* THE GREY REVEW CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,00€ REViEW OFTICB, GARAYRAXA TERM3; $ par year, IN ADVANCE CHAS RAAAGE Editor & Proprietor «* Paid ulg 1,000,008 RESERVE FUN 600,006 Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loass arranged without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. MANKY TO LOAN stlewost rates of Interest StandardBank of Canada W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. Reid, President. Manage A Soning duevin mithore ‘Dnilce srain DURHAM AGENCY. &A general Banking business iransacted Drafts a#ued and collections made on all points. Dopes ts received and interest allowed at current BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Vss VCs 3 IlLs! W PR LZ BflllSTEl. SOLICITOR IN SUFREME Gfl’Ul‘l' NOTARY PUBLIC,Commissioncer,etc., j FOR SALE The EDGE PROPBRTY. In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. G. R., Fowaship of Bentinck, 100 acres adjom» Ing Town plot Durham. Mortgage taken for yart purchase "‘County of Grey. Salos attended to promp mad at reasonable rat h":uu Durham Oat I I7® one door north of 8. Beot‘s Store Durhara Thursday Morning. S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thoma: *« Lerder, Registrar. John A. Munro Deputyâ€"Rogistrar. Office hours from 1( a m. to 4 p. m. JAMES LOCKIE, ALLAN MeFARLANE Handâ€"made Waggons In the old stand. All hand made shoes. Also Horse Shoecing Shop. W. L. McKENZIE, MONEY TO LOAN Fire Insurance secured. OFFIOE, oven Gnrant‘s Ston«. Lower Town, ‘BSUER of Mar-ringe Licenses, _ Auo | â€" troneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. | Residenceâ€"King St., Hanover, ; J. P. TELFORD Has opened out a firstâ€"class Head Office. Torontoâ€": ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th t Gromes ce Gmanqi wnes HUCH McKAY. Jobbing of all kinds promptly t allowed on savings bank depos.ts of $146 wards. Promptattention and everyfaeil rded customers liying at a distance. MISCELLANEOUS. ALLAN MoeFARLANE, SAVINGS BANK WOODWORK Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of DU RH A Mâ€" for sale cheap. A romppngete i in LEGAL J KELLX, Agens. THE TIGER OF THE OCEAN. STRENGTH AND FEROCITY OF THE HAMMERHEAD SHARK. Wis Power of Destruction Exhibited Best: in Froplcal Watersâ€"One That Towed a ; Whale and Another That Handled a Builâ€"When Me Turns on the Munterâ€" Trap in Which He Is Taken. " Sailor though you may hbave been for a score of years and never given cause for a man to call you coward, there comes a time when you feel the creeps and your knees grow weak," said a man who was a whaler once. " That time is when ‘you look over the rail of a ship rising and falling ona calm sea and find a big hammerhead shark looking up into your eyes. The white shark is voracious and merciless, but the tiger of the sea, as the hammer~ head is called, is worse than that. He is the most repulsive looking fish that swims. He will take up the trail of a ship like a biloodbound, and his perâ€" gistency is menacing and malignant. A white shark can be frightened or beaten off, even aiter seizing his prey, but the bammerbead shuts bis jaws like a bulldog and will be cut to pieces before he will let go. A man in the kvsau-r may dodge the rush of a white ?shark, but the tiger never misses his mark. He hasn‘t the speed of the othâ€" er. but it is his slower gait which makes him more certain of his vicâ€" tim. THEY AVOID EACH OTHER. | voiver, but he wouldn‘t let go. JDC! \ 3 3 3 ht | e fastened a towrope to the horns of }t m_seldum that a big shgrk is caug 'l l the bull and towed him to the beach in Northern waters, but in the lr(,pl-|ag(l the shark came with him and was cal seas a twelveâ€"footer, either white;lrill:i%d v:'vnl[hna? t?:delym:o;lxlxe g:rt)d:.t '11'3:: ‘ 3 s 2s as no § 3 ne or: hamtmer Bouth M AOnined ol .m,m end of a couple of days the bull was contempt. One day, as the ship Whil® | geaq, Wings was becalmed about fifty muu‘ " For a good many vears the Zoologâ€" off ine coast of Madagascar, a ham-lical Gardens at Bombay were seeking merlead shark of such size appesred | for a specimen hammerâ€"head. The price alongside that he was at first mken1ï¬iri;l(:‘(lin“:;:rle:b::\ilgifrnoxig}l':f gg(()lk:col;:? for a whale. He.rema.med with us for ; none lived beyond a few hours. It was over an hour, lying like a log on lbeiflmlly discovered that the laceration ‘:wau-r, and it was easy to gei his diâ€" | Of 5he throat by the hook bled lfhegn mensions, or at least his length. He| g:lroel?‘:-l- ; llhu(llsa nfl“"ï¬ of ;’f‘_‘e_ (;s ‘ue actly F ks feet long. and | n slan put the officia p | was exactly thirtyâ€"three fee 80¢)to a dodge, and a craft was fitted out about the size of a flourâ€"barrel. Li alu‘nd sent down the coast to Little | towâ€"line could have been made iast to George Island. When she had come to [ that figh he had the horseâ€"power to|anchor in a little bay men were sent | able h to drag us along. \ hile{“s}wre to cut and bring off ten long penedle LHR _ (C0 LCE ONE: slim poles. These were fastened looseâ€" i(he white shark is swifter and more|ly together after being spread four | supple, the haramerhead bas more uf,geel a;fmn. This gave thex}x a â€"raft ' xR j 3 4 ,. |forty feet wide by fifteen feet long. ;»\u.u x-mgus ap L.al.le\l ;xufnlmgh PP2â€" |Then ropes from ten to fifty feet long, |er. As an illustration of w hatv 8 ©@0 about twenty lengibs in all, were fastâ€" "do out of the water, 1 wili cite the ened to the raft and weighted just | cage of an Australian coasting :s(-huon-,(fl‘lglflt‘ntly tl;) slm‘k theim bel;)whlt: 'lh: | er cf 3 p a8 ‘entre rope had four feet of chain a |er called the \} an.lexyer.‘ I was in L‘h.e ts lower end and To this chain>was | whaling ship Paui Jones and we were wired » ‘ anchored off one of the Kangaroo isâ€" &A HUNK OPF .BEEF ‘lands on the east coast, to wood and ; NK IEF. | water. The Wanderer, which. was One morning they towed the light raft | northward bounil, cal‘r)xfdlo uncholr quite lw‘(; mx_llt-a:i off shore on hfl Smom(li]' sea \near us to make g some damage and pulled away to waich proceedings. received aloft in a squsall. The water It was even chances that a white shark | was alive with hungry hammerbeads, or ground shark or a small bhammerâ€" and the captain of the coaster, put | head might take the bait, but they | ;)‘I:; : \1)1;:01:(-’0;\ i|8hi‘llx-§ ?‘x'lgeki'wï¬!:lf ‘eae; | fla(lill:(;srm#‘hl(l;’ml.]d(}‘ ‘;)cel:'nw?vsai‘lvig: ;::;3 | 10 0 & d . d » L t i bour‘s hard work was hauled over the ' watching for two hours wl_]en there | rail. The figh seemed to be played out | was a sudden commotion. A tiger twenâ€" ::(ll;sdlkllleytlmlulettl h;mk.n, b‘ul 11119 sooxlller | hv-\il:‘rg{e fvetl lo:)g had llak(‘l; l1!he ‘bmtt. |did he feel the deck under him than ; Down it went at a gulp and he startâ€" ‘\he began business. The blows he ‘ed off, As soon as he felt the strain of | struck with his tail could have been‘-llgt' lr{afx he began to fight. <A white beard a mile away, and when he Shark would have rushed this way and sprang into the air and fell back there| ,',h:‘.' and sought to tear out the hook. | was a crash which told of splimeredi This fellow was not caught by a hook, | planks. In ten minutes that fish alâ€"| but he would not throw out the bait. most made a wreck of the schooner. | He sought to sever the chain, and when He smashed bulwarks, shi\_‘ered plunks:l it defied ‘hlm he rushed upward. at the un_dkbrulu(-l sli:pchmus ;15 l1]( they we{‘e | :-(llftwtlltnl:l mlledlg\ e'i‘;lmd lc]r:oir as 1fl 1(\‘11'1': sticks and chips, an« arnessâ€"cas a crank. ey bhad counted o \ waterâ€"butt, and the cook‘s gally went,ihiS behaviour to capture him. In five ‘ overboard as if sent by ‘minutes he was wound up in hbalf a " While the hammerhead shark may be caught all along the Atlantic coast, his true cruising grounds are in the tropical seas. To get among the Pig ones you must voyage up the Bay of Bengai or coast along the great barâ€" rier reef of Australia. You will find the white shark there, too, but the two species never run in the same school. I do not know that they quarâ€" re| when they meet, but certain it is that A POWDER EXPLOSION. * The carpenter managed to sever the tail with a broadaxe at last, and no more shark hooks were dropped over the side. Had that shark been free in the hold of the schooner 1 believe he would have started a dozen buttâ€" ends and sunk her at her anchor. " In his native element a big shark | has two sorts of powerâ€"the goâ€"abead and the reverse. Off the Java coast, on one of my whaling voyages, we killed a whale fixtyâ€"two feet long. In: bulk he seemed to be an island, ;mdi his weight was tons added to tons.: In a perfectly calm sea three boats: made fast to tow the whale down toi the ship. We had been straining our: backs for five minutes and bhadn‘t got the great bulk moving yet, when a hammerhead shark about twenty feet long dashed in and set his jaws into. the body just forward of the tail. As he got a firm hold he began pulling back and shaking his head, as you have seen a dog pull at a root when digging. As the flesh would not tear away, that shark kept reversing hig engines until he had turned the big body twice around in a circle, and addâ€" ed to the weight of the body was the drag of our three boats. To get rid of him we had to almost cut him into strips with our harpoons. As to the goâ€"ahead powers of a shark, perhaps there has never been a test which gave his actual horseâ€"power. At Sandalwood Island, off the ,coast of Java, “tze naâ€" tives caught a big bhammerhead who had pursued a bather too far and had been stranded. A rope was made fast behind his head and the free end fastâ€" ened to a raft which they constructâ€" ed out of driftwood. According to their statements the raft was about twenâ€" ty feet square, and they piled at least a ton of stones on it. It was a bulky, unwieldly thing, and yet when they got shark and raft clear of the shore, the harmessed captive satarted off at steambuat speed and seemed to make little of the drag in his wake. He was pasgsed by a catamaran, when fifteen miles at sea, and was still keeping up his stroke. "I have known a white shark _ to follow the ship twentyâ€"four hours, but never longer. By that time his bunâ€" ger drives him to go cruising around after food. . While the Paul Jones was working along the Java coast, a big hammerbead fell in with us, one day and stuck by us for eight days and a half without changing his position three feet. During that time we sailâ€" ed 630 miles. None of us could figure out how the shark got anything to eat in al} that time, and, as a matter of fact, I don‘t believe he got a morsel. The idea that ashark follows a ship for the food thrown overboard is a false one. I have seen the cook throw slops over when sbharks were following or skulking under the counter and A hammerhead estimated to be thirty | feet long followed the English ship | Red Lion 2,180 miles on a voyage tOo | Australia. Food was thrown to him’ twenty different times, but he would not touch it. The white shark of lhe! tropical seas displays more fierceness| than those of the Atlantic, but he is| a sheep compared to the hammerhead.’ In the year 1871 the brig Southern Cross, from Caloutta to London, was| wrecked on Nelson Island, at the northâ€"| ern end of the Indian Ocean. She nad three passengers and a crew of fourâ€"| teen men. They put off from the, wreck on a raft, but the wind blew | them out to sea instead of upon the| beach. The raft was surrounded by hammerbead sharks, and by sundown, when it was sighted, by a northâ€"bound craft, only one of the seventeen cast~| aways was left. The sharks could not | upset the raft, but they leaped upon | it sometimes two or three at once, and | knocked the people overboard. | Â¥ Pm n ‘In the year 1882, while we were landing some cattle from a coaster in Portland Bay, Australia, the sling broke and a large Devon bull fell into the water. This was about half a mile from the beach and in water fifteen feet deep. The bull started for shore, but a hammerhead shark seized him by the right hip almost at once. The shark was only about fourteen feet long, and the bull was strong enough to have pulled a tree up by the roots, and yet the shark began towing him out to sea. Boats were lowered and we went for the figh. We beat him with boatâ€" hooks. stabbed him with knives and fired six bullets intohim from a _reâ€" volver, but he wouldn‘t let go. Then we fastened a towrope to the horns of the bull and towed him to the beach and the shark came with bim and was killed with an axe on the sands. The flesh was not badly torn, but at the gnddof a couple of days the bull was ead. 1it defied him be rusbhed upward at the | raft and rolled ove© and over as if turnâ€" ed with a crank. They bad counted on ihis behaviour to capture him. In five |minutes he was wound up in half a ldnu‘n of the trailing ropes and had ! the limber poles bent in all sorts of |shapes, and they made fast and towâ€" |ed him off to the brig. No fish could have made a fiercer fight. It cook ‘f(;ur hours, hampered as he was, to get him into his tank, and his strength |and fierceness were matters of amazeâ€" ment. The fish was landed at Bombay | and transferred to a basin without inâ€" | jury, but he only lived three months. \A second and a third were captured ‘in the sime manner, but both died afâ€" ter a brief captivity. In the same Egardens was a white shark who had \spent ten years in bis tank and had ‘grown fat and lazy. | "In Atlantic waters the man lookâ€" i ing for sport may cast his shark hooks | overboard without fear of digaster, no matter what sort of shark takes hold, but in the tropical seas there is no \feeling of security. If a big hammerâ€" ! head bolts the book he will at first | be thrown into a flutter and make a‘ run for it. Five minutes later he will : get his mad up and demand revenge.| %There are scores of recorded instances | where he has made a rush and a leap | and crushed or nuset a small boat, and | |the tragedy at Batavia, happening| |only four years ago, was convincing | ‘ proof that he is a dangerous foe A! boat with five men in it hooked a big . himmerbead, and after running out| 100 feet of line the fish turned and rushed. As he neared the boat he leapâ€" ed clear of the water and landed amâ€" ong the men. In less than oneminute he had beaten out the bottom planks| of the boat with his tail, and of the| four men who met death two, at least, had broken legs or arms before the shark rolled out of the wreck and went his way." * " For a good many years the Zoologâ€" ical Gardens at Bombay were seekipg for a specimen hammerâ€"head. The price offered was liberal enough, and scores of them were caught with hooks, but none lived beyond a few hours. It was finally discovered that the laceration of the throat by the hook bled them to death. Then a native of one of the Caroline Islands put the officials up to a dodge, and a craft was fitted out and sent down the coast to Little George Island. When she had come to anchor in a little bay men were sent ashore to cut and bring off ten long slim poles. These were fastened looseâ€" Get out! commanded hber father. Don‘t ever let me see you here again. Very well, replied the confident young man. Your daugbter can tell you the nights I am to call, and you can arrange to be out until I leave. THEY WOULD NOT MOVE. OoUT OF HIS SIGHT. TORONTO | ~Ushered into the kitchen, I found anl [old and fineâ€"looking man seated by the| \fire, smoking a long churchwarden pipe. | â€"*" So you‘ve come, have you?" he said ; to me. " Nowt like bein‘ in good time. \ There‘ll ba a snack 0‘ something when | you‘ve done." \| | _ **You have done nobly by the disâ€" | triet, Mr. W.,~ Isaid, grasping the old man by the hand. He returned my |hearty squeeze, but seemed surprised. | _"Naw, naw," he said. "I made the | population here by my mills, so I mun | do my duty by them.". Church and Smeked His Pipe in the kitchen. k In England the people of the north are much more simple and democratio in their ways, as a rule, than those of the south, who are more affected by London manners. In his book " Lancaâ€" shire Life of Bishop Fraser," Archdeaâ€" con Diggle gives an interesting picture of a northâ€"country giver. It chanced that soon after Bishop Fraser came into his diocese, he bhad to consecrate one of the finest churches in South Lancaghire. It had been built on the benefaction of a manufacturer, at a cost of a hundred thousand dolâ€" lars. When the bishop returned from the consecration he was lost in wonâ€" der at Lancashire ways; and he thus told his story to the archdeacon : I got out at B. station and after a walk of twenty minutes came in sight of the church a mile away. It impressâ€" ed me with its nobility. I was on my way to the house of Mr. W., the man who had built the cburch, and I expectâ€" ed to find a fine mansion. "Can you teli me where Mr. W. lives ?" 1 asked a pedestrian. *‘Can you tell me where Mr. W. lives â€"the genileman who built _ this church ¢" & § " Oh, aye," he answered, ‘"in yon cotâ€" tage against yon bank," Thinking there was some mistake, I wert on, and presently overtook a girl in her Sunday attire. To make it plain whom I meant, I said to her: _ _ " That‘s his house," she said, pointâ€" ing to the same cottage. * I‘m going to the consecration." $ Still I was sure there must be an error, but made my way to the door of the cottage. An old woman, simply dressed, answered my summons, I darâ€" ed not ask if Mr. W. was in, and reâ€" peated my question : ols ("TEa_nâ€")"l)u‘ tell me where Mr. W. is, who built this church ?" hi " Oh, you‘re the bishop, are you?" she said. " He‘s hereâ€"he‘s been exâ€" pecting on you. You‘ll find him in the kitcher." (Sh It was all a very simple matter to this old manufacturer, who still smokâ€" ed his pipe by his kitchen fire, and so it seemed to his people as well. The chief topic of conversation at Cettinje, Montenegro, is the extraorâ€" dinary adventure which a woman from a village a few miles distant has just passed through, and which reads more like a page from a "penny drâ€"adiul" thin a record of unvarnished fact. The heroine of the story went to Cettinje recently for the purpose of selling in the public market a bull of which she was the owner. The transacâ€" tion satisfactorily accomplished, she set off to return to her native: village, when she was accosted by a man, who represented that he could show hber a much nearer way home than she proposed to take. Believingz in his sincerity and bonâ€" esty, she consented to be conducted by him, and they ieft the town. The hbad gome but a short distance, when their road led them to the edge of a deep precipice, and here the man halted and. confronting his companion, demanded the money which she had received in paym>»nt for the bulil. Seeing that she was in his power she banded over the money and the misâ€" creant then ordered hbher to give up everything else of any value on ber person. _ _ uin The frightened woman complied, and begged to ve allowed to continue her journey without further molestaâ€" tion, but disregarding her prayers the man produced a jong knife, and pointâ€" inz to the precipice, said, "Now you must take your departure from this world. If. I allow you to live you will denounce me. If you don‘t jump over I must throw you over. The woman begged and prayed to no purpose, and was about to give bherseif up for lost, when the mans attention was momentarily attracted by his turning to look at some object on the ground. Like a fiash the woman seized her opportunity, and springing on her assailant, she threw bim off his balance and launched him over space She then returned to Cettinje and told the whole story to the authoriâ€" ties who sent some men to the scene of the adventure. At the foot of the precipice they found the mangled reâ€" mains of the wouldâ€"beâ€"assassin and in his pocket the money of the brave woman. The Prince of Montenegro is said to have been so pleased with the woâ€" man‘s courage that he granted ber a small pension for life. ANTIâ€"EPIDEMIC CLUB. A club is now being formed in Paris, the members of which swear never to shake hands with any one unless they are wearing â€"gloves. Many members of the aristocracy have shown their willingness to support the organizaâ€" tion, and a fine is to be imposed upon all members who are caught shaking hands without gloves. The formation of this curious clubis undoubtedly the outcome of a recent discussion in a French medical journal. This paper endeavored to show that disease has occasionally been contracted by shakâ€" ing hands without gloves. A RIGH MAN‘Sâ€"SIMPLICITY. the edge of the precipice into A BRAVE WOMAN. l â€"â€"â€"silib () mm Aaving Completed our New Factory we are now prepared to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, | Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" | ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. _ Our Btook of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all ordert | can be filled. We cal} the speola‘ attent!i maste‘s and subscribers to the 1 nopsic of &o newrpaper|aws : _ 1. If any person orders his peper discon tinued, he must pay all arreages, or the publisher may oon:&: to sond it until pay mentis made, and otthe whole aw oun! whethor it be taken from the offiee or not There ean be no legal discontimuance until paymentismade. %. Asy person who takes a paper trom the post office, whether direoted to hbit name or aunother, or whether he has sub: scribed or not is rasponsible for the pay. 8. If a subscriber orders his paper to be stopped at a certain time, and the published continues to send, the subscriberis bound to pay for it if he takes it out of the pes! office. This proceeds upon he ground hat a man must pay for what he uses. Sash and Door Factory. Lumber, Bhingles and Lath always In Stock. TXE EES DF THE WORLD Are Fixed Upon South Ameriâ€" can Nervine. WaEN EVERT OTHER HELPR HS FALE] M CORB { £ y S j / m : I § a Ga, * . ‘ ,1' *â€A & ¢ / /‘_: : lT‘hk.." * ad ;n’;' ’u\‘;. o x “'lu’l“\ In the matter of Pd health temporâ€" Ising measures, while possibly succersâ€" ful for the moment, can never be lastâ€" ing. Those in poor health soon know whether the remedy they are using is simply a pessing incident in their exâ€" A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. that Renders Failure Impossible. The eyes of the world are literally Axed on South American Nervine. They are not viewing it as a nineâ€"days‘ wonâ€" der, but critical and experienced men have been studying this medicine for ears, with the one resultâ€"they have found that its claim of perfect ouraâ€" {ive qualities eannot be gainsald. perience, brurlug them up for the day, or something that is getting at the seat of the disease and is surely and permanently restoring. | P Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. The great disooverer of this medicine was possessed of the knowledge that the seat of all disease is the nerve contres, situated at the base of the brain. â€"In this belief he had the best scientists and medical men of the world ecocupying exactly the same preâ€" mises Indeed, the ordinary layâ€" man w&cfl this prinoiple long ago. ervone knows that let diserse or injury affect this part of the human esystem and death is almost certain. Injure the spinal cord, which is the medium o° these nerve cenâ€" tres, and paralysh is sure to follow. ; Here is the Artt =»‘~~tnle ‘The troms Pabscl Newspaper 1 Fex CA AM N. G. &J. McKECHNIE af by Iluillubobnndlnhhou.\ufl oppdbthoD-ru-Ban. Of the Best Quality Cheapes Firstâ€"Class Hearse. UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to. JAXE KRES8S, ]bl. with medical treatment earue ally, and with nearly all medicines, is | that they aim s#imply to treat the orgam that may be diseased. South Americar Nervine passes by the crgans, and im« mediately applies its curative powere to the nerve centrese, from which the |‘ organs of the body receive their supply of nerve fiuid. The nerve centre® healed, and of necessity the orgar which has shown the outward evide=ce enly of derangement is healed. â€" Indiâ€" gertion, â€" nervousness, impoverished biood, liver complaint, all owe their origin to a derangement of the nerve centres. Thousands bear testimony that they have been cured of these troubles, even when they have become so desperate as to bafe the skill 0€ the most eminent physicians, because Bouth American Nervine has gone to headquarters and cured there. The eyes of the world have not beem disappointed in the inquiry into the suo cess of South American Nervime Peoâ€" ple marvel. it is true, at its wonderful medical qualities, but they know beâ€" yond all question that it does everyâ€" thing that is claimed for ft_ It stands @lone as the onre great certain curin remedy of the nineteenth century. Wh.z whould anyone suffer distrees and aic ness while this remeivy is mm otioali® at their Furniture remeo‘y ts presotically KRESS n s »f the busipess 1 the amateur poul »a toâ€"say : Do â€"not q s 4beqt ‘to make a, i1 A lot of people try business witho perience, and the sre. They read ethers ard imagin without consideri that they are n venture. So ma on a ®scale that gidiculous. . We | quit jobs and star mess with hardl «dand teo pay for. iens, gxBDecting t lirsl year; lor i1 tain at the "end mmone those whq mothing in keba The best wa business on a with only a mbout chicken mll the good of without c 11, at the satisfied to amoney on ready for : well as to for the ns I, w pretly % The secon produce a able you ge menbe what cor make a hens.... PO {:u aesire (« ird, get of It. If you 6 can soon, by exhivicing y« tion on then good prices, markel. k that you c fancy prices, putation for vertise for a you can ex ruluyman v is fowls at who has spen try business, vertising. Bordeaux mix ally used in gar ing that its p comes all impo simpler ferrocy, s largely suj knife blase. J sium comes as & report of th punce of ferroc; soived in one « sufficient for : bordeaux mixi deaux it is ust milk of lime i sulphate soluti tain when enou after pouring a to the suiphate the ferrocyanid red color ap strikes, more â€" tinue adding t reddish color | the ferrocyani surplus lime 1 rocyanide of po chidren B prized so hig the grain : alone or in other. These uses. First, second, wher tar and (hrest fed ; whil bedding or ing purpo Props to soâ€" rye and wi For this reushed b; i compara clean th W hen Better three t starveling run Don‘t be con that ferming is fessions, and t should follow. there is someth they‘ll siay wi farmer is wo Farmer Slow sawing wood a the first part 0| to begin the To read abo good, to see i try and do it i There are shurches in t 2,000 member »mmend Xil, espe A GOOD TJ ng LV On the x1 wWwHY T H J