Lath always are now preprred MPTLY. tity of Sash, id the differâ€" S DEBILITY, § AINAL WEAKâ€" * UNNATURAL ï¬ ER DISEASES. Lh- nl: look back at & remor®e, of l).ol%v’..s has sown n against natore end very life and vitailty ly cure all the followâ€" d: tired morn‘ngs; 10 ed; excitable and irrtâ€" wl night losse«; reat» |'- soue throat; varico« f confidence; inck of ‘OMPARISOX EN1 hote! kEeeper, & I »nage as a natiof 'lihft.he other. ims, foreign and a Government ha irently believe in p_tho guest. glan » you el cKECHNIL my 9y uty NO PAY. INEIDENTIAL g side shecting. so that all orders | the bote! 0 list, wil} NO RISK CD s eiisacye e actory. bad stopped, 1 larmer‘s n Jackson y 1 @lancing ENDED i hotelk io»n. 1. â€"« e d _ do« ed h, unifiâ€" larter mong ns as LOLlar * Ccanâ€" Id be therg ‘ount~â€" nding . the scent U ghe ind MJ 19 LW AM nd U 1% M ir Handâ€"made Waggons The man who is always making exâ€" euses will stand up before a tribunâ€" al some day where no excuses are acâ€" In the old stand. All handâ€" made shoes. Also Horse Shocing Shop, LICENSED AUCTIONEER for Co. of Grey. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laurasa P. 0. will be promptly mitended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. 8, Township of Bentinck. S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thoma: » Lauder, Registrar. John A. Munro, Deputyâ€"Registrar, Office hours from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. ALLAN McFARLANE promptly made, Insurance effected. _ _ nANEY TO LOAN stlowost rates of Interest Â¥~17® one door north of 8. Heot‘s Store Durhara Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loans arrangad without delay. _ Collections DAN. McLEAN. NOTARY PUBLIC, Comu MONEY TO LOAN. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. Of the Best Qualitg Cheaper THAN EVE Has opened out a firstâ€"class IB still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durbham Bakery. Residenceâ€"King Bt., Hanover. 8. If asubscriber orders his paper to be stopped at a certain time, and the published continues to send,the subscriberis bouni to pay for it if he takes it out of fhe post office. This proceeds upon he grouni bat a man must pay for what he uses. We cal) the npoel;\:_atuntion ofâ€" Pos masty‘s aund subscribersto the following sy nopsis ofthe newcpaperlaws : 1. If any porson orders his paper discor tinued, he must pay all arreages, or the publisher may continuse 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 legal discontinuance unti paymentismade. 3. Aay person who takes & paper ftrom the post office, whether directed to hi: name or another, or whether he bas sub scribed or not is responsible for the pay. UNDERTAKILNG Promptly attended to. JAKE KRESS. JAMES LOCKIE, BSUER of Marriage Licenses, Aue tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Fire Insurance secured. OFFICE, over Grant‘s Ston« Lowern Town, Jobbing of all kinds promptly J. P. TELFORD ARRISTER, sollcitor cDr suzRent covar ALLAN MoFARLANE, ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th !Conny of gny. y Bales attended to promp HUCH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. WOODWORK Furniture . L. McKENZIE, in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of Newspaper Laws. for sale cheap. DURHAM. KRESS DAN. MoLEAN, ; C1€.» Ah, yes, now that mother lies in ber coffin where she cannot hear nor apâ€" preciate the kind words, and receive the little kindnesses promised, now the daughter is willing to do so much for her mother. Is it not true that mn.ni daughters wait until the coffin holds the remains She was standing at her mother‘s coffin. _ The tears flowed heavy and copiously downm her‘pale cheeks. As she looked on her mother‘s face before the coffin was closed, those standing near heard her exclaim: "Oh, mother, how gladly I would help you with your work! How cheerfully I would spend a few hours more wit)ï¬' you during the eveming, reading to you from the old family Bible, or some other good book. Oh, miother, if you could o:nl? live a few years longer, how I should try to m-al}g life pleasant and enjoyable for you Look about us. We are receiving help from many. Let them know that we appreciate their kind acts and words. Give father, mother, brother, sister, friends, all a cheer. They will see that we are thank{ul, and they will strive to serve us more. You will look for the know it, and help him to grow old gracefully. Give t‘i:_e_' aged a cheer. good, and find it. Give a cheer, and you will be cheered. a few moments in the care of a little i brother. In her absence the boy sketchâ€" ed a picture of the baby. When the mother returned and saw the baby‘s picture, she gave the boy artist a kiss of approval. " That kiss," said Benjamin West years afterward, " mads me a painter." How many have been helped by words of cheer or smiles of approvâ€" al, and how many lives have been crushâ€" ed through the lack of an encouraging word or a cheering smile! Have you told your pastor that his sermons inâ€" spire in you noble imPul.ses and help you to live a better life? If not, tell him. His heart is aching to know the result of his preaching, and be may be discouraged because he hbears and sees no result of his work. Give him a cheer. SHOWING APPRECIATION. Young people should cultivate the habit of showing their appreciation of the good, wherever it is seen or found, Honest praise hurts no one. And as we ourselves like it, let us give it to others. A mother left her baby for ‘This is an exercise for eight boys, who should have appropriate costumes, or at least implements, and act their parts as spoken. When I‘m a man, a man, I‘ll be rreaident. if l1 can, and I can, My uncles and aunts are a jolly set, And I‘ll have them all in my Cabinet ; I shall live in the White House, and I hope you all 4 s When you hear I‘m elected will give me a callâ€" When I‘m a man. Whatever we do this thing we say, We‘ll do our work in the very best way, And you shall see if you know us then, We‘ll be good and honest and useful When we are men, are men, We hope we shall do great things, and And once a week I‘ll come into school, Aad sayl.“Mms' Teacher, I‘ve made a rule That boys and girls need a great deal of play, You l‘lil:.y gve these chiildren a holiâ€" Y sw _ When I‘m a man, a man, I‘ll be a school committe IfI can, and I When I‘m a man, a man, I‘ll be a minister if 1 can, and I can, And once in a while asermon A‘ll make That can keep little boys and girls awake ; _ 6 es For abh! dear me ! if ministers knew How glad we are when they do get And above all things you never must study too muchâ€" When I‘m a man. The life of that aged one impresses ou by his consecrated life. Let him _to eat ; i hi velng I‘ll prescribe for you riding and sailing When I‘m a man, a man, A doctor I‘ll be if 1 can, and I can, My powders and pills shall be nice and __ sweet, ¢ And you shall have just what you like wear % Till nothing is left but my stitches When I‘m a man, a man, I‘ll be a shoemaker if I can, and I can, I‘ll sit on a bench with my last held â€â€˜ And in and out with my needle go l‘ll sew so strong that my work shall ewing ; I‘ll shoe your bhorse, sir, neat and tight, Then I‘ll trot round the square to see if its rightâ€" When I‘m a man. /. ‘CB im a man, a man, I‘ll be a carpenter, if 1 can, and I can, I‘ll plane like this and I‘ll bhammer so, Anmd this is the way my saw shall go; I‘ll make bird bouses and sleds and toys, s And a ship that will race with any boy‘sâ€" When I‘m a man. Third Boy, When I‘m a man, a man, gLi)lacksxnl ith 1‘l1 be if lâ€can. and_lI can, ang, C , clang, shall my anvil ring; Aznd fth;n?s the way the bellows 1?1' When I‘m a V{hen I‘m a man, a man, I‘ll be a farmer if I can, and I can. I‘ll plow the ground and the seed I‘ll sow I‘ll reap the grain and the grass I‘ll mow I‘ll bind the sheaves and I‘ll rake And pitch it up on the mowâ€" When I‘m a man. YOUNG FOLKS. WHY NOT TOâ€"DAY. When we are men. When I‘m a man. When I‘m a man When I‘m a man. (WHEN I‘M A MAN. First Boy. All in Concert. Seventh Boy Sixth Boy. Fourth Boy. Fifth Second Boy Poed hi in Looo e ol a ic bottles was an astonishment to myself and family. It worked wonders for her and we can not speak too highly of 2w ust pmedy‘. No case too actuite or of too lon{t‘ standing to defy its wonderful merits. " My wife was taken bad last Augâ€" ust with nervous prostration, which latâ€" er on developed into paralx'sis of one side. We tried many remedies, but all in vain. I thought I would try South American Nervine, having seen it adâ€" vertised in the New Westminster, B.C., papers and I am glad to be able to say that the result after taking three SHATTERED NERVES AND PARALYSIS. Shattered Nerves Developed Nervous Prostrationâ€"Nervous Prostration Deâ€" veloped Total Paralysis of One Side â€"Great South American Nervine in the Teeth of Most Adverse and Comâ€" plicated Circumstances, Overcomes All, and Restores Wife and Mother in Good Health to Her Familyâ€"These are the Written Words of Edward Parr, Surry Centre, B.C. ‘A faow years‘ work in the manufacâ€" ture of white lead suffices to effect a hideous disfiguremenot. In this indusâ€" try it is inevitable that, sooner or later, the workers must succumb to lead poiâ€" soning, and there would appear to be no part of the body that the poisonous fumes and floating particles which preâ€" meate the atmosphere of the workshops tdo not effect. ‘The complexion takes on a ghastly, corpseâ€"like pallor, the gums turn blue, the teeth decay rapidâ€" ly and fall out, the eyelids are hideousâ€" ly inflamed. A seratch or an abrasion of the skin becomes an unhealable sore. Later on, when nerves and muscles beâ€" come affected by the poison in the blood, the eyeballs are drawn into ohâ€" lique positions, and take on a dim and bleared appearance, The i‘oi‘nts, esperialâ€" ly the knee and the wrist, become semiâ€" paralyzed, and the whole form is gradâ€" ually bent and contorted. Mr. E. A. Norton, a wellâ€"known citizen of Grimsby, Ont., wais severeâ€" ly attacked with inflammatory rheuâ€" matiem some 20 years agoâ€"after a time he recovered, but five or six weeks ago the dread disease returned so violantly that he had to give up work. For nearly three weeks he lay in bed suffering terrible agony. Anâ€" cther resident of the towin who had bean cured by South Americain Rheuâ€" matic Cure, persuaded him to try it, aind, to his great surprise after using the medicine but one week he wasso far recovered as to go about town. From the first dose taken he felt marked inprovement, a‘nd toâ€"day he is most enthusiastic in singing its praises. No case too severe for South Ameriâ€" can Rheumatic Cure to check in six hours, and cure permanently. That is what Mrs. Billtops said to Mr. Billtops whem bhe had asked for something with which to wind up the unwpound spring in the roler of _ a window sghade. Did Mr. Billtops (ind the steel fork om the tin pie plate in the drawer nearest the ball in the kitchen? Well, ask him! He did ; and he mnot only found it there, but he found it with the sharp points of its primly parallel prongs pointed safely awaf with him, and its handle convenâ€" iently within reach. He carried the fork into the dining room, but there Mrs. Billtops took it from him and wound up the shade herâ€" self. Mr. Billtops observed that the tines of the fork were just wide enâ€" ough apart to fit snugly over the flatâ€" sided spindle of the fixture so that it was perfectly easy to twist the spring up with it. He learned, indeed, that hfrs. Billtops ke(;))‘t thia].fo.rk for . dthe express pu winding up window shgdes, w?o:?hep he hbad seen her wind up this sPrmg with it, and then throw the little side gleoe._ that held it, into place again with a single touch of a hairpin why, he was more than ever convinced, if that was possible, that Mrs. Billtops was a wonderful woman. Inflammatiory Rheumatism so ‘Acute He Coulil Not Attend to His Daily Dutiesâ€"Lived Three Weeks in Agâ€" onizing Pain, when that " Good Samâ€" Mr, Billtops Greatly Impressed by Mer Manner o! Winding Up a Window Shade Spring. ""You open the drawer in the kitchen nearest the hall, and on a tin plate you will find a steel fork." and exacting; you may be as she is when you i'regach her age. Do not wait until (fe‘:lth makes it impossible for you to do amything for her. She is with toâ€"day, then why not begin to show m kindness toâ€"dayt Appreciate their services while they are here with you. Mother may be strange, peculiar in her ways, but she !s still your mother. She may be old You are young, cheerful, amiable, perâ€" haps pretty; you have many friends to take you warmly by the hand, many lips speak flattering words into your ears, many eyes jook admiringly at you. Your mother‘s hands are rough and trembling, they cannot grasp yours very firmily; her lips falter as she speaks words of advice to her darling daughier; her eyes see you only dimâ€" ly; but be assured, those withered hands grasp yours with a truer grasp than that of your dearest friend, those lips speak words which come from the depth of her beart, and _ nre worth more to you thaim any other; they see more clearly what you are; they look up to heaven for you and im}\)l;)ra heaâ€" ven‘s blessings upon you. ughier, you will miss those hands, those lips, “fl(ilj? eyes when death deprives them of life. ‘THREE WEE KS IN AGONY. beiter than you understand yourself. She has open ears for the sorrows, the vexatioms the perplexities, the trials you wish to speak of to some one. Perâ€" haps you do not realize it toâ€"day, while she is with {ou, the friend she is; you will feel it, be sure, when she is gone. For sale by McFarlane & Co Speedily OCuredâ€"Cost 75 Cents. aritan" of alil Clures, South Ameriâ€" can Rheoumatic Oure, Passed His Way of what used to be mother before they think of doing little deeds of kindness for her who watched over them when they were lying in their little beds, unâ€" able to care for themselves? Daughier, your mother is the best frxend you have. She understands you # stame: WONDERFUL MRS. BILLTOPS. A DEADLY VOCATION. R 2 & 73. u.. % ONTARIO ARCHIVES moprone dn PSE a cbabk Is it sick headache !â€"Is it Biliousness? â€"Is it sluggish liver?â€"Is your skin sallow 1â€"Do you feel more dead than alive. Your system needs toningâ€"your liver isn‘t doing its workâ€"Don‘t reâ€" sort to strong drugsâ€"Dr. Agnew‘s Liver Pills, 20 cents for 40 doses. Five cents a box saved on the purâ€" chase and more real worth fout_mr moneLaMoro pleasure in the taking and a ute surety of quick relief are proved arguments why you shouldn‘t roved arguments why you shouldn‘t ta.bg any other kind than these little rubies. For sale by McFarlane & Co., _ _A German doctor living in Japan set himselfâ€" to construct a perfect â€" saniâ€" taury dwelling house at Yokobhama in 1891. The walls consist of two layers of rough plate glass about half an inch thick sepnraleg by a space of four inches, filled with a strong solution of salts of soda or alum to moderate and diffuse the sunlight. The foundaâ€" tions are constructed with a special view of minimizing the danger from enr}hx}uakes so common in Japan. The main feature of the house is that there are no openings or cracks of any kind to admit air, moigture, insects, dust or microbes. Fresh air and ventilaâ€" tion are supplied biy means of pipes and girds in the floors, and before entering the rooms the air is filtered by passing through cages filled with cotton wool. it is then made to strike a large pame of glass coated with glyâ€" cerin, which in the opinion of the doeâ€" tor, makes it as pure as an antiseptic dressing. The impure germs intro duced by the inmates, are it is claimed doomed to rapid extinction in rooms bathed in sunlight and _ without a dark corper. and at one period all the aristocratio qunarrels of the day were disposed of within its precinets. An engagement to fight a duel was a sure passport to the Comte‘s favor and bospitality. He spared neither pains nor expense in arâ€" mnging his househbold to anticipate the waints of his curious guests, and . a table was laid every morning in one of the rooms of the mainsion, at which the principals, amd: their supporters breakfasied be‘tol'e proceedings to busiâ€" ness with weapons supplied frequently from the Comte‘s armory. _ In an obscure thorough{are of Paris there is am old dilapidated building which has a curious bistory. Nearly 800 years ago, in the reign of Louis XIV., its owner, Comte de Boutteville, conceived the extraordinary idea of making it a rendezvous for duelists, They Were Built To Gratify HMobbies of Their Owners. armed. Just at this time 1 noticed Bouth American Kidney Cure advertisâ€" ed. ‘Although 1 had little faith left in any remedyâ€"having tried so many worthless onesâ€"but a drowning man will grasp at a straw, and I é)rocured a bottle. In a few days it had worked wonders, and before half a bottle was taken I was totally relieved of pain and two bottles entirely cured me." For sale by McFarlane & Co., not walk, and any standing position gave me intense pain. 1 became worse so rapidly that my family became alâ€" this enumeration be accepted as thorâ€" oughly accurate, it is difficult to see how, since that time, the population of Rio Jameiro could have increased to the present figures claimed, 800,000. There has been relatively, little emiâ€" gration to it. The Government is pot altogether a stable one, and since the overthrow of the empnire the imporâ€" tance of Rio Jameiro as a capital has somewhat declined. Buenos Xyrt_as._ _on the other hand, has had its population steadily increased by the stream of Italâ€" lan imimigration, New York city and Buenos Ayres, being the two foreign ports to which chiefly, Italian emiâ€" grants go when leaving | their own country, and ltalian emigration _ is now almost at its flood in consequence of the ecomomic conditions whig}n exâ€" ist in the home country. Buenos Ayres, it may be reasomably concluded, is enâ€" titled to the distinction which is claimâ€" ed for it of being the largest city in South America. The City of Mexâ€" ico, the largest city in Central Amâ€" erica, had by the last census a populaâ€" tion of 329,000. John Snell, of Wingham, Ont., was in a Maelstrom of Pain and Agony from Diseased Kidneysâ€"South Ameriâ€" can Kidney Cure was the Welcome "Life Preserver‘"â€"It Relieves Inâ€" stantly and Cures Surely. " Five ]Zaem ago I had a severe atâ€" tack of Grippe which affected my kidneys and caused intense pains in my back and urinary organs. 1 sufâ€" fered intold misery, at times 1 could as a trustworthy cemsus is a questivn for by the same enumeration the othâ€" er large cities of Brazil, Bahia and Perâ€" nambuco, were returned as having reâ€" spectively 200,000 amd 190,000 imhabiâ€" tamts each, though it is obvious that even numbers are rare in census reâ€" turns and are almost certain earmark of official guess work. If, however, The municipal oficials off Rio Janeiro claim for it at the present time a popâ€" ulation of 800,000, and do not seem to be at all inclined to acquiewe in the claim of the Argentine â€" Republic. There has been no otficial census of the cities of Brazil since 1890, at which time Rio Janeiro was returned | as haying 522,000 inbhabitants. It. was the first year of t)e new republican Govâ€" ernment in Brazil following the abâ€" dication of the EKmperor in November, 1889, but how far it may be accepted Buenos Ayres has, through immigraâ€" tion, chiefly Italian, been largely inâ€" creased during the last ten years, and an enumeration made of its inhabiâ€" tants in the month of January showed its populalion at that time to be 663,850 or 100,000 greater, it is claimed, than that of iRo Janeiro, heretofore reâ€" garded as the most populous city in South America. __Doubt has often been cast upon the claims of certain Asiatic cities, partiâ€" cularly Chinese cities, to the large population which has been ascribed to them, and recently there bhas been much reason to believe that some of the claims made for South American cities in respect to population are equally unsulystantial. The population of Reasons for Relicving the Claim of Buenos Ayres to Have the Largest Populaâ€"~ TORONTO WHAT‘S THE TROUELE? OUTH AMERICAN CITIES. QUEER HOUSES. KIDNEY PAIN. * ts the :mllnn of these nerve conâ€" | should anyone suffer am.wic" tres, an g:umhmnuuuow. \ ness while this remedy is Here i8 f@ret principle. ‘The trouâ€" ‘at their bands ? A FÂ¥or :ale by McFarlans & Co., Wholesale Agents for Durham and Vicin#Y}. FOR SALB Tho‘ EDGE PROPRRTL 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. In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power man . reoognised this _ prifioiple long ago. Everyone knows that let disease or injury affest this part of the human eystem and death is almost certain. Injure the -&ln‘l eord, which is the rodmn of ese nerve conâ€" tres, and paralysis is sure to follow. Here i8 tha @r«t prinoiple. The trouâ€" The great discoverer of this medicine was possegsed of the knowledge that the seat of all digease is the nerve centres, situated at the bage of the brain. In this belief he had the best acientiste and medical men of the world repimeeduis AP o un / the same preâ€" mises Indeed, the ordinary layâ€" The eyes oOf the world are literally fixed on South American Nervine. They are not viewing it as a nineâ€"Gays‘ wonâ€" der, but critical and experienced men have been studying this medicoine for years, with the one resultâ€"they have found that its claim of perfect curaâ€" tive qualities cannot be gainsaidh 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 oxâ€" perience, bmoinfuthom up for the day, er aomethin: that is getting at the seat of the diseaso and is surely and permanently restoring. FAMILY RECIPES. Mrs. Hayseed (reading from the medâ€" jcak l.lmnnwâ€"-&\rtland cement and skimmed milk make an excellent paint. Mr. Hayseed (in the dairy business) â€"â€"Paint? Git out it makes cream. Tomâ€"He‘s some furrin nobleman aâ€" travelin‘ incognito:s Dickâ€"Wha‘s that? Tomâ€"It‘s when a man changes hisâ€" self into wat he ain‘t, an‘ expec‘s every to know him as he isn‘t. Ahat under each rank wrong someâ€" where, There lies the root of right; That each sorrow has its purpose, By the sorrowing oft unguessed; But as sure as the sun brings mornâ€" 1ng, Whatever is, is best. I know that each sinful action, As sure as the night brings shade, Is somewhere, someiime punished, Tho‘ the hour be long dejayed.! I know that the soul is uidedv Sometimes by the heart‘s unrest, And "to iflrow" means often to suf(er, Butâ€"whatever is, is best, k I know, there is no error t I In the great supernal plan, |. j And all things work together | | . For the final good of man. And I know that my soul speeds onâ€" wand: 4 In the grand eternal quest, I shall cry as I look back earthward.i Whatever is, is best. w A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. Renders Failure Impossible. WIEN EVERT QTBRR HELPRR HiS FALED Itf CORB Are Fixed Upon South Ameriâ€" can Nervine. ~_~ â€"~â€" TKE EYES OF THE WORLD I know as my life grows older ~ And II? eyes have clearer sight, That under each rank wrong someâ€" Beyond Doubt the Createst Medical Discovery of the Age. f p I..\/\~ t Â¥ .‘:.‘,.,)“‘.‘ i Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, AN OPTIMiST A DEFINITION 44° #44, > C dutten®~ â€" TAE CREl REVIEY alone as the one great certain ¢ remedy of the nineteenth century. ble with medioal . treatmenit ï¬ ally, and with nearly all medjoines, i# that they aim simply to treat the AB: that may be diseased. South A.-:llq Nervine passes by the organs, and 3-; fnodluoly applies its curative to the nerve centres, from which organs of the body receive their supp of nerve fuid. The nerve cent healed, and of necessity the orga#® which has shown the outward evidence only of derangement is healed. lnt: gestion, nervousness, impoverish blood, liver complaint, all owse theig origin to a derangement of the norve centres. _ ‘Thousands bear testimony that they have been cured of these troubles, even when they have bww:‘ so desperate as to baffe the skill of} the most eminent physioilans, because South American Nervine has gone to bheadquarters and cured there. The eyes of the world have not been disappointed in the tw airy Into the sug» cess of Houth American Nervine. P ple marvel, it is true, at its nnhï¬ medical qualities, but they know yond all question that it . thing that is claimed for it ad it se VAs 4 A._ Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba U; and Eneland. A genersl Banking business transacted sued and collections made on all points. th h:miud and interest allowed at « Bierest allowed on savings bank dopo:u of tyd upwards. Prompt attention and every f anafforded cuctomers liying at a distance . Head Office, Toronto. CAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,008 «* Paid up 1,000,006 RESERVE FUND 600,000 W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. Reid, TERMS; $1 per year, IN ADVANCR CHAS. RAMAGE Editor & Proprietor StandardBank of Canada Thursday Morning. THECOOK‘SBESTFRIEND LARGEST SALE in CANADA. DUNNS BAKING POWDER GENTS in ali FOR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN YEARS DURHAM AGENCY. SAVINGS BANK. IS PUBLISHMED EVERT J‘ KELLY, Agent. oi m ie lt'kr everyâ€" 4t It stands