; .I. has: £11095 Consult me when ME -. 600. B. Muiford. Studio Mr. J. i Rat’s: {lope} Town, Durban. ERVANT GIRL FOR GENERAL Housework. Apply to Mrs. Jacob Kress, Durham. May 2nd-2t. ILL HAVEâ€"3‘03 SALE_ A Quantity of Slabs, mixed WOOd. 8t LAND Cement Stock at W1!) per share tor all or part. Apply to the Chron- 10 SHARES NATIONAL PORT- icle Oï¬ce. Durham. April llâ€"tf. April 25th.-4t. NE SHORTHORN BULL FOUR- teen months old. Colpr red. Eligible for registration. Price nght. Apply to Wm. Smith, Sr., 13;, miles east of Durham. 5-2-07.â€"6 Dd. wo- LARGE ’FURNISHED BED Rooms. centrally located. suitable f0] my 2ndâ€"3t. .1: Boats from imported stock ï¬t for ser- vice. Wm. Bradley, Orchard. Quantity of Slabs, mixed wood. 8‘ $3.50 per large double load dehvered. Or- ders may be left at the Chronicle Oï¬ce. The Durham Furniture Co. .1 Rooms. centrally located. suitable for four gentlemen. Apply at Chronicle Oï¬ce. D for registration. _Color. dark roan. Age one year. W111 sell nght. Wm. Leggette, Rocky Sangeen. March 23â€"tf. D tham, one block north of Review Otï¬ce‘ (Bur. Hunter St. and Garafraxa Road, rmzsisting :Eacre good beaying orch- ard and garden btable, granary, wood- shed. Suft and hard water, 11 roomed resi- dence, hm large stone cfllars. Apply to 3. Cameron, 2'6 Homewoud Ave., Toronto, nt. April 11--â€"4t. ARK LOT NUMBER 13 NORTH of Saddler street in the Town of Dar ham in the comm» 0f Grey containing 4 acres more or less. For terms and particu lars apnlv to J. P. 'l‘eltnord Vendor’ s Solici- or. Durban Dec. ‘2.â€"tf. fl storey dwelliug‘ alongside Presby- terian Manse property in Upper Town, Durham. Corner of Durham and Elgin streets. Seven rooms. pantry, closets. cement floored cellar. etc. Good airy loca- tion in rood locality. Good frame Stable. hard an soft water. one acre ot land. Snap for quick purchaser. For further particu- lars apgly to John W. )checlmie. Owner, Rocky baugeen P. 0. Aug. lst. ISBGâ€"tf. Feb. '23, 1907â€"tf. ON BRUCE 81.. DURHAM. NEW brick house, 30x32; 2.1: storeys high; double cellar. cement floor in one half. turn- ace in the other half. Small barn with stone stable underneath. Convenient to station, Furniture Factory and Cream Se - arator \Vorks. Will 58“ chea. - to quick purchaser. For further paoticulars apply to Wm. heggette. Rocky b‘augeen. or Jonn Leggeme. Durham. Feb’y 19th, 1907â€"tf. 1 Street, West, containing 36 feet front- age by 78 teet in depth, next to Gordon’s residence up town An excellent building site. Will sell cheap to a quick purclxmer. Apply to Benjamin Sharpe, Durham. .l. Carney. Good mug}: cast building. Good stabliug, shed and other conveniences. About three quarters of an aere of ground. The owner is anxious to sell and a. quick purchmer will get abargaiu Mrs. Wm. Crawfm‘d‘ Vai‘uey Ont. Marc h :26 - tt Jan. 3. 1905 â€"â€"tf U about six miles from Durham. Good title. PUSSQSSIUII at, once. GUOd land. 31“!" . . ‘ . ' n L‘é'“;‘~.122I""’i‘1;x-"i;;£}h'cu1ars apply to Telford, Durham. ‘gthe TOWI'Shi; of Bentinck. 208 acres, ne brick house. two large bank barns had ï¬rst class. all cleared 9xcept 20 acres. Snap to quick purchaser. $1500 down. bal- ance at 4.}: per cent. Apply to MacKay Dunn, Vendor’s Solicitors. '2 6 07â€"tf 100 .1. Lot No I. E G R.. in the '1‘ownsmp of Glenelg. 1m acres known as the “McKin' 1103 Farm†at the Rocky Saugeen. Im- mediate possescion given. For particulars apply to J. P. Telford. 3 ll-(flâ€"tf g ONTAINING 100 ACRES. BEING Lot 14. Con. 4. N. I) R. Glenelg, About 8?) acres vleared, balance in good hardwnml bush. Well watered. w‘ell fenced. good frame house. bank barn an'l imple ment hnuse. Guud bearing orchard. about twenty-ï¬ve acres ploughed, four acres in tall wheat I’u.-.~essimz may be had after Mar 15?. Fur further Particulars apply to Donald Beatnu. l’rop., Pomona 1’. U. Jan. 20th. 1906-†OT QIâ€"IN THE SECOND CON- cessirm West of the Garafraxa Road, in the T mvnship of Normanby, in the County of (new. For particulars apply to J. P. Telford. Barrister. Durham in {mud state m ('uluvauuu. UV“. .... ..... house. conufurfaMe barn and stables. well watered. springcreek running: through part of it Convenient. to Church and school. Will sell on easy texms. Apply to J. G.‘ Orchard, 43 York Sh, London. Feh'y 19â€"6m Feb 22nd 1905)-â€"-tf L‘UW “IDDUGIH III. ash. Map of the lbaihymi'id terms given on application to J. P. Telford, Solicitor for Vendor. 7- 18% --â€"t1 E 2ND AND 3RD DIVISION 0.!†TnLot‘No‘i. E G R.. in the Townshxp ' __ --_.- All .LA “Mn";n Classified Advenisements Lon}: over this column every. to ï¬nd sommhing thnt. any in New Ontario. near â€jgâ€"large discount for ‘2‘... -u... Oct-ma diva-n gANDLE m BEST PIANOS AT roUB YOUNG ‘YORKSHIRE HORTHORN BULL. ELIGIBLE T'lâ€"‘Iâ€"Iâ€"ATEU 1N UPPER. TOWN, ART OF LOT 27. GARAFRAXA N THE GARAFRAXA ROA_pâ€"‘ Property for Sale. bOOD SOLID BRICK. TWO Miscellaneous. Help Wanted. Stock for Sale. Farms for Sale. .AV‘v_‘- .â€" - Egremmxt. “garlv all cleared and state of (-ultlvatmn. Good frame :omfurtable lmrn and stables. well ’ P ‘ LO ‘li Bk AL} 24:_ _ HOTEL- PROPERTY AT pd . 'y. week income: possessing any inside information on this su ject is unaware that the in. creased postal rate has come into effect solely for reasons that concern the Canadian Poet Oï¬ce. No ether argument would have Weighed an ounce with the postal authorities at Ottawa. were it not for the fact that the American newspapers carried in Canada without yielding a cent to our postal revenue were increasing in numbers and weight annuallyâ€"con- stituting an immense and evenin- creasing mass of unproï¬table business for the department As the ï¬gures of the postal service concerning this class of business were considered year after year, as one ofï¬cial after anOth- er began to see how the volume of this business grewâ€"where, it stood in 1896 and how much greater it had become in 1906â€"they began to listen ' to those who had been arguing that too much periodiceil literature was flooding this country frsm across the border. It has been known for some [years that the poetal bargain between the two countries wasinequitable and unscientiï¬c. On the second class matter mutually exchanged at the border. Canada got less than one- tenth of the revenue and performed nine-tenths of the work. for where one ton of our papers paid one-quar- ter of a cent per pound in Canadian postage to circulate freely in the States, ten tons of their papers paid [one cent per pound in United States postage to circulate freely in Canada. Canada was handling an immense postal business originating in the United States, of which all the reve- inue went. to Washington. The cor- ,reSponding service rendered Canada was trifling: The disparity between the two services was increasmg an. nuallyâ€"our mail service was being clogged with a class of business that yielded nething to our postal reve- nues; that seemed likely to expand enormously and yet never could yield ' a copper to Canada’s postal revenue. As a business proposition the termin- ating postal treaty was an absurdity. The Canadian Government could see relief in no other Way than by putting up rates and shutting out some of this bulk of mail matter that yielded no revenue. Already it is announced that one New York weekly with a large circulation in Canada, will erect a plant in Toronto, and publish a" Canadian edition here. If one publi- cation adOpts this course it is proba- ble that two or three Others will fol- low suit, in which case not only the postal revenues will beneï¬t, but we shall have an enlarged publishing in- dustry. As a rule the press has ap- plause to char when a United States industry ï¬nds it necessary to estab lish a branch factory in Canada and make here the goods meant for con sumption here. But what are the facts ? No person .- V-wvv I understand that Canada urged that the new rate should not go into effect until next January, thus giving pub- lishers an opportunity to announce a new subscription rate. but to this the Washington authorities would not consent. Unless Canada would re- new the old arrangement. the new one would have to go into effect at once. And into eï¬ect it comes. Perhaps some concession can be made publish- ers in view of the loss imposed on them during the balance of the year by this treaty, Most of those across the border who subscribe for a small town weekly are former residents of the county in which the paper is pub- lished and most of them will renew next year at a half-dollar increase in the subscription price. However. while a Canadian publisher may fairly claim that he is injured in the carry- ing outlof contracts already made for The purpose of the new treaty is to decrease the amount of free carrying done by the Canadian post oflice. This has been large in bulkâ€"it is growing to immense. impossible pro- portions. But the new postal rate hits our small papers a hard blow, for they have contracted to send their papers for one dollar for 1907 to quite a. few: readers in the United States. N0 Delays in mdcingWithdrawab Intermt added fou- limos a year -SoylnssBankDepa-m InComedionwifllallBu-andles. ,I From some of the‘ootnm'ents glthat Euro appearing in some of the†Conn dian papers it might be supnosed that the new postal treaty‘ between; Gena- da and the United States imposing a postal rate of {our cents per pound on second class matter addressed lrom points in one country to points in the ether. was an iniquitous thing --done deliberate-1v with a View to' beneï¬ting-a {an special publications in Canada. regardless of the injury done to a great number of weeklies and dailies throughout the Dominion. Some of those who write angrily on this question appear to regard the increase in the postage as a piece of favoritism to a few iournals. hour 83 . ““85 Departmc nt. D eposx 1.3 of $I and upwards aretecdved, on Wth the hi gh est current rate f o intercs t is alIowed. 30' Th. 3mm light Vi!" tho _ the mount yea. yet he mnot «skimE I" Plltll lmlfllfllt 'zhat he mason I divine rich: to; ‘ demand thu the Government shill From some of the cannon“ thus “"30"" hi. 9‘?" in '| foreign mun- tre appming in some of the: Can. try u â€If «me "I“! u at homen dish papers it might beonpooaod that M°re.flpooltlly as the home rue isl th- n.- mull trash! between Cum- notononaly ‘W‘y below 0003. John Kelly, Manger lumen“ ALSO AT won an 7 Isnausuzo 1.1a A. cure may be affered by applying Chamberlain‘s Salve as soon as the child is done nursing. Wipe it of! with a soft cloth before allowing the child to nurse. Many trained nurses use this salve with the best. results. Price 25 cents per box. For Sale at Parker’s Drug Store. a two-horse power gasoline engine and small dynamo. By meanes of these machines he supplies excellent electric lighting in the house and Stables. and will also utilize the en gine in furnishing the water supply. So far the new outï¬t is giving the best of satisfaction. and mine host Peter is well pleased with his invest- ment.-â€"Ayton Advance. Last week Mr. P. G. Doersam had installgd in the Commercial Hotel, Spend what you may, but money can t buy anything better than Pol- son’s Nerviline. Its penetrating power enables it to reach deep tissues â€"that’s why it cures aches that all else can’t touch. For outward appli cation we guarantee ï¬ve times more Strength than in any other hniment. Inwardly it’s harmless and as sure as the hereafter to ease at once. Don’t accept a substitute for Polson’s Nerviline which is the one great household panacea of to-day. That’s how pain comes. We sit near an Open window, get sniff neck or sore back. Perhaps cool of! too quickly after exertionâ€"rheumatism develops. LIKE A THIEF IN THE NIGHT. E A French business man visiting in this country is quoted as saying that what surprises him most is the reck- less way in which our peOple spend money. In France every laborer, no matter how humble or small his pay. contrives to save something year by year. There are also business men who work and save and look forward to being able to retire. Here on the contrary, as this Frenchman ob- serves, workingmen seem to be bent more upon Spending their earnings than saving, while business men never appear to think of retiring, but work on for the mere sake of working and accumulating and dis- playing their riches in gorgegus liv- ing and expenditure. Under the old arrangement an American weekly. by paying one cent per pound. or 820 per ton. could send a ton of papers to Toronto for distri- bution by the inail carriers in this city. The Washington authorities received 'the 820 and carried that ton of papers in bulk to the border, where the Canadian postal service took it in hand, brought it to the city. sorted the papers out and sent them by carâ€" riers all over the city. getting noth- ing whatever for all this work. Yet Saturday Night could not have its papers delivered by the mail-carriers in Toronto. but must maintain a de- livery service ot its own, for the postal service asks us to payâ€"for the same service that it renders tor noth- ing to an American weeklyâ€"$160 per ton. Many medicines stimulate. break down. leave you worse than ever, Ferrozone is diï¬erentâ€"it’s a blood- fcrmer, a nerve strengthener, a body- builder. Pale anaamic girls are given color and vigor. The tired and sleepless are strengthened and re- stored. “Better than all tonics I found Ferrozone†writes Mrs. E. F. Casleton. of Woodstock. “I was completely run down. cheeks were blanched. lips white and had every sign of anaemia. Ferrozone added to my weight, gave me strength, ambi- tion and good health.†Nothing bet- ter, try Ferrozone yourself, 500 per box at all dealers. The old postal treaty was an exper- iment. It worked badly for Canada, and has been terminated Between other countries there exists no such free exchange of newspapers as there has been for years past between the Dominion and the Republic. THE DURHAM CHRONICLE FOLLOW THE EXAMPLE. THIS TONIC BUILDS UP SORE NIPPLES. ENTERPRISE. Yesterday our neighbors to the North-westlof us shook off the fetters of Township Government, for many years obnoxious to them, deï¬ned certain limits, inside of which is to exist and flourish the village of N eu stadt, appointed their own Council, and sprung into existence, a new municipality. True it is that the enterprising people of a progressive village are often retarded in their ambitions by being annexad to a township. This is particularly so I when lacal improvements or local en- . iterpr’ises are being projected. The ratepayers living remote from this centre of industry are not Specially inclined to vote funds to be expended therein. though the whole municip- ality receives the beneï¬t of the rev- enue accruing from taxes, licenses. etc†raised within the limits of this centre. Some of the businesspeople foresaw that they 'could direct the expenditure of the revenue with greater beneï¬t to the village than could outsiders, who knew little of the wants of. the people and perhaps eared less for the same. A- It was this idea that prompted some or ' the leads ' By an arrangement with the Brit- ish aovernment postage between the Mother Country and Canada has been greatly reduced. But Canadian lit- erature won’t circulate to any extent in Great Britain, and British periodi- cals. outside of a few of the leading magazines, cannot be forced into gen eral circulation in Canada. It is well to have proper literature from any country circulate as freely as possi- ble. but if British periodicals were handed out gratis American periodi- cals would still circulate largely and the. Canadian must pay for the in- creased postage.-â€"Picton Times. ‘ try. The amount that will be col leoted by the Canadian departmenc will be inï¬nitesimal in comparison with the amount. that Canadians will be obliged to pay towards the reve- nue of the United States. for the reader in the long run peys the post- age. The Canadian POStmaster General in announcing the arrangements laid Stress on the great bulk of second class mail matter entering Canada in preportion to the amount passing from Canada to the United States. While the increase in postage may decrease the bulk by driving it through ether channels the propor- tion passing between .the two coun- tries will remain about the same. The yellow trash will come in by ex- press and the more valuable technical journals and high class literature will cost the Canadians an increased price the increase going. not into the Cana- dian treasury, but into the coï¬ers of our great competitor to help extend the rural free delivery in that coun- To the publishers of the United States with large circulations in Can ada. the change will make very little difference. These journals and maga- zines are mostly dietributed in this country by agents and by special ar- rangements with the express com- panies, these will after the eighth of May be carried by express at a very slight advance on the old pOStal rate. w But this does not tell all the story. There is another phase of the case which is very unfair to publishers. Most Canadian publications which go to the United States are sold at so much per year. That is, for a certain amount the publisher undertakes to mail to the subscriber a copy of each issue. be it daily, semi-weekly or weekly. The charge to subscribers in the United States has for years been the same as to residents of Can- ada, and vice versa. Subscriptions :have been accepted in good faith. 'For all such subscriptions accepted the publisher is in honor bound to mail his paper until the time paid for expires. Some evening papers are sold to subscribers where they cannot be delivered on day of publication at $1 per year. For the next it will cost something over $3 to mail such papers to individuals in the United States. There is not a local newspa- per of any importance which has not several hundred subscribers residing in the United States on its list, prin. cipally Canadians who wish to keep in touch with their native land. To forward papers to these subscribers the publisher of a local weekly will be obliged to pay out in the next year at least 50 cents for each subscriber. To bring such a radical change into} eflect with a couple of weeks’ notice ‘ at this time of the year is simply robbery. It means that the publish ers of local papers must put their] hands in their pockets and hand out half of the money received from sub scribers in the United States for the year 1907. It is the meanest hold up the local newspapers of Canada have ever been subjected to. ' \ On the eighth day of Mai will come into elect a new postal arrangement between Canada and the United: States. The rate of postage on news-3 papers will be one cent for every four] ounces or fraction thereof. to be pre. paid by stamps eï¬xed. This simply means one cent each for Canadian newspapers going to the United States to say nothing of the incon- venience and delay in mailing. both in the oï¬oe of publication and in the post oï¬ce where instead of being hustled into mail bags and forwarded the papers will remain in the post omce until the stamps are cancelled. The Mail and Empire and the Globe have given notice that subscribers to . these papers in the United States lmnst pay $6. for the dailies and 82 per year for the weeklies. NEUSTADT INCORPORATED. 4.; ,_ ‘ ’3!- I 1 win ( A. ~ ,w ‘ I “ v. .' N8 1"“ 3, ‘J'L C. SMITH 6: SONS Special attention to Gaso. line Engine repairs. (N STOCK on MADE TO ORDER. Engines and Boiler Repairs promptly executed. RIGHT PRICES AND GOOD WORK. Cutting Boxes, Horsepowers, Wind Stackers, Stock raisers’ Feed Boilers. C. Smith Sons PROPRIETO RS Millwrights, Machinists, Iron and Brass Founders. and Steam Fitters ..... UURHM FOUNDRY Not an uncommon experience was that of Mrs. H. S. Wilmot. of Shuler. N. S. Doctors failed. still a quick cure was found in “Catarrhozone.†Notice this statement ; “I have been a most dreadful sufl‘erer from bron- chial trouble and catarrh. On damp days I would hawk and suffer great distress in my throat. 1 used all kinds of medicines but didn’t get permanent relief till I used Catarrho- zone. It has strengthened my throat cured my cough and made me entire- ly well.†Refuse substitutes for the one reliable bronchial and throat cure. All dealers sell ‘° Catarrhozone" in 250 and $1 ()0 sizes. or: to npply ‘for. incarnation. and oven to pgtitipn Puliunom for t Ipoéid Act t6 “mat the «no. . thorn†in popnluion di‘uqulifying them under the Act :3 it wu. The {coal momber,_ Dr. Juniooon. of Dar â€"â€"â€"v-v_ â€"-‘. .OV" U“ of new industries. The Township 0 the other hind is exulting because it is rid of what it has long since re- I garded as one of the most eXpensive parts of its territory, to maintain, and many a wish is expressed among ythe farmers that Ayton, the other prodigal part of the municipality, ‘may ape Neustadt in the matter of incorporation. Thus rid of the two devouring elements, the two Tress ury-draining factors, they fancy the Township of Normanbv would be converted into a veritable Paradise, a Garden of Eden. So far, however, we have heard no desire expressed. on the part of this village, to disenâ€" gage itself from the fostering arms of its Alma Mater., Nevertheless, we wish our neighbors greater suc- cess and greater achievements than, even in this hour of victory, they an ticipate. And here is to the newly- formed village, that concord and good will may always be characteris- tic of its rulers, that wisdom and wise counsel may alWays be charac teristic of their enactments and that prosperity, harmony and unanimity may be always found among the peo- ple over whom they rule.â€"Ayton Advance. hun. was made mandated 'with the "pct-pr. booms ingerutod and upon:- A Gosyl corner; 0d the’ «use Preeenting. it in e fevorehle light beiore the House, it met with the unanimous approvel of ell the members, even the Premier himself eeeing the feasibility and justice of the request made e short 8Panel: in its behelf and so it was recorded on the Stetute books. We have a larger, more varied, and better class of boots shoes than usual. Come to us for boots and shoes. Specml Bargains to cash purchasers. The people of Neuetedt feel that they have scored e victory in shed- ding their eweddling cloth. and look forward to repid advancement in STOWthfn‘d population end growth U ' ' BARGAIN BOOTS", Spend an interesting quan- ter-ofâ€"an-hour examining These Goods, and if "011 ï¬nd nothing there to suit you, we have the goods on our shelves and counters, with which we can suit the most fastidious. As we go through our STOCK 3e are continuously adding to our An]! A"- “AA"A Not exactly. but we have an equally INTERESTING CORNER in our store for those persons who appreciate a bargain in Boots and Shoes Great Distress in her Throat C- McArthur MANUFACTURERS OF IA Ccsy Icornen 3“" «5%? All kinds of Greg! bought at Harm; Chépping Done Every Day TRY OUR NEW CHOPPER. All up-todate flour and feed and grocers keep our flour for sale. If your grocer does not keep it come to the mill and we will use you right. Call us up by telephone No. 8. Constantly on hand the best brands of Rolled Oats. Also our make of Rolled Cereal. the best on the market. Also Chopped Oats. Mixed Cho . Pea Chop, Bean Shorts and Feed g‘lour. Special Reduction on Flour in 5 and 10 Bag Lots. Goods delivered anywhere in town. Is made from gelected winter Wheat and is a superior artxcle for making pastry, etc. Our pure Manitoba flour, made from No. 1 Manitoba wheat cannot, be beat, 0 _’ I for mther bakers or domestlc use. A blend of .5 Manitoba and. -‘ 0n axio wheat and is a strictly ï¬xst class family flom. People’s Mills Men’s, Boys’ Youths’ Furnisher HARRY BURNETT Special linp of Derbys at. . . 3:2 00 The King Hat at. .......... 2 E25 Manly Shirts for .vour little boy in neat White and black patterns from........ ............ 60c. Men’s Uhderwear in medium weight Natural Wool. from . ........... 5Oct075c. You willï¬nd just what you want in the Furnishing Line, by calling on to cater to the crowds that invade the Show Rooms Qaily. We just received a. > Dont forget to visit the Show Rooms on May 10th, an see our special dig-mu. “mu...“ â€" â€" SOFT HATS in all the up-toâ€"date colors and shape Spring . . N eckwear Durham John McGown. PASTRY FLOUR Dont forget to visit the May 10th, an see play 01' mammot- Men’s Spring Neck- wear and everything in Spring Furnishing Goods SOVEREIGN M188 DICK ECLIPSE May 9. TH E Ontario