West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 28 Jun 1928, p. 7

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I Riversdale: m \Valker of a! Mrs. Sid Motâ€"Paisley } our sincere Ixiends and M mm us E and loss on m: of our be- r. and rend- :trics of ser- so our deep- singers 1!! ng. and to th for their M (if hove. 'l‘hnmas Mc- Ix. and Mrs. ”hank; Mr. ficide pip Lice, re death rct. 011. »rk after NICE and Family. KS creases .o.-Q.oo..o.:.oo.:.oo._ ALL .ng .v' . ‘>_“. “.-u l‘. , .' DRS. JAMIESp-R 8: JAIIBSOR (Mice and resndence‘ a short. dist- am'c cast of the Hahn House on Lumhton Street, Lower Tm, Dur- ham. Office hours 2 to 5 p.m., 7 t0 a pm. (except Sundays). ~ J. 1.. SMITH, M. 3., I. c. P. S. O. (Mice and residence. corner of mimxxxtess and Lambton Strgets, oppo- me old Post Office. Office hours : 9 to 11 a.m.. 130p} p.m., 7 to 9 pm. U“. “0â€" III. ”an- thsician and Surgeon." Office U Lumhvtop street, Durham, Ont. Gradu- 791111â€"63}; excepted) . 2 to a um» excepted. Chiropractors Graduates Canadian Chiropractic College, Toronto. Office Macfarlane Block. Durham. Day and night phone 123. i 6 1A 23tf ’fiix. w. c. PIGKBRING, nnn'r’is'r umce, over J. 8:. J. Hunter’s store, Durham. Qntario. J. F. Gm'l', U. P. D”. “a U. 9. Honor Graduate Unlversnty of Tor- onto, Graduate Royal College Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Dentistry in all its branches. Office Calder Block, MillStreet, second door east of Macbeth’s Drpg Store. LUCAS 8: HENRY V Barristers, Solicitors, etc. A mem- oer of the firm will be in Durham on l‘uesday of each week. Appointments «mu hn mark! with the Clerk 10 the may 1. office. Licensed Auctioneer for .Grey County. Sales taken on reasonable terms. Dates arranged at The Chronicle ofiice. (ieo. 1*). Duncan Dundalk, Ont... 31Dec28pd n‘- A“_\ “‘0 fl 2 ”V Auctioneer, Grey and Bruce Sales promptly attended to Satâ€" istaction guaianteed. Terms on ap- plication.P Phone RAllgnr2 Park Central Sr 515 , Hanow er 502' 28tf _______________..â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€" LOT 7, CON. 2'1, EGREMONT, THE property of the John Lawrence Es- tate, comprisinv 100 acres in good condition; bricfi house, bank barn, good water from drilled,well;.wind- mill: good silo; reasonable price to quick purchaser. For further par- ticulars apply to Philip Lawrence or W. J. Lawrence, Durham, Execu- 2.16.tf Advertisements under this heading,_1cent a word each insertion CASH WITH ORDER; 511 consecuhve Insertnons gngen tor the price~ 1 or four. Telephone calls treated as cash wrth order If paid for before .. Saturday mght of week ordered. Mlnnnnm charge for first insertion. ' 25 cents. On an charge orders a atraxgnt charge of 1% cents a word will be made each Insertlon. mmunum charge 35 cents. ' tors. ANYONE THIN . a monument, or havi r, before worlg done. should see me placing their order.-â€"â€"W. J. McFad- 2.16.11 den. Durham. Ont. NOTICE TO FARMERS The Durham U.F.O. Live Stock Asâ€" .suciation will ship stock from Dur- harm on Tuesdays. Shippers are ' ~ ' C. 'e three days’ notice. James Lawrence, Manager. n13 A We will be in winter months cream. Orders dairy butter dc also buttermilk; e. . . . agent for the Superior (10., 3 29 3mpd J BUTTER! Thursday, Jun. 28, 1928 building fence. E supplied by Board’ ticulars apply to fianch otl’icB at. Dunaz open all day Friday. Medical Directorv. FARMS FOR SALE J. 3. ”3".” 1p, SCOPGtQI'Y- ' AND BESSIE McGILLIVRAY 1Y5 fiiafié'emh the .Barrister‘: Solicitoi‘, Etc.' DURHAM 311111011 Office at._D_u_ndalk Classified Advertisements Dental Directorv. n. Orders taken dehvered off the rig; buttmj buttermll k.â€"-\Vatson‘s Dairy. 107 tf Legal ‘Directorv c Wolfe vvv' 7 to 9 p. m., Sunday's I33. VII-r‘vvâ€"- . a three days’ notlce. Lawrence, Manager. Durham. R11. 1. For 'for IntAer- WORK WANTEDâ€"THE 'CHRON- xcle Job Plant 'is well equipped for turning out. the finest. work on short order. _ tf LATE FOR SALEâ€"«APPLY ZENUS Clark. Durham. USED PIANO FOR SALE. APPLY McLaughlin’s Garage. 3,29,tf. PROPERTY FOR SALE SEVEN .ROOMED BRICK HOUSE ON Garafraxa Street, electric lights, furnace and water, good. location and in good state of repair.â€"George S. Lawrence, Mount Forest. 3-1tf EIGHT ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE, in good repair; good stable 20x40 in connection. For particulars afiply to Chronicle Office. 3 8 tf TWO STOREY BRICK BUILDING on Main corner in village 'of Flesh- erton. Best. business‘ location in town for any kind of businegs. At present rented as grocery.â€"‘-’Apply to W. A. Armstrong Son, Flesherâ€" ton, Ont. 10 i7 4 THE ANNUAL U. F. O. PICNIC will be held in Carson’s bush, Nor- manby, Wednesday, July 4, 1928. Addressgs _byA_Miss A. C. Macph'a‘il, "“.“ v.-- M. P. F. R. Olixer, M.P'.P.; ghmes, softball, refreshments. Everybody welcome. 6 21 2 ALLAN PARK U. F. .0, PICNIC will he held Thursday, July 5, in Brigham’s Grove. Allan Park, Miss Macphail. M, P., and F. R. Oliver, M. P. P._. will deliver addresses; games and sports. Admission 25c. and 15c., ladies bringing baskets, free. I am here with Fertilizer of all kinds. grades and analyses, On- tario and Buffalo; also Super Sol- uble. Agriculture Lime, just the stuff to grow the bumper crops. Prices are right and liberal dis- counts for cash; extra discounts for advance orders.“ ‘ AII-'_. lkyl ‘t‘,"‘.II\/‘.J V I... n 4 “‘0 will shii) “to"Durham, Alba} Park. Hanover or E1mw00d_ 11} car lots. Club orders eSpeCIally appreciated. _-_ n _ _- .1 IAn-on 1vn111~ “FF \hite 0‘13 call and leave your 01(1915 eaIly.â€"â€"E. R. Goldsmith, R. R. '2. Durham. ARTICLES WANTED FOR S. S. NO. 11, BENTINCK;' duties to commence after summer holidays; state qualifications, ex- perience and salary expectedâ€"R. G. Hopkins, Secretary, Durham, R. D ‘2 6 14 tf TENDERS WILL BE RECEIVED BY the undersigned up to and includ- ing Saturday, July 7th, for the con- struciion of a concrete slab bridge {20x3 opposite Lots 5 6.: 6, Con. 9,1 Egremont Township. ‘ Plans and Specifications may be ,seen at the Office of the Engineer, Court House. Owen Sound. Tenders must, be accompanied by a marked check for 10% and the. successful bidder will be required to furnish a contract, bond for a /( of the amount of the contract. The lowest. or any tender not necessarily accepted. R. C. McKnight. Engineer. Egremont. Township. IN THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH BLYTH. late of the Township of Egremont. in the County of Grey, Gentleman. deceased. \‘ano 1': hpmhv given that all Gentleman. deceased. Notice is hereby given that all creditors and others having claims against the estate of Joseph Blyth.l late of the Township of Egremont.’ in the County of Grey, who died the seventeenth day of February AD. 1928 are required on or before the 9th day of July, 1928. to send or deliver to the under mentioned. qolicitor for the Executors full particulars. of their claims duly proved. After such date the exec- utors will proceed to distribute the assets of the estate, having regard only to the claims of which they then shall have notice, and will not be liable for said assets to any person of whost claim notice shall not have been received at the time of such distribution. Dated this 9th day of June, 1928. J. H. McQUARRIE, Durham. Ont. (Solicitor for the Executors) NOTICE TO CREDITQRS COMING EVENTS (LR. No. L Durham. NOTICE MR. FARMBR! (Solicitor Why take aphance and use water that IS golluted and unfit for domestgotqsek, ”3'19.” FOR uuull ‘U‘ “V“.Vvv-v ___ _ Pure Water can he had by having a well drilled. "We hapdle Pumps and Pump Re- palm ' Satisfaction Guaranteed -ED. J. PRATT TBAGHER WANTED TENDERS WANTED Phone fl-n Basil King, theâ€"noted Canadian noyelist, who died at his Cam- bridge, Mass, home last Frida . His real. name.was William Benja- min king. He was born in 1859 at Prince Edward Island, and receiv- ed hlS elementary education there. In 1881 he graduated from King’s College, in'W-indsor, N.S., and was ordained -into the Episcopalian church. His first charge was in St. Luke’s church, .Halifax, and after some ten years there he left to as- sume the rectorship ol' Christl church, Cambridge, Mass. Failing: eyesight induced him to leave the ministry and make novel writing his life’s work. Before he com- pletely lost his sight King had learned to use a typewriter and thus was able to work under less of a handicap when he became totally blind. Among some of the better known of his novels are “The Inner Shrine”, published in 1909; “The Wild Olive,” in 1907, and “The Steps of Honor” in 1904. Others .were “The Street Called Straight”. “Let No Man Put Asun- der”, and the “Dust Flower” pub- lished in/1923. Blindness sometimes visits even the gods. as Sir Edmund Gosse re- cently revealed in The Sunday Times (London), concerning the fate of “The Poor Man and thn Lady,” 3. novel written by the late Thomas Hardy in 1867: u.- -- v â€"â€"â€"--_ “This was Hardy’s first effort at] fiction, and was offered in turn to two firms of publishers, but reâ€" jected on the advice of their read- ers, who were, it is interesting to note, John Morley . and George Meredith. Sir Edward reveals the plot of the novel. as related 'to him by Thomas Hardy. The story con- cerned the son of peasants workâ€" ing on the estate of a Dorsetshire squire and the beautiful daughter of the squire. The peasant’s son .and the squire’s daughter fell in Ilove, and in the story Hardy re- lates that the ‘Poor Man’ is heard by ‘the Lady" addressing a crowded meeting ‘in Trafalgar Square. - _ _‘ ‘5 Ad.“ 4n nnmflf‘k , A PROPHET §CORNED While a‘ few hardy herbaceous erenmg: tend to revert to in- er-ior plors and patterns when grown from seed, there are a great many. whieh- come true or are as pleasi g in appearance as the paren . stock,‘ and occasionally superior. It .is therefore some- what surprismg thatt since the desire to grow perennial plants is so universal, there are not more roduced from seed sown in the mic garden. While it. is true that bloom will not be obtained the first year from seed, the fact that so-'large a number may be pro- duced with so small an outlay should more than offset the loss of one year’s‘bloom. \ vvâ€"v U - The labor involved in producing a supply of perennials from seed is not. great, provided it is under- taken‘in- a syspemegic way.‘ First, a small area in the garden or _- about the grounds, preferably in a sunny andosheltered location, and never win a posmon where water will pond in winter, should be set , apart as a nursery. The ground ' should be dug in the'fall, a good dressing of barnyard manure ' worked in as digging proceeds, and the surface left rough all winter. iIn spring, when the ground is suf- ficiently. ‘dry to crumble nicely. work the surface to a depth or about two inches and rake till, a .fine seed bed is obtained. Then with the aid of a stron string or wire, open shallow dril 5 about a foot or sixteen inches apart. By planting the seed 1n a narrow, straigth drill, cultivation will be much easier, the young plants will be more easily distinguished from weeds, and the appearance of the nursery will be greatly Improved. The seeds of some perennials germ minate slowly, and therefore, if a few turnip or radish seeds, which come up quickly, are mixed with the seeds of perennials when sowing, it. is possible to distinguisn the rows and to cultivate to check weeds before slow germinating perennials have come up. Dur- ing the first growing season, give ' shallow cultivation with a hoe to prevent the formation of ' a crust and to check weeds. When ' the young plants are about an ' inch high, thin to three inches , apart in the row. â€" _â€"_--AI\ Panama non-uh!) Breath,.~ Columbine, Iceland Poppy, Qriental Poppy, Perennial Sca- hiosa,‘ S'ca‘rlet Lychnis, Sweet Rocket, P rethrum hybridum. Ané chusa, onk’s Hood, Dictamnus, :Lupine, Veronica, Perennial Lark- §pur_, Bocconia, Globe Thistle. Hel- liopsm, Hollyhock and Everlasting Pi%eons Walk Around Exercise ard With Prisoners. At a certain prison pigeons walk round the exercise .grounds every morning alongside the prisoners. Each pigeon eats out of the hand of its own particular prisoner. and when the man is in his cell the bird is usually found perching on the bars of his window. 11-- hill; uusu v: LO.” 7 ---....- Dartmoor’s particuiar pet, is the jackdaw, and most convicts break the monotony of prison life by forming an affection for one of these inveterate tnieyes. ~ _ 1.42-1 U lll'uuva-ugu y.â€" Because of the cloth and material made abWakefield, the mouse is the particular pet of this prison. The fluff from __ the cloth forms a splendid bed for the mice. Many of these rodents are so well trained that when a prisoner returns to his cell after being at. work, they will be lined up, ready to climb up his clothes and rest on his shoulders. Many of the rate at, Wadsworth Prison will stand on their back legs and, beg for food. The. prisoners PPJSON PETS often sleep with them inside their shirts. ‘ . terflies and bees, many a splendid hive having been bullt in a cell window. The emerald lizard, a pet of remarkable intelligence, is also a favorite at this prison. . Dorchester Prison is a veritable aviary, and many beautiful birds are "adopted“ by prisoners. Worm- wood Scrubs also favors birds .as pets, the particular favorite being the sparrow. . n, -13A...‘ AMCIM‘A‘ UM! apal L ‘1 VV kn old laé at Portland smuggled an‘d kept. a pugpy in his cell. /He was discovequ at la.s_t_, gpd the Ever day the little dog wanderâ€" ed bac r to the prison gate, and when the convict was released he took his__pet home with him. __.:.1 I.-- a‘snm- LUUA Illa 11v» u‘.'...\_ V- More than one coni'Viâ€"étâ€"has shown great fascmation for. a blade 0‘! g1_fa_s§ henhas planted 1n the corner C'T'_ ' of his cell. Fire Stenogâ€"“Did you observe Fire Prevention Week?" Second Dittoâ€"“Yes, I got into the office earlier; the boss was getting sorefi’ Be sure to attestâ€"1d the Celebration in Flesherton on July 12. The 12th of July will be celebratA ed in Flesherton this year. Be sure to be there. ' PAGE 7. W

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