Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 21 Apr 1898, p. 6

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Handmade Jliraggona Horse Shoeing Shop, In tho Town of Durham, County of any, including "unable Water Power Brick Dwelling, 3nd many eligible building Iota, will be sold in one or more Iota. Also lot No. 00. con. t, w. G. R., township of Bontinck. 100 acres adioat. lng Town plot Durham. norm“. Men for M mil-cha- ALLAN MCFARLANE FOR SALE The EDGE PROPERTY. ISSUER of Mating. homu- for Cnnntin I “county of Om. 5.1.. “and“! to prom. I34 " tom-um mu. Home Durham on Has opened out a f1rgt-outm Loan and Insurance Agent, Con- veyancer. Commissioner ace. I“... unused without duh). collation. Peoruptly undo, hour-no. enacted. ION-I " hull! “lowers rune! [awed . w 0.. door north ot B. loof- Eton Durban HIDTA III " '"o"'.Co-oo1oaser,reo, J. P. TELFORD, “mum some: m 3mm cum BUSINESS DIRECTORY. 'BSUER of Man-ins. Lieu-on. Ano- . homi- tor Counties of Bruce 3nd Guy. 'u.itueuto--Ehts, M.. Hanover. JAMES LOCKIE, First-Class Hearse. ALLAN Hummus, Jtltiajr " kinds 1mm Of the Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVER. 1JNDiu'itTAKJNa Promptly attended G. Jul EBE88. . Any pomn who “in n pip" tron ht poet ttthee, whether Giraud to hit an. or another. or whether ho bu sub mud or not In "upon-ital. for tho pay. 0. Manchuribor orders, In: pupa to In hop-pod at a "rtnln time. and the Published continues to ornd,tho subocrihenl boum h pay for " if he tutu it out of the per ottieo. Tm , procood- upon to groan: but I nun man my for Mm he mu. MON BY TO LOAN Fire lmuranm secured. O'HOI. mg 924:?) 'vom. Lama Town. L It In, pouch onion his " r disco» “and. ho an“ my all IRTd, or the publisher may comma. to und it until In) Death atnde,and eolleotthe whole ”Loan? when!" Is be than from the omen or not The" on be no legal dnuonti-mnco an“ ”vmeunknndo. '0 an“ the up“; "tenuoti " Pee ttMaia and sub-crib"- to the (allowing " - of the IO'thpOlll'I: ‘IOENSED A UCTION KEN, HUGH McKAY. be old stand. All I: made shoes. Also WOODWORK MISCELLANEOUS. JAKE KRESS . u, MCKENZIE, Furniture in connection. A f1rat-oltum lot of still who found in his Old Sand opposite the Durham Bakery. Am to JAMES noon. “It Hill. Ono. for as]. cheap. Newspaper Lawn. DURHAM LEGAL All hand. Also ‘. foe th _ The jury gallantly declined to con- vict the accused Princess on the added and "trivial charge about a woman's age." an-l she was sent back to her provincial exile. Unfortunately, such marriages. wholly and solely mutter: of matrimcetial latter and suits. are quite comma: in “mix and aptly it. lustnte the truth of some ot the aocinl pictures so graphically drawn by Tol- stoi: but the purchase price of woo ru- bles. plus the woimn's happiness. for the princely title. is unusually low. It is only just to say that in the trreat majority od also unfortunate unions. the fault or the criminal folly. gener- ally_ lie: with the punt.- d tho tride- vieiiru. to lifelong interment in the Govern- ment of (Home: for the embezzlement. of 1i0,000 rubles. forming part of the fortune left by a. lately deceased staff ‘(L'iptuin named 03mm“. She was [again l roughl. Iretore the Moscow Court Pe other day on the further charge of having falsified hee certificate of lap- ;t.ism. causing it to appear that she was horn in 1867 insload of 1847. Through his counsel Prince Flusratstehett, who wan cited as a witness by the Procur- nor. said that “whether his bride was 20 years older or younger than her certified age was a matter of utsolute indifference to him. All ho had to my was that he received the sum of 8,000 rubles for giving the woman his name; that immediately after the marriage ceremony he procured for her a eepo Mate passport. and that since then he knew nothing more of his wife or her private affairs." Princess Eugaly when. nee Anna Don- itch, was recently untamed at Moscow “an on a Human Pruitt-u Somatic-HI In lifelong Imprisonment. That progress and prosperity have been so steady is due to the long tenure of power of President IJiuz,wltioh has enamel] him to continuously and et- fectively carry out this policy, and to the long dis inline of the people in ord- erly development and social ettieener Spanish America has produced some re- markable men, bat no one of them has‘ used his power more persistently or unselfisiUy to advance his state in ei. vi:ization, and to lift it to a position of dignity and prosperity, than has President lliaz. That his rule has at times been arbitrary, and that consti- tutional forms have not always been loluerved, is no doubt true, but the work of rec/aiming a great state from anarchy is not, to be done with gloves, and the politival and social results na-hieved Justify most of the methods by which they have been secured. Even in its present stage of ndvanoement, nothing is more certain than that should the present administration of Mexieo break down, the. rule of some other strong and virtually irrespon- sible President would he needed to prevent the Republic from relapsing into anarchy. The eternestr measures have been re- quired to effect this transformation. and the democratic forms of govern- ment have more than once been set tUV ide for the etrong rule of the diets.- tor, but reform has been so thorough that throughout Mexico today order and justice are now commonplace. The "eve!opment of resources has kept, ”are with political and social pro- ‘8ress. the Helmhlic having in 1895 nearly seven thousand miles of rail- way, while for the timel year 1895-96 its imports were $42,253,938, and its exports of previous meta's $64,838,596 and of commodities $40,l78,306. The mineral wealth of Mexico is well known, the Republic having supplied one-tum of the total roinage of the “arid rsince the discovery of America, and the egri~~u'turnl regions are very [rule and the differenres in altitude so great as to give a large variety of products. llncler the changed condi-' Lions, British and American capital has mug-ht investment in the country, with the resuits to open and enlarge many avenues of industry, and at- though wages are iow, the wants of the laboring clawes are few, and prices and “ages generally more stable than e aewhere. ed out by the moab snmmary adminis- tration ot justice. and by such a de- velopment of natural resources as has deprived the ciass from which hrigands Brit recruited of excuse for criminal adventure. _ The poiitieat and social change! 'wrought within n Jingle generation P" Well-night mgnguous, a coun- “U given over to . revolution. an- archy and brigandage having not only a'quirod n strong and efficient Bow' ernment, hat the habit of obedience to law. The first step toward the new order of things was to make life and property secure through the enforce-1 meat of order and justice. and tsol, thoroughly has this been accomplished] that on the testimony of competent ob- ser’vers. both are as safe as in our own country. Brignndage has been crush- men whom swish America has from time to time thrown up, it has been continued for Almost a quarter of I century by President Din. until now Mexico has become the most stable and progressive of the southern repuhiics. Nowhere perhaps has the WORN“ ot erecting a new date on the ruins of the old Bullish civillzstion been 30 ,3, pid and successful as in Mexico. Begun by President Juroz, one of tho strong MARRIAGE A LA MODE. NOTES AND COUHINTS. P‘ant apple trees fourteen by twen- ty-eight feet mart. 111 trees to the ewe. Varieties of apples - a narrow list. would include Early Harvest, Red June, 1htcrxyss of Oldenburgh'. Cole's Quinve, Wea'tliy, Utter’s Red, Grimes' Golden Pippin, Jomrthtsn,Winesap, Mie- sourl Pippin, Ben Davis and Janet. I would suggest fifty peat-h trees. occu- pying not quite one-fourth acre. Var- ieties in order of ripening, Alexander, Early Rivers. Hale’s Early, Champion, Wager. Wright, Crosby. Hill's Chilli, and Heath’s Cling. In planting the pearl), invariably use one-year trees. Remove all branches. out back to twen-i ty-tour .to thirty inches in height, See it is imperative that the trees should be grown u a low. stocky tree, and not to be run up as rapidly as it would if left to nature. Sinre the' tree is to be cal beak. it is not as important to buy the strongest trees of [leech as of epple or cherry. Trees (our feet in height enswer very well. and even two to three foot trees are quickly celeb- liahed end will give satisfaction. ot cherry. [would punt three dozen or even four dozen. commencing with the Cultisatico should he at least week- ly from early spring. soon after plant- ing, until the first, of August. Avoid Esta eultivation, Sinai unripe wood may be caught by the first sew-re freeze in autumn or early winter and trees wouki become blackuarted.l We no- ticed recently that. trees kept growing too late suffered from the first freeze which came in early winter. ltn the sun, the aridity of the wind, 'and to destrurtive hail storms. In purnting, set solid. After planting and tramping the earth firmly to the roots, should the soil be deficient in moisture. add two or three [axis of water for each tree, and after it has soaked away, fill tho ground level with loose soil. This is to guard against baking. Protect trees recently plant- ed, by wranping trunks with corn stalks. slough grass, cloth, brown pa- per, or even newspaper. These Iessen the evaporation of sun from, the lrunk during the trying time of rep'antiug. Shorten the hunches, cutting thenr away two-thirds or threo-fourths otl the preceding season’s growth. Not "ri cutting off three-fourths of the limbml but by shortening back all of them) and re_mov_ing the weaker limbs. i In r muting trees in heavy soils put them two inches deeper than they grew in the nursery. In light soils plant them four to six inches deeper. In very light soil, still deeper. In planting, lean the trees toward the one or two o'cloek sun, that the rays of the sun mar strike the trunk with) less power. Use low-headed trees in order that the trunk of the trees may be less exposed. the air, and the frost! allowed to cum.- out siowly. If the trees have been exposed to drying winds or are shriv- eled whan tereived, bury them forty- eight hours in a hunk of moist soil. This uit usually bring them out in fresh, p'ump eondition, insuring fair success. Having purchased trees and plants, on receiving them, carefully protect them from sun and drying winds. Oren the handles and half bury the. roots in moist. soil, so they may be fresh un- til planted. If by any accident trees haves become frosted they should he Unwed away from the air. That is, if a. case of trees slmuLd be, frozen it should be heavily covered to exclude It located in neighborhoods where fruit is already being groiin. purchase the same varieties which are succeed- ing in that immediate neighborhood. Purchase new varieties with cau- tion. Let the nurseryman and the ex- periment stations do the major por- tion of the experimenting with new varieties of unknown, untried fruits. Standard varieties of long standing can he purchased at reasonable prices, and are more likely to give satisfaction and an abundance of fruit, for family use than varieties of more recent intro-; durtion, which mar or may not. be) adapted to the peculiar conditions ici') rounding.r the planter. 3 vise with rare and caution, and to deal honorably and fairly with' his custom- ers than is the trave‘ing man repre- senting some di'alant nursery. who may make extravagant claims for the nur- sery he represents. Very few farm- ers will go in person to a. nursery. Thoy can not take the time, They! can cor- respond in advance with nurserymvn of their mwmintunr-o or of good re- putation, or they can purchase of tra- veling men representing known nur- series,.heing careful to absolutely know that these traveling men repre- sent some reputable nursery, of whose standing they know something. Prob- ahly if nurseries did not send out. agents and press on the farmer the importance of growing fruit, not half as many orchards Would be planted. l If within reach, better resuits are us- uall'y obtained by purchasing from the nearest. reliable nursery. Even if this nurseryman grows but asmall part of what he soils he is more likely to ad- ( The location should be convenient to (the. buildings. I would regard conven- ience of access from. the, house and to protection " being of more import- ance than elevation or slope. While northerly slopes have a slight per- centage of advantage in retarding blooming in spring and ripening in au- tumn. yet the difference is not so marked as to lead the planter to select ground at any considerable distancei from the house. In our experienee.l orchards do well on all slopes, whenl suitably cultivated and given proper‘ ottentipn. I i ORCHARDS FOR FARMERS. In (liming a farmer'- orchard from the atmdpolnt of profit. we shell in- clude the table and health: on well as a surplus to sometimes sell on the mar- ket, the some as the housewife diapoa- u of her surplus poultry and. dairy products. The farmer's orchard should have fruit enough for all domestic needs in the poorest years; and a. sur- plus for profitable sale in abundant seasons. Its area trluraid be two acres of fruit trees and half an acre for small fruits, writes E. F. Stephens. l PRACTICAL FARMING. ONTARIO ARCHIVES ' TORONTO fl She has no model or drawing of! any I kind to work by. but goes on su-aiiily, tunerringly, using guages of different , sizes and shaping the animal/ out with i an ease and an amount of truth to my iture that would be clever if it were {not utterly mechanical. She learned from her wothi-r how to make tin-so six animals. and her mother had learn- ‘ed. in like manner from her grand- mother. The old dame has taught the ‘art to her own granddaughter, and so jit wilt go on being transmitted for generations. , In some houses there are families ithat carve rocking horses or dolls or ‘other toys, and in other houses there ‘sro families of painters, In one house there are a dozen girls painting brown 'homes with black points. In another 5 house they paint only red horses with ‘white points. It is a separate branch lit,' the trade to paint saddles and head.. .gesr. A good hand wilt paint twelve ldozen horses s day. each horse being (about a foot in length. and for these I she is paid sixty soldi. or shout a he." , dollar. sr.eL-rasev. ist. fie-What do you mean by saying that your frirnd's work in MI play! Rhn_[.-n- in A --i..,.a.., I __ _ _ As a certain young hopeful 0:35 ob- served three sisters plying in the' next yaw, ht gnaw; remarked: - "JAephini, ieertikuvriiisd Katerina. I suppose souptureen is in the house. ‘ llow the Trude " THIS.“ and Item In One Family for Genet-anon». In plying their trade. the toymnk- ers of Aueriu. confine themselves to the manufacture of the particular at- ticles in which they excel. For exam- ple, one worker-an old 1vomaer-C.ttg_ cats, dogs, wolves, sheep. goats and ede- l phants. She has made these six ani- mals her whole lite long, and she haa an idea of how [0 cut :mthing else. She makes them in two sizes, and she turns out as nearly " possible. one tuouaand of them a year. "__-___' ._ -...... v. LIII- Ayn. I have not the least tlnuht that, had we left the rye a little longer before plowing, it would have her-cine woodr, and in doing so would have lost so much succulenue, that it would have hehl the soil Iooae,would have lurked moisture. would not have let the soil water up from below, and instead of being a benefit, would have greatly injured the crop. So I am convinced that to get the most good out. of a rye-rover crop, we should leb it get as mt1eh bulk and as much juice as pos: sible. hat not leave, it long enough to have it become so woody as not to rot quickly, and so Timid; up the soil as to have it suffer more from adrought. It might be different in e wet season, but we get those only as an excel» tion. lit heads out. It' should then be got linto the soil as quickly as possible, says Mr. Woodward. and the soil com- puted over it, and the surface made ', Cute, so as to hold: all the moisture it Icontained. We. Inst spring. had a field which had grown corn in 1896, on one part of it, crimeon clover had been sown, and rye on the other. The fall proving dry and the winter had, [the clover did not make a very large ltprowth, but the rye did finely. This field was plowed when the clover was! in full bloom and the rye just begin-l (ning to Show where the heads vsere;! ) and there was about four or five timesl, the bulk of rye to put under, as there “as of cl0ver. A chain was used on the plows so as to pat everythlng into the ‘grounrl, and as fast as it was plowed, n. roller followed; this was followedI with a barrow. and the land uguin' rolled, so as to get the ground as rom- i'n"t as possible above the, gn-en stuff. The field was fitted and plentvd to potatoes, all treated alike. and we ex- pected, of course. that that. part toi-I, lowing the clover Would show muchI the better crop. Hut first summer was about the driest I ever saw; for weeks} and weeks, we did not have a drop of rain, and the field was well worked to i-onserve a'l the moisture there was. Soon it began to show, to the row, where the rye was plowed under; the po.tatoes did not seem to mind tho drought at all, but grew right onl, while those after the clover were had.. ly pinched for water. I amounted for the difference, and I be ieve it “as the true reason, by the {not that the forge hurthon of rye plowed under till.. ed with juice and compactly held in the soil. furnished the needed mois- ture for the continuance of growth, and that the smaller bulk of clover, while most likely containing much more fertility, lurked the necessary moisture to carry the crop through. When the crop was dug, there was a marked difference in favor of the rye. T L-..- __,L u I . _ _ - ' WHmel'ellay. mull”, 'altrndM* ”at" tsilo., tuid Wran- Thea. ahmgld 'iii'ii,l"gdgtu,'tutrt " .1: ltr."'" fruit for SI! Weeks, and if properly rer- 5 .' ed tor should give fruit enough for the 1hs ehlftinc ot the minority of the my" tha bird. “ltd the “Inuit-o It!" mailman Home of Commons from the r unplug c any bees prepere ry n. . - planting, ehorten the bunches of "St ! eastern to the western portion of Gen my; growth to tour or tive buds.', eds, which he been going on elowly Use low-heeded trees, aim to grow [il einoe the union ot the provinces. in :35, 2:123:10 'gl,t, I?” brwi‘g?:tlikely to be greatly accelerated now. . . as! e o secure e; . . maxunum yield from . tree with few', Lt the first hrlmment after the union branches. or plums, I would plunttwo’ there was only 82 members for ell ot ggzenntlreeg. using the Americana tam- l Canada. west of the Ottawa, and 99 for . e uropeen varieties are rare- . . ly long lived, not often hardy. The‘ the portion east of the Ottawa River. Jelanese varieties give large fruit and! In the present Home there "I" IN should be planted sparingly, Trurietieal members from the east and 109 from r'.'i8dii,o,rt1tnfi'tit'aniAtf: f.et)'pt.oit.tseili the west. T he expectation among those . . _ t ' " pause. e- , . ' . l string to [Kent Japanese varieties,pltmti who wewh the drift of population In Algundanoe, Burl'ankl. Ogon, Mod Juno/ that the redistribution of the Parlia- ‘lllilatrd and Sateunm. It European memory representation. following up- I Ti les pre desired probably thel om the census ot 1901, will odd meteri- mm and Is as safe as any. . ally not only to the western coming- -- eat at the expenee of the out, bat el- PLOWING UNDER RYE. so to the total number ot the west's re- The longer we 1 t Arretrontauvera. . greater will he the E lkrye rl',',,"; f/yr The Pd'ovince of Quelrec is holding " l . tn . . . "f 'an he morelpopqutmn much letter than during tnota .re it will contain. up to the time, the lust renews period. This means I when it begins to gee woody, or after', that there will be several thousands it heads out. It' should then be got l pore of population to one!) of the sixty- into the soil as ickl . l five memlers to whom she is entitled. ea . M F "u” y W4 possible,': As a result, the population unit. per .vs r r. Woodward. and the soil com-l meniher in the other provinces must, Itryted over it, and the surface made‘be [pertained a'su. In the Maritime; Cute, so as to hold: all the tuoiutaare it i 1?ovuwms:.whssrt..t.ha ”gun-M increase Pontained We last . ' iof rnpu anon stl'l drifts largely io field Vi,', ' ‘1 Spring. had a, the western portion of the Dominion. , u nth had grown corn m 1896, ', or to the United States. a reduvtion in ‘ an one part of it, rrimeon clover lxad’a‘ie repre:enta1t1uu will Le iner.iiafO. l been sown, and r e n . , .r P. increase " population in the west _ fall proving drv in!” l?', lother. ”1'2le more than make up for this) tl " . . , t we winlor bad, shrinkage. Unless mellow prophets ( 1e t over did not. make a. very “we are enllrely too sanguine. there will be l growth, hat the rye 'lid finely. This t 1g,'Wifuit,n of at least W000“ lie.. 1.. " F , , . b ween dk e Superior and the P: ,ifie 19:1 J"t,', plowed when tin llnver was by the end of the r'entury. 'l‘heul'hrt 'l u U00ttt and th" rye just 'sezin-l that the west will in a few years hold ung to oow where the hung mural the o.'o.ntro.1 of mlitical power in lhel md them was about four or five, times,) Hommlon 15 r'er?.ruinrr more and more _ .119. hull! nf I've; fr, “up "n.4,". .. . "L __ l apparent to pulrrc men. l Use low-headed trees. aim to grow I very full head with may bum-hes. since it is impossible to secure the maximum yield from a tree with few branches. or plums, I would plant two dozen trees, using the Americana fam- ily. The European varieties are rare- ly long lived, not often. hardy. The Ja; anew varieties give large fruit and should be planted sraringly. Varieties like Forest Garden. Wolf, DeSoto, and Hawkeye and Wyunt will please. If de- siring to pfant Japanese varieties,plant Abundame, Burl-unlit. Ogon, Mod Juno, Wi lard and Satsuma. It European varieties are desired probably thel Lombard is as safe as any. 1 earliest varieties like Dyohouse or Early Richmond, following with Luge Montmorency. Ostheim, Entish Mor- ello, and ngg. These should give fruit for six weeks, and if properly "r- ed for nhon'd give fruit enough for the boys, the birds and the family. In trimming cherry trees preparatory to Planting. shorten the bunches of last ttyaoy's growth to tour or five buds. AND FINE PLAY, TOO FAMOUS TOY MAKERS. in . peoteaaioul LOCATED. - - iM'iiMre u-VBWIIIG lUI' 3mm. wlth the one "tuit-ther have found that its olnlm of perfect an. tive qualltlen cumot be gain-am The great dltoovmrof thla medlclne was pauses-ed af the knowledge that the an! or all an»... II the have centres. situated at the bu. of the brain. In em: belle! he had the but ”luncht- end medlonl men of the world occupying exec“! the lame pre- [mm Indeed, the ordlnery tar- man mulled this paneling Ian: “0. Duncan known that let disease or lnjury meet this Dartot the human ant-n um an». u---_--- - --- -'-"e 'i."... own. will!!! rem 'q the medium of then nerve com ohm Tan. and guy-h in lure to folk»: no. Hen h Int pr"'~'nla The "a". u ' Mrr - h “an". The eyos of the world are literally f,xod on South American Nervtne. They are not viewing " as o. nine-day.‘ won- der, but critical and experionced men h." boon undying this medicine for my. -...h. bk- --- ____.. ‘- In the matter of good health tempob lung measures. while pos-ibly lucceu- rul for the moment, an never be int- in. Those In Door heuth noon know whether the remedy they no nun; l.tt simply . pininl [madam In their ex- perience. bracing them up for the any. or something that I- (dun: " the an: of the also.” tad I. surely and permanently regtoring. A Discovery. Based on Scientific Principles. Renders Failure Impossible. WHEN EVERY OTHER HELPER HAS FAILED lf BURKS Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. Are Fixed Upon South Ameri- can Nervine. Yea, but -wuit can one dot It more oxpensiv‘e still to die there. THE EYES (lf THE WUHLD What makes Popper have such a sad and melancholy air? " he in love? No, poor l'e!lo.v; he was married three months new. Don't you find it very expensive to iixy.s in , Hg cityt CANADA 8 POPULATION SHIPPING. r _ t' iiri, ' I . " L" / l is") ' Y' _ m I LN P.e ' I 1eeglts, [( " fan. l ifa"t8 - -- ’4 .' O, , . “W?" My, "N a ai i . ‘15” f lift 1: 'e-cs.. ISK' _ 'fi-' 'm,trr=nrreF, / § be Meth.'. " "ttltttittMh"; t" .4 'i5ilfffP. = I , A .m“ a 2' Eil Tut "Ns, "’ " tttR, ', , an frpa - MI HIS CHULCE 01" EVILS AFTER TAKING 'q I“ ml a ,___....... "*r"rlrTe. PM). pl. marvel. it 1. true, " m wonderml meme.) quaint”. but they km bo- yond all tun-Non that It does every- thing that I: alum“ for it. " MI none " the on. (mt comm caring remedy of the nineteenth cot-wry. Whit would anyone "tfer.ttutrGd and sicko ne- white thin runway I. no.“ u 'hoh- hund- ' (bu with Indian treatment um fully, sud with nearly all medicines. A. _ that they aim llmply to treat the 0mm "hat may bout-med. loath Amen“.- ‘Nervlne mue- " the ornns. 1nd ll:- medhtely nppuu It. curative power. 'to the nerve centm. from which tho Vornnl of the body melve their sum:- _ M _.__- _ __ ‘__---.- - car?!) (new. - Th. on. oe the word haw not has. 6ieagrreinied m the Inquiry Into the on.- cm or South American "carving. P00. " mmgl " in ..-, 7 - -, ----V ""'-'* are" cured of theao troubles, oven when they have bacon»: so duper-u. u to bathe the skill at the moat "ntgtratt phy-Iclun. been". South American Nenlno In. con. to hogqunrtm um cured there. Agra-JA“ --- -- _ LlCENSED AUCTIQNEEB to! 0., of Gray. All communication: do drowned to human P. o. wtll be promptl attended to. Itoeidonoo Lot 19, Con. 'd Township of Boutinok. cin.io4i/m. S a. REGISTRY UFFIL‘E. l‘homu q Lnuder.Regiucrsr. John A. Munro DeputrRegitsuaF. ottue houn from ll than ulluwod on saving- huu Japan!- or 0| I " upwards. Prompt attention wd "who“. Mord“! carton." living at I (Hum... DAN. Annual Banking busine- tnnuntod but“ ”and sud collections mud. on an potato. Depot “Ammo and Interest allowed " out“ sud incl-ml W. F. Gavan. " Paid up t,000,000 RESERVE FUND 600.000 CAPITAL. Authorized 82.00000! StandardBank of Canada THIS: a per you. Bl mule: CHAS. “no: Editor. Proprietors THE GREY REVIEW Thursday Morning. GENTS in 311 rind l in. in _On_mrl_o. Quoboo. ,ar,','l'o'f,'lr'tl= mm DURHAM AGENCY. Hond Office . Toronto. n1 SA VIN GS BANK. President. OFFICE. GAB ST. IDURRAM. MOLEAN. J' KELLY. no» DAN. HGLE“. hill-d In . good mot. ad “no may. a)“. order'to nuke 'tste" WV; Bro-o Quint» “hm -trqaftmd the I... it RM no". BALLOON VS. ”(GNP Mine of the l-t'loun in u " one of the dr-.enopsrients l? 3.1.". A “ml-c Aw modem out. Btoottt 88,0000t0 Thin M it.“ 1114 aquip for “gr " - may Infloun‘, an! it w I if thes mm. he used by (1 but: ot a bacigod dry win» a“ over an invading fleet w “plosives upon the “arnhil qeath with deadiy can. " lilo II. and to drop than: I over the citiee wanna I -t. Of count there woul “cum. rink in sw~h An e1 In. the Imlloouu mun he ataeeed, but the dirigib c It]! of the Inventions mu we an an in the our (man. Id upon Mrr .tl', ‘I‘ Iii-Nina Mum" l" vi "lt dalitdttet to Ir“ .szn If M" lam: raw tbr cl, .~'- 1. l .0 "up ihouplrt ' nun“ ,0 thouattt "1an I w...| il " “T It (“MPH " ‘V‘I ', ' l VII quill: to “nu” 'n. ‘l Quinn-my ti". ..\'.)ul I _ tr' m tatrether “IN: " P'"' II “in... all worm-t Im- 'II I!" in danger Imp '. _ .0 could do u’mulu'a h [u "I Mr triena, mu m. , , , itt aad Inn-av " hawk. .nnnv‘ M. Mr Iflvnylh tt n ' “I. mud-Ind I ("u .1 ,,., our: New c nun! um hm! uh violently. " isnllmlv to {I’ly domed!!! um um! ottr..errite'. hromrhr luv .- Wmlauu' Pink Pills an! l .‘3 thrm. Irut I suit th, I" \I “In, could do no pm! I' bureau» replted that i Int “my at least ctmlri .51) no hole»: her [look the ho! "a I'm-cured unmhnr " “I to tool that they “am good. I tooh in o.l! rich! low I feel 01mm: mt! h: am} doing my hour-work ui‘ha or “curiae-n. For t0t,trne1 In" from we Jun-q. of thr, I “no them is nu rum-sir I that will bring such “pr-mm Dr. Wlllhm' Pink Pilis. I and Ibo-e wonderful pill! mid have hum mun“! l hm Sumerian. Mn. m) m the currionw of IRON". and “In! INF an] 511.. hopo lo Hum u ho hum h Mo mile! for them in " Dr. Williams' Pink mm m m [be- than we will eve! N “AXE BoMr, BAH - onionn_nyp " 3M9.- qurferet fr, “My Inn-mu have nun-Ia heard of Ir- unn- un:l sh [Ind hPal'h under H [or Ib. I tandem, than! ll town lix much w After I '1‘“ we looked u .atandincr in a Inn who w” lei-wig ‘pruh- “lh .. a ' I Urea: thw Fun I) - ”age-VIII: Lulu “ha I! lawn-eh §.v-n|;. ot I". Of the tuo n} "dude min “on a Sherhrnke, G C.l Col. lenmrd, Utrht Dragoons. When time ha t'low in..un'u-,~ t covered that Wt dead, In” UM h light on “In h ed to the txtunm Thin [IL-Hr invrensiuu a eegiment, “I hrokv- In? \\ Mulad un-u I Waynynrl m tion Mt: the exprewd ch, that was drtr C TROUBLE N0 [ONOFR AS INCURABI. They (bu-u v mm trom u lung of PM “may ro’m‘rm room ern,,tyl Uherhlukc figure, “I ment and utr, to SN IS the n. 11rd rm.» OIL "M3 broke. "ll ‘trd' Tim o'luw me John Core lenmm v Thirty l nird I- of the , 'see rev-mi t ibe in Catia,t, “I Ment an 'aynu rd mung. him. At I Cl union, Fa"! “I vornraninl “I In “(all - IUD-n.1- In" a! a. Ghost. In the whole record of mama: appearance." one which is more (hum “(Clad thin the fo louil To an: A cow "c font: HEART [USE I411 Mni ll otu WHAT TWO OF F ic, “any - Illlh Wheu I Mtm "tt ktotwtt Mn "I to (_ell t n- " In Mor thought I ‘ , myuulf I l in". it an lg to hum m. the aw “I,” n of ( Sherh rok mun h an

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