a k Growth P mm=msttel _‘ e s 3 c 4 9 l t > V _ I 2 o Fowa, ced s y i ons Har VigoRr () ars a tLL H H YER {f ly i12IP chemistry has a j f a hog. foods. Pumpkin seed a rule, should hbe with r four months prior t THE FARM. Robertson says habit of keeping : world paid up owns and feeds cow. That is the end. Her power cated by certain should have a we, vegetable in important onnecti irt even it ‘ GOR+. :17 :resvias in ds s British West Indies... British Quiana...... ... Tatliihs .c Serriresravsrers Hong Kong............. British Australasia ... . British Africa.... .... Other British countrics United Kingdom..... .. CHEDEERENE: 1 â€" 15 ++ + ce 1 4 10. FePMUGG: . .+1 21 ccÂ¥sc0rs Britiâ€"h Hounduras,. ... Dominion of Canada.... Newfoundland & Labra The imports for the l-'.wa as follows: British West Indies..... British Guiana..........] Pss +x+ en a e ricne onl Hong KON§g...1........ ... British Australasia.... .. British Africa ... Other British possessions Total British Hondura«. .. Dominion of Canada Newfoundland & La United Kingdom Gibraltar......... Bermuda â€" ... treasury has issued a stater ing the imports to and ex the United States to Great dependencies for each of t1 years. ‘The exports for the compared with those of 18 follows: Total Comparative 8t The United ITS AREA, POPULATION AND GEO GRAPHICAL POSITION. FACTS ABuUT VENEZUEL A. Â¥e Statements o American Im ports and Exports, States secretary of ibra $216,1014 312 3 37,507 .35 ‘Ses secretary of the d a statement showâ€" to and exports from to Great Britain and each of the last five s for the year 1892, ose of 1895, are as in oo E200 $150,300.881 $150,083,243 $580,120,533 $174,145,812 uie ofoto 124 79.444 1,303, 204 2251704 24.773,107 21,206,013 100393 _ 776476 8,192,308 . 1,620,828 816.507 TIMMH | 2307444 1,389073 my ( ETT 86081 T897 se | anndll 2.025 _ 181809 34,954,203 36,574(997 1802 1 199,315,332 gay 103, s07 908.118 173 008 13,200,787 . 5s 1,580,201 &130,257 1.933,200 8,074.307 1,894,019 11,380,677 3164 765 years were 381L.875 821, 561 102,033 52,854,709 1,126,009 7.7614,178 is 2 4,253,040 2014218 5,203.978 18 453 Grinnenâ€""W hat take for that frig rettâ€""I‘ll take arn Do you want it ?" "This is a sad occasion for ter," essayed the comforter. it is," assented the widow. But der for Bill. | been struck by lightning have had their skins bleached in spots to absolute whiteness. One negro struck by light~ ning found, after he had recovered conâ€" sciousness, that he had one completely white arm, the rest of his body being as black as usual. _ Blindness, deafness, and either total or partial paralysis are frequent consequences u%' lightning strokes. _ Sometime the lightning seâ€" lects a single object on a man‘s person, and assails that without apparently touching the man himself, Coins have been melted until they stuck together in a man‘s pocket, while he suffered no ill consequences. Keys, watches, and watch chains, metal cartridges and eyeglass frames have been more or less damaged, while â€" the persons wearing them were almost unin jured. Clothing, too, has hbeen almost d’emulished withâ€" out injury to its wearer. Iron tacks have been pulled out of shoes and ruhâ€" ber boots destroyed frequently. _ The brass eyelets were once torn out of a man‘s shoes, but he hardly felt the shock. Tersons struck by lightning have had l.\umll holes drilled in the skull, but otherwise they were not marked. Vicâ€" tims have been horribly burned and even dismembered. A stroke of lightâ€" ning has cut off a man‘s ear, or shaved his hair and beard clean, and not hurt him in any other way. _ The markings are often curious. _ Blue is the common color, but they have been red, green and black, and occasionally the whole body turne black | " Nammmac wdue Aulll that frightful cold?" _ Bar ta‘.keu Hything you‘ll offer CGuibcas at a Penny a Pleceâ€"Elockin Fieet Street bu the Buslest Part of the Das. ney have been red, green ind occasionally the whole black. _ Negroes who have hy‘ lightning have had their CURIOUS WAGERS, you going: to you, sis '_"l ‘l-lll(;\;v it is sadâ€" il) require very hard driving. I think i‘;lwlluv%o whnr’to hire a ilnv‘ory boree. anan g c 00 00 C Cns 10 jOu need the span f Fatherâ€"ï¬ay son, to get to Blank‘s Corners a‘nd back in time for I.ltlgm will require very hard driving. I Sonâ€"Father, I want to drive to Blank‘s Corners this afternoon. Do you need the &nan ? 1 know. That rare. Dealer in Antiquesâ€"Here are ty very rare revolvers. Customerâ€"What is their history ? They were carried by Columbus., What ! Revolvers weren‘t _ invente in Columbus‘ time, some years ma coaling station. The efforts of white men to reclaim these savages have not been very sucâ€" cessful. In 1850 a mission garty_' of seven men under CaYt. Allen Gardiner arrived at Tierra de Fuego, but they were not well received by the natives. They experienced the â€" most frightful hardships. Finally, owing to the neglect of those who had organï¬ed the exgef'i- tion to send provisions, they found theidâ€" selves destitute of food. In the autumn of 1851 the whole party, after undergoing horrible sufferings, died of starvation. . The only point of the iislngds.wlilch is occupied by white man is Pase1 aul oo ge PCV to be expected that tlwfy would be brutal in their treatment of â€" women. Their brutality in this res{)ecl. goes to such extremes that, when food is scarce, they KILL THE OLD WOMEN and eat themâ€"not very tender morsels, one might imagine, considering the years and the toughness of the skins of the victims. ‘They are quite without affection for their offspring, whom they have been known to throw overboard from their canoes in rough â€" weather. They resort to many repulsive practices connected with their food and social habits. The â€" tribal organization is unknown among the Yaghans, this being a step beyond their cortdition in the scale of civilization. Each family circle lives apart and combines only in small groups against some common enemy. They recâ€" ognize no hereditary chief, or even any temporary leader. "A few daring misâ€" sionaries who have braved the inhospiâ€" table climate and the more inhospitable ï¬:aople say that the Yaghans vocabuâ€" ry, which they have collected after prodigious labors, consists of 80,000 words. Yet in some respects it is rather limited. For example, the same word is emifloye_d to express hand and finger, f and their numerals do not go any lurther than five. I 0O enc NC PRSWHIIVI. HUC even on the coast they have been known to lie down, absolutely without covering of any sort, and sleep soundly throuq snow and temgflst, waking thoroughly refreshed in the morning. Such diseases as consumption, J)lelh risy, pneumonia, rhcumatism, colds in the head and bronchitis are unknown. This would seem to prove that the best way to [{n‘otect one‘s self from the rigors of a bad climate is to accustom the body to exposure. Asi(?gs from _ their rhinocerosâ€"like skins these Yaghans are mterestmiy in other ways. Representmf the very lowâ€" est order of human intel igence, it was to be expected that thav wnalda Lo nulna is | _ It is among the Yaghans, who dwell y ] in the more rugged and exposed lmrts of y |the island, that the strange tribe of ‘ "iron men" have been found. These n | are the true aborigines of the Archipelâ€" â€" | ago. It must have taken ages to turn «; their skin into a covering of bark caâ€" 1| pable of resisting the fearful attacks of d l-“-u abominable elimate. They are probâ€" s |ably the direct descendants of a primiâ€" {|tive race, by which the islands have â€" | been â€" occupied from a vastly rcumlr} r ' period. Wl Ey UORCE MIRATE 10 clothe themselves she has provided them with a garment that is a good protecâ€" tion from a cold, but that would freeze to death a more tender inhabitant of civilized countries. It is said that these hardy people sleep out of doors as readily as ‘under cover. Draughts have no terrors for them. Their (m-u[;]utiun consists chiefly in catching fish, and they _ are therefore obliged to spend much of their time on the coast, where the weather is much‘ more severe than in the interior. But But it is not so remarkable, after all, that they should fo about naked in the snow and cold. It was either this or perish, as there is nothing on the island which thui\; could manufacture into clothing. The wonder is that they should have survived after so many years of exposure. Nature has been verï¬' kind to them. As they warn nnoakhin~ L. Their mental qualitios are on the same low level, as is indicated by the almost tolal absence of elothing ° under such inclement skies. This is the feature about the iron men that has attracted the attention and aroused the curiosity of the few travellers who have visited this wild region. is described as follows: Low brow ; large lips; flat nose; loose,â€" wrinkled skin ; bll:u'k. restless eyes, very wide apart; unkempt hair, and head and chest disproportionately large compared with the extremely slender and outwardly curved legs, conveying an impression of topheaviness, |, The Patagonians on | known as Onas. Their timated at 2,000. Two known, the Yaghans, o the Alcalufs of We _ These eurious people are about five feet in height. The Patagonians on the islands are known as Onas. ‘Their numbers are esâ€" timated at 2,000. Two other races are known, the Yaghans, of the south, and the â€" Alcalufs of West Fuego. The Alcalufs are thought to have come over from the xna'mlanï¬â€˜ The truth of the matter probably is that the inhabitants are of several ‘difâ€" ferent races or tribes. It is certain that a part of them came over from Patâ€" agonia. ‘This is evident from their huge stature, a distinguishing feature of the natives of the extreme South American peninsula. a short, ugly, beardless race, with long black hair of a rusty iron color, and 06â€" eupying the lowest rank in the scale of civilization. _ According to Capt. W. Parker Snow, however, who made , & visil to the island aad studied the habits of the natives, they are robust looking, power{ful and of middle height. _ ____ Violent rains and snow storms occur at every season of the year. The only plants on these islands that can be eaten are the wild celery and spoonworl, and the natives are forced to subsist on shellfish, which are found in great abundance. The only quadruâ€" ped kepl in a domestic state by the inâ€" habitants is the dog, which, in extreme cases, sorves them as an article of [uod.‘ The descriptions that have been given of the natives by different travellers . vary. They are generally described as Curiosities Indeed Uses of a Livery. a paper lately written by Herbert Spencer ho refers to them as a people "‘who, in their wretched islands go alâ€" most naked while the falling snow melts on their bodies." Recent explorations of the strange land of Tierra del Fuego have revealed a curious race of people whose skin is so thick that they go naked in the coldest _ weather. â€" The discovery of these people is not altogether a surprise, for their existence has been hinted at more than once by scientific men. In Yhey Have Shins as To SLEEP NAKED IN SNOW, THE EXTRAORDINARY MEN OF TIERRA DEL FUEGO. CÂ¥ "ave Shins as Toogh ns Lronâ€"& Preâ€" sen? of a Now Suit of Clothes Would Probably . be Politeiy â€" ireclinedâ€"Conâ€" sumrpfion, Plearisy, Rleematisom, and Kindred Biseas s Are Unkeown, THELIR APPEARANCE s what makes them the Chilians have for TERRIFIC TEMPESTS are . two invented *â€"~eâ€"s, 1 remember. Well, did you do it ? Nâ€"0; she let the nurse go off, and had to stay home and mind the baby him bhae anaq c i1 C2000, CINK did that little plot of yours we Lerdn{V Jinks (savagely)â€"What little Why, old fellow, you know y pecledy Mrs. J. rather liked Mr away‘s society ; and, to satisfy y you had arranged for them to go theatre together : and then you ir to slip in unobserved and see w :u_;e gave attention to the play Lors aanCap o OnS CUMUPASE 1s yet greater in the five "rich" secâ€" ’lions, for the rate there is 58. But the drop in numbers is very startling inâ€" deed when the one exceptionally rich arrondissements is reachedâ€"t hat of the Elyseeâ€"whose births are ‘just 84 per thousand. _ M. Bertillon adds gravely that there is hardly a country in Buâ€" rope where the birth rate is so small as even that of the most ï¬mliï¬c arronâ€" dissement {mt citedâ€" enilmontant, with 116 births per thousand adult women between fifteen and fifty ye;rs.[ There are six secti ments in which near poor" live, and in tt per thousand women montant, with 116, do with 100, the avera the "DoOPr" arrndicen Winks &cheeril,v)â€"l*lello. Jinks! How d d:ha’t little piot of yours work yesâ€" rdav \ "URA Hnte Among the Very Poor, In France M. Bertillon has establishâ€" ed the exact relation of riches and poverty to the birth rate in Paris. M. Bertillon states that for Paris the birth rate is 79 to every 1,000 women between fifteen and fifty years of age. He clasâ€" sifies the twent y arrondissements as very poor, poor, comfortable, very comâ€" fortable, rich, and exceptionally rich, 3 Wont . 1 Statistics of the Chiidless Mick Higa Rate Among the Very In France M. Bertillon has « ed the exact relation of vi of the gi't;"-’y hot , e es 2 eP o OR S or erust of the batter. Put in â€" the oven and bake until the crust is erisp apdlhruwn. Serve with the remainder TRC,OCCRH. Ser Ne e ce ues y omm e es iet of the gravy to come up even with the top o fthe chicken. _ Pour over it a batter made from a pint of milk, {wo egï¬s. a little salt, and a Leaspoon . of baking powder, and flour to make a little thicker than for pan cakes. Put an even but thin layer of this, another layer of clnjrkc‘en. and an upper layer ouedudeaiiiven tss uie NC N I Another fine way is to dress an« joint a chicken and stew until tender remove from the liquor, and thicken the latter as for gravy. Put a layer | o vpive«*n in a baking pan with enoug} M q t ie CMCUE Creamed Chicken.â€"Dress and joi young chicken and put into a ba pan with a teaspoonful of sait, hal much pepper, and a tablespoon of ter, unless the chicken is very fat that case use only a little butter. « er the chicken with sweet milk, se the oven uncovered, and hbake n done. When the milk has cooked a it will be done. Requires usually al an hour. This is perfectly delicious. think the finest way in which chic can be cooked. % _ Another fine way is to dress â€" a thin cream. Season with salt ; white pepper and pour over erouto Thin slices of lemon also add to the f1 or of this soup. Two New Ways to Cook Chicken a sieve, and pour in a heated dish con taining three hard boiled egygs, eut in slices. The beans may hbe simply boilâ€" ed, then made into a puree wilL stock. or browned flour and butter if stock is not always kept in the house. A nutritious and excellent soup is also made from white hbeans. Soak a eupful of the beans in cold water over night, and in the morning cook them in three pints of water. \%’hon tender, put. through a sieve, using the liquid in which the beans were cooked. Thin the paste with milk or stock until like a thin cream. Season with salt and '\I\"Ah.ilc- l!wppo’rland pour over croutone from the black or turtle beans. Soak one pint of them in cold water over night, and in the morning put over the fire in three quarts of cold water. As it cooks away add more, keeping the supply up to about the original quantity. Cook with the beans a pound of fat salt pork, and half a pound of lean beef. Season with a _ small carâ€" rot, two small onions cut finc, salt and cayenne to taste. Keep closely coverâ€" ed and cook where it will not scorch for About four hours. Strain through in a pan which can be sent to â€" the table, have the pan well _ greased, moisten the hash and hake brown. Chop any cold fresh meat finely,seaâ€" son to taste, put a few spoonfuls of stock or gravy into the skillet or having neither, melt a lump of butter, stir in flour and when brown, cold water ; seaâ€" son and add a little tomato catchup and Worchestershire sauce, put the meat in and the juice of a grated onion, serve over hot toast, which has been dipped in boiling salted water. l«-d summer savoryâ€"sage, a very little celery seedâ€"a grate of nutmeg, pepper 'und saltâ€"and a grated onionâ€"grease | the pan well and have it hot, put in | the hash and let cook a few moments ‘ln-forc adding the liquid. Stock â€" left from boiled beef, milk or waterâ€"cover and set back to simmer. Croquetts may be prepared as above. A beaten egi stirred in, have ready another beaten egg and some finely rolled cracker erumbs, mold the croquetts into the size and shape of a small pear, stick a clove in to represent the blossom end and another for the stem, fry in plenty of boiling lard. . C Cold meat and boiled _ potatoes . in the proportion of 5â€"8 potatoes to 3â€"8ths of meatâ€"seasoned with finely powderâ€" Food For Children. Most mothers know that sound bodies depend upon proper nourishment, and 6L for that reason the children of a family ; |are permitted to eat just what the . | grownâ€"up members do, much of which 4| is not proper food for children, and is not composed of such ingredients as e|tend to build strong, healthy bodies. A 4| child should eat five times a day durâ€" s| ing the second year, four _ times s d_urmg the third, and after that, three f|times a day. The last part of this , | rule, if rigidly adhered to is very cruel, t | because a child may become honestly i| hungry in the middle of the forencon, j when he had no appetite at breakfast. +| A glass of milk, some bread and butâ€" |ter, or an apple are very good _ for ‘|lunch at such a time. The best way to arrange the meals of a day is to | have the hot dinner at noon, but as | many of the children are away | at | school and cannot come home, the hot meal will have to be eaten at night. As very young children are put to bed at an early hour their supper should hbe light, so with litite inconvenience their dinner can be given them at noon. Pork, in most farmers‘ homes, conâ€" stitutes the chief substantial of every meal. A child must be unusuaily tough if he can keep healthy on a diet of work, hot breads, strong tea, buckwheat I(';â€"Alges. and pastries day in and day out. ; Children should never be given bread :fresher than twentyâ€"four hours o‘d. Much rich pastry, cake, and sweet preâ€" serves should not form much, if any, of the chi‘d‘s diet. $ _ For breakfast a child can eat a [ll-‘ te fresh, ripe fruit, some of the grains with cream and sugar, a baked pululnl and meat, or softâ€"boiled egg for 'u’ change. Coffee is not good for chilâ€" dren, and where good fmilk can be proâ€" eured, it is always better. At noon they may be given some good . soup, meat, polatoes, and another vegetable, with some simple dessert. Bread and milk, ('ng, baked apples, stewed prunes and soft custards are all good for the child‘s supper. Children may eat as many pul.nnuml as they like, if properly cooked. ‘The best form is baked. Fried potatoes and fried meats are not good for children. Baked hash.â€"Put the seasone PARIS BIRTH FIGURES A Plot Miscarries. Soups of Different Beans v‘ggs, I oft cus AOUSEKOLD. and deli d \ hat little plot 1 ou know you susâ€" r liked Mr. Dashâ€" to satisfy yourself them to go to the then you intended | and ‘see whether 0 the play or to Hash cious soup i turtle beans n cold water n some good â€" soup, d another vegetable, dessert. Bread and ipples, stewed prunes are all good for the bakir atoes an« children especial form are about #1â€"2 dises are p foot apart, ; _ That part of the light which revolves weighs fifleen tons and so exquisite is the mechanism by which it is moved that the pressure of fingers will turn it. A child could control the machinery, and the motive }mwer which propels i( is a single bit of clockwork incased in a box 2 feet square. The light consists of two concave dises ahant @1o a22l020 Cas 1 W 1t Has a Power Equal to 259,008,000 Candies, In the lamp house of the Government lighthouse station at Tomkinsville, Staâ€" ten Island, NJ., is housed the most wonâ€" derful light in the world. _ The light itself stands 15 feet high, the face of its bull‘sâ€"eye is 9 feet across and its lenses are as much as 4 inches thick. t is capable of flashing a ray of light equivalent to the power of 250,000,000 candles, and the distance from which it can be seen on clear nights is practiâ€" cally limited only by the curvature of the earth, The flash will have the intensity and blinding glare of a stroke of lightning. _ has! or Sale by in i1â€" " Shelburne, Ont., March "I was for considerable t ferer from indigestion, ex; &llâ€"the misery aud an.. mony to South A given over her own reaily ashamecd of myself, N that I ate would rgree with me it does not mattor what I cat, cr.joy ment out of all my meals,‘ are Mrs. Galbraith‘s words of mony to South American N. G4a a o. .0 02000 CPNCEvE discs 81â€"2 feet in diameter. These are placed back to back about a part, and in position look like treâ€" igostion is the { ss nilments that ) the most serion With indige ne suffers all hysical and n aps, than any A WONDERFEUL LiGHt s<# "TE] J _ Lady of Shclburne, Onrt., Cured of Indizgestion Altor Boettlies of Sovuth Americ: â€"Qiad to Lt ErÂ¥vorwyar»~ CECBO® ETS PV MTVTT PCOX Uisetsed Fave New Method Treatment will cure you. What it has done for others CONSULTATION FREE. No matter who has treated you, write fiy 1 of Charge. Charges reasonable. BOOKS FREE â€""‘The Goid [ Disenses of Men. _ Inclose postage, 2 cent» Bealed. EÂ¥~NO NAMES USED wiTHouT WRITTEN consENT VATE. No medicine sent C. 0. D ~ No names on boxes opes. Everything confidential. Questlon list and cost of ment, FREE, uk DRS. KENNEDY & KERGAN, Nssz sn # 1 DETROIT. 11 y MeFARLAN® & Co q *R (Â¥" We treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, N Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Kidney and Bladder Diseases. Ghae, To 17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 Cu READER! *‘The vices of early boyhood laid the fonndation of my |~L ruin. Later on a "‘gay life" and exposure to blood diâ€" s geases completed the wrock. I had all the eymptoms of Nervous Dobilityâ€"#unken eyes, emiesions, drain in urine, nervousness, weak back, etc. Syphilis caused my hair to v full out, bone pains, uleers in mouth and on tongue, |_ blotches on body, ete, 1 thank God 1 tried Dre. Kennedy & Kergan,. ‘They restored me to health, vigor and happines to all my #ellowmen," O ~" " ""*VMbenG thes CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.â€" CONFIDENTAL VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS amo IMPOTENCY CURED. Bosees; restless; haggard 'l"oou.(f""' ; weak back; bone p vlr(coc:i:- ni‘:posit in trine an d:-!‘?- at -t«ml;'«;i:r energ; and strongth â€"WE CAN COURE YOU i #@"°*CURES GUARANTEED OR No PAYyj ARE YOU ? Sm=aicenentes 200,000 WEAK MEN CUREp; Mda o 9 m BEFORE TREATMENT, | AFTER TREATMENT, . BEFORE WOKATNMENT, wygrs . NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRitten comseyy JOHN A. MANLIN, JOHN A. MANLIN. _ CHAS, PoOWERs, on wÂ¥ was so cranl MZ glare of a stroke light which revolves and so exquisite is e L L T . e sTARTLING FAcTs FOr DiseaseDd victimg RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. k. w wollâ€"knowr of myself, -Nothix »svion, experiencir aud annoyance ; of South An In so many M Wholesale signature rosy e of M it is moved will turen it machinery , h propels it ut Leat. I take meals." Here be al ringe? | Mas y Are you a vieti time a suf eyes sunken, 1 to be Nervin ming un of te A! I t Kta D PA 5& o C y «/ in i I # oo on C / AQ rp ® N ; K encR Th mneer ‘{‘llll»t pu ?‘* L"t?\: (’A‘I 80 gents for Durham an Abundant Evidence Editorâ€"Have you any letters or ot het testimonials to ~ show that you are a Iilu’ur,y worker by profession / A(»pluuul.â€"lf gou will look at my Pln s, sir, you will find that they bag adly at the knees ; and if you will parâ€" don me for turning around, you will see that they are worn very shiny at the rear, Yes, sir. I am a literary man. /3 John A. Manlin #ays:â€""J was time of early iguorance commer tried seven modical firms and 1 gave up in despair. The «<ira woaken my intellect as well 3 life. l‘;ï¬mumr advised me as Pre. Kennedy & Kergan. | 1 com: Treatment and in a few weeks w life and ambition. This was fo am married and happy. 1 ro it al ce uTe TP000 4 When its ligh: . is proje these huge magnifying pri is intensified more than 8: It is altogether beyone imagination to grasp the j of 250,000,000 candles, wh luminating power of this house wonder. _ At the the finest oil lamp which i been able to devise may | clear night some thirty â€"f miles at soa. The new 1 . red and blurred; pimplee on face; dr ; weak back; bone pains; hair luo:-. mr( Farains at stool; distrustful; want of co hollow â€" int a powerful of itself i is proc _ Back BJ up the live is péculiarly shattered It nevor streagt} U sOur wl nerv nse | At sea. . The new ligl rt a point 120 miles aw 1 be J} d on emanates the 1 organs of t1 Keep these nd disonce is , weak or debilitated : tir t in the y C§ ar nery [J URED. NO o. 148 SHELRBY 31. DETROIT, Micn. Syphilis, Emissigns Varicocele, Cureq, 1J fiv it Sk PR PRA throeg thieg tuble f‘ We cal! the special a + aud subscribers to ofthe newcpaperia 1. If any person orders I.j med, be mast pay all isher may continne to se awentis .uade, and collect th \ whetbor it be taken from t â€" There can be no lega! disco. e 'n'monllunulo. 2. Aay persor the post oflice, uaume or anothes scribed or not is 8. If a subsc stopped at a ce conunnes to se to pay for office. This proce bat a men imust pa TOYS and $ wWOOLsS, BUSINESS DJY MISS G NEXT Door limm'fl. SOL weoua sw Paent MONEY ‘PO Fancy G or P ons door north of # vey ancer, on uil Loans armanged . without promptly made, lusu 9 NOE W DW 400 A N wi ho Howpital, Men be wriO. OFFICE:~â€"DURKH A *_â€" Calder‘s 1# NIGHT BELL AT D E NT I DR. ARTH H lhe Alling of #ence nex! c Wall P at ;reatly redu OFFIOE, oven G "*â€"*County of O rey aud at reasonable m J. P. TEL + _ FOR The EDGE PHYsHOIANX,. =t ©onenEA HON(H; G of Doutal weted withou ahed _ of Grey. All 1 dressed to Laxrasn P witended to. Reside Township of Bentinol DAN. In the Town of @rey, including vi Brick Dwelling Rujlding lots, will I w AÂ¥lso lot No. wrebip of Bent ing Town plot Du RMortgage take Lisensed Auctionee harges imederste # rrangements for #® aemew Oflce, Dus Sash Having Comp EMBROIDE and SIL in & and Newspaper Lumber We keep i Doors, M T. G. HOL ICENSED __ DURHA . L. McK HVUCH ICENSED AUC Our Btock of MISCELL AUCTIO ent Kind MEDIC Apply to LEGA DUR who tak Keside! Inauis