West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 6 Jan 1870, p. 1

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'dwifery, BdSnburvb; Licentiate offiket Apothecario’s Hall, London; Formedytcig: resident and Visiting Surgeon Liverpool 9.13: Fever Hospital and West Derby general hm Hos ital ; Late mistavt Surgeon Caernavou Aug ma Militia. Otfice, Spence’a Hotel, __‘ Ont. H I. 51ULUUL Lv u- -. w ’ . to furnish Carriages, Cutters, W32. guns and Sleighs, manafactuted frem the in“ material, at the cheapest possibie rates. bâ€" All work warrantâ€"ad. Shap, opposite Mr. «1 Mum}, Lower Town. Durham. - John Moodie, en 3‘ Agent, Conveyanccr, Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Grey. Lands c. ., Valued, Books and Accounts and. collected. :33- $50, 000 to nd 3”” and Town Propertyat ' ' ‘» " " 7:614 Garafraxa Sty, workmanlihe man ne Particular attention pm 1‘, on short notice. â€" d w horse shoeing. Waggon Wiuiam George {332103. “i \[11 >11“! ainter, Durham, Ont. and Paper Hanging, waved stvle of the art. . § . M__r Durham ‘gon a: Carriage Shop. 1. STOREY 13_N0w PREPARED .-_ mum Wm. iPublishers ProprietorsJ IL'V ... v 11 Somvfiand, Book. Binder, S Gtfice. univau Post Buchanan, 'nRUM GLA_S§OW D‘N'slés and Trunk A Maker, opposite the Crown Land Office, c., HAN- Chitti3k9 NSES, {ENTAL Pai “tin (I! 119 in the This House is furnished with all the re- quisites to iBure the comfort of travellers. ‘ i The Table supplied with the best the mar- i ket affords. Choice wines, liquors, and cigars kept constantly on hand. There is \also a. good livery in connection with this i house. Charges moderate. 'i April 26, 1868. M 1y. U Pnoemmoa. navmg above premises, lately occupiel Hart, I unprepared to offer 5 commodation to travellers and generally. Good Wines, Liqu gars always on hand. Super and an attentive Hostler. Stag tne 'â€" fice,‘ The undersigned would beg to inform the pnbfic in general, that. he has on hand 85c, ready for this Fall or Spring planting a large quantity of firstclass Fruit-Trees.â€" _____- II- ORCHARDVILLE. This House has re- first class style, with a v1 and accommodation of the travelling public. Wines, Liquors and Cigars of the cholcest bands always on hand. Good Stabl'mg and an attentive hostler. Stages call daily.â€" . Charges moderate. 1v. -_' . . furnished thh a vnew to ““1.“ " UL .- . . Luwsv u... .__ _ . . the effect that “ gold springs up where I . the foot of the sheep has trod.” This i A - ‘ ' litte ell true as lied to the weglth‘ is)” Green Gage Branch fro “ "11513311;”Bianca-tnsptfn'develafiédfirm '1 :02 - OUNTFORES!’ ii ‘11 fild soil. As fertilizers, sheep are unrival- . at ever Station led among the domestic animals. Be- blossom y ’ neath there. “ goldenhoof ” we see the \ 4...: - hrmg forth FRUIT at fields of Grrat Britain, after eateries Durham HQTEL QMIBS. fieiii‘m'w magma; "V'â€" was estabfished in 1864, and all trees offered ‘ ale were grown in Mount Forest. I will warrant them grafted fruit, of good hardy kinds, as I have tested them, some of them here fruit this season. Standard Apgfle Trees from 6 to 7 feet, Dwarf Apples, i Stberian Crab and pherry Trees, that, I can App": 11cc.» nu... V .. - __V , -. . Srberian Crab and Cherry Trees, that, I can; recommend. Small fruit such as Currants, Gooseberries, Raspberries, Strawberries. 833., also Ornamental Trees. Flowering Shrubs, Dablias and Gladious Bulbs, kc. All orders by mail or otherwise promptly attend to. ' ZLWAYS ON HAND, fig? Early Rose, Early Gleason Potatoes for sale, be purchased elsewhere. Homewood Nursery, Mt. Forest, g September 13th, 1869. 1 _â€"//â€"- Hotel has been entirely refined and tied with a view to the comfort and "a...“ of its guests. Wines, Liquors A b36163 LOT OF HANOVER. ,LLE, JAMES BELL, m. Having leased the lately occupled by Mr. J. red to offer first-class ac- ,ravellere and the public Wines, Liquors and Ci- hand. Superior Stabling Iostler. Stages call daily. AT THE Early Googierich_ BY STORM ! IQaid! soil. As fertilizers, sheep are unrival- led among the domestic animals. Be- neath there. “ golden hoof” we see the fields of Great Britain, after centuries of cultivation, riValling in production of wheat, and excelling in their yeald of 1e has on hand grass, the fertile prairie lands of our own 19: planting a and other Western States. Theprepoud- ‘ Fruit-Trees.â€"- crating, the undisputed testimony of ers of Gre I., - ~ the most successful farm ERSEB? ' ' ' that farming, though no? ‘ntrees “fend profitable, could not remain so in many s 1%} Oorgst-O {i localities, Withon sheep- ‘ g o Blest as we ar. .gith a virgin soil‘of 50“. Stands. . , WP, .Dwarf Apples, _ stantly keep 1 .. 5995. that I canl not inexhaustablc; and ch as Ctrrants, give heed to this fact, an , Striqherri‘es. versify our industry so 3 993° mm” 1 in our soil its original for f r q l! ~q , . “FU‘OS’ “”' ‘ ter for the most of this erwlse promptly all of the unborn million‘ are to find homes and a li Gooderich, and p the bosom of our vast prr \ o as cheap as can i the margins of our beau Sheep should be han GREGORY \farm, in connection wit grain crops. They oc ‘orest, 3. i “- the economy of the far animal can fill so well f“ l straw and cornstalks, a ‘ l fodder. I A correspondent of the Germantown Telegraph writes as follows: I am only a common farmer. I cul- tivate about fifty acres of land, and much of the labor is performed by my own hands, including the regular at- tendance at marker My land is goodâ€"I make it. so without. buying any imanure. I keep horses enough to do __2 __ __,“_1, mm“ “uh“ UL qu uâ€"v_- own bands, including the regulat- at- tendance at marker My land is goodâ€"I make it so without buying any n manure. I keep horses enough to do ‘ the work, and cows and pigs much more b numerous than any of my neighbors, a in proportion to the same amount of t land. I cultivate every foot of soilI a lean, and iti I have a good sized garden, stocked With 1 a little of everything, including small fruits, thanks to the advice re- j ceived through your paper. I have my orchard of apples, pears etc., and make leonsiderable money out of it besides lsupplying all our own wants. I find that well-tilled land, having. previously been put in a high state of cultivation, will produce not only twice but thrice , as much as moderately worked; i Commencing in a very small wayâ€" oing in debt for nearly the whole place. have succeeded in paying 05 the entire debt, building a new barn, repairing the house, and adding generally to the appearance and value of the improve- L, , ments. I pay cash for every thing I ‘ Ibuy We have all the leisure time wished for. We keep the Sabbath.â€" i rform a neighbor- Our children are I mention these things, not in the way of boast---for there is nothing to warrant boastingâ€"but simply to show how easy a matter it is to “get along.” If with a reasonable degree of good health, and abstinence from all that intoxicates, we and diligently the time and ‘.‘.A,,_ 0...] had Given to us; and A Common Farmer- Sheep as Fertilizers. Keeping Fowls of the Germantown Miss Sarah Ann Jackson sued the Rev. Alexander Blair, in the Irish Court of Queen‘s Bench, on the 2nd ult., for breach of promise of marriage, fixing the damages at $1,000. Miss ‘Jackson was residing at Cork with her brother when she formed the acquaint- young lady must be supposed to tell her own story best it is given in her own words, in the evidence on the trial, as “UlUUUI‘|IU, .L "U|JU UV vv-_ . eve, and he met me at the railway tion; I spent part of Christmas with him, and he said we were to for Dublin by the first train i morning to get married; on t morning the defendant told u thinking further over it he would not be prudent to g that people might make 1' our getting married so soo strbngly to the postpone I could not’thin‘! lgsw- " _..â€"â€"-"â€" [’â€" -,_â€"-».__.â€"â€"â€"- 1311 Jilting a. Lady. me' ._..â€"- and .‘ING BREACH OF take )MISE CASE. gen 1 Ann Jackson sued the iud‘ ier B‘air, in the Irish that LE ‘DRO\T. b. an engagement. ne nau Uuuciuu u.-- __, er confirqxed by so many promises. 1e The jury, after a short. deliberation, it. found for the plaintifiâ€"-damages £300, Lr. and Sixpence cosis. ne I . be 0y Saved from the Piratesâ€"A Strange 33 Experience. 10!: ev. om From the Boston Traveller, Dec 23, 1 A gentleman who is now a resident ONTARIO, A gentleman who is now a resident of East Boston states that after an un- e successful sojournfin California of several ‘15 years,-he took passage in a bark bound =. to New York. She touched at Panama ‘ for provision and water, and having ‘1 procured these, her Captain proposed 5 to sail the .next day. That evening thegentlernan wrote letters to his friends stating he might be expected home in I three months. At the usual time he retired and fell asleep, but about an hour afterward found himself on deck fully dressed. He was somewhat startled but, attributing it to” somnambulism, after taken a turn or two fore and aft . and exchanging a few remarks with the :.men and the anchor. watch, again un- dressed and went to bed. Imagin his 1 surprise when he found himself on the deck, dressed as before. Thrice he went to bed, and thrice he found himself on deck. As we never before texperienced 0 any kind of somnambulismvand was an e l uncOmpramising teetotalar,.yhe began to dl reflect whether there was not something 1 1 7 3 3 J JAN. 6, 1670- cilable with their right. It cmild r by the circum- reason or other he (1, and repudiated wâ€" ' 'n Putnam’s Magazine for the 1 t month, among other curiosities beastern Siberia, says : lusion of the ceremony 11 adjacent tent, and d as we came out into the ’ to see three or four Koraks ‘ shouting and reeling about in an advanc- ed stage‘of intomcation, celebrating, I supposed, the happy event that had just ' e6! I knew that there was not ern Kamschatka, nor, as far as I knew, .. . e :mm which it could be made, VVVW supposed, tge uapp - ' d. I knew.that there was not Lord 0 , whose pepuiz ‘ or in all North- excessive in the western town r em Kamschatka. portas far as I knew, having refused an importunatl anything from Whlch 1‘3 could be made, she renewed her application w and it was a mysterv *0 me how they Mr. if ye’d just give me one succeeded 80 in getting hopelessly ,‘un- pence, I could treat every deniably and thoroughry drunk- Eve“ have in the town.’ J. Rosse Browne’s beloved Washo’ehvith i Saloon, could An old Baptist minister, discreditable Religious Herald, enforced th humanity than of difference of opinion by those before us. The exerting .agent, meet: ‘Now if evervbody h ' ' ht be, .was 03”“qu as my opinion, everybody w and as (1‘110k “1 wanted my wife.’ One 0t t its onerationIas any ‘tangne f0“, offhm‘ who sat just beside him, res tled lightning’ known to modern CIVlllZa- ‘Yes, and if everybody w - . ot so far 10 advance of opinion, nobody would have the barbarians after all. They seemed to have solved. by ifh'éppfi intuitien, WORK AND ‘VAIT.â€"â€"Thei the problem which cmlizatlon has {‘0 things that alway pay, even ’ :long studied, viz I hOW }0 get drunk in overvremunerative existence the shortest possible time, and In the working and waiting. Eit-h -most efi‘ective way. For the fulfillment without the other. Both 111 l! method vincible, and inevitably tri He who waits without worls ' ' the Kora They get drunk by lply a man yielding to sloth a drop 0 r all others WhiCh D I Be who works without wait The “ ant IS in his strivings, and misse dlpeculiar to the count? . . t-lence. He who we violent narcotic pOISOD when taken {‘1 and wa1ts patiently may 1 large quantities, it acts upon the “1 small doses, very will find its reward. .d l and nervous system, . . . lcoholic liquor, and 1t 18 ly all the ,1 known as a ‘h a. single fun or themselves, ’ , ~ K mks would gather itf . “h l 01'}! ' -l.e shelter of timber for turer make 3,000,000 dos e fcund on . it is not to b which they Ninety persons have be ' the barren steppes 0V9? , , , 0“ obliged, {01‘ the Maine State Prison in th at enormous prices may sound One hundredâ€" years agl but the in- hibited in Virginia whicl 1 to . . imr strangely to American. ears, ds Toadâ€"Stool Whisky. COUNTY ADVERTISER. 190: W oRK AND Warsâ€"There are two 1; 5:10 things that alway pay, even in this not k "1 over-remunerative existence. They are the working and waiting. Either is useless ient without the other. Both united are in- LhOd vincihle, and inevitably triumphant.â€" He who waits without working is sim- i by ‘ply a man yielding to sloth and despair. arly : He who works without waiting is fitfull s, and misses results by ‘ . He who works steadily ' tly may have a long ' but at itsiclose he b is in his striving 1:111: Pittsburgh Ships stoves to California. b.0‘t8k1 A society of Scotchmen has been or. ntea ganized in Davenport, Iowa. . There are thirty slate quarries it 1 law. Lehigh 00., Pa., worth $2,000,000. Sir Walter Scott, in one of his dowels, gives expression to the height. of a Highlander’s happiness: ‘Twenty-four bag-pipe players assembled together in a small room, all playing at the same time different tunes.’ An old Baptist minister, says theI Religious Herald, enforced the necessity of difierence of Opinion by this argu- ment: ‘Now if everybody had been of my opinion, everybody would have wanted my wife.’ One of the deacons who sat. just beside him, responded :â€" ‘Yes, and if everybody were of‘my Opinion, nobody would have 12d her.’ ALL SORTS 0F ‘PARAGRAPHS. There are thirty slate quarries in Lehigh 00., Pa., worth $2,000,000. Boston paid fifty cents a pound for her Thanksgiving turkey. ' A'n Edinburgh chloroform manufac- turer make 3,000,000. doses in a year. Ninety persons have been sent to the Maine State Prison in the past year. One hundred. years ago a. hog was hibited in Virginia w _ hich weighed 1‘2 â€", whose papularity the western town of A e d e acons outright than carry them over a season; but it has not been asserted that he nondecl ' was ever reduced to that extremity.-â€"- re of my . . . . , He avords it 111 the first instance, por- l d hero ‘ ' haps, by this direct personal charge of 3 e two his retail house. He knows every day ’ ar exactly what is in it, and exactly how Dittlsfm everything in it is selling; and he is . v} late greatly aided in getting rid of goods of '1' 15 use €35 questionable pattern by his intuitive ited are m- knowledge of the fluctations of pOpUlaF iniphant:â€"â€" taste. Woman‘s whims dominate the 9% (‘15 3”?" dry goods market, which is, of course, :1 issgfgdl capricious as April weathker; but-Stew- 3 it b' art is-neverg at fault, fiid promptly resu S .V tacks with every change. Perhaps he 1‘: steal: ‘31-: sees the signs of their coming during ‘ e a c those hours at his retail house in the “3561039 he afternoon; but if the knowledge he so gained, it is absorbed without any out- 3 California. ward sign. He seems, as he stands at the chief cashier’s desk, to be totally has been 0“ unconscious of the presence of any one ‘1- except the subordinate with whom he is . . conversing, and as he makes his way quarms m through the crowds of ladies to the ,000,000. B d d h h' - roa way 091', v2 ere is carriage, d f with a span'ofsplendid sorrels attached, a poun or is waiting, he moves without a signfiyhat he is aware of their presence, unless he .5 ex- 1200 [VOLUME 3, NO. 49. ALL SORTS OF PARAGRAPHS. Au W‘Iusv .â€" happens to meet a personal acquaint- ance, when a polite raising of then» hat is all that marks the encounter. His. attention during these afternoon visits is chiefly directed to gathering an idea of the day’s business, and he rarely even then makes any extended inspection of .3‘9 3/”. ' ’t e remise.‘ w . l h P s - .eM' [$1.50 per Annum.

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