{d5 of Carpet :lish whips. in SvtheSQ a Tumble ER’S SAMPLE IRTS ardware from Ireland ! U? Q and Caustic lakers NS SITIES ! en 8: Boys ll wn Prices ll .V 11 at bu at big chance tain business ) us far more : curtains at 8110 W you quah good last'im- wssion. They 11d working, I'lng the next the prices of at the price. 1‘10 ht prices. . Ye are receiving _ about 250 on grot- your I'Will â€" Williams *1?) is nothmg .19;ng is shabby b‘u'm, even C olored “ant-V linen neighbors to 1 supply you ;0f the new and chiff- leated and sale $4.25 IZQ‘I 7b. to cover )rt- ends to Kins): 3P browns. Jap . 300 and funeral Director\~> ' A. BELL I UNDERTAKER Seasonable;l Goods inow in Stock“. j Prints ‘ 3 Ginghams F 1 Chambrays E 1 Dimities 1 Oro'andies k 1 Mulls l! 3 Muslins f 1 Persian and E 3 Under Linen E i Delainettes F 1 Dress Linen E 1 Victoria Lawns F 1 New dress goods k 1 Wnite underskirts k 1 Black satin it Ladies’ coatings E 3 Raincoat-s for ladies and E lgentlemen, all new and k 3 up-to-date goods. E mï¬wwww’nwwm‘wi A'blend of .1; Manitoba. and 5 Ontario wheat and is a. strictly ï¬rst clas‘s family flour. Qur pure Manitoba. flour, made from )0.1 Manitoba wheat cannot be beat tor either hakers’ or domestic use. People’s Mills ull line of Catholic Robes, and End white Caps for aged peoplePlack kmade from selected winter whea. and is a superior article for making pastry, etc. C9n§cantly on Lpnstantly on hand the best brands gtRolled Oats. Also our make of uOiled Cereal. the best on the market. AlsoChopped Oats. Mixed Cbo . Pea. “-09 Bean Shorts and Feed our. W Reduction on Flour in 5 and 10 Bag Lots. {‘U\ Iune 11, 1%8 530w Roomsâ€"Next to Swallows Barber Shop. RESIDENCEâ€"Next door South of W. J. Lawrence’s blacksmith Shop. Come early LiOf your share "fu camber and handle, soap 911195, ammonia. national polish Much-y SOHpS. borax and pearl- * me“ Try Naptha soap, to be 333911 with cold or tepid water. Embalming a Specialty 1’ ~ .. cottons 63; 20c per Yiud \ “bl" linen (,3 25¢ to 50c per yd- ? and stiff hats at right price6 Ii ".3, and shoes tor men. women sshdren. ' I 0“? new tints and muslin w3 at 10c ger yd. and dotted £window trimming. 11W PASTRY FLOUR ‘ spring house-(3193‘Ding mer Should be encourage‘t Whing that makes home more _ attractive. more 10. should be patronized- SOOdS do all thiq K. 7 stove shoe bmShes SOVEREIGN ‘11 your linen by urchas- eetmgs. plain an twilled 11d unbleached. cottons @ 200 per yC‘rd ECLIPSE WE KEEP 3min bought at Market Price. e flour and feed ana our flour for sale. If ues not keep it. come to We will use you right. by telephone No. 8. R. NE“? CHOPPER. THE Don’t you remember what delightful doughnuts she used to make? her and how she used to take you up on a cold winter night and. after you had said your prayers. bury you deep in a great feather bed, tuck the covers close around you and then sit by you and sing old fashioned songs until you wandered off into slumberland? And don’t you rememberâ€"but. pshaw. I could keep on reminding you all night and not exhaust the list of her good deeds to you and me! Oh. you. say. but that‘s my grandmother! Sure! And you don’t want to forget that she‘s my mother-in-law. You think a whole 'lot of your Aunt Fanny. too. don't you? I heard you say not long ago that she was a “peach.†I don’t know that I would express it just that way, but my opinion is the same as yours. And there’s your Uncle Bill. Did ei- ther of us ever have a better friend? Yes. it’s true that borh of them are your blood relations, but they are not mine. They are just my wife‘s people. and I want to get that pushed clea: through your thinker and clinched on the other side. These kinfolk you love so we'll hear the same relation to me that the people you are grumbling about do to you. and I don’t believe my relations-in-law will average up any better than yours. You feel aggrieved because your wife's father and mother and brothers and sisters are inclined to make them- selves at home in your house. You L-“ A‘â€" true, but nobody can deny the fact that there were mothers-ln-law in the days when men wrote their letter! withapotntedstickonagobotmud. and they were doubtless as prominent in domestic aflalrs then as now. Yes, I know it's the present that's bothering you now, but I just wanted to show you that you haven’t butted into an entirely new proposition, as you seem to think. Why. even your mother had some relatives when I married her. and a good many of them have the temerity to be alive yet. I am‘ rather glad of it, too. because I have become me back from the pearly gates by he! nursing. and I have a mighty distinct recollection that she helped you over the rough places more than once. Don't Be Ungrateful. And don’t you remember what de- lightful doughnuts and cookies she used to make for you when you visited as much attached to them as to my own blood kin, and there are one or two in particular that I’d feel mighty lonwome without. There’s your Grand- mother Larson. for instance. Why, my dear boy, I don’t know how many times that blessed woman has pulled Amatï¬moaialcoadttomthcm mm of mac’s wife’s relations. Some of these dusty diggers after tam- ily secrets of the past are said to have found mother-molaw jokes in cuneio form inscriptions. That may not be ‘-l morethanmerely trotting. girl up to a preacher. Most of the present day youngsters seem to think that’s all there is to it and never try to see beyond. They don’t realize that. marriage is the passing into a new life. or, rather, the graduation into real life, where the surroundings null --_J1As The Making of a Successful Husband h ‘8 Country to POM-Ila Trai- “°" â€" ‘“ have: M 'lmher-in-I‘w Is Wind He [Cowman mus. 3! CASPAL S. ways L's just like putting a football team at of to destroy her love for her mother. You can’t do it, in the ï¬rst place. but if you could you would deprive her of a friend whose help she will often need ln times when you are helpless. No matter how deep her love for you. you cannot ï¬ll a mother’s place. and you can add to her happiness and to your own by making that mother your friend. It isn’t hard to do. She is not an ogre. mothsâ€"7†your friend. way of thinking. if you are sure your .way is the right way. Don‘t attempt Add to her happiness by making to be too cocksure. You know. John. there's just a bare possibility that you may be wrong and she may be right as to some things. in which case you would be a fool if you did not accept her views and act upon them. Try to Be Logical. r There’s another point that may not have occurred to you. although you are the proud possessor of a college degree. Your marriage did not alter your love for your mother. Neither in that cere- mony did your wife concentrate all her affection on you. All her life her moth- er has been her most beloved counselor. Now. it is true she has transferred her allegiance to you. but a few words spoken at the altar cannot change in a moment the influence and training of a lifetime. Anna May is still her moth- er's daughter. still respects her advice and cherishes her love. and, although she may do as you wish in every par- ticular. if your wishes are opposed to the influence that has hitherto guided her she cannot yield without a struggle within herself. Now, don‘t misunder- stand me. I am not saying that you should let your mother-in-law run your houseâ€"not by a jugful. But you must take all these facts into consideration and bring your wife gradually to your than the expres- sion of the moth- er love. preju- diced. of course. and thereto re getting a more or less distorted View of things. but it is the part of wisdom to give her views consideration, no m a t t e r h o w much they may u d i t f e r t r o m 5? yours. It isn‘t ’ advisable in any The mom! possessor of position in life a 0-3606 W06. her disposition. her tastes and her wants much better than do you. She band. and she views your conduct at the beginning of your married life with a o m e anxiety. A her welfare. She has a natural desire to see her happy. and she has her own ideas about the pmceaa. You must re- member. too, that she has known her daughter somewhat longer and rather more intimately than you. She knows picion. All this 13 nothing more be paid. It is true that the mother-lu- law has caused many a domatic up- heaval. but the meddleoome mammas are not nearly so numerous as they are supposedto bqandit wecouldgetat facts we would and the chuckle beaded aou-in-law to blame for her meddling in most cases. a...“ $7 ways been a ‘ pretty regular Tum 0“ W attendant atthe â€an†‘0' II n ' theater, and I have yet to see a greater proportion of baidheaded men in front than of those more fortunate in the matter of hair. I believe in giving even the devil his due, and I am satisï¬ed the debt the world owes its mothers-in-iaw is so great that not even the interest on it could ever Your marriage to Anna May didn't make her an orphan. Her mother's Just as much her mother as she was before and just as much interested in ure rare enough in this world to make it worth while to go a little way to get them. It is true that you didn’t mar- ry the whole family, but by your mu- THE DURHAM CHRONICLE “D that Pumps of all Kinds. Galvanized and Iron Pip- ing; Brass, Brass Lined and Iron Cylinders. The reason so many use Booth’s Kidney Pills is their quick relief for all Kidney weakness Here is what a Durham citizen sayszâ€"Mrs. Thos. Wilson, Queen St. Durham. Ont., says: "Occasionally I would suï¬er with backache. A dull bearing down pain would settle in the kidney region and extend into my shoulders and neck. Headache and Spells of dizzi- ness were frequent and would leave me unable to walk across the floor. Spots would appear before my eyes and leave me in a miserable con- dition. I had tried diflerent plasters and remedies but could ï¬nd no relief. I learned of Boath’s Kidney Pills through an advertisement and pro- curing a box at Mr .‘JcFarlane’s Drug Store. I commenced treatment. The one box took the pain from my back and strengthened me wonder- fully. The dizzy spells and head- aches soon had gone and I feel like a new person.†Sold by dealers. Price 50 cents. The R T. Boath;Co., Ltd., Fort Erie, Ont., Sole Canadian Agents. Health Saving Explained by a Durham Citizen Who Knows From Experienco. Many Durham people take their lives in their hands by neglecting the kidneys when then know these organs need help. Pumps fmm $2 upward. .HOP open every afternoon. All REPAIRING promptly and prop erlv attended to Sick kidneys are responsible for a. great amount of suï¬exing and ill health. W. D‘ CONNOR KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL I have treated this matter seriously. John. because it is really a mighty se- rious subject in spite of the jokes it has caused. Your wife’s relations are of much more importance in the main- tenance of your domestic happiness than your own. and you cannot do too much to secure their respect and love. Your affectionate father. make them your friends, it will take a eataclysm to change them. As to your 'tather-in-law and brothers-in-lawâ€"weil, they are men and comparatively easy to get along with. Just let them see that you are a real man and that you are going to give their daughter and sister a square deal, and they will stand by you until the lower regiouq become congealed. 80, John. it all resolves itself into the right treatment of your wife in the ï¬rst place and the kindly and tactful consideration of her relations in the Iecond. You are not required to yield any of your rights; you don’t have to make a martyr of yourself; you don‘t need to get down on your knees to anybody. Simply be a man of sense, plain hoss sense. Keep your wagon in the middle of the road. but dodge the stumps. The driver who goes over instead of around obstacles may reach his destination. but he‘ll. need a blacksmith when he gets there. Make tact. tact, tact, a compound with your love. and you will eventually praise the Lord that your wife has relatives. And now, my boy. right now, is the time to make them friends. Now you are on trial in a way; now they are sizing you up to see whether Anna May has drawn a prize or a biank. The judgment will be rendered soon. and your conduct toward them has much to do with that judgment. See that it is rendered in your favor and you will have provided capital for your future life that will yield inter- est compounded semiannually to the end. Give Thom Their Duo. It is much the same with your wife’s sisters. but the conditions are consid- erably modiï¬ed. It b quite important to obtain and retain their good will- important, I mean, for your peace of mind and comfort as well as Anna May’sâ€"and you can’t get it .by force of arms. Keep in mind all the time that they are your sisters-in-law and therefore entitled to greater considera- tion than most other women. Once The driver who goes over obstacles will necdablackcmm Let her be once convinced that you can be depended upon to give her daughter the care and love she is entitled to. and she will become your most devoted ally. Take her into your conï¬dence. treat her as you would your own mother. show her that you are to be trusted. and you will have made a friend you will have many occasions in after life to be thank- ful for. Make her your enemy. and you not only make your wife unhappy. but you lay the foundation for some mighty uncomfortable moments for yourself. Don't be a chump. my boy. Diplomacy has ever won more victories than war, and tact will accomplish what opposio tion cannot eflect in the least. Manufacturer 01 And Dealer in â€" W. D. CONNOR JOHN SNEED. We have opened up a funeral and undertaking business in Priceville, and have on hand a full stock of funeral sup- plies. Undertakers Funeral Directors UR Summer Millinery opening last week was a grand suc- All June we will shocss a large assort- ment of summer hats, made up in all the latest summer materials. We have a large assortment of children’s hats and bon- nets, and a choice lot of black hats made in mohair braids, etc. We invite your inspection any time you are in town, or When- ever you Wish to lookat the new styles. Parisian Millinery Parlors, ///////// SUMMER MILLINEHY LENAHAN AND MCINTOSH. HARDWARE AND FURNITURE. Embalming a Specialty .AND. As the ï¬shing season is now on,’ it will be well to know where you can get a full line of the right quality of goods at the right prices. We can supply your wants in near- ly evm'y line. We have the steel Lancewood, Eng- lish Greenheart, Split Bamboo, and Common Bamboo Poles. We have a great variety of these, at all prices, among them are the Twisted Lines, Braided Lines and Silk Lines. Hooks and Flies It would be impossible to describe allithe‘different kinds here. Call and see them for yourself, it Will do you good. Fishing Tackle Besides the above lines, we have also a good variety of Reels, Casts, Leaders, Baskets and other Fishing Tackle. MISS DICK C. McMillan, F. P. Reiley. Prop. Poles. Lines 9 Lambton Street. They don’t buy so often as they: used to, for our shoes last much long-i than the ordinary. That means a‘ saving as well as a pleasure of wear- ing shoes so comfortable you never know you have them on. Come and get a pair as a trial, then you’ll know what shoe comfort really is. All kinds of shoes cleaned and repaired in ï¬ne style at Haying . will soon be Here and when it comes. the farmer Wil ï¬nd it necessary to equip himself with the best in the line of Mowersé: Rakes THE MASSEY-HARRIS MOWER embodies all that is'newest and best in mower construction, is strong and durable, and light in draft. Machine Oil and Coal Oil always in stock for us. Those who once enjoy the comfort; of our foot wear always come back when they need more shoes. For One Shoe Sells Another Call and see our New Line Mower also our Allâ€"Steel Rakes. Entricken 8: Sewell’s Machine Oil. Harness Oi}, Ame Grease and Hoof Ointment, go to S. P. SA UNDERS The Harnessm . McFadden, Agent. {Hi k "if“; (ll