West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 30 May 1912, p. 7

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325 ACRES close to Proton Stati ns brick dwellingfine large out-buildings windmill c.; hay, 2 tons to acre, only $5,500. Knocks the sunshine off Al- berta bargains. Ml. Land Hunts: .Lnnk Hen 533 ACRES near Proton Station an? Saugeen Junction. fine brick residence Splendid barns. splendid soil. good water orchard c. Will sell less than $25 an ncre. A bargain surely. A HARDWARE and Tinsmith Bus. mess, Grey County. post. office in connection Less than $10,070 will buy 40 acres of land store and dwelling, barn, other frame dwelling: and $4 000 stock. No man who doies business with H. B Hillar is ever satsfied to go elsewhere Our methods seem to please. - ‘ .Alwaye Prompt. â€" Never Negligent, GENERAL COUNTRY STORE five miles from Durham; very chap. Large numter of cheap farm prorertiee Money to Lend at Low Rates. Lands: bought and 501:}. Debts collecttd All kinds of writings drawn. It was Dr. R. V. I’Eercc, cw ‘.:"e Surgical Institute of BuEaio, N. Y O n z r- o-P vv '3‘ p o f of cur natnc .motx, 50". ~ \ uâ€" - 56-4 0 and queen's roof. black chr "~32 Pserce’s GCECcr. .ucuicm U1.“ ‘ “r .s‘J's‘ .-l whole of the pharmacopeia and r animals :11 gurzng themseives. J‘v’. (t I. b "3 m Wonderful Cures Repay“: 863 in (53522222223: J. D. Mu'nzsozv, Esq. May 30th, 191:2. H. H. MILLER . MILLER The Hanover Conveyancer Misses’, boys’ and youths" fine and heavy shoes at lowest prices. Now is your time to buy cheap rubbers. We have a full stock on hand for spring. Don’t fail to see. our trunks, suit cases, and travelling bags. All we want is a call at the Big Shoe Store near the bridge. riving and as we have selected our stock from some of the lead- ing Canadian factories, we have no doubt the most up-to-date lines that monev can buy. OUR SPRING GOODS are now ar- We have also a new line for men, known as the “Monarch” Shoe, rang- ing in price from $3.00 to $5.00. We are the sole agents’ for the Relindo Shoe, formerly known as the J. D. King Shoe, which is the leading; shoe for ladies’ in style and quality, made on the stage last, short vamps, high heel, Good-year weit in Gun Metal Calf, Tan Calf, Pat. Colt and Vici Kid in blucher or buttoned st; 198. T HOS. MCGRATH i TERMSâ€"CASH or EGGS. Opposite The Reid House. Hanover. D 16H 03.09600 *++?MIIMO+ "xtlalom‘OM :Imto 0.20.31 OMMMMQ Household furniture, and other articles for sale, iron bedsteads, springs and mattresses, side board, dressers, wash stands, tables, (hairs. floor oilcloth, carpets, plat- form scales, and other household furniture. Also a new buggy for sale. At very reasonable prices... At Levine’s, Durham. ooai 40W ‘4 040.0.4coo.a. IMIOKOQO‘QOIOOOQMOOKO I'VQ‘IOVOQMIO‘QOO'OI00.090.000th0509.0 0 +0. UNDERTAKING Rugs, ‘Jilcloths Window Shades Lace Curtains and all Household Furnishings {ew Stock just arrived and will he sold at the lowest living profit. Undertaking receives special attention FURNITURE‘ EDWARD KRESS u m u I‘ fit 0" a. mu” .5 «0 con. «8 a...“ .6 :03ch non"? “no m»... hi.“ .wom J2. ...a u“ «o 33:? .C \ .. ..u.»....mu an." :mouo "Luna 2... A AND Near the Bridge u .3150? cm» fun." >195 3m... 03 CE 9 3: .20va .fiLJGuH doc.» n... no 0..., son... an Mowom . 3.8:. I: ‘0 '(J C) (I h Q: U) the last (.113 When all our liotels 111113 “811119; lion/.11" \f11‘11‘t111t 111110 the pr13i100‘e will 10 1111ite1'1 ito ten hostclries in the Classic C'it3.'I11e liquor traffic is e31- , 1 entl3‘ becoming very unpopular, if the license reduction and local op- tion 113 -la33's that are being carried 'e3e1‘3. year are any criterion. , \Ve heart2 13' agree 3" 1th Ye Edit- ‘or. on the matter of putting 13‘ a little for '1. ‘ainy1 (1213‘. ’ lut it is a mighty hard job to do the trick just the same. However. it can be done if one starts in time. I 31.()rkecl out this interesting little problem in compound interest. If 'a 3oung man. at 16 years of age ihegins to save 5 cents a da3, and keeps it up for '34 years, he will 'have nearly $1700 to his credit, :provided he receives 4 per cent on fhis deposit, compounded annually. 1Man3‘ a young fellow earning moderate Wages spends 10 cents a ,day on tobacco alone. Instead of blowing his dime out of his mouth in smoke or sp2tting‘1 it out in toâ€" ihacco juice, he would put it b3 for ‘a “rainy day” he would have quite CLASSIC CITY CHRONICLES. Crowded out last week. I have decided to champion the cause of the Suffragettes. That’s so, Mr. Editor. It never entered my cranium until a. few days ago what an unexplainable, inex- tinguishable and most acceptable relief it will give to us poor bur- dened ratepayers if we grant the franchise to women. What stupid dull heads we men are to he sure! What will happen if women get their rights? Less taxes, don‘t you see, for us poor fellows. Ev- ery spinster will have to pay a poll tax. What a gold mine that will be for the city treasurer. Just think of it! Every dress-maker, miliiner, .l':ookâ€"keeper. teacher. clerk. housemaid. etc.. etc., will have to cough up (take your cough medicine. girls, like men) from 100 to 1300 cents for head tax. No lar- gain days. mind you, in this deal. .a “stake" in 40 years. While I am speaking on this subject I would like the liberty to :advise every 5 young man and Woman to take out ian endowment policy in some reliâ€" rable insurance company. Nineteen iyears ago this 'month Inspector lCampbeLl advised your scribe to itake out a twenty-year endow- iment policy. He did so :and has inenjer regretted it. It is a sure tano safe way of saving for a a “rainy day.” Continued from page 6. for ‘me all round. I've got a secretary fellow yonder,” jerking his thumb in the direction of Weyberne Hall, “no use at all. You’ll have to lend me your wife, Felix, to get things straight.” “Not I,” the squire returned, with his hearty laugh; “I’ll have no esti- mates, no speeches, no Greek exer. cises, no Herodotus and his kidney, coming betwixt me and my wife.” “Come here. Mrs. Feline!” and the baronet invitingly beckoned the lady. “You will help me to get my affairs ship-shape, won’t you, my dear? Don’t trouble about Fleming, he’s a terrible bully, and if you ask my opinion,” he added teasingly, “that husband of yours was more captivated while you were masqueratding as my secretary than ever he will be now you have elected to become an ordinary sensi- ble woman.” TEE SECRET of PAUL FARLEY 99 cents will be I am with you sense. I meant eunt chivalry. Ever since I have heard the looked Ilke a « 1; Donald McGinnis, a ‘ merchant * prince of Kincardine thirty years ago, . died in the House of Refuge here on Saturday last, aged 77 years. The de- 3 ceased was a nephew of the late Sen- . ator McGinnis of Hamilton, and about i a quarter of a century ago was one of the big dry goods men of Bruce That , he should have passed away on a. Poor “louse cot is a sad but striking in- ! stance of the irony of fate. Never E being marriedfihe wasn’t ruined by the ioxtr:wagan'se "and ingratitude of his ifauuly. and nut beinga drinker. King Alcohol never played a part in his un- doing. Mevertheless the years came [and relieved him of his wealth, and =wrecked in health and wrecked in )fo'rtune he was obliged some two ' years ago to fnake that saddest-of ail trip .‘°Over the hills to the Poor House.” where he was destined to eke out the remnant of his days. Hearing of his death kind friends in Kincar: dine had the remains forwarded to that town for burial and thus the ashes of the 01:1 merchant were saved from commingling with the dust of the Potter’s Field.-â€"Herald-Times, looked like a drowned rat." really never appreciated the point of the simile until I‘CE One fine morning this SDI got up early (no quest-ion here and as my hens: were, awake. and ready for their l: fast, I decided to feed- them as I was bending over the of the grain bin, '11 big 1'? it 1 on my shoulder. I straighten uith all the suddenness band of a jumping jack. The. movement threw the I‘LlSC'll his perch. and as luck would “You are said, dryly. mow his .1: it he \"ate O .1 21' THE IRONY OF FATE )1 0 n ( (1.11 V .1 I] V311 be no go. h you when 1t meant to say . I‘l Of mist ‘ threw the I‘LlSC'll and as luck would ght into a small 1" foot was in the 1‘: L when 'I release T1 ‘ A 9 End. y. the 20th. \x‘il‘ when all our 11( .020." After Curtain. was a youngster expression “1 I straightened up enness and speed ck. The quick out like THE DURHAM CHRONICLE. sir ression “He ed rat." but lted the fine mtil recently. :his spring I lest-ion mark 35-; were Wide thcir 1 1911;;â€" ed them. Just ver the edge )iO‘ rat 182‘ pod ralszhtened up the squire comes to ents. Ex- THE MIXED FARMING A Household Remedy SPECIALTY A cumin public official 111 one of the \Vestern Pr"m1nces is out campaign- ing against the p1 opusal to inuodnce mixed farming into the West. One dairyng and in grain-growing too for that matter, not excepting the great fertile plains of the “fest either. There are to-day hundreds of farms in Ontario devoted to mixed farming, whose owners have heen‘ successful in their callin". In fact the nmjority of the farmers in that Province have b e e n a. n d :1 r e following this kind of farming. and to say that mixed farming in Untarlo is n failure is to say that the majority of those living on the land are on the road to the poor house. ,But we know that this is not the case. and while the specialist in any kind of farming ma) ~ providing the demand for this inflict“- lar product is strong and the. price pro- fital'ile. find his venture :1 pi-(“ifitnhle one. this does not mean thlt all other kinds of farming are foilurm. The same energy and concentration of pur- pose applied to mixed farming as. the specialist has to apply to his particu- lar line would make the former i119! :13 Edward Yates. 12 years old. shot and instantly killed his companion. Oliver Stevens, the same age. at their home in Port Hope. While the lads were out shooting ground- hogs, Yates pointed the rifle at the boy in fun, and accidentally pulled the trigger. The boy fell, and (lied almost instantly. Stevens was a home boy. and Was popular. This is another instance of the folly of allowing children to handle danâ€" gerous Weapons. “in your sermon this morning you spoke of a baby as “a new wave on the ocean of life?” “Quite so; a poetical figure." “Don’t you think ‘a fresh squall’ would have hit the: mark better?” mr 11m: would make the I'm-mer- juRt. :1 profitable. \Vhy canno: a man spa ialize in mixed fzu-l'uix’lg, as well as i1 any other kind?â€"-â€" Jam-Minn Farm.‘ exactly meet the need which so often arises in ever 3’ f..«.miiy for a medicine to open up and regulate the bowels. Not only are they effective in all cases of Constipation. but they help greatly in bre:..king up a Cold or 'La Grippe by Cleaning out the system and purifying the blood. In the same way they relieve or cure Biliousness, Indigestion, Sick Headaches, Rheum- atism and Other common ailments. In the fullest sense of the words Dr. Morse’s Indian Root Pills are 47 “In ,A'i" W. L‘ ' . fifiA‘fl’fk '. POETRY AND FA CT SHOT HIS ICHUM UX‘T think fiat concrete can be used only for Titziiding bridges. sibs. walls and walks: because if you do. you will probably overlook ail the places where you can use it now. / ”KT- W‘- at... ‘- fl“ mmmr:mzu;xsé .u..... . 4 vv\\11'u..fi. It: raw. }Ab..0..n...rxv 3 gal... LtPMV-LPFHI Perhaps you haven't thought of 4 silo. or some other big improvement That’s why you should read flay/Buns... {.31 ‘C. .‘vs‘i. ‘13..) .nin0); 33“? 7?.3: :4 .V...p:v. now } rin m DEnIzI alt-”iii ISS A‘ICWILLIaIu'b ‘ The death of Miss Margaret Eleanor Mc\\'illiama, daughter of Mrs. John Mc'Williams, Ninth street. east, took place very suddenly at Guelph Hospital on Sunday last. Miss Mc- Williams had been in good health al- most until the day 0;. which bar death took place. On Thursday. ac- companied by her brother, Mr. Rich- ard McVVillimns. Miss Mc\VilliamS went to visit friends in \J-obonrg. W'hile there she felt slightly indispos- ed and when she arrived at Guelph. whithor she motored with her brother, she was suddenly taken seriously ill with hen: t failure from which she suc combed 2!: :1, few hours. The remainS were removed to Owen Sound. Where the interment will take place to Green- wood cemetery on the arrival of Misses Emily and Minnie 3112\Villi-ams. sisters of deceased. who are in Nevada and Calgary. reegjm-tively. M‘is-w Mc- \Villiams was a. member of the -\ ugli- can chm-r h, and active in all church work. She haul .. Dig? ('il'trle of warm friends to Whom the intelligmu'e of hSI' rlPRth OH!!!“ in the nature Hf a shock. Surviving her. besides her sor- iruwing mmher r. are {in lxxntllns micl tvu; sistels hei n z Rh Wllatul Omen S l: iGl-HUIKO. )lllwmkcm: Hohext. John and ii: 8.11).. all on the. Fulfill/i (must Hl‘n’l lMisseS Emily and Minnie. Hf {)A't X1 Sound and Calgary 1‘0.“ lOWeu Sound 'l‘iim-s. A ””1131 ”DU” falling on the roof. and on getting The Herald-Times is putting OUt up to look out he saw that the a rather sweet issue this week, a barn was on fire. In the excite- barrel of molasses having bursted ment of the moment. ifistead of re- in the C.P.R. station here on Tues- turning to see that his three hro- (lay night and ran all over our thers were awakened. ran to alarm supply of paper. As there wasn‘t his father. and the rest of the fam- time to get up another consign- ily. but although he met him a ment, we are this week publishing few rods from the barn and return- What will be known in history as ed at once. yet. sad to relate. it the sweetest issue \Valkerton ever was found impossible to reach knew.â€"Herald-Times. them.-â€"â€"Meaford Mirror. 0 M c A 1' ‘1: Mrs. W". J. R with friend x wet Weather lg hfs 5 around he holiday and Mrs. L 105 thur 1 3h A SWEET ISSUE EDGE HILL Polk L Edg Th0 “NOR. here ~02} u‘ I] .6215 Visiting irth, in Clin of th 1t “21.18 H )f U i‘z'I’flS 101 1tona I] I'SOH .1it( I] 1 The country village still contin- ‘ues to answer in the affirmative =the question asked nearly two (thousand years ago, “Can any ggood come out of Nazareth?" ;While the product of name may gmeasure up _to the acmeof perfec- tion attained by the meek and low- 1y Nazarene, yet it is the pride and glory of many of the villages of this land that they have given to the country some of its most eminent and public spirited men. Sir Charles Tupper, one of our most eminent states-men, first saw the light of day in the hamlet of Amherst, N.S. Sir Wilfrid Laurier, one of our most brilliant premiers, claims the obscure village of St. Lin, P.Q., as his birthplace. Sir Donald Mann, the Empire builder, made his mud pies at Acton. Ont. Jim Hill. the king of railway men on the continent was a native of Hoekwood. Ont. Edward Blake. regarded by many as our greatest native-horn Canadian, spent his (hilz'ihood at Cairngorm. Ont. J.P. Mahee. whose losa is now so sin- _-erel;c mourned from the Atlantic to the Pacific. and Whose life was cut short in the heyday of his brilliant career was reared in Port th? sanay sho‘ros an of the tossing Water theatre. ture sho Ht himself up he heard a (:1 noise. u hich he supposed to falling on the roof and on up to look out he _sa.W_ t} Wit h 6911 C V râ€"a. 0n ) \V 11 I] )man IHE COUNTRY VILLAGE. stren magi 111 9W, an him in on Mond .’ in unla IS Bes te t1 )LD MITCHELL SHOW. John Damm. of the Red Star 9. has sold his moving pic- mW in Mitchell, which he has onducting for the past eight 3. Mr. Damm will now con- is attention to his picture at Walkerton and Durhamâ€"- .‘lé ng 1n the four sons tl‘ flame e nois was The: StE m Of V O ndsw \V a} 1 H 1V 1t ()l( work admitted :1 been m who was manned Harriston on May :) has been living on the ll conju Ping all I‘l kVE BI He ha rmos village. on within sight of turbulent rom BEVBH at 1t cha \V tl' on xat 1t It

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