C soLmc:Tro®s, NVEYANCERS, &C 1CC HWâ€" On wing Machines, fo TRY. LT L. D. S. RRIAGE Licenses Doon R3429)% T & BATSON. Caioe®‘s Bioc DEFR EASY TERMS \AST CE Dar ilder‘s of the TW ~_The Big 4 BARRISTER. SoLICITOR iN SUPREME COURT, Norary PusLiCc, commIssIONER, ETC. blas Oxfords ther . and 206 Office, over Grant‘s store, Lower Town, | New Goods ways Ked Call and 10c Would intimate that she will continue the Furniture and Undertaking Business estabâ€" lished by her father in Durham in 1858 and will endeavor to give all old and new custom ers the same entire satisfaction. com: or Wile 1o Us for Inlormation. Furniture of the Best Make foo by dll Roil or loke roule. 4 more Homesecekers‘ Excursions To The Northwest Remember the standâ€"opposite the Market. Durham, tÂ¥ C he only Arsweclass Dearsein tewn »ch Indertaking and Embalming on latest prinâ€" ciples at reasonable r«tes, J. P. TELFOCORD, 10â€"in Grarite Pie Plates Boots Qnaque 5U MacFARLANE & 00 ALWAYS ON HAND. PICTURE FRAMINC A SPECIALTY $0â€"ing MISS SHEWEL Wi>inch MONEY TO LOAN "DONX‘T FORGET TO CALL. wch JULY TDean & o. . Giranite Wash Rowls, 20c Large Granite Spoons, 8e each, ep is full line at lowest prices. |_see our Men‘s and Women‘s Just the thing for hot weaâ€" BUY SHOE DRESSING, 10e We now issue through tickets to destination without _ change from Durham or any C.P.R. point. "nr‘% cigriwics MISS SHEWE L L 1J3 & 18 10 UPPER TOWNX DURHAM. Cashmere in navy blue and | a yard. | Black and Colored Allâ€"wool | frin Ihn bottle UH â€"FULL LINE OFâ€" vard Men‘s Dusters with eMâ€"| Little Heet« re. (GODc un. [ at m tinee | compl ss Ginghams, 7¢ them ! 1 TY inadov Shoeg. We alâ€" 1A 1 Widke OYH. . & ft. ble Oil Cloth ts and Drawers, Rubberine Collars Men‘s Rubberine t« 0 10¢ monnt Oc vard wRadcs ind 8c wide, toâ€"in on toe B THE RUN. Evening was well advanced when the Run was called, and four horses lined up. _ Atter a very fair start they went thundering over the course and at the last turn before the home stretch, when all nearly in a bunch promising an exciting tinish, Elnore slipped and fell, throwing her rider, a lad named sohnston. Boundary Maid, just behbind, fell over the first, throwing her rider ailso. _ Jay Bird came in straight while the fourth horse either boited or was directed up the hill. A crowd gathered round the fallen lad, and a brief anxiety was relieved when it was found he was not injured, almost a miraculons escape. _ After a brief consultation the race was postâ€" poned till Tuesday with the result given below : Little Hector has great speed, and at no time huardly was at his best. Blinky Morgan on a dry track might bhave done better, as it was he labored heavily, though his 2ud in the first heat goet him 3rd money. _ Black Thorn for a colt showed good staying power but Anna Gould hugged the inside so weli there was no passing her. Jay Birdâ€"Dr. MceWilliams, Dundalk (iwen â€"H. Wilken, The Band a little after 2 p. m. lined up and marched to the grounds, and the crowd followed glad not to bhave to go home disappointed. â€" Their playâ€" inz at intervals was naweh liked. Boundary Maidâ€"T. H. Craig, Guelph Owen Sound 2 Elnoreâ€"â€"â€"D. Nichol, Atwood 4 ‘Time, 58 see., 57 see., 56 sec. Before these were finished the track was worked up in spots to such a muddy condition that making good time was impossible. Competent men judged that on a good track 2.20 or 2.24 would have been made. It was good racing. that is, there was no suspicion ot fraud, which praciice has too often degraded the racers and cheated the crowd. The Turf, Club carried out their part of the agreement faithfally and the generous response g‘ven to their efforts, on such a day, will encourage thein another yvear. Black Thornâ€"J. A. Hanter, Durham Time of heats, 2.43, 2.47, Ella Stauntonâ€"â€"J. Reid, Owen Sound Blinkey Morganâ€"Herb. Wiikins, Owen Sound Grace M.â€"P. MceDavitt, Lucknow Spunkâ€"Geo. Powell, Anna Gouldâ€"W. Barnes, Toronto Harry (G. â€"Thos. Reid, More did come, however, and about noon too, when many would be leayâ€" ng home and it was certain that the success of the day was injured. From the large number who did face the weather it is evident that a good day would have brought a very large crowd when it is noted that gate reâ€" ceipts amounted to #135. Little Hectorâ€"J. Aldons, Fenelon Falls The following table will show the result of the two first races by heats. Only 3 heats in each case were ncâ€" cessary to decide. Arranged in order of merit : Monday last local sports woke up with disappointment to find that a brisk shower had ushered in the day. However, had no more come the track would have been in splendid condition, and as some good horses were here, the result very largely ot the indefatigable exertions of Secretary Black, it was confidently expected the record of the track would be broken. Time of heats, 2.36, 2.35, 2.30 PacE or Tror. Heats. UR CUB METMG FrEE ®or Aumâ€"Mile heats. An Unfavorable Track. Astowe Heats. 1 2 [l\f“ts. Orillia *) days Possessed with a deftness offingers, and an eye tor the beautiful, she deâ€" lighted many with her skill and handiwork, and showed her aesthetic taste in the selection and care of flowâ€" ers, of which she had a fine collection. Her _ tuneral, â€" notwithstanding â€" the showery condition ot the weather, was largely attended _ by _ friends and neighbors of the deceased, who had all sympathized with her in her afftiction during life, and who showed their respect to her and the sorrowing relatiyes in thus attending the last obsequies. Rev,. Mr. Miller of Holstein in the abserce of the pastor conducted the funeral service, taking for his text ‘"For me to live is Christ, but to die is gain." Mrs, Wim. Townsend,. lately of Egremont, but now of Nault Ste. Marie, is visitiny at MroA. Leshe‘s for a few This community has onee more been visited by death, and has been called upon to pay the last sad rites of reâ€" spect to Miss Maggie Adams, who has been such a sufferer for so iong a time, which she always bore with most exâ€" emplary _ fortitude _ and _ Christian patience. _ Maving in later years been denied the privileges enjoyed by those of a more robust constitution in outâ€" door exercises to a certain extent, she devoted her spare time to the reading of books, which were well calculated to aayance one‘s spiritual welfare, and growth in grace, and also stored her mind with a tund of usef‘ul knowledge. The judges were Dr. Mearns, Hanâ€" over; John Kenny, Mount Forest Thos. Black, Durham, and their deâ€" cisions were generally satisfactory. Wm. Caldwell acted as starter, and F. W. Gokey was Clerk of the Scales. The best horsemen present speak highly of our track, and another year, owing to Secretary Black‘s nerve in getting them here this, there will no doubt be a fine ** meet." The receipts, notwithstanding the weather, were $20 aboad of last year. The rain in the afternoon filled the Grand Stand better than the sun ever did. Rain again began to fall and the horsemen being agreed, the race was declared finished. The Great English Remedy. Sold and recommended by all druggists in Canada. Orx;z( reliâ€" sblle‘a;:dlclne w‘? e iï¬ guara cure forms of Sexual Weakness, all effects of abuse or excess, Mental Worry, Excessive use of Toâ€" buoof is Opium or ks"m?}“i"'s%‘“gg 3%‘ reeepk:zl of price, one age $1, six, $5. sixz will cure. ?:mphlets free to .n{nuddresa. * The Woed Company, Windsor, Ont attacks of dizziness, headache, palpitation, nâ€"rvousness HOWARD‘S HEART RELIEF cures such discases. & Ask your drugvist or by mail at gec. per box 5 boxes for $2 ce. ** §$, W. NOWARD, 71 Victoria $t., Torente. In many cases the heart and veinslack power to perfectly return the blood from the head and extremities for purifica ion. Then follow The Blood is the Life. Sluggish Blood breeds disease, the seed of death. A strong heart is natures ow n invigorator and the best purifier. Circulation. . . _ Patents taken through Munn & Co. recels special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir. culation of any scientific 1ourn;|. Terms, $3 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. year; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdeaiers, MUNN & Co.3s :sm« New YQrk Brauch Office, 6 F St., Washington, D. C. Roward‘s Peart ness and Imperfect ~ e C LPEpTEIEE "TITTC* Copynicants &c. Anyone sending a sketch and deocrlgtm may qnlckl{onooruln our opinion free whether an invention is probably &unuble. Communicaâ€" tlon.urlat&yeonfldont . Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest lgency for lecurlnncpnumu. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive For all Heart Weakâ€" Hood‘s Pills Rouso the Liver â€" Af" ‘Wood‘s Phosphodine, Are prepared from N2 ture‘s mild laxatives, and while flf{entle are reliable and efficient. They Cure Sick Headache, Bilâ€" iousness, Sour Stomach, and Constipation. Sold everywhere, 25c. per box. Prepared by C.1. Hood & Co.,Lowell, Mass, DPromore Relief Wncs Dik.Rite if I have been robbing a bank.â€"London aminer. Wifeâ€"How people guze at my new | dress! I presume they wonder if I‘ve I been shopping in Paris. I Husbandâ€"More likely they wonder * line, if he steers away from submerged buoy chains and docks, the fight must end in the deanth of the fish. Sometimes he tows the boat for three hours before his strength is gone and he is hauled to the surface. The death struggle is worst of all. The fish is dragged to the top and lies there, apparently all bus dead. Then they drive a harpoon #nto him, and the sting of the steel starts all his life again. The harpoon line holds him near the surface, anud he makes a great race for a little while, but, of course, it caunot last. At the end the sh is towed back to the dock, and there the floating population of San Diego is assembled. Everybody gets hold of a rope and hoists the giant fish upon the dock, and there the tired monster flounâ€" ders, its mouth gaping like a tunnel and its eyes, big as baseballs, starting from their sockets.â€"San Francisco Exâ€" real fun of jesviishing begins. It is just sport for a fish of any size to tow a whitehall around the bay, and it is pretâ€" ty rough sailing in his wake. _ As soon as he realizes that thero is afight on the jewtish seems to forget that heis astaid bottom fish. All the steam of his black bass ancestors gets riley, and he plunges and turns, twists and strikes Someâ€" where down in the cavern of his gullet he has an arrangement of bone like a couple of millstones, and when he disâ€" covers he caunot spit out the hook. he tries to swallow it and grind the line apart, so the slack has to be carefully attended to. Thereare some tremendous fish in San Diego bay, and though the hooks are made of hand forged tool steel they have snapped many of them. If everything goes well, if the hook holds and the fish does not grind the Incidentally toothpicks play quite a part in the fishing. Each fisherman takes a handful with him when he leaves the breakfast table. They stick one in a crack at the top of a pile and loosely loop the line around it. The shore part of the line is coiled on the wharf, ard the end is fast to an empty powder kee or some such thirg that will float well. On the toothpick is stuck a bit of white rag, and as half a dozen or a dozen lines are used at once therse is a string of these little signal flags all along the dock. The fisherman has nothing more to do for awhile than to watch the flags, When one goes down, it means that something has taken the bait. After gathering in the barracouda heads or the impaled halibut the jewfish starts away like the locomotive on a fast exâ€" press. Down goes the signal flag. Everybody around runs for the line. They know they can‘t hold the fish, but the resistance®makes it harder for him and helps them to tire him outâ€"the ulâ€" timate object. _ The great fish does not struggle at first, but moves steadily soaâ€" ward, pulling the line through the men‘s hands. Occasionally, when the fish weighs less than 200 pounds, they can tire him out without paying out all of the line, but usually it all goes, and presently the strugglo is transferred to the water. The empty powder keg bounces over the water imost erratical ly, the men chase it in a boat, and when they catch it hold on. Then the The process of catching a jewfish is a progressive and interesting one. The fishers begin at the beginning. With bent pins or dip nets they. look for minâ€" nows or sardelles, The quarry secured, it promptly becomes bait, and the conâ€" course is treated to smelt fishing. Then comes the smelt‘s turn in the succesâ€" sion. He is impaled, and the fisherman, with a keavier rod and a larger hook, goes to the other side of the wharf for & halibut or a sea bass. When the bait, dead or alive, is ready, the stoutest armed man on the wharf picks up the line. He swings the two or three pounds of bait around his hoead like an Indian does the bolas and hurls it seaward. The great line, as thick as a lead pencil, coils out after the hook, awud that is nearly all until the fish comes along. The men who catch these fish that sometimes weigh 1,000 pounds call them jewfishâ€"a corruption of junefish. The last is a translation of one of their Mexâ€" ijcan names. Probably they were called junefish from the fact that they are plentiful along the shores in tho late spring and early summer. No matter how he got his name, the jewfish is a wonder. Helooks like a bass fisherman‘s nightmare when they get him out of the water. Every fin and mark is there, magnifiecd out of all proportion. His scales are as big as half dollars, his mouth is a gaping chasm, and the spikes of his dorsal fin aroe bigger than tenpenâ€" ny nails. & The Process Is of the Progressive Kind, The Part Toothpicks Playâ€"The un With a Kegâ€"Members of the ass Family That Weigh Hundreds of Pounds. Don‘t talk to a man from southern California about black bass fishing, or he will make your best bass story a feeâ€" ble, pitiful thing. Hoe will tell you of black bass that could swallow the bigâ€" gest day‘s catch you ever mado and take in your creel for dessert without as much as gulping. Voice a doubt, and the man fron San Diego will pull from his fishing traps something that looks like a one fAuked ship‘s anchor. That is what he fishes with for the strange, monstrous black bass in the bays and ebout the islands of the southern Caliâ€" fornia coast. They don‘t call them black bass down thero, though the fish comâ€" missioners say they are, and the natuâ€" ralists have identificd them hy fins and bones and form with the gamy two and three pounders that make men fickle even to trout. ANGLING FOR MARINZ MONSTERS IN SAN DIEGO BAY. CATUHIN(i JEZWFISH, / Two Points of View, Our store will be open all next Saturday, July Ist aud Monday anorning, July 3rd, but Monday afiternoon is the day we celebrate. Everybody come next Monday. Be SURE ond CE our HEAYY HAVESTR Mochine 01L Every Man his Own Painter. _ Our weekly supply of Readyâ€"Mixed PAINTS just arrived. Do I=" If your dealer does not handle our Twine write Plymouth Binder Twine Agency, 54 Bay Street, Toronto. On Every Tag. _ See That You Get it! This Trade Mark is IT PAYS TO_ _ BUY THE BEST. Apples, per bag Eggs, per doz ... . Hides, per ewt _ ... Calfskins . ... ... Sheepskins ... ... Hay, per ton Straw, * nb Potatoes, per bag Flour per ewt .......... Oatmeal per sack ...... Bran per cwt ... ... Shorts per ewt Fall Wheat per bushel Barley, +* Peas, *+* Oats, ++ Dr‘d Hogs, per eowt Hogs, live weight ... Lard per lb Tallow* per Ib Butter per Ib, Tuab ... ** moll FARMERS Jas. R. Gun Galder‘s Block AMD RETURN Returning July 3ra. FULL PARTICULARS AS TO RATES, ETC. APPLY TO .. . July 13. July 18. DOMINION DAY « CHEAP Excursions Manitoba, Minnesota, and N. Dakota â€"â€"Just arrived a large stock of Preserving Kettles, â€"â€"We have, without doubt, the best Churn in the market. To# not neglect to paint your buggy. Now Have a Full supp‘y j HARVEST TOOLS. Call early and get your choice. Don‘t forget that we carry a full line of SECTIONS and GUARDS and HEADS for Mowers, Reapers, Binders. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO DURKHAM MARKET. June 30, and July 1, TICKET AGENT Cheap Rates going HAPDWAPE. se« sassak k 0 PA MOK srrsss esA r bushel ... ** wex : Q Â¥* se 0 +* tue . 0) Â¥ owb ... 4 gluk ... .... M ANOTHER large SHIPMENT of COOUE CANS just to HAND. Good for two Months going $1 80 to $2 15 2 00 to 2 25 Quthon, 001. 80 to 90 to 65 to 0 45 tc 0 62 to 0 28 to 4 75 to 4 10 to 10 to 04 to 10 to 10 to 11 to 25 to 50 to 5 00 to 0 00 to 15 to J A 6000" A AYMOUN Will not be persuaded into purchasing the unreliabe Binder Twine which some dealers wish to sell for the sake of the additional profit derived therefrom. Cruâ€" dely made from lowâ€"grade fibres,â€"such twine contains but a fraction of the qualâ€" ity, strength and uniform evenness of the highly constructed Plymouth Brands. 00 to 4 80 O0 10 04 0 12 0 6 0 00| 89| WHO APRP E T 00 30 WM. BLACK 66 62 70 50 *) «) NO OTHER TWINE 1S They Soy it Pays, They all Soy So H. H. MILLER will have been 20 %«uw at the business nert XMAS AY, and he KNOWS HOW to get monc{ at lowest possible rates and with best privileges, That is why the whole country goes to him. I’r ix lending at 5 per cent, and on large loans at 4 3â€"4, A Hundred good Farms for saleâ€"AIso a number of fine Hanover Properties. Go to him if you want to sell; Go to him if you want to buy. He collects notes and accounts, and it beats everyâ€" thing how he gets money out of old claims that have been thrown aside as worthless. â€" BUSINESS Tangles, Snarls and Difficulties straightened out settled and adjusted without lawsuits or ill feeling, by the use of a little tact and good judgment If you are unable to pay 100 cents on the $ he will assist you to arrange with your creditors, _ Imsolvent Estates satâ€" isfactorily wound up, Deeds, Mortga zes, Wills, and other Writings 1-;u-c~|'u|l‘;' prepared, "Always Prompt. Never Negligent. All business Strictly Private, * If. pypm # + o 1 er HANQOVER . SIANDARD BANK OF CANAD1 PROTESTANTS ' and CATHOLICS, Rich Men, Poor Men, Grits, Tories and Patrons, ALL DEAL WITH.... CAPITAL, CAPITAL, RESERYVE AGENTS in all principal points in Ontario, __Quebec, â€" Manitoba, United States and England, A general Banking business transacted, Drafts issued and collections made on all points, _ Deposits received and interâ€" est allowed at curreat rates. SAVINGS BANK. Interest allowed on savings bank deposits of $1.00 and upâ€" wards. _ Prompt attention and every facility afforded customers living at a distance, J. KELLY, Agent. DURHAM AGENCYy. cotch & Irish ! Head Office, Toronto. VE FUNXD iÂ¥ uky l W. F. COWAN, President. GEO. P. REID, Manager. . H. MILLER, The/Hanover Conveyvane Authorized Paid up . ... WISE I $2,000,000 1,000,000 . _ 600,000