The Signal, 1897-11-25, Page 7•aa
11 Move
, and
0 settia.
LIND
INGLES
dsswrtpueha
eciajty.
Suit the
ded with
wait.
et
D WADS.
t one' kill
PIP CO
DUR
!710
'I►
sane
a's
oma
k -
fisr
•
•
THE SIGNAL : GODE.IIIC$, ONTARIO. —
EL PULLMAN'S
OWN STORY
THE INVENTION OF THE BLEEPING
GAR AB HE TOLD IT.
*Did rut Originate this ,ldas-The Virst
tperepm Care ea the Itew York Cor.
trot - lir. P>•U=•e'e Mbyte to Carry
Qat HL Notion.
The lute Gould* M. Pulbsan told the
pry of the invent -lots of the Pulitnau
owing car to it reporter a year ages, but
attrrw:int requested that its yubhcarti +
k deinytel. The Preendt•utia► (-mim o
tris 01411 iu progress and be wanted t„
try 111 the backgruuud, fearing th.tt
sharers.e of the Adhere strike tweet
k used to hurt Mr. McKinley. The
story WO, lata aside anti tar one rtve,u
r another bas not been published until
suit
Mr. Pullman did not originate the idea
elf the *leaning car. it MAN stttttterte l
to him. he said, by the intruducuou of
erodes ears uu the New York Ceutral
woe
7be e0mpene which owned that
meal," wnid Mr. I4tllmau. "was restrict-
ed to a 'hater ut 2 tents a mike for per
weer_ treeeportaaione, It: crest to the
legislature we A(bapy• for authority to
elearge for sleeping weeoetmodat(on. I
vies liviug,.then at Albtun, doing buei-
.n tr... ...... rhc
went into the world to earn411
my
den I was 14. Not long sitter t
elf?' tyre I !bund myself' w4tlh-erry
brother and sister. on w
kinds. One of my friends anti ueilth-
tnee Albion eras Ben Field, who was
s member of the Legislature. He was
tae ut the men who put the first sleeping
lett iu operatipn• 'These care had cell-
ist', against which a tall mar►', brad
reset have brushed. There was no
rnewe:r deck' above and ne ventiestiou.
When ane of them Was filled on a winter
day, castle a big store fire at each' cud,
ter atmosphere was w,wethiug dread
iul."
Porter of these tars Mr. Field and sow.•
of his (rived' eunverted into sl tine
cave. The berths were in three tier*.
the lowest being on the Soar level. Th'+
ewe.: berth eels dl, the monad berth
ea ivies rind the upper berth was :iO
ate medias .caret, for welch
este- people noses darner. was the
at twl ecale. of chargees. Thew rieeetiug T
sat, mere ihterlded for nytht use (Orly.
110• l rd clothing was piled 0p in see -
Moo in the daytime. Mr. Pullman rode
or the filet est there sleeping ears whie.%)
kR Iiutlalo and he paid el for the
privilege. thumggb he was going only
may miles. Ile wanted the novel ex-
`erle tx and One of the emit li xurie.
of the trip was, tore-epperetenty -te. Nash.
your heads and race in the'•teeening.
"Net lone after," said Mr. Pullman, "I
war tto Mirage to do some enamel
4eekiinge to eunform tit the
cry's uew rade. 1 bad the sleeping ear
idea in my laeittd," and turned it over -a
mud many times. Rarity, I went atter
the business on the Oblate* and Alton
mrd..'
The road was a strwggffng coprpots-
too th those days. Mr. -Pullman re-
membered aeeln?t the sheriff in the ti+'ket
cake of the road more than Dice, wait-
Wr tie ovine the receipts. Two sieepitig
ars were pint on the road. running in
epI' ate directions each night They
erre of the primitive type of the first
steepiti(r care. Meauthae these first
tars heti not been a seeress. and Field
end his associates. who had bought theca
o* aro dtt. lost lsoeeeseten of thetas -
While the experiment was pro(tre•w-
Jsr der. Pullman gut the geld fever and
went to Pike's Peak. Ile stayed there
off mud on for three years. The Chi -
viz. and Alton went into the Mode of
a receiver. and tbia !vetiver was a New
thl,•ans men.
elle had an -idea," said Mr. Pullman
with a smile, **that when the war was
over gram moored grow between the
tracks .of Northern railroads. No he
took of the night trains on the road
&lee:ether and ton a time my earn were
sidetracked. But not lerlg. They were
rennins again after a time. and the op -
pertauity to buyback two of Field's
ears /Wag oilfired, back he and I bought theta
and owned them in (venison. I had nu
(des for -ea math better tar than these,
but I was not a mechanic, and 1 had to
(nt ether people to early out m Ideas.
benne teat visa' hard. The b Wers
wan reseals wby
whmt i WI no _
the nrrw carte 1 built. while they
were noire coed 27,were not satiefaetor<.
'.Finally the Ciioago sad Alton pensee
Pare nue too Mlle of a piece of ground
where the Union depot now stands, t,ntl
employed a builder t0 Carry out MY
elms.. My notion was always to utilize
the 'pace above the windows, where
the nick, Were, tb store the ber4iiag.
To do that it 'vette eimessery to, snake
the car very mach higher. My builder
armed ed that tee railroads would never
mat ors a car which .was so anntr4 bisber
than their own. 1 told him to Oro •bead
Ind Dude the car acoordlnt to my idea.
rad We world we about the railroads
afterward. 80 we trade the root bah
sad We pat the err on sixteen w'hde1,t,
se tent it would ride more arnotahly. 1
wait csct then for a decorator who would
Janke the interior of tbe ear luirmonioes
and pleasing to the eye. He reineined
with we at imy decorator for many
fears.
theft the ear was finished It had
treat the *114,000. It attracted a greet
dell a attendee. Malay people came to
ore it. sad k was mach admired. That
eare , by the way, is in Packman to -day.
e me it on *evasions.
"When 1 first pat th.• err in service I
a•Ad the president of the lake Shore
read that I weld id charge $et.• a
Th earl were ennetelf
b ot110 ltid* thein; Qand Their t'barp
il.hi0. He said he emend' net *tiled to
arlt'e e2 if entre rase elite was charginq
I negned that It would hie s Mut
sdrerlisement, for penes* went(' hr'
*axiom to nee what he had that was
with en much more. A* he voted not
teethe, rain/. of nay theory. I prnpoe rl
the train train p gtitOn.
. of the ehep cars on
t e the Puikaan car. 'leer
*.enri to t peed that the people ie.
ride peeved
the *t2 car, *lid If ,t
amt got to the train late and had to
'seethe other ear he abased the railway
("enemy. The reserk waw that n six
`te•ek* the Cheap ear was taken off alto -
tether."
Mr. Pit
be rhetiy
nail there were two rea-
m? r*f/.s •bald r18t
as ilea firat iacre, to
th'o: as stbrettha wank( ire to ;n-
'tM
desdrahle elites of menet..
in the ewitCai place, to ekespsn the
/Inb tRettkl leaks a 4*01 t:orn
betweree tr%,JW, which .wpitld b8 wqt-
te travel fs theap berths. and that
the mer. win area traced td take an
Veer Death became all the tower berths
*ere. "old would be srou.ded its his
Ond
As to the ehacke then the Phil/nes
endue 'wee asking too h h a rate
lanaitib t . tiro Pldnet
a ton ifs
hand
port by s were ekeek a Pethat tt the
1' ('ciente and Inve*ted it lltdictoul
dtere weekl set be scallth re y die"
'M1.nm b� iheo& The f ed, �} the
et the p'al M��
yrm.f)1.1"1 wont04
leteseete
efts
gone the rounds ot the newspapers not
1 before. It repress ted hint aa pax-
rrtt al• d*i *ter • **Ley of e1( )1 a
70*?care. to choose nature fur hie dew• itg
When it was suggested that the
only idea it euneeyed was that he had
made his daughter an ailowanee and
Jestingly pat it on the basis a a salary,
he auswerd:
uB
at right have 1 to sJetd the
motley of the etutkboldtyw b tbat way?'
Mr. Pelletal+ *Poke iu the °ours. of the
couversatiuu about the title the Kit*
•1 Italy conferred on hlni, IIs said he
knew midget *bunt it tin One patent
of nobility cattle to hi -
attached au iw ■"" ue sad not
Y purtatue to it. He said
4e was mere proud u( being a atniple
American citizen than he could be ut
an title ll+ the world.
Of the attat-ke made on bin* which
had been published iu cotuleetern with
the strike atyl with the bill to retie,*
skeming-car tares, Mr. Palle au
ke
with came bitterueaa. And in what
said he developed au interesting atti-
tude. He said that it was hard, after
ad mans had eume to feel that he had
that they shattldd ting urn up his fellow tueu,"
tack him. That was syr, him tt's ate
]I Pullman's at-
titude toward the rwurW. He did not
regard his invention simply as a money
maker, which had brought Mw ger;l�
wealth. He eon.u1eyee it a great public
work and belleved `Iitrtlee•lf a philau-
thropirt.—Newv Yetk Sun.
BLEEP AFTEJt EATING. ,
Is It Beneficial, or lore It Retard
wreak's' r
—
Advocates ltd the a/ter-dinner nap hie.
JL powerful, tspa
,.,:wcitlr,
argument iu the fact that Moat quintana
sleep immediately atter pariahs. Yee
the pruperiety of such a habit meow
hermit iheenge bids fair to be an . N w
question for mote [into to otkule.
Oce authority has receut,y added Lie
trite to the cote:t em of rimesters pp uu
this esterestaug subject by tueaicine a
eerier of experw1enta upon two p.o•remei
+af noriuttl digestive aunties.
The stomachs of these two persons
were et»ptwd a few hears atter tueuta,
suave ori which buil becu lutlo,petel by
sleep end others nut, ant the cvuteot•,
seat/med.
Y be normal stomach arta upon its con-
tent. by ehuruing them *bout iuol I+
this meatier wtblet•ting ever pectic!. t•
the action Or the digestive music. -
e above weau ued invesugetor
lensed, as tilai.aseart. ate
weakeen • tis e:b ,tr t„
t Iseld wuqq�pet�t� ytp�� Ar
stomach, while the acid nuttily t'the
atigentise Jules* Jr at the grater time in-
creased.
Ou the other hand, be found—what
is quite as intereeiug—that 10111,le ee-
pose in a heriauutul petition stimulated
the motions et the etuesech without 1n -
creakiest .late et -suety of it. Juitee.
The c•ime1wu,n reacb'wt' dee-
per -tawnier was that while a recuundheat
position liter entiug is' not to he regard(d
as harmful, but See the majority of cion
as emote—me nue vbttaid be ew.ut:uete
abseil .4ee riug directly alter a meal.
begleeially piloted this e•0Otie,u b! a �•
ed iu macs where their mteratack le
naturally weak, or weary there it a*
tneracidity a[ the digeeuve fields.
When ail is treed, horweve•r, the above
experiment proves litt:e more than tie
te trueh =attars each Person 1 4 Ira
mato htatse:f, that the ■ftrreliuner neap
differs in uo remote. frown other habits,
which can be inuulged in with itrpuuet,
by setme, while they work havoc with
the health and happluees of other. hest
after eating is certuioly beetlieiri, both
tram a rational end a ptiysioiegiell
standpwiut. Whether sleet, tem be ad-
vantageouely iudul*sd in hr a question
that must be dot.-rmiued by the 'u-
dividual himself by careful experiment.
Japan'. Next Emperor.
The Tempts hes an *Wresting artiete
on the succession to the thrutic of Japes.
His Imperial IIighueset Yoshibito -thee
no Harouboinyw is sufferieg tarn tuna
disease and cannot recover. Prince
g," to give him a more manak*.-
ab a tele. which Is the transistors of
Hata, is only lies. Ile is the eon, nut
orf the Empress,' twho L oteldlt-ss), but of
one of her Iadiea le waiting: aid he ties
proclaimed heir by an article 1* the eotn-
on:tntion granted by the klizg,per"r In
188H. Ile is the last wale deso•entutt
in order of priusogeniture art a dynasty
which has reigned for 2t1(1) year*, end
traces it. origin to a female iuctin+atn,ti
of the 'tin --the Goddess Ateatera, eltu
lo is n ted without ditflcuity
in a ono m
iwrppruveuieute in electricity and repre-
sentative government. elle nesters' ap>•e, -
prerach to a- serious religion which Ute
Jn .uueee have would seem to be their
colt for the imperial ;renames as em-
bodyiug in rade sort the tiaditiona and
the now e.f Jupan. Coueegrhentty, tiara
le Vit likely 10 he any trouble ewer his
arrnngagrats -tor the ancctwsivaasp welch,
aecottame to the succession of1AIfK1;
phte.,ca, 7n ((ty;nult of his own direct
descendants, to the heirs stale a Phare
Aristtytava Tarnieto, who died lu if�711
during the "lege of Wei-Lai-wei. His
sot, Prince lltkehitn, who was wed:
vice -admiral during the war, is, there.
fore, at Present the meat likely person
to succeed to the tbrone which p*eor
Prince Plying will hardly ii;ve to occupy.
—1'aLl Mall Gazette.
HOT CORN.
A stable Diameters—Tis srooa.
rapers a*..attaabm.at--A lore letter.
A table of Coateots--The dieser-Labia
1. was before Wedbiagten worst ta'e poll -
Wes that •' be could not roll • 1b." The m-
ooed is sheat, after thee.
()14 egotist:us (to oonvist) ; '• What is
tie moat otjecttooatlo feature you find in
prison lei., o y dear friend?" Ooavka& :
.. Winston."
Charles lamb's opinion of toe waist sere:
«le is meteor new nor wonderful, for it L
as old se the dotage whet, in my opinion. it
killed more than it cured.
The dog asosp e d ►ho eetamre mw,
Bet for thw brute he Messed,
And murmured as be reedy ran,
"Taste goes • howling wee*"
Fireman : I tell you elm wee • dahy.
I earned her down eters. She wekbed
about two hundred pound•." Husband :
"Of course she fainted !" Turmas : •' No
bat 1 did."
Mro. Westepd : "Do yes bed mush dif-
o41ty in netting your ss1vaata to stay wltb
yogi !'
Mn. •8ubbth.: '•I, do, indeed. It is
tell to impossible W keep • rirl more thea
Mrs. Wesrend : t' Why is tura rili'llltr
from tst'a?,',
lin. Jubbu et Oh, no' I third U4 ;
but you see, we have only one poltorrtao in
the pew*, and he's married •'
mama Relief Mat Pain.
Toe great pais caused by a burn, solid er
wound is inat•otly r•li.ved by an appli-
cation of "Quiokcure.'' Ito healing quali-
ties ere marvellous. as JC deetrey• the
oisrott+e winch usually enter where the skis
is broken and cause inttammattoa sad retard •)
hudipg. t
Marallas
Some years 'Moe • young girt wrote Mia
elderly 'Mad roe the question of dress, sad
received by rotate mill the folk:wise ad -
vies :
1. Devote eery snob time to dries all
*Mows jar and now:MO.10 is toe 1.rat of.
ether duties and oblieatlss,.
2 Newer esteem toe important for the
unimportant.
3 True plenty of Uma for bathing end
?reek ear even if frizzle and bangs are nee-
' boned.
4 Make yourself as beagt,fnl M yen ma
within. and ilea spirit will betray !Welt is
the body's ederaataat.
b. Never deem it wise or ladylike to at
trot •ttaptien by your drew.
1' Remember the moral es well as tr.'
aesthetes side of your wardrobe.
7 1)o not think it necessary to appear
•"guy" in order so wear sensible garments.
8. Refect aerlouaty on the absurdity of
wearing thio fiennels. or n0a3, for 'isto•te
women, and heavy weight Bennett with
padded top ooats for strum, women.
9. Remember that • neat calico, paid tor
and amity made, is bettor than a velvet
poorly fitted and an outstanding bill.
10 The gospel of drew, like all other
gospels, has e.a underlying principle, searoh
for is end measure your time by is rules.
He Must Have Been, -- Epsom : " How
rietiouloue these yacht people are! Spending
j
hoat • £iOO,000 Ina a a pop worth £109."
[iownws: •• Weil I remember that one
summer 1 "pent tre.*r>v 1!400 oo horse rases
std when 1 won f7 everybody mid I was a
*mart man."
I)eoline of a family. —Too bad how tbat
men's tastily bee stone down in the social
'soak, wet It r"
" 1 don't know their history. 1)o you e'
" Yee his father wan • b:aoksmith la out
village."
"And he V'
t He's a member of Parfi•meat."
T,ttil r L., brov 211, 389 ,• .rj
YOUR bILK UMBRELLA. •
t Con be
Many a line umbrella is cut
Vuth thrcwghythc careirranrM
caner. 'rake, stir ezxttyilr, u good
watershed. )'L you will rzaweu
weave, usually a swill, you will
that it L rztrewrly 'sensitive.
Silk is moderately strong need alai
1 and patient ruQrrer, but w
doer begin to give nut it giver uu
ai+idll. You will uvUce that it
bomb prowl, neither is it bund
Now, the ware you put your banner ,
ilk the worse it is fur the umbrella. •
therefore a great mistake to
our closed umbrella urmud the til
o swinging slung as if it waste
ud could endure guy amount of
sage.
1'hr
moisture u[ the baud iujurr
Ile far more thou efts•* the er(•(•s
rainstorms. When currying au umb
fx,tlu•r for prvtr•rtiuu ur for style
by the handle. Another point re
g the umbrella: Wheu timed d
maw's the walk with the terra
,u into- aluug. relit ',spoils the t
air umbrella and it nut goal to
let
Close -roiled umbrellas are uuw the
have been fur some time. The modern
kuwhrel+a isiuu•udt.l tub.•ag
1 addition tv a mat'•t sever, nr xe
N jj1rVtPCQ/lr. Tilt• Nay LO 4011 1!!
nJla is siwple, 1•ut the rale ls cum
i Dred
dry roM+ei. , •
tib dry en umbrodla, open it, secure the
Leh sad rest It wit•li toe- const :�p. the
,.ud. To rule an umbrella r take .out
tween the ribs but all hangs Iree.
I,,place tis' top of the handle in
e paIat of the d; "1i� r the' !Wogs
to form a circ e. With the right
nd, palm down. grasp the tips ort the
ha; turn the umbrella from you with
e right baud, at the acme time turning
e left hand toward you with a duwn-
ard motion. Then hold the umbrella
wry wK the lett heed, while with
e righty take a"fre,sh rhmp at the
me'entre as before aid tu� until the
ft hand madras the right; then whet,
e rt
1
a:+adrr liaised 4y enrolee.
Treatment.
In
7 o its
o !ilk
e the
uetec'
otic;
a hell 1't
d t very
✓ ie nut
N proof.
,u the
tt
is cutcb
k ane
* tvuu
rough
s tine
isio u.i l
stria,
`, hold
t gard-
eo not
k as
c up of
` r the
t
rage
(1 rur•-
n 11 as
i um -
b common -
ignored; hence the uamb.r ot tbuar
be
Ca
Yr'
Inc•
th
otllhti•si
-he
ri
th
thw
411
tsoh
le
th
TIM or ribbon is -secured the um•
••---'" — ere easa-.._p
emus wig tre perfeelly ttt000th. with
mei/ fppl14d neat and ones and the• tips
in an ordinary circle OIllr the handle. --
Chicago Tribunes. •
e..r .
*ailslea Hint.
As ions es there are charming womeu
there will be picture hats, Jur the woe
mau has ewe to be toutd who du..* nut
e to deck herself out in 10 beautiful an
of dress,
e very newest picture hat is or
black vuivet of flue quality. It is turn -
td up sharply at the left side, with at
large rhineetope buckle uoderueutb, hold-
ing two immense black feathers in place,
one of which sway* trout and tbe other
back. n
The crown is a black velvet puff,
which is set on a wide Jeweled band,
At the side our feather stands upright
and there are tau or three lying around
the crowu.
J4'or matinee occasions—when the pic-
ture hat it to be taken off—high tulle
ruches, in pale blue and pal • pink-, are
tied around the neck with broad tulle
strings. Thee, like the hat can ,be
taken off and held iu the lap.
For the first _cold day, a waist of bro-
ead.d cloth or heavy alik can be worn,
when quite a comfortable appenrance is
produced without too much warmth. The
black velvet hat is not very eipenaive
if "covered" at home. -
Fitting Over New Corset*.
Moat wntnen mak*. the mistake when
they are`haviug a dress fitted of wear-
ing new 'corsets. -- A Parieetn dre.s-
maker or Scot. -class tailor will never
+- ata' lire it a urtivIn
of eterch in it. Why . mp y eIIDB
aa J tbet is +tarched keens Its
shape on 'a0('tfbnt of tirtoemifiewieg el -
forded by the March, which atter a. few
wearing' lessees, aid such rhapetiness
se the corset had leatew it, with the
result that the hud..•e which was fitted
over it baa at the end of a few times
wearing a different figure to fit. Not
betty automatically adjuatsble, the
waist bugs and %%tinkles in places, and
the dressmaker g't' the blame for poor
bWm.—Weinau'r othe Comm Mote
E CURE WAS PERMANENT
be8jory of a ManwbQ Suffered the Agonies
oPa'Liwhg Death:
;i
IGLL EXPERTS PRONOUNS ifilliNCURABLE AND HE WAS PAID A
LOB9E DISA ILITY CLAIM
The Case Probably the Most Wonderful in the History of Modern Science ---Brought from Hopeless, Helpless In-
activity to Health and Strength ---A Reuroduction of the Check by which the Disability Claim was
Paid.
e The tnereawe .1
'Orme of the beet psible feeds la the
tattier -day os
ay progress of this country is
the increase iu the number of homes.
ll+ crowded centred" of population the
dat and the hotel Inset always be ue-
cetwaaty, for gave is too valuable to be
tuortoptdlsed by the humble. Bat even
around the very large ci,ir•e there are
Ming built Ike Amanda and thousand" of
anbne'besaeot and cemetey% realties -
and AIrough the length and
t wefts _q1 covet:7, 1n • fain tdt►ift,
villages and eider", arth.tle Mme* ere
ittcieasing at an astoni*hin+hg(r rate. It
any one will unite the tronbie to look
up the Mermen* on the subject he wilt
find that in this country there are more
than a hundred papers devoted to these
htxne-butkkra, giving thein each week
pane end a:ytweatio*a. The npmber of
books upon low-pr:c.d architeectnn•,writ•
tet+ in the peat fifteen year, exceeds the
total ter a century previous. A wider
education in being apre*d, sad the Pita
in every way f• tworm0Va.-
A matt who owns hie home l• a better
eitisen, even ft share. is a awRpge en
tt. 'Phere is a feeling at psraoeal part-
nersbiLi hi the protection of_property
and f1sh Iffitterettion of- p.401- oi.
w111* makes him *and for Whet M best
in ISM and ggoevertai 4?. It Is the bent
le thing for hie wife and eikdrsnt
.t for him and beat for the country. --
Leslie's Weekly.
Kew the Chlemee Reenact Trate.•
The tact that Centime in Amerrlee
(tkon time herr nes they are accustomed
ie theft ow* sweetly by •rei4na of
lOmperers Was reeeny Ifivsn*trd In a
cane before • Unt Iltates (norma
iasv. NM ass of the (Mose .14.
aenees could speak Einglish, so the mtese
sew of an laterareter were saeart&
fevers done a 40te wait tseOtitated. the
nteerpeeter would consult a lose sliest
t paper on a hlc% worn nosey roe
tel Aimee seaobda. ? a the
ty t i[ •the *tile ye sad the
h>, rkiit,ldrl�t ands it i that
a� yc fa*4tIla time
1.4.t�rt�alaltdts faeditate um -
14.
tlttattk ski
Or int DOMINION
Coe
SANK
TOR owro.
OM" NIU.N
•
o/%rs
SeoMintgtr
Prtsicrhri
No other,'
medicine in the
world has
ever offered
-such undoubted
proof of m j
"frI'&T
DR. WILLIAM8'
PINK PILLS
have 4 e for
others they will
din far you, if
given a fair trial.
1
1
Plum doe Mestere. Out.. Monitor.
About two years ago the Monitor pro -
oared se *tereNw with Mr. Reuben Petah,
of Orler•vtlla; to order to •soertain from his
own ripe if the reports were well founded
that be ate ibtted his most stoeishtng re
-
tura to health to the use of Dr. Williams'
Ptak Pills fes Pale Pimple The remit of
the •Mwwre► was phllahed to the Monitor
amiss 1r* Ms s* Jas. 17th, 1886. Mr.
POWs cos was oertai*ty east of Mrs mast
eatsaerdiaaty M the annals of medicine is
f---iMe---11 see he 1be world. !Is had barn
UI fee els Fran. sad hi that time he toe -
salted no lees than six of e best physfe
the
be scald dad. but none *mild give bins the
Mani relief. AC limbs and body were puffed
mad bloated to tech •a utast that he amid
not get hie clothes es, and for two years be
had set dressed. He had lost the hem et Me
limbs ..tittle. His deals sssssod be be dead.
sod p3.e meld be stash into various parte d
his holy without bang felt or areatiag the
slightest o.eetioe. $o could sot ones
about, and it ha attempted is Agit .p would
tall said ws*id have to be lifted up. Hi
was amiable to ensn his mouth eafRoie.tty is
take "clad teed, end hod to be fed with •
trthoos like •:14144. The decrier maid his
trouble woo visa] sclerosis, a.d that he
maid as* pessilly Ret batter. Hs_ was is
f•ot tytiktrg Moro or less this an estimated
apm. so bAplaws et Oa.adiseMMedial Uha Ile b
mem-
ber s.
ties, ..4 utas ander aims rubs aotitted le
dltttlbMl/ _was
IWO dread• s aialia tae lt.
Tiro am" ea WWI Imes _ t•�a aures Mr. r. tai
�'t'�
aaWr alIM MNOMA - Pik mei
hie nckoess begat. For three years more
he lingered in the onnditioa above noted,
utterly he)nhote.and a harden tw ks.h.elf and
tiered". 13e cap then advised to try Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills. Re did not hops that
they would help him, but its his sad oou-
dition he was prepared to grasp at anything
that sBorded the Droopiest of even a dight
relief. The first oh• es toted to bis son-
ditlon after be betas the 4.e of *epee was
• dlepNition to serest freely. Then lite be-
g an to return to hie hitherto dead body, and
from Chet time aro Isis megrim towards re -
emery sad ao.vity wae'Marty and *warm
The paSltoatioa of the interview, eeataie-
Mg the feats above rioted, created nominal
interest, not oniy in this section, but
throsthnst tla*eds. Time • else, whom
',miasmata body ware all bat dead, who heti
been saamlaad by towboat experts an pro-
pounded locatable, and on the strength of
their regrets wee pied • large dumblttty
(Aatm, ebo*Id eittstw•rds be oared }y 1)r.
Williams' Pink „Pills, was looked upon as a
tttarvel. Mary ware akeptioel ; sot es to
the eore---for the feet than M wee setHdy
Bolsi sheet proved Mals—bat they Aid not
bens,. t %child prove permanent. la view
M sea desbM thee espressad, the Monitor
determined to wets), the twee slowly, sad
Mw, wanly two year after the ears was
int published, hes again Intervlew.d kir.
AIeA .with the vomit that we ars 1* • pos-
IMOD le lay mast estpba(sslly that this ro-
taaaktabl. tow . ba' pr e.i seroa..as.
0* lir. iMob sale t—
••Yoe ,I�eMONOe nits is now
ad Way wets herd
ANS with
MANis ares•
rugate%
that I hays now even owed to tate • ease,
and est est about my business Partway
well. You may say there is absolutely so
doubt as to my ogre Nth>, permanent, In-
deed I am is eves better health thea when I
gave you tbe Bret interview."
" Do yon still attribute your erre to the
nes of lir. William•' Pink fill• !' asked the
Monitor.
" Uaqusetionalilp 1 do," was the reply.
" bootore had failed, se had elect the gam•
crow remedies reoommeoded by my Moods.
Nothing I took had the slightest effeot up-
on me until I began the use et Dr. Williams'
Pink ('11►s. To %Isis wonderful medicine I
owe my release teem a iieise death. I have
since reoomme.ded Dr. Williams' t'ink
Pies to matey of my frf*.ds, and the verdicts
is ha their hear, I Mott always bless the
day I wee Induced to take them."
The shove see the (Ake statements made
by Mr. Petah is thio Newt interview, and
the monitor may remark, !corn 1.. long 10-
geaintenoe with him, that we consider his
statements atrolat.ly true end reliable.
He had no lutanist to serve ether than a de-
sire to rooeeesaead the mediators that has
done ,o mot), good for him, and we feel
sere that it soy solderer will write Mr.
Petah, *nehmen( a .tamp torr rent?. he will
seder's all the statements soave above.
We me, tartars, add that Mt. Petah', re-
*arhahle reoevsry leaves so desire of the
weeder(nl eerailve pavan of 1N. Williams'
Pink }'ills, and it seams 4. infer
that they cam de fee Mises Whet have
Ion ter Itlat--tooter+ Mala
TM sisal as 4w bead mak& ti.. •
.itis'Ind Cadent' 1M'eitr*4 -shah Meet P etal:s
Gaya tram
(4a►he I£_ .- . 1, allies can rY, tsd la Ovum la