"= A 350¢. Calendar For Two 2¢. Stamps. If you will send 4 ots. to J. P. Lyons, Art Publisher, & Murray St., New York, he will nail you a beautiful screen Cal- ondar for 1900, size 11x16 inches, in 3 panels, lithographed in 11 colors and gold. New York stores charge 50 ots. for Cale ie as good, At meetings of the British Cabinet no official record of any kind is kept of the pro- ceedings. “Duly Feed Man and Steed. Feed your nerves, also, on pure blood if you mould have them strong. Men and omen who are nervous are so because their nerves are starved. When they make their blood rich and pure with Hood's Sarsaparilla their nervousness disappears because the nerves are properly fed. The Csar's Americana Driving Teacher, George J. Fuller, the trotting horse expert, who sailed for Russia a short time ago, will have the pleasant task of teaching the czar how to manage the trotting horse. He has been es- pecially engaged by the Russian gov- ernment to Instruct the army and the royal family. Mr, Fuller is a veteran years old. He sald to a sportsman fore leaving: think they all know me." Dr. Bulls The best remedy for Coug Consumption. Cures % yp u Coughs, Colds, Grippe, y ness, Asthma, Whooping cough, Cron Small doses ; quick, sure results, Bronchitis, Hoarse- Dr. Bulls Pills cure Constipation, Twial, ao for sc. Chenp Water In Gisagow. In Glasgow a $756 householder ob- tains for $1.42 per annum a continuous, never failing, unrestricted stream of the purest water in the world delivered right into his kitchen, wash-house and bath-room. It is calculated that 350 gallons of pure water are delivered to the citizens of Glasgow for every penny paid. And it is water of such peculiar softnesa that the householders of Glasgow can pay rate out of what they i Katrine water is not only soft remarkably bright, clear and free vegetable matter because of the and precipitous character of the which drain into the loch. It is uni- form in color, temperalure and qual ity, is absolutely free from pollution, aeir water Save on 2ap bare hille ing rights of the whole drainage area; unaffected by the change of seasons — Engineer Magazine OMEN do suffer! The Maunullcher Rifle. The power of the Mannlicher rifle was recently demonstrated in an accl- dent near Prague. Two gendarmes en- tered a room in an inn and closed the door, putting their rifles in the corner. One rifle foll nnd discharged itaelf, the bullet going through the door into the next room where a party was dancing. It paseed through the body of a musician, killing him, and then through the bodies of five of the men, all of whom were dangerously wounded, Fike Find ny Money. Starch and Chain “Red Cross’ The use of the Endless Book in the purchass of “Hobinger's Best” starch, makes it Hke finding money. Why, for are enabled to get ona large of “Red Cross’ stureh, one large 10c pack age of “Hubinger's Best” starch, with the preminms, two Shakespesre pansis, priot. ed in twelve beautiful colors, tioth Century Girl Calendar, gold. Ask vour grocer for this starch and obtain the beautiful Christmas presents [ree just only 10a 5¢ you package or one Twen: ambossad in Kipling's Gift to His Fhyasiemn. Dr. James Conland of Brattleboro, 7t., feels himself to be the richest man in his part of the country. He Is the Kipling family physician, and he accompanied Mr. Kipling In his varl- ove trips to the Great Banks when the famous author was getting informa- tion for his “Captains Courageous’ The other day Mr. Kipling made his inal manu- seript. Findliey's Eve Salve Cares Sore 8 days; chironi ¥ back All a OLA, 01 Havyren, Deca eyes in CHRee or money 1, 2 . per box. J. P. ponies are fed in winter on fish Pleon's Care is a wonderful Cough madicine Mrs. W. Piokenr, Van Siclen and Blake Aves. Brooklyn, N. Y.. Oct. 35, 1594 Balser FPlensed with a Boy's Tenacity, The German kaiser had the other day a curious adventure with one of his numerous godchiidren. Every seventl in the same family, if the parents humble circumstances, is named piser, held On the kalser's arrival at Rems one these godchiidrep was deputed to offer him a bouquet The small boy, however, at the last minute utterly refused to part with the flowers. The kaiser, however, only jaughed and patted him on the head and sald, “Yes, when a German once s hands or ything he d¢ of jays hi ly gi ordered fifty ve it up.” and to the obstinate be youngster to Don't Need Another, l.ady Traveler—Allow one moment, gir. 1] reat and pretty little handy. Gent very have |—at home me to you have letter-opener (interrupting) Sou gee! — Posters, for $5.2 Wages of Londen BiG london billposters struck tute a week's work But they are not Pain th cause. daughters. MUST faces of many of our its out and overshadows a . century women, SUFFER? s————— tte for woman's ills. Miss EmiLy St., Greenpoint “Dear Mgrs. > 23) tate that , Brooklyn, N. It is a woman's to was very sick for nearl hysterm, was and limbs. had doctors, but their medic me no good. Pinkham's Vegetable ly cured me. JENNIE SHERMAN, Mich., Box 748, writes: “Dear Mgrs. you what your medicine done for me. work. ter. Pink- Your All others provaring the Endices wilted It has superseded every. It i= made from wheat, Ask your grocers for this # THE DEBT CIVILIZATION OWES TO GREAT BRITAIN'S VICTORY. Some Diabolical Crueities that Were the Daily Pastime of the Dervishes Be. fore the Rout of the Khalifa. Mr. Neufeld's R.velations. After the first rejolcings in England over Lord Kitchener's vietory at Om durman there was the usual period of criticism, during which the any-price party bewalled the wholesale slaughter of the dervishes and called the Sirdar to account for the murder of the wounded, It sald that the English themselves acted lke savages, and many a homily was preached on the brutalizing influence of war. But people who had read Slatin Pasha's story of fire and sword in the Sudan must have felt little sympathy for the Khalifa's followers thelr English advocates, and Charles Neu- feld's relation of his twelve years of ery ¢ to the Mahdists will confirm belief that march of upon barbarism cannot too rapidly. “Chains and Slavery at Omdurman’ is the title of the work whose revelation of horrors seems well-nigh ineredible. peace-nt- Wis or itud them In the civilization proceed the of the der life un all men were Mad- of today of to-mor the Khu Cruelty the sport of Was a pastiine their dally which Kept i they shes, der a tyranny trembling, whether The the favorite victim hiss not might row if or become the were jealous fears of til fa For all tl had Incurred his displeasure there wi the pr aroused, those who on obese side, leaving the Neufeld supplements this w which rivals of the bl: In a cell less than 30 O50 to 280 m those feet were Calenutta, square from kept at peatedly fsOoners ivy but re fods the night, not once on throughout per tended over "Any such a nigl weeks, prisoner his ord $s 9 panden HAT pled ont of vivid description of ular In ips to realization of tram the the aAUz BOO Ne £3 casion one of Bim Pasha F don's, He roost was 1bhra id officer of Gor prison ors an ol the the As Rodanese eld deter desperate had been shackled like the and d swooned. and between pain the stench of place had ound four Neuf nined 10 go to his rescue. A f then resulted lay on the gr sat upon his jegs, and n figh 1 which b but more b duight thrown 1 reieon se, ywend Aft were vy 1 wwrrors folld open fwenty men, each were thrust Kind of yoke f +r extended into the {A «1 to the neck shayba isle arm in such a way the the fio ix Move arm throttles Practically there they means, Was to mine had To gaolers resorted to of blazing roon but driven in by for them Oe the favorite device evil BETHEsS, gpnce their throwing into and laying handful and bare the siraw time at the aie about the heads and shoulders of the pr Prior t ~] out, as he isaners with hips " weufeld © tO oXe o this experience ’ heen | supposed, tortured devilish cution, but all the American Indians, were throst instead of Spears and swords his and he given to understand that the final blow delivered by one big fellow who kept making pa him. But time the fettersd man was jerk ed back by the chain wh fo the great delight of the who were watching the play Neufeld i= a German, Slatin is an Austrian, but both glory in the ad vance of the British former from captivity, They have seen and felt too much of dervish cruelty to mourn with the English peace party over the fall of a detestable despotism Neufeld goes go far as to defend open- he was with ingenuity into wicle was was fo be ames nt each ich bound him, thousands to prevent the treacherous murder even of those who went to succor them. But whatever may be sald of the de. bate on this point, there can be no doubt that there Is an infinitely better rule now in the upper Sudan than there ever was before. Kitchener's coming was the whole people's salva. tion. Chicago Times Herald Nurses in the War, he largest and most important mill jean war was at Fort MePherson, Ga. It war a small but beautiful hospital, surrounded by flowers and shrubs, AL most immedintely there came call for nurses, made in vain, The nurses were employed upon the recommendation of the Daughters of the American Revolution, There were nearly seventy five trained nurses sent to Fort McPherson, and many deserve credit for the earnest work they did. Some were making from $85 to £100 per month before entering the army , service, and through patriotism were moved to give up their lucrative posi. tions fo go and nurse siek soldiers, For this they were paid $830 a month, Io tnost cases their untiring energy and tenderness in the eare of the sick was noteworthy, They were supposed to be 12 hours on and 12 off in the per 1 % of thelr duties, but there were many who worked from 14 to 10 if hours nn day, The work of the nurses consisted in keeping the beds tidy nnd formance the personal care and supervis ion of each patient, the taking of tem perature, feeding, bathing and spong ing, and writing letters to anxious and relatives at » distance. Mission Magazin AN IMPUDENT SIGN. Disfigured the (irand Canon for a Time, bu! Finally Disappeared. I've done a good deal of ‘land. scape work,” as they call it, in time,” sald a New Orleans sign paint er. “Landscape work Is simply paint ing signs on the landscape, rocks being naturally the that are used, | know some folks kick about it, can't me that a nsty piece of lettering don’t sort of brighten up the and improve the ‘toot and scramble,’ they gay on the French What was the hardest job 1 ever tackled, did you ask? It ‘ad.’ for smoking tobacco 1 painted on the side of Grand Canon the line of the and Rie Grande Rail road. I was working for a Buffalo concern that had a contract to put up 5.000 landscape for a tobacco cotupany, and a of us travelled all over the looking for effective This place in canon proposition as The about 206) “Yes, my things convince nice, view ax wide, was an the on Denver gigns Rang country good, locations, the Was tough n wri ns for ever went against went straight up 11 Fist § tiie 1{ wp there was big i It was ¢ a ladder from the 1dge HEY ret down On account of feet out After i brush, and | managed to do ¢ work; at lea a book get and visit YOu w g1ch able dt Musil % on lool birog geri ght shocked Garden hends potatoes | pO rRes irnips oF fs lw i evesd to read the women world be nex Riot Act taovent 1 EATS very Saturday morning in As it Is comfortable the drivers while the proprietors Answers, fiarden make a profession, daily the lady po lice living out of thelr giving them tips Singing School of Thrushes. A writer in Forest amd Stream tells “Find,” he says, “a family of wood The old male thrash will sing clear, flute like to listen fo imitate will utter one note, will uiter a hoarse After awhile seem to forget their lesson and drop out one by one. When all are the old thrush tunes up again the young thrushes repeat their amd =o it goes on for hours The young birds do not acquire the full gong the first year; so the jessons are repeated the following spring. 1 take many visitors into the woods to enjoy the first thrushes’ singing school. and all are convinced that the song of the wood thrash is a matter of education place, amd then stop Rome Rome the song. some Two, they Where Albinos Are Found. Albinos are found among all races, They occur most frequently among na. dark «kin and living in bot climates, In the copper-colored race they are more rare, and still more so among whites, It Is not accurately known what it Is that occasions alibi nolem. It i¢ not limited to man, but has a wile range among the lower orders of erveation, The white crow, white blackbird, and while elephant are classed as albinos. When 8 Woman Becomes Optimietic. When somebody admires a hat that a woman has made for herself she be gins to feel that there are some glim. merings of appreciation in the world, after all Puck. MYSTERY OF A HAUNTED HOUSE Cruel Truth Reduced It to a Commonplace | Esudbilshment. It seems a pity to let the light upon accepted mysteries, When, instance, a handsome mansion has worked long and bard to gain the rep utation of being a haunted house, it is positively cruel to reduce it to a com monplace, table establishment, Yet this Las just been by br. Marie Elizabeth Zal of Bos ton, a retired physician and the found er of the famous New Englund Hospit al for Women and Children. Her story of the haunted house 15 as follows: “In the early sixties I bought a fine old house In the subtirbs of Boston, It had been unoccupled 1 know how long, and it was sald to be haunt ed. It had not one ghost, but a colony of uncanny creatures My friends remonstrated both before after the purchase, and a few were more than ordinarily would pot visit bright, sunshiny w told all self-respes unknown realm. servants were heard tl ®0 excited ridiculously Finally they my its, in respec done sreewska do not these who supersti- in ai {0 tious me except when | retire eather, ting ghosts soe “My They got of all %, and the worst sings and saw thing that they | than sion of phi i gooured priest to col whaved more a is anion absence and exorcise the About that time 1 had repainted and put into charn Either the the paint Courage spectral friends, CXOrcism or 1 our because they came No more, “Years afterward one of my patients, a well-to-do said 10 mie “og When we fir wretchedly English, my husband German woman, must tell you a to Bost None after SiN st came poor and shortly and one of my theraselves out of worl money, Your rumored Bouse wy to be haunted, fo benefit : and We which gives no mined moved in Lise Years, Hight we burned invigible from noise now anda BONY wed out Evening Post Uscommunicative Heroes. really about deeds is always modes Not infrequently The brave man s story his own he aoccoun ih sat ters who ded on to his hearers. The report We soldiers wont Hill bad a from them tery hard ara nany of 1 De a silent man, Wis averse and weariso: wun I don’t know how fat Baseilles w All the office Ore all Bang’ all the soldier me. 1 had fired the last shot urally was doing what 1 "could to stand off the Bavarions, “Well, a general came, ‘Where's your officers? “