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The Wingham Times, 1897-04-02, Page 2;rttTLL SUCH IS THE Cir...AT RIO CRAND WITH ITS VAGARIES. ;<t Se a at tree or I'reantsb. stone fMet! nest Iso Sem :Mere Than Otteo to ire iUn- +.leristootl--Plows DXa::try ruclergrettad, belt ;,t Times. There Is a Torrent eat' op. ,L 22•.•• 1 1. ,r 3.1 1 , t1 lt. a.Ca Ursa r t if felt!( 1 1 : " fi:titl the titins TUE \ tthu. J4j TIMES APRIL 27 1.6077 - eos, or gtvat *telt; ole hart:, vinewartts, 1�-theaLttiolcla tura !tv iatg suite() aro all - ° le utter(•, of the s t eery of the Rio t irande, the A retic iuz Nile."—Neve Et Yeti. Suit. tttn.h ;, w, iiT'xit t3, sr: v1el:tg Cl the Ri Greene "lee!, e fete nit! .:, er its metal light (lt aft se—emcee fan t";3 fr(t:-t ti gnIf of Wei, tt. '.brve t•h::t it ct esti' float at Pratt e::: e pt t.1" f : tent's. In the el clays, when New Meek° wee aL I ovinee of it pl:till, the Iit•a13'.e, elong. the rife..• diebet even lrt-e fe r,;l:o::tti, and tri,+ only -, a y t:r. ; Led of vetting neront was by 'ergine.. :t: this litt.'1'txse zh sp•'( Eel br ec ;1 of le benne, was reared to be kept apt the :nestle When the liver v; too bight; r t: 't1 tt, Longs to, at'3•<'.�,V, teav'll'rS ( `'•;e•il en. i:'e 1•::it?: sal:(i wait- ed fee the t :t, rs to et !lits, Nom, titre are tri .,;e:, ear the liver et the, I•: Rio orate," ,..cit r, :tt1 i:t a titer ',lases Sevastopol, title ttie)lns e'f nevastupol, }Bich t:ttlt:(tt tlt< (t itsen) lunch trotkble (luring 'he :'ix months' defense of the fortress l y the Rtes. Lute. were at hest very tenter ..,tdl:tiltt;uvtsp eta Say the :night, have Leen ta:'ecc-n by a vigorous I enbart e ss, lzu i.t mai Luft during the ri .st Jew days tf the :doge. The ignc- t . ranee of the it1fl 1 ;:crit rahi in regituct to t Ors strength of the e t,: ri cotterel it deli y ( +, ;%.11 tllo1.41 izitusimprovedbyutaking defe'ns'e almost impregnable. lap fc rift:-. ;l:: i ret -}boats ta:.•o the uuuu Of r bas's cf lots n east a • Straars;: se_itig; its e :'rent f:r the firet ante tt world I:e a to brink tsa ' t ,ii;;ly rcalth Rio Bravo c -c 1 �r ertae, rte the Not: Mexi- eines love to c'::il the _c•:.t 11,er, . iean- dering in a: entail !:art t•f a very tide :t chat:eel he'seldsee only a little r<n defy streak!, for ortlizza:rily en e -te lune of the Req Grange* is enuler ;ro n, the water soaking r.Z':. toward tine gulf theneg11 the s:tele 1 ^:!cath it:t c'l ;nrt•1. 'erne val- ley, nom:t;eet (vein -where to left and right 1-y motiltaiiis or fccthille, is sandy, and the water, percolating the sands down to hand pan, spreads out on each side so that it may always be found anywhere in the valley by digging down to the level of the river's F?uri:.ee. For the greeter part of the year the river above ground flows swift and muddy, nturowiu7 us it swirls round a scud bar and -widening over shallows. But the thing that strikes the stranger most queerly is its disappearance altogether for reaches, luany miles in length, of its ehannel, whieh, except, it may be, fora water hole hcre-aud there, is asdry as Sahara. The river keeping right along about its business, however, and where a reek reef or olay bed blocks its subterranean current it emerges to the surface sad takes afresh start above ground, running as a Lig stream -which, farther down, may lose itself in the sands again. "It is when. the floods come down that the Rio Grande shows why it re - quirts so big a chatunel for its all the year round use Wad demonstrates that if tho waterway Were even wider it wonlcl • bo ^•z ucle-antage to residents along its banks. It iefedbya-watershed of vast Meta and steep dement, which in. tizues of rain and welting snows pre- cipitates the waters rapidly into the elzailneI, In Juue, -when. the snow melts on the peaks abtrnt its heartwaters in Colorado and northern New Mexico, and later iu the el -Fortner, when heavy show- ers and cloudbursts are the order of the day, the Rio Grande overflows its benlcs, deluging wide tracts of valley and some - f hztes carving a new channel for itself, eizauging its course for utiles. Where the valley is unusually wide and sandy, as ;leiow Isleta and in the Melilla val- ley, the old channels in which the river are used to flow eplainlyinciicated in the landscape. "No one who has seen the great river in flood is likely to forget the positive ferocity- it seems to display as its waters ,sweep all before thein, mid woe to the man or beast who is overtaken by them.! The fiend arri ves s; ithout warning. The, sky may be clear above when the travel- er, leisurely jogging across the wide channel,. hears his wegon wheels grate 'upon the sand with e 3eculzar sound. It means that the waters are stirring the sands beneath !zeal, and then, if he .lrzzows the river, ho lashes his horse, making at :ill speed for the nearest bank, and lucky he is if he reaches it safe.. The chances are that before he gets there he hears the roaring of waters up tho c'haunel and sees them conning down tweed him 'with a front like a wall, rolling forward and downward as if over a fall, 'with a rising flood behind.Many a man and 'whole wagon trains have been overwhelmed in this way, and, Buried in sande or caet away on desert banks, no human eye has ever seen them again. "The great river has its pleasing and romantic aspect, so fascinating that it is a raring; among people who live in its valley that 'whomever drinks of itswa- ters and c:eparts'vill come again to seek thew.' Like the Nile, the Rin Grande ern iehes the soil of itis valley' to the point of ineahstnstibla fertility. Along its banks in New ]tXesico are ffelcls that for two cent -Ivies have been etiltivated yearly, yielding groat props, and they aro es productive today 05 when they flrat wore tilled. Irrigating ennals, ('011- ed acegnias madras (mother <litehes), convey water from the river to bo dis- tributed through little gates to tin' fields of the valley, which it both waters and 3;O€TOS ON ALCOHOL TeielY ARE Of',»Q3Ea TQ ITS USE AS A BEVERAGE. vedlsposes the .Gotlyto 733se,tsa,--'t; eaic.. e:.13 the Mental Powers—Healthy Per, et”:s .^:o Not NeedAlcohol in Any Quant. t't7—�otttt .abstinence the Safeguard. a 1.I^. et. Baer of Berlin is a royal med. f . counselor ants the first physician r c: the prison at Pioetzeusee, ale has s:ritten a work on alcoholism and c+ bas been pronounced "the best iuform. { d mail on the subject of alcohol," writes J. I3. W. Stuckenberg in The `oice, His opposition to alcoholism is due to his sciezetific iuvestigetions and Ins cslielieueo with orimfuals. We c,c:ct e bat a few of his many utterances on the subject. IIe thinks drunkenness was probably never .before so generally 1•rtvalent and never so injurious to the publics welfare: Iio declares that lit'3tltlly persons do not need alcohol in moderate quantities even, and that it is certain that no one becomes a drunkard who was not previously a moderate 11z ilii:er. He says: "Alcohol is not a food fu the sense that it gives one the power of endur- auce or preserves strength and health. It rather produces the opposite offeats, for it destroys the body and ruins its Imelda" Instead of being a preventive of malaria, cholera and other diseases, t,lcohol actually predisposes one to those c,f. She mental and Moral effects of alcoholism are beyoud description ter- rible. "Alcohol destroys the individu- ality ofenen, paralyzes the will and the physical energy, makes the individual i, slave'of his passious, so than unless he gratifies them, he becomes stupid, tuisuable and impotent, but if they are gratified tiny are cultivated inordinate- ly 'o as to terminate in the destruction of the beery and the end of life." Wo now turn to a Dotch pbysiologist, Dr. 1?, 0. D:Indere. IIe rays: "never ict a deep of whisky moisten t:te !fits cf men, If . lca.ge quantities do- stroy zz:ind Ion' body, email quantities produce physiologically exactly the sante effect. The diffcrence is quantitative, not qualitative. I do not hesitate to e iran flint if tram this day not another drop of sp;tituous liquors was drunk, the appetite for it would be quieted after a few generations, if not wbclly destroyed." Among the raelieal opponents of the ase of alcohol as n beverage, whether in large or small portions, i, Dr. A. Fick, professor of physiology iu Wurzburg. He pronounces alcohol a poison, and'as a specialist in physiology he declares that its effect on the mind and body is zuost pernicious. However moderately taken, be denies that it can' he regarded sty a valuable nourishment. Respecting the strengthening influ- ence of alcohol be says: "It is altogether beyond question that even the moderate dose of alcohol dimiu- ishcs the power of work. All that is saki about the strength produced by al- cohol is deception. Tim small glass of the poor melt taken during his hours of labor is uue'oubtedly injurious. Every puny which the laborer pays for alco- holic drink» is not only wasted, but also works deetiuctivcly. The laborer would use his money productively if he spent for fat and sugar what he gives for al- cohol." He claims to speak as "a Critical scientist," and states that it is the province of pbysiology, his specialty, to determine the effects of alcohol en the system, As a scientific specialist he makes this riginificant statement, "The warfare agar eft alcohol is the most inn portant pheuoirenten of our age—mere important than political action, wars and peace conventions." He is a total abstainer aud sees in total abstinence the hope of saving the nations now dis- eased by means of alcoholic poison transmitting the pernicious mental and physical effects to the conning genera- tion. Dr, .7.. Gaoler professor of physiology in Gurieln, declares that the future be- longs to such as have the courage of total abstinence. IIe laments the great dominion f aiued by alcohol over the human family. The destruction it works 3t may be slow, but it is sure, "The man addicted to rinorphine is a ruin in two er three years. Alcohol gives longer respite, often 20 or t30 years, but it is e enriches A trip tamer the river reveals f a guecessitln of leis tun`s of a l�rintitirts civilization of the old Spani h-Anla'r'iean i typo. Adobe viliagt's, with s:nall, flat g roofed liotises built about antique w churches, and the sp:wit:is Ilouses of the t elassee to sef the (leamtile of total ab. etii3ence, '.Ihe rewards will be personal welfare, increase of the happiness of the family a uta a longer life. "Temuper- aueo, total abstinence, may lengthen life ten years." Dr, J. Rosenthal, professor of playa. ology and hygiene in Erlangen, says: "So long as alcohol remains in the btouiseh, deeestion is suspended, In that ease the food remains undigested for hours," The eminent Jules ;Simon, who died recently, sa;d: "x sun at great enemy of alcohol, which is wase than the pest. It is aid uuending pest," Dr. Helmholtz, late of Berlin, well known through his discoveries in physi- ology and in other departzuents of science, seas .regarded by many' as. the greatest scientist of the age, He was one of the eminent thinkers who estab- r lished the law of the conservation of t energy, In celebrating his seventieth anniversary, referring to his own expe.: a rime, ho spoke of the suggestions b which come like lightning flashes as if si by inspiration to the scientist and then added, "But the least quantity of aloo- hol seemed to banish them." ; t optimistic minority on a !tile day, sac- ceeding one of rain, to see the town and the clear outline of tate distant mountains through a dustless atmos. phere elle could not help regretting that the came. effects are not artifloialiy at• tamable. On the whole, Athens will show to best advantage if visited after Oonstan- CEYLON TA tinopie and other towns in Turkey, as . the standard of eon:parison will bo fairer then that afforded by the great11N .1 I I •, capitals of the west. It must not be tor. n ttE EO teTSTIMUtATINI ..jj �1 j['j�#J'�!� ft 1 that i al tri ti 111J f g f as of the most atloleut � � � t., ' Elm , she is at the same time one of the new- Lead packages only, 25. o, 40,o and hoc,per est mum rt ro i j} ? S Ib: Sold byt all z4Cers, nt ,lt t pas t tetras, nor ought tg 6 The DgvFtlsou & 3luy, Ltd.,Wholesale Agents, Toronto, rho long period of her decline ever to be Jolt sight of when comparing her with other towats. The traveler wbo, remembering that long period of Turkish sway, counts on ebeiviug au oriental inipreasion from he aspect of Athens is doomed to dis- ppointnaent, Even the national garb is fast disappearing. It ruay still be worn y a few older]y Athenians. These, and peasant here and there selling milk or heese, recall the day when their dress was the national one. It is, however, he uniform of certain! soldiers of light Alcohol's Ravages. As long ago us 1847 Dr. Turner de- clared thet the inebriate had suffered a compound fracture from the crown of his head to the soles of his feet, so groat is the assault made by alcohol on the huznari system, THE MODERN, AT}[ENS i f u entry, vt ha may be seen paiadieg 1 tete streets or inonuting giterd at the palace, in all the whits' splendor of the I fustanelle. The wide, blue trousers of the 2Igoan islanders are not less rare, per is there =oh chance of soeiug them at the Pira3ua, among the craft from ( the various islands mocred along the i quays. The uglier and cheaper product i of the slopshop has replaced the pictur- esquo drapery of the olden- tinho, 'The •inonotouy of the modern costume is THE STREETS ARE MADE BRILLIANT I .broken only by the priests, with their . BY MARBLE HOUSES. i long black robes and theirpeculiarilgts, i I -�•'D. Bikelas in Century, • I A. Substitute. Waiter—Sorry, sir, but ve baf no more quail on toast alretty. Customer --That's too bad. Well, have you anything else that is. just as good? Waiter --Ash, jal Buser! Ve leaf tripe, vienervurst, pigs' feet, frankfurter and cabbage and sauerkraut.--Chioago Times -Herald. The Soil Is Poor, however, and the City Etas Always Suffered Prom a Lack of Water—Tito Ptetaresoue Garb of the Olden, filen Is Not Now Often Seen. Of the three mountains inclosing the plain of Athens, Mount Parnes is the highest (4,1140. feet), Mount I'entelious (3,641 feet), with its regular triangular sln pe, suggesting the pediment of a temple, is the most imposing, but the thyme covered, honey producing Hyiuet. tus (3,308 feet) has always been most • Intimately associated with Athens. It lies nearer to the city, and from a !]most all the streets and all the windows look- ing eastward can be seen its curved line marking the bine •elty•above, except on rare gray days, when clouds resting on its top are an infallible sign of rain. The various lines of the mouutaius and the smaller billsforming en inner circle around Adieus, combined with the view of the sea, leud an additional effect of airiness and bnoyalley to the aspect. .In the long, straight streets of tho new town, open from end to end, nothing impedes the view on eitber side. Iu praising Athens we most not draw a veil over her defects, Stich im- provements as are •indispensable to a modern city have not kept pace with. her growth in extent and afiinenoe. The stages of title progrers eau be seen in the strfeturai inequalities even of contigu- ous dwellings. These dwellings may be cbronzalogioatliy divided into three cate- gories—those of the first sottlers, when all were poor, and the main necessity was at any rata to be housed; those of tho thrifty citizens, who felt the want of mere space and greater convenience, but had little regard for external ap- pearance or interior ,comfort and con- sidered carpets and plate glass a luxury and even chimneys of swell cense.- quenee, and those of the we:ithy rnigrants, who gave an impulse to the baildiug of elegant licuses ninoug all who, thanks to iticreasing prosperity, could afford to imient them. The proximity (.f the ;harries of Hy- niettus sill Peutelicus enahies Athens to supply Herself with a building ma- terial which no other city could have at equal cost. Marble, In itself an esn- bellishment, is profusely used and loses novo of its brilliancy in the dry atmos- phere, whose transparency makes pleas- ant to the eye even the light colors spread on the steak walls, which 1n other latitudes world hardly be beara- ble The {seeable effect thus obtained is increacerl by the trees in canto of the streets and sgmares, as w0d1 i:s in the gardens cf the better clam of houses. But Athees might z311d would be more verdant stili were it not foe the lack of ainuirinlot water. This scant was felt in antiquity as evert. To it may partly be ascribedepidemics recorded by an- eient historians ill tines of war, when the 'amber of Mita bitants was increased by those of the surrounding country seeking refuge within the wails. Ant (mines Pitts endowed Athens with a perfect system 'of waterworks. They eoirsisted of sal;ter'raueao, galleries, col. lectin» the-Zaters of the neighboring 'mountains, To them old' Roman aque- ducts, Humes lively discovered, repaired and utiliz(ni,Atbens still owes her Scanty:. supply of water, Projects for increasing the supply aro ever talked of, but will he rleft:•rted so long tts the municipal fluances remain 13o letter than the na- tiontd. Meanwhile, the • 'macadamized roads between the line sidewalks are hardly watered, This fact and the na- ture of the soil, notorious for its thin- ness elven the days of Thueeelides, ale- eouut for the dust, which is the great- est blemish of Adieus. An English lady was heard to admire the picturesque. nees of its eviiiriiug clouds, but even were that sinvle renreseutative of alt quaky re:enrselees, the )process beiug n essence the hale." 17r. J, I<eine m, professor of anatomy n Basel, pronounces alcohol one of the neatest hindrances to every reform 111011 nuns at promoting the welfare oe he il'eoplo. Ile waute the better situated SAN FRANCISCO'S BEER. her Saloons, Placed Side by Side, Would Extend Sixteen h[ties. The yearly consumption of beer in San Francisco, according to the oaloula- tion of the federal gaugers, is 14, 21 5,161 gallons. Tliis is equal to 2,843,082 1-5 eve gallon kegs, It would require a sin- gle cask 222 feet high and 101 feet in diameter to hold this liquor. - The bat- tleship Oregon could easily float iu this cask. The beam of the Oregou is only 70 feet and her extreme bei ht, includ- ing her mill tery toast, is 120 feet. It would rtclaire live ships as large"as the Oregon to carry this beer as a cargo after all the machinery and armament Mid been removed and allowing nothing for the !lull displacement. The displace- ment of the Oregon is 10,000 tons, the weight of the beer is 50,8e) tons. Notwithstanding tile fact that San F'ranciseo has but 300,000 people, there are 3,260 licensed saloons ill the city. The Examiner of that city recently compiled a statement of the extant of San Francisco's raze business, and this article has been drawu upon for many of the facts herein given. These figures take uo account of the numberless barrel houses ---"can joints" itn the expressive vernacular of the po- liee--for the barrel houses are not re- quired to pay the municipal license of $21 a quarter, and consequently are not enumerated in the books. Eliminating, therefore, the barrel houses 0301 allowing to each of the more • than 8, 000 Brewed saloons a frontage of 25 feet --certainly a moderate allow- ance—the astounding fact is made. to appear that the San Francisco saloons, if placed side by side in a straight line, would extend nearly 16 miles• -•one un- broken, bibulous, beery boulevard. -- New York Voice. THE MODERN CAIN. • Vliil(1bood, Youth and Manhood All Per- esh lleforo the Slayer. I Tbesn1oeu---ibis modern Cain --is the depository of the rankest poisons. IIs wbo ennuis behind its bar deals in death. It is n murderer of babyhood. No one who but mutually glances ever the record of crime issuing from the saloon can doubt that itis disastrous to child life. The saloon is a murderer of manhood. It has wrecked the bodies and sent to MCernnI gloom tho souls of thousands of the flower of our country, It is the destroyer of the home, that ancient institution of clod, that little heaven on earth, that one thing deur to n woman's heart next to her God. The saloon has been the cause of thotlsa ads of homes being turned into hells on earth. Here is fmodern Cain with this differ- ence, that, where.,la in the olden time Cain was reckoned an outlaw and went slinking away when Confronted with his crime, this modern (Jain is a legal. ized mei:dur'et awl entries on its work under sauietionof law, 1 ata profoundly impressed with the conviction that in the urinals of refile thiaehall be reckoned the "crime of the ages." May the voice of the etert,al God startle ns tonight With the rltlestioli, ''What hast thou douc?" Two hundred thoosand hones aro. under fife shndn-)); 100.000 heart) are broken; the cry of 600,000 wretched, ragged children pierces the air; the tramp, tramp, tramp of 100,000 drunk- ards yearly uzarohing to their doom makes the earth tremble, while crimes unmentionable aro being perpetrated upon thousands of innocent viOtilus by the votaries of the saloon.+ -,-Rev. J. Knox Montgomery. LIQUOR AND BUSINESS, People of a Town Don't have to Guzzle Beer -to Ire 1'roseerens. One of the highest salaried traveling men making Kansas was talking with a Wichita reporter the other day of the prohibition law of Raines and said: "1 matio all the towns in eastern Kansas and western Missouri, end I want to say that all this talk of prohibition hurting business is all a farce. I Fell More goods and a bettor quality iu Kan- sas towns than I do in Missouri, and my patrons are better pay. "They need not tell nie that the peo- ple of a town have to guzzle beer in or- der to have prosperous business. When the people of a town spend their looney for beer, they dou't have so much to spend in my lino. I don't wind a glass of beer oecasioually, hot I prefer to self goods to a roan wbo doesn't. use it. I 1 find he is a great deal more apt to have the money when pay clay comes. "-- Kansas City Star. Profits of Saloons. .According to the sworn statement of saloon keepers before the supreme court of the United States, the average daily inseam of a saloou is $IG. There are in Cincinnati 1,770 saloons. Assuming that Gaon receives $15 n day, the aggro - gate is $2,600,000 a year. How much of this is profit? A gallon of beer sells at wholesale for 25 cents. The saloon keeper receives for it 80. cents, a profit . of 220 per cent. The profits on wliisky arE' even greater. Sorely the people of this city must be prosperous when they can 'pay such profits to 1,770 01110011 keepers, while they support but 1,101 • grocers, nearly oue-fourb of whom soli ' liquor besides. --Cincinnati Co1nmercisl Tribune, Sunday C'los3ng In Scotland. Isere aro some tIgeres that witness to the advanteges ofSunday ciosiug of sue loons: In Scctlatud the couruulption of spirits in 1852 and 1558 was 6,858,1331 gallons for a population of ', 014, 744. In 1892 and 1808 the consumption was 6,6111,7558 gallons, the population beiug 4,008,451. Compare the decreaeo in consumption of spirits with iucrettse{1 population. No Geed Teuiplars In Russia. . Joseph Mathis, grand chief Templar of England, recently made an attempt to locate lodges of his order in Russia, 'eat the government forbade any move of the kind, and the enterprise was aban- doned. arrs. Ifearst's izttotive. Mrs. Phoebe Hearst of Oaliforuia has given $200,000 to found a uiinialg school iu eouneetdoe with the state university at Berkeley as a memorial to her bus. band. She gives largely to the free kin. dergartens, supports several college set- tlements and contributed $1,000 to rho recent eampoigu for the woman snfiffrngo amendment. She has also given $200,- 000 to establish a flue gymnasium for girls at the statcunieersity+. Shesaid to Miss Anthony, "I ani doing all this to make girls ,fit to. vote." Accounted. Per. Eiabel-•-What an interesting tauter Mr. Gumbel 1st He always Holds one when he 890331(5. Mrs, Gusher --Does he? That ac- counts for the hair Ifontidon his shoul- der last night. --.Strand Magazine. The priucipal defense of the Datch in the war with Alva was found in the character of their country. Small'bas• tions, long certain walls and very -vide ditches filled with water were the char- ' acteristics of a Dutch. fortification. A wagon load of taortae-will fill about Leo hods. • HAVE YOTJ CATARRH R3ut One Sure Re'u 4y--Obra:n It for 2$ coots, mower Incttotc(t, and be eared, Cettlrl•iz is a disagreeable and ot. fenoive disease. It usenet)! resuhts from a cold and n mu uanptiozz and death. ofteoneels ofiectivccosureuletdy. so far discovered For it is Dr. Chase's Catarrh Cure. Plltsielans fabled to cure Geo. llelfrey,' toll -gate keeper, holland Landing rood. Cbaso's Catarrh Cure {l;tl it. One box cured ti1'illiant ]1.Itee5llaw and, two bores Jth1in4 T. Stoddard, both of; SS'Gw•nla-, Isiwisiouest ihll CourtbtyClark Joel Ilogel's.. !rob., ert .L Hoover and Geo. Taylor, all of f Ileetoa1, volitutarile certify to the effi-` easy of Chute's Catarrh Cure, r: is•, ,Telltlison, of Gilford, spent nearly $300 oa doctors, but found no peliunnent relief fairer rte tried 0 25 -cent bot ofe Chase's. Miro Dwyer, of Alliston, go' rid of al cold in the head in 12 hours. Henry It. Nieltolis, 176,.lteetory street,' London, tiled aL box with excellent of-. feet: Dr. Chase's Catarrh Cure is for Hale bye any dealer, or by I:dmni{sou, Eater; fit; (o., Toronto. Price 25 cents iuclnding, blower. Coughn, colds and bronchial 'troubles,) resettle- cured by the latest discovery„: Chase's Lbls,ed a13(1 Turpentine. Pleas t ant anti easy to take. 213 cents. THE MOST PROMPTS Pleasant and Perfect Cure for Coughs, Coles, As mo,, 2 rseohit n, 'kr oarsoness, Sore Throat, Croup, 671ocp- ing Cough, CU:izo y, Paln z 'z X33 Cbo'.iii r.r.11.1:.tl Tllrvc t,, n«a4,'ai'ip,l e..,l`L..:.:1e, ?:.-ten.,<eese;:,. I rree healing, ere et • • r•IT^.i+ i ir'a \ • ,:t'q cEtit 3ll'ort7o,y-n`.'_nie 3C en.e.e•1 nitre inmedicine t it.'t`t,•e1.E?+_:f.^^ _'j (,n 1 ether I'ecto_rd. i o: r s c .,l :..1- tost :-1s t') 0t:t:a0 a 13'1:a ' , C' en rt.trn 1 nen nil 4•414•444 se444, AT STITTSVILLE ! The Town's Leading Merchant Lald IIp Rheumatism in va a is forms is one of the most common diseases there is; It arises generally from impure blood and n broken down system. In the limbs it is painful; in most of the in- ternal organs dangerous, and in the heart usually fatal. The experience of Mr, S. Mann, the Well known general merchant of Stitts- ville, is interesting: "Last winter 1 was badly afflicted with rheumatism, I decided to try, 13r. Chase's Pills, To my surprise. I got immediate relief, and before I had used one bot my affliction was gone. I was also troubled with bilious - ems for years, and at intervals of three or four weeks would. be laid up with as severe lteadaelte nntl sicic stomach. Since using Chase's Pills •I have not had ea attack of either. ” I may add that Dr. Chase's Oint= tient for piles and skin diseases it! just as effective as Dr. Chase's Pills for blood troubles. I have a clerk who suffered tceribly from bleeding piles. He tried Chase's Ointment and in a few days was completely cured," All dealers and I:dmansoe, Rates & Co„ manufacturers, Tbronto. 25e. Cheese's Linseed and Turpentittio for cords, bronch,Eetie avid Consumption. Sure etre, 25 cents • Caveats sad 'rtadc•lU%arks obtalota. and all patent basincss conducted for irfl)3ir4T1. F1;Lea. ?fy Alec in in theinunetli+te1cchnhtyofthtPatent Oaks •end sly tacltitles 3arscau-idr patent, art unsurressc4 rend model, sketch er reetegtaph of invention,wit:i description andstattmi,itas toadvantnges earthed. /'.Nn 'iiarrXodv!„a 40 f'ea'sts: 132)1)210»l rr.a to .r,7te,rtatitrt,t, and ,:V feo for prencetning the. trifpotenaCat Cs rri104 MQ+ 5 A + livestee' charter. " ctn. :ln,ng fiat information ser:: tine• t t�e3nitiadlr (::ciauyys C,3:st(iCrsd a3 etreal ' �ol,..;ltlitlut. a twob' t. .-:;;111."1 ... ti 7. 1 (. h v,.'g & retia a;l, e.•,reers„ oefe aA. to. trice Ise 00na3 p; r Box, er 6 for es • Ecru , i .a, tar P.tt,t d , ; fi te.r,t (4 i' . • 't y