Dying adulterants b When he beheld the little pst playing about in the '31: once asked pennission Is a. subject, in order to kn! demonstration of the a given. and resnited m Fm: photograph. the ï¬n! , the country, e suit in which he was ï¬ned his sister at Cabin- $.16 was to speak at 3 n his arrival the cm es: to shake hands with roke the windows of tha Ernst their hands through a. circumstance that ‘Lr-ongly as a sign at av“ t the servant had seen all-case early that mornâ€" fused to stay in the house. his baggage to his other is an inveterate gossip. perfect genius for smell- mother occasion, when he as a. guest by the arbor. (I thought she had seen air at a. moment when. as proved. he had not 70‘ km to patent his discov- ! his invention very eo- rt Photograph. :nmta flï¬."â€"Wireleu from thef INNOCENT LIFE. For News. love-like, accurate, (otherwi tOgl‘am: taken. M. ventor of the art. perstitions. in families.†thing of a storm t person in ppears that, like ten, Parnell was s\t the time £01- ubsequent to the ry was a footman ng and had been Lcting from the 1 coins and sub- Jght an action .» defendant call- prove what had suspect. was then 1833 effects were to his custom- 89 St:- John =. a. seal-en- treet, and hit-A nd sentenced w hole appar- g a. deal with not only de- ared that 1% was reveals n drew near. of the late art Parnell. the French- .o'mers with a.t her hus ' of coi 11 their in- aratus 1t- founl :atea. 3138‘ "v _ ans . . . line each subsequent inseriiénâ€" ' ' W Masionalgdsnot exceeding 00:32“ pagnmxn. . vemsements without speczï¬.‘ ~, wens '11le pgblnhed till forbid and charged ac- ' 1y Tmnsxent noticesâ€"“Lost." “ Found ' up“ 'e,†(sqâ€"59 cent; f0: ï¬rst insertion, 25 cenis h each subsequent msernon. An advertisements ordered by strangers must be paid kin advance. _ Court?“ at? {qrgffrly an mm furnished 0,, L. R. C. P., LONDON. ENG. NRADULATE of London, New U short distance east of Knapp’s Hotel, Lamb ton Street, Lower Town. Durban: Oï¬ce hours from 12 to 2 o’clock. Specialist: Eye, Ear, Throat and Nose EXCLUSIVELY THE JOB : ’ I: completely stocked with DEPARTHENT a; new TYPE, thus a. fading facilities for turning out First-clan HYSICIAN AND SURGEON, OF- ï¬ce in the New Hunter Block. Oï¬ce hours, 8 to 10 a. m., to 4 p. m. and 7 1.09 p. m. Special attention given to diseases of women and children. Residence op- posite Presbvterian Church. at tSe option of the ptoptieto} wuâ€"vâ€"v- uplicazion to thg oï¬ce. . . . a All advemsaneats, to ensure mutton m cut-rem 'eek, should be btough: in not later than Tommv Lste Assistant Roy. London Ophthalmic Hoe. 8112;, and to Golden Sq. Throat and N050 Hon. Will be at the Midisngh House lat Wednesday of each month. from 12 to 4 p. m. In: Cmtomcu. will be tent to my .ddress, free of postage, {at $1.00 per “IE8 . . , , papayable m advanceâ€"$9.50 may u nag so pmd. The date to winch every mm b aid is denqted lay the numbeton the w III-bd- o aper .dxchntmued untfl 311m _ “a pm: a: t. e opuon of the propriezox. For transient advertisement: 8 cents mum†line {or the ï¬rst menion; 3 cent; 5:: Garafraxa and George Streets-at foot of hill. Oflice hoursâ€"941 a. 111.. 2-4 9.211.. 7-9 p.m. Telephone No.10. THE â€WI'IWWm 3 PUBLMD m" Tunasom vacuum OHS KINNEE, LICENSED AUC- tioneer for the County of Grey. June 06 DURHAM. ONT. Drs. Jamieson 8:. Maclaurin. \FFICE AND RESIDENCE A U tioneer for the County of Grey. Sales Drongpfly attended to. Orders ma. .be left at 1113 Implement Warerooms. M 011’s 01d stand. or at the Chronicle Oï¬ice. l. G. Hutton, M. D., C. M. FFICE AND RESIDENCEâ€"COR. Nov. 9, Diseases of Eye, Ear Nose and Throat. OBN CLARK. LICENSED AUG York and Chicago. NOVEMBER 15, 1906 EDITOR AND Pnorm'ron. Medical Directory. Arthur Bun, M. D. at Knapp House, Durham. the 2nd r in each month. Hoursâ€"lâ€"G p.m. DR- GED. S. BURT. RHAM, ONT. (Lower Towno) Dental Directorv DR. BROWN Money 11’ PUBLIC STERS. SOLICITOR A. H. Jackson. Miscellaneous. {AD Kay 'OI'O IBLIC, COMMISSION- McIntyre Block. genera 9r, Etc. 11 lgoaru Issuer Branche ira' UNIVERSI- ï¬nancxaz W. F. DUNN Hunter’s. Insurance R0 IBALL mn STORIES A Bucket of hint Helped the Orioles to Capture the National League Pennant-mu Importance o! 3 “Col- or Scheme†In Batting. One of the oddest things that ever happened on a ball ï¬eld took place on the west side grounds, in Chicago, in a game against New York. Anson’s men 'were playing the Giants, and the vic- tory hung in the balance until in the ninth inning, with the score even, Bill Lange faced J ouet Meekin and rampsed a certain double to center. There were two out, and the crowd rose with a yell of delight when Lange smote the ball. which rolled past Van Haltren. .00<0_IO Z. m2<q ( 203 mOZO .52.: Pzwnuâ€"OZ. 000 That ball rolled on and ï¬nally disap- peared. Van Haltren was on top of it, but instead of picking it up he sudden- 1y threw himself flat on the ground, rammed his right am into the earth and commenced reaching. Lange meantime kept on. He turned second, raced on to third, gave a look outward and then sprinted for home. scoring the winning run. The ball had rolled lntoa hole In the ground from which a post had been pulled that morning. â€and Van Haltten had been able only to reach it with the tips of his ï¬ngers. The next day the hole was ï¬lled in. The facts are these: The Orioles were not hitting. They could not ï¬nd out why until one day Willie Keeler remarked that the ball when pitched from the pitcher’s box was the same color as the center ï¬eld fence and that the ball was lost to them against the dark background. The players set themselves down to ï¬gure it out. and in the end they ï¬gured that the reason they were not hitting was because there was a lack of relief in the color scheme of the grounds. The bat boy was sent in a hurry for a pot of white paint and a patch of the fence in cen- ter ï¬eld exactly on a line with the pitcher’s box, and the plate was daub- ed white. The paint made a difference of nearly forty points per man in their batting averages that season, and they won the pennant. Upon what small things the results of baseball depend can be guessed when it is known that a forty-ï¬ve cent bucket of paint won the National league pennant for Baltimore two years in succession. The men who composed the three times champion Orioles all admit the fact that the bucket of palnt had more to do with their pennant win- ning than anything else. After that the space in center on most of the big league ball grounds was kept clear or painted in some color that would assist the team in its hitting. The color scheme in baseball is more important than the casual observer would suppose. For instance, the Polo grounds are one of the hardest grounds in the world for an outï¬elder. Back of the grand stand rises a huge bluffâ€" “Coogan’s bluff†-and the stand is built partly on the side of the hill. Naturally the shadow of the stand and the bluff lies heavy over the ï¬eld as far out as second base in the late after- noon, and the outï¬elders have great dimculty in seeing the ball until it rises out of the shadow and above the sky line. The players learn to judge balls by the way they sound against the bat, but visiting players at the Polo grounds have a hard time judging line drives. For years the New York players have had the advantage because of the color scheme of their grounds. In center ï¬eld is a panel of color to relieve the hatter’s eye and show the ball in re- lief against it. while to mitigate the scheme of the ï¬eld is a panel hnfl'orâ€™ï¬ 0V9 nn BOOK-KEEPING SHORTHAND TYPE\VRITING COMMERCIAL LA‘V COMMERCIAL CORRESPOND- ENCE PLAIN BUSINESS “’RITING ORNAMENTAL \VRITING Each student is taught separately at his own desk. Trial lessons for one week free. Visitors welcome. week free. Visitors welcome. Now, it would be dogmatic to say ' that Indium will not generate life in W. T. CLAN CY, Prin. 1 Organic matter. but clearly Mr. Burke ; ï¬ves as little or no reason to suspect 123' DAY and EVENING classes. {that it does so at present. Business Coliege and in placing all its graduates. EADS 1N baseball because .ke of an ofï¬cial oft]; National league to him, had a scheme which worked well and which he claim- ed aided him in batting. He simply sat and held his ï¬ngers tight against his eyes for several minutes before go- ing to bat. Shutting out all light, he claimed, rested his eyes after pitching a hard inning, and he went in to bat with eyes fresh and steady. And 'how he did hit them! How he did hit them! Pietro Gladiator Browning tried ev- ery treatment possible for his eyes to keep them clear. Smoking a cigarette on the bench was one of his ideas, and he carried an eye wash with him which he poured into his eyes just before go- ing to bat. Most of the schemes of players to keep their “eyes in,†as they say, are ridiculous, but there is no reason Why a lot of players should not follow lit- erally the advice of the bleacherites and “see an oculist.†Any good ocu- list can devise a color scheme that will help the battenâ€"Hugh S. Fullerton The Experiments That Have Been Mode and What They Show. Does it appear that any one has pre- pared from sterilized bouillon by the action of radium or in any other way living organisms capable of multiply- ing either by repeated subdivision or by means of spores or capable of pro- ducing deï¬nite fermentive changes such as those which we associate with so many of the organisms hitherto in- vestigated? The answer jumps straight to the lips. No such discovery has been recorded nor has anything been ob- served which would justify us in supâ€" posing that we are on the verge of making such a discovery at the present moment. The fact is that. though much has Knew How. Friend (making a camâ€"You are not looking very robust. Do you enjoy good health? Mrs. Stayatt-Holme (with a sigh)â€"Indeed I do! But I hardly ever have a chance to. gested by the marvelous qualities of radium have been made, and that is all. Those experiments and their re- sults, which are not at all revolution- ary, may be described in half a dozen sentences. Mr. Burke ï¬nds that when small quantities of radium bromide or chloride are scattered on the surface 6f carefully sterilized bouillon well pro- meted from the air in closed vessels minute objects appear in the bouillon after one or two days. These objects have been watched, and Mr. Burke reports that after their ï¬rst appearance they develop into two dots, next present the appearance of dots, next present the appearance of dumbbells and subsequently of his- cuits, afterward take on forms which remind an observer of frog’s spawn and ï¬nally divide. lose their individual- ity and become transformed into ml- nnte crystals. These bodies. which Mr. Burke very prematurely describes as “cultures,†do not multiply, as living organisms should do, when they are transferred to fresh tubes of sterilized bouillon, though. as might be expected. they give some slight evidence that the ac- tivity of the radium salt is not quite exhausted by its ï¬rst action, and they are soluble in water. written and among ot a big book. very little a‘ccomplished up to t1] sv preliminary experin l by the marvelous q RADIUM AND LIFE. DURHAM CHRONICLE I) much has other things 'esent 11y My! You are a gbaStly hue, 'S metimes red and sometimes blue, ' Is this the best, come tell me true, i Private Ownership cm do? { Book-keepers can’t read or write, ‘Factory work is tied up tight, ' Merchants blue and †in the woods,’ Customers can ’t. see their goods. {Twinkle tinkle little bill, {Yes. ah, yes. I know 3011 will ‘ Be as large as e’er of old, For the Comp’ny needs the gold. Twinkle. twinkle nervous light. You have had some dreadful fright; Tell me, dear, what caused the shock, Was it water in the stock ? Twinkle. dim electric light. You are almoec “out of sight,†Lika a feeble dying spark, Like a ï¬refly in the dark. Twinkle. twinkle. bit or miss, Tell me how you came to this; Did the Comp’ny orders take For more light than it could make? Some Good Advice to Readers of the Chr‘onicle. A weak stomach and its resulting ills are not natural. \Vith proper Care and the use of Mi-o-na stomach ablexs, the very Worst case of indi- g-sti .u or stomach trouble can be lnpiPlely cured. 1: is a sin to deprive oneself of en- jOYmPnt in life and become a burden to others through indigestion. The backaches. headaches. distress after eating. loss of appeti'e. gulping up of undigested food and gases are not natural. Mi 0 na stomach tablets used for a few days before meals will so Strengthen the digestive organs ihat you can eat anything you want \xltllout fear of distress or resulting Sickness. The directions for taking Mic na unphasize the diï¬erence between this eiedy and the ordinary medicine t rat is given for ind: gestiou. Mi 0- u L is to be used before meals. strengthening the digestive system fur the food which is to be eaten, while the ordinary remedy is taken after meals, and simply digests the iced without strengthening the Stomach We absolutely agree that. your. money will be refunded should you My :1 50ocent box of Mi-o na. stomach tabiets and not be satisï¬ed with the results. Mic na is sold by druggists everywhere. or will be sent by mail on receipt of price, 50 cents CCORDING TO THE LAST WILL and testament of Samuel Kidd, de- ceased. there wxll be sold by public augtion on Thuysdax. Deceqnber 27th, gt 2 o’cxoql‘I: Write to day for a free sample package. and also give us your symp- toms, and one of the best known stomach specialists will give case his careful and personal attention with out. charge. The R. T. Boath Com- pany. Buffalo. N. Y. v-- -uuo uugoa‘ Vvv_â€"v- â€"----, w- P. m.. lot 33. con. 3. Egremont, one mile north of Holstein. containing one hundred apres of land well watered by the Sangeen river. Medium sized new frame house and barn. The cleared land is all under grass, medow and pasture. The sale Will be held on the premises. possession given the ï¬rst of March as it is now leased. Terms: cash. JOHN CLARK, MRS. S. 0391mm), Auctioneer. Executrix, Durham- Nov 7;8t'.‘ Do Not Be A Bmden. Our Beautiful Electric Light. Executrix’s Sale. 15 Cents The ladies may be good cooks, but there are others. ' GAR FRAX. ST. VE‘T Geo. H. Stunson Emmi ONT‘. 5 keeps the best Blead, Cakes, Pies, (Junkies, Doughnuts, Get Your Feet Butter and Eggs Wanted We carry the greatest assortment 0f 1' kinds in the Town. Ail Sizes and Pri Ladies’ Jackets THE MODEL BAKERY Only the best of material used and cleanliness carefully attended to. FOR THE SLUSHY WE ATHF R THAT [S SURE TO VISIT I We are Ready. for! a Big Fall Trade THE POPULAR CASH STORE Takes The “CHRONICLE†from now until the end of 1906.