West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 25 Jul 1895, p. 4

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‘WVHYIAGU ‘"gmo,1, joddpn TERMS : $6.00 to Insure a Foal. "The usual conditions govern all busiâ€" hess dones ROBT. WATSON. will stand for the summer months at his owner‘sstable, Lot 13, Con. 2, Tp. of Normanby. ~ That fine specimen of the above populitr breed of horses D urham, May 1st, ‘95. Imported and Registered Clydesdale Stallion. And Sold at Lowest Possible Prices. Call and inspect and be Convinced. "LORID LA V Just Arrived pred Chas. McKinnon â€" WAREHOUSE, Upper Town, Durham. â€"DEALER INâ€" All kinds of Farm Machinery, Vehicles, Organs & Pianos, Sewing Machines, Etc. w00 We take this opportunity of thanking our customers for past patronage, and we are convinced that the new system will meris a continuarce of the same. EVERYTHING BOUGHT FORX CASH One Car Maxwells‘s Light Steel Bindersâ€"cheaper than ever: One Car Brockville Buggies, also Gananoque, and Campbell, Lonâ€" don Carriages & Buggies. Ohe Car Chatham Famous Wagons, «lso Snow Ball Wagons. New Stock of the famous Ramssy Cartsâ€"at fabulous prices. Frost & Wood‘s Singe Apron Binâ€" ders, Buckey Mowers and Tiger Rakes. "Large Sales & Small Profits." B surham. Aug. O0th, °04. segq pue 1oung ® | We beg to inform our Customâ€" ers and the Public generally that we have adopted the Cash System, which means Cash or its equivalent, and that our Motto will be sH%OIUI claissod w#9ou9!H °WL . & J. McKechnie. CHAS. McKINNON. THE CASH ADOPFEED BY N., G. & J. McKECHNIE. ana Fâ€"’Lvâ€" g UYIH g YIHLIONY Aroned snn etrmeinmnay ue (eiarete C ... entalp !rc:mzcu must gnforl.u‘nately take pl‘ace "Have tried others, but like Ayer‘s School Teachers!! its just the thing uqon the question. Everybody believâ€"| best" is the statement made over and for you during the summer. Write for| ¢d that it could best be settled by the | over again by those who testify to the perticalars. iProvincial Legislature, and he was not | benefit defi‘ivedpf.“‘"" the o ”lf Tob w1 s o Sarsaparilla. â€" Diseasenever had agreatâ€" STONE &@@RLLINGTON, ) Without FederaDegisianon: Hervould | ef, shems, than. this Dowertul, blood ToroxTo, Oxt. deplore it as a great calamit: if they] portier tmaikes Ee atrong. ‘s JBDJVJVW * With the increasing demand for frait, a position with us as Salesman will pay better than engaging in farming. _ Send us your applicatiori and we will show you how to eart good moriey. A good man in your district to repreâ€" sent the "Fonthill Nurscries of Canâ€" ada."_ Over 700 acres. The largest in the Dominion. _ Position gcrm:timub. Salary or Commission to right man. _ , Now on Hana * OJJ ALAOIN Lt 1 Harrows: Wilkinson Plotughs and Scuffiers. Organs & Pianos of the best makes. A few Stoves at job prices. New Williams Sewinz Maâ€" Maxwell‘s Steel Rakes, eté. Coulthard & Scott‘s Seed Drifts and chines. 3 Full Stock of Repairs always, on hand. U} 18 { "He would be the last man to desire ‘ the party to which he belonged to | walk into office upon a religious strife. (Hear, hear,) He would rather remain where he was all his life then insroduce into this House religious dissension. He was proud to hear the member for Mississquoi (Mr. Baker) state that in Quebec they were living harmoniously together, Catholies and Protestants. He desired no more in Manitoba. He desired to build upa nation in Maniâ€" toba, and it could be done only upon lines of conciliation and harmony. The Government suid it hada policy ; he would not criticise it now, further than ‘ to say that it had as many interpretaâ€" tions as there had been speakers dur-l ing the debate. He was not there, he said, to discuss at that time that policy, nor to anticipate the debate which he realized must unfortunately take place upon chq)ques-n:o‘n. Every bodv believâ€" Mr. Laurier, in speaking on Mr. Mc. | for a long time and ha Carthy‘s resolution last week made an ;‘l“"‘l.“f medicine for it excellent address. _ He states, as| “,‘:"}‘l'! w 1“'"{” ‘“f‘:“‘ he has done _ful‘ years, that it was a| {“":‘ ,,(q ?]'('_)":,,.::,}":.‘} ;‘:;)rf question of facts and not of law, and | neted like a charm as h« the government had failed because | free from his complaint, thay had not sought to ascertain the 'ml all to the use of Pink facts. He closed with the following | not be without them in plea for peace :+ ‘ _ _ Messrs Scott & Jar { _ â€"The elections in Great Britain are decidedly in favour of the Liberal Unionists and Conservatives. There are 177 seats still open, â€"but should all I these go in favour of the Liberal Party, the Conservatives and Liberal Unionâ€" ists will bave an overwhelming majority in the new House. One way | and another, the persistent advocacy of home rule for Ireland is felt to have been the chief factor in destroying the popularity of the Liberals. _ The Champion of Home Rale, Mr. Gladâ€" stone, is not at the head of the party, i:\ml no other person has been found nble to take his place, while the Itish Party has been torn in shreds by inâ€" ternal bickerings and ;jealousiesâ€"Mr. Dillon himself admitting that the deâ€" feat ol the Liberals in Great Britain has been chiefly due to dissensions in Ireland. â€" Other causes aided, such as Rosebery‘s agitation against the House of Lords, and the proposed restrictive legislation against the liquor I.ru(‘liuI There will probably now be a reâ€" organization of the Liberal Platform in which the subjects of Home Rule and § the reform of the House of Lords will ; find a place in a totally new dress. f clothes and their books. Refering to Protestant missions in Lower Canada ‘he carried the war into Africa saying, that, if the society established for the conversion of the French Canadians desires to make any impression {on the people of the Province ot Quebec, they will do well to send missionaries to this benighted â€"race who will be socially and intellectually the peers of the priests educated at Laval University and Colleges in affidation with it. The address of. Dean Harris was nrost interesting throushent. The very Rev. Father Harris, of St. Catherines spoke of the greatness of the missionary work carried on by the Roman Catholie church, begun in 1622 under Gregory XV. The whole heaâ€" then world is mapped out by the Propaganda into 680 districts, and the priests when ordained promise to go to any part of the world to which they are ordered, to live pure and holy lives, and to own nothing but their Dr. Eby, of the Methodist Japan Misâ€" sion discoursed eloquently on Missions showing how little had been done and how much there was to do. On Saturday Education formed the subject of lecture and discussion, Dr. Rogers dwelt strongly on religion not being divorced from education. Luthâ€" er‘s axiom beingâ€"where schools are [csmblished the church prospers, and many authorities were quoted to show the necessity of a substrasum of reâ€" igion and moral training to suscess ‘fal educational work. Most people feel the need of the young receiving a distinetly moral and religious trainâ€" ing, but, think that it can best be done by the parents and the church. So thought Mr. Skinner, School Superâ€" intendent in New York. who showed, that sectarian education was impossible in a country where all religious sects had equal rights and, that the church would always find means to provide sufficient religious training. A notable gathering was held in Toronto last weekâ€"a meeting of the Panâ€"American Congress of Religion and Education. â€" Addressesof welcome were delivered by Mayor Kennedy and the Rev. Dr. Sims, who in the course of his remarks, dwelt on the importanice of unity, and that after all right thinking was yaluable as conâ€" ducing to right living, and that deeds were of more importance than words. The Rev. Dr. Smith, President of the Congress gave the inaugural address, the key note of which was the growing unity of mankind. PANâ€"AMERICAN CONGRESS a2uo$ pus «!prpoods swyp> 361]] 4t JO ay; out t;)'au.mo oavq “‘m &ue 3o so1qno} ofo jo 400018 uy qcaouedx» #uof &y s imok zo avd pur ssouisnq 14 qnog*t Te asouy 0f :4 q9o0dxo uoX 6 L944%] AU _ â€" cISTWDIS 4) xt 05 03 00L KIHA i‘l | boxes when I was fully recovered. This | was a couple of years ago, and I have {not now the least sign of dyspepsia." Mrs. Wood further said that her husâ€" ‘ band bad been a victim of kidney trouble a [flnl' a long time and had taken a great ; | deal of medicine for its cure but of no %fu\':til. When it wasseen that Pink Pills "| was doing his wife so much good, Mr. ) Wood determined to try them, and they L/ neted like a charm as he is now entively | free from his complaint, and neattributâ€" a |(~Ll all to the use (»F Pink Pills and would r | not be without them in the house. $2.00, FIREMEN‘S PICNIC Next Wednesday, Don‘t Forget it. Messrs Scott & Jury informed the News that Pink Pill have an enormous sale. â€" They have handled Pink Pills for years and say that they cannot recall a single instance in which a customer came back and said they were not perâ€" fectly satisfied with the results. . This is certainly a remarkable record, but then Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills is a remarkable medicine, and cures when other mediâ€" cines fa.1. Dr. Willian.s‘ Pink Pills are sold only in bexes bearing the firm‘s trade mark and wrapper (printed in red ink,) and may be had of all druggists or direct by mail from Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Comâ€" Kam,\'. Brockville, Ont., or Schenectady, N. Y., at 50 cents a box, ox six boxes for of the remarkable cures achieved by Dr. | Williams‘ Pink Pills that I determined to give them a trial, _ I gota supply and before the second box. was goue 1 found myself getting better, _ I continued the use of the pills until I had taken eleven through the terrors of a dyspeptic‘s life, Sometimes I would be fairly doubled up with the pain, and it seemed as if a knife was cutting into me. _ I then tried a number of medicines recommended for dyspepsia, but none of theimn brought the hoped relief. _ We had so often read | _ The Editor of the News, in company with Mr. Jury, of the well known firm | of Scott & Jury, visited the bhome of f.\‘.-nnuv] Wood, in the township of Darlâ€" l;n:,:um. for the purpose of ascertaining the particulars of another of those reâ€" markable cures happily brought ~about by the use of Dr. Williums‘ Pink Pills for Pale People. It was Mrs. Wood who had thus been released from sufferâ€" ing, and when the newspaper man made ‘ known his mission she said, * Yes I can give you a bright testimony in favor of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, for I believe that if they did not save my life, they at all events released me from untold misery,. . Some three years ago dyspepâ€" sia came upon me in a severe form. I doctored with one of the local doctors for more than a year, but all the time was growing steadily worse. The medâ€" icine I took cost mea dollar a bottle, and the expenditure was worse lh:'ml useless for it did me no good. Then my: husband thought as I was growing: worse, it would be better to try someâ€" thing else, as they felt that unless a change soon came 1 was doomed to live A Sufferer For Years Tells How She Obtained Reliefâ€"A Bright Ray of Hope for Those Similarly Affected. â€"We learn from a table of the levels of the waters of Lake Ontario, publishâ€" ed in the ‘Globe‘ that the water is lower now than it has been at this time of year, fortwenty years, Usually the lluwcst levels are found in February or March, and then with the spring freshetsâ€"melting snow and rainsâ€"the water rises and attains its maximum height in the months of June and July. Only in one year, 1866, has the level fallen in June, but then in that year, the water rose before the beginning of July fiftecn inches. â€" In the other year of the period during which observations ‘have been recorded, the heiglt above the low water level on the 15th June reached from twenty inches in 1392 to 5I inches in 1876. This great fall of lake and river water is dist.urb-j ing to navigation, and the seriousness of the situation is increased by the: possibility of the levels being still: farther lowered from six to twelve, inches by the Chicago Aqueduct conâ€"| necting Lake Michigan with the Misâ€"| SISSIPDL I A DISEASE THAT MAKES THE LIFE OF ITS VICTIMS ALMOST UNBEARABLE. â€"Several of our exchanges are' urging the claims of Dr. Sproule to the position of Minister of Agriculture, ! rendered vacant by the resignation of | Mr. Angers. We believe his merit| and ability qualify him for the office, | and certainly hbe has claims on the| present Ministry and the Conservative | party which entitle him to the appointâ€" | ment. By all means let Dr. Sproule| have the }»ositwn and give Grey and [ Northern Ontario a Minister for once. | should see the lines of the present; party broken and the members dividâ€"| ed as Roman Catholies or Protestants. He declined to engage upon the discussion of the question upon this day, and for that reason he was going to vote against the resolution." | THE TERROR OF DYSPBPSIAL m the Bowmanville News o m e es ts was gi UWZn:,' It is a great thing, or so considered, for r to try some. & woman to obtain & government clerkâ€" that unless a / Ship in Washington. The most pallid, the loomed to live I408t ©xbausted, the most unhappy set of yspeptic‘s life. women I have ever seen were the departâ€" ly doubled up ment clerks in Washington at 6 o‘clock of emed as if a & very bot day. Rent for rooms in Washâ€" . 1 then tried , lngton is very high, the clerks mostly cat ommended for| &t cheap restsurants, and two theals are hem brought said to be the order of the day with most of [ so often read | them. ‘The woman on the furm who has hieved by Dr. plenty of milk and butter and bread would .1 determined | Stare at the small modicum decmed suftlâ€" t a supoly and/ cient to feed a government clerk. She ; gone I found ) would declare that the ‘*interesting palâ€" continued the ’ lor"‘ was an *‘interesting starvation,"" and taken eleven | there is much truth in the idea. â€"Womanâ€" yoom 19591243 «0. u°. 83M ay; 30 pagaodas on fviu pue 411004# salmff‘f_ uim qug t pup 2M 3999 ed. This| kind uy 11024 Ask a druggist for a dime‘s worth of pipe clay. â€" Put a little in a disb, dry, and with an old tooth or nail brush which is stiff, brush the shoes hard, but always the same way as the grain of the leather, or it will make them rough. . Another way is to rub with devdorized benzine first and then put on a coat of pipe clay and let it xemain on over nizht. Moths In Carpets, Moths can be successfully removed from carpets in the following manner: Wring a coarse towel out of clear cold water; spread it smoothly on the carpet; iron it d¢y with x good hot iron, repeating the ‘operation wherever the moths are supposed to., l There is no need to press hard, shd the color of the carpet will not beinjured, as the moths are destroyed by the heat und. steam. For Evening Wear, For evening wear choose colors which resemble the human fleshâ€"the most beau* tiful thing in the world. Pink in grayish tones and old ivory white are advised, as nearest the tint of bealthy flesh. So much fiesh is confined in tight corsets, stff elothes and high collars that the everage socicty man and woman are really not flesh at all, but only canned meat.â€"Edâ€" mund Russell. Albonk. It is said of Alboni that ske "warbled like a bird all day long."‘ She used to sit in her garden and sing as she worked at lacemaking or some other feminine occuâ€" pation, and the reut of the house adjoining her villa was raised 1,000 francs because of the free musical entertainments thus furnished. In regard to her great size, her body became so unwieldy in her last years that she rose with difficulty from her <hair and usually had to be helped to rise. Gratify These Whims. Babies have their ‘‘notions‘" and whims which are not always bumored by their parents, but in this exhibition of character they are very often only patterning after their elders, who feel called upon to reâ€" prove them. One little boy is perfectly willing to go to bed in the dark room if he can take something along for company, and a little girl cannot sleep without her rag doll. ‘The next night a clothespin may be the fetich, and the following night a picture paper or broken toy. It is mo harm to gratify theselittle whims. Ofter injury is done a sensitive child by denying them. Some mothers discipline alt the love out of their children‘s hearts, and in after years wonder at what they call their "luck of affection.*" er cooky, and he is worthy of bis hire.â€" New York Advertiser. Save Your Hands, Some of the best women in the world are unnecessarily hard on their hands. This abuse docsn‘t pay. A mother who‘ mashes her finger with a hammer, sawia off pieces of flesh and deforms her nailw raising carpets with the tacks in and rakâ€" ing ashes to save a teacupful of cinders is not only wasting her charms, but doing work that nobody on earth will ever apâ€" preciate. . A woman who tries to drive a nail lacks common sense, and no woman who can talk or make a cup of tea need# to saw wood. As for the secondhand coal habit, it is the kind of economy that makes wrecks of so many housewives by the time they are 30. The maughtiest boy in the block will sift a barrel of ashe» for a tact |__Old Lady Hardwicke, who died at 95, was vigorous to the last, and hber elderly daughters were like unto her. A visitor was one day astonished to see one of them, r 76 years old, running up stairs and eryâ€" ing out, "Mamma, mamma!"‘ Another daughter was very 111 when: away from home and sent for the doetor of the village. ‘‘Well, my lady,"" sald be} "*at your age you cannot expect to be much better." ‘34471A414€ Out of doors, a Persian lady is perfectly unrecognizable even by her husband. She is enveloped in a chador, or huge blue sheet and a linen vell perforated about two inches square with minute holes, and her feet are thrust into two huge bags of colored stuff. And this applies to all classes, as, although some of the materials are more costly than others, the effect proâ€" duced is similar. The costume of the Persian ledy is as elaborate as that of any western woman, and probably more artificial. A profuston of jewelry is worn of the most solid deâ€" seription. | Silver is worn only by the very poor, and coral only by negresses. Neckâ€" lets and bracclets are much used, also chains with scent caskets attached thereâ€" to, while the arms are govercd with clangâ€" ing glass bangles, some 20 on a single arm. Jeweled talismen are often worn on the upper part of the arm, while among the lower orders of south Persian or Arabian women nose rings are not uncommon. He hadâ€"no muore to say.â€"Youth‘s Com panions _ "At my age!"‘" she cried. ‘Why, my mother only died last year!" Do tell me, are you old or youug? I never can make out!" * "My dear," said she, "I have been young a vYery long time." C y yap o-uuou--.taq;y.;‘fi ‘There is common sense as woll as 6#meâ€" pliment in the phrase, *A man is only as old as he focls,"" and it is of broader truth than the kindrod saying, ‘"A woman 1 only as old as she looks.‘" Old age 1# greatly a matter of personal ‘decision: One‘ may stave it off by a merry heart Or 1#* vite it by moping. Some one said once of a Frenchwoman;â€" ‘She has not yet lost the old habit of beâ€" ing young,*‘ a specch which recalls a clever" one of the English Lady Gifford. A Mtâ€" tle girl once said to her: To Clean White Shoes. A Government Clerkship. How Persian Womes Dress her: you old or young" I 6/ 2 O

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