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Durham Review (1897), 14 Oct 1897, p. 6

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somehow the States had not proved the Eldorado they had expected. There Maurice gained his first personal exâ€" pericnce of poverty. He had no assoâ€" ciations of that {ind with his own country,. and naturally came to the conclusion that once back, it would be an casier matter to find some emp‘oyâ€" ment that would eke out their scanty means, beside the hope that Mr. Gathâ€" erwick might relent and be willing to overlook the past miserable folly. But that hope had to be struck out of their calculations now, and they were not through the first week i'et. The shipping houses followed suit. " There is only one course left, Nell : we wast go back to Glasgow," Maurâ€" ice »nuounced at the end of the secâ€" "Mr. Gatherwick is obliged to you, air," said a deep voice from behind : " but instead of discussing matters that do not concern you, kindly put up your books and go," Mr. M‘Calium collapsed. He did as be was biddemn in perfect silence, too vvercome even to altempt an apology. Davidson followed him as swiftly as possible, and Mr. Gatherwick was left in solitary possession of the field. A limited and very dusty field; but the slilfest battle of bis prosperous life had been fought out there. It was theo 1d story; his only son, easy, careâ€" less, thoughtlessâ€"in all respects the anâ€" tipodes of his fatherâ€"mistakes in the cashâ€"bookâ€"inquiries hushed upâ€"disâ€" grace and banishment. That had hapâ€" pened two years ago, an dthis mornâ€" ings was the third letter that had been sent back unread. Mr. Gatherwick was at one end of the pole, Mr. M‘Callum at the other, yet both held precisely the same view on one subject. The prodigal in that old parable had been forgiven much too easily ; the father had exhibited an amiable weakness that was altoâ€" gether reprehensible under the circumâ€" stances. Mr. Gatherwick involuntarily commended himself for his sounder principles, and felt that he bhad done ]nghte »musly in returning that unread @lter. And yet, somewhere, underneath was a faint uneasy sense of discomfortâ€"of something wanting. For what end was le working now! He had no irreproachâ€" able elder son to.fall back upon. Hosâ€" pitais and almshouses are useful instiâ€" tutions, but few men labour with enâ€" thusiasm for their sole behoof. He might endow another school, perhaps : huk Mle usc sc ie s C C J : When Maurice set out to the far countryâ€"New York in his caseâ€"Nell and ber mother had been fellowâ€"pasâ€" kengers. The mother had been ailing all the journey, and died the day beâ€" fore they reached Sandy Hook. Nell was left solitary, almost penniless. Maurice‘s sole fortune was two hunâ€" dred pounds, descended to him from his mother. What could have been a more suitable arrangement than that they should marry and combine their jJoint misfortunes ? & Wpntaity ut epdiP romtminty tui d ActsFad ol but there appeared to be schooils in abâ€" undance already, and he himself was a sellâ€"taught man. Mr. Gatherwick abâ€" ruptly wound up his reflections at this unsatisfactory _ stage, locked up his safes, and rooms, and hurtied away down the stairs and through the bunf' gaslighted streets to his handsome solâ€" itary house, wherein dwelt no one perâ€" son to watch and wait for his advent. ‘‘Do you think it‘s becauseâ€"because you married me ?" she asked anxiously a minute or two after. *‘ No, Ne!!; that it certainly is not. BHe has not even read the letter, nothâ€" ing but the address to which he could send it back again." "That is the last time I will ever trouble him, Nell," said Maurice Gathâ€" erwick, the younger, flinging it into the fire. " He does not know what forâ€" giveness means, and he need not beâ€" gin to learn now, as far as I am conâ€" cerned." I was so sure he would tell you to come home when hbe found you were so rear. What are we to go * ‘" Don‘t fret, Nell. I‘ll have a hunt round the shipping houses here ; and if the worst comes to the worst, well, we can go back to Glasgow on our own account." CT ENETC C T AMBD OMRTUITC. The letter went back whence it came â€"not very far; it was from an Engâ€" lish seaport town this time; the last bad been from New York. It went back and was greeted with sore disâ€" may. Ne!! looked up from her stitching with a disappointed fae. " O, Maur.ce, I w:xs“sm sure he would tell you to mponrum uces Lk. ._‘% .m & ‘*Not entirelyâ€"moderation in all things. He might have been taken in on probation for a time, till they saw how far his reform was to be dependâ€" ed upon. No ; on the whole, I‘m not sayâ€" ing but 1 agree with Mr. Gatherwick." ‘"Then you would have left him to starve, I suppose?" returned Davidson, who represented the entire audience. There was a pause in the Gatherwick oflice. The baifâ€"hour after five had rung out some minutes before ; six was olosingâ€"time, and it was one of the arâ€" ticles of Mr. M‘Callum‘s creed that it was injcrious to the constitution to pass straight from the whirl of busiâ€" ness to the chill outside air. Mr. M‘â€" Callum was chiefâ€"clerk ; there were but two; and whenever it was pnct.io-l ableâ€"that is to say whenever Mr. Gatherwick himsel{f was not present in . personâ€"he made a point of allowing a suitable margin for general conversaâ€" tion, before the two descended the stairs and set their faces homewards. It was Mr. M‘Callum of course, who was leading the conversation toâ€"night and the subject of all others that had come to the fronmt was the case of the Prodigal Son suggested possibly by a circumstance that had occurred that same morning. Among the letters by the second post had been one in a big dashing bhand, which without reading further than the had of the first page Mr. Gatherwick had promptly put into a fresh envelope and reâ€"directed, preâ€" sumably to the place it had come from : but he hadâ€"posted it himself, instead of leaving it with the others to the junâ€" ior clerk, Davidson. Davidson took a special interest in that dashing bandâ€" writing, and was laboring under a sense of injury accordingly. "For myself, 1 never quite agreed with all the fuss that was made over that young renegade," Mr. M‘Callum was remarking with an emphatic flourâ€" ish of his ruler, "It‘s not the pracâ€" tice, in these days at anyrate ; and I‘d not advise any one to follow his examâ€" ple on the chance of getting the like reception." MR. GATHERWICK‘S PRODIGAL habitiane, i fet. ho E.. d Oul Moneybagsâ€"How dare you ask my daughter‘s hand in marriage ? De Brokeâ€"Yes, I know she ain‘t much, sir, but I need the money. Lifiihmats & 3. BB <...s d s s d td c 1030 kingdom was ransacked for such a man but ha could not be found. At last a laborer returning from his work was discovered to be absolutely happy and was burried befora tha Yrimc To..a A Persian king got the blues and was told by his astrologers that he would be himself again by wearing the suit of a perfectly happy man. The whole ue eeemimh E2 TEC, was burried before the king. _ But when his coat was removed, it appeared thit the man wore no shirt! One must depend upon one‘s self for happiâ€" neass. NO WONDERI Irate Customerâ€"This chicken is quite sold. Polite Waiterâ€"What else could monâ€" sieur expect ? The poor bird has been lead three weeks. s P e ERCC OR AdME CC CV CUId with sovereigns. the head being up. Each coin was stuck in a mixture of lime, which soomn dried, leaving the preâ€" clous /"tile" securely fasteneg. W hen &h“‘; l:n.ng ulrriv'gd and was shown what old duke, who pms«*hs;d «I;I;r; money than he very well knew what to do with. Upon this occasion, wishing to impress his Majesty with the immenâ€" sity of his riches, he had the floor of th_.eldin-ing' hall paved from end to end E00 ACCD TORD MIRMTH WHEC had been done in his honor, his amazeâ€" ment knew no bounds, and it was with difficulty he! could be persuaded to set foot upon the golden floor. 1 No n oo ie on o im n eaetitet as smooth!ly, by any means.â€"Now, draw up your chair, and we will have some tea." That was the first of Davidson‘s visâ€" its. They continued regularly all the rest of the winter : through the hot stifling summer, when only dust and heat spoke of the green glory that hovâ€" ered over the whole land beyond this wilderness of stone and lime. Maurice longed as he had never longed in his life for one sight of tossing waves and breezy moors; only there was the landlady and the butcher and the bakâ€" er, and a whole army of smaller satelâ€" lites planted between, barring the way. To Bs Continued. A GOLDEN FLOOR. King George II. was once invited out to dine with a wealthy and eccentric * No, Davidson ; I‘m not. Don‘t run away with any ideas of that kind. That ended some time ago. I have just got to peg on here and help myself." " But do you like it, Mr. ]K;Iaurice?" " Candidly speaking, I can‘t say I dori but needs must, you know." umtutite ~dlle shar t llh 4140 .cA AaAd Davidson looked unsatisfied. " It doesn‘t seem right," he was beginning dolefully. Maurice interrupted bis lamentation. "It‘s no use crying over spilt milk, my boy. Tuke you a solemn warning by my case, and don‘t slide into crookâ€" edl ways. You don‘t slide back again as smooth!ly, by any means.â€"Now, draw T t saitths waitl udiniin d csinds d Aratiuacatle c it b4 Maurice had an extra turn at the: grindstone that day, and did not reach home for some time afier the visitor‘s arrival. Nell was sitting by the fire, | trying to keep uP the conversation with rather indifferent success. _ She broke off with a sigh of relief at the sound of her husband‘s footsteps on the stairs. Davidson flushed a sudden uncomfortable scarlet; he got up off ; his seat, and then stood grasping the back and hesitating. However, there was no hesitation about Maurice: he greeted his father‘s clerk as if they bad parted yesterday, and under the | most ordinary cirecumstances, and were | meeting now in the paternal mansion, t insterd of this fourthâ€"flat threadbars lodging. { ‘"And you are still in the old place, | my boy ? and M‘Callum too? just as | usual." | " Yes, sir. I‘m glad to see you back, Mr. Maurice, the place has not been | right sfi’nce you went. Are youâ€"are | youâ€"â€"?" ‘‘Oh, yes," laughed Nell; " two if you don‘t mind it being a little weak. They say it‘s bad for the nerves too strong." "1 couldn‘t say, it‘s so long since we had a chance of judging. _ Never mfiad; Davidson is not particular." â€" Semt ENEA ACT EPC to Nell; but if that prodigal had had my stool and forty pounds a year, he would have hurried off home even quicker than he did." _ "Don‘t you think you might try once more?" suggested Nel!l half unâ€" der her breath. " He has no one but you." * No," said Maurice decidedly ; "that‘s settled. I sent a message to Davidson to come and look us up toâ€"night. Can z'o afford to give him a cup of tea, Nel!l ¢" They were both thank{ul for this clerkship, very thankful ; but when one has been in a certain groove for a lifetime, it is not easy changing inâ€" to another, and those two idle desulâ€" tory years had not been altogether the best training for a daily steady grind. Maurice liked pleasure and sunshine and ease generally ; prodigals are not usually a race of immaculats heroes : time and space granted, his prospects of attaining the giddy height of that bundred and ten stipend were but faint. The novelty wore off in the first three days, and then it was only sheer necessity for himself and Nell th‘z'lt; keplt him to his post. _ f "I1 used to think so, too; but all depends from what point you look at it. Davidson at our office had forty, and it never occurred to me that it was too little. I should like to see that lad again," he went on, starting off on a new track, as was his fashion. * He would have done anything for me in those days. I‘ll look him up when we get seltled down here." t * A great deal better," assented Nell cheerfully. " It will seem quite a forâ€" tune after all the failures; only I do think fivu ought to be worth more than that, Maurice." "of ue "I understand those husk banquets now very “:el.l;", he remarked one day Om omm And so the little tent was pitched once more and Maurice found himself back among the oid bauntsâ€"with a difference. Then he had been a rich man‘s son and keir, now he was one of the rauk and file, and the rank and file were inconveniently plentiful, it seemed to him, durng that long quest afier a clerkship. " Hurrah!" I‘ve got it at last,‘ he cried, one rainy night, leaping up the stairs into the shabby sittingâ€"room. Forty pounds a year, and a steady rise of a pound! Why, in seventy years I‘ll bhaveâ€"I‘ll have one hundred and ten! Never mind, Ne!! ; it‘s beiter than doing nothing." M s ond week. "There will be a better chance there for me; I know the places." 3 noe5. rikads s m 1 ERFECT HAPPINESS FEARLESS. All these being cudgelled are boiled; and now five punsaris of Ruddee mixâ€" ed with syrup are mixed with both the preparations and stirred with hand, and in this, essence of rose or keorah one tola ,musk six mashas, and saffron three machas "being grinded," are mixâ€" ed, and the process now ready is called khamira a good one for the purpose, ever used in India for smoking. are many enticing looking prospects to be had there at reasonably low figures. _ Of course, one cannot go out there [and pick up a gold mine that will ’Kn.y handsome dividends unless he knows his business ; but a good mining \ man can get hold of some sllxlendi/d properties there now. T have bought two claims upon the Lake of the Woods | which I will gamble on. I fancy I | can trast my judgment to know a good |prospect when 1 see it." 1. Cloven. 2 Cardamums. %. Mace. 4. Nutmeg. 5. Allspice. 6 Cinnamon, 7 Dry rove flower. 8. Filling aloes wood. 9. Filling sandal wood. 10. Nakh. 11. Pandree. 12. White cardamums. 13. Benzoin. Of each quarter a seer. 14. Amillas. One seer. All these except the last one which is boiled, are cudgelled and made a powder. And a next preparation is now made: Camphor, two Chatakâ€"Karpur; salâ€" arus, quarter a seer; betel, quarter a GOING BACK FOR MORE. "The mines about the Lake of the Woods, are showing up surprisingly. We, who have made our strikes in the west, have been rather skeptical about any mines of permanent value or of great number east of the Rocky Mounâ€" tains. But my tripto that country up north and northâ€"west of Lake Su- | perior has opened my eyes. The Michiâ€" Ipicoten field bas not been much prosâ€" ‘pectod as yet, but is making some ‘ splendid showings in the little developâ€" | ment that has been done, and more men are going in there Every day. I saw some samples of decomposed quartz there that were as rich in gold as any |I have ever seen in my life. The rock ’i.s very easily workable and there will be some big piles made there on small | capital." 3 _ "Did you make any investments?" | was asked of Mr. Edwards. \ _*"Yes, I bought an interest in one | claim and secured options on a couple more, But as a general rule the miners there are not ready to sell for any moderate figure. The‘i' think they have a good thing, and forget that it takes money to run mines. After a time, when the first flush of rich discoveries wear off, and money _ is nesded to work the properties, then ‘the figures will come down. Michipiâ€" coten is a good countr{ for the prosâ€" |pector now, but it will be better for the capitalist |__ TWELVE MONTBHS FROM NOW. |\ ‘"*Up in the Rainy River and Lake | of the Woods district I found the most tempting field for present investment that I have yet struck. Some of the mines there Kdve been developed long enough to give a fair estimate of their value. Bomething can be judged as to the character of the developments beâ€" neath the surface showing, and this gives achance to figure somewhat on | the probable character of newer prosâ€" pects in the same country. New claims are being continually found and there Being withered it is brought to be cudgelfed with wood so firmly as to become a dust, which is called "Rudâ€" dee" and mixed with syrup and alkali or impure carbonate of soda; it is left in hballs to be dissolved. Now a leavened or Khamira tobaâ€"co is prepared by the undergoing formula: When it is full grown and its leaves have begun to acquire a yellowish tint it is gathered and left on the ground to be withered one day or more in the sun. Although we can have smoking toâ€" bacco from many different ways, but it would suffice here to mention some processes, for their suitableness, curâ€" rent in a most famous place for the purpose in India, known as Biswan, in Seetapore district. a child of two or three. In India all clases and both sexes smoke, eat and smell. It grows in India so vigorously that we can scarcely find a town _ or village in Hindustan where no plot of ground would be found covered by this perpetual plant. And in the same manner there would be very few of our readers who know the processes in which the tobacco becomes suitable for our usual smoking. It would be not. therefore, out of place to draw before the public an outline of its manufacâ€" ture Valuable Information on the Right Mixture for Hindoos to Smoke and Chew. As we see it is a most amazing exâ€" tent to which tobacco has spread all over earth in these 300 years, when it was brought into England from Amerâ€" ica by Sir Waiter Raleigh in 1586 A. D. In Turkey it is perpetually in evâ€" ery mouth. In China it is so univerâ€" sa‘ly practiced that a female of six or seven has a pocket in her dress to hold her pipe and tobacco. In Burmah it is smoked by persons of all ranks, even About It. J. L. Edwards, a wellâ€"known mining man and capitalist, who registers from BGalt Lake City, but whose home is diâ€" vided between the locations of his sevâ€" ‘eral gold mining properties in Monâ€" tana, Utah and Colorado, was recently interviewed in Buffalo. iAsked as to whether he had any intention of going to the Klondike region, Mr. Edwards said : * No, I. aim not going to the Klonâ€" dike, but I have just come from the Lake Superior and Rainy Lake gold fields and the more I see of that surâ€" prising country, the more I feel that I do not care to go to Alaska. I think that the new country which is being opened up north of the Minnesota line and Lake Superiorâ€"the Lake of the Woods territory and the Michipicoten fieldâ€"is the most promising country for payingy mines that L have ever run across. I am amazed by it. I have already secured some options and have made some purchases there and am Inasmuch as Mr. Edwards has the reputation of never having been conâ€" nected with in unsuccessful mine, his last statement may be said to go. BABOO TOBACCO SCIENCE. RaINY RIVER DISTRICT. The renowned professor of palmistry gazed upon the lines in the young man‘s _ C rhere aill te ‘a weld "There wi a weddi soon,"" said in a confident taone.ns ns‘ he _ He did not see the left hand, as the oung man and girl in the buggy swept fiy him too quickly. h\uab;z}dt f io oo y o oog ditee ns is a man who lik j sud wal, o5 112 $s °_ mnreund VISIONARY BEINGS. What is your idea of a model wife? Weil, she is a woman who likes : fly round and wait on her husband. And what is your idea of a mod AN UNDERGROUND CITY. In Galicia in Austrian Poland, there is a remarkable underground city, which has a population of over 1,000 men, women and children, gcores of whom have never seen the light of day. It is known as the City of the Salt Mines and is situated several hundred feret below‘ the earth‘s surface. It has its town hall, theater and assembly room as well as a beautiful church, deâ€" corated with statues, all being fashâ€" ioned from the pure crystallized rock salt. It has well graded streets and spacious squares lighted with electricâ€" ity. There are numerous instances in this underground city where not a sinâ€" gl eindividual in three or four succesâ€" sive generations has ever seen the sun or has any idea of how people live in the light of day. These secrets, it is alleged, relate to the Prince‘s prospects of ultimately asâ€" suming monarchica‘! dignity which were they divulged, would not only place the Prince in an emharrassing situaâ€" tion, but in all probability forfeit for good and ali the monarchical recogniâ€" tion he desires to secure on the part of the foriegn Powers 1 am informed on authority J have no reason to call into question that the . disreputable Captain entertains the soâ€"called creme de la creme of Bulgarian society at his luxuriously furnished prison apartâ€" ments at lu.n(‘ile()n of a morning, and that his "cell" is the rendezvous of the fashionable world of intrigue _ and scandal. Shocking as all this may sound, it is neverth@less illustrative of life, not of middle class or low life, but of "high life" in an Eastern principalâ€" ity of Europe." to the prison; others that the Captain met the Prince at night outside the prison walls and conferred with him at a roadside tavern. Be this as it may, society holds the Prince blameless of bhaving taken part, however indirectâ€" ly, in the disippearance of Boitschefi‘s victim, but it is generally maintained that the Prince is anxious to see the Captain acquitted, the latter _ having threatened to divulge state secrets unâ€" less bis innocence of the crime be judiâ€" cially established. |_____ 1t Created a Sensation â€" Luxurious Prison Life of a Murderer Who Is a Court Favorite. His Royal Highness Chulalongkorn, King of Siam, is never troubled by loss of sleep. No matter what hour he retires to bed or what dissipation â€" he may have indulged in before doing so, the moment his royal cranium rests upon the pillow the King sleepsâ€"and snores. During his round of visits to the Continental courts, the King‘s sleap was of the soundest, and the thought of how far distant he was from his naâ€" tive land seems not to have troubled his dreams. His attendants were unâ€" der the strictest orders never to wake him. At Vienna one of the Archâ€" dukesâ€"it was Ludwig Victor, the Emâ€" peror‘s sole surviving brotherâ€"on callâ€" ing on the King at the Hofburg, at halfâ€"past eleven o‘clock A. M., was told point blank by His Majesty‘s atâ€" tendant, that he dared not wake his sovereign master, for doing so would be as much as his head was worth. The King might wake at any moment, and when awake should at once by apprisâ€" HE . A ROYVAL SNORBR. NASAL TRUMPETING OF HIS MAâ€" JESTY THE KING OF SIAM. NE RPOy RWe VPMO MWP en t C a woman, Anna Simon, his accomplices being the Police Prefect Novelics and one _ Wasilijeff, a gendarme. Boitâ€" scheff‘s incarceration, according to the same writer, is limited to his being kept under lock and key throughout the day. As soon as night sets in he is at perfect liberty to join his boon companoins and frequent piaces _ of public resort, provided every precauâ€" tion is taken to concsal his identity by disguising his person. _ fHe is on his parole d‘honneur as an officer in the army that he will not attempt to esâ€" cape "durance vile." He is now awailâ€" ing a new trial, and he and his friend the Prefect Novelics, being in possesâ€" sion of court secrets of a lt:oiiticui tenâ€" dem-y, are convinced that they will be acquitted on the testimony of a crowd of witnesses now negotisting with the Attorney General for their release. It is even rumored among the initiated and semiâ€"initiated of Sophia and Philâ€" ippopolis society that Prince | Ferdinâ€" and has himself had an interview with Boitscheff. Some declare that the Frinceo ‘"Is that His Majesty‘s snore?" inâ€" quired the Prince. _ ___ _ s ed of his I!mperial Highness‘ presence. At Dresden, writes a correspondent, on one occasion it was past twelve o‘clock at noon when a royal prince demanded an audience of His Siamese Majesty. â€" The chamberlain in attendâ€" ance expressed his profound regret, but the King was fast asleep. At this identical instant came through the halfâ€"open door of the adjoining apartment. _ o ne i _"It is‘ your Royal Highness," came the chamberlain‘s respounse. _ _ f At the Grand Hotei at _ Budapest, where Chulalongkorn occupied a small suite of apartments his mighty snores are said to have penetrated along the corridors to the chiel staircase, and visitors to the hotel whose time was limited and who had missed seeing him were gratified with having at least been privi?eged to hear His Majesty‘s snore. Out of all consistency with the dicâ€" tates of justice is the intelligence reaching Vienna from Philippopolis reâ€" lative to the prison life of the Bulgarâ€" ian court favorite, Captain Boitscheff, who, it wiil be remembered, murdered TORONTO READILNG THE SIGNS. WENT IN DISGUISE A LOUD SNORE model fancy dress. They had been to a ball somewhere and| were coming here now to have a bite with the old man with the beaver and the blue mask. ‘"‘They all piled into the house and Q'Vdd ‘em. Tbrq was M & doz.n- of Im.t thlt th 'wn‘ 'un.dsxmanmd-'xwamen.l-u‘nww- n fancy dress. They had been to a ball Bu-t' \:‘l:;u:fd you break somewhere amd) were coming here now | He believes in the germ to have a bite with the old man with | that kissing is dangerous. ‘"‘The first man out of the carriage was a man in a long black gown like a great loose coat that reached down to his feet, and he had on a blue mask and a beaver hat. I wanted to laugh a little at that costume and I did to myâ€" self. He helped out of the carriage a lady who was gorgecusly dressed, and then another man and woman in fanâ€" tastic coltume.e got out of the same carriage. Then that carriage pulled ahead and let the next one came up. "My main in the blue mask and the beaver hat was evidently the boss of the ranch. He pranced up the steps and in a minute I heard him twistâ€" ing a key in the lock. That was a pleasant sound because it meant that there were no servants up; they were going to look out for themselves; and that meant good for me, for they‘d be all together, and it would be easy to avoid ‘em. There was just a dozen of ;nterruwo.l While at Work by a Lvely Party of Masqueraders, "Masquerade balls I never attendâ€"â€" ed," said the retired burglar, "but I once had a part of a one come to me. It may seem singular, but it was really as simple as rolling off a log. I was looking around in a house one night, or rather one morning, about 2 o‘clock, picking out what portable articles I could find that I thought I could make useful, when I heard carriages up the street. That was before the days of rubber tires and asphalt streets, and at that hour in the morning, when evâ€" erything was quiet, the wheels sounded very sharp and clear. I judged there must be about three of ‘em, and I sort of felt it in my bones that they were coming to my house. I couldn‘t have got out then _ without attracing attention from the drivers, and there was nothing for me to do but to wait and see. I waited, looking out into the street from a basement window, and by snakes and alligators! they did stop there. Lumber, Shingles and Lath always In Stock. s â€"â€"â€"aili> ) umm Having Completed our New Factory we are now pl‘OPfl‘“ to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stoock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orders can be filled. Sash and Door Factory. ORS. KENNEDY & KERGCAN, nantnimit eall) anmalll us C Ceane Du us D S OD A PP PTOmZ MCCRIURS; VuTI wow Mumod Treatmont will cure you. What it has done for othors it will do for you. Consuwiiation Free. No maiter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge. Charges reasonable. Books Free â€""The Golden Monitor" (illustrated), on Diseases of Men. Inclose postage, 2cents. Sealed. Book on "Diseases of Womeh*" Frea. Mon, incliose postage, 2 conts. Sealed. Book on "Diseases of Women" Irc; l e R&@~NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRIVATE. No medicine sent €.0 .0. No names on boxes or envelopes. Everyth.ng confidential. Question Jist and cost of Treatâ€" ment ment, FREE. SYPHILIS is the most provalent and most serious BLOOD diseaso. It saps the very life blood of the victim and unless entirely eradicated from the Aysâ€" tem will affect the offspring. Beware of Meroury, HEREDITARY ELOOD DISTEARE, It only suppresses the symptorasâ€"our NEW METHOD positively cures it for ever, YOUNG OR MIDDLEâ€"AGED MANâ€"You‘ve lod a gay life, or indulgod in the follies of youth. Selfâ€"abuse or later oxcesses have broken down your system. You feel the symptoms stealing over you. Mentally, physically and sexually you are not the man you used to be or should bo. Lustful practices reap rich harvests. Will you heed the danger signals. REA E ' Are youavictim? Have you lost hope? Aro you contemplating marriage? ; , Has your blood been disoased? Have you any weakness? Our New Nethod Treatmgnr. will cure you. What it’!lns done for others it will do for you. Consuiiation Beam penvavy s eapet .Pn OO TeR VE apeliniaipti® se ns T " UE ; , ® BSW £u o t 2o en e m e ce the nerves become strong as stecl, so that ner‘vous- ness, bashfulness and despondency disappear; the eyes becomo bright, the face full and clecr, energy returns to the body, and the méanl, physical and soxual systems are invigorated; all drains ceasoâ€"â€"no more vital wasto from the system. The various organs become natural and manly, You fosl yoursolf a man and know marriage cannot be & failure. Weinvite all the affliicted to consult us confidentially and free of charge. Don‘tletquacks and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars. We will cure you or no pay, HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISZASTD! . YOU HAVE SEMINAL OUR NEW METAOD THEATMENT alone can cure you, and make a man of you. Underits iniuâ€" ence the brain becomes active, the blood puriGed so that all pimples, blotcbes and ulcers disappear; Sh w camsae 1 Eoi 1 & + 300 navo any of the following symptoms consuli us before itis too late. Are you morâ€" vous and weak, despondent and gloomy, spocks before the eyes with dark circles under them, weak back, &(1«lueya irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful, dreams and losses, sedimentin urine, pimples on the face, oyos sunken, hollow cheeks, careworp oxpression, poor memory, lifeless, distrusiful, lack energy and strength, tired mornâ€" ings, restless nights, changeable moods, weak manhood, stunted organs and mremeâ€" ture decay, bone pains, hair loose, sore throat ets, o YOU HAVE SENMINAL WEAKNESSI Thousands of young and middle agod men are annually ewept to & grave through EARLY INDISCRETIONS, EXCESSES, AND BI.DJD DISE. you have any of the following symptoms consult us before itis too lato. | Al Tous and weak, despondent and rloomv. snocks hatara tha avas with dark air WEAK, NERVOUSO31SEASED MEN RZ®CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY ! THE RETIRED BURGLAR. Greatest Discovery of the Age FCR CURING THESE DI8EASES The New Method Treatment is the SELFâ€"ABUSE, EMISSIONS, YARICOâ€" CELE, CONCEALED DRAINS, STRICTâ€" URB GLEET, SYPHILIS, STUNTED PARTS, LOST MANKHOOD, iIMPOTENâ€" CY, NERVOUS DEBILITY, UNNATâ€" URAL DISCHARGES, ETC. ‘ ¢innn iN wE $1000 iN GOLP For a cAsE_.wWE G. & J. McKECHNIE _ "I know the Goglinton building well, a big office building standing on a goreâ€"shaped ineoe of ground between two streets that came Llogether round the point of the building; there was a hall through the thick grt of â€" the building from one street the other. "*Not long,‘ I says to the driver in front of the W and then I shed the black gown and blue mask and the brown hat along the hall and went out the other door." 4 nover won an!thing. He was a str. n re driver. He didn‘t know the old in in but h knew the black gown and the blue mask and the brown hat. "‘You know the Goglinton building,* I ha"s ‘south First and Pine t ‘"‘Yessir, he says. ** *How long will it take to drive down there amd back? T u& *"About twenty minu: sir,‘ he says, aind I opens the door. Will you get there as soon as you can t I says as I gets in, and he says ‘Yesâ€"sir.‘ "The three carringes were standing there, the last one in front of the house and the other two just ahead, the one the old man had come in the head one. I walked down to that carriage and stood on the walk and looked up at the driver. T wa‘s taking some chances here but the main thnt never toaok no chances 1 put ‘em on right away, without any delay and made for the door. I had to shut the door after me, because the doors through to the dining room from the hall were open and they‘d have felt the draught and came out to see whiat was the matter before I‘d had time to get away. C "Jolly lot they were and when they‘d got toler‘ble well settled down to eatâ€" in‘ and drinkin‘ I thought it was about time for me to be lookinz around. T went the stairs to the hall on the parloruflmr, where they‘d left the light burning bright, and the first thing m eyes fell on was the old man‘s hlnc{ gown, blue, mask, and beaver hat, and the same floor, and heard dishes ratâ€" tlin‘ and corks poppin‘ and I knew the snack had been set out there and was waitin‘ for ‘em. I hadn‘t been inâ€" to that room yet myself. â€" threw off. their wraps in the hall, m‘- where and b‘iled into the parlor, laughâ€" in‘ and chatterin‘, and five minutes latâ€" er I heard em in the dining room, on But why did you break it? He believes in the germ theory and at kissing is dangerous. But surely that is right and proper. In a scientist, yos; but not in a hus A THOUGHTFUL MAIDEN. Isn‘t that the young man yourwere No. 148 SHELBY ST. CETROIT, MICH. CANNOT CURE OF Horse Shocing In *o old stand. Al made shoes. Al ALLAN â€" McFA In the Town of Durham, : Oreg, including valeable Wa Brick Dwelling, and mar lots, will be sold in 01 Also lot No, 60, con. 2, ip of Bentinck, 100 ac Town plot Durham., Mortgage taken for wart FOR SALE The EDGE PROP I-UDR of Marringes 14cen toneer for Counties of Bruc Residenceâ€"King Bt., Wanos and Loans u-ruu‘od without delay promptly made, Insurance e MANEY DO LOAN stionos: rea KO® one door north of . Reot‘s 8i NOTARY PUBLILC, Commin MONEY TO LOAN Has opened out a fir Bm suum 1x st BUSINESS DIRCE Firstâ€"Class H Of the Best Quality THAXK EVER JAMES LOC 8. If a subscriber orders ."od at a certaintime , an eentisnues to send, the subsc ’.’._v for it if he takes it o 2. Aay person who takes Bhe post ofice, whether di ht or another, or whethe Betibed or not is responsible | _aat = °_ _ """" e aRe8 it 0: office. This procveeds upo hat a man must pay for wh UNDERTAKING Promptly IAKK Jebbing of all kinds mepsic 0! th o newrpaper |aw 4. If any person orders his Moued, he :ut pay all an El'lhol may contingse to ser tis aaade, and collect the whethar it be taken from the There can be no lega) discon paymentismade, Fire Insuranc OFFIOE, ovrn® Grant‘s Brom:. L ICENSED AUOTION! kn and Insurance Ag veyancer, Commission We oa!! the .pefi.' atte aéte s §!d subscribers bo th HUCH McK WOODWO MISOELLA NE JAKE & P. TELF Furnit dâ€"made W . L. McKE still to be found in i oppesite the Durham in connection. A firstâ€"class lot Apply to JAMES K for sale cheap. Newspaper DURH A m LEGAL

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