Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 1 Jul 1897, p. 6

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it v, Handjmagio - Waggon; In tho old stand. made Show. Horse Shoeing Shop, ALLAN MOFARLANE LICENSED AUGTIONEIB to! 00. of On]. All communication. do aroma to Law: P. o. will be promptly "temUd to. Buidonoo Lot 10, 00-. it, Township of Bentimh. DAN. Idol“. “Cont, " thor. “In “toad-4'10 you. and u roman]. gut... IISUER of Marriage Mensa. Ano- nonnr for Con-tif- of Bruce Ind Guy. DAN. S O. Rhlom'rRrisyarictt. Thom: q Landonlo'uuu. John A. Munro, DePtttrauiurar. (Mice hour. from 10 In.“ tg,th1tt without dour. Collection- prompz y and; Immune. “not“. IONS! " LOAN " |owou “use! lumen l 1n!- ou door north at . In“ sun Dull“ "'ea IV PC ELM“. l'o-nl-n!o.or.ue.. '- T I I .-.-. UH" Bulllitrll, Mlllltllll ll 'llflllllill a, BUSINESS DIRECTORY. In opened out a first-tsho First-Class Hearse. Beeltunts.--3rhagr St. 1huusvere. Of the Best Quality Cheapo: THAN zvm. JAMES LOCKIE, UN Did “TAKING Promptly tvttended .0. JAKE 381188. l. It . unburibu onion " piper to ba "otrtod " I "rtain “In. sud tho published unanno- to and. tho which)»: n bound .0 pay for it " ho “in it out of the post 0.00. This proceed. upon be ground In I In must my for what he nun. . My porno who tutu I Par" from .0 you cl“. whom" directed to hie I... or another, or when": In In. lab -tbed or not in unpouiblo tor the pay. MON BY TO LOAN. Stttbb--Why do y_ou say Gavin in aroly I figureth In your business? Nmtr--rT,e'irour accountant. yunknow. I. " III] person orders his pup" “Icon bud. he an! n] all mu. or the tlefty, In, connnno to land it until '6) . M. made, And trolUetthe whole maul M! It be tutu from the otbte or not “an on be no by] (ii-continua» anti “rue-tlnuuio. Fire Insurance secured. ”MOI. on: IPI'"'. 810m. Lml Toma. -.u4p:-. Wo all tho and}: “and” of Poo m. I "d “Writer.“ nu following a, - of Ibo notcnporhn: .191?qu of all kinds promptly ALLAN mammal IICINBBD AUCTIONEEB. for th J. P. TELFORD In and Insurance Agent, Con- voysnoor. Commissioner Jae. HUGH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. WOODWORK JAKE KRESS Furniture . L. MCKENZIE, still tobe found in bi. Old Build opposite the Durham Bier. in connection. A amt-clan lot of for sale cheap. H IS OCCUPATION Revamp” bun. DURHAM- LEGAL MCLEAN. Also All hand. A mushroom expert “his“ " Do not cook the skins and atom! of mush- rooms, it you wish to acute tteir. hitrh- 950 flavor. Thom is nothing mjurlqus :Ilmul either, it is aim I that they give an earthy flavor. WI o.ootrs “OW mushrooms too long; tire or Mat minutes is ample time." l Thorough rinsing in plenty of water has ugood dra1 to do with clear, white as bad for the clean-Es fingers. A tableawontul of born inn pgilful of warm water helps get the dirt off the *mlnl withgut tsyng.ttte.staint, . too. once. - ___ . It is assermd that five cenU' worth of oil of lavender, mixed with an equal quantity at water ant} m»rn{_ed about_ I room will banish flies. he odor In agreeable, and the remedy not " all unpleasant. Borax ia just as useful in housoclum‘ ing days as ammonia, and it in not but SUGGESTIONS TO H0USEKE'E'PF1RS It is said that all traces of mud stains can he removed from black clothes by rubbing them with tho cut In]! of a raw potato. Humor the preference of the carpet bug for bright mlors by keeping Selma bits of red flannel on thus closet floor. Examine. them (wary few days and mur- der the hugs at their banquet. An exchange says that young onions --lseforey they begin to form bulbs and while they are about the size of agood {an lead pryncil--trimmed to Ittrts about two inches at the green. boiled tu-enty-five minutes and served like asparagus, are both wholesome and de- licious. An exchange gives the following re- ' for a cement that will unite china, and as it in white, mend it as math, and firmly as a fracture can be mend- b When one cannot get ice, butter and other articles may be. Rant cool by placing lhem'in a dish of water. Set tho dish before an upen window. Cover it with a. Moth which rests one end in the dish of water. the other in an- other dish. There will be a constant change of the water in the cloth by ttttro- illary attraction and that and the air make a good substituta for ice. And new it isclaimed that a dish of cold water at the head of the bed will prevent. and cure restlessness and sleeplessness. Tonvels wrung from wa- ter and hung in a hot room will purify the air and lower the temperature Bev- er?hytegrees, _ , The frugal housewife should preserve the chafirig-dirrh recipe, for everything which can be mad» in :l chafing-dish may be cooked over a kerosene or gas Move at less mat, aJoohol Vring the dearest fuel? The Moves lack thecluin- timess of the I-hafing-diah.but in all olhar respects they omits equal, and its superior in economy. An excellent cement for mendiw whites china is mad» of plaster of Paris mixed with white of egg. Apply toone hide and join.the edges quickly. This is strong"," and on wifike alidiGes Giri Ihqw. On colored, it leaves a. thin white lino. ' Another grateful dish for summer in cottage cheese. To have it tender take the milk at the amigo when, it has first turned to bonny-clubher. Pour on it boiling water, stir it thoroughly, and after standing five minutes drain off the water without squeezing the chem, as that toughen; It. Work in with a. spoon a little salt, a bit of butter, or of cream, which is better. This is one of the dishes of which the homo-made is superior to that in the market. - __ - . *"w “are": '““’ "Pr"".' edy: Thy mol, thirtrkeva" grains; oil of eucalyptus, two drama; firwood oil, two drums; chloroform, two drama: rectified spirit, two ounces. This will not still the buzzing of the insects when they are numerous, but it will keep them from making one's lih, a. burden. The top 0 tender rudishes make a: good a salad as lottux'o. It has a 1ei"t'i; taste that the latter lacks. Dress wit vinegar, sugar and Halt with oil. Melly- onnnise dressing is ow of place on do i- cate vegetable salads. Tho syn-tam craves acids in summer. and lemon in coffee and taa will be found by those of bilious temperament to agree with theanhettar than milk. Milk may deserve all the praise it gets as food, but no biliously inclined person should drink it. For bites of mosquito bathe with sat- urabed solution of salt in water. To keep musq'uitoa from biting apply this rem- 4‘II..."L_ __. AL. A . .. _ Summer washing may be made easy ri, letting themn do the cleansing. Rub soiled spots and soak the garments over night. putting them tonoak in hot war ter. lat the morning wring them out, scald, rinse once. and lay on the 81'8” without wringing dry. All spots and dirt will disappear as it try magic, the home is not scented with steaming clothes. the garments will be beautiful- ly white and sweet from the action of the sunlight upon them. This course will fade a colored garment white in two or three washings. so it must be used for white clothing only. To reduce the ice bill in summer keep the in wrapped in savaral thicknosael of newapapet. It will make 0. dif- feronua ot two day: in the time the ice ed water for twenty minutes drain, season with butter, and nerve. Ico housekeeper. which are” won;- oolno u lam. "cobble- and more duh- cano than spinach. These are the much- despisod put-alone. the former's pest, and the young beach of the milkwoed. The format taste; like beet green. The “on should not be cooked,it they look too much like angle wormatohe tompt- ing. The only part. of the milkweed to be cooked in the solid head ot the young leaves before they have opened out It all. Cook by dropping into boiling ult- is excellent toF%eaiihirku'mioal, HOUSEHOLD HINTS. There are two vntiotiu ot green: which an almost. unknown to the aver- -.--s-rs----s-s_ - ‘VV‘ THE HOME. com letely cured. -It L ihaaulie‘afy' the 1'ees'tl remedy in the world for rheu- gmfism." Mrs. Jolrn Beaumont, Eton. And every breath she draw was an excruciating pain- Rheumatism had fastened his (alone on his prey-South American Rheumatic. Cure snatched her from his grater. "For fifteen years I had been frail) ed with rheumatism. It had settled in my back. At timea the pain was so severe as to entirely lay me up for weeks at a time. I wt" just about discouraged and had given up hope when I was recommended to try South American Rheumatie Cure. I did so. The first bottle enabled me to leave my bed, and in one week from the _time [unpaved its use Twas In 1891 Ptolemy» Vilhelm Stomh, of Copenhagen, unneeded in isolating cer- tain acid Lacteria from ripened cream, and was able to cultivate and utilize them in the orenmeriea for accomp- lishing an artificial ripening in the cream, and consequent fermentation, in order that it more uniform and bet- ter flavored butter might, be produced. But it was not until two years ago, when I’rufewr Conn disoovered a germ tar the ripening of cream which was radically different from any here- tofore used, that the subject began to be studied in thisuountry with the view of developing itseoinmereial poa- sibilities. Since then a. laborator has been fitted up in "ostton by Orrin gong. lose for the separation, cultivation and investigation of bacteria from a com- mercial standpoint. Mr. Douglass has associated with him Mr. Keith, who is a graduate of the Institute of Terhnol- The III-ale Organ-nu nerve . Purpose and Add " Man's Plea-lure. So much has been said about bacteria as causing and propagating disease that it in difficult to make the public regard them minute organisms as anything but. mischief makers. Nevertheless, an American scientist. Professor Conn, of Wesleyan University, and Simon C. Keith, of Boston. are demonstrating by experiments that they serve a. useful purpose in nature, and contribute quite as much to one's pleasure as to one's discomfort. The oltoome of their in- vestigations is that it is tto the th- velqpmenl of bacteria in milk that the delicate flavor of butter and cheese is due, and that the reason some kinds of butter and cheese have better flaw vons than others is that different nannies of bacteria have been develop- ed. They have succeeded in isolating these different qpeCies. "The construction of a railway through Manchuria will open up a country exceedingly rich in gold and very valuable from an agricultural point of vimv. There are, lknow, some who think that the great under- taking will affect British vommerce. I am not of that ogifnion. Our com- mercial inmate in andhuria are of the slightest. It will effect commerce locally by cheapening {Nights and will seriously affect steamship passenger traffic. "115 commercial value is immense. The line will open up both agricultural and mineral rewun‘es which, for prac~ tical purposes. are almost inexhausti- ble. Siberia ran produce about, every kind of cereal, ull sorts of live stock. and it possesses in abundant quantities the more important minerals, precious and otherwise. Colonel Waters says that he exper- ieerced the greatest courtesy from the Russian officials 'throughour the whole route. On two points Colonel Waters has fanned strong convictions, Those are the 'rramr.t'yiheriaat Railway and the treatment of Siberian prisoners. With reggtrd to the to.rrrper ye tiaAt'r-- ed on (March 23. This journey is unique, inasmuch as it ia the first time that Siberia has been crossed throughout in the dead of winter. Leaving St. Petershurg on December 19 he travelled by rail to Krasmoiarak. which he reached on January 4. There he, started forth on sledges for a drive of nearly four thousand miles. For hun- dreds of miles he jourue 'ed noght and day, with but little 's1',7atil Lake Bai- kal was reached. Crossing the lake was an exceedingly diffiouir mgsttar,asthe ice was in a dangerous condition, be- ing Win in some places and heaped up in others. On January SI he reached Kiakhta, an the 1tumo-Cthinese fron- tier, where he was laid up for a. week. A month later Stryelensk was reach- ed. Here will be the terminus of the Siberian portion of the great railway to vladivostorA. in another month he arrived at Knot, where he took the tasin to Vladivostook. which he reach- London, has, in an interview given some interesting particulars of 'bis journey across Siberia. For sale by McFarlano & Ctr, A. Blunt 0."? lake: a Four Thousand Illr dour-r: In Whit-r. Lieutenant Colonel Waters, military attadbe to the Brim!) Embassy at St. Petersbutg who has just arrived in At this time old potatoes m wilted and toughened to a. greater or less do- gm. If pared and put into cool water and left standing for than or tour hours they will absorb part of the wa- ter that has ”unrated and bemealy Md tender if cooked rapidly. The last is an essential. Never put potatoes into lukewmrm water. Have the water boil- mg and the fire brisk that they may commence boiling at once. By rating the potatoes into water below t e boil- Ing point or letting than come slowly to a Gil, the starch is dwaiqntod and the potato becomes sodden. The baking of bread. is an Gportant point in the Induction of a good arti- cle. In general, yeast dough: having risen hetero being out in the oven will hear a higher degree of heat at first then other dough; Luge loaves re- quire a more moderate heat than rolls, but a too low Maximum-9 will often allow the dough to continue rising and even to run over in the oven. cloths. It the cloth- mut lie in the rinsing _waher our 'del, do not use blu- ing in it. cfriore.delorherrs should not lie in the water; In not... the quicker they no washed and dried the loan they will fade. The white soaps no better for the laundry than any other. BACTERIA HAVE USES. PM “I" ttt III, CROSSED SIBERIA. NTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO South American Kidney Cure loosed the bonds and freed the pritsoner.--It I relieves in six hours. "This is to cer- 'tity that after taking six bottles of South American Kidney Cure I am ‘mmpletely cured of stricture and gra- ivel. having suffered from these com- I ilainls for over ten years. I felt re- lief almost immediately, and after tak- ing three bottles felt greatly improv- ed. I continued its use until I was satisfied! was perfectly cured." Willis Gott, Chippewa}1 9nt. Thousands could tell the same story of misery that William Davidson tell. and thmmnds have. to-day the same song of rejoivjng--Cured hy South Am- erican Niervine.-c'l suffered untold misery for over three months from neuralgia of the stomach. Physician. did their beat to help me, but all ab. tempts were baffled. I saw South Am- erican Nervine advertised and resolved to try it. The first bottle gave“ me gent relief, and after I had used " ttlee I was Jer,""',',',.', cured of thin dreadful disease." Wi [ism Duvldaon, Thedfard. Ont. For ale by McFulane & Co. Jimmy Dragjeans--Wot wuz ya in- tended ter when ye wuz graduated frum college, Case? Case! de Kidder-l wuz so good at de dea languages dat me fade? wgnt- ed me to be an undertaker. ed In Nebraska the damag: done by grasshoppers and locusts ve been en- ormous. More than once every veetige of vegetation haa been destroyed. The worst IPI: was an 1875, when not a bushel grain was produced in the State. Ten days after they appeared the cunntry was black with them, and two hours were sufficient for a field of com or wheat, almost ripe, to be wiped out of existence. Railroad trains were delayed by the slimy mass of in- sects gushed length the wheels. A similar condition of affairs cow. fronts Professor Bruner in Argentina, but he feels confident that the meth- ods used in Nebraska will be efficaci- one in South America. by moving rapidly and aimlessly about from spot to apot. llu the course of another day the locust becomes slug- gish and seeks protection from the sun's light and heat. The favorite place of shelter is beneath clods and corn- stalks. or within some moist. and shad- ed spot. From the sixth to the eighth da the first dead bugs are found on- veihped in fungus resembling little wads of cotton. From the time the bugs first become sick they cease to sup the growing stalk or grain. The insect does not possess the instinct to discover the danger of an infected field, and few migrate, all dying in the locality in which they ha min to be at the time they {are Ld,ltrd1hJ, i SPREADING TUE DISEASE. i "We began at first by securing a supply of dead ilnseots that had been in led by the fungus known as spore- trichum triabulifeFum. The 'starters' were received from Nebraska farmers and placed inn our cages with healthy grasshoppers. (these health speci- mens were supplied with fool and the conditions made to conform as nearly as possible to out of doors climate dur- ing the months of June and July, the height of the insect's working period. As a rule, no difficulty was experienc- ed in securing the spread of this dis- ease from the infected bugs to the healthy insects in the laboratory. Dur- ilna the earlf' part of our experiment twice the in action seemed to tempor- porarilfr lose its virulence, and then prohah y on account of lack of material to work on. {the disease is a dry rot which causes the bodies of the locusts and similar species to decay. its spread is very rapid and the result is fatal. " resembles in some respects leprosy in the human family. . "The behavior of the infected locusts and grasshoppers in the field is inter- esting. The disease begins to show that it has been communicated from the second to the fourth lay after the in- fee-Eton has been plecedrln the field. "The live -rart"i"ilsGr'iG "riserii"ii,od plant, show "To carry out the plan of exterm- ination of this species of insect life it became necessary to have a large num- ber of healthy locusts and grasshop- pers. Farmers were required to send in a small number if they desired aid. They usually sent them in a tin box, with some green food to last the in- sect: while on the road. In return we send to them a supply of 'ttttk' hugs that could be used in ?armpuathcaaing the disease to the bugs in the field. Full directiotvs for using these inoculated bugs accompanied each package. I Argentina, South Amerioe. hu sut- fered from a plague of locusts which have destroyed every ear of corn punt- .ed this year. and up to urdar not one (thiariotsd, has left the port of menus 5AHOG. from which millions of bushels pare annually exported. ‘A cable un- nounces that the government has at- (r! Congress for the appropriation of "1,000,000 for the purpose of destroy- ing the peat. I Professor Lawrence Bruner, entomo- 1lidrii/t for the agricultural experiment "rtatioet ot the University of Nebraska, ‘ie now in Buenos Ayres under en- gagement with the Chamber of Com- merce to investigate the locust migra- tions in South Amerim. He will org- anize a system for the extermination of locusts and grasshoppers, and it he succeeds will receive a handsome bonus. PROFESSOR BRUNER'S WORK. For many years Professor Brunet has made a study of the destruction of‘ tarm pests, and during the plague in) Nebraska succeeded in developing some‘ wonderful results. In a recent inter-‘ view on the subject he stud;.-- l DUtPED. .Giriier1Vhat made you think he lov- For salé'by McFarlane & Co., SCIENCE ENLISTED TO FIGHT TEE PEST IN ARGENTINA. TU MAKE WAR (llf LUUUSTS. idie-He did linker-11y " New.“ In new Arres During the ”me of In: Oat We“ Io- Inoculated “not.“ With mm to Kill HIS NATURAL BENT SIGNS OF UNEASINESS TIN YEA]. II THE tout. NEURALOIA To.“ EN?! no bad," an he, "that one of my media“ uncount- an that I wu at... but. that God. I Am not dead yet. he. no an! few do.“ I tool at Rm t nuanced cu Net m.- m on I. “Any more. annual! to w I“ tttti.., A "at“! at an Maretaa" tn a. - of & J a _ It... an t "In i'ifit1%11t17ar'A'lig,"Sitd'. ”_ ___.._--.A, " of. But tour bottle. of Neronet gnve him beck hie netum strength A: victim of indication, w. F. Home", ofI Rentrew. uyn: “Nervine cured me of my suffering. which seemed incur-' able. and had tt.ftted all tornv-r me-l, mode and efforts." Peter meson. or? Paisley. loet tterrtt and rarely tad ef good night‘s eieep. because o' ntomechi trouble. He new: "Nervtne stopped; the exonining pains in my “crunch the;' tirtst any I used it. t hnve now taken- two bottles 1nd I feel entirely relieved and CBtt sleep like a. top." A rum-o9-r .rrtttttrt, farmer, of Wentern interim: in Mr. C. J. Curtis, raiding near "Ile' nor. “In henlth was seemingly comm pletely destroyed through h grip”. No medicine did him eny good "To Aimee bottles ot Nervine." he. an. '1 attribute my mtorntion to health and strength." Neither men or women can enjoy life when troubled with liver! complaint. This we. the sentiment end feeling at W. J. Hill. the well-‘ known hull! of Bruebridxe. "I we. " m It: Nerva cured no at! t an to-dly ll strong cud wall to ova." guano! a!" ot “Mord, was aura: of mutual. " the uomuh sad bowl- by three bottles ot this medicine. Ju. Sherwood. ot Windsor, u " yarn at no. ”and from an and: ot puny- nu. HI. life, at that an, wu Gumtr- " it ie the we that he who mute: two bled" of - grow where only one had grown before in e benei'ector of the rece. whet ie the poeition to be accorded thet men who by hie know- ledge of the inn ot lite end health givee - and strength where in- not, weekneee and enticipetion ot en only deeth hen before prevailed? to not he “no e public behetector? Let the” who hove been down end are now up through the nu at Booth Aru- eriou: Nervine give their opinioue on thin "Meet. John Boyer. beaker. of Khmer-dine. Ont., bed mule himself e hopeleee invelld through yeere at over- we'rh. At [out he felt hie one wee hoyeleee. tor the but phyeiciene hed felled to do him good. He tries Noe- vine. end thue ere " words : " t gm- In the Town of Durham, County of any, including valuable Water Power Brick Dwelling. and many eligible building Iota, will be sold in one or morn FOB sun THE EDGE PROPERTY. iota, Also lot No. 60. con. 2. w. G. R., Tommi, of Bentinck. 100 acres ndiout. Ins Town plot Durham. um taken for M purchase v. "n-1,. . - _ fennrowl. aafurty uni pun needles were also shown. The output of Russian bonzino has grown from 81,500 gallons in 1882 to nearly 1,570,000 gallons in 1894. The [madam industry is the amend largest in..thrr world. One firm alone owns 188 mllos of petroleum pipe lines. It bus an enormou- fleet and owns i 157 tank wagons for the muvey~ awe of its products by rail. The induct” qt the dry distihlatiou of wood to Russia u: only Just begin- ning. In Northnrn Russia. away from the railmmys. than up still many thousands of square mules under wood, yet up to the preempt only one half per cent. of all the rqoln and but a slight- ly Irrrrtpropoteion, of thy turpentino adiTrm"iui'a has haven of hum-e inali- utmtuN- l Tho Dame Vol-diet Comes From Old and Young. Male and Femalo. Rich and Poor. and From All Corners of tho Dominion. than" exhibition in Nijni Novgorod. Bo- aides her extensive sulphuric acid in- dustry. Rush in opening up import- ant manufactures of ohromato tsalts, vitriol, phaspttstms, lead. zinc. tin; strontium. and copper cults and miner- al dyes and plntinum in almost. a Rus- sian monopoly. 1n medicinal plant growing the progress _in Roam? is very great. Six can); oil factories, all working from mauve G,'lri'l new, were mraented .at the ex itrition, and oils 9f otpperPint, -- ‘wogmwoodu ion ra way, ‘THEY (Nil' llll THE SHIRE Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Rare Pronounced the Cases Beyond Cure, This Great Discovery Has Proven a Genuine Elixir ot Life. ll namely Widespread an Universal Ill m lamination. mini?” but but growth toward ind- trialism but manly been drawn in a remarkable mum" at the "All Raw Mile EKIIIIuoI of we“ “own a! (It 81].! low Expo-In... Man! you: may elapse before Raul; can moon a landing manufucmriug my...“ fiFi"llrraTlL11fl'A"d M u. by my]... a. Arptr to nuns anon. us. mu. Ont. RUSSIA'S GROWTH. By the Hundreds, Those Who Have Been Cured of Dire Disease By South American Nervine. " A Ihrewd ollaervcr ot burnt: new" In. and. "The hand that rack- "A. ) cradle moves the world." Now In. bot-um It is. then. that hull. all IItI‘OI‘th should be and. ttto lot at I(be mothers ot m. country. The wo- [men of Cunus are may by - to ipn of tho tr-ttts that turn: cone to In." through the use of South Anod- m Nerd-o. In. R. Amman-u. o! ’onuu, wit. of the oolporleur. or .0 'Blble Ioclety d that town. cal-MI tor six you" trom mou- mun“ I“and assume. did not help. "in gun.” also an". .. l have ulna on: but". Art Noe-vine. and cu truthful] any can [In the one medium (but in on“ In cure tn my out.” Mrs. John no» Woody has been for a you-- . no.“ lo: Pinkerton. cud In "mum tho do Hon“ chm-com you. and at M your. In her onu- nammol ' m .ore "tMttt {branch the an": all . [luncheon Nerrtno m rooomrnonlol. She par-070nm; not " but!” " 1'iiH'ii, with the mun that Che In too fu Ania - and harm l-‘nno Pye. of women can" from Impov :rlah. mac-canny». new“. ““0“!" unmnuwmm aeutfittqtiiFGin7ciiii n m: any. may hum been there nnd are Ive-king from the hem. Tho dozen or more yum-nae- that hero ttpo tit have their countvruru by the hundred; not only In the province ot “mu-lg. but In - other action oe tho but: “I. B-s, Am” Mao-I.- I. h---‘ ounQOOI-tuui In.“ no In. I " blood and wake-1e! nerves. "All vitality," an Mn. 1. rum. of Brampton, "seemed to lure tor-hen my system. I we. unable to get re- lief from my source untlt t vunmerced mm South Amer-tun Nervum. The "lulu Are moat "tiunctor.v- mm! tar then I could have howl tor." tt came within the way of Mn. " Map. leton. of Wlnxhnm. to treat under the beet physicians. both in ”and: an! England. for heart disease and nerv- ous debility. but she tulle-i to get any relief. "I was advised. ' she IIYI. "to take South Amen-mu Nun-inc, and must lay I do believe that lf I had not done no I would not be alive to- day." Newspaper space in too valuable to permit of further Additions to the“ cement wonl- of toulmony from those who know Jun whu they are will.“ about. In the. common lunzuur-e n! the any. they have been there. and are speaking from the heart. The A,-,- bottle- ot Nervme, tad cu: truth", uy mu l nun a new man." StandardBank of Canada f,,h,t't.t,'t'"_ linltolm. can“ and DURHAM AGENCY. Aaononl Rankin. button. annulcw uuod sud 00“..“qu and. on Bit potnta u mind and that": ullovod u n...- - “lowed on unna- b-nk dopoul- at a '" upwuda. Prompt mutation ad our]! mm “Home" living at n diam... W. P. Oovnn. 600. P. Pmidont. I " Paid It 1,000,006 RESERVE PON 600.000 OAPITAL. Authorized .8.M.M um: . you». ll ADV“ ems. MIMI! wmtm THE GREY KEVIN Thursday Morning. ---AT T..-- gnaw OFFICI. 0AM THECOOK’S BEST FRIEND DUNN'S BAKING POWDER FOR T“'EN'I‘Y-SEVEN YEARS 035818 _in _ ati -- ptjnpipcl Hoad Office. Toronto- LARGEST SAL: I. Cameo; SAVINGS BANK. LoeearteeAtiUti" Lira ', I. - - Q... J. KELLY, A"... W1“ from a humble ham! out city m the wot II I "iouemoratioa “who before even the was built. Rome wa til hundreds of )OII be abandoned. I tU: [gun or» T, he'll stages of our walk." then two m (m " woritt; stand till“ A u (no! a day, and (It the If: .. I heir " our in mm min 'gmt We! n my I toil.us ad im. dr; the found pl workers the glow io. the Ir I "The ln ' the , ms hers, edly out: the Tom them, an Wanda”! ctuvnuml " " 01k, (mu. m: ot “DIV. The "(OPIN‘T huh-nun " tun-n lllmr MAR In " INN re", I of tl rung "Dawning it in unlo- now Irma v. ith 1 inn-rs. Flt of Galt River Bil, " n od him gum dd workinv' Ghnged in a hren held Carina I outings lune; "The whit-h "roressor Al (rubs! "(an out day. ha, ' mice: for the They are near t 8min. What um (“at timee is Ulikl that they were I ”h“ there ir tto - Io emulation (”and of the {an “d. ot Umruers, moth atom arms -asvEea and mhar Wonderful. inn Wk. that have tatt Cl empire a ”remnant u! tie ooriag drill. to them, pa: a Mil. M " twenty (111m; , w Old (“can mrluid it with l Mon then “i. with gold a! - I part" Ch (nude and cold. And all m h the (numb. I. lid Utensils. w” And after ha had Me h overland tty I‘d Ind prerioi " and vii. "ratttre on " l hymen-mm nun... “can: obtained " cold. (upper to " an “no In” mineral Ewan I WOO lurk-m mu "Km "setul fu Inn. Tin unumd WI] the hum: 'eaturieas ago, Ct workers toiled, ta “I to emblaznn I-Q-A- Inl- ...e-A - Kin Solomon. biq reign, human M10, or the Ho log“: of thes Tea And thr height w the brand“: was 15mph wu hum. helm it Wax; lum tteither hammer l m hard in Ha hiding, ne M In I. ”N I. - .I" AFTER ENRICI TEIPLE " (A) But not KING SOL til It PROFryiso ll all ("no there "Ill ll NO u n tl " in: Work "Hm-5.”. 1 PIN-1n 's'., rror - tl the world drunk); " the an Hammad Ink still I I wit bad mm. ham u the W0. " H SH 'Wiqttit " u th. the H ny ll II y, toil lo Ki. it us “I them hugy nth "vet

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