West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 26 Oct 1911, p. 3

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‘ “1‘9 Only 62 electrical {59’ 1?: Stations in Europe“n However, St. Peters?!“ ulation of any city in 40 per 1,000. Every Branch \V. IRWIN u'usrnm #0 W . «m ".19 'm-broudtt n 110‘ a IHAM. ONT-c IS pramsnm ’mt'asmnr 3:03me ale Printing House, 6am - Street. b‘)\gs~â€"â€"\ext In Swallows hop. RESwflINCE~ N1 of \\. J hwreg lb shop. 31‘ ammg on sharks: notzze. Director» HAM CHRONICLE Mount Forest and AM H BELL RTAKER r Han-{rut “W m: per lim- for {he n; 3 nuts pen-lino )inin'n manure. P It: one inch $43 1" Etbmxt W.- 'M: rbid and ('qu - u anager and UGHES \ TYP‘F than“ a for running out oper Form M, ONT. Tfi'm. {n ”if not SW1 be bro‘ if not do W" what: ‘6 gm“ [re-9:1 1111101. \rn are ”(Lat n-a‘rflv ad veruaemau H i‘uxowm wm he at.“ er? 5th, 1911 ins - $6.Sso.ooo a Specialty sscrery uockrfl " ' 'Y‘VF. ”Ins” r!‘ WM“)! (“1‘ (1 R1 bets. and black - aged peqie. mePRIE'rOR- I‘M fad by stratum 3D m tself. The a back to meetings- officor 35 ‘3 . r pellent prO" Canada city Jun mun ll 444444444444444444444z4444.1 44M44 ‘Mz' cmirsos are much better than those 01 W'. “e nfl’er you advantages U0” offered ' a 4)} in thP provinve. l‘he school is atfilmted Wit "“4“ Hf Str'atfmd and all graduates Of each so! s. The (mm: md fm trained be! p is many times \ imml nth-mint; and s. udents may enter at :11 I .ngm- at 01169. |OOQOOOOOOO . A. NICLaChRam October Fielding, ‘v”heat 30 Bus., Oats 75 Bus. per acre The estimate of the average yield in this vicinity this year is: You can invest your money in land here that will advance from $3.00 to $10.00 per acre during the next year. l have Choice investments along the New Prince Albert to Battleford line. Choice improved Lands at from $15.00 to $35.00 per acre. Choice Prairie Lands at from $10.00 to $20.00 per acre. !F 50 .4 Come to the Saskatchewan Valley Canada's Greatest Wheat Belt Anything in the line of Furnaces, Ranges Stoves, Tin and Graniteware can be had. Cg SMITH 8: SONS. DURHAM. ONT. 2901' further information write or come and see REMEMBER Don’t forget to look at our di Collars and Ties. Brand Overalls. Call and look over our stark- We. carry the most I Gent’s Furnishings on the 113 Before you get your N what we have. We are agem (Jl<‘>thing, and these 'are apt). quality. ARE YDU .ulv l'ill .. . . ".00090 09999.60 onrvrnHrHrrOGQno®nnroflerHrN _ ‘ \\ kl .IIII‘IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII‘IIIIIII 26th. 1911. . J. SCOTT Next to the Standard Bank PRESIDENT, MOUNT, FOBESI ONTJ GOING WEST ? are 30‘ entsfor' ‘ / than those of the ordinary Business ~ not: offered in any other similar 3 s affiliated with the Central Business 33 of each school secure good posl' is many times the supply. We give w enter at any time. Get our free most up-todate stock of . STERNALL V‘. O n+4d6+eé. .5 . AS CASH Saskatchewan. , W. Ka Ile, PR1-.CIPAL b 0 '5. {‘0 1 in all its lines t 9 A 9E! Regarding the Factory of the Cham i A force of berlain Mealcine 00., Des Maine-s. Iowa: homes 91101153,”? . . _ - Barre 1mm f0," Let us demonstrate these and other strong advantages at Oxford line. We have stove: for every purpose, every fuel of prices. THE DIVIDED FLUE STRIP is the envy of all women w It guides the heat equally along sides, back and front of the oven rust or an 18 me lever that holds. No danger of the fire going out between meals. The Oxford Economizer will hold the heat at a low ebb till you want it; then turn the handle, and your stove is hot in a jifl'y. Besides this saving of time and worry it saves in fuel to the actual extent of one ton in six. IN l‘ERESTING FACTS . Hunter 6: Son DURHAM CHRONICLE i Mr. Thos. Derby was kicked on .the knee by one of his horses last iweek, but he is now able to be around again. i Miss Etta Anderson returned home on Saturday, after spending a month with her brother in Ham- ilt-on. ~ Mr. and Mrs. Th‘os. Young at- tended the funeral of the latter‘s Mr. Jos. F0 d was operated on for appendicitis last week, and at time of Writing, is on the road to recovery. Miss Wilena Binnie attended the teach-ers’ convention in Durham, and Visited with her parents at Bunessan over Sunday. f To follow theleader is a Very good rule, If you are willing to follow to his little sch-001.. . So Sir Wilfrid and 1, Without animosity Voted the same. ’Twas for reci- procity! Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Henderson Visited an afternoon With Mr. and Mrs. Wilkinson, of Lamlash. evening u 1th Miss Maggie Mcbin. Roots are all safely housed and the farmers arebusy with the fall ploughing. We are glad to hear that Mrs. A. Scott is improving in health. The young people are making“ great preparations for the concert on Friday night. There will be no lunch this year, but a good pro- gramme is being prepared. Come and enjoy yourself. Admission 10(- Miss May evening with Sunday was Rally Day at our Sunday sch-00]. The attendance was very good. in spite of the very Wet day. Mr. N.W. Campbell was present, and gave a good, and pleasing address. RIVERDALE. Mr. and Mrs. John McGirr Saturday and Sunday with f at Dramore. vpuLovAl IV 301' a business of this kind, ranks as one ofthe best in the State, and .is thoroughly equipped with auto- matic presses and folders of the latest improved type. Here enough print 'paper is used in one ’year to spread over ten farms of ‘160 acres each, upon which is ’printed advertising matter, direc-‘ itions and labels in tWenty~eight different languages and dialects. Enough lumber is used in making the cases in which the madicines are shipped to build an eight room house on each of these ten farms every three months. The bottles used by this firm every year, which are filled by machinery at at the rate of 2000 per hour, if placed end to end, would reach A force of helpers representing: homes enough to populate as aver- age Iowa town are regularly em- ployed at the want of the Cham- berlain Medicine Company at Des Moines, Iowa. The printing de- partment, which is usually OVer- looked in calculating the expense .1‘ - 1 me: it as nearly perfect as possible .ay night. There will be no his year, but a good pro- 3 is being prepared. Como oy yourself. Admission 10c May Young spent Sunday envy of all women who bake. HAMPDEN. . .J-onn McCrirr spent Sunday with friends of the Gurney- :l, and a variety Short hair has been made the distinguishing mark of the Chinese revxoluti‘onists, according to a mes- sage from Hankow, received in San Francisco. The Nobel prize in medicine has been awarded to Prof. Allvar Gull- strand of the Faculty of Medicine of Upsala University, Upsala, Sweden. A balloon was blown out to sea from Dieppe, France, but the three passengers were rescued. The seventh World’s S. S. Con- vention will be held, in Zurich Switzerland, fiuly 8-16, 1913. The survey of the boundary be- tween the northern possessions of the United States and Canada. is costing the two governments joint- ly about $2,000,000. The work has been going on for the past four- teen years, but Will be completed probably next year. Albert O‘Brien ,manager of the ilmmigration -Department dining ‘room at Halifax, has been dismiss~ ed, and Geo. J. Poley, a Conserva- tive, appointed. The schooner Renown, owned by A. E. Crosby, ex-M.P., of Halifax. bound from Spain to Newfoundâ€" land with onions, sank in mid- ocean and the crew were rescued. Humphrey ‘Wood, aged 78 years, an inmate of the county’s House of Refuge, Cobourg, committed su- icide by hanging. He was at one time a prosperous farmer, but too many lawsuits ruined him. ‘ Footprints leading from the burned barn to his home led to the arrest of Varmzm Va‘n'derburg, for incendiarism near St; Catherines. Mayor Guerin, of Montreal, laid the corner stone of the new Herald building, at Craig and Alexander streets. Peter Elson, M. P., for Middle- sex, East, 'demies that he was offer- ed a senatorship to retire in fa- vor of W, T. White. Hon. Sidney Fisher will likely return to Parliament, the seat of Sheffield, Quebec. having been of- fered him. John Robitaille, a young Cuna- rdian Pacific brakveman was cut in two while switching at Coleridge, Maui to ba. The body of John Cunnuly. a well-known Bi’itdgeburg man, was found in the M. L‘. R.,ya1'ds there. Fred. Carbeau, aged :46, Ottawa, was killed by the collapse 01 a roof on which he was standing. A Unit syndicate has bought 120 acres of land, and will donate 40 acres to manufactures. Dr. Clam), of Mllxdimay, will be the Conservative cauuxuacc my inc Legislature in South Bruce. The C. P. R. will Spend $0,000,000 in hotel extension and rebuilding throughout Canada. Joseph Marcotte, a brakcman, was killed at Verdun, Quebec, when he fissed his footing. The G. T. R. is buying up pro- perty in Hamilton supposed 101' a new station. Montreal‘s assessor thinks city has 243,000 more than the sus allows. Those who {dodge the poll tax in Beantford will, if caught, be tin- cd $5. The Nova Scotia Conservatives‘ banquet to R. L. Borden will take place November 2. Three provincial bye elections will be held in Nova Scotia, Ao- vember 15th. ______ C. Your scribe has a strong pott- ical infection this time, MI. Editoi, and alth-ou0h strictly Libewl in tone, we are contemplating writing an epitaph on “Liberalism,” and then of joining “the Conservative part '.” Reading the Chronicle did it? Thus. E. Fitzgerald, of Peterboro. is dead, aged 78. Mr. and Mrs. John COOper are spending a few days witn. their son, Mr. Alex. Coolyer, Shelburne. tive party. QVe therefore take time by the forelock. and ask the Liberal candidate for the Provinâ€" cial House, to be sure and cast hi; ballot for the other fellow. Come, cheer up, vou Liberalf‘. and cease your repming For every dark cloud has its silv erl inincr, And in the Conservative Cabinet a Liberal is shining" This, my dear friends, is the lag; of my rhyming. Since the Chr-‘3 -1 cie 7110‘; 1.11 i1d Conservath \@ \ictory at the Don‘ ini-on elections and go: it. and 1:01\ is claiming the provincial 12151.1 for the same paztv theie me 91 11-- er no Liberals in thc 0011111113 0. else evervthing in sizht. 11:11 11' - sighted b: longs to the Consona- I father. M It is :11 it is all \‘97‘\' w}: for 3‘ to surf}? 'hen (-Ver;'t}>;'::;;‘s 52; way. reciprocitv. GENERAL NEWS ITEMS. L‘s. of (The 1 the cen- w 2: Upper Town - Durhani anti Butter and Eggs Taken in Exchange New Grocery Store Fresh Groceries 4;.uA. 4.00 7.10 “ Durham “ 11.54 4.11 7.21 “ McWilliams“ 11.44 4.14 7.24 “ Glen “ 11.41 4.24 7.34 “ Pricex‘ille “ 11.31 4.40 7.50 " SaugeenJ. “ 11.18 5.15 7.50 “ Toronto “ 11.15 R. MACFARLANE. - Town A; 94¢§§§++§+¢§§+§9§vovvvoooo Trains will amive and depart as to! lows, until further nonworâ€" CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE hi Were received last month for ofiice help-37 were left unfilled. Demands for trained help are so great that we can afford to "guarantee a position to every graduate or refund tuition mon- 93 ey. If you are anxious to auc- ceed write for our beautiful catalogue to-day. uzuvanlgec and Iron Pipin , Br Brass Lmed and Iron Cglindearul. SHOP OPEN EVERY AFTERNOON Pumps From $2 Upward ALL REPAIRING promptly and Drnhprlv n r+n_ ,J _ .1 L 83 CALLS PUM PS OF ALL Ans.» ’r-RCSHURUCERIES Cooked Meats and Candies Thifi is tho Mane tn buy you FRESH BAKED GOODS. A FULH SUPPLY ALWAYS ON HAND. 6 25 Lv. Walker-ton 6 38 “ Maple Hill 7.47 “ Hanover 6.55 “ Allan Park DURHAM 3 N. B U RVETT This is Also a limited amount of iron work and machine re~ pairs. A call solicited. Ask for quotations on your next job. The undersigned begs to announce to residents of Durham and surrounding country. that he has his Planning Mill and Factory completed and is vapared to take orders for .D.CONNOR â€"â€" and all kinds of Manufacturer :‘end Dealer Ar.12.40 10.05 " 1".25 9.50 “ l" 17 9.42 “ 12.08 9.33 ONTARIO 10.5!) gm” TP ‘8 KINDS 9. 19

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