West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 26 May 1910, p. 3

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Am A, amt-nu. rnce and low cost unite to make 1 by this Bank a most satisfactoq sums to any part of Canada. 3c. 310m $30 . . . 10:. 6c. 330:0350... He. at amounts. CANADA mama... RS FOR SMALL SUMS epartment at Every Brandi. AM BRANCH .\l bARD BANK and Funeral Director\ Future Framing on Sham notice. Hunw }{nnMSâ€"â€"Next to Swallow. H». H .m- Sh: up. RESIDENCEâ€"Next dnm- Smuth Hf \V. J. Lawn-anon? mmkqmm shup. Attic A. BELL L'N DE RTAKER {HE DURHAM CHRONICLE Subteription’ Ram - ~01 T19 Jr?) in \‘4~lt.p.c-'Q‘l.\ I'("“ 'm f ‘ ' mew rim-3. than Mb. department mug. for turning on: 108 THE TRADERS. BANK OF CANADA Full litw nf ('nthnlic Robes, and blank and Whitc- ('aps fur aged people. 1; a convenient feature uf the Traders Bank Savings Department. It saves the danger {Wm-:0 pin; much money 1:1 the house, as th. “'th L‘fln draw “'hatevet 1;, m cdcd for the week’s expenses while the has band is at work. Either can dcpusitâ€"either can draw out cash. The Great Lung and Cough Medici-O M‘AHANTKED .~ \ tu- (tie it )Lu-fau-lane's Dfllgsm J61NT ACCOUNT in the Savings Bank Department. {)URHAM. ONT., Branzjhes also at Mo... 1“ and Ayion. IS PUBLISH-D EVERY Tfli'BSDAY HOW ; Chronic/O Printing Noun, W Street. Embalming a Specialty l-iwr'nm AND PROPRIETOt DURHAM. ONT. 10X] 2 Mt. "IRuVICLl Wm 50 0.. . sH‘ vicIIPdt {T90 0f” J i. w per 3 war. payublc {IT -. \r M .. pm. nu: - 9 :‘v-w' ytou H van! is COM - "‘2‘ t-.‘I‘fl~li lubel. No 3. t ‘ 1 "mm are pai‘, 0300’ I \V. IRWIN work 'r'. a 1m! mm for ‘h. ‘l'lt u .n rents per Kill. “I OI n :2'nu measure. Prof-ad ._ ww Inch $4.00 pf“! \ mar awn-JIM directio- a sun uhamrdwootdg m-t 'lI‘nnul.""F¢l' d: v. .nacrhon.5 O.“ '0! :n '..â€"- ~er. , w in «name hm- . n .1 :w ‘nmught flu INN“. May 26, 1 transmit NOX A COLD IN ONE DAY invw!‘ n attungofl I“ ‘dT.\' advonmom“ f. whom“ I n in! b" 1080!: I!» Profs.“ t per m reaction. moon“! mu for May 26, 1910 Monster Clearing Sale of $8,000 Stock J. Levine has decided to go West, and is forced to sell out .all his stock be- law cost. A full line of the very best of Gents’ Furnishings, including Working Shirts, Overalls and odd Pants,â€"also the famous “King” Hats. {outs and Shoes in all sizes and best makes. THE VERY FINEST ASSORTMBNT 0! Dress Goods, Spring Coats. Ready- skirts. Vestings, Ginghams, Muslims. Prints, Flmnelettes, Unctons. EEC :0 ALL IN E . mm B, and save your money by buying here. Be smc .m 1 c I.“ md examine o H‘ goads :1 J. LEVINE Rob Roy Rolled Oats CHRONICLE to Jan. 1, 1911, 50c Durham, Ontario, In the most up-' ROB ROY ROLLED OATS are made in the BEST equipped and must up-tn- I data Oatmeal Mill in Ontario, and are free from black specks, hulls, etc., usually found in rolled oats. Order to-day from your grocer; if he does not carry them in stock, send us his name and address. Remember the name. Rob Roy Rolled Oats, manufactured by PRICES CUT ON ALL GOODS FOR EVERY FIGURE Prices ranging from $2.50 to $35.00 Guaranteed not to break or rust. \Vill not take a permanent bend at waist line. These Cassets are stores, and can be I through their reprusen BOX 107 FULL S lo-date Oatmeal Mlll In the Province STOCK ALWAYS BONIN67v‘ Jamamz representative 3 Goods, Spring Coats, Ready-to-wear Waists and v.93, Unttnns, Etc. 10 ALL IN EARLYJand get vour my! call and exmmne our goods and prices. '5‘ ‘3 o A P.- DURHAM H AND MOCKLE R’S OLD STAN D Walkerton merchants are not goo dadvertnisers. It is fair to as- sume that merchants who do not advertise do not want peeple who read the paper to trad ewdth oth‘em. Merchants who blow themselves for eighteen cents a week for adr- vertisimg often wonder lmhy they do not have» to employ ea pol‘iceâ€" man to ‘keep the crowd away from the door, and the man who changes his advertisement every year stands around hollering that ad- vertising don’t pay. 'Ilhe store.- keepe rmho- does not advertise his business migiht as well put up his shutters. Judicious advertising means financial success. Nev-er in the history of the commercial world lhas advertising occupied so dominant .a place as it does to- |da,v.â€"Bruc eHenald. FOB DYSPEPSIA You Risk Nothing by Trying This Remedy ‘ We want every'c'me troubled with indigestion and dyspepsia to come to our store and obtain a box of Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets. They contain Bismutthubnitrate amd Pepsin prepared by a process which develops their greatest pow- 3r to overcome digestive disturb- ance. THEY’RE POOR ADVERTISERS Rex-all Dyspepsia Tablets are very pleasant to take. Tlh'ey soothe the irritable Weak stomach, strengthen and invigorate the di- gestive organs, relieve nausea and Indigestion, promote nutrition and bring about a feeling of comfort. If you give Rexafll Dyspepsia Tablets a reasonable trial, we will return your money SM you are not satisfied with the result. Three sizes. '25 cents. 50 cents and $1.00. Remember you can obtain Rexall Remedies in Durham only at our stormâ€"The Rexall Store. Robert : Macf'arlane. mcn Earner-My daughter is Hm young to get married. She is out} eighteen. lmpecnnious Lover-l know. air. but I have waited patiently im years. and she doesn’t seem to get an) older. Most cases of baldness are due solely to neglect. The hair often becomes dry and dandruff forms because the hair glands do not supply enough nat- ural oil. Nothing overcomes this deficiency so efiectively as that delicately perfumed, re- f reshing hair pomade, Bearine. Avoid baldness; apply Bearine to your hair occasionally. All druggists, 50 cts. a jar. 7 â€"_____.â€"_ A thick adhesive ointment. combined with Japan-:sc Mcmhul and Vaseline. two of th: most wopderful ‘heali‘n‘z flrugs known. .1.4_ __-L-__ ‘LA‘A mUDIr V'vu‘o‘--vâ€"v - v--. -- __ It socl_hes. heals and tends to restore those who suner from Piles. we. Ellen- mlism. Chafing. irritated and otb 2': skin troubles. The word "Salve" literally means be well or in good Health. Try Davis' “no; Salve and you will be relieved. All Dealers. DAVIS LAWRENCE CO" mm THE DURHAM (‘HRONICLE INTRODUCING BOLLINGSWOBT I! CUAB'. HE excitement attending the I SkaggsoWyckholme revelations had not yet spread to the grand duchy of Ilapp-Thorherg, ap- parently lost as it was in the cluster of small units which went to make up a certain empire, one of the world powers. The Grand Duke Michael dis- dained the world at large. He had but little in common with anything that moved beyond the confines of his narrow domain. His court was sleepy. lackadaisical, unemotional. impregna- ble to the taunts of progression. His people were thrifty. stolid and abso- lutely stationary in their loyalty to the ancient traditions of the duchy. His army was a mere matter of taxation and not a thing of pomp or necessity. The precise location of the grand duchy in the map of the worid has lit- tle or nothing to do with this narra- tive. Indeed, were it not for the fact that the grand duke possessed a charming and most desirable daughter the Thorberg dynasty would not be mentioned at all. The grand duke’s peace of mind had been severely dis- turbedâ€"so severely, in fact. that he was transferring his troubles to the emperor. who. in turn. felt obliged to communicate with the United States ambassador, who. in his turn. had no other alternative. than to take sum- mat-y action in respect to the indiscre- tions of a fellow countryman. Chase's conscience was even and serene. and he was resigning his post with the confidence that he had performed his obligations as an American gentleman should. even though the performance had created an extraordinary commo- tion. Chase was new to the old world and its customs, apeclally those rlg- oronshones whieb snrrounded royalty and denied it the right to venture into the commonplace. Brodney’s ‘uv vvâ€"-â€"â€"' Chase had been the representative of the American government at Thorberg fur six months. The American flag floated above his doorway in the Fried- ricnstrasse. but in all his six months of occupation not ten Americans had crossed the threshold. He was a vig- orous. healthy young man. and it may well be presumed that the situation bored him. He was not a politician; no more was he an office seeker. He was a real soldier of fortune in search of aflairsâ€"in peace or in war, on land or at sea. Possessed of a small in-i come sufliciently adequate to sustain life it he managed to advance it to the purple age. but wholly incapable of supporting him as a thriftless diplo- mat. he was compelled to make the hest of his talents. no matter to what ‘aest they were put. He left college at twenty-two. possessed of the praise» worthy design to earn his own way without recourse to the $4,500 income from a certain trust fund. His plan also incorporated the hope to save every penny of that income for the possible “rainy day.” He was now drawing 3 per cent interest. while ne picked his blithe way through the world on $2.500 a year, more or less, l as chance ordained. “When I’m forty." Chase was wont to remark to envious spendthrifts who couldn’t understand his philosophy. “I'll have over a hundred thousand there. and it I live to be ninety hilt think what 1’" have. Moreover, I may get married and have tomaintain a poor wire with rich relatives, which ‘is a terrible strain. you know. You ‘hnve to live up to your wife’l reu- thu. if you don’t do anything elle.” Be did not refer to the chance that he was quite sure to come in for a iarge legacy at the death of his map ternal grandfather. a millionaire ranch oner in the tar west. - .‘AA‘ pot luck with fortune and clasping the hand of umstance. There had been hard 3 to travel as well as easy ones. but he never complained. He swung on through life with the heart of a soldier and the confidence of a pagan. He loathed business, and he abhorred trade. question his actions after his twenty- flrst anniversary. He went in for law at Yale and then practiced restlessly, vaguely. for twa years in Baltimore under the patronage of his father’s oldest friend. a lawyer of distinctidn. Tlring of the law. books and reports in the old judge's office. he suddenly abandoned his calling and set forth to ‘see the world Almost before his ; friends knew that he had left he was :heard of in ankvstan. in course of time'he served as a war correspondent Copyright. I908. by Q Co. The Chronicle is 50c. till J an., 1911 CHAPTER III. tor one of tne great newspapers. acted as agent for great hemp dealers in the Philippines. carried a rifle with the Boers in South Africa. hunted wild beasts in Asia and in ilotteutot land. took snapshots in St. l‘etershurg and almost got to the north pole with one of the expeditions. Not in a month's journey would you meet a truer thor- oughbred. a more agreeable chap. s more polished vagabond. than Hollings- worth Chase. first lieutenant in Dame Fortune’s army. Tall. good looking. rawboned. cheerful. gallant. he was the true comrade of those merry. reck- less volunteers trom all lands who find commissions in Fortune’s army and serve her faithfully. He was nearly thirty when the diplo- matic service began to appeal to him as a pleasing variation from the rigor- :ous occupations he had followed here- tofore. One of his uncles was a con- gressman. and another was in some‘ way connected with railroads. He first sought the influence of the latter and then the recommendation of the for- mer. in less than six weeks after his arrival in Washington he was of! for the city of Thorberg. in the grand . duchy of Rapp-Thorberg. carrying with him an appointment as consul and supplied with the proper stamps and seal of office. At the end or five months he loathed Thorberg; he hated the inhabitants; he smarted under the sting of royal . disdain: he had no real friends, no 3 boon companions. and he was obliged 1 to be good! What wonder. then. that L I l the bored. suirering. vivacious Mr. Chase seized the first opportunity to leap headtoremost into the very thick of a most appalling indiscretion! When he first arrived in Thorberg to assume his sluggish duties he was not aware of the fact that the grand duke had an unmarried daughter. the Prin- cess Genevra. She was visiting in St. Petersburg or Berlin or some other place when he reached his post of duty, and it was toward the end of his fifth month be- fore she returned to her father's palace in Thorberg. He awoke to the im- portance of the occasion and took some slight interest in the return of the royal young lady. even going so far as to follow the crowd to the railway sta- tion on the sunny June afternoon. ‘lvu v.- vâ€"v He saw the princess for the first time that afternoon. and he was bowled over. to use the expression of ' his English friends with whom he dined that night. She was the first woman that he had ever looked upon that he could describe. for she was the only one who had impressed him to that extent. This is how he pictured her at the American legation in Paris a few weeks later: “Ever see her? Well. you've some- thing to live for. gentlemen. l’ve seen her but three times, and 1 don’t seem table to shake ofl the spell. You’ve ’never seen such hair. Gad. it's as near like the kind that Henner painted as anything human could be, except that it’s more like old gold. if you can understand what I mean by that. Not bronze. mind you, nor the raw red. [butâ€"oh. well. I’m not a novelist, so | I can’t halfway describe it. She’s ‘ lrather tall-not too tall, mind you- five feet five. I’d say-whatever that is in the metric system. Slender and well dressedâ€"oh. that‘s the strangest thing of all! Well dressed! Think of a princess being well dressed! l’d say she‘s twenty-two or twenty-three years of ageâ€"not a minute older. 1 think her eyes are a very dark gray. almost blue. Her skin is like aâ€"aâ€"oh, let me see! What is there that's as pure and soft as her skin? Something warm. and pink. and white. d’ye see? Well. never mind. And her smile! And her frown! You know, I’ve seen both of 'em, and one's as attractive as the other. She's a real princess, gentlemen. and the prettiest woman I’ve ever laid my eyes upon. And to think of her as the wife of that biithering little ass. that nincompoop of a Karl Brabetz! She ' loathes him. I’m sureâ€"i know she ‘does. And she's got to marry him! That’s what she gets for being a grand 1duke’s daughter. Brabetz is the heir ’ apparent to some duchy or other over is supposed to be the catch son. You've heard of him, {st Hick as Brabétzz I’ll state my head he'll never forget me!" Chase concluded with n sharp. reflect!" laugh in which'hls hearers joined. far the escapade which Inspired It wu be- Ing slyly discussed In every emhuly In Europe. He was in Paris this season and cut quite a figureâ€"a prince with real money in his purse. you know. [won- der why it is, that our American girls can't marry the princes who have money instead of those who have none. Not that I wish any of our girls such The advent of tho ROUND TRIP SUMMER TOURISTS TICKETS at LOW RATES June lst to Sept. 30th To Portland and Astoria, Ore., Sc- attle Tacoma. Everett and Bellingâ€" ham. Wash. Victoria. Vancouver and New Westminister. B.C., San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego. C11. RETURN LIMIT OCTOBER 81, ’10 HOMESEEKERS’ EXCURSIONS T0 WESTERN CANADA Via Chzcago. May 31 and June 14. Via S-arnia and Northern Naviga- tion Company: steamer leaves Sar- nia 3.30 p.m., May 30Lh and June 15. Secure tickets and full inform- tion fromâ€" Monday. . . . . . . . .. ..S.S. “Athnhm' Tuesday . . . . . . . . . .S.S. “Kewatin” “'eduesduy. . . . . . . . .S.S. “Alberta” Thursday. .......... 8.8. “Manitoba” Saturday ........... 5.8. “Assinihoin” The most pleasant and cheapest route to \Vinnipeg and West Through train to \Vinnipeg and West from Toronto 2.00 p.m. on above date. R. MACFARLAME - Town Agent 8. HACFARLANE. Town Agent. HOMESEEKERS’ EXCURSION ....... 2mm. “I. chewy-1 -.: littnii. on. for ful. J unto}: Vl‘finiâ€"srn'd I“; 319991: work. The following competent “I. II. h ohugo : T806. ALLAN.anoi n1. lat Choc.“- um. Subjects: Defiance. nclld, m 0!.- In-r. Book-kaolin; nnd Writin‘. GREAT LAKES NAVIGATION N OW O P E N M188 DONALUA HcKERRAUKII. ILL. Gunman of Queen‘s t m'vorui". GINO. Latin. lunch. Alpha. Ami-am. Ills AMY EDGE. Graduate armam- cf Mutation. Subjocu: 1.!th Coup non. Woks. History ud Art. Intending student. would com u “no In“.- ning of the term if pmible. Board an hoot. mined nr mahle mun. Durham h s huh” bail-d st reasonable igloo. Durham I. 3 hi] i â€" 39d wyivo_ gown, making it a In... data. I . P. TELFORD. u _ â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"v w ascent rootdonoo'. I'm. 01.00 pot coach in dunno. DURHAM SCHOOL. Trains arrive at Durban at 10.” 3.... 1.30 p m.. and 8.56 p In. The when! k moron III filmy. in ohmic“ an e CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE Trains will arrive and depart u fol- lows. until further notice:â€" Read down Raul I. R. MACFARLANE, - Town Agent. Dollars- Dollara- Dollar: madehydmlmgwttb H. H. MILLER The [home Conveyance!- mart-urchin.- mmm. 9:. dub Trains leave Durham 3! 7.!) 3.0L.“ HONEY T0 LIED. VERY can! If you put ho Buy._§g!.L Mar Borrow, go {15 Milli. DEBTS OOLIJELTwefio chuge I Railway any] Steam-hip Tic)“- cold in all point: at lo'w m. Em kind alflmnchl bim- m to cuddly and quietly. Business saw I “M'sys Pmpt. ~Rsm thz." Regular Sailings as follows: m “‘0” named to “it!“ into ex. “suddenly; thestreetlbookona new air; the hund- plnyed with . kmjgflt‘ m the my printed lt- Continued on page 6. Grand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE mm”? MSE'WQW sod other good bnfldinm. la- thnn vulno of buildiuat. P EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY BIA" AND EQUIPII". J. vaxlan. Dvpnt Agent J. Towger. Chum“: Lv. Walkorton Name Bill Hanover Alba Put Durha- IoWil‘b-a Prioovmo atom Jot. Ar. 00 0. CC 60 O. on 0.00 0.21 Omic- Reid Bonn. Halon! no monov Hindu . H. Miller. Uni-ham. .S.S. “Kowuin” 8.8. "Alberta" .S.S. “Manitoba" .S.S. "Assinihoia" MAY 31 nipped In a) supp)!” _ _ Ar. I... P.‘ 9.40 12.“ 0.27 13.0 0. II I” I.“ 13.23 8.57 18!. I." 13.. 0.35 IL. I.” IL.

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