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Durham Chronicle (1867), 26 Aug 1897, p. 5

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PH "* n (1 311(1 an a» uwvv- -â€" _ seine, and the gem, describing ' ht in its (light, vanished whet tells us that “his spirits rose ‘3 emltation with the thought that It had closed the long catalogue of memes, cranes, intrigues and in- funies which for untold ages had con- ‘jtuted the history of the stone. To ”sass that glittering lump of crys- m, to call it their own, to display it to the world, even to take it by stealth intervals from its hiding place luat over its beauty. men had for century, sold their hon- friends and country and at the commission of the ' the never end- ‘ mg struggle for its possession blood had been shed and myriads of lives sac- new it had glittered in thecrowns 01‘ tyrants, decked the beauty of the “omen, served as the chief ad- ‘Ullirju't of monstrous idols, been wmtwl from ow net after owner as the ('hd.'l"‘b[ prize of conquest, and as it Lhtab't‘d from hand to hand its com»: had been marked by scenes m -ll'.klug cruelty oi' shameless have knowledge, for almost. every one a the priceless diamonds and rubies no“ the pride of royal treasuries, or of rare collections in Europe, has a. his- tory lull of strife, contest. rivalry and " ".-I "(he eunpire of Napoleon was made end unmade by the Regent, long the pride of the crown jewels of France, and until within very recent. years the {meat large diamond known. This atone was purchased, in 1717, from its English owner, for the French re- g‘ma by the Duke of 011831“, then BO- 1-11? oi h‘ranee, whence its name, and w u flI‘SL made publicly conspicuous at the coronation of Louis XV., in 1722, when it “as {lashed es the most mag- war . t pesterod Pnncoio- .8 ‘ h’s diamond n d the Rina ‘ , Losse 7 Mia (‘ all] In be found in a 1‘ Avenues, Cham among other H diamonds, their newly made 11 but discharged {or ‘ Finally, an unsigned Col) [WLODS the Bank W needed after the 18th Brumaire." k‘olv lowing {ms coniessxou. Baba‘s ac- complices were convicted and sentenced to we galleys, but. Balm hlmseli was imprisoned at Bioetre, where he was fa- miliarly known until he died as "the man who stole the Regent," Recent investigations into the his- tnry of the Regent throw doubt upon the truthfulness of Balms story, but the vital part which the diamond play- ed in building the fortunes of Napoleon admits of no denial. In 1798, six years after its recovery, is was pawned to Vsnderberg, a. banker of Amsterdam, and it was the funds thus secured that alone made possible Napoleon's Italian campaign and the battle of Marengo, the winning of which launched the Corsican upon his long career of con- quest. Sapoleon redeemed the Regent in 12. and two year: afterward had it placed on the pummel of thesword â€"\‘. of state. It aunt‘ned there until 1511', when Man»: Louise carried it off to Austria. whanoe the Emperor Francis returned it to France, and it was reset for the coronation of Charles X. Dur- ing the reign of Napoleon LII. it was mounted several times, and in 1870was “posited in the Bank of France. It is gow in the Galerie d’Apollon of the Louvre with the two Mn diamonds not sold at the Franck crqwn jewel pale 3 law an ago. It: ogncunl woxght III minus“, but this was re- mus Slums in HEW )l'fl 8!) .L was flushed as the moat; mag- L jewel in the crown. Half a 3' later Lt. was again the center town, that. which, in 1775, weighâ€" umvily upon the head of young XYL, that be cued out. in: dis- 1. "It hurts me." Then came volution and the crown jewels, he property of the people, were 1h Sunk P TSODS \" e re 'Ll' 1'83 51.911036 propi to alspoae 11 years 1;: ' came at». 05 a forge: 1!: of Fram was a. v: comrades you condemn m ue clemency of UL mornxa During nets \V dd tb SM agent and the other ob- . bung easxly recognized. led to detection. 1. reveab Lg place Lie xiegent, was on are not ignorant. of the was placed 111 the hands of y the r‘Lrst Consul to pro- nds whzch were so much 3th) ““ """""‘i”“ “9“” his assailant-- ° tun “$3333 méh‘é‘é‘tnfi’m was urged ‘ in” v‘L’HIH “‘9 {firm On {mOther 0008510!) Saucy paW'ned to leave table jewel mthe tample of Jug- im {nuts XV” itnol, ' his great stone {or What was in those gernaut. and so break the spell of mis- d‘dys the immense sum of 33,400‘ Mfume that was supported to aCCO‘IP‘ C-ruwns, and redeemed it a year after-. i’fmy Lt- But he refused t0.d0 ”113' ward. There are records in 160.3 and. “1'0 Mountain Of Light continued to "‘iliHi'. (xi-awn; undis- : on». m moi-m: Sev- 1604 of attempts to sell the stone to‘ 3119118 in the treasury 0‘ Lahorgefigf irreA'eul an sui‘icinn. . the Duke of Mantua. DIarie d8 Medici' {519' When the Si-Xth “33512311 'ts last A;- “mm of “Mien“. {was eager to possess it. but the price? 10” Lb” arms Of England. an 13m; his , :wee a little too high even for the King. ; representative. Weep $1118“l fund Letter ra‘ 'zndthe . â€" - . " ' ' ' ' ° He “ ’ Mind in 1604 it was sent to Constantin-i “1““? and his murauglzglgreger for- 7h" "illlilllltt‘. stilt: g 10 1 i a ' - s was then a were b0 , . e _. '--'.\.-. to. 1.1'158thn the #09“ Of findm‘g atpmcha'se-r‘ eon that he had onyee been the owner .11 ~ue e~ ‘ fl . e I’erbf)“ Of the Dultdn. This, (Jr 311‘ K h . Brought over to ti” in {m Alli» d“ failed and in the'same year the gem‘ 1511;211:1111 (to-Lhemgtzihmth at public ex- » tittit‘t‘s. officers ' 133331.??? sdbrotherJthe k‘rf‘}9h i reuse. ”1 sh' oul‘ d like." he said one day. 32*” ml llflt‘il‘UW'L 60.000 crowms 81:5 Dari: light: {133:3 ”to place the jewel in the Queenshiindé a...“ i4, 11" ' - , gnofi'thntlmnamwn; [“330115’ ‘â€" AI . N m =3 “9 L 9 ing should pay one-third on the . .. . _ her by . _ t . . . ' (held when 1 surrendered it to [l't‘ttl v.i.u- hwing L‘Vi- 7‘th one-third U1 SIX months. and the: the treat but now 1 am old enough .:!1;:.»'.~‘i.);-e it)? the ' ”3131108 fit the end of a year. The'Sancyl DO [mdergt'and " Elks Widh was conâ€" ee .».' {ii-:11 .:i;i edict} h‘ewme in due course the property ofa veyed to the Queen and on the very ‘. ,1. 3m awry U;- We Lharles l. and formed part of the jew-1 next day he Was ' ed to the els of his queen, Henrietta. LIaria, palace. ’Ilhb jewel was placed in his \‘maé Jilllllllllt'tl .::i «laughter of Henry 1",, of France, who mmL and for mime he toyed With 1‘” Among {hm-9. em. {In the outbreak of the revolution. took it. It was quite a different object worm solder. called . it to France in order to pledge it and5 from that wnjph had CW SO much \ HUM. “Du betrayed use money (or the royal cause. At 3 joy and, sorrow 1m 111116 oriental home the .s not the 111‘s: venous tunes she raised large sums, ‘1 of his royal fathers. The laptdarfs ,» m. court. ' that. 111;. gram as security, among other jewels: art had revealed all ma hidden fire and lit-mu usezu; 1o Sut';et.j.‘; 1 the Sentry, which passed into the hands? dazzling beauty, but had sharn the 3991 min 111'. -. 5:411 1111- Cf the Due d'Epernon, in part pay-z 0f much of its“ historical. and SCthlflc is} oi the ‘ hmperor. linen: of the principal. This was in' ilnterest. Then the descendant .Of yon-“m “ould not he on i 1637. and in the same year the Sancv! Eastern kings handed back the mob ' lb -. ‘v m -. Alone the 5 Ewe-line the property of Cardinal Mai-I prize of many oomqulesteg and formally it my: )mreugo :5 due. ’ :irzn who at his death. bequeathed it‘ remarked that it gave htm great Pleas‘ ‘l'tmuez‘s ot the Gard-e r») the 'r'rench crown as a portion of we» to place ting jewel in the hand 11"“1 ’U “11?." m the i the famous collection of diamonds‘ his sovereign. Some 01 Dulleeps o if, .luti the other 01" kniw tr , °° " . ' n friends' India, wmfld hBVO 831d it W35 A _ ' _i _n _._s the Eighteen Mazarins. _ _“Jlg“‘_u \m n the Indian J". tunic 'il":l' why Balm, who betrayed Ihxs as not the first Lb: court. " that. my an useful to society; rested on suspicion, ' want of evidence. 1 letter reached the .- mmmune. stating‘ 36mg jewels would! . in tha Ame desi of the Emperor. )1) would not. be on to me. alone the This I: for a. crown to a priest, from whose from its hands It passed through others until 11 re- - {t was bought for 240,000 ducats by‘l’ope 3 'JUIIUS 11. All this, however. has been .hen Re- Droved improbable by M. Germam we. 110411949312- and of the diamond's history euous at HOLMES {8 {Known up to the time when n 179;; We find it in the possessxon of Nicolas ' ' Hanla)’ de Sancy in the closing years Mr “135‘ ‘of.the sixteenth century. This Sancy,‘ Half a . vhief of the Swiss Guards of Henry 1V- { a center "it k'l‘agnce. was a clever diplomat and; .linancrer. wholly devoted to his king. p :09 lwhose behalf be contracted many )‘UUDS ‘loans, often giving jewels of his own! in' dis- gas security. Once he sent the Sancyi an came £30 a Jew broker to be pawmed. ’Dhe lservant never returned. The broker _ gdeclared he had never seen him. But ;e. were ‘bu‘ncy's confidence in his servitor was a tire|ulnsha~ken He made searches. and at 1' last the body of the servant was found " 1.. in} .a deep ditch near the city vwalls. 11”: " hvndently an attempt at robbery had 'v‘ 'iXSMV‘ been made, and when the body was cut H been mpen it was found that the faithful "'l‘ntr {H9 1 fellow had swallowed the diamond. as u f 47‘. _',‘J “he onlyj‘means left him of *outwitting .3, weiglr E jeweis, duced in cutting to 128 carats. It; was cut by Harris, who devoted two 383m to the task, his fee being #50,- I have said that the empire of Na- poleon was made and unmade by the Regent. Before it came to France it was known as the Pitt diamond, and this name gives the clew to its part, in the Emperor's undoing. Tradition! has it that the stone was discovered by a slave at Parteal, south of Gol- Conda; that he escaped the rigid ind spectlon to which all the miners were subjected by the native prince by con- cealing the gem in a wound in the calf of his leg; that he made his way to the seacoast and offered it to an English skipper, but that in lieu of pay- ment he was murdered and thrown overboard; and that the skipper, after selling the great gem to the diamond merchant, Jaurchund, for £1000. per- haps from the effects of rum and an evil conscience, hanged himself. Be this as it may, Jaurchund, in 1703. Sold the stone to Thomas Pitt, Governor of Fort George. The price asked was 200,- 000 pagoda, but Pitt, after long hag- gling, beat the vender down to 48,000 pagodas, about $96,000. Pitt staked his Whole fortune on the diamond. but the venture proved a. lucky one. and in 1717, he sold it to the Duke of Orleans for' 3,000,000 livres. 8667,”. And with the money received from this sale was laid a firm founda- tion for the house "of Pitt. from which sprang in time William Pitt the elder. the great Earl of Ohatham. and Wit- liam Pitt, the younger. a greater than thegreat earl himself. When the vol-- canie fury of the French revolution blazed .out, in 1739. the second Mi}â€" ililm Pitt them at the height of his iuuparalleled career, “as building UP xthe peacetul prosperity of England. In the urst years of the great upheaval {“6 was blind to its [lame and deaf to its iury, but when m 1793. he was torc- eu into war, his neutrality gaveplm w a policy of aggression. and. 1113.1”? remitting hostility to the Corstcan ended only with the latter's overthrow. ror that reason it is not too much to sag; that the Regent caused. the 1311 asflyvell as the rise of Napoleon. inc. famous Clancy uiamond .1135 pl iyetl a not less fateful and grandwse part lI‘. history. “hence this diamond came is a matter of conjecture. Le- gend has it that it belonged to vCharleS the Bold, Duke of Bergundy, who lost it in 1476 at the battle of (Hanson .01‘ the battle of Morat. and that it was tounu by a Swiss soldier, who sold ' It is thus described in an inventory of the ['I't‘llth dinmon {is drawn up in 091: "A 3er3 large and deep diamond ; allei I.e Saucy. given to the crown flay the. late (‘ardinal )Iazariin cut in rivets.i on both sides in pendent form, of the finest water. white and brilliant {perfect in all points, weighing 53 3-4 (nuts. 33 hich having no equal, is of in- :estinmb‘ e 3alue. and which, for the {ormal purposes of this inventory, is ldeglared to be worth 000,000 lines." XV. “ore a: his coronation a. xrou 11 surmounted l) the bancy and; xx hen the Queen entered Paris on ()ct-. her 4.1728 see wore the gr reat diam- mi in her hair. In Van Leo’s? portrait of Queen )Iarie Leczin-l sk‘. no“ 11 the Loux re the Song form-I at the pendant of her necklace. On 11;'1n3 mcasions Marie Antoinette xxore the 5a.ncy and when the crown jewels xx ere sent to Amsterdam to be recsut the skins} alone was permitted to retain the I eudant form and prinlitive cutting 1 xx hich is unchanged to the present «in ‘x'x hen robbers during the revolu- Lion looted the barde \Ieguble and. as already described carried ofi the crown jewels the Sancy \\ as stolen. but was soon afterward recovered and played ‘a part second only to the Regent in sustaining the armies of the newt-born republic. ”W ith other crown jewels it was pledged with the Marquis d'Iralnda, as security for sum advanced to supply horses for the rep mbliacam cavalry artillery. (1111910011 mmm flhnlhrquigort'hheirl. toro- mmthedhmantandmldittoGod- oy, Prince dub them. (run whose habit blM‘bJ m pate. . formally THE DURHAM CHRONICLE, August 26. it disappeared from. new. In 1828. however, it was aim in the possession of the Godoy fanfify. Four years after- ward it was sold to Fringe Demidoff. and remained in the Demldoff family uptil about 1865, when i2 qus wogn by â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" LUW, "MC“ 5v "WU "Vbu U; the young prince Paul Demi- doff, who appeared at a masked ball at the Tuiileries in the costume 9f an In- dmp rajam. Strange to say, it was an Oriental millionaire who bought the Saucy for 550,000 [mums when Prince Dem-deft, after the death. of his wife, sold all his diamonds and determined to become a monk, and it, remained for more than twenty years In indie. In 1889 it was exhibited at the Universal Exthion at Paris, and in 1892, return- property of a group of Stencil). bank- ing definitely to Europe, It became the ers. _ In tine inventory of 179:: the value of the Regent was estimated at 12,000,000 francs. In the same inventory the Saucy was estimated at 1,200,000 francs. but for those who value the origin and blistory of an object the Saucy is P01" naps the most interesting of all th Frencih crown jewels. Ouruous also, 18 the story of the Kohâ€"iâ€"moor the costli- est jewel in the possession of the Brit- ish crown. This, the most famous of all diamonds, and its companion, the Orloff, are SUpposed to be flble fragments of a still mightier crystal of 793 carats. of which the tradition hasbeen pre- served by 'l‘avernier, Who Visited the East im 1670 and tihere saw and describ- ed many most remarkable jewels beâ€" longing to the famous Aurungzebexhen on the throne of the Mogul empire at Delhi. The legends relatnng to these twin stones are numerous and conflict- img. One account has it that they sllmne for ages as the eyes of :1 mon- strous idol in a Braihimian temple in Gol- conda. ‘Nhen the Mogul emperor fell out with. the King of Golconda the Prime Minister of nine latter forsook his master, contributed to his overthrow, and by the bribe of the Kohâ€"iâ€"noor ob- tained from the conquering Mogul the vacant Uhrone. Another caprice of fortune landed the Orion" also in the hands of the conqueror. rl'hus the gems passel from Golconda to Delhi. Sometimes worn on the persons of the Moguls, sometimes shining side by side on the famous peacock throne, they were safely preserved at Delhi un- til the empire was overthrone by the Persian Nadir Shah. With the ussas~ sinatiom of Nadir Shah. in 1749, their stories divide. The Orloff, then known as thb Deryaâ€"i-noor. or Sea of Light, passed to a. temple in Pondicherry. where it was stolen by a French de- serter, who_ had pretended cohversgioh so successfully that he was made priest ot the temple. and there bided his time wntil opportunity favored him. He disposed of his booty to a Greek mer- chant somewhere on the shores of the Mediterranean. and in the year 1772 it phased initb (thle hands of Brince ()rloff. who presented it to Catherine 11., Prince ()rloff paid for it nearly $500,000 in cash, beSides a patent of noâ€" bility and an annuity of twenty thous- {Lnd dollars for life. The Orloff is now set in the top of the Russian crown. OHS form. in teeMicgtl language. is a high crowned rose. It weights 190 3-4 parats, and its about half the size of a pigeQ'n'S egg. Unfortunately, it. is not .0? fll‘St }~*:Lter,_ being slightly tinged Witu 391‘ sow. like the orange diamond- And What of the KOh-Lâ€"DOOTâ€"‘tht 9f the Moumtam of Light? That, too, mus had its advantuzres since. it an‘Led fCUmLJany with its twin. It was (rimmed off by Ahmed Shah. and under we stress of prolonged persecution was surrendered by his unhappy descendâ€" 'fn:. Shah Soojah, to the greed of Rpm- jeet Simgh. When that Sikh ohlef- JOY and. wrmw im the orlental uuuw Of his royal fathers. The lapidary's art haul revealed all its hidden fire and (13331-11113 beauty. but had sham the gem 9f much of its historical and scxentlho figurest. ’1‘!th the descendant .Of mam kings handed back the mob Drnze of many conquests. and formally remarked that it gave him great pleas- mm to place the jewel in the hand of his. sovereign. Some 01 M6893 Old hug sovereign. Some 01: weeps um fruends in India would have said it was a good riddanoe. When the Indian ogstodian of the gem handed the splen- de bauble over to! fihb English, in the palace of the lhttle Maharajah. be ' of relief and sald 28 was always attached to his waist by a. stout cord of twisted rlbbosn. Dr. Logim. the first British custodian of the gem. {Unawed the 01d nat'nve keep- er's example until, Imwh‘ to his relief, the treasure was transferred to Eng- As Duleep held and looked upon his heirloom of his family it might well have conjured up Ln has mind. attain of assocxations that; are a part of many stirring epochs, of Asiatic history. for no gem has ever figomod so long and so 0011.5ch110qu in hiswry as the Kohâ€" L-BOOI‘. The priceless 38W 81 in the crown of the earl) ’lurkish invaders of India. of the Moguls from the north and the Pers ans trom the West it _ LL- (buu. luv LVLD.wuq LAVâ€" pgssed from peeple to peOple as the “chest emblem of conquest “313' son Humayoun.” said Baber. “ has won a iewel from the Rajah which is valued 3.1; half the expenses of the whole world.” It glistened in the headgear of Bu'lber's hapless descendant When the Persian conqueror jocosely remarked to his fallen foe, “ Let us change turbans," and walked off with the nze. Duleep's greatest ancestor broug- t it back to India. the prize of victor . and the third clause of the treaty mm which date the downfiall of the Sikh dynast {and British supremacy m the Pun“ u devoted to the Kola-Lamar. Sever aftersovereign won the gem whose or- ' 18m :3 hidden m the mists of antiquity. and the Britlsh Queen. as the latest vie- tor now holds the prize. Safety stow- ed away at Windsor Castle. the tam-1 ous jewel probably does not give its present owner so much solicitude as in the. days when only one man knew in whwh one otadozen boxes it was kept. or on which of a hundred camels it was carried on the march. Another historic diamond is the Nas- sak, 78 1-2 mrats. a triangular stone with triangular facets. It was among the spoils taken by the Mar uis of Has- tings in the conquest of t e Deccan. and in 1786 was sent by the Nizamto King George 11L. whlose favor Hast- ings was at that time anxious. to se- cure. He was on trial for havmg en- dowed the nation with an Eastern em- pire. Commissioned to deliver the jew- Iel to the King. this circumstance brought himself and the royal family i into great trouble. giving rise to num- erous scurrilous writings and carica- tures, which were publicly hawked about the streets of London and ex- hibited in the shop windows. Afterward the Nassak passed by sale through var- ious hands to its present owner. the Duke of Westminster, who paid $36,â€" .000 for it at auction. Rubies. when fine, are often more valuable than diamonds. and not a fgw have had long apd even_tfql_ histopes A very large and remarkably perfor- ated ruby of antique workmanship. now in the possession of a noble lady of Ireland, has sharply engraved up- on it in Arabic characters. the names of four successive rulers of great note in East Indian history, namely. Akbar. his son Jahangir. his son Shah J ehan and his son Aurungzebe. covering to- gether about the. first two-thirds of the seventeenth century. This was bought some years ago im Teheran. and is doubtless one of the 'ewels carried from India to Persia in 1 39 by Nadir Shah, and scattered and lost after his death. Another ruby. larger than this one. of which a model and impressions still ex- ist. had the same four names engraved upon it, butthe stone has 13.909 recubâ€" urvu -l- a. piece of historical vandalism that is umpardonalfle. Its pmsent whereabouts is uncertain. Still another ruby on- graved wig-h thg name of Aui‘ungzebe U-“'" â€" is said to have been among the jéwels of ms son, and a dxamond that has been out 31 noe also had the. engraved names of Jammgir and Shah Jéhan. LABOR IN RUSSIA. \Vhile- Emperor Nirhoias has declin- ed until now to endow his people with a constitutional form of government, yet it cannot be. denied that. he is in- troducing many reforms which show that he. is possesséd o2 an enlightened and hrozid-mindml sense of his respon- ! I sibililies. Thus he has just promulgatâ€" ed a ukase prohibiting. undpr severe penalties, any form of labor on Sunday. or on tho fourteen principal Russian' feast. days oi the .N’iuzwovxte valendur.g This practically assures the laboring»; populnm:-n 66 legal. days of res. 1n the a year. Children are not permitted un-- der any Circumstances to work more than eight hours a day. whlle eleven are henceforth to constitute the max- 1 i-mum working day of grown men. On Saturday the. working day 15 limited to This is the way it was béund (01001: 'hcn ;; .1 2c2;1;1-:ff;;r1111:3“pictcr Look.” at before These wen. the 511:1;ows ca The comLuJ of Conjurer Daguerrc And his art; like a girl in a pinafore Some day to bloom to a goddess fair. (nui c mm $5 fiwdq uwnaflnam on non Wmuv do Om 3.9%.: .hwofuufifl. o” 6.330 30639 rpm rampant 4.1;. deUm Bpmm 98H. Wu: shadow. 89 653W? Ufiwfimo a. on Swap vgwmww $5 Hoe-.. wisp . “Sum {wwwwmupnfiws H.“ To tho Men Yeast 00.. London. Ont. (lanthanum-We got and hm I‘M m ’ out n m- using In. WI cut than Mmdmmmmit. D 3308..” THE HIDDEN YEAST $0.. to“ "I. Its record proves it. Others imitate the remedy: til 93 v ° : 4. ,. ,. n - yer’s 52.: 539511" “3 1897. mfl‘ 000.00.00.00 ll ”mum-x an a an O mus“. summon no... 0 . coucn. loss or Amati. onnm'nr. the so...» or a. z . made are most was Bythouid of'Df’D. al-’ “W l 2.3:. . rldofnbavbnz cm whirl in! mud . over 3 year. and have gun-d Mi weight liked this Ilium.) "I“ ~ “ . .wm mammowmunduuhua . 1.11 WIXGflAlc. r. W . 50c. and 8! per lam-v ‘ mm a um 00., tum-mm O GOLIG, CHOLERA, CHOLEIA- MOBBUS, DIABRIIOEA, DYSENTEBY, And all SUI-EB 00'PLAIUT. .1 Children or Adults. PRICE. 38¢. Beware of mutual-I. florse 1M 9 x. 09W mm, in: . of Grey. including a valuable W. S32v2? Brick dwelling. and many 61 lble building iota. will be sold. 1n one or morei on}. Also lot. No. 60, (Jon. 2, W 163. B... Townsh plo Bentinck. 100 acres. adjoxnmg Town 9 at. m. Dygggagea taken for part purchaae money J AMES EDGE. n_n. I‘D-A Apply to 'Edge Hill. .0. Oct. 2nd. Dealers in Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Spectacles, Silver an'l Flat Warn of all descriptions. Repairing 0 pecialt y. Upper Town, Durham. S \l‘b‘ F ACTION GUARANTEED - I. the °nempmr SKINS, Etc., Tanned Suitublo RUBES and COATS by the now nrncesn- which for Finish brew process, w hich for and Sofnnesa csn’ t. be beat. IN THE NWN 0F hUflHAM. Robe Tanning. EDGE PROPERTY THO 8. SMITH. an" -qq'llI’ H ragga-SDI Us; 9:6. 5.»: gniuns. "gig 95033! . .8.â€" wl<a to...» E Ag‘K-lilgwa'imâ€"‘L. “Corgi-bunks; w. H. «495”»! Q. N! E . ridge HiTl'. TKO.

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