West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 15 Sep 1904, p. 5

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'0“ out your for Tel- of th. snag!" 3'00 tho was )oat ady tint all an X08- de~ Jst Ito shy an )9. la is g- G. H. Stinsoq The good wife of the house alwms: likes to have good Bread, and the! best Bread is to he had at Stinson’ s. g The whitest. awe-rust and moc'; healthful made. No husband wvlfi everlnd fault with Stirmon' a Brand ; \Ve urn out u first clean erticlw whether it’ s Bro-ed. Pu»: or Cat mu and give specie! nttemion to our' cuemmerl. ' I, thinig tur picnicé. fiat 100' ......... (‘henile Tabla Cloths, lé yds square L' N DBRSKIRTS Table Linens. Hold Decorated Table Sets ...... .81 75 “ Water Sets ........ 185 .. “ 7 piece Berry Sets1.60 1. 75 (mld decorations on shove being burnt in will not wash ofi. 7 New Mass Berry Sets. . ”40c 5nd 450 4 " Table Sets 1 patterns .......... 300 Fapg-y .Iananpsq paper Alf‘apkins. just the Large size White Coulnermnes W. H. BEAN The Big4 Bread Black )fiercerizpd Sateen lfnderukirts, a barmuu at earh .................... LN New Glassware. The Sherlock Organs. u. CAMPBELL, Agent. IMPLEMENTS Frost 6: Wood DURHAM, For which we will pay the "highest price ” in CASH or TRADE. CALDER BLOCK. He Sells Cheap. Custom Carding and spinn- ing attended to on short notice. Blankets. Twoods, Yuns. Funnels, Groceries ‘fmd Dry Goods “may: on hund. of all kinds for the Farm, the Home and the Dairy. â€"O~Q~oâ€" S. SCOTT DURHAM, ONT. Cu” and SH? us WOOL -- THE GROCER - We Want AGENCY. ONTARIO. ltghty. Queer. “It’s mighty queer about familial. There‘s Mrs. O‘Shnuxhneosy. She has no children, an’ if I nymimber corflct- ly it was the am. rm her mother."- Opportunities For Good Deedl. Remember that it the opportunity for great deeds never comes the oppor- tunity for good deeds is renewed for you day by day. The thing for us to long for is the goodness, not the glory. “Oh, I know!” he exclaimed trium- phantly. “Two handstul.” " 'Cause this Is a case of necessity,” replied the young philosopher. “A tel- ler can‘t fish without bait.” A. He Interpreted It. “How many commandments were given to Moses?" asked the Sunday school teacher of small Bobby. He could not remember, so in order to prompt him she held up her ten fln- gers. A Case at Necessity. “My son.” said the parson to a small boy who was digging, “don’t you know that it is a sin to dig on Sunday except in case of necessity?” “Yes, sir.” replied the youngster. “Then why don’t you stop it?” asked the good man. East Indian Names. Mercantile clerks with many lottmx to write to 11111111 tradeska are to he pitied. :l‘l1e following, picked at mn- dmn from the books of 11 1101111011 firm doing business in India, are net 11t 111] 111111 specinwns of the general run of names tiii'ovgliout the empire: Jugnvn- jala Seetlumamachendrudn. .\l1111t~11i I’ragmla‘. Suryanarayana, \'11n;_:111' ’11 thnngy \'ij11y11ragh11vacharrlz1r. (3011 jeevei'nm .\lnttukumaraswnnn' \11111 liur. 1’001111111111‘11: Si1111111111g11su111111111111 31111111111: [(011111111111111g11111m Sum-11111111- ist ( 1.11:11111i.er11 her. I’ernnu’vl (‘ 1111111 . lees“11111111101t1111 I: 11j11futhnn 31001111111 4, -._.__._< __â€"..__._._.- __._ -.-_ “It is simply a game of catch ho- tween Field and myself," he answer. ed. “He tries to put up as many hams as possible, all uniformly strong. Then I go around and try them and see how many weak places I can find.” “Which beats. Mr. Graham ?” he was asked. “Oh, I think I do in the long run he responded. “Field never sum-n :; In keeping me out as many times as have succemled in breaking in." A Game 0! Catch. Somebody once twitted John Gra- ham on the way David Dudley Field and he were drifting apartâ€"~he remain- ing in the harness as a criminal law- yer, while Field was selected by his state for the exalted duty of codifying her laws. By cutting old potatoes into very small balls, allowing them to soak for three or four hours in cold water, then boiling in cold salted water and serv- ing with cream sauce, a very good sub- stitute for new potatoes is obtained. For luncheon or supper serve the bread and butter in the form of sand- wiches. Cut the bread thin and re- move part of the crust. Cut in strips after buttering or in rounds with a his. cuit cutter. The bést way to mash potatoes is to rub them through a wire sieve. You can then be sure there are no lumps left. When weighing molasses sprinkle the scale well with flour and then it will slip off again quite e: mi]; without stick. ing. If it is desired to keep cakes moist put them in a stone jar. If crisp cakes are preferred use tin as a rtx-optncle. Salt In the oven under baking tins will prevent pastry scorching on the bottom. The photosphere or luminous surface is generally believed to be what it looks likeâ€"a sheet of clouds enveloping the nucleus and consisting of minute drops and crystals formed from those vapors which condense at the highest temperatures. These clouds float in an atmosphere composed of the perma- nent gases like hydrogen and helium mixed with the more numerous vapors which condense only at far lower tem« peratures than those that form the clouds. As to the substances which compose the cloud particles, opinions are unsettledâ€"Professor C. A. Young in Harper’s Weekly. r __ "a w-“'" am. This seems tobe an unavoidable conclusion from the sun’s low mean density and its tremendous internal temperature, which must almost cer- tainly be far higher than that of its outer surface, so high that even the enormous force of solar gravity is able to compress the vapors to a density on- ly one and tour-tenths that of water. although among the constituent ele- ments are many of the metals (it'on be- ing the most conspicuous) which in the solid or liquid state are from three to eight times as dense. The reader must not imagine, however, that this gaseous nucleus is like air or other gases as we encounter them upon the earth. Dense? than water and strong. ly viscous from the heat. it more re- sembles a globe of tar except near the outside. There the vapors relieved from pressure are free to eXpand and to cool both by the expansion and by radiating heat to outer space in a re- gion of powerful currents, ascending. descending and cyclonic. what a Globe at is}; n It is generally agreed that the main body of the sunâ€"the nucleus within the photosphergkmust be purély gase- THE COOKBOOK. " Be-embles Sol-e- The Truth. “Mr. Hardup must have used a great deal of flattery to win the heiress.” “No; he simply told her the truth.” “Indeed. 9” “Yes; he said he couldn’ t live with- out her ” . lute-tn]. Miss Oldgirlâ€"I don’t like the cotor of my hair. Miss Youngthingâ€"«Don’t let that bother you. my dear. It can’t ho lobe now before it turn: my. portunity. The Search For Success. This is my advice to young nwn seek- ing for suvwss: I‘ix your eye on Eng- land. fix it on Alaska, fix it on the moon, collect beetles. desire tram tick‘ ets, demand lost boot laces. die for dead cats-do any of these things and you may have your will. But do not fix your dreams upon success. for the hence of those dreamers are wrecks along the shore. â€"G. K. Chesterton in London News. Flint and Steel. Mrs. Highmore (with cold dignity)â€" To what am I indebted for the honor of this visit? Unexpected Callerâ€"To your careless servant, perhaps. madam. I dare say she forgot that you were not at home. Usually. It is usually the young woman who wouldn’t have the best man in the world who snaps at the first otter. and the man who is the most cynical about matrimony is pretty sure to propose to the first woman who gives him an opâ€" Mirror. Crystal and Sword. Thr th'ov svnnhuls 0f the imperial hm w 01’ .‘mwn :nv the mirror the crys- "E. : Us] ”.0 SWUH: and “10) are earned in t'v-nt uf ‘lw mmu 101 on n31 state oc- (f:’.\'§'m%. 11:. 11 has its: significance. ‘hnk at the mirror and reflect thy- svlt'." or. in other words. “Know thy- soif'." is the uwssngn of the «mirror. ‘ 20 pure and shine” is the ct‘ystal’s 1n- juuvtinn. whiie the sword is axeminder to “Be sharp.“ Onions For Diphtheria. In cases of diphtheria onions in the form of a poultice and a sirup are said to have an almost magical eflect. The pnnltice in this case is made of the raw onion pounded to a pulp and bandaged around the throat Well up to the ears, changing as often as the mass becomes dry. A poultice of the same on the sole of each foot reduces the fever. The nmcilnginous properties of onion juice make it specially soothing to the in- tinnmi mucous membrane and there- fore :ieeeptzihle in case of whooping eeng'h. eroup or diphtheria. An excel- ‘2't way to umke the sirnp is to cut onion into slices, sprinkle plentiful- ' with sugar and press between hot s .- lili a heavy weight until all the \e is extracted. 1 l l .5 l The Stage Mirror. Whenever a looking glass appears in a scene in a play above a fireplace, in a sideboard or a cabinet one is almost sure to hear somebody ask his or her neighbor why the glass has been smear- ed with whiting or soap or something that dulls its surface completely. All sorts 0! reasons are hazarded or sug- gested. Sometimes it is stated that it is done for luck, at others that they did not intend to leave it dirty. The real explanation is, however, a simple one. The glass is dirtied to prevent the illusion of the scene being de- stroyed, as it certainly would be if the audience saw in it the reflection of themselves or, worse still, the reflec- tion of the people in the wings carry- ing on the business of the stage. It is not a pleasant thought that the brilliant white note paper which your hand rests upon may have in it the fibers from the filthy garment of some Egyptian fellah after it has passed through all the stages of decay until it is saved by a ragpicker from the gut- ter of an Egyptian town, and yet it is a fact that hundreds of tons of Egyp- tain rags are exported every year into America to supply our paper mills. At Mannheim, on the Rhine, the American importers have their ragpicking houses where rags are collected from all over Europe, the disease infected Levant not excepted, and where women and chil- dren, too poor to earn a better living, work day after day, with wet sponges tied over their mouths, sorting these filthy scraps for shipment to New York. Our best papers are made of these rags and our common ones of wood pulp, which is obtained by grinding and macerating huge blocks from some of our soft wooded forest treesâ€"National Geographic Magazine. Material Uled la Making Note Paper. no Silence .1 fluttemen. After all. the chief charm or this no. of winged flowers does not lie in their varied and brilliant beauty, nor yet in their wonderful series of transforma- tions, in their long and sordid caterpil- lar life, their long slumber in the chrysalis or the very brief period which comprises their beauty, their lovemak- ing, their parentage and their death. Nor does it lie in the fact that we do not yet certainly know whether they have in the caterpillar shape the facul- ty of sight or not, and do not even know the precise use of their most con- spicuous organ in maturity, the anten- nae. Nor does it consist in thisâ€"that they of all created things have fur- nished man with the symbol of his own immortality. It rather lies in the fact that, with all their varied life and activity, they represent an absolutely silent world. ‘ " ‘ All the vast array of modern knowledge has found no butterfly which murmurs with an audi- ble voice and only a‘very few species which can even audibly click or rustle with their wingsâ€"T. W. Higginson in Atlantic. Next Door South of Post Ofioo. CALL AND SEE ONE. Marshall Sanitary Mattresses Pamphlets and full particulars from any Canadian Pacific Agent, or ‘Vinnipeg $30.00 Igolw hi fi)’ 1 e oraine . Somis '31 )0 Brandun J Lyleton 1 Lenore { Miniom } Elgin I Waw anesu J Binscarth 13.). . ,~ Mooso111in_,3:‘{ €110ch - - ‘32. 50 istevan 1 . . â€" York ton I "3'00 32. 00 HAVE COMFORT. Our Company pays market value for Grain, Hay and Live Stock. Hay in stacks is covered by insur- ance on contents of barn. Farm Implements used by hand. Carpen- tels’ 'l‘ools, Robes. Roots, Grain Bags. Wool. Beef. Pork, Fruit and Flour are payable in either dwellings or outbuildings. No other company has the the above in their contract. A Sydenham Policy is the best. For further information address J. H. McFayden Sept. 6.â€"6mc. DURHAM P. O. The best Rheumatism remedy is Fen-ozone. It reliveves quickly and cures so perfectly that the uisease never returns. After all other rem- edies fail, it cures, and that is the sort of medicine you want. Price 50c. abox or six boxes for $2.50. Send your address by mail if price is forwarded to the Ferrozone Com- pany, Kingston. Ont. Sydenham Mutual Fire Insurance Co Ferrozone cures these diseases be- cause it is a. solvent for uric acid in the blood. Then it builds up and in- vigorates the system and makes weak sickly people strong and well enough to resist and ward ofi disease. Mr. Cullen’s case is a fair example of the kind of cures that Ferrozone is effecting every day. In severe cases of Neuralgia. Sciatica, Rheumatism, and Lumbago, it acts with surprising alacrity. and no case is recorded where it. failed. “On the advise of a Presbyterian minister, 1 used Ferrozone. gave it a good trial at first, and when I saw it was helping, I bought six boxes and took one at the close of each meal. 1 am perfectly cured, and am to-day as spry as a youngster of ten. I am convinced that my recovery is en- tirely due to the marvellous action of Ferrozone.” Going Sept. [3“: and 27th. Retumlng until Nov. 14th and 28th. Mr. Cullen of Sturgeon Bay. writes: “For six years I hobhled about like acripple, unable to move without crutches and canes. I used quantities of medicines. and special baths, but they didn’t help me very much. The Remmkable Case of Mr. Cullen, a Chronic Sufl‘erer, Who Was Cured in Six Week: by Hobb VEGETABLE SICILIAN Hair Renewer A high-class prepâ€"{ration forâ€"{heI-hEF-i - -v..v v v v. . ee the hair 30ft an glossy and prevents sphtting at the ends. are: dandrufl and aways restores color to gray hair. marmmrr- HARVEST EXCURSIUNS CI‘I‘OZOUC. Furniture! furniture! ed Six Yeats With Rheumatism an Pacific Agent, or I Wright’s Old Stand. A. H. NOTMAN, Toronto. iDUREMM, â€"- ON' constructed of hair and a thousand springs. This Mattress costs a little more than the ordinary, but think of the comfort you get. and think of the health yon secure, and the extra cost will not trouble you. You spend at least one-third of your time in bed. and your health depends largely on the invigoreting influence of a. good night’s rest. You can’t fail to get real comfort if you sleep on one of our Edward Kress, Strathcona Mat-190d Calgary - Red Deer Regina - - $33. 75 Moose Jaw ' Kamsack 34. 00 S\ 'zm RiverJ Saskatoon $5.25 Pr. Albert THE F A. W. WATSON We make all kinds of CAKES and CONFECTIONERY and give special prompt attention to Wedding goods. THE BEST PROOF Specialist: Eye, Ear, Throat and Nose EXCLUSIVELY Will be it the Middsngh House In Wodnudny of each month. from 12 to 4 p. m. @Opp. Caldwell’s Livery. RADULATE of London, New ;York and Chicago. Diseasesp! Eyefiar. Nose “I'd Throat. Will be at Knapp House, Durham. the 2nd Satu:d1v in each month. Hours-lâ€"6 p.111. Lste Assistant Roy. London Ophthalmic 30s.. £33.. and to Golden Sq. Throat and Nose Hos. SCREEN DOORS from ...... 90c up. SCREEN WINDOWS at all prices. SCREEN WIRE, all sizes, from 10c Lawn flowers 8:. Garden Tools at Right Prices. Fly . . . . Weather HARD WAREflNDvTIN WARE. DR. BROWN L. R. C. P., LONDON. ENG. FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS every Wed. and Sat. evening. We want regarding the qual- ity of our bread is the in- creased amount consumed by the people of Durham. Since starting here a few months ago our trade has been con. stantly and steadily growing, and our weekly output now is over four times what it was when we started business. We feel truly grateful for the liberal patronage accorded us and with the increased and competent assistance we have secured we hope to merit a continuance of the public pat- ronage. If You Want your house Eavetroughed or if you want a Furnace m your house don’t forget us. F. Siegner DR. GED. 8. BURT. Keep out all flies and insects from the house. ONTA RIO. Alex. Beggs ‘ J. I. HUNTER max Highest prices paid for Farm Produce including Butter and Eggs. HAS ALWAYS ON HAND: MONEY TO LOAN gt low run. DEBTS COLLECTED â€"â€" WRITINGS Duwx. All kinds of “ Squnre Deals ” negot- iuted; everything confidentigl. Buni- ness ostublished 1884. BESIDES ABOVE I hnve othor Innds in Ontario and North West for sale or exchunge and CAN BELL You. FARM if you wunt to sellâ€"no chug. if no sale. HANOVER. 100 Acau in Egremontâ€"about 65 acres cleared. hardwood and swamp timber, good buildings, good soil. orchard. and well located, price 83200 \Vill ao- cept as low as 8500 down and allow balance to run at 470. lQO ACRES in Hemlockâ€"Crawford P O.â€"â€"good farmâ€"owner invalid and eager to sell. 50 ACRES in Egremontâ€"near Hol- steinâ€"fine 50 -sell cheap or trade for larger (arm. 1 ACRE~Durhamâ€"near the Cement Works. The Hanover Convayanoor. Offers the Following : VILLAGE Bucmrm Hummusâ€"No opposition~8plendid trade doaa â€"anap for good man. 100 ACRES near Allan Parkâ€"Fair land -â€"good timberâ€"cheap. 200 ACRES in a splendid settlement-â€" Normanby~owner nickâ€"bargain ofl’ered. fut Balgains Head Ihis! A handsomely Illustrated weekly. [amour caution or my adengmc pay-nu. Tel-mu. a at"; four months. CL 8016!»? ail newsdeala' Em cu. ";M-- New “19;: 'Fitlirit'é iiié'n' 3:356:25 'Munn'krckx M " new! notice. wiflmuc charge. in the Scientific Hmerican. GOODS delivered promptly to 0.11 put: of the town. All kind. of Groceries, Tau, Sugura, Colon. Spices and Tobaccos. The Hmover Conveyancer. Flour. Food. Potttoeu. Ott- moul, Cornmul, Field nod Garden Seedl. H. H. MILLER. . MILLER, Grocery and Provision Store ONTARIO.

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