\n E4 Jrt bj {} Owing to the dullness of trade and the feoling of insecurity in Russia, the Moscow Industrial Ezhibition, contamplated for 1000, has been postpemed for a twelveâ€" A despatch from Blackburn, Lancashire, says the cotton trade is unprecedentedly gloomy. Several mills in that district will Lzxox Prz.â€"1 cup of hot water, 1 tableâ€" spoonful flour, 1 cup of sugar, 1 teaspoonâ€" ful of butter, 1 lemon ; cook for a few minutes. ‘Then add one egg beaten ; this makeas one pie, with top and bottom crust. To Treur Goonp Eoos.â€"If you desire to be certain that your egge are good and fresh, put them in water. If the butts turn up they are not fresh. This is an infallible rule to distinguish good eggs from bad Warre Caxz.â€"3 cups flour, 2 caps sugar, threeâ€"fourths cup of milk, oneâ€"half cup butter, oneâ€"half teaspoonful soda, white of 6 eags, flavor with lemon. Aumox» Sroxos Caxs.â€"Beat fine, with a wineglass of rose water, 2 ounces of alâ€" monds, half sweet and half bitter ; 1 pound sugar, 10 eggs, beaten separately ; add, lastly, oneâ€"half pound of flour. Gmearzr Swars.â€"1 cup butter, 4 cups flour, ginger to taste, and wet with moâ€" Tar, Azle Greaseâ€"White cottons and lineus. Soap, oil of turpentine and water each applied in turns. Colored cottons and woollens. First smear with lard, rub with soap and water, and let it stand for a short time, then wash with oil of turpenâ€" ting and water, alternately. Silks, the same, using benzine instead of turpentine, audâ€"dropping the water from m certain height on the under side of the satin. Avoid MuUrrixs.â€"1 ping sour milk, 1 egg, flour enough to make a thick batter, soda. Bake chilozipate) warm, eblorie nm'.. concen trited solution o% tartaric acid. Colore« Acids, Vinegar,Orange Juice, &6.â€"White Cotto®s and linens. Wash with pure water or Wirm chlorine water. Colored goods of silk.~ Ammonia diluted according to fineâ€" nese! of the tissue and the delicacy of the weak solntion of tartaric acid, if the color allows of its use. Rust, Nutgall Inkâ€"White cottons and linens. ‘Warm solution of oxalic reid, diâ€" lute muriatic acid, followed by @ranniated tin. Colored cottons and woolleus liepcatâ€" ed washings with a solution of citric acid, if the other color is fast. {Silks, do nothing, all attempts makes things worse. Lime, Lye, Alkaliesâ€"White cottons and linens. Wash with cold water. Colored goods.and silks. A very weak solution of eitric acid applied with the tipof the finâ€" ger to the spot previously moistened with ether, ammonia, magnesia, chalk, yolk of ogg, with water. Paint, Varnish and Resin Stainsâ€"For white or colored cotton and woollen goods, oil of turpentine or benzine, followed by soap suds. For silk, benzine ether or soap â€"hard rubbing tobo avoided. For all kinds ot fabries chloroform is best. Stearin, Sperm Candlesâ€"For all kinds, 95 per cent. aleohol. Wine and Fruit Stainsâ€"White cotton or linen, fumes of burning sulphur, warm chlorine water. Colored cottons or woollens *Wash with soap suds and ammonia. | Silks, the same, with gentle rubbing. Alizarine Inkâ€"White cottons and linens, #artaric acid solution ; the older the stain the more concentrated the solution should be. Colored cottons, woollens, silksâ€"»s The following notes appeared some time ago in the Zeitung :â€" The stains easiest to remove are those of sugar, gelatin and albumen; a simple washâ€" ing with water is all that is necessary for all kinds of fabrics. Grease Spotsâ€"For white linen or cotton goods use soap or weak lye. For colored ealicoes. warm suds, For woollens, soap was soon restored. Pressed to say, if not cancer, what could cause such agony, he declared that it was not a surgical case at mll, and would never require the knife. She was scon well. Another lady, who hdh.ndc-ymhwa.. eases, travelled a long distance to confide to me her conviction that she had cancer of the breast. ‘The Instory was similar. She, too, rapidly recovered on being assurâ€" that there was no such danger. No part of the body is more likely to be affected by ‘"expectancy" than the throat. Of this I could give numerous examples, but will aid only one, as parallel with Dr. Carpenter‘s. A few months since a lady succumbed to cancer of the throat. I saw her in the later stages every week. A fow weeks afâ€" ter her decease, a young lady, a near relaâ€" tive, who had nursed her, came to me in the utmost distress, affected, as she beliovâ€" od, with the same disease. This single "7 In® NCY SORVIEWON that she had cancer of the breast. The Instory was similar. She, too, rapidly recovered on being assurâ€" that there was no such danger. No part onbobodyi-mlihlybboafleetodby ‘"expectancy" than the throat. Of this I Mr. Prosser James, Dean Stroet, Park Lane, writes to the British Medical Jourâ€" nal as follows :â€"A few years ago, a lady who had watched a case of cancer on the breast, which had been excised, became convineed that she was sufering from the Effecte of Attention on the ng to the tigsue and its color, each ion to be followed by washing with , Walout Shells.â€"White cottons t, Javelle Waters (liquor soda RULES FOR REMOVING , diluted A lady, not accustomed to raising poulâ€" tr.y set a hen on some eggs, and in due course of time a brood of chickens was hatched. A friend, coming in four days afterward, noticing that the little things looked weak and puny, asked how often they were fed. "Fed!" was the reply, ""why, I thought the hen nursed them." A promising youth of only seven sumâ€" mers, who had been accused of not always telling the truth, crossâ€"ezamined his father. "Father, did you not nse to whopper when ‘ you were & boy ?" "No, my son," said the paternal, who evidently did not recall the past with any distinetness. "Nor mother, either ?" persisted the young lawyer. "No! â€"â€"but why ?" "Oh! because I don‘t see how two people who never told a whopper eon'ldhnun boy that tells as many as I he don‘t I‘m ‘fraid it‘ll take me all next A telegraph operator at Phillipsburg proâ€" tects his cherry tree from the depredations of the small boy by running a number of wires over it in connection with the battery in his office. ‘When the small boy touches one of them he drops to the ground and and runs off howling. ‘"How long will it be before you get this work done ?" said a lady to s. apprentice who was painting her house on Third street. **Well, I don‘t know ma‘am," said he, "the boss has just gone to look for another job. ‘ If he gets it, I‘ll be done toâ€"morrow, but if ‘"Come, now, stupid," sard the schoolâ€" master, ‘"you don‘t know how much two and five make, Now listen. In one pocket I have $2 and in the other $5. Now how many dollers have I got ?" "Let me see them, and I will tell you." School was A gentleman addressed his servant: "James, how is it that my butcher bills are so large, and I always have such dinners ?" ‘*Really, sir, I don‘t know, for I‘m sure we never have anything nice in the kitchen that we don‘t send some of it to the Little boy at the opening of the proposed spelling match. "Let‘s start fair grandâ€" mother. You take, Nebuchadnezzar‘ and I‘ll take ‘cnt." In this busy land a man is always liable to be aroused from his slumbers ; but in Ireland they never wake a person until he The police of New York are being vaceiâ€" nated. Uscless precaution! they never catch anything. The winning of the last race was wholly due to skillfal Hanlan, of the oars. A correspondent of the London Times, summarizing the various accounts of the death of the Prince Imperial, says :â€"The Quartermaster â€" General disobeyed Lord Chelmsford‘s orders by sending the Prince on a dangerous expedition with an escort which deserted its duty. In the whole affair there is not one redeeming feature. A bang up affairâ€"A powder mill plosion. At a meeting of delegates from all the temperance organizations in the county of Waterloo held in Galt on Tuesday, it was finally decided to submit the Scott Act to the electors, and arrangements were made tor holding public meetings and securing the requisite number of signatures to tho‘ petitions. in St. John‘s Roman Catholic Church at Rochester, Minn., the other Sunday, Father Turner made his congregation ot 1,200 arise and take the temperance pledge in a lump. she must despair; they change the sublime meaning of marriage to vulgarity and weariness ; they spoil the chance of that best and finest of all education which each man obtains who wins a reasonable good woman for his companion, and they cost more to s million househnolds than money can ever pay back.â€"Daily Telegraph. The Duke of Cambridge, Commanderâ€"inâ€" Chief of the British army, heads the Comâ€" mittee of army officers to superintend the raising of a memorial to the late Prince Imperial. grossnesses of masculine ingratitude do not, indeed, often lead to visible catastroâ€" phe, nor grow into such absolute tyranny, but they equally tend that way. They drag down a wife‘s soul to the point where cannot comprehend, and the elevating inâ€" fAuence of which they throw away even more by stapidity than wilfulness. A woâ€" man, by her sez and character, has a claim to many things beside shelter, food and clothing. She is not less a woman tor beâ€" ing wedded ; and the man who is fit to be trusted with a good wife recollects all which petually chivalrous, awoetspoken, considerâ€" ate and deferential. ‘The fools and brutes who abound among ns may think such deâ€" mands hard ; but they are not nearly so hard as to live the catâ€"andâ€"dog life, missing the dearest possibilities of human interâ€" course. What right has a man to expect happiness in a household who brings no sunshine into it? What right has he to‘ look for the graces and refinements of earâ€" love when be violates them by rough speech, ill manners, and the disregard of those little things upon whichthe selâ€"freâ€" spect of a wife is built and maintained ? The cynic who rails at marriage is generâ€" ally one and the same with the thoughtless egotist who flings into the presenee of his wife careless, stubborn, and sourâ€"temperâ€" ed, though he never wont to his mistress except on his best behavior. Let us have more social justice in these matters. The fate is horrible which a pure and faithful girl may endure by encountering in him whom she weds not mere actual cruelty or injury, but stupid incompetence to underâ€" stand a woman‘s needs, dull forgetfuiness of the daily graces of life, and oblivion of the fact that while men have the world The truth is that these t30 trequent "onâ€" happy marriages" are the offspring of igâ€" ex AND SHINGLES, done at once, and cheap, to suit the times. SHINGLES, LATH AND LUMBER on hand and sold at down hill prices, J. W. CRAWFORD, Rockville Mills, Durham P. 0. Custom Sawing of Lumber With the Circular Saw against all kinds of Saw Logs during 1878. NO ARMISTICE For time at intermediate stationssoe Time Tablos EDMUND WRAGGE. On and after MONDAY, 3th May, 187 9, trains will run as follows;â€"â€", TORONTO (UXION 8TaTION. Depart, 7:30 s&. m., 11:35 p. m., 540 p. m Arrive, 10:30 a. m., 3:00 p. m., 940 p. m, ORANGEVILLE. South, 715 a. m., 11:35 a. m., 5:40 p. md m::;m a. m., 425 p. m., 8:20 p. m« North. Depart, 11:30 a. m., 445 p m. Arrive, 1115 a. m., 5:20 p, mâ€" West. Depart 1145 am, â€" Arrive 11:00 a. i. TORONTO, RAILWAY, Night of mocting, Thursda ono;bolou u moo‘ghln mhm;l:&. T,Cnngn.!oc. 8 TEPHEN LODGE No. 160 L 0.0.F. _ _ Night of moe! every Monday at 7:30 o‘clock, in t.h.%gd Foflowm."yvumn‘ ‘nflhnn welcome. T. A. Harris, N.G. W. B. Vollet, See. Night of meoï¬nl‘.r‘l‘uosduy on or before full moon of each _ month. mï¬nat brethren welcome. A. Vollet W, M. H. W. Moukler, Seerotary. Town Hallâ€"open overy Friday evening from 7 to 9 o‘clock. Shares #1, annual foe 50 cents. Alexan der Robertson, Librarian. Office hours from 8 &.m.to 7 p. m. Arch. Mc Kenzie, Postmaster. 8. G. REGISTRY OFFICE Thomas Lauder, Registrar; John A putyâ€"Registrar. Office hours from 10 a Toronto. April 20th, 1879 W. Grant, pastor. Bunday Servicesâ€"preachâ€" ing at 11 a. m.; Sabbath School at 2:30 p. m.; Preaching at 7 p. m. Week evening Servicesâ€" Monday evening, young peoples‘ rra{er moeting at 8 E m. ; Wednesday evening, Bible class at 8 p. m Thursday evening, regulai prayer meeting at 8 p.m Services evori' Sabbath at 10:30 a. m. and 6:30 p.m. Sabbath School at 2:30 ? m,. . Prayer meeting every Thursday evening at welock, and Bible Class every Monday evening at8 o‘clock. Pastor Rev. R. Godfrey. overy Wodnesday ovening at 7:30. Bible Class over Thursday evening at 7:30. Rev. Win. Park, pastor Divine Service GVOI?’ Babbath at 11 a. m. and 6:30 p. in. Sabbath School at 2:30 p. m. Prayer meeting Subbath services at 11 a, m, and 7 p. m. Sunday Bchool at 2 p. m. Rev. H. B. Wray, B. A., pastor Church Wardens, H. J, Middaugh and Elias Edgo. June, August, October and December. Primroseâ€"â€"Wednesday _ preceding â€" the Orangeville Fair. Orangevilleâ€"The 2nd Thursday in cach month., i Walkertonâ€"The last Wednesday in each month. Mildmay â€" Last Wednesday of each month. month. C Flesherionâ€"Monday before Orangeville. Dundalkâ€"Tuesday before Orangeville. Shelburneâ€"Wednesday before Orangevilic. Marsvilleâ€"Second Weduesday in each DURHAM DIRECTORY Hanoverâ€"Monday before Durham. Mount Forestâ€"Third Wednesday in each month. Guelphâ€"Â¥First Wednesday in each month. Harristonâ€"Friday before the Guelph Fair. Draytonâ€"Saturday before G: e‘ph. Eloraâ€"The day before Guelph. Douglasâ€"Monday before Elora Fair. Hamiltonâ€"Cyrstal Palace Grounds, the day after Guelph. Berlinâ€"First Thursday in each month Bramptonâ€"First Thursday in each month. Listowelâ€"First Friday in each month. Fergusâ€"Thursday following Mount Forest. Rosemontâ€"Fifteenth of February, April, Durhamâ€"Third Tuesday in each month. Pricevilleâ€"Monday before Durham. clover seed, Grass seed, Garden seeds & Turnip seed j Very Cheap. DONT FORGET TO BUY EARLY AT As all kinds of goods must shortly go up in price, many lines having already advanced, all who require goods will save money by Buying now at NOW is the time to buy a CATTY of that Choice Japan Tea at 46¢. put up in a neat Tin Caddy. NOW is the time to buy a PIECE of GOOD CHEAP FACTORY COTTON. PRINTS FROM b5e. PER YARD UP. FACTORY COTTONS From 5¢. per yard By the Picce. * TEA FRKOM 206. PER POUND. Immense stock of Staple Dry Goods. G@roceries &c., I beg to inform the public that shortly before the increased duties were imposed under the "National Policy" tariff J purchased an CHANGE OF TIME. War, War! DRY GOODS@ and GROCERIES At J. H. HUNTER‘S. DURHAM LODGE No. 306 OF A. F. & A. M Durbkam, April 2nd, 1879. MONTHLY CATTLE FAIRS. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH MECHANICS‘ INSTITUTE DURHAM L. O, L, No.63%, C. METHODIST CHURCH. 6:30 a. m., 12:00 noon. 400 p.m., 10:15 p. m. BAPTIST CHURCH TRINITY CHURCH And intend offering them at the old LOW Prices for 30 days. POST OFFICE TEESWATER GREY, AND BRUCE istrar; John A. Munro, Deâ€" ours from 10 &. m. to 4 p.m. â€"J. H. HUNTDERS. BY BUYING A GOOD STPPLY OF M J. H. HKUNTER‘. Buy It! .-'m’_[‘ry It! T.J. B. Harpixc, Dominion Agent h ville, Onlecs Agent, Brock For Sale by all Dn%fgn]ym Dolls Ask for Littlefield‘s Constitutional Catarrh * Remedy and take No Other. T.J. B. Harpixc. Dominion Amsat B1 y Pre io Prrped Ssd Wt mss P h vstoma t 5+2 t came to Walkerton in A t, 1876, 1 m&mbomu Mmlh&dunu:in: uarter nlthomhnhotomml!omdncldnzw, Tiking it, focling quite cured of that etiment! fad hvonolm.du;nmuï¬lol late L have taken some for a cold in my head Aunuuldusybmkommflmï¬m disease, Catarrh, to send this Cerâ€" tificate, nmoumod.'igl::ob mnz:‘vm use of it you may see proper. y w. mmlg;w‘"' list § Port Elgin, Ont., Aug. 26. Minister as at first the happy effects seemed to me to be "too good to be true.‘ I was affiicted in my head for years before I susâ€" foetodumbocmn{.lnn.dh(h ur Circular uwmyundaeflhodhmyï¬:;n, The lnwud'idnp;hv:::thohesdh-d mverydlr agrecable, and a omiu::ï¬lon preventâ€" ing me from lying lo w feol like smotherâ€" inandbooonpdï¬wdtn in the bed. My health ahd spirite were uflonl}y affected. When your Agent came to Walkerton in August. 1876 1 TX 6 2 PE OE Brockville, Ont. Dran Sin.â€"It is now two years since your "Conâ€" stitutionalCatarrh Kemedy ‘ was introduced to me. I have waited this long to see if the cure would reâ€" main Ermnem before doing this, my duty,to you as at first the happy effects ssemed to me to be "too Themands Appiand iis Wonderful Cures, Hear what a Reverend GentJloman says of the Constitutional Remedy. T.J. B. Harpmo. Esq., _ _ _ Light Harness, Trimmings, Whips, etc. A sense of duty to sufferers from ___ thoircustom, _ _ _ _ _ _ Chopping Done every Day. Flour and Feed for Sale. A comfortable Shed for in Firstâ€"Class Style. Having had twentyâ€"Ave years experience in the business, he can gurrantee 2007 ©2perience in the business, he can gurrantee satisfaction to those who may favour him with THE subscriber desires to inform the hrmin1 community of Glenelg, and surroundâ€" ing Townships, that he has rofitted the above Mills, and is now prepared to do _ Durham, July 4, 1878. Boed Millet, Hungarian Grass, Tares &o,, at Jowost Market rates. Bee Catalogue. ter‘s Purple Top Mammoth; Mengelâ€" wurzel, Globe nmr Large Mommoth, Beets, Cabbage, Carrots &c. &c. Clover & Timothy Aberdeen, Green Top and Purple Top Yellow, Devonshire Grey Stone, and Carâ€" Glenelg, Feb. 1, 1879. Carter‘s Imperial Hardy, 1879. ANNUAL 1879. ITIMPORTATION CALL AND SEKE . _ W.‘ Bouldens‘ Bangholm‘s Improved and Purdy‘s Mills, Glenelg. PER STEAMER "SARDINIAN." Sutton‘s Champion Swede. URES CATA CONSTITUTIONAL Catarrh Remedy A TA R R the Gristing, Of Seeds H. PARKER. mmodation of Teams. .. FREDERICK (G. KNIGHT, EStock of Including Durnax. t(â€"51 +hne Oubcriber is agent for the sale of the celebrated MOWER manufactured by the TORONTO REAPER & MOWEEK COMPAXY, * _ ALSO Note and Book Accounts collected on reasonable terms. omcz:nxhnn&nm'. Storoq Tnwrae T. The Subcriber Mowers, Reapers, Sulky Hay Rakes, Laidlay & Stewart‘s Improved Gang Ploughs,. &¢ AGRICULTURAL Cash for Sheepskins Agent for the Superior Broadcast Seeder and Drill. Alsc U HEAP FOR CASH OR TRAE, Cook, Parlor and Box Stoves. Particular attention paid to Favestroughing, STOVES AND TINWARE ! The subscriber bege to inform the public that he has a lar A LARGE AND WELL ASSORTED STOCK OF STATIONERY SUCH As Caulifiower, Cabbage, Celery, Tomato nip, Beet, Cucumber, Melons &c. : Vegetable and Flower Timothy and Clover OF THE DIFFERENT KINDS: TURNIP SEEDS, of The Best Quality, of the different named KIERNAN The Royalist Trimming especially shaped for collars & cuffs PATENTED CHINELLA NECK TIES, MUSLIN TIES, NET TIES, LACE TIES. FRENCH FAXNS, FANCY FANS, DAMASK POCKET IIA!\'DKERCHIEFS, NEW METAL DRESS BUTTOXNS, & A LOT OF SUXNX SHADES, All of which will be sold at very low prices. Fashionable SUMMER STOCK WOULD NOW INVITE THE LADIES TO COME AND EXAMINXE HIS Dorham, April, 9, 1879. The Subscribers wishing to return thanks to their numerous friends and customers for their patronage in the past would remind them that they are as usual prepared to do in the best possible manner and on the shortest notice. We are also prepared to pay the Highest Market Price in Cash, POEBRBR W OOL. ! As usual we have a large Stock of Feice and Canadian Tweeds, Eulicloths, Shirtings and Flannels which we will exchange for Wool or sell cheap for cash. Durham, April 4, 1878, SulkyHayRakes, Mowing Machines, Reaping Machines both single and combined, Lumber Waggons, Horse Powers and Separators, At The DURHAM FOUNDRY. A. COCHRANE. Carding, Spinning & Manufacturing, Durham, Feb. 26th, 1878. Durham, May, 15, 1879, Hanover, May 22, 1879, White Belgian Carrot Seed. MANGEL WURTZEL. Also a full Stock of NEW SEEDS, Comprising : Beet, Gucufnber, Melons &c,qa.n'dâ€"-t.ilâ€"e’ El-ée;c-x'lt. FLOWER SEEDS. WOOL!| WOOL ! JOHN CAMERON SWEEDS, YELLOW ABERDEEX, and WHITE TURNIP. ADAMS & MESSENGER. Before purchasing Elsewhere dont fail to see our Stock MILLIN ER Y ._JOHNSTON, Jr., STATIONERY. Fancy Dry Gooods. E. & A. DAVIDSON. Durham, May 15th, 1879. KIERNAN & HUGHSON. Agent for the sale of all kinds of cast Seeder and Drill. Also the Galloway Sulky Rakeâ€"the best Sulky rake in the Domtnion, Consisting in part of the following : BOOKS, Always on L A DTE S$ e public that he has a lar WPARE. which will be lolr #iccounts collected on reasonable terms. & Hughson‘s Store, Lower To DURRA N w* HAVE IN STOCK : IMPLEMENTS, â€"ANDâ€" ~â€"ANDâ€" MEDICAL HALL, LOWER TOWN y Qnion, Carrot, Pars JOHN â€" CAMEROX. Hides. and SCROOL yâ€"3 NEW MOST APPROVED KINDS can depend upon boing satisfe by leavieg And with the Greatest Promptituds Having lately made an addition to our Possesses great Facilities for doing Job Department, Is pow fitted up in the very best styls, and Best Style of the The Large and rapidly increasing Circy and contains a vast amount of READING MATTER, "Grey Review," Good Family Newspaper Best Mediums for Advertisers Osprey, Melancthon and other To« n ships makes it one of the "Grey Review" Job Work The office is furnished with K=°PO8STAGE FREr Price $1.25 per Annum type, parties wishing OF THE LATEST LOCAL AND FOREIG® If not paid in advrance should subscribe for the Townships of Glenelg, In the County of Grey V OR T. 88 COLUMX PapPrp us their orders. done in the very Al. who want a MARKET REPoRTs lation of the ,â€" NTYXPE, Ete AND EDITORIApLs PROTRIETOPR PRINTING _ orpics wline all of all kinds 3 . Daurha J’“:"’"}‘"" in 3. 7 Durham, « First class worl # Forous. ‘\']C will pa permon th a imission to sell ou Bontinck, a Ruthorford Borrowers. . W Mortgages Bou Bungoon Drug st 1y Veteria ( x RADCUATH K ‘College. T Mugh Roso‘s 131 ( +4 YETERINARY SUR V‘ Will be at Has duy and Frids ( * RADUATE I Toronto, an versity, Montreal Cabinet A ? solicitors in vevancing, &c Officos â€"PDou! tt Sound, and evory ALFRED ProS K. #chools, Church« Doors, Sesh and 1 Mas removed to his O near the Post Ofice, w friends and customers Dundalk, March, 20, weeks for ®1, the a need 8 lines. Advertisements, ex by written instruction inserted until forldd wlar rates, MR. EECTOT deaths, and all kind free of charge. STRAY ANIMALS 1 Do. three mo: Casaal advertiseme: LAne for the first inser for eath #@bsequent “!IWI’ eolu alf column One column, 13 (’\' Real Estates at 8, 8i, and 9 vent, aecording to privilages granted L.oans Rtepayab rotessional and business space and under, per Two inches or 24 lines ~, Three inches do. per you Quarter column, per yoa Money to #a. $1.25 if not paid w At the Office, Garafraxs S Dandalk, M Thursd: Ivery T Durham, â€" â€" m. Ordor Durham . A Carpenters and Build Instalments, or Othorw TRUST AxD LoOWN CO. Of English & Beottish Envestment Ca #hov work , srite Egremont, Jan., 167 $66 > BUSINESS DINECTOI C. McP ayor U PHOLSTERT NORMAN MoINTYRE, e Valuator, Durhar "TH EB REVIET V JLANS and * RADLT Lower Town, 1 *RADUATH .2 per Town, Durhs Meney te Loan. Do You Want Mon:« t MacRAF, REAL E81 | AGENTS, READ THI TERMS : â€" Connty < Frost & Frost ARRISTERS and A« loge, I ARRISTER, A C, 06. 3 A Oe B0 ®, 85. A 'l"l‘OBNl;\ at Law t McFAYDE N ARRISTER®S. + #e. Office. one d Garafraxea ®treet NTIST Geo. J. Matthews MISCELLANXEOU®S RATES OF AD\ Woo@ Turn WBRAAA M A. 40+ Watson Bros Com Ay E. D MEDICAL REMOVAL notices To Buit Borrowe six month three mont $1.00 per «s OBR O N LEGAL McARETH DUNDALA I% PUALL t3 w9 t B0 E9A % Make: H. Ha Oc