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Durham Chronicle (1867), 26 Nov 1908, p. 4

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M: 03' gym. '3citizens’ meeting held in the {Allen Fridny evening last, at r. J. A. Boyd presided. and Thurston was secretary, at was ado ted asking the to en orce the by-law on the streets among d youth of the village. " ontheotgeeta._ throwing RHAM CHRONICLE '. IRWIN. Editor and Preprietor. it Do L Eugenia, was the scene of a wedding at high noon on “'9d- ', November 18th, when, in the cc of a large number of friends, niage was solemnized of Miss inham, youngest daughter of I Mrs. George Graham. to Mr. I. Hnggard, of Clnrksbnrg. T_he Goods Draggish- and Booksellers and Holiday Christmas :udâ€"Grahamâ€"Tbe Methodist Saturday December 5th acfarlane C0. [A3]. NOVEMBER 2)”, 1908. .oooooooooooooooooww 70000000000090.9090. Flesherton. Olll' a dam ing of roperty ryancee ve 0! ate been god in As to be no longer a movement is now on immense stock of on the above date we TH E rb stock. '1] filled with f the section, 2 the auspic- Mr. Robert ... 00090. .000... The Saugeen branch of the C. P. R. 18 quteapopular one for cross-count visiting. Last week Mr. and Mrs. Not for a long time has Zion had such a large congregation as assembled on Sunday last, and the Rev. W. S. Jamieson’s sermon was a deeply im- pressive and soul-searching one. .000... .000... by a good-looking chap. visitéd Mr. and. Mrs. \‘V. L. Falkingham the first of the week. .0009, .0990. Last week.â€"'twas sleigh-bells and snow birds and oven-coats and mitts; Today. ’tis plowing in shirtsleevesâ€" November’s strange tits. The Misses Harbottle, accompanied by a. googiogkiggflchap. visited Mr. ..._ .O. Mr. George Lane has sold a. number of his horses at a good figure. Miss Lily and Master Gordon Sack- ett. of Haxnpden, are renewing old acquaintances around the Corner. Mr. \V. Sackett is locating a house with the intention of coming to live in these ts. \Ve will be pleased to have . r. and Mrs. Sackett with us again, as we always found them good neighbors. .o... Mr. James McClocklin, who has been for 16 yeats with Mr. Mark “'ilson. butcher. moved his family on Monday f to Ceylon. where he has purchased the . butcher business conducted by Mr. John English. Mr. Fred McClocklin, : of Dun-ham. has moved his family to the residence vacated by his brother, at»! has 8.130 taken his former position with Mr. \Vilson. 0.00”. OOO”OO ’OOOOOOOOOO”OO Mr. \Vesley Atchison, of Dallis. Ore- gon. who is visiting in this vicinity. and his niece, Miss Edna Love. of New England, have gone to visit friends in Bolton. “'e are all pleased to see “’esley again. He looks as if the world is good to him. “'9 regret to hear of our old friend, Mr. Vint Hill, of Boothville, being under the weather. Hope his case will not prove serious. Considering the many disadvantages that the Corner Sabbath School haVe to contend with, the report given of its financial standing at the close of the Sl'llnnl was very satisfactory. Geo. Sacket t, treasurer, gave a detailed a(‘len[ of all money received and ex- pended. After all school supplies be- ing paid there is yet $11.37 in the treasury [0 give the children a good Christmas Tree. The date for our Christmas Tree is set for December the 9th inst. Mr. George Haw, of this lace, has rpnted his farm to Sam McJurdo, of Balsam Valley. Mr. Haw intends go ilvg [0 Port Hope. “We regret to lose uur nld neighbor. 0111 ten days of wintet have come and gone and mud IS the order of the 'thve Muir and Deputy Reeve Mp.rwis the guzst of h-r sister, Miss henzne are at Owen Sound this week 33”» on; du)‘ th's week. attending County Council. ; Mr. 710d M”; A, \V. Hunt 3111 Oh]- Th? Battleford mask.) Press of the. dren Suniayd W‘th Glenelg friends. 12th inst says: “A deal was concluded Mr. JFS'i’h‘ MCC‘WII n Cf . Hgtton this week between the proprietors of H3, Wm} 3mm“). mm b” “mm the Press and Mr. T. Dewan, whereby' an "Ml“ ‘h' and ‘Eks‘ Donnally. at); foxgnellc-1 .becamel the owners of their heilr:.*nm?én68:1"f§fnih‘ aifihttmh 2121 o ce m in an remis 5 ‘ ’ 'T ‘ r " y No.12. southgside nfglst stsgez'l’ldllfi? or twa w-th Mr. and Mrs Thom'ls \Vesley Smith. a Flesherton boy, 15'1““de the editor and one of the ro rietors‘ MI“ and Mr" J' W' Vickers Visit” of the Press. and we are xplegsed to, ther daughtzr, Mrs. Robt. Smith.£n learn of this token of prosperity. sunday 14’53' \qu Janna annhnl'l «'c act-Usual" HI '__-‘ wu-Od" ‘ 311- , 111111 \115 S. 'Iulb:.1t of ()aphv (11’, “5111""-111111 11:; 0d rs and contlm- xvi-111411111111 4111T11es'1hv last \isitiug 'nf‘t‘“; 41.111111cts ”f "in" g 0‘15 bulk er ins..- tias are. A te’ipo; £1)“ ’4'. t( I 5' ~i§tt 2'. .‘II". \".].Il)v11 tCSt \\.il SllJ'W' thl: d- if; rencc Mi. 1111113115. hues .‘Inlli11.0.~p1ov, Wt‘lc \i itn1s in U111 11 on Sa'mday. ; ‘â€"â€"‘.â€"â€" Mis. C. E. VanDnsen. who has been - , 1 on an extended visit here, leaves this, V‘Ckerb wet-k fur 1121' home in Chi(agu. 1 Mr and )1: s 11,er” Ch tt1ch of 311.“. K.R1Lh.udson1s in the citv [111111 33,1 1411111: 311111111, in 11113 vic- this w eek atte nding a meeting in the Inity. 1 intexests of the Childxen’ s Aid work. . M as Florence Cuff ct Aberdeen, Reeve Muir and Deputy Reeve RIPâ€""“9 th? 8033': 0‘ h: 1' B-BtGI'. Mi!“i Kenzie axe at Owen Sound this week 3- rt one day th s neck. attending County Councii. : Mr. and Ma 3. A: \V. Hunt an 1.0111“ The Battlefnrd (Sash) Press of thedrfn Suniayzd W-th (31911918 intends“ I , Mr. Andy Benthum is having a. busy é mm with his steam power wood cutting , outfit among the farmers on the west , back line. A cut of 70 cords was com- : pleted at Mr. “'ilcock’s on Monday. Miss Maggie Ferguson has been for! some davs dan erously ill with acute; bronchitis an other complications, ‘ hut slight improvement is now report-. ed. Dr. Carter is in attendance. 3 Mr. Archie Boyd received a blow in l the side last week, which, we learn. fracturedarih, but he is able to be almut. Mi»: Bessie “'ood has moved tn who A number of young people drove to the home of Mr. and Mrs. McKenzie Duncan and spent an enjoyable even- xng last Week. A novelty at the home of Mr. J. I. Graham is a pretty white squirrel which his bays succeeded in caging a few days ago. The little animal is taking kindly to its confinement and is likely to become quite petted. The Senior Epworth League in the Methodist church held a pumpkin pie social in the basement of the church on Monday evening, which passed off pleasantly. An interesting program was rendered, consisting of a. trio hy Messrs. \Vilcox, Cornfield and Laird; reading by Miss Myrtle Thurston; solo b ' M13. Blackburn; trombone solo by Jr. A. S. Thurston. and speeches by Dr. Caldwell and others. The pumpkin pies were much enjoyed. -.\lr. James Genoe had a successful! auction sale of farm stock last week. At the Guild meeting in the Presbv- terian church last week, Rev. L. F. Kipp fraternized and gave an excellent address on “Service,” which was high- ly appreciated. Mr. T. \V. Mills. studâ€" ent. Rivet-view, occupied the pulpit on Sunday, and spoke with ediflcation on the "talents.” foot to stamp it out. A strony com- mittee was also oppointed to gather statistics and other matter relative to village incorporation. Sackett’s Corners. Traverston. )PI Flynn hn has No remedy has anything like the number of wonderful permanent cure: to its credit :3 Dr. T. A. Siocum’s rent remedy PSYCHINE. There is ll e in every dose. Send coupon for ample. It in an infallible remedy for disorders of the Throat, Lungs, Chest and Stomach, and is the Greatest of Ionics. Sold by .11 druuists and mm, 50c and $1.00. Limited, four years after, (Au st llth, 1908!, Mrs. Graves says: “ am con- fident PSYCHINE saved my son’s life, for the doctors did not think he would live the summer out, in fact he was a walking skeleton- it was your medicine that cured him, for to-day he is as well u ever.” Mrs. Wm. Graves, of Chester, Nova Scotia, says: “In the spring of 1904, my son was so bad that nobody thought he would live through the spring, but gut PSYCHINE came as a God send. ecould scarcely walk from his lounge to the table without fainting, and he had night sweats so bad I had to put his bed out of doors to dry every morning. His cough was terrible. Thanks to PSY- CH NE this has disappeared and he is now quite well." A MOTHER’S GRATITUDE. Mrs. James Turnbull is seriously ill at pr-zsmt. We hOpe t) soan hen- cf h-sr Spifdy recsvery. A little son arrived at the htme of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Hunt, intvsni- ing to stay t-r the wintn. Writing to the Dr. T. _A. Slocum, lcn pcrtable mill tjâ€"our burg purposa cf do'ng custom an curt ng shingles. Missrs. Joe \Vatsm and T ticn hers». “’6: 11 \pe our petitioners may ngt w'th success as it would b3 i lling a long felt want, and wwll sure army from travelling five cr ten m Ls for their mail or to post L. 0. L., No. 1192, are making brisk préparations f:r a fowl supper and gcn’oegt in \f’cdngsday night, Decemf- â€"-vâ€"â€"- bet 2nd, for their" filialâ€"IIBEI‘S ani friends, whcn the treat of the sea- san Is expwtedâ€" An dfort :5 being made t) have a._ past attic: establishzd at our sta- Mr. W. Arnott left a week aga for Tonnto. where he intends to rennin for the winter. . M'ss Eliza Patt:rson :f Toronto, is at present holidaying wth‘ her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Patterson. at. the L'ikrr. Like old times to see Mrs. Peart, Sta, at church on Sunday. Sh? has recent,- ly arrived home after spending some weeks with her daughter in Bentiuck. Mrs. A J. Rohson was waunly wel- comed back by Zioniies, after her month’ 8 sojom n in the citv. John 0. Greenwood performed qufte an acrobatic tumble, unexpectedly. on Friday last. \\'hile,p'1llmg a forkful of hay in the stable loft the fork slip- ped and he turned a 8 mereanlt through the'trap hole to toe cemett floor beneath. Jack is compactly put together or there might have been a broken neck. Word was received from Robbie Wright} that. the boat on which be has been sailing all summer was wrecked and that the crew Were rescued by a tug. Mr. Tom Blair took arnn down frum the county town on Saturday night. returning again on Monday noon. “'. G. McNally and Earnest 0001; returned from Owen Sound last, week and are pl’t’pal‘cd nnw to do all the wood-cutting L0 be had in the vicinity. Firth visited Mr. George Firth and family over in Melanchton, and Miss Olive Cook cook Saturday evening train out to Maple Hill, returning on Monday murmng. Mr. G. A. \Vatsn McWilliamsville. at?!) n :t Sw'nton PJI‘k. ' «:n moving hls our burg for the custcm sawing and THE DURHAM CHRONICLE (hula. N.S. 5000! Ma. 5 never Don’t get gay. The people on some dominant planet may be even now planning to reach our earth, and when they comeâ€"oh, howdy de do! --_, ‘- rglic of a. gréat peoplé runnin“ sxlver cup w 1th his conquerors? I wonder was it all fair and right? How would we like it if from another planet came a race immensely super- ior to us in crafts and armsâ€"superior to us intellectually as wellâ€"who would use on us the equivalent of smallpox, firewater, and shooting-irons. and who would wipe us off the face of the earth to all intents and purposes, so that one I noted a hand offine young red men the other day at the Herald road race. Here they were, in the midst of a dis- trict which was once the finest hunting grounds in the world. From Scarboro Heights to Burlington Heights, from the great lakes north, there was noth- ing like it; and today, they would tramp fifty miles before they would even see a black squirrel. No more were they a mighty people _ fed by the hand of God. They were a 3 broken remnant fed by the hand of man. Once God’s great herd of cattle 3 roamed right up to the teepee smoke, ' and they could go out freely and kill and eat. Now, if thev were starving, they dare not kill a stray calf. His voice rose and fell, wild. passionate. pathetic. His Voice would break, and I knew his bronze bosom was wrenched by a Voiceless grief. Then up from the Mark shadow of the Coulee rose an ulv’l and feeble .squaw. She ained the bluff. and taking his arm, 9' e led him away. And as they passed me in the‘ dark I heaid the Indian sobâ€"and it is not often that a white man has heard an Indian sob. The other days the boys around here went out squirrel hunting. They got one. redâ€"that’s all. But they enjoyed themselves just the same, for they knew there would be a hot supper waiting for then) when they got home whether they shot anything or not. They would get a hot dinner. no mat- ter how late they were. and it was all sport. How different it Would have been had they trumped all day to shoot their supper, with hunger gnawing at their vitals. and knowing that hunger gnawed at the Vitals of the little help. less hand at home crouching for warmth over the Wigwam fire in the shelter of the pines! ‘ There was a chill and feeble moon: great clouds raced across the hollow sky, and the merciless wind trampled the sounding prairies like a vast army. Up high upon the sharp peak of the bluff stood a young Indian, his half- naked bronze body glistening in the eerie light. Over his head in both hands he held aloft the skull of a huf- falo. and he was crying passionately to Manitou. the Great Spirit, to send back the bison. He was hungry; his people were hungry. His brothers were debased, his sisters debauched. No more were theyf a ‘mighty people c.‘-r] |'.-' ‘LA L --- One night on a bluff ovexhanging a conlee in the far North-\V «St, I heaud a wild and weird chant. seven seas, Straits, the and alert e\ The late Dr. “'ild persisted until the very last that the Anglo-Saxons. were the Lost Trihec, and then, with fine ingenuity and skill, he fitted to them all the comforting passages of Scrip- tureâ€"specially those which promised us the gates of our enemies and the fat lands of the earth. Tn-day, Britain is sunreme on tho vvv-‘ w- ”Haunt-l1, W'v “-13 ld3L “ :‘ho We are leased to learn that Mast- er John Veil" is a) much unmoved that he Ls expected home £12m Fe:- gus hospital 3.1113 day this week. Ll Darkie’s Corners. O A week ago Saturday evening then I W at the home ct Mr. ani r rs. Thomas Mchnb, anbton St» a young 33‘! pt about. 15 . ”I 0“ ,pg’f. giving her name as . 015-: {vat and enquiring the intance t0 il’rimville. Shc said she Intenlcd to? ;r.Lu_n on the p;.330nger train. havmg {coma d:wn an! awful at the Balm : chsz cur nght, l'riduy. but unwed 2th»? ustbound tran Saturjay and 'wus making the journey cn to;t. ;She was invitui to rimam (vet n gm. ,uud résume her journey next m:rn- Jug, Which $115 dll. In 1,110 coursf- «f ihm conversaticn she said her par- :(nts [sad in Przoerl", having mov- §<d thire from Cheslc-y a shut. timea gagc. She t;ld thnl tlut Mr. Hahn! jemploy‘d 15 girls ml .115) sc‘exnid‘ ;to b: slghllv acquainted m IIan>‘ fVCl, Where she had stayei at the ‘Rfes House. \Vhether this is a true cr £1139 sL;-ry on the girls put to scram he: movements {we are un- ;dbl§ tasty. A telephme message from ’Owsn Scund to the Durham ofte- i ials concerning a gal cf the same d:scr'.ption as the absv‘e, named :Stra'ths, who ran away trcm $110)] at_ that plane, saking them to (19-, th}. proves bey;n'd all doubt that‘ litus the same gal and that she! trxéd to keep her friends cit the ‘track by false statements. “'8 am [leard to learn that the girl has been located at Rev. Mr. Matbesm's at Prloeville, ante and sound. Mrs. John Hewitt visited Mrs. S Scctt, Cf Durham, one day last w:~:k Mr. Thomas McGirr, cur gcnial tax collectfr. finisbui ti his work for the prcs‘nt year on E‘rdz‘xy last. Mn. John Staples and 11's 3.11, M. J.. have recently been hustl’ng around and as a result have mark all the barn timber on the grmnd, ten” for the framing. They intend. if the weatlmr keeps favorable, to rush ’t togtther and raise the mam- ;ncth frame berm [the winter closss Mr. and Mrs. W. Hetht an! fam'ly visited at Mr. and Mrs. John chitt's on Sunday last. CHRONICLES OF THE KHAN {V9 SW A Fortunate People. wile! pt. awav t! of him is se N: In s supreme mlds t he Ca she stands The Khan. for a In OH I"): i 1.111, W“ V 1) sm- the t he mrd [9(1) x--ip 59d the Our Mr. Cameron has charge of the Re] highly recommended, having had extra es, clocks and jewelry. Extra large stock of fine Silverware just arrived Grand stock of \Vatcbes, Clocks. Chains, Charms, Lm- Links, Brooches, Stick Pins. Bracelets, Necklvts. . \Vatcomakers, Jewelers xtra values in Diamond Rings. Pearl Rings, gagement Rings, Birthday Rings.---Hundrvd from. Look out for it. This is just theweather to bring it my. 1“. creepy feeling going up and down your spine. that '5 ,.__ q. get a box of our “Grip Capsules,” they will give yc All the“ preparations ‘unnntood. Your ““"WY satisfactory. Another disagreeable trouble, don’t Blow and 8: 1w A ,, you. Get a box of our “Nasallno,” It will clea short order, “Grip” These changeable, slushy. November days, bring complaint. Are you troubled with them? we “Cold in the Head” “Chilblains” GUN’S DRUG STORE New Fall Goods Solid Gold Rind‘ b Satisfact Ion Guaranteed . Keeler Son 5 five rware Repairing AT KEELERS ‘. Opticians and Eng: the Repairin ‘ _" ___.-I. U ' ; 53:14:10)“. on thgy will give you relic V 7. 1m) U ex; ‘th‘l's mug on [his troubles. we have the can, SCI \Vt Feel that Symptom. Chilly m0... DGIC ; .' I‘ll Wheat . . gpring “’heat Rico» per bag. De“ . floor per cwt ........ Oltmonl per sack. . . .. (lop per cw: ........ Live Hogs. per cwt. .. Med Hogs per cw 1 Nov. 26, 1908 ht he will “9 corn cur ”I late and Ian‘- Corn E “I. 81W333 Bani? 3,000 Rolls Wall Paper At Half-prim Won no Macon». Market RUM THE (1 Every arti SPECIAL Ladi‘vs‘ Ifild it M e n M 01 Mon Chilt at .‘l. M (In M m Burnt. His T M 0! DURHAM. per lb... ll Ladies‘ R H H m

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