West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 9 Oct 1924, p. 5

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But Quality. and our Prices right for Cash Wilt-vii hiit'erezl at the Min tendon If a Infm 1~ unable to achieve sue- m.“ It H up to him to suceed with- mt It. LE’S MILLS and Rolled Oats Eclipse Flour ’astry Flour CGOWAN IE ‘ .2 - 7_ _proven by tho” .0.‘ -;,..r Fruit-a-fives” 1, . l‘rm' n-‘ut absolutely ”if“. }:- ‘. 9243-1), Pam in the nut. _‘.“'.."n s Q NPODIC HCQdIChCS dub ‘ )v u- 2.- in?!’ troubles, Md 0M h)’; 2 \ "L kl Qllf‘y DISC“. m.‘ we. abog-atalldedonot (>‘ 01 V L "Moved ant health". It is . fat of curs-4h Fruit Treatm Rheumatisl Neuralgia, cl from Fruit-34in. Ont. Amazirg Results m- Ih Pi ‘k.eatmentâ€"“FnliH-“M” yh n..- hark 0! his hand. “don’t 3 .-\.--- nng that... Mr. Superm- Veteran Star Theatre iéargain Day l“ R l I ).'\ Y - - SATU RDAY - a a,» wknflestotyofthom ..-‘ Mr Rheumztism to“ h .- y who suffered in y" . 'rx'ch affliction. -\ |’\ ”NOD, O‘BI'OH“, m. , ~ llhcwmutism was in .:~.»i ghouldpr; the p3 "The Light That Failed: mu suuws :8 and 9.15 P)! Thursday. Octohor 9. «a. Jacqueline Logan 0r October 10-11 ..'~ nriurable: After.“ ;1: Freatment 'i ' 1 I was completely -~ a :1 now in first“ Durham, Ont. Limited, on“; by ‘thow ds (Our own correspondent.) ln-.'I'uck of Toronto Spent the “wk-«ml with Mr. and MM,A. 'l‘m'k. \h and Mrs. L. B. Nicholson and 5“} s m Weston. formerly of this plan spent the early part of the m . k [‘P nowing acquzuntances. _\r thm Abbs spent a few days re- .. tu with his parents at Tiverton. n, J. mum, accompanied by Arthur a: man and Clarence Frntnn, went to Hrimiitnn Ml Sunday. MP8. Gadd had “Hm. Hu- wmk in that city and Mr. um! IIU'DIDI‘Pd down to bring her humon Whon thv rrturn trip was to hr mail». Arthur and Clarence could .. : l’w lnratml. iwnro were left in the cam, .\.~‘ thv return trip was being ..g.i.-. an arridont nrcurred that might have. pl‘HVPd serious. A car mum: tho» Opposite way was being mt, 'I‘liis ear was being followed by :ilmtllo'r' ear which turned out to pass the ear in front. By the way HHS ear was turned it appeared to up, Hadd that it would collide with his ear. hence he guided his car to “\i'lll a collision. As he was close in the S‘liiO‘. of {hp road his (331' went “\wt‘ 3 til teen-foot embankment. The top and windshield were smashed. Mrs, Hadd had her leg badly injured and Mr. (ladd‘s hand was badly cut. 'I‘Iu- ear was righted and brought Mr. and Mrs. (laudd borne without any l-‘iirtlier troub'e. ’l‘lw four patrons of the Egremont oix-o-axnery sending in the highest munhm' of pounds of butter fat be. hum“ September 22 and October 4 arr: W. bum-an. Conn. 88.46 1118.; 0. Hunt. 69.8! than; H. Alexander, Mum. 69.3! "m; G. Bis-Imp, 66.55 lbs. _\li.-~ Alma Halliday is spending a Mm.- with lu-r grandmother, Mrs. Hl'io'l’ Mr. .m-h. nil‘livs nf Knox College. '|‘u:'n!1.‘n. [mnzwhml in Holstein and Mr. \rrh. (iildivs nf Knox College. rhymm. prmrhml in Holstein and Fmrhuirn rhurrhos Inst Sabbath. ‘rlr. um] Mrs. Rlert. Crawford 0f ‘.l.o-r.t'n|'ol. Mrs. \V. \‘vreal. Detroit, am] Mr. Russell Crawford, Detroit, 1 MT rvrvnt Visitors at Mr. and Mrs. va'm- Fonton’s. M1.“ Flrml spmlt the week-end \HHI fl‘it'mH ill Hal'l'iSLOll. Wins xmn- Davidson of Newton .wnt :1 «hart tinw with her siistvr 'I‘ho- Library Board arr sr-curiug a eupply uf now books and offer mrmho-I‘ship till January, 1926, for iHNL We are receiving per radio daily r: was ut‘ HH- wnrld‘s spring of base- I’..lb.' The weakening agony of piles robs life of its pleasure, turns days of brightness into days of misery, and brings periods of acute sufl'ering. OverwhelmingevidenceprovesZam-Buk mvommrable for banishing the pain, L=Ir:-r- 3mg. swelling and inflammation. M" .\".f Brown.of Merritton, writes:â€"â€" "l E‘ugir” that my testimony will reach tummrmls suffering from that dreadful Ali 1 piles. For six yearsI was never fr~~ -v* irr‘. pain. No one ever spent more m '.~\ .n search ofaremedy. Asym- m R»: «- friend gave me a part of a box 2‘ Lin: 111k to try. Its soothing power w .=. 'narvoilous, and [soon had a further 3.1- t iv of this grand herbal healer. l um: [am-But until the old painful .: mil». was gone completely.” 'r- pally successful for eczema. psoria- 3 s nilt rlieum, pimples. boils, bad legs. ultra-rs, scalp disease. poisoned wounds. ‘u's burns, scalds. etc. Dealers everv- vixen-sellZam-BukatbOc.box,3for81.25 ll Abnut 70 names were added to the Thursday, October 9, 1m. \ Voters’ List. for the township of Egremont on Tuesday last by Mr. Greasor of Owen Sound. Miss Rose West visited her grand- parents in 63” recently. Holstein Show! Report Sr. Room : Sr. I\'.â€"â€"O. W‘est. D. Haas. B. Irvin, C. Smith. H. Pinder, R. Aitken, S. W‘oodyard, S. McKenzie. Jr. IV.â€"~L. McKenzie. I. Leith, Inez Leith, B. Smith, V. Johnson and S. McCall (Pqual). Sr. lll.--G:. West. H. Smith. ll. Christie. .l. Mowbray. B. Arnill, I. Hastie, C. Johnson, M. McPhaden, V. Allan. I). O’Connplll. J. Lewis, G. Ar- nill, C. Tyndall. I. McCall. Jr. III.â€"â€"M. Mowbray. M. Irvin, 1. Sim, M. Woodyard, M. Hoaney, .l. Heaney, M. Fidler. Average attendance, 30. â€"â€"J. B. Davidson, Teachnr. Junior Room : Sr. IIr-M. Aitken, W. Bilton. N. Johnson and C Mowbiay (equal), W. Aitken M. Aitken, B. Gibson, E. Gadd M. Nelson, 1. Ellis. Jr. .IIâ€"-G. Stevenson, B. Mather, A. Leith. Jr. I.â€"H. Smith, I. Rife, V Ellis, F. West, F. Gadd, L. Tyndall. Jr. Pt.â€"â€"F. Mather, 1. Christie, D. Atiatken, E. Brown. A. Classâ€"W. Stevenson, E. Smith, W. Lewis, G. Buller and E. Gadd and V. Leith (equal), R. Fidler. Average attendance, 32. Sr. Pt.â€"-â€"M. Johnson; M. Aitken, B. McKenzie, B. Fidler. (Our own correspondent.) Mossrs. Joo Dixon and Crawford Harrison filled their silos lust, wook. Mr. Thomas Binnie (lid the cutting. Mr. and Mrs. “K R. \meLsun spent Sunday afternoon at Mr. Crawford Harrison‘s. A number from this neighborhood tank in Pl'iCCV‘i'HC Show and report a very good fair. The wnathor was the very best. .4 ' Mrs; hutherford 0f Owen Sound gave a wry interesting talk on Mis- Glenmont. 2 Toronto IQUOR once sold cannot be controlled. The evil lies in the liquor, not in the method L of its sale, nor in the form of the package. This is proven in every Canadian pro- vince where government sale, in varying forms, has been tried. 1] With easier access to intoxicating liquor, drinking has increased enormously. More drunkenness and crime associated with drunkenness have naturally followed. Bootleggingâ€"instead of being CURED by soâ€"called government “control”â€"is flourishing to a degree that makes Ontario’s illicit sale seem small and insignificant by com arison. 1] A ghastly failure, serving only to MULTIPLY the very evils it was herald to cure! That is the story of government sale of liquor in BRITISH COLUMBIA, in MANITOBA, in QUEBEC. Bfiti‘h co‘umbia and gard for the will of the people as expressed in the disapproval of sale of liquor by the the Boonegge" glass, and that something had to be done.” The Vancouver World, a newspaper friendly to the government, has declared in an editorial: “British Columbia is the bootleggers’ paradise”. The Attorney-General of that‘province â€"who is the official administrator of the Government Liquor Control Actâ€"said in a recent speech: “Tlie greatest bootleggers of all are the brewers and export liquor dealers”. Dr. A. E. Cooke, of Vancouver, in The Canadian Congregationalist. asserts: “The Government controls neither the manu- facture, importation, ransportation, nor exportation of liquor. The distillers and brewers control all these, and the Govern- ment simply acts as one of their sales agents, controlling about 50 per cent. of the retail end of the trade. The whiskey ring and the bootleggers control the rest.” Manitoba sick of “Control” in Less Than a Year B.‘:"'Pn months after Manitoba adopted its govu:.v~ent control system, an open- minded inn ‘tigator of conditions in that province, su: :5 up the situation in these “I leave Manitoba impressed with the evidence that both wets and drys are dis- satisfied with the government control sys- temâ€"the wets because there is no legal sale of beer by the glass and because there is some delay and trouble in getting hard stuff, and the drys BECAUSE BOOT; LEGGING AND DRUNKENNESS HAVE GREATLY INCREASED.” The same neutral authority declares: “There is no dispute in Winnipeg about bootlegging. Everybodyâ€"city's, wets, moderationists, police, government oficials, business men, professional men and round- ersâ€"tell the same _ A‘, _ ““4 Peg, was that bOOdeg‘ ging was being carried on on a tremendous oalgthfl‘b‘fi‘Y‘fi” -F. J. Floyd, Teacher. are the brewers and export liquor «Street, Toronto sions at Ebenezer church on Sunday evening. Mr. 5nd Mrs. W'es Heard spent the first of the week at, Mr. T. Harrison, Sr.’s. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dixon ‘and Mrs. W. L. Dixon spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Sindlair, HOpeville. Mrs. George McKay and children lime returned after a pleasant. holi- day with friends at. Lucknow. Mrs. Alfred Tucker is visiting for a few days with Proton friends. (Our own corerspondent.) Mr. Arthur Corbett of Detroit. Vis- itml r-ccvntly with friends on the line. Mastm \lox.\\idm1-\cr of Hamp- don spout a holiday vs ith his grand- pamnts, M1. and M13. Alex. Grier- SOIL Mr. and Mrs. Will Derby and little Margaret visited the first of the woek with Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Smith, Mount Forest. Mis. Lhnce Rumble and Bobby, of Toronto. were the guests of Miss Efl'ie Mill igan. Mr. Louden Davis had a narrow escape from having his house burn- ed recently. Mr. and Mrs. Davis and family, who were not at home that afternoon, feel quite puzzled how it started. Smoke was seen from the woodpile, which was beside the house. it being in the neighborhood of twenty cords. With water, the neighbors saved the house. ’fhreshin~g and com cutting are in full swing, the latter being nearly completed. (Our own correspondent.) The work on the County Road be- tween Hanover and Durham, under the supervision of Joseph White- man. has been completed for another year. There has been 0; large. mile- age of work done. and we Wiill be glad when it is improved right. thru to Durham. _Miss Katie Herd returned to Tor- onto last weke to work at her old job. ad because there in getting hard IAUSE BOOT; UNKENNESS O wThe responsible electors of Ontario ’DO want the happier homes, women and children, made possible by The Ontario Temperance Act. They DO want to defeat ' traflic’s insidious efiort to turn back the clock. They DO want Ontario to be spared the costly experience of such bootleggers’ paradises as British Columbia, Manitoba and Quebec. In this belief, and with the Government pledged to “give active For the m 0! Old Guam and vigorous enforce- mark Your “fit that 8 ment” of The Ontario M Temperance Act, the in . Ontario Plebiscite 1 23.2: .3 $5331”; Y Committee asks, with 'l‘lu! nlcmbm's‘ of the AXJ’A. have South Bentinck pounce Act? Age you in favour of (In “I. u a lineage of he: ml mm liquot in mid pub Allan Park THE DURHAM CHRONICLE Quebec under Government Sale Eclipses Open Bar ‘Evifl Quelaec, with it; longer experience in government sale. has drifted still further back toward the evil days of the open bar. In fact, the only difference between the Quebec “tavern” and the old bar-room is that customers sit down at tables to drink, rather than stand up at a bar! And while Quebec goes on spending more money for booze than for educa- tion ($28,000,000 annually for liquor and $26,000,000 for educational purposes), crime is rampant. The Montreal Gazette was recently constrained to declare: “Mont- real is a perfect Mecca for evil-doers, with vicious, immoral resorts and gambling joints, the hiding-places of the alien and other criminals from all corners of -the continent.” Ontario citizens do NOT want THIS province to become “a bottleggers’ para- dise”. They do not want their government to go into partnership with the distillers and brewers, splitting the booze business “fifty-fifty” with bootleggersâ€"which is the best any government has been able to do under “government sale”. ‘ A A Ontario Has Higher Hopes G. B. Nicholson, Chairmm: painted the cviling and painted the walls of thn 01d Orange Hall and it cm'tainly looks fine. Thanks to the A.Y.P.A.. W e are sorry to say that at time of writing Mrs. Kerr 312‘s cundibion is not Very promising. We hope to hear of an improvement soon. A numbm' frbm Allan Park motor- ed to Eugenia Faflls last, Sunday to sppnd the. day. ‘1‘, ‘ ‘0‘ vv\. “v- T he potatn' crop is excellent around hm‘e this year. No doubt thm‘o will be an avomgc‘ of 200 bush- ols per acre Mr. Archie Park brought. one into the "W \wighing m0 and a half pounds. Traverston (Our own corresmudent.) Rally Day was held at, Zion last. Sunday and tho church lookml prvtâ€" ty, decked with autumn lvaws. ivy. ferns, flmwrs and fruits. We had presvnt with us Rev. Mr. UK!“ of Toronto, when) tv'ok part. in thv sor- vice. Mr. William Paylor returned homo. recently after spending six works among kindred in _]:_1ngland. ’Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Firth and daughter Marjorie, of Durham, vis- ited the first of the. week with the Davis family. â€" Mrs. Boak'os and 8191012 Mrs. Rob- ert Boakcs, of King mwnship, are paying a visit. at the Fallaisg homo. film's.” Philip Harrison spent a few days 'last‘vqgek at glenNelson home. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Peart and sons, Emerson and James, Visited with Hanovm‘ f rinnds oarly in the \wek. Mr. James Allvn of Toronto spvnt a (muplo. 01' days last “'(‘f‘k tho guvst. of his sister, Mrs. M. J. Davis. Mr. Ed. Cdok of Palmorsum spvut the week-end at the parontul home. Miss Kathleen Firth of Durham spent Sunday with friends in the neighborhood. --_. o o '1 'I‘ Quite a immlwi' from our district attended the School Fair at Edge Hill and report a good time. Several pupils from N0. 5 captured prizes. Mrs. William 'l‘immius is quit» ill these days. Dr. Smith was called on Monday. We liupe to hear of a spec:- dy recovery. every confidence, that Ontario citizens give the Government an Mukable mandate on October 23rd. iAL'rrrunz owns ruvoa 'ro 'ru Orange Pekoe Simply Name of Leaf “Let me have. a pot. of urangv pv- k(w ma.“ How often we hear this vxm‘vssion in restaurants and tvarooms. \‘eL if you asked “What is urangv pakov?" the answer vmuld almost. invariably be. “I don't know. but I do know it. is supposed to ho mm] {035' Orange pvkov issinufly the namn of the lvaf and Um distinguishing mark of tho Sill' of ihv Ivar. It is not. arbitrarily nnr nvvvssax'ily the" best tea by any moans. You may have good. had or indifl‘vrvnt urango pvkoo twp. ‘ (:omim'tss M the luaf is judgml In- the flavor. which depends upon two two things. thv vivVutiun at. \\'||i(fh the plant, is grown and thc- ram- 03:. (‘I'CiSPd in lhv manufarhm- uf the 'I'lul highm' tho olvvatim: of the tea garden the riclu-r the leaf is in essential oil, which constitutvs its thwor. Cream Wanted for Holstein Creamery. Highest Prices Paid. Call and Get a (In. We Pay Cash for Produce and Sell for Cash Only VOLLETT’S CASH STORE Boots, Shoes, Rubbers, and Dry Goods Don’t Forget Fruit Season Is Still Here WM. J. VOLLETT All Selling at 3 Reduction THE HOME OF QUALITY GOODS FRESH SUPPLY OF GROCERIES Wheat Wanted WE HAVE A NICE LINE OF PHONE 70 Publ of Ten] hleth FRIDAY, Everybody For (hell WHY KNIT YOl'R OWN SOCKS AND sumkimzs when you can get tlwm done for :20 routs pvr pair? Brim alung your yarn to A. (E. Webb. Dm‘- ham. ipd Public Meeting of Temperance Workers Methodist Church Durham FRIDAY, OCT. 10, at 8 p... Everybody luvlted~ In In Women For the Hour of Mario Cone (Too Late for Classification.) CLASSIFIED ADS. PAGE 5.

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