2 m. to 4 p. m. Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. G. 3. FTownship of Bentinck, 100 acres sdjoinâ€" ing Town plot Durham, FOR SALE Tho EDGR PROPRRTYL *[1 LICENSED AUCTIONEER for Co. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxtasz P. 0. will be promptl attended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. { Township of Bentinok. DAN. "*‘County of Grey. Sales attended to promp and at reasonable rates. Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loans ammsecl without delay, _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. HA@NEY WO LOAN stiowost rates of Intercst t Ia» one door north of 8. Seot‘s Store Durharo NOTARY PUBLIC, Commissioner,ctc., MONEY TO LOAN. LlAsensod Auctioneer, ftor the County of Grey. barges mederate and ulhflgt:on “Anntni m\rgynonh for seles ‘can wade at the €v‘gw Ofice, Durkham, or at his residence 3amsTeH, SOLICITOR .IN SUFREME COURT f IONOB Graduate of the Royal College 1 .xfl)onlal Snrreonl of Ontario. Teeth exâ€" «cted without pain by the use of nitrous oxide 13, o{ vitalized air. rarticularattention paid to he filling of the wwm teath. Office and Resiâ€" .ence next door West of Post Office, y.014 BUSINESS DIRECTORY O EN TISTRY In the Town Firstâ€"Class Hearse. Residenceâ€"King 8t%., Hanover, Of the Best Qualita' Cheapeor THAN EVELKL. UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to. .. JAKE KRESS,. JAMES LOCKIE, BSUZR of Marriage licenses, Aue tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. 2. Aay person who takes a paper fron the post ofice, whether directed to hi: mame or another, or whether he has sub soribed or not is responsible for the pay. 3. If asubscriber orders his paper to be Stopped at a certaintime, and the pnblishoc‘ eontinues to send,the subscriberis boun Ooflpty for it if he takes it outaf the pos‘ ofice. This proceeds upon he grouni hat a man must pay for what he uses. G. REGISTRY OFFICE. ‘Thoma: * Lauder, Registrar. Johun A. Munro, We cal! the special attention of Por tnasto‘s and nbtn(bonh the following s1 mopsic of thoe newcpaperiaws : 1. If any person ordeps hispeper discor tinued, he must pay all arreages, or th« puoblisher may continas to send it until pay mentic augo. and collectthe whole axoun: whethor it be taken from the office or not There can be no legaldiscontinuance unti paymentismade. Fire Insurance secured. OFFIOE, ovenr Grant‘s Stom«. Lowen Town, ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th J. P. TELFORD, 7. G. HOLT. L. D. 8. HUCH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. JAKE KRESS Furniture « L. McKENZIE, still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durham Bakery. Apply to JAMES EDGE:, Edge Hili, Ont, * .gf.‘t' -;45‘ AUCTIUNTEER. Newspaper Laws. MEDICAL. DUREHAM. DURHAM. LEGAL McLEAN. Office hours from 10 mee Durham Ont DAN. MeLEAWN, D. MeCORMICK, County of ‘"The doctor was then told that if he wished to pass through another winter he had better take an ocea{x voyage and visit some tropical coun m for a couple of years. So it was decided that he should try the ocean and the tropics. ‘"‘The day soon came when, with his luggage packed, he bade his friends self ‘"‘That winter he spent most of his time in bed, with his patient and faithâ€" ful wife to nutse him, and it was tryâ€" ing on her, who had been accustomed only to pleasures and gay society, to be obliged to stay close at home and wait on a grumbling sick man, whom none could please. And so he lingered through the winter until ‘warm weaâ€" ther came again, when he was able to sit up once more amd take short walks by leaning on his wife‘s shoulder, and tn‘:glly to walk short distances by himâ€" "But for all this talk of the gossips Robert and his wife lived together two happy years, with no darkening cloud on their horizon, when his health began to fail. .The hardships and exposures to which he had been subjected while in the gold fields and among the mounâ€" tains had at last begun to tell on him. "Some of the village gossips shook their heads and said: ‘She would be sorry that she had married him, for he was not the one to settle down vyery long and attend to home duties When he left school bhad he not thrown away his father‘s offer to study medicine unâ€" der him and succeed to his practice when he was no longer able to attend to it himself? ‘ And did he not start out for those wild lands in the west, which were overrun with ruffians and desperadoes, whose chief pleasures were gambling and murder? He bhad stayâ€" ed out there five years, and no knowâ€" ing how many crimes might be laid at his door, for he was always reckless and darin%. Probably the wealth he had brought home with him when he came back a year ago, and which he said was the price he had received for his gold mines, might have belonged to some wealthy speculator whom he had murdered.‘ % "I know that you suspect me of causing the death of Dr, Neville, and I also know that you have no proof that J did, and that you are working this case hypothetically. But as I have only a short time to livaâ€"cansum;)tion‘ has me in its cluches, and my late fever has strengthened its holdâ€"I may as well tell you my story, and thereby save you a great deal of trouble. So if iou will pour me another gtass of that brandy I will begin." This was the story that he told: ‘"The sun shone brightly on that beautiful May day twentyâ€"five years ago when, in the little town of Râ€"â€", in filinois, the wedding bells rang as | Robert Hart and his fair young bride | went from the village church to thelr‘ future home. She was the belle of the ‘ village, who, having just iassed her nineteenth birthday, had linked ber fuâ€" | tureâ€"for better or for worseâ€"to that! of Robert Hart. Upon entering the room he was seizâ€" ed with a violent fit of coughing, which left him weaker than before. As he dropped into a chair he asked for a little brandy, and my friend brought a bottie and poured some for him. He drank this, ana seemed to gain strength. Then, in a low voice, he said : ° And so it proved. The door soon opened and Barton and Du{uch enterâ€" ed, and between them walked the prisâ€" oner, with manacles upon his wrists. He was a taill man, six feet if an inch, with broad shoulders, which looked curâ€" jously out of place on his wasted frame. His limbs seemed too weak to carry him, and he leaned heavily upon the arms of his conductors. His clothing, once of fine material, was worn and shabby, and hung loosely upon him. His face was one not soon forgotten, it being dark and swarthy, as one accustomed to all sorts of weather and to tropical suns. The cheeks were sunken and gave to the cheek bounes a prominence they were not wont to have ; his eyes were dark, and the heavy black eyebrows gave them a severe appearance. From beâ€" neath his slouched hat could be seen straggling dark locks of hair that matched his eyebrows. My friend lifted his head and listenâ€" ed for a moment. Then he said: death. We found, further, that since the doctor‘s death this same stranger had been in a bhospital sick with fever; where, in his delirium, bhe talked of reâ€" venge on ‘Raiph‘ somebody, and on ‘Alice‘; but, having recovered before we bad traced him there, he had been dis~ charged, and so was lost to us for the time being. 2 ‘"‘That carriage which has stopâ€" ped, must contain Duroch and his prisâ€" oner." + ‘"Barton and Duroch, who have been bunting this man ever since, have at last found him, andâ€"*" _ "Close inquiry revealed many minor facts unknown to us, such as the door being unfastened when the servants reâ€" turned and found Mrs. Neville dead, or dying. Another bit of evidence was the visit of a suspiciousâ€"looking foreignâ€" er, who had called to see the doctor the day before his death, but had not found him at home. This same man, the housekeeper remembered, bhad passed them in the street a few blocks from the house as they returned from the thertre the night of Mrs. Neville‘s death. We found, further, that since the doctor‘s death this same stranger [ "Barton first gave voice to my susâ€" picions by saying that the hand looked as if it had been poisoned, and that the doctors had at first thought the same. Barton, who had at one time served in the army, doing duty in India, said that both the doctor and his wife looked to him as many of the victims of snake bites whom he had seen out there. So he, Duroch and myself secretly set to work investigating. \ CHAPTER . IL "It was the second day after that the doctors finally agreed death had been caused by a severe spasm, similar to that which had killed Mrs. Neville, and that the scratch upon his hand, although it had the appearance of beâ€" ing an irrit*g one, was insufficient to cause death. And so, you see, that is the reason the superintendent‘s undeveloped murder theory was dropâ€" ped. ' THE NEVILLE AFFAIR The Britizshâ€"Isles comprise no lower than 1,000 separate islands and inleta, without counting mere jutting rocks or isolated pinnactes. Maister Wilson in favor of spending thirtyâ€"six million a year on the army an‘ only tweive million a: year on edâ€" ucationâ€"that is to say, twelve million for pittin‘ brains in, an‘ thirtyâ€"six mil« lion for blawin‘ ‘em oot?" â€" Recently a" story was told in the House of the campaign a%ainst John Morley in Scotland. As his Conservaâ€" tive opponent was addreszing the Scotch audience in behalf of a more masterâ€" ful military policy, he was nonplused RI this %gstlon'from the crowd: "Is Maister Wilson in favor of spending "And what a homeâ€"comirig: mt was! Home! He no lon.ger,h&%*a home." His father‘s old seérvants told hitf _ the sad truth. His trusted‘‘friend, Ralph .Ber_â€"4 tie, had destroyedhis‘â€"paradise. ; Tho‘ ;vilfe hc*‘\Ihadl;l‘;wl(:ddst;1 well hsgi;'f;prmdu alse, Naug ad.. he now...but, shatâ€" | tered hopes. ~For diys he ‘ wahderéd through the House like one im a:dreani; | going from room to roomy and 9(%:*‘ mournfully calling ‘Alice‘! but ‘no 3 came to»axmvet,,glm_.“ )o oo uKm ~:; o . "Shortly after this he llefi: £Ind"r.a, talg-. inz passage on a vessel returning to England. ~Thence he sailed t6" New York, from which place the remainder of the journey ‘home was made overâ€" land. y es aak dog valt AZE*, ‘"Robert‘s snake, and its mate, which one of the sofdiers had killed that marnâ€" ing, were lying at the back of the bunâ€" galow ; and the first task wasâ€"toextract this venom from the sack atthe base of the fang where the fluid was secretâ€" ed and seal it in a..small; phist;to be kept as a memento of his narrow escape from death. _ k ces .. "After they had kept him running for two hours‘ he wasâ€"allowed a few minutes‘ rest, and then kept going for another hour, at the end of which time he was almost exhausted. After feeling his puise Aif had him . put to bed, where he soon fell asfeep and did not wake until the next afternoon. But when he did get up he was as well as everâ€"barring a sore arm.. "‘Keep him trhvtâ€"tirig«r,mt'bp, you rasâ€" cals,‘ he said ; ‘for I will shoot the first one .O.fA you that allows him to stop.‘ ‘"When the whiskey was handed him | Robert took ‘he flasiy: and drank it all down without stopping. Ha declared it felt cooling, and be held to this after | he recovered, although the soldier who> had brought it, and who tasted it after . it had been dosed, affirmed that it was | fiery enough to set the bungalow on fire. Alf anointed theâ€" wound with olive oil and then bandaged it. Next, picking two of the stoutest natives, he bade them take hold of Robert and make him run with them. + ‘"Robert was almost crazed, and his whole body seemed as though it was being consumed by some internal fire. They forced him into a chair, while Alf dispatched one of the soldiers to the storeroom for a flask of whiskey. Havâ€" inz torn the shirt from the injured shoulder, he took a scalpel, and while the soldiers held the other in the chair out a piece of flesh away at the wound, and, immediately applying his lips to the gash thus made, {')Jegan to draw out as much of the poison as was possible in this way. As the soldier was returnâ€" ing with the whiskey an old native stopped him and made him put a handâ€" ful of cayenne in it. T rvimadtilnlnnr cars BB S ~Aute diairs ns ds ‘"With a cry of rage Rnbertesnat(‘h('d the pistol from the table and fired at its bead with unerring aim. But the death of the snake did not lessen the peril of Robert, whose blood seemed now to be on fire, while the veins inhis forehead stood out like huge cords. The norise made by firing the pistol had drawn a crowd of soidiers and natives to the bungalow. "He and Alf liveg in the same bungaâ€" low. One evening there in company several officers had been sitting outside, where they had been exchanging storâ€" ies. About 9 o‘clock Alf went inside to light a lamp so that they might ?_!ay cards. Robert, who wished to reâ€" il1l his pipe, also entered, and, going to their sleepingâ€"room, reached for his coat, in which was his tobacco. He had thrown his coat on his bed in the early part of the evening. He had taken hold of the garment, when there was a hiss, a swish of a body quickly cutting the air, and by the pain in his arm near the shoulder he knew that he had arousâ€" a sleeping serpent. "His cry of alarm quickly brou%ht Alf, who had by this time struck a light, and by its rays he saw the serpent‘s body rising from its rusty brown coil, thus bringing into view ‘its yellowish white belly, above which, moving to and fro, was the nasty head of a cobra, with the sides and back of its neck, diâ€" la,t.e".]:-ï¬s customary when angry. _ _ "India was Robert‘s home for more than two ffl"s' and he spent his time there wholly either huntln[; or loungâ€" ing. About ten months after his arâ€" rival he received a letter from his wife, which she had written a few months after his departure, and from it. he learned of his father‘s death. That was the first letter he had ever received from his wife. It was also the last. "Only. one adventure that befell him there will I mention, and that is one hem\yill never forget. "The voyage .was an unusually long and tedious one, and many severe storms were encountered in the vicinity of the Cape of Good Hope. On two occasions it seemed as though the ship was to go to.the bottom, but they weathered the storms, and Bombay was reached in six«â€"months or a little more, from the time they left New Orleans. _ _ ‘"The time passed rapidly and the day for their de?art\u‘e bad arrived. _ It was a beautiful day, a day never to be forgotten by Robert. The hot rays of the sun would have made it very unâ€" comfortable had it not been for the cool breeze stirring. About 10 o‘tlock the last farewells were said, as they all stood upon the deck of the ship»which was soon to hoist anchor and bear away on its long course. The final embrace was given and Robert‘s wife stepped over the side as the last line was cast off, and the voyage was begun. As long as he could see her she was standâ€" ing in the same spot, waving her handâ€" kerchief as a last token of adieu. 1 ‘"They arrived in New Orleans safely, and there Robert met Aif Dutton, a {oung Englishman, who was going to eave for India in about three weeks to serve as assistant sur%eeon in the British army. They soon became fast friends, and as Dutton gave him a corâ€" dial invitation to accompany him to India Robert finally concluded to go, as by so doing he would have a friend and companion on his voyage. _ goodâ€"by. His wife was only to accomâ€" pany him to the coast, for he would not consent to her being exposed to an ocean voyage, which in those days was more hazardous than now. Ralph Berâ€" tie, a trusted friend, who had studied medicine with his father in his stead, was to accompany them and see Alice safe home again. _ weal rÂ¥. {To be gontinued,} ; KoT & "s«¥TNG. â€" ie ty At | MOST HIGH OFFICIALS of the Colonial Office an‘d colonial statesmen eventually attain to the K. C. M. G. The motto of the order is ‘"Ausp‘cium melioris aevi" (in token of a nobler time), and ‘the central device of the badge and star is St. Michael warâ€" ring against the dragon. There are thre2 classâ€"sâ€"the Kniw@h:s Grand Cross (who wear star, . collar . and badge). and Companions (who wear the badge alone)» The order of the, Indian Emâ€" pire is an inferior order for services in connection with India,. , The insignia are far less magnificent than those of the Star of India, being céomposed only of gold and enamel or silver and enâ€" amels.> There. are three classes, as in the othar. The Order of Victoria and ‘Altert is conferred when ‘the Queen wishes~to‘ compliment a@a.. woman« . And the .newest, one may ‘be ‘won by anyâ€" body ‘who proteéts or servtes: the Queen when :she‘ is alyroad, or, who. in an emâ€" ergency shows, her an dtterftion which shelikegh Cw.k h o hons‘ns |_ _ Every mother in ‘Christendom will | think that, of all the good works the | Baroness is engaged in, none has been | better directed than her efforts on beâ€" | haif of the children. s * _It was mainiy due to her unceasing ‘ devotion that the bill was passed in | 1869 which so materially improved the | condition of the little ones. That parâ€" \ents who have clearly proved. themâ€" selves by their cruelty to be ‘unfit to | be the guardians of their offspring should have them removed from them, | but should be made to contribute to ‘their support, seems at once a humane and commonâ€"sense arrangement, â€" and |\ ber efforts in the mattet were crownâ€" ed by her work in establishing the Naâ€" | tional Society for the Prevention of iCruplty to Children, the first meeting ‘taking place in her pretty drawingâ€" Coutts, in 1871, the Queen‘s‘ grateful acknowledgementâ€" of" this . remarkable woman‘s unique hbenevolence met with universal approvalt . Long before slumming â€" became the fashion the Baroness had penetrated, accompanied â€" by her great friend, Charles Dickens, to some of the vilest dens of London. The effect on her of wunessim{ the sorrows and sufferings of her fellowâ€"creatures in the povertyâ€" stricken East End bad immediate reâ€" sult. _ She bought ug Nova _ Scotia Gardens, the resort of murders and thieves, a feverâ€"trap for the disreputaâ€" ble and abandoned. Anyone ma{ now see the four blocks of model. dwellings, each containing forty tenements, with every accommodation of baths, launâ€" dry, and readingâ€"room, which have reâ€" placed the former abominations. _ _Can we wonder that when the honâ€" our of a peerage was conferred on Miss lreland, that _ most "disthressful" country, which is always in need of funds, was, on one occasion, assisted to the extent of £250,000, when her practical scheme for .the resuscitation of the work in the fishing villages was begun. _A fishing school, where 400 boys can be taught boatâ€"building, netâ€" ml'nl%;l;'llg' and fish curing, was opened in s Dr. Moffatt and Dr. Livingstone were also materially assisted from the deep purse of the Baromness, and nobly she pleaded on behalf of hbher brave friend, the martyr Gordon. Mra uh 5 Toom The name of this society reminds us of another which the "Good Baroness" was mainly instrumental in foundingâ€" for lsthe Prevention of Cruelty to Aniâ€" mals. Mr. Burdettâ€"Coutts, whose pleasant manner and brilliant coadjutation in his wife‘s philanthropic schemes,* as well as his talents as an earnest poliâ€" ticran â€" and a witty speaker in (the House,where he has successfully. pilotâ€" ed useiul bills, have earned him uniâ€" versal respect. â€"â€"~ â€" _ f Lady Coutts is well known for her charming grace and courtesy of the old school, and her home is the scene of many interesting festivities and enâ€" tertainments. She is tall and siender, and in the courteous greeting to indiâ€" viduals, in the few kind words or graâ€" cilous remarks accorded to each guest, one recognizes at once that there is a remarkable personality in this woâ€" man, whose name is European for her benevolence _ and farâ€"seeing _ charity, and that the intellect which has disâ€" tributed the colossal wealth of which she is possessed into such useful chanâ€" nels for sq many years is of a very high order, and her powers of penetraâ€" tion remarkable. f Tp ‘ At the chief entrance there is a relic of Mrs, Coutts, its former _ owner, whose fancy caused a horseshoe to be nailed on the threshold. In the wide entrance hall, now thronged with wellâ€" dressed guests, hang â€" rare old porâ€" traits, engraved and in mezzoâ€"tint. Many of these are interesting, historâ€" ically, to the family. BARONESS BURDETTEâ€"COUTTS. Holly Lodge, the home of the Barâ€" oness Burdettâ€"Coutts, is built bungaâ€" low fashion, consisting of two storeys only. Its deep verandah, with creeper entwined trellis, is a characteristic of the place, and the fiftyâ€"two acres of perfectlyâ€"kept garden and wellâ€"wooded park gives it a seclusion which is surâ€" prising, considering how close it is to the greatâ€" metropolis. What flls come .s humanity from a disordered livert Henry Ward Beecher has said that it was impossible for a man to hold correct spiritual views if his liver was out of order. ‘The liver is so important a part of the mechanâ€" | ism of man that when it ceases to work with ease the whole man is unable to do his work aright. Can we not appeal to thousands, nay, tens of thousands, for a verification of this fact? Cerâ€" tainly it is, that Mr. David Reid, oft Chesley, Ont., felt that the enjoyment of life had been taken from him, through the unhealthy condition of his liver. . For ten years he says he was troubled with liver complaint and dysâ€" pepsia. â€" Employing his own language: â€""At times my liver was so tender I could not bear it pressed or touched ~from the outside. . Had tried a great many remedies without any benefit.. ~ Was compelied to drop my work, and being worse than usual, I decided as a fNnal resort to try South Americar Nervine, which had been recommended to me hy friends who had been cured by it. © I got a bottle from A,. 8. Goo@â€" eve, local druggist, and commenced "taking according to directions. Before I haed taken haif a bottie I was able For sale by McFarlane & Co., Wholesale Agonts for Durham and Vicinity, hierest allowed on savings bank dOpO;X;l oi $1.00 tyd upwards. Prompt attention and every facilâ€" anafforded cuctomers liying at a distance, South American Nervine Was Recommended, and Hailf a Bottle Was Taken Relief Came. A general Banking business transacted Drafts sued and coliections made on all points. Deposâ€" "z received and interest allowed at current »aotao Havo Sinco Improved Rapidly, and So Ssays Mr. David Reid é:(:)?::tég Qi:ob:l: H&‘l'it:g{p.t;nlg’lin::tg _ DURHAM AGENCY. With Liver Complaint and Dyspepsiaâ€"Suffered; Greatly and Found No Relief in the Seores _ of Medicines Prescribed. IEN YEARS TROUBLED w Paid tg 1,000,00 RESERVE FUN 600,00 W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. Reid, President. Manages CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,000 StandardBank of Canada TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVANCRL CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprietorn REViEW OFFICH, GARAYRAXA TBE GREY REVEW| °* pARNES$ 01 THECOOKSBEST FRIEND DUNNS BAKING POWDER Thursday, Morning. !Jeouwm «& co‘s3" â€"A* THBâ€"» + HARNESS MAXEZRS. FOR‘TWENTYâ€"SIX YEARS LARGEST SALE iN CANADA. Head Office, Toronto: SAVINGS BANK Is PUBLISHED EVEET Paid uj J‘ KE LLY. A(OI‘. ipidly, and Am Now Completely Oured= David Reid, of Chesley, Ont. RAG Gonme uoo4, 1 htnm"mml“.: ml.nn&.msmw the necessitlies of the case. It is ® great medicine and thousands toâ€"day i2 Canada are happier and healthier m°4 and women, because of ites discovery. There is no great seoret about it, 2241 yet there is an imnortant secret. 1t Gifference to Nervine. This great 4‘»* covery â€"rises equal to the most try}»Z occasions.. Let it be indigestion, *»* most chronic liver trouble, as with Mr. Reid, nervous prostration, that meke® life miserable with so many, #0* headaches, that sap all the effort out of man @# woman, Nervine measur®® to tiously recommend South Americ@n® Nervine to any suffering from dys>>>* sia or liver complaint." This is > Reld‘s story as he tells it in his 0w~ words. _ Were it thought necessary it eould be corroborated by a host of witâ€" nesses. Mr. Reid has lived a lons t\~* in Chesley, and his oase was kac®n 0 Jobbing of all kinds prompt! attondal to. t ALLAN MoFARLANE, Proprieton Handâ€"made Waggons In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also Horse Shoeing Shop, "lâ€â€™ very bad one. But that ALLAN McFARLANR Has opened out a firstâ€"class SEE OUR HARNESS. UPPER TOoWwn. WOODWORXK * for sale cheap. in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of Befor «9 \ A cuttings at ground bet: well ecultis Rape drille« ol erdund thirty inche The shepberd who a his flock orer the & baving recourse to t\ making the worst mis dbk ln their manage sown piece of _ rape abundance of succulen when the ewes and the appreciate itâ€"during short, burnt grass an« It is a real luxury for given to them such an gder as green rape, fr cutting the crop with . distance frffm the grow Lhe the Ing na in D make grea clove fed «¢ *A tkranx*a and the pe the same. ed deeply. just the #a1 crop that : googd propo! crop 1 goog 9 paks 1« from lo<ging apre very for {attening «h foods that w Ar a fodder the best clo: Of the fara the best sati snorn, oats ar a&e the three there is no £ ms oats, wh corn and the For rams, ew ing ewes, on wome food t« when fatteni none of the | rddition â€" makee 1b the «hee; and greal :-yh.he_ kiegy g ving s is no foos th of turnips {« euccessfully not be grom ability of t made to tal The only ob aft« eno tryimg feeding compar as POOt in Hoa: TAI feed yresy® ust en whene PRACTICAL F FEEDI N( Ni n uripg it BFET CROP FPOY If D t« nft n M