West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 7 Feb 1895, p. 1

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e 3 “.,W: purem opmeadde PAE T Following Properties at Prices Asked Lots 241, 2%2, 243, . 3, S.W.T. and 8. Road, _Taw_nshie;nMehncthonâ€"l_u Lk h o Lo Jots. Also t No. 60, con. 2. W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" ing Town plot Durham. P C The EDGE PROPERTYT. In the Town of Durham, County of @rey, including valuable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more u-“ . * n « ® ‘ mdfiob.h- Barnétt, 126 bush, bring Lote 28, 44. 26, 26, 27, Old D. R@IRE, Life and Accident Insurance. Claims a{ all kinds collectedâ€"Old notes H. H. MILLER, Lots 241 242, con. 4, S.W.T. and S. Mlot. Melancthonâ€"100 acres & bush Lot 248, con. QS.W.Téooagd bihl’-oad, Melancthonâ€"50 acres it Lot 29, con. 5, Melancthonâ€"83 acres well timbered. Lot16, con. 5, Bentinck, 100 acres known as the Jas. Bamford farmâ€"well imâ€" proved close to Lamlash. Lot1, Durham Street, North Priceville. Lat $, Kinross Street, North Priceville. With other splendid Farms in Ontario and the Northâ€"West, Toronto and Hanover properties for sale or exâ€" There‘s Big Money ! ISSUEB of Marriage Licenses. Aucâ€" tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. attendedâ€" to. Residence Lot 19, Con. 8, Township of Bentinck. DAN. MeLEAN. LICENSED AUCTIONEER for Co. of Grey. All commuanications adâ€" dressed to Laxrasz P. 0. will be promptly HONOR Graduate of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Teewh exâ€" lraeted without p:?u by the use of nitrous oxide E or vitalized air. Particularittention paid to filling of the natural teeth. Office und Resiâ€" éence next door West of Post Office. y.614 Licenssd Auctioneer, for the County of Grey. harges moderate and satisfaction gquaranteed. xn nz _z 2l _ §w}:ingthe ' DENTISTRY. Pimman, , | Cl quisite etaal=â€"~2â€" __T. 6. HOLT,. L D.S. â€" |CLOCKS & â€" X" alist and Fellow of Trinity Medical Col. Toronto ; Member of Col. of Physiâ€" cians and Surgeons of Ontario; Late Resident Ph('ysician and Surgeon to the Loronto General Hospital ind Acâ€" coucheur to the Burnside iving in Hosâ€" MONEY TO LOAN at very lowest rates on good land pital, Toronto. /. :~â€"* > Office & Residence, â€" Dromore, Ont. PHYSIC]AN and Surgeon. Gold Medâ€" X" alist and Fellow of ‘Trinity Medical BDEEDS, MORTGAGES, LkASES, WILLS, ETC. ATTENDED TO PROMPTLY, NEATLY AND CHPFAPLY. JAMES LOCKIE, veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loans arranged without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. Mm@NEY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Intorest ©#PICB one door north of 8. Scot‘s Store Durbara Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" A Farm for Sale. . NOTARY PUBLIC,Commissioner,ctc., mmm-mnmn llTUWl ' ininditowe(iBrneferrvem «c( f J, SHEWELL & SON. EMBROIDERIES BUSINESS DIRECTORY. ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th lConnty of Oroy f Sales attended to promp Dornoch, Ont. IN HIGH CuXr 0P JuSuc. UNDERTAKING. W. i. McKENZIE, MONEY TO LOAKN. HUCH McKAY. OFFICE, over Grant‘s Stor«. Lower Town, MISCELLANEOUS. DR. C. Hâ€" BIRD, J. P. TELFORD 3 ARRISTER, SOLICITOR IN SUREME thrt | at sreatly reduced rates * _ In this line we Take the Lead. * Well Stocked and Complete in * CASKETS, COFINS, Ete., in * the Latest Designs. J. T. FOSTER. Apply to JAMES EDGE, AUCTIONEER. FOR SALE %mm Parâ€" lor Bete, and Centre Tables, Bible Standsâ€"in Oak, Bamboo and Elm. Nice Assortâ€" ment of Easles. We also carry a Large Stock of Pictures and Frame Moulding. y LARGE and Complete STOCE, The Hanover Conveyencer. MEDICAL. King St., Hanover. Residence Durham Ont McLEAN. Fire Insurance secured. D. MoCORMICK, WM. McFARLAN ALARM CLOCH Cheap and Reliable. Guar effectualy rouse the most i lieâ€"aâ€"bed. Geod Luck Said to bydn Store for George CGrabam. «George M. Graham, Jhk Albans street, Toronto, has reeciv“_t letter frum his cousin, a lawyer in d, asking thst if he is a son of the h Grabam, of Leitchtown, he will himsalf into comâ€" munication with the , who goes on to say that he has latel looking into the Leitchtownâ€"family zo far as that can be done from printed matâ€" ter, ard has found representative: of theTamily "is heir Méle of the Karl of years ol.age, and. Montreal.. On the momntke bre imo Dr. Creighton remaRks thit as the malâ€" adies of the Middie Ages contained an unusual element of bysteria, the ceremonâ€" ial may not have come amiss as an aid to the treatment. Phyd?u gain considerâ€" able fees by their practice, which the people appear to have grudged them. The satirical writers constaatly accuse them of greed ; but these charges wers probably owing to the prevalence of the idés, not {o& extinct, that as ‘‘medicine is lrom, rd God," the leech was not ent to amoney payment. heeQ 8 DaAY ;CLOCE With cathedral gongs, in v Medicine and,Ceremonial. The physicians of mediaeval England, who were for the most part monks, friars, or Jews, possessed m large assortment of remedies, some of them borrowed from the Byzantine physicians, others from the traâ€" ditional pratice of the people. Christian prysicians, however, called religion to their ard. None. of th#igremedies was ad ministere i without cexemonial. While the medicine was being compound+d, the paâ€" tient would ug.tvolu times over one of tke Psaims, beginning "Miserere Mei, Deus," then several Paternosters, "then dring the dose, and wrap thyself up warm.;" or he would sing the Psalm, "Salvum Me Fac, Deus," then arink the draught out of a charch bell, the wuu finishing the cure with prayer. _ _ 6 £ A generalfinancial business transactedâ€" Office next door to Standard Bank, Durham. # Money to lend. Money invested for Parties. Farms bought and sold. David JACKSIN, JPF.» cierk piv. court. Aithur H. Jackson, Notary Public. Land Valuators, Insurance Agents, Commissioners. X X X Transact a general Banking business. Money loaned to tarmers and others on reasonable terms. Interest allowed on special deposits at current rates. Also FIRE and LIPE Sold by H. PARKER, PARK & CO. _ TESTED REMEDIES ! SPECIFIC and ANTIDO! For Impure, Weak and Impoverishei Blood, Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpata: tion of the Heart, Liver Complaint, fi’on- ralgis, Loss of Memory, Bronchitis, Conâ€" sumption, Gall Stones, Jaundice, Kidney and Uricary Diseases, St. Vitus‘ Dance Female Irregalarities and General Debility, Laboratory â€" Goderich, Ont J. M. McLEOD, CcoNVEYANCERS. NEXT Door TO PARKER‘S MISS GUN‘S System Renovator‘ Assurance Policies issued. Middaugh House Block, Durham. Fancy Goods;, TOYS and Stationary, wWOOLsS, 1 cathedral gongs, in v cases and in many St Wall Papers Watchmaker & Lower Town, Durham:; HXIR TO AN EARLDOM. â€" â€" WATC JACKSONS. McLEOD‘S Draggist, Durham. â€"â€"â€" AND OTHER â€"â€" cuse us VOL. XVIIâ€"NO. 6. and SILKS, in all COLOR:i and Trop. and Manufacturer Th S obiinde t e It is not good to dine when in a state of | **,.‘*** °*** “fl mental or physical weakness. 9 t f Twa,pounds of potatoes dontain as mach | . The YoOW Of Fo: nutriment as.thirteon pounds#‘of turnips. _"| _ An interssting custoi ~ Abuse of the stamach at dinner will be | observ®d ‘this season c on on liter by thatâ€". punisbment m‘“m- comes: teithe.glutton."» e h " the tower ol. waboweuieg sed. froks dre. w to, aseq | Obristas wighy and j There is a happy mean between eating everything and being squeamish. o Hapid eating is alow suicide. Mege gratification of the appetite is ve likely to shorten life. f ry Camphor, when very much diluted, may be held in the paim of the hand and snuffed up the nostrils, affording great relief. Colds, however, become & serious question to women, who must be ever ready and smiling and at least ostensibly at their ease for whatever amusement the evening may bring forth. In the event of hoarseness or sharp, coustant coughing, nothing helps so much as a thorough mr}nnt.ino steaming. To do this fill a basin half full of very hot water, into it pour a scant teaspoonful of tnrpcn. tine, and throwins a flannel cloth: over neck and head, bend over the basin and <breathe through the mouthâ€"and nuej as much as possible of the rising steam. It is the tumm.ino fumes that find their way into all choked, strained passageways and soften and liberate the glands. L _Obstinate cases require prompt medical assistance. be warm. â€" The head should not be held down over a basin, as this favors the flow of blood. Ope «t the simplest and most effectual methods of stopping an ordmu-{ attack is for the person to stand erect, wit the head in the usual upright position, and the hands extended at legth directly over the head. â€"The treatment of an attack of noseâ€"bleed consists in absolute rest and cool applicaâ€" tions to the head. The extremities should Noseâ€"bleed occurring n middle life and old age is a more serious thing, as it indiâ€" cates a graver condition of affairs. It is usually coincident with disease of the liver, heart or kidneys. Its cure is of course dependent upon the restoration of the organs to a normal condition. In elderly persons the cisorder sometimes appears to result from weaknese, which, in turn, it ugfnvnu. t is a common saying that, in fullâ€" blooded. persons, an occasional noseâ€" ‘In either case he will be benefited by a curtailment of work, and an increase in the amount of time allotted for rest, until his body is more fully developed. No child‘s mind can be developed faster than the body except ._r._the_ expense of henlr.}‘;.‘ o nag If a child tires easil y, or in other words, if the least overexertion at play or at study results in a more or less severe attack of noseâ€"bleod, the child must be in a weakâ€" ened state ; while, on the other hand, if he is accustomed to allow his play or his studies so to absorb his interest as to make him forget his fatigue, he is placing an injudicious strain upon his constitution. Noseâ€"bleed in children is commonly supâ€" posed to indicate nothing more than that the child tires easily, or is overactive. . Yet even these terms express more than is ob* vious upon a casual reading of the words. It is to be hoped that efforts in this direcâ€" tion will be received by the public in a proâ€" per spirit If this is done, and proper wuthorities in order that the case may receive properinspection, that the necesâ€" sary disinfectants may be provided, and that the femily may be warned of the natâ€" ure of the infection and the inanner in which it is communicated. What is proposed to be done in the way of remedying the evil is that consumptive persons _-hufi be reported to the health Itis this fact which has rendered the disease the subject of so much investigation, aud which has led to its being placed on the list with other commuâ€"icable discases in order that it may come under the same sanitary treatment, mengs: i ’ The tuberculous germ in consumption is of course not only scattered more or less completely throughout the substance of the lungs, but is present in the mucous subâ€" stance which is constantly coughed up by !h:‘r.t.iem. The germs have a wonderful vitality, and ‘will persist long after the sputa is dried up and invisible. _ _ _ _ It is to the class of nonâ€"contagious communicable diseases that consumption belongs, in common with all disorders of a tuberculous origin. In other words, consumption is not a disease that calls for quarantine. The patient, therefore, need have no fear that he is to be isolated from his friends ; nor need we who love to render the last hours of the sufferer more endurâ€" able be alarmed lest our efforts shall only serve to spread the dread dis if . we will observe a few simpleâ€"rules of â€" In the case of nonâ€"contagious communiâ€" cable diseases, on the other hand, communiâ€" cation isnot established simply by proximity to the sick, but by intermediate means. Hence isolation is not necessary ; nor is it effective, as compared with measures directed against the medium of transmisâ€" _ These two classes of discases call for difâ€" ferent methods of sanitary treatment. JIn contagious affections it is obvious that since the infection is transmissible on a mere approach to the sick person, isolation, or quarantining, asit is popularly called, is the only sure method of exterminating the disorder. ~nann~nnairnmmmmiraamarmammamman One is Run by Alcohel > ' Consumption as a Communicable Midden . Mechanit : Disease. There is in St. Louis a cM There are two ways in which the infection | simplicity and accuracy surp 3 ‘rom communicable diseases may be transâ€" | yet mado, ‘The framework iesd mitted from one animal body to another. |an clongated horseshoo, abo In some diseases proximity to. the person | neighs, and from its centre h infeoted is all that is required. These are | 44 icches in diameter ane contagious diseases. In others some medium | wide. The wheel is inclosed like food or water, is necessary for the |«irâ€"tight. Along its inner G transmission of the germ. Such discases, |are ranged sixteen small pari though communicable, are not contagious | nected with each other by mÂ¥ These two classes of discases call for difâ€"| puncture, the saize of a pins ferent methods of sanitary treatment. In | wheel turns on an axle six im contagious affections it is obvious that since | about which is coiled the thread the infection is transmissible on a mere|the whoel is suspended. No# approach to the sick person, isolation, or.|rixteen partitions were quarantining, asit is popularly called, is | would be nothing to prevent t the only sure mothod of exterminating the |about the axle uncoiling and t disorder. falling down, As a counter ford In the case of nonâ€"contagious communi. | fore, eight of the partitions are fil cable diseases, on the other hand,communiâ€" | alcohol and when the thread begit sation isnot established simply by proximity | wind the alcohol on one side is nig o the sick, but by intermediate means. |on the other. Consequently tha Hence isolation is not necessary ; nor is | @raÂ¥ity acts to prevent the str it effective, as compared with measures :“l"‘"'“" further. â€" It is here tha lirected against the medium of transmis.| O}¢® come in, for as the aloohe rpasy cozes through them, in order to It is to the class of nonâ€"contagious | PTOP®® L""l' "’.‘; thread unwinds ommunicable diseases that consumption | MOT@ he °‘;‘°':d° To oer raized. elongs, in common with all disorders of a |*" '°l" °l“ d d’ scarcely pe uberculous origin. In _ other words, | *°P" 'J:." escends, On ‘b‘( s onsumption is not a disease that calls for :‘"’ i f "!::'":ml‘“ :;’ * juarantine. The patient, therefore, need J't"' :”' }' ee ”m ave no fear that he is to be isolated from wo Teat,. Atican O is friends ; nor need we who love to render "g’ “‘l‘: b!;."'“"‘:“ back he last hours of the sufferer more endurâ€" :h. ian AAOmar M“" bie be alarmed lest our efforts shall only | {D°T i« enc edlon Wiema i cdl oo oreraner in on e ge oo C oonpeie 7 OpIFRMC K ELCA a Health Department. In Case of a Cold. Table Hints. copporr, as they m_%" in the East, has now comé,_. Thi ks a change in public sentiment. â€"‘The paople‘®ure boginâ€" ning to realizeâ€"that diszegurd of the amall coins in their busingss fransactions . is 6dbtâ€" ing them many a dollat" ‘Their increasd1. frugality may be> ‘the resultaof "hard times, but otherwise it is not t‘be ‘ ted. . It is an old "and faithful saying that In many parts Of Western â€" Cenada the copper cent is practically nhknown. As & rule the allver fiveâ€"cent pisda is the lowesk fraction of carrency, flm iÂ¥is. neces sary,.to make any llnll&l % ange, zu ich is rare, postage stamps areâ€" used for ie purâ€" iserable traitor fnishing ‘his expiation .:o::whi.lo beneath the Olq‘lthn:"l‘::‘c." "*The King of Arms then poured hot water on the bared head of the felon, .as if to eilace all traces of knighthood, after which the degraded man was dragged to the foot of the sorffold by a rope atrtached about his body just below his armpits, was bound, placed upon a litter and covered with a sbroud. : Tbe judges and te then turnod their m:: Mc:ml;. i where the office for the dead was said, theâ€" miserable \traitor. fnishing ~his him a herald broke,‘ with three strokes of a mace, his nhiol_d inzo three fragments, . «*At the end of esch psaim the ‘priests paused,. while the heralds stripped from the condemned some portion of his armor. Th:g began with his helm, which they cast at the foot of the scatfold, orying : * This is the helm of the traitor !‘ and so successâ€" ively with all the pieces of his armor. the knightly judges, theâ€"King of Arms and the heralas; upon the other, the condemned, incased in oo:sleu a mor, his shield hanging reversedâ€"point upwardâ€"before him.â€"-gv his side stood twelve‘ surpliced priests, who chanted the service for the ively with all the g.n;'l of hin a Whon the last piece had ‘been taken Dreyfus, while impressive and thrillin was not so dnmau“:: as was the pnnugt ment meted out to trai orâ€" in France in the sixteenth century. Thelast to undergo that solemn ceremonial was a Gazcon captain named Frangez, who, in. 1523, traitorously connived at the taking of Fontarabie by the Spanish.«. .. _ _ [ Any unathorized person found to have in his possession documents relating to the national defense, even ‘without intent to make treasonuble use of them, will be liable to heavy fine and imprisonment, The accused will be tried . before a courtâ€" martial, whether soldier orâ€" civilian. _ N Spies will be sentenced to penal serviâ€" tude if anything has resulted from their observations, but if they have amounted to nothing simple incarceration will be their punishment. ~ f ed in five of its articles by the Army Commission. As it now stands, death will be the punishment of treason commit ted by a member of the army or a public officer, and imprisonment at hard labor for lifeif the guilty person is a civilian having no official rank. » | _ Anotherâ€"curiosity he possesses is what he calls the *‘mystery" clock. It consists wpparently of nothing but two hands, set in a glass plate. that point out the correct time without any visible agency. The secret of the matter lies in the interior of the thick hands, for there will be found a regular clock contrivance that makes a EDL SR Lb ofi hn on on aividitetimachiissscn l2 5s it C300 RL E. 1 f th ‘dollag " ‘Their increass4 | huebadd, the defendarit, _ The man lived in | I‘[lliell;" n::'! Lo the muf:,g ' wr:ood icyio. bus pretended that he was only ie«, bus ovhermine it is 0h Wt PSE |Socoup: a aiinpitated ns 61 siotines, and k i f uit 4 es, an one lo::k:nn:nr'u Mflnp::. at it was h%@w dressed bimself 1 tak® care of" ves, :~~:_ : ~~[4or the occasion so ssito impress the court s <@l . m orcotoan e l *‘ > 4n s usnally y a L‘!’ho\'gw i?l'::r Mm, :dhddl:lthum flo&. man ervéd ‘this season at< a ‘oeder to ascertain the defendant‘s resourcés â€" The owner told a reporter that he had been at work on this ingenious device darâ€" ing the whole of last summer. He had tried all sorts of substances, water, oil, etc., but had found none so servicesble as alcohol, There is, of course, no very great merit to the clock, as it is now, except as a showâ€"piece. By slightly oomphcnzins matters, however, adding four wheels and. enlarging the axle of the wheel, he says that the clock can:run for from three to ten years with a descent of only about a foot and a nalfduring that time. Certain minor matters, such as the construction of a cirâ€" cular dial, woula also be in the improved form. e is now applying for patents upon this rovention, The r'eooqt‘_publio degradation of Capt, poin‘s the time They Want.Small Change. CO. G. CURIOUS [ This piece of homely §hilooophy was utâ€" ‘tered by Commissioner Kerr at the City of ‘London court. He was‘trying the case of ‘a wife seeking to enforce payment of $280 iste hag under s ‘separation deed from her Ir.'Vnéhn said it was the woman‘s own‘faultiif she had no control over the child, and he refused to do anything but eaution the child, whose eyes twinkied in leasant anticipation of other sport with gag gaardians as she left the court. a DREESSED FOR THE OCCASION. "It is people who have no money in their pookets who have to dress well to impose on tradesmen .udd‘nylenwmu d. If a man goes into a ahm shabbily the ‘tradesman looks uce, whereas if he is dressed showily and well the tradesâ€" wan thinks he has a bank account, gives the man credit, and generally gets taken «*She won‘t do anything that she‘s told to do," said the grandmother. ‘‘Last night she was worse than ever. _ Me and ber aunt was in bed, and she snatched all the bedâ€" clothes of:us and slapped us hard. That‘s no way to treat her grandos and sunt." Under such ciroumstances it is refreshing to find that the tabies are turned at times. An instance of this was recorded at Bow street. An elderly voman accompanied by her grandchild of 12 years,complained that the little girl was completely beyond her wontrol, i **What does she do ?" asked the magisâ€" their children worse than dogs. Warnings have no effect, and a term of imprisonment often seema to embitter them more and more against their unforzunate ottspring, for instances are common where the father or mother has returned from jail and wreakâ€" ed vengeance on the children who were the innocent cause of their imprisonment. _ after boing sevcrely beaten. His arms were extended and secured with catgut and ropes, and one leg was also tied. The little fellow was compelled to stand on the other leg from 12 o‘clock at night until 10 in the morning. â€" Twice during the night, on g:sdmg to be released, his father burnâ€" ed his arms with parafiin matches. When pital: â€" The brate of a father was remanded, zo as to permit inquiries by the Society for g' Prevention of Crusity to Childrep. \/Wanrlv avery day there is some case of ed his arms with parafiin matches. . When re eased the child was* so exbausted and awollen that ho‘hqd. to byl !.sken to a £'°" At the Southwark police court a box: maker was summoned for unlawfally mesaulting, illtreating and neglecting his ll:{ of 9 years. For spending uixm.ee the was tied to the end ot an iron bedstead, Stern justice was exemplified at Westâ€" ham. A widow was charged with keeping a refreshmentâ€"housé without having a li« cense, She kept a little shop in which she sold confectionery, tobacco and small artâ€" icles. One night a revenue spy called and bought a bottle of lemonade. It was after hours, and he reported the circumstance. Defendant admitted the offense, but said she erred in ignorance. She had recently lost her husband and had opened the little shop to try and -:ipport. herself and seven children. She had given up the business after the summons was issued. But justice could not overiook any attempt, however small, to defraud the revenue, and a fine of $1.25 was imposed. .. . i see) "It wos like this, your honor," said he, in guttural tones, ‘‘it wos a wery damp morning, and a gentleman as was riding outside says to me, "Sam, will you have a [drop of ginger brandy?" An‘ I answers, nibus driver and ‘wasâ€"charged with being absent from his bus for five minutes. Like his famous prototype, We‘ller had a hoarse voice and & roundabout manner. He did ’hot. deny the charge, but pleaded extenuatâ€" ing circumstances. . He told his story pretty much in the same way, as the elder Weller would bave told it only that astute conchy never would have been caught off the box sipping ginger brandy, which appeared to be the favorite tipple of the modern Weller. l-nd almost concealing his red, weatherâ€" beaten face, gave his name as Samue! Welâ€" ler, spelled with a *‘we." He was an omâ€" â€"This week has been more than ordinarily wolificâ€".in . police court scenes. â€" At the Huildhall, presided® over by Sir Heary edern Edition of Sammel Weller, §r., _ Shmmened ‘at Guildhallâ€"His Wet Day AY, FEBRUARY 7, 1895. every day there is some case ES IN THE POLICE COURTS OF THE GREAT METROPOLIS. came to grief in the North LONDON‘S â€" SLUMS. SA ho S Gronrd on n "_F".'- AAUEaCieside = mssn on _ I m m I C d M T ! fl wbucoor?nunder !orh‘.:filin‘::'m: Dull of Comprehension. panamrebe beatiy k arok ie \ s L art. af tha instantly perishes, and a large part of the cxponnzofu:‘uuuocuhu of an elabâ€" orate systeim of ‘parits," or drains, to carry off storm water, a difficult thing to do in the level: coast districts. At length the leaves of firstâ€"planted "‘trees" begin to wrinkle andshow yellow spots, and now the mlur labor system. comes into action, h afterncon the coolie cuts his ripened tobacoo, and carries it to the "bangsul," or drying shed, of which there is one to every ten fields. 1 In tobacco intended for "filling," or manuâ€" facture, a (e'b:olu on the leaf u; o‘l lees consequence, but ‘‘wrappers" to be of an: use, must be'wi&hoat flaw,and the “vol'm.z unless carefully. bandâ€"picked, will reduce thoptofltlun'nqw;lll lnu&ln ues Another peculiarity is that, if tobaoco is floodod. even to the depth of an inch, it Only the strongest and most experienced coolies can properly cultivate an acre and a quarter, and even with them the last thir1 ofthe field is much inferior to the rest. Besides, tobacco is attacked by several is séct enemies, and particularly by amall Association, and the work cf his most genâ€" erally known 1s "The Reign of Lew." In the rea‘m of science he is marked ‘as one that does not find it necessary to reject Christian truth in order to accept scientific truth. In 1878 be visited the United States; and in that same year his son, the Marquis of Lorna, who had marrted the Princess Louise, the daughter of Queen Victoria, received a most enthusiasiic welcome as the new governerâ€"general of Canada. If his high connections reflect honor upon the dnio. it may be no less to his credit that by encouraging another son to enter business he showed himself to be fr:e from some false but common ideas as to notility. &A *4 :&k *I want that for one of ths hymas, but En &J’ t phccsl P e shan‘t name aay othere. There‘s a hind 42.« "Wt ts P * sitels button off your Sunday coat, anud I was Je .'!Q lech mt \ goin‘ to sew it on toâ€"morrow, but you‘il hev 35. lkee . to wear it jest as it is. Everybody will be C . $ aâ€"weepin‘ cver my loss instead of lookin‘ 3 R* |around fur missin‘ hind buttons. Yes, @ml i â€"â€" |Samuel, in spite of all, I‘m a person who‘ll §£‘ ir=: | be missed by her naybars. Nobody is callâ€" "d i« | ed on oftener to lend her quilt frames and "" NeSe > fiatirons and pressboard and coffee mill oo e se > than 1 am and nobody does it more cheerâ€" "T es ie en fully. That makes me think! Mrs. Tyler k a] oo onl . owes ma two cups of brown sugar and a ipene â€" whole nutmeg. I wouldn‘t speak about it be had filled before, but one that he soon | t the funeral, but don‘t let it go more‘n a resigned because of his views on the Irish| W**k arterwards, as she‘s a great hand to question. Shortly before, he had published| forgit. When she measures out the cugar, a book: reviewing the "Eastern ~situation. | 899 that she presses it down, and the nutâ€" His leaning in politics has been cnaracterizâ€" 1:“"5"5’3“'- R ed as "Whig by family, Liberal by intellect, . Gallup fi‘ through with the mort Independent by nature, and Conservative | £8§? #ale and 1 interested in an acâ€" by inclination." His tastes have led him|COPDt of the birth ofa fiveâ€"legged calf in to thestudy of art and literature, and he|the County adjoining, but it was all the has given lectures on various topics in those | Ame to Mrs. Gallup. 3 fields. He has been president of the British| * Samue!," shesaid, as she wiped her since then. On his succession to his father‘s title began his career as a ssatesman,and he soon made his mark as an eloquent member of the House of Lords. During several administrations he held important offices ; and, under Gladstone, in 1881 he was secretary of state for India, a position the if )fl\ â€"â€" it N S mt 2l c en «hi i: E. CAE < +; 4A A > ,-'".g : [ & 2 ,"° k Lal b: dn .. / elltill pbcats e s ... â€" taed Al P * ut fls _ . © yeite x 5\ Cr 22 + l C § w o «l ‘fil E> «l : ‘.'; e ie E wwR â€" f ioi s d 3 "alf «‘. firik _ C unsl old > ie esc P See ~ ** 1t was a holiday, your honor," pleaded the youny man, " und we had been keeping it up." g "pYu," said the unfecling magistrate, ** you seen to have keot everything up but yourself. You fell down on your nose." And before the laugh haa stopped the pris~ oner was mulcted $1.25 and costs, A nicely dressed young fellow, who said he was a butler, -uppof into the dock at Guildhall with a piece of sticking plaster fixed cn the bridge of his nose. A constable said the ** dressing" covered a wound prisâ€" cner received in a fall while drunk and mâ€" capable. d P ce w it tense amusement of the hangersâ€"on of the court, *‘ those biscuits have turned out hard tack for you. Five shillings and three biscuits which made him feel dizzy. This was too much for the ** beak." How could a man get drunkNon ':'nc:l:n Were they steeped in rum ? No, but prisoner had taken a nip along with them.. «xhorter to get her viotim to confess ber | â€"â€"‘ ; GALLUP‘S WOES. sins and become converted. ‘The ovu-o./ showed that the young woman was an old f _ 3 h band -t.h;:oh tricks. su:;dwmn' Ifc Gallup went out with the several â€"hearted people preten |. p sions and sham nl&iom It was a case for J mfiw u;b'd do:n‘;T c;:" severity, remarked the magirtrate, an< | 4*° oo ouse door an a fow novmv.g-andlq her â€"tears he sent the wily | not@@ornotbs to the fire in the smokehouse taken a pip Almivi;h them. An !‘ remarked bis honor, to the in Sumatra Tobacoo. o s us oo e ’Mnnud"ithouuyafi Back a ways the engineer and fireman were crawling out of the snow. They said that one paralle! hadbrokes and had come up, whang ! under: the â€" Gromen.. The nert moment both moen were in the ssow. The «* An engineer, if be isn‘t rattled, can reâ€" verse an engine in from five to ten seconds," says m railroad man. *"Porhaps a man under extraordinary conditions could do it quicker. ‘One time up in eastern Main our train jerked upsuddenly and we rushed oo the Platformes . Therp the onpibe Mond Reversing an Engine in Short Time. ** Samuel Gallap, I‘ve changed my mind. I wasgoin‘ to die, but now 1‘ll live jest as long as ezer 1 possibly kin and spite you all I know bow. Get along on your own side of the bed, or: I‘ll out the cord and let you drop on the floor."‘ Mr. Odl:K"u just finishing that item as she put inquiry. He hung on till he found & balf lived out orly two days, and he then laid the paper uside, got up and wound the clock, and leaving Mrs. Gallup to turn the cat out doors, shut up the kitchen stove and put out the light he went off to bed. She sobbed and gasped and blew her nose to attract atiention, but he tumbled into bed after a few minutes and was round asleep asshe finally come in and jerked the pillow from under his head and ;767\54;{ **Samuel," shesaid, as she wiped her eyes and puiled at her nose. **I want you to give Mrs. Harrison that crazy quilt on the spare bed. She giv me most of the pieces and helped to make it,and I pi omised it to her when I died. All the other things will go to my mother. I made you a mornin‘ band for your hat cother day, and you‘ll find it on a nail behind the bedroom door.~ ‘You‘ll hev to wear it at the funeral, but if you want to take it off as soon as you home I shan‘t complain. When you amp your clothes, be sure to take a wet towel and rub your neck,us every body who attends thefuneral will look you over. uel ?" Do you mt;w;; 'g;o;t;‘y tzv-m',- Samâ€" Mr. Ga.llnf finished the testimonial from the grateful victim of catarrh and turned to the mortgage sale, and both Mrs. Galâ€" lups slippers fell off her feet before she could get control of her feelings to say:â€" discovery, and it is doubtful if tsobs or realized what an effort r to continue:â€" uk I‘d like to hev the funeral hurch, but hev concluded to syou think best about it. 11 any more trouble when alive â€"~......â€"=«« belp, and I shan‘t make any arter I‘m dead. By settin‘ the cheers close together you kin git thirty people in this room, and them in the parlor and kitchen will hev. to do the best they kin. As I say, I don‘t want to be pertickler about things, but there‘s one bymn I‘d like to hev sung by the quire. Youkin sing with‘em, or jine in on the chorus, or ‘%ou needn‘t sing at all, jest as you like. hen they sung it at Mrs. Day‘s funeral, Mr. Day held his hmdkdcnhiof l::d his face u:md of j.'}nin' in, and everybody praised him fur it afterâ€" warde, That hymn: Samuel, is ‘The Sweet By and By"" . _ . â€"â€" & Lhee "‘I did want to live to see if tgo-;_punh pickles were all right and to make another jar of chilisass, but if the sammons hev cumâ€"and I know they ‘hevâ€"I must go. It‘ll be too late fur your recond wife to make mhili sass, and if the peaches spile about it, bein‘ in luv agin. {: a‘ll take a second wife, and the 1¢‘1l do will be to hev a new rag feather beds out toâ€"day to air, when all to onceâ€"all to once, Samuel Gallupâ€"sunthin tall and thin and mournfal seemed to rise right up and out of the floor before me,and a solemn voice solemaly.sard, ‘Git ready, fur your time is ut hand !‘ I jest screamed out and {cll.on the floor, and how I ever got on this lounge . I don‘t know. Samuel, was that lame hen on the roost when you ilooked into the coop? _ Mebbeâ€" dyin‘ people shouldn‘t be consarned about lame hens, but I was allus tender hearted." ‘ Mr. Gallup reached for his pipe and filled and lighted 1t and put his feet up on a chair and grunted with satisfaction, but he made no reply. Mrs. Gallup sobbed four wh-‘ and shivered twice and then went on :â€" **Whils you was out to the barn and i was busy with that rug," continued Mrs. Gallap, turning dger to face him, * I radâ€" denly saw & vision. You don‘t believe in imdeg the fresh hams, Mrs. Gailup wa rimg some bindjng on a piece of ingrain mcu rug to lay in front of the cook Mfilfl singing a hymn as she worked. wb{,h returned twenty minutes later, ty years‘ standing by one botâ€" :'&’;very. and ngubgonbtfil if "NO. 856. Bs ons ies oi un ts on Horse Shoeing n the old stand> A ALLAN McFARL â€"ATâ€" o BOULDIN a« â€"CO‘Z PRIME Has opered out Â¥_ firstâ€" London, TaS " 5.55 * Connections with morning and svening trainsfrom Darham aremadeat Falmerstenfor Wiartor,Southampton,Kincardineand Stratford Firstâ€"Class Hearse. Of the Best Quality Cheaper THANX EVER. Mt. Forest, 255 , Palmerston , 235# Guelpb, 1038 * Toionto 8.20 a.m. UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to. JAEE KRESS. THECOOKSBEST FRIEND: Jebbing sfall POWDER are nowsuocessful in business or positions. ‘The business course of the mont through and complete in is as much mthoknflorde&finomuh tire courseof mapy of the soâ€"called I eolleges, The short band course is thoro commiete. &:2d formcopy of the Aunt noung‘ usctâ€"containing full particular seat ~;eto auy addre«s® & SEE QUR HARNESS UPPER TOWKNâ€" S still to be found in his Old Stand ~ oppesite the Daorkam Bakery. anafforded curtomers living at a Aterest alioweu op savings lnnrfiomdg tyd apwards. â€" Prompt attention and ts received and LARGEST SALE iN CANADA. ~~ Agenerel Banking hu-lnel: ssued and collections mada a %EO::Ifu:l‘o, Quebec, "‘r“r‘rt;!;r'fi“‘;‘-â€"“'â€". _ DURHAM AGENCY |THe oRty REM | . Is PUBLISHED EVERT . W.F. Cowan, RESERVE FUND CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,000 TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVAWKCR CHAS. RAMAGE â€" Editor & Proprist® made shoes. ~Also woonwozfi StandardBank of Canada in _ B o w l 7y & ,//,/,’ -/<;%' 7 \ YoVYU e JAKE KRESS Furniture Grand Trunk Railway. TIME TABLE. J/}‘.lo IRITHER Thursday; Mor A firstâ€"class lot GENTS in all principal T WENTYâ€"FIVE YEARS for sale HARNESS MAKERS. SAVINGS BANK in connection. â€"© President. â€"TO ATTENDâ€" HARNESS 11.15 a.m. aorme xorta$ 3.45 p.m. GoTNG socTE 745 «. m Pard up â€"AT THRâ€" .. OFFICE, GAR ST.,â€"DURHAM, 0us made on all points. Doposâ€" interest nllowed at current {, a. FLEMING, J KELLY, Agent. transacted Drafts Y #2 Gbp.‘ Ne 2z P 9 0

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