Pumps of all Kindl- ing; Brass, Brass and Iron Cylinders Pumps "on $2 m“, HOP open every 31W All REPAIRING pro-ml“ , ,. MANUFACTURERS OP ‘utting Boxes, Horsepowcflv Wind StackerS, Stock misers’ Feed Boil“!- h-u. AGENT FOR Whm- 8: Son Threshing It chines. Wit iï¬c l W. D‘ CONNOR N STUCK OR MADE TO 0RD“ Enginesand Boiler Reps!" Special attention to 0199' me Engine repairs. Mllwrights, Machinists. ron and Brass Founders. 1nd Steam FitterS. . . . . promptly executed. . mm PRICES AND GOOD wont. l‘t mplements {PD {I‘D orly “tended (a. Canadian Paciï¬c ailway Time Tau.- Ill [KHAN FOUND!“ Royal Household Flour . SMITH 59.8.5. N1 any housefly“) it cheaper to buy 5‘ hzik's. That is becam‘ baking isn't 5‘1ch time. Their failurq. A the cost up. Get "1 FARM MACHINERY and follow diTCCtiona. result will be light" some bread or matr- )illl mm. 3 ou pay a few cm murc for Royal Houschï¬. but those few cents H, ccrtaimy and purity. Y†grocer can supply you. w Ogilvic Flour Mills C... It" .\l 01 Sash 8’ Doors ' 'u the opening of the new Utah-h .Hm :mnrhar milestone h†M.“ '2‘“ L]\?Hr)' Of Our wwno II|«-l)i| JUHN N. MUHDUEK following ti mhor notice -~. Rugs. \Vhips, Oils, GM w. Furnaces, Singvrs 80'1†«'hillt's. Heintzman’s Pianoo I ..-1 : uzhliu's Famous Bugqu in NW all makes of Plan ~ fur all makes of Sewing '3’ chines. “hilt-s. Ties, Poles, bought F Frost 5’ . Smith' 8: Sons Jn Manufacture! 0! And Dealer in â€"- l’vrcival Ayr, America. 11 and Listuwell pIOWI. mrpless Cream 89th unto “'indlnilh. All Kinds of Allan Pl. 9 '28 Dark sl- ’0? u- ’ Willi... 8 so Pricevillo 8 38 at. Sa‘go’nJ. lv 8 25 1 trains to am! In. batwaon bath. ll. and safety. Try tho mils at Junctions. n {urn-nion. g time table Will be in“ 1v Walk'r‘n at 1am Duplo Hm ’Q Hanover 9 :5 dedaugh House 310‘ 4 in? Allan and M mum liners and DID-I- M acfarlano 0.. 1221' " and funeral Directorw hshlhsua Unshrinkable Underwear 1: urndt- s for sale AT GRANT’S 1 â€D..- 11.4 Hmvv Shirts and F Ivy-.uwzw mmlv in the Dominion * O was: wmwrwnmwwm People’s Mills A Hand m‘ ._l, Manitoba andï¬ Ontario wheat and is a strictly ï¬rst class family flour. Our pmw M'lllitOhfl. flour, made from )0. I Muhiinhu wheat cannot. be beat fur t‘ithc-x' Imkt‘l'h or domestic use. 'A. BELL NDE RTAKER 19 made Md :5 i ("llstnh’h' “I! hand the best brands of Rnllmi Huts. Also our make of RHHt‘fl ("-hwl. the hast on the market. AIN'VIIHHHHI Hats. Mixed Chop. Pea â€WP. Hum Shorts and Feed Flour. Special Reduction on Flour in 5 and 10 Bag Lou. Gmds d. 1w urml aï¬ywhere in town. Chopping Done Every â€â€˜3' All myth-«lute “war and feed an“ gram-s kw,» uur flour for sale. If Mr grm-m- dues not keep it. conga t0 the mm and we will use you 1181“» (‘all m up by telephone No. 8. All kinds of Grain bought at nuke! Price. Embalming a Specialty GOING OUT of HATS . \Vv lmvv decided t0 go out.“ thlS lim- “1' goods that We may 8"†“101'? UNIV. energy and money w Other iLnM-z consequently.we 3’9 Uffcrm: nm- entire 8t00k “1 SOFTT up he mm hats at, GREATLY BE' “WED Mm Es. These bit“ were bought lu-fnre we arrived at me!“ "“m'hhinns, hence we have added [Use-11.1! 'd. sacriï¬ce- ‘ . Bâ€? ,Vnur Fall Hat at Exhibio l"‘01) liuw. and thus live money.â€" Entil'v stuck must 80â€"‘at coat if “(‘CbsNu-V. , MHZ S'rmv'rmr CASH 08 PRO- DUE- l‘muu'CE TAKEN AB CASH. , ILâ€, in Brown. Black, Cuba and â€We! in both so“ and stifl ht“ may CAKES FOR LUNCH 0N EXHIBITION DAY John McGowan. \' Rmmsâ€"Next to Swallows (.1- Shop. RESIDENCEâ€"Next south of W. J. Lawrence’s .smith shop. PASTRY FLOUR Oiltluval Perkins Bl‘mwwivk Mixed cakes at HI: lb Mnlaggsna , at. 10c. lb. ('I'isp Sada Breacnita, in “bu “b. and 311). pack as. Best quality ofï¬win ch00“- n; \ um xxwxaoppmn. Give us a call on ShOW’D‘y and buy your Int. 4" Catholic Robes, and blagk . (‘nps for aged p00ple. am- jams SOVEREIGN _ . l ’x'um selected wmter when, s'lpm'im' article for mamg pastry. etc. ECLIPSE W E KEEP TH E on shades: “Exam; â€mm? tho and mfling 1n 03011 to raise t to Swallows "aunt... 1a-.» 0‘ MM“! 9111.3 "1%me However, ' no longer mod st the Countess. Ho bsnt down lined Ksnrith’s shoulders from use und, aiming so much strength in oflort to raise the unconscious mu thot tho olss o! the strung. brood“ Elspflh once before not- ed onhls writ, snapped opsnsshis do". no pughod back. exposing tho ing to be all nzm try and help your: may have a. bone b' somewlnare. 1’11 1 carâ€"â€" “There’s nothing THE GHOST OF LOGHRAIN CASTLE Copyright. luminanwmu-n Involuntarily Elspeth place where the brace and where the heavy had been visgble at t'. ‘--â€"I ‘c.‘ BY MRS. C. N. WILLIAMSON Author of â€m mm Pm" “Tu 1mm; pu saw us arrive ini ‘electric car,†said lth an odd emphasis. l to before vou~falntr| But for a moment or two Els lost sight of the Countess skoi’s movements, and now she ly decided the}, yhile she 11: 1y decided that, while she had not ; been loo _ , the Countess must have 1 picked up e braceletr I “Will she keep it, or give it back 1 to himPâ€â€"Elspeth asked herself cur- 1 iously, as she stood aside while Trow- 1 bridge helped Lad Hilary into the 1 car. It was then t e Countess’s tum , to take her seat, and Trowbridge‘s ; assistance was given to her also, not- t withstanding the bitter words, and deï¬ant looks which had passed be- '1 tween them a shortJim , o. ‘3â€. , Mia; ,ann,†said Trow ge. wh | the Countess was seated beside L'a y - Hilary in the large tonneau. But : he did not come forward to help her. . He let Kenrith give her a hand, as ‘ she mounted the step, turning his back for a second or two. Then, with Kenrith was also in the tonneau, Trowbridge closed the door; and Els- peth had a fleeting, glimpse of gold , and turquoise under his cuff as he did so. _ ._ ‘ .. ! -___2L- mu DU. “She has given it to himâ€"quite quietly and stealthy," the girl thought. “Then she must have known all along why he wears it- there could have been no secret about it for her, or she would have said something. Now I’m certain that there’s an under- standing of some sort between them. She’s furious with the man, on ac- count of Lady Hilary. He knows that, but he’s defying her; and for some reason or other she dared not fail him when he needed her help, in spite of all.†Elspeth felt that she was surround- ed by an atmosphere of mystery. Something very strange was going on around herâ€"something so intricate, so many-sided, that she could as yet lay her hand on no clew to the puzzle, though she could dimly see her way toward more than one, as, half be- wildered, wholly frightened, she grop- ed in darkness toward the light. There was a great sensation at the Lochrain Castle Hvdro, when it was 1 known that there had been an acol- dent to Mr. Kenrith's magniï¬cent automobile. l Fortunately for the victims of the I disaster. there were few people about Fortunately for the victims or tn disaster, there were few people about when they arrived at the hotel in Lady Ardclifle’s electric car. Dusty and dis- ordered, they were able to escape to their own quarters without being seen by more than three or four persons; but the story of the accident spread _ through the house like wildï¬re. Groups assembled in the great hall to talk it over. Those who could say that they had seen the electric car come home suddenly found themselves , extraordinarily popular with all their ._. .â€" I . l acquaintances, and were besieged for . details. How had Lady Hilary look- ed? Was it true that Mr. Kenrith’s head was terribly cut? And had they really had that pretty little type- writer person in the car with them? The Countess Radepolskoi kept her room. and Mr. Trowbridge‘ also hid The Countess Radepolsaoi Kept um room, and Mr. Trowbridge also hid himself, therefore Ladv Ardcliffe was ‘ overwhelmed with call'ers in her pri- vate sitting room. It was her car which had gone to the rescue, there- fore it was thought that she must. have more information to impart than ' any one else. : On the contrary, however, she had very little. All she knew with our- tainty was that she had been 0': the point-of taking Countess Badepolskoi out for a spin in her car, when Mr. Trowbridge had rushed up to ask it he might borrow it in a great hurry. He had said samething was wrong with Mr. Kenrith’s car, and he want- ed to follow it. As he knew how to ing her dusty things. She might not be well enough to act as secretary for a day or two, as she had wrenched her arm, but she would be able to come to Lady Ardclifie’s room and tell the story of the accident. As a matter of fact, poor Elspeth’s experience after reaching home was scarcely conducive to the restoration of shattered nerves. Pitying Lady Hil- ary’s weakness, she had gone with the girl to her room, as poverty compell- ed Lady Lambart and her daughter to travel without a maid, and Hilary, utterly broken and inclined to be hysterical, was in need of help. It for no other reason, Chamber- lain’s Salve should be kept in every household on account of its great val- ue in the treatment of burns. It al- lsys the pain almost instantly. and unless the injury is a severe one, heals the parts without leaving a scar. This salve is also unequalled hr cl-appcd hands sore nipples and dis- en‘es of the skin. Price. 25 cents. For Isle by .ell Drum-ts. Best Treatment for a Burn- To be continued. THE DURHAM CHRONICLE i A running m’s Exportsâ€. i l “ must tell you m experience on In East bound 0. B. N. R .11. train from Pendleton to Le Grand Ore., lwrites 8am A. Gerber, a well- ooyvn, traveling man. “I was in the smoking; department with some other travel- ing men when one of them went out: onto tne coach and came back and“ said, "There is a woman sick unto death in the car. I at once got up and, went out. found her very ill with ‘cramp colic: her hands and arms were drawn up so you could not straigh- ten them, and with a deathlike look] on her face. Two or three ladies were‘ working with her and giving her] whiskey I went to my suit case andi got my bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic holera and Diarrhoea Remedy (ll never travel without it). ran to the ,water tank, put a double dose of the medicine in the glass. poured some water into it and stirred it with a pencil; then I had quite a time to get the ladies to let me ive it to. her. but I succeeded. I cou d at once} see the effect and I worked with her rubbing her hands and in twen- ty minutes I gave her mother dose. By this time we were almost into Le Grande. where I was to leave the train. I gave the bottle to the bus- band to be used in case another dose should be needed, but by the time the train ran into Le Grande she was all right, and I received the thanks of every passenger in the car.†For sale at all Drug Stores. -, He is away now, and the prow of the ship he is on is pointing towards ! England, and, after he visits that little ‘ isle, he will be back again as promised. 3 And even as yonder vessel noising through the ocean, takes the man from Galt on towards a foreign shoreJ so does each day move us nearer to , the unknown. Each sunrise ushers in I a period of new experience, of sorrows, hopes, and joys. No two days are ï¬like, and there is no retracing of ‘steps, no returning on the journey. n Oneâ€"twoâ€"three. ' The clock tells the hour, and three | o’clock of this Thursday afternoon will never come again. But the man from tGalt will return. He will pass the .same old stations in Welland, St. gOatharines, Grimsby, Hamilton and |Harrisburg, and will alight on the .same platform that he left three i months before in the town of Galt. (By Choc. F. Raymond.) “I will return again in three months.†Two men stood on the platform of Gnlt’s Grand Trunk station. and, shak- ing hands. one promised the other that he would return before the ï¬rst of April. I ,. So if we will see the things of the' l day. look. If we will learn the lessons 9 of the passing hour, pay attention, for ' we are never conning back this way again. And this is a jnurney unlike all oth- ers, we may not tarry. The man from . Galt may linger as he goes or values. E He may stand by far “if \Vestniinster bridge and view the march of tens of thousands, or he may alight at Beams- ville, the village near us, beneath the Inuuntain in Lincnln Futility, and list- en to nature. and her eloquent silence. But not su with you or I. ls there a chance to-(lay. then tu-day we must seize it. Is there a beauty spat til-(lay, then tn-day we must view it. True, it may came again, but it ‘will never come with just the. same . furee as it dues to-(lay. l . -- .. .__V . .. - a This is a journey peculiar. for to- -morrow holds not the treasures of : to-dzty. i; And so this mam from Gait will be back. but not so with you and I, for 'wem-e carried on hy the current of jthvdays, and there is no anchor to ‘hold our frail barks as we move to- wards etcrnity’s sea on the ebb of time. However, there are no returns on life’s Journey, tickets read but one way. and to one destination. i V 1 Two cents or its equivalent would l buy a. pair of chickensâ€"in the four- :teenth century. For the value of a nickel one would acquire a goose ï¬t for a Christmas dinnerâ€"in the four teenth century. A penny would purchase a dozen strictly fresh eggs “h- ._L2IA “I took two of Chamberlain‘s Stomâ€" sch and Liver Tablets last night. and I feel fifty er cent better thnn I lave for wee 3. says J. J. Firestone of Allegm. Mich. "They are certainly fine for biliousness.†For sale by all Drug stores. Bunplos tree. “I Vuw"v â€"in the fourteenth century; while for 2 cents the brewer was compelled by law to sell three gallons of beer, 'hG equivalent of 48 glasses. Wheat sometimes fell as low as 400 a quar- ter, though after a great storm or in time of grievous famine it would rise as high as $4 or $5 a quarter Still, at the e prices a good many pounds of bread could be bought forapenny. Pasture and arable lands were ridicu- lously cheapâ€"2 cents an acre for the former and 12 cents an acre for the latter being considered a fair annual rental Draught horses were a drug on the market :.t 72 cents each. and oxen at $1 25 In the days of the second Henry 850 would have sduip- pad a farm with three draught horses, half a dczen oxen, 20 cows and 200 sheep, leavmg a balance of 82 toward the payment of the rent. which would be perhaps 85 a year. The other side of the story, so far as the laboringl man is concerned. comes in the fol? lowing ï¬gureszâ€"Three cents a day was considered good wages for an ordinary laborer. Even at harvest time 4 cents was the largest amount eXpected. House rent was so low the Lord Mayor of London only paid $4 80 a year to his landlords. The chancellor had an annual salary of 8192. When a father sent his son to THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY. CLUE. 'V lav- â€" -wvâ€"vâ€" 9. university four cents e dey weei looked upon on e comforteble show- once. with n met-gin for such luxuries on wine et 8 to 12 cents e xenon. A selery of 824 a. your wee considered magniï¬cent. King Edwerd VI geve hie deughter en ellowence of “.80 3 week. with en edditionel $947 60 e your for the meintenence of her eight «neuter-The Monte. A IAN FRO! GALT. Good for Biliousnesu HARDWARE AND FURNITURE. We are Agents for McClary’s famous lines of ? Ranges, Stoves, Heaters, etc. \ “'1'“ George Matthews, 0-: a man named Magnire, who were in the 31% Bath, Durham), during riots at Ogdens- burg. please send their address to Joan WALKER. Box 186. Youngstown, Niagara County, N. Y.. _- L, , _‘ that is when beauty is combined with ability. Look at the “Pandora†Rangeâ€"it is a picture of beauty. All parts of this Range tell the same story of work-ability as well as show ability. You run no risk in buying a “Pandoraâ€â€"every one fully guaranteed. LENAHAN AND MclNTOSfl. SITUATIONS Goo“ Shorthund Thu-o. Boom. -â€" Swnozflth. Com- mercid. Telegraphy. Enmr my day. Write for particulars. Though we have been somewhat “out 0! the way†since the road was blocked some time ago, we have had no reason to complain, as the buying public have readily become aware of the fact that we sell a superior line of goods at very low prices. FALL TERM FROM SEPT. 1 WalkenonBusiness College 6150. SPOTTON, PRINCIPAL. This week we are offering : 12 pr. Men’s Dongolas, 12 pr. Buys‘ Box Ualt, regular 83 value. at†2.50. wnrth $2.25 for ...... 1.75. 24 pr.0hildren’s Shoes.worth 95c., for ..... . .85. Thesetare only a few of our many bargains, and we wnder you an invitation to call in and inspect our entire stock. You can get exceptional value for your money all over the store. Onrufnxu 8t. A Range of Beauty is a Joy Forever REPAIRING DONE QUICKLY AND SA'I‘ISFAC'I‘ORILY. The “Pandora†Range In furniture our stock is complete and up-toâ€"date. . We have a great variety of bed-room suites, springs, mattresses etc., at prices which will suit the purchaser. Couches, side-boards, chairs, etc., in abundance. We have a number of parlor suites which we are selling at a bargain. See them and you will be convinced. And with its reâ€"opening we expert to do more business than over before. tith India! business house. await our graduates. but! ‘11 modern 0600 method. which ensure mpid advance- moat, taught hr the onlv amber in Ontario who attended the Amnon'a SCHOOL. [El WANTED. THOS. McGRATH (1.3.4. somewhat “out of the 12 pr. Boys" Box Calf. Massey-Harris: Implements Everything the farmer wants in Implement line can be found in Ware-rooms. Sawyer Massey Thrashers Rubber ringl for Oxford Be; See our phtlorm oede- Lunbton 8M monumlouunys fll Machine 011. Harness (g Ame Grease and HG Ointment, go to S. P. SA UNDERS‘ De anal and Massey-Hurts The Best In the world Mwhine Repairsâ€"Cub "our the Inuit. The Harness-3 ak