West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 23 Jul 1896, p. 2

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$ O €4 ns s um Deputyâ€"P »gisp In the Town of Durham, County of 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. I4, Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" ing Townr plot Durham. FOR SALEB The EDGE PROPERTY LIOENSED AUCTIONEER for GCo. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxtrasz P. 0. will be prompt! aitended to. Residence Lot 19, Con, af Township of Bentinck. DAN. I'mu‘ DAN. McLEAN, SSUSR of Marriage Licenses. Auo tioneer for Countios of Bruce and Grey. Residenceâ€"King St., Hanover. * Lander, &nn‘ Auotioncer, foy the County of Grey, e4 moderate and satisfection gulmuox. nufgomnh tg soles joan be mado at the }nm Offlce, Durkam, Oor st his rosidence B. MeCORMICK, LICENSED AUCTIONE® County of Grey. Sales atten And at reasonablo rates. \"le: ai. DENTISTRY JAMES LOCKIE, G. REGISTRY OFFiICE. 2 e C m ty MXTIS® one door north of ©. Hoot‘s Store hP Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loans arranged without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. meNky to Loan atlowost rates of Intorest en tore ce Hocieve se l ce oo in n i Snvaamme uy p _ __ i =1_ COToge A. of Dental Sur,ooxu Of Ontario. Teeth exâ€" roted without pain by the use of nitrous exide 8, or vitalized air. Particular attention zsm to e filling of the x‘;atunl teoth. Ofilce and Resiâ€" mee next door West of Post Office, y.014 NO@TARY PUBLIC, Comn MONEY To LOAN J. P. TELFORD Bs sucte oo siremt cher BUSINESS DIRECTORY Firstâ€"Class Hearse. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Fire Insurance secured. OFFICE, oven Grant‘s Stom« Lower Town. ONOR Graduato of ;hTBoyal College of Dantal Envanamne kn , _ LW Cl CAH vssll i 9 e e h uP UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to JAKE KREKSS, HUCH McKAY. Of the Best Quality (-)h; er s 'rnANQ EVEI{ P Is still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durham Bakery, MISCELLANEOUS. . rson who takes a paper trom the p‘fi’f;ae., whether directed to hi: hame or another, Of Whether he has subâ€" Boribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If asubscriber orders his paper to be c.,mg at a cortain time, and the published niinues to send, the subscriberis boune w for it if he takes it outaof the pos: This proceeds upon he groun: hat a man must pay for what he naen. 1. If any j ‘.‘..“o hO n publishay m s tWentis .n.g‘ aothcr it ere can b« Newspaper Laws. ~â€"@=â€" ‘Wa cal! the special attention of Pos mastes uml subscribers fo the following sy nopsis of the newrpaperiaws : 1, If any person orders his paper discor timued, he must pay all arreages, or tht poablishay may continne to send it antil pay . toentic .mgo. and colleotthe whole ar.oun| Rothor it be taken from the office or not. ore can boe no lega! discontinuance until paymentismade. AUCTIUNEER. . G. HOLT, L. D. 8. « L. McKENZIE, Furniture DURKHAM. MEDICAL. DURKHADM. â€" muu Durkham )CTIONEER, for th Bales attended to promp » c..-luio-er.eu., KRESS Thonia what he uses. Teoth exâ€" 22 _" 12 m TVE CS S OOC prio% within two years after harvesting. he value of meats should, therefore, be calculated by the average value of the grain copnâ€" * In. Cl turity the n. early maturit grain proâ€" duces at least ono-{ou.rth more meat per bushel than when an animal is fed to afripghage. theThie meu;s&e gain of oneâ€"fourth in price o in and other food used. In a.nother?itw "anLL FINLSH OF LIVE STOCK. Early returns from a venture in busiâ€" ness are always in order. The meat producers are slow enough at best. Not long ago a beef animal was not finished for the block until past forty months old. The sheep and swine were then considered mature for meat at about twenty months of age. A score of years ago, with much cheap land and often wild free grazing, the cost was not considered seriously, . Now every ibamoftoodistobetakenintowoaint, as a rule. Grain may be ‘cheap when used, but carefully stored the same g:.a_u-: ‘B“‘-V?l“f_-l‘l_{ good price within two $ aht. t j 0C AF â€"GOW PUXUTIGHRL and palatable; the animals cought to be in good marketable condition on pasâ€" ture alone. The cow or steer might be put in a little better condition if given some grain. Grasses are, of course, not in as prime condition as those given some grain. But even grain will not make a firstâ€"class beef animal out of the steer or cow â€" you sell as a cull. _ There can be no reaâ€" sonable hope of making such an aniâ€" mal fit for export, or even of the class that commands the best price _ for home consumption. _ Hence, the best thing to do is to put it on the market as it comes from the grass. _It is now in a good marketable condition at a less cost than it will be for another year. _ This is true of other farm aniâ€" mals. At this season of the year culls can be disposed of to the best advantâ€" age. And it will be to the material adâ€" vantage of other animals if the culls are disposed of before the pastures be-l gin to dry up and shorten." EARLY FINISH OF LIVE e;, "£ _ °V‘ Eive the animal the beneâ€" fit of the doubt. Let it go. ‘"Now is the best season of the year to get rid of inferior animals. _ They are in good condition now, and have been on the cheapest feed. When the hot weather, fly time, and short,. dry pastures come, they / will not be in good condition and cannot be sold to as good advantage, Certainly one canâ€" not afford to feed these animals grain to put them in good condition. To . keep them till the season of grain t'eedâ€", ing is sheer folly. _ One will certainly | lose money if he does that. . Nor will | it pay to give these animals grain to ; put them in better condition at this season. The pasture is now luxuriant and palatable; the animals cught to be in ol esn S 4 3 _3 COTHTRELLS o armeun cyrneueso c apvs t 9 L9 NMHCAE is not the case now. To be profitable the mare must be able to _work. Sc with other classes of farm animals. The cow must be a good milker, and also capable of producing a good calf. The sheep or the hog must be strictly first class. One cannot afford to Fut more than the minimum amount of feed inâ€" to the offal in these times. _ The best animals and the best methods must be combined to make a profit. I believe that very few stocg raisers cull asg severely as would be profitable. _ Wa are too much disposed to hold on to inferior animals. If we are not certain that the animal should be got rid of, we sl}ou!d not give the anima% the heana j ; 5 â€"" _ eFoUtavie, good animals would be _ more gmfita.ble. But one can less afford to ee% poor animals now. There was a time when it paid to keep a mare too old to work. The colt she raised made it profitable to keep her. Such g‘ not the case now. â€" To be profitable in‘ mawe esclk 109C 253 1 1 # AG TB (waIh enc _ _ + . J mno o Henary m of some years ago prevail again. I "It was just after the gold cup race Certainly, prices cannot go lower, 89| when the Prince‘s horse, Florizel II. one cannot lose money. But if . 'tha which was the favorite, had lost, muc} change is not made until the good prices | to the disappointment of twoâ€"thirds o prevail it will cost $50 to make it, the | the spectators. Sir Henry asked me t« chances of being able to add the $50 | come with him, and along I went, litâ€" are poor and the probabilities _are, On ) tie knowing what a rare treat I was to , | the contrary, that when one wishes to have. Almost before I realized ‘where sell the' better mare he cannot get back I was at‘ Sir Henry spoke to a gentleâ€" all of his $50. man in the following style: "N'ow this rough statement reveals ‘"Your Highness, I wish to present | a principle applicable to all horses, 404 | an American friend of mine, Mr. Dean, to sheep. cattle and h_"g'fl- I‘l.le 12008E | from Baltimore. economical and profitable HOL 10]_ Blese me! Bat think I stood in the cull is when prices are low. â€" Then very presence of the future King of ::e “t: buy dg(t)?zd alx;lmal.s to u:)d b:_“‘t England. Just plain me, and without mvfi%g g: ?xlilce p?o%itmbwseca::: got t l?cl; |& rehearsal of a word of preparation | advance in prices. _ There is good reaâ€" L certainly must have presented a sorry son for getting rid of poor animais now SiZht in my embarrasment, hut' 1 exâ€" rather than ~ when prices are high, tended mf hand (which 1 shouldn‘t have although one invests only the same 4008 as I afterward learned it was not amount he has receivedâ€"sells three ggx»d form), H.R.H. kindly clasped my :50 animals, for example, and buys two | hand and said : 75 animalsâ€"for the advance in price| _ ‘"I am always pleased to meet an Amâ€" will always affect the better animals | erican. I remember with great pleaâ€" first an(} most forcig:{y. W hen px'ioes.;t;“[:s“go‘,’}sn to your country many recover from a riod of depression, | + % the prices of thep?)est; animalsp al?vays‘ I muttered that I hoped it would advance before the prices of the poorer | not be his last visit to our shores. He animals and at a greater ratio. ilvnce, reghed: 5 5 the reason for changing from in{erior |,_" You are very kind. Are you enjoyâ€" to superior animals now, although one ing the races toâ€"day f bas no bank account to draw on. | _ .To this 1 answered: , "There is another reason for culling )|, "Yes, indeed, I am your Hl(fh!le&‘!- nrU one may, be able to make a proâ€" but I am so sorry your horse did not fit from inferior animals when prices | Win. C‘ are good, but he certainly cannot now. | Then he said: ‘Well, we can‘t alâ€" To keep them longer is to only further | ways win,‘ and it was all over. We reduce the profits from the year‘s oper. | made (Sir Henry and I) a graceful obeiâ€" ations. The quicker one gets rid of sance (at least E hope mine was accordâ€" them the less money he loses. _ True | ing to the code), and for the first time one should never keep inferior animais. | I realized that 1 had shaken hands with If prices are sogood that inferior aniâ€" | the Prince: of Wales| § } mals are profitable, good animals would | , "I could not thank Sir Henry suffiâ€"| be _ more profitable. _ But one can less |Clently, I learned with considerable | afford to fiee poor animals now. There dismay that ‘the Prince never shaline | was a time wxinen M enb o o hy Irpdhngndiccian sebrall t N000 o.A iess . M < & it means much, the way or reâ€" AUMKICUL IURAL, | turns, trom forty acres in 2 duik fiE 6| â€"~~ ‘i:ih.:iafromfiftymalntheoldm 4 MWMMW\M «« #» fifl l-!u sy| PROPER TIME To CULL FLOCKS. The risk of holding live stock through *"Now is a good time tocull the flocks &N additional six _months or more is and herds and d. The | * 'Freat consideration. e J L and to cull them hard. he interest on the money invested, e | Prices of farm animals are low ; hence | the probability of some deaths in a . one has not to let go so much value herd, and the failure of ao.m;ttnmfi n{| &s he would have to in better times, | {P make a good gain in a Tongthene & s gument against a lengthened t | Possibly that is a doubtful consolation, |period of feeding grain. i | but I do not think so," says a writer ’orWhem _graizing i#s, ltahe gmtlg: iam in Country Gentleman. "I can part an animal‘s gro j o y | Wwith a slightly inferior animal when ! {’3”‘;‘,’,‘,‘;5, ma.tu.rf:y ffi? megftf:ffig ; | it brings only $25 with better grace | and sheeptafiog however, should have . | than when it brings $50. Why? Beâ€" | a moderate quantity (l):f graéu} regularly cause a good animal can be got to take mfé‘;"gdtgg :o:’?hts es Te _ """"" , |its place at a corresponding low price. * ' 7 The change does not cost one so much utiitenâ€"lifie uâ€"ommmpmmg ; | as it would were prices good. For exâ€" MR. DEAN AND THE PRINCE. 4 |ample: The brood mare of a certain Witkitt C quality will now sell for $50. _ Some | 4 Baltimore Man Writes About His Shakâ€" | years ago a brood mare of like quality ing Hands With Albert Edward, would have brought $100 and she will Mr. Tunis F. Dean, of Baltimore, who g possibly command such a price again. |;, travelling abroad, had an interview t It may seem better to hold her until | w;i{p the Prince of Wales recently at she brings a better price, although she | }p, Ascot races. He was presented by | & is not as good as one should keep. Not |g;, Henry Irving, whose guest he was |© so. Now is the time to get rid of her. at the races. In a letter to a friend in | For when she sells for $100 it will take Baltimore, Mr. Dean gives an account n $150 to buy a good one to put in ber / of the incident : bi place.." ‘Now & good one can be €0t ) "What do you thinkâ€"hold your |t} for $75. Of course I am speaking Of | breath while I whisperâ€"I had the rare good farm chunks. The change can privilege of being presented to H.R.H. ;‘: be made now for $25, and when better I the Prince of Wales !!I it. prices prevail the good mare will be ‘*Well, I‘ll tell you how ‘twas. Dere | _ worth $50 more than the inferior one. I was t‘ree uy us, see! Me and der Prince st; One will have doubled his money if the BM MiiYs T annsows 4 41 ® f it me AGR'CULTURAL‘EL{D: am MM’“NV\'\MN\MNWW 66 ut PROPER TIMER TO CULL FLOCKS. / rhe "Now is a good time to cull the flocks a Pro and herds and to cull them hard. The I ’fbe‘ prices of farm animals are low ; hence the m Pn Wintc c L 102600 4 BP o be able to work. So s of farm animals. The good milker, and also reredeasme good calf. The be strictly first d to Fut more unt of feed inâ€" ine iongest single telegraph span in ‘the world is that across River Kistnah, between Bezorah Sectannazon, India, Stretched from mountain to qnother, the wire is 3 than 6,000 feeg in lenoth ie ptinmbtyebo., elplan :115.%"}'%;}’ huâ€" m attemp circumvent the deâ€" mon of driak! Drinking o Peés Preâ€" sently mnf me a merry pasnime, and a m encouraging intoxication lil:':%mzzmg" in t!?g last century; and at no distant date Anseilm had to forbid his olergy expressly to ‘‘go to drinkâ€" ing bouts and drink to, pegs," * A d3 ht Ailalibaorck 42. uiss 1: l | seem to have gone on vexl'g. much the same until we come to ing Edgar, who, at the instance of Dunstan, made the _ first attempt at sobriety by. Act of Parliamentâ€"if the anachronism may be allowedâ€"as near as may be 1,000 ears ago. â€" He suppressed a great numâ€" ’ fier of alehouses, and, in order to lessen the depth of his subjects‘ potations, inâ€" yented ‘"drinking ‘to jpegs," which would be equivalent to regulating the size of the tumbler. People used to drink them out of wooden pots, holdin half a gallon, and the King had eigh% Pegs or pins inserted, dividing the pot nto so qlan%&dtoses or half a pint, like a medicine tle. ‘But, alas," for huâ€" man attempts to circumvent ihma 43â€" > | the temperance xfiovement 'diejlziâ€"nitely beâ€" ;‘gan. Members of the Church of Engâ€" , |land Temperance Society will be glad . to know that it began with the Church, 3 but that unfortunately was because the Church required it. St. Gildas the iS\Vi.sa (A.D. 570), observing with pain | that ‘not only the laity but also the clergy, were scandalously given to habâ€" its of intoxication, issued some rules to his own monks, and ordained that ‘"‘if any one, through drinking too freely, gets thick of speech, so that he cannot join in the psalmody, he is to be deprived of his supper." This does not err on the side of severity, and the test is charmingly naive, but at any rate, the blame was laid on the culprit. |, St. David (A.D. 569), took a more modâ€" || ern view, and punished the publican in | addition, so to speak. His monks were also accustomed to go about and get | ; drunk in a friendulf way, so he ordained, | j among other rules, that "He that ] forces another to get drunk out of hosâ€" | j pitality, must do Fenauce as if he ‘had | ; got dx;unt himself." However, things | s Old Saxonm Drinking Habitsâ€" Temperance Pledges, The Saxons were mighty e drinkers. ‘The mead horn | great part in the very earlic | ture, and aiready in the sixt] | _ ‘‘Then he said: ‘Well, we can‘t alâ€" | ways win,‘ and it was all over,. We | made (Sir Henr{ and I) a graceful obeiâ€" since (at least E hope mine was accordâ€" | ing to the code), and for the first time | I realized that 1‘ had shaken hands with | the Prince: of Wales ! j | _ "I could not thank Sir Henry suffiâ€" ciently. I learned with considerable dismay that ‘the Prince never shakes hands; that upon an introduction to & gentleman the said gentleman should \stand, bowing with his hands behind him. But Sir Henry assured me that his Highness was not offended ; that his very courteous bearing toward me wis‘a proof of that. "The Prince is immensely popular with his subjects,. He is just as plain and unassuming in manner as any plain American, and I was n%reeably disappointed in this respect. ow, if you are good, when I return, I will perâ€" mit i',ou to shake the hand that shook the Prince‘s." LONGEST SPAN orF I "It was just after the gold cup race, ! when the Prince‘s horse, Florizel II., which was the favorite, had lost, much to the disappointment of twoâ€"thirds of the spectators.â€" Sir Henry asked me to come with him, and along I went, litâ€" tle knowing what a rare treat I was to have. Almost before I realized ‘where I was at‘ Sir Henry spoke to a gentleâ€" man in the following style: ‘"Your Highness, I wish to present an American friend of mine, Mr. Dean, from Baltimore. 1700 N ‘"What do you thinkâ€"hold your |that rbreath while I whisperâ€"I had the rare| A privilege of being presented to H.R.H. ;gg&; the Prince of Wales !!! it. ] "Well, I‘ll tell you how ‘twas. Dere| pjp was t‘ree uy us, see! Me and der Prince stanc and Sir Henry| the : the Ascot races. He was J Sir Henry Irving, whose g at the races. In a letter tc Baltimore, Mr. Dean gives of the incident : A Baltimore Man Writes About His Shakâ€" ing Hands With Albert Edward, Mr. Tunis F. Dean, of Baltimore, who is travelling abroad, had an interview with the Prince of Wales recently at the Ascot races. He was presented by Sir Henry Irving, whose guest he was at the races. In a letter to a friend in THE ANCIENT TOPERS in length. is were mighty eaters and ‘he mead horn plays a in the very earliest literaâ€" J1 j /*C4â€" Kindly clasped my Said : ways pleased to meet an Amâ€" remember with great pleaâ€" i:'isit to your country many u) c CTCEs â€". cU Stmtcbe.d fr'om one râ€"the Wire: is mnuwira telegraph wire sixth century â€"The â€"Firs the annat 4 ~ 1003 54 00+ . t Oy nOL ‘th% gotlgi ball top a’tuddedl.v'w ut a tiny gem or two glis thelfwoven gold threads of itself, v°= ~,, 67°°~ VL LC PUIRG withint the be:lz as if it were a watch. Many of these woven gold or mesh purses are wond. erfully beautiful. They not only have the gold ball top studded with jewels, but a tiny gem or tue, 5q: §HCD J PURSE CHATELATNES. The fashionable girl these days lets her purse swing from a chain which she wears about her neck. The chain must be very fine and the purse of silver or gold mesh, with a gate top.â€" This idea is more for novelty than convenience, for & purse dangling from one‘s waist is apt to be a trifling annoying..â€" Bug it is the fashion, and so the girls are all doing it. A few of the fair maidg tuck part of the purge waip:~ _1 UA Ne euliihyr y t npuniaig) PBR Srnciocec s /A the oldest doctor flgure also the youngest. Mr. G. L. Watson, of Glasgow, the ‘ | designer of the three racing yachts, the : | Valkyrie, the Brit.a.nnia. and the latest |achievement, Meteor, is a hard man |to deal with; No man has designed so |many yachts in a given time, and yet |he has never owned one. So i'lealously does he guard his new designs that none were ever known to have gained access to his model room except Lord Dunâ€" raven and Lord Lonsdale, the latter of whom represented the German Em peror durin%"l the building and launchâ€" ing of the Metsor. Robert von Bunsen has the rare disâ€" tinction of having â€" been a "Fh, D." from his childhood up. He was born March 31, 1811, at Gottingen. His fa. ther was rector of the university, and according to the statutes of that inâ€" stitution the diploma of doctor hilsoâ€" phize was laid in the cradle of tfie son of "His magnificence.‘ At the age of nineteen he found no difficulty in passâ€" ing the examen trigorosum and obtainâ€" ed the . academic dj%nity rite. _ The Hu.ng:u"imll:Ls N(aip(;nal ni;grs{)ty has just renewe ip‘oma, thereby maki the oldést doci,,. 3: [NCrePy making terview H;clenw ntly at A trai ited by |St. Pete he was Ch.mic; C + :. |frontier. ib mewe The a: Locount nation d been moj your | that of t e rare i Ad wg and, 1. R.H. stroke of it. He v _Dere| The By Prince | stands nc lt{hetworl( . nots, or alralcle, Mrs. Ol "|to a pictu much |overlookin ds of |calls it * ie to| The big : Me000% uie pnbtcati? wl bul Toi. sovereigns have sons, unless the Sultar be an independent European sovereign Prof. Franz von Lenbach, the celeâ€" brated portrait painter and friend of Prince Bismarck, by birth the son of a simple peasant of Schrobenbausen, and the husband of a niece of Field Marshal Count Moltke, has formally declared to the priest of his parish his intention to renounce the Catholic faith. t An EnFlish paper tells a story of the late Earl of Fortarlington, who was always forgetting the names of people whom he had met, Once on receiving & gracious nod from Queen Vicioria at a Mariborough house garden party, accompanied by a few words of kindly inquiry after his health, he repiied: ‘"You are very kind, madam; your face seems strangely familiar to me, but for the life of me I cannot remember your name.‘" _ _A feature of the Paris exposition of 1900 will be a section devoted to the history of Christianity from the beâ€" ginning to the present day, with repreâ€" sentations of the temple of Jerusalem, the scenes of the life of Christ, Pagan and Christian Rome, Constantinople,and the lives of the saints. The Danube flows through countries in which 52 languages and dialects are spoken. It bears on its current fourâ€" fifths. of the commerce of eastern Europe. Barely 52 per cent. of the householdâ€" ers of London take a morning newspaâ€" per, 69 per cent. take either a morning or evening newspaper and 31 per cent. purchase neither. According to the method which is now adopted for reckuning leap years in England, December, January and February will be the summer months about 720,000 years hence. There is hardly a city in the civilizâ€" ed world from which ‘the Mikado â€" of Japan does not receive letters, many of his correspondenis antlicipating that through him they can gain an entrance to the Japanese market, The number of inventions offered to him for sale is enormous. dr1 knots, or about 36 miles an hour. â€" Mrs. Oliphant has recently removed to a picturesquely situated residence overlooking \(t'imbledon Common. She calls it "The Hermitage." , The biggest bug in the world flourâ€" ishes in Venezuela. It is the "elephant beetle," and a full grown one weighs about half a pound. \ L l 022E EO pPARID . AUUGCH stands now as the . fastes the world, with a record knots, or about 36 milas an lhe annual increase of the German nation during the last five years has been more than five times as much as that of the French. A wheelman in Bedfordshire, Engâ€" land, had his bicycle wrecked by a stroke of lightning as he was riding it. He was unharmed. ‘ fCl‘h:a British torpedo boat Desperate uho vule sseess c 0 o r ts m U 1 St ‘s jeana af tha T ___3 "O Penl. IH One ’day's issue of the London dailies reâ€" cently, The future town residence of Prince Carl of Denmark and Princess Maud hwill be a flat in the palace of Copenâ€" a from Old and New World Events of Interest Chron« icled Brieflyâ€"Interesting Happenings of Recent Date. # Little Prince Edward of York goes gfathe sobriquet of "King David" at rlborough House. Italy has two kinds of naturalization â€"â€"the one under the law and the other conferred by royal decree. New industrial companies capitalized at $50,500,000 were advertiaedp in one day::'; issue of the London dailies reâ€" f WHAT Is GOING oN IN THE. FOUR CORNERS OF THE GLOBE. ROVND TX MIOEF MORY a trifling annoying,. ion, and so the girls A few of the fair m ‘ present day, with repreâ€" the temple of Jerusalem, the life of Christ, Pagan li 2 _0 0C AB, glistens among rse of silver or top. This idea n conveni¢nce, m one‘s waist the . fastest vessel _ _vesse! in of over 31 rrreo steadily since. T can conscienâ€"lcured. _ . â€" For § *bluM&fi.Mmuerurham and Vicinity °0 Eo to work again, and proved steadily since. 1 c ‘*TaL IUSs come to bumanity from a disordered liver: 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 d0 his work A&right. Can we not appeal to thousands, nay, tens of thousands, for a verification of this fact? Cerâ€" tainly it is, that Mr. David Reid, of 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€" pepsta, Employing his own language: ! "At times my â€"liver was so tender Y | could not bear it pressed or touchea | from the outside. Had tricd a ‘great many remedies without any benefit. l ". Anlesdll c ae w C South Amorican Nervine Was â€"_â€" Half a Bottle Was "I With Liver Complaint and Dyspepsiaâ€"Suf! Greatly and Found No Relief in the Seeres of Medicines Prescribed. â€" O "2 mmRaV KL+ Rlerest allowed on savings bank deposits of $1 tyd upwards. Prompt attention and ovoryrum anafforded curtomers liying at a distance . IEN YEARS TROUBLE) " 0 Ameoee y & A general Banking business transacte sued and collections made on all points ts received and interest allowed At A poians, deen se emndo®l, po DURHAM AgENCYy THECOOKSBEST FRIEND l Head Offiooj'l‘oronto. OAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,000 es Paid up 1,000,008 RESERVE FUND €00,000 W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. Rail DUNNS BAKING POWDER StandardBank of Canad2 TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVANCR CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprietorn i8, that Mr. David Reld, of | Ont., felt that the enjoyment . ad been taken from him, | the unhealthy condition of his ‘ ‘or ten years he says he was | with liver complaint and dysâ€" Employing his uwn language: ! s my â€"liver was so tender 1 | : bear it pressed or . touched ‘< outside. Had tricd a great || madiss ie c l keanc oc PC 2200 7 9 P VTinV LARGEST SALE in CANA'DA FOR TWENTYâ€"srx Thursday; Morning, SAVINGS Barnr President. GREY REVEY I have imâ€" vears _ |Handâ€"made Wasg a 'tlouly recommend South American c | Nervine to any suffering from JvspeP? L \sia or lver complaint." This is Mr. [ | Reld‘s story as he tells it in his own r | words., Were it thought nece=sary it | could be corroborated by a host of wit : nesses. Mr. Reid has lived a long t=m* + in Chesley, and his case was known to | be a very bad one. But that makes n0 | difference to Nervine. This sreat 45 |covery rises equal to the imos !t.‘"'}t ‘|occasions. Let it be indigestion, th»* most chronic lHver trouble, as with Mr. Reld, nervous prostration, that m#k*s life miserable with so many, ®X headaches, that sap all the eSort 0U! of man @» woman, Nervine messures to the necessities of the caso t is ® great medicinge and thourands toâ€"day !" Canada are happler and hoealth o~ "*" and women, because of its discove‘ There is no great seoret ashovt it r.::("l > there is an important seoret. . 3t operates on the mnerve contors of th* from which emanate s1 life and thfuiness, or If disordered, alckn*es8 even death. Nervine striikes prompt‘y ®* ‘m‘d‘m centers, hence, as with NT t where ten yearse‘ use of other me dicines had done mno good. !~=« t»®" * bottle of Nervimne brought about "~* couraging results and a fow »~‘** s Recommended, and Bofore Taken Relief Came. Jobbing of all kinds sttonded to. proag, ALLAN uuFARLAm Propristy In the old stand made shoes Horse Shocing Sh; Has opened out a BOULDIN & o, PRIME ~Â¥#â€" HARNESS( SEE OUr HARN woopworr in connection, â€" A firstâ€"class lot of for salofl cheap HARNESg * Aip ~Sufforel McFAryy firgg.eh Al by Also oidk tion, and all bearing on th lew York Ledger. It is a curious fact mumber of deaths rmers. â€" This is no ) any unusual risk | ly to the fact + i of farmers i re are, of course, ' y holders meniio were victims ied as railroad the _ casu cable, elecicr Thirteen . persons died seived in this way. _ The deaths are a: hS the second lar killed by falls falling objects. â€" lt is interesting tfilhe number not ile the insured what one of our n road manager said that it is safer 1 lines than it is to i is certainly and one that we ;ltg, as when one easures is safety the %fi& horses or vehicles, four. Seven!i'osi! the list, and it is . the number of dea increased enormous few years. _ In 181 per cent. of the w :r&.ent over 1 th every new inven menaces and dange danger is ‘mwi e attention the m fts novelty. It tak », however, to put | lation looking to tL ew devices, and in Carelessness in V arms is responsibl &th. In almos persons . wert suicide is in a D strongly suspected, no positive evident n:fr_l! is the cus dling firearms way in which to < It is scarcely pos in an insurance the effeot that t shall not handle this risk, great as There were 1 cases. Btrychuai cannabis, indica, acid caused one Es OF ACCIDEN YONG INSURED I and arsenic two, chloral five, and The opium cases tions of that d1 covered four chlo :.tu:n, or mot is 1 ns Phanersiaptant In most of the ot g.,us :xurmd t rough mistake. tim dtlodrfrom u Twentyâ€"five perso fects of the Elt. to cold, three weln Of deaths caus Number of Deaths nersâ€"Not a Fatall BSTRUCK B three perished in in the Charlestom plosions, burns, cidents â€" resulting thirtyâ€"one death chipery, and vari ble for twentyâ€"fi The account miscellaneous l‘m are a fall 1 the eye with a j m .hzeaeveral fr g., three â€"from rned cattle, an horned cattie, & death between wharf. â€" Altho ©J+ condu ters. m‘nd L is restricted or | Among tion. '} of three eotton E some O \ . omegpcasme ies C Was On An th or Sucb ta ies interesting, n ance agent‘s they furnish tions on the of our everyâ€" um deaths occ LATEST R/ The Russian been launched ence of the C is entirely screws. $ J 0F F :Ehoement to cartr hber radius of of ten miles 19,000 miles. " tyâ€"six large J'xm of th firing. © She torpedo tube hs 1 A FINE S resp A mother, steamer MLeTS D D , by 69 nsl nese ry N. les LrOu.

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