AN awry sum The Ben: Ill afkable E 161160 f .. _ X 101' 0 r. W imam 391mm owed by IS said they . -’l‘he Menus ugh Reading a p n I From the ow0n SMâ€? ‘ ‘ The Times fir/"b, I. “ -‘ 95' lshed very frequently I . arkable cures attri- 4’ . Dr. Williams’ Pink Pillls in (,6, . These various artic es engfrzngr o newspapers of good stand- - V e was no reason to doubt their .fulness, but as we had not hap- m acre.st a striking a had given the articles but little . and perhaps this may also be the some of our readers. A few days ' Phe Opm‘bunity was given us to in- 'P§tlgate a case, however, which satis- dus, and will satisfy those who read .13. that there is a marvelous efï¬cacy ._ this now celebrated medicine. It was Jld us by one of our leading druggists (sat a well known resident had an experi- 5 race which fully equalled the wonderful :uresof which so much has been published. The citizenreferred to was Mr. \Vm.Belrose, ‘ ship carpenter, who has been a resident of ' this town since 1866. The Times undertook to get the facts from Mr. Belrose in order to satisfy ourselves. He was working in ‘ the shipyard and when found was wielding _ the heaviest axe on the grounds, shaping ) the ribs for a big vessel on the stocks. None of the 300 men employed were work- ing harder, nor appeared to be enjoying more vigorous health. In reply to a ques- tion Mr. Belrose said : “ Yes, sir, I would not be using this big axe if I had not taken Pink Pills." The story as briefly told as possible is this : In 1890, after returning 1, from the Paciï¬c coast, Mr. Belrose went '9 Chicago where he secured'employment the erection of one of the big Phil ..’mour grain elevators. After being in that city for a short time he was taken with a malarial fever. After a week of suffer- ing the people with whom he was staying spoke of taking him to the hospital, but Mr. Belrose objected. A consultation was held and it was decided that instead of going to the hospitalâ€"a place he dreadedâ€" he would take the ï¬rst train home. His ticket was bought and he was placed on the train. He was so sick that the only in- "dent he could remember in the whole 10 miles’ trip was the changing of cars at , ome junction. He reached home on Aug- " ' "‘st 7th, and at once a well-known physiolau ' as called in'. Recovery was slow and it ras not until November that he was able _,o get out of the house. Then in his weak- ened condition he took a relapse. Winter wore on ; the best physicians were called in I but with no avail. There was no improve- / L ment. The complications baffled all treat- ' ment. From the hips down a sort of paralysis seized the sufferer, and it was impossible to keep the lower extremities warm. The bed covers were increased, but proved of no consequence as far as the ,-.»-«‘.'v'ai-xnth of the patient was concerned. As a last resort a pair of heavy German felt socks were procured and pulled over the cold feet. But the artiï¬cial warmth failed to do what nature could not for some reason accomplish. At last the doctors decided that nothing more could be douo,and sooth- - ing draughts were administered to ease the pain. Friends brought the electric battery and this treatment,though relieving,served 1 7 only to make the pain more intense when discontinued. It happened during this treatment, however,that one of the visitors brought in, wrapped around a parcel, a paper giving an account of a cure effected by the use of Dr. \Vilhams’ Pink Pills. After reading thearticle the sick man determined to give them a trial. Before a box was gone the good effects were noticed, the second box brought still further improvement. A '. ‘ third, fourth,ï¬fth and sixth were taken,the end of each only proving a milestone on the i .j sure road to complete recovery. Twenty ' boxes were taken in all but the end fully justiï¬ed the expenditure, for as Mr.Belrose put it, “I feel better and younger than I have felt for years. I eat heartily, I sleep sound and I can do a day’s work alongside of anybody. under Providence did it all. Pink Pills should be kept in every house. Since they cured me I have recommended them to my friends everywhere, and I shall continue to recommend them.†An analysis shows that Dr. lVilliam s’ Pink Pills contain in a condensed form all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood, and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neural- gia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of 1a grippe, palpitation of the heart, nervous prostration, all diseases depending on vitiated humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They are also a speciï¬c for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregulari- ties, and all forms of weakness. They build up the blood, and restore the glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks. In men they affect a radical cure in all cases arising I- “from mental worry, overwork, or excesses of any nature. - Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are manufactur cd by the Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company: Brockville, Ont., and Schenectady, N. Y., and sold only in boxes (never in loose form by the dozen or hundred and the public are cautioned against numerous imitations sold in this shape) at 50 cents a box,or six boxes for 82.50, and may be had of all druggists or ‘ direct by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, from either address. -â€"â€"-°>â€"â€"â€" It has been discovered that the pressure of a railway train against the rails on a curve depends upon the conditions of speed and pull or push of the engine. If the train runs around a curve by its own momentum, the pressure is against the outer rail. If pulled around by the engine,the pressure is against the inside rail. The raising of the outer rail partially counteracts the certri- fugal tendency of the cars to crowd against the outer rail. The hydraulic propulsion of vessels has received an impetus in the invention of a. Texan named Walker. His is a method of jet propulsion in which the vessel has longitudinal pipes with propellers in them, in connection with a ventilated bilge water well connected by branch pipes with the propeller pipes. y K‘ case our. stones as it fell with him. ‘ “ Tie that women’s hands behind her,†Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills P /"-_â€"â€" Horrors of the Commune. . A young linesman staggered into the courtyard, bareheaded, ghastly pale, his tunic half stripped off. His neck was cut deeply open at the bottom of the right side for a length of nearly six inches, and the severed flesh hung down on to the shoulder in a thick scarlet fold; he dripped with blood, and literally spattered it about him as he reeled in. He still held his rifle With 'his left hand, and with the right he drag,- gcd after him a young woman with nothing on her but a torn chemise and uniform trousers, (which indicated that she had been a cantiniere of the Commune.) With a last effort the soldier flung the woman toward us, stammering out hoarsely, " She has killed my Captain ; she has cut my throat, and yet I bring her to you alive!†And then the poor young fellow dropped heavily, his rifle ringing on the ordered the commanding ofï¬cer, as the sol- dier was put upon a litter for conveyance to the ambulance. Silent and breathless stood the woman ; she seemed to expect immediate death. Her shoulders, her tattered chemise, her arms and hands, were splashed everywhere with blood ; the ex- pression of her white face, with hard glazed eyes, the clenched teeth, and the strained distortion of the corners of the mouth, was demoniacal. Straight she stood up before us,her head thrown back as if to dare the worst; she made no answer to the questions put to her There was discussion among the ofï¬cers as to whether it'was not their duty to have her shot at once. But, though the case was clear, they shrank from commencing execu- tions by a woman, and, after some hesita- tion, spared her, taking it for granted that when tried she would be condemned. l-Ier arms bound back, she was sent into the cellar. She was, however, the only one let ofl’; from that moment every prisoner, man or woman, brought in red-hand ed was taken across to the park and executed straightway â€"[Blaekwood’s Magazine. ##0#- No Disappointment. i Disappointments of one kind and another crop up all along life’s pathway, for unfor- tunately it is the unexpected that always happens. There is at least one. article of acknowledged merit that never disappomts. Putnam’s Painless Corn Extractor is sure to remove the worst coma in a few days, and as no claim is made that it will cure anything else, it cannot disappoint. .If you have hard or soft corns Just try it. Beware of the article “ just as good.†N.C. Polson Sr. 00., proprietors, Kingston. .,_â€".â€"â€"â€"oâ€"â€"‘â€"â€"_ St. Leon is recommended on the Highest Scientiï¬c authority. Why dose your system With ï¬lthy drugs when St. Leon can be ob- tained for a trifle 2 M The Press and Religion. Not solong ago a church “scandalâ€ofsome kind was about the only thing connected With the church that many newspapers ever published. Now the large city dailies re- port congregational meetmgs as fully as they report parliamentary proceedings and give as much attention to “ecclemastical af- fairs as to any other. The country week- lies report nearly everything the churches in their vicinity are doing. Some of them have a regular church column ï¬lled with ecclesiastical items. Anniversary servrces, church openings, Presbytery meetings, calls, inductions and other church matters receive quite as much attention from many journals as political movements receive. There is no divorce between the church and the bulk of the Ontario press. Ontario is one of the few countries in the whole World in which the press, taken as a whole, is friendly to the church. Of course there are a few journals whose ill-concealed hostility occasionally shows itself, but not many. The press being friendly as a whole, and having immense power and unrivalled facilities for reaching the people, might not the church make more use of it than is now made. Is there any reason why a minister should not give the local press an occasion- al extract from his sermons and thus reach a much larger congregation than the one he preached to from the pulpit. Is there any reason why a minister or any other good man should not send the local editor an occasional fresh news item. We abhor ufling, and above everything else clerical pufï¬ng, but an occasional striking para- graph from a sermon or a news item is not pufï¬ng. There is a proper as, well as an improper use of the press. One of the worst varieties of improper use is badger- iug the local editor to insert dead-head church noticesr Never do thatâ€"[Canada Presbyterian. W Chemical Action of the Sea. A little consideration will show that all the known chemical elementsâ€"and even the unknown ones, tooâ€"must be contained in solution in the waters of the ocean. Rivers flowing over the land are continually tak- ing up mineral matter in solution, and these substances are all added to the mass of ma- terials dissolved in the oceanic waters. The Thames every day carries to the North Sea some 2,000 tons of dissolved material, and if all the rivers of the globe work at something like the same rate, 20,000,000 tons of min- eral matter must day by.day be added to the store of materials held in solution by the ocean. ' Now, all the chemical elements are capaâ€" ble of entering into compounds which are to a greater or less extent soluble in water, and hence we cannot doubt that in the enormous mass of materials dissolved in the vast body of sea water on our globe all the elementary bodies must be represented. It is true that the chemist, by his most reï¬ned methods of analysis, is unable to detect the proportion, even if he is‘ able to determine the presence,of the rarer element- ary substancas which occur only as “ min- ' ute traces" in sea water. When a large lquantity of sea water is evaporated, we get a mass of chlorides and sulphates that can be separated by analysis ; ut even the very delicate ,tests of spectral analysis fail to make manifest many of the rarer metals and other elementary bodies that must cer- tainly be present in the mass. In a well- known case, the copper sheathing of a ves- sel has been proved to have taken up silver from the sea water by electro-ohemical action, though it is probable that all our ordinary analytical processes would have failed to reveal the existence of the metal in the water itself. ,____,_____..__._.___ Two Montana men have patented a mail box from which it is impossible to steal the contents unless the box is broken open. " But evil is wrought by want of thought, As well as want of heart." 1 By want of thought mothers allow (laugh. ters to become frail and puny. Over-study in girls induces uterine disorders and weak- nesses, and blights their future happiness as wives and mothers. Joined to proper hygienic care, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion is a priceless remedy in such ailments, its value becoming even more apparent every year. Using it, the wan, debilitated school girl gains color, flesh and: Spll‘lts, losing those deathly headaches, tormenting backaches, languor, dejection, and other symptoms of functional irregularities, and nervous debility; It never harms the most delicate girl. I Robertsdalc, Huntingdon 00., Pa. WORLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL . Assocx. ATION : GENTLEMENâ€"I cannot sufliciently express to you my gratitude for the beneï¬t your medicine has conferred upon my daughter. Of late she has suffered no pain whateyer. It is simply marvelous. You have just reason to call it your “ Favorite Prescrip- tion,†and to stake your reputation as .a physician on it. A favorite prescription it is indeed, to you and to thousands In this land, and I believe it will be to suffering women the world over. Yours gratefully, Tuonms TnmesLL. Asthma cured by newly discovered treat- ment. Pamphlet, testimonials and refer- ences free. Address World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. Isaac H. Lewis, a London pavement ex- pert with an experience of thirty-ï¬ve years, says that granite paving is the most desira- ble. It will last thirty-six years if well set at first. Wood pavement costs, in the long run, half as much again as granite, but it is increasing in vogue by reason of its comparative noiselessncss and easy traction. On the other hand, it is hygienieally the least defensible. Asphalt is the costliest pavement of all, but it is one of the most durable, and is the cleanest. In portions of Australia horse shoes are made of dried cowhide instead of iron. Take One Free A pillow sham holder on the bed wil save the thrifty housewife much worry and vexalion. There is only one first-class holder on the market. It is “ The Tarbox,†which makes the shams look the best, last the longest, and does not injure the bed. Drop a post card to the Wilson Publishing Co., 73 Adelaide west, Toronto, and you will be advised how to get a Terbox sham holder FREE. A.3P.696 .~ S.‘ COUGH CURE 5‘5U°&’i Cures Oonsumpton uhs Coup Soo Throat. Soldb all ï¬rsggists (in a Guafantce. For 2 Lame Side, sci: or Chest Shiloh’s Porous Plaster mll give great satisfaction.â€"55 cents. ATARRH a . sensor. Have yu 0 n his Remedy will relieve and Cure you. Price 50ets. This Injector for Its supcessfu] treatment free. Remember. Shiloh s Remedies are sol on a mmreatee l t ’ t , ’ i .‘ for sale by theSAm'r PAUL db DULUTH RAILROAD COMPANY in Minnesota. Send {or Maps and Circu- lars. They will be sent to you : FREE. Address HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner. St. Paul. Minn. .n. .au- AORES OF LAND LATEST IMPROVED. GREATEST VARIETY. PRICES RIGHT. . I implements Hill Furnishings, Conveyor Chains, 8m. Brantford, Canada†SJOI. llillliilllfl CONROY’S IMPROVED "t '4 Have all the latest improvements. Be sure than ever for 1891. MUSIC! ium l is in the Music line. . WHALEY. ROYCE 8!. CO. Have you. the Biases :? Do you ever get worn outwith business troubles or mental ex- haustion! Do you ever have the Blues? If you do there is nothing: that will refresh .and cheer vou like a good tumbler of St. Leon Water. Its action is directly on theliver, which ex- plains its cheering and exhilar- ating efl’ect. Every pl: slcian of , note recommends it. ext Lime you have the Blues try it. St, Leon Mineral Water Co’y, ltd Head Ofï¬ce â€"Klng St. W., Toronto. All drugglsts. grocers and hotels. sample copy of the CANADIAN MUSICIAN, & live monthlyjour. ml with $1.00 worth of music in each issue. $3 to $6 per day madeby canvassers. See prem- and get one for your buggy. They are better Every Mush: Teacher in Can nada should know where they can get their Music cheapest. Write us for Catalogues; also We carry everything Nerve Pain Cure. Polson’s Nerviline oures'flatulence. chill e and spasms: Nerviline cures vomiting diarrhoea, cholera, and dysentery. Nerviline cures headache, sea sickness and summer complaint. Nerviline cures neuralgia, toothache, lumbago and sciatica. Nerviline cures sprains, bruises, cuts, &c. Polson’s Nerviline is the best remedy in the world, and only costs 10 and 25 cents to try it. Sample and large bottles at any drug store. Try Polson’s Nerviline. W It has been found by the British ordnance department that workmen in the works at Woolwich are turning out as much work in a week of forty-eight hours as they used to do in one of ï¬fty-four. The quality of the work is said to be better than ever before. tops he Pmmptwd Permanenim'OE Pains. andvflid’lï¬t - is another name fo r , v . -. j -‘ SBROFULA, ‘ p a " ' _ and yields f. ' ,« ' to I 5?: it 1-. ‘ - v.“ I --" ‘: 0f Pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil '_ and HypOpliospbites. Impouerz'shcd and impure blood. is al- ‘ ways eï¬'aolively restored to vigorous con- » (tuition. by this wonderful remedy. Cures Coughs, Colds and all Wasting Diseases. ' Almost as palatable as Milk. Prepared only by Smtt & Bowne, Belleville. f male and female, To all our new Home Cleaner. Enlhel new; sells to every housekeeper. Aha our nrcail,CLke and nring Knives. Carver, and Knife and Sensors Sharpener. No rapllal required. Buy sellers. bl toms. CLAUBB BIIEAR (10.. Look Box 31! . omnlo.0nl. a The oï¬lcial or- } , gan of Church's Au t o - V o c c School for the cure of Stammering, Toronto Canada, sent free post-paid. TTENTIONâ€"IF YOU ARE AN AGENTâ€" if you are not an agent, but would like publisher, Toronto. crap yrup “ We are six in fam- AFarmer at ily. We live in a lace where we are Edom’Texas’gubject to violent Says: Colds and Lung Troubles. I have used German Syruprfor six years successfully for Sore hroat, Cough, Cold, Hoarseness, Pains in the Chest and Lungs, and spitting-up of Blood. I have tried many differ- ent kinds of cough Syrups in my time, but let me say to anyone want- ing such a medicineâ€"German Syrup is the best. That has been my ex- perience. If you use it once, you will go back to it whenever you need it. It gives total relief and is a quick cure. My advice to every- one sufl‘ering with Lung Troubles is «râ€"Try it. You will soon be con- vinced. In all the families where your German Syrup is used we have no JOI‘m trouble with the Lungs stall. It is Frankll“ the medicme for the Jones_ country. , 8 G. G. GREEN, Sole Man'fr,Woodbury.NJ. lilltEilt’S TICK DESTROYER Operates promptly and effectually in destroy ing Ticks and other vermin posts, as well asm eradicating all affections of the skin to which Sheep are subject. No Sheep-owner should be without it. As acertain cure it has hitherto proved infallible. Price 35 cents. 79 cents and. $1 per Box. A 35 cent box Will clean about 20 sheep. Sold by all rlruugxsts. - HUGH MILLER & 00., Manufacturers, Toronto They give perfect satisfaction in ï¬t style, and ï¬nish, and it has become 8- byâ€"word that â€" VISIBLE WRITING â€" TYPEWRITER. to be oneâ€"it you want to make moneyâ€"send for our illustrated llst. William Briggs, “ GRAWW†sthl Gililli} llT BLENIP. The last letter, the last word, the last lines in plain sight. adds :9 per cent. to the pleasure of . Hg.â€" NO LIFTINGIIF GARRIAEE, H0 RIBBON» DIREGT INKING, STRONG- EST MANIFOLDING, POSITIVE AL IGN- MENT, UNEQUALLED SPEED, A STANDAID AMERICAN MACHINE, THEHIGHEST GRADE IN EVERYTHINE' WE HAVE :THE AGENCY. ADDRESSâ€" QREELMAN BEES. KNITTING MACHINE MFURS. GEORGETOWN, 0 NT- Manufactured only by Bevgeltlesrcs 8r SGNS AMILTDN,0 NT. ennui l i 1