[# 4x % FOR SALE "_The EDGK PROPBRTY. & MA P *:fa0@@ and Insurance Agent Yoyancer, COM® ss&iGner . Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 00, con. 2, W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjomâ€" Ing Town plot Durham. In the Town of Durham, County of Groy, including valevable Water Power Loavs "arrap p ER of Marriage Licenses, Aue I l,;,u for Counties of Bruce and Grey. © Résidenceâ€"King St., Hanover, Handâ€"made Waggons NOTARY PUBLIC, Commissioner,ctc., "‘County of Groy. Sales attended to promp auad at reasonable rates. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also ALLAN McFARLANE Horse Shocing Shop, ACAUs T P,00@ without delay, _ Collections * PMatpély made, Insurauce effected. MEâ€"NRY WO L,OAN stlowost rates of Interost ® "I® one door horth of 8. §sot‘s Store Durbara Firstâ€"Class Hearse. 2. Aay person who takes a paper ftrow the post office, whether directed to his name or another, or whether he has sub seribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If a subscriber orders hie paper to be stopped at a certaintime, and the pnblislzeé eontinues to send,the subscriberis boune %> pay for it if he takes it out of the post office. Tiis proceeds upon ke ground bhat a man must pay for what he uses. Of the Best Quality Cheapor THAN EVER. UNDERTAKJNG Promptly attended to. IJAKE KRESS. 1. If any person orders hispaper discon tinued, he must pay all arreages, omâ€"tht publisher mey continuse to send it catil payâ€" mentis wade, and collectthe whole aw.oun|! whethor it be taken from the office or not. There can be no lega) discontinuance until paymentismade. W. L. McKENZIE, We oa!! & :poel;' sttention ef Pos maste~s and aâ€"becribersto the following sy mnopsis of the gawcpaperlaws : MONEY TO LOAN. Mortgage taken for it Has opaned out a firstâ€"class *ARRISTER, SOLICITOR IN SU;REME COURT Fire Insurance secured, OFFICE, over Grant‘s Sror«, Lower Town. JAMES LOCKIE, _ MISCELLANEOUS. J. P. TELFORD, ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN \MoFARLANE, HUCH McKAY. JAEE KRESS Furniture still to be found in his Old Stand opposite the Darham Bakery. WOODWORK Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of Newspaper for sale cheap. DURELAM . LEGAL Residence Durbam Ont nce AgeM<: Conâ€" oi sai a= Lmssioner &c. Tom Legan his woodwork with a simply constructed little stool, in which be used only a saw, bammer and nails. Since then he has made a score of articles, including boxes and other knickâ€"knacks suitable for Christâ€" mas presents for his friends. One of bis most amlitious efforts, and one in which he manifested the greatest inâ€" tarest, was a bird bhouse, in making which he used 12 different tools. ACUTE SENSE OF SMELL. When Tom is in doubt about the kind | of wood he is using he helps out his , fingers by smeiling the wood, and by this sense alone is able to distinguish | eight dilferent varieties. He is not | only painstaking and carelul in his | work, but keeps an accurate and sysâ€" | tematic record of all that he does,| describking each article that he makes ‘ and setting down the length of time ; be was ocoupied on it and other de-! | tails. * His mechanical bent finds expression I even in the summer vacation, which | | be passes on a farm. He spends a conâ€" siderable part of his time in fitting 'up contrivances which require skill | and patience. Last summer he rigged | | up an elevator in the barn without | | assistance or direction from any one. | | gelting the materials, consisting ofi rope pulleys, blocks and chain, togethâ€" | er himself, and so adjusting them that | he conld pull himself up and let himâ€" i | self down again. He is extremely | iauti.e and venturesome, but seldom| geis hurt. He climbs trees as nimbly | as any other twelvaâ€"yearâ€"old boy, and b has been discovered on the roof of | the house meaasvring chimnmeys and making otfher investigations to satâ€" isfy his curiosity. HIS INTEREST IN MECHANICS. One of the firs. indications that Tom ever gave of his mechanical ability | was in connection with a mischievous prank at the kingergarten a fow years ago. It was discovered that the water bad been turned on in the dressing room and the faucet taken apart. The | matron called up the little blind boys ‘ and questioned them atout it, but one | and all denied knowing anything I about it. Finally she thought of Tom. He cheerfully conifessed that he was the author of the act, and produced the missing pieces of the fancet from among his playthings. the matron endsavored to impress him with the sense of bhaving done wrong, and told him that he ought to do all he could to repair the mischief he had done. He responded to this apâ€" peal with prompt alacrity, and to her surprise replaced the pisces in their projer relative positions with the celerâ€" ity and deftness of a skilled workman. INTERESTED IN BUILDING: On the lot adjoining where Tom lives a new building is being erected by the kindergarten. and he has followed the course of its construction with the keenest interest and enjoyment. As soon as lessons are over he waunts to 5o at once to the new bhouse, and he knows as well as any one of the workâ€" men just what sort of materials have been used and how they have been put together. _ +5. 6 4 His highest ambition at present, hiowever, is to travel. This desire was inspired by the tales that were told him by two of the teachers from the "How many people are in the car?" be spelis with his inquisitive little fingers into the palm of his teacher‘s bhand. "What kind of a lady sits next to me, and what does she wear? W hat street are we on now ? Are the buildâ€" ings high or low ? What is there in the shop windows ?" Those questions go on from the time he starts until he arrives at his destâ€" ination. He knows thne route so thorâ€" oughly that he can make a diagram of it in the sand he uses for his geograâ€" phy lessons, naming the streets over which bhe passed without a mistake, and could doubtless find his way alone if it were safe to trust him without protection on the crowded streets. HIS SKILL WITH TOOLS. He uses the same kind of tools in bhis woodwork that the other boys do, except that his rule has to have raised figures on it, and in marking off he uses an awl instead of a lead pencil. Tom is neat, orderly careiul and exâ€" act in his work, and rarely makes a blunder of any kind. His intuitions are so keen and his two sapses O touch and sme‘‘, wpon which he depâ€" ends. ze so highly developed that he can detect the slightest variation from the model. If his work does rnot match the rule and square perfectly he is miserable llom is a most successful driver of nails. Every blow of the hammer falls with unerring aim fuil upon the head of the nail, and he can send it through the thinnest pisce of wood without splitting it. Seeing boys who smash their fingers anod splinter the wood in their endeavor to drive nails look on in wonder at Tom‘s feat. His Home Is in the Suburbs of Boston. Mass., and He Aitends Regular school Each Week â€" His Teacher, Miss Conley, Is Mis Guaide, Interpretor, Protector and His Confidante. Tommy Stringer is the most wonâ€" derful blind boy in the world. His bhome is in Boston, Mass., and for the past year he has been attending the Lloyd School in that city, where he is taught with ordinary pupils, most of whom he exce‘!s in the neatness and accuracy of his work. He attends school twice each week, being accompâ€" anied from the Kindergarten for the Blind, in Jamaica Plain, by his teacher, Miss Conley, who is likewise his compâ€" anion interpreter and protector. Tomâ€" my is not only blind, but deaf, and his means of communicating with othâ€" er people are confined almost wholly to the use of the manual alpha‘et. Each trip to school is of intense irterâ€" est to the hoy. Although doubly afflictâ€" ed, he sees and hears more than most boys would in passing over the same route. HIS INTENSE LOVE FOR MECHANIâ€" CAL APPLIANCES. FONDERFUL BMIND BOY, Lastly, she will be precise about the exact number of yards of materiat she needs, the precise width and every other detail. Mrs. Rambo, next morningâ€"Absalom do you know you tried to go to bed last night with your boots on ? _ And having made her purchases. the shopper will go home pleased to find she has spent a profitable afternoon, without spending too much money, nor on examining her parcels will she echo the sigh once bheard from an impulsive young friend going over her purchases, "Oh, dear, I thought I wanted that dreadfully when I bought it, but now I see it at bome. 1 wish I bhad ltft it in the shop and kept my money in my purse," + Shopping should not be done hurriedâ€" ly. By that it is not meant that the shopper is to spend hbours trailing about from counter to counter, or staring at the goods in the windows. A careful buyer will do nothing of the sort, but she will not choose her goods without looking them well over; taking them to a window or door, if it bhappens to be a dark afternoon, to examine both texture and hue. _ She will also look well to colors, if she is matching shades, and not be deludâ€" ed into buying a medium tint of blue silk to buttonâ€"hole a navy serge with. Then she will before buying, inquire the price of the article, and calculate in her own mind whether she can afâ€" ford the sum the quantity she requires will come to. _ Mr. Rambo, im:lyi-ng more ice to his beaiâ€"[ was trying to protect myself from your cold feet. HOW TO SsHOP. "How to shop!" you exclaim, "Anyâ€" body ean shop who has the necessary funds." Wait a little. There is an art in shopping as well as in everything else. First, of course you must be well supplied with money, _ though that is not by any means the point of greatâ€" est importance. The matter of real imâ€" portance is that you should know what you require to Imy. A counmtryman walked into a Westâ€" ern newspaper office to advertise the death of a s#relative. What is your charge ? be asked of the clerk. We charge two dollars an inch. Oh! said the countryman, I can‘t afford that. My friend was six feet three inches. No one knows exactly how much is spent in the United States on liquor in a year, especially in prohibition States, but it is supposed that the whiskey taken for medicinal purnoses costs each year more than does the maintenance of the regular armyv. First Trampâ€"Do you think cigarettes is as injur‘ous as they say. Second Trampâ€"Dunno. [ wish I could Austriaâ€"Hungary spendsless upon liâ€" quor in a year than any other counâ€" try of the first class in â€" Europe, amounting to about $225,000,000,though persons who are familiar with life | alongz the blue Danube might, not unâ€" ‘ reasonably come to the conclusion that | $200,000,000 of this sum was spent in ' the city of Vienna alons in lager beer. Such, however, is not the case. In the mountainous districts, particularly in the Tyrol, Transylvania, and in Croatia very lilttie wine is drun®, andâ€"though | Hungary produces a large and steadâ€"| ily increasing amount of wine, a very | large proportion of it is exported to other countries. Relatively, not much of it is kept for home consumption. | The Austroâ€"Hungarian Army costs $70,â€" | 000,000 a year, or less than oneâ€"third of | the cost of the liquors consumed in a year. The Russians expend $300000,â€" ‘ 000 a year in liquors and $150,000,000 a year, or half as much, for the mainâ€" tenance of the army. England expends $180,000,000. a year on beer, ale, wine; | porter, gim, rum, and smoky whiskey, | and $90,000,000 a year on the maintenâ€" | ance of the British Army. | i The Curlous tatistics Showing What Euroâ€" ; pean Naiions Pay for Them, _ The friends and advocates of " uniâ€" versal peace" and the foes of intemâ€" perance and inebriety are pretty genâ€" erally agreed that the expenses atâ€" tending war and war armaments and liquid beverages of an intoxicating or exhilarating kind are unduly large. There is an old proverb, it is not a Swiss proverb, of course, to the effect that a man who drinks more than he should " drinks like a Swiss," and it is for this reason, perhaps, and residents of the republic of Switzerland say for no better one, that the fame of residents of Switzerland for sobriety is not as farâ€"reaching as the fame of the Scotch, for instance, for frugality. A recent computation which has appeared shows that the annual exâ€" penditures of the Swiss for wine, beer, cider and brandy are 175,000,000 francs, six times as much as is spent on the army. Germany expends, or, more proâ€" perly, individual Germans expend, $500,000,000 a year on liquid refreshâ€" ments, distilled or fermentedâ€"chiefly beer and Rhine wineâ€"and $120,000,000 a year on the German Army. France expends in a year $500,000.000 on drink, chiefly wine, and $140,000,000. a year on the maintenance of the army of the republic. The Italians expend $250,000,â€" 000 a year for liquors, wines and corâ€" dials and $55,000,000 for the Italian Arâ€" my, the expenditures being in about the same ratio as in other nations. kindergarten who took a trip to the Pacific coast last summer. He maniâ€" fested the greatest interest in the places they had visited, and wanted to know about all the things that they had seen that differed from his own experience and surroundings. Among other things, they told him that they bad travelled 8,000 miles since he had seen them last. s _ ‘"Well," Tom ohserved calmly,"when I am a young man. 20 years of age, I will travel 9.000 miles." WILLING TO TAKE CHANCES ADDS INSULT TO INJURY AN EXCESSIVE RATE TROOPS AND DRINK. of tor TORONTO he |of that month. Hs wheat costs him or | over $5,000 per day, of which $2,500 reâ€" ch | presents storage charges and $1,250 is x. |the cost of daily insurance. The inâ€" r, | terest on $12,000,000 is $600,000 per year cs, | at four per cont. or over $1,300 per day, he ‘a.nd it is not belisved that Mr. Leiter o. | got the mouney he neeced for less than 4, | that, for bainkers do not lend money hâ€" on wheat at as low a rate as on some ly |other security, . 00 A TRALN 150 MILES LONG. ‘S‘: If all this vast qauantity of wheat ; .coulul be loaded on one train the train ï¬e | would reach a distance of nearly 150 p,. | miles. 12,000,000 bushels of wheat would râ€" | fill 20,000 cars, at the rate of 600 bushâ€" -l'£ els to the car, which is the average ** learload. Each car is thirtyâ€"four fset i. | in length, and this would represent, nâ€" | provided each car was placed end to )Gl; end, a distance of 680,000 feet, or pracâ€" {F;e | tically 136 miles. As there is a disâ€" nâ€" ‘ tance of awhout â€"two and a half feet beâ€" 9t \tween the cars when coupled this .‘:-‘ Iwould lengthen this enormous wheat i]e‘ train to tem mikes more, or 146 miles in | in all. ,i? But of courcs one locomntiva could S4 ; mot haul & train of 20,000 cars. An ayâ€" dâ€" | s 7 s py | erage freight train consists of about to twentyâ€"five cars, so that out of this ch [Leiter train could be made 800 trains ’[;" Iof twentyâ€"five cars each, requiring £00 of | engines. E‘The distance between Chiâ€" a cago and New York is less than 1,000 %,â€" | miles, so that if the Leiter wheat were '2’_’ started from Chicago for the metroâ€" 4s pol‘s there would be a train on nearly e; fevery nmule of the track, As the railâ€" vy’ | roads never rum trains so close togethâ€" . |er as this, it would therefore be an 'ixmpossibiiity to send _ the _ grain is |from _ Chicago _ to _ the _ seaboard in ‘over ane _ line. If this vast g, | amount of wheat were to be transportâ€" y ed to the seaboawrd by watler it would ch â€"require 100 vessels of 3000 tons each ce | to carry it, the capacity of a boat of that size being about 125,000 bushels. This would constitute perhaps the mightiest fleet ever sent out from any port. And now fo ra little calculation aside from the purely sustaining qualities of all this breadt. The average loaf is eight inchrs in length. The Leiter wheat would make 900,000,000 loaves, reâ€" presoâ€"nting a length of 7.200,000,000 inâ€" ches .or 500,000,000 feet, which is over 118.655 miles, or mare than four times around the earth. This means that Leiter‘s wheat made into ordinary loaves of breai placed end to end, would reach around the earth four times and lap over. There are nearly 3,000,000 barrels of flour in the Leiter wheat, _ or 2,666,666, I( there are one million persons staryâ€" ing in Cuba, this Leiter wheat would feed them all for three years, and if starving peophe got such bread as the Leiter wheat would make they would be well satistied. There is practically mo limit to the possobilitics of this great amount of wheat. Russia‘s army is estimated at 2,500,000 men. â€" Suppose the Russian War Department should buy all this wheat and put the army on rations of two and oneâ€"haif loaves of bread per day. The army could be fed for more than a year. FOUR TIMES AROUND THE EARTH. ist he coulid ieed every lmng;rdy man, woman and child in the United States until the cold weather was over and the warm wrather of the spring set in. We could succor the starving in India for months and yet have enough wheat left to make him more than once or twice a millionaire. He could 4n a to be mors acourate. If the barrels were phaced end to end, their length being estimated at three feet each they would reach from Chicago to New York and back again in a double line, If the United States should go to war with Spain and should send 100,000 men to fight the Spaniards, including the army and navy, Leiter could feed this force a year and never feel it, for he would use about 3,000,000 loaves out of his 900,000,000 or 2,400,000 pounds of his 720,000,000. It would mean only 400,â€" 000 bushels of wheat, and he buys and sells more than that every day. _If Leiter chose to be a philanthropâ€" sent _ 720,000,000 pounds, or _ 900,â€" 000,.000 loaves of bread, sufficient to give each man, woman and child in _ the United States ton loaves each with 180,000 loaves leit over for those who happened to be unusually hungry. This Leiter wheat coulbd feed the popâ€" ulation of Gr:ater New York for a year, provided the people were willing to subâ€" sist on nothing but bread. This uranu that every man, woman and ‘whild in Greater New York could have almost two and a bhalf loaves every day for 355 days, and in time of stress, such as a famine this would sustain life. And think of the bread? There are sixty pourds to a businel of wheat, and from a bushel can be made seventyâ€" five loaves of bread. Therefore, Leitâ€" er‘s 12,000,000 bushels of wheat repreâ€" If young Joseph Le‘ter, the l:ing of the Chicago wheat pit, should take it into his head to become a philanthropâ€" ist instead of a mere multiâ€"millionaire, what untold possibilitis lis buried in his 12,000,000 bushels of wheat! Twelve million buskhels! It doesn‘t mean very much in cold type, does it? But with the aid of a few mathematical calculaâ€" tions we shall attempt to show some figures which will rather startle you. In the first placa, you must know that Josoph Leiter ho‘ds more wheat than any man ever held before. He bhas in store in Chicago, Minncapolis and Dulâ€" uth about 12,000,000 bush=!s, worth $12,â€" oog’ow or nearly that figure, and yet i‘ï¬;‘;‘;:."“v' T9 We ie n t ate . â€" We pervevene t t this vast amount do:s not represent| God sometimes washes the eyes of his all of his bholdings, for he has from ‘children with tears that they may read 8,000,000 to 5,000,000 bushels of May |aright his providence and his commandâ€" wheat purchaosed which will not be deâ€"| M€RtSâ€"T.â€" L Cl:yler. f 4 livered to him until the latter part| . Vberever souls are being tried and It Would Fill a Train 150 Miles Long, and Would Make 909,0099,000 Loaves of BHread. THE CHICAGO MILLIONAIRE OWNS 12,000,000 BUSHELS. ABOUT LEBITER‘$ WHEAT 900,000,000 LOAVES OF BREAD uow up through the use of South Amâ€"| erican Nervine give their opinions on‘ this subject. John Boyer, banker, of Eincardine, Ont., had made himself a hopeless invalld thrsugh years of overâ€" | work. _ At least he felt his case was‘ hopeless, for the best physicians had ; failed to do him good,. He tried Nor-‘ vine, and these are his words : " [ gladâ€" Iy say It: Nervine cured me and 1‘ am toâ€"day as strong and well as ever,."| Samuel Elya, of Meaford, was cursd of : neuralgla of the stomach and bowels | hy three bottles of this medicine. Jas.‘ Sherwood, of Windsor, at 170 years of age, suffered from an attack of paralyâ€" sis. â€" His life, at that age, was despairâ€" el of. But four bottlies of Nerrinei gave him back bis naturel strength . A! victim of indigestion, W. F‘. Bolger, of Renfrew, saysa :; " Nervine cured me of my suffering, which seemed incurâ€" able, and had baffied all forn®> meâ€" thods and efforts." Poter lsson, of | Paisley, lost flesh and rarely nad ;' good night‘s sleep, because 0‘ stomach trouble. _ He says : " Nervine stopped the agonizing pains in my stomach the : first day I used it. I have now taken ‘ two bottles and I feel entirely relleved | and can sleep like a top." aA repre-' sentative farmer, of Western Ontario, | is Mr. C. J. Curtie, residing near Windâ€" sor. His health was seemingly comâ€" pletely destroyed through !a grippe. : No medicine did him any good. . "Ta three bottles of Nervine," h srys, * | ntflbuso my restoration to health and ; Remember you have not a sins whose law of strength is not acti not a faculty of body, mind or soui whose law of improvement is not enâ€" ergy.â€"E. B. Hall. 1 If it is tho case that ke who makes two blaues of grass grow where only one had grown before is a benefactor of the race, what is the position to be accorded that man who by his knowâ€" ledge of the laws of life and health sives energy and strength where lanâ€" guor, weakness and anticipation of an early death had before prevailed? Js not he also a public benefactor? Let those who have been down and are am tn.daw eas,,, 4 ___â€"â€"*_ PClL ji0n, _ Bout) American Nervine is base@ ter, and am toâ€"day restored completely |on a scientilic principle that makes s&o my usual health." A resident of|a cure a cortainty, no matter how desâ€" m&num?roflleu.uthomnmthouumbo. It @rikes of 8. Jones, of Susser, N.B., says : "Fur | at the norve eenters from which fows twelve years I was a martyr to indiâ€" the lifo biâ€"ed of the whole system. T6 westieon, constipetion and headache. hm.u‘iï¬.ummfl The treatment of several physicians | is complete and comprehensive in ts did not help me. I havye taken a few ‘anplication . Wor sals by McFarlhne & B strength .‘ Neither man or woman can enjoy life when troubled with lver complaint . This was the sentiment and feeling of W. J. Hill, the wellâ€" known bailiff of Bracebridge. "I was so bad," says he, " that one of my medical attendants saii that I was A GRAUND COUNTRY. A travelling American made a visit to Greyfriars churchyard at Ediaâ€" burgh. The sexton was a man of Abâ€" erdeenshire, and his bheart was in the Highlands, plainly. ‘The visitor had been at Greyfriars before, and said to the sexton, is the old man pocketed bis fee: 1 have seen your High‘lands since I was here last. Oh! said he, with inimitable Highland inflection, and had ye never bene there before? No, I have never been in Scotland beâ€" fore. I live in America. Oh! "lis a graund country that, America? It is, indeed ! The old man looked up in utâ€" ter surprise. Nay, nay, he said, impaâ€" tiently the Hielands! A graund counâ€" try 1 of NeFvine I oo-;;l_e:l -t; ter, and am toâ€"day restored « of 8. Jones, of Wherever souls are being tried and ripened, in whatever commonplace and homely ways, there God is hewing out the pillars for his temple.â€"Phillips Brooks. The Samo Verdict Comos From Old and Young, Male and Femala Rich and Poor. and From All Corners of the Dominiear. Most peoplie‘ would succeed in small things if they were not troubled by great ambitions.â€"Long{elJow. CHEY GOUXT BY 1HE 60R I tmgy Hiopmi af Riaih It fppicaton Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have Pronounced the Cases Beyond Cure, This Great Discovery Has Provon a Genuine Elixir of Life. The joy of meeting pays the pangs of abscuce; else who could bear it tâ€" Rowe. All affectation is the vain and ridiâ€" rulous attempt of poverty to appear rich.â€"Lavater. wOL OL UAAMIGAM CCC NC EC ds ar o he will do nothing but soll the wheat when he gets his price, and pocket his lot of thimgs, but this probabilities are Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who Have Been Cured of Dire Diseise By South American Nervine. .Agr*_e_ab!g_ad'vicefin: seldom useful adâ€" , but. r GRAINs OF GOLD. | A shrewd observer of human neture has said : "The hand that rocks the cradle moves the world." BHow im» ‘portant it is, then, that healts and {strength should be madle the lot of the mothers of this country. The woâ€" ‘men of Canada are ready by seores to ‘tell of the benefits that have OAme to ‘them through the use of Houth 4meri« can Nervine. Mrs. R. Armstrong, of |Orillia, wife of the colporteur, of the ‘Bible Society of that town, suffered for six years from nervous prostration Medical assistance did not help. "In all," she says, " I have taken six bottles _of Nervine, and can truthfully say this is the one medicine that has effected ‘o, oure in my case." Mrs. Jobhn Din= 'woody has been for 40 yoars a rAsident of Fiesherton, and has reached the ai» ’lollod threeâ€"score years and ten. Thre® years ago her system sustained â€" sove» gem shock through the death of a daughter. . Nervine was recommen ied Bhe perseveringly took 18 bot"les of medicine, with the result that she is toâ€" day again strong and bheerty. _ $iun= ;drodl of women suffer from impoy ‘rish« ‘ed blood and weakened nerves. * All vitality," says Mrs. J. baellis, of Brampton, " gecemed to have forsaken my system. I was unable to get re» lief from any source until L commenced | taking Bouth Amerioan Nervinc, . ‘The results are most satiafactoryâ€"greater lfl.l‘ than I could heve boped feor." It came within the way of Mrs. It. Ftap» {leton, of Wingham, to trea under the best physicisns, both in Ceanmada and England, for heart disease and nervâ€" ou: gcbtljt_y, but she fatled to get ADy bottles of Nervine, and can truthfully say that I am a new man." P CmmE THe "OF petmit of further additions to these earnest words of tesimony from those who know just whas they are tatking about. In the common languars of the day, they have been there, and are speaking from the heart. _ The dozen or more witnesses that here speuk nave their counterparts by the hundreds, mot only in the province of Ontarie, but in every other section of the Dominâ€" t( 0 css cop ces s relief must say I 4 not done so I THE GREY REVEV LIOENSED AUCTIONEER for Oo. of Groy. All communications adâ€" dressed to Laxrasa P. 0. will be promptiy aritended to. Residence Lot If. Con. 8, Township of Bentinek. Ageneral Banking business transacted Drafts sued ane collections made on all points. Depos ts received and interest allowed at current dterest allowed on savings bank depos.ts ol $1.00 tyd upwards. Promptattention and every facilâ€" enafforded cuctomers liying at a distunce . AGF.NTS in all principal points is Oniario, Quebec, Manitoba United States and Encland. DURHAM &£AGENCY. 2. m. to 4 p. m. S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thomas a Lander, Registrar. John A. Munro, Deputyâ€"Registrar,. Office hours from 10 DAN. W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. Reid, President. Manager CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000.000 ** Paid up 1,000,0086 RESERVE FUND 600,000 TERMS; $ per year, IN ADVANCR CHAS. RAMAAGE Zditor & Proprietrn StaadardBank of Canada REFIEW OFTICB, GARAFRAXA Newspaper Thursday Mcorning. Herad Office., Toronto. SAVINGS BANK IS PUBLISHED BVERT was advised," she sayse American Nervine, _ Go believe that it 1 > I would not be aliva McLEAN. J KELLY, Agers. DAN. MeLEAM. be alive toâ€" valuable to Ros. He Relates Event: Years We Su ly from Collay in Allend.lmj and Enjoys t A SUCCE Throughout © irn boundary o lis Ocean, there ly known in te iy known in Lemper d lsiic work than that of Dunnett. Mr. Dunne«4 Grapd ViseCouncilor Qusbec in the Royal I popular is he among the order that in Mot Royal Temp‘lar couns nelt Counci‘‘" in his | than temn yoars Mr. 1 going from place to p good work, somelimeâ€" dent ministers, somet a series of gospel tem; independently, but _ for the good of his 1« Smith‘s Falis a few m« pnection with his worl to the Record office with the editor. Duaci tion the Record sont that his duties eniar amovnt of hard wor‘k nott assented, burt a present physical cond ual to any amount oi it wus not always so, ae gave the writer t tle personal |iâ€"tory, to make it public. He ‘nst thirteen years h« y troubled with a ja@ of his heart, from w hi to get any reliel. Al duli, heavy pain, at « mevere. (Utentimes i unfit for his enyagwen times it made it diffi Lrouble was aways vi lic and frequentiy | service he wowld give had to be called in to occurred io him in 1 church, Toronto, the Woodstock, N.B.; tho 1 Carleton Plase, Ont. | sion while preaching 2,500 people in the Congregational! charcl From the Smith‘s 1 i Famous Bocter Generalarzt Dr. & collection of "Hin which are founded, states, upon his pro fons for many yea teeth. stomach, lung of the devotees of and foremost rule i before breakfast, n the stomach is emj the worst possible Never smoke durin groat physical en running. cycliing. or rowing, and es test. Never follow of the French and allowing the smoki from Lb the yipe Keep the smoke Sb\ L k. ARG \i‘/ l HINTS FOR the eyes and n' th bettor : during work ; never in s 10¢ Veli D