West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 5 Jun 1902, p. 7

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these were often I]. and “The Pilgrln’. ames there were M most part the” Val! 0F ESCADE. >9 For Him said the high bro" Men-y will at"? 10' ion.” .4 the loyal cont!" 3'” get appoht‘d fl ? days, Ind ‘59” 01‘ about your W" r“. before ”II". M-Iving hfl’. Hmly. ”that '3 1 i '10 pass DOW" lug at me!" at you. mam}; C01 seems strange to th d. but what a!“ u heir minds and dug? we know them 00'. .lutely now. One. . fluently a small m. 'ulate among th. m Minn-n1.» paid to 'I' >' i~' so lung» and d1!- mutto-r o! no MM” out the hflghtefll fuuuwmg was or mly deserved a 9'“. 'uIno-lwlle whom I!!! 00 Ill"!- v’ldnw Barntow .33 chef‘s Text. to Sapklu. Q‘ompllmout. him for Icicle“- went ofl ave one look as tho Lben be gathered up at. his baudana and n! cleared the back I with t‘ )e agility o! s he landed on tho mcbor gave out NI . that article 00' indispensable. "It first used only by :ztfuptt'd by Fldfl' :in about the mid- l century. In ad- vm'lior dat» thll :o- piPCPS of wide. ruvtions about Nil? 1d 'ips with (IMF pvil befall": you to man but God xtion also make 0 the 8:] me Church. he situation well :5 portion of th! m. Unfortunate- u-ro was a new svrvice was well my was In a 90' toward the front. P came the m ' tailing along ll ed her into Jalo- lure of napkins. m use napklnfl. on the should". and finally tied lows.” said tho “did 1 ever to! and the Widow ”cloth W 00? and on a word laid of the party n- like was til! we from he! cry sight of out the sight ‘ "rem“ 1. ' her a ide u ) the stag}. me of the“ [1 alone foe ng man. ho v9 or some OI) loter a! W a V. “\bxterian Ladiea’ College. TOP - ' Hi' 1;: taken the Musical 1000!” I‘ fl ". i' r. MU { nuservatory 0‘ late. which h "a ”Minion with the IW0 00'”- h“ ‘ ' I~le at her mother’s tuition”. "‘ “W -' Um ham and Elgin streets. 4)“ A .\l ES CARSON . DURHA M . LIC- fen ed Auctionoel‘ D'ivi‘simz. Court 8:10;! W ompti) attended toâ€"W‘ m V K. nrniahed if required {or the Co t 0‘ mm 0 maybe ad .110er matte" 1.6 “mm 1m wwmx AND SURGEON, OF- IEce uwr McLachlau’s store. Office hult'.’~‘ (‘6 tn IO 3. 01., 2t0 4 p. m. and 7 l09 ,.. m, spm-ial attention given to diseases ut‘ “mum: and children. THE JOB : : DEPARTMENT H I}? I’I'H‘I-L FIRST DOOR EAST OF I'GH M ACKAY . DUnHQM. M :u‘ riage Liconm. Durham. Dr. T. G. Holt, L. D. S. ding facilities mm and Surgeons, Ontario. Office G. Hutton, M. D., C. M. \zlir-IR COLLEGE PHYSIC- L' to. 1:. ’ a. m.. 2 to 4 p. [1). Residence mm. Uld Bank buildiu 25. Upper hurhaua. Telephone No.10. {Cm-mu AND Pnovnls'mn. G. Lefroy McCaul. A lad/2111 Dz’rm‘orv. Arthur Gun, M. D. J. P. Telford. :ls'l‘ER. somcrroa. 13'1“? »n GRADUATE 9F T§E éfififlifl BfififlflIflLE U i: '3' P l' BLlC. COMM ISSIOIN- Durham Pharmacy. ()alder’s Residenceâ€"Lambton Street, near UL Dalia! Direclorv. "m vyam-er, etc. Private money “Id act-nun!» and debtsynf all lwted uu oonnmission. Farms .1 mm. Insurance Agent. 6'0- u'Keuzie's Old Stand, JAMES! x'ham, gm. W. 8. Davidson. 9y THURSDAY momma '~:'2LE mums muse, um mm nivenih: (uradnate of Royal f Dental Surgeons of Ontario. [Me-r Block mer Po st Offite. distance east of Knapp’s Hotel, Street. Lower Town, Durham. - frnm 12 t0 2 o’clock. i GRADUATE 01“ TORON- ickering, D.D.S., I..D.S. A. H. Jackson. A‘II'Sc'c’llaflc’OlIS. Luau! Direclon’ Dr. Jamieson. \Y. I R‘VIN ER. 121:. SOLICITOR. ETC. tel Umdom's new Jewellery l‘uwn Durham. Anyxmount luau at .3 per cent. on farm AN D RESIDENCE tes, an we, 1‘ a .1 ‘s Uh 0k, Lower Town. Dur- n and Agmxcy prnmpt.ly mtrchcs made at the Runs- IS PUBLISHED Eté. M0118)" to Loan at an! m; terms to suit McIntyre Bkck (Over NO’I‘A RY, cm: VEYf Is completely stocked with an Nn'W TYPE, thus at. for turning out Fiat-class advertisements f‘m ) cruxure ins-anion in current 1 not laur than Tuzsuw NICLI will b. e of postage,fl ,le i1 advance- strangers must be 5 date to W zed mm] a pro; new u be sent to an) g9» r0? Shoo pet macâ€"$1.50 max and CI all a: 'ter maintaining the foregoing Opinion [for eighteen years, I have .found the Hoiiowing weii'attested: Onionsplaced 'in the room “where there is smallpox , wiii_,biister and decompose with great 3 rapidity; not oniyso. but will prevent the spread of the disease. I think that J as a. disinfectant they have no equal if ' properly used. If needed, the foregoing ; (which I have greatly abbreviated) cab _A.‘_ II, dent of your cm: Mrs. Malaprop present encumbr. delpma “Press.” When woman gets into politics Reform will just be great, rwo dollar votes will be marked To $1.98. -T.he "Cap Jayâ€"Yes, sir; when I was m new York. a sharper robbed me of fifty dol‘o 131's. Hayâ€"Why didn't ydu call ‘a po- liceman? “Well. I thought fifty donar. nu enou: ,’,'â€"Pbmdelphla ‘Tress."' ‘Vv .- be ettested on oath.’ ” It is a curious echo of a bygéne pre- ventlve, and it is given here without much hope that the suggestion can be valuable. VLI v-‘w _. 1n the sick- room, and replaced with fresh onps every fe_~w hours. . . . At- CORRESPONDENT writing from London under date of February 13 says: “One queer phase of the present smallpox scare is the smallpox insurance department opened at Lloyd's. The current rates are 21-2 per cent. it recently vaccinated, and 31-3 if not vaccinated since infancy. The insurance becomes due on the doc- tor’s certificate that the policy-holder has smallpox." He adds: “After jog- ging along comfortably with smallpox in its midst for six months. London is now beginning to get worried, and a. large contributing cause of that worry is that if the plague spreads much more it is going to frighten away the profitable American cousin, who is ex- pected to come over in unprecedented shoals for the coronation season and scatter dollars right and left. Trouble began away back in August. and has been slowly growing, off and on, ever since. until the average lately has been about 50 new cases a day. One day last week it ran up to 82. There were 188 new cases in September, 309 in Oc- tober, 473 in November, 804 in Decem- her and 1,295 in January. Yet, accord- ing to previous experience, smallpox reaches its height in London from January to May. Consequently it would be .11 for readers planning a trip to see King Edward’s crown put on to watch the smallpox returns from Lon- don for the next four or five weeks. At prosent the plague can be said to be well under control, but a big sudden increase would tax London’s resources to the utmost and might cause a pan- ic. . .--‘. ,_ ‘lxkkxl-CJXC pCU' pie believing in t-C-ltpathy as a thing indisputable, and holding that man, as we see him engaged in his various more or less ignobie pursuits, in the city and elsewhere, is but the inbarna- tion or one little bit oi.’ himself as he exists in an intangible and ethereal form. At the last meeting of the Pay- chical Research Society, Dr. Oliver Lodge, F.R.S., said that he did not hold that the whole of any carnated in their terrestrial bodies; certainly not in childhood; more, but perhaps not so very much more, in adult life. Viv-hat was manifest was only a definite portion of a much larger Whole. \Vhat the rest was doing dur- ing the years spent 'here he did not know. Perhaps it was asleep; but probably, he said, it was not entirely asleep with men of genius, nor perhaps was it all completely inactive with people called mediums. Now to the modern materialist all this is absolute ‘mt.’ Yet Dr. Lodge is not exactly a man to pooh-pooh. Indeed, may not the immaterlaiists retort that this is a Christian country and that our very religion teaches us not to weigh and measure too exactly? Again Roentgen. Tesla, and Marconi have of late been giving many shocks to old ideas. At any rate, this is clear. that we must not too rigidly put outside the bounds of sanity belief in the unthinkable. It is a queer world, and which half of it is sane appears still undecided.” 'pr the “I 3. Browneâ€"A d who is the presl'.‘ of your club xiow,.Mrs. Malaprop? Malaprop (proudly)-I am the int encumbrance, just howsâ€"Phin- Onions and Epidemics. EOPLE of Man as H Doubtless . v to ‘11le last meeting of the Pay- rnh Society, Dr. Oliver . said that he did not hold 9 of any one of us was In- thoir terrestrial bodies; in childhood; more, but so very much more, in an Incarnation kill 5e marked down The “Cap!tai.” are Zding that man, as ad in his various e pursuits, in the ,s but the inbama- : of himself as he gaible and ethereal an is but a aflstic f ranky about y do. it is a * firm good. as in New one and Dame Nature, too, is cleaning house, For in each 0001 retreat ‘She puts her verdant carpet downâ€" The one that can ’t be beat. â€"“Judge.“ “You." sighed the rejected lover, ‘would find your name written in im- )erishable characters in my heart could you but 1001;" "So?” murmured the fair young thing. who was aware of the fact that the swain hadbeen-piay- mg Romeo at the seaside for some. thing like twenty years. “So? . Then you must have a h' rt like a“ ‘el di- rec'to ‘v by this time."â€"Baltimore “A‘m- mean: miles. He makes two trips a month, and receives nearly $1,500 a trip, or $35,- 000 a year. Only 300 pounds are carried per trip, and this is usually made up of letters, few newspapers. Post-Office Department officials say that the sum paid to Fish is very reasonable when it is considered that he makes the trip by dog-sledge, and 'that he has the most dangerous route of any mail-car- rier 'in the world. He has several times been given up for dead 'by residents of Valdez and Eagle, but so far he has always ,managed to reach the end of his journey, although sometimes over- due, and occasionally very much 'bat- tered up. He has fallen down preci- pices, got mixed up in avalanches, and has been starved and frost-bitten. The Gloucester, 112253., fist turd Kipting a3 a hoodoo, as of the twmty fishing-beats all the days of E "ch. were 365 years.’ Being good, Enoch lived a measly little period of only 365 years, while the oth- ers, being given to sin, lived to grow up to manhood. It always seemed strange to us'that preaChers pay so lit- tle attention to the facts of the Bible." A contract was let last week for car- rying Uncle Sam’s mall in Alaska by dcc-sleds. The successful bidder was Oscar Fish, and his route lies between Eagle and Valdez, a distance of 414 t0 The “search-light telephone" is an- nounced from Washington. 'Dhe beam [mm a powerful light has been em- ployed in lieu of a. wire, and talking done to the distance of ‘half a mile. The telegraphic account adds that the inventor has not yet taken out his pat- ents. There are several reasons for this. It was in the same city of Wash- ington, tiwenty years ago, that the ex- cellent Dr. Graham Bell made his fa- mous experiments with vnha't'lhe first called his photophone. It is curious that this amazing work is so little known. Dr. Bell talked over a ray of sunlight to a distance of near two miles. A pair of parabolic reflectors served for sender and receiver, and a pair of selenium cells answered to the magnets of an ordinary telephone. The Kansas City “Journal" alleges Biblical authority {or the declaration that the good die young. “Seth," it says, “lived 912 years. Enos lived 905 vears, Cain n lived 910 years, Mahala- leel lived 895 years, Jared lived 962 years, Methusaleh lived 969 years, and [.emach lived 777 years. Of Enoch, the only good one in the let, the chapter is now placed on each of the tables each evening bearing this inscription: “Gentlemen and ladies wishing to smoke may do so in the gilt room.” So the world moves. For the first time in the history of Paris art exhibitions, phomg’raphs have been received as exhibits at the annual Salon. The photographs were submit- ted by Edward Steic‘hen. a.young New Yorker, and are regar. d as a great triumph. It is said that the decision to admit photograph-s almost caused a split in the jury. The pictures were. therefore, entered under the title of en- gravlnga. says: ‘And Enoch walked with God, and he was not, for God took him, and The experiment is being tried by the New Ze-aland Telegraph Department of issuing telegrams 1n type-written form. The operators have, of course, not only to acquire speed at typewritlng, but also to accustom themselves to the clicking of the keys or the typewriter as well as of the telegraph instrument. So far the experiment has worked well â€"to the receiver of the message it is certainly a great improvement upon manuscript telegrams. According,' to the “Pall Mall Gazette," Gandersheim. a German village, has recently been en fete. The occasion was the honoring of a hen which had laid its thousandth egg. Many of the houses were decorated with flags, while in the evening the proprietor of the hen entertained his friends at a supper at which the principal dish was a gi- gantic omelet. The function was a splendid success, and the health oi.’ the hen was drunk with great enthusiasm. There seems no limit to the variety of uses to which a m'an-of-war can be put when past her work. Here is the latest. A syndicate of sporting men is said to be considering a scheme for purchasing the old American ship “Ver- mont," should the bill for her preserva- tion fail to pass. The idea is to fit her up as a floating boxing-ring, which can be moved out to sea, so that the merry mills of the fancy may be brought off without police interferenceâ€"“United Service Gazette." Interesting Items smoking on Ema: x the dining-room t-chss hotel an en: blaced on each of ning bearing this en and ladies ‘ 1y do so in the gm “Pin g-Pong." 3., fisherumn re- loo, as every one beats beipnging by km in ”C39- 3 gone down at .6 ill-fated boats at big storm of! the oman W38 f a New wed card he tables =cx‘iption: ' As a matter or fact, the inventor ex- plained, itjdid Wake most people. But in case you were too sleepy to collect your thoughts into fitting shape, by press‘lng a little knob in one of the blankets, a second‘phonograph would grind 'Out a little appxopriate protanl- ty to ease your {Lellngs. The invention is patented; and n hen it is put on the market lelll beat all the spring mat- tresses golng .,, as it does’ for summer, autumn and winter as well. â€"“Plck-Me- U’ DO \Ve once saw a remarkable invention of this nature in Sheffield. It consisted of a small, but powerfully «built bed- stead which had an ingenious clock- work arrangement attached, as you would expect, to the ticking of the mattress. In the morning a. phono- graph got up from under the bed. walked round to your side, and an- nounced it was seven o’clock. After giving you two minutes to reply, one of the hands of the clock reached up and pulled your ear playfully. These were just preliminaries so to speak. It you didn’t move then, the patent bed began business. It got up" on its hind legs and ran downstairs with you in- side it till it got to the garden, where you were shot into a. modest little heap under the pump. By a clever ar- rangement of the process of suction you were drawn up to the mouth and a refreshing stream of cold water crawled down your back. If this didn't wake you, you had to wait for Ga- briel’s trumpet. Dispensing With Early Rising. Some genius has, according to his own advertisement, invented an ap- paratus to dispense with getting up so early in winter time to set the kettle boiling. As far as we un- derstand it, you fix the new invention on your clock, and at the hour required it starts a fire under a. kettle of wa- ter. As soon as the water boils a bell rings, and you wake up. This is not the sort of thing that takes the cake; lt simply grabs it. pursuit is chess, strange and unprofit- able. Not politics. nor fame, nor wealth, nor love can so engross a man. These objects are usually compassed by flashes of passion, insight, and dar- ing; but this slow, prolonged struggle of brain against brain, through the medium of pieces of «fantastically carved wood, is pure devotion to an abstraction. The man who wins, who so hems in the ,piece of wood called a. king that he may not move, gains nothing, proves nothing. establiShes nothing butâ€"“checkmate.” Yet when he accomplishes that he tastes of a. satisfaction deeper and more perman- ent than is accorded to statesman or lover, merchant or gambler. To ac- complish it he deliberately, and for very love of the doing of it, undertakes an enormous mental effort, a. thing which mankind in general shuns as it it were Satan himself. Truly a most mystical business this chess. In Para- dise you, will find politicians reading poetry, and poets studying morals; merchants will be cultivating the arts, and critics weeping on other people's necks; but the chess-players will be playing chess. He is as solemn, as rapt in thought, as oblivious of all but the game as it Mr. Barry were opposite to him in the flesh, and not opposed to him only by electric telegraph. Clearly to him the play is everything, whether the oppon- ent’s move comes to him by actull touch, by telegraph, or by psychic sug- gestion. But for our part we cannot throw of! a dread of the uncanny na- ture of .the business. \Ve feel in. clined to look about for some mani- festation of Mr. American Barry’s spirit. \Vhat better evidence of it could we have than the arrangement of these wooden pieces on that wooden board? There is Mr. Barry- most effectually Mr. Barry, for he is causing Mr. Mason to think, and think, and think; to purse his lips in the old familiar way, to fall into immovable silences, wherein you would think he was revolving schemes of a new order of creation or puzzling out the mystery of man’s origin and destiny: and Mr. Mason is doing the like to him in far Brooklyn. A strange and fascinating against tit-3 American: chessâ€"playersâ€" vxio were net there. Through the larg- er roamed a seleczicn of the chess pnlflic. . . . Inside the barrier, and next it. set Mr. James Mason at a. chests-board, facing us. \‘i’e seem to have known Mr. Mason as a fine piny- er these-well. say twenty years. On this occasion he is opp-3mm? Mr. J. H. Barry of America-who is not here; Mr. Barry is sitting in a room in Brooklyn three thousand miles away. under the eyes of American spectators. It is easy to say that the two men are Connected by electric telegraph; but it is not wise to dispose of the mystery and nomance of space in so rude a way. . . . But Mr. Mason. in this grand International Hail, seated oppo- site nothing better than a man with a. book of telegraph forms who waits un- concernedly for the move, can he play thus dumbiy and in absence against Mr. Barry in Brooklyn and think it chess? It is a very ghostly business. and we wonder Mr. Mason can get through with it at all. But he does. A Ghostly Game of Chess. “ Infernal " Dinner. “Tine-wash In the House. The e is "203'“ Virtue, in Wililv'«.'-.'ash for the ponlii'y house than most peo- ple we willing to credit. There are two ways to apply whitewash to I. poultry house. One is with a. brush and the other with a spray pump. These pumps are obtainable almost any- where now, and are the best implements for putting on whitewash. The Side: and ceiling of the poultry house should .be given an application of whitewash. The roasts and nest zoxes should not be neglected. The whitewash should be of the consistency of thick cream, and it will be found a good hm to put game kerosene i‘n eachnpeilfu . Mites Inv (h‘chn'ing it! .=(-rdict the (hurt ad- mittm that there were strong grmznds for the suspioidn which had been enter- tained regardin'r Marten and Hiviui’. but that, on the utiwr hand, part of the cir- cmns‘antial m'idoncc was utterly nn- trustworthy and part of it of dmihtful accuracy. Tlu-rmzms nothing to Show that the enmity of the Marten family against Captain Von Krusigk was of such a deep-seated and permanent char- acter as to have driven the younger Martcn and Hickol to commit this ter- rible crime. a few miuuios have a good application of whitewash that mu make everything sweet and clean. What falls on the floor will make a good floor itself when mixed with the harddirt or coal ashes, or of whatever material the floor in cede. ' ' ' 33!! be killed and line will not survive “here a frequent and thorough appli cation of “hit mx xsh is given. One can put on some old slip of a garment, an old hat. ‘and \\i_th a spray pump can in lu'aven I 01111 swvn' Hum the dust‘ I of my heart that I am innocent My wouls are no more phrase, they are the very truth. At the close of the in- vestigation the. Krivgsgeriehtsrath said to me: “If You are cond finned you can appeal to the merry of his Majesty. ’ if I were «guilty I should be ushmnvd to ask nun-v of mv Kaiser. I have always in ~11 heart mm mm: a soldier, like my father. New I am «My a shade \\ of w:h it i was, and I ilth‘ been diagqu though the. mire before the whole world. I ask the Count to «r w me justice.” In dwim'ing it! aerdict the Court ad- sigk was the non-commissioned oflieer Marten, as well as his father, a senior sergeant who had formerly served in Von Krosigk’s Squadron. but had obtained his transfer to another in order to escape the persecution to which he had been subjected by that oflicer. Hiekel was the brother-in-law of the younger Mar- ten and was involved in the suspicion which fell upon him. as he «had been in Marten’s company a few minutes before the murder. both in the former trials and in that which. lasting ten days ended recently the evidence was chiefly furnished by dragoons of the. squadrons who attempted, so far as their somewhat hazy memories served, to give an ac- count of what they had observed dur- ing the half-hours and even the minutes which preceeded and followed the crime. One witness maintained that he hid seen Marten near the carbines’ stand a few minutes before the murder, while another had seen two persons with still (Halts like those of non-eomrnissiond ollieers near a peep-hole in the .lmr of the ril‘ng school. 011 the other hand, Marten and Michel, it was proved. had hath been in the house of the paren‘s of the former no later than ten mmn'es before the fatal shot was fired. At the first trial last June Marten and Hickel were both acquitted. At the second trial in August Hiekel was ac- quitted, wlnle Marten was condemned to death, an attempt to escape from a mili- tary custody which. according to his own account, was almost intolerable, having weighed heavily against him. The Supreme Military Court, however, quash- ed the second verdict in the case, of both of the accused, on the ground of a. technical flaw in the proceedings. The final trial brought to light no fresh evidence of importance but the sensation excited by the case had apparentlv inspired a number “I only ask lvnvo in say as a last word in my dvfruce what I feel in my inmost h 'zlrt. Tn my (awn grief I have heard the prosm'umr propnso that punishment should be inflicted upun me. The whole nation must kmm'. and I declare with a loud “fire-as sure as there is :1 God in htavcn I 02111 swmr from the Myth of proved. however, that on that evening the moon did not rise. till three hours later than the hour of the murder. A good deal of evidence was adduced to gardiug previous attacks under cover of night upon the house and the property of Capt. Von Krmigk and it was testi iiod that he himself had attributui these outrages to civilians. ' Thé close of the final trial “as rendered d1 111111110 b\ a decimation made b1 \Ia1trn on the imitation of the Court. 110 said :â€" had apparently inspired a number of uneducated people to come for- ward with stories equally sensational, but unsuppm‘tod by any corroborative testimony. Thus a woman in Gumbin- nen declared that on the afternoon of January :21 she had heard a shot fired in the barracks and had inunodiatvly af- terwards seen in the numnlight two civil- ians running out of the gates. It was mon, and mm at [cast on (me occasmn Loon punishcd for (-xweding the h-ziti~ mate divtatcs of military discipline. The elaborate invostigathms which were instituted at Gumhinnen and which were partly conducted with the aid of a do.- tcctivo from Berlin laid bare the whole domestic economy and the daily life of the barracks. They showed that among those who had suffered most from the excessive harshness of Captain Von Kro- ml tn mc A conrtqaartial which ho aroused a :monso afnmmt of interest in Germany sebc n onu ,;1 t to an cud. For over A German Court Martial. their aci'uitt hey ha bee KIDS! ml to the moroy of l were, guilty I should be nun-y of my Kaiser. I ('11 heart auu sum a father. Now I am may 1t 1 was, and I lnvo boon h the mire before the I ask the Count to give intending his true :1 reputa is d’ilin; 331 on 0 0U 0110 0003510“ N T 's. The u for ex- with his \V 01‘s 11' Our New Prints are now in for Inspection er pér yard. Table Linen. 54-inch wide. 2ic per Table Linen. 68-inch wide. 50¢ per Women’s Straw Winn. 35c up to SALADA CEYLON TEA. black or mixed, at 25c, 30c und 40¢ a pound W. H. BEA SHOES: Lace Curtgins at 250. 650. per pair. Roiler Window Shades at Heavy Twilged Sheeting. In one year you get nearly 400 pages of Music, comprising 120 Complete Pieces for the Piano. If bought if. any music store a' (vine-half off would cost. $30.00. If you will send us thc name and address of Five performen on the Piano or Organ, we will send you a sample copy Fm. Eighth Locust Sts.,;rhnadexghia, Pa Cat alog Band and ()rch. Music and lustJ-‘roe The school is cquippcd for full Juninr [en-Vin and Matrimlation qu, under Ilw follow“ staff of Competent teach-rs tor that drpanmcm [xm-nding students should enter at Maintain“ term. or u soon after as possible. Fees. $1.00 per month. W. J. ELLIOTT, -- PRINCIPAI Furnish“ *Ionthly m all lovers 0 Music 5 \ast volume of New, Choict copyright Compositions bx the most popular am}: nors DURHAM SCHOOL He Sells Enables young men and tremor t secure employment. at good “9ng mmediatt-ly mu leat'ittg college. This is the school that enjoys. the reputation of doing the bt‘Sl. work in business education. The gtadtt ates of the school are in a Strong demand as teachers in business col lezes in Canada and the Imitec States. This is the school for you and your friends. “’rite for catalog DURHAM MARBLE GRANITE If Nothing Tums Up, Direct importers from European American and Canadian quarriea W M. J01] XSTUN. Once a Month for 10¢, Yearly Subscription. $1 All work warranted. Orders like! by Messrs. Barclay and Noble DURHAM - AND - MT. FOREST Big Sold by Ali i‘écmraicrs l0 Complete Pieces for Piano J. W. PEPPER, Publisher, Th“. Allln. I’l'im'ipal 32 Pages of Piano Music Ml“ Lick. B A, (‘ixniuâ€" and Mmlema Latest Design in Multan. Headstones and Monuments. WORKS. CALDEBS BLOCK. (FAST) 5 Songs. 5 Instrumental With Interesting M usical Literature. ROBINSON COBBE'IT. ’ES' DON’T FORGET THE ' “ Big 4 ” when in need of a new mir of Shoes for the spring. We have ’em. STA FF A ND EQL‘II’M EN '1‘ STR Chairman I'RUI‘RIE'I‘C )RS ATFOR (it, ONTARIO tum om t 35¢ each. ’. 2-yards wide. 2k Cheap ! C. L. GRA KT. Ecvmttfl . 90c and 31.2! CMDER'S - - BlUCl' ya rd . ya rd . 7.’ c eat-i

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