Hand:maglo Waggons In the old stand. made shoes. Horse Shoeing Shop, ALLAN McFARLANE building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 80, con. 3, W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjomâ€" Ing Town plot Durham. In the Townrn of Durham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwoll!ng’ and many eligible Has opened out a firstâ€"class FOR BALB _ The EDGE PROPRRTY TBSUBR of Marriage Licanses. Aue. houser for Cogntios of Bmeq and Grey. Residenceâ€"King St., Hanover, SLbd it roasen Jebbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MeFARLANE, ce mLoan arnd Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &0. Boass ll’l’llfl:}’ without delay., Collections promptly madle, Insorance effected. MeNEKEY to Loan atlowost rates of Interest Â¥"17® ore door sorth of 8. Heot‘s Store Durbara JAMES LOCKIE, J. P. TELFORD, yuestce souciton on soraaat chhar N@tarRy Pospic, Commissioner BUSINESY DIRECTORY WOODWORK Firstâ€"Class Hearse. 'Conny of Qroy 737 1â€"-w'“""' hivtcighieg County of @Joy. Saies attandod to promp MONEY To LoaNX Fire Insurance secured, OFFICE, oven Oxrant‘s Stome. Lower Town, We We ces cpas 020 ICOEXSED avcrtons ER UNDERTAKTN@ Promptly attended to JAKE KRESS. Of ther Best Qua THAX PV IB still to be foqlgd in bii Old Btand opposite the Darham Bakery, HUCH McKAYy. , _ 8. l asubscriber orders his paper to b« stopped at a sertainiime, and the publishe/ eontinues to send, the subscriber is boun« Io pay for it if he takes it out sf the pos‘ effice. This procesds upoun he grouni hat a mes must pay for what he uses. in connection. A fAirstâ€"class lot of MISCELLANEOUS. Rastora snd suls n:r:-f &. .3’& 1. M any persor h‘..‘n bhe must | poblisher may con mestis made, and gflhar it be take ere orn3 be pole for sale cheap. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Rdge Hill, Ont â€" L. McKENZIE, JAKE KRESSY Furniture tie . taken for wirt DUREH A M LEGA L C aTke * All handâ€" Also Cheapor ,C16., Sarcastic Traveling Manâ€"Bell Foy less it sees correspaonding rewards for do‘ng so. The gquality; of a large mass of farm butter would be rery muoh imâ€" proved if some way could be devised whereby every pound that is made were sold upon its actual merits, the good butterâ€"maker receiring a good m oi To en He ipally engaged in selling goods. He must hold bis trade and he purchases farin butter as a mere incident to his business. He does not, and dare not, conduct this branch of it on its merâ€" ts. He is gla enough to buy good farm butter if it comes to the store, and be will set it aside for his own use or for the use of good customers, but when the maker of poor butter brings in a batch, he is afraid to reâ€" fuse it or to pay less for it than he did for the good butter. He knows that he would lose the trade of the maker if he did. One farmer‘s wife will make good butter, but what inâ€". ducement has she to try to do still better when her neighbor, who makes poor butter, gets as much a pound for it as she does, or what motive has the maker of the poor butter to make it | better when she gets just as much for it as is paid for the better butter made in the nsighhorhoo4 ? Humar naâ€" ture is so constituted that the docâ€" trine of rewards and punishment cuts a Largo t}_gur_a with it. On the average UOn= of the problems of particular importance to the dairy interests is | that of improving the quality of butâ€" ter made on a great many farms. Large quantities are made in this way and a |great portion of it is of quite inferior quality. It is not remunerative to those who produce it, and it adversely affects the general market for good outter, because it is transformed intol "ladles" and ‘‘prosess butter," which enter into competition with genuinel butter, with much the same results | as follow olecoâ€"margarine competition. A good deal of the butter that is made might just as well, from the standpoint ol the maker, of the industry, and of the consumer, not be made at all, since it does not pay any of them. If this butter could be improved in quality it would add largely to the value of’ the dairy product of the country and | would help its makers to earn a livâ€" | ing.. Perhaps the most serious obstacle |6 to improving the lower grade of dairy | ulter is the facl that the butter in |! rural districts that is made on the ; ‘arm is so largeiy sold at groceries (1 and general stores. The buyer is prinâ€"| cipally engaged in selling goods. He’ must hold bis trade and he purchases | ‘culing stones. ‘The remainder of the ground can be thrown in with the turning plow. Set the beam as far to the "land" side as necessary to tk?ep the horse clear of the ditch. Use ona horse and with an assistant to manage the norse, the ditch can be fillâ€" ’esl very rapidly. After the filling is all in, harrow it thoroughly to leval it. There may be sitnations where the diâ€" rections cannot be applied. Sometimes the land is too swampy to take a team in with safety. Unless it is known to be solid enough, it is not wise to risk the team. Horses have been badly inâ€" jured, even to breaking their limbs, | by being driven into such places. Work . can be saved by having the ditch ready | for the tile before they are hauled. / They can then be unloaded just where | they are wanted, without any extra ‘ handling. When Niling is done at a | time when there is danger of freezing, | the ditch should not be tinished any | faster than the tile are lald, as the / freezing will cause the sides to crum» | We and dfon in sunbime" mekus. in o d falling stones. The remainder of ground can be thrown in with burning_plow. Set the beam as in front of anpther. For large tile it must of course be wider. beginning at the top, as the sides are always more or less slanting. After the lottom has been properly graded, and the tile laid, & little ground should be thrown in ; fngggh to cover and protect them from irsibntinls ctvadtyativniitintiil,trictiies" Tss ui. AilBel dins roto than necessary. The extra width is all waste labor. For small tile, the botâ€" tom need not be any wider than necesâ€" sary for a man to stand in, one foot e mee taa. . * SWELLED LRGS ES hB LIN IN HORSES. ’ ,B.AWNG LABOR IN TILING During the forced confinement of on | With the continued low prices of | Foung horses just being broken it is h4 | fari products, it becomes necessary tor‘"-ry common to find that several in ; | farmers to economize wherever posâ€" | the stable have their legs, the hind ones ’onz. i e The price of farm iabor has not.]eapeci.,n, "stocked," as it is termed is fallen in proportion to the price ot'by borsemen, that is to say, swollen farm products, bence the farmer is at | 404 round. At times they are hot and & disadvantage. It bhas a tendency, tender, while at other times they are 'I'i’, says a writer, to discourage him and |"Stocked," and there is no tenderâ€" », |Prevent bhim from making improveâ€" / N°Ss, the condition existing without ments, many of which would be very iflny apparent inconvenience to the aniâ€" ,, | Decessary und which he would very } mal. In such cases there is some specâ€" ".,gladjy m'a,le Put for existing circumâ€" | ulation about the cause at times, fOf t§ :t&nues. The improvement of the soil!the colts have ‘not been ‘overworked lj, 7 _ means of â€" properly placed tile | and they appear healtbhy, while some e l ;iraxns should be the last to be negâ€" of them have their legs in good condiâ€" acted. While it may not be advisable | tion. When it is remembered that there | C to go into debt as a rule, yet I have l_lre changes going on in the system,| beard men say that they have made ie.. colthood developing into adult money by going into debt for tile |life, dentition progressing, the temâ€" drains. One of the principal items of |POrary sucking teeth giving place to | | exvense in tiling is the cost of o;.en-!permo.nent ones, it can be easily unâ€"| ing the ditch. With a little thought | derstood that the system is liable to |, this can be reduced to a mmimum.’derangemen_t, and the digestive organs |â€" Ahou? oneâ€"half the hard labor usually ifa.t'e: most suscentible to such derangeâ€" done in laying tile is unnecessary; it can | ments when the dentai organs are imâ€" | 1 be done much cheaper by animal powâ€"|Plicated and the adjacent secretory | s er and machinery. Expensive machin~tgja';dfl- j’,‘ex;’coise being limited olx; *C : ery f ipgi j _ pended adds to the trouble, as the cfâ€" VO.Vlor the digging of trenches is be 'iete materials have to be eliminated | t | yond the reach of most farmers, but | from the system through those importâ€" !such machinery is not absolutely neâ€" ;laa'tteemu(xl)ct,ol.ies, the kidneys, so aptâ€" M cessary. A good ditching plow will not °* !@rmed by old pathologists the scavâ€" cost very much, and will save its cost ::ngg?rs of tl?e body. These organs beâ€" { ever . f c [ ng overtaxed fall also into deâ€"| t Â¥ year on any farm where any | rangement, and as a consequence we | D great amount of tiling is done. With | h&ffs t}xe " filled legs" termed "stockâ€" | n its use a farmer is likely to put in :fl L}?}:{ul attention to dietary al.ild CC j 3 1e exhibition of salines occasionally, more ® f ’;‘xor;, tile «ban without. The work 15? will prevent such trouble in most cases, d ade so much easier that he does aot ‘and can be supplemented by handâ€"rubâ€"| ldrea.;l it, an1i so rmuch more can be;:’LBK'OI tlt}e' extremities morning and ‘ci:] done in the sams time. A common FY°D‘"8, followed by bandaging. In | ‘t“ming plow should. I:le used first, and | l“andngm‘g. care is needed that the | W & couple of furrows turned to a good | L,a“duï¬â€™e is not too tight and that broad | 4 depth. Then follow in the same furâ€" !:dim be used always, never string so | row with a ditching plow, using an exâ€" tgat the N‘?Od vessels are pressed Of | op tra long doubletree, which will perâ€" ""* CirCulation through them interferâ€" Y mit the horses to walk clear of the ed' ‘Y.'th' for when this is done, the gr furrow, one on each side. Having loosâ€" swelling ncreases considerably. Modâ€" in ened it up, the lakor of throwing it ©"34t8 exercise must be given, and in an out is reduced oneâ€"half or more. After :’ dry, sheltered yard, for exposure is | me the loose ground has been thrown out, | "*2 .The system being excited, a chill the ditching plow can ke again used.| 8 °88y brought about. As to salines | ! The ditch should mot be duz any wider #2.9040¢e of the byposulphate of soda | wa IMPROVING paIRY BUTTER SAVING LABOR IN TILING. F With the continued low prices of farin products, it becomes necessary for farmers to economize whererer posâ€" sible. ‘The price of farm iabor has not fallen in proportion to the price of farm products, bence the farmer is at & disadvantage. It bas a tendency, PRACTICAL FARMING. 1 should not be finished any 1an the tile are laid, as the will cause the sides to crumâ€" drop in, causing extra work. quality | _ These were studied out 1 value of | Parker shortly before the The British army ponent parts, in t which 952. machines well as various nr not reauire marhin ;' SIBERIANX EXPLORERS., [ Russia is beginning to honor her Siâ€" berian explorers. A statue is to be erâ€" ected at Chabarowsk, on the Amur, of Deshnew, the Cossack, who went by sea in 1648 from the river Kolyma to the river Anadyr, thus sai‘ling through Behring Strait for the first time, and proving that Asia was separated from America. It is proposed. moreover, to cbhange the name of the Fast Cape into Cape Deshnew, which wili pro! ably be Ohkted to hy FANFTATLa«s 10. To prayers her. * mands. 6. To promote her piety. 7. To bear her burdens. ®&. To overlook her foibles. 9. To save. cherish and fava wedding. They took the form of 1( beautiful resolutions. which he inscribâ€" ed in his journal. They are as follows: 1. Never, except for the best reasons, to oppose my wife‘s will. 2. To discharge all duties for her sake freely. 8. Never to scold. 4. Never to look cross at her. 5. Never to worry her with comâ€" | Old shoes coud ie bad at smaller cost were it not for competing carâ€" ’riage houses, tookbinders and picture frame makers, who press the pulp into | sheets and mold it avcording to their | use. Bookbinders use them in making the cheaper forms of leather bindings, and the new style of leather frames ’wit.h leather mats in them are entireâ€" ly made of the castâ€"off covering of the feet. and shoes are first soaked in several | waters to get the dirt out of them., Then the nails and threads are removed the leather ground up into a fine pulp, and it is ready to use. The emâ€" bossed leather paperings which have come into fashion Iate?f, and the stamnâ€" D 22800 GCariert papering come into fashion Iatc’.}g, Qg loathe; fire screans thing tuft thick paper . layer of this pressed le '1& fines the quality the getter it takes tha | Eon h 952 machines are e as various nrocesses require machinery. Y DW OinP MRP® tctaininiitio ies ic ds t3 d0 13118 M 2 4 cï¬ Â® 11 s | plicated, there is evidenca that there \ is more amiss than the amateur can handle. The doctor is needed, that the legs may assume their healthy, flat shape agaim, and, not remain filled or ;liahle to refill on the slightest cause. them ‘ed." Careful attention to dietary and the exhibition of salines occasionally, | will prevent such trouble in most cases, [and can be supplemented by handâ€"rubâ€" |bing of the extremities morning and ‘evening, followed by bandaging. In .bandnging. care is needed that the bandage is not too tight and that broad tape be used always, never string so. that the blood vessels are pressed or] the circulation through them interferâ€" ed with, for when this is done, the swelling increases considerably. Modâ€" erats exercise must be given, and in a dry, sheltered yard, for exposure isl bad. ‘The system being excited, a chill is easily brought ahout. As to salines &n ounce of the hyposulphate of soda twice a week in the drinking water is excellent as a preventive, but when the h‘gs are Sto«"kecl SRA all Panie se im j o save, cherish and forever defend To remember her abwavys in me» THE BRITISH A RMY EASTER RESOLUTIONS price, and the maker of grease, a grease by geographers. YOUR OLD sHors. stocked and all four are imâ€" y rifle has 82 comâ€" the production of ie forced confinement ot}%‘:g;'te:al%s globig ‘e‘l}]e ï¬aeLl:g Im; i: s just being broken it ia‘fI didn‘t liée Mmâ€,,“s e n to find that several if| "Itg pp use to feel of Int wrigt, doo: ve their legs, the hind 0048 | thuy » 521q Dat, Whon the.physician beâ€" stocked," as it is terfx‘ledffg:fnto feel his pulse; "the pain is not employed, as 8 “'hil‘h do alvays in my TORONTO by Theodore : day of his form of 10 {should acquire. e es t d o Reniel. _if you will take the pains to investiâ€" gate our domestic relations. sir, you will find that it is Mr. Henpeck who agreas with me in everything. ° To write a good Hand Lsâ€"nâ€" & j . n essential accomplishment 6 v Ahmll.ip .'u-nn;:l which every w oman Indeed ! answered that estimable "If you will take the pains to in gate our domestic relations. sir, will: find that it is Mr. Hannaâ€"t 1 am delighted, said the old who had called. to find that you with your husband in every thing Henpeck. olï¬ fenstls ds & i2 4 0 33 education arising from struction of the men. 22 C000 C220 OIUnO of the soldierly condurt au based urmon drill,but of the adiven en 40048‘ % ' 10 C T P TT it was proposed to raige to Canrobert several chiei culated subscription lisls rank and file with the id might like to give a mod the honor of the belaved was, however, found to h ut ns t acac d TS o T L Tthe: war o6 1870,> and one at least that he was a Hohenzollern. It seems incredil le, but the statement is recorded, that out of sixtyâ€"six men twentyâ€"two had never beard Bismarck‘s name, Analogous ignorance is found in othâ€" er armies and perbiaps it would be posâ€" sible to find para‘lels in our own. The Avenir Militaire says that examples of astounding ignorance are found from time to time in the French armw* U .. 110 _ . _ CV _‘Cesperor ‘0f "the Frenclt some that he was dead, others that he had retired and lived at Paris, some that he received a medal for his good conduct in the war of 1870, and one at least that he was a Hohenzollern. It: seanst inanramtipl> 00 T.i I Prassian Soldters Who Bismarek. and Fre Lnow of Canrobrrt, Stories have lately the German press of embodied who did necessary Lasis of e British Army and N GERMAN AND _ The garbage is collected every Monâ€" 'daly on the street in which the D.‘s live. One morning little Helen D. proâ€" posed discarding for good a rag doll, of which she had grow.n tired. I think Mamma," she satd, that I‘ll put it out for the garbage man â€" to carry off. He can take it to the garbare woman. and she can fi; little garbage children _A Good Character.â€"Can you give any evidence in regard to the character of the deceased ? said the Judge. Yes, my lord, replied the witness. He was a man without blame, beloved and reâ€" spected by all men, pure in all his thoughts, andâ€" Where did you learn that? I copied it from his tombstone, my lord. ( _ One day an Irishman was taking a walk in & small town near Glasgow when he met an old friend. After walking along the road together, Pat‘s friend said to him : Have you heard the latest â€" news ? Patâ€"No; what is it ? There‘s a penny off the loaf. Patâ€"Beâ€" dad, and I hope it is off the penny ones, Horrors of Musi;'.â€"-Why. yes, the boy was eternally playing the violin about the house, and in selfâ€"defens> had to hire teachers, and let him deveiop himâ€" self into an artist or it would have been unendurable. That‘s what might be called making a virtuoso out of necesâ€" sity. Doctorâ€"â€"I wish you would tell those deaf mutes to stop talking; the noise disturbs me, Attendantâ€"W hy, how can they make a noise when they talk i with their {ingers ? Doctorâ€"Well, don‘t actions speak louder than words ? To Insure Safety.â€"Mistressâ€"So your cousin sszils for Ireland on Saturday ¢t You must let her take yourlghoto- graphs home to your mother. atyâ€" Indade, ma‘am, thim ships do be rollin‘. an‘ tossin‘ so. I think I‘d better slnd‘ me photygraphs by mail. SETTING HIM RIGHT 7 735 nrearâ€"verra nearâ€"daein‘ it; but the lassie had nae siller, so I said to mysel‘, Mac, be a mon. And I was a mon, and noo I pass her by wi‘ silent contempt. _ * euppose there are many problems which polar explorers seek to solv_eq" said the unscientific man. Yes, replied the intrepid traveller; a great many. What is the most important one t Getâ€" ting back. Mac, I hear ye have fallen in love wi‘ bonny Katie Stevens. Weel Sandy, Â¥ 5 iforntules it sinalic Rrdnatths itc td uicA might? Did you follow my advice and begin counting ? B.â€"Yes; {(I counted uUp to eighteen thousand. _ A.â€"And then you fell asleep? B._â€"No; then it was time to get up. r Briggsâ€"What did she say when she rejected you ? Griggs â€" She. said it wasn‘t necessarily due to lack of merit, but on account of the great pressure of other material. Ethelâ€"Have you noticed how Lord Slabsides drops his aspirates ? Peneâ€" lopeâ€"Oh, but that‘s nothing to the way he drops his rowelsâ€"papa says he has got more than a dozen of his I 0O U‘s. A.â€"Well, and how did you sleep last L " m ey n O en CATC COLER .l= SEV there, surrâ€"it‘s in my bid entoirely." "Sometimes," said Uncle Eben, "a man is like de bottom number ob a fraction. De bigger he tries ter be. de smaller what he stands foh really is." of Reggie Littlecton is such a conceited in the French army. When sed to raise a monument several chiefs of corps cirâ€" ription lists among â€"the v0~ of° rPrussians newly _ did not possess the _ _of education, says the and Navy Gazette. Beâ€" SPRING SMILES. FRENCH RECRUITs ho Had Never Meard of Frenchmen Who dD1at of t and discipl{nï¬ the intellectual the mi‘ltiary inâ€" been circulated 4 Prussians nev not possess + man _ to â€" carry to the garbage fix it up for the found in othâ€" would hbe posâ€" our own. The t examples of {found from old friend you agree bhing,. Mrs. to play with lad_y CC TETE WB UE O tres, and paralysis is goro ts tBs fAirst pojoâ€" man recog long ago. !=* discase or the human e in ,, @@22 [ . , "APr# them up for the day, or loneth.ln: that is getting at the seat of the dissas» and ts surely and vermanently restoring. The eyes of the world are literally 4xed on South American Nervine. They are not viewing 4t as a nineâ€"days‘ wonâ€" der, but critical and experi¢enced men have Ween studving this medicine for e@&ts, with the ons reeultâ€"they have found that its claim of perfect cureâ€" *Ive qualities cannot be wainaa‘d Dt e oriaing them or loneth.lnz that is seat of the diseas» an vermanently restoring in the matter of good health temporâ€" izing measures, while possibly suaceasâ€" ful for the moment, can never be lastâ€" ‘ng. Those in poor heaith soon know vhether the remedy they are using s simply a parsing incident in their exâ€" Nerimean â€"aasurl c T. 0C I In tha CHEN EVERT OTRER RELPM HAJ PALED it CUBIY i\ Discovery, Based eyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. Aro Fixed Upon South Amori can Nervine. You can tell very (‘*a.sily, 8 old gentieman, who hates t ed. It always breaks up in P OMCCRE Teioilabatimied Mamma, said the pre will I know when the h an end ? ' While Maggie ancd her mother were away on their vacation Mr. Newcomb took the opportunity to paint their woodâ€"colored house white, Don‘t you like it, Maggie ? asked her father on the little lady‘s return. I would papa, she replied slowly, ifâ€"if it wasn‘t so awfully pale, [E EYES OF THE WOR ’ g:o is pleased is sometimes a big bore, When your palm itches, it means money; you probably have somewhere a half dollar you have forgotten to spend. A real gentleman is a 15â€"yearâ€"old boy who will %ive to some plainâ€"looking woman in a street car his seat by his best girl. Fine feathers don‘t make fine birds;. the peacock has to roost in a barn, | Beware of the man who smiles he is angty ; the man who smiles he is pleased is sometimes a hi. T we 2o eoee Poe eescais that she sleeps almost on the floor. It is elevated scarcely more than a foot, as all who have visited, in old days, the private apartments of St. Cloud, Compiegne and the Tuileries, will remember. TT ® 6 ROYAL BEDS. ' ï¬ From a mere child the Duchess of . THE GRRY REYIEW Saxeâ€"Coburg has been most particular | , |about her beds, and when she first . BLISEZD BYERT came to England Her Royal Highness | 18 PU ¢ was much chaffed about this weakness by members of the royal family. Tho[ Thmday Moming. Queen, however, who is also most parâ€" l. ticularl about her beds, took her daughâ€" msicifdiznts terâ€"inâ€"law‘s part, and, although now / IEW OFTI the sheets are no longer sewn down to | REV 0 CB, GA.RA"R“‘ * | the mattress, they are composed of the | ST., |DURHARM. most exquisitely fine linen that ca.n" Sntvememoe. be produced, and stretched like a tight year, rope overbet.he most perfect mattresses | TERMS; $1 per + IN ADYaAxcrm that can be manufactured in Paris, in | CBAS. RAMAGE Editor & which capital the making of mattresses ‘ mm'“w. has been brought to a fine art. werimesteevermenrenratieatien o fileryperiyiirereirrormormiinroerss, Another royal lady who quite agrees | :hx th the Duc?ess of Saxeâ€"Coburg ;shto e fineness of her linen, ani the tightâ€" st Y d dB k f C d ness of drawing the sheets, is the exâ€" l afl ar an o a.na a gmpmss Eugenie. And Her Imperial| NNi C aaichidies ighness has an odd fancy to have her bed so low as to give a visitor to Head Oï¬ioe'roront"’ Ehe imperial chamber the impression smm 1e kua"s 7 c en . t & es .“:» h 7 5~.1\, k s mmï¬ in / __â€" Re . ; _ o 6 i C Cns ‘.'. Jfl‘»‘ ‘,1 \ 7 + » P /,7‘ “‘ ‘-'-~ > SoRE_ MB E. "’"" Es c“ H’» Â¥ + :mml\\‘i "*"ermenidh PÂ¥ic y 4 w d wvet As f 1 hs L 4 â€" 8 A_.Aé C A " e es s â€" _ ues i 1 $ cognized this prindiple * Everyone knows â€" that or injury affeet this part of n eystem and death is almost Injure the xlm ©ord. which edium of CGe Nerve aan_ DIDN‘T LOOK sTRONG RESENTFUT oDD NoTIONS very easily, snapped the hese nerve cenâ€" sure to follow. "~le _ The trouâ€" J, Based on Scientific Principles. Renders Failure Impossible. eala Ee *f, etty bride, how honeymoon is at who smiles when to be ignorâ€" n a cyclone, asked her | Farlana â€" uce Cu, STC TEoreerCus meuloal qualities, but they know bes yond all question that it does everys thing that is claimed for It. _ 1!t standa alone as the ome great certe‘n ow remedy of the nlueteanth century. .’ should anyone sufer distress a e n*sw while this ramedy is pr at their hands ? & ul _T 5, T7 owe Tnelr nrigin to a derangement of the nerve centres. . Thoussnds bear testimon that they have been cured of these troubles, even when they have bcoon;:’ so Aesperate as to batfme the skill the most eminent physicians, becausa BSouth Amertoan Nervine has tone to beadquarters and cured thene, The oyes of the world have not been disappointed in the Ingquiry into the 40 cess of South American Nervine. P ple marvel, it is true, at its m'mlor;:i marlinal acmarbaicl 200. I he when 7P Abdindiabdniiinetrdantibes s k â€" : | ___|al=! of Groy. All communioations ad» â€"if , dressed to Laxrasg P. 0. will be promptl altended to. Residence Lot 19, Con,. :{ Township of Bentinek. DAN. MeLEAN, L t S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. | Thomu a Lander, Registrar. John A. Munro, Deputyâ€"Registrar. Office hours from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. DAN. McLEAN, â€" rlannnlowodpon savings bt.xn dfl&utts ol 8100 yd upwards. Prompt attention an ©very imoil» enafforded customers liying at a distance . W. F. Cowan, Geo. P. Reid, President. Managers Head Office, Toronto. OAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,008 a* Paid 13 1,000,008 RESERVE FUN 600,008 GENTS in all principal points is -l?:t.flo.Qnob“, Manitoba United Stateq DURHAM AGENCY SAVINGS BanNK. "Gemint Me the skill o% slolans, becausa ne has gone to there, I have not been iry into the sy0 Nervine, ’.:i t Its wondert they know bas J‘ KELLYX, Agens, that vo go by comparison. Tut generally noted for their ; "Jet us go ourselves, V wili be the safest test," a wer Meade, and his sugge eeilve? with acclamation. "Of sourse I am out of says ASy. C‘row»â€"Brereton, "How is it to be decide well manage to see all th cardidates, and the ber to go by comparison. T generally noted for thei is so refreshing, tha ous to prove it real It is only one more that is ali * man that present: guide to knowled "I‘ll take the b It Is Colone! D w} turn to him i: "Do you know h Brergton jealou«}y mobody lesides hi to claim macquaint terious lady who Mved so seciuded a "Noa. I hove never even E idaa of a woman who lMfe is not the subjug=tio Rvis. i d pony that *"Accor glaa a cl ossly . low !" dra "For m y ere, "I dis tersst the ; band The o! megstive Pantain Ver when 1 "She m ime." obs Meade. "And th wll they o« out of the i kon, doleful a member « ing leisure and enjoyin tor all _"And ried ap respec en a and l‘ was e Hinues idea of such an story all crede: most curious we tion Gervase D truth of the re; "She mo y tims« Tromotion in swift, and, af relired, and 3 MHe (Wiuts eame inuo year he r« that wenl {ouuc. Ti img of the and bhomag sides alike of the ind cavalry cor ant into a very fasci. one of i» where a!! most of | i. ative Dow w pjr it da Cor #d and dis{ eyes are c will flash i Arly swee; , & His fag un He 4: £o aim But 1 and cop, weceived the spea} '“w ABu bimself i on BME Graver, : wnce, it s what she ; l'iï¬cing he 6of her chi n €a n #man €ll wer 1@UP Ds made a ber ool. dr O male 4 takes thi, Bistalke © hoy te en C); BB the . Inveter the ember ; Iy knov dr Prody quie: for +; #entlerg Address #hine » 6N 8 h6 b '."‘“’lllt ®FF no oi Ti t} h D (y «i Q T he H 14 (f * are s3 eu®n of 1 in he Iy H 6A t he 6 XJ ven m If of dy J H TD c dis the M on Ne 8t