§ O 2 P it 4§ We eal! the special attention of Pos masters and subseriberato the following sy nopsis of tho newcpaperiaws : 1. X4 any person orders his paper discor tinued, he must pay all arreages, or tht publisher may continns t send it until payâ€" mentis made, and collectthe whole axoun! whether it be taken from the office or not. There car be no lega) discontinuance unti paymentismade. 2 Aay person who takes a paper trow Vhe post office, whether directed to hi: Rame or another, or whether he has sub poribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If a subscriber orders his paper to be stopped at a certaintime, and the publilhod eentinues to send,the subscriberis bourd to pay for it if he takes it out@o([ the posi office. This proceeds upon he groun( hat a man must pay for what he uses. Of the Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVER. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. NOTARY PUBLIC, Commissioner,ctc., MONEY TO LOAN. UNDERTAKILNG Promptly attended to. JAKE KRKSS. Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &o. Loaps arranged without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. n@NEY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Interest 1 1M ons door north of 8. Beot‘s Stere Durharo DE N TISTRY. IIBUDB of Marriggo Licenses,. Aue tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Residenceâ€"King St., Hanover. LIOENSBD AUCTIONKER, for th County of Grey. Sales attended to promp and at redsonable rates. es it e FOR SALE The EDGE PROPRRTY. In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible Puilding lots, will be sold in one or more fots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. G. R., twuhip of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" g Town plot Durham. LICENSED AUCTIONEER for Co. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxrasz P. 0. will be promptly attended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. 8, fots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2 W. G. Rs | toxicating Ewnhip of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" l Use yo g Town plot Durham. | m\}iet;: far Mortgage taken for part purchase | wrong. money. " o oi 1 m ‘ Watch Township of Bentinck. DAN. McLEAN. W. L. McKENZIE, Fire Insurance secured. OFFICE, oven Grant‘s Srom«. Lower Town, Deputyâ€"R»gistrar. Office hours from 10 . m. to a 5. m. J. P. TELFORD Aatiore, souciror cOc suraent coat JAMES LOCKIE, Furniture € :t ..t‘o‘l lu:roonl of Onhx}'& Teeth exâ€" ted without pain by the use of nitroug oxide oo t nient ol ad o lt ng e ur 4 k ce % door â€ut of }' Ofice, y.‘l: still to be found in his Old Stand epposite the Durham Bakery. ONOR Graduate of the Royal College T. G. HOLT, L. D. S. Newspaper Laws. HUCH McKAY. G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thomas « Lauger, Registrar. John A. Munro, MISCELLANEOUS. AUCTIUNEER. Auctioneer, Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, DURHA M MEDICAL. DURHAM. KRESS seE CCC . or at DAN. MOLE“. D. MeCORMICK, Young people who live in the counâ€" try near big cities can do much to help in such a sweet mission as the following, clipped from an exchangse, describes : "A pretty sight might have been witâ€" i nessed by anybody who took the trouâ€" ble to look, one Sunday afternoon, when | a group of girls sitting in an old sumâ€" merâ€"house on a green lawn were tyâ€" | ing up bunches of roses, heliotrope, and | mignonette, and laying them in flat | baskets, to be sent to the city the next | day. The flowers were freshly gathâ€" | ered, and, after they were bunched, the girls had them carried to a cool dark | place, where they were left for the | night. Such color! such fragrance! such bloom! such beauty! "As the girls tied them they chatted merrily, girl fashion, not of the flowâ€" ers, nor of where they were to be sent but of their own affairs, their friends, their little jaunts, and plans for the next week. ° Every Sunday through the _ summer, either with their own hands or by some substitute, they arâ€" range these flowers, whatever kind are in season, and every Monday the sweet things start on their blessed errands to make people happy. â€" _ W ‘"‘The flowers are taken to a general receiving place in the town to which they are addressed, and other girls are | Wflltl.niI there to speed them on their way. Numbers of people pick them for the mission, so that a great many big basketfuls come in to &mse who take charge at the distributing end. They have a list of beneficiaries in viewâ€"the lame, the halt, and the blind. There will be cots in hos'fital wards brightened _bg the touch and whiff of perfume whic the blossoms will bring. Hardened hearts will grow soft as the sight of a flower recalls some memory of childâ€" hood and innocence; and so some of the dear flowers will go to the Prisons. to bn(fhten up weary hours of durance, and carry a real message of human love and fellowship to those who have put themselves outside the pale of symâ€" x::thy, except as Christâ€"like pity finds ; em. _ ‘"The city missionary has her people in the tenementâ€"houses, for whom "she begs bher share of the flowers. Up the dark stairs, into the rear apartments, stuffy, close, and crowded, she takes her way, laying a knot of flowers on the sewingâ€"machine _ where a pale girl stitches all day long, leaving the roses for the cracked gitcher on the mantelâ€" ï¬lece to make the children better beâ€" aved when they see them. ‘"You cannot walk through a downâ€" town street with flowers in your hand and not be besieged and besought at every step with, ‘Lady, please give me a flower,; just one, please.‘ They like the daisy and buttercups as well as they do the garden beauties; and chilâ€" dren who live in the country might think of this, and send the field flowâ€" ers to cheer the spualid areas of the brickedâ€"up town." YOUNG FOLKS. "1 can‘t make out how it is that Jim Johnson always gets such good places," said Harry Smith, the carpenter‘s son, to another boy; as they were returning home one afternoon. And Harry was not the only one who thought thus, for "Jim‘s luck" was the talk of the neighborhood. Jim was cerâ€" tainly no pattern of cleverness, or beauty, or strength; he could not do more than others, nor could he do so well as many ; but for all that, it was quite true he always had good places, good wa%es, and a good character. When he left one employer to go to another, it was generally said: "I would not part with him if I could help it; he is a good boy, and so obliging." ‘This was the secret of his good luck â€"he was "so obliging.‘" Did the merâ€" chant or the wagoner want an errand boy, or did anyone want a job done at a moment‘s notice, it was only to get a sight of Jim, and it was as good as done ; for Jim would hurry through his own business in order to help. When he was at home he kept the woodâ€"box full of wood, and his mother never had to ask him to bring a bucket of water, and many other little things did he do in a cheerful manner, so that bhe was a great favorite. And if he saw younfer boys in trouble he would try to help them out ; and he Put on his shoes, after taking them off, one ?:uring, rainy night, to walk two miles the town for a parcel containing a new gown the carrier had neglected to bring to the kitchenâ€"girl, who was cryâ€" ing her eyes out because she could not have it to wear next morning at her sister‘s wedding. . But it was not so much what Jim did, as how he did it, that was so agreeable. BARON ROTHSCHILD‘S MAXIMS. The following is a copy of the alphaâ€" betical list of maxims framed and hung in Rothscnild‘s bank. Baron Rothschild used to recommend these rules to young men who wished to "get on" and achieve success in life: C Attend carefully to details of your business. Be prompt in all things. & L Consider well and then decide posiâ€" tively. Dare to do right, fear to do wrong. Endure trials patientl{. _ Fight life‘s battles bravely, manâ€" fully. e Go not into the society of the vicious. Hold integrity sacred. ; Injure not another‘s reputation nor business. Join hands onlg with the virtuous. Keep your mind from evil thoughts. Lie not for any consideration. Make few acquaintances. I;Iever try to appear what you are not. Observe good manners. Pay your debts promptly. _ Question not the veracity of a friend. __Sacrifice money rather than prinâ€" olples . :. _ .>>> e t & e _ Â¥4 Touch not, taste not, handle not inâ€" toxicating drinks. § Use your leisure time for improveâ€" ment. 1 - P 4 Venture not upon the threshold of wrong. Watch carefully over {our passions. _ _ "Xtend to everyone a kindly salutaâ€" HOW ORANGES ARE PICKED. Everybody is at work, and if the crop, as it is this year, is large, everyone is feeling cheerful. The orange grove of the imagination is a stretch of trees Respect the counsels of your parâ€" Yield not to discouragement. HIS WAY OF DOING IT. FLOWER MISSIONS. ' A gang of men, under a leader or overseer, takes possession of a grove bright and early in the morning, two ‘ or three men being appointed to a tree, ‘and the gicking begins. Tall stegâ€"lad- ders enable the pickers to reach the top brancbes, and each orange is careâ€" |fully cut from the tree; if it is pulled ‘ and the skin broken it will soon deâ€" | cay. The picker wears a bag about his neck, and into this the fruit is |\ dropped. _ When the bag is filled the i fruit is handed to the washer or serubâ€" ber. The latter washes the black | stain or rust from the fruit, polishing it \ with a cloth, after which it is passed ‘to the assorter. _ Sometimes a simple machine is used, a runway so that the oranges of the same size will all collect togetber. This accomplished, each | orange is wraptw,d in variously colorâ€" l ed paper and placed in the box ready |for shipment. A counter keeps tally | of the boxes. y $A filled with golden fruit, where one can lie in the soft grass and luxuriate in the sight. The actual grove, when beautiiul to the eye, is not a place for lounging, as the ground is, or should be, kegt continually plowed and lrr‘lgat- ed. ut the trees are attractive. Ever freen. often showing ripe and green ruit and white blossoms at the same time, they are an enigma. _ _ The Financial Scheme by Which $20,000,« 000 Is to Be Raised. The organizer of the Paris exhibition of 1900 have launched a _ financial scheme which would seem senseless if they could not count on the passion for lotteries. They have announced the issue of 3,250,000 bonds of twenty francs each. _ The 65,000,000, thus produced, coupled with the subsidies from the Paris municipality and the state, amounting to 100,000,000 francs, are to be employed in starting the building operations. _ These comprise two Palaâ€" ces in the Champs Elysees in place of the Palace of Industry, a bridge over the Seine, and the buildings which will cover the immense area from the exâ€" tremity of the Champ de Mars to the chief entrance in the Champs Elysees. Each bond will entitle the holder to twenty admission tickets and to & chance in twentyâ€"nine drawings. The latter, which are certainly the great attraction, include money prizes o1 500,â€" 000 francs, 100,000 francs, 10,500 francs |and smaller sums â€"down to 100 francs. | The bondholders are also entitled to reâ€" duced railway fares from the provinces to Paris and back, reduced rates of conâ€" veyance within Paris, and reduced rates of admission to the entertainments in | the exbibition itself. _ ‘There will, of , |course, be no return of the capital to persons not winning lottery prizes. . In some groves various machines are used. Thus one patent is a knife on a long pole, whicgais connected with a canvas tube. The orange separated from others in this way drops into the chute, and, by an arran%ement of _traf)s, drops from one to another, and finally rolls into a box uninjured. _ The ordiâ€" Ear.z'i method of picking, however, is by and. . The orange (i)ieckers are usually a jolly lot, there being something about the business, apparently, that enlivens the spirit. persons not winning lotter{‘ prizes. . _Now the first question which arises is whether. there will really in SX months be 65,000,000 paying entries, Or about 860,000 a day. â€" Some will doubtâ€" less go twenty or thirgg times, but in 1889 there were only 28,000,000 paying entries. _ One million two. bundred thousand bonds of twentyâ€"five francs had then been issued so that about 2,â€" 000,000 tickets were unused, though they could latterly be purchased for twentyâ€" five centimes. gtrictly speakinF. inâ€" deed, the admissions numbered only 25,â€" 500,000, but on certain special days the charge was five or ten francs, and each visitor, therefore, used five or ten tickâ€" ets. This will again be the case in 1900 ; but in 1889 the daily average of tickets used, was 140,000, whereas if the 65,000,000 are to be used in 1900 the daily averages must be 860,000.0 To a certain extent, however, the inevitable fall in the selling price of the tickets will swell the attendance, and it is obvious that nobody will pay a franc at the turnstiles when he can buy & ticket in the streets for a quarter of the price. ‘But whether the great ‘ bulk of the tickets is used or not, the iexhlbil.mn coffers will receive the 65,â€" 000,000 francs. Of course the organâ€" izers do not count on any further reâ€" ceipts from admissions. _ They will however, make money by letting sites to exhibitors. That Government Will Build a New Rail way in the Cancasus. From Tiflis it is announced that the Russian Government has finally reâ€" solved to build a railway across the main chain of the Caucasus, from Viaâ€" dikavkaz to Kutais, on the Transcauâ€" casian line. If this report be true, it means that the engineers who last auâ€" tumn carefully surveyed all possible routes for the contemplated railway have decided in favor of carrying it over the Mamisson Pass, which attains an altitude of nearly 9,500 feet, and re,{gcted the alternative proposal of tunâ€" neling the mountain at the head of the famous Dariel Gorge. _____ s SULTAN‘S SANITY QUESTIONED To tunnel the Cross Mountain on the more Eastern route would entail an enormous present expenditure; on the other hand, to keep the Mamisson route free of snow for six months of the year will be a most difficult and costly unâ€" dertaking. It is not probable that any work on a large scale in connection with this railway will be undertaken until the principal difficulties of the Siberian line have been surmounted, as most of the best Russian railway enginâ€" eers are engaged in Siberia. A German newspaper boldly asserts that the ruler of the Turkish Empire is a lunatic, and gives good and suffiâ€" cient reason for its belief. During his fits of insanity his predominating pasâ€" sion is a frenzied hatred against the Armenians. So terrible have these fits become that the Sultan‘s attendants ofâ€" ten dare not enter his cabinet. In fact, all their energies are re%uu'ed to dodge their infuriated monarch, who rushes from hall to hall talking to himself. A short time ago, it is added, the Sulâ€" P MR DC CUHHFY 2C 27 C JRAOOU, UBU iPUl= tan, in a fit of madness, shot a courâ€" tier who happened to make a motion with his arm and which the sovereign chose to consider suspicious, Someâ€" times, on the other hand, the Sultan has fits of uncontroilable merriment, parâ€" ticularly when he has reason to believe that the Powers cannot agree on meaâ€" sures against him. COMING PARIS EXPOSITION. ANOTHER RUSSIAN RAILWAY. Weak-';;xd tired eyes are refreshed by bathing with warm water and salt. Public speakers and many noted singâ€" ers use a wash of salt and water before and after using the voice, as it strengthens the organs of the throat. It is the Readiest and Cheapest of Remeâ€" dies for Many Things. Balt cleanses the palate and furred tongue, and a gargle of salt and water is often efficacious, l Hemorrhage â€"from t.ooth-pull.ing :: stopped by filling the mouth with sa and water. s & Salt rubbed into the scalp or 0CCAS® ionally added to the water in washing prevents the bair t:al_lipg‘ out. w A pinch of salt on the tongue, folâ€" lowed ten minutes afterward by o & drink of cold water, often cures sick beadache. Salt hardens gums, makes teeth white and sweetens the breath. Cut flowers may be kept fresh by adding salt to the water. Weak ankles should be rubbed with solution of salt, water and alcohol. Rose colds, hay fever and kindred afâ€" fections may be much relieved by using fine dry salt, like snuff. ols Salt and water will sometimes revive an unconscious person when hurt, if brandy or other remedies are not at hand. g25 0 CCRA e . NeRER . AOCTET s dn Feathers uncurled by damp weather are quickly dried by shaking over fire in which salt bhas been thrown. _ . | Dyspepsia, heart burn and indigestitl_m are relieved by a cup of hot water in which a small spoon{ul of salt has been melted. IH WRILIUR SoRt MBR MWWSIE PC CC * Salt always should be eaten with nuts, and a dessert fruit salt used should be specially made. _ xt‘ !A w m ie L & 0 If twenty pounds of salt and ten pounds of muriate of ammonia be disâ€" solved in seven gallons of water and bottled, many fires may be prevented. By splashing and spraying the burnâ€" ing articles the fire is soon extinguished An incombustible coating is immediâ€" ately formed. EP Pemiiives ysd in t io Seta wl wuoOly PURIUUIUK Add salt tothe water in which black and white cotton %em are washed. Flat irons may made smooth if rubbed over salt. Copper _ and glass may be quickly cleansed by dipping half a lemon in fine salt, then rubbing them over stainâ€" ed objects. Lemons and salt also remove stain8 from the fingers. Do not use s0ap afterwards.. o e § m When cabbage. onions or _ strong smelling vegetables have been boiled in pans, to prevent odors clinging to them, place some salt on the stove and turn the pans bottom ui; pver â€" the salt. In a few minutes the pans will smell sweet. o "wi ue ks _ All salads should be soaked in salt and water to destroy animalculae or small worms. Py es d _ Make a -;sâ€"t'z"ong brine and water garâ€" den walks to kill weeds. A moderate quantity of salt stimulates their growth. Salt and camphor in cold water is an excellent disinfectant in bedâ€" 4UUIIOL Housemaids should pour salt water, after using it, down the drain pipes. Sewer gu.s is counteracted by a handful of salt placed in toilet room basins. Water for laiying dust is more efâ€" fective when salt is added. Sea water is generally used in England coast towns for this purpose. _ _ _ ie _ Rattan, bamboo and basket work furniture may be thoroughly cleaned by scrubbing with brush and salt water. Jafl)aneue and plain straw matting should be washed with salt and water and rubbed dry. This keeps them soft and prevents brittle cracking where traffic is heavier. _ _ _ % _ Black spots on dishes and discoloraâ€" tuï¬m on teacups are removed by damp salt. If Mother Earth Had Chose to Turn the Other Way, What Would Have Been the Result. The results would have been very important, in fact, worldâ€"wide in their application. The direction of the airâ€" currents would have been reversed. Granted such a change, the tradeâ€"winds would blow eastward. In America the regions west of the Andes would be drenched with rain, while the counâ€" tries to the east of that chain would be comparatively dry, and the great rivers such as the Amazon and the Oronoco, would be incomparably smalleri Norâ€" thern Africa, being visited by the trade winds from the Atlantic, would be a fertile region. ‘The ocean currents, beâ€" img mainly dependent upon the preâ€" vailing winds, would also be reversed. â€" Brooms soaked in hot salt water wear better and do not break. _ a C Bedroom floors may be kept cool and very fresh in summer if wiped daily with a cloth wrung out of strong salt water. All microbes, moths and pests are thus destroyed. _ y AB ce A warm current, corresponding to the Gulf stream, would probably wash the shores of Nova Scotia and Labrador, and would materially raise the tem{;:rature of Northeastern â€" America, ‘estern Europe, including the British Isles, would, on the other hand, be drier and considerably colder, so that its producâ€" tiveness would be enormously decreased. Northwestern America would be simâ€" ilarly affected, but Russia‘s possessions on the Pacific Ocean would be visited by a warm current, which would kees her ports open all the year round, an greatly improye her commercial _ and strategic position, In other parts of the world also climate would be dissimilar. Then, since the currents of the ocean wear away land in one place and create it in another, the distribution of land and water would not be the same as at gereaent. Less important results would a changed [iosxtmp of the magnetic poles and an alteration in «comparative time, places west of Greenwich having faster time than ours, while Eastern clocks would be slower. THE GOOD USES OF SALT. HOW IT WOULD HAVE BEEN. Sm« A general Banking business transacted Drafts wued and collections made on all points. Deposâ€" ts received and interest allowed at current bterest allowed on savings bank deposits of $100 tyd upwards. Promptattentionand everyfacilâ€" anafforded curtomers liying at a distance, 4:’2%2 Qi:‘ob:ll. l&:it::ip.t}nlmi.ag DURHAM AGENCY. CAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,000 #* Pard up RESERVE FUND W. F. Cowan, TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVANCLE CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprietor THE CREYT REVEY StandardBank of Canada Thursday, Morning. THECOOK‘SBESTFRIEND BUILT UP THE . SYSTEM IN A WONDERFDL MANNE], ever, t E P CIED L41.. 4 ht t aroe. Anidbatarsccsl Equally well knoan is Mr. Boll in other provinees of the Dominion, havirng been for years a member of the Manitoba Methodist Conference neg Part of this time was stationed in innipeg. His brother, Mr. James A. Bell, is a highly respected resident of Beaverton, where his influence, though perhaps more cirâ€" cumscribed than that of his eminent brother, is none the less effective and productive of good. Of recent years, howâ€" DUNNS BAKING POWDER J ever, the working a} A. Beli inp been sad panied by indigestion. Who can do fit work when this trouble takes hold af For sale by. McFarlane & Co., Wholesale Agents orf Durha» Head Office, Toronto: FOR TWENTYâ€"SIX YEARS, SAVINGS BANK LARGEST SALE iN CANADA. President Paid uj OFFICE, been 'udli marred by severe nervous headache, accomâ€" J‘ KELLY, Agent. . Reoid, €600,000 for sale cheap. _ Jobbing of all kinds proggt attonded to. Handâ€"made Wagga Horse Shoeing Shy ALLAX MoeFARLWy PRIME BOULDIN & On, them and especially when it b€00®) chronic, as was, seemingly, the onse WB Mr. Bell? The trouble rea« hed such tensity that last June ho wes compieit ly prostrated. In this coudition a tmead recommended Bouth American Noryine Ready to trg anything and eveJ®& though he thought he had covcred list of proprietary medieines, he sceured a bottle of this great discovery. 4 second bottle of tg: medicine was takd and the work was done. Exp oflah: own language: ‘I‘wo botties of " American Nervine iminediatcly ree" my hbheadaches and have buut "P aJ system in a wonderful mauner. 1et 9# not deprecate the good our c:erFl‘" and social reformers are doing !" ‘: world, but how illâ€"fitted they w94M,j for their work were it not !h* relit that South American Nervice brmfl: them â€" when _ physical ills | 9Y®"! them, and when the system, 4% * t sMt of hard, earnest asd contia work, breaks down. . Nerviue treats system as the wige reforme@r treats a evile he is battling against !t ‘"‘"“. the root of the trouble. _ A! the ease comes from disorganization of C nerve centers. â€" This is a sciontifi© to Nervine at once works on thes® l"‘: eenters; gives to them beatth ‘ll“ the or; and then there (‘(\urlll"'l 'bl“l':’{:“m strong, healthy, lfew®*" m-_a E.--m‘--hfymub'{I of M Has opened out a first. blood, and nervous troub variety are things of the ! §EE OUR HARXMEy UPPER TOWX. ALLAN MeFARLANE, WOODWOREXK e old stand. All hy made shoes. Also in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of HARNESB MAXED3 BARNES$ and Vido®r . . & stranger PW their daughter, wh father as dead, mAl ther‘s then livi souple is separated the father. Fortyâ€"six years | Sutton, Yorkshire Davey, a young 8b ols ade val ;nd the couple me to join her nusoa®n *‘ _ )t seen for 42 year® Pu ng fl("rlt«h the wife rem: e husband took a second W h of these later partuers Cases 0" sultation with his youns then been his bride but was decided that hbe + America. This was wil BAND AND _°y Davey, after landin 1854, went first to 1 remained some tim« there little better th his native country months be received home, and then cam which was told him had juast arrived fr« his wife hbad died, dren were being ca latives. The imorm: and he drifted aim!o cite coal region. T1 legheny, where he . on Lacock streel. From that time 0 ed. Slowly, but su: cumulate money, & until he had Had Married» gut NOY """" Mfl‘-.'!"‘-r xk dreamed km_ ‘PURCHASED TH where his shop ws he in his endeavors | that he ceased to wy in England. He con repairing shoes and H/fliTEm C tion of over 20 year never having heard children, Davey tw & second marriage 'wwo Bessie Epe! keeping a small r street, Pittsburg, a They were marrtic possessions, mpking equaled $10,000. gether in the 0| street. About five A stranger part of ihe 4 daughter, while she m« : as dead, married the | r‘s then living busba > is separated now by to the daughter‘s bust 6[ of Rebecca : the First Ward, wife there. \ One of Davey‘s in\ Frederick Smith, a manufacturer and seâ€" 183 Lacock streel. > ly familiar with ‘“:i '{.. ears ago last ond {Iu. Davey wa wife went for a visi i!llni)eth and THEIR AXA Dewsbury, Lancas! they were there s« rom Davey, maku his health and tel eriy affairs in A\l postscript, reques= Cowan and to n brother John as t his two children. Smith did found on a : Davey was â€" him to the William. S had met his ica, and, tha ing. The in« to William 1 pressed in a: are a liar," man who sa) mnster. Wwi 80 years. Smith s brother‘s } him of the Then Willis of Thomas‘ ’l'walion of was hers Briggs of life their Afte (o D;n'« Pottsyvile, An" always been ol ture. | Then without any ® ing for 1ive §P" several letters havi opened, it was deci and the wife mart er, who had a sof ward Davey, the had left behind d leaving Mrs. Davi Elizaboth, to comé ) im AAT England â€" After the mar #3‘ the two C er marmriages We‘ with the couple, 4 up an attachment terminated in TBElR1 When five yed dlied, bhis widow be, went to live stepâ€"sonâ€"inâ€"law . of affairs that went 4o Englan of _ On Smith‘s re after he had re to Davey, the tracted over | de wWIFE UNIT y YEARS. ; more by noveli Alleghens have STBR A NGd landing & ngland for projpt ad Edwar ambilions band w p.,rwel'l o been T« 101 foriune wor co 1. After Now The of a W D )W 1 e at stra n MJ M r 1y 8110 we M J