West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 27 Feb 1896, p. 4

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Jriiiiifiti7 émtmii egel'g'd,'h'lrM Tarmac no. we _ '4'i'llSli'l'6tl'GTfl'.] '/i'JhWn'N'lt FiiFriLjGiinitiiit% __ ata-aah-u' ve JifrififE"iE .. “an in Bio-aw”. New Tore cameo” - T."iiiruiiiiiiiWiuTi74iid Tieo'mn "iejNpltl'iii.i Jun-w. may,” r. nib; Tiiiiikn, Walnu- Pk'l'm COPVIICHTO. Por banana and trco Hymnal-k write to MUN}! . Co. :56: Uu-uuwn'. Saw Vol.1. Eta,“ ,ii'gYieii,iifjir,' '.'h"t'lk',l'ltMrgr'f,,t I K 0'. 'i774trt1'r",1fts'ls'lh's'v'hll'Mt?rlll'illl.'lG't'2 su tian 350d or evil. On our feast, ures the fine (thistle! ot thought and emo- gion gm eternally at wore-Alexander Smit . . It It we (cull but readjmvary human by ing art-ids his life Mt his Luce. and_m good-docking. .or the Reverie, as that; he Axum your“! to submit on ev- ery amnion to a. small present evil.ro obtain a. greater distant good. This will give decision. tone and energy to tbs mind. which. thus disciplined, will anon mp victory tram detest, and hon- or from repruae.-t?oltoa. ii For 3-1: by an Drtuprttrta.oraddm" I Dr. Je. J. KENDJ LL COMPA " ( xuosovncu nus. trr, msxxxxxxx4 ==zxzzxx=xx u Dr B. J. Kumu. Co. p. N Dr ”5'4an In“! and -erat We!“ of your F "Kendall “Np-nu Cum” with much awn-II. x " think 1: tue, n»: 1.1!:le t "rm-d. Ham .1 V N "Mon: rub. an I“... in”. and 'ttted tr l hm In... :Ip-ihus unu- meo-tgtqd tt to I , Annual? '"z'.pJ.t./tt.'," much plan-dunk ll ' AM . t . c , p 3.33:". harass". " Then is ' moral excellence attainable by aUl who luvs the will to strive tor it; but there ls an intellectual and phy- nlcal superiority which Lu shove the reach of our wishes. and is granted only to a few.--CraNte. When we can not invent. we may at least. improve: we my give tsomewhat of novelty to that which was old. can- densation to that which was diffuse. per- npicuity go that which was obscuro. Md currency to that whirl: was rewndite.- Cohan. 'haai'iriiiihii'itiiiiiii, E " Kuuo-ll'n syn... mm mm mum: u. u n. " u wme nwdwlm t main A mm am an: It I manna-nu. m4 live but!“ cur-d he. t I N I“): Mm nu {mud n" thud-e. y it hum» mm. mm. PM p " "EL-'m Header-on Co., 111.. Nut. Ile. h I Dr I 'Nt,',','?,'. Co. II " harsh-r Vinyl- mnd me on of your “on. y M Book: and oblwe. lhuve and - on! of your ll Yul-lI-II'I Hun-u.“ t" ”In uvllh on”! unaw- _ It (A A An inexhaastibie good nature in one of the most precious gitta at heaven. :9er its“! like oil over the troubl- 'ui. an; of thought. and keeping the mind month an unable in the rough- eat. weattter.-W. Irving. _In only life you my lay the founda- gm of poverty or riches. industry or Mignon). good or evil. b the habits to whieh you train your ciildren. Teach them right ubita then. and their tut- nre life is tsafe.-gutort. What can be main foolish I think that all this rare fabric, of and earth could come by than all the skill ot art is not. able t an oyst_retny Taylor. All my experionoe of the world tench“ an that in ninety-nine cues out of a hundred the ante and just side of as question ia the generous and merci- fat tride.-.im. JaaiiUm. .A man endowed with great infec- tions. without good breeding. ts 1i Q one who has his pockets mu of gold. but always wants changes tor his ordinary otscaterionr.-tb'toele. jlm't::i'ir,'fdlmnrgt - Plus than“ (In-1:010:15; Free from Eruption; l Common Admitted n tho W311i). 95sjr, ' Sanford; Oiii. l HERE AND THERE A GEN, i c. tiieultil A CAB-DRIVER'S STORY. 'r tt any Cuied by Taking >M man foolish than L 'chin ic, Ipr'f. w- j: Affliction Jr and the 'n-T- -.TttoNas A My t twe' (0'iAti Sa tl rs. wh heaven e,when , make ik nae-3;“ Export View. F' , ttEii7ii,c"iii'iir, 7fCiu""G'ii1GiG'tCij . pyLwhatuamarr*tsr..qteet, 130 s’huko! Wycloudclé- It's tl'Ali'l Tah' nth I 1'T,gtidt Itt1t,t while: the 'J2,'uit,T'PaT.g main: 'ara', MM’mwmxwmm-ewnml 2l'llMt"""r'rt."PJ""leP"'"_ Win-um gum . t.r'-. "_.. "fli'4ll,'gtl/tlh) fiwfi'fi‘m‘flufl-fii‘f 'htfi Paganini mail“: it up: to its mu, 't1iit,P, [utter exalt-112‘“. I]: bt de- n; astolhatnat- or: ;"Never more will I gonna the strings whirh your fingers ye touched; that instrument, is your-J." . Tha' Genotpoo- ple have begn m lucky: 'tho we: of Iviolim. Sivori, why and tart My” a pupil of MPI Ind Pm: pro- moted him, w , youth. with a very fine Gmrrmsriut, mtmmeng. "It, Iraq therefore. mammal tttat Sport should wish his violin to rut beach Phran- ini'a. Ind so My. for I Sign" fee, you up see both instruments In the mun- iclpol niche at Gem. 1 iiiiifai.i.r.Em. Esm’t'you Bot your cutter Miitt ' ' ' N. Puck. No. I'm married new. and we havesm M in ttto,exrtiar. BeroretutdAttrtr. Robson. I don't“? cum. exmflth’owilhthtfiwmldmw and ' Ham't'mm'mr . Pnguini came by the violin in a cur- mus way. A French merchant lent him tho instmmont to play upon " a. con- gen. a.t . Iaghqrn._ WA]? concert Paganini had several unable violins and the instrument which he used in his later rears-ts Cumulus. dated Fis'-i'll'o.Lil'G)'i2'h'rC mend some- _ " In VIII. that $50.... Ila! Bren otrered for l tho- but one I’m-hi 'ara. l The beauty und sweetness of Sara- sate's tone are often commented on by people who never think of the tone being in any way due to the fitness of his instrument As a. matter of tart. Smut» has two Sum. Oasis the 'e nowned .. Boissier' Strut. which he managed to secure in Paris for EI,000, an hour or two before Hill of London sent an otter tor it. Th. other is one that had been used by Wtrsnini.whietr came to him through his son Achille. Of course the latter Instrument his an additional value Iran the eiretunatanee ofhits t?ryspr . _owzterarl.iip.. .- _ -- The dominating greed is isowever,for mines that is, tor gold itself, and to it can be. traced many of this national BR- kresiions of recent years, and not a few serinlm national and international complications. The conquest of Mada- gascar was persisted in because of the French expectation of finding gold; Japan demanded Formosa in the some hope. and the territories of. the British South Atrtes Company would no doubt still be under native control had it not been for belief that the rich gold veins of the Transvaal extended into it. The (German desire for the independence of the Boer republic is due in part to the fact that it isa great gold field. of} which they hope they may some day have, a part. and there is no reason to [believe that the. Venezuelan controversy (would have reached its prudent acute stage had not gold been dimovered in the territory in dispute. Among all nations the hunger. not for potential. lbut for actual, v'mible wealth is rapid- 'ly suptsrteding all other kinds of greed and becoming a. sort of mania, the de- mands of our nwn silver senators being one phase of it, and possession of it, C or desire for possession. add-i heat to every contmversy. As we have will. the hunger is not a new one, but. that at the latter end of the nineteenth century international rela- tions should be greatly “tested by the frenzy which dominated the human- ears of the sixteenth century is not creditable to civilization. The fact. however, must be recognized. and the Christian pulpits of all countries cannot too urgently present. to their hearers the dangers that. menace thus: who! haste to be rich. and the duty which the potvwstsion of riches imposes. I am ot the sixteen reditable to civil'u mvever, mast be r hrLstian pulpits of a no urgently prawn be dangers that; 1 asbe to be rich, and _--'.-.. " -.'.o- tirely new featurejtor may ot the warn of previous centuries were due in part to the same cause. for example. that between England and Spain. which. aside trom the desire to check the extension ot the Spanish dominion, had ita cause largely in the hunger for Spanish mines. The chief ineite- ment. to humid” has, however. Btways been the craving for territory. for larg- er possessions and the only successful war has been deemed that which in- creased, umpomrny or permanently. the landed estate of one power or the Pther. Rut within the last quarter of ‘41. century the acquisition ot wealth has 'h-mnn- the chief object of nations. {bought that of territory has by no mam“ died out, as witness the brain“ nuan- by France, Germany and Aus- tria. and the eager scramble of the gran! gum-am for the lion's share ot Afrium wilt Every avenue of wealth is eagerly sought and tested. and it; found productive, in jealously guarded Hm ti.tht ur other nations to prnsper by Ilw sumo means being resented by thr. first rumnr as if it. were his by di- Vine monopoly. Treaties an made to rover “pm-ml trades. industries and rights; state cmnpaniPs are formed to exploit mmuwrru; contracts, cttm'e.%- sions and monopolies are granted by Km'vnum-nu for the sievelopment, of mm kiuds Hf wealth. and [minimal pres- xurv H nun! upon weaker stun-s to 34-- mn- llu- unk- supply of vermin wants. A noemsrthr - of recent in- ternational complications is the extent to which the their! for wealth in. its errnvrete form, has been in reality the run! root of difficulty. It is not. an en- tirely new feature, tor many ot the war.» of previous centuries were due in ‘u COSTLY Fl DDLES. CURRENT N0 T18 w" tSalt', {My 1mg; Ff. LO " ." For: "aaa "7:733fo“ nit-J A - it!!! 0‘ "in iDiiciiaurriirTi"rTiram Jiririhiiuii iiiii ttttrr. u'rly,'l,'l a?” ugh-zest l Our morning meal was taken in Jsil- ence, and after 1 had filled the lantern and cleaned‘ the reflectors. I went down on the. rock on which the light-house stoot.i-..-ie was low tide-ttntl. mixed {or a while. with a. hook and line I had Iggropmtod to my own use trom t Jittle cupboard in which my com- plmon kept his odds and ends. .INt Iwu . bio and lonely. in spite of my tat,'? to convince my: all! I ' lining a good time. Fsr 'war 9n the homon I could detect t low-lying shore, when a. hundred otmy te'tbtht were ,cluatgred ,t,1th',?ti: Overhead tt' sky was clear an blue. and the mters around me were bun also. undulating in great 1mm rou- cra. which ape towards the ' Ja: the m 5::- tt,ae2iutid : “P an a . _ 1t'tltl11Uf. {shims tittgtftrt't 'srrud.etsrsshim.mrtt.se (by my flmtarriyat. Intent uptotho'hu with» 'M_dttmrtrp: cur"." ' w. -y.aTFt7ttG" Win? m.___. to than“! .wNe.d. www.mmcy $3993. Alt that night he sat wtrtchirtgot9ile I having tired of pinging on my Hum and singing to mysel ' went below and tell when. . . . . .. I laughed at this old mania team. Be wgs absurdly cautious. What did atew {Inwww atxienee-trom-the lantern mat- er l He said, "Are you not ashamed of yourself for neglecting your duty? Do you know that he lives of hundreds of your .te1iye-ere.autres no in Clf, head's? And it ghmgh any ti.yWo yours this light Med. and any lives were lmton lt, not; out there, you would be a mur- Rt." . _ He was sitting in my chair whisd I entered. is up to the lantern-room, where I fo_l- lowed him after I had taken a yur draught of brandy and secured my uv strument. "What Arr. you'doing here?" he in- quired. stat-tux? up. "All right. have come to fetch my flute. I am sorry to have disturbed you." ,'2si',',','tN out ot bed, and with any:- preamp of, o.rrof made his way hur:riM- At eleven o’clock I went down below and tetghed my flute. The noise I made in passing into the room, though slight. was, auttreient to disturb the old man, wly,etirt “twin , . I " , . I thought. first ot all. that it I could bring myself to get Mcusfbmed to my mmpanion’s ways. things might go more smoothly. But I was young and ho+ayietLatsd. ipdgpendqng. _ _ My tirtst night's watch was a melan- choly affair. I felt {rightfully lonely. and the strained relations between my- self and the old Englishman made me feel that the next two month: would not come up to my expectations of an undey-keeper’g cxistpnge. _ _ __ - -- To this operation I at, once offered objection. My rebellious spirit cauu- Itil- permmt. and I flatly refused u, kneel or listen to anything he had to say. He did not try to (‘Umpul me Lu join him. but calmly knelt down and went through his devotions himself. while I logy-(5m, h.alf.tuuun!sd., yet defiattt. Fla: When the sun had seL and the what]- ow» guthemd over the strain!) of “'1“.er for that. night, leman my task of lighting up. Williams was very well satisfied with my first. attempt; but. he was a. man of few words, and when I had finished he drew out his Bible and told me that he was going to my pray- Daring the morning l mu tovleatt the n-Hevmru, and till LIN: reservoirs with oil; the alternoun would be tree; at. dusk I would light the lantern. and watch until one in the morning, when Wil- linnu would relieve me. th m st My tsuperior was an old Englishman. who had lived in the light-howdy tor twenty years. visiting the land only at such that»; as the authorities desired him to travel to headquarters to givv his typianariyt1 regarding any .wr.eck gruny The existence seemed to me ideal, for all the energy had been knocked out of me, and an easy-going life-nothing to do but to eat, and read and sleep. occasionally cleaning up the lamps-1 of me, and d/ easy-going life-nothing to do but to eat, and read and sleep. tg,ti',ie,rdg . cleaning up the lamps- gee,'."""' “self to my listless tstate, of mm . At the time I wondered why none of the men in the village were given the prNttorenee. I teased to wonder. however. after I had occupied the position a week or so. No one was near. The men on th: watch were well in the fore part of tht schooner. and, slipping off my boots am reefer. I dropped overlroard, and ttWtUL' ashore. They gave me mum work to (In in the village. and when a vac‘ancy okecarred for an under-keeper in this very light- house where you now sit, they Rave we the berth. it was a beautiful night. in July. We wow drifting slowly before a cool south wind about a mile from the shore, when the skipper. who drank terribly. struck me with his clinched fist, I was hot- headed in Hume days, and I knocked him down. So. at the Very slipped (whom. " was a Iseaulit wore drittiug slow When I wzu a young man. in tact. a boy, he began, I chose the mm as It cull- ing, (unfiilcnt that I would make " namp (for myself an a great traveler. But. an is the ram- with mom young men who start with that idea in their "Pads, I very soon Ireeame d'tsheartvtted at my life in the torecasil" of a small trader coasting in [hid very part of our mun- try. and I found that, u lundsmnn's idea of a sailor's existence, and the srenuine experientt itwlf, wrn- loudly tliffo'rt-nl things. During my wanderings in Frtsruw,1.rvd, summer, charmer led me to n. little. fish- ing village at the mouth of the Gironne. One clay! hire" a small bout. and raw- ed out of Cue light-house oft the Poirtrl de la (‘oulym, to have a chat “in: the keeper. i [umllehu in what The work "Gii'iirartuijEiffiiiy first rm mm unity I Hi; ‘97:. _- ', " ., T _ _ "I C,'? /" ' Jtg3c1-2,';it "s . 5 S”; ("ifiii , It My“: 1t"i/e"t'i,? itt#,:i?,,)iiii,s'it'i?.i'y'iii' 'tCLi?lPeVt4' "t1'i1ae7jjri,'ji?r"it'd 'it EEl'ii'f,l I 'i'At% tact "ji'i','i'A" L L, I LL m . ' . mo Just Ulf) 'ts'i'i't1,i'iir,'i'iri'i Wu d ”autos-tho Int-um em I 1i2iiiPiii2'ifijdttpii'te “0.1m mthgwn. gm! am the tint- link of up "Mocha-W was taawling slowly on timing tyranny. Dowmheweut itttto.' ond tuna. . , F _.' C l He and is party of his classmates from 'St. MiehaU's paroehial school, at; Sandy Hook, on that day went skating on Ni- nntio mill-pond. In the party wee Michael muting. a. boy at twelve years. Michael. venturing where the ice was thin. broke through and teu into the water, Stephen Kme cried: V "Fo,risvys"titb<shatsi.' boys. and we'll ave little .‘Miko' easy l' ‘ I v 'e,tittflttat't downward. on the be” who todomot the bpyatouidmyp as, be had end hold. eighth; onto As 1'tht mm thtg,r21ifutUdt'l' tl until“: "Kitts inn." at "iri'irsG tsoya. "i'i%G' . led his w; My out my» tlk'Pllt.', s'lll'toTt',4'tl 3e1.?of.E The Mod Thrilling Rim-m- on Record Mndr by Mung Lads. Then is a. nrsw1y<ruuiss hero downin the little post village of Sandy Hook. 'Conn. He is Stephen Karma. a bright. lad at fifteen yum old. Stephen has been a. valbmus boy all his life, but it was not until but. Monday that!» ban came a ma]. hero. I in} -cr, 77'1“" "'1': "'. Ouch! went as ice with that “got tho "lito-chnin"»mm also 1 When he died 1 thought I should my": gfollowed him, so terrible was my grief, although I was still a young man. I have never had an assistant since. All we work, I do myseJr, but the author- mos are going“: sand a younger man next year. for it anything happened to me and the light tailed. who can fell tp, many lives I might be responsible or When the' light-hum boat came in the afternoon to Lake Inn oft. Williams would not let me leave him. 1"an that. day t have been a reformed mam and for ten years we lived u ether hyour- selrea, here in this L'2,"l,fli" tighetypse. The rays of the rising sun that shot over the calm waters Lhrnugzh our lil- tle window bathed him in a flood of golden light, and. rising from my el- let. I put. my arms around him and kim- ed him. Do not smile. Ah. we French- men are very fervent! _ . I could not understand what he meant yntil he told me that. I had hem shout- mg and talking delirious in my sleep. and that he had been compelled to wakt l Ah, sir. I have tried to give you win" idea of my feelings, but [am afraid I have failed. At this 111ml. owning mo- ment everything disappeared from my mind like a flash, and owning my (WIN. I found old Wiliauns standing by my bedside, with a frown upon his calm, earnest face. "You have liven drinking again." he, said, solemnly. "Where is the. brandy concealed r" glarkmwa like A mighty six-vin- mun-n- Im: lo wreak it,, u-nm-zincv on mo. A few nmnwnlx lull-r J heard tho crunching of the limbo” against, ihe rocks, the crashing of mo mama and wars, the sliri0k~' of 'he sailors. and ov- erhead I could hear the foothills of old Williams talk-ring toward the. stair- cases. I could hear his tshuffling teot. on the stone stairs. and I feared to look over my shoulder Jul I should see his ashy white face staring reproachfullyat £wa ( The whole ot tho morning 1 sulkml our on the Iralcony [hut can around the glam houe, n-fusing in clean Che, lump or fill the reservoirs. and iryitur to think of 80mg: way in which I mum “(at hack bo ttrefs I had quite onough of this sort, of luv to suit mo. All that day INK'VN' “limkv a word to the old 1mm. and when night mum. imtmd of lighting the hrttt- em I went to my cupboard and drunk a laro, portion of the fiery Milnuhml. till I fell into a turttpotr and Hum till rlaybreak. All night long Williams sat. by the light, “awning, and the man day he dared not sleep In.“ I should porfux'm wine {mu-hardy rue, and muhmpor the safety of the mswhinery. SAVED BY A LIFE-CHAIN, am h'tgt 'tie'4'p? I this sort, lay l novt‘r and when r. the lam- mul drank Minimum. tslept till d aka iiFi Tiii Etna“ 13:11 he“ "$1171. -. tres misaldé t'J1"f2t'f haiku. . Don’t yam. We a!!! l NFC- Wirm dit . “Speakin' about animals, to my ex- pu'ience the elephant is the smartest otthe whole mhoodte." acid the am- vumgu. 1'r remaining:- but in '56, w_ben I was with Barnum ole Emp'rer showed om devise mudrmd.” l " on. came off." l "I wan't coma off. neither. An' Pit wry, it te you in wwwrpiplzml iidhiid "__"- Ga Iii? iii tTiCtdatiiisii a good manners at home. V . tivate manners. "bt.tor'fl1ule'g are mad; up of petty saorifioetc" Remember thim mothers, and whoa you are teach? the little want your knee to be can e, atteetioa- atm polite or unmyifiah in manner. re- tlect that you no helping your child Ito grow u.p a may a; woman titrll,i, l cave nq'unpmmon or g gm on I the tumlf. and therefore me great. wido w.or d. Forget not.qu that ex- ample " one at the gamut means by which to inculcate habit, and father and mother have it in their. power thus silently to aa their chudren in manyi (pleasant my, when they are gather- td round this bond, or clustered u the '. mil) way can the precepts ot kintr. liness, good will to each other, and sun- _t1rxt tot ttysh okh.er, be you: ettf.etivtslt MAny-we grieve to say most people --ore. often rude. careless and even un- kind in their manuals toward those nearest and dearest to them, who yet will be kind and count-mu in company. This is m)? as it should be. Emerson yyys that one must agree to nutritive his own feelings sometimes. to Maura the fence and harmony that'should dwel in. every family. and ha is right. No .tumily can ever grow a) in good feeling and real love town. one BU- qmer. that has not been taught to cul- tivate good manners. ( Ptrr'liaps no .xinxlv [hill]: in Iln- (‘lllh ration of children shows, its value in the. family virt'lo mum Hum Llu- impul- ml ion of good manners. F'aihers and nunhnrs, older brot hers and sistvm. should vxorcim good manners al home as well as much their lxanofim lo the younger members. Much of It family's happiness, indeed, depends on this, and then-fore no one who is .1 member of at family cirrla, with or without, clsil- drem, cm afford lo boedlemsly ignore the fact. Good manners are as effective a means of building up good feeling in a household circle as can he found, but, tuatbrtmnataly, they am rarely found there. Fathers and mothers are aptln think "good manners don't matter tor bonus use.” But they are mistaken. It is said that "familiarity pm con- mmpt.” and certunly. it it does not go that tar, it has a tandem: to came each member of I funny to. . the check be or she keeps upon his (alums. mainly on his scumbag“. though w among strangers he finds himself expected. and almtist compelled to con- trgl himself. 7 - 1iif, Je] if!!! l l. a; I in: toyin'. .Uts old fiUow may; gap with ttyt mtat. Home“ Ciiiiii 755.95 judis tiR ?eiii Could This' Elephant Read , ski us. Polatoes baked in their skim-1 should have. a. pit-cc out off the ends before baking. in order that the steam may mm. Prepared in this way they are light, and dry when eaten. Whon boiled. they my be prepnmd in the same way, and the skin removal just before serving to each individual. Potatoes are unquestionably dryer and finer of flavor when boiled in this way. than when pared before cooking. The utmost mm is nan-wry to prevent. their being cold when mum. an they grow cold rapidly uter .skinn are, Se.- num-d ', and of all things whims shnuld 1m hot in whatever form may are wr- vod. uuless it he in a cold salad. It is not rogunlml in good form to place "oil- ed potatoes. upon the toirle in their SOME PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS. Good Manners at Home 177.31. Imam“; Iris' than elephant went THE HOME. POTATO ES Inked potatoes h ryone knows this I and fried gllll‘k tht All“ now eeptywltes I . . . ., - 'se m.” Wm. tro, _ " IE 1m. A. 1. .. 'i' iug by any ', and over; .les about the aegis 'rewml on Main em: 1d the mu: n ite, own nut, paimo them an- e of tin, “on: tins. tiny aiairaiNiriiac-ft" mil-mg be 'miGiii will with JP, will. gray!!! Lhl's. I: -tttr mun um hand. else-A9! 9M3. lama!“ iriiG9diiiruiFrTyCiiiirgtWiiiCoieir. tedl'fltra8u"i'ittdh'rt ht, if t or tor mm not “on“. tttr mun JS, - hing can?” rise with 15:81,. It'; C , 0 II or: ItiiqtiHt% 1rimactt manotgube 1:31:34 All}. M" 'CfoTiiriirtTtis%arui' -fie7iiri7r tilpo for In. appear-nee; pad u diet" pointed. thy “(for an mjury. e 1rWir.1rttnieaa,e)tsetti_ttsp_tttet: 1a,xtltd, " jutyuch “and Lima. out- erw so. more wilt be 5 decrease ot the now of t'hiNrgt'tt'teteittt2r,r, tg,','. won-17mg t it supp we. Junta mutton!- unusual {paint - houn, and is disturbed. iCrt in pot amt so, the lawns; ml: i',i,i.fsiiddtis,e, an ITw se._ they: w m'iqdov: Islam tomadmxt'élsun It.' light. gun a c, r spec '. en- tiiatdea 2,i,'%', mud. that will not nah-daughts. Aa the stock maybe kept; Inside now (or the greatasr portion ot tive or more months. these'nnttu's 2tTigt,t't', mngpt i'ti,", hp??? muat expmod. e a on have an outdoor' .'tt'ati'tfftili"d"' tor a but hqur or no. upon att pleasant days. All .aau.nal.rte maize: at. least a lit- tlo fresh w. Winn: the m.an - Iceman: ot and: n of t highest un- portly». . Let, thqtood gum; be, 33313 The tanner does not have so much pressing work in winter as in summer; and what work be his to do too often does not bringin much cash. Would it not my to give more attention to winter dairying and thus have more money coming in right along' Primes for dairy products rule higher in wint- er than in summer; so that the dairy- man gets better ply for his labor in the former tttNNNN1 than in the lantern With good, sweet corn onsite, clover by. and yeuyw cairn moat, buyer can “Induced Mt motor mutually i) and cacopgg the [>5de ot. tAe is made It a much lower cost at this limited m. than when huge. carcasses are the purpose. The quality. too. of web meat and food is much mum Lu the tau ot the masses sad is thus in grun- er demand. To ttaard against loss in feeding for economical meat producu. the early maturity of canvas " twenty months to twenty-seven months of age. and of lambs and pigs at six months to eight months is “viable. Bcéoml this limit there is risk of a duct red digestion. In in gttled tsotusiurivyly, too, (hall Ttttt The fattening aninul. however. mud. be underfed a trifle it u. relish tor food is to be maintained. It is the critical time when a distaste for its food may muse it many weeks delay in finishing the “hull for the block. Meat produving stock, tluring the last ten weeks of maturity. require abund- ance of food of enticing quality and variety. Only moderate range and PE- ertim, is advisable. but fresh 1ur and sun- itation are very essential and we murh attention to securing a quiet. undislnrl» ed condition is not possible. as repose is..tsstTrirl .to a “trailing animal. . l The hors.s to b, worked in spring and summer allnuld be ted liberally in Folk wary and March previous. and at tle mums time alumld have liberal exercise -tlse {madam ot a large lot or pasturv. and will Ire better hardened for lull-r Ubor if worked moderately every day. Cotta under eighteen months old should have all they will eat with plenty of ezertsi.se and fresh air. The sun» policy ia. best for calves of same age, and fur pigs and lambs under six month: of ‘Wuulri make. it very convenient in nu- link the in- room, thus saving ugcynl do»! of lifting and laborious work. in some are: it might be deemed adeL-s- able u, construct ice home and dosiry 'u'parate and nun from each other-- the: ire house. near the pond tor rou- venience in filling, and the dairy pro- hany in an apartment of the human-n1. or house cellar. With noun: sort of a refrigerator provided In nrrwgcmt-nt of this kind is very satisfactory, and the whole oust would probably be less than that of the combined structure. as mort any sort of 1;ch board pen ran be put up Lo slam the ice in. But where ntyatnetitt and permanency are desirable. features we would prefer the plan at building a good dairy and ke ll'lllnc.1.0- “than and make it of stone or lingk, In arranging the diary do not. provide any man: room than you expect to we. also the dairy is apt to be made nsmrc home for roots and vmmbles in winter. very much to the. detriment of good milk and butter. lulnul afoot from the floor, grves yy a. very convenient place tat an] the milk or keep the cream and Imtwr. and " celce of in: placed therein onw- 3-1433 Rims Us all the dampness that. is desir- able, and a temperature that will in- sun- good. ruld milk for the lahle. and butter that is nine and unlit]. The Post of cortntruvung a combined in- [mum and dairy, as the (shove. would be than! 83.1), it brink is used. or $150 it it is all [mule of wood above the foundation. We Wnulduse nu wood in buiMiuglln- claim) We would not only have the _ "tone and brick. but. would tl dairy overhead with the unn- 1 no there would be numbing to n ovum tout and give bad odors ago. the milk and butter. Tlit and ceilings my be washed an bed. and the whole room kept in possible condition. The location of the ime [muse i'l "nu-u» w“-...v... The hrnlion of the ice bonus and dairy should Ire an convenient to un- Awry- ing as Fumble, and on a sloping bulimic. if one u at land. In and; came let bbe 'UNt hotme be above, and u alight urn- vation for, thy upper end yf hpildiw; clotsing 118 nemily demands Beside: a good Navy tututusr tor the door. 15 strong wire door should be uwung on the outside, so the dairy may be, Lhor- uughly ventilated at. night during the Nummer new. A mom: or cement trough an mm_side of the room, rtrised ventilating flue in the 'xrilintt, 1“ well an a couple ot small openings my”? tvytt oatds, and these should he provided. with shutters or means ht ypen".'y _ayd, lee House and Dairy. Among the most impomt and neoco- any improvements on the farm, we would mention the ice house and dairy. It in only upon an maxim] Linn tint lt, find a clear. cold spring (lowing the war round, giving an ubundnnoo of wav er that never needs to he iced. and la the means for the construction of the best diary in the world. In the absence of this meal: mam-.1 oonvenienw most of us have to build an im home and dairy. and how it can be done best is the topic to be considered. We favor building the two topeLber. it. being more l economical in vmt, and more conveni- ient in use. to do so. A building: 16x24 {not in size is sufficient. to meet all de- mands on the farm, unless dairying is made a. specialty. This will give nspm of 16le for ice. and 8x16 for the dairy. (The dairy part should he excavated to ‘a. depth of two or three feet and drained and ventilated with a tsix-inf tile. The walls of the foundation may be. made of Ieitlu-r brick or stone laid tn cement. Our dairy is floored and walled up with mawed stone and is very mummy. The superstructure my be of wood,brick or stone, as preferred. If sumo or brick is used. the ire house will have in be linrut with hands a. few incliegs trom the "all, or the in- will not keep all through the ma'mm in a. very tsatisfactory unm- nor. . Tbe om should have _ arood-esizehi PRACTICAL FARMING. (I Thrifty Condition Dairy Hints. worked in spring and fed liberally in Felr- previous. and at t.he MVe tiberzst exercrse ry convenient in nu- , Hum saving a. good I laborious work. In tht be deemed advis- ioc home and dairy mu! lu. dairy wal ls " t serurr the best. lan Adi G" GiriGG _-_"- him" lifaTikuaiai "T II In Ind-"Id Nun- or IIr an-I "a, Jule-n) of England. In particular. tho thirst for gold, in its concrete and turgible shape. has bmken out. everywhere. almmt u.‘ l stmngly as it broke out in (he sixteenth cantan- wan; Speusiards, Portuguese, 'tnd Elizabethan Englishmen, says the f London Spectator. Mines. it is believed .on the coutmen' t. an: the swiftest, per- m the largest. of all wealth produc- ou; ud not to pauses-i them is to he your. on grant - of the sudden exalt-lion pt 'the jqnlous hatred of ,Gmt Britain Is a hand that we have Jon-addenly enticbgd by new dis-4 Itttmgt"m ot nuns yielding {not onlv pre- I don: meals. but M91: diamonds and' nigh, nhsm_ in which Ita.ve recently Am a mum. of speculation in Park. l TkmtsU. and Berlin.‘ Look, av tho' mammals. at fly-youth tbm l English spa ot..8a.it.tiIttr in Amr- ; Wanna: Africa, 311931: foruytut ad tish Guam. digging it out of tho my ground. Why should tho-9' Mt mandala. with no conscription. hm nu that, .94 pPt.a.etAietr1frqpt or Sale by " {old iittrtnciay dso has the gm solid good hm}: indicate anythin tlust theie's n. active life rritl it's only a In] nursed a: an Clemens nun.” friend: in Wat, with a. report tlt of death. ll mg an is of dal )ple or, THE THIRST FOR GOLD. 'ii'iii1ii"iii','iii"i'ii WEAK MEN Mlltlll YELJ DES. KENNEDY 8o KEBGAN, viiu."tRdiriJiiiFirG E75: te.u5.u5" iqerriGitria, -iGk7srirViwriv'ii2 01105. Engythlng confidential. Question "It and can: of Treat- me I', Haul 'I‘n-nmu-m willcnrn you. What it bu done for (than n wilt: COhSul “HON FREE. No matter who t"rh'Tfelg'ig,Ti'g In!» tbot-t up "' I”, ,r‘-,:4- l '"ctrps manmnblu. BOOKS "EE- Golden Mogu'tor" ullum lr, t" .» "YAMMX. lucky-"5'59. "errtrtyy, frAed. _-___-_-- _ A __ - READER! f VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS 343 lWPOTENCY CURED M'CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY! - . . . . _ - timdm : nom- A (ll a i,'tr"vgr/g,fdt'.yggt,e 1rr?tf.ttt2"e,t.tj,iit' 'ger, l ' .. ARE V ll .' .:'i':)',','ii,?e'ii',i'.'.r'i'i('i'ii'2?ii',ifit plunk- 99 fun: dun- ttus'.. J'mau; ”Hm; " . tint atr-gufgi.rttairioo-uo-t- “a 1'.'f7 ',.,r, r". "iir/,d1.'1fr'i'l'J'rifdl'5,lltia'r. 3: 51991: dihtrmefts1t mam: M RESTORED To MANHOOD BY DES. K. d K. J: y', N 1. ‘HXIJN. JOHN LIAN”! CHAS. POWERS. CHAS. I’OWEKS- " ". I - - (CU; I. fi Sum. ' 5? _i,'cit". F) g MI '7‘ , MW. [:j1:) 5 I V. 2 (f: ii'). I;\ [I v " . u " y \ " trrtr or.) , ' . "' N LA Civ-ii) _ fl - , 1 t t l itf ' Crcrdc.; Yul Recovery. Illustrating the 1823: Response of a. Depleted Nerve System to a Treatment Which Zieglenishes Exhausted Nerve Forces. r McFARLANE & co., STARTLING FACTS F6R DISEASED VICTIMS. i. FREE i, .1; 'iih",c."t'Tri"u%rii"iiirdra"G "iriurtrat'Griiia "iiGariGiiGiaiiGiG; iiiF.- WE - mu: sin-null. -- WE CAN CUR. YOU I 17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200.000 CURED. NO RISK -----__.-e--- -_.-$-_ John/hut-r-ir-ortho count‘nilvfe- JCOCELE amidst]: ure?mr.hoersoerugeevaat " Mann-Jug... , , triad men tnodieml firm. ":61:qu without "In. SSIONS AND Inv- upin despair. The drum- on my Hypo!" 're - -eerniiwmrinuum-u-xaaLadphsmsum1 OTENCY “In. Hymn!“ ma as u Int ran-on In non-mt Dm. William 1oomt-dth.irhuwMethod lED Irratm.mttyy1itteyr_r-ttsaa.tthte =tL..-.._...- [ileum-mutton. Thin It.» Your yuan- un. Ind nan l .rnmarrudnmSbappr. Immun- numb]. mu to all my mun-ad fdlowmen.” mg NAMES iotsetihyitiiirtfwmtrEs CONSENT. PR] CURLS GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.-C0NF1DENTAL, and "ladder Diseaies, I:L\'I'SIL.\T. Ann run-rum. WIT-1AM: Ann mung: N0 MAKES " TESTIIOIIALI USED armour WRITTEN CONSENT. " fortune of enjoying t and if appearances J, it is safe to predict in: half century of UN“! for him But month: since. while invalid at the Mt. y mart, when hing, y resort, when hu, who were dismayed J.. be was at the point f narly boyhood hid tho foundation of 'IT m A "gay lite" and arm to Mood ml the wmck. I by! a} the Imman- of in rtunic-es.it'.tiqe"r, any: mgr-inn. Wholesale Agents ior Durham and Vicinity af and am VariroreU, Emissimts, Nervous Drbility, Somme! Vert, Jitrift.ure, Smith}. (Julianna! Discharges. seo Abuse, ak hawk. Mr. syphilin ant-d my huh-w Minn, aim-m in mouth Ind on tor-. y. Mr. I thunk God l triad pm. Kama-d: ' mwrulmwhullh. Windham m: ot Are you I victim? 1!." you loot. ? AM you eorstrmplatine nu- (inn-f “Hun your Bute. 's,'pla'phtr {inn [on my man}: Our JI ? In WIMP .3 of the moat usiness men of , As mung. tz can tr, he is madness, repre- rf many thous- own to my " Province. Frank Bauer (tim) Centres Need Natrition. INK BAUER, Bums. O had. Ind we'oumlves use not. innocent intbemtmr. Mqae?ttytr.qtioeeeme mansion; Besforethethimt torminimr l began. but though it " ettItumhu ter- I rivet-y that we have last of all nought Iin Soul); Atria. our non-icy bang ”migration. themes]: undoubt can w't9tee.ehfor.aoidh.aai.nfl-d_hyth ‘our {whey and our tohtetixatitm. It has [not unnamed our Omani: much. "gietM'tt ',utlT 2lt,tl 'i'mrnif " P I u: - tel. or Kim Elk-0.9!“! on! eytm to I The F much have born pascal-in? in I Mascu- immune they expect to ind (tell. The Cerium an eager for the independeams at the Transvul. be- laLi, it,. is a vast gold region, which [my ultimately. they an“. (all to 1tl,tttoEZ,x, the ernnao have been l u 0mm: w pexthahtr :weu founded. that 2At my be I!e.ef2.'?ttetet. momma-115mm. im" of t!” weid. Tttsei) grosi- tiaoaiik, it...” __ iaTiishrkiGriir. 'yyeewho Norah-din than Imus. or competing with all the world I for the sale. of our sun very feeble mummies! We will have ”no ‘ot the rally fit things. if we laws to Jig» fer than: . . . 1mm" 2y" ow déveh tin nations which new Mr. Paul: Euler's experience is thst otall others who have used the South America: Nervine Tonic. In instantaneous action in relieving div trem and pm: is due to the direct eff-actof this great tvntrdy upon the nerve centre-s, wltose fumed vitality is energized instant 's by the very first dose. It is, n. grind, it wondrous cure tor all nervous dis-ses, " well u indigestion and d) womb. It goe- to the real source of trouble direct, And the sick Always feel ita marvel. lou sustaining and restorative power " once, on the very first by " rrgularly may 'VY. with at much re'lishu ever. I hum no hesitation whom-var in saying that the South Nu,aieats Nervine Tonic cured we when all other rrmndias failed. I have recovcmd my old weight-4m 200 pounds-4nd never felt better in my life." seemed moat hopeices. I heard of a wonderful 'ture (-122 cted in a. use aomowUt similar to mine, hr the Groat South Axum inn Nervine Tonic, and I finally tried th a. On thebst day otitis use 1 hum to bel that it was doing what no other medicine had done, The Lu.' d be relieved the distress complcvcly. Bdore night I tau-Hy felt hungry and am with w into“ 'ia'mm" " CHAS. Pawn-ms an. No. I48 SHELBY S r. DETROIT. MICH. rjfriias, Emissions ifj)rjpptiele, Durex; pick up in kg rapidity, fore I knew we mealg and). on go

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