Y0“ get you: when you buy fomptly and prop. E) 00; in lO-kt. IMT. FOREST. md Iron Pip. .Brass Lined El any previous 5; the boot in bold attend our rcatalogue. ‘ Had, wann- yean. with ’m European. flit!) Quarries. pies front rank loss college: on Iy leading come Joy our gradu- NTARIO. y do our best to '3 in good posi- n more suceou- 'u of . D. CONNOR. 1 Kinds. fternoon. $2 upwatd. r. {val-rant“ . 10 00. s. tic-data.» WM RA NITE Orders tnkon and Noble. 0R PRINCIPAL 'alks lawman!!- t EAST.) you a little POSSIBLE "Hum-s, U short distance out of Knapp’s Hotel, Lambfuu Street. Lower Town, Durham. Ofï¬ce hnlm from 12 t0 2 O’CIOCk. “a od'pefâ€":Bl;.|o Madman within: specit'k dimmer“ n 9:. ppblbhed gm W m chavgeu ac. wrdingly '1 moment notacuâ€"“ Lou,†“ Found. H For Sale,"ac.â€"†cent} ‘0! 6m int-onion, a; cam- each subwquem Insertion. All advertimt! ordered Mm must be put? bf in advance. . Contract rates in :arly admins-cu: ï¬nished m. .ppiicatinn to (hi; 0 e. . . (I All 311ch news, go ensure min in canon. week. shouu 58 Rough! m no: lag than TUuaMs i". ians and Surgeons, Uuutio. Ofï¬ce buurs‘J m 12». m., 2m 4 p. In. Residence and ofï¬ce, Uld Baum buildings. Upper Tan, Uurham. Telephone No. IO. I. tice over McLachhu’u store. Oflico hours, 5 tn 10 a. m.. 2 to 4 p. In. and 7 «:9 p. m. Speciai attention given to diseases of women and children. Residence op- pusite Presbyterian Church. nmw mason! atom Tu Cnnnmcu: will 5 sent to an wascmflfl ddrug-{rsiofpoztagg “Dash†pg! _â€"-A _- -_ . _Am - -A "Ms. free of postage, for ’l.†pex . g o o o†83 "M- u ““8 ed“ '30.â€: p332}. 1h. daucow «:3: “on II 33221313“! opaper di .0 manned mm) all mean. â€.391, u the omion of the prop-inch Drs. Jamieson Macdonald. Mmmgmmm! 1’ FFICEâ€"FIRST DOOR EAST (H: the Durham Pharmacy, Caldor’a Bluck. Residenceâ€"Lambtou Street, near the Station. MUS" For transient advenmcnu 8 Car.» no line for the ï¬rst mm; 3 u. n- . “HS . . iine each subseqocm munionâ€" mm..." â€an", wagons] catd‘, no! exceeding one inch r annum. Advertisements without a c 13. ".00 r‘l‘ h nuk‘l- ‘1-" .I" (mm .l‘l‘ Phfl'fl’fl tit. THE JOB : : 1: cm plmly stocked with DEPARTHENT all N aw TYPE, thus at. {ording facilities {at tuning out Pitst.¢|.cc_ n t) humanity; Graduate of Royal Culleg e 0! Dental Sutgeom or Untario. Ruuunâ€"Calder Block, over Post Ofï¬ce. property D uï¬ice ovor'Gm-dou’u new Jewellery more, Luwel‘ Town. Durham. Any smount u: mnney to loan u 5 per cent. on tam Duiizin:;râ€"ez;vfllo;kv, [Juror ’l‘oï¬n. Dur- ham. Uullecuuu and Annoy promptjy atwudmi to. Search» made an the Roan- "? Oï¬ica. A RRISTER. NOTARY, CONVEY- aucer, Etc.. Etc. Money toLoau a} reasonable rates. and on terms to III“ borrower. Uflicc, McIntyre Block (Over the Bank). L‘ or, Conveyam-or,otc. Private money ‘0. loan. Uld account- awd .doth (:5 kmdn collected on coma-imam. l‘ll‘llli bo‘wht and sold. Mutual)†A301". etc. Uï¬lceâ€"MacKeuzio’s Uld ï¬uud. Lowe! TOWu. Durham, Uut. \‘OI‘ARY PUBLIC, COMMISSION. A or I'...nvnv-nmr all! PfiV‘m IIIODOY oer fur the County 0! Grey. Sales WW9“? attended to mad noun cashed. U 0m"! bachelor tor 1k County a! Dupe). Laud Vulcan-t m â€i th. 8nd D'V'ï¬ltm. Luurt M3“ at.“ gmlptiy attended toâ€"hm'hoot reference: “wished it required. J. G. Hutton, M. D., C. M. [uxmuu COLLEGE PHYSIC- DURHAM SCHOOL. :m‘uHCTwz >2: deQwCZ. 0â€"». FFIC‘E AND RESIDENCE A STAFF AND mmum'r. The 90'" I i t for h†Jain Lam! “d 24.?m.:h??.?.’§°:n, nude: the fallout-l out: of «mayo-tun WM†lot “In! W'- watt .0. Pickering, D.D.S., I..D.S. htflu‘ing mulomp should nut a! Ninth! 0" h. 01' an noâ€. 8"?! I. M». ARRIS'I‘ER, SOLICITOR, UNOR GRADUATE OF TORON- ARRISTER, SOLAICITQB, 1:10.. AMES BROWN. ISSUER 0F Marriage Licenses. Durham. Ont. Dr. T. B. Hoit, L. D. S. Min Lick. B A. Hunk. nu! Motion». Burma AND Pnornnz'ma. I'M. 01 on per lath. L Jonxm39 Medical Directorv . Arthur Sun, I. D. G. Lefroy IcOaul. Dental Directorv. w. 8. Davidson. Legal Directorv. A. H. Jackson. Miscellaneous. l. P. Telford. IS NILWD me think shoot her a lot more â€â€˜3" loving her did. I us always afrrâ€. at her ï¬nding me out and trying to «h to: me again. or getting at me by po‘ron- ed letters or som‘ething. So that i never stayed at any place long and was aiways drinking and gamb'i‘ s that I mightn’t think of her harm) face and malevolent, eyes. After handing Francesca’s hush-1nd a receipt in full for the sum he had won from him at play and a cheque to mee' his present needs. Dudley hurried from Paris that. same morning by the mail- train for England. He could not Drum; himself to fad-e the little mother }'-‘--‘. while her son's cold-blooded mu. 3::- remained unavenged, and he therefore sen Franceiwitheut seeing_ her. A... fl‘_\ “From the timé I léft her in Park I never saw her again until that 11‘s“! it: the_musicfhall when you intez'fn vd Then I met her to the park with that Other fellow, who you say was your brother. and. after that, with you at the regatta. The stght of her none: ves me and makes me m for weeks. I tel! you that woman has ruined roe-mired me! Her face haunts meâ€"I can’t get it out of my stght night or day. I see her figure in dark corners of the room Ind I ï¬ght with it for hours sometime:- -it 89mm to wrap itself around ind Cnd stifle meâ€"â€"†He broke 01!. and. burying his face in his hands on the table, burst. intc hystericaf and unmauiy tears. Shock- ed by the sight, Dudley did his best to reason with hém, but. time was precious. .‘J ‘ Jun-UV V-'_'â€"v Late in the afternoon of a still SepJ {ember day he stopped his cab on hil way from Caring Cross to Waterloo in order to purchase a revolver, which he placed in the breast-pocket of his over- coat. 7"- v. Fortune seemed all on his side. On the platiorm at Waterloo station a handsome foreignâ€"looking youth. hur- Wing out of a train which had just arrived from Hampton Court, ran against him, and at ï¬rst Dudley hardly recognized Joseph Welldon in this overcdressed perfumed little dandy. with an enormous ruse in his button- hole. and a gold watch-chain, which had formerly been the property of Vic- tor Revelsworth, adorning his waist- coat as laid his hand upon the lad’s coi- tar. At first Joe started and turned pale at the unexpected meeting. Then he speedily recovered himself. and tried to cary oi! matters with a high hand. “I’m not your servant,†he said in a thick voice. “I was Mrs. Revels- worth’s, and I shouldn’t mind being Francesca's, if she wasn’t going to marry you. But I won't be yours!†Dudley glanced at the station clock. “My train is due." he said “and, as I have a good deal to say to you, 'you must travel down in the same carriage as I. It you give me the least trouble, “I didn’t mean to steal it,†whim- pered Joe, cowed at once. “I only wanted to wear it at the theatre, like I‘ve sometimes done before. And you wouldn't treat me so uncivil if you knew how much I knowâ€"" ï¬liwill a£ onc'e hand you over to the police for stealing my brother’s watch- chain." ry. “That's just wha‘ you have got to tell me," observed limlley coolly, as he seized the boy again by the collar and lzalt flung him Into a ï¬rst-class com- partment. “I slm.‘ get the guard. who knows me, to lock this door; and I may tell you that I have a loaded re- volver in my overcoat pocket." 'v'haiever moral suasion Dudley em- ployed, certain it is that Joseph Well- don left the train at Kingston Station in a very different spirit. from the jaunty self-possessed deï¬ant mood he had exhibited on hour before. He looked pale and frightened. his leg) trembled under him. and he cast nerv- ous giant-es to right and left. as though he were afriad of being followed. “She’ll murder me it she knows I've rounded on her.†he whlmpered to Dud- lu. “I daren't go home. or she’d ï¬nd It out by looklnx at me. I told her I'd do It If she was to marry you; and she told me I’d better say my prayers and make my wlll ï¬rst. She sorter lnugh- cd: but I know she. menu It, and I :larcn't to balm"; ‘ ‘ A A..- "NAG; acorn'tully away from the ind. Dudhy walked -ln the booking om" and bought him a__a!qgl_e ticket IV v v.â€" 3}}: Londgn: _ Tynan he scribbled sn ad- dress sad s few words on his csrd sud hsnded It to Chg trightsned. joseph. A “Thet is Mr. Simpem'e private house in Buyewnter." he said. “Take this card to him. i Pve nixed him to keep you with him until i send for you. I may want you leter u e witness.†“A witness! Not mint her," Joe was beginning in terriï¬ed eccente, when Dudley cut h'm short by hurry- ing him along the pietiom and into in; him along the plauorm anu mu†the trail. I Muchâ€"very much-still remained to he done; but Dudley had learned a good ‘ deal by the confession he had wrung from Joseph Welldnn. and his plans needed revision in consequence. For forty-eight hours he had almost dis~ penned with rest and food. His eyes ate excitement and a ï¬erce determina- tion to unmask and punish the villainy “eh â€1‘1?!â€va his brother's- deuth. and he scarcely med†cagxahlhI d! feeling fatigue. Before seven o'clock he was standing in Kingston market-place. Revela- werth Heal! could be reached in n few an"; but it would he dinner. tine there. and to make even a pre- tence of heating brad with Francesca he felt would he itrpoesible. lie am an hc‘el and mechanical- Vlctor had Jour"-..yed thither for me ï¬rst tine in a ‘iztist hearted mood. and. standing on the bridge at the bend at §tl1e road. Victor hcvl jeated as to which 10! them should win “the beautiful icousin ancenrs." ' “And. coming twk,†he muttered to lair-self. “we mc‘ nor on the threshold "A hout what?" “About. the lady you're going to mar- the greet nun mm a crane upo’n mu lying lips. might be not be temmvd beyond control to draw nut the wvniw-r from 2 § 3 ihis pocket and lav her «jead at MS ff! t! i He hardly dare to look up as the door Ewes opened; but he experienced a fee!- lug of relief at the sound 0! Betty | Mannington’ 8 voice. ’ “Dudley! Back already! We d'd {not expect you Have you had any Winner? I am so gled I stayed at home Sand let Mr. O’Meara take Francesca on .the river instead or me!†' “She is out, than? Thank Heave'l!†3 “She is out: and we cannot ï¬nd we {iWel don anywhere; andâ€"Dudley! I What has happened?" “Nothing has happened yet, dear.†he said, drawing -her arm within his and the platform at Waterloo Station a leading her to the billiard-room. “But I good deal is going to happen. I have had my dinnerâ€"] want nothing of that sort. But now. before Francesca re- turns. you must take me up-stairs to Mrs. Harold’s room and you must ex- press no surprise at anything 1 mar say to her. Do you understand. duh ?" "3795;, “I have had no sleep for two nizr‘its, rnd I shall go to Ted very early. t want you, when you go to bed. to lo(:‘-: the door of your room as usual, and not to open it. whatever you may hear, pnzess I actually call you." “I will do as you wish; but [Jud I?" “Your face frightens me! Youâ€"you have found out somethingâ€"something dreadful, I can see. 0h. Dudley, ro-' memberâ€"-â€"she is a woman, and sheâ€"- lovcs you!" “I will remember," he said, “and I will show all shown." CHAPTER XXVIII. “Within three days’ time. by special license, I hope to make your daughtel Fratu'esca my wife." This was what In Lley had been so anxious to say t4 Mus. Harold before Francesca’s return ‘7‘ I u. 5“.- Betty Mannington regarded the hidI eous face, as it appeared to her, that she and Dudley Revelsworth were play- ing with repugnance and fear. That they two, Dudley and she, should aflecl to believe in this woman’s personation of Francesca’s dead mother, and that she, on her part, should imagine that they were deceived, and pile lie upon lie in her rhapsodies over her late but band, was most distressing to the straightforward young English girl and it pained her deeply to note how well-how far too well-â€"Dudley played his part in the ghastly comedy. "I cannot trust myself to speak abou‘ Francesca,†Dudley said to the old Italian woman. “I can only try to b: worthy of her." “You are admirable, charming in ev- ery way,†purrcd the old woman in re- turn; “but a marriage so soon after 01:: beloved Victor’s death is out of the qmstion. His mother would be shock. ed, and so should I " U“, ton-\- - nan-v "It will be quite a private affair,’ interrupted Dudley. “And Francesca and I have made up our minds. so you really must not oppose us. We both want a change of svene, and will take it together. To-night," he continued: rising as he spoke, “I very much tea.) that. I shall not see her. I look a do ploiahle object after so much traveling and after two sleepless nights I am so sleepy that I can scarcely keep my eye: Open, and must go to bed at once." “Poor hoyâ€"â€"-you must indeed be tired!" murmured Mrs. Harold, ï¬xing her keen gaze upon his pale haggard face. “And thirsty.†assented Dudley turning towards her with a pleasant smile. “I am going to petition you. Betty, for a jug of that iced water whivh Vernon condemns so strongly, to place by my bedside in the Ameri- can fashion. I feel as it I could drink up the sea!" 7 vâ€"v â€". “Not a {nusle of Mrs. Harold's face moved. Yet both Dudley and Betty fancied that they caught a sudden gleam in her sun‘ken eyes. She parted from the young man at- tecttonately. "‘ vâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"vvâ€"' _ ‘In three day s' time you win be my son " she said. yand gave him her clam my cold hand. 7 _ ï¬ngers. ' “Oh. Dudley, it was t" horrible!" Betty whispered, u soon as they found themsolves ‘ in _ the_ â€gage outside. A'U’L- _A --\ -u-‘r'v- ' "This is only the ï¬rst not)" he re- turned eerdontcnlly. “There In much worse to come. And now go down- stairs. deer. and make and send me up some of the strong-It and blackeet ol coaeeâ€"coflee that Wonk! keep the Seven Sleeper: wide unto!†‘But I thou;ht-â€"â€"-†“Ah, thet'e just whet you must not do! Good night. Betty!†:‘Ihwtuhtrett‘l'ays' time!†he returned. galiantly bending over tie hooked "wan" “‘7‘,“ â€"-uâ€"â€"' But. tired as Dudley had deciared himaetf to be. when ha nachod hit own room. ha mad!- no attempt to no to bed. Instead, luring tho cam" por- tion of the night. he paced rootleuly backward and forvr rda in his dinner. from his own room to that recently occupied by his brother._ The mystery of the shadowy hand beheld by Betty was: now partly clan! to him. for a close nxamlnation of tho wooden partition ill-tween the head oi Victor's bed and tlw haunted room ha. revealed to him th~ fact that a portion of the panelling was loose and had. ro- ccnily hoop out neatly «gt. If}! M “But I '11] not (In on! one tho trouble to unite a, hole in the will ll order to poison mm" lo I.“ to human with a loam-e atolls. u at elem o'clock ho oxtjnrdchod on It‘ll! no UVâ€. -""' Close toâ€"hid hmude be had placed a (mall table. upM which stood in I conspicuous posiflnn the Jug of iced water for which in had made tequesg a glass. at cundle. vd u box of matche. while under his pillow It] the loaded revolver. The woman: very duh. for. u- though the moon ahone brilligntly. the green blind and the henvy window mriains oflectivety shut out the light. L __-A AL- ' ‘||Iulllu vuvâ€" . More than once slight sounds thou! an house caused Dudley to (run the ro- voh'er; hm. ï¬t 1m not until utter thi hour of " 'd"ght had nounded tron the clock an “‘0 Idjtcent out)!" that anything bummed to rivet his utter t“ 'I. lie had purpOI-‘y left the door of hit man unlatchedx and more mun u Lour before he had hard Franco“ UM t.-é mercy she had a†of sign-me! retire to her room. which was next to his, titer hidding her foster-mrthM “Good night " Proternatnraliy wake ‘nt and alert, the sound which ï¬rst caught his ears afmr midnight was the stealthy opening of a door and flu withdrawal and Insertion of a key in av lock. He started up in bed to listen. Hr Imagined that the sound proceeded from Francesca’s room. Then then.- was silence, followed shortly by n 810‘ rustling, as of a nerson in a dress a stiff brocade movtay a‘ong the corridor His heart beat Md and fast. In his mind's eye he could already see the baletul ï¬gure which had so terriï¬ed Betty, the malignant “thing†that, glid lng in and out of old Margaret Revel. worth’s room, had left death behind n and whose claw-like hands, thrust through the panelling of the haunteq room, had brought death to his uni suspecting brother. Dudley's teeth wen: clenched. Mt hand was on his revolver. when “creakâ€â€"the sound “ame for which in had been waiting. and the “thing" we. in the room with him. "“iâ€"iwvï¬lâ€"lhgulde my aim." he thought. and waited. By almost superhuman self-centre“ he lay still and drew his breath ah regularly as he ccald to resemble UM breathing of a sleeplng person. 'l‘l‘n creature’s tread WM nolseles's. and only a slight. a very sllght *u‘llng hetrrym its presence. But. as he strained hh eyes to pierce the darkness. at lumlnone patch revealed lme'f to bun at a helm“ of less than ï¬ve feet. from the grountl -- He invggrâ€"wâ€"hat it. meant, and laughed to himself. -_ At length, after another spell of per- fect stillnesa, there fell upon his ear the sound of the slow dropping of liquid into the jug of iced water at his bedside. Thrusting out his hand, he caught the ï¬ngers of the unknown object in a grasp so savage that the phial they held was shattered into a thousand splinters. The “thing†recoiled from him, strove to tree itself, fought and writhed like an infuriated cat under his grasp. threw itself upon the ground and strove to wrigg'e free, and ï¬nally buried its sharp Lob‘th in his other hand. "this'ms the signal for which he had v u ited. Jr.“ 918. candy, flowers. manâ€"Aha: - vlu- order of a woman’s pi elem“ m. * Wela form a magnet of might} .mer to the average women. Even hat greatest of all jewels. health. i.~ Hen ruined in the strenuous eflon» u make or save the money to pur- chase them. If a. woman will I‘ISL her health to get. a coveted gem. then let her fortify herself against the m siduous consequences of COllglls,COHl.~ and bronchial aï¬ections bv the regu lar use of Dr. Boschee‘s German Syrup. It will promptly arrest con sumption in its early stages and heal the sï¬ected lungs and bronchial who» end drive the dresd disease from the system. It. is not a cure-all hu° it. I.- s certain cure for coughs. colds am: all bronchial troubles. You can gr! this reliable remedy ct. Darlings DI Nu The pain made T‘udley drop the re- volver, but he did not relax his hold 01 his enemy; and, without the weapon. he was the better able to cope with thin wild creature that bit and tore and kicked and struggled with him in dead silence in his arms, and, rushing to tho window, tore aside the curtains, tore down the blind, and let the moonlight stream in and reveal to him what he held. And then, distorted with rage, and rendered the more hideous by the luminous paint upon her wizened cheeks and the pearl-decked yellow wi| awry upon her gray elf-locks, with he) ï¬erce black eyes ablaze with a (mum of baflled rage and hate, and her hands out and bleeding from the broken glass clawing the air in impotent fury, hi beheld, as he knew he should behold the ape-like face of the woman who had sought his aunt’s hospitable root an Francesca’s mother, Mrs. Harold Rev elsworth! Store. The ' New Deering Home. 3. McKINNBN, (Concluded Next “'9. k ) Women and J ewem For all kinds of Agricultural and Domestic Implements visit the large Warerooms of lei-rout end 8100910.. There is just one cure and thnt' is plenty of food for the blood and nerves. which is best supplied in Ferrozone. then which no blood build. or. nerve tonic or strength producer is better. Ferrozone promotes heal- thy digestion, which results in im- proved nutrition. The blood grows rich and red, furnishes stability to the entire system, end the store of nerve force and energy increases daily. A rebuilding of the constitu- tion. new spirits. health and strength. all come from the use of Ferrozone. This marvelous renovstor is sold by Druguists {or 50c. a box, or 6 boxes for 82 50. By mail from Polson 00.. Kingston, Ont. Brother Glendinning of the Swan River Star. in scoring the Winnipeg Flee Press for upholding the Donk- hohor sect as apeople. has this to say:â€" In its issue of Aug 28th the Free Press devotes a column editorial to prove that the photo published in the Globe three years ago of Doukhobor women hitched to a plough was the exception and nor the rule. From what the editor of the Press says we mould. infer that the Doukhobor women had planned a pleasant sur- prise for their lovers and husbands a hen the) returned lrom uorkiug on the railway in having considerable breaking done, and these Uoukhobor That the whole ediiorial was writ- ten in a Winnipeg ofï¬ce by one who had never seen a Doukhobor. who either was not awue of the facts, or 100k a vs hole column to try to conceal them. is quite evident. We have never personally seen Doukhobor women plowing, but there must. be a lot of liars in Swan River valley if Doukhobor women axe not in the habit of drawing the plough. It. doesn’t require any great stretch of imagination to believe that women who can draw a heavilv laden wagon 40 miles could also draw the plough. wagons with Doukhobor women hitched like oxen to them. To-day we saw a train of them. women and men; they must have come over twenty miles. They would make the round trip, over forty miles, in two days.~ We would like to see that train passing up Main street in Win- nipeg and still more to analyse the emotions excited in each spectator as they passed. They have committed so many ridiculous excesses lately that it is no longer matter for sur- prise what they do. They have dis- covered that it is wrong to work horses or cattle. wrong to use milk or butter. wrong to use in any way the product of an animal. It is amusing the straits some of them are driven into in order to appear con- aistent. Some wear wooden shoes. others shoes made from bark, and others shoes made from bags. Their customs are just as varied. Their diet has become what may be called resrricted; they won’t eat flesh of any kind. ï¬sh, butter. cheese or eggs. Everything that is the product of an animal ls "unclean.†Their latest lad is that man is the only animal spoken of in the Bible as having to work. therelore all animals should have their liberty. Following out this peculiar theory. last week they decided to give their live stock free. dom and turned out over 500 head of stock. horses. cattle and sheep. to wander at their own sweet will. Land Agent Harley, drove over to their villages on Monday IO endeavm to try his persuasive powers on them and if possible obtain their consent to allow the Government to dispose of them. ' Lords" and ' masters†would be " righteously †indignant with them to. doing so. Ilfw' i1 THE DOUKHOBORS. @wa u [TC-SW? @ ACTS GENTLY MUN“S NEW PUMPS AND REPAIRS. Dilly†ALL Won: GUAMMHJ. .u "Live 3nd let live" Pawns. OVERCOMES Pumps. L09 SALE By an DRUGGISTS. PM 50cm BUY THE GENUINE -MAN‘F'D BY Ionoyto Loan at very low at“. Debt! Collected, no chnrge if no â€"â€"â€" v-‘vâ€"u' 0 acre farm u; Béutinck. 'Extra good shape. Thqgindlay [9300 Farm, Glenng. ALL KINDS of business deals negoti- ued quietly end carefully. 22 years experience. " Always pro-pk never negligent." The Gegrggniipl Align, bgst 159 The [aloolm Camercn 100 acres above Durham on Garafrau Rand. OFFERS FOR NOTHING The First Chance to Buy: THE Hanoveggonvexancer Luck Drawer :3. HANOVER. ONT. I BEG LEAVE 'I‘U INFORM MY CW I‘UMERB‘ Mu! tlw public in general tint I am prepared to {u rlziuh CURB, 85.0mm. 8r. PRESSCUBB WELLS. Allordars taken at the old lun- maur McGowan]; Mill will be promptly at tended to. 50‘ 5V] 200 acres. A cumpauy own this and will almost give it lwuy. Many other good properties for sale or enhance. money mule. . H.Miller . . H. H. MILLER GEOBG E WHITMOBE. CAL. DURHAM.