§ 0 2 P building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2 W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" ing Town plot Durham. The EDGE PROPRRTYL. In the Town of Durham, County of CGrey, including valeable Water Power LIOBNBID AUCTIONEER for Co. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxutrasz P. 0. will be promptl aitended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. ‘ Township of Bentinck. _ _ *4 We cal)! the lpcoi;l attention éf Pos masters and anbscribersto the following sy nopsis of tho newcpaperlaws : 1. If anyz person orders his peper discon Mnued, he must pay all arreages, or tht publisher may contimnus to send it until payâ€" mentis made, and collectthe whole ax.ornt mor it be taken from the offce or not. ean be no legal discontinuance until paymentimade. IISUEB of Marriage Licenses. Aueâ€" : tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. 2. Aay porson who takes a paper trow Uhe post office, whether directed to hit Bame or another, or whether he has subâ€" seribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If asubscriber orders his paper to be Btopped at a certaintime, and the published pontinues to send,the subscriberis bound Bo pay for it if he takes it out@f the post é This proceeds upon ke grouni a man must pay for what he uses. a i. to ¢ p. m. "‘County of Grey. Bales attended to promp and at reasonable pat maoo Durham Ont ONOR Graduate of the Royal College “slnuul Burgeons ‘9‘ Ontario, Teeth oxâ€" without pain by the use of nitrous oxide as, or vitalized air. rutloz‘lcr attentien paid to !ho Alling of the wtuul teoth, Ofice and Resiâ€" dence next door West of Post Office, y.614 D EN TISTR Y NOTARY PUELIC,Commissioner,etc., Ifl still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durham Bakery. J. P. TELFORD, ggiiste®, Soucitor (DC surREME Coort Of the Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVER. veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loans nrnm&od without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. nNANEY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Interest t "t1® one door north of 8. Seot‘s Store Durham BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" Firstâ€"Class Hearse. -'Uili)EB-TAEI'Nvé ;r;mp;l; abtended to. JAKE KRESS. Residenceâ€"Kifng 8t., Hanover. JAMES LOCKIE, W, L. McKENZIE, MONEY TO LOAN. Fire Insurance secured. OFFIOE, oven Grawut‘s Stom« Lowen Town, ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th JAKE KRESS T. G. HOLT,. L. D. S. HUCH McKAY. Furniture MISCELLANEOUS. Newspaper Laws Apply to JAMES EDGE, Rage Hill, Ont, AUCTIUNEER. Auctioneer, for ‘2’ County ef Grey. ederate and datitfaction sn.nhr:‘. uts for seles ‘oan be go‘:o at the FOR SALE DUREAM. MEDICAL. . McLEAN, DU RH A M DAN. MeLEAN,. D. MeCORMICK, Many people are well aware that each and all of these contrivances are far from .bem% an " honest" device for gamblm? ut are so arranged that by means of clever sleight of ï¬nd or by hidden mechanism the operator can reâ€" tain entire control of the results. His assistants, dressed as young farmers, are dispersed among the crowd, and these cappers or heelers are allowed to win frequently in order to advertise the game, but outsiders are fleeced withâ€" out merey. Large sums are lost by farmers and others who have earned their money by bhard work; but a far more serious result is the fever of gambâ€" ling which the games arouse, someâ€"~ times, it is feared, to the permanent inâ€" jury of the young men who take part. rest. The fairs are gréat harvestâ€"fields for the whole fraternity of bunco men, while the crowds and the extent of the grounds make it difficult altogether to prevent their dishonest trade from beâ€" ing carried on in a more or less open manner. Victims are always to be found who are willing to be fleeced by the same old methods, the shell game, the wheel of fortune, the roulette taâ€" bles, the ball and pin game, and the The swindlers usually obtain space and a license by pretending to enter some hbharmless exhibit, and trust to their own hired watchmen to afterward evade the vigilance of the police of the fair. It is })ossible in some cases that the under officials are themselves somsâ€" what lax in enforcing the law, and visiâ€" tors who notice a:‘L of these fakes at their dishonest tr should insist upâ€" on their immediate suppression. Now that the fair season is so near at hand it behooves those who are inâ€" terested in them and the welfare of those who attend that pains are takâ€" en to prevent the presence of objectionâ€" able shows and pastimes and see that such are removed from the fair grounds if they obtain an entrance, for, as an eastern contemporary says, our agriculâ€" tural fairs are liable to prove educatâ€" ing forces in a wrong direction, unless greater care is exercised to prevent the operations of gambling sharps and othâ€" er fakirs of the objectionable sort. Sheep are fond of a great many things and will eat almost any kind of vegetation, provided it be clean and free from filth. ‘They will eat any kind of grain, all of the grasses and most of the weeds. What they particularly deâ€" sire is plenty of what they have. If it be grass they will eat more of it in proportion to their weight than will either the ox or horse. The sheep usuâ€" ally has a good appetite and will find something to fit it if it is within reach and with a sharp appetite will get away with about four per cent. of its live weight daily, although the 1a ;:criglu thel’Lincoln‘;candhgoet:vgglrd:,hm irdly_reach this percentage. _ _ EEP CC ECCE 0. The Merino behaves with its food very much as the Jersey cow does, while the mutton breeds fall into the plan of the Shorthorn. In feeding in to sheep it is safe to ï¬ivo them a.é::t one per cent. of their live weight per d.{: and this may be increased when a fa teninf ration is wanted. Sheep will not eat flesh or sloes although one will 00â€" casionally Arial «im _ Basement stables under hay barns that have been in constant use for twenty or thirty years, as thousands of them have, are dangerous places in which to milk cows during hot weather. Milking cows in a clean, open enclosâ€" ure, or confined by stanchions in an open shed, is to be preferred above othâ€" er methods at this season. The brushâ€" ing of the cow‘s udder and flanks should not be neglected now any more than in winter. Dust and mud will accumulate there and fall into the milk pail if not removed. Milk full of this debris is not clean even after being strained. The dirt dissolves in the fluid and impairs its quality. g in other words, if you select a cleanâ€" ly place in which to milk your cows, the after care of the fluid will be greatâ€" ly simplified. This is a point well worth observing, and we would enjoin dairymen not to ignore it. It is essential to giltâ€"edged lacteal quality that cows be milked in a sweet, pure atmosphere. As soon as the milk leaves the udder and the air strikes it, it is subject to just the degree of conâ€" tamination with which the air may be impregnated. In a medium of pure air you will have pure milk for a reasonâ€" able length of time, or until natural changes cause it to become acid. The best plan is to aerate milk as soon as possible after it has been drawn from the cow. This prevents the deâ€" velopment of injurious bacteria, and at a temperature of 60 degrees, insures the preservation of good quality for at least twelve hours to come. 4 Don‘t compel your men to milk the cows on an empty stomach. A milker should have a firm steady grasp on the teats, not a weak tired one, or the cow will dry off under his hands. It may seem an unimportant item, and yet to bave the morning milking hour after breakfast, and the evening one after supper, will always yield better results. Don‘t ignore any point about dairying that conduces to a cow‘s comfort, and the result will make your pocketbook heavier every time. . Regularity in milking always brings its reward b{ preventing a shrinkafe in the yield. It takes a great deal of stamina and determination of purpose to adhere rigidly to the rule of milkâ€" ing regularly at a stated hour, but no dairy observance pays better. __ _ Unless a dairyman has a perfect staâ€" ble it never pays to milk cows during the summer season in the winter stable. AGRICULTURAL QUITE A SPELL. Th}sro ishs farmer l;vflhol‘: és YY Enough to take hi is And study nature with his II And think of what he CC. He hears the chatter of the JJ As they each other TT, And sees that when a tree DKE It makes a home for BB, A {nke of oxen he will UU, With many haws and GG, And their mistakes he will XQQ When plowing for his PP He little buys, %ut much he sells, And therefore little OO ; 1 And when he hoes his soil by spe!!® He also soils his hose. MILKING COWS IN SUMMER. FRAUDS AT FATRS. WHAT SHEEP EAT. B 20 POOC MERCRY ADLIOS, He has crossed the Atlantic 791 times, and has followed the sea 54 years, servâ€" }l'nlï¬s 011: 30 vessels tc?xin the Cunt:ni flee%. posed a greater recor thnthspotnyothumnownfloot. George Paynter, the barkeeper of the steamship Etruria, has *the record of having voyaged 2,889,612 statue miles. Interesting Scenes in the Quiet Reaches of the Thames. In the weird light of the smoky evening half a dozen barges, some alâ€" ready under jury masts, are making their way on the top of the flood into London. ‘They form a long perspecâ€" tive as they approach the Tower Bridge and are lost sight of in the yellow mist of the setting sun. They are loaded down to their hatches, and some of them have sailed far up the coast, perâ€" haps in half a gale of wind, to deposit their cargoes in the quiet reaches of the dreamy Upper Thames. _ Others hailed from the Medwayâ€"‘"the other river," as they call it on the Thamesâ€" and those who know Rochester and Strood Bridge will be familiar enough with the sight of them here. On Monâ€" day morningâ€"time, to the bhargemen, always waiting upon tideâ€"the Medway fleets gets under way. It is worth seeing this on a bright morning, when the wind is fair, eacï¬ vessel beatin%oup out of its own river, and coming about into the Thames, adds something to the interest of the scene. Pat became slowly appeased, and, as he put on his coat, he said: "I don‘t mind what a bird says, Molly, but beâ€" gorra, I thought it was that sneak Mcâ€" * You‘re a. F}éétivgawk, Pat, to be minding the likes of a poor, simpleâ€" minded bird like that." ) p "Paind the eyots of Isleworth Ricgmond, until once more they are freighted outward to their own river or to face the open sea. "Is that all you can say, ‘Hullo, Pat!‘ Where are you, anyhow?" ansâ€" wered Pat. ‘"Pat you‘re a fool," said the voice. "Begorra, you‘re a liar, whoever YO be," shouted Pat, as he looked blindly around for his insulter. "Pat, you fool," again uttered the voice. s "*I‘m no fool, whoever ye are, called out Pat, wild with anger, "an‘ if yez will show yerself I‘ll prove it to yez." ‘‘* Abh, you mustn‘t mind that, Pat," said his sweetheart. " You‘re a donâ€" key, surely, to be minding the talk, of that crazy bird upâ€"stairs. Why, it‘s only one of the you men‘s parrots which they broughtngome with them from over the sea. It‘s an illâ€"manner bird, and do swear dreadfully. Mistress won‘t have it in the house, so the boys hang up the cage out of the window of their â€"room upstairs. .. = â€" : ~ |>| Here, while some taken in bhand by the free waterman, "sweep‘" up on the floodtide,. their long oars or ‘"sweeps" serving to belg their dangeroua passage under the arches of the ridges, others are taken in tow by one of the tugsâ€" the Vixen, the Scorcher or the Storm King, perhapsâ€"and soon a long, black string of deeply laden huiks, often lashâ€" ed together two by two, go steaming past the Nine Elms, Chelsea and Hamâ€" mersmith to find a peaceful berth posâ€" nibl[ym]behind the eyots of Isleworth Richmond, until onte more thay ~ nnn Standing on the Essex side, one can on a clear day see some way up the Medway, now thick with sail, and folâ€" low the fleet rlong the Isle of Grain opposite, and far up the Thames beyond tge long, low line of Canvey, disapâ€" pearing at last as it bears northward up the Lower Hope. Thus toward evenâ€" ing, in company with their various seaâ€" going companions, these Medway craft enter the gloom and bhaze of London, each one as much at home in this crowdâ€" ed thoroughfare as in the lower reachâ€" es or along the coast north and south of the Thames, estuary. & _" Foolish Pat," came the reply, accomâ€" panied by a hoarse chuckle. | _ . ; , EOTOBSNE OUS BC UELWU URRUIITECCC * _Pat was furious, and thoughts of his rlya(li, McCarthy immediately came in his mind. _ " Pat, you fool! Pat, @u"fmln ho, ho, ho, ha, ha l" shouted Pat‘s tormenâ€" ed as he danced ix]i) and down. "Pat, you fool! Pat, you : . ‘*Did yez hear the blackguard? Oh, if I can lay my hands on him|" foamâ€" ed Pat, as he continued his war dance. Pat gazed all around him, bui see nobody, and ‘once again he the voice say, " Hullo Pat!" _‘ Show Myerself, McCarthy, only show yerself, McCarthy, an‘ I‘ll punch in the face of yez, I will! I will!" he shoutâ€" ter. By this time Pat‘s coat and waistcoat lay‘ on the ground, and be bad his sleeves rolled up to his elbows and was tearing around like a hen on a hot grlddle. There‘s no telling what would ave happened, as it was nearly the time for the policeman on the beat to pass that wui,, when the basement door openâ€" ed and Pat‘s sweetheart came out, On seeing Pat she uttered a little scream and exclaimed: " Are you crazy, Pat? what has come into you the mcgt? Put your clothes on, man,."" : °_ |_..};.; again. _ * You spalpeen, Pat ! Foolish Pat! Ho bho! ha ha! Go home, Pat," said the mysterious voice out of the darkness. iE ThEA ~ 1. 000 n 0O SAE U Mc on d t Th Patrick Thought It Was the Voice of His Rival and Got Riled at It. An amusing scene occurred in a quiet upâ€"town street. A young Irishman who is courting a rosyâ€"cheeked servant in one of the houses of the thoroughfare called about his usual time in the evenâ€" ing. Just as he opened the iron gate leading into the basement yard he bheard a voice say, " Hullo, Pat!" " Hullo yourself," replied Pat. " Hullo, Pat!" said the strange voice anQ pastilOs. There are a good many flocks of sheep that would eat more than, they do if they had a chance. Dry air is a fine thing for sheep, and while they cannot subsist on it alone for any length _ of time, when it is given in connection with suitable rations, it performs an important part in the management of sheep. arthy hidden furninst ther stoop." S CAZRZULOY . . MORECE ANERE TT MTCTLO OA ced sheep, and cockle burs and sand buts will be eaten when there is nothing else. They do not like the toPs of yellow dock, burdock or dog fennel, but dandelions :111;;3‘_‘k eaten freely, as v&fell s:sa.xfgxu:lx!' chicken grass, barnyard graf â€" row, andgother similar enemies to fl{lds and pastures. huy is Aroed . of fodder and ensilage, and geu and beans are great favorites W1 h them. Vetches and mustard are also eaten greedily. Oats are a staple food Eon"‘the C i P lt es on ut Law wvra IT WAS THE WICKED " POLLY." GREATEST TRAVELLER LONDON BARGES. taken in hand by ‘sweep" up on the iw.rs or "sweeps" dangerous passage the Eri_dggs. others im, but could Hosfteas-â€"h;(isu Hightom' won‘t you u.%' or ul i iss Hightone (society soprano Really, you must excuse me tO-nigE 1 have such a cold. { Hostessâ€"Mr. Lowvoice, I am sure you will sing. _ _ Mr. Lowwvoice (society basso)â€"Pardon me, but I donothwIcan.in‘ toâ€" night ; I haven‘t a cold of life and to save the lives of those who are in danger of perishing by reason of the wrecks and perils of the sea. In 1867 first class and second class Albert medals were authorized. BRAVERY ON LAND AND SEA. By another warrant issued ten years later the decorations were extended to cases of gallantry in preventing loss of life from accidents in mines, on railâ€" ways, at fires and other perils on shore. These are also of two classes. So exâ€" traordinary must be the acts for which the medals are bestowed that in all but fifteen firstâ€"class and fortyâ€"two secondâ€" class medals have been given for galâ€" lantry in saving life at sea up to the time of publication of the 1896 edition of Burke‘s Peerage, and but fourteen firstâ€"class _ and fiftyâ€"six secondâ€"class :)I:fdlz;hsdhad been given for saving lives haps animated by vague hopes, and the commanding officer was amazed to beâ€" hold Capt. %Iutman clinging tothe botâ€" tom of an upturned boat, still grasping the now unconscious fireman. Another half hour elapsed before the boat could approach, but eventually this hero and his precious charge were rescued. OTHER BRAVE RESCUES. It is doubtful if any rescue could be more brave than the one just described, but the act for which Wm. Dodd, under manager of the Diglake collieries in Staffordshire, received an Albert medal certainly approaches it. On Jan. 14, 1895, the mine was flooded with water from the old workings of an adjoining mine while 240 men were at work in various parts of the pit. Descending twice, the second time after he had reâ€" covered consciousness after exbhaustion from his first efforts, he battled against iceâ€"cold ~torrents several hundreds of feet below the surface, with the result that his splendid bravery saved more than thirty miners. A number of the thriliing rescues that have earned the Albert medal were reâ€" cently graghically described by L. S. Lewis in the Strand Magazine, London. One of the most extraordinary rescues conceivable was that for which an humâ€" ble subject named John Smith received a secondâ€"class medal. Smith was a moulder in the steel works of Messrs. Thomas Firth & Sons, of Sheffield. _ On the night of May 18, 1889, as the workmen were about to reâ€" move from the casting pit a whiteâ€"hot steel ingot weighing twent{'-six tons, the awtful accident occurred which made his gallantry famous throughout Engâ€" say ‘11 _ "Pull away with those people and come ‘hback for me."‘ â€".â€" . . iA That was in the middle of the night. At 6 o‘clock in the mormnï¬ the only persons left on the wreck were the captain and an injured and helpless fireman, whom he was attempting to save and whom he absolutely refused to abandon. The Aidar was on her beam Having given Capt. Nutman many chances of life, the men in the rescuing boats pulled away reluctantly, and imâ€" mediately after the Aidar foundered. Long afterwards the Staffordshire‘s lifeâ€" boat returned to th> spot, the crew perâ€" One of the menâ€"Benjamin Stanleyâ€" was adjusting a chain. His foot slipxed and he fell down into the pit, a disâ€" tance of fifteen feet, close to the great column of whiteâ€"hot steel. _ The poor man lay stunned by the fall and was already ablaze, when Smith, realizing the terrible danger his comrade was in, seized a ladder, and, thrusting it into an adjoining pit, climbed hurriedly down. He had no clothing on his body, excepting trousers and boots, ind hbe met with an awkward fall by the sudâ€" den turning of the ladder. _ M ~L Recovering himself quickly, Smith rushed to the rescue. _ He jumped into the inner pit, and, though choked by the heat, picked up his comrade and succeeded in carrying him into the next pit, whence he wais able by the assisâ€" pit, whence he wa able by the assistâ€" ance of the other workmen to get him up the ladder. _ _ ks it he n ind 3 The latest recipient of an Albert medal of the first class is Capt. W. J. Nutman, late master of the steamer Aidar, of Liverpool. The Aidar was wrecked off the %editerranean and was sinking fast when sighted by the steamâ€" ship Staffordshire, of Liverpool. _ As the Staffordshire‘s lifeboats returned each time for more of the Aidar‘s passâ€" engers and crew, Capt. Nutman would sinking ship because no one knew the moment when she might founder and suck down anythmi that chanced to be in the vicinity. The officer in charge of the rescuing party asked Nutman for a final answerâ€"would he leave his helpless charg> and save himsel{? He would not. ‘The fireman was powerless and paralyzed with fear, making no efâ€" fort to save himself beyond clinging to the broken bridge. _ _ ‘A COVETED DECORATION, This decoration was instituted by a royal warrant in 1866 for the purpose of rewarding, by a mark of royal favor, the many daring and heroic actions of mariners and others to prevent the loss _ That inner pit into which the brave man dashed was almost filled with the F‘eat incandescent glowing steel beam. oor Smith was HORRLBLY BURNED and was carried in an unconscious state to the infirmary, He recovered, but Stanley died three days after the accident. 8 £ (al ds mal ends â€" and ra‘f)idly settling down. The lifeboats could not come close to the of recognition, but as the decoration is never conferred unless the recipient has performed â€" a feat of almost ‘supernaâ€" tural gallantry, the wearers are among the most envied men in the realm. More envied than any of the others are the possessors of the Albert medal. Acts for Which the Homor is Bestowedâ€" Instances Where Men Have Risked Their Lives to Save Their Fellowmen. Most extraordinary are many of the acts of bravery for which the Crown of England has conferred the Albert medal upon its subjects. The English Crown is famous forits substantial reâ€" cognition of bravery. â€"At the same time it is most conservative in its awards. A medal is the usual mark HEROES THAT® HAVE WON THE ALBERT MEDAL oUT OF CONDITION. Ger, but critical and experienced men have been studying this medioine for years, with the one resultâ€"they have found that its claim of perfeot curaâ€" tive qualities cannot be grinsaic The great discoverer of this medicine was possessed of the knowledge that the seat of all disease is the nerve centres, :Ltll:fl:dnl} ;ï¬.‘bc_a. of the brain. In Aterest allowed on savings bank deposits of $100 tyd upwards. Promptattentionand everyfacilâ€" anafforded curtomers liying at a distance. A general Banking business tunuctodï¬ Drafte wued and collections made on all points, Doposâ€" ts recseived and interest allowed at current and England. per pas Pard lg 1,000,0( RESERVE FUN 600,0° W. F. Cowan, | Geo. P. Reid, CAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,000 or sale byilcl‘a.rlm 4& Co., Wholesale Agents orf Daurham and Vicinity» TERMS; $ per year, IN ADVANCLE CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprieton StandardBank of Canada A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. thr Renders Failure Impossible. THE GREY REVEY WBEN EVERYT OTHRR HELPR HAS TALE N (W Are Fixed Upon South Amer can Nervine. Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discoven of the Age. T8E EYES DF TRE WDRT THECOOK‘SBEST FRIEND Thursday,; Morning. DUNNS BAKING POWDER GENTS in all principal lmintl in _ Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba United States fl'l"'"u ""‘/““ * tA "€ 4A t Je *J T /" '-?"‘ DURHAM AGENCY. FOR TWENTYâ€"SIX YEARS Head Office, Toronto. LARGEST SALE iN CANADA. / *A W/ s\,‘? ike * lé c A ailt SAVINGS BANK _ AMERICAX .:> Paid u; OFFICH, GAR ST., |DURHAML 7 NERVINE ; J* KELLY: “‘.‘o soOUTH / ‘- -’ .} ‘.‘ NE VINE > C â€"7; La < ‘5& m* ce all "_' \"\ & ~gG=@ a’.gt\y M m * z in C o. 2A) *z ?’:’s"l Bs * P ",7\". y '71.,'.-- â€" J"' C “E‘ K C /Nrb h . PEX .7 blood, liver complaint. all complaint all owt w origin to a derangement of th* nerv® centres. _ Thousands bear tes m that they have been cured of thet trowbles, even when they have becomt so Gesperate as to bafie the ®K!! o the most eminent physicia06 becaust South American Nervine has $09* o headquarters and cured thert. ‘m eyes of the world have nQt bees Isappointed in the in guiry into t!* l cess of Bouth American Nervin® , Pf} ple marvel, it is true, at !!® wondertd medioai qualities, but they, kno= B R“ all question that it 409# o ob that is olaimed for it J #t* ht ml '-1 one great certal® cu;!†Of the nineteenth centu"*. dok should anyone suffer Cistres® "‘.;. mess while this remedy i# pomet at their hands ? Oof nerve fuld. The nerve O"°/ . m’ and of necessity the orgas has shown the outward eviden® only of derangement is healed. _ !"°} w nervourness, mwo"m‘bd liver complaint all owe thelf Mm to a derangement of th* nett? #ram Mhanesnis beat "'(m!o_._, ble with medical treatment U"" ally, and with nearly all medicines " that they aim simply to treat the 0°C4" that may be diseased. South Ame"®" Nervine passes by the Org@0% and |2" mediately applies its ourstive powe" to the nerve centres, from which # Organs of the body recelve their #U"" ‘“ nerve fulid. The nerve gents®® nalad aud s# Feppay e : 0.'{“' Jobbing of all kinds altontad to. Py Handâ€"made Waggy Horse Shoeing Sby In the old stand. All by made shoes. Also BOUL_DIN & Oy PRIME Has opened out a ALLAN MoFARLAXKZ SEE OUR HARXME: UPPER Towy WOODWoORXK in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of for sale cheap HABRNESE \uin J h \\\\\“ “l\“ HARXNRS$ McFARy _ ATâ€" f $4 The blue and whi active cotton cr silks from Japs our stores. So a regarding ys that an Osaka whole output 0 (gold) per £r0o 14 will purchas s, and hbe « ples of nail bi at prices n onde . â€"> **1. 1“.......:.....&..‘0. i great lactory. far the compe! articles, notabl matting, hem;»* rbrellas, matches, | d earthenware, _ ® aids and so on. Bu! iss of the chalienge me cases, that is s stive; and even wh ticles are compara‘ exy are at least stap :rains and provisions Make Textiles, prceri n ationsâ€"A HHH is the opinion of 1 bro OWM in the Meview, that when la _ Au%act Japan‘s total exports cluding bullion reacue _M. reckoned in sÂ¥ ten years earlier thy ality of these cheap 20 r $8 gold per gross Mr very superior grade of Last year Japan expo hina, mearly $5,000,000 res. "Their safety ought for fourteen sil y . $7.50 in gold, for 7 weden compete at this rg the last ten years (OE er gives a table of the pdividual increases in 1 EXPORT TRADE O $77,000,000, _ tha mearly quadruple 1895 over 1894 wa h# J 0T C Review, that when «N ped with the latest m e "the ©108t poten in the markets of the 1 while, she is already us strides in her in« ly in those whose pr ; way to the marts of appliances and new on +ca~ the ancient spinDit The epormous incre af textiles is due to thi is a nation of weavers in Japan as women se mo exaggeration to sA every house in rural J i wheel n,nd'“loumhar«- i mor till night." t.rict:uï¬r. Porter four mery, and even Te milis employing from : aithough usually the from 40 to 120 hands, | «ol thousands of bhouses also to draw from. 19 ing district most ol LL in the bomes, whi« make the finish uni« trict the thin silk 1a ralled habutai in Ja; also well known her« in 1888, and last year duced $6,076,220 wor! U sTRIES oF THE W extiles of all kinds the supply, bo en up by the port of coiton yet exceed $0, value of the s _ The manufac sluded in the &AN EXTRAO! and obi fabric, ton spinning is item of drugs inc. phor, and the las dry miscellansous is expressed in s to only in 189) ing for U gomg up hanghai Whiie :iotwn C ty is © Inland : 1090 mile the port over 16,000,00 ply of imexpe water is shot is only a Lew the Biberian can take be e _ ~.. Should Jlftn tax ture of woollen and of cotton, Australia with cheap wool. , H to any new industrs 9 BUSI WO eeM t which about 2,000,0 0 1894, mostly to Chi trict of Sakaye al trict of Okayama, \ Porter, are depopu dren for those ® m o( lh littlc mabout one cent to “dg'n el 1NX and "the pay Lor in these d&“."“"ï¬ E"u, rareiy exc€ erican money." Th matting in 1893 y last year .5-07'21 JAPAN‘S 1 ‘h‘ further IW‘:'I capital since either in new ent largement of old : thus newly establ e ancien factory . yarn China r the â€" #1 rial pm(/ilion notably t« hempen An ches, brush A Millton â€" on of Mr in the N 304 1 ove ex pensi V short 11 few day! in dus ith an OWn D« ort then« w dq. to n railroa ar Yariou & J> But it T sUI &A W ast 1 1 w Di incl DTX 30 tar #1! V irt uj TO L8 iD 14 1 16