“Ln v_â€"â€"â€" 753. w. c. momma, Dentist. Office: Over J. J. Hunter’s Store, Durham, Ont. _‘â€" " nn. BURT Late Assistant Royal London O};- o thalmie Hospital, England, and Golden Square _Throat and Nose ‘Hospital. Spemalist: Eye, Ear, Throat and Nose. Office: 13 Frost Street, Owen Sound. OEice and residence a short dist- ance east of the Hahn House, on LamMonStreeL Lovzer Town,Dur- LWLUU DBLCGD, uvvvva. -vvvâ€",r. ham. Office hours: 2 to 5 pm, 8 p.m., except Sundays. J. G. BUTTON, MIL, 6.1!. Oï¬â€™ice: Over A. B. Currey’s office, nearly OppOSite the Registry Oflice. Remdence: Second house south of Registry Ofï¬ce on. East side of Albert Street. Office hours: 9 to 11 a.m., 2 to 4 p. m. am} 7 to 9 p.111. Telephone communicatxon between office and residence at all hours. _â€"hn J. L. SHITH, M.B., M.G_.P.S.O, Office and residence, Corner of Countess and Lambton Streets, op- posite old post office. Office hours: 9 to H a._m., 130‘t9m4 p.m., 7 to 9 -â€"-â€"-Anuv n3‘nfl_ DR. BROWR L.R.C.P., London, En land. Grad- uate of London, New ork and Chi- cago. _ DisAeasgs of Eye, Ear, Nose -l-Jt n“; om Durham and Hanover. A pointments may be made with the C erk in the ofï¬ce. I. B. Lucas, KC. W. D. Henry, BA, Medical Directory). nu. MoLEAR Licensed Auctioneer fen Counts of Grey. Satisfactlon guarantee Terms reasonable. Dates of 331 a made at The Chronicle Office or wi himself. 0'33†inch and union-m inches. RBSIDBNGB FOR SALE Good double house in upper town; in good repair. This preperty is be- ing offered cheap to quick purchas- 2132113 wist a. desirable property. Ap- ply to Mrs. A.W.H. Lauder, Durham. nlflnl‘ Ontario. J. BAINI-‘ORD Piano Tuner Durham, Ontario. General expert. Reg'airs a special- ty. Orders left at H. . Snell’s Music Store promptly attended to. D1531!) MILK REDUCED To 100. . Mr. W. R. Watson, milk vendor, wishes to announce that he has re- duced milk to 100. a quart, and needed in the business. 22 t1 FOR SALE Good double house and comfortable frame house in Upper Town; hard- wood floors, two manteis, hot air heating; large clothes closets in bed- rooms; good cistern; hen-house; one- half acre of good garden land. Cheap to quick buyer. â€"R. J. Matthews, Durham. BARN POR SALE At the John E. Russell' Stone- crushing plant. owned by Charles Caldwell. Will sell at, reasonable price to a qmck puychaser. Apply at The Chromcle Ofï¬ce. 5 18’tf TIMBER FOR SALE 24 feet long, 6 and ‘7 inches thick, and other barn timber. Applv to \V 111mm Edwards, R. R. 1, Pricevine nnf ' 6292 HOUSE FOR SALE _ Fine two-storey brick“ residence in ï¬rst-class condition andlwith modern equipment throughout; electric lighting, complete hath, furnace, garage, etc.; will take reasonable cash payment, balance arranged, Apply to J ., Levine, Durham. . ’ . _ FOR SALE . Two good building" lots for sale; one on Main Street, the other on New SW. Apply to J. A. Brown. Thursday, June 29, 1922. JAIIBSON JAHIBSOII Dental Director» Lem! rDirectory 9m“ 32“ udiosâ€"Cal! at once and get goods. ,Iptending buyers will do $0 examgne ourAlarge‘stgck n as? we “,‘2 _ A- from $4.50 up THE SPIRBLLA PARLOBS Mrs. J. C. Nichol N 0!. 28 Ur. , NOTICE "ro FARMERS The Durham .U.F.O. Live Stock Association will ship stock from Durham on Tuesdays. Shippers are requested to give three days†notice. James Lawrence, Manager, Phone 606 r3 Durham, RR. 1 1127 if. - Book your order now for eggs and baby chicks from our flock of pure bred 0A3. White Leghorns. These birds have exceptional heavy laying ancestry and were raised on unlim- ited range conditions. Also hatch- ing eggs from our bredâ€"to-lay White Wyandottes. Hatching eggs, $125 per 15; 88.00 per 100; day-old Chicks, 200. eachâ€"Mrs. J. C. Henderson, Durham, Ontario. 330 if HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE FOR SALE Oak Bedroom Suite; Oak Library Table; Oak Buffet; Mahogany Sofa; Oak Arm-chair, leather upholsterâ€" ed; Refrigerator; Otfice Desk; Baby Carriage; 2 iron Garden Urns. FOR SALE 1 second-hand Gasoline Engine, 3% horsepower, in good running order, for $25.00. Also‘ Brantford Iron Pumps, the easiest working and cheapest pump on the market. $7.00 and up.-â€"~W. D. Connor, Durham, Onâ€" tario. 3 16 if BONNIE BRAB POULTRY FARM SASH, DOORS, ETC. Having installed suitable machin- ery, I am prepared to make Sash, Doors, General House Fittings, etc.; also to do custom surface planing. Factory near G.T.R. Station. Patron- age solicitedâ€"W. R. F. Clark, Dur- ham, Ont. 3 16 12nd ‘ FARM FOR SALE 150 acres; school across road; ï¬ve miles from town; 135 clear, 15 acres hardwood bush; bank barn, straw shed, water in stables and h so; stables all cemented; good rarne house, 9 rooms. This is a ï¬rst-class! farm and is priced right at 331000000. Terms: $5,000.00 cash, balance at 5 per cent. For further particulars, apply,.0ntario Farm Agency, Palmer- ston, Ont. 6 8 4 SPIRELLA CQRSETS PULPWOOD WANTED Poplar, Balm of Gilead, Basswood, Spruce and Balsam, .peeled and cut, 48 inches long; delivered at railway siding. For price and information, apply to W’iarton Lumber Company, Limited,.Wiarton, Ont. 615 4 MBAFORD MAN KILLED IN WEST William Robinson, a well-known Meaford young man, a son of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Robinson of Meaford, was instantly killed when he was struck by a passenger- train on Wednesday near Outlook, Sask., says the Meal.- ford Express. The sad news of his death was received on Thursday: but as yet no details of the accident have arrived except that the body was so badly mangled that it would be im- possible to send the remains home for burial.‘ However, the members of his Odd Fellows Lodge in Toronto and his parents are making efforts to have the remains interred in the Meaford cemetery. All Our Gggduates have been placed to date and still there are calls for more. Get your course NOW. I! you do not get " it you pay for it anyway in smaller earnings and lost opportunities. Enter any day. ’Write, call or phone for information. CENTRAL BUSQ‘ESS COLLEGE Stratford and Mount Forest The late Mr. Robinson was 23 years «sf age and was born in St. Vincent, altheugh. his parents are now resi-. dents of Meaford. Hs enlisted in the 147th Battalion in August, 1916 and went overseas with that unit and served in France until the end of the Apply at Chronicle Oflioe. H62 Representative. POINTS 0N PASTUR'ES Some Interesting Facts Abï¬ilt Grasses and Crapping. "â€"__v_- .. Agriculture. Toronto.) We frequently hear the word “sod- bound†applied to grass areas, when people are discussing the failure of pastures. The meaning that the word sod-bound is intended to convey is that there are too many plants- to each square footof area. Such conâ€" dition is rarely true. Pastures selâ€" dom fail because of too many plants or over population, but they do fail through the exhaustion of the avail- able plant food supply. The plough-- Sod-Boqu Fields and the Remedy â€"â€"How Pasture Plants Growâ€"- Good Pasturage Chéap Stock Food â€"â€"Treatment of Beef Calves. (Contrfbuteq bx‘Ontago Depaytment of ing up of old sod lands, thereby cauS* ing the roots and stems to decay, brings about increased available plant food, and this' followed by re- Seeding, while eï¬ective, is very ex- pensive. It is cheaper and usually better practice to adopt methods of turf improvement. It takes years to develop a good sod, so why destroy by. inverting it with the plough, when surface applications of available plant food will make such proï¬tably productive. To those who may think that the “sod-bound“ condition can- not be remedied by any practice oth- er than ploughing and reseeding, I would suggest that they stake off a square rod of dense sod and apply to it either one pound of nitrate of soda or a wheelbarrow load of stable manure. Conviction guaranteed.â€" L. Stevenson, Secretary Ont. Dept. of Agriculture, Toronto. The ability of grasses to With- stand continued pasturing is due to the fact that the leaves are being pushed up or grow from the lower or attached end. Nibble oï¬ or cut off the upper portisn of the grass leaves and the leaves will lengthen again and again so long as there is warmth, food and moisture. With. the clover plant it is different. If this type of plant is cut or eaten oï¬ new buds must form, unfold and grow into stem bud and leaf. Clovers if pas- _tured will not yield in feed more than a fraction of what such would produce if the plants were permitted to develop fully. The fact that the bitten blades of grasses will push up high enough after a few days to produce a second and a third bite makes it possible to pasture grasses with no injury to them. With rea- sonable care and management the grazing of grass areas may go on in- deï¬nitely.â€"â€"L. Stevenson. A generous top dressing with good barnyard manure applied in the fall, winter, or early spring is re- commended. This top dressing should be distributed evenly and not too thickly. If bunchy, it may be thinned out by harrowing which sometimes helps to stimulate the growth. One of the cheapest live stock foods is good pasturage. Good yields of this cannot be secured unless the land is kept in good condition, Thin spots in the pasture should receive a new seeding of grass. The use of a mixture of six pounds of timothy, two pounds of red clover and one pound of alsike clover.t the acre will give good results. here there is a partial stand of grass, pos- sibly not more than one-half of this quantity is needed. Only the thin spots will require treatment. Alternate freezing and thawing and the early spring rains will work the seed into the soil and result in quick growth. Let the grass get a; good start before the stock is turned in. Nothing so depletes the annual yield of pasturage as to overstock it at the beginning of the season. The.most proï¬table beef animal is the one that has the capacity to eat and manufacture into beef the great- est amount of feed, and not the one that can subsist on the leaét and poorest ration. Good Pasturage Cheap Stock Food. There are thousands of young beef cattle that can eat plenty of feed, but many of them are not able to manu- facture much beef out of it, largely because their growth was stunted, their vitality weakened and their beefy conformation lost through lack of proper and sumcient feed when they were calves. The red spider does a considerable amount of damage to garden crops at this time of the year, during the dry, hot weather. These mites feed principally on the underside of the leaves, causing the foliage to lose their color, having. a whitiSh, bleach- ed appearance, and the plants be- come stunted. The damage is done to the plants' by the mites sucking the juices. This troublesome pest is easily controlled by the free use of cold water applied under pressure. directing the spray to the underside of the leaves. It the water is not effective, the sulphur-soap solution is- made up in the following manner: Flowers of sulphur, one ounce; laundry soap, two ounces; water, one gallon. Dissolve the soap in the water and thenadd the sulphur. and apply to the .mites. . Good Treatment of Beef Calf Pays. ' Cleanliness is ‘one of the greatest means of combating lice, mites and fleas and other insidious insects which prey‘ on poultry. ' Not more than two geese should be allowed for each gander, and What is better yet is to have them 111 pairs during the breeding s’easgn. Gnt is essential to the health of the towls and to economy in feeding. How Pasturk Plants Grow. Poultry Notes. Red Spiders. THE DURHAM CHRONICLE. THE NEW NORTH ‘ A SPORTSMANS PARADISE To men who spend ,their vacation fishing, hunting or canoeing, Canada is ï¬rst among countries of the world for the Opportunities it aflords for indulgence in either of these invit- ing, invigorating and exciting pas- times. But there is one part of the Domâ€" inion which is particularly inviting to the Sporting ï¬sherman, the big game htmter or the clanbeist. -It is what is aptly termed “Canada’s New North,†reached ,via Cochrane, and comprehends that vast stretch of virgin country contiguous to the Canadian National Railways, Trans-g continental Divisiom extending across the upper part of the Prov- inces. of Ontario and Quebec for a distance of over a thousand miles, with Hudson’s Bay as its northern limit. To quote a traveller who ,knows it well: “It is a’virgin coun- iry just as God made it.†U v To the sportsman this northern: country is a veritable paradisen Within its. vast forests there roam at will all species of big game com- mon to the North American contin- out. Of the big and burly moose it is. the home. Red «leer have a wide range and in some sections are nu- merous, while caribou are to be had by the hunter who seeks them in their feeding grounds. In several districts hear are to he found, while the smaller fur-hearing animals are common to a wide range of territory. Disciples of Izaak Walton will ï¬nd in the numerous rivers and lakes all that. the most ardent of them can doâ€" sire. both in regard to extent, and \'zu'iety of fish which abound in their waters. Lake, or grey trout, ranging in weight from six to twenty pounds, are common to several of'the lakes. Water in which speckled trout a-‘ bound are easily accessible, alttlmugh 1 naturally, the more remote the (lisâ€": lricts the hetier the sport. In. some of the rivers and streams are to he caught siiieckled and brook trout (known also as the square, tail trmlt) \x'eigliing from live to seven pounds. Good bass ï¬shing is to be had in cerâ€" tain parts, and particularly in north- western Quebec. One specie of ï¬sh which is common to some of the oldâ€" er parts. of Canada not found in this tar-northern country is the mas- lkinonge. But, in some of the waters flowing “into James Bay are to he caught. the lurdly sturgeon, sports- men having landed ï¬sh of this spec- ies ranging in weight all the way from twenty to two hundred pounds. In the/ waters contiguous to Hud- son’s Bay excellent salmon ï¬shing is occasionally experienced, Pike and pickerel are common to the wat- ers of this northern wild. To the canooist who seeks adven- ture in the territory beyond the fringe of civilization the waters of the northern parts of Quebec and Ontario 1111111111 ideal’ facilities. Riv- 9115 many 01 them mighty streams. \xhich for generations 11am serwd as highways to adVenturers, fur- traders and {rappers bound to and MAIL CON‘IRAGT Sealed Tenders, addressed to the Postmaster General, will be received at Ottawa until: noon, on Friday, the 4th August, 1922, for the conveyance of His Majesty’s Mails, on a proposed Contract for a period not. exceeding four years. 6 times per week on the route, Durham No. 1, RB. from the 1st. October, 1922 next. Printed notices containing further information as to conditions of pro- posed Contract may be seen and blank forms of Tender may be ob- tained at the Post Offices of Durham and Dornocli, and at. the office of the District Superintendent of Postal Service. . District Superintendent’s Office, London, June 23. 1922. D. J. McLEAN, District Superintendent of Postal Service. v Sealed Tenders, addressed to the Postmaster General, Will be received at Ottawa until noon, on Friday, the 7th July, 1922, for the conveyance of His Majesty’s Mails, en a prOposed Contract for tour years,12 times per week on the route between Durham Post Office and StreetLetter Boxes, from the 1st December, 1922, next. Printed notices containing further , information as to conditions of proâ€"‘ posed Contract may be seen and blank forms of. Tender may" be ob- tained at the Post Office of Durham, Ontario, and at the'bï¬ice of the Post Office Inspector, London, Ontario. 3 Post. Oflice Insiiector’s‘ Oï¬'ice, '. r I; _;‘London," 26th may, .1922 1. . -~ - “p -91: mt! aaaaa++4++++¢++++++++++J from Hudson’s Bay, are almost be- yond compute ii): number, ‘the coun- try being grid~ironedby them. Won- derfully interesting'canoe trips, ei- ther extended or limited, are avail- alile. Take, for example, the six rdutes to Moose Factory, all of which ï¬nd their way into Moose River a- bout 30 miles south of Moose Facâ€" tory on James Bay. Until within recent years this great new north Was inaccessible to those who had but a. few weeks’ va- cation at their disposal: It could not even be reached during an or- dinary y-acation term. Now, ovcrl the lines of the Canadian National Railways, the sporting fisherman, the hunter, the c‘anoeist and holiday seekers in general can, occupying en route modernlgz appointed steel- constrâ€"ucted trains, reach points in this “Happy Hunting Ground†in the course of 24â€"hour journey éfrom such centres as Toronto and 1Montreal, and from New York, Chi- cago and Boston in approximately thirty-six hours. And there is an interesting little booklet entitled “Wl‘iere to Hunt, Fish and Paddle in the New North," obtainable from any ofï¬ce 01‘ the Ca- nmlian NationalRailways, which en- ables the holiday seeker to select his camping ground in this primeval paradise. ' A number of sectional maps cover- ing the, Sporting territory from west ef Lake Nipigt'm to Western Quebec, in which are shewn came routes and ROB RC Day .. M'LLS v, The booklet also furnishes infor- mation regarding guides, outï¬t and other necessary details. 6292 trails, will prove: invaluable to the Sportsman visiting the territory. FORMER DUNDALK BOY - IS ORDAINED A PRIEST (Dundalk Herald.) .Rcv. J. D. Egan. son of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Egan. formerly of Dundalk, is at present visiting his cousin, Mrs. S. D. O‘Connor, and other rela- tives in the vicinity, and is receiving congratulations from ' his many friends. On June 10. Father Egan was ordained in St. Mary’s Cathedral, Hamilton, by Bishop O’Brien of Pet- crboro. He celebrated his first moss in St. Cecelias (‘hurch. West Toron- 5to, and on June is celebrated mass bin St. Johns Church, Dundalk, lwhich was crowded to its capacity ‘hy old time friends and acquaint- mices. An t‘lOQllt‘lll sermon was deâ€" liVel‘ed IN the pastor. RCV Father (",1lt’iliec.\'.: ind he also expres sell \xel- common 1 encoui agement tor the new priest. Special music was tendered by the choir. A large (:ung‘regm inn welcomed the? ynung; priest at. Proton Pm‘ish Church for evening «‘ivmtious. B’londay af'iommm and owning, Rm. Fathgr Egan. his mother and mam and sister. Miss Mario. rowiv- 0d many of (hair 01d Dundulk friends at. Hm 11mm of Mrs. ()‘0mncyr. Father Egan has been ahpnintod to the parish of Hanmm'. to become offnctim on July 1. PAGE SEVEN