West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 9 Oct 1902, p. 7

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lif 'd and Iron Pip. 38, Brass Lined Cylinders. Picture! of Talks .OCK. ( EAS 1‘.) HI)‘ rkcn. MOO-a. menu. 701-0. wan rs. 810 00. :ham lawman. _. $12 00. NNOR from Europeul. uadian quartiu. CORBETT. - .\iT. FOREST. Dotm. “.0 Pm”! “aural“ 3) xenrs. nit} all kinds. -- PRiNCIPAL A M GRANITE let in NTARIO CO; in ’0'“- “'Ol’r.'l'd‘ Orders “in and NObIO. leading com- V our gradu- 0 our best to in good posi- more sumo..- any previoul the be" in M amend our a'alozue. {V/z/xz, - POSSIBLE 5323MB". nt rank prOpo “magma, somcrron, ma. )1 ~Intx're‘s Block, Lower 'l‘own, Dur- ham. 4‘. :1. ction and Agency promptly attezuiw’. m. Searches made at the Regis- try Umu‘ ARRIS'L‘ER NOTARY, CONVEY- a. your Etc. Etc. Money toLoan at Beuwnahie, rates, and on tam: to amt burruwer. Utfice, McIntyre Block (0V0! 'A‘ my (.‘uuveyancer,etc. Privatomono “f I‘M- 01d accounts and debts of km!" “"“W'ed on commission. Fauna b‘".‘fi~'r.t and sold. Insurance Agent, etc. QThL‘vâ€"MHt‘KOHZiO’S Old Stand, LOWOI' 10““. Durham, Unt. " Fl‘IUEâ€"FIRST DOOR EAST OF rim Durham Pharmtcy, Butler’s liiwk. Residenceâ€"Lumbton Street, nest tizu Matinu. W. C. Pickering, D.D.S., I..D.S. Ilqnm' (xRADU ATE OF TORON- . (mixersit ; Graduate of Royal 4.1m; ~ .t Denta Surgeons of Ontario. un- (alder Block, over POM. Office. 1 rice over McLachhn’s store. Oflice hams,8t(:10 a. m., 2m 4p. m. and? £09 p. m. Special attention given to diseases of “mum: and children. Residence op- puaiw l’resbvterian Chuxch. 6t: 11. Lani Valuator and L300!!!“ Anti)!” Ger 1- r :2» County 0: Gray. Sales prom“? lttewm: rw and notES cashed. uulufi .' LU lb an Illa, 8 EU 3 P. “B Ill. and «42100, Old Bank buildings Tuwu, Durham. Telephone No. 16. 51061100 Upper 1‘1 mm and Surgeons, OnWio. Oflieo hulln'!tu12am._,2t0 4p_m. Residence DURHAM SCHOOL. I‘I'IL‘E AND RESIDENCE A .Em-r. distance east of Knapp’s Hotel, Lambmn Styeet, Lower Town, Durham. Utfice' nuurs from 12 to 2 o’clock. hm- mg Drs. Jamieson Macdonald. THF DEW MERTISIE {3?}; RATES . .. . . fine sac ,,,r 7,--l 3M Tm: Cmnmcu: will it ant 353$“le “drum fre: of package, for 31.31;:- HES . , . . year, payable m Manet-SI. ma ° ha? y k Ch.zr’:€d If got. sq paid. The date to v every w?~~u»pi“"'" 35 and IS denoted by the number on the ‘ 1;. bcl. 0 paper d: c .ntmucd unnl a“ meat. Ni" x - 21‘. .453, except at the WW)" °‘ the P'W'iem' U9? IS PUBLISH“ EVERY THURSDAY MORNING “m cummu film mu, mu my DURHAM, ONT. mt’ flflflflflffl BHBDNIBLE Ayn BROWN. ISSUEB OF AMP»: L‘ARSON, DURHAM. LIC- uver Gordon’s new Jewellery I. An l‘uwn, Durham. Anyemount n: my in loan at 5 per cent. on farm Arthur Gun, II. D. uysu,:1..\N_ _A_ND_ SURGEON, pp- J. G. Hutton, M. D., C. M. rnmng students should 0'”, “ I 0‘ II. 01' as soon after“ W 119041.00 per month. I. Jonxs'rox, c. 1.. “All. O'I \1: msz, SOLICITOR. ETC. '5“. Allan. P119131)“. "m “Ch. 3 A. Chm L’ 1'; H _ __ MACKAY, DURHAM. MT} 3" equipped for full Junior Latvia; 0! «gm ulatlon work, under the M ‘-““'I"'tent teachers for that dammit 1.1mm _ COLLEGE PHYSIC- O! vvvâ€"V‘ Mar rmge Licensee. Durhflll. 0"“ Dr. T. G. Holt, L. D. S. W! Auctionee'r for the County 0‘ Land Valuator, Ballifi' of ”IO M U. (Want Sales and In other matters ij.‘ attended toâ€"hurhoot teforoneeo Mi if required. G. Lefroy McCaul. \ 1: Y PUBLIC, COMMISSION. M‘AFF AND Eqmm'r. JOB A ludical Directory. Dental Dz'rectm. mum AND Pnopmm'on. “m For transient advgnisemem 8 can: I' ’ line {or the first Inscrpon; 3 cents I . . line each subsequent Immioo‘mim Professional cards, not exceeding one inc 1' annum. Advertisements without speci will be published till forbid 8nd margcd : l‘ransiem notices-“1.062,: “ Foum km, --59 cents {or flu: human, 35 Ce" “'r‘ff- lucnt Insertion. vi~cmcnts ordered bystnngtn must be p:. W. 8. Davidson. A. H. Jackson. Legal Directory. Miscellaneous. f’ V'" ls completely stocked with “E‘ ‘ all NSW TYPE, thus af. facilities {or turning out First-clam; J. P. Telford. . B A, Classic. and 106m 5 Tarynarly advertisements (finished 0‘ “3 IR‘VIN .to ensure insertion in cunem l in not 131:: than 'lUEsuAv The new Cathedral of St. John in New York will, dn addition to its main hall, have seven “Chapels or Tongues" where German, Spanish, French, Swed- ish, Italian, Armenian and Chinese ser- vices will be held each Sunday. Nev- ertheless, by the time the great cathe- dral is finished it is not unlikely that the crypt and transepvts and an'te- rooms will be required for other na- tionalities. A clergyman called upon Bishop Potter the other day to ask that some provision might 'be made for re- ligious services for some «Mesopota- mian immigrants. “Really," replied the bishop, “cannot a handful of 'Mesopotamlans be pro- vided for in connection with your Ar- menian congregation ?" The young clergyman of the tene- ments mailed. “I do not know what you can a handful, sir. There are V“. V- that in-higvexeitement he had bitten the mouthpiece of his pipe in two. He was greatly relieved to see the deer move on, as it seemed to him that he was the game and the deer was the hunter. â€"‘v w. ior his pibe, he diéwvsred that it lay on the ground new his feet. By the time he had picked it up the deer was out of range, 396 then _he discovered I L!LL-_‘ gun, and that the deer was his “meat." He began to tremble and shake in every limb and joint. and it was dim- unit for him to remain a yell of fright. He watched and trembled until thel deer passed his hidmg place and went lnto the thicket beyond. Then feeling After spending a few hours tramp- lnq through the woods, feeling tired, he Ia: down on a log to rest. Like moat hunters, he had taken his pipe ant tobacco along. Filling the pipe, he smoked for a time without inte1~ ruptlon, when, happening to turn his head a little to one side, he saw a large buck coming: straight toward him. A: luck would hare it, he had sat down to smoke near a deer trail. The deer came nearer and nearer, until he was nearly opposlte the place where the hunter wt concealed. WhlIO the hunter was war hing the approach of the deer he forgot that he had a n .1, _A AL- .3 ....... L‘n "me ’. B Is First. IN or. Buck fever is a. hunter’s diseasze. me symptoms of which are pretty well known, but they have seldom been more feelingly des-r-ribed than by a Marquette citizen, whose first experi- enoo in deer shooting is related in the Mlz-Ing Journal. a. further consignment of between 50,000 and 60,000 Spey ova will short: ly be forwarded from the Howietoun rearing ponds.-â€"London Times. The project of dispatching a con- signment of salmon ova this year to New Zealand has been attended with no little difficulty. So many of the fishery boards throughout the country have now started fish hatcheries for districts that they are naturally some- what loath to give permission for the collection of ova. ior stocking other than their own waters. At times, in- deed,- owing to various causes, they find it difficult to get sufficient ova to till their hatching troughs, let alone those of others. Due to the kindly intervention or the duke of Richmond, who, it should be recollected, has a fish hatchery near Fochabers, permis- sion was granted to collect ova from the Spey, and under the direction oi! Spey fish and carefully deposited at Howictoun, whence they were in due course packed and dispatched on their long journey. The Spey, Forth and Teith have each contributed ova for this shipment to New Zealand. From the first mentioned has been sent the largest number, and it is hoped that on board the steamchip Rimutaka, ly- ing in the London docks, and these are now well on their way to their destination in New Zealand. The es- tablishment of trout in many waters at the antipodes(which formerly were absolutely bare of that variety of fish) has been successfvlly accomplished. Many rivers at the other side of the world are now plmtitully stocked and yield fish in abundance and of remark- lble size. Salmon Ova for New Zealand. 'A few days ago siv boxes containing abopt 90,000 salmon ova were placed Betty laughed and biushed, hair vexed, for was there not something a. little too brotherly in such a grating? But Dudley’s first words dispelled her misgivings, as in tones of deep tenderness he exclaimed- “Thank Heaven I have you two with me againâ€"my mother and my wife!" END. Both greeted Dudley with delight: and he. bronzed almost beyond recog- nition, lifting *7 cap from his silvered curls, threw his arms about them both at once kissed them both in quick suc- cession. The Little Mother was as pretty as ever, it a little, a very little. plumper than of oid, and the chance reembl- ance which her two sons had discover- ed between her and Betty, and which had so much endeared the latter to them both, was emphasised by a simo iiarity in their fresh white summer toilets, and by the fact that Betty had let her dark curls grow and fastened them coquettishiy at the back of her head. mine, with'hfs London w’after airs, and make him know his place! I shall live to see him in the gflmlnal dock yet!” â€"v'â€" J .7- On the same midsummer day which, put into his hands the control of the Revelsworth fortune, Dudley arrived at his step-mother’s country house in France, and joining a happy family group in the gardenâ€"a grorr) of five personsâ€"Monsieur Giles, stout and radiant, sunning himself in a white waistcoat and straw hat, ar" proud beyond measure of the p ‘:~taced baby-boy in white lace and V. '93 em. broideries, carried by a be-r. ~.oned Alstatian bonne. and two very pretty women, WHO n’zht have passed for sisters in spite of twenty years’ diifer- ence in age. Cosmopolitan New York, Caseyâ€" Fifty ddlars Callahan has splnt trydn’ to {It his mot-her-I-n-law out av purgatory. Dallyâ€"Fifty dollars! Caseyâ€"T} Same! He 8i: he wants to either Ca sbeforehem-inititkin '0 bunk-”Putt! .- ‘ mow-‘44“ “ “Not far from the Kingdom of God' is not within it. That is how I would putit. ‘Never up,never in.’ Idare say those of you who are golfers know what that means, and I am sure if you have ever paid any attention to the game you will be struck by the way in which the game of golf seems to reproduce the common scenes of life. Those 0! you who don’t play may know that the great object is to put the little white ball into the little hole. 80 long as you are short of that, if you don’t do it- well, the other man does lt before you. He has won the hole. And in doing this, when you come to what is called the ‘-putting green,’ and you take your puttâ€"1t may be a beautiful putt, it may run straight to the hole, but. K it stops short you will say .to yourself, and your partner will say to you, ‘Never up. never in. It is abeauty, but It wants legs.’ And that is just exactly the situation hereâ€"‘not far from the klngdom.’ You may be ‘lylng dead,’ as we say. The next shot is sure to do tt. ‘Never up. never ln.’ ” To illustrate his text, “Thou art not far from the Kingdom of God," an Ed- inburgh minister the other day drew upon familiar golf expressions. He said: While 'he was at the Carlton, in Lon. don, the banker met -a Dutch diploma- tic officer, on his way to America, to whom he gave the results of his ob- servations at the tables at Monte Car- lo. The nobleman from Amsterdam, who is greatly respected among the baccarat players of Par-is, had just had some very costly lessons in Amenican poker from his New York friends. He was delighted with the mathematical “beauties of the “graphic system” and offered to furnish a capital of £10,000 if the banker would go with 'him to Monte Carlo and instruct him how to make his wagers. The American, of course, declined, lbUt he gave the Dutch ofl‘lcial enough of an outline of the method of play so that when he 'made a recent visit to America he spent several profitable nights in a well-known gambling house near Fifth avenue. The first night he won 8250. the second $440, the third 81,200, and the fourth 8970. The one fault he found with the system was that the winnings were made at the expense of brain tis- sue. He said 'he would not attempt to follow it longer. Meanwhile the secret of the “graphic system" of “breaking the bank at Monte Carlo” lies in a safe-deposit box in Broad street. and the man who has the key refuses to indulge in public gamiblinmâ€"“Ieslie's Weekly.” 1 Coming back to New York, 'he pri- vately engaged, in another part of! the office building in which is his banking house, a small room, which the fitted up as a miniature Monte Carlo. Six young women spent three weeks there spin- ning the roulette wheels and making charts of the fall of the balls. These charts represent the equivalent of. a. year’s play at one of the tables at Monte Carlo. The ‘banker keeps them in a {safe-deposit box, marked “strictly private;” the wheels he has destroyed. These charts, too, have the same eas- ily rec0gnized zigzags. From the study of them the New Yorker has evolved a. “graphic system" of “beating the bank” which has met with marvelous success, although the major part of the winnings ‘has been made in imaginary play. Ail odd moments he and several cl-ub friends play-ed 'the charts. Start- ing with a capital of $1,000, they won: a small sum every “day," and at the end of the “year" had won $256,000 without plunging. Had they given a larger in- crement to their wagers they would have ”broken the bank." They are all satisfied that the chart system is based upon good mathematics and will “beat the bank.” Not only does the Prince of Monaco welcome the distinguished scientists who come to deprive him 01' his wealth. but he even goes so far as to pay their railway «tare home, when their money is gone, and to provide for them, (if desired, one or the most picturesque spots in the world in which to blow their brains out. But pistol practice on the grounds is very distasteful to the prince; hence his readiness to pro- 5 vide funds to place the unlucky system : player in some other part of the world, Where he may take his life in Whatever ‘ manner he pleases, without disturbing l ‘ the other players at the tables. record sheets of the roulette wheels. the' New York banker plotted more charts, all of which showed the same characteristic zigzags, with “high lev- els,” “low levels,” “crises-crosses,” “runs” and ‘fishutesfl and other pecu- liarities, for which the mathematical American has an elaborate nomencla- 'turec One of the recreations of a well- known New York banker, who has no need to “break the bank” atrMonte Carlo to provide funds for himself, is to play imaginary roulette on a com- plicated system of his own invention. Although a yearly visitor at Monte Carlo, he has never staked a sou on the spin of the 'ball at the Casino. Back in his college days he was an honor man in mathematics, and he still dc- lights in odd computations that have no connection with dividends and mono ey rates. One day last spring at Monte Carlo he amused himself by making a “graphic chart" of the “rouge et moir” croupier for five hundred consecutive rolls. Governed by the immutable laws of chance, the zigzag line, tracing the variations from one color to the other, appeared to have certain sub? zigzags of similar outline occurring at irregular intervals. Taking the daily F every one who has a system for beating the bank at Monte Carlo attempts to float a public company, as the young Earl of Rosslyn is doing, to invite the world to share in the pro- fits, there will not be much available capital left for any other enterprises Whatever may be the peculiar merits of the scheme evolved by the English peer, who has recently been selling dog biscuit, the fact remains that despite the daily attack on the Monte Carlo bank by mathematicians with" new sys- tems the Casino continues to pay its large dividends. Beating a Gambler at His Own Game. A Golf Sermon. Revolution in Newfoundland. Since the introduction into New- foundland of the new Inhaler Reme- dy, “Catarrhozone,” the treatment of catarrhal diseases has been entirely revolutionized. The old time snuff and internal medicine has been cast aside and everyone is inhaling Ca- tarrhozone; it clears the head and throat in two minutes. and is very agreeable and pleasant to use. Ca- tarrhozone is a wonderful cure for Coughs. Colds, Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Lung Troubles and Deaf- ness. It relieVes quickly and cures permanently. We advise our readers to try Catarrhozone. Price $1.00, trial size 25c. Druggists. or Poleon 00.. Kingston, Ont. The New Deering Home. Markda‘le .. . ....Oct. 9-â€"10 Priceville ......... . ..... Oct. 14â€"15 Another instance of the scarcity of teachers for the coming season is shown 1n the fact that Inapector Cowie of Carleton Co. has applied for forty of the students (being half the number) now in attendance at the Normal School. to engage with the several boards of trustees at salaries ranging from $300 to $450. This al- so shows the increasing demand for public school teachers with Normal training.â€"Ex. Scarcity of Teachers. For all kinds of Agricultural and Domestic Implements visit the large Wareroomqy of FALL FAIRS. F. N. MILLIKEN, M.D., Rogersville, Pa.: “1 find your remedy to be the best I have ever tried in the treatment of whooping - cough, catarrhal fever. asthma, also for disinfectin rooms where scarlet fever and iphtheria prevail." 0.0 0-4 \‘apo-Cresolene is sold by druggtsts everywhere. The V3 riser and Lam bl h h ld I H ’ ' and a bottle 0‘ Cresolene complete, “-50: extra SUpplies of Vggo-Cresolene 25 ageth and. 5::Jucern.s‘.t finixf‘tifllfi 'in n ' ' ’ ' ' . \ - ' ' 23100:]? conu i g physmnans tunmonxals free upon request. VAPO-CRESOLENL C0,, Ibo Fuuon bu. New \oxx. Recommended and Sold by MapFarlane 00., Druggists, Durham And take Notice that after such last men- tioned date the said Mary Ann Barker. the Executrix of the last Wil and Testament of the said John Barker. deceased. will pro. ceed to distribute the assets of the said de- ceased among the parties entitled thereto having regard only to the claims of which she shall then have notice. And the said Executrix will not be liable tor the said as- sets or any part thereof to any rson or msons of whose claim notice shal not have n received by her at the time of said distribution. Dated at Durham this 30th day of Septem- A. D. 1902. 25th Day of October A. D. 1902, their christian names and surnames and addresses with full particulars in writing of their claims and statement of their ac- counts and thefnature of the securities held by them (if any) duly verified. i‘ Bursuant to Section 28 of Chapter 129 R. S. . 1897 (and amending acts) that all persons having claims or demands against the estate of the said John Barker, de- ceased. who died on or about the eighteenth da of September A. D. 1902, are required to eliver or send by st prepaid to Mary Ann Barker, at the own of Durham, in the County of Grey. on or before the In the Surrogate Court of the County of Grey, In the Matter of the Estate of John Barker, late of the Town of Durham, In the County of Grey, Laborer, Deceased. OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to Section 28 of Chapter 129 Notice to Creditors EXECUTRIX’S NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Keep Vapo-Cresolene on hand; it’s not expensive, for the vaporizer lasts a life- tune and the Cresolene costs but little. \Vhat is Vapo-Cresolene P It '7 what the doctors call a coal-tar product ; tnat is it’s something like carbolic acid, only it destroys disease germs. such a remedy must be for hay fever, diphtheria, sore throat, catarrh, asthma. and other diseases of the air passages? For whooping-cough it is a perfect specific, oftEn curing the ' disease in from one to three days. You don’t taigs Vapo-Cresolene into the stomach, you breath it. Put some Cresolene in the vaporizer, light the lamp beneath 2111' then breathe-in the vapor. It’s easy, convenient, safe. It can be used w1th success, even for infants. W. S. DAVIDSON. Solicitor for the Executrix. T. J. JORDAN Next door to Mockler’s Dry Goods Store. G0 to JORDAN'S for your Groceries Fruit and Confectionery Hello !

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