Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 12 May 1898, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

FOR SALE The EDGE PROPRRTY. IBSUEB of Marriage ldcenses. Ausoâ€" tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loass arranged without delay, _ Collections promptly madlo, Insurance effected. MANE Y VO 1.04N% stlowost rates of Interast ® "10® one door norti of 8. Keot‘s Store Durbam 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. 80, con. 3, W. G. R., Fownship of Bentinck, 100 acres adjomâ€" Ing Town plot Durham. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. NOTAIRYV PUBRLIC,Commissioner.eic., g3ameisTER, So010IT0R DN SQIREME COURT *‘County of Grey. Sales attendod to prowp had at roasonable mon. idence Dorbam Out 2. Aay person who takes a paper tron Uhe post oftice, whether directed to bu bame or another, or whether he has sub seribed or not is responsible for the pay. 1. M any person orders his paper discor Moued, he must pay all arreages, or th« poblisher may coutinnus to send it until pay mentis .sade, and collectthe whole aw oun whether it be takeo from the othee or not There san be uo logal discontinuance unti paymentismade. 8. If aaubscriber orders his paper to b« floppod at a certaintime, and the publislm eontinues to send, the subscriberis boun:« to pay for it if he takes it out of the pos office. This proceeds npon ke groun: hat a man must pay for what he uses. We cal) the specia‘ attention ef Por maste»s and subseriberate the following s1 popsis of the newcpaperiaws : Of the Best Quality Cheapor THAN EVER. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. ALLAN â€" McFARLANE Handâ€"made Waggons In the old stand. All hb made shoes. Also WOODWORK Horse Shocing Shop. UNDERTAKJING Promptly attended to. JAKE KRESS. W. L. McKENZIE, MONEY TO LOAN Residenceâ€"King 8t., Hanover, JAMES LOCKIE, Fire Insurance secured, OFFICGE, oven Gxant‘s Srom«. Lower Town, Mortgage taken for ywinrt purchase Has opened out a firstâ€"class J. P. TELFORD, ICENSED AUCTIONKER, for th HUCH McKAY. Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MoFARLANE, Furniture MISCELLANEOUS. still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durham Bakery. Newspaper Laws. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont A fAirstâ€"class lot of for sale cheap. DURHA M in connection. LEGAL KRESS All handâ€" Also . This combination has been fully tested wt the OGhio Experimental Staâ€" tion, and found to be quite as effective as the Paris green and Bordeaux mixâ€" ture combination, and for the reasons given al:ov:\ is much to be preferred. One and oneâ€"halif pints of this soluâ€" tion to each barrel of Bordeaux mix~ ture is suificient to use when sprayind for potato bWlight and polato bugs, for apple meab and apple worms, or for any other purpose where a combinaâ€" tion mixture for fungi and insects is reqtired, s The arsenic and soad solution, or arsenite of soda, is more safely used in comr bination with Bordeaux mixture tha 1 alone, as when in combination with Bordeaux mixture than alone, as whin in combination it will not inâ€" jJure the foliage, but alone it is liable to burn the leaves. The same objection ho ds good, however, with reference to Paris Green and London _ purple. It is letter in almost every case to use ths combination mixture, as fungi are nearly always present, and unless they are kept in check there is but little we of fighting insects. The arsenite of soda may be preparâ€" &f in any quintity desired, but being a most a clear liquid is dangerous to keep on hand. The danger may be obâ€" viated, to some extent by coloring the Imquid with some cheap aniline dye, usâ€" ing enough of the latter simply to give suificient color soâ€" thalt no one ‘vould mistake the solution for an inâ€" ffensive drink. It takes but a short time, bowever, to prepare sufficient for a day‘s spraying, which is, perâ€" haps, the least dangerous method. It is a rank poison and should be proâ€" perly labelled and carefully guarded, the rame as all other poisons. Insects may be the means of spreadâ€" inz fungous diseases and fungi may so enfeeble plants as to make them an easy prey to insects. Flew beetles, blisâ€" ter beetles (old fashioned potato bugs) and the larvae of tha Colorado potato beetle mot only make entering places for potato blight germs but may acâ€" tually earry the infection from ons plant to another. Probably the flea bectle is the worst offender of all, because of the numerous punctures which it makes in the leaves, With plum and cherry trees the case is reâ€" versed. Fungi alttack the leaves, causâ€" inz them to dro» prematurely, thus weakening the grees and â€"rendering them an easy, prey to the bark beetle. Simiiar relations between insects and fungi may not be evident in all cases, but the necessity of Lreating both canâ€" not be too strongly emphasized, for very often whoen one is allowed to go unchecked and the other destroyed, the work is partially or wholly lost. This may often hamvoen when the reaâ€" son is not avparent, In some casos there is no nsed, of an avplication of a combined mixture,but these awre excentional, if we exclude those cases where insscticides or funâ€" gicides nther than those above named are teqauired. Paris greon is a good insecticide, but is somewbat trouwblesome to use in liâ€" quid form as it does not dissolva readily, and needs constant agitation to keep it from settiing. If allowed to settle at all, the disâ€" tribution is not uniform, and injury is likely to result to the foliage of some plants, while the insects on other plants escape. Moreover, it is unduly expensive, whether used dry or in the form of a spray. White arsenic, in a soluble form, costs about oneâ€"third as much as Paris green, aund gives noâ€" trouble in the way of settiing. Dissolve two pounds of commercial white arsenic and four pounds of carbonate of soda (washing soda) in two gallons of water and use one and oneâ€"half pints to a barrel of Bordeaux mixture (50 gallons). is formed, and then dilute to two gal« lons. Whenever there is any possibility that insects and fungi are both presâ€" ent. it is well to use the combined mixture, even thouch evidence to that e‘T=ct is not conclusive. It is hardly possible to do anvy injury to plants by !hiq treatment, while the extra cost The rasiest way to make the solution is to put both the white arsenic an carlbenite of soda in a gallon of boilâ€" ing water and keep boiling about fif« teen minutes, or until a clear liquid this treatment is triflipg. 3011 the HrH A BSUBSTITUTE FOR PARIS GREEN Ve set oul early as possible, as curâ€" fants start earlier than most fruits. Mr. Orpet says: Preference shoulid be given to & covi, moist soil, one that has a clay swsoil is best for all bush {ruits, as it hoids well in a dry speli, A great assistance is at the hands of the cuitivator in the shape of a mulch under all small fruits; we have got in the way of it and do not stir the soil at all, as the roots are so near the surface, brought up there by the moisture usually present near the top of the soil, and it is a revelation to see how all bush fruits on dry soil have put on growth under this treatâ€" ment, and when the fruit is ripe it is kept clean by the straw that is used for a mulch. It is the strawy porâ€" lion of the manure that we use, and it contains a good proportion of plant food in itsaif, but wa spread a good sprinkling of fertilizer underâ€" each bush before putting on the mulch. DAINTY DAIRYING. Dairymen able to prepare their goods in an attractiva manner will find cusâ€" tomers in even small villages, where 0. Orpet writes that he is enlargâ€" BLACK CURRANTS e s e 1. 0 " s l Cut the patch two or three inches longer than reat in bags. Make flowr | paste about consistency of cream. Paste the patch to the bag. Then with | & hot iron press well on both sides. | Leave about one day before using and | you will find that the bag will last | one or two seasons, London was the fiurst city to use coal. The game of chess is taught in all the Australian pubjlic schools. Thirdâ€"class railway fares in India are less than a fanthing a mile. Oakum is whisfly used for caulking ships; it is also largely used for surâ€" gical pwrposes in dressing in the hosâ€" pitals of Great Britain and on the conâ€" tinent. % Before the revolution in France it was customary, wihen a gentleman was invited to dinuar. for him to send his servant with nis knife, fork and spoon; or, if he had no servant, he carried t'{mm with him in his breeches pockâ€" et. w Mr. Rous claims to have invented a powder, which used in the place of | concrete will have «he effect of makingI buildings fireproof. 1t can also be used | in the extinguishing of fires, and can| even be swallowed witbout fear of conâ€"| sequences. ; The vital statistics for the Society of Friends have been compiled for the denominational year. _ In 1897 there were 276 deaths of members of the soâ€" ciety in Great Britain and Ireland. This is a slighter death rate than in the previous year, but is much below the average death rate. A â€" remarkable feature is the large number of deaths at advanced ages. Of the 276 there were not fewer than fortyâ€"six between 80 and 90 years of age at death and seven over 90 years, so that nearly oneâ€" fifth of the deaths wera of persons ovâ€" er 80 years of age. A Thorse will live twentyâ€"five days without food. maerely drinking water. "Deliver a@ll things by measure and weight" Weigh the pigs, stock and grain, and bhuay as well as fertilizers, so as to deal justly and be fairly dealt with. In selling live stock the weight is usually estimated by the drover or butcher who comes to buy, and long practice on their part gives them a decided advantage over the seller, Some of us followed on fool among the reeds and bushes, but soon got tired of this useless business, and were quite willing to stop and turn back at the sound of the recall. Our hospital steward, a native, and a good one, was by my side. My canteen had been empâ€" tied on the march, and i was parched with ths thirst that follows fighting. Something among the bushes, glistenâ€" ing on the ground, like water, caught others cannot make sales. The apâ€" pearance pleases, and when the qualâ€" ity is found as good as the looks, the market becomes permaneont. _A cake of good buiter, wrapped in fresh parchâ€" ment paper, with a bright trademark and the owner‘s name upon it, will bring more {for the halfâ€"pound or the pound than a chunk of the same make cut out of a tub. A red ribbon tied around the wrapper will help to sell every cake so wrapped before one of the same lot not so wrapped can be disposed of. To please the eye it is necessary to reach the pnlate someâ€" times. + Scales should be used in every house and barn. There is more money in knowing than in guessing. The folâ€" lowing proverb ought to be heeded : Mistook the Colis of a serpent For a Pool of Water. The moonp bas a curious trick of changing objects into something quite unlike themselves in appearance. in one inslance such a transformation nearâ€" ly cost the life of a British soldier. He thus relates the incident: My company had been ordered into the Deshur district to break up the dacotis, who had become very troubleâ€" some. We arrived there in the night, stormed a band of the robbers by moonlight, killed or captured a round dozen of them, and chased the rest into tha jungle. my eye "It‘s a stagnant pool left by the rains, but it will serve to wet my throat," I said, and was for throwing mysolf on the ground to drink; but the steward puiled me back. ‘"Nay, sahib, stay! Lend me your sword for a moment," he said. He took the sword, and lightly stirâ€" red the pool with its point. From the middie of the pool a cobra‘s hooded bead arose, and there came the sound of its hateful hiss. With a sweep of the sword the steward cut the reptile‘s head off, and at once what had seemâ€" ed to me a waterâ€"pool became the withing coils of a serpent that had been fully six feet in length. _ wWEIGAH EVERYTHING YOU SELL "‘That was your pool, sahib," the steward gravely said. "It was well that you paused before attempting to drink from it." y TO HAVE A WHITE SKIN. Eat no meat at all. Become a vegeâ€" tarian, they â€"always have beautiful skins. Once in six weeks or so eat a meal of fresh meat. Driak as much water as you can; eat little grease, and touch no tea or coffes. _ Your breakiast may be oatmeal and orangâ€" es; your dinner fruit, nuts, fruit tea â€"rreferably cuince teaâ€"browr bread, muflins, cau iflower croquettes, marâ€" ma ade, and dishes of stawed vegetaâ€" bles. The diet is not so bad when you become accustomed to it. In London there are any number of vegetarian restaurants. A BRITISH SOLDIER‘S MISTAKE, BITS OF INFORMATION. TO MEND GRAIN BAGS ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO to use coal NWO TE O NN | _ What struck a Flume, Austria, wareâ€" ‘house and set it on fire turns oul to ‘huve been a meteor,. It was assumed | to have been lightning till a fowrâ€"ton ‘;mehmriv stone was found in a deep | hole in the celfar i Lorda Bute has tried to encourage imuniugo at Cardiff, Wales, by offerâ€" \ing a dowry once a year to a deserving , girl. The Mayor of the town reports, | however, that during a whole year he 'has received not a single application. | _ When the Gordon Highlanders went into action at Dargai it appears from | the contession of one of the wounded pipars that each of the six pipers sent ahead played a different tune. In | spite of this the Gordons followad them. | _ William Rees, of Llandovery, pig killâ€" ‘er, died recently at the age of 104 | years, having worked at his calling till \ within ten days of his death. He boastâ€" ed that ns had killed over 20,000 pigs, He was seized, by a press gang before the battie of Waterloo, but was reâ€" leased, as he was too small. M. Brune{iere has lost his case again st the author of the tragedy "Fredeâ€" gonde" in the court of anpeal, The deâ€" cision is that the French law is clear on the subject of criticism, and that an author whose work is reviewed unâ€" {favorably has the right to reply at any length in the columns of the periodiâ€" cal that criticised him. i _ Miss Charlotte Yonge‘s name is to | be given to three free scholarships for \girls, for which her admirers, headâ€" ed by the Princess of Wales, are colâ€" | lecting money in England, Miss Yonge is 7 years of age now, and has written â€" more than eighty books. ‘"The Heir of Redclyife" first _ appeared fortyâ€"five years ago, and "The Daisy Chain‘" three years later. \ _ Berlin cemeteries are now infested by | people who try to lift the gravestones in the hope of finding banknotes undâ€" er them, Grunenthal, the Government bank official who is accused of bhaving appropriated either misused banknotes | or notes withdrawn from cirealation, | had picked out graveyards as hiding | places for his plunder. Large sums have | been found by the polics under three | gravestoncs already. O1d and New Worlid Events ot Interest Chronâ€"« icled Brieflyâ€"Interesting Mappenings o Recent Date. wWHAT IS GOING ON IN THE FOUR CORNERS OF THE GLOBE. English brook trout grown in the New Zealand rivers are now exportâ€" ed back to England in cold storage. A bugte on which the charge was sounded that sent the Light Brigade to destruction at Balaklava was sold ;.;suurtiun in London recently for $3,â€" Standard Hill Farm, near Northallerâ€" ton, on which the Battie of the Standâ€" ard between King Stephen and the Empress Maud was fought in 1138 is offered for sale. Liverpool‘s Chamver of Commerce is considering theâ€"plan of bridging the Mersey by a suspension bridge 150 feet above high water, with a central span 2,000 feet iong and two side spans each of 1000 feet. The estimated cost is $12,500,000. Lord Charles Beresford, MP., was summored before a police court lately for not muzzling his dog. He pleaded that he was sorty and that the dog had died since, but was fined ten shilâ€" lings. Queen WilheImina of Holland is fond of art, but has deciared that she wholly dislikes music. There have been 71,0006 deaths from palgue in India so far, according to a recent report by the Secretary for lndia to Parliament. A curiousiy annoying theft is that of a neguative film of the late solar eclipse, taken for the cinematograph by ons of the British astronomical expeâ€" ditions to India, Somewhere between Buxar in India, and London one of the boxes was opened and only the eclipse film taken out. A British spinster, who chastised ber servant merely with "her fists, a poker, a clothes pole, a stick, a bhammer, and the arm of a chair, and by compressing her neck and kicking her," has been punished by the unâ€" usually severe sentence of 12 months‘ imprisonment. Kari Marx‘s daughter Eleanor bas completed a consistent socialistic caâ€" reer by ending her own life with prusâ€" sic acia. She Itved with the Socialist Dr. Aveling and bore his name, but at the inquest be asserted that they had never gone through the form of marâ€" riage. Sir Henry Hawkins, the sporting Jusâ€" tice of the Queen‘s Bench, though he is 80 years of age, does not intend to write his memoirs. He says: "If you begin by saying what a splendid felâ€" low you are they call you egotistical, and as for saying anything against myâ€" seif, I‘ll be hanged if I will. Would you €" Gen. Zurlinden. Military Governor of Paris, bas taken up his official residenâ€" ce in the Hotei des Invalides, the old soldiers for whom the building was inâ€" tended baving been turned out. Their number had grown small owing to the establishment of the sysiem of uniâ€" versal military service for a short term of years. The survivors have been eithâ€" er sent back to their families, receivâ€" ing a money pepsion instead of the State support they enjoyed, or else have been placed in other asylums. Russian Don Cossack regiments are being drilled in crossing rivers on & nove! sort of improvised bridge. Seven or eight lances are passed between the handles and tops of a dozen cooking ketties and are hbeld firmly in place by the handles, and are besides tied toâ€" gether by forage ropes. A dozen bundâ€" las of these lances fastened together form omne section of & raft or floating Their Population Increasing While th Home Country is Stationary. The colonies of Holland are enlarging steadiiy in population and productiveâ€" ness, in wealth and stability of governâ€" ment, in civilization, and in the triâ€" bute paid to the home country. By the officiai bulletin of the Minister of Colâ€" onies, as that {functionary Is called in Hollana, the Netherlands had, in 1+70, colonies in the East lndies covering 660 square miles of area, with a populaâ€" tion ot Â¥2,000,000. ‘The Holland colonâ€" tes in the East Indies include Java, sumatrra, Madura, two districts of Borâ€" neo, and other minor divisions, while in the West indies Holland exercises jurisaiction over the islands of Curaâ€" coa, St. Eustacne, and Aruba, with some minor neighboring isiands, and in Soutt America Holland owns, and bas contrived to make very productive what is known as Dutch Guiana, or Burinam. Whiie other European nations in concert with each other have been enâ€" deavoring to develop their possessions through conquest and through parâ€" tition, the Vuich, content with the area oft heir foreign possessions have been | satistied to develop the material inâ€"| terests of these without seeking, iu' the bazard of war, their extension. The| latest figures, published officially in Amsterdam, show the area of Holland‘s colonies to be 769,000 square miles,| while the present population of them| is 33,000,000, an increase of more than 50 per cent. in population without corâ€"| responding increase in area since 1870.! IThere has been a corresponding gain| in commerce. ‘The imports and . exâ€" ports of the Dutch East lndies last year were _ $150,000,000 unllvu!ivelyi There has been a corresponding gain| increase in the population of the home| country, which remains at present not l far from 4,500,000. The territorial area| of Rolland is 12,000 square miles only., Their Population | Increaaini Home Country is Statie The colonies of Holland are steadiiy in population and | ness, in wealth and stability ment, in civilization, and | bridge, which ”u‘:vymrt halt a can be put t minutes. With an area\ so small and a populaâ€" tion thus meagre, the Dutch Governâ€" ment has been able to regulate,wit hout friction or with very little controversy of & serious character, the affairs of a enolonial empire in another continant and without secking or requiring help or coâ€"operation from any other Eurâ€" opean Government. The disparity beâ€" TXE FYES OF THE WORL Are Fixed Upon South Ameriâ€" can Nervine. WwBHEN EVERT OTEER HEELPR HAS TALE t CMRB The eyes of the world are literally fxe8 on South American Nervice. They are not viewing it as & nin>â€"days‘ wonâ€" der, but critical and experienced men have been studying this medicine for earr, with the one resultâ€"they have found that its claim of perfect curaâ€" iIve qualities cannot be grinsaid, The great dircoverer of this medicine was possessed of the knowledge that the seat of all disease is the nerve centres, situated at the base of the brain. In this belief he had the best ecientists and _medical men of the world oncupying _ exactly the mame preâ€" mises. Inrdeed, the ordinery layâ€" man recognised this prinoiple long ago. Everyone knows that let disease or injury affect this part of the human «ystem and death is almont certain. . Injure the «pinal cord. which is the med‘um o°% these nerve cenâ€" tres, and paralysh +s »ure to follow Herc t« (B« #@e4, fls "g h Simikel A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. that Renders Failure Impossible. In tha matter of good health temporâ€" IzIng measures, while porsibly successâ€" ful for the moment, can never be lastâ€" ing. _ Those in poor healith soon know whether the reimnedy they are using is simply a passing incldenst in their exâ€" perience, bracing them up for the day, ar -ometh.lns that is getting at the seat of the dizsease and is surely and permanently restoring. Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. HOLLAND‘S " Vor sa‘ls ~ Uâ€"Farlina & Ba L* a iB which it has been found will halt a ton of weight, A section put together in â€" twentyâ€"five LARGE COLONIES C_f Comme ues C They only of der wonâ€" gestion, n men blood, liver e for orizin to a have â€" centres. n curaâ€" that they : c troubles, ev licine so desperat 1t the the most e ntres, SBouth Ame: will Cb | ble A SENTS dissen wethone Vailea DURHAM AGENCY. Head Office, Toronto: CAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,00€ «_ Paid up 1,000,008 RESERYVE FUND W. F. Cowan, Ageneral Banking busipess transacted Drafts wued and collections made on al) points. Dopos: ts received and interest allowed at eurrent TERMS; $1 por year, IN ADVANCR CHAS. RAMAAGE Editor & Proprieton Alerest allowed on savings bank deposits of tyd upwards, Promptattention and everyi enafforded customers liying at a distance. REVIEW OFFICE, GAR ST., |DURHAL standardBank of Canada which »,, /3 _ _ D)FCeselty the organr which has shown the outward eridence only' of dnp.ngencnt is bealed. _ Indit SCELION, _ nervousness, impeverichs® blood, liver complaint, al owe thetp aorigin to a derangement of the n*vo cen tresa. Thousands bear tes: Iimony that they have been eured of three troubles, even when they have becorne #o desperate as to baf» the skill s8 the most eminent physteians , beca use Bouth American Nervine Ras gone tw headquarters and eured there. The eyes of the world have not beary disappointed in the inquiry into the BUG» cess of So$0 American Nerving. Peg» mik mummena® es gcca t SR Dle with medical treatment . umge ally, and with nearly all medicines, is that they aim simply to treat the orga.n that maw La 43.__ 103 CV NTEqt 6 nnw L. 43 __ 20f "C*Cenu the oFghi that may be dissased. South Arverion® Nervine passes by the orguns, and lime mediately applHies its curative powere to the nerve centres, from whirh th» Oofgkans of the body recetve their suppiy gt Lerye Hulid. ‘The ~nmerun) canthem I} * vapecvazpadaarelizeat O /.. . alone as the ore great certain curing@ remedy of the ninc‘teenth century. Was should nnyon; sufter distress and Ei tige nssm willethrmum at their hands ? S @. REGISTRY OFFICE, Thomead * Lander, Registrar. John A. Munro Deputy â€"Registrar, Office hours from 1¢ a m. to 4 p. m. ple marvel, it is true, at its mediaal qualities, but they yond all questiocn: thrat it 4 thing that is ciaimed for 1t. sÂ¥ ce uP home country and the area and popuia~ tion of its colomies is relatively greater other counhtry in the world. There are tew Aoliandâ€"born â€"residerts of the in the case of hHolland than of any tween the aroa and population of the Dutch colonies Is PUBLISKED EVERY Thursday Morning. SAVINGS BANK Presgident. cREY REVEY J KELLYX, Agont, #eDoI for awwit h tame al reverses . the disgrace presence of upon them. dig «11 1® Whe most interesting wl bsode during tlis long . ferocious attempt wade atds toward the clode, wi ETRAINED EVERY D ud N1 P W H *5 naeI 1y D ko t po l be REDG¢CED BY B ©Vho i 14 BOll® HEAVY BONMBA WEAT CAME C the def #I <r Kn L tm ue bom ba j those « Mme ps Those of Alcraundria and Famous oi Medern % Wad to Bicld in BHou Kiege 0" Glbraliar thi hast Comtanry . Iw> in un no US 3 M Â¥% W £4 rr D ipd overcome 1 1 D D n h I

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy