The town of Atchison.’ Kansas. found ample subject for conversa- tion four years ago, when little Lizzie Sauer came back to town. Almost everybody in town had known Lizzieâ€"a round-faced little German girl whose duty it had been to ride upon her father's vegetable cart and offer ripe to- matoes. fresh cucumbers. green corn and sundry other good thmgs of the garden to the houseWives of the town. Then she had married and gone away and nobody had heard much about her for a good while. One day she reappeared c.1211!“ home for a \‘iï¬x't With her ‘I \r r¢___] Qni‘n†“vnllt’. V11» “g...â€" __ , _ came home for a visit with parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl painted house- in a garden on the noth edge of the ‘ She came back like the desl ne in a story book. di 7.19. smllmg and radiant, ancl IT DIDN’T sun THE ;; OLD FOLKS ‘e I ULlL lights and bathtubs and a thou». and one other little conveniences‘IMrs -â€"all the things that Lizzie Sauer the herself had missed as :1 child in left the primitive little house on the ban edge of the town. fro --- -3“v mn‘I'“ (101‘ tug: Ul- ;.u\. .v C And there “as a new silk gown and a whole new Outfit of clothes for Mrs. Sauer, and when the house was built and furnished the dutiful daughter paid all the bills. O¢§§§§§§§+§O§¢§O§t+§¢b¢+40 9 : Opposxte the Old Stand. ‘ Durham, unL. 3 o O §§§OO§§§§§Q§Q§+¢Q§§§OQOO ¢§§9§OOOOOO§§§§§§+¢§O§§§¢Q04 July 30, 191-1. PQQQO! UI ‘UUD l‘ "'W “18 Down own "Shoe Stare l S. Mollraith $$3¢3¢V' 3€$v3vv w. 9" : 33% 3334136'65'0'333'93733Q town hou )us l( Not a big house, for would only be 1 _ca :1 nonnle. but the ma 02d Stand; just :urmss‘ the ï¬re in businvss we ask ul‘. nf faix huh-st :m Give Us Your Repairing \Vt \\ 9 Eur It‘cehed SUM. \\ (mllen (woods and inn ite i hefme buying. (‘all and see us 0 ll but if present warm weather cmxtinues prospeots for a. 1011;: season for \Vhite FOOIWear. and gm a pair before sizes are out. ‘ ()ur stock or must gum} i larger than usual. but they are gmncz fast; Indie: Pumps in diï¬ervm; styles at 1 .50 ‘l .75 3115595 1 .00 Child rel-1's 856 and Infant’s 750. Ladies. high button hunt $2.25 Some ï¬ne lines nf vhildren’s Lisle Huse in black. pink and Hum Ludivs‘ Italian Silk Mack or hm 25¢ per palil‘uhlnL’k or Inn Silk 35¢ per pair. Mark or tan Untmn 1 50. Men’s heavy or light, wear at different prices. tan. ICK mor me t1 )€ ,- are :Ignm st it is, with a roof and mories 0 a and all take this nppm'tJnin uf t! «'nstun ers whn gave us a sh 3:» during our thirty ye: ’r are an unpre- n couple. am! nard all theix was Lizzie like bléï¬med above udebakerâ€"F Iada.she I I come back ~r father :2 L! M‘Hh'tl and ready fur business in the store the 5! wet and as we have dvcided to remain w ask fur a mmt imu-d support. assuring {39% :md vmu-tenns treumwut. she m Silk hlm-k m~ hm 25¢ per pain-black or : per pair. hlzwk (w tan Button 1 56- m- llgllL wear at dil’fcrent prices. pairing It will be Promptly and Neatly Done uthing on in nu:- nmv premises. YOU id “'9. m close the rest 0 used - could thousâ€" . :9 COTT wore real neat nard- BE WISE .‘K 'COQ‘C‘ Lllk' \Iltt “g..“‘ , my“! .\:id Mrs. SilllCI‘â€"\Vhat of her“? mmtflVell, silk dnesses were Well aril-senough of a Sunday, and Lizzie :t ;- Wis :i ut‘hifllt‘fl. no doubtpf t‘tflt: otis-ghut in the bottom of her hem-L ‘Mrs. Sauer, too, was hungry to. ' ,"the Old, hard life that they had (1 in.left. Had she not been her husâ€" the‘bnnd‘s helpmate, gaining a living: from the little hilly farm of five :own acres? Assuredly, and after all it rthes had been rather satisfactory. that the l outdoor living. ithe This dwelling in a town, it bills. might be all right for someâ€"but 1n for .1" uuvuu “A } kissed them g moved Mr. and Mrs; Sauer in, kissed them good-bye and return- ed to Canada. . Now, according to all story book precedent, the tale ought to end right there, oughtn’t it, with the concluding remark that “they liv- ed happily ever after?†Alas for the vagaries of the human mind, though, that set story book pre- cedent at naught. Scarcely had Lizzie Sauer flicked the dust of Atchison fromher silken skirts. and the town begun to recover from its surprise and its romancic interest, before the Sauers began treigrow restless. Papa Sauer had run that market garden on the edge of the towh for 30 years, and it would have been easier to transplant the old- est and most firmly rooted of his German plum trees than it was in spurt ion . 0-5-, v.â€" ___. to transplant him. Sitting on a thoroughly up-to-date front porch with nothing to do but smoke and contemplate his good fortune, very soon began to be an awful bore. Thirty springs he had Watched the new green things come up out of the brown earth. andâ€"Gott‘ in Himmelmone does not like to abandon all at once the work of 30 years. The house was a good Lump†nY'If‘ li17i'x‘ Was .a 200(i us a share nf their patron- 1v \‘t‘ul’s tubing»- m the. W of flanking our many 'u'us. Blaukrts and n. Learn our prices Our stock nf these Durham, Ont. .‘ll't‘ there was so little to doâ€"why one could not even keep chickens sat- isfactorily on a city lot. She fell into the habit of visiting her older daughter, Mrs. Sh-ockey, who was living in an old home place, help- ina' her husband with the garden stuffâ€"and it was With a sigh that she Went back every evening to the electric light and thehard- wood floors and the bathtub. Such a foolishness and such a bother! Of course they didn’t Want to hurt daughter Lizzie’s feelingsâ€" , and of course it was very sweet and generous of her to have built them that houseâ€"but as a matter of fact the house of the thousand comforts bored its occupants ex- ceedingly. And finally they wrote to Lizzie and talked it all over. and consequently the Sauers are moving out oi the brick house and back to the unpainted frame dwelling on the edge of the country. The gift house is rent- ed and it is for sale if you should care to buy it, and Mr. and Mrs. Sauer are back in primitive happi- ness in the home that sheltered them before their daughter came back to play the fairy godmother. There. aren’t any lights in the lean, spent little frame house. and there isn’t any bathtub. and naturally there aren‘t any harm- Woud floors. Outside is a tangle of green things, and chickens and dogs and cats roam over the premises and there is no need to fear the neighbors will complain. Mrs. Sauer in a gingham dress, is busy with her housework, and the veteran of the siege of Paris, smoking an old black pipe that glows half buried in his gray beard. sets down two buckets to tell you with enthusiasm of what he plans to-raise next year, and how. after a drouth, one may be almost certain of fine Weather. Michigan CHINAâ€. (7mulnc'tnz' Kvmze 3 EXPIVS‘ :~':!.\\' UH: just us it was pull thu train and p mucus», I the face (350'; 1 re. [61‘ Carson wenL m Mr. Knumuiv. I'PM‘H", but I'M-rival a, heavy blow :11 £11» face. The mun then made then- DIES IN HER IUUTH YVAR. RuLhH-n. Julx 2-37. ~\lx:~. Jane 3h - Dzuxicl. whn vhtuml (m hm 10:)le \u u an “M 23:61 1;.1 L. died \csLmd: u n... the hmm ut 11x1 (1 ulghlz‘x. 3115.!“- fzn‘ouu U ssvhine. “V"v Mrs. \Iclmuitrl I1 LII ht cu ht LII 'itItIt: n 'nr si vytnus Imt upcu tlmL III]I‘-I1.‘NI vniuvt t-tI EXCUIIL‘: It heal ..h III‘I hats ImntI «Held 47 \I'. I15 mg“, “I he :wr â€I .)1 ye: 11': R. \\ . and Ir. B. Mt: I): UH nt Dammit. mo srms. SIMI} grandchil- dren and great. grmuiuniltlrtm ulsn slur vive. w. M. CLARK 1:; DEAD gw'mi A LONG ILLNESS. i] Clinton. July 27.«â€"\Vm. .\1. Clark. aged 73. died at dis home here Ln-(luy utter an illness extending OVUI' twu years. He \Vt‘lli, from Flesl‘ierwn Lu Toronto, where. he was engaged in llle ; milling business, until he returned ' two years ago. HP (lied sit the home“ «if his sister. Mrs. E. J. Cantelun. MisS' Mabel Clark of Clinton is a sister. and 1 Joseph, of the 'l‘m-nutn'Smr, \V. J.. of Pickering. are sons. and Mrs. J. [Li Marquis. of Pickering. is a (.izlughttrl'. ‘ le' film-ml will he. held nu \lench (in)? in Fleshertnn. l l St. Thmnns, July 't-Mml v-nnsidv'x'nhle DESPONDENNT LOVER COMMIT-l TED SUICIDE. i Owen Sound. July Iiiâ€"Alexaniieri )IcGoinh, aged 25, committed suicide: here. this evening by drinking a, bottle E of carholic acid. He horroWed ten cents from a triend and purchased an !_ ounce of the poison. Hie body was: found shortly afterwards in the Davis ' Smith Malone wood yards, but life‘ was extinct. 1 - u\ ‘ The remains were taken to Brecken- ridge’s mulertaking pen-luvs and the coroner, Ur. Dow, ordered an inqueutz. The (furuner’s jury Vi8\\'t’d the. hudy and njum-ned uutn \Vednesday th-n- inn. In the meantime :1 postmortem exmninatim) will he umde. Mcbumb was about; 25 years 01' age and was a, ï¬sherman by uccupatiun. UPHpUHd- elmy over a love affair is said to be the cause uf his rush act. .‘lv uuuuuubuv, V“--- , v ’ Arrangements are being made tol give those who attend a good time.! The boys will be camped upon the! grounds of the Exhibition and nothing,r ' will be spared to make each boy com- 2 fortable. There will also be given a.‘ grand illumined Pageant of floats1 showing the various activities of this; great Boys’ 'elt’are Movement. I . It is hoped that every district in the ‘ Province will be represented at this. i the greatest boy event yet held in’ Manama. The main object is to get‘! '. the 'boys and districts to know one another along'the lines as laid down in the training of a. Boy Scout. in oth- er words to cement still further that bond of good comradeship that exists throughout the organization. - ‘urther information will be for- warded from the Provincial Ofï¬ce, Sher-bonnie and Bloor Sts., Toronto, any questions will or answered upon application to the Secretary. :XSSAUUI‘E!) BY 'I'RAMPS . Damage of $40,000 was done bv hghtning to Knechtel’s furniture factory at Winnipeg. BUY SUUUTS 01“ ONTARIO nsidvz'ahlo eXulCemeuL at, the Ur‘lltlnl depot last, night. ' Kennedy. in cit-age 0f Nu. :i:€\\' tiw mun hum-(.1 Mesh-Md!) vnspuliingnur. Hvsmypml and put thmn ()if, one of “in“: 30"1’RHIV. 5-H ‘,(°:|u:‘:1.~€~ THE DURHAM CHRONICLE. \VU hnhues w their motion These ievered and restless things at our feet? They wander and fret. like the wave. ' of an ocean, ‘ With their rage as vain and their hours as fleet. Whaf is the. meaning and Trampled and torn by the hooves o! disaster 0’ ertaken by thirsts and hungers and fears. Deï¬ant of torrents no daring shall master, They hurl their wills in the face O! the years. . THE’VOICE OF 'THE'SELKI‘RRE They come as the rainfall, and go as the river; ,We listen impassive and wonder and wait, Abiding the hour that our womb shall deliver The passionless silence of ultimate fate. ’Tis we who have known not of tn- mult and fever, 'Tis we who are patient and measured and sure, 'l‘is we who are doxie with desires for ever, T18 we who are silent and changelw and quail not,_ Exult, and 5111 06a50! ~11}! Arthur West Monthly. 'Tis we who persist through immov- able peace, 'Tis we who have seen that their 91v forts avail not, Ways of Great Singers. The (‘eicbl'zllcd mugn'esurio Schur- mann once said it was a premxrious matter to draw Up an agreement with a star, for each one had some strange little provisos which he insisted on in- serting. In one contract Tumagno exacted that he should be‘ allowed thirty-seven candles each night in his drgssing even a great tenor should require so much illumination. but he consented When Schurmann visited Tamagno’s dressing room he found only two can- dles alight. On another occasion in discovered only one. Inquiries led a the discovery that the provident tent)! saved up the other candles and sold them at a proï¬t. ,3 Hon. C. J. Dohm‘ j; Tmior in the absence 30rden. Schumann said that a small boy whose father was a great friend 01 Caruso’s, having asked the tenor for a signed photograph. received as a reply. “Certainly; go to my photographer; he will sell you a photograph. and if you bring that to me 1 will write on it whatever you like." There are {our am111c1t1ons for (11101130 (111 file at 0t tau (1. ,r‘ . ‘ c bulnmnn 11:11. for ovm' 40 yezn'Si in business 111 Markdale, is deadg The harvest in Southern Alberta is mmr. but good in the north. Thv St. John railway strike was ended late Friday night. i A strike of (r.T.P. machinists and: jhoilermakers from Fort \Villiaml gtn Prince Rupert. is thought to be gymssinle at any moment. It is officially stated, on behalf vdf the men. that there is no dan- ger of a strike by the boilermak- Hrs and machinists of the G.T.P Stag Island‘ in Detroit River, has been purchased by the Interna- tional Peace Assembly Association land its name changed to Decorner. 1 i Archbishm) Spratt of Kingston. will go to Rome in September. No (‘zmadizm officers will attend this y‘ur's British-army manoeu- \VI‘QSI Lumhton and Northunï¬mrlund counties now report the army worm. A party of Kansas City cattle- men are on their way to British Columbia to select ranching land. The Montr‘al Clmmbre du Com- merce has issued a pamphlat boosting the Georgian Bay canal. A flow of natural gas was struck? in Desermxto at a depth of 601 feet, while drilling for watert was in progress. 1 Miss Lily Ir'» me £1911 £10111 San-.- ‘dusky to Cle\ela1nd, Ohio ovex Lake Erie, a distance of 74 miles. in an hour. we' who are passive, shall live and endure. vaave of extreme heat last} week caused 16 deaths in Chicago†and over 80 others were mentallv; affected. 1, BishOp Stringer of the Yukon and his wife are returning to-Can- ada on the Empress of Britain and will visit Toronto on their way west. Arch. Quance, while adjusting hay-lifting machinery in his fath- er’s barn at Elfrida, near Hamilton. was killed by a Weight falling upon his head. ' The department of justice at Ottawa has no application for the rel-ease of Nolan, the last of the Welland canal dynamiters to re- main in prison. The US. patrol boat Bear and a Russian patrol cruiser have start- ed in search of the marooned members of the Stefansson‘ eXpedi- -‘chJ. vu‘bvuw, “av-1 -_ plished the big t sk one 'day last week, _of‘ bingipg a} figld of wheat > ‘A-â€" mï¬â€˜ land. Nelson Current; aged 95,‘acc?m: i, of binding a new 01 wneaL Walker Blanchardâ€. near Wel- survive, and never shall is acting pre- Of Sir Robert GOT $100 DIAMOND FROM JEW-i ELER‘S WINDOW. Chatham. July :27. -â€"J A. Graham, a‘ 100 11 jeweler. lust :1 $300 dj‘ 1111011d r1112 1 -v- -- J' on Saturday. as the. xesulc of a clever game of a. smooth crook. A man who gave his name as Thmnes. called Mr. Graham (m the telephone. and asked if he had a Hamilton watch move- ment. ' wHe said he wanted to buy one. but didn t have time to go to the store to look at it. M1. Graham offered 111 111144; him at 111111 h.a1‘ad while GxaLam was away fun“ the store. anomm 111.111. vs ho gave his 11111119 as Hardv B1°11~h. valled at the Sim-e saying he “as a car penter. \thn he fmmd Mr. Gmhz-i m out. he asked th» (-lm'k if he (-nnlai make sump measnrmnems of the store window. as Mr. Graham had asked to make sump alterations in the Store. The stranger got intn tln3 window, and St'('UI'€d the measmneuwnts and when he departed it was found that the diamond ring was "one. The no' ‘1 .ice have secured no t1. no 9 of the men. 1 Mr. Graham u as unable. to locate 311. k s i l I Thames at lunch rim“. and it, is stmmr- = '.y suspected that Mr. Thames and M) . 3 l Brush are one and the same man. ‘n, I .. . “g bull pzu'tmulars and hi*1‘H)1‘t‘*.~M'\’:l- é timxs from agents or wz-itv (‘.I*I.H(_)1{N- ! ING, D.P.A.. 'l‘ormntn. Ont. : \V. (‘3:leer, Town Agent. Phone 3:! i J. Townel‘. Suuiun Agvnt. Phone 18 TORONTO=CHICAGOz TORONTO=MONTREAL' Lv.Montreal 11.00 pm Lv.Chicago 5.45pm I.v.Tor0nto 8.00am Lv.I)etroit H.05pm AnLondon [1.06am Lv.London 5.45pm Annetmit l.45plll!l.\'.'l‘or011t() 9.00am Ar.Chicag0 8.40pm‘Ar..\10ntrcal 5.45pm Highest ("L155 â€1' t'clniwm-nt. v09+¢O§§§¢¢O¢¢OVOO9OOOOOOOtitttttk'ot?06bitttt¢¢o¢¢ 000000000000 00000000000000 0000000000 §§§§§§§O§§§§§§§0 WEST! 3017 X I) We haw :1 wmd stock (11' :-:11 hand, \\hi(11 \\eâ€"_~21.1'usv111::gin 1:; prices at, \1i11: Oat Shorts . . . Oat Chop Crushed Oats - Heavy Mixed Feed . Corn. Wheat and Oat Chop b We allow :10 each for all sflPKS 1121111111111 111 J J" good condition If 1011 1121111: feed 111111191911 11111111 nubide station 1111139. 01 plume f111 1191 11'1-11 911 111113.45 - The Rob Roy Cereal Mills Co. IMPORTANT IMPROVED DAILY SERViCE NOW IN EFFECT STBU U N I) Oatmeal Millers. each for an szwks wturm: wk of :21] kinds 0? Feed (m Him: in fun his 211 inflmving Canadian National Exhibition ‘ PEACE YEABI America's Greatest Livestock Show Acres of Manufactures Exhibits by the Provinces Exhibits by Dominion Government Exhibits by West Indies Dragoons‘ Music-.31 iiLde A-uto Polo Matches Circus and Hippodrome Dozen Shows in S‘ ngle llour Boy Scouts Revie“ Canada’s Biggest 002 Show Paintings from England. Scotland. United States and (.‘anada Educational Exhibits Goods in Process of Making Athletic Sports Ael‘o-Iiydrophmc Flights Grand Water (‘arnival Creatore’s Famous Band Score of other Bands Dozen Band Concerts. Daily Chesapeake and Shannon Biggest Midway ever Peace Year Fireworks Aug. 29 1914 Sept. 14 T O R O N T 0 Grenadier Guards Band International Peace Tattoo 10 Bands 400 Musicians Greatest Oriental Spectacie ever presented on (ominen: BABY LON $22 per ton 27 “ 2'1 “ 24 25 “ ma 111