+A In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also Horse Shocing Shop, â€"*â€"â€"4 of Grey. All communications adâ€" iressed to LaxLrasx P. 0. will be promptl alttended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. i Nownship of Bentinck. LICENBED AUCTIONEER, for th County of Grey. Bales attendei to promp and at reasonable rutes. DAN. McLFEAN. C 0. REGISTRY OFFICE,. Thoma: . Lauder, Registrar. John A. Munro, ‘eputyâ€"Registrar, Office hours from 1¢ . m. to 4 p. m. The Major»â€"How‘s that $ Has opened out a firstâ€"class Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loams arranged without delay. Collections mm.,ï¬y made, Insutance effected. m@®NEY TO LOANstlowost rates of Interest m one door north of 8. Meot‘s Store Durhara WHISKY WORTH MORE. The Colonelâ€"Whisky is the exact opâ€" NOTARY PUBLIC, Commissioner, etc., BUSINESS DIRECTORY Buldenooâ€"lh. Bt., Hanoves. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. JAMES LOCKIE, BSUSR of Marriage Liconses Auo tioneer for Counties of Brace and Grey. ALLAN MoFARLANE, Jabbing of all kinds promptly Of the Best Quality Cheaper UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to. IB swill to be found in his Old Btand opposite the Durksm Bakery, MONEY TO LOAN. Fire Insurance secured. OFFIOE, oveun Grant‘s Stor«. Lowen Town, 2. person who takes a paper trom the p:l†office, whether directed to bis pame or another, or whether he has sub seribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If asubscriber orders his paper to be stopped at a certaintime, and the published bontinues to send,the subsoriberis bouni #o pay for it if he takes it out ol the pos! od:. This proceeds upon he groun< ‘ hat a man must pay for what he uses. We cn!! the specin< attention of Pos masters and subseriberste the following sy nopsic af the noewspaperiaws : 1. If any person orders hispaeper discor tinued, he must pay all arreages, or the publisher may contimue to send it until payâ€" mentis made, and collectthe whole axoun! whether it be taken from the office or not. There can be no logal discontinuance until paymentismade. ICENSED AUCTIONEER for Co. J. P. TELFORD ARRISTER, â€" soliciton cX SUFRENE cover HUCH McKAY. WOODWORKX JAKE KRESS . L. McKENZIE, Furniture in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of for sale cheap. Newspaper Laws. est Qualxtl THAN EVE @eucyes ols a & se m ~aeeeeienonconey uies McFARLANE DAN. MeLEAN, Waggons candied cherry. Bamanas and Whipped Cream.â€"Pare and slice thin half a dozen bananas;, lay them in a pretty dish, and ?rinklo with half a cupful of powdered sugar and four tablespoonfuls of orange juice. Let them stand in a cold place an hour or more, and serve with whn'gped cream. _ _Rhubarb Blanc Menge.â€"Prepare rhuâ€" barb as for sauce, stew until in a pul% sweeten and thicken with cornâ€"starc which has been dissolved in cold water. The amount of cornâ€"starch used depends upon the i’gicineas of the rhubarb. Pour into moulds while hot. Serve when cold with sweetened cream or whipped cream. This is delicious. 3 l"rult"ujlelly is delicious and is always served cold. Make ““‘i‘d‘ jelly from latin as is deaired and flavor it with gnm In the bottom of a wet mold t & hgu- of sliced fruit, either Eu-nu* R or oranges uw the gelatin over. This may be e in layers if desired, but each layer of jelly must be allowed to stiffen before more fruit is put on. Serve with cream. Diâ€" rections for making ttr jelly are on every box vf gelatin. It makes a nice dessert and is quiikly prepared. l with vanilla sauce. + Bamana Cream.â€"This is a simple desâ€" sert. Peel the fruit and rub it through a coarse sieve, add as much cream as you have fruit, and a pinch of salt. To one pint of this mixture put two ounces of powdered sugar. Beat this with a whip until it is light and frothy. Pile the mixture in glasses, and sprinkle the mixture in glasses, and :Prinkle blanched and powdered almonds over the top. In the center of each place a gar to the pudding, with the oggs: stir over the fire for two or three minutes, add two cupfuls of grated coâ€" coanut flavor with vanilla, and turn T iWiarntinindiei®® tullP Sn set i s + AlB ssm iad h ccnicn ~ 4d If the housewife is really desirous of baving Sunday for rest she can with a little forethought serve the Sunday dinâ€" ner in about half an hour from the time she commences to get it. There will then be no overheated tired mother who cannot enjoy what has taken her all morning to prepare. She can have it as early or late as she desires because there is no roast to il from being overâ€"done, and no :Eborate dishes which must be served as soon as ready for the table. She will have more time to spend with her husband who is away every other day, and if she chooses to go tochurch or to visit a friend, she has nothing to worry or detain ber. | A few desserts which may be made on Saturday and served cold for Sunday dinmner are bherewith given : Blanrâ€"Mange.â€"Two tablespoonfuls of on Bunday. As for freah vegetables, nothing is so easily prepared as a letâ€" tuce salad. The lettuce may be washed and picked over in the morning and left in cold water to keep crisp until needed. Most camned vegetables require onl ten or fifteen mmutes to cook. Freag asparagus if tender requires but fifteen minutes and radishes may be cleaned the day before or in the morning. _ tially fried on Saturday so that ten or fifteen minutes on Sunday will finâ€" ish them. Saturday roasts may â€" be sliced: cold for Sunday evening, and the chicken or turkey for a salad may be chopped on Baturday, ready for the dressing on Sunday. ‘There are canned lobster and salmon wihich may also be enjoyed On Sunday and which are alâ€" ways ready. Soups may be cooked on Baturday also, and rebeated for dinner ind of number of ways which only take a short time if partially prepared on Satâ€" urday, It is customary to ‘have a roast of some kind for Sunday, but this reâ€" quires hours of attention. If cold meat is not relished, some kind which may be fried will only take a short time jJoy it, too, for they do and cook just what they please. But the mother with a family of little ones, who never gets a chance for rest on week days needs hber Sunday, and if she waints to attend church she cannot prepare a great dinmer. There are any number of things which may be preâ€" pared on Eaturday. Usually the baking is dome then and there is fresh bread with biscuits amnd cakes. A pot of beans is prepared on Saturday afternoon and warmed for Sunday breakfast. The desâ€" serts for Bunday are also made on Satâ€" urday, and a few that are easily preâ€" pared and which are good cold are given below. When fresh fruit is to be obtained, nothing makes nicer dessert and is more quickly prepared. Served with rich cream and sugar any of the berries, peaches or bamanas are deliâ€" clous. Potatoes may be served in a work, either. "Let them learn bow," she says, "they canmot always have me with them." Amd the girls say they enâ€" dinner can be prepared. One mother who has two daughters bas found this an admirable plan, and she only preâ€" pares the dinmer every third Sunday. The girls acquire a confidence in themâ€" selves and learn considerably. Their mother enjoys these days of rest, and she does not worry or help about the in & home where there is help or when there are one or more daughters whoare old enough to help,. each one cain take turns in making the Sunday dinner. In this way the mother may bhave her much needed rest and a nice Jjust the most satisfactory thing to sit down to very simple Sunday dinner, but one will scomn become accustomed to it. preparing a number of extra or fancy dishes She must necessarily give up church, and when the meal is over and the dishes wushed she feels as if a day‘s wuork had been done. It may not be 1 SUNDAY COOKING. In most homesthe Bunday dinner is looked forward to as the principal meal of the week, and consequently the houseâ€" wife is kept busy all Sunday morning About the House. mold to harden. Serve cold, of suâ€" eE@S i three ‘‘ Na, na, Jeems," said the other; ‘"you‘re the youngest and the maist lively; ‘ou take a wife, and when I die you‘ll get my share, mon." . JCA _ COIG MHO LNCSL there‘s aï¬y }aah or take it all; you‘ll do A country laird at his death left his property in equal shares to his two sons, who continued to live most conâ€" tentedly together for many years. At last, however, one of them said to the other : : ‘"Tam, we‘re getting to be auld men; you take a wife, and when I die, you‘ll get my share o‘ the land." . SHIRKED THE TROURBLE. An amusing view of matrimony that presented in a story told of t Sootchmen: Mr. B. F. Wood, of Easton, Pa., was a great sufferer from organic â€"heart disease. He never expected to be well :lsfai'n, but Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the eart was his good angel, and he lives toâ€"day to tell it to others, hear him: "I was for fifteen years a great sufâ€" ferer from“heart (lhsl:::e, had smothâ€" ering _ spells, ton, pain in left side and m'e?lles ankles. _ Twenty physicians treated me, but I _ got no relief. I used Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart. One dose relieved me inâ€" side of 80 minutes. Several bottles cured me." For sale by McFarlane & Co., Nothing could have been more absurd, yet there was not a sign of appreciaâ€" tion from the audience that the great orator had been unconsciously funny. "I charge the British government with the murder of those twenty thouâ€" saind infants who never were born !" the birthâ€"rate in Dublin had diminishâ€" ed at the rate of five thousand a year fo‘l: r1’0\{‘1' yoars.Lang‘_.a‘qd‘ed. solemnly : O‘Connell‘s most famous Irish bull was delivered at a public meeting in London, and passed unncticed until the speech was in print. He asserted that Unconscious humor is not always apâ€" preciated. MWhen Herr Rickbhert, not long aio. turned contemptuously toâ€" ward the German ministers and cried out, " We bear nothing upon the minâ€" isterial benches, nothing but profound silence!" no member moved a muscle, and nobody laughed ; yet whispering in thunder tones were scarcely more ludiâ€" crous than heariing profound silence. that he was unconscious of the real cause of amusement, the{ laughed again even more heartily than they had laughed before. He was not ariowed to go on. The members burst into a loug guflfaw of laughter, which drowned his voice and seriously disconcerted him. When it was perceived from his look of astonishment "If I may be allowed to whisper in the ear of the governmentâ€"" It was like the breath of a roaring blast furnace, and every word seemed to crackle with explosive energy. Memâ€" bers in the benches were at first amused by his unnecessary fervor, and finalâ€" ly wearied by his noisy, earâ€"splitting declamation. Drawing himself up to his full height and speaking in tones which were fairly deafening, he shouted : Debate in the British House of Comâ€" mons is ordinarily conducted in a low, conversational tone. Not long ago a burly military member, who was not accustomed to public speaking, deliverâ€" ed an excited harangue on the exile of the Guards to Gibraltar, and nearly emptied the House by the violence of his shouting. An Englishman‘s Bad Broakâ€"A Case Where Unconscious Humor Was Net Appreciatâ€" Amother recipe for strawberry shortâ€" cake runs thus: One quart of flour; three teagpoonfuls yeast powder; one teaspoonful salt; half cupful best butâ€" ter; one pint of sweet milk or water. Bake in four shallow pans; fill with strawberries lightly chopped in sugar with a knifeâ€"not bruised but cut in pieces. Serve with the heated juice of one pint of berries and one cupful of sugar. 1 Strawberry Mousse.â€"Crush one quart of strawberries and add two cupfuls of gowdered sugar. Let it stand two ours. ‘Then add one tpint. of cold water, and the ijn.uoe of one lemon. Mix it well, and freaze without stirâ€" ring it. ¢ Shortcake.â€"Into one pint of flour put a large teaspoonful of baking powder, and oneâ€"quarter of a teaspoonful of salt. Sift thoroughly. Rub into tha flour four large teaspoonfuls of butâ€" ter. Wet with a teacupful of saweet milk. Bake quickly in a hot ioven. When well browned spread with butter and berries, whole or mashed, cover heavily with sugar, and serve hot, passâ€" ing a pitcher of whipped cream ‘with the shortcake cut in cubes. sugar and beat well. Pour in » pint and a half of rich cream and beat well for a quarter of an hour. Serve at Strawberry Whipped Cream.â€"This is not frozen. Mash one quart of berries; strain through a sieve; sweeten with threequarters of a nd of white sugar and beat well. 1933:;9 w pint hat‘s _ Here are two waysof serving the poâ€" tatoes cooked Saturday : + Stewed Potatoes.â€"Put into a frying pan a small piece of butter, a little Ersley chopped fine, salt, pepper and a If cupful of cream. Let this come to a boil ; add cold boiled potatoes cut into dice, and let the cream boil up well around them, then add another small piece of butter and serve. $ Potato Cakes.â€"Work into each pint of cold mashed potato a tablesgoon_ful of butter, two eggs beaten light, and salt to taste. Make into cakes; roll in E‘gg. then in crackerâ€"dust, and fry in butter or lard. Serve at once. ence in their flavor. Apples may be cooked inmanny\_n{a and are always aooemble when‘ nice i served. Instead of ing them wit the skins on, pare and core them. Fill the cavities with sugar and pour very little water on them. When baked tenâ€" der remove to a pretty dish. Serve cold with sweetened cream flavored with a little vanilla. If apples are tasteless as usua Ildul‘s the case so late as now, & little lemon juice makes a great differâ€" ingerni c A Codâ€"Sent Blessing. UNCONSCIOUS HUMOR. t1U ARCHIVES TORONTO Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment relieves in one day and cures tetter, salt rheum, piles, scald head, eczema, barbers‘ itch, ulâ€" cers, blotches and all eruptions of the ékin. It is loothmgh:nd qmetinf and acts like magic in cure of all baby humors ; 85 cents. For sale by McFariane & Co., carried out. "For yearsiliwas a viotim of chronic catarrh. L had tried all kinds of cures, and had been treated by numbers of physicians,il but no cure was effected until I had procured and used Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder. The first application gave me almost inâ€" stant relief, and in an incredibly short time [E was absolutely oured from this distressing and dmï¬uating lï¬lal%dy." James Headley, undee, For sale by McFarlane & Co., A MINTATURE BALACLAVA, ‘ U One of the principal episodes in the: fighting at Valestino was a mad charge made by a body of Turkish cavalry numbering about fifty. While the Turkish infantry stormed th heights from the village side to regain a posiâ€" tion theg had lost, the cavalry swept around the vallei' *and charged tge enemy in flank. It was magnificent, says our correspondent, to see the way in which the Turkish cavairy came on to attempt the impossible. _ Their orâ€" der was ferfect. but their horses were blown before they were uip the slope, and, in face of the fire from the Greek Infa.ntri. more than half their numâ€" ber suimk out of sight in the standin sorp. The remupant, turned, thougg corp. The remnant _ turned, though some struggled to reach the top. They lost thirtyâ€"seven men, and none but riderless horses came through the batâ€" tery. The charge was a miniture Balâ€" aclava, and the order was Splendidly carrind ont Medical statistics dprove that eightz out of every hundred are tainted wi Catarrh. Are you one of the eighty?t Foul breath, pains over the eyes, dropâ€" ping in the throat and headmheo‘ deâ€" note it. Have you these symptomst Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder never disâ€" appoints in a cure. Jt is expected that this present boat will be launched in about two weeks, and will be ready for a trial trip about August Ist. The result of this most interesting experiment is being looked forward to with considerable interest, and every detail of construction and progress will be eagerly watched by all who take any interest in marine engineering or steamboat building. For a long time after Mr. EKnapp 'conceived the idea of a cylinder boat be was unable to interest anyone in his scheme, everyone declaring it imâ€" practicable and chimerical. Finally Mr. George Goodwin, the wealthy Governâ€" ment contractor, of Ottawa, became interested in the scheme, and, acting on his orders, the Polson Company are constructing ‘the strange crait at a cost of $10,000. i READY AUGUST 18T. This boat is being built as an exâ€" periment, for use on Lake Ontario only, but ifit proves a success a monâ€" ster roller, 750 feet in length and 150 feet in diameter, will be built for ocean traffic. | 1 sohl WCBA dhcnficiind slsc PR Aectr uio of the vessel will slope upward from the water line, thus obviating any danâ€" ger of shipping seas. This roller boat will only draw about a foot to a foot and a hall of water, but it is exipected by Mr. Knapp that the vessel will velop a speed that will enable it cross the Atlantic in fortyâ€"sight hours. Imnain stauonzux. The boat will therefore be virtually a bhuge paddle wheel rolling over the watler, instead of through it, with the passengers, engines and steering apâ€" paratus in the centre of the wheel. The steering gear will consist of steel plates, on the lee board principle, that will be suspended by chains â€"from either end. ‘The power from the enâ€" gines will be communicated to the outâ€" er cylinders by means of friction. FABTER THAN A TRAIN, The inside cylinder will be open at both ends, and the revolving portion _ _IThe boat now building will consist of three gigantic steel cylinders, the outer one being 110 feet in length by 20 feet in diameter. Within this is anâ€" other cylinder of the same length, but only 12 feet in diameter. These two cylinders are to be strongly braced toâ€" gether to form a gigantic paddle wheel. On the outside one ,}mddles will _ be placed as in a paddle wheel of ordinâ€" ary dimensions. TO RUN ON BALL BEARINGS. The third cylinder will lbe placed within the other two, and will be but a few incbes smaller than the second one. . ( The intention is that ball bearings will be Aplzwed between these second and third cylinders, and the two outâ€" side ones be made to revolve at a high{ rate of speed by means of hundred and fifty horseâ€"power engines placed withâ€" in the third, which of course will re main stationary. The boat is indeed a strange and utterly unconventional looking craft. The idea of its construction and locoâ€" motion is entirely foreign to all preâ€" sent methods of ship construction, and this radical departure from the ordinâ€" ary may possibly account for some of the prophecies of failure. It Is Now Under Construction at the Polson Shipyard, Torontoâ€"Knapp‘s Stcamer is Intended to Roll Over the Water. The strange cra{ft now under course of construction at the Polson shipâ€" yards, Toronto, known as the EKnapp boat, is attracting more than local atâ€" ‘ tention, and now that the experiment is nearing its climax the interest in the success or failure of the project is becoming intense. * The inventor of the idea, Mr. F. A. Knapp, barrister, of Prescott, Ont., has roseate hopes of the ultimate great utility of his strange underâ€" taking, and what perhaps is more to the point, many prominent marine enâ€" gineers and shipbuilders are coming around to his way of thinking, and are beginning to realize that the achemel may be quite feasible. On the other hand, many equally clever men in this particular line do not besitate to say that nothing out failure can attend Mr. Knapp‘s project. A STRANGE BOAT, INDEEN. FOR WHICH ITS INVENTOR HAS GREAT EXPECTATIONS. YOU ARE A VICTIM:! for 35 Cents. BOAT. jon at the Polson PV DAPATe t ieb lincinte *A achc s Th :: :A kind of thing themselves. The poor paâ€" lmhutoput_l%p with a good deal of @xperimenting. e discoverer of South American Nervine takes too Serious a 'h'otll!otoï¬l;: pranks of this kind. He does not t that these human bodiers of ours should be fooled with,. He that tle‘ are lllol’g"ct to , by scientific meth s, he |â€"= that just as thol,mtgh l.lmto perfect re only when the ho on aap s en e u‘,uhc in â€" on has)th eny, VThen,the nerve centres kept and strong. %t disease is more distressing than Indigestion or dy'?gsh? Bome simglo mlum“ ven to cause relief for the moment. Nervine is an indisputably menul remedy for the worst cases of faulbras Heanadis ez L1 7 \| Aud yet it is no easy task, However well conitrolled, â€"| To answer one, if whe should p "When is a woman old ?" â€"| The graceful ones are all at t And those alone are old , | Who try _to make themse moung C ce uxperimenting. IDe discoverer of South American Nervine takes too serious a ï¬no!flhtom pranks of this kind. He does not t that these human bodiers of ours should be fooled with,. He that tle‘ are luol‘:iioct to 4 by scientific meth s, he that inst am tho aBatal ts a. CAP O e C C207 20 CORT. Has No Equal as a Spring Medicine. ‘There is ':nut deal of uncertainty in the methods adopted to remove disâ€" ease. Doctors are not free from this , * MC DP CCC mrup daantih s POINTS THE WAY TO PERFECT HEALTH The “G;eâ€".;“ï¬;al.t; 'l.l.;:tom of the Century. Sickness Cannot Cope With It. ,5‘“0'"“ the Worst Cases on Recâ€" ord. n-Onmb;t the N:!vo Centres and Thus o.}.“"i’:m...' ramently. _ _ _ , A Wonderful Specific in In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more Jots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" ing Town plot Durham. Tho EDGE PROPRRTY. .“m Unless they hide the truth. LONDON STREET FOUNTAINS. There are now 712 fountains for humâ€" an beings, 286 large troughs for horses and cattle and 476 small troughs for sheep and dogs in the streets and subâ€" urbs of London. During a period of 24 hours the fountains have been used by more than 2,500,000 persons, while at the troughs 500,000 horses have quenchâ€" ed their thirst. Ab, some are old before balf way, And some are mever old, .For these but hu{h life‘s cares away, While those both fret and scold. KHEAQPWOCPV CE VCAE SE in 12 t ce To answer one, if whe should ask, | "When is a woman old t" The g.rwelul opies are all still young, And those alone are old Who try to make themselves look When age bas taken hold. * The oldest ones of all the old Are those wiho would look young, For they will always fret and scold When age‘s sign is bung. As long as women cling to youth And disregard their ?a "They never can be old, forsooth, ‘Their youth fills up the page. Yes, some are old before their timeâ€" Old age usurps their youthâ€" And some are young beyond their Bouth American UNLIKE ; ANY OTHER _ MEDICINE When is a Woman Old? This query on my mirror hung "When is a woman oldf" It clings to me and lï¬hlcl «_ Whe answer must be told. + FOR SALEB Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, taken for sale by MceFarlane & Ca.« All Cases of k Headache, das clung, The moral is plain, 3llldmwo§1lt you '&4 sease, then you ican N'ervine, which you, " "!e condition. No eore can take 3 bot tle of Nervine at tha yurowitbm dloe.n.mï¬n wak to abounding health. K. T& NP _ ETNE rttaedit o 3 exhausted vital forces that ©10086, thro neglect, has become imâ€" povorhlg.::l :fl whole n{otem gets eut of order. We speak of it as s In the spring of the year the stron est suffer from general debility, . The troubles. Nervine has cured more desâ€" perate cases of nervousness than any other medicine anywhere. And it does #o for the same reason that it cures in« digestion. ‘The nery centres are ranged, or there wonla be no victims nervousness. _ Nervine rebuilds ap strengthens the nerve tissues, and hence L"t marvellons powers in diseases of this Lislly C202 UJETeIRs are PuUDn gowH through nervousness. A stimulsnt may gEive ease, but it will not cure nervous ols centres, from which come these t;"“'. removes the causes of indiges Hon, and then builds up the health comâ€" Stes. _indigestion ertsts becaouse the :it-ll .'2.’2‘.'_-5"!. become diseased an# general Banking business transacted :uauné coliections made on al! points. ts received and interest allowed at c ratos . tlerest allowed on savin bqn;;:x:ruâ€"ï¬ of :yd upwards. Prompt n.ttntmu and .v.r,fa enafforded customers liying at a distance . Hend Office , Toronto. CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,09 as Paid up 1,000,008 RESERVE FUND €00,008 W. F. Oo:_c‘n._‘ Geo. P. Reld, StandardBank of Canady THE Q@E um Thursday Morning, THECOOK‘SBESTFRIEND LARGEST SALE in Canapa. DUNNS BAKING POWDER GENTS in all principal _ Ontario, Quebec, Manitobs U FOR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN vYEirg DURHAM AcENCYy, SAVINGS BAxXrK. ‘v’tul ‘_::rcu .:‘h;:‘ hu: led to M â€"out, misem Io;.. N:.:n can take a bow IS PUBLISEHEED EVEry $1 per year, N abvrame MAGE | Editor & Propristog J‘ KELLY, builds up the the same as beifer, or n never @rike violence ex all she anoj tions will e0f to e amoth poswer of er tne same ma on and othe: a singleâ€"han made to exi @gccomplishing master, and | er and intel kicking cow . need not be milker can Perhaps a l‘exame«‘rs col fight again; to accommo she will pro any cow for er, when an« me. My i ple, and is | img heilers. heads are cannot su Nl‘ is not cow but a standing wi my head im of her near and hold I don‘t try hand when is straining in order to ing that I changes he with her not hit the ing. After ent strugg hu:t the 0? ms to in ber abili lows hersel has found « to tie, and or at all, which had a dec Aed ated upon. when tied or she she to and tiume« lives. 1 t« loads make they cannol t draw ing 1 img o How 1o There is be confined «te three f A cow maj if milk is fair profit, a di(?oru.t‘ butter ccw the milk n that the sa one cow aj may take « thi [O o. paying profi of | would bay price of f obtained . ter would and the i» to choese over $40, third as m are three ; whole ran and abou: ter. Bome actual ma; butter and rales, it w and it is to rate much fed to som the produc the Tood 0 & 1â€"2 cent: At the ;xj experimen gard to th # ppriropir us t !n‘nx suppl wed; but Bhe stays ducer or consumes that of i of the dif John Goul smy any ty$ No cow and pounds o and bhow small ¢ larger on hor in bu be biilt sconcmy work." 8 much fir put up so through t dairy the eught to portion t« from old butter, in dairy the makes . e Bu Lo spe much ha, ought to eng.neer motive, t 2,000 guli that 1 « mmany tor this male UE EL In the d PRA Â¥ Ado¢ n milk 1 darv D m 2 n 8. OF SC np w d ind t ie wiar it of COW no