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Exeter Advocate, 1900-2-22, Page 2aub8eribers N4110 clown veeoiye their papers stem.ilarly will please 0,0iii)-11 at untie, Apply at this office for advertising rates. THE EXETER Al)VOCATE. FEBRUAleY 22,1900. FIGS AND THISTLES. The pardon of sin is not perfect without the power over sin. It is not the num who does the most talking who is the Most talked about. The "Golden Rule" would not be Brach but or the light of the .Golden Life on it. The preacher Without ambition is errorthless ; with nothing but ambition be Is daugerous. The kings of finance have no greater eeower than the humblest toiler with. the King of G-lory. Just common everyday obedience would please God about as much as anything we can think of. The church and the Christian need to remember the judgment as truly as the sinner does. A Recognized Regulator.—To bring the digestive organs into symmetrical work - Ing is the aim of physicians when they Sud a Patient suffering from stomachic arregalarities, and for this purpose they can prescribe nothing better than Parme- lee's Vegetable Pills, which will be found a pleasant medicine of surprising virtue in bringing the refractory organs into subjection and restoring, them to normal Action, in which condition only can they 'perform their duties properly. Time of Birth and freight. According to Combe, boys born in the months of September, October, 7Noveraber, December, January and February are not so tall as those born In other months. Those born in No- vember are the shortest. Girls, ac- cording to the same authority, born. in December, January, February, March April and May show a less eength of body than those born in the remaining months. Those born from June to November are taller, but the tallest are born in August. To some extent these facts are attributed to economic conditions, for a child ''born in summer has generally better ood and air. IAre you not well? Are you pale, weak- ly, depressed in spirits, melancholy, tired, nervous and irritable? Then try Miller's ;Compound Iron Pills. They will build Ion up, tone up your nervous system, give Ion energy. Tons of Flowers Used. Vast quantities of flowers are gath- ered for perfumery purposes. It is es- timated that each year 1,860 tons of erange flowers are used, besides 930 tons of roses, 150 tons each of violets nd jasmine, 75 tons of tuberose, 80 Ions of cassie and 15 tons of jonquils. Illnard's Liniment for sale everywhere, Sponges Made to Order. Artificial sponges are now made In Germany from a mixture of pure cellulose with zinc chloride and sodi- um chloride. These sponges will ab- sorb water in the same way as the genuine article, and when allowed to dry they become just as firm in sub- stance. New life for a quarter. Miller's Coes- ;pound Iron Pills. Work. Man is not exceptional in the fact that he is and has to be a worker. All nature is a vast scene of incessant action. Everything from atoms to stars and systems of snns are con- stantly in 'notion. Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator has the largest sale of any similar prepar- ation sold in Canada. It always gives isatisfaction by restoring health to the little folks. Evidently oa the Bias. In Mexico it is proposed to create a 'fund for the widows of condemned criminals by charging the public for admission to the executions. The Mexican philenthropist, says the New -York Press, evidently has a Chinese mind. Miller's Worm Powders make the children healthy. Smothered Beef. Have lean beef chopped fine; place it into a shallow baking pan, putting here and there upon it bits of but- ter; sprinkle over a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of pepper, cover it with auother pan ancl run it into r, very quick oven. Serve at once on ea heated dish. Miller's Worm Powders for restlessness and peevishness. Ammonia Gas Motor. There is a new railroad car that by Its own motion compresses ammonia gas to liquid, which, in going through the pipes, expands: and produces the necessary coldness in the air. Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. Proof Against Plague. Several of the native papers in Bom- bay are now 'urging their readers to •resort to inoculation as a precaution against the plague, Miller's Worm Powders for sallow ;kin; s1d or young. atrench eiroin en 13 ()oil)] acks. Female baotlaeles axe increaing ra- pidly in Prance. They we tom costume not unlike that of the tautis. Ill-fitting boots and shoes cause corns. Holloway's Corn Curets the article to use. Vet a bottle at once and eure your coens itt'' tea*, teeettet,'; 1,^ 1)01NGS of [ 11E IA/ 1,-\1( ,i„a„ noon by Sir Malachy Daly I leuten- ant-cioverzlor. flio speech from the TE MS OF INTEREST FROM AROUND throne refers at length of the counit'Y and -tile ,Soatil African to prosperity , THE WORLD Pruned, I'unctuated and Preserved in Fithy PhragraPhe for the Perusal of Practical People Personal. Political and Profitable. UNCLASSIFIED. ' Herbert Loudon shot •iit Canadian 'eagle on the Torouto Island on lori- day last. The bird measured '7 feet 8 inches from tip to tip. A radical bill for good roads will be introduced at the coming session of the Ontario Legislature and it will include a measure to abolish statute labor. In the vicinity of Grand Rapids, Mich., the railroads are tied up by washouts, bridges having been swept away and tracks are under water for long distances. A drinking fountain is to be erect- ed in Brooklyn, N,Y., memorial to the late Miss Frances E. Willard, un- der direction of the Women's Chris- tian, Temperance B Mon. Sir Charles Tupper has been invited to deliver an address in the City of Boston in aid of the British South African Patriotic Fund of that city. Sir Charles has consented to go. Toronio junction has now 13 cases of smallpox. Every precaution is be- ing taken to prevent its spread, and vaccination goes on apace at the Junction, East Toronto and Weston. The Grand River at Galt was ram- pant on Friday and did manufactur- ers along the river banks consider- able daniage. The water and ice lifted the floors of the Main street bridge. The lumber industry in the Ottawa Valley is evidently on the decline. The luntber production of that dis- trict last year was 532,000,000 feet, fully 100,000,000 feet less than dur- ing 1898. Sir Edward ke has resigned his seat in Parliament owing to the Con- servative Association of Plymouth passing a resolution deprecatini,'his attitude to the Government's South African policy. Dr. A, S. Ashmead of New York, in reply to the demand of the Board of Health, has corroborated his state- ment that there is leprosy in New York, by giving the names and resi- dences of those afflicted. Dr, McKay, M,P.P., Ingersoll, is said to be recovering from the attack of typhoid le\ er which has laid him up for some time. He will doubtless take his seat in the House some time before the close of the session. The contract for the new public buildings at Westminster, B.C., has been awarded to Messrk. Bourque Sr Des Rivieres of Ottawa. The amount is in the neighborhood of $60,000, The old building's were destroyed by fire. J. J. Bostwick, a leading wholesale merchant of St. John, N.B., commit- ted suicide on Sunday. The body was found on his office floor, with a bottle of chloroform suspended above his head. Temporary insanity caus- ed by insonmia. The core -makers' strike, which was inaugurated at a number of foundries in Cleveland, 0., several weeks ago, has terminated in a victory for the strikers. The men are to receive 62.50 a day as demanded. The strik- ers get practically all they asked for. What is claimed to be the record in pheasant shooting was made Friday, the last day of the legal hunting sea- son in France, on the estate of Bar- on Edmond Rothschild. The Baron and three guests killed 1,683 birds in seven hours. Comte Clerk alone brought down 635. United States Consul Brush, at Nia- gara Falls reports that the .electrical industries in Canada have doubled their output so far over the preced- ing year's business. The workshops are so crowded with orders that no promise of delivery at a specified time can be obtained. CASUALTIES. The flood damage at Buffalo is es- timated at $100,000. A wind storm at Collinsville, Ind., blew down several houses on Thurs- day morning, and injured fifteen per- sons, some of thein fatally. The little 5 -year-old son of Samuel Canute, St. Catharines, while playing near the gas works Thursday after- noon, fell into the mill race and was drowned. Willie Knight is in jail at Winnipeg for shooting W, S. Chase, the 14 -year- old son of. James Chase, foreman ' of the Winnipeg Waterworks. The in- jured boy, who is likely to die, has made a statement accusing the Knight lad. Three persons were killed and three seriously injured in a head-on colli- sion on Thursday between fast freight trains on the New York Central Rail- road at Gordon Heights. Both en- gines were demolished and 37 cars were wrecked . • Saturday evening Mrs. Waterson of Toronto fell backwards while going upstairs with a lamp in her hand. The lamp exploded by striking the floor and ignited her clothing. She was burned to death, and it was not till after the firemen had extinguish- ed the fire that her charred remains were discovered by the police. Mrs. Waterson was 58 years of age. She leaves two sons, Vdward J. and Wil- liam It Waterson, beth of whom were out at the time of the fatal fire. MARINE MATTERS. A report comes from Lone Hill life- saving station that a steamer is ashore near Moriches, Long island. The name of the stranded steamer is not obtainable. Tait FIRE RECORD. San Salvador, Central America, has been visited by a fire, the total loss by which is estimated at $1,000,000. The National Cooperage and Wood- eftware Company' e plant at Escana- ba, Mich., was totally destroyed 'by fire on Thursday. The loss is esti- mated at $250,000: POLITICS—CANADIAN. Notices of seventy private bills to come up at this Session have Olready been received by Col, Clark, Meek of tho Ontario Legislature. There are a lot of electrie railway and beaus bills. • War. CRIME AND CRIMINALS. The sum" of £20,000 sterling, the balance of £G0,O0 etole a from leture's Bank, London, a year ago, has been mysteriously rettirned. The notes were found on Thursday enclosed in a custonsei•'s pass book, • William P. Miller, -the absconding head of the Franklin Syndicate of Brooklyn, was brought to police headquarters in New York on Thurs- day by former Captain of the Deteee tives Reynolds of Brooklyn. 'Miller was arrested in Canada. FOR MEN OF WAR. • General Sir Francis Clary is on his way to England invalided. Major-General Henry W. Lawton was buried op Friday in rho 'U.S. Na- tional Cemetery at Arlington. In the supplementary army esti- mates to March 31, which was laid pro forma before the British House of Commons on Friday, it is reported that the War call is for £20,000,000. Major-General ()tie is to be ordered front the Philippines as soon as the Philippine Commission arrives at Ma- nilla. It is said this is of the Gener- al's own volition, as he wants a rest. His successor as military command- er in the islandswill probably be General MacArthtir, THE DEAD. Mr, Thomas Weetehead, president of the Walkerton Board of Trade, died suddenly on Friday, Mrs Marshall Safford of New York was found dead on Friday in her bed in a hotel at St. Alban's, London, Eng. Dr. R. Johnson, an old resident and medical practitioner, died at Thorold on Sunday at the ago of 77 years. E. T. Taylor, a well-known insur- ance agent, and one of the auditors of the Grand Trunlc Railway, died at Montreal on Sunday. After a few weeks' illness, there died on Thursday one of Thor- old's oldest residents and landmarks, Captain Hugh James, at the advenc- ed age of 86 years. The late captain marched with his men to the front at the. Fenian . Raid in 1866. The captain had just received his medal in recognition of his services. He will be accorded a masonic and a military funeral. THE RELIGIOUS WORLD. Rev. Timothy Casey, D.D., and Rev. Thomas F. Barry were consecra- ted bishops, the one coadjutor of St. John, N.B., and the other coadjutor of Chatham, on Sunday. The cathedral in St. John wascrowded, and 4,000 people sat silently through a service which lasted four hours. A TORONTO MERCHANT Bears Important News to His Fellow Citizens. Toronto, Dec. 20th .—Here is a letter we hope every one of our readers will peruse : "I am 89 years old. Heve been troubled for four years with what I thought was Rheuniatisin—stiffness in the muscles of my legs, later in the arms. Soon the stiffness changed to soreness. Went to Hot Springs, and came back a little bet- ter. Was a moderate drinker, but quit using liquor altogether, and carefully regulated my diet. One day I got wet and then the trouble was worse than ever. Had to lay off for three weeks. Have had similar attacks at intervals ever since, each one worse than its predecessor. Had beadache, pain in the small of the hack, urine dark, scanty and scalding. Began using Dr. Arnold's English Toxin Pills a short time ago, and am already wonder- fully improved. Feel confident that they will cure me, and I shall give them the chance and report. I have not felt so well for years as I have since I began using your pills." H. LEWIS, 477 Yonge St., Toronto. Dr. Arnold's English Toxin Pills, the only medicine that cures disease by killing the germs that cause it, are sold by an areggests at, 75e. a box ; sample lox 25e., or sent post-paid on re- ceipt of price by The Arnold Chemical Co., Limited. Canada Life Building, 42 King street west, Toronto. Has Oetrichlike Appetite, The appetite superinduced by the glorio-as climate of Western Kansas is something phenomenal. "We are willing," says a Rooks county pap- er, "to take on subscription account chickens, pork, corn, wheat, alfalfa, prairie hay, wood and anything else we can eat." We believe MINARD'S LINIMENT is the best: Matthias Foley, Oil City, Ont. Joseph Snow, Norway, Me. ' Rev. R. 0. Armstrong, Malgrave, N.S. Chas. Whooten, Mulgrave, N. S. Pierre Landry, Bente; .Pokemouche, N. B. Thoinas Wasson, Sheffield, N. B. Parsley Sats°. Melt an ounce of butter itt a sauce pan, stir in three-quarters of an ounce of flour and half a pint of milk, and boil for three minutes. Add salt, a few drops of lemon juice and a des- sertspoonful' of very finely chopped parsley. The Horse --noblest of the brute crea- tion—when suffering from a cut, abrasion, or sore, derives as much benefit as its master in a like predicament, from the healing, soothing action of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. Lameness, swelling of the neck, stiffness of the joints, throat and lungs, are relieved by it. The Mont Penetrating Sound. The roar of the lion can be heard further than the sound of any other living creature. Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc, Populat,lon of Pretoria. Pretoria, the capital of the Trans - ie a small city of about 8,000 white nonulation PRJUF .1)0SI't I IT14, The Truth About Backache Proved by Dodd's Kid- ney Pills. Mrs. Katy Lougheed Gives Evidence— No Doubt in the minds octec reo- pie of Staples—Backache is Really Kidney Ache, Staples, Feb. 12.—There is no doubt in the minds of the people of this dis- trict that the contention that back- ache is a symptom of kidney disease, is literally and absolutely correct. If not, how is it that Dodd's Kidney Pills, a kidnoy medicine, cure back- ache? For there is no dispute about it that Dodd's Kidney Pills do cure backache. New cases in this neigh- borhood are coming to light every day. Mrs. Katy Lougheed is ono of the most recent, but there are scores more. It has long been contended that backache is really kidney ache. But up to within ten years ago, when Dodd's Kidney Pills were first given to the world, the fact had never been actually proved. But Dodd's Kidney Pills have turned the theory into a fact. If one has backache one's kid- neys aro out of order, and no amount of medicine which does not act on the kidneys, will do the sliglateet good. How many peope have been crippled with lame back and given up trying to be cured in despair? They were not aware that backache is but a symptom, not a disease. The real backache, about which nobody who ever experiences it can be mistaken, is not au ache of the back at all. It is the ache of disordered kidneys. The kidneys are situated op- posite the small of the back. Thus the pain is termed -Backache. It is no use treating Backache, so called, locally. It is the kidneys that de- mand treatment. That is the reason that Dodd's Kidney Pills have such a reputation for curing, Backache. Mrs. Katy Lougheed, of Staples, writes: "I can highly recommend. Dodd's Kidney Pills as the best thing for lame back that I ever got. I have only used two boxes and they cured me." Alcohol and Plant Life. An ingenious Frenchman, M. Louis Le -vat, recently administered alcohol, through the soil, to a geranium plant for the purpose of observing the effect. It was sufficiently startling. The leaves of the geranium began to turn yellow, and gave off a peculiar etheric odor, symptoms of poisoning appenx- ed, the rootlets turned black and seemed to have been burnt, the circu- lation stopped in the branches, the leaves dropped toward the earth, and in four days the alcoholizecl gerau- ium, which had been a very beautiful plant, was a tottering wreck. Why will you allow a cough to lacerate your throat and lungs and run the risk of filling a consumptive's grave, When, by the timely use of Sickle's Anti-Constimp- tive Syrup the pain can be allayed and the danger avoided. This syrup is pleasant to the taste, and unsureessed for relieving, healing and curing all affections of the throat and lungs, colds, coughs, bron- ehitis, etc.. etc. Rolladen. Take two thin slices of beef from the round; add salt and pepper and pound. Then lay in the centre of each slice a piece of fat bacon. Roll each slice up and tie in shape. Lay in a dripping pan with bits of butter and roast for an hour, basting fre- quently. Remove the string just be- fore serving. People.who are debilitated and who lack energy as a result of overwork, care and anxiety will recover quickly by taking Miller's Compound Iron Pills. How to Use Stale Broad. Soak the bread. with .crusts, in water for a few minutes; beat up one egg with a little milk ; mix with bread which has been strained from the water, and boil for about two hours. Turn out and serve with a little sweet sauce. Some others may be good, bat without doubt Miller's Compound Iron Pills are the best. Lijk2,Ij To Clean 'White S11k. Dissolve some soft soap in water as hot as it can be borne. Rub the silk between the hands in this soapy lather and rinse in tepid water. Then pin it on to a cloth and dry. White brocade may be cleaned veitli thy bread crumbs. A new back for 50 cents. Miller's Kidney Pills and Plaster. Tho Holy City. Jerusalem is now holding but a sha- dow of the magnificent city of ancient times. It is about three miles in cir- cumference and is situated on a rocky mountain. THE eandpor fel OF JOHN LABATT London . I Are undoubtedly THE BEST. Testimonials from 4 chemists, io medals, 1* diplomas. The most wholesome of beverages. Recommended be, Physic:lane. For sale every.' whero. , I . I 1 , • ' • DRUM LANGUAGE. ----- How South African Nativem Send News of the War. Much surprise has been expressed at the quickness with which the natives of South Africa have learned the results ef the recent battles betweeu the Boers and British. These natives know nothing of our methed of telegraphing, and yet when yidtory has been declared for either of the contending parties the news has been flashed with amazing celerity to re- mote parts of the country. The manner in which the news is carried is novel and SENDING WAR NEWS. most interesting. Throughout Africa the natives are expert in the use of what is known as the drum language, and they use it as we use the telegraph and the telephonnarnely, for the purpose of sending a message from one place to an- other. The most important events as well as the daily occurrences in every village are transmitted in this way. In the Kongo region near Stanley falls some of the natives are so skilled in the use of the drums that they can carry on a conver- sation with one another at a great dis- tance just as easily as though they were standing side by side. The chiefs or head men of the various tribes converse daily in this fashion, and thus each quickly learns what has occurred in the sur- rounding districts during the past 24 hours. The drum used for this purpose is fashioned, as a rule, out of a hollow tree trunk, which is covered with the skin of an antelope. In regard to the euickness with which news is transmitted in Africa Peter de Deken, the famous traveler, tells two good stories. While Inspector Five was in control of the station at Basoko he vis- ited one day a distant outpost and found that it would be impossible for heal to reach home until late at night. As he looked forward to a hearty dinner he re- quested a head man who was with him and who was an expert drummer to send word to the station, several miles away, that dinner was not to be served until he returned. The head man drummed. Straightway another drummer repeated his message, and so the news was flashed from point to point until it reached the distant station. When Five reached home at night, he found the table laid and the dinner ready to be served. This was the message his servants had received: "The bula matori (governor or inspector) will be home late in the evening. Don't eat everything up." Mistakes are sometimes made in tele- graphing and telephoning, and Peter de Deken's second story shows that one may blunder also in using the drum language. Inspector Five took several photographs during his stay at Basoko, and on the day of his departure the thought struck him that it would be well to take a pho- tograph of all those natives who from time to time had acted as his domestic servants. Accordingly he ordered a drum- mer to notify them that they were to ap- pear before him at a certain hour in their holiday clothes. The drummer at once sent n message, but what was' Five's sur- prise to find at the appointed hour, not his servants, but all the police of the sta- tion drawn up in front of his residence. The drummer, it seems, had either mis- understood Five or had blundered in sending the message. Instead of sum - mo 'g domestic servants he had sum- moned state servants. A Forgotten Patriot. "In the struggle for national independ- ence Samuel Meredith was one of the wealthiest men in Philadelphia," said a Harrisburg man. "He was, moreover, n personal friend and adviser of President Washington and the first treasurer of the United States. I ran across the old finan- cier's grave last summer near a hamlet called Pleasant Mount, Wayne county, Pa., three miles from any railroad and a quarter of a mile from any highway. It was all surrounded with trees, which have grown to a good size. "I heard about Meredith's grave at the village postoffice and was inclined to disbelieve the story, but after 1 saw the gravestone I was satisfied. Afterward 1 learned that Galusha A. Grow and other congressmen had tried to have a larger monument erected to Meredith's memory. They were not successful, however. "After the war for independence Mere- dith, it seems, secured from Pennsylva- nia a big tract of wild land in the north- ern portion of Wayne county and tried to make something out of it. As near as I can find out, he lost the greater part of his money and died poor and among com- parative strangers. Anyway, his selitary grave le on this lonely hill in northern Wayne, while the bones of many of his associates in the work of founding the republic reeeive high honors. It is only another illustration of the tact that it doesn't take lang for a prominent man to be forgotten.”—New York Tribune. eseessel1/4 (JNLY A WOMAN'S Srl'011Y 13UT 11' WILL WRING' HOPE TQ MANY SILENT SUFFERER:et Nervous Prostration—lieart We81ne55 --Agoulz lug Pains and Misery Snob. as woolen Alone Endure Made the Life of Mrs. l'hos, Sears a Burden. Just a wornan's story. Not strange becauee it happens ev.ery day; not romantic or thrilling, but just, a story of misery and suffering such as, unfortunately, too many wo- men endure in silence. For several years Mrs. Thomas Sears, of St. Catharines, felt her ill- ness gradually but surely gaining a firmer hold upon her system, and ultimately she almost dispaired of recovery. To a reporter who called upon her, Mrs. Sears said: "What I have suffered is almost be yond description. My illness has been gradually growing upon ince and eighteen months ago I found my- self almost helpless. Met nerves wore shattered, my heart weak and my en- tire system seemingly broken clown. I had no Test night or day ;.the little elect) I did get did not refresh mo. was in constant agony, and only a wo- man can understand what I endured as I tried to do my household work. Any sudden noise would frighten ma and leave me in a condition bordering on collapse. At times I experienced attacks of vertigo, and these seemed for a time to affect my memory. The least exertion would leave me al- most breathless, and my heart would palpitate violently. I had no desire for food of any kind, and yet I had to force myself to eat to maintain life. I treated with three clifferent doctors and spent much money int this way, but without avail, and 1 was in a condition bordering on de- spair. I was urgod to try Dr. Wil - Hams' Pink Pills, and in December, 1898, I consented to do so. I first got four boxes and noticed a change for the better after I had finished the second box. When the four boxes were finished there was a great change for the better, and I then procured another half dozen boxes. Before these were all used I was again en- joying the blessing of good health. There can be no doubt of my cure be- cause months have passed since I dis- continued taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and during that 'dens') I have never felt the alightest symptom of the trouble, aud I cheerfully and strongly urge other women who are suffering to use this wonderful medi- cine, feeling sure that it will cure them, as it did me." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a spe- cific for all forms of weakness. The-' blood is vitalized, the nervous system is re -organized, irregularities are cor- rected, strength returns and disease disappears. So remarkable have been the cures performed by these little pills that their fame has spread to the far ends of civilization. Wherever you go you will find the most import- ant article in every drug store to be Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Horse Radish Paste. Mix thoroughly .together one-half cupful each of grated horse radish and fresh butter, half teaspoonful each of salt and sugar and two tea- spoonfuls of • lemon juice. Spread upon circles of brown bread, placing them together in pairs. How's This We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward roir any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Ilad's Catarrh Cure. F. a oiegNoy & To'edo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che ley for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transo alone and thiancially able to carry out any obligation ms de by their Jinn. WEST & Wholesale Druggists,Toledo,0.. WALDING. KINNAN & MARVIN, WIIOIRSRIC Drug- gists, Toledo, 0. I -fall's Catarrh Cure 1+ taken Internally, sat- ing directly ni on the blond ,and mucous sur- faces of the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Testimonials free., Cabbage Pudding. Chop Inc one large head of cabbage, tie in a cloth and steam until done. To each quart of cabbage add two well beaten eggs, one-half cup of cream, two craleers Powdered, a teas-000uftel of salt and a saltspoonful of cayenne. Turn into a buttered dish and bake ten miuutes. Suffer No More. --There are thousands who live miserable lives because dyspepsia .- dulls the faculties and shadows existence (e._ itv‘311,:titis:.: theele ee:so tlii_degofe tdaebplreespei joitiis., OwilileieNhvayartoe being easy to take and :ire mot efficacioue dispel the vapors that beset the victims of among the best Vegetable Pills known, in their action. A trial of them will prove this dieorder is to order there a course of Sauerkraut. For one-half barrel, 125 pounds of cabbage cut very fine, one pint of fine? salt (put in hard wood barrel). First - laver of cabbage and then salt, with ten quarts of luke warm water. Weight it with a two galloa jug filled with water: let it ferment for 20 days, then use. Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. tondo:,'s Rouse Servants. It is estimated that there are 240,- 000 women dm:needle servants in Lon- don, and that 10,000 are always out of situations or changing their placea Worse Than Broken Glom!. tBbr:iiWitrisbehiedyinocineStocuohtrehpas.PA" fhrtijathnillutgltinalg)ouutsethoef VI*7;le'rnalEtrhxopw100drtrieRrso.thr ale ci,hinildgres::ekulf. The Congo region exports about 8,000,000 walking sticks a year. "Good reason why—those Boers are such clever marksmen that they can punctitre a tire at 2,000 yards."—Cleve Irina Plain Dealer.