[arm for Sale. nnsistiug of twent ~6v. I“ 10 east of CorporttiOId to' not than lob. applv to F6: w 'w' (703', :3. EAST 01“ GARA- hud, (.Elenelg. about 3 mil†, mu! clnse by Edge Hill P. 0 _ acresâ€"wanes cleared. vol, from stones, and in â€(sellout nrkilu: machinery: remindu’ 3h and cedar. Ontho prop 0 brick housn, with ciShfll. *ith stone subling underneath , inblemont home. Two and t to buildings and a m runs across roar of lath. bearing orchard. chanco to buy one of tho but mm DURHAMS. YOUNG oors good house well 1n“ . Two barns stone in“ further panic ulars apply to ench Burr Stones. Good flout- £8 with getting and spindle; t Clean" May be a... i! dam Rubonson at McKnh- 'ill 9911 cheap. Feb 1. 3e. 52, 53â€"Sidorond I0, “j north of Prioovillo. F“ bndition. (500d buildi d roam convenient to 3. particulars npplv to DL'uALD I). mCLACM‘Z Prieovilh P. Ila: street in the Town oi 6-: . county of Grey, «IMO tr loss. For tarma and p.16..- . a J. P. Tzu'onn. Vendor’s Solicitor. Duh... 2 house on the farm. with (spring water at both In... 1 tunher particulars apply to HAN. 31:. Forest. or JAS. 'k Lot For Sale. .o'r NUMBER13 NORTH THOS. DAVIS, I. 0011.3. N. D. 3.. Ola I ED C! )T'I'AG E. PANTRY llor. Also good \Voodshed. I , well and cistern. Desirable ('olliugwood street. Darin... md particulars apply at r.)- Muck. (.‘on. 2. W. G. R" «- Cor ration of tho Town of to arm consists of 429 m ros uoodland. the balance ul- bmfortable dwelling and god pnttguiQdingg. Small 013:“ .ABLAB PI_ECE Off PROP. use for Sale. I (’mntains Imacrosï¬om Innate of cultivation. and ti. Mlidition 90! mm. Tb†nbaru 40’3. '. and a an. )8 E D H 0U SISâ€"EASILY good collar garden. M on George street. PM at. us apply on the pubis. b t H a uniform-Mo bra. I†we. a good {ramp ban I‘ I“ bearing orchzrd. an :3... Le best lunuing water. a good. Terms can't-d further particulars : b l uf place for a daigy w Irdoner. Sold at right "3: terms as the woman: . out and wishes todiapooo 0! It. H. BURNETT. Proprm. -â€"tf. Dunn“. Ol'r. fox-table, conveniently lit- ' on Lambton street went. leih a township. 'l-‘or patticnhn. promises or by 10th:, to ARTS OF LOTS 62 AND CENTRAL PART 01' Four lots on the Want died :. for pyivatg Inï¬del)“. Now P‘IRST OF DECEMBERâ€"â€" ,rm for Sale. use to Rent. For Sale. use for Sale. rm for Sale. rotted, Mrs. For Sale. Sale or Rent. 'm For Sale. J. M. HUNTER. :, CON. :5. GARAFRAXA 'ntinck, situated about 2.9. ES NEAR WILDER’S MRS. JAS. MCCRACKEN, Edge Hill P. O. For Sale. N. Holman, Durham. Lots for Sale. MACKAY DUNN, Y El A . FORD. Proprietor. O F FORTY-EIGET and L‘ows. Term a. {SCIIUYLE (Inn) Ct H. PARKER. Durham. M. J. BUTTON. eudor ’s Solicitors. kitchen. m Dunn: P. 0, V RADULATE of I ondon, New York and Chicago. 'U m: Diseases»! Eyo, Bat N000 and Throat: a. Will he at Knapp House, Durham. the 2nd Satuzdav in each month. Hoursâ€"lâ€"G p.111. Specialist: Eye, Bar, Throat and lose Late Assistant Roy. London Ophthalmic 300., 233.. and to Golden Sq. Thu-mt and No.0 Hal. W ill be st the Middangh Rom ht Wodnoodsy‘ of each month. from 12 to 4 p. m. ‘ \VE give Tm: CHRONICLE and the 'l‘m-untu News, both papers for a. a whole year for $1.85, cash in advance. mommaemmwmm' Free. to any Woman who bakes her own Bread ADVERTISING PAYS. RR. GED. S. BURT. BARCLAY BELL. KIRCHNER MAL" RA HY BRO~'.. 3mm! DR. BROWN I, The hog is a machine to make pounds (“f por‘:. In raising hogs for the market, the proht is rapid and health y gm )wth. Feeding to simply sustain life makes you no proï¬t. A fUud t..:v.t \ ill fatten your hogs in To get the shortest time, and with the least waste. : ; tizt- proï¬t maker. the most good out of its food, the hog must thoroughly digest and assimilate it. It is this assimilated food that makes the pounds of pork. The addition of Clydesdale Stock Food will enable it to‘d'o this It creates an appetib for a full ration. Many farmers seem satisï¬ed to let the hog “root†for itself. There 15 no better money maker ' half a chance. Clvdesdale Stock Food will en- able you to get your hogs to the market at least thirty days sooner; this is money saved. Mr. A. D. McDonald. ]« rieho, Ont... says: “ I fed it to six fattening hogs as a test and found the hogs that received Clydesdale Stock Food made a decided gain over those that received none.†This is “WISE FEEDING.†Don’t neglect the “ RUNTS â€, they can be made to , and be kept growing, by using Clydesdale ' healthy condition as Stock Food. It will keeP your hogs in such - _ v- s _. Inna...“ 41.5 mat“? menace to bog Thousands of women are writing in every week for the “ Royal Household †Recipes-they explain the new and easier way of making bread. Make a trial with the new Royal Household Flour, which is puriï¬ed by electricityâ€"- you would not believe there could be such a difference in flour â€"- these receipes are certainly worth asking for. Send a postal card toâ€"day. THE OCIlLVlE FLOUR MILLS COMPANY, LIMITED MONTREAL IXCLUSIVILY SAvoxAs. Tmuzz MILE CREEK. B.C.. November 28th, 190 . I have been using yoesr flu-.r exclu-iu-cly since I came to Canada, fourteen years ago, and have been using “Royal Bonsehold" since its introduction. To thow on how I value it my grocer lately ily, I sent to Kam- muld not supply me with it, un‘l rather than use another bran . even temporax' . loops, twenty-ï¬ve miles awry, and hml it shipped to me per C. P. R.. preferring to pay the railwa charges rather than use an inferior brand. In fact. if I could not get it otherwise, I would ship t direct from the mills. I an always rely on having good bread when nsmg it and nothing tends more to keep harmony in a homc. (Signed) 3.! RS. T. SMITH. _; I? r, R. Hal“). 8"o â€(It I3 40“.? ON! TESTIMONIAL OUT 0' IANY THOUSAND. RECEIVID. :1 t. Durham. Hair Soft and Fluâ€. Washing the hair is a task most woc men dislike, and even he girl who can least afford the dollar a month neces- sary to a professional shampoo pre- ters to pay it at a sacriï¬ce rather than bother to wash her own hair. Yet it. the work is gone about in the right manner at home it need not be difï¬cult at all. The first thing is to prepare a sham-: poo liquid. Take a square inch of some good soap, shave it ï¬ne and dis- solve it in half a cup of hot water. Then add a teaspoonful of violet am- monia and the raw white of an egg. Beat these thoroughly and strain through a wire sieve. Now stand with the head over a basin, pour a little of the shampoo over the scalp and rub briskly with both hands. Use all the liquid in this way, rubbing it thor- oughly on the scalp. After this wash the scalp with several basins of warm water and then wash the long hair in the basin of water. Rinse by holding the head over the bathtub and pour- ing over it a stream of warm water, keeping this up until the water that drips from the hair is perfectly clean. Then dash with cold water to close the pores and prevent taking cold. , L‘.- 1-.-!“ v"â€"â€" 7- You are now ready to dry the hair. First wrap it in a thick towel and wring thoroughly. Then spread a dry towel across the back, throw the hair back and rub the scalp well and dry. It may take some time, but it is the best possible means of drying, acting as a massage too. Call in the aid of the sun it possible, but never use steam. Do not brush the hair until it is thoroughly dry. Then, as you brush, raise the hair, that the strands may be , separated. After this combing will not g be difï¬cult, and when the hair is read-y % to go up it will be soft and fluffy.---Chi- ; 9‘9 2‘0 Coughs. colds, hon-acne“. and other throat Lm-nts are quickly relieved by Crvsoleue ...‘.ut.~x, ten cents per box. All druggists. WIN 'S‘G’OVOV‘QVO‘ o o o o o o o A HOME SHAM POO. Nauru. 'l‘nYLHR 00.. I) omore l‘, A. DRUM“. H â€stein. KBO'I'T BRUS . M-olkdu'4 The “'35" a Showman Got Friendly \Vith a Flt-roe Beast. .\ zoulnglst thus describes how an am'mluut brought about friendly rela- \. “us With a Home tiger: "l'here was a showman 1 used. to kmm named Mekhior He once bought a umguiment Bengal tiger, which he got at a lo“ [nice because it had al- leady killed two men. -- . ..h ‘-_L â€At ï¬rst Melchior would put his foot or his hand into his cage, but from the way the tiger would leap at him he knew that to put himself entirely in its power would be suicide. Nothing he could do would establish a friendly relationship between himself and the tiger. ‘_s ____| “Some originality was needed, and Melchior showed it by taking some old clothes, stufling them with rags and throwing them into the cage. The tiger in a jiffy tore the old clothes to pieces. thinking that the ï¬gure was a human being. “Next day and the next day and the next Melchior continued to throw in to the tiger stuffed ï¬gures, and the tiger continued to destroy them. But as time passed the animal ceased to put heart into its work and in the end it gave up altogether these attacks on the scarecrows. It would just play with them or else not notice them at all. ed the cage door one morning. walked in boldly and slapped the tiger familiar. 1y on the back. It gave him a friend- ly look and purred. It took him for another manikin not worth bothering about. It lived seven years with Mel-- chior and became as gentle as a kit- ten.†v Sect In Turkey. The Yezidees, the Baal worshipers or devil worshipers of Turkey, are an ex. traordinary people, and, although forc- ed by the laws of conscription to serve in the Ottoman army, the seizure of one or more of their young men by a Turkish recruiting party is such a dis- tressing spectacle that once witnessed it can never be forgotten. Queer Ways Of -' V“.- -v Wails and wyells 3t despair are rais- ed. Men, women and girls kiss the recruit’s eyes, cheeks, mouth and hands. Throwing themse' es on the ground, they even embrace Ats legs and feet. The conscript appears guite dazed with sorrow. He folds in his arms and caresses over and over again his weeping kindred, whom he will never see again. He kisses the walls and the hearth of the cabin in which he was born, but which he is about to quit forever, and wets them with his tears, but when, accompanied by his Turkish captors, he leaves the village the lam- entatlons of the villagers cease. Then, and as though nothing had happened, the latter go about their ordinary occupations. Never again is __.I “Now was Melchior’s time. He open- “DJ v‘vâ€" -â€" the conscript’s name mentioned. and on joining his regiment the young Yeziâ€" doe becomes a Mussulman. His kin- dred. believing him accnrsed. affect to forget him, and were he to approach the village from which he has been forcibly dragged away every Yezidee. even his dearest friends, his father. mother, brothers, sisters and sweet- heart, would drive him from their presence with curses and pelt him with stones. The Human Foot. It Is asserted by a sculptor that the human toot is becoming smaller. The masculine foot of twenty centuries ago Wyn-"v ' v _ was about tvvveï¬e inches long. The average man’s toot of today is easily ï¬tted with a No. 8% shoe, which is not more than ten and seven-sixteenths Inches in length. m Signals. The flags to be hoisted at one time in signaling at sea never exceed tour. It is an interesting arithmetical fact that with eighteen variously colored an. end ,never more than four at a time, no fewer than 78.642 signals can WORSHIPERS OF BAAL. TAMING A TIGER. Extraordinary long in...“ lo.- Polqtlu (to '37 ding well sired sud sunned every day. all except feather pillows. Sun is said to draw the oil from the feathers. but they should be exposed to s curmt of sir. Great dsnter lurks in damp hed- clothes. Especial precautions in thh regard should be observed in trsvel. Ds mp linen oflers encouragement to microbes. And now as to the walls of this habitation of yours. Oil painted walls are the most hygienic sud most . satisfactory. In hospitals a pale yellow 3 or drab has been found most plessin: ‘ to the eye. A plain color is siwsys more restful than a ï¬gured hanm. Have you not all had the experience when you were sick of chasing some grotesque ï¬gure around and around with your wearied mind until the very pattern was seared into your brain? Oil painted walls, too, can be wiped down daily if you Wish with oiled cloths. They are indestructible, too, unless you disï¬gure them with nails. Your ceiling should be light in color. It is most advantageous to have a hardwood floor in the bedroom. Caro pets should be banished and only rugs ""' 'â€" employed. Choose a closely woven rug that it may hold as little dust as pos- sible. Your summer rug should be â€â€˜UUV. ' â€"- made of grasâ€"sflor ï¬ber. Such a floor. covering is both satisfactory and in- expensive. These can be taken up and cleaned every week. VOVuâ€"vw v vâ€"v The broom should always be damp- ened when used, and a carpet sweeper is better, for it gathers up all of the dust without scattering it around the I-LL “w. H awn-w..- w_, room. When dusting nee a damp cloth, never a feather duster. Keep your dust cloth clean, washing it out after its use.â€"Ladies’ Home Journal. Cover is Hinged Frame With Burlap and Dalntlly Decorate It. One of the prettiest ways of getting up a screen is to have a carpenter make a plain. strong wooden frame, with its three “leaves†separate, and then to cover it yourself with burlap in colors that ï¬t in with the general color scheme of the room. The burlap should be tacked on neatly and sunothly. without a wrinkle. then the .i‘lllxl-ltstu‘y . leaves joined by little brass hinges and the Whole screen decorated. One girl gave herself a constant reminder of the woods in autumn by painting au- tumn leaves in rich glowing colors on her dull green screen. Another chose blue and painted in outline work a row of little Dutch ï¬gures clear across the top.â€"â€"Philadelphia North American. The Ball That Can’t Tangle. Those who knit and crochet know the trouble caused by the ball of yarn or floss falling and rolling about the floor. This trouble is easily obviated if the , yarn is wound so that it can be used ' from the inside of the ball instead of in the ordinary way. Unrolling from the outside is the cause of the ball’s rolling propensities. First wind the wool or silk six or eight times over the outstretched ï¬ngers of the left hand, giving as great a length as possible to the windings and keeping in mind the fact that these windings are to be pull- ed from the center when the ball is ï¬nished. With these ï¬rst windings always protruding at the top and bot- tom, proceed as usual, winding very loosely. When the skein is wound the outside end is tucked in securely. and the ï¬rst is pulled out. After once using and experiencing the satisfaction ‘ of a nonrolling ball the knitter will ’ never go back to the old method of working from the outside. The Lovable Girl. To be placed in the corner of a young girl’s mirror and read while she is mak- ing her toilet: She cultivates reserve. She thinks, then acts. She speaks ill of no one. She is loyal to her friends. She lives in her mother’s faith. She cares for her body as God’s tem- SERVICEABLE SCREEN. ple. VUV. She writes nothing she may regret. She knows there is nothing more nn- digniï¬ed than nnger. of love.â€"Hubbard City News. Bath nuts. For the after bath rub nothing is better than the mitts of Turkish towel- ing, which quickly bring an exhilarat- ing glow to the skin. They can be bought in the shops, but are far less expensive when made at home. _â€"‘â€"u â€"‘â€" ‘A-A‘.‘- hp with linen tam A GIRL’S ROOM. BU BL A 1’ SCREEN. Implements the Sherlock Oragns :‘Efl‘aï¬â€˜Ã©â€˜Ã© Sewing Machines Melutte Separators the school is nipped for full Junior Lasting ad Mstrlculst on work. under the following We! of competent teachers for thst depot-talent: THOS. ALLAN, lat Clsss Certiï¬cate. Prln. MISS L. M. FORFAR. Clssslcs and Modems. J. B. SMITH, B.A.. Msthematics and Seience. F600. 81.00 per month. WM. J OHNSTON. Chairman. The Big 4 CALDER â€"~ DURHAM SCHOOL. NEW GLASS WARE. 7-piece Berry'Se's at 450 each. 4 piece Table Sets at 400 and 600 each. Berry Bowls at. 15c. 200, 300 and 50?. Cake and Bread Plates at 2% and 2:30. SHEETING. Heavy Twilled Sheeting, 72 in wide, . CAMPBELL, Agent. DURHAM, ONT. 23c a yard FLANNELFTE BLANKETS. Large Size Flannelette Blankets. white or gray, at $1.20 a pair. FLOOR OILCLOTH. l and 2 yards wide, at 25c a square. TABLE OILCLOTH. 45 in wide. white and color, 25¢ a yd. [5,?" Pure Honey and Fresh Groceries always on hand. The undersigned having been restored to health by simple mesns. sfter snflering for severel ymrs with s severe lung nflection. and thst dresd Com-p000. is snxions to nuke known those who desire it. he will cheerfully send. free of chsrge. s copy of the prescription used. which they will iind s are cure for Comâ€. Acting. put-m. Bronchitis end all thrustsnd -- 1' n - U __ -II .....â€".n -l“ Oâ€" n-u... m". ' -. â€"- 'VM-w lung Handles. Ho ho :11 “More" will try his remedy. u it in inv: able. Thou damn; the prowdption. which will cost than nothing and my prove n hlggotnl._!ill pleat. “drool of all kinds for the Farm, the Home and the Dairy. He Sells Cheap T0 CONSUMPTIVES. AGENCY. move a bloc. in . plea. mm AID A. Wl .Bmklyu,N-v York BLOCK .â€" DURHAM Ogilvie’s BUHHAM BAKERY. A. W. WATSON Sydenham Mutual . Fire Insurance Co. Our Company peys market velne for Grain. Hey and Live Stock. Hey in sucks in covered by insur- ance on contents of burn. Fern Implements need by bend. Cnrpen- tels’ Tools. Robes. Roof}, _Gnin_ WUU -vvâ€"uv‘ vâ€"v . Bags. Wool. Beef. Pork, Fruit and Flour ere peyehle in either dwelling. or outbuildings. No other compo-y hoe the the show in their contact. A Sydenhnm Policy is the heat. For further inlormetion odd“- J. H. McFayden Sept. 6.â€"6n_)c. DURHAM P. O. The People’s Grocery Groceries, Teas, Sugars, Coffees, Spices, Tobaccos. We also handle all kinds of Feed, Potatoes, Windsor Salt, Oatmeal, Cornmeal, _ Field ‘l‘ho Highest Prion hid for PI!- Produce including mm and Eul- A carload just remind and kept for sale at. ch. Pumps. le Lu. W01: Gown-D u “Ling“ let live" PM. Choice Bread: and 003.. fections constantly on hand. and delivered to all parts of town daily. Dpuuo. RI-CUIII’O A†W done with Come†m @- ALLORDmbh-uthodl“ nut 1000mm um will to ma In FLOUR we bundle the Listowel. Hunt’s Mali- tabs and McGowm'. Goods delivered promptly to ell pet“ of the to". PROPRIETOR. end Garden Seeds. J. M. HUNTER BUICK FOR ALL KINDS OF -- TRY--