, We all the "mm numb. of Pu an“! I all Inburibouh unknowing " up.“ of tho newtpnporlun: . I, If n] pene- orden hie pep" "tton and. he mull pay all mm». or the men-her may eonunne to send it until pey- uellle dude, tad eolleeube wholeeuount when" it be taken from the ottioe or '"1 Flam on be no loge] discontinuance anti} vevmentiemede. t My penon who. “be . met, hour he put aloe, new" directed to hit nlle or “other. or whether hf been!» scribed or not in teeponeible for the pey. I. " baboon»: ordm his psi)†to be ','t,'tt', " . certain time, .nd the publish“? an no†to mun. subscriber“ bound to [my for it it ho taken it cum! the post ales. This prooudn upon he groiutt in u an an“ [my tor will! he um. In the Town of Durham. County of Grey. including vdnlblo Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building iota, will be sold in one or more bu. Also lot No. Cl. con. A W. a. B... township of Bentlnck. 100 acres adiotw hg Town Not Durham. FOB sun Tht EDGE PROPERTY. u of Guy. All communications " drouod to Luau. P. o. will be prompt] attend“! to. Buidonoo Lot IO, 00-. a Township of Bondnoh._ -- -- - - - - Oftho Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVER. . BUSINESS DIRECTORY. DENTISTRY. DAN. ‘McLEAN. First-Class Hearse- " ot Donn] Surgeons of Ontario. Tooth ox- .watod withou. pun try tn- an of nizroul oxide 'air, or unlined nu. ration!“ Luciano]: Pg', to . mm ot we whim! teeth. can. a: Rui- euoo nut door on at Port onâ€. you Loan and Inguranqe Agent: Con- S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Tho-m - Bahama. John A. Imam. Downy-Rom. one. houm from 10 q. I. to 4 p. tt, . _ LICENSED AUCTIONEEB, for th com, of any. In“ “tended to may sad at was“. in“. " Datum Ont voyancer. Commissioier Joe. .0“. "tuned “than. deity. Collection. promptly mule, Immune. enacted. I‘ll! To [ADAM “Iowan ntuot Inbred I w on door north at B. In". Eton Datum UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to. l All HESS. 'q'TA RV PUBLIC. 1'-uuoner,rte., W. L. MCKENZIE, MON BY TO LOAN. Buiuates.--Eing 30.. Fire Insurance secured. "MOI, my 9551331031.. Lawn Toma. JAMES LOCKIE, ‘BSUEB of Marl... Linn-u. Arte. , tion- for Conglo- of Bruce and Guy. J. P. TELFORD mum ttNlllttll .lll tlllllllilll ihe ICENSID AUCTIONEIB foe 00. oy PA dequo ol_tl_u-R9yal_Co_llogo Furniture T. G. HOLT. L D. S. HUGH McKAY. "ill who found in his Old Stun] opposite the Durham Bakery. MISCELLANEOUS. N OWIDGPOX' LEVI. meAXISEDGR. "comm AUCTIUNEER. Auction... for the Cult} of 6 .510th. "f "fftfettiortpley MEDICAL. DURHAM- DURHAM. KRESS DAN. Hm. D. mama]. Humor. CHAPTER ON CHEESEJIAKING. Fall-made cheese is popularly suppos- ed to be the beat of the season: It really ought to he, and produced under right conditions itgrenertutr in, but the dairymen has almost as much influ- ence in molding its character as the maker. As a eheese-m.turer I have " ways had a hard-tie-it-re-ima' dalrymen of this, many of whom never could be convinced, and consequently would not mend thtsirfautta, writes Geo. E.Newel-l, in Ohio Farmer. There always has been, but I hope will not always continue to be, soles of dairymen who motes to believe that it is a maker's business to produce good, marketable chem out of most any kind of milk. This misapprehension comes from a lack of understanding of right dairy principles which time will re- move. Under favorable conditions I have made the finest of cheese in thw tober, and under unfavorable condi- tions cheese not so good. In the first instance frosts held off late and feed remained sweet and nutritious. The skimming craze had not also turned the heads of my patrons, and they were able to furnish rich, pure milk. I have even made verrrieh, buttery cheese where skimming, extremely light night skimming was done. The milk was not set for rapid cream raisngi. being aerated before storing in delivery cans and afterward stirred several times. Thus perhaps only a third of the cream would be secured on skimming in the early morning, a few hours after setting: By quality of the cheese I am convinced that when this was mix, ed with the whole morning's milk, the common fluid contained three per cent. or over of butter-fat. This was virtu- ally full cream cheese, although the state full cream brand could not be us- ed upon it. However, it is Just ex- ceptional cases like this that have led to the belief that all fall night Aims are equal to summer full creams. Another drawback to producing first- claes cheese at this season is that in every dairy community there will al.. ways he found some who will] pasture their cows till snow flies. It hay been my experience that the character and quality of feed always crops out either in the manufacturing vat or later on in the quality ot the cured cheese. Bad feed will! make bad milk, bad curd and bad cheese everytime. Frost-bitten grass, when eaten by the cows, pro- duces thin, poor milk, which in turn iwild make aalvey cheese. No trick of 1mu1ufaeture can overcome this when due to such a cause, nor can it produce "nellow, rich chews from milk con- itaiuing less than three per cent. of "ur'ter-fat. The adoption of the rennet test stands foremost among these, as it enables the maker to do with accuracy what was formerly largely guesswork: It now remains {pr (lumen to be more generally cmvmoed t their highest mterests dengue! an .increased atten- tion to the milk quality furnished tao- tories. . We off" "awe suggestions at Ilium mediately' acted upon by dairymen for their mutual interests. The cheese.. maker of to-day is a great improve- ment on what he was ive years ago, and there has also been great improve- !!!th in‘the. vortti1sn during that timp. A great deal of it is better, and it might " he better if just a few oh- at 1cles were removed from the path. First, do not skim below three per cent. of butter tat. To do this the skim- mer mast leave thousands of pounds of whole milk untouched. Second. have a proper milk and dairy room Yjuet as you have a proper granary. on put in- verted till] pans over the posts of the corn crib to keep out the mice: For myself, however', I had rather eat meal ground from corn where a mouse had nibbed on the cob, than to eat cheese made from milk in which his mouseship had been drowned. Keep mice out of the dairy room! Also keep everything else out except the 'pure air of heaven. As long as milk is kept on the farm twleve hours or more before taken to the factory, proper means must be provided to preserve it pure. Pure wholesome milk only can form the basis of a first-class cheese quality. I think every eheeeismaktir should know just what each of his patrons is doing in the .way of feed and milk care. Suggestions of improvement that he may 12rikha,tvittut into execution Itil! tarngfh‘hlm wit ' just the quality I heartily wish that there was aful- ler a".dersrandjn and more mutual re- lations existing Ct',',',?,,,',," manufacturer and milk-producer. It must come to that before we can have cheese that are urtit9rmally good every day in the week. There iam't one farmer out of fifty but what has a granary for his wheat and oats, a bin for his potatoes, and a crib for his corn. Let me add that in a prominent dairy neighborhood of twenty-four such farmers I found only one who had a dairy room for his milk I, What was more, dairying was their main dependence, and grain, IMF tato and corn issue on?] side issues. The condition of this neig borhood can be duplicated in scores of instances in our beat dairy sections. It means that dairymeln have a work to do, a work which they have not yet generally un- dertaken. The lack of it adds another to the several causes that inNiure fall and winter milk quality. ow that the season has come when (lairgmen generally set the night's milk in cars, it finds no garticular abiding place. Per- haps on t e pantry shelves in the same apartment with victuals, on shelves in the kitchen, or on an impro- vised rack in the woodshed. In all of these places I have found crocks of milk setting in the fall ot.trtt year.___ wm gut-man nun With Just the utility of m11k_ that. tte want? should im- At one place designated "the milk room,' the pane were ranged on a bench in an apartment used for general stor- age. Two dead mice were floating in the cream, which I {'11de was not an unusual occurrence )y evidence of the verminonald aides. At still other farms dairymen kept their night's milk in the delivery cans, standing out of doors and protected from the rain. Provided they aerated it thoroughly 2 stirring or other means this was muc the pre- ferable way, as after such treatment I invariably found the milk in prime conditionufor e.heesyryu.riryr. . __ I cite these truthful instances to il- lustrate the disadvantages associated cheese manufacture labors under during the autumn months. And in spite of them all fall cheese is expected to be better than that produced at any oth- er_time of the. yeah! _ _ __ _ -- AGRICULTURAL when the give of cheese is low, and when a bet meat of quality wjlljgave a potent iatluenas in making it high- er. The main object, however, should be. to start a policy that will keep Am- snow cheese mvariabLy good for your: Itawoolisverycoaxsemndisua for carpet manufacture. Some of it imported into this country, where sells at a very low price. In referring to this comparatively lit, tle known breed in this countrypthe Country Gentleman says: The sheep, are plastic under "good management, and it may be easily pup- posed that an experienced shepherd might no manage these itieisp as to tM% eLimate this breed, in time, even to the very different life on a prairie. It is essentially a mutton sheep, but even this is the result of its mountain life and the nature of the pesture. ' his Litton,Uwear, is unexeelled in quallty, and is sold at the highest prices in the London markets, to which the tatted sheep, fed an roots on Enghsh {aims very often age pent tgfnsale. " Tiii)'. 2tr'aG"ii; $33G}; -afuimui, weighing 17 or 18 pounds a. quarter when finished " three yeqxzs 01:11 __ --- to The young lambs are considered to ex- cel all others in the fine (layer and ten- derness of the meat. Thus, it 13 a small] sheep, but yet it might meet. a demand for light carcasses here, if it could be acclimated. The fleece is coarse, loose and shaggg. and weighs not far from four poun 5 either way for the ewes, and an: to sew. on for ram. 7 7 ... _ The nose is prominent and arphed,but not so much as the Cheviot, wh}ch most nearly resembles in figure this sheep, batik smnewhnt larger. . , _A, "in; "raiGrTGrG"i'G/ large and get Iost,.resembling those of the Merino, makugg one or two spirals, as the age may be. . ' he ewes' horns are small, short,thm flattened, and not spiral, but only halt bent forwards and downwards. _ These sheep are exceedingly active, " might be supposed from their moun- tain life; but how they might succeed in our warm climate and on an ordln- ary pasture and under close control. Is a. matter for experiment, which must be said to be a very uncertain affair. We have never seen or heard of a cross between these sheep and the Mer- ino; and to judge from experience in the crossing of such entirely different breeds, the result of such a cross is a mere matter of guesswork. Not all of the men who have been interested in the petroleum business have grown rich. Cor. Drake, who drill- ed the first oil well in Pennsylvania. would have been pennilcss in his declin- ing (fears if the Legislature had not vote him a pension," something unus- ual, but very" deserving. Van Syckel. who first demonstrated that the' pipe line was practicable. became a paraly- tic and died a‘ pauper in Buffalo .Wil- Ham Morris, of the Kamwha. West Virgin country, known to all oil men as .the inventor of a drillingb tool. which' he ‘did not take the tron le to gain, died a poor man, and Joshua errill, who was the pioneer refiner, and was in the .oil business for 82 years. finally had tollismantle his plant. . CIGARETTE AWNrrNG. Cigarette smoking in Englnnd dates back to 1844 The great impetus to their increased use was can-ad bythe Crimean war of 1854.56. when numbers of mili- tary and naval .offiqsrts 'rlg,'hf this method of quoting from.the habit- Inat,a 3&1!me Turkey, Mala, Lanai: "7riirtair/riid legs are black or mottled and carver-ed with smooth hair, quite free from wool. _ _ _ . . Tho, back is broad an the way from the shoulder to the rump, and the tall Is naturally short and is never docked. It is not uncommon for the tails to be free of wool, or, '35 it is termed hy tht. shepherds, whirr-taiyyi.. . RUUKEFELLER THE HIGH. PROBABLY THE WEALTHIEST MAN IN THE WORLD. Ills Income Greater Than TIMI “the In“ or Entrlttntr-Wt" Me Ever Become I Bllllonulrc. Attention is once more directed to the enormous profits of the Standard Oil Trust by its operations in Boston and New York gas stocks, and the an- nouncement of the liquidation trustees that, they have divided 8 sum equal to $3 per share and a further sum equal to 87 per share. The capital stock of the trust is 8100.- 000,000, divided into sham of 8100 each. There are 27,000 shares still in the treas- ury, and of the outstanding shares John D. Rockefeller, the president, owns 400,- OOO, with a par value of 840,000,000, Mr. Rockefeller's share of the usual quarterly dividends this year will be $11,600,000, or $31,868 for every day in the. year, including Sunday, which means 81,828 tor every hour of the day. ONLY ONE SOURCE. - These figures represent Mr. Rocke- Seven years ago his regular income was estimated at 820,000,000 a year, making him the richest man in the United States, or perhaps in the whole world. This was nearly three times the income paid by the Bank of England in 1892 to all its stockholders. but this, the greatest financial institution on earth, has been in operation for two centuries., The Standard Oil combination has been in existence only M years, start- Ing with a capital of 81,000,000, with the Rockefeller refinery at Cleveland as the. basis. Mr. Rockefeller's annual in.. come is now placed at about $35,000,000 or $10,000,000. He is credited with the desire to become the world's first bil- lionaim., _ MONEY IN GAS. The Standard is understood to have {lust secured control of the Bay State gas Cornpa'ny, paying 8ii,000,000 to - __‘._..._,, ruin-5 'u,wv,wu LU Henry H. Rogers. also a. Standard Oil man. He is said to have cleared 81,000.- 000_by_ the transaction. feller's income from um: source. It does not include the returns from probably hundreds of other rich pickings built upon Standard earnings of former years. . It'ia uiaLTirii""'t7,i: outsiders to timate correctly the wealth of the in any. its ptembem. but SCOTCH HIGHLAND SHEEP." with a market value of $100,000.; mm of was? trust it Cannot Turn Back the Tide. The De man‘d for Dr. Agnew. mm. P111: is 3 Marvel. . up. ’thb? Old sur,' Esra. Sui'vinl of " the Jrittest" sud "Jealousy Ita ' Own Destroyer." Cheap to buy, hut diamonds in qual- itr-rbiniah nausea, coated tongue. we- ter brash, pain after eating, nick heed- pche. never cr operate Elemntly. " tr" in B via, . 10 cents a all drug- s]: . ԠEarlene by all druggista. ' STITUENCY. Mr. J. H. Metcalfe, M.P. for King- ston. talks of the Splendid Curalive Character of Dr. Agnew's Cater!- hal Powder. There is no small amount of talk in all parts of the country of the class ot peogle who are proclaiming the re- marka le results accomflishe by Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Pow er, for leading gitizens in all parts of the Domin- lon are using it. Among others who tell of the effective nature of this mo- dicine for' ontarrh. hay fever, or cold in the head, is Mi.g. H. Metcslfe. the popular M.P., for Kingston, the con- stituency represented for so many years by the late Sir John A. Macdon- aid. Beyond_a_1ny doubt t,.tu,rer,n,tt,ir is HEART FLUT'I‘ERING AND SMOTH BRING SPELLS. mu. "WV..- """.' _-t___-ev -__ _-*_,, -- a. marvel, radical in its effects, it is at the same time simple and agreeable to take, which cannot be said of most on- tarrb medicines.†-- . A Why, captain, 1 never supposed you would marry again. I'm only takin' a secon' mate, Bur. Quickly and Permanently Banished by Or. Agnew's Care for the Heart. One does not need to wait, if wise, until heart disease has developed to that degree that one hardly knows from hour to hour when he or she may drop dead. Those heart. flutterings that a little excitement brings on, fol- lowed by smothering spells that seem as though they would prove fatal,are simply guide pasta painting to the grave, if ready and reliable measures to stem the disease are not taken. A safe remedy is always tound in Dr. Ag- new's Cure for the Heart. It gives re- lief immediately, and even, without much of the medicine being taken, it completely removes disease. It is a heart specific, really wonderful'in its results, but it cures heart, disease only. For sale by all Druggists SIR JOHN IACDONALD’S OLD CON‘ ,,,w -"v .- wvvhl? .‘viuilv no MIMI“: he saw a light shmmg he toured out: Put out that light, them? One of the men shouted tauskt' It's the mum, sergeant! I dinna. care a tacket what it ia the urgent said; pit It ooh TRYING TO PLEASE HIM. Arizona. J?tsys--Ahort, Grizzle lhot Dem tar full of holed. ‘Algli ilt,tterltat's tll .r't'trht. Demp- “I cannot sing the old gangs.†said the belle. And the assembled guests inferred at. once that she wag gang to disguise her age, which was an uncertain quantity. It is a. mistake to suppose that pain In the back is the result only of a cold, and is more of a rheumatic trouble than anything else. It is evidenee that di- sease has lodged itself in the kidneys, and the warning is plain, if further trouble is not to be taken on, that the pain must be quickly got rid of. There is no remedy we can so completely re- commend as South American Kidney Cure. Knowing what it will do, there is nothing extravagant. in the state- ment of Count de Dory, who wrote from Neepawa, Man.: "During my travels I was induced to try South American Kid- ney Cure, from which remedy I re- ceived instant relief. I do not think it has an_equal."__ _ . . "WirU%s" {hit tower with the greaf wheel on top of it t" "That there is a windmill.†the farmer .expu.ain.ed. .1mt- J. H.Garrett, a prominent politician of Liverpool. N.S., makes for the benefit public, the followiulg statement: "I was greatly trouble: with rheumatic pains for a. number of years. On sev- eral occasions I could not walk, nor even put my feet to the floor. I tried everything, and all loyal physicians, but my suffering continued] At last I was gé'evailed upon to try South Am- eriean beumatic Cure. I obtained rt tect relief before I had taken hal ' a bottle of the remedy. and to-day regard it the only radical cure for rheuma- tism." .. / For sale by all Druguiet: 5113i"'About how much ivind will it turn out in a day t" A Certain Indication of the Lodgement of Kidney Disease. 1t.iehyrd--."..What makes you so sure that she will marry you t" EIarry-- "Well, you see, her mother and I have engendered a mortal hatred of each other." An old Scotph sergeant was going hi. rounds one night to see that all the Light}! were out in the ttarrru,asror"la Piles Cured in 8 to 6 Nights.-- Dr. Agnew'a Ointment will cure all cases of Itching Piles in from 8 to 6 nights. One appllcation PPs', comfort. For Blind and Bleeding Pi as it is peerless. Also cures Tetter. Salt Rheum. Ecze- ma, Barber's Itch, and all eruptions of the skin. 85 eta. Mamma-What do you mean by in- viting Mr. Rocker here to-night when every parlor chair but one is at the tWtolstjTer'ts t" -Daughter--one's tnou-er--we can use a. dining-room chair. “I took One-Half Bottle of South Am- erican Rheumatic Cure and Ob- tained Perfect Reliet"-Thie Rem- edy Gives Relief in a Few Hours, and Usually Cures in One to Three Days. jG. -iiiiririiu Drusgisto a EALOUS RIVALS l'Gracipus/' said the tsuqyper_boarder, For sale "by all Druggiata For sale by ail druggists. ME "is"h C (v., was um- Lau Me Exams" m: MEETING THE EMERGENCY, SCOTCH INDIFFERENCE. PAIN IN THE BACK. Bii i"kit NAUTICAL. - --- -_Bri9r u-u Lug in the tsarpusk-romG." “’3? Jtt.ract It9uyttttii Annual Bank!†bum- tron-acted Deane mud and 0011009102). and: on I.“ when. D-.. 9‘30“va and latex-out snowed n - “on“ snowed on avian but damn!- at 01.. trd upwudl. Prompt mutation And "out-“l- “mama cinnamon living u I dunno. ?yllli!?il2ue"2"2'11ust"t'"t DURHAM AGENCY. CAPITAL. Authorized $8,000,000 " /itl “I; . 1,000,000 RESERVE N 000.000 W. P. 00m. 600. Il., Reid, The great di-coveretot this medicine was posters“! of the knowledge that the seat of all Iii-en. in the have 'tentrea. situated at the blue of the brain. In thia belief he had, the beau-cannula and medical men of the world occupying - the name pre- mlua. Indeed. the ordinary lay- man recognized tit principle ion. ICO- Evemaa have that It! Itey, or injury age}: thi- par-to! Tho'eyu of the world "a menu! and on an? America: Net-vine. Ther am not View " It at B nine-(luv won- der, but critical and experienced men have been studying this medicine tor mm, with the one result-ther have .'ounl that It: chm: of perfect cum- tire ttuv cumot her “mind. the human â€can all huh to - tterutn.' In!!!“ the Mud cord. which In the noun- of they. no". - tm, “a -truqtts sun to New. Rm 3 a. nut Mndpb. he tn.- um; I new. nr “VM mum: “tantrum StandardBank of tah In the matter of (not! heat): tempor- hing measures, while possibly mace.- Cat for the moment, can never be lut- 'tur. Those In poor balm noon know memoir the remedy they are using Is slmp y . plum; incident in their ex- perience. bracing them up for the any. or sorcthin that In getting " the seat of, the L'd'll and In lurely cud IDOL-mummy _ttoette. mam omen. Gm THE GREY REVIEW THE EYESIIF THE [jlij' WHEN EVERY. OTHER HELPER HAS FAILED ff tEl A Discovery. Based on Scientific Prlnciplea. thai Renders Failure impossible. 1llt, LILEIUF llM, WHEEL†Are Fixed Upon South Ameri- can Nervine. Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery ' of the Age. t 1nmrtrtiar', Morning- THECOOK'S BESIFRIEND DUNN’S BAKING POWDER and Office. Toronto. llil'm' CD, - -e i--- V --. - I / 15t Fr ' tjr-is" . t . 7/ '..fy , ~ , m m 'rl:',')',));: ' "' . _ ' -r per-SEE'; a. T .. 4 Ib, ' - r" r A V . / ./ .-,triE 'ear ‘ J. M 'lr:?"" . t W', - " Blh' far. " f tMSI Ilgiilii Git, . "d ,', a, . J 4,3 r/ . 'ig' "_opp/,rrz.-.cc5,1tdi' x 6“?" i M. ,6? ' , - milmirNsG .A “I , (8 _ gs' jaiEiiR!llt f . _ x , t A 1"“ - i ' ‘ 7 c .; ( a“. "-u, 9 Ga i: _, = ' .3 "ie. I†Ct 55 _ "cs' "oy . V I A CT . ba-apo' Iron TWENTY-SIX YEARS. i.ruauiiaunr' CANADA. snares 3AM:- Mont. lungs: as: J. KELLY. Aytent. J0i:Rgilyfliy ï¬x , . . yr! "'Immx [Me with nailed [ream 11117, and with nearly ay W {that they um aimply to new (ttsat my be din-"sad. t-', l in NerTiate passes by the crud :medlntcly applie- its our?u ito the nerve centre. trom .0111!“ of the body receive t "iaT%itivi5iraord r of nerve fluid. The tr' healed. m6 of necessity “Id: bu shown the out" a Only " thsturngontent is III _ ICUâ€. nerv0usneu. sl, NONI. Hm complunt, at origin to I derangenent .n contra. Thousands ben that they have been (mu troubles, even when thr'y r so detrgterato a to but, t the moat eminent phyxxim loath America.“ Nervlne h Madttuarters an! cum! 1.9.. Th. cyan of the mud DI" n dhtpmmedln the Inquiry (mo 1 can I loath Ann-{can Nert"o pl. Ill-no]. It I. true, at 1" '" in“ can“... but they " you a: -tiors that it 40" m tttat# and foe jul,', Jobbing d all kinds piqlt tiiadd to. ALLAN MoFARLANl, l Prop“; Handfmagle _Waggou In the old stand. All a made shoes. Also _Ho_rso _§hoeing Shop, PRIME --Ar--. muss mun- Bu opened out a mam. __ r urn-m row]. an 003 1111an WOODWORK in connection. A futrt-elass lot of for sale cheap. 5; . - “UM" ;-w _- 9‘ flu/41W†mass on Mlillliit kn" It 't no r." Gie fig - "W“ In mtamped f h tIre water new Lo_uik (I My data' I ind," u M by my cm llWiii out. One h“ Fatetr in an ae t. lu tree can 1Qtd PM qettratme. Eih1%'t, w. “it: ha i h 1ittiy (Quinn - - "In it 'You Bah. an m- an?“ n Ae NEVER an: a h 'll22PteeiGei' After this "provin tinge was sold by sac drought it intandmg l United States. an think there wu n h punch-er was, .howe ro-cell the carruMre; enough. the next ow intentim n his pro likewin to curry it Robert Jeffrey‘. I d cwhmhr in 1"i','al L thin" in bad 'iiii'-,,Fll,r,? t - r t p /i'rJ,.t'ihHf I t origin o lll_cut any 'dag “Pl.†hunters. Thin hum: at the vehicle. “an: the denim of Imp- of the leather. prone- In. M to ittqlir our canoe. "T all out: the world," mad III. "mu 1Y,tryte .to (and. - all. u. as "es turn " deaf a: or trind to. Not up an (m by ooti,.dimestard to ooachmnn W“ Joe himself. aatd M w - . esBrrinqts, only Napoleon had ESCAPE!) ON TE d lad mum of! . hum to - rot bad dropped do, which were d pt-sd in the e In my. in an Hm I. of multum in In builder, M. .. nod that most. of imam in this card - and insurin . Ice WON 608893 kiln-all. It was a idering merely t in mounts. Desi niche of gold and mm the carnage, a are also found. besid unannou- value. four hpuen was l the Frame Regen At thin tum, 3 an? . ullock In}! an exhibit Ball, In Pioudill} amino: he got got t first has And then to {lock bought the cart IV. tor tho sum of cod investment, tor tl'rx,d 1817. it was shownnn had eluted 'ting the carriage, year no tower than I died themselves " . matter of tact, the which the populace run was so neat mt requests: Mr. it " every town in t And angular about to In It. VICISSITUDEB OF - wt of “Nut. a the yr, Glc. T‘an -_ - . ut PM; “an GUiiii Ar, bought It w at, wanton...†“-0 etc. . TwGttri,"t" f: f,fd,tirii1'iii.i.t 'l u. nip“. ttou. Parts. "admin“ “bunch: “that†‘Mthxt "rvvvuu. [Arc twisty-two Inn-m on an" . I h was}: ltd abou In an on. but†5...... hee-Eta, J" Me"'" w Blwr- - - mile which in nothl a.†Baiirr1 bs tttrand Miziot will. which WI. I uwrifio rata, draw: I... of Normal bu aJor, feeling ooutida â€was the "God I â€â€™W â€â€3 " if. I:- _A- III AT THE BRIT! no." -teeh"2 C' "-v u an: 1 1'22eqy7d'rr' Ill?- rm, ll Mahatma] I’ll-100.114 Itit-annual: 3.... Icon "new a I ttus, Mttor It than two and Ill!