West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 17 Mar 1898, p. 2

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H mndynsurwaggon, In the old stand. 'All ban-d made shoes. Also _Horse Shoeing Shop ALLAN McFARLANE! __ ,_V --' ...- v. uu-u-lu, vuunly or ' Ore}, including valuable Water Power I Brick Dwelling. and many eligible ' building lots, will be sold in one or more I bu. Also lot No. 60. con. 2, w. G. R., F township of Bontinck. 100 acres adjom- I Intr Town plot Durham. Bu opened out a first-olass FOR SALE ‘ The' EDGE PROPERTY. 188033 of Matting: Linen-u. Ana. hone» for Counties of Bruce And any. 1ueuernao--Kun, Bt., Hanovu. ytityhlltiaiiuimmr ALLAN lam, “Conny of an]. an" "tended O“ u "'tootttbbi. "in. longing. taken for I! the Town of Pee, County of --"'". . uvll'U "in. promptly made. lunurnueo “noted. "I!!! I To DADA N " Iowa" runs of Intent. Fru- on don north at B. Icon Btoro Durham Loam JAMES LOCKIE,’ NOTARY ?P"""rrro-qtoarr,eu. MONEY To LOAN. J. P. TELFORD, Baum. summon m swarms sonar BUSINESS DIRECTORY. WOODWORK EH93???” Hearse. DINO! ‘ICENSED AUCTIONEEB. for th UNDERTAMNb Ethyl]; REM a. nu mass. Of the Best Quality (helper THAN EVER. in connection. A flrat-elaat, lot of In and Insurance Agent, Con- veyauoer, Commissioner ace. HUGH MCKAY. I An, pomn who “to; u pup" trot the poet om“, whether directed to h, lune or another, or whether he bu an; mind or no: in "wound. for the pay. I. If. nuburibn orders his pnper to I "Ted " . oonnintimo, And tho publialw continues to "nd,theobsusrir,or1. bow h ply for it if he takes it out of the p(' tee. This proceeds upon be you“ t n man man my for what ho mu. MISCELLANEOUS. tor salgicheap. I. "my person omen- his pcpu dint. “ninth an" my all Arranges. o: t. [UNI-hot may comma. to send it until " auti- ands,gnrl colloetthc whole “lot; when»: it be taken from the oftiee or at, There on be no legal duqrorttinunneeunt "rrnorsti'arrtade. yunngod without dolly promptly made. [unanno- Apply to JAMES EDGE, “as Bill. Ont. ‘0- We to" the "our “nation " 1 may: and Inherit."- " the following up.“ " the nutty-pun!" t . iv.Mciumzne, F urniture will tobe found in his Old Sand oppesiu the Durham Bakery. Fire Insurance secured . OVII ORANT'I Brom, LOWER TOWN. --- - - Dmtiiiiiii NeWaDaper mun In. a. ,_ .7- 3.3“... Duh-n a; LEGAL 'mrt purchuo ' KRESS Cpllpcuonl to "on. - _ .. "wu- 1uuu u.u.a mm (rimlatmns strand come-- rs the dearest. tuo years devoted to, George. iuneuzmi-hry heart in yours fully frrouing, a vluwr crop in very alone, my love, and always will be. often the best use In which valuable' Clara, sobbimr-irrtre' are you sure. hurl can he put. When a Plover crop jperfectly mtrethat netthhy.rr--rypthiaur at i is plowed under in the second summer lall. could cool your Mtectront of its grouth, it meilows and lightens E StHt. thoroughly tutr/mer-My trm- the soil as no method of artificiai man- 'eioua.' IT in.“ happened, Baa, your tiring or cultivation could do. kTtirltather tte". . the clover all the other manure: appli- I Clrtra. hrfttrytury.:--11 orse. Far Worse. ed are much more effective than 't'lfl;l George. much Tlasv.xs.d-Teu me all, would be if clover had not preceded [my ameel; I can !'ear.itt. them. For this reason those who buy Claris ,with I heroic ette.rrt-Georare, the most stable and mineral tertiliz- 1'me-ire trot 3-3 hm! 'omilntr-corning era can best of all afford the time and on my 0006- WUT'.,',' remixed t grow u do?! crop. ' - --_--, -- w Us itiat unrailirstrtsnde espre- souroe of those on land remote from A REMEDY FOR HIS CASE. good match. and who cannot well Bros-Jones strikes me :3 a man afford to purchase the more expensive who is afraid to think for himself. kind. of km“ thatith-ttrh,, a-..- L t gem-ms or the clover to decompose the ' air. An old practical farmer whom we ,kneu long ago was satisfied that the benefit “as in the clover stems after ”they became hollow. and that the air inside the stems “as decomposed, and its nitrogenous parts made available for use by the plant. This “as a stepf towards the truth. for it is at this per- I iod of clover growth that the nodules, on the roots. which are now known to} be able to decompose air in the troil,! are most abundant and active. Nitro-,' "rnoun fertility in its available form) is a much more costly fertilizer than? any other which the farmer purchases. i As it is made from blood, or from the j decomposed excrement of animals, it! is north as manure 17 cents a pound. l If the. worth of a clover seeding were -,:' reckoned only by the amount of nitro- , I genous fertility that its fully grown) roots can furnish to the soil, it “ould " the the cheapest fertilizer that the far- I mer can use. nut with this is to bet! reckoned the aerating effects of that] clover roots in the subsoil, and the] supplies of mineral plant food that,! they bring to the surface. and the bene- 5 fit to the soil is very greatly increased. l It is not. possible to fix any sum asl. the price whieh a good clover ley is!. worth per acre. because fertility is! worth much more near a market than in it is where the market is distant. But , it is safe to say that even where land 4"] isnthe dearest. two years devoted to; " u -.ri....m. - . ., --._ _9.e-'_9..._rr “u. a.” .as, the air amounts to only from four to, six parts in 10.000. Yet from this small ' proportion reruns all the cornhuatihltsl portion of plant trees and vegetation! of every kind. Whenever these are} burned their nitrogen is speedily mix-i ed "ith air again. and becomes {reel nitrogen, not usable by plants, except. by the leguminous family, which in-' cludes Mover. beans and peas. Of all these plants the common red clover.’ including uith this the Mammoth orI pea-vine variety. has been proved by; prai-tit-al experiment. much the most) valuable as a restorer of fertility. The " virtues of clover were. indeed. practic- _ 1 ally known by farmers long before ' "eierwe demonstrated the methods by l which clover benefited the crops. Cl0v- " or as a renovating part of the rotation j I has keen sown by generations of farm- it ern who did not know why it did any good. Most rnmmonly it was supposed IE that the broader leaf of the clover shad.. [a ing the surhwe soil enabled it or It!'; stems of the Plover to decompose theI air. An old prai-tiral farmer whom we I n kneu long ago was satisfied that the. i P t'upposed that the leaves of plants “ere alile- to take ammonia from the utmos- .phere. That they take something that m a necessity for thvir growth has long liven knoun. But the most vareful ex- amination has failed to show that any- thing except varlronic acid gus is ever thus taken by leaves into the plant yirrulation, The carbonic acid gun in (non of free nitrogen it contains avail- aide for (Tops. In round numbers, 80 per rent of all the air we breathe is nitrosmn. But in its free state, or as it exists in the air, it is nor available for plant food. It has been the dream of cliemiwts ever since In. Priestley discovered the component parts of minimum air, that is nitrogen, which in the form of ammonia or nitrates is so important. as a fertilizer, might be made available for crops. It wan long sod, tion e “M's grows beneath the nurture. If he Pan dig deeply enough he will find olover roots going down two, three, flour or more feet. Email root of clover as it Penetrates the subsoil carries with it a small proportion of carbonic acid gas. This is one of the most powerful solvents known, and it obliges the sub- soil in contact with the root, to yield some of its mineral fertility to be by the larger the plowing may be frequent, that seeding, and that too with clover. Hex-veg its most important purpose. The growth of clover on the soil. no mat- ter what may be done with the crop, Rreatly increases the amount of vege- table matter in the soil. Did any of our readers ever take the pains to dig out a, Mover plant. using preferably rule that stood isolated from other clov- "r or grasses. so that its roots ran he kept separate I He will he astonished Perhaps to find that in most cases much . do: VALUE OF CLOVER SEEDING. There is much unjustifiable neglect n seeding with clover, which is the re- "lt of a failure to fully appreciate hat clover seeding does for the soil. n the first place seeding of any kind, art, American Cultivator. prevents most of the waste that on all cultivated rfd guns on during the season of trout ind snow, when there in nothing to use ertility. as the soil decomposes under _ these influences. There is no washian away or amr ttorl whioh in nnvnr-d \rifh I AGRICULTURAL rger bulk of the clover plant, " grows beneath the Buriaee. If I dig deeply enough he will find e trom Mood, or from the errunent of animals, it manure 17 cents a pound. of a Mover seeding were y Ity the amount of nitro- Bros-Jones strikes me as a man who is afraid to think for himself. 'smith-wit, dooan't he get married; Clara with erPotianr-George, are you sure you will always love mot George. fervesntrrr--whihs life lasts my own. Clura. suppressing a tear-George, id trials and tribuhtigns should come-- it. The List which fits the foot comfort- ”: ably is the best on which to have shoes I I made. One can usually find out after 'lt, ' a, while whether her foot requires a Eispecial last-whether, owing to the L' i peculiar shape of the instep, she can Elsafely wear a shoe selected from the y amnion stock, or if for the sake of ', llaii'riii' and beauty her shoe should be i made for her as an individual. A small a iextru cost should not he regarded :lwhen the question is of health and 'iiiurii; of mind, both of_which depend ,largely upon an easy-fitting shoe. A : shoe too loose and too large is equally I ito be deprecated With one which is too :fmirrow or too short. For Talking q , purpmes, either in summer or in win- jl'ter. a broad and rather thick sole is 1 needful. . v' Low shoes and slippers are comforts [only for the house 'luring our wintry lweather, and invalids should avoid {leaving the ankles unprotected out- side their own rooms. unless they live i in homes where the temperature Is {kept at an even rate, no matter what imay be the variations without. Fre- l I quent changing of shoes rests the feet 1 gen-'1 saves the shoes. It is really good 1 .ex‘onomy, if one can afford it, to keep i ‘seveml pairs of shoes in use at the l amine period. taking rare to put them t away in good order, always airing them f and removing dust and dirt before v placing them in the shin box or bag. Tissue-paper stuffed into slippers and patent-leather shoes keeps them in shape. A patent-leather shoe should be smoothed and warmed by pressure C from the hand before it is put on; this little care prevents the cracking of the S leather. :their tot. We begin with the little Emma. and. crowd their tender growing ifeet into shoes either too tight or too 1811011. or both, the consequence being ithat before adolescence many young i people have more or less deformed feet. :The corms. bunions, and other painful [evxcrescenpes from which numbers of _ men and women suffer are largely due Lofolly in the choice of shoes, and to the old idea, from whnmnuh-ma " I., c__al men and women suffer are largely due totally in the choice of shoes, and to the old idea, from whom derived it is hard to say, that a small foot is a very de- sielrlt possession. Those useful servants the feet have so muéh work to do on the mamh of life that they should be treated with greater consideration than often is their tot. We besrin with Hm noun HER GRocsiiLEss FEARS ‘iwtier chance than their fellows, they t u ill always remain rants. The best way fto manage this is when the pigs are seven or eight weeks old, take out the 'strongest, ones and wean them, giving then plenty of the best food that can he got to make growth. Then the runts, left to suckle the BOW alone, will in two or three weeks more take a, start that may make them as good as the others, so that in later life all can be fed together. No other feed, without the sow's milk will do this, though such other feed should be given and the pigs he. encouraged to eat all they can he made to eat. l be l [t is neither profitable nor always entirety safe to keep grant number! of hugs together. Besides the liabil- ity to disease getting among them there is always a certainty that the stronger will crowd the weaker from their feeding-places, so that the in- equality in size will increase. instead of decreasing. In every litter there are 9.1:»:in oaepr tw? wepkltngs that - - ___ --v-----e~ ...* lf/t log-n runts. and unless given a generally advanced hygiene, better srhool system arrl an advanced culture turl refinement are not to be regret- ted. But they cost more. And so, while there may be other reasons the chang- ed rendition of the times is salted down on the farm and more evaporates now than a half-century ago." "There is no can for lament over those departed days. Life is brighter atri more gladsome now. The great so- vial uplift which modern development has brought makes life worth more. Improved conditions of life, better-tur- mshed houses. better-provided tables, the decay of the deadly frying-pan, and is Ln the changed conditions that have led farmers to live more expensively than formerly. Income and outgo have ci,iiyy.re/i their relative position. LESS PROFITABLE Orr LATE. I A correspondent discussing why the farm is less profitable now than it was [bait a century ago thinks that one l cause is due to the introduction of lrailroads and other modern facilities for transacting business which has led I farmers to sell their produce in a small ' “any as fast as it is ready, In old times 5 the stock of butter was salted down and sold at the end of the season; the cat- tle were disposed of to drovers who vis- ited the farm once or twice a year, and mm can anon! it, to keep rs of shoes in use at the l, taking rare to put them 'd order, always airing them 'ing dust and dirt before In in the shoe box or bag. r stuffed into slippers and er shoes keeps them in patent-leather shoe should! I ._- ' - _ _ A HINT ABOUT PIGS SHO HS lits the foot comfort- ', deigyysd. for the mu m which to have shoes, Behind this gloUe , usually find out after plan-ed a. Iepresentatt1 _ her foot requires tri,n,1,ent.as.iravpears at u not he regarded ion is of health and M) of which depend msy~fitting shoe. A TORONTO Seeing not amid the evil All the golden grains of troot-.. Oh. mid love cab cther better M we only understuod. Sstityr ho? __ -'me.Wb6%.r= Jun me same? Should we help where naw we hind: Should we pity where we blame? Ah, we judge earl) other harshly, Knowing not life's hidden force; Knowing an: the fount of action Is has turbid at its source, __ 7 ,-___ _.._ ..y...., l Know what spur the auction gives, ‘Often we should find it better, Purer than we judge we should; We should love em-h other better " we only understood. Could we judge all deeds by motives, See the g03d and bad within. Often we should love the sinner. All the while we loathe the sin; Could we know the powers working To overthrow integrity, We should judge etch cther’s errors With more patient Htaritr. If we knew the cares and trials, Know the efforts'all in vain, And the bitter disappointment. Understood the loss and train-- Would the grim, external n ughne. Seem, I wonder just the same? Slum-Id um Ind» -c, Could we but draw the curtains That surround eavh cther's livel. See the naked heart and spirit, v--.” __, A .. m me it because it. is a. novel and in- teresting show. " is acknowledged to be one of the most, useful educators from a scientiti, point of siew “at has yet been invented. No better means of illustrating the wonders of the hetr. vens and the method of the earth's re- volutions have yet been devised, and Flamrntvriort has won additional laurel wreaths by his clever work. \.......u H. mm rourse when the revolv- ing globe comes back to the light of the sun. Every detail is shown on the screen with wonderful fidefity. The interesting exhil ition is attract- ing a great deal of attention from sci- entists,as well as from those who come to see it because it. is a. novel and t,-l beresting show. it is acknowlmlmul tn my a-~r-< """'"'tH (two minutes, showing the e volution of the world in that time. The effect is “ouderful. The sees the world revolve in al Utes, exhibiting the great glc every sea. river and mounts.) fully portrayed. At the pro; night falls on the world, and dawns in due course when the ing globe comes back to the “mu we globe “as set revolving, and the virysmdtograph photographed it in two minutes, showing the entire re- vo!uti0n of the world in that spam of tim-n i A PICTURE OF THE EARTH As seen by the inhabitants of the an if there be any. The manner in wl this picture was obtained is very genious. Flammarion caused to be t strucbed a huge globe, on which , marked all the various seas and t'O tries of the earth in their exact. g graphical positions. Then, aiming Instrument at the glob, he caused to revolve by means of a mechaui designed for the nurnose, umlugl'upil at work on the stage is vis- ible, and, the supporting effect of the walls being alment, the audience gasps as the well-known iwavenly Indies gy- rate with dizzy speed, and in defiance of all their accepted rules for their movements. _ Flammariou's wonderful experiments did not end with, the illusion described. With the r'inttnatosrrsph he caused to be shown in the, theater \Vhile sitting comfortably in a seat in the theater there passes before the eyes of Che audience the setting of the sun, and the gradual rising of the moon, the filling of the heavens with stars, and so on to the dawning of the day. In order to heighten the delusion, the theater is darkened during the ox- hibition, so that nothing but the cine.. pmlogruph at work on the atoms is viu- PV 1 they live, also the heavenly bodies tra- E veling their appointed course. r, The photographic novelty is regarded " [ as one of the most brilliant of the 2 year. With a cincmatograph M. Flam- y marion took his stand one night in the a center of a fine stretch of landscape“ and left the moving earth to register t the heavens on the film of the instru- , ment. In this way Flammarion was l able to do what it would have been im- . possible to do with a cinematograph '. used in the ordinary way. 1 In order to make the consecutive pio- tures that would enable him to portray the scenes of the heavens " various stages of the night, he took thous- ands of proofs on the some film, and I made a. number of proofs on different l nights, and in this way made I i A SERIES or PHOTOGRAPHS 1 ‘,Showing the gradual going down of the l lean, the coming out of the stars, the l risi..g of the moon, its motions during ti the night, and the entire movements f of the ever changing astronomical rod- 3 ies from darkness to dawn. e The flying stars that shot mysteri- l ously across the firmament during the fi night were ah faithfully portrayed, and the whole svene of the star-lit hm- vens transferred to the film, ending .uith the breaking of day, and the Chas. "yr_away of the stars luv the risinir nuu. Lue wnole scene of the star-lit hm- vens transferred to the film, ending uith the breaking of day, and the chas- ing away of the stars by the rising of the sun in tile morning. The wonderful result of this patient work of Fiaramarion is that time is annihilated to the audience that watch- t Sign Ital-eel " Two M""Mrs-Enttre Ite. v-nlullon or thc Globe on a Screen In the Spare a! a Few Second“. I The latest development in the pho- , tographic novelties obtained by M. CI- lmille Flammarion, the well-known tu- tronomer, of Paris, France, include some remarkable work with the cine-, matograph,which has enabled an audi- ence sitting in a theater to see por- trayed before them on the stage the revolving of the very world upon which BY FLAIMARION'S LATEST PHOTO- GRAPHS OF HEAVENLY BODIES. flliMMfi"'ig. OF THE WORLD l 101' the purpose. 1 this globe Flammarion had 'representation of the firma- it appvars at night, and then ted the globe uith a. strong .de to shine on the globe in the t.hat the sun does on the earth. , "lulu. -- - _ ' ' IF w E KNEW , 1ddC7 quuUlluulZS ot the moon, e any. The manner in u hich [re was obtained is very in- Flammarion caused to be con- - C., ' F lg the great globe, with war and mountain faith- rd. At the proper time the world, and the day (nurse when the revolv- 0113. Then, tcunirur%i, the glob: he caused it gl.oue, on ivriiii was of I mechanism we hi ndert ', blame? seas and Poun- geo- _ _ ---- - w-I ucbl ad of. But four bottle. of Nel- gave him back his natural strewn! victim of lndlxcauon. W. P. Bolgvr Bantu-ow, lays : "Nervine cured of my suffering. which seemed In able. and had burned w tornee thods and elortn." Pater Emu Paisley. lost tteteh and rarely to good night's sleep. because or atom trouble. He an; " Nervine Ito; the n‘onlllnx pun: In my stomach first by I used it. I have now to two bottles and I feet entirely rule and can sloop like a too." A ret tentative farmer. or Western Onto is Mr. C. J. Curtin, -g.., - - rlve Years I " 'tion, Ponrtimttr u.e treatment of d not he'll) me. t hovelcu. tor the best Dhy'liclsns iiiiff Nervum, mud an truthfully my um mixed to do him good. He tries! Nor, In the on. tax-dicta. that has c-mou‘l "me. and those are his word: '. n t iiiiyit euro In my on..." Mn John Du.- Ir lay It: Nervine cured me mm] 13"”? hqa been for " your: a rum-m Jim to-dur In Itronr and welt as ever " (ot Pinkerton, and h” retctemt tht " 311mm] 817:. ot Meatord. was cured (I): :lottod tttree-score "are nnd ten Tttrea nounlth of the staunch and bowel. ya." no her system assumes ”v. Ir three bottles at an. medicine. Jan 3" shock through the death ttt ' Fhorwood, ot Windsor, It " you. J'idty'ye NGWIIQ In recommeniod. an. sutured from tn attack of mnly- She ”rower-Inc), tot" " mm" rt 31."..3‘1352- tiPttte, m a.....u.. 'ttt'tttyliifs 'e, that m 1. w war, Weakneu and enttclputlon ot an surly death had before prevailed? In :.ot he also a. public benefactor? Lot (lime who have been down Md a." now up tttroturtt the use of South Ant- vrlou: Net-vino give their opinion] on thin subject. John Boyer, bunker. at Kincurdine. Ont., had made himself a hopeless Invalid through year- at over- work. At least he felt hi. can we: " It In tho one that " who muco- bottles of Nervine, and can tvuthturxy two blades of grass grow where only [any that I am ' new man. one had mum before 1. . benefactor) A shrewd observer at human will" _ : ., _ I the of the rm, whnt in the petition to be t','r%efnid,,',"t"L"tt,uh.rt 1:2: ,m, accorded that man who by hi. ttnow-i . a "y . ‘portnnt it is, then, the! ham: an 'r,e/'d'll',t,.,t.l",' tr'c'rul'tt',e,.,t,"tat,ti)'irfl;;t)! should ho made tho lot ot n " o].- __,..I_-_- ~‘ -. . Tho Sumo Verdict Come: From Old and Young. Rich and Poor. um From All Corner. on] Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have Pronounced the Cases Beyond Cum This Great Discovery Has Proven a. Genuine Elixir ot Life. a [is-man Mammal and Universal In Its Earmarks The Ring of Siam has a body guard of female 1sarriorts-i. e., 400 girls, chosen from among the strongest and moat handsome of a,li the ladies in the land. 5 THEY BIUNT llll 'nlt"i1i'iiiii"i'ili'":" Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who Have Been Cured of Dire Disease By - South American Nervinc. er of it power to act as t Thus a woman, having her signet ring, had power to is as he himself would do. From the remotest times women have loved to adorn their fingers with rings, and some of the mummies found in the Egyptian pyramids had their fin- ‘gers literally covered with them. Some- times these rings were of gold, but at others they were of glass, pottery or brass, according no doubt, to the: wealth of the wearers. A ring is iir-" stowed in marriage because it was an- ciently a seal by which orders were signed, and the delivery of the ring was a. lichen that. a man gave the lrear.. I the young officer answered quito' {coolly "Hold on a minute! I'm light-i OAPITAL. Authorized $8,000.00. 2 ‘ing my pipe!" at . , And he struck a match and lit it"BESEBVEPF'.6le3 1,000,00t There was a roar of laughter. and Bl 300.0“ soldier called out, "Well, sinee you're! so Trs",' I 2.int, 1"ll have tl 11pm W.F.Oowgu, Geo. P, Reid mysel ." And ' too, struck saute . ' and began to smoke. This bit of fun, Pmaiant. Manage steadieg file glen. _nnd they came " ______ _ T""""" through in good aide}- A very young officer, who had gone almost straight from school to the army sud thence to India, was leading his company through a rocky pass.,on returning from a scouting expedition. They were beset by the enemy, who fired at them from behind the rocks, and the men were growing very un- steady. Those in the rear legal: to by impatient, and shouted to the men in front, "Hurry up! What are you “nit-i ing for there t" I flow a In" You“ one" and III In In. Oral. “He's a. cool hut," is the my the soldiers in a certain English regiment describe one of their officers. n young man whose mM-possession in a time of danger saved his men from defeat, and probably from death. The tsircumsttrn- ce which gave this officer his reputa- tion is related by Rudyard Kipling in tht Westminster Mnga ine. He writes: "u; um mm any (lea of Nervine,u my restoration u ' Neither man A FEMALE BODY GUARD _ - -... w " tlrst few dam-g Commence-1 to " -dny r'Mtored on” my. wmch seemed Incur- f ttattest Bil tornee Ino- ortn." Pater Emu. of tteteh and rarely had t hep. beau-e or stomuh an : " Nervine 'rtopped hlln- ". --, . anon and hendache. of Mvertt1 physlcnanl I _ :on FINGER RINGS th Martyr _ to - 77v ---une ponevenn'ly to m attack ot 'treiiiirhri:1,'i, with the m at In. was dean-1b thy Ollln “you. apt bottteq of Ner (in. , dred. of woman cuter naturu "renqth, Aled blood and wukez ‘n, W. P. Bonny-r, at vttaiitr," "" Mrs. Nervine cured “‘°’BHBM°n. “teamed 1 Men seemed incur-.13, "Item. I Wu t led :11 tom": um- In... a.-- ----, " A COOL 'UN." “"1 " mama: .‘ny good. "To me," he Qty], HI on to hegllh und- tttatt or wdman WHO»! wlth liver B the Bentiment "1 to tet ha. ored '"'mptetety A Haitian: of l, in the Der-on that I Gd, an not dead alten u (on u .. u; ' husGndu issue orders Indi- wt the ring ve the hear. his; leputr took - -e_'eeV ."trl ulrli, lllu 3”. "9'“th from the heart. The dam or more witnesses that here sp'uk have their countermru by the hundrMS. not only In the 'rrovtrttte or (mum. but In every other FOCUOH ot the rsomlttr. Ion. Sou" American Nervine " bu“ 0’! a “ammo ernprlc (hut 81”" a cure a Certainty. no matter new dub route the one may be. It strum. a the nerve center- from which am the I". b"od at the whole avatvm tt It not . medicine of patchwork. but frt '?.'mHe" and emu-Mu " In 'nf‘nun New-er Inca in too vuuub‘r- " mum of further additions to than earnest word. of teidmon' from than Who know just what they are mum! "out. m the oornmon haulme of the dar, they luv. liken there, Ind Mr. "entries. from the heart. The dam - _ --.- Old and Young. Malonnd roman All Corners ofthe Dominion. . tho mothers ot this country Tho wo. 'fmon ot Cum. are ready by own" to 'iteu or the benettta that haw- wmv to ‘lthem through the use of South Amw- ) an Norvlno. In. R. Arnum‘ona ot 10mm, win or the colporteur. of the 'Bxblo Society of that town, “new! do: all you-o from nervous proumuon. ‘Medloul “than“ did not not.) ' In JIL" she can, " I In" (dun aw be“!!! :0! Net-vine. and an truthhlly my um III the one Ian-dicta. that has tstNotod I,", euro In any can." an. John Dan- ter ha. been for " yam a nuns-m iot Pinkerton. and bu tact-d the Il- 1lottod tttree-acorn you. nnd ten Threat yctn In her Intent untamed ”R'- gm shock through tho death of 0 [human NorvIle m recornmerMetf, 'IPte-trywir" took " hotUu rt mu nun “to" ard hogan} I , n- 1er of women B1teer. from lm pov ,ri'h- " blood sud wukene-J nerve, ‘AII Vitality." "" Mrs. J. “was, ‘t Bramrton, "loomed to havn tor-urn my "um. I wu unable to can .e- not from any com-on until t unumfx trd Mint South American Na-rx .... a " result- I." - .nM-t......... A» . - _i.ii-', StandardBank of Canada around to TuGieari.0rrd.Tii'iriU'r)'roo1", attended to. Residue. Lot 19. Con Townlhip of Bontinek. S a. REGISTRY UFFLUE. h, mu I La1titer,Raautrar. John A. M .uro. Deputy-Registrar. Ollie. hours mm 10 DAN. I!“ allow“ on uninc- bluh t. " /w'_s' trd upwuda. Prompt attention and em mod carton»: living at u dunno. v. --* v " I Annual Rink“). bullion. tran-d !trnftt sued-n6 oollocttonn nude " all Potnta mp... u mind And interest anon-I at "at". can. - - __ W. lr. Oman. Geo. P. Reid, Pmidont. Manage AGENTE in atl principal points i. thtfarttr,thtoboo, lunch. United tittrttt ill IMO-d. DURHAM AGENCY. nus: l on you. lit “was; can. “110! “no” Propmm. IOENSED .to4plm. a nnmm mm Thursday Morning. gt" G_roy. Head Office. Toronto SAVINGS BAN, 1 t .2 OFFICE, "Aru'auxa It. (BUREAU. my mai QPCTIONEER for All, oqmmuniontign's McLEAN. Ill'I “I“ 10.. 1.3.1- ot 'df. “caution sad "or, In 1- living u c dint-.0". ' KELLY. Aunt. DAN. IcLEAl. ' wt" be prempiir ageing)!!! , wen-w rt it d M 0 . - ("m l ot "I. on . bra I that. (If H] At that neeti tuna agree Mu deep is W otaeettrtt of t Too much (L " asffrw bran " ruck mg brush 1f There d We mun “ucly , bi bl Ila M I In: It ul Wt hurry-s ”in, a "ostaa' . prawn " N: by; pus ~- body I no Promo- " not iii .r.uBeto I GROWIN SLEh’rl mun-a h Bow H” In.“ I It" " [may "W by

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