ovt annuity of 330007;; ,nug h, t' life time, a 't Is to be â€an, Hm tour children.“ to have the free - mrgo >troet resident)†" John. In... hot . In Hamilton Steel? KY A brother In t5tsotd t.000: a niece In B“. ooo. tho Orphan we Women‘s Home. in. w remark he walks. restaurant into "I. " arm around tho )r'te horse and lifted 6,923.22 to niture was neys IE’S Wlll. . s Suffering betw _ Mo “Pr Pills. on. t box. At all Bates & m. itt ttt "anneal. the Home Mission S BURNED. In: no Att wul too trrmit lad to rides. no " union. During MI a pony kicked ttian mv. halving It bad he would be u strung. In hotom trr" “nor b90311†Hurt fur him; in 1M ‘ntvr'tH trip Hove]... Llovl (ir about 310... ty tin. Mi th nu" [hr astute up may har, to par nuinl. Tho law, II Dun om Y" sied " trsr,l than i To per. ‘u:l tho“ -: I strore _ Kidney- Ih~y 511'. lb restat- " 00.000 tormn Chi-'0- the Boys’ 80- me 8GOO one), qwerty is to h -o-n Jnmua TL 4H“ and If. Al Organ try Dr. and at.. " 1.2%; Aatoo. , a a towing I too trreast ride, m h During his V kntrd hi,- tvinst n bad 8100.000 ia Cryr you. beset warn old be “That. "st thing to. i the mm at his only "thm, wet. AZIRIS Parishn in the rt, but i. For gr who smut- ~p-nkl. mused at. tho y (-0]. m tho much " ear- use. E He arm fire 'u 1 r Id na- war- mn- I 0 a] and in. 1r, moo 0m- and list) " on ty. 1a- trt- nqt mu "u 'ol. het on " m per p- was Any. tht Cit" ash]. All weak and ailing girls and wo- men. sufferers from backache. head- aches. indispoeltion to work or ex- amine, who show by their pale and shallow cheeks that they are in ill health, will find prompt relief. bright eyes. may cheeks and active health h a fair use of Dr. William: Pink Pills. You can obtain these pills from any medicine dealer or by mail postpalil. nt GO cents n box or six boxes for $2.50, by writing dlrect to the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, 'Brockville. Ont. Never accept any- thing: else which a dealer may my " "just as good." I tn raw-a trr this kiml. Sh." says: .. Mxm: throw you“; aw" the health of 1123 dumc’ltnr, B;u'tha, began to tail. Sim gn-w weak and seemed un- able- to stand thrs least exertion. She suffnrul from distressing headaches and fainting tits; lwr nanwtile loft her and she RIF-t flesh. 1spmtt hm,le moan; un 'nulit-inw. but they (lid not hrlp her. Then I took her ton. doctor, and although his trentmr‘nt Was pv-rxixtml in for a long time she remix] to he growing worse, and I began to fear she was going into consumption. Then I took her to a spa-inlet. but his treatment was likewise nmmccesslnl. Finally upon the advice of a lady friend. a doctor practising: in (thcago. Bertha began; using Dr. Will'uims' Pink Pills, and before long there was a decided im- provement in her condition. and by the time she had taken nine boxes she was once more '"272t the beat ate health and had gain fifteen pounds in weight. I would strongly “his:- all similar sufferers to give Dr. William? Plnk Pills a tair trial, as her case seemed " hopeless us add be." - - After trestodtoou, “in most perilous limo in a young girl's lite is when she is Just entering wumanhoud. It b then that she is subject to head- aches, dizziness. heart palpitatiou, (Gable apatite, and bloodless Ntooks all) Ups. This condition may easily develop into consumption. and to t,T2tl this-to lump the young girl good health and strength. moth- er. mum insist upon their taking; a 'blood-making tonic, such as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Mrs. annry Nahum rp, Port Daihouait‘, Ont, tpivot N’llild mlvirn to other mothers tn amps or this kind. Sim saws: Marked by Pate Faces, Heart Palpita- tion. hose ul'Appetite and General Lassitude How to Overcome This Condition. Is the Period When Young Girls are Merging Into Womanhood c, "_-e ...,v.. uvsult: autumn. " she held on until the evenings Brew cold and long, until the winds began to howl about lonely Larklmli. and to bring swirling showers of dead leaves to the ground with the hiss. tug sound of a beach ot pebbles un- der the retreating waves of a wintry sea, then I felt that i should giro way. that I should see in Miss Farlngton’s pro- saic gray eyes pleasant domestic pictures. in her erect figure and slop- ing shoulders, an attraction which, to a lonely mom when the deer- stulking and fishing seasons were over. were quite irresistible. I had had one plaintive little let- ter from Babiole. in which she en- trentmt me. in rather stiff and s'tiltod language, out of which peep- ed a. most touching anxiety. to be- ware of her father, who, she assured me. was more desperate and danger- ouu in his intentions to do me harm than she had even dared to suggest when face to face with me. Iwrote back in a clumsy letter. as still as her own. but not so touching. that she need have no fear. as her father had settled down quietly at Aber- deen. I dart-ll not tell the truth, which I had found out through Fer- $rttrton--tltat Mr. Elliner had indeed Comr- up to the Highlands with the aVmel intention of "eair- ..... M.-- he so much I must be an 1ntinitO morn amiable man than I had ever supposed. This frame ot mind natur- ale led me to look kindly on the lady who had enabled me to make such tr phasing discovery. and I knew myself to be softening to such an "stent that l felt that, unless Mr. Fari.usrton should have Ballator be. lorr- the summer was over, 1 should bo “a, game coon" before autumn. If ntto lu-ld on until the evenings Brew cold and long, until the winds began to howl "bout lonely Larklunll. anti; to bring swirling showers of dead h-..-.. A -' , I am not making an idle boast; I am recording a Incl when I say that that girl lard siege to me with a skill and putVmee which tilled me at. ternately with admiration, grati- tude and alarm. Sine learned my tastes. she rimmed my habits, she metered my opinions until I began to think “null it a person who ap- purt‘ntly knew me N) well could like u an ---L, . V A TRYING TIME aevAiymd1ua4thgetti1g,btt, (Zg/ZM% 43/675?! Wat-4 attack ul enabled me to make wing mammary. and I to be summing to such " I felt that, unless Mr. ould have Ballater he. of ne had delirium I "Think." sho said, 1ntlpsiatrtitraIly, "what " would moan! To plant the ‘llrst footing; of knowledge, civiliza- tion, refinement, among these peas- ants! To give them (was to see the brauty of the nature which surrounds them! To give them resources tor refined onJoymom when winter closes the door of nature to them, to widen their knowlmlge of the world and touch them that "hintor den Bergen stud and! Lento!" Oh, Mr. Maude, If building and starting this school were to cost ten thousand pounds, I should say tho mmmy had been well However she was more pleased with me for What I had remembered than angry for what I had forgotten. I "ht any rate you can come and i!""' It now.“ she said, and turning l back she In] the way townrdsa broad ', meadow in the valley of the Muick. ! with n fair view or the little river and of the hills beyond. which would have been " very good site for a school, if n school had been needed. "An awfully nice place for it," I agreed, as she expatiated upon the merits of n. rising ground with drain- from the woods above. "And if the I school ever gets blunt. I exrwot there will be only one thing it will want." "Go rm, though I know what you are going to tray," sho said. '* Scholars," Irinbhr‘d, briefly. Miss Farlngton nnddrd. "'l‘lmy will comp," she mid confidently, "it the thing is properly organized." Organization' was her hobby. If that little affair came off, my library would be partly catalog-110d and partly burnt, and To-tn would he organized into the stable-yard. Still I did not flinch. ' " I took this letter up to Cruigen- y durroch. and had first a cigar and - than a pipe over it. To refuse f? Fabian'" request was impossible; to lend the cottage and go away my- - self would be inhospitable and suc- - piciou's: to lend it and stay would 1 be dangerous. With the last whiffs - of tobacco an inspiration came. I - swung back home, wrote back to l Fabian that Lnrkhnll itself. the cot- .. tage, the garden. the s'tnbles, and t every tool-shed about the place were ' entirely at Mrs. Scott’s disposal. to- ' gather with all the live Mock, hips 1 man and otherwise: and that she : had only to fix the timo of her ar- ' rival and Mrs. Ellmer's. ' The letter finished, and put in the bug. I had a glass of sherry; and. fortified by that, and by nu heroic Home of duty, I sallind forthi in tho direction of the Mill o' Siorrin, in which neighborhood Miss Furingtou. who did everything by rule, was al- wnys to be found district-visiting on a Thursday. I suppose no nun: wizh M’m' so little brain or ever My little iwart, who hut; ilrlihttutely made up his'mind topm- pose to a girl, was the moment up- proarhing wliimut a certain trepida- tion. I own that when I saw the moment and Miss Faringtnn up- proaching together, although I had very little doubt about her answer, and wry little cnthuvsinsm about tin- result, I had a thumping at my hunt and a singing in my euro. With the memory of Bahiole and the thought l of her visit in my mind, not even the [ sherry Would cast a giumur over l those exceuiingly winning shoulders, which seemed almost to argue some , ‘morai deficiency. some terrible luck I of some qualitv without which no t woman’s character " complete. In 1 the meantime, she was hearing down l upon me, and I was still without an ( opening speech. But she was not. i "What a treat to see you in this I part of the world, Mr. Maude." she said, holding out her hand. .. I con- fess I did you the injustice to think I you would forget your promise." t "Promise!" I repeated, vaguely. . "I am afraid Imust teoMetm-.-" H "You had forgotten ?" she said, t smiling. " Rf‘aily this is too bad.†f "ht least. you see. I hadn't for- gotten thnt this is the way your al- t ways walk on a Thursday," said I. u with a look that was intended to c convey much. i? "And had forgotten mg site tor a new school !" Fabian which gave me a great whorl; Him wiln had been very ill, he said. and although she had now been declared out of danger. she re- covered strmsgth so slowly that it had become imperative to send her away somewhere. Mrs. Ellmer, who was now with her. having sa1ggeixl her old homo im the Highlands. the doctor had agreed warmly and Fa. bian tlrertfor" begged, as an old blend. that I Would lend his wife and her mother the cottage tor a short tinw, nailing that he was sure I would look after my little favorite until. after n tow dnys" time, he could rejoin her. i It was kn tint: dele ot August, while the weather was still-everywhere but in the Highltmdtr-insufteratgy hot, that I rem-wed a letter from tromens. and had been placed under" restraint in tho county lunatic may» Jam. I Babble's letter I van-led about with m0. and Eometiruerr-tor loneliness among the hills would make a son- timntal fool of the most robust of ttsu-l taucivd that the little sheet of paper. In spite of Miss Farington and tho domestic pictures, burnt Into my heart. expat-t there lmulrtiful Mr. Wed/iris-No, f hadn't; were so very nrzrmvlb‘e. I wm Metoly deceived. ' Ramon to be Received. Til-Bits. Mrs. WPderly (unmaakirng after fancy trally-Oh, but didn't I 1 you, though. You had no idea t you were flirting with your wife the eveging. keeper, Mrs. Janet, took mp over it one day." Perhaps it was anger at the thought that this young lady had mentally disposed ot all my property prematurely, perhaps annoyance that she should have intruded in the cottage at all, which helped to augment the sad- den fury which seized me at this suggestion. She went on, quite un- aware of what she had done. "Now I was thinking what a charming convalescent home a place like that would make for poor wldqws in re- ducal circumstances, wlto"-- su nicrly ituiished too. Your house- But she could trot ki-(sp long away from [Home confounded plans. As we drew [war the gramme; of Larkhall. and could sen tlw slnlylns and (mo cor- nor (if the roof of th" cottage, she utupped short and said pensively - 'U've oTten thought, Mr. Maude, what a. pity it is that cottage should be kept runny. when it is "I will try to make still mare,†I sairl, quiet cerely, upon which she length ot returning the my fingers on liters. "But I like It (won as it is because lit is your hmne." she added, with tt Much of humnn feeling for which I felt grateful. "Thank you." I said, and I took hem hand again. I hmitaled about using: lwr Christian name, and de- cided amt to. "Lucy" seemed such an Inappropriate appvllatiun tor Miss Furingmn; R-he ought at least to have [won "Henrietta." I felt a oold shiver up my back, per- cehing that even my study Inlght be already doomed. “I think it only wants the south wing raisod a story. and the tirawint room Hillargr‘d by taking in that space between the outer' wall and that row of lilacs and guelller- â€me-H at the back, to makn it one, or the plnasantt-st of the country houses about lie-re." she replied promptly. "In my plans? No, ‘mleml. I haven't Don’t you rtrttttttnirvr your mymg the othm' any that it tietattted a pity to waste good drainage and sanitary regulations upon people who WPrt? never ill T' "I-I only mean. that my interest 1 “DUNK. Allis have noticed m, runngum lutrmd with a pprfoctly stolid face, but with a heightened color which told that she knew. in vulgar parlanctu, what I was driving at. Now that I was coming to the point, however. 9hr- did not nwan to have any "humhugglng about." At least, some such determination as that rather than mu'LdPn coylwss. mamâ€, ‘_ - __ . . P6K1utrnetttg and at tor you-An a pin to say. I nhnuld whatevnr lay in “Then I Guoiare, I mustn't expéct much help from you, Mr. Maude," she til, rather etimy. . over it In "188. you may. indeed. .voi: may expect every help." I said. rushing at the tmoortunitv, and ".oaarrrirar.. r,.." "And can you, Mr. Maude. who pro- fess to revel in Montaigne and Shake- speare, delight in Charles Lamb and Hun-ed do Vigny. deny such plea- sures to Four humble neighbors'."' "But my humble neighbors woulda't read Shakespeare or Montaigne, nor even Wilkie Uolllns nor Dumas the Elder. Ttnerd red the Bow Bella novelettea. Ahd as to teaching them to admire their own hills, why they love them more than you do, for Nature Isn't to them a closed book in, winter as it seems to you." I was on tho wrong tack alto.. gether. 3.3 I felt when " goodluck the lady herself brought me to more‘ congenial ground. I se", tn It}! /etee 'riatlt_Hitrhund bog were taught to read!" athei- appalled by the thought ot the length. to which such a bound- leu enthusiasm might carry her, I murmured _ something to the et- tect that it would be rather ex- pensive. Whereat she turnedupon mh (To he Continued.) moan I' m Htghla nd Bonner-y, returning the pressure of opportunity, and 'ktarririkiG't' "It's true I-I don't much care m [m _ not 5199p!)- interested to make you like it said, tiuietly and sin- land childrnn. except ry, you know, pictur- and all that: but-er-but I a plan of Fours, that is 'rhrruhi be JPlighted to do ny g In my puwvr.’ lame} mtrtrrrmarwe Miss l naun‘t; yon [lie I was com- ‘uringxon. you muét growing interest in t I fool idea that went tho the all Brockvillc, Om.. m There is no tyrant like it teeth- ing baby. His temper isn't due to original sin. however; the tyrant suffers more ttian the rest of the family. He don’t know what is 1111- matter. They do. The trouble is they do not always know what to do tor his lordship. An Ontario l mother writes to tell what is best to do. “When my baby was teeth- ing," she says, “he was so cross and restlese that I hardly knew what to do with him. 110 had a poor appetite, and ate but little. and was growing thin. I got a box of Baby's Own Tablets, and they, made a great change. He now rests well, has a splendid appetite. nndj givcs me no trouble at all." This] is the experience not only ot Mrs.‘ D. K. Schroeder, of Hanover. Ont.. but also of thousands of mothers all over the Dominion. A baby teething is cross because his blood is heated and his little bowels con-l stipated or unheaithily relaxed.‘ and his system heated by the ct-! fort of getting the teeth through] tho gums. Baby's Own Tablets not. like magic not only in this. but in! all niiments of little ones. Sold by! druggists or sent post paid at 'e'tl cents a 11w h'y writing direct to. tho Dr. 'Willinms' Medicine tha., (kilns syetctn The Trouble- Not Due to Original Sin. _ Easy Way to [kt-member Dates, Tit-Bins. Ttturl/v-ln what year was the battlo of Waterloo fought I' Pupil-l don‘t know. Tia_tivluw--.It'r, simplv enough if you only woull learn how to cultivati- nrtifivial ntr'mory. 1temetuber the tw, 1w,- Apos-llvs. Add half that num- bot. to tluau; thut's eighteen. Mal- tlply that by 100: that's 1.800. Take the twvlvo apostles again; add a qmrtvr of thitr number to them; that's “Mann. Add what you‘ve got; that‘s 181.1. That‘s tho data. Quit:. simple, you two. to remsamber Although Tolshur.s boasts a pop- ulation of considerably over " thun- unni inhabitants. ills nvnrost rall- Wny Minion. levmlon and Manon. are hourly ton miles away. and from Muy until toward th" 9nd of hltrp- trtulu"r it is; simply n vlilage of wo- mm and :hildron. This Is owmi,r to tho tayt that nil the men, and most of th:. boys OVPI' JO yours of age. mun their living as. yacht hands. uni whr‘n tho rummvr commence»; tltry start. awry year for a crum- of .wnvr-rnl months' duration. rnrr-ly seeing tin-ir homes again till late in thr, autumn. _ By tho 0nd of this month tho mud flute whivlt ll.“ bviwoen Toilesbtrry and tho drop new will be a forest of nusts of plvasur'o yachts. which liv, up hi-ru for the winter, whrn the hands are pnld oil nnd the mun re-, turn to tho villugr'. During th'ewin-,' tor tlio anlo industries or ttte pluco are fishing, In smacks. oyster Ill-raging and (knight: for Har- fish. which lath-r urn of consider-l able vaiuru for manuring purposes. , Wut of Tollr-sbury WP“? among the (-rnw that Sir Thomas Lipton took, across tho Atlantis to sail Shumrork‘ I, am! sr'vtpttl of them all take part in tho fovtlrrominp: contest. English Towns Which are Deserted by the Men Every Summer. During the summvr and autumn many of thn villages and towns around Um Essex const are entirely without ablv-bodit-d won. save, or 00111399. for thn prt-sem-c of such 'indispensable pornoxmges as the clPrgyuvan, doctor and onn or two shopkuvpvrs. A typiol example is (he Village of TOMOSbul‘y. candoit that Doud's Kidney Pills, a. Canadian discovery. is the one rem- edy that treats diseased Kidneys as they should be treated. and effec- tually and permanently curesthem. An Eminent Authority. William Henry is the name of the English scientist who makes this statemmnt. He is known, rt'speeted, and followed in tltousaruls ot British homes. for as thw, author ot “Tim Penmy Medical Library" and kindred works he has talked uwdlcal st-ionce in slmirlo words to almost the Mitire British family. And William Henry umkos this statement concerning Dodd's Kimmy Pills, hoe-hum he has tested Dodd’s Kidm-y Pills thorough- I ly, because he has given Dodd's Kid- "Ry Pills the must thorough and [Practical of all (metre. he has usvdl Budd's Kimmy Pills himself tor Kid-l 1193' Trouble, and has trisen cured by 1 than). Nor is this mui'umlt Englislnmani mild in his own-(“salons of the satis- faction ho, feels at the result pro- ducml by this mmmly. “Dodd'a 5Pci m‘y Pills is Nwtninly a wonderfull rennmiy," he doclunm. "Is a Kidnvyl reiuusldy. I would buck it against all l the drugs in thru, Pharmaoormeitc" - H, â€-7. -_.___ “MT“... ...... how cause to be proud of her ad- vance along the walks or science. For an English authority. one of the highest in all England. one of the highest tn the world, has declared, and declared as emphatically as man mum}. Hem-yf "idiiCik""'iGiiiue, William Henry, the Cele! Himself with ll Englishmen are morbially slow to take up new things. They cling to the old till the new has been tried and tested. till n has been proTen beyond a. doubt that it is sound in its every principle. But once they have passed on It, and passed favorably. it goes forth to the world bearing a. trump of genuine value that nothing else could give it. And from that time forth that new thin-g. be it a thought, a fabrie or a remedy. bears the hall- mark of sterling worth that notlr. ing can destroy. Why Canada is Proud. It is fy: thi? mar-won that armada has CANADA lEADS THE WORLD IN Tiff FIELD Of MEDICAL RESEARCH A VILLAGE OF WOMEN. it you will A LITTLE TY "ANT only adopt my "cht'neettuty, ie Celebrated English Medical Authority, Experiments with Dodd's Kidney Pills, and Gives the Results. war-w ut2t%' There is no doubt that the unfavor- able effects- on the fueling of voll- being experienced by many indivlin- als. such as headache and oppression and nervous distrr-ss, on the advent of a thunderstorm, have a similar foundation. and are duo to tho same Plectrum! differences of rrnteotittl, the effects passing away as tho Ms... tufhed Condition of tho titrnoitlvere, or the storm. sttlriides.--Chieazo Lancet. .. _ _"'-..'- ...V.....,.t...,v. i Patt lawn win-n the sky is clear “he ntmmpheru may exhibit com 'suivmblv Mach-10M tension. Tho l,6'lsxctro.vicope constantly shows that in ('omluctlng point olevaton in the ‘nir is taking up " positive charge (an a rulv) of vlvctricity, tlt/ tendon rising; with thy might of the pint. This effect inrrnuscs toward day- break until it i'vnt'iws a maximum, some hours nut-r sunrise. it than diminbhos until it is weakest, a few hours before sunsvt, when again it rises and attains a wound maximum value some hours after sunset. the second minimum occurring before daybreak. There are. aretordinley. constant changes of olrctrical ten- sion going on, (-lmngos. howaver. which are more rapid and much more marked during a thunderstorm and which: are quitn powerful enough to exert an twit influence on certain. arm-loo of (car or drink susceptible to change, notably meat, milk, uni beer or older. _ ad- For the the I " um; be urged, again. that the phenomenon is due to oxidation by means of ozone, but this can hurd- Ity be the case. in view- or the large quantities of beer and milk that are tcyured in relation to the very small quantity of clone which a thunder- storm produees. in the. case of meat, at an) rate. the turning con scarce- 213' be attributed to the notion ot ,ozone. or oxygen. The change in probably due, not directly to chem- ical agencies, but purely to a dis-‘ turbunoe of the electric equilibrium.) , It in well known. that an opposite; ,electrical state is set up by induc- tion, so that an electrical condi- ! than of the. atmosphere tndruces 9. similar condition, tihoagh Wilt! in ctutmeter, in the objects on the ieartth. Persons near whom a flash lo! lightning passes frequently ex- 1perience a, severe diilock by induc- turn, though no lightning touches them; and in the celebrated exper- iment of Graham he showed that a. skimmed frog in the neighborhood of an electrical machine. although. dead, exhibited t'onvulsive movements every time that a 'spark was drawn from the cumin/clot: In the case of milk “turning" or of beer "harden- lug" Ot' ot meat becoming tainted, it is probably, therefore. an in- stance of chemical eonvulsion or,it may be, of a stimulus given to bacteriological agencies set up byI nu opposite elm-trite condition in.. t'iueed by the dixetnrbed electrical state- of the atmosphere. Although them; charges are most marked dur- ing a thunderstorm, yet undoubted-l ly they occur at other times, though t not to the some degree, when there‘ is no apparent electric cytituroanee. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO During serious electrical disturb- ances in the atmosphere it is well known that beer may become hand. milk may go sour, and meat may tre- quently tum. Considerable specu- lation has arisen as to the cause of this change. It has been suggested that an 020111294] state ot the air due to electric discharge has some- thing to do with it, or that the tor- matron of nitrous avid in the air is respunsible for the. change. It is, however, not probable that the at- mosphere undergoes any chemical. mhunge sufficient to account for the extent to wihieh certain, foods turm Moreover, any important quantity or ozone or nitrous acid would be cal- culated to exert a preservative et-, feet, as both are powerful auntisep-l tics. ' _ div -- "e-'------. btv'teA'kYtfctst,attse,etsesestsst ttY2eAfAApAftyxsgtfte,se.1se on 39 n "V ""5 Mr. Henry Woof otl Watched the working of Dodd's Kid- ney Pills from " scientific stand- paint, and he affirms they are alike right in theory and practice. Ho says at the theory: Kimmy Therapeutics. "I had reerd one of the MIT! Kill- nPy Pills pumphh is. and could tell from it than thv u'ircoverer or nodd's Kidney Pills tum really studied what I may cull Kitim-y 'rher"upeutius. I saw that he was on the right track, cleanse and tour. up 1hr Kidneys. and they will not only gen. rid of the uric acid, but will prvvrat it unstimulat- ing. That ls his :l'gumvnt. l talm it. and It is u sown! one. This sound- ness has Ireen sxrtmgly Irroved in my Author of "The Penny Manon! Library." "as a Kidney remedy I would back Dodd's Kidney Pills against all the drugs in the Pharmacopaeia." A 11 thor of serious electrical a7Girt; the atmosphere it is well at beer may become hand, go sour, and meat may tre- turm Considerable specu- M'JLLI.U£ HENRY, i'tlm it, or that the for- trons acid in the air for the change. It is. probable that the at- to relate how l kia;, Fill; The doctor saw that his nuisanc- would be of no avail, and left tho house, the members or the family following hlm to tho doott waning, Almost unmednxely the trial stricke- ones were nddrvssul by an humbln German. He had hrard of the denial:- ot the fumiSy. and now air-km them to try his round): and according†brought forth " bottle of St. Jacobs Oli. The poor wire upwind this r0.- and). The first "malt-Minn "ttsoul the patient very much ', utter u fs-w hour-I thoy used it again. and. womb; at wonders. tho rviu V;'.nilt.oi (IllH'I‘ly' Every subsequent . ppiicntfoa i.- provvd Stu, pntivni. and i.1 ito,r .luyu he was won and HAL-WI“ p, Min 40.. tor onllml a rv,, cum ttftsy, h., wa- lndood mrprlsnd. um painful disnauc. lie prescribed tor the patient, but the mun continue‘ to grow worm, and on Sunday eve-- int; he was found to be in u very; nmrming condition. The knees and (WOW. and larger Joints were greatly inhammt. and could not be moved. It was only with extreme dlmcutty that the patlrnt could be turned ll bed. with the aid of three or four: persons. Th6 weight ot the clothing was so painful that moans had to be adopted to keep It from the patlem u w- - '" w-i Nputable and widely~known P'urart- clan, living on C--, slum. was called to attend " wry cotttpirated case ot Human-Luann. [you arriving at tho house he found " man about forty years of is“. lying in u pro-tuned and lotions condition, with " whole frame dangewously affected with the painful disnasc. no prescribed tor the patient. but the man continue. to Brow wore and on Sunday mu- Intr he was found to be in u very alarming condition. The knees and 1 Another dimovery. that of the 1 site of the tower ot Babel, is thought to have been made by a party or German excuvatora. It has usually been identified with the mount not, called the Birrr-i-Nintruu. But thin was a mistake. for the Eire-i-Nim- rud rmresents the temple not of nabgiori. but of tne 'teightmeantt town of Bonimm. The tower ot Babel was undoubted» the great tower attached to tho temple at Blemeroduch in Babylon itself. 111m same German excavators discovered the palace of Nobtumhtsrineezar, in which Alexander tho Great died. A SURPRISE!) PHYSICIAN. A Dy lug Pat lent Recovers Through the 1nterpmsitton of: Humble German Chicago, Nov. IG. Some weeks ugu Dr. ti----, a Vet! PMIYQIHA nn-l _.... ._.‘_, I, . The discovery of these libraries and the facts for which they stand ha: an important bearing on old testa- ment criticism and history. It dis- poses once and for all ot the con- tention that no written documents, of the Abrahamie age could have descended to later times. Palestine. at that period. was a sort of do- pendency of Babylon and Abraham when he moved Westward was 01n- ply entering another part of the Babylonlan empire. :50 even in Ca.. naan he was surrounded by the tn- fluencea of Babylonian culture. They are in the shape of tablets. of which it is calculated thero were morn than 100,000. The lurrlp- tlons on them, relate to all the vari- ous branches or knowledge and lit- erature that were swam: at the time. The chief cities of lknbylonia. all had these libraries of ituperitrh- able clay. A "ontemporaneoas rec- ord of evehts had long been kopt and an accurate systom of dating had been invented. , ThIA tn MN, is the experience at William Henry, perhaps England'd greatest and best-known medical nu- thorny. It puts the stump of genuine worth on Canada‘s grmtest medical. dimovery. Dodd'n Kidney Pills. This added to the testimony of the thou- awds who have been relieved and permanently cured by band‘s Kidney Pills. must convince even the moat [tanned] that Canada stands in the front rank of medical research. and [that chief uniting the remedies aha has taruirhmi the world glands that I sure cure for 1lhruntatimu, Bright'- l Disease. [mum-s and all other [forms of Kidney Cumpiuinl. Budd‘s I L'CA..A_ “In Baton Abnhul’a Time There Wu . Literature or Much Value. An American excavating expedi- tion engagod in operations at tho ancient city of Nippur has recently unenrthni document. that pram that ancient Babylon existed in . literary ago, and that more was no mail amount of culture in the time of Abraham. the patriarch. A li- brary of clay books has been tound which had alrc-ndy been lost and cov- ered by the earth when Abraham WM born. "4. Though it is now at: mullhl dnce: I took the last doc? of DoddU Kidney Pills, there is not now a trace ot uric acid in my mind notwith- standing that my diet and mode at We age just the same as tltey alwayl worm" "3. Every one of the tymptoms I have mentioned as well as the Tio- lent headaches which I had forgot to mention. had disappeared. ":2. Three doses brought a gr improvement. though I was extru 1y bad before taking the first one. BOOKS OF AN EARLY DATE. m (requent'ly ebsGaeii “a; ..; cram he could not throw on. Results Obtained. He tried all sorts of thintm tor his trouble. medicines old and medicines, now. Some gave him temporary when but that was all. Then he tried Dodd'l Kidney Pills. and he gives the follow- ing read“ of ms experiment : “l. Before 1 had finished one hos ot Dodd's Kidney Pills l was pvrfmtly free from uric acid, my water being quite normal. l at. and so could not work. The pain. in: the hack and loin. were excruciat- ing. Another marked symptom wo- Maddor Irritation. He also had heart “Humming." He was demos-ed. lrrlt- able; sud subject to bad dreams. Ho he wad to troubled with Gravel that he was often, unable to follow " tit- erary 'ttu1imr--ho could not stoop or m __-_____..,__A . -.-. orth a bottle or Jiir.riiiil;i,f, not wife nppllnd this IT.- first "lymetlon "ttsed tha, What tt Menus. a great extreme- IT It