West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 24 Mar 1898, p. 2

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t# &{â€" Handâ€"made Waggons In the old stand. made shoes. Horse Shoeing Shop, 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. ALLAN McFARLANE In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power FOR SALE The EDGE PROPRRTY. ‘ *CVnoud â€" avuiioINEEL, f0f th County of Grey. Sales attended to prom; sad at reasonsble rates. Has opened out a firstâ€"class ne*~y re : NOTARYV Pog MON®BY T BUSINESS DIRECTORY. J3 48M595R, SOLICITOR INâ€" SV REME COURT t t~" ome door uorti Firstâ€"Class Hearse. Of the Best Quality Cheapor THAX EVER. > tionser for Counties of Bruce and Gâ€"r;; Residenceâ€"King 8t., Hanover, 0an and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. JAMES LOCKIE, UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to JAKE KRESS. 8. Aay person who takes a paper tron the post office, whether directed to bis name or another, or whether bhe has sub soribed or not is responsible for the pay. 1. If any person orders hispeper discor tinued, he must pay all arreages, or the publisher may continue to send it until pey mwentis made, and collectthe whole awx ourn whether it be taken from the office or no: There can be qo legal) discontinuance unti paymentismade. 8. 1# a subscriber orders bis paper to b« stepped at a cartaintime, and the published continnes to sand,the subscriberis bour{ b_poy f(_)_r it If he takes it out of the pos office. This proceeds upon ke groun: hat a man must pay for what he uses. BSUZR of Marriage 1lj4censos, Auo Wo call the npul;' attention ef Poes maste~s and subseribersto the following sy mopsina a(the newrpaperiaws : Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MoFARLANE, OFFICE J. P. TELFORD, ma arranged ICENSED AUCTIONER, for HUCH McKAY. WOODWORK MISCELLANEOUS. JAKE KRESS Furniture 5 . L. McKENZIE, still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durhawm Bakery. in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont. for sale cheap. Newspaper Laws. DU RHA M taken for wrt LEGAL G v(thout delay. _ Collections ‘mde, Insurance effected. ) A N stlowost rates of Intorest 1,10, Commissieoner.ctc., ve Insurance secured, ant‘s Stom«, Lower Town. LOAN f . Seot‘s Store Durbam ee Darbham Ont All hand« Also The following extracts from adletter written to Gardening may be useful to those who contemplate pruning young trees. The writer says: It is not sayâ€" ing too much that many young trees are ruined by severe pruning, and many more are much weakened by it. A gentleman who had set out an aven ue of pine oaks a year ago, recently inâ€" quired if it would be a good time to cut away some of the lower branches. The trees, he said, were about seven feet high, and it was his desire to have no branches lower than five feet. Now I may say first, that for a lawn tree, no branches should be cut away. The prettiest specimens are those with branches sweeping the ground. But in the case of the ons who was seeking advice, there were good reasons for deâ€" siring that the lower branches should not be retained. My answer was that it we may judge from these facts, we may be sure that the refuse of the crop is of really surpassing value for the manure made of it. when used as a litter. It is true there is a common prejudice against it on account of the belief that it has the effect of indueâ€" ing disease in animals, under which it is used as litter ; a prejudiceâ€"by the wayâ€"that has no support in fact. and seems to be as ill founded as the belief that it may be grown on such lands as will not yield a profitable crop of any other kind. The old and common adagze "Give a dog a bad name and you may hang it." seems to be applicable to this really valuable plant for its yield of grain and the fertilizing value of its straw. 6°°~°° "erest in regard to this really valuable crop plant. _ In addition, the grain has more protein in it than barâ€" ley, and as much fat as this grain, and nearly twice as much as wheat or rye. At the same time, under due culture and on good land, it will yield filty bushels per acre, which his been made several times by the writer, and the market value of it for making the popular flour, is always above that of wheat. If wa may Snndiee Posias j l Pn t Figures show that this siderably more ash than the grains. That it ha. phosphoric acid than an to four times that of wh times as much of lime. sulphuric acid than an y grain crops, and many chlorine, while few sur quantity of soda. _ Thes great interest in regard y .\ _3 " Ge ne few currants and gooseâ€" berries I have. I regret very much that I did not plant acres of them years ago where I now have only hills. This year I shall plant largely â€" of them. Can I, as a farmer who lives on a farm of 169 acres, worth $125 per acre, close to a town of 10,000 â€" people, nogliect these small details, small fruits, when I have proven by my own [urtuul experiments, extending over a period of six years that there are imâ€" mensely greater profits in these small fruits than there can possibly be in any cereal or vegetable crop one can raise, yea, ten to twenty times greater ? The pleasure we derive from growing them and from baving them fresh on our table, says no. And the credit side of our ledger decidedly says no. And besides all this, what fascination and what enjoyment there is in their culture. . Verily it is "a labor of love {rom start to finish." It is business farming. There are no mysteries about it. just good "horse sense" is all that is needed. | $24, or at the rate of $276 net per acre, ’ as I figure that the amount used in the | family, if sold, would more thain pay | the cost of picking, boxing, etec. _ When ,( first planted the 200 hills I thought that I might get enough fruit from ‘them to supply my own table, and in lthut case would have been satisfied with that much return from so small a plot of groundâ€"fortyâ€"eight by sevâ€" entyâ€"five feet. _ But each year as 1 would jingle the twelve, fifteen or twenty good dollars that lay in my pocket as additional returns in the way of bounteous profits yearly for so litâ€" [ tle labor nÂ¥emamideas" Bs ane Ual BUCKWHEAT STRAW AS A FERTL LIZER. hi rsittudit® Socicats ns Allh c t ..A 15 tle labor expended, fl:egun to study and figure, and the more 1 figured, the more 1 planted out of small fruit, unâ€" til now I have a goodly acreage that brings me yearly returns fifteen to twenty times greater than what a crop of corn did before, and eight to ten times greater than a crop of potatoes, and at no greater outlay of either time or money in cultivation, acre per acre, than either of the other crops. _ What I have said about raspberries is also true regarding currants and gooseberâ€" ries, and I think with a greater profit to the grower, as the care and expense is not so great in currants and gooseâ€" berries, you have not the old vines to take out each year, and the pruning is not so radical. The cultivation would be about the.same ; this is my experiâ€" ence with the few currants and gooseâ€" berries I have. I regret very much that I did not plant acres of them years ago where I now have only hills. This year I shall plant largely â€" of thom. Cur L AG .& Rivemnmes ennpl mpete n ed and sold $12 worth, besides what a family of eight persons used to eat ; also used a proportionate amount put up in cans, jellies, etc. The amount sold from those 200 hills has increased yearly, not stinting the use of them in the family, until last year at the unprecedently low price of $1.50 to $1.75 per crate cf twentyâ€"four quarts, each, I sold fourteen crates, netting me 1 secured 200 Blackâ€"cap raspberry plants, and planted them in hills in my garden three feet by six feet, or at the rate of 2400 per acre. I never gave them anything but ordinary cultivaâ€" tion, enough only to keep down the weeds and grass, I think it was three times per year, which was less than the care or cultivation of a crop of corn. The first year of their bearing, I pickâ€" Mr. T. C. Beasley writes on the subâ€" jeet of small fruit culture on the farm, giving the results of his experience from which we quote: Six years ago AGRICULTURAL SMALL FRUITS FOR THE FARM RUNING YOUXNG TrErEs "0f a bad name and you méy _ seems to be applicable to this iluable plant for its yield of id than any other of the w that this plant has conâ€" e ash than any other of That it has largely more id than any other, equal that of wheat ; and three many times as much few surpass it in the i. _ These facts are of It has more A new solution has been proposed for the domestic servant difficultyâ€" namely, the employment of boys, and even of grown men, to do housework. One of the employers of a lad from the Boys‘ Home at Regent‘s Park, Lonâ€" don, bears testimony that the boy did very well everywhere except in the drawing room, where he was rather clumsy, but for kitchen work and cleaning generally he surpassed any girl that the mistress ever had. Most of the housewives who have tried the young Armenian men servants testify as to their cleverness in learning cookâ€" ing. cleaning and waiting and their desire to meet their employers‘ wishes. Aunt Emmaâ€"Your folks all we‘ll Willie t Willieâ€"All but mammaâ€"she‘s gwt!' billiard trouble this morning The masters, though intent on reâ€" establishing amicable relations with the men, are incapable against those employed who refuse to join in the lockout. Their toycott against Harâ€" land & Wolff, of Belfast, is going to be the most interesting thing of its kind the shipbhuilding trade has ever known. The manager of this great firm, Pierie, who is already Lord Mayâ€" or of Belfast, wants to go to Pariliaâ€" ment, and is charged with refusing to join the lockout in order to make favâ€" or for himsel{ with the electorate. He bids fair to pay dear for his seat, for the Masters‘ Federation talks of noâ€" thing less than smashing this leviathan of shiphuilding firms. The steel plate manulacturers, for example, are being compelled to decline to sell to Harâ€" land & Wolff, under pain of losing the entire Federation‘s custom, and the principle is being extended to cut off practically all their supplies. It may involve the ruin of Belfast‘s prinâ€" cipal industry. British Shipbuilers Were Never so Busy as at the Present Time. Engineering, shiphuilding, and ship fitting industries in England have never been so busy as now. They are making up for the last ha‘lf year of the gxreat lockout with a vengeance, night slMifts being almost universal and deâ€" liveries hard to secure under two years. The immense bylk of the men who were out are at wwork again, but there are several hundred marked agiâ€" tators who will not be taken back anyâ€" where. ‘The men show no disposition to quarrel on their account. _ They bave learned a good many lessons since midsummer, and among them is a wholesome distrust of the "leaders" who get them into trouble, and so grossly bungled their efforts to exâ€" tricate them from it. Many stories are, current of how generously individuâ€" al employers bekaved in feeding (pe women and children during the disâ€" tress, and «it is easy to believe that there is a better and more cordial feeling of the men toward the mastâ€" ers toâ€"day that England has known for a long time. There will be no strike in trades for vears to come. grape. The method of application is to bathe or sprinkle the vines with a 10 per cent. solution of the sulphate and then place a small quantity of the rowdered sulphate around the base of the vine. 3 SOAKING SEEDS. Prof. Waugh has been conducting exâ€" periments to determine the value of soaking smal! seeds to aid them in gerâ€" minating. Both pepsin and diastaste were used in the experiments, and the professor gives preference to the latter. He explans thati the diastaste used "is really only malt extract. We dissolve one part of powdered malt in ten parts of water, strain it, and put the seeds to soak twentyâ€"four hours. A quart of malt, worth five cents or less, would thus make ten quarts of liquid, or enâ€" ough to treat ten pounds of tomato or radish seeds, or peas." THE BLACK ROT. Bulphate of Iron as a winter treatâ€" ment is used in France for preventing the black rot and other diseases of the TROUBLE OF A NEW NATURE of the trees. Roots had been lost in transplanting which had to be met ‘by shortening the tops. I added that had a few years, branching wherever they will, and in this way from sturdy trunks in less time than if they were {)runod up at once, A great deal the etter way, as I told the party inquirâ€" ing, is to cut away a few only, every year, not commencing at all until the trees are five to six feet high, having oaks in mind. I was explaining this to a friend one time, and he replied, " Well, but I see here some young oaks which you bhave transplanted trimmed up almost to a bare pole." I acknowâ€" ledged this and explained that in such cases it was a necessity to save the life the trees been moved with all their roots intact, such as would have been the case if they had come from out o( pots, there would have been no prunâ€" ing necessary. unless the trees had more branches above five feet than I should suppose, it would be highly injudicious to cut away any of them until the trees were stronger, and I _ would repeat the advice to any one seeking it in similar circumstances. A young tree well established, and well branchâ€" ed ,will grow a great deal faster if its branches are not taken away. I am sure that had the party referred to tried an experiment, cutting away all branckes below five feet on the half of his trees, and leaving the others unâ€" touched, he would have been abundantâ€" ly satisfied of the correctness of my advice. I bhave seen the mistake made many times. Those who raise k rees in a commercial way are well aware of the danger of cutting away the lower branches of trees too soon. Trees inâ€" tended for avenue planting, which ofâ€" ten have to be with bare stems from six to seven feet high, are not trimâ€" med up to the required ‘height at once. They are let grow almost at will for THE DOMESTIC PROBLEM THE WORLD‘S SHIPYARD. TORONTO Aboui 25. answered the And the exrcerienced chry understcod. and whispered to her leaves. Pretty lowâ€"spirited. i_t;ea at least 75 declarations of love. Seventyâ€"five? Why. how many were here toâ€"night ? _ Papaâ€"No,. my son, you should not say there he is, but there it is. How are you? cried the chrysantheâ€" mum to the palm at the other end of the ball room"a.l‘ter the dance. Charlieâ€"Why, papa, it‘s book, ish‘t it ? Biliousness so affected a Cleveland man that his doctor told him be must give up drinking coffee. He refused. Five or six weeks passed, and his phyâ€" sician noticed a marked change in the man‘s appearance, he had a clear skin and was active and vigorous, " So you have given up coffee?" said the docâ€" tor, ‘‘Indeed I have not," replied the man. "I still drink two cups every morning." He was not aware that his wife had substituted imitation coffee for the genuine article. Papaâ€"Charlie, please band book on that table there. Charlie (aged nine)â€"There Having a marriage in view with a new charmer a Parisian student deterâ€" mined to abandon an earlier sweetâ€" beart. She begged for a final meeting, They met, and in balf an hour he was in a stupor from drugged win>. Then she poured vitrol in his eyes, utterly destroying his sight. The sense of smel! possessed by Patâ€" rick J. Lauphear, of Lexington, Ky., is very keen. He is fiftyâ€"five years of age, and his nose is considered the best whisky tester in the world. By simply smelling whisky he can tell the age, ingredients, and market value of any spirits of that kind. His nose has alâ€" ready enabled him to accumulate a forâ€" tune of $20,000. Pawnee County, Kansas, offers a bounty of three dollars for every head of a coyote brought to the Treasurer‘s office. These animals have slain numâ€" erous sheep, and even young calves are their victims. Hunters make big wages by the slaughter of coyotes. A Jewish congregation in Chicago. that of Dr. Emil G. Hirsch, holds divine service on Sundays instead of Saturâ€" days. Hebrews all over the United States are discussing the propriety of a general change of the Jewish Sabbath from Saturday to Sunday. A torpedo, such as those used by railroads for signaling, was found by Frank Warren, aged sixteen, of Midâ€" dletown, N.Y. In attempting to exâ€" plode it by hammering a piece of his nose was torn off, and the sight of one eye was destroyed. The Rev. Thomas E. Moore, one of the five young men who, in 1865, originated the Salvation Army in Lon:lon.l;‘e('Pnt- . xpected death. He was i));'e:z";ltinirn i:npt‘lg: Baptist Church in Harper, Kansas, and dropped dead in the pulpit. a gallon of water at a time to quench his thirst. The hotel and gambling hbhalls at Monte Carlo last year made a profit of $2,880,000 over all expenses. For the next ten years Prince Albert of Monaco will exact $250,000 a. year from the gambling syndicate for its lease. James Mcindoo, of Modelia, Minn., is a remarkable young man. He is only 18 years of age, yet he is 6 feet 10 inches tall and weighs 303 pounds. He wears a 24 shoe, a No. 8 hat, and drinks The term " infantry " meaning footâ€" soldiers, originated with the Spanish. It was first applied to the military force employed by an infartlte, or young prince of Spain, to rescue his father from the Moors. Last year the importations of chamâ€" pagne in the United States aggregated 219,000 cases. This is only about oneâ€" forth of the quantity consumed here. The other threeâ€"fourths must thereâ€" fore have been spurious. The descendants of Mrs. Watt, of Ferryden, Scotland, number 269, twelve of whom were her sons and daughters. She recently died in that town in the 101ist year of her age. England receives no tribute from any of her colonies They are of advanâ€" tage to her only as markets for her productions, and as permanent homes for her superfluous population. In Dawson City, Alaska, in the depth of winter, the foam on a glass of beer turns into a substance resen'lbhng iceâ€" cream in one minute after being drawn from the keg. Bicyclists in India are becoming proâ€" fane. Their chief enemies are the mosâ€" quito>s, which not only bite their limbs and Lodies, but actually bite through the tires. j Beet sugar to the amount of 2808 tons was produced in the United States in 1889. Last year the quantity raised was 43,000 tons. A rude wag in Waterbury, Vt., threw a polecat through a neighbor‘s window and so scented a $75 carpet that it bad to be buried. He was fined $25. The cost of fuel on steam railroz.lds is about ten per cent of the operatmg expenses ; on electric roads it is about five per cent. All the employees of a new literary paper in Paris, named Le Fronde, ediâ€" tors, compositors, pressâ€"workers, etc., are females. Snakes and other reptiles are the only animals which seem to be able to exist without drink. Rabbits are so plentiful in the marâ€" kets of Omaha that they are sold as low as twentyâ€"five to fifty cents a dozen. A Few Paragrapks Which Willbe Found Worth Reading. Nearly. all savages have sound teeth. Imperfect teeth are a sign of civilizaâ€" tion. $ wWHAT THEY HEARD HAD A REASON ITEMS OF INTEREST. I heard toâ€"night chrysanthemum palm sadly. e\'erlastihg something me that he is hyman men w"H°mM004, oL WindsOor, at 70 years of ige, suffered from an attack of paralyâ€" is. His life, at that age, was despairâ€" ca of. But four bottles of Nerâ€"ine zave him back his natural strength. A victim of Indigestion, W. P. Bolg=~, of Renfrew, says : * Nervine cured me of my suffering, which seemed Iineurâ€" able, and had baffied all formre> meâ€" thods and efforts." Peter lsson, of Paisley, lost flesh and rarely nad a good night‘s sleep, because o‘ stomach trouble. He says : " Nervine stopped the agonizing pains in my stomach the first day I used it. 1 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. J. Curtis, residing near Wind. sor. His health was scemingly comâ€" pletely destroyea through i grippe . No medicine did him any good. "To three bottles of Nervine," he sEys3, ‘I attribute my restoration to health and strength ." Neither man or woman. can enjoy life when troubled with liver complaint. This was the sentllnsnl‘ and feeling of W. J. Hill, the wellâ€" known bailiff of Bracebridge. " 1 was so bad," says he, " that one of my medical attendants sai+ that I was : dying, but, thank God, 1 am not dead yot. _ From the first few doses I took of Nervine I commenced t> fee] bitâ€" ter, and am toâ€"day restored completely * my usual health." A resident of the Maritime Provinces, in the person of S. Jones, of Sussex, N.B., says : "Fup‘ twelve years 1 WEE B mniburme Lo ce es If it is tho case that ke who makes bott iwo blades of grass grow where only say me had grown before is a benotlu:torfhA of the race, what is the position to be 5crl:d ‘ccorded that man who by his knowâ€" Iport edge of the laws of life and health'.u.fl ives energy and strength where ianâ€" ‘the : uor, weakness and anticipation of *" imen «arly death had before prevailed? Il’“u ot he @lso & public benef@actor? Lot then acse who have been down and aro‘c“ ow up through the use of South Amâ€" Orill rican Nervine give «their opinionus on :Blbh ais subject. _ John Boyer, banker, of for a incardine, Ont., had made himself a Med hopeless invalid threugh years of overâ€" !." »» work. _ At least he felt his case wes ‘of N Lopeless, for the best physicians had is t "alled to do him good. He tried Nerâ€" & cu vine, and these are his words : * U gladâ€" lwood Y say it : Nervine cured me and I ‘of P m toâ€"day as strong and well &8 eVerâ€"" ‘jotte amuel lÂ¥a, of Meaford, was cur:d C year ceuralgia of the stomach and bOW#IS ‘epe y three bottles of this medicine. Jas. ‘@au Jherwood, of Windsor, at 70 years ot'sh,‘ age, suffered from an attack of pal‘lly-',;,.‘] is. His “t., At that arA was 42 .22uil C Recruiting Officerâ€"I‘m afraid you are not heavy enough for a cavalryâ€" man. We want men who can ride right over everything, if necessary. Applicantâ€"That‘s all right, sir. I‘ve been a cab driver for seven years. *tion, The Same Verdict Comes From Old and Young, Male and Female liich and Poor,. and From All Corners of the Dominion. Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have Pronounced the Cases Beyond Cure, This Great Discovery Has Proven a Genuine Elixir of Life. The late Sir Edward Lechmere, head of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, then took the matter up, and a powerâ€" ful committee was formed, which inâ€" cluded the late Archbishop of Canterâ€" bury and many leading Christians and Jews. The Baroness Burdettâ€"Coutts declined to join it until it had obtained the Sultan‘s firman. The committee worked for ten years, it made sure of the $250,000 required, it arranged with the authorities at Jerusalem, it obtainâ€" ed the Sultan‘s personal promise of a firman. At the last moment the proâ€" ject falls through. All the officialism of Constantinople apparently require to be bribed before the firman can be issued. At any rate, the demands for backsheesh added up some $20,000, which killed the scheme. i ind Wiio af Rivrailh I: fpqlcl TREY GOUNT BV THE §808¢ Yartous Attempis Mave Been Made to Get It, Bui They Have Fatles. Jerusalem now has a population of 60,000, about double the number of its inbabitants twenty years ago, but it bas the most imper{ect and unwholeâ€" some water supply of any city on ’ earth. Many attempts have been made to provide the city with a proper water system, but the "heelers" at the Subâ€" lime Porte have thus far prevented their realization. All the people of Jerâ€" usalem now draw their water from cisterns which are filled by the heavy rains from December to March and in these, of course, the water deterioraâ€" tes and breeds impurities, to say nothâ€" ing of the frequent failure of the supâ€". plys: Many English people exerted themselves to improve this state of alfairs; among others, Henry Maudsâ€" ley, Sir Moses Monte{iore and the Barâ€" oness Burdett Coutts, the lastâ€"named of whom offered to defray the whole cost of a proper supply. After making arrangements at Jerusalem, on negoâ€" tiating at constantinople her ladyâ€" ship was invited to hand over the monâ€" ey to the Turkish authoritiee who would carry out the work! The Barâ€" oness naturally declined. . | Yea, By the Hundreds, Those WVWho HMave Been Cured of Dire Disceise By South American Nervine. 101u, constipation ‘m,’, treatment of several not help me. I hay» ( PURE WATER FOR JERUSALEM EXPERIENCED _ _ ~VOIn i0 health and Neither man orâ€" woman when troubled with liver This was the sentiment f W. J. Hill, the wellâ€" vids cold 1 cler Esson, of | tak fesh and rarely i.ad A | res: leep, because o" stomach | far says : * Nervine stopped ‘can b, W. °RP. Bolge~, of Nervine cured me hich seemed Ineurâ€" led a@ll forre> meâ€" a martyr to indi headache,. f | physicians . taken u few _ Newspaper space is too valuable to petmit of further additions to these carnest words of tesuimony from those lwho know just whas they are talking about. _ In the common languarme of ltho day, they have been there, and are speaking from the heart. _ The dozen ’" more witnesses that here speak have their counterparte by the hundreds, not only in the province of Ontarie, but in every other section of the Dominâ€" ion. . Sovut! «merican Nervine is base4 on a sc.entific principle that makes a cure a certainty, no matter how desâ€" perate the case may be. _ It strikes at the norve centers from which fows the life b‘ >d of the whole system. Tt is not a medicine of patobhwork, but is complete and compreheniive in 1# application . & cure in my case." Mrs. John Dinâ€" woody has been for 40 years a reakdent of Filesherton, and bas reach»4 the alâ€" lotted threeâ€"score years and ton. Thre®e years ago her system sustained § sove» gre shock through the death of a daughter. . Nervine was recommen led. She perseveringly took 1% bottles of medicine, with the result that she is toâ€" day again strong and hearty . HWun» dreds of women suffer from im poy »rish» ed blood and weakened nerves. " All vitality," says Mrs. J. Fallis, of Brampton, "geemed to have forsaken my system . I was unable to get reâ€" lief from any enurce until I commer.ced taking South American Nervine. ‘The results are most satiafactoryâ€"greaior far than 1 could have hoped for." 1t came within the way of Mrs. I1. Ftapâ€" leton, of Wingham, to treat under the best physiclens, both in Canada and England, for heart disease and norvâ€" ous debility, but she failed to get any relief. _ "I was advised," ghe says, "to take South American Nervine, and must say I do believe that it I had not done so I would not be alive to« C Feskl men of Canada are ready by soures to tell of the benefits that have come to them through the use of Houth Ameriâ€" can Nervine. Mrs. R. Armsrrong, of Orillia, wife of the colporteur. of the Bible Society of that town, suffered for six years from nervous prostration. Medical assistance did not help. "In all," she says, " I have taken si~ bottles of Nervine, and car truthfully say this is the one medicine that bhas effeeted A shrewd observer of human nelur®e has said : "The hand that rocks the cradle moves the world." How imâ€" portant it is, then, that health and strength shoulid be made the lot of the mothers of this country The woâ€" bottles of Nervine, and can trutbfully say that I am a new man." A. hi. to 4 p. m. S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thow. a Lauder, Registrar. Jokhn A. Munoro, Deputyâ€"Registrar, Office bhours from 10 LIOENSED AUCTIONEER for 0o of Grey. All communications ad. dreased to Laxmasag P. 0. will be promptly mritended to. Residence LGt 19, Con. 8 Township of Bentinck. Ageneral Baunking business transacted Drafte ssued and coliections made on all points Depos ts received and interest allowed at enrrent uatuam tlomt allowed on savings bank dopos:ts of 31 op yd upwards. Promptattentionand everyfas(}. amefforded customers liying at a distance AGENTS in all principal points is Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba United Etaty and England. DURHAM AGENCY. DAWNW. W. F. Cowan, RESERVE FUND CAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,001 StaadardBank of Canadp TERMS; $ por year, IN ADVA®oRr CHAS. RAMAAGE Editor & Proprietop THE CREY REVRT ISs PUBLISKED EyEry Thursday Morning, Head Office. Toronto SAVINGS BANK ‘~PCCs Lnat here speak have rparte by the hundreds, the province of Ontario, other section of the Dominâ€"« Presidont. Paid up OFFICR, GARAFRAx, eakened nerves. " All Mrs. J. ®Fallis, of med to have forsaken was ungble to get reâ€" McLEAN, J KELLY, Agent. DAN. MoLEAR, 1,000,00¢ 600,00¢ Geo. P. Reid, alive to« Manager 101. NEWS FROM A ThoUsanNpds or rrl:j mOST FRIGHTrU An ® Disuln,r_ Bcription â€" of Austra Vlm-nu\'fl on Monda @Pi ©a 1 & wit in th gasped for 1 be d #d M« Li tarnin sudf 11 B1 I thun other po yain M« ter t! shult powerir barder t Relief & blindi from the the C( a{ t} W M Far m« hecan of s 8| t OT f} d« t §7 1N €ed m d wa [« t ©ou #3 C mos tar MJ W her lllfl W quick!y from } The fir houses . fir and fled cases flix of childre tubs. and were sayt M from tysn *0 . house to house. and fled to sas cases flitht ws of children we! tubs. and thow ware saved fro d 11 it D I h« Entivre Colony Stric Brive Every Living * â€" Romes &urn Every irbolled, as \he ater to boiling wo men covered wks, They are &1 whe« are alive werl L4 BRIEI TY H &n M det on rn H da y n rin N) U n H 11 L9 UA @L 1C 14 \i (7 n taken les poit! the all &DO . n

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