West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 25 Jul 1901, p. 5

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53mm”? IMPORTER 0' AND DIALII IN Swedish, Scotch Canadian BBIIITE IlflBlE WORKS. GAIAE‘RAXA 81'. â€"- DURHAM IARRISTER, NOTARY, CON- VEYANCER. Em. Etc. Money to Lou: at teat-unable rates and on terms to suit borrow". ()I‘r‘ICI-z- McIntyto Block (Over the Bank.) Wm. McCalmon, Monuments Repaired, and Office ham”: 91012 t. In. 2104 p. In Residence and ofiico. Old Bank buildings. ll'ppor'l‘own, Durham. We olor a ungnifioont uuy 0! Watches. Clocks, Rings und Jewellery. lift up“ aha-nah“! homunculus-thin! Potato Bug Spams. m“ (We. We have a full supply of ..JEWELLERY.. 6mm meal Pails. New and Beautiful Things In our flame Pots. Binder twine. Pct-hm 36mm. J. O. HUTTON. M. D. O. M. “on.” College Physicians and Surgeons. \\'. S. DAVIDSON, A. GORDON Our Potato Bug Sprayers are very use'ful articles. Get one, and make your work easy. H you require Fencing, there is ”dining to equal our American Steel Wire \\ oven Fence. Buy cave of our Granite Preserv- ing Kntcles, and get 3 lb. of “ Black’s Baking Powder.” Ever)" farmer should have one ol our Granite Cream Pails. which we are selling at the low sum of 60 cents. Do not forget the quality of our Mar-nine 011. as it is second to none. Try it. I! you enjoy drinking good coleo call and inspect our "Marion Harland Coffee Pots.” as they no the only reliable nrciclu of that description manufactured. Our Binder 'l‘wine is going very hit.‘ Ask your neighbor about the quality, and secure your sup- ply before stock is exhnuu' Just to hand an immense ship- ment. of Pea- Pulling Scythes, which we are selling at 25¢ each. Inscriptions Cut on Shorten Notice. July 25, 1901. We are always to the front with everything in our line. Telephone No. 10. CATTLE ()IL, PARIS GREEN. BI'G FINISH, BINDER WHIPS and HARVEST MIT'I‘S. mm: of all Kinds consuntly on hand. Low“ Town. Durban. For Saving Nubian; Organs and Pinon, give us 3 trig]. lust Received a Lam Stock or the best Wagons nude in Canada, and we are bound to sell them at Rock Bot- tom Price. to make room for our [Inventing Machinery. which will be hue in good time. Perhepe you. need a new Buggy We can supply you at astonish- ingly low prices. Do You Want THE LHRGEST STOCK from 5c up to ................ 200 Table linen, 54 in. wide, yd ...... 25c Table Oil Cloth,;45‘in wide. 25c Buggy duster: from 600 up to..1 50 24 only glass table setzs, each. .. 35c 30 only glass berry bowls, each.. 10c Nappies per doz from 35c to ..... 65c 4 only yenuine oill paintings on canvas. 22 in. by 26 in. with 4 in. gold leaf frames,each only.1 50 Toilet soaps. a cake up from . . .. 2c Don’t forget us when you want a. pair of shoes. as we carry a. full line of the celebrated Sterling Bros. make of Shoes. IMPLEMENT WAHEBUUMS W. H. BEAN. for childrens’ dresses.yd. 7 and 10c White and cream silk gloves, pr. 45c White 'Pafieta gloves. pr ........ 25c White and black silk mitts ...... 95c Lndies’ and childrens’ undervests Piques in white and fancy. yd. .. 13c Dr_ess Gipgham, _just. the thing But her bvauty was completely hidden by sores, hlotches and pimples till she used Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. Then they vanished as will all Eruptions. Fever Sores, Boils. Ulcers, Carbuncles and Felons from its use. Infallible for Cuts, Corns. Burns, Scolds and Piles. Cure guaranteed. 25c at. all druggists. 1m. 1 Shoes made for all kinds of diseased )r deformed foot. A CALL Soucn'mo. T. MORAN, Miss Julia Weir was visiting in this neighborhood over Sunday. Mrs. Thos. Livingsron, of Mt. For- est, is nursing her mother, Mrs. Joseph Corbett, until Mrs. Montgom- orty returns from the Soo. Big 4, Mr. Frank Livingston returned to Port Elgin Monday. Mr. David McClocklin is visiting his sister, Mrs. George Calvert. who has just rammed from a visit to Arte“. Miss Maggie Daniel returned to Durham after spending a few weeks at Mr. Hunt’s. Mrs. Smith and dauglstors have returned to Toronto after spending a few weeks with Mr. John Coons. The when! harvest is nlmost over. nnd threahings are beginning this week. Mrs. W. P. Smith and son, of De troit. are visiting her father. Wm McCulloch. Mr. Thou. McCullcch and wife had childron are visiting at. the parental homo tad at Cugill. Mill Streetâ€"In Rear of Calder’s Block. Lower Town, Durham We always have a full line of the best Groceries. General Blacksmith. [ORSESHOEING A SPECIALTY. v." want ‘ Plow, a Harrow. a Scufller, or :1 Cream Separator? If so we can suit. you to a '1‘. Of Farm and Domestic Impleo manta ever seen in Durham, it will certalnly pay intending purchasers to Call and see our 390d. before purchasing else- ‘horo. The Season is now on when far- mers will find a. pressing need to get some labor-saving device to keep up with the times. and as we have Mu. Joseph Corbett is v'ery ill. SHE DIDN’T WEAR A MASK. McKinnon’s C. IcKINNON, VICKEBS. Caldet's Block, At a recent school examination for girls this compositiOn was handed in by a girl of 12: “The boy is ‘not an anintal. yet they can be heard to s considerable distance. When a boy hollers he opens his big mouth like frogs, but girls hold their toung til they are spoken to, and then they snswer reSpectable and tell just how it was. A boy thinks himself clever because he can wade where the water is deep. When the boy grows up he is called a husband, and then he stops trading and stays out nights, but the grown up girl is a widow and keeps house.” 4 This most distressing and common malady doubtless has its origin in some unbalanced condition of the nervous system. Probably the simp- lest, safest and most efficient remedy is Polson’s Nerviline. Twenty draps in sweetened water gives immediate relief, and this treatment should be supplemented by bathing the region of pain with Nerviline. To say it acts quickly fails to express the re- sult. Sold everywhere in large 25c. bottles. THE CAUSE OF NERVOUS HEADACHE Mr. Wm Sparling, a brother-in law of Mr. Valentine Bauer, of Bentinck, arrived here on Thursday last. hav- ing driven all the way from Dewitt. Nebraska, a distance of between thirteen and fourteen hundred miles. He was accompanied by his wife and seven children. They left on the firsc of May intending to be here the first of July, but owing to delay in Michigan they were a week late in arriving with friends in Normanby where he pulled up a week before his arrival here, He was nine weeks on the road and the horses are in excel. lent condition, having "lost only thirty pounds since leaving home. His wagon was specially built for this trip by Mr. Sparling himself, and is filled up with beds, stove. water tank and all conveniences. The total weight of the outfit is 32 hundred pounds. and rides as easily as an ordinary buggy. Mr. and Mrs. Sparling are natives of Normanby, having left Ayton for their western? home seventeen years ago. Theyj made money out there anti of course1 like the place well. To meet anj emergency the company was fortified with a first-class dog and a revolver capable of shooting sixteen times without reloading, but such was un- necessary as no harm befel the travellers on the whole trip. They will make the return trip in the course of a couple of months. Mr. and Mrs. Sparling, we understand. are well 05. and desiring a summer’s leisure they adapted this plan which will certainly commend itself in many ways. In no other way could they get a better idea of the country, and in no way of travelling can they exercise greater independence and have greater freedom to enjoy the. family circle. They can go when they please, rest when they please, sleep when they feel like it. In short it seems an ideal way to make an independent visit. 1 A very phasing event took place Jat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard iBanks, Edgehill, on Wednesday, evening, July lOth, when their idanghter, AnniKVictoria, united her destiny with that of Mr. Allan Boyd, !ui Glenroaden. At 8:30 pm. to a Spirited wedding march, rendered by Miss Bertha Hamilton, of Laurel, the wedding party assembled in the prettily deco- rated garden, and in an alcove of balsam Rev. Wm. Graham made the happy couple one. FROM NEBRASKA IN A WAGON- [The above notice is commendable, inasmuch as it tells the whole story and doesn’t tell in too loud. We congratulate the happy couple. â€"â€"Ed.] The bride and bride’s maids were tastefully attired in white organdie, and carried boquets of roses. The extensive array of beautiful and costly wedding presents convey to the young couple the esteem in which they are held by their former school- mates and friendsâ€"Com. Travelled 1400 Miles to Visit Friends. -â€"A Unique Outfitâ€"â€"Every Con- venience for a Family of Nine. THE latest role in which the versa- tile proprietor of the Glasgow House has appeared is that of a prophet. One of the windows of that Well- known establishment was tastefully dressed on Dominion Day in a most unique manner. In the centre was a large engraving of “ The Fathers of Confederation,” and under it the words “ Canada 1867-1901 ”; on the left was a portrait of the late Sir John A. Macdonald with the inscrip-a tion “ The past ” and “ Honor to whom honor is due ”; above the cen tre piece was the distinguished coun- tenance of “The Present” bir Wilfrid Laurier with the inseription “Canada First ”; on the right was the smiling countenance of our own:M. P. labelled ”The Future ” and with his motto “Assiniboiaâ€"â€"new province.” There is no doubt that “ the future” will be realized if Mr. Williams has his way of it.-~Regina Standard. [This is the store our old friend Rice Mere- dith is in. Wonder if he had a hand in dressing the Window.â€"â€"Ed.] A PATRIOTIC WINDOW. WEDDING BELLS. c. . vvu mVL‘nm. Lately starved in London because Hp could not digesc his food. Early tape of Dr. King’s New Life Pills would have saved him. They strengthen the stomach, aid diges- tiqn, promote assimilation. improve appetite. Price 255. Money back if not satisfied. Sold by all druggists. A prominent undertaker expresses the following sentiments in acontem- porary, which are very much to the point : “ I wish a law could be pass- ed prohibiting the barbaric custom of opening caskets in public at church funerals. It isa relic of dark ages and has no place in a civilized com- munity. It jars on the sensibility of every tender chord, and it is something that the churches and un- dertakers ought to combine and put a stop to. In nine.tenths of the cases it is merely a pandering to ghoulish curiosity. PeOple who never spoke to the deceased in their life time parade around the church, gape at the form of our loved one. then go out in the presence of death. not to talk of the good deeds. done in their life. but to criticise the appear- ance of the poor clay that death had left for once at their mercy. Death isa sacred thing. If we are going on a long journey we do not make our adieus before a gaping crowd; we ought not to be expected to bid our dead a last good-bye while curi-g osity Stands agape.” For the first time in many years the Kincardine Board of Education advertized for a teacher on the “state salary ” basis. It was to fill the vacancy created by the resigna- tion of Mr. F- C. Powell, Principal of the Model and Public Schools. There were 44 applicantsâ€"l at $1000, 1 at $900, 3 at $800. 2 at $750, 9 at $700, 2 at $650, 1 at $625. 18 at $600, 3 at $550. 1 at 8.300, and three stated no amount. By resolution the salary was fixed at $600, but all the applica- tions were read and it was a tedious? task. Some of them would condemn the applicants even if they were good teachers; others would commend the applicants even if they were poor teachers. It requires some tact and judgment to write an application and the briefer it is the better, One ap- plicant stated that he was a cousin of the organizer for the Reform party; another praised his own vir- tues and merits so highly that he got no votes at all. It narrowed down to four or five applicants who had had personal interviews with the trustees, and at last a Mr. Crime. of Dunnville. got the place.â€"Kin- cardine Review. The type setters are not the only hlunderers that startle people. A telegrapher tells of a case in which an operator’s error caused a poor man no end of: anxiety. This man’s wife was visiting at a distance from home when she was taken ill. and with due wifely regard, sought to break the nevus gently to her hus- band by means of a telegram from the pl'sician. As the husband re- ceived the message it read: “Wife has been quite ill, but is doing well now. She has had a child. but we hope to prevent her having any more.” The husband’s natural alarm was not allayed till he learned that the word that the operator had made “ child ” was in the doctor’s writing, “ chill." l A mother sent her small boy into } the country, and after a week of ’anxiety received a' letter: “ I got here alright but forgot to write be- fore. A feller and I went out in a boat and the boat tipped over and a man got me out. I was so full of water that I didn’t know anything for a long time. The other boy has to be buried after they find hm. His mother came and cried all the time. A horse kicked me over ' and I’ve got to have some money for fixing my; head. We are going to set a barn-on fire tonight and I should smile if we don’t have some bully fun. I shall bring home a woodchuck if I can get him in my trunk.” The “ {armiu ” editor asked his opinion about late plowu-g. " Plow- ing.” he said. ”should not be con- tinued later than ten or eleven o’clock at night. It gets the horses in the habit of staying out late and unduly exposes the plow." Another sub- scriber asked “ how long cows shoul be milked?" The answer was, “Th same as short cows.” 1 DURHAM CHRONICLE. A POOR MILLIONAIRE. that makes your horses glad. THIS AND THAT. the 1 m7. 0 no] Pattern,.Peerless Separator, ‘B inch cylinder} 50 Inch body. .Sawyor muse Hamnlton. Good repur through. out. wk and Pump complete. RICK HOUSE AND LOTâ€"THE Melligan Property on George StroeL one are 0 good land in good location. a dosirsble residence, will be sold on easy terms. Apply to ED. MILLIGAN. Palmerston. or to W. CALDER, Durham. Jan. [7. 1900. t! 13 July 9,â€"tf. N IMPROVED FARM. LOT NO. 7 COM. 8. D. R . Glenelg, fifty-five acres, ‘fw cleared. about 55 miles from Durham. Good orchard, good concrete house, good well, in tair state of cultivation. For particulars see the owner. NW 5 tf. HE COMMERCIAL HOTEL, Prjcevijle, newly bricked all round. pew brick kitchen, new windmvs and other impgovem‘ents. ()n the premises are a good improvements. On the remises area ood stable and two never railing wells. ‘he place has always done a good business and will be rented right toa good man. The furniture will be sold to lessee. For further particulars apply to. EING Lots No. 11 and 12. Con. l, N. D. R., Gle'nelg. and 11 and 12, on Con. 2, N. I). R.. also 13 and 14. on Gen. 3. N. D. R.. each lot containing 50 acres. or 3(1) acres in all. nearly all cleared. Well watered. well fenced. good outbuildings and dwellings, good bearing orchards. ‘ In first class state of cultivation, within a iew rods of school, 4 miles from Durham. Will be sold en bloc or in separate lots. as purchas- er desires. Easy terms. For turther par- ticulars apply to - | NEW PUMPS AND REPAIRS. DRILL, CURB, RE-CURB, PRESSCURB \VELLS. All 01113“! taken at the old stand near McGowau's Mill will be pmmptlyat- tended tu. ALL WORK GUARANTEED at “Live and let live” PRICES. W. A. GLASS, TAILOR. We make and trim vour own gouds Into a first class suit. Ladies’ Tailoring a Specialty. Pumps. Author and teacher of the Nonpareil Sys- tem of Cutting, Patented. Whether it‘s a suit for a formal occasion, or just for business, or for outint'. it ought to be well made and ought to tit. \V’o do it that way. The tit will lw pot-foot. and the making will he exc-el- lent. The clothes will be a credit to us and to you. “'0 make a specialty to suit the publiv. TAllflHING ! Mar. Fall Term Opens Sept. 3rd. A”- ..N’ :- 4!, \sâ€"p L7 //« z/i/(JJ fl/ marrow. ONTARIO. . BEG LEAVE '1‘0 INFORM MY CUS. TCMERS and the public. in general that; I am prepared to furnish HORSE P0W_ER_ENQINE, con- Thresher for Sale. have our graduates been so remarkably successful in securing excellent situations immediately on leaving college as during the present 'ear. If you havea di loma from our co lege you need no "p0 itioal pull ” or influential friends to help you to success. You can stand on your own merits and will surely advance to the front. Our courses of study are com- plete, systematic. valuableâ€"the beat in Canada to-day. Catalogue free. X ever before in the. history of our mile 0 have oqrgraduatep been ,80 remsrhb y . J. Elliott, - Principal \On the Banks of the Sangeen Whatever You Want. Hotel to Rent. Farm for Sale Apply to New High Class For Sale. . For Sale. . GEORGE WHITMORE, DCRIIAM JOHN WILSON. 80:104. Durham, or 1t Hill, Remnant. JOSEPH .JAQU ES, Durham 1’. O. AA). BEATON, Bunessan P. 0. A. Hummus. Pncevxlle. THURSDAY.

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