HAVE PURCHASED the laundry business of Charlie Lee, and wish to announce that the business will be :arried on in the high class manner followed by my predecessors. Hav- ing had large experience in laundry work, Spending the last four years in Wichita. Kansas†I guarantee satisfaction. All hand workâ€"Nu machinery. The Laundryman. Durham, Ontario Washing done on Monday, Wed- nesday and Frida_y. Irgnjng done Vwâ€"w Pmfly Washing, plain . . . . .35c doz. Famxly Washing, starcbed, 300 (102. ' The umle: Mgnnl hzwlugbeen restored to hem- vy simple me-uw. after suffering for several year» 11th a ecvm'e lung azfectlou. and that. dread lessee Consumption, 1s anxious to make known 0 his fellow euflerem the means of care. To .hoee who desire it, he will cheerfully send, free '5‘: charge, 3 Cup}: of the prescription us , which {my will ï¬nd a euro cure for Consumption W, Chatarrh, Bronchitis and all thx oat amu lung Madics. He hopes all euï¬erers will try hisremedy. as it is invaluable. Those desiring ï¬n nchriutluu. which will cost them nqtping EVERYTHING WELL IRONED LEE GET his remedy. the_ prescru W. D. CONNOR Pumas from $2 upward. 330? open every afternoon. All REPAIRING promptly and pm: orly attenrï¬ed to. Pumps of 2m Kinds. Galvanized and Iron Pig.- ing: Brass, Brass Ln'zr-w and Iron (Ivlinders. 1 Bus and Dmy businex from Mr. John \ollet. and \\ 15b to announce to t 1e people; of Durâ€" ham and \ Ecinity. that. it will be my aim to make the business. so sun-cvsu'nlly carried on by my prodwmsur for the past twn years. more successful than ever. Perm Anyone sendh‘E a arkeujh 3:10 6mm.“ quickly ascertain our opmton free w 4r momma is probabiy patentabh Commune â€strictly conï¬dential. HmdbOOKOB Paco. “free. Uh'lest agency formwema Patents taken through Mum: 3 00. read“ “gal notice. without charge. Intho A-9 A A-.. ’KUWI L'J'. VJâ€, vv _ may run: a lyli‘éQQn'éi-wilâ€"l please mum.â€" .BD RD A. WILSON,Br09klÂ¥u:N°W York A handsomely illustrated cation of any scientiï¬c year: (our mouths. 81 mmmr four months. 81 3010 Dill! W‘- yucâ€" NH 3. co. wen-mm 196 0M“ FR.WMG: S. P. SA UNDERS Prices Moderate, and Strictly Cash. Machine Oil, Harness Oil, Axle Grease and Hoof Ointment, go to Wï¬ï¬ï¬Ã© Mental 1T0 BONSUMPTWES. HAVE YOU? Changed Hands. Any 01d Worn silver? It so, I am prepared to re- plate it. Bring it in now while I have the time. All work guaranteed. HAVE PURCHASED THE All orders promptly attended ’Phone No. 13. W. J. WMPUIE dauufacmrm 0* “did Dunk-hr in ~â€" {116 Public x? The Harnaossmaker Geo. Siirs. W. D. CM {:3 Dnrha m. On t. “That was a long time agoâ€"last weekâ€"but I will call you it again if you wish, Mr. Jack.†She laughed and flashed a hasty glance at him from her soft, dark eyes. “Perhaps,†he returned moodily. “l have stayed too long already.†“You do not like Texas, senor?†“You did not call me senor last week.†He bent toward her slightly. but she did not turn her head. “You ‘ I o - called méâ€"Jack. †Carruthers did not notice the conces sion or her gay scorn. He stared out to where the cattle browsedâ€"a sea of still, brown waves, hundreds of them, motionless and peaceful in the morn- ing sunrise. Here and there on the outskirts stood a ï¬gure of a horse with a silent rider watching the grazing herd. Carruthers’ gaze swept over the mass until it rested on one herder at the extreme north. Even with the dis- tance of nearly a mile between them he knew what the ï¬gure looked like. knew that it was watching them as he was watching it. It was not a pleasant knowledge. “So you are going home, senor?†The girl looked straight ahead at the wide sweep of level prairie pasture, her red lips parted in a smileâ€"a most tantaliz- ing, annoying smile Carruthers thought as he caught a glimpse of it sideways. “You have changed your mind, Seno- rita Rita,†he said bitterly, “since Ra- mon came to the ranch. I was very happyâ€"in Texasâ€"until your old sweet- heart appeared.†Rita laughed again, deliciously, warm- ly, with a full enjoyment of his mood. “You are not tired of Texas, Mr. Jack,†she said merrily. "You are tired of meâ€"ah, yes, I say you are. You love me so madly, so entrancingly, until somebody else comes who also loves me so madly, so entrancingly, too; and then all at once you are jealous and distant and dissatisï¬ed, and, presto. now, this minute, you say you will leave Texas, you will never, never come to the Fortuna ranch again. You areâ€"what did you call me the day I cried when Pep broke his leg?â€"kid, that is it. You are a big, foolish kid, Mr. Jack. When a man loves he does net Still: and ride away. He stays and ï¬ghts. See!“ She held up her hand and snapped her small tanned ï¬ngers sharply in the air. ‘I would not give that for the silly kid lover who rides ’way south over there to Mexico. You would not carry me away to your home like that. would you, Mr. Jack?" “I have no home.†said Carrutbers. “When I came here to Texas I meant to stay even before I met you.†"But you are rich. Ramon says you could buy all of the Fortuna for a pas- time it‘ you cared for it. And the For- tuna is the richest ranch within a hun- dred miles of the border. There is no cattleman so rich as my father in Mex- away. Ramon is :1 Mexican, but he is brave: he can light. If I but let him know the least bit I loved him he would carry me 011‘ on his horse ’way. "I would carry you to the end of the world.†retorted (L‘amlthers. She lifted her head with the little tilt of pride he knew well. Senorita Rita Riaz, heiress of the Fortuna. could well afford to lift her head a trifle higher than other girls. But to Carmthers the motion brought merely regret. He knew the truth about the Fortunaâ€" knew what every Texan as far as San Antonio would know within a week- that old Diahlo Riaz had squandered his wealth in gambling; that not a thing on the Fortuna was unmort- gaged save his daughter, and even she, it was rumored, was pledged to Ramon Doranda in return for his promised as- sistance when the crash came. : marry him?†he asked. with sudden :. curtness. The uncertainty was mad- 5, dening to him. '; “Why do you ask?†she answered 1 teasingly. f “Have you told Ramon you would Carruthers might have given the same assistance and claimed the same reward, but something within him re- volted against making the hand of the girl he loved the stake in a transaction over old Riaz’s gambling debts. If he could win her, if he could hold her promise freely from her own lips. then he felt free to buy up the whole For- tnna when the crash came and lay it at her feet. But she must be free to say yes or no. And she 'would say neither. She would only laugh. “Rita,†he pleaded. “be serious. If you do notâ€â€" "But not to your home?" she persist- She raised her arm with a sudden. imperative gesture and pointed to the herd. ‘Look!†she cried. “They are stam- Carruthers looked. The brown sea had suddenly stirred to life. Undulat- ing, swaying, branching out loosely at the edges, it was lurching toward them. There seemed to be nothing rapid or swift about its coming. Carruthers thought, almost idly. of how it resem- bled the swing ot a bunch of race horses rounding the end of the ï¬eld, when the movement was so concerted, so deliberate, that it hardly seemed a movement. The herders were riding here and there in confusion. They seemed meme specks of helpless misdi- rection in the distance. Rita’s face had lost its color. She to rub turned her horse about. the rein held deg th short and tight in her clinched hand. ' one. g “Wemustracebeforethemasthey ww¢ come.†she said. “It the horses keep “a y†their strength they will not tramee “It is sure death to try to ride with them,†he answered. “Dismount and do as I tell you.†“Hold the horses,†he ordered. She obeyed, watching him in breathless si- lence. The brown cloud on the prairie was becoming more and more dis- tinct. There was a heavy, low rumble in the air like far of! thunder. Car- ruthers drew a cigarette case from his pocket, and after hunting carefully he produced one match. The stem masterfulness of his tone stai’cled her. He had never spoken like that to her: no one had. “That {s the only one I have,†hé said. “Pray that it doesn't go out.†He struck it on the box. The faint flame wavered in the southeasterly breeze, caught the end or the cigarette and lit it. Before the match went out Carruthers smelled it and set ï¬re to the grass. It was dry and yellow from the sun and Caught the blaze with a snap. The wind fanned it and a wav- ering line of thin smoke slid like a snake along the roots for several feet. The horses reared and kicked at the ï¬rst whiff. am‘. (‘arruthers seized the hridles from the girl. “Take the cigarette." he said. hand- ing it to her. "Keep it alight and set ï¬re to the grass as far as you can reach in a straight line facing the north. The wind is fxom the southeast and will blow the the to :II‘d the herd. It may turn them." Holding the plunging. trembling horses. he watched her. There was no fear. no sign of weakness. She. was alert and sure in her touch as she knelt here and there in the grass and ï¬red it. As the cigarette failed she tore a bunch of grass. tied it with an- other Wisp an] set it blazing like a torch. In another minute a wall of smoke and smollerin: ' flame closed them in from the rushing.' herd line. â€Come back." called Carruthers. The herd were not a quarter of a mile from them. He eonll see the leaders. heads down. and behind them line after line of tossing horns. "Will they reach us?" whispered Rita as she stood close beside him. her face lifted to his. “Jack, listen to me." There was a new light in her dark eyes. :1 new softened tone to her voice. “Ramon has done this. The herd has never stampeded before. He has done it for revenge upon you and me. Last night I told him no. I know about him and the claim he holds over the Fortuna and my father, but I would rather lose it all than"â€" “God knows: I don't.†said Carmth- ers desperately. â€It is all we can do.†“Than what?†C‘arruthers let the' bridles trail on the ground and held her close in his arms. The tremble of hundreds of hool‘s shook the ground, the thunder grew louder. now and then there came a low, threatening bellow from some steer gored by its fellows in the on-rush. “Than lose you.†Rita Whispered as she closed her eyes to meet what might come. The herd was on them, but as the leaders caught the ï¬rst sickening whifl of smoke they hesitated and wavered. Low leaping tongues of flame flashed up before them and rolls of smoke curled upward. The leaders swerved westward. After them plunged the frightened herd, mad- dened and scared at the smell of the ï¬re. The two horses, loosened, joined them in the frantic gallop, and in less than three minutes the danger had passed, and on the blackened bit of land stood Carruthers and Rita alone. But Carmthers had slipped from the “The river will stop them,†said Rita. “Ramonâ€"I know he has done this to harm you. You must leave the ranch. No one can say what he may do next.†Carruthers bent to pick up something from the ground. It was the stub of a cigarette. He placed it tenderly and carefully in his case hefore he spoke. “I know what Ramon will do next. sweetheart. He will (cross the border into his own land tonight or else land in the hands of the sheriff. I mean to stay in Texas, and there is not room for both of us.†“On the Fortuna '3" “On our ranch.†he said. “I bought the Fortuna yesterday to make sure of Ramon and of my senorita.†Be Didn't Lie. There is in the service of a Balti- more man an elderly darky who is much given to rehnking the mischiev- ousness of his grandson, also in the employ of the Baltimorean. One day the latter ch'mced to overhear a con- versation between the ï¬rst and third genemtions. :‘rom which it was at once apparent that old Mose was scolding the boy for some trifling fault. The cross examination appeared unsatis- factory to old Mose. he suspecting the pickaninny of concealing something. _ _ .13.‘ .,.~........-.-,, v- -W .- “Jackson Brown." said the grandfa- ther sternly. “yo‘ is shore keepin‘ sum- thin' back! 'Mem‘ner what de good book says, Chile!" â€" _ 1.. - AL!â€"’ “Yassah,†glibly responded the third generation; “I knows dat de Bible says yo’ all mustn’t lie, but it don't say yo’ all got to tell de trut all de time!â€â€" New York Times. â€my- - â€" v vâ€" -7, “In the north country,†so goes the story in “Sun Babies,†by Cornelia Sorabja, “in the month of Kartik is worshiped by the women folks the great and terrible god Bhlshma. Light- ed lamps must be placed at the cross- roads ot the village, under the sacred ï¬g tree, at the shrine of Shiva, and 3:8 “li'tï¬eï¬iiggtedv lamp is sent adrift on ‘8. raft in the village tank. .When the lamps have burned low, it is good to rub the black from the wicks un- der the eyes. It keeps away the em Black Under the Eve! A .9. MW (‘a rruthors let the' DU RHAM CHRONICLE u. u an â€Esme *«WMM Explained. The Real Test. Even the man who says he doesn’t care a rap what other people think hesitates about carrying a pair of his wife’s shoes to the cobbler to have them tapped without doing them up inside a piece of wrapping paper. " ' Alike. Husbandâ€"What has become of those indestructible toys you got last week? Wifeâ€"They are out on the scrap heap, along with the indestructible kitchen Obstinacy is the mask under which iderstand Eng? weakness hides its lack of ï¬rmness.-â€" . “Impossible Panin. V 7 Iblondn-css, re utensils. How Emery Is Quarrled. Emery comes from the island of Xaxos, in the eastern Mediterranean, whence it has been exported for the last two centuries or more. The beds are in the northeast 01' the island, the deposit descending into some of the neighboring isiamls. he emety bein f found in lenticulgr 111as>.es, testi up; on layers of schist in limestone, almost identical with ‘:.rian â€.11le the nu- est marble known. nhich comes from the island of Paros, close by. The-1e are about 300 men engaged in the trade, all of whom have to be mar 'ied before they are admitted to the fit.- ternity. The material is much too he rd to be dug out or even blasted. Great ï¬res are lighted round the. bioc‘ (8 till the natural cracks expand with the heat, and levers are then inserted to pry them apart. Mummy Wheat. The Arabs. anxious to impose upon travelers. often sell as genuine “mum- my Wheat†grains taken from their own ï¬elds. Water Mills. Water mills were used in the time of Julius Caesar. In Roman times slaves were condemned to the corn mills, which were propelled by treads. Aft- erward cattle were used. In the third and fourth centuries there were as many as 300 cattle mills in Rome. Longshnnks. Edward I. of England was Long- shanks on account of his extraordinary height. He is said to have been nearly seven feet in stature. Philippe V. of France bore the same title. “'illiamstown Observatory. The ï¬rst 0!.)scl".':1tm'y was located at “'illiamstown, Mass†in 1836. This system is continued until the blocks are reduced in size to masses of a cubic foot or less, and they are then shipped as if they were coals. There are said to be 20.1â€}!X).flfs{) tons yet avail- able at Naxos. It is one 01' the hard- est substances yet known. coming: next to the diamond. and among: its crystai- line forms known to the jewelers are the ruby and the sapphire. Elements of \Vheat. “'heat in 100 parts contains 14.4 of water; mineral olmnouts. :2; albumi- noids, 13; carbohydrates. 67.6; crude ï¬ber. 3; fats. 1.33. Lighting :1 Pipe. A smoker who started to light his pipe on the street turned to his (-0111- panion and said: “A man told me the other day how to light an ordinary match in a high wind. Let me show you.†There was a stiff breeze blowing. The demonstrator took from his pocket an envelope. struck a parlor match on a rail and shielded it inside of the en- velope, facing the wind as he did so. The match burned with hardly a flick- er, and the man who held it puffed on his pipe with great satisfaction. “That’s a trick worth knowing.†he remarked. “Here's another. Some- times you get a spark on top of your pipe which the most vigorous pufï¬ng fails to spread over the surface of the tobacco. In that case take a piece of paper of almost any kind and hold it down in the spark. This will spread the ï¬re and give you the sort of light a pipe smoker wants.†Raklng Grass After Mowing. Some persons advise raking after each mowing. I do not, because the clippings drop down into the grass and form a mulch, which I consider of great beneï¬t. They also help to fer- tilize the soil. The lawn that is not mowed often enough will not look well after you have been over it with the mower, because there was growth enough to partially hide the sward up- on which it falls. This will wither and turn brown in a day or two and great- ly detract from the beauty of the lawn. But it you keep your lawn well mowed â€"and that means going over it at least three times a week in ordinary sea- sonsâ€"the amount clipped on: at each mowing will be so slight that there will not be enough of it to show. Let the knife blades be set high enough to _ leave at least two inches of the fall- “Impossible, Aunt Ellen. German blondn-sss, reading a German paper, traveling in a German train with bag- gage nmrked ‘A. von S. Bremen.’ †“Virginia! What dGL-S possess you? ' “iVirginia! What do I never heard you talk Miss Dressel laughed a hearty Amer- ican laugh. “I am so glad to shake the dust of Europe of! my feet that I can’t keep it in. I’m so glad we’re headed for Hamburg, the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, America and Washington that â€"thatâ€"-well, honestly I should like to kick the epaulets off the guard’s gor- geous blue and gold uniform. Don’t faint, Aunt Ellen. I’ll stop and not say another word for an hour.†â€"' -â€" For an 110111 and ï¬ve minutes Miss i Dressel sat silent, ostensibiy watching ., the valleys, the German gables, the green of meadows and forests, as they ' - V‘â€" swept by. For an hour and ï¬ve min- utes their young German fellow travel- er read his German paper, and for an hour and ï¬ve minutes Miss Ellen Vanâ€" strum enjoyed perfect peace of mind. Then Miss Dressel coughed, and Miss Vanstrum inwardly caught her breath. l l l ! l “Aunt Ellen,†said Miss Dressel, la- 1 2in waving her hand toward the scen- , ery as if she were discussing itâ€"“Aunt ' Ellen, do you know that young man has a dreadfully nice face, even if he ‘ is a German. Oh, don’t look shocked. ' Just gaze out the window as if I were talking about the scenery, and he will never know the difference. I’ve been looking at him off and on for the last hour. Just see what a nice ï¬rm mouth he has. He‘s so well groomed too. Just look at his ï¬nger nails. Uh. Aunt El- lcn. I wish you wouldn't gasp so. I like his looks better than an}: frireigner I have seen in the five years we have spent in Europe. I‘lefilly. I shouldn’t mind being married it‘ I could get such a handsome. well groomel man as he i W c.-- a.-- ~___._- __...__._ _. -q..._. o..â€" “\‘i1'gini11,ohYirrï¬nia!" moaned \Irs. \ 111st1'u111. â€â€˜It <«21‘s indwent to talk about :1 1111111 like that when he 1:111‘t understand.’ “Don't jiggle your pompzulour crook- ed. Aunt Ellen," said Miss Dressel calmly. “Don’t worry. If he under- stood English he would have betrayed himself long ago. He might be a chunk of pink and white and yellow taï¬'y for all he understands of the English lan- guage. Thank goodness. Aunt Ellen, here we are almost at Hamburg. Here, let me tie your veil. You are getting it on crooked. No, let me carry the suit case. It’s a young house. Now for my last feeâ€"almostâ€"on foreign soil.†The train had hardly come to a long screeching stop in the great station at Hamburg when the door of the car- riage was jerked violently open and a young man pulled the German out with a hearty grip, exelaiming in Eng- lish . “We’re in luck. There was a state room unengaged on the Kaiser Wil- helm. and we can sail four days earlier than we expected. Good luck. man! Why don’t you say something instead of looking at me like a dazed idiot?†The German pulled himself together with a noticeable effort and began to stammer out something in German, when the other interrupted him impa- tiently. “Aw. cut that out! You know per- fectly well I can’t understand a word of German. Never mind, come along!†The young German flushed red. and with one appealing look straight into the eyes of the astonished Miss Dres- sel he picked up his suit case and was soon lost to View in- the hurrying throng. Miss Dressel silently picked up her luggage. carefully avoiding her aunt’s eye, and for a minute after leaving the carriage she looked helplessly about her. Then the label “Berlin†on a carriage caught her eye, and without a word to her puzzled relative she took her by the arm, raced her across the station and pushed her in, stumbling in herself, just as the guard put his hand on the door to close it. “Whyâ€"What-whereâ€â€" said Miss Vanstrum. “I don’t know,†said her niece des- perately. “but most anywhere out of Hamburg.†“But our steamer!†gasped Miss Van- strum. “What’s losing a steamer, Aunt El- len, compared with my peace of mind? I’d no more sail on the Kaiser Wilhelm now than I’d fly. Aunt Ellen. you're a jewel not to say, ‘I told you so.’ nor even'to look it.†“You haven't given me time,†laugh- ed Miss Vanstrum. “but I must say I certainly think it. There. I’m glad we’re off at last. I don't think I my- self carv to come face to face with that young fellow again.†It was the evening of the last mu- sicale of the season at the White House. and an unwanted air of antici- pation pervaded the brilliant throng as it gathered in the great east room. “They say she has one of the ï¬nest voices ever heard of! the stage,†said the wife or a South American diplo- mat. “But the family is one of the kind they call here ‘F. F. V.’ and will not let her accept any of the ogem she has had for grand opera. This 19 her only appearance in 1311ch since she I? only appearance in public since she turned from Europe. eye’s von Stosch. (1 you our! . IO eager to to 7mm 711811 '2†“American women strangers, you should say,†laughed a man Wearing ' the cross of the Legion of Honor. "You can ge§ 1:09, yon $0501}, ‘2 30 any. (inert; just I) hinting that soï¬Ã© w, an *va be there? we 1 “ hey say at the German legation i that by actual count Tony Yon Stosch has met 800 ‘neW girls’ since the sea- ' son opened. And he’s still going.†is? He’s simply crazy about meet! Americans.†as As â€"the ripple of merrirnent greeting this expression of the well known f0}, ble of the popular Anton von Stosch died away some one said: “Hush. The programme begins.†. For some time Anton von Stosch watched the artists come and {:09 his face wearing an unwonted look of weariness and discouragement. p91. months he had sought diligently for the two American women who Called Washington their home, who had been his fellow travelers from Berlin to Hamburg on that fateful August day, More than once he had followed a lithe, active girl with glinting Chestnut hair, only to ï¬nd it was a stranger in- stead of “Virginia of Washington,†as he had come to call her. Day after day, night after night, he had followed the whirl of the social wheel, but never had he found a clew to their identity. He had spent hours poring ovgr the city directory, but never a }"')‘.1}:: WP ginia nor an elderly Ellen proved to be the ï¬rst bearers of the names he had met so oddly. the evening Anton von Stosch raised his eyes.and then grew rigid as he saw. “Virginia of ‘Washington†in the flesht smiling acknowledgment to the enthu. siasm. One long look to assure himself it was really she, and Anton ron Stosch sat back in his chair with fold- ed arms and a look of content upon his face such as it had not worn in all the months since he had arrived at the German legation. \‘o sooner was the programme ended than he made his way to the blue room where Miss Dressel was holding court and without delay Sought an introduction. “Oh!†said Miss Dresscl, her hand poised halfway toward his. “Whyâ€"oh, I’m glad to meet you, I’m sure." she ended lamely as she saw her excl ama- tion and gesture had. attracted atten- tion. Anton von Stosch looked straight into her eyes as he took her hand. “I am glad to meet youâ€"again,†he As a ripple of enthusiastic applause greeted the appearance of the star of said quietly. over to ï¬nd row?†“Iâ€"Iâ€"oh, I really don’t know," said Miss Dressel. Then she began to laugh almost hysterically. “It's all too ab- surdâ€"and I can't tall; about it nowâ€" and please don’t get offended, but I was so surprised andâ€â€" “I’ll wait,†said Anton von Stosch. quietly falling back. “It is quite enough to know that I have found you at last." Though he spoke no more to her that evening, Miss Dressel was well aware D fearful of losing sight of her. As the door of her carriage was snapped shut his face appeared in the opening, and he said quietly, but ï¬rmly: “I shafl do'ï¬lyself the honor to ca}! upon you tomorrow afternoon.†Had Anton \on Stosch been less eager or determined he would have waited until the conventional hour of calling and possibly have missed Miss Dressel for his conventionality, but as it was he arrived so early and unex- pectedly upon the scene that he was ushered into the library where she sat. “I don't know how they do things in America,†he said after the ï¬rst greetings, “but I’m not going to lose any more time. I desire much that you should be my wife,†he said sim- ply. dropping unconsciously into the German idiom. Miss Dressel had seen the night be- fore just what the intentions of An- ton von Stosch were, and she had been trying to make up her mind whether to let the affair run its course or to evade the issue by another flight. She was taken wholly unawares by the ox- peditiousness of his attack. “You don’t love another?" said An- ton von Stosch, growing pale. “No,†said Miss Dressel. “hutâ€â€" ,“Then I’ll make my tight.†said An- ton von Stosch, “and I mean to win. It’s life or death to meâ€"and no man who is a man will give up his life without a struggle.†“But I’ve only seen you three times in my life!†she gasped. “I can't can- sider anything of the kind from :1 man I know so little as that.†That was the beginning of one of the prettiest courtships that ever crossed the horizon of Washington life, and since Anton von Stosch was a gentleman as well as a man of promise in his chosen career the June wedding bells rang merrily over smiles and happiness and genuine good wishes. A Saving Scheme. There was a struggling writer in the front studio and a struggling artist in the back. The struggling artist was very nice to the struggling writer for a time. He even helped her wash her windows once. Then it came about that one Friday he saw that she had a well ï¬lled envelope which contained some ï¬ves. “I wish,†said he, “that you would lend me one of those ï¬ves. I’m hard up this week. I will pay you back next.†The struggling writer knew all about those “next weeks†of tho atmggling artists. “Lo Wouid,†said she, “but I am afraid I will lose your friendship if I do. Things like ‘that have happened to He looked at her sternly. “You’ll loue it if you don’t.†said he and set his teeth hard. “Well, anyway,†returned she. W 1th a sigh, “I'll save my flve.â€â€"Clncinnifl cgmmercm mbnne. SEPTEMBER (5. 190 9’ “I 113“ you. ret youâ€"again,†he 'e hunted this town May I call tomor- JIBSBRIPTEON 199' ‘ U short distance east of Km Lamb ton Street, Lower Tow Oï¬ce hours from 12 to 23 «‘.‘clock. EVERY THURSDAY MGR 3m cumxcu vsmnac mast. SARA! U Garafraxa and foot of hill. ()tï¬ce o.m.. 7-9 D.m Tel I ï¬ce in the New H hours, 8 to 10 a. m., ' p. m. Special 8.1th of women and childre posite Presbvterian U Specialist: Eye Pr: E» .508 I)E}}I‘.§\ .' :4 Late Assistant 130)“ 3112;, and to Golden Will be at the Midim of each m‘ontl' Will be at Knapp Satuzdav 1n each 1‘ OFFICE D ()ï¬ice over VGordon’s 116 Store, Lower Town. Durham. of money to loan at 5 per 0 oropertv. Drs. lamieson Mac 0301-1 (3-1 tv of ‘ College Dentu.‘ > D veyancers. ETC. Mon Oï¬ces:â€"-ln the McIntyre Standard Bank. Agent. Money in Luau. rage Lloenses. A general ness transacted. d tioneer for the County of 4 June 06 DURHAM. ONT; OTARY PUBLIC er. Qoxxveyanvm‘. l. G. Hutton, M. 0., 2’ ï¬nger for the Cunnty of Drcqpflyattended t0. Order “3 hm Implement \an‘GI'L'JmS. 01d Stand. 01' at the Chrumcle U. tioneer for the Cour Tenn moderate and satisfa teed. The arrangements ; sales can be made at THE C see. Residence and P. 0.. 1 phone connection. Dec. 3, ’04.â€"1ypd. FFICE AN 13 RESID FFICB AN D RES! DEN HYSICIAN AN 1) 5'1 '0!’ h" ,. G .MAcKAY K Nov. 9. ’03. L. R. C. P., LONDON RADULATE of Lon J. F. GRAN ARRISTER, SOLICI'H OHN KINNEE, LICEE ARRIS'BERS. 50141911“ Diseases of Eye 'OHN CLARK. LICEN; :e.â€"Calde SEPTIC.“ R ER DURHAM, ONT. 2: L {M an York and Chic Medical Dz'redoz; DIToR AND PRUPRH MCPHML, LICEX Dentistr Arthur Gun. M. DR- GEO. 8. SUN Dental Di; MacKay Du DR. BROWI‘ W . I“ “'IN Mz'scellmzeou. GRAI l. P. Telfor 52d! Di! . H. Jackso ‘3' ‘7"- ' {pit {High Over J. J Teler .311 Ear, Throa‘ LISHE D AC )‘VCT ’0 3!