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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1897-11-04, Page 15b m in Some months ago paid fifty dollars to ferry his party over this salve little hake. As wriLirig materials ware ab, sent and the snow driving across fut•- J iously the Auditot-General will not look for a voucher for this expenditure from. Major Walsh. They met the manager of a Canadian Gold Fields Company near 'Tagish, He had come in by the White Vass, which, he said, no tongue or pen could adequately describe. He paid sixty-five cents it pound fox, the packing of his supplies over, and adding his other expenses he found that it had cost one dollar and twelity-five cents a pound to get his stub over. One is driven to the Con- clusion that compared with the White the Chilcoot Pass is it picnic. In justice to Cal.)t. Moore and his trail over the. White Pass, it should he stated that the trail is not the best route and it dues riot go through the pass at all. The pass itself at the suni- init is blocked by boulders. If thew, are blasted, out rrnd the !rest trail laid out it may tie, and would be, a great improvement. Then, it. must be re- rnenibered, that the White Pass trail was it new one, unimproved, and thousands of horses and pack animals of various kinds driven over it in it fere weeks cut it urn so badly that cir- ourustances made it horrible. If Mr. Wilkinson, the agent in Canada of the British Yukon Company, whose inter- ests are bound up to it great extent with the pass, and to whom Capt. Moore is said to have transferred his interest in the town site of Skaguay, haul come up here last June, when he wits in Ottawa, and expended a few thousands in !"proving the trail, it would have heen a work of great value. It is now probably too late. The public are offered three routes idto the Yukon through the moun- tains—the White Pits-, the Chilcoot and the Chilkat Piles or -Dalton Trail, hot if a, new coast entrance can be furnished it will knock all three passes into it cocked hat. N a �Y D o a DAIRY STUDENTS. How They Are Prepared Serentifleally For Their Work. The out here given shows the studenj of an np to date dairy school at work in the milkroom. They are'running hand separators and parting the milk from the cream in fine style, and quickly. We give the picture here for one purpose. It is to call attention of dairymen and creamery men everywhere to the costume worn by these students. Snowy overalls and blouse and linen cap constitute an outside costume so clean and attractive that it alone would be a great advertise- ment for the creamery or private dairy whose employees were thus uniformed. The time is coming when every dairy and creamery in the land will require its employees to be (lad in clean cotton or linen uniforms. Nothing that cannot be washed, and washed often, should be worn about a creamery or private dairy. Fortunately nearly all the states now have dairy courses in connection with the agricultural -colleges. The course is much the same in the schools. A fair idea of it may be gathered from a sketch of the branches taught in the Wisconsin Dairy school. Professor Moore, director of the Wisconsin school, says in Board's Dairyman: The student becomes proficient in using the hand separators, the Babcock test and the lactometer, and in all sub- jects pertaining to making a fine grade of butter. A course of lectures bearing on the work is given and supplemented by practical work in the laboratory. In the separator room the student is taught to use the different separators imol test the speed, skimming efficiency clati<ui--for--s.a&, telling lust what his the inan beside hint. The murderer SITUATION AT DAWSON CITY. The 11 News-Recora mren Four men from Dawson arrived i1.9ol a Year, to Advanaa. - -- hero yesterday, twenty-seven days They by from Dawson came water THURSDAY, NOVEMBER llth, 1897. as far as Selkirk, rrnd then out by the Dalton trail to Ghileat, about ten miles -- -- front here. They would not say how Kloodilie Gold Flaps. much gold they had but expressed satisfaction with their seasou's work. They city there is no dearth of provi- urn this trip paid forty dollars sions at Dawson, but caution is being exercised. They met from seven to for it horse and seventy dollars thirty-five boats a day on the river, all RUSH OF IMMIGRATION EXPECT- hound for Dawson. ED TO REACH THE 2(X),()00 Forty tone of outfit and supplies gulch about it quern ter of a anile off were landed this morning from the MARK IN THE SPRING. 'Seattle,' and the owners were for ,.da incl expressed the opinion that there pushing on. 'Dawson City' was the cry. There is no stopping them. Skaguay, Oct. 18.—If reports of Some of them had sleds and dogs. steamship companies are to be A consignment of toboggans will be relied on, two hundred thousand sent back to Mayor Walsh as soon as persons are already booked for tht'J'Quadra' can return from Vancou- the Yukon next spring. To this ver. The sleds brought up are not would have to be added all those considered as well suited to dog teams from abroad—from Great Britain, and to this country as toboggans, but Norway and Sweden, GPlmAtiv anti the toboggan is unmown here. The Australia, and all those going in by 'Quadra' will bring till another cargo I is therefore, is, the Edtaont on route. GPP 'e which Ins rest rW ood here of supplies 0 i probably it Conservative to will push on to Tagish and hF posts say that the world's population will contribute two hundred thousand per- flora there follow Ma'or Walshs patty down to Selkirk and atvson. sons to the Klondike gold fever he- PARTING WITH THE MAJOR. tween now and the end of June. Where will they go P They will spread For two days after their return Mr. south and east of Dawson, which is merely the gateway to a re ion where Sifton and Mayor Walsh were bus as y nailers making final a rangements for the government of the kon and the there are many rivers an creeks as rich as Bonanza and Eldorado Creeks. transportation of the party. Major The miners swear by Stewart river, Mellree, assistant commissioner of the board the All.. Ogilvie says, but supplies cannot Mounted Police, cable on 'Quadra,' his place being taken at be. g'it to it, the trading companies not having been able to get past Dawson, Skaguay by lnpector Wood. At one where the demand for supplies has o'clock on Oct. 21 Major Walsh left the ship accompanied by Messrs. Bliss, been so great. In addition to Stewart river, Miller Creek, Beaver, Glacier, McGregor, P. Walsh, and Patulla. Gold Creek, Bedrock, Indian, Hunter, They were sent ort wil h three rousing cheers and a tiger. Before he left I Big Salmon and Little Sairnon, are rich with gold. Mr, Ogilvie says so ; asked Major Walsh to send a message and further points to the Hootalinqua -in east and fie replied: 'Tell them that so frit• everything hats gone well, and and its tributaries as yielding gold his These streams are all that I believe we will accomplish what opinion. in Canadian territory. 'Then there we have undertaken.' The gallant m ajnr, whose flow of animal spirits is copper and coal near by, also well in Canada., so that the Yukon territory never desert hire, was in high humor, will doubtless have abundance of tree- • • �s inn 1 but fully cut.cultts of his rt } Bibi i- ties and the magnitude of the task sure for everyone who is willing to work. ahead of hint. FIB is making great Guim will have to take evidence and sacrifices, leaving wife and home com- It is a great mistoiAw to imagine that forts, and a 1arKe incinie, and if he a man call walk to a claim and shovel sitS�peeds, its }le is holund to do, the loose earth flilAwith gohi,into, aTr_'uiC ' ' uple of Canada will be tinder great box. dtndou ly gold" iras been obligations to him. He and the party found near the surface in one or two with hire will start for Dawson in two instances. To wash the damp a fall or three days as soon as it is certain of water of about three feet in twelve that the supplies are well forward be - is necessary, whereas on the creeks the tween the suurmits and Lake Bennett. naLural fall is only about fifty feet to• tent with tarpaulin floor and a stove the mile. On one occasion rafter the ACCIDENTS ON THE TRAIL. ruiners, had spent weeks of labor in The entry of Major Walsh into the constructing drams it heavy rain crane Yukon territory and the establishment down and swept away all the dams in of law there are none to soon. Dir. a night. In the spring, there is, on the Sifton's trip into the interior showed :. other hand,' liable to be too much hill) the neces-ity for organized auth- water• to work with, and then dams ority, Mnjor Walsh bought a boat at have to be built to turn it, so they Lake Tagish, for which he paid three darn the water when it is high and ,hundred dollars, and at that moment when it is low. Wood has to lie a hot dispute over the boat was going brought from a distance and labor at ori between 'four Americans, which high prices paid ,for. On the other would in all likelihood have ended in hand thete are great rewards. A Nova bloodshed but, for the presence of the Scotian, named Aleck McDUnald, went in with very little experience in mining police. Ninety-five percent. of the men who have gone in pimtTagish since the and staked out a claim on Eldorado Canadian customs office wits establish - Creek and worked, all through the ed there were Americans. Those who winter of 1887 inaking a dump. When had money paid the duties to coin. water canis: in the spring he shovelled Some who bud no money paid in pro - for five hours the first day, when he visions. Some had neither money or had to stop and 'clean up' and found provisions, and these the collector set $1'6,000 in tale box. The total yield of to work sawing wood for the new his whole dump was $110,000, To get gbuildings until they had worked out this lie worked hard all through the the :amount. Three inen left the head Arctic winter, with five men, to whom of Lake Bennett 'in it boat three. days he paid one dollar and it half an hour ahead of Mr. Sifton. The boat Came in'lv'•ages. A great deal of the time into Tagish with only one inan, who was taken up in getting wood to feed told it story about one of his compan- the fires which burn down through the ions falling overboard and the second frust which never leaves the ground being drowned in trying to rescue hint. otherwise. The hig brawny Nova Major 'Walsh gave instructions to the Seotian'is at present buying up all the police to follow him and investigate properties e can get, thus showing his ease, which certainly had a sus p ic- faith in the region, ions look. Here is another actual case which The nitirder which took place near- earin inall honesty should be given along- Tagish a feiv clays before seems to side McDonald's. An I!7nglishnnan have been a cold-blooded and brutal named Leonard had spent two years affair. The two men, Petersen and on Bonanza Creek and sunk nine holes Henderson, were travelling together, down to hard pan without striking it sleeping in onp tent and bound for the dollar, although the claims on both gnld fields. Petersen way ill and his sides of his were enormously rich. notions at night annoyed Henderson. Finally, last August. ho offered the who finally seized itt revolver and shot in Some months ago paid fifty dollars to ferry his party over this salve little hake. As wriLirig materials ware ab, sent and the snow driving across fut•- J iously the Auditot-General will not look for a voucher for this expenditure from. Major Walsh. They met the manager of a Canadian Gold Fields Company near 'Tagish, He had come in by the White Vass, which, he said, no tongue or pen could adequately describe. He paid sixty-five cents it pound fox, the packing of his supplies over, and adding his other expenses he found that it had cost one dollar and twelity-five cents a pound to get his stub over. One is driven to the Con- clusion that compared with the White the Chilcoot Pass is it picnic. In justice to Cal.)t. Moore and his trail over the. White Pass, it should he stated that the trail is not the best route and it dues riot go through the pass at all. The pass itself at the suni- init is blocked by boulders. If thew, are blasted, out rrnd the !rest trail laid out it may tie, and would be, a great improvement. Then, it. must be re- rnenibered, that the White Pass trail was it new one, unimproved, and thousands of horses and pack animals of various kinds driven over it in it fere weeks cut it urn so badly that cir- ourustances made it horrible. If Mr. Wilkinson, the agent in Canada of the British Yukon Company, whose inter- ests are bound up to it great extent with the pass, and to whom Capt. Moore is said to have transferred his interest in the town site of Skaguay, haul come up here last June, when he wits in Ottawa, and expended a few thousands in !"proving the trail, it would have heen a work of great value. It is now probably too late. The public are offered three routes idto the Yukon through the moun- tains—the White Pits-, the Chilcoot and the Chilkat Piles or -Dalton Trail, hot if a, new coast entrance can be furnished it will knock all three passes into it cocked hat. N a �Y D o a DAIRY STUDENTS. How They Are Prepared Serentifleally For Their Work. The out here given shows the studenj of an np to date dairy school at work in the milkroom. They are'running hand separators and parting the milk from the cream in fine style, and quickly. We give the picture here for one purpose. It is to call attention of dairymen and creamery men everywhere to the costume worn by these students. Snowy overalls and blouse and linen cap constitute an outside costume so clean and attractive that it alone would be a great advertise- ment for the creamery or private dairy whose employees were thus uniformed. The time is coming when every dairy and creamery in the land will require its employees to be (lad in clean cotton or linen uniforms. Nothing that cannot be washed, and washed often, should be worn about a creamery or private dairy. Fortunately nearly all the states now have dairy courses in connection with the agricultural -colleges. The course is much the same in the schools. A fair idea of it may be gathered from a sketch of the branches taught in the Wisconsin Dairy school. Professor Moore, director of the Wisconsin school, says in Board's Dairyman: The student becomes proficient in using the hand separators, the Babcock test and the lactometer, and in all sub- jects pertaining to making a fine grade of butter. A course of lectures bearing on the work is given and supplemented by practical work in the laboratory. In the separator room the student is taught to use the different separators imol test the speed, skimming efficiency clati<ui--for--s.a&, telling lust what his the inan beside hint. The murderer experience had been. He got $2,500 made no attempt to escape or resist for it, and quit. arrest. Another case. A inan had been for IIor•se feed is more valuable in the years to the country without getting Yukon than horseflesh. Major•Walsh anything, When Mr. Ogilvie was at urn this trip paid forty dollars % 7awson this man appealed to hint for for it horse and seventy dollars t ti •. pointer. Mr. Ogilvio pointed to a for horse feed. All the tint- gulch about it quern ter of a anile off Iter at LAke Lindeman will be ,.da incl expressed the opinion that there stripped away this winter and boat - was coarse gold there. The man and building will be ialp nssible there. It his companion staked outclainis in the was bard for Major Walsh'a Indians to I a, side gulch indicated, and panned out get firewood there. Mr, Ogilvie re- I..` t ,t one hundred dollars it day in coarseparts that it is thirty-seven miles froth gold They gave the first nugget to tidewater to Lake Bennett. That is Mr. Ogilvie. It was worth nine or ten the length 4 the White Pass trail, DAIRY STUDENTS SEPARATING CREAM. dollars. Dr. Bonner will remain at Tagish until and capacity of the same, is taught to Mr. Justice McGuire will have to spring, when he will exchange with Dr. Willis, of Dawson. ripen the cream properly and churn, adjudicate on a largge number of part- color, salt, work, score and pack the nership cases when he reaches Dawson. It is hoped that Starne's party will butter, • They are also taught to make Some of these partnerships have been be able, and Major Walsh subsequent good batter by setting the milk in cans running on for years, and while min- ers were getting front $6,000 to $8,000 ly, to reach Selkirk by boat. They will rest therd'Apd a dog train rnessen- .and pans in accordance with the older a season, they worked all right with out any papers. None were needed. ger will make n, clash for Dawson, two hundred miles distance, and hand a methods. In the laboratory the students are The enormous wealth of Eldorado and letter to Inspector• (lonstantine, there taught to determine the amount of but - Bonanza blunted their moral sense instructing hint to take a party to it ter fat with accuracy in a given sample and partnership ayre- house one brindled and ten iniles front of milk or butter anis to detect whether pndiated right and left. Judge Mc- Selkirk and make it ready for the re- milk has been skimmed or watered. Guim will have to take evidence and ception of the Judge and Mr. Wade, In stock judging they are taught to decide these cases. It is safe to pre- dict that in Mr. Justice McGuire the who, on the return of the dog train, will go to this house and from there determine ata glance the common char - miners will speedily recognize it the entire party can easily make Daw- acteriatias of a good dairy cow; in feed - thorough representative of British son. The proRrrantnte provides that Ing, to prepare rations according to the fair play and Justice. the party will suffer as little discorn- best authorities and are given hints and Sales of claims are fregnent. A con- fort its possible on the way. A double suggestions regarding taking care of tract will he drawn up stipulating say tent with tarpaulin floor and a stove dairy cows in general; in brooding, to for $5,000 down, $10,000 in three in it will he its comfortable lit nights select good stock and breed to increase months, and $20,(X)0 in six months, as a hotel. In fact, Mr. Sifton has the characteristics of the dairy type; in The owner of the wine remains the ).r r i considerate for the been 1 ext en sly d to comfort of the members of the expedi- agricultural physics, to draft daily barns nhas all the money is paid, but tions. Every precaution has teen and silos, so as to have them convenient the. purchaser the t thefirst has the right to work it from the first. If he fails meet any taken for their sale ty, whieh has been and especially adapted for dairy use. h payment {le forfeits whet he hats paid kept in view as the prime considers- tion. The minister did not ask the They are also tanght to run wind - mills, steam and gasoline engiuos, tread and the owner, takes Somers of the mine. A man named Somers bought staff to cross the pass Until he himself j powers and all farm motors, so as to be it elinin! on Bonanza Creek, agreeing d one unction with over and in con bag I nolo to attach them to and run cream to pay $-45,OU between April 11 and the Major, made every possible pre- prarstion far the j . As it turned separators,pumps, P feed mills, churns, June 30. He wits told he was making a very stiff contract, but had been our, Mr. r the ,journey. dash Tagish and thrashers. s:... e dawn in the drifts and knew what he back wits of the greatest value. It was doing. He paid the last instal- inthree drys ahead of time, getting ensured the taking over of the sup- plies, the establishment of camps, and `— The fil(bustering steamer Dauntless all the money out of the purchased shelters en route and put life and energy into the whole undertaking. has returned to Key West from Chiba, Claim, and the two men who sold it to hitt refused to speak to him, saying MIs. SIFTON's PART. having succeeded in landing a cargo they had been swindled. I It, required no small sense of duty of arms and ammunition for the in - Miller Creek, which was thought to and cmirage to cross the two dreaded surgents. be in Alaska, tarts found, when Mr. passes at a time of year when one is Ogilvie ran the line, to be in Canada, I warned that lie may he caught in a The argument in the Ontario appeal and it has lots of Oold on it, In Mr. i snow storm on the summit and be regarding the Common school fund Ogilvie's opinion quartz gold will be heard from in the future. There is lost. At the same time, to live for ten days on hard tack and bacon {s not a was finished in the Supreme Court ,plenty of quartz milling front six to decided attraction. As a fact, Mr. Yesterday. Judgment was reserved. sever) doll;trs a ton. The value of the Sifton and Major Walsh found them - )))lacer gold varies. The lowest for. ' selves in a snow storm just over the summit of the Chilcoot Plass. They There are already fonr applications lk1loadike gold is $15.25 an ounce, and the highest $18. In estimating the hired a bout to terry Chen) over Crater for divorce bills to come before the next session of the Dominion Prulia- ,value of Yukon gold it is best to caleu- Lake, paying the boatman fifteen late it at $15 an ounce. dollars. One of the police parties sent meet, HAPPY PEOPLE Who Aro Made Well and Strong by Paine's Colors Compound. NO RETURN OF DISEASE. Cures are Permanent and Lasting. A Letter from a Montiieal Gentle- man Cured Four Years Aero. Medical colleges conferred upon Pro- fessor Edward Phelps, M. D., their highest honors for his invaluable in- vestigations in medicine, but all this seems small in comparison with the grand chorus of Gratitude that has gone up all over the world from men, women and children who have out- grown weakness, lack of health and disease by thA use of Paine's Celery Compound, the noble professor's grandest medical discovery. Paine's Celery Compound justly boasts of one grand advantage over all the advertised remedies of the day, whether they be nervines, bitters or srarsapavillas- The cures effected by Puine's Celery Compound incases of rheumatism, neuralgia, kidney and liver troubles, nervousness and dys- pepsia are permanent and lasting. Thousands of glad letters like the folluwing from Mr. Charles Bowies, of Montreal, are received every year: "Over four pears ago 1 gave you a testimonial fpr Paine's Celery Com- pound after it had completely freed me of rheumatism of many yearsstand- im I sn happy to state I have had notrouble i'vohe disease since your Paine's Celery Ccinpound cured tile, proving conclvsively that vnur metli- cine works permanent cures. I am always recommending Paine's Celery compound to the sick, and particular- ly to those troubled with rheuma- tisill. With regardto,nininginfheYukon, Surveyer gilvie recommends a change in the size of the standard claim, now limited to one hundred feet along the river, and that the Government re- serves section to be taken in blocks. EXTREME NERVD-USNESS. FREQUENTLY BRINGS ITS V ICTIM TO ZHE VERGE OF INSANITY. THE CASE OF A YOUNG LADY IN SMITH'S FALLS WHO SUFFFRX D SFVEREI,Y— GIVEN UP BY Two DOCTORS—DR. tl'ILI.IAMS' PINK PILLS HAVE RESTOR- ED HER HEALTH. Froin the Smith's Falls News. Many cases have been reported of how invalids who had suffered for years and whose case had been given up by the attending physicians, have been restored to health and vigor through that now world -famed medi- cine, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, but. we doubt if there is one more sCartling or more convincing than that of Miss Elizalbeth Minshull, who resides with 1' s ) • brother, Mr. Thus. tlw.hull of het uother this town, an employe in Frost & Wood's Agricultural Works. The News heard of this rein,ai•kable case, and meeting Mr. Minshull asked him if the story was correct. He replied: "All I know is that my sister had been given uu as incurable by two physr clans. She is now well enough to do my kind of housework and caul go :and come as sbe$plea-es, and this change has in niv hones conviction, been bt.ought about by the use of Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. Mr. Minshull then related the following story to the News:—iViy sister is twenty years of age. She cattle to Canadi� from ling - land about ten years ago, and resided with a Baptist minister Rev. Mr. Cody, rat Sorel, Que. in April, of 1806, she Look ill and gradually took worse. She was under a local physician's care for over five months. The doctor said that she was suffeting frorn it con)p)i- Cation of nervous diseases, and that lie could do little for her. The minister with whom she lived then wrote the of my sister's state of health, and I had her come to Smith's Falls, in the hope that a change and rent would do her good. When she arrived here she was in a very weak state and a local physician wascalled in to see her. He attended her far some time, but, with poor re- sults, and finally acknowledged that the case was one which he could do very little for. My sister had by this titue become a pitiable object; the slightest noise would disturb her, and the slightest exertion would almost make her insane. It ►equired someone to be with her, at all times, and often after a fit of extreme nervousness she would become unconsciolls and remain in that state for hours. When I went home I had to take my hoots off at the door -step so as not to disturb her. When the doctor told me he could do nothing for her, I consulted with my wife, who had great faith in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, as she knew of soveral:loses where they had worked wonderful cures, and I concluded it wrrnld no har►n to try them anyway, and mentioned the fact to the dodtor. The doctor did not oppose their use, bat said he thought they might do her good, as they were certainly a good medicine. In September of last year she began to use the Pills, and before talo boxes had been used, she began to show signs of improvement. She has continued their use since and is to -day it living testimony of the enralive }x) vet of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." Mr. Minshull has no hesitation in sonnding the praises of a remedy that has worked such a change in Lite health of his sister and cheerfully gave the "News" the above particulars, and when asked to do so most willingly signed the following declaration : SMITH's FALLS, Sept. 11th, 1807. I hereby make declaration that the statements in shove as to the condition of my sister, and the benefit she re- ceived from the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are absolutely correct. Trios. MINSHULL. Witness, J. H. Ross, 1897 New Dried Fruits 1897, Raisins --Malaya, Valencia and Sultanas. Currants — Filiatras and Fine Vostizzas. California Prunes and Elime Figs. CROSSE and BLACKWELL PEELS, Lemon, Orange and Citron, NUTS—Filberts, S. S. Almonds and Walluuts. COOKING FIGS for 5e. a lb. NICE OLD RAISINS for be, a lb. ------Headquarters fort TEAS, SUGARS, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE AND LAMPS. J. W. IRWIN � McKay, Block, �-.Clinton• Robson's Snow -flake Baking Powder Is absolutely pure, is Canadian, is economical, is a bigh grade Baking Powder, with it you oantuse lees shortening, you can use fewer eggs. One 16, Cantwenty-fivefor cents. Those will Have used it say it is equal to any 500. Powder, New Raisins, New Currants, New figs. Finest Teae, Monsoon, Japan's, Young Hyson. Highest prices paid for good Butter and Eggs. N. Robson, Grocer, Albert St., Clinton. CLINTON SASH, DOOR, and BLIND FACTORY —0— S. S. COOPER, Proprietor. General Builder and Contractor.`--Ot This factory has been under the personal supervision and ownership fo= eight years. We carry an extensivo and reliable stock and prepare plana and give estimates for and build all classes of buildings on short notice and on the closestrices All work i supervised p e su p vteed in a mechanical way and satisfaction guaranteed. We sell all kinds of interior and exterior material, Lumber, Lath, Shingles; Lime, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Etc. Agent for tYe CELEBRATED GRAYBILL SCHOOL DESK, manufactured in Waterloo. Call and gA prices and estimates before placing your orders. If you want Rgam PrIHIIIHA LID `�", �g�_ IN01 G119155-1rH MEN 4 Try THE NEWS -RE- CORD Office. Our 411. work is good and prices right. Ape You a Subsuibep M To The News -Record. n ONE; GIVES RELIEF. Don't Sped a Dollar for Medivne until you have tried r 'Wit, �ir �^•�p�lr a�ra4��Ya*w,. ;��,+.,��h '1� ,,.. ` .; ..,,. •amu,,, •,+ ..,,�.w.. j ���r 1• y : ....�• 7„t�a.s$ x.nnt,•.x .>,twa ..r+.r� .�.ce•r a+r,rr. . You can buy them in the paper 5-ccnt cartons Ten Tabules for Five Cents. TbL sot. Is put up ahoaply to gratlry tho unlyersnl prosent downed for a low pries. If you don't find this sort of Wipans Tabules, At the Druggist's Twin• Send Five Cents to THE RiPANS CHEMICAI. COMPANY, No. ro Spruce St., New fork, and they will be sent to you by mail; or 12 cartons will be mailed for 48 cents, Thi chances are ten to one that Ripens Tabules are the very medicine you need. raaK The insurance companies intend DABY ECZEMA AND SCALD bringing a test case against the Inter- HEAD. colonial railway, to see if railway Com- Infants and young children are pe- panies are responsible for fires caused culiarly subject to this terrible disord- by sparks from their engines. er, and if not promptly arrested it will eventually become chronic. Dr. Chase The coroner's juryinvestigating the made a special study of Eczema and accident n the Canadian Pacific rail- disease of the skin, and We can conff- way near Stitsville, brought in a ver- dently recommend Dr. Chase's Oint- diet yesterday of manslaughter against men, to cure all forms of Eczema. engineer Alexander McCuaig and con- The first application soothes the irrita- ductor Hary Hawes. tion and gives the little sufferer rest. 11 t