cst suspicion of get a bottle of tea from 3pm.), has died from uh. nake. There .2. L08 killed each you generally suppoggd, r entirely unknown of the Province, lly seen in the new le heard of at lean ; killed along 1h. 1fmflmlelz. and two Points. But_ they get usud to an)" angers and d.- in a Wilden)!†ï¬ne city hon!†y nourish 3 pl!" dy. but it Win an. Yet. how- mgy b0, i“ d bv indigestion us: pn-puro for ' prevent Hui? uses 0! Groom ’I voritu mudicilO a. A for do.“ at» the liver to In the blood â€â€˜4 n no! and V310†bis reliablo “In" ,Slote. ? kind 6: toodis ï¬ber for maulâ€. rbones. A c0!- Is food (and but! most. compote!“ bave dispelled [hf nsumptiondoes : Scott‘s Emu]. gmg lrom Denmu wallâ€"letting ito bed and crawling rs. It was pr»- 1 killed, movinc After the place Ian occupied 150 but whether she {ed awake houn- .r informant. do“ f Scott’s Emu]. disease while it .bont Shaken. W83 It on DAYo 1 won ’ct. .lrooms in the 16- an appegr. [l u morons. unnougn 3131111 on 14â€"15 RI them 30 batthoy 2:3.- :-. I 2-- Ol't‘ )VE snakes snakes after where fl hind hem re VC!’ â€no rat an 3W 1.9 D McIntyre’s Block, Lowor'l'oivn, Dur- ham. Collection and Agency prompt†attended to. Searches made at the try Utï¬ce. A 9r. Conveyancot,olc. Private“ "% lnan. Old accounts and ï¬sh“ 0‘ 1“IN“ collected on commiunon. Fun! b‘~".‘“‘ht and sold. Immune. Agent, etc. ‘Jflwe~.\1acxonzio’o Old sand, Lower Town, Durham, Ont. D (Mice over Gordon’s new Jewellery ï¬gure, Luwer Town, Durham. Any amount wt muney tu loan at 5 per cent. on farm pruperty. AMES BROWN. ISSUEB 0F Marriage Licenses. Durham 09‘- L'GH menu, DURHAM. . Laud Valuator and Licenced Anchor)- eer m the County or Grey. Saba pronpuy attended to and notes “IM- \HI .\I{Y PUBLIC, COMMISSION- ; er Conveyanror. etc Privateâ€! U ensed vAuctionoe'r {oi the County 0‘ Urey, Land Valuator, Bailifl of m and Dnmmn, Court Sales and all owe: mutton y'wmiy attended toâ€"huzboot "form unmixed if required. FUCKâ€"FIRST DOOR EAST 0]? the Durham Pharmacy. Cslder’s Block. Residenceâ€"Lamina: Street, near the Station. ONOR GRADUATE OF TORON- u University; Graduate of Boy}! L‘Ullege of Dental Sutgeom of Queue. Rummvâ€"Calder Block. over Post Oflce. 1 rice over McLachlnn’a store. Oï¬ce hours, a to 10 a. In., 2 to 4 p. In. and 7 to9 p. In. Special attention given to diseases of women and children. Residence op- posite Presbyterian Chntch. w. G. Pickering, 0.0.8., I..D.S. Th“ srhqml in c nipped ‘01 full 1..“ “Yb, "1" Matriculat on work, under m mm of competent. teacher! for th‘ “ Intending students Iboukl one: 0‘ W“ term. or as soon bite! .0 WHO. Foes, $1.00 per “a. vm. Jomws'rox. 0 1'- “RE. M. iaus and Surgeons, Ontario. Oflice hours 1’ m 12 a. m.. 2 to 4p. m. Residence and utï¬ce, 01d Bank buildings Upper Tuwu, Durham. Telephone No.1 . DURHAM SCHOOL. M U Jun-t distance east of Knapp’sâ€" Hate-l: Lamhtun Street, Lower Town. Durham. Office huurs from 12 to 2 o’clock. Drs. Jamieson Macdonald. mum: AND RESIDENCE A THE JOB. - : DEPIRTFIENT “IE3 “2 even mono" momma: mm canouucu mm mm, um m DURHAM, ONT. 111E DUMB] flHflflNIflLE AMES CARSON, DURHAM, LIC- Pn~nfl Alminnnnr (at th. County 0. J. P. Telford. mmst, SOLICITOR: qrc. ARRISTER, SOL_ICITO_B, £30.. Arthur Gun, 3. D. HysICIAN_ 5mg SURGEON, gr. J. G. Hutton, M. D., O. M. Thou. Allan. Principal. Mlu Lick. B A, Classics and lulu-o. lln “‘71, o o ' ls completely naked with EPA‘RT‘1ENT all NdW TYPE, thus at. {owing facilities to: taming out Fiat clans thrk. w BER, COLLEGE PHYSIC- Dr. T. 6. Holt, L. D. S. G. Lefroy McCaul. Emma AND Pnopnm'ron. . Tm: Cmvwlcu: will b. .IPTWN address, free of postage, (0:71:12 . . . . year, payable fn Mumâ€"’h .3, ,,_.d if not. 59 pan}. '1 be dam to whicrmyy g-n is prnd 19 dcrfotcd by the number or. flu Lon-:1. No papers!» «2 [named an"! an arm, cxocpt at the Output 0! the proprietor. """" lme lo: the ‘ . . iine each 9:: Professional card er annmn. Adv“ s will be publbhcd ' Transient no! 6, â€\JC.ҠCCDIS |u )s'cqucm memo: Medical Directory. Dania! Directory w. 8. Davidson. . mtcs {oryc-arYy advenm . . t ) the ofï¬ce. ‘ {'m' lxcrti‘c M! {M 30 ensure inaction in cunem d be brought in not 133.: [ban TUB“ A, A. H. Jackson. Legal Directory. Miscellaneous. “K IRWVIN 13 P0 31.13118. 1 25 CCHI In! ‘CC II 0T I“ "1 am afraid 1 have been a hard wom. an all my life, Betty!" she said. as she lay in bed and stared at the girl with a pathetic expression in her eyes. “Per- haps, it I'd had children, I would have been gentler; but we Revelsworths are not a gentle family. ‘I work and wait' is our motto. you know. and our crest a mailed hand clenched.,which means. as I take it, ‘and, it necessary, I strike too â€"strike hard where I hate.’ My grand- father Isaac adopted the crest and mot- to when he took his wife's name a hun- dred years ago. We have been a tough hard family. Very soon there will be only two of us leftâ€"Victor and Dud- 19’.†“And Francesca." ' “And Francesca.†Mrs. Revelsworth repeated atteraslight pause. “I should like to have seen those boys married. and ,young children growing up about them to carry on the name." “You will. dear Mrs. Revelsworth-o you will, some day.†. The old woman shook her head. ‘,'I‘hey are both bewitched," she mur- mured. "I should have liked my nep- hew Dudley to have taken a fancy to you, Betty; and I think you would have liked it too. You have been a good daughter to me for live yearsâ€"you are a kind unselï¬sh girl. I am airiad, dear, I have been hard with you at times." “You have always been kind," ex- claimed Bettyâ€"“very kind! I can't bear to hear you talk like this." __-‘-_. n...- -A-_ discovered that it was Mrs. Revels- Iorth who lay the". paying for breath. my 'I- W v. .- -â€"â€" â€" wâ€" “I should hnve loved to!†little Betty answered irankly. “But nienee, please, dear flu. Revel-worth, never let any one lvnow I said no! He doesn’t care in the least little bit (or me ln that way. ad I would not for the world thet he should ever know I hnd been silly en- ough to fall in love with him.†“ He ehnll never know it from me. my little girl." unrxnret Revelsworth aid gently. on the potted Betty's hand. “But I wieh things had turned out otherwloe, t- _And now you must say , A-.. 1 o--l mnrn ml! “In†W w â€"â€"._ ‘Good night' to a“... for i feel worn out. We old thing: cannot stand excite. w.- .v â€"-â€"- '-_ “Would you have untried my nep- w Dudley it he had uked you ?" Mrs aim-worm “le that n slight pause. a AA... “.-'A â€A... At a little before her usual time Mrs. Revelsworth retired to her room. All her life she had dispensed with the ser- .vices of a maid, but Betty Mannington invariably brushed and arranged her hair, and placed her watch. night-light. candle and matches, barley-water and novel on the table by her bedside. and kissed her the last thing before draw- ing the curtains of her bed. On this particular night the old lady was very silent, and more than once sighed deeply, but. somewhat to Betty’s surprise. she did not allude to the sub- ject which was troubling her. v. v ' â€"'°â€"' V The question puzzled and troubled the old lady. That interview with Francesca had disturbed and agitated ner greatly. At dinner she could eat nothing, and in the drawing-room ai- terwards neither her knitting nor Bet- ty's playing could exercise their wontcd soothing effect upon her unquiei mind. Her letter to the lawyer Simp- son was written and entrusted to Dud4 iey's hands to post. True to her prom- ise, Mrs. Revelsworth did not conï¬de one word of what had passed between Francesca and herself to any inmate oi her house that evening; and, although little Betty not unnaturally connected the interview between aunt and niece with Miss Revelsworth’s non-appear- ance at table, as well as with Mrs. Rev- elsworth’s letter to the lawyer, she was left to her own surmises on the subject and in no way enlightened by her cm- player. But what could he the meaning of that look of triumph Francesca’s face had worn when she said “Good nightâ€? Dessed. Again and Minimum smote her for her harsh treatment at her beautiful niece. But slapson had not yet been summoned. Alter dinner the would write to him. she decided. The ï¬rst dinner-bell had rung immedi- ately upon the conclusion of her inter: View With Francesca, and there had been no time as yet for letter-writing. When Simpson came to-morrow, she would lay all the {acts of the case be« fore him, and consult with him as to a. suitable provision for her niece. Ot course her devotion to that dirty-look- ing old invalid nurse had something touching about it, and presumably it was not her fault that her two matriv menial ventures had been so unfortmri ,__ w...â€" y-wuuuubuCDDo Victor and Dudéey, for their part, were almost equally disappointed by Pranceaca’s non-appearance at table. The former was buoyed up by his be. flat in the secret understanding which Ousted between htmselt and his beam flful cousin, while 3th brother Dudley longed against his better judgment to 380 and speak with Francesca again. «3w as aluminum" smile as she Ieft‘hen unnt’s presence for the last time. Dinner was a. dull function that even- ing. Each one 01 any anxious and agitated; and little Betty, who, as n rule, did her best to smooth over all difï¬culties, had not yet umciently recanted from the previous night’s ghost-adveniuro to exercise he! gifts of socihl tact and pieasantness. 171-.A-â€"- ‘ “£3 'a ’d‘isdainful'smil’e as she Anâ€"LD- “u 7 ‘ “My dear Mrs. Revelsworthâ€"I re- ceived your letter ten days ago. and I am now in a position to answer the in- quiries you made with regard to your niece Francesca. or. as I see you call her, Frances. the only daughter of your late brother-in-law Harold. My affec- tion and esteem for your dead husband and for you are so strong that I cannot help regrettin the task you have as- signed me. A the same time I feel in- cumbent upon me in the circumstances you state to tell you the whole truth. I knew Harold Revelsworth at one time fairly wellâ€"a handsome, pleasant. erratic. almost a brilliant man. but hampered by a sensitive and irritable temper, by extravagant tastes, and by a craze for scientiï¬c experiments which half ruined him. You puule me great- ly by your reference to his invalid yid- "Graham Andr'ew Barker.†The contents of this letter tilled Bet- ty with the deepest concern. Piecing it together with Mrs. Reveisworth’s de- mand for an interview with her niece immediately the latter returned from town, with Francescs’s absence from dinner, Mrs. Revelsworth’s subsequent silence and evident agitation, and hen summons of her lawyer Mr. Simpson,‘ Betty arrived not unnstnrslly st the conclusion that Francescs wss deliber‘ stely misrepresenting the sctusl (sets when she asserted thst her last hit 'U ‘U U ow. His wife, an extremely lovely Ital- ian lady of high rank. died of malarial fever fully twenty years ago. I have often seen her tomb. inscribed with her name in full. She was one of the Con- ti family. ‘ As far as I can recollect. your niece. who was a strikingly beau- tiful child, was brought up by an old nurse. Very shortly after poor Har- old's sudden death Miss Revelsworth eloped. so I heard. with a young Italian tenorâ€"a handsome dissipated fellow. of no fortune, family, or education, a member of a traveling opera company. A few years later I myself recognized her driving about Rome in a showy carriage beside a worthless young gam- bler. a man of good family, a younger son, so I was told. of an Irish peer. She was subsequently seen in his com- pany in Paris and at Nice. I believe the man’s name to be Devereux. but of this I am not sure. I am sorry to give you so had an account of the girl, but I have to speak as I know; and. if, as you say, two of your nephews are in love with her, it is only fair to them that she should at least be asked to ex- plain these suspicious incidents in her career. Hoping that she will be able to do so to your complete satisfactisa, I remain. dear Mrs. Revelsworth, “Always very sincereiyuyours. It was long before Betty could decide as to what was her duty with regard to the letter in question. Clearly it did not belong to Francesca, and as clearly it concerned her. for it was. as Betty knew full well. the only letter from ltaly which had arrived at Revelsworth House on that particular day, and Francesca's anxiety to possess it was abundantly manifest. 0n the evening of the funeral. having bad the open en- velope and letter in her possession, un- read. for two whole days, Betty decided that she would best carry out her late friend and employer's wish by reading it, and, in the solitude of her, own apartment. she drew the thin crackling beet from its covering and read as tolv 0W8â€" Even in the distraction of her sincere grief Betty recalled the fact that Mrs. Revelsworth had herself received a let- ter from Rome on the day in question; and. when subsequently Francesca beg- ged to be allowed to search in Mrs. Reveisworth’s bedroom for the missing letter. a sense of her duty to her dead relative made little Miss Mannington glance ï¬rst about the room for her own satisfaction, with the result that. within the pages of the library novel which she herself had placed upon the table by Mrs. Revelsworth's bedside, she discovered a letter in a man’s hand-writing. bearing the post-mark “Rome," and addressed, not to Fran- cesca. but to “Mrs. Margaret Revels- worth." Almost before the breath was out of Mrs. Revelsworth’s body, and long be- fore Betty had recovered from the first cruel shock of her sudden death, Fran- cesca had been discovered by Susan tho parlormaid on her knees in the dead woman’s drawing-room, huntlni high and low for a letter with an talian post-mark, which she alleged she had dropped during her last interview with her aunt, and far the recovery of which she offered a reward of a guinea. Dudley was clearly struck by the feeling and tenderness displayed by his cousin; but little Betty, ordinarily the most sympathetic of mortals, rcddened and look d extremely uncomfortable. Fortunately Miss Revelsworth was too much occupied in noting the effect of her words upon her male hearer to taka any particular notice of Betty’s de- meanor. Betty was such a dear unsu- spicous little thing, so devoted to her, that it did not occur to Francesca to mark especially her reception of these confldences. But the fact was that something had happened which had materially shaken Betty's belief in her beautiful friend’s veracity. CHAPTER XX. Francesca Revelsworth’s grief oven tier aunt's death was extremely touch. mg. n.- tle funeral, pouring out the tea, Ind looking. in her flowing draperies of iunereal crane and cashmere, more dazâ€" Iiingiy fair than ever; “but on the very day of her death we had a long talk-o a real conï¬dential talk, and for the first time we began to understand each other. I told herâ€-â€"and she bent her head and spoke in low sad accentsâ€"- “the whole story of my wrethced past experiences. At ï¬rst she was cold and‘ hard, but gradually her sympathy was awakened, and she spoke to me with such real motherly tenderness that I burst into tears. Indeed I was so agi- tated that, if you remember, I stayed upstairs all the rest of the evening. My mother was far from well and wanted me; but, had I known that I should never have seen aunt Margaret alive again. I would not for the world 1have spent the evening away from er!†0ng atom: for help, the young girl flung her arms about the elder woman and strove to lift her in the direuion at the bed. But, by the time that help came and lights were lit and a 'loctor sent for, the mistress of Revelsworth House was past all human aid. From Icute and burning pain she passed to a comatose condition, and before the day broke her spirit had passed away while her body lay supported in Betty’s lov- ins arms. Sometimes I think that men who have been murdered for their gold. and it luried in an old iron tea-kettle where it could not be got, would not rest, whc ther in heaven or doan in the pit, until he has told it to some- one on earth, and sometimes that poor troublesome spirit has to come and tackle many peOple that dare not say boo to it, and we all know that those spirits cannot tell their griev- ances without someone enquiring what ahey want. It must be very hard indeed for the poor things to have to come back so often and they generally make their appearance in a grave-yard. a swamp or a rackety old frame house, and those that do not believe in them are always skittish when they pass such places, but you take one who believes in ghosts or witches and they generally stand their ground. yes. you never heard of aGerman or a Pennsylvania Dutch man starting 03 on a run. Way back in the years of the ï¬fties there lived a beautiful young woman between Camps Creek and Hanover. Her parents, like all the new settlers. had plenty to eat such as it was, and their garments were made of blue duck, and they were pleased to get such for Sunday or a week day. But this young woman was only ï¬fteen years old, and she, like many other good innocent girls, was forced to eat the forbidden fruit. One dark night the poor girl was taken from her home by her betrayer. and her poor distracted parents did not ï¬nd it out until next morning, and their dear girl was never seen or heard of again, but her ghost was often seen in the above mentioned pine woods. Now dear readers, don’t shake your heads and say there is no such thing, for I can give you the names of team- sters and farmers that saw this same ghost. It would make its appearance and then disappear among the bushes often to return two or three times. To-day those pine woods are all cleared up. and the pine stumps are about the only land mark left. and what a mystery it will always be to know where the poor girl’s ghost went. We all think that her bones are under the ground where the big pine trees once stood. and where the plough. cattle and sheep often pass over them and will do so until the end of the world. Mr. James Morri- son, a pioneer teamster of Walkerton, will tell you how he saw the ghost. and both he and his team were so frightened that they left so quickly that several boxes of goods fell ofl .his wagon and left them there the bal- ance of the night The writer was teaming in those early days but he did not see anything that was as bad to look at as himself. It is not my intention to keep you reading half the day before I tell you what the spook was, but as a general thing when an editor or correspond- ent tell in print big things, the read- er will twist their mouth and stick out their tongue and say it is just like them, I do not believe there is any truth in it from start to ï¬nish, but dear readers I am going to give you names of old settlers that went through that lonely pine woods at night and the spook was seen by them. Neatly all the English speak- ing peOple have no faith in spooks. but for all, if they happen to be in a grave-yard or any doleful place at night and hear a chipmonk or a rab- bit, they take to their heals and run for all they are worth, but talk to a German or Dutch man and they will tell you or quote scripture about the evil spirits that were on the earth in the days of the apostles. My dear friends. this letter will remind the old pioneers of the early part of 1850, when there was a pine woods about two miles west of Dur- ham road this pine woods was about one-half mile long. and when early night came on. it was a dark and as skittish a place as one would see in many days travel. The pine stumps were very large and the roots ex- tended many feet. The roads were so muddy and deep that ayoke of‘ oxen and cart could not be seen by travellers coming from either way. until they were within a few feet of} each other, and often we could see‘ the driver standing on a stump with a blue beech as big as a ï¬shing pole slashing it up and down on the poor beasts, when they were in the mud so deep that it was often a diï¬icuty for to get out of it. It makes me often think that Our Father in heaven has bolted the doors on many cruel teamsters. The wild animals. such as bears, wildcats and panthers lived in these woods and fared so well on the new settlers’ hogs, sheep and chickens that they put one in mind of pigs in the clover. Often berry- pickers have been run right up to their shanties, and I have been told that travellers, who carried pork or beef on their backs, were often com- pelled to climb trees. and were glad to get off by losing their meat. “I require your presence to-morrow gt noon.†the aid lady had written to Ir. Simpson, the damper little gray- halred gentleman. those ï¬rm had looked after the Reveisworth legal ins temsts for half a century. “Certain facts have come to my knowfedga which render it imperative that I should destroy my existing will and make another: so phrase come prepar- ed. not to advise. but. to assist me in Lhisuudutukiug." ' ‘ mm her aunt had been wholly a‘ plena- at and friendly one. From the lawyer hlmsell there was little to learn, but that little was un- portant in the light 01 what Betty now know. A SPOOK NEAR DURHAM. (By Mc'l‘uï¬, in Hanover Post.) The National Live Stock Associa- tion points out that †There are sev- eral classes of shoddy. The best is made from the sweepings of tailor shops, and the emptyings of ragbags in civilized countries. The worst. ~which constitutes the greater part ; used in America, is from the rotten ,cast 06 rags of beggars and the lazar and pest houses of Europe. having in ,them all kinds and amounts of ï¬lth sand disease. These are gathered by 1 rag-pickers from the slums and alleys and sent to America in ship-loads. where they are purchased by a certain class of manufacturers, who, in order to take the curse of the name. term the stud “re used wool ï¬bre.†It must be remembered, however, that in most instances, when tearing this shoddy to pieces, preparatory to again weaving it into cloth. it is found to be so rotten and dead. that, nothing is produced but dust, and in order to get two ends, so that it can In spun. a minimum portion of wool or cotton is mixed with it. in order that it may is held together. The next step alter weaving carries it to unscruplous dealers. who sell this production to the laboring men, and in fact to all classes of society, for “ pure wool,†thus getting for a suit worth three or four dollars, more than three times this amount. To encourage such a fraud is simply put- ting the lousy rags of European paupers in competition with the sheep and wool growers of America and elsewhere. and robbing the consumo ers who wear woollen garments by selling them the stuï¬ under s misre- presentation.†If the foregoing statements are (sets, and it is source- ly likely the Live Stock Aesocistion would publicly state them unless they were trueâ€"It can be readily seen thst. apart from the (nod end mis- representation in the mutter, there is a. considersble source of danger to the publio_heslth th_rough_infection. If your child comes in from play coughing or showing evidences of an approaching attach of Grippe, Sore Throat. or sickness of any kind. ï¬rst thing get out your bottle of NERVI- It will, I believe, be readily admit- ted that acme shoddy is better than many low grade wools, and when made into cloth, would make a better article than the short staple low grade wool; but this is one of the anomalies one has to contend with. and should not be a stumbling block to legislation on the question. Compliments of F. W. Hodson. Live Stock Commissioner. mum. Rub the chest and neck with Nerviline. and give internal doses of ten drOps of Nerviline in sweetened wnter every two hours. This will prevent any serious trouble. No liniment or pain reliever equals Pol- son’s Nerviline._wl1icb is s. neeessity Strenuone eï¬orte will. no doubt, be made in all countries where legio- lation is proposed to prevent the con- sideration of the subject: but the difï¬culties in the way of formulating a workable enactment cannot be un~ surmountable. and I sincerely hope that this paper may do something to hasten the object we have in View. ALFRED Manama" Shewebury, England. in every household. Large bottle} con only 26c. Act. That such mark, label or tag, shall be so attached to such goods or fabric so that it cannot be detached except by design ; and such label shall accurately state in plain printed letters or ï¬gures the constituent ï¬- bres or other materials or substances of which it is composed, or the rela- tive proportion per cent of each.†The penalty for non-compliance with the provisions of the prOposed law are thus set forth :â€"“ That any man- ufacturer, merchant, importer. or other person, who shall wilfully, recklessly, or carelessly. mark incor- rectly any cloths. goods or fabrics. or any article manufactured, or in the process of manufacture there- from. required by this Act to be labelled or marked, so as to show a larger per cent of wool or a smaller per cent of shoddy or cheaper ï¬bre or material, in any manner than will, or is calculated to. deceive or mislead the purchaser thereof. shall be guilty af a misdemeanor, and shall be ï¬ned not less than $50.00, and not more than $5,000.00 for each oï¬ence.†or intended to be some: woollens or1 woollen goods, not made wholly of] new or unused sheep’s wool. shall so mark, label, or tag such goods. as that they may be readily distinguish-l ed from genuine wools or woolléns, l as deï¬ned 1n the ï¬rst section of this} As an eptome of the measure, the;: following 18 extracted: "A“ manu- facturers of goods or fabrics of any} kind, whatsoever. made in imitation? of xx oollen goods or fabrics, or goods? which. when so made, are calculated} or intended to be sold as woollens or With this object in View. the Hon. Chas. H. Crosvenor, at the request of the National Live Stock Associa- tion. recently introduced into the House of Representatives of the United States. a hill to provide for federal inSpection of mixed goods and . the proper marking of the same. which is known as H. R. 6.3651. '1‘ he. 1 purpose of this bill is to make it pos- isihls for the consumer to know what he is purchasing by having the ‘ goods stamped so as to indicate; whether it is all wooi. or if not. then .‘ the percentage of shoddy or waste.i There is no objection made to the use of cotton waste. mungo shoddy, c. ., c. . in the manufacture of textile fabrics. wl en the fact l8 made kno“ u to the consu1ner.a11d 11 here hand is not perpetrated by selling these mix-; tures as all wool fabrics. Proposed Legislamon re So-cauedl Valuable Advice to [others “ Woollcn Goods." DURHAM - AND . MT. All work wax-noted. Order. “I. by Messrs. Bucky und Rollo. Direct importers from European. American and Cnnaditn quart-ii. 150 MAPS 0F DNIAHI JOHN LIVINGST! MASSEY-I BICYCLESâ€"new 3nd second ll-ï¬ always on hund. Repairing do" promptly nod well- Fire Insurance at low 8 pér ytrd. Table Linen, Minch wide, 2i‘c per yard. . Table Linen. 68inch wide. 50¢ per yui- Women’s Straw Sailors. 35c up to 75c and DURHAM MARBLE GRANITE Our New Prints an i now in for Inspection P Lace Curtains at 2 SALADA CEYLON TEA. black 0 mixed, at 25c, 30c and 40¢ a panic SHOES: w. n. BEAN! He Sells Cheap 1 . Lock Drawer 28. HANOVER. ONT. ALL KINDS of business deals: negoti ated quietly and carefully. . 22 years experience. “ Always. pram... never negligent." Late-t Design In Mal-ken. Ila-dunno DOM! Collected, no‘ charge: if as money made. 2w acres. A company owns flu: and will almost give it â€my. Man: other good properties for sale a». autumn. he,“ Lou at very low rates At the Haley-Berri: Show- rooms to the former: who. purchue the ï¬at 150 beilev Of 60 lhe. or more each of the {unions Plymouth Binder Twine. Cell eerly end don't be disappointed. We guer- entee the best twine mode or sold for the prices uked. The Haloolm Camemn 100 acre above Durham on Gurafran Ron Cream Separators, Organs“ and Singer Sewing Hashim» elm}: kept in flock. us our Muuy-Bcrris Iowan. nuke: sud Binders. They wfl interest you. THE HanoverConveyancc CALDEBS BLOCK. (EAST) ROBINSON count, 'ES' DON’T FORGET TB} ' " Big 4 †when in no“ of a new pair of Shoes for th spring. We have ’em. acre farm in Beatingâ€"k- shape. H. H. MILLER ' Miller 0 . WORKS. 25c. 65c. 75c. 90c and â€.2 . CAMER’E _’ 1 ml. n 4'