HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1903-03-05, Page 3.•V
THE ti 1NG'IiA . TIMES, MATCH 5, 1903..
•
valid
Requires nourishment in a concentrated, palatable and easily
digestible form. Bovril should therefore form one of the
chief items on the diet List of every invalid, as it is the
embodiment of all these qualities.
Bovril is not merely a stimulant to prop up the flagging
spirits for the pa ssing hour. It is a highlynourishing food,
containing all the strength -giving properties of the best lean
beef in the most palatable and easily digestible form.
Bovril is Liquid Life.
"Jest 1R
PROFIT HALF A MILLION.
f Bell Company la Canada
Was $504,9$2 iP 1002.
7dontrsal, Feb. 27. -At the twenty-
third annual meeting of the Bell
'Telephone Company. held yesterday,
the president, Mr. C. F. Sise, in pre-
senting his report, stated that much
progress had been made during the
past year. Five thousandsix hun-
dred and twenty-three subscribers
ihad been added during the year, the
total number of sets of instruments
mow earning rental being 48,481; 2,-
4655 miles of wire had been added in
the long-distance system in 1902. Of
these, 1,042 miles aro in the Ontario
department, 1,042in the eastern de-
partment, and 378 in the north-
western department. The long-dis-
tance lines owned and operated by
the company comprise 26,848 miles.
'['ho total revenue was 52,085,134.26,
and the total expenditure 51,580,-
651.39, leaving not revenue of 5504,-
282.87.
Twenty Passenger' Leave.
St. John's, Nfld., Feb. 27. -One of
the two blockaded express trains is
moving towards this city, and will
probably roach here to -day or Sat-
eirday. The other snowbound train
ihaa not yet been moved. Twenty of
&he latter's passengers left the train
Wednesday and traveled across thir-
ty miles of unbroken snow fields,
cierrying food in knapsacks on their
!t�1�yldlr/a..
ABSOIUTE
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's'
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of
See Pile -Simile Wrapper Below.
'Very ea1a11 and as easy
to take as angers
FOR HEADACHE,.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR BILIOUSNESS.
FOR TORPID LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
CARTERS
ITTLE
IVER
'PILLS.
O]aNIIZNar MUBTMAV. MATURE.
;rats I puri Yegetable.iewe
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
A Bad Breath
�A bad breath means a bad
stomach, a bad digestion, a
bad liver. Ayer's Pills arc
liver pills. They cure con-
stIpation, biliousness, dys-
pepsia, sick headache.
25c, Ail druggists.
Want your moustache or beard a beautiful
brawn or rich black? Then ma
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE wh s°
ileic e. o IR R. P. Ow,. a co., Mumu►, N.N,
IT PAYS
TO ADVE}tTISB
IN THE
TIMES . .
NANAIMO STRIKE ENDED.
.pany'e. Proposal .Accepted by the
Men-. ork. Resumed.
Victoria, B.C., Feb. 26. -The Na-
naimo strike has just been declared
off. Yesterday utortiing posters were
placed around the cool pit calling
the men to a mass meeting at 3 o'-
clock. .It was alio learned that the
Western fuel Company has made a
proposition, and that the ruiners'
lexecutii a were } repave(' to recom-
mend its acceptance. This proved to
he acceptable to the hien, and last
es ening the announcement was made
that the sail:e was terxuinated, and
the men would start work in the
morning. The news has created a
feeling of the greatest relief in this
city, as well as at Nanaimo, at
which latter place some miners were
beginning to leave for work in the
urines of Washin't•ton State.
BEN HOLMAN ARRESTED.
Alleged Shortage in Accounts of Agent
of Express Company.
Windsor, Feb. 10. -Ben Holman,
city agent of the Canadian Pacific
Railway and the Dominion Express
Company here, was arrested yester-
day morning at the instance of F. J.
Mic[iay, route agent and auditor of
the express company, on a charge of
stealing $805 from the company.
Lotman asked for an audit of the
books. and an investigation was
made, with the above result. Hol-
man was committed for trial and
gave bail in the amount of 51,000.
Local Registrar Appointed.
Toronto, Feb. 26.-J. T. Field of
Cobourg, has been appointed by the
Ontario Government local Registrar
Clerk of the County Court and Re-
gistrar of the Surrogate Court r
t o
f
Northumberland and Durham Coun-
ties, in room of John Fisher, de-
ceased. •
. Still seek see Trains.
St. John's, Nfld., Feb. 26. --One of
the snow -bound expresses was mov-
ed some miles yesterday, but the
other is still blocked, and it. is like-
ly to continue so for several days.
Belief trains are actively engaged in
trying to free the latter.
To liske Observations.
Di •--n., Feb, 27. -On the recom-
mer of W. F. King, chief es-
teems.- .sn. Clifford Sinton has
appointed t...to Klotz and F. W.
0. Werry to make scientific observa-
tions ofr the determination of long-
itudes along the line of the Pacific
Cable in 1892.
. Stanley Denies It.
London, Vela 27. -Lord Stanley,
eldest son of the Earl of Derby, for-
mer Governor-General of Canada, de-
nies the recent published statement
that be was to succeed Lord Minto
as Go•iernor-General of the Domin-
ion. •
Gatling Is No More.
New York, Feb. 27. - Dr. 13. J.
Getting, the inventor of the Getting
gun, died in this city yesterday aft-
crnoo:t, at the holue of his son,
:!ugh C. Pentecost. He was. Sal
years old.
THE BERLIN POLICY.niao{ad ;tilt t ud; ?gee I THE PIONEER of ALL MALT -
the MUNICIPALITIES. water revenue, thorn really WHEAT FOODSayspo
Municipaiities a Unit in Decision
to Carry It Out.
WILL VISIT PREMIER ROSS.
Ask Tariff.' 1l.s Ju.tment.
Ottawa, Feb. 27.-A deputation of
wallpaper manufacturers waited on
Ma Fielding yesterday with a plea
foe readjustment of the tariff for
their benefit.
WOULD HAVE TO STOP HER
WORK AND SIT DOWN.
Deputations From Ontario Cities and
Tawas Will Wait Cp.n the Guvera-
aagnt ConCoruin` tLn Tree of Niagara
1 • is Yewea•-Alayura and Rot.re-
seetattve' the (Attests of
Tereato City.
Toronto, Feb. 27. --Premier Rose
will be waited upon at ll o'clot:a.
this mornitag by a deputation repre-
senting luroneo and the western
uoinioipa}i•ics, wno will discuss with
;fins the development and distribution
of electrical energy from Niagara
Falls on the lines of the resolutions
passed at the power conference in
Berlin a week ago.
The delegates appointed at the
conference arrived • in 'Toronto yes- '
terday morning, and at 2 p.m, were '
the guests of the city at luncheon:!
Acting Mayor Ward presided, and I
those in attendance were: Jacob E.
Klotz, Preston; R. Macgregor, Galt;
W. Snider, 'Waterloo; J. F. Housber-
ger, John White, Woodstock; J. H.
Ffamllton, Guelph; L. Goldie, Guelph;
M. L. Halloran, Brantford; J. F.
M. Stewart, Toronto; P. W. Ellis,
Toronto; C. F. Maxwell, St. Tho-
mas; Hugh Cant, Galt; W. B. Bur-
goyne, St. Catharii es; W. F. Mor-
den, Hamilton; Henry Bertram, Dim- 1
des; E. W. B. Snider, St. Jacob's;
D. B. Detweiler, Berlin; A, Beck,
London; Controller Richardson, Con-
troller Oliver, Ald. Spence, Ald. J.
J. Graham. Ald. J. G. Ramsden,
Ald, W. S. IIarrison, J, S. Fuller-
ton. K,C., and Assessment Commis-
sioner Fleming.
After• lunch, Acting Mayor Ward in
a brief spee h outlined the business
before the deputation and expressed
his pleasure on behalf of Toronto in
having such a representative body
of visitors as our guests. He favored
the Government taking hold of the
power and. distributing it.
Ald. Spence, Chairman of the To-
ronto Electrical Energy Committee,
said Out Toronto only wanted to
share witµ+ other municipalities what
was clearly a benefit to everybody.
They were 1,xmbined in a movement
in opposition to having the heritage
of all turned over to a few. The best
plan would bo municipal ownership
and Government control. The pros-
perity of Toronto depended upon the
success of outside places and the suc-
cess of outside places depends a lot
on the prosperity of Toronto.
Id reply, E. W. B. Snider of St.
Jacob's was very brief and to the
point, lie thanked Toronto for its
hospitality, and said the object of
the. deputation was - to ' make one
joint effort to further the cause they
interested Bested in.
r alldeeplyn
weoso
The party then adjourned to the
City Hall and talked over matters
privately in Corporation Counsel
Fullerton's office for two horn's. The
alongthelines
much
was
discussion
of that of the Berlin conference, and
it was decided to carry out the
wishes expressed at Berlin. The
meeting was unanimous.
A committee was appointed to
wait upon Mr. Ross and ask that the
Government undertake the transmis-
sion of power to municipalities, and
that if that could not be taken up
by the Government. to ask that the
municipalities be given power to go
into a plan by which the municipal-
ities may be allowed to co-operate
and transmit energy. The commit-
tee chosen is composed of Mayor
Hamilton, Guelph; Mayor Cant.
Galt; Mayor Housberger, Berlin;
Mayor Maxwell, St. Thomas; W.
Snider, Waterloo; T. IT. .Tones:
Brantford; I7. W. B. Snider, St. Ja-
cob's; D. B. Detweiler, Berlin; P.
W. Ellis, Toronto; Aid. F. S.
Spence, Toronto.
HOW MANY WOMEN HAVE TO DO
TIIiS FROM DAY TO DAY?
MILI`1URN's MART ♦1!711 NERVI; PILTS
are a blessing to women in this condition. They
cure Nervonshee(s, sleeplessness. Palpitation of
the Heart, faint and Dizzy spells, eakness,
Listlessness, and all troubles peculiar to tate
female sex.
Mrs. James Taylor, Salisbury, N.B., airmen -
mending thorn ears: About eiebtinontheage
Iwo' very badly rem down, was troubled greed,'
With palpitation of the heart and' would'getse
dizzy. I would have to leave any work and sit
down. I seemed to ha getting' worse all the
time, until a friend advised me to try MIL.
BURN'; f 1tAIlT ANI) NEiIVF. Phil.. 1
can truthfully say that they do ell you olefin
for them, and I can recommend them to all
rundown women.
Price 60e. per box, *rah ere* for $125 • all deal-
ers, or The iIilbxta Ce.. Listits , T.r.ete, Oat.
MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP.
would be no lees. No one would '
think or handing over our water sup-
ply to a company.
Our Street Railway was taken over
some years ago by the city, and a
franchise or lease granted to a com-
pany for a period of 30 years, Last
year, tate city received $235,000 as 4
revenue from this source, besides
taxes,' and yet the company, al-
though we have comparatively low
farces, paid 5 per cent, dividend on
ever live millions of watered stock.
The city owns the Cattle Market,
which is a source of revenue, is the
largest owner of real estate within
lie limits, owns moat of its wharves,
is looking toward municipalizing the
gas plant, and is taking up the quos,
tion of developing and transmitting
electric energy from Niagara, Falls.
Toronto is alive to the benefits
which will flow from. public owner•
ship of franchises.
Toronto." Mayor Says It Is Growing -Tae
New York Conference.
New York, Feb. 27. -The second
day's session of the national conven-
tion on municipal ownership and
public franchises began yesterday
with a discussion on "Municipal
ownership of electric lighting
plants." The affirmative was taken
by Victor Rosewater of The Omaha.
Daily Bee; and the negative• side h,
Lieut. Cabe:min Secretary of the- Ltia-
tioriele r'aectrit Assotiatiotl. In th
discussion that followed the debate.
Edward B. Ellicot, city electrician,
of Chicago, said the most important
difference in conditions between pub -
lie and private ownership is that a
municipality does not have to earn
dividends for stockholders, and, int
most instances, on a greater vitt 1a--
tiqn than the actual money invest.'•'
would warrant.
Joseph E. Lockwood, President of
the Michigan Electric Company,. said:
"Detroit's municipal electric ligh*uta
plant has been in operation scv:''
years. Except Chicago, it is the.
largest municipal plant in this coma
try. It will have paid for itself to
the next three years, based on the
lowest ten-year contract offer from
a private company. Great improve-
ment in the sem ice is effected."
Mayor Urquhart of Toronto, said :
"My impression is that public ower
ershii) views are being rapidly
adopted. The corporations are alive
to this fact, and aro Making stren-
uous efforts to combat thele. Paid
servants are attacking the principle
in the press and on the platform.
In Toronto we have owned and op-
erated our Waterworks for over a
quartea' of a century. A few years
ago, after paying all expenses, in-
cluding interest, Sinking I'•und, and
a considerable capital expenditure,
there 'was is large surplus revenue,
And it was decided to cut, the rates
iu hall, and, to -day, we have not on-
ly the cheapest. but the best water
en the continent.
While nominally. the result shows
a email lose, yet, if we ellnifnated
ikpital eiapenclituro, cliirged asainet
•
To the Weary Dyspeptic.
We Ask this Question:
Why don't you remove
that weight at the pit of
the Stomach?
'Why don't you. regulate that
variable appetite, and condition the
digestive organs so that it will not
be necessary to starve the stomach
to avoid (listless after eating.
The first•step is to regulate the
bowels.
For'this purpose
Burdock Blood Bitters
has no Equal.
It acts promptly and effectually
and permanently cures all derange-
ments of digestion. It cures Dys-
pepsia and the primary causes lead-
ing to it.
wITIMMIIIIMMTWO
BYE=ELECTIONS TODAY.
Vote in North York and Centre Bruce
Now Proceeding.
Toronto, Feb. 26. -Premier Ross
and Hone Fl R..Latchford returned
yesterday ftbm Centre Bruce, where
they had Conducted meetings in be-
half of Dr. Stewart, the Liberal can-
didate. Besides Mr. Ross' excellent
meetings at Ripley on Tuesday,
there were good audiences at Chep-
stow and at Paisley. Mr. Latchford
and Mr. T. I3. Preston, M.P.P.,
spoke at the former place, and Mr.
C. J. Michle of Chesloy, Mr. Andrew
Pattullo, M.P.P., and Senator Laad-
erkin at the latter place. The Min-
isters are hopeful of the result of to-
day's voting in both Centre Bruce
and North York.
G.T.R. May Rival C.Y.R.
London, Feb. 26. -The officials of
the Allan Line of steamships at
Liverpool positively deny the rumor
that the C. P. R. have entered into
negotiations with that company look-
ing to the acquisition of their line.
It is understood here that the G. T.
R, are determined to meet the com-
petition of the C. P. R, at every
point, even to the establishing of an
ocean line of their own.
Malt Brenkfebt Food is the great pion- Ownership Foots Laid Before
Beer of all Malt -Wheat Hoods. In Malt Convention at New York. 0r Ten
first us( (I to increase the digestibility,
tiavor and food value of wheat. No pro-
cess since brought ant has equalled that BRITISH EXPERIENCE GIVEN.
cm
in the manufacture of .delis -1
popular bouts and Malt• Breakfast Food. ------a.
It is good to eat; it pleasesyoung and In Groat srlteiat Nearly Ali the IMrge
old; it furnishes ieuthe greaten amount of Giulio operetta rranx�waye -Advantages
nourishment;; it is the most economical
0f cereal foods; it is earning more com- of Municipal Ownership as Com-
pletely every day the name its friends
give it: "The altogether satisfactory
breakfast food." Physicians say it Inc,
surpasses all other gtaiu foods. All Gro-
cers sell it.
A CHEEKY MOTION.
The Newest Form the Annexation Idea
Takeo on is the Great Baited States
or Algeriea.
Washington, Feb. 26-Itepresetita-
tive De Ansond (Mo.) yesterday in-
troduced a .concurrent resolution pro-
viding as follows:
"That the President be and is
hereby requested to leaen and advise
the Congress upon what terms, if
any, honorable to both inhabitants
of the territory primarily affected,
Great Britain would consent to cede
to the United States all or any
part of the territory lying north of
and adjoining the United States. to
he formed in due time into one or
more states and admitted into the
Union upon an equality with the oth-
er states, the inhabitants thereof in
the meantime to enjoy all the peiv i -
loges and imrnunities guaranteed by
the Federal constitution,"
TO GET RID OF BORAX.
Garman Government to Shut Out Meat
So treated.
Berlin, Feb. 26;r-Tn the Reichstag
yesterday Herr Oertel, editor of The.
Deutsche Tages Zeitung, urged the
Government to enforce with the ut-
most stringency the regulations
against meat treated with borax,!
especially against meat so treated bit l
the United States.
Home Secretary von Posadows'• i -
Wehner remarked that the American'
House of Representatives had passed
a bill prohibiting the export of, im-
port of or internal trade of adulter- 1
ated food or foods treated with un- 1
wholesome ingredients. A motion to
except borax from this prohibition
had been voted down in that HIouse.
The Secretary added that the Gov-
ernment was determined to strictly
enforce the regulations until borax
was proved to be non -injurious by
indisputable scientific authority.
pared to That or 1'rirate Coma
penis, -1 we Forms et 1'rotit
-An.itnormoue Profit.
New York, Vela 26. ---The conven-
tion on municipal ownership and
franchises,, wh•iait is. to continue un-
til Friday, opened mere yesterday.
The delegates were welcomed by John
G. Agar, who said coadi;tions is
American cities are such as to make
the thoughtful and patriotic seek
some method of improvement. The
convention was called, be said, for
the purpose of furnishing facts and
information and of., organizing a per-
manent bureau for the collection and
distribution of •muni;ipal statistics
relating to the best method of sup-
plying commercial wants.
Clinton Rogers Woodruff of Phila-
delphia opened the' discussion of re-
cent history of Municipal ownership i
in the United States. He said in
part:
The undeniable growth of popular
interest in the municipal ownership
of public service franchises is print-
arily due to the popular indignation
felt at the corruption and degrada-
i tion inoident to the poliey of private
ownership. The people are awaken-
ing to an appreciation of the dan-
'gees lurking in the shadows of such
relationship as now exists between
city governmen) s and private cor-
porations. 7'he e•)mpensation of pri-
vate corporation, must be limited to
a fair return for the services reit-
dered, and no txtore."
Mayor Urquhart of Tor)nto refer-
red to the success of municipal own-
ership of the weterwor}cs in his
city. A paper pr.'pared by Robert
1'. Porter, d it a:fur of the eleventh
census of the United. States, was these
read.
A paper 00 "ll•scent British Experi-
ence of Municipal Ownership," by
Robert Donald, editor of The Muni-
cipal Journal, of London, was read
by the secretary. Mr. Donald said,
iu p
Alart:most. all the. large cities (Great
Britain), not onl, own, hut operate
their own tramways. The. London
County Council is operating 721
utiles, and is b'tilding 100 miles.
Glasgow owns end operates 103
utiles, Llverpoo`: 90. Edinburgh
owns lines, and a company operates
them. Companies are confined to the
smaller towns in England and Scot-
; land. One of the elements which
helped forward the muxticii.ilization
Movement, was the bad management
of companies, w}xirlt allowed their
undertakings to become dilapidated
, towards the latter end of their
1 leases. They paid their workmen so
dfs racefully that there were seriou:t
strikes. Cars Wel e dirty, horses bad,
service irregular.
The advantages of municipal
ownership are considerable. It ree-
1 Mates fares, provides for workiu
men's csax•s, and fair treatment to
I employee. All th? , beside:a a years
rental when the lines aro leased. Lo-
cal civic pride and jealousy, howev-
er, prevent co-operation between
municipalities on 1 large scale. Yu
Glasgow, the aint of the municipalit
has not been to make a profit in re-
lief of local taxation, but to carry
the greatest possible number of per-
sons the longest distance possible at
the lowest poeeib[e fare. Ily the end
of the }'resent year, most of the mun-
icipalities . will have complete sys-
tems of electric. fraction, and, in al-
most all large c'otees of populatio,..
municipal ownership of street rail-
ways is likely t,) be extended. The
1 scope for private enterprises will be
confined chiefly to linking towns to -
I gether, and opet.ing tip rural dis-
,triets."
C. R. Delaney, general manager ..f
the Municipal Street Itailw'ays in
Liverpool. spok in favor of munl:i-
pal ownership. ;•I_ said:
:
; "There are two forms of profit at-
tending a municipal undertaking -
the profit that results to the indi-
vidual by reason of increased facili-
ties or better art fetes at }ower rates,
and the profit that standi out as it
net balance after all financial obliga-
tions hate been tart, The latter ie
unimportant, if the first is coneid.'r-
able, but both are substantial under
inuni,:ipal management."
Ile referred to he criticisms b: -
Americans, and added: -Our Ameri-
can cousins are kindly offering us as-
sistance in dealing with questions of
transport in London, although tin'
requirements in New York strike
me as being more pressing."
In conclusion Iv! said. • •Tlte mu-
nicipalization of trimmers in large
towns can be carried otit with per-
fect security and to the lasting ad-
vantage of the whole c'u'mtry."
Mr. Charles 'I;..'rkes' paper on
"Municipal ownership and franchie-
es" was then read by the ,+'ere tars.
Edward M. Shepard spok • ou cit;.~
owning and leasing-, and ,txplaitv'd
the method tha' had been taken with
the construction of the Rapid '19'at:y-
St Subway, Me. She•pu"d said
•"Those who criticize the teasing 01
the Rapid Transit road for .il) years
must •remember, that unct thew•'
years ago there was not a railroa.l
or financier who woul.i •audertake
aWlifiVhWeseVadliWritriaiWitafielAWANV.Wiel
Not NowCheap
Buttiow Good
The most successful farmers in Canada
read the FARMER'S ADVOCATE: they
think about their work, they act upon its
teachings, and they are its greatest admirers.
• ItsTseditors and contributors are specialists.
FARMER'S
1
• ADVOCATE
and HOME MAGAZINE
contains the cream of agricultural thought,
and practical men continue to read it be-
cause it pays them and because they want
the best. We want thousands of new sub-
scribers who will appreciate something good.
The sooner you subscribe, the more you
▪ will get.
Charged With Forgery.
Quebec, Feb. 26. -Albert Pare, age.1
50 years, who returned from New
York State to claim an estate of
$5,000 left by a dead brut her, was
arFeeted' S'esterdae' on a charge of
forgery. It is alleged that he for)r:'d
the name of the Provinc•itti Librut ion
to a note given in the street pa ing
contract two years ago.
Seat; and Soothes the Lungs and
Bronchial Tubes. Corea COUGHS,
COLDS, BRONCHITIS, HOARSE.
NESS, etc., quicker than any rem.
' edy known. If you have that irri-
tating Cough that keeps you awake
at night, a dose of the Syrup will
stop it at once.
USED FOR EIGHT YEARS.
{ I bare used DR. WOOD'S NORWAY
k PINE SYRUP for every cold I have had
Iii for the past tight years, with wol.<der-
I ful sues see. I never see a friend with a
cough or rola but that T reeo)nmend it.-
K M, Ellsworth, .Iaeksonville, N.$.
PRICE 25 CENTS.
For S,.00 we will send to new subscribers
ever)' iasuc of the FARMER'S ADVOCATE ti
Iran, now till the end of too3. including the "-
beautiful Christmas Number for both years.
1 Time is' money. Read! think 1 act 1 Send
▪ for a free sample copy if you want to see a .
,tt, practical. up-to-date farmers paper. It will
{ please you.
S
ADDRESS : e
the William Weld Qo.,Etd.
LONDON. ONTARIO.
f.t.M4WitAMMAMVAMPARMARMWAMA
Miss Jessie Rogerson, school teacher
!of Walkerton, died Wednesday Feb.
j 25th, after a two days illness. She
taught school on Monday previous. but
did not feel well. Death was due to
1 peritonitis.
Ear Over Sixty Years.
An Old and Well -Teed Remedy -Mrs
Winslow's SoothingSyrap has been used
for over sixty years byntillionsof mothers
for their children while teething, with
perfect success. It soothes the child,
softens the gams, allays all pain, cures
Wind colic, and is the best remedy for
diarrhoea. Itis pleasant to the taste.
Sold by druggists in every part of the
world. Twenty 8ve cents a bottle. Its
value is incalculable. Be sure you ask
for Mrs. Winslow's Soothiug Syrup, and
take no other kind.
Rockfeller the Standard Oil magnate
has offered $100,000 for a new stomach.
The millions who have good stomaches
that will digest any kind of food are in.
finitely happier than the millionariers
who !nave to eat mush three times a
day.
Construtiy hungry, William Es
/gamier, of Montreal, Dare
Not Pat, ani ExiEtence Be.
owe Truly Mizerable.
Theo He Heard of Pot iey's Liquified
Deone•••The Disease Germs Were
Soon Destroyed and After Talc.,
ing Pour Bottles Ile Was
Completely Cured.
Gentlemen, .-. I
have been a great
imfferer front dye,-
pepsia for 10 years.
Sharp out tillg
pains and eonstan
hunger m,do my
existence truly
xniserabin, while
tlatuleney a u or -
mented the trou-
ble, Despite all
efforts to overcome
t his distressing
condition it con-
tinucd until Aug-
nst last, when I
heard of Powley's,,
Liquified OY.one."I
)' have nscd four bot-
tles of the Ozone apd cat now eat any-
thing.
I would strongly recommend it to
every sufferer, as I understand it ap-
plies alike to all germ disease.
(ai;ned)
WILLIAM LE MLSUI'„TE,ti,
126 Metcalfe St.; Montreal.
POWLEY'S
LIQUIFIED
OZONE
CURES
DISEASE BY
DESTROYING
DISEASE
GERM
WHEREVER
LOCATED,
WM. LE MESUI1rER.,
>
ft Does Not lYzitt+,r How C,fllroni<ao
Y?ntr ('ave of Dyspepsia Nay
Hare .iiie('onle: Ozo3ie W'iU
C'ertu;nly- Cure You.
The action of Pane:ey'a Litjttifnetl
Ozone in cases of Dyspepsia is peculiar_
tri.it come there is almost immediate
relief and the patient commences to)
got well at once. With others the
first few doses cause nausea and the
Datient seems to get \sor;e. This is
merely au iadiea.iou that Ozone is
doing its work, bet that the ease is a
severe oats, and that there is „teeter
diflleelty in destroying tto disease
germs, Later trio symptoms of dis-
tress become less pronounced and at
fewer intervals until they cease, a1tf1'
gother, when there is rapid improve-.
ment and the patient is soon entirely
cure's. There is one thing certain,
how)ver, and that is that it does not
mattsr what the first effects Ozone
may he, if persisted in tho>;e is no
case of dyspepsia that it will not cure,
ttutl when we say cure we ratan. cured
for all time to coma This has been
proven so often and so thoroughly that
it Hess 'become an absolute certainty.
Th,' following are extracts from tai
few If the mauy letters received, tes-
tifying as to the curative reaalities of
Ozon) t
V. J. ADAMS,
4.3 Vi')llesley $troet, Toronto, says:
"I had dyspepsia for years. Good
phydi,'ians and advertised. cures dill
' xne 11') good. I was advised to t
Ozone. Three bottles cured me and
now env digestion le perfect. I feel
that it was n. Cod -send in my case."
to build the roa•i.
"To-dayth.' or );it in si;:t' on Y1)s
contract f) $:b1,00u,1)1)0. anus I 1>.'-
lieve it may he $.zt),000,000. Here-
after municipal eonstructaott in Ills
transit linen wo'ild he cariael on."
Sues For 880,000.
Toronto, Feb. 273. ',I {, (,faint is
suing the Grand 'i'runk Itailteay
Company for $,30,000 damages for
the death of her husband, Russell
Quinn, Who died at tho' Victoria
Hospital a short time aro front in-
juries received in the wreck int Wan-
stead,,
141123. JOSEPH-! ROY,
163 tit. Dotli'lxhItie s ,, elonilrcal, sa.#tii
"For ;ix yettre I wee• troubled wit-
indigestion,
itindigestiotn, heartburn and nouralgi
^nil used many medicines evithont ob:
taiufug any relief. Two months age,
I :eo:aai nced teking Ozone and afte
taking four bottles I amrhappv to sat
I ani ^ural. T have ani excellent p
potito and earn eat anything I wish.'
E. J. DOYLE,
53 Per•v street, Ottawa, say:!: "P0
ton v ears I suffered from stoma°
troualo and after trying all sorts o
treatments was thoroughly tliseon
aged. It was therefore, with co
sideral)le doubt that I was induced
try 1-owley's L:quilled Ozone. In
short time I was better and 50)11 gain
you ni; in weight. 1 ant workin
eve, v lay :ma fool well and Heart
wi+li nota tra •e of dyspepsia lel t,
wife anti dau'ih:er were also moo
benetitt.)d by Ozone and I am sure.
saved the hatter's life."
MISS JESSIE THOMP.ON,
liver street, Toronto, say:!; "F)rfo
year; I suffered uleerated stow
with frequent hemmorhages. I w
treated by the best iby ici a hesii
taking many different remedies, b
continued to get worse. 1 was advi
to try Powley"s Liquified Ozoua
did. so, carefully following direetio
In is short time there was a renter
able improvement in my cotelitioi
Tho hemmorhages oea5ed, nay etreugi
returned and I was much improved
every way.
In buying be sure to gat Porch►y
Liquified Ozone. It is solei only I
reliable Ilealerit--never by peddler
Prioe, 60 outs and 31.00 per bottle.
THE OZONIC 00., Limited,
Teroitto, 4 ip