’ar. probably, 1 styles and 133‘ active prices. wry handsome. ushinndblv colors. 25 Iitings. mum.- arrived I-dmftiuns. hi! niln tn with a Ur rm 1 need prices ;â€".'-J‘3 VHF 831 we can ’t in†line of Fruit in ‘l’\ E D at all hours I‘)? WTTER AND EGGS uitings are on m cut list tn-dntp, good t all the verv sn nnw we -s up to T 5" COOPER Men's Straw Hats ’etticoats 3?; soft. rif'h shades. silk and “Did. 70 to $1.“) 'a â€00.000090000000000...“ in Fall Dress Goods Whitewear. Hosiery, Gloves 'e Specialize on Tea fil‘COOPER U EI'V‘ 09090 09.090000009000000? umny ï¬ne tucks it on. wears we". 31.“). MW4€V©©< ' tun. l‘here Is one a i: In]. dingmal. beam ul 1 Burgundy. and only we suuw. comes in shade- o! ad, Cakes ‘2‘. (x, mmw arrived thifl HOOK, Linus. big pile to go at He. are Manitoba Floors .4 Produce Wanted the Highest Slum Price 11 1h» wuumer flats in th. Ito": um“ prices. suit. “79 will mdo ha l'hvre is - __ -.-_ _. . 0"" 9P9“! lino 25c to 350 lb. aï¬mer ............... 81.00 lies. silk and tilt $1.00 yard. STINSO‘ better than Over $2.50 to $3.5. )C mu'ilul ï¬nish. only 600 yard; suit you With in flounco, A Good Cold TIRE SETTER .\ qwrial emu-t is made to please every wustmner. and you are request- ed [U ml] and give me a trial. Yours for business. lmake a specialty of Practical Horse- shoeing and always give it careful ï¬rminn. The only kind that cannot pos- sibly hurt your wheels and has Prowd Satisfactory. o o a Wm. J Dl'RH H1 Mrlners’ Central Humal Fire Insurance Head Office. Insureu all kind! 0! “m D70P9r‘ ‘3 a::’ bilated dwellings at re. dnced 92m rates, and under 10'- " Drs’kum notes £0! a term of three m {our years than can be locum: elsewhere Buildings prof PRCI'F'ILTY INSURED NEAR- LY 39.000.000.00. Th J g . Schmachcr. Manager. .3. .‘XCFADDEN, Ag’t. DURHAM. ONTARIO ft' In New Quarters Near the (influx: 8!. Bridge car the (iarafnxa St. Bridge I wish to announce to NW public that I am Imw settled in my new quarters. T. Moran’s Old Stand. near the Guru- fraxa St. bridge, where I am prepared to cater to their wants in all kinds 0f custom blacksmith- ing. All work gamu- teed ï¬rst-class. ‘l . D. McGRA’l‘fl COMPANY und Strongest PurelyMutual ~urunce Company in Ontario ice. - Walkerton,0nt Lawrence ONTARIO The CENTRAL Drug Store Calder Block - Durham A small or large hm: at a ï¬ne gram. white, nutritimw flour, is sold as nu: brand. Have you ever tri'd it? Get your grocer tn give you our kind nox: time and see the superior baking qual- ities it possesses. Better and wow whulemuw. because nf a secret, pun-e.» that we put the whvnt through Our pure Manitoba flour, made from No. l Mmï¬toha wheat cannot be beat for either bakers or domestic use People’s Mills A blend of; Manitoba and Ontario wheat and is a strictly t class family flour [a made from selected winter wheat and is a superior article for mulling pastry, etc. Goods delivered am; where Chopping Done Every. Day PLANING MILLS ZENUS CLARK DURHAM Anti Bug Finish A Bug Killer and Fertilizer The undersigned begs to announce to residents of Durham and surrounding country. that he has his Planning Mill and Factury completed and is prepared to take orders for W++MH++M+++++ Also a limited amount 01‘ iron work and machine re- pairs. A call solicited. Ask for quotations 0n your next job. call and settle by cash or note un or before the 15th of April. All persons owing us an account are requested to John McGowan ure aris SASH, DOORS - and all kinds of â€"~« House Fittings SOVEREIGN 30c POU N D ECLIPSE Don’t forget. T H E ONTARIO Continued from page 3. She started and caught her breath. “Mr. Chase? Heâ€"he hasn’t said any- thing about it.†she responded lamely. “He’sâ€"he’s not that sort.†“Ah." reflected Deppingham, “be Is a gentleman?" Genevra flushed. “Yes. I’m sure he “I say. Genevra." be said, looking straight into her rebellious eyes. “you‘re in love with Chase. Why don’t you marry him?" “Youâ€"you are really delirious, Dep- DY.†she cried. “The fever has†â€" “He’s good enough for any oneâ€" even you,†went on his lordship coolly. “Hé may have a wife," said she, col- lecting her wits with rare swiftness. “Who knows? Don’t be silly, Deppy.†, “Rubbish! Haven‘t you stufl‘ed Ag- gy ‘and me full of the things you found out concerning him before he left Thorberg. and afterwardâ€"the let- ters from the amimssador’s Wife and the glowing things your St. Peters- burg friends have to say of him. eh? Besides. he'd give his head to marry youâ€"having already lost it." “You are very amusing. Deppy. when you try to be clever. Is there a clause in that silly old will compelling me to marry any one?†“Ot course not, my dear princess, but I fancy you’ve got. a will of your own. Where there's a will there’s a way. You'd marry him tomorrow ifâ€" “If I were not amply prepared to contest my own will?†she supplied alrily. “No; if your will was not wrapped in convention three centuries old. You won’t marry Chase because you are a princess. I‘m atvfully sorry for you, Genevra.†“Sorry for me? Dear me “You‘re tremendously gone on him.†“Nonsense! Why, I couldn’t marry Mr. Chase,†she exclaimed, irritable at last. “Don’t put such things into my head-I mean don’t get such things into that ridiculous old head of yours. Are you forgetting that 1 am to be- come Karl’s wife in June? You are babbling. Deppy.†on “Well. let’s say no more about it,†he said, lying back resignedly. “It’s too bad, that’s all. Chase is a man. Karl Isn’t. You loathe him. I don’t wonder that you turn pale and look frightened. Take my adviceâ€"take Chase." “Don’t!†she cried, a break in her vqice. She arose and went swiï¬tly toward the window. Then she stOpped and turned upon him. her lips parted as if to give utterance to the thing that was stirring her heart so violent- ly. The words would not come. She smiled plaintively and said instead: “Good night! Get a good sleep.†“The mime to you.†be called fever- lshly. “Deppy.†she said ï¬rmly, a red spot in each cheek, her voice tense and strained to a high pitch of suppressed decision, “I shall marry Karl Brabetz. That will be the end of your Mr. Chase." “1 hope so,†he said. “But I’m not so sure of it if you continue to love him as you do now.†She went out with her cheeks burn- ing and a frightened stir in her heart. Her thoughts raced hack to Neenah’s airy prophecy. How could she face the charge, “I’m not so sure of it,†unless she killed the indictment, “If you love him as you do now.†Lady Agnes and Browne passed by without seeing her and entered the window. She heard him say some- thing to his companion. softly, tender- -â€"â€"â€"o - lyâ€"she knew not what it was. And Lady Agnes laughedâ€"yes. nervously. Ah, but Agnes was playing! She was not in love with this man. It was dif- ferent. It was not ' what Neenah meant-nor Depplngham, honest friend that he was. Down below she heard voices. She wonderedâ€"inconsistently alertâ€"wheth- er he was one of the speakers. Thom- as Saunders and Miss Pelham were coming in from the terrace. They were in love with each other! They could be in love with each other. There was no law, no convention that said them nay! They could marryâ€"- and still love! “If you continue to love him as you do now" battered at the doors of her conscience. Buy “'vâ€"vâ€"v Her maid came in. and she prepared for bed. Left alone, she perched her- self in the window seat to cool her heated face with the breezes that swept on ahead of the storm which was couiing up from the sea. Her heart was hot;’no breeze could cool it; nothing but the ice of decision could drive out the fever that possessed it. “It is impossibleâ€"incredible!†she was saying to. herself. “I coula not love him like that. I should hate him. God above me, am I not Gifterent from those women Whom I have known and pltied and despised? Am I not diflerent from Guelma von Her- rick? Am I not dlflerent from Prince Henri's wife? Ah. and they loved too! And is he not different, from those other men-those weak. unmanly men who came into the lives of those wo- men? Ah, yes, yes! He 1': different.†ALA She sat and stared out over the black sea. lighted ï¬tfully by the dis. tant lightning. There she pronounced sentence upon-hlmâ€"and herself. There was no place for him in her world. He should feel her disdain; he should suffer for his presumption. Presump- tion? In what way had he onended? She put her hands to her eyes, but her lips smiledâ€"smiled with the memory of the kiss she had returned. “What,s,}ool! What a fool I am,†she cried aloud, springing up resoluteâ€" IV. “I must forget. I told' him I l’ . _ fl couldn't, but' I can-:1 can.†Halfway across the room she stopped. her haï¬da '1 fl : MAN FROM dRUDNEY’S TH E DURHAM CHRONICLE clinched ï¬ercely. “If-11' Karl were only such as he!" she moaned. She went to her dressing table and resolutely unlocked one of the draw- ers, as one would open a case in which the most precious of treasures was kept “It was so silly of me!†she mut- tered. “I shall not keep them for him.†The drawer was partly ï¬lled with cigarettes. She took one from among the rest and plaeed its tip in her red lips. a reckless light in her eyes. A match was struck. and then her hand seemed to he in the clutch of some invisible fOI'L'Q. The light flick- ered and died in her ï¬ngers. A blush suffused her faee. her eyes, her neck. 'l‘hen. with a guilty. shamed. tender smile. she dropped the cigarette into the drawer. She turned the key. “No." she said to herself; “I told him that I was keeping them for him." Invest 25 cents in a box of Davis’ Menthol Salve (“The D. 8: L.â€) and be prepared for a hundred ailments, which may not be dangerous but are very annoying and painful, like neu- ralgia, earaehe, sprains, burns, bruises,insect stings, cuts, piles, etc. It is a household remedy always useful for some trouble, and should be kept in the family medicine closet. TO «THE A. RUSSELL STORE Youths" Suits, sizes 33 to 35, dark and light patterns, good serviceable suits, worth from 6 00 to 8.00 for ............................................................................................. Buys’ 3-piece Suits, regular 4 00 to 5 00, .for ............... Men’s Suits worth 12.00, for ............................... - ............... Elastic Belts and brass buttons, best make, for ............... Men's Black Smocks to match, to sell at ........................... Imstres and Suitings, Worth 350 for .................................. Cotton cashmeres, all colors, worth 150 for .................... Ginglmms, worth 150 yard for ............................ . ......... White Vestings, worth 250 yard for ................................. White Vestings, worth 200 yard for ................................. BEARINE Fo'u‘vteen Calls in eight Fours rvceived by our Emphunwnt Department on Wednesday. July 6111. indioam the (-Imnves we haVa for pl cing wmxwtent ymmg peuple in gs. ud «ï¬lm pnsitiuns. We cannnt Hlnpl} llalffluec'anr we reveiVu for lack nf matPrial If yuu want a gmd twining and a 200d sal- my when Had)’ aflvl‘d cmr SI-hnnl (TI‘TV'I‘RAL PU‘TNESS‘ COLLEGE 'l‘urm.t') W H. Shaw, principal. Fran cam lugue mviied on request. WILL. MAKE HAIR GROW w mmmmlu. Davis a Lawrence Co" neutral. Prepared from the grease of the Canadian Delicately perfumed: (To be continued) In the McIntyre Block, and are selling goods as low' as ever before. (iive us a. call and save money by buying here. Them-Indra“: , “1'qu Canadian National _[_x________hi am AUGUST 21“: lo SEPTEMBER IZih, ISIO [um and Brass Outings and general Repairing. Feed bonus. swam ï¬tters supplies. Engines and Tin-embers. Sash and Dam. Planing mud General Wood \Vork. BAND OF THE GRENAplEï¬uGUARDS Ito-«ml Firmrk Smack: L.___J THE NAVAL REVIEW AT SPITHEAD BATTLE BETWEEN DREADNOUGHT AND AIRSHIP WATCH FOR REDUCED RATES AID EXCURSIOIS. For all information write Manager, I. 0. ORR, City Hall, Toronto MUSICIANS TH E DURHAM FOUNDRY Im roved Grounds, New Buildings, International Live Stock Show Exgibits by 111 the Provinces, Magniï¬cent Art Loan Exhibit. BY PERMISSION OF HIS MAJESTY C. SMITH 8: SONS, DURHAM, ONT. KING GEORGE’S HOUSEHOLD BAND Model Militnry Camp. Tattoo every night. ,3 Everything new in attractions. Pl RUSSELL’S OLD STAND ........ 85c 2.98 7.98 PERFORM £38