SECOND SECTION. 7.50. good things we hava me particularly good 7.30 to 10 o'clock. KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SS . -------------- HTGOWNS . Cotton, different styles. rimmed with ing and pd with fine embroidery. ) 1.200 At, 69¢ Each. a Waists : Green, Navy, Brown, ck of black. These are ¥ ht, 374c Yard raped over figure -night.} Ss A Silks pT 5 - i ROB. i ahh London, Nov. 30 case contin in London, and ds police court at Mary is probable thal the estimates, which ged, was ymas Druce Druce, she by an aristocrat Duke of betwoen tty shade of brown, tens intently and we until 187Y x eA To we In oun eXtraordinary evident tbo rect. 1 wo take £300,000 a year as the total rental this capitalized magistrate. mean an immense fortune in itself. to by The dram Y and 6 15¢ yard. phase of ti to title 1: courts refused to gra w order. -- estates of the present e of | 1 Dr se was beginni to ¥ Jand are 1 int \ \ ant ap Po to... < At present the plaintiff is not mak ing a direct claim upon the estate of : : Thomas Charlies Druce, sworn to | pear od in the pers n gt ied Shirts died on Dee. 23 1564. amby 1 n Austral % . s Herbert Dru i He ol to hav tier right] the Duke of Portlanti. But if he linen frontsy some with nephew, who said he sgw h Mrs. A Ih take ' should succeed in establishing his right coffin, terest in the Portl much to the De Walden property, he & dently expects that will in Eve of IC Dew that of the duke. This would mean e are 79c quality, others 2A 13 Send FO ony land ar ress the transference of such estates 8&8 go George Hollamby Druce, is proceedi rainst | : 2 last-nan for perjury, inasmu er, at} hd 5¢ Each. he avers Thomas Che Druce yn Oct. 19th. 1516 _ : : with keclom ' tlie tall re ha th i Y --- Bazar " ran heir, the life interest went to Lady | But. now George Hollamby Druce is ing in value so far "a size and = was a mock one, and that A Runaw | n Beker Steet | Howard de Walden, and so to her son. seeking to establish that the fifth | tv go. ¢ io Fo i | duke did marry in the name of T. C, The Portland estates cover an was in reality the fifth Duk t Acco : nd. laim s You Like ATE cuteness oni \ { 1 : | Immense Property Involved. | Deuce, who was this George Hollam: cousidecably Souter "than The present charge is regarded byiby's grandfather. On these grounds whole © iddlesex. Monaghan, emig , ving his ap} ticeship sOpntey scat at Hotton, | George Hollamby Drude and those act-| he will seek to establish his title to to America s heir a Y the Thames, hd went The question that the courts are|i.e on his behalf as a sweliminary | this London estate. a that it was i the 1 "drag : vesend and sent for his|now asked to decide is Was this | to a struggle for the Lin estate| This property alone is worth an al | 000 to £150,000, if we take the CS. in the coffin i \ ed mock owhere, a} t sixteen-year-old son. man, Druce, the owner of the bazaar, | of the present Lord Howard de Wal | most fabulous fortune. It lies in the | ev figure, that a barial. t frienc sw relatiy »w three | Now for the first time the Druce grandfather of George Hallamby Druce, | jo. i region of Oxford street, » riland [oent. a sf] £3 gs The essential facts in this roma vears lived with his wife, spending | fam ly learned that the missing father | really the fifth Duke of Portland ? | Tn his will the fourth duke of Port-| place, Cavendish square, Wimpole four per £4.750,000, But case were first published in 18 The his n freely. In 1520. his wife's | was "the proprietor of a bazaar mj Lord Howard de Walden comes into | jand directed that this property | street, Harley street, Wigmore streot thid does not fully represent. | Baker street. The boy was taken the case by reason of the will left by | should descend to his som, the fifth| and other thoroughfares. When it | wealth of dike. td > and 39¢, others at 39%¢. claimant was then Mrs. Auna Druce. fortune having disappeared, he desert- ak . h ! TOT Several verre Mrs DFT; who bet 60 Wer ANN Wer -ohilireh there, educated AL 8 naval academy | the fourth duke, who provided that in | duke. avitl to 'hix son's heir. | cama into the Bossosmion of the Dow- . . sent to sea His sister, | the event of the fifth duke and Mk} Fuiling the fifth duke having anager Lady de Walden it is recorded | tuary, tapestry furniture lieved herself to be the widow of the: For s the Druce family at]and ags eldest legitimate son of Thomas Burs eard 1 Y { f the claimant, was also! brother dying without heire the life | heir, the property was to descend in | that it furnished her with the splendid alone are worth a fortune, Some le Charles Druce, of the Baker r tl i he seer and lived for many years) interest in the estate should go to] the female line. On the assumption! income of £150,000 a year, It is im-| of the value of thess treasures . Bazaar, , made unavailing efor t Iv repented of his de y father, who now appears asithe survivor of four sisters and then | that the fifth duke did not marry, the! possible to say exactly what it | gathered from the fact that a } and Duchesse Satin. compel the consistory court to grant and, di ri that the shin on |the owner of a residence at Brighton,|to the descendants of that survivor estate went to the Dowager Lady [yields to-day, but its value has risen | table there is said to be worth £15, her an/ order to open the grave of which the father of the present laim- | & hunting box in Leicestershire, and a | Lord Henry Bentinck, dying without | Howard de Walden considerably sinee that time, and it | 000, 1 the tallest one : 'What sin d fhore were : catond Yikan du forme dara. by ts dada YSICIANS' FORTUNES. with the facts. Three medical men at a re were many reasons | than i rmer years, but t a PHYSICL least hath left estates still larger than |commig¥ forbidden fruit. wild turkey should be chos: | was unusually high, A g fying fea-| \ f tine Thirt rs « 'He ate wl of roast beef. The wild tur- | ture was a large number of lady ex-| Large Estates Left--Last Words lhe of these, Thirty years ago ; op pted Adam? .bungdant when the pilgrims | hibiters, aud the fock pre 'ook of Famous Doctors. Dr, Blut died worth more than a | Right. Woe tem third of & million pounds--more ex- | Eve. "at Pivmouth Rook; he was a a number of blue ribbons and medals | British Medical Journal. oS I and courageous bird, and] of merit, of which the owners were] Nothuagel, who died alone in his actly, £350,000; during fifty three A ot a x » vy proud. The horse show is|{ room, noted his own symptoms to the Wilke of Sleenutus juruisssional Fife Sir nd haw 1 itated and high-class fashionable finds | last. A letter to his assistant is said {Wiliam & epner accumulate enor 1 hesital L the ie Tails In tor tu lin mous sum of £375,000, though it is | fused. Hehind her sat a littla was the largest that soared heaven- | exceed ward above the fields. His color was | on tifil blue-black, and shove like | of t! n. All the ladies exhibit- to have ended as follows: "Written |W ) " ) band \ mirror, and his Weight was frequent-| ing have a neat uniform, which gives! late on the evening of July 6th, after doubtful if he ever made more thin ry oP who tor; 1k » 3 Iv between thirty and forty pounds. {a very distinctive character » | experiencing these severe attacks. . . 412.000 in any year; ow a rr ny a ats Pas ' -----_ 3 pune ilv domesticated and inde- | that of any other association ito- | died of calcification . of the arteries full Ish Rerschalte nee oh " ished ¥' , tell us; how an : a | i ; 000 rT . rmitage died, at: 4 med his | mobile but our! Traube also made observations on (7 oa y -d Bass +80 ; (sixty-six, worth £217,000; Sir Erasmus « 'fie had to marry Eve. ason | | BOMBING a . Letter From Greater New|' d New Holiday Books. York. k Special ..| "The Weavers," hy Sir Gilbert Par lug yv come and rood he never t r [vss | a po » > ; e morning, } 4 Arethusa, by F. Marion Craw pest MOEN Es chalienge of the bakd- | oll-time friend and companion, the|himseli to the very end. Locock ex- | Ya i s | ford, 1 no Wa . i» 3 1 jot dead 'vet 2 the d ¢l ; } %: ent at the | Wilson left £264,000 behind him, and 4 - "The Yar of Destine." : ary : Ron i chic) a ant night hawk ; he | horse, 1s not . ead ye in the day of | pressed a wish 0 be presen at he Sir Andros Clark's savings reached . i ' tiny," by William l salves w i red fox. or motn- | his supremacy he was nop responsible | postmortem examination. on himself, | Sir AD ¥ Don't Invite Rheumatism. * ong, " 5 ---- - * . ith equal for a tithe of the murders and acci-land among Cuvier's last recorded { £204,000. Rheumatism and a variety of other s "Bud, by Neil Munro. } when ine dents of the automobiles: we may be|words is a remark, as his fingers | --------r---------- painful affections cannot come as r The Shuttle," by Fr. Hodgson Bur- AND THEIR FAILURE 0 | PURel : ty. He was native able. 40 get about the world consider Piwitched involuntarily, 'Charles Bell | Adam's Punishment {long as your blood is pure amd abun- nett, - S X y ; t § § ts | 8 nner born, and the i but it is at heavy penal-!is right; 'Co sont Jes nerfs la volonte | In. the Intest number of Heimgarten, | gant. These affections are due to peise e| "The Halo," by the author of ABOLISH CHRISTMAS. eppayl Jul MW Bey jie a of © same hirds that ble cost. ui sont maladies.' Dyce Davidson, | which has just been published ations in the blood which must be 'ex v | "Pam. eh 10} tls Lic | not leave us in the winter for | of the Jews to kill off | professor of Aberdeen, died imme: | Graz, Pastor Rosegger tells this story: | yelled. Keep your vitality high and £4 "The Daughter of Anderson Crow." New York School Besieged W i _ hy Ane el - ¢ our dear old friend, Santa ( : ately after saying to his class, | "1 vis a school one day where {cour blood rich and red by use' of d "Susan," 10,000 sold before publi- Lett Begging That Fi y 4 x 3 : 3 . to knoek ir whole calender of saints | speaking of the pext . meeting which | Bible iostruction was a part of the Wade's Iron Tonic Pills (Laxative r. | ation. ors g8ing y : ne 2 has aroused a heavier storm than was | vas never to take place, 'Four o'clock | daily course, and, in order to test They are n great nerve strengthemer le "Light fingered Gentry," by D. G. Stand Be. Taken Ag him. Fr re expected. Letters from all parts of on Monday, gentleman; four. o'clock." | the children s knowledge, asked some |. 4 flood maker. In boxes, 25e., at a | Phillips. = Jewish Encroachment on A hurct he a when "the. eagle mtry are received by the bun Several doctors have taken their | questions. One class of little girls [w, do's Deng Store. Money back if not - "Days Of," by Henry VanDyke. Liberty. ta. hn tly - ily, begging our most influ-| leave with a blessing to those around | looked particularly bright, and I asked | gq tisfactory. > >-| "Romance of An Old-Fashioned Gen- i : i charac men to UAke a firm stand them. Astley Cooper's last recorded | a > |tleman, by Hopkinson Smith. Sptvnl Se ™ 8 ! I ey y ye Rick of the mtzuest the® school board and the words are, "God bless you and good- | An immense stock to select from at LAIN, a : 5 : o onidand ror It seems to me he onlv!bye to you all!" He had previously | "IR. Uglow & Co's. the greatest Purit hols it atin Y 1 daxtrorine all | fair way to look at it The { to his physicians, Rright and | year, has come gnd gone, but Was t the!pl ! ik Rims rE me | Christian countries of England, Ger-| Chambers, "Goa's will be done; God | \s rion. f} 3 L | many and the United States, bl vou both 1" adding, "You must of Everything marked down in port- -- m-- " hr Dagrican fsb. hawk have piven the Jews greater freedom '« e me, but 1 shall take no more | it ble lamps, gas apd electric chande- = BCT us ha ae ed apy than the pagan countries. As a proof 'medicipe." Benjamin Brodie . was n |liers; Newman-Spriggs Electric Co., : WAG a Ha Sy red of this assertion is the fact that Ju-|heard to mutler, "After all, God is 0 ™ Princess street. . hiir Lif gi i 3 th | daism and Jews have risen to wealth very good." The saddest of all re "nt New stock of gold-filled - eye glasses : Ec \ 1 pH h ne a and power equal to the best Christian | corded last words are probably those is | for Christmas at Bests', , 2, can a a an or k SOR Citizens: a Jewish family, the Roths of Oliver Goldsmith, who, when asked | peoperly tested later. Bi aH - me ----- fF ohilds. sta without a peer in the by his physician if his mind was nt @nicure sets in ebony ne . i of to-day; the Je case, said: "No, 'it ix not !I"" On the as | designs, at Bote' Fs handsome 3 New Ly coveted | re the merchnnts, bankers other hand, William Hunter's mind See Bibby's $2 fu. lined doves. prize salely ie ad ati sto of | stocks ey- seems to have been full of bright ---- A cry whet it is evident that g we moment of death, for while he. the | hristian observances not in- he said: "NH 1 couM hold a pen, what the plunder are some notable | For k i a book IT could write ! Pasteur and Darwin, though not be a EE EEE has Lonaires only longing to the me ical profession, are | : : al recipients of the i= remembers venerated by it as teachers. Darwin's | = A in seem to think that as ane of the } last words were: "1 am not the i % hankfd : i 34 4 . to be thankfael for memories of least afraid to die. Pasteur was ws earth has we {oo ' h as offered a of milk, and, heing un It y rv mach as ¥ x : vat { i emands with w made to consol able to » it, murmured, "I can- | = % . mous crops--to the tune of 3 and ignorant host at the poles and not He passed away with one hand | The skating season 18 000,000,008. It is beyond the power | to tor our old time liberty for alin his wie - i other grasping, a | 5 here an we ha of thought: ti e can reach the{ £3 That costly jewel ucifix astly are mentioniad the last 'good 4 yah figures, but the mind is not able to {V0 C0 Filo, must not be words of Mirabeau, which are said to | ING best Seso} Smut of Fhe gras bulk. With our 5 qo nin of we have paid dear- {have been addressed tn doctor He ti 0 oC ey } vast crops \ ara wor underi, oo it. and, if seeds be, will hgh wrote wmper which re i Boo tribut tas ' Pe ig dd | Y for it gave to his} ian, the philosopher ICH i X whi ane i ped ns to] BROADRRIN. | Cabanis, the single yard "Darmir." | en' 3 e } Another account, which may he an ex- | NM psPatett Loside An- --- Ee panded version of this, is that, after ! e Su po rts ,a i - x . Wanlew' : be. |hegwing for an anodyne, he said re | sh 50 ¥ splendid QEVEN MEN WHOSE AGES AGGREGATE 313 YEARS sae Has Wes i Cheisteniak Ro *: | proadhfally 10 the doctor, "Were vou | The Clarkes, of Duffield, England, are a kable ov ly an hes ra to in Ot my physician and my friend * Did | oe, : i ister ; th A robust hea th. ar. ana Lhe plus a not promise {0 spare me the suf- | b $2.85. There are seven DE a ave of 73} years each wiand, has in her posses tering of Bh " Its * Must 1 wo { : { £ 9 ears, a ~ 'a sate ¢ same shoe, $2.85, rather: iy been (two still are) employed in paper } ion John u Rley ® Shietarening Told. away carrving with me the regret of | T s enh. 3 Ys i re t t i= of white silk edged with sive ii eonfded 3 2? This is y : Y f local paper i Their ages are § - . > having nid in yo lockey Protected Heel, In- making, one being mARAgws of Vie loa Lr bott then back row) thread. When Epworth rectory] Wes ober a long and rhetorical spee "h | 3.50. as follows (reading from le $ 3 gh an Be ihe. (ls. W., destroved by fire John Wesley, then po" ing man ed Tongue $2 00 Adam, 82 years 6 te 3 w.onth) Paul, 74 years 6 months ; an infant, wax carried to the house | fy is riven to few 'men of -any-pro--| y = mister, not i8 gl a Hl years 8 w.onths ; John, 69 years 4 Alippines: | of her grendiather, Dr. Pashley fession to accumulate such large for | : Joseph, 73 years ; i ere : at i As scme of them have settled sen to dis - _---- tunes as the late Lord Brampton and | INDID BOOTS. months ; Silas, 64 years 1s BED Ras Westmore nd. another in Kat the New A Purely Vegetable Corn Cure. Nj, Murphy, K.C., have left behind | away from their native place--on? in ther for T any years, so thev | Englands both at home Putnam's Corn. Extractor contains ghem--fortunes amounting to £141,000 | --the 'whole 'family have not beentogelaes ed mid he abroad ; but is entirely vegetable in [and £234,000 respectively, but to say. | ; " tr a Ce } § 3 - . . " Ri FF STORE. gpealy upended boat tS WE 0 LL | he 10 Me Se i ae ny i WILLIAM WALCOTT, ale and strong, THES f - tad nother 10uP Garden, has been brought 10 a satis- jeauses distominrt. cures quickly, 'such an achieve only po J "» 4 F . : they gave the photographer a commission to take another gIOuUp } factory end: the entries were fewer painlessly; permanently. {in the law is scarcely in accordance In "The Fatal Flower,' at The Grand, om . } 4 . | . when they were 100.