tend by a nova! "a well. faintly well a cultivation, at {0! hr- “- nion: to church :91! school, - â€"â€":A AL _ LGIN STREET WEST | there is a good solid Btick iruom: Burnand flame! ill and young ovchatd ; M n tobarnj pd 4. Kincatdino Street wont, acre. No buildings. m he sold on block or count. 1909 Hwner ruins west. Fat th of Pricovillo. Farm in Man. Good buildings wit} m mnvouiem to the Mn rticulars apply to .ST PARTS 01‘ LOTS on. 2. W. (E. R.. Sumanby, com! division of Lot3, Cu. containing in all about I†cleared. 2:0 acres 0! Diana home, good frame barn wdl flared with sprungs a flu- " good #1810 Of cultivation. . of agricultural mach' , church. school and Di] A mod chance for quick )r further particulars a aux, Durham P. 0.. or :5. R. Roxmuiun, 254 Bard.- For .Y 1.00.2330 ON GAB- A b '16. 212...an ma"; $3155 f. â€00d fund for liv a .moss. forms rough LOT .\O.Q)1.COX.2 WES! Frau Road in the town“! Known as tbs Bun: m. bout 7?) acres cleared. it“ ad welt watered and good ‘0'.- r urticulars appty to 3H hovusm' maiuins 12 r mated. and quite 110'. Va} flout boarding house. Fat kept for sen homoof the RID Utah .hï¬ pfflper‘y 9‘ 3.1â€"8. J. ’0. IKE ED LA RG 6: Lot for Sale. use for Sale. u. tar for Service. GILBERT McKECHNIE. at 3R5. NEIL )IcKECHNlB. life: Calf. Bu- Jeaio LP §_in Pine Hurst’s 80- AJ W vv-wvvâ€" "E'g‘m' Tomiâ€"to nit Iii» umber puticnhfl “I AND LOT ON QUEEN for Sale or Rent. FINE PURE BBED J. .ale or Rent. M. H ENTER, Dork... For Sale M s For Sale. or for Sale. IO C. ELVIDGE, Durban.- for Sale. A. H. 801mm, Honovilb P. 00 ; I). MCLACIILAN, Pricovmo P. 0. I)“ A RD KRESS, ‘r wrvice during tho III- L the undersigned, DI!- Sale. STREET WEST F. PEEL, w. use, Propm. :\ Y Sideroad 50, I) {ERIK ONE TWO .-\ R W IL DER’S f Maury-ï¬ve m M-rpnratic-n of ‘b. 'Ide aw South p“ I. K†Ulsuelg. OI tunable brick it. i frame barn t“ m_chard. an 85'.- .uumg water. I) 6, stuns sub“. 39, was! watered .xlars apply to Dl I) DORNOCB. I-Ud O’Ch‘td. DAVIS, R.. Glands. Drama 1' S 0 F PROP- with a wash. 7 acres of land E393? and bunaani lots. Prices right. 913.389 1 9‘." 9. Durham. Durban. My 30 The good wife of the house always likes to have good Bread, and the best Bread is to be had at Stinson’s. The wlzitcsm sweetest and most healthful made. No husband will ever ï¬nd fault with Stinaon’s Bread We turn out a ï¬rst-class article whether it’s Bread, Pies or CaLe: and give Special attention to cm . customer‘s Bread G. H. Stimson lumber 81 Shingles {m ,Sa'e July NILâ€"3.x: pd Dromore 'P. 0. School Medals GIVEN BY Watcbmskor. Jeweller. Optician O DU RHA .VI , ONT. For which we will pay the “ highest price †in CASH or TRADE. â€" 'rnz (moon â€" DURHAM, â€" ON' K WOOL< FIRST-CLASS LINE of Bakery Goods always on hand. On the premisvs of than an- dnrsicnad. Lots '23 and “24‘. Con. 21. Egremonl. u lugs quantitv of Lumbar an-i Hhinglou a?“ kupt for Bula- at right pricco. going like 3. SHOT and we always hit the mark. A. GORDON Custom Cnding tnd spinn- ing uttendod to on shon notice. Blnnkots. Twoods, Yum. Funnels, Groceries and Dry Goods alwoyn on bond. The tinw has almosm coma “lmn Hm "poms of tiw Eluruncn Exammal ions will be, out. The Vanchrrs M moan winning medals wm lw kind rnuugh to bend 1mm hauws and addressvs to In as soon as thvy know‘m that we can send the me dais m the schools It. tuu~t hr. thnruuxhly UH dfltstmud thou tho-'89 medah are given FREE by Us «in; ihr†'h") 8'†llu- 'H b“ SUN-i HH [hr cwr'iï¬nc'ps n? ginl- out. Teachers “121 kuuln let us know u few days he {ore bend so that. we can send the medals to the schools. These are the ï¬rst medals that were ever given in South Grey and we sincere ly bape cbu the winners ‘- will prize them as such g... S. SCOTT MODEL BAKERY J. (i. ORCHARD. We Want O-Q‘ ONTARIO. asle’ellewolthocoust. Following the court about (‘1 the circuitwasnodoubtthoioyofmno coln’s life. no wassofondefitthat hedeclinedaflatteringolertoenter a lucrative law perm-ship in Chicago. because, as he contended. it would ne- cessitate more or less conï¬nement in the once and therefore keep him oil the circuit. Seated in a one horse lugv gy. behind a sorry looking animal, he would set out from Springï¬eld. to be gone for weeks at a stretch. The law- yers, as he drove into each successive place, eagerly anticipating a new stock of stories, gave him a cordial welcome, and the landlords hailed his coming with delight, for he was one of the most patient and uncomplaining of guests. “If every other fellow." re- lates one of his colleagues, “grumbled at the indiflerent accommodations and scant fare which greeted us at many of the dingy taverns we struck. Lin- coln said nothing.†His forbearance in this regard well warrants the ob. servation he is said on one occasion to have madeâ€"that he never so complete- ly felt his “own unworthiress as when he stood face to face with a real, live hotel clerk.†How he appeared on the circuit may be gleaned from this sketch of him, drawn by Henry C. Whitney, one of his colleagues in central Illinois: “His hat was brown, faded and the nap usu- ally worn or rubbed 01!. He wore a short cloak and sometimes a shawl. His coat and vest hung loosely on his giant frame. His trousers were inva- riably too short. In one hand he car- ried a faded green umbrella, with ‘A. Lincoln’ in large white cotton or mus- lin letters sewed on the inside. The knob was gone from the handle, and a piece of cord was usually tied round the middle of the umbrella to keep it from flying open. in the other hand he carried a carpetbag, in which were stored the few papers to be used in court and underclothing enough to last till his return to Springï¬eld.â€â€"Century. Morbid Mind. That Associate Home. and Numbers With Colors. “Numerals have no colors to you and to me †said a psvchologist. “Three. for instance. (loesnt sccm to us to he pink, and eight doesnt seem to us to be brown, but there are certain slightly diseased minds to which almost every word in the language appears to have color. “The odd part of this matter is that when you study the minds that attrib- ute colors to ï¬gures you find them al- most unanimous in attributing to each ï¬gure a particular hue. Thus, they will say that one is black, two is cream, three is pale brown, four is red brown, ï¬ve is blue, six is tan. seven is green. and so on. Finding among the morbid so uniform a belief in the blackness of one, the blueness of ï¬ve and the green- ness of seven, you almost persuade yourself that these ï¬gures actually have colors. “Mankind harbors an incredible num- ber of illusions. Each one of us. per- haps. has an illusion of some sort. Mine is that if I count on getting a thing I desire I will be surely disap. pointed. My wife‘s is that her brother appears to her in dreams. “Some morbid minds hold that names have colors. A New Orleans glyptolo- gist says that to him John is blue, At- lanta is steel gray. Peter is brown. and 80 on. "I know a nervous, pallid woman who attributes certuln perfumes to ,cer- tain sounds. A soprano voice to her is like lilies of the valley. A tenor Voice is like roses. A contralto voice is like heliotrope. A bass voice is like violets.†Animal 011- In Medicine. The number or animal oils and fats used in medit-ine are extremely nu- merous. Large quantities of oil are obtained in Tasmania from the mut- ton bird and used as a linimeut for rheumatism. while the fat of the frigate bird is said to be an excellent specitiv for sciatica. Cod liver oil is too well known to bear more than mention. and the oil got from the dugong. an aquatic monster related to the whale tribe. has a high repu- tation as a substitute for that obtained (rum the smaller try of the cod. From st: to fourteen gallons of this medici- nal oil can be taken out of a single animal. John Bright’s Speeches. John Bright had a curious method of guarding against any failure of mem- ory or language in his public speeches. thn he had to deliver a speech of importance he wrote a sort of essay on the subject and tore_it up. He then wrote another and treated it in the same way. and ï¬nally a third. In this way he considered that he had not only exhausted his own thoughts upon the matter in hand. but had gained such a commnnd over the language in which it could be expressed that he could new or he at a loss for the right word. “(a there danger from ï¬re here?†“Oh. no.†replied the hotel clerk. "We are well provided With ï¬re es- t 11 p03." wonomy.†"Maybe no,†said Senator Sorghum. but the injudlcious way he mend: his money at an election looks to me like political “trauma." 5'1 don’t care a hang about that. now we you ï¬xed for man escapes?†Judging from what they have} to show (or it. some people’s the must ho LINCOLN 0N CIRCUIT. The Escape. He Wanted. QUEER ILLUSIONS. Not In has studied political â€â€˜1’ .°‘o :5. m m. It is a remaniable thing that thm exists in people’s minds I Mac! so- cial precedence among the vices. To own oneself on intimate terms with such n one as deceit or slander. for instance, would be almost undresmt of. but how often have we heard people say, almost with pride. at any rate with no trace of shame, “I have a very hasty temper?†And then as it to transdgure it into a very virtue they triumphantly add, “But it is soon over.†So it may be, but how about its conse- quences? Are they soon over? There are few more dangerous ene- mies to the peace and comfort of every- day life than the people who speak hastily in the squalls of passing ill tem- per, and then, when they are restored to good humor, expect everything‘to be Just as it was before. There is no such position possible as “just as it was be- fore" in this up and down hill human nature of ours. Every act or word is a step by which we mount upward or sink lower in the unhindered journey- ings onward of r‘l the conditions -of life, and the people who give utterance to the incriminations of passionate tem- pers unfailingly drop down in the esti- mation of others, from which it is I stii! climb up again. Moreover, words once uttered, wheth- er true or false, are usually undying and live on in hearts and memories long after the careless bow that shat such poisoned arrows forth is unstrung. And though the utterer may plead that to feed his passion he said not what he really believed, but what he thought at the time would hurt most, it is al- most impossibie for the bearer to un- derstand that the expression was not that of a living though latent opinion and to feel it accordingly. The code of fashion in the moral realms has decreed how much better a passionate temper is than a sulky one, but there is something to be said in favor of the latter in that it only hurts itself. Like the little girl who when annoyed always ate her apple tart with- out sugar, the guilty person may suffer most individually, but that is surely better than the suffering to the inno- cent caused by the rando") shots of the norm though short onsluughts of a hasty tmnper. And silence is much less generally disturbing than violence. though perhaps quite as unbecoming.â€" Editll II. Fowler in London Mail. Does it pay an acorn to become an oak? Does it pay to escape being a rich ignoramus? The Doctor Had Nothing to Say. A certain physician told some of his patients that as long as they kept their feet dry they would be safe from the attack of the grip. He- was surprised to receive a letter from one of his pa- tients in which the latter said that he had two wooden legs and yet he had the grip for ï¬ve consecutive years. The letter was unanswered. Does it pay to ï¬t oneself for a su- perior position? Does it pay to Open a little wider the door of a narrow life? Does it my to learn to make life I glory instead of a grind? Does it my to add-power to the lens of the microscope or telescope? Does it pay to taste the exhilaration of feeling one‘s powers unfold? Does it pay to know how to take the dry, dreary drudgery out of life? Does it pay a rosebud to open its petals and fling out its beauty to the world? Does it pay to learn how to center thought with power, how to marshal one’s mental force effectively?â€"Suc- CQSS. Does it pay to push one's horizon farther out in order to get a wider out- look, a clearer vision? Be Ready For the Emergency. Good luck is desirable even when you have done your best to succeed, but remember that the most favorable cir- cumstances or strokes of fortune are of little value unless you have pre pared yourself to take advantage of them. Of what advantage would IIayne’s ï¬ery speech have been to Daniel Webster if he had not, with the instinct of genius, long before equipped "‘inself for the assault which he repelled with such crushing energy? Had he not previously weighed and refuted in his own mind the charges of his opponent his reply, instead of ranking among the greatest master- pieces ot‘ oratory, might have only re- vealed his own weakness. Thousands of men had seen the prints of a horse's boots in the soil before Faust dis- covered by them the art of printing. Woetnl Lack of Conï¬dence. A prominent actor tells about :1 Chi- cago theatrical woman about to wed who was one day mousing herself by going over the marriage service. To I friend who discovered her. prayer book In hand, she said: “I always make it a point to do this. for no matter how well you may have known a part in the past it should al- ways be rehearsed before the piece is revived.†Then. rather playfully. she read the words. “Till death do us part.†Wherenpon her friend interrupted: “How foolish that is. isn't it. dear? Sounds like one hasn’t any conï¬dence in the courts!†“How did you manage to sell that Piece Of QOOdl that’l all out of date to Mrs. Hid?" Clerkâ€"I told her it wu a great bar- gain, but I thought Mrs. Richcoln hnd had It laid aside for one of her (huh- ten. Then she took it right 0!. DOES AN EDUCATION PAY? A HASTY TEMPER. It I o the. « was Newsboys and street arabs often make admirable clerks. The way they work into commercial houses is aston- ishing. A large percentage of public and prosperous business men of Amer- ica began as newsboys. but probably no one realizes how many work their way up from the gutter to wealth and influence. They begin as hangers on and are recruited from the ranks of every class of street gamin. Their wits have been sharpened by contact with the sordid side of life and by observa- tion in the school of the street. They know the value of friends. So they are to be found at the door of every big house. ready at any time to run an er- rand. always at hand to pick up an umbrella or open a door. And before the people who regularly pass in and out of the doors of the place realize it one of these little chaps they have been :lvt'llstothl to see is ontbe payroll. Somebody has bought him a six dollar suit of clothes to put him more at ease with the people and weather, and he is on the road that in a surprising number 02‘ vases leads to success. The Streets 01 Austen“... Amsterdam, in Holland, a city of ten miles in circumference, is mostly built on piles driven into the sandy subsoil, but the flowing of the tide and the debris of the Ainstel river have made ninety islands, and the city has more canals than streets. The watery ways are traversed by over 300 bridges, so that Amsterdam has earned the desig- nation ot the Venice of the North. Mrs. Skrapâ€"There is no possibility of our quarreling if neither of us speaks. Mr. Skrapâ€"Of course; but, as I say, it Isn’t possible for us to live together and not quarrel.-â€"Philadelphia Press. CALL AND SEE ONE. Hi- Problematlc 'l‘our. “Did you ever appear in a problem play?†“Yes,†an'swered Mr. Stormington Barnes. “Last season I was doing sums with hotel bills, time tables and box ofï¬ce statements all the time I was out.â€- Next Door South of Post OM00. Marshall Sanitqu Mattresses A Matter of Opinion. “Pardon me, sir, but isn’t there an- other artist in this building '2†“Well, that is a matter of opinion. There is another fellow who paints.†A Little Mixed. Patientâ€"Look here, doctor. I’m not going to starve to death for the sake of living a little longer. The Woman Mutt Speak. Mr. Skrapâ€"There’s just this about it. ilt is impossible for us to live together md not quarrel. Moslem and Paper. A Moslem in the east will never pass or trample under foot a scrap of paper lest thereon might be written the name of Allah. He will pick it up and stufl it into the crevice of a Wall or even carry it for days until he ï¬nds out from somebody who can read whether it con- tains the holy name. Dog Exes-duets. There are people in London who earn quite respectable livings solely by ex- ercising dogs, and some of those who so live are ladies. In every suburb and in every London park these exercisers of dogs may be seen each day, and one gentleman alone pays 15 shillings a week for the walking out of his valu- able bulldog. The Cardiff Giant. The CardiiT giant. the famous stone man hoax of wars ago. was 10 feet 21;» inches in length, had a nose 6 inches long, a mouth 4 inches wide and a foot 151/2 inches from toe to heel. H AVE COMFORT. The Floorwnlker. One of the greatest surprises for n countryman on his ï¬rst visit to a big city is to learn that the floorwalker does In Amtrnlin. with the oxm‘ption of the dingu. or wild dog. there is no boast at great. not own the storaâ€"Danville (â€1.) Com- mercial .\'vws. Furniture furniture constructed of hair end e thousend springs. This Mettreu costs a little morethen the ordinary, but think of the comfort you get. end think of the heelth you secure, end the extre cost will not trouble you. You spend at haalth depends night’s mat. on one of our )end ct least one-third of your time in bed. and your depends largely on the invigorating influence of 3 good rest. You cnn’c fail to get real comfort if you s eep Fly . . . . Weather “QC“.L-I. Ill-LOKMLI. at Right Prices. THE FURNITURE MAN. Lawn Mowers EBardon Tools WOpp. Caldwell’s Livery. Specialist: Eye, Ear, Throat and Nose Will be at Knapp House. Durham. the 2nd Satu.d9v in each month. Hours- 1â€"6 pm. Late Assistant Roy. London Ophthalmic 1105., Eng.. and to Golden Sq. Throat and N030 Ho. EXCLCBXVELY Will be u the Middaugh Home lat Wedneldny of each month. from 12 to 4 :9. In. O HARDWARE AND TIN WARE THE BEST PROOF Durban) Bakery ! We make all kinds of CAKES and CONFECTIONERY and give special prompt attention to Wedding goodu. Wright’s Old Stand. DURHAM, â€" ON‘ RADULATE of London, New York and Chicago. DR. BROWN L. R. C. P.. LONDON. ENG Diseases of Eye Ear, Nose and Throat. If You Want your house Eavetroughed or if you want a Furnace 1n your house don’t forget us. F. Siegner We want regarding the qual- ity of our breed is the in- creased amount consumed by the people of Durham. Since starting here a few months ago our trade has been con- stantly and steadily growing, and our weekly output now is over four times what it was when we started business. We feel truly grateful for the liberal patronage accorded us and with the increased and competent assistance we have secured we hope to merit a continuance of the public pat- ronage. Keep out all flies and insects from the house. DR. EH]. 8. BURT. . WATSON ONTA RIO. Fm Balgains Read his Tho Hanover Convomr. Offer. the Following oppoutionâ€"cplondid ï¬nd. I... -â€"mp for good m. 100 A08" an: All“ Putâ€"Fair I.“ â€"‘00d timberâ€"chap. 200 Acuns in u splendid action.“â€" Ngmmby-ownor nickâ€"bani- 60 ACIDS in Bentiookâ€"Abordooa P.O. â€"woll improved and cloud ridiculously chap or for on- chtnge. 100 A0888 in Remindâ€"Curt“ P. O.â€"â€"¢ood (umâ€"owner it'd“ and 0:33! to all. 50 AM in Egromontâ€"nou Hol- steinâ€"ï¬ne 50-0911 chap or trtdo for Inger (um. I Auxâ€"Durhnmâ€"neu the Canon Works. BESIDES ABOVE I hovo othot lands in Ontorio ood North Wont for solo or exchoogo sud CAN nu. YWI nu if you wont. to sellâ€"no chug. if no «lo. MONEY TO LOAN nt low run. Dams COLLECTED - Wm'mzas Unwu. All kinds of “ Square Dede " negot- inted; everything conï¬dential. Buli- neee estnbliehed 1884. Highest prices paid for Farm Produce including Butter and Eggs. HANOVER. Alex. Beggs J. :1. mm m HAS ALWAYS ON HAND: Anya!!! lending a “deb and decal I†quickly “certain our optnton free w echo - Invention to probably Immutable. Comm “on. strict}; conï¬dential. Handbook on PM Cont. free. Ides: arena for securing: What. Patents token t "'0!th Munn a Co. mogul notice. without. charge. in the _ A- A nmdeomely “haunted weekly Ian-mg! culauon at any scientiï¬c «'mrnel. Tet-me. e year :A (9;: gnoythu. $1. 80 d by unmoved†swear four month 8.". Sum bvuII no I'Isaenm MUN" Co. ammo-m New Ygrt lunch 0mm 6253' St. Wumnuton. D. Scientific Hmcrican. The Hunover Conveyumor. Flour. Feed. Pontoon. Ont. mul. Coronal. Fiofd and Garden Seeds. All kind. of Groceries. Tons. Sagas, Coloâ€. Spica tad Tobnoou. GOODS donut-0d pron-pay to all put- of tho an. H. H. MILLER. . MILLER. Grocery and Provision Store ONTARIO.