«+ TY o“4 My dear, why are you saving those old fly papers? . Whyâ€"you said you always have to but flies wwhen you go fishing. IBSUEB of Marriage Licenses. Aueâ€" tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also Horse Shoeing Shop, LICBNSED AUCTIONEER for Co. of Grey. All communications adâ€" drunjd’to Laxtasz P. 0. will be promptly aitended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. Township of Bentinck. DAN. MeLEAN. ALLAN McFARLANE DAN. McLEAN. S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thom» « Lander, Registrar. John A. Munrc, Deputyâ€"Registrar. Office hours from 10 r. m. to 4 p. m. y Loans mn?d without delay, _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. mANEY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Interest ® In® ome door north of 8. Heot‘s Store Durbam Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. NOTARY PUBLIC, Commissioner,ctc., 3USINESS DIRECTORY Has opened out a firstâ€"class Firstâ€"Class Hearse. UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to. JAKE KRESS. Of the Best Quality Cheapor THAN EVER. Residenceâ€"King Bt., Hanover. JAMES LOCKIE, 2. Aay person who takes a paper trou Khe post office, whether directed to hi lhawme or another, or whether he has sub peribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If a subscriber orders his paper to b« w‘ at a certaintime, and the publilhoé tinues to send, the subsoriberis boun‘ to pay for it if he takes it out ol the pos‘ effice. This proceeds upon ke groun« hat a man must pay for what he ases. W. L. McKENZIE, 1. If any person orders his paper discon Mnued, he must pay all arreages, or tht poblisher may continus to send it until payâ€" mentis made, and collectthe whole ax oun! whethor it be taken from the office or not Thero ecan be no logal discontinuance unti paymentismade. We cal) the specia‘ attention ef Pos masters and subscribersto the following sy nopsia of the newrpaperiaws : MONEYTO LOAN. Fire Insurance secured, OFFICE, over Grant‘s Srom«. Lower Town, Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MeFARLANE, ICENSED AUCTION®ER, for th 'Cou-ty of C{roy. y SBales attended to promp J. P. TELFORD HUCH McKAY. WOODWORK Furniture still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durham Bakery. in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of HER HAZY IDEAS. â€"made Waggons for sale cheap Newspaper Laws. DURHA Mâ€" t T hte i'-ï¬.... Durkam Ont I is ts! W TL LZ soulerro® in surREME cover LEGAL KRESS hogs. Then came a rank growth of ragâ€"weeds, which were cut just when coming into bloom. Following this, a __ We do not keep a Timothy meadow, and consequently do not have a field povertyâ€"stricken with Timothy, to reâ€" juvenate with manure. The manure goes onto the clover the first summer after it is sown, the best time, or else the second fall and winter after sowâ€" ing, to be plowed in for corn. We do not say plowed under, because in turnâ€" ing the sod we do not turn it flat, but turn each furrow slice up against the preceding one. This season, says Mr. Jamison, we top dressed a tenâ€" acre field farthest from the highway and barn buildings. This is the first complete coat of manure the field has ever had. Last fall the field was sown to rye, this spring to clover. As soon as the rye was ripe we began to haul manure, and kept it up at intervals, till the field was gone over at the rate of twenty heavy twoâ€"horse loads per acre. The manure was hauled from our own lots and stables, and from town. ‘It was scattered from the waâ€" gon, and not a firstâ€"class job, mainâ€" ly because of the variable quality and condition of the manure. The rye was a light crop, and was harvested by the f‘t through the winter?"‘ If they do ive through till spring they are not worth as much as they were when winâ€" ter commenced. They have. developed immense bellies, because the food on which they have been fed was so inâ€" nutritious and indigestible that they bad to eat a large amount of it to susâ€" tain life. Their bones have not grown a bit during the winter and the amâ€" ount of muscle they carry is much less than it was in the fall. If it was not for their big beilies they would not weigh as much as in the fall. It is weigh as mush as in the fall, It is true that they are deep through the middla, a qual.ty we want a dairy calf to have, but this large abdomen has | been made with the wrong kind of ifood. Marsh bay, corn fodder and straw are carbonaceous foods; they | distend the stomach, but they do nothâ€" ing toward building up the form. The !calt's education hbad not been in the | direction of developing a capacity for bandling a large amount of protein | food. .A calf that has been wintered | in the manner last described is worth much less than one fed the other way .. It has been stunted and dwarfed, n.nd‘ the man who follows this way of winâ€" | tering calves every year will find that bis cattle will " runi out" badly and he will soon, after a few gererations, have a herd of the meanest kind of |scrubs, no matter how fine the aniâ€" jmul:« were that he commenced with. large proportion of protein in it. I would recommend feeding clover hay, aMalfa hay or pea vine bay and corn fodder, and some good oats or wheat bran. That would make a wellâ€"balancâ€" ed milk ration. Feed so as to make them grow and look in good fair condition, ut do not make them fat. that will make your cows produce the most milk. This will be fomrtlmt has a 1 have told of two wrong ways of wintering calves which are practiced all too much ; and now it will take but a few words to tell what in my opinion is the right way ; Give the calf good clean quarters, where it is comfortably warm, but not too close. Give plenty of tedding, which should ‘be changed frequently. Give the calves a chance to exercise in the open air except in the worst weather. Feed with regularity three times a day on the kinds of food ‘There is another class of farmers that make a mistake in winberin% calves which is exactly the or:i)osite o the one 1 have just described. They starve their calves or let them take care of themselves. When winter comes they are turned into a yard that perâ€" haps has a sbed or a straw stack in it. Marsh hay and corn fodder is thrown over to them and this, awith what straw they eat from the stack, constitutes their whole feed. The only question the owner asks is, " Will they WINTER CARE OF DAIRY CALVES. To make good dairy cows calves must not only be well bred but must be fed in such a manner as to develop their growth and a capacity for consuming a large amount of milkâ€"producing food, writes C. P. Gooderich. .A good dairy cow always has a large stomach, which is shown by great depth through the middle of the body. The time to lay the foundation for the great depth of body is during the first year of the calf‘s life, Men make mistakes with‘l calves in two directions. As it is winâ€" ter care we are talking about, we will suppose that the calves that were dropâ€" ped in the spring have been well kept during the summer ; but when winter ; comes, one mian anxious to feed his | calves well, feeds Timothy hay and corn fodder for the main part of the coarse fodder, and then to make them ‘ sleek and look fine to his eyes he feeds a liberal allowance of corn and ; HOW WE SPREAD MANURE AGRICULTURAL ‘"Young celibates of either sex who shall without legitimate motive reject the addresses of him or her who may aspire to her or his hand, and who continue contumaciously unmarried, shall pay the sum of. 500 piastres, about five bundred dollars, for the benefit of the young person who has been so reâ€" "Madame, I desire the honor of your hand. \What!> you refuse me because of my facial defects? ‘Then 500 piasâ€" tres, if you please." Argontina will become a veritable Uw{na of the ugly. However hard the road may be to others, the plain man shall not err therein. "On and after January 1, 1897, every male from the age of 20 to 80, shall: pay a tax till he marries, and shall pay once in every month." And in Argentina no womanâ€"no, nor man eitherâ€"may be fickle, coy, or hard to please. Let us hear Clause II : The Argentine Republic has just inâ€" troduced a series of laws which spare neither youth nor age. Clause 1 runs as follows: ‘"Then all the people present who unâ€" derstood English were comnelled to stuff their handkerchief{s into their mouths to prevent a desccration of a solemn service with laughter." ‘‘The marriage ceremony had proâ€" ceeded as far as the place where X was to repeat after the minister the proâ€" mise to ‘love, cherish and obey.‘ The clergyman was repeating the words in little phrases so that I could folâ€" low him. "*‘To love, cherishâ€"‘ said he. "*‘No!‘ said 1. I had been taught always to tell the truth. ‘Me no love cherries,‘ 1 whispered, ‘me love strawâ€" berries!‘ and ol course the service was . conâ€" ducted in the English language. 1 will mention that the season was Deâ€" cember, or midsummer, and that the market was full of fruits, the Engâ€" lish names of which I had amused myâ€" self by learning as I ate them. \ _ _One of the most common practices is to churn about the same time eyery day anid let the cream ripen about so many hours, regardless of its acidity. I On gathered cream routes the cream in bhot weather is more than ready to | churn by the time it arrives at the facâ€" }tory. but it must be " mixed," and so ’the cream from the different cans is put into one common vat and stirred Isome and left until the next morning | to be churned. Thus cream of all deâ€" | grees of acidity goes into one common mass and butter results from fair fiaâ€" | vor, to that actually sour, the flavor | of active fermentation, rather than the mild lactic acid flavor. Not one of these creameries in fifty employes the acid test to grade the cream when it arâ€" rives, so that certain cans are put at once into the churn, othersâ€"after coolâ€" ingâ€"into the vats and possibly others into the " starter" tanks. Creameries , by the score can be found that are run | by men who churn, when they are reaâ€" \ dy, not when the cream is properiy ‘ripe. _ One of the greatest needs;toâ€"dayâ€" of | the creamery is men as makers who are | not automatons, but bhave the knowâ€" ledge and skill to grade cream and | vary methods by the conditions of weaâ€" ther, qualiti of the material and alot of things that cannot be found out about in the booksâ€"things that come up unannounced day after day. Aill difficulties cannot be met with a cutâ€" andâ€"dried plan of making, though makâ€" _ers by the hundred do every day alike _and wonder why it is that they have no two days‘ results uniform. ‘ "I could speak but little English then," she says, "and how much a child I was you may judge from my story. I was married in the English church, SLIGHT MISUNDERSTANDING. ln South America girls are often married at the age of fifteen yearsâ€" at which time they can scarcely be said to have arrived at the age of unâ€" derstanding, especially as the fashionâ€" able method of education gives them pretty manners but completely isolates them from the world. An Argentine lady, who, some years ago, was married at Buenos Ayres at the age of fifâ€" teen years to a British subject, tells an amusing story of her wedding. THE WISE BUTTERMAKER. It is astonishing how many creamâ€" eries are run upon the same general plan, regardless of location or condiâ€" tion, It would seem that all the operaâ€" tors were from one school, and were under orders to follow one system. _ probably till about the first of Septemâ€" ber, the manure hauling was continued. At times, when we walked over the field, we noticed the manure was not as uvonl{ distributed as desired. To ru a man in the Leld with a fork in the rank clover to complete the work, looked like an endless job. This fall we have had the colts and brood sows on the field. They have trodâ€" den down the weeds, and consumed and trampled down the clover. Now, lookâ€" ing over the field irom a distance, the manure coating is quite noticeable by its dark color in contrast with the groen sward of clover. The animals in ramping over the field have done much toward breaking up and fining the manure. But the work is not comâ€" E!ete.. If the first few days of Decemâ€" rank growth of clover. All this time, UTOPIA FOR THE UGLY. plasâ€" | _ When the anchorite is dying invocaâ€" tions are ceaselessly uttered by the TORONTO o use h i en e SE ce _ The instrument of torture is a miniaâ€" ture catâ€"o‘â€"nine tails of knotted hemp. Each monk has one underneath his pilâ€" low. While the mitred abbot recites the Miserere the holy men in their reâ€" spective cells bare their shoulders and excoriate their flesh as a tpema,nce- for their own sins and those of a derelict world. In Lent the penance is more severe. OnGood Friday the monks wash the feet of the poor. Even the other day, many mon‘ks, especially _ the brownâ€"garbed lay brothers, refused to avail themselves of the permission to converse with their fellows. In the pharmacy, Brother Martin, a â€" forâ€" mer distinguished physician, _ absoâ€" lutely refused to discuss modern medâ€" icine. He conveyed by a ?antomimic act his desire to be left severely alone. Then he gloomily peered outside the window at the quadrangle where reâ€" poses the seven departed brothers. His example was soon followed. Plain wooden crosses indicite â€" the resting places A grave already balf dug warns the sinner of death and eterâ€" nity. of conscience and Angelus; 11.30, dinâ€" ner, and intermission; 1.30 p. m., work; 3.30 p.m., end of work; and intermisâ€" sion; 4.30 vespers; collation and interâ€" mission; 6.10 p.m., lecture, Salve and examination of conscience; 7 p.m., bedâ€" time. EFlagellation is an every day pracâ€" tice at Oka. It is a form of penance An ascetic life has no terrors for them. An idea of the rigoun of life at Oka may be gleaned from thefollowing programme of duties cartied out by the Trappists: They rise at 2 a. m., then follows the office of the Holy Virgin. t rayers are scheduled for 2.30. The canonical office is recited half an hour later, followed by the Angelus and private masses. Intermission then gives the monks 1 period for vrivate meditation. â€" * rime is the office at 5.30 fo‘lowed by the Chapter. Bedsare then made. Then comes at 7.45 a. m.. Tierce, High Mass, and work; 10.45 &. m., end of work;11.07 a.m.,examination: The dormitories are on the upper floors. Each monk occupies a cell six by four in dimensions. His bed is not of eiderdown ; rather it resembles pressed brick. The monks, according to the rule of the Cistercians; never undress at night. ‘They sleep in their hooded garb, and in the cool season, in addition, wear at night a woollen outâ€" er garment. A name above the cell indicates the occupant. The chamâ€" ber of the mitred abbot is even more severe in its appearance. ‘Texts from Scripture and warnings respecting the import of eternity are seen on every side. In such surroundings the nerâ€" yous visitor is apt to be startled; the monks, however, wear . a tnnqui.l.‘ The monks never eat meat. â€" Unlike the Golats, they are strict vegetarians. Only when ill are they permitted to eat fish. Since the founding of the monastery in 1880, laymen have always been welâ€" come guests. The western wing is esâ€" pecially reserved for their comfort and accommodation. Transients are never charged, but those en retreat are exâ€" pected to contribute fifteen dollars a month. The privileges include access to a library where devotional works reign supreme. ‘There are at Okal 42 monks, 63 convertsâ€"lay brothersâ€"and 24 Oblats. All are vowed to a life of perpetual silence and abnegation. _ "Beati, qui, habitant in domo Doâ€" mini,‘" is the inscription over the enâ€" trance of the stone monastery. Truly hospitable are the monks. Male visitâ€" ors are permitted to inspect every nook and corner of the vast establishâ€" ment. The transition from thesombre cells and whipâ€"cords to wine vaults came by easy stages. Brother George, Lavallee, and Mr. Jos. Girouard, exâ€" M. P. for Two Mountains, made an adâ€" mirable press committee. Oka and its dusky denizens arose with the sun to welcome the Montreal contingent, which arrived by the steamer Duchess of York at â€" an early hour. Capt. McGowan, at a low estimate, looked after the comâ€" fort of nearly one thousand passenâ€" gers. Ladies were in a small minâ€" ority. After reaching the wharf the visitâ€" ors ran the siege of clamorous upâ€"toâ€" date country hack drivers. Up bill and down dale, now driving through a dense wood, then catching _ a glimpse of the murky Ottawa far beâ€" neath, the monastery was reached. It rests snugly between mountains. A noisy stream diverted by human bhands, flows by, thundering an accompaniâ€" ment to the ceaseless intercessions of La Trappe. exâ€"actor, despite his emaciated vyoâ€" cabulary. ‘The kneeling anchorite bowâ€" ed with an unforgotten grief, doing penance in a private chapel, was deâ€" scribed as a successful book canvasser ten years ago. These were several of thg_types seen on every side. real. The characteristric tread of the Thespian could be distinguished in an Honks at Oka do noet Havo Many of the Luxurics of Lifeâ€"Vegetarianms who rise \ . at J a.m. and Retire at 7 p.m. time in many years, contemplative brothers, vowed to perpetual silence, were permitted to indulge themselves to their heart‘s content. How well they enjoyed the precious privilege words cannot picture or describe. What oldâ€" time associations were recalled as the shaven penitent, sympathetic and spirâ€" itual, listened to the latest gossip, The cowled figure, whose countenance beamed so {graciously, was that of a former wel!l known banker in â€" Montâ€" In hallowed hall and gloomy cloister laymen walked one day recently, says the Montreal Star. The occasion was the consecration of the church of the Trappist Monks at Oka. For the first CONSECRATION OF THE CHURCH OF C THE TRAPPISTS. soME OF THE TENALTIES WHERE SILENCE RBGNS. RIGOUR OF THE LIFE THE MONASTERY. it ie ABBtrointscnas lfoa c 22421 4 rCsidert o(lt cure a certainty, no matter how dcsâ€" the Maritime Provinces, in the person|perate the oase may be. It strikes of S..Janes, of Sussex, N.B., says : "Fur!at the norve centers from which fows twoelve years I was a martyr to indi« | the life biâ€"od of the whole system. Ts gertion, constipation and headache. j is ‘mot a medicine of patahwork. bug The treatment of several physicians : is complete and semprchonwve in ite did not help me. " »â€"~ve taken a few ‘application. ‘ Â¥For eale 6r MeFarlana & LCa4. to my usual health." A the Maritime Provinces, in of 8..Jones, of Sussex, N.B., twolve years I was a mar gertion, constination ana lp Dmee " 4 Crlcine s Pn io on ï¬ e cine in t i P o . > ,_,AjJ}.:g;:gEA ed of. But four bottles of Nerqne gave him back his natural strength. A victim of indigestion, W. F. Boig=r, of enfrew, says : " Nervine cured me of my suffering, which seemed incurâ€" able, and had baffted all fornw> meâ€" thods and efforts." _ Peter Esszon, of Paisley, lost filesh and rarely had a good night‘s sleep, because 0f stomach trouble. _ He says : " Nervine stopped the agon!zing pains in my stomach the first day I used it. I have now taken two bottles and I feel entirely relieved And can sleep like a top." A repreâ€" sentative farmer, of Western Ontaric, is Mr. C. J. Curtis, residing near Windâ€" sor. His health was seeiningly comâ€" pletely destroyed through la grippe. No medicine did him any good. "To three bottles of Nervine," he sfys, ‘I attribute my restoration to health and strength." Neither man or woman can erjoy life when troubled with liver complaint. This was the sentiment and feeling of W, J. Hill, the weltâ€" known bailiff of Bracebridge. "I was ko bad,". says he, " that one of my medical attendants saii that <I was ; dying, but, thank God, 1 aim not dead yet. From the first few doses I M‘ of Nervine I commenced +a t22r LY" If it is the case that he who makes two blades of grass grow where only one had grown before is a benefactor of the race, what is the position to be accorded that man who by his knowâ€" ledge of the laws of life and health gives energy and strength where lanâ€" guor, weakness and anticipation of an early death had before prevailed? Is not he also & public benefactor? Lot those who have been down and are now up through the use of South Amâ€" erican Nervine give their opinions on this subject. John Boyer, banker, of Kincardine, Ont., had made himself a hopeless invalid through years of overâ€" work. _ At least he felt his case was ‘hopeless, for the best physicians had Talted to do him good. He tried Nerâ€" vine, and these are his words : * [ gladâ€" 17y say it : Nervine cured me and I am toâ€"day es strong and well as ever." Bammel Kiya, of Meaford, was cur>d of neura‘gia of the stomach and bowels by three bottles of this medicine. Jas. Sherwood, of Windsor, at 70 years of 1ge, suffered from an attack of paraly-' sis. . His life, at that age, was deâ€"pairâ€" , FOR SALB The EDGE PROPRRTY. In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjomâ€" ing Town plot Durham. Mortgage taken for jeirt purchase The. man who wrote verses at twenty anmd can read them at forty without feeling ashamed of bimself is either an _And slips‘ into the housewile‘s trap Socn finds that be‘s like most o‘ The mouse that smells the cheese The Samo Verdict Comos From Old and Young, Maleand TYomale. Rich aud Poor, and From All Corners of the Dominion. ?&'ï¬&’;&'kvmé in the vaults. A cheese actory and a&a creamery were inspected by all visitors. Two hundred cows supâ€" ted monks, works in tha fields© _ One thousindacres are tilled, a half desert and barren mountain side has been conâ€" verted into agarden. The goodfathers won many of the prizes at the recent Exhibition. _ They have fifty thousand The penalties include uunim&ou the ground kneeling, while the others eat, or kissing the feet of all the brothers. Walking home trom work in Indian file is::“okvory?hy rule. g"ho Pm'h never as they pass by. Permisâ€" sion must first be obtained from the Abbot, who, like the other gt)rgw-l;e_t- THEY GOUNT BY THE SE0RF I Ban:g Cidspod af Cruiversally Its fpplicatin. Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have Pronounced the Cases Bayond Cure This Great Discovery Has Proven a& Genuine Elixir of Life. Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who Have Been Cured of Pire Disecse By South American Nervine. Who thinks they‘ve struck a snap. AN INFALLIBLE TEST. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, LIKE A HUMAN " â€" can Nervine. Mrs. R. Armstrong, of * {Orillia, wife Of the colporteur, of tha O"‘¥®ible Society of that town, suffered of for six years from nervous prostration. _@/Medical assistance did not help. " In "~ |all," she says, " I have taken s!x bottles *® of Nervine, and car truthfuilly say this ad jis the one medicine that has effected *" im cure in my case." Mrs,. John Dinâ€" 4â€" "woody has been for 40 years a resident I ‘of Flesherton, and has reachoi the alâ€" +‘ lotted threeâ€"score years and ten. Threa Of years ago her system sustained _ sev.â€" ‘!" ere shock through the death of a ‘®. daughter. Nervine was recommen led. Of She perseveringly took 1° bottles of &4 l medicine, with the result that she is toâ€" *â€" iday again strong and hearty. tsun» ©€ / dreds of women suffer from impov :rish» A!’ed blood and weakened nerves. " A}1 Of |vitality," says Mrs. J. ba)l‘s, of lle'-Bnmpmn. "seemed to have forsaken ll‘-imy system . I was unable to KOL 1e 0â€" lief from any source until I commerced Ofluktnl South American Nervino. _ "‘he & . results are most satiafactory~â€" #rea ts cA | far than I could have honed for." â€" 18 ed4 |came within the way of Mrs, i1 Ftapâ€" he : leton, of Wingbham, to treat under the n ‘best physicions, both in Canadla and ed ; England, for heart diseas» and nervâ€" eâ€" jous debility, but she failsd to get any 3, J relief. "I was advised, ‘ ‘she says, "to Aâ€" | take South â€" American Nerving, and nâ€"| must say 1 do believe that if I haa :. f:ot :!.one so I would not be alive toâ€" m a er Newspaper space is too valuable to permit of further additions to these earnest words of tesuimony from those who know just whas they are talk ng about. In the common languar» of the day, they have been there, and ars speaking from the heart. â€" ‘The dozern or more witnesses that here apesak have their counterparts by the hundreds, nok nithe Li aksl c c | A shrewd observer of human neiure ‘has said : "The hand that rocks the cradle moves the world." liow imâ€" ‘pomm it is, then, that health and strength should be made the lot of ]tho mothers of this country. . The woâ€" men of Canada are ready by scores to 'toll of the benefits that have come to |them‘ through the use of South Ameriâ€" bottles of Nervine, and can truthfully say that I am a new iman." *‘ sAVINGS BANK + DURHAM AGENCY. Aavdand opticetiona made 98 til prints. bepos to . ‘Euolvod and interest allowed at eurrent Aterest allowed on savings bank deposits of $1.90 tyd upwards. Prompt attention and every facil« enafforded cuctomers liying at a distance . ENTS in all ipal i A_?o.m.m -.':flu::.p.o-m. :u: RESERVE FUND 600,0( W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. Reoid, OAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,008 DUNNS BAKING POWDER StandardBank of Canada TERKS; O per year, IN ADVANCOR CHAS RAMAGB Bditor & Prepriceton REVIEW OFFIOR, GARAVRAXA THE GRET REVET | THECOOKSBESTFRIEND LARGEST SALE in CANAOA. FOoR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN YTEARS s POBLISKED BVRRT Paid up . Torontoâ€" w first line of 0 of British ind important sUr discussion reg classes of ig! ments in the efficiency in t ly admitted th lios' whose n t B M To tically featur MJ comman regi :h ree « orming Mudras, five M S(> t me vi Rajputs Nepal, . from th compare th India at t preceded 1} at the pr 1856, there â€" and 348,000 the former latter 248 the same British, wit of six guns with 12 by lery , to th Imperial seq teries of im a Lotal of 1: batteries. The relati British and fer very w from that 1856 the Br to ten tives, and t ly manned is not oneâ€" in the hand the excepti Byderabad, exsept those tain wa In the mu most from Whi('h. Wwhiil the British tire.y by n i1 we exel has, the c ments of 1 jab iufantr; almost the Company‘s ten regula regiments < horse and 1 four regim besides an i from the Oudbh. TJ comprised mans, Ra proportior l(‘knn.“ t superior Un ‘the 0 toâ€"day in N« the vast tra the eastern mountlains 4 an t 18. With of the Bon the whole India has the Britisi tire.y by case with large fort Again, 1 difik A D C ngu e qu vaiuanle tains wit arm y . mon‘th the; ymous wr of India," when we 1 exciting t« part of A stated, on army is 1 awur Vall tually sub if not wi marching Algbamni No Oac D ., Enliste: and Bef 'll Blacl sONETHE1 i¢ H Tonce â€" ve anu repre rst n up der M «f J ats )J e Y L re NiÂ¥ in