Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Apr 1906, p. 9

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Coverip Choose fac White Silks ry fashion page-in the land r talking "white" for the S2ason. Isn't 1t unneces- say that we heard of this wave of popular fancy long om headquarters, and. with ble foresight bought largely h practical wash silks a Look : Iabutai Nill m the market, 27 iy wd, 49, 65 and 69 hina Silks licror Silk, 20 i 1 fic. affeta Sitks, 190 and 21 inches wid ouisene Silks, 20 iy ard, 69 and 75 LAIBLAW & SO) ite and am Over Laces us just announce the arrival OHN ssortment of most excellent s in these splendid materi- \l the soft valuable texture nty appearance are here in new and pleasing. Four prices, . per yard, 49, 65 e., and 1.25. AW & SON -- 1's Fancy Sil White hite Lawn Bom vith ful rue , the others vith full ru hite lawn v LAIDLAW & SO) 1's Cashmere r of t} WOW come ur. stor thers in garments tle Casha chalteng: vles aren 0 charming le for childhood. 50 to 1 's favor. And othy Dodd' Ii rent in ever srt Oxfords. We hat - £3.00 and ™h ; whi . J taken with id which must always be APRIL 21, 1906, NO 91. Hp ee paisley fie Words Weds of EMG) 6a the Prettiest Giris 7n Samosa Aolfos. 3, Ze 7. To on a ot ew Zealznds ® ., Commercial Museums - A Stunner in Epa. Ag Z7ny looted Chinese Bes uty Of y music-loving American ov, nature wit} &% apt to Jy to. the eye Central America ® some ver the Spanish-Asn astilian type, the dreamy, maidens © of the Latin when endowed by tarms of face and form, exceedingly atiractiv® nose seem too flat, hut the ovaj face is almost perfect in its contour, and us ually beaming with good-natured mer riment, Whatever may. be the limitations of a Filipino mai 's wardrobe, she is sure to possess a cherished wealth of beads and is rarely seen without long (strings of them encircling her neck, furnish- mens of beauty, among the better wes' of Costa Rica, Guatemala, and the other little re Piblics that nest in that semi-tropi- cal belt feminine loveliness is by no means rar : Regular fot glow under 1 mun; will motion 1} waved flowy gardens Large, "limyid ath a mass Which the faci ally fastened lashion, fillin. itresis tab), y face shyly hid A Dong Inez y Followed. lover rao th romantic picture corfjur- moonligh tt of this land of ght les and lovemaking pleasing erican Attractions In Adornment. Such a type as is depicted here is found 'among the natives of the prin cipal islands. Among some of theless avilized tribes feminine beauty reached rather a low ebb, and attractions are not so much of face as of rude meth ods of supposed adornment. 'This is also true of some of = the tribes of New Zealand, No matter iow handsome a Maori woman may be, for example, #sn thinks her beauty is enhanced by painting her face, Na turally, the men think so, toa, or she would not do it There are among certain of the Maori tribes women who are really beautiful and who do not' paint their faces, but it scoms they are not ac counted as bewitching as thos® who systematically daub. their features with colored grease The unpainted among these simple" minded children of nature possess fea tures as regular and as patrician, in their way, as un American of Furo pean girl. Rich tints ereep into their velvety cheeks and their long black hair is often silky and wavy. Among th 'painting Maori helles a favorite decoration seems to be drawing curious designs upon the chin gbout the mouth, About their necks they wear rudely-carved orna- ments of idols, and a feather or flower is usually to be found in the hair. Short, plump, curveless and stolid is the famoan belle, Her fot are usual ly bare and probably will not object to the ith being told--very large and emphatic in their suggestion 08 usefulness Many of the Samoaii men are more attractivesin physical appearance than the women The latter are heavy- looking with Lroad faces and rather flat noses. They possess many feminine charac- teristics, however, and have their own ideas of fashion, although these are mon JO sum] wou) pagsodut jouw York, Floral garlands adorn their res and soft cheeks ardent kisses of the lorms rival in graceful bending of the zephyr- stems in the gwners' eyes gaze softly from of dark hair, upon iting 'mantilla is usu- careless, ecoquettish stranger with an Ing "to peep at the beneath its folds. b a black mantilla, light' by an unknown { smile scems to lack in weetness Central = American maidens many of the poetic compliments paid { end 1 : : ] to them, and they are particularly There is no elasticity or sprightli . susceptible to a recognition of their J ness of mind indicated by the placid | charms, whethef made to the countenance, no buoyancy or willowy plishihent of the twanging g , or |ewace in the stolid figure, no sugges in the effusions of sentimental rhymes. | tion of the liveliness of youth in the ters. | sedate movements. : the de Her dress is rich in coloring and embroidery effects, hut those trousers! --they. are, indeed, a far ery from the softly. clinging, graecful gowns of the deserve spontaneity A piquant picture is that of mure littla human bloom of Japan. Than some of th the mest skilful artists of that coun : try of blending colors and delicate 7 APAncss . 7 tinte could not paint a dainticr "Near to nature's heart ab Perhaps their pretty costumes, al- | ian woman dwells, snd gtars as ways attractive ta the eves of the Am- | cealt with 'her rather kindly in the ot, Ty 0d purest Ozone on the ! erican visitor, have much to do with matter, of. yorsons} ¢ Z\Ciaritudeut Poduet t is sold as a commercial i charming get presented hy the pris ast of the som at appeals to the ot at reasonable rates, 0. that ~tocratie litt] woman of the island em. | Hawaiian lover. other by about twice as. much as of | pire. % k For supplengss of form and easy, un- fing ands. Also cach bottle con- | Iv pleasing maiden is grace of movement, the. A Coupon which entitles v A Aruly. pleasing majaen, Hawaiian women can scarcely be sur- & pack, § entitles vou to AH in dimity and dimples Mgwy 2° of "Celery King," the well- is little wonder that the Japa. |Passed. Many of them aye veritable Teted i there is litle Words Re, 3 2 mermaids, and, to the long hours spent ! nese girl figures 50 largely in the at disporting: in the surf much of this work of that pation. he i$ an ani- supplengss and 'grace: is duc, t the "Cele mated bit of Dresden china. iE a and thy We pL 3d Kine According to American taste, the dpm, Lon; i ey our Ls why we can give it with | Chinese belle is in an entirely diff rent | OO oes I he. { clase. If her lot has been cast into the "Soluti | and sunlight. io f Le 1a i" hos ¥ Won of (the coupon iho sireles, she je apt ta} & aloe teibiber and dirk eves that chore. helpless from the 'cruel a ici « ica as much terize so manv dwellers upgn Pacific ote ; i rTitv i y a ; Ts a as any other kind. It formity of her feet. ; islands, and their Jong, dark hair. is 8othing, Traint 1. Coiery King" | Hor hair is worn smoothly plastered | SUNG TRC TOT COL re Tour a on getting he over her round head, with an uncom Ona ripen finda rial heatity am ugg oF write 8 | isi iovic yart in the centre. Ra vy Phils Urug company, Bridgeburg, i Ad rg Da hor Y aaze | 908 the varios tribes of the Philip Who will wie that you me ro: or features a nan ever ¥ hex pine islands. Perhaps sometimes the 3 : © fixed and expressionless; ¢ © "eyez mua set' too widely apart op chrysanthemum nd appropriate in dress oft in speceh and shyly nanner, these dark-pyed When You Buy--Buy Right. You buy. Oz I "Soluti o 3 one, buy ution epee (the coupon kind)." It is the Hawai- Zone, other brand of Ozone gives vou oP tunity io "alinost live out- bronze of face and a love of open air me They have the regular fontaine ahout- tw! -- ---- heads 'as a rule; they are fond of bracelets, and a ° string of colored glass beads will make one happy for life, As "worth makes. the man and want of it the fellow" in the ethical codés of many civilized communities, so tattooing makes personal . beauty in French Guinea. Perhaps it was "largely due to the fact that the wo- men 'there were largely overlooked in the distribution of personal charms that they took to extensive tatooing. . Decorated All Over. The more tattooed she is the more beautiful a Guinea woman is regard- ed. This decoration of herself does not stop, either, with the limitations of the most generously decollette gown ever devised by Worth, All sorts of designs are tattooed upon her, and they - extend pretty much all over the body, The latest designs in tattoo work form an db- sorbing topie of conversation at meetings . of Guinea sewing circles and card clubs. Péthapt there are 'enamored swaine in Zululand who sigh-- If she be not fair to me, What care I how fair she be ? but the average visitor to that coun- try of rude customs and strenuous life is not apt to feel impressed: with the sentiment. ( Fatness---not plumpness, stoutness, or_any other softening term, but plain, ordinary. fatness--is. the stand- ard of beauty among the aseegai flinging Zulus, ' 'The women are squat and chunky. Their physical' attractiveness. increas es in proportion as their breadth ap- proximates their height. The 'question of robing: such rotundity in silks and sativa! would, doubtless prove a stag- gerfig problem to the head of many a family were it not for the simple solution that the Zulus have igh regard for the old adage that unadorned is adorned the mast, To be considered' beautiful, the Ha- kimo lady, 'too, must be excessively fat. She may waddle ludicrously and be entirely ignorant of the usual} grace of her sex, but if she is suffi- ciently stout, her personal loveliness is .acknowledged. Women of certain = Senegambian trihes measure heauty by the size of the rings they are able to wear in nose and ears. Sometimes they are of enormous extent, As a rule their features are coarse and irregular, not being at all imi proved by the blackness of the skin. Their noses"are flat and huge in bulk a combination made really hideoas by the big rings they insert in the cartilage between the nostrils, Really beautilul women are found in some. M | said that the faces of many of the | reveral hundred inmates of the sultan of Morocco's harem wenld create a sensation in Paris, London or Now York, could they be seen there, Watch Rheumatism Go. The action of Dr. Hall's Rheumatic Cure is direct and positive, and zé- sults are similar in nearly all cases. First a lessening of the symptoms are noted, there is less pain and sorenoss and more freedom of the mugcles, Then tomes a gain in general health, The sufferer knows he is getting bet- ter-and feels he will be cured. Time required to cure varies according to the duration of the disease and gener al condition of the patient, But those who use the remedy faithfully will have constant improvement to cheer them and will soon know they are be- ing made sound and well, Price B50c- Sold only at Wade's Drug Store, This is the preparation that cured William Tait, Brock street, Kingston, Truly Obliging. Miss Flurtic-What are your ing the gas down for ? Jack Nervey---I'm going to kiss you Miss Flurtic-1'd just like to soe von ! turn- Jack Nervey--Oh, in that cuse I'H just leave the light. up. : Bad For The Trust, An lowa farmer claims to have dis- coveraed a method by, which he can produce ice-at- a cost of thirty cents per ton. If he makes good he stands a chance of causing the' ice trust to look like the same sum. rr ---------------------------- Is 'one of the best. friends that any family has, but there are often sudden and acute attacks of some painful disease that require The immediate treatment, Family such, for instance, as Doctor rheumatism, neuralgia, lamo back, ete. Tuck's Rheumatic Bone Oil makés the calling of the doctor unnecessary. It will give relief before he eonld answer the call, and if faithfully used will oure the most stubborn attacks of rheu- matism, neuralgia, lumbago, pain in the chest or back, soreness, sprains or straips. 14 is a. powerful 'penetrating {oil that goes straight to the seat of {the trouble and roots out the cause. | 1t relaxes the stiffened joints, soothes | the affected part and allays the | inflammation which produces the | torturing pain. It is therefore a i valuable remedy not only for rheu- matism 'and kindred diseases, but is equally good for eroup, bronchitis and quingy. One father writes that it cured his child of a violent attack of eroup Sn five minutes. A mother writes that her boy was subject to quinsy and two or three times oach year was confined to his bed and Lcould not speak. When - threatened with another attack this fall ghe rub- berl + his throat and chest with the Hone Oil and by three applications warded off the attack. The wonder- | ful curative powers of this remarkable | femedy are being talked about by everyone. A bottle should be in ever: home. For sale by all medicine deal: cers at 50c, a bottle or will be sent prepaid on receipt of 50c. by the Tuck Bone Oil Co. Limited, Smith's Falls. | Money refunded if not satisfied, ' an rountrisscdt-de | der this law, # ) zeal of the (ierman polich officials, the gram from a oagfsspondent reporting 'his recruits, all LESE MAJESTE CRINE[: 3 IT IS JUST SMILED AT IN LONDON. Germans Suffer Extraordinaty Sentences for the Offence-- London Police Turn Deaf Ear to Offenders. London, April 12.-The motley gatherings to be seen on Sunday af ternoons in Trafalgar Square "or Hyde Park, made up largely of men with real or imaginary grievances -- chiefly noisy Irish agitators and so- cialists--must amuse Germans who witness them. Lese majeste has no terrors for those . spouting orators. They call the king names, sneer at the royal family, and condemn all kinds of just legislation. And the strangest bart of these meetingd lies in the act that the police are sent there in large numbers, not to arrest the gentlemen who would rob King. Ed- ward of his erown, but to preserve order while the eloquence flows. In Gérmany, on the other hand, where the laws regardibg "lese ma- joste" are so strict, scarcely a 'week passes without the conviction of some unfortunate person who has dared to infringe one of the score of clauses in the law, and suffers accordingly. > majeste;" gucoinetly defined iv the crime of uttering an insult to the ruling monarch of the country. In the a statute book no fewer than 125 paragraphs are devoted to expounding the law, and 900 hooks of reference br the information of law- vers have been published on the intei- cate subject. . The law is so worded as to bring within its scope any remark which can by the erexcise of great ingenuity be twisted into soniéthing reflecting, be it ever so remotely, on the ¢har- acter or person of the sovercign, and to make it a criminal offence. The clauses have been so loosely worded that 'the widest possible interpretation may be placed on any remark which falls under suspicion. "Lose majesto' can be committed by words or hy actions, in private conversations no less than in public speeches, and in personal and confidential letters to friends or relations, as well as in newspaper articles or books, Prison For Editor. If two persons are carrying on a conversation alone in a private room and ono of them should make & re mark disrespectful to the kaiser, 'the other may denounce "him 'to 'the po- lice, would probably be con- victed and sentenced to. imprisonmen authorities find plenty of work to db in the direction of seeuring convig: tions for this offence. The . latest 'case occurred a! fow days ago, when a Berlin butcher was sentenced to six months' "imprison- ment for having spoken disrespectfully of the kaiser = three years ago. Not long ago the editor of a German newspaper reecived a sentence of three months for remarking in his journal that the kaiser received £2,000 daily for appending his signature to a few state documents, The law of "lege majeste" is no re spector of persons; school boys or old women are equally visited 'with the full penalties. An old woman = of soventy-'hree living in Presden, was sentenced to six months' imprisonment for remarking that the fate of King Alexander of Servia ought to 'hefall King George of Saxony, and a baker's hoy of fifteen, in Silesia, had three weeks' imprisonment for insulting the majesty of the kaiser. If the eulprit is a solMlier, Ris pun: ishment for "lese majeste' is exces sively severe. A private was drums med out of the army and sentenced t6 seven years' imprisonment for saving to a comrade that the kaiser might have slowed down the train in which he was travelling in order to see the salute of the soldiers who were lining the route. Poor Innkeeper. Last year an innkeeper of Lichten- berg -was -sentehced to three months' imprisonment for a somewhat curious form of "lese majéste." It. was al leged against him that in his con versation with his customers' he. used the 'German language in an unworthy fashion, and was not over nice in his expressions © when talking to a police official. He wag 'a conservative, a member of a patriotic rifle club' and had served in the army, but these proofs of his unyuestionable loyalty did not save him from dire punish: ment, One of the most extraordinary pro. secutions was that against a gov- erness. who was convicted of "lesd majeste"' for having written her name in the visitors' book of an hotel im- mediately beneath the signatures of the King of Saxony and two princess- es. Newspaper @litors are frequent victims 'of the law in this connection. Two of them were once sentenced to four months and wine months' im- prisonment respectively, and to heavy fines for publishing an article which was held to suggest in some obscure way that the kaiser was afraid of his own subjects, and a third was con- victed for having published a tele the death of an alleged step-brother of the kaiser. On another occasion, when a news- paper published an incorrect Versiém| of a speech made by the Kaiser to! the persons respon- sible for 'the reporting and publishing! of _the' speach were prosecuted for " "lege majeste." "Kaiser Is A Fool." A German marine, while 4n Kiel on leave, had an argument with a com- rade in a festaurant, and made use of an -expressign which was held to have been ins®iting to the kaiser, He was let off with cight months' im- 'faet, that he was not quite sober ati A "foreigner, visiting Germany may fall En scope of. this absurd "law, th 1 , of sourse, be imprison for its infraction. o American i were, howeter, ar rested and expelled from the countrit for talking (in English) m a 'manne not flattering to Emperor William, Perhaps the most al case of all was one that did not end in a con- _ giction;even - G officialdom was, not proof against the humor of the situation. When the health of the kaiser as being drink at festivities in honor of his birthday at Scharley. in Silesia, a school boy, observed to ile prosecutor immediately set on an action for 'less maieste," but the school boy miraculously escaped "the consequences of his awful deed. There is an old story concerning "lose majeste" which is worth repeat: ing. A man was arrested for remprk ing in a restaurant that '"'the kaisa ie a fool." He was promptly hale | before the magistrate, when he pro: tested that he was not referring | ta the Kaiser Wilhelm, but to the ¥m- peror Francis Joseph. "Oh, that tale wy not do," retorted: the magistrate. "There is only one kaiser to whom you conkld have referred I" The story does not state. how many years' im- prisonment the magistrate was award« ed. KING EDWARD'S GARDENS. The ki dens at 's fruit and vegetable gar- gmore arc probably the most complete in the world. His majesty has had many improvements carried out. The shabby looking old fruit houses have been swept away and replaced by houses more roomy and suitable for fruit culture. The king and queen are very fond of the s at Windsor, and spend urs there in the summer. Just before Jrocending abroad, the king paid a visit to the gardens, mo- toring Sows from Yrotdon lot the oa pose. His majesty was the gardens by. ome . of the forenien and inspected all the improvements that have been carried out. The King said was hted with what he had seen. He took tea in private head er's house. the al dairy, close by. The favorite lowers the king nd ueen are maimaisons, violets gn and ial attention is paid them. - = descriptions, Anvohg the x matoes raised in the gardens 'a fa- vorite called "Frogmore Prolific." _ Mr. MacKellar, hig majesty"s head gardener, has done wonders with the crops, he his a, most efficient stafl under him, foremen of the flower, fruit and vegetable departs ments being all skilled men. If ever there was a epecific for an ono complaint, then Carter's Litt Liver Pills are a specific for sick head-- ache, and every woman should know this. Only one pill 'a dese. Try them. The Great Northern and City Elec- tric Railway company of London, is going to try carrying children for half fare in order to stimulate Sunday traffic in the tube. "The harder it is to acquire a dollar the Harder it'is to give it up. What Colds : Lead To Not the Lungs Only, But Every Organ of the Body in Dan- ger From Neglected Colds. DR. CHASE'S 'LINSEED AND TURPENTINE Most people know that such ail ments as pncumonif and consumption have their beginning in a cold, but all do not realize that other, vital organs of the body are almost equally liable. Not infrequently colds settle on: the liver or kidneys, causing serious diss case of these organs. In other cages colds hang on until the system is run down and exbausted and so left in a fit state to fall prey to contagious diseases, The only safe way is to speedily got rid of all colds 'before "they become fastened on the system. 3 This can best be, accomplished by the use of Dr, Chase's Syrup of Lin- seed and Turpentine, This medicine has come to be con- sidered indispensable in the home as a cure for colds, bronchitis, croup, asth- ma and whooping cough. John Clark, coachman, Port Hope, Ont., writes: "Being exposed to all sorts of weather, Y trcneany cateh cold. Last winter 1 was 80 bad with a cold that 1 could not speak shove a whisper, and had great pains in the chest. At last I feared it would de- velop into consumption if 1 did not succeed in getting proper treatment. A ° friend advised me to try Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine, and 1 began to improve before I had taken half a bottle. One bottle cured my - cold, which, 1 believe, would have pro- ven very werious if I had nol used this i ogy 's 8. of Linseed and . Chase's Sy i Turpentine, 2c. 3 bottle, at all deal- ers, of Edmanson, Bates & Co., Tor- onto. To protect you against imita- tions, the portrait and ture of Dr. A. W. Chase, the prisonment in consideration of the signa! famous } book author, a

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