LOT 33, CON. 9, GLENELG, CON- taining 100 acres of first-class land in good condition. Reason- able terms. Apply to J.A. Rus- sell, Box 39, Sedgewick, Alberta. Man-“ti A COMFORTABLE BRICK CO r- tage in upper town, well located, about a quarter acre of land in good condition; Will sell cheap to quick purchaser.â€"Ap-â€" ply to Geo. Finney. 418 ti A GOOD LOT IN UPPER TOWN, Durham, on Garafraxa street, near the Durham Road crossing, next lot south of McArthur’s old store. ‘Splendid residential site. For particulars, apply to Miss Martha Sharpe, 37 Beverley St., Toronto. 7575i 3n;pd AN UP-TO-DATE PIG-SKIN SIDE THE J. C. NICHOL TAILOR SHOP and dwelling, next to :R. Bur- nett’s store. For particulars, apply to George Ryan, Sr., Lamb- ton street, Durham. 425tf A GOOD COMFORTABLE SEVEN- room house, about an acre and a quarter of land. large stable, :1 never-failing well. Will be sold cheap, and on easy terms. Ap- Dly to Thos. Daniel, Durham. 79tpd A COMFORTABLE BRICK HOUSE For Rent THE ROCKY SAUGEEN HOTEL property. â€"Apply to J. A. Brlown, Durham. 1:. 7t! GOOD COMORTABLE FRAME house on College street; six rooms, two storeys, hard and soft Water. good- half acre of land. A bargain to quick pur- chaser. For articulars, apply to Ed. Lang on, Durham, or John M. Little, 205 Riopelle St? WARNING T0 TRESPASSERS HUNTING. FISHI\ G AN D OTHER- wise trespassing on E54 61 Lots 28 and 29 on the 4th concesison, and Lot 28 on the 5th concession THREVING‘EA‘KE'EY †BUSINESS in the Town of Durham.â€"Apply to H. Burnett. ; 1251:! Sheep bstray ON OR ABOUT THE 3rd OF AUGâ€" ust, a ewe and lamb strayed to the premiSes of the undersignâ€" ed. Owner may have .same by proving property and paying expenses.â€"Joseph Billings, Dur- ham. '- 81549 For Sale or Rent FOR SALE OR RENT, WITH OR GOOD BUEDITI’G'LOTS APPLY to J P. Telford, or Mrs. G. 31391;;- SEVERAL HOUSES IN DURHAM. One nice cottage in Lower Tow.n â€"A.. H Jackson, Durham. 3 21tf A. PAIR OF ONEâ€"HORSE BOB- Iledg'hs. and a cutter. Apply to D. MacKenzie. Upper Town, Dur- ham. 51211t1 BRICK COTTAGE, AND NICE Lot A bargain for immadiate buyer.â€"Arthur E. Jackson. 18tf LOT 1 OF 17, CON. 1, E. G. R., Glenelg, 50 acres; jorty acres under cultivation, 7 acres hard- wood bush, 3 acres swamp. 2 small orchards, variety of other small fruits: watered by spring and well. Frame house 28x24, frame barn, 50x36; stone base- ment underneath, and other out- buildings. Also lots 2 and 301 15. Con. 1, “KGB†Bentinck. 100 acres: 30 acres under cultivation. 30 acres pasture, 35 acres .hard- wood bush, 5 acres swamp, 1,4 acre orchard. Small frame house frame barn 50x36, stabling un- derneath. The above property will be sold cheap, as the owner intends going to Alberta. For further particulars, apply on farm, or to Wm. Leggette, Rocky Saugeen-,_On§.p_ 1 25 tf EAST PART LOTS 41 AND 42. Glen‘elg, 100 acres: 75 acres clear- ea, valance in hardwood and swamp: well watered with never- Iailing stream: two good wells: a desirable property. For furth- er particulars, apply to Thos. Banks, Edge Hill. 8 15 4pd LOT 16, CON. 1, S. D. R. CONâ€" taining 50 acres; about three miles from Durham; well water- ed, and well fenced; excellent pasture land: easy terms. Apply to Jas. Atkinson, Durham P. O. - 815tf LOT 2, CON. 4, E.G.R., GLENELG. 100 acres: 70 acres working land. 10 acres new land, 20 acres hard- wood bush. Two good wells on premises. Good concrete house. trams barn, driving shed, K-acre orchard. Well fenced. Will sell cheap to quick buyer. For fur- ther particulars apply to David McAuliffe, Upper Town. Durham saddle; will be sold cheap, as the owner has no further use for it. Apply to Mrs. Seymour, at Mrs. D. Jackson’s residence. 815tf in Durham. 2 storeys high, hard and soft water inside, good cem- ent atahln frame barn on too, quarter acre of land. Price away down to quick purchaser. Apply at the Chronicle office. 7 27 tf Detroit, Mich. I Bentinck, is strictly forbidden, and intruders will be prosecuted accordmg to lawnâ€"T1105. Torry and Alex Grierson, Proprietors. _ 6 20 Sp burn, Durham For Sale or Rent. Advertisements of one inch or lees. 25 cents for ï¬rst insertion, and 10 cents for each subsequent insertion Over one inch and under two inches. double the above amount. Yearly rates on applicatxon. Farms for Sale. For Sale. SMALL ADS.‘ Oct. 5th, t1. 2 2%! 613 if Notice is hereby given that the Saugeen Fishing Club, having leased all the fishing and angling rights on streams ,mvith branches and tributaries on the lands of Messrs. Wettlaufer, Mueller, Damm, Seim and Ryan, being Lotsl 30 and 31, Con. 12; Lot 30, Con. 13; Lots 27 and 30, Con. '14; .Lots 29 and 30, Con. 15; and :Lot 23, Con 3, all in the Township of Normanby in the County of Grey, as aPre- serve for the propagation and cul- tivation of fish, that fishin or trespassing by unauthorize per- sons Will be rigorously prosecuted' according to IaW. A. reward of] $15.00 Will be given for inIorma-’ tion given either personally or by' letter leading to the conviction of any person or persons guilty of. unauthorized fishing or trespass-’ ing upon any of said lands. ‘ JUDGE BARRETT, W. HUETHERJ - President. Secy.-Treas. lNeustajt, May lst. 1912. 1 Notice is hereby given that any person found hunting or other- wise trespassing on Lots 9 and 10. on the 3rd concession of the township of Egremont, after the first appearance of this notice, May 23rd, 1912, Will be prosecuted according to lamâ€"W. T. Wilson, Varney. 523 tf Holstein Conveyancer, Issuer of Marriage Licenses. Money to loan at lowest rates, and terms to suit borrower. Fire and Life Insurance placed in thor- oughly reliable compnaies. Deeds, Mortgages, Leases and Wills, executed on shortest notice. All work promptly attended to. Notice is hereby given that the Crystal Spring Fishing Club, having leased all, the fishing and angling rights on streams with branches and tributaries on the lands ,of Messrs. Blyth and Cornish, being Lots 30 and 31, Concession 3, and Lots 30, 31 and 32, Concession 2-, all in the Township of Normanby in the County of Grey, as aPre- serve for the propagation and cul- tivation of fish, that fishing or trespassing by unauthorized per- sons will be rigorously prosecuted according to law. A reward of $15.00 will be given for informa- tion given either personally or by letter leading to the conviction of any .person or persons guilty of unauthorized fishing or trespass- ing upon any of saiid lands. - JUDGE BARRETT, W. HUETHER President. ' “‘wecyn -I‘reas. \‘eustadt, May lst, 1912 J er, Conveyancer, c. Insurance Agent. Money to Loan. Issuer of Mar- riage Lic'enses. A general ï¬nancial busi- 1688 transacted. AS I HAVE NOT DISPOSED OF my stallion, “Young Prince Erie†I will keep him for service at his own stable for the season of 1912. All interested will bear this in mind. Terms made known on applications â€" Dan. McNamara. oyner, Lot 25, Con. 2. Normanby. l. P. Telford. BARRISTEL, SOLICITOR. ETC. Ofï¬ce nearly opposite the Regis‘ry ofï¬ce Lambton 5t. Durham. Anyamount :f monev to loan at 5 per cent. on farm o-ropertv. L. R. C. P., LONDON. ENG [‘1 RADULATE of London. New \T York and Chicago. Diseases of Eye. Ear Nose and Throat. \Vil_1 be at the Hahn House, July 20 Oct. 19, November 16. Dec. 21, Hours. 1 to 33 p.11). Ofï¬ceâ€"Over Douglas’ Jewellery Store. SPECIALIST : EYE,_ EARL Hmong nose Late Aasxsmnt Roy. London Ophthalmlc Hos. 3112;. and (060le Sq. Throat and Nose Hos. A. H. Jackson. TOTARY PUBLIC, COMMISSION- ; er, Conveyancgr, c. Insurance HYSICIAN AND SURGEON, OF- ï¬ce in the New Hunter Block. Oï¬ce tours, 8 to 10 a. m., to 4 p. m. and 7 toSJ ). m. Special attention given to dlseasee of women and children. Residence op- .)osite Presbvterian Church. ty of Toronto. Graduate Roya College Dental Snrgeons 0t Ontario. Dentistry 1n all its Branches. U stairs, Lambton Street. Resideue Corner Queen and George Streets-Nor ot Methodist Church. Oï¬ce hours 9- a..m. 2-4 o.m.. 7-9 pm. Telephone No. FFICE AND RESIDENCE A short distance east of Knapp’a Hotel, Lamb ton Street, Lower Town, Durham â€)ï¬ce hours from 12 to 2 o’clock )FFICE Notice to Trespassers Ors. Jamieson . Jamieson. ‘- Go Hutton, â€0 0-, c. "I |FFICE, TELFORD’S BLOCK, UP J F GRANT, D. D. S .LD S. FONOR GRADUATE. UNIVERSI- DURHAM ONT. (Lower Town.) b21108: 13, 'Frost 81:. Owen Snnnd. YOUNG PRINCE ERIE Dr. W. 0. Pickering Dentist. W. J. SHARP Arthur Gun, M. D. FISHING NO I‘ICE FISHING NOTICE Med [all Directorv . Dental Dz’recz‘orv Legal ‘Dz'rectorv. DR. BRCWN DR. BURT. Over J. J. Hunter’s Weir for the construction of a reinforced concrete arch bridge over the Saugeen River at Lot 7, Concession 3, N. D. R., Glenelg. Plans and specifications can be seen at the office of William Weir, Durham P. O. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. ___ “VVVIquu. Tenders will be opened at E o’clock pm. on Augtft 28th, 1912 at Durham. ' WM. WEIR, I. TRAYN OR, Reeve, Engineer “I was cured of diarrhoea by one dose of Chamberlain’s Colic, Chol- era and Diarrhoea Remedy,†Writes M. E. Gebhardt, Oriole, Pa. There is nothing better, For sale by all dealers, While Mr. Berry, of Mitchell, was tying a stallion in the stall, the brute bit the first finger of his right hand nearly off at the first joint. Mr. Berry had been caring for the animal all ,‘summer, and knowing him to be’vicious, he was always very cautious when around him. Dr. Armstrong, Who dresseri the injured member, thinks it 'WIH grow together again. Twenty-three years ago, Mr. Berâ€" 'L‘W-enty-three years Ego, Mr. wBer-- I‘Y had ‘alï¬li lgis ï¬ngers and thumb A__ 'I _â€"â€"nv-v “A.“ gnu»- n. on his. left hind taken off in« a t13resh1ng mechine. About .six weeks ago, hxs son, Herbert, While putting up some eave~troughing: had the scaffold give__w_ay,_ and _h_9 £.§1‘ L‘ L‘ _ arm. On Saturday last, another son, Wilbur, an autoexpert, who works in Stratford, had his leg broken While cranking an auto. - w -v‘-utau\,\4. The ï¬eparttï¬ent does not bind itself to accept the iowest or any tender. By order, VCUL CLdI-y a Department of Public Works, Ottawa, July 19, 1912. Newspapers will not be paid for this advertisement if they insert it Without authority from the De- partment. Each tender must be accompan-o ied by an accepted cheque on a chartered bank, payable-to the or- der of the Honourable, the Minis- ter of Publis W'orks, equal to ten per cent. (10 p.c.) of the amount of the tender, which ‘Will be for- feited if the person tendering de- When called upon to do so, or fail to complete the work contracted for. If the tender be not accepted the1che£ue will be returned. ‘ __ __ .â€" -vw- «VLJVM each member of the finm must be giv en. Plans, speciï¬cation and form of contract can be seen and forms of tender obtained at this Depart- ment, and at the offices of J. G. Sing. Esq., District Engineer, Con- federation Life Building. Toronto. Ont.‘ and on application to the Postmaster at North Kagapel. Ont. Persons tendering are notified that tenders will not be considered unless made on the printed forms supplied, and signed with their actual signatures, stating their oc- cupations and places of residence. In the case of firms, the actual signature, the nature of the occu- pation, and place of residence of AA-‘I. -- SEALED TENDERS addressed to the undersigned, and endorsed “Tenders for Wharf at Big Bay, Ont.†will be received at this of- fice until 4 p.m., on Wednesday, August. 14th, 1912, for the construc- tion of one crib, the stone and gravel approach, and the recon- struction of the superstructure of the existing Wharf at Big Bay, County of Grey, Ontario. A homesteader who has exhaust- ed his homestead right and cannot obtain a pr-e-emption may enter for a purchased homestead in certain districts. .Price $3.00 per acre. Dutiesâ€"Must reside six months in each of three years, cul- tivate fifty acres and erect ahouse worth $380.00. Durties.â€"Must reside upon the homestead or 'pre-e'mption six months in each of six years from date of homestead entry Linclud- ing‘ the time required to earn homestead patent) and cultivate fifty acres extra. In certain districts a homestead- er in good standing may pre-empt a quarter section alongside his hom‘es-tead. Price $3.00 .per acre. Deputy of the Minister of the Interior. DERâ€"Unauthorized publication of this advertisement will not be paid for. Duties.â€"Six months’ residence upon and cultivation: of the land in each of three years. A home- s'teader may live within nine miles of his homestead on a farm of at least 80 acres solely owned and oc- cupied by him or by his father, mother, son, daughter, brother or Sister. ANY PERSON who is the sole head of a family, or any male over 18 years old, may (homestead a (“Intersection of available Dom- inion land in Manitoba, Saskatch- ewan or Alberta. The applicant must appear in person at the Don- inion Lands Agency, or Sub-agency for the district. Entry .by man may be made at any agency, on certain conditions by father, moth- er. son, daughter, brother or sister of intending homesteader. SYNOPSIS 0F CANADIAN NORTH WEST LAND REGULATIONS A VICTIM OF HARD LUCK W. W. CORY, . 'C. DESROCHERS TEE DURHAM CHRONICLE. -‘ ULLUL‘U, Secretary. W01 ks, Slips of the Tongue. In a case tried before a magistrate [11 Glasgow the defending agent made reference to a verbal agreement be- tween the parties. “Let's see yer ver- bal agreement.†the magistrate said. “Hand it up here.†The Steeplechase. The ï¬rst steeplechases were literally “chases to a steeple." The earliest we can discover was a match in 1752 beâ€" tween Edmund Blake and Mr. O'Cal- Iaghan over four and a half miles of 81:11? country between the church of Butltevant and St. Leger church spire. -London Ta tler. Next Thing to It. Sheâ€"Kind words can never die. He -Maybe not. but a whole lot of them seem laid up and not workingâ€"Boston Transcript. . Asmfleisanassetafrownanatmo lty.â€"â€"New York Press. At a parish council meeting, when a petition for some increase of wages was under consideration. the chairman said peevishly: “A canna mak’ heid nor tail 0’ this dockyment. It’s jist like Alphy and Omegyâ€"it’s got neither be- ginning nor end.â€-â€"-Glasgow Herald. The End of the World. Although our earth cannot in any vital sense last longer than the sun, it may last less long for intrinsic cause. Life is dependent not only on the sun, but on the presence of air. When this air departs life will depart too. Now the earth’s air is going slowly, but surely. evaporating into space. If it all goes before the sun becomes ex- tinct the earth’s surface life will lapse while the sun still shines. Both processesâ€"the evaporation of the air and the cooling of the sunâ€"will re- quire long eras of time, but the second process will be much the slower of the two. So we may expect the last in- habitants of the earth to die of lack of breath rather than from want of warmthâ€"Percival Lowell in Youth’s Companion. Arctic Marine Plants. The inhabitants of the ocean, like those of the land. are affected by the climate. Arctic land plants cannot flourish at the equator, and in the arc- tic and the antarctic oceans marine plants are found that are unable to survive in warm water. Among the most remarkable of these cold water plants are the laminarlaceae, a kind of seaweed. which sometimes attains a gigantic size, exceeding in length the longest climbing plants of the tropical forests and developing huge stems like the trunks of trees. Investigation has shown that these plants flourish in the coldest waters of the polar seas and that they never advance farther from their frigid homes than to the limits of “summer temperature†in the ocean. The genial warmth destroys them just as a polar blast shrivels tropical flow~ William the Conqueror and Charles II. had palaces here, and within ‘the monastery were buried King Alfred, his queen and two sons. Winchester has indeed fallen upon evil days, for at the present time its population is only the same as it was in the days of Henry II.â€"â€"Shefï¬eld (England) Tele- graph. The Decline of Winchester. Winchester for ï¬ve centuries was the active rival of London. and for 400 years English parliaments occasionally sat in the castle. which contains the round table of King Arthur. It was a city with great temples and the site of the ï¬rst Christian church in Britain. Its buildings were of the most magnif- lcent character. and pilgrims flocked from far and near to t’ magniï¬cent cathedral which commit: the body of St. Swithin and where many miracles were worked. A Hindu Dinner Party. A Hindu ladies’ dinner begins at 12 o’clock and lasts two hours. But the guests begin to assemble some time before the dinner, for the simple rea- son that they have to go into the gar- den and choose their own fruit and vegetables. Meat. by the way, is for- bidden. The chief dish at a dinner party is composed of rice and maize. The guests sit on the floor in two rows, facing one another, and eat with their ï¬ngers. The most esteemed wid- ow lady present hands round the dish- es, and this service is considered a great honor. Cocoanut milk and va- rious kinds of sherbet are drunk. When the meal is over the ladies take a small portion of betel nut wrapped in “pan" leaves. Pan is a green leaf something like laurel and is prepared in no fewer than eighty different ways. Each of those ways is sup- posed to give a ditierent emotion to the eater. exit of any kind but the neck of the bottle. A prisoner there had no more chance of escape than a crab has in a creel.†St. Andrews’ Bottle Dungeon. St. Andrews is perhaps the most dis- tinctive of the old castle towns of Scotland. It was built early in the thirteenth century. and it was here that Bishop Kennedy showed James [1. how to break the power of his no- bles by taking a bundle of arrows, separating them and siapping them one by one. In Stewart Dick‘s “The Pageant of the Forth" the author says: “Under the sea tower, in the heart of the rock where it juts into the sea, is n grewsome dungeon known as the 'Bottle dungeon,’ so called from its shape. In the floor of the lower room in the tower is a hole ï¬ve feet in di- ameter. Down it goes for nearly twelve feet. The neck or the bottle then widens out to form a chamber nearly twenty-four feet in breadth. There is no light, no ventilation. no 4%?me undergicund passage near a hisâ€" !ori: old colonial mansion, on Prudence Island, R.I., has started .Prof. David Greenberg, of Colum- bia University, on a systematic search of the old cellars on the The recent discovery of several choice IOO-year-old hams in an [I THE J. R. GUN, Town Agent. Phone 14 J. TOVVNER, Depot Agent, Phone 18 New London. Conn... . . . Cacouna. Que ............. Charlottetown, P. E. l ..... Halifax, N S. . . Murray Buy, Que ......... Old Orchard. Me .......... Portland, Me ............. St. John, N.B ............ . Sydney, N.S ......... Fm F1111 particulars and tickets enquile fmm any Grand T1 unL Agent, or WriteA. E. Duff D. P..A Union Station, Toronto. “My, ' - August ll, [2, l3, 14, round trip rates from DURHAM T0 Half-cent mile tolWinnipeg, plus"$18.00 to Destination in Eastern Canada Augustyllthâ€"From Tm onto to Sarnia Tunnel. 111c1usn 9, via Stratford and all stations south thereof 1n Ontario. August Bidâ€"From all stations North of, but not including Main Line, To ronto to Sarnia â€Funnel v ia Stmtford; all stations Tor onto and North and East of Tolonto to Kingston and Refrew. August 28thâ€"From all stations Toronto and Fast. East of Orillia. Scotia Jet. August :iOthâ€"From all stations Toronto to North Bay, inclusive, and \V est thereof in Ontario Y‘ï¬AD OF F1 CE and money orciers are ‘ TORONTO D UR H AM BRAN c John Kelly! D * U D We all love a cheerful loser, but some people are not even cheer- ful winners. Farm Laborers’ Excursions $10.00 to Winnipeg With the prevailing feminine shape. the chances of the fat woman are mighty slim. GRAN D TRUNK RAILWAY SYSTEM Future Frammg on sharks: notice. SHOW ROOMSâ€"Next to Swallo Barber Shop. RESIDENCE-Nexf door South of \V. J. Lawrence’s blacksmith shop. and Funeral Director A. BELL UN DERTAKER meat sum m a. savings account in tha Bank to future years. $eg the same principle to the life of your eat-aim LONDON, ENG. OFFICE Bani Bldgsâ€"Binces St. THE TRADERS BANK S. HUGHES, Manager, THE ROYAL BANK 0F CANADA H. S. Holt, President. Full line of Catholic Robes, and blax: and White Caps for aged people. SEASIDE EXCURSIONS Capital and Surplus HAMS A CENTURY OLD. Return limit: Aug. Embalming a Specialty $6,800,000 VIA CHICAGO Plus half-cent mile from Winnipeg to destination.'but not beyond MacLeoi. Calgary or Edmonton. Personal Depreciation 190 Branches in Canada Capital Paid Up Reserve Fund Total Assets * For INCORPORATED 1869 Rates, Etc., enquire of Local Agents. 3151:, 191 RETURNING a of your earning capacity by ï¬eposgtingt :. ‘k-. D-_‘- A A A ~__-_, - ENDING money to any point in Canada, the United States or Europe is safe. economical and expeditious when this Bank's drafts and money orders are used. Popularity consists in giving the minimum of advice, and the maximum of,appiause. island. The hams found are pack- ed in wood ashes. Their flavor is so excellent that they have been readily marketed at $1 a pound. Sailings from Sarnia for $00 and Port Art/hur3.30 p. m. Mondays, \Vednes- days and Saturdays. Winnipeg and Return - $32.00 Edmonton and Return 42.00 Contract rates for yearny advertisements fur nished on application to the ofï¬ce. i‘Zv-sinsiéot tomsbn 3x. "' ‘ :t‘éiiï¬dF'VI'rb'r’éZTé?‘ etc,â€"5O cents for ï¬rst insertion. 25 cents for each subsequent insertion. All advertisements ordered by strangers must be paid for in aannoe. Subscription THE CHRONICLE will be sent tc R any address. free of postage, for ates . . $1 OOper year. payable in advance -â€"S].50 may be charged if not 60 paid. The date to which ever) .~nbscription is rand is denoted by the number on the address label. No paper dia- continued to all arrears are paid. except at the option of the proprietor. ' ' For transient advertisement: 5 Advertlsmg cents per line for the ï¬rst inser- Rates - tion; 3 cents per line each unbec- quent insertion minion measure. Profession cards, not exceeding one inch $4.00 per annnm. Advertisements without aneciflc directions will be published till forbid a) d charted accordingly. IS PUBLISHED- EVERY THURSDAY MORNING A t the Chronicle Printing House, Garafraxa Street. IH’E DURHAM EHHUN . . $7,900,000 . . 8. 900,000 . . 1 23,000,000 .. Peaso. Vice Pres. and Gen. My: . tram Coast to Coast Homeseekers’ Excursions August 6 and 7 Sept. 3 and 17 Via Sarnia or Chicago. DURHAM. ONT EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR Tickets good for 60 days N0 CHANGE OF CARS UPPER LAK ES SA I LINGS NEW YORK AGENCY Cor. William and Cedar Sts. W. IRWIN August 15th, 1912. Total Assets $52,000,000 DURHAM. Ont. 'of comfort iii