SHED 1m Subaiption ' Batu I: 41.310 may be oh: to which «vary nubwnptmn is â€{d it «lo-obi U, tho number on thn address label. No .33). a «manual to all art-tun an paid. oncoptu ovum of the proprietor. ' ' For hunk-It «haunt-.3. I Advertulng can“ mt lim- fur the ï¬n! m ht. - Mun; Leon. per line nob uh. qua! inn-mum: minim: mega-r0. Profo‘ ‘1’"... not favor-ding on!" Inch um pot “I Advnrnmmanu without ammo dine“. be puhhnbml ull furbnl and shamed mold!) l‘nmm- .t nutmeg ~â€""L( at." ' : Found." "For nagâ€"60 «mu fur ï¬rst mnflhm. :56 no... for “ olhuumnot Inneruon. At the Chronicle Printing Home, Gala/flu. Street. All advancement. .0 odd for in min to Contact am lbhod un “)th {HE DURHAM CHRONICLE The Job . . Depmnnt ’88 ACCOUNT - 108 mm! won-k. I TORONTO at 315: January, 1910 The Great Lun DURHAM. ONT., and is prepared to re- ceive collections, docu- ments in escrow, and to transact a General Banking Business, With such specialties as are incidental to a mining region ' a Matheson Haileybury, Porcupine EV REY THl'HHIDAY MORNING TRADERS BANK such :8 you may ‘ thin and» the very best conditions u the Central Business College of Tumnm. is A sure passapofl to snot-Gas Thousands have pmvnd it. Why not inventi- gaup fur yourself? Our free catalngum ex lainn. write (0! it ‘3' OF CANADA STUART STRATHY, l'l‘UR HAS OPENED BRANCHES AT W. H. SHAW. Principnl. \V'. IRWIN B U SIN ESS EDUCATION _ -ï¬... ; th fur turning out 1'me work l8 PUBLISH 8D uh cum » Ho“) MHOIPG '"h . NR“ '1' ‘Pl-I. thus wording» M "I ‘n‘ n. wnanrw 1099an - Jump†A) not bm‘n r VNPJ’ {lvurnnomclt‘ m NOX A COLD IN ONE DAY nnlrml by “Tang?“ I†1nd Laugh Medici-C \ \ l’l": Inf) fill‘llnt‘.3 Drug Store ‘N ixxu LE will he cont 3 ~u {rt-0° of push“. h .-..r payable innâ€... but I0 paid. Th0 d.“ n m pam‘i! donotodniy mmm TC. E DWARD KRESS 5333123333 Special attention to Hummus. Slow-tools next door to Post om“ on the shortest notice and at reasonable cost. There are many homes in which articles of furniture are becoming shabby, and a very small expense will make them as good as new. In these times a dollar saved is as good as a dollar earned. If you have any- thing needing repairs, bring it along or let us know and we’ll call and get it. cal! and get. it. Remember. we have a thoroughly practical man on the job and we'd guarantee satisfaction every time. “'e have just planed in stock a large lot of Window Shades from 25c up. Many of them are a. job lot and we are selling them much below the originn! cost. Call and see them. \Ve always keep the best Furniture of the best makers and sell at the lowest possible proï¬ts consistent with quality. In this way we endeavor to Ire-it our customers right and they are always well plewed. \Ve have secured the services of a practical man of much ex- perience and are prepared to do all kinds of 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. Furniture and Upholstering FARMERS’. . . . ATTENTION ! UPHOLSTERING AND REPAIR WORK mvhymrlyleiufailstomh goodin th'ncouau'y. in: and-madeva-izh‘toovu- mothio vital vain-s. Front Win in Annealed to the only defâ€. dampervhich'mumgood in Canada. And it is galvanized no per cent. thicker than gay 0th.: Win. Ya it will not teal. or clip 05. This new Fro-t Win 50 dunno kind which womforhoth the Pros: Fences. So youcfnbomdutiththobatWinin E1): Frost Coiled Wire Becam- nhnï¬nndoucthecorrea .17, 1910 FURNITURE PRICES ARE RIGHT THE MCGOWAN Milling Company 200,000 BUSHELS of Oats and any Quantity of Peas, Barley and Mixed Grams And No Other '. BLACK, Local Dealer. Durham. are in the market for We should rally chart. {at chi. Booklet. it'- oo vduablc. But if you'll write for it co-day. we'll and it to you free. Writ. foe WehmeomeookletolFroetWiu. It telhallabout W'ire. It “able. you to buy the right kind of‘Vite. “thed‘htptioo. Any nun who once reads this new Prod Booklet will be able to buy Wire intelli‘eatly. without taking anybody' I won! for it. The Frost Wire Fence Co†Ltd. Agents Wanted in Open Dhaka Front Win hill stand n m attain. and ï¬ght 0. mt longer. than any other “fir. nado. “No, you don't, neither!†exclaimed Mrs. Morxnlngstar. “I'll wenture down that there hall myself and make the door locked before I’ll leave no more boarders sleep in there! I’m all wor- ried up with thlnkin’ Doc was in there last night. I get it in my nerves so ugly if I’m worried up!" she said plaintively. “I shall sleep there tonight!†Daisy declared. "I’m game! And I’ll ï¬x that ghost! I only wish it were a man!†she sighed. “Oh, look here. Peterâ€"skiddoo!†cried Daisy. "Now, stop jollying us and tell us what you did really seeâ€"please,†she begged. “Were you up against anything? You‘re so foxy I never know When you are jollying us." “No use my tellin’ you if you don’t blee’ me,†Peter returned. ostentatious- ly holding a huge slice of bread on his palm and Spreading butter all over it. “0h. a lady, was it?" exclaimed Daisy. “Did you have a sympathetic time with her? Go on; tell us.†“Want some more?" he inquired amiabiy. “Well, then. I ast her would she play solitaire with me. Didn’t gamble, neither. she says.†“1 ast it was it the spook, and it sayed It was. Then I ast it would it set. and it sot. Then I eat would it have a drink. and it «yet! it didn't drink. 'A cigarette? 1 ant. Didn’t smoke, 1t sayed. Ain’t up to date, 1 tote 11:. Ladies where thinks anything of thetrselfs these days smokes ciga- “Oh. tell us about it!†cried Daisy. “What did it do? And what did you do?†“I seen it. yes, ma’am." Peter an- swered. “Did you see It. Doc?†Mrs. Morn- ingstar asked breathlessly, evidently forgetting in her anxious interest he! objections to Eunice’s hearing any- thing of the story of the room. Mrs. Morningstar had dropped her knife on her plate and was staring at him apprehensively, while Mr. Morn- ingstar suspended his onslaught upon his food as he awaited his story. Abe and Ollie also ï¬xed their eyes upon him wonderingly. Eunice was the on- ly one who did not look at him. “I didn’t do so very much at sleep- ln’,†he answered. “Did the spirits keep you awake?†she asked lndulgently. “You really did have the ï¬ne com-- age to sleep in that room ?" Georgiana asked, leaning toward him across the table, with her smile and tone of in- viting his conï¬dence. ' “Yes,†answered Pete. surreptitious- ly watching Eunice‘s f are opposite him as he spoke. ~He observed that Abe. at her side, was nearly disiocating his eyeballs trying to look at her without betraying himself by turning his head. Her habitual manner of utter with- drawal from her surroundings was un- changed today. though he fancied he detected a quivering of her lashes as he spoke. “Och," exclaimed Mrs. Morningstar. aghast, “now you didn’t sleep over there, after all. did you? I didn’t hear you make any, and you was in your room till (when) we got up a‘ready this morning.†“Was there anything doing in the haunted room last night?" Daisy ea- gerly inquired. “And were you game. Pete, or did you cut and run ?" dinner of the household served for his breakfast. Miss Ellery and Mlss Parks when they took their places were eager to hear of hls adventures of the night he- l< lng that the early 11 o’clock INROSS rose so late next morn. JO COPYRIGHT. 1M. 3! McCLURB. PHILLIPS Cr COMPANY. b Author y “Tillie: A Mennonite Maid.†By HELEN R. MARTIN, THE DURHAM CHRONICLE “Hit it's dimer-ant with Eunice.†be hem “She’s not your oxnghlld and “But she never does say a word against anything she’s asked to do, does she?†questioned Klnroee. averse to thls interpretation of Eunice’a Il- lence and acquiescence. “Well. I’d like to see her oncet! What right would she have, I‘d like to know? Pap he won’t even leave Ollie and Abe speak back. What fur would he leave the youth and'the maiden u long as they were in sight. The incongrulty of a Wolcott working in the fields like a peasant and elong with a fellow like Abe Morningstnr struck him afresh. “Now, you seeâ€â€"Mrs. Morningnmr turned to him as her husband stretched himself out on the settee and Ollie de- parted with a pile of dishes to the out- er kitchenâ€"“how crazy thet there girl is after our Abeâ€"her not hevin’ 1 word to an: egin workin’ in the fields out such a hot afternoon.†A little while later as he lingered in the kitchen after dinner to get a word alone with Mrs. Morningster and (u Providence favored him by keeping old Morningstar indoors) with Mr. Morn- ingstar as well he saw Eunice and Abe start out together for the ï¬elds. While Mrs. Morningstar and Ollie cletred 0! the table be seated himself by the kitchen window and watched feelings which her manner and look expressed and he felt such strong dis- approval oi‘ Eunice’s apparent lack of sensitiveness to the shame of this talk that a sudden warm liking for Georgi- ana stirred in him. Forgetting his role, he rose instinctively to stand while she passed from the room. But the act was so entirely out of character that neither of the young ladies recognized it for what it was, though Georgiana's glance did for an instant rest upon him uncertainly with a vague surprise which quickly brought him to himself and to his chair. Georgiana. with a queenly; lift bf her dark head and a look of disgust. rose from the table. Klnross so thoroughly shared tha “I’ll be strollin’ over there some time this after.†Mr. Morningstar said warningly. “to see how things is goin'.†Abe growled an amrmatlve under hls breath. He was afraid of his father. “Yes.†cried Mr. Mornlngstar sar- castlcally, “they’ll both mind you. too, when they’re out of eyeslght in the ï¬elds over.†“Her and Abe needn’t be together-3’ Her husband obstinater stuck to his will. “She can work in the upper ï¬eld and him in the lower. Do you hear. Abe?†he sharply questioned his son. Mr. Morningstar receivpd a dollar a week extra on Dr. Kinross’ board for aiding and abetting his disguise. “Ain't you leavin' Eunice stay and help as?†Mrs. Morningstar persisted. feed his cows chop feed yet! That would pay. ain’t it? It takes towners to have the dumm ideas about a cow!†“Towners?†Georgiana questioned. with a lift of her ï¬ne eyebrows. “Och. I mean a body’d think Pete he was a towuer. recommendin' such a dumm thing like that there!" lugstar went on querulously, “and there’s all the churnin’ to be did. It comes wonderfully ouhaudy, pop, your gittiu’ cold just before market day. And the yeller cow gives such poor milk still this while past it’ll hardly churn fur a body. Doc he says feed her chop feed and it’ll hearten her up. he says. and make the milk better.†“He says. does he!†sueered Mr. Morningstar in a tone freighted with sarcasm. “Yes. I guess a teller would Klnross glanced across the table at Eunloe. Not even a quiver of her lashes betrayed any efl'ect upon her of the woman’s lnsinuations. Her self control or lndlï¬erence. whichever it was, seemed to him passing strange. almost bla meworthy. The woman’s tone expressed a dis- trust of the girl which brought the blood to Kinross' face and made Georgiana and Daisy cast their eyes upon their plates. here cold'y’et! i got 'It so bad l can't make very loud no more. But mom she clspt such a tar plaster on me and tied flannen on. so now l kin make a little louder yet. I conceited a little whisky would helpâ€"fur all I ain't no drinker. though oncet I did have it so bad in my insides it went two months till 1 got better sg‘in. And." be related with evident pride in the facts. “1 had to take a whole gallon of whisky! A whole gallon in two months! Indeed. yes. You'll think I‘m a drunkard yet! Ain't? But." he boasted. “when a man is a man he kin temperance hisself. IIe don‘t have to leave it be altogether! Abe." he added, turning to his son. “I don‘t feel fur workln' this after. You’ll have to git along without me. I'm goin’ to lay. Eunice she can go along to the ï¬eld over and help you." “I need her here. pop." Mrs. Morn- ingstar quickly objected. a Jealous anxiety -in her voice. “It ain‘t right. her and our Abe beln’ out there to- gether by tbeirselves!†hoarsely “And. how'd you know it was that Menthol {n “10 form 0‘ DlVil’ much 19“ I18?†mm In. Mom- Henthol Salve is the best applia- Inntnr. . .1 spent the club! part of In! two {or mouquibo and tnuct bite. night In tin haunt-d room. an.†h and lungs, old con-ea. etc. 26c. u Coma-nod GI lid. 7. tin at damn-tn. WWWWM be refunded. You will pay to Eunice within the next week the sum of $3.000. I'll allow you a thousand dollars for your care of her up to the age of six years. though of course you never gave her a thousand dollars’ worth of care in the whole nlneteen yeara you’ve had her.†“You’ll allow." gasped Mr. Morning- star. while his wife’s eyes “My bulg- ed from her face. “What are you got to do about it?†He had turned from the window and sat facing them both. speaking with a cool precision and in a tone of author- ity which bewildemd them. “Which you did not use for her,†be repeated. “and which, therefore. must “To pay you for keeping her when she was a child? But you told me you had been paid for thatâ€"the money found pinned to her dress. And then. you know, after a very few years the child‘s work more than paid for the expense of hoarding her. So that real- ly, as I heard her tell you. you owe her back pay; also you owe her. now that she is of age, that large sum 0! money you found pinned to her dress which you did not use for her." "Who's been tellin' you them things?" Mr. Morningstar asked. with repressed venom. “And what’s it your business, anyhow?" “Eunice she has the right to work fur our keepin' her when she was t child yet.†Mrs. Morningstar repeated her oft reiterated argument. This brought Kinross to the point which he had been driving. “But you have not ‘raised' her as your own. She was taken out of school at a younger age than Ollie was, and she has never been clothed as your daughter has been. For years she has been doing the work of two women and has got nothing for it but her board." does not owe you s daughter‘s respea sndobedlenee.†‘ Mrs. Morningsinr set down the plat- ter she was scraping and stared at him, and ‘Mr. Morningsmr sat upright on the settee and ï¬xed him aggressive- ly with his little shnrp eyes. “She owes us more’n what our own children owes us,†the latter amrmed. “us ralsin' her like our own and her not beln' ourn.†F17 ve Roses, Aladam, Gives Y ou Better Pastries Cheaper know the wonderful hr'eodstuttsvih the FIVE ROSES barrel. But think of the pastries and the goodies you could make from it. Take any standard recipc,â€"â€"sam¢ quantiï¬es of shortening, water, salt and other ingredients Then. owing to its high†absorbing poum', you require ONE FIFTH LESS 0F HVE ROSES than of so- called “pastry" flour. Just mix your dough and set aside awhile before rolling. and roll thin- ner than usunl. if it's starch yvu want. Madam. and not {fawn- starch is cheaper and mare 131202th in patatoes. Wheaten flour is vaiued for its protein contert. which is the real breadstum And Manitoba wheat is ever so much n'chcrin gluten and protein than the soitwinter article. pf c on Arse O M _ad_am _ _. you ‘ aim d)’ Soft when. mews m'rn‘ starch and Lbs: y:'.‘«..’NC‘US pro- ll/Z‘wan' fork-«.1 ROSES Mad {'1 $0 you: Q +9.31. 34-..â€...33. 53163. 9.33..“ 6.3,.550. 3w Yuma. noonâ€"unmivaw a alum . “.38 8 9.95 $.03 833%. (0155 Scan. than; "(a __ â€" “"â€" 'vâ€"vwvw to artfully sud uniâ€"6d,. 8min.“ slaw-bod I yous. "Alum Prompt. -Nevor Negligent." DEBTS COLLECTEDâ€"No chnrge if no moncv made» Bdlway and Shaun-hip “ck-u no“ to d] points at low mun. _ Rwy kind qï¬wmaw IOIBY TO mu. "3! can: no“... (Honda. (1’ M but bunk Into- 9:0 . Fin. fl: boon. Good tuba. .3 all. Only m. Owner in Want and mi duo mnde by dealing with B. H. KILLER The Innova- Convey-nou- R. MACFARLANE. . Town Dollars -Dollars - Dollars Trains will arrive and depart as fol- lows. until further notice:â€" CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE I‘M-0.01.1!) pct month in dunno. I . P. TELFOE-D._ 7 C BAlgfll. Trains arrive at Durhm u IOU 1.50pm..and 856pm. EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY 0. '1; lel.‘ _ J. U. Mellon-Id. handing student: should color st to. bom- mng of the term if poulble. Bond on: Mob- uluod st moombh noon. Durban h a boslth sad waive town. taking it. a moot doubt: ulna cf mldonoo. The echecl ie thou-on M eqmpped in teeelli eMlflty. in chemicel en eectnccl eupplhe ea “tinge. etc.. for fuh Junior beeï¬ng end Inï¬de- nleuon vork. The follow“); competent e“ en lo cherge: THOR. ALLANJ’HI ci I. let Cleee OM ate. Subject» Science. ucud. much Gun. Iner, Bookkeeping and Writing. M1158 DONALUA chERRAUBIR. EL. ï¬reanete of noen'e l‘nivereiey. Subjecee Latin. French. l‘cbre. Arithmeuc. c 94 New Discoveries hynn old physieint . . C. N.Tabletsforintenml use. C. N. A AND , local nonrisher for external use. The two -b0th used in conjunct- c I ‘ ion at the same tune produces more 0 O 0 invigorating. vitalizing and rejuvenatp In: efleets then has ever before been oflered. Suï¬- erers from vital weakness and lost vigor. that up: the pleasures oflife. will ï¬nd one of each produces wonderful invigorating. enlarging and lasting results. Free Trial Smle mailed in plain package on receipt of thisndvertimnentan‘ six cents postage. Addressâ€"THE NERVINE on 90 chronu AVE. .. “'INDSOR. Own. Cum); mas AMY EDGE. Graduate «(an ML of Ell-comm. Subjects: mem Compas- uon. Gownohy. [is-wry and Art. If you want more puma. with by: hborâ€"more nutritious. more thing ddnfleaâ€"to an Maps. e and troubie. Ind mannaâ€"Then. Your FIVE ROSESpIes. your cakes. biscuits, griddle cakes. 3!! contain that (x- crpnora.’ tum'nw value lacking â€tiny :9: so]! matflourx. And they invmat-iv raise higher, with a clearer, richer. man delta appearance. The baking aroma gives you on ldeu of the flavor? is there my perfume to compare with (ha ( coming from: hot oven full of FXVE ROSES good!“ ? You sum blissfuny ma mink not. Quins lave Durham u 7.!) mum.“ DU RHA M SCHOOL. Grand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE “miffed. J . Towget. mm AND EQUIPIIHT 0mm w Bonn. Humvee Ani " rthe um. reuon (Lr coqkies tad cakes. Think of the 9:3th Madnm. both in Iva.†and dollars. etc... wil! kerp [engenfrrshfl rvmv writing. because FIVE ROSES bid: the moisture. Lv. Wnlkonon Ar. “ Maple am “ . H. Miller, Quinta!) MoWil‘hmu Ptioovdlo Gannon Jot. Alhn Put Bunovw '9 w to u‘u*o Duihun. Rood“ (I)