In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more Jots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjomâ€" Ing Town piot Durham. Mortgage taken for part purchase Lumber, Shingles and Lath always â€"â€"ilP5 () ammme Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepared to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orderr can be filled. â€" _ FOR SALE The‘ EDGE PROPRRTL Sash and Door Factory. LIGENBED AUCTIONEER for Co. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Lawtasz P. 0. will be promptly mitended to. Residence Lot19, Con. 8, Township of Bentinck. DAN. **‘County of Grey. Sules sttended to promp and at reasouable rates. k 5 Lieensed Auctioncer, for the County ef Grey. harges modersto «nd satisfection guaranieed srangements for seles can be made at the wviaw Office, Duikam, or at bis residence riceville. HO.\OB Graduate of the Roy of Dental Surgeons of Ontario. lraoted without prin by the use of n m or vitalized sir. Purticular attent Alling of the natural teeth. Offic #ence next door West of Post Office, EEE N FIS‘F BR YX. Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loame arrmoged without delay. _ Collections prowptly male, Insurance efected. MNAONEY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Intorost ur "tn® one door north of §. Beot‘s Store Durharo â€" tiqneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Residenceâ€"King St., Hanover. We cal! the special attention of Po: â€" masters and subscribersto the following s1 popsia of tho rewcpaperiaws : @ Ast _ 1. If any person order@i@? d it 0K 5,5 tinued.hcyn?mt pay all & i ol:lj b_‘; publisher may contimnue to seas! io ft: :-v wentis .uade, and collect @fe ghole am cvu ;;é whethor it be taken from the office or not ,»+ There can be no lega‘ discontinuxnce unti c paymentismade. _ _Member College P1 AT1O. OFFICE:â€"â€"DURKHAM PHARMACY Late Reâ€"ident Physician MHospital, Montreil _ _ _ JAMES LOCKIE, J. P. TELFORD, BmISTEK. SOLMIGI7OR .IN SUFREME COURT NOTARY PUBLEC, Commissioner,ctc., BSUER of Marriage Licenses. Aucâ€" BUSINE®S DIRECTORY. DR. ARTHUR GUN Firstâ€"Class Hearse. W. L. McKENZIE, Of the Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVEE. UNDERTAKTNG Promptly attended to JAKE KRESS. MONEY TO LOAN mmb â€"_.Fire Insurance secured. OFFICE, over Grant‘s Stom«. Lower Town, MeGLLL. PHYSICIAN, sURCEON, Ac¢â€" CoUTcUEUR. &c. 8. If asubscriber orders his paper to be stopped at a cortain time, and the published continnes to send,the subscriberis boun( to pay for it if he takes it oui@{ the pos‘ office. This proceeds upon ke grourm« bat a meo must pay for what he uses. ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th 2. Aay person who takes a paper from the post office, whether airected to his name or another, or whether bhe has sub seribed or not is responsible for the pay. HUCH McKAY. T. Gâ€" HOLT, L. D.: S MISCELLANEOUS. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Rdge Hill, Onts $ still to be found in hi« Old Stand _ opposite the Durkam Bakery. JAKE KRESS Furniture AUCTIUNCGER. DURHAM. Newspaper Laws. MEDICAL. DURHAM McLEAN. LEGAL Residence Durbham Out DAN. MeLEAN. D. MeCORMICK, Jn Stocl. .. G. & J. MeKBECHNIE. t t ax T‘ > 'flfl BT=1 mp | DAVIQ JACKSON, JP.» crer piv. court A:thul’ H Jaflksony Notary Public. _ Land V aluators, l Insurance Agents, ul Commissioners. ey. | Money to lend. Money invested for Parties. Farms bought and sold. "a344VO 21 &. m. to 4 p. m. S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thoma» * Lauder, Registrar. Joln A. Munro Deputyâ€"Registrar, Office hours from 16 Sold by II. PARKER, Droggist, Durham. For Impure, Weak and Impoverished Blood, Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpotaâ€" tion of the Heart, Liver Complaint, Nenâ€" ralgis, Loss of Memory, BrozcLitis, Con sumption, Gall Stomes, Juundice, Kidner and Urinary Diseases, St. Vitus‘ Dance Female Irregularities and General Debility. Laboratory â€" Goderich, On! J. M. McLEOD, TESTED REMEDIES SPECIFIC and ANTIDOTI Ageneralfinancial business transacted Office next door to Standard Bank, Durham System Renovator‘ Wo FURMTURE AND UNDERTAKING E J. SHEWELL Ayer‘s Pills Cleanse the Bowets. Ayer‘s ons Sarsaparilla CONVEYANCERS. Free from Eruptions A V 9 Sarsaâ€" / N sommmummmzons A YERE ; parilia A Common Admitted at the World‘s Fair. c McLEOD‘S Permanently Cared by Taking A CABâ€"DRIVER‘S STORY th VOL. XVIII,â€"NO. 12. Thomas A. Johns Prop. and Manufacturer â€"dr Affliction D My 8ho K Lib tinue the =s estabâ€" 1853 and v customâ€" h Of that my beight, love brought me . --:M'fl‘:ll;.â€" i & Oâ€" "The heart of love is with s thousand woes ® Pierced, which secure indifference never. T * l e en e "The rose aye wears the »ailent thorn et heart, j es !""hiu"g' asked and answered, one aJone has n forgotten. & g- never deâ€" sired of her whether ves bim. "‘Love set me up on high; when I grew Not that he has ever gone so deepâ€" ly into the matter as to tell himself the love is all on his own side. Inâ€" stinctively be shrinks from such inâ€" K;rd v.sonfetumn.he It i-d mlgm;lhm.he parted from her, is riding quietâ€" Iy Bomeward .. thevugh _ the _ wistful gloaming that he remembers. with a {;apg,how, of all the thousand and.one hings asked and answered, one aJone Even at this avowal she does not blush. Were he her brother, or an a{;ed nurse, she could scarcely think less about the favor she had jyust conferred upon the man who is standing silently regarding her, puzzled and disappointâ€" ed. truly, but earnestly reflstermï¬ A vow that sooner or later, if faithful love can accomplish it, he willâ€" make her all his own, in heart and soul. x ‘"Do you know," she says, a moment later, in no wise disconcerted because of the warmth of the caress he has given her in exchange for hers.â€""do you know, * never remember knssm% any one in all my life before, excep poor papa, and Clarissa, and you." _ ‘‘Yes; I think I should like to kiss you,". says Geor?xe. kindly; and then she raised herself from his embrace, and, «tanding on tiptoe, places both hands upon his shoulders, and with the utâ€" most calmness lays her lips on his. HNn ts Arserns Tob ainatnadivarenank "At least, before we go, you will kiss me once," he says, entreatingly. All the gayetyâ€"the ?ludness â€"has izone from his voice.; only the deep and lastâ€" ing love remains: He says this, too, hesitatingly, as thouï¬ohalt afraid to demand so great a boon.. _ ; "I have been happy,â€"quite ha{)py,“ she soays, sweetly, coloring warmly as she says it,. ‘"You must not think _ 1 have found the time you have been with me dull or dreary. Only, I am afraid Clatissa will miss me." £ "I should think anyone would miss you," says Dorian impulsively. . He smilés at her as he speaks; but there is a curious mingling of sadness and longing and, uncertainty in his face. Laying one arm around her, with his other hand he draws her head down upon his brast. . Msm __As it has been barely one, this is rathâ€" er difficult to endure with equanimâ€" ity. « "How long you have found it!" he says, with some regret. He is honâ€" estly pained, and his eyes grow darkâ€" er. Looking at him,she sees what she has done, and, though ignorant of the very meaning of the word "love," knows that she has hurt him more than he cares to confess. "Oh, nonsense!" says Georgie. "I am sure it must be quite two hours since you came.". _ : we can." "I haven‘t got any clothes," says Miss Broughton; at which they both laugh gayly, as though it were the merriest jest in the world. "You terrify me," says Branscombe. "Let me beg you will rectify such a mistake as soon as possible." We have been bere a long time," says Georgie, suddenly, glancing at the sun, that is almost sinking out of sight behind the solemn firs. "It hasn‘t l_x-enr u;ix"n}inules.’: says Mr. Branscombe, conviction making his tone brilliant. hav W rhay ed me by it, 1 can feel its beauty . I dare say if I had been christen Jehoshaphat I_ should, under thes umstances, think just the same II, you were going to sayâ€"Z" l’-,-rha?s Clarissa will not care t« e me for so long." _ (t tds THE VILARS GUOVERNESS long s sh ther How long! By the bye, wouldn‘t; so I suppose we e married as soon as ever sts a full minut ers freshly mad : you thinking ‘ntly, bendiog t« er downcast eye eagerly that sh ought upon him. never bave to t s again," she sa { relief. lisappointed, he He laughs, and, kisses her v c it is almost the pretâ€" | she i T heard,â€"Dorian." N ever thought it a nice | "and t _ now that you have : after . I can feel its beauty. i tried if I had been christenâ€" i ‘H says But N you know M Clarissa ind bring eorgie Brans mbx DURHAM, CO. GREY, THURSDAY, MAR. 19, 1896. themaselves alone. . _: â€"___â€" Con c 0 COUDUL EY iB oomcs oioe n x beir has a high. value â€"of its w e 1e t * '.,:nc:.flg’n my’hub:-"w to treat "Is it all true,. I wondert" uzs Dorâ€" ‘it so that it will #tey curled. _A forâ€" hif:.haotui‘:dht::‘am. He hold: mwntbuh;thw‘ï¬:t’*m b:tr C 4 A8 ~ h a : ® j ie socl & bace To sanis" that." te" caace move deatings in neturally curts ing." . > 3 "Why, so you were," says Clarisss, "terribly alive,â€"but only on one subâ€" ject. By the bye, has any one seen ;mpa lately? He had some new books rom town toâ€"day,â€"some pun!ull{ old books, I mean,â€"and has not been found since. I am certain he will be discovâ€" ered soime day buried beneath ancient tomes; perhaps, indeed, it willâ€"be ‘this da.vaill two forgive me : if I to;ag: itmit ’;swy;te lt"imrz: dig b:xlnont?? ve ; and presently find :hemlzlve:ilone. ; E’ ’»:4 "Well, that‘s hardly fair I think*" says Branscombe; "you, at least, should not be the one to say it, as {ou aro in a position to declare I was alive and hearty at halfâ€"past twelve this mornâ€" _ While they are at.tes, Doriar drops in, and, seeing the little yellowâ€"haried fairy sitting in the huge loungingâ€"chair, looks so olpeut glad and contented that Clarissa laughs mischievously. p "Poor Benedick!" she says, mockingâ€" ly; so it has come to this, that you know no life but in your Beatrice‘s presencel""_ .0. 00 l0 Ond "He will think it very sweet of you," says Clarissa, "considering how you deâ€" test teaching, and that." _ _ . _ _ n“ie%l;(lia'r mess now until she gets somebody to take my place. I can‘t leave her yet." ‘"Dorian will not like that," r "He must try to like it. Mrs. Redâ€" mond hus been very good to me, and I couldn‘t bear to make her uncomfortâ€" able. I shall stay with her until she gets somebody else. I don‘t think, when I explain it to him, that Dorian will mind my doing this." . _ [ >‘ no shy, halfâ€"suppressed smiles, there is no word of love; Dorian‘s name has not once been mentioned, except as & secâ€" ondary part of her story, and then with the extremest unconcern. A W rreroea l o en areone aloe me altogether?!â€"I mean until the marâ€" riage?" asks Clarissa, presently. .. "I cannot leave Mrs. Redmond like that," says Georgie, who is always deâ€" lightfully indefinite. "She will be in "Lucky, fortunate;" where has the word "happy"* §one, that she has forâ€" gotten to use it? Clarissa makes no reâ€" ply. Something in the girl‘s manner checks her. She is standing there beâ€" fore her, gay, exultant, with all a child‘s pleasure in some new possession: "ber eyes as stars of twilight fair," flashing warmlgl:\ her whole manner inâ€" tense and glad;but there are no blushes, u ‘"Now, don‘t spoil it," says Georgie; "I am certain 1 deserved it all, and more. Well, if he didn‘t sleep, L did, and dreamed, and dreamed, and dreamâ€" ed all sorts of lovely things until the ady broke. Ob, Clarissa,"â€" throwing out her arms with a sudden swilt gestâ€" ure of passionate relief,â€""I am free! Am I not lucky, fortunate, to have deâ€" liverance sent so soon?" part of the morning rambling on in this style, and then towards the evening dispatches Georgie to Gowran to tell Clarissa, too, the great news. But Clarissa knows all about it before her coming, and meets her in the hall, and kisses her then and there, and tells her she is so glad, and it is the very sweetest thing that could possibly have happened. "Me came down this morning very early and told me all about it," she says, looking as pleased as though it is ber own happiness and not another‘s she is discussing. "Now, what a pity!" says Georgie: "and I did so want to tell you myself, after the disgraceful way in which you tried to wed me to Mr. Hastinsg. ‘"He could not sleep; he confessed that to me. And you had forbidden him to go to the vicarage to see you toâ€"day. What else then could he do but come over and put in a good time here? And he did. _ We had quite a splendid time," says Miss Peyton, laughing: "I really don‘t know which of us was the most delighted about it. We both kept on saying pretty things about you ail the time,â€"more than â€" you deserved, I think." : .‘\ ; bréD ith a deep fond smile: that . b¢â€" ~more alnceâ€"Cealing the deep love of his heart. | _ hair developed as anything for you. An from the beginning she thus,â€"nothing on ear Mrs. Redmond to call more _ frivolous, â€" "tel prefer somebody old a She spends th rning rambling en towards th ‘cause Dear, And wh she had earth 3 (EDCIO0. CBUE _ T Ltle ds I 7 me it I mllï¬ into ‘theatrical wigs, . Mins mmou;fg y the way, is said o h thï¬qfltM' o;wip‘og this in will the G s ould anyâ€" she TE h women wear close caps, shorn or unâ€" shorn, so.there is not much lost or gainâ€" ed in hai mwm& is a business with them tu‘;ï¬m t it pays to keep it clean. ‘The dealers are careful to attend all the fairs and merryâ€"makings in the fall of the year, in lblfowmc ? the trade. "I attended one such sale when visâ€" " Black hair is fashionable just now, out there are certain golden tints that ilways bring the highest price ; for exâ€" ample, certain shades of light bair that {etch as much as a dollar an ounce. The peasant women of Brittany and Southâ€" arn France supply most of the dark hair in the market, and from one to five francs i:tpdd per head. The averâ€" age weight a single growth is ‘one nd md‘ï¬;&mfuse as a rule to mdle' leas t that amount unless Coor. The opermenia ade Abliged: o r. are wash it before the sale, and mm as * New York imports four or five tons of hair annually, and London twice that amount. English women have never depended upon their own bair for adornâ€" ment as Americans do. They have. finer suits generally, but like to see the bead overloaded with puffs, braids, buns, ete. _ _ T 2? "1 suppose it is due to the growth of the country," said he, ‘" and the extenâ€" sion of fashionable luxuries into the byways and hedges, but on the whole our business is as valuable now as when the women wore chignons. The theatâ€" rical world is bigger than it used to be, and after all they are the great xirâ€"bayers. s s t s ooo I Though women do not at present upâ€" holster their heads with locks that obâ€" viously grew somewhere else, hair. is still an important feature of commerce. In fact one of the great New York imâ€" porters say that the trade is as large now as it Cver was. She is plainly not listening to him. She is lost in a mournful reverie, and, leaning back in her chair, is staring at her little white fingers in an absent {ashion, and is twisting round and round upon ber third finger an old wornâ€"out gold ring. Poor little ring. so f'ull of sweet and moving m«-morm_-! "It was fortunate," she says, sudâ€" denly, with a smile, and without lookâ€" ing up at him, being still engrossed in ber occupation of twisting the ring round ber glender finger, â€" "it was more than fortunate that the first rich man should be you." "The big bair crcips come from Gerâ€" uany and France. 1t is handled bythe igents of a Dutch company who visit imerica annually for orders. _ not one bit in love with you." ‘"Then why are you marrying me?" demands he, a little roughly, stung to pained anger by her words. "Because I promised papa, when â€" when he was leaving me, that 1 would marry the very first rich man | that asked me," replies she again lifting her serious eves to his. "I thought it would make him happier. And it did. I am keeping my promise now.," with a sigh that may mean regret for her dead, or, indeed, anything. _' "Are you not afraid to go too fart‘ demands he, very pale, moving back from her, and ~ regarding her with moody eyes, "Do you quite know what you are saying?‘â€"what you are comâ€" pelling me against my will, to underâ€" stand?" when he marry th asked me serious "What am I to tell you?â€"that when I am away from you J am restless, misâ€" erable; when with you, more than satisâ€" fied. I know that I could sit for hours contentedly_ with this little band in mine" (raising it to his lips), "and 1 also know that, if fate so willed it, 1 should gladly follow you through the length and breadth of the land.. If you were to die, orâ€"or forsake me, it would break my beart. And all this is because I love you." ‘""Was that your first thought?" He is both surprised and pained. "Yes, my very first. You look as if you didn‘t believe me," says Miss Broughton, with a little laugh. *"But if you had gone through as many moods and tenses as I have during the past week, you _ would quite understand. Well, then I thought how good it would be to have nothing to do but amuse myâ€" self all day long. And then I looked at you, and felt so glad you had no crooked eyes, or red hair, or anything that way. And then, above all things, I felt how sweet it was to know I had (?ungl somebody who would have to look after; Aa , 80. 25 seb ipmand iale mormetien ortbnt 3 more." i t," she says. "What am I to am away from y rable; when with ied. I know that She has risen, and is nc it him inquiringly, with ind beautiful and deep, They chill him in spite . to disbelieve in their fa lfh" seems really anxious as she asks this. i8, no one quite my bave you. You will of me than of any body won‘t you?" have had no one $r0(k» o# an NT n t sut "é‘ inutterably bappy ever sin it you thought off" Nell, I‘ll tell you," says Miss cheerfully. "First, I said ‘Now I shall never again h Murray‘s Grammar." back. â€" GOLDEN LOCKS (To Be Centinued.) rtam _ am qui $ es d s t onl ce en s g mt ead tae ons nllin dnc n m P wEr on (B . st "bo think belonging to me,â€"that own; and ilways be else in the ol sns e anathicenmce Dc now 1 fonder world, Fu"m‘"‘ "GLet, Scrizture, Szpl:is, Unnuatural Dizc/erges, e Kiduey and Bladde» Disecses. ; Mmss o en § RESTORED TOMANKCGOD BY DRS. !{. & K. e Wi. A. WALEERB, W A.WALKED. . MBS. CIAC. PERPY, <3.L.-X'EKB1 E >\ " cz % Goe +3 C iG€) »es9 | /Q Cc / 1 f , n c p h + x / nCM VA OA Ds | o i\ * _ Ay 3 s h \ gx AfComiver mm reaftermn . a yermen teurte boniFracem Divorced bot united agein er is shut off and a powerful brake ap plied to the flywheel. A twenty horse ver engine working at ninety revolu &upr second. was stopped "inâ€"twe thirds of a second. : â€P‘ We trect and cure Verizocclc, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Weakmess, Glet, Scrizture, S;pl:iz, Unnatural Discherges, S Wood‘s Phosphodine Is sold by responsible wholesale and retail Gruggists in the Dominion. *44%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%@ & @@ ol!%mmandfofl*in youth, overezortion of râ€"i>d and body, in :TH REԤ'.".T ed lm:ndoxpo.f:muo cu'.â€";.n:;;mk:fwr‘muvcuand fu W;nm mos. LomefsJeand w.isor at un early of while others aro foreed to Câ€"3 out n weary, fruitless ':nohnch:l“; onutox‘xeul.nomcin mtcmm lx:t',i.u:d ro solace or comfort ';::n. victime found in all stati Morâ€" form, the 6Sie:, fh0 \icoâ€"chacp, P:thhundthoym'adon:mo ____i____ ho e P 2‘ ,h the result of over ©5 years treating thousands of cases with all known (/ drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatmentâ€"a > combination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stages of Sexnal Debility, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Mental Worry, Excessive Use of Opfum, Tobaceo, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of m ® which soon lead to Insanity, Consugnption and an early grave. Wood‘s Before Taking. Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that scemed almost hopelessâ€"cases that had been treated by the most talented physiâ€" ciansâ€"cases that were on the verge of despair and insanityâ€"cases that were 3 tottering over the graveâ€"but with the continued and persevering use of Wood‘s Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were @ restored to manly vigor and healthâ€"Reader you need not despairâ€"no mat { ter who has given you up as incurableâ€"the remedy is now within your reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness and happiness, \’ Price, one package, $1; six packages, $5; by mall free of postage. fr One will please, six guaranteed to cure, Pamphblet free to any address, ~\ MACHINERY I'{".Ie{'-E“‘E uTsl s _.s pic. CSï¬ -Kau‘ SBIGRZTI] BÂ¥ ) C " Ed T/A SsiNFTL A&Ssits in yOUTH A*A*%+*%%%.%%°%+%2°%t%%%%% G + @% * @ % @4 G Lord Milton an M. P. ar 2204 Ancestors‘ Footsteps The William Pitt of the Bri YOUNGEST MAN IN PARLIAMENT. C hy 1 io#s stlat jof ymudes a0dJ an .qnI 4r aft} u10 s n.y,‘.;gQ.,‘,,; adt ei aword | 930C nid sbfe fio@Atto yeerbaot odt Qsuil | â€"ba I 1 h‘ 1 2 x q7 2 fy l]@ | \ ] 1 h t l a . D / Ay & . SYPHILIS EMISSIONS STRICT URE CURED & LATER EXCESSES IN MAMHOOD . MAXKE NERPVCUS, DICEASED MEN i TREATMENT AYTERTREATMCE® Divorced but unii00 ce tâ€""~HO NAMES OR TESTIEONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.â€"@a 17 VEARS IN DETROIT, 200,000 CURED. NO RISK â€" Hothod Treatment cured moin a fow woeks. A‘wir trectment is Wo=C ';onmu gaining overy day. wl‘l:?v: m?zmet‘uï¬ fallingto c;',.';:i‘, tS~CURES GUARANTâ€"CD OR MONEY REFUNDED thos. Ferry aaz5:â€""I owo my lifeo to Prs. K. & K. ~~â€"â€"â€"â€" _2 ju) I20 52010 & beH altacH .2sl 1M The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. hiveds anidonorgqa weor it sitenH t if agods besertiatpaizeons .M d0itn1t yald yecunY ad:1 to fim sof zgwapoo adt 2s .yni 'r~'1‘v:4unl¢mn »dt oi aword sbie o# yeer heor odd .suil QUICKI IAAT HTAdG A Wood‘s Phosphoding.â€"> ping Tm, A. Walker of 10th Stroet says:â€""I havo suffered o mnhï¬lurmn c; 'l‘i»‘in ‘* Lcontracted Iopriii mat ather Privato elseses. 1had ulcors in the mouth and throct, bcmr.lnn. hair 1oose, pimples on face, finto mailscamoof, o dosic~s, became thin and despondent. Fovea doctors treated mo with Mcreury, PE ET iodioecedractaey ies hennody & Ionon. od moin a ow vooks. ;::e‘?{-g,:_mm is wo=derfol. STOPI Follows His AT V sma it in en m D) DR. J. C. AYER & CO Aver‘s Har Vicoq 1 '“lfliglfllt z)s:"uf's:;:'u 'I:'l oid, an ously was ?uih' :;J::l::'l a variety oia??p:ul‘r‘ i id ‘i(!n?ï¬c .ghln"tnl' fear s_lougi perm .\lu)utl :lxlm tï¬s ll::?k brongh A,; llair Vigor, I begs usecft. l% %M‘SJ Ayer‘s Pills cur Growth WHOLE NO. 920 occasional apfl!«fu the hair in good c L F. Fexwics, Di gl mailsom & en3 bra ysabitfd so adTo cat q3 is r0ggo ns avai at bain 0 G .coH ad) quinsod +040 e A. W ttle of Ay vas resto; ImMPOTENCY VARICOGCELE EMISSIONS / _ â€"â€"â€"OURED {23BRS MT HATHSIGUAJ TVA 422404 reat English Remedy q det k 1 began ut once to ï¬\m*l;::lme new hair LOWELL, MASS., U .S. A C aechk 12cuccchg ’ Egzl; AYER‘S of Hair. BoULDIN « CO‘S After Taking VI H { glams 1o viltod A y vrovnalf "iuu are in a starving condition and are wholly dependent for the necesâ€" saries of life upon the charity of the British and American public.. One disâ€" trict alone, the News will say, ebsorbâ€" ed £16,000 of the £30,000 remitted to Sir . Phillip Curric, the British Ambassador to Turkey, for the relief of the sufferâ€". Terrible Suferings of the People for Want . _ f Feod. ~. A. despatch from London says:â€"The Daily News says that 200,000 ArmeRmâ€" As early as 700 A.D., there were many m? factories in both Italy and Spain, and about 750 A.D. the Phoenicians inâ€" troduced the business into France, iue ï¬g'rlt factories being established at Marâ€" seilles. ® Pling"the Eider speaks of soap, and says that because its price was so high many . substitutes _were used, among them a kind of glutinous earth and fine sand mixed in the juice of certain plants that made lather. _ _ A few years ago a soapâ€"boiler‘s shop was discovered in Pompeii, having been buried beneath the terrible rain of ashes that fell upon that city in 79 A.D. The soap found in the shop had not lost all of its efficacy, although it had been brried 1800 years. At the time that Pompeii was destroyed the soapâ€"making business was carried on in several of the Italian cities. _ shtalâ€" & | for sale cheap. _ Jobbing of all kinds promptly | attended to. ! _ ALLAN MoFARLANE, ANTIQUITY OF SOAP. Soap is not a modern invention. T: is twice mentioned in the Bible, firs in Jeremiah and again in Malachi. His tory tells us that more than 2,000 year ago the Gauls manufactured it, by com bining beechâ€"tree ashes with goat‘s fat sold in bulk U your ge ackigren e'u( ..;.l«}?i: ?Eï¬ Handâ€"made Waggons In the old stand. made shoes. Horse Shoeing Shop, ALLAN â€" McFARLANE snaifforde AGENTS in all principal points ir 4 Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba United Stater and England. DURHAM AGENCY. A general Banking business iransacted Drafts »sued and collectious made on all points. Depo«â€" ts received mnd interest allowed at currept PRIME W.F. Cowan, President THECOOKSBEST FRIEND CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,000 RESERVE FUXND Has opened out a firstâ€"class THE ~"GREYT* REVEY TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVANCE CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprietom DUNNS BAKING POWDER StandardBank of Canada REVIEW OFFICE, GARAFRAiXA ST.. DURHAM. INJTS NATIVE SURIT FIDM TNZ TCA PLANT TO TNE TEA CuP 4 and 13 Front Stroct .« "" "(MS PDBLISEED EVERT Thursday, Morning. SEE QUR HARNESS UPPER TOWXNâ€" LARGEST SALE iN CANADA. Th STEEL, HAYTER & CC. ALL ©OOD GROCERS KCLP Head Office. Toronto WOODWORK SAVINGS BANK A PERFZCCT 1 THE ARMENIANS. in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of it IAZZYID GHA IK30L Heoria« wed on savings bunk drpos.ts of $1.00 s. Prompt attention and everyfacilâ€" curtomers liying at * distance. HARNESS MAKERS Paid up HARNESS OL â€"ATâ€" J EELLY, Agent SIX gur.'n and g--;dl& pakazes, and never ob Proprietor. YEA Geo. P. Reid, Manarze: All handâ€" Also croort 4i 1,000,008 €00.090 H (J A)