. COIPORTABLR BRICK HOUSE ,u Durham. 2 won-ya high, hard md not! vat†inlido, good con- out sum frame barn on too, quarto! a". of land. Prico away down a quick put-chem. Applv 0' tho Chronicle office. 7 27 t! «an-For Sale or Rent. .54 LOT 3, CON CESSION 9, GLENELG, t containing 100 acres of first-class ‘ land in good condition. Will 5 take 81000 if sold before the first . of February, @500 c9311; bnlange {WY-THREE ACRES GOOD I!“ had. no buildings; situated in- “ Durham town limits; spring clock runs through the property. Good chance for quick purchaser. Apply to C. C. Elvidge, Durham. ‘12 «itp PUB RU‘IY SAUGEEN HOTEL “PODBYVY -Apply to J. A. Brown. :9 7n GOOD 361 szG LOTS APPLY to J P. T llord, or Mrs. G. Black- ___burn, rham 6 13 t! GOOD OMFORTABLE FRAME house on College street; nix 1'00 , two otoreys, hard and soft water. good hall acre of . A bargain to quick pur- r. For lculare, apply ’ to Ed. Loni. 3, Durham, or John M. tht 206 Riopelle 8t., DOtmlt, Mich 222tl A COMFORTABLE BRICK C01“- tage in upper 'own, well located. ' about a quarter acre of land ln good condition. Will sell cheap to quick purchaser.â€"â€"Ap- ply to Geo. Pinney. 418 t! BEVEHAL HOUSES IN DURHAM.§ One nice cottage in Lower Town.‘ -â€"A. H chksog, Durham. 3 21“; - â€v-7 BRICKâ€"«COTTAGE. AND NICE’ Lot A bargpln (or immediate buyer.â€"Ar_tlyur H. Jagkggn. w181! ,__.._‘ â€7 «ppm; on time to suit purchaser. Apply to J. A. Russell, pLougheed I". 0., Alberta. adies desiring to have their 1 hair combings made up into latest style of hair dressing, l as coils, braids or switches, the Puffs, which were once so .lat‘ should address the un- igned. '* Hair goods remodelled‘ fade-d switches d ed.â€"Mrs. Williams. Eugenia galls, Ont. “a I...†inn FRAME SEVEN-ROOMED attage. eligibly situated on ‘ollege street. Apply to Ed. Iatson. 11141:! \TRAC [‘8 FOR MAKING ON rat 1?, Concession 13, Glenelg,a rge quantity of railway ties piles (tamarac), and deliver- g same at Berkeley, about four 'les’ haul. uote best spot sh prices. A dress J. Ritchie, IIPCRTAN 1’ T0 LADIES } ABOUT SIX MONTHS OLD e to the remises of the :rsigned 3 out the 20th of ember. Owner may have a by proving property. pay- -xpensea, and taking away.â€" 231) Smillie. Bunessan. 12124p OTICE T0 C REDITORS \Vanted Tn Let e Surrogate Court of the ‘ matter of the estate of flat, late of the Township nanby in the County of Now, deceased. ‘E is hereby given, pursu- )ntario Statutes 1911, Cap. ‘35, that all persons having gainst the estate of the 1 Moflat. who died on or ~uluutc I’llc “Hutu UI lllC . . “I say, doctor, did you ever doc- (3:5!) :19 r33; :3â€;3;‘t :2 tor another doctor ‘P†. “011, CI.†L“ which be 9M“ the"! “we“? tell me this. Does a doc- :" tor doctor a doctor the way the k 33th 33! 0‘ December, ' doctored doctor want: to be doc- ; gtored or does the doctor doing 11! Allan, Adminhtnto: the (factoring doctor the other L Solicitor. J. P. Teflon-d. doctor in hh own way 7†111, Bank and e 18th day of October, A. are required to send by mid, or otherwise deliver l‘elford, of the Town of Solicitor for the adminis- . or before the 23rd day y A. D. 1913, their names, and descriptions and a nent of particulars of is and the nature of the ? any. held by them, duly 1nd that after the said administrator will pro- trlbute the assets of the - n: the parties entitled Vin; regard only 20 01 which he shell then Pig Estray M )l’ S 3 ale. For Rent mod com- :m'l other )od wellS, 70 alCI‘t’S awn-s hzuxl- .Iilbtlll't' land. Reasonable pLU'ticulzu'S. .xcross. Trav- 11 7t! _\' '1, AND LOT N.1).H.. ’n-nt- 1‘)†.H'l't‘S; l’g ‘m t. gnml f‘ll'ml -, Pgs: ,lnts us soft Wa%3‘; 5:0"5 young straWbcrr 1m. ranp‘m-r-q J {AND 42. i can clear- ~ 0d and n th never- : md wells: T For furth-g to That. ‘ 815499 BESSION 9, 12 12 tf nmummuubm..ualuuuhm no hob and and" 3'. We, doc"! 35. a". 1'2 l2tf 12 7t! Yuri! nu. OI :pphuuon. Mr. and ..Mrs D. Edge. celebrated !their 30th wedding anniversary on December 28th. Our annual school meeting was held in the school house on Thurs- day evening, but as usual was not very largely attended. Too many of the ratepayers take too little interest in school affairs. Mr., Adam Anderson was elected trus- tee‘in place 01 Jos. McNally.__ Mr. C. H. Moflat spent'Chriat- mas with his aunt in London. Miss Maria Ritchie and brother Herb., and Miss Lizzie Weir, of Riverdale, are visiting friends in Greenoch and Paisley. We extend hearty congratula-i tions to Mr. Herb. Greenwood, who: was hap ily rwedded on Christmas: dal to '_§s _Geddes, of. Dromore.| Mr. 'C. H. Moffat sold a pure- bred Polled-Angus bull calf to Mr. W. Davis, of Egremont, last week for $75. He was only nine months old, but is well grown, and Mr. Davis is to be congratulated on securing such a high-class animal. Mrs. A. R. Taylor, of Crider, .Mo., had been troubled with sick head- ache for about five years, when she began taking Chamberlain’s Tablets. She has taken two bot- tles of them and they have cured her. Sick headache is caused by a disordered stomach, {or which these tablets are especially in- tended. T them, et well and stay well. ld by al dealers. 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. EDGE HILL. M'r. Wm. Howey, who taught in our school about six years ago, was visiting in the neighborhood last week. Ofï¬ceâ€"Over Dnnglas’ Jewellery Stow. I. P. Telford. ’ARRISTEL, SULICI'POR. ETC ()ï¬'nce nearly upposiIe the Rogis‘ry o'ï¬co Lambton t. Durham. Anyamount f mouev to Man at 5 per cent. on farm mmrtv. thk 4nd Chicano. Dim 0! Eye. Ear Nose and Throat. \Vill he at, the Hahn House, July 21) ()«-t. 19. November 16. Dec. 21, ‘ er. Conveyance». c. Insurance Agent. Money to Loan. Issuer of Mar- riage Licenses. A general ï¬nancial busi- aoua transacted. DURHAM ONT (Lower Town.) i 0n. Jameson Jameson. 1 t ‘ )P‘FICE AND RESIDENCE A ' short distance out of Kupp’l Hotel I Lamb ton Street. Lower Town. Durban Wm hours from 12 to 2 o’clock Hunt's. ltu 5 p.m. JR. iii-N WN L R C P. LONDON ENG (‘RADULXTE 0! London New - 1.1-- .. EYE.» : )FFICE: .Vu-v. l v- ‘v ‘0 “I. o. ‘- ). :11 Special Intention“) a :f women and children. «mite Presbvtorian Ubnrc A. H. Jackson. OTARY PUBLIC, COMMISSION- er. Convoyanopr, 81cg lnagrgpce ty of Toronto. Graduate Roya 3ollnge Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Dentistrvjn all its Branches ‘ [PRICEâ€"Over J. P. Telford’s ofï¬ce nearly nppusite the Registry ofï¬ce. Residence Second house south nt‘ Regisrrv ntfloo rm east. side of Athrt Street. ()ï¬ia'e Hnma 9-11 8.111., 2-4 p. m.. 7-9 p. m. Twit-phone mnnmunicu- tinn hepwwn nfflce and residence at all hours. PBYflL‘MN AND SURGEON, OF 1; In the New Hunter Block. 0500 ‘murs '5 tn 10 3.01. to 4 p m. and? .09 ' '11 Spam! attention given tn diseasoa 2f «(me-u and childrpu. _R89idence op- Hu- {Mutant Roy. Landon Ophthumtc Ho. "’8- MM toGollau Sq. Throat :nd None Ho. SPECIALIST : J F GRANT. D. D. S . L. D. 8. {ONOR GRADUATE. UNIVERSI- I. 8. Hutton. DOCTORING A DOCTOR. Dr. W. 0. Pickering Dentist. 73: (MM J J. Hunter’s "flair ’3. vb‘rmt. -‘. (kw-v 400ml W. J. SHARP Arthur Sun. I. D. Den/a! Directorv Med [ml Directorv. L em! “Directory 7m, THROAT nos: m DR. “Our cashier tell unconscious at his desk this morning. Up to this time. 4 p. m.. we have been unable to get I word out of him except your names. May we say to him. with a view to his immediate recovery. that we have your check. as we thlnk that is what is on his mind?â€-4Pearson’s Weekly. Buainou Humor. Here to a rare specimen of heathen humor received the other day by a London ï¬rm. It ran: Man and Woman. “Man. composed of clay. ts client and ponderona.†preached Jean Ranlin tn the ï¬fteenth century, “hot woman gives evidence or her osseone origin by the rattie she keeps up. Move a each of earth and It makes no notae; touch a bag of bones and you are deafened with the cutter clatter.†Four Days In the Year. There are but four days in the yen! when the sun and clock exactly corre- spond In other words. there are but four days of the 365 in Which the sun is directly south at noon. The ï¬fteenth of April and the seventeen†, Lincoln Joitod Seward. Uncle Billy Green of illinois was Lincoln’s partner in the grocery at Sa- lem. At night. when customers were few. he held the grammar while Lin- coln recited his lessons. At Lincoln'l first inaugural banquet }reen sat ai the table on the president’s left. with the digniï¬ed Secretary Seward on the right. Lincoln presented the two men to each other. saying. “Secretary Sew- ard. this is Mr Green of lilinois.†Seward bowed stiflly. when Lincoln ex- claimed: “Oh. get up. Seward. and shake hands with Green. He’s the man that taught me my grammar."- Kansas City Star. of June remember. August thirty-ï¬rst and twenty-fourth 01 December. On. these four days end none elee In the year The eun and clock both the same time 60- clan. lion helpful than all hum m bmdnflotulmplohnmmm mount-noun. “I’m sorry for pa." “Why?†“813.1: going to marry n man who makes more money than he don."- Detrou Pm Press. Modern Husbands. Lady Nevill in her reminiscences talks of the decadence of the day as reflected in the lives of women. “The fact is." she says. “that in a great many cases modern womanâ€"in Eng- land, I mean-is spoiled. Many have no interests and too much time on their hands. with the result that they will take up some fad. As for the well to do. a great number of them now seem to completely dominate their husbands. This struck the old shah of Persla very much. “It seems to me.’ said he. ‘that an English or American husband is nothing better than a sort of butler.’ " This undoubtedly is the explanation that most strongly commends itself to those scientists who courageously ac- knowledge thelr belief in telepathy. Nor do they see any obiection to it in the fact that people apparently are af- fected by the telepathic impulse only at certain times. for the brain of both sender and receiver may conceivably‘ on the analogy of wireless telegraphy. be set to transmit and receive tele- pathic communications only when at- tuned to vibrations of a certain ampli- tudeâ€"H. Addiugton Bruce in Hamp- ton Magazine. “It seems to me." he suggests, “that these rays (the Roentgen rays) may have a possible way of transplanting intelligence which. with a few reason- able postulates. may supply the key to much that is obscure in physical re- search I.et it be assumed that these rays, or rays of even higher frequency. can pass into the brain and act on some nervous center there. Let It be conceived that the brain contains a center which uses these rays as the vocal chords use sound vibrations (both being under the command of in- telligence) and sends them out with the velocity of light to impinge on the receiving ganglim of another brain. In this same wav the phenomena of telepathy and the transmission of in. telligence from one sensitive to anoth- er through long distances seem to come into the domain of law and can be grasped." Sir William Crookes. for example. calling attention to the marvelous hut undisputed facts of the real vibration as evidenced by the phenomena of wireless telegraphy and the Roentgen rays, urges that here we have quite possibly an adequate explanation of the mystery of telepathy of a wholly naturalistic basis-that is to say. a basis which enables us to accept telep- athy without disloeailng our entire conception of the physical universe. To this question it must frankly be admitted no positive answer can on yet be returned. But some interesting hypotheses have lately been advnheoll' not by mere theorists. but by eminent. men of science. who. themselves aflirm- ' ing the â€My of telepathy. have given much thouzht to the problem of its mode of operation. W Tel-granny May Pom. to the “Why†of Telepathy. Accepting telepathy as an ectahlhb- cd fact. the problem remains- how an we to explain It? What Is the macho mum by which we person In able to transmit messages directly and III- Itantaneouely to another person. al- though they may be half the world apart? Sorry For Pa. TRANSFEBENCE. 3. The said debenture shall bear interest at the rate of five and one-half per centum per; annum payable yearly at the‘ sail Bank on the First day 01' February in each and. every year iduring the currency thereof, and :Shlll have attached to them cou- puns for payment of the said in-l telest, which coupons shall be signed by the Mayor and lreas-i urei of the said Town of Durham. 4. During the curiency 01' the said debentures there shall be! 'xaised annually by special rate on: all the rateable property in the | Town of Durham the sum of $530. 67 i for the purpose of paying the amount due in each of the said le'ycaxs for principal and interest in! respect of the said debt (as shown, iin the Scheduile A hereto annexedi. 7. On Saturday, the Fourth day of January A. D. 1913, the Mayor of the said Town of Dur- ham shall attend at the Council Chamber at 10 o’clock in the fore- noon to appoint persons to attend at the various polling places aforesaid and at the final summing up of the votes by the Clerk on behalf of the persons interested in, and promoting or opposing the passing of this By-Law respect- ively. 8. The Clerk of the Council of the said Town of Durham shall at- tend at his office at 12 o’clock noon 0! Tuelda the Seventh day of January A. . 1913, to sum up 5. This By-Law shall take ef- fect on the 13th day of January A. D. 1913. ‘6. The votes of the electors of the Town of Durham shall be tak- en on this By-Law at the follow- ing times and places, that is to say:â€" On Monday, the 6th day of January A. D. 1913, commencing at the hour of nine o’clock in the forenoon and continuing till five o’clock in the afternoon of the same day, by the following Dep- uty Returning Officers:â€"- North Ward at George Shire’s Store by Clifton Elvidge, Deputy Returning Officer; East Ward at the 'lown Hall by W. H. Bean, Deputy Re- turning Officer; and West Ward at Pasco Saunders’ Shop by John Smith, Deputy Returning Officer. ! WHEREAS it is requisite and ‘necessary that a retaining wall zand abutment should be built and erected and the structural work of a bridge across the Saugeen River 2' at Lambton Street in the Town of Durham, thoroughly and complete- ly repaired and put in order. 2. Each of the said debentures shall be signed by the Mayor of the said Town of Durham, and by the Treasurer thereof and the Cicrk of the said Town of Durham shall attach thereto the Corporate Seal of the said Municipality. _ 1. The sum of $4000.00 shall be expended by the Municipal Coun- cil of the Town of Durham in the building and erection of a retain- ing wall and abutment and repair- ing the structural work of a bridge across the Saugeen River, and approaches thereto, at the in- tersection of Lambton Street and the said River in the Town of Dur- ham, and for the purpose of rais- ing the said sum of $4000.00 de- bentures of the said Town of Durham to the said amount of $4000.00 in the whole shall be issued in sums of not less than $100.00 each on the First day of February A. D. 1913, each of which debentures shall be dated on the date of he issue thereof, and shall be paya 1e within ten years there- after, namelyzâ€"One of each of the said debentures on the First day of the month of February in each year for ten years after the pass- ing of this By-Law at the office of The Standard Bank of Canada in the said Town of Durham. AND WHEREAS it is desirable to issue the said debentures at one time and to make the principal of the said debt repayable by yearly sums during the period 01' ten years, being the currency of the said debentures, said yearly sums being of such respective a- mounts that the aggregate amount payable in each year for principal and interest in respect of the said debt.~ shall be as nearly as possible equal to the amount so payable in each of the other nine years of such period (as shewn in Schedule A hereto annexed). AND WHEREAS the totalamount required by “The Municipal Act" to be raised annually by special rate for paying the said debt and interest as hereinafter provided is $530.67. AND WHEREAS the amount of the whole rateable property of the Town of Durham according to the last revised assessment roll thereof is $537,120. ‘ AND WHEREAS the amount of the existing debenture debt of the said Municipality is $59,189.30, whereof no part of the principal or interest is in arr-ear. THEREFORE the Municipal Council of the Corporation of the Town of Durham enacts as follows: AND WHEREAS the said retain- ing Wall and abutment have been erected and the said structural work of the said bridge is nearly completed, and the total estimated cost thereof is the sum of $4000.00 or thereabout. ND WHEREAS in order to de- f , the cost of said works, it will be necessary to issue Debentures of the said Town of Durham for the sum of $4000.00 as herein;:fter provided (which is the amount of the debt intended to be created by this By-LaW) the proceeds of the said debentures to be applied to the said purpose “and to no other. __â€"â€"..‘ __ retaining wall and abutme.nd{ repairing the structural work of a; bridge across the Saugeen River; and approaches thereto, at the; intersection of the said River and Lambton Street in the said Town of Durham. vi the Municipality of the town of Durham BY- .“‘ “\m~“ vâ€"v-C' Daily Star, 1 _§ear...... 2.50 The Chronicle and Toronto Dail World..1 year......... 3.75 The C ronlcle and Toronto Daily Mail and Empire, 1 yr. 4.75 The Chronicle and Toronto Daily Globe. 1 year... .. .. 4.75 The Chronicle, and The Grain. Growera’ Guide, Winnipeg $1.60 R. EWEN Magnet Cream Separatms and 'eration and W111 be finally passed by the Council of the Municipality of the Town of Durham in the event of the assent of the electors being obtained thereto, after one month from the first publication in “The Durham Chronicle,†the date of which first publication Was cipality will be taken thereon on the day and at the hours and places therein stated. The Chronicle and Weekly Mail and Empire, 1 year ...... $1.75 The Chronicle and Weekly Globe, 1 year...... 1.75 The Chronicle and â€again; Herald 6: Weekly Star lyr. 1.90 The Chronicle and Weekly Witness, 1 year...... 1.90 The Chronicle and Weekly Sun, 1 year...... 1.90 The Chronicle and Farmer‘s Advocate, 1 year ............ 2.40 The Chronicle and Canadian Farm, 1 year...... 1.90 The Chronicle and Toronto Dail News, 1 ear... 2.50 The C ronicle an Toronto Referred BY'Iaaw 8110 to in the foregoing wing how the amount of 8530.67 therein required to be raised annually by special rate is apportioned. Year Principal 1.013 3310.67 1914 327.76 1915 345.79 1916 364.81 1917 384.87 1918 406.03 1919 428.37 1920 451.92 1921 .476.7 8 1922 503.00 0 4000.00 Interest $220.00 202.91 184.88 165.86 145.80 124.64 102.30 78.751 53.89 27.67 $1306.70 _ Total 530.67 530.67 530.67 530.67 1530.67 530.67 530.67 530.67 530.67 530.67 $5306.70 The Yorkshire Insur- ance C0.,of York Eng. Insurance of All Kinds Including Stock Durham W. JOHNSTON Sr. TAKE NOTICE that the above Rugs, Oilcloths Window Shades Lace Curtains and all Household Furnishings New Stock just arrived and will be sold at the luwest living proï¬t. Undertaking receives special attention UNDERT AKING Clerk of EDWARD KRESS FURNITURE Durham New Clubbing Rates Schedule “A†DURHAM BRANCH, T nan M Magnet Gasoline Engines All SIZES W. B. VOLLET the Town of Durham. Notice AND Ontario AGENT Mayor. Ont. Clerk. SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH. ' WEST LAND REGULATIONS. ANY PERSON who is the solo head of a familg, or any male :over 18 years 01 , may homestead !a quartersection of available Dom- ;inion land in Manitoba. Saskatch- iewan or Alberta. The applibant tmullt appear in person at the Don- ;inion Lands Agency, or Sub-agency {for the district. Entry ,by proxy may be made at any agency, on certain conditions by father. moth- .er. son, daughter, brother or sister [of intending homesteader. To preserve eggs, {ill a wooden.- box with ordinary saltz smear each egg over with olive on], and lace it in the salt with the pointe end downwards. Eggs treated in this manner will keep fresh {or some- time. A present of The Chronicle for a year would be appreciated by some distant friend. The extra guesses allowed might win the five dollar; in the bean content. Try it. " When you want a reliablemedi- cine for a cough or cold ‘tzkt Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It can always be depended upon, and is pleastnt and safe to take. For sale by all dealers. In certain diltrictl u homestead- er in mood standing may pre-empt a quarter section alo side 1330 homestead. Price 83.00 -m‘ acre. "K Dutiemâ€"Must reside upon the homestead or pre-emptton Iix months in earh of six year- from date of homestead entry [includ- ing the time required to earn homestead patent) and cultivate fifty acres extra. A. homestead†who has exhaust- ed 'his homestead right and cannot obtain a pre-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 a'houu worth $300.00. Duties.â€"Six monthl’ relidence upon and cultivation of the land in each of three you! A home- steader may live withir nine miles. of his homestead on n (arm of at lea-t 80 acres 001er owhed and oc- cupied by him or by his “that; nilothor, son, daughter. brother 0 a star. Deputy of the Minister of the Interior. N ..B â€"Unaut‘horized publication of this advertisement Will not b. paid for. Aha-thing For "ancient Mm unto pet line for the Int Buta- . tion; 3 cent. per tin! my ' quent innonion minion men-urn. GINO. not exceeding one inch 34 00 9» 03-3. Advertisements without speciï¬c direction. 3‘ be published till forbid m 1 clinical noon the! Transient notwoaâ€" ‘Luw ":Found ' "For E .' etcâ€"50 cents for ï¬rnt insertion. 25 can“ for out“ onbaoq uent insertion. †Ivar rumour mu 4: the chronic“ Prjpting â€was. Tn Cm will to d sumac“ say “an... but! Butc- - . $1 tIOpor .pynbloll 41.50 mhy be chased if not to EU. “It to which our} uhnription h p. h 1].. the numbea nr the address hbol. No pp.- continued to :11 armr- m M. «no»; untmr of the proprietor W 1 Allulvertisononu ordered by stranger. III“ In mid for in Min-cc. § Contact rum for you-J alumnae-u (Ii ruched on nppliutioc to the 0600. and Funeral Director\ SEND HIM THE CHRONICLE Full line of Catholic Robes. and blank and white (mp5 fur aged people. ’zcture Frammg (m shoflest«?"‘ notice. , ~ DURHAM. SHOW RO0M8-Next t4) Swallnw'br Barber Shop. RESIDENCEâ€"Net! dOOI;S()l!t!l (pf \V. J. lmwrence't blanksmi Lb shop Embalming a Specialty Em'nm AND memmu KEEPS EGGS. .C‘ORY . IRWIN «m or the In! at “an M - an. N 00 per “I lie direction. :1.†n («I mung, tund ‘ .25 canto for on: vy otrangaro In: §