West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 21 Oct 1897, p. 2

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The EDGE PROPRRTY In the Town of Durkam, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwelling, 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 adjoinâ€" ing Town plot Durham. In the old stand. All handâ€" made shoes. Also Horse Shoecing Shop, "*"Gounty of Grey. Sales attendeod to pro;' and at reasonable rates. ALLAN â€" McFARLANE Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loaps arranged without delay, _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. nANEY TO LOAN stlowost ratos of Interest F IA® one door north of 8. Seet‘s Store Durhara NOTARY PUBLIC,Commissioner,etc., MONEY TO LOAN. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Has opened out a firstâ€"class Residenceâ€"King S+., Hanover. JAMES LOCKIE, Firstâ€"Class Hoearse. BSUER of Marriago Licenses. Aueo _tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Of the Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVER. UNKDERTAKJNG Promptly attended to. JAKE KRESS. IS still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durham Bakery. Fire Insurance secured. OFFICE, over Grant‘s Stoms. Lower Town, 2. Aay person who takes a paper trow Bhe post office, whether dirested to hit Rmame or another, or whether he has sub seribed or not is responsible for the pay. 0. If a subscriber orders his paper to be cb'xd at a certaintime, and the Pnbli-hod eentinues to send, the subscriberis bour{ to pay for it if he takes it out of the pos! ..: This proceeds upon ke grouni hat a man must pay for what he uses. Tavines is ts thave We eal! the tpo'zii' attention ¢f Pos maste‘s and subseribers to the following sy mopets of the mnewcpaperiaws : 1. If any person erders his paper discon tinued, he must pay ali arreages, or tht pablisher may continne to send it until payâ€" There can be no lega! discontinuance until llv-ulin.x.m s ALLAN MeFARLANB, Jobbing of all kinds promptly IIOEN!ID AUCTIONEER, for J. P. TELFOCRD, HUQCH McKAY. MISCOELLANEUS. WOODWORK . L. McKENZIE, JAKE KRESS Furniture Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of â€"made Waggons for sale cheap. FOR SALB DURHA M SOLICITOR IN SUIREME COURT LEGAL for the whole ax oun! the office or not. L&AWsB. to which water is to be raised by sucâ€" tion .below the practical limit, _ we would adviss the use at the mill of a syphon pump, and by all means use galvanized pipe. The difference in cost between plain and galvanized pipe is but little, and in all plain pipe there is a liability of small imperfecâ€" tions, and the casting in galvanizing rills as large. Now an airâ€"hole as large as asmall pin in aline of suction pipe 300 feet long would be fatal to the sucâ€" ces of the system; so that. were there nodifference in the length of time each would last it would not pay to take the chances of using plain pipe. In laying the pipe plenty of thick red lead and oil paint should be used, and great care taken that every joint should be screwed up tight. It will also pay to paint the whole length of each thread with the paint. If the elevation is too great to allow the use of apump at the mill he can either use a ‘"pump jack" over the well operated by a wire rope from the mill, or a pair of "quadrants" one at the mill and the other over a well and operated _ by two No. 9, galvanized steel wires. These should be crossed, and in a 300â€" foot space. it is advisable to sup‘fort them in the middle. This can be done by erecting & post and attaching to each side of it a piece of 11â€"2x4 hardâ€" wood, five or six feet long, by a round bolt, on which it will work [reelg'. and fastening awire to the top â€" of each. This will allow them to move with the wires and at the same time keep them from sagging. These quadrants can be had of any wind mill company, but as sold bÂ¥tham are hardly strong enough forsolong a distance. He can have them made at a smith shop, out of inch by threeâ€"inch iron at small cost. For each one take a rieoe of said iron twentyâ€"eight inches long, and another sixteen inches, and leaving it weid one on&.ol the short one to the }ong_ one in the middle at right angles, he can overcome, or rather lessen the elevation by sinking a false well at the barn into which to place the pump, and from this dig a trench to the well, so as to keep the extreme height but in practice it is not safe to depend upon this to elevate water more than twentyâ€"five feet, and as the elevation increases, the height to which water can be drawn diminishes. Mr. Culbertâ€" son‘s barn, writes Mr. Woodward, in answering a question, is fifteen feet above well, which is twentyâ€"five feet deep, making the elevation forty feet; but if the water in the well is never less than fifteen feet deep, or ten feet below the surface, he can bring it up by placing the pump at the barn: If Theoretically, water can be raised by suctionâ€"pressure of the airâ€" thirtyâ€" three feet at the level of the ocean, is not a pleasing nor profitable sight. But the most profitable of all ways of disposing of akim milk is to turn it into eggs or poultry. Eggs _ are mostly protein, and skim milk is the sime, so one turns into the other in the laboratory comducted by the hen in a most profitable manner. Just what a tonm of g.over or cow pea hay is worth when it is fed to the cow, the manure carefully saved and the skim milk turne=d into eggs, would be a revelation to most of us And this is where we make our money. _ Grow clover or cow peas and make a profit by so doing in the increased fertiity of the soil. Feed the hay to the cow, and make another profit by the inâ€" creased amount of milk that the cow will haye by reason of the Proper amount of protein in her bill of fare. Save the manure and make another profit by reason of the increased value of the manure owing to the amâ€" monia it gets from the clover. Feed the skim milk to the hens and get still another profit from the protein in the milk. And when you market your clover hay in the shape of eggs, knowing at the sume time that there are already three profits to your _c{edi.t on the farm, Klondike is not in 1t. any feed that contains an abundance of pretein is to be welcomed, and as such skim milk stands high in the list. But if it is dumped into a dirty barâ€" rel, and once or twice a week, acâ€" cording to the fullness of the barrel, is carried down to the hog pen, and there allowed to stand a few days beâ€" fore it is finally all fed, a large part of its usefuiness has been destroyed by that fose to thriftiness, bacteria. Why the separator people do not lay more stress upon this advantage of theirmaâ€" chines has always been a source of womder to me. When a man has a separator the skim milk is turned out sweet, and unless he be the personifiâ€" cation of carelessness, he does not like to pour it into a dirty swill barrel. But when he uses the gravity method sometimes the milk is already sour, and he thinks that it is sour anyway, and there is no use taking so _ much trouble with it. And then the separâ€" ator gives back the milk warm, and in winter, if fed at once, this makes it more va}luable. While a man will feed milk while it is is warm he may not take tha trouwb‘le. to warm the cold millk, and a piz filled with iced milk USE FOR SKIM MILLK. The disposition of the skim milk is a problem that does not receive the consideration that its importance warâ€" rants. It is for the most part regarded as a secondary product, and as such, convenience has too much to do with its ultimate resting place. If fed to the hogs, says National Stockman, it is too often allowed to get sour in summer and frozen in the winter, and thus has the profit squeezed out of it before it has a chance to show what it can do. Skim milk contains the most valuable part of the milk when either fertility or muscle making is in quesâ€" tion The value of a ton of skim milk ‘ may be reckoned at $2.31, while that of a ton of butter is only worth 49 cents, and when, roughly speaking, a cow gives twenty tons of skim milk to one tom of butter we see that the fertility of the skim milk is far greatâ€" er than that of the butter. Skim milk that is all skim milk contains no fat at all, and is therefore an excellent feed to balance a ration of corn. The ordinary farmer produces too much feed in the shape of carbohydrates, and PUMPING FROM A CISTERN PRACTICAL FARMING. pounded on. the verg latest scientific discoveries in the medical world. There arae thousands toâ€"day who do truthâ€" fully say "I am living because I used South American Kidney Cure." It erlivees in six hours. Insignificant _ Beginningsâ€"But They Steal on one as a Thief in the Night, and Before one has time to Wonder what ails him he is in the Firm Grasp of MDiseaseâ€"South American Kidngy Cure will Break the Bonds and Liberate, no matter how strong the Cords. The thousands of cases that have been helped and cured by the great Bouth American Kidney Cure is the best recommend of its curative qualiâ€" ties. The remedy is a specific for all kidney trouble. The formula is comâ€" Geared too low, eh? quered the cyciist. * BUT THEY MADE CENTURY RUNsS Cheers and laughter filled the air, and when the captain finally whirled his cow around at the gate of the fairâ€" ground and brought ber neatly " up into the wind," the shout that arose might have been heard two miles away. Unfortunately _ Captain _ Patterson‘s cow did not take oneof the prizes for blooded stock, but the captain himâ€" self was given a special prize by the fair commissioners for " the best deâ€" vice for getting balky cattle to marâ€" ket." ied o+ ts Bm The mills of the gods gring slowly, remarked the philosopher. t everybody ran out to see the remarkâ€" able sight of a cow being sailed through the streets like a ship. _ Captain Patterson seized her tail, and using it as a rudder, guided her skilâ€" fully in the right «direction. With evâ€" ery fresh puflf of wind, the obstinate gow would be hurried along faster, while the dust blew up in clouds, and the sail flapped and tugged as Captain Patterson held to the main sheet with one hand and the cow‘s tail with the other. It was a hard voyage for both of them, but not a lor(x)? one, and when they came in sight of the fairâ€"ground The wind biew " quartering," and when the captain untied the cow and raised the sail the canvas swelled out over the cow‘s back, and away she went "sidling‘"‘ down the road, mooâ€" ing and plunging, and trying in vain to stop herself. ( otnas Tying the cow to the gateâ€"post, he went up into the loft of his barn and threw down an old sail attached to a doryâ€"mast. Then he put a horse‘s blanketâ€"belt through an iron ring, strapped the belt around the cow, inâ€" serted the end of the mast in the ring, and bound the mast to the side of the cow with some fifty feet of rope. t Captain Patterson‘s patience was nearly gone, when suddenly an idea occurred to him. Though he was not strong enough himself to force the cow to go to the fair, his training sugâ€" gested something that was. Whe cow, though a lank and rather stubborn creature, was said to come from very good stock, and when the Barnstable people took it into their beads to have a fair Captain FPatterâ€" son determined to exhibit her. But when the day came for driving ber to the grounds the cow showed that she had a mind of her own. She would not budge a step beyond the farmyard gate. In vain the old captain tugged ai the rope, pummelled her sides, and pushed her filanks. The cow wanted to go to pasture, and was bound she woulda‘t go to the fair. An Old Sea Captain‘s Ingenious Device for Driving a Baiky Cow. Whe story is told in the Outlook, and is probably one of the queerest cow stories on record, if not one of the truest. WThe scene of it is on Cape Cod, on a little farm near Barnstable. Upâ€" on this farm a retired seaâ€"captain had settled down for his old uge, along with a horse, a cow and two or three dozen hens. HOW THE COW WENT TO THE FAIR. Try to ist the colts grow up with such good stromg feet that there will be no excuse for cutting them.‘ Use the rasp on the underside of the toe and under no circumstances put the rasp on the outside of the foot. The entire hoof, from the coronet to the so.e, is covered by a fine coating of natural varnish, beginning at "the urâ€" per margin of coronet and gradually becoming thinner as it descends. Unâ€" der cover of this varnish th enew horn is secreted and protected until it atâ€" tains its maturity. The moisture neâ€" cessary by the animal economy to the perfection of the horn is retained within it and the influences of wet and dry are set at defiance. It is easy to see that this most important covering shou‘d not be interfered with, and that the foot show‘d be kept level and in good shape from underside. \ Bold by McFarlane & Co. TRIMMING A HORSE‘S HOOFS. Have you a good rasp for the feet of the colts? The old saying "no foot, no horse," is not only a true one but shouid teach the farmer to take the best of care of the feetof @il colts. The tos often gets too long, unbalances the foot and then splinters, spavins and every other disease to which the feet and legs are heir. Bee that the foot is kept rasped off and level. Do not use a knife if it can be helped, as the first blacksmith that shoes the colt will cut enough away to last a lifetime. In no part of the horse‘s anatomy has he suffered so many wrongs or endurâ€" ed so murh unnecessary suffering as in his feet. If there is the least exâ€" ouse every blacksmith will use a knife. punch _ a _ threeâ€"quartersâ€"inch _ hole through the unt&of the long ong in this union and a oneâ€"half inch hole near the end of each arm. The large hole is totake & bolt to act as & shaft on which the quadrant turns and the small holes in each end of the long piece are to atâ€" tach wires runni.:f to its mate, and that in the end the short piece is to connect~onse with the pump and the other with actuating rod of the mill. To make connections of wires to these quadrants it is well to use clevises or stirrups and at one end there should be & "turn buckle‘" for tightening the wire. With either of these devices the mill will run the pump and will give an abundance of water and with proâ€" per care will last many years. IT HOLDS THE KEY. have returned to Quebec from Inverâ€" ness, Megantio county, in which place they found a still in good working orâ€" der which was seized together with some thirty ga‘lons of mash, and several botties of unadulterated whiskey. Were of the Heartâ€"Human Skill was } Almost Defeated when Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart Fell Into the Breach and in afew Minutes After One Dose He Found Great Relief, and Five Bottles Made a Bad Heart a Good One. Wm. Cherry, of Owen Sound, Ont., write« "For the past two years I have been greatly troubled _ with weakness of the heart and fainting spells. I tried several remedies and consulted best physicians without any apparent relief. 1 noticed testimonials of great cures made by Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart. I procured a hbotâ€" tle, and the first dose gave me great relief. The first bottle did wonders for me. After using five bottles there are none of the symptoms remaining whatever. I think it a great boon to mankind." * } ANIMALS IN GROUPS. The ingenuity of the sportsman, is, perhaps, no better illustrated than by the use he puts the English language to in designating particular groups of animals. The following is a list of the terms which have been applied to the various classes : A covey of partridges. A nide of pheasants. A wisp of snipe. A flight of doves or swullows. A muster of peacocks A siege of herons. A buildin{g of rooks. A brood of grouse. A plump of wild fowl. A stand of plovers. A watch of nighting‘alla. A clattering of cloughs. A berd or bunch of cattle. A flock of geese, FURLHER SOUTH a trip was made to the head of Hope‘s Advance lay, the most important inâ€" let of Ungava bay, but it was found to be much smaller in extent than deâ€" noted on the maps. _ Moreover, Mr. Low satisfied himself that it had no connection with the large indentation on the western side of the peninsula in Hudson hbay known ag Mosquoto bay. Off the mouth of Hope‘s Advance lies the island of Akpatok, differing in its geological features from the coast, the latter being of the Laurentian and the island of silurian formation. The party reached the southermcst part of Unâ€" gava bay on the 2ith of August. There at Fort Chimo he found the Hudâ€"on Bay Companay‘s steamer Erik which had arrived on the 2â€"th from Fort Churchill on the west coast of Hudson bay, the earliest passage on record. The capâ€" tain reported, however, that the ice pack had been the most formidable in his experience of six years‘ navigation of these waters. From Fort Chimo Mr. Low made a trip in his sail boat across to George river, on the east sicde of Ungava Lay, returning on the 7th of Heptember. Next day the boat and her outfit were put on the Erik, which took them out ofpthe strait and around to. Nachvak on the Atlantic coast. From St. John‘s, Newfoundland, Mr. Low sailed for home. Mr. Low‘s party made no mineral discoveries, but of game t.her found an abundance. Mr. Low declined to speak of the probable length of the Diana‘s stay, but says that up to November she will hbe able to force ber way through the thin ice of the straits. Dr. Bell and his party made a very successful survey of the coast. _ They also travelled for seven daysinto the interior of Baffin Land, and discovered an immense lake over 80 miles long. He further explored the region â€" for gold, but found nothing of much pracâ€" tical use. It was on the first of August the party reached Stupart‘s Bay, where some years ago, the Observer after whom the plase is named, established a station. Mr. Low found everything intact at the station. Along this part of the route the coast is bold_ and rocky, towering to a height of 700 to 2,000 feet above the shore line; south and ea«<t of that along the Ungava bay coast the shores are low and the coast navigation rather dangerous by reaâ€" son of numerous boulders, and the great rise and fall of the tide amountâ€" ing to fully forty feet. Mr. Low sailâ€" ed up Paine river some distance, exâ€" ploring that stream. Sold by McFarlane & Co ‘That," said Mr. Low, "was thelast we saw of the ice and we had comparaâ€" tively plain sailing from then to the close of our boat voyage. The ice apâ€" pears to melt in the straits." A. P. Low, of the Geological Survey, Desâ€" ‘cribes the YVoyageâ€"No Mimneral Discovâ€" eries, But Game Found in Abundance. A. P. Low, â€"of â€"the Geological Survey, who went north last spring with the Diana, returned to Ottawa the other day. The Diana entered . Hudson‘s strait on Jubilee day, June 22nd. On July 6th, she met thick weather and was fast in an ice pack; on the 9th she reached loose ice, and on the 12th clear water in Hudson Bay. On the 16th July Mr. Low‘s party were land-‘ e1 near Douglas harbour, a plase Mr. Low describes as affording first rate shelter. On the 18th the Diana steamâ€" ed away and Mr. Low set forth on his coastâ€"wiss journey eastwards. On the 26th their yawl became fast in the shore ice and remained until the lst of August. THE VOYAGE uF THE DIANA TO HUDSON BAY. A covey of partridge A nide of pheasants. A wisp of snipe. A flight of doves or & A muster of peacock A siege of herons. A buudintg of rooks. A brood of grouse. A plump of wild fow A stand of plovers. A watch of nightin A clattering of cloug! A berd or bunch of A flock of geese, A bevy of quails. A cast of hawks. A trip of dottrell. A swarm of bees. !A school of whales. A shoal of herrings. A berd of swine. A pack of A dprovo of A skulk of foxes. A drove of oxen. A sounder of hogs. A troop of monkeys. A pride of lions. A sleuth of bears. A gang of elk. MET FITR BIG.ICE PACKS. CHERRY‘S TROUBLES wolves. If it is ths ease 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€" ledge of the laws of life and health gives energy and strength where lanâ€" ; uor, weakness and anticipation of an early death had before prevailed? Js not he also a public benefactor? Lot those who have been down and are now up through the use of Bouth â€" Amâ€"| crican Nervine give their opinions on : this subject. _ John Boyer, banker, of Kincardine. Ont., had made himself a hopeless invelid through years of over-[ work. _ At least he felt his case "‘l: hopeless, for the best physicians had | [ailed to do him good. â€" He tried N-r-" vine, and th. are his words : " I gladâ€"| iy say 1t:.§.orvlno cured me and I! am toâ€"day as strong and well as ever." ; _ samuel Elyea, of Meaford, was cur>d of neuralgia of the stomach anrd bowels | by three bottles of this medicine. Jas. ‘ sherwood, of Windsor, at 70 years of | ago, suffered from an attack of paralyâ€" sis. . His life, at that age, was despairâ€" ed of. _ But four boitles of Ner vine | rave him back his naturai strength. A | victim of indigestion, W. F. Bolg#er, of â€"ienfrew, says : * Nervine cured me of my suffering, which seemed incurâ€"| able, and had baffied all forn#: meâ€"| thods and efforts." _ Peter sszon, of | Paisley, lost flesh and rarely rnad l! good night‘s sleep, because 0t -tomnch‘ trouble. _ He says : " Nervine ltopped] the agonizing pains in my stomach the : i‘rst day I used it. I have now taken | two bottles and I feel entirely relioved | and can sleep like a top.". A repreâ€"| sentetive farmer, of Western Ontario, | is Mr. C. J. Curtis, residing near WYina.| sor. His health was seemingly comâ€" pletely destroyed through la grippe. : No medicine did him any good. *"To | three bottles of Nervine," he 8t ys, ‘II attribute my restoration to health and ; strength." _ Neither man or woman | can enjoy lfe when troubled With liver| complaint. _ This was the. sentiment | and feeling of W. J., Hill, the wellâ€" | | known bailif of Bracebridge. "I wull go bad." save â€"ha Hamss _ * The Bame Verdict Comes From Old and Young, Maleand Fomaila Rich and Poor, and From All Corners ef the Dominion. Family Ties may be Broken in the Wealth Without Healthâ€"Dr. Agâ€" Grand Rush for Gold, but What‘s new‘s Catarrhal Powder is a. Wonâ€" _ derful Cureâ€"It Never Fails to Reâ€" _ lieve in Ten Minutes. Fred Lawrie, of Trail Creek, B. C., writes: "I have used two bottles: of Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder, and have been wonderfully helped. I can recommend it very highly toall sufâ€" ferers from Catarrh." And here is another:â€"Mr. B. L. Egan, Easton, Pa., says, "When I read that Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder would reâ€" lieve Catarrh in 10 minutes, I must say I was far from being convinced of the fact. 1 decided to try it. I purchased a bottle. _A aing{e puff of the powder through the blower afâ€" forded instantaneous relief." Bold by McFarlane & Co. Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have Pronounced the Cases Beyond Cure, This Great Discovery Has Proven a Genuine Elixir of Life. 0 Remsdg Widespread and UVriversalia Its fpgc K:’l.â€"afterward. they say they can‘t stand it because it has been hot so TXEY 6OUNT BY THE SE8REF use B9 â€"scttce 70 itz e to alter the rule ofa bygone -T» and visitors to its ancient walls will note {,)lh.t un_{.s employes present a remarkaâ€" m â€" appearance. Theâ€"younger cle.yrks yearning for those hirstute adâ€" ornments so dear to budd.mT adolesâ€" cence bave recently memorialized the partners on this subjoct; but, alas! without success cmmmgued 3 HUMAN ~NATURE.~ $ When the weather first gets hot peoâ€" ple say they can‘t stand it because they are not used to it. Yesâ€" _ net s o long. Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who Have Been Cured of Dire Disccse By South American Nervine. almost every instance long. been reâ€" moved. One exception still remains. The historic house of Coutts, where royâ€" alty keeps its privat accounts, declines C wla% ies celtre ocm Nnancommes metes covuth THECOOK‘SBEST FRIEND DUNNS BAKING POWDER FOR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN YEARS. LARGEST SALE iN CANADA. RIGHT FROM THE MINES. and are‘!_.. outh â€" Amâ€" | 647 inions on ‘Rir anker, ot’w himself a Z“. s of overâ€" |.“' CAase WB# e | ""> iB i CRET REVIEV n the emâ€" | 2 sar beards ; t <4 â€"'-l;.- popPDw !mnot done so {a cure in my case." Mre. John l)‘c.- iwoody has been for 40 yeats a resident |of Flesherton, and hide reache4 the al» ‘lotted threeâ€"score years and ten. Three ‘years ago her system sustaimed © seyâ€" ere shock through the death of a ;daurhtor. Nervine was recommenied. She perseveringly took 12 bottles of ’modlolne. with the resuit that she is toâ€" \ day again strong ad hearty. Hune { dreds of women -u:e‘ from impoy :rish» |ed blood and weakened nerves.: " aAll vitality," says Mrs. J. Fallis, of Brampton, " seemed to have forsaken my eystem. I was fnable to get reâ€" !llet from any sourge until L comme» ~~nd |taking South American Nervine. _ ‘The 'renults are most satisfactory~â€"greater far than I could have hoped for." 1t ]camo within the way of Mrs, 14. Ftapâ€" {leton, of Wingham, to treat urder the {best physicizns, both in Canada nnd |England, for heart disease and rorvâ€" |ous debility, but she failed to get any |relief. . "I was advised," she says, "to ltfl(e South American Nervine, and MUSt say J &n InolWTskiicrca .. d LX for six years from nervous prostration. Medical assistance di4 not help. " g all," she says, " I have taken six bett of Nervine, and can truthf@liy say this is the one medicine that has effestel A shrewd observer of humen n#ature has said : "The hand that recks the cradle moves the world." ow im« portant it is, then, that health and strength should be madle tho lot of itho mothers of this country. â€" 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€" san Nervine. â€" Mrs. R. Armstrong, of Orillia, wife of the colpprteur, of the Bible Society of that town, guffered in | , _ JB PUBLISHEED EVERY I’ Thursday Morning. bottles of Nervime, and can truthfully say that I am a new man." Newspaper «lâ€"4 of Groy. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxrassz P. 0. will be promptl mitended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. ‘ Township of Bentinck. S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thoma+ « Launder, Rogistrar. Jobhn A. Muaro, Deputyâ€"Registrar. Office hours from 10 e. m. to 4 p. m. Alerest allowed on s1 8yd upwards. Promp amafforded curtomers DAN. McLEAN. OAPITAL, Authorized > $2,000,00€ #+ Paid up 1,000,008 ** Pard ul; 1,000, O€ RESERVE FUN 600,01 W. F. Oowan, Gee. P. Reid, & general Bouking busipess tramsacte wmued and oa?honona m',‘? on all pointe. ts received and interest allowed at rates . SAVINGS BANK stoadardBank of Canada TERMS; $ per year, IN ADVANCR CHAS. RAMAAGE Rditor & Proprieton upwards. Prom; GENTS in all principal _ Ontario, Quebes, Manitoba U ICENSED AUOTIONEER for 0. DURKHAM AGENCY. Head Office, Torontoâ€" erparts do belicvethat if I would â€"mot be a! J‘ KELLY, DAN. MeLEAM, hat if 1 had <~be alive toâ€" cull. a ¢¢ ©our lhe gain in way earnings tember. as c rond'mg peri red and fift The report i way is regard orable. dea EA I tato n)ANn found by the das junction and passed a discovered . RI Ous go short line t dleton,. a wi from Ottaw tion is bein sible. ‘The | freight this The gain i Glasgow b1 national exbi Am &n Y men i engit try t] Ln and ther are up in & pouncemen t Council thke t« resp in tion the poet t] Anquiry forunem bere bas prairie fij Beason Thomas The Eider new _ steams at Montreal one of a nu are being on . purpose trade who tender A man n: burned to . exp.oding 0 r_ied by a pr ire. i1 is repol a woman nan Ann‘s, save« being burned way . The Domit has decided bags supplied Mr. W Mr. D D THE VERY with . a beart accident vames to t] those of las John Hou from a s wheels or The â€" asm It is reyp :;k‘ Bt r;*t-‘i an Eng! to extend | F. E. Hy dealer, will of Winnipe; There is ; 500 men to Eight of . Vincent de ances â€" have ston It is repo child was re morency Fa The Ham have refuse & fooll»nll | L red The I h The The new 1Ve #ID LT vemer enee on t All Parts y Char i|â€"Gen He w Sta hes here by overing raterna ouvey Railw me to . a vill nt O Ten in y fires @ of i pal le ner Wt 11 GR Xp IY

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