mummy the notice advising m whomtochamitto,nwinbechufled tothopersonphonmgorlendmcnm. Advertisements ordered for III-anon “until forbidden? ‘ and than ' aunt mm mm. Editor and from price of three; Office and residence a snort dist.- mceeast of Thenahnnouuae, on Lambton Street, Lower Tm, Durham. Ofï¬ce hours, 2w5pm., TtoOpm. Office and residence at the comer of Countess and anbton Streets, oppo- site old Post Omce. Ofï¬ce hours: 9 m1! 3.111., 1.30 to 4 pm, 7 to 9 pm. (Sundays excepted). Physician and Surgeon. omen Garafraxa Street, Durham. (3mm Umversity of Toronto. Eyes tutu! md corrected. Office pours: 2 to_ 6 Graduates Cmdbn We College. Toronto. Ofï¬ce in â€lane Block. Durham. Day nudmght phone DR. W. C. momma, DENTIST Office over .1. 8: J. hunter’s store, Durham. Honor graduate of the University 01 Toronto. Graduate of Royal College Dental Surgeqns of_ Ontario. genus- Gi'niiiiail’ifs branches. Oflwe Calder Block. Mill Streethecond door out 01 without than :1 instructions, near an ten orders .’or their discontinuance. m cheth's Barrister. Solicitor, em, Durnun. Branch oflice 3t Dundfl! open as day Friday. Barristers, Solicitors. etc. A member 01 the ï¬rm wmbe mDurhmu Tuesday of each week. A manom- my be made with the out in the I’. F. mum Notary Public, Conveymcer, Insurance. etc; a general busmess “amend. A1} 108 'Hb WOOVV vvvu' w '-____ mamas 'tramcted. All Ten: docu- mems efficiently and carefully grepu'ed , ‘1 -1A- George E. 1 Phone 4:!1'3. Auctioneer. .Grey and Brueu. promptly attended to. sun guaranteed. Terms on app] Phone Allm Pu'k Cantu! _ Your parents. solicited. OFFICE: 1 door Noflh of McLaughlin’s Hanover H. R. 2, P. ï¬nes lama. W Phone 601 r13 Durban. 3. a. 1 The School is thoroughly . to take up the folldwlnc com. (1» Junior Motriculouon. '2' Entrance to Normal Etch member of tho 8M 8 t W‘ vermy Grodunte and W Teneher. Intending pupa. mom m0 ‘0 enter 3t. becmnm. of m Inxorrnntion u to Coons m 3‘ obulned from the W The School has n WM mmepmwmxthov-"m inanimate. 0 ‘ _Dmhnmumnmop§_m W".I' be obmned 3: mm“. m J W. OI J.OH.NII. 3033.3.LP J.L.SMITB.H.B~H.C.P.8.0. (320363 I. DUNCAN Llcmxsed Auctioneer 101' (31:01 Count? DES. JAMESON I JAMESON C. G. BESSIE MOGILLIVIA! DURHAM HIGH SCHOOL . 7 to 9 pm. (Sundays excapt'édi. __V 59.: :3; Piano ifl-MA Jul-mid- .l. H. MacQUm B. A. Dmumho haul! w Lumchmz.5c.mhwnhm nun-y, Jan-n O, I†Medical Directorv. Dental Directorv. Legal rDirectory. LUCAS b HENRY JOHN at 3112389 91115: FOR SALE - NINE _YQUNG PIGS, ONE 3300:) Varney; spring creek; drilled well, water in stable; good brick house and bank barn, driving shed, hen house and oth- er outbuildings; centrally located for High and Public schools. For partic- ON LAMBTON STREET, NEAR FUR- N_IT_URE _Factqry; 1n 369d 9911431931; FARM FOR SALE ’ LOT 47, CON. 3, EWGR GLENELG, 100 acres; yell fenced, wel_l watered by ulars apply to Thomas Ritchie Dur- ham, R ..R [1.10.3.t1. _ ' pay some 0808580. creature a. couple OI PROPERTY FOR SALE hypgred d_9_llars to takp big! out apd ADJOINING TOWN. 25 ACRES, 6- room house, barn stable, driving shed and hen house. Buildings all in good condition. Watered by creek and good well. Price right for quick sale. Immediate possessio'n.â€"Herbert Mur- dock. 12 5 ti. THE LATIMER PROPERTY FOR WORK WANTEDâ€"THE CHRONICLE is well equipped for turning out the nnest work on short. order. t! SOLID BRICK RESIDENCE IN UP- PER town. Apply Miss F. H. David- son, Durham, Ont. 10.3.“. WE WILL BUY ELM, BASSWOOD, Maple, Birch and Beech 1088. delivered at Durham. Highest prices paid. Ap- ply at oflioe or Mr. Kinnee. â€"-Durham Furniture Co. 12 5 tr. ' wvwvâ€"w Durham welcome. will hold aim ' mg m the day, January 18, at 2 o’ oak/6m All are cordially NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the estate of JAMES MCDONALD, late of the Township of Bentinck 1n the County of Grey, farmer, deceased. NOTICE is hereby given pursuant to R. S. O. 1914, Chap. 121, Section 56, and amending acts, that all persons wélcomc. ‘ l 9 2 James ther, Secretary. 13rd and soft Water, .. éléctfié 'ii'gâ€"hts', Igod Eugen, _stable 9nd garageâ€"Apply ANNUAL MEETING The South Grey Agglpulm: FOR SALE OR RENT z. 'E. Roséborough. COMING EVENTS HOUSE FOR SALE FOR SALE LOGS WANTED WANTED FOR The Chronicle. 113 . 1‘31}: Society 194p 1010f! to come.- Old criminals who have spent years in prison are unanimous in their decision that a criminal career does not and never did pay. It is a' logical conclusion that you can get no more out of_ life than you put _into_ it. Then why do b0 s so wrong? Is society partly to b ame? Our method 0! deal- ing with criminals is crude and sewage and has changed very little in a kill him. There were 16 of those neck- tie parties in Canada this year. A big reward is awaiting the genius who will ï¬nd a cure for crime. century. It a. murderer is caught we go through a court trial, which very often is merely a farce, and then we pay §orne pepased creeture _a couple of Every time an American comes to Canada to live, his secret determination seems to be to try and make this country Yankee. Every time an Englishman comes to Canada to live, he wants to make this country English. The resisting of these two opposing impulses is a good thing for this country, because it is what makes Can- ada Canadian. Canadian personlity is welded out of the clash between Eng- lish influences and American influences. Canadians are able to realize that the American is going too fast. His ration- al, scientiï¬c action, his business phil-' osophy of make or break, and his rest- less business ambition tend to make a buiness machine which has created an astounding prosperity in United §tates .- v v wâ€"â€" "â€"â€"â€"q r _ But have these things made Ameri- cans happier? Have they added to the richness and fullness of American life? Are the American standards of success based on true and lasting premises? The Englishman, on the other hand, is going too slow. His industrial phil- osophy is archaic. Maintaining a vast army 9f middlemen, he. lets the yer}:- man do what the machine should be doing. He devotes his time to political philosophy and econmic theories rather than to practical action. He is the source of big world talk and big politi- cal talk. But the Englishman has a cultural setting and an aesthetic background that the American,__as a class, lacth each and apply them to her own peculiar problems. And the sooner Americans and En- for themselves. ‘ Meantime, the pressure from both‘ sides is forming“ and building up a‘ â€" vv "â€"T distinctive Canadian personality. And that personality is an engaging and a hopeful one. Johnny Canuck is sitting here with 8,729,665 square miles, including some of the most pro- ductive soil in the world; sitting here with vast resources, with minerals. in- cluding 95 per cent of the pre-Cam- brian shield. containing the great ore deposits of the world; sitting here with a variety of climate unequalled in any other country on earth. His vigorous Nordic temperament gives him the energy to develop his possibilities. His historic background gives him cultural appreciations. His achievements and his blood give him a pride and a determination. as girl and a car are much alike. A PG A good int job conceals the years but the lines tell the _story. “You must not lookâ€"around at any- one, son,†said the mother to her boy in the restaurant. “Perhaps that poor ggagthas never learned to eat his soup “I was Just looking to see 11 he had fallen in.†NOTICE TO 'cnnnnong. ammmwmm, and; mumdthencunty,ï¬Â§ny. m .. _mWWmeu mm“ «a mummwma “mummmummm hm 1.8 “What Makes Canadians Canadian†SW â€31'; thein to her own THE DURHAM CHRONICLE Market milk has been greatly im- proved in quality within recent years. .For some time the Health Departments of most large cities have been applying scientific tests in order to protect the consumer from dirty, bad, contaminated or adulterated milk. Milk dealers themselves are also making use of these tests to protect the consumer, the dealer and the careful producer alike. By systematic teSting and grading of incoming raw milk supplies, the dealer is now able to eliminate milk unsuitable for bottling and thus to improve the quality of milk offered to the consum- er. To supply information to producers and handlers of milk the Department of Agriculture at Ottawa has issued a bulletin on the Testing of Producer’s Milk for quality. This bulletin, No. 123 of the Department of Agriculture, by C. K. Johns, and A. G. Lochhead, Bac- teriologists at t Experimental Farm, treats the subjec from the standpoint of food value, cleanliness, keeping qual- ity, healthfulness and flavour. It explains the importance of each of these factors in a food so generally used as milk and tells how the tests for each are made. From knowledge of the quality of milk obtained from these tests, dealers are able to grade milk, and to pay for it according to its value. Any system of grading, to do justice, it is stated, must take into ac- count local conditions such as present quality of milk supply, relative shortage and surplus at diflerent seasons and competition at other outlets for milk. All these considerations should be taken into account if the maximum satisfac- tion is to be given to all parties con- cerned. MAY BECOLIE GOVERNOR- GENERAL OF AUSTRALIA Recent portrait of His Excellency Field Marshal Sir William Ridden Birdwood, A. D. C. to His Majesty the King, and. Commander-in- Chlet of the Army in. India. who is: to retire frgm service in June 1930. It is reported that he will succeed Lord Stonehaven as Governor-Geh- eral of Australia. MARKET MLK IMPROVED 11-th M- THE OLD} LOG-COTTAGE SCHOOL The old- lgg-cotpagq schoolhouse, John, I think I see it yet, Just but a step from two cross-roads Where you and I oft met; The same board fence encircles round; The bellâ€"well, we had noneâ€" But how we guess’d the time, dear John By looking at the sun. What anxious .boys we went to school To learn to read and write, Fill'd with the loftiest notions then, And futures just as bright; How proud we sat upon the bench And plum’d each word at will, And smiling roundâ€"why, John, I think We’re in the old school still. J ust look! right there the blackboard is; . The , teachen’s desk in front; On either side we stood in class And read and “trapp’d†quite blunt: But theala those were the good old YB. Ere style had stalk’d abroad, And neatly prudlsh pupils now Would term our way "a fraud". And then the games we used to play Upon the old school green How very littlemje, deer John.___ The games that now are seen. When with a group on eithe- Side ’ At the heart of New York, at 42nd Street is the New York Central Station where Canadian Paciï¬c trains from Montreal and Toronto arrive and depart. The above is a photo of the New York Centrd building which is a part of the station buildin and is one of the out- standing huildin in a city of wonderful buil ings. Standin almost forty stories big at the head of Park Avenue, it rises well a ove the high buildings surrounding. It is of gold relieved by brilliant reds and greens and when lit by a battery of- flood-lights at night it is one of the eautiea of New York and can be seen for many miles around. D We hailed the ball with "Over!" That, bounding down the old grey rod. In some one's hand did hover. Well, we}l.htxi‘i’ne's changed, and with it. 0 We’ve crossed tac path of youth. And manfully bearing each his part Let’s crown our lives in truth, That when the silvery locks of age With death droop round in duel, Our happiest thoughts may and a The best way for a woman to keep 3 mhnatadstanoelsbymmymzhm. Married. Woman Fears Gas â€"Eats Only Baby Food thanks to Adlerllu. I eat unythlng' all enjoy llfe.â€â€"Mrs. M. Gunn. Just ONE spoonful Adler-lb rellev. all GAS so you can eat and sleep hem Acts on BOTH upper and lower baud removing polsons you never knew wen there. and which caused your stomach trouble. No matter whet you hove trial for stomach and bowels, Adlerln VII surprlse you! McFadden’s Drug 8m In the old log-cottage school! “For 3 years I ate only baby food. PAGE 1. ° ll 31 (K