ba has . GUTHRIE '. Miller FOR It 311C!“ re of Your 3eet. . . . . :H N CLARK ADVERTISEMENT. 'rmts. SCOTT I‘DI‘OO ll ay "Post" we mean mm; the month of are- determined ‘9 Hing and bunc- rse’s foot, I 11". 5c Horse Foot [t8 m m VEYAchn H" PISS WORK, Apples 3“ prices. * see our do- We can save IN 'enre Co. of 's prizes of $100 to per- :ho greatest heir fencing. {K uney, in ROI. tarm and m to 5:0 Weâ€, Blacksmith. .v mg v 1e Juli“) ound. BO- lat all the 'a: coat.†they Iâ€. the latent - f or £11“ guarantee 3kets, ILLER. )fl'ered ‘FF 0‘- Alh- gent meshing ll a Hy k Dow- “'35!!- II )TH- very 81‘- OD. 181'- )v Specialist: Eye, Ear, Throat and New Late Asthma! 30). Landon Ophthalmic H»... 352.. and toGoldon Sq. Thrust uud No»- "on Because its Shorthand students are doing x :lf\8"0l18 work Some wniting 2(1) words 3 Hr minute after attending only two months. Became at the head of it is a man whom I ualiï¬utious u a "anchor are unoxcolled M I! when ambition is to see hIs students become goal oItizons. Inonll). socially and I; manually 0, en July and August. :‘m the OldesIâ€"Not the largest! F0095 Just the Best. rm. q Will be u the Xiddlugh Home» of each month. from I: v. This College is the Best :- lxecause each student is taught separate- *;\' at his own desk. lim-ause all ditliculties are thoroughly . wlaiued as they occur. thus avoiding loss . 2 time to the students and enabling them in accumplish more than is possible in class tat-hing. Because each student receives special at- ?»n-ti m in his weak subjects and may choose :.:~ subjects. Because each student does his work in- .mpendent of all others thereby establish~ n.1,! conï¬dence in himself. Because by attending the day and even. mg classes, students graduate in a short {me and at a small cost. Because its graduates are enjoying the lust positions in almost every Canadian and American city. - >|Kt"§. â€VG! 3"IIIII‘ III - “VVU-IIII- --- - â€".v "5 uue sum. Contents of out-buildings in: mules an the farm produce generally. Hacks and live stuck from are or lightning; he wndesv range of Insuram-eOat the lowest (ate). If your insursnca axmros this \ear It Will pay you to Ina-me m the Sydeuhtm. Business College wâ€"-.~ Because this College enjoys the conï¬- dence of the Business Public. Because it taachea Actual business from «art to ï¬nish. L R C P.. LUNDON ENG. (“RAUULAIS of London, New J York and Chicago. Diseases»! Eye. Est Noss and Throat. Will be ag Knapp House. Durham. the 23!! >23 aadav m each momn. Hours- 1â€"6 am. Sydenham Mutual Fire Ins. Co. ESTABLISHED 1869. lmures farm buildings and content}. oiMelhugs and coutputs in tpwngt and VII- -_ 0:84. Everything w_ a d'wollnlgu n:- cuvergd .2'):.,.“ -n April Nthâ€""In. r um wish to reCPiVO the Begtflommercial ad. Shorthaud Education. it Is necessary mt yuu attend the Bestâ€" Drop a card to L; The Pro“ Fence is gua'nnteed. ‘9 charge, any dcfects due to tuneful or 3: Write for free booklet. F0: 331: byâ€" A, ‘Voo‘ooooooooo’é‘i‘o The Mount Forest W. T. CLANCY. Prin. DR. EH]. 8. BURT. J. H. XcFAYDEN. Agent. DR. BRUW 1N VVincheéter Springs, Feb. 27th, 05. “I read about Royal Household Flour which is puri- ï¬ed by eleétricity. I also read about the woman paying freight 25 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 ï¬fty miles instead of twenty-ï¬ve, rather than go without it. There is no Hour ‘just as good, as [Loyal Household.†Now, is there a single woman in the whole country who, after reading what Mr. Henderson says, will not at once send for the Royal Household recipes and give Royal Household Flour a trial. Mention this paper and address If a man’s wife is a good baker, nothing EXCLUSIV SLY THE OGILVHE FLOUR MlLLS (.30.; LIMITED, . MONTREAL. DURHAM P. O. m In! Wodnmu! II- '1 I): "I. is one of the new features of the Frost WII'O Fence for this year. The locks are coated with zinc by an electrical process which absolutely prevents rust. The Frost Wire Fence in nude 0! The “ FROST but the best flour is good enough for her. There can be no greater extravagance than the use of inferior flour. As to the puriï¬cation of flour by l elecuicity. the speaker remarked that it is about two years since this met- had was adopted, and the develoy- ment has been woaderl'ul. A beauti ful silvery whiteness is produced by subjecting flour to air which has been [passed through a flaming electrical [discharge The flour has also. as a ‘cuuSequeuce. better keeping qualities laud commands a better price. The lUgilvie Flour Mills Company. he said was the only ï¬rm in Canada.and one 0'. the ï¬rst. in Azneiica, to make um of this purifying and Steriliziug pro 0633 Prof Gray sLecture Before the Nat- ional History Society of Montreal The lecture was most exhaustive and instructive. dealing with the growth of wheat, its constituents and the electrical treatment of flour. Mr. Gray remarked that but little could he said concerning the percent- age of nourishment contained in the different grades of our North West- ern hard wheat. as it varies from year to gear. Speaking of chemical experiment, Mr. Gray pointed out what had been done in this last ten years, in the United States. It is but verv recent- ly. howeVer, that laboratories had been established in connection with flour mills. but they have already demonstrated their utility. Prof. M. A. Gray, chemist. lectured ( last night 00' Foods and Food Pro- dncts’ in the National History Socmty rooms. Make your blood nutrilious and you’ll have lots of strength. Your culv hepe is Ferrozone. an instant blood maker, blood-puriï¬er, blood en- ricber. It brings keen appetite, di- zesrs food and supplies nutrition frr building up all the bodily tissues. Ferrozone makes muscle and nerve- ï¬bre, and increases your weight. in- stills e reserve of energv into the body that deï¬es weariness or exhaust- ion from any cause. To have virility and heelthv vigor use Ferrozone u hich all dealers sell in 50c. boxes. You"v ujwusy. rt-stlvss. without amenity S ill worse you urn thin m d faggwd our Work must I»- done, hr: “CH 1'» h- the strnnxth '0 come Hull “1 km \A hon)? 3A Dutchman addressing his dog, said. "You vss only a dog. but I Vinh l V“! you. Von you go win your bed in. yo) sbust mm round drso dimes and 143/ down. Von I go mid the bed in. 1 but to lock up the blsce. wind (Signed) JOHN HENDERSON. Why That Weariness? AND FOOD PRODUCTS i †GALVANIZED ' While a. bilioua mm a. decidedly unpleuancit is quickly over when gChamboflsin'u Stomach nod Liver 1Tgblouuo used. For no u Par- kar’l Drug Store The weather keeps cold, but in spite of alldrawbacka, Mr. G. Lane, our hauling farmer, is through seeding. Mr. C. B. Wainwright. of Lemon City. Fla., has written the manufac- turers that much better results are obtained from Chamberlain Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in cases of pains in the stomach, colic and cholera morbus by taking it in water as hot as can be drunk. That when taken in this way the eï¬ect is double in rapidity. “It seems to get at the right spot instantly,†he says. For sale at Parke’rs Drug Store. Mr. James Fenwick sold his brood sow and eight young pigs to John Ferguson, Proton. at a fair price. Mrs. Geo. Haw has been under the weathes with a severe cold. Miss Maggie McDougall has also been on the sick list, but we are pleased to hear they are both much better. up the cat and put out the clock und my frou vakes up uud scold, den de baby vakes up and cries und I haf to valk him mit the house round. den maybe ven I gets mineself to bed, it is dime to get up again. Ven you ged up, you shust stretch yourself. are; your neck a leddle. und you vas up. Ihaf tolight the tire, but. on the Riddle, scrap some vit my frou al. ready und git mineself breakfast. You blay round all day und haf blen- dy of fun. I but to vork all day und haf plendy of drouble. Ven you die you vas dead. Ven I die. I bet to go to 11â€"] yet.†Mrs. Coutts. and Mrs. Brown. of Yeovil. spent a pleasant day with Mr. and Mrs James Fenwick. this week. Miss Canie Taris is engaged' to assist Mrs. W. M. Haw with her work. as the latter's time is taken up with music pupils. Mr: W m. Sackett has purchased a new piano case seven octave organ. Now for music in the air. Mr. Hugh Atchison visited his daughter, Mrs. Henry Love. of New England, this week. Miss Sylvia. Sackett spent. a pleaq. not day with former schoolmates at New England this week. The party that lost the blue garter in Mr. Fenwick’s sugar bush the night they made taï¬y. can have the same by calling at Mr. Fcnwick’a home. Please call and get it. or leave the mate. The most successful way of ward ing of the approach of old age is to maintain a vigorous digestion This can he done by eating only food suit ed to your age and occupation, and when any disorder of the ~tomach appears take a dose of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablntt to connect it. If you havea weak stomach or are troubled with indigest inn. you will ï¬nd these tablets to h» jam what you need. For eale at Parker’s Drug Store. How To Ward 06 Old Age. SackettsCorners. A Good Suggestion. HISTORY OF THE CEMENT BRICK mortar the preference for all work of importance. Coloring cement wares.â€"Use only sharp washed sand and clean water. Mix thoroughly. The coloring must not contain acids and must not aï¬ect alkalies. Only mineral colors are ï¬t to be used. All liquid coloring matter destroys the alkalies of the cement. Usually coloring matter lessens the strength. therefore, no more should be used than is absolute. ly necessary, especially ochres. Ul- tramine is an exception. 30 or 41’) per cent of this can be used without the strength being materially lessen- ed. ln weak additions it even raises the strength. A small per cent of Germantown lamp black is also can sidered an advantage. as to ability to resent the elements. on account of its cheapness. the small quantity needed and the pleasant gray color resulting It is the usual coloring material used. No product in the world has a wider application to useful purposes than Portland cement. Men who know its worth realize that it is the only absolutely ï¬reproof building materialin the world. In this re- spect, brick, terra cotta, iron. and granite all under markedly by com- parieon with it. Cement is the ideal material in bridge construction. whether for strength, form, beauty or durability. There has never been found a paving material equal to Portland cement concrete, whether it be for sidewalks street beds or roadways. In house building there is hardly an article used that cannot be made stronger and mme durable out of Portland cemeni than out of any known material. Artiï¬cial Stoneâ€"Natural stone, even the best marble and granite. will ultimately crumble under con. stant moisture and freezing, but prOperly made artiï¬cial stone is bene- ï¬ted by reason of the moisture. and Roman arches, stairways, break waters, and walls made of artiï¬cial stone over two thousand years ago, are doing duty today, while marble and granite work of the same time is mostly in ruins. Progress is the watchword of the twentieth century. and it is with this thought in mind that I present these lines with an intention of con- veying as briefly as possible, an idea of the progres being :made in the cement business. and the present ad- vanced ideas of manufacturing com ent wares. I hope the Canadian people Will coutmue to build their houses, stores, factories and places of busi uees out, of cement. brick, with a view to economy, convenience. perman- ence and protection to themselves and the communitv. The kinds and quantities. in pounds per hundred weight of Portland cement usually used, are as follows: Gray. use Germant’n Lampblaek =13- lb Black, " 0x. Manganete 12 lb. Blue. " Ultramine 4'» “ Green, “ †(3 ‘° Red. †Oxide Iron (3 “ The use of about 20% of this some- times makes wood disintegrate. Bright Red, Pompeian or Eng red (ilb Sandstone Red or Violet, Ox. Iron 6 lb Yellow or Brown, Ochres 6 lb White.â€"Absolutely white work cannot be made with Portland cement The whitest work can be made by using pure white slacked lime, free from iron and other coloring matter, and white sand or powdered marble. By the above it will be seen that a number of t’liï¬erent colored articles including brick and other waxes can be made with very little additional cost. Persons about to build will be agreeably surprised and intensely interested if, before building with other material, they will investigate the merits of Portland cement brick. window sills, blocks, door sills. etc History chronicles vaguely the events of a. period known as the "Stone Age.†when men wrought with the crudest of implements and shed out the merest sort of existence but man’s necessity made him pro- gressive, and his cunning taught him to devise better instruments of bronze with whieh to serve his pur' pose. only to ï¬nd them in turn infer- ior to the improved work of his son in the "Iron Age.†Each plsvs its part in the economy of nature. then yields place to its bettets, and the Stone Age. the Bronze Age and Iron Age retire, yielding to the Imperial Age of cement. 1‘ o ordinary clay brick or ï¬re brick will stand the test of heating to a bright. red condition and then being suddenly drenched with cold water, neverrh less. in ï¬res cheee materials are subjected to such condition! Portland Cement concrete brick is the only brick that will stand so severe 3 meet. It perhaps would do no harm to take mention of a little incident thet happened lest fall. The writer wee trying to sell Mr. Nevins a. quantity of brick made out of cement, to build a chimney. but as the men who were working with Mr. Nevins laughed at the idea end eeid they would not etend the bent of e chim- ney. l at last got Mt. Nevins to witness a test. We put e clay brick in the stove. elong with e cement brnok. got them no hot as we could. put the clay brick'in s_pnl of colt} r _ _ wa’ar. and it. crushed in cover-.1 phone We then put. the cameos brick in cold water, but. inland of a mixing it got much hll'del’. and we Ind wry much diï¬oalty in banking it with u hummer. Continued from page 2 Q“M‘~“~~‘O STANDARD and mm: Sewing Machines Malone Separators LA Dl ES’ SKIRTS, ETC. The Sherlock Organs All our Curtains except the 250 and 400 ones have worked edges. CALDER ~â€" BLOCK -â€" DURHAM tie 89118 Cheap LACE CURTAINS. Hedvv Twil ed Cotton Sheeting, 72-in wide. 25c a yard. White Bedspreads, Inge size. 1.40 each. Table Linen at 25c and 50.: a yard Floor Oilcloth. l and 2 yards wide. as 25¢ a square yard. Stair Oilclotb at 15c a ytrd. Japanese Matting at we I yurd. HAVE YOU? MISCELLANEOUS. Q“ Pure Honey and Fresh Groceries always on hand. Any old Worn silver? If so, I am prepared to re- plate it. Bring it in now while [have the time. All work guaranteed. Prices Moderate, and Strictly Cash. STORE T0 RENTâ€"1n J. M. Hunter’s Brick Block. Plate Glass \Vindows, Tables, Counters, Shelving, Hot-air Furnace, Good stand on Main Street. Apply to J. M. HUNTER, Proprietor. The Big 4 Frost 6: Wood Implements 2 ya'ds long. 26in wide. 25¢ a pair. 2Q yards long, 26-in wide. 40c a. pair. 25 yards long, 30-in wide. 50¢ a mir. 3 yards long. 37-in wide, 70c a pair. 35 yards long, 54in wide. 81.00: mir. Ladies' Overskirts at $2. $3.50 and $4.50. Ladies’ Black Sateen Underskirts at 81. Ladies’ Black Stteen Waists at 85c and 81 Lndies’ White Waists :t 50c and 75c. White Night Gowns at 75c and $1. Coreet Cuvers at 25c and 50c. . CAMP BEL, Agent. DURHAM ONT. W. H. BEAN of all kinds for the Farm, the Home and the Dairy. AGENCY. Geo. Yiirs. Ogilvie’e Roy-.1 Household Flour. ' $6.00 per barrel. The Famous Five Roses, $6.00 per barrel. Other High Grade Manitoba Flour. $5.60 and $5.75 per barrel. McGowan’s Family Flour ut stun- dard prices. Choice Bread . . and Confections The school is oqunp for full Junior Loom cad Matricuhtion 1:3“. under tho follow on! of competent teacher. for that departs“: T305. ALLAN. lat Class Certiï¬cate, PHI. MISS L. M. FORFAR. Clusica and Model-lo. J. 11. SMITH. B.A.. Mathematics and Seton“. Intending students abound enter at beginning“ term. or u soon after u pouible. Fees. $1.00 per month. WI. JOHNSTON. C. RAMAGI. 18 FULL of the GOODS you need. The People’s Grocery Fruits in Season. DURHAM BAKERY Manitoba Flour. Goods delivered promptly in town. Breakfast Foods. BEAN. SHORTS. GRAIN sud ‘11 kinds of FEED in stock always. Mrs. Alex. Beg J. M. HUNTER BlflCI Ln. Won Gonna-n gt “1 I». live" Puma. . le Pumps. DURHAM SCHOOL Dunno. Ill-Conan no done with Canon m . W. WATSON New Fresh Groceries ALL THE YEAR ROUND. Highest Ptice for Pgoduce. We Deliver to Any Part of the Town. The Celebrated “ Keewetin Five Roses.†the very best mode by The Lake of the Woods Milling Co. from No. 1 Manitoba. When. Cracked W heat. Creum of When. Rolled Ont: Mid Core.“ of all kinds. Test them. Constantly on hand and deliv- ered to all parts of town daily. STAFF ARI) EQUIPMENT. Chlirman PROPRI ETOR Flour. C. RAMAGI. Secretly £13