RECONR SECTION, -- ---- -- YEAR 76. THE PRINCE AND PRINCESS DEL LEN CESS Dl DRACO 99 New York, May 27.- del Drago, a scion of one of the oldest Roman families, the Church of the Sacred Heart, Brooklyn, to Mrs. Josephine Schmid, widow of August Bchmid, founder of the brewery, which Mrs. Schmid has con- --Prince Giovanni was wedded in Lion trolled since her husband's death. Mrs, Schinid is popularly supposed to be one of the wealthiest women in the United Statice. When August Sch mid died, in 1889, was valued at $2,000,000. JOY IN Recent es | run ! widow the--Lion brewery MBS HOCH. A. IRAY., timatcs of tho value of the property from $10,000,000 to 220,000,000, idea the the brewery may from the fact that during when the coneern was in the hands of a receiver the profits wero in excess of £500,000. Besides, Mrs. Schmid known to have made investments real estate that has enormously creased in value. Mr. Schmid' the with the powcr to, dispose off fit. One-third of the Some of be gathered one vear Irom in will appointed sole it pro- ato, she saw as NETHERLANDS Birth of Heiress to Throne Calls Forth Exira-| ordinary Manifestations of the People's Loyalty and Aftection. Hpeeial Correspondent. - e Hague, May 3. ONTRARY to pectation, the lit tle princess, whose | (he red arrival has given immense joy to the Dutch people, is not to be call-* suthorities. of mother, her two giandmothers, the "queen: and the duchess of Mecklen- ex- ihurg, and of the queen herself. A. touching little scene took place in chamber of the palace when the child - was presented for the first time to the officials who have to no- tify the fact of birth to the municipal This chamber, furnished ed Wilhelmina asi, the style of Louis XV, with a mag- her first name. On Saturday morning her: birth was registered in the municipal ar- chives under the name and title of Iter Royal High ness Juliana Lou ise Emma Marie Wilhelmina, princess of Orange-Nassau, duchess of Mecklenburg, ete Tt is the queen of Holland's choice, and she has expressed her wish that the people of the Netherlands shall hencsforth 'call . the new-born child Princess Juljana. The Dutch peo ple, however, who love the affectionate diminutive, are so far disobeying the queen as to call the little one "Juli ekje," which means 'Little Julie." Her majesty has dictated an expla nation of the historic associations ich have suggested a name not yet in modern Holland. sen chosen, she says, in membrancd, of that ancestress, worthy of all respect and veneration, of the two branches of the house of Orange- Nassau, the Countess Juliana of Nas- sau, born countess of Stolberg. The second name, Louise, has been chosen by her parents to do honor to the memory of Louise de Coligny, wife of William the Saint, and the three oth: er names of the new princess are those OWI re WHAT THE KIDNEYS DO. What Booth's = Kidney Pills Are Doing For Kingston People. All the blood in the Body through the Kidneys every three min- utes. wi The Kidneys filter the blood. They work night and day to daily remove about 500 grains of impure matter. If they fail some part of. this impure matter is left in the Blood, bringing on Phin in the back, head ache, dizziness, irregular heart, hot, dry skin, rheumatism, gravel, dropsy, deposits in the urine. Baoth's Kid ney Pills make the filtering right and overcome Kidney trouble. Hundreds of Frontenac county residents have found this out. Mrs. F. Young, No. Kingston, Ont., says: "1 caught a heavy cold over a year ago and it settled across my back and kidneys. I became stiff and sore <hat I could not turn in bed. A dull burning pain settled in my sides, the kidney secretions were very irregular and specially frequent at night. My sleep was so disturbed that 1 would awake just as fatigued as on going to bed. Nothing benefitted me and 1 had consulted the best specialists in the city. 1 learned of Booth's Kidney pills through a friend and proc ured them at Mahood's Pharmacy. I com- menced their use and Ww cured Jess than five weeks of each and every symptom of the dread Bright's Dis- ease, 1 am well and and feel like a new person.' Sold by dealers passes 128 Queen street, in strong Price, 50c. The R, T. Booth company, limited, Fort Erie,» Ont,, sold Canadian agents, nificent Persian carpet, is one of the chief audience chambers of the court at The Hague, and here, shortly be- fore eleven o'clock in the morning, as- sombled the ministers of justice and foreign affairs with the sheriff and the elerk of the archives, in court dress, On the stroke of eleven -the opened and a tall, solidly built young man in uniform came in with an officer. It was Prince Hendrick and his adjutant, The prince was excited with joyful emotion, and, grasping the hands' of the two ministers, he said several tunes, "I am more than happy, Iam enormously happy." Then ke said, "Jt will he a great honor for me to show you my child." It had previously been arranged that the act of showing the child to the ministers according to the law should be a mere fcoemality, and a nurse with the baby in her arms should pass the open door of tne audience chamber and then return. But by Prince Hendrik's wish~ the -nuxse brought the child into the room. The ministers of justice and of eign affairs ave both middle-aged men, with gray hair and keen eves, But at the first sight of the princess of Orange, that tiny babe with blue eves, they trembled with emotion and their own eyes weve moist, as they bent over this child of destiny, who will one day wear the crown of . the Netherlands. All through the past two days im mense crowds of people nave been drawn up in the Noord Einde waiting for their tin to sign their names in the' visitors' book. For the first time the doors of the most private and secluded court of Europe have been thrown wide open to the people«of all ranks and classes who throng forward to pay tneir af- fectionate homage. It is characteristic of the temporary abolition of all class ~distinction dur this reign of joy that. for in- stance, the Spanish minister of for eign" affairs signed his name next to the porter of the Hotel Indes, and that peasants in their awkward dress are jostling with the corps dip- lomatique and the old aristocracy of the Netherlands. Extraordinary are still taking place in the streets and restaurants. It not only the middle classes and peasants who have dancing in the streets hand in hand and singing and shouting w ith ohild-like gaiety, This infection of oy caught hold of every one and one of the most distinguished officers of the court told me, quite simply, how he wept and laughed alternately as, with many other gentlemen and la- dies, he danced down the Lange Voor- hont. One amusing scene took plage the Hotel Central, where 1 have It was besieged by revelers, on the tables and sang anthem again any again. Kon- doors for ing des scenes of enthusiagm heen at heen staying. who danced the national Suddenly they recognized Dr. wer, the queen's physacian, whd was sitting quietly at one of the tables. Instantly a great shout went up and in- fh [Joicings and KINGSTON, ONTA DRAGO. perty was to go to lier and the rest 140 the two children when they became : X i k oe y income derived | of age, the profits of their share during | vane of fifteen miles, has steamed at their minority to be set aside and added to ihe principal. One child, a | son, died. The other, Pauline, was in | a eonvent when her father died, and fol in 1896. The year before ' she had heen married to Hugh A. Mur ray, of the firm of Flower & Co In January, 1908, Mrs Murray eof age A his | brought suit against her mother to re- | abe completed warship rei oxceutrix of the es | cover her share of the estate which sho | face of the ocean : estimated at several millions dollars in value. _--- | Nees, hundreds of men and women pressed | around him, drinking to his health. | It happened that he had not a glass w his side, but with a salt-cellar he clinked the innumerable of | hie admirers until they joined hands land danced around his table. The poor doctor was nearly killed by the | enthusiasm, and his back was slapped {by strong hands until he must have { been black and blue. |. But all these rejoicings are unau- | thorized and of a merely private j character. Ten days from the birth has 'been appointed for the official re- | illuminations in every and village in Holland, and then some six weeks hence 'there will Ibe a great public ceremony when Princess Juliana christened tle Groote Kerk. The Dutch people are going to | joy themselves solidly for many days {to come, : ! glasses city in 18 en- | All About Neuralgia. Neuralgia is the most excruciating pain 'that a human being is called upon to emdure. Those who suffer from it should never resort to opiates that is making a bad mafter worse. The ailment should be radically cured and it can be with Dr. Hall's Rheu- matic Cure. Neuralgia is a consti- tutional disease. Its source.is in a disordered state of the blood. Dr. Hall's. Rheumatic Cure removes the cause and it so regulates the vital organs a8 to make the cure perman- ent. De. Hall's, Rheumatic Cure is a great blobd purifier and spring tonic. In bottles 50c.iat Wade" drug stor RIO, SATURDAY, na THE NEW WARSHIP SHE IS REGARDED AS WON- DERFUL SEA MONSTER. The Temeraire, Besides Being the Most Formidable Vessel Afloat is a Marvel of Marine Archi- tecture. London, May 28.--The new battle ship Temeraire has just been commis sioned at Devenport for service in the main fleet by Capt. Alexander Ludovic Duff, lately na v a | assistant tor the control ler of the navy. Jy an ioter- esting ¢ o i nei dence, Capt Duff, as midshipman © o Mm mission in the last Te merairo when she hoisted her pen- nant for the first time in 1878, This vessel, which was one of -the "iavin: | cible monsters" | at. the battle of Alexandria, car- ried fourteen guns, with an range of five miles, steamed at 13.8 knots, had eloven inches 'of com- pound armor, equivplent to four in- ches of Krupp, was 280 feet long, and carried 592 officers and! men: The new Temeraire hat an extreme i extreme twenty-two knots, has eleven inches of Krupp belting, 530 fect long, anc about twenty more men than hor predecessor. Whatever the future of naval design may hold, as suggested hy the recent eryptic utterance the prime minis ter. the Temeraive is the most formid 18 only carries of upon tho | The first boarding her is striking impression that of extreme roomi- sweep of deck is magnifi- broken ond by the wing and line turrets, with adl 'upper | structure reduced to a minimum. | Some idea, of the magnitude of this war leviathan may be gathered from | the number of her decks. Sho has a | flying deck, boat deck, battery deck, main deck, lower deck, armored deck and double-boitom flat. Between each tier is splendid head room and per- fect ventilation, Electricity is the primary factor in the vitality of this wonderful vessel. The switchboard room, with upward of 300 controlling keys, is one of the sights of the ship. . The installation is on a novel plan. Four dynamo: gonerate the current, which circulates through two .gigantic cables weighing fifteen ton, carried entirely around the intevipr of the ship. i, These main cables are tapped at fre quent intervals, and 140 miles oi wire brpnching off from them give light and ot. ring bells, operate lifid, coaling winches, ammunition hoists, ventila- ting fans, work. the smaller guns, and actuate the fire-control apparatus of the big ones. The wireless installation is of = tho new Mark 11 pattern, with a radius of 1.100 miles. The operating room bolow, instead of on deck, as hereto fore, and the wires passing up to the masthead gafis are caged around, be ing dangerous. A telephone exchange, with upward of 120 connections to all parts of the ship, is another of the sights of the Temeraire. z Access on} cent, i centre i is to the fire-control stations a a ALBERT HOUSE MADE SPECTACULAR DIVE of | Liver Pills. Y 29, 1909. aloft is through the interiors of the tripod masts. It is a weird climb from the lower deck up through 140 fect of slantwise steel tunneling, lit at intervals by arc lamps. One great ad- vantage all rigging is abolished, enabli a wider radius of gunfire to be attained. On her recent gi trials - the Temeraire fired eight of inch guns in broadside at one dis- charge, and the observation party in the vontrol stations could follow the flight of the projectiles through glass | for fifteen miles by the columns of spray 500 and to every ricochet. The main gun turrets, each weighing 400 tons, with its twin pair of fifty- eight-ton weapons and twelve-inch armored walls, are operated by hy- draulic power, the pressure being 1,000 pounds on the Square inch. The abolition of secondary batteries has reduced the number of fighting stations, and the adoption of tur- bines has greatly simplified engine- room work, hence . the Dreadnoughts spurti of 600 feet high carry smaller complements than their predecessors. The magazines store 242 tons of twelve-inch projec. tiles and 120 tons of M.D. cordite charges for these same weapons, The coal bunkers will store 2,400 tons. At full power the Babcock and Wilcox boilers, working at 235 pounds' pressure, consume 500 tops every twen- ty-four hours. of The Temeraire has ninety-five sets of auxiliary engines, She has ten goarchs | light projectors, each four feet in di- ameter, and capable of giving a com- | bined blaze equal to 4,000,000 candle- | power. . The officers' quarters are exceptional- lv spacious and luxurious, the mid- shipmen's flat being the largest. space below decks. The gunroom, wardroom, ante-ropm and admiral"s quarters are all contiguous, just forward of the boiler-room bulkhead. The bulkheads below the armor deck are unbroken by any doors or aper- tares, to enhance the invulnerability the ship against torpedo attack. Three lifts obviate the necessity of making the sixty-foot climb from the engine-room bed to the upper deck. The Temeraire will have cost. 'hard upon $10,000,000 by the time she hoists the pennant, and in going around her one can well believe it Retire Or Resign ?--No. i Toronto Telegram Conservatives play into the hands of | their adversary by suggesting that | Sir Wilfrid Laurier's preference is for | the ease of private life. Ease, minus power and plus obscur- ity, has charms for Sir Wilfrid | Laurier, i Politics has been' 'the only mnon-do- | mestic interest in Siv Wilfrid Laurier's | life for nearly half a century. i Politics rescued Sir Wilirid from the | editorial career or law practice 'in| which his - powers no could have never | commanded rich rewards. Sir, Wilirid | Laurier's whole public life has been a | venture after the premiership which | the Borden opposition imagines he is willing to throw away. | While life and health last Sir Wil-| frid Laurier will never give up the] leadership of the Canadian govern-| ment. It is a poor style of politics | this miserable game of waiting for the undertaker to give a party the vie- | tory for which it is afraid to fight, May the health and life of Sir Wilirid | Lauriér long survive his premiership. meaiteirmmip ei Will positively cure sick headache and prevent its return. Carter's Little This is not talk, but truth. Ono pill a dose. Sce advertise ment. Small pill. Small dose. Small price. Stumbling over ling. golf is bad stumb- + | of these tripod masts is that || of the Temeraire | MAN-A-LIN Is An 'Excellent Remedy for Constipation, There are many ailments directly dependent upon con- stipation, such as biliousness, discolored and pimpled skin, inactive liver, dyspepsia, over- worked kidneys and headache. Remove constipation and all of these aliments dis- appear. MAN-A-LIN can be relied upon to produce a gentle action of the bowels, making pills and drastic cathartics entirely un- necessary, A dose or two of Man-a-lin is advisable in slight febrile attacks, la grippe, colds and influenza. HE MAN-ALIN CO., COLUMBUS, 0HI10, U. 8. A. Train leaves union station, 4 9 (8 |r Hsad? pdonnam, ~ Naps Return limit Oct. 31st. Low Round-Trip : Rate will be i on following dates : Ries 1st, 15th, 20th; July 13th, 27th; A Sy, th. Good to return within vs. Full particulars at K. & P. and ©. P. R. Ticket Office, Ontario St. "Phone, 50 F. CONWAY, | Gen. Pass, Agent. BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY. ~~ Onl DICKSON, ' Agent, Quebec Steamship Company LIMITED, River & Gulf of St, Lawrence Summer Cruises in Coal Latitudes i -- Twin Screw Iron S88. "'Campana," with electric lights, electric bells and all modern comfort. SAILS FROM MONTREAL ON MON- DAYS, at 4 pm. 7th and 21st June, 5th and 19th July," 2nd, 16th and 80th August and 18th September, for Pictou, N.8., calling at Quebec, Gaspe, Mal Bay, | 500 tons. Sailing 1st, TRAVELLING, Forest, Stream, AND Seashore WRITE General Passenger Department INTERCOLONIAL RAILWAY MONCTON, N.B. Enclosing ten cents' for postage. FOREST, STREAM and SEASHORE fs a book of over 300 pages, liustrated in colors and hall tones, giving well written descriptions of the country con- tiguous to the line of the railway in Québec, New Brunswick and Nova Scdtia, replete with historic incident, legend and folk-lore. It has also chap- ters of Prince Edward Island, The Mag- dalen Islands and Newfoundland, and 'is wotthy of a place in any library. ET DRG North-West, RAILWAY SYSTEM Mani- Low be Sud- To the Canadian tobn, Saskatchewan and Alberta. round-trip second-class tickets will jssued via Chicago, North Bay or bury, on following dates: June 15th, 20th; July 13th, 7 10th, 24th ; Sept. 7th, 21st return within 60 days from going date. Albert House made a specta 20th. House has made many oth diving, with the intention of Bent enough for the leap. _ ly made arrangements. THE NUL dk AMTDECC LIRIDGE \ = intended to leap from the Brooklyn Bridge. 'unmolested, made his dive from the Williamsburg structure. House, who is married and has followed the occupation of perience as a professional diver before, making the leap from the big structure That time arrived on Thursday, when he executed his design with careful- of 187 feet from the mew om bridges and it was r cular dive er jumps fr carpe but in the last year he Sa THE THOT DIE, JF FET oo ww Ce sw Williamsburg Bridge, on May eported to the police that he had While the police were guarding the latter structure House nter for a living, has had fio ex- had been practising steadily at high when he considered himself pro- | 1909. | good returning on or before ( ALASKA YUKON PACIFIC Seattle, Wash., June 1st Special round trip sale daily, May 20th to to Oct. i" tickets on Sept. 30th, ct, 31st. i a | aq's | Military Tournament | Montreal, May 28th, 20th. Round trip | vickets will be issued at $5.80, including long admission coupon to Tournament {good going on P.M. trains, Thursday, ay 27th and all trains Friday and Saturday, May 28th and 29th good re- | turning on or before Monday, May 31st. { for full particulars, J. P. HANLEY, | Agent, Corner Johnson and Ontario Sts. | i Living And The Salaries. | Toronto News, Guido H. Marx pointg out in Science Lian while the cost of living has been | rising the salaries of American ¢ol {lege instructors have actually fallen. | While none too large vet, the salaries fot full-fiddged professors have ad- "Is Good: If you use it you know it is good. will your friends ? tell General Manager, 3 Kin, Perce, Grand River, Summerside, P.E.L and Charlottetown, El NEW YORK FROM QUEBEC Via the far-famed River Baguenay, calling at Charlottetown and alifax, 8.8, Trinidad, 2,600 tons, soils from Quebec 16th and 80th July, 1bih hd 27th August, at 5 p.m. : BERMUDA Summer Excursions, $20 to $30, by the Twin Screw S85. "Bermudian," ©5.- 8th, and 15th June and every 10 days thereafter from New York, Temperature cooled by sea breezes seldom rises above 80 degrees. The finest trips of the season for health and comfort' ARTHUR AHERN, Secretary, Quebec. For tickets and staterontis apply to . P. HANLEY, or £ . KIRKPAT- RICK, Ticket Agents, ton, Ont. ISLANDER LEAVES WOLFE ISLAND. N: 7.809.185 a.m. 3.00--8.00 p.m. 7.80--9.15 a.m. 1008.00 p.m. 7.80915 a.m, 1.00-3.00 p.m. Hreakey's . ay 6.80080 am. 1,00 pan. 7.809.105 a.m. 1,004.00 pan. R.00--9.15 a.m. 1.00-2,30 pan. 9.001280 a.m. 8.00 p.m. LEAVESKINGSTON = A 8.801180 a.m. 2.00--4.80 p.m. TUES. 8.801180 a.m 004.30 pan. WED, 8.30--11.80 a.m, 2.00--4.30 p.m. Thurs. 8.830--12.830 pau. 3.00 p.m. 7 pm. Breakey's Bay and Halliday's & Walker's, 8 p.m. 8.80--11.80 a.m 2.004.830 p.m. 8.830~11.80 a.m. 2.00--4.30 p.m. 8 9.30 aan, 1.158.830 p.m. Sat.--Special trip to Simcoe Island and Spoor's dock, at 2.00 p.m. Time Table subject to change without aotice. 4 Boat calls at Garden Island going to and from Kingston. Lake Ontario & Bay of Quinte Steamboat Co., Limited. STR. "NORTH KING" 1000 Islands --Kingston -- Rochester, Commencing May 80th, Steamer leaves tor 1000 Islands, Alexandria Bay and Gananoque, at 10.15 A.M. on Sundays. Returning leaves at & P.M., for. Roches- ter, N.Y. calling at Bay of Quinte Ports, . WED. THURS, MON, ---------------------- STR. ALETHA--Leaves for Quinte Ports at 8 P.M, dally Sunday. Jay of except ---------- Full information from E. E. HORSEY, J.P, HANLEY, ©. 8. KIRKPATRICK, Agents, Kingston. - v S.8. IONIAN, 9,000 TONS, ' (TWIN SCREWS), This Steamer will carry one class, (second cabin) passengers, at $42.50 ui wards. Sailing June bth; July ard July 81st. For full particulars of ALLAN LINE sailings to Li il Ser. vice), lnsgos, avy a BANLEY. Lota! Agents, Kingsion. STR. MISSISQUOI Will run every Tuesday and Thugsday, from Rockport to Kingston Calling at intermediate points. ved (Crawford's Whar!, f Princess 8t.,) at 3 p.m., for Gananoghe and Rockport. Servite begins May 20th, Time subject to change without notice. CAPT. JOHN A. CARNEGIE. m-------------- vanced considerably; but their assist: ants, the "instructors," of whom the college stafi is largely made up, are worse off than their predecessors were twenty years ago. At Johns Hopkins the average instructor gets $725 a giton. . year, at Brown's $734, and at some other colleges $1,000 or a little more, ex you