i TORONTO at 31:: January, 1910 33 ACCOUNT - 4! the Chronicle Printing Noun, admiral. Street. - . ‘l‘ug q‘uuuili LI will he â€I. . snmxp‘lm BIIY aaldl‘mu. {TM 0‘ '0'“... u Ram :51 â€Opvl' your. payable inulvm --$! 501m“ ho charged if nu: so â€id. “on. b whkh unwary ouhu‘flphon ‘0 â€Id il (1qu †lbs number on the mlclrou label. No pp. «manual an .H .rrufl Ir. pnid. nooptn wuun nf tho pmpriotor. [HE DURHAM EHHUNICLE Enron-mt “Iver-ulna. I Advomsingm 1 lim- far tho In! “ 3“. - In!“ con- pot “no nah uh..- mmt int-«nun mimnn mason". PM.“ grâ€; not asrmhng 000 mph ï¬ll) pot “I \olvornnmmmn: mthmn spun]. din“. 'Iu puhnahnl ml forbnl 5nd out.“ soon . humu- u! nunm ‘ [A u.“ ‘-P‘o.ld." "For 0. ’ mw 50 mm- (or am inaction. In" in “ ulnoquont martial AH inhuman-om. unload by amp" " be Dan! in! '1) ad 'altCF. Pun-bf! I‘m for yum] “V'mm ~° nhhml an npplfcnuun to the "doc. All alvuflxmmoh. to nature huflh . ~nrrvut went. sbuuid be lbw-3h: in .0! Int.“ \L'SDAY M 75 p m. I!!!) :m Depmut the Job . .2-.‘:‘."!'.J 108 .anaommummunuï¬p h-ll‘2- THE TRADERS BANK OF CANADA The Great Lung and Cough mam. mumxx'n-mn w a hunk- u Macfarlane’s Drug 8m Positions for Young Men DURHAM. ONT., EV HEY TM 1' WHAT IUBNING such .3 you any .buin under tho vsry best conditions at the Central Business College of anonto. is 3 sure passport to succoss Thousands have proved it. Why not investi- gate for yourself? Our (re. catalogug axulsiyp. Fri†{0; it EDITUR AN!) TORONTO, ONT. 12‘ 50°. and $1.00 lotâ€... W". H. SHAW, Principal. B U S I N E 88 EDUCATION W'. IRWIN 18 PI' ELIE! ID mm. for tuning out work. I. H»!!! incl)- smoked V". . x P. w PE. um wading..- Mar. 10, 1910 cw: voo Al lmvfllt You: YOUR IIIVISI In“ vou svnoucl MAKE YOU “(3L3 NOX A COLD IN ONE DAY M Pannumn. l. Supt. of the wane, Montreal, utiv mu! gives us .ntreal. Drive your loads straight to our new elevator and you will receive the highest possible cash price for all kinds of grain. We have every facility for unloading, and we want your custom. FARMERS’. . . . ATTENTION ! Frame. And the Zinc not only spreads ave: the surface but out into it. becoming apart of the Pipe huff. The Zinc Galvanizing will now “here mancntly to this thoroughly cleaned G Frame. Afld tho Zinc nm AnI- -....J_ . rat. thiiV'WéiBiKEI Becamthg’ 'nlttheweakatpamdochq 'ro_st EL“ Frames Are Welded- '. 10, 1910 THE MCGOWAN Milling Company 200,000 BUSHELS of Oats and any Quantity of Peas, Barley and Mixed Grains W. BLACK, Local Dealer. Durhani. are in the market for Not Coupled The Wire used in the Front Gate in No. 9. This Wire is nude and Galvanized by our- oelvec. It is the strongest Wire of its size in The Fros_t_ Waite Fem; Co., Ltd, __'~-â€" Hamilton. Ontario â€" 3 Agents Wanted in Open Districts When ordain; 3. don't ctely ask for a metal ate. Say )00 want a Frost Galvanized _A‘ Drop us a card to-day for free Booklet. “imam-muowï¬ghzoï¬ mg ‘EunicewasthenieceotlflsaEunieo Wolcott, whom he had known all hll city of Washington. Eunice a Wol- ’ cottz Incredible! The foster child of the Liorningstars a Wolcott. than whom a prouder race had never de‘ veloped out of that boat load of immi- grants that the Mayflower had dump- ed on Plymouth Rock! Eunice wal an heiress if her identity could be proved, and Miss Wolcott would own her. He suddenly saw. with cleanest. the plight of Miss Wolcott in thb dis‘ covery of her niece, and a cold fear crept over him that there might be some difliculty in restoring to Eunice her inheritance. It would have been difï¬cult enough if it had been attempt- ed at the time this confession was made. But after all these years? He had been a youth of eighteen when Miss Wolcott had come into her for- tune. and he remembered well how it had changed her mode of living from a style of modest dignity to a luxnrh ous elegance. How. after all these years of lavishneaa. could she go back to a simple habit of life? And then the hprt to he! grids-pt race (which in BEATRICE DANIELS. A date twenty year: hock was am:- ed to the paper. Klnroes' heart thumpedth breast, and he sat transï¬xed as the hand which held the paper fell to his knees. -v- u-vâ€" â€"" U-‘I‘ Hr. Wolcott had two moles in exactly the same spot. The little necklace and locket whlch will be found on the child were given her by Ila Woloott and contain ha- mm: and the child's. I solemnly amt-m that mt I have here wrltten ls true. of confronting old Mominatsr with his discovery. He read on: The father of the child was the late 8. 8. Wolcott. Esq.. of the New York city her. His half sister is Miss Eunice Wol- cott of â€" avenue. Washington. Miss Wolcott can identify the child by the two tiny moles on her neck just under her left ear, for I once heard her say when she had the baby on her lap that ‘I.. III.-- nxnross, ms race pale with the ex- citement of the story. “The yearly interest of that sum would have more than paid the girl’s board in this mea- ger household. And they have made a slave at her, not even allowing her to go to the public school !†He felt a ghoulish glee in the thought used In peymx the expenses which may be Involved in restoring her to her aunt or. in case of failure to prove her iden- tity. to support her until she I: able to take care of herselt. W. on end fall Into the hands of honest people. I shall now write here every act which may serve to restore Eunl_ce to her rights A A. _A- The sum at $4.000 which I took tron? my employer's deal: the night I fled will be rouqdymneq to the child's clothing. to be 'vwâ€"vâ€"r' our crime. I never would have done this wrong of myself. I have been led into it through my insane passion for this dia- bellcally clever and conscienceless men. Tonight must decide my fate. I shall either depart for Washington with the child or else I shall die either by my own hand or that of my husband. I leave this confession. which I trust will escape my We wrote to her and told her what we had done and altered to give up the child for a certain sum. but whether she didn't believe us or whether it served her pur- pose better not to have the child recov- ered I do not know. We have never had any answer to our repeated communica- tions to her. It is now four months since we came away with the child. and we have accomplished nothing. We are living here incognito on this out of the way Pennsylvania farm. It is my wish to take Eunice to her aunt. The lady has seen the child several times in her visits of a few days each to her brother’s home in New York. and or course she would remember me as her caretaker. She always seemed very fond of Eunice. who is her namesake. I do not believe she would deliberately do her the wrong of keeping her out of her in- heritance. If 1 do not soon take Eunice to her the child will have changed past recognition. I cannot longer endure the burden of the crime 1 have committed. I must make amends. But my husband will not let me expose us both to the risk of punishment. and he still hopes to make proï¬t out or the child. He says he will murder me before he will let me confess “Four thousand dollars!†Both the wording of it and the pen- manship gave evidence that the writer was a person of some education. though at times her phraseology was stilted, bookish and even a little melo- dramatic. The child. Eunice. is not ours. For the sake of the moneyed reward which we knew would undoubtedly be offered for her recovery by her wealthy father we stole her away from her home. Her moth- er died at her birth. and I. being a trained nurse, was employed by the father to time into the house and take entire charge of the baby. When she was a year sld I secretly married her father's secre- tary. whose learning and brilliant talents attracted me almost to the point of hyp- notizing me. and together we hatched the scheme of stealing the child as a means of extracting money from the father. But an unforeseen event thwarted our well laid plan. On the very night of our flight with the child her father was killed in a railroad accident. Somehow the story got out that he had his child with him. and the mutilated body of a year~old girl was actually found in the wreck and identi- ï¬ed as Eunice by some of the servants of the household. In this turn of affairs his entire large fortune went to the half sis- ter of Eunice's father. a single woman of about thirty who lived alone in Wash- i CHAPTER XVI. RATED on the side of his bed. his lamp burning on the bureau at his elbow. Dr. Klnrosa, in the small hours of the morn- ing. read the paper he had found in the haunted room. I HIS COURTsmPi b COPYRIGHT. Iâ€. I! McCLUIlB. PHILLIP! By HELEN R. MARTIN. Author 1 “Tillie: A Mennonite Maid.†THE DURHAH CHRONICLE. Kinross threw himself back on his [pillow and clasped his hands under his head. No use to undressâ€"he couldn’t sleep. The thought of thh girl. brought up as a servant to the Morn- lngstars. her marriage to their son opposed because her poverty made her "not good enough fur our Abe." her ignorance of life combined with her knowledge of books making her unique to the polnt of being patheticâ€"thin young creature to suddenly ï¬nd herself a great heiress. The speculations which the situation gave rise to drove sleep far from his brain. Would the be good enough for “our Abe" when her story was known? He chuckled when he thought of old Mot-marl earneet endeavors to hang melt. The fact that the communications to Miss Wolcott of Beatrice Daniels. the trained nurse. had been ignored did not promise well for Ennice’s cue Just now. “It would be more than common hon- esty; it would be heroic. But if she 'takes after’ her niece she won’t lack the heroism 2†He himself had no doubt of the truth of the “confession" and of En- nice's identity wlth the stolen chlld. But while the moral evidence seemed clear and convincing. would it be suf- ï¬cbnt without the legal proof which he recognized was lacking to persuade Rho Wolcott of her duty to give up a fortune after nineteen yenro' posse.- llon of it? Here would be a test of the “good blood†of which she was no Yet he found himself just now. per- haps, inconsistently patting himself on the head for his perspicacity in having magniï¬ed that Eunice was of no .m Miss Wolcott. who. with her liter- ary tastes and extensive travel. he was sure would appreciate his bril- liant college mate. instead of which bent upon “the old families†to pre- aorvc their exclusiveness and not to ~ulmit into their sacred circle any vul- gar new element. When. with youth- l‘ul enthusiasm, he had rebutted her theories as narrow. old fashioned and .:o forth she had pinned him down to the fundamental question, “Do you or do you not believe in blood. Peter Kinross?†“I do! The blood that makes true men and women. not the blood that makes snobs!" With which parting shot he had left her. and the coolness between them thereafter had never been overcome. 1 He remembered his cynical reflection ‘ at the time of her brother’s death.‘ "She’ll think the angels in heaven will feel honored at the arrival of a Wol- cott!†â€he absence or anything more snnstan4 tial to be proud of she had nourished and brooded upon almost morbidly) to have to own kinship with a girl reared in such a sordid environment as that of this farm. with less knowledge of the world than any servant of her establishment. He had a tiresome memory of Miss Wolcott's motherly warnings to himself in his callow ,vouth against “dragging in the mire†his ï¬ne old family name by his lam- entable luck of that “exclusireness†which. she assured him. had charac- terized his mother of blessed memory and both his paternal and maternal cmndmothers. It was on the occasion or his having brought home from col- lege for the holidays that splendid tel- mw. John Lowry. a diamond in the rough. and in his pride in Lawry‘s friendship having taken him to call Seatedonthefldcofhubed. (m MME)I :CURES CATARRH, ASTHMA, lBronchitisCrmxpCoagbdeoflgoc mmhack. 503:1!!me IACFARLW C0. Sold by dealers. price 50 cents. Ilia R.._T Boo_th _Co. Limited Fort Mrs. 080. Ryan. of Lambton 6t.. Durham 'Ont.. says: “For years I had suffered with a miserable, dull pain across the small of my back and extending into my sides and shoulders. I would be unable to straighten myself up at times. and lcould not stoop .to lift any- thing. Headaches and spells of dizziness were frequent. and left me in a miserable condition. I had not found relief in any of the different remedies I tried. and thought there was no relief for me. I learned of Booth’s Kidney Pills through an advertisement. and procuring a box at Mr. Mac- farlane’s pharmacy. they quickly‘ regulated the kidneys. have not suffered with dizziness. headaches. or languidness since and feel lad to recommend Booth’s Ki ney Pills.†Durham Women are Finding Relic! at Last It does seem that women have more than a fair share of the aches and pains that afflict hu- manity: they must “keep up†:must attend to duties in spite of constantly aching backs or head- aches dizzy spells. bearing down pains; they must stoop over when to stoop means torture. They with racking pains and many aches from kidney ills. Kidneys cause more suï¬erintg than any other or- gan â€of the body. Keep the irid-1 neys well and health is easily maintained. Read of a remedy for kidneys only that helps and cures the kidneys and is endorsed by people you know. u; l\..l. UUULII 90.. uuuucu. EU. 0 $.12. Ont. sole Canadian agents. The oil in his lamp was nearly burn- ed out as he reached this point in his meditations. and he rose. blew out tho flickering light and in the dawn of tho early morning flung of! his clothe. To be continued. He fell to wondering what had he- come of the husband of “Bentrlce Du:- iels.†whether her death had been I suicide or a murder and whether it the man could be found his presence would lend any proof to the “confec- sion.†“A good thing for Eunice that this matter has fallen into my hands." he thought, “one wholly disinterested and with time, Inclination and. I flatter myself, skill to work the thing out for her in the best possible way. not mere- ly for the fun of the excitement of the case. though there’s that side or it. too. but for the spice that there is in lee- ing a beastly wrong righted.†He wondered whether he would do 3 well to tell her at once all that he knew of her or to wait until he had ' seen Miss Wolcott and learned wheth- er or not there was going to be dim- i i culty about her coming into her own. i It would be cruel to raise her hapcs before there was some assurance of their being realised. He would do well to put her oil! when they met tomor- row night in the haunted room with as little as would satisfy her torthe time being. He would then communicate at once with Miss Wolcot‘t. If she was spending this summer at her Newport house he would run on to see her im- mediately. If she were abroad (she frequently spent the summer in Swit- . zerland) he would cable her to return . home at once on important ï¬nancial business. I l that‘ Teflov'v 1w; never Iivlng 5060 any other sort of men, but of cool-u a few months in ‘the world' will cum Do You Ever Make “Jelly Roll, †Madam ? nous md yieldingâ€"no Bob ‘ "no; ï¬mbmuw. M‘Omtb ' .Mtdnm, ‘W â€In FIVE R0 {bumm- lng to you every effort. Elke: evenly. giving mill tex- ture. soft. gelden crumb _apongy. WOMEN'S W038 Do YOUmmdw “jelly Corn Extractor. It’- beIt-bevm of III “Putnam’s.†' tio .11 point- .iTo'w we; Em kind of Munch! indu- ‘1 lo usually sad quietly. Baht. chukka! S M ‘2 Pro-pt. â€"lonr aging†DEBTS COLLECTEDâ€"No Me I no money male. “'9? 924 8.09m!» mm- mm murmur». Ifyon mummy. MM..- madebydulhgwthhll IlLLIB newt-Convoy“ Dollars - Dollars - Dollars 8.00 4:30 “ Bungee-Jot. °‘ t. 11.. R. MACFARLANE. - Town Agent. Hundredl have tried. but no one I: succeeded in mung a good remedy u Putnam’s Patnleu Tmins will arrive and depart as fol- lows. until further notice:â€" Read down CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE Tnins lave Durhun st 7.†manual .50 pan. Trains arrive 3t Dun-bun at «no 1.... [.mpm.. Ind 856p m. EVERY DAY EKG-PT SUNDAY 9.1;. hu,‘ _ J. o. gage-pa. ran. 01.00 per month in «In... J P THEFORD. U BAIRAGI. IVA. ------- M183 AMY EDGE. Grndmuo ofWMJ of Education. Suhjoctn: “mama. Coupon- uon. Gwnnhy. diuwry nnd Art. Intending undem- nbonld onto: nt “no homo nsng of the term if pmiblo. Bond no be ob- uinod nt meonnblo nun. Dnrhnn In n m um native town. nnklng h n In.“ ‘dllb‘ oboe of residence. [138 DONALUA loKERRAUKII. EL. 6mm!» of nven'o \nivonnv. Subject. Lnfln. From-h. lgebrn. An'tho-uc. .. Cure all Kidney and I'rinary ‘Wenknem l'ainsin back. Lumba- go. Rl1eu111:1tic.Neumi1ria. All li- ' Female weakness painful and irreuul 1r periods. M111 “'ome. and Children me lwnefitiul alike. ' Price one pair one dollar. M o quickly introduce will mail with first order One Polr Freeâ€"that is two pairs on receipt of this advertisnien t and one dollar. Otd. to-dny this cheap and reliable treatment. 20 Addressâ€"THE HEDICATED PAD COH'IW 90 chroxu Ava. annsoa. 0x12. Carma. The achool h thorn M3; oqnipnd II Mt ability. in chflniml no central “ppm-I u Out-n. one... for (uh Junlor Latin: and Intru- nbuon work. The following compote-t "A. m In charge : T506. ALLAH. Pmolpgl. Int Cl... Gentl- mua. Subjects: 80mm. Euclid. II‘IIII Gm.- mnr. Book-kooping wd Wï¬unx. Kidney and Liver Medicated Pads OnlyOnoPdnlu-cou 0m. Boflourwlae, Kuhn. join mu. FoundngFlVE mSES. I! you are accustomed to chug flowflnresdtawmaeemllkeuqic. h-_ -â€"-_‘____ "IIâ€" â€"A-‘ v i..- BuyouuarmFlVE ROSES. DU RHA M SCHOOL. "be .0500! h tl Gragd Trunk Railway Motif Goon-it. W Bonn. mm BIA" AND EQUIPIlfl'l‘ TIME-TABLE . H. Miller, And When you tum It out Chum“: 'I m (b Im*o (t)