Upon the duced at the I luted ve,sHels, ^•~' I dLminution of A VERY STRIKING REDUCTION IS ture. THE UENEHAL DEATH RATE Increased heat pro- peripbery in the di- tbere often fulluws a the general temiiera- SHOWN BY FIGURES. Far thea« reasons warm baths have been ordered in (ever ditieanes aa de- rlvativpji againHt ezuduUonu, to favor All Aae •• B«i(rrU>:<lcurâ€" |l(llli)r uf Witra j rtjHurption. They have ({iven gcjod re- Water la NediclMc. IIh Dvubte Arilan | sulUi in cerebral meningitui, io oedema ama K«->< atii-Biaeli aail Kcri Ksx»> cambine<l with nephritis, bronchitis and /-I t .i. 1 t u., „ „ pneumonia, rheumatism and sciatica. OWrvance of the rules of hygiene [l^^n^^ ^„j^ ^^e form of com- bos for ixs result the decrease oi mor- presats, warm waJer is advantageous taiity, writes a correspondent. In ev- , un cerebral apt^lexy, in certain ery coaniry statisticuins have taken i forms of conjunctivitis and in aicit pleasure in ahow.ng ihe results obtain- | ^„ affeciU>n» of the heart, prud- ed ijy iitiuse^. Sir Joeeph Ewart has { enoc in the use of wtiirm baihs is nec- pjoved beyond dispute tuat in liingland j essary. partiiiul^xrly the death rate was losver- ^ surgery warm water is used es- ^.. ., . ' , , . peeiaily in parenohymal<jus . hemorr- •d, that the moiiahty caUi*d oy cer- hages, but it is effective only when ap- taio special diseases bus dlmiuiiibed, { plied to contractile organs. Lt pro- aiid LiLaL there is a disappearance or, | Juces excellent results in the treat- al the lea^t, a very areat reduction. â- . °^'»' "^ spr^iined or crushed limbs It .~ , . ft. J e><^o .«..»». , I jj^j^ marvellously on atonic aores.which in the deii.th rata of some mala- I it excites to cicatrization, on boils di4». I and anthrax. It limits the inflamma- Thus, from 1858 to 1860, and during '^'"'> »°'l circumscribea purulent al>- the following five year perioils, ending WLLh tba.t of 1891-1890, the death rate per thoa:>a.nd from all diseases amount- ed to 22.iJ, 25.58, tiAl. il.aB. :10.79. 19.- 40, 18.yu and ii)M. Ana it must be no- ticed that of late years influenza has •welled the death rate. it is particularly the death rate of cities that has diminished, i'hus, from 1861 to 1870, fur every lUU deatbo in the country there were 126 in the towDSi from 1891 to 1893 the proportion | them in almost tb« same and scesaes when it does not completely stop suppuration. For all these reasons the use of warm water in therapeutics cannot be too highly recommended. BLACK AND aED EXXiS. There is noC, so far aa I know, any aliment more appre<;iated than eggs. Their value is known to all. Like milk, they offer to digestive action, un- der a simple form, albuminoid matter Snffeped from Infaney. THE WAND OF MERCY WAVED OVER MRS. THO.s. GREEN. Frum Her I'liildliuad .â- <lie AulTerrd fram â- cart Trouldo-Uorlork Milai .\aililBK (iiuUI Br UuD« r<ir Hrr, uiiil ibul Her Itrmli al .4ar Mrnueut Mauld .^ut >iur- pri»t Tkrm. From thd HeraJxl, Stratford. "Of the m;ikiii45 of Ijooki there is no eo'l," it bos b«:en said, and the same clujm might bt> set up In respect fji the making of te«CimoniiUs in favor of Ur. Willuuns' Pink PilU. Won.lerful â- dm are soone of tihe statements |Hib- liiibed in the newspapers as bo the cures effected in all parts of the coujitry, fresh evitlence proves the h<ilf has not yet been told. \\ ere it "not for a false sense of delii^acy which a great many people entertain in regard toaui-h mutterti the columns of the preoK would be literally teeming with grateful acknuw^edgment^ of lienefit derived from and permajient cures effected by Lhe use of Ur. <\Villiajiui' Pink Pills for Faie People. It is kiuite within the ouixk to say that there is no other mediciae offered the public thMt can at all cumpara with Dr. WLliiaius' Piuk Pills, aaad tibere is not a comer in this wide Dominion im. which their virtueti have not lieeu proved. A cure which rece^itlv came A COE&ET FOR SWIiOXERS. A flannel bathing corset, imported from France, is one of the luxuries which womeji appreciate, for. notwith- standin(r all the preaching of the phy- sical oultiirists. no woman with an ex- cess of avoirdupois can afford to risk her appearance in a loose l;athing suit without stays of some kind. Many wo- men wear the ordinary linen corset, with steels, bat this is a poor practice, for several reasons. The principal ol>- jectiun is the fact that the steels rust after Che first wearing. Besides this, the corset that is made for ordinary wear is too stiff and harsh to admit of the motionii necessary in swimming. The flannel corset is stiffened with doutde sets of whalebonesâ€" that is, two whalebones sewed together in each groove. It is made of cream white French flannel, which is soft and warm for baihuig. There is no steel in front and the corset is fastened in ihe back wilJi straps sewed on each edge of the back anti slipped through a slit on the opposite edge. The straps, alter be- ing passed through the slits are brought down and fastened with but- ixjn and buttonhole in front. It requires the very best shrunk flannel and is made double. Una and a half yards is emough to make it nnd - . I "^ '^ knowledge of a reprectentative ! for a pattern one has only to tut one . tu„'^*'*^v'"^?5_'^^ sa^ta, similar . of the Herald in deserviiag of being j from a dxess waist or from one's ordm- was only 100 to 113. The progress of urban hygieneâ€" street paving, sew- erage, drainage, belter drinking waterâ€" accounts for these favorable re- aulu. From 1858 to 18iiO the death rate trom suiallpox was 219 per mUliuO' in- habitants. It has fallen to '^i during the period 1891 to 1893 Between the â- ome periods there is a reduction from 792 to 191 deattw per mtllion from the group of fevers, inclusive of typttoiid fever, typhus wul Bume other ill defijied continuous fever. From 1871 to 1875 the typhoid mor- Ulity was 378.8 per million, from 1891 to 1894 it fell to 135.^. The muaicipal nieaaures taken to provide pure drink- ing wateiT in the towns, and the watch k«pt upoo milk are in great parti the to those which enter into the composi tion of the blood. Albumen is found in fatty matter in a larger proportion than in the muscular meat of the ox. Con- sequently, there are united, in one aliment, substances which play an im- portant and very general role in the economy ol life, h^fgs present all the characteriiitics of a complete aliment, capable of furnishing formative mater- ial to all the tissues of the hiunau economy, even the osseous tis- ane. T'he eggs most used for food are those of the hen, and, more rarely, those of the guinea fowl, the duck, the turkey and the plover. The quality of the eggs varies somewhat according to the food eaten by the bird, and to which must be ascribed the black col- oring that may be observed in ducks' eggs, and the red tint that may be seen in hens' eggs. As every one knows, eggs are com- widely luio.\n. It is an instance of lifart trouble that baffled the skill of a number of {>h,>'mcianB, some of whom |M»sitively ret used to treat the patient on Uhe ground, that it waa no use. The sul>ject ol ihe affliction referred to is the wife of a faigbly r-spected and weil-to-do farmer u ih lowushij) of Logan, near the village of Dublin. Mr. and Mra. rhoe. Ureen are firiii be- lievers in the efficacy of Dr. Williams' Pink Piiis, and for very g<x>d reasons. Ura. Green had suf fei^l everything but death from a weak heart, the trouble hiaving afflicted her smce early child- hood. On several occasions she has been so low that it was not thought possible for her to recover. Hier grettx- j est trouble often arose from exhaustion ] or a sudden start, and at such limes hier heart seemed tocease its throbbing ; aud the breathing was fitful and i liibored. Doctor's medicine seemed to I have no effect whatever. .She was ad- ary corset, taking care, however, to make the one tor bathing aliout two sizes larger than that for oniiuarj pur- puses. Make grooves for the whale- bones in the same places a^ in bther corsets, omitting tie steel in front, sewing in gtissets to support tlie busts. At the back between the doulile row of whalebones on each edge, make an up and down slit like a buttonhole, about two and and a half inches long, to admit of the strap. The strap is not ENGLISH ROTHSCHILD. iHlrrritllss itiory ui (ke Head of tbr Vaai- <â- â- « faSiilT. The greatest financial genius «if- Ch« Rothschild family, though they huv« been many of great talent, wa.t .Vsi'liaa Mayer, of th£ secouul tjemerauun, wiM established the house of \. M. Hotbs- uhiid & Co., is I7u8, in Loudou .HjeVlew to the stars aud groveled la t«tfcs mud tot iiiooey. Ue welcomed all trausiacti tluos, big or little, w herewith to bur^ the banker's penny. Ue was the jnoet daring speculator of his time on the StOL'k Kxuhituge luid Uie most Micces*- ful. He had rirrujr-pigeons au»i last- sailing boats to bring hiui the earlieit new.s from the war centers of Kuri'jw, and do help hun to manipulate stocks. He followed Wellungtoa's army to H'a- terlixj in person au I ha I reiuya oi tlfas swiftrst horses, and a fast yaiht ly- ing in the harbor at Ostund. So he arrived at the Loiuion oum-Jl Exchange after the battle, Li hours aheail of an/ public announcnment of the victory, made £5.U0a,t)0lJ by one of the mont tre- lueiidous series of speculations in his- tory. In 181U, vrhaa uhe Duke of VVeJ.. lingtoo. then commanding in Spaia, drew o'n the English Uuveroment fos £3.U00,(K)0, and the English Freasury was srhort Nathau Ixjughi the tirafte at a big discount and at once sent the money. The stories about thii* remark- able man are aimcst esLlless, and ."how how strangely he was aiike equal U> the most tremendous s<'hemes and t]i0 pettiest tricks of avarice. HIGH-TONED BURGLAR. â- e Urr^vrd Kauitlpwil; aiiil Lltrd tn »â- â- •». luuMK .kparUHrsU Is Parl». There have been burglars in evening dress before, on the stage, for instance, but the Paris police say there was never one wuh such a distinguished air sewed directly to the edge of the cor- i ur aristocratic residence. He had set, but IS secured with a gusset form- | d^j^^ ^^j Duchesses for next^oor ed of tihree small straps. A ixfue out- Now these glands are very rich in | Piok Pills. »b« had not been taking tannin and the yolk is rich in ironâ€" r tbein long, horuevei, where there was the chemical combination of these two i an unmistakable relief from the trouble results in tannate of iron, which pro- that had made her whole life miser- duces ink, the good black ink of olden able. Luring the past summer she has days. used Pink Pill.s freely, .in'! has enjoy- No explanation has yet been given, | e<l better health than for many years to my knowledge, at any rate, of the before. an<i has liten abie n<,i <>niv to fact that hens fed on crayfish shells, | di* her household work, Imi also niany which they like immensely, lay eggs of the ou* door chorti* Uiat fall to the the yellow of which has a bright red coloring. Uut that is a fact placed be- yond douJat by experience. Are these black or red eggs offensive? I do not think the euliug of them should cause any injury to the health; but 1 do believe that they axe of in- lot of a farmer's wife. Ihe different physHcians who have treated her have frequentlfy told her husl>and that they wxmid Hot l«surjiriseil to hear of her death at any miHueiit. Init she is to-day a stn>ng wotuau, enjoying Ijetter health than she has done for years. . -- vised by one i)h,ysiciaji that ail that posed of a yolk swimming in a white I oouid be dooe was to keep her strength or albumen and enclosed in .a shell. ' Ui>. and it was with a view tostrengih- How is it possible for the yellow to as- ' ening her sy.'item. and with no hope sunie a black tint* 'ITie reason is : thai her heart would be benefitted, cause of this iu»rovement. For some! that ducks particularly eat oak glands, i that she began ibe use of Dr. Williams' tune past attention has been drawn to the propagation of typhoid fever by •hellfish â€" by oysters taJien from beds affected by sewerage. Sir Jo»eph Ewart, by personal investigation, be- came convinced in 1894 that out of 56 •wjies of typhoid fever 22, that is 42 per cent., were due to the cuntamtna- tion of shellfish by very impure wa- ter. In 1895 out of 5fi caaei# 7 were attributable to oysters and 12 to other shellfish. These facts justify the mea- •ures taken by the .Local Oovern- ojent Board with a view to purify- ing the beds in wliich the oysters Ue. From 1871 to 1875 typhus caused 81.4 deaths per million, and only 2 from 1891 to 11^94. This disease, due particu- larly to crowding, A.LMOiSri' DliJAPPiiAIUiD, •ave in a suiall number of large cities. Phthisis shows, from 1856 to 1860, a mortality of 2,565 per million, and from 1891 to 1893, a reduction to 41, per 1,000, or 1,512. (Jeneral hygiene â€" im- provement of food, Increased comfort, better habitations â€" has its share in this progress, but special indications have also contributed to these excel- lent results â€" disinfection of spittoons, care in the cooking of meat, prohibi- tion of meats and milk from tubercul- ous antoiais. Hygienic or sanitary measures do not ton is sewed in front and the strap buttoned to it. 19ie straps are l>etter whein made of flannel, but linen '\\ill serve if there is not enough flannel left to make them. WHAT JAMFi? WA.S RFADI.MJ. neigiibors. A gentleman living in that district oaugtil the burglar ransacking hia rooms. He was dressed m lue most cor- rect evening cloiues, aud had an airot distinction. The gentleman notified the police. Tuey saw the burglar walk uiuMa- cernedly downstairs and carefully ex- amine the floral decoration as' be "James, dear, will you bning me up | hummed an air from an opera. When a scuttle of coal from the cellar i" said a busy wife. "That's just the way with you." said James, with a frown, as he put down his book and rose from the armchair. "Just the way with me t" "Yes!" be snapped. "As soon as you see 'lie enjoying myself yoit have some- he was arrested he gave an uopro- nouncalile :3lavonic name, and uis ad- dress Lu the Avenue des Choiops Fly- Thuher went some of his captorsi and found that he lived in an ex^ien* sive bachelor's flat, or celebale's snug- gery, tieautifully furnLshed. .A search was made there, and bruughl to light a reuiarkable assort- thiaig or other for me to do. Didn t i ""♦"^ "' l>urKli*r'» t""l». ^ w«ll ^ • * I list of persons whose apartments could ferior quality, and th.it for this reason ' ^^^ r i^*^"^^ and her husl>and feel they should be avoided. As a matter *" "" "" of faot, it is a rare thing to cuoie across these eggs. IN A MINE ABOUT TO EXPLODE. The Forrranii. ImrrlMiNrd â- â- â- ! la Itarhsn*, KMlBSaliilKd (Sr Faite* Wkrs AlMMt â- â- rsetl la Ike Puwdvr. John Kendall, who was recently the foreman of a mine at Bossland, B.C., lately underwent an experience that you see I was absorbe<l in my read- ing f" "Well, deux. I will do it myself." "Y«, and tell everylxxiy â€" y«jir mo- ther especially â€" that you have to carry your own coal up from the cellar. No, I'll do it. Let me mark my place." tjo he marke<i the place im the l>ook at whii'h he had o^used reading and when he went down to the cellar, griunbliog all the way. she picke<l up the volume, and found iit was a love gratefuil for the great Iwneflt she has received from the lureof Dr. WiJiams' Pink PUis, and spare no words in sounding their praises lo everyone [ story, and thst the psiss.'ige that he who enquires what has wrought such l^d been al»orl)ed in was as follows; a wcnderfuji .'hange in Mrs. Green's "My darling, when voU are my wife health and 9p«rita. Ii will Bhiald and protect you from In cuaes of paralysis, spinal troubles, every rare. Tto wiD<ls oC heaven shall locomotor ataxia, sciatica, rheumatism, not visit youir fata too roughly; those erysipelas, scrofulous troubles, etc., ( pretty lis mis shall never In soiled by t)!r. Williams' Pink Pills are .'sipprior menial tisk ; your wish shall be my to all other treatment, Thev are also a specific for the troubles which make easily be entered aud plundered. It has been ascertained, iu fact, that tua man is a praciised burglar, and ttiat he adopted fashionuibie attire in order to defy suspicion. General Dousebreaking operatinna lately effected in the ChamisKly.'tees and similar dis(rii-ts are now put down to bis credit, and it is prubalilt^ that bis trial will lead to some curious dis- coveries. the liverf of so many women a Iwrden. a«jd speedily restore the rich glow of eCRGEUN A>D JOCKKY Frederick Archer, Kngland'a famou jockey, was evidently a wit at ona time. It is told, says an exchange* that he went to a famous surgical »|)ecialisl to be treated for badly {smashed toes, injured by an ill-tem- law ; your happitoees " ! smashed toes, Just then he reappeared, ajid, drop- I pered horse. Uie surgetm examined pimg the Bi-uttle upon the floor, s-iid: '. the injury, which he pronounced to be has left hiim a physical wreck. UiSj health to pale and sallow cheek.s. .Men nerves were shattered aud it will be | broken down by overwork. _ worry or months before be regajus hia former strength. It was about three weeks ago that Kendall and four other men lighted the short fuses under eight charges of giant powder in the True Blue mine an<i then jumped into the basket to be hauled to the surface and out ut barm's way. Ihe basket raised a few feet and tnen stopped. Soon it began appear to have reduced the death rate «el"'nK' »"'' '•â- lo^l^, »» though the of diphtheria, and the same is the case ' f^^« '"«" vioald be blown to atoms with measles, scarlatina, influenza.and' *''•'> l*"* tremendous charges of pow- iinglish cholera i <*»'â- were exploded. When the basket Cultivation of the soil and drainage! *»» within lour feet of the bottom of have aUnoet entirely got rid of mil- ^he shaft the fuses could be heard aria. Scurvy is no longer a terror on sputtering, and the men knew that only the ships or in the colonies of Kugland. » f«* seconds would elapee before the excesses, will/ find in Pink Pills a cer- tain cure. Soldj by all dealers, or sent by mail poistpaid. at TiOc a Ihix. or six boxe« for 12.50 by addressimg the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co. Brockville, Ont.. or iSt he nee tidy, N. V. Beware of imitations an<i substitutes alleged to lie "just as good." blasts were discharged Kendall jumped from the basket, and began pulling the fuses from the primers, which were to explode the powder. Kendall had extinguished five of the fuses nearest the bottom iof the shaft fc^ugl X«prcey, after having been endemic for over thirteen centuries, with its max- imum in the twelfth century, and its latest cases iu the eighteenth, has al- nioet disappeared. While the plague bos not msde its reappearance iu iCng- land, it has made and is even now -. , . , i- • . making ravages in Great Britain's In- ' *'^«° ^*' '^"'"â- •^ l^^ preliminary sput- dian possessions. It was owing tothe l»r'n« »^''*'" betokened the immediate fact that the rules of hygiene explosion several feel away. Ue were misunderstood, that Bomhajr sluiubled towards them and fell, ex- has been invaded bv the plague from tinguishing his light, I hen there was China. â- nothing but the spitting fire to guide As for cholera, although it has re- ' ''""â- , ,. .. . v, ceutly been imported, inits most seri- ' â- fcoriunalely, he says, in deecrib- ouB forms, into three districts, nowhere mg his actions, the shots had been has it spread, because nowadays every P"' 'i"*" «•â- '?* together 1 was able proper pr-.H-aation is taken by the lo- '" '^'â- ^^ * f"»« '" '^'^^^â- ^ 'V*"'^' fJ"" cal authorities to preserve the drink- videnct was with me again, for neither iDg water from conUmination bv the blast exploded as 1 drew the fu»e f rom cholera bacillus. It is thus evident, the primers. W hat happened after ihat from a study either of the general » "lo n^^ "^O"" "' •"> *"'" knowledge, death rate or of the mortality from cer- * «>â- «»*• ^larkueas come oyer me. Ibey tain specific diseases, that there is a «"> they louud me doubled up at the noleworthy decrease. Mu.h still re- bolttmi of the shaft, with the fuses of mains to be done, but the result* so ib« last two holes clinched tightly in lai obtained are an encouragement ""J hands. . .• j n. . to persevere in the path of progress ^ was afterwards discovered that upon which science has set a resolute th® stopping «;f,^ l»>^_?*;«°^,'.°«.„°^„t': foot was due to the engineer's careless- ness. He had forgotten to open the waier-cocks in the cylinders, and as a Warm water exercises a double (;„iii^quence the slide valves choked and ^" would not act. WARM WAPER IN MKDICINK. physiological action, local and gener al. .Locally, it irritateis the nerves of the ski.n, excites the cutaneous circula-, tiiiu. owing to the contraction produc- | eil ill the vessels, which, however, after- j ward dilate. Its general action isi characterized by an augmentation of the movements of inhalation and ex- halation. "The resjpiratory movementa' later become less frequent and deeper, I which increases the action of the heart and the circulation. I'he dilatation of the vessels of the skin induces a strung-! er current of blood toward the periph- «ry and ""decongests," the intern.il or- gans. The chemical properties of thsl blood uuclerg*' changes. I IfOR TWENTY-isKVEN YEARS. BAKING POWDER THECOOK'SBESTFRiENC LAROSar 8AkK IN CANAO.« SPANKED FOR I IIB F.VMILY People never get encouragement for doing the Good Samaritan act in the interests of the public, as the man de- cide<l who offered to assist a distracted wnonutn and .imeluorate the sufferings o< a lot of people on a subur>>an car. The l)oy who howls was im evidence, the curled darli'ng of his only own mo- ther and the terror of everybody else, and ha had kep^ the car im a state of wild excitement and exhausted the patience of everybody, including his dotbng parent. "Qb, if our father were only here!" abe hod said for the fiftieth time, as She tried vaioly to restrain the howl- itn^ terror. At that he stopped howlimg long en- ougih to beat the air with his small shins, and the woman on the other side of him remarked audibly that a cage was the proper place for savages like hixn. "Johinoy dear." hsked bis mother, "won't you be a good lK>y 1" Roars and kicks from Master John- ny. "Oh, I wish your father were here to give you a good trouncing this very minute !" she wailed as she struggled with him. Then it was that the phLi.anthropist of tho compamy asserted himself. He had t)eein tryiing in vain to read his iiiornling paper ever since he (started from home. "Allow me. madam, 'â- ne said blandly. "I am a father myself, and I will be happy to chastise yooir cherub im be- half of his abseiut parent." "Oh, no, yoM won't, not if I kno%v it!" said Joluiny's mothej 'rising in her wrath likeatigeress. "There aim't that man liviing dare lay a finger on tib.it boyâ€" his only father or any ether ugly old eataifaioaiit wTio thimks he knows it all." and sihe sh^It off debate by golmg 'unto tbe next car and taking the sweet Infant wibh her. coal! Give me my or a grave character, and one neces- jsilatlng a long period of complete _ I rest "Uow long must i lie iipr' ask- ed Archer â€" the interview, it should !)• Slated, took place early in April. " I liree uionih-s' rest, with careful treat- received an invitation to a party which ment anil pro|ier diet, woulil be suffi- a friend was al)out to give, .says the cieut." 'Hut what about the Derbyf" There's you* book." I IT WAS A BIRTHDAY PARTY. | A little girl who liveji in Craftoo Pittsburg "Chronicle-TeUgraph." The invilatiim had been wriitt-n by the aniall hostess. After surveying the note with delight for a few minutes the recipient said: Papa. I wonder if It is a birthday party. Let it me see the invitation. After a brief insitect ion he said. Yes; it must be a birth lav part. It begins, Vour presents is desired asked the patient. "The IJerbyf re- pealed the surgeon. "I must lie there," sold Archer, ' I absolutely must." 'Well, well," said the surgeon, Mooih- ingly, 'take great care of yoriM-lf and if you make satisfactory progress you might go." 'Gof" ""Yes.' "But can I ridef" "Well," said the surgeon, "you bail better drive, 1 think.' He bad read the n'lme upon the patient's card< but It had iiieitnt to htm nothing more than a name "Y'ou mustn't think me rude, Mr. Archer." he said, when his guest had explained his identity and vocation, "but 1 take no interest io any branch of sport, and 1 had never heard your name." "Well," said Ar- cher, 'I hoi)c you won't think iiuc rude, either, but till a friend luivised ma to consult you, I had never beard your I name, either. And when I asked my friend who you were he .said. He is I the Kred .Archer of the surgical profes- It is a lc*ig lime to look !l>ack over • sion.' " twenty years of life, bat wb^n the^uilo I â€" â€" IKjsU have been iii.irkie>l by the pains I NKW ,UD TO HAIR CT'RLINn. a,n.l a.*ee of Lumbago, it renders the j Members of the fair sex are Doti retrce|)ect far frtm being a pleasant ; one. TWENTY YEARS „ LUMBAGO. lET IWTMIV CIIKIi COmtlitLH. Such was the experien<'e of .Vfr Jamas Muir Night Baggage Master, G.T.R., residence 243 Kmcrald street, Uumiltoo Ont. He mode a sworn dedaiaiion to the ' alway.s the embodiment of ethereal ' beauty w^heo they do not happen to Ikive naturally wavy locks. Half ot their time they have looked fairly hid- eous in order that the other half might find iJieoi with captivating little riu^ eXfe<:l I hat for over 20 years he % at lets and airy wavelets, and their pri- offlicted with J.umbago. oad at times vnte families* have had to suffer from was BO severely afflicted he could mot their un«e>thetu: a^ipearance. walk. I That is one reason why the curling For about tc« years ho could not inoo has been so [opular. It saves go- st.-iiiid Biraight for a longer period than i<ng aliout with the hair done up ia about fifteen minutes, when he would paper.s and hornlike pins, rubber and be compelle<l to stoop forward in or- | «•'<! i^ls- etc. Even the neat monta^ der to relieve himself. He took nine 8Ue« of 'â- he same shade as the hair gave bottles of Kpotenay Cure and they have cured bim to stay cured. He says; â€" "I told Mr. Ryckman if I felt no paJins for one year after taking hia medicine, that I would give him a tes- timonial, and as the time expires this week I come to him without solicita- tion to give this sworn declaration. I consider Kootenay Cure one of the greatest add best remedies for lack or kidjiey troubles ever used by lOian- ki.ntl. and wUh lUiy case to fi>ecouio gen- erally kmwn. as I doctored with fire different medical men. and was told they could do nothing for me." v Chart book free un oppliiation to Lb.'. S. 8. Uyckmaji Medical Co.. Lim- ited, Hamilton, Out them a bald apijettrauce, and. as foe whites of eggs, gum arable and other "stick 'em's" to make water waves, so called, the sight of tbetn was enougll to make one »ick. The French h.ive come to the rescue. TJiey usually do when there is any aes- thetic or artu-tiu ({ue^tion at issue. They have invented "le flou flou," ae luidulator, which consists of a sort ot fork with two U|>right tines, to wbiob ribbons can be affi.xed thorough eyelets in such a way that the hair can b* w^>ven in the u&ual manner about tb« two tines, aa is done with a large waT% pin. and then the pin ran bo witbK drawn leaving the bair wxiven en s r^l) •> tb« ends of which can tbea t- '' '•••' i".w"kno». producing s otianning effect.