ays 1B ders sh, ‘asge o d * Handâ€"made Waggons Brick Dweliing, 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 acre« adjoin« Ing Town plot Durham. FOR SALB The EDGE PROPRBRTY. Horse Shoecing Shop, ALLAN MeFARLANE In the Town of Durham, County of @rov, including valeable Water Power Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" Â¥veyascer, Commissioner &c. Loanvs arrangod without delay, _ Collections prompt.y made, Insurance effected. MANKY TPO LOAN stliowost rates of Interost Â¥â€"ia= oae door north of 8. Beot‘s Store Durkara "*‘Ocounty of Grey. Salos attended to promp aud at reasonable rates. Rostdence Durham Out NOTARY PUBLIC, Commissioner,etc., 3USINESS DIRECTORY. the post office |44M2ETER, SOLICITOR ,IN SUFREME COUBT 1.. If any person orders his paeper disco: Uoued, he must pay all arreages, or th« publisher may continns to send it until pay mentis made, and collectthe whole ax ovun‘ whethor ‘4 be taken from the office or not There orn be no loga) discontiznuance unti parmentismade. Of the Best Quality Choeaper THAN EVER. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. Wa sall the specia‘ attention ef Por maste‘s +ad subsoribersteo the following «1 nopsisoftho newcpaperiaws : he post office, whether directed to hi same or another, or whether he has sub seribed rmot is responsible for the pay. 38. If a subscriber orders his paper to b» stopped at a certain time, and the publishe? continues to send, the subscriber i8 boun: ¥» pay for it if he takes it out of the pos ofice. This proceeds upon he grovm: hat a man must paÂ¥ for what he uses. Has opened out a firstâ€"class UNDE RTAKJING Promptly attended to. JAKE KRESS. W. L. McKENZIE, Rosideonceâ€"King 8%., Hanover, Mortgage taken for mrt purchase MONEY TO LOAN. JAMZS LOCKIE, Fire Insurance secured, OF *10E, oven Grant‘s Srom«. Lower Town. B3UER of Marriage Licensos, Aue tioncer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. J. P. TELFORD, ~.: Mewspaper Laws & still to be found in his Old Stand epposite the Durham Bakery,. Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MeFARLANE, ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for tha old stand.â€" All handâ€" made shoes. Also HUCH McKAY. JAKE KRESS MISCELLANZOUS. Furniture WOODWORK ‘y person who takes a paper tron 6 .ms â€" es ut 4 T Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Lill, Ont in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of for sale cheap. DURHA M LEGAL iis best that all of the rain shall perâ€": |colate into the land upon which it falls ‘and that it shal not flow off upon ‘the surface. This is rarely possible in : the open fields, even under the best ‘oouditions; ut there should be endeayâ€" ‘or in this direction, not only for the 'conoerra'tion of plant food, but to lessâ€" ‘en the injury to the physica} condition ‘of the soil which always comes from | the rapiul movement of overflow waters. ‘“’hfl‘ever upon nearly level lands, exâ€" cept, of course the small areas of : :alluvials subject of overflow, the rain . i waters submerge the fields and remain : lutanding for hours, or for days, as the : writer has seen in the redâ€"clay secâ€"| |tionse. at the first opportunity the undâ€" | !er soil should be deepened. The use | of the sulbâ€"soil plough in midsummer} 'or early fall is here imdicated as the‘ next best thing to thoronch u»nderâ€" | dranage. |cold. [WThe best cure for colds is warm, "ry air; this will sson cure vithout anyâ€" lthmg else. mA little sulphbur, alum and ‘magnesia, all in fine powder, blown upâ€" on the nostrils and in the throat is \a great assistance in drying up and curâ€" Iiug a cold. The air for a small sized poultry house can be made quite dry with a lamp alons for a heater. ‘To do ‘this a hoater and a condenser is requirâ€" [ed; the heater can be made out of a comâ€" |mon stora box and a piecs of sheet iron; |thn irom should be put far enough up \from the bottom of the box to allow & lamp to be set under it; then just above the iron bore some holes to admit air. This forms the heater; a window can be made to serve the purpose of a conâ€" denser. A tight box must be placed over the window inside the poultry hbouse, leaving the glass exposed to the Icold air outside. Now then make a conâ€" Inm-tion between ‘the heater and the condenser so that the warm air from the heater can onter the condenser near the bottom of the window; the warmn air will strike the glass and beâ€" come cold and part with nearly all its \moisture. The dry air must be allowed | to escape near the bottom of the conâ€" i denser, but as high above the lamp as | poss bleâ€"anywhere from a foot to three |feet above the lamp will do. The conâ€" denser box must be very tight at the top, else it will not work good. Such |& crude affair as Lhis will take a most ‘astonmishing amount of water out of the lair in a cold night, and wili be found \very useful in a damp house, and the whole thing need not usually cost anyâ€" | thing more than the time it takes to ‘put it up. If the apparatus is desirâ€" ed to be used as a ventilator as well as a dryer, take the air from the outâ€" 8‘de into the beater, but it merely as a dryer then take the air from inâ€" side the house to the heater box. In |either case this plan will extract the [greater part of the surplus moisture. |\Perfectly dry air, if it could be had, would cure roup without any other atâ€" tention, that s as far as it can be i eured. ASPARAGUS. A row of asparagns i hundred fest long will afford an abundant suppoly for an ordimary fammily. The beat way _ _One of the first things to be done whenever the farmer will set about perâ€" man at improvement of his lands is to prevent surfaceâ€"washing. in the "laying off" for planting, in the dirâ€" ection of the longer furrows when breaking the land and where space will allow a modified system of terraces or of surface drains must be so directed as to catch the surface waters and deâ€" liver them at the foot of the slope by a gontle descent of not more than one foot to fivxe huadredâ€"one inchk to forty feet of drain. There must be careful consideration in advance and equally carofu! executim of plams adopted. it 'less thousands of fowls catch cold from {this one cause alone, especally young {stock, and brooder raised chicks are ‘much more apt to crowd on the perches !than those raised in small flocks, beâ€" !cause they have been raised that way. |Make perches in such manner that no ‘two fowls can touch each other, or at least crowd up close. . This can be done in several ways; one very good Iplun is to cut sticks one inch square !and six inches long; nail these along SURFACEâ€"W AsHING OF THE sOLIL the roosting poies so that only one fowl can geot between two sticks; the spaces will need to be from six to eight inches, owing to size of fowls, or boards six inches high can be used and let the fowls roost on them, avd between them, In either case each fowl will have to sit by itsolf. Whereâ€"the climate is very cold the spaces or boards can be made to take two fowls, and that will prevent crowding up tight. It is astonishing how tight a row of fow!s will jam wp on a pole in a cold night. Some of them get too hot, and are sure to sweat and catch n experienced person will never make | a mistake between the two. The best! possible plan to prevent either colds| or roup is to keep the fowls free from draughts and reasonably warm; a fowl l:l much safer roosting on a tree than | in any kind of a bouss where a curâ€" rent of air can strike them through a crack or knothols in a board. Do not let them crowd on the perches; countâ€" ojor although very pronounced has none‘ of the vileness that it acquires after the | tissues of the head and the throat begin | to decay. This fact leads many to supâ€"| pose that roup in the first stages is merely a cold, but it is more than a cold. Fowls do catch a simple cold, of course, and while there is a certain unâ€" definable odor about such a cold it is so entirely different from roup that DISEASES OF POULTRY. The most common diseases at this seaâ€" son of the year are colds and roup. It is very important to be able to distinâ€" guish between the two. The only way I know of, says a writer in American Poultry Journal is by the smell. Roup | has a smell so distinctly its own that | once a person becomes familiar with it he will be certain to always recognize it‘ again. \When the attack is light the | AGRICULTURAL The action of the ether is hastened by shaking the mixture in a glass cyâ€" linder for fifteen minutes. The solution is allowed to stand, and, after the fat has been separated, the remainder of the liquid is allowed to run out. Dilute acetic acid is adderfl to this until the first sign of coagulation appears It is then transferred to the lactocrit, and the machine set in motion for fifteen minutes, when the vast majority of the bacilli sink to the bottom. This deposit is then conveyed to two slides, stainâ€" ed, abd examined with an oil immerâ€" sion. If bacilli are present in the milk they wili be found in this precipitate. The author consiJers this method more certain than the inoculation of anâ€" mals with the suspected milk. Jollifelloâ€"Hem! That is to remind me that I‘ve sworn off. Joliifelloâ€"Yâ€"es._ Fact is, 1 never ee the keot till [ take out my haadâ€" kerchief to wips my mouth Goodfeucâ€"H"s your healith, old fel. By the wAy, what is that kaot in your bankerchie! for ? Goxifelloâ€"But you just this minute took a drink. A New Methoi of Detectin« the Presence of Tabrrentosis. A Russian has formulated a new proâ€" cess for the detection of the bacilli of tuberculosis in milk, which is founded on the fact that tubercule bacilli will be precipitated by rapid centrifugal motion He uses a modified lactocrit, which makes 8,600 revolutions per minâ€" ute. The milk is coagulated by means of dilute citric acid, the whey is sepâ€" arated by filtration, and the casein is dissolved by a phosphate of soda soâ€" luzion. To this are added six cubic centimeters of sulphuric ether, mixed with water, in order that the emulsiâ€" fied fat corpuscles may be set free. pos remarks on the maiter. He first cites instances of celebrated men who needed a small amount of sleep and says:â€"‘"Humboldt, who lived to be eightyâ€"nire is said to have declared that when he was young, two hours sleep was cnough for him, and that the regulation seven or eight hours of repose represented _ an unnecessary prolongation of the time of somnoâ€" lence. It is also said that Sir George Elliott, who commanded at the siego of Gibraltar, never indulged in more than four hours‘ sleep while the siege lasted, and that little affair ocoupied at least four years. Sir George died at the ageo of eightyâ€"four. Dr. Legge, Professor of Chinese at Oxford, who died the other day at the age of eightyâ€"two was declared to be satisâ€" fied with five hours of sleep only, and rose regularly at 3 am. What do such cases prove ? "Assuming .« the correctness of the details, they prove only that certain men, and very few men, 1 should say, are able to recuperate their brain cells morse quickly than the bulk of their fellows. They are the exceptions, which, by their very opposition to the common run, prove the rule that a good sound slesp of _ seven or eight hours‘ duration represents the amount of reposa necessary for the average mean or woman. It would be a highly dangerous experiment for the ordinary individual to attempt to curtail his hours of repose, aid it must not be forgotten that in this matter of sleep we have to take into account the question of the daily lwbour and the nature of the work in which the indiâ€" vidual engages. 4 In the case of Dr. Logge we have a picture of the student whose labour is solely of the intellectual kind, involvâ€" ing little drain on the muscular sysâ€" tem. In the case of Sir G. Elliott we have an active commander, who, in addition to the mental anxieties inâ€" volved im the conduct of a long siege had no doubt & fair amount of physiâ€" cal exertion to undergo. _ But, while the cass of the professor may be exâ€" plicable on the ground that his five bhours‘ sleep compensated him for any wear and tear his quiet life presented, "The personal equation in stnort..i plus the kind or character of a man‘s . work, determines the duration of his ! repose; and that the average period | required by the ordinary individual in | health is from seven to eight hours is | the one opinion confirmed by the collecâ€" | tive experience of the civilized race. | we may fall back in the Instance of the General on the theory of a special organization sat, as it were, so as to satisfy itself with a limited amount of sleep. a ruls sleep too long, while others are of the opposite opinion. Dr. Andrew Wilson has recently made some aproâ€" That Some Give tew Mours to It Does Not Prove that ail Should, Much has been written lately conâ€" cerning the phenomena of sleep. Many persons have aired their views on the subject. Some assert that people as ches of dirt, and after the plants are well up and grown above the surface fill the trench with equal parts of wellâ€" rotted manure and rich earth. The obâ€" ject of using so much manure is that it will be difficult to apply it deep aftâ€" er the bed is established. Common salt may be used on the surface every year. Mound the rows every year, so that the points will not be grown on a level, but in a long hill. Soapsuds are especiâ€" ally beneficial to asparagus and celery, and when putting in the manure and earth suds should be used freely. Make a drain by the side of the row and let all suds flow down the drain. HOW LONG SHALL A MAN SLEEP ? to make a bed is to dig a tronch two feet deep and two fest wide. Fill in with ten inches of clean horse manure, and on this sow & mixture of twentyâ€" five pounds boneâ€"dust and forty pounds sulphate of potash. Cover with six inâ€" ches of rich dirt, and then place on this dirt twoâ€"yearâ€"old roots, placing the roots two feet apart, and they will Cover the roots with two or three inâ€" BACILLI IN MILK. A MEMORY AID fear; But ‘tis a task indeed to learn to hear; 'In that the art of conversation lies, l’l'hat shows or makes you both polite and wise. The choice of acquaintance is another most important step in life. _ Where | there is little decorum there is little real delicacy. Never make a flirt, marâ€" ried or single, your friend, Rumor will seldom venture to assail a prudent woâ€" | man. If you have the happiness of beâ€" ing guided by a mother, remember she ; is your best friend on such points; but â€"do naot forget in your anxiety to do | well, that you are not to take the | reins of government in your own hands por, presuming on her maternal love, ‘to overrule her better judgment, and | persuade her to follow rather than to ‘lead. Some precaution may be hinted at in the selection of male acquaintâ€" In entering a drawing room the lady of the house is the first object of atâ€" tention. The elatorate courtesy of the woman of fashion, of a former generaâ€" tion is now a lost art, but there is a good deal to be learned in the way of a graceful inclination of the body, an appropriate carriage of the arms and head, especially on an in{roduction to any lady your superior in age or disâ€" tinction. No not attempt to recognize wise rule, and one which will tend all you may know. It is better, unless it be a very small party, to seat yourâ€" self, and then, icoking round, to reâ€" cognize with a bhow, without rising, those whom you know slightly. Should a lady cross the room to speak to you Lefore dinner, rise and stand while she slands: but if she bids you sit down do so, as she will feel more at her ease. Should a gentleman come to speak to you, custom authorizes you to keep yourseat, evenwere be a duke an1d you a milkmaid. In due time you GCOD ADVICE FOR GIRLS. ' It is but too striking a fact that a | knowledge of the world, as far as etiâ€" queite is concerned, is most commonly acquired in a very humiliating way, and at the expense of much injury to real delicacy of character. The votarâ€" \ ies of fashion must, to a certain deâ€" !gtee. pay the usual penalty of ignorâ€" ance, but still, the more they can beneâ€" fit by the experience of older and wisâ€" |er hbeads, the more free from annoyâ€" ‘ance will be their path. ances. The class of men usually most attractive to a young lady, on her first introduction to society, is generâ€" ally that of lively, irresponsible pleasâ€" ure seekers, skilful in the dance and delightfu! to smail taik, who, the maxâ€" ims of the experienced would teach, should be kept at a certain distance. Let the young lady be most careful in permitting the partner to become the acquaintance ; she will not then enâ€" tangle herself in embarraseing relaâ€" tions with men who have no other obâ€" ject in view than that of pleasantly passing the time. A genuine sentiâ€" ment may induce her to disregard the distinctions of social caste, but it is a dangerous experiment. At the same time beware of over fastidiousness, and suspicion. A correct and simple girl, has, in good society, little to fear from the freedom of the other sex or the ill nature of her own, if she maintains an easy, courteous, not forward, and not repelling deportment, Forwardâ€" ness disgusts; a repelling woman afâ€" fronts. Important, indeed, is it to walk circumspectly, and keep that hapâ€" py medium which will prevent the young pilgrim from loving, where no esteem can be felt. A young lady begins her career of womanhood without the chances of any allowance for her mistakes and misâ€" deeds, and the same nicety of criticism is applied to the sex throughout life. How carefully then, ought every acâ€" tion, every expression, every thought, to be watched! In conversation, perâ€" haps, she is most likely to blunder. It is wiser and safer in general to obâ€" serve the good oldâ€"fashioned rule of being addressed first; but then the young lady should receive the address readilyâ€"meeting it half wayâ€"repaying it by enlarging a little upon the topâ€" ic thus selected, and not by sinking into a dull silence the moment after a reply is given. It is in general a much to insure comfort through life, to avoid disclosures to others of famâ€" ily affairs. On the same principle, let the concerns of others be touched up on with delicacy, or, if possible, be passed over in silence ; more especially those details which relate to pecuniâ€" ary matters, faults of temperament, or family differences. To be able to listen well, strance as it may sound, is one of the chief secrets, of the art of conversing ; to do this, without imâ€" patience, contradiction, or too eager & wish for giving advice, is & gift not easily acquired. A dearth of words a woman nced not Aitention to the following hints to young ladies on their entrance into society will spare them from encounâ€" tering many mortifications, for, we reâ€" gret to add, they must always expect to meet more of illâ€"natured criticism than of Christian charity. * Naughâ€"tee May! ran away!" Till I didn‘t know what to do. Now, how do you s‘pose he knew! And once we went to the meadow brook, Josie ind me, wih a fishing hook, _ And the very same birsis sang again, Over and over, and just as plain, Josie, she guesses what I heard Was just my conscience ‘stead of a ‘"That is the best thing to do," And mammaâ€"she said so too. bird ; But the water looked so scowly and black, We took hold of hands and ran right back;, And all the way we heard it say, | ** Naughâ€"tee May! ran away!|‘ And Josie she bheard him too ; Now how do you s‘pose he knew ¢ NAUGHâ€"TEE MAY. I just ran away to the buttercup lot, When mamma told me I‘d better not ; And a little brown birdie up in a tree YOUNG FOLKS. sure as you live kept aâ€"saying to sor. _ His health was seemingly com-lmuat say | pletely destroyed through> la grippe.:not dons s No medicine did him any good. "To day." three bottles of Nervine," he srys, ‘I| Newspape attribute my restoration to health and permit of strength." Neither man or womanienrneot wor can enjoy life when troubl«e] with liver | who know complaint. ‘This was the sentim=nt about. _ In and feeling of W. J. Hill, the wellâ€" |the day, th« known bailiff of Bracebridge. "I wu'lmklnl fr so bad," says he, " that one of mylormore wit medical attendants sail that I was ; their count aying, but, thank God, I am not dead j not only i: yot. From the first few doses I took |but in every of Nervine I commenced t> feel butâ€" fon. Son+* ter, and am toâ€"day restored completely|Oon a s..en so my usual health." _ A resident of|a cure a ce the Maritime Provinces, in the person|perate the of 8. Jones, of Sussex, N.B., says : "Fur‘at the nory iwelve years I was a martyr to indiâ€" ‘the Ilife b!~ gostion, constipation and headach». |is not a m The treatment of several physicians is complete d:# »ot help ime. I > taken a few application. ! Â¥or sls bs McFarlhns & Sa iy say it : Nervine cured me and 1| am toâ€"day as strong and well as ever." | Samuel @lya, of Meaford, was curâ€"d of : neuralgla of the stomach and hbowsls ! by three bottlies of this medicine. Jas.‘ Sherwood, of Windsor, at 70 years of | age, suffered from an attack of pual:r-‘ sis. . His life, at that age, was Jdeapairâ€" | ed of. But four botties of Ner rine | gave him back his naturel strength. A | victim of indigestion, W. F. Bolgar, of Renfrew, says : " Nervine cured me of my suffering, which seemed incurâ€"| awble, and had baffed all forn®t maâ€" thods and efforts." Peter Esson, of Paisley, lost flesh and rarely i.ad a good night‘s sleep, because o stemach trouble. . He says : " Nervine stopped the agonising pains in my stomach tho; 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 Ontario, is Mr. C. J, Curtis, residing near Windâ€" First Hotel Waiterâ€"That ere young squirt at table C is a gent all through. H» guy me half a dojlar. Second Hotel Waiterâ€"He ain‘t half the gent as that ere ole baldâ€"headed fat porker at table B. He guy me a dollar. Henry, said the anxious young wife, I heard you muttering in your sleep that you had lost five hones. If you feel that way, dear, why don‘t you go and see some good ostcopathist ? be hopelessly compelied to share the , communion of the unlettered and the | weak. You will find your own level,| whatever that may be. The ballroom is a piace replete with | many allurements for the young, and | it is in the mnature of things that youth «hould dance, even as thai maturity sbould pay the piper. But there is nothing wrong in dancing ; it is just ‘tne expression of the joy of life in | action, but if ever gayety degenerates | into a love of dissipation, then certainâ€"| ly it may become harm{ul. And with | regard to waltzing, if there is a serâ€"| ious objection to it, on the part of | those whose opinion you value, thati objection should be respected, even at | the cost of some sacrifice of vresent enâ€" | joyment. There can be no true satâ€"| isfaction in amusements of any kind | unless they can be enjoyed with an | easy mind and a conscience void of ot-i fense. Brownâ€"There are too many societies for the provention of this, that and the other. Smithâ€"Yes. We‘ll soon need a soâ€" clety for the prevention of the socieâ€" tiee for prevention. of yourself, or your dog, or your horse, or quote " papa," or enter into family hbistories; keep your mind up or down as the case may be to the level of those about you. But do not be discouraged if you find that you have nothing to say. Conversation is the growth of ease ; and be consoled with the reflection that the little arts of lively gossip are only acquired with practice, and are but the small change of society, highly useful, but of small ix}lri‘nsic_ value. Attain the requisites of pleasing and nttrav'ting'tlvxé‘c“ulti%; ated and refined, and you wili never will go down to dinner, and then you must be guided in your conversation, by the people around you. Never talk Tho Samo Verdict Comes From Old and Young, Male nnd Femalo Rich and Poor,. and From All Corners of the Dominion. THEY GOUNT 3Y 1BE 5608E Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have Pronounced the Cases Beyond Curs This Great Discovery Has Proven & i Genuine Elixir of Life. f i Rasy Wiispe af Vesd it fpplcction. Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who Have Been Cured of Dire Disecse By South American Nerving, TORONTO A FINAL NEED TRUSTING souUr TWO GENTS. ye ' A shrewd observer of human nature has said : "The hand that rocks the cradle moves the world." . How im« portant it is, then, that health and strength should be made the lot 0% the mothers of this couatry. . The wo«â€" men of Canada are ready by scores ta tell of the benefits that bave come to them through the use of South Ameri« can Nervine. Mrs. R. Armstrong, of Newspaper space is too valuabl» to petmit of further additions to these earnest words of tesuimony from those who know just whas they aroe taiking about. In the common languar» of the day, they have boen there, and are speaking from the heart. The dozem or more witnesses that hers speak have their counterparts by the hundredm not only in the province of Ontarie, but in every other section of the Domin« lon. Sont* Americas Nervine is base4 on a s..entific princisie that makes a cure a tertainty, no matter how des« perate the case may be. It strike® at the norve centers frow: which fows the I!fe blâ€"3d of the whole system. T% is not a medicin=e of patchwork, but is complete and comprebonsive in t# Thursday Morning. AA G(‘;‘;{ï¬i Q|1ll‘ab:2 â€â€˜[;I;::‘:si.plé-‘min':lul and Eneland . DURHAM AGENCY. Agoneral Banking busipess transacted Drafie wued an? coliections made on all points, Depos: ts received and interest allowed at current LICENSED AUCTIONEER for Co. of Groy. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxrasa P. 0. will be prompti aitended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. l Township of Bentirck. _ l W. F. Cowan, pierest allowed on savings bank depos.ts of #1.00 tyd upwards. Prompt attention aud every facilâ€" erafforded cuctomenrs liying at a distance, OAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,00€ RESERYVE FUND DAN. McLEAN. TERMS; K pur year, IN ADVANCR CHAS. RAAAGE Editor & Proprieton THE CREY REVEYV StaadardBank of Canada e Lander, Registrar. Jolhn A. Munro, Doputyâ€"Rogistrar, Office hours from 10 r. m. to 4 p. m. REVIEW Oâ€"STICR, GARAVRAXA Head Office, Toronteoâ€" SAVINGS BANK G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thomas Presidenst. Paid up 1,000,006 J KELLYX, Agent. DAN. MeLEAN, $3 14