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Grey Review, 5 Feb 1880, p. 4

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An \ se# shiek is ite natura * Nok must not be too alik '.‘;.. mored, as it is by a e Es <@". ~ â€"eannot be ; it will (From the Owen Sound Advertiser.) There is reason to believe that before very long the power of imposing market fees on farmers‘ produce will be abolished. In an agricultar®# country like this, where the farmers control fiye out of every six votes polled, it will be very strange, now that they are beginning to realize their own strength, if they do not compel the Governâ€" ment to pass an Act doing away with market fees. (A step has ~alveady been taken in this direction by. â€" the Dominion Grange,â€" Legislatare to abolish these fees. We alsol wbserce that one of the Members of ~the House has introduced a Bill having the same object in view. . Many places have voluntarily abolishes these fees already, and the feeling in favor of free markets is fast spreading, not only among the farme: but among the residents of towns and cities. The people of these places are beâ€" ginning to find ont, and that to their Sorâ€" row, that the fewer restrictions they place on farmers who favor them with their trade the better it will be for themseives. â€" The farmers of the present day are not by . any means so dependent on their local merchant and tradesmen as they were‘a fow years Aboliticn of Market Fees. Warktxaâ€"stroks.â€"A walkingâ€"stick has always been considered a useful aud graceâ€" jul present, likely to be of pleasant service, and long possessed. Some are inclined to thiuk that the pilgrim‘s staff, the bishop‘s eromer, the drumâ€"major‘s gorgeous mace, aund the usher‘s wand, lmive a common oriâ€" gin with the walkingâ€"stick : ut least we know that change o&habit, and that most unfzecountable change of f{:shion, has in our time worked some curious results, the various materials called into use are alone sufficient to excits surprise. Walkingâ€" stick@ hiftve been mado of tortofseshell, the beackbone or vertebre of the shark, the tuék of the rhinoceros, and woods of every eonceivable varicty, and lately one was oxâ€" hibited made entirely of champagne eorks, with a stout wire passed through them. The linudles have many more sources to boast, as there are mamy materials not large euough to make whols sticks, such for instance as the teeth of the giraffe, The walrus, the elepbant, and, in fact, most hmhpthnddlmmml-ltorm purpose. â€" It is a remarka.ble fact that woâ€" meo sre seldom employed at stick making, und tholy- bfivflo. there hhc:‘nne_h know skilb tariâ€" ous w»t'::-u that m employâ€" ous processes that men are chiefly employâ€"=|~ ‘There is perhaps n ed ; it is also singular that stsam power is | as Catarrh or cold not in use to any large extent ; machinery | both in winter .and the Farmers‘ Parliament,â€"for large quanti. | pain in the limbs ke Near CWester, N. Y., is a morass which some years since was & miserable awamp, but which is now being gradually reclaimâ€" ed under a system of drainage. . , T wenty years ago, so the New York Times asserts,; a farmer conceired the notion of draining a portion and pmaking it tillable soil. He took sixty acres and ditebed it, and when it was founl that the draining left as & soil the finest of black muck, the price advancâ€" ed from $4 to $19â€"per acre. . The great }vdle of the land is owing to its adaptabilâ€" ity to onions. The price continued to rise until as high as $1000 per acre has been paid for the reclainied lands. _A erop of 800 bsh. to the acre is not nnecmmon,and the Greyeourt onion mendows aroâ€" celel rated throughout the country. About 300 aeres are uwnder cultivation this year, and the suceess ef the onion business in the meadâ€" | ‘ows basled to the reclaiming of similar: lands in other parts of the country, ‘ntil it is believed that the onion erop of Orange econnty will amount to 500,000 bushels this year.. The averace price received by onion raigors is $1 per buskel. ‘The averaga yield is about 300 bushels per acre. _ The crop is almost invariably sold for cash as~ sooan as it is ready for market, and as it matures early in the season the farmer is allowed abundant time to keep hisland in condition necessary to its productiveness. This great success in draining wet lands ought to lead ‘to more efforts tbrouglxont‘ the country to reclaim rich lands now soakâ€" ing through the ignorance and neglect of rmers. â€" Every little while a body of men disgusted with the small returns from Eastern farming, will migrate West/wheore land is cheap, We are inclined to think that $1 per acre is cheap enough, especilly when lying near a market, and a very little added expense, mostly at the comâ€" mand of a man who can dig ditches, will; when jadiciously applied, raise the value of the land seven hundredper cént. ~And we would like here to make a practical sagâ€" gestion to any man who finds difficalty in getting the water to run off from a hillâ€" bounded swamp. â€" It is a fact, occasionally utilized by plumbers, that if a pipe be driven into a gravel soil, the point perhaps perforated with boles to keep out the stones, water can be poured into the pipe at pleasâ€" ure, and it will aKrun off. This makes a vory fine drain for waste water. The same idea can be ‘utilized in certain swamps. Take a clay swamp in a sunken valle} with no nntnfivmr-shd, and dig & cistern, say six féet in diameter and (two or three feet deep. In the bottom of this sink several tubes, using ordinary 14 inch gns pipe. â€" Under‘ths elay there is usually sand or gravel, and the water from the gisterns will flow through these pipes into the earth. A Maine farmer, some years since, built seceral cisterns in a swamp as described, and by digging drains to them in various directions suceeeded in leading all the standing water into the earth, and converting a Swampâ€"hole into a productive farm. Maple sugar was made in Carrick on Jaunary 7th and 8th. ‘Ten wiiners were killed and nine injured by a colliery explosion in Saxony. By the burning of a steamboat at the mouth of Red River, near New Orleans, on Monday, eight lives were lost. Counterfeit Dommion Bavk fours old issue, Ontarie bank tens, and commercial bank fives, old issue, are in circulation, The Turkish Minister for Fordign Affairs and Sir Austin Layard have signed a convenâ€" tion for the suppression of tne slave trade in Turkey. The Prince of Wales will visit St. Petersâ€" burgh to take part in celebrating the twentyâ€" fifth anniversary of the Czar‘s accession to the throne. 5 4 The Porte i3 to be called to account" for seizing the plant of an English newspaper at Constantinople, which had been suspended by its orders, A severe earthquake shock was fels in Cuba on Thursday night, and it is supposed that there has been a heavy earthquake someâ€" where in Central America. ‘The contract for building the Railway and traflic bridge across the Red River at Winniâ€" pex was let last Tuesday night to the Toronto Bridge Company for $164,090. It is interesting to notiee thint out of 789 Roman Catholic teachers in the Province, only 383 of them are employed in the R. C. Separate Schools, whilst 456 teach in th%_p'ublic_schogh. k ‘The Maine "o&ble has come to a elose, at Rast for the présent. On Wednesday the Fusionist Legislature met and adâ€" journed until August next, after which the majority of the Fusionist reprosentatives returned to their homes. On the moruing of the S1st. ult. Mrs. Becket, 8rd con. Reach, went oft to milk her cows, leaving three young chidren in the house. On returning she found the youngest, a boy of two years, standing by the side of the bed with the elothes entirely burned off him. He died the same evenâ€" inge It has been ascertained by careful analâ€" ysis that rain which falls in towns often becomes charged with injurious properties, and can only in rural districts be regarded as thoroughly safe drinking water., MISCELLANEOUS. le 44@ ++ Manufactarers of and Dealers in _ â€" LUMBER, _._ LATH,| OATMEAL, SHINGLES, . _ FLOUR, &:'QHOPSTUFF. Bil Stuf CGut to Order, Dry Goods, Millinery Durhamâ€"Third Tu;sdny in each month. PÂ¥icevilloâ€"Monday before 'I‘)m‘{snm. 3. 1 d ds steit itc nc n B +3 > 38 H:moverâ€"â€"-MoudayJ before Durham. Mount Forestâ€"Third Wednesday in each month. Guelphâ€"First Wednesday in each month. Harristonâ€"Friday before the Guelph Fair. Draytonâ€"Saturday before Guelph. Eloraâ€"The day before Guelph. Douglasâ€"Monday before Elora Fair. Hamiltonâ€"Cyrstal Palace Grounds, the day after Guelph. Berlinâ€"First Thursday in cach month Bramptonâ€"First Thursday in each month. Listowelâ€"First Friday in each month. Fergusâ€"Thursday following Mount Forest. Rosemontâ€"Fifteenth of February, April, June, August, October and December. Primroseâ€"Wednesday preceding _ the Qrangeville Fair. Orangevilleâ€"The 2nd Thursday in vach month. Flesherionâ€"Monday before Orangeville. Dundalkâ€"Wuesday before 9rm:\geville. Mi AHEVEIUIC® Fleshersonâ€"Monday before Orangeville. Dundalkâ€"Wuesday before Orangeville. Shelbnnoâ€"-"ednesdxwkwe OTngeville. Muarsvilloâ€"Second Wednesday *in each month. Walkertonâ€"The last Wednesday in each month. Mildmay â€" Last â€" Wednesday of each month. * _li)URAHAMW IEE.ECIORY Sabbath services «t 11 a. m. and 7 p School at 2 p. m. Rev. H. B. Wray, 1 Church Wardens, H. J. Middaugh an Divine Service c\m? Sabbath at 11 &. m. and 6:30 p.m. Sabbath School at 2:30 p. m. Prayer meeting overy Wednesday evening at 7:30. Bible Class overy Thursday evening at 7:30. Rev. Win. Park, pastor. Services cvorr Sabba Sabbath School at 230 Thursday evening wh every Monday evening R. Godtrey. Sunday Servicesâ€"preach School at 230 p.m.; Pro evening Servicesâ€"Monday prayer meeting t 8 p. im iflluc cluss at 8 p. m. Th §,G. REGISTRY OFFICE, Thomas Lauder, Registrar; John A. Munro, Deâ€" putyâ€"Rogistrar, ()tnco’i.uuu from 10 s. m. to 4 pan. D TE T T ECA P se i poricclocicnnieh Town Hallâ€"op« 9 o‘clock." Shares Office hours from 8 @. m. to 7 p. m. ATCM. 267 Kenzie, Postmaster. DURHAM LODGE No. $06 OF A. F. & A. M., Night of meeting, Tnasdn{on or before full moon of each month. Vi.qmn{{ rothrén welcome. A. Vollet W. M. H. W. Moukler, Secrotary. Robertson, Librarian Night of mootiufievvr;'â€"!\v{;mday «t 7:30 o‘clock, in the Odd Feliows‘ Hall. \'mtimf brethren welcome, T. A. Hurris, N.G. W.13. Vollet, Bee, Night of meeting, Thursday on 0 moon in each month. /T. Carson, See AETV Malslarl 2 2t prey er pieting at 8p.m r Depart, 7:30 & m., 1135 p. M, Arrive, 10:30 a. m., 300 p. m., South ‘Depart 7:15 a. m., 1135 a. m., 5:10 p. mM« > Arrive 11:10 am» 425 p. m., $:20 p. m« North. Depart, l1:30 a.m., 445 p m. Arrive, L:15 a. m., 5:20 p. m. West. Depart â€"lixoam,.. Arrive 11:00 a. m. owEX soUXD. Depart 6:30 a. m., 12:00 noon, Arévo 4:00 p.m., 10:15 p. m, ‘TRESWATER * Depart 6:00 a. m., Arrive 4:30 p. m., ‘ Fortime at intermediate stationssee Time Tables ‘ EDMUND WRAGGE, On and after MONDAY, 5th May, 1879, trains will run as follows:â€" s ToRONTO (UNION STATION, NO ARMISTICHE With the Circular Saw against all kinds of Saw Logs during 1878. Custom Sawing of Lumber AND SHINGLES, _ ~ done at once, and choay, t sult the times. J. W. CRAWFORD, Rockville Mills, Durham P. 0. FHoentinek Feb. 141878 . _ # Â¥1 t y B2 | BBic it sn it nliisiit.2.i. id 96 +ob Saddler, TANMOP) | > m m ns ie ae op x cus oo i * sn *A _A Y aypâ€" o%n iesponmili® . % ies Adr»m P *% Each c ab psperimy be addressed separately, u0C neeiengntprem: yemgcra " a;.) may be tot any Post Officé, . â€"___. _ . SHINGLES, LATH AND LUMBER MoXTHLY CATTLE FAIRS. Toronto. April 20th, 1879 CHANGE OF Custom BTEPHEN LODGE .No. 169 L 0. 0 THOMAS SMITH, on hand and sold at down hill prices. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH MECHANICS® INSTITUTE DURHAM L. 0. L. No. 632 3 l TRINITY CHURCH BAPTIST CHURCH open every Fri(lé.y evening from 7 to yes $1, annual fee @1. Aloxander r Sabbath at 10:30 a. m. and 6:30 p.m, wt 2230 )‘) m. _ Prayer mecting every ing wt o‘clock, and Bible Cluss evening at8 o‘clock. Pastor Rev. ETHODIST CHURCH PosT OFFICK â€"preaching at 11 a, m.; Babbath .m.; Proacning at 7 p. 10. . Week ~Monday even'\n(fi; young peoples‘ at 8 p. m.; Wednesday evening, ). m. Thursday evening, regular «t 117 m. m. and 7 p.m. Sunday Rev. H. B. Wray, B. A., pastor H. J. Middaugh and Elias Edge. ORANGEVILLE Sawing attended to during Winter , ~War! to 7 p. m. . Arch. Mc on or before u @eneral Manager m.; Sabbath Go to KELSEY‘S Gallery Een SCCNROC In the best style for low {vrices. All Photographs will be Burnished, and will be found the best ever made in this section. Wha CGallery will always be attended. 10 cent Pictures KELSEY Also MAKES PHOTOGRAPHS Uppor Town, Durham, Duxh%m. Jan.13th, 1 l The Datoy WiTrxsss is niailod to all its subscribâ€" ers in Amcrica atdess than a cent a day. It is the | BEST CENXT NEWSPAPEK IN THE WORLD, | giving all the latest news by telegraph, editorials | on the most imgplt-.ut questions, a comprehensive correspondencé column, a valuable department | devoted to the cortemporary press, home and reâ€" | ligious rondhm,nweeklg summary of the new books and maguziucs-in fact, each number is the world‘s hjatory for a duy. | _ Price, including postage, $3.00 a yonr. |_ ‘The Werkuy Wirxzss bears the same relation JOHN ROBERTSON‘ TAILOR AND CLOTHIER, Residenceâ€"Opposite Spring and Summer Fashions regulai) received. The Gallery will always And other fittings V(or Pictl;m always on hand. NORMAN KELSEY, ppor Town,Durham, Opposite the Review Oflice muinies TemThh 1880 thâ€"78 P k o o8 Oe NCO Th it l0 remeay e wl Acvaadt The Werguy Wiryzss bears the same relation to the week as the daily does to the day. In this paper the news is gummarized and condensed to the smallest spaco, that everything may have & place. Its great popularity is shown by its 3 CLIRCULATION OF 30,500 COPIES Amonrst the bost classes of the community. This immense circulation jnstifies its publishers in placâ€" ing the price at @1.10 a yoar, and when the number of subscribers reaches 37,000, which seems likely 3!:(11 year, the price will be reduced to the mn& ollar. Price, $1.10 a your, y o |! ie Nmd h ce‘ o omny mm dpeic en se exprossed of the Wiryien by those who have tried it is that of Donald Grant,a subs criber from Portuge La Prairio, Manitobs, who writes : "The Wirnkss is such a nscessity that to do without it is almost an impossibility TT . UNEED use onb aeeg s cacs ces cta d o NPDCCCIUUT® The NomtHERN MrssENGER is on cightâ€"paged semiâ€"monthly illustrated Impm'. which costs but 30c a year to single subscribers, and nwuch less to elubs. It is the pioneer of the WrrNrzss publica tions and goes everywhere. . We roceive yB HUNDREDS OF EVIDENCES ""I yeur of the lmll))ort:mt work it 1s doing in the Sunday school and by the firoside, Owing to its immense circulation of over 51,000 copies, we have been enabled to make groat improvements in is appearance, evon at its presont price, It has reâ€" contly been improved in npperrance by the addiâ€" tion of a neat border‘ which will make it much betâ€" ter liked than ever before, not only being & valuaâ€" ble paper but a beautiful one. There is also an edâ€" ition of this paper devoted to sUNDAY SCHOOLS. Its club rates ao as follows : 10 copies to the one address, $2,50 ; 25 onHlozA to the one address, $6 ; 50 enpies to the one address, $11,50 ; 100 copies to one wddress, $22, Sumple copies of these papers sont free on appliâ€" eation, j k JOHN. DOUGALL & SON, Posuisg®Rs, MoNTREAL, For the Review, Durbam, Feb. 14, 1878. CHEAPEST AND BEST Cutting done to Order. CREAT IMPROVEMENTS IN 18630. TX BI3T! THE LARCE3T] THE CHEAP:ST 9 IN NORTH AMERICA. Â¥s NEW PRESSES â€"NBY TYPEâ€"INCRELSED SFEED 1N PUBLICATION. WEEKLY~CLOBE tained tion as Close Titt The increasing newessity for great variety of readinz matte: in each week‘s issue, so as to inâ€" clade the news from al! sections of the Dominion and meet the varied tastes of its numerous readers, has rendered expedient the enlargement of Tk Werniy GuoBr much beyorid even its xre-ent large dimensions, â€" Commencing with the first week of the New Year therefore, the form ot the paper will be changed trom that of an 80â€"columm paper to that at a 96 column paper : and the length of each page will also be so extended as to g}\'e. in ali, an fi\cmse of reading matter in each week‘s sheet of ucarly 32 cotumns beyond its present B12¢. probably mors varicd and interesting than was ever before accompiithed in sng weekly journal. The literary matter wiil be much inctreased ; more spaee wil be devoteu to Houschold and social wiurs ; and the Agricuiturat Department witl be rendered mor efficient than ever before. Nutwllhsundluhthe teat eniargements and improvemeats to muio the annual subscripâ€" tion to Tux Weexir Guose will remain as hereâ€" tofore, oaly . > â€" This vast addition to the capacity of the psrct will enabie a bili of fare to be presented weekly ;':n'l' p'out;e'j;-ac- t'o' ;;I_p“,“ of Canada and the United States, payable invariably in advance. The CLUB RATES FOR 1880 \ wiLL BE AS FOLLOWs : For 4 Copies and up to 10.... .$1 90 per copy. w« l‘ *4 *s * ”'.. y l “ ++ +« m " «6 «+ «e w..‘.. 1 1'0 #+ s« ya Bl ;# _# @ wo.... 100 8 _ = «6 ‘l 6+ «s over . .... 1 u «4 «s 4 Any one 1s at ilberty Jo get up a clud on his TWO DZLLARS PER ANNUM, On the 2nd of January, 1880, THE r!!{l' LUBE wii) taike another of those upward strides "the march of mprovement that bave mainâ€" incd ;t for neary forty years in its high posiâ€" DU .l may be tor any n;uomc',“ itt be *«. 00 w ups wili su Ned "whe ‘gm %!‘m paper grui‘:; ALMOST UNANIMOUS OPINION While you have a chance LEADINCG FAMILY NEWSPAPER OFâ€"BRITISH AMERICA. ‘All Sizes. Gristing and Chopping attended to at Shortest Notice. terian Church. y, Boots and Shoes, Groceries, &c., &c., Now Very Complete. * * f â€"FORâ€" T H B the Canada Presbyâ€" Months. McKECHNIE y1 Finished, and Ready for Delivery : Sleighs, Land Rollers, Gang Ploughs, Turnip Cutters, Straw Cutters for Hand, and Straw Cuttérs for Horse Power ; S TOVES of al STOVES, Stoves, STOVES! Call N\d'lee before purchasing clsewhere. We will not be undersold and are selling ean w upon being satish 7 inch Pipe and Elbows at 7c each | us their orders. Gash for Hides and Sking, Truck taken as Cash. HARRIS & Co. wâ€" Fall and Winter Stock of STAPLE and FANCY n P At the Durham Foundry, Durham, Nov. 20, 1879. COOKING PARLOR BOX Best Style of the Art, from $20 up. from $5 up. from $3 up. . All Sizes and all Prices, And with the Greatest Promptitude Durham, Sept. 18, 1879, ~~*â€"~~â€"@ancy Dry Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots & Shoes, MILLI N E R Y Before purchasing Elsewhere dont fail to see our Stook HAS now reccn‘gd his FA oF Intending purchasers will find it to their interest To call and exomine his goods before Puarchasiug. Everything at Lowest Rates. P hk G R O CE RIE S â€"â€"_5. & A. DPyurham, May 15th, 1879.1 Which he will sell CHEAP for CASH, Always on Hand Cheap and Fresh. LA DTE S L. GRANT. pey* |" PA LL and Winter Stock. 0; . _COCHRANE. and contains a vast amount of interesting READING MATTER, The Large and rapidly increasing Cironâ€" "Grey in whe Townships of Glenplg, Bentine Normandy, Egremont, Proton, Artemesi Osprey, Melancthon and other Town ships makes it one of the Best Mediums for Advertisers Job Department, Is now fitted up in the very best atyle, and Possesses great Facilities for doing Good Family Newspaper Havring lately made an addition to ouf «Greoy Review," ean depend upon being satished by leavitg LOCAL AND FOREIGN 28 COLUMX ‘ PAPER Price $1.25 per Annum, Job Work EK=POsTAGE FREE In the County of Grey. should subscribe for the} If mt paid in advance. The affice is furniahed with type, parties wishing W ORILE. Al. who want a lation of the OF THE LATEST done in the very AND EDITORIALS * WXA Bantinick , a Ratherford At the Ofce,]Garafraxa Stroot, B Dr «# Fergus Protessional and business cards, apace and under, per year, . Two inches or 24 lines Nonpariel Three inches do. per year. ... .. Quarter column, per year.. .. Mall column, ** & One calumn, ** Do. #ix month®, .. ..»> Do, three months . . . . . Casaal advertisements charge Line for the first insertion, and 2 far e«th #ubsequent insertion méasure. VYETERINARY SUR ho 3+ way and J reason n and of th #1,.%1.25 if not paid withintwo dumwor E-.}}..m-rf Wontgagon )4 Every Thu The British Hotel an A LIVERY ES Durham, â€" â€" Ordinary motices of births, deaths, a kindr of Jocal n« free of c aeed 8 linos, Advertisements, except when a by written instructions to the c« mserted until forlndden, and cha wlar rates, o 4 7 solisitors in Cb vernncing, &c Othoms â€"Poulott Sb Bound, and every Th ALFRED FROST the above 11 the patronn Bank Unionâ€"st.. < }MHIETE! The wery D superior to t !:.'u work in United St« Formeriy M undredth ie Fine Cal I $72 A\\‘\AI "‘THE REV Augusta V LCX Tlustrated Floral the Dounéalk A beautifu Plate, and BUSINESS DIREC ~_~. KBCALr Soamp. In TCO w Oe * .50-;.. Five Cents for post Guipe, telling ho w :‘ TERMS:â€"$1.00 por year in C. MeFavor * RADI ~oUTH EN: " Â¥and Wotel, i TR A o MISCELLANEO Do YÂ¥ou Waut M re dav or nigt County Or EXTIST RADI E.D. MACMITA TTORNEY â€" AT â€"LAW ©. . 3 ACBCECM, Bt. A TTORNXEY at Laow, Solicit« MeFA ARRISTH Dn ILI, be nt T, CALDW Boot and Shoom »te #e. Ofh Macl Darhe RATES OF ADVERTI® 0 A WEEK Flow or Frost Maine F1 d a trom of the requost MKEDICAL. D1 TJ DR. K1 [‘] t The Spoâ€"ker dhe veared IBiils M ALS, «o., adve the advertisemen is PUBLISSED «10B 1O N pad N egetnt aied Mesthiy 14 DPrug 5 TAl J . TOWN MV the

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