mu- that (or sale. I! Jaw“ nnr keep". emu.†I “v will the you n.“ ) hv *w!ephcme No.8. '43ng Ca. mm on Flour in 5 at 10 Bag Lots. TRY FLOUR "beau :V‘, ONT, w-riur article for Nil. p:utrY. etc. red anvwbere in tow: 1 McGowan Done Every Dly VERSION am bang!“ at mm Price R’s LIP THE flout .Zurtains ¢ ’3 1. Harness â€â€œ9 '93»? and Bad ,lm-aciuo. Hahn"? )l' (1. 0mm. :3; â€brat «In. "If S In .tdn "‘7 309' H3! TLnflfl-‘h. c aides“: Bhok WI \V inst, ill Wi \Vl I". 'H PHI)“ Iv {ll me HI) H The furniture £36017 1. Working overtime this week. 9 Fergus hospital for the put couple of weeks, owing to the s 55 4)! her brother, Donald. stock. at lot 34, conceaaion 4, S. D. 3.. Ulvnelg, on Friday, Out. 28th. Otto Konold, Prepr/ietor, D. Mc- Pharl Auctioneer. See tuner not- icu in thrs Issue. Mr. Frank Lenah'an turned the ï¬rst and on Tuesday morning for the ex-u-tiun of a residence on Garafruxa .Street, a few otepa Mr. Samuel Caldwell, of Norman- by, ‘liqunsed of his farm a couple of wen-k9 ago, to Mr. Wm. Sharp, 01 Sax-manhy, for .a satisfactory ï¬gure. A little ad. in the Chronâ€" icle fwz' thrt'o Wf‘eks, brought buy- er and seller together, and com- plett'd the deal ,wbich is satisfac- tnry In both parties. All ad. in the Chronicle pays. Rev. ‘Ml’. B cred two we: Trinity chug am ll News AROUND TOWN l": "w absence of Rev. R. “'1‘ Wright who was attending ajubâ€"T L1H sw‘wim‘ at a mission church‘ near vads‘tock. the service in the .‘lt‘t’h‘hlri church here om Sunday 135‘: ‘.\‘.i~ taken by Mr. Snell 3'1 {the warning. and Inspector Campbell .n thy evening. Both services Wm» thrhly pleasing to the con- gregathnm. Mr. Campbell’s topir Was on "unseen influences.†and Sham-«l mmsiderable thought in "‘9 Plt'mraticm. Both gentlemen are members of mm: Presbyterian Church. and as it was anniversry â€Wit-e d1V in wheir own church ‘they must have Jelt it quite a sac- rzfice to forego the pleasure and. Dfnfit of listening to the (lilting- “29hed Dr. McPherson, Jrom To- "mo, who preached ver able §°rmons. both morning an even- mg in the Prmbyteri'v Ghurch here. 'While we migh‘ "nest that it would have been '3} act of courtew for the letha- ev. Mr. Bice, of London, deliiv- 1 two very (orcelul sermons in nity church on Sunday last, rning and evening. Mr. Bice is e in the interest of Huron Col- 9. London, and will spend the 4: among old parishoners sol- ing aid for that instituton. His ny friends are pleased to see 1 lunkillg SO “'8“. 'hnugh Thanksgiving Day is ierally a quiet one in town, 'l‘l' Numises to be plenty of usement in store this year for we who take any pleasure â€in mting. Besides the regular nting expeditions, and the rifle me. a big shooting contest is mg pulled off by Messrs. 'Robt. mu zmdl‘morge Bauer. They “1‘? church to close for one or both services. we may add that the °°n2rogafion ha“ much reasrm to "‘91 grateful to the gentlemen who "Wk the work in the absence of l1r. Wright. 111 Monday is Thanksgiving 1t n'x'nundings. A clergyman. a -r<lanied clergyman. one who 1)“ authorized to marry and rlsten, told us about a fel- 'hu was vlound drunk, and the thinking to have a little t his exlwnse. smeared his .ml whiskers with Limburg’er ~. while he was in the intoxiâ€" -tme. On waking up, he form! a smell. and. sninffing «i. he exclaimed. “That's aw- Dh. that’s awful!" On being .nrrnml as to the cause of ."xlmt annoyance, he ex- ~«i ‘ny saying he felt very embarrassed to discover that ï¬n .ln world was rotten. It’s the game with the ‘chronic HIM-s. who generally rim with the idea that everybody .4 wrong, . 1V Stroc the c [11f H‘I .V a 3‘ lam t11( ys bad taste to find 1 the town you live in to depend om dor your butter. There is gener- h’mg wrong with the always dinds fault with ndings. A clergyman._ a fl nr-h stream was turn- creek at Smith’s harâ€" rilh the result that the lowed its banks and vral properties along at. The pressure, so veded all expectations co of water for houseâ€" purposes \\ 113 Thursday 139}, reduced to half inch. 'frum the flowing It threw the stream about seventy feet. ight, the water was and all through the good and pressure 10" )3 was demon- an pply Q( 201K ‘ a litth‘ and his .imburger heintoxi- when Servant girl wan'ted.â€"Apply to Mrs. T. C. McGirr, Lambton St. E, In speaking of the furniture fac- tory in last issue, we said the new part to be added would be 30 by 175 feet. It should have been 60 by 175. and the total length of the whole factory will be ‘300 feet, three storeys high. Rev. Henry Smith, rector of Farewell“ will have charge of the services in Trinity church .‘next Sunday. Rev. ’W. H. Hartley ,will conduct the Thanksgiving ‘serâ€" vices in the English church at Farewell, on the same date. Mr. H. A. Burnett, who has been conducting a tailoring and haber- dashery buau'mess here for the past three years, has assigned for the benefit of his creditors to Mr. Robert Burnett, merchant. A meeting of the creditors baa been called on November 4et1h, at 3 o’- clock in J. P. Telford’s 'law. office. We overlook-ed the dact last week that on Monday morning, Mr. A. Pennington, ï¬ormerly con- ductor on the G. T. R. here, had resumed duty .with the company. -1 ALA lcaulll‘v“ “ubJ vvvvvv We understand thatwnâ€"mst off tï¬e old employees 0.! the system are again in the service, and 'that the remainder will be on duty before the ninety days are up. Next Monday evening, a please- ing public Junction is to be held in the Baptist church here, when the Royal Canadian Humane Society’s Diploma for life-saving will be presented to Mr. Jemee Erwin. formerly of rUlmiss place, but now of Bolton. It will be remembered that on the 28th ‘of May last eight-year-old Eddie Hildebrandrt, *son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Hilde- son of Mr. 'and Mrs. Ed. Hilde- brandt, vfell into the Saugeen ’River here. and hwt afnr the promptnesa of Mr. Erwin, would have drowned. The incident came to the notice of the R. C. 'H. S , ‘w_'i'th_the result that theyuha've-issued Mr. Erwin the Diploma, as above stated. Mr. Frank Hind, drayman, had the misfortune to lose one of his horses last week, the animal bleeding to death as the result of a fright from an automobile. Be-i ing of an exceptionally nervous disposition. the beast had never rbeen able :to become used to tlhese machines, and on this particular occasion was standing on the road near the eurb, when one passed by. Mr. Hind stepped to the ani~ mal‘s head to quiet it. and after the maehine had passed on, drove off. He had not gone in, how- ever, when he noticed that the 'animal was bleeding at the nose. It was .found impossible 'to Map the flow of blood. and the animal dried the following morning. "wv‘v he is proved to have murdered. As for preparation for the future, 1L doesn‘t seem that a week or two would make much difference under- the circumstances. To be honest tabout it, we were never able to ,understand how any person could isend a fellow-being into eternity ‘with'out warning, and perhaps un- Eprepared, and then be taken to glory himself. after a few haprs’ of sorrow, not because he Win a sinner, but because he was caught. Dr. Crippen was found guilty of the charge of murdering th wife, Belle Elmure, an actress, in London England. and the hanging cere- mony is fixed 'for the 8th of NOVv ember. The evidence was strong enough to satisfy both judge and iury, only twenty-nine minutes being occupied in coming‘to a dev vision. British law as administer- ed in British courts, is not usually a long drawn out affair, and in this respect, both Canada and the United States might learn a few good lessons from examples set by England. The trial of ‘M3.s-s Le Nevc, who was also charged with the crime, as an accessory after the fact, was held on Tuesday, and she was declared “not guilty" after nineteen minutes’ deliberation by the jury. Sentimentalints will shudder at the thought of Crippen going to the swing om such short notice, but what would be the use of delaying? His first wife disap- peared mysteriously. and in his own evidence he admitted lying about the disappearance of the one Read Our New Story, “The Pillar of Light†th 0 Miss Cora Patterson, o! (Ford-l wich, is the .guest of 'h'er aunt. Mrs. W. B. Bean. J. G. Wilson, cattle buyer, is in- stalling a telephone in his resi-v dence on Lambton Street. Messrs. H. R. Koch and 'Chas Ramage, are engaged in auditing the books of the National Port- land Cememt Co. Rev. A. A. Bice, B. A, "is in the parish of Durham this week, and part 0:! 'next, soliciting funds for the College of ‘the Diocese of Huron. Mr. John Whittaker, bus and dray mam'has purchased the drav business carried on by Mr. Frank Hind for the past year or so. He took possession on Tuesday. Mrs. Alex. Nevin and Mrs. Thios. McAnulty, spent a very enjoyable day this Week at the home of the farmer’s mother, Mrs. Oliver, and also at Mr. Wm. Mead’s, near Sau- geen Junction. Mrs. A. McTavi'sh, of Cedarville, better known as Miss Lydia Male, daughter 01 the late Benjamin Mule was in town over Sunday, and gave us a b13161 call before returmi-ng home on Monday 18:31:. Mrs. A. Whitmore intends leavâ€" ing town shortly for Chicago, and offers her household goods for sale by public auction on Saturday afternoon ‘next, at two o’clock. See bills. James Carson, Auction- 86’. Mrs. Capt. McLachlarn and daugh- ter, Mrs. Armson, of Port 'Huron, returned home on Monday after- noon. after spending three or four weeks visiting: the .former’s sister Mm, Hugh Vaughan, and b‘t‘her relatives and ifriendis. We were delighted with a [short interview with the genial visitors, Whose delight at the 'weekly visits of the Chi-unicle was quite runconcealed. Mr. Howard McDonald met with a peculiar accident one day last week, While rolling the lawn at the Armory. He had borrowed J. A. Brown’s roller, Which was about ‘half -filled with water. and which had not been emptied since spring. Taking out the plug, he applied a match to the hole to see how much water was in it, when an accumulation of gas tool: fire, and burned his hand and wrist. The editor of the Bruce Times 131 certainly a muckraker of the Very first calibre, and his paper. from week to week is chock full of' a conglomeration of stuff, whichl while breezy, and readable, has; about asmuch weight as ateather; and no one is immune from the at---. tacks of his scurrilous pen. His‘ last issue contains an article about a Durham gentleman, who has†through no fault of his own, re- cently passed over a period of his life which the would gladly 'forget, and the majority of the journals in this part of the counv try are trying to let him do so.‘ But not so with the Bruce Times, which lives on this kind of stun, and evidently takes a delight in maligning every thing and per- son on which it can lay its claws, The Chronicle will probably get a dressing down next week from the Smart Alex. of the Times, but will have to take it. lWe can't hold a candle to him. As apur- vey'or of dunghill English, the Bruce Times has the reputation of being second to none in this part of the country. ‘ " Some of the young gentry around town made themselves ob- noxious in front of the premises of Mr. J. Levine, last Week, and,. besides ringing a‘ bell and makâ€" ing considerable noise about his place, hurled a few uncompli- mentary epithets at the gentleman himsehf. Mr. Levine laid a comâ€" plaint before Magistrate Telford, \Vlho had the offenders apologize,‘ 'tJhough they won’t get off so easily next time, if the offence is repeated. There is altogether too much annoyance caused by some of the boys and young men; about town at night, and it is possible some more Olf Itlhem will be dealt with if 'they do not mend their ways. A lxittle fun, and 'a little racket is all right, at reasonable hours, but when «a bunch of young men, or boys who are old enough to know better, take to «howling at one o’clock in the morning like a band of Apaches on the Warpath, the long arm of the law is liable jto reach out and yank them back .to civilization in no very gentle 'manner. For some time past, a bunch of these hoodlums have been in the habit 03f disturbing bhe slumbers 0.: lane Billy Ridsdale, wuhose domicile is just one door south of this otsfice, For a time, they \contented‘ themselves with -â€"J â€"-!‘J‘."- “IUUJ \a‘.’ I rapping on the door and windows, but have lately resorted to “firing rocks against the building. The gentle-man in question is an old man, and this in itselrf would an- peal to 'the ordinary run of indi- viduals. but to 6115.6 gang of un- principled jackanapes, it seems but an incentive to go ahead) and raise a zquB. It is to be. hoped that something will be done in the very near 'fuhn‘e, and that the offenders, when caught, . 5.11 not be let off with a mere reprimand. DURHAM, 01â€., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1910. PERSONAL. THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ANNIVERSARY. ' The anniversary services in connection with the Presbyterian church, were held on Sunday and Monday last. The services on Sunday were conducted by Rev. Hugh. McPherson, of Chalmer’a church, Toronto, and the two ex- cellent discourses were much en-. ioyed by the large congregations in attendance On Monday night a large social gathering assembl- ed in the auditorium oi the church and for nearly two hours were de- lightfully entertained by a high- class program of choruses by the choir, la quartette by Messrs. Telford. Clark, Dr. Hutton and A. W. H. Lauder, a fine solo by Mr. J. P. Telford, and a very tasteful address “What made the Scotch- mgn famous,†by Mr. \IcPherson. In his introductory remarks, Mr. McPherson made a good im- pression on the audience 'by a number of happy Wittictsms. He congratulated the audience on the 1excellence of their pastor, whom he had known and respect- ed ,for many years. He also complimented the choir, on the very fine musical program furnished for the occasion, and congratulated the congregation on the financial success of the anni- versary in the face of the unfav- ‘orable (Weather conditions and other drawbacks. The address was not of the or-" dinary kind presented on such oc- casions. It was broad-minded in the highest sense 0.! 'the , term. and the speaker at the outset gave his audience to understand that he is a Canadian, first, last and always, and for some time he made very spirited references to the greatness 0d the (Land of the Maple Leaf. The Scottish people were natur- ally a religious people and had a high reverence for all things pertaining to their spiritual wel- fare under all conditions as point- ed out by a .few little incidents that came under his own observa- tion, and Which graphically por- trayed the position he assumed. The Scottish people are intel- lectual, and. never willing to take for granted any information With- out thoroughly investigating for themselves to ascertain the ’real truth of the matter under consid- eration. They read carefully ,With a determination to master the au- thor’s meaning, which they re- ceive or reject, according to their own best judgment. They are composed and thought- ful in their deliberations, and ‘no* apt to give way to passion, or be swayed by impulse, and here the speaker pointed out the weakness of the man who tried to control others, while unable to control himself. . The English, the Irish, the Scotch and the :Welsh, were all re- ferred to in very charitable terms, but it could easily be seen that Canada struck the responsive ichord in the speaker’s heart. Rev. Mr. Hartley, rector of Trin- ity church, was called on at the close. Aifter expressing regret at not being present during 'the whole lecture, and saying that he entertained a very kindly «feeling towards all Christian churches. He moved that a very hearty ,vote of thanks be tendered to the speaker, Whose address, judging been .full of wit and wisdoml of a very high-order I 1 1 ‘ I-UHOI \'- W'- The motion was ‘seconded by Principal Allan, and on being put by Dr. Farquhanson, 'who ably filled the chair. the meeting was brought to a close by the ‘Nation- 31 Anthem ‘and the benediction. which was pronounced by Mr. Hartley. A serious accident occurred near Priceville on Wednesday of last week, from the effects of which, the unfortunate young Woman, Miss Mather. had 'to have one foot amputated. She was driving home from Flesherton, and nearing the McDonald crossing, she saw a west bound freight train coming up the track from Saugeen Junction. In order to avoid danger, she Mapped the horse about a hundred yards east of the crossing, in order to allow the 'train to pass. The horse became frightened, however. and« ran straight for 'the train, which by this time, Was crossing the road. Finding the Way blocked. the. animal turned up the track, running alongside of the train, which upset the buggy as the col- lision took place. The horse be- came detached from the buggy and escaped without much injury, while the buggy 'was badly smash- ed, and Miss Mather had her leg broken and was otherwise badly iniured. On arriving at. 'Priceville. an engine and van were sent back to the scene of the accident, and the injured lady taken to the vii-g lage . where medical aid was secur-j ed at once, the resident physician,‘ going to his assistance. Next day, Dre. Button and Gun went again to Priceville, and from the mangled condition of the young lady’s (00‘. they decided that amputation was necessary. Even yet, we learn she is in a very critical condition, ibut we hope soon to hear of a change for the better. i Every Day is Bargain Day at Our Store We sell the kind of goods that make life long customers, and we sell at. right priCes. Our Millinery _ Department is complete in all lines. Gnod goodsfï¬at moderate prices. S. F. MORLOCK INSPECTION SOLICITED No Trouble to Show Goods $1.00 PER YEAR g: §