sti Puma! doesm on qlue cure re First perfect of some coympos juice punf uniox Dr: \Viliizvn’é’ Pink Pills are manufac~ tured by the Dr. VViiliams’ Medicine Com- pany. Brockvilie, Ont., and Schenectady, N. Y.. and are 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 $2.50, and may be had of all druggists or direct. by mail from Dr. \Villiams’ Medicine Company, fiom either address. _ An analysis shows that Dr. Williams’ 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 speciï¬c for such diseases as locomotor ataxia. partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neu~ ralqia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of la 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, anl restore the glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks. In men they effect a. radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry, overwork, or excesses of any nature. Newspaper ethics usually prevent the publication in the news columns of any- thing that might be construed as an ad- vertisement, and thus much valuable in- formation is suppressed that might prove of incalculable beneï¬t to thousands. The praise of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills should be sung throughout the land, they should be familiar in every household, and news- papers should unite in making them so. Amlctcd Willi Deafness and Partial Par- alys|fl~9bllged to lee In) H“ “'“l' nose on Account of These Innrmuiesâ€" To ‘lm Surprise or Ills Friends “in Been Fully Restored to Health. From the Ottawa Free Press. I Mr. R. Ryan, who is well-known in Ottawa and vicinity, having been until recently a merchant of this city, relates (in experience that cannot fail to prove interesting [0 all our readers. It is well- knownpto Mr. Ryan’s acquaintances that he has been almost totally (leaf Since twelve vear: of a;e,and that some time ago this afllzction was made still more heavy by a stroke of partial paralysis. Recent- ly it has been noticed that Mr. Ryan has been cured of these troubles, and 9- re‘ porter thinking that his story would be of beneï¬t to the community requested permission to make it publici and 1“ W33 given by Mr. Ryan as follows :â€"“In the fall of 1883, when I was about twelve years of age, I caugh: asevere cold 1n the head. which gradually developed into. deaf- ness, and daily became worse until in the month of July, 1884, I had become totally deaf, and was forced on account of this to leave school. The physician whom I can- sulted informed me that my deafness was incurable, and I concluded to bear my ail- ments as well as I could. In IRS!) I started .a store about two miles from Calumet Isl- and, Que., but not being able to converse with my patrons on account of my deafness, I found it almost impossible to make busi- ness 9. success. However, things were getting a. little brighter until last April when I took a. severe pain, or rather what appeared to be a cramp, in my right leg below the knee. I was then doing business in Ottawa, having come to the city from the place above mentioned. At ï¬rst I gave no heed to the pain,thinking itwould disappear but on the contrary it grew worse, and in the course of a few weeks I had to use a cane and could scarcely bear any weight on my leg. I continued to go about this way for two weeks, when a similar cramp attack- ed my left arm, and in less than two weeks, in spite of all I could do for it, I could not raise the arm four inches from my body and I found that the trouble was partial paralysis. Judge my conditionâ€"a leg and an arm useless, and deaf besides. Being able to do nothing else, I read a great deal and one day noticed in one of the City papers ‘ofa man being cured of paralysis by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. I immediately began the use of Pink Pills and before I had ï¬nish- ed the third box I noticed a. curious sensa- tion in my leg, and the pain began to leave it excepting when I endeavored to walk. Well the improvement continued, gradually extended to my arm, and by the time I had completed the seventh box my leg and arm were as well as ever, and my general health was much better. And now comes a stranger part of my experience. I began to wonder why people who were convers- ing with me would shout so loud. Of course they had always had to shout owing to my deafness, but I was under the impression that they were beginning to shout much louder. After having bade them ‘ speak lower ’ several times, I an- quired why they still persisted in shouting, or rather yelling at me and was surprised to be informed that they were not speaking as loud as formerly. This led to an investi- gation and judge my joy when I found that Pink Pills were curing the deafness which was supposed to have been caused by my catarrh. Icontinued the Pink Pills fora month and a half longer, and I now consider myself perfectly cured after having been deaf for ten years. I can hear ordinary conversation and am ï¬t for business, though I am yet a little dull of hearing, but this is not deafness, it is simply dullness, the ‘result of my ten years inability to hear con- versations, which still leaves me with an inclinationnotno heed what is being said. But I am all right and you may say from me that I consider Dr. Williams' Pink Pills the best medicine known to man, and that I shall be forever indebted to them for my tenYeWed health and strength.†gram-saws '55 O M m The S'tary of an 0ttawa Business Man. ‘ubnu. *ei of SAVED BY A NEWSPAPER. the bud, then the blossom, then the fruit. These are the several stages of the most important ingrediean ing the painless and sure corn cure Lm's Painless Corn Extractor. The fpkmts greatly concentrated and Purely Vegetable. ation aonius salts. spot, 'Far from being a. simple problem, this question of the unemployed is a most com- piiCated one. The economic law of supply and demand has a good deal to do With it. The migration of people from the rural dis- tricts to the towns is an incident common to all countries, even those which possess the best land laws. It is, for the most part, a necessary and irremedinble condition of the agricultural life of to-day. When men have but one occupation, either for their money or their labor, they are bound tâ€"under existing conditionsâ€"when a cer- iain point in the development of population ‘ 5 reached, to repair to the towns. A resort toa. diluted system of protection is too absurd to be considered for a. moment. The works suggested to be undertaken by the Government would, at best, only partially and temporarily remedy the evil, which, when they would be ï¬nished, would be as great as ever. Reduced hours of employment means so often a. reduced rate of wages, that this proposed palliative may be dismissed as failing to meet the case. If it did not nearly always mean a. reduction in wages it would long ago have been obtained. Besides, if the shorter hours would mean, as “labor†men con- tend, increased efliclency, then no room would be made in the factories and other establishments for the people who, it is claimed, would ï¬nd employment. The problem of poverty, is unhappily, yet far from being practically solved: and in the meantime the alleged connection between poverty and suicide has not been estab- lished. ‘ year has proceeded far upon its course. The reason assigned for the small stocks in Liverpool and London is the abnor- mally high price of coal, which has forced the poorer‘ class of consumers to use cheese as a substitute for meat, the former being available for esting without the aid 0 coal and cooking. As a result of the great coal strike, the consumption of cheese has been unusually large, the good solid com- bination of bread and cheese being the principal food of thousands of families is the great trade centres of England, and this, no doubt, accounts for the light supplies in the two great cheese emporiums of Great Britain, which fairly represents the supplies in the provmces there. Holder on this srde are therefore verv ï¬rm in their The stocks of cheese in Canada 0.1 the ï¬rst of the present month were smallest for many years past, a. careful estimate placing them at 110,000 to 125,000 boxes, although several wellposted dealers maintain there were not over 95,000 boxes in Canada on Jan. 1st. In this district, which is prob- ably one of the largest in Ontario, stocks are short. According to the Trade Bulletin- the cheese in Montreal on January lst were 55,000 boxes, a. good portion of which has been sold to England and are awaiting orders to ship. It is calculated that there are 25,000 to 5'l,000 boxes less cheese in Canada. to-day than at this time last year. The same journal says that in Liverpool, London and Canada. there is a shortage of 145,000 to 170,000 boxes,as compared with supplies at this time last year. When Eng- lish buyers fully rezlize the paucity of stocks on this side, they will prob- ably become more anxious operators, and some excitement is anticipated before the year has proceeded far upon its course. The reason assigned for the small stocks In the discussion. which ensued several speakersâ€"especially Sir Walter Foster, a Liberal who has given much study to this sad subjeetâ€" conclusively showed th it Mr. Keir Ilardie‘s statements had no foundation in fact,and that the remedies he proposed would, if applied, be entirely in- adequate. 1n the vast aggregation of hu- manity in the Imperial Metropolis, with its four millions and a quarter of souls,authen- tic statistics proved that the number of people who died from starvation last year was nominally 31. But these included nine children, most of whom died not so much from want of food but from neglect and im- proper food. And of the adults a large pro- ortion were in the last stage of disease; and their death was not directly caused but ac- celerated by want and exposure. Only four of the deaths were directly traced to star- vation. This, indeed, is four too many, al- though it is asmallproportionintbeimmense population of London. Suicides, it is true, were more numerous within the metropoli- tan area last year than they were in any of the preceding three years. But there is no evidence in favor of the assertion that they were due to lack of employment. Many of them were, as a. matter of fact, proved to have been ascribable to the effects of over- work. As to how many of them were caused by the fear of want or starvation, nobody can ever tell. It is a strange and suggestive fact that the largest precentage of suicides is to be found amongst soldiers, who can have no anxiety about their daily bread. With regard to pauperism, the poor law statistics testify that there were exactly the same number of paupers in London twenty years ago as there are now, while during that time the population has been increased by_a million: attributed all-the deaths from starvation, and most of the suicides that occur amongst the humbler classes, no lack of employment for persons willing to work ; and he declar d that what he termed this “simple prob- lem†of the lack of employment could be easily solved by the Government, through building, in various ports of the kingdom, in number of war cruisers; through the dimi- nution of the hours of labor to eight hours; through the adoption of a. modiï¬ed form of protectionâ€"which, he said, would keep peo- ple from leaving the rural districts for the townsâ€"through the reclamation of foreâ€" shores and waste lands, aï¬orestation, etc. He also asserted that deaths from exposure and want were increasing in London, as were the number of panpers. Mir. Kell- Ilanlle‘i M ollon In the Brltlsh Com moatâ€"No rounilnllon In Fact. Mr. Keir Hardie. one of the “ labor†members of the British House of Commons, did some real service by bringing forward recently a motion calling upon the Govern- ment to adopt such measures 8.5 would ef- factually put an end to deaths and suimdes by starvation and by fear of want in Lon‘ don. The service which he rendered did not CODSlSl in the remarks he made or the [udicrous conclusions which he drew from the statistics that be quoted. but in the in- teresting information which his motion was the means of eliciting from memb:rs of both parties who opposed it. Mr. Keir Hardie attributed all the deaths from starvation, and most of the suicides that occur amongst the humbler classes, to lack of employment of( 33 an D EATII'S AND SUICIDES IN LONDON. Idintheirpresenttem Lbstantial advance in Lheir goods. The s lanadian cheese in 1 ‘en conï¬rmed The (‘stue Market. l. 'l‘he sale of a. round lease in London at 605, ~arresgoudent two weeks very ï¬rm in their mper it; will take a. in cable limits to CHARLES CLUTHE‘ 134 King Street West. - - Tax-o nto ple are mined for life by tru reverse of wh at is really nee Infants and children cum Thousands of people have b: trusses. “cam-1’,“ Strengfln & Beautyf WATEROUS, 0 AND onaLE MACHINER; The best can be procured from One bottle will work wonders. If you druggist; does not keep it address, P532? T. A. Slocum & 00., |86 Adelaide St. W. TORONTO. LADIES, DR. SLOC UM‘S COMPOUND PENNYRUYAL TEA A if you are not an agent. but would like to be oneâ€"if you want to make moneyâ€"send for our illustrated list. William Briggs, publisher, Toronto. Semi for illustrated Take 0“ FM: A pillow sham holder on the bed wil save the thrifty housewife much worry and vexation. There is only one ï¬rst-class holder on the markets. 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 bow to get a Tarbox sham holder FREE. Have you 021th ? This Remedy will relieve and Cure you. Price 500115. This Injector for Its successful treatment free. Remember. Shiloh’a Remedies are sold on a rumth Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Sore Throat. Sold b all Druggists on a Guarantee. For 2 Lame Side, ï¬nch or Chest Shiloh’s Porous Plaster will give great mtisfactiomâ€"Qs cents. The Winter In Europe. The beautiful blue Danube is frozen stiff. ‘From Vienna. to Belgrade a. man might iekate upon its surface. A blizzard blows down upon beautiful Trieste and vexes the bosom of the Adriatic, whose northern coast is strewn 'with wrecks. Snow falls in Corsica. Southern France is frostbitten, and at Paris the starving poor forget their hunger in the 001:]. All over Germany, even in the south, the mercury has gone below the freezing point. At Munich it is 4 degrees below zero ; at Breslau and Chemnitz 3. The telephone and telegraph wires are down in Rome, broken by the wind and snow. Madrid is double-locked in cold that has frozen the mercury in the bulb. The same story all over Europe and even in the United Statesâ€"cold plus bun ger and tenfold misery. Factories closed, workmen idle, their families starving, freezing, dying. Who in Canada. would exchange their happy lot for “ the miser- ies we know not of†in at her countries. lee tumors, rupture and ï¬stulae,mdically cured by improved methods. Book, 10 cents in stamps. \Vorld’s Dispensary Medical Association, Bufl‘alo, N. Y. 1 A man in Colorado has a. quaint collection of bottles. It is divided into two sections. Section one is large. Section two is not. Section one contains hundreds of bottles,the contents of which his wifeswailowed hoping to ï¬nd relief tram her physical sufferings. Section two contains a few bottles that once were ï¬lled with Dr. Pierco's Favorite Pre- scription. It was this potent remeiy that gave the suffering wife her health again. It cures all irregularities, internal inflamma- tion and ulceration, displacements and kin- dred troubles. It has done more to relieve the sufferings of women than any other medicine known to science. TTEN’I‘IONâ€"IF YOU ARE AN AGENT LARK'S atarrh URE EJLGH’SACATARRH "W mars mural: W 9 To all an! new Haul- cxmu Entirely non; lull: to ovary kouukecper. Au.) our Brut], Clio Ind Purim; Kuhn, Cm", Ind Kn": Ind Scluvr: Sharpener. Norlplulrcquired. 2n)ullers._l3' mu. nun“. mm... m. . HUNGEâ€" I86 Ade1aide’st.’ W, Toronto, 0m; cudss su’xflï¬cou Lock Box :2 Elï¬n. on. An (Md (‘ollcctlnn J. Don & SON. Artiï¬cial Limbs The greatest preparation on 77 Northcofe Ave.,Toronto Catarrh in all its Stages MILLS For Circular Addre: G IVES Earth for speedy and ape rupt DEFORMITY perm anent cure of It pays nobody to specu ,te on trusses gvihen you 13' needed.) ‘ n cured in 6 to 8 wee ks. we been cured by my book free‘ RUPTURE Brant-ford, can adn. REMEDY. AND TORONTO Id. Mahy peo- sold them (the A..P.695 Easy to take and a great flesh producer. Ask your drugiist; torit,and take no other. Manufacture y DR.SLOCUM’S OXYGENIZED EMULSION Bright eyes and Clear Complexion. from the use of éâ€"â€"’â€"_ dc Dvw'm RAILROAD COMPANY in Minnesota. Send for Map: and Circu- lars. They will be sent to you l,00,000 The_H_igh Spegg family Knï¬ï¬ v . _u-_.- ....-.\.u. nun: Auryur' ‘tculnrl. Dundas Knitting Machlne Co.. Dundas, Ontario. T. A. SLOCUM & 00., cures headache. sea. sickness and summer complaint. Nerviline cures neuralgia, toothache, lumbago and sciatica. Nerviline cures sprains, bruises, cuts, 854:. 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. and spasms; Nerviline cures vommng dlarrhaea, cholera.and dysentery. Nerviline â€"OFâ€" PURE COD LIVER 01L. OF PURE NORWEGIAN COD LIVER OIL AND HYPOPHOSPHITES OF LIME AND SODA, will restore a lost appetite» lost flesh. and check wastin diseases, especial- ‘X i: wildren, wit wonderful rapidity. ,O'Mghs and colds are easily killed by a few doses of this remarkable remedy. PALATABLE AS MILK. 1?: :ur: [0 get the genuine, put up in :almon-rolortd wrappzrf. » _ a? f Mawï¬east Diseases are often difï¬cult to remedy. Nerve l‘nln Cure. Bolson’s Nerviline cures flatulence. chill Addres- - SIGNS OF HEALTH - They give perfect satisfaction in by-word that; Pre‘p‘ared only by 900w dz Bowne. Bellevllle. 8E mags I ELM AA‘II FREE. v. â€". â€"â€"â€" vunnnlig LII-1a Commissioner. St. Paul. Minn. HgPEvaLL CLARKE “ (QRANBY RITBBERS wear like Iron.†7*: Wlll knlt 10 pairs socks per any. Will do all work any plnln clrcular knlttlng machlne will do. from homesnun or {AC- tory ynm‘ The most practical family knltter on the market. A chlld can operate In Stronz, Durable. Simple. Rapld. We guarantee every machlne to do good work. Beware of lmltauons. Agent: wanted. Write for par â€"AREâ€" USE W: m; AWAKE m‘ for sale by the SAINT PAUL ACRES OF LAND '1 oronto HAMILTON,0 NT. cuxmss Manufactured 0?th USE E ï¬t style, and ï¬nish, and it has becom If you are in want of 3 Cook Stove or Base Humanâ€"don‘t buy until you have seen this Elegant Line. Sold by leading Stove Deal- ers everywhere. The BUBNEY, TIHIEN $0., ltd They Excel in Baking Quali- ties, and in Economy of Fuel and convenience. They are Superb in Finish, and Superior in Quality of Material & Workmaqship. Made from 0RIG1NALDESIGNS and :-: Patterns :-: STWES & RAM [9. G. GREEN, Sole Man'fr,Woodbury,Nj. l Martinsville, N.J., Methodist Pafi isonage. “My acquaintance with [your remedy, Boschee’s German :Syrup, was made about fourteen years ago, when I contracted a Cold which resulted in a Hoapseness and Cough which disabled me from ï¬lling my ulpit for a number 01 Sabbaths. fter tryinga Physician, without obtaining reliefâ€"I cannot say now what remedy he prescribed â€"I saw the advertisement of your remedy and obtained a bottle. 1 received such quick and permanen help from it that whenever we have had Throat or Bronchial trouble; since in our family, Boschee’s Geri imam Syrup has been our favorite remedy and always with favorable results. \‘I have never hesitated to report my ex rience of its use to others when have found them troubled in like manner." REV. HAGGAR’I‘Y, {m c o t eNewark, New " Iersey,M.E. Confer- A8“. ‘ i ce, April 25, ’90. Remedy. A †SUWENI RT’ 5 @Pmaip : Syrup TheÂ¥ are made to burn wood ex- clul voly.or Coal and Woodpnd in a. Great Variety of Sizes, 03111 are therefore adapted to the re- gulrgments of Large or Small mules, in any part of the Do- minion. Hamilton. Ont. Every Stove Wax-ranted. Manufactured by NGES