West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 14 Sep 1905, p. 3

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muse fl‘HB GARAFRAXA ROADâ€"â€" ed EM line‘- well I“!!! a] D.P. 9.1906. 3-. M I: :2 Lnt H ( UlNPsiOII I9 "I I“ h um [humor-.9 5 «5 mil. {to- n 39th!!!) Churth. Canal-II“ 54x64 on stuns ban-out.“ month. “ind-m . i beat or Sold. 0-mi- THE CENTRAL PART OF Irbam. ['our lots on the West 930‘ Sheet. for private residences. Nov time to get those lots. For funk Ition applv to Houses for Sale. 51, 5‘2. 5:Lâ€"Siderond 50,1} x109 north of Priceville. Flt-h ms eundition. 6on buildingt'i. r atteam convenient to 35'. bri- ‘thor particulars applv to DlhALD D. McLAanAll. ~tt. Pricevile. 0. lientmck, (on. 2. W. U. K" “- the Corporation 0f tho Tm of . The tarm cousins of m In. 4 acres woodland. the Mk” III- out six miles from Durham. 00‘ mmmon at once. Good land. In. For particulars apply to ’ark Lot For Sale. 190: own Lots for Sale. n. Cumfurtable d walling and M .ble nutbuildings. Small m vkind nf place for s 433in w .et gardener. Sold at right who any terms as the proptiflor il- tiug west and wishes to dis” 0‘ it. H. BURNETT. Propriflo' Ianâ€"4f. 'Dnnmul, Orr J. P. TELFORD. Durban : small aidâ€"(ad: wall " D‘tticuhn and, to ’od Farm for Sale. ’or Sale or Rent. Farm for Sale. Houses to Rent ("-lt‘i‘fiufl ”f twenbfivo m. m1» east of (‘orporation d t“ Durham. dmcnbfid as Sonthm ('nn. 2. 1'). U. K. Glenda. 0. $824 i4 3 (:nmfnrtable brick iv.- .ttage. a good frame m 3‘ small bearing orchard. an ab- rim best running water. He gm“. Terms easv tad ur furtlwr particulars n b THUS. DAVIS. t 2. Can. 3. X. D. R.. GM. ll IS NORMANB House to Rent. PARTS OF House for Sale For Sale. 'l ING OF 100 mung or twon ~33: of Lower: :11. described a . 2. E. U. R.. l ' a comfortabh . a good fun bearing orchm best mnuinfl M H01 W TO LET. M. HI'N'I‘ER. Durban 8| KB)“ L\"I‘. 4 mile- fl. NUMBER N'I‘l.\'( PI HOE OF PROP. »t in the Town MD!!- ct (trey, contunifl‘ 1' ur terms and partici- “on, near Orch- A M Bâ€"A PPLY T0 RAW FORD. Ll H, near Bum... I mm. LA“ 11mm in first-eh“ P. TELFORD, t Solicitor. Durban. Y, 6 mile. {7. LOTS 62 AND 2. w. G. R" .3. of the Town of Dumas. W L ‘VIIYCMO WM. SLA‘I'C Dummx P. 0. near 1H ' xx, .~o.licnor_a.l red for par ticufifi Jl 'SE F0 .-\ pply to \TI )1 ER. 3 N ORTB W BRICK WA L8H. “BER- ntly sit- '(‘f west. :1. Rel“ 'h each. SituaM 1 rham. FOR if Master Willie McMillan, the wwn-year-old son of Councillor A. McMillan. does not meat with a. ser- Inu accident one of these days it will not he because he did not temot the fates. Not content with his ex- ploit of driving a team of horses an 1 a lumber wagon to Lvith a couple of weeks ego he undertook a similar performance on Monday With a horse and buggy belonging to Mr. John H. Scott of Derby. The little lad secur- ed the outfit in the First Methodist "hurch sheds and started 06 {or Leith shortly before six o’clock. He wns caught in the heavy downpour Ofl rain and thoroughly drenched before' reaching Leith. Mr. Gibson. the liming man who recoanized him onl the former occasion. ptrsuuded him to return home which he did in ufo ty. A smnll tour in the buggy top Which the youthful driver say! was (mused by on upset in turning nround yes .11 the dnmue done. The horn is a spirited unimnl end does not take kindly to the whip. nut-kn of which no pluinly viable norm its heck. How the youngster Ills-Ind to cover the diets-co without n nio- Whom-alertiuonoflli “Iterations-0.8. 11-“. The body needs patchingâ€"wasted tissues must be rebuilt. playedvouc argans meteredâ€"blood needs extra nourishment. Elderly people need L"err07.nne.â€"â€"need it because it vital. .uni rejuvenatea as no ether remvdv ‘illl. Ferrozme build; up the kind hf strength that. makea one “201 good ~-kva.~1 hack decal? of the old age and makes you look young end handsome main. Forget nervousness exhaust- ion. renew your vital energy, again re~enter the life of youth. Your; remedy is Ferrozone. only fifty cents: Fer box. at all dealers. ! '- We are going to set. an old burn an tire to-night, and I am not your son if I don’t have some real fun. I lost my watch and I am real sorry. I shall bring home some snakes and a toad. and I Sb.“ bring home atame row if I can get ’em in my trunk.” "The other boy has to be buried when they find him. His mother came from her home and she cried all rht- time. A horse kicked me over, and I have got to have some money to my the doctor for mending my head. It was broken a bit. “I got here all right, and I forgot to write before. It is a very nice place to have fun. A fellow and I want out in a boat, and the boat tip- ped over and o man got me out andI was so full of water that I didn’t know anything for a. long while. A fond mother sent her small be? into the country and after a week of anxiety receiver! the following letter: TOOK ANOTHER DRIVE. WHEN YOU GROW OLD. AS USUAL. i ll Dull. sherifi, of Monroe, Mich. Eand O T. Montgomery. deputy war- iden of the Reformaiory at Ionia, Mich, struck a snap on Sunday. ‘They came over here after a man jnamed George S. Smith and while sitting down at the Royal, he walked into their arms. He was in the poultrv business at Ionia and for some years did a thriving business. He used to out at night and “raise” chickens to have them fresh for his customers next day. The authorities over there did not appreciate this public ienefactor and arreSted him and sent him to the Reformatory for from one to live years according to his behavior. He stayed there for three months and skipped. coming to lihcardine. At Goderich, he wrote to a lady friend at Ionia and asked fora reply to Kincardine not later than the 6th, as he was going West. They found this out and came here with the result just memtioned. Smith did not appear much concerned over the way his plans were spoiled. He spent a night in the lockup and next day returned to the Reformatory.; On his person were found letters in: which he was given quotations by’ Toronto merchants for chickens, so that he evidently still contemplated? the chicken business. 2 Smith worked in the Bightmyor «It block {or a you and a. but in the seventies. You catch a littlecold to-day, by g to morrow it. has reached the throat, i next day the lungs are aflected and :you wish you had used “Catarrh- Mzone” which kills colds in five min- . utes. In the first place Catarrhozone sooths Mu. irritated membranes and relieves congestionrâ€"then it cuts out. phlegm and m-stroys the germs. It enables the Hood to retain a natural supply of oxvgen. lungcfood. and vi. rality in any Conzh. bronchitis or lung aflection it’s guaranteed to pos icively cure. Decline any substitute for “Catarrhozone.” "You’re a brick, my boy ” said the busy man. “and you don’t know how much I appreciate you. How did you fix it?” ”Oh, easily. he replied. “Ijust changed the addresses ”â€"-Howard Lampoon. He was given two very important letters to mail, one to Cleveland. 0., and the other to Liverpool. England. As he was about to place them in the receptacles in the post oflice. the clerk’s eagles eye detected that his employer had made a slight mistake. He had placed a 5-cent stamp requir- ed for foreign postage on the Cleve- land letter and 2 cent on the Liver- pool missive. The alert clerk was of course equal to the emergency and soon had the matter adjusted all right. Then he fairley flew down the street to report the mistake. WALKED INTO THEIR ARMS. How Pneumonia Starts 'on twelve employees who are five minutes late in starting, and this amounts to quite startling propor- ,tions in the course of a year; and it isjust such little leakages of time and materials which sometimes de- termine the profit or loss for the year. Punctuality is agood habit to Cultivate. The employee who comes in late is not in the path of advancement. In fact. it makes for the other direction. Come early even if the ” boss” isn’t around. It ‘is more productive of mental satis- faction, and. besides that, if you wait every morning until the streets are thoroughly aired before opening the store, someone may be kind enough to put the proprietor wise“ and some fine morning he may get; down before you. l I find Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets more beneficial than any other remedy I ever used for etomooh troubles," any: J. P. Klote. of Edmo. Mo. For ony disorder of the etomnoh, billionenees or constip- ation, these Tnblete ore without a peer. For ule nt Parker’s Drug Store. The Chronicle till Jan. 07 $1.00 to new subscribers, Coming on time denotes alertness and interest in business. Coming late denotes laziness. dissipation per- haps. at any rate, it shows a certain amount of lack of interest. Tardi- ness may seem a small thing to the employee. but it is one of the things which are held in detestation by most employers. Five minutes loan by one employee means an hour lost Medicines that aid nature are al- ways most efiectual. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy acts on this plan. It allays the cough. relieves the lungs, aids nature in reStoring the system to anthealthy condition. Sold at Parker’s Drug Store. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy Aids Nature. Ex-Premier Parent resigned from one of his 361 jobs yesterday, but took it back before the string on it was allowed to strain itself. The sailors shouldn’t kick at the treatment they received in Toronto. They were lucky to get away with car fare. Being a well behaved pair of kids. Alberta and Saskatchewan have not as yet kept the neighbors awake nights. Now that Russia will not issue a new loan, the world’s money-markets can prepare for the time Gaynor and Greene finance the payment of their lawyer’s bills. An English and an American were discussing the relative importance of their business. “Why said the Eng- lishman, “in my firm the clerks use 3000 gallons of ink a year.” “Oh. that’s nothing!” retorted the Amer ican. “We saved that much ink in a vear hv ordering our clerks not to dot their i’s.” “Oh. yes,” laughed Betty, “but it’s never too late to mend!” “Betty. why do you sit up at this hour of the night darningyour stock. ings?" said her mother sharply; .‘don’t you know it’s twelve o’clock?” "I have but three requests,’, ans- wered the Japanese naval hero: "don’t. erect a triumphal arch. don’t present me with a house. and don‘t let the girls kiss me.”â€"\Vashington Star. “You have served your country nobly, 331d the Mikado. "Anything you ask will be granted.” ‘There is one editor in Heaven, says an exchange, ‘though how he got there Lord only knows, but it is sfipposed that he rode in on the blind baggage or got a pass. When they found him they tried to turn him out but he refused to go. They hunted all over heaven for a lawyer to serve him ejectment papers. but they could not find one, so the edit- or held the fort and is there today. “ I was down in Orono this sum- mer and while there visited a cousin of Mr. Thos. Lowe’s. the genial proprietor of the Revere House. They had a call to take to market which had been purchased by a town butcher, but everybody being busy it was decided to send “Collie.” a very intelligent beast owned on the farm, with it. The calf and dog were started ad but after going a short distance the former laid down and refused to go on. All the dog’s per~ suasion was of no use, so he started back home in hot haste. went down cellar, swished his tail through a pan of milk and started back for the calf. When he got to where the calf was resting he stuck his tail in its mouth and in that way got it safely to the butchers. If you don’t be- lieve me ask Tom Lowe.” Next.â€" Refleccor. One evening lest. week while welt- ing for the night tnin the Bus man told the following yarn :â€" A Remedy Without a Poor. non nns'r's DOG-GONE nnx. ; RUNAWAY mummy. PU NCTUALITY. DURHAM. Custom Carding Visitors to the Show will find Lunch Conntor' inside Store. Fruits, Confectionery 6: Staple Groceries Also a full stock of Having purchased the Grocery Business of JOHN ROSE at Theo- balde old stand, we beg leave to to announce to the public that we will carry a. full stock of Itching. Blind. Bleeding or Protrndin Piles Druggists refund moneyi PAZO OINT EXT failsto cure any case, no matter of how long standing, in 6 to 14 dog's. First application gives ease and rest. 500. f our drngfiist hasn't it send 50c in stamps am it 'will 6 forwarded post-paid bv Paris Medicine Co.. St. Louis. Mo WANT 3 Another sad and fatal runaway [accident was added to the long list iof tragic events that have occurred in this vicinity within the past few weeks and occured on Monday fore noon in Derby township. The victim was Wesley Bowman. a young man I belonging to a highly repected family of that township and the son of Mr. land Mrs. Samuel Bowman of the [tenth concession. The accident was ’the result of an attempt to break in a two-year- old colt which was hitch- ed te a two-wheeled road cart and was being driven for the first time. In company with his sister. Miss; Ethel Bowman, they had only gone! a short distance from home when the colt became fractions and got beyond control. Miss Bowman was thrown out and escaped serious injury. but her brother’s foot became fastened in the brace of the cross bar and he fell back with his body between the wheel and the seat of the cart, while his head was dragged along on the {gravel road. The horse turned into the driveway of the Archer farm, .which adjoins that of the Bowman’s, and Mr. George Archer. who witness- ed the tragedy, succeed in extricating form the rig. He was carried into the house and physicians from Owen Sound and Tara were hastily sun- moned. Owing to the serious nature of the injuries, which consisted of a badly lacerated scalp, a number of cuts and bruises and a fractured skull. it was deemed advisable to ;take him at once to the Owen Sound beepital An operation was per- formed, but all to no purpose. He never regained consciousness. but passed away shortly after nine o’clock the same evering. The re- mains were taken to his late home in Derby The colt continued its wild race down the road until it met one of the Creamery W'agons driven by Mr. Jessie .Vchnnis, when it turned OR the road and fell in a heap in a fence corner, where it was after. wardsfoundinan uninjured condition. The funeral took place to the Tara Cemetery Rev. Mr. Hall of Allen- ford. conducted the services. assist- ed by Rev. Peter McNabb of Kilsyth. The pall- bearers were Messrs. Philip Iavins, John Robertson, T. Taylor. H. Javins, James Robertson and Bert Rowman. The funeral was one ofthe largest ever seen in that section. over eighty vehicles being in line as the procession left the house, sixty- five following the remains to the cemetery.â€"â€"O. 8. Times. THEN RELIABLE GROCERY A GUARANTEED CURE FOR FILES Matthews Latimel. a large assort= ment of Blankets, Tweeds, Yarns, etc, and a full stock of Groceries. We keep on hand For which we will pay the highest price in Cash or Trade. Changed Hands S. SCOTT FLOUR. FEED 6: SEEDS and Spinning. ONTARIO. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE stleto. All drnGgg'mta rdund the money if It hill! to cure. E. W. rove'o signgturo is on each box. 25c. @3 Pure Honey and Fresh Groceries always on hand. Heavy TwiL’ed Cotton Sheeting. 72-in wide, 25c a yard. White Bedspreads, large size, 1.40 each. Table Linen at 25c and 50¢ a yard. Floor Oilclotb. 1 and 2 yards wide. as '25}: a square yard. Stair Oilcloth at 15c a yard. Japanese Matting at 20c a yard. MISCELLANEOUS. LADIES’ SKIRTS. ETC. 2 yans long. 26-in wide. 25c a pair. 25 yards long. 26-h: wide. 40¢ a pair. 2.1; yards long. 30-in wide. 50c a pair. 3 yards long. 37-in wide. 70¢ a pair. 3i; yards long. 54-in wide, $1.00a pair. “I" All our Curtains except the 250 and 400 ones have Worked edges- LACE CU RTAINS. CALDER â€"â€" BLOCK ~â€" DURHAM He Sells Cheap The Big 4 STANDARD .nd WHITE Sewing MEOMIIBS Malone Separators HAVE YOU? Any old Worn silver? If so, I am prepared to re- plate it. Bring it in now while [have the time. All work guaranteed. Prices Moderate, and Strictly Cash. Geo. Yiirs. The Sherlock Organs T0 CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Frost 6: Wood Implements Ladies' Overskirts at $2. $3.50 and $4.50. Ladies’ Black Sateen Under-skirts at $1. Ladies’ Black Sateen Waists at 85c and 31 Ladies’ White Waists at 50c and 75c.) White Night Gowns at 73c and $1. Coreet Covers at 25c and 50c. . CAMPBELL, Agent. DURHAM, ONT. The largest Business and Shorthsnd School in Western Ontsrio. Our courses are thorough and practical. Teaching is done by experienced in- structors. There is no better school in the Dominion. Au. GRADUATES SECURE POSITIONS. Cstslogue tree Elliott Mclachlau . H. BEAN of all kinds for the Farm, the Home and the Dairy. STRATFORD. ONTARIO. AGENCY. I’RINCM L8. Lu. Won Gum-nun st H 101: lin” Bil-u. Highest Woe to: Produce. Goods delivered promptly in t0! Mrs. Alex. TRY OUR PRICES TRY OUR FOODS. Alwuys in “oak the you round Pumps. STOCK FOODS. Flour! Flour! The People’s Grocery Here £ Here I WI. JOHNSTON. C. RAMAGI. Intending students abound onmr st balm-h" d term. or u 000:: after .- pot-ibis] The school is equipped for full J untor Lend“ end Metricuhuon work. under the following on! of competent teecheu for tint damn THOS. ALLAN. let Clue Certificate. Pun. MISS L. M. FORFAR. Cluetce end not!“ MIS§_ A J O’HNSTON. B. A.. Methemtloe end Choice Bread . . and Confections TRY US HoGownn’s Fgmi 1y Owilvie’s Boyd DURHAM SCHOOL. Foes. 31.00 per month. In stock foods we but“. Anglo-Sumo and Incarnation“. Com march}. \Ve also have three othe} grtdO; Try us 1nd be convinced. The Celebrated “ Keewatin Five Roses.” the very best mude by The Lake of the Woods Milling Co. from No. 1 Manitoba Whest. Try our tees and be Convinced that we have the best on the A regulnr 35c ten selling 5 lbs for for 31.00. Buy at once while it lasts. .I. M. HUNTER BLOCK Constlntly on hund nod deliv- ered to all parts of town dsily. STAFF AND EQUIPMENT. Chairman PROPRIETOR. burrs]. "'9 Rom. $6.00 pop Household

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