- 141’» "-â€" a" PHUTUQRIPHS Ill BUTTER RECENTLY EECâ€"Oile TEE FASH- ION: IN ENGLAND. at Luncheons and Cele- Unique Ideas Dinners to British brities. Novelties for the dinnerâ€"table are becoming as numerous as fashions in iatlii-s' boniicts says London An- :wers. At a literary man's dinner a short time ago, for instance, there graced the centre of the table a number of characters taken from the same author's novelsâ€"wax dolls properly dressed in accordance with tho dcâ€" scription accorded to each in the 'v‘nrious novels. The idea was uni- 1pm and cheerllul, and it brightened the table and the dinner, too, This was followed shortly after- Wai‘ds by a literary luncheon, given by another wellâ€"knoun novelist, who scored a tiiumph in the "sweets" that were served up, these being made to resemble pens, ink, and paper. But while theso and other recent attempts at striking some- thing new in the novelty line achiev- ed distinction and applause for their Inventors, there was something in (the idea which, while it pleased the Eye and artistic taste, yet did not. furnish anything practical. A prac- tical novelty was Vantod, and it has Just been found in pats of butter. (it to be outdone by his “lit,â€" erary" friends, a young English sCul- ptor furnished a pretty decoration for the dinnerâ€"table, at, which sat re- cently some of the first artists of the day. This consisted of nothing less than a bust, done in butter, of each of the six guests whose company he Had the pleasure of enjoying. THE IDEA HAS CAUGHT ON and now it is becoming the fashion at wedding-parties and dinnerâ€"parties and so forth, to mould the principal guest, or bridal pair in butter, re- plicas of which are placed in proper position near to the covers laid for the guests. Reproducing the bust of some par- ticular friend or other in this way is done at small social gatherings, but at the more ambitious "meets" the custom of reproducing Britain‘s greatest celebrities Obtains. At a dinner given to Lord Roberts a few weeks ago, at a. small but exâ€" clusive club, the butter on the table was moulded in the image and likeâ€" ness of the gallant and noble guest, an example which was followed by Mr. I. Z. Dcakin, an architect. of Westminster, who, at a private din- ner which he gave last month, proâ€" duced the bust of the King in butter- pats. Butter as a dairy product is a commodity man cannot do without, but since it can be turned into beau- tiful models, as neatly done as inasâ€" terpicces carved in marble, its value is doubled, if not trebled. Miniature busts of noted authors, composers, artists, statesmen, and royalties, 'dotted about on a table already laden with flowers and tempting cdiblcs and ï¬nddeâ€"sicclc deâ€" licacies of every description, enhance the cpicurean surroundings, just as the “Dreaming Iolanthe"â€"a statuette made of butter by Lady Caroline Brooksâ€"raised the tone of the gath- ering assembled, on festival bent, at '9. ball in .Whitechapel last May. THE POORLY-OFF GUESTS made it a study, and no doubt all tried to do something like it with the scanty remains of their own butâ€" ter when they returned home that night, There are few people who are not gifted with the artistic talâ€" ent, and the vein is humorcd when it is put to a pleasing yet: simple test like that. Butter busts for the tables of the very wealthy are made by not more than three known butter-model arâ€" tists. Theirs are real “butter 11n- gcrs," for they turn out their models by hand. The newly made busts are put into a refrigerator, where they get iced, to prevent them from melting before,use. At one of the sports clubs recently the pats of butter were made to fur- nish several items in connection with sports of all kinds; the favourite sports “pat†is a dog's head. These heads and busts of humans, too, are made without the assistancel of casts, with the exception of those of the King and Queen, Prince and Princess of Wales, Lord Roberts, Lord Kitchener, and a few other celebrities, whose presentment in butâ€" ter can only be achieved by the but- tcr fingers of an artist: who has but a picture to go by. Butter busts are to be the butter pats of the future. __+____. LAMBETH PALA CE . Historic Pile Is Crumbling Afteri Eight Centuries. l Lam.- at. Palace, the London resiâ€"l dence of the Archbishop of Canter- bury, is now undergoing extensive repairs, the older portions of the; palace having become decayed. Al-i ready some progress has been made Willi the renovating of Norman Tow-. .4- ' .1(~-~»-.... A little Sunlight Soap will Clean rut glass and other articles until they shine and sparkle. Sunlight Soap will wash other things that clothes. LB H V“ ,recenily the archives of the see of (.‘antvrbury were deposited. The towers are of red brick with the embattlements coped with stone. Recent. examination showed that. the, ext t‘l nal structures wero much ‘frctted and the tall hexagonal chimâ€" neys above the roof in danger of falling. The decay is generally atâ€" tributed to the atmosphere, which is impregnath with chemical fumes belched from factories in South Lam- both. The work of reparation was not Hilton in hand a day too soon. The primate, it may not be generally known, pays a small sum to the Bishop of Rochester as recognition that the palace is really in his episâ€" copal territory, ‘ for the bishops oi Rochester made their home at Lain- beth at a much earlier date than the bishops of Canterbury. ___+â€"_ ï¬lllflltl’s lllllllltlill Ulliï¬S CtllUBl Ill UO‘r‘lS. ___'â€"+â€"._ CHARACTER IN MOUTHFULS. The Girl Who vï¬ Make a Good Wife. The nervouse girl can be told by the manner in which she breaks her bread and sips her soup. She cats in a quick, voracious manner, even though eating little, and with cvi- dently very limited interest in the food for its own sake. Such a gill will never have the force or courage to pursue her ambitions. The girl who eats steadily, as though it were a business to he got through, not sparing much interest ‘to the talk going on round, or to ‘the relishable qualities of the viands, iis the systematic, practical girl who will make a good wife and orderly housekeeper. The girl of licodless view is told by the spoon left upright in the hall'â€" drained cup, the knife and fork left at cross angles, and the chair pushâ€" ed back just as she arose from it. The girl who eats very slowly, even while not consuming much, munching her mouthfuls deliberately and surely, is of unpractical turnâ€" given to undervaluing things that the majority of people count as of most consequence. She is fastidious and aesthetic, destined never to make much show in the world. The sort of girl to make a good lielpmeet for a man is she whose organ of taste is as alert us her other faculties; who cats in a notic- ing, discriminating way, that imâ€" plies her recognition of the imporâ€" tance of matters usually considered humidrum. She does not hesitate to interrupt the most interesting talk by asking for another helping or for some condiment she lacks, and shows plainly her belief that the embroidâ€" ery of life should be subordinate to the main material. HORSES EDUCATED. Upon the wall of a stable adjoinâ€" ing a. wayside inn in Essex, lingâ€" lan-d, may be seen printed in large black letters on a white background the strange notice: "Horses Educat- ed." Upon inquiring of the pro- prietor of the inn the meaning of this notice, one may learn that, a previous landlord was also a “horse breaker," and this was his way of advertising. â€"+___.., WAS INGURABLE BUT IS UURED JOSEPH BOONE AT WORK AGAIN AFTER SEVEN YEARS ILLNESS. Discharged From the Hospital as Incurable, He Used Dodd's Kid- Cottle's Cove, New Buy, Nfld. Oct. 1t).â€"(Special).â€"Aftcr being for seven years a hopeless invalid, unable to work and racked by aches and pains, .JOSC‘DII Boone of this [lace is back at I his old work as a fisherman. It it was Kidney Disease was the matâ€" ter with him. Dodd's Kidney Pills cured him. “It is something worth relating what Dodd's Kidney Pills have done ers, which before the close of the1 twelfth century was selected as thol princely town residence of the pri-i males, It contains specimens of‘ almost every style of architecture‘ that prevailed during the intervening! years. Norman and early English,‘ with its spacious arches, and the most conspicuous external features of the high,irregular structure. Two immense Norman towers face due south. In the centre there is a mag« aiiitcnt stone archway and postern. l‘he arch is pointed beautifully. Sroincd above is an apartment call- ld the record tower, where until; i for me," says Mr. Boone, “and I am glad to tell it. I had doctored with several doctors and after seven months in the hospital was sent home as incurable. “ lichard Quirk, who had been cur- ed by Dodd's Kidney Pills, advised me to try them and I did. I took 21 boxes before I was able to go to work. But I can hardly believe it is myself is in it all after all those years of suffering." Dodd's Kidney Pills never fail to cure all forms of Kidney Disease from lincknchc to Bright's Thousands of cured will tell you so. ney Pills With Splendid Results. , [ IdsliARIJS AND SEASONS. ! Physicians say that certain disâ€" enw-s frrllllIV the changing seasons ‘ _ \‘.ilil almost. clockwork regularity. ‘ ‘ acute riieunmtism prevails from l'vl)!.lai'_\' till April, ihe lungs from March till May, stomâ€" ah and inlextinal complaints in Augâ€" usz, tnlmi‘. classify dismises into summer, auâ€" i’tuimn, winter, and spring diseases. ,l‘he cla~siiicatiou is supported by many facts which show that Weather ‘t'lltlligï¬â€˜s really exert, powerful influâ€" i'lll'l‘N upon health and disease. To cope successfully with these changes and their harmful influences, daily ,exu‘rise in the open air in all kinds of weather, and at, all seasons of the year, is the best preparation. This io'ighens the system, and is at once ,prevention and cure. ___.._¢.__ How's This i We offer Ono Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrli that cannot I). )Y cured Hall's Untnrrh Cure F. J. CHENEY 5; 00., Toledo. 0. We, the undersigned, have known 1“. J. Cheney for the lust 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their ï¬rm. \IL'JS'l‘ (c 'l‘ltllAX, Wholesale Druggiats. Toledo, 0. WALDING, KINNAN b MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, 'i‘olodo. U. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Inter- directly upon tho blood the lay-um. per acting and mucous surfaces of Testimonials sent tree. Price 761:. bottle. Sold by all druggists. Hall’s Family Pills are the but. nully, “So you are engaged to Dr. B.â€"?" said one of those old ladies who are always taking medicine, to a young friend. "It must be very nice to be engaged to a doctor. Eveiy time he calls, you kinowâ€"and, of course, that must be very oftenâ€"you feel as if you were getting for nothing what everybody else has to pay for.†“Do you think my latest photo docs me justice?" asked the girl who was beginning to forget her birthâ€" day anniversaries. "Justice is not the proper word, dear," replied her girl friend. “It is really and truly merciful to you.†Mugginsâ€""They say cigarettes will .turn the skin yellow." Hugginsâ€""I should say that’s right. Every time I catch my boy smoking them he gets tanned." “Their engagement was rather roâ€" mantic, was it not ?" "Yes, rathâ€" er. They went in bathing, got be- yond their depth, and were. comâ€" pletely carried away with each other." lllnanl's Llnimenlâ€"Eures‘ Bull‘s. elc. Sheâ€"“They haven't found a name for that baby in the flat upstairs yet." lifeâ€"“Tho one that cries so?†“Yes.†“Well, that's strange! The neighbors have called it everything they could think of!" Lei'er’s Yâ€"Z (Wise Head) Disinfect- ant Soap Powder is a boon to any home. It disinfects and cleans at the same time. “You say Bliggins has gone in for writing verse?" “Yes. Scared to death he's getting bald, and has heard that poets all have long hair." Minaid's linlmeil Elites Distemper BARGAIN HUNTERS IN PARIS. Time-Honored Customs in the City of Fashions. It is a rule with many retail lionsâ€" es in Paris to rent several square metres of pavement in front of their premises for the better display of stock in trade, and as additional sdling space, and at sale times the public pavement in front of some of the large drapery establishments is transformed not only into a shop, but into a “tryingâ€"on" department. Customers of both sexes think noâ€" thing of taking off their own hats to try on others, and getting into jackâ€" ets ticketed at live francs, or fourâ€" franc “peignoirs,†before the eyes of the world. The scene is typically French, and passersâ€"by see nothing“ unusual in it, as, indeed. there. is .not on the other side of the (‘hanâ€" «nel. Passersâ€"by, in fact. take to the great cnough to entirely block the way. It is not only, however, the buyers and sellers of apparel who block the way. Others who reserve plenty of space for their own uses are the sounds like a miracle but, it is notâ€" 1children in the Champs l‘Ilyseesâ€"ancl they are often pretty enough to be lforgiven, though they do dig up with sand gravel daily for their mud piesâ€"â€" l‘who, with their nurses and the latest English innovation, the perambula- ltor, are masters of the situation. iEnough that these, with the excepâ€" ition of the perambulator, are timeâ€" .honored customs. They are not. :however, such excellent institutions ,as the domestic servant who can cater as well as she can cook, or her lhushand, who can do housework as ,well as she can: or the happy method \of keeping the gutters full of running iwatcr. so fresh that the horses may [drink it; or. again, the good old practice, to be seen any day at the Sisttrs for the poor or sick. gutter when the rush for bargains is- impunity many square feet of earth; inflammation of j ‘ l and cholera from August to ()câ€" J (in this basis Mum:- hygienists '1 l 'ondâ€"class tickets will be I I l Disease. baker's. of free gifts of bread to the} l 5 Mike - h‘rï¬ï¬‚flili xi: ‘I _ ‘ C for another Black. Mixed. Imttice: “That's the girl who broke my poor brother's heart." llinson: "Really ! How did she do that?" Lettico: “Well, he was on gaged to her for three years, and the very day after he broke the enâ€" gngcment off she had $150,000 left to her," HERE'S AN OPPORTUNITY TO VISIT THE EAST VIA GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY. Effective daily, until November 30th inclusive, colonist one way sec- issued as follows, viz: From Toronto to Anaconda, lluttc, Chinook and Ilclcna, Mont., $37.25. From Toronto to Spokane, Wash, Nelson, Rossland, Trail, lrmd Forks and Robson, 13.0., $39.75. From Toronto to Seattle, Tacoma, Wash, Portland, Ore., also Victoria, Vancouver, and New Westminster, 13.0., $42.25. Proportionate rates from all points in Ontario. Full particulars as to time of trains, sleeping car rates, etc., on application to Chas. W. .lraves, District Passenger Agent, 6 King St. West, Room 12, Toronto, or, F. I. Whitney, General Passen- ger Agent, St. Paul, Minn. Hcâ€"“That was Miss M'Quccn who just passed. She has such a regal way of walking, don't you think?" Sheâ€"“Yes; you could tell her a mile away by that silly wrigglc of hers." __.._.___________ C. C. RICHARDS & CO. Dear Sirs,~I have great faith in MINARD'S LIDIIMI')."1‘, as last year I cured a horse of Ring-bone, with five bottles. It blistered the horse, but in a month there was no ring-bone and no lameness. DANIEL MURCH‘ISON. Four Foils, N.B. 7.39 too many ideas is the man with too The man with no better than few. For Over Sixty Years Kris. wmsmw‘a SOOTHING Svnur bu been used by billions of mothers for their children while tooihlng. ltsootlies the child, softens the gums. allay: pain. cure: rind colic. rcguluies the Stomach and bowels. and is the asst remedy for Dinrrhcies. Twenty-ï¬ve cents II bottle lold by druggists throughout. the world. Ba sum and L2]: for " Mus. \VINSLOW'S Sooruixo SarP." 23-7! Heâ€""Thcre is only half an hour be- fore the train goes, and your trunk isn’t half packed." Sheâ€"“Don't worry, dear. I have my bonnet on." Minard's Hindiâ€"fines ilphihsiia. USE F0 R NEWSPAPERS. A Wellâ€"known Viennese architect has built himself a neat and very fastâ€"sailing boat out of Old news- papers. The framework is of wood, but all the planking is of paper, each plank requiring 2,500 leaves. This boat is to be seen on the beautiful Worthersee, and has proved an un- qualified success. rim E i 3- i E It mzkes no differenca whether it is chrome.- none or inflammatory Rheumatism of the muscles or joints cares and cures promptly. 3 Limits hi 3 Price. 25c.,and 50:. ii WWWW i t-l‘ Write t4: {Hashim $05-52 u:t-:.:;,>,.--x.,u eon-tic. 'F’Ftflia‘lï¬tï¬it fi'de‘dI-‘MM' Jun '3.¢‘iv:‘l.’43n‘.lltwvioy\1. has! There is only one way to make a g and allow to steep seven minutes. The tea that one British Colony grows Ceylon Green. FORTY CENTSâ€"SHOULD BE FIFTY i Cl § 3 3 This. g 8 § § E SMITH & DAMERDN :;ol.c.coraotl’n:enca ‘ ('snLJn L fa Duds. : To onto W sewâ€; Ask for Red Label. ~«-$~.' Q‘l":h; .â€"- ‘1..“- .-I--. in 'w E BUTTER, HQNEY. We buy f.o.b. or sell on commission. “'0 so licit ycur consignment. and correspondence. RUTHERFORD,MARSHALL & CO TORONTO. _42_â€"M FATE?†f'†M" OOUHTfllEsu RI D3 UT flight.†ï¬gngi‘rfiw MAYBEE [03 Buy 8t..ToRONTO Gen ï¬ning Bum! for Handbool on Patents, 1:0. We are paying very hi h prices for clean, dry Root. Ship 11% once. Prices will decline. 38-50 D. II. BASTEDO & 00.. 17 King at . East, Toronto, Fur Manufacturers. Sondfor Cataloll CARPET DYEING and Cleaning. This is a specialty with the BRITISH AMERICAN DVEING 00. Send paniculars by post. and we are aura to satisfy Address Box 158. Montreal. lSl H Vi’e will give ABSOLUTELY W FREE Guaranth for A HIGH GRADE WATCH It you will do a few hours work for us any day after school. Boys must enclose refer- ences from parent! or mmrdlanz. Write today. IV. P.1[lild‘TI 3‘, Room 510, No. 150 I Fifth Avo., New York. U,S.A. Billiard and The Best at tho Lowest Price erte for Terms REID BROS... M’f’g 0039 735 King 0t. W. Dominion Lina Steamships Montreal to Liverpool Boston to Livorpool Large and Fast Steamhzns. Superior nccommodatln or all classes of paxson 9.1. Saloon: and Sgntaroonni .re amidshipn. Specia attention has he: n given to “II Bee d Saloon and ’I‘hlrdfllnn accommo ation. Fol at: of passage and all particulars. imply to any 31w If the Company. or to psasenler agent. DOMINION LINE OFFICES: 1 time BL. Benton. 11 St. Sun-mom St. Elana-ll Poultry, All KINDS OF I Butter, muus Eggs, 3.11 Fééfï¬ii; consign it to us anl we will get you good prices. Haney, Apples, THE Dawson Commission 00., 9â€"15 TORONTO. llMITB“ $53; SALE}. WINTOM AUTOMOBILE TOURING Car, new springs all round, machin- erv tut worn in the slightest, tires new this spring, spring cushions, duplicate parts. For sale at great: sacrifice. Cost $2,500. Box 7, Truth Oï¬ice, Toronto. TH E BEST INAY TO NEW YORK is VIA THE LAEKAWAHHA Entom- IIIVEST IN THE BEST. ‘ ' ‘ ' . i the Pocono F 78 trains daily from I‘llf‘f’viu, ov‘cr V Mlmmtninn. the Deleware \ hieJ (mp, mross the (Luau-c. Sn r,uch: urn, Dcleuaic and Hudson rivers. ‘lo- cat. to all s'eum. r duets. \V'rite to FRIZD 1’. FOX, I).P.A. Buffalo, N. Y. _â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"=â€"- 1For: SALE, CHE-AP FORMâ€"CASH. i1 Buï¬alo pressure blower, No. 4-â€" l 9 in. outlet. l2 Globe waivesâ€"£1 in. flanged. 1 Globe valveâ€"0 in. flanged. 1 Earl steam blowerâ€"10 in- inlet. 4 Ten branch cast iron headers fol’ 1 in. pipe. 2 Iron pulleysâ€"530x12. 2 Iron pulleysâ€"â€"32x12. 1 iron pulleyâ€"22x6. ‘ 2 Iron pulleysâ€"18x6. ‘Also an assortment of IN]? Conn .‘ pulleys. f s. RANK WILSON, I‘ 73 West Adelaide St., 43â€"03 u- .. .: I 33‘“ i .1 - a m h at a .-