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The Clinton News-Record, 1907-01-24, Page 33atietary 24th, 190,7 Zwerrorv.1 Run Vo*vn edeptessecleewithliceelechee heligenien, ceaniese le" bellstumour*. leroluje Or ether results et '12uPute, Woodeecaa had speedy said in ftlira Mood T idee. • It draw* otit the pohon from the blood and 'Imes uP StotasehAves, Wetly* end 'bowels. Puae *ale. palatable-cobs/a the medicinal lied); which eel ia 'whir -4- 4"r" he 5Ygern, Neel 81 4-hOtt1e-6 for. 65.X44V-APW,"*".04.^. 45seesesteloegeineeneeer hear The tCo oE camel*, Limitee, Hereiltoe.--Toiente. Ateurele get Ms xemth0e-,40,for .0 •TriArm maart JjiIiT. . . Lapponi and Dr. Mazzoni, who at, • Wii0fie duties "gron• more tuict leer% ar. <Immo as the years Paesed. The Pope tissed hi a ninetieth year and exeep- mina precautions had to be tkezi against the smelled possible dtnY. Dr. Lapponi attended him throughout his flying moments. - Dr. Lapponi' e treatment of Leo •-MIL was stroller criticised by -Dr: - Antonio Cardarelli after that Pontiff's edeeefeeee etW1.40, the=latter-waft.ft"filee tor as well 44 411 eminent phyeician hie published statements attracted considerable attention. Dr. Cardarelli ' claimed that the Pope died ot tuber- culous cancer, and fortified hie stat ment with a long series of argument baaed on his own experience and tile of well known authorities. To this Dr. rrrt. The Clicaon New4.Ree 3td, •AN HOTEL FOR BABIES A POPIILAR INSTITUTION IN THE HEART OF LONDON." r - - ,•,``, Vv.` *What :BeittirDOnetfritli!ff 'MOI • Who Went a Temporary Home - The Petrone of the Establishment - The Suites of Rooms -Fit the Smell $ Visitors -A Unique and harming t Feature. D GTO TO TW POP FAMOUS. PHYSICIAN WHO WAS WHE FRIEND OF TWO PONTIFFS, 1.13r-• Ghlis0PPe Leppert' Popular - Rome In Both Clerical and Ant - Clerical Society and a Familiar ;Figure At the Vatican-'144Putatkm, 'Vindicated As to His Diagnosis of :Pope Leo X111. Last liIness.: Dr." Giuseppe Lapponi, physician to ;the Pope, who died recently in Rome, had been seriously ill for eome time .of cancer of the stomach and, prien- anemia setting in, he could not, in his 'weakened conditicae, withstand its .ravages. When r. LapP lao was sinking the Pope sent him th Apostolic bene- • -diction, and when he news of the -death of the doctor 'f eaehed,the Pon- tiff he was exceedingly grieved. e Dr. Lapponi was very popular in Rome, in both Black and White so- ....ciety-that is to • say, among the Clericals as well as with .the anti- • Clericals. • . When his death became generally :known his friends„aaid that 'the time had arrived to vindicate his reputa- tion regarding his diagnosis of the :nature of the illness of Leo XIII., 'which step 'the doctor always refused -to take while alive. When the • late Pope Impanel' ill the bulletins issued only revealed the symptoms of his -disease, but did not mention the dis- eease itself. Many _ physicians and .medical -publications «,,,,attacked Dr. Lapponi, sayiug that lee did not recog- nize the fact that the Pope was suffer - Aug from cancer. Shortly before the Pontiff's death telegrams containing .statements to this effect made abroad were submitted to the doctor at the Vatican and he emphatically denied that the Pope had cancer. Dr. Lapponi WErd supported in this .statement by his assistant, Dr. Maz- zoni, but they absolutely refused to Igive out any statemept regarding the real ea de of the illneese of the Pope. aater, hen the interest in the'ensee e*, • nu. LAPPONI. had almost disappeared,. the doctor iinfortaed a correspondent that Leo XIII. suffered from senile conaump- tion which .eatised pleurisy. Cardinal Rampolla, then Papal Secretary of • :State, obliged both Dr. tapporn and Dr. Mazzoni to maintain' seterecy re- garding the cause of the Pope's death: The following curious and interest - zing incident regarding Dr. Lapponi tis recalled. OR September 6, Dr. Lap- poni, while visiting a patient in a hoe- pital in Rome, said.to the man:- - "Unless complications set in you will recover in a couple of days." After the -doctor had gone the patient said to 'his nurse: "Dr. Lapponi is Mistaken, -or he liiished to deceive me. I will die :in a couple of days; you will die in a. month, and Dr. Lapponi, will pass t away in three months.' The prophecy of the patient has 'been fulfilled. Re -did die two days later, the nurse died, -a month later, and Dr. Lapponi ex- pired exactly three months later. Dr. Lapponi related this 'prophecy -to his friends, including the -- The pontiff laughed at it, but Dr. 'Lapponi, who was a confirmed spirit- • ualist, remarked that' it wee possible for a human being to receive inspire - lion and unconseiously foretell the future. Dr. Lapponi .had been for eighteen .years the friend and physician of the • Pope; first of Leo XIII., who- chose him to succeed -Dr. Alessandro Cec- oarelli, • and next_ of Pius X., who,, • within three hours of his election, ap- 'pointe:d the doctor as Papal medical • attendant. Dr. Lapponi studied medicine in ?the Bologna School under Professore Murri, Coacato and other physicians of reputeMe distinguighed hiniself in his studies, and in 1875 he took his 'degree of doctor of medicine. After practising for a while in Capalone, •an Tuscany, he znov_ed to Pollenza, 'where he built up a large practiee. In 1885 he moved to 0simo, whence he was called to Ronielii. Pope Leo to be Papal physician and rilledioal etendant of the 'cardinals when 'in con - .clave. The Pontiff tame speedily to .place -earantetescenfidenee in hie Abysician, • N CA N A r.' s .r.onle In the ecct tv'tio ril lg. how thelr r;ki • • -ea- .Ar,. tern Vanada g4tflit • ,, a. e . ox.• ..15 to ah )w w'ra Wt ' .• ej.0 are,....ko. rhere .1re .11 .,f o .n this, prceetie v • , .tosP,us obtelr le1.10. icto,:ott.101 „ ;:nr..o•clng t%ost...nd- ss to kno'4. ' • s pc'o, ore .t 18.- momr.er there. ar' ly In, the ..191 who ne.vo trichtls in Itt t oho it ou:d w •., •0 neWs frOrd thole. cr • •e+. Frr...ent t: e 1 tv.th•a eOPY 0 1 News-11tord . 0.1.1toa j.61• d has arranged tt • • • iv .5 se • . y mg a ceubLitt; --,rr,c2ierneat wr h e :rt n.t fl,reSti f 1A,Inni,', e ..ttoo,t a d itteding .neWspni . tVestc.n • ...lie ' .f.er • • As," • ,;•.J.,1 tvli; v •t! atolo. se tvor rul gkcw.h •Jf the ell WInniper., .1 .8 ,..0s.itt 0 s • x•./.tlo v in th..t oltio, the ell - ',nett, Cat ;cell ,or e.t.ploytnezit. the e.,st ;ft tr.C. h. • a0 r...:t, etc.. the ,pportnnitles oi Lust:neon opotfnag. w11,1 a:so fUrn.sh Ycr• 'with toll infort.,e I, ,he saute cut...10,21S tr. .og.t.141 ,to oth.r 1'4.14 tOwnt of. . 'rive '3danItcl a rroe Pres* prints every dm.: sfroin, •Aree to fo.n, full enlutnits 'Sititatloite Ve.. %vat."' over a luo,o 'of "Esus;rtesit OPOOr• v411.11(11,- tWO etnia,ris of "Board •rt -5 -wont" sdrertisemernic.clIVerY resident of lesvt.u.s Canada wim contemPlating ternov- 105 to 'the west wou.d iind It of thelretttost. rodvartage to IMPS. r.be for the Pree .Previtt'• f.r a cchort thno f r the purpose of famItiat- • nor lAnzetf Ith t.te actual 'Jena:tides before 01% 'ouo.- he tititelog Offer Of the • cutuon rtioAts.• o; adtert:sed en artoi.her bade, tiffordS YOtt'• an opportunity of riet.iirilyg the 1464n4tetOtil. %An4 .14se .1tross, at, a ope.ial Saute, • tended the Pope during his illness, re- plied in a long article, 'published on September 10, 1903, to the effect that • •both these physicians after examine Ing the patient understood his true illness but that Cardinal Rampella„ the then Papal Secretary of State, ab., solntely refused to have it announced In the medical bulletins, and that in , order to protect their peofessional -reputations they then had recoarse to a written statement made before a notary. Thie etatement gave the exact details of the Pope's case andcool* of it were deposited with • Cardinal RamPolla and Mgr. Cagiano, the late rope Yst major dorno, Previous to this Dr. Lapponi denied that the Pope had suffered from can- cer, , • •D. Laptioni a feet months ago pub- lished a remarkable book on hypno- tism, spiritualism, and kindredphe- nomena, conceding nearly all/lhat has been clairaed by theinoste advanc- ed psychasts as to the actuality Of the plienontenaa but disputing their olaima as to supernatural ageneY and at the same time warning the gen- eral public against dabbling in 'Such matters as being exceedingly danger- ous to sanity and general health. IT'S A FACT.. A -Great Congrorneration. of Inform*, • tion In Small Space. • The Cunard line of steamers em- ploys 10,000 men. Thunder is very rarely experience in the Isle' of Man. Fiction ie barred from the Aritish... Houk of Common' • Library: • Peetal 'Orders were first issued in Britain on Jan. 1, 1881. Buckie fishermen fish away from home 11 months in the year. • If kept going,. the wheels of a watche„ travel 3,558 3-4 miles in a year. • Wick has the greatest extremes of climate of any town ,iete-Biitain. Burns and Byron -174e died . at 37. Bruce won Banneekbura at 40. • London's nohcemeri number 16,846, exclusive of the 1,144 city constables. En land and Wales- have 46,508 p0- 1i9e en, Ireland 11,799, Sedtland, .303. • • Scotland ha e twice as many distil- leries as. England and, Ireland com- bined. Banffshire has the reputation of be- ing the best educated county in Scot - and. . Four 'Persons cross the ' Atlantic in the eteerage to each cabin passenger. An Atlantic liner must earn g16,000 er trip before a penny of profit is 0 "r• 50 tons of leather are used for covering footballs in Situated in* one of • the healthieg parts of London, at 7 Pembridge Square, is a hotel exclusively for babied, It is known as the Norland Nurseries, and besides affording. cellent adcommodation for its tiny visitors, serves as a final test of abil. ity for the nurses of the Norland stituteheforetaking up private work. Who Ari its Patrons. The hotel is intended or little children from one month old up to seven or eight years of age, and ig especially patronized by Indian offi- ters and others on foreign dervices. widowers, widows, ineMbei's o the theatrical profession, and other par- ents desiring a tepaporary, safe and • happy hone° during theirenforced absence. One little visite* lately arrived all the way from • America. The nurseries are beautifully ar- ranged in' six •suites, each. having a, day and night nursery. The rooms are large, • airy and cheerfully deeor- ' ated, and each has a pretty name, au& as ForgeteMe-Not, Daisy, Speed- well, Peace and Joy. Each little re- . sident llas the individual attention of, an efficient nurse, whilea fully -train- ed nurse of long experience superin- tends 'the health . of all infants and children. In all the rooms the furni- ture is of diminutive, proportions= tables, .chairs, washstands, jugt: etc., all exactly Fit the Small Visitors for whose iise and convenience they are designed..During the season. the. hotel 1 pre-Wtreree-frieest engegfeuge-end . novel sight. Tiny terearereearing. to' take a morning ride -in thee; mail ear or perambul tor; others enjoying a '1 nap, wl in the play teethe others. are cupied with their toys. The •co .ch house expellently arranged for, the reeeption of visitors' mail carts and carriages, which can be at . the door in readiness to coreveY -i'Majesty" to Konsingthn Gardens ' or elsewhere at ,a minutes' notice. Parents of infants under , three , months old pay two guineas a week. Older children pay from thirty shil- lings to two, guineas a week, or from 50 to £80 a year. Thee charges are • inelusive, but 0.0 no, of ociuree, em- brace a doctor's and dentist's fees, which are extra. The very small in- fants are kept quite apart from the older children: Each wee mite has its own Special nurse, whb studies its niiscont needs and desires,findsout ... ale the essential characteristica of its . dietary, and, • indeed, lived onlyto • bring- happiness and joy., into its little * life, Each suite. is arranged, for a model familyof three children, and ,is , annual Britain. Enough • ore is lost stopping an express train. -.tee carry the .same fif- teen nines. • Eveey day thirty-dix .thousand Mes- sages are eent Over alleethe.-eables in the World. • . - Queen Alexandra loves violets and lilies of the valley, and 'is eond of wearing. them. e . There "are mere-. pilots' Widows- in Fraserburgh than in any . other Scot- tish .town. SCotlaild has 1712 ranee of railway, • `harrYing-in a11'117,000,000 passengers yearly. The bell �f Carinunnock Church, Lanarkshire, is over leiin- died yeare old. ' • The reading -room of the British Mu - Benin has, accemmodationAie 'Watt thoUsnd books. ; " 5 • 'Lerd-Wolseley, h "as--'5Ten pre;ent at _more battles than any "other living BritiehTeeneral. Cabbage stalks are used for fence' m jersey; cabbages,. there. grow, 16 :feet in height. • Southend poisesses the longest Pier in Britain, measuring over a mile and a quarter. Montreal has the largest flour mill' • in the British Empire. It turns out 5,000 barrels day, • Sir Henry Campbell -Bannerman and Mr. Joseph Chamber/gin were born in the same year. • • 'Lord' Kitchener served as it volun- • teer Under the Fiench flog in the _Franco-Prassien war of 1870. • • In 1670, Capt. Best, a British priva- teer, fought and ;defeated' the whole Portuguese navy: • To protect on invention all oiet the world 04 different patents are re- quired, Costing over £500: In 1887 Lord Brampton sentenced wernan to five .mintites' itnprison- ment, the shortest on record. • • The 13oys' Brigade was started in Glasgow in 1885 by Capt.. Smith and Prof, Drummond. • The mail earried by an Atlantic liner averages 200,000 letters end 300 sacks of newspapers.: ' There are three "Glaegows" in Am- erica ; two, iri Canada; one in .Deme - rani; • andone in Sereland. Lord: Kitchener, the soldier, and lan Maclaren, the novelist, arechil- dren of the same year: . Next to his' orchids, Mr. Chaiaber-, lainedelights most ire: his tollection of caricatures of himself. • Nairn Viaduct, on the Highland RallwaY, contains more Masonry than any other bridge in.Britain. Lord Rosetiery takes a great inter- est iii -wood -carving, and possesses many valuable specimens. The Clyde shipbuilding yards pro- duce- more than twiee the amount of the entire Continental tonnage. . . Royalty Likes Oysters. . '"What'is the most favored dish of the. Engligh royal family?" Was the question put at a Lorid.on cookery exhibition to Cedard, chef to the household of the Prinee of Wales. • "It is difficult to say," he replied, !‘but1 think oysters would make a very bold bid. These are served to their Royal Itighnessea almost daily. As a ride, however, both the prince and princess prefer plain diiihes with predileetion for the French erripine air eomparedwith the English, while the 'time table,of ilia day's meals is/ - breakfast, half -past nine.ttaii.; lunch, two p,.m.; dinner, half -past eight p.m. "After a visit to the theatre or opera," eontintied Cedanl, "their Revel Highnesses simply have a light moor -that is oil. , PURVEYOR TO THE KING' •A TITLE VALUED BY TRADES - grapner ae van% a mairer.or cnerrit brandy at Cepenhageni a biome Ma- ker at Florence, a bagpipe maker at Aberdeen, barber in London,„ and even a horse knocker -that is to say, a TIM who makee it his business to kill horses, and who, for a coneidera. MEN IN. GRE# BRITAIN! tion puts .raysl, nag -out of their - _,.„ , -...'' , it' ---. misery when the dicta* of human- . ity demand. their_ departam, •Or. , -anotheriforld. The royal purveyore by appoint- ment, 200 or 300 in number, have formed themselves into ateincorporat- ed associatien, the organization- -of' which dates back sixty yeas age. Display Goods At Palace. ' Cable &patches: Published. recently do not visit the altos- for the pure . from London have intimated, that pose of buying-, save when. abroad, ' owing to the recent inauguration of where they are relatively unknown, stricter husinese methods on the part In their own capitals they ,..aree. so of the so-called"board of green M11011 in danger of being crowded and 'cloth," which controla the victualing even mobbed if they show themsel- department of the royal household, a Vas in any Otero that they find it spirit of revolt has arisen among the .more convenient tee have their pure' warrant holders, that is to say, the veyora bring selections of their wares tradesmen whci hold official warranta to the palace. In England the war. as purveyors to the king, the queen, . rant holder in question, is notified by. and the members of the reigning fam- some member of the household that ily. Indeed, it is said that the pure the qUeen, for instance, will see 'him veyors have bee4 eeendered so indig- on a certain day, and he is likewise nant by the new process of shaving furnished with some information as down their forinerly large profits that to the nature of eheegoods which he they contemplate throwing up their is expected to bring with him. On the • royal warrants, a threat which- the day in question the things are taken sovereign and the board of green to the palace, and are placed on ex-. cleth, caii contemplate with equam- hibition in, rooms prepared for the nay, Writes Ex -Attache in the Chi- purpose, it being a strict rule that nage Tribune. - ` every article should 'he labeled with 'e Inasmuch as there are several the price. Sometimes the queen im- firms in the United States who -hold mediately makes a selection m ro what es./.. warrants issued frotheoyal house- she wants. But quite often e pee - hold in London, conferring upon' far s to linger over it,e.a,n -several: them the title of "purveyor" of their days elapse beforeethe purveyor is, particular .wares "to the king* and summoned toeretiove• the wares that queen of England," it may be as well :she has deelfned to retain. The 'kinO, to explain just What is meant by the makes his purchases in the same title and warrant in question, They manner; and so,. too, do ,the -Prince do not in any Way imply that the nd Princess of Wales, though. Prin.. firm which receives the 'warrant cone- cess Christianand the Duelfilits of stitutes the only one of a pertitidar Argyll, sliders el the king, his nieces,. .trade that he to be thus dietinguish- Princess Patricia of Connaught and, ed. For there are at 1001. a dozen Princess Victoria iif Schleswig -Hol - great firms of Engifsh and foreign stein, and his eldest daughter, the *jewelers andesilfersmiths Which have Duchess of Fife, are quite often to be been, nomenated, "jewelera and silver -I met shopping in Bend street, Regent smiths- to/their- majesties." Nevertlae- street, and Piceadilly, withoutbeing less the' appointments are regarded recognized by any -save. their person- as " if honor of considerable commer- al friends and acquaintances: ' e al value. . For ' the warrant endows ' It is said that Queen Victoria • the concern in, question. with a • pub- never visited -a -London shop from the. lie stamp Of royal aPpeeval, and Alio • time of her accession to the theone • knowledge that the 'English court id . in .1837 until her death at the close' chary and careful • about . makingof. the nineteenth eeatury. The Lon - then) appointments . of purveyors te . don shops; indeed,- were to her •,e, royalty serves to invest the flrin .in terra incognita; and when • one eon - :question with a sort of guarantee, na eiders hew devoted. women are to the 'only ' of respectability, but •also' of ' pastime. of shopping it will be ape fashion. • ' ' preciated that queens and empreSses • . May Use Royal ArMsare forced to forego, by reason of The appointment in itself does' not their rank) pleasures that are 'within . the reeen of women of inferior clay. carry with • it any special privileges, . -.excepting the right of •putting up the • . : ---'- . . royal, arms above doors • and shop .. LUXURYFOR: LODGERS. Windows, and of using the same her- • . • - aldic devices on letter and bill heads, . Lon don ConntY COUneil Proves.. Pal But the fact of the royal ' arreeagar.. . ing ever the entrance of a store 'W.! • erstial Actommodation For Poor., . ves toattract a large amount of °wee , In environment influences character, tom, people on the other side of the and all psychologists declare it .does, Atlantice7and eometimes hate, too- then. the :future inmates-: of ltruce being impressed with the belief that House, Xemble street, should visibly in following the example of , •roenitY. - ascend in the social arid ethical scales especially in xnattersf - purchas,• after a brief residence in that. palatial they bapnot possibly go wreng,. The.use' of the royal ernes and in- leallo. ping he, . Ieea 'Itis ., : like a dieelling for the rich thiri.. tem - 'ed strictly, to those firms haffing war. rants authoring them to style theme :, Bruce House, some details of whielt selves "purveyors by appointment" ' appeared ift The Daily. Mail, recent - t' this or that member of the reigni i ly, is the London County • Ceitincil 'OrliTaritqiilty 'Not WoirlitanW Threat of Shopkeepers to Surrend, or Warrants -Process of the Ap-, pointment-ExAttache Tells How Shops -Secure Royal Arms and of Method of Selling to Palace, As a general rule, kings and queens made as needy as possible like a nursery i•ri a private home. leesides•the suttee already mentioned, the hotel • contains four enema rooms set apart • for infants' under 'four, five end. siec monthe of, nee; also .for a &did nt exceptional delicacy,. or for any small operellens 'Which may be necessary. - • ° • An Unique Feature. unique and charming feature of thie babies' hotel is that its inmates are privileged as soon as the hot wee- eher sets in to repair tq the seaSide,' exChanging the more modified pleas- ures of the London squares and tarke for the bliss ef donkey-tidee and 'goat chaises, and wielding spade and pail, for the Nortand Nursery 'has a beauti- fully sitbates1 cottage . at Bognor,' in Sussex, where, for theeesingle extra eharge of traveling expenses, its lit - tie -visitors may repair. Consequently, during the summer months the babies' betel is almost depleted 'of its small patrons, who revel in all the delights • of 'delving in long stretches Of silver sand and bathing and paddling in a quiet sea that Creeps up the beach so • gently and stftly as though fully con- scious of its duties in safeguarding the tender lives entrusted to its mercies, • . The 1-11zhest Inns: . Therdeare half a cloien innkt "well up in the air," as country people say, in England, writes a Correspondent in The Manchester Guardian. Tan 'Hill lteti is 1,727 feet above sea level. The Cat and Fiddle near .Buxton Mires next, 1,630 feet up; and its compara- tively neat neighbor,. the Travelers' Rest at Flash, on the Leek and Bux- ton road, is third, 1,535 feet. The next three inns of the series are fur- ther afield. There is the Isle of Skye Inn near HOlinfieth, 1,500 feet above sea level; the Travelers' Rest et. the • top of Xirkstone Pass, between Win- dermere and Fatterdale, 1,467 feet; and the Newby Head between Black Hawes and. Ingletore 1,420 feet. These high-plaeed inns are not the most re- mote from customers even in the win- ter time. The Cat and Fiddle, 'for ex- ample; gets customers on the bleak- est, days in inid-Winter. Very different is the experience of the Barrel- Inn - en the ridge. between Eyelet and Hath - &sage. There are some weeks the winter nfentlis in which (one has it on the testimony of a former header of. the licen'thi) not a shiningOworth of beer is sold.. 13-t that is partly be- cause the current of traffic in, modern times has been diverted from the old Sir ;William. road, on the hill -top, to • the valleys. These figures take no et'. count of Wales; the hotel at the tees of Snowdon is, of course, the highest in the 13ritish Islands: ' ' • • Fish Story Hard to Swallow:' The other day, while Mrs, Louis Allard, of Madoc, was attending to her duties in trapping along the lake, she noticed a ripple on the surface of the water, and upon further in- Yestigation saw that it j was a large 1 maskinonge: As she drew' near with t )tor held the monster dfikappeared, but presently appeared on the , surface again in a sort of torpid kitate, She quickly despatched it With . her hatehet, and after a severe' struggle , a in. which her hands were more or less N out, succeeded in landing her prize, The fish in endeavoring •to swallow k a ling got eholted, and would no•doubt h have died in a short time. Mrs. A. •h landed her game, and on weighing ' d found it tipped the beam et 32 lbe. I •....1•444 C Canadiati Pacific earnings for tile 11 second week in January showet a decrease of $123,000. .ing house. Any 0110 found einploying lodging -house which that body prem - the royal.--arras-in this way without ised when it displaced 3700 Of the Proper authOrity or falsely assumingtheverking classes by the Holborn to gnt the title of purneyor.etlxe soverei Strand improvement. It was opened ort e any of the primed Or princesteS 7 reeently by Mrs. H. Wallace Bruce, of ftia, blood is liable not only to a Wife of the chairman of the London heavy fine butlikewise to 'imprison- . County ment: Since the accession of Kind le is as a tribute to Mr. Bruce that_ Council Housing Committee. 1011011101014111001110111101 ." Grippe or Influenza, whichever you o -call * is one -of - the- -most 'weak 4 Scolls Z1,1014011, which Liver (NI and 1-lypoi•hosphites in easily gested form, is the greatest strength -builder known to wc,c1:-:al science. " It is so ca..4.:;,/ 1.....3esbc1 that it sinks into the, system, snaking. liew blood and new fat* and strengthening `nerves and muscles* Use S'cottres.- Influenza. invaluable for Csuiths and cold& ALL. DRUGGISTS; soa. AND SIAM* oicao•assooloHoloiolooloolopioNo44410 ovnesterwrswessinesomentimensetelnignOlinetellir • 111111M11111111111•111.999996..... Let Me Sell You a • Chatham Incub -On Time Do you know there is big money in raising poultryt Do you know there is more money in running a good incubator than in almost anything else you can do for the amount of time and trouble it takes? Do you know my incubator will' pay you a bigger profit than ,any other thing you can have on your place? • • • • 'Well, all these things are true, and I can prove it. Thousands of people all over Canada have proved it every year.for the last five years. . , 1 want to quote you a price on my Chatham Incubator0 , -sold ON TIME. I want to send you my, Chatham boeir. , ' : A.,. postal card. It tells you a lot you ought to knavr aboht. the This incubator book is free- I'll send it to you for-juSt 4' • N Poultry business --it tells you how to make money out of ' %-ebiekens-it tea y•ou hew my,Chathani Incubator will Make .. you more money than you can make with hens -far ---..\ \ \. is lessyoutrouble.hownv. Io'cuba'tors are made -Why they sire l'r ' Thisanbdookitihel My Codipany has been in business in Canada for over 50 5 -Year Guarantee. - the best ever invented -and why I sell them ON TIME aFicl•on 4 , Weare one of the largest • wood-workiag•factories in the co ' We also operato a large factory .at, Detroit, Mich. We have t cubator and BIZoder business clown to a science. • ../ Ctietham -Incubators end Brooders will make yott;inc%,ey, fo•r. a • Chatham Incubator.will hatch a live, healthy chicken dut 0 every - es *0 fertile eggput into it, in,21 days. ., . . , Will. you write for my book today? Do it no.w while you think of it. Just say on &postal "Please send me your Incubator Book" - that's all. Address me personally. • Marason 'Campbell .... • Pre3ident . l'bo Maneen•Ca,mpbell Co., Ltd. Dept. , Chatham, Ont, tarry huge stocks and . -. NOTE -7. ship prafaptly from betinch houses at Calgam.Alta.. Montroal0aue4 Bran don, &Iota,- Dalitux, N. S.,. Vlotoria, ' u..p., ganef sotory at Chatham, , .rits.,t400L 4,........, • kr i'•; - i• .4 ,• V / vl •,,, P 1: • '.. II' Edward quite 'a large n'uraber of Eng- the building is so named: lish manufacturers arise tradesmen The POW house, which is designed have been brought ,into courts- .and mulcted in large amounts for using to accomenod,ate .699 'lodgers -why not 700E --stands ion the corner a Drury the royal arms without Mitherity. The warrents --are wlthdraw-n in the lane and Kemble street. It is in the p y, form of a huge letter E. The dining - case of .bankruptcy, tc or even in the event of' any questionable dealings on room is a commodious and home -like the part of the firm concerned. The apartment. The wills are lined vvith appointment likewise becomes void.umber. glazed tiles, relieved • bright green. On the walls, ramed • in green tiles, are colored • seascapes and rural vievisa„.., . ••• "Lodgers often'like to 'cook their e$, and by . the deraise of the sovee own food," said -Mr. 'Bruce. and so reign. Thug all appointments of pur-i we have provided facilities for their veyorkyto Queen:Victoria lapsed with doingscL:here.." • Near the middle of her death. . roinix •specithia ,epen : chamber How Warrants Are Issued., is provided for a rlarge hot -plate, Warrants are headed with the royal where 50lodgers could simultaneous - arms and bear the :'signature and the 1•3' 0Vek fif4'` modest .neeals. seal of the lord steward, the. lord The smoking -room has acconimoda- chamberlain, the Controller". of the', tion for 100 men; and chess -boatels royal household; the, treasurer of thie and oeher table games aid provided. latter, the master of the royal house.= gunting scenes adorn the tiled wail, hold, or of the matter Of the horse. 1 the deep -mullioned windows lend an by the change of the designation of the ' firm, by the death of the indivi- guitellVigiten;sairoarntdsirlacvttiorsbeiel whaons: UBBING OFFE • The NeweiRecord and Weekly Mail and Empire, one year., " . Weekly Glob6 . .... (4 46 ' 4( 4. 6( Faini I y Herald and Weeily • Weekly Witness „ ...;., # C Son ...............'...........1.75 " • Free Press 't , 1475. .• . Advertiser , 1. •`, ^ " " Farming World " Farmet's Advocate and '. Home Magazine 246. Daily Nevei; Toronto .... 2,30- •• • " Star IC • • • 6.4 2.80 • " ... 4,25 f. ' •A.• . " ... ....„.. 4.20 " • . " World " ' ▪ . . . aoo Safe:led:1:y Night • • .. • . . . . 2.36, (4 if • Free Press, London 3.35- -•"..-‘ • • Free Press, Evening Edition , 1.70, - " A*, • loiremng,plertso b'S, 'Express Order 9r, .• • - , s .... Postal Note, arid, address . , .., 4 'according to the departmeiat under 1 old-world air to the 'placer -And a. . . which they dome. . With regard to , broad, open, green -tiled fireplace, , Queen Alexandra, certain. of her pure. . which one enthusiastic lady describe - ., VV. 3.- MITCHELL; ‘ . veyors receive their warrants from i ed as a "perfect love,"- would. not be •----:---‘;--- - ---- ---.. --. . J.J. her lord chamberlain, who is the , out of place in a ducal palace. , The garl of Howe, while others are issued; , THE NEWS -RECORD, ' - - Clinton*, .0 '4 • reading and writing rooms, in white by her mistress of the robes, who is1 i and green, carrY 'ant the same en,- ' • • the Duchess of Buccleuch. It must I erous and STPliitit scheme. .e...-ert thcironghly be Understood tha,t the se- 1 The cost, per :night at this lodging leetions are made by the royal per- ' house ia ' 7e1"., which charge includes sonages in question themselves, and ' all et he ada.antages 'of the building. that the names and seals" ef the dig- If akere by the week, the charge. is nitaries figuring: on the warrant are I merely those of the executors On the 6d,' per night. For ld, a lodger can have a, hot or. cold bath, which in - royal commands in the matter. cludes soap and towel. The men can The mere fact of the king having. buy cooked food at the shoe, or mw made 'a purchase from a firra• does themselves.' not confer upon the latter any right : food: anfi col it to Bye itself "purveyor to ii iOsnt s besideandtheirththe jesty: ! Indeed, the king; the queen, his ma" ' p' iSi:enr onof at eriPiredvi.? and the royal househeld may be buy- . shop counter are:, Tea, per ctip; 1-2d: ing tUngs from a concern all the .or id.; coffee, per cup, 1-2a1 or Id.; year round. But unless it receives' a . "cut," 1..:2,1.; ld., 1 1-2d.; butter, per royal warrant, , signed arid sealed in "pat," 1-2d.; margarine . per '.`pat," due form, it is liable tes get into serelej-2d.,. cigars,.1d., 2cl., 3d.; cigarettes, ions trouble. if it venturea to adopt 'packet, 1-2d.; roast beef, per plate, the royaleerms and the style .of pule 4d.; roast perk, per plate; 4deproaste - veyor "by appointment." • • mutton,- per plate, 44.; brawn,' per. „ There are some old features about ' plate, id., 2d. ' " - . these royal warrants. Thus, the drew , e e - • Lone St.' galena. ' g's t to the king and queen is appoint- * ea in the seine way as the royal phy.; 'It will never ,be possible to add to sicians and surgeons, although, un- the tragie interest centering around like them, he uses the royal arms for'. -the island prison of the great Na trade purposes, On the •other hand, poleon Bonaparte. He was alone in the offiee of geograPhee to the king his genius, alone in his career, alone is distinctly . a • trade appointment, in his fate. For years the, eyes of the . a ranks as such with the boot- world were upon the. caged emperor, maker to hie majesty. The poet limy. and St. Helena became a name to •eate, the astronomer royal, and the 'make monarchs and diplomats shud- ' historiographer royal no longer figure der and dread. among the warrant holders, but oc- Since the removal of the remains of copy .to -day a more exalted rank at Napoleon from the island where he Court. But the veterinary surgeon and died the Place has been garrisoned by the canine surgeon of the king and of a smiall forte., and held, as a naval the royal family hold their offices by coaling station,. It is now proposed to %inns. of a warrant 'similar to that abandon the post, and the' iluestibn ' 2 *wanted to the royal tradesmen, The arises, What elhall be. done with . atter are of the most varie4 des rip= 0 , ing, but what it became through the • e ena a i i o . ion. • accident of Napoledn't gaarded exile ' Have Some Purveyors Abroad. therejt can best remain by letting it As 1 have mentioned above, both revert to a wilderness, tbe sport tf . Xing Edward and Queen Alex0.ndta waves and tempest. When all the lave a jeweler and silversmith "by wqr14 it under the spell of progress,' ppointinent" to their majesties in deSolatiOrl is the fitting state 'for the. ew York, Queen Alexandra has a y*tty domain over whiclv Napoleon modiste, a hairdresser, A corset ma- reigned by the grace of his conquer- er, and a gloyemaker at Paris, all or& after kingdoms and princelings gilding warrants appointing them as -which his sword had exalted cast him er, purveyors. The king has a sad. . v. •••M•14.•••.•••10.4,10.1•1•60*•••••••*•1•14 • 0 Mede 4 Hit. Ws At Cologne, a furrier in Quebec, "Ever been on the stage?" asked the Prankfort-on-the-Main and at Vienna, ,rmada; sellers of fancy goods at corner groeery egg. "Sure," answered the cabbage, "1 , eller of see& at Hymns, 9. wine was once east for the villain and roster, at Aronte, in wily; a photo. made A grant hit._"......„, _. ... . ler at Budapest, eau de cologne ma- • Hair Has' Teeth. plabed .under a powerful micros- cope, the hair shows a surface cover- • ed with strong, edarse, jagged teeth, and more strongly resembles a coarse, rough rasp. Dealers in human hair can tell in a moment whether " the locks offered them have •been cut off or combed out. They •do this by rub- bing the hairs through the fingerie: If • the halt has been -ent from thelitad, and has not been misplaced, IV re- mains in its original position; but if it has been pulledeor combed out, and. put together regardless of the direc- tion in which it grew, one portion of • it will slip to the right and the other to the left. It 'clinei this, because the jagged edges engage upon each other and pull in opposite • directions. The philosophy of this is demonstreted by drawing a hair first one way and then the other, . through the fingers, which 'slip easily toward the point, while considerable resistance is felt when the fingers are drawn from the poitit towards the end next the head. • •• Queer Bela:ice Sheet, , • ' Perhaps one di the cluaintat bal- ance sheets issued is that of the Gar- steng and Knott End Railway, one of the smallest working lines in 'England, which shows that the half -yearly re- ceipts weird '12,117, and the expendi- ture g.1,203, _leaving a revenue of ,t009. , The rolling ate& comprises two engines, six carriages, and 41 , wagons, and the 'Mileage of the corn- pany itt six•miles seventy-nine ehains. • Sir .Wilfrid Laurier is in comitiwi cation with .the 'Governor a jam on the subject of 'relief far the s 1erers from the earthquake, .;* R N ;tZ rAZN r.)A, lio'man catholic elrarcii'at Leonard de fet. Maurice, nea,t .tewl, 'was :hurtled. Loss 0,75,000.. • Your Doctor The Hares Collided, • . Anincident of it very curious char- acter. happened at the meet of Mr. E. A. Hardwick's' Weston -super -Mare Harriers it‘ North PethertoneEriglesrid: 's • The hounds were in hill cry in a.; field of roots, after a 1iare, when a second hare was disturbed: with the result that, racing in en °assail° di. 1•" reetion, she eollided with the 'first hare, 'Both were killed on the *ispot, one having its neck dislocated, the other apparently dying of fright, , • Can cure yoUt 'Cough or 001.1# no question abont thot_tout- why go to all the trouble and inconvenience of looking ttp„ andthen of having hispr ien filled, when you' cakittePtil « drug store m•Clifittois antt a bottle of SITILOWS CUE for a quarter. 7 when a t we -five eon Why pay tit tIVe dollar* bottle of 8HIRO will out* as quickly? ?" " Why not dolts huareas o thousanda of Canadietia ha dono for the past. thirty -f years: beyour tor Iyhenever a Cough Or appears. SHILOIt will tura you, out druggists back up this eta with -a positive guarantee. The next time you him Cough or Cold cure it with