$ 0 #4 The Council of the township of Normanâ€" by met per adjournment oflast meeting on L _ she Rih 186( at the Township Members present,â€"Jobhn Koenig Keeve, John Blyth 1st Deputy Reeve, William Winkler 2nd Deputy Reeve, and Hugh Ball and Counrad Fisher Councillors. Minutes of last meeting read and passed. Moved by Mr. Blyth, seconded by Mr. Winkler, that account relative to bridge presented by Mr. Schenk, as overscer, amounting to $145 be paid,â€"Carried. Moved by Mr. Fisher, seconded by Mr. Wiukler, that account from Mr. Hartman for cof%in for old man Aurich, amounting to $8 45, be paid.â€"Carried. The Trustees of P. S.5. â€" heard in favor of their petition ment of said section north in tion taken by incorporation of est. Trustees of P. S. S. No.: against portion of their section to No. 15. Moved by Mr. Fisher, seconded by Mr. Blyth, that prayer of petition be granted except lot owned by Mr. Stone and Mr. Halliday.â€"Carried. A Bylaw was passed changing boundarâ€" ies of both sections lots taken by Mount Forest being detached from southern bounâ€" dary of No. 15 and remainder of lots on eon, B. being added to Northern boundary except Mr. Stone‘s lot. Em mnsoie, Moved by Mr. Blyth, seconded by Mr. Fisher, that Lewis Runstedler be notified to pay tares charged against him for 1879, on lot part 1, on 18th con., and if not paid on notification that Treasurer give note to Mr. Mearns with instructions to seize for same in any part of the Township.â€"Carâ€" ried. Moved by Mr. Winkler, seconded by Mr. Ball,that Trustees of Roman Catholic Sepâ€" arate School Section No. 5 be authorised to borrow $700 for erection of schoel house giving such security therefor as is allowed by act of 1879.â€"Carried. 1 sis a us mR Ed Wms Moved by Mr. Blyth, seconded by Mr. Fisher®That Henry Ebanau having paid tax for lot 12, 8rd con., to Township Colleeâ€" tor, and afterwards to County Treasuroer to amount of §6 17, the same be rofunded to Anthony Ebenau, heir of said Henry Ebenau.â€"Carried. The following offices sent tenders for printing for 1890 : Examiner and Confedâ€" erate, Mount Forest; Review, Durham ; Arrow, Clifford ; and Tribune, Harriston. The Examiner being lowest, was awarded goutract for $35. « Moved by Mr. Ball, seconded by AMY. Winkler, that the Commissioners for diviâ€" sions be appointed as follows : Mr. Biyth.........North East Division. Mr. Winkler...... North West Division. Mr. Ball............ South Rast Division. Mr. Fisher.........South West Division. und that amount to be expended in each division do not exceed $200.â€"Carried. Moved by Mr. Fisher, seconded by Mr. Blyth, that parties eraployed to eut jamb to save Bridge be paid §5, cost of same.â€"Carâ€" ried Moved by Mr. Winkler, seconded by Mr. Fishor, that E. Widmeyer be paid $1 for plank for culvert.â€"Carried. 7 Trastees of P. S. S. No. 18 agresd with Trustees of No. 5 to have Mr. Braun‘s lot attached to No. 5, unti supporters of sepaâ€" Trastees of 1 Trustees of No. attached to No. rate sehool join Trastees of Sections ! were heard, some for certain applied for c Some thirtyâ€"six persons tive to changes, a larzo wore prosont and addre Moved by Mr. Biyth, seconded 5y MT. Koemnig, that council go into committee on proposed changes with Mr. Winkler as chairman.â€"Carried. Gounecil went into Cormittee. â€" Commitâ€" tee rose Council resumed. Mr. Winkler presented report Committeo rogret from confl dence and claims relative to sch modation as prosented by differe that they caunot seo their way recommend any chango at pres Moved by Mr. I Blyth, that report â€"Carried. Moved by Mr. Winkler, seconded by Mr. Ball, that Peter H. Esch be paid §1:50 for planks for culvert.â€"Carried. Moved by Mr. Blyth, seconded by Mr. Ball, that debentures and coupons be defacâ€" ed and that Treasurer receive an order to charge the sum of $10,380.00 on his books to expenditure in redeinption of same.â€" Carried: Moved by \fr. Winkler, seconded by Mr. Blyth, that Mr. Kcoenig examine and report on relative to opening of road asked for by William Gehl and seventyâ€"nine others.â€" Carried. Moved by Mr. Blyth, seconded by Mr. Fisher, that Reeve and Councillor of diviâ€" sion examino and report on bridge asked for by Adam Ringel and thirty seven others to be erected at lot 3, on the 17th and 18th conessien line.â€"Carried. Moved by \Mir Winkler, seconded by Mr. Biyth, that tender for printing from Exzaâ€" miner office, boing lowest, the same be la Mr. John Dickson, of Normanby, who | hes been for some time engaged in inventâ€" ] ing and perfecting a new road seraper, 6xâ€" hibited for inspection of council a model thereof, which was pronounced a most inâ€" gevious and simple machine. It can be attached to wheels of a lumber waggon and ean be unloaded with the amallest exortion and will spresd material where wanted. I+ is likely to revolntionize the cutting of hills and the grading of roas. 4 mae _" us .._s.s Lâ€" uc miner office, Moved by Mr. Koo‘g, Normanby Council. ses of Sections Nos. 9, 11, 12 and 2 ard, some for and some against applied for changes in sections. irtyâ€"six persons were notified, relaâ€" hanges, a larzo number of whom ssent and addressed the council. I by Mr. Blyth, secouded by Mr. that council go into committee on ; of P. $S.S. No.15 were of their petition for enlargeâ€" ction north in liea of porâ€" neorporation of Mount Forâ€" of P. 3. S. No. 8, were heard ; of their section being given s regret from conflicting eviâ€" aims relative to sehool accomâ€" prosented by different sections mnot see their way clearly to any chango at present. \r. Konig, seconded by Mr. revort as now read be adopted. all, seconded by Mr Koenig Reeve, seconded by Mr Blyth, that Clerk"publish court of Revision for May, the 21st, 1880, to be held at Townâ€" ship Hall.â€"Carried. _ Bill for $7.50 from Confederate Office was ordered to be paid. o On motion made and seconded, council adjourned until the 21st day of May, 1880. W. H. Ryax, Township Clerk. Hints about House Cleaning. Copperas mired with whitewash put upoa the cellar walls will keep vermin away. L s usc ie To polish stained floors rub thein thorâ€" oughiy onee a week with beeswax and turâ€" pentine PE Hellebore sprinkled on the floor at night destroys cockroathes ; they eat it and are poisoned. * Strong brine may be used to advantag in washing bedsteads; hot alum is also good for this purpose. Drain: pi-pu and all places that are sour or impure may be easily cleansed with lime water, copperas water or carbolic acid When house cleaning be sure and take nutritious food at least three times per day and it will go far towards enabling you to keep your health and temper. Carpets should be thoroughly beaten on the wrong side first, and then on the right, after which spots may Lbe removed by the use of oxgall or ammonia and water. Where hard finished walls have already been kalsomined, the soiled coats should be washed or scraped off before a new one is put on. This is tho most disagreable part of the process. The furniture should be covered, as lime makes spots that are reâ€" moved with difficulty, especially upon black walnut. Furniture needs cleaning as much as other woodwork. It may be washed with warm somp suds, quickly wiped dry and wiped with an oily eloth. To polish it, rub it with rotten stone and sweet oil. Clean off the oil and polish it with chamois: skin. â€" For ordinary woodwork use whiting: to rub th» dirt off an4 ammonia. Mortar sud paint may be removed from the winâ€" dow glass with hot, sharp vinegar. Grainâ€" ed wood should be washed with cold tea. In washing nainted walls it is a good plan to remove fro:" the room everything that can be injured by *eam and then hang sheets wrung from hot watcr in the room. The vapor, condensing on the â€" walls, will invariably softens the dirt, which may be wiped off with woolen eloths wrung from soda water. If the wall about the stove has been smoked by the stove, cover the black patches with gum shellac, and they will not strike through either paint or ' kalsomine. Paint your plastered walls and they will not absorb odors. You can easily clean them with soda and water. Soap and water spot them. When paper and wator become saturated with affluvia nothing but entire removal will clear thema. Insocts will not harbor in painted walls. Before paint or kasomine is applied to walls every cxack or crevice should be filled with plaster or ceâ€" ment made of one part water to one part silicate of potash mixed with common whitâ€" ing. For the Kalsomine put a quarter of pound of white glus in cold water overnight and heat gradually in the morning until dissolved. Mix eight pounds of wluting with hot water, add the dissolved glue and stir together, adding hot water until about the consistency of cream. Use a kalsomine brush and finish as you go along. A home is a place where character is formed, where education goes on, and where people are impressed for time and fitted for eternity. It is a place to be hapâ€" py in, to grow in and start out from, for all good, homest and earnest living. Very great is her responsibility who is queen of this kingdom. To a very important extent she makes or mars its completeness. . A fearful, faultfinding, narrow, incapable woman, in the position of wife and mother can cloud a house with misery, while still she keeps house well, and serubs floors till they are as white as suow. . But the recorâ€" ding angel, smveying her performances, will surely say, "This ought you to have done, and not have left the other undone." In a homo there should be liberty withâ€" out license, time for family intercourse and space for personal solicitude, room for the entertainment of guests and the maintenâ€" ance of social life, and over all, a tender, trastful daily atmosphere of true devotion and communion with Godâ€" â€" All this is not wholly, but largely, in the hands ofher who is the central thought and wellâ€"spring of pleasure in every commfortable Christian homeâ€"the dear, honored and gracious moâ€" An aged lady on her deathâ€"bed, in a peniâ€" tential mood, said, "I have been a great sinner more than eighty years, and I didn‘t know it." An old colored woman who had lived with her exclaimed, "Why, missus, 1 knowed it all the time." A gentleman, lcerned in the origin of social customs, was asked the origin of throwing an old shoe after a newly married couple, as they started on their trip. Said he, To indicate that the chanees of bappiâ€" ness in matrimony are vory slippery." Let nolody who is a housckeoper fear to magnify her office. â€" Itis a very sacred one, and if she performs her dutics faithfully,. she is worthy of no stinted praiss. pleasure in homeâ€"the « ther. A negro woman near Chesapeake Bay lately made an amusing reply to a Wall street speculator of a religious as well as a duckâ€"shooting turn of mind. ‘"Are there any Presbyterians in this viemity ?" ke asked, ‘‘Well, massa, "she answered, "I ain‘ut heard of none of dem bein‘ shot this season !" When a brave voltigaur of the Imperial Guard wrote from the Crimea to his father in Afsace, asking him to sead him a pair of strong shoes and a five frane picce. the fathor, bethinking himself of the speed, ut the money into one of the shees, and gnng the shoes upon the wires. An il! shod fellow coming along soon afterward made an exchange, and theoid wan up6o uiscove ering the substiltation weat home to tellhis wife that their bov had not only recsived bis new shees but had returned the oid ones! What is a Home. wwnxwZZnn~ t 4n 44â€" ~~â€"â€"â€" + 4@ ++ NEW GOODS, NEW GOODS, NEW GOODS, A Gold Ring $1.00. AT MOCKLERS 18 K‘t. heavy Rings Te cAï¬ . > 30 Pieces New Dress Goods, in Pompadours, Sateens, Plain Lustres, Striped Lustres, Figured Lustres, j Cashmeres, &e., &c. (Gent‘s Giold Altert Csll and Seoe my 10 cont DBross Goods. New Prints, New Twooeds in Scotch and Canadian. New Hollands, Corsats, Handkerchiefs, Gloves &c. &c. Anothet large Stock of BOOTS and SHOES at Very Low Prices. No Old Goods, all Perfectly New and Fresh, A GOOD STOCK OF It will puzzle you Give me OLD PRICES ! OLD PRICES! Goods selling at Old Rates at JAMES H. HUNTERS, Good Tweed Suits made in latest style for $9 worth $12 The cheapest and best in Town at old rates. Good BROOMS for 15 cents, and every other description Over 52,000 immigrants have arriyed at New York since January, as compared with 16,000 . for the same period last year. Hagyard‘s Cattle Spice is put up in pound packages, and is just the medicine wanted at any season of the year for horses, cattle, sheep or pigs. It cleanses the blood, tones up the system, and opens out the water passages, giving relish for food, rapidly* im« proving the condition of the antm al fed with it. A purely vegetable preparation ; 25 cents w pickage. Sold by all Druggists and dealâ€" in00@ D viéée iGukii. . ers DURHAM DIRECTORY Services every SabDath in Subbath School at 2:30 ‘7) im Thursday evening at 7 0‘ every Monday evening t R. Godfrey. Town Hallâ€"open 0 9 o‘clock. Shares $1, Robortson, Librarian Night of mesiang eva.mug at 7:30 o‘clock, in the Oud ZOkOWS db . Vistuli. rethren welcome. * Craus X ;. W.B. Yollet.Sec. lwo 4 Sunday Servicesâ€"preaching at 11 a. m.; Sabbath School at 2:30 p. m.: Preaching at 7 p. m. Week evening Servicesâ€"Monday evening, young peopies‘ BmYer mreoting at 8 p. in. ; Wednesday oevening, ible clase at 8 lt’. m. Thursday evening, regular prayer meeting & @p.m. Sunday Services School mt 2:30 p. evening Servicesâ€" prayer neoting @ Thomas Lat putyâ€"Registrar OfMce hours from 8 «. m.to 7 p. m Kenzie, Postmnaster. ©89 April 8th, 1880. Durham, March 18, 1880 Durham, March 10th, 1880. The Fifteen Puzzle Solved. 193. STEPHFY LONGE No. 160 I. 0. O.F. a week in your OWys towa. ioutis whd 50 & + y P izes. o Tros® Hactr: & co, For . Rockville Mills, ‘n.llâ€"-o1;c-;;€riy Fridey evening from 7 to Shares 21, annual fee $1. Alexander MECHANICS‘ INSTITUTE 8. G. REGISTRY OFPFICE. Lauder, ne[il;sw; John A. Munro, Deâ€" car.. Office howrs from 10 a. m. to 4 p.m. AUPMHAM L. 0. L. No.639. Bales of Prints fast colors at 8 cts per yd. Factory Cooton 20 yards for $1. BROWN HOLLAND at 10 conts per yd. Heavy CANDIAN Tweeds at $1 per yd. Very Fine Canadian Tweeds at $1 peryd. Beautiful Worsted Coatings at $2 per yd. Men‘s Felt Hatg for 60 cents worth $1. do do for 80 cents worth $.125. STOCXK OF FERESII Groceries. A lot of First Class DRIED APPLES at $1.75 per Bushel. BAPTIST CHURCH y Sabbath at 10:30 a. m. and 6:30 p.m. I at 2:30 p. in. Prayer mesting every ing at 7 o‘clock, and Bible Cluss evening at8 o‘clock. Pastor Rev. And at Prices Lower than ever Sold in Durham before. ETHODIST CHURCH POST OFFICH ERLA 8 day Clock on‘y §6. Silver H. C. Watch _ $10.00. ____ GORDON, Durham. A Clock for $2.00. to buy Cheaper a Ihigk® _ . W ool Shawls at cost price. 10. 14. of Goods equally Cheap D U BR H A M. pr before full Striking‘(_ll_qck.e day J. H. HUNTER. Mc A Clock for $8.00. Silver Watch, Leaver, ~$11.00. than quoted above Time is Money. H. W. MOCKLER. 'l‘()RO.\’TO, GREY, AND BRUCE RAILWAY, On and after MONDAY, 5th May, 1879, trains will run as follows:â€" TORONTO (UNION STATION. Depart, 7:30 a. m., 12:20 p. m., 5:00 p. m Arvive, 10:30 a. m., 3:00 p. m., 940 p. m, Custom Sawing of Lumber AND SHINGLES, done at onse,and chorp,to anit the times. SHINGLES, LATH AND LUMBER on hand andsold at down bil} prices. J. W. CRAWFORD, Fockville Mills, "Porham P. 0. South â€" Depart 7:15 a.m., 11:5 a. m.,5:10 p. m. Arrive 11:10 a. m., 4255 p. in., §:20 p. ms« North. Depart, 11:30 a. m., 445 p m. Arrive, 1315 a. im., 5:20 p. m, West. Depart 545 a. m. 11;45 a.m. Arrive 11:00 @. m., 445 p. m. With the Circular Saw against all kinds of Saw NO ARMISTICE TEESWATER Dapart 6:00%. m., 11345 a. m.* Arrive 10:40 a. m., 4:30 p. m., *Tho Mixed train will only run on Tuesday, Thursâ€" days and Suturdays. FLESHIERTON, South, Depart 8:55 a. m., 245 p. m. Arrive 1:55 p. m., 7:35 p. m. Fortimes atintermediate stationssee Time Tables EDMUND WRAGGE. Toronto. November, 1879 CHANGE OQF ‘ TIME. $7.00. 10. 11. War, War! owEX soUND, Popart 6:80 a.m., 12:00 noon Arrive 4:09 p.im1., 10:10 p. m,. CASH â€" STORLE. ORANGEVILLT Lady‘s Set, Gold, $4.00. Lady‘s S)p:‘l Chain Gent‘s Watch and Chain, $12.00 a speciality, . A! work warranted. khe 14. GG;IBN&TM" ans .â€";I‘ y96 All HARDWA'RE, Hardware Cheap, Cheap. Spades, Shovels, Manure Forks, &C., My Spring Stock of HARDWARE is Eâ€""Don‘t Fail to give me a call. TEAS, TEAS, TEAS! ATTENTION ! JOHN CAMERON‘S TEAS ARE GOOD, They are Cheap, They are Excellent Value. Bought before the Advance. Try Them. Just Received at MOWATS FARMERS AND OTHERS Who are anxious to have their Dwelling Houses, Barns and Contents Insured against loss by Fire, can do so at a low rate, and in a reliable Company who pay losses promptly. STOVES, Stoves, STOVES! Call and see before purchasing elsewhere, We will not 7 inch Pipe and Elbows at 7c each! Cash for Hides and Skins. _ Truck taken as Cash. HARRIS & Co. ORGANS AND PIANOS. The Largest and Most Complete We are now manufacturing Square and Upright PIANOS. Scythes, Cradles and Harvest Tools on the way. Highest Honors ever awarded to any Maker in the World. Correspondence Solicited. Send for HMlustrated Catalogue April 15, 1880. A good Spade for 75¢. Manure Forks 75c up. Trurham, Sept. 18, 1879 COOKING PARLOR BOX from $20 up. from $5 up. from $3 up. AllL Sizes find all Prices. Feb. 12th, 1880. MEDAL AXD DIPLOMA, CENTENNIAL, .. .. ... 1876. do do SYDXEY, AUSTRALIA, ... 1877. GOLD MEDAL at PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION TORONTO, 1878. HIGHEST Award at INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION, Toronto, 1879, Factory in the Dominion, Eze.< 40 x 400 !== Dominion Organ Company, Which will be sold at very Low Prices. Mailed Free. Addressâ€"â€" 1DONIL~N 1O;°‘°xX% Best in the Market. A Full Stock of Applyto JOHN CAMERON, JOS. F. MOWAT, All g06d| are marked at the Lowest Cash Price. now Complete and will be found very Cheap Bowmanville, Ont. Lower Town, DURHAM. Agent Western Insurance Co., Durham be undersold and are selling yâ€"1083 day after Guelph. Berlinâ€"First Thursday in each month Bramptonâ€"First Thursday in each month: Listowelâ€"First Friday in ench month, Fergusâ€"Thursday following Mount Forest, Rosemontâ€"Fifteenth of February, April, June, August, October and December. Primroseâ€"*Wednesday _ preceding the Orangeville Fair. Onngtvilgoâ€"'l‘he 2nd Thursday in «ach month. a Flesherionâ€"Monday before Orangeville. Dundalkâ€"Tuesday before Orangeville. Shelburneâ€"Wednesday before Orangeville. Marsvilleâ€"Second Wednesday in each month. € Walkertonâ€"The last Wednesday in each month. 7 Mildmay â€" Last Wednesday of each month. Reosidenceâ€"Opposite the Canada Presby. terian Church. JOHN ROBERTSON‘ TAILOR AND CLOTHIER, Spring and Summer Fashions regulan received. * THOMAS SMITH, Saddler, Tanner, Shoemaker, No. 5, Garafraxa Street, LOWER TOWN, â€" â€" DURHAM The Highost Market Price paid for Hides and Skins. giving all the latest news by telegraph, editorial¢ on the most importiunt questions, a comprehensive correspondence columm, a valuable department devoted to the contemporury press, home and roâ€" ligious reading,s weekly summary of the new books and mn?u.iucav in fact, each number is the world‘s history for a day. Price, iuclutlinq postage, $3.00 a year. The Wrxxkty Wirxrss boars the same relation to the week as the daily does to the day. in this paper the nows is suminarized and condonsed to the sinuliest space, thut everything may have a place, . Its great popularity is shown‘by its CHRCULATION OP 30,00 COPIES The Dary WiTx®ss is mailed to all its subscril» ors in America at less thun a cent a day, It is the BEST CENT NEWSPAPER IN THE WORLD, Amongst the best classes of the community, This inumense circulation jnstifics its publishers in placâ€" ing the price at 1 40 a your, and when the number of subscribers renches $7.000, which seems likely this year, the price will be reduced to the reand dollar. Price, $1.10 a yoar. ALMOST UNANTMOU® OPINION el&roue'l of the #irr3zss by those who have trisd it is that of Doraid Grant,a subscriber from Port age La Prairie, Manitoba, who writes : . "The Wiryras is such r nocessity thut to do without it is almost un impossibility." The NowruchX Mrsasryxorn is on cightâ€"pneed semiqmonth‘y Mustrated paper, which costs but vOc a year to single subscribers, and much less to clubs, It is the pionecr of the WirNrEss publica tions and goes everywhere, We receive HUNDREDS OF EVIDENCES every year of thelm&vomm work it is doing in the Sunday school und by the freside. Owing to it« immense circulation of over 51,000 eopies, we have been enabled to make great itoprovements in its «pponrance, even at its present price, Jt has re cently bees fimproved in appearnnce by the «ddi MONXTHLY CATTLE FAIRS tion of a next border‘ which will tmake it much bot ter liked than ever before, not ouly being a valua ble papor but a beautiful one, | There is also an ed ition of this paper devoted to SUNDAY sCHOOLS, Its club rates are as follows : 10 copics to the on« address, 82,50 ; 25 copies to the one adress, 26 ; 5 copies to the one address, $11,00 ; 100 copres to on« address, 822. . M T 7 ETOTCTT; EEC Bcunpin copics of those papers sent free on appli cation. Durham, Feb. 14, 1878. For the Review., Cutting done to Order. CHEAPEST AND BEST The Durham, December 19th 1878 CREAT IMPROYVEMENTS IN 1880. THE BEST! THE LARCEST! THE CHIAPIST s IN NORTH AMERICA, se NEW PRESSES â€"NEW TYPEâ€"INCRE:BED SPEED iN PUBLICATION VWEEKLY~CLOBE On the 2nd of January, 1880, THE WEEKLY CLOBE wi») take another of those upward sliides in the march of mprovement that bave maiâ€" tained it for neatly forty years in its high posiâ€" tion as THE LEADING FAMILY NEWSPAPER The increasing newessity for great variety of reading matte: in each week‘s issue, so as to in clade the news from alt sections of the Dominion and meet the varred tastes of its numerous readers has rendered expedient the enlargement of Tuw Wiakiy Guour much beyond even its present in rze dAimewsions. . Commencing with the first week of the New Year, therefore, the form of the paper will be changed trom that of an 80â€"column pajper to that of a 96 column paper : and the length of each "f‘ will also be so extended as to give. in ull, an increase of reading matter m each week‘s shoct of nearly 32 cotumns beyond its present size This vast addition to «he capecity of the pape will enable a bili of fare to be presented werk!s probabiy mors varid and interesting than va* ever before accomplished in any woek!y journal The literary matter wilt be much incteased ; more space wth be devstes to Mousehold and soâ€" i) affairs ; and the Agriculturat Department wii! be rendered more efficiont than ever befose. 4 Notwithstanding \he‘:tmt entargements *nd jmprovemeats to be made. the amina) «uh crip tion to Tur Werkuy Guose will remoin as hoo tofore, only TWO DOLLARS PER ANNUM. I-'n-l- p‘n"l_'nrjvâ€"u_ior;lilvpb urfll Canada and United States, payable invariibly in adveance 7 Any.one is at liberty to get up a clun on D18 own responsibilit\ Fach « ab paper mry be nddressed separate!\, CLUB RATES FPOR 1880 u..."|~~ pa ‘.eo'ntu up clubs wilt be suj plicd wi.o s ccomen u;‘ Of the paper grac on +pplicatior Tur Waensuy Guone will be sent free of pesta2 to any Post Offue 1, Great Briain for &" * ~ nine sh "Imcz# #«terling. â€" Remit aaces may beseut by P.O money order. a»dmay be tor any Post Office isnn P hep Nes Pep e Aven n honk droft, reistered ant <a, or by ©p Ror al a bscripti ns san! in between oho sond th ues o pumaairw, 4 386 wonld ontialle 14 PpURHAM Sr., DURHAM. WILL BK A8 FOLLOWs For 4 Copies and up to 10. . . . . We o) . Mb .A . W# e m o# _ @* «o ).. 9 o +* #+ ©ver . .... Omlecs and remitiances to be addressed io the «se Cl JC PRiNTING COMPANY, loron‘o neome TBR WOEBKLY GLCUE tron to Bist Pecewber , 155 â€"AND JOHN DOUGALL & sON, Posursmens, MoNTREAL $1 00 per cof y1 date 1he Tie wne Protessional and bus space and under, Two inches or 24 line Thrae inches do. pei Quarter column, per Malf column, * One column, * Do. a1x mor Do. three m by written i mserted unt wlar rates, Atthe O fice, Garafraxa Street, Upper T1y‘% Frost & "‘\lll:l.\l".l(\ and solicitors in Chanoor YVETERINARY SURGE "THE REVIE Every Thursd Durham, â€" â€" O hours day or night 1Y" wW. CALDWE W V ICHC Illustrated â€" Floral BUSINESS DIRECTO LEBGAL wrhiatm Money to Lean Fo I.\ thanking his nameron thoir nast fevore andsol.oiting hags to say that he is now fuily rute any orders that may bo entr noatnosand panotuality, and it ast in the villago. ALFRED 14 QOIE REASONS why these k ) are better than others : Ist.â€"No Elastic required.. Ond. â€"Is Slack when: ing. 3rd. â€"It nover slips MI‘- 4+h. â€"Bold at prices of common suspen TERMs The UNIVERSAL SUSPEND Xt Manu(actared by C. E. RAMAGE, yag Adeiaide St. Wesl, J W. CHITTILG OLD TrOl . oppos §1.25 if not paid within two mou! No# ax MAIlN STREET, DUNDA . 0B @3 t t s ts . 08A TTORNEY at Law, Soheit McFAYDI ARRISTERS A Adres Boot arad Shoemaker RATES OF ADVERI [L1 AJ ADUATH MISCELLANEOUS. Try a Pair and Beoure Comfort t1 Oft Merchant Tailor 1¢ DR. LIJS MEDICAL D PBR at $1 1s PUBLISNMET «s > Wt #D@ % A t 00 per year in Adva M J A MLS U egernb‘e <2 m arih A M Frost. J\G