MeFaddenâ€"Williamsâ€"That W.J. Moâ€" Fadden be paid §1 for repair of culvert at lot 56, con. 38, E. G. R., also Geo. Ryan $1 for repair of cuivert at lob 10, cou. 1, S$, D, R. Carried. Williamsâ€"MeMillaoaâ€"That Geo. Twamâ€" ley be paid the sum of $2.50 tor repairing culvrert on lot 12, con. 3, E.G.R. Carried. Firthâ€"MeMillanâ€"That Chas, Ramage be paid §8 for printing and advertising. Carried. Williamsâ€"Firthâ€"That C, W. Rutledge be paid $16.90 for printing and advertisâ€" ing. Catried. Firthâ€"MceMi!lanâ€"That Sam be paid $5 for buildingz culvert cou. 11. Carried. Fiithâ€"MeMillaaâ€"That Colin MeArthur be paid $4 for culvert at lot 6, con, 10. Carried. MeceFaddenâ€"Firthâ€"That the clerk l'ol paid $25 on salary. Carried, Meraddenâ€"tirthâ€"ibat be paid $10 for coffin for Aun MeMillan. â€" Carried. Fiuth â€"Williamsâ€" McMillan be paid | Board and other nee Firthâ€"MeMi be now read a and engrossed : 1898, be paid for as follows No 9, $4, John MeArth Arrowsmith, $4, and Peter Carried. Mrs. Aon McMillan The counzsil met April adjournment. _ All the the reeve in the chair, meeting read and confir tions read as follows: MceKenna and 26 oth conncil to open sideline 8. conu. 3. K. G. K. Fr I by Law ~No. 3, appointing first and 2nd Williamsâ€" O i0 &A ynâ€"hip â€"~That Mrs the sum essaries 1 ns ildrer arta YI rrie eni lin Wm. Watson the late Mrs. n un Mel paursuant ers presi 11 at lot 24, stitu rried W irca xt n in neariy every neighborhood in the ) province, the influence of which can \ never be correctly estimated. To give | some idea of this influence, I quote the ;following from reports sent in by exâ€" | perimenters : R ‘+ P get much benefit from my experiâ€" Over twentyâ€"eight hundred Ontario farmers have received material and inâ€" struciions for conducting tests upon {their own farms during the present | season. These include young men who I have attended the Agricultural College, lsu(-ccssful and painstaking farmers who \have experimented previously, and iothers who are undertaking the work | for the first time. About two thousand experimenters have conducted satisfactory experimenâ€" tal work within the past ten years. Of this number, over two hundred have furnished good reports for at least three different years and some for five, six, and even nine years. These little exâ€" periment stations form object lessons in nearly every neishborhond in tha 1 C€Oâ€"OPERATIVE AGRICULT t Ad resu reavye umned her & my experi RE The of the ON'IAR'U AMWUWGEI! ?Y m« 10 1t nda 3 8# Ir 1d oo Bs ooo T8 2e ie n e diang ie on us iâ€" _ "qecccscceccscecese | experiments, l cultural cro tenths of the The demand periments w corn and ma WA w fe This system of Coâ€"operative experiâ€" mental work in Agriculture, which centers at the Agricultural College and operates through the mediam of the Experimental Union, is being enlarged and improved from year to year,. A study of the fertility of the soil on different farms, and of the relative merits of promising varieties of agriâ€" cultural crops for different sections, are the main subjects under experiment on about twelye thousand plots this year. â€" There avre in all nineteen distinct experiments, which embrace the agriâ€" cultural crops grown on about nine ~ W e could still furnish a number of apâ€" plicants with a package of each of six leading varieties of corn, which forms a valuable test for farmers who are anxious to ascettain which varieties of corn are best adapted to the soil of their OWn g Who would prescribe only é)bi tonics and bitters for a weak, is puay child? Its muscles and % nerves are so thoroughly exâ€" M hausted that they cannot be % awhipped into activity, The M chiid needs food ; a bloodâ€" % making, nerveâ€"strengthening A and muscleâ€"building food. e A\ (ON S$DDBPPBODSSDOCpRrDPDSDPDOA of Codâ€"Liver Oil is all of this, and you still have a tonic in the hypophosphites of lime and soda to act with the food,. For thin and delicate children there is no remedy superior to it in the world, It means growth, strength, pilampness and comfort to them. Besure you get SCOTT*S Emuision, SHne en enc r uen . ormpeterngy Puny 5oc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto Mi s. Kell Marsh. cott‘s Emulsion $ ul M M i1 C1 LE\ » ith ( 1 s grown on about nine cultivated land of Ontario, has been greatest for exâ€" th oats, spring wheat, peas, pl U LV ises granted at th board. Dundalk h 1 M 11 11 drew dren ; U Allan I Hanoy W CENSE BOARD ZLAVITZ, Direc Walte: 11W Guelph TORONTO 1) rl vnlin 004. n wOO meedlun followi 10( w U Ni orth ntre. In ( worl 1OFPO, n Station 6« n sford Uy, NOPmMaAT lis tri 1rOIm f{ll»lt‘ two n On C The Mission of the Advertiser,. The advertisor bears the same relaâ€" tion to the business that a drummer or outside salesman does. He pleads its cause and offers its wares to an audience which it in no other way could reach. His work is to bring the people. The store must do the rest. The goods must be all he claims for them. Itis his busiâ€" ness to paint the truth as rosily as he can and to see that the customers are given honest value for their money. Once you have won the public confi dence, do not abuse it, for you will be the greatest loscr in the end. Remember there are other stores, just as good as yours, who sell at equally low prices. Your only advantageâ€"and it is yours if you take itâ€"is to have better adverâ€" tising than they. a This is a lesson the peoplaghould learn. Buccess in the various occupations in lifeo dopends upon their own endeavor and not upon any legislation congress may enact. When people learn to work and think more and discuss politics less, an era of prosperity will dawn upâ€" on this fair land that will surprise even the most cynical curbstone prophet.â€" Kansas City Times. Wind May Propel a Ship at Sea, but It Won‘t Make a Town Grow. Times nover boom so that a lazy man will prosper. An idler can inherit wealth, and it slips through his fingers until in a few years he is a ragged loafer,. No man or set of men can sit around on the stool of do nothing and make times better by theorizing on the financial question or discussing the rapid transit on which the country is going to the ‘"‘demnition bowwows." It is true there are certain times when the conditions are better for general prosperity than at others, but as a main proposition an individual‘s prosâ€" perity depends solely upon himself and a country‘s prosperity upon the indusâ€" try and frugality of its people. No legâ€" islation can alter this fact; neither can the enactment of any law make a proâ€" fessional loafer prosperous or keep an industrious, economical man from sucâ€" ceeding in life. hey 2ro wise, and sirmighniway business relations are begun between buyer and seller. _ If a man is in need of a pair of shoes, he does not travel the highways and byways gawking to the right and left for signs. He knows a surer and less laborious way of acquainting himâ€" self with the whereabouts of a reliable dealerâ€"he consults the newspaper. The English people have suffered from the landscape advertiser almost to the same extent as this country, but they have become so disgusted with his efâ€" forts that agitation has begun by the people and press to abolish boardings except in large cities and in town limâ€" its. In other words, they are striving to presorve the scenery of England from the hands of the advertiser. insomina, nervousness, and, a if not relieved, bilious fever or blood poisoning. Hood‘s P' I ls Pills stimulate the stomach, rouse the liver, cure headache, dizziness, conâ€" stipation, ete. 25 cents. Sold b all druggists. The only Pills to take with IiooJ:s Sarsaparillia ERamt NB 0 T0 CC Is caused by torpid liver, which prevents digesâ€" tion and permits food to ferment and putrify in the stomach. Then follow dizziness, headache, Hoods Biliousness Consorvative and careful advertisers have long realized that the shortest route to public notice is through the columns of the newspaper. â€" Judicious expendituro in this direction never fails to bring satisfactory returns. Thenewsâ€" paper is the universal dissominator of knowledge, and to it the public resorts for information on any and all maiters, whether it be the war in Korea or the price of eggs at the nearest store. The newspaper reaches the people, goes into the home, is recognized as one of the esâ€" sentials of the houschold. Tt is an everyâ€" 6 or I the log attract ten as small returns for money expended is that known as landscape advertising. It is an American institution, but does not call for an exhibition of national pride, as today thousands of miles of our beaunâ€" tiful country scenery are disfigured by the work of the secenic dauber, who reeâ€" ognizes no spot as too sacred for his reâ€" morseless brush. It is pleasant to con: sider that when a custom occasions unfavorable comment it has lost its efiiâ€" cacy, and the day is not far distant when landscape disfiguration as a means of advertising will have followed the town crier and the handbill into merâ€" ited oblivion. The concerns that have availed themâ€" selves of this method of calling attenâ€" tion to their wares have gradually had the conclusion forced upon them that results obtained did not justify the outâ€" lay, and this knowledge will do more than the protests of an outraged public to put a stop to the wholesale desecraâ€" tion of the landscape which has preâ€" vailed for many years. The Senseless Disfiguration of Our Scenery HMas Hecome Intolerable. A form of wdvertising which has many objectionable features and gives LANDSCAFPE ADVERTISING. n WORK, NOT TALK 11 n TH \the advertisor is to make ublic that he has certain s or commodities for sale barter, and the public w where it can most pply itself with the luxuâ€" ties of life. They both ms of the nowspaper if nd straightway business ouschold. Itis an cveryâ€" The paint daubed cliffs ing fences and brobdingâ€" ds are but incidents, and y unfold may startle and instant, but are forgotâ€" hey are nassod. l Food' wishes wherever v.\:"m;' 'x.n.u;;" be as | ong as you live. | ) â€"I remain, your true friend, | MRS, ANDREW sMITH. ; __Dear Kir,â€"I think it is my duty to write to you regarding my boy. Wel, my boy is about twentyâ€"one months old when I began to give him your System Renovator Improyed and your Protein Resurgam. I gave him the medicine for about five months. Then he was cured and woday I have as strong and as healthy and as good looking a boy as you would wish to see, now three years old, He was very troublesome from the time be was born, cried nearly all the time and and slept very little, and that never soundly, not until he had taken your medicine for a short time. He used to go into convulsions three or four times a day from the time he was five days old, and then his head began: to grow large, increasing in size all the time, until the medicine took effect, We sought medical aid from different doctors without any benefit (one only relieved him some). _ The size of the‘ head began to diminish gradually as he was getting cured of the dropsy and of the water in the head. No other mediâ€" cine was used but yours only, with the above mentioned results. I trust other mothers will benefit from my boy‘s cure, The bottle‘ of the Renovator which I took myself has done me a great deal of good. From my very heart and tlmt’- of a‘,‘gra_u;ful mgther you will have my‘ J. M. McLeod, Goderich : I certainly feel that I cannot say too much in ‘n':usv of your madicine, and shall do all I can to make known its value to others, Yours very sincerely, (Signed) _ REUBEN CLARK, Manufactu‘d on Honor & Sold on Merit I did so, with the result that when my boy had taken only half a bottle he wa‘s able to get on his Incycle and ride like any other boy around the block. GEXTLEMEX,â€"I hardly know how best to express my appreciation of your yaluablefrheumatic remedy, Phrenoline, Mmy son Gordon, who is 9 yea‘s old, has been a sufferer from inflammatory rheuâ€" matism for the past two years ; was so bad at times that be had to be carried about on a mattrass; was attended by two city doctors apparently without the slightest hbenefit ; spent 10 days at Caledonia Springs, came home with no marked _ improvement ; _ took _ three bottles of a Homeopathic remedy now being extensiyvely advertised, which did not relieve him in the least. I was beâ€" ginning to give up all hope of his recovâ€" ery, when by chance I mentioned the case to a friend who strongly advised me to gise Phrenoline a trial, ta The only firstâ€"class Hearse in rown Almost a MIRACLE Undertaking and Embaiming on latest crin ciples at reasonable r«tos Would intimate that she will continue the Furniture and Undertaking Business estabâ€" lished by her father in Durham in1858 and will endeavor to give all old and new custom ers the same entire satisfaction. Furniture of the Best Nake FURMTURE ANB UNOERTAKINC MISS SHMEWELL Only by H. PARKER, Durham OTTawA, Sept, 9th, 1896. To the Phrenoline Medicine Co,, Ltd, Oltarwa. Remember the standâ€"opposite the Market. Durham, ALWAYS ON HANXD. PICTURE FRAMINC A SPECIALTY AN IMPORTANT CURE MISS SHEWEL t â€"FULL LINE OFâ€" lflyt‘h, Sept, 22nd, 1896 REV, EDWARI] A WILSON, Brocklyn NewYork. W ds s 2CE SE EAmey SoVWe uo uiB fellow sufferers the means of cure, To those who desireit, he will cheerfully send (free of charge) a ecpy of the prescripton used, which they will find a sure cure for Consumption, Asthma, COaâ€" tarrh, Rronchitis,and all throat and lung MWad. ndies. He hopes all sufferers will try this remedy is}‘t unvaluable. Those desiringthe preseription sw batanln can d n m k ez L wluch will cost theim nothing blessing, will please address The undersigned kaving been restoredto healtn by simple means, after suffering for several years with »severelang affection,and that dread disense Conasnmption,is anxious to make known to his !lcllu w su‘fl'urer:!ltl:e means of cure, Tothose who Anufua$k Jos cebs 422 t ut NUZ . TO CONSIUIMPTIVES â€" isw * â€" (Aor Saule Among which are the following ; 1st & 2xp Drv. Lot 19 Con. 1 W. G, R. Bentinck, 100 acres, lately owned by Henry Hall and formerly known as the *"* Parker"farm. This is a good farm and will be sold on very reasonable terms. Tnxr® SCaANLAN FaRM, lot 30, con. 5, Bentinckâ€"100 acres. _ Will sell or rent. BexTrNoK: The Teasdale Farm Lot 30, Con. 2, W.G.R. Bentinck 100 acres, I bave just bought this from Mr. Teasdale and will sell at a great bargain. Hormaxp Towxsntr, Lewis Eydf farm 100 acres in good German settiement â€"will sell or exchange. _A good place. Tus Rommoven Prorerty, Durham. What I cant sell I will rent. 1 have $1,000,000 to lena at 5 per cent. Choose your time to pay it back. â€" Business private, charges modâ€" erate. I{Lâ€" JL. [{QDier The ]{anover:Gonveyancer, ARas 100 C a special notice in over 300 ne\:mpapcrs. MARION & MARION, Patent Experts, Temple Building,185 St. James St., Montrcal. The only firm of Graduate Engineers i: the Dominion transacting patent business exclusively, Mention thispaper. Workmanship Unsurpassed Fize Choice in Valises, Grips, Horse Blankets, &c., &c. W_?_:io the trade in Raw Furs. Highest Price Paid. 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