\f We cal) the special attention of Pos maste‘s and subscribersto the following s3 nopsis of the newspaperiaws : 1. If any person orders his peper discor tinued, he must pay all arreages, or tht publisher may continus to send it until payâ€" mentis made, and collectthe whole aw oun! whethor it be taken from the office or not. There can be no lega) discontimuance unt! paymentismade. 24. Aay person who takes a paper trowm the post office, whether directed to his pame or another, or whether bhe has sub soribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If a subsoriber orders his paper to be étopped at a certaintime, and the publi-hed eontinues to send, the subscriberis bound to pay for it if he takes it out of the pos! office. This proceeds upon ke groun( hat a man must pay for what he uses. Of the Best Quality Cheaper THAN EVER. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. NOTARY PUBL1IC,Commissioner,etc., MONEY TO LOAN. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loapse arranged without delay, _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. mANEY TO LOAN stlowost rutes of Interest F I® one door north of 8. Seot‘s Store Durhara UNDERTAKILNG Promptly attended to. JAKE KRKSS. Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" "*"County of Grey. Sales attended to promp and at reasonable rates. Residence Durbam Ont LICRNSID AUCTIONEER for Co. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Liaxutrasx P. 0. will be promptly attended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. 8, Township of Bentinok. DAN. McLEAN. ALLAN â€" MeFARLANE W. L. McKENZIE, Handâ€"made Waggons In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also Horse Shocing Shop, Fire Insurance secured. OFFIOE, oven Grant‘s Sronc Lower Town, s G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thoma: * Lauder, Registrar. John A. Munro, Deputyâ€"Registrar, Office hours from 10 2. m. to 4 p. m. Contrary to the custom of Chinese residents in the States, relatives of two Chinese who died at St. Paul, Minn., gave their kinsmen American funerals, at which there were music and flowers. ‘BSUZER of Marriago Licenses. Auecâ€" â€" tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Residenceâ€"King St., Hanover, J. P. TELFORD, ARRISTER â€" SOLICITOR DN SOFREME COURT JAMES LOCKIE, Has opened outra firstâ€"class Furniture ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Darham Bakery. HUCH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. Jobbing of all kinds promptly Newspaper LAaws. ALLAN MoFARLANE, WOODWORK in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of DURHAMâ€" for sale cheap. LEGAL KRESS DAN. MeLEAK, LETTERS BY THE MLLION Sketch of Its Development aud Statistics as to Work Doneâ€"Facts as to Registered Leiters and Money Orders. In the year 185i an act of the Imâ€" perial Parliament transferred the manâ€" agement of the postal systems in the colonies of British North America to the various provincial authorities, and from that date until Confederation. each province controlled" its own system under its own laws and regulations. Shortly after Confederation, however, the Postâ€"office Act came into effect, establishing uniform rates and regulaâ€" tions for the Dominion. sOMETHING ABOUT THE POSTAL SYSTEM OF THIS COUNTRY. These regulations, which since that date have changed from time to time, are now as follows: General letter rate, 3 cenis per ounce or under ; letâ€" ters for local delivery, wihere there is a free delivery, 2 cents per ounce Or under ; letters for local delivery, where not delivered free, 1 cent per ounce or under ; registration fee, 5 cents ; letâ€" ter cards, 3 cents; postâ€"cards, 1 cent; newspapers, books, etc., generally 1 cent per 4 ounces; parcels, 6 cents per 4 ounces; fifthâ€"class matter (parcels open to inspection), 1 cent per ounce. In the year 1875 an agreement was made with the United States, whereby a common rate of postafge between the two countries was adopted, each counâ€" try retaining all money collected, and no accounts being kept between the two Postâ€"office Departments with reâ€" gard to international correspondence. Later in 1888 another agreement was made, specially providing for the estabâ€" lishment of an exchange of general articles of merchandise, open to inâ€" spection, between the two countries, subject to certain regulations for the protection of customs with respect to articles liable to duty. All the princiâ€" pal provisions, however, of the agreeâ€" ment of 1875 were retained. The inâ€" ternal postage rates of each country generally govern, and official correâ€" spondence entitled to pass free in one country is delivered free in the other. }THE UNIVERSAL POSTAL UNION. The Universal Postal Union was formed at a conference held at Berne in 1874, and a treaty was signed in that year, the countries represented beâ€" ing the several countriee _ Europe, the United States and Egypt. The obâ€" ject of the Union was to form all the countries of the world into a single postal territory, and to establish uniâ€" form reduced rates of postage, and to further the interchange of correspondâ€" ence by arranging that every country should be bound to convey the mails of other countries by its land or sea services at the lowest possible rates. The next Postal Congress was held in Paris in 1878, when the Dominion of Canada was admitted a member from the following 1st July. Letters, newsâ€" papers and other printed matter, samples and patterns became subject to uniform postal rates and regulaâ€" tions for all places in Europe and for iall other countries that were members of the Union. The existing postal arâ€" rangements with the United States were allowed to remain undisturbed, being of a more liberal and advanâ€" tageous character than the ordinary reâ€" gulations of the treaty. At this meeting the regulations of the treaty of 1874 were revised ana embodied in a conâ€" vention which came into force 1st April, 1879. The third congress was held in Lisâ€" bon in 1885, but no materiai change was made. The fourth congress was held in Vienna, 1891, when the admisâ€" sion of the Australasian colonies was agreed upon, and a number of meaâ€" sures, all tending to facilitate the trinsâ€" mission of correspondence were agreed upon. WIDE AS THE CIVILIZED WORLD. ‘The Universal Postal Union now inâ€" cludes almost every civilized country, in the world, being composed of the folâ€" lowing:â€"The whole of Rurope, the whole of America; in Asiaâ€"Russiaâ€"inâ€" Asia, Turkeyâ€"inâ€"Asia. Persia, British India, Burmah, Ceyion, and the postal establishments at Aden, Muscat, and Guadar, Japan, Siam, the European colâ€" onies and the European and Japanese postai establishments in China and Corea ; in Africaâ€"Egypt, Algeria, Tripâ€" oli, Tunis, Liberia, Congo, Free State, the Azores, Madeira, the European coloâ€" nies, the Orange Free State, the Trarsâ€" vaal and all the territories, under the protectorate of Germany and _ the French postal establishment in Madaâ€" gascar; in Australasia and Oceanicaâ€" the British colonies, ‘Tasmania, New Zealand, Fiji, British and German New Guinea, Hawaii, the Marshall Islands, and the French, Dutch and Spanish, colonies. EXTENT OF THE JURISDICTION. A central office has been established at Berne at the cost of the various countries comprising the union. At the time that the treaty of Berne came into effect (1875) the jurisdiction of the union extended over an area of 14,293,â€" 700 square miles, with more than 350 millions of inhabitants whereas it now extends over an area of 39,372,000 square miles and 1,035,000,000 inhibitâ€" ants. The population of the whole Iworld is less than a billion and a half. The number of pieces of postal matâ€" ter distributed over the whole area of the union during 1893 was computed as follows: 8.201 millions of letters, 1,898 millions of postal cards, 5,899 millions of napers, printed matter and official documents. 143 millions of samrles. 44 millions of registered letters with a deâ€" clared value of $8,028,400,000, 307 milâ€" lions of money orders and tal credâ€" its with a value of 83.061.7%3%00 makâ€" ing the enormous total of 17,778 milâ€" liona of pieces of mail matter. _ The prevailing rates among Postal Union countries are 5 cents per 1â€"2 ounce and under for letters. 2 cents for postal cards and 1cont per 2 ounces for newsâ€" papers, hooks, etc. The registration fee is 5 cents. * & WENT THROUGH POST OFFICES On account of the enormous stretches of country over wihich the mail has to be delivered at the ordinary rates, the Government of Canada found itself beâ€" ONTARIO ARCHIvES ~ TORONTO hind in the Postâ€"office Department to the extent of $800,000, the total net revâ€" enue, bein$882.792.790 and the total exâ€" penditure $3,593,647. The same trouble has confronted the &bâ€"oï¬ï¬oe authoriâ€" ties of the United tes, as in only ten of the States are the postal revâ€" enues in excess of the expenditure. COST OF CARRYING THE MAILS The following sums were expended for osrrgi.ng the mails:â€"By rail, $1,â€" 241,115; by land, $844,118 ; by steamers, <4l,110; by land, $844,110; by steamers, $79,356. The department has postal contracts with 48 railways, whose comâ€" bined lengtb is 14,463 miles. It uses 157 postal cars, of wihich 53 are on the Grand Trunk, 50 on the Canadian Paciâ€" fic and 18 on the Intercolonial. The daily distance travelled is 30,436 miles. â€" The total distance travelled in 1895 was 14,836,735 miles. . * *3 iaevier The correspondence between Canada and China and Japan consisted last year of 179,993 letters, 77,488 newspapers, 652 pounds of parcels and miscellaneous articles to the number of 61,049. With the Australian colonies the mail comâ€" mumnication <resulted in the transmisâ€" sion of 148.729 letters, $13,525 newsâ€" papers, 206.916 books and samples. GROWTH OF POSTAL SERVICE. At Confederation there were only 3,â€" 638 post offices in Canada. There are now 8,882. The first year of Confederâ€" ation 704,700 registered letters were sent, last year 3,183,200 registered letâ€" tes were sent. The total letters posted in 1868 were 18,100,000; in 1895, they numbered 107,565,000. Post cards were used in the year 1876 to the number of 4,646,000. Last year no less thin 24,â€" 025,000 of them were sent by mmail. Acâ€" cording to the population there were 5.37 letters to every head of population; in 1880 there were 10.86 letters per head ; in 1890, there were 19,63 letters per head. and in 1895 21.16 letters per Newspapers, periodicals, books, circuâ€" lars, parcels, etc., to the number of 5.6 per ‘head of population went through the mails in 1868. Last year 18.92 per head of population were handled, or a total number of 96.176,206, LETTER WRITING IN ONTARIO. Of the total 107,565,000 letters sent in 1895, Ontario people wrote 57,900,000, or more than one balf. This is at the rate of 26 letters per head of populaâ€" tion. Quebec sent letters at the rate of 15 per head ; Nova Scotia, 17; New Brunswick, 17; Prince FRdward Island, 11; British Columbia, 27 ; and Manitoba and Northâ€"west Territories, 25. Out of a total of 3,183,200 registered letters Ontario sent 1,750,000. _ C During the whole period since Conâ€" federation the postal revenue has been always considerably under the expendiâ€" ture, Each of the past twenty years has shown a deficit of from $400,000 to $800,000. _ __ epy is The sum of $16,154 was paid during last year in money on letters delivered: Rents of letter boxes andâ€"drawers proâ€" duced $27,698. Commissions on money orders amounted to $107,085, and profit on exchange on money order business with other countries to $1,815. Among the items of expenditure it appears that postmasters received $905,369; stamp vendors made $17,325,. and that there were losses by fire and burglaries to the extent of $3,278. In 1868 thie conveyance of mails over 10,622,216 miles cost per mile 5 1â€"10 cents, and the transmission of 36,984,â€" 800 letters, newspaners, etc., cost 1 4â€"10 cents apiece. In 1895 the conveyance of mails over 80,351,115 miles cost 7 2â€"10 cents per mile, and the transmission of 227,766,206 letters, newspapers, etc., 9â€"10 of a cent apiece, so that there is a decrease in the cost of carrying each article of about oneâ€"half cent. And in connection with this it must be conâ€" sidered that if newspapers, were carâ€" ried now at the old rate of 1 cent per pound a sum of probably not less thain $100,000 would be added to the revenue each year. 7 The system of free delivery of letters by carriers in the principal cities was commenced in 1875, and last year the total number delivered thus was:â€" Letters and postcards, 38,088,749 ; newsâ€" papers 13,734,474. The number of carâ€" riers employed was 398. AS TO REGISTERED LETTERS. Last year 3,1838,200 registered letters were posted in Canada. Of this number 164 failed to reach their destination. No less than 28,158 of those registered letters were sent to the dead letter office. Of thesoe 15,189 were returned to the writers, 1,339 remained in the ofâ€" fice or with postmasters for delivery, while 12,330 failed of delivery and were found to contain no value. _Of the 164 which failed to reach their destination the contents of 125 were made good hy the officials or others held responsible for the loss; five were stolen, and in 28 cases no evidence could be obtained to account for the discrepancies. In _every 19,410 registered letters only one miscarried, so that sending hy regisâ€" tered letter in Canada may be considâ€" )ered a very safe method. THE DEAD LETTER OFFICE. Last year 960,031 letters found their way to the dead letter office. Of this number 134.343 were returned to other countries: 24,973 were forwarded to correet address; 288,770 were returned to their writers ; 8.547 remained in the office ; 471,850 heing of no value were destroved : 28,093 were _ returned to printed _ address, and 8455 were returnâ€" ed _ to Government Department The growth of the money order sysâ€" tem is shown by the following figures: In 1868 there were 515 offices, 90.163 orders issued ; amount of orders $3.â€" 252,881. Last year there were 1.261 ofâ€" fices, 1.092,052 orders issned: amount of orders $13,187.322. Of the 1.261 money order offices. Ontario bas 624 and Queâ€" bee 199. Of the total money orders isâ€" sued in Canada $10,7386.647 were payable ?tn_ Can@da and $2,450,064 in other counâ€" ries. There is but one way out of the difâ€" ficulty. It is impossible to avoid the causes for worry, for there is no day that does not bring its share, but the trouble lies in the fact that so many yield weakly to the depressions to which nearly everyone is liable, and do not make any effort to rise superior to their trials. Worry isâ€" not always the au‘nm;)animent of _ great troubles; it more frequently arises from petty cares, the constant jar and fret of which in time wears out the life. _ These can surely be put aside if one has the will to do so, and this is most easily done by sbustituting in their places thoughts o{ other and better thin%s, which will take the mind out of self and selfish affairs and turn it in other channels. _ Mr. McSwillemâ€"Self r‘spect, m‘ dear? I‘m, sho fuil self r‘spect, m‘ dear, that I enter every shloon by back door. PLENTY UF SELF RESPECT. Mrs. McSwillemâ€"I should think you‘d have more self respect than to drink the way you do. _ _ _ 8 J2 se DECREASED COST OF CARRYING DON‘T WORRY TAUGHET TO BE A MONKEBT AN INHEUMAN FATHER‘S TREATMENT OF HIS DAUGHTER. Covered Her With an Ape‘s Skin, and Made Her Cut Capers on the Streetâ€" Dosed Her With Gin and Starved Her to Stunt the Child‘s Growthâ€"Rescued By a Salvation Army Officer. brought to light if all the secrets of the Salvation Army work were made known can be judged from this story which Commander Booth{Pucker told the other day. Commander Booth/Tucker and Brigâ€" adier Swift, of the New York Salvaâ€" tionists, can show you a little girl atâ€" tending one of the grammar schools of New York city, whose father deliberâ€" ately so stunted her growth and misâ€" treated her im other respects that he was able to use her to beg pennies as a grindâ€"organ monkey without people who saw her suspecting that she was other than the beast she represented. FOUND IN KENUISH HOP FIELDS. keen eyes had seen humanity in so many almost unrecognizable forms that they detected it pven in this forlorn little being through all the brutalizing disguise with which her parent had enâ€" deavored to conceal the fact that she was of human kind. It was down in the Kentish hop fields of England that Brigadier Bwift found the pitiable little creature. Mrs. Swift‘s The child was then, as nearly as could be guessed, about three years old. Bhe was dressed ina dirty red jacket trimâ€" med with lace and shining buttons, like the typical handâ€"organ monkey. _ Her diminutive body, moreover, had been squeezed into the skin of a real monâ€" it fitted down closely over the entire face, leaving only openings for the mouth and nostrils and two holes surâ€" rounded by hair, through whicha pair of eyes peered. y aian io to o t to ie Originally the monkey skin had been | made to cover the hands and feet, but bad worn away, leaving the tiny memâ€" bers bare, save for the thickly _ enâ€". crusted filth and dirt that covered them almost beyond recognition. ! HER COVERING MOTHâ€"EATEN,. The monkey skin upon her body had become worn bare in spots, and besides was mothâ€"eaten, and had been dingily patched, but the apeâ€"like tricks the child had been beaten into acquiring readily diverted attention from ‘thesw defects, To the gaping crowds of stolid hopâ€" pickers and stupid farm laborers before whom she was exhibited she was the typical grindâ€"organ monkey they had been used to seeing, only a trifle more knowing and impish in her grotesque caricature of humanity than the ordiâ€" nary run. _ â€". . s Fi bmevs She could climba table leg as nimbly as any monkey ever exhibited, and there was a contrivance by which she could move the tail that was attached to the monkey skin she wore. It was dreadâ€" fully fatiguing work for the withered little midget to move this tail,. and out of all the horrors of her life the memâ€" ory of the halfâ€"fainting efforts to do this still come back to her as among the most vivid of her child miseries. _ What â€" dreadful things would be The estimable parent who maintained his valuable existence by thus exhibitâ€" ing his off{spring took a sound commerâ€" cial view of his property and did not pound her except in moments of mentâ€" al depression incident to alcoholic re laxation. yq He bad to starve her and had fed ber on gin from childhood in order to repress her unfilial tendency to _ outâ€" grow ber _ monkey skin, and he knew that this could not go on forever withâ€" out killing her. Ho he was trying to get as much but of her as he could while she lasted. & t But in one way and another she was a great trial to her benevolent parâ€" ent. _ She wantonly wore away the fur of her monkey skin for one thing, and as she grew older became perverse in the matter of exhibiting human tendenâ€" cies at critical moments in the exhibiâ€" tion. _ Walloping, of course, was _ the only reimedy for this, and wallopings wore her and shortened her days, and this, too, was a source of aggravation, TAUGHT HER TO STEAL. During the summer the father and his girlâ€"monkey tramped it alone, and once in awhile, by way of variety, the father let her out of her monkey skin and sent her begging from house to house with instructions to steal whatâ€" ever she could lay her hbhands on. In the winter the two joined a comâ€" pany of snen who played a sort of panâ€" tomime, the father assuming the role and costume of a horned devil. _ The girl monkey appeared with him and reâ€" lieved his heavyâ€"villain part by _ her apish tricks and agility. . She climbed table legs, nibbled the nuts that were banded her and begged pennies by passâ€" ing around the lill%‘e red monkey cap she wore, Brigadier Swift found her as related, readily got her away from hber father on condition that he be not prosecuted, adoped her as her _ own _ child and brought her to this country. Speaking of her, Command>r Boothâ€"Tucker, said: HER SECRET WELL KEPT. ‘"The little girl is very sensitive about her history. Her secret, out of respect for her feelings, has so far been kept from all but a very few of her friends. She is at present attending one of the public schools of New York City. &he is an unusually bright child, of refined tastes and with very lofty ideas and ambitions. "I consider it very remarkable that, in spite of her early training, and her doubtful _ heredity, she _ should have turned out so well. g._[;hfl) in Moody‘s school in Northfield, The suffering of the early years of her life seems to have left no touch of bitterness, but instead a very ready sympathy for the poor and the afflictâ€" ed everywhere, a "We took a considerable risk in adoptâ€" ing sucha type, but we bhave been amâ€" ply rewarded,"" > >>.sâ€" 05044006 .. The little girl‘s ambition is to becom@ a trained nurse, She will soon complete her course in a grammar school in New York, after which she will get a scholâ€" Heâ€"I wonder what the meaning of that picture isf The youth ard the maid are in a tender attitude. paes Sheâ€"Oh, don‘t you see? He has jest asked her to marry him, and she is accepting him, j Heâ€"Ah! How appropriate the title! Sheâ€"I don‘t see it. Heâ€"Why, that card at the bottom says usold!n THE PROPER WORD. 1 found her away from t he be not The truth that a good man has spokâ€" en with the noblest purpose may be changed into a falsehood by simply taking it out of its connection, giving it a different inflection, or attributing to it some motive that was not in the mind of the oriï¬inal. speaker. The fairâ€" minded man will always try to repreâ€" sent another as doing and saying what he has reason to believe the other honâ€" estly purposed doing and saying. When he reports the words of another, â€" he conscientiously aims to give them the ‘exa,ct connection and circumstances in which they were originally spoken,and then puts upon them the best possible construction. In short, he treats the word and acts of others as he would have others treat his word and acts. you ? Heâ€"Yes, it does. I was so sure you would tell me. Yes, I actually wagerâ€" ed $100,000 that you would marry me. A bhundred thousand dollars ? _ Well, I was only joking. When shall it be, dear ? Biffersâ€"Hello, Whiffers, what‘s the matter? You have a strangely unsteady gait. Been sick? _. * Whiffers (with disgust and indignaâ€" tion)â€"See here, you landlubber, you ; don‘t you know sea legs when you see ‘em ? f've been to Europe, of course. FOR SALE The EDGE PROPRRTY 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 lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2%, W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjonâ€" iIng Town plot Durham. Mortgage taken for jairt purchase A SUDDEN CHANGE OF MIND. Sheâ€"Does my refusal really p THE TOURIST‘S TRADE MARK. THE EYES DF THE WORL Are Fixed Upon South Ameriâ€" can Nervine. WIEN EVARY OTBHER BELPRR HAS TALE M CORE A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. that Renders Failure Impossible. The eyes of the world are Jiterally fixed on South American Nervine. They are not viewing it as a nineâ€"days‘ wonâ€" der, but critical and experienced men have been studying this medicine for years, with the one resultâ€"they heave founrd that its claim of perfect curaâ€" tive qualities cannot be gainsaid. Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. In the matter of good health temporâ€" Izing measures, while possibly successâ€" ful for the moment, can never be lastâ€" ing. Those in poor health soon know whether the remedy they are using is simply a passing incident in their exâ€" perience, bracing them up for the day, or something that is getting at the seat of the disease and is surely and permanently restoring. The great discoverer of this medicine was possessed of the knowledge that the seat of all diseage is the nerve centres, situated at the base of the brain. In this belief he had the best scientists and medical men of the world oooupylaf exactly . the same preâ€" mises Indeed, the ordinary layâ€" man recognized this prinoiple long ago. Everyone knows that let diseate or injury affect this part of the human eystem and death is almost certain. Injure the spinal cord, which is the medium of these nerve cenâ€" tres, and paralysis is sure to follow. Here is the Oret prinoiple. The trouâ€" MISREPRESENTING OTHERS. 4 _ P > n e iA C & 2 NERVINE ; «M /â€" & 4 / . N i f'/, // . ."'\§> & 6 e & M A *A BWPAE e » /1 / | B r*" es 3 ///’// .%// “ f:: f, -.\“, ~ a’ i 4 /" \â€\( * 2 e l ARy § %*. \ e :z] S {:&;: dnb f "@,* ~ , \ »‘?‘\: A ///,‘. es J a8 * \ 4 j'// i € N ""‘,'5: [ k â€;/./-/;“‘f ols "‘,‘I\'(v, \:«' t .: *h 'i’,' f/ & Fés C uks NN / vq J !k." 7"Op¢ O d U w 2y JJ ® “' \ y '." NA hi 69 ; o:B\ [ C r,"\‘;. /, ',““. £ -.-â€"’:‘;\‘\\‘ mai®y® sale Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, Tean N4 9 AMERICAK ;3 by McFarlane & Co., Wholesale Agents for Durham and Vicinty U ue CA A C rrrrzcoccaccttls W( AMSY REVIEW OFFICR, TERMS; $ per year, IN ADVANOR CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprieto® Heand Office, Torontoâ€" CAPITAL, Authorized $23,000,000 StandardBank of Canada a* Paid up RESERVE FUND W. F. Cowan, and England. A general Banking business transacted Drafts wued and collections made on all points. Depos: ts received and interest allowed at current Aterest allowed on savings bank depos:ts of 2†tyd upwards, Promptattentionand everyf w anafforded customers liying at a distance. [ble with medical treatment ueuâ€" ailly, and with nearly all medicines, is {that they aim simply to treat the organ that may be diseased. South American Nervinre patses by the Oorgans, and imâ€" _mediately applies its curative powers \to the nerve centres, from which the organs of the body receive their supply of nerve fiuid. The nerve eontres healed, and of necessity the organ which has shown the outward evidence only of derangement is healed.. "Endiâ€" gestion, â€" nervousness, impoverished blood, liver> complaint. all owe their origin to a derangement of the nerve centres. Thousands bear testimony that they have been cured of these troubles, even when they have beeome so desperate ms to bafe the skill of the most eminent physiclane, because South American Nervine has gone to bheadquarters and cured there. Thursday, Morning. «p swhould anyone suffer distress and sickâ€" ness while this remedy is practicaliy at their hands ? GENTS in all prineij . Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba THECOOK‘SBEST FRIEND DUNNS BAKING POWDER DURHAM AGENCY. d "Mil FOR TWENTYâ€"SIX YFEARS. SAVINGS BANK LARGEST SALE iN CANADA. GREY REVEY President. 1 _ principal P04 se i8 J‘ KELLY, Agent. 1,000,008 Â¥#, Th the the @1 fro budt pat dov Capt h than a | lariy or transier m inutes and catin this time ing down landed ir a tenâ€"foot rushed 0 women .« some fell t LX fall piteous I‘t ing ones man‘s ho burning â€" evieted i fire brok 1 JANITO Erelting i House Wome Bixty in the co by a fire says a N three _ f; Their fls them ba; There w hand. _« human i of tenant post tili men â€" let against e lives. TY general « wpen thei th, and two bl started warn n« 18Â¥ ned t} Gaynor t in by of they ti nearest into the time to those on of the t Lorenz, : children took in t with a g and an a needed . nving wome the la enz l fresh door in had br iD der, ants dowt M and sliid I‘& Th )n MILE®® ( Prices The mhm E1p santd DN 8 Nn M A 1 N M Ni of 1C D M PAR 1 ne H W1l 1 D