Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 2 Aug 1900, p. 2

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‘ " i I advise also that you be busy in LUITING TEETH? iChrietian work. How many Subbaths fin the year} Fifty-two. 1f the text be Watch him carefully.~0n the it?“ ”t yum it do“ "9L say. at “Y?"ft iI’St indication Of DifiPPhCBa ‘tune you may go, and therefore rt 1.3 6v? DP. FOWIBP’S Extract Of ’ unsafe to count on till ot the hfty-txro fld Strawberry. buuduys. As you are lxkely togo m tthe first half of the year as 1n the [lust um, I think we had better divide » Hotwcathfer comes 3 the {lity-two into halves, and calculate ’ r 3. «352,-; h?“ °“ babm’e’Pe‘ t twent -eix Sabbaths Come Chm- ezfii- ' ~..;. ‘zgv’ cxallgr those cutting :"_“" y . . ° . ~ “51' 314.11% teet . gtmn men, Chrustran women, what. can :4; 4) W? 'f. Thelittleform soon {you do in twenty-six Sabbaths? Divide I . 1,, Y up s wastes and fade: lthe three hundred and sixty-five days . ‘ l.,,:_- away when dxarrhcea‘. t t . . 118' h t , ' '\ .1”: or cholera . f: tum 5m 0 “0 par , w a can you do 1n seizes upoult. one hundred and eighty-two days? As‘ you IOve our child mother and What, by the wa of aavin wish to save his 10, give hith Dr. Fovaler's y 3 your Extract of Wild Strawberry. égznxlytlihe tCltlturch. hand the. world ? There is no other remedy so safe toi 0“ 1"“ .00 , tong all the ages of give to childreuand nonesoeffectual. getermty 1n Theaven, get over the dis.â€" Hrs. Chas. Smith Shoal Lake Mam, .honour and the outr e of oin ' t says: “I think Dr: Fowler’s Extract of a3 8 8 1n 0 L 1 - . Wad Strawberry is the best medicine that :fhory, and lhavmft flaked none up to was ever made for diarrhma, dysentery 6 same P 308- W111 be found th'r‘ and sum complaint. It is the best many a Sabbath-school teacher 3;.” ing to give children when they are teeth- } taken into heaven her whole class- . that Daniel Baker, the evangelist, took .1 hundreds into heaven; that DOdflrido-n . I have always used it in our own ° y end it has never yet faded." teeth. v The little form soon A; you love your child, mother, and Wish to save his hfe, give him Dr. Fowler’s Extract of W?” Strawberry. _ _- _v‘-â€"w--- "' Anyone sendinz a shaft-b and description may quivkly ayertain. flee. whether an Izzveacmn I}. zuohm-iy patentable. (.‘otlmunicntinzm afl‘totly confidential. Ofdesc agency {enemy-'13; paws-zen mPAmer'xca. “’8 have a. “Emmagtou Q1220}. stems taken through 11mm (:0. men. apecwl uotice in the wanna 52535238339, _ .1 , swampy; illustrated. 1m. carafe}; on g arse-inn: ncinumag. wagdy msilit I '- 93.. .5031: months. area's-1:1 co 9:8.331-5-33; BOOK 0.\' PA'“ x73 3cm. 1:». «has Watch him cavehflly.â€"â€"â€"On the first indication of Diarrhcea Eve Dr. Fowler’s Extract of ild Strawberry. ES BABY CUTTIN G TEETH? Hot weath hard on babi .. r: .2 ciall those “4795’ teet 5 k Thelittlefl wastes 304 away when c or cholera i seize: 090:: i LUMBER, SHINQLES AND LATHS FLOUR,0ATMEAL and FEED THE SAWMILL BRISTINE AND UHUPPING DUNE That is why “ Monsopq.’ the perfect Ta. each} I Yd at the same price as anterior tea. It I: put up in sealed caddies of); 1b., 1 lb. an} , m, and sold :11 three flavours at 4oe., 50c. and 600 If vour grocetdocs not keep it, tell him to writ} P STEEL. AljiAYTER CO., 1: and 13 Stan: St “ Monsoon ” Tea is packed under the sgmision the Tea growers. and is advertised and so b thod a sampEeof the, best qualitiesof Indian and eylon m. For that reason they see that none but tht very fresh 361ch go into Monsoon packages. I .50 «whim... o... .53.". «u... u...» .205 3:03 at» a. E... __ us Local News is Complete and market reports accurate The Chromcle Contains \\'c at THE JOB :: I: completely stocked wit! DEPARTHENT all NEW TYPE, thus af- on'ding facilities for turning out First-class WEB-"81m for transfer): adverticements 3 aces p BATES lme for the fix 8: ixxscqion ;.3 cent§ p . . . line ac): sub‘cqncmwanton-mm», nature. Messional cards. an: exceeding one had ‘4.” pet finmun. Ad venivmemb without specix‘. direenons '1)! be published :ill forbid and charged :1 mm!” Transient notices ~-“ Lost," “ Found. " For Sale,” can-50 cents {or first insertion, 25 cert: for each subsequent imerzion. All advertisements ordered by strangers must be p;I be in advance. Contract ms for yearly advertisements furnished 0 applicatign go the office. a“ All advemsc newts, foe mute insertion in cones. week, should be brag; ht. in not later than T0330» .___A, wmlm Tn: Cflznmcu: will be sent to an; address, free of postage, for $1.00 pc» ““8 . ... o year,payablo in advanceâ€"$2.50 ma) be charged If no:_ sq paxd. The date to which cvcr; subscription is ad ts ducted by the number on {2:- nddrcxfi label. '0 paper di.-cr:.ti;2~.:cd mm! all ante: are paid. accept at the option of the preprictor. EVERY THURSDAY MORNINO n museums mums noon, mum crass DURHAM, ONT. IN "'8 NATIVE PURITY. TfiE BREW flfiBflNIflLL on shortest notice and satisfaction 1., TH E PERFECT TEA Each week an epitome of the world’s news, articles on tb household and farm, and lerials by the most popular authors. DURHA M now prepared to do all kinds of custom work. EDITOR AND Psoratm'oa. away on hand. 5: J. MCKECHNIE. Wen 15 ”31.23839 l‘ I announce it 8.3 an impossibility fthut three hundred and sixty-five days should. pass and leave us all as we now are. In what direction to shoot the garroxv I know not, and so I shoot it 'at a venture, “This year thou shall | die.9’ win view of this I advise that you lhave your temporal matters adjusted, Do not leave your worldly affairs at the mercy of administrators. Have your receipts properly pasted, and your letters filed, and your books balanced, If you hare “trust-funds" see that they are rightly deposited and ac- counted for. Let no widow or orphan scratch on your tomb-stone, “'l'his man robbed me of my inheritance." Many a man haa died, leaving a competency, whose property has, through his own Carelessness, afterward been divided between the administrators, the sur-; rogate, the lawyers, and the sheriffsfi 1 charge you before many days have] gone. as far as possible, have all your worldly matters :nade straight, “for this year thou shalt die.” l Rapid climatic changes threaten our ilives. By reason of the violent fits of ’the thermometei, within two days we live both‘ in the Arctic and the T1 Oplc. The warm south wind finds us with our furs on. The wintry biast cuts through our thin apparel. The hoof, the wheel, the fire-arms, the assassin, await. their chance to put upon us their quietus. The character of our occupations adds to the probability. 'Ihose who are in the professions are undergoing a sapping of the brain and nerve foun- dations. Literary men in this coun- try are driven with whip and spur to their topmost speed. Not one brain- worker out of a hundred observes any moderation. There is something so stimulating in our climate that, if John Brown, the essayist‘ of Edin- burgh, hed lived here, he would have broken down at thirty-five instead of fiftyâ€"five. and Charles Dickens would have dropped at forty. We are like a debtor who is taking the “three days' grace” of the banks. Our race started with nine hundred years for a lifetime. \Ve read of but one antediluvain youth whose early death disappointed the hopes of his parents by his dying at seven hun- dred and seventy-seven years of age; The world then may have been ahead‘ of what it is now, for men had s01 long a time in which to study, and invent, and plan. If an artist or a philosopher has forty years for work, he makes great achievements; but what must the artists and philoso- phers have done who had nine hun- |dred years before them? In the " nearly two thousand years before the ' flood, considering the longevity of the inhabitants, there may have been nearly as many people as there are now. The flood was not a freshet, that washed a few people off a plank, but a disaster that may have swept away a thousand million. If the Atlantic Ocean, by a lurch of the earth to-night, should drown this hemisphere, and the Pacific Ocean, by a sudden lurch of the earth should drown the other hemisphere, leaving about as many beings as could be got in one or two Cunard steamers, it would give you an idea of what the ancient flood was. I The text will probably prove true of some of us: “This year thou shalt die." The probability is augmented by the fact that all of us who are over thirty years of age have gone beyond the average of human life. The note is more than due. It is only by sufferance that it is not collected. Jeremiah, accustomed to saying bold things, addresses Hananiah in these words. They prove true. In sixty days Hananiah was a dead man. A desthch from \Vashington says: Rev. Dr. Talmage preached from the following text: “This year thou shalt die."â€"Jeremiah xxviii. 16. WHAT THINK YE OF CHRIST P Rev. Dr. Talmage Speaks on the Un= certainties of This Life. “ 3 evangelist, took ; that Doddridge ..;.;rning, or noon, or evening, or nil of these three hundred and sixty-1 days. death should look in and a "Are you ready’?’ you might, with \H: “Lord, let it alone th 'but pressed upon my first of all. and 13.31: of all a,“ were the words, “Thxs shalt die.’ .If the text means some of you, my hearers. 1 do not want you to be “life insurance," be able to leave the world feeling that your family new! not become paupers. ‘="ruld 121:: e in h nvc your soul fitted of eternity. so that if, ‘ any ..;.Jrning, or noon, or evening, or night ' A ‘ 1 am coming to the close of my 881'- an. I sought for a text. appropriate {(-1 1h? occasion. I thought of taking one in Job: ”My days New as a weav- m's shuxtle;” of :1 text in the Psalms: "So teach us to number our days that we m'ty apply our hearts unto wis- dom;" of the prayer of the vine-dres- ser: “Lord, let it alone thts year :11- 50;" 'but pressed upon my attention, first. of all. and last: of all, and above all, were the words, “This year thou -_L.I4 -- - Decide, on Lhzs t year. whether or Jesus He win 11 b’eggmg far your here His plea. en "Thu: year than s auu urop upno you from his brow, from his side, from his hands. Do you no: fee: Ihe warm current on your inc»? 00h dying sinner, {Or thee the hung“; the thirst, the thornsting, th suffocation, the darkness, the groan. the sweat, the struggle, the death! I wish you might know what a job Jesus undertook when he ° him to the wall. They struck him. They spit on him. They kicked hxm, They cuffed him. They scoffed at him. They scourged him. They mur- dered hxm. Blood! blood}. As he su'ops down to lift. uyou up, the crxmg son drop upuo you from hxs brow, . . . 1 from hxs sxde, from his hands. Do you ‘ no: fee: the warm current on your fr‘c'lz o%‘ d"i1‘.0‘ Qinnfl" fifty. 1‘s-.. ‘1. - 'd _â€".- who wants to be saved. He waited for you all last year, andall the year before, and all four life. He has wait- ed for you with blood on his brow. and tears in his eyes, and two outstretch- ed, mangled hands of love. and win heaven 2'” The drowning man, when a plank is thrown him, stops not to ask what saw-mill made it, or whe- ther it is oak or cedar, or who threw it. -The moment it is thrown, he clutches it. If this year you are to die, there is no time for anything, but immediately laying hold on God. It is high time to get out of your sins. You say, “ I have committed no great transgressions.” But are you not aware that your life has been sinful? The snow comes down on the Alps flake by flake, and it is so light that ‘you may hold it on the tip of your .tinger without feeling any weight but the flakes gather; they compact until some day a traveller’s foot starts the slide and it goes down in villagers. So the sins of your youth, and the sins of your manhood, and the sins of your womanhood, and the sins sins of your womanhood, may have seemed only slight inaccuracies or trifling divergence from the right-â€" so slight that they are hardly worth; mentioning, but they have been piling; up and piling up, packing together, and packing together, until they make a mountain of sin, and one more step of your foot in the wrong direction,’ may slide down upon you an aval- anche of ruin and condemnation. Let me announce that Christ, the Lord, stands ready to save any man. book of. Jonah is inspired; or who Melchisedec was; or what about the eternal decrees. ‘If you are as near eternal decrees. If you are as near there is no time for anything but the question, “ How shall I escape wrath in view of the probabilities men- tioned, I advise all the men and wom- en not ready for eternity to get ready. If the text be true, you have no time to talk about non-essentials, asking why God let sin come into the ‘world; or whether the took in many thomnds; that Paul took in a hundred million. How many Swill you take in? It you get into hea~ fven, and find none there that you ‘eent, and that there are none to come :through your instrumentalityJ beg of you to crawl under some seat in the :back corner, and never come out, lest the redeemed get their eyes on you, and some one [cry out " That is the man who nev- er lifted hand or voice for the redemp- tion of his fellows: Look at him, alll heaven!” Better be busy. Better pick the gunlock, and bite the cartridge, and be sure the caps are good. Better put the plough in deep. Better say what you have to say quickly. Better cry the alarm. Better fall on your knees. Better lay hold with both hands. What you now leave undone for Christ will for ever be undone. “This year thou shalt die.” wnetner or not you will have He wiH not stand for ever lg far your love. With some His pier). ends right speedily. year thou. shalt dier.” this first Sabbath of the sixty-five a nd ask, any man An indication ot the Chinese charao. ter can be inferred from the nature of ltheir proverbs. A. tew of them are as follows: “If the blind lead the blind they will both go to the pit.” “An old man marrying a young wife is like a withered willow sprouting .” “A wife should excel in tour things, virtue. speech, deportment and needlework." “Every day cannot be a Feast of Law terns." “Would you look at the char- acter of a Prince, look at his Minister, or the disposition of a man, observe his companion, or that of a father, mark his son." The higher a rat creep: up a cow’s born the narrower liei finds it." “Let us get drunk to-dey I while we have wine; the sorrows of to. i marrow may be boine by to-morrow.” “One of the grandest parks in England is Cha-tsworth, the Duke of Devonshire's seat in Derbyshire. Ev- ery variety of scenery is to be found in this domain. It is a pretty sight in the evening to see the deer quenching their thirst in the Der- went, which runs through the grounds. Lork Kimberley has restored the deer to his Nor- folk purk, which were removed dur- ing the present century by his pm- decessors, He is sail? to have de- clared that ‘a park is not a park without deer.” est park in England is Grimsthorpe, the property of Lord Aveland, in Lincolnshire. It is no less than six- teen and three-quarter miles in cir- icumferetnce. The red deer have been bred here for centuries. although the herd is not so numerous as that which roams over the wilds of Tatton park, the seat of Lord Egerton, which com- prises 2,500 acres of Cheshire land. The deer here are of extraordinary beauty and number 800 (allow and forty red. The finest deer in Kent are to be round in Eastwell park, 2,- 508 acres, the seat of the Earl of \Vin- chilsea. This charming place was forl some years rented by the Duke ofJ Saxe-Coburg, when he resided in Eng-1 land. I which at present comprises 770 fal- low and sixty-four red deer. A‘ curi- ous feature an Blenheim park is an arrangement of the oak and cedar trees, which are grouped in separate bodies so as to indicate the position of the Dutch and English troops at the battle of Blenheim. The larg- “Blenheim park, which is twelve miles round, has an acreage of 2,700. His grace of Marlborough, it is said, is about increasing his herd of deer, England "as the Greatest Number or Any Country In the Worm. England has the greatest number of deer parks of any country of the world, there being 324 parks well stocked with deer in the different counties, while red deer are found in thirty-one. There are but few deer parks in Scotland and Ireland, but the number will probably increase, es- pecially in Scotland. Some of these English parlns are of great extent, though they have gradually decreased} in size during the past 200 years. In the reign of Charles I. Windsor park covered an area of 100,000 acres, ‘ whereas it consists now of only 2,650 acres, with Windsor forest adjacent, making an additional 1,450 acres. Lord Bogot's park in Staffordshire embraces about 1,000 acres; near Tun- bridge Wells, 2,500 acres is extent, and is one of the oldest deer parks in England. The Prince of Wales has a fine but not very large deer park at Sandringham, and Lord Der- by has one over which roam a herd of 300 {111" .v and eighty red deer. The, Duke of Portland’s park at VVelbeck abbey comprises 2,283 acres, including many venerable oalks, one of which is known to be 700 years old. It is fifty feet in circumference. An article in the London Mail, from which the above facts are taken, gives this de-. scription of some of the fine old Eng-l lish parks and their charm of scen- outbdrst of Christian triumph, ans- wer. “Ay. ay! all ready." I know not what our last words may be. Lord Chesterfield prided him- self. on his politeness, and said, in his last dying moment, “Give Dayroles a chair.” Dr. Adam, a dying school- master, said, "It grows dark. The boys may dismiss.” Lord Tenterden supposing himself on the bench of a court room. said, in his last moment, “Gentlemen of the jury, you will now consider your verdict." A dying yPlay-aotor said, “Drop the curtain. lThe farce is played out.” I would rather have, for my dying words, those of one greater than Chester- field, or Dr. Adam, or Lord Tenter- den: “1 am now v'eady to be offered, and the time of my departure is at‘ hand. I have fought a good fight, Ii have finished my course, I have kept the faith; henceforth there is laid up for me acrown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, shall give me." As a proclamation of joy to some, and as a matter of alarm to others, I leave in your ears these five short words of one syllable each, “This Year Thou Shall: Die !” OBIN ESE PROVERBS. DEER PARKS. As to the part played by cold wash- in-g water, it was shown that'more working was required, and when giv- en there were no mottles. The rea- son why butter washed with very cold water is likely to be mottled was attributed to the fact that, being much harder, it is more difficult to ihandle and consequently in the same time does not get the same amount of working as softer butter would. When worked as long as four minutes and washed with water at 50 degreesu none of the butter was mottled, al- though three minutes of working was not enough. The difference in! time required to work! hard and soft? butter is greater in the combined' churn than in the table workeru When sufficiently worked to insure an even distribution of salt, the best: grain was obtained with butter wash-l is the chief cause. Serious doubt is thrown upon the general belief that cold wash water is especially re- sponsible for the effect. To test the effect of uneven salting, the butter from each of 20 churnings was divided into two lots after washing and one lot was salted and worked one min- ute, while the other lot was not salt-7 ed. None of the unsalted butter was mottled, while that salted and under: worked was all more or less mottled. Simply testing the light and deep- colored portions showed a great dif- ference in the distritution of salt. MOTTLES IN BUTTER. A study of the cause of mottles in butter made by Charles F. Deane does not indicate any new causes which have not been previously recog- nized by scientific and experienced dairymen and butter makers, but seems to make more certain the fact that the uneven distribution of salt If possible, have your own private customers. If you ship to the com- mission merchants, ‘send nothing but the very best, put your name on the crate or package, and you will soon have a steady market for all your surplus at prices considerably in ad- vance of the regular markets. The farmer's table is one of the very best markets for poultry products, for, un-\ like most other markets. it is seldom over-supplied. 1n marketing poultry products. ways have everything in the best shape. _ fi disease. \Vhevn disease first makes its appearance completely disinfect the premises, then use the remedies commonly given for each. in the young chicks, and roup and cholera in adult flocks. A great many remedies have been suggested for these disorders, but an ounce on prevention is worth a pound of cure. Lf filth, dampness and vermin are avoided, and fowle well cared for, the flock will not suffer much from in all the nests to destroy vermin. After the chicks are out of the shell let them remain in the nest as long as they are quiet. Let the first few feeds be hard-boiled eggs. Then lice and you will never have any trou- ble in raising them. The three prin- cipal diseases which the poultry- keeper has to contend with are gapes A constant. supply of clean, pure water should be furnished; also furn- ish them with plenty of lime and gravel. Plaster supplies both. Re- gular attention should be given the hen during the process of incubation. it is best to have a regular brood- ing house for sitters; Put sulphur vegetables used on the farmer’s table will be relished by‘ the fowls and will be found conducive to their health and to the production of eggs. Let soft teed be warm and not slep- PY- Feed it in troughs. Scatter it. Some meal and bone should form a part of the ration two or three times a week. Almost any of the free from dampness. Allow about five feet of floor space to each bird. Have perches low down and movable, so the droppings can be removed easily. Let perches be flat, say about three inches broad. In feeding fowls provide a variety. Feed twice a. day when fowls have the range of the farm. Give soft food of some kind mornings, and grain evenings. T POULTRY ON THE FARM. The bulk of the poultry output comes to the farm where it receives the least attention, and consequently yields the smallest profit. With cheap lands, cheap feed and cheap 13- bor, it is possible to realize the very largest returns here. There is no stock on the farm that brings in as large profits in proportion to the with all its mismanagement, and nothing will respond to good care and systematic treatment so liberally. If a large flock is to be kept do not house too many in one place. Do not make buildings too expensive. Have them warm, light, well ventilated and iucts, al- the very - Ever-y due of these cells is :1 living animal. But the fat and bone of the body csmain none of them. for {base are really lifeless substances. On the 01110 b: uni, the muscles. nerves. heart. lungS. 51; m. and every livin‘5 r part con- 5115 entirely of them. The blood brings them all food, and, curiously, the blood contains a num- ber of the animalculae you find in ponds, which forage for ghemselves. But in the humun body Lb; muses of jelly are each sux‘l‘uunzied by :t douse envelope. so that they have no power to put out feelers. They are of di- ferent shapes in the muscles, lungs, liver, intestines, brain, and elsewhere, and each does a certain part of Lhe body's workâ€"that is to say, them is division of labor. In other words, our bodies are cum- posed of myriuds of little masses ui protoplasms, called cells, each having a distinct and independent life of its' own. These cells are really very sim- ,1 ilar to the tiny little uninmluculae that one finds in ponds and in every pool of stagnant water. ll you get uue ! one of them under a IDLSCCHCUPe you; will see that it IS a little mass of; jelly which 1.3 continually sendinguut! feelers for food, and it it meets with’ a particle of anythmg 1t engulfs it.: o' i I t Singular nlscovery Sow Slade by Ad Him-- ed Scimiiixu. "'?is rather a creepy piece of news to hear from the scientists that one's body is not, as most of 113 think, a single :1nim:,1l but is actually made cup of something like ten millions of mil- lions of animals all welded together and helping each oihe‘.‘ ‘10 live. E “The body remained kneeling, and l the arms worked frantically in protest for some time, till knocked over. The spectators then ran with bread and other soft foodstuffs, which they dip- ped into the blood and ate, the super- stition being that this man had died a hero, and that the blood of a brave man would give courage to those tast- ing it. , “Among the favorite palace deaths is stoning. The victim is stretched out on his back, arms and legs extended. and a man sits on each of the limbs. The executioner appears with ahuge stone. If the victim has the money to pay for a speedy death his head is crushed at once. Otherwise the ex- ecutioner may torture him at will, administering blows wherever he pleases until the victim dies of pain and loss of blood.” as if still trying to articulate tbs words, ‘Injustice. injustice.” f “The seven first men were executed neatly and well, but when the exec- tioner came to the deposed Mandarin [he struggled and declined to put forth his neck, wildly vociferating that he was innocent and had been unjustly accused and condemned. The execuâ€" tioner caught his pig tail and dragged his head forward from the body, with the result that the head was severed only after many blows had been struck. The head and body were terâ€" ribly mutilated. When the head tin- ally fell the mouth opened and closed, ; 5 “Eight prisoners were to be behead- ged. The Mandarin, who was the ex- fiecutioner, sat in an open booth, and {as the eight; men marched by him each was marked on the forehead. Seven of the prisoners were to suffer for robbing and murdering an old man. The eighth was a Mandarian who had been degraded for an offense which he declared he never committed, Once he had been a great man in China, even as Li Hung Chang. He had been a prisoner for many years, when suddenly his execution was ordered by the Viceroy of Quung-Tung. Eight. Prisoners Put to Death in the Pro. «once. of u Foreigner in (Mina. The following is the story of a Chinese execution, as told by Sir Robert Hart, an eye-witness: 0n stiff clay land open ditches are a necessity. No matter how thoroughly underdrained, during a heavy or protracted rain the close texture of the soil prevents the water being absorbed as fast as it falls. Even on sandy or gravelly land there is an occasional downpour too fast for the land to drink it up. This necessi- tates some provision for taking care of this surplus water, and it can be successfully done only through the {medium of open ditches. 1n meadow land, where the water flows only a Portion of the year, the ditch should be made shallow and broad, say about 1 ft. deep and gradually sloping t0 the banks on each side 6 it. away. ‘ A ditch of this kind will sod over in one year and is not so deep but that a mower can be run across it‘ at every point, also loaded wagons} Deep ditches that now out up pasture} and meadow' land can be made shal-l tenacious grass. If they are crooked You can do much' to strengthen them by making a channel across the bends. 1 If in places the incline is so steep as liable to wash, fill in during a dry time to the proper depth with loose soil and pave with stiff sods. It takes a little work, but pays well. ( ed in water at 40 degrees and worked immodiately. EVERYONE it? PLURAL. CHINESE EXECUTION. “I then started usin Burdock Blood Bitters, and when I had nished the second bottle I was almost well. but continued taking it until! had completed the third bottle, when I was perfectly well. Before taking B.B.B. I could scarcely eat any- thing without having a Pain in my stomach. Now eat whatever I like with- out causing me the least discomfort." â€"â€" MRS. THOMAS CLARK, Brussels, After trying the hundred and one new-fangled remedies without much benefit, why not use the old reliable Burdock Blood Bitters and obtain a perfect and permanent cure? Here is a case in point: “I was troubled with indigestion and dyspepsia for three or four years, and tried almost ever doctor round here and differâ€" ent dyspepsia. remedies, but got little relief. Dyspepsia and indigestion keep them in constant misery. Many people suffer terribly with pain in the stomach after every mouthful tluey eat. ‘ “I Gan Eat What I Like.” County of Grey. including a valuable We.) Power. Brick dwellin . and many slogan building loss. will be to d In one or more low Also 10:, Na. 50. 0021.2, W. G. R..Townsmp oi Bentlnok. 100 acres. adjoining Town plo: Durham. Mortgages taken for part purchase money Apply to J AMES EDGE oct. 2116. Edge Hill P.O. The “Chronicle? is mo oiiiy 12-l‘age Local hewware' in Western Ontario. ”7/ r.rr ’1’," 2‘1 Milburn’s Heart and Nerve Pills, collapse is almost certain to ensure. Mr. Fred. H. Graham, a we -known young man of Barrie, Ont, says :-“ I have had a great deal of trouble with my heart for {our years. I was easily agitated and my ex- citement caused my heart to throb violently. [had dizziness and shortness of breath, and often arose in the mornings feeling as :ired as when I went to bed. I was terribly nervous. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills have done wonders for me. '1‘ hey have restored my heart to regular healthy action," giving me back sound restful sleep, and making my nervous syn-z ;em strong and vigorous." ltttk--__. ' 1v- __- n-u MilburnTs Heat-{and Nerve Pills are 50c. 1 box or 3 for has at all dru gists or by :naill. Eh; T. Milburn Co., imited, To- Do you feel wretched, mean and uni-ab able in the morningsâ€"as tired as whm you went to bed I? It's a serious condition -â€"too serious to neglect, and unless you have the heart and nervous system strengthened and the blood enriched by Does Sleep not bring ch'whmént 1“ DO YOU FEEL TIRED ,q IN THE MORNING? ‘nto, Ont. IN THE TOWN W BUSH“, EDEE PROPERTY

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