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Durham Chronicle (1867), 12 May 1898, p. 8

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Mr. Jâ€"â€" added that 'he had passed an houIr alone in The unfurnished room which I had urged him to destroy, and that his impressions of dread while there were so great, though he had neither heard nor seen anything, that he was eager to “have the walls ba-red and the floors removed as l'had sug- gested. He had engaged persons for the work, and would commence any day I would nune. The day was accordingly fixed. I re- paired to the haunted houseâ€"we went. into the blind dreary room, took up the skirting, and then the floors. Un- der the rafters, covered with rusbbish, was found a trap-dour, quite large en- ough to admit a man. It was closely nailed down. with clamps and rivets of iron. On removing these we descended into a room below. the existence of which had never been Meeted. In this room there had been a window and The American and his wife took charge of the little boy, the deceased brother hearing by his will left his sist- er the guardian. of his only childâ€"and i111 event of the child' s dealbh. the sister inherited. '1 he child died about six mont hs afterwardsâ€"it was supposed to have been neglected and ill-treated. The neighbors deposed to have heard it shriek at night. The surgeon who had examined it after death, said that it 1111s emaciated as if from 11an1t of nonm- ishmenrt and the body was covered with livid bruises. It seemed that one wint- e1 night the child had sought to escape â€"crept oult into the backâ€"yandâ€"tried to scale the wallâ€"fallen 'back exhaust- ed, and been found at morning on the stones in a dy 111g state. «Bwt though there was some evmdence of cruelty, there was none of murder; and the aunt and her husband had song ht to pauiute cruelty by alleging the ex- ceeding stubbornness and pernversity of the child, who was declared b0 be half- 111.1!th Q39 that as it may, at the or- phan's death the aunt inherited her brother’ s for Lune. Before the first wedded year was owt, the American quilted England abruptly, and never returned to it. .He obtained a cruising vessel, which was lost in the Atlantic two years afterwards. The widow was left in affluence; but reverses of vari- ous kinds had befallen ‘her; a bank brokeâ€"an investment failedâ€"she went into a small business and became in< solventâ€"then she entered into service, sinking lower and lower, from house- keeper down to maid-ofâ€"all-warkâ€"nev- er long retaining a place, though noth- ing peculiar against her character was ever alleged. She was considered sob- er, honest, and peculiarly quiet in her ways; still nothing prospered with her. And so she had drapped into the work- house, from which Mr. Jâ€" had taken her. to be placed in change. of the very house which she had rented as mistress in the first year of ‘her wed- ded. life. I would name. _ . The day was accordingly fixed. paired to the haunted houseâ€"we ‘went into the blind dreary mom, tooa up the skirting, and then the floors. Ln- de-r the rafters, covered th’h rubbish, , I l was found a trap-dour, quite large en- ’ ough to admit a man. It wasclosely nailed down. with clamps and rivets of iron. On removing these we descended into a room below. existence of which had never been suspected. a flue, but they 'had been bricked over, evidently for many yea-ms. .By the help of candles we examined this place; it still retained some mouldering fur- nitureâ€"thiree chairs, an oak settle, a In’ this room there had been a window and f floated a kind of compass, with a needle table, all of the fashion of about eighty ‘ years ago. There was a chest of draw- ers against the wall, in which we feud half-rotted away, old-fashioned articles ago by a gentleman at some costly steel buckles than vet yarn ' “'9. had found no difficulty in Openâ€" 1 re- ing the first drawer within the iron safe; we found great difficulty in op- ening the second; it was not locked but it resisted all efforts, till we in- serted in the chinks the edge of a chis- el. When we had thus drawn it forth, we found a very singular apparatus in the nicest order. Upon a small thin book, or rather tablet, was placed a saucer of crystal: this saucer was fill- ed with a clear liquidâ€"on that liquid shifting rapidly round; but instead of the usual points of a compass were sev- en strange characters, not very un- like those used. by astrologers to deâ€" note the planets. A! very peouliar.but not strong nor displeasing odor, came from this drawer, which was lined with a wood that we afterwards discovered to be hazel. \Vhatever the cause of this odour, it produced a material ef- feet on the nerves. We all felt it, even the workmen About ten days afterwards I receiv- ed a letter from Mr. Jâ€"â€", telling me that he had visited the house since I had seen him; that he had found the two letters I had described, replaced in the drawer from which I had taken them; that he had read them with mis- givings like my own; that he had in- stituted a cautious inquiry about the woman to whom I rightly conjectmired they had been written. It seemed that thirty-six years ago, a year be- fore the date of the letters. she had married against the wish of her rela- tiyves am American of very suspicious character; in fact, he was generally be- lieved to have been a pirate. She her- self was the daughter of very reapec- table tradespeople, and had served in the capacity of a nursery governess be- fore the-r marriage. She had a brother, a widower,who was considered wealthy and who had one child of about six years old. A month‘ after the mar- riage, the body of this brother was found in the Thames, near London Bridge; there seemed some marks of violence about his throat, but they were not deemed sufficient to warrant the inquest in any other verdict than that of “found drowned." Vâ€""Na.y, I am well able to afford the cost; for the rest. wllaw me to write “1 will tell you what I would do. I am convinced from my own internal feelings that the small unfurnished room at right angles to the door of the bedroom which I occupied, forms a starting-point om receptacle for the influences which haunt the house; and I strongly advise you to hen \.the wells opened, the floor removed-nay, the whole room pulled down. I obsenve that it is detached from the body of the house, built over the small back- yard, and could be mmoved without injury to the rest of the building.” “And you think. it I did thatâ€"" "You would cut off the telegraph wires. Try it. I am so persuaded that I am right, that I Willi pay half the ex- pense if you will allow me to direct the ppere'tions.” _ _ “Yes, though imperfectlyâ€"and Iacâ€" cept any croahet. pardon the word, however od¢ rather than embrace at once the notion of ghost; and hob- goblins we imbibed in our nurseries. Still. to my untartunate [house the evil 18.15118 name. What an earth can I do wmh the house 3" “The instincts of the tmute creation detect influences deadly to dheir ex- istence. Man's reason has a sense less subtle. because it has a resisting paw- er more supreme. But enougib; do you comprehend my theory: 9". 1'"- 0 “1t. killed your dog! that is fearful! indeed it is strange that no animal can be induced to stay in tlhat. house; not. even a 9%.. never found m xt." THE HAUNTED HOUSE. ,_-__=, -w‘uu.” .uuuu, ”UL insueaa OI the f the usual yoints of a compass were sev- ace; . en strange characters, not very un- Eur-i like those used. by astrologers to de- 5, a , note the planets. A! very peonliar.but 'hty' not strong nor displeasing odor, came aw- i from this drawer. which was lined with and a wood that we afterwards discovered cles to be hazel. Whatever the cause of .awe this odour. it produced a material of- sars feet on the nerves. \Ve all felt it, even [be the workmen who were in the room like ‘" creeping, tingling. sensation from ha th' ti" n! fha finmr- #n ‘L- _-_L_ are . It was a most peculiar faceâ€"a most i found in all London. Subsequently hi 'impressrve face. If you could fancy I let it to advantage. and his tenant. has lsome mighty serpent tiransformed in- i made no complaintS. I to man, preser'Ving in the human line- But my story is not yet done. A » aments the old serpent type, you. would , f - - ew days after Mr. Jâ€"had removed in {have a better udea of that countenance] to the house, I paid him a visit. A var figfighlggg gfigggfisffggggzfizhgf 5 containing some articles of furniture ' , ,, . - - - which he was moving from his form! 'mmg 9198“” 0‘ mm“ magma“ ‘ er house was at the door. I had just ’ the strength of the deadly jawâ€"the i urged on him my theory that all those long. large, terrible eye, glittering and l phenomena regarded as supermund- men a . ' .i' hal a l - 8' S the emeraldâ€"and w t ; ane had emanated from a human brain certain ,, ' om t‘he . ”“1933 calm, as if fr ‘ adducmg the charm or rather curse we consciousness of an immense power. The i . jstrange thing was thisâ€"the instant I l h?“ {Duff}: and! defimwd 1}) sugiporyt ,saw the miniature I recognized a start- ‘ 0 my p l 0301’ y. * r. â€"' “as 0 ser ‘ . 1- . . _ : ing in reply, “That even if mesmerisrn. ltggfismffinf: wo:?:â€"flfh:h;o;%::?: (pfora ? or whatever analogous power it might I _;be called, could really thus work in |manl of a rank only below that of ray the absence of the operator, and pro- :aslty, who in his own day had made . , - [a considerable noise. History says lit- ; dupe effects so extraordinary, Still] tile or nothing of 'him' but search the . could those effects continue it hen t e - ’ - operator himself was dead? and if the ‘correspondence of his contemporaries, lh . ' ht ' d . d d iand you find reference to his wi'ld dar- 3 81'8" an icon wrong ' an ’ m ee ' the room walled up, more than seventy ling. hm bO‘ld profligacy, (hm restless 5 years ago, the probability was, that ' I O I O .spirit. his taste for the occult sciences. . . ‘ v ° - ° , - - . {the operator had long Since departed H hile still in the meridian of life be this life;” Mr. J__' I say, was thus {died and was buried, so say the chron- l .- -, - , . - . ,answering, when I caught hold of his .icles inaforeign land. He died in time . arm and pointed to the street below. Eto. escape the grasp of the law, for he, :was accused of crimes which would have I A well-dressed man had crossed from given him to the headsman. After his 3 the OPPOSite side, and was “COOStiDg ideath, the portnaits of him, which had i the carrier in charge of the van. His _ been numerous, for he had been a mun- ' face, as he stood, was exactly front- ‘irficent encourager of art, were bought i ing 0111' WindOW- It was the face 015 flip and destroyedâ€"it was supposed by ; the miniature we had discovered;it was ,hris heirs, who might have been glad ‘ the face of the portrait of the noble could they have razed his very name 3 three centuries ago. -‘ Efrom their splendid line. He ‘had en-S “Good heavens!” cried Mr. Jâ€"-â€", IJOyed a vast wealth; a large portion of - “that is the face of De Vâ€"â€", and scar- lI-hills was believed to have been embezâ€" ' 0815’ a day older than when I saw it zled. by a favorite astrologer or sooth- ! in the Rajnh’s court in my. youth l” sayerâ€"at all events, ixt had unaccount- Seized by the same thought, we 1’0”) ably vanished at the time of his death. g hastened down stairs. I “'88 first in One portrait alone of him was suppos- i the street; but the man had already ed to have escaped the general destr.uc- gone. I caught sight of him, however, too; I had seen it in the house of a , not many yards in advance, and in Icollector some monlths before. It ‘had : another moment I was by his side. made on me a wonderful impressifmw I had resolved. to Speak to him, but Ias it does on all who behold iitâ€"a face j when I looked into his face. I felt as never to be forgotten; and there was if it were impossible to do so. That that. face in the miniature that lay ieyeâ€"‘the eye of the serpentâ€"fixed and “1,”!“11 my \hand. 'Ilruie that in the held me spellbound. And withal, about! miniature the man was a few years ‘ the man’s whole person there was adig- "0 er than in the portrait I had seen. f nity. an air of pride and station and or than the original was even at the f superiority. that would have made any :m; Of his death. But a few years! 5 one habituated to the usages of the f]: yinhbetween the date in which ;wor1d, hesitate long before venturing , uris ed that direful noble and the f upon a liberty or impertinence. And 333.3331???fEf_IҤP§§tP_r°,_‘YaS “lid: 4 What. «add I say? what-was it} W09“ I v up- vvuunvnuuLlu “Vuwv v 'v- â€"' â€"why, between the date in which flourished that direful noble and the date in which the miniature was evid- ently painted, there was an interval of more than two centuries. While Iwas thus gazing. silent and wondering, Mr. 9.7â€""- Said. . 73‘“? is it possible? I have known this man." “BOWLâ€"where?” cried I. “In. India. He was high in the con- fidence of the Rajah ofâ€"-â€". and well- nigh drew him into a revolt which would have lost the Rajah his dominai- one. The man was a Frenchmanâ€"his niame De ’â€"-â€", clever, bold, lawless. We insisted on his dismissal and ban- ishrmnt; it must be the same manâ€"no two faces like thisâ€"yet this miniature seems nearly a hundred years old." Mechanically I turned round the miniature to examine the back of it. and on the back was engraved a pen- Within-side the lid were engraved. "Mariana to theeâ€"*Be faithful in life and death toâ€".” Here followed a name. that I will not mention, but it was not unfamiliar to me. I had heard it spok- of by old men in my childhood as the name borne by a dazzling charlatan who had made a great sensation in London for a year or so, and had fled the country on the charge of a double murder within his own houseâ€"that of his mistress and his rival. I said noth- ing of this to Mr. Jâ€", to whom reluc- tantl) ' I resigned the miniature. I In this safe were three shelves and ,t.wo small drawers. Ranged on the shelves were several small bottles ofi ‘crystal, hermetically shopped. Thes’ :contained colourless volatile essences, ,of what nature 1 shall say no more , than that they were not poisonsâ€"PhOS‘ lphorr and ammonia entered into some of them. There were also some very curious glass tubes. and a small point- .ed rod of iron, with a large Lumsp of rock-crystal, and another of amberâ€"a1- so_a loadstone of great power_. ' handsome court awardâ€"in a waist- :coat which had once been rich “nth gold-lace, but which was now blacksn- ;ed. and foul with damp, we found fgve {guineaa a few silver coins, and an IV- ory ticket, probably for some place of {entertainment} long since passed away. ‘But. our main discovery was in a kmd 50f irron safe fixed to the wall, the lock ;of which it cost us much trouble to . get picked. In one of the drawers we found a miniatutre portrait set in gold, and re- taining the freshness of its coloulrs most remarkably, considering the length. of time it. had probably been there. The portrait was that of a man who might be somewhat advanced in middle life, perhaps forty-seven or for- ty-e-ight. waist;- I A well-dressed man had crossed from fthe opposite side, and was accosting fithe carrier in charge of the van. His jface, as he stood, was exactly front- ;ing our window. It was the face of the miniature we had discovered; it was the face of the portrait; of the noble t:hre_e centuries ago. I But my story is not yet done. A i few days after Mr. J-had removed in- I to the house, I paid him a visit. A van icontaining some articles of furniture ’which he was moving from his form- ;er house was at the door. I had just i urged on him my theory that all those lphenormena regarded as supermund- ; ane had emanated from a human brain; 3 adducing the charm or rather curse we ihad found and destroyed in support of my philosophy. Mr. Jâ€" was observ- ing in reply, “That even if mesmerism, ? or whatever analogous power it might {be called, could really thus work in ithe absence of the operator, and pro- lduice effects so extraordinary, still icould those effects continue when the operator himself was dead? and if the iSpel. lhad been wrought, and, indeed, ' the room walled up, more than seventy lgyears ago, the probability was, that {the operator had long since departed ithis life;” Mr. Jâ€"â€", I say, was thus ,answering, when I caught hold of his 'arm and pointed to the street below. A mouse skipped across a class-room in Public School No. 42 An eight-year- om girl saw it and screamed. Then several children who had not seen it also screamed. and. one of them shout- ed "Fire 1' Most. of the inmates now screamed "Fire!" and in five min- !utes the engines were at the door, a platoon at police. and four thousand people in the street, many of them in- [[16 cant] three mile to swing l bably pro deadly we A Mistress bread 9 Domesti \Vhat a voting the Almighty to save their gave you. children. It was fully two hours he- Yee. mt tore the penis was over._.'l'he mouse ee- thg-t. that I had not been two minutes in the room before I beheld at a table, con- versing with an acquaintance of mine. whom I will designate by the initial Gâ€", the manâ€"the Original of the Min- iature. He was now. without his hat, and the likeness was yet more start- ling, only I observed that while he was conversing there was less severity in the countenance; there was even a smile, though a. very quiet and cold one. The dignity of mien I had ac- knowledged in the street was also more striking; a dignity akin to that which invests some prince of the Eastâ€"con- veying the idea. of supreme indiffer- ence, and habitual, indisputable, in- dolent, but resistless power. Gâ€" soon after left the stranger, who then took up a scientific journal, xx hich seemed to absorb his attention. I drew G-m aside-â€"“\Vho and what is that gentleman f" ask 2 Thus ashamed of my first im- pulse, I fell a few. paces back, still, however, following the stranger. un- decided what else to do. Meanwhile he turned the corner of the street; aplain Carriage was in waiting, with a ser- vant out of livery dressed like a valet- dle‘Place at the carriage door. In an- other moment he had stepped into the carriage, and it drove off. I returned to the house. Mr. Jâ€"-- was still at the street door. He had asked the carrier what the stranger had said to him. The same evening 'I happened to 80 with a friend to a place in town call- ed the Cosmopolitan Club, a place 01)- en to men of all countries, all opinions, all degrees. One orders one’s coffee, smokes one’s cigar. One is always sure to meet agreeable, sometimes remark- able persons. “Merely asked, whom that house now belonged to,” . Seized by the same thought, we both hastenod down stairs. I “as first in the street; but the man had already gone. I caught sight of him, however, not many yards in advance, and in another moment I was by his side. “Good heavens!” cried Mr. Jâ€"--. “that is the face of De Vâ€", and scar- cely a day older than when I saw it in_tl_1e Rajnh’s court. in my; youth !_" ‘_ We found no more. Mr. Jâ€" burnt the tablet and its anathema. He raz- ed to the foundations the part of the building containing the secret room with the chamber over it. He had then the courage to inhabit the house him- self for a, month, and a quieter. bet- ter-conditioned house could not be found in all London. Subsequently he let it to advantage, and his tenant has --vv- “â€"â€" thwliszfi-“I‘bn all that it can reach.with- in these wallsâ€"sentient or inanimate, living or deadâ€"as moves the needle, so work my will, and restless be the dwellers therein.” Meanwhile I had opened the tablet; it was bound in plain red leather, with a silver clasp; it contained but one sheet of thick vellum. and on the sheet were inscribed, within a double pen- tacle, words in old monkish Latin, which are literally to be translated The two workmen were so fright- ened that they ran up the ladder by which we had descended from the trap- door; but seeing that nothing more happened. they were easily induced to return. roug. (To be Continued.) The masses ot the uneducated [come in England championed the, cause of the claimant, and at the time of the trial a laborer was quoted as saying: "I don't care whether ‘e's Arthur Orton or Roger Tichuoxne, but it’s a shame to keep the poor man out of ’is rights.” . The story of the neat fashion in which 'the claimant gave himself away and 4 enabled the solicitors for the Tichborne trustees to snap up a clue as to his identity was retold by a London pap- : er Just week. - ----. Messrs. Kynooh of Birmingham, Eng- land. have ;fo.r some time past been en- gaged- in med-teeming flhe mechanism of a new quick-timing gun, and they have succeeded in producing a weapon 8 Lung way aihead of any other gun of a similar type. By taming a. wheel uhe whole mechanism is set working and 600 maga‘zine‘lfullets are_<iis_cha.rg- A) â€"-â€"â€"- â€"Aâ€" 9‘â€" ed per minute. The gun which only weighs a hundredweighlt is single bar- relled, and while in action is kept cool by. a water .jacket, Wlhich is filled sulta- omaticallly. The firing action is sup- plied witlh cartridges by an endless belt which passes through a box and collects the cartridges. 'Dhe gun will! kill at three miles at“ as It/he barrel is made to swing from right to left it will pro- bably prove to be one of the most deadly weapons of modern warfare. vv. “Cit“- Mistress â€" Did ou ask ' bread? y (31‘ m1": Domesticâ€"Yes. mum. ' ‘ SPRING PROBLEMS. ! What a. miserable little loaf they What is John fig’lll'i“g “honing! gave you. He's trying to find Ollt who Yea. mum; it's .my Opinion. _muin_. grill be_ chapter to QOVCAffzrawl *k.‘ ‘k-‘ k- I.“ __ ___2_- __ "When the claimant returned from Australia he went over to Paris to see his alleged mother, the poor crazed Lady 'l'ichborne, wh‘n the famous re- cognition by maternal instinct ensued. Just before starting Orton, who was then of Falstaffian proportions, visited his native Wapping. and, entering the Globe tavern, made close inquiries re- spec-ting members of his own family, and A German named Schottler. By this time the oppomtmn got wind that the mysterious claimint to the Alresford estates hailed from Australia, and a detective was sent thither to make en- quiries. He sreedily found out the erst haunts of the fat man, and as- certained that the latter had been in the habit of boasting about a friend he had in London named Schottler, and sent word to England to that effect. Then the solicitors anxiously consult- ed the London directory, and it was found that only one Schottler had been in business in the metropolis for ° 3. number at years, and that he had re- sided in “'apping. Thither hied a de- tective to ferret out what he could. By the unluckiest accident imaginable for the cause of the claimant. he turn- ed into the same Globe. On asking about Mr. Schottlel' the. landlady re- markedc ‘Curious, there was a gentle- man inquiring atrout him months ago!’ cl- ALI.-A_ , ._____ HoU Is that like him?’ said the dethtive exhibiting th3. c.a.imant’s photo. ‘The \ery man. " was the reaponse. Popular sympathy With Orton was shown by sendin'z thy claimant’s lead- ing counsel to Parlirmrmt as member for Stoke, deepite the favtt that he had been disbarred. "Lamoert, who has been described as the 'ucme 01 mortal hugeness,’ has done duty as a synonym, as George Meredith descrmes London as ‘i.he Dame! Lamnert of cities.’ Perhaps the heaviest young woman of the century was exhibited in Paris about eighty years 0:80.. At the age of 20 she scal- ed thirty-two stone. and could lift eas- ily a 2:50-1:0an weight in each hand. She was a German, named Frederica Ahrens.” "Daniel Lambert. (who, at the age of 39, died at Stamford in 1809 is perhaps THE MOST NOTED of corpnlent men. His coffin was slid down an incline, to the bottom of the grave. Lamoert. who weighed fifty- tym and three-quarter stone, was some time keeper of Leicester jail, but he re- Slgnea that appointment for the pur- pose OI exhibiting himself in a house in Piccadilly. Then a would-be-rival in girth. a Kentish man named Palmer, wno only weighed twenty-five stone. came .to see Daniel. Palmer was so mortified at being hopelessly eclipsed by the other in point of obesity that he tom: the matter “to heart and died soon afterward. ay "The funerals of several fat men have been accompanied by somewhat re- markable circumstances. For instance. when. in 1750, a man named Edward Bright. who weighed forty-four stone, died, the walls and staircase of his house had to be removed to allow the coftin to be carried out. According to a Paper 0! tne period, another Falstaf- Iian ind1v1dual,who died at Worcester in 1710, um a coffin that “measured seven Ieet over. and was bigger than an ordinary hearse, and a wall was ob- llgea to De taxen down to admit its passage. GOSSIP ABOUT “THE CLAIMANT.” (Drum Compared with Other I‘M In Who Were Famous only for Their Bulk. The recent death of the Tichborne claimant had stirred up a lot of re- miniscences bf the man’s personality and ot‘ the gigantic fraud which he at- tempted to perpetrate. A recent Eng- lish paper says of Arthur Orton. the claimant, that he was one of the few men possessed of abnormal adipose tis- sue who will go down to posterity fam- ed tor something else than mere bulk. The London Echo, in discussing Orton, compares him with several other fat men who have Won fame by their size, It says: A NEW QUICK-FIRING GUN. ESPECI ALL Y A BUTCHER A MEAN SWINDLE. v- --- W Queen Christina of Spain is an fencer and a good piquet p18) ‘91” 01' pfcquet, 1185 Per!) kn bpun since the early apes um Rune cientos. Bowling is the {t0 recreation of Queen Olga of bug is “90 quite devoted to {1‘1 “Ohm“. particularly the one ca Helen. Which is played with w m “"18. and said to have b??? by N‘POIOOII in exile on the ‘5 St. Helen. San-c coral-e Gan-um. «m. “lute-I1 Mu: Crowned luau!» Amuse I‘m-«IM- Many of the cmwu‘d 111.11. 11111;. games in these days fur 1mm; tram State cares. 'J‘bv 12mm“ 5' Germany turns frequently to tea: for Sport. and be his 11111511111106 “1" of the best appointed 11111115 comb the W'Ol'ld at th’ Cthh‘ 01 )Iurtmo' It ‘8 appropriateh dew'mmwd uni Emperor himself suyelimended” Lnilding. as he undmmw .11 1111 builders “106.1116: Czar of Russ“ 15 a ma“: hand at the game of 161111411113, of R" 5111:; wmst. winch is 1159 uur “1““ " ”PC that there are no 1111111115. 1‘. The Emperor of J awn. (J Wu.” lets the national game of ' S05 t [or we study of (his gulur‘ are. ”9119:! In Jazmin. an] wwrul it“ are aevoteu entirely in ”I“ 5 Queen chtoria prcfms WNW German gum ’ rescmi Mu! “ka Which sne learned from HIV J’HD‘ sort. The Princess Beatrice 111“ e; up Iottmg, a am kind 0‘ {30” she is also a capitai gullL belongs to several dubs presents valuable. prizes 'I \ ictont or Wales is at 4“ Player. "Inc Archduchcss Elizaww ‘” ‘. mo. takes her athlvhcs in the W“ long tramps “ND her 111M hr'l'. “19 h.“ °‘ SP“!!! pet pastimv is kite MW ‘ contest between (“H kiiv “3'9”" see Who can capture ”1' (“5;“18 :: QtDCT'B kite. A game (:HPd “ 0 Knights of Spain" is 3'8“ nnuther 0! ms sports. The young .Queefl Holiand is devoted tn lauimlnll’n “‘ her bleycte, Th6 Queen (of 118” has reputation as a pedestrian: for 1'91“ “on she turns to chess. an Christina of Spai fencer and a good pique! P (met or plaquet, has L99” “Nd Rn-In chum th- narlv REPS ”def” Lua-Liver Pillsclean Coated To: Milbm‘n’l Heart and Nerve Pillu Anaemis. Nervousnesl, Weakness.i lumen, Pslpitation. Throbbing. 1 Spells. Dizziness or any conditiop u from Impoverished Blood. Duon Nerves or Wank Heurt. one u follows: “For the putthm, I heve Inflered from weakness, shown . bmth end palpitation of the he; The least excitement would make myhr flutter. and at night I even found it di ' to sleep. After I got Milburn‘s Bean Nerve Pills I experienced great end on continuing their use thei meat hue been marked until now alltbe. The onerona dutieu that fall tom. 1.! a nurse, the worry. care. loss of. irregularity of meals soon tell 0M nervous system and undermine the M Mrs. H. L. Menzies, a professional“ living 3t the Corner of Wellingxm. King Streets, antford. Ont..m1 Toll: In. the was cured at M Horn Troublu. DIVERSIONS OF ROYALTY. Mr. \V. G. Mugfoy-d’ C Street, Charlottetown’ m writes : " For the past mom" I 5.. kid much trouble thh d‘ tho kidneys and nonqeum . . W! urine. was dropszcal anu inlets“ 1t deal with pain in my N nave been greatly be . . MN h the use of Donn s ludnoy P1113." ' I NURSE’S 8mm. Elizabel!l The fin? Our Buttercup finest in the n T0 CHEF; A Large Selling at Ntl, extra qu TWEEDS, PANTIX FLAXN F LA Plums, (301‘ TON ' C(')'l"l‘( Pgtato Mashers Bolling Pin< 0, Towd Rollels. Sletk Pounde! s 8T0VES Alway: easiest Ch u rn (1 Snow shil H]

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