Anai -if anoB adeLu Mseraàle for Tvvee Teas HaI . ffstorod by Dr. Ch 8's Kdny-lerP". 1 H avin airect action on thse liver, j:r. chase ýXLdney-Ljver Fille are in- ,varie bly icocaýssful in curing liver coin- pantorpîd livar, and thse headaches elid *tornach troubles resulting thare- Fr. aulknuer, 8 Gildealeeve place, Toronýto, says:-' Âfter doctorIug wth- ýoi sucxess for bliouseas, lver cern- Notes and Comyments. It was recently anncunced that the buildings of the Trans-Siberian Rail- rc.ad had recEmtly reaced Streteinsk, east of Lake Baikal, and that Europe vras at. last conneotad wtth Vladivo- stok by a steain route across Asia, as passenger boats arepiying on the Soilîka and the Amaur rivers be- tween Stretensk and the railroad near the Pacifie that connects Vladivostok. The Journal de Saint Petersbourg gives some interesting fac ts about this trans-continental route as it now ex- lets and the facilities it la offering to g g g mnovenft la essential, so long aB theire is reasoin tci hope that any Eu- ropeans have escaped massacre in the Chir- capital. Japan alene la able to s-,isfy ail the conditions, and she has offered te bear the brunt of the difficuit undertaking. But here, as we have said, we en- counter a state of things very dif- ferent from that which was original- ly conritemplated, when ail of the Pow.ers interested in the restoration of order were expected to, furnish con- tingents practically equal, and rang- ing frein 2,000 tu 5,000 men apiece. In that event, ail of the Powers would Ching belongs to the regular Chinese army, and though ha ha.s bceau fighting Tuan, and protecting the orege the allias apparantly vicw hl with considerable distrust. Tfha allies, of course, have been aided greatly by Ching, but in the absence of any com4. munication between the Chinese imperial authorities and the Goveru.- ments of the United States, BEnglan.d, Germany, Russia and the rest of the countrias represented lu tha CýhinesO difficulty, ne foreigner eau tel how far Ching's aid can bc ra]ied on in this criais.1 1 Apparently, hewever, thse Dowager1 (aie Home TREATMENT OF SUNBUJRN. The great tamuptation after the ex- posure te the heat, and thea proba- bilities of anuburu la to wash the f ace. Water acta like a mordant to set the dye of sunbnrn. The skin that might possibly have escaped with a faint reduess becomres scarlet alnd even blistered 'after washing while the sun tas stili upon ih, or after just returnhing froin an exposing ex- Castorla 18 Dr. Samuel Pitüher's prescriptIfon for Infants v ý 1