West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 23 Sep 1880, p. 4

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to The Victoria, B. C., Colonist thus describes the earthquake whick visited that part of the Dominion at 1â€"23 p. m. on Sunday. August 22:â€"The motion was from south to rorth,and was accompanied by a low, rumbling sound, not unlike that heard when a heavy piece of artillery has been discharged at a spot a mile ortwo distant, â€" Houseswereskaken violeatly, and plaster was crrecked ; pots and pans and erockery rattle® on the shelves, and in some instances the inmates ran into the streets. Trees and stumps wers shaken. In a few eases loose bricks fell from chimney tops,and lumber and bricks piled up in yards were up set. The shock did not last more than five" seconds, but the vibration continued for about half a minute. At 2â€"10 o‘clock there was another and slighter shook, and at 219 a third shock, but neither was assevere as the first. The shock was felt throughout the Saanich Inlet, at Esquimalt, at Sooke, and in Cowichan district. From Somenos we learn by telegraph that there were two shocks accompanied by a report like a distant heavy gun. Houses were shaken violently,but no damage was done,. At Rocky Point three distinct and yiolent shocks were felt, At Port Townsend and Seattle the shock was as great as herg. At Goldstream the trees shook and toased their branches,â€" and the sound of the passing wave was so terrifying that people who happened to be in the bush ran into the road. A telegram from Nanaimo states that the shock was not felt there. This is a remarkable circumstance. Two tamilies of bears, seven in all, have been killed in the township of Rawdon, Hastings, within a fortnight. % ‘ wauacccâ€"â€"64 4 4 +â€"â€".â€".~.â€".~â€"_â€"_â€"_. A few weeks since aland slide of unusua‘ magnitude cccurred near Cooke‘s Ferry, B C. A huge mass of the Shawnikin mountain was suddenly observed to be moving, and without a moments warning thousands of tons of Earth and rock were precipitated into the channel of the Thompson River. So violent was the decidence that not only was the course of the river impeded, bu# a large porâ€" tion of the flat on the opposite site of the slide. Fortunately no lives were lost, alâ€" though Goyette, the teamster, whose death by drowning occurred a few days afterwards, narrowly escaped fatal injuries,. Numbers of fish were washed out of the river by the disâ€" placement, and the Indians of the vieinity were for some time busily employed in saving and drying them for consumption. M. Monelar, a noted agriculturist in France, kas suggested a singnlar plan for varying the flavor of meat. IHe imagines that by feeding cattle, sheep, pigs and poultry in a particular way, or rather by flavouring their foods in various ways,their flesh may be rendersd much more aggre» able to the palate than it often is; and there ean be no doubt that he is substantially . right. Thus, for instance, it is well known that poultry which have been fattened upâ€" { on food containing a slight adn@@uare of chopped traffies aro far better eating than those chickens which have been stuffed or larded with trnfiles a‘ter they are killed, Itis only natural that such should be tL-o‘ ease, for the flavor of the trafile that is conâ€" | sumed by the chicken permeates the whole | system, which it cannot do when simply placed in the carcaso. Monclar instances eases in which hares killed in a worimwood field, larks shot in a cabbage feld, and eggs laid by hens which have eaten deceased silk worms, bad such a neanseous taste that no one could taste them; while, upon the other hand, some ducks and field fares which had fed upon some sprigs 0f J uniper had a dilicisus flavor. He has made seyâ€" eral experimentsâ€"among others, three inâ€" tame rabbits, which he fed with th» waste ef anise seed,with barley and bran eontainâ€" ing a little essenco of thyme. Iy cachcase he found that the flesh ofthese animals was for better eating than that of rabbits fattenâ€" ed in the ordinary way, and vet that there was no trace of anise seed or juniper in the | taste. FHis conclusion is that cattle, sheep and pigs might be fed in the same way,and | the same way, and that by varying the fAavoring matter, the beef. mutton and pork might be made to have several difâ€" feront tastes.â€"Chicago Times. | "If he wasn‘t lame T‘d take him into my family," observed one of the men in a tome that seemed to blame the boy for his misfortune. The boy too lame to be taken care of on earthâ€"too feeble to carn the crusts that some one would have given him, had a home better than the best,. When thoy knew that ho died alone, worren bent over him and wept. When they lifted his wastâ€" ed body from the bed, mons‘ consciences smote them for their harsh words but it was too late. FHe had gone from earth feeling that there mas no mercy in the huâ€" man heart, A few days ago a boy about ten years of age, lame and sickly, who had been living with his mother in rooms in the city found himself alone in the world. The lad was too ill to ride in the one poor errriage which followed the body to the grave, yet no one thought his condition serious. Afâ€" ter the funeral a number of persons gather. ed in the povertyâ€"stricken room where he lay weeping to See what disposition could be made of him. Late in the morning a woman living on the sams floor went in to see if ho might not want a bite to cat, and question of who should take care of him was settled. God had taken him. Hugged close to the wail, as if he feared the midnight shadows, and with eyo lashes yot wet, he was dead and eold, no longer a burden to any one. Each and every one had some exeunse. The boy heard thera all without a word,but with quivering chin and eyes full of tears. Under one pretext and another all slipped out, and left him alone, promising to have another talk in the morning. Perhapsthat night before they closed their eyes in sleep, some of them thought of the poor lad lying in the dreary room, alone and almost helpâ€" less, but if so no one of thom went near "Well, it‘s awful hard," sighed one of the women, "but I know he coulfdn‘t get along with my children." "Nor with mine," added the second. "It I should take him, he‘d run up a big doetor‘s bill on me," said a man as he flled Who Took the Orphan. Flavor of Meats. *4 @> » 4 Ladies, would you be beautiful, have a clean complexion free from blotches, pimples, and other skimmn diseases arising from impure bloud ; would you restore the bloom of health to the pallid cheek, the brilliant sparkle to the eye, and clasticity to the step, take Burâ€" dock Blocd Bitters, the great blood purâ€" ifler, vitalizer, and tonic. A cure for all forms of female complaints, weakness and irâ€" nfuhrihu. One dollar fir bottle. Sold by nlbd;lon. T. MILBURN & €o., Toronto.J â€"bl A monster tooth of some unknown aniâ€" mal has been found in a sandbank atGatâ€" ipeaun Point, l An English farmer says that when he | gave ns men, in former times, milk and oatmeal as a part of their daily food, they were robust, hardy. and enduring; but since those have been changed for tea and coffee,â€"*‘wreiched slops," ho contemptâ€" nously calls them,â€"the laborers have beâ€" come pale, out of condition, and cannot perform the tasks of former days easily, Heore is a good hint to our own farmers in the way of rations for their working men and even themselves. Great Britain canâ€" not compete with us in whe production of wheat, but she can produce a much superâ€" ior quality of oats. Let us exchange proâ€" duets to a certain extent, for mutual bene fit. It is a pity we don‘t abandon fine flour, and ert the whole, ground from the gruin, as in grits and Graham _ bread. Our teeth, bones, and muscles would be all the stronger and better for such a change of diet. Corn bread and fat pork,â€""Lhog and hominy," vulgarily speaking,â€"is too much the food of our households, especially at the West. This, at least, might be often varied by beef, mution, poultry, eggs, aad bread made from unboited wheat flour, and all be groat gainers thereby in health, strongth and endurance.â€"New York Triâ€" bune. C ’ olden times, especially with the gentlemen tacksmen, or leaseholders. Dr. Macleod, in his book published twelve .years since, says he knew one who was ninety years of age then. Fifty years since, in the Highâ€" l lands, ho was accosted by a pedestrian with a knapsack on his back, who addressed him in a language intended for Gaclic. The farimer, judging him to be a foreigner, reâ€" plied in French, which met no response, the farmer‘s French being probably as bad as the tourist‘s Gaelic. The Hi,'.:hlandar‘ then tried Latin, which created a smile of surprise, and drew torth an immediate re-‘ ply. This was interrupted by the remark that English would probably be more con venient for both parties. The tourist, who turned out to be an Oxford student, laughâ€" ling beartily at the interview, gladly accep. ted the invitation of the tucksman to acâ€" compary him to his thatched house and share his hbospitality. He was eurprised on entering ‘the room‘ to see a small libraâ€" ry in the hurable apartment. ‘Books here / he ezelaimed, as he looked over the shelt. *Addison, Johnson, Goldsmith,Shakespeare â€"what !‘ Homer too ?* ‘The farmer, with some pride. begged him to look at the Hoâ€" mer; it had been givyen as a prize when he was a student at the University, Engenieiwo wreaths, and the Empress, after she made her pilgrimage to the spot where her son was killed, continued her journey to find the graves of these obscure English soldiers and to lay the wreaths upon them with her own hand. She wrote afterward a letter to the Queen describing the wild,grand spot where they are buried, the heroic cirenmstances of their deatb, as she had been able to learn them, adding a tew words of carnest sympathy for them and congratulations for the sovreign who had men so brave to lose ; all of which the Queen copies in her own hand and sends with a letter of earnest syrqpethy to the widews of the dead herocs. Envcatio® mm Scoriaxp a CExtuay ago. â€"The state of culiture and education must have been much higher in Scotland in thcl Hoxounmme swo Deabp Herers.â€"Two English soldiers, it will be remembered, Mellville and Coghill, wore killed at the battle of Isandula,in Zululand, while bravely attempting to reseue the colorsof their regâ€" iments. Their widows were pensioned, of course, but the Queen‘s own womanly heart suggested a further and more gracious reâ€" compense. She sent out by the Empress Irish epitaphs form a distinet variety of the genus. They are rich, rare, and redolâ€" ent of the land of bulls and blunders. Pasâ€" sing over that famous one which recites the virtues of the nobleman who was "faâ€" ther of modern chemistry, and grandfather to the Earl of Cork," it is really worth while to reproduce another, perhaps not so well known. I give it untouched : To the memory of Thomas Kelly, who was accidentally shot by his brother as a mark of respect. This curious epitaph still exists in the churchyard of Woodbridge, Suffolk, Engâ€" land : Sacred to the memory of Lady Elizabeth O‘Looney, first cousin to Burke, commenly called the Sublime. She was bland, passiâ€" onate, and deeply religions. Also she painted in waterâ€"colors, and sent many pictures to the Great Exhibition, and of such is the kingdom of heaven. She lived the life of the virtuous, an 1 died of cholera morbus, caused by eating green frait in the full hope of a blessed immnortality at the early age of 20 years, 3 mos, and 16 days. Reader! go thou_and do likewise ! A weather beaten stone in the quiet churchyard of Culmore, some few miles from Londonderry, gives the following inâ€" formation : Here lies the remains of Thomas Nichols, who died in FPhiladelpbhia, March, 1783 Had be lived he would have beem buried here. A Which‘is only surpassed by this, from a tombstone in Ulster : Here lies the body of Benjamin Brinkley, Who though Lustic and Strong, was one That by misfortune Shot Himsel{ with‘s Gun In the 23rd year of his Ago Te departed this Life To the Grief of his Parents, Spectaters and wife. At Oxford, New Hampshire : To all my friends I bid adiou. A move sudden death you never knew. As I was leading the old mare to drink, She kicked and killed me quicker‘n a wink â€"Harper‘s Magazine, Quaint Epitaphs. A5 to $20 Btwathent 20L PPR PR ETD PRRMCCaTI BMR EBE AC ETT has advanced ftrom 20 to 25 per cent). Customers in want of anything in his l‘ne will please call earâ€" ly, so that none will be disappointed. He emâ€" ploys uw special agout to sell his boots, depending on their superior merits for his business, Buperiâ€" or éTfa'x}s"y"‘Sa"'io‘i'“éi?n"‘a“ef.“u"'ffi:?&u"omfi comnetition Soethirs at old prices for cash, (although the raw material Baving received his Fall stock of Goods is now in & position to offer a FIRST CLASS ARTICLE NIANUFACTURER and Dealer in Boots, Shoes, and Leather. Wall Paper and Window Blinds. Always noted for Goodâ€"Flavored TEAS from 35 cents up. Who are anxious to have their Dwolling Houses, Barns and Contents Insured against loss by Firc, can do so at a Jow rate, and in a reliable Company who pay losses promptly, Sewed Work|a: Specialty. CASH FOR HIDES. Rockville Tannery, July 20, 1880. Gretehen Bows, Muslia and Silk Scarfs, Cheniile, Ruchings, Motto Pocket Handkerâ€" chiefs, Damask do., Hair Ornaments, Back Combs, Ladies‘ Neek Chains, Lage (Gloves, Coloured Lace Mitts, &e. * Frillings from 5 cents per yard up. GENTS‘ REGATTA SHIRTS, Special notice of the Ladies is called to his Stock of Goods, viz : Lovely China Fichues, New Style of Embroidered Collars, Fancy Goods at John Cameron‘s. Dye Stuffs and Perfumery, â€" Stationery, &c., &e. PATENT MEDICINES of all kinds constantly in Stock, DEALER IM Pure Drugs and Chemicals, Lower Town DRUG STORE. One door South of PARKER‘S DRUG STORE, Upper Town, Durham Farmers, Builders, Blacksmiths, Painters, Carriage Makors, Cabinet Makers, and the General Public will find prices and goods to their satisfaction, hays bought the large stock of Hardware belonging to the estate of JAMES BLAIR & CO, is now offering to the Public the whole Stock, consisting of Silver Plated Goods, Mouldings, Shelf and Heavy Hardware, Paints Oils, Varnigshes, Carriage Trimmings, Glass, Cutlery, Bankrupt Sale of Hardware ; IN DURHAM. Men‘s Stoga Boots $1.50 ; Men‘s Kip do. $2.25. See his Women‘s Boots at $1.25 Call and be convinced that H. W. Mockler‘s is the place to buy the Best and Cheapest Boots in Town. Has this week received.a Large Stock of. Boots and Shoes. Durham, July 24th, 1880. â€"J . C. .J OP P, Cl GMILST $ DERUTGGOGTIST, ETEFARRMERS AND OTHERS GROCERIES Cheap ftor Cash. Rowswell‘s Building, Upper Town, Durham. August 12, 1880. y96 Harvest Tools, Harvest Mitts, &c., &c., At Prices never heard of befors in Durham. BOOTS AND SHOES. REMEMBER THF STAND, E. J. HALL, of Walkerton, ROCKVILLE, G. C. McFARLANE, â€" m s Tocm . ~ H. W. MOCKLER, H. W. MOCKLER, Appyto JOHN CAMERON, Agent Western Insurance Co., Dui‘hm:ri Dress ~and: Mantle Makihg. FAR] Proprietor. Has Now on Haud' & Good Stock of Carriages, Buf@gies, Demoâ€" crat Wagons, etc., of GoOop MaATRERTAL, 4 \GOOD FINISH, and ROBERT McFARLANE DURIELA M Carriage Works. The su Durham. C‘kll and Inspect My Stock J. CAMERON, E. J. HALL. IING IMPLEMENTS. â€". LOWEST PRICES. seriber is also Agent tor allkinds R. McFARLANE. w 3 Aun®t 127 Dominion Organ & Piano Company, Correspondence Solicited. Send for Tllustrated Catalogue We are now manufacturing Square and Upright PIANOS Highest Honors ever awarded to any Maker in the World The Largest and Most Complete QRGANS AND PIANCS. Call and see before purchasing elsowhere, We will not be undersold and are selling 3STOVES, Stoves, STOVES! The subscriber wishes to inform the inhabitants of Durham and tde surrounding Townships, that he is now prepared to do Done on the shortest notice and in the best style. _ Flaunels, Tweeds, Full Cloth, and Stock ing Yarn to exchange for Wool or sell for Cash Cheap, The Durham Woollen Factory Carding, Spinning, Weaving, Fulling, Cloth Dressing ond Dying, in the latest styles, and at the lowest rates. Feb. 12th, 1886 Durham, Sept. 18, 1870 Durham, August 1‘/, 1880. Cash for Hides and Skinsg. â€" Truck taken as Cash. HARRIS & Co. COOKING PARLOR BOX from $20 up. from $5 up. from $3 up. All Sizes and all Prices. \ Mrs. FREEMAN‘S WORY POWDUR is a «afe, sure and eGectual destroyer of worm in children or aduts, | Price % cents, or 5 for $1.00, Mrs. FREEMANS NFW DOMESTIC DVES are perfect in every color. For brightness and durability they have no equal, | Price 15 cents per package. MAVZAL AND DIFLOMA, OENIENNIAL, ... ... ... 1876, do 5 do SYDNFEY, AUSTRALIA, ... 1877. GOLD MEDAI.; at PROVINCIAL EXHILBITIOXN TORONTO, 1878, HIGHEST Award at INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION, Toronto, 1873, MEDAL AND DIPLOMA, CENTENNIAL, CUSTOM WEAVING! Durham, 18th Joly, 1880 Another lot of Boots and Shoes, comprising, Men‘s Woemen‘s and Children‘s Goods. No trash, but a good article, which will be sold CHEAP FOR CASH Factory in the Dominion, â€"~â€"* 340 x AOQ *.: Boots and Shoes. JUST TO HAND, Mailed Free. Addressâ€"â€" e Best in the Market. DOMTN ICOPN Bowmanville, Ont. C. L. GRANT. JOHN CAMPBELL. onth, Depart P45 a. rm. e Amive 186 p. m .. $3 p. m Fortime at intermediate stationssoo Time Tohes EDNUND WhACGE *The Mixed train wil} ony run on Tuesday, Ther Arrive 1130 n.m., 425 p. m. North. Depart, 11:30a.m., <@5p m, West. Anive,&lg:m @. m., 65'?'””“ * 45 . m. 11:45 m .m0. mllm m.im., 4:45 p. m. @WEN soUuXD. Depart 6:30 a.m., 12:00 noon Arrive 400 p.m., 1030 p.im. meBswaTER mln ~6:00 8. m., 11335 a. m.* ichn _ a ve 13040 a. m., 4:80 p. m. On and a ® . YHay, J 878 «am ue Airs eA ye An Mn TORONTO (UNLO®N §T&aTHON. Depart, 7:30 m. m., 1220 p. im., 5:00 p. m Arrive, 10:30 m. m., 300 p. m,, 930 p. m OKANGBEVILLIA:, Bouth Depart 7345 a.im.. 1125 a. m..540 p.m» TOR()\"I‘O, GREY, AXND BRUCK RAILWAY ‘CHANGE OF TIME June, August, October and Doce Primroseâ€"Wednesday preceding Orangeville Fair, Orangevilleâ€"The 204 Thursdsy in month. Walkertonâ€"The last Wednerday is month. Mildmay â€" Last Wednesday of month. day after Guelph, Berlinâ€"First Thursday in each month Bramptonâ€"First Thursday in each month Listowelâ€"First Friday in each month. Fergusâ€"Thursdayfollowing Mount Forest Rosemontâ€"Fifteenth of February, April month. * Fleshersonâ€"Monday before Orangeville Dundalkâ€"Tuesday before Opangevilie. Shelburneâ€"Wednesday before Ofz ngevil Marsvilleâ€"Becond Wednesday in ea Toropto November 1979 month, * Guelphâ€"First Wednesday in each month Harristonâ€"Friday before the Guelp): Fair Draytonâ€"Saturday before Guelph, Eloraâ€"The day before Guelph. Douglasâ€"Monday before Elora Fair. Hamiltonâ€"Cyrstal Palace Grounds. the Durhamâ€"Third Taesday in each month. Pricevilleâ€"Monday betore Durham. Hanoverâ€"Monday before Durkham, Mount Forestâ€"Third Wednesday in each STEPHEN LODGE No. 160 1. 0.0.F. Night of nufln&wcr,\‘ Monday «t 7:30 a‘cle the Oad Fellows‘ Mall, ‘Visiving brethron wel N. livess N.G. W.B. Vollet. boe. DURHAM L. O. L. No.63 Night of moeuu& Thursday on c moon in each month, T. Curson, See Night of mosting, Tuesday on or of 3ch month, \nuu'n‘f ‘Mn Mchenzic, W. M. J. #. Mowat, He Povor meeting atdy lm;)o eluss nt 8 p. m. prarer moeting at 8p.r Bervicen u«y Subbath at 10:80 a. m. d 6:30 pm Sabbatl #ck»o0Fat 2:30 ]’\ m. . Prayer mectin®®very Thursiay eveming mt 7 o clock. Pustor Rev. R The Fountain of Life is the blood, Keep the fountain pare andall the tributaries Of health are in good condition Burdock Blood Bitters will cleanse the blood front all impmrities, expelling Scrofula and all buâ€" mors,toncs up the debilitated system, regulat» ing the liver, bowels and kidneys, and brings health to the afflicted. â€" b135 Franklin Kantwer, of Rending, Pa., was awrkened on Monday moruing by the screams of his child, aged four months. Me discovered a hage rat grappling with the babe, biting it in the throat. Thechild was horribly mangled, and died from conâ€" vulsions and loss of blood. For Reapers, Mowoers, and Threshing Maâ€" chines use Castorine Machine Oil. For sale by G. C, McFarlane, Lower Town, and J. H. Hunter‘s Genera! Store, Dovham.â€"m129. PURHAM DBDIRECTORY sti P1o.â€"Pig, in oldâ€"fashioned Beotch, was term always used for m conrse «arthen. ware jur, or vessel; the story is well known of the good natured chambermaid. who said to an English lndy who hra Intely ar Â¥ived in Seotland for the first time in hor life, "Would you like a het erock in your bed, this enald nicht, mem *,‘ "A what» said the lady. "A pig, mem. ShallI put apig in your bed to keep you warm 2* *Leave the room, young woman} Your mistress shall hear of your insolence," "Nea offence, I hope, mem, 1t was my mistress that made me ask, and I‘nt sure she meant i in kindness." The laéy look â€" ed at Grizzy in the iaco,and saw at & glaneg that no insult was intended ; but she wag quite at a loss how to account for the proposal. â€" She was aware that Irish child. reu sloep with pigs on the earthern floors ‘d their cabine, but this was something fup more astonishing. â€" Ter curiosity was now roused, and she said in a nsilacy tone, "Ig it common in tlis country, my girl,, for ladies to have pigs in their beds?" "And gentleman hae them foo. mem, wnen the weather‘s cauld." *"But you surely coult not put the pig between the sheets 9" "If por please mem, it will do you maist good there." "Between the shects! It would dirty theim, girl, I could never sleep with a pig between the sheets." Never fear, mem! Yon‘H sleep far mair comfort able. _ 1‘ll steek the mouth 0‘ t tightly,and tie it up in a poke," "Do you sleep with a pig yourself in cold weather?" "No meim; pigs are only for gentlelolks that lie on feather beds. I sleep oa canf (chaff in sacking)with my neighbor lass." "Calf Do you sleep with a calf between you ?" said the Cockney lady. "No. mem; you‘re jokin‘ now." said Grizzy ; "we lie on the tap 0‘t."â€"Leiswure Hour. *‘Cartorine" Machine give eatisfaction. â€"m129 Sabl ty â€"R nday 6 MONTHLY CATTLE FAIRS n Hal W t question of revising the Swiss Conâ€" n is to be submitted to a popular PEESBYTI 8. G.RI rd MRCHANI days and Saturdays PLESMERNON nuder METHODIST CHURCH BAPT rey TRINITY CHURCH Mt ory Priday c annual ioe 8STRY OFPICI L.B 1135 n, m., 540 p. m 498 . in .. 820 p. m« 306 OF N CHURCH, buth a* 11 a. m.and 6:3 10 ;:, m. Prayermeutin it 7:80, Bible Clossever Rov, Win. Park, pastor 1C1 Oil is warranted to NTUCTi Â¥r het erock in your em 2,‘ "A what® mem. â€" Shall I put p Kov â€"Mx. DuWatoy I¢ nd H. Parker @1 m tarry Arch. Me mber, the each encl vach each ome the full ting SOUTH EXD, Dorkam, mear 4. Yard Hotel, having ecammeneed bu the above lin: would respectPullysoliedt a the patronage of the public, â€" The very bost mateorial used , work #uperior to anvthing in the @ounty, havi 1600 Bush, T Darham P. O N enareqis uon O OO * ** Mor Majesk For Summer Trado, Fine Sowed "Wellin zon Boots, only $6.00, Lased Balmor. als, Sewed, only *5. Low Shoes, Sowed, only $4.59. The hest French Stock used. Lumber, Lumber, Shingles, Shingles, Lath & Lim est in the village . Cutting Sp Dundalk. Nov .19 he Unitod outo m He is prepared t on the shortost having had the n Gristing & Merchant Wo l Town Durha EDGE MILLS, DURHA South End Bakery, Durhs KR ECENMECO®N OA L. d B NETERINARLY C W. CHTTPTIC XV L4 be at Merchant Tailor, MAIN STREET, DUND/ 13‘ ALPRED P1 N thanking l their past favor T TH STRAY ANIJMA weeks for $1, the ceed 8 lines. Advertisements, . by written instruct: nserted ustil forb» «tlar rates, * BRADI Boot and Shoemaker measyne a hurge Three inches do. ; Quarter column, ; Malt column, On Casd a l Line tor t space and under Two inches or 24 lin Jus * RAD BUSINESS DIRECTO & LEGAL urhium. Money to Loan ham . J . CALDWEL ©HEORP PE NC Ordinary notic aths, and all k ee of charge., "THE REVTIT Frost & Frost, ARRISTERES and Atbornev‘s ©, B. & ACBAEU®, 08. 6 TPORNEY at Law, Solicit« PPORNXEY . 4 opposite Parker MISCELLAKEOUS, .~**NDER BRCW Do 10 4 Â¥" . w %* subser n the; States li istoh wumin, t h, 188( )X ICK V MEDICAL. DR. Kl 12m, â€" D. MACM t May R Garat t} 1. 00 A "I W D ho c n ty 2 hoerg th. 188 ADVIEI ensod | Awetiof owed "Wellin ood Balmorâ€" workmank} heaving m et, Uj att

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