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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1895-03-15, Page 6t terttingam times F]ltID.A. 6 ;l1TARCii 1G, 1895, to all that, and beery as thatburden has been, a very large percentage of that sum has been used, not for the public benefit, not even for the bene- fit of the manufacturers but for the t the t • t' on thein was a lunglisia customs tariff and the I•Jng- ple absurdity, If it were true fish system of taxation, and I make 'FRE !'>7 1.1�,� O f Aki `.4,`.A.,t1'#. .IS1, MARO:4 F 15. 187iti', discovery bad enabled skilful mann- rives his. income without any exertion How to Master Your Temper. �•i 'tv faeturers in other countries largely front the money that he has i 1 Cstecl Starve it; give it nothing to feed to reduce the prices ofeertain, Manu- in some way or other, largely in on. when sornething tempts you to fiictured goods, but to say that it was banks. and other institutions„ I have grow angry do not yield to the caused by the fact that welled added recently examined in detail the temptation. It may for a minute or purpose of maintaining; a corrupt 51m to as a ion up ing them with the cleans of de- 'Government c- that protection were entitled to the this statement to you—mired what I SIR RICHARD CAI TWRIGHT ATt s de d ' Government in power and of provid- LIST b•tuching the electorate, and i i credit for that fall in the price of say ---I make the stetoulent that the • Diu, of that same corruption fund lnanrhtae,te t eel, goods, it was entitled necessary taxation which the ordinary . . 'cause , to the credit for the immense fall Canadian wage-earner or artisan is In addressinga large a•ui entlan- i that we find the Government of these of to that has taken place in the price of obliged to pay for the benefit of his day so abjectly the delve of these pro- land and of tate goods that farmers farnil under our stein is, just ex- f$astic audience in Listowel, on the tected manittacturers, and so deter- g y s ?let instant, Sir Richard Cartwright, mincdly bound to refuse to . the. produced. lie wasaquite willing to actly twenty times as great as the Inong other things, said , r of justice which meet the Ministers on their own amount which the English artisan or people the measure t , tound; if they were willingto tell wa a•earnor receiving equal wages Ladies and gentlemen, on the pre- has been requested at their hands, g • g q wages, cleat occasion you will permit me to even by their awn friends and sup- •the farmers of Canada that they is necessarily obliged to pay for the iso that although I am told that in y assumed all responsibility for the fall articles he uses oe requires to use for ?r g porters. As my friend Dr. Macdon- in the lice of farm products he his family. I think that statement rotas county as well as in other 001111- old bas told you, scarce! eight and 'e inCanada there have oven some 3 Y would give them freely te credit for is of itself enough to startle some of ides forty hours have elapsed since a con- the fall in the rice of cotton geode ' you,- and now I shall proceed to parties found who attempt to draw a vention met in the city of Toronto P g y ' distinction between the interests of composed, as ho truly says, of gen- and other manufactured articles• prove it. It is a very common thing gen- the people who inhabit the townsThey said, whenever the question and a very significant thing, and it P 1 tiemen who may have Liberal or came a that the rice was regu- shows in the most remarkable man- aud the people who inhabit the Tory leanings, but who are all one P' p b q country, I believe I am justified in in this, that whatever happens, fated by the foreign market, that the ner !tow greatly the welfare and tg that if any such idea has ®• Liberal price was regulated by the demand wellbeing of the whole. people may 7teen s read amongyou it is verywhether Torp t prevail, abroad, and for once in their lives be'affected by the equal distribution P their rights and powers 9f taxing the the made a statement that was , of their taxes. It is true that the fast disappearing. Ladies and gen- people of Canada to the tune of $G0,- y ngland is *denten, of one thing we may be sure 00 00 a year must on no account exactly true. _ 1 nominal o able the nominal axattiion Ok Can - In Canada, and that is this, that the be interfered with, and these men The Government did not,and ion is "vast mass of our people, whether have the power to a very large ex- cannot, Sir Richard said, that T Will about equal although cheer is the real tgreat they inhabit the town or the country, tent of giving effect . to the threats admit, add one farthing, the Govern -1 amount which the English Govern - Aroidentically the same interests, which theyuttered upon that oei ment never were able to add one b' arc in no way opposed to one another; P mens are able to raise obtained ? It theymust seek the same policy, must rasion. We have seen and felt what farthing to the price of these things I is obtained in these three }ways : P these protected manufacturers can that you produce. What Govern- I about ono -third is obtained by an pursue the same ends, if Canada is do, we have seen and known what,it gent can do, and what Government ;excise duty levied on spirits and to prosper, and, I believe from my is to fight, not merely a parliamen have done, what Government are tobacco, which, as you know,' no own experience, that it is utterly int- tary majority, but a subsidized press doing all the time, is, while not able roan is exactly: compelled to pay ; possible that any town like Listowel, and a number of wealthy men seat- to add one farthing to the price of in particular; can hope to prosper tered all through the county, anythe articles the bulk of our popula- another third is obtained by putting g Y, en duties of the nature of an income tarhless the great mass of' the agri- one of whom can afford, and very tion produce, they can add and do tax., none of which the ordinary town population surrounding that easily afford, to contribute his '$10,- add enormously to the price of the wage-earner or artisan is required to town can be restored to a state of 000 or his $20,000, or it may be his articles which the bulk of our pope pay at all, The remaining third is permanent prosperity. Your pros- $100,000 or his $500,000 to the Gov- laden consume, which they are com- iity in this town—arid the same sled to bu•v, which the aro cog- obtained £20,000,000by tolms duties amount- ernment election fond, provided al- P Y ing to a year, but of i%1 true of every one of the 00 towns ways that he is allowed in return the gelled to pay for, and for which they and villages which are to be found -11 h 1 d f these customs duties there is but one throughout the Province of Ontario •—your prosperity must always de- pend upon the prosperity of the agricultural class to whom you minis- ter whose needs you supply and from 'whose expenditure your income and prosperity in turn are derived. Now, sir, at this present moment, I ,don't think that 1 at all overstate the case —1•don't ' think my friends have overstated the case—when I say that we are to -clay face to face with a vast and formidable organized conspiracy. There is no doubt whatever that there are in Cani'da at this moment, .iuufortenatety Ow tis, :r number of powerful and wealthy men, a nam- ber of p:,werftll and wealthy corpor- ations, ivhieh ibr many years have been fattening on the spoils Of the people, who are determined to leave Ile stone unturned and who will con- -tinue to put their hands into their poekets daring- the succeeding Par- liament term just as they halve been. permitted most unfortunately to do during the preceding three or four that have passed over our heads. Very few, indeed, even of those who have paid the utast attention to this question, are fully Aware of the enormous extent to which that plun- der has gone on during the last six- teen years. Now it hi:s.been on var- tlous oce'tsions niy- C4)001ai ditty to investigate that sul jeet, iuui I may .. say that owing to the position which . I at one time occupied 1 have had special opportunities for doing so. And I state this he.t,, n:)t a s rhetori- t:ai exactggeration, but as :t calci al- fiegation of a mere matter of fact, that so far as I awn able to come to a confusion on the subject I believe that the smallest sunt that has been exacted front the people of Canada diking the last sixteen years in the shape of taxes, not counting in that tate sums which are merely paid into rite public treasury. but sums that nre taken out of the pockets of the people under the protective policy, rind paid partly into the treasury and partly into the pockets of a Stuntber of protected manufacturers, is not less and may be considerably more for these sixteen years than $'!0,000,00 per year, not one penny' fess s0 far as I ant able to form any conclusion on the subject. I believe that lulu literally correct in saying that during- the sixteen year's whieh eiave / elapsed since the . protective Volley was put into opet�ation, the teal taxation, not merely the nominal taxation, but the real taxation which tuts been exacted from the people of privilege of taxing the whole body of virtue y exc ange t to products o the ditty on tea, which amounts to the people for his private benefit. ' their farms. If we were to measure about £4,000,000 er annum, which Sir,when I make the statement that the reduction in the price of cottonP outaxation to-dayamounts to $GO - and the reduction in the price of the ordinaryf ece Englishypay provide his I must of necessity pay to provide his 000,000 a year, I make it, as I have wheat, you would soon discover for family ,with a wholesome beverage. said, with knowledge. Under the Yourselves that you are not In Canada the position is exactly protective system every man of any able for that bushel of wheat reversed. I except the excise duties discrimination and intelligence who to obtain anything like the same of being voluntary, but under our has looked into the question at all is quantity of commodities that you protective system every family is aware of this fact, that no matter could have obtained a dozen years compelled to pay at the rate of $50 how skilfully your protective tariff ago." or $GO a year for customs purposes, may be drawn, at the very least for; AN INTERESTING COMPARISON. although a large proportion of that every dollar that goes into the• "I believe that with the exception never goes into the treasury. All treasury you may rest assured that two dollars will come out of the pockets of the public. Ile- knows, also, that under such a tariff as • we have there are innumerable cases in which fur every single dollar that goes into the treasury sometimes $20 are taken out of the people's pockets. There are cases to -day in which. something over $2,000,000 a year is taken out of the pock- ets of the people :and only $10,000 goes into the treasury, and it is in that way and through a series of impositions of this fashion that this huge sum comes to be exacted from, you which I have spoken of just now. You may depend upon it that men with such a prize in their hands, that men who know that the success of the. Reform party threatens to restore to the people all these millions will fight hard, and that protection, as in the United States, will die hard. Thirty or forty millions of dollars a year to be divided among a few wealthy men and wealthy corporations is a prize well worth striving for. The sum that these-nien in these sixteen years have exacted from us would almost pay the heavy war indemnity which Germany demanded from • France of the tariff of the • United States, that the English artisan has to.pay there is no .country in the civilized is his proportion. of the duty* on tea ; world to day where the taxation is so everything else is absolutely free grossly unjust to the poorer class of with the exception of tobacco the community as it is in Canada and spirits, which some of you under this same protective tariff. In Probably think he would be better part this is incidental to any tariff without, and the duty upon which he under which the bulk of the revenue need not pay unless lie pleases,' I re - is raised by a heavy customs duty. peat the statement 1 made, that the amount of absolutely b utel taxa- tion, nee � •.L e � by .axe - tion, which under the English system is collected from the ordinary. wage- earner, the ordinary poor man, is just exactly one -twentieth part of that which, under the protective. tariff, is exacted from the artisan, or wage - But, sir, by the' system of specific duties which has been introduced this injustice is aggravated to an extremely high degree, wholly and entirely apart from the necessary effects of the protective tariff. The specific duty is a duty of this sort : The duty is levied on • every yard of earner receiving equal wages in this cloth,.wholly irrespeetive of its price Dominion of Canada. or quality. The coarsest cloths and Sir Richard dealt as considerable cottons made under that specific duty length with thequestion ofreciproeity, pay exactly the. same rate as the and showed that notwithstanding the finest and the most expensive. The difficulties which the Government has result is that the most costly goods placed in. the way of the negotiations, which the rich man uses, under a the prospects are good for seent•ing a specific duty, are the most cheaply, treaty with the United States without taxed, while the coarsest goods which ' discriminating against the . mother the poor men use are the most country or any other country. He heavily taxed. The price under the held that it was not a question of specific duty is precisely the same on ' discrimination at all, but a business the coarsest as on the most costly arrangement between two countries • articles. ]n stating that this tariff, by whieh they agreed to exchange is one of the most unjust I have ever i certain valuable, privileges for a when Fiance lay prostrate, at her examined, how unjust it is I am go. valuable consideration. They cer- inoto show yolk, and by an iltustt•a'- , tautly had the right to enter into.sueh net. The money which ]las been tion which theseb,u'bargain, .gentlemen cannot a g • find fault with, because 1 am goingyou vp No Idea to show you how- unjust it is by al • comparison with the system of taxa- • How nicely Hood's ,Sarsaparilla h to the, wrested from the people of Canada during the last sixteen years, were it to be used for the public • benefit,. were it to be invested barely at 4 per cent., would have been sufficient tion which exists in the mother I needs et the people wi'ho reel fill tired to -day to have defrayed all the re- countl;y, En„ a i to oil up the wtole mechanism of• quirements of Canada, and to have large revenue; nominally per family the body iae that all moves smoothly and saved you from all taxation whatso- the amount of, taxation is about work becomes delight. If yen are weak, double that,' which it is in Canada. , tired and nervous, Hood's Sa1•haparilfa ever. It is lftetilly true that if is just what you need. 'fry it. during the last sixteen years, instead Really there is no difference, because - _ of Llttlno this vast sunt i t0 the the real taxation is !rather More than I HOOD'S .PILLS cure liver ills, e'Onstipa- P n the nominal taxation, the only clif= tion, biliousnetaet, Ruiodke, sick head- ockets of theprotected n II P ra cent. ference being that the English taxes ache, indigestion• tures it were invested at 4 per cent. o into the English treasury to be eland Pais s a v ..;out or rtin doer! from any cause, It you might to -day have been free g distributed for the people's benefit, I felt like a tin soldier in that riot, from any taxation whatsoever for while .L large Part of the taxes in said tate militiaman, When the 1,'ederal purposes," a 1 Canada go to be divided among a bricks began to fly, really it made. i;b•FI•:r'r 0E TIM '1`III/Pi••, few favored firths and manufacturers. illy heart zine. Sir Richard proceeded to show But our taxation as compared with Trow the protective tariff bore with t the taxation of England is most Adjust Vanitly Differences. Canadaallas not beenless than $G0, -,especial severity upon the agricul-1 horribly unjust, in a way whish Bad temper is often merely bad 000,000 It yeitr, aa.1. if you will rout- l tura.' class, how it had depreciated 1 affcets the poorer class of the corn- digestion. tiply that by sitteetl ;you rvili see! land values, and how it bad increas-' munity. Ilere in Canada the .most Many quarrels attributed, tei pre - that it atnounts for sixteen years' ed tho price of commodities to the heavily taxed martin proportion to verse dispositions are due to disorder. mud one-third of a year to the suns l consumer without being able to Iris ilioome and his means is the poor ed livers. et $1,000,O000,0(X), In other words, 'maintain the price of agricultural laboring man, or the poor artisan, or Means Tabules adjust fancily every single, solitary family which, products. Alluding to the contention the wage-earner of any kind who /differences, and would prevent -thein, sit present inhabits Canada has der- t of the Ministers that protection was happens to have a large falnil r, and 1 which is better, if taken in time. , that Mlle been compelled to pay entitled to the et'tdit of havingre- the most lightly tweed matt ill Can Ripens Tabules, taken after meals, evening., for a while over. fur the revenue lJttrpofse,•s and duced the price of goods to the +Cos':- adat ht proportion to his means is the mot niug' and. a g, , fin that pAtteeted manufacturers, sumer, he said that it might be true wealthy mall who dohs no work of r'Ngnlate the, system and sweeten the $44f►J.3. More than that, in addition :that the progress of invention and any kind or description, but wlio de• temper. two be difficult to control yourself, to do nothing, to say nothing and the rising temper will be obliged to go clown,because it has nothing to !told it up, What is gained by yielding to temper ? For a moment' there is a feeling of relief; but soon comes a sense of sorrow and shame, with a wish 'that the temperhadboen controlled. Friends aro separated by a bad temper, trouble is caused by it, and pain is given to others as well as self, The pain too often lasts for days, even years—sometimes for life. An outburst of temper is like the bursting of a steam boiler, it is impossible to tell beforehand what will be the result. The evil done , may neverbe remedied, Starve your temper, It is not worth keep- ing alive. Let it die. e To search out impurities and drive Toni the s m s e work pf Burdock Blood Bitters ; thus B. B. 13. - — •-• : - _ _. cures dyspepsia, constipation, bad blood, biliousness and all diseases of the stomach, liver, bowels and blood. tl ac 'yst 9 ith ..aw, • i:ie : --18 P1101,i51111) 13V%.lt•Y 1'ItI1)� X I ORNINO WINGiCI-AEAM1N AHRIO.TIMES.OFFSTREET subsorttptionprice, $1 per year, in advancer AD:4405001100010.011.81 VI1RTrsLNG RArm: hpa e t 1 yr. j G u•a, - J O. t•. j i mo;. Ono tlolnuui ijU0 00 $i0 00 t 820 00 0 00• half " 90 00 20 00 12 00 400 tluartar " 20 00 12 00 I 7 00 204 cue(h ii 500 9 00 2 1 1Oa [,uaal mncl other 00810 adver11,ernents, 80, psi' lino for first iusuttiuu, and tic. perlinuto tach •Iubsequent (,n08100. Local m0ecos toe. pc. ilbe for first insertionend, 50. per line for oeoh anbee,iuont ,scorner.. No 'local* notice will be charged funs than 250, Advurtisowouts of Lost, round, Strayed, Situations, and Business Oh�u,00s Wanted, not oxceedhlg 8 linea nonpmuti, 1J1 pot• month Houses and isms for Sale, not exceeding 8 linea. el for east mouth, 50u, per eubsucfuent month ph0se Minis will be strictly adhered to Spoo(cI rotes for local advertisements, or tot Iongcr purioas, Advuttisenso its and local notices without epeoiffe- direotimis, will ho Inserted tin forbid and (hargee, accordingly. Transitory advertisements n;cat paid.advaucn Chahinges for contraot advertirsnments 'mist be IMO mire by Wednesday noon, in order to appear. that week R. ELLIOTT PROPRIRTOR ANI) PUULtenno The saloon will stay until the church says it must go. 20 YEARS OF• SUFFERING 20 FAILURES TO CURE • For 20 years 1 suffered the torments of the damned with blind and itching piles. Had I known of any cure I would not have hesitated to have given hun- dreds of dollars to obtain it. I followed the instructions of an eminent physician in using syringe treatments, 1 used Fowler's Pile Cure and 2.0 others of dif- ferent kinds. From some a little relief was gained, but nothing approached a cure. 1 was about resigned to the fate of having•to pass through an almost un- interrupted course of suffering so long as I lived, when Chase'b Ointment was brought to my notice. The statements in regard to it were so strong and bore with them a sense of conviction suffi- cient to overcome my skepticism in re- gard to its being no better than the rest. I used it, with the result of re- ceiving immediate relief and permanent Mire. For weeks and weeks I was fear- fully afraid of a return of misery, but it did not occur. I started using Chase's Ointment, hoping for relief and realized a cure that is permanent. I do not be- lieve there ever was a worse ease of blind and itching piles than wine, which leads me to think there is not a case to he recorded Chase's Ointment will not cure. Yours truly • GEO. W. MORRIS, Brantford, Ont. •Prop. The New Morris. Separator. BRISTOL'S Sarsaparilla Cures Rheumatism, Gout, • Sciatica, Neuralgia, Scrofula, Sores, and all Eruptions. BRISTOL'S Sarsaparilla Cures Liver, Stomach and Kidney Troubles, and Cleanses the Blood of all Impurities. BRISTOL'S Sarsaparilla :ures'Old Chronic Cases where all other remedies fail. Be sure •and ask your Druggist for BRISTOL'S Sarsaparilla For Twenty-five Years DUNN'S BAK1NO POWDER THECOOKS BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. POWDERS Cure SICK HEACACHJ1# and Nehtalgla 18 RHO JMINuisa slab Coated Tongue, DIM.nets, Yiiionenues, Pain tri ilia Side, Constipation Torpid Liver Bad Breath. To stay cut'd and reeparaia the Liver, Vivito MC* rte i`Ak*. PN 111 I$ 010,0TI*_ Tit tiRf)'Gi STONES. UIt 111AODONALD, CENTILE STREET. WINdling, • ONTARIO.. • B. TOWLE% M,D.C.M,, Member College Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario- -Coroner for County of Huron— Office np•etairs, next to Er Morton's uaaee, Wing. - ham, Ont. Orxws H cuss. -0 to 12 a, in., 1 to p. in., or Residwiue, Diagonal Street, TP. KENNEDY, M, D., AI. 0. P-8 O. • (Sueces•or to Dr, J. A. Meldrum.) 0'i8 Mecl thst of Western University: Late House, dnrvroon in London General Hospital. Ppecial atten- tion paid to diseases of women and children. Otiice—Formerly occupied by Dr. Bleldrmn,Corner- of Centre and Patrick streets. 1Y'sultan - ONT DR. MoASH, M. B. Toronto, Member College Physicians ands Surgeons, Ontario. Bh•LURAVR ONTARIO. T) VANSTONE, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, Etc.. • Private and Company funds to loan at lowest rate interest. No CW11Inleeiol1 charged, Mortgages, tows+ and farm property bought and sold OIrFICE—Beaver Block it'INOUA't J. A. MORTON BARIRISTER , 15 Ingham Out 1 . L. DICKINSON, • Barrister Etc. soLmerlon TO DANNC OP ItAMrLTON. ATONNT • TD'+ LOAN. OBice—Meyer Block, whighant. DENTISTRY, -J, S. JEtLOME, L. D. 4.,ti iXtti. IsInanutacfurn)g firr.t-c'cossets or r'•. teeth as rhea') es tIc• J ,•an be trade in'the Dominion. Teeth extracted, absolutely wirh..ut pais , by hls,new 'm process, guaranteed pule tly sole. OFFICE : in the Beu1•er Moult, opt.tnmte the Brtu,swluk Irouae. 1eir"Ari- Wm. F:. 1Ylacdonald, L. D.j.,. DENTIST, OFFICE, MACDOPIAL0'S r&LOCK. Will visit Gorrie 1st and lard itlonda-ys of each month. J 0111.5 RITCHIE, tiJlNER,IL INSURANCE AGENT WINOIIAM, ()Prangs p DEANS, JR.,WINouuAN, LICENSED AUCTimNEEIt FOR T1IE COUNTY OF HURON, laiSales attended in any part 01 the Co. Charge, oera JOHN CURRIE, WrNGuAiN, ONT., • LICENSED AtlOTIO 8 N Jr R FOR TILE OOONTrEf! BORON AND tints. Ail orders left at the Toms Office promptly attend ed to. Terms reasonable. • JAMES HHENDEIRSON, LIMO= A0CTIOR00R FOR COUNTisa Htmolt 1s' DRUM All males attended to promptly and on the Shorties Notice. Charges Moderate and Satisfaction Guaranteed. Ali necessary arrangements can be tirade it tb Toisa' office Wixemu brit Money to Loan on Notes' Notes Discounted AT REASONABLE RATES Money advanced on Mortgagee at 51 per oentwii and a oouofe Boll led the end of atiy yeah Nate Ii13$7rt. llgolfNT)00. Beare Moak Wiasbaoa, Ont, 8 Nollinern Districts o Three interesting pamphletls, have just under the authoiitA, a direction of II o r. A missioner of • ••wn Lane; necessary ,'• - ormation f settlers reference to pro r t3, agricultural resources,etc., of the vel , very imperfectly known. Ontario, comprising East North Nippissing, Rain the T'emiscanting settl' cue dealing with the I District was compiled b'i Yeigh, of the Departine Lands, and the one clesci Temiscaming District by Mr. 0. 0. Farr, of Ht that District. The thre have been prepared wi and aro marked triol sobriety and moderation' and with that...strict t* facts, which -it would be all compilers of emigr'at' tions observed. We ,cannot do beat what the Presbyterian !these districts as desira I :settlers: To many it will come. interest and surprise of to be informed that '1 moderate distance- froi settlements of Ontario large fertile and heal country, where farms e as free grants, or for I: I',. - very small and moa description. And yet •doubtedly the fact, pursuaded that many •ous to make for them would do better by I newly opened distrie than by taking them own vast, and, " in. in: attractive North Weste We do not pretend in the faintest outline, these very interesth written pamphlets. wish to settle on land but little cash with wh start, procure a copy o ,they can easily do by the Crown Land autho thein road, mark and iI the information they are quite sure that the; be helped to a deeisiou subsequent course of insure a moderate an perity and comfort f their lives. One great advantage settlers in these distrie .are so accessible and c at very little expense time it was not uncomi to Carry on their back days journey their ft and general supplies. tricts of which those settler would have to in order to get more tl front, a base of supplk the greater part of tion can be done by v pioneers bad frequent years before they < churches, • school a• organization.' Now, 'organized are the ir various Christian den very- few indeed are t do not have an oppor ing the Word of God As to education, schof :soon as the children the excellent laws of • provide a form of lo gent—cheap, effleien and adapted to the n and struggling coma These pamphlets or lated broadcast, not J • *countries but throng Province. When sc farmers' sons are for: • and seeking a pri most eases, a very living in the greatly fessions, it is special point, as these pampl opportunities, comps: 'very doors, as will c • •of average strength, perseverance, whethc • a farm or not, to ma home in which he "privilege of being 1 far as any one could Popul r 7 Mr. G. Fred Ander representative of T. 5 John, N. 13.; in Orteakit Syrup, says : "ft is tl I ever used and 1 roof Have given it to f2181 cured every time, It now to intiliioe inn 10 1 A 0