West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 13 Dec 1928, p. 3

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--' '- vâ€"w' wwâ€" aueued $25.00 ind costs "â€" an to about $40.00 for a, hreacmrftglmmig highway tramc act. Some weeks ago .Day overtook a car driven by Mrs. Thomas Stine of Grand Valley between this place and Oranaevlne and In passing theJatter vehicle ripped ofla rear bumpet and otherwise damaged court 11: Wine on Monday or M'flkmpnyotmytonm _A_.-M-AA manna-com For Men,â€"â€"Sweaters, Bath‘gRod Fine Shirts, Ties, Gloves, Socks, etc. FINE’S We have the Selection and the Price This is your big chance to save money. Men’s Suits $12.95 to $22.95 Overcoats $12.95 to $26.95 . See our lines of Boys’ Overcoats at ..... $10.95 And Boys’ Suits, with 2 pairs longs . .4. . $11.95 Christmas Shoppers are invited t take advantage of these prices. For Ladies,â€"A pretty assortmen of Dresses, Bath Robes, Lingerie, Silk Scarfs, oves, Hose and Novelty Boxes of Shoe Trees, rters, and Handkerchiefs, etc. Went over big, but notwithstanding the fact that many have taken advantage of the exceptional values offered We still have a full new stock of high grade Ladies’ and Gents’ Furnish- Our Greatest Clearance Sale COME AND SEE US It will pay you to advertise in The Chronicle. Scarfs, ummttohow Mix them with the melted butter and then add coarsely chopped apple, celery and onion chopped and the seasoning. Moisten with boiling water. Spiced Apple Rings (to serve with Goose) 4 large apples ‘2 cup water Grated lemon rind 3 cloves 2 cups sugar 2 tablespoons lemon juice 3 inch piece stick Cinnamon. Core the apples without peeling and cut in thick slices. Mix sugar, water and lemon juice. add the grated rind of half a lemon and the spices. Boil for five minutes and then add the apple rings. a few at a time. Cook them until tender and then remove carefully with a skimmer. The syrup may be colored with red food coloring if desired. ‘4 teaspoon pepper 3% teaspoon clove 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon 11.4; teaspoon salt. The bread Crumbs should I (toast may be used) and rather ' hour. Then pour of! the fat and re- duce the temperature to 375 degrees. Cover the roaster, or put one half cup water in the pan and baste frequent- ly while cooking. Cook until tender, allowing twenty to twenty-five minutes to the pound for an old bird, fifteen to eighteen minutes for a very young one. A tough goose will be improved by steaming for an hour, then roasting by the method given above. “oushly with soda and water or soap and water, rinse, and wipe dry. Fill with stuffing, sew up the opening. and fasten legs and wings close to the body. Place the bird on its back in a roaster and lay a few thin slices of salt pork over its breast. Bake in a hot oven (500 degrees) for half an The following Christmas recipes were given by Ruth Axtell Chambers in Apple Stump; for Goose 1 quart bread crumbs V.» cup butter or margarine 1 quart chopped apple 1 cup chopped celery 1 medium sized onion About 1 cup boiling water 1/; teaspoon celery salt 1 teaspoon paprika Come in 8: Chat Awhile â€"nuth Ruhurn. At Home THE DURHAM CHRONICLE Mrs. Nouveau-Richeâ€"“He’s getting on so well at school: He learns French and algebra. Now Ronnie. say “How d'ye do’ to the lady in Algebra.” Vollettâ€"In Bentinck, December 10, 1928. to Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Vollett, a daughter. (stillborn). Nobleâ€"In Bentinck, December 11, 1928. to Mr. and Mrs. Reuben C. Noble. 3 son (Ceral Bruce). Vanslykeâ€"In Durham. December 12, 1928, to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Van- slykc, a son. McCrackenâ€"At Munson, Alberta. November 28, 1928, to Mr. and Mrs. Roy McCracken (nee Allie McGowan) a daughter. Lawrenceâ€"In Bentlnck. December 8, 1928, to Mr. and Mrs. Rex. Lawrence. Henderson-In Normanby, December 8, 1928, to Mr. and Mrs. William Hen- derson. a son. finds no favor among proponéntisfl 6i confinement brooding. the source of other serious parasitic infestations. Sometimes a wooden or concrete exercise platform of limited dimensions is attached to the brooder house, but this, too, is tightly screened to prevent invasion by flies. The old belief that chickens should be allowed to range in the fields or large yards Joined the war against them. All of which was brought out be- fore the new Jersey Poultrymen‘s As- sociation in a talk on “Confinement Brooding" by Professor '1'. B. Charles. 01 New Hampshire. who predicted that large numbers of commercial poultry- men would adopt the new chick rear- ing method. This he described as confining the chicks to the broader houses where they will have no chance to come in contact with the soil which may be ALA _â€"- - .--â€"â€" v- "I regards the common house iiy us one of his greatest enemies, so much, in fact, that he carefully screens the broader houses to keep flies away from his chickens. The house fly, research has shown. is a. so-cslled intermediate host of the poultry tapeworm which causes great I--- 1-â€" LL- 'â€" IsDelcribed As HOUSE FLY MENACE T0 FINE POULTRY The scientific The world of events in review portfâ€" the iwgrld’oâ€"vfii; yarlgty of mqnlc. Jan. m Wench; BORN ew chick rear- l confining the houses where Ba [cc to come in which may be rrious parasitic u... .4 Read The Chronicle ads on page 7. E. A. Rowe Baker 8: Confectioner Pastry Ffour 24 lb £1.00 Good: Dcllvmd Anywhere II To" The FA HE NEW CABLES, like the brown cord and the loading Coil, mean millions of dollars saved. These dollars are dollars in your pocket. Your telephone is being connected with thousands of new telephones across the country every week yet this increased value does not cost you more because costs are suc- cessfully offset by the economies which re. search accomplishes. The gentleman testing the transmitter and the five thousand working in the laboratories with him are saving money for you . every day and keeping the tele- phone adequate to serve the needs of Canadian progress. HERE ARE NEARLY five thousand of them at work in the Bell Telephone Laboratories -â€" the largest telephone resarch laboratories in the world â€" ~~ a1 d the Bell 'l‘ele phone Company of Canada owns a contract giving access to all the Work they do. That is why your telephone sv stem now has the ingenious dexice know :1 a: t‘1' “1, adir‘ ;* Coil’ which transmits messages m er \vires fine as human hair. It used to be necessary to have heavy wires, increasing in size with distance. The heavy wires were Costly. The loading coil has saved millions in telephone costs. The underground cables developed in recent years are another of a score of similar benefits. They have wires to carry a vastly greater num- ber of messages than they used to, but they are so compact and so efficient that they can be pulled through the original underground ducts. If cables and duets had tobe increased in size with the vast new traffic the costs of telephon- ing would climb sky-high. N THE NEXT ROOM another man is using an apparatus which rubs a piece of telephone cord back and forth until it trays. He is seeking a better cord. lie is the man who found that the brown cord in your tele- phone today wears better than the green cord you used to have. You may not have noticed the change from green to brown but it has saved hundreds of thousands of dollars for telephone users. That is the business of these gentlemen-â€"to make a better telephone and save money in doing it. HIS GENTLIZMAN is lmsy “talking tele- plumes tn de;itli"â€"~-wliieli is merely :1 we" of saying that he is testing their transmission qualities. He is a Worker in the teleplmne research laboratories. He has a rack of telephone trans- mitters and a phonograph. He “talks them to death" by means of the plumug‘ruph to .~ee whether the transmitters give satisfactory results. There have been 95 different types of trans- mitters and 64 different receivers tn uhtuin the instrument you are using today. And men are at work now to find one still better. necmurormmim * "mam“- “ion of motor vehiclesmtheemptre. The recent Mute requires that .11 mm” “’8 mu“ be equipped with dome “slits which must be mum humps perch-3's Wu, QVWPPm’- M“ 3‘ Amer“! have PAGE 8.

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