11) made up when you b.†.. Don t delay. The cool- ‘you come the bone: 3.. bice. Procrastituon in tho ,ection a dopon won 0 and a ’arm for Sale. Ln want vv'-v. ‘. x). U. a" ULâ€. vnqsfing hf 50 acresâ€"well m armed and must†3499de M house and stables, nib b. no from meossan ..0 3“ Durham. An 0300th Bid suit anyone "Wt. ." lifarming. Apply “or will we: {oft 'ady-mixed. ne. Gasoline. CON. 1 ’ax House- ma ’roprietors. mg Ls. g Store 517111}: oeman 1D . GRANT ing .. FIRTH. 00twear mtiripation of ’0'! have ready for ’0'! a larm- stock of m Hub!» kind of no... well-mane}: .3 you Rotting from upâ€" on can rely on for uality. tints now and ‘0‘. my kind of .\' SOUND. $1.00 30m. hero 'I The People’s Drug Store JNO. A. DARLING Exquisite Easter . . . Perfumes Easter Flowers, Easter Confectionery. Easter Dyes. Darling’s There is no more dainty or acceptable Easter gift for a lady than a bottle of good perfume. We are making a special display this week of PERFUMERY that for sweetness and delicacy of odors cannot be sur- passed. Every bottle of our Perfume exhales the exquisite fragrance of the flowers. All fresh, Now, is there a single woman in the whole country who, after reading what Mr. Henderson says, will not at once send for tlze Royal Household recipes and give Royal Household Flour a trial. Mention this paper and address â€" â€"vâ€"- fied by eleétricity. I also read about the woman paying height 2 5 miles before she would be without it. Royal Household was not sold in our town, I was asking about it and my grocer told me to wait a day or two and he would get some, and I am glad I did so. My wife is a good baker and made good bread out of other flours, but what she has now made out of Royal Household is so far ahead that I would be willing to pay freight fifty miles instead of twenty-ï¬ve, rather than go without it. There is no flour ‘just as good’ as Royal Household." If a man’s wife is a g’ood baker, nothing DRUG STORE. THE OGILVIE FLOUR MILLS CO.,‘ LIMITED, MONTREAL. . Wincheéter Springs, Feb. 27th, 05. ‘ ‘1 r‘ead .al.)out Roxal Househéld Flour which is puri- and cheap, at First of all the. little girls that are left alone; second the gatherer; third, the manufacturer; fourth, the rail- road; ï¬fth, the dray man and lastly the merchant. Are we aware how manv derive a benefit from a. pair of old rubbers and yet the consumer facts the bill. A pair of rubbers-that may last a couple of weeksâ€"cams about adollar, whereas, a. pair some vents ago would cost about forty cents. Coughs. colds, hootoeoeu. and other throat ailments are quickly relieved by Cremleno tablets, ton cents per box. All druggists. The country is infested With these individuals, whom, we suppase are paid for their work. in gathering up old rubbers, rags, etc. these are sent to the factory to be transferred into bran new rubbers and 010th, and come back to our local towns for our beneï¬t for which we pay the highest price; We notice an article in your paper last week, cepied from the Owen Sound Times, treating on the subject of Peddlers and Junk gatherere. While there is so justly said about. the peddlars. yet. there is very little comment on the junk gather. who is a greater nuisance, and of more detri- ment. to the public in general. Mr. 1). Gilchriht came up from Port Elgiu, to see his sister Mrs. Geo. Campbell. Mrs. Artchie McLean is, we are ,' Form IIIâ€"Clara Aljoe. Arthur sorry to say, again under the Dr’ si Weir. John Johnston Edith Grant, care. lCarmau Aljoe and H. Campbell eq. Our teacher went Edge wise out home; Form 11- Oliver Hunter. Keith last week to do justice to some Easter l Newton. Willie Farquharson, Ethel eggs ' 15;: {- â€r'gér “a ‘ _ lMoi'rison. :I‘hos. Alla_n. Missâ€"iv‘Annieâ€"â€"McCracken, teacher, from Nu. l Normanby, spent Easter week under the parental roof. The seeding is well under way. An exceptlonal one has ï¬nished. Mr. and Mrs. Jno. Hewitt of Dark- ies Corners took a trip up this way last week to see old time friends. (Signed) JOHN HENDERSON. Market Report. Dunn“: Aberdeen. May 3. 1905. .8 95 to 31 00 95 to 37 to 62 to . 40 to . 7 00 to 18 to 13 to . 50 to . 1 00 to . 2 75 to . 2 40 to . 1 10 to . 5 30 to s. 6 50 to 5} to 50 to 20 to 4 t0" . 10 to 1 00 37 62 42 7 00 18 13 55 1 oo 3 00 2 4o 1 10 5 3o 7 oo 5} 1 oo 20 4i 12 5% 00 2o 4?: 12 Jr. Pt. II (u)-â€"-Alex Hilderbrandn. Edwin Search. Cassie Russell. Alï¬e Sharpe. Murray Thorn). mgr (a)â€"-Nellie Flu-liar, Cecil Town Jr Pt. II (b)~â€"-Roy Farquhatsou. Frankie Mollraith, Ian Campbell. John Harboule, Gilbert. Gordon. Intermediateélsabel Lawson and Myrtle Sparling eq., Sadie MPDonald am} Mary_l_iudso_n eq. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy the Very Best. â€I have been using Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy and want to say it is the best cough medicine I have ever taken,†says Geo. L. Chubb. a mer- chant. of Harlan. Mich. There is no question about its being the best, as it will cure a cough or cold in less time than anv other treatment It should always be kept in the house readv for instant use, for a cold can be cured in much. less time when promptly treated. For sale at Par- ker’s Drug Store. Sr. Pt. Ilâ€"Earl McDonald. Shirley Fulton, Annie Vollet. Verna Fluker‘ Cecil Guthrie. Sr. Iâ€"Cecil McNally. \Vesley Johnston. Emily Lloyd. Islay Quinn, Mary McKecbnie. Joe Mighton is engnged for the summer with Goo. Mighton. Mr. 3nd Mrs. David Donnelly visit- ed at Allm Purl: on Sttnrdny lat. Jr. II (a)-â€"Sydney Holt, Winnifred McCaul. John McIlraitb. Clara Law rence, Lenard Lavelle. Jr. II (b)â€"Vivian Crawford. May Cliï¬. Mamie Mountain, Horace El. vidge. Ruby Catton Mr. Geo. Noble is very ill at pres- ent with pneumonia. Hcpe to soon hear of his recovery. Mary McKechnie. ' An Ibsen Theory. Sr. I (s)-â€"-Helen Ireland. Lillian In one of the published letters of McCrie. Laura Ryan, Jessie Bleak Ibsen he says that While he was writ- Wilbert K nisel y. ing one of his plays he had on his desk Intermediateâ€"Isabel Lawson and an empty ale 81388 With 9. 80011110“ in Mrs. W. D. Mills and children Spent Easter Holidsys with the Hunt fumily. Jr. IIIâ€"~Nellie Hepburn. Jamie Farquharson, Jack Davidson. Annie Ecmr. Marjorie MacKeuzie. Jr. (b)-â€"Irene McPhoe, Willie Watt and Willie Hazen eq. Sr. IIâ€"Mabel Grasby, Rex Me Gow,an Davina \Varmington, Mabel Latimcr, Edith \Vatson. Sr. IIIâ€"Brock Grant and Ruby Kniseley eq., Catherine McDougall. Lyle Kelsey, Arthur Hutton, Hazel Guthrie. Sr. IVâ€"Jean Watson, Chaule Crawford, Lizzie Kinnee. Nellie Smith. Ruby Watson. Jr. IVâ€"Eva Burnett. Laura Sieg- ner, Hazel Marshall, Beatrice Wilson, Garï¬eld Calling. Form Iâ€"Irene Latimer. Katie Clark. Stanley McNatly. Maggie Petty, Ella Ector. April Honor Roll of the Durham School:â€" HONOR ROLL Vickers. P. S. DEPT. H. S. DEPT. Mr. Jimaby, that there 19 in no a sixth Caseyâ€""ms hard luck about Kearney. Ol hear he had to have his leg cut 01! bechune the ankle an’ the knee. Cas- sldyâ€"Ay, the docthers decided that to save the whole leg they’d have to cut 01! part of it A Lens Sentence 0! Six Letters. Here is a sentence of thirty-two words which some ingenious person has constructed of the six letters found in the word “maidenâ€: “Ida, a maiden; a mean man named Ned Dean, and Me. dis, a mad dame, made me mend a die and dime and mind a mine in a dim den in Maine.†Papa-I hear you were a bad girl to- day and had to be whipped. Small Daughterâ€"Mamma is awful strict. If I’d 'a‘ known she used to be a school- teacher I’d 'a’ told you not to marry it. Now and then the animal would grow sick, and the author would throw a piece of soft fruit to it, whereupon the scorpion would fall upon the food furiously. empty its poison into it and then get well again. “Is it not a good deal like this with us poets?†Ibsen continues. “Nature’s laws apply in the domain of the spirit also." Length of the Law. The phrase “the length of the law" owes its origin to the enormous length of some of the parchment rolls upon which the ancient statutes of Great Britain were inscribed. The present day ofï¬cial title of the “master"ot the rolls†is a reminder of this ancient cus- tom. Some faint idea of the bulk of the‘ English records may be obtained from the fact that a single statute, the land tax commissioners act, passed in the ï¬rst year of the reign of George IV., measures when unrolled upward of 900 feet! A Frenchman goes into raptures over the wildness of the scenery and the beauties of nature and sometimes ac- companies his remarks by an attempt to embrace his guide. The Englishman, when he has “done†his peak, plunges his ice ax into the snow, looks around him and then says, “I say, open the baskets and let’s have something to eat.†A German, he says, as soon as he ar- rives at the top wants to know the ex- act height of the mountain he is on and of every peak around him. How It Aflectl Them. An Alpine guide who has had many years’ experience in mountaineering thus describes the behavior of differ- ent nationalities when they get to the top of a peak. “The scheme is to rub the strop with the pipe. It works best with a plain leather strop. Apply the pipe, just as you would strop the razor, to the un- ï¬nished side of the leather. Strop your razor on that side, wind up with a few passes on the ï¬nished side of the strop and you will have a ï¬rst class edge on the tool. I never took the trouble to get a scientiï¬c explanation of the vir- tues of lead pipe as an aid to whetting, but it is all to the good in that respect.†Looks After the Cents. A simple illustration will show the care that is taken of cents by one of the big banks of Chicago. Stamped postal cards are not used, and not one of the thousands of routine letters that are written every day is stamped or sealed until the whole routine mail of the day is assembled in the afternoon. Then all the cards and letters to one correspondent are put in a single en- velope, and, except for letters from the ofï¬cers and the like, the bank comes as near as possible to get its entire mail carried at 2 cents an ounce or a cent for every postal card instead of often paying 2 cents for a quarter of an ounce, as it would have to do if every communication were sealed and stamp- ed separately. This little matter of getting full value out of a two cent stamp makes a saving of from $25 to $30 a day.â€"World‘s Work. Leud Pipe to Keep Razor Sharp. “Lead pipe will keep your razor sharp,†conï¬ded the garrulous barber. “Get a short piece of the smallest, softest lead pipe your plumber has in stock, and keep it handy when you are strapping the razor. In this guise he can be deposited as an ornament either on the sumptuous best bed or on the kitchen dresser or on the drawing room table. How fond the Germans are of this presentment of baby may be guessed from the fact that it ï¬gures largely in their picture books, among their dolls and even in the bakers’ shops at Easter time, made of dough and covered with sugar, to be devoured by greedy live babies.â€" Strand Magazine. new . Ger-an Baby I. Swath“. Of all housewives in Europe proba- bly the German is the hardest worked. and or all European mothers the Ger. man practices most completely the art of swathing and padding her baby and of putting it on the shelf. The German baby is swaddled in a long, narrow pil- low, which is made to meet completely round him, being tucked up over his feet and turned under his solemn chin. Three bands of gay blue ribbons are then passed round the whole bundle and tied in large, florid bows about where his chest, his waist and his an- kles may be supposed to be. So Much For Manna. WI‘ teaspoonâ€"Do ion believe, *%****%****Â¥%%%%¥¥#*%**ï¬ii $2? We hnve just completed out: assortment of Floor Oil Clothe. in H block and floul designsâ€"3 ft., 4 ft. 6 in. god 6 ft. widths, prices a 250. 40c and 50c yd. $33 gaLadies’ Tan Hose :3!†73? Silk mixture and lisle, 400 and 50¢ per pr, 5% 0‘“ if Ladies’ Summer Vests é o g; We carry the largest assortment m town. s?!» N e w S w i s SIS D 0 t M u S] i 1 1 s age These are very fashionable this spring, % 15c, 200 and 250 per yd. éié gig White Organdie g . Extra. ï¬ne quality, at 30c per yd. 5% Qt: New Chambrys 5* Plain colors, very ï¬ne quality, 12.50 per yd. '2!!! iii- A New Line of Ginghams :3": All colors, the best we ever saw, at 150 g per yd. J AS. COLORED CURTAIN GOODS, 60 yd. to 250 yd. Large variety of Nottinghnm Luce Corning is here. We huvo them :t all prices. from 50¢: per puir up. This floor covering is more popuiur than ever this aeuon. It is 3 ft. wide. Prices 200, 25c sud 300 yd. We hove the deintieet Curtein meteriele you would wish to see, i in either white or colored goods. ‘4 O‘D'-~ H.H.MOCKLER% THE CASH STORE. See our special $1.00 Corset, the best ever REIEUBER THE PM OE New Arrivals This W M CURTAIN GOODS. LACE CURTAINS. JAPAN MATTIN G. Warm (Juana! Goons, 121“: yd. to 500 yd. LAIDLMV'B 0L0 STAND. H. H. MUCKLEH.