West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 17 Jan 1901, p. 7

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. . Standald Bank at Canada 5pm I prim! u ' 0" nth. 6J3... mmrUdm an“. “d mund- Durham Agency- Oflioez-ant door out on L him Pharmacy. Calder'u Block. Rwdeme.-â€" 1‘ first ABRISTER. Solicitor. etc. Offloa ovo Gorzlou’n new jewellery a'oro. Lower on». Any smoum. of money to loan a. 5 per cent. on tum prowny. 1" BRIS'HR. Eolicit r. blut‘K. Lower Town. Anne vrymvm attended to. u the Jam UMco. {UGH MwhAY, Durham, Land Valu- utor and banned Auctioneer for the County of Grey. Salon promptly Intended to 3nd not” cubed. JAMES CARSON, Dal-bun, Licensed ' Auctioneer for the County of Grey Lund Valuttor, Buil'ul' ot the 2nd Division Conn. Sale- and .11 other matters rompcly uttendod toâ€"highut refinances urniahod it rouuiud. JOHN QUEEN, ORCHARDVILLE, Ins ' tunmod h'u old buttons. and in prep» odto loun sny amount. of money on real state 01d mung-age: paid 09! on the moulibonltorms. Em and Lu. lunar- ncoood’cctodin tho but Stock Computin- u [must um. Corrupondonco to Orchudvillo, P. 0.. or u call couched II-D -lVW" -_ -_ pain 01 .1 ud amnion. Ptompt {tendon and ovary mum “ford- . «fauna. 04 customers living at" ' " '1 Amount. FURNITURE UNDERTAKING AMES BROWN, lunar Uconm.Durhsm Ont. as m sue: roozroa «WE MAKE -- Furnace Kettles, Power Straw Cut- ters, Hot Air Furnaces, Shingle Machinery, Band Saws, Emery Machines, hand or power ; Cresting, Farmers Kettles, Columns, Church Seat Ends, Bed Fasteners, Fencing, Pump-Makers’ Supplies, School Desks, Fanning Mill Castings, Light Castings and Builders’ Sup- plies, Sole Plates and pointslfor the different plougha in use. Casting repairs for Flour and Saw Mills. a“! IIPAIR-o Stea- lugines, Home Powers, Medical Directory. Legal Directory. I OPECIAI." nunnm. - "NT DENTIST. ‘, P. TBLI'ORD- Miscellaneous . ”lav In all II“. of minimum a. amid”. (“INTER SMITH, . HOLT, H IA 88 I IN CONVICTION Ics- â€" ----- door west 01 the Durham, Laud Vsl‘u- and Embalming FOUNDRYMAN 3 short_ displace oi the D01" etc. Molmyren Collection and Seacheumudo ot Marriage lilo-doubt A “patch from Wuhinston says; ~31". Dr. Talme preached from the following text; "He shall be buried with the burial 01 an ass.”â€"Jeremiah 1:11. 19. Jehoéakiem sat (at ten years on a throne. Plenty at goldâ€"plenty of sycophantsâ€"plenty o! chariots. \Vben _-'.ok 'I‘AII‘ horses; and when ha wore diamonds. 1 think he wore them aa big as a Will-- nut. If there 1nd been a railroad so early in the htswry ot' the world he would have stolen it. flu wallowed in «in until a sudden change in pub- lic alfalfa, and then he died in shame, and was klckcd um. 01' public con- tempt; “Buried wrth the burial 0! an 1 addreaa young men to- the rummc oi crims, and snow Lbcm that Luough gcuiug to be {mac win 55.“ m swallowing "u LIL“- buuks, stocks, and moucyuu ms Liana. Our young men are uazzlcu by me gum: nausea», and say, ”Lhut La My: way to uo it. lie was ammu- try pcddkcr u few year; ago, now pee man. a gorgeous turn-out!" He who aunts a vest mom. a mound- hand “mung-store gets a ride in the city mu mmaut uu oppurwuity 0L Linc \V’Lfldow, but ht yea manhunt); his equip 01 lawnug out. who “41.0w; u nwuc: automanca the Park. wan 1 [hunk Uod W} gunned 8° to ‘ puguc-atl'uci: and BLAHI A NAHON. I like to have them go to p-.ece a wreck nu» they can uuvcr gathered up. 1 like to m nude luat'uaomv’ and an ' stench, 80 that honest yo may take warning. “U“; ‘---v -» _ 11' God shoultl pat suddenly into: money, or its representative, the}. pawcr‘ to return to its rlghtl'ul own-= er, there Ls not a bulk or a satietyz (WPJdl‘t that won“ not have its zs'uleil'a blown out; nnJ plrehnnents thulx‘l: rip, and gold would shoot, and mort- = gages. would rend, and beggars would! get horses, and stuck-ganwlcrs would I go to the nlmahogwe. How much din- }huunc.sty in the making of invoices, and 5m the oaths at the Cmtom-huuse, and in plastering of labels, and in inching of c'nitomers of rival houses, and in false samples, and in the mak- ing and breaking of contracts! llunâ€" dreds of young men are being induc- trlnnted in the idea that money must be had quickly, and that the larger the scale on which they take it, the more admirable that: amartneas and and in false samples. mg and breaking 0‘ dreda 01 you!” “1"“ trimmed in the idea 1 fraud. 1"“ W1“ midst of your days. aha“ be a fool.” 11. Next, I speak of. the romance 01 iibertinism. Society has severest re- tribution for the impurity that lurks about the cellar: and alleys of the city. It cries out against it. It finally, it is silent, or disposed to pullinte. Where is the judge, or the sheriff, or the police! who‘dare ar- mien tor. hdecency the wealthy vil. him? May he not walk the streets, and ride the parks, and sail the steamers, haunting his vices in the eyes 01 the pure! Doe. not the vile “â€" l--|.. A‘s} 'rnm and, you Will leave tum... u. -..- - hldSt of your days, :1 locked since you. went away. 1 18“ be a tool." have given orders that, by. day and ll. Next, I spwk o! the romance 0! night. it SHOUN be Wastened, for I 31 bertinism. Society has severest re- W35 sure that you would come back, a ribution tor the “impurity that lurks and when you warm I did not want b bout the cellar: and alleys ot the you ‘0 be hilndered aminute.” So 1 fl ity. It of.“ out against it. It have to tell you that the door of God‘s n turns the indignation or the law at mercy is ever wnlwked. By day and h I. But society becoxItes more leniâ€" by night it stands open (or your t nt as impurity rises toward afflu- 004111118- T110118!) your sins were as t ghee and high social position, until scarlet, they shall be as white as 8 inally, it is silent, or disposed to “WOW though they Were red like t palliate. Where is the judge, or the crimson, they shall be as wool. Though sheriff, or the police! whodare ar- YO“ may W polluted With all crimes, min“ for. indecency the Wealthy vilâ€" and smitten of all leprosies, and tired mm May he not walk the streets, by the meet depraved 93881008. and sad ride m par“, and sail the have not heard the Gospel invitation steamers, Haunting his vices in the for twenty years, you may have set eyes 0! the ”are" Dug. not the vile upon your brow, hot with infamous ness look out from practices and besweated with exhaus- ' tive- indulgemes, the flashing coronet ' viour’s forgiveness. thinks I know his steps. Methinks before this I have seen the rags. Look, all ye people 0! God! Out 0”; all the windows oi'heaVen let the angels watch! Aprodigal returning: Let us go out and meet him. Wel- come back again to thy long-«torseken home and to thy long-forsaken God. The dead is alive again! The loot ls found! only in u wig-store gets 0. ride in u walnut an oppul Luuity NA. 01 me window, but he Me n mun-yea institution Lbc l'arK wan his equip- flowing "trust-Lungs, , and moneyed institu- mumz men are. uazzlcu whcn {OL‘Luuml thus awash. lhcy are go to pzeces in such can never again be Nos of the world,‘ how you get your hand of death or‘ be wrenched from you get riches by leave them. in the . and at the end you: lflafiannnuvuv... irwd- If capital punishment be right. then =0 “8‘ let the life of the polismed murderer = “105‘ i go with the life of the ignorant and‘ Lungs,” I vulgar 'assassin. Let there be no par-i 113m” ‘tiality of hemp, no aristocracy of the ““1““ I gallows. \Ve are, in our cities, on the ” 11"“ 5 march back toward that state of bar- “ 00'1““!b'1riem. where every man is judge, ! 4 10W 5"" 'ijury and executive officerâ€"a state of '3’ n" isociety in which that man has the BWUDJ“ asup'emacy who has the sharpest knife, ““6 in l and strongest arm, and stealtbiest re- ,q-Luuity avenge and quickest spring. L - ....‘I ‘ forms of murder. t way home at night, is waylaid and slain by a robber, we are all anx- » tion. For garroting, or | out of life with a club, or axe, or slung-shot, the law has a quick spring . and a heavy stroke. But let a man ' come to wealth or social pretension, 3 heart of another, "' there are sympathies aroused; and '9 the lawyers plead, and the ladies d, and and the juries are bribe "' weep, n the judge halts; a new trial is grant- ed, and the case is postponed for n witnesses that never come; and at- 0 ter a number of months in prison, the y door is opened and the murderer is ‘3 ‘out. I call this the romance of as- r. i sassinatiou. n AL‘_ 'C-‘II\4 “.o‘. ‘â€"â€"___ My advice to all young men is to sell their pistols, and take the knife out of the top of their cane, and depend on God and their own stout arm for defence. A man who does not feel himself sate without deadly weapons is in the wrung kind of association and companionship. and you had bet- ter get out of it; for the probabil- ity is that either they will kill you or you will kill themâ€"which latter thing, for your goul in eternity, will of the two; for “no murderer hath eternal life;” and in 'the future life. there is no romance of assassina- tion. 011 young man, take not the man- ners, mud cmstmns, and habits of what = is wr 1!}:eg called “high life” for your {examplr D) not think sin is less to. be ham (1 because it is epauleted and 'aderned. The brown-stone frontl 1 can no more keep back the judgments of God them can. the cellar door. Be- hold how God blows up the magni- ’ticemt wickedness of high places! i There may be some here who have |‘vemtured into sinful courses who would like to return. You came in here tso-night discouraged, and feel ithat there is but little hope. I will resolved one night to go home to her mother’s house. It was after mid- night when she arrived at the house. She supposed that the door would be locked; but, putting her hand on the latch, \the door opened. She asked adter midnight, was unlocked. Said ithe mother, “That door has never been locked since you. went away. I have given orders that, by day and night, it should be unlaatened, for l was sure that you would come back. and when you came I did not want .â€".EE awakeâ€"«We CEPJHEW “v W .v W vâ€"wâ€" â€" l -.\:I n my Luca and rum!) my hair. in juat about a minute. Then [turn und nah my bod. In jut about another. Ky kitten than I have tn food. And wuh my um. brother. toundlsnd some years sgo. denly wrapped tn s whtte mist. One moment the air was perfectly clear; the next it seemed to be full of tiny particles that scintillated like dia- monds, and made it impossible to see ten yards shesd. The phenomena only lasted about half an hour. and then the air cleared again. Before evening five men who had been on deck at the time. were in estate of violent fever, and two days later (our 01 them died. for LBV'I- â€"â€"v â€"_ The men who were down below when the white mist appeared were as well as ever. They did not know at the time that the curious mist has often been known to hang over? these waters. and it means almost certaim death to anyone exposed to it. Sailors call it the “White Death,” and say that it is composed of very minute particles of ice. so small that they penetrate to the lungs and set up a very acute form of pneu- mania. In the thinly-populated northern parts of Sweden death oomes in the (arm of a thin blue smoking cloud. that rises from the vast marshes of Mishoping. The mist is swept .by the northeasterly winds over hills and valleys, and anyone exposed to it for a few hours will almost certain- ly die within forty-eight hours. It appears that the mist is charged with adeadly gas, that causes viol- 'e'nt inflammation of the. lungs. ‘ Some persons will succumb in a few hours, but in most cases the sufâ€" ferer lingers on in great pain for two days. The only way to protect your- sel! when- you see the death-mist sweeping towards you is to bury vmm‘ taoe in the snow until it has A SHREWD FROG. “‘ One of 'the most knowing little animal pets I ever nad is a frog about half-grown,” said a well-known; artist the other day. "I made thei jumper’s first acqnainlance one morn-4 in; two weeks ago, when he hOpped‘ from the garden through an open French window into my studio, where his frequent daily visits afford me much amusement during idle mo- ments. He is so tame that he will take worm from my fingers, and to hold him. tellow’s cunning I was one morningi feeding a favorite cat with asaucer“ of bread and milk all of which pussy' did not eat. The food that the cat left soon attracted quite a number of flies. The observant frog noticed this and hopping, into the saucer, he . rolled over and over until he was fair- ’ ly covered with a batter of bread and milk having done which he lay per- |tectly motionless and awaited devel-1 {opmnta The flies enticed by the‘ prospect of a good meal soon began to circle round the' scheming batta- chian and when one passed within two inches or so of his nose his tongue darted out and the fly disappeared. The plan worked so well that the frog makes a regular business of rolling himself in the cat’s left-over dinner. At a recent banquet in Sydney a de- scendant oi the Macdonalds massacred at Gleneoe passed a knife, "with the blade foremost,” to a member of a famous old family bearing the historic name of the Maodonalds’ betraycrs. tixed the action as one of contemptibly bad breeding. But one or two under- ‘stood the significance and knew that the betrayal is still nnforgiven. THE warm aura. In a little village between Monte Carlo and Nice, there is a board owt- side a shop \ nnnouncmg; . "Irish Whisky, Laid Eggs, English Spoke-n." In Upper Norwood. there is a shop whose window is filled with shabby garments, for both sexes and a basket 0! eggs. A card hanging in the window runs; Second Hand Cloth- ing and Strictly Fresh Eggs. Innâ€"gun" I4 «I LOOKED LIKE BAD BREEDING. The above: of the Bolivian Indians are curious things. A hole in dug in the ground shout 18 inches deep and a, {not square, and over this is built a roof of clay. with holes of dif- ferent sizes to receive the various cooking pots. Routing is done on spits passed through the holes. no that the IQIGIo A than“... patient. illustration of the little MIXED SUPPLIES. CURIOUS STOVES. populated northern the Runs 0 f RUE STORIES THAT ARE HINGE} TRAN FICTION. The lineup-ad Ap,.ennuce 0! Au “bloc. Lite is crowded with strange co incidences. but (cw are quite 00 re- markable and dramatic as thot of thh Columbia Field. New York was the scene a few months ago. The Athletic Union was holding its annual sports. and the competition for putting the 16lb. shot was about 1 to commence, among the competi~ tors being the well-known athlete. Sheldon. The official who announced the event expressed a wish that Dennis Horgan. the great Irish weight-putter, were present to com~ pete with Sheldon. and tacetiously ‘-!.â€"- ‘A calling him b step forward. "' v-â€" Immediately. to the amazement of all. Horgan, in the flesh. pushed his way through the crowd of spectators. and promptly accepted the challenge. winning the event with the utmost ease. He explained later thnt he had only just landed in New York, and hearing of the sports had reached the field at the very moment when his name was called. Two young girls of Norton. near Shitnal. experienced a series of re- markable coincidences. which had a tracheal climax. For many years the girls. both called Mary. lived togeth- er in the name farm-house. Each married, at the same time a man of the name of William, and they made their homw in the same villazfi Each wife had four children, the last baby in each case costing its mothel her life. and two women whose live: - -â€"-““ lines were but yard, the two mothers brother in good practice as a the brothers the medwal to buy a box of matches. In thin mix-table. forlorn wreck o! 11me Mr. [1- reoocnisod the brother whom he had left in such comlortable circumstances leu than twenty years earlier. Only a. few years ago a mu wu- convicted in Paris of the murder of his own father undo: pathetically tragic conditions. The convict m the son at a prosperous tradeor man of Lyons; and. u o youth. hod conducted himself so disgraceful], his home at Chur- enton, on the ouatskirto of Paris. shortly afterward: he was waylaid and BRU'PALLY MU ROBBED the Seine, and his murderer promptly gave himself up to the promptly authoritwig From his contesmuu u. “up..-” that he was the son at the victim. and had. in perfect ignorance at his identity. done his own father to death. When the cowardly blow had been struck the victim recognized his as- aailant. and had died with the words “0h! Pierre!" on his lips. A coinoidence which might have only last year. A gentleman wt! sing Northnmbcrland Avenue when he saw a lady in imminent dan- ger of wing run over by a cab. Ho ans «ohm her halt-fainting from (”‘08 ger of being run over ny a can. uv snatched bet halt-fainting tram wake pavement. Before. however. the had recover- cd mimntly to thank her renou- ed, at the same time a man of une of William, and they made homes in the same village. wife had tour children, the last in each case costing its mother to, and two women whose lives run on such strangely parallel were buried in the same church- the two babies following their 1h: sequel is known in unsung- The old love n: renewed hmmsh'u‘e. in n new cutcoment. and within th month. at that dxamatio roman WEB m! m. U his confession it appeared a was the son at the victim. d. in wriect ignorance 0! his y, done his own father to death. the cowardly blow had been name invited bl mto -.plendid drum. they ohm 00- Why in son“ like tho lottu‘ 8' DO- ‘ fauna 'ut is the Win. (1 IIOOI‘ICo Mosquitoes are like doctors. tile, never let blood without twin ID 1 bill. write. ‘â€"-'__ “'hy ought students in. chirocrlphy m be commended! Baum may do «Muted to purchase. 3 mu: 0! the starch with which they who “cut: winds." What is that which Mung: to yoursell. yet is and by "“1504” Your name. Why is it vulgar to sand I tele- gram! Because it is making use of (mm language. Modest; u; a woman is like color on her cheekâ€"decidedly Naomi“. it not put on. “"1131 did a blind wood CIW’GI‘ his to restore his night! He took ht: horse. und saw. acruplea to a drum. What step must one take to remove the letter a (rum the alphabet! 80- head it. B head it. Why in the law like a book of surgery! Because thate are a great many tertible cases in it. MRS. ROBERT L STEVENSON. Mrs. Stem!) accpmpanied her husband to 3am and endured trinlo that mid have crushed may wo- men. An exchange given thin litue sketch of her: well-appointed yacht or upon n “cockroach steamer." beguiling the the time. with infinite resources when the ship lay becalmed. undismayed by tempeats and mdden nqualls; and whether upon a lonely atoll or un- der the palms in an island village. she would not up her household code. and make 'each spot I hone. are has begun more than one voy- ML- W‘ --â€" â€"_7-__ use an an unwelcome passenger. The! captain and crew wanted "no tine; Indies” aboard. There wan “no «3-1 commodation for India.” In short: they were afraid of heving to weeri their company manners every day.‘ But invariably. the end of the voy-fi use found every man on board. from! the captain tn the Chinene cook. heri devoted friend and nervant. g Her courage ln an emergency. her “complaining fortitude in the mat-‘ ter of rate and cockroachea. her calm' acceptance of South Sea anatomy: called forth enthusiastic approval. She could cook like a French chef. geon: deviae aporta and invent game. and had invaluable remedies atowed away in a little old medicine cheat. She looked alter the health and comp tort of the wild-mannered native taailora aa kindly and unaffected” aa VARIOUS nus. are there three object,“ to of spirits! There are three equally at home “9°“ We beg to infl and the public have adopted dent, and tint. « W 80.16: N patronage. “a that the new I continuance ox Adopt and? That un- smokin‘ 33“- } those H a! with. l'e-r in Western she taught ed. when land rich-l ltul wine-I drew out ti at his boat A halt-cal Steven-on h er, and MI O! on in the like do ‘. reform | [HS ‘ They : though i min WI ': “on. But er in IO! Teacher. A tellou Quart I Well claimm she’d star. thi that to What he

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