Priceville. FOR SALE The EDGE PROPERTY Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. G. K., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" ing Town plot Durham. In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including v&lnnb}e Water Power Mortgage taken for part purchase money. ie maanicenge. «i/ SZ oi the late James burnels, 12 mcres under caltiyation, rest hardwood pash, being Lots 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, Old D B. in the Township of Artemesia, Counnt; of Grey, two miles from Flesherton Sta Lron, three miles from Priceville. Fo turther particulars apply to A. H. BURNET, Hopeville MRS. BURNET, Durham. *cn LICENSED AUCTIONEER for Co. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxtasz P. 0. will be prowmptly ritended. to. Residence Lot19, Com. 8, Township of Bentinck. _ __ _ _ __ dor 250 . Following Properties at Prices Asked Lots 21, 212, 243, con.3, S.W.T. and 8. Road, Township Melancthonâ€"174 acres timbered. En onE 7 m 1 Lot1, Durham Street, North Priceville. Lnt 3, Kinross Street, North Priceville. With other splendid Farms in Ontario and the Northâ€"West, Toronto and Hanover properties for sale or exâ€" change. MONEY TO LOAN | _ DAN. There‘s Big Money ‘ Lot 29, con. 5, Melancthonâ€"83 acres well timbered. Lot16, con. 5, Bentinck, 100 acres known as the Jas. Bamford farmâ€"well imâ€" at very lowest rates on good land security. FIRE, Life and Accident lnsurance. Claims of all kinds collectedâ€"Old notes «ud ut re For Impore, Blood, Dyspey tion of the He Lots 21 242, con.4, S.W.T. and S. lR(t:.“d' Melancthonâ€"100 acres & bush o Lot 248, con. 4,S.W.T. and S. Road, _ Melancthonâ€"50 acres good bush. _ _ TESTED REMEDIES SPECIFIC and ANTIDOTH Loan an veyar Loane arranged without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. m@NKY TO LOAN stiowost ratos of Interost oÂ¥ "t7m® ous door uorth of 8. Beot‘s Store Durbare Licensod Auctioneer, for the County ef Grew. harges moderate and satisfaction gu«rantcew rrangements for seles .can be made at the weruw Ofice, Dukam, or «t bis residence BARHISTHR. SOLICITOR .IN SUFREME COURT NOTARY PUBLIC, Commissioner,ctc., BUSINESS DIRECTORY. McLEOD‘S System Renovator‘ NEXT Door TO PARKER‘S MISS GUN‘S. Fancy Goods, TOYNS and Stationary, WOOLS, EMBROIDERIES and SILKS, indall COLORS proved close to Lamlash. W. L. McKENZIE, bougnt. MONEY TO LOAN Fire Insurance secured. OFFICE, over Grant‘s Ston«. Lower Town, i by II. PARKER Druswist J. P. TELFORD, ICENSED AUCTIONEER A Farm for Sale. T. . HOLT, L. D. S. Wall Papers at â€"reatly reduced rates )NOR Graduate of the Royal College HUCH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. ext Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, AUCTIUNGER ACRES bel i Insurance Agent, Conâ€" cer, Commissioner &c. MEDICAL. DURHAM. e nat DURHAM H. H. MILLER, The Hanover Conveyencer, â€"â€"IN THEâ€" gg1 LEGAL Weak and Impoverishe sia, Sleeplessness, Pnlg»t: airt, Liver Coroplaint, Net Memory, Brenchitis, Cor Stones, Jaundice, Kidve iseases, St. Vitus‘ Dave AND OTHER â€"~â€"â€" McLEAN. Prop. and Manu{acturer â€"â€"ATâ€" t. Durham nco n#ing DAN. McLEAN. th D. MeCORMICK, Durbam Ont d to promp e und Resi and Bladder discases relief in six hours the *Great S&ut.hhAma:i.e:.n Kidney Cn;e"'l d'f:i- new rem a and ight on on -ooozut of lt‘t uu:;;?romptnm in and onr;.h po‘r: ‘:l.e:.%ydn".' uz male or female. It relioves gop.u‘:x Pri % Boow ‘to Homsaxxx.â€"One bottle of English Spavin Liniment completely removed acurb from my horse,. 1 take pleasure in recommending tho remedy, asit acts with mysterious promptness z. the removal from hornes of hard, sofé or salloused lamps, blood spayin, splints, gurbs, sweeny, stifles ard spraims _ Gzoror Ross, Farmer, Mark wen ie t PP raenys FOoR TWENTYâ€"FIVE YEARS Don Ramon Enrea, of Spain, Invents Novelty in Water Cycling. PR o ie First of all, the new design is not in the shape of a boat, and does not admit of the carrying of passengers. ._.Themachinery. is just above the surface of the water, only the wheel comes partly beneath it, The position ofpzhe man in the boat is exactly like that of the rider on his bicycle, The weight of the entire apparatus does not exceed fifty kilograms. _ It is asserted that a ride on the lake on one of these mauchines is exceedingly pleasant and exâ€" hilarating, and in smooth veather more than ten miles can be covered in an hour, The inventor is Don Ramon Barea, of Furniture of the Best Make 22" The only firstâ€"class Hearse in town, CA What is there that is illustrious that uot also attended by Jabor *â€"Cicero, Would intimate that he will continue the Furniture and Undertaking Business estab lished by his father in Durham in 1858 and will endeavor to give all old and new custom David Jackson, dr.. ‘ctex Div. Cout AithUP H. JACKSOM) Notary pubtic. Land V aluators, Insurance Agents, Commissioners. Money to lend. Money invested for Parties. Farms bought and sold. that a ride machines is hilarating, than ten mi The invent Madrid, Sp« PURMTURE AND _ UNDERTAKING E J. SHEWELL FIRE and LIFPE Assurance Policies issued construct rapidity worthy of A bank cashier of Vienna recently died from the effects of touching his lips with his fingers when counting money. At an examination of the vaults it fell to his lot to court a large number of small bills, and, withough repeatedly warned, he continued mechanically to touch his lips when his fingers became dry. That evening he felt a smarting pain in his lip, but did not attend to it until a swelling had set in the next day. He then consulted a surgeon, who insisted upon an immediate operation on the tumor that had in the meantime asâ€" sumed alarming proportions. . But in spite of the operation, the patient died three days after of blood poisoning. A wealthy citizen of Berlin will erect a Â¥. M. C. A. building there. PARK & CO. M ery popu‘lar THECOOKSBESTFRIEND Our DUNNS BAKING PEOWDER CONVEYANCERS. is your remedy, Beld by MocFarlane & | Midd PICTURE FRAMING A SPECIALTY LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. BAN EEERS A NEW TREADLE BOAT Polson on Bank Notes ime entire satisfa JACKSONS. witrontieme: VOL. Bold by McFaclane & Ca. t invent ALWAYS ON HAND ex a generai banking business, ined to farmers and others on e terms. Interest allowed on posits at current rates. Also ELTY IN WATER CYCLIN M Trea FULL LINK H his latest contrivance and jon which it affords is E. J, sMEWELL D The â€" OreD I1 continue th ,â€"NO. 835. | The one &i’ec‘o of good fortune in our favor | was that beautiful lamp, It was nearly in Bmen Nesn en PW * Nay, madame, why should you kiss my hand !"" he cried. ** Because it is the hand which struck him on his vile, l{ing mouth, â€" Because it may be the hand which will avenge my mother. I ain his stepâ€"daughter. The woman whose heart he broke was my mother, I loathe him, I fear him. Ab, there is his step !" In an instant she had vanished as suddenly as she had come. _A moment later, the Baron entered with a drawn sword in his hand, and the fellow who had admitted us at his heels, es ** This is my secretary," said he, ** He will be my friend in this affair, But we whall need more elbowâ€"room than we can find here.. Perhaps you will kindly come with me to a more #pacious apartment,." It was evidently impossible to fight in a chamber which was blocked by a great table. We followed him out, therefore, Into "the dimiyâ€"lit hall." At the farther end alight was shining through an open There was only one window, which had no glass in it and was sonarrow that one could not s» much as get one‘s head through. It was high up, and Duroc had to stand upon a barrel in order to see from it. **What can you see *" I asked. "Firâ€"woods, and an avenue of snow beâ€" tween them," said be. ""Ah !" the gave a cry of surprise. omm o ang ie door. «* We shall find what we want in here," said the men with the dark beard. It was a largs, empty room, with rows of barrels and cases round the walls. â€" A strong lamp stood upon a shelfin the corner, The floor was level and true, so that no awordsman could ask for more, â€" Durec drew his sabre and sprang into it. The Baron stood back with m bow and motioned me to follow my compunion. Hardly were my heels over the threshold when the heavy door crashed behind us and the key screamed in the lock, _ We were taken in a trap. For a moment we could not realize it. Such incredible baseness was outside all our expetiences. Then, as we understood how foolish we had been to trust for an instant a mwan with such a history a flush of rage came over us, rage againat his vilâ€" lainy and against our own stupidity, We rushed at the door together, beating it with our fists and kicking with our heavy boots. The sound of our blows and of our execraâ€" tions must have resounded through the Castle. We called to this vil‘ain, burling at him every name which might pierce even into his hardened soul. But the door was enormousâ€"such a door as one finds in mediseval castlesâ€"made of huge beams clamped together with iron, It was us easy to break as a square of the Old Guard. And our cries appeared to be of as little avail as our blows, for they ouly brought for answer the clattering choes from the high roof above us. When you have done some soldiering, you soon learn to put up with what cannot be altered. â€" It was I, then, who first recoverâ€" ed my calmness, and prevailed upon Duroc to join with me in examining the apartment which had become our dungeon. Duroc advanced in silence,ant tha ruffian‘s side, = """CCCCC~~C "*Jean Carabin," said he. The Baron started, and th drunkenness_seemed to be clem his eyes. "Jean Carabin," said Duroc, < He sat up and grasped the ar * What d name, young coarse as a horae‘ s mane, 1 nave Seen 20ME strange faces in my time, but never one mor® brutal than that, with its small, vicious, biu° eyes, its white, crumpled cheeks, and the thick, hanging lip which pretruded over his monstrous beard. â€" His head swayed abou on his shoulders, and he looked at us with the vague,dim gaze of a drunker man, Yet he was not so drunk but that our uniforms carried their message to him. "*Well, my brave boys," he hiccoughed. "What is the latest news from Paris, en ? You‘re going to free Poland, I hear, and bave meantime all become slaves your» selvesâ€"elaves to m little aristocrat with his grey coat and his threeâ€"cornered hat, No more citizens either, I am told, and nothing but monsieur and madame, . My faith, some more beads will have to roll into the sawdust basket some of there mornings." a MDLERCL me n y door, hung with a curtain, faced us upon the other side. â€" Between lay a @quare table, wtrewn with dirty dishes and the sordid remains of a meal, Several bottles were scattered over it. At the head of it, and {facing us,there sat a huge man, with a lion" like head and a great shock of orangeâ€" coloured hair. His beard was of the same glaring It was a small room, scantily furnished, with the same marks of neglect and decay which met us at every turn. The walls were hung with discoloured tapestry which had come loose at one corner, so as to expose the rough stonework behind. A second «* Jean Carabin, you ave long wished to m« * Supposing that I 0: ow can it concern y« ave been a child wher «* My name is Duroc STORIES OF ADVENTUREKE, mabtt ed in silence,and stood by tang seen film . of w from DURHAM, CO. GREY, THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1895. He will kill her," I cried. Duroc sprang down with the inarticulate shouts of one whose reason had left hm. He atruck the door so frantically with his naked hands that he left a blotch of blood with every blow. «* Here is the key !"‘ I shouted, picking one from the floor. ‘*She must have thrown it in at the instant that she was torn away." _ s My companion snutched it from me with a shrick of joy. _ A momont later he dashed it down upon the boards, _ It was so amall that it was lost in the enormous lock. Duroc sank upon one ol the boxes with his head between his hands. He sobbed in his despair. I could have sobbed, too, when I thought of the woman and how helpless we were to save her. .. : But I am not easily bafled. Aiter all, this key must have been sent to us forâ€"a purpose, â€" Thelady could not bring us that of the door, because this murderous stepâ€" father of hers would most certainly have it in his pocket. . Yet thisother must have a meaning, or why should she risk her life to place it in our hands ? It would say little for our wits if we could not find out what that meaning r_nighb pe. sls I set to work moving all the cases out from the wall, and Duroc, gaining new hope from my courage, helped me with all his strength, It was no light task, for many of them were large and heavy. On we went, working like maniacs, slinging barrels, cheeses, and boxes pellâ€"mell into the middle of the room,. At last there only remained one huge barrel of vodki, which stood in the corner. _ With our united strength we rolled it out, and there was a little low wooden door in the wainscot bebind it. _ The key fitted, and with a cry of delight we saw it swing open before us. With the lamp in my hand, I squeezed my way in, followed by my companion, We were in the powder magazine ot the castleâ€"a rough, walled cellar, with barrels all round it, and one with the top staved in in the centre. The powder from it lay in w black heap upon the floor. Beyond there was another door, but it was locked. It is no joke, my friends, to lie among all those tons of powder, with the knowledge that if the flame of the explosion should penetrate through one thin door our blackâ€" ened limbs would be shot higher than the Castle keep. Who could have believed that a balfâ€"inch of candle could take so long to burn ? My ears were straining all the time for the thudding of the hoofs of the Cossacks who were coming to destroy «* You would blow this door open ?" «* Precisely." But you would explode the magazine," It was true, but I was not at the end of my resources. _ _ *We will blow open the storeâ€"room door]"M eried: sc 00 09 0 asth Iran back and seized at in box which had been filled with candles. It was about the size of my uhako-â€"large enough to hold several pounds of powder. Duroc filled it while I cut off the end of a candle. When we had finished, it would bave puzzled m colonel of engineers to make m better petard. I put three cheeses on the top of each other and placed it above them, so as to lean against the lock, ‘Then we lit our candleâ€"end and ran for shelter, shutting the door of the magazine behind us. us. I had almost made up my mind that the candle must have gone out when «* Weare no better off than before," cried Duroc. _ ** We bave no key." * We have a dozen," I cried. «* Where?" I pointed to the line of powder barrels. could desire, to go off upon a hairâ€"brained expedition of this sort, as if it were mot enough to have a quarter of a mill;:%‘. sinn« to fight against, without plu into allsorts of privateâ€"quarrelsâ€"as welt, _ full of oil, and would last us until morning. In the dark our situation would have been far more difficult. By its light we proceedâ€" ed to examine the packages and cases which lined the walls, In some places there was only a single line of them, while in one corner they were piled nearly to the ceiling. lt seemed that we were in the storehouse of the Castle, for there were a great number of cheeses, vegetables of various kinds, bins full of dried fraits, and a line of wine barrels. _ One of these had a wpigot in it, and as 1 had eaten little during the day, 1 wa« glad of a cup oi claret and some food. As to Duroc, he would take nothing, but paced up and down the room in a fever of anger and impatience, "I‘ll have him yet !" he cried every now and then. *‘The rascal shall not escape This was all very well, but it scemed to I sat on a great round cheese eating per, that this youngater was thinkâ€" ber too much of his own family ind too little of the fine scrape into m woman 8 V he le It was only afterwards that I had time to think of all this, His monstrous body had hardly crashed down upon the floor before the woman in the corner #prang to her feet, clapping her bands together and screaming out in her delight. . Formy part I was disgusted to see a woman take such delight in a deed of blood, and I gave no thought as to the terrible wrongs which ‘must have befallen her before she could so far forget the gentleness of her sex. It wal on my tongue to tell her sharply to be wilent, when a strange, choking smell took the breath from my nostrils, and a sudden, yellow glare brought out the figures upon the faded hangings, «* Duroc, Duroc !" I shouted, tugg his shoulder. * The Castle is on fire The boy lay senseless upon the ground, exhausted by his wounds. 1 rushed out into the hall to see whence the danger came,. Jt was our explosion which had set alight to the dry framework of the door. Inside the storeâ€"room some of the boxes were already blazing, I glanced in, and as I did so my blood was turned to water by the sight of the powder barrels beyond, and of the loose heap upon the floor. It might be seconds, it could not be more than minutes, before the flames would be at the edge of it. â€" These cyes will be closed in death, my friends, before they cease to see those crawling lines of fire and the black heap beyond. How little I can remember what followâ€" ed. Vaguely I can recall how I rushed into the chamber of death, how I seized Duroc by one limp hand and dragged him down the hall, the woman keeping pace with me and pulling at the other arm. Out of the gateway we rushed, and on down the snowâ€"covered path until we were on the fringe ofthe fir forest, It was at that moment that I heard a crash behind me, and glaccing round, saw a great spout of fire shoot up into the wintry sky. An instant later there seemed to come a second crash far louder than the first. I saw the fir trees and the stars whirling round me, and I fell unconscious across the body of my comrade. S ols Tt was some weeks before I came to myâ€" self in the postâ€"house of Arensdorf, and longer still before 1 could be told all that had befailen me. It was Daroc, already able to go soldiering, who came to my bedside andgave mean account of it. He it was who told me how a piece of timber had struck me on the head and had laid me almost dead upon the ground.> From him, too, I learned how the Polish girl had run to Arensdorf, how she roused our hussars,and how she had only just brought them back in time to save us from the spears of the Cossacks who had been summoned from their bivouac by that same blackâ€"bearded gecretary whom we have seen galloping so swiftly over the suow, As to the brave lady who had twice éaved our lives, I could mot leaen very much about her at that monient from fluroc; but when I chanced to meet him in Paris two years later, after the campaign of Wagram, I was not very much surprised to find that I needed no introduction to his bride, and that by the queer turns of fortune he had himself, had he chosen to use it, that very name and again andagain he passed his sabre through its body, but it was not until I blew out its brains with my pistol that the iron jaws relaxed, and the fierce, bloodshot eyes were glazed in death., There was no time for us to pause, A woman‘s scream from in frontâ€"a scream of mortal terror~â€"told us that even now we might be too late. There were two other men in the hall, but they cowered away trom our drawn swords and farious tnces. The blood was streamingfrom Duroc‘s neck and dyeing the grey fur of his pelisse. Such was the lnd‘s fire, however, that he shot in front of me, and it was only over his shoulder that I caught a glimpse of the scene as we rushed into the chamber in which we had first seen the master of the Castle of Gloom. The Baron was standing in the middle of the room, with his tangled mane bristling like an angry lon. He was, as 1 have said, In fact, it had done more for us than we had even ventured to hope. Ithad shatâ€" tered grolers as well as gaol, The first thing that I saw as I came out into the ball was a man with a butcher‘s axe in his hand, lying flat upon his back, with a gaping wound across his forehead. The second was a huge dog, with two of its legs broken, twisting in ngony upon the there was a smack like a bursting boom, our door flew to bits, and picces of cheese, with a shower of turnips, apples, and splinters of cases, were shot in am ong us, As we rushed out we had to stagger through an impenetrable smoke, with all sorts of debris beneath our feel, but there was a glimmering square where the dark door had been. The petard had done its work. I shouted, tugging at Revit Not much ! responded Mr. H., warmly ; not much, _ I have been waiting seven years myself for this boy to be old enough to take. _ You go borrow & boy out of a family where they‘ve got more than one. tX ?n-t;;yoii are very busy, Mr, H., but I will take your little boy go the circus for you if you cannot go. |_ _ _____ & Times have changed #ince the days of long ago, when one church member went to another with this offer: _ | length epce at the There.. in Charlotte, Dijon, F m record th Are the best Ayer‘s Sarsapuarilla for the blood, Ayer‘s Pills Liver, or Bowels, For Stomach Highest Awards at World‘s Fair. One man‘s word is no man‘s word ; we should quietly hear both sidea,â€"Goethe. An Antarctic iceberg has been seen that was twenty miles wide, forty miles in br title of the Baron Straubenthal, which showed him to be the owner of the blackenâ€" ed ruins of the Castle of Gloom. ' In allâ€"round family medicine I have ever known.""â€"Mrs. MaY JOHNSON, 368 Rider Ave., New York City. "I would like to add my testimony to that of others who have used Ayer‘s Fills, and to say that I have taken them for many years, ind always derived the best results from their use. and liver troubles, and for the cure of headache caused by these derangements, Ayer‘s Pills cannot be equaled. When my friends ask me what is the best remedy for disorders of the stomach, my invariable answer is AK"" Pills. Taken in season they witi break up a cold, prevent la s:rlrpe. check fever, and regulate the digestive organs, ‘They are casy to take, and AYER‘S PILLS Not As It Used to Be. SOMEWHAT CURIOUS fee T&D Mrs. May Johnson. N. C., which is only 45 feet irface, It is 700 feet wide and in deoth. It was dissovered (TO BE CONTINUED,) has n poplar tree Will be traced to 722 A. D. and 45 feet in circumfer lars of the Hotel de hools of Germany the erated from the stupid do the sorting. at the Kaffirs in the mberley, South Africa, orth of diamonds re are m dozen cases have been preserved in maxing A little soap cases wonderfully the labor of cleaning a stove. Rub a flannel rag on the soap, dip into ordinn;iy stove blacking, s_nd_npplz to the stove ; _ni-h wi}l_x a dry cloth. The work will be done will last much longer than with A porch divan may be easily constructed out of a spring cot with the legs sawed down and a mattress laid over it. This mattress may have a simple valance of the bedâ€"ticking, or it may have an extra cover of blue denim. A dozen good pillows with washable covers, preferably of Japanese material, make the couch complete. . A tea table of willow ware and some porch rockers, the whole concealed by Japanese curtains hung between posts of the porch, help to convert the porch into an outâ€"ofâ€" door room. Sheâ€"Surely, my dear, you will consider the matter carefully before consenting to Clara‘s marriage to old Mr. Cashman * Heâ€"Certainly. I shall have his books examined by an experts Creamed sweetbreads make a delicious supper dish. To prepare them parboil a pair of sweetbreads, pick into small pieces, and chop fine with half a dozen mushrooms. Put a tablespooninl of butter in & small saucepan and set on the stove to melt ; when hot add a tablespoonful of flour, mix until smooth, pour over half a pint of cream, and stir until boiling; add the sweetbreads and musbrooms, set the saucepen in a kettle of boiling water, and stir five minutes ; season well with salt and a dash of cayenme, â€" Serve in little paper cases. That umbrellas will last much longer if they are always placed, when wet, with the handle downward to dry. The moisture then falls from the edge of the frame and the fabric dries uniformly. â€" When it stands handle upward, which is commonly the case, the top of the umbrella +holds the moisture, and not only takes a long time to dry, but it soon injures the ilk or other fabrics used for the cover and rusts the steels. This is the cause of this part of the umbrelia wearing out before any other part, Umbrelia cases are also respousible for the rapid wear of the silk, The conâ€" stant friction causes the tiny holes that appear so provokingly early. When not in use leave the umbrella loose. To make combination pickle no cooking is required, Use three quarts of ripe tomatoes pared and chopped fine ; half & pint of ted borse radizh, one pint of celery, £:ppod fine ; hali a cupful of chopped onions, eight tablespoonfuls of mustard seed, two tablespoonfuls of chopped red peppers, eight tablespoonfuls of sugar, eight of sait, one tablespoonful of ground cinnamon, a level teaspoonful each of clove and mace and one quart of vinegar. â€" Mix all these ingredients thoroughly and then pack the pickle in a stone jar. It will be ready for use in a few days and will keep for months in a In buying tomatoc® try to get the #mooth round in preference ?’o the lined ones. When buying for cooking they should be quite, but not over, ripe. For eating unâ€" cooked buy them a little less ripe and of a #»mail size, _ e Tomato Relish is good with cold meats, and easily prepared. Cut the tops from the tomatoes, scrape out all the pulp and juice, being aareiul not to pierce through the '5:' ; gprtinkle a very little salt over, nd set or " a couple of hours. Serve peouieite pols Dl:a A littlc yinegar _ may ocol place, ! Tbedl%ut ways in which tomaoes may ‘beror the table are very many» Wbcaï¬' A#fortuuate enough to have them growing anc pick them dew bewprinkled from tha'hu in the early morning,and eat them 'iï¬y accompaniment but a very lit@ nlt.‘Ql learns what the true flavor of a tomato ought to be, But this luxury is denied to many, who have to depend on the market for theirsupply,and who cannot always seCure them in their luscious new» picked freshness. So for the benefit of those 'h;\.’t them at secondâ€"hand as it were, MABy ways of cooking them have been devired, Some of these which have been thoroughly tested, and found to be really excellent, are appended . W.__ Tomatoes. Pdralï¬lule when in season they are usually chéap and plentiful, tomatoes are not edias highly us they ought to be They mre One of the very fow articles of food which almost uny one may eat without feeling pleasant after effects. They possess cooltngandantiâ€"scorbuticpropertie®, and wre e8pecially valuable as a hot weather HOUSEHOLD. Prudence. pick them dew bewprinkled | ssu i the early morning,and eat :t« ccompaniment but a very arns what the true flavor 5t it to be, Bat this luxury tyS y, who have to depend on | ans heirsupply,and who cannot em in their luscious new» #. So for the benefit of| __ NO. w Handâ€"made Waggons Horse Shocing Shop, ALLAN BOULDIN & CO‘S PRIME UNDERTAKING 1 A_GE.\'TS in all prineipal points in 4 Ontario, Quebec, Manitobs United States and Encland. DURHAM AGENCY. A general T W.F. Cowan RESERVE FUNXD CAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,000 Has opened out a firstâ€"class TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVANCR CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprietom StandardBank of Canada Residenceâ€" THE GREY JAMES LOCKIE, s e ‘ € f"ï¬ s ;-‘:,,,;," ® . 2?; f v..' ':-f'_;:; y ocm ExEey &QL & "\" E3 > Dase ce tm ‘J'Ié is {*‘&a‘:t?,f _ 3 $ Aiâ€"sapemXx OJ s ""®- irstâ€"Class Hearse. SEE QUR HARNESS UPPER TOWXN. JAKE KRESS IS PUBLISHED EVZRT Thursday; Morning. Furniture Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MoFARLANE, the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also Head Office. Torontoâ€" WOODWORK SAVINGS BANK in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of for sale cheap. â€"TO ATIENDâ€" President â€"AT THEâ€"â€" OFFICE, G4 BA NESS MA 4 aÂ¥ )A () ARNESS OL. mge Licenses. Aucâ€" ies of Bruce and Grey. J* KELLY, Agent. TcFARLANE #s transacted Drafts Hanover allowed at curren» Geo. P. Reid, Manager k deposits of $1.09 nand everyfacilâ€" a distance. is Old Stand Bakery. IL/ELT Chneaper tended to KRESS. 1,000,008 €00,090 $ O UA