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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1892-1-14, Page 3TO COOK A IIIISHAIID. TELEGRAPH SUMMARY. DB OAS nOVATED lutlealte Action against the Quebec lotteries is intetwo 31h$ laidergroustd, east nun er' ILawless bands are again imaraudiug la the •-•••••••••••••••••-, POINTERS rou YOEND WIVES, 1She Best Mahe& or Setteetnag.Mreparing and dervisseantis art Vrisient Once nenutred, kle a Mess Ifetelot ante-enonse Mans for the ithnSblind as Wein Many a good nusband. is ;visaed is the cooking. In selecting your husband you should not be guided. by a silvery apneart mice, as in buying mackerel, nor by the ff ;golden tint, as you wanted salmon. The hest way is to seleot him yourself, as tastes aiffer, says Fred May in the Minneapolis Epeetator. Do not go to the market for bine ; the best are always brought to your home. Having caught one, you roust learn low to cook hire, to make a good dish foi, your home. Some men are roasted too much in cooking • and some keep them constantly in hot water, while others freeze them in connegal coldness. Some keep thein in piekle all their lives. Such women serve them up with tongue sauce. A little spice improves thein, but must be wed with judgment. Now it is not to be supposed that husbands twill. be tender and geed if treated in this -way, but they are very delicious when ananaged as follows; Get a large preserving kettle, called the `kettle of carefulness, width, all !pod house- -wives should have on hand. ilsee your hueband in it, and place it near the fire of conjugal love. :Let the fire be clear, and above all let the heat be constant; cover .labn over with affection; garnish him with sthe spice of pleasantry ; add a little sugar in the form of what confectioners call kisses ; let them be accompanie.d with • a sufficient portion of secrecy, • n• ixed with prudence and modems • Nexer use vinegar or pepper on any account. In getting him ready for the l' ettle see that the linen you wrap him in is of the beat and the tie strings newly. Sewed on. Tie him in by a strong silk cord walled comfort, keep your cover of duty well over him and your steady fire of loye burning bright. , Do notatiek him with a, fork to feel if he has become tender, but stir him gently, and you can not fail to know when he is done. kf he should sputter and fizzle do not be ,alarmed. Some do this until quite done; for, like the lobster, he is cooked while ,alive. 'When done, take him from the laettle and place him at your neatly spread table, and,serve him a good dinner. Unless you become careless or set him in a cold place, he will keep well cooked in this way. isTow to be fair we must look at the other side. The husband who is prepared for his ;home table in this way must always come home good-tempered, leaving business care behind, and do not vent its annoyance on your wife. Make yourself agreeable to your wife and friends. Be lenient to your wife's faults. :Be punctual at year meals. Re- anember a cook cannot keep a dinner wait- ing without its being spoiled. If you should be in a hurry do not expect she has two pair of hands. Re as kind and attentive to ler as yonswere beforenyouranarriage. Don't be afraid of a little fun at hoine and make her shut the house up for fear the sun should fade the carpets, for a merry heart in the home does good, like medicine. Home ,should beta, woman's heaven in the world, and if your wife keeps your home in order, her meals regular and well served, and does her best to please, let her see you appreciate her, and she will be preserved in the jar of perfection, as you have been cooked in the kettle of carefulness. NEBTOBSIIBAIDACTIE. ai OM Be Cured With got Water :anti a .Good Best. It has been a hard day, and the tired lines in your face show it. The muscles of the face have lost their firinness, and the lines about the cheek and mouth and eyes siroop wearily. You look ten years older than you know you are, and you feel sadder than you have a right to be. Worse ilan all, a sharp pain shoots from the left temple .over the forehead and down the left side of tbe face. You know that Menne a nervous beadache and a night of agony :unless some- thing is done quickly. Tay this: Slip off yew bodice and bare your neck. Twist your Iwsk• into a loose tenet on the top of your head. Then take a sponge and a basin of hot water—just ashot as you can boar it Pass the hot, wet •eponge slowly and eteadily over the face and forehead for eight or ten minutes, keeping the sponge as hot as it can be borne. By that time your face will look and feel as if it were parboiled. • But don't worry. Then bathe the back of the neck as you have done the face, carrying the sponge each time well up the bitek of the head. Keep this up for the same length of time; them without looking at yourself in the glass, because that would be sure to dis- quiet you, dry you face and neck softly and go and be clown fiat on your back. Close your eyes and think of just this one thing: how heavy you are on the couch and how easily it supports you. That is really an important part of the cure. Lie there for half an hour, if you don't fall asleep, as you probably will. Then get up and take the deferred look in the glass. The tired look has gone ; the muscles have regained their tone; the wrinkles have dis- appeared. You look like your younger sister. Best of all, the darting pain in the lead and the pessimism of the soul have gone, too. —Pitteburg Despatch. About the Sick -Boom. Let in the sunshine. Banish all confusion. Cleanliness is the first rule. Make mustard plasters thin. Ask the doctor as to visitors. Don't ask queetioms of sick people. Wear a clean dress and a bright smile. Flowers are perraissiale, but never in profusion. Shnple surprises are a pleasure to a con- valescent Rheumatic patients should lie between woolen sheets. Eat a cracker or two before goieg into the room of contagion. A sandwich of minced raw beafeteak often tempts an invalid. A mustard la/aster mixed with the white of an egg will not blieter. Watch the veatilation and guano the temperature by a thermoineter. The sick chamber should be plainly for- e:abed and no heavy hanginge. The best night light ie candle, weighted with ;email, and made to float in a glass of All woollen or similar geode should be re- moved from the room Where contagion is tinder treatment. There ie a fish hatchery in Miehigan that has 51,000,000 white fish eggs in pre - :ems of incubation. The Marquis of Bate is said to be plans ning a visit Et: this country. This id the enormously Wealthy English peer whom Mgr. Cni epol evertero d to Uoatt Oatkoli- sm. contemplated, " or northeaetern part of China. Jame Walters was killed by a falling limb at Elmstead yesterday. The wife of Mr. L. Cochrane, M. 13, for East Northumberland, is deed. Alfred Richet the well-known Veen surgeme is dead, aged 75 years. ' The revenue of the Port of Halifax fell $636,683,88 during the past year. Li Hung Chang, the Chinese Viceroy, recevering front his severe illness. There are now but ten cases of smallp in Montreal and the scare has subsided. Dr. Chariton the distinguithed Fren physician, is seriously ill with influenza. The thipping of the Maritime Provinc shows a decrease of 210,228 tons in eig years. Glengarry Reformers have selected Arch bald MeArthur as' their candidate for t Home of Commons: Mr. .A. Dunlop, Conservative M. P. P. f North Renfrew, died yesterday of diabet after a week's illness. Hell, cm liadee gebenne, or siheol, Itteridn Orinistette. eh off is OX eh es ht i. he or es The writ for an election in Richmond, N. S., has been issued. Polling will take place on the 21st of January. The steamer Lbenda.ff City, from New York for Bristol, is reported by, the City of Paris as clisabled at sea. John Cummings, while chopping in the woo& on the 12511 line'Brooke, yesterday, was killed by a falling tree. The schooner Catharine Richards was wrecked off Tralee, Ireland, on Wednesday. Five of the crew were drowned. The barque Alexander, from Pensacola for Amsterdam, has been wrecked near the latter port, two men being drowned. United States soldiers stationed at Fort Niagara are alleged to have accepted bribes to sm.uggle Chinese over from Canada. The Duchess of Campo-Selice, formerly Mrs. Singer, of New York, was married at Paris on Thuasday to M. Paul Sohege. The North Lanark election yesterday was won by the Conservative candidate, Mr. Rosamond, by a majority of about e00. Nothing has yet been heard of W. Beam- ish, of the customs department, Belleville, who mysteriously disappeared on Christmas eve. W. ltL Henchmen Assistant Com- missioner of the Noithwest Mounted Police, died suddenly at Calgary last night. Governor Russell, of Massachusetts, has issued an appeal to the people of that State to come to the aid of the famine sufferers in Russia. Twelve fishing boats belonging to Vinaroz and San Carlos de la Ramita, Spain, bave been lost in a storm, 43 persons being drowned. The barque Alexander, from Pensacola, October 31st, for Amsterdam, has been wrecked near the latter port. Two of her crew were drowned. The contracts between mine owners and miners in Wales have expired, and 85,000 men are out of work until a new arrange- ment is completed. The peerage has been conferred by Her Majesty upon General Sir Frederick . C., Admiral Sir Arthur Hood, and Sir Roberts,?William Thompson. The iron workers of Ottawa have noti- fied the masters that after Monday next they will stand out for the nine -hour day. The bosses :meet to -day to consider the situation. Numerous Russian Nihilists residing in France have been arrested, and it is said a plot to destroy the Russian embassy andthe building in which the Chamber of Deputies meets; has been discovered. The new Government of the Northwest Territories will include Mr. Haultain, mem- ber for McLeod; Mr. Clinskill, of Battle - ford • Mr. Neff, of Moosomin, and Mr. Tweed, of IVIerlicine Hat. Mr. Haultain will be leader. Uhing, the murderer of Col. Prager, was beheaded yesterday at Metz. lrrager's body was found near the barracks on May 7th, /891, with the head smashed and the throat cut. Robbery was the motive for the crime. A miner in the township of Barrie found a cave containing a sheet of water, situated 200 feet from the entrance. On the walls were carved the name of C. P. Myers. Mining tools were found, and, most won- derful of all, silver stalactites were picked up. A correspondent writes that there is great Buffeting among the coal miners in some of the Pennsylvania towns and sug- ges that their necessities are quite as great as are the neceisities of the Russians, to whom the Western mills are sending 30,000 barrels of flour. A Vancouver, 13. C., despatch says E. L. Woodin, late superintendent of the Penin- sular and Oriental Steam Navigation Com- pany at Hong Kong, has been arrested on the steamer Gwalior. He is charged with embezzling $100,000 from his employers, and with falsifying his accounts. The Viceroy of Ka,shgar, in reply to a request from the Chinese Government, bits declared in favor of the English taking possession of the Pamirs. He urges that China do all in her power at the Se Peters- burg conference to attain this mai. He holds that Kashmir's trade with India will be ruined if Russia acquires the Pamirs. In order to counteract, certain effects of the new commercial treaties, which are deemed unfavorable to the interests of the people of Zittan, Saxony, t he ithorities of that city have revives' en netroi (local duty) of eight pfennigs per I; flogiumme upon fresh aud pickled meat. The ottiroi, though never formally roweled, load long fallen into dis- use. The Calninet and Hecht smelting corn - panics on Lake Miclhigan yesterday closed down their furnaces. throwing out of em- ployment 30 men. The furnaces were sbut down for The purpose of accumulating about 1,000 tons of mineral per month for tram- portation at the opening of navigation to Buffalo smelting works. This means a, re- duction in the production of refined copper. A party of boys at Grand Rapid, avers aging about 12 years of ago, went dowa the river skating. • The iee was very thim and they began daring each other to see who could go the farthest out. Suddenly the ice gave way, and Willie McDonald went down. His companions tried to rescue him, and Walter Dolan and Louis Dolan also fell in. Louis Dolan was reamed, but the other two were drowned. • Joseph William Richards, the only author who has produced a standard work On aluntinum, which he calls the metal of the filter°, is only 27 years old mid was born in Diriningham, Eligland. ' If it take a all sorts of people to matte a' world, Adam must have felt dascourged at his lonely condition. • Smilea that erack in the middle With! their metallic hardness celivey but little } real cordiality. ' the inferno ev whatever yoa want to call • it, is a lake of fire and brimstone, exactly fifty-two miles below the surface of the earth at sea -level, and has the cubic con- tenti of 542,000,000 miles." That is the statement made yesterday by Rev. C. A. A. Taylor, D. D., educational and finaneial travelling agentfer the Florida African Methodist Episcopal Conferepees, Indianapolis Freeman representative} and general. preather, "1 beve come th this conclueion," he continued, "after se met painstaking investigation into the most eomprehensive literature of seience, phil- osophy and theology; of libraries in Paris, London, New York and Boston, together with a minute investigetion into the holy scriptures, I base my belief on the Scriptures, In the first: place, Christ always speaks of hell as being down and not up. Again, it is often and everywhere spoken of in the Bible as being a lake of fire and brimstone, and if it is not, why should tho Bible say it is? You notice where the Bible says that when Christ was three days in hell he lifted up his eyes. How could he look tip if he was not already down S I get at rny conclusion by estimating the increaseof heat as we go downward,and have figured that at exactly fifty-two miles the heat is just great enough to snelt any known substance. Here the lake of fireand brim stone begins and extends through the whole interior. It was once completely filled with a molten mass, but God bas put it into the heart of man and constrained him to bring about the grand consummation. In obedienoe to God's mandate man is gradually emptying out this interior by sinking oil wells and coal mines. Besides this volcanoes are gradually preparbeg place for the unregenerate who persist in disobeying divine law. The Holy Book says that at the coming of the judgment the earth will be rolled together as a scroll and burned with an unguenthable fire. This remiss that the interior will be so emptied out that the crust will break in laid the friction ,caused by molecular disentegration will create the heat which will consume the world and leave only the lake of fire. The good will .escape by being ealled to heaven. The Bible says the sun moves around the earth, and does not say that the earth is round. For that reason I believe the earth to be fiat, or at least not as round as the sci- entists believe it to be. I have about con- cluded that there are many suns and that we may have a new one every day.—Chi- 00430 Tribune. 018 WENGER. A Description of what is Now Talking Place in Russia. The famine having raised all substitutes for food to the level of artioles of oom- meree, a single measure of pigweed costs already nearly three times more than a strong, healthy, well-fed colt, and specula- tors are purchasing all they can obtain of it at this price, in the reasonable conviction that it will rise 100 per cent. in value before midwinter. Driven thus from their last stronghold—viz,: pigweed—by their Oar's- tian brethren (the Jews are out of court in tbis matter), the famishing people fast, poison themselveaor ,die. In the village of Ishaky, during divine service, a woman suddenly cried out in a most piteous manner : "0, God, I promise to light a candle at your altar if only yea% give me a bit of bread as bigaszny.finger for I've eaten nothing for five days." An- other woman, unable to say even tbis much, fell down exhausted from the effects of an involuntary fast of the same duration. A well-known parish priest, F. Philimonoff, describing the scenes that meet his eyes daily, says: "Many of my parishioners have had no bread for two or three weeks, and are sustaining life as best they may on grass and the foliage of trees." He found children unable to stand on their legs who, on inquiry, proved to be dying of hunger, and to whom he proeeeded to administer the last sacraments of his church. In the room in which they were lying he discovered some packets of a powder employed as flour to bake bread of, which, on examination, proved to be the powdered leaves of lime trees, and on this the head of the family had been living for one month. "During the space of two days I administered the last sacraments to 16 persons dying of hunger." Harrowing though this tale sounds to foreign ears, it is no very unusual thing in Russia, where sometimes whole villages lie perishing of want, without a soul to comfort them on their deathbeds. An official state- ment has jutt been made public to the effect that the entire population of a village (Boolnsky district) were accidentally dis- covered to be so enfeebled by hunger that they were actually dying, and not one even of the males could stand on his feet. —Fort- nightly Review. 'when the Czar Goes 11.4ourneying. The following satirical production, pur- porting to show how the Russian court travels, appears in the German papers in the form of a letter from a Russian court functionary to his friend in Berlin: "Dear Friend—The following may serve you as an exact information. It is quite uncertain when we leave Copenhagen. In any case this afternoon at 7 o'clock—it may be also early the day after to -morrow; but quite certain to -morrow at noon. We shall, of course, choose the Bea journey, for ths. land journey suits us much better. For this reason it is not yet decided which we shall prefer. I think we shall go by sea as well as by land. When we leave the steamer we get into the train—that is to say, on to another steamer—I mean a steamship on rails, or rather an express train in the water. We are mainly afraid of sea -sickness, therefore we remain as long as possible on the ocean. For, after all, one travels best on terra firma, : therefore the sea journey is as good as settled. We travel via Berlin, where you may await me at the station; but you can save yourself the trouble, as we shall not touch Berlin under any consideration. We shall travel via Stettin. When I say Stet- tin I mean Dantzig. What's the good of our going to Dantzig ? Naturally we shall go direct from Copenhagen per ship to Konigs- berg. Therefore an revair the day after to- morrow in Berlin. We leave here in a week; where we shall go is still quite undecided." Scotsmen as Foreigners in England. In the eye of English law, a Scotsman, domiciled in England, is a foreigner. That is the deoision of the Lord Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Wrighn Also, it appears from the judgment in Grant .vs. Andereon that a Scotsman does not acquire a domicile in England by having a business representa- tive and a warehouse in London. In effect; therefore, a Scotsman* as one of the coun- sel in the case pointed out, even more of a foreigner in England than a Frenchman is, since he has more protection against being sued outside the jurisdietion of •his own courts. ORIGIN OF THE ° GRIP." A Disease That is Still a Great Mystery, • " THE NEW ACQUAINTANOE " Oarxied by Oontagion From Person to Person. and not by the Atmosphere. Shortln after the arrival a Mary Queett of Scots'and her eourt at Ifolyrood, the queen and all her household, both French and English, were taken down with the influenza. , The queen kept het, bed for sin days. The name given by the court to the disease, which from the details given is easily recognizable as one of the Same class as that from whieh humanity has lately • suffered, was "The new acquaintance:" Since that day the disease has often visited mankind the latest violent outbreak balling occurred about forty years ago. During ell this time singularly little seems to have been learned about it. Notwithstanding the groat improvement which has taken place in scientific observation and in statis- tical facilities, the chief mysteries of the disease remain as much mysteries as ever. The microbe, if it be a microbe that does the mischief, is undiscovered, nor has the problem of the method of propagation been fully solved. Upon the latter point, however, that of the method of propagation the recent official report ef the British Government presents i some important information. It s true that the report, the chief points of which are given in the _Practitioner, mainly con- cerns the epidemic of 1889-90, and does not cover that of the earlepart of the present year, in which the mortality was higher, and in which the contagion was more rapid than in that of the year .previous. But the method of propagation was no doubt much the same in. the two years, and the conolu sions which the report establishes will prob- ably not be invalidated by later investiga- tion. The nnquiry was entrusted to r. Franklin Parsons, who has sought informa- tion in every quarter of the globe. The facts which the report has got to- gether seem to showthat the disease is carried by contagion front person to person and is not carried in the atmosphere. This opinion is expressed very decidedly by Dr. Parsons and other experts and is deduced from a variety of facts. The general comae of the disease has been, in the northern hemis- phere, front east to west, and, therefore, in a direction contrary to the prevailing sur- face winds. It has followed the lines of human intercourse, striking the cities first and the provincial towns and rural distsigit s later. It seems also to be pretty well estab- lished that the disease does not travel faster than humanbeings or than letters can travel. The fact also that the disease has prevailed independently of weather or climate seems to point to theprobability that it is not of atmospheric origin. It has appeared in all seasons, existing simultaneously in the northern and southern hemispheres—that is, at opposite seasons of the year. It bas flourished under all kinds of conditions of heat and cold, dryness and moisture, in Russia and in India, in Great Britain and in the diy air of Egypt. In Spain it was ushered in by a month of cold, dryweather, and in New York by the moistest and mild- est season on rebord. It is of course, well known that the dis- ease hits spread rapidly to the various members of households into which it has been introduced. It accords with the theory of infection' also, that the disease has usually attackedthe persons liable to infection. Thus, husbands who go to town daily to business have been attacked be- fore their wives. It is claimed, further, that persons living out of the way of infec- tion have, as a rule, escaped influenza. The persons so favored would be deep-sea fishermen, lighthouse keepers and the ike. Dr. Parsons has made naa,ny inquiries among these classes of persons and the replies Lave shown that they have usually been exempt. The fact that the disease bas often broken out on shipboard in raid - ocean seems to point to a different ex- planation of its origin, but it is said that in no case has it appeared upon a vessel which bad been so long at sea as to preclude the possibility of the infection havtng been brought from shore. Dr. Richard Sisley, in his new book on "Epidemic Influenza," very strongly expresses the same view, that the disease is almost entirely propagated by infection. The British official report also discussea the question of the origin of the present outbreak, giving an account of the "fog fever" of 1885 in Australia, the dengue in the Levant and the antecedent horse dis- ease, and. the Chinese floods of 1888 and 1889. It is pretty clear, however, that all that is known definitely of the history of the epidemic called the " grip " is that it first broke out in the early summer of 1889 in Bokara, and in Russia in the autumn of the same year. With regard to infection from animals, it seems pretty clear that the disease may be communicated from animals to men and from men to animals. There appears to have been some epidemics of influenza among animals, particularly among dogs, in 1889. In the spring of the present year Dr. Sieley saw many eats suffering from influenza in Lon- don. He, however, made inquiries in the zoological gardens and learned that there had been no unusual mortality among ani- mals during the three epidemics of 1889, 1890 and 1891. There ie a practical sequel to the recognition of the contagious charac- ter of influenza. Dr. Sisley proposes that the notification of influenza should be triade compulsory by Parliament. The English local authorities already have the power to decide upon the infectiout; character of any disease, and to apply to it fhe provisions of the Contagious Disease Act. But it is now proposed that influenza shall be classed by Parliament with diphtheria, smallpox and 'other such maladies, and that the local authorities be required to treat it be a sim- ilar manner.—Areto York Times. Most Extraordinary Coincidence on Becord. According to a little work on coincidence, which has just been issued, the following is quite the most extraordinary coincidence recorded More than 200 years ago, on Dee. 5th, 1664, a boat crossing the Menai Strait, with 81 passengers sank. The only man who escaped death was a Mr. Hugh Williams. More than 100 years later, on Dec. 5th, 1780, another vessel with a large number of pasSengers sank tinder the same circum- stances and in the same place. All the pas- sengers were drowned except one (and the fade are proved to the hilt), a certain Ilegh Wi Mame. Again, en Dec. 5th, 1820, a boat laden With warty 30 souls also sank in the stune Spa, The only eficaping paSsenger was a Hugh Williams. These coincidences are well known to Welsh antiquarians, and are all recorded by good authorities. 1-te (looking up front his paper)1—The largest baroteeter eVer made is in Pari. It .•:;",fr for infants and Children., "Calliteriajg SO wellaclapted to Oildrett that 0:Astoria cures Colic, COnetiptst100. 1 I recommend it as superior to any prfMcription flour Stomach, Dia:Those :84u:tenon, imkown fp we,' o•n. 4... .&tutttt, IL p.p - mus worms, gives sleep; and promotes. dio gestion, 1.11 80. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. Without injurious medication. • Tan CSIVATIA CQMPASIY, 77 Hurray Street, N.1, M....;')4it.gio a -4 -:Ottlidi',14141`:fikiA2Vt''.4 • BICE AT WEDDINGS. The Gauntlet the Bride and Groom lilave to nun. • I wish a few heavy swells would set their fanes against the hideous rice scuffle de rioneuer at the close of wedding receptions. The cuetom of throwing rice at departing lovers comes to us from the East where rim is a sign of plenty and prosperity. This emblematic idea is lost, and, instead of a few grains softly fall- ing, we pelt and smother and bembard our brides with, thorough brutality, and filially tbe practice bas degenerated into a senseless and unseemly fight Formerly the "going off" with the pretty traveling toilet, the handshakings, friendly speeches and fare- well kisses was a trying epilogue to:a trying drama. Now this episode is a thing of the past. When the bride emerges, ready to start on life's journey, her heart must fail at the thought of the ordeal in prospect. She says her principal adieus in private' for the guests, like ravening wolves, awaither below. A serried phalanx blocks the halls, lines the staircase and extends • in masses to the door of the carriage. Flushed and excited faxes are turned toward tlte victims, and every strong right hand is clenched. The bridegroom, white, determined and awkward, joins his wife, and they make a desperate rush. But it is of no avail. The upheavinghordes close upon them ; the stinging grain is hurled in their smarting faces, trickles down their backs, gets into their mouths, and up their sleeves. Farewells are impossible, and no one gets a 'glimpse of the faultless costume evolved with such talent and time. Wibh insiinct of self-preservation, the bride defends herself as best she can, and the couple litemlly fight their way, breathless and dishevelled. With a supreme effort they gain the door, bolt like rabbits into the brougham, and the couple, who have earned a little spooity peace, are forced to travel and make love with a pound of rice in the small of their backs.—London World. .Folles : At Monte Carlo—Young English lady (to Mr. Coiney, who is staying at the same hotel)—Do you know I must put a 5 -franc piece on the number of my age, just for fan? (Puts one on No. 25, No. 33 wins). Little Sister—Oh, I say, Ethel, what a pity! Now, if you had really put it on your right age you would have won, wouldn't you? at ell F 4RE 1 'T Is a dangerous condition directly due to depleted or impure blood. It should not be allowed to continue, as in its debility the system is especially liable to serious attacks of illness. It is re- markable how beneficiai Hood's Sarsa- parilla is in this enervating state. Pos- sessing just those elements which the system needs and readily seizes, this medicine purifies the blood, and im- parts a feeling of strength and self-con- fidence. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best remedy for that weakness which pre- vails at change of season, climate or life. ars.aril "1 believe it is to the use of Hood's Sarsaparilla that I owe my present health. In the spring, I got so com- pletely run down I could not eat or sleep, and all the dreaded diseases of life Seemed to have a mortgage- on my system. I was obliged to abandon my work, and after seeking medical treat- ment and spending over $so for different preparations, I found myself no better. Then my wife persuaded me to try a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla. Before the first bottle was gone I began to amend. I have now used two bottles and have gained zo pounds. Can eat anything without it hurting me; my dyspepsia and biliousness have gone. never felt better in my life." W. V. Etmows, Lincoln, Ill. akes the ea< tr ii$Fr "Early last spring I was very mucb run down, had nervous headache, felt miserable and all that. I was very much benefited by Hood's Sarsaparilla and recommend it." Mas. J. M. TAY - Loa, 1119 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, 0.• "1 was very much run clown in health, had no strength and no inclination to. do anything. I have beea taking ood's.Sarsaparilla and that tired &d- ing has left me, my 'appetite has re - tarried, lam like a 'new man." CHAill LATHAlvi, North Columbus, Ohio.' tmah ring one rcnibtllo trig on a certain, i is 41 feet 5 ithe ne high. .She—Graeio&1I ,t; al „ street railroad in Buffat e car is cote- wouldn't like to be under that batercieter " pelted to erten 54 railroad track. vrben it falls. 100 Doses Ono Do t ".; • CA TIE gS, IT= IVER PM& Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles Mei, debt to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Distress after • eating, Pain in the Side, &c. 'While their rnost ' renuntable success has been shown in curing s Headache, yet CAnz.zit's levsti PItto are equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the fiver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured Aelie they would be almost priceless to those, who suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortunately their' goodness does not end here, and those who once try them will Mid these little pills valuable in so many ways that they will not be wiling to do without them. But after all siCk head Is thebane of so many lives that here is where; we make our great boast. Our pills cure it while others do not. MUTER'S Lima Erma Pu..ts are very small and very easy to take. One or two loins make a dose. They are strictly; vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by tliem gentle action please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents; five for $1. Sold everywhere, or sent by mad. CARTER IIED10/1IS 00., New York. t11 i1Small ;o1o, Small hilm, APov 0 le *In 0 A! 4n2,1C,AN L. 7AGENuehr A.„ ,\ pamphlet of information and ah- e'A street of the laws, showing' Rom to A Ohtain Patents, Caveats, Trade AjgtzrAdkdsre'ssCopyrlahts, sent hue 351 Broadway. li:170: CO LESSON ON saMINCS DANK& One MUIR Wilk Deposits of Forty.flevera Millions of Labor's iVoitey. Among the good resolutions that are form- ing in the minds of many people as the . - present year dra,ws to a close, says the t Boston Globe, is the resolution to begin t with. 1892 and lay up something for a many day. A writer who bee been strollini around among the old savings banks o New York gives some interesting facts touching the power of money to accumu- late, even at the modest but prudent and reliable rates paid by savings banks to the depositors. The laborer is, after all, the heaviest capitalist in society, althougbb he does not manipulate the funds whicla ho saves, like the capitalist proper. A single savings bank in New York has ozt deposit $47,191,052, mostly the aavings of labor. That this is the case is indicated by the fact that it has 107,440 depositors. Compound interest is a powerful accumulator. Taking even the modest. rate of 4 por cent. interest on de- posits, and probably no institution: on earth could exist for a century paying compound interest all the while, if any considerable number of depositors and their heirs should leave their deposits an touched. It is for this reason that savings. banks prudently stipulate that, no deposits. left untouched for 20 years shall draw inter - eat after that time. In this fact lies con- cealed a greet lesson in self-denial. A man, in Dutchess county, New York, upon thm birth of his babyboy, went and pat $100 in a New York savings bank, entailing princin pal and interest until the child was 21. The bank book was lost and the matter almost, forgotten until recently, when, upon prey-. ing his claim, be received from the bank over $2,000. An old Irish woman recently went to the Bowery bank to dram out $5 which she had placed on deposit. 25 years ago, quite unconscious of the power of compound interest, mid created a very amesing scene when the mushier in- sisted upon paying her $200. For the average laboring man the task of saving is, not an easy one. But eyery savings bank that offers compound interest offers a square winning game to whoever has the nerve to -practice self denial and keep any con- • siderable sum undisturbed for a number or years. She 'ryas Not IBS Wife. The Master in Chambers has settled, so. far as he is coneerned, the dispute between the administrators of the late Joseph Leah and Miss Roddy, the young lady to whore Leh wag engaged at the time of his death* by directing that the $1,000 in the hands ot the Horne Circle Society be paid to the ad- ministrator. It will be remembered that the benefit certificate was drawn tip itt favor} of and payable to Leah's wife, but he died unmarried. Miss Roddy had the certificate and Leah bad told the authorities of the - order that the tertifieate was for her, and the name of wife was inserted, as he ex- pected to be married shortly. The master - holds that the administrator is entitled 'an the Money, no one being in existence who- anewere the description of wife. Miss Roddy will appeal from this decision, Amenity appears to be very unequally divided betWeen those who can't stand pros.- etit7 and those who eati't get any to btn,',. •