West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 5 Mar 1896, p. 1

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" DENTISTRY. NOBARY PUSLIC, Commissioner,cic., Loan and Insurauce Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loune arranged without delay. _ Collections promptly mude, Insurance effected. MeNEY TO LGANX stiowost rates of Interost er "I® ons door uorth of 8. #eot‘s Store Daurhara Cs 100 3 Lizl J PV L2 ppimisre," suom on shae ol Wacal! the special attention of Pos hastors and subscribers to the following sy popsis ofthe nowcpaperiaws : 1. If any person orders hie peper discon tinged, he must pay all arreages, or the publisher may contiuns to send it uutil pay« wentss usde, ind collcetthe whole ar cunt whether it be takes from the office or not. There can be no lega} discontinunnce until BUSINESS DIRECTORY. whether it be tai There can be no paymentismade Of t hat a men must pay tor.w":hut he uses Firstâ€"Class HMHearse. DE. ARTHU R GUN T. G. HOLT, L. D. S HU.\'Ui; Graduate of the Royal C of Dental Surgeons of Ontail -”l\u the don wou at MONEY TO LOAN â€" _ FOR SALE The EDGE PROPERTY LICENSED AUCTIONEEEL for GO. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxtasa P. 0. will be promptly sitended to. Bngidenoo Lot 19, Con. 8, DAN. Fire Insurance secured. OFFICE, over Grant‘s Stom« Lows® TOwn, Tl‘:'w_n-sil‘ip of Bentinek In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valvable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more Jots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2 W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjomâ€" Ing Town plot Durham. Mortgage taken for part purchase Licensod Aucti harges moders rrangements _ f reviaew Office, ricevilie. J. P. TELFORD MLCGEIXL %«. PMYsICIAN,. sURGEON, AC¢â€" CovcrEUR, «&c. BSUZER of Marringe Liconses. Aucâ€" â€" tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Residenceâ€"King St., Hanover. Sasgh and Door Factory. JAMES LOCKIE, W Lumber, Shingles and. Lath always JAKE KRESS Furniture I HUCZLH McKAY. . l.. McKENZIE, MISCELLANEOUS. Newspaper Laws. 4 Auctioncer, for the County ef Onz. moderste and satisfuction gumrin ents for scles {can be made at ths Oflice, Dubam, or at bis residence AUCTIUONCER. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Onty DURHAM MEDICAL. KJ NG Promptly attended to JAKE KRESS. DURHAM. st Quality Cheapor [HAN EVEE. LEGAL found in bis Old Stand he Darbkam Bakery. Ph McLEAN. AUCTIONEER for TION DAN. MeLBAN. e Durbam Ont D. MoCORMICK. In Stock., .. G. &J. McKECHNIE. Almost a AYER Sor: TESTED REMEDIES SPECIFIC and ANTIDOT For Impure, Weak and Impoverishe Blood, Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpota . C D C Tioar Complaint, New Office Durham Buh PCPE CC 2O )e tion of the Heart, Liver Coroplaint, Neuâ€" ralgia, Loss of Memory, Bropchitis, Conâ€" sumption, Gall Stones, Jaundice, Kidue, and Urinary Diseases, St. Vitus‘ Dave Female Irregalarities and General Debility, Laboratory â€" Goderich, On! 1. M. McLEOD, McLEOD‘S System Renovator | A general financial business transacted Office next door to Standard Bank, S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thoma * Lauder, Registrar. â€" John A. Muaro Deputyâ€"Registrar, Office hours from 1( &. m. to 4 p. m. Bold by H. PARKER, Druggist, Durham» nor Day. C CONVEYANCERS. Hogeiess £g§§: YOL. XVIII,â€"NO. 10. IFE SAVE TARKINC Prop and Manufacturer Cht â€" 1% i "I know nothing, as you should unâ€" erstand." He laughs significantly. "What do you mean ?" demands Dorâ€" n, a little fiercely. His eyes urc_fizrk id flashing, his lips compressed. "What can I mean, except that yOu e ridiculously absurd?" says Horace, sing. ‘"What is it you expect me to y? I can‘t get you out of it. I alâ€" ays knew you had a penchant for her, it never thought it would carry you far. â€" If you will take my advice, howâ€" er, you will be milder about it, and No pelnynrnae ce tesany Tace: . TL NOU O Scrope s CICZT combe draws i in the future believe, now, Dorianâ€"clear evil that has '.He throws air, and trie conquer the hours past heavily. in answer (0 S 227 "It is such an unac says Scrope, lifting his did she go? and with quiet little mouse of a understands her being a lraf:ed_\’. But how d 1y affect you?" _ ; Branscombe hesitate moment_be . wonders _ or shall not reveal to that hbas ’I&assed bet we uncle. en his who volt from the task, a to let things rest as t RY, RAARACAINLC s Branscombe hesitated. For one bried moment. _ be . wonders whether he shall or shall not reveal to Scrope the: scone that hm\’lg]aswl between him and his uncle. en his whole sympathies reâ€" volt from the task, and he determines to let things rest as they now are. "Arthur has tormented himself needâ€" lessly about the whole business," . he says. turning his face from Scrope. "He sys EU Phat is. every oneâ€"to blame, mCt nc thinks meâ€"that is, every Oneâ€"=AMAnIOIE until the girl is restore to her father." 2 Con t amita see.‘" says James Scrope "Her eyes were deeper than the depth Of waters stilled at even." "Dorian |" says Clarissa. "Clarissa I"* says Dorian. "I really think I shall give & ball." "What ?" cries a small, sweet, plainâ€" tive voice from the corner, and Georgie, emerging from obscurity and the treâ€" mendous volume she has been studying io uitc onl â€" vawal venc Papa says 1 mU county in some . Way meditatively, ‘"and 1 1 will be the best way CHAPTER XXII.â€"Continued. s that all you can tell me?" \I1 about my old lady, certainly you YE .. smdite c h Siel W Sn on atrnaterr ce n titin Aincol half tender: "A rosebud set with little willful thorns, S dnc And s“;set as English air can make her, she." The lines come hurriedly to Bransâ€" combe‘s mind, and linger there. Raisâ€" ing her bead again, her eyes meet "bis, and she laughs, for the second. timmc, out of the pure gladness of her heart. «T think it was my NApPpY. _thought.." and s16 180872 WO1_"lzcaf har hei out of the pure gladness of her heart. "I think it was my nappy thought," says Branscombe, mildly.. . "I suggestâ€" ed this dance to Clarissa onlf {esfierda{. Might not I, too, partake 0 he ‘small return *‘ _"*It no longer belongs to me ; I have given it all sw_ny.-â€"bere." says Georgie, touching . Clarissa‘s cheek : with . one finger; "but for that," with a slow u!oi'u.tlg_e ila[nee, “lI slzould lxla chadrmed.". (s n shall get pencil and psper and write down the .names," say3 C&-â€" ETTE P Lsandâ€"ening toâ€" adorabDid WHEEAT OS TOCCGCAH cam? a thinfi I shall get pencil and pa&o;: and write down the names," says °C jssa, energetically, rising and going toâ€" ward the door. ‘"Dorian, take care of Georgie until J return." f t "I wish l‘know how," says Bransâ€" combe, in a tone s0 low that only Georâ€" Sie can hear it. Then, ‘as the m gie can hear 35â€" . _eZUCP o_ vanr last closes he says, ""Did you measâ€"your lest Ah! I quite see JHE VICARS LOVERNESS know brandy will be best (al Mrs. McGinty has left me so thoroughly done up." you,â€"nothing." He gas er long and earnestly. be word ought to be sure ull minute Dorian makes no He is looking . earnestly in rope‘s face, to see if in it there y hidden thought, any C&reâ€" cealed expression of mistrust. indeed, none. No shadow, no trace â€"of _ suspicion, lies _ in clear and honest eyes, Brans aws a deep breath. Whatever ture this friend may come to ow, at least, he holds himâ€" lear and pure from this gross has been imputed to him. ows up his head with a freer tries, with a quick effort, to the morbid feeling that for st has been pressing upon him w nothing," he says, presently, r to Sir James‘s last remark. such an unaccountable story," pe, lifting his brows. ‘‘Where ro? and with whom ¢ Such & (le mouse of a girl, one hardly nds her being the heroine of v. But how does it particularâ€" Ruth CHAPTER XXII wa ze the depth one brief Phe DURHAM, would you have that small return **No."! ""Not even if I v "Not if I wer thing you most "My last? What wa remember anything." 8 blushes, but now agzain color creeps into her face Cissy Redmond, in the arms of a cayâ€" alry man is floating round the room, her unutterable little nez retrousse lookâ€" ing even more pronounced than usual. Her face is lit up with pleasurable exâ€" citement; to herâ€"as she tells the cavâ€" alryâ€"man without besitationâ€"the evenâ€" ing is "‘quite too awfully much, don‘t you know |" _ and the cavalryâ€"man underâ€" stands her perfectly, and i4 rather takâ€" ing to her, which is undoubtedly clever of the cavalryâ€"man. He is now talking to her in his very best style, and she is smiling,â€"but not at him. Within the shelter of a door, directly opposite stands Mr. Hastings: and â€"â€" he . is . answering.. .. back. w(m,l smile fourfold. He will not dance himâ€". self,â€"conscience forbidding,â€"yet _ it pleases him to see his Cissy (as she now is) enjoying herself. The band is {:lny- ing *"Beautiful Ferns" dreamily, langâ€" uidly; and I think at this very moment Mr. Hasting‘s reverend toes are keepâ€" ing excellent time to the music. But this, of course, is barest supposition; for what human eye can penetrate leather? The waltz comes to an end, and Doriâ€" an, having successfully rid himself of his late partner, draws Georgie‘s hand within his arm and leads her into a conservatory. _ Pasberertcen‘ ‘It is too large a promis%e ‘A true one, nevertheles A little earnest shade sho his face, but Georgie lau oE nenoge Her late partner was a fat, kindly squire, who will dance, but who, at the Ӵl;g““"“ of each effort to eclipse ‘Terpâ€" sichore, feels devoutly thankful that his task has come to an end. He is, to say the mildest least of him, exceedingly tire ing, and Georgie is rather glad than otherwise that Dorian should lead her into the cool recess where flowers and perfumed fountains hold full sway. She sinks into a seat, and sighs audibly, and looks upward at her comFanion from halfâ€"closed lids, and then, letting them drop suddenly, plays, in a restless fashâ€" jon, with the large black fan she holds. If you adn‘t Nâ€"oâ€"n ul onlb nen hi renlicoas ~ plenirermesl ereelirait s vor . Branscombe is stupidly silent; indeed, it hardly occurs to him that speech is necessary. He is gazing earnestly,teadâ€" erly at the small face beside him,â€"â€" "A‘ face o%er which a thousand shadows _1 ho smal face, pernups, objects to this minute scrutiny, because presently. it raises itself, and says coquettishly,â€"â€" ‘"How silent you are! What are you thuz.)limg of ?" As ly. "What "Of you," says Dorian, simply. "" o m on en care‘s, merfect "Of you," says Dorian, simply. * \\ hat a foolish question! You are a. Eerfect picture in that black gown, with your baby arms andâ€"neek.‘" «. .. [ _ . â€" cce isw id enc linserirccmig . P "Anything else?" asks Miss Broughâ€" ton, demureal{. RX 3+ Yes.. It almost seems to me that you cannot be more than fifteen. . You look such a little thing, and so young." . "But I‘m. not young," ui‘"s Georgie, hastily. "I am tiuite old. wish you would remember I am nearly nineteon." "Quite a Noah‘s Ark sort of person, "Quite a Noah‘s Ark sort of person, â€"a fossil of +the preâ€"Adamite period. How I envy you! You are, indeed,uniâ€" que in your way. Don‘t be u:&ry with me because I said you looked: young; andâ€" don‘t wish to be old.‘ There is mo éandor so hateful, no ‘truth so unpleasâ€" Ing as age. S NCO Th S n en Ne olne c aaag d s nes moagmt, would remember . at neull) MOATIE CD 2 O nanda or anv naked part of "Quite a Noah‘s Ark sort of persOD, | the face or hands or any naked. gut of â€"a fossil of the preâ€"Adamite period:| ths body. It is better to lift him by How I envy you! You are, indeed,uniâ€"| the coattails or throw .& blanket _ over que in your way. Don‘t be “25'7 with | im and pull him by this. Nothing that me because I said you looked: young; ;.wat-houldhothmnumm.md andâ€" don‘t wish to be old." There is ‘mo | if the clothes are wet the abould éandor so hateful, no ‘truth so0 unpleasâ€" | pot h.pw.incmtwt with them. _A ing as ago." 7 , r ‘of dry wood can be placed under "How do. you know ?" demands she,. mody and he can thea be lifted. The saucily, sweetly,. half touched by his treatment of the case is the tone. . "You are not yet a Methuselah." iar one applied in attempting: to Then, tDo lMyto;x l!:Inoqv your“br&tg;uim yeatore: the W 'n: mdu;: come al e is ye K aR & : mklg- T c yry“ m -'“Am%-m-mflm' rubbed him. _ And wliv:do L haven‘t the‘ ie t ht e it adue ie o mm ohan S eromen ie td‘ xc :g'f;‘:‘q,:-,:.igw l ve Aoemies w d oo d hesoroens aroemien e on enc have given 1t ay from him ove at this moment 1 with paper an CO. GREY, THURSDAY, MAR, 5, 1896. desired were to give a ball f She “Ml("lhl;\\" itself up rgie laughs lightly P en hk 9000 it it ? I never very seldom soft delicate all a little the ons hastily Hastings 3t is 1" "He has a nose," says Miss Brough ton equably, "though there isn‘t muck of it. He is very like a Chinese pug Don‘t you see him? But he is so nice.‘ Doriaw looks again in the desired di reclion, and as he does so a tall young man, with a somewhat canine expres sion, but very kindly, advances toward him, and, entering the conservatory comes :i) to Miss Broughton with . @ smile full of delight upon his ingenuâ€" ous countenance. ; $ ‘"Yes,â€"the dark thin young man met at Sir John Lincoln‘s. I dare sa) I told you about him ?" "Yes, you did," says Dorian grimly "I see him over there," pointing airil with bhor fan through the open consery atory door to a distant wall where man young men are congregated together. ‘"The man with the nose ?" asks Brim scombe, slightingly, feeling sure in hi soul he is not the man with the nose. Branscombe, turning a vivid red. “\\'hfi my Mr. Kennedy |" "Your Mr. Kennedy ?" reiterates 1 blankly, his red becoming & crimson ( the liveliest hue. K ""Miss Broughton," he says, in a low musical voice, that has unmistakable pleasuré in it. "Can it really be you! 1 didn‘tsbelieve life could afford me s happy a moment as this." "I saw you ten minutes ago,". says Georgie, in her quick bright fashion. "And made no sign ¢ That was cruel," says Keanedy with some n'qro.wh in his Lone. He is looking with illâ€"suppressed admiration upon her fair uplifted face "Now that I have found you, what dance will you give me $" "Any one I have," she says, sweetly "The tenth? ‘The dance after next,â€" after this, I mean? ©V8I UEVERCCE "Gentlemen," he said, ‘it‘s so im‘cr-‘ nally hot that I must ask your permisâ€" sion to take off my cout and this thick collar. I would have done so without asking, only you all look so spick and span. I wish you would keep me in countenance by following my example." The governor looked deliciously cool in a thin undress uniform coat and duck riding breeches, and the men reâ€" cognized the goodness of his suggestion and gave him three cheers. Then they stripped to their undershirts and trousâ€" ers and enjoyed the remainder of the evening, notwithstanding the jokes of those guests who had not been blessed with university educations and arisâ€" tocratic tastes. The discarded shirts were stood around the back of the room like tombstones as monuments to Lhe;u like tombstones as montiIMEN‘S TD TL owners‘ discomfiture, serving as rests to hold up the castâ€"off coats and waistâ€" Kest Formula for the Treatment of Perâ€" sons â€" Struck Down Ey the Electric Current. One of the contingencies of modern civilization which is almost entirely new and is wholly dependent upon the development of modern industry is the treatmert of â€" accidents from electric shock. The matter, says the Medical Record, has been discussed quite thorâ€" | oughly by physicians in this country,| but it has been worked out perhaps more ‘ ‘systomatically by Dr. D‘Arsonval, of Paris, who has recently made a report to the Academie de Medecine, of Paris, upon the method of treating persons injured by electrical shocks. D‘Arsonâ€"| val states that electricity causes death. sometimes directly by the disruptive and electrolytic effects of the charge on the tissues. This death is final. It sometimes, however, causes death indirectly by arrest of respiration and syncope, caused bty} stimulation of the nerveâ€"centers. nder these circumâ€" stances a person may be revived. if measures are applied. C * %fi formula for renviqf the victim of electric shock is this : he person so disabled _ should be treated like one «drowned ; in other words, he should be laid upon the back, and artificial resâ€" piration performed in the way that is ordinarily described. Some further ractical advice, however, is given to fw who are palled‘ at once to the ‘scone gltnm sccident and. atmtlh&txmo when the person is perhaps still in conâ€" when MOP EUA CCag aravren the fi tact with the wires. Of course, the first thing to be done is to .togo_the current or break the contact. In doing the latâ€" SSRA LrmaL ha srlatim| an THE GOVERNOR‘S TACT ELECTRIC SHOCK VICTIMS. MBR UR No i opogr ce mt eelagd one should no‘, touch the victim on onl P o esc an sc ul l s (To Be Continued.) Uoimmmnn Ueoiae C sns t most welcome address he had 1y for potatoes, I would choose a S2N0) loam with a clover sod to be plowed under. Of course we cannot all have this, but we can nearly all have the clover sod. _ The ground should be well plowed, about seven or eight inches deen the long way of the field, and Typical Draft Horses. In the borse breeding future the draft will take prominent position and will be the type preferred by the majority of farmers because better adapted to the condition prevailing on most farms. The very ln-:n'-y draft horses which have alâ€" ways commanded the highest prices, can be grown only on the best lands. With a view of describing as nearly as possible, by measurement, what is reâ€" garded in England as the typical draft horse for the heaviest work, we give the proportions taken from an article in the London Live Stock Journal, of what the English regard as firstâ€"class sires for the very best draft horses, as follows: Firstâ€"class Dray Sire No 1.â€" H.«x%‘ht. 17 hands; weight, 21 cwt.; girth, 96 inches* girth round belly, 100 inches : round foreâ€"arm, 28 inches; bone below knee, 12 inches; bhind leg under hock, 14 inches * second thigh, 23 inches, Firstâ€"class Sire No. 2.â€"Height,. 16.2 hands :. weight, 19 cwt.; girth, 92 inchâ€" es; belly, 96 inches; foreâ€"arm, 27 inchâ€" es ; bone below knee, 12 inches ; hind l:g under hock, 14 inches; second thigs, inches. We ofi" the above more for the purâ€" pose of forming an ideal of the typical is not likely that sires of This size anc quality will be within reach of our readers. It is a geood thing, however, to bave an ideal before the mind, and ap&zroximw it as closely as gossible. he selection of the sire, however, is not the only thing. Many colts that are well bred fail of their natural develâ€" opment through want of feed. It reâ€" quires good feeding, especially in the earlier years, and grazing on good, rich land to (')rroduc« even fairly good draft horses. The heaviest draft horses of England are produced on the fens and in the richer valleys. _ The fens are lands which have been reclaimed from M o tte in the richer valleys. _ The fens are lands which have been reclaimed from the sea by dikes and are as black in color of soil as an Iowa prairie, and are fertilized by marl, which is found under the peat, which underlies the surface of the fens. The lighter m)i‘ls p‘r_oq_uce uT Ump e Tok Sm ons m e it en a smaller draft horse with lighter bones, but of better quality in proporâ€" tion to their size. There is no danger of our getting our draft horses too large, provided they are low down, blocky and sound in all respects. Potato Growing. If I were to have my choice of land potatoes, I _ would choose a sindy m with a clover sod to be plowed A Tank Heater. ' A good tank hbeater can be made for | very little money. Here is a plan for one which is very simple and yet efâ€" fectuai for a small tank, say ten to fifteen barrels. It is simply a round drum of galvanized iron one foot in diameter and as high as the tank. This has a solid bottom upon which are soldâ€" ered some strips with screw _ holes punched in, to fasten it at the bottom of the tank. Inside an iron i:ate raisâ€" ed two to three inches from the bottom, so as to give a place for ashes. On the outside a round pipe two inches in diameter goes down the side and under this grate, for draft. On top is & COÂ¥~ er with a ~pipe in the center, four inches in diameter and a foot high, for ;x& :'tovtopipe. Wl’::‘h this you cf‘l;y bun& of wood, cobs, or anything , &n if you have some chunks, or if you live where you can get coal cheap, you can keep a fire all night and never. have your tank cool off entirely, even in the 7 . slum ol Analâ€" sam your tank cool off entirely, even in the coldest nights. _ This will cost you, sorde at »oar local tin shop, $2 to $2:50, and any one who has cows to come in early maz)reutly save the money in oneâ€" bill a veterinarian. It is not clfim@d}htthuuucwdor"h‘fl as an oil beater, but it is very m cheaper and can be made to answer ‘This is such & simple ion when . the snumal hmmflwm; THE FARM. Dehorning Calves, to explain why it is postponed until the horns are fully growim. _ Caustic potâ€" .Iash in e;ticks is lt.(li:e material to be used. t can ber secur y at any drug store. _ When tucu‘is three days old, tie his feet together, and lay him in a clean, wellâ€"littered place. _ Press his head firmly to ugmnd with the knee and locate the le which indiâ€" cates the budding hormn. Wet the spot well, then take the stick of potash wrapâ€" ped in paper, with one end exposed, and rub around the embryonic born until it is well coated with;g:ash. Roll the calf over and repeat operation on the other side. If afte@r a week or ten days any signs of growth appear about the scar, touch up with potash as before, and the animal will grow up as thorâ€" oughly polled as if heshad been born in that condition. WHOLE NO. 918 A YVariety of Kees That Plainly Betra) Their Innate Wickedness, ‘Almost every form and variety of huâ€" man crime is common with insects. Cases of theft are noticed among bees. Buchner, ipv_!si._s“'l‘hysic Life of Aniâ€" & Lieyt s eciaiacs ARCTTCY Emm which in order to save themselves the trouble of working, attack & wellâ€"stockâ€" ed hive in masses, kill the sentinels and the inhabitants, ro bthe hives and carry off the provisions. _ After repeated enâ€" terprises of this description they acâ€" quire a taste for robbery and violence. They recruit whole companies, which get more and more numerous, and finâ€" ally they form regular colonies of briâ€" gand bees. _ _ R MFiay _ __. comelans ifact that ascaaf io verss But it is a still more curious FC these brigand bees C281 be pro artificially by giving working b mixture of honey and l.vrand{l to The bees soon take a delight. in beverage, which has the same disa effects upon them as upon MeD. become _ illâ€"disposed and irritable lofi altlhedesuel‘”mw “ior‘l"hmd f when y in to feel “liff)fl attack and plunder the wellâ€"su hives. . . t s k ! A London medical journal publishes a list of theâ€"sums left by & number of l'promme' nt medical men, mostly knights | or baronets, who died last year. The estates range in value from nearly half | a million to about $40,000. Sir Willism ISwm'y. who died at the age of sixtyâ€" eight, left an estate worth over £93,000. Dr.. John S. Bristowe left an estate worth £15.734 and the late Dr. Tuke an estate of about £30,000. It is estimated. .‘;:"‘2&?““"““”-""‘3""““' â€"seven physiclans surgeons whmozviulwemmficulduginenxor saven years was £50,614. ‘This is a vastâ€" ly grester sum than could be credited t mc nc io esc temi] a an | that most Mpflam-inhndht{ : Of. LHORt Mocag Ahives. * There is one variety of beesâ€"the Spbeâ€" codesâ€"which _ lives exclusively _ upon plunder. According to Marchall, this i'{ulnety is formed O}E individuals ?t _tdhle alyates species, whose organs of nidiâ€" fication are defective, aod which have gradually. developed into a separate vaâ€" riety, living . almost exclusively â€" by plunder. They may thus be said to be an exâ€" ample of innate and organic criminality mmw and they represent what Prof. Lombroso ealls the born criminals â€"that is, individuals which are led to crime by their own orgaDiC constitution. A SAVAGE MARSUPIAL. CRIME AMONG INSECTS. We ENi Wealthy London 8. is a still more curious fact that igand bees can be produced ly by giving working bees a of honey and l.vrand{l to drink. ; soon take a delight in this , which has the same disastrous pon them as upon men. They illâ€"disposed and irritable, and Anaira to â€"work, and finally, 1 "{él-,l"h"uzifr‘ y, they the . wellâ€"supplied Thievish bees, Is « Whote THE GREY REY REVIEW OFFICB, GARAFRAXA TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVAKCL CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprietos A Coatate quetes, xtsuiiots. Cnlies Siater and England. DURHAM AGENCY. Ageneral Bunking business transacted Drafts suedand coliections made on all points, Dopesâ€" ts received wnd interost allowed at curren» CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,000 W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. Reid, President. Manager pterest allowed on savin tyd upwards. Prompt ut «pafforded cuctomers liy «« Paid up 1,000,008 RESERYVE FUND €00,000 StandardBank of Canada PRIME for sale cheap. Jobbing of all kinds promptly attended to. ALLAN MoFARLANE, Propriston BOULDIN & CO‘S ALLAN â€" MeFARLANE Handâ€"made Waggons Horse Shocing Shop, Thursday, Morning. Put up in pokss®:® Has opened out a firstâ€"cla rrowers as a sample of the teas, Therefore they use slection of the Tea and it sut it up themselves and ~ packayges, thereby scoursag Eoo oc ads Mandreds Killed b» sunstroke dred and Thirteen in the {f your gi weer TCA a Tmx WORLE o a FROM THE TEA PLANT Quecasland, The steamship Miowera arrived reâ€" cently at Vancouver from Australian ports. Mail advices are to the effect that, besides terrible storms and awâ€" ful destruction of marine . property along the Australian coast, the weather on land has been unprecedentedly hot, and the death rate from sunstroke has been excessively high. In a gr;url n.lan,\' sections the crops are ruined. In Queensland 113 in the shade is the recorded temperature, and in many places in Australia the thermometer reached 125 in the shade. Startling statistics are . to bhand of death from beat. On one day previous to the sailing of the Miawera 80 peoâ€" ple were interred at Sydney. So great was the demand for graves that manâ€" agers of cemeteries had to engage & number of assistants. Nearly all of those who succumbed were infants and aged. people. Sheep and cattle are dyâ€" mguln droves for want of fodder and water. o In Queensland, New South Walesand Victoriaâ€"the beat has never been so exâ€" cessive. Men, women, . children, and. horses drop down in the streets and die before assistance ‘can reach them. To add to the distress, scarlet fever and other epidemics prevail in many localâ€" So many of the gold seekers have found death mud ‘of fortune that & " ut L dF e thae" me SEE OQUR HARNESS UPPER TOW N. Head Office. Torontoâ€" is now called into service to transpof from Western Australia those who a BUNNS BAKING POWDER THECOOKSBESTFRIEND e ~â€"ralmpe ces _ want to ses there $ _: Who do gou _ i want to se wysolf Shere, :".Mrv__‘i?; SAVINGS BANK FOR TWENTYâ€"SIX YEARS the old stand. All handâ€" made shoes. Also LaARGEST SALE iN Ts NATivE PURITY WOODWORLEK Â¥ and 13 Front Street € STEEL, HAYTER 4& CO. ~ ALL GOOD GROCeRS KCE cer does not keep it, teil hi in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of HARNESS MA ocer lb.,a lb aad 5 1b, packC uo geapent A DEADLY HEAT. A Personal Matter. BHARNESS AT in CANADA. 7 P0 istrokeâ€"One Honâ€" in the Shade in To TME TE evory1 + AH $ o 2A)

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