West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 31 May 1906, p. 3

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leinz LUT No. '22 and part of?! in 2?; ncession of Normanby contain)“ 1 es in all. Good frame barn With 31:03. bles underneath. A good frame W n with cement floor and cement "0‘8!“ fairly comlortable house. good OM‘ cellent fruit, well watered from 39'“ ling springs which run tbs year M out a. hundred acres cleared. . 300d M l in first class state of cultivauon. T“ sale and other particulars m: b.” tained by applying on the pram“ - ‘ Iav l9th-‘2m. ‘ .ivingston’s Corner, ‘. May 14th.â€"â€"tf. ‘ 001‘ et in the bag. Good Farm for Sale. N'I‘AINING 100 ACRES. BEING traved from the premises 0! the Jdersigned about. the 1815 0‘ M‘y' two- year old heifer, part J9my' oetly red in color smell form: ny person giving information Lg to her recovery will be suitably"; rwarded. ‘22 3:1 will brick house. of nine ~15. 2:: Harafraxa St , upper town. runâ€"xi by furnace; electric lights. 5: :tlasa kitchen and furnace: Ears. Good woodsbed; hard 3nd : water. 33 acre ground with 1388’" hard ane‘l good barn. A190 8033’ >d pasture lots, well watered- r further particulars apply on mises t0 b( Nermanby Farm for Sale S S C ILVERTON. ONT. For Sale or to Rent. TH :or Sale or Rent. Farm for Sale. -0 , ($.12. 4. N. D. R, Glenda. :u'rps {'7Par9d, balance in good, 5min. Well watered, well faucet: ea have. bank barn an‘l implo- P. ‘Un'd hearing OTChard. ‘m :zc-rh plnughed, four acres in ‘. i’u~~o:~.~ir>n mav be had after Fur further particulars apply.» DUNALI) BEATON, Prop., tamâ€"96 POMONA P. 0. FOR SALE wk Lot For Sale. M Farm for Sale. Heifer Astray. MAY 31 A. G ORDON, Durham. For Sale. barrels made from -}i 8! IN THE S} CO\D CON' \‘9,f ? ’he (vararraxa Rog, Kai; t Nuzmdllb 21:7. :{mrticulaxm apply t0“ 1}. TELFORno LUiAFRAXA ROADâ€"- our mills are free. #10. L A W RENCE. and Lot For sale V‘- ; {â€"aged 14 mos. 4. :‘n ilding lot on Bruce St: .ue M Apply to W. LEGGE’I‘I‘E, 'vinq mare, in f0“. 1 harness. Must he meter is going west. ax'tiadars apply to WM. LEGGETTE LLâ€"BRED FROM as from Durham. God : cum-9.. U- ad land. Must (”Mars apply to B« >x 9:3, DURHAM. Eh‘ “HAM, NEW .."_\.I§L_’: 3.: storeys :1. H nwnt “001‘ in - ":: the “the!“ half; ~Iurlt‘ stable under- s-n C {/0 station, «y and Cream Will sell cheap to fhe .‘tht is going *hleroad 50,1} 1--~.i‘:e. farm in 4 ..iidings with 1..“ .f .2) the barn. Barrister, Durham. ER 13 XORT. thc Town (3f pur- z-ey, contain"? 4' v-z'ms and particu- Rocky Saugeen. . FORD, Durham 1.ij ”LAN. ’x'iceville P. 0. LFORD, it. hr. Durham. GROCERIES THE TWO HIGHEST GRA DES OF MANITOBA. FLOUR Farm and Garden Seeds. MATIHEWS LATIMER Undertaking. Satisfaction Guaranteed in Embalming. . . . . New.... Resolutions GROCERIES DURHAM. Feed. Flour \Ve have also replenished our stock of Hoseâ€"in all sizes from 4 to 10$ inches. In fine shoes for men, women and children. Shoes laced. buttoned and strapped, high and low, black and tan. Our numerous customers testify that our Boots and Shoes are nnexcelled in townâ€"for the price. B ring along your cash and you shall have special prices. Children’s Hose. black and tan. BOOTS and SHOES at 25¢ per pair Ladies’ Cashmere Hose at 25c pair, Men’s Cashmere Sux at 25¢ per pair- Boys’ Heavy Carton Hose. rock rib. strong as Gibraltar. made to fit and fit to wear. Misses‘ Cotton and Cashmere Hose STILL TU THE FHUNT THOUR MAY 31, 1906 BARCLAY BELL “'9 have opened up Under- taking in Thomas Swallow’s budding. opposxte Middaugh Hfiuse. and are prepared to do business for any person re- quiring Undertaking. BRING ALONG YOUR Butter and Eggs and see what we can do. Government Standard Timothy and Clover. Our stock of Far.- eral Supplies have arrived. also a full line of Catholic Robes. THEOBALDS OLD STA\ D. Every person makes more or less ‘° good resolutions ” at the beginning of a. new year. 'Let one of them be that you have resolved to buy your a well assorted stock on hand, and at the lowest possible prices. You will always find our Grocexies f resb and clean. From us. We always keep S. SCOTT HOSIERY. Cl sper barrel. Ugilvie’s Royal Household Keewatin Five Roses ONTARIO. Not long ago Mr. Russell Sage, the multi millionaire, cashed a cheque for four cents and as he did so it is said that he remarked: “It was juSt like finding money; just like picking it up from the sidewalk.” The cheque came in a letter. It was from a theatrical firm, calling his attention to their new play then run- ning at a theater. and enclosing this cheque to pay for the time‘nsed in reading the letter. This was the note (says the “Daily Mail”): "As- suming that your income is $15,000 a year. and that you appreciate the fact that time is money. we enclose cheque for four cents in payment of two minutes of your time at that rate, to be employed in carefully reading a brief and honest statement of the novel. applause-winning fea tures in our new musical farce." Such letters were sent to many wealthy New Yorkers. but it is said that Mr. Sage was the only one who cashed the cheque. Why the Usefullness of All Organs is Destroyed by Costiveness. By nature these organs are intended for the removal of the waste particles of matter which accumulate in the system. Habitual costiveness is best over- come by Dr. Hamilton’s Pills, which establish regularity than is exactly consistent with nature. Retain these wastes and you poison the blood. ruin digestion, bring on nervousness and anaemia. Most important to health and com- fort is prOper accion of the bowels. Not a. drastic pnrgativeâ€"not even a. pain or sensstion of gripe. because Dr. Hamilton’s Pills are vegetable and free from irritating mineral sub- stances fonnd in so many widely ado vertised remedies. In every éase Dr. Hamilton’s Pills do cure and bring sure relief from headache. biliousness and other manifestations of conscipation. J us: try the wonderful magic of Dr. Hamilton’s Pills. Sold by all dealers. 25¢. per box, or five boxes for $1.00. By mail from N. C. Poleon 00., Hutford, Conn., U. S. A... or Kingston. Ont. "My- appetite was good and strength kept up. yet I knew some- thing was wrong. “Frequently I took bilious attacks and violent headaches. My Stomach was disordered, skin was murky, un- der my eyes were heavy dark rings. '-La9t summer I read through the 'Polson’s almanac and decided my trouble was constipation. I used Dr. Hamilton’s Bills. and can hardly tell the help they have been. I am now as fresh. strong and well as a boy.” Jan. McConnell of Walkerton writes: "Since I was comparatively a you ug man I have no: enjoyed real good health. Sin Against Health. He Cashed the Cheque. The only nourishment that bread affords is that which the flour contains. Bread baking is merely putting flour in appetising form. Flour making is merely putting the nu- tritious part of wheat in shape for bread making. Good milling is the kind that takes from the wheat all that is nutritious, nothing else. Royal Household Flour is made from carefully selected Manitoba Hard spring wheat. It goes farther, does better baking and is more satisfactory in every way than any other flour. “Ogilvic’s Book for a Cook," contains 1 30 pages of excellent recipes, songe never before published. Your grocer can tell you how to get it FREE. Every pound is almost a pound of food; clean, White, pure and nutritious. Your grocer knows he cannot keep store so well without Ogilvie’s Royal Household. Ogilvie Flour Mills 00., umuea. MONTREAL. I have sat upon the bleachers, With the yelling. booting crowd; In the grandstand I have nestled, W'ith'the wealthy and the proud. I have been in many places. But the one that was immense Was when a boy I used to seek The knot-hole in the fence. ’Twas a knot hole I had whittled Big enough to fit my eye; I could see the pitcher working, And the fielders chase a fly. I could always see the runner, Though the crowd was bxg and dense; I could always tell the players Through the knot-hole in the fence. It was there I always hurried After school, and there I stayed; Nor thought of leaving. Till the final out was made. It was there you’d find me peering. With my features drawn and tense; For I often grew excited At that knot-hole in the fence, I have tried the difierent places. Back of third I thought was great; I’ve set just back of first, and now I sit behind the plate. But something there is lacking, I know not how or whence; For the games seem more exciting Through the knot hole in the fence. A cure may be afiected by applying Chamberlain’s Salve as soon as the child is done nursing. Wipe it off with a soft clath before allowing the child to nurse. Many trained nurses use this salve with the best results. Price :25 cents per box. Sold at Park- er’s Drug Store. \\'e were asked this week by a de- linquent subscriber why we kept on sending the paper after the subscrip- tion date had expired. Every weekly neWSpaper in towns of this size are forced to do this. Should we StOp subscriptions when time expires nine times out of ten the subscriber would give us a “ calling down” for insinu. ating that his credit was not good. Rather than cast a reflection against the honesty of a subscriber to pay a small debt, it is next to a necessity for a home paper to continue sending the paper after the time has eXpired. It is not necessary for the city dailies or weeklies to follow this rule, as their subscribers live at a distance and are not personal friends as is the case in a majority of our subscribers. Our subscribers should deem it an honor to know that we do not doubt their integrity and continue to send them the paper after their time has expired. Should any desire their pa- per discontinued they should notify us and remit to date if they have not already done so. WHY DO WE SEND IT? AT THE BALL GAME. Sore Nipples. DURHAM CHRONICLE How the Strong Perfume I: Obmned end It. Various Uses. AJthough pure musk is not usually relished by the delicate olfactories of persons with cultivated sensibilities, there is no odor so extensively used in the compounding of perfumes. It is obtained from the musk deer, which inhabits the mountain ranges of Tibet. This animal is smaller than the deer of this country, being about the size of a calf. It is of a dark gray color and has no horns. The odor for which it is valuable is a fluid secretion in a sac on the underside of its body. This is exposed to the air and when dry is sent to the market. When first obtained it is about the consistency of honey and has a bitter, pungent taste. It is used as a medicine, but has more value as a perfume. On account of the persistency with which musk retains its odor it is u‘sed as the groundwork for other perfumes which are more volatile. It is said that a single grain of musk will perfume a room for twenty years. So strong is it that it has been esti- mated that 3,000 parts of a substance in itself devoid of odor will become permeated “'ith\ the scent with one part of musk. It is in consequence very valuable, and as it is diflicult to procure on account of the almost inac- cessible haunts of the musk deer it is quite expensive. Chemists have long endeavored to procure an artificial musk, but they have not as yet been successful. It Had Its Origin In Venice In the Sixteenth Century. About the year 1540 an unknown Venetian lady first conceived the happy idea of carrying 'a “fazzoletto,” and it was not long before her example was widely followed throughout Italy. The handkerchief then crossed the Alps into France, where its use was immediately adopted by the lords and ladies of Henry II.’s court. The handkerchief of that period was an article of the greatest luxury. It was made of the most costly fabrics and was ornamented with the rarest embroideries. In the reign of Henry III. it began to be perfumed and re- ceived the name of “mouchoir de Ve- nus.” It was not until 1580 that the handkerchief made its way into Ger- many, and then its use was long con- fined to princes and persons of great wealth. It was made the object of sumptuary laws, and an edict publish- ed at Dresden in 1595 forbade its use by the people at large. Slowly, but surely, however, the vul- garization of the pocket handkerchief has been accomplished, and today even the humblest is superior in one im- portant respect to Petrarch and Laura, Dante and Beatrice, who, it is some- What painful to think, lived in a pre- handkerchief ageâ€"London Standard. Some North German Superstitions. If you are superstitious there are many things you must not do. In north Germany you must not spin during the twelve nights of Christmas, lest you should walk after your death, nor aft- er sunset on Saturday, for then mice will eat your work. Speaking of eat. ing, it you want to have money and luck all the year round you must not fail to eat herrings on New Year’s day, nor, if you wish to be lucky, must you rock an empty cradle, or spill salt wantonly, or cross knives, or point at the stars. It you leave a dirty cloth on the table overnight you will make the angels weep; it you point upward to the rainbow you will make the angels’ feet bleed, and it you talk of cabbages while looking at the moon you will hurt the feelings of the man in it, who was a cabbage stealer in his salad days. Leprosy. From reliable statistics we draw the conclusions that leprosy is generally contracted between the ages of fifteen and twenty-five or that in a very large number of patients the disease shows itself at about eighteen; that it develops very slowly, so that the patient does not require much medical aid before the disease has run four years; that the majority of lepers die within five years of their admission to the hospital, and that the average length of life of a pa- tient after he has developed leprosy is nine years.â€"Pearson’s Weekly. Odd Marriage Belief. An unmarried man or woman or marriageahle age is something that is rarely seen in the Fiji islands. The reason or this is not far to seek. The natives believe that if a person dies while in an unmarried state his or her soul is doomed to wander about through endless ages of eternity in an intermediate region between heaven and hades. At the end of each moon they are allowed to look into heaven, but are never permitted to enter. Sensible Advice. A. writer who had made a good bit of money at a single shake of. the bag went to Charles Reade for advice as to investments. “‘Well,” said Reade, “I should say put it in the best gilt edged securities. Divide it among the first class bonds of the first class nations. It’s better to sleep on 3 per cent than to lie awake on 6.” Be Cheerful. Let your aim be to keep cheerful al- ways. You may fall short of the “al- ways,” but you will acheve more by taking this highest standard than by trying to be cheerful merely “most of the time.” Learn to make an atmos- phere of joy for yourself not only to: your own sake, but for the good of. the people you meet. Pity 13 best taught by fellowship In FACTS ABOUT M U SK. TH E HAN DKERCHIEF. e y‘s‘m mcw‘o The undersigned having been restored to health by simple means, after sufierin g for several years with a severe lung affection, and that dread disease Consumption. is anxious to make known to his fellow sufierers the means of cure. To those who desire it, he will cheerfully send, free of charge. a copy of the prescription peed, which they will find a sure cure for Consumption. Asthma, Chatarrh, Bronchitis and all throatand lung Haladies. He hopes all sufferers will try his remedy. as it is invaluable. Those desiring the prescription, which will cost them nothing and may prove a blessing. will please address Rev. EDWARD A. WlLSON.Brook1rn .New York 2 yards long, 2.1; yards long, 2% yards long, 3 yards long. 3%; yards long, 3?; yards long, 3::- yards long. The Big 4 54 inches wide. 25c gyargi. OILCLOTH. Table Oilcloth 45inches wide 25c yardc Floor Oilcloth 1. 1.1: and 2 yards u 1de a square 3 ard. SHEETING. Heavy Twilled Cotton Sheeting, 72-inches wide, 250 a yard. Large 11-4 size Fleunele‘tte Blankets, grey and whue, 81.20 a pair. NEW PRINTS and GINGHAMS now in. DISHES. 1. American Press-Cut Glass Preserve Dishes, something fine, 25c and 35c each. Crystal and Gold Imitation Cut Glass, 4 piece Table Sets, $1.75 each. Double Glass Egg Cups, 75¢ a dozen. China Egg Cups, 30c dozen. Best Nest Eggs, 2 for Be. Comfortable Dwelling Houseâ€"hard and soft water, heated by steam. Electric Lights. Apply to May 14 â€"tf. Tlfiread Bifim While we make a Specialty of bread. we also bake many other nice things such as Cakes. Doughnuts, Cookies, Buns. Pies. etc.. etc. Alwavs fresh. We Satisfy . . . Our Customers Model Bakery. W. H. BEAN Our classes are much larger than they were a year ago. The public have learned that this is the best place in the Province to obtain a Commer- cial Education or Shorthand Training. Students are enter- ing each week. All graduates get good positions. \Vrite now for catalogue. CALDER BLOCK HE SELLS CHEAP T0 CONSUMPTIVES. Elliott Mclachlan G. H. STINSON Call and See Us. STRATFORD, ONT. Is one OUR customers are always glad to pay. So well that. they like to spend their money here. LACE CURTAIN . 27-inches wide. : ', 27-mches wxde, 1' 30-mches Wlde, '. 37-mches vnde, :, 37-mches wule, I, Y O , 50-inches wxde. . 54 Inches wnde TABLE LINE \. r v .. 9 I! '5 TO RENT. I’RINCIPALS. 08tinches wide, 50c yard. N. MCINTY RE. Durham, Ont. a a a a mwmmw. 11 pair. pair . pair. pair . pair. pair. pair. Ogilvie’s Royal Household Flour Other High Grade Flour, per bbl., $4.75 and $5.00. DURHAM BAKERY PUFF PASTES, LADY FINGERS, MACCAROONS, CREAM PUFFS, AND MINCE PIES Confections and Canned Goods Always in Stock. The scho‘ol is thorouhly equipned in teach' ability, in chemical and clear-ml suppliee 3):: fittings, etc., for fulx Junior Leaving and Matric- ulation work. The £0110 wing competent stat are in charge : A. W. WATSON MISS FLOSSIE MCKERRACHER. FirstClsol Ceruifica'e and third year undergraduate o! Queesn’a University, Science, History and Gao- granhy. MISS L. M. FORFAR. Classics, Modem all English. Intending students should enter at the begin- ning of the term if possxble. Board can be ob- mlnedat. reasonable rates. Durham is a healthg and activefiown. making it a must desk-ab place of resxdence. WM. JOHNSTON. Chairman . Deering Harvester Co.'s Farm Implements Machinery. MANURE SPREADERS HAY LOADERS ‘ ~ BIN DERS MO WERS RAKES SEED DRILLS DISC HARRO WS WAGGON S ‘ GASOLINE ENGINES. ALSO A COMPLETE STOCK OF AND PROVISION STORE The People’s Grocery All Kinds of Field and" Garden Seeds. Democrats and Buggies (Rubber and Steel Tires.) McClary Stoves and Ranges. Raymond Sewing Machines. Bell Pianos and Organs. No. 1 Fancy Red Clover. N o. 1 Common Red Clover. No. 1 Mammoth Red Clover. No. 1 Alsike Clover. N o. 1 Alfalfa Clover. No. 1 Timothy Seed. Local Timothy Seed. MIS. Alex. Beggs 8: Sons. - Implement Agent and Auctioneer. GARAFRAXA STREET, DURHAM Glover and Timothy Seeds Implements High Class Wedding Goods A SPECIALTY . DURHAM SCHOOL. THOS. ALLAN, lst Class Certificate. Monuments and Tombstones O‘VEN SOUND. AGENT for DOYLE 85 JULIAN Ask us how to get an Ogilvie to order on shortest notice. $5.25 Per Barrel. $5. 25 Per Barrel. Give us a call. Prices right. For Government Standard STAFF AND EQUIPMENT. John Clark Fives Roses Flour A FULL LINE OF THE Fees. $1.00 per month. Cook Book Free Berlin Pianos. .., C. RAMAGE,

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