/OUSs DEBILITY, SEMINAL WEAKâ€" 0D, UNNATURAL ODER DISEASES, Ilitated: tlrod nmin.n\ Do fatigued; excitable and trrtâ€" ame und night losses; restâ€" uleors; sore throat; varieoâ€" ed a bad habit. Tried lops and deains lncnï¬ y Drs. Kennedy & Kor is two months -ï¬ d have two h::b, hi we are now prepared ROMPTLY. rantity of Sash, and the differâ€" outside sheeting. arge so that all eeders ishful in society, bair thin, p!nlcthgd ‘l('e-tuu 5 PETERSON, lonia, RED. ng from the Living. "At L Y is experionce. "I lived ned anm carly Thn. wbl: ‘ edited by D-.'?rm.d, or, d the (‘AU‘E. Baifâ€"abuso tmeat and was cured. M om many patip., all o‘ pplies vigor, vitality and My br rqun, s on boxes or envel= n list and co<t of t Are you contemplatim ? RHave you any wnr.-‘ mne for ot‘an it will foo EN CONSENT. PR A48SHELBY ST . ~TROIT, MICH . d old men sun look back at d with a 11; of remorse, "one of the yn"hum blo sin %m 1 the very -n;nd vitality sltively cure all the followâ€" McKECHNIB serable. I was weak and URED SK NO PAY. _ _ CONFIDENTIAL ESP itandard, revised erwise mutilate month or two. GUILTY Factory. »Seqiseileéspe ". cdle, ©42. . 11 j Lath always others it will do for write for an honest Ihe (toiden Monitor" U h I ge flock of chilâ€" §1 SCHOOLS3 lerms so bi’hl or the teaching uy about half a © {einperalture thei tar and etained in the of 80 per cent. | to contain 63 per cent. of 5 per cent. of bout the same s, and has beent in foundry and One thousand ie cost of preâ€" LAY GOLPF 2 ie m That We ed, iinprovâ€" ited â€" school Iul y i me »‘ K count W hy n Ihe riduâ€" 10 @T® the ing Anâ€" ent L 1 Z4 n ill 1% 8. If a subsoriber orders his paper to be gtopped at a certaintime, and the published gontinnues to send,the subscriberis boun( o pay for it if he takes it out of the pos! «thhses maeis. Li & C We cal! the special attention of Pos masters and subscribersto the following sy nopsis of the newcpaperlaws : 1. If any person orders his peper discon tinued, he must pay all arreages, or thet publisher wmay continus to send it until payâ€" mentis made, and collectthe whole ax.ouni whether it be taken from the office or not. There can be no loga) discontiruance until paymentismade. 8. Aay person who takes a paper trom the post office, whether directed to hi: name or another, or whother he has sub goribed or not is responsible for the pay. office. This proceeds upon i-omgro;:«% hat a man must pay for what he uses. Of the Best Qualitg' Cheaper THAN EVER. BUSINESS DIRECTORY J. P. TELFORD poarnistee, â€" soucirorn onl sucaaue coorr NOTAUY PUBLIC,Commissioner,etc., Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loans arranged without delay, Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. neNEY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Interest Â¥ I~M one door north of 8. Keot‘s Store Durham Firstâ€"Class Hearse. LICENSED AUCTIONEER for Co. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxrasx P. 0. will be promptly aitended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. 8, "*‘County of Grey. Sales attended to promp and at reasonable rates. nddon« Durbam Ont Township of Bentinek. DAN. UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to. JAKE KRESS. S G. REGISTRY OFFICE,. Thoma: *« Launder, Registrar. John A. Munro, Deputyâ€"Registrar, Office hours from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. Handâ€"made Waggons Horse Shoeing Shop, In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also W. L. McKENZ!IE, MONEHEY TO LOAN. Fire Insurance secured. OFFIOE, oven Grant‘s Srom«, Lowen Town, 8 still to be found in his Old Stand _ opposite the Durham Bakery. Residenceâ€"King 8t., Hanover, JAMES LOCKIE, Glass bricks with a hollow centre are found quite desirable ia Germany, for the consiruction of conservatories. B=UNHR of Marriage Licenses. Aueâ€" tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Has opened out a firstâ€"class JAKE KRESS ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th Furniture HVCH McKAY. Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MoFARLANE, MISCELLANEOUS. Newspaper Laws. WOODWORK in connection. A firstâ€"slass lot of for sale cheap. DURHA M LEGAL McLEAN. McFARLANE DAN. MeoLEAN, FINISATY 3 naine Upon a kage ol seed will sce ISHING OFF BEEF CATTLE. to it that it ‘;ca good seed. 4 Mr, Wfll}nm T. Taylor, a feeder of fegrermma ong experience, thinks that ‘"perbaps DAIRY WISDOM. ?fl general principles twelve to twentyâ€"| We learn some of our most practiâ€" our months is long enough to keep|°Al lessons in life from that wise a bullock profitably. As the value of | teacher called experience, writes Sarah.' beef‘cattle of the same quality varies’Hentom. And it is wften well for| considerably during each year, a Weu-‘fhose coming after us that we havei k(?pt, qeghy yearling steer or heifer | learned them. One lesson learned was will yield a much larger amount of how to make gcol Luiter, I had always money to the owner at that age than livedin a city, and had an idea th'at; thg same would months afterward, ‘ Country butter was always good, but with its increased growth. Henceialas! this was not true. I married a|' t.hc advantage of keeping stock all the | farmer and my motherâ€"inâ€"law made the | time in condition, ready to take adâ€"| MOst delightful butterâ€"sweet, andasi vantage of these varying circumstances. | yellow as gold, and always the same This cannot be done if we attempt to ! wellâ€"worked, perfect butter ; but we hadl follow the amcient custom of growing & relative who was very neat and careâ€"i before fattening and finishing our catâ€"| ful with her milk crocks, churn, etc., tle for the market. Rich and strong | yet we could mot eat her butter. My! smln.l?-eed not necessarily be fed in mother said she kept her cream too. quantities that would be detrimental to long, until it was too old, and hence | later Hgrowth, should we decide to}the rancid, queer taste. My mother | carry our cattle beyond the twoâ€"year thought a great deal of borax as al limit, and at the same time enough can | disinfectant and purifyer. As milk be fed to have them ready and desiraâ€"| will absorh taints and odors more Ule‘ to the slaughterer and perfectly’quick]y than any other liquid, she satisfactory to the consumer. When always wrapped each ball of butter the market and price and other circumâ€" I' that she sent away into a cloth dipâ€" stances demand Lbonger feeding, careâ€" | ped in a solution of borax water. And ; fuJ. and judicious precautions in selectâ€" , if she shipped a number of pounds in | ing stock w!dl insure a continued & firkin, she rubbed the sides of thef growth and improvement, to repay @all firkin with powdered borax. It helped | the food and care we bestow, although | :?hoke(fp ’lltl S’W:let and gl\‘ue. ({Ibtl:me‘ wemay safe e lrg. | eal largely in muilk and bu terl S a r?u:a ell“; calculate that less E210 | would only adopt scalding t heir churns § e, will come as agreater age!8 twice a week with borax water, and attained. Butas anoffset to this loss,| their crocks andmilk jars, they would there is generally a better demand and | have less 5 th milk fm;f fagmos‘phgrlo advanced price 1 f at ,Ohans'es.' now sever riends, ar-l bullock “{; n"fhï¬;’ef i:‘}grn;g; eof“]‘gs:::g ‘mers‘ wives, who make almost perfect | and feeding. ‘The fmai «lfort in 141. | [NtLer: Puf it ffaysisweet such a short| tening for the market need or ought not | thaees uq d‘ o n o e oo . t ue | to occupy a great length of time. If the | _t:steal old, and we have to put |t>as-‘ bullock has had such attemtion as to inâ€"| ;hz bn this case, if it hey “‘f'uld Whier. sure the proper and steady development | f bo;nt" up in a cloth wrung, out | we are seefli'ne,a.nd gsuch condition otlt $ %ï¬emte;lbeforq serding ll]t ng flesh has been secured as tobe in fair‘«l%zn' o T. o t avoid this, per aps.‘ shape for the butcherat any time, and | 2 q :utter would taste sweet longer an additional seasoning of fattening is Then on better. An 01‘(1 Gerq;a;n l ago. desired, one hundred to one hundred | gan who furnishes my sister with. b“(;" and fifty days is long enough. Give‘dr' mdfhns been furmslu{ng Irl?ï¬; s during this time, or as soon during ours for thirty years, has a white this period as we have brought ous |aloth wrapped around each ball, i carde sarely. to. tse poink. all . tne | i eA io oi ie o m d i o. Erain of any kind that is available, that | 96 fetex Teker. Hex buiter is sellone they will consume, and pasture or othâ€" | ‘ï¬:‘e riaar pu(ll'e. fM}]yt mg‘t. w?u er similar feed, with the grain. The | ; :ï¬hmvmï¬e l:s h ltd ehfl‘praub;ca gzg best plan in my experience, when fall | ?1 a mï¬ne 3{,’ lt.t “r:x):il;'..k e ls:;nb t feeding, is to place the grain in â€" a ?‘“&;ul ?l'l e le o dw?l‘{)ath'nkeoi suitable position and allow constant | T obe.rs ie bntet x t 11 access to it. This plan requires less one person, Dring in Do ol o s s Cl labor, and the food is then partaken.clty for thirty yg>a.rs| and never a fault at such times as the appetite deâ€" g(lvmnd mdthn,é tltr}el..t%% l‘;)i‘tl r?mazifl,ki:; mands it, in such quantity as nature . ; hasceal" ana m hl * mune d indicates. Minute details of any parâ€"| i8 k?eg-‘,’fgl'ï¬â€œmd perhops some Teduers ticular method or fancy scheme of;mfl) P o . on ‘ P feeding 1 have purposely avoided, for ; gacbu.hropder must supï¬ly them b{, MANURING STRAWBERRIES. intelligent attention. Every anima : ; disposed of in a thinâ€"fleshed condition | The Amerlgan Cultivator notes the is at a loss to the producer, while by effect of placing coarse stable manure w«ll't }?mnalged a‘lwy'{)rk't in 1lndcrgaiin8 | on strawberry beds in the fall for the growth amd quality, it would insure‘ pose on a profit. ‘Then there will be an evenâ€" | doubls purl of \\.Lnter .protfecn:fn er distribution of fat and a great imâ€"|48d enriching the soil, stating in efâ€" provement in quality." |feot that the result is a crop of weeds ¢ FARM GARDENING. Gardening is different from general farming; for, whereas, the farmer spreads hbis efforts over many acres of iland, the gardener adopts a more particular and intensive system of culâ€" ture, to the end that he produces as much produce upon one acre and reâ€" ceives as large returns from this same area as the farmer does upon several acres. There are many live stock and grain farmers in the west who should do some gardening in connection with their general farm work. This gardenâ€" ing will be found very satisfactory, for it will in the first place afford a very important home supply of the most acceptable food, and, in the second place, the returns from the sale of good vegetables to one‘s neighbors and friends, or in the nearest town or city, will afford a considerable item in the effort to make farming pay in these duill times, when cereal markets are so depressed. Select for a garden the best piece of land on the farm. Let it be smooth level, and in a good state of tillage. To grow good, tender, succulent vegâ€" etables very liberal quantitiee of rich manure are to be applied, and the soil is to be kept in a fairly moist conâ€" dition, as moisture is absolutely requirâ€" ed to enable the plant to appropriate the needed fertility from the soil. No fertilizer is better for the garden than rich, wellâ€"rotted, fine horse or cow dungs. Avoid the application of coarse, strawy kmanure, as this, has a tendency to make air sgpaces in the soil, cut off capillary action, and cause the ground to dry out too rmplgl}y. Ifi it is mear barn or stable so much the better, as it will be less labor to draw on the manure, and, being near the water tank, it can be irrigated in a dry time. UE ie is o oi eg t t is ten or twelve cords of manure per acre, for this manure is just what will stimulate a rapid, quick grmfth e e oA o Ds Do not be afraid to put on the manâ€" ure, no matter if you think your land in good shape ; na‘verthelees. put on y HEP Sp o eteinie s Pn oi n n 24 1 of stem and leaf, and is what makes | the same juicy and terder. \ Remember that there is little bard | labor evenm in garden culture if you | but lay out your garden rows of good | length, and place them wide enough | a})art to admit the passage between | of hborse and cultivator. The horse ; now does most of the work in the garâ€" | den, if one will but let him. I Be sure and prepare the soil the very best possible, for the effects of a thorough sKring preparation are to be seen all through the period of the grofwnh of the crop. Good tillage at irst meains reduced jlabor in cultiâ€" vating the crop afterward. So plow and barrow, and drag or roll and harâ€" row repeatedly. The drag or roller following the bharrow is very effective in breaking up the clods and making the soil as fine as sand.. a~. Une SOH AS I00C aM SUMTI When it comes to seed buy the best and surest, although you may and probably will have to pay mOre for it than at the cormenr grocery. Groctery seed is too oftem wholiy, or partially old and inferior, and after your careâ€" ful preparation of the garden, you cannot afford to risk any chances whatever. It is a good plan to order your seed direct from some of the THE FARM. seed growers and reputable seedsmen who now advertise so generally, as a man or company that places its own name upon a package of seed will see to it that it is a good seed. DAIRY WISDOM. We learn some of our most practiâ€" cal lessons in life from that wise teacher called experience, writes Sarah Henton. And it is wften well for those coming after us that we have learned them. One lesson learned was how to make gool Luiter. I had always lived in a city, and had an idea that country butter was always good, but alas! this was not true. I married a The American Cultivator notes the effect of placing coarse stable manure on strawberry beds in the fall for the double purpose of winter protection and enriching the soil, stating in efâ€" feot that the result is a crop of weeds in the spring that nearly ruins the plantation. Would it not be better, it says, to cover the plants with some mhiterial bulky and hbheavy enough to make a mulch that winds will not blow away, but with little or no manâ€" urial value, and then supplement this toward spring with some rotted maâ€" nure mixed with enough potash and phosphate fertilizers to give the plants the kindand amount of nutriment the crop requires, and just when it is most needed ? We always liked the plan of the old farmer who grew potatoes largeâ€" ly, and who every year drew and spread a good sized load of potato tops over his strawberry patch. The potato top is richer in potash than much barnâ€" yard manure, and the winter‘s freezâ€" ing and thawing reduces its bulk into fine mould. It has no weed seeds, which is miore than can be said of most stable mamure. It protects the plants just when it is most needed, which is through the coldest weather, disappearing when spring opens, and when the plants require all the sunâ€" shine they can get. Those who can not get ;‘)Jotat.o tops may use evergreen boughs but these would need to be removed awhen warm weather comes. Keeping the sof moist is even more important for the strawherry crop tham is making it rich. What fertility it needs must be given early to do the most %ood to the crop. It will do injury by making weeds grow, if its fertility camnot be used early in the spring. Under ordinary manageâ€" ment, applying coarse manure in fall or winter, most of its strength goes WMs W PETUWD 4 NERVERRE M 0n mt CC mn 0 EO OC" to weeds that have to ‘be fought, while before it is available the strawherries have suffered for lack of moisture and fertility that thoroughly decomposed manure with potash in some form would have supplied. A SANDSTORM AT SEA. The Royal Mail steamship Volta, which recently arrived at Liverpool, reâ€" ports that when between Cape Blanco and Cape Verde, a sandstorm was exâ€" perienced which lasted for two days. The sand bas been carried from the deserts of the Northwest Africa, and was so thick that it was like a mist on the sea. The sun was partially obscurâ€" ed, and soundings had to be taken. The vessel from stem to stern was coverâ€" ed with sand of a red color, and lookâ€" ed as if she had been painted red. There were also flocks of birds which had been blown from land, and these settled on the ship from time to time. The sand bad a troublesome effect upâ€" on the crew and the passengers, who could scarcely remain any time on deck without being seized with violent sneezâ€" ITCHING, BURNING SKIN DISEASES CURED FOR 35 CENTS. Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment relieves in one day and cures Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Ecezema, Barbers‘ Itch, Ulcers, blotches and all eruptions of the skin. It is soothing and quietinq. and acts like magic in the cure of all baby humors; 35 cents. EXPENSIVE SHOOTING. guxm is a good shot, isn‘t hef? Very good. We were practicing with our guns at my country place the other day, and he hit the bull‘s eye the first time. Very clever. Yes : hut he had to pay for the bull. For sale by McFarlane & Co., K: k P GL When women were first confronted with the statement of their unconscious ‘sinning against themselves, they askâ€" | ed a trifle indignantly, what could take | the place of the hairpin, if it were once abolished. Surely it would be impos ‘sible for selfâ€"respecting women of midâ€" ) dleâ€"age to parade the streets with | their scanty bair in pigtails. This was Iadmitted and for a time the matter i did look rather dubious. ; not apfpeal to the dignified mariority. so the following compromise was finally bit upon. According to this scheme the hair was to be combed loosely back from the forehead pompadour st({le. At the back it was to be arranlie in a loose yet cleverly arranged knot and caught in place with a single twoâ€" pronged ‘h]_uqt-gslged shell comb. _It was suggested that all women might cut off their hair and wear it in short, loose curls. This again did A recent fashion in bairdressing is distinguished by its most singular and unusual origin. It has been adopted to preserve the sanity of the fair women who have bhad recourse to it. Mental balance, as it has long been suspected and recently strongly affirmed by phyâ€" sicians of repute, is almost always inâ€" jured and frequently utterly underâ€" mined by the wearing of hairpins. And now that the truth is out, woâ€" men bave shown that there is at least one absurd feminine custom to which they are not so indissolubly bound, by vanity that they must forever cling to it. And the very natural wish to retain one‘s reason has been the means of abolishing the steel hairpin. g The bead, argue the scientists who bave made a study of this matter, !s the most sensitive portion of a woman‘s anatomy and the one which she freâ€" quently abuses the most violently. She is quite likely to fix upon a nerve cenâ€" tre as the permanent spot for doing her coils of hair, or persistently to jab with an ugly hairpin the regions which should be kept free from | the slightest touch. The back of the head is one of the most sensitive of places, yet from the time a woman first wears long gowns until she dies she wilfully ignores and defies this sensitiveness. When tried, this arrangement was found to work admirably. The absence of steel hairping made headaches more and more infrequent and the daily coifâ€" fure a delightful and gleefully anticiâ€" pated process. On the other hand the: presence of the shell comb was hardly moticeable and contributed not at all to the wearer‘s discomfort. And finâ€" ally the new method was found to be more becoming than any coiffure that had been devised in years, as the illusâ€" tration convincingly shows. It will unâ€" doubtedly be adopted by thousands of women who will rejoice to exclude the steel bairping from their homes forâ€" ever. Guffer More or Less from That Most Offensive of Diseases Catarrhâ€"That Dr. Agnoew‘s Catarrhal Powder is a Wonderful Remedy is Testified to by Thousands who Have Been Curâ€" ed Outrightâ€"Mr. Alex. Edmondson of Rosemuth, Ont., Says: "I have been troubled with catarrh for a great many years. Have sufferâ€" ed greatly from it. I had tried all the soâ€"called cures, but never received any relief from them. Seeinï¬ Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder largely advertised, I determined to try it, although very sceptical about any relief, but I was freatly and agreeably disappointed, or from the first dose I received very great relief, and toâ€"day I can honestly say that it bhas cured. I keef it conâ€" stantly in the bhouse, as we find it a quick cure for cold in the head. It gives almost instant relief, I have no hesitancy in proclaiming it the best cure for catarrh, and I heartily recomâ€" ï¬len(} it to all sufferers from this malâ€" y." e o se .L A Delicate Operation Performed in Rough Weather. A mnovel method of lifting a buoyed cable end is described by a writer in a London paper. He states that this method has the important advantage of being free from all usual risks to boat and boat‘s crew, and was sucâ€" cessfully adopted on a recent imporâ€" tant cableâ€"laying expedition, when the weather was too rough to even allow of a boat being lowered without danâ€" ger to the men. On this occasion the modus operandi was as follows: The ship, a vessel of some 3,500 tons, gross, paid out 200 fathoms of buoy rope, with a centipede grapnel attached to the end of it, the depth of water being 2,800 fathoms, and steamed round the buoy at a distance of about fifty fathoms until the centipede and rope became entangled, as they very soon did, with thi» buoy moorings, which were then hauled into the bight and the buoy then cleared from _ the buoy baulks. Bg this means not only was the end of the cable readily .bmught on board without risk and with very little trouble ; but several days of valâ€" uable time, which would otherwise bave been lost in waiting for the weaâ€" ther to moderate sufficiently, were saved, and the cable was successfully completed. With vessels of smaller dimensions such as those usually emâ€" ployed for cable repairs, this operation would, mo doubt, be still more easily effected. A French telegraph enginâ€" eer bas the credit of being the first to suggest amd practically apply this ingenious end novel idea, which is to be commended to the notice of those who are engaged more particularly in submarine cable laying and repairing work FOURTEEN YEARS IN TERROR. But Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart Gave Relief in 80 Minutes and Three Bottles® Effected a Cure Which Baffled the Best of Physiâ€" sicians. This is what Mrs. J. Cockburn, of Warkworth, Ont., says: " For fourteen ï¬ears I bhave been a great sufferer from eart disease; troubled very much with sharp, shooting pains constantly passing through my hbeart. Very often the spasms were so severe that 1 would become unconscious. My limbs would swell and become %uite cold. For these fourteen years I doctored with best %hysiclans without relief. Haviny seen A Aqnew’s Cure for the Heart adverâ€" tised, l determined to try it, and before I bad taken balf a bottle I found great relief. I felt the beneficial effects inâ€" side of thirty minutes. I have taken three bottles and it has done me more good than any medicine or any physiâ€" cian ever did. I can conscientiously recommend it to all sufferers from heart trouble." For sale by McFarlane & Co. For sale by McFarlane & Co., FIGHTY IN EVERY HUNDRED THE HAIRPIN CONDEMNED. ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO PICKING UP A CABLE END. FOR SALE The EDGE PROPRRTY. The present agitation of the Greek question has increased the interest of the public in all matters pertaining to the classic country. One of the subâ€" jects which has caused widespread wonâ€" der is how the modern Greek soldier gives such a balletâ€"like effect to his skirts,. A traveler in that country has offered the following as an expianâ€" ation: Instead of wrapping his kilt about him only once the man of arms envelops his figare with turn after turn of the stiff white linen, till the requirâ€" ed degree of standâ€"out effect is reachâ€" ed, and his shirt is on a level with his waist. This same traveler remarks upâ€" on the curious effect of inconsistency that is evident when a visitor to one of the beautiful old ruins finds himself gazing on only a plaster cast of the classic buildings and structures, while Or Philanthropy to Give you good Good Health for 10 Centsâ€"The cost of Dr. Agnew‘s Liver Pills. Bure, Safe, Quick and Pleasant to act. No Pain, no Griping. 10c. a vial. For Sick Headache, for distress after eating, for Biliousness, for coated T , for Constipation. The{ work wonszrtul cures. All druggists have them. 40 in a vial, 10c. For sale by McFarlane & Co., In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valvable 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 adjoinâ€" ing Town plot Durham, a placard announces that the original may be seen in the museums of Eurâ€" ope or America. minutes. It is said that baked bananas will unâ€" failingly build up and strengthen thin and weak bodies and enrich the blood. They should be baked about twenty PILLâ€"ANTHROPHY or sale by McFarlane & Co., productive of good. Of recent years,hqwâ€" ever, the working ability of Mr. James A. Bell has been udl‘ marred by severe attacks of nervrous headache, accomâ€" panied bg indigestion. Who can do fit work when this trouble takes hold af BUILT UP THE SYSTEM IN A WONDERFUL MANNER, _A victim of the trouble for â€" seweral years. _ _ M E: m C o nds South American Nervine effected a complete cure, * In their own particular field few mep ge beter known than the Rev. John esley Bell, B.D., and his brother Mr. James A. Bell. The former will be reâ€" cognized by his thousands of friends ali over the country as the popular and able missivnary superintendent of the Royal Teplars of Temperance. Among the Equally well known is Mr. Bell in other provinces of the Dominion, having been for years a member of the Manitobr Methodist Conference and part of this time was stationed in Winnipeg. His brother, Mr. James A. Bell, is a bighly respected re-l%ent of Beaverton, whnere his influence, though porln;;: more cirâ€" cumscribed than that of his eminent brother, is none the less effective and GREECE AND THE GREEKS. James A. leg. of Beaverton, Ont., brother of the Rev. John Wesey nBell, B.D., prostrated by nervous headacher 20,000 members of this order in Ontario his counsel is lou%ht on all sorts of ocâ€" casions. On the public platform he is one of the strong men of the day, nattling against flZF._ avile . _ of intemperance. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont taken for Whoesale Agents for Durham and Vicinity TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVANCR CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprietos 66 Pad nlg 1 000,00 RESERVE FUN 600,00 W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. Reid, President. Manage! CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,00€6 A Pontars, dueven, utdunons Unilee Btaie DURHAM AGENCY. StandardBank of Canada A general Banking busivess transacted wued and coliections made on all points, ts received and interost allowed at current Bterest allowed on savings bank deposits of #1 tyd upwards. Prompt attention and everyfac anafforded curtomers liying at a distance, ISs PUBLISEKED EVERT Thursday Morning. chronic, as was, seemingly, the case with Mr. Bell% The trouble reached such in* tensity that last June he was complet® ly prostrated. In this condition a friend recommended Bouth American Nervine, Ready to try anything and everything, though he thou‘gn he had coverea the list of proprietary medi¢ines, he secuted a bottle of this great discovery. A #econd bottle ef the medicipe was ta and the work was done. Emp!oyt?Ԥ own Inuu;)fv: *"‘Two botties of Sou American Nervine immediately relieved my headaches and have buut up wJ system in a wonderful manner," Let 9# not deprecate the good our ciergymen and social reformers are doing in tw world, but how illâ€"fitted they wouid iv} for their work were it mot the rolie that South American Nervine brings to them when physical ills overta ke them, and when the syetem, as a r& sult of hard, (mrnel& and continuous work, breake down. ervine treats :g: system as the wise reformer troats evile he is battling against. It strutes at the root of the trouble. Au _ dis ease comes from disorganiration of the noerve centers. â€" This is a scientific fact. Nervine at once works on these nerÂ¥ve eenters:; &iveo to them healith and vigâ€" or; and then there %ouu« through the system strong, healthy, lifeâ€"maintanino®g them and especially when blood, and nervous troubles of eÂ¥ery varioty are thince of the nast Head Office, Toronto: THECOOK‘SREST FRIEND DUNNS BAKING POWDER FOR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN YEARS SAVINGS BANK LARGEST SALE in CaANADA. OFFICHR, Paird u: J‘ KELLYX, Agent. alle it