Standard Bank of Eanada «mie- ‘ tsrio, in an pmcI' 'Pal â€in" in 0" Quebec. mum. United A. general Banking business trans- azted. Drafts issued and collections made on all points. Deposits re- ceived and intereSt allowed at cur- rent rates. AZ DURHAM AGENCY. Otpitsl Authorized . . . 82,000,000 â€"AA A“ F01“ g P:id Up ............. 1.000.000 Reserve Fund ........ 1.000.000 W. D. CONNOR HERO OF: ICE. TORONTO. P. Scaomnu), Guzman Mun)“. SHOP All DURHAM FOUNDRY Millwrights, Machinists, Iron and Brass Founders. and Steam Fitters ..... Cutting Boxes, HOl‘sequCiS, Wind Smokers, S‘toc< ruisms’ Feed aniiers. amps of all Kinds. Pumas from $2 upward. [0? Open every afternoon. ll REPAIRING promptly and prop- erly attended to. SAY. D. CUNNUR Galvanized and Iron Pip-' ing; BI ass 31 ass LinecH and In on Cylinders. ; [N \‘TO ‘K (W. Enoines: nrl 1mm 11.- pmmp’“ executed. aIGHI‘ PRICES -\N D :30’1‘) Special atte line En giner C. SMiTH 3: SONS Machine Oil, Harness Oil, Axle Grease and H001 Ointment, go to S. P. SAUNDERS um SAVINGS BANK. Sash 6’ Do 91‘s Prices Moderate, and Strictly Cash. §5€ï¬ï¬ï¬â‚¬ 'Hmerm HAVE YOU? M ANU FACTU RERS 0F Any 01d Worn silver? If so,'I am prepared to re- plate it, Bring it in now While I have the time. All work guaranteed. 1'. mur mourns. u. au-u vy .u ..vâ€"--_w V i m g, 80.36'Bm New 1g: “hum. an a- 3L wunmm D. . Smith Sons PROPRIETORS Manufacturer of And Dealer in â€"â€" KELLY. Agent- The Harnessmaker. Geo. Yiirs. TYPOGRAPHICAL error in one of the papers caused no end of ‘ amusement to every one except ‘ CHAPTER XV. ! I rans- tions Monty and Miss Drew. The s ro- i headlines had announced. “Magniï¬cent cur-a Ball to Be Given Miss Drew by Her q Finance," and the Little Sons of the ! Rich wondered why Monty did not see ‘ l the humor or it. “He has too bad an attack to see any- ‘ uk de-E hing but the lady.†and Harrison one 30mlâ€: evening when the Sons were gathered orded , {or an old time supper party. 1 “It's always the way." commented 3 the philosophical Bragdon. "When you 8f“?1 lose your heart your sense of humor . goes too. Engaged couples couldn't do 1 such ridiculous stunts it they had the ; least particle of it left.†“Well, if Monty Brewster is still in . love with Miss Drew he takes a mighty 6011,; poor way of showing it." Subway H001 Smith‘s remark fell like a bombshell. The thought had come to every one. ' but no one had been given the courage F. to utter it. For them Brewster’s si- ?8 lence on the subject since the DeMille . dinner seemed to have something om- maker. 5 inous behind it. -A.‘ 3, Before the evening came to an end i, 5 they were in possession of many aston~ i ishing details in connection with the i coming ball. Monty did not say that it i was to be given for Miss Drew. and '1 her name was conspicuously absent i from his descriptions. As he unfolded : his plans even the Little Sons, who i were imaginative by instinct and reck- ! less on principle, could not be quite i i. 1 acquiescent. Nopper Harrison solemnly expressed the opinion that the ball would cost Brewster at least $125,000. The Little Sons looked at one another in conâ€" sternation. while Brewster's indiffer- ence expressed itself in an unflatter- ing comment upon his friend's vulgar- “It’s probably only rel.†said Bragdou. ment was cut short b‘ Monty himself, and pace- at table. Ina V Lâ€"- lty. “Good Lord. Supper." he addgd. “you would spemxiate about the prxce of gloves for your wedding!" Aâ€" A “1. UL DIV. \_~I_r -v- . Harrison resented the taunt. “It would be muth less 33.11::1r to do that. Monty, swing 3our prom-nee. than to force 3our millions down every ones throat." “\V ell. they swallow them. Ive no ticed." retorted 1’. rewstet. “as though they were chocolates l‘otti ngill interrupted grandiloquent- )3, “My friends and gentlemen!†"W’h ch 13 which. '3†asked ‘21!) Win- kle casually. - Vw-v -w--. But the artist was in the saddle. “Permit me to present you to the boy frownsâ€"the only one extant. His mar- bles are planks. and his kites are made of ï¬fty dollar notes. He feeds upon coupons a la Xewburg. and his cham- pagne is liquid golden eagles. Look at him. gentlemen. while you can and watch him while he spends $13,000 for flowers!†“With a Viennese orchestra for twen- ty-nine thousand!†added Bragdon. “And yet they maintain that silence is golden.†G “And three singers to divide twelve thousand among themselves! That’s ab- solutely criminal!" cried Van Winkle. “Over in Germany they‘d sing a month for half that amount.†“Six ‘hundrod guests to teedâ€"total cost of not less than $40,000." groaned Nopper dolefully. txA‘nd there a1'cn‘t 600 in town.†la- mented Subway Smith. “All that glory wasted on 200 rank outsiders.†“You men are borrowing a lot of trou- ble." yawned Brewster, with a gallant effort to seem bored. “All I ask of you Is to come to the party and put up a good imitation of having the time of your life. Between you and me. I’d rather be caught drinking ice cream so- da than giving this thing. Butâ€â€" “That’s what we want to knowâ€"but what?†and Subway leaned forward eagerly. “But,†continued Monty. “I am in for it now, and it is going to be a ball that is a ball.†Nevertheless the optimistic Brewster could not ï¬nd the courage to tell Peg- gy of these picturesque extravagances. To satisfy her curiosity he blandly in- 1 formed her that he was getting 03 much more cheaply than he had expect- ed. He laughingly denounced as untrue the stories that had come to her from outside sources, and before his con- vincing assertions that reports were ri- diculously exaggerated the troubled ex- pression in the girl‘s eyes disappeared. “I must seem a fool,†groaned Mon- ty as he left the house after one of these explanatory trials, “but what will she think of me toward the end of the year when I am really in harness?†He found it hard to control the desire to be straight with Peggy and- tell her the story of his mad race in pursuit of poverty. Preparations for the ball went on steadily, and in a dull winter it had its color value for society. It was to be a Spanish costume ball, and at many tea tables the talk or it was a godsend. Sarcastic as it frequently was on the question of Monty’s extrav- agance, there was a splendor about the Aladdin-like entertainment which had a charm. Beneath the outward disap- pgogal there was a secret admiration ly only a lovers’ quar- gdou. But further com- short by the entrance of f. and they took their or the superb nerve or the man. And there was little reluctance to help him in the wild career he had chosen. It was so easy to go with him to the edge of the precipice and let him take the plunge alone. Only the echo of the criticism reached Brewster, for he had silenced Harrison with work and Pet- tingill with opportunities. It troubled him little, as he was engaged in jotting down items that swelled the proï¬t side of his ledger account enormously. The ball was’oound to give him a good lead in the race once more despite the heavy handicap the Stock Exchange had imposed. The Little Sons took of! their coats and helped Pettingill in the work of preparation. He found them quite superfluous, for their ideas never agreed, and each man had a way i of preferring his own suggestion. To‘ Brewster’s chagrin, they were united in the effort to curb his extravagance. “He'll be giving automobiles and ropes of pearls (or favors it we don’t stop him.†said Subway Smith after | Monty had ordered a vintage chamâ€" pagne to be served during the entire ‘ evening. “Give them two glasses ï¬rst. ’1 it you like, and then they won’t mind :1! they have cider the rest or the i night." â€" H n ‘0 -3 2.. â€"-°â€" .. "Monty is plain dotty,†chimed in Bragdon. “and the pace is beginning to tell on him." As a matter of fact the pace was be- ginning to tell on Brewster. Work and worry were plainly having an eflect on his health. His color was had. his eyes were losing their luster. and there was a listlessness in his actions that even determined effort could not con- ceal from his friends. Little ï¬ts of fever annoyed him occasionally, and he admitted that he did not feel quite right. Suddenly there was a mighty cnecn to the preparations. Two days before 1 the date set for the ball everything came to a standstill and the managers sank back in perplexity and consterna- tion. Monty Brewster was critically . lll. _ , “Something is wrong somewhere,†he said ruefully, “and my whole system seems ready to stop work through sym- pathy.†Appendicitis. the doctors called it, and an operation was imperative. “Thank heaven it‘s fashionable." laughed Monty, who showed no fear or, the prospect. "How ridiculous if it, had been the mumps or if the newsgâ€" pers had said, ‘On account of the whooping cough Mr. Brewster did not attend his ball!‘ " “You don't mean to sayâ€"the ball is off, of course.†And Harrison was real- ly alarmed. ‘_ “ 7" ‘l---L-- “Not a bit of It. Kopper." said Monty. “It’s what I've been wanting all along. You chaps do the lmudshaking and I. stay at home." UU'J w- â€"v_, There was an immediate council of war when this pieve of news was an- nounced, and the Little Sons were unanimous in favor of recalling the in: vitations and deolnring the party offs At ï¬rst Monty WL'. obdnrate. but» when some one suggesteq that he could give the ball later on. after he was well, he‘ relented. The Opportunity to double the cost by giving two parties was not to be ignored. .A ’_ .V “V -O-â€"vâ€" ____ "Call it on', then, but say that it is only postponed.†' A great rushing to and fro resulted in the canceling of contracts, the re- calling of invitations, the settlement of accounts, with the most loyal eflort to save as much as possible from the wreckage. Harrison and his associ- ates, almost frantic with fear for Brew- " ster’s life, managed to perform won- ders in the few hours of grace. Gard-- net, with rare foresight, saw that the Viennese orchestra would prove a dead loss. He suggested the possibility of; ' a concert tour through the country : covering several weeks, and Monty, too ill to care one way or the other, au- 1 thorized him to carry out the plan if it " seemed feasible. To Monty, fearless and less disturb? ed than any other member of his cir- cle, appendicitis seemed as inevitable . as vaccination. I... Uuuc svau an ‘55., v-“ He refused to go 3to a hospital, but pathetically begged to be taken to his old rooms at Mrs. Gray’s. UL“ ‘WHU '0‘ "-‘v w ’ith all the unhappy loneliness of a sick boy he craved the care and com- panionship of those who seemed a part of his own. Dr. Lotless had them transform a small bedchamber into a model operating room, and Monty took no small satisfaction in the thought that if he. was to be denied the nriy- your friends or retatives sufl'er with Fits. Epilepsy, St. Vitus’ Dance, or Falling Sickness; write for a. trial bottle and valuable treatise on such diseases to T as LEIBYG C0,. 179 King Street, “L, Toronto, Canada. All dmggists sell or can obtain for you LEIBIG’S FITGURE DURHAM CHRONICLE mighty check are features of a throat cough. They’re very dc- eepuve and a cough mix- ture won’t cure them. You want something that will heal the inflamed membranes, enrich the blood and tone up the sYstem . '- Scott’ 3 E mulsz'bn ilege of spending money for seV’Vei‘al weeks he would at least make his illg ncss as expensive as possible. A con- sultzltion of eminent surgeons was call- ed; but. true to his colors, Brewster installed Dr. Lotless, a Little Son, as his house surgeon. Monty grimly bore the pain and suffering and submitted to the operation which alone could SCOTT €92 BOWNE, Cbemiu: yv t save his life. Then came the struggle, then the promise of victory and the;1 the quiet days of convalescence. In the little room where he had dreamed his boyish dreams and suffered his boy- ish sorrows he struggled against death and gradually emerged from the mistsl of las ‘itude. He found it harder than he had thought to come back to life. Thu burden of it all seemed heavy. The. trained nurses found that some more powerful stimulant than the med- :I-Tne was needed to awaken his ambl- 1‘ tion. and they discovered it at last in Peaxy. ' â€mm A tickling in the throat; hummus at times; adccp breath irritates it;â€"â€"_thcse r‘: .- “(‘hild." 110 said to her the ï¬rst time she was permitted to see him, and his eyes had lights in them, “do you know, this isn‘t such a bad world after all. L LA‘ mood and nourishing power. Removes the cause of the cough and the Whole system is given new strength and vigor ‘Vw â€Vaâ€"v “And what isv the additional charge for the operation?†asked Monty, un- willing to accept such unwarranted favors. .- AA AAA 0. _-‘A ‘3‘ Uta. “It’s included in the $3,000,†said Lotless. “They knew you were my friend, and it was professional eti- quette to help keep down expenses." -- â€"-_.-.-AA 0* “" “EIVB‘V 5v -v-r â€"_ For days Brewster remained at Mrs. Gray’s, happy in its restfulness, serene under the charm of Peggy’s presence | and satisï¬ed to be hopelessly behind in ‘ his daily expense account. The inter- est shown by the inquiries at the house and the anxiety of his friends were soothing to the profligate. It gave him back a little of his lost self re. Spect. The doctors ï¬nally decided that he would best recuperate in Florida and advised a month at least in the warmth. He leaped at the proposi- tion, but took the law into his own hands by ordering General Manager Harrison to rent a place and insisting that he needed the companionship of Peggy and Mrs. Gray. ' _ “- 1" â€"â€"Aâ€"‘- Ovooa ._____ â€" - "How soon can I get back to work. doctor?†demanded Monty the day be- fore the special train was to carry him south. He was beginning to see the dark side of his enforced idleness. His blood again was tingling with the de- sire to be back in the harness of a sire to be back in the narness or a spendthrift. “To work?†laughed the physician. “And what is your occupation, pray?†“Making other people rich,†respond- ed Brewster soberly. ' “Well, aren’t you satisï¬ed with what you have done for me? If you are as charitable as that you must be still pretty sick. Be careful and you may be on your feet again in ï¬ve or six wee- .99 Harrison came in as Lotless left. Peggy smiled at him from the window. She had been reading aloud from a novel so garrulous that it fairly cried aloud for interruptions. Toronto, Ont. 50:. and $1.00. All druggim “Now, Nopper, what became of the ball I was going to give?†demanded Monty, a troubled look in his eyes. "Why. we called it off,†said Nop- per in surprise. “Don't you remember. Monty?†ask- ed Peggy, lo’oking up quickly and won- dering if his mind had gone trailing off. - “I know we didn’t give it, of course, but what date did you hit uponys â€We didn't postpone it at all.†said Nopper. “How could we? We didn't 1:110. 1. whetherâ€"I mean, it wouldn’t. have be: 11 quite right to do that sort of thinc." Sun! for free sample aim an that?†and an In!“ ; s galiivanting around “The orchestra i the country, quarreiing-with itself and everybody else and driving poor Gard- um. The flowers have lost their bloom long ago.†‘ “ ‘ ‘k I“. wanna]- "378 “Jul. Wyn- ~â€". _ “Well, we’ll get together, Nopper, and try to have the ball at mid-Lent. I think I’ll be well by that time.†" ~-â€" 'uI-na onnpn‘inffly at Harri- ‘ will“ I 11 W V'VC- â€"., Peggy looked appealingly at Harri- son for guidance, but to him silence seemed the better part of valor, and he went on: wondering if the illness had nnmnlntelv carried away Monty’s rea~ completely carried high place means happiness read the words of President Loubet of France, who goes out of omce in :1 short time: “I await Feb. 18 with the greatest im- patience. I shall leave the Elysee never to return. I shall dine alone with my wife and children in the privacy of home. I shall allow nobody to disturb my privacy that evening. There will be family rejoicings with the door closed. The president of the republic is a pris- oner.†A Canadian Inference. New York, whose annual death rate used to equal and once or twice even exceed its birth rate, has or late been showing a change for the better, and last year there was an excess of births over deaths of some 30,000. Perhaps this is another evidence that New York is no longer an American city, as re- gards the nationality of the majority of its peopleâ€"Montreal Gazette. The Czar’s Daughter. i On a recent occasion at New Peter- ‘ hof all the members of the czar’s fam- ily were present at a ceremony, in-\ cluding his four little daughters. These, 1 however, drove up last, to ï¬nd that the 1 entrance to the palace was blocked by another carriage. The Grand Duchess Olga, the eldest of the four, was visi- bly disconcerted, and, beckoning to a tall Cossack, she ordered him to bid the owners of the voiture to move on and make room for the emperor’s daughters. The soldier saluted, but made no attempt to obey the mandate. ? The irate little lady, unable to tolerate the insult thus openly offered to her imperial person, leaned out of the car- riage and called aloud in her shrill, babyish voice, “Please to move on!†There was a moment’s silence, then the door or the carriage opened slowly, and no less a personage than the czar himself alighted and shook his ï¬nger rebukingly at his imperious little daughter.â€"London M. A. P. Indicates Faulty Blood and Wom- Out N ervesâ€"Build Up. or Total Collapse will Surely Follow. \Vhen vou’re tired all day, bothered by trifles. exhausned with nervous ness. be sure there is something wrong. You need bracing up. need more nucnmenc in the blood, need a pow- erful medicine to vitalize the nerves and distribute force and Staying power to allover worked organs. The most marvellous success is Fer rozone, a nourishing tonic so scien tiï¬c as to be the admiration of every physician. Ferrozone performs won- ders for people in poor health; it acts ‘0--- directly on the blood. enriching it with strength and new life that is at once dispatched to all parts of the body. Fen-ozone feeds the nerves and the vital energies, supplies force. determination and joyous. buoyant spirits. A case where the lassitude and lack of strength is told by Mr. David Brown. of post ofï¬ce box No 30, Bee- ton, Out: "About a year ago my health commenced to fail. My hands and feet seemed always cold. I felt worn out and exhausted. weak as a little child. My face twitcbed. My limbs and arms commenced to lose *heir sense of felling and ï¬nally my lelt side was perfectly numb. All my color left My appetite ran down. Ferrozone was the ï¬rst to give me anv help. I improved with it verv quickly. It toned up the blood and started circulation, so that the numbness gradually disappeared. My condition was perfectly cured by Ferrozone, and I have been well ever since. (Signed) â€David Brown.†TIREDNESS MEANS DANGER! SPECIAL NOTICE.--To get satis- factory reaults be sure you get Ferroâ€" zone only. Fifty cents per box or six boxes for $2.50, at all dealers, or N. C. Polson 00., Kingston, Ont., and Hartford, Conn.. U. S. A. The new Educational Bill provides! for doing away with Model schools.j Henceforth all teachers will be re- quired to attend a Normal school. We are inclined to regard this as a change in the right direction, but it will make the teaching profession a much more expensive one to qualify for than it is at present. And this will probably be a good thing. One result will be to raise the teachers’ salaries which at present are not more than half of What they ought to be.â€"Telescope. THE MODEL SCHOOL GOES. once or twice even te, has of late been for the better, and 1 an excess of births ne 30,000. Perhaps DR. HARTE’S GELERY- †IRON PILLS. “ The Remedy we Positively Guarantee will Cure You orYour Money Refunded, nest, Pimpleu and Eruptions, Heart Pd. pitation, Shortness of Bmth, Dining“ and Faintneu, Genettl Weakness m1 CHE MIST â€"- O GRANDMOTHERLY LEGISLATION A combine of lawyers to keep us from getting our wills drawn by honest men who are n0t lawyers; a combine of doctors to keep us from taking pills or syrup or plaster pre- pared for the common herd; a com- bine of druggists to keep us away from the drug counters of the depart- mental stores; a combine of nurses to shoo awav all unregistered angels of mercy; a combine of undertakers to lay us out in regulation cofï¬ns at lregulation charges; a combine of lparsons to make the prOper prayer lover what remains of us after all '3 other combines have had their turn I {That is what we are coming to. And lone wonders if life under such con- 1. ditions is worth while. Surely Par- liament will leave some chance for peeple to make mistakes, and to learn by experience and exercise gumption Without being pestered at every turn by legislative interferences. Protec- tion is bad enough in the large mat- ters of trade. but when it comes down to the everyday details of life it be- comes an insuï¬erable nuisance. The Legislature had better adjourn, when its chief business is playing pater t1 ! grown folks.â€"Globe. Rheumatism A happy home is the most valuable possessionth is within the reach -_-Aâ€" :‘P r vvvvvvvv â€" of mankind. but you cannot enjoy its comforts if you are suEermg from rheumatism. You throw aside bus- iness cares when you enter your home and you can be relieved from those rheumatic pains also by apply. ing Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. One application will give you relief and L...-.\ That the public health Will be care- fully safeguarded by a strict enforce- ment of the health act was apparent ITuesday morning When two cases for _- -12...‘ will bring about a permanent cure, For sale at: Parker’s Drug Store. “VI-I‘- v. v..- _____ Tuesday morning when two cases for violation of the act appeared in police court and in each case a ï¬ne was im- posed. Mr. and Mrs. John Cords. who live on the east hill, were charg- ed with having failed to report the presence of smallpox in their home. Dr. Cameron had visited the Cords’ home some time before the appear- ance of any rash and learned that a man who had been in the infected ‘ house visited them. He then warned ithem to report to him at once if any ‘ “ - nn information received from an inmate of the isolation hospital he visited the house again about the latter end of March and found unmistakable signs of every member of th ' having had the dread disease. They were well by this time but for a safe' guard the house was placed under quarantine. Information had been laid against both Mr. and Mrs. Cords ibut the magiStrate held that Mr. Cords was the only one who [prosecuted under the act, him ï¬ve dollars and costs. Henry Lu'mley whose house W35 quarantined for diphtheria. had in- sisted in deï¬ance of the health ofï¬cer blankets and other articles likely to _ carry infection. A dog had als '~A- A morn. VW'D.’ -â€"â€"'-_, allowed to run at large after a ing, which, according to Dr. Ca was one of the easiest. ways cc the disease. Aï¬ne of ï¬fe f APRIL 26, 1906 DRUGG IST Miserable U. tionegr for ' the County 01 Tours 311‘:me and satisfactiém bed. 0 ants an 1 4 also cube mum“ Canon 2"“. Resident: and P. 0.. Ceylox EVERY THURSDAY menus {tum manna HOUSE. um: DURHAM, ONT. propertv. Specialist: Eye, Ear, Throat FFICE AND RESIDEX short distance east of Knapp’ Lamb ton Street, Lower Town, Oï¬ce hours from 1:2 to ‘2 o’clock. WIIS!NG For :rm..~12n' :4. line fer the :m â€â€œ3 . . . iixxc each saw.- measure. Profes>ionai C3T£’.‘. 2 $4.00 per annum. Adï¬chiw diregtions willbc published 1 Z cordxngla' 'lrarmicm hm": . â€For le.’ czc.â€" so cenu 1 (trench subSCqucnt mu-H; U Garafraxa and Gear are Sm foot of hill. Oflice hoursâ€"S- 11 a. Will be at the Miédaugh House let “’1 of each month. from 12 w 4 p. m; OFFICE: Over J. â€'LQ . . . . ycar, payed. 1e 2 :ac maceâ€"1 he charged if no: so puni.'1;;c .jam :0 “ :O“.‘,1: v 9% -.. mbsaiptionisgidisu. imamâ€? “w Wâ€" |o pï¬p-cz‘},- ‘K- MAHU‘CJ 3:17;, .1. ï¬ce in the New Hunter Block. hours, 8 to 10 a. m.. to 4 p. m. an 9. In. Special attention given to 1 of women and children. Reside: posits Presbvterian Church. Dw§;§;;1cers, Etc. Money t< Oï¬eeSrâ€"In the McIntyre Bloc-I Standard Bank. unpaid, except at the. 0min“ 01‘ m: pm; '33 All advertise n: ,: ~. veek, should be brou‘ï¬zt normng. THE JOB : : 1: DEPARTMENT . L. R. C. P., LONDON, E3 BADULATE of London York 4nd Chicago. Diseases of Eye. Ear Nose and Th1 Will be at Knapp House Durham satmdiy In Gael) month. 11 DUNNâ€"1 A. G. MACKAY. K. C. Bi}: BUBHHIH BEBE! All advertisements ordered by h in advance Contract rates for w any at. «- .ppLiattiqn to the oï¬â€˜me. Late Assistant Roy. London Ophzbah Elm, and to Golden Sq. Throat and X ONOR GRADUATE, UNIV ty of Toronto. Graduate College Dental Surgeons of Ontario: Dentistry in all its Branches Oï¬w.â€"Calder Block, over P981 GIBSON“!!! ï¬lm THE CHR ‘NYCLE address, {rt-v: mi 3 .‘ww'f A. H. Jackson. 0mm PUBLIC, comm: 01‘. Conveyancer, kc: 1r 01‘. Conveyancer kc. 1 Agent- Money to 111.1311 Esme: “5-86 Licenses. A general 12113111 mtransacted. OBN CLARK. LICENSEE tioneer for the County of Gre: DTOthly attended t0. Orders ma; at his Implement Warerooms, Mp. old stand. or at the Chronicle Oï¬uc d ensed Auctioneer. for the C Gram. Land Valuator, Bailiï¬ of Division Court Sales and all othe. mpfly attended to. Highest r4 hed if required. Drs. Jamieson Macla l. G. Hutton, M. 0., O. \FFICE AND RESIDENCE Nov. 9. ’03. Arthur Gun, M. D. .HYSICIAN AND SURG E03 ’â€"Oï¬oe over 'Gordon’s new Je we, Lower Town, Durham. Any monev to loan at 5 per cent. a J. 1?. GRANT, D. D. S.. L. 'AMES CARSON, DURHA fouling facilities {or turning work. . . ARRISTER, SQLECITOR. :ABBISTERS. SOLICITORS DURHAM. ONT. (Lower gonna, _LIQENSED EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. APRIL 26, 1906 Dr. W. C. Pickering Dentist. Medical Dz'redom‘. MacKay Dunn. Dental Dz'redorr. 08- EH). 8. BURT. DR. BROWN p. m. Telephone No. 10. Miscellaneous. l. P. Telford. EXCLUSIVELY ‘S PUBLISRED pairwis- 8‘ 1 l {-41 0's :1 _ I§suer ls completely stoc‘ all NnW TYPE. J.Hu out W. F. Tow'.