’k Lot For Sale. arms For Sale. [ILLS AXD}!E1FERS RIG! RBI from Imported Stock. ousmua Bogus, 11.1], AA..-__I_ .n “V Farm for Sale. CENTRAL_ PART Lots for Sale. W anted. "O r Sale. Sheep for Sale. NUMBER Srï¬rpnp no b" ‘9‘ {Limit 13 N033]! Houses to Let Stock for Sale THUS.DAV19. I N. D. 1%.. 0109018 Dumm- l forms 0“" â€d not particulars nDD ' Io -in Tia Town of D!!!- f GreY. 601mm“! ‘ or terms sud [I'm deroad or Sale. VABSI VTER. Du!“- ll Cows. Terms HUYLE (Imp RAMS. YOI ACRLAXI 'icovillo P. 0. OF PROP- m ELFORD. it 0th. "xiii"; Durham MI NEAR DBR’S 0P 16 Con two Six 1' at at G A RAJ .81'20 we“ 103 IMPLEMENTS Ihe Sherlock Organs. :2‘;il‘fr-‘Ir‘r‘{=‘r‘: Sewing Machines. Melrme Separators. CLOTHING line of Ready-made suite, 3 hr 0 u- sortmont of Heavy Woollen a nod Mitts. etc.. etc. Just the things you want outside in the cold. TRY US FOB Gnuurnum of all kinds. .They’re alwa 5 fresh. Teas a specxalty here. ry them. DU BEAM , . CAMPBELL, DURHAM, ONT. Agent. The Big4 Pure wool blaqqtets §4x§4 White and grey flannelette blankets ll 4 size .......................... _Bod comforters well ï¬lled with all .white ï¬lling. ze 54372 ....................... s1 2 " 60x72 ...... _ ............... v â€at 4 " 66:72 .................. .....$22 " 72172 extra heavy .......... 330 Size 54x72 ............. . .......... . “ 60372 ...... _ ............... v: " 66x72 .................. . . . . . I " 72172. extra heavy .......... 1 For caperinea. satin lined. high : er’ ........................ . . . O I ' rtnï¬'g from .................... W at 1‘ US FOR 030013111193 'ur’ruï¬'s from .................... $1. 50 u; 'oman’ 8 dress skirts in black only at 33 50 and $4. 50. A bargain. mid“ line ofmen ’9 knit top shirts and no r tormwc. up of all kinds for the Falm, the Home and the Dairy. BLANKETS CALDER BLOCK. He Sells Cheap. â€" THE GROCER â€" k‘hmaker. Jeweiler. OphCiah. The very best Watches manufactmed are shnwn In our asaortmem. This does nor. signify high prices. To Watch pur chnuers we pars ma†\ guayantee satisfamion in the fullest. sense. of flip urm Call in. carry the best Blankets y can buy, and Woollen all grades and colors. This Swan’s'l’uro Honey. AGENCY. H. BEAN C. no .7 mm 66x84....... 68x84........ ....... Silï¬eau ................ V8L4093c ............ $225030} I heavy .......... 33 (1) sad satin lined. high storm u-oi .............. ..... $5.50 u; ONTARIO. with all pm- .3! 20 3;; no' big forges to overwork the Itomach, but there are I11 meals a day of moderate also. Some patients can eat tnll meals and then swallow thir- ty-eix rawegcladay. Thealmotthe treatment in these eanltarla la to get the slot man to drink three quarts of milk and eat a dozen raw eggs a day ln addition to his regular meals of alm- ple tood. . I_ _L,_‘ 20!; have to eat at a unltarlum for mumptivea, hungry or “not. frhgro lam} And you must eat meat and plenty ’ of it. Don’t cut the fat 01!. The cow got most of the good out of the lean in her lifetime. The tat is what will do you good. All that there is to cod liver oil that makes it worth while is that it is a tat easy to assimilate. Ba- con fat is nearly as easy to digest and about 500 times as easy to take. Fruits and salads you may eat mere- ly to amuse yourself and pass the time. But you are wasting stomach room on them. Milk, eggs, meat and hard breads for you if you are to get well. Not a great deal at a time, but often.â€"-Everybody’s Magazine. What Chemistry May Do. It has been said that a century is the natural duration of the human body; that it decays earlier because it does not receive proper care in health and disease. In regard to this latter, here 1 is a suggestion from a man who pro- .tests against so much research in elec- tricity to the neglect of chemistry. He says there are seventy-two elements of matter capable of entering into an inï¬nity of combinations and concludes therefore “that a form of matter must be capable of existence, and must therefore be within the power of chem- ical research to discover and prepare, which will possess any assignable or conceivable potency Br influence over any form or species of matter, dead or living.†If this be true, then it is pos- sible to chemistry to ï¬nd substances , which will neutralize all the poisons Egenerated by disease germs and kill g disease the moment it is discovered.â€" i Exchange. The Omnivore's: Korean. The Korean is omnivorous. Birds of the air, beasts of the ï¬eld and ï¬sh from the seaâ€"nothing comes amiss to his palate. Dog meat is in great re‘ quest at certain seasons. Pork and beef with the blood undrained from the carcass, {owls and gameâ€"birds cooked with the lights, head and claws intactâ€"-tish sun dried and highly mal- odorousâ€"all are acceptable to him. Cooking is not always necessary. A species of small ï¬sh is preferred raw, dipped into some piquant sauce. Other dainties are dried seaweed, shrimps. vermicelli, pine seeds. lily buds and all vegetables and cereals. The excesses make the Korean martyrs of indiges- tion. A Mean Husband. “I think old Kreezus has the queer- est way of teasing his wife I ever heard of.†“I thought he was fond of her.†“He is, but he likes to get a joke on her. You know she is sensitive about her age. Well, he has let everybody know that when they were married he gave her a magniï¬cent necklace of dia- .-..L'-- n monds,“each diamond representing a year of her age, and he adds one to the string every time she has a birth- day. Imagine how the poor woman is torn between her desire to display the necklace and the fear that when she wears it everybody will be counting the diamonds.†Touching-II. There is a disease called “touchi- ness,†a disease which, in spite of its innocent name. is one of the gravest sources of restlessness in the world. Touchiness, when it becomes chronic. is a morbid condition of the inward disposition. It is self love inflamed to the acute point. The cure is to shift the yoke to some other place; to let men and things touch us through some new and perhaps as yet unused part of our nature; to become meek and lowly in heart while the old nature is becoming numb from want of use.â€" Exchange. at om-o." , “Grout tlmndomtion. woman. how can you ask for a gown and coat when you have to testify in my bankruptcy hearing next week ‘3’ “ h- “‘.¢ llllll H I v “I simply have to have them. Do you think I can face the people in the courtroom when I am wearing my old clothes? The Charm of His Hamlet. Concerning Hamlet as played by the late Wilson Barrett a little story is told in the greenrooms where the ac- tor was known. One of the ancients was talking of the Hamlets he had seen on the stage. “Well,†he said. “I’ve seen dozens of ’em, but of all the hactors wot played Hamlet give me Barrett. He was always done ten min- utes afore any of the others.†Rent In Bl. Art. ’ Musicianâ€"I tell you, ladies, we art- ists ca’nnot succeed unless we give up our very souls to our art. Why, last week I was so rapt in a composition that I was playing that a thief stole the violin from under my cpln, and I never noticed it. ' Proved. Professorâ€"Which is the most deli- cate of the senses? Pupilâ€"The touch. Professorâ€"Prove it. Pupilâ€"When you sit on a pin, you can't see it, you can’t hear it, you can’t taste it, but it’s there. 66' S’itefll. Miss Joyceâ€"Yea, Jack and I are to become partners for life. Miss Means-â€" And you will be the senior ’ partner, now ntcul ,. The Eternal Womunly. must have a new gown and coat ‘5†1m A saint would have been driven fran- tic by the girl. I threw up my hands, ï¬guratively, groaned literally and with an expletive not at all in harmony with the best ethics of polite society declar- ed to my tortured soul that she had the sphinx beaten a mile. wrâ€"---â€" â€" v -_ The same not being an elegant thing ‘ to do, I excuse it only on the ground that I was worried to the point of ir- responsibility. I swore by all the gods, from the little mud god of the Digger Indian to the war god Thor, never to have anything more to say to her. Fif- teen minutes later 1 was back on the hotel veranda watching that tantaliz- ing, inscrutable glint in her eye. For I was human, and she was very dear .v luv. And the worst of it was she knew it. Once let a girl know you love her and you are lost. “And you don’t wish me to go out with Mr. Blakeslee?†she said with pro- voking mildness. “And why, please?†‘ -â€"_- “4‘0".- “Indeed! And will you kindly tell me just when I promised to marry you, Mr. Jack Weston '2†_ - ‘ L A..-- She wasn’t‘ angry. 1 Dan nor even that satisfaction. But I was both an- gry and in love. “Youâ€"well, you know it’s as good as settled,†I began, but she interrupted “Asâ€"goodâ€"asâ€"settled!†she murmur- ed dreamily. “Watch me now!†she said. She lifted her hand toward a brilliant butterfly which had alighted upon a rose at the edge of the porch. Her ï¬ngers Opened. “See!†she said breathlessly. “I reach my handâ€"my ï¬n- gers nearly touch him. IIaVe I got him, though? It seems all I have to do is to close my ï¬ngers soâ€"ah!†The gaudy creature eluded her just as her ï¬ngers brushed his striped wings. “I didn’t get him!†she sighed. “And I was so sure of him!†She jumped up, gave me a teasing smile and ran down the steps. Pres- ently I saw her with Blakeslee going toward the boat landing. A little later they were moving briskly up the river, and then I sawâ€"â€" “u“ ‘uv-u _ .- It made my heart stop. Blakeslee palpably was the raw est dub in a ca- noe, and a canoe with an unskillful MISS MILWOOD, STRANGELY QUIET, HUD- DLED IN THE BOTTOM OF THE CANOE. hand on the paddle is about as dan- gerous as a powder mill with a live coal knocking about in it. C AI - I startedâ€"vinroluntarily toward the boat landing where my own canoe lay. Then I turned on my heel and stamped back. Not to save a thou- sand livesâ€"my own includedâ€"would I be seen following them. They and all the rest of the world would at- tribute it to jealousy, andâ€"- Etc-tr“-â€" And dâ€"éeï¬ down ifxvmy poor, aching, bedeviled heart I knew it would be the I dug up my pipe and polluted the sweet summer air for rods around. I determined to be a pessimist and a cynic and spend the rest of my life sneering at everything I used to like. I jeered at the idea of human felicity and wished I’d never been born. I had what is technically known as the mollygrubs. And thenâ€" ° Suddenly a great light broke over me, and I saw where I had been playing the fool instead 0! the wise general. I had been giving her all the adt'antage, and as I reviewed my case I grew ut- terly and thoroughly ashamed of my- self. The spectacle of a great six foot grownup man toddling around, he- seeching a small girl to love him! How could she, when I was so devoid of stamina as that? And then Heterm‘ined that, come what'might, I would do so no more. It might break my heart, but I was deter- mined. Then, too, my heart was all crushed to frazzles anyway, so a little more breaking would be a mere inci- dent not worth considering. “v“. â€V- v- v A mutter of thunder in the west, and I glanced up in apprehension. A black cloud was rolling up through the pines, and already the wind was beginning to sway the tree tops. I rose and looked up th river. No canoe was in sight. Fill with alarm I- climbed into my I had not even I was both an- oualy up the stream ahead of the rising Half a mile up the river, and no sign of the canoeists. The wind swept down and almost instantly the water was beaten into whitecaps, and the little shell bobbed like a cork, but I held it straight ahead and watched it with the instinct of one trained to the paddle. And then the rain came! As I rounded a bend in the channel I saw them. They were huddled under a heavy pine near the water’s edge. The waves were trying to drag the ca- noe away from the bank, and Blakesâ€" lee, the picture of woe, was struggling to get it ashore. I ran my canoe close in and sprang upon the bank before they saw me. It was growing dark, what with the storm and the lateness of the hour. Miss Milwood turned and gave a glad (2"). O "Oh, Jack,†she said piteously, “I’m so glad! We’ve been unable to get home! Our canoe was beaten back by the storm, and it upset and we were thrown into the water, and it was a mercy it was near the shore, else we’d have drowned !†I‘How did you escape?†I asked stiflly. “Weâ€"we waded! And I’m chilling to death, J ack!†Her lips were blue with cold, and she shivered miserably. Poor Blakeslee was in no'better plight. I hastened to right the other canoe with Blakeslee’s help. Then I put the luckiess boatman aboard, paddled him across to the mainland and bade him sprint for the hotel and get a roaring ï¬re ready. I then recrossed the river, lifted the terriï¬ed girl into the large canoe, tied the other behind and set out in the teeth of the storm. Doggedly and steadily, keeping as much as possi- ble in the lea of the shore, we crept down the angry sheet of water. Miss Milwood, strangely quiet, huddled in the bottom of the canoe and said not a Word. But I could hear her teeth chattering and I felt love and pity struggling hard with my new resolu- tion to be grimly ï¬rm and uncompro- mising. My muscles were aching and my heart throbbing as though it would burst when at last we drew into the shelter of the honthouse. I fastened the canoes and lifted the wet ï¬gure ashore. ‘5’ .- “Oh, Jack,†she (wavered, “I should have died if you hadn’t’ï¬Ã©- “I beg you won’t mention it, Miss Milwood,†I said with exaggerated po- liteness. It was a mean thing to say. I realized it at the time, but it was nec- essary if I was to crush the ï¬erce long- ing to take her in my arms. " A__‘- I hurried her up to the hotel. From time to time she pushed back her wet hair and gazed at me with a pathetic wistfuluess which I affected not to see. The storm had blown swiftly away, and the big white moon was sailing through the sky dotted with scudding cloud drift. I resigned her to the care of the so-( licitous Mrs. Kerens, who was all sympathy and hustling niotherliness. Blakeslee was there. in an agony of con- trition. I went away, changed my wet clothing and sat down within the half lighted library, gloomily watching the pine logs in the wide ï¬replace. After about an hour a timid hand parted the curtains. and I knew with- out turning my head who it was. She came in slowly. “J ack,†she said treinulously. I sprang to my feet and offered her I chair. She refused to notice it. She held out her hands. I in turn refused to notice them. “Jack,†she whispered, “are you an- gry?" “Not at all, Miss Milwood!†I rejoin- ed, still exeessively polite and proper. “I am merely going to reform.†She knew. For a moment she stood silent with her head bent down. I stood gazing over her head with e‘yes which dared not look for a moment at hers, else all were lost. Then I heard her sob. ‘I \alv .vu“ â€".â€"â€"vâ€" __ “It was a bad day for butterflies,†muttered huskily. She glanced up, and I saw her eyes ï¬lled with tears. “This butterfly is tired, J ackâ€"dear Jack I†she whispered. “It doesn’t want to fly!†“Neverâ€"for always?" “Neverâ€"for always !†It was goodâ€"all that wretchedness and anxiety ot long months, when she lay tight against my breast and I kiss- ed the perverse red lipsâ€"meek now and sweetly submissive. Perverse no more, for the butterfly was caught! A Once Famous City. Caerleon of Roman times and of the days of King Arthur still exists. The famous city that was once the garri- son of the Second Augustan legion, the capital of South Wales and the seat of an archbishopric is now a sleepy little town lying between the industrial centers of I‘ontypool and Newport, but is far enough away from both to have maintained the dignity and pathos of its isolation. Here are to be seen the ruins of a Roman am- phitheater, a great oval bank of earth called Arthur’s Round Table and an enormous mound once fortiï¬ed by the Romans. The ofï¬cers and men of the crack Roman regiment and their wives and families left many remains of their occupationâ€"tombstones, frag-l ments of household utensils, needles and fibulae, remains of villas and baths, lamps, glass and enamel orna- l ments, carvings, rings, seals and the like, to be gazed upon in the cases of the local museum. The whole place, with its combination of hill and wind- ing river, with low“ lying houses nes- tling in abundant trees, forms a pic- -â€" ~-_._LL ture whicl; 'râ€"nany a painter has sought to portray on canvas. Well Prepared For Dinner. Hicksâ€"So you went home with Stingiman for lunch today, eh? What did you get? \Wc-kSâ€"An appetite for dinwn'rwP72"f‘r‘ol“hiu Ledzer. {oiled to. ALL Wonx Gmuum'rmn at “Live and let live†Pawns. Take Care of Your Horses Feet ..... Pm Balgains Read This! The Hanover Conveyancer. Offers the Following : VILLAGE BLACKsmru BUSINESS-â€"â€"NC oppositionâ€"Splendid trade done â€"snap for good man. 100 ACRES near Allan Parkâ€"Fair land â€"-good timberâ€"cheap. 200 ACRES in a Splendid settlementâ€" Normanbyâ€"owner sickâ€"bargain oflered. 100 ACRES in Egremomâ€"about 65 acres cleared. hardwood and swamp timber, good. buildings. good soil. orchard. and well located. price 83200 \Vill ac- cept as low as $500 down and allow balance to run at. 40/0. UUBB, DE'UUKU, a L uuuuvvuu WELLS. Allardero taken an. the old oun- near McGowan'I Mill will be promptly at 100 ACRES in Bentinckarawfox-d P Oâ€"good farmâ€"owner invalid and eager tu sell. 50 ACRES in Egremontâ€"near Hole steinâ€"ï¬ne 50 â€"sell cheap or trade for larger farm. 1 AcammDurhamâ€"near the Cement Works. BESIDES ABOVE I have other lands in Ontario and North West for sale or exchange and CAN SELL You. FARM if you want to sellâ€"no cherge if no sale. MONEY TO LOAN at low rates DEBTS COLLECTEDâ€"Waxnsas DRAWN. All kinds of “ Squere Deals †negot- iated; everything conï¬dentiel. Busi- ness eemblisbed 1884. ‘ The Hanover Conveyunoer. HANOVER. â€" â€" ONTARIO. NO MORE GUESS WORK, in levelling and balanc- ing your horse’s foot. I have the Scientiï¬c Horse Foot Leveller which is the latest and best contrivance for that purpose and will guarantee satisfaction. W. GUTHRIEe . H. MILLER. . H. MILLER. The Blacksmith. DURHAM BAKERY. Sydenham Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Our Compnny pays msrket vslne for Grsin. Hey and Live Stock. Hay in sucks is covered by insur- ance on contents of burn. Fsrm Implements used by hand. Cnrpen- texs’ Tools. Robes. Roots, Grain Bags. Wool. Beef. Pork, Fruit and Flour are psysble in either dwellings or outbuilaings. No other compnny hes the the aboVe in their contact. A Sydenham Policy is the best. For further information address Sept. 6.â€"6mc. Pumps! Pumps! PUMPS THAT PUMP Double Action Lifters. Nov. l5th.â€"3m. DURHAM. ONT. The People’s Grocery Groceries, Teas, Sugars, Coffees, Spices, Tobaccos. A carload just received and kept for sale at the We also handle all kinds of Feed Potatoes, Windsor Salt, Oatmeal Cornmeal, Field and Garden Seeds. Choice Bread andCon- fections constantly on hand. and delivered to all parts of town daily. The Highest Prices Pdd for Fun Produce including Butter and lint :3: oté???£;nof 1'56._tr3' «me 6? OLR NEW SPECIAL IRON n----\.- This is unquestionably one or we BEST PUMPS _it_1 the_ mag-ken -’u'l ullrï¬kinds tnd nuke u SPECIAL Y OF REPAIRING. PROPRIETOR. In FLOUR we handle the Listowel. Hunt’s Muni- tabs und McGowmo’. Goods delivered promptly to ell part: of the town. . WATSON E. H. KINNEE FOR ALL KIEDS OP â€"Pricos right.â€" -- TRY-- DURHAM P. O