% Residenceâ€"King Bt., Hanoves. IBSUER of Marriage Licenses. Aueâ€" troncer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loane un.aod without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. ©ANEY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Interest Â¥14» one door north of ©. Beot‘s Store Durhara NOTAHRY PUBLIC,Commissioner,etc., MONEY TO LOAN. "‘Gounty of Groy. Sales attended to promp and at reasonable rates. «l4 of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxrasx P. 0. will be promptly attended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. 8, Township of Bentinck. _ _ C We cal) the specin attention ef Pos gmasters and subseribers to the following sy thopels ofthe nowrpaperiaws : 1. IHf any persor orders his paper discon Cnaed, he -,:ot pay all arreages, or the gblu may continne to send it until payâ€" tis made, and collect the whole aw.oun!t m« it be taken from the office or not. can be ro lega) discontinuance unti effice. This proceeds upon he groun‘( hat a man must pay for what he uses. 82 Aay rn who takes a paper trom w ee, whether directed to hi: or another, or whether he has subâ€" sexibed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If a subscriber orders his paper to be stopped at a certaintime, and the pnblinhod centinues to send, the subscriberis boun‘ #o pay for it if he takes it out of the pos‘ BUSINESS DIRECTORY. DAN. McLEAN. Of the Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVER. 2s Lauder, Registrar. John A. Munro, Deputyâ€"Registrar. Office hours from 10 & m. to 4 p. m. Handâ€"made Waggons Firstâ€"Class Hearse. ALLAN McFARLANE In the old stand. All handâ€" made shoes. Also Horse Shoeing Shop, UNDERTAKJNG Promptly attended to. JAKE KREGQS. cheap than good manners.â€"Southey. W. L. McKENZIE, Fire Insurance secured, OFFIOE, oven Grant‘s Stonme«. Lower Town, JAMES LOCKIE, Has opened out a firstâ€"class J. P. TELFORD AnBisre®, © soulcrton in surRenE covnr ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th ICENSED AUCTIONEER for Co. HUCH McKAY. Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MeFARLANE, Furniture still to be found in his Old Stand oppoesite the Durham Bakery. MISCELLANEOUS. G@. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thoma WOODWORK Newspaper Laws. in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of for sale cheap. LEGAL KRESS DAN. loLmo J. I. Taylor, living near Cottage Grove, Or., touched a match to scum over a stagnant pool on his place, and the whole surface of the pool ignited ;:;d blazed as a kerosene pond might z6. That there are vigor and hardihood in Brooks, Or., can hardly be doubted after publication of the information that Brooks is the home of John Stutâ€" hammer, the Stagger twins, and Bud Weddle. Portland, Or., is expecting the arriâ€" val of a 2,500â€"ton, 4â€"masted British bark, the Sgr'mgburn, the largest sailâ€" ing vessel but one ever in that port. She is 206 feet long, 45.6 feet broad, and 25.7 feet deep. It took half an hour for a mother in Bristol, Tean., to recover a watch wheel which her small boy had swallowed. One of the lazy farmers of Utica, Neb., has a rockingâ€"chair attachment conâ€" nected with his harvesting machinery. Only the wouldâ€"be saloon keeper and one nonâ€"resident signed & pelition for the establishment 3 a saloon at Monâ€" Manbattan, Kan.,, with three womâ€" en‘s clubs in a population of 3,500, is said to have more cuiture than any othâ€" er town of its size in that State. What is known as the young marâ€" ried set of Carthage, Mo., society enâ€" tertains itself in these hot times with wading parties in the Spring River. Five million bushels is the expected harvest yield of the Walla Walla Valâ€" ley, Wash., and at present prices on the crops the farmers will realize enâ€" ough to lift a number of mortgages un their places this fall. It does not necessarily take gold to arouse people to energetio activity in & new country. ‘The people who made up the first rush to Oklahoma counâ€" try oPly a short time ago gathered in one day 1,000 bushels of plums. _ _ In the neighborhood of Jamestown, N.D., the barley crop has increased 18.3 per cent. in acreage over that of last year, the corn crop 189 per. cent., the wheat crop 27.3 per cent., the oat crop 9.8 per cent., and the flax crop 8 per cent. The ever active desire of newspapers to give the public more than the worth of the public‘s money, had a manifestaâ€" tion lately in the case of a paper at Juniata, Neb., which put in so modest a bill for country printing that the Supervisors voluntarily increased the amount of it and paid it. By the tomb of Henry Ridgely, who died in 1699, in Anne Arundel county, Md., Isaac C. Anderson, of the Second district of that county reoengiy found a coin of the date 1695, marked on the obverse "ViII. Skilling Danske." The reverse, which is well worn, bears a capital C., over which is the figure, 5. The Rev. Dr. Hancher of the Grand Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church of Kansas City has establishe@ not only a bicycle check room in the basement of his church but also a room where mothers may check their babies while they attend divine service. Electricity in the operation of the farm is to become a factor presently on the far Pacific slope. Jesse Kilgore of Weston, Umatilla county, _Or., has employed an electrician and is to inâ€" stall a 32â€"inch dynamo to supply light and power for harvest work. be served, sat in â€"T.h'éâ€"kvit;he-ï¬_g{i.n; what he wanted of it, and keeping the cook quiet with a revolver. Most Kansas counties pay a bounty on wolves killed. Yet wolves in that State have in a year killed 1,150 sheep, according to statistics collected by a member of the State Board of Agricul- ture, while the 155,570 dogs owned there have killed, 1,294 sheep. Scorn must be felt by New York gripâ€" men and Brooklyn motormen for the motormen of Mechanicsville, Tenn. Acâ€" cording to local newspaper pliants these actually stop in one part of the town because children are so thick upon the track. ‘‘The cars have to be stopped," one paper says, "to avoid an accidâ€" wiuck §# NMeighborty Interest in His Doingsâ€"Maiters of Moment and Mirth Gathered from His While a business man of Newport News and his family were sitting at taâ€" ble wondering why the cook was so long in getting breakfast, a tramp, who had come along just as it was to A resident of Skidmore, Mo., boasts of havi:f put up twentyâ€"two threeâ€"ton stacks hay in one day. Near Brunswick, Md., a cow which last summer dropped twin calves has done the same thing again. ITEMS OF INTEREST ABOUT THE BUSY YANKEE. On the spur of the moment Charles J. Kaufman of Newport News offered to bet with Miss Zella M. Hendrick, of Fairville, Mo., that she would not marry him while they were in Norfolk on a visit with her cousin. She took him up and surprised him by not backâ€" Oats six feet high in the stalk are reâ€" ported in Lane county, Or. At Clinton, Ky., an acre of wheat yielded 108 twoâ€"bushel sacks. ent I‘ Tom Morgan of Eureka,, Kan., is of opinion that a hoarse shout at a steer fattening for market bhas as bad an effect on the animal as an impatient word may have on a very ill person, which recalls a remark og Rarey, the horse trainer, who said that he had known an angry word to accelerate the pulse of a highâ€"spirited horse many beats to the second. To work on the sympathies of a denâ€" tist who was at first hardhearted, a tramp at St. Joseph, Mo., asked him to pull out two of his teeth which were filled with gold ; for, he asked, of what use were goldâ€"filled teeth if one had nothing on which to use them ? This apâ€" gealed so to the dentist that he gave him some money instead of drawing ing out during his quest for a license and a clergyman. ks teoth,. =: * _ â€" * * ; e 2t 50 Dr. W. A. Roberts, of Minneapolis, in the interest of a society which aids WBA UNH SA B AI One Amecrican Who is Willing to Justify Canada‘s Action â€" Life and Property Safe. A correspondent writing to the Chiâ€" cago Record says:â€" stt wh "Canadian Greed may Causea Fight," is the cheerful caption that heads an article in one of the Record‘s contemâ€" poraries, and a sit has been preceded and doubtless will befollowed by many articles in the same strain it may lead to consequences disastrous to all conâ€" cerned.. I am one of a company of American citizens who mean to send twenty of their number to the new gold fields mext season and therefore I am deeply interested in everything said and done â€" concerning the Klonâ€" dike, and particularly in seeing that that country remains the home of â€" law and order, a place where human life and property shall be as sacred and safe as it is in this city, and I cannot see how that condition is to be maintained if newspapers conlinue to preach riot and bloodshed. ‘The Klondike gold fields are well within the ubndisputed territory of the Canâ€" adian Dominion. Canada has spent large sums of money in preparing the country for the gold seekers. lt has established foris appointed magistrates, and supports them with one of the best systems of police in the world. It has opened land offices and supplied surveyors to lay out claims and give them a legal value. In a word, it has given the Klondike 4& firstâ€"class, liberal, safe and stable government, where life and propertf'f are as safe as they are in Chicago. If Canada were as greedy as some would like to make it appear it would have put in force legisiation parallel to that secâ€" tion of our mining laws which enacts that all persons taking up mining claims shall becitizens or have declarâ€" ed their intention to become citizens of the United States. It would have been perfectly justified in following our exampie. _ We never charged royâ€" alties, it is true, and for three good and sufficient reasonsâ€"we had no equivalent to give in, the shape of setâ€" tled government; the constitution made it difficult, if not impossible, to charge royalties, and 95 per cent. of the wealth mined was being used to deâ€" velop the country where the gold was found or to enrich other sections of th eunion. Canada is justified in charging royalties. Let us be honest. The gold belongs to Canada and Canâ€" ada has the right, to make regulations for its distribution. D. R. GOUDIE. nc dda se 1 1 dh stt a + ic Pss a coming week‘ day evening. The parâ€" son refused to read it and the deacon forsook the church. The matter is not yet settled. Boards of Health Should Stop Spitting in Public. "If men were compelled to wear skirts for a period, I think they would insist more than they now do that their fellow men should stop the nasty habit of spitting in public," writes Edward W. Bok in the Ladies‘ Home Journal. ‘"There is no practise of man which is more distressing to women than this disgusting habit. _ Women constantly complain of it, especially in our large cities, where sometimes the sidewalks are scarcely fit for them to walk upâ€" on. They revolt at the practise, and they are right in so doing. Yet year in and year out the habit not only continues, but increases, and the proâ€" tection of cleanliness, to which every woman walking upon our streets has a perfect right, is denied her. "In New York City the board of health has taken the matter up on the frou.nds of public health, and the poâ€" ice department is lending its coâ€"operâ€" ation in the enforcement of an ordinâ€" ance tlirected against the evil. No action taken in New York for years is so highly to bé recommended, and the ordinance should quickly extend to othâ€" er cities and be put into force. It is an undertaking which public opinion will sustain in whatever part of the country it is attempted. Every comâ€" munity should be urged to try the exâ€" periment. ‘"‘The.time is ripe when every deâ€" cent man should take some steps to see to it that the nastiest and most yulgar of all habits is entirely srtz})ped. New York City has started the reform. Let the boards of health of a few of our other large cities take up the question, and the reform, which appeals to ever( cleanâ€"minded man and woman, will it abce mt mpers: that, the geqplogot ap ple . that section have as yet triesww(.lu- courage hopeless invalids, from coming there, to raise the mortality figures, as some Western places have recently done. At Terre Haute, Ind., there is a Methâ€" odist church, on Maple avenue, of which the Rev. Frank Gee is pastor, where it has been the practice for the minâ€" iatoâ€"rï¬to an_nouno; on each Sunday the midweek run of the church bicycle club. Deacon James A. Dixon, who objects to this practice and had protested in vain, one Sunday sent up a m?uest that the parson read a notice 0 the meeting of a card club to bemhkeld on soon 6 d. It is a work in every way caliing for the attention and acâ€" tion of boards ot health and all bodies and citizens interested in the health of communities. The spitting habit is an absolute menace to the public health." Oh, did I tell you about little Henry, grandma ? He‘s got a biâ€" cycle. & Good gracious!_ Well, don‘t get exâ€" cited about it. Just put a big poulâ€" tice of soap and sugar on it, and change it every morning, and it‘ll be gone in three days. Your grandfather used to have ‘em every haymakin‘ time, regular. They ain‘t nothin‘; they‘ll do him good. INTERPOLATED. Jagsbyâ€"I never take a drink durâ€" ing business hours. Friendâ€"How long have you been out of work! consumptives to find a locality where they may get relief or be cured, has been looking about in Kittitas counâ€" Chicago, Ill. THE GOLD IS CANADA‘S. A VULGAR HABIT. FOR ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORonNntTto Titn i nranele uies uie + sdwnk h e k ced raan n i sns To The area embraced in the Lake of the Woods gold district of Ontario is vast, and the present revival in ‘the mining industry has given a new imâ€" petus toâ€"this town. One most encourâ€" aging fact i sthat the Rat Portage reâ€" duction works are again in operation. For most of the summer these mills have been idle owing to the differences of one kind and another, but ore is now again being brought in on barges from lake properties for reduction. And it may be here menmtioned that some Rat Portage and Ottawa gentiemen think that there is room here for a second customs mill. The Ottawa Gold Minâ€" ing and Milling Company, as their charâ€" ter authorizes them to call themselves, will forthwith erect a stamp mill at Keewaydin, a suburb of Rat Portage. The company, which is a strong one, claims to have already secured the proâ€" mise of sufficient ore to keep them runâ€" ning steadily. The theory of the customs mill is a good one, for it enables companies with limited capital to make their properâ€" ties yield revenue from the time they begin to mine the ore. The idea is that by bringing in their ore to the custâ€" oms plynt from time to time thay can keep their treasury replenished and finally get together emough money to buy stamps of their own. The theory is all right, but to prove successful in practice the greatest skill and care is required. The difficulty is that the ore from every property differs in charâ€" acter from that from every other, so that in each case the mill and its ap~ purtenances ‘have to be adjusted to suit the rock to be treated. One ore is nearâ€" ly all free milling, while another is more o fa concentrating nature, and the mill man will see the care needed to successfully treat both in the one mill. Experienced mill men and amalâ€" %(z)maators, however, are able, it seems 0 so. Two Custom Mills Open â€" Englicdue Com pany‘s Progress Gives a Lot of Satisfac "Jenny Lind arrived. The city was wild with enthusiasm. Her hotel was surrounded day and night by crowds. Every seat and standingâ€"place in the house had been secured. ‘"The night arrived, the opera began, and my time had come. My poor little trill came betweem two great arias of the prima donnma. ‘The last triumphant note of the first was sounded, and I came forwuaurd. 1 gianced at the vast audience. Every eye waus fixed on the great singer, wailing for her to beâ€" gin again; nobody saw me; nobody would hear me while she Stood there. ‘"She was more than a great singer; she was a good, kind woman. She unâ€" dersto 1 my uncom{iortable position at once, and instanily walked to the back of the stage, pretending to look out of a window. She had given the stage and the audience to me. in opera. But ner kindness to a poor girlâ€"a strangerâ€"warmed my heart more than the applause of my audience could have done. It warms it still, though I have grown now into an old woman and she is dead." INTERESTING NEWS FROM THE LAKE OF THE WOODS. THE ENGLEDUE CONCESSIONS. The decision of the Ontario Governâ€" ment Gold Concessions .Com(i)enny to work the grants of land made them by the Government forms a source of satisfaction to Rat Portagists and all interested in the development of _ our gold fields. Active operations have been begun upon the two blocks of land turned over to them. Col. Engledue arâ€" rived at Rat Portage a few days ago and set about the exploration of the two blocks of land which were pracâ€" tically presented to them by the govâ€" ernment. ‘The first block of twentyâ€" four thousand mcres, comprising ‘a whole peninsula in the neighborhood of the Mikado mine in Shoal Lake, has been put in charge of Mr. T. R. Deacâ€" on who ha sgone out with a gang of eighteen men. Mr. Alan Sullivan, a son of Bishop Sullivan als oleft last week with thirty men to openm up the fortyâ€" thousandâ€"acre gr&nt &n the Lower Seine district. The first month is to be deâ€" voted to breaking both blocks of land up into sections for exploration purâ€" poses, after which several Parties will set to work to systematically prospect the areas for veins. Considerable progress should be made before the snow falls this autumn. ‘"When I was a girl my friends thought that my voice anid training would enable me to appear in opera. I was put on trial in Munich. Jenny Lind was to appear there, and the impresario consented to give me a little part, only two linesâ€"to sing. I knew that my success or failure that night would deâ€" cide my future. I practised those two lines for weeks. I threw not only my voice, but my heart and soul into them. There are masters in every line of lie; men and women who have won popular applause and success and who sometimes look with indifference upon young aspirants who are struggling for recognition. If you are large enâ€" ough to deserve your success, don‘t be afraid to give them so far as you can, the stage and the audience for th.eirberohmoe,f and tl;:h wor l!;d"8 ;]vill h:: mem ou for something er t art, ami’ more valuable than your honors. A somewhat noted concertâ€"singer in England has frequently told the followâ€" ing anecdote. of Jenny Lind : "I don‘t know bow I sang. I only know I never again was asked to sing GOLD MINING IN ONTARIO Back! he cried, poising his knife and lgli::ri.ng at her with intense hate in eye. Seeing she did not quail before his glance he took up his fork and went to work trii:ng to carve the portion of the chicken referred to that the landlady usually gave him. You should have heard Smith crackâ€" ing up his wife‘s biscuits this morge mf believe I did bear him. 1 thought SWALLOWED THE INSULT at the time he was chopping JENNY LIND. n ce The story is told of a bhousewife who was extremely neat, that she woke one night at the sound of her husband creeping softly out of bed and toward the lightâ€"stand. What‘s the matter, William? she whispered. Sh! he whispered, there‘s a burglar coming up the front stairs, and I‘m getting my revoiver. All was silence again, in the midst of which William crept noi-eleul{‘ to the head of the stairs. Presently there was a loud refort followed b‘ a mad scurrying of feet; then the husband came back, lighted a lamp, and reâ€" turned to the stairway. O William, William, did heâ€"â€" Yes, he got away, said the husband. Oh, I don‘t care so much about that, the woman said, but William did heâ€" Did he what? Did he wipe his feet before he startâ€" ed up the stairs? FOR SALE The EDGBE PROPRERTY. I send a sure cure for whooping cough for the benefit of the mothers who read your paper, one I have testâ€" ed myself. f Take half a pint of New Orleans moâ€" lasses, quarter of a pint of sweet oil, four sticks of the best licorice ; melt the licorice, and mix the other ingreâ€" dients with it. Or, for a smaller quanâ€" tity take two teaspoon{uls of the moâ€" lasses, ome ‘of sweet oil and one of licorice. _ _ uh & Give balf a teaspoonful five or SIX times a day for two weeks. The first quantit yspecified is sufficient for two or three cases. Aunt Sarah. Gr.eâ€"y: Eel‘udles valvable Water Power “B';i'câ€"kâ€"‘l)wel.l'ing. and many eligible building lots, will bngold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2 W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" ing Town plot Durham. Mortgage taken for yurt purchase The eyes of the world are literally Aixed on South American Nervine. They are not viewing it as a nineâ€"days‘ wonâ€" der, but oritical and experienced men have beef studying this medisine for years, with the one resultâ€"they have found that its claim of perfecot ouraâ€" tive qualities cannot be gainsaid. The great disooverer of this medicine was possessed of the knowledge that the seat of all llmn:mm...tm. situated at the of the brain. In &l‘o bolh_t he had the bost scientists In the matter of food health temporâ€" Izing measures, while possibly successâ€" ful for the moment, can never be lastâ€" ing. Those in poor healith soon know whether the remedy they are using is simply a passing incident in their exâ€" perience, bracing them up for the day, or something that is getting at the seat of the disease and is surely and permanently restoring. | CURE FOR WHOOPING COUGH. m lad sapen 0f Setss naree ate ‘‘Tare it the Aist princigh. d E. THE EYES OF THE WORLD Are Fixed Upon South Ameriâ€" can Nervine. A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. that Renders Failure Impossible. WEEN EVIRY OTHER EELPRR HAS TAILED M CORE Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. In the Town of Durham, County of ‘- % S ’ ““:."\ & « ’/ mc Oe "&> 1# ns > "w, bs uTh IIIH\““‘\.i ";'IM", ",' R ty ART C ~<<F 6 sel ma uav@® < 4 <â€" e CA / 4: / +. Wns (ore #, M P @2 Mz l nunt c ( Azy, h8 + l uh. io _ ___ S O s 0 < k J MREC , T f}v ' 'i/'“ ' ",‘«\" Y ..,,i‘- )i THE RULING SPIRIT. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont L /Ajas; _ SOUTH â€" %@\\ \ flMmlcflJ( O # *z MNERVINE 2\ 4) 9m = m e t routpyth 'v & faman®‘ VFor sale y McFarlkne & Cs, â€â€™â€â€/u |l t 4\\\(\\}\ CAPZet C dBAC RNOJ AS KA 20 RB.‘ l Atlorest allowed on savings bank depos.its of $1 K ; byd upwards. Promptattention and everyfacil« enafforded cuctomers liying at a distance . ble with medical treatment uveuâ€" ally, and with nearly all medicines, is that they aim simply to treat the organ that may be diseased. South American Nervine passes by the organs, and imâ€" mediately applies its curative powers to the nerve centres. from which the organs of the body receive their supply of nerve fuid. The nerve centres healed, and of necessity the orga® which has shown the outward evidence only of derangement is healed. â€" Indiâ€" elome as the one great certain 0 wfltw umu.r.y‘ 2 nds io dï¬ remody is broc gestion, . nervousness, impoverished blood, liver complaint, all owe their nrigin to a derangement of the norve centres. _ Thousands bear testimony that they have been cured of these troubles, even wher they have becoms so desperate as to bafie the skill 0# the most eminent physicians, because Bouth American Nervine has gonce to 5*:“;-:‘ cured there. is the world have not beem ‘h-'_o_:gg‘u_m linquiry into the sugâ€" & goneral Banking business transacted Drafts wued and collections made on all points. Depés: ts received and interest allowed at curreni «* Pard u RESERVE !’UNI! W. F. Cowan, THE GREl REVEY OAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,00€6 TERMS; $ per year, IN ADVANOR CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprieton StandardBank of Canada REVIEW OFFIOR, Thursday Morning _ THECOOKSBEST FRIEND DUNNS BAKING POWDER GENTS in all cilpal points in ._Ontario, Quebes, -zdn:uâ€umm“m FOR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN YEARS. DURHAM AGENCY. LARGEST SALE iN CAKADA. SAVINGS BANK Is PUBLISEED EVERT Paid uj . Toronto: s _ I fack know be + Bananas and plania lAdance if they are pr }They are relishe@ by . " Then the pot is : fire and uncovered. and a bow! of clean : near to enable the « pands when bardling iA native ‘ _ NEVER EATE AN " Amother way to Â¥a is to make utlnfl root are and it is aro secur an bour sd, J " W he aure dus they rOOLS t« Ing Lo to eigl to fous gelling usea to ®is meniy ol i lime juice and ine ane all Lha: speedy precover; Ja vorable. ‘‘LVever is of pineapples or 0 © W i V somelume denis. 4 bies duri ©r, and « going to one iind: ing 1OI poss i bol ner. 4 piame projp " buill, with all i summer, one may e climatic changes w havoo if the houses budti differently an other means of wa ed for every room 14 ness and chull co the nighi air. M« no windows, bus o is Compeiled Lo #11 untiul the sun Sta dry the Gew ana August, 4 i ids ~OO1 Lhe ng below 80 degre ppressive during a January. At t a very desirable 1 longed for in vai 80 degrecs, an change is whai fevers and wl during the dry Lhe slapie "lne rainy sea summer tune is w Poraiure is more on ihe i rench C ster is often dow grees Fabr. duri mornmng, bui rise § o ciock. The hbea then and makes eÂ¥ The temperature a April to Ociober, v Pn the French C€o i8, 1 believe a fain orial Africa. It i @ll. It seems stra sidenis to be oblige ind windows, righ § 0‘C)i0Ck. The hea 1 *"Others among chants, live immeo carousing â€" from They, too, soon i folly jand again TBE CLIMATE . it, an for it mistake soop cos! en the strongest it, and then the * Now it is q white women ca years. Still it in the climate has We must rather have learned fr« counteract the q are better able t formerly. Gene scareful and do in any way, they Standing the wea life ; but a white an African naviv, «ie‘ principle, buy used to the chan valuable lives ha men and women work like the na " Africa was is of its climate," turned missiona.: ly a dozen years regarded as foo There seemed n fore the white p sacrificed their AReturned Missi Food, and Pr THEY MaYy x IF THCY duning ind @ve €xj FH 1 MD 1 & ane #s0 are #0o aced and J oking . Native .l..kftd nds 1% D Vi M nch T+ 14 1 <it Li« SLC Lh S ARJ 4 1 V% 1A U pa ie Li« t 1 «<A he it ) t n <l4 L furs DC Sb