West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 Jul 1898, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

we He line the lin cor or . ing Ho Jar his pro ten We eal) the l’ocl;! attention ef Pos maste‘s and uburibou? the following sy nopsis of the newcpaperlaws : _ 1. If any person otlofu bis peper discon tinued, be mmzt pay all arreages, or th¢ publisher may oonlmno to send it until pay : mentis made, and collectthe whole ax.oun! whether it be taken from the _ofloo or nog\ %. Aay person who takes a paper trom Uhe post office, whether directed to bin mame or another, or whether he has sub poribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If asubscriber orders his paper to be stopped at a certaintime, and the publishod sontinues to send, the subscriber is bouné t pay for it if ho takes it out of the pos! office. This proceeds upon he ground hat a man must pay for what he uses. payment Ie still to be found in apposite the Durba Of the Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVER. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. NOTARY PUBLIC, Comu MONEY TO LOAN. 'IJ;I'D;.B‘TAEI'N-G }tbmptly attended to. JAKE KRESS. Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€"« veyancer, Commiu}oner &o. Loans ;rnm‘od without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurauce effected. meNEY TO 1LOAN stlowost rates of Interost #1® one door north of 8. Seot‘s Store Durhara Lxcmiszn AUCTIONEER, for th County of Grey. Bales attended to promp ma at aable a'-‘:luu Durkam Ont Fire Insurance secured. OFFIOE, oven Garant‘s 8roms Lower Town, â€" _ FOR BALB The EDGRB PROPRRTY. Im the Town ef Durham, County of @rey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more _‘ e FY a €ur A 1 lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. G. It, Rownship of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoin« ing Town plot Durham. Furniture JAMES LOCKIE, Newspapor L&AWS. Residencoâ€"King B4., Hanover. still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durham Bakery. BSUER of Marriage Licenses. Aue . tiencer for Countios of Bruce and Grey. Horse Shocing Shop, In the old stand. All handâ€" made shoes. Also Handâ€"made Waggons for sale cheap. HUCH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. . L. McKENZIE, Has opened out s firstâ€"class Jehbing of all kinds promptly ALLAX MeFARLANE, ;;.i;;n 1 discontinuance unti . TELFORD soulcrron in StrRent chort WOODWoORK Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hil, Ont DURHAM LEGAL in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of taken for yart purchase KRESS , Commissioner,¢tC., McFARLANE ,i HOUSEHOLD. [ noUsEROLD. s sOME GOOD RECIPES. Broiled Ham.â€"Cut ham one quarter of an inch thick, scald in bot water, wipe dry and broil over a clear fire, Garnish with daintily fried _ eggs, browned, not in buiter, but sweet olive oil. . Eggs and Toast.â€"For the capricious appetite, tired of eggs and toast for breakfast in the ordinary way, comes the recipe from a notable North Caroâ€" lina hbhousewife. ,After toasting the bread an even delicate brown dip in melted butter. Boil hard as many °e&@S as are desired, chop the whites and add .to a rich cream sauce; place the toast in a warm dish, pour over it the sauce and run the yolks of the eggs through a potato masher over the whole. Lamb Cutlets.â€"Either broil, braise of | / fry the lamb autlets as you please and | c serve on a mound of spinach, previousâ€" | ly rubbed through a sieve and beated .: with a little cream, white pepper and | f salt, and serve with the following sauce ; 1 round: Stew a small cucumber in : white stock till tender enough to rub || through a sieve, then add to it a lit= l, tle milk or white stock, and allow it [ to reduce fill it is a pretty thick puree; | ; then stir in with this a short half pint | . of rich bechamel sauce, season to laste ; : with white pepper and salt, reâ€"heat the | whole in the nainmarie, coloring it to a pale cucumber green with a drop or | two of green coloring, and just as you | are about to use it stir in a spoonful or | two of stifflyâ€"whipped cream. | _Pound Cake.â€"Cream well together six ounces of butter and eight ounces | of powdered sugar; add the beaten yolks of four eggs and beat again ; add one quarter of a teaspoonf{ul of ground mace, the juice and one half of the grated rind of a lemon, one quarter of teaspoonful of salt, and seven ounces of sifted pastry flour. _ Beat hard, add the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs and beat again for at least ten minâ€" | utes. As no baking powder is used the | lightness of the cake depends upon | the eggs and the amount of beating.l and there can searcely be too much of the latter. Bake in three layers, und‘ when cold put together with boiled icâ€" ing. Wine for. Invalids.â€"Five pounds of rhubarb stock to every gallon of water; rain filtered water is the best; cut it in slices and let it remain in an open tub nine days, stirring it three times a day ; ithen squeeze it through a coparse cloth, and to every gallon of liâ€" ‘quor, add four pounds of brown sugar, | the juice of two lemons and the rind eCE CS of one*; also toasted bread and barm ; cask it, and when fermentation ceases bung it. Strawberry Cheese Cakes.â€"Bruise a pint of berries with a wooden spoon in a china bowl; add four heaped tableâ€" spoonfuls of powdered sugar and eight wellâ€"beaten eggs. Line patty pans with good paste, fill three parts with this mixture and bake in a wellâ€"heated Qven Baked Ice Cream.â€"lou have heard that old joke about warming ice cream? It, is a joke, no longer, for it has been found possible tp place a brick of it in 1 nUsrert dout UOOR PS AUiRo on e en t C c a very hot oven and not only have it keep its shape, but have it improved by the process of heating. It is only the work of two or three minutes. . At a child‘s varty last week it (was the daintest item of the spread. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. If you use a water cooler in summer you can cool lemonade in it by putting the beverage in a bottle. A piece of ice will keep some time if laid on a piece of muslin which is tied ovar a bow! tight enough so that the ice cannot touch tha sides or bottom Then tie another cloth over the top. The water from the melting ice is beâ€" low, and does not accelerate the meltâ€" ing, as it would if the ice were standâ€" ing in it. ts Silk stockings should be washed and Silk stockings should be washed and rinsed in lukeâ€"warm water and wrung between towels. Silk underwear should be washed in warm soapsuds, to which a little ammonia has been added. 6 TORONTO uP IPPWUIW PPRPRRERTMC EPC CC If flour is sprinkled over suet when while ironing they will save many calâ€" lous spots on the hands. If flour is sprinkle dover suet when it is being chopped it will prevent the pisces from adbhering together. s P . uns Aptlith on ; VARems oC es o . e Ee Li nog c ie o o o ie Brooms hung in the cellarway will keep soft and pliant and wear longer than if kept in the dry air of the kitchen. f For polishing oak. woodwork or furâ€" niture, use raw umber, paraffin oil, turpentine and whiting in the proporâ€" tion of one pint of oil, one and one half gills of turpentine and three tableâ€" spoonfuls each of raw umber and whitâ€" ing. l The best way to clean painted walls is to use a large soft sponge. They should be wrung out of warm water in which a little soda has been dissolved, and the walls wiped downward. going over a small space at a time, before it is wiped dry again with clean house eloths. sUGGESTIONS TO HOUSEKEEP ERS. The canning season begins with the strawberry. â€" Though this fruit does not retain so much of the genuine fruit flavor as some others, yet canned strawberries, _ strawberry â€" jam and strawberry preserves are "not bad." But. all are better if nice, sound, not overâ€"ripe â€" fruit is usedâ€"fruit that should be fresh too ; in fact. the qualâ€" ‘ ity of the fruit largely deteimines the quality of the canned resultant. Don‘t,. to save a few pennies, try to use old rubbers on your fruit cans. When your frait "works" you‘ll wish you hadn‘t. Save the cans with tops that don‘t fit quite snugly for the pickâ€" les. If your family is small the pint cans are much aicer than larger ones. Cream.â€"You have heard C | camphor and alterw a 1 ‘ture polish or oil. The | dining tables and sideb , erally vanish after an | equal parts of olive oil with a brisk rubbing ‘\cloth afterward. _ Instead of rubbing th | any longer, cover it W i 18 S0 i pen PAL ces 1hne «in UUMeB AMRRE CCC Spots on furniture, says an exchange, may be removed by rubbing with es« sence of peppermint or spirits of camphor and afterwards with furniâ€" ture polish or oil. The dark spots On dining tables and sideboards will genâ€" erally vanish after an application of equal parts of olive oil and turpentine, T. U neter rubbing with # flannel cloti &itGIM ALM+ Instead of rubbing that kitchen floor any longer, cover it with linoleum, ev= en if you don‘t have another new thing for the house this spring. Think of the backaches and weariness yOu will thus avoid! But do not get a cheap quality. If you do you will very likely call me uncomplimentary names. Do not get any at less than fifty cenmts per square yard. The good grades, ‘8 is the case with mattings, are the only kinds that it pays toa buy. They are warm ; there is a slight elasticity anout them that is pleasant to the tread; t hey will last for years; they are easily cleaned, and the patterns are pretty. What more can you wish with a â€"floor covering ? Filty cents a yard! seems to some a good deal to pay for a covering for the kitchen floor, but think of the work it will save you. and how long, it will serve you. _ Linoleum is a good covering for the diningâ€"room floor also. Do not wait until a rent appears, but i they generally do + s iss , | uks * flnrn the linen. if pos,snhl.e. as $s000 4$ | the timber should be it becomes frayed, and thin, l')el'ure the isplit and allowed to i threads have bl'ok'en apart. Use thread | Now burn the lower :;:out ltlle suu}: s;:eras th: thread of | that it will have a & goods, OT 1 the linen has a coarse | Â¥ i sc e "Aisid, ‘a litcle fner, Where the | 44 n pod L0 8: linen has been torn or has broken apart, | gro‘un when set. _ fasten under the rent a thin piece of | burned pzu.|. “,l‘h I linen cambricâ€"a strong piece of an old | pf;sl: a"’l 'e"d).‘t'h"" handkerchie{ will do. Draw the parts ‘ ““(’; e"d} mm:"d,'t‘teh of the tear together. Trim off the unâ€"| lllln'“ sl'lg|te| with t even threads, and with a little of the | 12 16 ‘:.fi"}"ed that ravellings of the linen, replace them ‘ :‘h“y “'f i‘“" ?wen' and weave the stitches in to keep the Bberonys (liw..same edges together for about an inch on gr;‘en ‘mt \\thl_w_ut each side of the rent, sewing lhem‘ex z:cos of fixing through the back of the linen cambric, | ten‘* * post. If this work is carefully done it will be Steas quite difficult to trace the tear, proâ€" f viding the linen has been properly wHEN TO »P o neila c s Te gea oc Un ced e o id £31 utous Ruartt | ahi washed and troned after it was me Months before a wellâ€"known society belle was married there appeared in one or two popuilar papers an adverâ€" tisement which imparted to all and gets so tired of the same sauce reâ€" sundry that Miss Gâ€"â€" would Weat the family‘s famous lace on her wedâ€" ding morning. Whetber this statement was responâ€" sible for the multitudes which throngâ€" ed to see her we cannot say, but hunâ€" dreds of fashionable people were unâ€" able to obtain a seat. The wonderful | lace was piled upon its foundation of pearly satin ; it hung in festoons from ‘ the bride‘s shoulders ; is swept the carâ€" | pet in billowy trains ; and snapâ€"shot cameras were much in evidence as the bride left the church door. Certainly, the fair wearer was a vision of lovli<. ness; but it was whispered â€" abroad that not oneâ€"fourth part of the lace was genuineâ€"a cheap variety having iheen cunningly introduced to make up for deficiencies. A Parisian bride advertised her forthâ€" coming marriage by inserting a flowâ€" ery description of the dress she inâ€" tended to wear; while mention of one or two famous people, who had promâ€" ised to attend, was also made. The novâ€" elty of this advertisement was in the very readable fashion in which it was presented. | & More like a societyâ€"letter than a paid | for announcement, it described the pe~| I tite beauty of the brideâ€"toâ€"be, andql whetted the appetites of fair readers | by a description of the dress she would l | don. This gown of triumph had beâ€"|â€" longed to a foreign princess, was lusâ€" trous with costly pearls, and valued at £1,000. Famed for her pretty face and lovely dresses, a young actress advertised her coming wedding by a supposed interâ€" view. She infornmed the fictitious reâ€" jorter that she purposed to wear all her jewels, which on two occasions had been stolen under romantic conditions. The interview was light and chatty, | but paid for at the rate of so much per inch; and, in consequence, atâ€" lracted hundreds of people to the cereâ€" mony. A quantity of paste jewels were wortn to add further lustre to the display, Crowds of eager individuals gatherâ€" ed to witness the wedding of a promâ€" inent tradesman‘s daughter, whose marriage had been announced in a very original manner. Weeks prior to the necasion the grocer obtained special wrapping paper printed with a ortrait of the bride, a notice of the marriage following. An offer to distribute samâ€" ples of his wares to all who were at the church gates proved an enormous | attraction. | Three men with wellâ€"filled carts were l intrifsted with the distribution, and _\ were soon at work disseminating the ‘ i free packages. Meanwhile the bride : | drove away, amid the cheers and conâ€" â€"|fetti of the grateful recipients. I suppose, said the farm hand, who was looking for a job, that you believe in the eightâ€"hour system ? That‘s what I do. replied the farmer. I work eight hours in the forencon and eight in the afternoon, but along about havin‘ and harvest time I occasionally put in two or three hours extra. ADVERTISED WEDDINGS MENDING LINEXN HE BELIEVED IN IT Miss Gâ€"â€"â€" would wear »nded. Clover is not only more suitable for summer food for poultry, owing to its buiky nature, compared with corn, but it is also more nutritious, as it contains a greater quantity of the substances required for the production of eggsâ€" The line for the shells is produced e enc otamnhts" +arm ‘An the food, it is also more nutritious, as 1t €0/"""""°_ a greater quantity of the substances required for the production of eggsâ€" The line for the shells is produced when in a soluble form in the tood.l as it must pass through all the stages and processes of digestion, and the more soluable the mineral elements the easier and more completely they serve the purposes of the hens. _ Clover bhay contains over 30 times more lime than does corn or wheat, and the green cloyâ€" er, though containing more water, 18 }compuratively as rich in lime as the haw" ~â€" flawor ig~" aISD &A DItCLOKCNOUR and processes OL _ OEC""*" W _""ia the more soluable the mineral elements the easier and more completely they serve the purposes of the hens. Clover hay contains over 30 times more lime than doos corn or wheat, and the green clovâ€" er, though containing more water, 18 comparatively as rich in lime as the hay. Clover is also & nitrogenous food, and supplies the elements D°C~ essary for the albumen of the egHâ€" When the hens bhave access to clover & on 4 10â€" hva nb n y d it 1104 1 $ 2 1 MR .4. dncfi atiiies insl . they will eat a large quantity during the day, and if insects are numerous their wants will be fully supplied. The chief end of the bulk of dairy work is to keep things clean in the cowshed and in the dairyâ€"room. In the stable it is the cow that needs most looking after ; in the dairy it is the milk and it« neadnuots. cream and butterâ€" MTRTME . O RCeeednt e 7 pure air, clean water, clean food and clean stalls for the cow; clean and sweet vessels, pure air and the proper temperature in the dairy. VR rtur. \uMn) moankh COdR Pn ECAE C M CC C i These essentials are within the reach of the oneâ€"cow dairy as completely as of the fancy dairy of the millionaire, though they may cost some more rubâ€" bing and scrubbingâ€"a . more vigilant campaign against dirt. The following is given as a good plan to make fence posts last longer than they generally do. In the first place the timber should be cut in midwinter, split and allowed to season under cover. Now burn the lower end of the post so that it will have a coal showing from the lower end to six inches above the | ground when set. _ Then saturate the | burned part with hot coal tar. _ The | posts are ready then to be set. If not ‘wunted immediately â€"let them stand |\ under shelter with the black end down. | It is claimed that posts fixed in this | way will last twenty limes as long as : those of the same timber cut and set \ green and without being burned. The ‘ extra cost of fixing them will not be 2 | cents a post. TO MAKE FENCE POSTS DURABLE. DIRT CAMPAIGN IN THE DAIRY wWHEN TO PICK FRUIT. All ripe fruit should be picked clean as pickers go down the row. Pick carefully with thumhb and forefinger, placing fruits in the basket, not a sack, one at a time, to avoid bruising them. Most fruits should be picked with the stems on, as they keep better, and ii( to be sold fresh should always be | gathered in baskets. To keep well, | fruit must be picked at the proper time lwhen mature but not fully ripe. Fruit i is mature and should be gathered when 'the stem separates readily at its joint | with the branch. _ Never leave it on ithe tree too long, the flesh becoming \so soft that it is easily bruised and its | keeping qualities injured by slight iars in handling. | in large orchards picking should beâ€" _ gin as soon as fruit in sunniest portion / changes color, then as work proceeds / other fruit is maturing and there will ‘be less from overripe fruit. The nearâ€" er the market the riper the fruit should | be when picked. _ Never pick green, deâ€" & To the young man who 18 JUS! S°M"* ing out for himself upon a farm, no branch of agriculture at the present time offers such inducements as dairyâ€" ing, according to A correspondent. Pairy farmers as & rule are mof prosâ€" perous and complain less of hard times and low prices than any other class. Their butter always brings cash, the byâ€"products furnish nourishing food for young stock, pigs, calves, etc., the fertility of the soil is constantly inâ€" creased, and being in_operntion the year around, it brings into the farmâ€" er‘s purse at all seasons the ever ready and ever useful coin. Houd Me ce uin (ips, .: Tenl eennencereca d CLoOvER FOR FOWLS. TT 1 t Bd i dih conmratienndiir it ye‘l The first requisite for a suvssessful dairyman is that he have a natuial likâ€" ing for the work. This may be acâ€" quired, yet where one has inborn fondâ€" ness for cattle, for the cow and the work of caring for ner in the best manâ€" ner it is certainly one important factor toward the successful carrying out of the enterprise. This will inspire a cerâ€" tain enthusiasm for the work without which no labor is intelligently perâ€" formed. GAPES. This disease among poultry is princi-‘ pally confined to young chickens, and is due to the presence of small, threadâ€" like worms in the windpipe. The cure should be directed to the removal of the pests, for so long as the worms re« main in possession the gaping will conâ€" tinue. â€" There are three or four ways INDUCEMENTS O® DAIRYING upon aaazinnnzzn _ in which this may be done. _ First, a stout feather is stripped of its down 1 to within a short distance of the end, and this is passed down the throat of the bird into the windpipe, and withâ€" drawn after being turned two or three times, the operation, as & rule, causing some of the worms to adhere to the feathers and to be withdrawn with it. If the feather be previously dipped in | tobacco water or turpentine it will be more effective. Secondly, some people administer doses of rue, garlic, or camâ€" phor, the object being to kill the worms 1 by the strong odor inhaled with the medicines in question. Thirdly, the|| inhalation of lime dust, sulphur, and carbolic acid fumes Of chlorine £48â€" This is certainly the most effective cure but needs extreme care, Of the chickens ‘will be sacrificed as well as the pest that it is sought to kill. The opera~ \tion consists in placing the chicks in a box, and making them inhale the fumes thrown off. The gas may be generated by pouring sulphuric acid over some salt, on which a little black | oxide of manganese has been sprinkled, lin a saucer. _ The birds must be reâ€" | moved immediately after they are obâ€" served to stagger or fall over ; two or t!lree minutes are usually sufficient. The gas may be administered again in a couple of days if necessary. â€" Carâ€" bolic acid fumes are rendered by pourâ€" | Ing some of the crude acid over hot y cinders. In each case the vessel conâ€" ‘| taining the agent employed must be ‘ | protected so that the birds shall not | get _ into it. lt may be well that ; | "Chick" should know gapes can be preâ€" _| vented by the adoption of a proper 8Â¥8â€" ; tem of rearing. It is generally adâ€" 1 mitted that the disease breaks out f every year in situations where it has found a foothold, and nowhere is the 6 epidemic more severely felt than in 3 thos» yards where the chicks are reared ; among the ordinary adult stock. The s real preventive is to rear only on land t which is not fouled by the old birds; if this plan were regularly followed g;lpes would soon disappear altogethâ€" A HINT,. l Heâ€"That vessel out there is hugging the shore closely. ‘ Sheâ€"Yes; and I regret to say that at this moment the situation is unâ€" paralleled. Manitoulin Island boasts that it has six planing mills running and another one in sight. TXE EVES OF THE WORL Are F‘~~d Upon South Ameriâ€" can Nervine. Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. wBEN EVERT Of8E2 BELMBR MA FALED N CMRS In the matter of rod health temporâ€" izing measures, while possibly successâ€" ful for the moment, can never be lastâ€" ing. Those in poor health soon know whether the remedy they are using is etmply a passing incident in their exâ€" perionce, bracing them up for the day, or lomet.lunz that is getting at the seat of the disease and is surely and permanently restoring. The eyes of the world are literally fxed on South American Nervine. They are not viewing it as & nineâ€"Gays‘ wonâ€" der, but oritical and experienced men have been studying this medioine for years, with the one resultâ€"they have found that its claim of perfect curaâ€" ‘Ive qualities cannot be grinsaid. The great dircoverer of this medicine so desperate was possessed of the knowledge that the the most em seat of all disease is the nerve centres, Bouth Ameri situated at the base of the brain. In headquarters this belief he had the best scientists : The eyes of and medical men of the world disappointed cocupying exactly the same preâ€" cess of South mises. Indeed, the ordinary layâ€" ple marvel, i man _ regognized this principle medical qua! long ago. Everyone knows that yond all que lot disease or injury affeet this part of thing that is the human eystem and death is aimost alone as the certain. Injure the spinal ecord, which remedy of th is the medium o‘ these nerve comâ€" ghould anyor tres, and parelysi» is sure to follow. +ness while t Here is the Aret vrinciple. The trouâ€" at their han T Â¥or wale by McFar‘ane K Bg, * Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. that Renders Failure Impossible. [A t â€" CA QbqAANSC Cl ) souTH _ @yA ; e Q’ * a f & ~. 0|u ,’l” i .\\‘\\ © % W \ Il * + snperl ".‘/ "*, # z. YNERVINE y‘r\\w '. pif _ hE nb '.’}* M y . A i 6 / if ; ‘ // "<c9 t,\\ . ’ \‘ ( :v".‘ o Off.. \t d * 4 * A PP F N J 3 “k i ’}q,’/. St5ea 4 /"\.,\‘ a 1 Is ‘ § 1 map tm " 111 OW f 7 \‘ /48 hk 7z ‘ s .:.'..;“43 2 % 10R CRET RVEV O "â€"' 0. 010\\ TERMS; @1 per year, IÂ¥ ADVANCR CHAS. RAMAGE | Editor & Propricton staadardBank of Canada CAPITAL, Author se Paid u RESERVE FUND W. F. 00!‘“[ ZA _ Ontario, Quebes, and Eneland. Thursday Morning. A general Bulginl business transacted Drafte sued and collections made on all points. Depos: ts received and interest allowed at current ',\M allowed on savings bank deposits of 01 d upwards. Prompt attention anud every fas amafforded cuctomers liying at a distance . s Lander, R/ Deputy â€" Registr a. m. to 4 p. m. That‘s so, & JOH that you play on i mean trick is a jo low plays on you. Head Offloo. Toronto: PITAL, Authorized $2,000,008 i _ Paid up 1,000,006 GaENTS in all ‘ 18 PUBLISEED EBYERT DURHAM AGENCY. SsAVINGS BANK ally, snd“ wlth;fiil}ty all medicines, i» that they aim simply to treat the that may be discased. Bouth Anm Nervine passes by the organs, and imâ€" mediately applies its eurative powers to the ::r\;o centres from which the Awten mua 1k 4 0A C . t :'rnu :( t}e‘fi;;!sg;l;: th:lt -up:I’; that N6 DP Gcighh dP vcanlith w ts c c .. 1 Mh :sc 2’0 most eminert pbhysicians mss# & usn ®s S laas wyl__1,_ _1 "CC, CToRuse Bouth American Nervine has gone to headquarters and cured there. The eyes of the world have not besem disappointed in the inquiry into the suo ee|:| of So?th American Nervine. Peoâ€" a toe t ons o n Se §uolgc c _ ifututaditvns &.4..... 4 £ COs ple marvel. it is true, at its wonderful medical qualities, but they know beâ€" yond all question that it does wflx; thing that is olaimed for it It stan donouth.olocnumaurln' remedy of the nln::oen‘th century. Why should anyone suffer latress anQ sicy«â€" news while this remedy in PovetUoalip ai their hands ? a. REGISTRY ()FF;ICE. President. OoFTICB, : i‘;;i‘o't.;u;._ John A. Munro ibtrar. Offce bhours from 1¢ .y‘o;xv:;lo.tâ€"be; fellow, and a is a joke that another felâ€" J KELLYX, Agont. 600,000 Thomea trick jÂ¥ " 11 AN EBAR A BUNKEN CITYy For Two Centurics Port bered Beneath the Even Now in Calm merged Bulldings Urystal Bepth, There is little of gentle muses wing the deafening roar of rattle of musketry, I yrespondents in Southe busy with the stern confront them to pg beauties which ubde stances might inspire bits of descriptive w To illustrate my quote from a desps Kingston, Jamaica. * writes this correspo patch boat bas been lwaul.(ul harbor of the clear blue water i of Por our 1x in the muor ‘h}l‘& the . and where mearly to U ihat was ference to lore and t pomance. | mysterious « ningstor buggests Atlantis M face of uns « and bats t of the se: be Jued of â€"bug id ding centuries n' of LC i8 W the t1 beneath 11 the wieke commeun: ty being alm« The sur geance of ( struction 0 in very t1 seems to s divine pow its time i quake, si smote th al. whichl ed place, u Disaster af After the ea1 rebuilt. only to GRiAT LOS The city of Port B built upon a narros tending out into spounts for its str at the time of the e house of the foolis lore which was buil literally slid into t earthquake shock c Previous to that of June, 1692, Po known as " the 1 world." It was, a rolony, but there Epa of 1 and ally the n virtue. And like th the earthquak the ear element opened in £ again like th t id 1 And hands above grou anwful sliding, gri city, built upon its eank jnto the ca gea, which forever edness and will fo secrels. ; geemed then, w In his " Annals of ed in 1828, Rev. G: gquotes from a 1 of the survivorsâ€"a& days after the dfi part, as follows : " After I had be ing, which 1 did ev Men and women 16 ran into the stre death in the bowel the hidden recesse The s The mir time Down 1080 â€" # hanal tloden SPIRES WAR SH Lsed '-lfl t] mming is tLurreis. t hi« E0. W Me nightly hx n n the hes wit hoi AI Re P roflig nc indu wert roI 8U THI pla iA U tC "HI N It was, : but there rnment 6 We D H ere, in th nes of thi n# X« L7 U ©id lu h h C morC by anot ue the EARTI reve ng % .. xo u9 disast once in | nI th s) ie 1 ©lOU 1 1« 0 hou OI of O N) hq 1 bac We N) 11 G W n ou th

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy