hm #ay BORERS’ IONS énipeg 'om I Lgent, :1 Ontario 5 mticularly Satis. ; because thee. 9 proved so eat. our customem 3 card size 3g; 311388, , splendid ba Plours Wanted In all statio as. ,c of Orillis and 3 Canad. nfectioner d Grocer .l Returning 0an J unction (et Kodak ty all through 't us show Von mer fraxa 8t. RHAM ickets Here all station-9’ and West in all static?! .‘vvâ€"v any G A.E.D rand Tweeds. roceries. )0] for trade lowest 'Townto' you. g EDWARD KRESS §:::"3‘;:;22 ‘um'f‘ “"5“ “â€4.‘ “w* “‘3" M-‘v. new» \ ’ 3 Furniture! Furniture ! .ooooo¢+¢+¢+§¢§§¢¢+§§4 +§++¢¢v+ Will be sent to any address in Canada forthe balance of the year for 25 cents, and 2â€"5;: COMPLETELY CURED BY THE NEW METHOD TREATMENT swan Is TAINTED W. J. REID, President. FIREWORKS DISPLAY EVERY EVENING FM’. '1'†E FLOURâ€" Rugs, all sizes and colors, Flour Mat-s, Door Mats. Flum- Oilrloth of different colors. FOR THE \VlNDOVVSâ€"Tapestry Curtains. Lace Curtains, Wimluw Shades. Bnbinette Poles. Brass Poles of diffewnt kinds. FUR 'I‘Hli K11 CHFNâ€"Tahles. Chairs, Glass Cupboaids. etc. 1 FUR THE DINING ROOMâ€"Buffets, Sidehom‘ds. Extension fables. Dining Chairs. '85, ' FUR 'l‘HE PARLORâ€" Parlor Suites. China Cabinets.‘ Odd ("hair-s, I’m-Im- Tables. Music Cabinets. Picture Mouldings. Picture Frames. ar-(l all ther rgpxisitvs. IS Row ONT Now IS THE TIME TO BUY In Prizes and Attractions Exhibition of Live Stock. The best ever seen in Ca Many L’nique Special Attractions, including AERIAL. MILITARY AND HYDRO ELECTRIC FEATURES JUMPING AND SPEEDING CONTESTS BIG DOG AND CAT SHOWS. FOUR SPLENDID BANDS A HOST ATTRACTIVE MIDWAYâ€"BEST EVER SEEN IN LONDON Spring Furniture Sale Â¥ THE TORONTO NEWS u- - . 0111' Dru ate address. WESTERN FAIR" NE‘\';S'I‘O(‘K JUST ARRIVED and Will be sold at lowest All letters from Canada must be addressed g.) if? a?! c E to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- I†W ment in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to 97502151" ,1 - . - - m2; .1 3 earl at onr Medrcal Instxtute m Detr01t as we see and treat 3n; O} (at \tmusor. offices which are for Correspondence and ~ 113.! ran bnsmess only. Address all letters as follows: DRS. KENNEDY KENNEDY. Wind-or. Onto ' to the [st of October for 25 cents extra. THE GREAT EXHIBITION OF 19†REDl'CED RATES 036 ALL RAILWAYS v’rize Lists. Entry Forms, and all other information from THE CHRONICLE I'H E HALLâ€"Hall Racks. Han‘ra'bies,’Han spat; H 1 RED ROOMâ€" Bed Room Smtes,MattxSSSeS,Sp1mge H. tits. (‘nmhea megeS. etc. ,. [NDERTAKING RECEIVES SPECIAL ATTENTION Spring is here and our 1 911. Send for Booklet on Diseases of Men “ THE GOLDEN MO NITOR †FREE ..... CONSULTATION FREE f0: +¢§4§¢§¢¢¢¢§9+9¢¢¢4$é . M. HUNT, Secretary. :11, write for a Question List Home Treatment seen in Canada ‘1 Put a hardwood board behind the cylinder attached to the ma- chine on the left. Bring it to with- in a foot or so' of the other end of the cylinder. If plenty of con- cave surface is used and the first row of teeth removed to create a draft, the seed Will be very Well hulled by going through once. If 3 Winchester Springs farmer can grow 5,15 bushels per acre on 4%, acres, realizing over $55 per acre for seed besides the value of the first cut of hey, it will surely pay others to consider this crop. for the production of seed. If it blosom well. the harvest should be good; if not. it can be turned into hay or pasture. It is easy to har- vest clover seed. Mow it when the straw is tough from dew or rain. After it has lain two or three days in the swath to cure, rake it up into good sized bundles. It should be damp with dew in order» to pre- vent shelling. It may be housed in a Week or ten days. In Decem- ber an ordinary threshing ma- chine Will thresh it satisfactorily. I believe the farmers of the Qt- tawa Valley and St. Lawrence counties would find it profitable to use their second growth clm'er I Reports from the Ontario red :clover districts report that the prospects for seed are extremely poor. Even in the Lake Erie counties. the dry weather during May and June shortened the hay and pasture to such an extent that much of the second growth will be used for fodder. Where the first growth blossomed wel‘. consider- able seed is forming‘. which is not usual. However, the clover midge is taking“ some toll. CLOVER SEED \VILL BE SCARC‘E The tobacco habit has its com- pensations. It has been largelv the means of putting )IcGill Uni- versitv on a sound financialhasis. Sir Wm. ;I\I3cdonald. the tobacco king. has given almost ten million dollars for the furtherance of higher education in Quebec. Tobacco, love, and olives are. all acquired tastes: a man must eat nine olives, smoke nine cigars and love at least nine women before he can settle down to any one brand. bztat to m: he:k a...) the man Bliss (Eli: foxd is nurs Shaw! Here is the wag. and the gdar edexil, crammed the only tOp hat in (‘aribou more tight 1:; on his head, spurxed his beast ignto the edge of the grey flood that went roaring by, slipped and recovered, sit- ting his horse now as firmly as Combe himself might have done; slipped as sin, and the next moment was swim. ming, horse and man, deep in the angry waters of the Frazer. “No, to the you wanted to â€Vie C’n't. “('Q 0 \He 1;â€: K b" \. o “Is [Ea so. crass: tins bit beat (0 get t There was a pause whilst Jim fas- tened the bag in its place again, the lights were growing very close now, and the voices of the searchers plain- iy audible. Combs could distinguish his own name. uttered from time to time. “Veil. what a‘e we waiting for? Arcn’t you coming?“ “Pack to Soï¬a i'rcek?†“No, to the lisia'y. Isn't that Where you wanted to take me?†“Vie can't. That b‘anked ferryman has. gone avid i can't break the lock.†“Is tlï¬a so, and Jim Conibe can’t £1252 this bit of a river without a boat to get a:k 'io in.) man â€â€œ55 .~1A Cliiford is nursing? Shaw! Here is suppose?†He was quiet now ahd business-like. “I guess so." “Well, these will do then. We shall make them all in a devil of a mass. but the water-proof case will save some of them. I’m glad you brought that, Mr. Combe.†Jim struck ano doctor finished 11 “They have all ances for cases of his own (3.30.. He aiw: them L1!) in this and :m bank. Scnuc-zze \\ 111 zinc shan’t have any use for trip. We don’t “ant to (_ than we are obii _ed to. †Jim Chew.» of a match, him, the do of his grips; “Have you got all and things there? '1 think,†and its point strapped upon Jim’s “No, I don’t know as it does matter a whole heap. I rode that devil here in a day and a night to get you. He wasn’t broke when we left,†and he pointed to the weary roan. “I’ve lied “If you had to} me that it was for a woman I would have come.†“But it wasn’t.†“No?†hesitating questioningly on the monosylla‘ole, “but you told Bill 50. Vhy didn‘t you lie to me?†“It wouldn’t have helped. You 113,1“?4- ~- 1’ ter?†THE TENDEBFOOT’S WOOING Continued from page 6. my “assistance or die: Does it ma Continued next week r II'L-i‘nd Bi]! got these, 1 inta- he said. “He was thinking 0! Nn case. He always is. Wren; up in this and put them on the Senna-:29 will find them and w have any use for than on this 9n :ck another match and the shed his examination. ave all the ordinary appli- :ases of accident at Rolt’s, I He was quiet now and d, and by the faint lin‘" {at I which Jim had to hold for Mr explored m.» interior best to steal a man. I r it does matter," and he one side of the boulders 1e and cry came nearer. 3 their lanterns flashing ' them on this 'at'ry any more THE DURHAM CHRONICLE . “YES, Suppose next year there is a shortage in the United States .C'f fifty million bushels. This shortage in the United States in- fcreases the demand upon the iWrOId'S supply, and raises the price at the world’s centre of the ztrade. From there it stiffens the demand and raises the price at all the shipping markets of the world. The United States buys its fifty million bushels wherever it is most .convenient, the market price en- !hanced by the United States de- mand. It makes not the slightest difference Where the Wheat is bought. Every primary market in Of 5 “Can this question be satisfac- torily answered?†“I think so. Great Britain set- tles the price of wheat for three reasons. She is the largest imâ€" porter of wheat. She is a free trade country, and she is the world’s carrier. She therefore. acts as the world‘s clearing house for wheat as for many other com- modities. The price in Britain is settled by 'the world’s supply and the world‘s demand. If the Uni- ted States should become a wheat importing country and wants fifty' million bushels it would make not the slightest difference whether she baught it from Canada, Argen- tine. Egypt or India. What the United States absorbed from the world‘s supply would affect the' demand and the price in precisely the same way. wherever she might get it. Ten years hence there would not he a market for a single bushel more of Canadian wheat because -'.>f wheat being free between Canada and the United 'States. The ration of the whole available supply to the whole deâ€" mand fixes the price in the world's centre of the trade, and that in turn regulates the price in the emotest corner of the earth where there is transpartati-on to take the wheat to the world‘s market.†' ' PUT CON CP ETELY. “Can you put the case a little more concretely?†“Yes. Sunnose next vear there “What about Northwestern Wheat?†"The contention that the west- ern wheat grower will get abet- ter price under reciprocity has been pretty Well shattered. A. Heading article in the Manitoba Free Press of the Blast insrtant. giv- ing .a moderate and reasonable statement of the case for the treaty, does not claim that the price will be higher. The articie after pointing? out that Great Brit- ain takes only 105. .,000 000 cwt. of Wheat from all countries. and showing that the total nestern wheat crop may soon reach 400.â€" 000,000 bushels, puts the question as follows; HOW TO DISPOSE OF CROP. “The problem before Mr. Borden is to demonstrate how the Cana- aian producer is to dispose of this volume if he is limited to the Canadian market and the British market.†"in addition to this it is certain that many, important industries WE}: be seri-nusiy affected.†'1 “‘0 MAIN PROVINCES. “To be more specific take the case of Ontario and Quebec. While the-â€'3 may he opened up amar- ket f .-r '3 few more or less un- img‘ortunt products which are not now wadil} saleable, and while the. prices of a few high class priducts may be temporarily raised. there is an absolute cer- tainty that the market for the great bulk of the staple products of the farm, such as butter, eggs sheep, hogs, etc., will be flooded fram the outside. From a business standpoint the arrangement is upon the whole in- jurious. General phrases about larger markets and greater free- dam of trade are meaningless Without application to the par- ticular conditions of the country. In 'any arrangement of the kind proposed there will be some ben- efits and some injuries. I regard the benefits as largely probla- matical while the injuries in many cases are certain. Taking the sit- uation as a Whole it appears to me that the disadvantages largely out \~'eigh the advantages. , “I shall be Willing to do any, thing in my power to assist ini the campaign against reciprocity.l The Views I have expressed in! the House have become stronger; as the discussion has proceeded. ‘ yHON. CLIFFORD SIFTON STILL'the world gets the be};fâ€"it of the! increased demand and the enhanc-l OPPOSES RECIPROCLTY. ed Price caused by the shortage. in the States. Hon. Clifford Sirfton, after an-, “Incidentally I may remark that nouncin-g his intention not to seek , a study 0" the Statbs’tlcs and the l t' . : 1d t'tu ncv 5 agricultural conditions of the U.S. re-e ec ion m h“5 0 cons 1 e. ‘ gdoes not indicate that she is any of Brandon, went on to say; ; nearer to becoming “I shall be Willing to do any-.a wheat importing country than! . . ,. ,. 99 thing“ in my power to assist inshe “as WW“) years ago, l NO 'MORE FOR \VHEAT. “'9 Wu; give ()m. Hundred Dalian-n for any can of mama-w m-nwd by cmarrh; that cannot be curt-«l hv Hall's (Jararrh Cure. Sand for circular c .rve, w .V .--...,_ u. my Eustachian Tube “'hvn this tulw is inï¬anmd yuu haw- a nnnnling 51mm] or imperfect. hearing and whrn it is mni My chased. Dvafnms in Hue result and unlvs Hu- i- ï¬mn a'ion can be takpn n I am" this tulw rest! rm! to us normalconditiou hva ing \\ ill lw destrl-ywi furovor: nine mam-z out. of Wu .arvczmsml ht ("marrh which ts nothing but an inflamed «animal. of the mnmua surfaces bv lovai mq-limtinn, as they ('amm‘ reach the dimusmi pur'mu «.ftlw mun ‘lwre is ntr‘y (me waytumuwdeainmu an that is by cmwtitu- rimmi rmm-dm- Deufiwss i~ mum-d bv an in- flamed (-muiitiun of Hm mucmi- lining of the Eustachian Tube Whom this who in inflamed yuu haw a rlnviniin! suum‘i nr innmrï¬mt humhmr An ozrdinlar-y case of diarrhoea can, as a rule. be cured by a single dose of Chamberlain’ns Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. This «remed'y has no superior for bowel complaints. For sale by Gun’s Drug Store. “No, but I hope and trust that. there are a great many thousands of Liberals in Canada who are pat- riotic enough to put country be- fore party and stand by our true. national interests. Particularly I hope that the thousands of young men who have lately been forming themselves into non-political Can- radian clubs for purposes of dis- cussion will see that the ideals towards which they have been working are. in danger and will, regardless of party affiliations, throw themselves into the fight. It makes little difference to the future what is the name of the party which is in power for the next five years, but it is of incal- cul'able importance that the true lines of our national development should be firmly and zealously maintained.†Fold bv Druggista 75c. Take Ham 8 Familv PM» for mnï¬imioin is no excuse for throwing away the advantages of our position. The true path for Canada is the path she has been followingâ€"a dignified independence in policy and a vigorous development and careful conservation of her own iresources. The treaty its the first step towards the exploitation and subordination of Canada.†HOPE'S FOR PATRIOTIC ACTION “Have you any Opinion to offer regarding the probable result of the election?†- "But the most serious features of the arrangement is the sacrifice !Of our fiscal independence. The imore you look at it the more cer- ;tuin does it become that from the 1moment the treaty takes effect our policv will be controlled by What is done at Washington. To- dar' We are the most independent geountry in the world. W’e abso- lutely control every department of ‘our administration. Once we put ourselves into a state of depend- a self-reliant and independent country. It was at first a hard- ship, and there was every excuse for those who sought reciprocitv. Now we have overcome the diffiâ€" cu]*ies and won our wa \ through to independence and prosperity there “No intelligent man can deny that the policy followed by the United States in excluding us from her markets in the past have been a prime factor in making: Canada ence upor. American markets and Americran tariffs our freedom is gone. With it goes the main- spring of our national life. “NO intelligent man man- dpnv Take “No. II†Tablets reg'rularlx a that you have found (hmvrue with v: beneï¬tted from the start and soon cured Father Morriscy Medicine Co., Ltd., â€"-one of the best of the late priest- p11} sician s remarkable prescriptionsâ€"positively cure Indigestion, D\ soc; 1;,ia s ck or Sour Stomach, Heartburn, and{3 all the su11feriz1g that comes from a “bad stomach.†FATHER MORRISCY’S "No.11†TAï¬LETS H ave you ever felt a leaden weight in the pit of the stonmchâ€"a feeling of fulness, with belching of wind and perhaps severe pain? Then you know how indigestion feels. It makes a person sarcastic and cranky â€"â€"it causes misery after every mealâ€"it saps the strength. A Positive Cure For Indigestion and Dyspepsia. Deafness Cannot be Cured Each tablet will digest 1 91 pounds of F. J CH EJEY (30., Toledo 50c. at Your Dealer’s he main- “$0 rmgln who dni’e? Fistsiuess with H. a. , . - XS ever sat" i. to go eisewhero llfe- ; Our methods seem "†please. ‘ ' I (fan deny;“Alwa§'.~ Prompt, â€"- Never Negh'gent.’ I'sfands to-dw without a superior in fCanada.(1mdmr,Ps highly succ<3238 z'fal. Catalogue ree. ier. Laid HUME! Look Here All np-tn-date flour and fPPd an. grocers keep our flour for sale. vmzr grocer dues not keep it come 0 ï¬he mill and We will use you right Call us up by telephone N0. 8. All kinds of Grain bought at Market Price- Chopping Done Every Day Special Reduction on Flour in 5 and 10 Bag Lots. Goods delivered anvwhere in town. [8 made from solertpd wintm and is a superinr artirvle for m: pastry, etc. ynnr groper to give ynu our kind next time and see the superior baking qual- iï¬es it possesses. Better and mate Q-hghsnnw. became of a secret prom that; We put. the wheat through. Dnn’b forget. Our pure Manitoba flour, made 13%;]: NO. 1 Manitoba wheat cannot he 5 at For either hakerh or domestic use A small or lmge bag of a. ï¬ne. gram, whim, nutritimzs flour, is sold as our Wand. Have vou ever Lri' d it? Get your groper Ln give ynu our kind next A blend of}; Manitoba andg 0 Wheat and is a stricUy ï¬rst family flour H. H. MlLLER Fall Term Opens Aug. 28th. .533 ACRES near Protnn Staï¬rm and 501269!) Junction. ï¬ne brick residentâ€, splendid barns. splendid sail. good water, orchard c. Will sell less than 325 :1 acre. oA bargain surely. if..." A EAR“ WARE and Tinsmith B333 oess.Grey County. post ofï¬ce in connec; :0? Less than $10,000 will buy 40 acres of ant store and dwenimz. ham, other fruit dwelling and 84 000 star-k. GENERAL COUNTRY STORE ï¬x miles from Durham; very chap. People’s Mills Large mum-Her of chem farm gas-overtime Money to Lond at. Low Rates. Lands bought ani sO!d. Debts callected All kinds of writings drawn. bets-a bargaihé: 326 ACRES close to Proton Station, bgick dyvellingï¬nelurge out-buildin a wmdmlll 8:12; buy, 2 tons to acre. orgy Aw nunn -_ l IOC PASTRY, FLOUR SOVEREIGN TORONTO, ONT. -.V w--â€" Kï¬'ocks the sunshine off Alâ€" f2." . O I,“ Hanover Conveyancer ECLIPSE '1‘ H E MILLER an d 5 On £45310 Opposite The Re House. Hanove SEVEN "91' vi’he making