West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 6 Sep 1906, p. 1

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IATCH trade bus so much this hat nonths we no on- meet w.:h the do- f the public. .58 up to $18. bite without. rther rings in he jeweller- and MARK .' 915 131 value 5‘ is Week at you seem to be I on auction-sac #‘ going, 20ing, pp the auction Hair Vigor. It :ks falling hair; out this. It acts ledicine; make: lthy. Then you Balthy hair, for vay. 1 a testimonialâ€" Ir sixty yous.” CS STER SARSAPAIIUJ. PILLS. CHERRY mom. Rubies of EVE until )efore your and 01188 Y 011 1b0} 80¢ Olll' 188 for .ree last NuTlt'E H. il. Miller‘s change of ad. this issue. Good properties for sale c-‘U‘ Durham. mornm nmtrimnuiszl e-wmt in which he is m be mu- uf the prim i323! p92. .02 men-3 t : day. Yew. Aw Mi... )3 Ln he. henceforth. an uh! hurried man. the lady nf his choice heir“: Miss Caroline Smith. Elativenf Mr. Search, of this town. Awhic- had been a. number of years in this nffice and we fvel that we ran heartily consummate him on the mutrimnnial t-VPHt be mu- nf the prim day. Yes; An'hiei an old Married In: choice heimz Miss RIativo 01’ My- Rm chanzml cunditiuns of his life. and, wish him every en jnymentand a. happy i and prosperous future. He will Iikely; be back next week. bk SALE. organ. Ap essan.â€"3 pd. m Public and Model School re- wd on Tuesday morning. 1 PS? ‘iESSMAKING by the day or by the 9. Apply to Miss Nevins, Elgin er. Durham.â€"2pd. m DALEâ€"TWO good bicycles, one Is and one lady’s. Good condition N) for both. Apply to Peel at the - Store.â€"tf. mu)! Fair. the 19th and 20th. VOL. 39â€"N0. 2060. \V BROWN. Eye. Ear, Nose and . will be at the Knapp House, n. Sept. 8th. Hours 10 a. m. to Eves tested and glasses sup- 11 )I ; invaded by lnnuey seekers- cilia? letter :tccnnipdhying the s to stockholders intimated the but another similar dividend be paid before the close of the The will. we understand. is g in first class condition and utputs are being made and dis- »f every week. It. isn’t neces- Speak of the quality of the pro- . the National Cement has been 'mm the very first and has its in as the best in the market. this week, outposnm 'ge 12x14 photograph given 11 one dozen cabinets is well lollar and a. half. F. “’2 Kel- ugr:.1pher.â€"-July 12th. tf. “day 1.0 d '2'. Archie week we apologised for the 3 errors in our paper owing to work and want of time. “'9 imagine things will he much nis week. and for any defects Ire “PHYS? ( w lines 9 may be 0! unusement . LOSTâ€"Gold Crescent. Pin with spray of Pear Co. Finder will be rewarded â€"A good second hand by leaving it at this office. Apply to “'m. J ackson. ! yees of the Cement 00. ml picnic on Labor Day n joyable time was spent nmsemeut. music and L" A M 1 tbn} M nnday.an OI urm Ill Me Dnugail went 1‘ Iptls still, I} \' ixmg u w ton is away will conduct t Church on causes 3!} i, as nm' prin- up and type He imagines his absence rm as we pen \Vednvsday. )1 lie .1 Bank xh m, out The Chronicle for Balance of Year for Twenty=five Cents. '13!) )l HIP )Pl' MARRIAGE Licenses Issued as usual by A. Davidson, Up-town at Division Court oflice.â€"4. BILL VOLLET, the Town Clerk, says it's a dirty mean trick for Archie Mc- Dougall to get married down east and do him out of twenty cents registrar tion fees. THE Durham Junior League will meet in the Methodist church on Mon- day Sept. 10th. at 4:15 p. :11. Every member wanted. Preparations for Rally Day to be begun at once. .1. L. Flarity. Supt... Annie Aljoe. Sect. FIRST class Organ for sale at a bar- gain. Apply to Mrs. A. Ngill, Glen- reader). DON’T forget the Durham Fair on the 19th and 20th. To REXT.â€"G00d large house in Dur- ham, good garden, fruit trees. stable and pasture for one cow. Apply to “’11). Wall. Park St. “(31131575 Second Coming” will he the subject of the sermon in the Metb- odist church on Sabbath evening next. Mr. Colling goes to the General Con- ference of the Methodist church which opens at Montreal on \Vednesday next. LABOR DAY was observed here by the closing of stores and business gen- erally. A number went to the Exhi« bition, some went to the Cement Company’s picnic. members of the Rifle. Association went shooting off the official score, but the CHRONICLE had from his arm to graft on his daughters heaui. Several patients in the hospital willingly allowed the doctors to take skin from their arms as well for that purpose. She came out of the mues- thctir some time later and has rested as Well as could be expected during the day. Doctors have some hope that the skin may graft on her head, and that she will recover. Over a year ago Miss Olive Clegg, this city, met with a similar accident, and, though the efforts of doctors to graft skin on her head have been unsuccessful,she is otherwise in fair health. Till-J grading on the C. P. R. is pro- gressiug favorably west of the town. but the limits of the town have not yet been entered. and some of the citi- zens are alarmed over the probable expropriation of their property. The line will run through or near George Street from the western limit of the town to Garafraxa Street. \Ve think the desire of the Company is to avoid taking the street if possible, but unless ahere he a hold-up for prices of proper- ;y on either side the street will have 'u be taken. This would be disastrous in residents on both sides who could ul-iim little compensation for the dam- Agnes incurred, and as the Company m't‘tus desirous to purchase outright th» properties along one side or the other at a fair value it would be a. last- lug benefit to the town if the proper. ties on one side could be secured and thus leave the street unimpaired. \Ve know it is a hardship for people to be forced out of their houses and 'have their homes demolished, but the bene- fit. would be permanent to the town. This however. must be settled between the property holders and the Company and we.h0pe everything will be done for the best. ll \\' 01" K 1 n ' the ht. t1 \I U! Ill with a terril [Bl ban we Rama 5 “'1 0 Sun have arge ’ was there the torn drowned. and OIL Mrs. Morten of Gorrie spent over Sunday with Mrs. E. Langdon. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Douglass, are spendinga. few days at the Toronto Fair. Mr. Chas Porter of Buffalo arrived in town Tuesday night for a. short visit with his mother, here. Mr. “I Calder left \Vednesday morning to spend a few weeks in the W’est, on business. Miss Ethel Johnston is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Melville Storrey. Miss Amy Kelly left Monday morn“ ing to take a course at the Conserva- tory of Music in Toronto. Miss Maggie Mitchell, returned home last week after spending her holidays with friends in Hamilton. Mr. and Mrs. Siegner, of Tavistock, were in town over Sunday, guests of the former-’3 cousin Mr. F. Siegner. Mayor Hunter. went to Mantra Tuesday to interview the C. P. officials regarding the construction 3 Railroad from here to Southampt: The Southzunpton people are interns in the road and have represuntati at Montreal to state their claims. Mrs. Banks and daughter, of North Bay, left for home \V’ednesday morn- ing after visiting the farmer’s mother, Mrs. Porter for a week or two. \\'e are sorry to hear that Mr. M. N. Clark, the popular Principal of the Meaford Model School. is confined to his bed thrmxgh illness. “'8 hope he may have a speedy recn very.--I\Iirrnr. Mr. Charter Smith went to Toronto yesterday afternoon. and will have. his eyes open for a day or so :unongsb the machinery at the Exhibition. Svdenhuux ed is 115:1 Svd ltwas an ideal Spot. for sport some, twenty ortwenty-five years ago and many an enjoyable hour could he spent in struggling with the pike and black bass by lovers of the piscatO'ial art. Principal Allan would be in his glory down there. but instead of a "split bamboo" he would have to sub- stitute a trolling outfit. “’e have not learned what Miss McKerrach er in tends to do in the matter. Think of Dr. ShOop’s Catarrh Cure if your nose and throat dischargesâ€" if your breath is foul or feverish. This snow white scathing balm con tains ml of eucalyptus. thymol. men- thol, etc . incorporated into an imported. creamlike. velvety pe'rola- tum. It soothes. heals. purifies, controls. Call at our ‘store for free trial box. Macfarlune 8: Co. School.... Largest stock of Schoo! Supplies in Durham to choose from. The Busy Store on the Busy Corner. RB. Keeler 8’ Sons une daV Re=opening 100 D811 1t um were tht nuns Buy your School Books and School Supplies at KEELER’S and save money. Our stock of High School Books 13 now complete. and in Public School Books we have everything that is repaired The most for the least. money at KEELER’S. Come with the crowd as there is sure to be u great. rush here for these goods. hool the: Ill} ut DURHAM, 0NT., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6,1906. lll‘St mm tht UPS I“: PERSONAL. with ideals OI 0â€"4 ... .â€"Q ~â€"-. the: h several tkos in the mgus hallo tempt; )H tl' )an l“ 01th b er resumed Tuesday and ingston, ofl'm-iz ) to teach in t] As the sum 01ft I. the Board pd: Uld ltiOD to vicinitv )OXBS :mng m with hi 1m“ fish beau 1H) "N 11m l V it )Ill H, m H lt You shouldn’t lose sight of the' South Grey Fair. It will be pulled ofi in Durham on the 19th and 20th, and everything up to the present time points to it being a great success. The Directors have gone to considerable expense to get the grounds in betterl shape, and the main building has been thoroughly renovated, remodeled and modernized for the comfort and con- venience of Exhibitors. Entries are pouring in already and the total list of exhibits is likely to be a large one, and in all probability the fair of 19063 will surpass all its predecessors. Ex-: cellent talent has been secured for the concert in the evening. Eddie Piggott, Comic Vocalist, Mabel Manley Pick- ard, Soprano, Miss Eva Cuthburt, Cos- tume Character Vocalist and Dancer, and Master Harold Rich, Boy Contral- to and Pianist, have been secured already. They expect to close shortly with further talent for the concert, but they are already provided with a 'good array even should they get no further assistance. The. judging is to ,l)e done by gox'ernment experts. un- , known to exhibitors, and the judging i will be strictly in accordance with the merits of the article with no reason for any charge of partiality. The track events will be in accordaiwe with Government regulations, and speed alone is not the. only gaound on which a prize will be awarded. Remember i the date, Sept. 10th and 20th. How to enjoy a holiday is a question easier to propound than to answer. Notices meet you in plenty of books to read. lands to see and fresh air to breathe, but after a few of them have been tried you (lecide for the most part to keep your money deeming it better to “ hear the ills you have than fly to those you know not of.’ M 3' first move was to South \Vestern Ontario. where as in former years, my visit was as an offering: laid upon the ancestral shrine. The pilgrimage this vmn- was esneciallv fruitful in reviving Vt’i-U and voice as clear as that wmcn was our admiration in the days gone by. Yul”. in spite of its youthfuiness of spirit there are two marks. that like wrinkles on a thoughtful face, tell of the struggles of the passing years. Four ornamental pictures of a church and steeple, placed to fill in the corner between the Circle of the dial plate and the frame surrounding i as an ascrib- ed square, are actually set so that the steeple of one of them points in a dif- ferent direction from that of the oth- ers. This one slip tells that the clock was made before the days when ma- chine work with its regularity was everywhere the rule. “Oh for the change twist now and then.” The other mark of age is on its brow, where on a graceful arch above the dial plate the picture of " Highland Laddie” and his dog is recognized by the royal in- signia as “ Bonny Prince Charlie,” and you are by that recognition wafted to the time when he was looked to as the star of the north, when though bereft of royalty songs were sung in his honor, glasses passed over the water in memory of the prince across the seas and his picture was laid away among the honorable gods. Yet heed- less of the marks of age the old clock ticks out the seconds, with their story of births, marriages and deaths, with an air as light as if it had begun its task but yesterday. h .itmxiu of iecluiming it, as a, family lie. and there with the woodwork uched up after the former design it, 110d smiling, with facens youthful 111 voice as clear as that which was 11-:Ldmimtion in the (luvs zone '03-'- H )cks or ll .. .. . ._ r. 1:? 7:2. 7%.: 2 "2.52.4 ..L....:.£:.m“ fig : . u [HE \Vil Continued on Page 4. ,8 especially mories of THE FALL FAIR. u w ht II'( ;- than the ulde hold can recall when my Unldsmne A HOLIDAY. flu 856 gave '0 en- uher Ill L5 :1 fmxmy w (n MI W 0 1'1; ~x' design it, s youthful which was s gone in . lfuiness (f) .=. that like me, Lell 0t sing: years. )t' a church the corner 11 plate and 5 am ilSCIib- A‘ LL‘_..| .â€" mommsm '4'~ 006886)“ F1: 1‘} XE Forty ft the sold at her of death i Hats, Caps, § Furnishings i s .2 § Du LLer anu Eggs. J. J. HUNTER THE BUSY 8TORE ON THE BURY BURNER Light and dark shades Highest price in cash or trade will be given for Butter and Eggs. New st vies in We have always What is new and fashionable and our prices are right ..... Satisfaction is stamped on faces of those who buy from us. THE BUSY STORE ON THE BUSY CORNER. STYLISH PH Qz‘fi HE EDS/$125. $1.00 PER YEAR. 1200 yards in good styles 6: colors. Reg. price we, 12§c to clear at Stylish Prints I

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