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Flesherton Advance, 30 Aug 1894, p. 7

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CANADA'S TRADE WITH BRITAIN. sir : ov.n. rer Ike Flri Halfaf TUI tear AaM*>l I* wverTkree Millies) n.illar. Jere Than Vlrl Hairer l.i Ve*r. Notwithstanding that British imports for but month and for the preceding half-year how a falling off by comparison with those of the corresponding periods in 1893, the aggregate value of those from thi* country continues lo increase. Our export* to the United Kingdom during the first half of the present year amounted to above three million dollars more than those of the first half of last year. This gain is lo be credited chiefly to our cheese, cured fish.eud lumber. Chee*e and lumber continued the improve- ment throughout July, but fish fell aw%y. In bacon and flour our export* to the United Kingdom for the tint seven months of this year surpau those of the first seven months nf last year, both in value and quantity, ibe gain in bacon alone being $360,000. But of live stock, wheat and hams, Britain took very much less from Cmada in the firet seven month* of this year than she did in that part of 1803. The value of our beef cattle sent forward shows a decline of 1KARLY HALF A MIIJ.WX Dol.i-ARS from the figures ot the former period. Yet, though we have loet ground under this head, the United Stale* has gained, its sales of beef cattle on the British market being nearly twice as great during the seven months just past as they were in the same months last year. The British im- port* of live stock show great expansion, the** up to the tint of August aggregating about ten million dollar* more this year than they did last. The fal.mii off in our live slock imports wa* not therefore due lo both year* the order SOLDIER ANTS *nmr 4d<1lll,,>.,l Koiunn. Tales of Tli.-lr fcnrrnr rt iBlMIU'urr. When the question is put to us, "Which do you consider tho most resistless of all animals V it is always safe to reply that if warlike manifestations are referred to, the noldier or driver ants ire far away the most terribly invincible creatures with which we can be brought in contact. M. Coillard, a French missionary in the Barotse Valley of South Central Africa, thus write* of these terror* there : One see* them busy in innumerable battalions, ranked and discip- lined, winding along like a broad, black ribbon of watered silk. W hence come they ' Where are they going? Nothing can stop them nor can any object change their route. If it is an inanimate object, they turn i t aside and pass on ; if it is living, they awail it venomously, crowding one on top of th other to the attack, while the main army paase* on, businesslike aud silent. I* the obstacle a trench or a stream of water ' Then they form themselves at it* edge into a compact mass. Is this a' deliberating aMembly ? Probably, for soon the msss stirs and move* on, crosses the trench or stream, continues in its incessant and mysterious march. A multitude of these soldiers are sacrificed for the common good, and these legions, which know not what it i* to be beaten, pass over iLe corpses of these victims to their destination. Against tneee tiny enemies no man, nor band of men, no lion or tiger, nor even a herd of elephant*, can do anything bat hurriedly get out of the way. Among the Karoise natives a favorite form ot capital punish- ment is to com the victim with grease and tnrow him before the advancing army of "oldier ant*. The quickne** with which the a lack of demand. In requiring the slaughter of our oattle upon ' Por wretch ii> despatched is marvellous landing was in force. One large element m ; when it is considered that each ant can do the increase ot BritUh imports of livestock : nothing more than merely tear out small is to be found under the entry of sheep, j particle of flesh and carry it oif. Yet m a The value of the sheep and lamb* entered *urpris'ngly fhorttime the writhing victim in the last seven months is about ten time, will have been changed into a skeleton of that of tho-e entered in the same months ! ole*n and polished bones that will make the of the year before. Canada share* little in trained auatomut envious. the benetit of this increase. And the staple | All are familiar with the tale* of how commodity in whu-n we have not half kept ! these armies of ant* enter a tropical village up to last year's mark is wheat. From the and take entire possession ot it. driving ita tint of the year to the first of August our wheat shipments to Britain showed a fal- ling off m quantity ot a quarter of a million hundredweights, and 'u value of about f 1 70,000. This retrogression i* notable, for oar export* of wheat during the same part of 1 893 were not above the average. Our low was small compared with that of tbe United States, whose shipment* to Britain during the seven month* DaVLIXKD TIN MILLION IMH.L vH. below I'DOM of the aarae period last year. This was undoubtedly a consequence of the stagnation caused by tariff revision, a stagnation whose effect* we did not escape, a* our wheat export* show. Strike* also cost the United States some of its British wheat trad*, as they interfered with de- livery. The decline in British import* from North America wa* uounterbalanje.i by the increase ot those from other countries. Russia took advantage "' tnt> situation to end forward about two and a half tin.es a* much wheat a* *he did last year, during the tint seven months of which she suppli- ed Britain with three and a half million hundredweights, while during the last seven months her contribution to the British market wa* eight and three quarter million hundredweights. Turkey and Ar- gentine also placed larger quantities on the British market. But while a greater part of the British demand for wheat and live slock is falling to other countries, we have more than held our own in dairy product*, ftsh, lumber, and timber. In lumber and inhabitant* out in terror, and at last in a few hour* or a day or two abandoning 11 clearer thau the art* of the mo*t orderly housekeeper oould ever make it. Thee are not travellers' tale*. The must gifted pen must fail to give an adequate idea to the uninitiated of just how thorough and searching theee creature* are in ridding a house of every bit of animal or vegetable matter in it. Perhaps, however, the nar- ration of the following bit of personal experience may help to illustrate it. I had returned from a day's tramp in the hills, laden with trophies in the shape of tropical insect*, some of them, perhaps, new to the eye* of scientist*, and all of curium value, when I was called out of my house by trn cry, " The driver ants, the driver ant* !" Hastily placing mo*t of my collections m glass jar* and tin boxes, so a* to be out of the reach of the invaders, and gathering uch clothes a* I would need for a day or i.wo, 1 made a rath -r undignified retreat. Afttr I bad done so I remembered that I had left some rare bees pinned in a box that was in a pocket of my collecting coal, bnt a* the coat had been placed in a strong chest and thi* chest was heavily scented with naphthalin or " tar camphor," and the lid fitted down very tight. I felt that they were safe. Tho next morning when I went back, after a night spent in my hammock in a tamarind tree I found that of a bunch of banana*, con- sisting of a thick stem and about on* hun- dred of the fruit, there wa* no trace whatever, aave the dangling string with which it had timber our export* increased for th* last I been hung from the ceiling ; and not a ves- **ven months by above two million dollars. ' tige of br^ad, chjcolate, coffee and other But, in spite of the fact that our total , eatable odd* and end* oould be found on the export* continue to increase, and that a thoroughly cleaned shelves on which some reduction has been made in our tariff, our | food had been left. Even the cracks between import* of British goods show a falling off j the floor board* had been cleaned oat the in woolen ti.su**, worsted fabric*, and in j particles of edible matter having been car- ruvi away or devoured and the mere dust left where it oould easily be swept away. This was not so bad, for a good cleaning ' never hurts a house in the tropic*, but when I cam* to examine my cheat and found that a hole quit* two inches in diameter had been lorn in one end through an inoh board of bard wood, that the box in my ooat pocket had also been pierced and every one of the pins on which my beetle* had been arranged stood in place a* empty and clean a* when taken out of the paper? I iron particularly. In her pig iron exports to this country Britain has been steadily receding for some years. Tbe low price* ruling in the United States are one cause and the production of our own iron is an- other. Should the Two Navies Combine ? The United State* resemble* (ireat Brit- ain in not being obliged to maintain a dis- proportionately large standing army, says tbe Fortnightly Review. It resembles it also in having a great number of son* who have a peculiar aptitude for the sea life. It is, therefore, in the ultili/.ation of sea power in it* various aspect* that the two countries may beat co-operate) and assist one another in the future. If they were to cove, a* they surely will come, to an un- derstanding to employ their combined naval foroes for the preservation of general peace and for the forwarding of the common in threats, few countries, no matter how bel- ligerantly inclined, would care to defy the alliance, even now : and none would dare to question itr will after it ha* rearranged it* force* in frank recognition of all its responsibilities. It is net merely that tbe combined navie* would be strong. Tar more weighty are the considerations that the British Empire and the United State* share between them nearly all the work of providing other countries with the food, raw material, and manufactures which those countries oannot provide at horn*, and of carrying the ocean- borne trad* of the world. The interests of your ever- growing oommerce require the maintenance if not of peace, at least of open port* every- where. why should not your combined navie* declare : " We refuse henceforth to acknowledge the right of any civilized power to close her port*, or the ports of another power, by blockade, or otherwise, " Surely that would sound the knell of war. An Impossibility. Housekeeper I'll 'give you ll you want to eat if you 11 tack down this carpet. Tramp Uo I wan m* all Couldn't mum. If you'd give t to eat I'd have to stand up. had a better idea of th* thoroughness of the*e tiny icavengen than ever before. Bismarck's Daily Life. Princ* Bismarck's life at Varzin, a Berlin correspondent, say*, is marked by the ut- most regularity. Shortly sfter nine o'clock he rise* and takes a bath immediately, a* prescribed by hi* physician. He then breakfast*. About a quarter to twelve he goes for a walk in the park till about half- past twelve, being accompanied by his two dogs, Tyre* and Rebecca. Lately, pointing to these, the prince said in a rather mourn- ful tone, " You we everything around me i* growing old my dogs, my hones, and, alas ! my nearly beloved wife alao." The Princess ha* been suffering for the past few year* with an asthmatic trouble. She i* now convalescent from a series of fainting attacks, but must still keep to her bed. A recent visitor to Var/.m says that Prince Bismarck walk* more slowly and i* more bent than in fonm-i yean. On the whole. however, few of tne affliction* of age are to be noticed in him. When ihe Prince has ended bis walk he take* a substantial lunch, giving preference to cold fowl, era In and the like. When the wenher i* favorable he takes a drive in the afternoon, which at time* last* three hour*. On his return dinner i* served. Regularly at eleven o'clock the I'rmoe retire* to bed. He deep* much better now than in former years, a* he i* not so tormented by neuralgic pains. Why he didn't rhojly "Did you eveh study Kwenjh " Algy "No. Fwenoh isn't English, yeh know." THE HARVEST RETURNS. A field Abeve ihe Average TbroHuhani Ike I ! In- runulr.1 Haullaiui'- OrHrlul Crop SUpurl. One of the favorable *i $ns of the times is the excellence of the harvest this year. Throughout the entire country the yield in all depart menu ha* exceeded tbe average, and save where, through the heavy rains in the early part of the season, the crop* were drowned, there have been no losses to speak of. The failures were all in the low- lying lands, and the** were speedily resent- ed, so thai Ihe disappointment was, in the end, not so great a* might have been expected. Manitoba, which is alwsys a centre of interest, not only becauae it* yield strike* the keynote for the North-NX est, but for the reason lhat upon it* ability to buy rest* to a vei y large extent the prosper ity of the Hast, appears, according to the official crop report, jusl issued, lo have shared fully in the favor* of the year. Thi The wheat yield is placed ai 15.700,000 bush els; the yield ol oat* at 12.197,000; and that of barley at J.lv.'.iKKi. It is impossible to contemplate il.ese figures wilhout reflecting upon the remarkable growth of iheprovmce, so far at least a* it* production* are concern- ed. There has been, of course, a counder- I able increase in population, from 1S.OOO ' in 187 ( the inhabitants have grown in number to o-.'.OOO in 1881, to 1.V2.000 in I 1891, and, on the authority ot ihe muuici- ! pal officials to 192.COO in 1X94. That there should have been an augmentation of 40,000 in the past three yean i* A TKIPf.K STAKTUNc:, seeing that the immigration figure, do not point to any such result. But it is possible that many of the new settlen were from the older part* of Canada, although the Interior Department has reported that ihe movement from Ontario to th* West ha* been checked. Probably 1891 and 1892 saw the last for the prevent half of the decade of the progress weatward from the older communities. The result* of the labor* of the population, old aud new, will bear a contract with the former harvest returns. In wheat the past teu year* shows a very large advance. The yield of 1884) wa* bul LOW, 000 bushel*. In 1890 Ihe return was Iti.iHJO.UGO bushel*. Thi* latter figure is .'OH), < KJO bushels more thau was grown this summer. Two circumstances have effected ' the change. One i* the fact lhat the yield of I H9 1 .' was abnormally large. It averaged sixteen and a hall bushels to the acre, whereas the 1894 crop aveiaged fifteen and a half bushel*. The second factor i* the divenion of energy to other clause* of production. Thus there ha* been an in- ' creaae from I.4A2.INM) bushels in 1H9I to _', I .vj.000 bushels m 1894 of barley, and an increase in oat* of from S, 740,000 bushels in the former year to 12.100.000 in ihe Utter Simultaneously a "onmclerable development ha* been effected in live ctock. There are rwil THOl'SAND MORE IIOBSE8 lhan formerly, and cattle have increased by III, 716 in the year. Sheep are stationary, but swine have increased from 53,000 in Is'.M to rJS.OOO in 1894. The additions to ' the live slock serve to show thai i. diver 1 urination is gradually taking place in the character of NVeaiein agriculture. This ' change would be gratifying did it prove nothing more than that the farmer* are ceasing to rely upon one particular class of production, but it i. additionally so in lhat 11 proclaims ihe ability of ihe West to oar- '' ticipate in line* which in 'he old days the critic* regarded a* unsuitable to the country. ! It wa* supposed once that live stock could ; not thrive in the climate of Manitoba, but it i* clear now that the conditions are altogether favorable. It seem* lhal the cattle development U the result, in a large degree, of the re*ori to dairying, which i* i found to be profitable lo thoso who engagn in it on a scientific basis. Thi. year's ex- perience dispels all illusions with reference to the Western province and the Western territories. Nature, at leait, has done well, and is doing well, for both. But circumstance* point to ihe necessity for governmental care in all dealings with matters of trade and transportation. A large yeild is one thing ; a good financial return is another thing. The Australian Administrations, it i* important to note, dinxt their aitenMon very largely lo the latter consideration. THEY SURVEY THE WURI.D. with a view lo finding profitable market* and cheap and favorable route* to the con- timers. Certain of these Government* actually bouiued the butler indiutiy with a view to introducing Australian bulter into the English market. The enterprise ha* been successful, and it is reported now that the Antipodean article, carefully done up in tins, is sold in South Africa and even in (^nada. The lubsidizmg of the cheese industry 1* another Australian pro- cedure to which we cannot afford to be) blind. Supplementary to thu bonuses are the effort* to secure cable and steamship communication via Canada to Kngland. The cable is expected to reduoe the cost of business transactions by telegraph, and the steamihip tin* is to carry frozen food from one end of th* world to the other at a cheap rale. Bonuses no one care* to ad- vocate. It is better M oh tapen production than to subsidize it. But in the face of the Australian bonus** and the Australian effort* to secure a firm foothold in Britain through cheapened communication and less costly and more rapid transportation, we mult b* up and doing. Canada must reduoe her own transportation rales in pre- ference to ihoae of Auslralia, and seeing lhat the live mock irade is temporarily and perhaps permanently checked, we mutt look to cold storage as a factor in trade with Britain, IMMIGRATION PROSPECTS. The Krperu from Tkls Mdr Have Clvr a 1 tlrrk I* KMlcraMI**). The British emigration return* show tbat from January I to July :tl of thi* year 77,- ".ii, person* left the I'uiteil Kingdom as against 130,52* during the same period last A GRATEFUL GIRL. The Kxprrlrmrr ef >t > Lauly la trval vTb* I:\IMTIPII le k>lr ..> *i>r U r Wa* - i >!. From l..il'aine. Montreal. The full duty of a newspaper is not sim- ply to convev " * to it readers, but to ive sucn information a* will be of value lo i g year. South Africa alone attracted more [ t| lem lu tt || walks of life, nod this, we take immigration, the figure* for the 1'iiiled State* falling from !W,872 to50,372, Canada from 1(1,07.') to Ui,:il, and Auitrslia from ~i,.Y-7 to 4,904. Canada ha* undoubtedly suffered from the report* of the severe busi- new depression in the States, "America" being a vague general expreuion in the it, includes the publication of such evidence as will warrant those who may unfortun- ately be m poor health giving a fair trial to the remedy mat has proved of lasting benefit to othen. LaPalrie having beard of the cure of a young lady living at 147 St. Charles Uorrome street, of more than ordinary intenMl, determined to make an i investigation of the case with a view to minds of the emigrating cla*ws in tne old Igjvmg it* readers the particular*. The dresssd, and country, where a surprising amount of ignorance of Canada and it* attain still prevails. The ularmini; reports sent over the Atlantic from ihe State* and from the wheat-growing diilricts of the West on both side* of the line have given a decided check to emigration generally. The work- inumen of (ire*i liniam are begmping to think llial they are better off where they are. The well-orgauixed and wealthy irade* unions now excrcine tremendous power and reporter's knock at the door ' by a young person neatly showing all the appearance of good health. "I came to inquire," sail the reporter, " , un'-crning the young lady cured by the use ot l)r. William*' Pink Pills." In thai oaae it must be myself," said the young tirl smiling, " for I have been very sick and laid up with heart diseaatt, and some months ago thought I would soon sleep in Cote de* Neiges uemetery. Won't i.Hcure good conditions of labor and a fair | you oome , m ,\ ,j t a own .4,4 I will tell rate of wages. Rent i* low, and clothes and vou A \\ a bout it?" other necessities of life cheap. The agn Xhe young girl, whose name is Adhenne cultural laborer, by joining the industrial Sauve, is about 19 years of age. Sheetated ranks in lot, greal cities at home, thinks he j lnEl some yuan ago she became ill, and secure* better prospects for himself and his gradually thq disease took an alarming children than bv taking up land m the un ara*-t*r. She wa* pale and lutlees, her West, in view of the pressure of the blood wa* thin and watery, (be could not agricultural population on the labor mar- i Wll jfc ( a8t> coa \A not |j m b SUl j r , or do in keu of the citmn, and ihe outcries of the I f iC , an y work requiring exertion. Her employe* agaiual ire lyrauuy oi the unions, it ii a question whether this state of t.'iing* can continue long, but for the present, in detault of special inducement* on this side and special incentives at borne, it is evident that only a moderate number of immigrants can be expected. heart troubled her *o much and the palpi- tation* were so violent as to frequently prevent her from sleeping at night, her lip* were blue and bloodleas, and she WA* subject to extremely severe headache*. Her condition made her very unhappy for, bring an orphan, she wanted to be of help to the relations with whom she lived, but instead was becoming an incumliran< e. Having read of the wonder* worked by Dr. ! \VilliamsTink Pills, Miss Suave determined The Price of Wheat Sir William Van Home's recent pre- n diction regarding the price of wheat does | togive thema trial.' After uaing on* or two not harm jni/.e with the calculations made j box** an* began to revive somewhat and by the London Economic In considering I '"- '">"" * ^^ 8h '" b l * r . 8 ; the color began to return to her cheeks, the harvest* of Hurope and America it ; ,,, . new h(;ht .. , n ner . ye . Tm . finds that in the I'niied Kingdom the crop encouraged her so much that shedetermm willbebonntiful,but.inadiminishedacreage, d to continue the treatment, and toon the so that the total yield will be only ti,00;i, ( N> heart palpitation, and spasm, which bad mad* her life miserable pssssd away, m. i bushels greater lhan last yes r. The French ine WM BO |, , aaist once more in the harvest is unusually large, nay 32(1. OOO, (too household labor. To-day she feels a* bushels in all. In Spain, Portugal, Italy, > young and as cheerful as any other young (iermany, Holland, and Helium there is a and healthy girl of her a<e. She is very considerable irain over laat year. In A us- thankful for what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done for her, and feels lhat she oa:i not too highly praise that marveUmi* remedy. Indeed her OA*F points a mem of rescue toall other young girls who find that health's root* have rtowv from their cheeks, or who are tired on siifc a eiertion. subject totitaof nervousoe**, headaches ai,. I tria-Hungary and ihe neighlionng conn- tries there i* a considerable deficiency as compared with last year, and the *ame may may be said of Russia also, bul the r- port* from the latter country are conflict- ing. The rrve*t of the United State* i* put somewhere about 4. r >O,OUO,liOO bush- els. It* con hnion is that "both Europe palpitation of the heart. In all such and America will probably produce lets Dr. NVilliam*' Pink Pill* are an unfailing than the quantities grown in 1893 ; but un- cure. Sold bv all dealers or sent by mail less other parts of the world fall oft greatly postpaid: at M oent* a box or six bvxe* the total production can hardly fail below for 4-..VI, by ajdrewing the l)r, William* a year'* consumption, while there are still Medicine Company, Brock vi lie, OnU, or remnants of :he great accumulations of tbe Schen>-otady, N. Y. Beware of imitation* last three yean to clear off, so that there and substitutes alleged u> be "just a* good." i* nothing at present to indicate anv sub- tantial wheat." improvement in the price of A Well Disciplined Man. Army discipline is supposed lo be very stricl indeed, and orders musl be obeyud swiftly and silently. The beet disciplined The Camphor Tree. While camphor was formerly produced in Sumatra, Borneo and other part, of th. 1 llller ever ln the Ru " 1M> army ll ~ d '" liast Indies, all now known to Ihe trade 1T " He w- * tl 1 Mnn th ' door of come, from Japan and Formoa,. The cam ! " P' 1 *" durin ' htM ' flood ' wh ~ tb " phor tree is a large ev.rgr~n.ol symmetrical Bmpre*. seemgfron-. her balcony that the I water had reached the sentinel, called to proportion*, somewhat resembling a linden. hiin to retire- Tni , th , .oldier refused It bears a white flower which ripen* into a red berry. Some of the trees are fifuen feet in diameter and live to a great age. A group of trees in the province of Toosa, about a ct.tuiy old, are estimated to be equivalent to about forty thousand pounds of crude camphor. The camphor is extract- ed from chip* taken from the root* or from the stem near the roots the wood yielding about 5 per cent, of camphor and the root a lw)m to rehe larger proportion The annual export of ] lnat Ulne Japan camphor average* about :>,(MMi,iKKi { M1 ,| to to do ; and when the Empres* asked if he knew who she wa*, the man lepliad affir- matively. Although he knew her Majesty he would not leave hi* post unlil his cor- poral relieved him. Th* water increased until it reached the sentinel'* knee*. The Kmpress sent several message* to him, but he refused lo obey her. Finally she wa* compelled to summon the corporal, who wa* found asleep, and he wa* obliged to the honest private, who by only bis head above water. pounds. The forest* in Japan owned by i Mlt the Number of Shingles NeedtxL Anyone may easily calculate) for himself how many shingles are needsxl to cover a given space. As a rule, a thousand shingles laid with four inches exposed to the weath- er will cover lOUequare feet of surface, and five pound* of shingle nans will fasten them on. With a foot rule and five minutes' figuring anybody can ascertain the expense ot a new roof. the people are now almost denuded of timber, but the Government slill possesses large woods nf camphor trees, which it is estimated, will maintain a full average sup- ply of the gum for the next twenty -five years. Plantations of young tree* are also making and are well taken oar* of, and, although camphor has not hither to been extracted from tree* lea* than teventy or eighty yean old, it is expected that undor the present intelligent manage- ment equally good result* may l>e realized in twenty-five or thirty years. The Japan- I): ,/t.rtment of Kom*te, whioh ha* the control of ihese management. woods, is under good A Speaking Watch. To the ingenuity of inventors there ii hardly any limit. It would, however, be a mistake to say that all inventions, whether the bud of blossom, are as desirable, practically speaking, an they may be ingen- ious in conception. We read, for instance, lhat a watchmaker at Ueoevs propose* lu make a chronometer which will speak, in stead of ringing the lime, when tbe button is pressed. He hat devoted a great deal of patient study lo his invention, the speak- ing process being produced by mean* of a mall revolving phonographic plate in which pre**e* a small piece of steel. The vibration, resulting give rise to words de- noting tbe exact time. On the perfection nf invention, of thi. claw thai i. to y. of what'may be called the curious rathei than the useful order much time and study are spent without, it appear* to us, much com- pensating advantage. A speaking chro- nometer would certainly be a curiosity m it* line, but nothing more, sino* all most people want to know is the exact time, and whether they are apprised of the hour by ringing or by words matters little. The (jeneva watchmaker i* said to have grown wasted and worn in the pursuit of hi* hob- by the production of a perfect-speaking timepiece which he ha* not yet succeej*o in making. ,,,,;,, oompotiedly have suffered him- M drowned rather than disobey orders while obeying his sovereign. Beef Pie. A great meat pie is " hearty" and taste- ful. Make tbe pa*te as follow* : Chop four ounce* of beef suet and put in a stow-pan with tbe same quantity of butter and a pint of water ; when boiling pass through a sieve into two pound* of flour snd stir wi'b a spoon until oool ; roll out and line a large earthen pudding dish with ik Fill the centra with Masoned and figured strip* of rump (teak alternately with layer* of thinly slioed potatoes ; cover with some of the pa*t, make a bole in the centre and bake thrm imura and a half in a moderate oven. Make gravy from bone* and pour in when the pie i* don*. - ^ A Back Number. Sunday School teacher "What i. char- ity !" 'Bov "It's a feeling that folks used to have before tramp. got so thick." That Tired Feeling Tli" niurkeil benefit which people overcome Thai I Ip-il I-'nclliiK <!rmv from Hood'* Sar- .'ji:iii!ln, ronrliiM' ly prmtx tli, it tH> nielli <lil" M..lkr the Wi-Hk itronc." .1 II. Itaiertiin, a well known nii'ii haul ol Aniililii. M.nm ". \lMiut tlvn yrart a(u ; lic-rn to HiiIrT with M'r fait. 1*1 m. MieiMcli, Ri-IMl- tially KIIIV. mi; Mnrae. I look Hixxl't Snrsjipa- rllla, Ix-MIK lOIIMIIIi'il thai 1 was troubled with O>pt>|iii oompll- iMlnl with Liver nurt Kiilur, lunlhlio I llllplllM'll :tt OIHT alKI .1111 ' ' I lilllllj M IV Illlirtl In -tin ami feel more like working. ..-rood's SarsapaHlla Mr. .1. U. I in. inn. Most any man will take advice if there's medicine in it. *!v>ay* it to any one stilln INK * I did." HOOD'S PlLL8 """ Habitual CiiiiktlpatUiii lir ;.. u ,.rltUlU<:actiouu(Uieallmeiitai; oauaL

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