West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 9 Aug 1900, p. 3

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MILLS They cure palpitation, dizziness, smothering, faint and weak spells, shortness of breath, swelling of feet [and ankles, nervousness, sleepless~ 'ness, anaemia, hysteria, St. Vitus’ dance, partial paralysis, brain fag, female complaints, general debility, andlack of vitality. Price 50c.abox FLOUB,OATMEAL and FEED THE SAWMILL BRISTING AND SHOPPING DUNE on shortest notice and ntisfsohion' LUMBER, SHINGLES AND LA TH 3 away on hand. N., G. 8; J. MCKECHNIE. new: MARKS, DESIGNS, commons C. 3101:. sending 1 sketch and description ma 1y ascertain, free. whcche: an inventioa . :5ny p ontuble. (‘nmmunlcazmus sti-k :7 out! Oidost agency ftn‘sevmrfpz fluent: m Laurie; We have. a Washingtpaz 331M. hsuntsxakcn Lbrouxh Mann 3 to. 260317: mom notice in t a 01mm ‘Agggagaga, __. A .- k -- ‘_“I_ “\_-_A, .A These pills are a specific for al! diseases arising from disordered nerves, weak heart or watery blood. Its Local News Is Complete and market reports accurate on. For that reason' they see that none but'tb‘ {rah lave. go into Monsoon packages. , That in why "Monsoonf \hc perfect Tea. ma r 'd it the “mo pdlcas infetior tea. . Ii hf“: ufnin ml‘ad caddies 004113., 1 lb. an? 5 135., an sold three flu vouz's at 4°C., 5°C. and 600 v'o grocer does not keep it. tell him to writ? P ggfi‘i. {IAYTER 8! CO., xx and 13 Front St The Qhromole Contams TH; 7mm? Tu In THl‘ Wanna W‘nsmc For transient advertisements 8 came v line for the first xnsenion: 3 cents p “118.. . ii 2e each subseauem msenim-mmic Prmesfional cards, nut exceed: ng one km? 4.09 per yamm. Advertisements without specit'. recuon; m" be published till forbid and char ed a. yard Transzen. notk esâ€"~“ Last,“ cunt}. ‘ For lie.” etc-~50 cent$ for first insertion, 25 cc“ for each subsquem Insert. )n. ..I . .1 ' THE JOB : : DEPARTMENT 313383319110“ T" CHMMCL! will be sent to :1. address, free of postage, for 51.00 p: RATES . ._.' . year, payable in advanceâ€"$1.50 m; be charged If not-so paid. The date to which ever “be-edgier: is pmd is denoted by the number on :21 eddres label. So paper distentinued uxml 311 urea: up paid, except a: the Option of the proprietor. AU tdveniséxfienzs ordctcd by strangers must be pal bf in aduncc. Comm: rates for y: :ar!" advertisements furnished 0 application to the office. “All adverz'vc scan, to ensure insenlon in cunt" 52:; “should be bzo on; In in no: later than Tczsms -owrâ€" EVERY THURSDAY monumo 3111!; camzzcu Fxmmc muss, um :12; DURHAM, ONT. Bit litéfigififfl Bfifififllfii? ’the Tea «was, and fs advertised and 3013 b tine}! m tangy cg'f the bees: qqglitiesof {ndim and. eylpx} “ gamma " Tea ifopzcyed 39d? tho sz‘xg'ervfi‘sion‘ IN ITS NATIVE PURITY. mom THE Tn PLANT To THI.’ Tu cm- I“ "V" O O . , I: completely stocked wit} ‘PARTHENT all NEW TYPE, thus ai {ordinz facilities for turning out First-clay ar now prepared to do all kinds of custom work. M860 20 h A'fl TH E PERFECT TEA Each week an epitome of the world’s news, articles on th household and farm, and serials by the most papular authors. Eon-03 AX!) Psormnou. DURHA M M U f as érdércd by strangers must be pa} 15 PC 31.13sz Lt: 1 Him .lie. The sceptical tailors have jtriei for eighteen hundred years to find out one hoie in this seamless gar- ' ment, but they have not found it. The ‘most ingenious and eloquent infidel of this day, in the last line of his book, all of which denounces Christ, says, ,“All ages must proclaim that among 1 the sons of men there is none greater 'than Jesus.” 80 let this bird of the text be cleanâ€"its feet fragrant with i the dew that it pressed, its beak carry- ing sprig of thyme and frankincense, ’its feathers washed in summer show- lers. O thou spotless Son of God, im. press as with thy innocence! ' But Icome now to ape ak of this second bird of the text. We must {not let that fly away until we have ; examined it. The priest took; the sec- .' and bird. tied itto the limp-branch, ‘ There is nothing more suggestive §than a caged bird. 1n the down of :its breast you can see the glow of southern climes; in the Sparkle of its eye you can see the flash of distant seas; in its voice you can hear the song it learned in the wild wood. It is a child of the sky in captivity. Now the dead bird of my text, captured from the air, suggests the Lord Jesus, who came down from the realms of light and glory. He once stood. in the sunlight of heaven. He was the favourite of the land. 'He was the King’s son. Whenever a victory was gained, or a throne set up, He was the first to hear it. He could not walk incognito along the streets, for all heaven knew Him. For eternal ages He had dwelt amid the mighty populations of heaven. No holiday had ever dawn- ed on the city when He was absent. He was not like an earthly prince, oc- casionally issuing from a palace her-; alded by a troop of clanking horse-g guards. No; He was greeted every-j where as a brother, and all heaven; was perfectly at home with Him. 1 But one day there came word to the palace that an insignificant island was in rebellion, and was cutting itself to pieces with anarchy. I hear an angel say. “Let it perish. The King’s realm is vast enough without the island. Clhe tributes to the King are large enough without that. We can spare it.” “Not so,” said the prince, the King’s son; and I see Him push out one day, un- der the protest of agreat company. He starts straight for the rebellious island. He lands amid the execrations of the inhabitants, that grow in vio- lence until the malice of earth has smitten Him, and the spirits of the lost world put their black wings over His dying head, and shut the sun out. The Ha wk: and vultures swooped upon this dove of the text, until head, and breast. and feet ran bloodâ€"until, un- der the [locks and beaks of darkness, the poor thing perished. No wonder it I notice also, in my text, that the bird that was slain was a clean bird. The text demanded that it should be The raven was never sacrificed, nor: the cormorant, nor the vulture. It must be a clean bird, says the text; and it suggests the pure Jesus â€" the holy Jesus. Although He Spent His boy- hood in the worst village on earth, alL- though blasphemies were poured into His ear enough to have poisoned any one else, He stands before the world a perfect Christ. Herod was cruel, Henry VIII. was unclean, \Villiam III. was treacherous; but point out a fault of our King. Answer me, ye boys, who knew Him on the streets of Nazareth, Answer me, ye miscreants who saw was a bird that was taken and slain over an earthen vessel of running we... ter. It was a. child of the skies. It typified Him who came down from heaven in agony and blood to save our souls. Blessed be His glorious name for ever! The Oid Testament, to very many people, is a\ great slaughter-house. strewn with the blood, and the bones, and horns, and hoofs of butchered ani» mals. It offends their sight; it dis- gusts their taste; it actually nause- ates the stomach. But to the intelli- gent Christian the Old Testament is a magnificent corridor through which Jesus advances. As he appears at the other end. of the corridor we can only see the outlines of His character; coming nearer, we can descry the features. But when. at last, he steps upon the platform of the New Testament, amid the torches of evan- gelists and apostles, the orchestras of Heaven announce Him with a blast of minstrclsy that wakes up Bethlehem at midnight. A despatch from Washington says: -Rev. Dr. Talmage preached from the following text :-“And the priest shall command that one of the birds be killed in an earthen vessel over run- ning water. As for the living bird, he- shall take it, and the cedar-wood. and the scarlet, and the hyssop, and shall dip them and the living bird in the blood of the bird that was killed over the running water; and he shall sprinkle upon him that is to be cleans- ed fxom the leprosy seven times, and shall pronounce him clean, and shall let the living bird loose into the open field.” Leviticus xiv. 5-7. Rev. Dr. Talmage Speaks of the Biood of Christ. BIRDS FOR SACRAPICE. my Bethlehem manger; I bid for rum my hunger on the moungain; I bid for him my aching head: I bid for But by reason of am we are poorer than that African. We cannot buy our own deiiveranoe. The voices of death are bidding for us, and they bidusin,uud1he~y bid us down. But the Lord Jesus Christ comes and says, “I will buy that man; I bid for hxm free! Oh, I wish my people to {1911- derstand this: that when a man 'be- comes a Chrx'Stian he does not become a slave, but that he becomes a free man; that he has larger liberty af- ter he becomes a child of God than before he became a child of God. General Fisk eeys that he once stood at a slave-block where an old Chris- a'uotioueer said or him, "What bid do I heart for this man? He is a very good kind of a man; he is a mlmster." Somebody'said ‘twenty dollars’ he was very old and not worth much; Psomebody else ‘twenty-five’.â€"-'thirty’ -‘ thxrtyl-twe 'â€"“forty.’ The ‘ aged mimster began to tremble; he had ex- peCLed to be able to buy ms own freedom, and he had just seventy dol- lars, and expected with the seventy dollars to get free. As the bids ran up the old man trembled more and more. ‘For'ty’ -â€" 'forty-iive’ -â€" ‘fiftyfâ€" ‘flfty-five’ -- ‘sixty’ -- seventy.’ He was afraid they would 'sixty-fl‘ve.’ The old man crted out outbid ham. The men around were transfixed. Nobody dared bid;.aud the auctioneer struck hxm down to htmseilâ€"domrh-donrl f a man has become aChristian, he 18 no more afraid of Sinai. The thum- ders o( Sinai do not frighten him. You! have, on some August day, seen two thunderv-showers meet. One cloud from this mountain, and an- other cloud from that mountain, coming nearer and nearer toxether, and responding to each other, crash to crash, thunder to thunder, boom! boom! And then the clouds break carnage of the storm-battle has been emptied into it. So in this Bible I see two storms gather, one above Sinai, the other above Calvary, and they respond one to the otherâ€"flash to flash. thunder to thunder, booml fbooml Sinai thunders, "The soul that sinneth, it shall die;” Calvary responds, “Save them from going down into the pit, [or I have found a ransom." Sinai says, “Woe! woe!" Calvary answers, “Mercy! mercy!" and then the. clouda burst, and empty their treasures into one torrent, and it comes flowing to our feet, red with the carnage of our Lordâ€"in which if thy soul be plunged. like the bird is astate of slavery. A state or pardon is a state of emancipatlon. The hammer of God’s grace knocks the hopples from, the‘ feet, knocks the handcuffs from the wrist, Opens the door into a landscape all asghunmer with fountains and! abIoom' with gad- dens. It is freedom. quality that?” No; for I remember that in conversxon the Will ls chang- ed, and the man will not null that thch is wrong. Them 19 no stralght jacket in our religion. Astate of sin As this second bird of the text was plunged in the blood of the first bird. so we must be washed in the blood of. Christ, or go polluted for ever. it that the priest carried into the holy of holies, making intercession for the people? Blood! What was it that Jesus sweat in the garden of Gethsemane? Great drops of blood. What does the wine in the sacra- mental cup signify? Blood. What, makes the robes of the righteous in heaven so fair? They. are washed in the blood of the Lamb. What is it that cleanses all our pollution? The blood of Jesus Christ. that oleanseth from all sin. and then plunged it in the blood of the first bird. Ah! that is my soul, plunged for cleansing in the Saviour’s blood. There is not enough water in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans to wash away our smallest sin. Sin is such an outrage on God's universe that nothing but blood can atone for it. You know the life is in the blood, and as the life had been for- feited, nothing could buy it back but blood. What was it that was sprink- led on the door-posts when the deâ€" stroying angel went through the land: Blood! What was it that went streaming from the altar of an- cient sacrifice? Blood. What was 5'5... 5%.?“ "‘ ,. m‘fl'a-I! I: 13‘; v. .f. ~r. . a . ”FY .. aim Carleton Experlmoutcrs Hare Now Caught the English Palate. An interesting experiment in the curing of cheese is being carried out at Carp, Carleton county, under the direction of the Commissioner of Agriâ€" culture and Dairying. The English palate likes a Canadian cheese of a flavour similar to the English Ched- dar, which is cured at 62 degrees Fahrenheit. . At Carp a special room ,has been set apart in the factory, the lair of which is drawn into the room‘ ’through the drains, cooling it so that {the temperature of the room is .con- Etinuously under 65 degrees, and a gflavour is given to the cheese cured in it equal to the best English make. Last year similar experiments were carried on, and the unanimous Opinion of the Montreal Cheese Board was that cheese so cured was worth halt a cent per pound more than cheese from the very same vat cured under‘ordin- ary circumstances. In addition, the; shrinkage in weight of the cheese inf the cooler room is much less. 0n the 1 basis 0! last year’s output of cheese in 3 Canada the increased value represent- ' ed by the new method would be about $900,000, or to a small factory it would represent an annual increase of $40,- 060 after the initial expense of $250. The general adaption of the new system in Canada will certainly work a revolution in this important industry. (a 0h ye who have been washed in the blood of Christâ€"ye who have been loosed from the hyssop-branohâ€"start heavemlward. lIt may be to some of you a long fight. Temptations may dispute your way; storms of bereave- ment and trouble may strike your soul; but God will see you through. Build not on the earth. Set your are factions on things in heaven, not on things on earth. This is a perishing world. Its flowers fade. Its fountains dry up. It: promises cheat. Set your affections upon Christ and heaven. I rejoice, my dear brethren and sisters in Christ, that the flight, will after a while be ended. Not always beaten of the storm. Not always going on weary wings. There is a warm dove- cote of eternal rest, where we shall find a place of comfort, to the ever- lasting joy at our souls. Oh, they are going up all the timeâ€"going up from this churchâ€"going up from all the families and from all the churches of the landâ€"the weary doves seeking rest in a dovecot. Oh that in that good land we may all meet when out trials are over. I beseech you, by the God of your sister. for who has not a sister in heaven,â€" by the God of your sister, Ibeseech you to turn and live. We cannot go into their blessed presence, who are in glory, unless we have been cleansed in the same blood that washed their sins away. I know this is true of all who have gone in, that they were unloosened from the hyaeopâ€"branch. Then they went singing into glory. See that ye refuse not him that speaketh, for if they escaped not who refuse him that spake on earth. how much more shall not ye escape it we turn away from him that speaketh from heaven? so often to change our Christian course if we lived in a higher atmos- phere, nearer Christ, nearer the throne of God. those who are making dollars. If his whole object is. to get applause, he will be running against those who are seeking ap- plause. But if he rises higher than that, he will not be interrupted in his flight heavenward. \Vhy does that flock of birds, floating up against the blue sky so high that you can hard- ly see them, not change its course for The next thing I notice about this bird, when it was loosened, and this is the main idea, is, that it flew away. Which way did it go? When you let a bird loose from your grasp, which way does it fly? Up. What are wings for? To fly with. Ls there anything in the suggestion of the di- motion taken by that bird to indi- cate which way we ought to go? I wish. my friends, that we could live in a higher atmosphere. If a man’s whole life-object is to make dollars. he will be running against him my fainting heart; I ‘bid for him all my wounds.” A voice from the throne of God says, ‘It 18 enough! J esus has bought him}: Bought wmth a price. The pu'rchase complete. It is done. "'I'_.he great transaction’s done; I am my Lord’s, and he is mine, He drew me, and 1 followed on, Charmed to confess the voice divme.” Why is not a man free when he gets rid of his sins? The sins of the tongue gone; the sins of action gone; the sins of the mind gone. All the transgressions, thirty, forty, fifty, seventy years goneâ€"no more in the soul than the malaria that floated in the atmosphere :1 thousand years ago; for when my Lord Jesus pardons a man he pardons him, and. there is no half-way work about it. NEW MODE 0F CH EESE-MAKING. Little Willie-Say, pa, what does M.D.” mean on a doctor’s card? Paâ€"It means “ money down,” my ABOUT THE SIZE OF IT. London has alarger commerce than any other city in the world. Liver- pool comes next, and Hamburg prob- ably ranks third, although Antwerp closely approaches her. The docks of London cover a greater area than those of Liverpool, and some of them individually are, or were until recent- 'ly, larger than any on the Mersey. The Victoria dock, opened in 18.35, measures 3,000x1,050 feet. The Royal Albert con. necting with it and completed in 1880, is 6,500 feet long and 490 feet wide. The two with their locks, constitute a chain .al‘most three miles; long, across -v_ wvs VUU one of the greatnhai'ses‘hoe Bends in the lower Thames. . “Two and one-half inches is the preper length for a Chinese woman’s foot. Little girls. while undergoing the binding, are tortured for three years, the bandages being tightened every five days. It often causes para- lysis, and sometimes the toes and feet drop off. More than one in ten die during the operation. In some prov- inces rich and poor alike bind their feet. Its h‘orrors cannot be exagger- ated. Everything in China moves with tremendous slowness, particularly in- novations, and the reformers expect it will take a century or more to make the change complete. “ The greatest problem to be over- come is the aversion of Chinese men to marrying women whose feet are not squeezed into deformed objects hear- ing little or no resemblance to the natural human foot. A woman whose foot is anywhere near the size nature intended is an outcast so far as mat- rimony is concerned. The men thinki it a disgrace to marry her, and an unmarried women is a burden to her relatives and herself.” M last a movement is under way to abolish the hideous custom of bind- ing the feet of the Chinese women. It will probably be many years before mulch will be accomplished, for the idea is so entirely novel to the ante- diluvian Celestials, but gradually the custom may be broken down. Mrs. Lit- tie, an English woman. doing mission work in China, some time ago organ- ized “ The Tien Tsu Hai," or “Natural Feet Society,” and all the mission- aries are using their influence to bring about the reform. In speaking of the matter Mrs. Little says:- “ This custom of tootbinding dates back one thousand years, and until the women of China are released from this terrible bondage, endured only to please the men, {here is no hope for China. had last opened the safe. The clumsy ingenuity of the idea made it a hard one. to carry out, but, in less than a week an apparatus was designed which would contain the seven photographs. This was fast- ened inside the safe and made to com- municate with the lock. By aclev- er mechanical device, the key of. each servant, as it turned the lock, acted on the photograph and brought it in- to vievv. To carry out his wishes, the lock must be so constructed that upon the opening of the safe by any particular key the photograph of the opener should appear immediately in front of the glass, to remain there until an- other key was inserted. Thus it would be always possible to tell who had last opened the safe. The rajah'e order was for an ex~ ceedingly complicated lock. He wan-ted a safe fitted with eight dif- ferent keys, one for each of his ser- vants and one for himself. A piece of glass about eight inches square was to be let into the front of the safe. Whehher this unique look ans- wered its purpose is not yet a mat- ter of 'histoxy, but it was certainly a clever piece of mechanism. _, .' â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"v He wanted not simply to preserve his jewels, but to catch the thief. It, was the fashioning of a look that should carry out the rajah’s idea that taxed the ingenuity of the do signers of the great lock-making establishment. An Indian Rajah‘s Plan to Watch Izh- lumen Servants. _ A lock for which Messrs. Chubb. the famous English lockmaker, not long ago received an order, taxed the in- genuity of all their experts. It is a point of honor with the firm that no order, however uselessly ingenious. shall baffle the inventive faculty of, the designers or the technical skill of the workmen. W'hateverr a cus- tomer wants he must have. rajah. -After the manner of dusky POtentates. he suffered from the dual possession of dishonest servants and magnificent diamonds. The diamonds had been disappearing at an alarm- ing rate, and although only seven servants had access to the box con- taining them, it had been found im- possible to discover the culprit. Whether the rajah dismissed his re- broken regularity. In his extremity he thought of Mes- srs. Chubb. An ordinary person would have contented himself with procuring a safe, the lock of which would answer to no‘ key but his own, but the rajah desired something more. NATURAL FEET IN CHINA. LONDON’S GREAT DUCKS. A LOCK AS A DETECTIVE. Why, my dear young widow, if your first marriage was aha'ppy one you will never be happy until you are married again. If it was a failure you are entitled to another trial. Aunt Ann, I am surprised to hear you say you are in favor of second marriages. How can you justify them? “Every town has its head women, who judges and punishes offenders without asking the advice or consent of the man. I have asked for an ex- planation of this custom, and have always been told. 'Woman is the mo- ther of man, and he ought to listen to her.’ Some of these women are remarkable orators. l have often seen one of them standing in the midst of a crowd of peopleâ€"kings, chiefs, soldiers and womenâ€"all seated on the ground, and according profound at-‘ tention to the ‘queeda,’ as they call: her. The men of a town dare do‘ nothing to which the women seriously object, as they think women have more influence with God and the spirit world." "A man going off to his work in the morning is never sure he will find his wife on his return. It is a com- mon thing for her to run away, and she is considered a. very queer woman who has not at some time left her husband. When he goes visiting he usually takes her with him, to carry his chair, light his pipe and to make sure of having her when he gets back. After harvest the women go on danc- mg parties from town to town, and are entertained with feasting by their friends. “When a child is 9 to 10 months old small bells are tied to its person at its wrists, waist and ankles. These are intended to coax it to walk. The mother then takes it to a devil doc- tor, who makes a charm, which she ties about its waist. But often I have seen children without even these charms, and whenIasked for an ex- planation I was told that the child was supposed to be some one who had returned from the spirit world only to find articles to carry back: If its parents should dress it or give it any- thing it would not stay, but would take the things and be gone. So it is forbidden clothing and orna- ments, in hopes that it will change its mind and remain on earth. "When a girl is from 6 to 10 years of age she wears on her forearms brass rods, sometimes twisted in a spiral and sometimes bent into sep- arate rings. These are put on half way up to the elbowâ€"put on with a hammer to stay. They are worn night and day until the arms become sore. Then they may be taken off, for the scars will always be there to prove that the girl wore jewellry when she was young. If a woman grows up without these marks on her arms it is a lasting source of annoy- ance to her; for should her neighbors become vexed they cast it up to her‘ that her mother was too poor to putl jewelry on her child. This is a greatl insult, as they all aspire to be consid- ered wealthy. “Girls are usually betrothed at 7 years of age, and when about 10 she is taken to live with her betrothed's people, where she will be associated with him and learn "his fashion." She is supposed to study his wishes and live to please him. “A young mother is never permitted to have the care of her child, an older woman being called in. These nurses may be seen any morning sitting on one of their common chairs, which is nothing more than a stick of stove wood, out of doors, with a pepper board by their side. They will rub one finger in the pepper on the board then thrust it as far down the child's throat as possible, and massage and stretch the throat thoroughly until the poor little creature is almost strangled and throws up all that is in its stomach; The wretched infant is then laid down to sleep on its lit- tle mat on the floor by the fire. “When a child is born some mem- ber of the family is sent at once to the devil doctor to inquire who it is and what its name shall be. He goes up into the house top, taking with him a cow horn. This he blows to call the devil, and the devil is supposed to tell who it is that has come back into the world. For the people be- lieve that every new-born child is some deceased member of the family who has returned to life among them. It sometimes receives the same name it had before, and sometimes the name is changed. “Liberia is the paradise of mother- in-laws,” says Miss Agnes McAllister. the author of "A Lone \Voman in Africa," who has been for the past twelve years in charge of the Gar- raway Mission, Liberia. “A woman can command the services of her sons- in-law for certain duties, and it mat- ters not what their other obligations are, they must obey her. For that reason daughters are exceedingly de- sirable possessions among Liberians. AUNT ANN’S PHILOSOPHY. Mrs. Cattersomâ€"Why. I didn’t knew you were without a cook. A HEART-BREAKER. Mrs. Seesideâ€"Oh! I think divorces are simply awful! I never could bear to hear of another woman filling my placeâ€"never! Mrs. Breezyâ€"You couldn't ? Mrs. Seasideâ€"No! It would simply break my heart to think of any other woman writing to Harold for money! abâ€"‘Q- INFERRED. Mrs. Hattersonâ€"I don’t know what I shall do. My husband has fbpen so fiiscontented lately over his meals at It is not for us to pass an Opinion on kalagua, but from the fact that it appears to stimulate nutrition and in. crease the weight. it certainly merit: attention and enquiry. Kalagua is not poisonous. It stimfi- late: nutrition and increases the wgight. Lastly, the Belgian doctors, Ysenoo Papelin, Hendericks and Coremans, an. nounce that kalagua has, to some ex- tent at least, reahzed the expectations they had formed of it. Dr. Stubbert of the Loomia Sani- tarium, at Liberty, N. Y., and Dr, Wechtold, another American physi- cian, claim to have effected cares of patients, whose recovery was despair. ed of. The plant in question is called kaiagua, and grows in South America. M. Ch. Patin, a Belgian Consul, who is a botanist and an explorer, is said to have used kalagua with success in the treatment of bovine tuberculosis, and Dr. Alberto Reatreps has obtained excellent results from its use on his own person. Tuberculosis Also, It l~ Said. Shows Bone nclal Besuus From the Ilse of lung's. A new specific for tuberculosis and cancer has, it appears, just been dis- covered says a Paris deepatch. It in true that scarcely a week passes with- out some such discovery being re- ported. Nevertheless, as nothing ought to be rejected "a priori,” w. think it right to point out to our readers a medicine which its promotâ€" ers claim to be a cure for these two terrible diseases. Count-y of Grey. including a. valuable Wu‘or Power. Brick dwelling. and many do :01. building Ions. will be sold in one or more one. Also lot. No. 60, Con. 2. W. G. RnTownshlp of Bentinck. 100 acme. adjoining Town [not Durham. » Mortgages taken to} part purchase money Apply to J ARIES EDGE 0013.236. Edge Hill P.O. 'â€"â€"’ 12 P130 Local ' .l\'ews,pa:|r¢':r In Western Qmmrio. like fight-011mm: is the only were committing. Did you on]? consider the fascinating allurexnente o thk ail habit? Whentoo lateto avoid the :5 rible resplts, were your eyes opened to our pox-11? Dad on later on in mn- eodoontraotany BIVATE orBLOOD (he 30? Were you cured? Do you now on then see some-alarming symptom? Due gen man-y ”1’6?" resen con- dition You know. I FAT LIKE SpN." Itmrri are you eon. gtgptly min: in dread? ‘s We; 250,000 CURED “‘ Ham; you sin‘nod 1!ny iyngruyo t_ e £$§3m§3§3§ €E§i§i€nfi€c§f 'the éfibfi'cfiniéjéi yerqooxpmigting.__Did you‘oniy op deg failure with on on account of any weak- nesa can-ed y earliabusg or later 9::- causes? we you can rucfnod nth mercury This bookletwillpo toufito you the results of these crimes :11ng t gut ho_w our: NEW_METHOD TR i- -_-s IN THE TOWN OF DUNN, NEW CURE FOR CANCER. EDGE PROPERTY P03 B‘LH cammon every-day ills of humanity. The modern stand- ard Family Medi- cine: Cures the againa't nature horrible crime you On} manta o thioivil no avoid the 11' eyes opened to later on in man-- .VATE or BLOOD MA 9 “A 'An un-

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