West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 25 Apr 1912, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Galvanised and Iron Piping, Bra Brass Lined and Iron Cylinder SHOP OPEN EVERY AFTERN 001$ Pumps From $2 Upward ALL REPAIRING pmpfiy and properly attended to. W. D. Connoi' Immaculate! And Duh: h PUMPS OF ALL KINDS. pas. KENNEDY KENNEDy, fl rite for our private address. ‘ Ame Grease and H001 Ointment, go to S. P. SAUNDERS v - -_\.U\ see us personally call at our Medfil Ihgitute in I no panenu 1n our Windsor ofices which are Laboratory for Canadian busi‘xess only. Addre “be I’D‘m'flhv o ”B‘tfiv-n ..... DRS. KENNEDYG: KEN Cor. MiChigan Ave. and Glfiswnlrl <§ nofrm 5 M3 14. Machine Oil. Harness Oil, ‘A\l‘u\V-\.‘J, yuvu ‘LL L “w JUSL 8.11 Ialtll In doctors. L31zeadrowning man I com‘fienced the NEW )Imm saved my life. The improvemont Win like magicâ€"I could feel t1 the nerves. I was cured m entauy and physically. I have sent and continue to do so. OUR NEW METHOD TREATMENT Will cure you and make a man of you. linderitsintluence the ann becomes active. the blood puritiel so that all pimplm. Matches and ulcers had up: the nerves become strong as stew]. so that nervousness. l_v":_hfulne;~'s and (lespondenc? disapjwear: the er ‘8 bee vme bright, the face fut an 103mm energy roturns to the body, and the mor '1. physical and mental S}'Stemsaz'e im'i 'omtel: all (lr'dins cease-no more vital v-nste how the system. You fnvl yonrzzolf a. man anl know marriaze cannot. be a. failure. Don’t let. quacks and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars. :3" NO NAMES USED MTHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY We heat and cure wmmnse vans. NERVOUS DEBIU‘I‘Y, BLOOD AND URINARY COMPLAINTS. KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES and 0.11 Diseases peculiar to Men. \- CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS FREE. If unable to call write for a. Question Blnnk for Home Treatment. | BEFORE TREATM ENT NERvovifi DEBILITY E HAVE finished stock-taking and find broken lines. We are not stock-taking this season. We are offering these at and below cost for§quick sale, also substantial reductions on all ,winter goods. Call early and get first chain... Q’Cngfnm work and repairing as usual. But Quality Is Essential if best results are to be obtained. Remember that you can follow this example in purchasino any- thing in Tin“ are, Granite“ ale, Stmes, Ranges, Furnaces, and General Plumbing: Goods from - - .. -- . . - oc'oo'oo‘va'ao'oo’o . - ----- § ‘ . . ~1*°§*4~I~§°+‘§”i' WWMMMWWQ' 6 Never substitute appeal £11108 for quality but rather choose am article a trifle more costly and obtain both. Appearance is prudential % + + .§ § '1“ April “231111, The Dawn Town Shoe Store '. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., 016-35768; BOOTS and SHOES CLEARING SALE THREATEN ED WITH PARALYSES The Harneshfi: the: 21912. Peter E. Summers relates his experience: "I was troubled wi.h Nervous Debility for mzzny years. Ilayit. to indiscretiun and excesses in ynuzh. I becgmc veg: despondent. and uidn‘c care whether I worked or not. I imagined everybol ' xx ho leeked at me guessed my secret. Imaginative dreagns‘ at} night. \vegkened “\A ‘m-- L--‘_ wv â€"-°-â€"' -- vv-Anva. meâ€"‘mv back ached, had pains in the back of my head. hands and feet were cold, tired in the morning, oor a; petite. fingers were shaky. eyes lYZI'I‘Cd. hair loose. memory paior. c;c. Numbnessin the fingers set. in and the doct m told me he fcarca paralysis. I toot: all kinds of medicines and tried R1'ZITY first-class physicians. wore an eiectri 3 Lew-Sat three mongiisl. ”ft received iifiehbenciit. I was 1:'( ucet to cum-3.: rs. 'enne ' Kennedy, thou'fh I had lost all faiti); in An" TREATMENT rning man I (:nm‘wenced the NEW METHOD TREATM'EX'P and it improvement. w": like magicâ€"I (:01in feel the vigor going thrrgugh I‘Pd mpnanv and h‘11vL-:nn.n1’ T LA-n.‘ -.._.A_ A‘. _ N. H. STERNALL of Broken Lines of- J. S. McILRAITH All letters from Canada must be addressed to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- ment ' \desor, Out. If you desire to fil In itute in Detroit 3) we see and treat M6 by Marianne Co.. Durham .’__J uuuuuuuu v Juana. LCI'IHB IOI' Canada, 83.“) a year. postage prepaid. Sold by all newsdealera. MUNN 00.38'Bm. Negggrk mammrsuwmm A fiandsomely' tfitfstvmtzd week! . Lax-g - culation of guy scientific 10mg]. @3135: Fanatic .7 ".'-\ - -nn- -An---A __-_ ,n ‘.'--'-.‘ vâ€" - “Hui sent. free. Oldest afiexiéqu'éi: securing patents. Patents taken t rough Mann a; Co. recen apecAial gotta, without. charge, in the -A. A“ _ _ __ v â€""_v. invention is probably ntentable. Communica. tions strictly confident a1. HANDBOOK on Patents sent. free. Oldest ency for securing patents. Pntentqjaken t rough Mann A: Co. receive. Scientific mam. 9”.”OWW ', Windsor, Ont. once. “F St‘Wuhmgt on. 13.0 theiil 153537 bEtiéKtE ¢+++é++++¢u British Columbia. Ht was 32 years of age and was the son of the late J. Allison of Chesterville~0nt. He was owner of a 400-acre model pure- clty last Labor Day to take a post- graduate course in Guy‘s Hospital, 'London, Eng., and was returning to take up the practice of medicine in his native city. It is said that he refused a knight- hood in 1910. His wife is the daughter of William H. Gregg of St. Louis, Mo. Thornton Davidson Thornton Davidson, son~in-laW of Charles M. Hays was about 30 years of age and a prominent stock broker conducting a business at 86 Notre Dame street. About five years ago he Married Miss Hays. K. J. Allison _ K. J. Allison, a Montreal million- aire. left for England, accompanied by his family, last November. The object of his trip was to interest British capitalists in the British Canadian Lumber Corporation, a $20,000,000 concern with large lumber tracts in Benjamin From a clerk sitting in the office of the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Com- pany, Charles Melville Hays, appear. (1 to be impelled by some unseen power until he‘eventually became one of the greatest railroad men in the world. His career. to say the least, was checkered and there seemed to be no obstacle too large for him to over- come. Charles M. Hays was President and General Manager of the Grand Trunk Railway. He had been in England for some time securing loans to car- ry on the construction of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway. He was born in Rock Island, 111., on May 16, 1856. and aftervholding various positions on American reads entered the service of the Grand Trunk Railway in 1895. .His distinguishing work was the or. ganization of the new transcontintn- ta] line, the Grand Trunk Pacific. The Titanic took with her to the bottom of the Atlantic men dis- tinguished both in the United States and Great Britain.. Some were known the world over. A financier, a mine owner. an artist, a railroad president, a theatrical manager, an editor, an author and a merchant are in the list of victims. financier, Mine Owner, Artist, Rail- 30:3 Pre ident, Editor, Author and Merchant 3 A Glance at the Careers of Some‘Prominent Victims NOTED DEAD BRIEF NOIES KNOWN WORLD OVER M RS. JACQUES FUTRELLE 3- Guggenheim C. M. Hays THE DURHAM CHRONICLE. HENRY 2’ P.-¢‘-."?K’TS Theatre managc 1‘. a \-i-t m of the Ti tanic. James Clinch Smith, a brother-in. law of the late Stanford White, was known as a sportsman in New York and Paris. He had a fine stable 0% polo ponies, running horses, and trot- 2. He was born in Georgia on éep- tember 26, 1865, and was a graduate of the University of the South at Se- wanee, Tenn. Francis D. Millet, artist and writer, was born at Mattapoisett, Mass, in 1846. He enlisted as a drummer boy toward the end of the Civil War, and was promoted to the post of assistant in the Surgeons’ Corps, which he held for a year. When he war was over he entered Harvard. After gradua- tion he went into literary work. Major Butt Major Archibald W. Butt, military aide to President Taft, was granted a leave of absence by the War Depart- ment on February 20 for one month and twenty days, and sailed from New York for the Mediterranean on April Clarence Moore Clarence Moore of.Washington, D. 21., was one of the best-known sports- men in America. He was master of hounds of the Chevy Chase Hunt, and on his visit to England from which he was returning he was said to have purchased twenty-five brace of hounds from the best packs in the north of England. Henry B. Harris, who came into ago as manager and producer was a veteran betore metropolitan fame came to him, and a member of an old” theatrical family. He was born in St. Louis, December 1, 1866. Re- cently he had. no less than sixteen companies on tour during a single sea- Son. through his journalistic ’lii'e he born ,‘the impress of his noncont’orinist 3 training. Stead came prominently be- lfore the British and world public in ;maiiy’ ways. An ardent Radical, he fbitterly opposed the Boer war and found public opinion strongly opposed to his attitude. On the cessation of the war he actively engaged in a uni- versal peace propaganda and came lmore prominently before the foot- lights as a bitter opponent of the Boer war. Later Mr. Stead develop d strong spiritualistic proclivities. H. M. Molson Harry Markland Molson, born in Montreal on August 9, 1856, was edu- cated in Montreal and in Germany .and Paris. He belonged to the famous Molson family, who have been pro- minent in shipping and banking“ circles in Montreal for upwards of a hundred years. Mr. Molson was at the time of his death a director of the Molsons Bank and of the Can- adain Ttransfer Company. He was a man of wealth, but took a keen in- terest in civic affairs, serving for a number of years as an Alderman of the city. A quiet, unassuming man, he was very p0pular with all who knew him. Ia Congregational minister, and al-. I W. T. Stead William Thomas Stead was one of the best known cosmopolitan British journalists, was born at Embleton, in the County 01' Northun'iberland, Eng- land, on July 5, 1849. His father was lionaire, made his money out of street cars. He was once a butcher. His house in rhiladelphia is one of the greatest palaces in America, filled with the finest private collection of masterpieces in painting held by any- one on the continent. The whitneys. the Widners and others began to buy up horse car lines a quarter of a cen- tury ago and made many millions. Milwaukee, who lost his life on the Titanic. CAPT. E J. C. Smith F. D. Millet H. B. Harris . G. CRLSBY The Western Union Telegraph Com- pany handled all messages free of charge for survivors of the Titanic master. They had emcee on the Cu- nard pier where the Carpathia dock- “After I left the bridge I did not see the captain." “I saw nothing of any explosion." “I saw no struggle, no confusion." “I saw no women waiting when I entered the lifeboat." “I did not look to see after leaving the Titanic whether she broke in two.” “I did not look to see if there was a, panic.” “I did not see what ha lifeboats.” ppened to the “I saw no passengers in sight when I entered the lifeboat.” Bruce‘Ismay, managing director of the White Star Line, on the stand be- fore the senate investigating com- mittee: MRS. GEORGE D. WIDENER Philadelphia, who was saved and hot husband was drowned. All Allan steamers Canadawards this week carry extra lifeboats, suffi- cient, in fact, to accommodate every soul aboard. The C.P.R. manager states all their ships are to be equip- ped with such life-saving appliances as will accommodate passenger and crew in case of emergency. It. is also probable that the Cunards Royal Mail Steamship Company and the Booth Line will follow suit. ger and author, Jacques Futrelle’s chief claim to distinction had come in recent years through the authorship of fantastic writings. George E. Graham George E. Graham had been in Eng- land on business as Winnipeg pur- chasing agent for the T. Eaton firm. He had lived in Toronto until six years ago when he removed to Win- nipeg. Misfortune in other ways seemed to have been the lot of Mrs. Graham during the last year. It is only a few months ago that her only child, a boy two and a half years old, died, and following close upon this comes the greater blow ‘ British Passenger Augmenting Llfe- saving Appliances PROFITING FROM DISASTER The Philadelphia traction magnate victim of the wreck. WHAT ISMAY DID NOT SEE St. Paul’s .Church in Loxidon, wat coming to New York for the purpose of Opening a mission on the Brooklyn Heights. _ â€"â€"â€" v-v vâ€"VJ v- more large coi‘porefions, including railways, His fortune has been esti- mated at from $100,000,000 to $200.- 000.000. ber of many clubs. He put up and owned more hotels and skyscrapers than any other New Yorker. At one time he was a girector in twenty or n--- ters, and built a race track. He mar- ried Miss Bertha Barnes of Chicago. I. Straus Isidore Straus was a millionaire merchant and philantrOphist. He was a director in many organizations and charitable institutions regardless of creed, and a director in several bank- ing and financial institutions. Col. Astor Col. John Jacob Astor, the American head of the Astor family, was a mem- Futrel Ie Newspaper writer, the H! GEORGE D. WIDENER Rev. J. S. Holden , theatrical mana- Upper Town - Durham Mrs. A. SULLIVAN ”Woomwwvooooqu 4.00 7.10 “ Durham “ 11.54 9.19 4.11 7.21 “ McVVilliams“ 11.44 9.09 4.14 7.21 “ Glen 11.41 9.06 4.2 7.31 “ P1iceville “ 11.31 8.56 4.40 7.50 “ SaugeenJ. “ 11.18 8.43 5.15 7.50 “ Toronto “ 11.15 7.55 R. 331ACFARLANE. - Town Agent New Grocery Store Fresh Groceries Always in Stock Trains will arrive and depart as fol lows, until further notice:â€" P..M A.M. P.M. P.M 3.15 625 LV.VValkerton Ar.12-m mm 'OOOOQOOQOOOOOQOQOOvio... CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE â€"__ Trains leave Durham at 7.15 a..m.. and 3 4'3 p.m. Trains arrive at Durham at 10.30 a.m.. .50 p m.. and 8 50 pm. H G Elliott; G. P. Agent, Montreal. J. TOWINER Depot Agent JAMES R. GUN. Town Agent \Vere offered our graduates dur- ing Morch, according to our Em- ployment Dep‘t File, You never need wait. Thorough prepara- tion with us insures immediate returns in Cash for yOu. Get, free catalogue. Central Business College, Yonge Gerrard St-s., Toronto. \V. H. SHA\V, Pres. DURHAM 01's. Also whip cords. poplins etc. W'ehave our popular line of Dollar silks in the dilferent shades, also jacquhar ds at 35 cts.. Ginghams in Checks and stripes. Linens and Towelings galore, Check muslins, etc. Kid gloves for Easter, popular price $1.00. (Dome and see us. PLANING MILLS EXERY DAY‘EXCEPT SUNDAY GRANTS Also a limited amount of iron work and machine re- pairs. A call solicited. Ask for quotations on your next job. 87 POSITIONS The undersigned begs to announce to residents of Durham and surrounding country. that he has his Planning Mill and Factory completed and is pxepazed to take mdexs for 3‘ 5‘ It .6 Durham ‘ McVVilliams Glen Priceville Saugeen J. Town to 6 â€" and all kinds of . L. GRANT apl Ar.12.40 l “liu “1mm pppo figaa ONTARIO THREE. M

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy