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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1896-04-15, Page 611. I",,; 1 , , �,::y �� , ''�, , "" , ." a .. , , �,� �� ,��, 11 � ,�." - , ,:' ,',; t. , ",I " '? , � `U�,-,, `­ ­. '. � -11111;11�11`1`1'1 ,.�,� 6'z, , � a . � .a I � �t .1, ,� at �1, 4 M ,, ,•. a -. ,,... t 1. ,. ...,.r . :.,,, .� .. ., ,, k,. t :i:' 1 h �.. :.,,. ,.a ... n .: Se.. a :. .. .:h t e I 11 a, O rr �Q��k i 0 4 +,tli %V4&ti-.lfl,Q0. to Advapitla AaDN 'lV�Fa6]).*T, Aram 15t'b, 1886. T140 Qunad(PIA Notional 80010ty-- A b.Inagestlon. - , — "Uv',Tho Week of 27th March. WVe have now arrived at the third ehtaQter in the histor of the growth of CaWkda. In the firs we read of the Uniting of the insolatrd provinces of British North America into one great country. The second is the story of '&velopment, a period of expenditure in the building of railways and canals Uetweenyto the more provide distant i Provinces, and with the markets of the world. The third chapter, which is now open- ingi will, or, at any rate, should be, a period of scientific colonization. The building of railways and canals, which cause a circulation of money and a certain amount of consequent activity, has come to an end. We have now to meet. the ayment of two hundred million dol ars expended to provide for a, populat on of fifty or a hundred millions, and the whole burden lies upon s people less in number than the in- habitants of the city of London. The great task, then, of the Inimediate future is to fill the country. How can it be done? We cannot look to our politicians, for most of thorn are after• votes, and the subject i4 too wide, per- haps a little too abstruse and too de- void of the party element, to provide foo[i for a stump speech. Besides, suc- cessful stump speaking is not remark- able for close and impartial reasoning. The main object of a politician, in these days, is to please the people, not to teach them. The leader of the Orange Order, who, by the constitution of his order, is bound, above all things, to preserve the'constitution of his court - try, in his addresses to the people on the Manitoba school question carefully abstains from any reference to the constitutional side of the question; while the man who depends upon the vote of the Labor party tries to win their support by opposing the importa- tion of labor to harvest the crops in Manitoba. He would let them rot on the ground first. And he sometimes even goes so far as to be opposed to,any expenditure by the Government for immigration purposes. While men squabble over the tariff and the Manitoba school question, the country is drifting to it crisis, the end of which it is difficult to see. Millions of dollars have been spent on immi- grationbytheGovernment, the C.P.R., and :,he Hudson Bay Company; yet be- tween 1880 and 1800 we only succeeded in retaining an increase of 38,054 in our foreign horn population. Some politicians, of course, on the stump, attribute this, with everything else that is bad, to the national policy. But common sense tells us that it is due to lack of system, and popular co -opera - ,tion, and to the fact that the sole ob- ,}ect of all our efforts at colonization Las been, not the building up of civili- zation, but the sale of homesteads; per- haps also to our northern position on this continent. Nor can we shut our eyes tc1 the conditions of life in our cities. Higher education, increased facilities of communication, depart mental stores, with the evolution of machinery and of women, are rapidly hringing nearer the time when many will he forced to turn back from the city to the farm. With the cessation of immigration and settling down of the country, the volume of litigation has permanently decreased by fift, per cent. In the last fifteen years, and yet lawyers are increasing in large num. bers. In Toronto it is estimated that there are two hundred lawyers not making enough to pay office rent, and a similar proportion of doctors not paying expenses. Advertise for a pub- lic school teacher, and you will have a hundred and fifty applicants for rnis- arable pittances. Meanwhile the du- cational mill is still going on, ari�the educated Canadian thinks the country too dull. A hopeless battle for life is being fought by many of the smaller merchants against the .principle of centralization. As the Indians disap- peared before the march of advancing civilization, so the small storekeepers in the city must, in time, drop out be- fore this new phase of mercantile evolution. And it is a parallel sign of the times that our patriotic societies, who should, by, the great force of so- cial attraction which they possess, contribute their dollars to briotheir countrymen to Canada, subscribe, m- ttead, to shift back home the city - stranded immigrant who cannot find employinent here. These are facts; they will not be denied. We must take the world as it comes. But why , should we go on drifting any longer? Are we living on hopes? The note must soon be protested. Sooner or later we must turn right about face: and on our banner as we march will be inscribed, "Back to the land." Canada, .of course, is not alone in this. Let me see what other countries have been doing. In Holland labor colonies have flourished for seventy - ars tinder Government control. The German Government are dealing with the problem of relieving the congestion of cities under similar fines with their land banks and colonies in Prussian Poland. In England there are numer- oils colonization societies with training homes and home farm colonies. And, to come to. new countries, in the United Staates..there has lately been formed the National Coioniat society, dealing with the same problems. Lectures have been delivered in the eastern cities, and model colonies are being founded upon scientific lines in the West. ';NQr has Australia been idle. The ,.govlarlgment of South Australia,tWp,ea)'g ago, passed the Village $ettieimont ' Act, which set aside for theuse of home colonists certain lands q the Murray river, and arranged for the' advance of $250 to each member of a colony in the, form o£ loan. It, Canada we are just beginningg to wake up 'to the situation, In Mon- treal ' A Itepittriation society bits ex- isted littfiong the French Canadians for tsbdie• time. This With the formation of itermanetnt iminigttation associa- Uon in Winnippen g' othhe line of that m lately foried i1h the We'Aet'n States, trod thea piicaMdR of a number of To. ronto's citizens to the Provincial Leg- islature for a charter to ec,rry ons a 'system of home colonization for the unemployed, marks the transition line from.theetalm of the intellectual In- ter+Ist to the field of practical work. It is An evidence that there is a large bodl of ti'len who realize the situation and are willing to give thought, work Irl4tinie, to grapple with our ;,rent aattonal problem ; and It is reasonable a�►1 ►- ;�tl' 0 0111ok EICB tit f#, i�>Gt %«. 11y,1604% ind. ick, The eit�taition lsa rttli'DA and irap�ilt Witpoe•01b.11U,elol. it is important that, e,ta start, t;�hlq, us fQ�rce of ",Rpt.114r gssoGiatiun ehptlild I�, sed u oR tile. most comprehenaive'JAS.013g, and war . a4le lines. r - ' � ' Two ggtestlons. nays confront us, What is the realpprovitttce of pular associations? Augwhat is tfle best and most )practical form of machinery? In defining the lila,t for the operation of tassoeiations, it Ilimi'mptortant that we should not trespass .upon the work which esseptlally belongs to the gov- ernment. In the conduct of immigra.- tion.most people will agree that the distribution of literature and nnfoema' tion belongs to the government on ac- cout of the prestige and weight which naturally attaches to publications en- dorsed by the government, We would add to this the management of colonies both in home colonization and in immi- gration from ahroad,""whieli has proved such a failure in the past at the hands of amateurs. The deputation that went down to Ottawa a few weeks ago, from Winnipeg, were at a loss to know exactly wherein lay the duties and scope of usefulness of the Immigration Association. -It was suggested that the association might act its an advis- ory board to the Government. This, do doubt, -will be one of the most im- portant of their functions, Another suggestion is contained in a letterfrom Sir Wm. Van Horn to the writer apropos of the formation of "Colonial Clubs" advocated some time ago in the Week, in which he says, "Somethin much more effective than 10oloniai .Clubs' would, -to my mind, be clubs for pounding into the heads of the minis- ters at Ottawa a sense of the import- ance of doing what is necessary to build up the country." The main functions of popular associations may, then, he said to be to give ;tdvice, to "Pound" and, we may add to educate, and eventually to organize. And now to discuss the machinery. There is surely an affinity between the societies formed in Toronto and Mon- treal and the Immigration Society of the Northwest, The principles involv- ed ate the same, and the older prov- inces are greatly interested,though, perhaps not equally, with the settlers of Manitoba, in the settlement of our prairie lands. We would suggest, then, that the nucleus formed by the Immigration Association in the West should be ex- tended to embrace the Repattriation Society of ,)Montreal, ,the chartered as- sociation for home colonization' in To- ronto, and all thinking patriotic men through the Dominion who are inter- ested in the subject; and that from this material shall be formed the Canadian National Association. It would be a non-politienl and distinctly national organization, with local branches and a local secretary in the lar0er centres, and its motto will be "To fill the coun- try." Annual conferences should be held in each province and an annual or triennial conference for the whole Do- minion. It would be necessary to have some journal to act as the organ and central pivot of the association. For this pur- pose there is no journal in the country at the present time which, from its non-political and judicial ch+aracl.er•, is TO re speciaally suitable than The Week. The Week might issue, say every two weeks, a special supplement devoted to these subjects, with a review of current literature dealing with the objects of the association, including 'magazine articles, lectures, Govern- ment reports of our own country, the other colonies, and the United States, much on the line of Mr. Stead's jour- nal, the Review of Reviews. This suppleurent would also he, the medium for correspondence and suggestions. A annual programme of subjects might be decided upon for papers to b. contemporaneously read and dis- cussed at the montly meetings of the different branches of the association. The secretary of each branch would forward the paper with,a report oft the discussions to the editor of The Week, whose duty it would be to give a judi- cial criticism of the reports and papers submitted to him. As an inducement to special study, the association might offer, at started intervals, a prize for the best papers upon given subjects. L'irculatlng libraries of all literature dealingg with these subjects should be estAblished in connection with the journal and it list of publications sent to every member. If it could be so managed the editor of this department should be chosen from -among the higher clerks of the De- Fartment of the Interior at Ottawa, or he 'would have extraordinary fat,- cilities for obtaining information, and the subjects would be in direct touch with hie line of thought and the work in which he is engaged. Money, of course, will be required for the work of organizathin any running expenses. But it is not unreasonable to suppose, that, if the association was once form- ed on a practical working basis, an annual grant would be given by the Dominion, and possibly the Provincial, Government. Indeea, according to the press reports, the Ministers at Ot- tawa who met the deputation from Winnipeg informed them that the ob- jects of their association were such that they might reasonably expect a grant frim the Government. The Government, both Provincial and Dominion, want to be "pounded." No one is more painfully aware of the necessity of filling up the country, and yet the grants for immigration pur- poses are being constantly cut down, to please, it may be the leaders of the labor party. And the Government want advice, Our public men are waiting for some genius to bring out a practical working scheme of coloniza- tion, but such as scheme can only be evolved by collecting the ideas of the people, biased upon practical experience of life and colonization in this country, an acquaintance with the social condi- tions. of Great Britain and the different countries in Europe'from which we ex- pect. to 11raw our 'population, and it careful study of the history of coloni- zatfon In this and other countries. There will be no lack of food ifor dis- cuasiou. • !the labori questioin, and edu- ention beth have it, boor n'g tigpon the subject. The social 1,013 not t aherent .in us all, -nod especially in our woman folk and'educated yonng men, points to the n4cessity+ of snaking farmlalite a more plea Alet social iilxi4tenee. Model colonies on our vis tn'►fands open tip great possibilities, irrigation in our Northwest, and electricity, with the Gospel of diversified products and small holdirip, are new f"tors in so- eiail life which have not, yet. been studied from a practical point of view. We might add the exclusion of unde- Of encs, tree Yrom aft eiemeaw oz pourace ' and e+ctering to the votes of people who take if, one-sided view of these questions.' The aadsoeiation would become a power in the land, . and the journal which acted as its organ wound hold a unique position as reflecting the views, nop of one man—the editor, but of hundreds of the most thoughtful and useful citizens In the countryy It would collect suggestions whicb at present never see the ligght of day or are passed unnoticed in the local prase. It would have a detbrrent and a leaav- euinu influence on the country press, and it would preserve it continuous, reliable record of the history and ad- vance of scientific colonization. ERNEST HEATON. Goderich, Ont. RHEUMATISM Its Cause and Curet. A poisonous Acid in the Blood, which needs removal. Only one means for a radical oure. Rheumatism is a blood disease, due to the presence of uric acid—a poison—in the system, and itis only by tine removal of this pain-producingpoison, that a radical cure can las effected. Acute rheumatism is hereditary, and thus it is that young children are often victims to this torture. The use of liniments, em- brocations and outward applications, may give temporary relief, but can never cure, for the poison is in the blood, and until it is expelled, rheumatism, sciatica and neuraligic pains will continue. Scotts' Sarsaparilla cures rheumatism by removing the cause—by neutralizing and expelling+ this poisonous acid. In chronic cases, this medicine reaches the source of the disease as no other medicine can. It gives renewed energy to the organs that sustain life, the forces that make the blood. For the nervous troubles of youth, for the debility that precedes old age, for ladies in their severe ordeals, it is without a compeer. Scott's Sarsaparilla is a concentrated compound of the finest medicines known to modern medical science—The dose is from one half to one teaspoonful and during its use the ordinary vocations are not interfered with. There is a movement on foot in Hal- ifax to establish it battery of field ar- tillery it, Nova Scotia. Patrick Connors was killed on the Grand Trunk railway at Hamilton. OVERWORKED HIS HEART, AND WOULD HAVE BEEN A DEAD MAN 13UT FOR DR. AONEw'S CURE FOR THE HEART. -- The whole trend of present day liv- iis in the direction of the grave. nWere our fathers lived so that they might prolong life, the people of the present day live so tbat they may shorten it. It is all hurry -burry and the result is that a large percentage of the men and women on the stage of life to -day are over working what at any time, and under an circumstan- ces, is the hardest worked organ of the body—the heart. bio long as people will persist in this method, the best thing they can do is to keep as retnedy like Dr. Agnew's Cure for the heart, close bv• This remedy is a heart remedy only, but is almost miraculous in its effects. In all cases of organic or sympathetic heart disease relief is secured within thirty minutes, and there are scores and hundreds of peo- ple in Canada who testify that had it not been for the prompt use of this medicine they would have been in their graves to -day. __ She Dominion School Commissioners have returned from Winnipeg. 25 cents cures Catarrhal: Headache " " ' Incipient Catarrh " Hay Fever " " Catarrhal Deafness " " Cold in the head in 10 rninntes. 11 11 Foul Breath caused by Catarrh. 'Lai cents+ secures Chase's Catarrh Cure with perfect blower enclosed in each box. Sold by :all dealers. Newfoundland sealers report a good catch. Vice -President Smith of the Trans - vital Republic is dead. HE WANTS OTHERS TO KNOW. Dear Editor: I'lease state in your valued ,journal, that. if any sufferer from Nervous+ Debility, Seminal Weakness, Lack of Energy and Ambition, Lost Manhood, Night Losses, etc., will write me in confidence, I will inform him by sealed letters free of charge, how to obtain a perfect cure ask for no money, having nothing to sell. I know how to sympathize with theso sufrorem and am only too glad to be able to assist them, I promise every one absolute secrecy and as I do not, of course, wish to expose thyself either I do not give my name. It you desire to ges well, send stamp and address simply: 1'. 0. Box 398, LONDON, ONT. , After the Accident. 0 Dr. Bleeder—It's broken, gentlemenl It's broken. Prof. 8peeler (who has fallen)—Vat Is broken? Der violin? Dr. Bleeder—No, your leg. Prof. 8peelet—Oh, I dought It vos der Instrument. .• 'Za.a-,...aS.",Mr. ,,... i.a'w RI Ius�,� ,i I.ll��ave 11 I gee. I Thousands of Others i Have Made Similar Deolaratlons. A LADY COMPLETE- LY CURED. She Used Paine's Celery Compound. Remarkable Increase In Weight. The Great Spring Medi- cine for Building Up Weak and Sickly People. The surest and most positive cure in the work] for disease is Paine's Celery Compound. It strengthens and invig- orates the run-down systetp, and builds up quickly flesh, tissue bone and mus- cle. No other medicine can so fully and quickly tweet the desires of the sick and diseased. It should be borne in mind that the seat of disease is in the blood and ner- ves. rhe peculiar composition of Paine's Celery Compound enables it to reach all the centres where disease is working, and it soon banishes all pain and trouble. At this season, Paine's Celery Com- pound is a heaven-sent blessing to every nervous, weak, debilitated and sleepless mortal. The diseases that have held men and women in bondage during the winter, can now be effectu- ally removed by the use of Paine's Celery Compound. If you are truly and earnestly seek- ing for renewed health and long life, let the example of Mrs. Lloyd lead you to give Paine's Celery Compound a fair trial. You are certain to reap the same happy results that she and thou- sands of others have experienced. Mrs. Joseph Lloyd, of Gananoque, Ont., says: "I feel it any duty w tell you what Paine's Celery Compound has done for me. I was always a sufferer from ner- vous debility and very bad headaches, and found it impossible to obtain regu• lar rest and sleep. "Two years ago I read of your Paine's Celery Compound, and bought a bottle of it. After 1 had used it I found I could get rest and quiet. I have used altogether seven bottles and find myself completely enred. "Your medicine porif3es the blood and regulates the system; and I would not he without it in my house if it took my last dollar. "Before using Paine's Celory Com. pound my weight was only 100 pounds; now I weigh 141 pounds. It is not sufficient reason for me to praise the Compound highly ? "Before I knew of your valuable medicine I was trented by the doctors but never received any good. Five of my friends are now using your great medicine since they have seen what it has done for me. "I wish yon to use my statements, as they may he of encouragement to others. The reported drowning of the Naff MMiaon R,tiny river proves to have ia false. The party, who were look- ing after alleged Canadian timber rob- bers, had a narrow escape, and lost all their ou;lit by breaking through the ice. GLAD TO SEE SPRING. City people don't begin to know all the discomforts a long cold winter brings to people in the country. There is no hardship in leaving a warm house merelV to step into a heated streetcar and be rapidly conveyed in comfort to , wherever one's business takes one. But when one must go right out and face the elements either walking or driving with no protection except what, one's clothing affords, it is 'different. No one ogres to be,weigbed dowry with , the burden of many gar- ments, and, .Yet warmth must be• had by some means, and thus the idea of using -a F1BIt11 011AMOIS. interlining in all wintbt,clothi'ng'hUs becodi&.'deserv- edly popular. Itd wartnthi without wp(ggbt, and wind and , waterproof qualities are highly appreciated bq nil who require to be much out of doors. The Duke of Argyle and the Duke of Westminster will send it circular to the American and Canadian peoss ap- pealing for relief for the suffering Armenians. N o �a �01 .., , a -0. �:j u Y X tP , f aJ f.dl.;1/�,„.; : . • ,,, TRA$, ---Black, Oreen and Japans aro unequalled in quality and prices; yyua'!011 1t)o. pound if you buy front mo instead of Tea Peddlere; catnpore qulil(t$ i'# SUGARS. --We are headquarters, we buy direct from Moutropl Refunerioo, 4@ and sell at close prices. NEW FRUITS and PEELS.—Wo Q have thready disposed duriog holiday et four tons and still have large stock on hand, different brands aelling, 9400p CAOOBRRY, CHINA, GLASSWARE AND LAMPS.—We hafts4t to mAko Imported Goods and we have reduced our prices on Dinner Oota, Tea act Berry Sets, Water Sets, Bread and Butter Plates, Cups 0.1111 Saucers ARd XAr Call and see Goods and Prices; no trouble to show goods. •' - -'Terms Cash or Trade.` • � , ;i . I ., f, Bargains! Bargains! At the Cheap Cash Store. ,$1,500 NORTH OF GROCERIES and OROORERY must be sold to make '.` room for Stook to arrive. Don't mise this chance to buy Goods cheap. a CASH PAID FOR GOOD BUTTER AND EGGS,—G. J. STEWART. Agent for Monsoon and Burma Tea '+ I +,+ 'Ving of all "`' �, Absolutely t• Bicycles. the Best, �'11 ;*� .�;l � ­ '!}a� L7�1,lt ►vrwght:.and Stiperlor Materlal .14.0'�i'.':?sty. Hvoryma- / rr Scientlflc�FJcrtca ,4)I + '9f,:r41y"varrooted rose ,ship. . _ -- — - ,'�'t ,` 1 �, �== �" bulli!! \.'�.,��ll",�l�i,",,�l\'�""I'l�"I - \ . I " s Styles �W' kZ,R,',4,'1 Highest Honors at, the b`idills Columbian EXPOsli;es?a S=d two•cZ:% stamp for our 24-17119c Cataloguo—A wort: of Art. Monarch Cycle Companyq Retail Salesroom, 28oWabash Ave. lake sad Halsted Sts., CHICAGO, ILL.. —_ Wood's rhoSphodlnee-The Great English Remedy. °; Is the result of over 85 years treatdng thousands of cases with an ]mown drugs, until at Inst we have diaeovered the true remedy and treatment—I& and permanent cum in all stages of :, `� combination that will eReet It prompt Sexual Dsh#ty, Abwe or Ezeesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Meulal Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcokolic Slimulanls, all of and an early grave. Wood's ✓.;±i which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption 86Wte Twdjig. phosphodine hue been used successfully by hundreds of eases tbst seemed I s1. almost hopeless --cases that had been treated by the mostenst�� w ire clans --cases that were on the verge of despair and insanity persevering use re with the continued and pe g Of tottering over the grave—but Wood's Phospbodine, these cases that had bean given up to die, were restored to manly vigor and health—Reader you need not despair—no mat- ter who has given you up its incurable --the remedy Is now within your y ry . ;>•r reach, by Ite use you oan be restored to o life of uuseal1ulnew andel hatagein� $5; by r t }?rice, one package, al; Nix packages, Ow willAhase, sixgaaranleed to care. Pamphlet free to any address. • AtYef adrla 5, The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Wood's Phoephodlne is sold by responsible wholesale and retell drugyrlsta In the Domialon. 1 11 VITAL TO PERFECT HEALTH. I A GENEROUS OFFER ; (Published by Regnest,) .(r,'; IF IN DOUBT, USE SOUTH AMERICAN Dear Mr. Editor: Kindly inform J KIDNEY CURE. readers that I will gladly send ab- ' The avers a man or woman cannot g your solutely free to any sufferer from ner- vous debility, sexual weakness, night , trifle with that slight pain in the back, be thou ht only it result Of losses, weak. shrunken parts, varicocele full -; ,; r, that may cold. More than likely it is the warn- and the results of self-abuse, par- ticulars of the means by which I was '1 ing note k,ha.t kidney trouble has taken It is simply aamaz- restored tit perfect man- rood rood f hold of tho system. and sexual strength. I have ing the extent to which kidney disease nothing to sell and want no money, but 1 is common in Canada. The wise man will take time by the forelock, and in will he pleased to explain in a private, sealed letter, how I was cured. As I t11 using South American Kidney Cure send this entirely free, each applicant ; drive the disease from the system in must enclose a stamp for reply. D. G. its incipient stages. Fortunately, if it is too late to do this, this remedy is Owen, Box 2&i, Picton. Out. , s strong enough to battle with the wot st kidney disease. It is another The Prince of Wales has taken A case of intance of doing only onathing, but p letou house, on the Sandringham estate, for Princess Maud and her hug - doing it well. South American Kidney Cure is a kidney cure. It does not I band + and the young couple will spend 1fi make any other claims, but no other four months there every year, accord- in to present arrangements. g g' i remedy can meet it. on its own gratund. , Sold by Watts & Co. WEAK MEN If snHerina from Lost Manhood Nervous Debility Laok of Vigor Mr. Daly hag slosh notice of it bill to Emiselone iC nays treatment sent )see to anyone no !`Lcte. 1, make further provision respecting Bending STANDARD eCEDICAL CQa, "?f grants of land to volirnt vers who serv- 290 St. James Strect, real `' *' ed in the rebellion of 1880. __ _ ,_ The death of Sir Edward Cbolmeley ' HE HAS SWORN TO ITa h erjng, who was first elected a meal her of Parliamhet in 1830, when he was ,>+; returned for Wexford, leaves living 'r -, only three men who sat in the House AN EX. -DON. POLICE OFFICER OF of Commons before the passage of the CERLETONCO.ONTHE SITUA710N, reform bill in 1832. a ,,i The Strongest Affidavit He Has Made SPRING REQUIRES `� in His Wide Experience of Twenty That the impurities which have ac- ;,4 Years—He Says He Never Expected cumulated in your blood during the winter shall he pmrnptlyand thorough- -,:. "I to Do So and is salad the Hour Has ly expelled if good health is expected. ;,); Struck. When the warmer weather comes these i;; impurities are liable to manifest them - County of Carleton, To -wit: selves in various ways and often lead serious illness. Unless the blood is �'�� ,' [, Thomas Moffatt of the City of Obto Carleton, d - rich and pure that tired feeling will ".111, County fawn, in the Count of solemnly declare that I live at 178 Mur afflict you, your appetite will fall and will find yourself °°a11 run down." '`+1 ray -street. in the City of Ottawa, that you Hood's Sarsaparilla tones and strength. 't, I am forty-six years of age and a baker ells the system, drives out all im- t'y trade and was formerly of the purities and makes pure, rich, healthy. ;'r Dominion police. For over twenty blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the one "1 years I have been badly a15 feted With true blood purifier and the best spring ;`>4 Rheumatism, So severe was my case that 1 thought that I would never get medicine. Be sure to get only Hood's. ?`:. '.. heifer. On the tl -at day of May, 1896, I began taking "Ryckman's Kootenay There has been an unusually strong the British volunteers for1. : ;' . Cure." I used three bottles and It cured roe completely. I have not felt turn -out of the Easter manoeuvres this year, the �:_ �r the first sign of rheumatism since. It is a tonic and a grand Blood policy of Gen. Woleely being to Mn, vert what has been an ornamental '� great Purifier. I gained twelve pounds in the I corps into an efficient branch of the service. ,;a weight while tieing remedy. ,.A recommend it most highly. — — - And I make this solemn declaration TO 'Fri, ;, conscientiously pelieving It to be true, and knowing it is of the same force ,O�N$uM,PTM'�/� the onaetglgned havtfip , been reel orad. to health - by elaiiple' mgane, after edge �jnp ins a pY y 'ae , ,::,.t.« and effect as if piade tinder oath, and with a revere lung affectlo», arid that diddd�if b , by virt tie of the Canada Evidence Act, THOMAS hIOFP'ATT. Coaasumptioai, ie an:li ue to make npwn to (e i floe enlfot�era tae moans o care. 'A` �l}id ggli0 ti he hhaly$��Aa) x ' S` of the (Signed.) w111'db�6ertnity ren (fieb,at d tine 1,11, nNd a11rG OhM fol „' Taitetn Land acknowledged before me at this Ci of Ottawa, in the Count City y e e ate whieh p18 oritiW n e , y th=mpkI, , AptAl2 Coe r ,, ilrolglt0)aitis end thfent Cn Lang teat•° tic lin s a of Cavrtletuni this 19th day' of February, hit all ill litmerifil 'win try' bis renieffA ate It i. hita�n 1 ; , able. Those dbeiridp the prpecriptlam 1rhlch*11T.- et them nothing[, ane may prove A ,negates, will dlesee ,'r (Si #d.) .JOSEPH R. LSMONDR, addreee, `t 1C8iD11t,tlrnokfyn,,X L Just de of the Petfice for the County ofv. Ills)WAktD A. M* ,.'' Carleton. '''• ,, e\ , t , a, ,.e. ,b �