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Durham Review (1897), 30 Dec 1897, p. 6

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Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. G. R., FTownship of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" Ing Town plot Durham. Loaps arranged without delay. _ Collections promptly male, Insurance effected. MHANEY TO 1L0AN stlowost rates of Interest Â¥â€"IA® one door north of 8. Seot‘s Store Durhara FOR SALE The EDGE PROPRRTYT In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valvable Water Power IBSUEB of Marriage Licenses. Auoâ€" troneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Residenceâ€"King St., Hanoves. "‘Couuty of Grey. Salow attended to promp and at reasounable rates. Residence Durham Oni In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also ALLAN McFARLAWNE Horse Shoeing Shop, NOTARY 2UBLIC,Commissioner,ctc., MONEY TO LOAN. we i1 s I lelal AZ 11 LZ 4 J3AmsTSR, SoLCITOR IN SUREME COURT BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. UNDERTAKJNG Promptly attended to. JAKE KRESS. We cal) the specia‘ attention ef Pos maste‘s a1d subscribers to the following sy mopsin of the newcrpaperiaws : W. L. McKENZIE, 1. If any person orders his peper discon tinued, he must pay all moo::o, or the publisher may continne to send it until payâ€" mentis made, and collectthe whole awoun! whether it bo taken from the office or not There can be no lega}! discontinuance until paymentismade. 2. Aasyâ€"person who takes a paper troz Bhe post office, whether directed to bi: mame or another, or whether he has sub seribed or not is responsible for the pay. Has opened out a firstâ€"class Of the Best Quality Cheapor THAN EVER. 8. If asubscriber orders his paper to be stopped at a sertaintime, and the published eentinues to send,the subscriberis boun i pay for it if he takes it out of the posi office. This proceeds upon ke groun hat a man must pay for what he uses. JAMES LOCKIE, Fire Insurance secured, OFFICE, over Grant‘s Stom:, Lowenr Town, IICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th J. P. TELFORD an and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. for sale cheap. e Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MoeFARLANE, HUCH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. JAKE KRESS WOODWORK Furniture ssill to be fonnd in his Old Btand opposite the Darham Bakery. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of Newspaper Laws. DURHA M LEGAL Waggons There is no way in which so much can be accomplished with so little outâ€" lay of money and effort as in the proâ€" duction and sale of guaranteed eggs, says a writer. The equipment consists principally of an inflexible determinaâ€" tion never to sell any but absolutely fresh eggs, those which you know all about. â€"If there is the slightest doubt on each egg. This will bring many good retail customers. Remember all the time that success depends upon the absolute perfection of your eggs. A single bad, or even a stale one, will ruin your reputation, so never under any circumstances sell an egg that you do not know is fresh. Take no chances. Get china nest eggs and use them. If you find a stolen nest use tha eggs yourself or give them away. Do not expect to accomplish saverything at once. Be patient. Your customers must be educated, but it will not be long before there will be a demand for more eggs than you can supply. It will pay to use pasteboard boxes, holding one dozen, in which to put up eggs. They cost but a trifle. I have found it pays best of all to have the name of my farm and postoffice address priated on the bores. ed two or three times a week. Wet land, although it does not produce footâ€" rot, is very favoravle, to its continuâ€" ed extension; if possible, therefore, sheep while under treatment, should1 be kept on dry ground. Land on which sheep with footâ€"rot have bheen kept is ceriainly dangerous for some time, how long has not yet been ascertainedâ€"proâ€" bably for som» months, especially durâ€" ing wel weather or where the soil is moist. Sheep cannot be infected with footâ€"rot if they are bred and kept on an uncontaminated farm from which all sheep from without are excluded. But, generally, these conditions canâ€" not be secured or mainta‘ned, and, inâ€" stead, the adoption of a system of quarâ€" antine of a mounth, or as long as cirâ€" cumstances will permit, for all newlyâ€" purchased sheep, hefore they are alâ€" lowed to associate with the rest of the flock, will afford a reasonable amount of security without materiaily alterâ€" ing the customary course of sheepâ€" farming. The exercise of ordinary cauâ€" tion in the purchase and sale of sheep would have an immediate effect in arâ€" resting the spread of disease, which is chiefly due to the contamination of highways, pastures, railway â€" trucks, fairs, saleyards, and markets by disâ€" eased sheep, which are constantly heâ€" ing moved abou(t the country without regard _ to the serious consequences which maturally result. Complete isoâ€" lation of all diseased or even suspected sheep should, if possible, be insisited on, and sheep which have recovered from the disease should not be returned to the flock until a long period of separâ€" ation has proved that no return of the disease is to be apprehended. as to the age of an egg, don‘t sell it. It pays to wash every egz. At first you may not find any difference in the demand for your eggs, but if you perâ€" gist in always selling only absoiutely fresh, honest, clean eggs, you will, beâ€" fore long, find customers at the store asking for your eggs, and that they sell before any others. If you want the full benefit of this reputation, get an egyg stamp and put your name, or better still, the name of your farm, When the disease exists in a large number of sheep they may be driven through a trough containing a soluâ€" ton of carbolic acid, one part to thirty or fifly parts of soap and water, acâ€" cording to the severity of the disease; or, inslead, the sheep may be turned into a shed, the floor of which is covâ€" ered with quicklime reluced to a coarse powder. But this rough treatment, is not so effectual as the other method, which includes a careful preparation of the diseased foot before any remedies are applied. Lressing must be repeatâ€" ‘|CONTAGIOUS FOOTâ€"ROT IN SHEEP. f The following is compiled from a 4 pamphlet by Professor G. T. Brown, of ‘| the Royal Agricultural Society, of Engâ€" 1’hnd: Footâ€"rot is a contagious disease .‘ of the foot of the sheep, communicated ‘! to healthy sheep by association with ‘diseased sheep, and also by feeding on / grounds contaminated with the virus â€" of the disease. Sheep after being inâ€" ‘fected may not show any signs of the | disease in their feet for from ten to |twenty days Newly purchased sheep | with perfectly sound feet cannot, thereâ€" ‘fore, he considered safe until the exâ€" ‘ piration of at least a month. Footâ€"rot: begins on the skin above and between the claws. The skin is slightly redâ€" dened and covered with white granu-i lated matter or small warty growths. The disease proseeds downwards on the . ’ inner side of the horn of one claw, and,| as a rule, one or two feet are only atâ€". tacked ; very rarely are all fouwur feet affected at the same time. For treat-l |ment of footâ€"rot, all the sheep in an infected flock should be carefully exâ€"" amined. Loose and decayed horn should | be carefully and completely removed ,without wounding the sensitive parts | or cutting away any of the healthy horn. It is, however, most important | ’to get to the bottom of the diseasedl parts. Caustic dressings may be applied ' by pouring or droppingâ€"not by means }ot a brush or feather, which soon be-: comes covered with virusâ€"and the foot | should afterwards be protected by ai coating of tar. Most shepherds have| some favorite remedy, but butyr of an-i timony, chloride of zinc, or pure carâ€"| bolic acid, applied lightly to the dis-i eased parts, are usually effectual. _A | powder of acetate of copper or _ red| oxide of mercury, ten parts of either | mixed with forty parts of powdered! sugar, or madse into an ointment with | sixty parts of vaseline, may be used instead of the liquid dressing. MONEY IN GUARANTEED EGGS THE FARM. The method that is coming into vogue with farmers in Canada is to | draw their manure onto these lands, | then with a double mold board plow | they throw up the tilth of the surface ‘ and the manure into ridges about 21 | inches apart. The manure is left largeâ€" ‘ ly in the centre of the ridge, where it | cannot get away. The water from | rains and melting snows, when suffiâ€" | clent to run off the land, will pass ‘down between these ridges. Th washâ€" ‘ down between these ridges. The washâ€" ing will be less because the water will not be allowed, to collect in so large rills. And what, there is will be _ of | less consequence, because from _ the \lower and less soluble soil. ‘The loss by waters percolating downward through the soil will also be lessened because the greater part of such waâ€" ters will not have passed through these ridges of manure and rich vegetable mold. _ In the spring when ready to _seed, a smoothing, harrow run crossâ€" wise of these ridges renders them â€" alâ€" most level and leaves the ground as mellow as an ash heap. ’ To prevent the leacking away, by | melting snows and early spring rains, iof the soluble food elements of the | surface soil and of manure spread upon | it, is most important. The finely deâ€" | composed tilth that is daveloped upon fthe surface by the proper cu‘tivation | of corn and other .cultivated crops ! contains much soluble matter. The proâ€" | portion of this which is retained near | the surface will determine very largeâ€" ‘ ly the strength and vigor with which i the young plants of the next â€" year‘s | crops will begin their elaboration of | the inert materials into higher forms | and the beginning thus made will conâ€" | trol very largely the final product. Mr. Citimanâ€"Yes, that‘s why Idid a‘t propose it earlier. Mr. Citimanâ€"My dear, let‘s, take a cottage in the country. . Mrs. Citimanâ€"Why didn‘t you proâ€" pose that earlier? It is too late now to maks a garden. CHERRY,. GROWING. The cherry tree thrives best in a warm, dry, loamy soil. The sour cherry likes more moisture, and is hardier. Soils too dry can often be improved by the addition of humus and _ cultural aids. The land should be ploughed early in spring, and receive frequent cultivation until tie first or middle of July, and then be seeded to a covâ€" er crop. The orchards should he placâ€" ed on an elevation sloping to the north and the fruitâ€"buds will thus be retardâ€" ed in spring. Sweet cherries should be planted thirty; feet, and sour cherâ€" ries sixteen to eighteen feet _ apart each way. The buds for the future erchard should be selected from trees of a uniformly heavy bearing babit, as a promiscuous selection tends to make unlike trees. Sour cherryâ€"trees should be pruned similarly to the peach; sweel cherries should have three to five main arms. Brown rot is the most destructive fungus disease, and can he controlled by spraying and by pickâ€" ing the fruit just before it is rine. Black aphis and curculio are the worst insect enemies. Both are most deâ€" structive to the sweet varieties, thougrh the curculio is sometimes serious in the sour kinds. Spraying controls black aphis, and jarring the latter pest. Sunâ€" scald and bursting of the bark _ are not uncommon and are due to climatic influences. They are favored by nitroâ€" genous fertilizers, late fall growth, and exposure of the trunk. Care in the selection of soil and in fertilizing, and a lowâ€"headed spreading form of tree reduce the danger. Geographical varieties are as yet undeveloped. ‘The most profitable among sour cherries. are Montmorency and Early Richmond, and among sweet. varieties, Black Tarâ€" tarian, Roberts‘ Red Heart, Napoleon, Windsor, and the new Dikeman. J African Explorer, dumfounded â€" What, you Clarence Vere de Vere, in the heart of darkest Africal Whatin the world are you doing here? Another great benefit, to be derived from the practice of ridging is that the land can be worked a week to ten days earlier than with the ground in the ordinary condition. This also means earlier work of the nitrate and other germs w‘iich develop fertility in the soil. _ Further, ground that is ridged north and south can _ be worked earlier than‘ that ridged east and west. Clarence Vere de Vereâ€"I‘m wearâ€" ing the necktie Miss Darling gave me for Christmas. I promised her I would, you know!l When I first began keeping poultry I determine1 to do everything in the best possiole way or not at all. After trying several breeds I settl@d on the Brown Leghorn as the best fowl for and kept them abyag® healtlk‘, glave and kept them; always hbealthy, gave plenty of food to produce eggs, providâ€" [ed gooi nests, with china nest eggS, [tarefully cleaned every egg, whether it appeared to neei it or not, then !utamred the farm name and address | on it, and put into neat boxes on which | was printed the name and address of the farm. I took them to the store and | placed them on sale at five cents above "the market price for ordinary eggs. At | first the storekeeper did not think he | could sell them, and the first lot went | slowly, but the next week there was | a quicker demand and inside of a month | all my eggs were engaged before they | reached the store. Then people came out to the farm to get them, and I could have sold twice as many. At last the proprietor of a famous hotel in the city, heard of my eggs and made me an offer of 45¢c. a dozen the year round, and then came my reward for all the care and selfâ€"len‘al I had practiced. Now, I co not wish to be understool as saying that everyone can succeed in getting fortyâ€"five cents a dozen the year round for their eggs, but they can casily get a handsome a+â€" vance over the ordinary market price, an advance that will pay for the extra trouble taken. RIDGING LAND IN AUTUMN. KEEPING HIS WORD. THERE BEFORE TORONTO one if you‘ve got one that says "Better Late Than Never* Poddiert{iâ€"Wouldn‘t you like some mottoes for your house, mum? It‘s very cheering to a husband to see a nice motto on the wall when he comes home t‘ It was sq _ Her body was growing cald to the touch. Lying there on that befl o6 rags, with the darkness shutting heg in and no bhuman being within call, she hatl welcomed the comâ€" ing of death with a smile and sang in the glaginess of her heart as the angels bore her through the valâ€" ley of the shadow to the eternal sunâ€" mhine ‘beyonil. "Anid she is deadâ€"Jan _ is dead!" whispered the father. *3 "Yes, poor chilg!" y He sat down on a chair with his face to the wall, ant rocked his body to and fro and monn«d and wept. So I left him and stole quietly down the dark and nerrow stairs, and out into the night. t were â€" bettar th-us'. for what could 1 say to comfort him 1 eyes!" "Even so. Beet _ She passed away without a struggle. Your Jan will never know sickness an‘dâ€" bunger again." $ "What, Jan veadâ€"Jan dead here in the darkness and alone!" he alâ€" most shouted, as he laid a ‘hand on her There was not the slightest moveâ€" ment from the wasted form on the bed, and the man turned to me and said: "Jan! Jan!‘‘ whispered the father, as he bent over her. She made no move in response. "Poor Janâ€"poor little geill She is sick and hungry and does not hear me. _ Jan, father is homeâ€" open your At his door, on the sixth floor, we waited for a moment, and he gripped my arm, and put is mouth close to my ear to whisper: _ _ We went over to the bed of rags, and in the dim light of the candle I saw a skeleton form with ghostly face lying on the old pieces of quilt and carâ€" pet. Hands which had wasted away to mere claws were folded across the child‘s breast, and her sunken eyes were tightly closed. ‘"‘She‘s waiting for me to come home with a stale loaf, and here we‘ve got all that a rich man could want for his dinner! She‘ll laugh and cry, and want to kiss you, and you mustn‘t mind it. Stand here in the door till I light the lit of candle." 1 softly entered, he picked up t'heflvi‘gfiz and said: He went in on tipâ€"toe and struck a match and lighted the piece of candle, standing in a broken cup n the table. Then he beckoned to me, and as "Little Jan is asleep. Ain‘t she a brave gell not to cry out at the darkness when left alone? Come over and we‘ll wake her up and tell her the good news." ‘"Tell her that I‘ll soon find work and things will go all right again. She‘s got a clean frock laid away in the chest, and perhaps you‘li come some day and take her to the park. She knows how I love her, but you can say a word or, two about that if you will. Poor little Janâ€"poor little gell!" "You won‘t fail me, sir," whisperâ€" ed the man as he stood in the dimlyâ€" lighted doorway through which poverâ€" ty had passed and repassed thousands of times. ‘‘‘What do you meant" "You‘ll go up with me and see Jan and help me tell her all about it, poor gell." "Yes, I‘ll go up." ‘‘And praisa her, sir," he whispered as he put a hand on my arm, "and tell her sue‘ll get.well of her sickness and better times will come. _ You‘ll find her sick and hungry, but you‘ll see a dear, good gell, who‘d die before she‘d make a complaint." At the third fiight, where we halted for breath, he touched me again, as if to make sure that I hadn‘t vanishâ€" ed, and whispered in my ear:; It was a tenement of narrow halls and steep stairs and small rooms. There was the odor of sewer gasâ€"the noiseâ€" some smell of poverty wherever you find it. _ Yow felt the dampness, and you expected the faces peering at you to reflect the degradation of the place. "Good Lord, but to think of it! Everything is for Janâ€"poor sick Jan! Why, sir, when she sees all these things she‘ll think Heaven has come down to her." 4 "All aloneâ€"Jan and me. It‘s right down here two blocks and up six flights of siairs. Dare I ask you to come along with me?t It‘s hard climbing, but you‘ll see what poverty can do for a man when you get to the top of the house. Poor Janâ€"poor little gell! It‘s hard to be sick and without either food or medicine." He went with me to a grocery, and we got bread and fruits and jellies and other things, and at every order he lifted up. his hands and exclaimed: "And you and your daughter live alone, eh"? Ske Did Not Want the Feast When It Came to Her. One night a man stopped me to ask for money to buy bread. There was such an eernestness in hbis voiceand gestures that 1 questioned him. . He was a man of fifty, ragged and pinchâ€" ed, and the story he told of looking for work in vain for weeks and weeks was no doubt true. ‘"The bread is pot fog me, but for litâ€" tle Jan," he explaing. when he saw that I was interested. "And who is little Jant" "My gell, sirâ€"my gell Janâ€"the only one of the family left me. _ Wife dead â€"boy deadâ€" only little Jan _ left, and she‘s sick and hungry. Poor gelll" ‘"Poor . De Jaggâ€"You might sell A CHEERING NOTION Janâ€"how sound she sleeps!" is asleep in death," I answerâ€" LITTLE JAN. to my usual health,." A the Maritime Provinces, in of 8. Jones, of Bussex, N.B., twelve years I was a mart mestion, constipation and The treatment of several 01d no‘ 1y PA 0 0 OW owess Ts sentative farmer, of Western Ontario, is Mr, C,. J. Curtis, residing near Windâ€" sor. His health was seemingly comâ€" pletely destroyed through 1a grippe. No medicine did him any good. ‘"To three bottles of Nervine," he seys, ‘I ettribute my restoration to health and strength .*" Neither man or woman can enjoy dife when troubled with liver complaint . This was the sent‘ment and feeling of W. J. Hill, the wellâ€" known bailiff of Bracebridge, "I was lane â€" us d ie s iLc +k EY y 0 mss & was so bad," says he, " that one of myl medical attendants saii that I was | dying, but, thank God, I am not dead ; yet. _ From the first few doses I took | of Nervine I commenced to feel bitâ€" ter, and am toâ€"day restored completely bo my usual health." A resident of tha Maritima ®ucli2 us Iiy say it : Nervine cured me and I am toâ€"day as strong and well as ever." Samuel »Xlya, of Meaford, was cur»d of neuralgia of the stomach and bowels by three bottles of this medicine. Jas. Sherwood, of Windsor, at 70 years of age, suffered from an attack of paralyâ€" sis. _ His life, at that age, was despairâ€" ed of. But four bottles of Nervine gave him back his natural strength, A victim of indigestion, W. F. Bolger, of Renfrew, says : " Nervine cured me of my suffering, which seemed incurâ€" able, and had baffied all formn®wr meâ€" thods and efforts." Peter lszon, of Paisley, lost flesh and rarely nad a good night‘s sleep, because 0* stomach trouble. _ He says : " Nervine stopped the agonizing pains in my stomach the £irst day I used it. I have now taken two bottles and I feel entirely relieved and can sleep like a top." _ A repreâ€" sentative farmer, of Western Ontario, is Mr. C, 4. Cutrtis: raxifiinmw wmunu Aitll m If it is th» case that ke who makes two blades of grass grow where only one had grown before is a benefactor of the race, what is the position to be accorded that man who by his knowâ€" iedge of the laws of life and health gives energy and strength where lanâ€" ,uor, weakness and anticipation of an sarly death had beiore prevailed? Js ..0t he malso & public benefactor? Let those who have been down and are now up through the use of South Amâ€" erican Nervine give their opinious on this subject. John Boyer, banker, of Kincardine, Ont., had made himself a hopeless Invalid thrsugh years of overâ€" work. _ At least he felt his case wes hopeless, for the best physicians had failed to do him good. He tried Nerâ€" vine, and these are his words : " [ gladâ€" Butcherâ€"The pyramids, er yer own sweet self, mum. in winter. Pasteur and Miguel found that the germs floating in the air are, for the most part, deadâ€"killed, the auâ€" thor holds, by the sun. Yeasts which normally vegetate on the exterior of ripening grapes are destroyed, accordâ€" ing to Martinaud, if the heat be very intense, and Guinti has observed that the ingress of sunlight bhinders acetic fermentation. When the typho‘id Lacâ€" illus falls into turbid, dirty water in summer, it finds a congenial propogatâ€" ing place. The dirt furnishes it food, absorbs heat to increase the warmth, and keeps off the bostile blue dnd vioâ€" let rays. THE BUTCHER‘S CUTTING REPLY.| _ President. manggo* Miss Antiquateâ€"This a young turâ€" w aciped e in key ? I don‘t believe you sir. | INTS in all "‘.fi' Butcherâ€"It is a young turkey, mum. | AG(I):?W.M. lzd“.b. 0 Stetoi Miss Antiquateâ€"Young! Young @8 and Eneland. % compared with what ? i Butcherâ€"The pyramids, er yer own DURHAM AGENCT. How‘s your brother, Tommy ? I!l in bed, Miss ; he‘s hurt himself. How did he do that ? We were playing at who could lean furthest out of a cerriage window, and Sun‘s Mays Purify Rivers of Bacterin im Summer Time. In view of the destructive effect of sunlight, especially of the blue to the ultraâ€"violet rays, upon bacteria in winâ€" ter, Prof. H. Marshall Ward would exâ€" plain the comparative freedom of river waters under the blazing hot summer sun from bacteria, as against the more abundant infection of the same waters THEY GOUNT BY THE 808E che Samo Verdict Comos From Old and Young, Male and Fomaie lich and Poor, and From All Corners of the Dominion. Iitany Wipe af Wyrih t fqpliglii Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have Pronounced .the Cases Beyond Curg This Great Discovery Has Proven a Genuine Elixir of Life. Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who HMave Been Cured of Dire Disecse By _ . South American Nervine. THECOOK‘SBESTFRIEND DUNNS BAKING POWDER FOR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN YEARS. LARGEST SALE iN CANADA slsc ismmd Lh Arciscia 1> me. I hbave taken a, eals hy â€"MoFarlans & Og KILLED BY HEAT. HE WON was a martyr _to indgi in the person h ts s Aue bottles of Nervine, and can truthfully say that I am a new man." | _A shrewd observer of human neture has said : "The band.that rocks the cradle moves the world." . How imâ€" {portant it is, then, that health and strength should be made the lot of the mothers of this country. The woâ€" ‘men of Canada are ready by scores to tell of the benefits that have come te them through the use of South Ameri« can Nervine. Mrs. R. Armstrong, of ‘Orillia, wife of the colporteur. of the Bible Society of that town, suffered _ ____ _ .)"" wovvince of Ontarie, but in every other section of the Dominâ€" ion. Bout+ American Nervine is base@ on a s..entile Drincolmia enssi 200C BAt the DOPvÂ¥a mame.‘,°*®" It strikes utlulornmtn-whleh fNows the life biâ€"od octh-um. 1§ :mn“fluflm ba mumn- Applicatice . ress d "lâ€"\il" & cure a certainty, no ma m# #Ba 200000 5 for six years from nervous prostration Medical assistance did not help. "Im all," she says, " I have taken stx bottles of Nervine, and can truthfully say this is the one medicine that bhas effected & cure in my case." Mrs. John Din= woody has been for 40 years a residgent of Flesherton, and has reached tho ale lotted threeâ€"score years and ten. Three years ago her system systaimed © sevy» ere shock through the death of & daughter. Nervine was recommen ied. She perseveringly took 12 bottles of medicine, with the result that she is toâ€" day again strong and hearty . uns dreds of women suffer from impov crish= ed blood and weakened nerves. " All vitality," says Mrse. J kallis, of Brampton, " seemed to have forsaken my system. I was unable to get reâ€" lief from any source until I commeyrced taking South American Nervine. ‘The results are most satiafactoryâ€"greatop far than I could have hoped for." 1; came within the way of Mrs. I1. EFtapâ€" leton, of Wingham, to treat under the best physicisns, both in cCanuvia and England, for heart disease and rery» ous debility, but she failed to get any relief. . "I was advised, ‘ she says, "to take South American Nervine, and must say I do believe that if 1 had not done so I would not be alive toâ€" day ," Newspaper snace Is too valuable to petmit of further additions to these earnest words of tescimony from those who know just what they are talking about. _ In the common langua»>> of the day, they have been there, and are speaking from the beart. ‘The dozen or more witnesses that here spear have their counterparts by the hundreda, not only in the bprovince of Ontarie, but in every other aamsil _ C °C O THE CRET RAEVEY LICENSED AUCTIONEER for Co. of Groy. All communications ade dressed to Laurasa P. O. will be prompti aitended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. z Agenersl Baxking busipess transacted / sued and coliections made on all points. | ts raceived and interest allowed at 0 Township of Bentinok. Heand Office, LZoronto: CaPITAL, Authorized OQ.OW.M «* Paid us 1,000,008 RESERYVE FUN 600,0086 W. F. Cowan, ttorelt allowed on savings bank depos.ts of 81 yd upwards. Pro npt attention and every fac enafforded cuctomers liying at a distance . CHAS. RAZAGE staadardBank of Canada DAN. REVIEW OFHI r. m. to 4 p. m. S G. REGISTRY OFFICE,. Thomas s Lander, Registrar. John A. Munro, Deputyâ€"Registrar, Office hours from 10 Thursday Morning. SA VINGS BANK ne onl dectun t 8 mt t i mnw,unvm s Editor & Proprieto® . no matter how desâ€" McLEAN. J KELLYX, Agent. DAN. MeLEAM. ns to these from those are talking langua»r»> of M9 uce gogas dhur destit1 deat tweer #D an U lodgir house work, the h ing® : WiOT five ar are toâ€" were rT ti findir d« ti it ti 8J "Well, you never mixed I saw my saf ing a rath tor cayrelessness it would ta an U lun fin ing ean‘t paint i mgmfmt‘ll( H work for the ¢ ly when the | Company did 1 c,-,d a parlic r punctualit in the mornin "But how « talk as men 1 I asked. "Well, you A ROMM [ fur d o g1r at W bran far W of t Arc. and out Catherine C unique distinc who has for f tnlly masquer under the nag worked with trade of a pa dent her sey is now in the don, where sh viewed by the prints her str not seem a . ; degrees, and â€" ing question extraordinary ed it hecame tages these Dressed in West Ham 1 white apron lron gray hai briskly and a ly not have Drisk ly n than saying,. n n1 than fifty ye over sixtyâ€"th tall, and in ) bave appeare BQ' voim son sequent conyv vated its low come JOve ty D & Wwon tic n (1 O n house 1 C« #4% L 1 ettey AIQ KB n a men t LT express and vi LY n t in, but 1Â¥ He Ly en 1Ve A M 1 M Lt 41 n 0 w t OW ne Un« pid n n

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