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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1897-09-24, Page 7PHRENOLINE REMEDIES Taking the lead everywhere. We are working day and night t9 supply the demand. Our correspondence shows that hundreds upon hundreds of poor sufferers aro being restored to health and happi- ness daily. TRY RHE?� MATIG SPEOdF O ©i KIDNEY AND LIVER PILLS They are absolutely pure and healthful. Guaranteed) to cure Rheumatism, Sciatica, Nournigia, Lumbago and .all forms of Kidney and Liver troubles. =13EwA.RE Oil SPURIOUS IMITATION!; Soldin Wingbam, only by Gordon & Co els rs' Heart •Or have you palpitation, throbbing or irregular beating, dizziness, short breath, -smothering or cholcinp; sensation, pain in the brc,ast or heart. If so, your heart is affected and will in turn affect your nerves, c1,—ing nervousness, sleepless. ness, morbid anxious feeling, debility. tilted 61-q3 Pr Cure all these complaints by regulating the heart's action and building up the nervous and muscular system to perfect health and strength. Price 6oc. per box •or 6 boxes for $2.5o. At all druggists. ELTON'S UIiiPS Will standee -at and "t ar for THE 41 I G.IA.M TIMES, SEPTEMBER 24,, 1897. 33o Good to Y'ourseif. The Medical and Surgical Repor- er gives the following practical ad - vie( ; 'Think deliberately of the house you live in—your body. Make up your mind not to abuse it. Wear nothing that distorts or pains it. Eat nothing that hurts it. Do not over• load it with victuals, drink or work. Give yourself regular and abundant sleep. Do not take col ; guard your self against it. If you teel the first symptoms, give yourself heroic treatment. Get into a fine glow of heat by exercise. This is the only body you will have in this world. Study deeply and diligently the structure of it, the laws that govern it, the pains and penalty that will surely follow a violation of every law of life and health. Li Eli ti31 TTL WEE FELLS SM11 EADAGII Positively ela't'ed by these tittle Pills. Theralso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizzitless, Nausea, Drowsi- ness, Bacl Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small PiE9e Small Dose*, Soak Price. • Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's Liver Pills. The, UP THE FRAZER RIVER. WHAT A. TRAVTLER SAW. STIsArzi a ', RANS,' lt, Vanua 114vms, D. c FROM OUR NOTE I300K, To -morrow we are to have the pleasure of a trip to Yale, 100 milt•s up the river, and we turn out the light and lie down, wondering if we will oversleep ourselves. We rll•e wakened with a rat -a -tat -tat on test door—it is 10 minutes after three. and at 3:45 we aro on board the Transfer and in half an hour are under motion, while the rain comes down—as it has done, lately•-mt st remarkable weather for this time of the year. It is Tuesday a. in., feel we'll not be back till Wednesday p m. or rT hursdtiy a. in. Before the beet started one of the officers brougnt us a tray containil:et hot coffee and bread and butter, which was very welcome, for some- how we had queer sensations. Break. fast was announced at 7:45, arise while partaking •of mush, sa11ncn, oranges, &c„ the Captain enter Ca in re us with anecdotes of Rocky Moun- tain pioneers. It is 11.sw 8:30 and the rain is staying above, but tee clouds are dark and d'•eary. `1'1:1• boat is very shaky. '1'bc scene et1 far has been a succession of same- ness. The river is wide, ntudtle and swift, the country on each side being mostly undulating or hilly, elotl!ed in the freehness and beauty of summer. At Longley, the prairie was it verdant plain as level a15 :t sheet of ice, In the dietanctr, 1711 ; either hand, rise pigmy mountain- ettes. No doubt they started 115 with giant ambitions, and thought they'd soar aloft above the skie=, bet —well, if they did not light 01: daddy's wood pile, daddy's • !sono! • pile Iit on them (nearly.) The rain is pouring dawn. Tee nilly other lady passenger is a mid dh-aged person tviroee acquilintanee 1 we hese not c et made. The first place passed was Port IIovey, tii'i: Longley, next Warnock, Ston: River. • Silverdale, and we have not yet corpse to the next, but here and !Frere along the route little browtr \' ooden houses peep frim among the tree:. Occasionally we see a 'Lig-;aag ur straight rail fence, and ti, nice wagon winding eking the side of hill, and we are reminded of Ontario. rust now tyre seen a group of horsee ietly grazing near a little wooden ridge, and across the river runs the] R. close to the water's edge—nue; it has vanished into the depths Of the wilderness. As the heat pulled up• t Silverdale we passed so close t1• : o water's edge that the breeches of the trees snapped against tht! i windows. `Vo are passing; •soine ! i IN THE TIMES. UA canvass Address all is ;r[ct t foe this publication. orders #�R° ERT SE ��lr�al T UR C9., Ltd. LONDON, ONTARIO. C. Bell, of Fordwieh, writes: "Will you send me ono doz. Sh an's In Ilan Tonle, Tonle is .making some remarkable cures in and around this place. It is here taking the place of B. B. B. and other inedieine4'." Price 81, 6 for the A"l bracelets ar ay I Xpresa. P• 0. player 381 THE SLOAN M .3IOmE OR. OF i• AMILTON, LIMITED. P.O. I raw ez 1 ., Ilarnit.o 1. Suwon to I'urtail Ji •e, ,l Cor SLOANS INDIA"l rowic Cures Salt Rheum. " and 'Mrs. Thomas holder, of Aylmer says: "I have b!en a great sufferer for a good many years with Salt Rheum, so bad at tunes it was impessibie for me to wash a dish or or do any housework, but after taking Otto bottle t+f Sloan's Indian Tonic, it took every particle iele of the disease out of niy system, and made a perfect cur.'. It ba, now been four years since I took this medieble and the, di, ease has not t•ettane3. I mast say your pretty islands and now the clouds I are breaking It is half -past nine. We are` just passing an island of stumps and logs washed into a pile by the curt ent. We etre nearing Mission, where the pretty scenery begins, It is on the north bank, and on the south bank are some very pretty tinted mountains. They are ot l3roadignageous, but neither are they Lillipa.tions. A fine railway suspension bridge spans the river here, and we went right on, From Mission to Chilliwack the scenery- is touch the same, the winding river and islands with rounded mountains on four sides. Tho river seems to be a toile or two wide, and there are many snags in it. The channel for boats is constantly changing. The trees on the banks are small, and mostly cottonwood ; there are 1 also stunted fir, spruce, hawthorn, hazel, wild crab-apple, cedar, ferns, 1 &c. We are weary from the effect r ot our early rising, and rest awhile; then dinner is announced at twelve o'clock sharp. We reached Chilli - week a few minutes later, but failed to see the town, as it is a anile distant, In a few minutes we were again on the: prove. It is now 12:40 and the scenery* is just the same, %vitt: no villages on our route. Most of the rilnnntains have a head dress cl vapor, but we aro getting tired of seeing- the static' thnlg over again. vote we see Morriston nestling swat back at the foot of the, mountains, but we pass it by without stopping. I have been lying down waiting for the mountains to grew. direotion we are likely to go. I the R. R. was building, but since then wish you were here with us. We everything has been removed to Yale, see many streams flawing down the four miles above, We stepped off mountain sides, but they look small into the Emory sand and up the hill and far aw ay, to the track, picking goose berries, Five forty-five. We have bad but we soon returned to the boat, supper and are again outside drink. which started again and climbed the ing deeply of mountain grandeur, rapids over Emory I3ar, wbieh runs I am thoroughly satisfied with it ; on t across the river. The rapids here either side awe inspiring mountains are very swift, and we had quite an rise out of the water and lose then!- exciting time. We got part way up selves in a hood of vapor, To the the rapids and watehed the water, front, in our rear, and right and which was running down the hill at left rise the mountains, but if we a great rate on each side of us, and run against any of them there is spinning round a rock by the bank ; always a way out ; something like then the boat began to go back, and the widow's oil, we are never quite after considerable puffing the Captain to the enol when a new supply of steered for the bark. When we were waterway appears, We often see almost touching the rocks we once the R. R. running close to the more began the ascent, and this time water, and passed a few 0. P, R. we climbed to the top and did not tunnels and often Indian houses, and fall back again. A little above Imory we wave our handkerchief's to half' a Bar is Union Bar, where the Steamer dozen barefoot urchins of the Red Yale blew up,and Captain Jameson, race. Most of the mountains are with some others, were drowned. pretty well covered with evergreens, This happened in the early sixty's. but now there is a long stretch •ef The boiler was leaking, so they put, 'giant mountains, looking all the in soda, &e., to fill the cracks. That more awful for the absence of any was all rit ht, and it stopped the leak covering. We had a good view of ing, but the soda made a foam, caus- • the train tllis.,evening as it came eat ing the water to register higher than of a tunnel:' We will soon be at it really was: '1'110, water gave out, Hope and may stay there over night unknown to then;, and in going up It is scfgrand out here we have not Union liar the boat stopped, so they ltreteinded to write for ever so long, !put on more steam and then poured hitt keep everything stored no till cold water into the boiler, which by to -morrow morning. We have been this time was red hotecaueino' it to . h lefe to 11!11' e'iatt 111 11 tends. Af'tt.t' art line Wit l:e•.,rll thie whistle. We hurried and "ititte tired long i•t•f re we Yale. At last we heard thee'. whittle mai it told that u e well take it easy now as the ;;, f.,r :t'!' beat to t•. 1' 1 lttt' had not for the Capt. had prom. to wait for us. Before we reached till bait they gave t and started the minute we ;tel& 41„r1111i hit's' l,,'ti Waited 1'1 t.01 I minutes. Yale is a Chinese tow a containing only about 20 white pep. pee, including children, afi'w live here. There is nee 'House in Yale. Vie St.. supported by Trinity 01 two department., out' ee. the other fur Iediane all for nnI,:rt.unntes or fur at ing to put their .children Tt'ansfcr went to Yale tor the purpose of taking on beard 75 or 100 Chinamen wbo are coming duw to work in the Westminster. It t:yis¢ i cont colto see the crowd of heatren, each with his brtlldit: of hlaokets, all standing; or lying on the bank, waiting fur the command to come aboard. We had to push our way through diem vie ea we went on short. Of course they went (town below. There is issue to rt 11 about our return ti ip. We are getting along et a great, ratteef speed passing te, ough rapui:, and it takes ; explode, blowing the vessel all to and expect to reach New Weettein- all the breath out of our steamer.' ' pieces, Tien we passed through The whole course Of the current is i Hell's Caste, the narrowest channel on mite, and much of the time it seems ' the route. The current is rapid, but to boil. The river looks wild over `we got through all right. The next to our left, tumbling over and aroundrapid is hills Bar, and it is treacher- y pile of snags, making some of them • ous indeed. The current spins round spring up and down like a teeter. I and round, and we saw on t. nc side should not like to bo in a row boat `of the river a great volume of water now. rte going Y .through tht,l-r, flotvengr up hill. rapids we pass some sluice boxes on ! The engine puffed until I thought the north bank, where the; Chinamen: 'she would burst her little sides, But aro washing for gold. They have the current was so strong it turned just been placed there. It must our boat half way round 'till she was ;lave taken nearly an hour to get , Iyieg directly at right angles to the through these rapids, and now, as stream. we round to the !eft. the moat beau- Yale wet in sight but tie feared tiful view yet seen today, makes we would have to go bark to West - our blood tingle with delight. On minster without setting; fort on the our right we passed a peculiar look- site of the city that marks the ing mountain ; just ahead is [lope bead of steamboat navigation, Mountain, on the south baffle bat our boat was plucky and of of the stream. hope is good stuff. We held on to the rope un a level plain, with a high motile eepeeting to run aground. tain towering up at each of the four', We ran within a split hair's corners of the compass. We reached bredtn of it and swung round and the village at about 8:20 p. m. hope • climbed to tae top, we i3 located 10 nearly the prettiest spot rounded a point and Yale lay be; .re in the world. As we rounded the us, we are through the last rapid, little island in front of the town crossed to the north brink. threw out sten by 7 or 8 this evening, We left Yale at 9.15 a. ln. A lady came ne on board at Yale and told lt:g If we Liner },toilet about a mile beyond the imatrt'la We vvetti,t.lhav,t come to it ,I Iell Where a 1,<trket rales tweets the rivet' on at 011tile and. if Ate '"t•t ill we would slip reruee to the meet'- tvith perfect satet.y, 1Vc stopped- r , a be‘ era . , (:,u,nL i l; ings, on the way home, ttt land\ elite on paseenger,e. At (hilliwaek1 nlu'ical panel of 50 or 60 pig crime ot. board, much against their They are enrerteining the Ohi down below. I forgot to t ohms Carts Landing, a little Emery" I3ar. It. is 1101 1.1 -And nn ['1l tell y uu how it got lis Capt. Irving used to kited t the earl, days. lee had --en h fine ext, rrhbelt one day went Oi slew at this place and disappeared. t} ben tee whietle blew, aiuhg came the cat with a fa101ly of young; kit1en8 and it hes been ealled on that aeeoaat, Cats Landing to this day. We have had first rare wt atber: ;tel the o ulaLiou tomo out to reel- foe our trip, scarcely any raft, since p p the ropes and tied up at 7.45 a. m. it or t0 yesterday" morning Cats Colne as ; I do itis drink there were i Slane of the passengers walked Landing is close to the ra;,i;l more than a hundred, and many of from Emory by the R. R. reaching tween she "Two Sisters" and • them appeared to have Indian blood ! Yale, aboat 20 minutes before us. are so many sand bin's formed here t n their •rents. the town site 15• as They shot rl Kodok at us as we were level as a table, and is extensive , steaming in. With the seine moment enough to build a town large enough.: one of our passengers pointed a ko- to cntllain a population of many • dok at Ya1c. thousands. As we were to stay= lure Y;ile lies on a. sloping- bank at the that it takes good steering to keep clear. It was here that the steamer Union struck on a reek 01111 tank with several of her crew jest. arrive the rapids is Strawberry Wand. six '.11 night we went for a short walk foot of the moutains. The town is milts below Hope is Murder's Her, before dark, going a short distance narrow, running parratel with the so named because a German eel ills toward the back of' the town. It is river, back of it rises the mountains wife were murdered by ln•ii•t'1s like a park grass, so green and in terrace after terrace and then whom they had hired to stew ,.�:'in short, and so clean, with lovely ,' shoot straight upward to a noble • up the 514 00111 to II+qur, wiero 11!1.v Shade trees growing herr and there . height. Compared to the giant were ging to start a !este mem. t in groups.• the whole of the place . background the houses were like can hear the (ilin;imen :• r•1 ':-e3 k similar. I think it would be aa bird cages, such a strange felling eeeenrr a tight. down le -lets. mile or two to the Eliot of the moun-'thrilled me through, as T gazed This has been sn1'.h an vet •tt le Min. Then we canoe back and 1 with rapture at the view. To Dom- trip and :ill the hands i t' tuts. t,, e walked to the foot of Rope Mountain, . pl'tte the picture ere had to turn our so eortt•'rr,5 and attentive 10 1::•' 1, •� about a quarter of a mile distant.' gaze.. '• Ilene is the old Yale and Cariboo`g'`�u up the to our right, here c+nf;c1•-., they stere net h,t,lti•t,;,• f. u• the river came pouring through a tips ei:her, es •••'tee. e" :•t r^ad and wee t: -e -•,r.. picked a few goose-; narrow canon, the bases of two ,the rules er this boat, berries on it. Hope is not on the I' I I mountains forming a narrow chasm + There has not teem a beat 1.1• to R., the railway being on the north i the peaks pointing outward from ; sale for .et oral y slat•,. \'t r :: . d -hie: of the Frazer, about a mile dib- leach other, between these mountains - at We-en/hater at 6 all 0 01 , - :.111 ant.. It is very seldom a boat comes :and on the other side of them another ,hour ahead of lilac!. We :t t ed. here. They get to the railway by ; mountain reared above its comrades.' and glad to get Inmos: and to t::. emit neons of a ferry. The people i'1e1 In the river at its foot anci,just be- have a grot d sleep, batt tete tilt, to iving on hope—hope of some rail-!yond its chasm, there grew a boauti- Yale will retn:li't ono of Ow 0 ._tilt -owl. If the Crow's Nest railway is 1 fol large moss covered rock round ! memories in (me lives. built, the one they want will not be!wi.ieh tile water 0:1010 rushing on 1 .11 ly -i h, 1897, t milt, and s7 hope will die, as the ! all sides. As soon its we stopped. we; ,251.,..„,, . row's Neat R. R. cannot come near ate breakfast and then trent on shore, thein. When we returned from our; ho Cape strict we coulee eeee one walk it was about dark, and mut of !hour on shore. We went with tele the inhabitants of the town were on j watchman to see the Conyon g clog board sight-seeing, Before we went 1,11„lig the railing till we get through to bed lunch was placed on the table • • th,'. 1110001, I cotttntt>cl my steps and we were invited to partake. Our digestion was aided by listening to the cheerful chat of our entertaining Captain. We retired about tet• and slept well until the boat started at ryou could walk aeras;; the titer w n :3:15 a. 01. � their backs they are piled up so I arose at 4 o'clock with a pain in thick in this narrow passage. 'Then my bead, but my wise companion wont tlrrousi h two more tunnels a stayed for another snooze. We went little shorter. through rapids between two in 1:11• We wr.10 told that when we heard tains called the Two Sisters, bu , •telt' ' um boat whistle the seeond time, we one can be seen, as the other ,,•,.10r tvonlel know we had just fifteen min - has been blasted away. lltt,s 1.4 Spire. We went about a At t; o'clock we landed at Emory, Mile a11t1 a half ; starting back, 'we to unload swine lumber. Tie. le 3i, ,jnk.t emerged from the tunnel, eche„ runs through Here. Teer•o tee I' tits, t':t,.tcrn train tooted, and cxmr. .lilt•kon y tee b .'1 '•1ite0 rater rnshietr through. We had jtiat time: rltik and the oth •t• s d *west et -re. tr lump unto the wake safe •,i 14a.,. t,' P,1::. ', betteeinyr p':,cn• (i i i�':a,.. Sit Wave Three -thirty p. tit. The monotony is wearing away, 'We have been spading our time en the front of the boat, watching the ripenings un. fold to view. We speculate as to which •a t vi pi. . , ten rt Itnt direction fd :.r n to halt through 260. ';'hen we, beheld the Conyon they -try that daring the the rush of tee -penmen up hill, the river lo.rke as if S t gr n. BP. Bo. 11111:Ls L. Its Purity. 2. Its Thousands of Cures. 3. Its Lcoluo;tlay. le. a dose. 3E8- 33,f, 3'.. 'Regulates the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, ttsllocksthe Secretions, Purifies theBlood end removes all The impurities from a commoat Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Sore, and Critreatalletill DItSPItPStA, BILIOUSNRSS, CO SLRaAT EUM, sCRO 'ULA, HEARTBURN, SOUR STOMACH, DIZZINESS, DROPSY, RHEUMATISM, SHIN DM