West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 11 Jul 1895, p. 7

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We observe that many bicyclers have an wnxious or even distressful look while rid« ing. This is unsatisfactory to us. lt indicates a lack of freedom, and of selt commund, and of mastery of the wheel. It bears some resemblance to stage fright, and might be calied bike fright, Thos¢ afllicted with it onght to shake it off at once. Again, we have noticed some men smoking cigars while out riding ; and they may think that this makes them look dandy uis cR \y / AÂ¥e don‘s ike the habit. annexation W although, this, in turn, check by the question o scudition of Italy‘s funds. Ager‘s Pilic for iver and bowels. " Ayer‘s Sarsaparilla is without an equal as a bloodâ€"purificr and Spring medicine, and eannot have pmiuenough. Thave watched its effects in chronic cases, where other treatment was of no avail, and have beerf astonished at the results. No other blood medicine that I have ever used, and I have tried them all, is so thorough in its action, and effects so many permanent cures 33 Ayer‘s Sarsaparilia."â€"Dr. H. F. MERRILL, Augusts, Me. : Ayor‘s 355 Sarsaparilia wITHOUT AN EQUAL. Statement of a AYERS=: Results Astonish NOTES AND COMMEN E000000 Chan S T e cJm e wC we ».«\'.\\‘\.:wi' 'w;w %" Ǥ -./_._,(\, ao 1 eypâ€"â€" ch news as we get from Abyssini s through Italian channels, and .i sents the movements of Gen. Barat us having been forced by hostil ind malcontent At War has become MEN OF SCIENCE hortness of the bresth, or smotherâ€" is, the value of Dr. Agnew‘s Cure heart cannot be estimated,as it will ief in 30 minutes in every case, and ously used, effect a cure. Dr. Agâ€" ure for the Heart is the greatest life remedy of the age. by McFarlane & Co. Dr. H. F. Merrill ave acceptcd Italy‘s protecâ€" irse, w policy â€"of further uld need no further excuse, , in turn, may be kept in MEDICINE f Mahdists on Well Known Doctor vssinians on the necessary, 1t is safety to the one RENARKABLE METHODS OF CURE IN THE FAR EAST. Chinese are the Who Falls BARBAROUS SURGBRL. RELYING ON THE PULSE, ** Many Chinese doctors declare that the health of the body is maintained normal by the flow of the internal perspiration, felt at the pulse,the beating and throbbing of which is one of their most important diagnostic sigos, The radial pulse is not the only one depended upon, there being four places on the right wrist and as many on the left where it is examined, One hundred different kinds of pulse beats are describe by the doctors. ** Many Chines health of the bo by the flow of th felt at the pulse, by the advertiser, but also recommending twoother medical * rethren as almostequall y skilful. principal surgeon of the place. "Contrary to the regulations of American and European physicians, all doctors in China advertise freely. On wrriving in a town one is always confronted with great glaring signs setting forth not only the marvellous skill and many cures performed IRONED OUT A HUNCHBACK. ©I now recall a truly remarkable surgiâ€" cal case, . The surgeon, having advertised an infallible cure of curvature of the spine, @ hunchback applied to him and asked if he could straighten his back. The surgeon undertook to do so und agreed with the man‘s relatives that ne should ask no fee unless he fulfilled his agreement, "Placing the unfortunate putient on his hack on « tlat board, invoking meanwhile all the customary deities with burning joesâ€"sticks,he placed a similar board on the patient‘s chest and wbdomen, which he loaded with heavy weights and stones. ©The result of this novel orthopaedic surgery was that the patient was so effectually straightened out that he died on the spot, but, notwithstanding, the doctor cluined his fee on the ground that he had kept his promise, "The burgain was that he should straightâ€" en the patient‘s back, which as a surgeon, he had done. Notning had been said of the man‘s life, which a physican whould have been employed to protect. The claim was "The burgain was that he should straightâ€" en the patient‘s back, which as a surgeon, he had done. Notning had been said of the man‘s life, which a physican whould have been employed to protect. The claim was «llowed and the suryeon paid in full. HOMCLOPATHS NOT WaNTED, © Chinese doctors are vory liberal with their doses of medicine, for which they charge according to the quantity when conâ€" sulted at their offices. In the matter of wize they cater to the popular taste, for their patients are not pleased with simple or small doses. Medicine must be compoundâ€" ed of at least five different drugs, important enough to have a killing effect, an evidence trat the Chinese haye neither respect nor use for Homeropaths. «* No sugarâ€"coated pills for Mongolians. They want medicines with a bitter taste. The blacker and thicker the mixture, the better they uce suited, the efficiency of a dose being in direct proportion to its size and nastiness, .. c ho s * The ingredients used in the art of healing are mainly vegetable substances, of which cinnamon and ginseng are the most costly and highly prized. Of course opium occupies & high‘ place aiso, but mineral substances, such as plumbago, sulphate of copper, calomel, arsenic and red precipitate, are JGSt as often prescribed. *The latter are believed to assist the products of digestion in sweating through the coats of the Eintefimel uu! becoming ‘l;';:o:i‘:u-:;xi'-t);;écfore they are freely used in digestive orders. Varicus animal subâ€" stances, such as the teeth of the cuttlefish, the legs of fowl and birds‘ nests containing the unfledged young, are also employed, a rich patient sometimes being directed to take a birds‘ nest stew each day. onty waANDS AND warers. «*As Chinese ladies are not permitted to be scen by strange men, they are shielded from view by a curtain, with the exception of their hud-hn:;l ym“T;:Monz to be felt by the physiciat» t also pays for m{m of mm_fi&wa. uese are the Vietimsâ€"Woe to a Stranger Who Falls Sick Among Mongelsâ€"Igâ€" norance as Deep as Their Confdenee is Sablime â€"Ctvilized Ideas of the Mealâ€" ing Artâ€"Likely to Follow Japanest Invasio®. he purpose of increasing LNeIT COUTMEN: ©"Constitutional sickness is uxually ascribâ€" d to the agency of evil spirits, which an be controlled only by the right proporâ€" ion« of the five eloments,fire, earth, metal, vood, or plants,and water. . Thesecompose l1 things human and divine, . Some of tife vil spirits, they believe, are too small to e seen by the naked eye. . Thesecorrespond vell with bacteria and are the most difficuit AUT rist gives information art and intestines, the stomach and lungs. The next~in importance to n between physicians e sharply detined than Eutopeans, every man tick to his own branch No surgeon is allowed . of the body except the e of his profession conâ€" it splinters, removing rom the skin, setting st not in any case give f the conventional ce, when a rich man inch of it is ate poultice or Suct (sthonmd ut mt ol ing to the distance 200 """"" 220 5i oÂ¥ Cer ‘The doctor does not present his bill or demand a certain sum for his services, . it being customary for him to accept whatâ€" ever is given him. â€" But if be thinks he has been underpaid, he will be ‘‘busy" next time the ungrateful patient has occasion to summon him. _ The actual fees he receives vary from 10 cents to several dollars for each visit, calculating in American coin. Extracting teeth and . other dental operations are the most extensive and im portant measures which the Chinese surâ€" geon is called upon to perform. If the tooth comes away easily the patient is unlucky, but if the crown is gone and nothing but the roots remain they invariably remcve gum and ali with a chisel and mallet, %‘hey aiso make false teeth; those for the wealthy of gold or ivory, and those for the poor of iron. â€" en it en s RCERr AR LalnGinprmnei ndrcidad nb c Chinese surgical knowledge, as is obâ€" served in the case I have related, is extreme> ly crude. Ihave never kknown of an instance of their using the knife. When they are in doubt about a diagnosis they always apply a plaster. It was my good fortune once to be present at the dressing of a fractured leg. â€" Three surgeons and a phyâ€" sician had been summoned. They fi:ced a peculiar kind of clay in & wooden bowl, brought in a lot of chickens, and to the accompaniment of weird incanâ€" tations severed their heads and allowed the ; blood to flow on the clay, making a sort of poultice. This was applied directly to the ‘ fractured limk without any attempt at reduction. Bandages were then applied, and finally small bamboo strips were entwined in the baudage, enveloping the whole as if in a wicker basket. Another chicken was confined under: the last turn of the bandage, and the head | revered, the blood being allowed to wouk through the bandages. . After this the bird was removed und the leg dressed in the : most approved Chinese fashion. *Thea they proceed to exor and force the wpirits to aban prey by various incantations or charms, which are merely piece paper bearing caballistic charac copy is put on the bedâ€"curtai warn next to the skin, and a th scar. The fee charged Â¥ equivalent to 1 cent in Amer **I have hitherto describ of the *regular school.‘ men remain to be treate mostly Troit priests, who superstitious fears of the i very little civilization in would subdue them. They patient that his disease is 0 the imagination, they make is troubled with evil spirits worn next to the and its ashes diss the patient, . Som temple are also us Nometimes a medium a trance. _ Then agair supposed to inflict bo who have offended him to propitiate him by th the .burniug of incense Only the M aHi- gymuasium was gradually converted into a school of health. By physical exerâ€" cises conducted under his supervision, he undertook to remedy deformities of hody, and to cure patients afflicted with disoases of lungs, digestion and disordered nerver. He became in fact, if not in title, a physiâ€" cian of recognized skill, and applied many original theories to the treatment of diseasâ€" es, devoting the best. years of his life to a minute study of the mechanism of the human body, with a view to remedying the physical defects of other men. 5. wl J asisne dapeminanes qh Nes buntTaam | We bnvav atsininertebinetredatpe enc o C Whether it is the blind boatâ€"builder designing the finest yachts, or the blind entomologist making sorentific discoveries, or the blind statesman discussing â€" in Parliament the intricacies of finance and conducting the most laborious executive department, only the most resolute natures can win such victories as these. can city, . 1t was 10 blind from early child of an inflexible will, I coming a scientific ar Although deprived athlete. The loss of one sense only ened his determination to preser other facuities in the freshness of J His own success in muscular exercise brought a group of young men around him, and before he was twentyâ€"one years old be was a trainingâ€"master for athletic sports of every sort. _ He opened a gyimnasium with wpparatus designed to carry into practice theories of his own respecting the developâ€" ment of the human body. fle taught large classes, led in exercises of allkinds, and performed the most diffiâ€" cult feats with unerring accuracy. His facility in using the apparatus and moving wbout the gymnasium was amazing. Visiâ€" tors could hardly be convinced that the expert and fearless teacher was absolutely sightloss. ! . e ie e td Mr. Fawceit, when he met with an mcciden* in his youth by which he lost his sight, was a student with an ardent amâ€" bition for public life. A weaker nature would have given up the fight as hopeless, but with unginching courage he â€" followed the career he had marked out for himself. He continued his study of political economy by the aid of other men‘s eyes ; trained his memory until he could carry complex tables of statistics as easily as other men could read the figures from the printed page, and achieved great distinction as a university professor and political leader. So complete was his conquest of infirmity that Mr. Gladstone was the only man who could rival him in Parliament in the exposition of statistical question#. y L UIB U7 BmOT Go L Ds s en Althc himself M OoT o ortger m‘ He was virtually blind, but with unconâ€" querable patience he went on with his work year after year. ©Iwill rom‘ember," wrote Mr. Prescott, the historian, ** the blunk despair which I felt when my literary treasures arrived and I saw the mine of wealth lying around me which I was f‘oxbiqde{x to explore." But One Dose of South American Rhou, matic Curo Relioves, and Half a Bottle Curos. Robert E. Gibson, Pembroke‘s well known merchant : * I contracted rhumaâ€" tism in very severe form in 1898, and have suffered untold misery each spring since. 1 have repeatedly -pg:d‘ fly blisters with but little success. torm whom I conâ€" sulted likewiso failed to relieve. I was induced to try South American Rhumatic Cuobzol‘lnr.w. F.C. Bethel of the Dickson Drug Company. The first dose gave inâ€" DOCTORS AND FLY BLISTERS FAIL. \{)\uvv&-;;----â€"vih fi d rug Company. e first doseo gave inâ€" Padk relet: and half x bottle cured." . â€" As a cure for rheumatism this remedy is certainly peerless. Sold by McFarlane & Co. ‘There are 1,600 men working onâ€"the Parry Sound railway. the distance the doctor has to come, ctor does not present his bill o1 I lose i1 BLIND laced a peculiar kind of ©69 40 * | w s on to Fiji, m 4 bowl, brought in a lot of chickens, Norfolk island to Fiji, a d e accompaniment of weird incanâ€" miles; the third to Fannin evered their heads and allowed the miles; and the fourth and flow on the clay, making a sort of ‘ from Fanning island to V This was applied directly to the l a distance of 3,242 miles. i limlk without any attempt at, of this cable would thus be n. Bandages were then applied, and | about three times as long mall bamboo strips were entwined | transâ€"Atlantic cable, . The mdage, enveloping the whole as if of this cable from Aucklan ker basket. is £1,517,000,orin round fig er chicken was confined under the This cable, it is proposed, n of the bandage, and the head | 0f a number of cables conn the blood being allowed to somk | the southern hemisphere. tha handarres. . After this the bird ] nnnummmencmmafieme such Butile ost Resolate Natures Can Win ‘lood being allowed to son andages. . After this the bit und the leg dressed in t 1 Chinese fashion. OVED HER MOLK. MEN‘S VICTORIES s as These A CAREFUL STUDENT OF SOCIAL REFORM. he is able to speak with tforce and intel« ligence, He is to be credited with examining into the merite of Dr. Agnow‘s Catarrhal Powder, with the same bent of mind : And what does be say ? That in this medicine he has found a remedy that gives quick reliet for cold in the head, which is so unsomfortable to everybody, and giving relief there it helps perhaps more than any other remedy to stave off the ill effects that come from catarrhal trouble. (One short puff of the breath through the Blower, supplied with each bottle of Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this D 1 5 eluadi e e ied mouth various seeds, so is NO MIMT 7J it with d fferent studies.â€"Pliny "t. Eio y dot on i 1 rne m W en onbaNetan in this community to sell specialties in our line. Trees that bear seediess Pears. Apple Trees hardy as oaks. "Excelsior" Crab a« large as an Apple. Cherry trees provif against blackâ€"knot. Plum trees not affected by Curculio. Tree Currants. Space Gooseberries which will do not mildew. not Blackberry Bushes allow without thorns. us tofurtherenumerate, Tree Roses, etc. BUT our stock talks for itself. Prices right. Handsome book of platesâ€"and comylcte outfit furnished free of charge. Write for terms and particulars. _ __ _ Rix Tine "Orp Reciastz" NursuxyatN WE WANT A MAN AT ONCE in this community to sell specialties id 6 se Anramaan‘n, CHASE BROTHERS‘ COMPANY, _Colborne, Ont. Ne se arar ce acan en in Torpid Liver, Bad<Breath.. . to stay cured also regulato the bowels. vaRy MICE TO TAKE» Prics 26 Cante at Drua SToRK®. Cure SICK HEADACHE and in 20 miwuTes, also Coated Ton ness, Billousness, l‘ain in the Side, Co 1 CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? For a topt answer and an bonest opinion. write to MOUR N & CO., who have had nenrl(\r fifty years‘ experience in the patent business. Communicaâ€" tions strictly confidential, _A Hundbook of Inâ€" formation concerning Pntents and bow to ob. tafin them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan» lcal and scientific books sent free. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive lgochl noticein the Scientific American, and thus are brought widely before the public withâ€" eut cost to the inventor. ‘This splendid ‘DDPQ‘I'. issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has b{ ar the largest circulation of any scientific work in the world. $3 ngw. Sample cgy:e. sent free. Buudlng uonkl:lpnthly. .50 a year. Singlo eotplu.'z cents. ry number contains beauâ€" tiful plates, in colors, and gbowmphn of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the lutest designs and secure contracts, Address As land keep a Dott KENDALL‘S SPAYVIN CURE, wnd keep it For Side byTnll Drugeist«, or addr Dr. B. J. KENDALL COMP test designs and «ecure contracts, Address MUNN gn CO., NEwW YorK, 361 BROADWAK v. B. J. Kesbat Kendall‘s THE PACIFIC CABLE e would thus be 6,484 miles, or times as long as the shortest tic cable, The estimated cost e from Auckland‘to Vancouver 10,orin round figures,$7,585,000, it is proposed, will be only one r of cables connecting with it on x hemisphere. POWDERS ENOSBURGH FALLS, VT y t Yo r);-c;\;;ln!;r):-'! When the bullâ€" d the cowâ€"slips about, and s are shooting all about. root of a tongve like a deâ€" Because it is down in the most dangerous time of th proved by sowing it with is the mind by exercising i all the tim truly, >CZX'7A‘6$7, Mo., Apr.8, "0 pate at to a doorstep r used. . Have CHtas. PowKLT s lafine rext ol @%*fiw es m stt ons fas dn Lack n ttlea When it hat bad 4 N1 sTEAM ROADS DOOMED. A Hot Box‘Prevented Higher Speedâ€"The. Test an American Road is Making With Electriclty as a Motive Power., A revolution in railroading is promised by the result of the trials of the electric power on the Nantasket Branch of the New York, Noew Haven and Hartford Ruilway yesterday. . The success of the venture is assured. The first trial was made on Thursday night. News of the test was withheld from the public. Two electric locomotives were run over the road wnd a speed of more than fifty miles an hour was attained between the old Colony House and Pemberton, Saturday night another trial with an electric locomotive geared to accomplish eighty or more miles an hour was made, and a hot box on & motor car defeated a new record for speed. _ The heating of the box was due to the fact that the new bearâ€" ings would not withstand the friction caused by territic speed, at which the car \was run for a distance of probably less than three miles, â€" In the opinion of men quali® fied by years of experience to judge of *peed, eighty miles an hour was reached. The possibilities, they say, were AN ELECTRIC MOTOR RUNS EIGHTY MILES AN HOUR. eited en on in als " or the other styles of rail in electric railâ€" ways, there is used the conventional T rail employed by steam roads. The rails weigh seventyâ€"eight pounds to the yard, and are 4} inches high and are laid precisely as the RATLS OF STRAM RoADs, Two flexible copper bonds seven inches long are under the base of the rails at each joint and riveted to them, _ The bonds are so placed that when the angle bars used in splicing the rails are in position the bonds cannot be seen,. The length of the bond is reduced to a minimum to insure the maxiâ€" mum carrying capacity with the minimum of resistence. C board is of the latest design. It is arranged with two main generator panels, The tation voltage is 700 volts. The wires are zo arranged that none can be seen issuing from the roof of the building, and there is little to indicate that the building is an electric power house. . n L Ens station and Pemberton _ Until the capucities of the motors are fully ascertained it is not known how many cars will be run on a train. . Itis expected, however, that trains will have from four to nine cars, as occasion may require. The Nantasket Beach branch was chosen for the experiment for the reason that within its limits are condensed most of the diflicult problems which will have to be determined to make electricity a successful substitute for steam. The curves are many and sharp and the grades steep. Treing will be run with great frequency in the seven miles beeween Old Colony House Thousands Know of the Quick and Cor tain Rolief That Comes from South American Kidney ERaaie Em Pn Four motor cars, built after the style of baggage cars, are the electric locomotives. To sesure traction they have been made extra heavy, weighing, when fully equipped about 60,000 pounds each. Two will have four motors each and the others twonetors each hung on trucks, The cars are equipâ€" ped with the Westinghouse air brake, and have all standard appliances of â€"the steam cars in use by the Consolidated, In addiâ€" tion to a 15â€"mch goug at the front ends of the motor cars, each of these cars will have a chime whistle, worked ~with compressed This medicine will not cure all the ills that flesh is heir too, but it will cure kidney trouble of whatever kindâ€"no case too aggravated. â€" It will cure apeedilyâ€"sure relief in six hours. _ 1t is rich in healing air in place of steam hoi ind | itnnbeiet i ndutninttin Save for a single feature, there is not the slightest resemblance to the steam locomoâ€" tive. That feature is the cowcatcher mt both ends of the motor cars. . It is situated underneath the platforms instead of proâ€" jecting beyond the body of the locomotive, us with the steam locomotive. The wheels are about the size of the largest wheels used on steain cars, but the axles are consider~ ably heavier to withstand the strain of the slectric gearing. L S 23. Esn td powers, and. whilst it quickly gives ease, where pain existed before, it also gives strength to the weak and deranged organs, making the cure complete and lasting. Thousands who know what South American Kidney Cure has done for them will tell you s0. Sold by McFarlane & Co Something ought to be done to prevent those two lunatics from going out rowing together, exclaimed the nervous woman. Don‘t mind ‘em ‘madam, replied the byâ€" stander. Rach.is im good company. One of ‘om is the man who rocks the boat and the other is the man who wants to see how TRIED, TESTED AND TRUE. NINETY MILES AN ahore ho can awim. Comrades b of the entire It was Sash and Door Factory. W Lumber, Shingles and Lath always HARNESS SHOP! I[s still in his old stand Office, where h. Mlighest Price paid for Raw Furs Ruwberm., Jsn 26th, 1892, Little Johanyâ€"I know what the baby is goin‘ to be w‘en he grows up. He‘s goin‘ > be a detective. # Motherâ€"Ot all things ! Because he‘s so Men and Women in all Walks of Life Tell of the Remarkable Cures Wrousht by Soath American Nervine Tonic. ED 1 TORS, CLERGYMEN, PHYSIG I ANS For Sale by McFARLANE & CO,, Wholesale Agents for Durham and Vicinity Newspapee editors are almost as sceplical as the average physician on the subject of new remedies for sick people. â€" Nothing short of a series of most remarkable and well authentiâ€" cated cures will incline either an editor or a doctor to seriously consider the merits honestly claimed for & medicine. Hundreds of testimonials of wonâ€" derful recoveries wrought with the Great South American Nervine Tonic were received from men and women all over the country betore physicians began to prescribe this great remedy in chronic cases of dyspepsia, inâ€" digestion, nervous prostration, . sick headache, and as a tonic for buildâ€" ing up systems sapped of vitality through protracted spells of sickâ€" ness During bis experience of nearly a quarter of a century as a newspaper publisher in Paris, Ont., Editor Oolâ€" well, of The Paris Review, has pubâ€" lished bundréis of columns of paid medicine advertisements, and, no doubt, printed many a gracefullyâ€" worded puff for his patrons as a matter of business, but in only a single instance, and that one warrantâ€" ed by his own personal experience, has he given a testimonial over his own signature. _ No other remedy ever offered the public has proved such a marvellous revelation to the most sceptical as the South American Nervine Tonic. It has never failed in its purpose, and it has cured when Little ‘Johnnyâ€"No‘m. Because he never SIX BOSES WiLL CONYVINCE THE MOST INCREDULOUS, e diimne $ pen [emis CHAS. LEAVENS, Jr., HEAVY AND :LIGHT ‘ HARNESS, | SADDLES, BRIDLES, | COLLARS, Etc. New Stock Horse Blankets. A Born Detective. d stand on Lambton Street, near the Post where he is ready to fill all orders for ppesyYEF & . In stock. t C. & J. M:KECHNIE doctors and other m tried in vain. says Mr. Oolwell, and could find no relief from the intense pains and disâ€" tress of the malady. 1 suffered day and night. â€" The doctors did not help me, and I tried a number of mediâ€" cines, but without relief, Abut this time I was advised to try the South American Nervine Tonic. | Its effects were instantaneous. â€" The first dose I took relieved me. J improved rapidly and grew stronger every day. Your Nervine Tonic cured me in a single week." > “I was prostrated with a particu larly severe attack of ‘La Grippe,‘ PORUi uc nmeceine n qnq )h doo iog‘. The South American Nervine Tonic rebuilds the life forces by its direct action on the nerves and the nerve centres, and it is this notable feature which distinguishes it from every other remedy in existence. The most eminent medical authorities now concedethat fully twoâ€"thirds of all the pbysical ailments of humanity arise from exhaustion of the nerve forces. The South American Nervine Tonic acting direct upon the nerve centres and nerve tissues instantancously supplies them with the true nourishâ€" ment required, and that is why its invigorating effects upon the whole system are always felt immediately. Â¥For all nervous disenses, for general debility arising from enfeebled vitalâ€" ity, and for stomach troubles of every variety no other remedy can possibly take its place. dinglish Spavin Liniment remeves all CHARLES LEAYVENS, s MerPBeet (eat B rmpe erens to. Bave use y * * Warranted byb‘lauhn & ONT., REVIEW and could find no dicines were We call the special attention of Por masters and subscribersto the following s3 nopsis of the rewcpaperlaws : _ 1. If any person orders his peper discon tinued, he most pay all arreages, or the publisher may continus to send it antil payâ€" mentis asade, and collectthe whole un qun! whether it be taken from the office or not. There can be no lega) discontinuance until paymentismade. 2. Asy person who takes & paper ftrow the post office, whether directed to hi pame or another, or whether he hbas sulâ€" scribed or not is rexpousible for the pay. 8. If asubscriber orders hie paper to be stopped at a certaintime, and the published continues to send, the subscriberis bound to pay for it if he takes it outsol the post office. This proceeds upon ke ground hat a man inust pay forwhat be uses. PURHAM DIRECTORY Sabbath Services at 11 a. r°. and 4 Sunday School and Bible cluse ut 9:3 Church Wardens, W. B. Vollet and Whitmore «t 2.00 p. m. Jmyer day evening at 5 p. m Sanday Services, moruiog «t 11 a. Sabbath School and Bible class at * p. m. Preaching at 7 p. m. Week evi ing Serviceâ€"Thursday evening, regu prayer meeting at 8 p. m. Young Peog Service every Sabbath at 10;80 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sabbath School at 2:80 p. m. Prayor meeting every Wednesday evening «t 8 p. m. Mave Wour Amenia Sonp Wrappers And when you bave 25 Ammonia or 10 Poritan Soap Wrappers send them to ns, and a threo cent stamp for postage, and we will mail you FREE. s hardsom picture suitable for framing. A list o; finm around erch bar. . Ammonia Lhn me equal. We recommend i. Write your neme plainly and address : W. A. Enapsgaw & Co., 48 and 50 LombardSt., Toronto. Hold by all ge 1 merchants and; esocers. Givre iu_m Lxaine Vnion bottle. Soli by all druggists throughout the world. Be sure ndsp:lk} for *‘Mrs Wixszow‘s Scorume §¥yarr." Mrs. Wixsiow‘s SoorHIXG NYRUP has been sued by millions of muthers for their children while teething. It disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth sen4 at once and get a bottle of "‘Mrs. Winslow‘s Sootki.g Syrup" for Children Teething. It wiil relieve the poor little suferer immedia tely. Depend apou it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures Diarrhoea, reâ€" gulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gums and reduce® Inflamâ€" wation, and gives tons and energy to the whole system. ‘"Mrs, Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup" for children teething it pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of ope of the best female physicians and nurses in the Uaited States. Price twentyâ€"live cents a ALL Hallâ€"open eyery Tuesday evening from 7 to 9 o‘clock, and every Saturday from 2 to‘g.‘:. Auppual fee $1. Dr. Gun Pres. O. age Seo. Mrs. MacRae, Durkum Servicesâ€"11 a. m. firet & day of every mouth. Glenelg Servic 9 m. m. first Sunday of every mo 10:80 a. m. third Sanday of every mont Deputy â€" Regist: a. m. to 4 p. ui Stark‘s Powders, each package of which contains two preparations, on in & round woodenâ€"box, the cover o% which forms a measure for one dose, an mmediate relief for Sick Headache and Stomach, also Neuralgia, and all kinds of nervous pains, and another in capsul (from 4 to 4 of one in an ordinary d which acts on the Bowels, Liver an Stomach, forming a never failing pert fect treatment for all Head and Stomach complaints. They do not, as most ?d!‘ â€" PugP t on t rmei e enleniiissd MEEdl-â€"op?:‘ PmAE Pn EPE _ .2 «uns â€" and so many other medicines do, los¢ their effect or produce after conafipnfio:a and are nice to take. 25 cents & box, all medicine dealers. Durhamâ€"Third Taesday in each month P1 .evi‘leâ€"Blondsay _ before _ Durham Hanoverâ€"Monday before Dorkam. Mount Forestâ€"Third Wednpesday in encb month. j # ; Gaelphâ€"First Wedesday in eack montb Harristonâ€"Friday before the Guelpb Fair Draytonâ€"Saturday betore Guelfih. Eloraâ€"The day before Guelph. Douglasâ€"Monday before Elorg Feir. Hamwiltonâ€"Crystrl Palace Grounds, th day after Guelpb. Listowel~â€"â€" First Fridey in each month: Fergasâ€"Thursday following Mount Forem Markdaleâ€"Suturday before Orapgeville Orangevilleâ€"Second Thursday in eac Don‘t say : ‘"Oh for a life on the briny deep" when you are likely to be seaâ€"sick cver the lee rail. â€" month. Fleshertonâ€"Monday before Orangevil Dundaikâ€"â€"Tuesday before Orangevilicle Shelburneâ€"Wednesday before Orangevillq Walkertonâ€"Last] Wedvesdey in each wontb. SAUGEEN TENT, K.O.T.M., No. 164, moets on the first and third Tuesdays of every month. _'l'hoc. Brown, Com. F DUBBA.\I LODGE NO & A. M. Niglnl of M on or before fall moon « Visiting brethern welcome W. M. Geo. Russell, Sec. POS’I‘ OFFICE, Ofite ®. m., to 7 p.m. Arc Postmaster. SONB OF SCOTLAND, BEN NEVIS CAMP NO. 45, meets in 8. of S. Hall, Friday on or before full moon. George Binnie, Chisf, Geo. Russel, Sec. \A of Meeting every 8 o‘clock, in the Odd F ing brethern welcome Ser DUBHAM L.O. L. NO. 682. Night o Meeting, on ThursGay or before fol moon in each month,. â€" Wim. A Auderson RINITY CHURCH LESBYTERIAN CHURCH APTIST CBUKCH rvice every Sabbuth at 11 a w. Sabbath School aud Bi REV. W. MoGRE ETHODIST CHURCH C. CHURCKH REV. A. G. JANSEN, Pasror Newspaper Laws. REY LODGE NO. 1 G. REGISTRY on Monaay evening REV. R. MALONEY, Pastor J.C. POMEROY, Paston w.J. CONAOR, Pasror EGISTRY OFFICE. Thomas ler, Registrar. Jobun A. Manro, egistrar. Office bours from 10 Monthly Fairs For Over Filty Vears Bs ‘ INSTITUTE. New GOR, Pastor 1. ‘W. B. Voliet Sec { Me a. r°. and 7 p ng on Wedues at 5. p. 1 os. Brown 0.F. Nig achenzle l uesday § o

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