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WITH THE MONDAY, MAY

SECOND 20, 1912

LARGEST NET SALE.

irror

One Halfpenny,

CH AT COPENHAGEN: THE WIDOWED QUEEN AND THE KING AND QUEEN MEET THE FUNERAL SHIP.

With the remains of King Frederick on board, the royal yacht Dannebrog steamed slowly into Copenhagen Harbour and cast anchor before the black-draped land' ing-stage. Crowds lined the streets to watch the procession pass to the Castle Church, It was a very different ceremony from that in which they had hoped to take part. His Majesty, who died in most tragic, circumstances in Hamburg, had apparently greatly benefited in health by his stay on the Riviera,, and his people

had been looking forward to giving him a rousing welcome on his return to his capital. (1) Leaving the royal yacht. The leading figures arc the widowed Queen Louise and her son,- the new ruler, both of whom showed signs of deep emotion. They are followed by the new Queen walking with King Haakon of Norway. Prince Harald of Denmark and the Queen of Norway are about to steg on the gangway, (2) The funeral procession leaving .the landing-stage.

Page 2

'Advertisers' Announeemer^K

THE

DAILY

MIRROR

'Advertisers* Announeemenfit

May 20, 1912

Half a Century's Reputation For V a l u e

a r t \ P a l a c e Rostd. ew Ideas in Millinery, Moderately Priced.


The three Hats illustrated are represerdative of the practical styles, suitable for all occasions, in which we specialise-.
Smart hat in putty coloured chip, brim covered with navy s i b and trimmed with bow of same. Can also be made in White and Black,

"

.Soft, pliable-Hat, in Frent^h Canvas, trimmed satin ribbon, brim easily adapted to suit any wearer. In Natural and White, lined Saxe, Navy, Vieux Rose, and Reseda. Also in all White. Most useful for Travelling, SportSj^etc

Useful Hat for morning or country wear, in all shades of straw, with plain corded band and bow.

Dainty '

Lace Wear
for MANUFACTURERS.
(Dept. 89),
S E L F R P D C E a. C? UP O X F O R D 8T LONDON ,v-,

D o not ^f^elav in f)urchasing those things required for your rapidly approaching Whitsun Holiday. Glaftce through the subjoined Hst, make ybyr selection, ana buy your needs n o w . " W e would remind you that our excellent Letter O r d e r Section is. always at your service should you be unable to make a personal call,- and also that we pay Carriage to anywhere in the British Isles irrespective of price, bulk or weight. SPECIAL DISPLAY AMD SALE OF LACE CURTAINS.

9, L o n g L a n e , A l d e r s g a t e St., LONDON, E,C. THE SEASIDE PRINCESS ROBE.


it is m a d e . of a good quality casement Cloth, with White collar and cuffs embroidered in colour to match dress. It is a well made, nicely finished and perfcctfitlin^ Gown. Will wash splendidly. Colours Sky, Saxo Blue, Quaker Grey, Rose, Navy and Brown.

High-grade Swiss Curtains, 120 designs only, and not more than six pairs of each design. A fine embroidered applique rosebud and ribbon border, with dainty ^ Q / Q tambour trellis body. Usually 47/6. Now ^*^t ^ Anotlicr desiijn consists of a handsome conveniional medallion border, witJi scroU centre; f O / Q Usually 39/6. Now

Hand-wock Marie Antoinette Curtains, border one side arid bottom. Kibbon and rosette design, I * ? / Q Usually 25/6. Now ' * ' / * ' 150' British-made Curtains, heavy allover design, specially suitable for hotel or dining room Q / Q windows. Usually 18/6. Now, a pair * ' / "

each

Usual price 8 / I I .

Order Now.
Length of Skirls, 38, 40, and 42in. W R I T E AT O N C E FOR OUR N E W SUMMER CATALQGUE O F BARGAINS in Ladies' Dress of all kinds.

F l o u n c i n g s , &c.
White Embroidered MusHnFiouncings in the newest desiijns. Width 45i. Special value at, - Q / I I a yard < ' / ' * HsniSsoine Embroidered Muslin Flouncing, in the new o p e n " C o l bert"(leEiRn. Width S+in. Good.vaiue, a yard Dewdrop Chiffon in Pink. White. Violet, Grey, E m e r a l d , Vieux Rose. Black and While, White and Uiack and Navy. Suitable foe evening dresses, scarves. &c. Width (iA 40in. Special line at, a yard " V * Dainty designs in new Shadow Nets, in Ecru and VVhite ! / | l X Width 38in. A yard ' / ' * ^ a Fine Valenciennes Lace and Insertion. in dainty designs. ' Widih lin. Special value at . , . l/jR A. dozen yards * / "

Blouse Robes.
S&lendid valuis In While Cotton Veils Blouse, Magyar shape, with effective, yoke of fine Valenciennes insertion with molif of guipure lace. Also Eoveral olhet designs in iS / I I the same material *'/*' Charming selection In Satin Foulard Blouse Robes, made with, panel at back of skirt and buttons of same material down front. Magyar shape and embroidered black. In Grey. Cerise, Navy and Emerald. . I f J / i I

Hosiery.
Ladies' Lisle Thread Hose, with new open clocks. In Black, 0/ While or Tan. A pair */ Ladies'good wearing Lisle Thread Hose, with self clocks. In Blaclt A pair l / l l , 2/6 and

F.--Spotted Muslin Tab edged fi3*| Lace Also wiih Neck Band. . ' ^ J " * Post free cash refunded.if goods not Asli for Catalogut. approved.

1/11

3/3
Ladies' fine Lisle Thread with cashmere soles. In Black or Tan. A pair Ladies' Gauze Lisle Thread Hose, In Black only, A pair Ladies' Plairi Cotton Hose. wearing qualities, A pair 1/-and With self-embroidered Clocks A pair 2/-and Ladies' Lisle Thread Hose, now designs m lace fronts. In Black or Tan, A pair 1/6 and Hose. 1/^ */ " 1/ft */ Good 1 /fi V " O /ft */" with O /^ ^/

5/11
e a c b . K'orlli 8/11 Honey retarned if g o o d s not approved. Write for Patterns-FlUm.

The Noted Drapers. EstaMished 1886.

191-195 Kensington Hsgli Street,


THE

Petticoats.

Made o t J a \ ^ Straw, fnmmed p/hh buckle of Ta{?al Braid in Navy,. Grcs, Saic and Biown, Pobl Free

Neckwear.
Box-pi ea fed Chiffon Ruffle with pleated frill and finished with satin ribbon bow, in Black, .White and all the leading shades, very <i / I I 1 fashionable ... ... ...'^/^'I Chic Cravat, composed of Brussels Net, trinimed with efiective lace insertion and iilack ribbon 7 / 1 1 velvet bow - ../ I / yt Useful Collar in Macramd Lace. in . Ecru,"^-'V<;ry suitable for 7 / 1 1 tailor made costumes ;.. ' / "

163-170. f C T T E K H A M

C O i l B T R O A D , W-

Shot Taffeta Petticoat, made with effective box - pleated flounce, in' Green and Gold, Blue and Brown, Helio and Grey, and several I 9 / f i other dainiy colourings. ' ... ^ / " . Soft finished Moire Petticoat, made with knife-pleated flounce, in light shades for suinmer wear, including Grey, Saxe. Biscuit and I * ? / A Rose ... ... ... ... 1 ^ / y Knitted Coats. Ladies' Knitted Coats, Norfolk . Washing" Cotlon Petticoat^ in white ground, wilh effective spot desien and shape, in a fancy design. Can be pleated flounce, with dark band C /ft worn double - breasted or buttoned atfoot, luSky,Helio,Navy,&c. ' ^ / " back on eilher side. In all TO /I I new shades l*i/ii Ladies' Wool Sweaters, with the useful turnover collar. A very SuitFine French Grepe Voile, in able garment for all kinds of Q / I I 18 new 'shades. A- leading sports, !n"all good shades.,. * ' / ' fabric for Summer Gowns. Ladies' Knitted Coats, singleWidth. breasted, wiih . pockets and belt. a yard In all leading shades, - l i ^ / l l 40in9. Length 36in ... ' < ' / ' ' Ladies' Knitted Coats,-in & fancy design ; good shape, with roUcollars, Coal sleeves and pockets. OT /R Lengih44ins. ... . * ' / "

No ^ore AohingFeet
WHY SUFFER?
W i t h Corns, Bunions, W e t , PERSPJRING and Inflamed Feet. (made of Iinprcgnated'AabcBtos) are guaranteed to relieve all foot troubles. Three qualities, 6d.i 1/-, and 2/" pi-r pairany si/e. Send for Pamphlets, freeof all boolmakers and Chemists or direct fromroST ruici!. Dr. F, HOGYES (Dept. 1), 4, Domingo StLondcn,

May 20, 191^

'AivertUer^ Announcemefifti-

THE

DAILY

MIRROR

"Adverllserf Announamenlt,

Page 3

KENSINGTON. HrOH STREET, W.

TO DAY
And During t h e Week

SPECIAL OFFER
OF
REGISTERED

Giiaranteed Rust Proof throughout.


Cygnia Corsets produce thai long, graceful, willowy figure which imparts to tHe wearer that natural grace which is the aim of every perfectly dressed woman. Either walking, standing, or sitting, a perfectly graceful contour ig assured without the slightest sacrificf of comfort.

ModeHOO. Novelty M o d e l , cut with a low b u s t a n d w i t h e x t r a depth round. hips. Although v e r y d e e p , can b e w o r n w i t h t h e very g r e a t e s t freedom and c o m f o r t b y a l l a v e r a g e figures. I n a R i c h W h i t e a n d Sky Figured Brocade. Trimmed with L a c e ^ t h r e a d e d R i b b o n , a n d fitted 'four R u b b e r G r i p H o s e S u p p o r t e r s . T h i s Model is guaranteed rustless throughout.

p"<'' 7 / 6 S .

Sioclied in Sizes 19 to 30 laches.

M o d e l 401. A' dainty low b u s t e d design w i t h a m e d i u m , h i p , a good all r o u n d a v e r a g e M o d e l , c o n s t r u c t e d of S t r o n g F i n e W h i t e F r e n c h Batiste. trimmed with White Swiss Embroidery and completed by four Silk S u s p e n d e r s , fitted with Rubber Studs. This Model c a n a l s o b e o b t a i n e d in F r e n c h G r e y B a t i s t e .

Excellent qualily I v o r y Washing Silk S h o r t s Shirts,very useful shape, with the fashionable " P o l o " Collar {izh to 15 jn.i, Perfeclfittin^ shape, and well made, f f / ' l f i Offered at ^f ^ ' t (Post 4d.). Equal to Shirts usually sold at 6/11.

Heavy Quality I v o r y Washing Silk Sports-Shirtalatest shape wittit lie newfashion " Kobespierre " Collars, l a i to 15 in.necks. Beautifully madeand perfect shape a s usually sold at 8/11. A./'t | X (posl4d). Offered at each ' * / * * 2 "

Good Quality Ivory Washing Silk B l o u s e s , f a s h i o n a b l e Majjyai shape, well made willi Maltese style,lace yokes Perfect fitting shape Marvellous O/'l.'ll offer at ... * / * * iJ Post 3d. and honestly worth double the money.

Price 1 0 / 1 1
STREET. W.

p^-.

HENRY DOBB,

LTD., WESTBOURNE GROVE, W.

PONTINGS. KENSINGTON

HIGH

WHITELEY'S
KILDARE CLUB

GIFT OF 20,000 DAINTY BOTTLES OF LAVENPER WATER.


T o advertise our goods we will p r e s e n t , a b B o l a i e l y f r e e , a dainty a n d n n l q a ^ ahapefi b o t t l e o f Mitcbam L a v e n d e r Water to every customer orderln)^ t w o Of t h e ^ e F e a t h e r s o r R a f f l e through the post or goods from our Catalogue; a l s o t o all c a s t o m e r s v i s t t l a g onr s h o w r o o m s . W e are the largest firm of expert Ostrich Feather Manufacturer sin the World, and the g e n u i n e originators of direct supply from the bird to the public. <No c o n n e c t i o n with any o t h e r f i r i n g ""I^IM 19ins. long, in ^^m Black, White, orany colour. Thisbeautiful Heal Ostrich Plume sent on approval, post free, on receipt of remit- As a number of firms in the tance for 2 / - (or two for West End offerinB inferior 3 / 6 with free gift.} goods, and advartisine in a simi. Pay a Visit to lar manner lo ourselves, are en. our S p a c i o u s deavouring to pass themselves S h ow r o o m s . off as our Company, we would 100,000 stock to select from. respectfully ask the public, S e n d l o r N e w S p r l n S therefore, to note M O S T Illustrated Catal o g u e o t B a r g a i n s , C A R E F U L L Y our N A M E post free. Ostrich A N D A D D R E S S , and thus Boas from 8 / 6 t o K l O . avoid disappointment. Your own Feathers and Baas Lancered by Experts. Special Offtr of 409 Dainty Call or write for Price OSTRICH RUFFLES, to fasten at List cf Renovations. neck with iatinribbons, any colour

*WHATTOBUYAND WHERE TO BUY IT/


Before deciding on your new Garments for Snmmer wear, i'"" """t see a couy ot our
' new and bi'uiitlnillv printed CATALOGUE OF SOMMKK FASHIONS, coniulnlng numDrous lliustratloua of tlio iieiveat iiiid rnoat plOHSltig atvloa and (ifsifriia to be worn thia Sensoii, ifa title, 'WHAT TO BUY AND WHKIU': '10 liUY lT."fully couvovs to nil readprs the wldu apliors of its uaofulticsa, and every lady alioiild send lor her nopy to-day, SENT POST FREE, . accompnnyliiK Illustrations are iipics of tU Homloi'fiil value wo are .'im{ Iri Ciarnioiita 'Ik-iidv-to-woar" ;lio lioi sujinui'v <li' 'a. Many others lllusU'iitoiJ Iti > ataloguc. S\T1SFACTI0N GUARANTEED OR MONEY RETURNED.

CYCLES
3:19:6
O R \Z P A Y M E N T S OF
Splendidly built and well finished, D u n l o p Cambridge T y r e s , P t r r y C h a i n a n d F r e e W h e e l , Lined, c a r r y i n g a S i g n e d G u a r a n t e e .

2/-orTWOfor3/6
Money promptly re turned if not delighted. Post Free. 19 I n c h e s lontf, worth

IMPORTANT NOTICE,

e/s.

OTHER MODELS
from

6/8

MOTOR CYCLES
by

IS!*

Tli< Maflbsra' Blous. 'T^^ Klno W h i t e - - - Muslin WftRj'ar D i o u s o with Ilneiy tiiclfed front and sloeves t r I m m o d pun ola of " - '-S Bmbroldery.

3:3:0

EASY PAYMENTS

THE Af'RICAN OSTRICH FARM Co., Lt^d! r Showrooms: 109, OXFORD STREET, LONDON. W. ^^eSJHeathTLM.';
Als^ranche^^sa^^^n^^^Oxfo^^treetJjOndon^^jeleph^^

T*.

2 / 9 paid.

BRAND at a small extra charge. NEW. THE BIGGEST SHOW OF PEDAL & MOTOR CYCLES IN THE WORLD.
All the best Standard Cycles sup. plied by Easy Payments at the Cash Price,, without one penny extra charge over, this price for the 12 mdntlis' credit. Whiteleys are the only firm in the Kingdom Qffering such

^^j==^- HMRPINS FREE


T o t h e first 50 l a d i e s w r i t i n g u s after t h e p u b l i c a t i o n of this p a p e r we will s e n d a h a n d s o m e 1/- b o x o f o u r " a P K l N Q B O K " H a i r p i n s free. A useful p a c k e t will b e s e n t free to all s u b s e q u e a t a p p l i c a n t s , also s o m e i n t e r e s t i n g a n d a m u s i n g b o o k l e t s . *' S P R I N Q B O K ** H a i r p i n s c a n n o t fall o u t , e v e n of t h e flnpst h a i r . T h e o n l y c o n d i t i o n is t h a t you send With y o u r a p p l i c a t i o n a n e m p t y c a r d of I N E W Y T E S i L V f a k " H o o k s a n d e y e s , w i t h D r a p e r ' s r e c e i p t for s a m e , a n d by t h e n e x t p o s t t h i s M A Q N I P I C E N T F R b E G I F T IS YOURS. T h e s e were the hooks and eyes which w e r e u s e d o n H e r JWajesty's C o r o n a tion R o b e . T h e y a r e n o t c o m m o n h o o k a a n d eyes, b u t a r e m a d e from a special w h i t e m e t a l w h i c h c a n n o t r u s t a n d spoil t h e g a r m e n t . T h e y never c a m e accidentally unfastened. C a n b e o b t a i n e d of all D r a p e r s ,

^X ' >^^

\i

Blouse Robe Model (4, Dainty White Muslin Bobe. prettily 8/*a trlmmod with KWIBS em/V broidery motifs and carl', paid. Iriaprtion, All Orders s e n t Csrr. Paid In United KiDtfdom. Coat Model 787. hityllstiOOHtot Sicilian Alpaca, looas back, lln satin collar una Inuk and white atrLped aatin on r.ivu rs.il ills tied buttons to matcli, and black plpiiigB. InCroam, Biscuit, Giey & Navv, Cnr. paid

,mt^

Money returned if not satisfied. Carriage Paid. No charge for crates.

WONDERFUL EASY PAYMENT TERMS.

12/6

WHITELEYS
QUEEN'S ROAD

107,
Brearley Street, BIBMIN6HAM.
fjuji/iiautmt**^'*

LONDON, W.
Please mention '* Daily Mirror."

"-SS-^

Cat; Fit and Finish o f all Garments Uneqaalled. m n a c 1 7 U r D E < D I Great cure haa been taken In tlie H c n i C m D K i H I selection of materials. . Only upto-date patterns of hermonloua and eleRaiit design are shown, and tho wearing qiwllties of every fabric can ba relied unon. DO NOT DELAY, BUT WRITE TODAY,

THIS

OPPORTUNITY

MAY NOT. OCCUR AGAIN.

ROBINSON BROWN'%rETFlLl,;

Page 4:

'Alhertiiwf Announcemetiffi,

THE

DAILY

MIRROK

'Advertisers* AnnouneefnenlT,-.

May 20, 1012

Paris Model Blouse Sale Exceptional Bargains.


KENSINGTORLONDOXW
36 do7,cr) Dainly Magyar Blouses m fine lawn, some nicely enibroidered and others tiimmed with Val, lace in several designs, ill both Peter Pan and stand-up coliars. Usual prices range from 6/11 to 8/11. O / Special Sale Price O / *

Whitsun Millinery.

of

Continttation of Sale
Stock of French Handmade & Sewn Lingerie
of Madame R PERRILLAT, 9, Rue de la
Vii!e Neuve, Paris, comprises thousands of great bargains. W e give a few examples. . Wrile for Catalogue or call to-day. Specially purchased at a big discount this stock

316.Smart Grey Toque Jlat, with brim (of shaded pink roses and feather mount, an exact copy of an expensive

'^^'^'^^odel

29/6

A limited nuinbor otilj'. Charming net Blouse (as sketch), suitable for . afternoon wear, in Paris and Ivory, nicely made, perfect fit and daintily iritjinied with fine embroideted net insertion, collar and cuffs finished through with silk stilchiiifi, lined Bargain Price ^ *-'/ * * The new Robespiene Blouse, in fine Swiss Lawn, D e n y & Toms' exclusive desiiln, nicely tucked all over, finished in front with smart Jabot trimmed with pearl buttons, collar also trimmed peari buttons to match. ' *> / 1 1 Special Sale Price - ' / * *

chiffqn.

t ft/t 1

Great Bargain in Nainsook Nightdresses, with turnover collar, trimmed Val. lace and insertion. Cannot be sent 3 / on approval, Will be sold early in this Sale / Great Bargain in this Sale will be a large stock of Ladies' Dainty Knickers, closed golf shape, trimmed Val. and O / Torchon lace. All One Price ^1 Real Bargain. Ladies' Plaited Spun Silk Combination, with openwork crochet top, with and ivilhout sleeves. ' 5 / 1 1 Worth 7/11. For this week only at - ' / *

109. Smart 6oft Italian Chip Hat suitable for sports and morning \year, with silk \ % / Q underbrim

This :t^ay and during the Weelt. The stock includes Model Blouses in Ninon, Lingerie, Shot Taffetas, Lace, Voile de Coton and Crepe de Chine. All this season's productions, priced at exceptionally low figures. We give a few typical examples of supreme value, A visit is cordially invited,
150 Charraios Blouses, suitable for present wear. All this season's productions in Lingerie Hand-made and Enibtoideted; also Ninons, Shot Taffetas, and Silks. Usually 29/11 to 3gns. Bar- J g / gain Price 300 Dainty Blouses in Lawn, Ninon, Lafce, ant] Crepe de Chine, smart and stylish designs, Paris nianufactnrer's samples, Many worth from 21/9 to 29/11. Exceptional 1 2 / 9 Special Sale Bargain. Hundreds of beautifully Hand - e m b r o i d e r e d Lawn Blouses; also Silks and Voiles. All One Price

L o t . li1,400 Lace and Mushn Jabots and Collars, ^d-A all less than half oricinal price. Each ^ ' 4 " Lot" 2 . - 9 4 6 Shadow Lace and Spot Mnslin Jabots, i jQ^ Each T o be cleared at L o t 3.-1,142 Beautiful Lace Jabots Usual t / I 1 A price 2 / n i Sale Price (each) * / * * 2 L o t 4 . - 1 , 0 9 0 Exquisite Lace Peter Pan Collars, 1 / 1 1 1 . Usual Price 2/11^ to 4/11 each. . Bargain Price * / * * 2 Lot S. W o n d e r f u l B a r g a f n . '450 Dainty Chiffon Ruffles, in Colours and Black. 1 / 1 1 ^S' Bargain Price ' * / * * ' 4 L o t 6 . S p e c i a l B a r g a i n , 640 Beautiful Lace Ties, in Whiteand Paris. T o be cleared 1 j(\l l /|*3 1 / 1 1 i at the following prices '/"2 i / O ^ , * . / ! l^ L o t 7. - E x c e p t i o n a l ' B a r g a i n s . 3,460 yards of Fashionable Laces and insertionsi in Paris and White, 1 I , Also Coloured and Tinsel effects. Bargain Price, ,per yd, * / "

Gigantic Display of Bargains in Lace Dept Charming Whitsnn Hats.

Nowliere else is there to be seen so glorious a collection of Millineryeither in scale of magnificence or in extent of choice. Three spacious showrooms are devoted to this wonderful display, which promises to eclipse all previous exhibitions for style, immensity and value.

Exquisite Hat Mounts at Bars^ain


Just now our Artificial Flower Department is at its bestbrilliant with a glorious array of flowers of all kinds. On account of the extraordinarily tow prices no hat wreaths can be sent on approval,

T h e d e l i g h t f u l c h a r m a n d p o p u l a r i t y of t h e s e f a b r i c s lie. i n t h e e x q u i s i t e c o l o u r i n g s a n d p h e n o m e n a l l y l o w prices. 38 pieces of Rich quality Satin Charmant in 19 beautiful shades, double width. Usual price 8/11. , A.l'% \ Sale Price ^ / * * 1] pieces Rich Brocade, elegant designs, in Maize, Nil, Hello, Pink and Sky. Usual P n c e 3 / l l | . 9 / 1 1 1 Sale Price * / * 2 2Z pieces Pa'sley Ninon, beautiful shades. Double 1/113. width. Usual Price 2/11^. Sale Price * / * 4 792 yds. Taffeta, brilliant, bright and supple, in Heiio, Apricot, Electric, Grey, Navy, and Ivory, Double width ' i ^ / l 1 1 Usual Price 6/11. Sale Price " / ' S " 1753-yds.'French Twill Foulards, in a variety of designs and "^olourinys. Double width. Usual Price 4/11 O /C 1 Sale Price ^ / " ^ -_-2 yds. Heavy Serge Silk, suitable for Coat and Skirt, in Navy and White stripe and Black. 33/3Sin, wide. Usual ^ / l 1 1 Price S U . Sale Price **l ^ ''^ 258 yds. Satin de Chine, pin stripe, shot effects. X / R l Double width. Usual price 4/11. Sale Price * * / " ^ S 13 pieces Voile, elegant in Greys,' Old Rose and 1 / i 1 3 Ease. Doubiewidth. UsualpriceS/lli. SalePrice * / * * 9 pieces Black Duchesse Mousseline. Double width, ^/fil Usual price 4/11. SalePrice " 7 ^ 2 323 yds. Striped Taffeta, pin stripe, shot effects. Usual X / C 1 price 4/11. Sale Price * * / " S 3,895 yds. Manufacturers' Coups, comprising Taffeia Chiffon, Ducliesse MousseUne, Moire Velour, Satin Superb, etc., in lengths from 5 to 20 yas., all double width. Patterns of these cannot be cut. Usual prices 4/11 to 5/11. 0 / 1 1 1 Sale Price * / * * B "

Below we give several very special lines.

6/11

H 2.Wreath of White Marguerites iVith Gold, Green or Black centres, also toned in beautiful art shades, Usual price 5/11, *>/fil SalePrice * ' / 0 2

E 6.Silk Shantung Paisley Bat S q a a r e . with self coloured borders oi Navy, Brown, Reseda, Vleux Rose, Saxe Blue, and Prunella. Usual price 4 / n . 1 / 1 1 1 Sale .Price / * * 2

Astounding Bargains in the New Department this Week

H 4.A sweet Wreath of smart mixed flowers. UsuaP < C / 1 1 price 8/11. Sale Price * / *

H ].Natural Corniiower WrealU. Usual price G/n. 0 / 1 1 ,1 Sale Price ^ / * * 2

Salvage Sale This Week


Grand Opportunity to Purchase HOUSE LINEN At HALF \ >RICB Irish Linen Goods damaged by smoke and water only, HALF k'RICE Linen Sheets Stained by C o t t o n SIieets,-300veryBtained, Water. Cotton Sheets, single and double. bed. U s u a l l y 9 / n . fi/ll All at Special Price ^ / * * ?2 by 3 H . S . All - Linen Pair. Roller Towels.380 (water Sheets, 24/9 15/11 marked) LinenRoUerTowela 1 / C SO by 3 H.S. All - Linen at 2 prices (each) J/, and * / * * Sheets, 34/6 2179 UII reiiea table. F a c e T o w e l s 8 9 only All-Linen 3 by 3j H.S. Heavy Linen, 49/U, H.S. Damask Hiicit Towels, 24 by 35/42; 1/11.1/6 all stained. 1 /{\i Value never to be met with again. Each */*'2

CONSISTING O F

Eon Marche, Host wonderful Skirt ever produced, in good quality Alpaca, with sateen si!3< finished Hounce, ,in Black, Ivory. Navy, Old Kose, Reseda, Grey, Mole, Saxe, Amethyst and Myrtle, i'^i correct shape, Astounding price l/TIi Postage V*^t 3d, extra.

I. a d i e B' Slriped W a s h i n g Cotton and Zephyr Golf Knickers for Summer wear. Mixed sample stock. T o button at knee. Sale Price

Paris Stock of 300 g.ood quality WJiite All Silk Satin French Petticoats, various Flounces, Can only be had at Counter First Day of Sale,

T W E E D S , ALPACAS, SUITINGS. CLOTHS. Etc. A FEW SPECIAL LINES. 35 pieces Sedan Cloth, all good colours, 52in. 1 wide. Usually 2/ll4. Sale Price * /111 38 pieces Striped Alpacas, beautiful effects. Usual Price, 2/115. SalePrice 1/31 1.875 yds. Fancy Tweeds. Usu?illy l / l l | . Sale Price 1/Of 15 pieces Plain Alpaca, in Sase, Navy,, and Royal. Usual Price, 1/11 J. SalePrice 1/61 14 pieces Fancy Suitings, in Navy and White, and Black and White mixtures. 2/6ii. SalePrice 1/64 1.587 yds. Fancy Tweeds, 48/49iii. wide. Usual Price, zm. ' Sale Price 1/61

2/6
T o clear.

6/ri
Worth 14/9.

S a l v a g e Table Linea (odd designs) stained by water and snioiie. S.2 yds., 4/n 6/11 8/11 10/6 X 23ydE., 4/11 10/11 5/11 7/11 X 3 yds., 12/n 8/11 10/11 6/11 X 3 yds., 219 i x 4 yds,. 18/11 12/11 15/11 37/6 25/9 32/6 Above a r e abbnt o n e - h a l f n s a a l v a l u e . A PERSONAL VISIT PAYS BEST.

Salvage Irish Handkerchiefs in Linen Dept. damaged by water and smoke, easily washed like new. Lotl Lot 2 Lot 3 Usually Usually Usually !/0i i/6i Sale Sale Sale 63i). 4U. Each.

May 20, 1912

THE

DAILY

MIRROR

Page 5

*' Daily M i r r o r " Sends Relief to St. Kilda.

A LITTLE FLOUR LEFT


Stores Utireplenished for Months. , Natives Live on Birds' Eggs.
St. Kilda, the lonely home of eighty Scots in , the Outer Hebrides, and the most isolated spot in " Great Britain, has been in danger of starvation. ^ ,0n learning of the plight of these islanders on Saturday afternoon, The Daily Mirror instantly decided to organise a relief expedition. And within a few 'hours that expedition, despite enormous difficulties, had been organised and was on its way to the assistance of the " b e l e a g u e r e d " eighty. Even if other relief arrived before The Dq^ily Mirror boat, it was obvious that the supplies would be of inestimable value, since the visits. paid by vessels to St. Kilda are so few and far between. Besides, we wanted to ?nake sure. Late last night, when 7'he Daily Mirror tug Victor, specially chartered at Glasgow, was weli on her way, news came that H . M . S . AchilieSj which was in the neighbourhood, and had been ordered in a wireless message from M i . Churchill to proceed to St. Kilda, had arrived at the island and had rend.ered assistance. Bui the Victor and her cargo of stores will still be immensely welcome. Besides, The Daily Mirror boat contains a doctor, who will be able to treat the cases of sickness caused.by the scarcity of food, It was on Saturday ti^^i*^ trawler which arrived at Aberdeen told how slie had touched at St. Kilda and learned of its inhabitants' desperate plight. The natives were reduced to a mere handful of flour, and had been " l i v i n g " for some time on birds'- eggs. How The. Daily Mirror at once set about the organisation of the necessary relief expedition no inconsiderable work in view of all the necessities required and the fact that it was Saturday, when shops and stores were closed and heads o i firms out of Londonis told Uelow. Sir Thomas Liplon was on his racing yacht; the Shamrock, at Southampton. But when asked by The Daily Mirror by telegram if he would help he replied, " D e l i g h t e d . " The rest of his telegram is priiited in another column. Mr. Sandow, Sir Joseph Lyons, Messrs. Spiers and Pond, the manager of the Hotel Cecil and the London Hospital all generously did their Utmost. Then a fast lug, the Victor, was hired, and The Daily Mirror expedition is now well on its way from Glasgow to St. Kilda, Messrs. Marconi had almost completed, arrangements to fit the tug with a powerful wireless in-

not possibly cope with a large order such as was required. Moreover, with such an order, it was necessary that the heads of the big wholesale houses should be dealt with personally. Here again, Saturday intervened. Most of the heads were eolfing, or away for the week-end, But, despite thege unusual difficulties. The Daily Mirror was able to obtain such stores ai>d equipment as vfere vitally necessary for such a expedition within three hoyrs of receiving the original message. Within three hours the expedition was actually ready to start from London. Stfi THOMAS LIPTON TO THE BESCUE. Sir Thomas Lipton was the first great provider who was approached. This was a little before 2.30 in the afternoon. The reply came back that Sir Thomas was on his famous yacht, the Shamrocli, at Southampton. A telegram, explaining the position, was dispatched to hiiii at once. In the meantime the general manager of Lipton's, Limited, Mr, John Caiisfi'eld, was communicflted with. At 3.-45 he telephoned to The Daily Mirror that ample provisions for eighty people (the population of St. Kilda) would be awaiting the pleasure of The Daily Mirror at Glasgow. These provisions included sugar, condensed milk, butter, baton, tea, coijee, corned beef; tinned meats, and flour. It was at 6.i0 that Sir Thomas Lipton sent the following splendid telegram: SOUTHAMPTON, S a t u r d a y . Delisfhted t o b e of a n y s e r v i c e t o s t a f v i n g : InttEibitatits of St. KHda. I will s u p p l y At m y o w n personal e x p e n s e youi* t u g : o f m e r c y w i t h t h e provisions you r e q u i r e . I congri'fttulate y o u o n y o u r p r o m p t h u m a n i t y , w h i c h Is j u s t w h a t o n e e x p e c t s f r o m " T h a i Daily M i r r o r . " T h o m a s J. L i p t o n , Yacht Shamrock, Southampton* At 2.39 Sandow's Health and Strength Cocoa, whose premises are in the New Kent-road, had been telephoned to. At first there was no response because it was Saturday afternoon and the offices were, of course, closed, MB. SANDOWS PHOMPT AID, Then Mr. Eugen Sandow was also communicated with at his private address in Holland Park, and he replied that he would be very pleased to give a hundredweight of cocoaif the factory could be got into, kt 3 o'clock a message came from Mr. Drain, the advertisement manager of Sandow's Health and Strength Cocoa, stating that if The Daily Mirror sent down they could have the cocoa _ a f once. Within hal? an hour the cocoa had arrived in a taxicab at the oftice. Then we found Sir Joseph Lyons, who immediately promised ;65. Messrs. Spiers and Pond were also approached. Unfortunately, all the assistants had gone, but eventually the manageT of the provision departmer^t was spoken to on the telephone. ' At 3.45 there had been promised a large quantity of cheese and ham. At 4.15 the provisions were in The Daily Mirror office. The medical side of the matter was also being spoken to on the telephone and the services of a fully-qualified doctor were asked for. The situation was fully explained, and on hearing the story and the plight of the people of St. ICilda, the Medical Registrar immediately promised that, a doctor should be a.viowed to join the expedition, CIFT OF SHBITS AND WINE. At 6.45 Dr. Charles J.. G...Taylor walked into The Daily Mirror. Dr. Taylor is a house surgeon at the London Hospital, and expressed himself as being only too pleased to be given the opportunity of doing something for the unfortunate inhabitants of St, Kilda. Signor G, C. Nobile; the well-known manager of the Hotel Cecil, also rose to the occasion. Within.twenty-five minutes of our consulting him h had sent clown a supply of port wine, whisky and brandy, Pipes and tobacco have also been takenforty of the .former and 41b. of the lattera copy of every Daily Mirror published since last Christmas and a large portrait of Sir Thomas Lipton, which we shall hang in the principal room of the island to commemorate his generosity When, last February, a Daily Mirror correspondent. left with ft specially-chartered vessel to take relief to the marooned people on a stormbound lighthouse off the coast of Spain,' he was able to save the lives of twenty-one sailors who had been shipwrecked close by,

6,000 Thames Lightermen to Cease Work To-nightCrisis Over One Man.


Once again the whole transport trade of London is threatened by a grave strike, caused by one man. At the end of their day's work to-day 6,000 Port of London lightermen will go on strike, and apparently nothing can avert a paralysis of work on the "river. Like many of the recent labour difficulties, the dispute has grown from a very small beginning. The Mercantile Lighterage Company has tor some time past employed a non-union man at the Millwall Docks, and aithough the rnembers of the union did their best to persuade him to join, he remained obdurate. The Amalgamated Society of Watermen, Lightermen and Bargemen claim that in their agreement with the Masters' Association, arrived at on August 19 last, only foremen were exempted from holding a federation card, and in consequence' of this employee's refusal to join the union his fellow-workmen declined to handle the goods o the Mercantile Lighterage Company. This work was then distributed among other firms, but many of the men in the employ of these firms also refused to handle these goods, and, according to the state'ment of Mr. Harry Gosling (the secretary of the Amalgamated Society), over 2,000 were in consequence discharged by their employers on Saturday night. As a result of this action the men's executive met at the London offices yesterday, and after deliberating for nearly six hours decided to order the strike, Mr. Gosling stated yesterday that the executive had notified the various branch unions and. asked for their assistance, and also the General Federation of Trades Unions, The Transport Workers' Federation are meeting at the Maritime Hall to-day to consider the situation, If they should decide to actively support the strikers, a general and disastrous stoppase of transport work will be the result.

FIFTY-TWO VICTIMS OF TEAIN 'SMASH. '


Thirteen Killed and Many Injured Near Paris Terminus.

TERIUBLE SCENES.
<Prom Our Ovn CorreapondontO PAltrs, May 19.Thirteen people were killed and thirty-nine were injured in a terrible collision which occurred last night on the Northern of France Railway within a stone's throw of the Gare du Nord. Several carriages were reduced to matchwood and many passengers were imprisoned in the wreckage. Some had received' shocldng injuries and pitiful scenes were witnessed, Just after 9,30 a train left the Gare du Nord for Ppntoise, i t was crowded with people returning through the suburban stations on the I'ontoise line. It had not gone more than 150 yards when the driver saw with terror that instead of running parallel with the line he wason, a train from Montsoult, coming to the Gare du Nord, was bearing down upon him. It had crossed the points a short distance higher up and it came obliquely across his track. STfiUCK MIDDLE OF TRAIN. The driver of the I'ontoise train made desperate elilorls to slmt oil sleam, but he was going at a good speed, and he failed. Then came a terrific crash. The locomotive of the Montsoult train struck the .middle of the Pontoise train with terrible force, and cut clean throiigh a third-class carriage. The .steel and wood work of "the superstructure was carried away, and nothing was left bvit a twisted, shapeless mass. \iy the force of the impact the locomotive rose on end and fell on the I'ontoisc train destroying two more third-class carriages and one firstclass coach. Indescribable scenes of panic and terror followed.' One yotmg woman in bridal dress waa seen lying beside a couple of wagons. Dragging themselves painfully along, several soldiers, them. selves hurt, were trying to crawl to the aid of others pinioned beneath the wreckage. A number of emjiloyees at a railway cabin ne^v by rushed to the scene of the disaster and did the best they could to e?:trioate the victims, but their efforts were of little avail, The driver of the colliding train sat on his tender looking at the terrible scene with despairing eyes; One of the passengers, pointing to the wretched man, shouted, " l i e is the cause of all this." The cry was taken up, and the passengers began to climb the tender, - DRIVER'S FLIGHT. Seeing his danger, the driver, who was in no way to blame, jumped to the line on the other side and fled into the night. M, Louis Manheiaer, the buyer for a well-known London firm dealing in ostrich feathers, was in a first-class carriage, all the occupants of which perished but himself. l i e gave the following account of the accident at the I.ariboisiere Hospital : " We were going at a fair rate when suddenly there was a terrible-shock, and in a second out

FLYING ACCIDENT-1 DEAD 3 HURT


A fatal flying accident occurred at Amesliury, near Salisbury, at about seven o'clock yesterday evening, one man being killed and three persons seriously injured, including two soldiers.

PIT EXPLOSION

KILLS FIVE.

M e n , B l o w n t o Pieces in T e r r i b l e A c c i d e n t . a t a W e l s h Colliery. ( F r o m O u r Owin C o r r e s p o n d e n ' t . } NEWPORT (Mon.), May 19.The rescue of John Snatcham, among those missing after the explosion

yesterday afternoon at the Abernant {Maikham's) Colliery, near Argoed, in the Sirhowy Valleyt
would seem to fix the death-roll at five. The five victims have been identified a s : GeoTge Jones, head mecliaQic, wliose fatlier vpaa killed Six weeKs ago.. MichrtBl Caixoll. fitter, Aigoed. Bart IJeggatb, fitter, ArgoeS. Tom Piitrick, Caerphilly, banksman, a married man. Georgs Guntripp, sinker, HoUybuali. Of these the bodies of George Jones and George Guntripp have not yet'been recovered, search for them being continued to-day. The cause of the explosion is not yet known, but it was very violent, and some of the victims were literally blown to pieces. Snatcham was found by the rescue party in the lodge-room, 400 yards down the shaft, in a semiconscious condition. H e was quickly brought to the surface-and taken to the hospital, where to-day he is making good progress towards recovery. Six other men who were in a cabin close to the pit mouth had a marvellous escape, the wooden structure being entirely demolished.

staliation,- in order that, if further help were

j>eeded, it could be. suinraoned to the far-away island at once. But then news came that Mr. Churchill had ordered a warship to take relief, and, since the warship is fitted with wireless, Messrs. Marconi's valaable help was not made use of. The Daily Mirror tug contains enough stores to last the islanders until the ordinary relief ship arrives. (Photographs on page 13.)

considered.

At 4.15 the Londoii Hospital wa3

carriage had been reduced to a sliapeless mass.

FEAR OF STARVATION.

(Pi-om O u r O w n C o r r e s p o n d e n t O ABERDEEN, May 19.Most extraordinary was the story toSd by Captain James Rennie, of the trawler Strathmore, which arrived here yesterday, regarding the plight in wliich'.the inhftbitants of lonely St. Kilda find themselves as the result of lack of food supplies, caused by the severe weather experienced for several months on the Atlantic seaboard. In winter time a provision boat calls from the mainland once every three raonths, but so rough has the weather been that the islanders have not had a call from the steamer since before Christmas. It was on Sunday of last week that Captain Rennie, thinking that^ he might come across some other vessels oE the trawling fleet, decided t-o xMti, into St. Kilda. No other trawlers were there, however, but, making with all haste ffom the island in El' sit.^hoat, the Strathmore's crew espied seven or eiglir natives, whose anxiety in a measure prepared the skipper and his men for bad tidings. :The S t . K i l d a n s were taken on board, and subsefjuently related the story of their terrible privations. " W e are half-staiving,'' was one,of the first remarks m a d e ' b y the spokesman of the party. " W e have not seen the provision boat this y e a r ; " W e have no tea, no sugar, no meai. and or flour we have bnt a handful. We are practically living on sea fowl and their eggs." _The islanders proceeded to explain tliat tlie provision steamer had twice put in an appearance, but that in consequence of th6 rough weather no silpplies could be landed. Every day Jor weeks the islanders had been looking for relief, but it was not till a fortnight ago that they got in_touch with a Hull trawler which left a small quantity of foodstuffs and informed them or the Titanic disaster and the big storm of January.

" Pitiful voices were crying for help, and for a moment I thought I had gone mad. " Two ladies who a inonient before had been sitting opposite to me full of gaiety lay with their arms torn olf and their licad^ aniaahcd beyond recognition. " I shall never forget the scene of horror. One young soldier with an arm and leg severed was groaning, horribly and imploring the rescuers to finish him off. " People were running up and down the- line mad with terror. I do not know how I got to the hospital. I had a piece of steel in my right foot " It is a miracle I was not killed outright. I GOOD FOR THE CROPS. arrived on the platform as the train was moving I had a third-class ticket, I jumped General Showery Weather Predicted After out, and, though carriage. That saved my life, for into a first-class a Warm Week-End. no one in the next carriage survived." Official forecasts of frost for the week-end were not .realised, London and the country gener- WIFE SEES HUSBAND DECAPITATED ally enjoying a warm Saturday and Sunday. \ I h e temperature rose well into the sixties in PARIS, May 19.Most of the killed presented a London, and though only eight hours of sunshine terrible spectacle; several of them had their Jinibs ' were recorded for the two days, several seaside cut off or torn away. resorts returned about double this amount. A young married woman saw her husband's head With the barometer falling generally a genial fall before her, completely severed from the body, The cause of the accident would appear to havo and rather showery type of weather is indicated, with the rain in places accompanied by thunder, been the wrong setting of the points, but i t i s not and this is just what the countryside and the crops yet possible to say if it was due to a mistake, faulty points or sabotage. require. Two of the persons injured in yesterday's railway accident died this morning, while Nai Prasom, COLLIER SHOT. DEAD. the attache to the Siamese Legation in Paris, died this afternoon.Renter. In the roadway at Chesterfield early yesterday a collier named Alfred Johnson was found shot, TRIBESMEN'S ATTACK. and later John Mowbray, a collier, was arrested on a charge of murder. Bundar Abbas, on the Persian Gulf, has been Johnson accompanied a policman on his beat, attacked by the tribesmen, and H . M . cruiser Perand they met Mowbray. The officer flashed hks seus niid the screw-sloop Alert have landed parties, lantern, and Mowbray resented it and made use of while the Royal Indian Marine steamer Minto ha threats. Afterwards the report of a gun was heard, disembarked a <letachment of Rajputs. H . M . and Johnson was found dead. cruiser Fox has been ordered to the spot, Mowbray disappeared, and wag foiind asleep at a house a mile and a half away. The motive suggested is that Mowbray believed that Johnson had TO-DAY'S WBATBBp. given the police information about a poaching expedition.
Our special weather foreoaBt lor to-day Is : Moderate eouth-weatetly winds; oloudy a t times; some ahowora l a the west and north; coiitinuinit mild. LightiDB-up time: 8.49 p.m. Hiah-water at London Bridee. 1.20 p.m. LONDON OBSUKVATrONa, irolborn C liens, City, 6 p.m.: Barometer, 39.fi8iu Bteady; temparature. 63aeg. Wind; 8.W., light; weather, lair and hazy. Sea passages will bo smooth to moaorata.

CUT OFF FROM THE WORLD.

St. Kilda is the chief island, and the only inhabited one, of a rocky group lying far out in the Atlantic, forty miles west of the north-west extremity of North Uist. It measures about seven miles 111 circumference, and is enclosed with great, precipitous clifTs. It is the most lonely, the most remote and one of the most remarkable sjKJts in Great .Britain, The majority of its eighty inhabitants have never even seen a horse! They have never looked upon GANISING THE EXPEDITION, a tree or a bush, for such things do not grow on their wild, wind-swept home. Directly The Daily Mirror had decided to send The native? live to a hearty old age, and yet a relief vessel to the help of the starving folk of from, the moment they are born to the time when' St. Kilda, the question of organisation had to be they depart from this world at a ripe old age it K I L L E D 137- T I G E R S . considered. ia not necessary for them to.spend a farthing! London, for all practical purposes, was shut up. And, stranger still, in this remarkable and The death was announced yesterday of Colonel The new Shops Act was largely responsible for happy village, the tax-gatherer is absolutely un- F , G. Steuart, aged giglvty-three, an Indian Mutiny this. Several provision shops were.open, it is true, known, and it is a spot where the women do the veteran and a big game hunter, who had killed 137 but it was no good dealing with tnemthey COUIQ \vork and tlte men are the gossips. full-grown tigers.

Page 6

THE

DAILY

MIRROR

May 20, 1912

HOW IT FEELS TO 15E A


Mr. Harold Bride Tells of New York Crowd Who Shadowed Him.

RAILWAY CARRIAGES SHATTERED IN A COLLISION.

"THE MAYFLY IS UP!"


Phenomenon Which Has Gladdened Hearts of English Anglers.

A WEEK EAIILY.
A/

:XLAIMED AS "LOST SON."


" It is a very, difficult thing to be a hero, or at least to be thought a hero, How I longed at times to be quite unknown and just my old ordinary self !" With a smile Mr. Harold,Bride, the junior Marconi operator of the Titanic, made this remark to 2'he Daily Mirrof shortly after he had landed at Liverpool from the Baltic on Saturday morning. A HuLter ol excitement went round the wauniy crowds on the landing- stage as he walked down the gangwaythe first passenger to leave the ship. With eager eyes he searched everywhere for his father, who had come to meet him. Then he saw him. The two rushed to each other. "HullOj f a t h e r ! " cried the son, with the assumed casualness of youth. PlNGE&S FEEL FBOZEM. Harold Bride now bears little trace of his terrible ordeal. His right foot, however, is still numbed, a n d ' a Curioils result of lus exposure and_ struggles in the icy sea-water is that the finger-tips of his right hand, feel aa if they, were froKcnthey are still insensible to' touch. _ ,, '. Otherwise, hut for sleepless nights, Mr. Bride is quite well, and after a rest at his home at Shortlands (Kent) will resume his work as a Marconi operator. .During the train journey", from Liverpool to Shortlands he'described k_^^xperiencs " a s a h e r o " in America. Of the actual story of the sinking of the Titanic and his own escape he can say nothing until after the Titanic inquiry. SAVED FAVOUBITE PIPE. H e relateswith pride how he "salved his pipe." It was a favourite pipe, a long, straight briar, and it was with great joy that he found it stilljn his pocket on the Carpathia. This pipe, together with two photo'graphs blotched yellow with the sea Water, were practically the only things he managed to save from the wreck. Then he recalled the Carpathia's dramatic entry to New York harbour. " I t was like a nightmare," he said. " On all sides'were tugs and river craft o all kinds with newspaper men aboard shouting at u s . throttgh megaphones; the din of sirens and hooters was deafening, searchlights played on us, rockets were constantly explodmg. . . ." . And amidst all this bewilderment of lights and sounds Mr. Bride noticed, he says, \yith a peculiar distinctness the huge flashing advertisement signs. ' ,When he-arrived in New York, ill, tired out and temporarily lamed, he soon began to realise that he was a celebrity. " I was taken to my uncle's houSe," he said, " b u t in a short time my address was found out and numbers of kind-hearted people visited me. , " When I went out into the street to go to Senator Smith's inquiry men and women pressed rpund to shake.my hand. A fe'w days after my arrival in New York came the first request for autographs, SOLD HIS AUTOGRAPH. . " T h e first batch of letters came.chiefly from Americiin 'girls, all asking for my signature. One girl wrote: ' I should love to have your autograph to add to'my collection of notorious characters.' . " A t a friend's suggestion, I then sold my autograph for five and ten cents a time, and several dollars were thus obtained for niy aunt's missionary box." Among the letters received by Mr. Bride there Were three from people who imagined him to be a long-lost relative. One correspondent told an elaborate story of how she had lost sight of her boy years ago, and a^ked was he her son? When at Washington for the inquiry (he attentions of the American jonrnalists and other people were so pressing that h e had to disconnect the telephone in his bedroom at the New Willard Hotel. A valuable tie-pin was one of the presents he received from an admirer, andjust before he sailed on the Baltic, when he was able to walk without his,crutches, there.came along a strange gift from a-lady. - It wiis"-,^ "ushion ! A soft, expensive-looking cushipn,.embroidered with green and yellow flowers.

n
\r:^.

-:A*si'

-4

Debris covering; t h e lines a f t e r t h e terrible cotlisioh w h i c h o c c u r r e d on t h e N o r t h e r n R a i l w a y of F r a n c e a t P a r i s . S o m e of t h e c a r r l a s e e w e r e . r e d u c e d t o matchwood. ^

TO TEA BY AEEOPLAI^E.

XJALLAKT

^IGtyALMAN.

How Mr. Grahame White and Passenger Nearly Fainting He Remains on Duty for Galled on Friends Near Busliey. an Hour After Being Shot.
Mr. Grahame White flew from the Hendon Aerodrome yesterday to take tea with friends of his at Hartsbourne Manor, near Bushey, the residence of Miss Maxine Elliott. Mr. Hugo Rj^mboid, who had been staying at the manor, went down to Hendon yesterday atternoon to watch the flying. About a quarter past six he expressed a desire to Mr. Grahame White to pay another visit to the manor, but this time iii the nature of a surprise. The famous airnian and his passenger left in a Grahame White biplane and, after cilciing the aerodrome once, made oil in a westerly direction. The nine miles were covered in about thirteen minutes, and a landing was made in the 'park Sir Ernest Cassel, Lord Francis Hope, and the Duchess of Rutland, with their hostess, were playing tennis on the lawn at the time, and the descent of the airmen close- by was the cause of great surprise. They ran to the spot and greeted them, and the party proceeded to the house for tea. Mr. Grahame White stayed for some time, leav-. ing the manor just before half-past seven, and flew back to Hendon-^this time without Mr. Rumboldwhere he arrived about fifteen minutes later. Ten minutes afterwards he was in the air again with another passenger. This time it was Mrs. Arthur Du Cros, wife of Mr. Arthur Phillip Du Cros, M.P,, whom he took in the same aeroplane to her residence at Canon's Park. After remaining there a. short time, Mr. Gmliamc White rose into the air again, and within twentyfive minutes his machine was being run into its hangar at Hendon. This was Mrs, Du Cros' first flight. During the afternoon Mr, Grahame White flew round the aerodrome several times with Miss Taylor, his fiancee. <Prom Our Ovwn CbrreepondentO MANCHESTER, May W.After sniiering great pain in his heroic devotion to duty, .when accidentally shot in the eye in his cabin, William Morrellj a signalman, is now making good progress at the Royal Eye Hospital here. H e was examined under the X rays to-day, and sevjen pellets were removed; Morreliwas in his cabin on the Manchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway, near a. field where a pigeon shoot was being held, Shots were being fired at pigeons which had escaped during the shoot when Morrell was struck in the left eye .by pellets which passed through the glass of his cabin. Morrell was blinded and in great pain, but knowing that many lives depended upon his continuing to work" he made an heroic effort to discharge his duty, and with his hand to his wounded eye he went oh pulling the levers for an hour until a doctor and a relief signalman arrived. A youth named Eden, who was the firstto go to Morrell's aid and scour the neighbourhood for a doctor, said that the injured man was in great pain, and was almost fainting all the time he worked the levers. Twelve trains passed the points at the man's cabin while he bravely remained at his post. When Dr. Westwood arrived more than an hour afterwards - orrell completely collapsed from exhaustion.

(From Our- Special Correspondont.) BiiEAMOliR (TlaiUs), May 19.The mayfly has risen in the land, and nature has gone wild for ten mad, delirious days. Down here, on the green skirts of the rolling uplands of the New Forest, a phenomenon has happened. The mayfly, deceived by the pleasant stretch of warm, sunny days, has risen a week before his time, and. Nature is all the more madly and wildly excited because it is so unexpected and unprecedented. As a rule the mayfly is almost as regular in his time as Hig Ben.^ H e usually makes his annual appearance about May 21, and disappears, just as suddenly again, in ten days' time. Directly he appearsand he only makes his appearance in ones and twos at the beginning the word goes round in some mysterious way, " T h e mayfly is u p ! " Then, from. all. parts of Ii!ngland the rattle of the .rod and reel can be heard, and anglers rush forth to the f r a y ; for it is the maddest and most amazing week for them, too, in the whole year. Although we are a week before our lime down here, the word has been circulated broadcast in the old familiar way, and the enthusiasts have begun to arrive with their wonderful freemasonry of impossible stories, and fresh supplies of " w a d e r s " and rods, and imitation mayflies are arriving by every train. A BRIEF, TRAGIC LIFE. For the intoxicating (en days' dance of death of the mayfly has really commenced. Ordinary folk may well ask. with just irritation, " W h o and what on earth is the mayllj'?" It is not an easy question to answer m a word, or even a sentence. But, After, due consideration, h e ' is probably o.ne of the most tragic living things in creation. In fact, sometimes he doesn't even live at all, rightly speaking. His career is a i)ainfii!ly touchand-go affair from the beginning ; and, at the incst, he has only a day to live it in. I''or two years lie lies at the bed,of the river as larv^. Then comes some nice warm, inviting

BRITISH SHIP SEIZED.


Steamer Detained at N e w Orleans A r m s and A m m u n i t i o n . with

BATH V. BUXTON.
N o r t h e r n S p a T h i n k s I t s Rival C l a i m s T o o M u c h for I t s Springs.

There is trouble among the spasthe English ones. For Buxton has a grievance against Bath. Bath claims to have the only radio-active hot water spring in Britain, and widely advertises it as such. Buxton contends that its springs are quite. as radio-active as those of Bath, and the master has been solemnly discussed by the Buxton Council. . A member of the council said this was not the first time they had had occasion to complain of the methods of advertising adopted by Bath. The point was that Bath drew a fine distinction between hot and warm springs, and gave figures of comparison as to radio-activity in Bath and Buxton. The comparisons, he contended, were based on erroneous figures. He thought the council should send a dignified that this of advertisement The directors of the Cunard Company have letter, pointing out to add to classdignity of British was not calculated the decided to award one month's extra pay to every spas. niember of .the Carpathia's-crew, in r-ecognition of-their services-to the Titanic's survivors. The following further subscriptions have been , 'Thousands of mourners attended the funeral of added to The Daily Mirror Fund to supply milk Mr. Wallace. Hartley, the heroic bandmaster of the to nursing mothers and babies, the victims of inTitanic, which took place on Saturday at Colne, dustrial distress : ~ , Lanes. . . -. . . Anon. lOdol. bill (Toronto Canada) 2 1 0 1 0 0 The whole town was in mourning, flags being W. Fraser (Belize. British Honduras) Miss Cecil Q. S. Walker . 1 0 0 lowered, to hjilfiiiiast arid blinds drawn. -After an impressive service, at which the strains W. Smith (Westminster) : 1 0 0 of "Nearer, My God, to Thee," gave an especially Coilectioti, per Netta Peters, .Cambridge 0 15 0 affecting touchj the funeral procession moved slowly ; Aged Grannie ....'. 0 6 0 through -the streets of the town to the cemetery. Baby and Toddles 0 5 0 where, at the graveside, a choir.again rendered the Corporal lYork) : 0 2 6 hymnvvhich was played on the Titanic. Anon. (Tean) ' 0 2 6 TURKISH jBARRACKS B O M B A R D E D A Mother
Collection, per Mrs. W. Smith, Tiverton Medium Freddie H. N D I A N I (Woolwich) P R I N C E ' S 0 0 0 0 2 2 i 0 0 0 i 2

TITANIC'S BANDMASTER BURIED.

3,838 FOR MILK FUND.

HEIR. CONSTANTINOPLE, May 19.A telegram from The gifts to the fund now total ^3,838 l i s . l i d . Sm-wina states/that itahan warships yesterdny bom. barJcd Marinaris, on the Asiatic mainland, oppoA son and heir was born yesterday to his' Highsite-Rhodes, destroying the ammunition depots ness the M,aharaja of Bhavnagar and the Maha-^ and a portion of. the barracks, but doing no other rani. The latter was invested with the Imperial damage.^Renter. Order of the Crown of India at the Delhi Durbar.

N E W ORLEANS, May 19.~The United States officials have seized the steamer Santona, ilying the British flag, on the charge of violating Piesideiit A MAYFLY ON A ItUSH, Taft's proclamation regarding the shipment of arms and ammunition to Mexico. weather towards the end lof May, and, without The vessel had cleared and sailed when she was knowing anything at all about it as yet, he rises in seized. She carried 110,000 rounds of rifle arnmuni- his sheath or "shuck " to the surface. fion and ten cases of carbines.Renter. Directly the air is reached tlie sheath sjdits open, and the new-born mayil^ flutters free, with a heart no doubt filled with the joy,and promise of life, LOUIS AND LOLQ. Whatever his happy expectations may be, they are seldom realised, alas ! H e never has a single T w o T i t a n i c Babies Sail for T h e i r H o m e instant's peace until the moment of his natural demiseshould he h e s o . f o r t u n a t e a s to reach i t with T h e i r Mother. which occurs about si."i in the evening, and which is the most peaceful event in his,exciting c(ireer. (From , Our Own Correspondent.) Every living creature within reach makes an N E W YORK, May 19.The Titanic babies, Louis and Lolo, are on their way home after their terrible attack on him, and looks upon him as fair game. To-day they were hatching up here in hundreds, . mid-ocean adventure.' Mme. Navratil, happy at the recovery of her and twinkling about for what was in most cases two little boys, Louis and Edmond, sailed yester- a few brief seconds only. . One rose to the surface, burst his encasing 'day on the^ Oceanic for Cherbourg and Nice. sheath and had only just commenced to live "'As the little chaps were, carried aboard the big liner they seemed nervous at the sight of the. water, when " P l o p ! " a trout jumped like a streak o i and evidently still .remembered the dark _ night iridescent light and had him. voyage in the open boat when they left the sinking JOYOUS, EXCITED ANGLERS. Titanic. His brother got away from safely, There are only sixty-one first class passengers on and was just trying his wings the shath surface along 'the the Oceanic for this trip; - of the water wlien " S n a p ! " and a diick had him. ; H i s sister managed to get away a little further and was fluttering gail^ into the sunshine when CATTLE MAIMING OUTRAGE. there was a sudden rushing swoop and a swallow had her. A shocking case of cattle maiming was disArid so, in this lamentable way, a whole family covered in Sheffield-yesterday. ' ' '' Mr. C ' T . L a w , butcher, of Cxookes, placed was wiped out. And scores and scores of other happy families too, some cattle in the corporation slaughterhouse. .But on the banks and in the water stand joyful They were bedded u p and left secmCj b u t yesterday two were found dying, with their hind and excited anglers, bitten and inoculated with the.same mad mayflj; fever, who realise to the quarters practically gashed to shreds. T h e work had been done with a knife stolen from an adjoiti- full that they are having the greatest week in all the glad new year. i'ng slaughterhouse. For a trout will rise to a mayflyand to ai? The animals were killed and the matter reported imitation one just as promptlyas he will to to the police. . , nothitig else on earth. " ' " ' ' T h e last phase in the life of thpse lucky mayEX-PRESIDENT C A S T R O DYING. flies who have ^luded nature's con"fcentrated attack takes place in the pasture-scented dusk. WASHINGTON, May 19.News has reached here They have found their mates, and indulging in that ex-President Castro is l y i n g 111 in a critical ft mad irresponsible dance which is called " dapcondition at Teneriffe and Is not expected to re- ping " by country-folk, they gradually sink and cover.Renter. die,

May 20, 1912

O'HE

DAILY

MIRROR

Page 7

Invention of Portable Dulcimer-Piano Danish Royal Family Place Flowers Tribute Paid to. "All the Terrys" Thought Out During Street Rounds. jRound King Frederick's Coffin: at London Banquet. His Majesty's Many and Varied Lambeth possesses a young dustman who in his The Queen-Mother, the King and Queen of Denspare time has invented a new musical instrument. mark, and the other members of the Royal Family, Duties at Aldershot.

THE KING'S 12 HOURS' WORE A DAY.

DUSTMAN MUSICIAK.

GREAT STAGE FAMILY

Tttfe DEAD MONARCH,

HALF AN HOUR FOR LUNCH


<From Our Special Correspondent.) ALDERSHOT, May 19.The King will concliicie his visit to Aldershot to-morrow (Monday) morning, whea, accompanied by the Queen, he wtl! leave the royal paviUbn at 10 o'clock and journey by motor-car to Buckingham Pdlaoe, arriving about 11.40. Thousands of people assembled in the vicinity . of the royal pavilion and All Saints' Church today to see the brilliant spectacle a,lw3.ys associated with church parade, which was attended by the King and Queen. Representative detachments from all the corps in North and South Camp in full dress uniform, \6 the number of more than 700, took their seats twenty minutes befojje the King, who wore the fuU-dress uniform of a field marshal, and the Queen arrived on foot by way of a private path from the pavilion. Their Majesties sat in the front row near the pulpit; T h e orohestra was supphed by the string band of the, 19th (Queen Alexandra's Own) Royal Hussars. The choir was augmented, and the fiermbn was preached by, the Chaplain General, Bishop Taylor Smith. ; > SIX H0UB5 IN THE SADDLE. yifter the service the King and Queen stood on the lawn outside the church and watched the troops, headed ,b>; their own bands, march past on their retu'rr^^o barracks. .Then their Majesties walked back^to the royal pavilion. Tn the,afternoon their Majesties were visited by prince Maurice of Battenberg, Since his Majesty's arrival last Wednesday he has Jiad a most strenuous time. He has bceii continuously working for at least twelve hours a ftay, and on some days his work was fto pressing that he could spare no more than hait an hour for lunch, and not even the customary one hour for dinner. Kvery morning the King rose at seven o'clock, and by 9.30 he was either in his motor-car ormounted on one of his chargers proceeding to watch and criticise the training of his troops in the field. On two days the King was six hours in the saddle, , find yesterday, when he went to Bordon to watch infantry training, he,travelled about forty miles by jnotOT-car, and was in the saddle two hours. As is well known, the King has a special foncJ.. ftess for horses, and I noticed that before mounting his Majesty always gave' his charger two or three lumps of sugar, which he produced from a paper bag, and an affectionate pat on the neck. HER MAJESTY'S SYMPATHY. Undoubtedly the most charming incidents in connection with the Queen's visit occifrred yesterday) when^ obeying the maternal instinct wnich is so strong m her, she visited the I-ouise Margaret Hospital for Soldiers' Wives and Children. Her Majesty spoke kindly to every mother, and'took a great delight in looking at the tiny babies and squeezing their plump little hands to make them smile. Each of these wee mites lay in a swing cot at the foot of its mother's bedan arrangement which was warmly commended by the Queen. In the centre of the Maternity Ward were baby girl twins only a few days otd, and when her Msjesty saw them she exclaimed, " W h a t dear httle babies. ' . , Her Majesty was particularly interested m the Jnethod of bsithing the,babies, The water taps of the bath are worked with the foot, so that the nurse's hands are left free to hold the baby. " A n excellent idea." was the Queen's comment. Having spent nearly an hour in the hospital, the Queen joined the King on a tour of inspection of the Cambridge Hospital,' where their Majesties showed, a deep and sympathetic interest m the ailments of all the soldier patients, (Photograph on page 17.)

Ah accomplished musicianhe can play h've different instrumentsSamuel Woods, the inventor, described the new instrument to The Daily Mirror at his home in. Glasshouse-street, S.E. " I t is a portable dulcimer-piano," he said, " a n d it can be played either as a little piano or separately as a dulcimer. " The idea of a piano that could be easily carried about occurred to me some six months ago when I was looking in a music shop. " A t last I drew a design of the invention, but so far I have' not started to make it, because I have liot sufficient money to buy the materials. Roughly,I reckon ^2.103. wouid be enough. " The instrument when complete would be about 3ft. long, 2ft. wide, and. a foot deep. " A s yon see by the-design, there will be little piano keys, which will make the, hammers strike the wires. But the p.iano hammers can be taken away and the dulc'imer can be played in the ordinary w a y . " This dustman-musician has never had any lessons in music, and in his own words, he just "seem.ed to pick it u p . " His age is twenty-seven, and he says he can " play a b i t " on the dulcimer, banjo, mandoline, whistle and zither. _ , Besides nis aptitude for invention. Woods does enamel painting,, and he has made a rou.^h design of a sanitary dust-cart to be drawn by motor traction.

'THE SHAKESPEABE GIRL/

says a Renter's message-from Copenhagen, on Sat* urday morning paid a visit to the Castle Church,

COST OF LlViNG,
Leading Factor of Industrial Unrest Discussed in'the-" London Magazine."

Among the causes lor the labour unrest which Mr. H . G. Weils is now analysing so keenly in the columns of The Daily Mail a leading place must be given to the increased cost of livinga phenomeno to which even the most unthinking housewife can testify from painful experience. The phenomenon in all its bearings is discussed and explained in a timely article by Mr. Manners MiSS ELLEN IN VAHIETY. Howe m the " I-ondon M a g a z i n e " published toMiss Ellen could tell deeply inieresting stories day. ' ' The masterpiece in this world :of ours," as the of her early career. How_, for example, she was shaken .pieces in being so vigorously author epigrammatically puts it, " is not to be nearly to dancetowhile almost an infant, and of fo'und amongst principalities and powers, but In ta.ught a juvenile escapade. many the pantry," Miss Terry could also relate some peculiar exThe article, which is but one feature of an excel- periences of a " v a r i e t y " kind when she was lent number, will repay careful reading by those compelled by need to " a c c e p t an e n g a g e m e n t " interested in the problems of the day. (as actors say) at the old Coliseum in Regent's Park,-a variety enterprise then managed by Mr. Culverweli, father of Sir Charles Wyndham. IN. LOVE WITH FRENCH LESSONS. There,' too, in her pensive beauty, was Miss Marion TSrry, whom her sister Ellen lately L i t t l e G i r ! W a n t s " T h e D a i l y M i r r o r " described to the writer as " o u r finest pathetic actress," C o u r s e t o " G o On"for E v e r . " . And there were Miss Ellen's .two children namely, Mr. Gordon Craig, distinguished alike as " Can't we take some more French lessons? I artist and Stage producer, and Miss Edith Craig, want them to go on for ever." Thus did thirteen-year-old Mary O'Halloran, who still hopes to convert her mother to the suf. . of South London, one of the London County frage cause. Mr. and 'Mrs. Ben. Terry had several sons. Council children who are going to Paris at WhitThe eldest is Georgelong with Irving in the, suntide, appeal to 7'he Daily Mirror There has been a 'race to learn French during Lyceum "_treasury' ; the second is Charlesa the fortnight's course between children of South martial-figured man who mostly goes in for London, who knew some French when they lirst theatrical touring management, met Professor Bizeray, and children of East DEBT TO IHVING. I,ondon, who did not know a w o r d ' w h e n they The third is, Fred, who married Miss Julia Neilbegan the course. T h e East, nevertheless, won son and is the father of Miss Phyllis and her young easily. =_ brother Dennis, who is also with Sir Herbert Tree. Professor Bizeray has been so charmed with his Kir. out as Sebastian to Sister little pupils that he states, that all children who Ellen's Fred, who came be played by his daughter Viola (a would like to go to his school in Bouverie-street, at His Majesty'spart to Thursday) often speaks of next I'^.C, on Wednesday mornings may 'attend his the debt he owes to the kindness of Irving. lectures free of charge until they are proficient " One thing which he taught m e " {says he) in French. "helped to save much expense. H e taught me to manage my stage sword-fights without hacking the scenery to shreds." S T R E E T SIGNALS FAIL. This brilliant gathering of AH the Terrystheir PARIS, May 19.The signal kiosk for regulat- sisters, their cousins and their aunts>T-" supported " ing trainc which was erected on the Boulevard by a large number of other dramatic favourites, was Montmartre has been found impracticable, and is very fittingly presided over by the Fair Guest's manager. Sir Herbert Tree. being demolished.Renter.

" T h e Shakespeare Girl "that was the tribute paid by Miss .Ellen Terry to the acting-of Miss Phyllis ,Nei]son-Terry, who was the guest of the O.P. Club at dinner at the Hotel Cecil last night. Rem'embrances of this wonderful theatrical family are ahnost unending. Of course, there have been other famous theatrical families, notably the Kembles (headed.bv Sister Sarah Siddons), the Farrens, and the liobertsons. But these Terrys are a wonderful group of players. . They date hack tq Daniel Terry, a great Iriendof Mr, (afterwards Sir) Walter Scott, an'' the first dramatiser of the novels of that Wizard &. the North. Sitting among.the numerous representatives of the family last night, one's mind w.ent back to the actual founders of that group, namely, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Terry, whom some can remember as ever, beloved and, honoured visitors to Henry Irving at the Lyceum long after they had retired from acting. LINK WITH SEAN. And there sat all--or almost ailof their descendants, children, grandchildren, and even a growing great-grandchild or two, children of Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Craig. There.was Miss Kate Terry, whom her parents put on the stage at the age of eight with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kean at the Princess'. With her was her daughter, Mabel Terry-Lewis. Hard by sat the ever-young and ever-charming Ellen Terry. Miss EUen at the age of six joined sister Kate with the Keans. Barely ten years later Miss Ellen married the great painter, G. F . Watts, After work in the provinces itiss Ellen at last got to London, and after several trying experiences, made her first great hit with the Bancrofts at the old Prince of Wales' as Portia, the part which her niece is to play for the first time at His Majesty's to-night,

where they arrangetl magnificent floral decorations around the coffin,of the iate monnrch.
In addition to the royal personages already mentioned, the Emperor of Austria will be represented at the late King Frederick's funeral by the Arch' duke Peter h erdinaud; Prince Frederick of Schauniberg-Lippo will attend in person. The King of Siam will be represented by a Siamese Prince, iinr! the Argentine Chargii d'Affaires in Copcnha(jen will represent his Government. The King of Italy will be represented by the Duke of (ienoa, ancl'the Regent of Luxemburg is also sending a represciUative, Kino, Gustave, according to a Renter's message from Stockholm, will in person attend the inler.ment of the late King at Roskilde. Iving Cieorge of tireece, siiys Reuter, who wilt also be among the mourners, left Athens on-Saturday for Copenhagen, anil will be absent from Greece for four weeks. Queen Alexandra and the Empress Marie oE "Russia, as alrea.dy announced, leave London for Copenhagen to-morrow. The rojal party will travel via Dover and Calais, crossing the Channel on tho royal yacht. At ('iilais their Miijesties will joiii tho Russian imperial train, It i-i understood that after the funeral of llie lata King Frederick the Empress will proceed direct to St. Petersburg. At present it is Queen Alexandra's intention riot to make a protracted slay in Denmark.. Preaching at (he Ch.ipei Royal, St. James', yesterday, from tlie text, " In the world yc shalV have tribulation: hut he of good cheer, I have overcome the world," the Arclibishop of York alluded to the death of King Frederick, adding : " Our hearts are filled with deep and most respectful sympathy with our gracious Queen Alexandra, who has been called lo add this io tha burden of her recent sorrow." (Photographs on pages 1, 10 and 11,}

DEATH OF LORD STALBRIDGE.


Lord Stalhridge died at his residence in LondorJ on Saturday aflcriioim at the age of scvcniy-live, The late peer, who was the second son of the second ^huqnis of Westminsler, was Parliamentary Secretary to the 'J'reasiiry from 1880 to J885, and

r,oRD STAi.BRiDai;.

chairman of the London and Xortli-Westeni Railway Company from 18D1 to 1911, He sal as l.ihetal M.P. tor Flintshire for twenty-five years and was brother of the first IJuke of Westminster. He is succeeded by his son, the Hon. Hugh Grosvenor, who saw service in the South African War, being twice mentioned in dispaiclies. He married Miss Gladys dc Coiircy Ni\on and has a son seven years of age.

'~'v^m

^iP^K A* * i * Iwiifti II...

"^ '

-r-

il

'^iiA^^^m^i^^,^^
t h e trains, which fell on somo coachesi complotely destroying them. class coach, cut in tvwo. ( 2 ) A first-

Terrible scenes f o t l o w e d ' a faital railway collision which occurred within a .stone's throw of tho Qare du Nord " ' a t l*ar<8< <l) LoQomotivo of ono of

Page 3

'Advettisers'

Announcementt.

THE

DAILY

MIRROR

'Advertisers^

Annoiincementf.

May 20, 1912

Smart Coats for Whitsun*


T H E LARGEST DRAPERY & FURNISHING HOUSE SOUTH OF THE THAMES. LTD.

ready for immediate service.


ADIES who need a smart Gown or Coat at a moment's notice will appreciate the unusual facilities afforded by our large and diverse assortments of Ready-towear Garments. We specialise in goods ready for immediate service not ordinary ready-mades, but garments of distinctive style and cut, and made exactly as they would be if ma ie to youf special order,
During the coming week special interest will be centred in t h e departments devoted to R a c e G o w n s a n a Coats, Reception G o w n s a n d W r a p s , Rvpning Frocks, O p e r a Cloaks ond Millinery. H e r e are \ ^ V a l u e s : two very special Coat

CLAPHAM JUNCTION, S.W.

What to Wear for Whitsnn


N u m e r o u s purchases m u s t be made at this season by every welldressed lady. S t y l e , fit, q u a l i t y a n d e c o n o m y c o m b i n e d a r e t o b e f o u n d in e v e r y a r t i c l e d i s p l a y e d in our S h o w r o o m s . A v i s i t t o Clapham Junction this w e e k will undoubtedly prove a pleasure and a profit, to you. The f o l l o w i n g i t e m s a r e t y p i c a l of t h e v a l u e s w e offer v a l u e s w i t h o u t parallel in L o n d o n . All drapery goods sent car paid fo any addtesa in the Kingdom.

Ladies' Patent Colt w h o 1 o cut Court Shoe, straight toecap, button ornament, Ctiban Also in White and Grey Siiede

heeJ. 0 / 1 ' 1 Z7l 1 I VALUE AT BIGHT PBICES.

STERLING

REAL SHANTUNG COATS. yHE"SEAFORD." Heav^ Natural


Real Shantung Coat, cut with raglan sleeves, ,53 inches long, tailor- ^^A*"*^ mads. Very exceptional value. oUS, BLACK SILK COATS. T H E " H A S T I N G S . " Smirt Coat . in fine bUck Poplin, \ jy light in weight and smart in; appearance. it is trimmed with wide lace insertion, and niade in ' three sizes.. ^^]y^ Very exceptional . value DJS.
Prder* by Post will receive special care and prompt attention and, all nii'rchases are forwarded free in the United Kingaoni. T h e csceptioiial guaiily end stremely low price of this. IndersKirt will appeal to .Ihe economical purchaser. A tietlet cut and neater finish could not be wished .for, Made . in a fiood quality Moiretto, In - all J h e beat colourines, ^ / 1 1 1 Price - ' / * *

Ladies' Glace Kid Derby Shoe, perforated quarters, patent toe-cap, Cuban heel, ribbed silk tie included ...

' 7 / 1 "I I MM Xtoney Refunded

SEAFORD."

BJack and White Stripe Cotton Dress; side Rever and Peter pan Collar pf embroidery. , _ Well Cut' with' Panel , SItirt, /l 1 A Other /** 2 clock

Ladies Glace Kid Derby Shoe, pateiit or ' Slaco toe-cauB, Cuban heel, ribbed silk tie included.

son s
OXFORD STREET, LONDON, W.
19 in. long. W o n b 8/. S e n t on approval. Honey retDrned If not delighted.

Johfl Harmv

2/- or Two for 3/6 Great Whitsuntide SAMPLE OFFER Of REAL OSTRICH PLUMES. TRUNK SALEI
T O - D A Y & DURING JH^WEEK
NOTICE.Owin to the enormous expense of this offer, we cannot, supply more than a of these Plumes lo each CUB tome r, Send f o r i b e s e Dargatna at o n c e t o avoid disappointment. Visit o u r S b o w r o o m s 30,000 Stock t o s e l e c t front o r s e n d for Cataiogoe f r e e . Brine us your own Feathers to no I.an eeren or Ileilovat^d, aiid your JJoas to Ije.cleaijed or re-dyed.. We aio exports. CAUTION.We are the orifiinatora (and oniy Genuine Firm) of Direct Supply from Bird to Buyer, and the Pioneers of ihe Ostrich Feaiher 7"rade. Post Free SENT

(Post Free). Of good quality Casement Cioth, trimmed seif-colourfd buttons, lawn Quaker Collar and Cuffs. Colours : Navy, Saxe, Butcher, Champagne,^ Cinnamon, Vie us Rose, : Keseda, Ain ethy st, and Gr^y, "Tftuit apPii. S e a s o n ' s Cataliie on application. ,

No. 11 M.R. Beautiful S u i t C a e , sqare edges. Welted, good Lock, and two Clips, exposed Nickel Frame, Leather Handle. Sizes 23 4 26 In.

"THE OXFORD," Black, White, and all 'Newest Spring Shades.' This lustrous full fined Real Ostrich Plume, post free on receipt of remittance for 2/- or 2 for 3/8 NOTE A D D B E S S - O p p o s l t e S e l f r l d s e ' f l .

5/6

|^JSs21/6 23/6

25/6

COLONIAL OSTRICH FEATHER Go.


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DIRECT FROM OUR PARIS FACTOHV. This exqiiialto and fascluntlnK real Ostrich roallicr NecltJet, of hFst quality feather, soft lor tlie uoek, fastens with hooif and eye, silk how to iriatoli. EHIiis. !n length, to fit round neck lis llhistrntcd, In lllaOk, White, and alltho latest Sjiring ShHdee. 5 / 6 1""*'' frre. Worth lE/-

IT ON

APPROVAL.

'mGANT PARISIAN MODELS!


The CORSET
Direct from Factory to your Door.

. ,

Washable
. Easily Washed in the Home.

JOHN HABRIES,
Westboqrne Grove, W,

27/6
Fibre T R U N K , with metal binding round lid, exposed Nickel frame, eight leather cap comers, tray lined twiil, brass lock, two front straps. Sizes, 27, 30, 33, 36in. . AH one price (carriage paid). . LADY FLORENCE DIXIE, GLENSTUART, A N N A N , N.B.. writes: 'Many Inferior, Tents are sold at double its price." No centre pole.

ALWAYS CLEAN
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DO YOU W A N T
ANOTHER

EVEBLASIINiG WEAR
In White or Grey. EMPIRE I-ook SS&L. On Every for this a^WSpr n Oenuine Trade ^' ^M ' "XBNJA" Mark ^9^ Corset,
TRADE MARK

&\ A WEEK!
Ilellable persona will be pro> Tided w i ^ conEtant home work on AUTO-KNITTERS by hosiery Manufacturer*. EsperJcnc* unnecessary, dlttsnce tniniateriAl.Write at once, enclosfng Id. stamp for poitatfe, to 0 . C. GENZ &C0. (Dept, 2 3 ) , S2, Belyoir S t r e e t . Leicester. Carr. paid.

4/11

HANDSEWN. For t w o pairs or A / A ' m o r e . P o s t a g e Frtee. o / H S i n g l e p a i r s S d . e x t r a t o r p o s t a g e . ** I w Is. e x t r a lor Foreign and Colonial Orders. At this remnrliBbly low price wo arc supplying the most fashionable Models In Finest fJlaec or Patent I.naltier , Fancy Shoes, 1 hose rah le oh, tallied ill BlackorTan, trininwd with FftDcy Ornaments. High, Meditim, or Low Heels. Similar quality it Paris. Shoes are. being Sold in I-ead!ng , West End Shops at more than double thft price we chaie. Money Heuiriicd if Goods not approved. Tlie MODE DU BAL can 1)6 had in ]jiack Glace, lati,- and Patent Leatliers, tn all coinuieof Velvet Leathers and Poplin to matcl) ladles' dreBseS. Hose : to match atl/Hcdc du BKI,
l/6,& !/-

SENT OH APPAO/AL.

Of all leading Drapers and Lndfec' Ontfltters or writ ToriKiI(Iet,andvddir<eH.ofncflreiit Agent to the Mannffctiiriers: ..

per pair; , Cashmere orLlB'e In Plain or Lace. Send lor copy of New Catalogne, post free.

DELAFON.^gv.W^wm^iiSt.Lopd6n,W.

The Parisian Slioe Manufacturers,


Dept. X.lla.LODDIQES ROAD, HACHNBV, LONDON, m r - OUR ONLY J^ODUESa. "^KB NO CONNECTION W I T H A N Y O T H E R F I R M .

May 20, 1912


NOTICE TO READERS.
Th9 Editorial, AdTertising and CenerftI Busiaegs Office* I The Vaily Mirror are.: 12, WHITEFBIARS-STREET. LONDON, E.O. tJ^EUieiiOiisia : 6100 llolboro p^e.lines). ^OViNCiAL CHLT-S: 125 T.9, London, "pAnia OmcB: 3fi, E^e da Sentier.

THE

DAILY

MIRROR

Page ^ T H R O U G H T H E MIRKOR'
ANOTHER PROPHECY,

T H I S MORNING'S GOSSIP.

MOMPAY, MAY 20, 1913,

O C I A L events are more numerous than ever this week, and there'are many dances taking place. M I S , Stainton has a dance tonight at tbe Ritz, and Mrs. Arcliijaald Norman is also giving a .ball. A Eimilar entertainment is to b s given b y X a d y Maxwell, the wife of General Sir John Maxwell, at her house in Ealon-squaTe. This dance is Jn honour of the debut of Miss Philae Maxwell, Another important event of the evening is Mrs. Bischofisheim's cotilloa at Bute House, South Audiey-street,

country. Mrs. Mark Fenwlek has a small dance at 23, Bruton-street o n that night, and Mary Lady Gerard is giving u cotillon at Claridge'g, Mrs, G r a i a m e Stewart has a dinner dance which will be followed by a cotillon. Lady Butghclere, who is a sister of Lord Carnarvon, is giving a dance at Surrey House, a n d Mrs. Annan Bryce is a dance hostess at 35, Bryanston-square. On Wednesday, too, thers will be a dress rehearsal of the Naval and Military Tournament, and the interesting show will be opened on the ioiiowing day. O n Thursday night tliere will be the Empire fancy dress ball at the Savoy Theatre, the proceeds being devoted to the Middlesex HospitaJ. Prince and Princess Alexander oETcck will be present, and

BII^VS

"BETTERS."

* *

To-morrow night Gora Lady Strafford has a musicai party at Chandos House, when Sir Henry

H O W tliy b e t t e r s " is a n o l d s a y i n g , no doubt in past times often inflicted u p o n t h e e a r s of i m p e r tioent upstarts who would have, thrust thems e l v e s '^into p l a c e s app,ointed f o r t h o s e s o c i a l l y a b o v e t h e m . W e m a y t a k e t h e saying nowadays with a n added sense to it. K n o w t h y b e t t e r ^ t h y s o c i a l supeiiors^ive taay s a y t o t h o s e a t h e l o w e r r u n g s of thfi ladders know them a n d you shall certainly not envy them a n y more. F o r it is rather comically claimed a t t h ^ p o m e n t t h a t those on the lowest r u n g s g o a b o u t b i t t e r l y l o n g i n g for e x a c t l y t h e s o r t of p l e a s u r e s t h e y s e e b e i n g i n d u l g e d o u t of t h e i r r e a c h . I t i s a m a t t e r of p e r s o n a l t o r m e n t t o o u r f r i e n d B i l l , of Q u e e r - s t r e e t , E . j t b a t l i e h a s n o c l i a n c e , n e x t w i n t e r , of g o i n g t o t h e . R i v i e r a f o r la c h a n g e . The sbarp a p p e a l of a l l t h e c l a m o u r i n g faces, t h e e a g e r e i g h t s a n d , s o u n d s of B i l l ' s n e i g h b o u r h o o d , a r e , wo a r e giyen t o suppose,' ^ s o l u t e l y p D t h i n g t o h i m . A* h e f e e l s t h e c o o l n i g l i t " ^ i r o n n i s f a c e , a f t e r a l o n g d a y i n t h e work-^ Sh.Dp, a s h i s w a s h a n d brush, u p i s o v e r , a n d t h e t h o u g h t c o m e s t o h i m t h a t it's S a t j a r d a y a n d shfft v e r y m a g n i f i c e n t , w a i t s f o r h i n i a t the corner. Bill's heart disraally sinks a n d b e reflects (we a d a p t his forcible t o n e s t o gentler measure) j " Ah, no Riviera for m e t h i s w i n t e r . N d c l u b i n tlie W e s t E n d , l i k e

In the presence of the marvellous present-day Ae. velopment of motor tratfie, by land, sea and air, it may not be uninteresting to your readerglo have broiight to their notice the enclosed quotation from Roger Bacon, who more than C O years ago, when O the motive power of steam and spirit and electricity was undreamt of, adumbrated the poKsibifilies of a then far distant future. Here is the quotation ; ~ " Machines can be constructed to drive ships more rapidly than a whole galley of rowers could d o j nor would they need anything but a pilot to steer them. Carriagea also ipight be constructed to move at an incredible speed without the aid of any animal. Finally, it would not be impossible to make machines vvhich, by means of a suit of wings, should fly in the air in the manner of birds," (Roger Bacon.)
F E E D "WKDB.

BISDS THAT BISTUHB SLP IN LONDON,

London-road, Worcester.
EUGENIC MARRIAGES.

While most heartily wel* coming the new, measura for the proper care -and control of the feebleminded, I cannot help thinking that there may be a grave danger attached to that proposal, whereby an army of inspectors is to he permitted to invade tha homes of the people in order to find out the mentally deficient resident in them and to remove them lo a safe place. The danger really lies in the stringency of the test as to mental deficiency. W h a t , is tliat to be? Many poor families will I think be only too clad to pass oil some of their relatives as mentally deficient in order to get them off their hands. Very care* fu! medical tests will hav to be applied, For the rest, no problettt more than this is at pregent worthy of the thought and consideration of your readers. There is much talk nowadays of industrial unrest. There is not enough talk about thij growmg rebellion and dis*. content amongst the latepaying class against tha' great evil of feeble-minded marriages and feeMeminded families resulting from them. Would it not be an excellent reform if the poor, instead of envying tha rich, were to determine to suppress this terrible evil of the propagation of tha unfit amongst themselves? W. L. Aibert Gate Mansions. , UQLY BOOKS. I entirely agree' thai 'what we of the modern world want ia beauty and more beauty in our books. Think of i l l Wehve.(all those of U3 who have to work in chies) in almost incredibly ugly surroundings and sights suiroundinga that woiild have shocked and horrified the average Englishman of El''-bethan or Stuart times. The uniformity, the monotony, tha dreary hardness of our streets I And all that is-bnt the outward expression or gymbol of the monotony and uniformity of our ways and our huBiuess all day long. It is therefore, as " W . M . " suggests, an odd theory of art that requires US to delight in echoes or copies of all this ugliness People havA.eDffipIained lately of the noise madetoythe oiu-ly-mornins;tolriisin tho country at thie timo within the pages of a book. o f year, i n i o n d o n , too, w 9 l i a v o u r matMtlfUM 9tng9ii9ront]f l l i e y a r e of a different a n d permanent Realism as a theory is kind. finished. No one wantJ ufily copies of ugly things, Wood 0nd his orchcstrs will entertain the giisSts, some beautiful and orlglnaJ coatoraes have been I least thought so, until I witnessed the great s u e cess of such books as " Tono-Bungay _" and Mr. Lady Bathufst will ^ v e her first baU, which is to designed for it. Mis, Welke is giving a ball at the Arnold. Bennett's pictures of dreary lives in the tske place at Bathuist Howse, Belgiave-square, and S i t z ' t h a t n i g h t . North. , ia in honour of the d^but of Lady Merlel Bathurst, ^ * . When shall the artist come who shall be, not * * * On Friday a great many people will leave town narrowly optimistic and shallowly, cheerful, but for the Whitsuntide recess, but the holidays, so far filled with a sense of beauty he is eager to impart AT FIEST SIGHT. ai society is concerneil, ate not Ulsely to last more to us? A PAINTER. There .19 a Jjail? eweet .and kind, than three or four days, Giebe-place, Chelsea, Was,never fees BO pleased my miadi I did bat see tec issiiig fej, * * * And jst, I Jwe her tiU I die. Mrs, Arthur Wilson and Miss Muriel Wilson have IN M Y G A R D E N . Her gesture, awlSoa, ftd ber Bmiles, arrived at their house hi Charles-street, Mayfair, from the Riviera, and here they wiU stay until the Her wSt. tier voice mj lieart feesuiles, MAY If).At no season of the year is the rockery end of the season, . Beguile? Jy teart, I itnow noj; wtij, lovelier than during May, The saxifragas (rockfods) alone make this part And j e l l lore 3iw>iU I 41B, TO-DAY'S DINNER-TABLE TOPICS. of the garden very gay, and the brilliant crimson. Cupia sa winjM and Ao^h rftoga,' eaponaria is quite dazzling. The mountain Her WMintryso.107 JMdethchaagft 1 Summer atid spring eolds^anger of them, misery cauaea (alpine) phloxes ought to be always seen on a bf them, and how to avcia them. . . , But do doctor* But c&ange lie firtli, or oht-nga shs ekf, mifi give .lie Any ii^tul bints about icolds. One isn't sut>- rocKery, for they make cataracts 01 rose, white, ifet wlU I loVa hsr a n H die; poBed lo jna&s too mut* (ass ftbout them, but nothing prob- crimson, blue, manve and pink. . ^ttoiHAS FeW 11607). abl7 ciuaei mote 4iaccmtott, And hoir we bate our nelgaT h e sandwort (arenaria montana) now forms ^ bours Hb*> go ad Bteh ilbera and pMe tiiem ou t> osl " ?J * * " Titanic inguiryany'use going on, recriminating? Well. mound of ^large white flowers, while the creeping On Wednesday the King and Queen will be pre- at teas* i t would.^ever do lor the impciaaion t get a!>out sandwort is started with tiny blossoms. Aubrie. sent, at ..the opening of .the International- Fiower that thew cstastw^fees Wuld happen mthout any ruauiFy. tia, white .and pink thrift, " snow in summer," St.-JCiid4 and the Quiet places! No Show a t Chelsea. This is likely to pjoye one o t t h e Tha]> amy ^'t> neU Hebridesr-nice, nothing to eat. ^news. woodruff, and violas are other flowers decking inttough. But a t is

those Johnnies have got I saw from the carl

l a s t week. N o b o x a t tlie o p e r a . N o m o t o r t a r . I t is c n i e i . I t is u n k i n d . I; s h a l l r e b e l . I shall be unrestfuh I shall make them take m e t o t h e R i v i e r a o u t of t h e r a t e s . " F o r a moment t h e absurd dream, a scarcely i m a g i n a b l e p i c t u r e , realises itself for u s B i l l l e a v i n g t h e Ifamiliar b r i c k s a n d m o r t a r of n a r r o w Q u e e r - s t r e e t , d o w n w h i c h m a n y a l o u d ^ ' G o o d - n i g h t B U I " f o l l o w e d Mm. a s h e s a u n t e r e d toTvairds h i s r o o m ; B i l l d r e s s e d u p differently a n d f e e l i n g v a g u e l y c h o k e d ; Bill a l l b a n k n o t e s a n d w a t c h c h a i n , "suddenly rich, as in fairy tales, m a k i n g for the

What a place! All golf, and stuck-up talk,


a n d people lounging about in deck-chairs r o u n d h o t e l p i l l a r s . T h e b o t h e r of d r e s s i n g , u p i n t h e e v e n i n g ! N o t h i n g y o u <ian g e t .your, teeth into for dinneronly snippets.

Johnnies all about-Johnnieg waiting on


you^Johnnies f u s s i n g o v e r y o u . W h a t a life! ' ^ Back from t h e R i v i e r a to good old London, dear, old London, A room at the s w a g g e r c l u b ? J o h n n i e s t o fiiss o v e r y o u ? . B e t t e r g o o d -old Q u e e r - s t r e e t a g a i n : o n l y w i t h m o r e m o n e y , you u n d e r s t a n d , t o s p e n d * h e r e p l e n t y t o t r e a t t h e b o y s w i t h . B u t if tV; alternative w e r e p u t b e f o r e h i m p l e n t y of~^oney".and t h e life led b y his " b e t t e r s , " o r n o m.oney a n d Q u e e r - s t r e e t , E . w e t h i n k B i l l w o u l d b e w i s e . If h e k n e w h i m s e l f , a s " w e l l a s h i s " b e t t e r s , " to s t i c k t o Q u e e r street. B u t l e t h i m also, when he's vaguely disc o n t e n t e d , k n o w s o m e t h i n g of t h e u n i f o r m t h o u s a n d s , a l l e g e d t o b e a b o v e .him, t o i l i n g &U y e a r l o n g w i t h a t h o u s a n d r e s t r i c t i o n s a n d n e e d s a n d d e m a n d s t i p o n tliei h e n e v e r kno-ws. Let" h i m s t u d y o u r s u b u r b s , o u r r e spectable neighbourhoods, our poorer parts f S a y s w a t e r a n d t h e j K e n s i n g t o n s , o u r d i s m a l W . a n d S.W.) and our professional p o i s t s of t h e r e s i d e n t i a l c o m p a s s a l l a b o u t . W o u l d y o u l i v e thi? l i f e , h a p h a z a r d "easyg o i n g B i l l ; t h i s lif.e of i n c o m e - t a x , rate.s, r e n t a n d a p p e a r a n c e s ? C e t to know t h e s a t o o of y o u r b e t t e r s , . l i v e l y f e l l o w , a n d y o u w i l l d e c i d e for Q u e e r - s t r e e t o n c e a g a i n . U n arest-.-there i s b e t t e r t h a n d e a t h of . r e s p e c t a b i l i t y ' i n t h o s e ' m i d d l e - c l a s s sup.^rio"r3 o f 5'.ours"who h a v e n o t i m e t o tallc, o f . s o c i a l i n c l o t h e s t o k e e p UP t h e l o o k s p t h e i r r e stricted families a n d to hem and to pay the rates. . W , M, A THOtlGHT FOR TO-DAT.

-^

N o dynamite will evcir b e invented that can rule; it *an but ^dissolve and destroy. Only the word ^S X#tfd tmd w b s a t t - ^ a aa g9vfa,-^S^tiiiti

tb jockety w^day.

"

E. F, X . *

' r-^

Page 10

THE

DAILY

MIRROl

KING FREDERICK TAKEN HOME TO HIS CAPITAL AND BORNE THRO

The funeral procession passing through the town to the Castle Church.

The hearse was drawn by six horses draped with black.

Prince Frederick.

Prince Knud.

Prince George of Greece. .

The royal yacht Dannebrog arriving in Copenhagen Harh Prince Frederick

T o six neyal and six military officers fell the honour of bearing the coffin containing the.body of King Ffedetick from the royat yacht to the hearse at Copenhagen.

W- MAY 20, 1912

Page 1 1 ^

UGH THE STREETS BETWEEN LINES OF HIS SORROWING SUBJECTS.

Prince Frederick.

King Christian.

Prince Knud.

King Haakon.

''^;jl^^',i

ar.

Her approach was heralded by a cannon salute.

Placing the coffin on the hearse.

The dead monarch's white charger is also seen in the photograph. Mirror and C.N.)

nd Prince Knud are the little sons of the neW King and Queen, the former being now Crown Prince.

King Haakon is a son of the late mons^ich.-(Daily

Fage 12

THE

DAILY MIRROR

May 20, 1912

THIS WEEK IN THE SHOPS.


3 . Olive Oiland the others. W h e r e to Go for t h e Most Useful Bargains for Whitsuntide Wear,
E v e r y o n e , i t a p p e a r s , is r u n n i n g a w a y f r o m L o n d o n for y v b i t s u n l i d c , a n d I , a m o n g s t o t h e r s , w i n m a k e tlio r i v e r m y h e a d q u a r t e r s , u n d e r m y c o n v o y ' s , w i n g . A n e a r l y espediticift h t h e r e f o r e arranged to High-street^ Kensington, where Messrs. Ponting a r e holding this week a special sale of trunks a n d suit cases. W e ha've b e e n c o m m i s s i o n e d t o s e c u r e f o r a globe-trotting brother a suit case wliieh he says is s i m p l y a p k n d i d a n d r e m a r k a b l y inexpfeastve. S o i ^ S o f its a d v a n t a g e s a r e t h a t i t K a s a n i c k e l f r a m e , two straps, inside^ . a n d a g o o d iock s u e h a s ^ m a n i n s i s t s u p o n h a v i n g , a n d y e t it c o s t s p n t y 22s. 6 d . - , . M y a m b i t i o n i s a c o m p r e s s e d fibre t f u n k , 48inl o n g , w i t h a s t e e l f r a m e a^*! a m e t a l b i n d i n g round the lid, . iealher . corners, two sfraM a n d a good brass English leycr lock. T h e r e a r e four sizes i a this, p a r t i c u l a r t r u n k , a n d

T I D B H C E waa gtTen iA fcbe reeenl l i t i g a t i o n -(wiieu t h e , a c t i o n brought-by the Frencli Packers against Skipper" Sardines failed), t h a t noi only are m a n y kinds of little fish used in the manntacture of sardines, but that cottonseed, ,pea-nut ^cndi n^iKed oils are all used in the pi'oeess of canning. Just Ash tlie as inferior oil will spoil a sauce or salad, so it spoils a tiii
oJ s a r d i n e s . T h e deiicato flavour of the

d r e s s r o b e s d e v e l o p e d i n c a s h m e r e , silk w a r p eolie n n e , e a s e m e n t c l o t h a n d fine v o i l e . T h e i n v e n t o r of t h e o n e - p i e c e d r e s s d e s e r v e s a v e r y sjcpensive l a u r e l w r e a t h , for t h e r e is n o t s i l e t t e m o r e e a s y t o p u t o n , m o r e g r a c e f u l in w e a r , a n d m o r e c o m f o r t a b l e , wlietlier for t h e y o u t h f u l o r t h e mature. T h e r o b e s t o b e sold b y M e s s r s . W a l l i s enly^ r e q u i r e s e a m i n g at t h e b a c k to m a k e extremely dainty and p r e t t y toilettes ready to wear. T w o exceediBgly t e m p t i n g f r o c k s a r e t h e F l o r e n c e , m a d e of casement cloth smartly embroidered a n d t r i m m e d w i t h buttons, obtainable in all colours at the special p r i c e of Ss. l i d . , a n d t h e C l a r i c e , p r i c e 25s. fid., c a r r i e d o u t in fine F r e n c h c a s h m e r e in all c o l o u r s and in black, handsomely triinmed with Russia braid and given a lace yoke. A s o l u t i o n h-is a t l a s t b e e n f o u n d t o t h e everpresent query as to what a woman whose figure shows signs of over..developmeat s h o u M d o t o retain t h e s h a p e l y figure of h e r m o r e y o y t h f u l d a y s . I t i s c l a i m e d for t h e * ' W - B . " E U s t i n e T ? e d u s o corset that, w e a r i n g it, n o w o m a n need b e b u l k y . I n a i p e a r a n c e it is l i k e a n y o t h e r c o r s e t ; t h e r e is an entire absence o j harmful buckles, straps, o r b e l t s ; b u t t h e b r a i n s of e x p e r t c o r s e t i ^ r e s h a v e I j e e n put into its construction, w i t h t h e result t h a t , gently a n d n a t u r a l l y , i t will c i p u l d t h e b o d y i n t o g r a c e f u l a n d h a r m o n i o u s - l i n e s . I t is also d e l i g h t i u l i y <:omf o r t a b l e i n wear^ M e s s r s . T . J . H a r r i e s .an4 C o . , l - t d . , 252-268, O x -

IXO-

<3>t

Let leilma make your attractive


Icilma can help y o u t o m a k e y o u r face attractive; to keep your complejuoa f r e s h , p u r e a n d ^:lear. N o a r t i f i c i a l a i d c a n o o n u j a r e w i t h N a t u r e ^ t h a t is -why icilma"Cream,^ the famous non-grasy c r e a m , w h i c h is p u r e l y n a t u r a l , i s s o good. I t m u s t not be j;onfused w i t h poisonous waxes, greasy creams, etc., w h i c b a r s of little service, b u t t e n d t o s p o i l t h a n t o benefit t h e c o m p l e x i o n . Lcilma Cream i s s i m p l y a p l e a s a n t a n d c o t t v e n i e m form of a p p l y i n g I k e w o n d e r ftil I c i i m a N a t u r a l W a t e r , t h e s k i n - t o n i c w a t e r f r o m t h e A l g e r i a n S p r i n g;T~wbici stimulates the skin i n t o n a t u r a l 'activity and thus bihigs keting beauty to the face, '

fish can only be retaiaed if the best QHye Oil Is used; but because this oil i s so expensive many canners. use substitutss. "Bkippfir'- Sardines, which are packed from the brisling found in such abundance in the .Norwegian fjords, ace put u p in the finest Olive Oil that can be obtainedno matter what the price may be, the paekrs only buy the beat, the best of 14 g}:ad@3. T h a t is one reason why the flavour of "Skipper" Sardines k 0 enticing^ I t is important to rewiffioiber that genuine Olive Oil is
v e r y n o u r i s h i n g , v e r y digeafcible, - w h e r e a s

all cost the sanie sum, namely, 27s. 6d. each. As for the convoy, she haa determined io inspect the -alpacas which .Messrs, Ponting are offering'xo.black atid
colours at Is. 6d, price,. considering a yard,

The dailj; tise of hilma Cream will


m a k e t h e s k i n soft, COB! a n d s j n o o t h , p r o t e c t i t a g a i n s t irritatiofts, sunbui-n o r i n ct'bites, a n d ^ive y o u r complexion t h a t touch of daintiness s o m u c h a d m i r e d . N e e d s trn p o w d e r a n d c a n n o t g r o w h a i r . I t i s a s i m p l e a n d inejtpenaive b e ' a u t y -

which i* a most modest fabric is 46in. in width. And she has -discoyeted that -lor the same sum all wool wMpcord and able is. a that ths

bringer.

Coarse oils are pf less vpXna and are liable to disagree. . Thus you see the importartee of
' ' g o i n g b y t h e b r a n d . " ' If y o u ftsk for- '" s a r d i n e s " y o u may simply; get fiish

The Cyg'iis eorset* at flis-

ferges will be oSsrsd also that the fashions p o t t g e c l o t h i t c o s t .yard.

leilma
FL1I0R
t h i s sorM-tamed cream,

same-"" a d d r e s s , s h o u l d fee a a '

allur^mcflt to the ?hpper, for Jhey-are mi from the designs of oae of tbe lead'-'
ing Viennese corset artiatss,

CREAM
Icilina Co., Ltd.

(Icilma is PrmouHeed E y e Si7wa.J 0niy i / - per fpf. Sold everywhere.

whose'-fell intent it i% \0
^ea\uify the figure whilst. g i v i n g it t h e c o m f o r t a n d eas.e w e s e n a i b l w o m e n o f the present d a y demand a n d insist upon havingT h e prices of the C y g n l a c o r s e t s viiTi'. O p e o f t h e d e signs that I have heard p r a i s e d o v e r a n d .over a g a i n c o s t s o n l y Ss; H d . , a n d f o r 13s. Ud. a vvhite e o u t i l model bound w i t h , ^atiji ribbon is an estremeiy d a i n t y sij?ht. Those who prefer white or sky blue brO' cade can secure the .Cygnia A T m prstfe? gKnshiae hat for Whltsustide wear, .ma^le of whit spotted i n t h o s e , m a t e r i a l s a t :the Cftmbzu;; with bJacfe brim .Uniog .indi* wr^atU^fckwrj blossom* jioa fruit same price. ' ,. round t^e swwa. I found at Messrs, D e r r y a n d T o m s w h e n I -went t o c h o o s e b l o u s e s t h e r e ford-street, a r e d c m o n s t r a l i B g t h i s m o d e l , t o g e t h e r t h e o t h e r d a j - , t h a t t h e firm has, e x t e n d e d i t s w i t h m a n y o t h e r of t h e f a m o u s " W . B . " b r a n d , i n p r e m i s e s , w h i c h m a k e s i t s . a l r e a d y m a g a i f l c e n t t h e n s h o w r o o m s , d u r i n g t h e w h o l e of t h i s w e e k . salons more palatial-looking than ever, I a m Although specially suitable tor the robust, I o u g h t very m u c h irtipressed'by the light a n d a i r y aspect t o mentjon t h a t the " W . B . " Elastine-Reduso forms o f t h e v a r i o u s d e p a r t m e n t s , i n w h i c h it i s a a m o s t s a t i s f a c t o r y g a r m e n t for a n y a v e r a g e figure, r e a l p l e a s u r e te ^ h o p in h o t w e a t h e r . D u r i n g t h e p a s t few m o n t h s . M r . S a n d o w ' s n a m e T h e .blouse s a l e of t h i s w e e k i n c l u d e s m o d e l s h a s b e e n so p r o m i n e n t l y before t h e public i n conof t h e v e r y d a i n t i e s t d e s c r i p t i o n i n l i n g e r i e , s h o t n e c t i o n w i t h a n e w h e a l t h b e v e r a g e t h a t m a n y of lis taffetas", l a c e , c o t t o n v o i l e , c r e p e - d e C h i n e , - a n d m a y K a v e t e m p o r a r i l y f o r g o t t e n t h a t h i s e n e r g i e s n i n o n , d i r e c t f r o m P a r i s , a n d m a r k e d a t e x c e e d - a r e i n n o w a y s l a c k e n e d a s r e g a r d s his- c u r a t i v e physical culture ingtitute.in S t James'-street, S . W . ingly low pricesA r a n g e of m o d e l s s u i t a b l e f o r t h e s e a s o n .com- I n d e e d , r e c e n t l y s e v e r a l r e m a r k a b l e c u r e s of wellp r i s e s h a n d m a d e l i n g e r i e b l o u s e s m o s t d e l i c a t e l y knoiyji meii and w-omes suffering from various forma e m b r o i d e r e d , w h i c h h a v e b e e n m a r k e d do-wn t o of ill-health have inspired quite a rush of.society i S s . l i d . , t h o u g h t h e y a r e u s u a l l y p r i c e d a t -from invalids to what has bees described as Sgciety s 29s. l i d . t o t w o g u i n e a s . A t t h e s a m e p r i e s a H e a l t h M e c c a , w i t h t h e r e s u l t ^that " A c o u r s e a t f a a e l n a t i n g c h o i c e o f n i n o a d e s i g n s w i l l b e f o u n d . - S a n d o w ' s " h a s b e c o m e a p r o m i n e n t f e a t u r e of t h e There are hundreds of haad-embroidered lawn p r e s e n t s e a s o n . S o c i e t y h a s a p p a r e n t l y " m a d e u p its m i n d t h a t b l o u s e s , as. w e l l a s s i l k a n d v o i l e o n e s , m a r k e d a t 6s. lid. ach, so all purser will fiad their re- b a d h e a l t h m a y b e e s c h a n g e d for g o o d at t h e S a n d d w I n s t i t u t e , a l m o s t a s e a s i l y a s o n e f a s h i o n for quirements metf Even the ffJrt who is most ignorant of business gtiiother, News hasjust been.received hy Messrs. W, SymroIliagJn?nt IftSt T e c o g a i s c t h e fact t h a t t h e o r g a n i s a t i o n o t t h e L o n d o n ahoj^ d i s p l a y s a n d sales ington and Co., Ltd., of Bowden Steam Mills, Mat, is o n e of t h e m o s t w o n d e r f u l a n d i n t e r e s t i n g e o m - k e t H a r b o r o u g h , t h a t t h e y h a v e b e e n , a p p a j u t e d m e r e i a l a c h i e v e r a e n t a in t h e i?ietropolia, p u r v e y o r s of t b e i r w e l l - k n o w n food s p e c i a l i t i e s t o t h e Uo^'al P a l a c e of S p a i n , p e r m i s s i o n a l s o b e i n g NEW COATS, g r a n t e d to use the S o y a b A n n s . S e a r c h benefith t|ie s u r f a c e , a n d it will a l w a y s b e M e s r s . S y m i n g t o n ' s f a m o u s s p e c i a l i t i e s , w h i c h inf o u n d t h a t s p e c i a l o p p o r t u n i t i e s s u c h a s t h e offer of c l u d e soups^ p e a flour, c u s t a r d p o w d e r , t a b l e coats this w e e k b y Messrs. D o b b i n W e a t b o M r n e - c r e a m s , jeiUes, a n d t h e like, a r e already wide g r o v e h a v e a s p e c i a l s i g a i f l e a n e e . I t is v e r y a p r o p o s f a v o u r i t e s , a n d t h i s r o y a l r e c o g n i t i o n of their exw i t h ' t h e W h i t s u n t i d e n o U d a y a ifl v i e w t h a t c o a t a eellence is as well merited aa it is gratifying. sliould b e m a d e a partienJar e s r e a t this addressT h e r e a r e s o i a e lovely' m o d e l s s u i t a b l e for t h e s e a s i d e a n d ail t h e s m a r t l e s o r t s , a n d t h a s t o r e i n c l u d e s a l a r g e - c h o i c e of S h a n t u n g m o d e l s , i d e a l for t h e b o a t i n g t r i p , t h e m o t o r i s t a n d t h e traveiiei: b y t r a i n , . I n tliese d a y s , , m a n y of t h e b l e m i s h e s a n d d i s A lovely b l a c k s a t i n c o a t hands*^mely r u c k e d ^nd figurements of- t h e G o m p l e s i o n a r e s i m p l y t h e r e s u l t d r a p e d w i t h b l a c k l a c e h a s a l i n i n g of b l u e s a t i n of u s i n g b a d s o a p , w h i c h h a s a m o s t i n j u r i o u s etfect a n d costs o n l y t w o a n d a half g u i n e a ? . An<*ther U u p o n t h e s k j n , r o b b i n g it of its n a t u r a l oil, a n d l i n e d w i t h p i n k a n d hiis a w h i t e , lace c o i l a t . t h e l e a v i n g , i t d r y a n d r o t i ^ b . G o o d s o a p s l e a v e t h e .whole p r o d u c t i o t i m a k i n g ' a n e x t r e m e l y s m a r t cnoi?e s k i n c i e a r - a n d soft,, p a r t i c u l a r l y O a t i e e S o a p , w h i c h for L o n d o n w e a r o r a t a n y J i o l i d a y resort-. p o s s e s s e s healing, a n d ' c i e a m j n g l^roperties- u n p r o - ' ", ~ I . m u c h a d m i r e d a b l a c k .satin . iftisdel w i t h a v i d ^ d b y a n y o t b e r Boap. .--,.-/. pointed design at the back which 1 thought would If t h e r e a r e anjr r e a d e r s - w h o h a y e n o t t r i e d it, l o o k v e r y g r a c e f u l o n a m a t r o a l y w e a r e r . I t , . t o o , a n d w o u l d l i k e t o d o a", t h e P r o p r i e t o r s will s e n d ^a w a s t r i m m e d w i t h l a c e a n d r u c k i n g , a n d y e t is .to 3 4 . t a b l e t free t o a l l s e n d i n g 3d, in i d . s t a m p s for b e p r i c e d a t 35s. Od. o n l y t h e Oati'he S a m p l e O u t f i t , w h i c h c o n t a i n s a s a m p l e r " r o a d e < a note., of a n o t h e r ' e x t r e m e l y d e s i r a b l e oi'Q d i f e r e n t O a t i n e P r e p a r a t i o n s , a S d . S h a m p o o b a r g a i n w h i c h M e s s r s . T h o m a s W a i l i ^ a n d C o . in Povi-deri t o g e t h e r w i t h t h e f r e e 3 d . t a b l e t . o f . S o a p . H o l b o r n . - c i r c u s -are offering, in a s t i ^ i R a d o n of t h e A d d r e s s a p p l i c a t i o n s t o T h e O ' a t i n e G o , . 1 1 6 D ,

Send a Postcard 'i,f"g


(Bei^t. B l 39, King's Road, St. Panpras,
L o n d o n , N.W.,

that ape ruined by the. coarse oil iii w h i c h J h e y are immersed- But if you definitely say " Skipper" Sardines, you will get sardines of tt * finest quality, packed in the finest htb,.A of Oliye Oil.

See the rest of the .


Story, Talks X io 6. ANGUS WATSON & CO. NEWCASTLfi-ON-TYNE

Great Sale
OF

WOOLLEN DRESS

* 5 Q Vaiieties ot WJiAT, F I U and tiASlIt rfiS? iiifil.ASS I'UTri. Ofui-oeei's&Stoiea. 8f,'J50IAL Oi'FlSK1 f uU.aiKed [jotof ijieat fish, oi' g^nie, wltti knife for apreadiog (us ilUisti^itefl), of beat SiieffioW stoej, 60!it for 1/-. . L.OEL&SONS,ld.,
(tiSohoWnrUSiLoildOii

WHOLESOME,-tigTRITIUUS

A H D UL1CI(/US.

MATERIALS
including the Stock of

E4TON & CO., JLtd..


Manufacturers, 11, Ludgate Sq., E.C., a n d during

TODAY

the

week.

EVERY BEETLE
i s A 4end B e e t U OIIB'!ECfttliiK'ft"com<fi into horauBb contact will* t. Sold in T i n s mly, I d . , 3 d . , 6 d . 4iid J / ' T h e Mnrivalled wBy t o kill beiatUa Add sU tiQHaetiold ii)fiact i. WSfl"

A fell) examples of value .' Mo.SM>R.~-5,200yds.ofAnWoo!Twfieda, usual prices from 1/11 to 3/U per yard. S A L E PRICE Ho. 9 M.K.-3,700 yards of Striped Alpncaa, in Black, Ivory, Saxe, Grey, and Champagne, usual price 2/IH 1 1 lHy per yard. S A L E PRICE I / Q4N o . 10 M . R . 2 , 8 7 5 y a r d s o f P u r e W o o l F r e n c h C o a t i n g S e r g e s , in all shades, 48 i n c h e s w i d e . U s u a l n r i c e , % IgZQ

3/6iperyd. SAI,E PRICE


Patterns Sent Post Free. receive Speeial Orders Attrition.

l / O ^
by Post

P0WU6R

vmnm% HENSINOION BIGHST.

WORRY

KlUS

YOUTH!

OATINE SOAP FREE.

ftUfi t u r n s h a i r g r e y . Y q u n g loqlta a r e w a n t e d a n d a p p r e c i a t e d e v e r y w h e r e . I f y o u r h a i r jg g r e y J a d e d o r j u s t t i r e d - l o o k i n g , (J& n p t d e l a y , b u t s e n d a t o n c e for a Is., trial b o t t l e of " B r i m a n i a , " Nature's own enaniel. -No w a s h i n g n e e e a a a r y . S t a t e s h a d e required.-- : N o " r i $ k o f u n u a t u r a l t i n t s , S p e c i a l l a r g e s a m p l e c a s e witJijbriiBh, ^ B . i l a r g e r Biiies.5f. 6 d , a n d XQs.. m. Of c h e m i a t s , M i i d T e a ^ c r s , Harrod^^, SelfcidgeV,. Whjtelay'g, rBatkei'Sj X t d . , C<5-.ope?ative S o c i e t y , H a y m a i k e t , J u o i r . A i n s y and^ N a v y S t o r e s , L t d . , a n d B o o t s ' L t d . S e n d 3d, i n stajoips {to c o v e r p a c k i n g , e t c ; J f o r Special Is. tria) bottle: froni M a l s o n M a x H e m p l e , 16, G l a s s h o u s e S t r e e t , P i c c a d i l l y C i r c u s , W . This e i l e r 13 o p e n f o r 10 d a y * o n l y . ( A i J v t . ) ,

Wbitsuntidit neR. l i U a fffing* of MW f^-piec9

May 20, 191^


"THE DAILY MIRROR" SENDS EXPEDITION

THE
TO

DAILY

MIRROR
STARVING ISLANDERS. The Milk and

Page 13

THE RELIEF OF

Water

Problem.

It is g e n e r a l l y s u p p o s e d - t h a t a b a b y w i l l t h r i v e on p l a i n m i l k and water. S o m e u n d o u b t e d l y d o , b u t m a n y i n f a n t s are q u i t o u n a b l e to digest cow's m i l k in its o r d i n a r y f o r m , a n d for t h e m a m i l k a n d w a t e r d i e t is s i m p l y s t a r v a t i o n , It is in these cases that; S a v o r y a n d M o o r e ' s F o o d , is so e x c e e d i n g l y v a l u a b l e . As t h e f o l l o w i n g i n s t a n c e s s h o w , it is e a s i l y d i g e s t e d , even w h e n m i l k a n d w a t e r c a n n o t be t o l e r a t e d . (I) " A f t e r t r y i n g h a r d to m a k e a p l a i n m i l k a n d w a t e r diet stiit o u r b a b y , w e b e g a n w i t h y o u r food, a n d f o u n d it cn-i tirely satisfactoiy, the baby making extraordinary progress ever since." {'2) " W e fed h i m on m i l k a n d w a t e r e v e r y two h o u r s , but he n e v e r s e e m e d satisfied, a n d cried o u t . l o n g b e f o r e the t i m e for feeding. W e tried increasing the quant tity of e a c h feed, a n d d e c r e a s i n g t h e p r o p o r t i o n of w a t e r , but t h i s r e s u l t e d in' him ithrpwing back p r a c t i c a l l y all th.6 food he took. O u t of t h e m a n y a n d v a r i e d i n f a n t foods we selected S a v o r y a n d M o o r e ' s a s b e i n g t h e m o s t likely to s u i t o u r case. T h e r e s u l t w a s wonderful,* After t h e first feed our b a b y slept six h o u r s w i t h o u t a w a k e n i n g , a n d h a s cont i n u e d to s l e e p p r a c t i c a l l y day a n d n i g h t since. H e k e e p s a l l his food d o w n , whicJx i s ' a m p l e p r o o f t h a t y o u r food is j u s t the right kind." Y o u ' c a n g e t a S p e c i a l T r i a l T i n of S a v o r y a n d , M o o r e ' s F o o d by s i m p l y , filling in t h e tioupon- b e l o w , a n d s e n d i n g it, with Od. in s t a m p s for p o s t a g e . F u l l d i r e c t i o n s a c c o m p a n y , each t i n , a n d w h e n you h a v e t r i e d t h e food, y o U ' w i l l , . a d m i t t h a t you h a v e n e v e r s p e n t 3d. to g r e a t e r a d v a n t a g e .

T9 S a v o r y & M o o r e L*^. Cf7en7ists t o The Wn^ New Bood S t r e e t , L o n d o n . I e n c l o s e 34 Pop p o s t a g e oPH7e Special THal tit) o f ^ o u r f o o d . ' Naipe w__:_J : _: '. .

Inhabitants hear of the death of King' Edward from the special expedition which visited the isSand to carry (he sad news.

Address . " D . Mirror." 20/5/lZ.

* , >

T h e Lightning Cleaner
Batlta, Siuks, LavatorieHt a n d ell Eartfacnwaro a n d E n a m e l l e d I r o n Utensils. F r e e from ^rit or acid, it speedily removes all soiling matter >tfithout scratching or injuring the surface'of the w a r e in a n y w a y .
Sold everywheie, in 6d. and i/- ttnn (fitted witb patent perforatud sprinkler lid.) Send for

Free Trial Tin


ir<) 'li' in'i il 1 mis po r tinir t'tiienclosing 3d. Btampe to covor cost of postflSO and packing to

D O U L T O N & C O . , Ltd. The Royal Potteries, Lambeth. Lopdmi, S.E,

HOW TO WASH YOUR FACE,


Some women scrub their faces every night as i^ they were boards in the kitchen table.' Tlien ihejf wonder that soap, hot water and rougli towelsonly fit to use on the body after a cold bathleave th? complexion rough aiid-dry, with stretched and flqbby muscles" which are die cause of prematura lines and wrinkles. A heaithy skin does not picl^ up so much duSt) or hold so much perspiration, ai| to need sOap. If, instead of using water at night, ladies would use a little, Pomeroy Skin Food (which can b bought iit any cheniiat's, including all ^3oots^ branches, for eighteenpenoe a jar) they woult^ soon notice an improvement in the comj plexion: This is really far more cleansing thaif wiifer, because water only washes the surface.skin. while Pomeroy Skin Food draws dust and clrie(| perspiration out of the pores, leiiyine the' face coo!, clean and free from grease. It should be gently, massaged into' the face with^he finger-tips until the skin has absorbed as much'as it will take. The rest can be wiped gently off with (i clean, soft toweli In the morning bathe the face with.lukewarm or cold water, using only the handsand notice after a week how much smoother, clearerand brighte^ the complexion will become, Large-jars of Pomcf roy Skin Food Can be had at three and sixpence of five shillings, and no woman who values ner good looks should ever be without it.-^(Advt.)'

*mmmmdM

i iiflllinr

i1iiiiiMMiiriiitiiMaBahAM
How provisions are brought 1o the island.

Map showing the position of St Kilda \ hich is in the Outer Hebrides,

When the news arrived on Saturday that the Jhty inhabitants o f S t . K i l d a were in danger of starvation, 2'Jie Daily Mirror decided to organise ft relief expedition, and seAd it off at once As iliustra^ied apove, the .inhabitants, send many of their communications by. putting them in skin co\cred boxes, which i r e blown, when a strong we^t wind-iprev^ils, either ,to islands nearer the coast of Scotland or to the mainland . ite\i\fDa!iy -Mirrer photographs.)

Page 14
SERIAL.

THE

DAILY

MIRROR

'Advertiser^

Announcements.

May 20, 1912

THE. POPULAR CHEMISTS.


MAKE T h d S t o r y of a n U g l y 'Woman. A DOUBLE O F F E R T O MIRROR" READERS. DAILY

By GERTRUDE Part III.- -The Increasing Purpose.


CHAPTER III peter Gilead went to look after Mary's higf-iige. Bhe stood and talked to lier manager, for a while, ond all the tiro.e she was nodding and smiling to fellow-passenKefs to whom she had hardly or never fipokeii during the trip. But now they all seemed lUte friends. She was so glad to be home again. She, h>id lost sight of Mrs. Frayne, but suddenly she saw her again. As she did so-, she gave a great Btarfc, for a man was holding Oetavia s diessingcase, and was Iq-okinji down at her with OH expression that could only he described as intense delight on his fat:e. It was Joshua Bullard." The sight affeicted Mary strongly. I n a way, it ^ e c t e d her disagreeably. Had they not just heard of Bullard's marriage to Isobel Mesquitii? Mrs. 'Frayne had spoken of herself only as his friend. p u t his attitude was not that of a friend- Ip his eyes was the light that one sees in the eyes of a lover as h e looks at the woman h e loves. There ^ a s no mistaking it. Mary felt tm unreasoning anger against Mrs. Fjrayne. Why h a d she told her R he? Obviously, she ancTBuilard were not merely friends. And what was h e doing here, meeting her, as if he had the right to, as it it were the most, natural thing in the world? ,, These were old, resentful feelings that had not been roused in Mary for many months. She knew that they were imreasonable, and. in a way, ridiculous. She felt that Octavia Friiync was all that she seemed. She was sure that she had:5poken the truth when she said that she was o n l y B u l l a r d ' s very good friend. She told herself that it was the shock of seeing Bidlard. She supposed it would pe a long time before she would be able to see him ^vithout experiencing an echo of that wild tumidt of ^motion that had so nearly brought her to mental shipwreck. It was 3. jarring note. Her return was clouded. She turned somewhat impatiently to her manager, A t the same moment Octavia Frayne came up behind her. _ " I must say good-bye, dear Miss Shaw, I do liope we shall meet again.. Are yon slaying in London at all? I have jusfbeeiv tellirig Mr. Btdiard how we have made friends," She tnrned to himj including him, with a smile, in the conversation. H e raised his hat, and Marv held out her hand, She saw him stare at her. She remembered the change in her appearance and was exultantly glad, I t seemed like poetic justice that he should of all men be the one to set eyes on her first. " Y o u are looking very well," she said carelessly, *' I hear that we must congratulate you'." " Me'. On ' w h a t ? " he asked. There was f,'enuirie surprise in his voice, It was Mary's turn to stare. Evidently Mrs. Frayne had said nothing to him about the news they had heard on board the ship. She carried it through. She coidd hardly do anything else. "\Ve'heard that you afe married. Please accept my very best wishes." _,It was a stilted speech. It, coidd hardly be anything else. But Bullard's retort was inexplicable. H e pushed the words aside with a kind of brnsque inattention, that amoimted to rudeness. " Oh, that's ancient history," he said. And then he closed his lips tightly in the way Mary remembered so well, and she knew it was useless to say any more, He turned to Octavia in a proprietary way. " Yon'd better come now. I want to see you settled before I go for your luggage." "Will you b e staying in, t o w n ? " i f r s . Frayiie asiied Mary, holding out both her hands and gripping the "other woman's. " D o say you will? I want to see you somvich," ' For the present I shall b e , " Mary answered. " My address is Mortlake House, Belgrave-square, Will you remember i t ? " " I ' l l tell her,- if she forgets," pnt in Bidlard, with his sudden boyish smile. " I hope you'll allow me to come and see you, too, Mary." She Said something hastily to Mrs,'Frayne, and thus was-saved from answermg directly. '.' T shall be at the Palace Hotel," Octavia said. " I shall ring you up very soon." They walked away, Bullard raising his hat. After a few steps he left Mrs, Frayne and came back. , . . . . t ^ ' M a r y , " he said in a low voice, ' ' I ' m sa sorrv"j^s. Frayne has only jitst told me a'lout poor jMrs, Anstey. What a sad loss for ycu ! You must feel so lonely. I am more sorry than.I can say,'' " Thank you very much," she answered, and she was touche'd. There was a genuine ring in his Toice, -'Hediurried off after Octavia; and she and Mr. Qarbery made.their way to the train. She had a- reserved compartment. She had the 5>abit of hixury by this time, and, although she cared little for the outward expression of it, she mechanic ally drew to herself all that money can buy. I t was the habit of solitude that ,al\vay5 caused her to travel in such state, Colonel Gilcad talked to her during the first hour of the jom^ney. H e had a great deal to say ; but be could get very little out of her. It was very difBcult for her to speak of Mrs. Anstcy's illness to' anyone, even to one who^ had knowu her so well. And she had very few impressions of South Africa to convey to him. She saw him looking at ber, too, much in the same way as Bullard had looked; hut he said nothiiig, and she suddenly burst into a detailed account of the Capetown doctor's treatment of her. Whereat he said that the charge was wonderful. But to him she knew that it was of very little account, for to him she b a d always been beautiful. And that was perhaps the greatest tragedy of her life, that to tliis one (TranalalioD, dramatic, aad all ottiai lishtA Mcared Copyright. U.S.A.. 1912.)

CARR

SMITH./

good man who so truly and devotedly loved her she could give nothing at all. Presently he and Mr, Carbery went along the corridor to the smoking compartment of the saloon, and Mary was kft alone. And her thoughts wandered back to Fred Tanner at once. She could not understand why. She had hardly thought of him at all during all this time she had been away from England. But now she realised that she,Jiad missed him, that she was still missing him, that he had filled a place in her life that no other person. could ever usurp. H e had occupied a position that no ,one .else would ever fit into; She might forget all about h i m ; but she would still miss him. She wondered what he was doiiig now, whether he had got on in the world. She had not heard a word from, him since that day when she sought him out in a moment of madnes* and asked hinv to ma*ry her. Of course, it had been madness. She realised'/that now, .And only his common sense,and his fioely adjusted, mental balance had Saved tbem both froni disaster.- Stieh a marriage would have spelled disaster. She reahscd. that, too. * With her return to England," the thought of him. came back so iri^sfently t h a t she w a s astonished. It was (pteer that her very first thought on landing should have been of him. She did not supp05e that she would ever ,see biro again. She. did nqt tliink a t , t h e ..moment that she wouldevet seek him out again. That last interview had rendered it impossible. . . . She grew bitterly angry as she .thatight of the scene^that had led lip to his departure^ of the disgraceful.artd misleading conduct of her,maid, Rosa;-,-iYho had ^eeamped with h e t jewellery, leaving;, an absiiid letter, foi M r s , A n s t e y to put the hdu'sehold .off the 'scent. I t was not until after Mary's departure for .South Africa that the truth had come'oiif. T h e police had found the gir!.She !iad stolen the jewels a n d ' r u n away with an Italian footm.in who. had been one of the servants Mary had-taken on with the villahelovv E i e . She had bieen secretly carrying on an intrigue with him all the time. Fie had followed her to England, and it was at his instigation that she had cxjmmitted the theft. It was also from his ferrile brain t h a t ' h a d proceeded the plan that the girl had adopted of pretending to have fallen in love with Tanner. .; .. Rosa was .punished-comparatively Hghtly, Mary having cabled instructions to Peter Gilead to do all that,he could for the'misguided giti. She was still in prison, and the Italian, had fled the country, Mary intended to do everything she could for her on her release. She realised, as s.he had written to Colonel Gilead, that she waspartly to blame, for she had thoroughly spoiled the girl, treating her more as a child than a servant, and allowing her ever so much more liberty than such a young and foolish individual was .e'ntitled to. Some of the jewels had been recovered, but not all. and those that had not been traced were no doubt still in the possession of the Italian footman, And- for this sorry business Mary had lost the curiously satisfying companionship of the young man of whom iSfrs. A i i s t e y h a d so ardently disapproved. T h e thought of it all came back to her as the train slid through a igrey drizzle .towards the great citv- where she was going to take up the threads of her lifeflits time all alone. It WMS a humiliating time to look back, upon, and she told herself she -\vas-, glad ~ that it was, ail wiped out. And yet from the back of her, mind she coidd not banish the faint regret. There had been much that was good in it, much that was better than anything that had come into her life. Only, of course, it could not have gone on. I t was much better that it had ended where it did. The train slid into the terminus, Peter Gilead came back -with Mr. Carbery. On (he platform Mary shook hands with the manager. H e was commg to make a, general report to her the^next morning, and then was going back to GatesborOugh. She herself was staying in town for about a fortnight, the Capetown doctor having warned her against going straight up,to the bleak, northern air. Colonel Gilead drove with her to Belgravesqnare. It was ;a-dark, miserable afternoon ; the rain fell in a persistent drizzle. It was heavy, though fine, just as^ if it -were raining mud. The big house was ablate with lights. The old servants were there, drawn up in the hall., \t was home. Mary once more felt the cxhilaratii)ii. of returiiing among her own people, She was unconsciously cruel to Colonel Gilead, " Yon would rather I left you, Mary? " he asked, His keen, light eyes looked at her questio.l^nj<ly. " I f you don't mind, Peter," she answered. " I'm a little tired. I''d rather be alone." So she dismissed him with hardly a word,^the man who' had thought of her without ceasing, wbo had devoted himself entirely to her interests all the time she h,ad been away. OHA.PTER IV.

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Octiivia Frayne nd Bullard were not so lucky as Mary. They travelled to town in a packed firstclass compartment. Conversation, except on the most general lines, was out of the question. Bullard looked at Octavia nearly all tlieitime with quiet satisfaction. At first she,tried to return his -gaze in a friendly way ; presently she gave it up. When they reached t o n d o n she expected him to leave her, but he went and collected her lijggage, and then followed her into the cab ' ' I , c a n get on alPright now, thank y o u , " she said. - " O h , no, you can't. Besides, I want' to talk to you." " I ' m rather tired. Won't it k e e p ? " " N o , it won't. There's an hour or so before dinner. You must dine with m e , " She stared at him. He did not say " u s . " His (Contimted on fage 15.J-

Should there-ever come a time In your experience when you find your-' self a victim to some form of indigestion, liver trouble, or constipation, and it is quit-e probable that, sooner or later, such a time may come you are advised to rid yourself of the disorder without delay by taking a few doses of Beecham s Pills. For generations past this world-famous medicine has beeti to thousands of sufferers the most powerful aid towards health and happiness, and, surrounded as we are to-day, by great advances in the healing art;' an ever-increasing number 6f people turn for help healthward to the feame old remedy

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May 20, 1912

THE

DAILY

MIRROR

Page 15

THIS MORNING'S NEWS ITEMS.


L o r d P i r r i e a r r i v e d y e s t e r d a y a t P l y m o u t h on b o a r d his yiicht V a l i a n t . H e lias b e e n on a healtii cniise after his r e c e n t illness ai),d o p e r a t i o n . Thirty-four ships y e s t e r d a y passed tliroiigh the reopened Dardanelles, O n tlie r a i l w o y ai N u n e t i t o n ye terdsiy w a s f o u n d t h e b o d y . o f M r . A m o s J a c q u e s , a g e d tifiy-seven, a BedwoUh schoolmaster. Sergeant-Major B a n well, w h o w a s severely w o u n d e d in t h e Brittle of t h e A l m a , died y e s t e r d a y a t N o r t h a m p t o n , a g e d eiglity-five. D u r i n g her voyage fram M o n t r e a l , the Allan l i n e r V i r g i n i a n , it w a s r e p o r t e d a t L i v e r p o o l yesterday, sighted seventy-seven icebergs. T h e e d u c a t i o n e s t i m a t e s for t h e y e a r , a m o u n t i n g to .7;)0,fl00, a n i n c r e a s e of J;20^325, will b e s u b m i t t e d at t o - m o r r o w ' s m e e t i n g of t h e L . C . C . M r . A s q u i t h will t o - d a y r e c e i v e at t h e H o u s e of C o a t m o n s a d e p u t a t i o n on t h e n a t i o n a l i s a t i o n of railwaySj a r r a n g e d b y t h e P a r l i a m e n t a r y C o m m i t t e e of t h e T r a d e s U n i o n C o n g r e s s . A b o u t a s c o r e of L o n d o n t r a d e u n i o n s w e r e r e p r e s e n t e d " at yesterday's demonstration in T r a f a l g a r - s q u a r e to d e m a n d t h e r e l e a s e of T o m M.ann, G u y B o w m a n a n d o t h e r s n o w in p r i s o n i n c o n n e c t i o n w i t h t h e Syndicalist prosecutions. T h r e e h u n d r e d a n d t w e n t y b a r s of s i l v e r w e r e s a l v e d f r o m t h e w r e c k e d P . a n d O . l i n e r O'ceana off K a s t b o u r n e y e s t e r d a y . T h e a n n u a l c o n f e r e n c e of t h e R:iihvay C l e r k s ' A s s o c i a t i o n w a s r e s u m e d at t h e G r e a t E a s t e r n H o t e l , I..ondon, y e s t e r d a y . S i t e s for b e a c h t e n t s h a v e b e e n let b y a u c t i o n a t F e l i x s t o w e for t h e s u m m e r s e a s o n , a n d w e r e t a k e n at f r o m 2 to 8 p e r s i t e . I n a l l , 1,000 was'realised. B O G O T A (Colombia), M a y 19.Senor P , N. O s p i n a , f o r m e r l y C o l o m b i a n M i n i s t e r at W a s h i n g ton, h a s d e c l i n e d the p o s t of M i n i s t e r t o G r e a t Britain.Renter, T h r o u g h his b i c y c l e s k i d d i n g o n t r a m w a y IJnes in V i c t o . i a - i o a d , S u r b i t o n , y c i t e i d a y ' a f t e r n o o n , a -young m a n w a s r u n over b y a m o t o r - o m n i b u s , a n d died on t h e w a y to h o s p i t a l .

F o r t u n e s Made in Land.
H O M E O R B U S I N E S S SITESFOB T H E M A N W H O C A N SAVIU ' ed A DAY. T h e g r e a t e s t f o r t u n e s t h a t h a v e ever b e e n m a d e a r e t h 3 s e t h a t h a v e b e e n m a d e o u t of i n v e s t m e n t in F r e e h o l d L a n d , ' or w h a t is n o w k n o w n , w h e n s m a l l e r plots of l a n d a r e r e f e r r e d t o , a s B u i l d i n g S i t e s , a n d until r e c e n t l y L a n d O p e r a t o r s a n d financial m a g n a t e s d e a l i n g in l a n d e d p r o p e r t i e s h a v e successfully k e p t t h e s m a l l or L i t t l e M a n o u t , T h i s o r d e r ot t h i n g s is n o w hiippily at an e n d , a n d t h e m a n of m o d e r a t e m e a n s h a s e q u a l c h a n c e s with the big linancial m a g n a t e . T h e m a n with o n l y Gd. a d a y to invest can now s e c u r e for h i m s e l f a freehold H o m e or B u s i n e s s S i t e , a n d so b e c o m e in a s m a l l w a y a L a n d e d P r o p r i e t o r , W i l t y o u be o n e of t h e new I N S o r s t r u g g l e a l o n g a m o n g s t t h e old O U T S ? _ . \ T h e i m p o r t a n c e of this o p p o r t u n i t y c a n n o t b e o v e r - e m p h a s i s e d , a s it offers an investiiient w h e r e t h e security is as .solid a n d t h e p o s s i b i l i t y of d e p r e c i a t i o n a s r e m o t e as an i n v e s t m e n t in B a n k of E n g l a n d Stock. T h e h o l d e r of a F r e e h o l d B u i l d i n g S i t e is in r e a l i t y in a b e t t e r position t h a n i h e financial m a g n a t e w h o p u r c h a s e s l a r g e e s t a t e s , i n a s m u c h as h i s p u r c h a s e p r i c e is h i s o n l y o u t l a y t h e s e B u i l d i n g S i t e s b e i n g sold free of all liability for l a n d a n d r o a d i m p r o v e m e n t s . N e i t h e r is it n e c e s s a r y t o p u r c h a s e o u t of c a p i t a l , a s o n t h e special t e r m s u p o n w h i c h B u i l d i n g S i t e s a r e sold y o u c a n b u y a p l o t for y o u r s e l f o u t of i n c o m e , 6d. p e r d a y , 15s. i)cr m o n t h . L e t it b e c l e a r l y u n d e r s t o o d this price inc l u d e s all c h a r g e s s u c h as c o n v e y a n c e , legal costSj t i t l e , e t c . S i x p e n c e a d a y is all y o u p a y . The H o m e Site b e c o m e s y o u r o w n i m m e d i a t e l y t h e first p a y m e n t h a s b e e n m a d e . Y o u can t h e n d o a s y o u l i k e w i t h it, e i t h e r b u i l d a h o m e t o live in o r to let a g a i n , c r e a t e a g r o u n d r e n t o r , a s is so often d o n e , s i m p l y l e a v e it a l o n e ; t h e v a l u e g r o w s w h i l s t you sleep . W o u l d y o u n o t like t o o w n s u c h a p l o t ? W o u l d y o u not like t o k n o w y o u h a v e a plot of land y o u c a n call y o u r o w n , a n d t h a t t h e e n o r m o u s in__crease in v a l u e (the s o u r c e of B u i l d i n g S p e c u l a t o r s ' F o r t u n e s ) g o e s d i r e c t l y t o y o u ? R e m e m b e r L o n d o n is g r o w i n g at t h e r a t e of 150,000 souls p e r a n n u m . Ihese people must be housed and shops erected. Houses a n d s h o p s r e q u i r e sites. T h e s u p p l y of Suitable sites is, of c o u r s e , l i m i t e d . It cannot be augm e n t e d ; n e i t h e r can t h e g r o w t h of t h e d e m a n d b e s t o p p e d . T h e v a l u e of l a n d , a s of a n y o t h e r c o m m o d i t y , is, of c o u r s e , g o v e r n e d b y s u p p l y a n d d e m a n d . T h e s u p p l y is b e i n g e x h a u s t e d at t h e r a t e of 33 m i l e s of s t r e e t s per a n n u m . S u r e l y , e v e n a novice can r e a l i s e w h a t this m e a n s ? W i l l y o u b e o n e of t h e n e w " I N S " o r s t r u g g l e a l o n g a m o n g s t t h e old " O U T S " ?

Usecl b y y ^ a r Frien<lsl The world-wide use of Euthyniol Tooth Paste is based on merit. It can kill decay germs in 30 seconds, Its other remarUabie qualities are vouched for by prominent British scientists. Refuse vague claims. Captive Cap tubes 1/-. All chemists.
i I FltlSB SAMl'Mfi C O U I ' U N . | P a s t t h i s coiipciiv'ot! (i p o s t c a r d a l d r e - j s e d | "EUTHYMOL," 60. B e a k Strct, L"iidori. W., anfl secDre i t r U l puck ^ifo iiiid inforiiiatlon I [ Of, t h e ohiiSee ot a SA^'IO (iontifriiie. I j W H t y o u r nufiie a n d adrtress t laiiilf. 0 , M . 7 . I

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AT

BSJSTOL.

THE O.C. A N D G.W. RAILWAY d i r e c t o r s {the s h r e w d e s t m e n a m o n g s t us) t h i n k well e n o u g h of N o r t h o l t J u n c t i o n ' s f u t u r e t o h a v e s p e n t " over =22,000 in b u i l d i n g a R a i l w a y S t a t i o n a n d o t h e r facilities for t h e c o m i n g P o p u l a t i o n of N o r t h o l t J u n c t i o n . R e m e m b e r , t h e R a i l w a y C o m p a n y is m Business only to m a k e m o n e y s a m e as you a r e . t h e r e f o r e , t h e y w o u l d not e a t e r for a ixjpulation it t h e r e w e r e a n y d o u b t as t o its c o m i n g , A g a i n : W i l l y o u b e o n e of t h e new " I N S " or s t r u g g l e a l o n g a m o n g s t t h e old " O U T S " ? H a v e y o u ever c o n s i d e r e d t h e possibility of b u i l d i n g a h o m e t o live in a h o u s e d e s i g n e d to y o u r own i n d i v i d u a l t a s t e ? If y o u desire t h i s a n d m o s t m e n d o sostart r i g h t a w a y a n d secure a site for t h e h o m e y o u a r e now BUILDING IN THE AIB." If y o u m e a n s o m e d a y t o realise y o u r d e s i r e , you s h o u l d s e n d t o - d a v for p a r t i c u l a r s of N o r t h o l t J u n c tion F r e e h o l d E s t a t e . T h e e s t a t e is o n l y 20 m i n u t e s from O x f o r d - c i r c u s , a n d is s i t u a t e d at t h e j u n c t i o n of t h e G r e a t W e s t e r n a n d G r e a t C e n t r a l R a i l w a y s , . N o r t h o l t j u n c t i o n S t a t i o n , I t is also w i t h i n e a s y w a l k i n g d i s t a n c e of t h e D i s t r i c t a n d M e t r o p o l i t a n , R a i l w a y s , a n d p a r t of a l a r g e G a r d e n City T o w n Planning scheme. T h e first division of 450 plots h a v e .all b e e n disp o s e d of, a n d t h e s e c o n d section will b e d e c l a r e d o p e n for sale on t h e special t e r m s m e n t i p n e d a b o v e o n S a t u r d a y next, M a y 25. T h e a v e r a g e price of t h e plots is .60, s o m e less, s o m e m o r e , a c c o r d i n g t o size a n d location. W i l l y o u be o n e of t h e n e w " I N S " o r s t r u g g l e a l o n g a m o n g s t t h e old " O U T S " ? F i r s t c o m e , first served, a n d , of c o u r s e , t h e first b u y e r s will o b t a i n t h e best sites. I t is a n t i c i p a t e d t h a t t h e w h o l e division will b e d i s p o s e d of I'y J u l y 1st next, after w^hich p r i c e s will b e a d v a n c e d 10 p e r ceiit. on t h e next p o r t i o n s of t h e E s t a t e , A m o n g , t h e 375 p l o t s t h e r e is selection for e v e r y b o d y , a n d m u s t b e o n e that w o u l d suit y o u . NOW T H E N , " I N " O R " O U T " ? Y o u c a n visit N o r t h o l t J u n c t i o n ; n d i n s p e c t t h e e s t a t e free of all cost, b y filling u p t h e c o u p o n h e r e w i t h . S e n d it in t o - d a y , w h e n yon wi!' r e ceive free r a i l w a y t i c k e t s (state h o w m a n y r e q u i r e d ) , t o g e t h e r w i t h c o m p l e t e p l a n arid full m t o t m a t i o n about the estate. . , . ,, , , E a r l y a p p l i c a t i o n is a d v i s a b l e , as t h e r e a r e o n l y 375 m o r e p l o t s to b e d i s p o s e d of. H O M E F R E E H O L D S CO., la,Southampton-row, London, W . C . ' P h o n e : 4495 C i t y ! S e n d p a r t i c u l a r s of y o u r N o r t h o l t - J u n c t i o n V i e w D a y o n S a t u r d a y n e x t ; also free r a i l w a y vouchers and time-table. Name Address

ALLEN FOSTER & CO.,


4?^0lttEJ^ANE^^BARBJCANJj0(^^ M. S a l m e t , " T h e b a l l y P A a l l " flyinef m a n , w h o i s m a k i n g : a t o u r t o d e m o n s t r a t e thei w o n d e r s of a n a e r o p l a n e , w a s a f : o r d e d a g r e a t r e c e p t i o n a t Bristol o n h i s a r r i v a l t h e r o o n S a t u r d a y . A b o v e , h e la s e e n s e a t e d o n h i s m a c h i n e s u r r o u n d e d b y a n a d m f r i n s c r o w d - J u s t a f t e r ItindlngrB r i s t o l will b e h i s h e a d q u a r t e r s till Friday.("Daily Mirror" photogrraph.)

.,,Postcard brings yoy j?ree and Post Free, a World-famous Book that has_sf^ved money for thoii-jSandBH:Sainuel'sbig' - '

EEF.
(Coniinued from --page IM-J a t t i t u d e - w a s inexplicable. ' But she k n e w the tenac i t y of h i s w i l l ^ . a n d ' d i d n o t ^ a t t e m i J t t o d i s s u a d e iiirn, " ' ' ' ' " I h a v e w i r e d f o r j n y r o o m s , " .she s a i d , a s t h e y d r o v e t o t h e h o t e l . . " I h o p e t h e y h a v e given m e m y h o t little s i t t i n g - r o o m in t h e leadsit will b e a cold l i t t l e s i t t i n g - r o o m n o w . " " I t w a s v e r y g o o d of y o u t o c o m e o v e r , " h e s a i d , "1 H k e . t h e t r i p j " s h e Answered. " B e s i d e s , you' say there are some extremely i m p o r t a n t t h i n g s to settle." " Y e s , " h e answered gravely, " t h e r e are. A t the gigaiitic hotel M r s ; F r a y n e found t h a t b y a. l u c k y c h a n c e h e r o l d r o o m s h a d b e e n e m p t y a n d w e r e r e s e r v e d for h e r . S h e w e n t u p s t a i r s a t o n c e , Bpllard following her without being invited. A fire b u r n e d in t h e Utile s i t t i n g - r o o m . T h e w i n d o w s w e r e cosily c u r t a i n e d , a n d t h e m a n a g e m e n t h a d p r o v i d e d s o m e flowers. O n a t a b l e l a y in a C o n s p i c u o u s p o s i t i o n t h e c a r d of t h e e d i t o r of t h e m o s t i n f l u e n t i a l n e w s p a p e r in E n g l a n d , arid b e s i d e u w a s & b o o k l e t i n d i c a t i n g all t h e p r i n c i p a l L o n d o n

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FREEPRIZE-K^
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a m u s e m e n t s , issued b y the District Messenger Company. B u l i a r d t o o k of! h i s h a t a n d coat a n d laid t h e m oti a c h a i r . T h e n h e t o o k u p " t h e e d i t o r ' s caril a n d smiled. " Y o u r fame has preceded y o u . " , " I expect he wants,articles," she answered, with a l a u g h . ' " T h e y w o r r y m e from t i m e t o t i m e , b u t I ' m t o o l a z y for j o u r n a l i s m . T h a t ' s t h e t r u t h . " ',' W i l l y o u listen t o m e n o w ? O r m u s t y o u h a v e tea?" , " N o . I can d o w i t h o u t it. B u t I d o n ' t u n d e r stand you." " I w a n t t o e x p l a i n . . T i n s o g r a t e f u l t o y o u for coming over." " O f c o u r s e , I c a m e over. A n y t h i n g t o d o w i t h J a n e t ' s affains " " I t ' s riothing to do with J a n e t , " h e interrupted, " o r v e r y l i t t l e . I w a n t e d ' y o u t o c o m e o v e r to listen t o w h a t I a m g o i n g t o s a y to y o u n o w . " S h e flushed .and looked_ a t h i m indignantly, though without comprehension. " T o explain to you r a t h e r , " he went on c a l m l y . " W h a t c a n y o u h a v e t o e x p l a i n to m e ? " s h e asked. " M y m a r r i a g e , " he said, {To be coniinued.)

,/;' you haven't out one.

a stamp

handy

fosl

confon

with*

Page 16

'Advertisers^

Announeementt.

THE

DAILY

MIRROR

'Advertisers'

Announcements.

May 20, 1912

BATHING

TENTS.

Bathing Tent made with patent corner post, folding wood frama, No centre polo. Easiiy set up or taken down single-ianded. Walls fitted with flaps at bottom for sand or shingle. Size 4ft. square. Walls 6ft. high.

PRICES.

In Plain Grey Cloth,

In Striped Tent Cloth,

In Green RdtprooE Canvas,

176
^

22/9

29/6

Packed In valise complete, with &\y ropes for use in very rough weather. Complete with Ironi Curtain.

A BOON TO BATHERS.
The " Bathesl " Oowii. Reg. No. 340728. An overall enabling ba.thera to undress and dress without,the use of a T e n t or Hut.^ T h e " Bathesi'' is a contrivance which .^lips over the head aad spreads out like a tent, fastened down by stones or sand in pockets provided. There are ^Iso pockets to take clothes ; thewliole iseasily slipped on and off, having an elastic top. When fastened up it makes a smalt light volt 13 in. long by 9 in, deep. Price, in Grey Cloth; Bound Red

Yes, we are smart; in fact, the latest creations. We not only wear longer than the maiority of patent shoes because we are made from better materials/but our character is both distinct and striking. Although we are light and flexible, we can stand considerable hnoching about, and yet retain the same appearance as when we were first created. For ease and comfort we stand alone, for the Anglo-American models on which we were made were themselves built on scientific principles. Therefore, we do not uncomfortably slip at the heel as do many of our fellows on the market. Although essentially for Spring and Summer wear, we can he worn with confidence through the year, and whoever ns,es us Is distinguished from the crowdwe are so neat and refined in appearance. Being put together by the finest craftsmen in Northampton, we represent the highest form of shoe art; in fact, we are described as '*The Acme of Perfection/' for our name is "Footshape." Send for one, or both of us TO-DAY, and if you are not satisfied that we are fifty per cent, better value than you can obtain in any shoe store; send us back at once, and have your money returned in full.
. No. 2301 Ladies' Shoe. T h e following sizes are kept in stock : 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 (size 8 1/- extra). Each size is made in three different widths,No. 3 width (narrow); No. 4 ( m e d i u m ) ; No. 5 (wide). .When ordering simply quote Style Number, and state size and width required. If size is not known, send an old boot or draw outline of stockinged foot on paper. (Outime of boot is of nb use).

Preparingi to

Bathe.

5/n

Walhing to the S e a .

Cheapest 6ft. S q u a r e Tent.


With Projecting Front Awning. With Plain Curtain to set out as front awning with guy ropes (oo bars), 6ft. high walla. Prices with Front Awning In Plain Grey Cloth ... 3 3 / 6 In Striped Cloth ... ... A-SI" -InOrey Cloth Prooted,(Rotproof Green) ... 5 2 / " T h e awning may bS used for closing front of tent at night or when tent is not in t s e ,

Foreign postage ex'.ra

POST FREE.

No. 1302.Gent's Shoe. T h e following sizes are kept in stock i 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, n (size 12, 1/- extra). Each size is made in four different widths- No. 3 (narrow); No. 4 ( m e d i u m ) ; No. 5 (wide); No. 6 (extra wide). When ordering, simply quote Style Number, and state size and width required. If size is not known, send an old boot, or draw outline of stockinged foot on paper. (Outline of boot is of no use).

W. BARRATT & Co., Ltd.


There are many attempts to imitate the charm of the P. F. Flavour. Each
"Pootshape"
WANTED TO PURCHASE.

Boot

Manuffiicturers.
HOLIDAY APARTMENTS AND HOTELS.

(Desk 56), S T E R L I N G W O R K S , N O R T H A M P T O N .
Teeth Bought, any condition; money Rate. 13 words (minlmuml; word.attet. ARTIFICIAL7d. guaranteed; on silrer, more2d. gold,apeaka BOURNEMOUTH, 1.Wost.Durley Id. per well-known for best; Is. pet tooth 29. lOs. Hall; platinum; prices' rtiil pay il weight ol comfort and excellent table; electrophone; bllliarda; metat allows; immed. caeh; call or post, old and honour1,453 Maiiwarlng. able flrm.C. Spink, 272, Eegent-st, Oxford-circus, LondOB. moderate; quiet Sundays. Tel,, Board-residence from 263.;, A R T I F I C I A L Teeth Bought; liberal advance on any BRIGHTON.ApartmeiiU or minute sea and iav;n"i.-Mrs. Staff, 16, Norfolk-aq. onets.Hurcomb, 8, Cuilunn-st, City, London. BRISTOL.Colston lIoLol, College Green (unlicensed}! A R T I F I C I A L Teeth Bought.Is. 7d. tooth oii silver, 23. 2d. gold, 10a. platinum.Call Or post, H. Mack and Co., 21, Elgin-av, Paddlngton, London. AST-OFF CJothes, Nava! and Military UniforMS, Lace, Furs,-Teeth, 01<[ Gold, Silver. Jewellery and all kinda o property bought for Cash; we guarantee highent price*; competent buyers attend=free or cash by leturn for parcela received.-M. Myers and Co.. 89, 96, 98, Hlgii-at. Hotting Hill Gate. London, 'phone 1,843 Western. Est, 50 yeaw. OMBINGS.Ladies' Combings bought; 4d, per oz.; no tails.Thompson, 430, Wands wo rth-rd, London. D I S U S E D Clothes. Naval and Military Uniforms, wanted lor our Great South African contract; marve)]ousIy high prices given; please send as aoon as possible; appointments free or cash per return for parcels sent.Mr. and Mrs M. Hart, 6, Pembridge-rd, Bayswater. Teeth .Tewellery, Old Gold, Silver bought for cash. Tel., 169, Western. Est, 1847. ENT.'S, Ladies' second-hand Clothes; good-prices palCBIS.Great Central Stores, 24. High Hoiborn, London. O L D Artificial Teeth Bought.Persons wishing to receive full value should caii or forward by post; utmost vaiue per return or oSe- made.Browning, Actual Manutactiareri 63, Oxford-st. London. Eat. 100 veai:s. LD False Teeth Bought.Send any you iiave to sell; utmost value by largest firm.B. D. and J, B. Fraaer Ltd., Desk 103, Princes-at, Ipswich. E Give you Money.Cold. Jewellery, Watches, Chains, Rings, Trinkets. Stiver Antiques and Precious Stones bought for Cash; best value sent for parcels or offers made; references Capita! and Counties Bank.R. D. and J . B, Fraser. Ltd..' Goldsmiths (Desk 222), Prinoes-st, Ipswich, Established 1833.

PEEK FREAN SHORTCAKE


bears the letters P . F .
About 32 Pieces to t h e pound, at t h e P o p u I a r P r i c e .
16

moderate tariff; highly recommended; 60 bBdrooma, CROMER,Send lor illustrated OfRcial Guide to thl8 well-known Report, to Clerk, Room 10, Council OfQces, Cromer. UBLIN.-Royal Hibernian Hotel, Dawflon-Bt; fltst-olass; electric light, elevator. _ . . REAT Varmouth.Garibaldi Hotel for Gentlemen; moderate terms; liberal table.Powell, Proprietor. GI BEAT YAilMOUTH.Windsor Boarding Est'b.. Kent-iq. r 2le, week; comfy; min. sea, centre, amusements. I LFItA COM BE .Osborne Private Hotel; minute sea; gisty bedrooms; separate tables; inclusive tariff. M A R G A T E . - F o e Health and Pleasure.Illustrated Quids ( l i d l - Apts, Hotel. Brd. Hs, List. Id.; all Information (Box R.). Chamber of Comraeice Information Bureau, Margate.

O W

V E H I C L E S , H A N D T R U C K S , ETCi Rate. 2s. per line: minimum, 3 linen. r r o the Boy-8couU of the.British Empfre.-There fs only X. one " B e a t " Transport Wagon; it is unllmbered in Seven Seoonds, Made by South London Wheel Works (Dept, F.), Now. Kent-rd, 8.E.; ail separato parts supplied; patent artillery wheels, ofc,: call and see our famous Wagon to-day. Price list tree. 'Phone, Hop 3,329.

PARIS

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS.

supply planoa oa PIANOS.Boyd. I,td., or19,for their gold medalfree; catadeferred payments cash; carriage logues free,Boy<l, Iitd., Holborn, London, E.G.

'Daily Mail'

May 20, 1912

THE

DAILY

MIRROK

Page 17

STOCKS AND SHAKES


Markets Worried by Financial and PoUtical Fears.

THE KING FEEDS HIS CflAHGEH WITH SUGAR.


Debilitated Wives and Mothers find the w a y to Health in Dr. Williams" Pink Pilla.;

MAYPOLE.
3, COPTHALL BUILDINGS, E . G .

i.

Fears financial and political are worrying, the Stock. Exchange, driving' dealers everywhere to reduce rather than extend their commitments. The political outlook abroad is being watched with in-terest^ not immingled with anxiety, and naval intelhgence is being closely scanned to see whether it will provide 9.ny clue to the situation. The uneasiness is reflected in the weakness of Consolsj which in its turn reacts upon Hflme Rails. Markets all round the House, in fact, are stiH e-\ceedingly subdued in tone, and do not yet appear to have fuliy recovered from the shock of the four failures. The forthcoming special settlement in American Marconisis awaited with anxiety. It is believed that the recent wild ganible in Uie shares has created an exceedingly dangerous position, and the possibility of still more financial trouble is not overlooked. To add to these troubles, moreover, there is the stubborn labour cloud still overhanging the House. i MAYPOLE SPLITTING RUMOURS DENIED. Oiie of the few active features in the Industrial markets, on Saturday was Maypole Dairy Deferred, which added 3:nother ninepence to their recent remarkable rise amid the vague talk of a sharesplitting scheme. The rumours, however, are emphatically denied by the chaiinian of the company, who states that the splitting of the shares has. not even been discussed by the board. At their present price of 65s. the Deferred shares, which are of the nomiiial value of two shillings only, certainly seem unwieldy,.and the marketabdity and value of the shares would no doubt be enhanced if a splitting scheme were effected, But even without the share-spHtting rumours there is sufficient in the Maypole Dairy Company's excellent position to justify the recent rise in the price of the Deferred sharW. At their present price of 65s. the shares yield over 6 per tent, on the basis of the last dividend, and there is no reason whatever to anticipate any change for the worse in ^the company's fortunes, . The company has achieved phenomenally successful results. For 1907 the Deferred shares, of which there are two millions, received 5 3 | per cent. ; for 1908, 6SJ per cent.; for 1909, 85 per cent. ; and for 1910, 125 per cent. During the year 1911 an even bigger stride, was made, the last Deferred dividend being at the magnificent rate of 200 per cent. Since the beginning of the month the price of the shares has rjsen 15s., while earlier this year they were changing hands at 39s. 3d. CONSOLS STILL FALL. In the Money market there was quite a keen demand for loans in the first hour or two, and up fo 2J per cent, was paid for advances until to-day, but towards the close money was offered down to 2 per cent. Weekly fixtures coniijiijnded fully 2^ per cent. In the belief that considerable pressure for money is inevitable bef,ore the end of the month in connection with the issue of Treasury bills and the maturity of bills at the Bank, discount rates continued to, move in the upward direction. Labour an<3 pohtics have joined forces in a successful effort to depress the gilt-edged market. Consols dropped an eighth to 77 13-16 for cashan unusually large move for a Saturday morning and the other leading securities in the market suffered similar falls. Not an atom of support was forthcoming for the Home Railway market, which is a little worried over the latest outburst of trouble at the London Docks. Apart from " M e t s . , " which offered resistance to the downward trend of prices, nearly all the recent favourites showed losses on the day, which, however, in no ease exceeded a half. Little Chathams were particularly depressed, falling as much as 7-16a rather sudden drop for so lowpriced a stock. Americans were again a rather quiet and cautious market. The encouraging crop reports, however, and hopes that a settlement will soon be arrived at in the anthracite strike, sufficed to impart a fairly firm tone, and the enhanced parity levels were generally well maintained. DEBLIN UNLOADING CANADAS. By far the most active feature of the day was Canadian Pacifies, which, however, were at the same time one of the weakest. The company's traffic gain of 629,000dol. was considered excellent, but the emphatic warning issued by the Berlin Bourse Commissioner against the wild speculation on the " cash " market prompted heavy selling from Berlin, and the price flopped from 274 to 271, closing a little above the worst at 271^, with a loss of nearly three points on the day. Grand Trunks were not .adversely affected to any extent by the collapse of Canadasj but Mexicans continued to fall, the previous day's traffic decrease being offered as the excuse. On second thoughts, dealers grew more optimistic regarding "" "'ujjBSAa.is^'^^eeclL-.at-the Leojioldina meeting, T e o s " rallied a point lo 7 0 i The definite news regarding the reopening of the Dardanelles was welcomed in the Foreign market, but it failed to affect prices to any extent. We understand that the forthcoming Danish loan will probably be in 4 per cents, at 97|. At present there are only two Danish loans quoted in London, and in both cases the market is a narrow .and a nominal one. Danish Threes of 1897 stand at 84 and the Threes of 1894 stand at 79. Marconis were an almost neglected market, closing with a fall of a sixteenth on the day, and Industrials generally suffered unwonted quietude, P. and O. Deferred dropped five pomts. Schweppes Deferred, which have been active of late, rose further to 133. IJd.. There were thirteen

How can a'woman appear to be cheerful and well when a distressing weakness is sapping all her energy and making her duties in the home a positive bdrden? Thonsands of wives and mothers are going through life in utter misery, whereas if they would but realise how necessary it is to keep the blood rich and pure, there woidd be much.less sjiffering. It is through the blood Ihal the body receives new strength, and is able to resist dise.ise, If the blood is weak or iminirc then the body. becomes feeble and readily attacked by disease.

^^j/'^US
"Ohp^WTfit-* &SM 4 K Sft ' ^ ^ ^*i

An i n t e r e s t i n g i n c l d o n t , iifustt-atine t h e King's Eove f o f a n i m a l s , occufi-ed a t t h e ctode of t h o m i l i t a r y opei'^.tions on t h e Fox Hills on Saturday. Havings dism o u n t e d f r o m t h e horse w h i c h h a d c a r r i e d h i m over t h e hills, his Majesty t o o k several l u m p s of sugrar f r o m a.n envelope h a n d e d t o h i m by t h e g;room, a n d , a s seen a b o v e , f e d t h e a n i m a l vwith them.(" Daily M i r r o r " p h o t o g r a p h . ) markings of business done in the shares in the official list. The shares have risen 5s. since the beginning of the month, Rubber shares remained hopelessly neglected, with prices a shade lower here and there. Rubber Share Trusts were unaffected by the report, with its capital reduction scheme, being unchanged on the day at 95. The scheme seems to be generally reg.arded as a bull point, Jhe possibiHty of a dividend in the ensuing finanfcial year being to the liking of the market. Eatu Tigas at %\ were undisturbed bj' the'report with its increased dividend of 25 per cent. The Allagar dividend for 1911 is only 8 per cent,, compared with 10 per cent, for the previous year. The Woodend Rubber and.Tea Company's results, however, are more encouraging. A final dividend of 10 per cent, is declared, making 16 per cent, for the year. Tea shares continued in demand on the better prices now being obtained for the commodity. The principal market in the shares, of course, is in Mincmg-lane, but Stock Exchange interest in them seems to be gradually expandingand so is the market. Several of the higher-priced shares advanced, Lunglas being a feature with a spurt of a point to 22i, and Jetinga Valleys improved to 31s, 6d. buyers. Quietude prevailed in the Oil share market, but apart- from Urals, which dropped to 3J, the tone was fairly firm. One of the chief causes for the recent depression in Urals is the heavy realisations on the part of the many badly-cdught Marconi speculators. Premier Pipes were a good market, and rose ninepence to 23s. 3d. ANGLO-CONTENEISTAL HOPES. Nigerian Tin shares were lashed into activity by the report, published in The Daily Mirror on Saturday, that the Colonial Office has received a glowing report -regarding the Anglo-Continental's Jemaa lode - which meana that the truth regarding this much-discussed formation may be revealed within the next few days. It is anticipated, moi-eover, that some statement regarding the Balfour report on the Anglo's property, which has been guarded with so much secrecy, may be forthcoming at to-day's meeting of the West African Mines, Anglos themselves moved in lively fa.shion, clos)ng with a gain of -h at 2 | , South Africans were completely devoid of feature, but in the Copper group Tintos advanced a quarter and Lamaquas were in some demand. CLOSING PRICES. BRmSH FUNDS, etc.
India Zi p.c-Sai i Do 3 p.c.-79| I Met. Watr " B^'-82| 83 Ldo. Cty, 31 P.C.-100J S Do 3 P.C.-S4 4 Port o London ''B"-101i 2 i RAIia. Hull and BarnBley-68J 5 Lanes, and York6.-91i J Metropolitan OonB,-704 1 Met. District-463 SJ Midland Def.-63 9 North British-28i k North-Eastern-121i J North-Western-l 324 % 8oHth-Eastern-66Ji S SoiitlJ-Western Def.-43 J

Consols for cEh-77ii Do June Acc.-77iJ -HIrish I^n(l-77i 78 Ical Loane-Saj S Transvaal 3 p.c.-92 I Back o Bngland-2fl^ HOME Brighton Def.-1024 J Caledonian Def.-SO^ g Central London-BS 65 Chatham Or(l.-2o4f iV GlaE. and S.W. Def.-40J l i Great Central Pref,-3Ii I Do Def.-lll 15^ Great Eattrn-663 TJ Great Northern-53 4 Great Western-llSi 1?.

AMERICANS. Amal. Copper-85J I Norfolk-115 116 Atfijii30n-109 \ Northern Pacific-122 123 Bait, and Ohio-113 J Ch'p'ke and Ohio-8iJi ; Peiinsylvania-63i 3 xd Dcnver-205 14 ReadmB-SO i Brie-36i ^ Illinois Cer.ti-aJ-129 150 Hock Island Com,-284 2 Louisville-ies 4 Southern Paciflc-111 i N.Y. Central-122J 3J Southern-29i g COLONIAL AND 'FbHEIGN RAILS. Canadian Paclf!c-2714 % 1 Union Rly. Com.-113I75 Braz. Pacinc-174a 114 Grand Trunk Ord.-30i 3 Cent. States 8teel-714 UnitedArgentine-108 9 1 Do 1st P r e f . - l l l i S Guayaquil Bonds-593 ^04 Do 2nd Pref.-lOOi g LeopoldiuB-89i 7 1 i Do 3rd Pref.-59i S Mex. Ord.-B24 3 B.A, and Pao!flc-94 95 Do 8 p.c. 1 Pf.-1373 Bi B.A. and 9oiithern-124i 6i Do 6 p.c. 2 Pf.-914 i B.A. Western-130^ I J United Havana-SS 9 FOREIGN STOCKS. Argen. 5 p.c, 1886-lOai g Honduras-104 3 Do 5 p.c. 1907-lOaj 34 Japan 44 p.<r.-974 3 Brazilian 4 p.c. 1869-8&4 | Do and ScrieE-96^ 7& Chinese 5 p.c. 1896-lOOS 14 Mesican 5 p.e.-lOO 101 Do 4 i p.c. 1898-94S 54 Peruvian Pref.-IIJ 3 Colombia 3 p.c.-494 % Portuguese 3 p.c.-65i 61 German 3 p.c.-79 SO Riisa. 5 p.c. 1906-1035 4 Guatemala 4 p.c.-47g 84 ! Do 4i p.c. 1909-1014102 INDUSTRIAL" AND MI80ELLANEOU8. Aerated Bread-54 g Hudson's BayG-1344 54 Amal. Press Ord.-7g S Lipto)i"e-19/0 20/9 Do Pret.-23/6 23/6, Lyons-6^ 1% Arjn5t.rone-43/9 44/9 Marconi-e-J^ \^ Mexican Traiiis-123 4 Anglo-Newf'd Deb.-lOOi 2J Nat. Steam Car.-33/6 34/6 Anglo " A ''-2BJ 6 Nelson, Jas.-i^ -if Associated Cement-6^ i f It is gratifying for Mothers to know that rashes, P. and O. Def.-366 75 xd & r Ass. News Ord.-23/6 24/ xd pimples, blotches, eruptions, chafing, ringworm, Do 5 p.c. Pref.-30/21/)id Pictorial News-22/3 23/ City Electric-21i 24 Do Pref.-18/ 19/ etc., are quickly cured by this wonderful salve. It Coats, J.P.-9a 104 Royal MaiI-116 118 xd stops the itching and begins! Healing at once. Trial English 8ewicg-13/3 44/3 Telephone Def,-157i 94 Harrod'e-4if 4f box, 7^d., at all Chemists. RUBBER SHARES. Allagar (2/]-2/104 3 / 1 , Loii. Aaiatic-lO/e 1 1 / S I T U A T I O N S VACANT. Anglo-Malav-15/7i 15/i04 Malacca Orcl.-14i S Rzte, 2s. iicr line: minimum, 2 lines, Bukit MerfcBiam-2/6 2/9 Do Pref.-134 14 " A WORD to Women."Home conditiuiis and opporBukit R3,iah-12 k Merlimau-S/e 3/9 i^ tunities abroad; pamphlet Ircc; uiivaie cnvoJape. Highlands-3^ -{JRubber Tr.-10/l04 l l / 1 4 p m Colonel Lamb, 122, Queen Victoria-at, K.C. Kuala Lwmpur-6S -1^ Str.Bertam-4/44 4/74 Bli joii on the look-out for opportunities of increasing Linggi-33/l4 33/44 Vbrosa (2/1-25/14 26/44 yoiir income without intcrfcrciito with your present ocOIL SHARES. MiCTiop Pipe L)ne-13/6 14/6 cnpationi If so, address J., 1,065, 'Dally Mirror," 12, ABglo-Maikop-liV . Whitefriats-st, K.C, Baku (f.p.).4/9 5/3 Mex, E. Prer,-24 -,^ ANADA.AgrieultnriHs, female domestics; part fate aiiBlack Sea Otd,-14 ? Preni. Pipe-23/ 24/xd vanced; Australia, iI2.Hetheriiigton'a, 10la. Strand. Biirmah-3S 3 Bed Sea-l| 4 ' C A N A D A for Women.Miss Minnie Hatnmond will conOt. Carpafh.-16/6 17/6 Shell Tranai duct a party of sHlecttd girls to ReKitia, Saskatchewan, Egypt 6\\ Trusi-i Spies-28/6 29/ sailina from Bristol on the Royal Kdward, July 24th; Lobitos-S 1 Ural Caspian-4-^ 4 situations KuarHntKe<l by Government; exceptional advanSOUTH AFRICANS. tages.Write tor p.irticulars and copy o " Bunch of Letters Central Miiiing-9| 10 Goers-it S from Canada ' to Canadian. Northern llailw.i.y, 21, Charing ChaTtered-28/ 28/6 Jagers Dei.-6-A- ? Cross, London. Qnderella Cona,-l4 4.Johannes. Cons.-21/3 21/9 ITUATIONS in the CoIoHlns imt! Abvoaa.Advertise in Crown MineB-6+4 IS" KniKht^2|* 1& the " Overseas Daily Mail," which, with its world-wide Cons. G. F.-il-^ 4 Modder fo n tei n-10j |. iJ circulation, is read by employers wherever tho EngllBh De Beers De(.-204 4 Premier Def.-94 it tongue 1B spokon; rate. Id. per word; specimen copy tree.-Bast Eand-SViT - ^ Kandtontein-l-ft le"Oversees Daily Mail," 130, Fleet-st, London. El'do Bankets-2 4 Kobinsn-4g % Geduld-14 A Rand MirteE-63 -^ GARDENING. Gen. MininB-31-32 1 1 Sbamva-SS i Rate, 2s. per lino; minimum, 3 lines. Giafit-13 i f Tangaiiyika-2i AUBEROUS Begonias; leading Hower of the day; for winGlobe Phcenix-lii- i|Willoughby-13/6 14/ do^vs, greenhouses, bedding; priao giant strain; immenso OTHER MINES. massive flowers; brilliant and distinct colours; well-starteil Abbontiakoon-8/6 9/ . Golden^HorseslioeB-2i^ i i plants- 6 Is.; 12, is. 9d.' carriage frco, with instructions. Great Oobar-4g Ash. Gold-I h J M Ha'yner, F.R.H.8,. Hlghflcld, Southampton. Great Fing3l!-137 U / Anacouda-8i4 ^ I J O V E L Y Hardy Climber; Carnation Moonflower; runs Ang!o-Oont.-2|4^ ^ , , ^ Ivanhoe-44 i xd rapidly yard itfter yard; strings of exquisite largo B ' r n Hill Prop.-48/ 49/ i d Kalgur]i-2ft- A Mex. Mines El Oro-7 4 double carnation-like silvery-pink flowers; IlouriRhcB anyChampion Tin-4S 1 - ^ North NJgeiia-9/0 10/6 E! Oro-16/9 17/3 where; improves yearly; 2 good roots. Is. free,Kayner, aa Prestea Bloclc A-iS- 1-iV Esperanza-IA ^-4 above. Rayfield (Newj-lA- A Fanti Cons,-U/ 12/ Rio Tlnto-784 g Gold Coast-lg 4 ARTIFICIAL TEETH. T ADY Reid's Medical Aid Set?., Ltd.-Gas, 2s,; artificial X J teeth at hospital prices; payable weekly i( desired.-Call or write, 8ec., Miss Gordon, 534, Oxord-6t. Marble Arch, With Colonel the Right Hon, George Wyndham, HE Artificial Teetli Aid Society, Ltd.-PainlesB exttao. M . P . , in command, the Earl of Chester^s Veomaniy tions, 2s.; teeth a t Tiospltal prices, by weekly payments The Eight Hon, Lord Haldon, Hon. Soc., iB9,0x(or<i-iit,n^ Cavalry are in camp at Eaton Park, Cheatei,

Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People gtv new strength to the feeble body and form a safe* gnard agamst the inroads of disease for the simple, scientific reason that they supply rich, red blood thai nourishes the body. In this way they fortify the tired nerves, cure licatlaches and nervous attacks, strengthen weak, aching backs and make worried women bright and well. " Abont eighteen months ago, following a domestic event," mentions Mrs. J'ldith Hodges, of 34, St. Ives-grove, Stanley, Liverpool, " I felt there was no life in mc. I used to turn very faint and dizzy. Doctors said that I was bloodless, and they feared I should not ' pull roimd.' No nourishment seemed to do me any good, and I got so weak that the clergyman was called in, as it was feared I would never get better. \\y legs and hands swelled with dropsy ; my face was drawn and though medicine after medicine was tried I made no headway. " Then an acquaintance advised mc to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. After taking a few boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I began (o feel betterSteadily the swellings left my legs and hands and I never felt faint or weak again. " M y appetite returned and I could feel that the Pills were supplying nie with New Blood. After I had given Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a fair trial I was completely well and strong." For further information write to (he address below for booklet, " Diseases of the Hlood." The above cure is an example of what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are doing every day in cases of Anaemia, t-eneral Weakness, . Rheumatism, Neurasthenia, etc. Of dealers or direct, price 2s. 9d. one liox, or 13s. 9d. for six, post free, from Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., 4(1, Holborn Viaduct. London. At shops never listen to talk .about "something just the same," hut insist upon l}A^Y'"g_J.'li_ Williams' Pink Pills.(Advt.)

for children's

S
T

Page _13

THE DAILY MIRROR


M I D D L E S B X LOSS BY AM INNII^GS.
MIDDLESEX, F i n t I n n i n g g . 1 3 4 {A. B . L i t t e l j o l m , n o t o u t , 40), Se.cond l a n i n g a A, R. Lltteliohn, c HudW . P , Hobertflon, c TyVdleaton, b W h i t e h e a d . . desley : ( J . T.), b whitehead 1 1 O. V B a k e r , o B r o o k e , b Sharp Tarrant, ' o Brooke, b H b Whitehead ... Dean ..; , 8 S N . u r r a i g,, b W h i t e h e a d . , , M ell Heacno (J, W.); 6 H e a r n o (J. W , ) , b DKin Whitehead 6 Mignon, o Tyldesley ( J . P. F . Warner, not out. .105 T.), b W h i t e h e a d Hondren, o Brooke, b Extras Dean . . , . 8 Total 217 B o w l i n g . W h i t e h e a d . 6 w k t s for 7 5 r u n s ; D e a n . 3 l o t 7 5 ; S h a r p , 1 for 2 3 . LANCASHIRE. F i r s t I n n i n g . s 3 8 9 (Tyldesley ( E . ) 8 3 , R . H . S p o o n e r 7 1 ) . CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY BEAT SUSSEX. SUSSEX. F i r s t I n n i n g s . 2 2 8 ( B e l f (R.) S S . K i U i c k 6 1 ) . S e c o n d InniuHs. Vino, o Woosnam, b J a m of N a w a n a g a r , b Kidd 43 Knight 36 R e l l (B.1, c K i d d . b CalA H . Lang, n o t o u t ..... thoTpe ...: 27 B . H . Hollowsy, b Calthorpa B . G. T u d o r , C K n i g h t , . b Kidd / . . . . 19 J u p p , b K n i g h t L e a o h , . o H o l l o w a y , o Elf (A. E.}, Ibw, b Knight Knight 43 " Extras H . L . S i m m s , b H o l l o way 1 6 Killick, c Pfttteson, b Total Smythe 8 OAMBRIDGE "UNIVERSITY. ' F i r s t I n n i n g s 4 1 2 | E . L . K i d d I B T . F . S, Q . C a l t h o r p s 78). S e c o n d I n n i n g s . R . K n i g h t , n o t o u t . 1 3 ; C. P a t t e s o n , n o t o u t , 1 6 ; e x t r a s , 3 ; t o t a l (for no wkt), 3 2 ,

May 20, 1912


:SB

EASY VICTORY FOR THE AUSTRALIMS


South Africans Avoid Defeat at HuddersfieldChampions Bustled. LAisCASHIRE WIN AT LOBB'S.

DERBY PROBLEMS.

OLYMPIC TRIALS.

Successes of Darling's Stable at Gatwlck Marathon Race, Athletics and Swimming Selections for York. Events in Town and Country.
Darling's stable sent three fancied candidates from E e c k h a m p t o n to c o m p e t e at G a t w i c k , and two w o n their respective race3. It seemed clear that the defeat of Santaline,- indeed, was due rather to ill-luck t h a n w a n t of merit. ^. , , B a n g a l o r e on S a t u r d a y r o m p e d away w i t h , t h e e ' 8 f ' 3 W e l t e r , a n d his ready success a t o r t e d gossipers. t a l k i n g a b o u t t h e D e r b y , a s S t . Neota ia t r a i n e d T)J p a r i m K , a n d t h a t c o l t is k n o w n t o b e of a s o r t l i k e l y t o d o s o m e t n m g very c r e d i t a b l e i n L o r d L o n s d a l e ' s c o l o u r s t h i s season, N e v e r t h e l e s s , t h e K i n g ' s c o l t , P i n t a d e a u , g a v e 51b. a n a a decisive w h a c k i n g t o S t . N e o t s i n t h e P a y n e S U k e s , a l t e r t h e f a s t e s t m i l e a n d a h a l f d o n e i n s u c h stylo a s t o m a a e t h e m o s t p r u d e n t m e n believe t h a t h i s Majesty S representa-. t i v e h o l d s a r e a s o n a b l e c h a a c e lor t h e D e r b y , s i n c e all save o n e ol t h e s u p p o s e d first-raters have been utterly discredited; A n d t h a t one. Sweeper II., has not yet gone f a r t h e r t h a n a m i l e , a n d h i s a b i l i t y t o s t a y t h e D e r b y (or P a y n e S t a k e s ) d i s t a n c e is o p e n t o d o u b t . The m a r k e t o n t h e D e r b y ia n a t u r a l l y a t p r ^ e n t c o n c e r n e d chiefly w i t h S w e e p e r 11. a n d O y l g a d . T h i s I>air a r e l i k e l y to b o l d t h e p o s i t i o n s of first a n d s e c o n d f a v o n t i t c a r i g h t t o t h e close, a l t h o u g h n i n e o u t of t e n m e n d i s c u s s i n g s u c h m a t t e r s a g r e e t h a t t h e D e r b y Is l i k e l y t o b e w o n by aome outsider. T h a t o p i n i o n is b a s e d o n t h e c o n v i c t i o n t n a t n o t o n e of t h e t h r e e - y e a i - o l d s is r e a l l y of h i g h class. A h o r s e of t h a t age, t h e A m e r i o a n - b r e d C a s t l o t o n g a v e t h e m o s t i m p r e s s i v e d i s p l a y seen a t U a t w i c k , .WheM, 1" M^J . R . K e e n e ' s c o l o u r s , h e c a n t e r e d a w a y w i t h t h e iWatlb c r o u g h S t a k e s . T h e r e s u l t , j u d g e d by t h e b e t t i n g , was confidently expected, a n d . f u r t h e r , we m a y d e p e n d u c o n s e e i n g O a s t l e t o n d o m u c h bigger t h i n g s a n d j u s t i t y h i s e x t r a o r d i n a r i l y good r e p u t a t i o n a s o n e of t h e b e s t s e n t l i e i o from t h e United States, , ,. - ^ , /\.IITI Scotney, backed a week previously to b e a t Charles O Mailey, n o w h a d a s o f t e r t a s k i n t h e P r m C e ' s H a n d i c a p , a n d o u t s t a y e d w i t h ease o v e r t h e t w o m i l e s F l o r l z e l s P d e a n d company. R.nown, a l w a y s a h o r s e of m o o d s m a y n a v e h a d h i s s o u r n e s s d e v e l o p e d a s t h e g o i n g was n o t to nis^iiKmg. Anyhow, h e swerved a n d c u t t h e business in t h e last naii" " T h e first of t h e , s o l l i n g r a c e s s h o w e d t l i e m a r k e d s u p e r i o r i t y of Tosson (10 t o II, a f t e r w a r d s b o u g h t m for 3 0 0 p m e a s , T h e r e was a l s o v e r y i n t e r e s t i n g s p o r t a t H a y d o c k i-aric, where as it happened, hackers h a d a n excellent t i m e through t h e success of n o fewer t h a n five S r s t f a v o u r i t e s , a n d in t h o s i x t h c a s e , won b y S o u r P l u m , t h e r e waa a l m o s t a s m u c h money invested o n t h a t c a n d i d a t e a s o n A l a n c or H a r k Halloa. T h e A m a t e u r . Athletic Association carried out tho O l y m p i c t r i a l s , i n v i e w of t h e s e l e c t i o n of r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s for t h e O l y m p i c ( J a m e s at S L o c k h o l m , a t Stamford Bridge on Saturday. A Marathon race from W i h d s o r Castle grounds to Stamford B r i d g ? g r o u n d s , o n e l a p .of w h i c l i h i t t e r l i a d t o b e c o v e r e d in o r d e r t o c o m p l e t e t h e d i s t a n c e , w a s jilso d e c i d e d . B e l o w will b e f o u n d t h e full r e s u l t s . A g r e a t p a c e was m a i n t a i n e d t h r o u g h o u t i n t h o M a r a t h o n r a e e . J . O o r k e r y , of t h o I r i s h C a n a d i a n A.O., w h o is & n a t i v e of T o r o n t o , n o t o n l y p r o v e d auccessful, b u t e s t a b l i s h e d a fresh r e c o r d of 2 h . 3 6 m , 6 5 2-3a. for t l i e j o u r n e y . a s a g a i n s t t h o p r e v i o u s b e s t o n r e c o r d o f 2 h . flam. 3 I s , , l a w h i c h H , V. B a r r e t t , of t h o P o l j t e e i i n i o H a r r i e r a , w o n in 1959. B a r r e t t , w h o suffered f r o m m u s c l e t r o u b l e a n d was b y no m e a n s a t h i a b e s t , finished t w e l f t h . In 2 h . 6 5 m , 10 3-63, C a p i t a l l y a , C o r k e r y r a n , h e w a s c l o s e l y followed b y P , W . G i t s h a m , of t h e S o u t h A f r i c a n O l y m p i c t e a m , i n 2 h . 3 7 m , 14 3-53. H . G r e e n , of t h e H e m e H i l l H a r r i e r s (holder o t t h e t r o p h y , p u t u p b y t h o Sporling I4fe, whose t i m e w h e h h e won l a s t y e a r was 2 h . 4610. 29 4-6a.t, finished t h i r d , i n 2h. 3 9 i n . 1 4 3-53,, a n d S. P r a n c o m , of t h e W i r c a l l A . O . , f o u r t h , i n 2 h . 4 2 m . 5 1-53,, so' t h a t ( h o first f o u r m e n b e a t , the previous " best." 100 Metres ( I 0 9 . 3 S yards).W. H , A p p l c g a r t h IPolyt e c h n i o H . ) , 1.^; W . A , S t e w a r t ( L . A . C . ) , 2 ; I I . M . M a c k i n t o s h ( C a m b r i d g e U n i v e r s i t y A.C;.), 3 . I n c h e s ; s a m e . Time, l i s , liO Metres Hurdles (130,29 yards).~K. Powell ( C . U . A , C . a n d L . A . C ) , 1 ; H . E . I I . B l a k e n o y ( L . A . C . ) , 2J K, H . D u r n i o r d ( L . A . C ) , 3, T i m e , 1 5 4-58. 200 Metres (318.72 yards).-!!;, w , Haley (Herno Hill IL), 1 : D . H . J a c o b s ( U e r n e H i l l H . ) , 2 ; R . G. R i c e ( R e a d l n e A.O.), 3 . T i m e , 2 2 3-5s. flOO M e t r e s (fl37.14 y a r d s l . - C . N . S e e d h o u s e ( B l a c k l . o a t h H . ) , 1 ; G, N l c o l ( P o l y t e c h n i c H , ) , 2 ; 8. t j s h o r ( S u r r e y A . C . ) . 3 . T i m e . 4 9 l-5a. 800 Metros (874,48 y a r d 3 ) . ~ P , E . M a n n iPolyteohnic H . j , 1 ; P . I I . H u l l o r d ( S u r r e y A . C . ) . 2 ; e J . M, H i l l ( Q u c o n ' i P a r k H i , 3 ; A, P a t t e r s o n (SalJord U . a n d L,A.O.). Time, I m . 5 7 3-5.1. 1,500 M e t r e s ( 1 , 6 4 0 , 4 y a r d s ) .W, C o t t r i l ! ( i r a l l a m e h i r o H . l , 1 ; D. F , M c N i o o l ( P o l y t e c h n i c H . l , 2 : C, H , R u f f e l l ( H l g h g a t e H , ) a n d H . H a r e ( H e r n o H i l l H , ) , d e a d - h e a t for third. T i m e , 4 m , 8 4-53, 5 . 0 0 0 M e t r e s ( t h r e e milca 188 y a t d a l . G , W . H i i t s o n ( S u r r e y A . C . ) , 1 ; A . L , T r e b l e ( P o l y t e c h 11 ie I L ) . 2 ; 0 . Leo ( D u r h a m C i t y A . C . ) , 3 . T i m e , 1 5 m . 1 3 3-S3. PIKLD KVENTS. Standing H i g h J u m p . - C . W . Taylor (Polytechnic H.), 41t. 8 i n . . 1 : W . K. B . H e n d e r s o n ( O . U . A . C , a n d L . A . C t , 4 t t . 6in., a, R u n n i n g B r o a d J u m p . - - 8 , S. A b r a h a m s ( C U . A . O . a n d L.A.C.), 22ft, 43iii., 1 ; W . L e a c h ( R e a d i n g A.O.). 2 1 f t . Bin., 3 S t a n d i n g B r o a d J u m p . - T . C, S H u s s (I.ynn A , 0 Cawlift), 91t. 6 i n . , 1 ; F . 0 . K i t c h i n g (L.A,0.1, 9 t t , 4in,, 3 . R u n n i i g H i g h J u m p . - B . H , B a k e r (Liverpool H , a m i A.O.) a n W r . O. D o n o h u e ( W a t e r l o o H , a n d A.C.) t i e d for first a t 6ft. l l i n . Hop, Step and Jump.-B, B. A b r a h a m s C.U.A.O, a ^ d L . A , 0 . ) a n d M . D . D l n e e n ( H l g h g a t e II.) tie<l tor fittt place a t 43ft. lOin. T h r o w i n g t h e H a m m e r . A . E . F l a x m a n (L.A.O, a n d S.L.H.), 1 3 4 t t , e i i n . , 1 : P , I?, R y a n ( D u b l i n ) . ] 3 2 f t , e 6 i n . , 2. W e i g b t . - P . Q u i n n ( D u b l i n ) . 41t. l O ^ i n . . 1 ; P , V. R y a n {Dublini, 3 9 f t . I l 4 i n . . 2. T h r o w i n g t h e J a v e l i n (best h a n d ) . 0 , P i r o n (I(,A.C.l, l J 7 f t . 2 i i n . , 1 . F . 0 . K i t c h i n g (L.A.O.), 1 2 1 t t . l U i n . , 2 . T h r o w i n g t h e D U c u s . - W , E . B , H e n d e r s o n IC.U.A.O, a n d L.A.C.), i a 4 f t . 3 i i n . , 1 ; P , Q u i n n (Dublin), U 4 f t , S l i n . , 2 . T u g of W a r . ^ C i t y P o l i c e A . O . b o a t ' K " (Pfaistow) Division P o l i c e A . O . by 2 p u l l s t o 1.

T h e South Africans easily avoided defeat against Yorkshire on Saturday, showing m u c h better batt i n g l o r m t h a n i n t h e first i n n i n g s . Frank'MitcKelFs was the greiU i n n i n g s , SI npt o u t ; Y o r k s h i r e m u s t b e s o r r y t h a t t h e y h a v e n o t still g o t h i s s e r vices to call u p o n for t h e c o u n t y . Neai-ly nil t h e S o u t h Africiiiis h a v e g o t r u n s a t o n e t i m e o r a n o t n e r n o w , a n d t h e s i d e looks l i k e i m p r o v i n g i n t o a r e a l l y good o n e . Ti'-ue, t h e y w e r e o u t p l a y e d by y o r k s b i r a : b u t t h e i o r i i s l i i r e b o w l i n g is p r e t t y difficult t o p l a y u n t i l y o u h a v e h : d f o u r o r five s e a s o n s a e ^ i n s t t h e r o . E v e r y week a d d s in t h e i n t e r e s t t a k e a i n t h e first T e s t m a t c h , p l a y e d a t M a n c h e s t e r o n M a y 27 b e t w e e n A u s t r a l i a a n d ^ u t h Afvii^a. T h e A u i t r a ! i a , n s easily k n o c k e d off t h e few n e c e s s a r y r u n s a g i i n s t S u r r e y a t t h e O v a l . M a c a r t n e y a n d U a r d s l e y d o . n g t h e j o b q u i t e n i c e l y . T h e vexed q u e s t i o n of t h e i r b o w l i n g s t r e n g t h s h o u l d h a i e s o m e l i g h t t h r o w n on' i t d u r i n g t h e m a t o h a g a i n s t t h e M.O.C., w M c n s t a r t s a t L o r d ' s to-iiay. F.nicry, f r o m t h e f a c t t h a t h e t o o k e i g h t e e n w i c k e t s l a s t week for 2 9 1 r u n s , o n good w i c k e t s m a i n l y , m u s t b e a m o r e t h a n u s e f u l bowler, Of t h e r e s t , o n e h a d b e s t w a i t b e f o r e c r i t i c i s i n g too closely. I t w o u l d n o t s u r p r i s e s o m e , C H A M P I O N S ' NARROW VICTORY. I un<ierst-nci, if t h e a c t i o n of o n e of t h e m i.^ q u e s t i o n e d , GLOUCESTERSHIRE. W a r w i c k , a f t e r h a v i n g all t h e b e s t of t h e . e a r l y p a r t of the g a m e against Gloucester, h o d to bustle at t h e end, and F i r s t I n n i n g s . 1 9 9 (G, L . J e s s o p 3 7 , L a n g d o n 36) o n l y j u s t g o t h o m e by t h r e e w i c k e t s . If all t h e c a t c h e s h a d Second I n n i n g s been h e l d t h e finish m i g h t easily h a v e b e e n d i f f e r e n t . Board, c Smith, b PerBowles, b Q u a i f e M i d d l e s e x w e r e well h e a t e n by L i n c a s l i i r e a t L o r d ' s , b u t sons 53 Mills, s t S m i t h , b Q u a i t e t h e d e f e a t was softpned by t h e fat t h a t P . F . W a r n e r c a m e D i p p e r , b Q u a i f e Huggins, b Hands 25 h a c k t o t o i m a g j i n a n d m a d e 1 0 5 n o t o u t . Now t h a t h e C. O. n . Sewell, c B a k e r , Nott, c Baker, b Quelle,. h a s b r o k e n h i s s p e l l . o f b a d l u c k we look for m a n y r u n s f r o m b Foster .....'....8 5 P a r k e r , Ibw, b Q u a i f e . . him. 25 Dennett, not out W o r c e s t e r c o l l a p s e d in t h e i r second i n n i n g s a g j l n s t H a m p - L a n g d o n . b F i e l d Extras G. E . J e s s o p . c H a n d s b s h i r e , w e r e all o u t for 8 0 , a n d finally b e a t e n by e i g h t Field . . . , 1 wickets, I l e s k e t h P rich a i d did t h e damage, t a k i n g six w i c k e t s for 18 r u n s , a q u i t e e x c e p t i o n a l p e r f o r m a n c e . Total 225 B o w l i n g . Q u s i f e , 5 w i c k e t s for 3 9 r u n s ; F i e l d , 2 for 1 8 ; I n s p i t e of a p l u c k y s t a n d b y 11. W r i g h t a n d J . S h i e l d s . L e i c e s t e r -were b e a t e n in a n i n n i n g s b y N o t t s , a t T r e n t P a r s o n s . 1 for 2 2 ; H a n d s . 1 for 3 1 ; F o s t e r , 1 for 3 8 . B r i d g e . L e i c e s t e r a r e a m u c h b e t t e r side o n p a p e r , u n l o r WARWICKSHIRE. t u n i t e l y . t h a n o n t h e field. F i r s t I n n i n g s . 2 9 3 ( S m i t h 9 9 . B a k e r , n o t , o u t 29), W o r t l t a m p t o n scored a good w i n over Essex b y sevenKinneir, r u n o u t Second Innings. wickets. N o r t h a n t s h a v e a lot of b o w l i n g a t t h e i r comBaker, b Parker 2 m a n d . a n d i t w.is well m i x e d uji a g a i n s t Easex, wlio were Parsons. c Mills, b d i s a p p o i n t i n g in t h e i r secontl i n n i n g s , t h e i r m e n g e t t i n g p u t Dennett 8 G, S t e p h e n s , c B o a r d , b Dennett 21 j u s t when they seemed to be g e t t i n g set. Charles worth, c Jessop, Smith, c Nott, b Dennett 28 Cambridge o u g h t to h i v e a better side this year t h a n b Dennett 22 Santall. not out 3 t h e y h a v e h a d for some t i m e , by t h e i r s h o w i n g so He. A 38 t e n - w i c k e t w i n a g a i n s t SUSSCK is a p r e t t y good o n e for a n y ' Q u a i f e , n o t o u t Extras 2 ' V a r s i t y , especially e a r l y in t h e t e r m . E, L, K i d d is to b e F . R , F o s t e r , c M i l l s , b T o t a l , (for 7 w k t s , ) . . 1 3 2 D o n n i n g . D e n n e t t ; 5 w i 2 k e t s for 6 5 ' " r u n s ; P a r k e r . 1 e wlett congratulated, both on his p;rsonal success a n d the m a t e r i a l B , c a t b i s d i s p o s a l . O x f o r d h ' s a s t r o n g side, t o o , a n d t h e i r for 3 5 . m a t c h to-day a g a i n s t t h e S o u t h Africans should tell u s VOGLER SAILS FOR ENGLAND. things. F . B. WILSON, J O H A N N E S B U R G , M a y 19.Vogler, t h e S o u t h African c r i c k e t e r , a n t f h i s f a m i l y , h a v e left h e r e for E n g l a n d . It is c o n j e c t u r e d t h a t h o U going to coich. g e n t l e m e n i n IreA U S T R A L I A N S AOAIN SUCCESSFUL. l a n d . H e h a s h i t h e r t o n o t been i n v i t e d to j o i n t h e S o u t h SURREY. A t ri ca ns.fee u t e r . r i M t I n n i n g s . 1 3 9 (M. C, l i i r a 7 6 , H a r r i s o n 251. S e c o n d I n n i n g s . - 2 0 5 I H o b b s 8 1 , M, C. B i r d 68). Mr. Allsop. the manager, and F r a n k Mitchell, t h e capAUSTRALIANS. . t a i n of t h e S o u t h A f r i c a n t e a m , s t a t e d o n S a t u r d a y t h a t F i r s t I n n j n g s . - a 9 2 ( 0 . G. M a c a r t n e y 1 2 3 , T . J . M a t t h e w s t h e y k n e w n o t h i n g as to E r n e s t V o g i e r ' s i n t e n t i o n of c o m i n g BB). to E n g l a n d . Mitchell a d d e d t h a t Vogler certainly would S e c o n d I n n i n g s , E . R , M a y n e , r u n o u t , 0 ; S. K. G r e g o r y . n o t b e aliowe<l t o p l a y for t h e t e a m w i t h o u t t h e a u t h o r i t y I b w . b P l ; i t t . 0 : S. H . E m e r y , b R u s h b y , 0 : C . G. M a c a r t n e y . of t h e S o u t h A f r i c a n C r i c k e t A s s o c i a t i o n . n o t o u t , 2 5 ; W . B a r d s l e y , n o t o u t , 2^1; e x t r a s . 5 ' t o t a l (Cor t h r e e wicketsl. 5 4 . TO-DAV'S MATCHES. B o w l i n e . P i a t t . 1 wioliet for 7 r u n s : Itiisliby. 1 for 17. L o r d ' s . M . C C . v, A u s t r a l i a n s . DRAWN GAME AT H U D D E R S F I E L D . Oxford O x f o r d U n i v e r s i t y v. S o u t h A f r i c a n s . SOUTH AFEI0AN8. ~ ' O v a l , - S u r r e y v, G l o u c e s t e r s h i r e . F i r s t I n n i n g s 1 7 0 (G, P . 0 . H a r t i g a n " 5 7 , G . C. W h i t e C h e s t e r f i e l d , D e r b y s h i r e v. L a n c a s h i i e . Mj. I.*ed3.-Vorkshite v. K e n t . Second I n n j n B i r m i n g h a m . - W a r w i c k s h i r e Y. Sussex. , G. P . D. H a r t i g a n , . R S c h w a r z , Ibw, b Boath 16 Rhodes H . W . T^yloc. c T a s k e r , * F. Mitchell, not o u t . . . b R h o d e s ...i ; 1 0 B,. B e a u m o n t , b R h o d e s . A . D, N o i t r s s , b R h o d e s . . 2 8 C. P . C a r t e r , b H a i g h . . . 8. J . VoBler, b D r a k e .. S. ,T. Bnooke, Ibw, b First a n d S e c o n d R o u n d s of A n n u a l TournaHaigh 7 A. W a r d , b Rhodes . Extras m e n t Played at R y e on Saturday. G. C. W h i t e , c B o o t h , b Rhodes ., 6 Total 288 B o w l i n g . R h o d e s , 6 w k t s for 102 r u n s ; H a i g h , 2 for 4 3 ; T h e a n n u a l p a r l i a m e n t a r y golf h a n d i c a p o p e n e d 'on t h e D r a k e , 1 for 5 8 ; B o o t h , 1 f o r , C I . b o a u l i t u l Sussex l i a k s a t R y e , o n S a t u r d a y , w h e r e t h e first a n d .'iecond r o u n d s w e r e c a r r i e d t h r o u g h . The gathering YORKaniRE. W4a as u u a l a m o s t i n t e r e s t i n g o n e , t h e r e b e i n g a l a r g e r e F i r s t I n n i n g s ~ 3 1 7 ( D e n t o n 8 2 , H i r s t 65). p r e s e n t a t i o n f r o m b o t h H o u s e s of P a r l i a m e n t . P o l i t i e s t o o k Second I n n i n g s . R h o d e s , n o t o u t . 7 ; B a t e s , c S n o o k e , h a. b i c k s e a t for t h e d a y , o n d m e m b e r s of b o t l i s i d e s of t h e N o u r s e , 2 ; J , T a a k e r , n o t o u t , 1 ; t o t a l (for 1 wkt), 1 0 . floor m e t i n f r i e n d l y c o n f l i c t . T h e r e was a n i n n o v a t i o n i n , P L E N D i n W I N FOR M A M P S H I R C , t h i s y e a r g t o u r n a m e n t , t h e p l a y e r s w i t h h a n d i c a p s of t h i r t e e n - o r m o r e c o m p e t i n g in a division a p i r t from t h o s e WOROESrBBSHIR-E. enjoying a smaller h a n d i c a p allowance. B o t h divisions will F i r s t I n n i n g s 3 3 4 ( P e a r s o n 1 0 2 , BoWley .56), worii o u t t h e i r w i n n e r , a n d t h e s e will m e e t for t h e final Second I n n i n g ^ prize, p r o b a b l y . i n a b o u t two m o n t h s ' time. P e a r s o n , h H e s k e t h "" r i P ' G. d imps o n - H a y w a r d , T h e h e l d o n S a t u r d a y was a v e r y l a r g e o n e , a n d i n c l u d e d chard I K e n n e d y , b N e w m a n m a n y n o t a b l e figures o n t h e l i n k s . "Mr. A . J , B a l l o u r , t h e Arnold, c and b Hesketh J . W . C. T u r n e r , b N e w e x - P r e m i e r , b e a t M r . R, Y e r b u r g h , M . P . , o n level t e r m s Prichard ........:...... 0 man . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i n t h e first t o u n d , b u t h e was b e a t e n in t h e s e c o n d r o u n d Bowley, c K e n n e d y , b W. H . Taylor, c Brown. in t h e a l t e r n o o n by M r . A n g u s H a m b r o , M . P . , b y 4 a n d 3 , Hesketh P d c h a r d 7 b Newman a l t e r b e i n g five d o w n a t t h e t u r n . Ciiffe, thw, b H e s k c t h . B u r r o w s , c R e m n a n t ,. b Mr. J . F . Badeley, a n ex-winner, had a h a r d m a t c h w i t h Prichard 13 | 19 M r . E . M a r s h a l l H a i i . K . C . . M . P . . w h o m h e b e a t a t t h e Hesketh Prichard nineteenth. I n t h e second r o u n d , h o w e v e r , h e was casil.v W. 3 . Burns, b Ncwmin 2 l " ale, not out . . . , . - - , . . - , B " T u r n e r (B.), b H e s k e t h I 9 b e a t e n by M r , G u y L ' E s t r a n g e , t)ie h o l d e r , w h o won t h e Extras first five holes. M r . H . W . F o r s t e r , M . P . , t h e w i n n e r i n Prichard 0 1 1 9 0 3 , p a s s e d t h r o u g h t h e first t w o r o u n d s , h e a t i n g M r . Total .. _. B o w l i n g . l i e s k e t h P r i c h a r d , 6 w k t s for 18 r u n s . New- G, P . C o l i i n s b y 3 a n d 3 a n d M r . P . R o b e r t s o n t h e h o m e green. m a n , 4 for S 3 . L o r d D a l h o u s i e was a n o t h e r e x - w i n n e r t o w i n b o t h HAMPSHIRE. h i s m a t c h e s , b u t i t was n o t u n t i l t h e n i n e t e e n t h hole F i r s t I n n l n g s - 3 2 3 (Mead 135,- K e n n e d y 61), t h a t he deleated Lord Darnley in t h e second round. Second Innings.Stone, c Turner, b B u r n s . 5 ; A. 0 two m a t c h e s w e n t t o t h e t w e n t i e t h h o l e , b o t h of t h e m J o h n s t o n , b Cuffe, 1 2 ; M e a d , n o t o u t , 3 7 ; B o w e t l , n o t o u t b e i n g i n Class B , I n o n e of t h e m S i r F r e d e r i c k L o w b e a t 3 5 ; e x t r a s . 3 ; . t o t a l ( t o r 2 wkts) 9 2 , M r . W . Y o u n g . M . P . . i n t h e first r o u n d , a n d i n t h e o t h e r M r . W . P e a r c e , ^.F,, q u a l i f i e d for t l i e t h i r d r o u n d . Bowling.Cuffe, 1 w k t for 21 r u n s ; B u r n s . 1 for 3 2 . beating Mr, H. Terrell, M . P . T h e biggest winning m a r g i n N O R T H A N T S DEFEAT ESSEX, was also r e c o r d e d i n Class B , M T . T . D a v i e s , M , p . , b e a t i n g ESSEX. M r . J . L . B r u n n c r , M . P . , i n t h e s e c o n d r o u n d b y 9 a n d 8. F i r s t I n n i n g s . 1 6 6 (Hev. F . H , G i l l i n g h a m 68), M r . Lionel de Rothschild, the r u n n e r - u p last year, was Second Innings. b e a t e n i n t h e first r o u n d o n t h e .last g r e e n by M r . R . M u i r F ,u sL e l lF aA .e ',, b T heo l s p s o.n 20 , F r e e m a n , . n ) b W lm . . . c Wells, 0 R s I 1 Mackenzie. Thompson P , Perrin. c Thompson, b C a r p e n t e r , c Buswell, OTHER COMPETITIONS. Welh 0 WooHey T h e St. George's C h a l l e n g e Cup, of t h e Royal St. George's C. McGahey, c East, b Reeves, b T h o m p s o n . C l u b , S a n d w i c h , w a s won by M i c h a e l S r o t t . He had a Smith 31 B u c k e n h a m , c E a s t , s c o r e of 166 for t h i r t y - s i x h o l e s , a n d j u s t w o n b y a s i n g l e K e v . ff. H . G i i l i n g h a m . s t r o k e f r o m D . S. ' J n s o n ( P r i n c e ' s ) . W . A . M u r r a y ( R o m Wells 0 ford) a n d O. O. B e v a n ( B o y a l S t . George's}, w h o a l l , t i e d Ibw, b E a s t 53 Mead, n o t o u t t e 5 J . W . n . T. D o u g i a a , c Extras . 3 forI ns e c o nsd r oplacc ow ip h t i aigognr e g a te rs tof e 1 R7 .d h i l l a n d R e i g a t e a t ke m e t ov h e B U B well, b T h o m p s o n . 4 2 Total iuwu .188 c o u r s e o n S a t u r d a y J a m e s B r a i d a n d H a r r y V a r d o n t i e d a t 70, K e n n e t t t o o k 7 2 a n d H u n t 7 8 . V a r d o n a n d ' K e n h e t t Bowling.Thompson, 4 w k t s lot 4 5 r u n s ; Wells. 3 lor b e a t B r a i d a n d H u n t i n a foursome by 2 u p a n d 1 to play. 6 5 ; W o o l l e y , 1 for 7 ; E a s t , 1 lor 1 6 ; S m i t h . 1 for, 3 9 . NORTHAMPTONSHIRE. F i r s t I n n i n g s 2 6 0 | G . A. T. Viala 88, S e y m o u r 72). Second Innings.W. H . Denton, b B u c k e n h a m , 9 : E a s t , Ibw.' b M c G a h e y , 3 0 ; H a y w o o d , n o t o u t . 3 7 ; 3 . G. S m i i h , b Mead. 10; Thompson, n o t out, 1; extras, 9 ; total llot 3 T h e New South Wales bowling team opened their tour Wkts], 96. a t Forest Hill n Saturday, when they defeated the Forest Bowling.-Mead. 1 w k t lor 16 r i m s : B u c k e n h a m , t lor H i l l B . C . b y 7 3 p o i n t s to 6 5 . 2 2 ; M o G a h e y . 1 for 2 6 . . T h e c l o s i n g s c o r e s I n t h e billirfrds m a t c h of 1 5 , 0 0 0 ' u p , o n DECISIVE W I N FOR N O T T S . a throe-inch pocket table, a t t h e Old A c a d e m y H a l l , H a n o v e r - a q u a re, o n S a t u r d a y , w e r e ; I n m a n , 7 , 1 6 8 ; R o b e r t s , LEICESTERSHIRE, 6,267, F i r s t I n n i n g s . - 1 2 1 ( K i n g 6 7 , M o u n t e n e y 131. A t the National Sporting Club to-night J a c k Harrison Second Innings. C. J . B . Wood, b Waaa Mounteney. o a n d b B i l e r 13 (Rushden) will m e e t P r i v a t e McEnrojr (Irish Guards} in a t w e n t y r o u n d s c o n t e s t (or dE400 a n d t h e m i d d l e - w e i g h t Whitehead, r u n out Shlpman, c Iromonger, b c h a m p i o n s h i p ol G r e a t B r i t a i n a n d I . o r d L o n s d a l e c h a l l e n g e King, b Wass Wass 10 belt. I t w i n be r e m e m b e r e d t h a t J i m Sullivan, who held Lord, b Riley J , Shielda, b I r e m o n g e r 64 t h e title, resigned t h e belt owing to ill-health, Coo, b W a s s Astill, not out 2 A^ T .. Sj h a i ip , b W a ms . . . . a r r, u i r a s H , W, Stevenson a n d George Gray, the young Australian n. I . u 1 j a r J n e d forces, a d rti g e e n H . W r i g h t , Ibw. b I r e T o t a l :....: ; . 1 6 8 p l o y e h ,s ' ht a v e ofo i t h e w o r l d . Gn a y a r e l es t afor nS o uatn A i gih ta e a m nt our r sai d h fr c monger 44 I few weeks a g o , a n d o n S a t u r d a y S t e v e n s o n , i n t h e c o m p a n y B o w l i n g . W a s s . 5 w k t s lor 5 2 r u n s ; I t e m o n g e r , 3 l o t 2 2 ; of G r a y ' s f a t h e r , left S o u t h a m p t o n b y t h e K i l d o n a a C a s t l e . mUj. a for 5 3 , T h e t w o p l a y e r s a t e e x p e c t e d t o b o b a c k i n t i m e for t h e NOTTINOHAM3HIKB. b i l l i a r d ^ KaAon of 1 9 1 3 - 1 4 . F i r s t I c t n i n g 3 - 3 0 1 ( O u u a [ J . ) 1 1 3 . G u n a [Q.) 7 6 ) .

SELECTIONS FOR YORK.


2,15.-SUNRIPE. 3.45.-F1NAL SHOT. 3.15.-PIOKMORE. 3.45.BATTLEAXB. 4.15.-THR08GA. 4 , a 5 . _ S W A N SONG.

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3.45.-^AmSTY SELLING P t ATE. 200 sovs; 6f,


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T h e F r e n c h One T h o u s a n d and Two T h o u s a n d Guineas were d e c i d e d a t L o n g c h a m p s . P a r i s y e s t e r d a y . ^ T h e c o l t ' s r a c e was won by B a r o n G o u r g a u d ' s De V i r i s , a n d M . W . K , V a n d e r b i l t p r o v i d e d second a n d t h i r d i n B l d i u s a n d M o n t " " M E d m o ' n d ^ B l a n c ' s P o r t e M a i l l o t won t h e fillies' r a c e , w l t h ' M iTean S t e r n ' s S a n e r l i p o p e t t e second, a n d M, A u g u s t B e l m o n t ' s Q u ' e l l e est B e l l e H , t h i r d . N i n e t e e n r a n .

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QATWICK.
a O.Leonard'a P l a t e . T o s s o n ( 1 0 t o 1, A , S h a r p i e s ) , I j I t i v o ( 7 to 4 1 . 3 ; M e l a n t o (7 t o 4 ) , 3 . 1 4 r a n . 2 3 0 . - R o o k T ! Y . O , P l a t e . - I r o n i c a l 1.(4 to 7 . M a h o r ) , 1 ; S e t t o n F a r i m a n (7 to 1 ) , 2 : C a r s o n ( 1 0 0 t o 6 ) . 3 . 8 r a n . 3 0 P r i n c e ' s Handicap.Scotnoy (5 to 2, W . H u x l e y ) , 1 : Florizel's P r i d e (3 to 1), 2 ; E a t o n L a d (100 to 3 0 ) , 3. 1 ' 3 30Marlborough Stakes.Castle ton (8 t o 15, F . W o o t t o n ) , 1 ; A p p r e n t i c e (7 t o 1), 2 ; Don R e y n a l d o (20 to, '4 d . B e i g a t o H a n d i c a p , B a n g a l o r e (6 t o 1, IIlBBa), I ; D a l n a s n i d a l (6 to 1), 2 ; Saucy V i x e n (10 t o 1 1 , 3. 15 ran, 4 a 5 ^ M a ! d e n P l a t c - M a r i u a I V . (10 to I, Woodley,. 1 ; M l l i i n e t (5 t o 4 1 , 2 ; F i z Y a m a (9 t o 3 i , 3 . 10 r a n , HAVDOCK PARK. 2 0 S c u r r y P l a t e , M i x U p (1-3, M a r t i n ) , 1 ; B r a m b k lell'v 'f 16-11 2 ; O h r y s a n t h e (30-1). 3 , 8 r a n , 2 3 0 - - E a i U t o w n S, . H ' c a p , - 8 h u d d o r (6-4.' C a l d e r ) . 1 ; C r a i M a r t i n f (6-1), 2 ; V a r r a f (6-1), 3 . 6 r a n , T o . - H a y d o c k P a r k H ' c a p . - R o y a r M a i l (7-4. T r i g g ) , 1 ; J e r n o i n t c (4-1), 2 ; A p r i l l e (10-1), 3 , 6 r a n , s'so-"-Juvenile t l a t e . - L o c h utaree (8-11, Wheatley), 1 ; Over A n x i o u s (5-1), 2 ; A s p a t r l a f (7^1). 3 . , 8 r a n , 4 0 - G r a n d S t a n d H c a p . - S o u r P l u m (5-3, T t i g g ) , 1 j H a r k H a l l o a (5-2), 2 ; L a v e t (6-1), S. 6 r a n . 4 3 0 - C o S e l a n d P l a t e . ^ A n o t h e T Bird (10-11, Wheatley), 1; i m p e r i o u s c (11-10), 2 ; W h e a t f l e l d e (30-1), 3 . 4 r a n ,

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T H E D E R B Y . - 3 S w e e p e r I I . (t), 0 C y l g a d (t, o ) , 10 L o m o n d (o, a f t e r 1 0 0 to fi t), . 1 0 0 . to 8, M o r d r e d (t, 0) a n d W h i t e S t a r (t, 0), 100 t o 6 P i a t a d e a u (t).

May 20, 1912

'Advertisers*

Afinouncemenfs^

THE

DAILY

MIRROR

'^Advertisers'

AnnouncesetH^t

Page 1^

SMALL A D V E R T I S E M E N T S
are received a t fho oilices of " T h e Dally Mirror," 13, Whitefriaiis-st, E.C., between the hours of 10 and a (Saturdays, 10 to 1), Financial and Partnerships, Ss. per lino, minimum' 2 lilies. Trade advertisements, 2a. per line, minimum 2 lints. SEASIDE .AND COUNTRY APARTMENTS. 13 words, le., and Id. per word ftfter. Advertisements if sent by post must be accompanied hy POSTAL ORDERS. CROSSED COUTTS and OO. STAMPS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED. " U;iily Mirror " advertisers can have replies to tlietr advertiseuients eent free of charge to " Tho Daily Minor " offices, a box department liaving been opeiie<l (or t h a t purpose. If repfies are to bo forwarded SUFFICIENT STAMPS TO COVER POSTAGE MUST BE BENT WITH THE ADVERTISEMENT.

Body Completely'Covered with Sores. Worst at Night. Could Get No Sleep. Used Cuticura Remedies. Now Quite Ail Right.
I

FINANCIAL. B to A A.A.A.AA.A.A.A.A.A.A.A.A.A.A.A.A.-Money suroticsi 6,000 on Note of Hand in a few hours; no easy repayments.-Actual Lender A. G. Whitoman, 229, Seven Sisters-rd, Finsbiiry Pink. N, Distance no object. A.A.A.A.A.A.Ar-A all genuine borrowers on A t to tiioir nmount to Loan togentlemen, clerks, working own written promise to repay; 1 will advanca 3 any ladies,

6 8 , WHiiigton P a r k , Belfast, I r e l a n d . " T b e s k i n t r o u b l e I h a d b e g a n with little i t c h y l u m p s . T h e little spots came o u t oa t h o u p p e r p a r t of m y body, a n d t h e itching w a s so Intense I used t o t e a r myself until i bled, a n d B5y b o d y wag c o m pletely covered w!tl sores, which were ^\waystheworstfitiiighti. 1 could g e t BO slep,, p a r t of rty b o d y feeli n g o n tire. I suffered with it over t w e l v e . m o n t h a a n d b o r e i t h o p i n g t h a t i t would, g e t better. " I had o i n t m e n t s which relieved m e for t h e fflonjenthiitdidnptcure. A s t h e CuticumSoftp a n d O i n t i n e n t were k n o w n t o m e b y r e p u t e , i resolved t o give [ h e m a trial. I found g r e a t telief from t h e samples, a n d after t h e u s e of t w o boxes of CutlGiu-a O i n t m e n t , t h e Cuticura Soap a n d Eesoivent, I feel q u i t e a n o t h e r Voroan. N o w I a m q u i t e all r i g h t again.": (Signed) M r s , A m y B e a t t i e , J a n . 1 3 , a s i 2 . N o t only aro Cutieura Soap a n d Ointment m o s t -vaiuablQ i n t h s t r e a t m e n t of eczemas arid o t h e r distressing eruptions of skin ajid Scalp, b u t Jio o t h e r emollients do eo m u e h for pimples, blacliheada, red, rough skias, itching, scaly scalps, dandruff, d r y , t h i n a n d falling h a i r , c h a p p e d h a n d s a n d shapeless naila, n o r do it so economically, A single cake of Cutic u r a Soap a n d box of Cuticura O i n t m e n t a r e Often sufficient when a!l else h a s failed. Sold everywhere- A s a m p i o of each with 32-p. b o o k tree from nearest d e p o t : F . N e w b e r y & Sons, 2 i , Charterhouse S q . , L o n d o n ; R, Towns & Co., S y d n e y , N . 8. W . ; Lennon, U d . , Cape T o w n ; MuUer, Maclean & Co., C a l c u t t a a n d B o m b a y ; P o t t e r D . & C . C o r p . . B o s t o n , U.S. A. . ^ ^ T e n d e r - f a c e d m e n should s h a v e w i t h Cuticura Soap fihavijig. Stick. S a m p l e free.

Superiority IJnquestioned. For 104 years it has been the standard by which other whiskies have been judged, but still stands pre-eminent.

Guaranteed genuine only w h e n b e a r i n g Branded Cork and Capsule*

DUNVILtE & CO,, Ltd., Royal Irish Distineries BELFAST.

men and wo.mea, without Objectionable inquiries or eocurity; loans granted immediately; special terms to tradesmen. Call or write Actual Lender, Mr. Hamilton Young 18, Red Lion-st. Holbo.'n. W.G. Open 9 till 9; Sat.. 3. A.A.A.A.Loans by post to nil classes; &, Gs, monthly; S S . S s . ratliiy; .15, 15s. mthly; iE20. 20B, mthly; 3 0 , aSs. mthly; S0, 40s. mtbly; 1 0 0 , BOB, mthly; *200, * 8 mthly.Mr. Gow, Howard-at, Glasgow, A.A.Borrow by Post, Privately on Simple Note ol Hand, without trouble, bother or delay; to all classes at 5 , 6s. monthly; 10, lOs. monthly; 20, 20s. raonthljj 30, 30s. luontfily; 50, 60a. monthly; 100, lOOi, inonthlj; apply and be convinced; special terms farmcrj and dairymen.J, Sawers. ,il6, Dudley-drive, I'nrtlck, N,B. A.Are you ^ o r t ot ready cash? D. P . Morgan, Ltd., 160, Eegent-street, will accommodate you with a loan of 20 to 5,000 upon your written promise to repay; ny other security; no private inriuiiies. 'Pliono 36 City. EIRS [England or Abroad), Jiliititlod to Money or Property on JJoafii of Friends by Wills, etc., Note. Ordinary Moneylenders' biainess notdoiie; jE350.000 Trusts, 100 to 500 a t 5. 1,000 4i, 5,000 4 per cent, per ann, arranged a to 20 years; urgent cases special; 60s. a Quarter for 200[ notice, ladies with Life Incomes, Widow.^ oven if restrained. Private Full Booklet post Iree. list. 30 years. Call or 'phono, Letters i)rivato.Fawcett and Co., 109, Chcapsido, London, F you require an advance, 5 to 5,000, a t one daj'9 notice, on your own note ot hand, repayable by easy instalments, without fees or fuse, call, wiite, or phone (I710BfttterEea) to Mr. S. Rothschild lliilhps, 13, Dalhamgrove, Balham. S.W, OANS by Post without Interviews; 2 to 500 on Not* of Hanti; BII classes; town or country; repayment! from Is. weekly.W. Massingham. High Bank Chichester, ONEV lent on simple note of hand; from 6 upward* privately a t one day's noticoj easy instalments; nO fees; forma free.Tho Finsbury Discount Co.. Ltd., 119, Finsliury-pavement. JG.C. No cliargo unless business done, ONEY lent privately to gentlemen employed in banks, insurance and merchants' offices; easy monthly re* payments; no fees.0, Price and Co., 94. Cannon-st, E.O. PECIAL terms; money advanced for coming holidays! banknotes sent to any part, from 20 to 6,000; no fees, no objectionable inquiries; simple promise to repay i l all t h a t is necessary.Apply direct to Cliarles Stevens, Ltd., 12, Devon ah ire-chambers, 146, Blshopsgate, London, E,(X Thone, Centrar9713. \ I weekly repays 6 loan: 4!., 2 0 ; lOa., 60, by post.-* Xr Apply G. Gow, Bonlnh-chambers, Haitogato. jPfi 1 0 . 2 5 , 5 0 . 100, and upwards lent to respont c t O s i b ) e applicants, withoi^t security ;ccpayalilo as convent* ent; no fees,D. Phillips, 3Ja, Tho Broadway, Haramcrsraitll K A A A A to lend trivtktcly, from 10 to 1,000; comOi/UUV pare terms; telepliono. 912 Bank.Wni. H, Wfaltemao. 48, Poultry, Gheapslde. E.G.

A A

M S

LONDON

AMUSEMENTS.

Vedtenne and Eadio present T i R U U y L A N E . T O - N I G H T , a t 8, A r t h u r C o l Bennett Knoblauch. fiJ lins ptsenta Klaw and i::Tlanger'B producUon o General MILF-STONF-8, by Arnold THURS. and Edwarda t 2.30. MATINEES EVERY and SAT., I*w Wallace's BEN-HUR. Dramatised by Wjiliam young. Matiaees.Weds. and Bats., at 2. Tols., 2,688. GOT. ^ VFDRENNE-EADIE SPECIAL MATINEES, . V EVERY TUESDAY arid FRIDAY, a t 3.. D E L F H I T H E A T R E , , S t r a n d : S a t . N e x t , a t P E T E R ' S CHANCE, by EDITH LYTTELTON.ROYALTY. 8 Mr. GEORGE EDWABDlSS' new production, AUTUMN MANCEUVRES. A play witli n'"|'C. First Mat.. QCAIA THEATREKINEMACOLOR. Bat. J u n e 1 Box-otlice. 10 to 6. Tels., 26^5. 8886 Gerr. kJ TWICE DAILY, 2.S0 and S.O. TXDWYCH. LOOKING FOR TROUBLE. WITH OUR KING AND QtrEEN THROUGH INDIA. T . J A M E S ' . T o - n i g h t , a t 8.15, a n e w p l a y , 1\Ev(My Evening, a t 9. Mat;, Sats., 3 . BELLA DONNA. EVA MOORE and N E I L K E N y 6 M . GEOilGE ALEXANDER and Mrs, PATRICK CAMPBELL, Matinee E\'ery Wednesday, a t 3 . preceded, a t 8.20, by A Bhoit Concert. X P 0 l X 0 " T H E A T R E . ^ E v e T y E v e n i i i g , a t 8.45^ QHAFTESBURY. PRINCESS CAPKICE. i x T H E GLAD E Y E . Preceded, a t 8,15, by ' The Tatleis,'^ yj To-night, 8, Mr. GEORGE GRAVES, Mr. COURTICE Matineea Ever; Wednwda? and Saturday, a t 2.16. . -, P O U N I ^ , Miss CLARA EVELYN. Mat., Ever? Wed., a t 2. OME^DY. E v e r y E v e n i n g , a t 8.30, AUDEVILLE. Charles Kenyon presents THE BEAR-LEAffliiES. "bT"*- C. Carton. Matinee, EveSry Wednesday and Saturday, a t a.SO, NIGHTLY, a t 8,30, Mats., Wed.. Sat.. Z, RUTHEHP R I T E R I O N . A t 9, T H E N E W S I N , b y fi. EORD AND BON, by K. G. Sowerby. Tei., Gery, 3.81-S. yj Maedonald MaEtings. Preceded, a t 8.30. liy T H E KISS, HITNEY. STRAND. by Gwrge gaston. Matinco, Weds,, Bats., a t 3. Every Evening, a t 8,15. Matinees, Saturday, 2.15, U K E O K Y O R K ' S . E v e r y E v e n i n g , a t 8.30, T H E J E W OF PRAGUE. C H A R I - ^ FROHMAN jpreaenti T I I E " M I N D T H E By ALFRED WIISON-BARRETT. Y N D H A M ' S . - A t 8:.40, G e r a l d d u M a r n i e r P A I N T " GIRIj by ARTHUR PINERO. Matinee, Every and Co., In J E L F S . Mat.. Weds, and Bats., a t 2.40. Thnrsday aad Saturday, ai 2.30. ^ A I E T Y . E V E R Y E V E N I N G , a t 8. A N e w L H A M B R A . M U R I E L R I D L E Y in " T I I E Musical Play, T H E SUMSHINB GIRL. MATINEE, POOL," P A U L T O N a n d DOLEY. ODYS. LOYAL'S EVERY 8ATUBPAV, a t 3. UPK-oflioc. 10 to 10. CANINE WONDERS, etc. Eve6 a t 8. ~ A ^ I C K r "^ARTHUR BOURCHIER. IPPODROME, LONDON.-Daily, a t 2.30 and 8, INSTANTANEOUS SUCCESS of " ARMS AND At 8.4S, PROPER-PETCEa, by Monckton Hoff T H E G1RI>." including G. P . HUNTLBi', MAY JDE SOUSA, At 8.20. Hclea Mar. Matinea, Wedncadays, a t 3,30. J E A N AYLWIN, and Star Co. Is. to 4 4s. 650 Gerr. AYilARKET.Af 9, b y a r r a n g e m e n t with Oyril Maude, BUNT PTJI.LS T H E STRIKG8. A t 8.30, A L A C E (Saison R u s s e } . A N N A P A V L O V A , ANTONNET and OEOCK. BARCLAY GAMMON. " Their Point of Viw."' Mats,,- Weds., Thurs., Sats., 2.30. (Special PAVLOVA MAT. Every WED., a t 3.) EVGS., 8. a P m l A L MATINEE, wrflT-MONDAY. ^ a y 27. " ^ S MAJESTY'S.8th L O N D O N S H A K E - MAT, (reduced prices}, SAT, and WHIT MONDAY a t 2. SPEARE P E T I V A L . To-night, To-morrow, Wed,, a t ALLADIUM.6.20, 9.10; Mon., Wed., Sat., 6 Mat 'Wed.. 2 T H E MERCHANT OP VENICE.- Thurs.. 3.30, 6.20. 3.10. GEO. MOZART, RUTH r r ! a i d S^t. Eveuings,T:'WBLFTlI NIGHT. Sat., Mat./ WILL EVANS, LIANE ' D'EVE,' POLUSKIS,VINCENT, CEUIKOTHELLO. ^ SHANK, WHIT OUNLIFFE. etc. Prices, 6s. to 6d.

OYALTY.

T O - N I G H T , a t 8.30.

YMP A. O L ROYAL INAVAL AND RHLITARy TOURNAMENT. PatronHia Most Gracious, Majesty t h e KiPg.

io-de5;ooo.
I f In financial difficulties D O N ' T , W O R R Y , h u t w r i t e or call a t once on ws, the a c t u a l lenders, W c make advanccE on note of hand witliin a few hours to a p p l i c a n t s of a l l classes, a n d guar.inlcc absolute PRIVACY and STRAIGHTl-'ORWARD DEALINGS. .MODERATE I N T E R E S T , PAY AS YOU L I K E . Bills of Sale speedily a r r a n g e d . Reversions bought. S t a n d a r d D e v e l o p m e n t s L t d . , 7, E s s t c h e a p , L o n d o n , E.C. NO ENQVIRY FliliS.

Twice daily, a t 2.30 and 8 p.m. May 23rd to J u n e 8th, BOX OFFICES NOW OPEN. 66, Victoria-street. Tel.. No. 5,055 Gerrard. Oljmpia (Addisou-road and HamBiersinith.-Poad Entrances). Tel. No. 3683 Kensicgton (six lines). And Principal Book,ing Agents. Reserved seats, morning and evening, 4s., 69., 7s, 6d, and 10s, E X H I B I T I to N S . ed. Boxes, 5 O 8 guineas,

SHAKESPEARE'S-

. E A R L * COURT, Organised by Mrs. George Coriiwallia West. Mcrrie England as it was in Sbakesxreare's Time,

ENGLAND.

About Financial Matters when

V W

G G

W A

TTINGSWAY.8.30, FANNY'S FIRST PLAY.


I V ' Bernard Shaw a t his best," Mate., Weds., Sate.. 2.30. SPECIAL MATS.. TUES- and F R I . (Last 2 Mats.). T H E DOTXBLE GAME, by Manrice Baripg. T O N D O T r " O P E R A H O U S E , Kingsway.TO-NIGHT (Moil.).'Faust"_ ; 8. 0 Tbesdav May 31. Don Qmchotte 8- 0 Wedneeday 22." Tho Barber of Sevillfe 8.15 Thursday, ' 2 3 . - " Tftl^s of Hoffmann "..,. 8,15 Friday , 2fl." HonQmchotte 8. 0 Satardav 25." Rigoletto " 8.15 BoxjOffice^^iiy, Jfl to 10. Tel., Holborn,_6840._ Itemaritablo-Wew. Romantic Play, by Fredk. MelviDo. HiBhtly 7 46. Mats,, 2.'30, Wed.j Sat. 100th Performance WED NTGHT^_May _2g^::jtonvenir_Night, Gcrr.- 7617. .' .

"1^CEUM.THE MONK AND THE WOMAN

T YRifc.-Af.e; THEI-^VE FRANKFORTERS.


XJ_^_^^g.3ff..-C,Qmedi^il.^Mats.. Weda..'at 2;30: ' ' . ' EWv^Jf^f^IGHT, ki 8.36, r e a p p e a r a n c e .of SIR CHARLES WYNDHAM and Miss MARY MOORE, supported by Miss LENA ASHWELL, in MRS. DANE'S DEFENCE. FIR'ST MATINEE, WED. N E X T . a t 2.30. LAYHOUSE.TO-NIGHT, a t 9,- L O V E T AND WHAT THEN? by B. Maedonald Hastiiigs. OYRtL MAUDE, MARGERY MAUDE. A t 8.30. " Before Breakfast.'' Matinee, Weds, and Sats.. a t 2.30. R I N C E ' S THEATRE.-Shaffe.Tjury-av., W.C, Nis-hf y. 7.46, MAT.. Wed., Sit.; 2.30, Very Remarkable Piay, by G. Carlton Wallace, T H E APPI-E OF EDEN. Pro-" daged by-Walter and .Fredk: M-elyjIle. Gcrr, 6.9S5. U E E N ' S . M i s s Siirah"TJrooke's S e a s o n . E v e r y Evening, a t 8.20, T H E EASIEST WAY. by Eugene Walter, Matiaee. Every Sat,; at 2.16, Box-office, 10 to 10.

P P

q U R R E Y T H E A T R E , Blackfriars-road, S ; E . kJ TWICE NIGHTLY. 6.30. 9.10. MATINIEG. TO-DAY (Monday), May 20th, and during the week. Starring Engagement of the Famous Oae-Act Drama of China Town, San Francisco. . . . T H E CAT AND T H E CHERUB. By 0. B. Fernald. , !SPOCLally-Selected West E n d Company, including : ' r i l E SIGHT O F LONDON IS THE,RIVER! M r T i ' R E D i a i I C K LLOYD Mr. CYRIL SWORDER (From the Globe Theatre), (From His Majesty's Theatre) -I- Steamers now running every 20 minutes:. WESTMINSTER to GREENWICH. WESTJvnNSTER" to KEW, 11 and Miss HILDA BTiUCE-POTTER . 12 and 3 and 4 p.m. Cheap fares; refreshments.-CITY (From the Criterion Theatre). . . . . . This Powerful Play ran for 300 consecutive nights a t t h e STEAMBOAT CO. Royalty Theatre, IiOiidon, Specially Imported ehineso CosK 5s.Montreux Tours, 7 days. Extensions tumes and effects. .POWERFUL VARIETY COMPANY, (./ Chamoni;:, Zermatt, GrindclwaW.GEORGE LUNN'S in addition to above. Seats can now be hooked. Telephone, 1,460 Hop. Reduced Prices for 1st House Performances. TOURS. LTD,, B3. Old Jeyry, E.G. Saturday c:icepted. . .. Q P E C I A L T O U R , L E A V I N G L O N D O N on P R Y S T A L P A L A C E . O n S A T U R D A Y N E X T C May 24tli, for Whitsuntide in LUGANO, 5 lbs. 6d, vJ , ^ Messrs, James t a i n and Sons present Extensions Vetiice.S'Grindelwald. CHINA. ' A Startling Exhibition.- ' GEORGE LUNN'S TOURS, LTD., 23, Old Jewry. E.G. Every Evening, a t 8,30. Mats., Sat. nest a n d Whit MonR.M.8.- "DUNOTTAB CASTLE " - C R t r i S E S . : " day,-ai> 4. p - i (T 1 5 s . N O R T H C A P E a n d F J O R D S , J u n e 24. FJORDS-only from 1 ] U s . . July 16. Sim and Moon Ballets, Tartar Horsemen, Historical Illus- XiLtJ The Crnising Oo.. Ltd.. 6. End sleigh Gardens, London, N.W. t-ratiOK of t h e Celestial Empire, " C H I N A TOWN." M O T O R S A N D CYCLES. Natives a t Work^ Chinese Tea Houses, Chinese Eestaiiiant, YCLISTS beware of bogus advertisements of alleged second-hand machine^ a t ridiculous reductions by people Chinese Theatre. Admission, Is. Return Rait and AdmlsBJop,' la. 6d. "going a b r o a d " , and so oh. They a r a mostly worthless ASKELYNE&- DEVANT'S MYSTERIES.-- machines made for the purpose.. St George's Hall.Daily, a t 3 and B, Matchionejss HOUSES T O 1.ET. Townshend'a ikctcb, " All Souls' Eve " ; Tableaux FanLL rent payers ehou.ldi-ead,:." Home-.'; it illustrates how tomes; Haunted Window, etc. Is, to Ss. 1545.May, '; easily t h e rent may bo used to buy a house; specimen A I D A Y A L E ^ R I N K . - ^ S k a t i n ' ^ d a i i y , 1 1 , 3 a n d copy post free on application (mentioning .' Daily Mirror ") 8. SUMMER PRICES: Adm 6(1.; Skates, ed^ -to-the-Edi-t(jr,-3. Brushfleld-st,'E.O.'-.-. , ,

DAILY, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Admission; Adults Is,, Children 6d. Season Tickets, 1 I s . ; CMMieu, 10s. 6d; Daily Performances on Harbour Quay and in tlie GIobiTiiEi^, Fortune Thcatrie. Novel a n d Attractive Side Shows. The Band of H.M, Royal Garrison Artillery (Dover) will play in t h e Western Gardejis, bf permission of t h s officer commanding. OYAL INTERNATIONAL HORTICULTUEAL EXHIBITION, Hay 22na to 30th, 1912. ROYAL HOSPITAL GARDENS, CHELSEA (Near Sloaae-siyare" Station). e Patrons : H.M. T H E KING, H.M. T H E QUEEN, H.M. QUEEN ALEXANDRA. President: The Duke of Portl i n d . K.G. To be opened by their Majesties t h e KING and QUEEH on WEDNESDAY, May 22nd. a t tivelce o'clock. Tlie most wonderful Exhibition in t h e History o! Horticulture. Exhibits IrOm all jiatiojis. 'Prices ol admission; Until 5p.m. After 6 p.in. Wednesday. May 22 JE3 2 0 1 1 0 Thursday, May 23 I 3' 0 0 10 0 Friday, May 24 0 10 0 0 5 0 Saturday, May 25 .%... 0 E 0 ' 0 2 6 Monday, May.27.!throKhout theday) 0 2 6 And subsequent days 0 1 O Transferable Season Tickets, ^3 Ss. Full particulars liiay bo ol:itaiiied from t h e Organising SecreR A Victoria-st, S.W. H I P P I N G , E T C . tary, 7. I L W A Y S , STelephone, No. 257 Victoria.

IMMEDIATE CASH ADVANCES 20 T O 1,00X)


can be obtained AT 24 H O U R S ' N O T I C E ^ O N Y O U R S I M P L E PROMISE T O REPAY. fiepayments t o S^'it y o u r O w n C o n v e n i e n c e ! tiO P P G t I M I N A R Y FEES. ALL Communications siricfly Private.

LONDON & PROVINCES DISCOUNT CO., LTD., 7 8 . QUEEN VICTORIA S T . , LONDON, E.C.
Wire ' LoPKODis." London. 'Phone Bank 8532.

its to Jt5,
Cash Advanced
On Bills of Sale in 24 hours ov on Note of Hahd alone at

LOW INTEREST.
WEST L O N D O N A D V A N C E C O . , Ltd.< 27s, P e n t o n v i l l e R o a d , ' K i n g ' s Gross (side e n t r a n c e ) . MARKETING BY POST. ELICIOUS Fresh Fish.No disappointment; 61b., 23.J 91b. 2s. 6d.; 111b., 3E.; 14Ib., 3a. 6d.; 211b.. 63.J carriago "paid and dressed for cooking; list and partlcuhiia freeNorth Boa Fisheries Co., Oept. 1, Grimsby. T ONDON'S Leadilig Poulterers, ck!,3 Delimoiis^ClHokena,

_
R

. _.,.i

M M

aEout 2glby 5s. 9d,; 41b. lujiu Lamb and 2 Spiing Chickons, 63.j Sib FoTc-(iiiartcr T/iml), 4K, 9d.; 2 F a t Wild UtinkJ 4a.. 6d.; all carnage paid.S. Frost and Co., Ltd., 279, 281; Edgware-rd, London, W. EAL Wiltshire'Bacon from 63d, to S^d, pet lb.; ensure a good breakfast by buying direct from curcrs; price list free.County Bacon Factory, Chippenh,am, Wilts, MISCELLANEOUS, T \ R U N K A R D 3 , Cured (iniekly: secretly; cost triflings i~J tree.Carlton Chemical Co., 522, Birmingham. LECTROLYStS. .-.Superfluous hair permanently roliioved; ladies only; consnltations free.-Miss Florenca Wood 105, llegent-st. W, 11 :to 6 daily. I. EW-Invention lor-tho Deal.-Deaf persons arc invited to cnil at 'tho offices of Tho Maxiphonc, Limited. 92, Great Rusaell-st, London. lor the purpoao'ol having a tre demonstration test ot t h e Maxiphone, tho latest Scientifio Invention lor the alleviatiou ol deafness; descriptive book* 'letfree, : -'...-

E N

Pao-e 20

'Advertisers'

Announcements.

THE

DAILY
=^

MIRROR

Advertisers*

Announcement!.

May 20, 1912

Awarded a Gold Medal

WE BELIEVE IN MAKING GOOD . . . FURNITURE AND MAKE


1 Jl f

/ DARN NO MORE
Holeproof Hose {Regd.). If they are not "Holeproof" we will give you

NEW

HOSE

FREE.

T o save u n c o n g e n i a M a b o u r , t o rriake life h a p p i e r a n d s w e e t e r for every h u m a n b e i n g , t o i n c r e a s e t h e l e i s u r e t i m e of t h e overw o r k e d t h e s e things' a r e t h e o b j e c t s which i n v e n t o r s h a v e striven t o a t t a i n , Bell, t h e i n v e n t o r of t h e t e l e p h o n e , p l a c e d all t h e world o n c h a t t i n g t e r m s over t h e w i r e s , H e s h o w e d u s h o w t o l a u g h a t s p a c e . E d i s o n applied electricity a n d e n a b l e s u s t o b r i g h t e n t h e d a r k e s t n i g h t . A i r m e n h a v e m a s t e r e d t h e a r t of flying s o w h a t is t h e r e left W H Y , OUH GARMENTS STILL WEAR OUT. Put \ o u r Hosiery need not if you will keep pace with the times, for there is now H o s i e r y that is H o l e p r o o f .

WHY THIS HOSIERY IS HOLEPROOF.


n-L I i r.( ti,o amayina durability of -" V. & H . " Holeproof Hosiery is made here, so ^ , tti?^ihffr?,^h nnf e i f o r S e l l& r herself, the g e n u l n e n o . s of it. Your own brain will - I v e V f c r 1 it. This v e S !h, o w y o n the tru^h of it This *' V.. H . " Holeproof Hosiery is made in a new way from a specially v^ ^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^.^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^ tiian any privately 'manufactured yam. This y^^^^^^ pressure and wear, just as a sponge may be depressed by other brand " f so p lab e ** " ^ f ' ^ | | ^ g ^ o n e to its fabric. There is hardly any spring or elastic stretch In gripping m th l*^**'l*?!''*" " ^ I ! , J l ^ ^ S d , and this accounts for the rapid appearance of holes and thin places. SSuslycoXuble?sSnn/^^^^^^^ " V. & H . " holeproof Hosiery is a revelation to all. Luxuriously^om^ o u r " G U A R A N T E E ' T i c k e t w h l c h ^ s ^ e n t - " J - ; ' > ' ^^ " "

There is nothing mediocre or sombre about the furniture ^ we make. Instead, every Music 2 ' s o piece can lay substantial Cabinet claim to a certain .beauty if simplicity of design, because right from the fashioning of the wood, through every stage of its construction to the final polish, it has received the care and thought of craftsmen who are skilled in their work. Any furniture you care to acquire from us will ireflect good taste to a very marked degree, and will enable you to furnish a home with the utmost charm and effect. w

TRY THEM FOR TWO MONTHS.


T h e n , If w i t h t a t h a t t i m e a h o l e slo"Jg a p p e a r , s e n d t h e a i b a c k t o a s a t o n c e with t i c k e t , a n d w e will p r e s e n t y o n w i t h n e w h o s e withont'extra cost. ., . , No such guarantee could be given with hose made In theordinary way. But with " V . & H " Holeproof Hose you can be free from the fear of a hole suddenly s h o w i n g - h o t only just at that point at the heel where the eyes of everyone can see, but at no part of " V . & H . " Holeproof Hose will there be a hole. T h a t w e g u a r a n t e e f o r * w h o l e m o n t h s . T h e comfort and pleasure of good wearing hose to men conveys a sense of well-being and satisfaction all day long, while to business girls and busy h o u s ^ wives, to whom the weekly darning is a long and tiresome task, the benefit is incalculable. ^ __ ^ - Everyone in thecountry will be wearing v . & H . Holeproof Hosiery after we can get them just to I K I it once. Orders are now pouring m from the triends of those who already are wearing the new V . & H . Holeproof Hose. T h e price is T V / O P A I R S Ladies' Stockings. 3 / 1 0 , postage 2a. T W O P A I R S Gent.'s: Socks. 2 / 1 0 . postage 2d. And a Guarantee ticket with each pair. Remember, it is easier to TRY ' V. & H . " Holeproof Hosiery than to darn a batch of socks and stockings every week. ,JJ,. Please state boot size, v ite name and address plainly, a n d g o f o r y o n r p o s t a l w d e r n o w . Don t let good inventions pass you.

Vanghan h. Heather, c et o. Dp
THE MAIL ORDER HODSE.<^DEEW'S ROAD. BRIGHTON.

Drawn to Her by Some

SUBTLE ATTRACTION.
T h e plainest woman may weave about herself a n e x q u i s i t e charRl. She can.be likpa lovely flower, a l l u r i n g w i t h t h e evasive t^ f r a g r a n c e of a lily, t h e r o s e , o r t h e m o d e s t -l>^ violet. - E v e n w h e n g o n e s h e will hold " h i m " \ b y t h e m e m o r y of t h i s d r e a m i l y s u b t l e a t m o s p h e r e . I t is a gferm of r o m a n c e - : - t h i s fraf r a n e e we call " V . & H . " JLOSSOM DROPiJ. N o t j u s t a ' ' P e r f u m e ' ' it is t o o refined for t h a t n a m e . I t i s m a d e of t h e : p u r e o d o u r o.f t h o u s a n d s of flower p e t a l s n o t h i n g a d d e d . I t is fifty t i m e s m o r e concentrated than ordinary perfumes a d r o p is t o o much. The full-sized bottle is specially encased in a screw capped beautifully fashioned pedestal case, which is highly pohshed. being an ornament in itself besides serving the purpose of protecting the bottle from harm when travelling, &c. Price 3/6 poat free. . . v , , i- j . With each bottle (also with sample) rod is supplied by which a portion of a drop is extracted at a time, thus eliminating any. waste which would result if the Blossom Drops were poured out indiscriminately. , ,. Send for a dainty sample in its fascinating little golden case, 9d. post free, or 5 assorted scents in cases. 3s.

If you wish to you may purchase from us all the furniture you require, simply paying us a small amount monthly: such payments can exteml over a period of one, two, or three years to suit your convenience. No interest will be charged as with other firms. We' should appreciate a personal visit, but in any case are anxious that you have a copy of our latest CATAJLOGUE, a magnificent book, illustrated in colours, ^and giving every possible kind of information. We pay postage. GENERAL TERMS.
10 Worth 0 6 0 per M'th 100 Worth 2 5 0 perM'th. 20 0 11 0 200 ,, 4 10 0 30 0 17 0 500 11 5 40 1 5 0 1,000 22 10 50 1 8 0 We do not charge interest or require deposit. Country Customers' jares are paid on any

DAINTY SAMPLE, 9d. M T


V A I J G ^ A N & H E A t H E R ( D e p t . C ) . T h e M a i l O r d e r H o u s e . Q u e e n s R o a d . BRICHTOW. Cars, direct, from factory, on approval; carriftgft paid; save you 5s. in 1 ; cash or BABYfromwe4s, monthly; send the splendid new easy payments. for catalogue

DAILY BARGAINS.

order over 30. Every article purchased is very carefullyPaclted and delivered to any required address free of all cost. Any Carpets'- or^Linos bought will be laid free, and S(^emes for completely, furnishing a house in various original and attractive styles will be submitted at your request. 10,000 of Second-hand Furniture always in stock.

HACKNEY
FURNISHING CO.. LTD..

OXFORD ST. SHOWROOMS:


103 & 103a, OXFORD STREET, LONDON, W.

H A C K N EY SHOWROOMS:
1, 2, 3, 4, Town Ilall Buildings; 18,19, 20, 21, 22, The Grove (adjoining), Mare Street, Hackney, London.

T e l e p h o n e : 84 D a l s t o n a n d 854 N o r t h . T e l e p h o n e ; 8936 a n d 8008 G e r r a r d . ' F u r n i m e n t s , London.'. Telegrams Telegrams: "Openwork, London." BUSINESS: HOURS O F M a r e Street9 till 9. S a t u r d a y s 9 till T o'clock. Oxford Street9 till 8 T h u r s d a y s 9 till 1 o'clock.

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Dress. free.Direct Public Supply, Co. (Dept. 74), Coventry. A BABY 8 LONG CLOTHES SET.. 50 pieces 21s.; everyOOKS Second-hand, at Halt-prices, on Every Subject; A M i m s necessary jwondrously beautiful rol^e*; new deNew at 25 per cent, discount; Books bought; Catalogues Bi^ns nerfect home-finish work; an extraordinary bargftin. post free,W. and G, Foyle, 135, Charing Cross-rd. London. i n l t a n t l p p r o v a l - M S i . W. Max, 14 The Chase. Nottinghara. HINA Bargains.Lovely tea sets, green and gold, 5s.; A BABVS LONG CLOTHES, 82 articles, 2l3.. or 2. A ^ w e e k l y * e x q u i s i t e ; home-made _Eobe3, Flannels. Night- of dinner sets 99. 9d.; toilet sets, 5s. 9d.; special outfit complete gownl etc': approval first 2s.-Call or write Nurse Scott, andhousehold china, 4articles to sets, breakfast, dinner, tea toilet with extra match, best quality, packed 251, trxbridge-rd (private house). Shepherd s Bush. . over A Trousseau.-24 nightdresses, knickers, chems.. petticoats, safely delivered perfect, 2I3.; continental tcstimoniala, illus20,000 satisfied customers: Catalogue Froe (coloured A - etc., 25s.; easy payments,-Wood. 21. Queen-sq, Leeds. trations);' all classes of china at halt usual price; ecnd C H A R M I N G Drws Patterns, post iree on approval; lovely Pottery, Dopt. U d i a i o n a l tweeds and Quaker-grey whipwrd Buitings. to-day,-^Century " Kompressol " E., Burslein, Staffs. 3 com^ORK LINO,' (Registered).Ward from 13? Old. yd.; delightful cotton novelties, f r o m 7 | d , yd, J pres.sed cork lino, 3yds. by 4yd3., qual. A, ISs. 6d., qua!. - W r i t e Bradford Mauufing Co.,Ltd., Dept. R.M. Bradford B 16s 6d., other sizes in proportion. Write Desk 5, TPEINGE Nets, full size. Is. Id. doz.; hairwork and hair 1912 coloured design booklet and samples (roe.Ward r a v e s of every description; hair Combings purchased; Furnishing Stores'(Seven Sistcrs-coriior), South Tottennripe lists g r a t i s . - J . Brodie, 4 1 , Museum-st London. .ham, A Id. car ride h'om Finsbury Park Station. ffiNDLlisHosiery.-Marvellous durability; no more ILL'S Best American Cut Plug, in tins-, 1 2-3oz. Is, OJd-. iVLdarniSg gentlemen's socks, 3s. 9d. half-dozen; sample 2s Oid., 41b. 43, 9d.; two i l b . oair 9d ladils- stockings,-4s.' 9d. half-doz.; sample pair, p a i d .3 B1-30Z Withers, 59, Bull-rt, Birniinghiim.93. 2d.; post - . M. l i d all'post free.-F. EylM, Hosiery Warehouse, Brighton, IVE quires splendid note, rough or cream headed your A/IONEY-SAVING Bargain! Genuine Irish linen cream address, post free. Is. 6d,; team, 5s.; cuvolopos, 9.1. lOO; iVi damask breakfast cloth, ornamental design shamrock centre, borders to match; 41 inches square, only l s postage cards equal plate, Is. 6d. lOO.-Viclorj Tresr, BournymoaA. REE.30 as.sortcd samples of Rob Roy Pens., 2d. post 3dHutfcon's, 8 1 , Larne, Ireland. free.-B. Hinks, Wells and Co,, Birmingham. l ^ ' E A L ' a v y -Serge; as supplied to H.M. Gov.; Is. 3W., R Is 6 i d per yard; patterns free.-^kewes Bro.. Plymouth H I N T S for Home Decorators.Best book obtainable; full instructions on Painting, Paperhanging, Slaining. EAL Navy Serge, direct from Portsmouth, as used Royal Navy - i s 3 i d . to Is. CJd.; carriage paid; pa.ttern Graining Varnishing, Enamelling, Stenmlling, Signwriting, Polishing Paint and Colour mixing, and all decorating subfree.-Beaiimoiit, D.M., Contractor, Portsmouth. Q E R G E as supplied to the ^Royal Navy; every length jects: 6 d , po.it free,-Decorators' Stores (Dept. 86),Lythamb ^ t a m p e d with guarantee; absolutely the best for ladies. rd. Blackpool. gentlemen and children; patterns post f r e e . - J , D. Morant, POULTRY AND PETS. Ltd., Admiralty Contractors, Portsmouth. . - _ OLICE Dogs.Protect your families and property while A r t i c l e s for- D i s p o s a l . A MAZING.-7 splendid complete services for Sis.. Inat business.Major Richardson's Airedales, 4gn9.; A eluding dinner, tea,, breakfast, bedroom, toilet and pups, 2gn3.Grovend, Harrow. Tel. 423. charming china afternoon tea service; also a pretty tea- Printed and Published by T H E PIOTORIA.L N E W S P A P E R CO. set for a child; packed free, guaranteed deliTOred perfect, (1910), LTD., a t 11 and 12, Whitelriais-stieet, Loudou, 21s t h e lot; write for free catalogue, saves 50 per cent. E.C.-Monday. May 20, 1912. Vincent Fine A r t Pottery, 5, Burslem.

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