MCDOOMOOOflOWMOWWMWO 3 SHOES THAT SUIT People’s Mills A blend off; Manitoba andï¬ Onmmc wheat and is a, strictly ï¬rst: class family flour " Our pure Manitoba. flour, made from No. 1 Manitoba.‘ wheat. cannot be beat for either bakers 'or domestic use .r.v+.v+ ++£4+$+ iii. [5 made from selected winter Whe and is a. superior article for .making pastry, etc. special Reduction on Flour in 5 and Goods delivered aavwhere in town Chopping Done Every Day All up-to-date flour and feed and grocers keep our flour for sale. your grocer does not keep it come to the mill and we will use you right Call us up by telephone No. 8. All kinds of Graig bought! at Market +4 July 25th, 1912. A good talcum powder givt es returns in comfort out of all proportion to what it costs and. if in is pure, it IS absolutely harmless. Om is just talc ground to an im- palpable ï¬neness and preg- natod with the daintiest of violet odors. You can get nothing better. Just Pure Talcum +++zzzzz++:++++¢+++.+ N91 er substitute appeaiance £01 quality but rather choose an article a trifle more costly and obtain both. Appearance is prudential John McGowan Price 25 Cents The annannShueStme :. J. 3 .Mc PASTRY FLOUR \Ve also have Men- nen’s Ruxal Vinolin Colgate s. and all the othex populax talcum puwdel s. acfarlane Co. Violet Dulce C. P. R. Town Ticket Office SOVEREIGN put ECLIPSE 10 ‘Bag Lo_ts. THE S sold as our it'd it? Get; 11- kind next baking qual- er an d more vecre t- proces s at through. sold avs Galvanized Ind Iron Piping, Bras. Brass Lined and Iron Cylinders SBCP OPEN EVERY AFTERNOOB Pumps From $2 Upward ALL REPAIRING promptly ant" properly attended to. Manufacturer of , And‘ Dealer in PUMPS OF ALL KINDS. W. D. Connor If Pay Also Agents for the Baker Ball Beat- iug Direct Smoke ï¬nd Back Geared Pumning \Vindmi Pumps and Supplies. \\ lite and have us call em you. atisfactiQn Guaranteed z'ou Patron-age Solicibed. Fall Term from Sept. Stands in aficlass by itself for strictly ï¬rst-class work. Open all year. Write boâ€"day for handsome catalogue. ' W. D. CONNOR \Ve make examinations free and can determine the LOvavâ€"- exact: condition of your vis. ion. Glasses me never reco- mended unless positively needed. ‘ Any person who has hen-"1- ache should make sure that the eyes are not the source of trouble. ' WATER! ' WATER! Headaches come from eye strain oftenet- than from anv other cause. Often head- aches that have persisted from childhood will ,Wholly disappear when the eyes are properly ï¬tted. Eyestrain . DRUGGISTS AND STATIONERS 0r ' ‘. r h‘mfl‘§\ty tâ€;“’"l.‘:5 you are. inï¬ed of a, supply you to consult the LOUISE WELL DRILLERS S. P; ‘SA UNDERS Buv Your Tickets Here Machine Oil. Harness Oil, Amie Grease and 800! Qintment, go to ' from 15c. to 500. Trunks. Valises. Teles- copes. Suit; Cases. 850., in stock or supplied on short notice. Custom \Vork and Repair- ing as Usual. able prices You can ï¬nd come extra gobd value in Hosiery here for Men, Ladies, Misses. Boys and Children. Prices ARE; thefldealsflyou have m mindï¬EYou can realize that; idea'lvby purchasing a pair here_. AYe hzgve _a_, iarge stock of Shoes for all kinds of wear and at; reson- EGGS TAKEN AS CASH. EPRATT BROS, TORONTO, ONT. ELLIOTT vHC'mo 91â€. OM. OM. QM. «WI 1M. 9M. 0H5 0â€...†he Harnessmake‘: Lotta}: P. O. LHA TH It will REVITALIZiNG EGYPT LORD KITCHENER-HAS ALREADY WORKED WONDERS. The New Administrator Has Renewed the Youth of the Ccuntry by De- veIOping Agriculture and Repress- ing Strife With a Strong Handâ€" Archaeologists Put In Their Proper Placeâ€"ls Building Good Roads. The world knows Lord Kitchener as a great soldier, remarkable for fore- sight and patience. In the negotia- tions at the end of 11 e Boer War he showed himself a tactful, broad-mind- ed diplomatizst. In Egypt, in four months, me is universaily and grate- fully recognized as an administrator _______..,v. â€""I of genius. He is strong but sympa- thetic, always completely accessible, ï¬nding no responsibility too great, no detail too unimportant. His interests cover the whole life of the country. His ability to speak Arabic fluently brings him into direct touch with the people. Since Lord Kitchener has†been in Cairo an almost- startling stimulus has been given to national prosperity, and political unrest has given way to a welcome and obvious tranquility. DA-.. -u-1:L . __-~_. ~-.. v-v‘-H ylwtluluLLLUJo Personality counts for even more in theeast than it does in the west, and Lord Kitchener’s gimrsunality has fas- cinated Egypt. He is revered by the Soudanese as the savior of their country from anarchy and misrule, and the Egyptlans have come to re- gard hm) as the one man essentlal 1f security and prosperity are to be at- tained. For the moment at least, the stirrer 11p of sedition ï¬nds his occupation gone, and the so-called Nationalism is out of favor. The people are realizing the possibility of security and all that follows security, and they themselves are giving the cold shoulder to the agitators, one of the most prominent of whom has, within the last few days, shaken the dust of Cairo from his shoes and departed for the more pro- mising,r atmosphere of Constantin0ple. Lord Kitchener has avoided, where- ever possible, overt and abrupt action against the sedition-mongers. though more than one of their organs has been quietly and unostentatiously sup- pressed. Cultivation of the land is in an eminently health) condition and the growing undeIstanding of the power of the land and the «:ood- will of the administration in (hecking the habit of the “countrymen ’of burying their gold as a precaution instead of em- ploying it in the development of their holdings. The cotton question looms very largely in Egypt. The crops have in the past suffered severely from the baleful activity of an infesting worm, and a commission has been app-oint- ed to probe the whole question and decide how the evil can be most efï¬- caciously treated. It is characteristic of Lord Kitchener’s desire to develop the Egyptian’s sense of responsibility that he asked Prince Hussein to be chairman of this commission. By do- ing this he gained the sympathy of. the Khedive, pleased the people, and secured the co-Operation of an ener- getic and capable prince. A determined effort is also being made to prevent the use of bad seed by establishing Government depots for the sale of seed. {This will destroy the frequent custom of paying part of the price of the cotton in seed, and will strike an indirect blow at the middleman. There is also a proposal to issue seed free for employment in Governmentacontrolled ï¬elds. Agriculture is also likely to be stim- ulated by another )imely reform. Hith- erto large areas have been marked off for prospective excavation by the enthusiastic Egyptologists, and these areas have often lain idle for years waiting for this excavation. Now it is being released for cultivation un- less good and solid reason can be ad- du-ced for believing it to be a worthy subject for the archaeologist. Who af- ter all. is of less importance than the peasant. While every facility will still be given to him, and while any terri- tory exhibiting any promise for his labor will still be reserved for him. the excavator will no longer be a source of agricultural wastage. As regards treasure trove. stens will u» vvvz IV 5“ be taken to prevent the rule which divides the spoil between t‘..e Govern- ment and the discoverer from being interpreted in sue-h a way as to cause a constant outflmv from Egygit of her most valuable antiquities. The physical improvdnent in the Eg‘ptian is remarkable. The statute and stamina of the natives, both mili- tary and civilian, are the constant theme of admiration tothe foreigner. Ophthalmia, which used to infest the land' as a veritable plague, is steadily‘ 'decreé’sing._ The traveling theme of admiration to the foreigner. Ophthalmia, which used it) infest the land as a veritable plague, is steadily decreé’sing. The traveling hospital inaugurated by Sir Ernest Gassel has done splendid work, .shd steps are being taken to combat the injury done by ingrowing eyelash in chil en, which‘i§ now recognized as eat cause of mischief, and to , ,rwhich deformity operations of consi’ era~ble difï¬culty and delicacy are often necessary. _ ' The Budget. is the great measure at a nation’s prospe ‘ty, and it is there fore. noteworthy tlrilit the ï¬nancial ad- visor’s note on the budget has been greeted, with ~' great satisfaction- ' ' fore 11C»te‘-.'~"<T)I'tl1}.f till}? Visor’s note on the 2:1. e. .e greeted wiuh great satisf? -‘ , Trade is good. marl t‘-‘a,<le:<rnen in Cairo who have 32.1ffered ever since the “slump†of ï¬ve sears ago, and who rhave been adversely affgéted by the War, express themselves as full of hope and conï¬dence for the future. the hotelkeepers reserving the IEngages- tion that their business has beef in. some degree curtailed by the attrac- tions offered by Luxor and Assouan. One small buteimportant instance of Lord Kitchener’s proverbial “driv- ing power†may be noted in the road whic is being made to Helouan, Lord itchener is still an engineer with a Roman eye for roads. It is-dif- Ficult for the: stranger to realize that. aoces's to this delightful resort, with its marvellously ,powerful sulphur baths and other curative privileges. is, still, impossible by motorâ€"and the arder the]; the road should-be" ready ‘fofii‘ins’pectiOn by May: 1" has "been-ire- miledwithmhï¬cqelon '_ wa- -v“‘t\-“w‘ IV ï¬vcï¬-GEC: As regards treasure trove. ste taken to prevent the rule vides the spoil between t‘. e ( ant and the discoverer front terpreted in such a way as :1 constant outflou flom Egy 13+ 33f; valuable 11111101111391: THE DURHAM CHRONICLE. a. The stature ves, both mili- the constant. the foreigner. 159d to infest ale plague, is The travelino 33' Sir Ewes? , steps will rule which .‘..e Govern- from being DEAD AWMT SECOND COMING OF THE [630 “No Man Has Ascended Up to Heaven but Son of Man.†Pastor Russell Shows From Scripture That the Thief on the Cross Did Not Reach Paradise at. Death, as Many Erroneously Believeâ€"Pastor on Atlantic on Way to Conventions In Britain. be held in Europe. He will be absent from A m e r i c a about two months, Speaking twice a. day in many of the. principal cities. His text for to-day .. .._,,. .. was: “If I go and ' ,re'mre a lace PASTOP RUSSELL $013 you 1 pm ‘ 'come again and receive you unto Myself that where I am there ye may be also.’ ’-â€"John xiv, 16. The error of supposing that men are alive when they are dead lies close to the foundation of every theological error the world over. We have all erred. in taking the guess of Plato instead of the Word of God, and we can get rid of our difï¬culties and theological entanglements only by re. tracing our steps. The Bible alone, of all religious books, teaches that a dead man is dead, and knows nothing, and that his only hope is in the Divine ar- rangement through Christ, by a re- surrection of the (leadâ€"“both of the just and of the unjust.â€-â€"-â€"Acts xxiv, 15. w “No Man Hath Ascended to Heaven.†Here note cur tex . In it- the Mas- ter says not a word about our going to Him at death. but quite to the contraryâ€"that. He would come again and receive us unto Himself. And are we not told that this will be an instantaneous change? Is it not styled an awakening from the sleep of death? - Hearken to St. Paul: “Behold, I show you a mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump (seventh trumpet); for the trumpet shall soundâ€; “and the dead in Christ shall rise ï¬rst ; then we which are alive and remain shall be caught away together to a meeting of the Lord in the air.†(I. Corin- t‘hians xv, 51, 52; I. Thessalonians iv,’ 16, 17.) How plain, how simple! But Jesus arose from Shem, 1mm had-es, from the tomb, from the state of death, on the third day. He had not been to Paradise, for Paradise was not yet in existence. He had net been to heaven, for He had been dead. Let us hear‘His own words to Mary on the morning of His resurrec- tion: “I have not yet ascended " * * to 'My Father, and your Father, to My God, and your God.†(Jehn xx, “17.) Could anything ,be plainer, sim- ‘pler, more harmonious? , -v, But, says one, does not the second coming of Christ take place whenever His :holy ones die? Does He not im- mediately come to receive them unto Himself? Surely only a very lame tlheory could seek to bolster itself up by such a. perversion of the Scriptures. If Christ were to come every time one of His saintly ones die, would it‘ not mean many comings instead of mere- ly a second coming? And even if His faithful were very few indeed, would it not seem that this would keep the Redeemer busy coming and departing every few minutes? - I 1 t!" Let us see wha Note the circums between two thie heart. than the ot ted 'his own gui Hearken again to Jesus’ words, “No man hath ascended up to heaven.†(John iii, 13.) Only the Son of Man had ever been in heaven. He has ascended up Where He was before, with additional glory and honor. But, says some one, did not the dying thief go with Jesus to Paradise the very day in which they both died? No, we have made a stupid blunder and misinterpretation of our Redeem- ers’s dying words to the thief. The wrong thought being in our minds we misinterpreted in harmony therewith. And our interpretz-ition has done an immense amount of harm. Thousands of .people have been encouraged to continue. a life of sin, trusting that with their dying breath they may have the opportunity of sayinv, “God 00111? 8 be mercifui to me medlately ushO-rec and 1mmortali‘ty. tunity to do a Kmdn turn. I heard you b that you have a King this Age; some h-eav thm'efore presume, “Lord. I an unjust Door thxef We Ewaraphr nave defend attack 11‘ you c July 21 .-â€"Pastor Russell is on his way to attend Gen- eral Conventions of Bible Students to Jesus really ,said. moms. Jesus hung res; one of better .m' honestly admit- ; and that of his uphrase His words, and d you against Remember this .n’oo .111 then" be im- glorv. honor SUNIAY SCHOOL. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Lesson lV.â€"-Third Quarter, For July 28; 1912. and then ever and always without dis- couragement sow the good seed of the word, ready as seed ourselves to fall into the ground and die that we may win others. I was greatly helped at one time by a remark of the late Dr. Arthur T. Pierson to this effect: Your parish is not your ï¬eld; the ï¬eld is the world. and your parish is a force that God has given you to train that he may use you and them to work the ï¬eld. Those who do not see the re- sults they are looking for will be helped if they remember that when the devil sowed his tares he went his was. He knew that the: would m1. teat ad‘ R. M AC F low CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE Trains leave Durham at 7.15 a.m., and 2 4'3 p.111. Trains arrive at Durham at 10.30 3.111.. 1.50 p m.. and 8 50 pm. EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY w-‘u' ' "r“_ W“ '1 in newhéeslers. MUN" “ï¬ght; $22334 New Ygrk A ï¬andsomélf muhmeSdWeéili.â€" ingest: Eir- culation of any scientiï¬c journal. Terms for Canada. 33.75 a 163nm prepaid. Sold. by ‘.‘ _A_-J__I__. invention is probably Paventable. 'Communicap tions strictolyd conï¬dent al. HANDBOOK on Patents sent. free.0 octagcacy for securing scents. Patents taken trough Mann receive special notice, withouccharge. nth AAA You will find a nice selection of Dress goods in Serges. white. black. blue. gray and other col- ors. Also whip cords. poplins etc. We have our popular line of Dollar silks in the different shades, also jacquhax ds at 35 cts., Ginghams in Checks and stripes. Linens and Towelings galore, Check muslins, etc. Kid gloves for Easter, popular price $1.00. Come and see us. ‘ TRADE MARKS Dssucus COPYRIGHTS ac. Anyone sending a sketch and deem-inï¬rm may quickly ascertain our Opinion free Whether an mvemion is probably mumble. mmunicao tions strictly conï¬dent a1. , HANDB on Patent: BRANTS J. TOWNER Depot Agent JAMES R. GUN. Town Ag PLANING MILLS sciéï¬ï¬ï¬Ã© ilkâ€"Mean. from July 2nd merges into our Autumn Term from August 26. Manyxtea’chers and senior stu- dents will take advantage of our Summer Term and many will tinecnon until gradnaLion in tour or six months leads them direct into a good salaried po- sition. Let; us send you parti- culars about; our courses. Central Business College, Yonge Gerrard Ste", Toronto. \V. H. SHA‘V. Pros. DURHAM ZENUS CLARK rains will armve 's. unml further Grand Trunk Railway A. TIME-TABLE The undersigned begs [to announce to residents of Durham and surrounding country. that he has his Planning Mill and Factory completed and is prepared to take orders for Also a. limited amount of iron work and machine re- pairs. A call solicited. Ask for quotations on your next job. \l Kl A. M 10 21 2-1 Custom Sawing Promptly At- tended To . L. GRANT â€" and all kinds of â€" SASH,DOORS House Fittings Summer Session “ Priceville “ 11.31 8.56 “ Saugeen J. “ 11.18 8.43 “ Toronto “ 11.15 7.55 ARLANE. - Town Agent v. VVal k real flanover Allan Park Durham “ McVVilliams“ Mapl Ham OI l( ONTARIO )art 11.54. 11.44 11.41 11.31 11.18 11.15 HS 8'81» gem “ox-onto. s fol 9.9. 9.06