:1 you can en- '5, then you 3211 ï¬re when ine Stove so I}’ respect for m Horse Net. {0N quantity of thi- Analhtl at the Ed has ever been I] pl» 2‘ ~-. June 29th Pnple m 8? Made 2'13 ï¬erent Id spray rietY of ' offering Middlings +é++~i-§~y eedmg . p ' ~- 1 U“JL. ‘JLL‘LauLJCh .uo' v" "“- __.--_ v. u . V . 4“...- ï¬, :,1:.D(-)uo.all. I The meeting was opened by reading S~ -_ . ° l and prayer by Mrs. McGowan, Raven- " -. - r. IIIâ€"A, Witter, J, . na. who afterwards spoke on the ’ NH, .- "\Vhite Slave Trade and How we “"‘JClmano - o ' '90 o Lan Should Help Destroy it.†The ad- .II‘ '- ‘ 0 310'“ \z‘. IIâ€".I, Runciman, E, dress of welcome was given anda \- L; 3-. Haw, G. M, d suitable reply made. Then followed cDonal " the reading of the minutes and the ad- J, MCDONALD, Teacher. 5 dress by the President. ' Mrs. Sharpe, Holstein, gave a paper on “VVoman’s Duties in the Home.†One duty is cheerfulness; one. encour- agement; another, thankfulness; but the highest duty is adorning the home; Be “c. -£‘ ‘ WEI» o.- Olntments for Catarrh lthe best time can be had in the home. That - ' Mrs. McTavish, Port Elgin, spoke Contam Mercury, on “Some Economies we Should Prac- 7-_"'"‘".or “me .. . , , We“??? “'le surely destroy the sense of tice.†Economy means ‘makmg the, System {25,7“12"â€â€˜513813' damage the whole best of everythmg.’ We should econ-1: 0‘15 s p " “ ““9“an It through the 3186- omize out time. Some say they have “Hui Such articles should never no time to go to Institute meetings d .j masttjggf“ fresï¬nptmns "9‘: ’ep‘lh‘ because they are too busy making (301-5 1mm“: n7 in s t e damaget ey ,Wl [fancy work- some have so much bric- eme f. f *’ ekood you can possibly ’ . ll h . mannf to: them. Hall’s Cata<"i'110111'¢3‘ll‘v'bme that it takes them a t eir l V ‘ aCtl‘ ‘J" .l o f .t0 Taittme dusting and taking care 0 1 , 56%,.) “ferflby F. I. CheneyCo, . . - ontalns no mercury, and is takenmnd others, spend their time In fancy “Item . . . . . . and maligmilctmg direct] upon the blood ; cooking. True hospitality 18 not in buying Hm.;‘3u{f8098 0 the system- In {making a great dinner for yourfriends, 39‘ the zenuib Latan-h Cure be sure you but just as you come unexpectedly and "We in 13133“ 1‘ ‘5 “he“ mummy “‘1 l a plate is set for you just as they are. (/6. TGW' 0. Oh"). by F. J. Cheney and you Sit down ana enjoy cup of ' Sol samonals free. - by] Crugmgts Price 75¢ per bottle. tea, some bread and butter and a good Tak . . . . \eï¬lau 3 family P1118 for constipation. chat. This you. would enjoy better \:‘Q~ than the grandest dinner. . Sachem, Janet \ C H Druggists and Bookséllers .PJ‘; £0WN OFFICE :: Buy Your Tickets Here Need mm: In properly wash buggies, but yuzx want the imported, Oil dress- od skin. ur in. Will become hard and stiff. We have the right kind from 10 cent.» Buggy Paint Big strung ones that. give good net-vice and wear like iron. Cost more than sponges that, go to pieces after the second or third washing. but are Worih double what they cost. From 500. up. according to size. Buggy Sponges PROLYW‘ {'3N fXAMINA'IIGNS. LEVINE CO. Clothing, Boots and Shoes to go at cost price. Crockery and Glassware to clear at cost price. Groceries to clear at cost. Prices cut on every article in the store as everything must be cleared. “ 120. for 80. White Vesting up to 250. to clear at 121/gc. per yd. Apron Gingham at 100. and 120. per yd. Dress Goods, 3 big range to clear at cost. Ladies’ White Waists and Summer Suits to ciear at cost. ~ the job yourself with the '>-=a~:~ paints we carry. Come .c‘:_..v.1¢.. colors. 25 cts, a can. r: 1' ford Shirting reg. 130. for 10c. xxx-â€Weret-te worth 120. for Se. Print worth 120. for 80. Hing-ham worth 150. for 100. June 29th, 1911. Few Prices Quoted Below: 3"? uple's TOWIiDg, 7C. for 50 uiving up Business gimmrlane £0. w 100 for 80. muelette 36 inches wide, reg ,‘EGT 8: PROTON. ‘ . .AIVâ€"E. Sackett, G. Wilson, .I.McDona:1d,‘ "wild. J. Marshall. â€Tr IVâ€"J. Weir M. f . Harrison. A. McCanJ’oE ( :i r â€"-v-â€"â€"..- The ï¬fth annuai Convention of Grey ,. County Women’s Institute was held : in the High School, Flesherton, \V d- ’ l n 'sday, 14th June. l Eightladies enjoyed a. lovely drive . , from Durham to Flesherton. After 7? having a good dinner We wended mu- 'Way to the High School on the out skirts of the town. Here we listened .. to an interesting program. I ‘0 Women’s Institute Convention Poultry Lice Must Go Lice are increasing with great rapidity this “anther. better lose m. time in applying this certain remedy. MacFarlane’s Light= ning Louse Killer. If you realize how much damage they do you will not lose any time in ridding your poulty of lice, fleas and similar parasites. \Ve have a prepar ation that. has never failed to ï¬ne poultry from these pests. It is Price 25 cents. OLD STAND 6‘ A beautiful golden-haired maiden, Mlle. Flora Cordler, a Belgian mo- diste, chanced to pass through the crowded streets of Constantinople. She became aware that a saflow, dark-eyed boy on horseback had his eyes riveted on her. She paid no attention to him and was aroused to anger when he attempted to speak to her. She assed along thinking the incident had closed. The next day she was surprised to receive a note from a member of the royalty. The note con- tained the startling information that Prince _ Abdul Hamid .muld like “to One day the youngster met a gypsy fortune teller who rezâ€"Vi his palm. She told him that some day he would sit on the throne. The suggestion was all the dreamer needed to begin his plan- ning. Plan, he undoubtedly did for power to mete out cruelty. After this he devoted days and nights to sor- cerers and magicians. With much of his time occupied in this manner, yet he had time for a romance or two. It is said that his mother was a slave of Armenian origin. She was a dancer in the household of his father’s sister, Esme-Sultana. When a young man it was noticed that he was un- like the other children of the court. He was sad, taciturn and melancholy. Though his face was the personiï¬ca- tion of innocence and youth there was an apparent expression of cunning to tho.e who can detect evidence of a hidden characteristic. nauseating as the career oi this old wretch. From the time of his youth to his overthrow by the Young Turks he has been the incarnation of all that is Wicked . Old Abdul Ham-id, cruel persecutor, are you alive? 18 your brain suffering the visions of many whom you killed and cast into the depths oi the seas? Are you crouching along the musty floors of a dark and hideous cell, your craven ï¬ngers seeking for a crevice that will let in a little light? Do your eyes peer from hollow sockets like the ravenous beetles they are? Are you sapped of the last drOps of vitality and are your bones huddled fleshless together? If you are so, Hamid, the laws of retribution are nstly penalizing you. But if you ave paged from your torment to a greater unknown, only the horrifying thought of your transgressions will be__perpetuated in history. Tile Ottoman empire h'as furnished ï¬le world some of its most trepid in- comgmities. Bqt none has been $9 The denouement of the tragic drama oi the eas1~tl1e liie career of Abdul Hamid with a half million as- sassinations to give it the vilest of vile settingsâ€"is shrouded in mystery lNo one seems to know authoritatively 'whether or not the most tyrannical despot of history is still alive. The dim tapestries oi obscurity have been lowered before his career until now there is nothing to give an inkling as to his condition. Mystical are the ways of the Turk. but none more so than the manner in .which this insipid old wretch is paying the penalty on this earth of his awry career. If he is alive and suffering the pangs of his iniquitous past his plight is un- covered. If he be dead the sordid place his decayed bones desecrate lies in a remote spot with very few know.- ing its whereabouts. Reports coming from Salonica, his place of banish- ment, are conflicting concerning his predicament. The Latest Events In the Most Vile of Histories Are Unknown to Public â€"How a Sad-Eyed Youth Laid His Plans to Gain Royal Powerâ€"The Fate of the Belgian Modiste, Who Attracted Him. MYSTERY SURROUNDS FATE OF THE MAD SULTAN. Him-owe. “'e can levas happy on a. small im-ome us on a large income if ‘ we are only contented. Suppiy our homes with good litera- ture: if possible have a. good daily paper; if on a farm take a. good agri- cultural paper. and every home should have a good map and dictionary. Every mother should take time to read some good stories which will ele-l vate her mind. Another point of economy is to see that everyone in the home has plenty of rest: mothers should take a. rest in the afternoon and a vacation every year. Agood point of economy is to join the VVom- en's Institute where one is always learning something, where one be- comes acquainted with many nice people and where one learns good business methods. Another good thing is in making our homes happy. The lust time in a mother's life is when she can th all her children to. bed and know where they are. The' ‘(ild people should he made happy fori lwe will not. have. them \x iih usuwnys. In the (evening Mrs. Mc'l‘avish spoke on "'I‘mining our Future H: usekecp- ers.†Daughters should receive the host eduestion possible. Mothers should let their (lnugluers help them and SlIOVV them how to (lo things pxooe'ly. They should he taughthow. to take care of their health. how tor dress properly u hen at. their work; the Value and proper we of money: how to he modest. and lo litâ€"t happy where- ever they may he. The meeting: closed by singing the National Antueui. Ofï¬cers for the coming ymr are :â€" President. Mrs, Rim. Best, Flesher- . Lon; Vice Pie-m. Hrs. .ln.~, Ath. l Chnbwoxth: Seth-'l'i'ensu Mrs. T. H. Thurston. He hex-ton. 'l'h- next noeliz'g Hill he lzeld in Dundnlk. ‘ i IS ABDUL HAMID DEAD? 5 A mistake mothers make is in dreSS' ing their childnen in two many white dl'cebCa uLd {11113. They should be . d; arsed in dark clothes so they can go gout and play. In all these things we econunsizoâ€" time. Then we can econo- iinize in Spending our money. “78 g'shnnld never buy a thing we don’t inc-ed, nn nmtter how cheap it is, and jwe should never buy a cheap article. FAnulner ecunomy is to keep astrict uccmmt- of an we Sell and huy, and al- ways keep on the right sideof your immune. “W: van le as happy on a. small inc-nme as on a large income if we are only contented. TEE DURHAM CHRONICLE. thousand feet down the steeps of Ben Nevis and lived to tell the tale. Ad- miral Sir Novell Salmon was clean shot through at Lucknow and return- ed as dead, but came up smiling soon afterward. Similar was Lord Wolse- ley’s experience in the Crimea; but, thcugh pretty well riddled with shot an;l shell and deprived of the sight of an eye, he was able soon after to enjoy a laugh over his own obituary. Not long ago there was a girl up on trial in a London police court-who had twice attempted to commit sui- cide, but two trains had passed over her and left her absolutely unscath- ed.â€"London Telegraph. Abdul Hamid was born September 22, 1842. If he is yet alive he is. only 68 years old. Penned in Salonica as a human spider, the last days of a wretched career are coming to a close if they have not already ceased to be numbered. He had seen to it that his brother wougd not. return from his place of con nement. Some time later a ï¬re destroyed the house of Midhat--P-asha. Closely following this a box arrived in Constantinople addressed to Abdul Hamid. In the box was the head of Midhat-Pasha, the brother of the Sul- tan. He had been choked to death in his bed. A quarter of a century later the head was found in the cellar of the royal palace. Similar persecu- tions followed during the long career of the scheming Sultan until he was dethroned and cast into exile by the Young Turks. _ l I Soon after this he began to plot against his brother. He was 33 years old when his brother Murad succeed- ed Abdul-Aziz to the throne. About this time the madness of the Othman family began to show in the dreamy young man. He told Midhat-Pasha that the brother on the throne was a helpless madman. The pasha was the great friend of the peeple and he saw that the regent was not the studious and far-sighted man he had been be- fore his accession to the throne. By the efforts of the pasha and the con- nivances of Hamid the latter was able to ascend the throne three months after his brother replaced Abdul-Aziz. His expression of grati- tude was in doing away with his bro- ther and placing Aibdul-Aziz, the pa- troit, in exile. The new regent de- stroyed all manner of claim to the throne by his brother in the event of his being restored to health and ban- ished all patriots from the kingdom. There are many stories telling how many of these were killed and their bodies placed in sacks and cast into the seas. â€18KB ner acqualIIIaDCc. Din), can... ‘uv dest, as she was, the information played on her vanity. She granted him an interview which was nothing more than the ï¬rst. step in her wretch- edness. He offered to make her his legitimate wife and she accepted. She was converted to Islamism and the world-famed Fatima began her career. But his love was short-lived and soon Fatima disappeared. Tho ahnv» prices inrlmle freight prepaid to any points beyond Tut-unto and snuth of North Bay add 0! Ontario, Quebev, and M x-itime Provinces add six cent order by money under or draft to The fallowing styles we carry i in 20. 30 and 40 md mils onlv. \Ve sell at actual cost. of manufact top and botbom draw, very heavy chain to stretch any fence. Shipped with fen: 7-48-0 Has 7 line wires rod, all Nu. S) 1) ad steel 6. 7. 9. 10, 11. Price per paid .... . ............... The Sarnia Fence Cumpany are the only knot-fence manufacturers in the D combine. DON’T PAY MORE THAN OUR PRINTED PRICE FOR ALL DO YOU ARE BEING TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF. Ourguarantee will pt'ot BACK IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED. DON’T BUY COMBINE FENC Canada. The fence combine endeavored to get cont join their association. but we are satisï¬ed with at prices on fence. consistent with the best fence on the Canadian market to-day. Our direct to the is endorsed by GVé-I'Y fartners’ organization in the D with leaps and bounds farmer policy nminion. The demand for our fence this vear has increased and We are now operating a plant which. has the largest capacity of any plant in the Dominion. a! d it was entirely built. up on our direct to the farmer policy. $24.- 6-40-0 HasB line wires, 40 in. high, 9 the rod. All No. 9 hard steel wire. Spac- -40 Has 8 line wires. 40 inches high, 12 the rnd. all No. 9 hard steel wire. 3, 4, 6, 7. 7, 8. Price per rod, freight prepaid paid. ~40-O Has 7 line Wit‘PS 40 in. high. 9 stays to the rod. all No. 9 hard steel wire. Spacing 5, 6. 6. 7, 7;, 85‘ price per rod, freight pre- n. Royal Brand farm fencing ue wires. 48 in. high, 9 stays to the ad steel wire. Spacing 5, Price per rod, freight pre- ï¬t- Sold Direct to the farmer (be Sarnia Race (Zompanv, Sarnla, Ontario we Pay the “freight to Your nearest Railway Station very heavy chain, extra. single Wire stretcher, and splicer. Shipped with fence orders only, freight payed. $7.50. manufacture. the best fence stretcher 'mvinces add six cents per Hoofzottzoooooozooooe: izqzooooooooifv Xx. 3, 4, 5, prepaid... 29c in stock ahd can make prompt shi Lam bton Street, Continues until 1st of July 2 stays to Call in early and take full advantage of the bargains offered in this summer’s most fashionable millinery. The prices are reduced next to nothing. Look up last week’s adv’t for descriptions and price lists. We had a splendid opening trade, but there is still a vast choice of the most beautiful creations to select fromâ€"all colors New Hats Constantly being Added to the Stock 0 any railroad station west of add one cent per rod and we pm MISS DICK, .-fence manufacturers in the Dominion is in full swing I Our guarantee will protectâ€"y0;1:â€"â€" YOUR MONEY BUY COMBINE FENCE AT COMBINE PRICES. 9-48 Same as 9-48-0, with 12 stays to the rod. Price per rod, freight prepaid. 10-50 10 line wires, 50 in the rod, all No. 9 hard 8 ing331}, 35, 3g. 5;, 6. 8, 8, freight prepaid .......... 9-48-0 Has 91ine wires, 48 in. high. 9 stays to the rod, all No. 9 hard steel wire. Spacing 3, 4, 5, 5, 6. 8, 8. 9. Price per rod. freight pre- paid ............. . ........................ 30¢ 8-48 Has 8 line wires, 48 in. high. 12 stays rod, all No. 9 hard steel wire. Spacing 4. 5. 6. 7. 8, 9, 9. Price per rod, freight, pre- paid ...................................... rod and we shipment of any amount. All fence put west of Toronto in Old Ontario. To we pay freight. To poian in New pay freight. Remit cash with your the market. Has heavy iron clamp, 2 proï¬t, and are offering the farmer day. Our direct to the farmer policy for our fence this vear has increased largest capacity ofany plant in the s, 50 in. high, 12 stays to hard steel wire. Spac- 6. 8, 8, 8. Price per rod, rnce per rod, 35c l'uu, 1 rexgnu pre- 30c All complete and guaranteed Du rham 32:50 to the UP