West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 3 Dec 1896, p. 3

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CURFD rflfl and night loss ; ul 3 throat '.:“.?.;1_ ?‘fl.!!done« and old men can look baâ€"~; ood with a sigh of nch as "one of the boys" has sq trible sin againgt natoca C 48SHELEY ST. TROIT, MICH. Sealed ap pt J we are now Pl’epug PROMPTLY, VOUS8 DEEBILITY, SEMINAL WEA OD, UNNATURAL \DDER DISEASES, ‘> Cook‘s Cottom Root Compound Manufactnured by The _ Cook Co., Windsor, Ont, and Detroit, Mich., is the only known safe, reliable edicine on which ladies d in "ke hour and time Every lady who reads ested to inclose two postâ€"| s, with her address, for 128 :00K CoOMPANY, No. 253 Woodward Ave« Detroit, Mich. Cotton Root Compou.‘ 1 respousible wholesal¢ uggists in the Dominion id United States for One Sonâ€"-Mothor. ‘opose to a & s n n n n * > on boxes or anvel«= list and cost of rticulars, which we wil irn mail in plain. sealed N CONSENT. PRI~ routside W pose to a girl? n the riihg“lifl comth you won‘t need a8Y ad Arge so th * > > 4 CONFIDENTIAL MceKECENIEE FurnitUre M s1 on o (4 ysician, 33 years con e treating diseases of 1arge of the office. and ltcfi by letter or in ress our main office _ GUILTY \TTING NO LOSS. ed: tired m 2N H CWUMC3 NO PaAY, Lath a xmfi a fi Facto i any _'dn.u’ ire it will do for te for an honest iolden Monitor" kN WAVES. â€"minent authoritf ocean waves. &4 st velocity in * ved at 46 1â€"41 naÂ¥ i a. about 781 MWME oted the waves periods of 15 :ed their lengt® g a strong wind locity to be 36 cond, and in * wet per M #N ho_ur. “T! itemplati 14 ? weakness? [{ ‘Pavoute sheeting, D 0g®; no le and lni. D#ses; rest. at; varico. what‘s 0; lack of at '1:"!1"» and id vital L6 lod:'.w LOr Ad Way; x at O( JQ. LICENSED AUCTIONEER for Oo. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxrasa P. 0. wxllboprompfl‘ iltended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. Towunship of Bentinek. *‘County of Grey. Sales attended to promp and at reasonable rates. Â¥wg Goan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &o. Loass arranged without delay. _ Ceollections ___ promptly made, Insurance effected. NANEY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Interess : In® one door north of #. Seot‘s Store Durham DAN. McLFEBAN. a® Llud;rfl‘ D'P\lt]-R.gi, L M. to 4 n Handâ€"made Waggons ALLAN â€" MeFARLANE Horse Shoeing Shop, In the old stand. All bandâ€" made shoes. Also "BSUZR of Marriage licenses. Aue > troneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Residenceâ€"King Bt., Hanover, WrigY PUBLIC, Commissioner, elc., J- P., 1| LbLt, V TLLZ pyaiot." sucmmn 0o S.an covar y the JAMES LOCKIE, Has opened out a firstâ€"cluss First QFFICE, over® Q:A_n_v'u Ston«, Lowen TOWN, MSINESS DIRECTORY. MoONBY TO LOAN Hear *o Huear you h .Ym’ Barker !{eat did : |! | Acfiiprtbdyâ€"ps l;mm-;BTAK! NG Promptly attended to. JAKE KRESS. ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th for sale cheap. _ Jobting of all kinds promptly HUCH McKAY. JAKE KRESS l e **** L .z orhs 1 l:’o“:.,, or whether ho has sub ,..:in nlponniblo for the pay. 1. ,.Mm orders bis paper to be at 4 sertain time®, and the ynbli;hod »u004 to send, the sabscriber 18 bound P"{" it if he takes it out of the pos! pe. This proceeds upon ke ground , ) a63 mast paY for what he uses. MISCELLANEOUS. ssill to be " opposite the . L. McKENZIE, G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thom: WOODWORK in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of â€"SClass Hearse. DURHAM. mE _ Best Qualit Chea THAN EVEg, C der, Registrar. John A. Munre egistrar. Office hours from 1/ LEGAL A BIG SELL, Fire Insurance secured. you found in bis Old Stand a Durham Bakery. Residenes Durbham Ont a church fair at your DAN. MeLEAN. LaWBâ€" BREEDING LIVE STOCK. Breeding is governed by laws, some of which are fairly well understood, and some are only recognized as such by their constancy and â€"uni.formity, writes Thomas Shaw., Of the former class is the law that like produces like, and of the latter the law which controls or determines the sex. By the formâ€" er we are enabled to make improveâ€" ments practically. The latter we canâ€" not turn to any practical account in the present state of our knowledge, and yet from the balance or equilibrium that is preserved in the sexes, we can believe that the law which controls or determines the sex is just as much a law as that which determines the form of the animal. But we understand enâ€" ough about the latter to enable us to turn it to good account in our pracâ€" tice, while a knowledge of the formâ€" er has hitherto eluded the grasp of the profoundest intellect as to the influâ€" ences which control it. AGRICULTURAL Other _ influences sometimes operaâ€" tive, but not always, and which do not appear to be uniform in their action, may be classed as laws or otherwise, according to the standpoint from which we view them,. These include the inâ€" fluence of a â€"previous impregnation on progeny from the same mother and by a different male, and the influence or supposed influence of the imagination upon embryological development. The rank which these and similar influenâ€" ces should hold in the laws or influâ€" ences which govern breeding has not as yet been assigned to them, nor is it likely to be until there is more of agreement as to the measure of the influence which they exert upon breedâ€" 1t may be claimed, and perhaps with‘ some degree of correciness, that three laws stand out prominently so as to iniluence in a greater or less degree the practical work of the breeder. These are, first, the law that "like produces like;" second, the law that like does not always produce like, or as it is sometimes termed the law of "variaâ€" tion;" and third, "atavism‘" or the proâ€" duction of progeny bearing some poinis of resemblance to _ remote ancestry. These three laws cover much ground, bhence a close examination,of ail or even much that they embrace cannot be thought of at present. Lde lt may be memu.oned, however, that the first is undersiood much _ belter than either of the others, and it is well tuai it is so, for the knowledge of this and iis workings is the great sheet anâ€" chor of vhe breeder‘s hope, the rock upâ€" on which he must base uis hopes of imâ€". provemenit. ‘lhe second ana third of chese laws oftener thwart the eiforts oi the breeder than they help him, and yet it would not be correct to say tnat be has not in any sense profited by them, for be bhas. ‘rbrough the influâ€" ence of the second, new types have been evolved and these in tura have been rendered permanent by the aid of man, and through the operation of the law that "like produces like." _ When thus made p:rmaneni, these new types have in ins.ances not a few been elevated into the dignity of breeds, ‘The third law, thougn it may frequently bhave proved a lnorn in the side of the breedâ€" er, has not been an unmixed evil, for while it may have been, yea has been, the medium of the transmission of unâ€" desirable characters possessed by a reâ€" mote ancesiry, we can believe that it has been the medium, also, of the transâ€" mission of desirable characters _ that may have been possessed by these, as for instance, stamina and prolificacy, and even good milking properties. So long as these laws are operative, just so long will breeding have in it many elements of uncertainty, unless indeed, that time should come when all governing laws appertaining to the subject come to be well understood, But notwithstanding these uncertain elements, a judicious and faithful apâ€" plication of what is known ott_th? p‘rin- ennen e ie es B d E ciplas apperiaining to the first law, will insure success in practice that may be regarded as at last fairly uniform and unvarying. A knowledge then of all thai is known of the workings of the first law is greatly essential toa markâ€" ed degree of success on the part of those engaged in breeding. Some of the influences that modity the action of these laws we know, while many of them are yet hidden from us. . Of these influences, selection is one of the more important. _ It bears most directâ€" ly on the first law, and it may bear directly also on the second and third. A second influence is the care givâ€" en and the food provided. . This comâ€" bined influence, like the former, is greatly important,. _ No matter what the line of breeding, its benefits may be casily more than counteracted by the one or the other of these influences, and counteracted in a manner so comâ€" plete as to frustrate all possibility | of improvement, Cross breeding is a third influence, and so imporiant is it in its bearing upon breeding, that without a fair knowledge of the probable _ reâ€" sults to be expected from crossing, it is bazardous to engage in it. To do so blindly would be to run much hazard. It is peculiarly strong in the influence which it exercises upon the tendencies to atavic transmission, From what has been said, it will be abundantly apparent that the subject of the bl‘ei‘(h'.n‘i of live stock is one of the deepest that can engage the atâ€" tention of men. In fact, it is so deep that the foremost minds can soon reach the domain of haze and dimness when they pry into the many corners of the unknown in reference to this â€" great theme, â€" And yet what may _hLe_‘km‘vwn UIORMCY EBCOE POV d cmanano y d in reference to it has so impbrtant a bearing upon the practice of breeding, that it may be pursued with not a litâ€" tle certainty, so far as the general reâ€" sults to be looked for are concerned. While the lens of gtient thought is now more than ever being turned upon the subject of breeding, we are not to conclude that all that is known in reâ€" gard to it has been the outcome of modâ€" ern research. Breeding had made considâ€" ;.mblf'tprlfgm;u as an art bebl'i‘ehe the raelitish so. in Egypt. = triarch J.oofuvrv:n evidentlg a akfl‘l- ful breeder. â€" Several of the breeds that we now have, more especially those that are hornless, could not have been esâ€" tablished without a fair knowledge of the principles of breeding, more espeâ€" cially those breeds among cattle that are now bornless, But much more trogreu has been made in recent times han formerly, and every step that is now made in advance will undoubtedâ€" ly be securely held. With these ever gathering accumulations, we may 8000 L °_ ids ha:o to know very much more with reference to this subject, and we also live in a time when this knowledge will be distributed in a degree not hitherto thought of, so that the future is full of hope with reference to great question. The important subject of deep ploughâ€" ing is thus treated of by a corresponâ€" dent of the New England Farmer: It is believed that shallow ploughing is the cause of the failure of success in farming so generally seen all over the country, One of the great losses caused by the practice of shallow ploughing is that of fertility, experiencâ€" ed after grain cropping for a _ few years and which is so generally comâ€" plained of from one end of the counâ€" try to the other, In the New Engâ€" land states many of the farms have been wholly abandoned, and in â€" the West where a few years ago it was claimed that the soil was so very rich deep down that it was impossible that of the sun and air, so that it may be safely stored deep in the earth _ until needed at the surface where it will be brought by the capillary action of the earth and air to be used Bby the growâ€" ing plants. 3 ‘The ploughing should also be deep in order that excessive moisture may readâ€" the fertility should ever give out, but experience with shallow ploughing has proved that the loss of fertility is genâ€" eral after fifteen or twenty years of crop growing. Now this is an unnaâ€" tural result., . No such result ought to follow, but it is nevertheless a result everywhere seen and felt to the great loss of agriculture s The true policy of crop production will avoid this loss. The soil should be opened up to a good depth so that the moisture of rains and melting snows may be readily and quickly carried down into the earth deep down into the subsoil, before time is given for its loss to the soil by the evaporating influences ily pass down into the earth away from the roots of plants that no inâ€" jury may be done to the plants by the presence of more water than can be Great loss is often experienced _ in wet times by the presence of too much immediately â€" surrounding the growâ€" ing plants, and as deep ploughing loosâ€" ens the soil, a great deal of the loss occasioned in times of excessive â€" rains may be avoided _ altogether, while growth is promoted by the supply of enough moisture to be taken up and used by the growing crop. HORSE NOTES. â€"If you raise the right kind of horses the buyer will hunt you up. * â€"See that the shoer fits the shoe to the foot, and not the foot to the shoe. â€"The cause of a vicious disposition in a hborse is often rough treatment in grooming. â€"Too much feed is as bad as too litâ€" tle, especially when the horses have but little to do. * â€"The weight of a good draft horse should be in the bone and muscle, and not in the superabundance of fat. â€"Finely bred, intelligent horses are usually very nervous. â€" They are quick to notice, quick to take alarm _ and quick to do, . ho ts( g & i Snuni No CBtntit: i; â€"Never allow anyone to tickle _ or tease your horse in the stable. ‘The anâ€" imal only feels the torment, and does not understand the joke. _ L â€"The farmer who has the care Of young colts should make up his mind not to let them lose a. pound of flesh at weaning time. The colt should pass bis first winter in the best of conâ€" dition, and without a hitch in his growth. . i ty 4 ts €20 000 CCC â€"A veteran broncho breaker gives the following as a sure way to cure a horse of kicking: "Tie one of his forelegs with a rope to his hind leg on the other side. As soon as he starts to kick, he jerks his front leg off the ground and he goes down in a, heap. Two or three doses of that kind will cure the worst case you can find." called the account of the Marriott beâ€" quest. The bequests to the two archâ€" bishops and to the Bishop of Lonâ€" don provide that the money is to be be:.d in trust to devote oneâ€"half toâ€" wards the erection of churches in the poorest and most thickly populated districts in the metropacis, or in their respective dioceses, but so that no great{r sum than £2,000 shall be exâ€" pended in the erection of any one church, the remaining hbaif to be deâ€" voted to the endowment of such soâ€" cieties for assisting the fallen of either sex, or hospita‘s, or refuges, as may seem to be of the greatest puf)lic utility. The testator recommends to the atâ€" tention of the Bishop of London as worthy objects societies for the succour of orphan children or fallen women and the assistamce of seafaring men, and it was his express desire that the bequests show‘d be entirely applied within the period of six years, any balance unexâ€" pended at the expiration of that period beix returned to ‘his trustees, and apâ€" pied as part of the balance of this reâ€" siduary estate. _ ‘The estate has been eworn under £594,000. I wonder why fat people are so uniâ€" versally good natured? queried _ the apgculo,‘t:ive}}gf_der.-'__ a i 1. WE idys PeC For the reason, answered the cheerâ€" ful idiot, that it would take a fat man so much longer to get mad clear through. _ The less religion there is in a church the more oysters and ice cream it takes to run it. A HANDSOME BEQUEST. THE CHEERFUL IDIOT. DEEP PLOWING. A Bcholar‘s Struggle and Despair and His Violent Ending of Five Lives. Germany has a peculiarly German kind of wretchednessâ€"the > wretchedâ€" ness of the highly educated poor. Hardâ€" ly a winter passes without some schoolâ€" master‘s dying for want of the ordinâ€" ary necessaries of life. The neverâ€"endâ€" ing production of doctors of philosophy, doctors of law, doctors of music, and. doctors of theology, has filled the ofâ€" fices of the Church and State and school to overflowing. So around the fringe of official life the whole length and breadth of the empire there hangs a hungry, poorly clad, disheartened, and embittered contingent of Ph. D.‘s, L. L.D.‘s, and other less betitled scholars. If a man wished to write a dark page in the everyday life of the German peoâ€" ple toâ€"day, he would need only to reâ€" cord the suicides of men who were trainâ€" ed to fill high places that never ware left vacant, or were left behind in the mighty struggle of university graduâ€" ates for offices which would yield them the unbuttered bread of life. If any person wishes to learn how bitter is the end of one of these unâ€" employed scholars he should read the story of Paul Eulenburg, doctor of jurâ€" isprudence, who took his life in Blaseâ€" witz three weeks ago. He was the son of a Berlin professor of medicine. He married twelve years ago and lived in unmarred ‘happiness with his wife. He bad three childrem, 9, 5, and 2 1â€"2 years old, all girls. He had written much for magazines and newspapers, ‘had pubâ€" lished several modest books, and had turned his hand to one play, " Our Bisâ€" marck," which was presented repeatâ€" edly in small Baxon towns last winâ€" ter. He and nis wife lived in a flat in Blasewitz, and were supposed to eke out a fairly decent living with his earnâ€" ings in literature. They belonged toall the local societies, such . as abound. in a German town of Blasewitz‘s size, seemed cheerful and comfortable, and for some time paid their debts with exemplary promptness. $ Then Eulenburg began to put off his creditors. _ His income grew smaller, and he made the most desperate efâ€" fort to increase it by tutoring, by writâ€" ing, bly copying, and by odd jobs at law. in Germany such efforts are doomed to failure ; the man who makes them finds every avenue crowded heâ€" yond the possibility of admitting the casual struggler. _ e C e o NO ROOM FOR HIM IN GERMANY. es Amiy® Naddady â€"acpanr t On Oct. 10 a tradesman came to Eulâ€" enburg with a bill for $12.50. Eulenâ€" burg pawned part of his furniture and paid it. Then came another bill for $8, another for $3, and still others that must be é)aid from the proceeds of furâ€" ther pledges. Finally a bill for 70 cents found him at the end of all his resources. He locked the _ doors and windows of his flat; he did not open them to the man who called for his 70 cents. This creditor got an order from a court to enable iim to seize part of Eulenburg‘s furniture. H:a Jand d CC on o ~Aoone w c l ee at T 0 e m 7 9 T a court officer broke in the front door of the Eulenburg flat. In the first room they found the three children in a row on the floor, their faces waxen white and cold, and a sheet tucked evenâ€" }f' under their chins. All three were ead. In the next room lay Eulenburg and his wife on the bed, both waxen white, as were the children, and dead in each other‘s arms. _ _ d pta: Dr. Eulenburg left a note saying that the struggle for a chance to earn his bread had become h(?eless. He had poisoned the children, his wife, and himâ€" self with grussio acid. The tradesman found his 70 cents in a little nickel pile on the bureau, accompanied with a copy of the bill. The janitress found her month‘s %ay in an envelope addressed to her. Eulenburg had paid his last debt. He gave up the struggle, just even with the world, which had nothing for him, as he had nothing for it. A NOVEL SOCIETY. These mysterious capital letters,(S. P.H.D.) stand for society for the Preâ€" vention of Hereditary Blsease s. It is not a medical association, as you would naturally think, whose members are baldâ€"headed and wear spectacles and Fuep through microscopes on the hunt or bacilli. Far from it. The members are young and marriageable women who‘ solemnly promise not to become the wives of men who have any herediâ€" tary taint. The first article in the constitution of the S. P. H. D. contains an obvious j,ruthâ€"'_'\Ve believe it to be a crime against society and future geneâ€" rations for certain persons to marry." That whisky‘s fifteen years old, whisâ€" pered the bartender. uqs & EmE ds EE EeX use ECC 7 C en e ced i Lookey here, answered his rural cusâ€" tomer, don‘t try fur to git funny with me. You kin jist pour that thar stuff back inter th‘ bottle an‘ I‘ll go whar i kin git suthin‘ fresh. Smithâ€"I see that a bullet from one of those new rifles will kill six men, standing one behind another. Thompson â€"You don‘t say? In that case, a man might just as well go to the front. Hay Fever and Catarrh Relieved in 10 to 60 Minutesâ€"One Short Puff of the breath through the Blower, supâ€" plied with each bottle of Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this Powder over the surface of the nasal passages. Painless and delightful to use. _ It treâ€" lieves instantly, and permanently cures Catarrh, Hay Fever, Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis and Deainess. For sale by all Druggists Over 1,250,000 acres of the earth‘s surâ€" {;ce is devoted to the cultivation of toâ€" eco. y@t EU EOV IAamrRTT MREeh PCw y ce 9 in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon | the system is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. _ The first dose greatly benefits. 75 cents. Rheumatism Cured in a Day.â€"South American Rheumatic Cure, for Rheuâ€" matism and Neura‘gia, radically cures Sir Adoliphe Chapleau, Lieutenantâ€" Governor of Suebec. has just celebratâ€" ed his fiftyâ€"fifth birthday. Heart Disease Relieved in 30 Minutes. â€"Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief in all cases of Orâ€" ganic _ or Sympathetic Heart Disease in 30 minutes, and speedily effects _ a cure. It is a peerless remedy for Palâ€" &tation. Shortness of Breath, Smotherâ€" g Spells, Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of a Diseased Heart. _ One dose convinces. _ _ £2% NoT TO BE TRIFLED WITH. NO CHOICE. all Piles Cured in 8 to 6 Nights.â€"‘Dr. Afgnew's Ointment will cure all cases of Itching Piles in from 3 to 6 nights. One app.ication brhfis comfort. _ For Blind and Bleedi les it is Erleu. Also cures Tett,er?%a.lt Rheum, Eczema, Barber‘s Itch, and all eruptions of the skin. 35 cts. For sale by all Druggists * A PUZZLER. I‘d !l!ike to ask one thing, said the cross boarder. What is it, pease? askâ€" ed the landlady. How do you get this steak cooked so hard without even getâ€" ting it hot ? 10 cts. Cures Constipation and Liver Its.â€"Dr. Agnew‘s Liver Pills are the most fierfect made, and cure like magic, Sick Headache, Constifmtion. Biliousâ€" ness, Indigestion and ail Liver Ilis. 10 cents a vialâ€"40 doses. For sale by all druggists. ~~ _ FOR SALE The EDGE PROPRRTY. Relief in Six Hours.â€"Distressing Kidâ€" ney and Bladder Diseases relieved in six hours by the "South American Kidâ€" ney Cure." _ This new remedy is a great surprise and delight on account of its exceeding promEtness in relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every 100 fartofthe ruinary passage in male or emale. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing it a‘ most immedâ€" iately. If you want quick relief and cure this is your remedy. bui Mortgage taken money. wik The Vatican For sale by all druggists. work. At least he felt his case was hopeless, for the best physicians had falled to do him good. He tried Nerâ€" vine, and these are his words : " I gladâ€" liy say it : Nervine cured me and I am toâ€"day as etrong and well as ever." Samuel Z}ya, of Meaford, was cur>d of neuralgia of the stomach and hbowels by three bottles of this medicine. Jas. Sherwood, of Windsor, at 70 years of age, suffered from en attack of paralyâ€" sis. â€" His life, at that age, was deopairâ€" ed of. But four bottles of Nervine gave him back his natural strength. A victim of indigestion, W. F. Bolger, of Renfrew, says : " Nervine cured me of my suffering, which seemed incurâ€" able, and had baffied all forn®»>~> meâ€" thods and efforts." Peter Esson, of Paisley, lost fiesh and rarely nad a good night‘s sleep, because o‘ stomach trouble. He says : " Nervine stopped the agonizing pains in my stomach the first day I used it. I have now taken two bottles and I feel entirely relieved ‘and can sleep like a top." A repreâ€" sentative farmer, of Western Ontario, is Mr. C. J. Curtis, residing near Windâ€" sor. His health was seemingly comâ€" pletely destroyed through l@ grippe. No medicine did him any good. "To three bottles of Nerving," he srys, ‘I attribute my restoration to health and strength." Neither man or woman can enjoy life wher troubled with liver complaint. This was the sentiment and fecling of W. J. Hill, the wellâ€" krown bailiff of Bracebridge. "I was so bad," says he, "that one of my medical attendants saii that I was dying, but, thank God, I am not dead yet. From the first few doses I took of Nervine I commenced t> feel bitâ€" ter, and am toâ€"day restored completely o my usual health." A resident of the Maritime Provinces, in the person of B. Jones, of Bussex, N.B., says : "For twelve years I was a martyr to indiâ€" gestion, .constipation and . headache. The treatment of several physicians did not help me. I have taken i few For sale by McFarlane & Co., W hole: THEY COUNT BY THE S608F THE VATICAN A COLD PALACRE, If it is the case that he who makes two blades of grass grow where only one had grown before is a benefactor Of the race, what is the position to be accorded that man who by his knowâ€" iedge of the laws of life and health gives energy and strength where lanâ€" guor, weakness and anticipation of an sarly death had before prevailed? Is not he also a public benefactor? Let those who have been down and are now up through the use of South Amâ€" erican Nervine give their opinious on this subject. John Boyer, banker, of Kincardine, Ont., had made himself a hopeless invalid through years of overâ€" Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who Have Been Cured of Pirs Disecse By South American Nervine. The 5n I ko Wiisped ad Uuvesaly It fppicatin. Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have Pronounced the Cases Beyond Cure This Great Discovery Has Proven a Genuine Elixir of Life. wdwes. ctam. .. S~amo Verdict Comes From Old and Young, Male and Fomale, Rich and Poor. and From All Corners of the Dominion. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, is the coldest palace in of its immense sizeâ€"1,â€" for c yB, ‘I| Newspaper space is too valuable to Ith and permit of further additions to these woman | earnest words of tesuimony from those th liver| who know just whas they are talking ntiment | about. In the common langua»> of e wellâ€"| the day, they have been there, and are "I was speaking from the heart. The dozen of my | or more witnesses that here speak have I was ; their counterparts by the hundreds, ot dead ; not only in the province of Ontarie, I took but in every other section of the Domine el bitâ€" |fon. Sout® American Nervine is base& apletely|on a s..entific principle that makes dent of|a cure a certainty, no matter how desâ€" person | perate the case may be. â€" It strikes s : "Fur‘at the norve eenters from which nows o indiâ€" | the life bliâ€"od of the whole system. It rdache. |is not a medicine of patehwork,. but ysicians ‘ is complete and comprehensive in e : 4 few application. W holesale Agents for Durham and Vicinity «â€"â€"AT THBâ€" REVIEW OFFICB, GARAFRAXA TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVANCL CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprietor CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,000 RESERVE FUND 600,00 W. F. Cowan, Gep. P. Reid, President. Manage StandardBank of Canada say that I am a new man." A shrewd observer of human neture has said : " The hand that rocks the cradle moves the world." _ How im» |portant it is, then, that health and strength should be made the lot of ‘the mothers of this country. The woâ€" ‘men of Canada are ready by scores to tell of the benefits that have come to them through the use of South Ameriâ€" A SoiInS doewen rdutons" Uniled Smaier DURHAM AGENCY. Agenerasl Banking business transacted Drafte sued and collections made on all points. Depos ts received and interest allowed at current can Nervine. Mrs. R. Armstrong, 0% ‘Orillia, wife oOf the colporteur, of the Bible Bociety of that town, suffered for six years from nervous pmtrsfi: Medical assistence did not help. * all," she says, "I have taken «ix .“:3 of Nervine, and can truthfully say is the one medicine that has effected ‘a cure in my case." Mrs,. John Dfi *woody has been for 40 years a residen! ‘of Flesherton, and has reached the al» lotted threeâ€"ecore years and ten. Three yearse ago her system sustained © sove ere shock through the Gdeath of a daughter. Nervine was recommen 4ed, She perseveringly took 1% bottles of ‘medlclne, with the result that she is to« day again strong and hearty. |fufie \ dreds of women suffer from impovarigh» led blood and weakened nerves. > " All vitality," says Mrs. J. ballis, of Brampton, "seemed to have forsaken imy system. I was unable to get ra« \tef from any source until I commencéd [ taking South American Nervine. The ,results are most setisfactoryâ€"greatofr | far than I could have hoped for." It | came within the way of Mrs. L. Ftapâ€" ‘leton, of Wingham, to treat under the ‘best physicians, both in Canada and !England, for heart disease and noervâ€" ous debility, but she failed to get any relief. _ "I was advised," she says, "to take Bouth American Nervine, and must say I do believe that if I had :not done so I would not be alive toâ€" | day." pierost allowed on savings bank depos.ts of $100 tyd upwards. Promptattentionand everyfacilâ€" anafforded curtomers liying at a distance. bottles of Nervine, and can trutb€ully Thursday, Mornizg. ‘ THECOOK‘SBESTFRIEND Head Office. Toeronto: DUNNS BAKING POWDER FOR TWENTYâ€"SIX YEARS SAVINGS BANK LARGEST SALE iN CANADA. "I8 PUBLISHED EVERT cREY REVEY Paid up 1,000,000 J‘ KELLY, Agent. % pmtnfi: ot help. * en aix bom tfully say has effectad s. John Dfi are a residen! ached the #i% nd ten. Three tamned © sove death of a recommen 4ed. 1% bottles of 600,C00 O 0 4 2

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