West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 19 May 1898, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

mday, 21 bk Agents! HE! Iv (if RE If lc {’T FORGET that 0 Wire Fencing Ming Machines. and min the CHEAPES 180 GUI Inst Wood how Room < every (183' E INSURANCE Co’s. ultural imfi other ll WILL BY Pl [IS Hm HE furrow 8.; single. Sowers, ll" Stock 18. vml If") 'm pr‘S' {mm is open at mu to call and nanBS {ree‘ t 3‘ N urseries base P. E OFFERED FOR n we AUCTION ox 0 ha". 1'3““ nothing ‘0 Old Foundri- of June. :0 East side Durham. flemem 1‘83"}?! 3 ani com \\ hole or P In: If and can insufl \PEST anJ B13ST ”He and a half 8M” 1 smaller rough as: 11' ll V0“ ll in cash on clay «I . apd balance with- thhont intemt. y f0 auctions: a! [110 {\N. "Still. being wing hlnds}. r’s St HI‘NG HAM train we sell the and SW“ A!“ 3'. A.D, I” licitor, Gait mm Dnrh‘m If r0111 8'" -~ Bufl 33(1) for Holstein. Elgin' 3010- 9 2:0, w W m» ‘ s . 0‘ pork choppal tine» m1 a; butter. 8 Dinah pod parsley, the ju an” 0110? al a lemon. 63” ”d ”we: If the stuffing 1 hold the a own The ”arqb for my ball rm smog J"y to others mmuonal flu-mt. and parsley may; "'3 36:1 ‘ 'r (term UVN‘ the meat. *9 Make , 21 \'ml Loaf.â€"Mince 31-2 "PMS of um; and one thick slice of .314: pork Very fine. Add half a dogen her CNCkPrs rolled time, a. heaplnc hopped parsley, two a piece of butter the s . f an egg. 3 level tablespoonful of .3113” a teaspoonful of pepper, and 31:51:“ Quantity of mixed cloves and ‘ e ' , e e vku a-"~‘ the form of a Square loaf of bffiado. ucumber or walnut plekle {W} there, pressing them Into - bpl‘bnkle bread crumbs over , top and .' Stick a ti - n ".1 here $ ’ EAL. [9 is 1688 Wu happinessg salt and pepper; then a layer of the hem and another of the veal and sees- oning, alternating 13111 and veal until the bowl is filled; then pour a cup of rich veal stock over this. Make a paste of flour and water as stiff as it can be rolled amt. Cover the contents of the bowl with the paste and over this tie a clean cotton cloth. Put the bowl in- The common soil found in the rear yard of a town house. by the addition ’ of salt. ashes, lime, etc., makes the best possible soil for growing the greater number of flowers and vines. Favor- able situations are usually accessible in .the country but in cramped city lots i there is often no possible choice. i To the genuine flower enthusiast lthere is no satisfaction in half-devel- 'oped flowers, vines. and shrubs. Var- i iiety is often esteemi‘ "l more highly than :quali'ty. Study the harmony of color. ‘White blossoms are always beautiful ‘ and combine well with all colors. Shun i planting blues with: reds and reds that war with each other. Very pretty ef- fects are sometimes produced by sow- 1ling tuo plants of similar habits and harmonious colors, as a pink and white geranium or fuchsia in one large pot. to a sauce pan or some other vessel with boiling water that will just reach to the rim of the bowl! and boil three hours. Then take from the fire. move the cloth and paste, and let it stand until the next day, when it may be turned out _a.nd seryegl in thin slices. . vâ€" â€". vuu DLLUCD. To make a brown fricassee of veal, out four ounces of pork into strips and try them browm and oniSp. Meanwhile out two pounds of lean veal into fing- er strips. and when the pork is cook- ed take it out and put the prepared veal in its place and brown this meat. Remove the meat and stir into the fat three tablespoonfuls of browned flour. and then three cups of stock or part water and stock. Season with salt and paprika and a gill of Sherry. Add the meat and cover the pan; put it where the meat will simmer twenty minutes. Turn it over strips of bwttered toast and sprinkle chopped parsley over the whole. Flower lovers in town houses, the poor and the well-to-do alike resort to some very ingenious devices for mak- ing room to grow their favorites. One would have puzzled long to know that a charming bit of color from a rear dining-room window in a fashionable second story apartment. The dining and one sleeping room were at the rear, and below the double and single win- dow opening out of them was the roof of a first floor piazza. The boxes were filled deep enough with broken bricks and potsherds to allow, the pots placed on them to reach just to the top of the boxes, and the outside of the lat- ter was painted (lull brown. When placed in rositioni they reached six in- ches alove the window sills and after being filled as full as possible with pots containing flowers, trailing and high growing vines, the spaces between -A...‘ asnl‘" a. unique shaped mass of the most iux- uriant vines and flowers imaginable. u a UV the pots and boxes and pots were pack- ed full of (lamp moss. The latter was the sort used' by florists and had first been picked apart and thoroughly dampened. Earth would have been us- ed instead of moss, but it was feared that the weight would be too much for EVERY-DAY FLOWERS of ignorance and folly' 1n I" E REo§tansan [Ted dsbz 1?:th e xyougéemagg. (501519-13t1 Ibup inesso 'at t o blossom of manh _ lmelanch 0 1y lexistonco. Others roach matnmony victims are found 1n all stations of litez-‘The the trades and the professions. ‘ RESTORED TO MANHO t lci mpiea for my 83.? ' B0 91 1°0an : SYPH'L'S 23° ”smzmixmwpzammtggw EMISSIONS 131m and thrpat, bong em,i32ia01!:8. $1.112 thin 3mg; IGTU RE M filfievlmslgvgmgoctém treated me thh Met-013g: ) 8TB dag: 93:. They be! me brig ӣ2323; ggmn. CUBED guaniafriendindu met9mtreartaxhent is Wondqrfnl.R n a few weeks. Thai! . . to ”91,135,331 a My “immune: hm otthen‘fuhns c 3 ,#1u- On M- K. K'I Il-nnTcmnv ix} SYPHILIS EMISSIONS STRIOTURE CURED THE DURHAM CHRONICLE No variety of flowers is more able for table decoration than r. tiums, with their hmdsome folia tistic shaped, brilliantly colorm and Tropaeolum Lobbianum require comparatively lit- tle root room and will flourish beau- tifully in large pots, boxes or almost any receptacle. ‘ The Britons themselves were quite unable to construct a bridge of any kind unless in the rimitive methods observed at Post gridge and Two‘ Bridges, on Dartmoor, by a slab of . stone laid across two bowlders. The work. therefore. was certainly under- taken by Roman engineers. We have, in the next place. to inquire what kind of bridge was built at that time by the Romans. They built bridges of wood and stone; many of these stone bridges still remain. in other cases the pieces of hewn stone still remain. The bridge over the Thames, however. was of wood. This is proved by the fact that had it been of the solid Roman construction in stone, the piers would be still re- maining; also by the fact that Lon- don had to be contented with a wooden bridge till the year 1176, when the first bridge of stone was commenced. Con- siderations as to the comparative in- significance of London in the first cen- tury, as to the absence of stone in the neighborhood, and as to the plen- tiful supply of the best. wood in the .world from the forests north of the E city, confirm_ the theory that‘the bridge "'7 Vl.‘- ‘v'â€"â€" was built of wood. \"We have only, therefore, to learn how Roman engi- neers built bridges of wood elsewhere in order to know how they built a bridge of wood over the Thames. That dog certainly seems almost. hu- man at times, said old. Mr. Fussy. Yes, replied Mrs. [9118837. He growls over his {and quits). as much as you do. ORIGIN OF LONDON BRIDGE THEY “' RR R. ALIKE ~ May 19, 1898. ROUND IHE WHOLE NOR“). WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE FOUR CORNERS OF THE GLOBE. Old and New World Events 0! Interest Chron- Icled Brieflyâ€"Interesting Happenings 0! Recent Date. In Berlin the firemen wear water jackets. with a double skin. which they are able to fill with water from the hose. The income tax of India is levied on all incomes of £33 and upwards. {and then only one man in 700 comes “1th- in its scope. There have been 71000 deaths from Plague in India so Iar, according to a recent report by the ecretary for India to Parliament. Jealousy of the first husband of the widow he had married drove a French- man to kill his wife and then himself recently in Paris. A 130 pound vonger eel has been caught in Lock Long. Scotland. It 1113118111th 6 feet ll) 1-: inches in length and 2 feet 7 inches in girth Rmsia’s estimated population is 106,880,000; the combined population of Germany and Austria is 98,400,000. and that of the United States is 72,300,000. There are annually killed in Africa a minimum of 65, 0110 elephants. \ield- ing the production of a quantity of rim iv01y the sellino; price of “hicb is £850,.000 ' There are in Gulicia 600,000 children who cannot get any schooling. As called for, the cost- of: which is esti- mated at 46:22, 000 florins. An eighty-year-oid elephant, whose life has hitherto been devoted to crush. inc; the life out of condemned criminals Ln- India. has been acquired by a 1.13m- burg dealer for at Berlin menagene. A French author, M. de Meaguil, has written- a book on. Madagascar. in which he claims that that island was colonized by Greeks, and that Homer was no one else than Ulysses himself, a great traveller. The Swiss Government is making ef- forts to protect useful birds, but no- thing oan he done without. Italian co- operation, and the Italians, even in Switzerland, continue to slaughter birds in the most ruthless manner. The town of Dornstettin. in \Vurt- temburg. has its funds so well invest- ed that the inhabitants instead of pay- ing. taxes receive a bonus of $25 each annually. besides free firewood and free use of land for raising vegetables. Lord Bate [has tried to encourage marriage at Cardiff. \Vales, by offering a dowry once a. year to a deserving girl. The Mayor of the toun reports, houever, that during a whole year he has received not a single application. Livernool’s Chamber of Commerce is Liverpool’s Chamber 01 Commerce 15 considering the plan of bridging the Mersey by a suspension bridge 150 feet above high water, with a central span 2,000 feet long, and two side spans each of 1,000 feet. The estimated cost is $12,500,000. L..- Karl Marx's daughter Eleanor, has completed a consistent Socialistic car- eer by ending her own life “ith prussic acid. She lived with the Socialist Dr. Aveling and bore his name, but at the inquest he asserted that they had nev- er gone throught the form of mar- riage. British trade ethics are about to ap- ply to the Klondike. Liverpool has sent out on the steamer Manuense, bound for St. Michael, the largest car- go of liquor ever shipped. It includes 14000 cases and 1,000 barrels of spirits. \ I. c . A AA: a- ......1.- A chiefly whiskey, and 3,000 nun-ens or beer. Though only sixteen murders of chil- dren have been traced certainly to the murderer Vacher, and eighteen more were probably his work, it seems that in the three years after from a. madhouse there ' than ninety-eight murdc fnmuts to Murder and in the three: years after his release from a madhouse there were no less than ninetyâ€"eight murders and at- tempts to niurder and outrage in France. where the police were unable to find. any clue to the perpetrators. At rehearsal Sir Henry Irving will sit upon the stage among his players, watching every movement and listen- ing “,0 every" word. and constantly stopping any oneâ€"Miss Terry as readily as the messengerâ€"who does not do exactly right Mr. Irving rises, explains the fault, and gives the pro- per form, and that part of the scene is immediately repeated. As he is very exact as to every detail, and requires its elaboratiom to a nicety,. you can readily imagine that the scene does not quickly reach perfection. But his patience holds out against every test it receives. Over and over again the line is recited, or the bit of action done. until. all is perfect. At the Lyceum one sees the perfection of stage discipline. and in Lâ€"â€"-- .m nnnn Alexander 111., the late Czar of Bus- sis. was said to be an autocrat, even in the bosom of his family. Nicholas II. however. is the very reverse. He re- gards his consort as a, 'good comrade, and when, in urgent cases, Ministers seek an audience late in the evening. he is invariably to be found in her company, chatting and laughing with- out. restraint. The Czar is generally occupied at his desk. while the Czar- ina basics herself with embroidery work. [namediately a Minister enters she rises as i! to retire but more often A‘â€" (I‘- 3â€"‘A-m pel‘TC'Dm-On 6f 'gmge patience You need it to beer the deily bin-done of life. If your beok’e weekâ€"Dom’ e Kidney Pills will etrenghen it.1f it paine end achesâ€"Doen’e idney Pills will cure it. No experiment in taking Doen’ e Kidney Pille They cured hundreds of week, eching becke long ybefore other kidney pille were dreemed of “Ms. J me Row. Belleville, Ont., euflered for nine yeere with terrible pein in the heck. rhenmetio paine, end peine in the bladder. He e nt 8300 doctoring. butgoe little relief. oan’e Kidney Pille heve completel cured him. beniehed the heck peine. en ell the other paine end when Farmers, Thrashers and Millmen Furnace Kettles, Power Stsw Cut- ters, Hot Air Furnaces, Shingle Machinery, Band Saws, Emery B'Iacliines. lmnd or power ; Creating Farmers’ Kettles, Columns, Church Seat Ends, Bed Fasteners, Fencing, Pump-Makers’ Supplies, SEhool Desks. Fanning Mill Castings, Light Castings and Builders’ Sup- plies, Sole Plates and Points for he diti'erent ploughs in use. Casting repairs for Flour and Saw Mills. Steam Engines, Horse Powers, Separators, Mowers, Reapers. .‘xn .Circulaf and Cross-'Cut Saws Gummed, Filed and Set. I am prepared to fill orders for 00d shingles. County of Grey. including a value Power. Brick dwelling. and magmuxm. building lots. will be sold in one or mom lots Also 10:, No. 60. Con. 2, w. G. P" Township of Bantinck. 100 acres. adjoin ng Town plot. Durham. Mortgages taken for part, put-chose money Oct. 2nd. Horse Slides Cm Hides, ”0K Dealers in Watches, Clocks, J ewelrv and Spectacles, Silver an'l F lat W’are of all descriptions. Repairing a pecialty. Upper Town, Durham. N. B.--To ensures first-elm 50b the hide: must be ultod u soon ,2 ukon Durham Tannery. The Uhronicle Is the .0“ wide ly read newspaper published In the County of Grey. “Roy Pill Co Victoria 5L. 'l‘oronm. Cm ’ 1.1 PM our Ideas: thev may brimâ€"13’ you' Quail. wme_._1 1m wsngmwbjaxp _CQ., PW!!! Act!- he met more than his match. . George of Greece. is also skilled the gloves. The pro-eat Ml Russia on his travels ground tho ‘ used to bum a bout with Fringe? Boxing is a. favorite sport of the Danish royal family. Prince Valdemr being the heat boxer among them. When he challenged the late Emper- or Alexander 111. of Russia}. howgger, HIE LUXURY 0F SEGURIT' [I FOUND IN v' "f ‘4 - Dr. [eBay‘s Female Pills. - 6712:” 36%}? fififisfi'fibéfi'fi 66'°p1?.7n(iiibi IOYI. Washington. D. 0.. for their 51.8» prise one: :21! net at two hundred mutations waved. 5‘ \I‘ESFACNON GUARANTEED DURHAM FOUNDRYMAN SKINS, Eta, Tanned Suitabia orwRUBES sud COATS by the ned process, which for Flfliih an Softneu csn't. be best. IN THE TOWN OF DURHAM, AT rm: BRICK rouxon -- WE MAKE -- ROYAL FAMILY OF BOXERS. A. GORDON Robe Tanning. -- WE REPAIR -- EDGE PROPERTY GHARTER SMITH, THOS. SMITH. Apply to J AMES EDG . Edge H1 1 LADIES? The only nibble and trustworthy po- pu'uuon known. Sch-t. surest and and down remedy ever Maud for all in. Influe- o! the female-yawn. Scaled «mu- free. Price 0| per ha: ofdrngzhru. or by on! secure” scaled an hxfript of prlct. of some staph thing to putt-p}! Who and“)!

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy