West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 24 Oct 1895, p. 1

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z Fancy Goods, i TOYS and Stationary. i wooLs, â€"~ _ J. P. TELFORD, & T. G&. HOLT, L. D. S. ONOR Graduate of the Royal College [E s dentnt Sergoons on Ontario... Fent: co. Licensod A harges mo« Arranzemen BHENFISETHRY. LICENSED AUCTIOXEER for Co. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxtassz P. O. will be promptly aitended to. Residence Lot19, Con. 8, Township of Bentinek. DAN. MeLEAN. FOR SALE The EDGE PROPRRTY the fiilng c dence next of Groy. ton, thi DAN. 050 weros push, In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valzable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, Ww.G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjommâ€" ing Town plot Durham. and ut ro hsn ‘â€"p;)'n;i;ay made, Insurance effected. M@NC€W NO LOAN stlowost rutos of Interoat o% "In® ous door north of 8. Heot‘s Store Durharu Mortgage taken for part purchase money. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, NOTARY PUELIC, Commissioner,c(c., For Impure, Weak and Impoverish« Elood, Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpota tion of the Heart, Liver Coroplaint, g’“en- raigis, Loss of Memory, Bronchitis, Conâ€" sumption, Gall Stoces, Jaundice, Kidne; aud Urinary Discases, St. Vitus‘ Dance Female Irregnlarities and Goneral Debility. Laberatory â€" Goderich, Ont â€"IN THEâ€" Following Properties at Prices Asked There‘s Big Money ! 13 Sold by I. PARKER, Dragcist, Darbham. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. TESTED REMEDIES SPECIFIC and ANTIDOTL at very lowest rates on good land security. FTRE,. Life and Accident Insurance. Claims of all kinds collectedâ€"Old notes vicoville, NEXT Door TO PARKER‘S MISS GUN‘S System Renovator | W. L. McKENZLIE, ote 241, 212, 243, 8. Road, Towns acres timbered. MONEY TO LOAN. Fire Insurance secured. OFFICE. over Grant‘s Stom«. Lower TOWN. lot. bougnt. »ABRRISTER, SOLICITOR .N SUFREME COURT ane arrul promy I¢ Ler p at »reatly reduced rates Wall Papers voy an HLJCH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. the Township of Artemesia, County sy. two miles from Flesherton Staâ€" threo milos from Priceville. | For r particulars apply to A. H. BURNET, Hoperilie, Â¥RS. BURNET, Darbam. *cn MONEY ‘*o LOAN McLEOD‘S 4 Auctioneer, for the County of Gn& moderste and satisfuction guxrantoe ients for seles can be wade at the Oflice, Durkam, or mt bis residence EMBROIDERIES AUCTIUNGER. Farm for Sale. 2%42, con. 4, S.W.T. and S. Melancthonâ€"100 acres a bush J. M. McLEOD, DURHAM. MEDICAL. DURHAM r W 2, 2%43, con.3, S.W.T. and Township Melancthonâ€"174 D AUCTIONEER, for th and SILKS, in all COLOKi and Insurance Agent, C r, Commissioner &c 1 without delay. _ Collec H. H. MILLER, The Hanover Conveyencer, LEGAL McLEAN. â€"â€"ATâ€" sto James I Prop. and Manufacturer ence Durbam Ont D. McCORMICK. ed to promp Old D ectiong land n Money to lend. Money invested for Parties. Farms bought and sold. David JACKSON, JP.» cierk piv. Court. AithuP H. JACKSON) Notary popuc. Land Valuators, Insurance Agents, Commissioners. A general financial business transacted Office next door to Standard Bank, Durham A Boon to Horsemen.â€"One bottle of English Spavin _ Liniment â€" completely removed a curb from my horse. 1 take pleasure in recommending the remedy, as it acts with mysterious promptncss in the removal frora horses of hard,soft or callused lumps, blood spavin, splints, eurbs, sweeny, stifles and sprains. George Robb, Farmer, Markham, Ont. Sold by McFarlane & Co. 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 plates and comglete outfit furnished free of charge. Write for terms and particulars. CHASE BROTHERS‘ COMPANY, Colborne, Ont. Tus "Ocp Recuasts®" Nuzszarmzn, W ~ in this community to sell specialties in our line. Trees that gmrseed]gn Pears. WE WANT A MAN AT ONCE in this community to sell specialties 3 Cherry AYERXR Smz o Ee Om fia'u;t. answer and an honest opinion, write to UNN & C#., who have bad neul‘!ntty yours® experience in the patent business, Communicr« tions strietly confidential, | A Handbook of In« formation concerning Patents and how to ob~ tain thein sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan« leal and scientific books sent free. _ _ a CONVEYANCERS. _ Patents tuken through Munn & Co. receivo special notice in the Scientific American, and " e P ts thus are brought widely before the publicwith= out cost to the inventor, This svlendid fn.p&‘r. issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, bas b{ ar thy largest circulation of any scientitle work in tha world. $3 a year, Sample 024?'" sent free. Bulldlng lfidmon‘;onthly. .%0 a year. Singlo eotplu. 2. cents, ery number contains beaue tiful piates, in colors, and gbotompha of new houses, with plans, ennbling builders to show the latest designs and secure contracts, Address _ Result of a Neglected Col: DISEASED LUNG Consulted a Doctor text designs and secure contracts, Address MUNN f“ CO., NEW YouK, 361 BuoaADWAY. CURED BY TAKING LARGEST SALE in CANADA. Apple Trees hardy as oaks. "Excelsior" Crab as large as an Apple. Cherry trees proof g;finst blackâ€"knot. Plum trees not affected by Curculio. Tree Currants. JACKSONS. &0 P A0)\ @ P T (hloan e / :) B se Lp Amst) /.0 8\ VOL. XVII,â€"NO. 48. Ors F A led to Holp Tht The Right Rev. S. F has gone to China to from its original tongt From the spelling of | been suggested that he the job. The memory of the atill fresh in Chicago, atill fresh in Chicago, | The Tri city says that Spain could ea Cuba by making the duke Capt "*as he would eat them out home in six weeks." In the eight years of no saloons, the progressive city of Cambridge, Mass., has grown so rapidly in population an i wealth that the increase of taxable valuation more than makes up the loss in revenue by eason of abolishing saloon licenses. In California it has been found that peach stones burn as weli as the best coul, and give out more heat in proportion to weight. The stones taken out of the fruit that is tinned or dried are collected and sold at the rate of $3 per ton. The American Baptists claim in Southern India 75 cburches, with 53,000 members, 274 Sunday Schools, with 5,456 scholara ; w collego, with 342 attendance, and 27 missionary stations, with 75 missionaries, 837 native preachers, 125 Bible women, and 154 assistants. Indian education does not scem to be & failure at the Crow Indian reservation in Montana, The Crows this year have 30,000 acres of irrigated land under cultivation, and built there own irrigation ditches, Last year they sold $82,000 of hay and grain, and pastured 26,000 head of live stock. â€" This year they will raise grain and vegetables enough to supply all the Govâ€" ernment posts on the Yeilowstone. There is nothing that n man can less afford to leave at home than his conscience or his good nabitsâ€"Packe. Trolley cars have done away with the services of 275,000 horses in the United Statee, That many would consume about 125,000 bushels of corn or oats a day, besides hundreds of tons of hay, and the discontincance of the demand for this fodâ€" der is enough to affect appresiably the prices of these articles of food, besides considerably reducing the tonnage for the railroads. : orte NMartin Quick, a pioneer of Franklin County, Ind., who recently celebrated his 99th birthday, is now cutting his third set of teeth and he is proud of the achieveâ€" ment. The old man bears his years well, be still being quite vigorous, both mentalâ€" ly and physically. _ e he‘ _ On a tombstone io Laudaff Centre, N. H , is the following : "Widow Susannu Brownâ€" son was born Aug. 31, 1699, and died.J une 12, 18(2, aged 103 years." The remarkable part of this record is that Mre. Brownson lived in the seventeenth, cighteerth and nineteenth centuries. uen It is interesting to note that the Banâ€" nock Indians, some of whom were arrested and some murdered for alleged violation of the Wyoming game laws, will be defended in court by no less a personage than the Attorneyâ€"General of the United States, who affirms that the Bannocks were in the right and that the Jackson‘s Hole coustablee were the criminals in the late disturbance there. s R Nelghborly Interest in ters of Momont aind WTENS OF INTEREST ABOUT THZ RAL from this Dat (RCLE SAM 1sS AL LUS nt and Mirth Gathered y Record. in i« Doingsâ€"Mat Veragom is bune of that sily subdue ainâ€"Genoral, of house and DURHAM, CO. GREY, THURSDAY,OCT. 24, 1895. © ons |_ An English chemist named KHennell, while manufacturing a shell for military | use, into the composition of which fulminâ€" late of mercury entered, was also blown {literally to atoms, and the fragments of the buiiding where he was conducting his experiments were scattered for hundreds of feet in every direction, of £40 to divide among his people, in recognition of the gallantry displayed by them in rescuing the crew of an Italian vessel which was wrecked on the rocky hore of Tristan. _ The President of the United States had previously sent the sturdy old hero a chrorometer and chain as a token of his appreciation ofa similar noble action in the case of an American vessel. Green, by reason of his protracted resiâ€" dence at Tristan, has become quite attachâ€" ed to the island and now expreszes his intention of ending his days there. _ It is somesixty years since he eaw any of his relatives, â€" He has latterly become vested with the duty of solemnizing marriages, and on one memorable day ‘‘spliced" no fewer than five couplesâ€"two of them naâ€" a "national anthem" for Tristan has been wpecially written by Mr. G, Newman, of Einsbury road, Woodgreen, London,. The latter had a relativeâ€"Capt. Anderson, of the ship Benaresâ€"who was shipwrecked off Tristan in 1868, rescued and succored by Green, and since then Mr. Newman has corresponied with him, . For several years his letters were sent by ships of war rom the Admiralty ; of late a manâ€"ofâ€"war fas called there once a year with mails. oo e n ie , "ets r The aged chicftain records with satisâ€" faction a visit to Tristan d‘Acunka from the Governor of St. Helena, who was on his way to that island, and states that the latter was successful in ‘putting to rights" his clock, which had stopped for a long time,. . At the urgent request of Mr, Green Awful Destructiveness of Falminate of Mercury, the Powerful Explosive Used in Anarchists‘ Eombs. Fulminate of mercury, which is used by European Anarchists in the manufucture 0 their bombs, is one of the most treacherou and powerful explosives known to science. Heretofore it has been empioyed in perâ€" cussion caps and as a detonator for nitroâ€" glycerine preparations. It explodes when subjected to a slight shock or to heat, and not a few expert chemists since its English inventor, Howard, nave been seriously inâ€" jured or killed while preparing or experiâ€" menting with it. B S Aain In France some years ago the colebrated chemist, Barruel, was munipulating this dangerous product in a beavy agate mortar when his attention was distracted and he let the pestlo @own with a little lees care than ordinary. _ The explosion which followed almost literally blew the mortar to dust, and it tore Barruel‘s hand from his wrist. _ Another distinguished chemist, Bellot, was blinded and had both hands torn off while experimenting with fulminâ€" ate of mercury. Justin Leroy, « French expert in the manufacture of explosives, wes one day engaged in experimenting with this compound in a damp state, in which condition is was supposed to be harmless. It exploded with such force, however, tnat nothing of M. Leroy, that wes recognizable, cculd afterwards be foundsa umscc o8 nc Ne tales of her frugality that are current with us, â€" Another fact must impress itself upon the minds of American visitors, und that is that the members of the Royal family, men and women, from the least to the greatert, do not live the life of luxurious ease that might be imagined. â€" They are exceedingly hardâ€"worked people. â€" The number of cereâ€" monies in which they must participate, the meetings they must open, the hospitâ€" ality they must mccept and dispense, is fatiguing to think of. They are here toâ€" day and at the other end of the kingdom toâ€"morrow, and off in the opposite direction the next day, 5 This society is consumed with jealousy if it is neglected,and the other is tp in arms if it has been slighted. _ Always apon dress parade always before the people, smiling tives of Tristan, two of them belonging to Italy, and one couple from Euglup(li. t An Aimerican Correspondent‘s Tribute to Their Worth and Work. A staff correspondent of the Chicago Interâ€"Ocean writing from London says :â€" * 1 have mentioned in a former letter the hold the Queen has upon the afections of the English people. _ We in America, from time to time, are told how tired they are getting of her protracted reign ; how inâ€" different they ars to her, and how glad they would be should she see fit to abdicate. Love FoR THE QUEEN, Nothing could be farther from the truth. I bave met within the past few weeks a great variety of people, Liberals, Conserâ€" vatives, and those who were decidedly Radical, but 1 have never heard one speak of her who did not say affectionately and everently : * We love our Queen.‘ It is more probably for her simple virtue and goodness, for in her own realm she is considered both good and kind of heart, especially help/ul and mindful of women, and we hear none of the little deprecating DEATH IN ITS SECRET. THE ROYAL FAMILY LR VED . deprecat h the Value of Wheat Feeding for Hogs. From many parts of the west we hear of successful results of feeding wheat to domestic animals. Its value as a food for cattle and horses, whether the whole grain is fed or its byâ€"products,has long been well known, and the presout experience has confirmed that knowledge, But the greatest good likely to result from the corn crop fwilure of 1894, and the consequent use o wheat in its place, will be the feeding of wheat to swine. Its value here, when the price makes it practicable, is incalculable. We have fed too much corn. We have for many years made this cereal the almost exclusive food of swine, and we have thus brought on severe punishment. . Exclusive corn feeding to hogs has given us a race of domestic animals which are debilitated at birth. No animal can be fed on such a highly carbonaceous food as corn without becoming physically demora ized, We do notthink that firstâ€"cluss pork was ever made on such a diet. Swine thus fed, when. @laughtered, always bave more or less: inflamed viscers, the result of impaired health. Perhaps the greatost harm resulting from this oneâ€"rided diet is that it impairs the animal‘s vitality and makes it an casy prey for many contagious discases which a wellâ€"fed and healthy animal would readily | resist, This has been & srominent factor | in making hog cholers the destructive agent / that it has so long been, With the range of clover pasture for the swine, and some wheat in the grain ration, this pest would soon ceage to go formidable. I will do. I will feed her more corn meal in place of some of the bran. 1 will change the ration gradvally till I get ber so that she can hold her own. Number two is & thin dairy cow such as the dairy man needs to make his business profitable. _ Now it will be seen why 1 say the feeder must become acquainted with his cows in order to make the most profit from them. _ _ Whether the ground food should be fed wet or dry depends on circumstance, If cows take all the water they need for the production of milk (and it takes a good deal of it) without baving it mixed with their food, then I say leef it dry. But if they have dry fodder aod are watered but once a day and have to drink ice water at that, then I say they do not take water enough, and will do better to have the‘r food wet, and the wetter the better. For greatest profit cows should be fed to the full extent of their mbility to consume digest, and convert into milk the prope kinds of food for milk production. _ They will consume more and do better if fed a variety of foods each day. _ They love # variety just as all other animals, man included., No man can be a good feeder and obtain the hiyhest and best" cesults in. dairying unless he studies the art of feedâ€" ing, and to do this hemust love his cows and watch them while eating. _ He must feel the same kind of desire to please them and do the best he can for them by providâ€" ing the right kind and quantity of food as w mother feels for her children when providing food for them. ~ The kinds of food that cows should have depends upon circumstances â€" what we have on the farm and the cost of those feods we have to buyâ€"but it certainly should be palatable, and an effort should be made to have enough protein food to make, in conâ€" nection with the cheaper and more carbon= anceous food, a fairlyâ€"balanced ration. For best results somesucculent food isnecessary, such as ensilage or roots, Aa good a daily ration as I over fed was for 1,000 pound cows in full flow of milk, an average of thirty pounds of wellâ€"eared corn ensilage, ton pounds of good clover bay, what dry corn fodder and oat straw they would eat, probably eighy or ten pounds, five pounds of wheat bran, and five pounds gluten meal, The protein in the bran and gluten meal balanced the excess of carboâ€"hydrates in the corn food. Clover hay is a furly wellâ€"balanced food for milk. If the main part of the course fodder is clover hay, it will do to feed more corn or corn meal than if the coarse fodder is Timothy bay and corn fodder, In the latter case it will not do to feed much corn. Let me illustrate how I would feed : Suppose I had m xed hay and corn fodder for roughage, and plenty of corn and oats â€"cheap as they are this year, _ I would have for the grain part of the ration ground corn anc oats and bran oneâ€"third each by weight. _ Now, cow number one eats up her food readily, her grain food being ten pounds given in two ?eedingl daily, She gives a moderate mess of milk, but is putâ€" ting on fat, I would reduce or entirely leave out the corn in her feed and replace it with bran, or, better still, gluten meal, or, perhaps, part cotton seed meal. _ This would, if she is a cow fit for the dairy,stop the tendency to lay on fat and increase the flow of milk. Cow number two I feed the regular ten pound ration, she eats it up greedily and gives a large mess of good milk, _1 increase the ration to twelve pounds, she eats it quickly and gives more milk ; I increase it to fifteen pounds, she still eate it up readily and also eats a large amount of coarse fodyder. She is making good use of her food,for with every increase in food there is a corresponding increase in milk ; but she is all the time losing flesh, What shalil I do ? This cannot long conâ€" tinue. _ If she is not fed ditferently she will milk herself down to a skeleton and then the milk flow must of necessity drop off or she cannot live,. I will tell you what English Methods With Poultry. The methods which prevail in England for growing poultry and their care vary so widely from those in vogue here that our readers may find something to interest them in following, gleaned from the writâ€" ings of C. E. Brooke. Food should be I think it best to feed three times a day, and never feed at one time imore than they willeatupatonce. The feeder should watch his cows, and if one leaves at the time any of her food it should be takenaway and not left before her, and next time feed m little less till he finds out jast her capacity for eat. ing. On‘ the other hand,it acow eatsall thag is given her quickly and from her tcflous seema to need more, she should next title be fed more. Care of Dairy Cows in Winter. Cows should. be fed in good comfortable stables and the attangement of the feeding mangers should be #uch that each cow can have her food by herself so that it will not be pulled away and stolen from her by another cow, writes C, P. Goodrich,. In this way the feeder can give each cow just the quantity he wizhes and he will be able to know just how well she eats her food and how much she eats, The practice ‘of throwing food of any kind out on the ground at any time for cows to drive and chase one another over, is always to b condemned. Now, what I have been writing is a sort of general rule, but when we come to practice we find that scarcely any two cows should be fed exactly alike. Here is where the «kill of the feedec comes in. He must know each individual cow and her capscity to make profitable use of food. It is not profitable to feed dairy cows so as to make them fat beyond a good fair condition,. The food that goes to produce fat is wasted us far as dairy products are concerned, ACRIEULTURAL Review. ‘ _Froude. ©+I kin see my ole wife an‘ de chill‘en up der! I kin see glory an‘ rest an‘ peace ! I kin look acrross de dark valley an‘ see sich happiness as I nebber dream of 1‘ "An‘ he passed away like & babe fallin‘ asleep, an‘ you who go up dar‘ toâ€"morrer will fin‘ dat same glorious smile lighting up de face of de dead, He has suflered an‘ believed an‘ had faithan" gone tohisreward. He had bin dispised fur his color, ridiculed fur his igerence an‘ scorned fur his faith in de hereafter, an‘ yit no king eber died wid sich a smile on his face an‘ wid sich hsp&ineu in his heart. Peace to his ashes ! While we mourn fur him we sball rtill rejoice dat he has gone to his reward. Let us break de meetin‘ in two an‘ go Raggey, for a tramp, youse is de best behaved feller I ever met. _ _ . It‘s business, Dusty. I ain‘t anxious to get into no hot water. Fact is, 1 hate water of all kinds. Everyone of us, whatever our speculative opinions, knowns better than he imv.ieu, and recognizes w better law than he obeys home." Col. Contraband Smith, chairman of the committee on decorative art, announced a new scale of prices to be adopted for the fall and winter season, and after some deâ€" bate they were mccepted. The increase over summer rates is about ten per cent, Stove pipe will be blacked and put up at the rate of $24 per mile with extra for elbows, Woodâ€"sawing will remain at the same figures, whether the sawyer is asked to eat dinner with the family or not. The secretary announced a communica« tion trom Montgomery, Ala., asking if the Lime Kiln Club would assist the next congress in conducting the affairs of the country. â€" Brother gardner read the letter over twice and then arose and replied : ** Dat will depend altogether on de ackâ€" shun of congriss towards dis organizashun, If we am inwited to mix in an‘ assist we shall do so wid great cheerfulness ; if we am notinwited we shall go ahoad an‘ ran our sheer of American an‘ let congriss fool around wid de balance." FALL RATES fi_‘. ‘ iled with milk, is e ground oats or buckw f d tndminin'end in «mall dosos~~ Brother Gardner Ealo ‘m Doâ€" parted Membe â€" As soon as the secretary. the Yoll Brother Gardner called for the report of. the Committee on Astronomy, which should have been handed in two weeks ago. Asteroid Johnson, chairman of the comâ€" mittee, promptly stood up and read the report. There had been considerable dis cussion in the club as to what influer ce the un had on the weather, and the committee bad thoroughly investigated the matter. The sun, as the committee understood it, was manufactured and hon; out for the purpose of encouraging photographers; laundresses, hayâ€"makers and house paintâ€" ers, and the idea that it has any visivle effect upon weather 93,000,000 miles away was not to be seriously thought of, The late remarkabtle summer was rather to be laid to the supposed sliding of the North Pole a distance of over 3,000 miles south trom its Brother Gardner then arose and said it was his sorrowful duty to announce the death of Uncle Jim Whitestone, which took place only the previous day, and continuâ€" ed : green food, and wi ) clude meat or ho ,_ Who * You knew him to be old an‘ feeble an‘ sort o‘ waitin‘ to go, an‘ yet de news surâ€" primes you. . A week ago he sot heah wid us, toâ€"night he am lyin‘ in his coffin, â€" Sich am de onsartainties of life, I bas knowed Uncle J m since we was chill‘en togeder in de faraway days. â€" When herealized dat de summons was drawin‘ nigh be sent fur me, an‘ I sot beside him when de angel took his apecrit n‘n’ (‘l.aw sway.) R k d d" "Dar was sunthin grand in that deathbed scene," continued Brother Gardner in a whisper. . ‘‘Eighty y‘ars of toil an‘ anxiety an‘ sufferin‘ was drawin‘ to a close, . A life in which dar‘ had bin meny clouds an‘ leetle suushine was about to end. | "I see him as desinkin‘ sommer sun crept inter de winder an‘ turned his white h‘ar to de color ob silver. He woke from his soft sleep,an‘ dar was sich happiness in his eyes an‘ gich glory in his tace as I nebber saw befo‘, He listened like one who h‘ars de farâ€"olf sounds of sweet music, an‘ de glory deepened as he reached out his hands to me and whispered : Dt aic P | ou en se ds meal. i)uring chickenhood four meals daily are besc, The mother should have grain and meal. When molting, a slight addition of cayenne pepper to the meal, with some hemp seed now and ther, and an occasional meal of minced raw onions will be fourd advantageous, The midday meal at all scasone should include some & food, and when winter appromches ) clude meat und fat, minced . liver, "he , _ When fa‘ tening for market, : kep* sheltered. Mutton iled with milk, is This being ly report on Davis, chai follows : 3.â€"Ninety out of every 100 watermelons received in the northern markets this season have been green. The ten ripe ones have been reserved by the commission men. _ We submit whether it wou‘!d not be a good idea for tha public to learn to enjoy the taste of green melons? It would save time, money, waste and hard feelings, and prices would probably be cheaper, 4 s ul : l e s ym â€" 4.â€"Considering the weather, scanda earthquakes, syclones and elopements, U crops in general average more than cou have been looked for and we see no cau for lamentation. usual position 2,â€"Wheat is only twoâ€"thirds of a crop, but this will save a great deal of handling and â€"wear and tear and give freight cars and gristâ€"mills a rest. : *** Uncle Jim was a poo‘ old black man, unlettered, unlarned, an‘ lookin‘ back only to y‘ars of toil an‘ privashun an‘ sorrow. He saw poverty, wos an‘ misfortune in almos‘ ebery month of his life, an‘ yit how did he die? hy 3 t mixed fresh for every meal, and fowls should have only what they eatâ€"leaving none, Through the winter they are fed in the morning with a hot mess of middlings and barley meal, _ From November to March their midday meal is boiled barley and the later meal is wheat or maize, Now and then fowls in confinement should have a fresh piece of sod at which to pick. A little salt should be added to their food now and then, and occusionally m small quantity of Epsom salts, For a fuil day after chickens are hatched they need no food, and for the following week they should be fed chopped boiled eggs and soaked bread and milk, feeding them every two hours for the first fortnight. For the next two weeks they shocld have grits, boiled rice, barley or potatoes, followed later b{ bruised barley, whemt, or corn meal. During chickenhood four meals daily are besc. The mother should have THE LIME KI®W«* CLUB 1,â€"More cucumbers will this fall then ever before in Americs, and pickles are cheap next winter, no mat pricetof cogk L 3 C oxifes ns Taking No Chances hairman, UNCLE JIM WHITESTONE, THAT WILL DEPEND AGRICULTURAL e meeting wh< riculture was be harvested the history of er what the e rarier "‘;u: are also sHMe?ted GMIRTORRUIZ l:ipo Much of the modus op ssion | cbhemical changes carried on ot be | body is mcarcely to be fol ‘njoy | observer in his laboratory. mave l ‘The chemistry of che h , and 'vhich by early physiologists \ comparatively crude, is now als Ds good diaposition is more valuable than ‘ gold; for the latter is the gift of fortune, but the former is the dower of nature,.â€" l Add ision. Eastern manâ€"The boasting of you West~ erners makes me tired. When you cut up your quarter sections into town lots, and old ‘em at a high price, it was to the East that you looked for buyers, wasn‘t it" Western Manâ€"Jus‘ so. Then it was Eastern capital that put, money into your pockets waen‘t it Of course, Then what have you to brag of! We brag of our smartness in keepin‘ that money in our pockets instead o1 buyin‘ back the lots at hal‘:(rriee when you Eastern capitalists wanted to sell, Nervousness, bilious attacks, headaches sleeplessness or the reverse, attacks o‘ calculi, whose passage from the kidneys i® attended with most agonizing pains, or severe pains localized elsewhere, are symptoms of the improper performance of the functions of the organs mentioned. Such sy mptoms are not often found among persons actively employed in outâ€"ofâ€"door work, butrather among the sedentary and body is scarcely io 5e ioNowel j LNE observer in his laboratory. The chemistry of che human system, which by early physiologists was considered comparatively crude, is now recognized as most compiex and puzzling ; and many of its mysterics are yet far from having been completely unravelled, active «s are the investigations now being carried on, and competent and ardent as ure the investigaâ€" tors. Food is the fuel introduced into the furnace of the human system, while the excreta are the ash from its wasteâ€"pan, Let one or more of the organs perform their functions improperly, and unconsumâ€" ed fuel clogs their workings, and products improperly fitted for meeting the demands hoh t Nt t oprremind +2 ing E of the system are formed. This crudely represents the state of the system in which uric mcid is found in the blood, and excreted by the kidneys in abnormal quantities. ‘Those who suffer in this way should drink a much greater quantity» of water, and consume less starchy and eugary foods, They should indulge in more exercise, and if the symptoms are severe they should consult a pbysician, who may carefully revise their dietand mode of life. inactive, ly subject to biliouszess and sick headaches, while the excess of acid in the system i® frequently relieved by the vomiting of quantities of extremely acid flaid, with which are often mingled portions of undiâ€" gested food. Inactivity of the liver certainly takes a prominent part in producing this un natural state,. â€" The spleen and the kidneys are also sffected untavorably. X Much of the modus operandi of the Frightened to Death by Hor Railâ€" road Ride. It was the fate of pretty 16â€"yearâ€"old Lizzie Goddard of Burnside, Ky., to b¢ frightened to death by the first ride she had ever taken on the cars the other night. Five minutes after she had arrived at Chuttanooga on her first railway trip she was dead. Little Miss Goddard nad been in constant fear of railromds all her life, and bourded the train only after much persuasion. The train made a lunge & fow miles from the city, and she jumped from her seat and screamed in a frantic manner, She at once became unconscious, and died as she was being removed from the train. Physicians agree that she died of fright. Deep Breathing. Cultivate the habit of breathing through the nose and taking deep breaths. If this habit was universal, there is little doubt that pulmonary affections would be deâ€" creased oneâ€"half. _ An English physician calls attention to this fact, that ‘deep and forced rospirations will keep the entire body in a glow in the coldest weather, no matter how thinly one may be clad. He was himself half frozen to death one night, and began taking deep breaths and keeping the air in his lungs as long as possible. The result was that he was thoroughly comâ€" fortable in a few minutes. . The deep respirations, he says, stimulate the blood currents by direct muscular exertion, and cause the entire system to become pervaded with the rapidly generated heat. _ The tendency toward making children prominent in the household,wiile notto be condemned altogether, may easily be carried ‘te excess, * rmilind > Parents of children who suffer in this way from ** nervous" symptoms should look the matter squarely in the face, and ask themseives if they are not in part to blame. One of the common mistakes of parents is that of allowing their children to share in the pastimes and pleasures of their elders ; pastimes and pleasures which in many cases are of too stimulating s charâ€" acter fora child‘s more susceptible nervous organization, The fact that this is done out of affection for the children, and from a desire for their companionship, does not render it less barmful. 6 A child, even at an carly age, should be allowed to play and to spend some time in amusing himself, When the bedâ€"hour comes he should be put to bed,and it is best that this should be done without rocking or walking. The hours of sleep should be long. 1f any unusual or unnatural babits are developed by the child, the physician should examine him carefully. lo nearly every case some local irritation will be found,the relief of which will remedy the evil, The child‘s clothes should fit loosely . The hysterical nature of the child is developed by ‘‘showing him off," or by relating his exploits before him, Constant scolding tends to make him less tractable. OQutâ€"ofâ€"door air is a necessity to the child‘s bealth. Play in the open air #upplies the physical wants of a child better than the restraints of carpet and furniture, Nervous Childrén. S An increased tendency to nervous disâ€" orders in childhoo1 is & chnnmrinhk‘cl the preseat age. Childreo now suffer from various symptoms which formerly were uncommon, except in advanced life or among confirmed invalide. Some of the symptoms thus observed are extreme exhaustion after slights overexerâ€" tion, neuralgic psins in the head or back a tendency to hysteria, and on the other hand, an abnormal craving for excite ment. Again,children are too frequently grantâ€" ed the things for which they mak or cry, without regard to the wisdom of their deâ€" sires. _ It is a mistake to suppose that the will power of a child is wemkened by denying him that which gives him moâ€" mentary pleasure. . _ _ | _ _\ â€"__> WHOLE NO. 893. Urle Acid. Prominent among the many causes 0 rvousness is the state known as the "uric vousness ndition r8 in HEALTH. The West Ahead. luced into the tem, whie the its wasteâ€"pan. rgans perform randi of the in the buman owed by the n are especial Handâ€"made Waggons Hols Mt. 3 In the old stand. All handâ€" made shoes. Also Horse Shoeing Shop, D H and England. Agenerel Banking business {ransacted Drafts ssued and coliections made on all points. Deposâ€" ts received und interost allowed at current pterost allowed on «avings 1 tyd upwards. Promptatter «nafforded curtomers liylug Of ALLAK MeFARLANE TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVANCE CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprietor W.F. Cowan, BOULDIN & CO‘S PRIME StandardBank of Canada UNDERTAKING Promy Has opened out a firstâ€"class â€" tioheer for Counties of Brace and Grey Residenceâ€"King St., Hanover. JAMES LOCKIE, BSUER of Marringe Licenses. Aucâ€" Ir Y vi irstâ€"Cliass Hearse. SEE QUR HARNESS UPPER TOWXNâ€" g’}mmr({[fiy L ‘///A////;/,/’/ CZJLLLCI) Jobbing of all kinds promptly GENTS in all principal points in _ ‘Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba United States OwWEN sSoOUND, ONT., Grand Trunk Railwayâ€" ALLAN MoFARLANE, JAKE KRESS Head Office.Torontoâ€" DURHAM AGENCY. Furnitiy suii to be i oppesite the SAVINGS BANK WOODWORK IS PUBLISEED EVERY ursday, Morning. in connecticn. A firstâ€"class lot of BusixneEzss I HARNESS MAKERS. President. for sale cheap. "CREYT REVEVU â€"TQâ€"ATIEXDâ€" Ds OFFICE, GAR ST., DURHAM. HARNESS OLL. P L( 1 p J KELLY, Acent. mptly atiended to JAKE KRESS. ank depos.ts of $1.00 tionand everyfacilâ€" ut a distance. Geo. P. Reid, Manager iTE Chea 17L 4) V $ o #)

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