' l â€"â€" l MIRAOOEJF Til-DAY. rm: STARTme sxrsmsscs or A rouse LADY IN ST. moms. A Constant Sull'erer for More Than l‘lve rearsâ€"fl" Blood Ind Turned to Water -Phyalclau leld Out no lope ofller Recoveryâ€"low ner ur- Was Saved- A Wonderful story. From the St. Thomas Journal. “ The Angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him, and de- livereth them." Such is a verse of holy writ made familiar to very many residents of St. Thomas by the well-known evange- list, Rev. J. E. Hunter. In letters of gold on the stained glass fanlight over the door of his residence, No 113 Wellington street, is the text “ Psalm xxxiv, 7." Though we live in an age noted for its energetic, zealous Christian endeavor, this idea of Mr. Hunter's to impress the truths of the scrip- tures upon those who read though they run, is altogether so original and so novel that iht once excites the curiosity. Those not familiar with the text make a mental note of it, and at the ï¬rst opportunity look it up. This is just what was done by a representative of the Journal, who had occasion to visit Mr. Hun- ter's residence the other day. But with the object of the visit and the infqr- mation obtained the reader will be more concerned. The reporter was assigned to .‘investigate a marvellous cure said to have been effected in the case of a young lady employed in Mr. Hunters’ family, by that well-known and popular remedy, Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills. And it was a wonderful story that the young lady had to tell, and is undoubtedly as true as it is wonderful. Last June the same reporter interviewed Mrs. John Cope, wife of the tailgate-keeper on the London and Port Stanley road, who had been cured by Pink Pills of running ulcers on the limbs after years of suffering, and after having been given up by a num- ber of physicians. The old lady had entirely recovered, and could not say too She was reï¬ned, intelligent. and not bad looking, but somehow she never seemed to take with the gentlemen. They didn't like her listless ways ; they said she hadn’t any "snap" about her. Poor girl! she w.s suffering faom functional irregularities. and it was actually impossible for her to take much interest in anything. But a change came. One day she heard of Dr. Pierc ‘s Favorite Prescription. She procured a bottle, and she had not taken half its I contents when she lelt like another woman. Who In In to the Bad or Ila Tether Temporarily at Vlctorls, 8.0. A despatch from Victoria, B.C., says:â€" Victoria city jail has at presentas a guest a stylish young Englishman registered under the name of Percy Whittall and who is charged with uttering worthless cheques in settlement of sundry wine bills. He pleads ignorance of business require- ments and intoxication as the only excuse, and feels his position keenly. Barrister George Powell, who is retained as his solicitor, announces that the young man has an income of £40,000,and since his incarceration he has, by the death of his father, come into the peerage and vast estates, James Whittall (his father) having been a millionaire brewer of Dumfries who was elevated by Mr. Gladstone after long service in the House of Commons. The son was mixed up in the Dunlo-Belle Bilton scandal a few years ago and has since been travelling at a very fast paceâ€"so last that the family could stand it no longer, and when he was helplessly drunk, so it is alleged, ship ped him from Liverpool to the Paciï¬c coast on the sailing barque Astoria, in order that his escapade might blow over. On arrival in San Francisco he collected $3,000 there to his credit, spent it iua fortnight, and came here, where he pro- ceeded to repeat his “celebration†on credit, and by giving cheques on local banks where he had noaccount. Had he not been intox- icated certainly he would not havt‘asgpne so, for Bella, Irving & Paterson, his agents at Vancouver, say they have instructions to pay all bills certiï¬ed by him, though not to advance money. ' 7 A veer SWELL PRISONER » Iss- Didn‘t Take With the Gentlemenâ€" Now she is in the enjoyment of perfect health, and has suitors by the score. No woman need suffer from functional irregu- larities and weaknesses. The “Favorite Prescription†is a safe and certain cure ftr all the weaknesses to which women are peculiarly subject. Dr. Pierce's Pellets cure constipation biliousness, indigestion and headache. One a dose. ' A ï¬rm in Palestine is engaged in supply- ing water fro n the river Jordan to churc es. It is put up in sealed bottles and sold by the case. Wide Awake. Soup Is a solid bar or pure "In that will not vanish like snow In hot water. Try it. The most useful insect is the silkworm. It is estimated that 5,000,000 persons gain a livelihood by raising the worms. Wide Awake Soap is a mammoth bar or pure soap. Try it. About half of the world’s population die before the age of sixteen, and one-quarter before the age of six years. nerve Pain (‘nre Polson’s Nerviline cures flatulence. chills and spasms: Nerviline cures vomiting, diarrhma, cholera, and dysentery. Nerviline cures headache, sea sickness and summer complaint. Nerviline cures neuralgia, toothache, lumbago and sciatica. N erviline 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 A Wave that Traversed the Globe. The biggest solitary wave ever known was that caused by the Peruvian earth- quake of August 13, 1868. In no other in- stance, we are assured, has it been known that a well-marked wave of enormous pro- portion has been propagated over the largest ocean tract of the globe by an earthquake whose action has been limited much in praise of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which had given here new lease of life. As it was with Mrs. Cope, so was it with Miss Edna Harris, the young lady in the employ of Mr. Hunters' family who has been restored to health and strength by Miss Harris has just passed her twentieth year, and is a daughter of George Harris, who lives at Yarmouth Heights, and is employed by Mr. Geo. Pink Pills. . Boucher, florist and plantsman. “ I believe Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills saved my life, and I am quite willing that every- one should know it,†was the reply of Miss Harris when asked if she had been beneï¬t- ted by Pink Pills, and if so would she make public her story. Continuing, she said, years of age I was ï¬rst taken sick. The doctors said For ï¬ve years I suffered terribly, and was so weak that I could barely keep alive. It was only will, the doctors said, that kept me alive at all. If I tried to stand fora short time, or if I got the least his warm I would fall over in a faint. My eyes were white and glassy, and I was so thin and pallid that every one believed" I was dying of consumption. During the ï¬ve years I was ill, I was attended by ï¬ve physicians in St. Thomas, two in Detroit, one in Lou- aud one in Aylmer, and none of them could I was so far gone that they had no hopes of my recovery. feet and limbs swelled so they had to be bandaged to They were whole body was swollen and bloated, and the doctors said there was not a pint of blood in “ Vl'hen I was twelve or thirteen my blood had all turned to water. my grit and strong do anything for me. Towards the last my keep them from bursting. bandaged for three months, and my my body, and they held out no hopes what- ever. about a man in Hamilton being taxing Pink Pills. cure him they continued taking Pink Pills until I had taken seven boxes, then irregularly I took three more, one of which Mr. Hunter brought back from Brockville. I am per- fectly cured. I have not been ill a single day since I ï¬nished the seventh box of pills. I came to Mrs. Hunter‘s a year ago,and she will tell you I have never been ill a day since coming and able to do the work. can and do strongly recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills," said Miss Harris in conclusion. Her appearance is certainly that of a strong, healthy young woman. hire. J. E. Hunter,wife of the evangelist, told the reporter that Miss Harris was a good, reliable and truthful girl, and that perfect reliance could be placed in her state~ meats. “She looks like aditl‘erent girl from what she was when she came here a year ago,†said Mrs. Hunter. The facts above related are important to parents, as there are many young girls just budding into womanhood whose con- dition is, to say the least, more critical than their parents imagine. Their com- plexion is‘ pale and waxy in appearance, troubled with heart palpitation, headaches, shortness ofbreath onthe slightest exercise, faintness and other distressing symptoms which invariably lead to a premature grave unless prompt steps are taken to bring abouta natural condition of health. In this emergency no [remedy yet discovered \can sup ly the lace of Dr. Williams' Pink V'l’ills, w uch bui d anew the blood, strength- ‘en the nerves and restore the glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks. They are certain system. young or old. Pink Pills also cure such diseases as rheumatism, neuralgia, genial paralysis, locomotor ataxia. St. itus‘ dance, nervous headache, nervous prostration, the after effects of la grippo, and severe colds, diseases depending on human in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas etc. In the case of men they etl'ect a radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are sold onl in boxes bearing the tirm's trade mark. hey are never sold in bulk. and any dealer who offers substitutes in this form is tryin to defraud and should be avoided. The pu lie are cautioned against other so called blood builders and nerve touios, put up in smile: form intended to deceive. Ask for Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, and ms. all imitations and substitutes. Cars be had from all dealers or by mail from the 1):. Williams' Medicine (bmgsuy, Brock- ville, Out... or Schenectady. .". Y., at 50 Two years ago I saw in the Journal cured by I thought if they could would help me,and Idccided to try them. Before I had ï¬nished three boxes I felt relieved; the swelling went down and the bandages were removed. I here, and I always feel strong town. and westward. California, was sixty feet. 6,300 miles away, and reached Yokohama, in Japan, inthe early hours of the morning, after taking in New Zealsnd on the way. having traversed nearly the whole globe. -â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€".â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Rulned Ills Stomach for Science. in which he saved his nerves for science, but injured his stomach for the same cause. Throughout his life he was opposed to the use of tobacco. “I never smoke, " he once said, “because I have seen the most evident proofs of the injurious effects of tobacco 0n the nervous system." But his desire to investigate the contents of his own stomach, by swallowing sponges to which a thread was tied and pulling them up to examine the gastric juice which they had absorbed, brought on a. rare affection, known as mery- cism, or rumination, which compelled him to masticate his food the second time. ' Railroad Development. Relatively to its area, Europe is much better furnished with railway‘facilities than any other of the world’s continents, and even in Europe, where the railway system had its ori in, and where it attained to its vigorous a olescence at a much earlier period than elsewhere, unless weexcept the United States, the rate of growth during the last decade has been considerable. It the whole of Europe were to be supplied with railways to the same extent, relatively to area and population, as the United Kingdom, the railway system of this old Continent would still appear to be only in its infancy. The British Isles have an area of l‘21,l155qunrc miles, and as the mileage of railwaysopen- ed is now close on 20,000 miles, there is, roughly, one mile of railway to six miles of area. If the same relationshiplof railway mile- age to area were to be established in Eu- rope generally, the total railway mileage, instead of being only 136,562 miles, would be raised to about 030,000 miles, or nearly ï¬ve times as much as it is at the present time. Europe, however, although it has nearly one-third of the total railway mile- age of the world, has only about one-four- teenth of the world’s known land surface, so that if the density of railway mileage were as great throughout the land surface, of the globe as in the British Isles, the ulti- mate railway mileage, instead of being only about 370,0L0 miles, as in 1890, would rise to 8,866,000 miles or nearly thirty times as much. This, of course, is an im- possible ï¬gurc, and is only interesting as showing what still remains to be done in the way of extending the existing network of the arteries of commerce and travel. A large part of the land surface of the globe is uninhabited, owing to its aridity or to the rigors of the climate. No one would dream of constructing railways in “Greenland's icy mountains," although a good deal has already been done, and much more remains to be achieved in “India's coralstraud."â€"[The Fortnightly Review. .â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"_o___.____ Insanity is increasing in Ireland. In 1830 the average was ‘249 cases per 100,000 of population ; now it is 369. An Extended Experience. Writes a well-known chemist, permits me to say that Putnast Painless Corn Extractor never fails. It makes no sore spots in the flesh, and consgquently is painless. Don't forget to get Putnam's Corn Extractor, now for sale, by medicine dealers everywhere. Substitutes areevery- where offered as just as good. Take “Put~ mans"ouly. Aglass factory in Liverpool has glass doors, glass shingles on the roof, and a glass smoke stack 105 feet high, built of glass bricks 1 foot square. cam! morning. Hrs. Smith. [have Just ï¬nished my washing. using Wide Awake Soap : It is the has snap I ever- uud: It washed so easlly. snaking the clothes far' cleaner than I ever her! than: before, and Is lasts twice as lea: as any other soup 1 eye? used; and Inst feel luv also and set: my to a relatively small region, and that region not situated in the center, but on one side of the area traversed by the wave. At; Aries. it was ï¬fty feet high, and enveloped the town, carrying two warships nearly a mile beyond the railway to the north of the The single sea traveled northward Its hight at San Pedro, in It inundated the smaller members of the Sandwich group, It spent itself ï¬nally in the South Alautic, One of the most singular things about the great nervous specialist, Dr. Brown- Sequard, who died recently, was the way Try Polson’s Nerviline. been burned. says It is the best they have ever used. Have you tried It yet ‘.' The peace footing of the Russian army calls for the services of 170,000. A Toronto Coroner's Verdict. Dr. W. A Young, Coroner, 145 College St., Toronto, writes that he has used St. Leon \Vater very largely in his private practice, and can endorse it as one of the best saline waters at present on the market and positively curative in its et’ects. Sold by all principal druggists, grocers and hotels. The death penalty has just been resumed in Switzerland. For twenty-ï¬ve years it had been abolished. Wide awake people always use Wide Awake Soup. The nations richest in horses are the Argentine Republic and Uruguay. Recipe.-For Making a Delicious llenllh Brink at Small (fast. Adams' Root Beer Extract ........... one bottle Fleischmann's Yeast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . half a. cake Sugar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . two pounds Lukewurm W'ater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . two gallons Dissolve the sugar and yeast in the water. add the extract, and bottle ‘; place in a warm place for twenty-four hours until it for ments, then place on ice, when it will open sparkling and delicious, - Theroot beer can be obtained in all drug and grocery stores in l0 and 25 cent bottles to make two and ï¬ve gallons. has been found in Sicily. It yet! Toronto, Ontario. A Narrow Escape iTook Poison by Mistake Bad Effects Entirely Eliminated by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. “C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mesa: “Gentlemeatâ€"In April last. through the effects of :1. dose of strychnlnc taken in mistake for another drug, I was laid up in St. John, i N. 13., for ten days. After this I never seemed to regain my former health, and continually ant. (cred from indigestion and heart palpitation, for which I could get no relief. I thought I would try Hood's Sarsaparllla. After , taking one bottle, Ilelt a little better, so con- ' tinue using the remedy until I had consumed I slx bottles. I found myselt gaining strc Hood’sss’irCures and flesh every day, and am now as healthy as I was before taking the lace." F. V. Wmoan, representing the ly Perfumes, so Melbourne Avenue, Tomato, Ontario. Hood's Pills cure liverllls. constipation, jaundice, blllousness, slck headache. indigestion. The ofï¬cial or- gan ofChurch's miniqu School for the cure of Stammcring. Toronto Canada, sent free postpard. - C AX VASSl-IRS W'ANTED for the Farmer's ' separate accounts for all farm transnational). ,One axenthai alread sold nearly It!) coal.“ in one county. Send or circulars and terms. Since cremation was begun in France more than 13,000 unclaimed bodies have .mrnt everyone says must be true, and everyone who has used Wide Awake ‘50:“) BOOKS standard, mailed post free on receipt of price. Send for our catalogue. A. Prddington. 248 Yonge St. Ahuman skull as large as a bushel basket Wide Awake soup is the only true. self washing soup In the world. Have you tried Friend and Account Book. presenting near: 0 1 “ma-Mon m xcaucumï¬ 10 page .~ Walgij agdj GU use oh .i _ Perilqu loot leer During the summer months a more de~ licious drink than Root Beer could not be desired. For the beneï¬t of our readers we give this recipe. Take Spider‘s Root Beer Extract - one bottle 1 ea t â€" - . - half a cake Sugar - - - - ~ 4 u». Luke Warm Water . - o gallons Dissolve the sugar and yeast in the water, add the extract, and bottle, place in a warm place for twenty-four hours until it fer- ments, then place on ice, when it will open sparkling and delicious. The Root Beer Extract can be obtained at all Grocers’ and Drug Stores, at 25c.per bottle. ssOm‘ m OlllllOOlll - DRY - lllllll - OlOSil Endorsed b doctors and scientists. Every home about have one. Price '6. Manufac- . turod by CAN, GEAR 80., Gananoquc, Out. A. P. 708 WILL OUT Scatter-ed For-onto Meet Economlouly. More Proï¬table Investment for Small Mann. Wm“ WATEROUS. 2.17.23" MUSIC! wads should know where the can get their Music chcnpcsg Write us for Catalogues; also sample copy of the CANADIAN Musrcrarv, a live monmlyjour- nal with $1.00 worth of music in each issue. 33 to $6 per day msdaby csnvassers. See rem- iumlist. We carry every bin: in the Music line. WHALEY. ROYCE & CO. 158 Your: 21'. renouromur. . HOW TO GROW FAT . ‘ All diseases of thl nervous system, such as Rheumatism, Neuralgia. Nervous Debilitansomnia. Heart Failure, Palpitation of the Heart, Paralysis, Epilepsy, Locomotor At- axia, are closely allied to 31.00 Bottle. _- One cent a dose. Itis sold. on a Epsnntee b drug gists. It cures cipient Coynsumption uro. and. is the best Cough and Group C Take care Mat your drafts on mrpï¬yu’ml endurance don’t come back to you some day marked “:10 fund’s. " Take ' THERE are two sides to every ques- tion. Thin people sometimes G R 0 w FAT. That is the side you want to know OfPureCodLiverOil&Hypophos bites to mcreareyom; erg and :0 ma :gvod your amount a! 2‘ dank Q/‘Igaltï¬. about. Well, you such renal digeasesnal Diu- ' b ties, Brig t's issue, 17‘ CURES may be sufl'erm g from Junta", mum at m GUI/SUMPTION, SOROFI/ll, BRONCIIITIS, DOUGHS, 00108 and all forms of Wasting Diseases. Almor! a: Palatable a: [Vi/é. Be run you gt! tire genuine a: Mere arefoar imi- lalz‘om. Prepared only by Scott 3. Rome. Belleville. Wu“ some diseaseâ€"nothâ€" ing to kill you, but something that makes life a burden and keeps you thin. Get rid of it at once by taking Scbi/ler’s Sar- sapari/la Pills. Sold by all Drnnlsts everywhere. in square, flat boxes, AI 60cents. Any responsible druggiat Will get them for you. Hailed on receipt of price. TORONTO K. H. SONILLER & 00., Bladder, Stone in the Bladder, and Backache, as they are all due to a low tone of the System or speciï¬c poison in the blood. and can be very easily cured by using sch". ler's Sareapnrllla Pills. Dole!- as dangerous. ‘ Money spent for good books is well spent. Any book or novel, new or Established in 1860 by RISSER & GO. mansrorrr noon srous. Tor-on to W.t.\"l‘l~‘.D.â€"â€"A position on a farm or hour a suburban row Home as an ornament, and to pump wawr, sprinkle lawns. c'n -! water up atalrs, out wood, cut Iced. run a dynamo is: t‘lL‘tllfl-l light purposes, and do a , ‘ rcat variety of odd , c ‘ g .‘ in». For a week I ' ave been a galvan- '» r izcd-aftcr-completcd - Acrrnalcr;prcvrousto _-,' - that I was only Steel. _, ‘_ Zinc and Aluminum, unulloyed and unmade l . ll services can be v" V . ligd very’chsnp, it taken now, 10 3“, homo. are tur~ durin the slackaeason. Ape ‘. nlshed ï¬t prices within ply tdnry parchmthe Ars- ‘ reach 0! ML Cypress, aoroa Census, 1211.. Each 1 Pine or Galvanized wall and Fillmore streets, _ . SmlTankg'wnugmo. Chicago.N.B.â€"I amalwsys v lug galvamm am“ at horns and steady. Ours ‘ - amlcluros a spec. hllwlnrgnat rmmlyotio ,\ , “my, \vammlshaal- kind in the world, and .5 . yanked 8m, stock never hasoue of us gone , f that do notlenk wrong. We are aloe a k and wake mud hole. ‘ ‘ mo thls which do- , light the eye and add lnnumerablo comforts SJOI OOVllllll'O CONBOY’S lMPllOVEO r! 'l "w" W" "I 1"" Y’ at less than wooden Be sure and get one for your Buggy. Take no ‘1‘“ “‘vâ€,"°'°“~’ “‘31â€: one, cost. other kind. They won't: disappoint you. and? (Simiiï¬ferwn am†my 'l‘lzo Aermctor Col They are better than ever for 1894. Steel ones) but are '3 ‘ proposcstodlstrlbuto \‘er sensit‘vs bolngvisc ihly’aflcrlc‘dliyableslh and have great in- "mm flucnce,belng [1‘le to , persuade \vatrrh run aim ‘ uphill.lnf..ct,vrsuro 5r ., $500 CA8, .v "I PRIZES, for the best essuy - nritten by the I , wlfo, son or I 4 daughter ‘ of air. “'6 Itand high 'FEEF emu-min the use. tion“\'ll 'BllO Ll) l [’52 All ABIL- MOTOIII" For con- diticnl of compo- titlon and amounts and numlx rs or ' prizesmul for per- . “salon to tho ' ‘1, Acrxnutor C0» ,c_ \, (hicago, or to ï¬x ll’ .rnncher, 5†nth-allusion:- . eo,h’ansasC.ly, ‘ liucoln, Nels, Sioux City. Iowa. Minneapolis llqu .' bin, or 0-â€: Park Place, N. Y. Cal. anything ever known, since we work 2!. hour: a (lay and more : t ‘ MANUFACwH/i'esgzro.RON To ~«_: Ac RES 0F LAN D {or sale by the Sam‘r PAUL I,OO0,00 a Duwrn Rarnnoan Conraxx in Minnesota. Send {or Maps and Circu- lars. They will besent to you FREE. “an†HOPEWELL CLARKE, \‘.’rl'/3qulc'a’. w Land Commissioner. St. hummus. m win: “4% Supericr be.u;;1, lxsv- film“: If lug liccu place! by our creator between ‘ tlzessrh and heavens. » 3 Ourstcol has breathed .. § in many a tilt and J_ 30 . towers shore every. I 2'. thingeverywhcre. We 1 3 ereinduslliousbsyond . ‘ y I 1 . ». i- t .. Hull (1.35 do}: in tho ‘ year. We are untir- , In; in our vigilance ] -â€"\vu Han-l our you > - day and ni:lzt. We are CCOHOEZIICJI be- )H-nd Iujlllinz on :- I the cnzh or lathe cbvululnlynnlluns hut thin air. 'a, ii o , . ] hesvcnr, as we til- ‘ _EE_ANBY. RUBBEï¬S. They give perfect satisfaction in ï¬t style, and finish, and it has. become a by-word that ‘ “ GRANBY RUBBERS wear like lron.’ b.-..__.___.__. - .._.._.__.... .. THE ONLY ONE IN THE WORLD .. ROUGH WOOD and 00M. . . . Equally W'ell. . . 8 0X 0RD Gllflfll ::Wllldolt:: Has the Largest Oven. IS A FARl‘lER'S srove ls Everybody’s - Book stove. See it. O u - - THE OXFORD'. . OIL GAS COOK STOVE Mthoutlllolt. Makes and Burns Its Own Gas From Common Coal Oil. N0 DIRT, N0 HEAT IN THE KITCHEN. Cooks a. Family Dinner for Two Cents. . The GOOOEY FOUNDRY OO., Ltd†TORONTO. ' i l ._-.-:L «La». cure for all troubles peculiar to the female, cont-abet ersix boxes for $2.50. hands are. l WuJJAJ-l unions. Publisher. Toronto. $W O