West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 8 Apr 1897, p. 7

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NOT CURC OF YO PAY!T3 4 ese _ into prGâ€" o put the bulk bor on the best farm took betâ€" a these . places tasg tree® olant~ 0, IMPOTENâ€" TY, UNNATâ€" : now prepared TLY. y of Sash, the differâ€" INS T9 > 3 i‘if‘““."‘: E I e sheeting. i€ th always that all orders BCHNIR ) 444 ald Â¥3> & ctory. is the ive â€" for e more ns some 49 4 M seemed others a meal n â€" did is n sHCB at AD mar d at 181074 D1 eare Care the the iken Was D It ind fall ing Tlik D6 ealâ€" ind 1@# i1d ay 13 1 T at â€" â€" Handâ€"made Waggons We cal) the special attention of Por masters and subseribersto the following s3 mopsis of the cowrpaperiaws : 1, I¢ 2ny person erders his peper discor tinued, he must pay all arreages, or the poblisher may continge to send it until pay â€" wentie aade, and «é:ottho whele awoun| whether it be taken from the office or not Theore can be no legal discontinuance unti paymextismade. 4, Azy person who takes a paper trom EBhe post office, whether directed to hi: mame or another, or whether be has sub geribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If asubscriber orders his paper to be .topp“ at a certaintime, and the Qublinhod sontinues to send,the subscriberis bouné to pay for it if he takes it out of the post ofice. This proceeds upon ke grouni hat a man must pay for what he uses. NOTARY PUBLIC,Commissioncr,ctc., BUSINESS DIRECTORY. ‘"oaun and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Of the Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVER. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to. JATE KRESS, promptly made, Insurance effected. _ _ nONKY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Interest * In» one door north of 8. Seot‘s Store Durharo wa i . I iminl &7 14 LZ y3 Admisren, â€" soulcrton JOf surRent cover Township of Bentinck. L!CEN SED AUCTIONEER for COo. « of Grey. All communications adâ€" lressed to Laxrasx P. 0. will be promptly iltended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. 8, DAN. McLEAN. *‘County of Grey. Bales attended to promp ind at reasonamble rates. T Has opened out a firstâ€"class Horse Shoeing Shop, In the old stand. All handâ€" made shoes. Also )amns arrauged without delay, _Collections a. m. to 4 p. m. S a. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thom« *« Lauder, Registrar. John A. Munrrc Deputyâ€"Registrar,. Office hours from i/ W. L. McKENZIE, MONBY TO LOAN. Fire Insurance secured. OFFICE, over Gnrant‘s Stor« Lowen Town, Residenceâ€"King Bt., Hanover. JAMES LOCKIE, What do the coal men do in the hot weather, papa? _ x e 1t igkes thein all summer to figure «p tbeir profits, my son. BSUER of Marriege Licenses, Aueâ€" tioncer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. J. P. TELFORD ICENSED AUCTION®ER, for th JAKE KRESS Furniture HUCH McKAY. Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MoFARLANE, still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durham Bakery, MISCELLANEOUS. Newspaper Laws. WOODWORK in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of MERELY A GUESS. for sale cheap. DURHA M. LEGAL McFARLANE DAN. MeLEAN, RISE OF THE ROTHSCHILDY .« Myers Amschel Rothschild Lent Money at Great Interest to a German Prince to Fight Napoleon. The war clouds which continue to pass over the European borizon have directed attention to the money pOWâ€" ers of the world, for the "wherewithal" is as essential to the launching of great armies as to the launching o% any peacrful enterprise, and at the present time a few Jewish gentlemen are believed to hold the purse strings of FEurope. Should the great war so long predicted and so much dreaded HOW _THE FAMOUS FINANCIERS FIRST GOT THEIR POWER. be suddeniy precipitated, it would not oceur to anyone to suggest that these gentlemen refuse the necessary Milâ€" lions from motives of benevolence, and! so prevent Christian nations slaughterâ€" ing one another according to the most approved scientific methods. The rise of the family of _ Rothschild as @ money power, although linked with war, bad its root in an act of noble honesty which is worth remembering, writes D. K. Roy in the Globe. The story _ was considered a beautiful myth for many years, too beautiful it was averred to be connected with the nume of a mere Jew money lender. Alâ€" though the Jew is no longer considered a convenient subject to plunder, and at the same time expected to feel himâ€" self bhonored by being fleeced at the will of spendâ€"thrift Christians, he is not credited with an overwhelming number of the higher virtues. The truth is, ; sOCIAL JEALOUSY is one of the most cruel of the passions â€"cruel as the grave in fact. Consider the condition of the Jews in European countries at this hour. Are they not libelled, lampooned and insulted evâ€" erywhere. A Jew in Vienna at the present time is hardly safe in {requentâ€". ed streets, the head and front of his offending being an exceptional capaâ€" city for getting on in the world. Even Benjamin Disraeli, with all bis marâ€" vellous force and brilliancy, found it no easy matter, as he tells us, to "vanâ€" quish and overcome the prejudices of inborn feeling," not only in the arisi tocracy of Emgland, but in the beartd of the English people. The Hebrew genius for moneyâ€"dealâ€" ing has been manifested wherever the race has penetrated. It was the main ambition of Lord Beaconsfield‘s grandâ€" father to found a banking house which would outrival Rothschild‘s, and for a time it appeared as though his hopes would be realized. Early in the presâ€" ent century, when the Emperor of Rusâ€" sia required a loan, he applied in the first instance to Disraeli, and only placed it with Rothschild, whemn thea negotiations with him fell through. Isaac Disraeli, as we know, finally: wrecked his father‘s hopes of founding a great financial dynasty by his deterâ€" mination to devote himself to literâ€" ature. + It was no uncommon thing for Jews to change their names furing their frequent wanderings in the fifteenth and sixteenthcenturies, and Lord Beaâ€" consfield tells in his own picturesque manner that when fanaticism â€" drove them out of Spaim they took refuge in the Venetian Republic, "and as soon as they trod the soil of Venice they renounced their Gothic surname and, grateful to the y $ GoDp OoF ABRAHAM who had sustained them throug4h unâ€" precedented perils, they assumed the name of Disraeli," a name never borne before by any other family. + The Rothschilds in a similar manâ€" ner, dropped their original name, and took the name by which they are now! known from the sign of the house they occupied in the Jews‘ quarlers in Frankfort. Signs were then the rule rather tham the exception, and the house where they lived and flourished in the seventeenth century was disâ€" tinguished by a red shield, and in time Zum Rother Schild became the cogâ€" nomen of the family, hence the name Rothschild. The real founder of the family fortunes was Myers Amschel Rothschild, who was born at Frankâ€" fort in 1743. He was educated for a rabbi, but finally turned his attention to moneyâ€"making and banking generâ€" ally. His uprightness as a man _ of business won the confidence of the peoâ€" ple with whom be had intercourse, and also of the reigning Prince, the Landâ€" grave of Hesseâ€"Cassel. The times were stormy, and continental Princes became aware that their lot had fallenm on evil days. Napoleon was abroad in . the fuil tide of hMs fame and power. His marches were the wonder of the age, and have continued to amaze and fasâ€" cinate every gemeration down to our own time. The story of his campaigns reads more like the pages of romance tham sober history, and his battles like th» strokes of an aveng'uxg_{ate. C The dates of the memorable month of October, 1806, merely indicace the resting places of his mnqu"infi eagles in their progress from‘ one fiel of vieâ€" tory to anpther. The battles of Jena and Auerstadt were both fought and won on the same day, and the Prusâ€" sian armies as a fighting force were BLOTTED OUT OF EXISTENCE, and Napoleon became sole dictator oven the greater part of the Fatherland. Landâ€"Grave of Hesseâ€"Cassel was reputâ€" ed to be the richest man in Purope. The French said he bad grown rich by selling his soldiers to fight the batâ€" tles of the Emglishâ€"not a very digâ€" nified or noble way of making money, certainiy, but é)erhaps bhe thought with the Emperor Vespasiani that all money smelt sweet however men might come by it. His hoards, however, were 10 danger, for Napoleon not only claimed the territories he conquered, but the personal property of defeated Princes and States. The Landâ€"grave took the Jew of Framkfort into his confidence and placed 15,000,000 francs in his hands. The interest of the money was to be the banker‘s own, the principal he was to return when the Prince should come to his own again. By the time Naâ€" poleon and his victorious troops reachâ€" »d the palace of Hesseâ€"Cassel the bird had flowm and, although the palace well worth looting, they were unâ€" and determined to put him on his cath | but to their disappointment he deâ€"l clined absolutely to be sworn. It was difficult to know what to do. It was too late in the day to toast Jews on gridirons, racks were a little out of ; | date, and armies were not in the habit | | of carrying thumbâ€"screws among their | munitions of war. Persuasive instruâ€"| ‘menkts of that sort had been mainly ! used by theological bigots, and forâ€" _tunately for the Jew, of Frankfort Naâ€" : poleon was not disposed to borrow them‘ | _ on that occasion. (Enken f !_ _ The Landgrave‘s millions remained in Rothschild‘s hands for fifteen years or more, unfil the fall of the empire, when Napoleon passed to his island | prison, and the ly:".imoe returned to his ‘home in peace. Faithful to his trust, the banker restored the millions inâ€" ;trusted to him. ‘The interest of this _immense sum in the hands of a JeW at such a time was well calculated to lay the foundation of great wealth, [and the belief that the commanding opulence of the Rothschilds dates from‘ |this period is, we believe, wellâ€"founded. he made his plans â€" accordingly. _ Ib was said that he was even present at the Battle of Waterloo. One wonders whether there was room in his mind at such a time for any admiration for the contending Genthes engaged in |\that great duel, where "valour with bis armed hand administered the cup of death." Did the enduring courage | of the British squares make his pulse beat quicker as he saw them slaughterâ€" |ed at their posts by the French artilâ€" lery, yet remaintng steady and calm awd brave; or did any admiring pity move him as the old guards charged in obedience to the last orders ever given by Napoleon to ‘his soldiers, only to recoil broken and vanquished beâ€" ‘fore the general advance of the Briâ€" tish lines ? Reaching London before the result of the battle was known, he is said to have bought and sold stock which brought him a million pounds sterling clear profit.>_ _ _ _ 1 able to finkk any specie. Judging i4 impossible that the rrince could have taken it with him, considering the haste of his departure and the necesâ€" sity for speed, suspicion fell uron Rothschild, he having been seen f{reâ€" quently at the palace forseveral days before the Prinre‘s flight. Napoleon sent a commission to examine the banker‘s books and premises, and with full authority to force hiim to disgorge the millions su d to be in his posâ€" session. His le?l)goers were examined and his house searched without sucâ€" cess. A victorious General is apt to have little patience under such cirâ€" cumstamges. As he was known to be adreligious Jew, however, they proposâ€" € & That Nathan Rothschild, by his wonâ€" derful forecast of the future and powâ€" erful business brains also contributed to lift the family fortunes into promâ€" inence cannot be doubted. He foresaw that Napoleon must succumb to the mighty forces arrayed against him, and pinning hbis faith to the It was easier to tempt him by bore of gain. Every man is said to have his price, and if the bribe is large enough he is expected to find exceilent reasons for affecting a compromise. He WAs offered one'i%alf the hidden treasure if he would tell them where it was to be The position of the Jew toâ€"day is one of the womders of the century. The race despised in time past dominates the fiâ€" nance of civilized nations, and the rulâ€" ers of millions of fighting men do homâ€" age perforce to his ever present Yower. What part the Jew may yet play in the history of the world it is not safe to forecast, but so long as money is a controlling force in the world‘s afâ€" fairs he canmot be ignored. When the President of the Franch Republic and the Emperor of Germany concluded peace it was np secret that the Rothâ€" schilds were a third party to the agreeâ€" ment then made, and when the Veneâ€" zuela boundary war fever was at its bheight last year it was freely propâ€" hosied that the influence of the Rothâ€" schilds would be exerted to maintain peace. The Jew toâ€"day has his finger upon the financial pulse of the world. The despised people, who in time past with bowed backs and trembling knees seemed on{}y anxious to dissemble beâ€" fore their Gentile masters, bestride the world like a Colossus, and with the sceptre of millions dominate the Counâ€" cils and politics of the nations. Are women becoming more marriageâ€" able? An English writer flatters them that they are. The writer declares that they are not so ready to rush into matâ€" rimony, certainly, for their lives are no longer stunted and empty, and they are perhaps inclined to subject suitors to a little more mental criticism. Moreâ€" over, men are, happily, not so eager to marry young. "I think we shall find as the world goes on more happy marâ€" riages to rejoice our quality of benevoâ€" lence, for the reasons, that I have {'ust stated are deep and powerful incentives to hagpmess. If oniy each sex would more fully realize the honor done to it at the altar by the other! The ruicest, most chivalrous hearted men sometimes say that half their pleasure in a wife consists in taking care of her, yet one cannot belp agreeing with the saying of some writer thatr "a woman, _ in order to give her hand with dignity, must be able to stand alone." _ ‘The giÂ¥n is then complete, openâ€"hearted and genâ€" erous; a meet return for the honor, grace and reverence which have been reely paid to her." A Remedy Which is Instantaneous and Permanent in Effectâ€"A Calgary Reâ€" sident, Crippled for Three Years, Beâ€" comes Strong as an Athlete. No subtle or mysterious force could be more miraculous in its effects than is South American Cure in all cases of Rheumatism. _James A. Anderson, of Calgary, N.W.T., says that seven or eight years ago he became afflicted with rheumatism, and for three years it made him a cripple, so that he had to use a stick to get about. In his own words: "I suffered untold misâ€" ery, and though treated by the best physicians in the country, and Ispent a term,in the hospital, recovery seemed as hopeless as ever. A friend recomâ€" mended_ South American Rheumatic Cure. It gave help immediately and after the second bottle I threw away m{‘ stick. To-da; I am as strong as an athlete." Price 75 cents. For sale by McFarlane & Co., ARE WOMEN GROWING NICER sUCCESS OF THE BRITISH TERRORS OF RHEUMATISM A RELIGIOUS TEST ) KITTIE‘S KITE. As soon as the snow and ice were gone, and sledding and skating were over for the winter, the boys ‘began to make kites and ta‘ked a good deal about how high they would fly. Now Kittie thought that she ought to have a kite, too, but when she asked Charlie to make her one, he only said : "Pooh! girls don‘t fly kites !" And John looked up from the! sticks he was whittling and said : "Why don‘t you buy a kite if you want one?" Kittis hadn‘t thought of that, and besides she did not want a boughten kite. She wanted one like the boys But a boughten kite is better than no kite at al.l, and she went back into the house to get some pennies that Unco.e Will bad given ber a few days before. that you couldn‘t see it. Just about the time Kittie got so far away from home that she couidn‘t find her way back, Charie suddenly looked up dfrom his work in the back yard and said : ‘"Where‘s Kittie t Then there was a great searching and caling all over the house, and John went over to the grocery store, and had the grocery man telephone to Mr. King, the chidren‘s papa, and there was a great time a.l around. . Both John and Char.ie were crying as they flew around corners and down alleys asking everybody they saw if anyone bad seen a iittle girl who looked like she was lost. Mamma was nowhere to be seen, 80 Kittie pushed her high chair close to Papa came, too, and asked a great many questions and was just sending for a po.iceman to hbunt for Kittie when in walked mamma leading the little girl. Bhe had found her nearly a ha‘f mile from home. _ _Kittie was carrying a kite almost as big as herself. "I buyded it," she said to John, "but you can have it." And then John cried harder than ever. Can you teil why? THE FIRST DRINK. Two boys stopped in front of a saloon and an old man standing near, listened to what they said. ‘"‘Let‘s go in and take a drink," said one of them. "Iâ€"I don‘t think we‘d better," said his companion, "my father‘s terribly opâ€" posed to sa.cons. I don‘t know what be‘d say if be knew I‘d been in one, and drank liquwor there.‘" "Just for the fun of the thing, you know," urged hbis friend, "of course. we‘d stop with one drink. There couldn‘t be any bharm in that." __ 4 "My boys," said the old man, coming up to them, "you don‘t know what you‘re ta.king about. If you go in there and take one drink, you‘re not, sure of stopping there. ‘The chances are that what I‘m ta king about by a bitter exâ€" you won‘t, for‘ 1 teil youâ€"and I know perienceâ€"there‘s a fascination about .iquor that it takes a stron% will to reâ€" sist after the first taste of it, someâ€" times. Take the first drink, and the way of the drunkard is open before ou. Only those who let liquor:entireâ€" Yy alone are safe. I know, for I‘ve been a drunkard a good manjv years. I expect to be one til I die. began by taking a drink just as you propose| to â€"‘for fun‘â€"but £ didn‘t stop there, you see. Take the aavice of a poor old wreck -â€"avn;‘l that is, never take the first drink." Death Charmed Away Under the Spell of Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart â€"More Wonderful Than a Fairy Tale is the Story of Mrs. Roadhouse, of Willscroft, Ont. Where disease has effected the heart the remedy to be applied must . be speedy in its effects, or all may be lost. Mrs. Roadbhouse, of Willscroft, Ont., says: "Cold sweat would stand out in great beads upon n;y face, beâ€" cause of the intense suffering from heart disease. I often felt that the death struggle was at hand. No mediâ€" cine gave me helgI until I used Dr. Agâ€" new‘s Cure for the Heart. .In tlurtg minutes the severe fun was removed, and after taki.t% little more than one bottle the trouble had vanished. I know nothing of it toâ€"day." For sale by McFarlane & Co., "You‘re right," said the boy who had proposed to visit the sa.oon. "I thank you for your good advice, sir. »1I say, Tom, let‘s promise each other mever to take the first drink." e es _ "All right," said Tom, and the (boya clasped hands on their pledge. _ _ _ â€"‘‘That‘s a good temperance society to belong to," said the old man. "I wish I‘d joined one like it when I was a boy'li A Large Percentage of Members in the Commons Suffer From Catarrhâ€" The Hope of Fifty Found in Dr. Agâ€" new‘s Catarrhal Powderâ€"They Tell ‘Their Own Story of Successful Reâ€" covery Through This Remedy. Mr, W. H. Bennett, Member for East Simcoe, and fortyâ€"nine others of the House of Commons, have, over their own signatures, told of the good effects of Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal _ Powder. What the remedy has done for these Parliamentarians it is doing for thouâ€" sands of others in public and private life the Dominion over. _ With cold in the head it gives immediate relief inâ€" side of half an bour, and a little perâ€" severence quickly rids the head of all trouble. It is easy and pleasant to gse and produces no bhurtful after efâ€" ects. First Newsboyâ€"There goes a gent, Chase him. Second Newpboyâ€"No use. Just saw him come out of a barber shop. He‘s beard all the news there is. YOUNG FOLKS. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO For sale by McFarlane & Co., AWFUL HEART DISEASE. EASY VICTIMS. OPPOSITION. They are S{st‘em renovators, blood purifiers, and builders; every gland and lissue in the whole anatomy is benefited and stimulated in the use of them. For sale by McFarlane & Co. The Sanitary Burial Association of Tondon is trying to introduce a new system of disposing of the dead. It is a combination of cremation and burial. Within the lining of the voffin are placed â€" chemicals which will rapidly cause the body to réturn to its conâ€" stituent elements. The process is not so rapid but that in suspicious casesa of death exhumation cox'lss be possible for some weeks. In cases of poisoning the poison would be turned into an insoluble precipitate which could be des tected long after interment. Take Them and Go About Your Busiâ€" neasâ€"They do Their Work While You Are Doing yours. Dr. Agnew‘s Liver Pills Are Purely FOR SALE Tho EDGE PROPRRTY. Ministerâ€"I hope you began the new, year well. Eable, an undertakerâ€"Fairly well, I had two funerals. In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dweliing, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, w.G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjomâ€" Ing Town plot Durham. For sale by McFarlane & Co., Whoesale Agents for Durham and Vicinity The eyes of the world are literally fixed on South American Nervine, They are not viewing it as a nineâ€"days‘ wonâ€" der, but critical and experienced men have been studying this medicine for years, with the one resultâ€"they have found that its claim of perfect curaâ€" tive qualities cannot be gminsaid. The great discoverer of this medicine was possessed of the knowledge that the seat of all disease is the nerve centres, situated at the base of the brain. In this belief he had the best ecientists and medical men of the world oooupylnf exactly the same preâ€" mises. ndeed, the ordinary layâ€" man recognizedi this prinoiple long Ago. Everyone knows that let disease or injury affect this part of the human system and death is almost certain. â€" Injure the spinal cord. which is the medium of these nerve cenâ€" tres, and paralysis is sure to follow. Here is ths Aret principle. The trouâ€" THE HES DF ThE WORL In the matter of good health temporâ€" izing measures, while possibly successâ€" ful for the moment, can never be lastâ€" ing. Those in poor health soon know whether the remedy they are using is simply a passing incident in their exâ€" perience, bncln“them up for the day, or something that is getting at the seat of the disease and is surely and permanently restoring. | 40796 Are Fixed Upon South Ameriâ€" can Nervine. A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. that Renders Failure Impossible. Vegetable and Act Upon the the System, Diet or Occupa. tion. 20 Cents a Vial. Liver Without Disturbano to WBEN EVERY OTBER BELPM B TALD N COREH LONDON‘B SANITARY BURIALS. NEVER WORRY. Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. Ni > / i# z. 14 s ‘ 1 5; 3 I ‘ ~ fl“é‘i t ‘A GOOD BEGINNING. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont. taken for THE CGREl REVEV TERMS; $ per year, IN ADVANOR CHAS. RAMAGB Editor & Proprietorn t Paid ul; 1,000,00 RESERVE FUN 600,00 W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. Reid, A dornats, doetan, mitiers Uniies mmmin DURHAM AGENCY. A genersl Banking business transacted Draft# wuued and coliections made on all points, Depo# ts received and interest allowed at current Head Office, Toronto. CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,0006 StandardBank of Canada REVIEW OFFIOBR, GARAYVRAZIA Rterest allowed on savings bank dopos.ts of $1 90 tyd upwards. Prompt attentionand everyfacil« anaiforded curtomers liying at a distance. ble with medical treatment o6ft ally, and with nearly all medicines, that they aim simply to treat the org that may be diseased,. South America® Nervine passes by the organs, and im« mediately applies its curative po to the nerve centres, from which ) organs of the body receive their suppl 0f nerve fiuid. The nerve cent healed, and of necessity the orgas$ which has shown the outward evide only of derangement is healed. lalg geetion, nervousness, impoverish blood, liver complaint, all owe their origin to a derangement of the nerve centres. Thousandea bear testimon® that they have been cured of these The eyes of the world have not beeB Alzappointed in the inquiry into the ;uo cese of SBouth American Nervine co» ple marvel, it is true, at its wonderfu) medical qualities, but they know be yond all question that it does every» thing that is claimed for it . It stand» alone as the one great certain curln; remedy of the nineteenth century. Why, should anyone suffer distress and sick» ness while this remedy is practically at their hands ? troubles, even when thg have becom so desperate as to baffie the skill the most eminent physicians, becaus@ Bouth American Nervine has gone to headquarters and cured there. I8 PUBLISKED EVRERT Thursday Morning. THECOOK‘SBESTFRIEND DUNNS BAKING POWDER FOR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN YEARS& SAVINGS BANK LARGEST SALE iN CANADA. J: KELLY, Agent. 1 medicines, reat the org outh America® rgans, and im« urative po om which , ve their suppl nerve cent ty the orgas tward evide healed. lng impoverish all owe their t of the nerve ear testimony® ured of these r have becom e the sakill clans, beca 1,000,0006 #

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