RS de gs à PRE .* ‘… RE chérie €. - L'iIMPARTIAL 1907 FENETRE 7 MAMPLAIN, MONTREAL MNVITE TOUTES LES FEMMES MALADES À ALLER LA VOIR [ _ ELLE ÆST ANXIEUSE DE LEUR DIRE CE QUE LES PILULES ROUGES ONT FAIT POUR ELLE. QUE SON TEMOIGNAGE SOIT POUR CHACUNE UNE NOUVELLE PREUVE ÆEVIDENTE DE 1/EFFICACITE DES PILULES ROUGES — LISEZ-LE ATTENTIVEMENT. Les médecins, dit Mme John Repper, ne s'en-|_ richiront certes jamais avec moi! Je n'ai recours à leur assistance que dans certains cas où leur présence est requise. Et pourtant, j'ai été très malade, il y a quelques années, mais j'ai trouvé un moyen plus sûr, plus rapide et surtout plus économique pour me guérir: les Pilules Rouges. Voilà, à mon avis, tout ce qu'il faut aux femmes pour se maintenir en bonne santé ou se défaire au plus tôt d'un mal subit. C'est parce que j'en ai fait l’heureuse expé- trience que je puis ainsi affirmer l'efficacité des Pilules Rouges. Pendant près d'un an j'ai souffert de faiblesse générale accompagnée de fortes douleurs dans la poitrine et dans le dos. J'étais aussi continuelle- ment enrouée, je craignais même une affection de la gorge et des poumons. Dans tous les mem- bres j'éprouvais d'étranges sensibilités et c'est sur- tout la nuit que cette espèce d'engourdissement douloureux me faisait le plus souffrir. Ainsi privée de sommeil et d'appétit, je dépéris- sais bien vite. __ Un bon jour je lus, dans les journaux, qu’une personne avait été guérie par les Pilules Rouges, d'une maladie identique à la mienne. A mon tour, j'essayai le même remède et avec succès ! - J'en avais à peine pris une boite que déjà ces douleurs dans le dos avaient cessé. Bientôt l'appétit me revint avec le sommeil. Mes membres s'assouplirent et tout mon mal disparut comme par enchantement. A mesure que je prenais les Pilules Rouges je sentais rcellement qu'elles produisaient un effet salutaire dans tout mon système. Non-seulement elles firent passer le mal dont j'étais affectée, mais de plus, elles rétablirent mes forces et me rendirent plus vigoureuse que jamais. Pour en arriver à ce point de santé parfaite, il ne m'a fallu prendre que cinq boites de Pilules Rouges! N'ai-je pas raison de proclamer l'efficacité des Pilules Rouges ? Aussi j'invite cordialement toutes les femmes malades à venir me voir. Celles qui peuvent dou- ter encore partiront bien convaincues lorsque je leur aurai dit ce que les Pilules Rouges ont fait pour moi,” — Mme John Repper, 395, rue Champlain, Montréal. Ce témoignage de Madame Repper est, en tous points, corroboré par son’ mari qui a même voulu y apposer sa propre signature. (C'est que les hommes sont aussi intéressés à ce que leurs épouses soient toujours en bonne santé. Quand la femme manque, voyez-vous, tont va mal à la maison. La famille entière est éprouvée par la maladie de la mère. C’est pourquoi nous pouvons dire sans emphase que les Pilules Rouges font la joie et le bonheur des familles C’est aussi une heureuse fortune pour ces braves ména- ges d'ouvriers, car, chez eux surtout, la santé st la force constituent le plus clair de leurs revenus et l'unique capital que savent si bien mettre À profit leur courage et leur énergie. Les déclarations de Madame Repper sont caté- goriques. Flle à été très malade. Sa maladie menaçait de prendre des proportions alarmantes. Flle ne voulait pas des médecins et avait peur des remèdes. Cependant elle eut confiance aux Pilules Rouges puisque celles-ci en avaient guéri d’autres. On a vu combien elle à eu raison de croire au Mme J. REPPER, 395 Champlain, Montréal, —- Les Pilules Rouges sont une médecine appro- priée spécialement à la constitution de la femme. Elles répondent à tous leurs besoins et suppléent abondamment à tout ce qui manque chez elles, réparent tous les défauts de leur organisme. On ne peut donc pas s'attendre à d’autres résul- tats qu'à ceux qui se produisent infailliblement dans tous les cas où les Pilules Rouges sont es- sayées. Le contraire ne serait pas vraisemblable et ce serait un démenti à la science médicale, puis à ont arrêté Médecins qui la longue expérience des précise des la formule exacte et Pilules Rouges telles que préparées par la Cie Chimique Franco-Américaine. CONSULTATIONS GRATUITES. — Adres- sez-vous par lettre ou personnellement, au No. 274, rue Saint-Denis, si vous désirez avoir des con- seils Les Médecins de la Cie Chimique Franco- Américaine vous donneront, tout à fait gratuite- ment, les informations nécessaires pour l'emploi des Pilules Rouges et vous indiqueront aussi un autre traitement si votre maladie le requiert. DEFIEZ-VOUS. — Les Pilules Rouges sont toujours vendues en boîtes de 50 pilules. Chaque boite est recouverte d'une étiquette imprimée en rouge sur du papier blanc. Les Pilules Rouges que les marchands vous vendent à l’once, au 100 ou à 25c la boîte, ne sont pas des nôtres; ce sont des imitations, car jamais nos Pilules Rouges ne sont vendues de cette manière, Ces charlatans qui se font appeler docteurs, pas- sant par les campagnes, allant de maison en mai- son, se disant envoyés par la Cie Chimique Franco- Américaine, sont des imposteurs toujours, car ja- mais nos Médecins ne sortent de leurs bureaux pour soigner les femmes malades. Si votre marchand n’a pas les Pilules Rouges de la Cie Chimique Franco-Américaine, envoyez- nous 50€ pour une boîte ou $2.50 pour six boîtes, ayant bien soin de faire enregistrer votre lettre contenant de l'argent, et vous recevrez, par le re- tour de la malle, les véritables Pilules Rouges. témoignage d’une de se+ semblables. dinaire, rs de rt Adressez toutes vos lettres: CITE CHIMIQUE Dans tout cela il n’y a pourtant rien d’extraor- FRANCO-AMERICAINE, 274, rue Saint-Denis, - ontréal A NEEDS OF THE WEST [west from Charlottetown. He _{could only, however, bring to the Letter Erom Mr. A. J. McFadyeu of! minister's notice the_iniquities of Tignish | the past. Notwithstanding the das Der given us for skill in protest- REGARDING THAT TIMEling, it was beyond us to anticipate TABLE ithe ingenuity of the time-table |maker of the P.E.I. Railway. THAT 1 THE SOURCE or GENERAL | When that monstrosity, the ten- |tative time-table was published, Boards of Trade of this County passed upon it. Summerside Board effected a compromise and gained a second train betweet that LS town and Cnarlottetown, but noth- a le DISSATISFACTION SIR:—Mr. Hughes’ letter in the | Guardian gives the impression that the indigmation meeting was ca!led for the fun of it, that there à : |ing west of Summerside was gain- nothing to protest = ; . ë P° de ied. We did, however, build on when the Minister visited the pro-! ; ‘the fact that the necessity for re- against, that vinse, there was no trouble The; : LE TE . |treuchment was relieved and that Minister came ‘‘to meet the busi- es . Îthe department would carry out ness men, here their grievances, lis- the principle admitted: that a dual train service was required on the westeru section. Mr Hughes has no cause for complaint, he has both the wivter stearmers and sufñicient train service for the needs œf his County, the freight rates although outrageous the hauls are short. If he will imagine himself at the western end teu to their requeats or suggestions and endeavor to meet their wishes.’’ To my knowledge the Minister did this with attention and apparent sympathy. À few small requests were made that have met yet been granted, to say : filling of an unsightly slough hole in the Tignish railway grounds, the add- ing of few pieces of plank to the platform at Tignish station, to save of the line, payiug ridiculous rates ‘storiug to us the daily second traiu{held uy to suit the whims of officials, he will appreciate the dis- abilities of the western section of the province. One tran a day cannot serve the requirements of the people, it will serve for threugh passengers, but cannot be arranged to serve way passengers. To take train for an hour’s banking busi- ness at Alberion, you leave at six a, m., aud return about eight p.m; or from O'Leary, you would re- quire two nights and a day; se that, the road is not a means of deelopment to this section of country, We think we are not unreasonable in maintaining that we should have two trains a day the year round and a through and continuous mail delivery. Jf the Minister wiil not grant us this, let him tell us so squarely, and end our expectations and put a stop to the injustice that we may be doing his eicials. Yours etc. A. J. McFadyen Tignish. RU UN When Rockefeller Financed a War The Women's HOME Com- &. prising sides to his character, but clusively tothe magazine. feller’s «career is the following. It happened about forty-four years ago, whem Abraham Lincoiïn was nearly suffocated with trouble. New troops were required and momay needed. Rockefeller, than a youug manu, had not as yet been accused of being a billionaire. He was strong for the Union, however. His office was at that time on River Street, Cleveland. Capt. Scofield came im one day with thirty raw recruits. The young pusiness man saw what was needed, walked to his small safe, took out a bag of real money, giving to each man $io. When outside one recruit remarked, ‘‘God, but he must be rich,’ And another one said, ‘‘Yes, they say he is a rich mau—that he is worth as much as $10,000!"” Ê NEW CITY OF THE PACIFIC PRINCK RUPERT, THE GRAND TRUNK’S WESTKRN TERMINUS. Planned to Make it a Model Sea- port—The Harbor Commo- dious and Safe and the Surrounding Territory Picturesque and Productive. VicroriA, B. C., Dec. 5.—The new city which the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway Company proposes establishing at it western terminus on Kaien Islaud is already taking shape. The city has been named Prince Rupert, after the cousin of King Charles II. uf Euglanü, who was first Gevernor of the Hudson’s Bay Company. A trip to Prince Rupert fills the visitor with the enthusiasm and Obtimism which the head offcials of the road are displaying. Imag- ine a wide channel leading into a land-locked harbor a mile in width, whose waters ezxtend far inland beyond the expansive basin which forms the harbor itself, and some | idea cau be formed of the great port which, it may be said without exaggeration, will be capable of accommodating all the fleets of the Pacific ceast. It might be lost in that of Prince Rupert. Friuging the shores of this great day, Kaïen Island and the adjacent mwainland present a panorama of almost unbroken forest, while Digby Island stretches itself ac- cross the entrance of the city to pretect it from the swells of the Pacific. Mountains towering two thousand feet above the water per- form a similar office in shielding the town from the winds blowing off land, The green mass of fir and cedar is scarrei here and tle-e by the location camps of the survey parties, while a small wharf pro- vides landing accommodation fer the coasting steamers. Apart from ! these all is yet virgin wilderness. The site is picturesque. The land slopes back gently for dis- tances ranging from half a mile to two or three miles. Here and there the ground rises abruptly, provid- ing the necessary fall for drainage and sewerage, while à shore line five or six miles in extent sweeps LE” ! Rockkfeller in which the richest | President of the line. It is more, man not only reveals several sur-|than three thousand feet high. illustrates them by a number of|upon somewhat striking photographs loaned ex- founding the city. Before au acre Amoug |of laud is put om the market the; the incidents related of Mr. Rocke-|best expert advice is to be obtained in plauning ihe city om the most up to date lines. party of the railroad were last ou the Coast they saw being torn down in order to permit of lowering the street grades aud correcting other defects in the lay- The railway men aie proceeding novel lines in When the official in Seattle houses, hotels and business blocks ing out of that citv. Thisisto be obviated in Prince Rapert, which is intended to be the city beauti- fulof the Coast. Five parties are new engaged im a careful topo- graphical survey of the whole townsite. When this is complete their plans will go before a board! of engineers and landscape gard- eners, aud they will decide upon the best lines to adopt in building the city proper. The city itself is in a trade sense born to the purple. Not only will it be the Pacific terminus of the shortest transcontinental system in America with the lowest grades of any line traversing North America, but through its gates will pour the‘vast westhbound trade of that line to the opulent Orient. Immediately behiad it lies a virgin territory of immense potentiility quite equal in coal, gold, timber and agricultural land to the southern portion of the province. Already preparations are being made to onen up the great coal deposits of the Telqua, on the main line of the railway. Immediately in front of the city a rich harvest lies waiting. The richest halibut bank: in the world, those of Queen Charlotte Island, lie within five hours steamirg of the docks of the new city. It is to those bank that the New F:gland Fish company of Beston sends its fleet of steamers, and loads from their catch the halihut s ecials which carry the frozen f:h io the tables of New Vork rhiladeiphia and the New England States. Salmon, clams, herring, and other food fish abound in the neighbor- hood. The railway company is fostering new organizalions to ex- ploit this wealth. The climate is extremeiy mild, snow seldom falls and work is earried on in the open the year around. Within the past few weeks the work of surveying the actual line of the railway froin Prince Rupert east has begun. Several preiiminary surveys were made last summar, but 1he line is now being definitely located.—N, Y. Sun, Dec. 9, 1906. _DR.WOODS j "A, É | + NORWAY. PINE SYRUP Stops the irritating cough, 1oos- ens the phlegm, soothes the in- flamed tissues of the lungs and bronchial tubes, and produces & . quiek and permanenteure in all : cases of Coughs, Colds, Bron- . Chitis, Asthma, Hoarseness, Sore Throat and the first stages of | Consumption. around the front of the future city. The view from these elevatei stations and from the beach is charming. Onthe opposite vue mountains slope down to the water. To the northwest, through a channel studded with islands, i$ to be seen the fa nous Indian village of Metlakhatla, kmown on the coast as ‘‘The Holy City.” This village was laid out by the mission- ary Duucau. Here he taught his copper colored diciples to imbrace the aris and trades of the white man and founded what was intend- | ed to be a model settlement. Later trouble arose between Duncan and his Bishop and the Isdians migrat- ed to a settlement on the Alaskan 1 } coast. the limbs and lives of passengers|for long hauls, subjacted to the |pAxION for January contains a re- leaving the cars at night, and re- j vexatious delays of mails being | markable interview with John D. {rises Mount Hays, named after the Opposite Prince Rupert, | mending Dr. Wood’s Mrs. Norma Swanston, Cargill, Ont., writes : “I take great pleasure in recom- orway Pine Syrup. I had a very bad cold, could not sleep ab J. H. Myzick &Ca IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN DRY GOODS HARDWARE BOOTS & SHOES FINE GHOCERIES And Fishing Supplies AT TIGNISH and ALBERTON We have just opened a full and complete stock of NEW GO0DS We are prepared to upply the wants of the farmer fish ‘erman and mecha- nic 4 We invites Inten ding purchasers to give us a call, and they will find if dame ie WC Can meet all bottle of Dr. Wood’s Norway Pine Syrup and was perfectly well again.” Prloe 26 cents a bottle. com pe titors, a1 dd Avis save to them the M. Paul B. Perry est notre agent pour Rogersville, N. B. M. Jacques Buote pour Law. rence, Mass. M. Orell Gaxdet puur Yarmouth- ville, Me. M. Nap. Piueau pour Bath, Met trouble and ex- pense of soing to Summerside or M.S. E. Gallant pour Abram's- Village. M. Pacific Gallant . pour St Chrysotôme, Charlottetown je rome, ral: Pemrbt, ae « a = Re “ es % rer TT me ST