XXX11 



RECREATION. 





l»«^^^^^.#»^^»^^^rf»'to#%»«b«.»»^«»•^^»^rf%<'^rf»W»^^.^ 



> FROM HARPER'S WEEKLY. 



> " -w- LCOHOL, it is claimed by statisticians, is the chief curse of civilization. More men 

 fail in body, brain, and business through its agency than from any other cause. 



Ventures sent to sea with alcohol in command cannot mind the winds, fail to take 

 correct astronomical observations, and arrive anywhere but in the right port. 

 I Alcohol ruins a man's health ; ruins his home ; endangers his happiness ; jeopardizes his 

 C business interests, and brings him into ridicule. 



I The Keeley Institutes are neither hospitals nor prisons, but are as homelike as it is possible 



i to make them. There is no confinement, nor is the slightest restraint put upon the patients 

 I beyond the request that they shall observe the few simple rules, and take faithfully the 

 C medicines prescribed. Neither are the patients treated as offenders against the morals of 

 C society, but as gentlemen and ladies who are afflicted with a disease that is curable. 

 € To Dr. Keeley is due the honorable distinction of having first declared against the vice 



theory of drunkenness, and to substitute for old methods a humane and intelligent treatment 



which removed permanently the appetite for drink, and at the same time, by restoring the 

 s system to a sound condition, improved the general health of the patient." 



nervous syste 



The Keeley treatment cures this T , . . 



disease by restoring the nerves to a Leslie E. Keeley, M.D.. LL.D. 

 perfectly healthy state. It cures by removing the cause. The 

 result is that the patient is left in a normal and healthy condition, and 

 he has neither craving, desire, nor necessity for stimulants. 



ADDRESS THE INSTITUTE NEAREST YOU. 

 Hot Springs, Ark. Giand Rapids, Mich. Pittsburg, Pa. 



17-21 Sheldon, St. _ 424(5 Fifth Ave. 

 Minneapolis, Minn. 



Alcohol, 



Opium, 



Tobacco 



Produce each a disease 

 having definite pathol- 

 ogy. The disease yields 

 easily to the Double 

 Chloride of Gold Treat- 

 ment as administered at 

 the following Keeley 

 Institutes 



San Francisco, Cal. 

 1170 Market St. 

 Denver, Colo. 



18th & Curtis Sts. 

 West Haven. Conn. 

 Washington, D. C 



211 N. Capitol St. 

 Dwight, 111. 

 Marion, Ind. 



1903 S. Adams St. 

 Plainfield, Ind. 

 Crab Orchard, Ky, 

 New Orleans, La. 

 1628-38 Felicity St. 

 Portland, Me. 



151 Congress St. 

 Lexington, Mass. 

 St. Louis, Mo. 



2803 Locust St. 



Providence, R. I. 

 Park Av. & 10th St.S. 306 Washington, St. 

 Omaha, Neb. Cor 19th Columbia, S. C. 

 & Leavenworth Sts. 1109 Plain St. 



Carson City » Nev. Sioux Falls, S. D. 

 North Conway, N.H. Dallas, Tex. 

 White Plains, N. Y. Belleview PI. 



Buffalo, N. Y. Salt Lake City, Utah. 



799 Niagara St- 1st North and 

 Ogdensburg, N. Y. 

 Greensboro, N. C. 

 Fargo, N. D. 

 Columbus, 0. 



West Temple Sts. 

 Rutland, Vt. 

 Richmond, Va. 



403 N. 12th St. 



90 N. Fourth St. West Seattle. Wash. 

 Portland, Ore. Waukesha, Wis. 



Harrisburg, Pa. Toronto, Ont. 



Philadelphia, Pa. 786 Queen St. W. 



812 N. Broad St. 



" Non-Heredity of Inebriety," by Dr. Leslie E, Keeley, mailed upon application. 



* , W'<u' l ti«>«> «»^^(>■^,l«u< , ^■»«u<■».•"><>*».«nk.mu«k<>•«J»^<» , <.<'^.<'>.<•^rf*w , w«« r, ^<« 1, »■«'*><'' , •<' , 



Detailed information of this treatment, and proofs of its success, sent free upon application to any of the institutions named 



THROUGH THE CASCADES. 



Pendleton, Ore. 

 Editor Recreation : 



I went to the Cascades last season and 

 had a pleasant trip; visited Crescent, 

 O'Dell, Davis and Summit lakes. We se- 

 cured enough game to keep our larder sup- 

 plied and that was all we cared for during 

 the summer. We caught Dolly Var- 

 dens up to io>4 pounds in the headwa- 

 ters of the Des Chutes river, and silver 

 trout in the lakes up to 3 pounds. The lat- 

 ter are the most brilliantly beautiful trout 

 I ever cast a fly over, and are gamy to the 

 last gasp. The silver trout of Crescent 

 lake must be seen to be appreciated. Their 

 colors and markings are simply beyond de- 

 scription. The Eureka folding boat, pro- 

 cured through your kind offices, was a 

 source of continual pleasure to our party. 

 By this means the hiding places of the big 

 ones were sought out and battle offered 

 and accepted, time after time. 



The region is an ideal one for a summer 

 vacation. The lakes are clear, cool, placid, 

 dreamy, restful. There are plenty of mule 

 and black tail deer. Elk can be had by 

 moving up over the summit to the West 

 slope near the head of Lost creek. The 

 black tails came within 35 yards of our 

 camp, at Crescent lake, and attempted to 



lick at the rack where we were salting and 

 smoking a few trout. There is consider- 

 able camping here during the summer, and 

 the deer, near by, become foxy. 



We had the Eureka boat, Baby Wizard 

 5x7 camera, 30-30's and 32-40's, and 

 Bristol rods, and we emphatically approve 

 of them all. 



The Cascades are not nearly so wild as 

 the Bitter Roots, and are easy to traverse, 

 on the Eastern slope. There are, appar- 

 ently, more deer in the Cascades than in 

 the Bitter Roots, but not nearly so many 

 elk. I prefer the Bitter Roots for big 

 game. There are no sheep, cattle nor 

 horses grazing in that region, and when 

 you hear a thump and a twig snap you 

 simply brace yourself to shoot, for it means 

 business. 



I sent Dr. C. T. McClintock, of Detroit, 

 Mich., into the Bitter Roots last year in 

 charge of my old guide, L. C. Roberts, of 

 Weippe. The doctor had only 25 days to 

 be out, and of course could not go far on 

 that limit. However, he got a tremendous 

 7 point bull elk and all the birds he could 

 use. As for the fishing, he says it was the 

 only cause for dissatisfaction on the trip ;: 

 the fish being too large, too numerous and 1 , 

 too easy to catch. 



H. S. Garfield, M. D. 



