West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 7 Aug 1902, p. 3

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m 0‘ mm m . 11y wreck I So. “in. LD MCCOSKL" I! Peter 83,. To“ ”I” I “MEN-mm {MICK .013 For Sale. 31) LOT property p 200 acresâ€"so act... I class state of ca!” ‘ well watered. V935 3121‘ good out full:- x' on Mon. on barn 2533). 600‘ fly 100 "cell. will)! ‘received by the undat- ' July 18 for S. S No. botmanby. Applicant name salary and {ar- mials. Duties to co.- ug. 28. A L“ DAVIDSON M \ NY 5:081:11“- Bank Deena}: " I- wlthoot m III 1 young I 1“ . made noun. 4...." «Is For Sale. 'or Sale. i. Sale. \‘ISHIXG T0 PUE iEORGE LA )1 B. Butter. and pr Sale. I' "1!“ '- The! i}. H H m arty term. he owner, .\1 ALB -- APPLI- ()PERTY II CON . u, GLEN- A RKER, Durban!- for Sale. 11‘ Sale. Ils For Sale. Us \Vantnd. ERR. Secretary, d. \‘Anst P. 0. ue couhélu 12" i. and qmto my boarding homo‘ 8 P3" at (LV. 3. “Jul” wuship of 6'99“ ltivation. Th.” 5 u barn and pub.“- L-hard. count!!! tf If BULLS FRO! HL'R Sale. )l BELL milding lots won“ John A. \Varron’l Park Lot numb" street, in the Go" ' Town of but“. uflice 0’ J. P. 1'" mice of the nude:- nrticulats apply '0 Drama. 03?. OF lo. Con. 19..“ h tarms there 8!. reasonable tor-o. east side of Lots 10 ll. ure building 1.. NY to Diwsiou Con". Ii: ":19 ‘0' 3. SOUTH .‘Y â€"- NEAR DURHA! Dromoro. l9. 10m}. Water“ Dion“ Jewels. candy, flowers, manâ€"that is the mler of a women’s preferences. lewd» form a magnet of mighty power to the average woman. Even {Tum greatest of all jewels, health, is Offvn animal in the strenuous 050118 :3 m {w or save the money 10 Pa" «Inmw mum. If a woman will risk Lev m h m get a. cove’ed gem. then 1e: Lmify herself against. the in- si i : , .< .- umequences of co..ghs,cold8 mm m 'ha'hinl affections hv the regu- lar of Ur. Boschee‘s German 5U It will promptly arrest con- -‘ ‘.:;:;' mm in its early stages and 5031 the :t'?«'-"_.+:'l lungs and bronchial tubes uni {five the dread disease from the 5): ":21. iv. is not. a cure-ell but. it is a Germ-.11 cure for coughs. colds and d}; hurt; '11131 troubles. You can 83‘ '21:» mime remedy at. Darlings Drnx side upon "ted now t tected menu Every mail adds evidence to the {act that Dr. Pitcher’s Backache Kidna" Tablets act on dilerent mm from other medicines, produc- ing quick and permanent cures from babk2t3119 and kidney troubles. They are ,, revelation to suflerers from kidney complaints, and bring con- victim of merit because of the quick relief gained in unexpected cases. The backache kidney suflerer only doubts their worth before using, for a few Joses impart a sensation of re- ;;e{ that foretells the story of cure. The following result was accom- plishetâ€"l with one bottle of Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kidney Tablets, and this is the report: Mr. Wm. Benton, miller in Me. Kechnie’s grist mill, Durham:._ ”some three years ago, due to lift. ing dour dust and «poems to cold, a kidney and liver trouble with severe pain in the back set in. The trouble becoming gradually worse. 1 got a. bottle of Dr. Pitcher’s Back- ache Kidney Tablets at MacFarlane C025 Drug Store, and I am sure they are a splendid medicine. After using: the one bottle my back did not bother me at all, and I felt strong again. The complexion also grew clear. and this, I think, is good evidence of their worth and reli. ability." mg down the front, the white of two eggs and cut bias, 3 pint of milk rutfled around the neck, hall pound of currents with seven yards of head trimmings, grated lemon peel with lace fishu ; stir well and add I. small fitting paltot with visite sleeves, garnish with icing and peeeement- erie. Bake in a moderately hot oven until the skirt is tucked from the waist down on either side and finish with large satin rosettes. wid \. forbidding exyectoration 131.0; try-boats, trolley and 019- "d'~~. us. an.) in car stations; and “04‘ ‘u-r sidewalks are to be pro- tfi‘W‘i The justification of “1080 “mu was is the statement “I“ "N". '_\' years ago almost six dughl i“ "'~‘~I‘\' hundred in New York Cit-y “'6?" 'ii‘hed by tuberculosii. “.3079” 345‘ Matt the deaths from this can»! Izlmkwrml only about I‘ve and O bu" ,. :‘ k. hdl'td Dr. Pitcher’s Beckeche Kidney Tablets are put up in wooden bot- tles. with green wrapper, beefing the portrait and signature of Z. Pitcher, M. D. Etch bottle conteine 7.0 Fablets. Price fifty cents per bot- tle. Manufactured by the Dr. Zine Pitcher (30., Toronto. Ont. A young lady visited s cooking school recently end her attention was divided between a dress worn by a friend and the direction for making: a. cake. So when she under- took to write the receipt for her mother the old lsdy was psrslized to read the following: "Take two pounds of dour, three rows of plnit- 3 -_-n_)l thing, i3101d by n mvmbo'ri 9“ ‘W' M tlm Liuu'a New! chuuzhes U“ YMMIUX. “Inch vcuun'ed On 8 Sun . “‘_‘~ human}; H'cchtlfi'. “6 Evy“: “9 “'”1' 7» «'huu'h “a van“, the paStOl'. “I‘mhhg. 'lhfl opening h) IN“ ““3 FAN. mat uni Um 05"‘uitul‘ pruyef “d‘ L-flcrvd In. '3h9 Sawm'o W‘s ”“1: Head and another hymn, WIN” M the bUI'l'l'lm‘. ul all the benediction “4“ pronounced and the cons“- Ktt-Ziun GialuisSed, the Rev. “all"? man having forgotten to 93036.5 h" sel’mon. Whether In and. “P ‘hf, mm. on the next Sand” by Chess of double proportion! told, â€" \Viarlou E6130- FEW ESCAPE FOR BACKACHE IS KIDNEY TALK. Old backs, Young hacks, Weak backs. Strong backs. 38 A Receipt From a Young Lady. An Absent-Minded Pasta. ACHES COME. Don't Spit on Sidewalks. {r spit on the sidewalks !". is ‘, mmmand Of the New York ‘ Health. Three years ago 1 began its anti-spitting cru- Women and Jewels. reload Ibo an ad- . is not cream, reduce the pressure in the gas meter. keep bins and receipts on tile. spread butter, cut patterns, tighten windows. clean a watch, untie a knot. varnish floors, do practical plumbing. reduce the asthma of tobacco pipes. pry shirt studs into buttonhoies too small for them, fix a horse’s harness, restore damaged mechanical toys. wres- tie with refractory beer stoppers, im- provise suspenders. shovel bonbons, in- spect gas burners. saw cake, jab tramps, produce artificial buttons, hooks and eyes; sew, knit and darn, button gloves and shoes, put up awnings. doc- tor an automobile. In short, she can do what she wants to. She needs no other instrument. to. With the hairpin all that is (lo-able can be done. With a hairpin, a woman can pick a lock, pull a cork, peel an ap- ple, draw out a nail. beat an egg. see if a Joint of meat is done. do up a baby. sharpen a pencil, dig out a silver, tas- ten a door. hang up a plate or picture, open a can, take up a carpet, repair a baby carriage, clean a lamp chimney, put up a curtain, rake a grate fire, cut a pie. make a fork, a fishhook. an awl. a gimlet or a chisel. a paper cutter, a clothespln. regulate a range, tinker a sewing machine, stop a leak in the root. turn over a flapjack, caik a hole in a pair of trousers. stir batter, whip You “out! You Knew It. It)! Does, but here Are Others. The comprehensive merits of the hairpin are known to all observant men. Its special value in surgery is asserted by a writer in American Med. icine. It seems that a surgeon can do almost anything with a hairpin. He can wire bones with it, probe and close wounds, pin bandages, compress blood vessels, use it “to remove foreign bod- ies from any natural passage” and “as a curette for scraping away soft ma- terial." And no doubt the women doctors can do a great deal more with that most gifted and versatile of hu- man implements. Anthropologists have never done justice to the hairpin. It keeps civilization together. In the hands of girls entirely great it is much mightier than the sword or, for that matter, the plow. What is the plow but a development of the forked stick. and what is the forked stick but a modification of the hainpin? If there was any necessity a woman could scratch the ground successfully with a hairpin now. In fact. there is no work Dnllnrds will tell you that women aren’t so inventive as men; don’t take nut {emany patent» They don’t have When Women Were Era-avatar“. Such a hue and cry as is raised about the extravagance of the women of our day. and yet at the court of St. James. in a dress of velvet embroidered with gold. which is said to have cost no less than $1.500. Marie de’ Medicis had a gown sown with 32.000 pearls and 3.000 diamonds. and her example was followed by lesser personages. who cheerfully expended more than their incomes on gowns so laden with pre- cious stones that their wearers. could scarcely move about in them. Mme. (iv Montespan. the beauty who reigned If a woman went into the Robinson Crusoe line, she could build a hut and make her a coat of the skin of a goat by means of the hairpin. She will rev- olutionlze surgery with it in time. Meanwhile the male chirurgeons are doing the best they can. but It is not to be believed that they have mastered the full mystery of the hairpin. or play in which something may not be accomplished by means or it. at the court of Louis XI\'.. wore at one great court festival "a gown of gold on gold and over that gold frieze stitchml with :1 ccrtnlu gold which nmkcs thc most divine stuff that has c-wr In 0:) imagined." according to the naturazyrrcs written by the pen of Mme. .19 Sevigue. \ 'J'.‘ almost to tears over the commonplace nature of his own times. John Adams used to bathe in the- Potomac every morning at daylight because they had no bathtub in the White House. and no one ever pulled a kodak on him. President Taylor used to -â€"walk about the town and stop and chat with every one he met. like. a policeman. A recep. tion in the White [louse in these days relieved of monotony only by the great crush of guests. who trample the clothes 03‘ one another's backs. An- other president set up in the east room a six hundred pound cheese and in- vited the multitude to come in and help itself. which the multitude proceeded to do. Old Time: at the Capital. In romlling tln- lively and Motor- esque incidents which the old timers enjoyed in Washington one is moved Distant Neptune. The period of man's whole history is not sumeieut for an express train to traverse half the distance to Neptune from the earth. Thought wearies and fails in seeking to grasp such dis tam-es It can seareely comprehend 1.000.000 miles. and here are thousands of them. When we stand on that. the f the planets. the very last outposts ot' the King. rows dim and small in outermost o sentinel of the the very sun g the dzstahce. The Youth: ' Inysvlf. but I don't swm tum-t with any Sorrows. The Sage- Nobody ever meets with business. your; man. He must over- take 1!. Disturbed the Peace. “She disturbed my peace of mind." When ll. Drew l‘t. "9 of hers." “How well I remember." said Dum- lay. as he proudly brandlshed the sword. “the first time that 1 ever drew nose. “I. check! "'d that once ablnlnc blade!” been found an e800- ..m dld you draw a. Dunne)”â€" mmr bum lmnlmd Featherlr. “In a ram!” ' According to a French ethnologist, whenever two men met in former times they were accustomed to hold up their right hands in front of them as a sign that they had no intention of attack- ing each other. This mark of confi- dence. however. did not prove sumcient in all cases. for a man may hold up his right hand and yet. if he keeps it closed, may have a weapon concealed in it, and therefore it became the cus- tom {or the two right hands to grasp each other. as only thus could full as- surance be given that no weapon was concealed in either of them. Formerly. therefore. this gesture, now the token of loyalty and friendship, was one of reciprocal distrust. As he was going out with this pre- cious information he was detected, and the enemy said to him, “We are going to cruelty you, but we will let you 01! on one conditionâ€"that you go to the wall and tell your people that we have supplies for a week." Why We Shake Hands. To shake hands with a person is rightly regarded as a token of amity, but very few know how this custom a rose. A Story of Mark Twain. When Mark Twain was beginning his career as a humorous lecturer, he one day arranged with a woman ac- quaintance that she should sit in a box and start the applause when he should stroke his mustache. The lecturer started off so well that he did not need any such help, however, for he caught the audience from the first. By and by, when not saying anything worthy of particular notice. he happened to pull his mustache, and his anxious ally in the box at once broke into furious applause. Mark was all but broken up by the misadventure, and ever after- ward carefully avoided employing such help to success. I recall to mind a story of an officer in the Japanese emperor’s army which was besieging a fortress. Its number was small and a relieving army was coming up. It was of immense mo- ment that they should know how long the fortress could hold out. If it must capltulate for want of supplies within a week they could stay and win the campaign for the emperor. A young Japanese nobleman volunteered to go into the fortress and ascertain how long it could hold out. He disguised himself, and in passing learned that it had food and water for only two days more. He said. “Very well,” and went to the wall. His wife and children in the besiegers’ camp saw him, his friends were there also. and he held up both his hands and said to them: “There are supplies for but two days. Con- tinue the siege and you will take the place.” Out of One Clay. Many years ago before the days of railroads a nobleman and his wife, with their infant, were traveling across Salisbury plain. As the story is told in Mr. A. P. Russell’s “Character- istics," they were overtaken by a se- vere storm and took refuge in a lone shepherd’s but. At last the process of undressing was completed and the little naked baby was being warmed by the tire. There it sat, with all its splendid outer husks peeled off, its little body beginning to glow in the but by the fire. The shep- herd drew a long breath and exclaimed, “Why. it’s just like one of ours!" The child had taken cold before they could find shelter and the nurse began at once to undress it by the warm cottage flre. As she pulled 01! one rich silken garment after another the shepherd and his wife looked on in awed silence. He died by a hundred spear points, but he had done his duty to his gen- An Animal's Memorial Stone. , In the center of a field at Waverhlll, Snt’l‘olk. England, is a large flat stone covering the grave of a mare that died in $352. inscribed as follows; “l’oka. She never made a false step. l-Zwleslastes ill. 19.” A reference to chapter and verse shows the following: "For that whleh hefalleth the sons of nwn lwfnlleth beasts. even one thing lwl‘nllelh them; as the one dleth. so (llvth the other." This is probably the only instance of a text from the Scrip- tures appeal-lug onn memorial stone to an animal. l'u’lmtstry. "Do you believe in palmlstry. Bob?" "I do. A sweet little amateur palm- lst held my hand for half an hour the nllwr evening and tuld me that l was gain: to {all in love in about twenty taluutes and ask the lady to be mine and be accepted. and the. whole thlng ea me true before I got out of the chair." Acrlmony. Barker-l see .Sloltlwitz in going to marry Maggie Sbrvwsbury. I don’t wavy him. but I suppose money talked. Grumpy-He'll find that matrimony rat I: talk too. lla'r'lser-And I fancy that allmony will have somethlng to say before long. A Japan-o Hero. a. h . r3”... u: a frame and constitution originally very robust. Her head was finely formed, with a noble and well bal- anced arch from brow to crown. The lips and mouth possessed a power of infinitely varied expression. “She was not, as the world in gen- eral is aware, a handsome or even a personable woman. Her face was long; the eyes not large or beautiful in colorâ€"they were, I think, of a gray- ish blue; the hair, which she wore in old fashioned braids, coming low down on either side of her face, of a rather light brown. It was streaked with gray when last I saw her. Her figure :was of middle height, large boned and powerful. Lewes often said that she inherited from her peasant ancestors “Lewes told us in her presence of the exclamation uttered suddenly by some one to whom she was pointed out at a place of public entertainment. ‘That.’ said a bystander, ‘is George Eliot.’ The gentleman to whom she was thus indi- cated gave one swift. searching look and exclaimed, sotto voce, ‘Dante’s auntl' Lewes thought this happy. and he recognized the kind of likeness that was meant to the great singer of the Divine Comedy. She herself playfully disclaimed any resemblance to Savona- rola. But, although such resemblance was very distantâ€"Savonarola’s pecul- iarly unbalanced countenance being a strong caricature of hers-some like- ness there was.” In small quantities cottonseed meal is a good feed. but in excess it in- jures the butter. One of the most important condi- tions of churning is the temperature of the cream. N o guess should be allowed, but a good thermometer used. “George Lewes once said to me, when I mad! some observation to the eflect that she had a sweet face (I meant that the face expressed great sweetness): ‘You might say what a sweet hundred faces! I look at her sometimes in amazement. Her conn- tenance Is constantly changing.’ “The said lips ant. mouth were dis- tinctly sensuous in form and fullness. She has been compared to the portraits of Savonarola (who was frightful) and of Dante (who, though stern and bitter looking, was handsome). Something there was of both faces in George Eliot’s physiognomy. Clover is better than timothy for cows. Cows that are good producers of rich milk must be good consumers. Once a lawyer objected to a witness, but Judge Davis refused‘ to sustain him. The lawyer cried, “But, your honor. I submit”â€" And here he broke off. Regularity in feeding and milking is important To get all of the butter the cream must be uniformly ripened. Kicking a cow that is lying down may make her get up more quickly, but it will not induce her to give any more milk. It rock salt 13 kept in the yard where the cows can lick it every day, there is no danger that they will get too much at once. of many judges and lawyers who make the courtroom the scene of some of our best Wit and humor. The New York Commercial Advertiser gives some illustrations. In one case over which he presided there were fifty-five distin‘ct oflenses and four counts on each offense, 220 in all. am to Have Been . (to-Mutton o! but. and lavonmlc. A close friend of George Eliot’s. writing of her personal appearance. said: In milking squeeze the teats just hard enough to get the milk. Judge Davll’ Wit. The late Noah Davis, justice of the supreme court of New York, was one “That’suright,” said the judge quick- ly; “always submit. Crier, adjourn court!” “Well," said Judge Davis, “there are more counts than in a German princi- pality." In order to secure rich milk start with a rich cow and feed her rich foods. Scalloped Bananas. Bananas are good enough in their or~ dinary simplicity, but some persons there are who like bananas made into a sort of scallop in this way: Cut half a dozen bananas into half inch slices. Cut some bread into small pieces and place a layer of these in the bottom of a pudding dish. Add a layer of ba- nanas, two tablespoonfuls of sugar and one tablespoonful of lemon juice. Repeat these layers until all have been used. having bread as the topmost. Put over the top a tablespoonful of melted butter and sprinkle lightly with sugar. Bake half an hour in a quick oven. Patientâ€"Not exactly. They seem to cut the others. Society Nolan-s. Dentistâ€"Well. how do the new teeth work? Everything satisfactory? The Thing That Puzzled the Patient. “You may be thankful for your ex- cellent constitution. It has pulled you through many u spell of sickness." llcr Went-n. Hts. Durhamâ€"Wu your wedding In June? Dentist-Naturally. .Tbey don't be- long to the same set. you know. “Buâ€"t. doctor, if I have such a blamed strong constitution why am 1 always getting sick?”- GEORGE ELIOT'S FACE. Wabanh- In; tum »! than DAIRY NOTES. The men who want to look wellon hot days should wear Fur- nishing which'give complete comfort. which fit so they don’t rub or chafe in the hot sun, and which-are light enough to be a plea- sure on a hot day. Our Furnishings combine all these qualities. Our Shirts are perfect fitters, and our lines of Neckwear in Silk Ties and Ascots are also perfect for summer wear. Our Hosiery in fancy striped and embroidered cotton and cashmere is very nobby. ()ur Collars are np-to-date and comfortable. Summery Things for Hot Weather Comfort. We have s new Caller in stock called the “ Palmetto,” en ideel collor for the hot weether, in sizes 14} to 16}. It combines comfort and coolness with a stylish sppeerence. end thet is whet our young men are looking for. Our stock in (not is complete with every shape desireehle in diflerent heights and qualities. H. W. MOCK A few Words I About our New Collars. '\ I

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