West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 26 Sep 1895, p. 5

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1 :: L i :/> i na England is discourteous. It is Turkey that says so. The sultan is becoming pathetic. He has been compinining bitter ly. â€" It is into the ears of Russia and France that he has been pouring his bitter comâ€" plaint. . Great Britain‘s attitude, he say8, is **discourteous and unscemly," _ More than that, he avers, it is derogatory to his own prestige. . He appeals to Russia and France to speak to Great Britain about it and to use their good offices to induce her go modify her attitude, to be more polite and deferential, and in particular to keep her horrid gunboatea little farther out of sight, and not look too narrowly under the ruined homes in Moush and Sassoun. Honest Times. At one time in the Highlands of Scotâ€" land to ask for a receipt or promissory note was considered an insult, and such a thing us a breach of contract was rarely heard of, so strietly did the people regard their homor. The Presbyterian Witness tells q story of a farmer who had been to the Lowlands and had there acquired worldly wisdom : Alter returning to his native place he needed some morey, and requested a loan from a gentleman in the neigl: borhood. The laiter, Mr. Stowart, complied and counted out the gold, when the farmer immediately wrote a receipt. * And what is this, man?" cried Mr. Stewart, on receiving the slip of paper. That is m receipt, mir, binding me to give ye back your gold at the right time," replied Donald. C# L 1 £o% o3% pee wl en full round waist has a notched yoke and standing collar of perforated black velvet mounte« over red silk, and is completed by w bias black velvet tolt. 3 The accompanying hat is a wideâ€"brimmed capelice of black fancy atraw edged with pleatings of black mounsseline de soie, and trimmed with black satin ribbon bows and fan pleatings of mousseline de soie, with a mass of red poppies lifting the brim at the buck. Msm Sn detsie Po "*Binding ye, indeed! Well, my man, if ye canna trust yourself, I‘m sure I‘ll na trust ye ! Such as ye canuw hae my gold"; and gathering it up he returned to his desk and locked it up. "But, sir, 1 might die," replied _ the reedy Scot, unwilling to surrender his hope of the loan ; ‘*and perhaps my sons might refuse it ye, but the bit of paper *But, sir, l might die," repMed . U"C reedy Scot, unwilling to surrender his hope of the loan ; "*and perhaps my sons might refure it ye, but the bit of paper would compel them." *Compel them to sustain their dead father‘s K:nor 1" cried the enraged Celt. "*They‘ll need compelling to do right, if thisis the road ye‘re leading them. Â¥e can gang olsewhere for money, I tell ye ; but ye‘i find nane about here that‘ll pus more faith in a bit of paper than a neighbor‘s word of honor and his love of right." o SJneâ€"How long do you suppose the bicycle will remain so popular among the fashionable people * xt ioas _ Heâ€"Until it zcomes established as a useful vehicie. ‘The woman that is new begins To more or less prevail, But up to date she is not new Enough to drive a nail. CURREXT XNOTES, The New Woman. The Bicycle. Bay8, More o his & and right, them. I tell that‘ll than a A DAY WITA STEPBEBN, stephen Cazing Into Meavenâ€"8Stephe9 Lookinz at Christâ€"Stephen Stoned Stephen in is Dying Houwrâ€"Ste phe® Asleep â€"A Picturesque Sermon, New Yorx, Sept. 15.â€"In his setmon for toâ€"day Rev. Dr. Talnage has chosen & theme as picturesque as it is spiritually inspiring. He groups his discourse into Fige Pictures," The text selected was, ‘ "Behold, I see the heavens opcncd"-â€"x\(‘l" REV. DR While you long to join their companionâ€" ship, and the years and the days go with such tedium that they break your heart, and the vipers of pain and sorrow and beâ€" reavemant keep guawing at your vitals, and you will stand like Stephen, gazing into heuven. You wonder if they have changed since you saw them last. Yoa wonder if they would recognize your face, now, so changed has it been with trouble. You wonder it, amid the myriad delights they have, they care as much for yor as they used to when they gave you a helping hand and put their shoulders under your burdens. You wonder if they look any older, and sometimes in the evening tide, when the house is all quict, you wonder if you should call them by their first name if they would not answer, and perhaps sometimes you do make the experiment, and when no one but God and yourself are there you distinetly call their names and listen and sit.gazing into heaven. Pauss on now and see Stephen looking upon Christ. . My text says that he saw the Son of Man at the right hand of God, Just how Christ looked in this world, just how he looks in heaven, we cannot say. The painters of the different ages have tried to imagine the features of Christ and put thom upon canvas, but we will have to wait until with our own eyes we see him and with C Rummetalioeiebamnee s t dons like thatâ€"do you wonder chat Stephen stood looking at kim ? I hope to spend eternity doing the same thing. 1 must see him; I must look upon that face once clouded with my sin, but now radiant with my pardon. I want to touch that hand that knoc«ed off my shackles. I want to hear the voice that pronounced my deâ€" liverance. â€" Eehold him, little children, for if you live to three score years and ten you will see none so fair. _ Bebold him, ye aged ones, for he only can shine through the dimness of your failing ageligh',. Behold him, carth, Behold him, hecven,. What a moment when all the nations of the saved shall gather around Christ, all faces that way, all thrones that way, gazing on Jesus ! e "Iis wortk if all the nations know Sure the whole carth would love him too, 1 pass on now and look at Stephen stoned. The world has always wanted to get rid of good men. Their very hife is an assault upon . wickedness, .?htwvzh_,shpbcn through the gates of the city. Down with him ovor.;:o i Le .1);‘1"7 man come uj rop a stone . his head. (Toan Anose men aid uousbangaiokiitntephss come and sit beside him? Oh, wonderiul invitation ! You can take it toâ€"day and stand at the head of the darkest alley in all this city and say : ""Come! Clothes for your rags, salve for your sores, a throne for your eternal reigning" . A Christ that talks like that and acts like that and parâ€" as they killed themselves, Every stone rebounded upon them. While these murâ€" derers are transfized by the scorn of all good men Stephen lives in the admiration DR. TALMAGE PRESENTS FIVE LIVING PICTURES. of all Christendom. Stephec stoned, but Stephen alive. _ So all good en must be elted. _ "All who will live g. dly in Christ Sesu- must suffer persccution,." It is no eulogy of a man to say that everybody likes him, _ Show me anyone who is doing all his duty to state or church, and I will show you scores of men who uttorly abhor him. 1If all men speak well of you,it is because you are either a laggard or m dolt. If a steamer makes rapid progress through the waves, the water will boil and foaum all around it. Brave soldiers of Jesus Christ will hear the carbines click. â€" When I seea man with a voice and money and influence all on the right side, and some cariccture him, and some sneer At him, and. some denounce him, and men who pretend to be actuated by right motives conspire to cripâ€" ple him, to cast him out, to deatroy him, 1 | any, "Stephen stoned." When I see a man in some great moral ‘or religious . reform battle against grog: Mz 1 Ca CK301. alaaae if, so perceinl Was i1, . oTOpuBI MAC LEDOCZ very laborious life. His cuief work has been to care for the poor, How many loaves of bread he had distributed, how many bare feet he had sandaled,how many cots of sickness and distress he had bleased with ministriee of kindness and love, I do not know. _ Yetfrom the way he lived,and the way he preached, and the way he died, I know he was a laborious Christian, | But that is all over now. â€" He had pressed the cup to the last fainting lip. He has taken the last insult from his enemie« . The last stone to whoâ€"e crushing weight he is susceptible has been hurled, Stephen is dead ! The disciples come ! They take him up ! They wash away the blood from the wounds. ~ They straighten out the bruised limbs, They brush back the tangled hait from the brow, and then they pass around to look upon the calm countenance of him in fweer ho merasnime _I have seen the sea driven with the hur» ricane till the tangled foam caught in the rigging, and wave rising above wave seemâ€" 6 &n Ovelt it se ctoan eeitenior M ed as if about to sterm the heavens, and then I bave seen the temptest drop, and the waves crouch and everything become smooth and burnished as though a camping place for the glories of heaven, _ So have 1 seen a man, coming down at last to an inâ€" finite calm, in which there was a hush of heaven‘s lullaby. Stephen asleep. _ _ _ TcR Td S ces en ied mnesial while the world faded, heaven dawned and the deepening twilight of earth‘s night was only the opening twilight of heaven‘s morp. _ Nota sigh, _ Not a tear, Not a struggle. . Hush ! Stephen asleep. I have nct the faculty as many have to tell the wenther. I can never tell by the sotting sun whother there will be a drought or not. I cannot tell by the blowing of the wind whether it will be fair weather or foul on the morrow. But I can prophesy, and I will prophesy, what weather it wil l be when you, the Christian, come tolic. You may have it very rough now. It may 1 > . Aut oun Nudocndetoatinart ENNNAE AET AAURs Oe ce t sety I be &his:week one annoyance, the ‘next another annoyance. | It may be this year one bereavement, the next another bereave> ment. _ But at the last Christ will come in and darkness willgo out. _ And though there may be no hand to close yourâ€"eyes and no breast on which to rest your dying moistabdraverinlintitsbeted Jniihetha 209 reerni o l I saw such a one. He fought all his days against poverty and against abuse, They traduced his name. They rattled at the door knob while he was dying with Auns for debts he could not pay ; yet the peace of God br.ooded over his ,pillow; nng who had lived for the pbor and died for the truth,. Stephenasleep ! a a PCH Ndbten nta Hies ‘I 1 was it *uix‘r_{;«;»':fi.'?‘a% wos %* Aplieniiye Stephen had lived a His cuief work has e poor. How many had distributed, how ho o y on MWF oz not SIdCRUCLLY DUSTET allow C)U l\bwithout thorns. us tofurther enumerate, Tree Roses, etc. BUT our stock talks for itself. Prices right. Handsome book of plates and complete outfit furnished Frce of charge. Write for terms and particulars. CHASE BROTHERS‘ COMPANY, ___.__Colborne, Ont. Tiz "Ocn Recuast®" Nuxswxnune. Â¥1 ~ in this community to sell specialties in our line. _ Trees that L:ar seediess Pears. Apple Trees hardy as oaks, "Excelsior" Crab as large as an Apple. Cherry trees proof against blackâ€"knot. Plum trees not affected by Curculio. Tree Currants, Space Gooseberries which will do not mildew. not Blackberry Bushes allow without thorns. netafwrtharannmerate: Tree Roses, etc. WE WANT A MAN AT ONCE in this community to sell specialties NUTITT T UUIDLTO OOAW Anbsen Cenita Mmupl answer and un bonest opinion, write to UNN & CO., who have bad nearly fifty years‘ experience in the patent business, Communica~ tions strictly confldential, â€" A MAnutibook of Inâ€" formation concerning Patents and how to obâ€" tain them sent free. Also n catalogue of mechan» fcal and scientific books sont free. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive lgoclul noticein the Scientific American, and thus nre brought widely before the public with» out cost to the inventor. This splendid ‘pnper. issued weekly, clegantly illustrated. bas by fur the larzest circulation of any scientific work in tha world. $3 a year. Sample c;;;m-a sent froo. Bulldlng Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year, Singlo oofpms.-z cents. Every pumber contains beau» tiful plates, in colors, and ghomunpns of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the latont qwgm and secure contructs, Address MUNN & CO., NEw Your, 361 BroADwA®. {=xx===â€"z==~ _ LOWDERS ness, Billousness, Pain in the Side, Const Torpid Liver, Bad Breath, . to stay cur regulato the bowels. vary A1Cs To Prica 26 Osnre ar Drua Src retcrpnmmemmememsenponmnemmnemnnme ¢ ul ; f moâ€"â€"ume KENDALL‘S SPAYVIN EURE, an Ocenlt Sps cep a bottle < wnd keep it. o For Sale by all Druggists, or address Dr. B. J. KENDALL COMPANY r. B. J. Kispazt C d one Curb, on Rone Spavins ral of my friend ENOSBUARGM FALLS, VT id ca Bs d 2 s s se y dicine. 1 once had a mare that bad avin and tive bottles cured her. 1 on hand ali the time. Yours truly, Cuas. PowRtt. Ht1 Caxtox, M d several bottl » with much. ich pleased with / P. O. Box 348. Apr. 8, )09 Ja A PICTURE OF SIBERMA RUSSIA‘S GREAT RAILWAY ACROSS THE EMPIRE. Something About the Passengers, Restau 1 rants, and Stationsâ€"Emizration Mas BHeen Very Fastâ€"A Mundred Thousand Colontsts Cross the Urals, ho great Siberia railway, properly . speaking, begins at Cheliabingk, nearly 1,400 miles beyond Moscow writes a corres pondent, â€" Thiz preliminary journey can be made in three days and four nights, on th* whole not uncomfortably, at the excccdiug' ly cheap rate of about thirtyâ€"seven and a half rubles, or some twenty dollars, for a firstâ€"class ticket, The fare all the way from St. Potersburg is proportionately even cheaper, as the Rusaian Government & fow months ago introduced the system of a rapidly decreasing rate of mileage for long distunces, The trip is only moderately interesting. The country passed through is flat, and seems fertile and prosperous, The crowds at the stations are the usual picturesque redâ€"shirted mubiks, with m #prinkling of the original native inhabitants as one goes to the custward. . The Volga is crossed on an iron bridge 1,484 metres long a few hours before the train reaches Samarm. What one sees of the passage through the Urals is decidedly pretty, but to a foreignâ€" er hardly more, though the Russian, acâ€" customed to level or rolling plains, is moved to much enthusiasm by mountains and | valleys. Cheliabinsk is bey and already in Asia, x it lies in the Gove which is somewhere twentyâ€"five thousand thanks to the railw THE POPULATION, which is somewhere between fifteen and twentyâ€"five thousand, is rapidly increasing, thanks to the railway, and is likely to continue to do #o, as from here a branch line is being built to the Permâ€"Tiumen road, which crosses the Urals further morth. The station, in true Russian fash= ion, is w good mile and a half from the city, and about it & subuch is quickly growing up. The place itself is in some ways not unlike some of our own western ones of the same size, with its unfinished buildings and general air of untidy new» ness ; but there is less bustie, and the colour is different, for instead of our preâ€" vailing white, most of the houses are unpainted and weatherâ€"stained, giving a generally dark effect, Very different, too, i# the population, with its soldiers and officials in uniform, its peasants (for the lower classes in the Russian towns wtill ere peasants, long bearded, redâ€"shirted), its Tarters and Kirghiz, the latter of whom aea ant to iive in the surrounding country, peasants, long bearded, redâ€"shirted), its Tarters and Kirghiz, the latter of whom are apt to iive in the surrounding country, from which they come in to market. . The streets are broud and shadeless, with the tow houses, often of logs, straggling along loosely on either ride ; and carriages for hire abound, as the distances are considerâ€" wble, and the Russians are not fond of walking. Besides the churches, most of the chief buildings are public ones, such as oflicial residences, schools, the offices of the railway, etc, The shops are small, biit apparently not ill supplied. _ Here and there one may see the omnipresent biâ€" itwelf is at present finishe Cheliabinsk to Onsk, a exhaustion of the soll Of RTOMLNM M CMT population till the lands of the Mir or commune are overcrowded; but perhaps the chief one is the restiess, wandering spirit o characteristic of the Russian peasant,. â€" The extension of railways must stimulate this emigration, Such of the stations as were finished were satisfactory brick buildings, with granite waterâ€"towers near by, and each with its embryo garden. At each th sight was the same. Knowing that the wait would be a long one, the passengers atreamed out for air, exercise, and retreshâ€" ments. Three times a day we came to & buffet with very tolerable food, and more than ample leisare was allowed for a meal, while at every stoppingâ€"place there was & great samovar filled with boiling water from which anyone could fiil his precious lu;-kcule gratis, _ A little way aif, kept T i A Oe ol e The thoroughly successiul man is he whose labor is of real value to the communâ€" ity, who has formed the habit of doing what is before him, unhesitatingly and manfully quite lndgendeutly of whether he likes it or not, e has chosen his work,and takes it just as it comes ; if it chance to be agreeâ€" able so much the better ; if not, his energies do not swerve.© His question is, not * How amuch shall I enjoy doing this piece of wo‘k, or carrying out this new plan in my, ‘businees *" buz"‘i: this work necessary? Is W wise?" No question of like orl ‘comes in to interfere. There are but two towns of auy imporâ€" tance along the routeâ€"Kurgan and Petroâ€" pavlovskâ€"each with some ten to filteen thousand inhabitants. â€" The whole way lies through a prairie broken by continual patches of woods, or now and then a salt lake. The soil seemed to be a layer of black earth over sand,the degree of fertility varying with the thickness of the layer and its intermixsure with sand. It can be fear fully cold here in winter, and must often be equally hot and dusty in summer ; but, thanks to cloudy weather and occasional showers, we, at least, had nothing to comâ€" plain of in this respect. â€" Thus for two days und nights we jogged along until, on the third morning, . we saW before us, rolling northward, the great river Irtysh, partly spanned by m fine halfâ€"finished railway bridge. â€" By us weresome wooden barracks for a temporary station,and in the distance four or five ‘miles off, the roofs and domes of the capital of this region, the city of Omsk. TS m T W ie C1 C c draize oo ut this respectful distance by the orders of the gendarme who paced the platform, atood a crowd of peasants with wild strawberries, or fish, or vegetables, . or kumise, for sale, and from them the emiâ€" grants seemed to get most of their food, which they eked out with much tea. . The town or village that the station represented was frequently not in right, and in no case very close. instead, there stood nondeâ€" seript vehicles to carry any possible visitor to it. wbout were goodâ€"naturedâ€"looking Kirghiz men of a marked Mongolian type, aud clad in sheepskins, with the wool inside, . They are largely still in a pastoral state, and own much of the land in this region, to the disâ€" content of the more pushing western intruder. Duty and Success AMONG THE LOAFKRS TRANSâ€"SIBERIAN eyond the mountains im, but not in Siberia vernment of Orenburg and open from Sash and Door Factory Lumber, Shingles and Lath always Is still in his old stand Office, where h. HARKNESS SHOP : HEAVY AND :LIGHT HARNESS, | SADDLES, BRIDLES, | COLLARS, Etc. New Stock Horse Blankets. *==** whips, Combs, Brushes, Bits, Ftt, i. Repairing promptiy attended to. Firstâ€"class workmanship guaranteed D The Mother Heart Touched Although a rubber horseshoo has been fnvented for use on icy pavements, nothing sitis‘actory scems to have been found for horses compelled to travel upon wet asphalt. Jt is noticeable that horees accustomed to asphalt learn the trick of stepping carefully, as men learn to walk with stiffened ankles on ice. | 16 Durham, Jan 26, What will touch the mother heart more deeply than the illness of her little ones ? She may suffer much herself, and women are sorely afflicted with many ills, but she will endure wll this, however often, without a murmur; but there can be no disâ€" *Or guising her anxiety when the little ones of the home are stricken down with sickness. â€" And how many puny children there are ! We talk of the bloom of youth, but thousands of children know not of it. Others may romp, but they are weaklings. Mothers, would you have your loved ones strong and healthy ? Would you enjoy good health yourâ€" self}? Then use South American Nervine Tonic ; there is no doubting its efficacious properties. Investigate from a scientific or & common sense point of view and you will find that nearly all disease has its start in the nerve centres of the body. The mission of South American Nervine is to at once reach the nerve , centres, which are to the. whole body ‘ what the mainspring of the watch is ; to every other part of the timepioce.é Pelieve SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE Saved the Lives of Two of My Children."â€" Puny Children Grow Fat and Strongâ€" Tired and Ailing Women Take on the BLOOM of EARLIER YEARS. : Sale by McFARLANE & CO., CHAS. LEAVENS, Jr., Hicmest Prics d stand on Lambton Street, near the Pon# where he is ready to fill all orders for Wholesale Agents for Durham flls () cagermaee AID FOL In stoclc. LA W G. & J. McKECHNIE Finglish Spavin Liniment removes all Hard,Soft or Callcused Lum; sand Biemishes from horses, Blood Spavins, Curbs, Splint, fweeney, Ring Bone, Sufles, Sprains, al Ewollen Throuts, Coughs, eto. _ Save $50 by ase of one bottle. Warranted by McFarâ€" Give me health and a day, m ake ridiculous the pomp 0f E merson. lane & Co. Science has made perfectly clear that the troubles that affect the individual organs of the body, have their seat in these nerve centres, so, without any wasteful experimcnting, South Amerâ€" ican Nervine reaches out to the seat of the difficulty, and straightening out what is wrong there heals the whole body. Listen to what Mrs. H. Russell, Wingate, writes on this point: ©"I have used several bottles s£ South American Nervine Tonic, und will say, I consider it the best imedicine in the worid. I believe it suved the lives of two of my chiidren. They were down, and notmng Ap pcared to do them any good until I procured this reme" . It was vory surprising how rapidiy both improved mu its use. I don‘t allow myself to tw without some of it in my house. i recommend the medicine to all my neighbors." It will certainly grant new life to all who are delicate, whether young, middleaged, or old. To not worry along with ill health, but dispel it, and brighten your lives by the immediate use of South Amerâ€" isan Nervine. CHARLES LEAVENS d a day, and I wili pomp of Emperore.â€" and Vicinity all We call the spc:i;l attention of _ Pos masters and subscribers to the following s3 nopsis of the rewcpaperlawe : 1. If any person orders his peper discon tinued, be nmust pray all arreages, or th« publisher may contnne to send it antil paj â€" mentis made, and collect the whole an cvi ( whethor it be taken from the oflice or no. There can be no loga} discontinuance unsl paymentismade. PURBAM BIRECFTCORY Sabbath Services : Sunday School an i I Cuurch Wardens, W Wihitmore. Mxs. Wixstow‘s Soormixg SYRUP bas been sued by millions of mothers for their children while teething. If disturbed at night amd broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and erying with pain of Cutting Tecth seni at onee and get a bottle of "Mrs, Winslow‘s SootLg Syrup" for Children Teething. 1t wiil relieve the poor little sufferer immedia tely. Depend upou it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures Diarrhoca, reâ€" gulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gams and reduces Inflaunâ€" mation, and gives tous and energy to the whole system. ‘"‘Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup" for children teething it pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the best female physicians and nurses in the Unmited States,. Price twentyâ€"live cents a bottle. Soli by all druggists throughout world. Be sure and ask! for *"Mrs %Msw Sxaere." Sunday bervic Subbath School p. m. . Preaching ing Serviceâ€"Th: And when you have 25 A Furitan Soap Wrappers #er and & three cent stamp for will mail you FREE, a har ruitable for framing. A 1i around each bar, . Ammonis coual. â€" We recommend it 48 and 50 Lombard St., Toronto. Scld by all general merchants ard grocers Give it a trial. It can mot be denied that outward accidents conduce much to fortune‘s favor â€"opportunity, death of others, occaston fitting virtue ; but chiefly the molding of a man‘s fortune is in his own hands, â€"Bacon very naughty man, £nG / WoBN not H peat his lauguage in your bearing for any Darkam Servicesâ€"11 s day of every month. Gen 9 a. m. first Sunday of 10:30 2. m. third Sun.Jay of SAUGEEN TENT, K.O.T.M., No. 154 meets on the first and third Tuesday: of every mouth. Thos. Brown, Com. F €. Hamilton, R. K. M me plainly s W. A. Ethelâ€"â€"What did papa say, Alg you asked him for me ? s Prise SUURRRTUY PTNTUCDOOOO EC fect treatment for all Head and Stomach complaints. They do not, as most ill# und so many other medicines do, gosd their effect or produ:eafcerconst.ip-.fio:a‘ and are nice to take, 25 cents a box, all medicine dealers. P POSI‘ OFF a. m., to Postmaster SONS OF SCOTLAND, BEX NEVIS CAMP NO. 45, meets in £. of S. Hall, Friday on or before full moon. George Binnie, Chicf, Geo. Russel, Sec. n & round woocQiâ€"D0m, AM ADRTC O which forms a measure for one dose, an mmediate relief for Sick Headache and Stomach, also Neuralgia, and all kinds of nervous pains, and another in capsul (from 4 to 4 of one in an ordinary do.ag which acts on the Bowels, Liver an Stomach, forming a never failing pers Stanx‘s which con Visiting brethern w W. M. Geo. Russel ing brethern w DURHA.\] L.O. L Meeting, on Th moon in each month Seo. hi raver D Save Your Ammonia soap Wrappers RINITY CEBURCH C. CHU ECHAN RP G. REGISTRY H Newspaper Laws. REV rtor tx‘s Powders, each package of contains two preparations, on ound woodenâ€"box, the cover o: forms a measure for one dose, an w.J. CONAO BA Y LOI For Over Fifty Years Monthly Fairs M M onday R. MALONEY, F and address _ FIREE, a handsome picul raming. A list of pitur bar, Ammonia Soap bus 1 recommend it. Write yor Afterwards CS rd Tacsday in each , W. B. Voliet aud T. M ay before L D SH W papa, Gariing O1 Arc Wm. A Anders I asror. noecay in CacD every &stOr A. Munr s from I Tt €RC4 10 2 O

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