#i : f x In the old stand. All hand made shoes. Also Horse Shoeing Shop i°Câ€" Audinatiaindinaton in udsc S 152 "** of Grey, All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxrasa P. 0. will be promptly mitended to. Residence Lot 19, Con. 8, Township of Bentinok. hP <uhn ced 8... 2.3 2401 bs Lauder, Registrar. John A Doputy-l}egiflru. Office bhours IBSUE‘R of Ml::!,n Licenses. Aueâ€" tioncer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. #e lcb 0 s _. S Has opened out a firstâ€"class DAN. McLEAN. LICENSID AUCTIONEER, for th County of Grey. SBales attended to promp and at reasonable mn Dursam . Ont ALLAN MoeFARLANE, dobing of all kinds promptly Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loane -rnn:rd without delay, Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. nANEY To Loan atlowost rates of Interest Â¥"IA® one door north of #. Seot‘s Store Durham Momâ€"xl.. 81., N@OTARY PuUBLIC, Commissioner, etc MONEY TO LOAN. JAMES LOCKIE, BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. 'IOENSED AUCTIONEER for UNDERTAKING Proniptly attended to. JAKE KRESS. Fire Insurance secured, OFFICE, overn Qnant‘s Brom« Lower Town, spre Sprepr ies es 1220 |.‘0‘p-.m. WOODWORKXK Of the Best Qualitg Cheaper THAN EVER. IS still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Durham Bakery, 1 Aay n who takes a paper trow the post m whether diruhs to hi name or another, or whether he has sub seribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If a subsoriber orders his paper to be lm‘?od at a certaintime, and the published ecentinues to send,the subscriberis bound to pay for it if he takes it out of the pos! J:- This proceeds upon ke groun« hat a man must pay for what he uses. &. REGQGTSTRY OFFICR v > x . HUCH McKAY. We cal} the speciay attention of Pos maste‘s and ubo’mbmlo the following sy nopsis »fthe newepaperiaws : 1. If any person orders his r diseon tinued, he must pay all m::::l , or the publisher may contians to send it until payâ€" mentic 1Ado, and collectthe whole axoun! whether it be taken from the office or not. There can be no legal discontinuance until MISCELLANEOUS. in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of for sgloâ€oheap. â€"made Waggons , P. TELFORD . L. McKENZIE, Furniture JAKE KRESS THE CAUBE, r died lash week; he was DURHAM. McFARLANE rar. John A. Munro Office hours from 1( DAN. MeLEAH, Hanover, 6° W UR L# JX strREmt coort Thoms pretty, akatrhad a,~j, _ _0 _j}*° . STImnot may be sketched on the materials and workâ€" ed with rope or etching silk or cotton in shades of blue, red, . dull green, brown, black or all combined. Ruifles of ribbon adorn somis of the pillows, but if the ruffle is made of the samea material as the pillow it looks very ï¬)retty. On the linen and denim pilâ€" ws heavy cords are sewed around the edges, and sometimes ordinary manila rope is used with pretty effect. Cords eighteen inches long with tassels at each end are tied around the corners of some pillows about five inches from the point of the corner. The cord is tied tightly and the corner has the apâ€" peh.rance of a dolikey‘s ear. Pillows are made circular, oblong and trianon. a ,.20.00 °0C SHQud 90â€" UeUâ€" grated, with designs appropriate for the season. The outline stitch is most commonly used, making the work very simple. Sprays of wild roses or popâ€" pies, oddâ€"shaped fans scattered _ over the covers, branches of trees with birds flitting about, rural scenes or anything suggestive ‘nf anMiman mau tens wiuoirkeg 5. . _ C.le *OO IH the designs worked ‘upon it. A fingic sheer linen is still prettier, and is used extenmsively. Heavy white linen covâ€" ers adorned with drawnâ€"work look beautiful over pillows covered with colâ€" ored silk These covers wash â€" nicely and are very strong 0(23 ,° °06. CHU BUFPFICCADIG â€"such that will launder nicely. Scotch plaid ginghams, plain and figured denâ€" im, ecru and colored linens and wash silke. A favorite material is a sort of crash, which is very strong and cheap, and combines most beautifully with royal blus or bright red in the d{‘fimlf wourked upon it. A finer & stt Bimeam Eo ceï¬ JP There is an array of beautiful pilâ€" lows in the fancy goods stores. There are pillows designed for the hammock, for the piazza, and for the yacht ; pilâ€" lows in all shapes and sizes, colors and designs. The materials of which they are made are strong and serviceable Ceetimncly n bncege iss l9 p C P and wip.," }} ""il Reed no richpastries, and when they crave condensed sweets, as they will occasionally, try maple syrup, a little honey or good Southern cane syrup, which will keep indefinitely in airâ€"tight jars. se d y c O9 eeemaenied. POsng afound by buying ten pounds, and will keep _ as well in your store room as they will at the grocer‘s, Teach the children to be critical about the fruit they eat, to remove the skins, cut out ths bruises and decayed spots, and spit out the stones or seeds. Apple and tomato skins are especially bad for digestion, as they curl up into sharp, hard little rolls, very irritating to the intestines, | . SBHOOE DOKIG Hromn ant Matmn..‘"1 z.. damask â€" average two and help out on the v Even in dried fruits mise, for prunes, peach do betf.p 3 4 IPWmDer that they can do better by buying a quantity ; apâ€" Ples, pears, plums, peaches, etc., . by the peck or bushel, not quart or dozen. Pineapples, too, by _ the halfâ€"dozen ; whnt you cannot eat may be canned, amia“i belp out on the winter‘s stores. LWwan iMlbmLoab al se D 39 B2 CURIAL 11 you have not thought of it before, begin now, you will have fruit _ of some sort by another year, for strawâ€" berries yield the second season. Most children like tomutoes both raw _ and cooked ; the plants cost but a trifle ; and as for the trees and shrubs, they never were cheaper, and a few dollars each year would insure _ sufficient fruit for the whole family, after a few years‘ time. h Those who are obliged to buy their fruit should remember that they can d? better by "DUYEAEC & ouuntilty * an chil 2 °_ 2°,"" LalDage are crimi;nally neâ€" glectful; not only will the bad" fruit cause bowel disorders but in many cases direct the boys‘ cravings _ toâ€" wards‘ cider and beer, and the first sbqytdownwud is taken, for, tï¬m‘"ï¬ as iL may seem, many paren wiho think fruit unwholesome, see no barm in the fermented fruit juice, us the cider Jug in the pantry testifies. Be SEEned, mothers, and give the children suificient fruit and their abnormal PPA VI n . esd ht rF Weline ind tA 2 eat such Earbage are Blectful ; not onlv wl . : Ue, design wasextremely being violets, The corners were in recovering, are restricted in their diet during this time, and consequently are thin and pale a greater part of the summer. Another result: these children always have an unnatural apâ€" petite, craving concentrated acids and sweets, and their pennies are spent for such unwholesome trash as pickles and cheap candy. Again, the children whose natural appetite is thwarted, will pick up green or decayed fruit whenever they have an opportunity, so eager are they for fruit of some summer mllows should be ’h'“t‘d by some antediluvian quack, "Fruit in the morning, golden; at noon, silver ; at night, lead." Take noâ€" tice of their little ones ; are they rosy and plump? No, they suffer from freâ€" quent bilious attacks, are several days Parents who drive finue to male pastries and puddings, multiplying their own labors and enâ€" dangering the health of the family. 2700 I0f Warm wewtber, a lact which many mothers overlook and conâ€" FRUIT FOR THE CHILDREN. Nature has wisely provided a sUMMER PmLows. G HOUSEHOLD. * mm mmmimmmmmmarraean °°C Of summer may : materials and workâ€" etching silk orcotton is sure she cannot afâ€" one can econoâ€" 8, apricots etï¬" s a pound y | w'i.lr0 keen â€" as their children to 7 w au ol 0g20 MO2e WEUREE EKE Nen I‘d have two an‘ no . ma, wouldn‘t I f yepas mam puzzled expression on her face ; but her question showed that she had at least m‘u;ghtht;h{_d_;}fg of the remarks: We fell into a discussion of the woâ€" man suffrage question and kindred things, at the table, the womenâ€"folk, as usual, declaring it was a shame they weren‘t allowed to vote, but that they wouldn‘t if they could. & ‘ Fiveâ€"yearâ€"old Elsie listened with a Until sunset the incantations beat away on the stilly aiir without a pause. Then the coffin is shot off the Ibamboo erection onto the funeral pyre, and as t.llxp ll:d sun sinks the whole thing is set alight. Nothing could be weirder than the curious ceremonies attending the burâ€" ial of a Burman priest, or, as he is ! called in his owin dreamy country, *phoongyee." The funeral does not take place unâ€" til three months after death, the corpse having been meanwhile preserved _ in honey, and placed in a boxâ€"like cofâ€" fin of many colors and extraordinary ornamentations. Toward noon the Ising pause of this droning day is g:oken by a bum of fa«r-a.w'udy incanâ€" tations which rise and fall rowsily, and one knows that the burial service is going forward. The coffin has been raised to the top of a huge gilded bamboo erection, and is being swung monotonously to and fro on the bare shoulders of 40 or 50 Burmans. ‘The chanting never ceases, nor the queer gliding backward and forâ€" ward. Ceremontes Attending the Burial of a Bur man Priest. T6 nowever popular it may become, ’yields very much to the composer. The unknown genius is likely to reap the reward on his second effort, even if the quality be of a kind less likely to gain success. One curious feature of the situation at present is the glut of marches in the market. These have been popular as two steps for several seasons, and the result is now that the supply of these pieces is so far ahead of the demand tha‘E'it‘_is next to impossible to Wat nma wiliicr 3 get one published |a specialty of these songs said last summer, after having exhausted the popularity of several, that she was afâ€" raid others so good fwould never be found. But they were forthcoming at the opening of the season, and proved as successful as their predecessor. All the song writers with any talent in this direction have been turning their attention to negro songs, and one reaâ€" son why their grade of comparatively . high excellence has been preserved is to be found possibly in the fact that many oldâ€"time negro melodies have been worked over to meet the present taste. Very few of the songs that have reached the dignity of publication are the work of negro composers, a]though negro performers claim the authorship of some of the songs they sing. Neverâ€" theless, one of the most popular songs of the yeait was written l:jy a negro performer, who has alrea y received upward of $5,000 in royalties from the work. It rarely happens that a first | song, howevelr popular it may become. Their Popularity Mas Killed the Demand For Other Music. The popularity of negro songs durâ€" ing the past two winters has practicâ€" ally ruined the demand for popular efâ€" forts of amy other kind, and the sentimental ballad, whether it involves the overworked " mother" interest or is concerned with some less filial moâ€" tive, is just at present a drug on the market. It is evidently the negro song that the public desires now, and there is seemingly no indication that this demand has been satisfied. The popularity of these negro ballads was established anew two years ago by a couple of very successful efforts of the kind, and the supply that followed has been kept up to a remarkable degree of excellence. One woman who makes I 1 i Waity ie us d MB \ c c3 CC soft custard, cold. The rice will be warm, and this is a nice hot day desâ€" sert as the custard can be prepared ea,rly in the day and set aside till and slip from the pan. It must be cut the moment it comes from the oven. bpnadn it as thin as a wafer on the ns. ’ Rice Padding.â€"One.cup of rice ; wash let stand two hours in cold water ; turn off the water, put the rice in a double boiler with one cup of water, coo khalf an hour, then add one quart of milk, one cup of raisips, a teaspoonâ€" ful of salt and boil an hour. Butter a miold or a bowl, pack the rice in it, let strind‘ fen mintite® turn into a dish decorate with bits of jelly or candied f{}uftsan‘d pour rownd it a quart of ELSIE MISUNDERSTOOD. Fairy Gingerbread.â€"One cup of butâ€" ter; two of sugar, one of milk, four of flour; threeâ€"fourths of a teaspoonâ€" full of soda, and one tablespoonful of ginger. Beat the butter to a cream : | _ Ginger Beer.â€"Put ane and a half pounds of granulated sugar into a stone crock, wilth two ounces of pure ground ginger and a lemon, sliced thin. Pour on eight quarts of boiling water, and 'W’hen lukewarm ‘add one quarter of a [YGBBL cake, dissolved. Stir thoroughâ€" ly, and when perfectly cold strain inâ€" ’to buttles and fasten the corks seâ€" curely. Keep in a moderate temperaâ€" ture for twelve hours, then put them in the coolest place you can find. The beer is ready for use in four or five days, and is a very acceptable drink to harvest hands. This is an old famâ€" ily recipe, used "down east" for threeâ€" quz}r'bers ‘qf a century. . "a o Lt‘ ... c n ve CE ESEDCCC lllll!'l"‘ was of white silk, with scarlet poppies soattered over it and the corners were tied with red cord and tassels. A white linen one bad a Dutch windmill design outlined with blue silk and a thick‘ white cord around it. tied into "ears" with white silk cord WEIRD FUNERAL. THREE GOOD RECIPES. NEGRO SONGS. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO given from «* the stables w were sent to ‘lal of a Burâ€" cover the ca were obliged r than the lt]!e army of g the burâ€"| "TThe nation , as he is | want of indep . country, | would the ro a cream ; thrones in the world !" ficient 1|3 LV n a, box, but it is suf. ficient to know that the British st office performed its duty with aaf:ty and despatch. 1 ! PF SVP SDHE I-IJII.I!- ham, England. The father, who was a working man, had no time to take the youngster home, so he walked into the nearest post office and tendered the child as an express ugamel. The authâ€" orities, under the rule regulating the delivery of live animals, acce rted the “{)arcel," and delivered it like any other at a charge of eighteen cents) Report dosen‘t "say bl‘.‘:f. tt;h:t .fid was stam or im a box, it is sufâ€" ï¬EieuptOdto k:zl:to'tw that tha pp.:,y 38 S« NOVEL POsSr PACKET. A threeâ€"yearâ€"old child has been by post to its destination in Birr of the royal family, as persons who bardly ever try and blue sky," pillow sta , 4 _ __S . _‘ Stik A0F Rer age. The day | before the jubilee on her way to Buckâ€" | ingham . Palace from the siation, she |sat erect in her carriage, bowing graceâ€" fully to the shouts of welcome with |smiles on her face. On the day of the Jjubilee, while the many bands that hedged the Foad to Buckingham Palace played "God Bave the Queen," she lookâ€" ed almost radiant, and, as if then and there, gave the promise of permitting & third jubilee ten years hence. ‘TWiAs NoT an ORDEAL, Sitting next to ons of thes ladies of bhonour of the Queen, I asked her if this Jjubilee was not an ordeal for the Queen and her court to go through. "Ohb, indeed, no; they were delighted at the prospect of it. ‘The Queen was much interested in all the preparations and said she was sorry she could not bersel{ see the procession, she would like to have been one of her fortunâ€" ate subjects sitting comfortably on a stand to take a good view of everyâ€" thing.*" ‘And all of her children, grandâ€"childâ€" ren and great grandâ€"children, did they not think the jwbiles was a bore ¢" given fromt he one in whose keeping "Not at all. Exnanp 1j . __" C aeepHt NAPOLEON®8 LAST worps in a hardy, rosy' «Ie_eked, looking woman, for her before the Jjubilee on her ingham Palace from the sat erect in her carriage, fully to the shouts of â€" smiles on her face. On i ©0009 Cns COmRRTe ECICLINC. She sat alone on the back seat, with the Princess of Wales and the Princess Christiana opposite to her, clothed in the most gorgeous toilettes that Parisiâ€" &a conturiers could invent. The Prince of Wales, the Duke of Connaught, and the Duke of Cambridge, followed the Queen‘s carriage on horseback. 1 was surprised to see the Queen look younger than her pictures. Judging from the majority of them you would infer that the old ladyâ€"as the English call herâ€"had just roused the moment necessary for photographing and that she sank into a semiâ€"somnolent state immediately afterward. 1 found myâ€" self twice very near to her and sha i« covered with a black ,| borses, with harness which would be ;| great curiosities in museums, mounted | with postilions in gala dress. The ‘| drivers with cocked hats, covered with embroideries of gold; the carriages | filled with all the gayly dressed royalâ€" ties of the world, and in all this powerâ€" ‘ fui nation‘s splendour, the only simple, unassuming one was the woman whose sixty years of glorious reign her peoâ€" ple were celebrating. BHE LOOKS YOUNG. There she sat in her grand carriage, drawn by eight horses, with all of her subjects, family and servants dazzling with gold and gilver, purple and fine linen around her, simply clad in black and white, like a good bourgeoise, who condescends to come out for once with her rich relatives. For once, however, she condescends to change her broad brimmed, much battered hat, which | has become traditional, and the paraâ€" sol which is said to be much out of repair. Her gray bhair was neatly tucked under a black lace capote â€" trimmed with white Troses ; her portly figure was | , Funiy ues B 20 0 P . _ °_ __"~ °CC> Aimost as Young as Her Daughtersâ€"HMardy and Rosyâ€"Checked â€" Unterested in the Jubilee Pageant. A correspondent of the Brooklyn Fagle writes in this way about Queen Victoria and the jubilee:â€"England is one of the countries that has retained its old costumes, the old paraphernalia which belonged to royalty for cenâ€" turies, and just imagine all of it taken out of its hiding places and for over a mile displaying its splendour. The gala carriages, drawn by four and eight e rtiasics"? Lzcx mm o APPEARANCE OF THE QUEEN IN THE + PROCESSION. EVEN A8 A YOUNG WOMAL, "Aniittie c llPh hh c a d : s all. Except those who relat‘iaopshq.p with _ roj least by the female PUr‘um of lives. Etiquette that they are slaves to the ceremonies. A walk into th is the privilege of the erof tpeir _subjects would ination in Birmingâ€" e father, who was a no time to take the he walked into the erward. 1 found myâ€" near to bher and she is Cheeked, alimost young Ussuca i) 4 ack and white pelerine: on the back seat, with & picnic is by see the counâ€" sent part live did not h:l;';e.‘.“ 1 h D qy o oo °. oornrinney l bf 8. Jones, of Sussex, N .B twelve years 1 was a ma tcstion, corrtipation ang Wikle" masGeis 7 2 120 CE wn’m" o my usual Realth . " A resident of the Maritime Provinces, in the persoen bf 8. Jones, Of Sussov xr w ° CC CHPTZ" 7~_TCLVC EAFMCT, of Western Ontario.! is Mr. C. J . Curtis, residing near \de-{ sor. _ His health was scemingly comâ€" pletely destroyed through i2 grippe. : No medicine did him any good. To | Three bottles of Nervine," ho seva, ‘I| attribute my restoration to health and } strength ." Neitherp man or woman can enjoy life when troubled with liver complaint. . Thig Was the sentiment and feeling of w. 4. Hill, the wellâ€" known bailif of Bruobrldu. "I was| so bad," says he, " that one of my | medioal attendants #ei4l thet ; was | drilt.but.thmcoc.tunnot‘dou 1 yot. Â¥rom the auttndon.lutl of NMervize 1 commenced t feel Botâ€"| 1 teP, ane anm toâ€"day restored cempletely } c to my usual Reaem = _ VC °** mittatatncs Alistdecsclh s . A : S _ neufalgia of the stomech and bowel: by three bottlies of this medicine. Jas Sherwood, of Windsor, at 70 years of age, suffered from an attack of paraly. sis. _ His life, at that age, was despairâ€" ed of. But four bottiles Of Nervine save him back his natural strength, A victim of indigestion, W. F. Bolger, of Renfrow, #*ays : " Nervine cured me of my suffering, which seemed incurâ€" able, and had baffied all forn®r meâ€" thods and efforts,." Peter Keson, of Paisley, lest fBesh and rarely bed a good night‘s sleep, because of stomach trouble. _ Ne says : " Nervine stopped the agonising pains in my stomzch the Prst day I used It. I have now taken two bottles and I feel entirely relieved ‘and can sleep like a top." A repreâ€" sentative farmer, of Western Ontario, 4s Mr. C.J. Curtlie raeban... _ _ S TMEELZ, | 100 0 22PCACRTTE HEu failed to do him good. He tried Nerâ€" vine, and these are his words : " I gladâ€" I7 say it ; Nervine cured me and I am toâ€"day as strong and well as ever." Samuel Miya, of Meaford, was our :d of nomimalaia ca in o2 F those who have been down and are now up through the use of South Amâ€" erican Nervine give their opinious on Uris subject. _ Joha Boyer, banker, of EAincardine, Ont., hed made himself a hopeless invalid through years of overâ€" work . At least he felt his case wes hopoless, for the best physieians had Anils® in au en L _ If it is the case that he who makes bottles of Nervine, and can truthfwlilg two blades of grass grow where only #8y that I am & new man." one had grown before is a benefactor '.A :::;‘.'d“‘;f‘“"" :t human neture of the race, what is the position to b'?c::dle mc;vu .t'l.uhi:)rldtq" * ;";::' ::: accordéd that man who by his knowâ€" ortant it is, then tha.t health ledge of the laws of life and health l:!l’.ll‘th lh0|.l|d be' magke u'm lot.fl gives energy and strength where lanâ€" !the mothers of this country. â€" The woâ€" guor, weakness and anticipation of ‘“’mon of Canada are rca:d b Py to early death had before prevailed? _ Js en Of the beneiits that Lave come +4 not he also & public benef@ctor? Lot‘““. th 6 th ¢ Sa oho:mo those who have been down and """m Ncmwn. uouuuao "Wnt -"‘: now up through the use of South Amâ€" lo-uu.. '“.'“ the heds OnLé ."'o.(‘m erican Nervine give their opinious °" |Bible Society of that ’i†ts fered is subject. _ John Boyer, banker, of FOr #IX YERrk Hnoms m amirirks .?.'...8:..-._ FinonrdikG. Onkt. had makds i1 _I. "~4 » ‘The SAme Verdict Comes From Old and Young, Rich and Poor, and From All Corners af t lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2 W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" JIng Town plot Durham. building lots, will be sold in one or more Grey, including valeable Water Power O Rined Witospre and Uriversatly Its Application. Tho‘ EDGE PROPRRTY. Where Other Medicines Have Failed anc Pronounced the Cases Beyond Cu Great Discovery Has Proven Genuine Elixir of Life. In Bombay the plague is carrying off over 500 persons a week still. It is now officially declared that the plaâ€" gue exists in Jiddah, the port from which Mecca is reached. the chain, and a simple driving maâ€" chanism all correspond closely with the every day bicycle. The pedals turn the sprocket wheel, which is turn, so to speak, causes the aluminum hull beâ€" neath to revolve. It is pretty hard to get started, but once under way scorchâ€" ing is easily possible. TKEY GOUNT BY THE SEQRF Yer, By the Hundreds, Those Who Been Cured of Dire Disessc I South American Nervine. Regular bicycle machinery is mountâ€" ed upon the cylindrically shaped hull. A large sprocket wheel, a gear case for not have a de?rp keel beneath the reâ€" voiving hull. ‘The whole affair is built of aluminum. In shape it is like aciâ€" gar, It is ten feet in length, but in consequence of the material of which it is built it is very light. _ Brick Dwelling, and many eligible have for a long time enjoyed a rare subject for experimentation in the biâ€" cycle, and many weird and wonderous have been the oreations. Bicycles for the water as well as bicycles for the land have ufnmg into being, and the end of the list is not yet reached. A water bicycle has been invented, fstentod‘ and constructed by an Engâ€" ish, genius, who claims that it is supâ€" erior in every rea&eot to all water biâ€" cycles yet put forth. To look at it you would say that it would roll over at once. So it would, ?ethnps. if it did not have a dean lFeal hananth tha waâ€" In the Town of Durham, County of Shaped Like a Cigar, and Its Inventor Boâ€" lieves It Will Beat All Comers, Men of an inventive turn of mind Winaes 2 c 2s o sagmir m imur on 1 1 _I7C00!, &At i0 years of red from an attack of paralyâ€" life, at that age, was despairâ€" But four bottles Of Nervine back his natural strength, A indigestion, W. F. Bolger, of #*ays : " Nervine cured me ftering, which seemed incurâ€" had baffied ali forn®r meâ€" Nee ie eagrrizintP THE BOMBAY PLAGUE Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont A BIKE FOR 1HE WATER leep, because of ntomach‘ says : " Nervine uoppedj pains in my stomzch the 1 d it. I have now taken | 4 I feel entirely relieved | Wiles c io &0 > of gseveraj he stomach and bovzols- es of this medicine. Jas. Windsor, at 10 years of 3 _ _ _"CH O woman ‘hen troubleq with Iiver i8 Was the sentiment w. 4. Hill, the wellâ€" f Bruobrldu. "I was h€, "that ona ., T8E FOR SALE \ taken a faw S 0 C 0C CHHIRELRTCCO _3 ;\ _ "_Jmachifar than 1 sould have hope Nervine stopped |came within the way of Mrs my stomzech the {leton, of Wingham, to treat have now taken | begt bhysgicians, both in 17; entirely relieved England, for heart digease 0P." **â€" & repreâ€" | ous debility, but she failed Testern Ontario, relief. "r was advised," sh, ling near \de-‘take Routh American xo scemingly comâ€" must say I do believe that ugh la grippe. : not CONe E0 I WOR was ... nÂ¥ ewaaA ue PC ' for °C CECCEmnmete McFarlane & €o, To ; da 0 ; day,* uie ,, |10" ®ix years from nervous pm-mtlag elf & Medical assistance did not help. * overâ€" !.u." she says, " I have taken «x botttes We8 of Nervine, ard ca» truthfully zsay thi® .820 |is the one medicine that has +ffeored N°râ€" !s oure in my case." Mré. John Dinâ€" 824 /woody has been for 40 years a resident nd gotrnuhmnuwrow the ale Y®râ€""‘ ilotted threeâ€"seors yeayrs and cen. Three *C Of‘yoars ago her evstem sustained © apyâ€" ‘Wwels ‘ere shock through the deatk of a J48. ‘éaughter. Nervine wes recommen 128, * Of |\ She perseveri y took 18 bottles of "AlYâ€" | meditine, wlth.{'bo result that she is toâ€" "Ur"â€" | day again stromg and hearty, Nuneâ€" ‘Cin€ / dreds of women suffer from impov crigh» h. Aled blood and weakened nerves. " Ail " 0f | vitality," says Mre. J. Feallis, of M } Brampton, *"seemed to have forsakem wl""lmy system. I was nnable to get reâ€" meâ€" | lief from any source until T commen oeg â€" Of | taking South American Nervin~. . The d l‘ruum are most satisfactory=â€"rreoatae Ath i #am arn.. _ _ eE 2. «, _ .. "â€" Ves$ trom “u flm the !ifo blâ€"od of the whole m 18 < com & medicine of, pareb but C plete and comprehensive in it Application â€" â€" â€" uo ui _2 __ _8 _ NeEs AEKK EY &£bout> In the common langsaws of the day, they have Bbeen there, and are speaking from the heart. The dozen or more witnesses that here gpeak have their counterparts by the hundreda, not Only in the province of Ontarie but in every other section of the Domir= 108. _ SBoors Amerlez® Nervine is basse O¢..& scientiic Jrificiple that thwakes # cure a Certainty, n5 matter how deai pergt6 the case may Be. 1t strikes at the Gerve Centery from which flowse the I1fa 31. , _, 1 °" trom about, Petrmit of further carnest words af + Vld and Young, Male and Femailo All Corners of the Dominion. Newspaper "" "*° iurther additions to ‘st words of tosiUmony from know just what they are 6 E+ _ In the common lan#ss fas i PC Failed and Doctors Have Beyond Cure, This t’t:nu .IlomPon u:lnu ba:rd;n‘»o:vu ot' wards, rompt attention and ov .ul.aud curtomers liying at a dhhno:' J‘ KELLYX, Acen A general Banking bulï¬ transacted wsued and collections made on all points, ts received and interest allowed at « W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. «___ _ Paid o 1,000,008 RESERVE FUND 600.000 CAPITAL, Authorized _ $28,000,000 StandardBank of Canada TERNS; $ per year, IN ADVANCR CHRAS. RAMAGEB Editor & Proprietonr THECOOK‘SBEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE in CLNADA,. REVIEW OFFICB, GARAVRAXA DUNNS BAKING POWDER THE GREl REVETY . FOR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN Thursday Morning. GENTS in ali ipal _ Ontario, Quebee, -.‘I."..?ï¬l"‘n.,\ DURHAM AGENCY. Head Office, Toronto: SAVINGS BANK «@ AGVised," she says, "to American Nervine, and Jo believe that it I had [ would not be alive toâ€" heart c;.;.; and she failed to get Lactorya Ereater hoped for." t; E Mr®. IJL Etapâ€" treat under the in Canada and valuable to By trik! Have these neryve t any ‘ing 1k 107 carriage serv‘ M fanh :. craft n gine is started wi wanted for usea a NAPTHA on These seem to ho v© the pump. @trect many other form amount of ¢ 6P wWork. i he . M U'f‘ slea m re provided witl ’w~ 18 AK i N w0# is really mx:'.":. hn per sense. It cor heavy tubes eac} erushed until the In Eurcq made in th« Gu'i.'.g« th Te favorit to be thos roleum eng and those dr ®©r work. " They â€" weig $2,500 each goes to the c are o rubber for 50 cents as cab top aï¬ dou bJ drive; Of a lever steering. © muyni age baitery « Caryri Iwo passonger m‘;‘ im April ber baus 4 N@eng ors‘ Connyim of time cab wirl wheels, which A square, ven: ly by the binc Lbe continent gu selirpropelied ve way inom bacycl or two riders awboliusned and ;ï¬ fouling thre sir Lhe sLreel they y only hall the spa and wagom, and congested. . Te 1 immio ui from his vould keep a ca #SLoop . Tradesmen ©~o ery wagons on 1 business. AN.hepn thour work will omy and can be by an ordinarily san be dittle do adoption for bus pocially im clties over the horse at respecis obvious in less than heal z-u awnd in pl be kept. A brougham alwaos BLECTRIC & and convement sel ingenuity to 1f such vehicle # 40 whice ad i« whee be in The us almost a bicycle, a tory is o« be good 3 eities ®From J new vehicles hi where it is of 0 end anow FEngla the borscless « which is at ha it is known th and there is « 1Â¥ wagon in which Fran is taking to ti earriage, the \ e#ra whea mos pressed air, e their eqm;a{]j The invasi by the autor Paris only day it is said vehicles in pu more in priv were said to } July 1, and at that date, could be amnade are in all Fr to kbompute @r of man or by the work by the force tnw ';\‘ bented + r is wain wJ 0 1i 4 JC al ning and France e d Ds ¢ com mon u V\ 17 es by this PQ 6n d Gurzelh world ne t I 18 @1 un i« eng D decre im MR t« €3 M h«