West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 1 Aug 1907, p. 7

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THE DURHAM CHRONICLE IS PUBLISHED . EVERY THURSDAY MORXIXG At the Chronicle Printing House, Garafraxa .,8treet ° ' Tm: CHRONICLE will be sent- to Subscnptlon any address. free of postage, for Rates - - $1 OOper year, payable in advance â€"$1.50 may be charged if not so paid. The date to which every subscription is pa1d is denoted by the number on the address label. No paper dis- continued to all arrears are paid, except at the option of the proprietor. 1158].!) For transient advertisements 8 Adve g cents per line for the first inser- Bates - tion; 3 cents per line each subse4 quent insertibnâ€"minion measure. Professional cards:not exceeding one inch $4.00 per annum. Advertisements without specific directions will be published till forbid and charged accordingly. Transient noticesâ€""Lost." ‘=Found." “For Sale." etc,.â€"30 cents for first insertion, 2‘5 cents for each suhsetluent insertion. ,,‘-_A_J L_ _A.___._-_.,- “--_‘ FFICE AND RESIDENCE A short distance east of Knapp’s Hotel, Lamb ton Streeth Lower Town, Durham Oflice hours from 12 to 2 o’clock U“ Garafraxa and George Streetsâ€"at foot of bill. Oflice hours-941 a.m., 24 p.m., 7-9 p.m. Telephone No.10. HYSICIAN AND SURGEON, OF- fice in the New Hunter Block. Ofiice hours, 8 to 10 a. m., to 4 p. m. and 7 to9 p. m. Special attention given to diseases of women and children. Residence op- posite Presbvterian Church. -quv“ vâ€" wrr “m vâ€"vâ€" -â€" All adx ertisements, t3- lensâ€"life insertion in current week. should be brought in not later than TUESDAY morning- Late Assistant Roy. Lo‘ndon Ophthalmic Hos. £112.. and _to Golden Sq. Throat and Nose Hos. wâ€"vv‘\| wvâ€"v -â€"â€"-â€" ___ All advertisements ordered by strangers must be Daitl for m advapce. vv 57â€"-“ --- -â€" Contract rates for yearly advertisements fur- nished on application to the office. ._A._A.,-_ -â€" SPECIALIST : EYE, EAR, THROAT .81. NOSE L. R. C. P., LONDON. ENG. RADUL‘ATE of London, N=~w York and Chicago. Diseasés of Eye. Ear Nose and‘Throat. Will be at. Knapp House, Durham, the 2nd Satuzdzv in each month. Hoursâ€"l-G p.m. . . is completely stocked with all The Jab NEW TYPE. thus affording fac- Department iliti‘gs for turning out. First-class OFFICE: ONOR GRADUATE, UNIVERSI- ty of Toronto. Graduate Royal College Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Dentistry in all its Branches. Ofilce.â€"Calder Block, over Post Ofice propertv. D 0666 over [Gordon’s new Jewellery Store, Lower Town, Durham. Any amount of monev to loan at 5 per cent. on farm ”v â€"'â€"‘ â€" _ veyfmcers Etc. Money to' Loan. Ofices:â€"I n the McIntyre Block, over Standard Bank. A. G. MACKAY K. C. W. F. DUNN. 1‘ er, Conveyancer,' c. Insurance Agent. . Money to Loan. Issuer .of Max:- nage Lxcenses. A general financlal bum- ness transacted. . DURHAM. ONT. (Lower Town.) 2’ tioneer for the County of Grey. Sales promptly attended to. Orders may be left- at his Implement Warerooms, McKinnon’s old stand. or at the Chronicle Ofiice. IL‘L ACCEPT PUPILS IN Voige culture and singmz, Studio at Mr. Laumer’s Uppertown. Feb tf. Drs. lamieson . Maclaurin. 'rosom'o, 01w." Corner Yonge end Alexander Streets The School that ranks first in. thoroughness, gopulnrity and genume ment. Our atten- . once is greater, more students were placed m positions and oat and at better salanes than in any premons year; Wnte today for handsome catalogue. - l. G. Hutton, M. D., C. M. \FFICE AND RESIDENCEâ€"COR. Nov. 9, ’03. DURHAM, ONT., J. F. GRANT, D, D. 8.. L. 'l. P, Telford. ARRISTEIqASQLIAClTOR: Ego. IARRISTERS. SOLIQITORS, CON- OBN CLARK. LICENSED AUC- A. H. Jackson. - Q 'OTARY PUBLIC, COMMISSION- FALL TERM OPENS SEPT. 3 August 1_ 1907 'EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. 'omce: 13, Ff'ost Sn, Owen Sound. Medical Dz’rea‘orv. Arthur Gu'n, M. D. MacKay 8:. Dunn. Dental Dz‘reptorv. Geo. H. K. Midfurd DR. BROWN Legal “Directory. It pays to attend the Miscellaneous. W. IRWIN W. J. Elliott work. DR. BURT. Cure the Indigestion Which Is So Liable to Lead to Apoplexy. Mr. Thos. Gilray. whose death oc- curred at Toronto Saturday. was well known in this country many years ago. He was sixty-four years of age For many yearsa farmer. he took an active part in municipal afi'airs, being reeve of Euphrasia township for 13 years, and also Warden of Grey. Giv- ing up his farm a few years ago to his sons, he entered the insurance business in the County of Simcoe. The deceased is survived by many relatives. His wife died some eight or nine years ago, but there are left three daughters and two sons: Mrs. Edward Donneley, living in this county; Messrs. Fraser and Thomas Gilray in Euphrasia township, and Miss Lila and Annie at their present home in Toronto. There also sur vives besides Rev Dr. Gilray, four other brothers and five sisters, viz: Mrs. Margaret McMaster. of Toronto Junction; Mrs Katie Youmans. of Boise, Idaho; Mrs. W. A. Malcolm. Elmvale; Miss Alice Gilray. residing with Dr. Gilray. and Mrs. George Wright. of Vandeleur; and Messrs. James, near Buffalo, N. Y.; John in Coaldale, Colo; Robert, Chicago, and William. Toronto. The remains were taken to Thornbury on Monday for interment. We absolutely agree that your money will be refunded should you buy a 50 cent box of Mi-o na stomach tablets and not be satisfied with the results. Mi o-na is sold by druggists everywhere, or will be sent by mail on receipt of price. 50 cents. Booth's Miona Company. Bufialo. N. Y In recent years the greatest ad vance in medicine has been in the study of diseases of indigestion and nutrition and no other prescription has proven itself of as much value as Mimona. It is relied‘ upon as a certainty today in relieving the worst troubles of digestion and as- similation and making a complete cure. Rush of business, eating too fast and too much, excesses of any kind. soon result in indigestion. Then when the digestive organs cannot care for the food properly the coats of the blood vessels in the brain get little nourishment. become brittle. and finally yield to the fierce blood pressure. One is then said to have a “shock,” to be paralyzed, or die from apOplexy. People suffering with headaches. giddiness. palpitation. sleeplessness, bad taste in the mouth, drowsiness, coated tongue, distress after eating, specks before the eyes, and any other of the many distressing results of a Weakened stomach, should profit by the discovery of Mi-o-na stomach tablets “Three years ago we had three doctors with our little boy and every. thing that they could do seemed in vain. At last when all hope seemed to be gone we began using Chamber~ lain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and in a few hours he be. gan to improve. Today he is as healthy a child as parents could Wish for.”â€"MRS. B. J. JOHNSTON, Linton, Miss. For sale at Parker’s Drug Store. Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, Better Than Three Doctors. The Indian who is camped up at the station is the well known Cephas Cabbage. He is the interpreter of the Saugeen band, and talks English as perfectly as a white man. They tell this rather good story on Cephas. Some years ago he bought a lor. of apple trees from a nursery agent, butl did not pay for them as per contract. ' He was repeatedly billed through the post, but dunning letters didn’t die- turb him any, and at last the account was placed in the hands of a collect- ing agency. Soon after arepresenta. tive of the agency visited the reserve and one of the first men he met was Cephas himself. The stranger, of course, did not know him. and pro. ceeded to inquire if he knew a man named Cephas Cabbage. “Oh, yes,” was the reply, “I knew him well. He was a good man. but poor fellow he’s dead ! He died yesterday. Too 'bad, too bad.” That was enough, fthe stranger left the reserve without collecting his MILâ€"Telescope. A modern dude with narrow striped clothes, saddle colored shoes, a loud necktie, hair parted over his nose, and smoking \a cigarette, addressed his best girl thus: If you was me and I was you what would you do? She hesitatingly said with a smile: I would take 0E that hideous tie, put that cigarette in the stove, part my hair on one side, then pray to God for brains. Unscrnpulous dealers actuated by large profits often recommend corn cures “as good as Putnam’ s. ” There is only one genuine Corn Extractor and that is Pntnam’ s Painless which is a. minds of eflioienoy and prompt. ness. Use no other. THE PUBLIC IS OFTEN FAKED DEATH OF THOS. GILRAY. DON’T DIE AT 45. AN INDIAN’S RUSE. WWW The United States Departuwnt of Agriculture has started a crusade against the common noose fly and is carrying on extensive experiments as to the best way of banishing it from the abodes of man The fly has been found to be not only a nuisance. but a menace to man’s health. Its hairy body carries both disease and death. Many epidemics which sweep over communities in the hot season have been traced to the fly. Having its origin in filth, it brings with it the bacteria which breed in filth. And as it moves about, now crawling over refuse. now over the food on, the table. flying from the lips of the sick to the lips of the healthy; it is said to be more dangerous to modern society than were the wild. beasts to primi tive man. The high mortality among children in the congested districts of a city where families are closely crowded tOgether, where refuse accumulates faSB, where food is often kept in liv» ing rooms, is due to a large degree. so scientists now say, to the fly. in- fant diseases chiefly prevail in the season when the flies abound D». J. T. C. Nash, in [he Journal of the Royal Sanitary InSLitute giving hi 3 experience as an English health officer says that the fiv is responisbie for the death of many children because of polluting the milk which they drink. The Common House Variety Are a Menace to Health. _ “It is a matter that has been en- tirely overlooked” Sn id Dr. C. O Probst, recently, “but we now know that the common house fly is an agent of importance in carrying the germs of typhoid fever. It was for. merely believed that the germs were only carried in water, milk or other liquid food. Flies bonh breed and feed in places where the germs are to be found, and then, flying into our houses, no doubt often carry the germs and deposit them on our {ood. Remedy for Diarrhoea Never Known to. Fail- “I want to say a few words for Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. I have used this prescription in my family for the past five years and have recom- mended it to anumber of pepple in York county and have never known it to fail to effecta cure in any in- stance. I feel that I can not say too much for the best remedy of the kind in the W0rld.”â€"S. JEMISON, Spring Grove. York County, Pa. This remedy is for sale at Parker’s Drug Store. Lives of editors remind us Honest tOil stands little chance, The more we work we' leave behind . us. Bigger patches on our pants. On our trousers once so stylish Now are stripes of varied hue All because subscribers tarry- And dont pay us What is due. rI'hen let them be up and doing Send your mite however small Or when winds of winter hit. as We will have no pants at all. The young man Starting out for himself ought to make a, study of his power of penetration, of his. character-reading ability. He ought to make it a business to study men, estimate their capabilities and mo- tives .which actuate them. He should study them, scrutinize their actions, watch their tendencies in little things and learn to read ' them as an open book. The involuntary acts and natural manner of a man in- dicate more than does his studied conversation. The eye cannot lie. It speaks the truth in all languages. It often contradicts the tongue. While the man is often trying to, 'de- ceive you with his words. his eyes are telling you the truth; his actions are indicative of the real man, while the tongue may only represent the diplomat, the man who-is acting. FLIES AS DISEASE BEARERS. w. K. GEORGE, Exemplified - Portrait Collection Agficfiiture and inArt FINEST OF THE WORL’D’S BANDS MAGNIFICENT BATTLE SPECTACLE UNRIVALLED ENTERTAINMENT FEATURES The Triumph of the Time! In Premiums $45,000 In Premiums $40,000 In Special Attractions $40,000 Indgstrial Activity National and Historical All That's Best in Our Country's , Canadian Progress Our Country's Raources Illustrated ' Industries 1907 $400,000 In New Bufldinds $400,000 POOR FELLO W S. ADVICE TO BOYS. Single fares for round trip: and excursion rates on every line of travel. For all information address CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION TORONTO Auéust 26th to September 9th THE DURHAM ~ (JIIRUN lCLE Hidden: words for Mrs Harry Grant. of Toronto. whow husband has been missing since some time eaxly in the spring. Was among the excurtionists to town on Saturday. She came up to have a talk with Consmble OWen regard. ing the unknown man “Clarence” Grant. who died as a result of in~ juries received at Emary’s barn rais- log, and who. it ‘18 generally believed, was her missing husband. Mrs. Grantis awoman of slight stature, rather pz'epossessing in manner and appearance and apparently about ‘25 or 28 years of age. After interview- ing Constable Owen she visited the home of Mr. James Emary on the 7th. line and made father inquiries of that gentleman concerning the man who was fatally injured on his premises. Mrs. Harry Grant. of Toronto, is Qulte Posmve That “Clarence” Grant Was Her Hu~band. The descriptlou ot the man in question as also that of the husband of the Toronto woman have already been published and commented upon at length in the columns of this paper. In fact the Express was the that paper to show from the descrip- tiou of the clothes worn by the de- ceased as well as from a cooked foot and certain marks under the chin and upon the right arm that the body was none other than that of Harry Grant, of Toronto. the husband of the woman who came here on Satur- day, Mrs. Grant is almost certain that suzhls the case, but realizing that she may be mistaken she has decided to DFObr-f the matter to the bottom. With this end in View she will con- sultacextain dentist in an eastern town who did some work for her supposed husbmd over a year ago, and whOse testimony will, it is be- lieyed. Serve to clear up the mystery. If evorything turns out as anticipated Mrs. Grant will return to Meaford and have the body exhumed. To improve the appetite and strengthen the digescion try a few doses of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets. Mr.J. H. Sei’tz, of Detroit, Mich, says: “They restor- ed mv appetite when impaired. re lieved me of a bloated feeling and caused a pleasant and satisfactory movement of the bowels.” Price, 25 cents. Samples free. For sale at Parker’s Drug Store. It is worthy of notice that when the freight train collided with the excursion train on the Pere Mar- quette Railway. near Salem. Mich.. the passenger cars were crushed like eggshells Excursion cars are gener- ally frail. rickety, and old. Often they are no longer suitable for use in regular passenger traffic. If there is an accident of any kind they go to matchwood, and the passengers are killed by dozens. There is only one remedy for this danger. the grad- ual replacement of all wooden coach- es by steel cars. It has been proved in the New York subway and else- where that the all~steel car is not only prrctical, but desirable. It is capable of all necessary decoration. can be made exceedingly comfortable and is vastly more sanitary than the wooden car. Its great rigidity would be a p'r0tection to passengers. The records of railway wrecks show that passengers in sleepers or parlor cars seldom sustain injuries of a serious nature because of the solidity and strength of the cars in which they are riding. Yet the Pullmrn Com- pany has begun experimenting with an all-steel car in the hope of still further reducing the danger. Piles get quick and certain relief from Dr. Shoop’s Magic Ointment. Please note it is made alone for Piles, and its action is positive and certain. Itching, painful.protruding or blind piles disnppear like music by its use. Large nickel-copped glass jars 50 cents, Sold'by MsoFsrlane . Co. . “ALMOST PERSUADED " For an Impaired Appetite. EXCURSION CARS. Manage} and Secretary. (Meafurd Express.) (The News. City Hall. TORONTO 1907 That the world is me- : on in all human activities - witl. <tonishing rapidityis emphatically - caressed the family. From the poi: = : cleavage. Everv morning the :- rd of the world’s doings of the p.» . ous dav is laid on the breakfast use, in that marvel of the age. th. .laily paper. Nothing escapes the seen-sighted vision of the correspondents and the searchers for news in every nook and corner of the globe. And what a record it is! Intense activity every- where, with gold as the objective and metive force and universal unrest be- cause of unjust conditions. There is a plane of cleavage in the human family. ' From the point of cleavage there are two scales, the one of de- scent through every phase ol’ degen- eracy down to the quintescence of diabolism, and from the same point upwards through all farms of uplift- ing: to the verge of the divine and godlike. That is the neat saving element of humanity, which. possibly saves the world from a fate like that of Sodom and Gomorrah. The world’s hisrory for a day is absolutely bewil- dering to the sane brain. Its mur- ders its suicides, its infinite variety of crimes, its drunkenness, its glut» tony, its debaucheries. its poverty, its misery, its slum life, its gambling. its universal dishonesty in act or thought. its overreaching and jeal ousies in business, its extravagance. its \disregard and waste of human life. and the thousand other things on the downward degenerating scale, makes one wonder whether the grand agents on the upward scale, which are trying to uplift and purify the impure. the wretched and the godless, to a higher plane of clean honest liv. ing. will every gain the victory â€"Ex. An old Scotch lady used to be at- tended by a doctor to whom she in Variably gave a guinea when he went to see her. He had told the friends with whom she lived that her death would probably be sudden. and one day he was hurriedly sent for. as she appeared to have become unconscious. On his arrival he saw at once that the old lady was dead, and, taking hold of her right hand, which was closed. but not rigid, he calmly ex tracted from it the fee which she had provided for him. and as he did so he murmured. “Sensible to the last!” For the good of those suffering: with eczema or other such trouble. I wish to say, my wife had something of bat kind and after usmg the doc tors’ remedies for some time con- cluded to try Chamberlain’s Salve, and it proved to be better than any- thing she has tried. For sale at Parker’ 3 Drug Store. THE WORLD WI. . 5 ON- Eczema. iBleached Talile Linen 54 inches wide ! 35c.:1vard. ,Lad1es’ black sateen underskirts 1 $1. OOeach. Ladies’ White lawn underskiits 75c. each See ou1 ladies’ fancy collars M2012 each. â€"B:11 gains. :, See our new Prints and Dress 1 Ginghams. iFLANNELET'l E BL A\ KETSâ€"Larqe 11 4 size in White and gmy , $1. 20 pr. .FLOOR OILCLOTHâ€" 1 yd.,1§ vds. ! ’ Vds. wide, 250. :1 squme y ’°::.1d 'SMYRNA BUGSâ€"30x1,” i11c11es.).1)€) I Gateh- (TEAâ€"$.11 1d.1 Ceylon T1111. black and mixed :112. 5..c .$1)c..:1nd «We. :1 N» i 2 Yards long, 26 inches wide, 25c. pair 91‘ 66 30 66 00C. 65 321'; u u 30 u 66 70C 6‘ 3% so ‘6 :36 £5 to we. 65 35 u s. 50 .o 66 $1.“) “ 31; u u 54 u u 1.40 H Table Linen 54 inches wide, :50 a yard He Sells Cheap Pure Canadian Honey in 250. The Big4 I BEG LEAVE 1‘0 INFORM MY CUS- l‘OMERS and the public in general that I am prepared to furnish NEW PUMPS AND REPAIRS. WELL Pumps. music. E?" ALL ORDERS taken at. the old stand near McGowan’a Mil! will be promptly at tended to. ALL WORK GUARANTEED at ‘ ‘Live and let live” PRICES. GEORGE WHITMORE- Songs, (Claims Y C l\ew music received each week. Percv (H1. webster Barnum, *{E-CURBING up Pnaseccnama done with Cement boncrebe. SOLD AT HALF PRICE. 25 gents Per (low . H. BEAN l have placed in Stock a. fine line of late LACE CURTAINS. ' CALDER BLOCK and Cwo=$t¢ps 0‘ 6‘

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