Ontario Community Newspapers

Grey Review, 17 Dec 1896, p. 9

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go in] chain tsterpl team out Iron) 5 Elder D. Mot Sim“ muck 0 may an! “I? Emacs Cc 25 cu . day s " t1se um. t '1‘ he, ”3" uk the trrp mun! ot a" [tank con“ In commit tho trre.f " All"). P. I mm: W0" 51mm. Th lsolto, Bro oovud ' Road an moi: "Po numb“ b coiling!" MM, Ban-u“ eis tltr, Via-5035] samurai by” v, Sound pended T w ml 623.67 Fian mend- reu'I That t sf " Thu. fol uc LII tor pal ml .0] tlu jni W19 ti coll Jobbing of ill tith promptly mm to. ALLAN magnum, S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thomas . Lauder, Registrar. John A. Munro, f.tr.It"h.ri,',tei: "Oraeo hours from 10 B. tn. 4 p. In. Handjmagie - Waggons In the old stand. made shoes. Horse Shoeing Shop, Baron von Wiamann. Rte governor of German Fast Africa. has been elect- gl prtesiebnt at the Berlin Geog-apnea I. Arte y Loan and Insurance Agent. Con- veyancer. Commissioner &e. Tnlu Hanged without deny. Collootionl promptly made. [nuance tttNoted. MONEY " LOAN allowust mum otlntoru‘ I an on door north ot I. “on Star. Durham LICENSED AUGTIONEEB for Co. of Grey. All communications ad. drouod to Luann P. o. will be promptly attended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. tr, Township of Bontinek. DAN. MeLEAI. NOTA I"! . U ILIO. Connmluionovwlm. MON BY TO LOAN. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. ALLAN gtnlllJilill “Conny of any. Salon attemUd to prom. and n tone-3N. run. “an“ Durham Ont '0 all an "efat attention of Poo manor 5 “a who "urste the following " noplin eftbo BOWLgllelAl'I: I. Itanr potion orders his pop" disco: “and. ho mu ply all arranges, or tht nbliahor In.) commas to and it until pl) zoom mode. and collocnhe whole a: cunt Whether it be “kn from the oitiee or 'P". The" can be no logo] discontinuance out: pavmontilmndo. a. hay person who toku . pop" tron the pod oitiets, whether directed to hi mm. or another. or whether he has sub scribed or not is teaponliblo for the pay. BWSTBR, tl)uCmlll .lll SHERRI}: ttht, Of the Best Quality Cheaper -- THAN EVER. DAN. 8. If a subscriber orders in: pgper to be stopped at n cumin time, uni the publisher" continues to Iond,the subsorihorin boom to pay for it if he takes it out at the p05 "ice. This proceeds upon he grounr in! u nun must p.110: what he uses. First-Class Hearse. Hal opened out a flrst-olass UN DEBTAKIN a Promptly attended to, JAKE KBESS. W. L. MCKENZIE, Botridesntto--Eintr Bt., Hanover. JAMES LOCKIE, Fire Insurance secured. OFFIcl. ova Gum's atom. Lows! Toma. BSUER of Marriage Lion-on. Ano- tioneor for Counties of Bruce and Guy. alst?CrtiTF9Rllt,, IOENSED AUCTIONEER, foe th JAKE KRESS HUGH McKAY. Furniture MISCELLANEOUS. WOODWORK Still tobe found in his Old Shad opposite the Durham Bakery. m ewspsper Lawn. in connection. A f1rtst-elass lot of for sale cheap. DURHAM- LEGAL McLEAN. Also All hand. are composed largely of water. This is evaporated when internal fevers ev- aporate the internal moisture, and the meat is then said to be firm, solid and will waste little in cooking. Whenever pork of this kind is not wanted, it should be fattened with boiled veget- ables or fruit mixed with wheat mid- dlings and bran to make the right pro. portion of nitrogenou_s matter. Ive have often more than half tattened hogs on boiled grtstt windfall apples, and never d pork that tasted better than that thus fettened. Even before we knew that it was anwholesmne, we never much liked the pork fattened on corn alone. . "It is well always to select the breed- lng sow early and give her the espe- EARLY F ATTENING Oi? PORK. "Corn is not so exclusively the feed of hugs at any age as it used to be. Instead of growing pigs on their swill with pasture, and thus stunting their earzy growth, it is the practice of the best farmers to begin the high feeding from birth, keeping the pigs always in condition for the butcher, and top- ping off the lust few weeks with a clear corn diet. Many farmers," ac- cording to American Cultivator, “pre- fer that pork for their own use shall not be thus topped off. It is sweet- or but less firm in texture, containing more moisture. This, however, only means that the pig killed after being fed so as to waste in cooking is by that fact shown to be in healthy con- dition. All animals in perfect health inHhe - morning LIKE; V1145}; are again given w.ater and left for the night.--L. Conine. we may be using; sometimes it is hay sometimes corn fodder, and we have fed many tons of rye straw in the sheaf. When the cows have finished this (we only give them what they will eat clean) the manger is swept out and they are given all the water they will drink. The water is pumped into the manger from a well, and it is as good water as we use in our house. After the cows have finished drinking, the manger is swept dry, and the cows left alone until just before milking time in the evening] when they are again fed and then milked. After milking they are again given all the hay they can eat, and about 8 o'clock at night, if on}; 'hay is left. it is taken out or use Cottonseed meal furnishes more nitrogen at less cost than any other of the foods common to our market}. For this reason it can only be fed . In small quantities for any length of time without impairing the digestion of COWS. Two pounds a day is ample for a Jersey cow. Even this small amount should always he tgignggt"i by some} sucoulent or Jrelaxirt pod. _ a duty to reduce the cost of foods to the lowest point consistent with the preservation of the health of the cows and the maintenance of the quality of their product. But the man who en- dangers the health of his cowe by cheap feeding or impairs jp the sligh.t- est degree the high quality of they butter product had better change his Vocation. Oil meal also needs to beefed in mod- eration, not exceeding two pounds. a day. Its effort is directly oppomte cottonseed meal. Cottonseed meal 1s costlve and tends to tie up the bowels, while oil meal isa laxative and tends to loosen them. Cottonseed meal "tthet" hard butter, oil meal makes so . We mix by weight and each cow gets the same proportion of each kind of grain. ' The first thing in the morning is to give the cows a feeding of grain, then they are milked and given a light fod- dering of whatever kind of roughage I doubt if any good, sound cattle foods are ever sufficiently improved by cooking to pay for the labor and ex- pense of the operation. Poor food, es- pecially poor fodder and hay, may be enough benefitted to pay the expense, but, the good farmer doesn't have such fold, to cook, 7:13 a. rule. 7 There is a cement manger in front of the cows wi,th an outlet at one end and a grade to it, and there we feed and water from fall to spring. All ground grain is mixed for feed and kept in a mixing bin in front of the manger. The bin is large enough to hold a number of feedings, and it is easier to mix and feed in that way than to feed each kind of grain separ- ately, and the rows seem to like it bet- ter that way. When we are through maturing in the fall, the cows are stabled day and night, except that on pleasant days we let them out for an hour or so for ex- ervise, but when the weather is not pleasant, they are not outside at all. We keep them from getting wet by storm during all the cold season. Ive keep the stables xxsmfortably warm and always well aired. The man who, seeking cheapness, sacrifices quality in buttermaking is truly penny wise and pound foolish. It is at all times not only desirable but Whenever the siierlurrf plays around the zero notch, it will pay to warm the drinking water for cows. Corn meal deserves a good place in all rations for Jersey cows, newspaper chemists to the contrary notwithstand- ing. A good silo increases the cow-keep- ing capacity of a good farm by at least one-third. Some claim one-half. Silage also adds very materially to the condition of the cows during the win- ter. Keeps their digestion in better order and brings them to the spring grass in better flesh. Good corn silage is excelled in milks giving value by no other one food, un- less it be good pasture was. Like grass, it brings out all the inherent value of dry food. MErtras OF DIFFERENT CATTLE FEEIE. In a consideration of various foods for cattle a correspondent decides that oats, as a dairy food, is worth at least 15 percent more than wheat bran, and 10 percent more than mill feed (bran and shorts.) In a breeding herd the difference in value is even greater. THE FARM. M cow FEEDING, u”, auu uusuuer ulseases relieved in six hours by the “South American Kid- ney Cure." This new remedy isa great surprise and delight on account of its exceeding promEtness in relieving pain in the bladder, idneys. back and every tgf, of the ruinary passage in male or emale. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing it almost immed- iately. If you went quick relief and cure this is Four 3-2va is a master enginéerr gt -diGiTCiiiii,' Glasgow. 10 cts. Cares Constipation and Liver Duc-Dr. Aguew's Liver Pills are the most perfect made, and cure like magic, Sick Headache, Constipation, Bilious- ness, Indigestion and all Liver Ills. 10 cents a. vial-40 doses. Relief in Six Holes-Distr-ring Rigi- qeylggd 1JlMt.itpisesysed relieved In Mr. J. Murrie, who chime to be .the _1.11tenyrT,tot, a au.ccesstul aerial manage, Du Maurier used to keep a vase on his mantedpiece for his friends to drop jokes into, which he then used for ‘Punch." Hay Fever and Catarrh Relieved in JO to 60 Minutes.-Ahte Short Puff of the breath through the Blower, sup- plied with each bottle of Dr. A new's Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this Igowder over the surface of the nasal passages. Painless and delightful to use. It tre- lieves instantly, and permanently cures Catarrh, Hay Fever. Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, and Deafness. For sale by all druggists. "At Ratherhithe, some years ago," said he, "in the forepeak of a very old wooden merchantman, we found the skeleton of a lad jammed behind the skin of the vessel. The lad had been a, stowaway in all prohabiiity." Aunt of them were false or duplicate bills of lading. and there were. counter- feit foreign wins, a, pair of heavy gold earrings with a turquoise in eaeh-- pruhubly stolen by one foreign sezunan from turother--a hand grenade with a cap to it, an old wig with three small gold nuggets wrapped in it, and many other small trifles. l But even during the breaking upof lquite modern vessels which have be- lch-me wrecks, remarkable finds. particu- larly relating to smuggling contriv- ances. are by no means rare. In a. por- tion of a. considerable wreck on the south-east coast only the winter before last the ship breakers found.hidden in a part of the engine room, a. quantity of valuable jewellery and a number of newspaper clippings and published por- traits relating to a murder and rob- bery at suit. Louis, in the United States. The jewellery found was that described in the reports as missing. Two of the men employed in the engine room were drowned in the wreck, but, there was no clue to attach either the drowned men or the other engine room hands with the published descriptions and por- traits of the murderer. The mystery was never cleared up. TREASURES EVERYWHERE. The manager of a sh?) breaker. .8. man who has been for orty years in the business. could cite hundreds of cases where hiding places for small articles smuggled by officers and men have been found, these being in connec- tion with nearly every part of the hulls broken up, and he produced several articles that has been found by himself or his men. -- l Valuable and G1taMV Bella III-covered Beneath [he Pia-In or Hulls. The utilization of apparent waste is well exemplified in the breaking up of ships of various kinds, for every nail and every chip are put aside for sale; but in the case of vessels ot con- siderable tonnage, and especially of very old craft, finds both curiousand valu- able are by no means rare. An old wooden vessel that was broken up near Greenwich only a. few months back re- vealed a very purious sight when some old planking in the foxecastle had been torn down. Hem, nailed up, were the two mummified hands of a negro.and in the palm of each hand, and transfix- ed by the some nails that held the hands, were two counterfeit silver dol- lars. The hands had been hacked off roughly. A year or two ago the breaking up of on old schooner near Sheerness brought to light beneath the inner "skin" of the hull quite an elaborate armament ot a. very old-fashioned kind, including a. splendidly made bell- mouthed flint-look musket, the stock being marked with a representation of arm and leg fetters. and the name "Philip Steyne, Boston, Lincolshire." The most curious part of this find was a set of books-a privateer's books evi- dently--shrrwing the capture of various French vessels. Tied up in a canvas bag 190 guineas in gold were found a, year or two back during the breaking up of an old 1retF sel lying between Birkenhead and New Brighton. With the money were found too. a. most curious and unique yet.. of foreign playing cards, some loaded dice, and three magnificent pieces of amber. All these were found in the false bot- tom of a. wooden bunk. For was the sow out of the lot that was then the best adapted to breeding, but it was also the sow that had shown by its failure to fatten when highly fed that it, lacked the especial trait that {made a hog valuable. What is wanted in breeding- sows is the reatest; pos- Slble ability" to make use of all the food given, 30 that the tendency will al- ways be to an excess of fat, and feed them so that this tendency will be kept in cheek and yet so liberally as to pro- mote vigorous) growth. This means an abundant, but not any concentrated ration of food adapted to make growth rather than fat, All the grains are too fattening. Wheat middlings and, skim milk diluted with dish washings, with enough grass in summer or beets in winter to keep the pig from squeal- mg, will build up a long, tangy low that will produce more and better pigs in half a dozen years of her life than a armer can make by any other like investment of his money." For sale by all Druggists cial kind of feed and care adapted to prepare her for her mission in life. The old fashioned Yrsctice of Home farmers of feedi.ng a] the pigs together on corn until nearly fattening time tend- ed always to deterioration. Not but that the sow which had fattened least and hail made liberal growth instead of putting on fat even with this feed MURDER AND ROBBERY. FOUND IN OLD SHIPS. is your retriedy. - by all Druggist. ed with direct railway communication with Lahore and the cities of the north- western frontier. There has been a heavy rainfall in the fruitful valley of jCashlmere, but in this beautiful region Ithe natives are too lazy to work, and ,and to sell, for a general riot seemed imminent, and it was Probable that a , massacre would occur i steps were not (tttii',','; to bring the prices down to a I reasonable figure. There is a general impression that the grain dealers in the large cities have ample stocks for the present, but they are bent Upon forcing up the prices. In view of the serious scarcity. the military authorities have ldecided against moving the trmps at what is known as the "annual relief," when regiments are moved from one station to another. it is felt that the villages in which the regiments would be encamped could not furnish the troops with the supplies. The Government of India is looking in the direction of San Francisco rather than to Australia for the necessary sup-) ply of grain, but it is curious to observe the fol owing passage in an Anglo-In- 1dian newspaper: The announcement that three cargoes of grain are being shipped from San Francisco to India. seems so contrary to the nature of things, that, afterthc first shock, one is tempted to recall the saying that California has the small- eat stones and the biggest liars in Am- erica, but when we remember that the price of grain and seeds in this country is at the present moment 10 or 12 per cent. higher than in Europe, we must admit that there is only too much rea- son to accept the statement wired by Router as not improbable in itself. We learn that orders for grain have been wired from Calcutta to New York. It is possible that the shipments from Cali- fornia are In response to Calcutta in- dents. . But they have ere this. discovered that even. San Francisco is quite capable of sending grain to India. The chief port for vessels_ conveying gram to north- ern India ls Karenina. the capital of the province of Scind, which is connect- of life. for the Prophet of Arabia said: "Whoever puutopplizes is a sinner. He that keepeth grain forty days in order to increase the price is not only a for- saker of God, but will be forsaken of Him." Consequently in the great moslem city of Lahore, where the grain merchants were buying up grain in order to raise its price, a deputation of moslems waited upon the Govern- ment officials and requested them to compel the merchants to sell their grain. At Delhi, also a Mohammedan city. the Bunnias. or merchants, have been com- pelled to According to. tta/sl nun}; of Mohaarr, madam law it Is forbidden far any one tis, ie.ryatt a nmngpoly on the, necessaries For some time past a large quantity of wheat has been imported from Cali- fornia. In a single year the United States. the Argentine Republic. and Canada have exported to India twenty- three crores of maunds of wheat, while thirteen crores of maunds went there from Russia, and thirteen more from Australia. If, therefore. as it seems probable. a steady supply of wheat pours into India from abroad. it is im- possible that prices should ever ap- proach such rates as obtained in 1878, when the coarsest rice was sold at five Beers for the rupee. The Famine Com- mission appointed by the Indian Gov- ernment now estimates that under the most unfavorable circumstances it is not likely that, more than 2,500,000 PEOPLE for an average period of one year will ever be likely to be in receipt of relief from the Government. For the suppnrt of these it is said that about 10,000,000 of maunds (a Bombay maund being twenty-eight pounds) will suffice. The Government of India and the local Government of the provinces are tally alive to the importance of mak- ing timely preparations. There are nine schemes of railway construction in con- templation, which will supply work for a large number of men, and the local government are preparing canal pro- jects and minor public works, which can be utilized tor purposes of relief in those districts on which distress is apprehended. Ten lahks of rupees have just been added to the already large grant at the disposal of the Govern- ment of the northwest provinces, to be spent in advances for the construction of temporary wells, which can in many parts of the country be dug with great expedition and with small expense. Meanwhile test relief works and poor- houses have already been opened where they seem to be required. I Recent News From the Provinces elected -Cal the Government Meet the Ener- - F-Better Prepared for a D‘s-Inc Than In Former Years. It is now nearly twenty years since India suffered from drought and fa- mine, The experiences of 1877-78 induc- ed the Indian Government to set aside l a contingent fund for a possible famine, and now, after twenty years, the Government of India is able to face the horrors of a famine more effectively than it did years ago. During the last twenty years much has been done in strengthening the hands of the Govern- ment in' combating distress. The irri- gating capacity of all the canals in India l has rapidly risen, and, in the northwest- ern provinws alone, there are 10,000,000 acres irrigated from various sources, while in the provinces of the Punjab there are 7,500,000 acres. During the same interval the miles of railway open have increased in these two provinces from 2,460 to 6,284, while the cost of car- riage by rail has been greatly reduced. PREPARING FOR FAMINE WHAT THE GOVERNMENT IS DOING FOR INDIA’S MILLIONS. REDUCE THEIR PRICES In the matter of good health tempors izing measures. while possibly success- ful for the moment, can never be lut- ing. Those in poor health soon know whether the remedy they are new: is limply e passing incident in their ex- perience. bracing them up for the day. or lomething that in getting It the seat of the disease and is surely and permanently restoring. The eyes of the world are literally fixed on South American Nen-ine. They are not viewing " as a nine-dnye' won- der, but critical and experienced men have been studying this medioine for in". with the one result-they have found tint its claim of perfect cun- tive qualities cannot be nlnseidt The great diecoverer of this medicine was polarised of tho knowledn that the seat of ti diocese is the nerve centres. situated at the hue of the brain. In this belief he had the belt scientist: and medical men or the world contain! moth the “no pre- mine. Indeed. _the ordinary lor- a...“ auuucu_ mo DRUM" I. - mu matted thin when: long ago. Evoryono know. 'ell “it lee, or injury affect thla purtof g - ...--i- ----_-, _ - - -- ' - 17., ...--v. uu- "II-VI the human system Inc death in almost cot-tun. Injuro the arm cord. winch Is the medium of t one nerve cen- trtt: an} Myth " sure to follow. FOR SALE The‘ EDGE PROPERTY. In the Town of Durham, County of Grey. includigg valunlile Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building Iota, will be sold in one or more Iota. Also lot No. 60, con, 2, w. G. R., Townlhip of Bentinck, 100 acres adjom- lug Town plot Durham. Heart Disease Relieved in 80 Minutes. --.Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief in _all cases qt Or- ganic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in 30 minutes, and speedily effects a. cure. It is a peerless remedy for Pal- pitation, Shortness of Breath, Smother- ing Spells, Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of a Diseased Heart. One dose convinces. Hero II KrtiUGr"rinirii;iC."kltit and For sale by McFarlane & Co., Wholesale Agums for Du r hm itortsmre taken for pm purchuo annoy. - __ - W ---- Lord Roberta, the British field mar" shad, will soon ambush his remin_is- canoes. which wi'. be particularly In- tesesting to those familiar with Indla. WHEN EVERY OTHER HELPER HAS FAILED lf Q'ili Rheumatism Cured in a Dar-South American Rheumatic Cure, for Itheu- matism and Neuralgia, radically cures m l to 3 days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the dgsease immediately disappears. The firat dose greatly benefita. 75 cents. Piles Cured in B to 6 Niirhts.--Dr. Agnew": Ointment wild cure all cases of Itching Piles in from 8 to 6 nights. One application brings comfort. For Blind and Bleeding Piles it is peerless. Also cures Tetter, Salt Rheum, Eczema. Barber's itch, and " eruptions of the skin. 85 ota. For sale by all .druggista. Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. dog). and is at work on his "Rise of the Br}tisb Empire from the Time of Queen Elizabeth." Are Fixed Upon South Ameri. can Nervine. this native Government too indifferent to its own interests to cultivate grain, or anything else for export to the plains of India. THE EYES (lf THE WEIHEE For sale by all Druggists Dr. Carl Peters bus returned to Lon- Discovery. Based on Scientific Principles. thtl Renders Failure Impossible. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, V i. mi F [Me With medlml “cum”! ttre ldiir, end with nearly an momma ' "ttct they um mum . to trest the or!” [that 2'G"l,1"ldh'lM. South Ame: :31 NeMne Dulce by the organs, and itte lmodlately applies its curative pow-N i, the nerve control. from ,rhreh HM forum at the body ror‘eh'e their supp}! "rt nerve ttaid. The nerve ttrt:trt0 Elle-Jed. tad of necessny the "Fan ‘Vhllddhll shown the outward evi {3" "ttt y dam-lent is healed "‘ '- fatten. BQWOIIIDOI'B, in'pu' ,de blood, liver Comphrnt. all t,TVe' 'lisle origin to . derangement of H WV" centree. Montana. bur WWW" that they have been run} (-5 1’1”". troubles, ”I. when they fry-“e “WWI: BO descent. I. to bamo the l:-:,,'} "r the no" eminent Dhynhxum. " “1““ South Amerfema Nervine has cone " [ 1tetdtttutrtem and cured t! e». L-.. I “M on: o! the world l. diuppolnted tn the tnqutry can at South Amorscun N N0 marvel. it II true, an I much.) qualities. but th, Fond d! question that ‘1 thing that In claimed for 11 “one u the one great " remedy of the Mnetomth w thould Anyone sufrvr Cw" I he. wh"e this remedy 1- at their hand. , i DUNN’S f BAKING 5 POWDER new allowed on savings harm] Vd upwuda. Prompt ltwutmu a unnamed custom living In a d Anne“! Bulking bullne mud and collections nude a. rewind sud Interest fh flJeglt Quebec, tu'trtai'"iLllll gpggAM AGENC! W. P. Comm. " Paid up BEBERV E PON D CAPITAL. Authorized anvaw omen. on". “I. DUE“ TERI“ u Me you. I. tttt cm Inna: mam-",0. StandardBank of Cam n.iE_t)_tltytfrBrsT_rRiii ll muslin "I" Thursday,' Morn! GENTS in :11 FOR TWENTY-SIX Y f Head Office Luau? SALEM CAME SAVINGS BANK President. GREY -Al' Pu!!!” tun J. KELLY, Iy,ietlpt,1._rra, . Tom“. I “lbw an I" poi-u. snow“ It l Goo mm. tAtt d 'mi "an. IR“ 'id') Kitt " f ' TI, ' with . a [ the lulu-r J" a ITE] Ithfliiwr' T CTI, 2"2Tr: lCt‘l _ - huh-r. " In; to _ our spin eg, a: lung drawn u line n It! co U "M Cid cont {New - lit id, 'iiLewifeU1",Cc, - all r" . . Whey the l - gl' are at we mm" otsail give all?“ "its "no“ the nation 1er, that ttte perfect“ A:_-oinm must iiii “may on“ " only weapon is , a. field is open for ”.60 Ski“ bedore tststade to nuns. a. will“! ot the 1 antic "1“" man and . ”treat. I in of the Le r '" k-"' 0' Bey of the out, his Wm“ one "at!!!" from ‘ with pane and, inane powers, wno tl; A FORCLBLE RES A - .1ng Cabix Wanted. made . -tntion, attached the “I aqroneota' posiciors w rieidimy would be w rieitruto would La, we a advantage ot Mm Such a n -uee Mat is tbe m; it was well can (it-K Governmwk in ttrq - tan yew! Nro, W M “use by a he“ ”voted in to the [an b has of the warning-an “muons at tbe a a. “V U W Yumun B “I? -41.“ of wttich " an “other iusta! d Feb. 11th. in Seoul, v “at "ttree in the Run as!!!“ our bemvokul but the independence l “nitration of Kora I we should bare done. in. yr "calling our ”in; up the kg“. Cum our troupe, ti'i'iriiilr.il.:,.5, “In Gr the woman m A but favorable oppou my. " fd Ruben u 'dqtirttt . am uh I itmid “wives to unit can of cireunuuaoraw [n d haw. Our Miva a ll “demanding uit - a temporszirw u the event we lost pram an“. It aua cases as Um I to all for , 9331:.“ w In Bctive, In " “a policy in. foreign (gloat national mu his iiaGUGGuar d Wit-home aux-tum a the bold Janna» SPIRIT OF ADV I. expansive power a must nnlu- itself Si?:' North and S g Indies, thlna and southward tut grii, “mung ever)! humus um supplu u. an! of a “Knot UCLt l Pilot: ot our dumi d eoionixation mus “gunman; mum: the! u home, “n and consulam m Idat tape tor the pro) "re, at our" -eliar' We“ allxlvr: ed M in the ttro Dutch, Pram} Station Furs, a years l 9533mm an a 1ll=utrtti'h"iy, for, te ldjau'ul _ h 'i'ilfurilU, and Car ht to Spin, and m iikitgli,1', ot 'utflaea . Wm: this. a (in our reapsmn‘ M “P titer the w: “It tide at Japarvs ~22 Mt be 'stayed In tr {a ftr't,i,iNiijr'ii,i' t. T imam bonusl W “a Spani M myrtle: ot a J: u island at the Ihfair'; is t ca.“- r, cut the Perm“ Wiu‘i“ muat m d M " atti “AM cannot be cannot Ltd I '" com”? mand otexpedi m For maul-DC i-r-tomrm to at mMe, to t m m the (I I. tension, ar F1'llfi?a't'i,! duh-n L“ til; Inn-car» war Span Maple “nun-.1 h In of the fru tflhet l: ... Ila errata th. diplomatic l [ E Protimity mnoeuv duetoJu It in the count In ad WEST P fri-aus, wh in. kt oflrt _er.oit"i' r, mull“ “ht. tn W10 ', you»: ture a E'v'ér'iv our mansion of this 'to p, the Mon oi our in! " um tor t) all“! at th Pear itt km to new " Ill h it Mil th pi

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