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Durham Chronicle (1867), 10 Mar 1898, p. 5

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our large and compFete stock 0' Silverware, Watches. Clocks, Flatware and Jewelry \ Ill Wheat. . Win] ms. . , Wheat and best on the market. YO“ can save money by buyinx 0‘" goods. It is more pleasing N visit our store and 011m“. Met pa per do: ............ . . . .. )3 les....porbag ...... ...... 50 Ewes. . . .per bag .......... . 50 Y" per ewt .......... . ..... l 75 lineal per sack ............ l 8) )1) per cw! ................. 75 $3qu Hugs per cwt .......... 5 75 ’03., per lb .............. R e have just received a shipment Sterling Bros. celebrated bud do sums for Men, WomeD,B°” Girls. Just the thing for Sprinl' "I‘ forget we sell “Salad.” CO" Tea at '23, 30 and 400. nib. Ck or mixed, in load packet!â€" nds and half nnnnfln- omkins ...... keys per lb. . . 30 per lb ...... rks per pair. . . £30119 per pair Lnds and half pounds. - and see what a lot of TIN- ARE we give for 31,00. Ah.“ pment just in. Serges 25c. fiy‘l’do ,ncy figured Lustre: (a snap) 30c. and 35c. unid- rtan Gingham: 70. t yard- “'0 have it in every m Styles are the Newest m IDAY JEE ELRY. w Goods. OCS. Seeds Goods You \Vant! EAN CO. UPPER TOWN DI'RHAM, Mar. 10th Tushmere in Navy Blue and Blm‘k 12§c. a yard. “Black and Colored Wool Than to visit : minim“! ,1 opening. 3‘ UPPER TOWN. toltfi "“f‘ "' “W“ ”‘ “‘c Why? aéked Mrs. Dooley of Bridget 1‘ \\ int n k- _V ' Flanagan, do you 9.0 to -.that GM MIS- {hr Hugo i . '. "1"" Chomwd Jelly Smith to read your letthers from your mm W 1 '1‘ ““1198. remember to swatcheart? Billie. ”you don't be ‘ _ “‘ 1‘ With a k '1'. . , knowin’her ata we . be?“ mimed in water m e that be“ flat I don’t. But she do be deaf as ‘1 mzki ' - , ° 8 t! takpu ,mng‘k“) “'“8, When the cake is 30; what's the good. of thatg? “int; 4% _ m {be men, place it upon a» The good of it. ? The good of It 9 W'hy. thgjrmwd mmld “ at" then S read thin, not one wurrd of thnm letthora Fur 80:81: the cake and m“ qujcgly. do she hear! 011nm of g 1'31.“ .Wllow. take a half. tithe Ini‘ (”hm and four of water, Mrs. Siixndiet. proudlyâ€"I don’t have usingu‘m' Stand several days be- any cheap stuff on my table. That T0 ('0‘ . . . ted. ' ’ gooseberry Jam 13 unpor “Dumb (1:52?” "ugh and cook a few New Boarderâ€"Is the butter? to the liquif '“,“"Eter. strain and Mrs. saimdietâ€"The buttqr? Why, 110, mu.“ for (fol .b r “it juices can also of course not. lid you thmb the but- ai‘f' onmg purposes in candy tor came from Em'opg? M hunts make , New Bosnianâ€"Yes. m the steerage. ter shellmg the nuts, ”MGR ‘ Wg . ‘M “at: 1:: Kittie butter and an, H". you been reading about. the bard "‘ removed fix-:1; Of them, The you on tho sun I and the young “611 over 01am- ”:3. nm_tm;.um [it]. III?» I U Want to have ‘0!” garniAh-ing dishes, remember to “too or cut it with a knife that has be“ dipped in water. I“ Making jelly rolls, When the cake is the oven, place it upon 3 chopped Jelly it in the mo}. mm; W pm .11. um: hands (If an un8kiiled person to rip up. SCiSSnI‘S shouM not I»? used, a sharp- poinfted knife doing the work better. Bias 343.1118 shou’hd he held carefully in order not to stretch them. and all threads neatLy pulled out after they are weii rut. so that there is no knot- thug resistance. Hanks. eyes, 'buttOPS, Clasps. (‘10., Should }.fl Inhmn. nlf ----- 0L cu mutate says few women know how to rip up a dress for re-mak-imgs. Many a good gown is spoiled by being placed 1). the ban-(ls 011' an unskilled person to rip up. 80:2:th should not I»? used, a sharp- poiwtml knife doing the work better. Bias yams shoulld he held carefully in 01'er 'UUL to strph'h tknm n...: -H ,wust peopie an'k Lt is very easy to rip gumwntsn but a fashionable dress- umkvsr thinks mberwise. This celebrat- ed mnxilsle says few women know how to rip up a dress for Icy-[naming Many a good gown is smmlzgd bv being him “3091‘s- fl‘hr pump for the wufe is that he alhxnuld emjoy his home when he is there, m1 that Liking. we think, belongs first of all to the Mum: and strong and (in-ply engaged. and not to the lounger or the guy sociaety marn‘. In marriage. as in every other rela- tihn of Life. the urmrpetamt man is the pi'e‘usan'tes'l {mm to [We with, and the mfest to vhoose. 3.an bbfi one most like- ly to prow- an umveuiad friend, and unw “hp enjoys. and suffers others to mxjry. when at home, the endless charm of mcnml repose. The gay man of the ‘ world makes a pleasant companion for the society gun. but when. selecting timts a constant sowroe of enjoyment. All the motony and weakness of life he encounters outside ill] the busy world. it is the. pleasmre-lovmng man, the many mmpan .01)., who requires con- stant excvtement. and‘ who needs to be ever summed~ that funds home We un- mummbie. lie soon grows weary of II. a.“ and [welders everything so tame and uninb'resti-ng that it is impossible [or hum Lo be. happy. in fact, he soon (tunes to think that he is less happy that» than amynv here else and he is; won seek lug the society of gay comr‘ pan ons and graduaMy drifting back Inâ€" i to thr 9...: ways of his bachelor da.ys.i Do not wmierstwnd me to mean that the (hyluestic man should be always at home. The man always at home, has not hair [hr chance of the man whose busimt‘ss calls him away for a part of the time tor he must sometimes be in thy: wza3. hen the most Longenndo peo- pit 911303 eauh others' society better, if NW3 are um (hiOhSitillf y together. Ch- smooth iriknd 01’ his wife, finds music in bhb‘ merry prattle of his little ones and feels in the little hmne circle, where no one is above him and 331 are sympatrmtm, that. he has indeed, found a. haven of rest possmllitiee ua' i-nsipidity,, sameness and ('onSrquent weakness 18 never present no surh a man. Hi: no more tires of his wife than he does at his own happy moods. He finds in hera tried and true mmpunbu. He is no more bored with [La hwnr than he is with his sleep. In L‘L he finds his greenest coqurt. He is nowvrv bothered W11 11' his children thu “'Lthhis own lighter though-ts. He finds in their innocent ways and childish pas- i 01' mold to md dumbâ€"i 92 S!" {.mu'lered sugar sifted ls H.311 any ”we: kind. 8-9- an angel or sponge cake. FOR THE KITCHEN. THE HOME. over the 'l t L children are asked to l waist. trimming of I have is to he put )3 strliang should be .4108 rolled carefully 'Oods-n stuck, perhaps -r. which is kept far this care repays in may . lare is almost a ‘ 5 urfm of the Reading and writing are not really a necessity of life, when there are other peOpIe who can read and_ vyrite. t Girlâ€"I was thinkigg it might lmszegeood plaza for Mr. Naoefello and me to sit up a. few nights and watch for him. Sweet Girlâ€"Pa. the house next door was robbed last night. {Paâ€"Mercy! Next door? Sweet Girlâ€"Yes, and the burglars have been in two or three houses on this block within a week. Paâ€"I know it. I know it. It's ter- rible! But what can we do? i If a cold is checked in time it may he driven off without the least trou- hle. As soon as the first symptoms are manifest, the patient should take a hot mustard foot bath, sip a glass of strong not lemonade, or take a hot brandy, and go to bed well covered. The best results are always secured by un'lressing' and going to bed, for then the temperature of the body is the same all over and a cure will be. effected in a shorter time. Another thing that a mother shbulrl see to is, that by some means the bed clothing in the children's beds is securefl so they cannot throw ‘ it off in sleep, and thus become ill. as a rousequence when‘ Vthéy go out they do not: fag] sufficiently warm. like a furnace which requires that. the prOper fuel be put into it and the '_ , removal of all Cinders and ashes, to ,’ .‘keep‘ it in running trim, there would ifbe fewer headaches, less indigestion, t brighter complexions and better health 3 in: mind that the. human (body is much 8 ’lstudy or play. Encourage them to 'Ibreathe deepfly. This has been known ,to ward off more colds than almost ,‘anything else. Let them play out of when the weather is cold, for by sit- ‘ ‘ ting around quiertly they become chill- §erl, and this should be avoided. Guard {against siitting in drafts, even in the iwarm house. So many colds are con- ltracted through carelessness in not lputting on) sufficient clothing when lstepping out flor ‘ ‘a minute." Women ' work about the kitchen in a thin dress ‘ and slippers, and possibly run out in the cold that way. The children if not watched do the same. They stand in [open doorways or step out into the ! snow and get their feet wet. and then {a cold follows. ' _ __ v "-'--HU and shoes with heavy soles are best for winter wear. When the children come into the house, all wraps should .‘se removed. Many liftie folks have a, bad habit of sitting all day. at school with their rubbers or leggings on, and N AMATEUR DETECTIVE AGENCY. Children who are predisposed to colds should have particular attention given their «'lothing. This does not necessar- ily mean flannels as thick as boards, but sufficient for warmth. Half wool knit underwear does not shrink and is to he recommended. W'oolen stockings ...... VII-J like coaiduions are Improper fogd, and, fluent clothing are no...) u; we weather. It is not in proper condition it invites dis- ease and colds will be frequent. Indi- gestion, constipation, sleeping rooms, unCleanlinncu nun-â€" _. 9‘1 against A cold'i ' 8 not al - t9 exposure or to the changi: ays due tlonS ()f *ho il'nn‘l.-_ TA .- g condl- REASON ENOUGH. are apt to produce indigestion rwise injure the health of the Keep the children clean, not face and hands, but the entire ‘ much effete material is ex~ n-nA..- care for their I (.‘oomass'ie is to be connected with 3 road. Engineers and material have been gline will run first to the 'l‘ai'quah gold mines, a distance of forty miles, and then as soon as possible to the Ashanti capital. '"v'v wwwv ' ' â€" --â€"-â€"â€"'â€"v w' o 'Kidna andBladdtr Dumas. I I7 YEARS IN 021-3011. 200.000 OURED. Brunswick, Germany, is troubled over a peculiar epidemic of hysteria that has broken out in one of' the girls’ schools. A few girls in one room, started the NO NAME?) USED VgI‘I‘HOUT WRITTEN OONuN‘I‘. 'P O . edirfmz sent . O. D. No use . 3,593.5. $3.?thln: ccnndentlahr Que on lzstmgoxe of m \Vhether “ Hock I” or “ Hurrah I” is the prOper ejaculation after a toast is Pronosed is a question that is disturb- izng Germany. Prince Ludwig of Bav- aria at the Munich banquet in honor of the Kaiser’s birthday avoided the point by shouting, ” Hoch, hurrah!" Col. Ibbetson, who died recently in England. was the hero of the last sen- sational elopement to Gretna-Green. He ran off forty-four years ago with Lady Adela. Villiers, daughter of the Earl of Jersey ; she died six years after they were married. ---- vvuvl y‘alâ€" Boas has been" fooâ€"fiafig’et. t artifice has a ourmushcustorx: .0; dis. For preventing a railroad disaster n. u ing “9 ”0'8“” S 098' “ ”c are V . (:overnment offices, to the widows and by. the timely discovery Of a broken other needy relatives of her distin- ran] and_ the stopping. Of an {ippl‘oaCh’ guiszied. Among the recipients of the 138‘ tram a. locomotive engineer, at 261 given last year are Mme Halle on the Saale recieved a 1‘9”” fawn, widow of the Academiman Sen- Of 2 marks, 50 cents, from the railroad t ator and Minister: the widows of a oompam. ! General of division, of four Generals of Col. Ibbetson. who died recently in {brigade and of a Rear Admiral and England, was. the hero of the last sen- [the daughters of a professor at the sational elopement t0 Gretna-Green. lborbonne. 'v-‘ kuv the patient in and notâ€"meons of isolat- ing him fromj contact wit sons has been found yet. h other per- A case of leprosy. in its worst form hit-‘3 been discovered in London. N0 hos- Dita! ox: h9m_e forAincurahles will take ‘L- ,,,.1 i T H RE ”11' of ignorance and folly in youth, overexertion of. mind agd body indnc . ed b Inst. and exposure are constantl wreckqm the Inca and rotor Pull-happiness o thonmndso romisin young men. Some- and mther at an only age 19% the blossom of manhood. while 0 era are forced to drag out a weary, fruition an: E? melancholy existence. Others reach matrimony but find 11.0 solace or comfort there. Th1 : victims are found in all stations of Bierâ€"Tho farm, the dime. the workshop. the pulpit '9. the trades and the professions. Three travelled Welshman gave a horseflesh banquet at a Rhondda Valley hotel recently, to which they invited eighty-four persons. Only sev- en, however, presented themselves to feast on a. “sirloin of four-year-old Empress Augusta Victoria of Ger- many found 144 German servant girls. last year to whom she could giive the gflldezn servants' cross for having liv- ed forty years with one family. Only one was found in Berlin. 100 and was subsequently discharged from the French Army at the age of 22 years as a consumptive, died re- cently at La-Roche-sur-Yon, aged 105 Years and 10 months. George Frederick Watt’s colossal equ- 93tl‘iflan statue of ‘ “Force ” will be cast up bronze, at the expense of the Bri- tlsh Government and set up in Hyde Park, on the terrace at the end of the Serpentine. ' A little hot sealing x:'a.x dropped on his hand has just killed the Earl of Gimme”, blood poisoning having set un Ir..- 1‘. .I. - Viv,” p. . 0"»..1. K “2 59f. ..:.z...u.. Old and New World Events oi Interest Chron- WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE FOUR CORNERS OF THE GLOBE. ‘ 'vsh 1 'wmu-R .7. s.‘ fiaTER EXCESSES IN MANHOOD MAKE NERVOUS. DiSEASED MEN Baillot, who fought at Water- REV 85 KERGAN. '9 March 10, V81. “'9”, Simple [bought it I find that the owner of ‘the building is going to'tear it dowtn'. ' Sell‘erâ€"-Yes, that's Why I intended to Selle râ€"Yes, travel. Lvul‘\'u- Itinn Again. The. ship Nelron ar- ’ rived a1. \‘Vellington, having struck on a rocky point, and had several holes in her bottom. Divers found one hole stap- ped up lzy a large piece of rock, and another hole calked by a fish that had u..- GOOD REASONS FOR. SELLING. Buyer, amgnilyâ€"See here. You said the reason you wanted to sell that. store was beceuse you imitended to truâ€" " C‘ Two strange tales come from the au- tipodes. On Nov. 19. the Catholic church at Minyip, Victoria, was partly blown over by a storm. and propped up by heavy timbers. spiked to the ground. A few days later another sltorm arose and blew the church p]umh_ on its founda- v v vaublufl in Belgrade. King Alexander’s mother, ex-Queen Natalie, set such a pace in drses and court festivities that the pockets of the Belgrade husbands could not keep up with it. They remonstrat- ed with the King, and, as the surest way to keep Natalie out of Servia, her spendthrift husLand was invited back Sootch whiskey keeps on booming There are 158 distilleries at work in Scotland, that find it difficult to keep up with orders, and more Government inspectors are called for. The output last year was 28,500,000 gallons, an in- No. I48 __ -v ‘- wvu‘vuuluu to the police. Asva result seven div- orce suits were begun the day the di- vorce court Opened, and the Belgian Attorney-General has been forced to resign. . Lawyers in England have no legal ;right to “ get their names in the pap’ " according to a recent decision of Mr. Justice Hawkins. The suit of a Birm- ingham lawyer, who had sued two papers of that city for conspiracy in purposely leaving out his name when- ever he tried cases. was dismissed be- fore it went to the jury. Brussels is having an unpleasant so- ciety scandal. A handsome Spanish adventuress, who kept a bar and gamb- ling house frequented by the most fashionable set in the city. having been arrested for usury made a confession Ln LL- Oxford University has been obliged to lock up the books in the Radcliffe Camera. Where the reference books of the library are kept. owing to so many volumes being stolen. The worst of- fenders are said to be undergraduates preparing for examination, and the greatest sufferer the department of history. ofhem._hy§t9;ica spread to all the clus- Diverged but united again IMPOTENCV - The Chronicle Is the lost wide 1y read newspaper published I. LeRoy'Pin Cu Dealers 111 V and Spectacles of all descri pecialty . Up] County of Grey. including a valuable W Powei. Brick Welling.“ many olecibla building Iota. will be d oind one or more low. , 0.8.. Tonnhlpof ing Town plot. Mortgages taken for pm purchase mono! ApplytonES EDGE. I 0ct.2nd._ . I... Edgeflill. PM 0 0d sl’ninqles. Circular- and 'Crosstut‘ Saws Gummed, Filed and Set. I am prepared to fill orders for Steam Engines, Horse . Separators, Mowers,_ Reapers Furnace Kettles, Power Stsw Cut- ters, Hot Air Furnaces, Shingle Machinery, Band Saws, Emery Machines. hand or power ; Cresting Farmers’ Kettles, Columns, Church Seat Ends, Bed Fasteners, Fencing, Pump-Makers’ Supplies, Siihool Desks. Fanning Mill Castings, Light Castings and Builders’ Sup- plies, Sole Plates and Points for he different ploughs in use. Casting repairs for Flour and Saw Mills. SANS '3‘ {C NON GUARANTEED Farmers, Thrashers and Millmen IN THE NW 05“ ”URN“. 3.)U.~’.‘{A.\l FOUNDRYMAN SKINS, Em, Tanned Suimblo orw.{()BES and COATS by the med process, which for Finish an Sofcnou casn’tbobost. EDGE PROPERTY GEMSOFWTI‘ Robe Tanning. pm, Priq-e .1 per nmx «(drum orb: In! I». ,1me Icflod nu tumult ofprico. L‘u Vicwria St.. Toronto. Cu: THUS. SMITH. mam SMITH, mam ()«w Hides, Dog -- WE REPAIR SURE TO CURE. Whom otsom m1. Powers,

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