West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 15 Oct 1896, p. 3

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we are now pr OMPTLy. antity of and the d; hundreds of cases Mz ted physiâ€" e that were ering use of to dis, were irâ€"no mat within your happiness, ;: address, Canada,. ED VICTIMS. NFIDENTAL. râ€"Did your W‘ -eauw{ol you â€"I abould say ® o buy ber any . afterward 1 »usands of 6 trus rem k in aboutl nIGC "“"'l' I# patient, when cure ‘rful how much w"s very little others are the sand and soMe "* _ Not a great '.-5 iked to the bosP! ned in a big fireâ€" and sat down, her hair. She soon died as brought in on j badly burned, WD° Shoge or talk. She soon **"" _ Ahe Great Efi(lifi R e you any weakness? UUE others it will do for rom an hopest opinion Free Tonitor®" (iiMastrated), om Mc KECHN NT. AÂ¥TaR TREATMASNT TEN CONSENT. s on« of the connt‘sss vieâ€" meed at 15 years of ago. I d spont §900 without avail, uins on my systâ€"m as my sexual and pl:g s a lnst resort to con menced their New !h .1 was a new mand, w\ our years ago, and now ecommend these reiiable outside sheefi.‘ ous Debility, Seminal scharges, Self Abuse, D. NO RISK. rgo so that all soon as I she itions. | CONSENT. PR!â€" n boxes or anvel«â€" ind cost of Treat= Uaands Of Ccases with “h ® true remedy and treatment. permanent curs in all us Weakness, Emissions, L."! nhilis, Emissions ricocele, Cured. * CHAS. POWERS re is one by 1 Or s0o ago all dflltgist{h@. Dominioy, 4; tired morni noam. d; excitable .:f" . face; dreams an loose; nleers; sore th unt of contidence; lack cough for ught im. ronm eontpn‘hun’ -& ure ut {emale suffra w hit‘s that, D tR A DOX R NO PAYI 8 SHELBY ST. ROIT, MICH. | |yÂ¥a>bmdl’aiflll _ You take a £ iavle terms W »y come to be In about nine mfieut. when ( much disgusted Fact ORDINARY. / Lath a CHAS. POWEEXS, 1 looke CURED! ago an 7". uk h for something UM in. â€"He was 4 ind when 35" 1 woman U ~s notbidg thing d disapp or 1P ‘.Sll-ula*' all After T aism is of is & f?lldw - $ “’i(b a. ‘ be much like se ~ ha old "Aczeâ€"/ such "‘! PENTIST RYÂ¥. Sence nert door Wast FOR SALE ts EDGg PROPRRTYT |leessen AUCTIONEEB"Ror 0o« 0 Grey. A;] communications dresed to Lwrasy P. 0 will be promptl Mitended go, Residence Lot 19, Con. { Towuship of Bentingls "!. iwud,ng '7' atick Dwelling Tilding lots, wil, : “" lot No, e arranged without delay. _ Collections promptly mado, Insurance effected. NEY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Interest Â¥M0P oue door north of 8. eot‘s Store Durhara {vENseED AUUCTIONEER, for th hfinty of Grey. Sales attended to promp and at reasouable rates. DAN. MeLEAN., T acted w Cmy _â€"~â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Ed« ISTRY orrior y3 T Regig,,2 "CSe*z#obn A. Munro. "“‘p.. * Office hours from 16 In the 7 JAMES LOCKIE, BSUER of Marriage Licenses. Augâ€" + honeer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Wâ€"Kiu Bt., Hanover, MoNBYT TO LOAN Fire Insurance secured, OFFIOE, ourr Gaant‘s Srom«. LoOwen Town, ONOR Graduate of IICIRSID AUCTIONEER UsSINESS DIRECTORY. n and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &o. *. 6. HOLT, L. D. §. NDLS J. P. TELFORD, h. . 3. ~~* is con, hi of Bentinck, 100 b‘m Durham, HUCH McKAY. irstâ€"Class Hearse. NS MISCELLANEOUS. JAKE KRESS t hKE o ap # .::‘;. ”"p.'orll'l 1 reon order$ hispeper discon ";:’::“ pay al1 arreages, or the l ."'-.”..u.nnlemln antil pay â€" y sade 108 dollectthe whole an oun! "'m be takem from the office or nob sag be 29 logal discontinuance anti ,,mmado. rson who takes a paper trow ’:.':,,’i”, whether directed to bi: i4 or another, 0" whether he has subâ€" or not is responsible for the pay. "."b..ribn 'ordeu his paper to be | ,.Ju a certaintime, and the Qubliobeé tiomes to send, the substriher is boun( ’.][or it if he takes it out@of the pos‘ jce. Th# proceeds upon he grount ) a mad must pay for what he uses,. ARY PUBLIC, Commissioner,etc., Furniture . L. McKENZIE, 4 Auctionser, for the County of m l“fl:h “ld l.milcbnon galn:. C nents for seles ‘can be made Ollles, Burkax, Or at BIG resslOndts AÂ¥rly to Jaxes Epor, Edge Hill, Ont, AUCTIUNTEER TAEJNG Promptly attended to. ‘ '7'. L&aW® . # ® ’p.?'mmo- of Pos isl ® 4 aal) ‘fl':):::;:”utho following s7 :v:f‘"b. ”m,.,.rlnu 1 & ~_s.sshispeper discon MEDICAL. DURH A M. Bes DURHAM \ of Durkham, County of ig valzable Water Power ling, and many eligible will be sold in one or more be found in his Old Stand , the Darbham Bakery. ost Quality Cheapor THAN EVER. LEGAL Restdence Durham Onk for » 11 acres adjomâ€" DAN. MeLEAWK,. B, MeCORMICK, JAKE KRESS. IX SUFREME COURT wirt e Royal College ntario. Teeth oxâ€" so of nitreus oxide c attention paid to ._Oiflce and Resiâ€" Office, y.614 . â€" Thoma: and An Inhuman Father at Cleveland Pursued by a Mob Jumped Into the River and Was Drowned. Just before dark on Sunday night Edward Wald, a ship carpenter residâ€" ing at 53 Mulberry street, Cleveland, Ohio, narrowly escaped lynching at the hands of an infuriated mob of west of horses, cattle, sheep and pigs, and | by the rapid purchase by the pea.sants| of their holdings. Not content with‘ this, Baron de Kallay is by the extenâ€" sion of railways and the erection of’ government hotels, ‘drawing the gold of the tourists to a country described as more eastern than Egypt, more beautiful than Italy, and cheaper to live in than Germany. Such a work of reâ€" generation may be classed with that of Lawrence in the Punjab, and could, | of course, only have been accomplished by a dictator, without whom in eomel form Oriental peoples can never be | held thoroughly in hand, and themâ€" selves never feel quite content. ‘ _ The task of bringing order out of such a chaos seemed a wellâ€"nigh hopeless one, but the ambition of Baron de Kalâ€" lay was to make of the united provinces the model state of the Balkan peninsula, an example of the methods by which the mergence of the life of the East and the West can best be effected. Realizing the difficulty of imposing wesâ€" tern institutions upon the diverse Oriâ€" ental tribes composing the population, and finding much of the old Turkish law excellent in principle, he simply added to it so much of western jurisâ€" prudence as was necessary, and then enforced it with an iron hand. The reâ€" sult of the experiment has been little less than marvellous, the province withâ€" in thirteen years having been made as safe as a city street, an excellent sysâ€" tem of popular education put into opâ€" eration, courts of justice reâ€"established and purified roads, railways and pubâ€" lic buildings built, and an efficient gendarmerie organized. Despite the free expenditure of money in internal development, the annual budget now shows a surplus under diminished taxâ€" ation, the population has increased nearâ€" ly eighteen per cent., while their prosâ€" perity is proven by the large exports the garden spot had long been given over to anarchy. It had passed under Austrian administration as the result of the Russoâ€"Turkish war of 1878, and Baron de Kallay received it from the Austrain troops who had enforced orâ€" der following the Turkish evacuationâ€" a province without roads, trade, popuâ€" lar education, in short, with nothing save internal strife, famine and bloodâ€" shed. Under the ‘Turks government had been maintained only to the extent of forcibly collecting exorbitant taxes and quartering soldiers upon the villagâ€" ers, oppression which the Christians reâ€" sented by savage reprisals, the provâ€" inces being thus kept in a wallow of want and, crime. of the Norwegian fiords. But when Baron de Kallay, a Hungarian, who had been successively a soldier, an author and editor, a legislator, an official of the Austrian foreign office, and secâ€" retary of state, at the command of the emperor began his reign there in 1882, of earth, with a fertile soil, a climate soft and equable, and scenery which adds to the grandeur and picturesqueâ€" ness of the Alps the indefinable charm No better example has been given in recent years of what a great adminisâ€" trator, with absolute powers can do, than that presented by the old Turâ€" kish provinces of Bosnia and Herzeâ€" govina. We are accustomed to look to England for the men we can quickly bring order out of anarchy, and make two blades of grass grow where only one has grown before, but the work of Baron de Kallay in Bosnia has shown that the British have no monopoly of administrative capacity. By nature the provinces form one of the garden spots HE ESCAPED LYNCHING. CURRENT NoTEs ve : €i i 54;%‘% “VM e Sn three tons of good hay %er acre, where now can be seen nothing but weeds. Pasâ€" turing has done it. fi‘here are thouâ€" sands of acres more of low, moist, botâ€" tom land, that were once excellent meaâ€" dows with a smooth bottom over which the mower could be run with ease, that now have become rou%h and bogg{ from the tramping of the feet of cattle, and the native gay grass has given place to some shorter grass like June grass and white clover, which, although good Meadows are, in this country, usually | understood to be grass lands that are | used for the production of hay, as disâ€" tinguished from pasture RKinds. _ It is the practice of some farmers to pasture | their hay lands after the bhay is taâ€"| ken off, and some even do so early in the spring. This is a ruinous pracâ€" tice and one that results sometimes in the complete destruction of the meaâ€"| dow as a profitable field for cutting hay until it is plowed up and reâ€"seeded. The truth is that the kinds of grass best for a meadow are not those best for a pasture. Take Timothy, for inâ€" . stance. Jt is one of the best of hay grasses, but is a poor pasture grass, writes C. P. Goodrich in Prairie Farmâ€" er. It is a bulbc/is plant, and the bulbs are near the surface of the ground where the tramping of stock injures them if turned on in the spring, so that it weakens, though it will not kill them. After the hay is cut or the | grass bhas become mature, a new bulb grows to take the place of the old one. â€" Out of this new bulb the aftermath | grows. this needs to grow so that the | bulb may become strong and healthy! enough to survive the winter and be hardy in the spring and able to throw up a strong and vigorous shoot. Our | native meagovn of prairie and bottom | lands produce, some of them, splendid | crops of hay, but will be utterly ruined | / by pasturing. I have seen thousands of | acres where, a few years ago, the magâ€" ; nificent "blue stem" would produce ; I $E en e mt EOUUY AAOIS C CHqITY | feeding of the latter. Barley straw has some _ objectionable features, one of | them the beards, but cattle thrive on it and like it better than any other |straw. 1 have never had stock get |sore mouths from eating it, but my |neighbors have, and it is well to examâ€" | ine them occasionally, and if any beards are fast in the flesh to remove them. Tt}fx sometimes make a very bad sore. ‘"The cows have cut corn stalks for roughage entirely. We have no silo, but cut the well cured stalks and mix tg)e grain with them in this way: Enough of the cut stalks are sprinkled with warm water to make one feeding; the grain ration is mixed in by shovelâ€" ing the mass over on a tight floor and the whole then packed snu%}y and covâ€" ered until feeding time. e keep two feeds ahead and tho heat developed keeps the whole warm that length of time. This manner _ of feeding is enâ€" tirely satisfactory. Where formerly we fed our cows three times a day we now feed but twice, and can see no differâ€" ence in result. Last year as straw was at a premium we used fine saw dust for bedding. We like it very well; it is far better than nothing, but I must say I prefer good straw for the purâ€" pose. As will be seen, where this manâ€" ner of feeding is followed there is very little hay fed upon the farm,exept to the work horses; and by utilizing the pastures at night when the weather is pleasant, this amount is considerably lessened from that required if they were kept on dry feed entirely. Thefi enjoy their night‘s pasture very muc and suffer no loss of flesh by reason of this method." to tide over the few weeks in spring after they begin to refuse corn fodder. Last spring pastures came green â€"so early that none whatever was fed. "Our colts are fed on straw, except weanlings, which, when we have them, get hay, as well as the young calves, and grain, and keep fat on it, and for 9ur‘_n'1ilch cows only enough hay is fed ‘"As the 1896 hay crop is about as short as that of 1895, it behooves every farmer to study the fodder question and see if he can get along without hay, for, if he can, it will enable him to sell what he has, and bay is almost | the only thing grown upon the farm 'this year which is going to bring a | good price. In many parts of the counâ€" try the crop is very light, and it would be not at all surprising if last year‘s prices were sustained for the coming one. Let us keep watch that no hay is wasted upon our farms. It is not always easy to avoid waste, either, where the owner cannot do the feeding himself, for there are very few hired men who are not lavish feedersâ€"they like to fill the mangers, even if half‘ the contents are wasted. _ It makes the economically inclined feel blue to! see his hay going under the horses‘ feet., is it sometimas Anas e e en oo t -WWM WINTERING STOCK WITHOUT HAY. "Our fathers and grandfathers would have thought this quite impossible, yet it has been demonstrated during the Past year that it can be done, and with no detriment to the stock, either." So says Myr, Rockwood, in Hoard‘s Dairyman, PRACTICAL FARMINCG PASTURING MEADOWS w t ho e 06 the proprietors of Dr. Agnew‘s Catarâ€" rhal Powder. This medicine merits the best things that can be said of it, for be the trouble Cold in the Head, Caâ€" tarrh, Hay Fever, or Catarrhal Deafâ€" ness, relief is so speedg and effective that it charms all. This is the view of the popular member of the House of Commons for the District of A}igoma. who has used this medicine, and does not hesitate to tell the people of Canâ€" ada of its g;at worth. _ For gsale all druggists, Let no one be surprised at the high character of the testimonials received %y easily occur if it is a case simply of exâ€" perimentinf with medicines that are not specially intended to remove the trouble in this direction. Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart is a heart specific, and will give relief within 30 minutes after the first dose is taken, and cure permanently, as many have already testified through these columns For sale by all Druggists Atlanta, Ga., has a house wholly conâ€" structed of paper. Mr. George H. McDonnell, M. P. for Algoma Recommends Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powderâ€"It Relieves in The thousands who suffer from heart disease will understand what is meant by Mrs. Roadhouse, of Willscroft, Ont., when she says: "Cold sweat would stand out in great beads upon my face." With everyone who suffers from heart trouble it is a death struggle, for it is hard tosay when the cord of life will not snap with this disease controlling the system. In the interests of human life, let all who suffer from beart trouble always act promptly, and use a remedy that is effective. _ Death may @ratitude to Cooumbus is refiected in 20 towns, if we include Columbus Landing, Mich., and Columbusville, N.Y. THE COLD SWEAT OF HEART DISâ€" EASE Is Dispelled in 30 Minutes by Dr. Agâ€" new‘s Cure for the Heart. Hardly any organ of the human sysâ€" tem play a more vital part than the kidneys. _A derangement of these, even to a slight degree, will lead to trouble that is likely, if not stayed, to prove fatal. There is only une way for the sistem to be rid of this disease, and that is by trying a medicine that will act specially, and is a specific for kidâ€" ney disease, â€" This is the strong factor in the great South American Kidney Cure. It is prepared specially for these organs, is radical in its banishment of disease located here, and rich in the healing powers necessary to complete restoration. 1 "It is my desire," says Mr. James Kerr, farmer, of Kars, Ont., "to tell for the public good of the great blessing South American Rheumatic Cure has been to my wife,. She had been a great sufferer from rneumatism for 25 years; bad doctored with all physicians, far and near, but never received perfect relief until she used South American Rheumatic Cure. It banished all pain in one day, and seven bottles cured radically. I think two or three bottles would have been sufficient had it not been for delay in securing medicine. I most cheerfully and freely give this testimony, and strongly _ recommend sufferers from rheumatism to use this remedy, as I believe it will cure in every case." i. o t l No man can outlive his usefulness; he may still serve as some sort of horâ€" rible example. Baron Steuben‘s services in the revoâ€" lution have not been forgotten, _ for tl‘lfire are 12 Steubens and Steubenâ€" villes. TWENTYâ€"FIVE YEARS A MARTYR TO RHEUMATISM. They are as Great an Improvement Over the 50 Years Old Etrong Dose Pill Formulas as a Bicycle is Over An Ox Cart in Travel, and Less Than Half the Price. Cinnamon Driop Coated makes them pleasant to takeâ€"being rurelfv vegeâ€" table makes them absolute y safeâ€"they never gripe and they never failâ€"40 doses, 10 cents at all druggists. For sale by all Druggists year‘s feed DEATH THROUGH THE KIDNEYS. w For sale by all Druggists ;¢ j3 ~"¢dium red and Alsike clovers, if there is a rank aftermath in |the fall, may bear a little pasturing if not wet, and will probably do no harm. But if it is intended {Y)r meadow the next year, it ‘is safest to keep the stock off, for when once they are turnâ€" ed on, the chances are the{ willâ€" stay there unti] late in the fall, and the clover is gnawed _ close to _ the ground ; and if the winter is open and _ the ground _ bare, it â€" will be dead in the spring, | and _ the farmer will be complaining of his bad luck." Do not turn stock on to VDNY masc on e Es ME For sale by all Druggists OoNTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO [ Â¥ _ O >aniwn. ~ Sor z09. ADAINE or hay. Of course a little paatunng in the fall after the hay is off an the ground is hard, will not produce i!)uch_ results as I have just described, lutt it will do some damage and lessen he next year‘s crop of hay to the exâ€" tent of five times tge value obtained by pasturing. ‘The short grasses that form a thick, tough sod are the ones that ffin stand pasturing, but they are not s e kind that makes the best {ay meaâ€" ows. Medium red and Alsike clovers l‘{,.there 18 & rank aftarmath in tha 10 to 60 Minutes. THE MEMBER FOR ALGOMA. Released From Pain in One Day. Agnew‘s Liver Pills, 10c. a Vial are Planned After the Most Modern in Medical Science. PILL AGE zr;gt‘ases. amount to nothing tÂ¥ F Iea t3 m N en %fii‘ EWB‘E >’L MBAE i For sale by McFarlane & Co., W holesale Agents fo r Durham andVicinity. What disease is more distressing than indigestion or dy‘lpepfia.? Some simple remedy may be given to cause relief for the moment. Nervine is an indisputably successful remedy for the worst cases of indigestion, because it reaches the source of all stomach troublesâ€"the nerve cenâ€" bodies of ours should be fooled with. He has nized that thex are luot:iiect to disease, Eut. by scientific methods, he has learned that just as the watch is to be |put in perfect repair only when the ma n-mring is kept in runnt“n:rder. so with the individual, he rem: in perâ€" fect health onl{ when the nerve centres are kept healthful and strong. _ _ Rierest allowed on savings bnnkâ€"cle-pomu of $1.00 tyd upwards. Prompt attention and everyfacilâ€" anafforded customers liying at a distance. A general Banking business transacted sued an? collections made on all points, ta n:ooetve(‘ and interest allowed at ral I A Wonderful Specific in All Cases of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Nervousness and General Debility. Has No Equal as a Spring Medicine. There is a great deal of uncertainty in the methods adopted to remove disâ€" ease. Doctors are not fyee from this kind of thing themselves. The poor paâ€" tient has to put up with a good deal of experimenting. The discoverer of South American Nervine takes too gerious a view of life to pla{ pranks of this kind. He does not think that these human Bouth American Nervine. The Great Health Restorer of the Century. Bickness Cannot Cope Witk It. Has Cured the Worst Cases on Recâ€" ord. Cures at the Nerve Centres and Thus Cures Permanently. _ _ _ _ PQINTS THE WAY TO PERFECT HEALTBH CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,000 *«*+____ Paid up 1,000,008 UNLIIE LWY OTHER MEDICINE, StandardBank of Canada TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVANCR CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprieton REVIEW OFFICRB, THECCOK‘SBEST FRIEND THE GREY REVEV DUNNS BAKING POWDER Thursday; Morning, FOR TWENTYâ€"SIX YEARS LARGEST SALE iM CaANADA. Head Office., Toronto. SAVINGS BANK IS PUBLISHED EVERT J. KE"‘LYI A(.nto uy transacted Drafts current you. In the spring of the year the est suffer from genen{ debility, g: blood, through neglect, has become int poverished, and the whole ?ltem gets eut of order. We speak of it as s spring medicine. Nervine restores the exhausted vital forces that have led to this tired‘ don‘tâ€"care, playedâ€"out, miser able condition. No one can take a botâ€" tle of Nervine at this season of the year without disease quickly giving way to abounding health. The moral is plain, simple and understood. If you would not tflm disease, then you will take South Amerâ€" ican Nervine, which will not tride with How many systems are run do through nervousness,. A stimulant q give ease, but it will not cure nervo troubles. Nervine has cured more de# perate cases of nervousness than any other medicine anywhere. And it dees so for the same reason that it cures inâ€" digestion. The nerve centres are de ranged, or there would be no vietims 3 nervousness. Nervine rebuilds s strengthens the nerve tissues, and Ioa: lktil (l!narvellon- powers in diseases of nd. tres. Indigestion exists because vital forces have become divease are weakened. Nervine builds u; nerve centres, from which come forces, removes the causes of in tion, and then builds up the health plet@ly. Jobbing of all kinds prom attonded to. muly Handâ€"made Waggons In the old stand. made shoes. Horse Shoeing Shop, [PRIME ALLAN McFARLANE «â€"â€"A T â€". BOULDIN & CO‘s HARNESS MAKERS,. Has opened out a firstâ€"class ALLAN MoFARLANE, SEE OUR HARNESg. UPPER TOWN. WOODWORK in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of for sale cheap. BARNES$ OIL be no vietims a _ rebuilds . a ssues, and ho&z i diseases of ear the { debility, K has become int hole l:ltem gets ak of it as s ine restores the that have led to layedâ€"out, miser _can take a botâ€" i season of the because : diveased builds up ch come these iea of indige® he health com» re run â€" do stimulant -2 cure nervo‘ red ?:.n dos 1ess n sany _ And it dees ir Ax

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