West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 22 Feb 1923, p. 5

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(Our own 'câ€"ofi'espondent.) A large numner from this line took in the box social at the Rocky last Friday night and all report a good time. Miss Lamb had an especially interesting program prepared and everything went off splendidly. ‘. b". Messrs. Gordon, Jim and John Mc- Donald of Proton visited at Mr. Hugh Macdonalds this week and at. to-ndml the sale of Mr. William llfmkv. “'0 am- sm'ry tn hear Mr. Archie Mob-an is sm'iously ill with pleu- ri-sy. We hnpe to hear soon of his rm-m‘o'l‘)’. Miss [Mia McKillop of Durham is sin-[Ming a few days with Mr. and MN. Duncan McLean. Mr. Ray and Miss Mary Lamb. and Mussrs. W. and L. and Miss Ella Eclgv. took in the dance at Mr. Earl \W-«iw‘s last Friday night and report a pm»! time. CEYLON \rlhm' Whittako‘r, who has bum) Visiting: his {athc'r here for 50m“ timv. has gone to take a position in Tomnm, Mrs. H. Builny of Shrigley \‘isitml ho'r parents. Mr. and Mrs. D. Mcl’hail last wr-ek. Mr. Campbell. Mrs. Hoslip and W. Mara-«- and wifv Hf Hum-Ilia visited "*0wa at (it-urge McKenzie‘s. Mrs. H. Piper spent the week with lwr pan-Ills at Markdnlv. Ed. Sarge-ant, of Owen Suund visit- ed his son, James. the) first of the week. Thomas Spin-r 0f thv Priccvillf’ sectinn spmlt tlw wevk-ond with his paro'nts. (Inmuril uwt thruary 10, mvm- lu-rs aH pro-«mt. Hm mev in tlw chair: minutvs 01' last. nun-ting road and mlnplml. dhnmnunicatinns read as fullnws: Allan Mcthrsnn r» assossmt-nt; Armstmng’s (lamp, 6th (limcossion. re minm' o-uming to (lump; Trustees S. S. Nu. m [-0- whim] of school taxes: aci'nunts l'rmn Municipal World, (I. Ramagi' Sun. for printing; pvti- tions from rnsidonts on County and Provincial Roads against passing primosml by-law for commuting statntn labor on said roads. The,» “new l'O‘pOI‘tPtl examining the Treasnrnr's sm-nrities with the Au- ctitm'S. and fmnnt them ample and satisfactory. Ernvst McRae applied to Council for ro-imbursvmvnt for hoavy traffic gning through his farm on account uf bring» being unsafe. 'l‘ln- Ann-liturs presented their re- pOI‘t tn tlw Council. It was mow-d by J. J. Blackâ€"Alex. Aljm'. that. art-Hunt of Municipal “'nrM. lurim.r supplivs l'nr Treasurer datml January 19. 1933, amounting to $2.57 lw paid. -t‘.arriml, Brnolic- -â€".\l. Muck ~~'l'hat Ernie Mr- Rav hr paid the sum 01' $10.00 per annum for right Hf way for neces- sary trawl thruugh Lot 16, Conces- sion 7». in rummo-m-o- January I. 1923. â€" Lari-incl. AUHH -â€".|. .l. Blackâ€"«'l‘hat accmmt ui’ 11. Ram-.igv Sun for printing be In“ uwr till m-xt mveting.-â€"â€"-Carl‘im|. M. Blark~~Brodicâ€""l‘hat Angus Hum-up 1w paid $8.00 for one sheep killm! by dogs anal $8.00 for (WM Show“ \wrriml. and that. Malrolm McInnis b0 paid $1.50 for insportinn Hf sanic_‘.-â€"4(_Xlrri0(l. M. Black~-A|joc-â€"'l‘hat the Audit- nrs' Rupm't. be acco‘ptecl and that they Iw paid $15.00 vach l'nI' thvir services. -~â€"-â€"Ql:ll'l'iml. ‘ Brmliouâ€"M. Blaokq'l‘hat thc Reeve he paid $2.11) and Arthur Jackson $1. for wxamining 'l‘rcasurer’s securi- tivs. »râ€"4Iax'riml. .Ujoolâ€"J. J. Blackâ€"«'l'hat m't'mmts fur wintm' wm'k 1w paid : Ward lull. Urvonwmd $2.00: .I. Mrfiil'l‘ 35.00. H. Atkinson 8320. mm \\'m~‘i ;’ J. P. McMillan 85.20. P. J. Hairy $5.20. Neil Black $8.20. John Black $5.20. and J. J. Black with snmvpluw $1.60 total 81940â€"4231'. Brodieâ€"~31. Blackâ€"That f0”0\\'il‘.-H accounts for winter work in Whrd 1: bv paid : Wm. Brady. 7 hours tram $2.80. and 2 hours man, 400.; John Vasey, 9 hours tmm. $3.60; John Moran. 9 honrswam and 2 hrs. man. $4.00: William Moran. 3 hours team and i2 hours man. $3.60: Clif- ford Brodie. 5 hours team, $22.00: 1‘. Timmins. 2 hours tram. 800.: total $17.20.â€"â€"Carried. Brodieâ€"M. Blavkâ€"Jl‘hat Thomas Mercm‘ be refunded $2.00 dog tax. he having no dogâ€"Carried. Byâ€"laws 636, 637/ and 6-“ “MW in- troducod and read a first time. Brodiwâ€"J. J. Blackâ€"That By-law 641. to cummute statute labor on County and Provincial Roads b9 read a second timer-Carried. Brodieâ€"J. J. Blackâ€"That By-law! 6“ be nuw read a third time, signed, ‘ sealed and engrossed in by-Ihw Bookâ€"Carried. Aljoeâ€"M. Blackâ€"That By-law 637, to appoint Township officers for 13 be now read a third time, sign- al, salad and engrossed in By-law "0 GLBNBLG COUNCIL 1mm 33. 1m. ham Moore be appointed Assessor for 1923 at a salary of ”mmâ€"Carried. M. Blackâ€"Brodieâ€"That M. Quil- linan be paid 328$, being for stamps on cheques sent to Treasurer.â€"Car. M. Blackâ€"Brodieâ€"Jl‘hat Reeve and three members of Council be paid $2.00 each for trip to Durhamâ€"Car. ET now LITTLE ran how nucn BUT now MUCH FOR now LITTLE Brodieâ€"M. Blackâ€"-â€"'l‘hat the Reeve and Clerk be appointed to arrange to have the Auditors Report printed.â€" Carried. Council adjourned to April 15 at 10 am. â€"-â€"H. H. McDonald, Clerk. The Chimpractoi‘ is not. a more Thinker nr Dreamer. H0 is a doer of things. ~ By giving Chiropractic Vertebral Adjustmvnts with the bare hands alone ho rostm’vs you to health. If you have been lnld that your case is m-rious and that. your only mam-v uf hoim: restored to Health is by \lnclergoin ’ a $111 giml Operation ascmtain the cause of your sickness. Ynu can do this by consulting the (Lllil-npract«_n'. who will locate the cans» and adjust same. le will then be gvtting Much for Lilllo. wlwreas. if you submit to a surgical nperalinn you will he get- ting Little for Much. You will b9 minns some part of' your Hint-given anatomy. the effect will have been treatml but the cause will still romain. and any rolief ob- tainml will be but tomimrury. The relii-l' ohtainod from taking Chiro-j practic Vortrbral Adjustments will, lum'owr. be normanont, for Where 'l'lu'ro Is NO (331130 there (Ian be No Efl‘m-t. and Disoasr is an Effort. Consult tho Chiropractor Now. ‘ «tall and sow its, Consultation t'roo. » DRS. C. G. 8: BESSIE MacGILLIVRAY Chiropractic Specialists Middaugh House Durham Chronic, Norwns and Spinal Disoas vs a Specialty, l RUMORS! l (Flesherton Advance.) \ Now that the spring months are t approaching the air appears to be 1 carrying political propaganda as well -: as tlu microbes. The most pro- nounced preot' of this comes to us in : the form «if an interesting rumorti from Centre Grey, the constituency represented by Hon. D. Carmichael. 'l‘his rumor is to the etl'ect that the Hon. 1. 8. Lucas will not be after the Colonel’s scalp at the approaching election, but. he hopes the Conserva- tive party will accept his son Ken- dall. as a substitute for himself. That ' is the rumor. but it is persistent. But it is also rumored that such an ar- rangement would not be acceptable to the north side of the riding, where they think there is just. as good. if not. better, material to he found. The young man referred to is. we believe, a lawyer residing in 'l‘oronto. but. with Markdale affini- ties. He was a member of the flying corps during the war, but saw no actual fighting. being occupied as a scout. on the Albanian coast. He is of a rather shy. retiring disposition” and some who loye a joke would‘ probably say that he would be flying in the face of providt‘rnce to try to uuhoise Col. Carmichael. Anyway. the north seems to feel that Mark- .» dale has had its full share of M. P.’s l in the past. and other towns in the t ridiug'should be. given a. chance to show what they can produce. All of . which. so far as we. can see, appears r to be quite logical and worthy of _ consideration. A full-size, full-weight, solid bar of good soap io ‘f‘S‘URP‘RISEX’ .For use in washing machines cluweor slice n portion of the “SURPRISE” bar direct tn the nuchine.â€"-lt will (If) fine work. ARE ALL W0“! 8m UNDER THE 831‘!" “Wlhen the Devil Drives”, the Asâ€" sociated Exhibitors five-reel drarm coming to the Veterans’ Star Theatre to-morrow and Saturday nights, is from an original story by Leah Baird, who is also its star. It shows convincingly the truth of the con- tention that all women are "sisters under the skin." There is good and had in all of us; it bakes the stress 1” a crucial moment in our livesâ€"- moment at which the Devil drives ’ to force thes ame reactions from ’_ ion and had alike. To prove this. Miss Baird‘s story relates the experiences of 3 good girl and a girl with a past. Kipling: has the same idea in his poem of the Colonel‘s Lady and Judy O'Gracly. 'l‘ho prinriplo role, that of the bail girl. is pnrtrayed by Miss Baird. It. calls for spirited emntional acting. fur fine «Iramatic restraint and for (lolicatv handling of a part which would lose sympathy in the hands of a less capable artiste. The role also gives Miss Baird an Opportun- ity to Wear some marvellous clnthus. In support of Miss Baird arr Ariiiw Protty. Richard Tucker, Vernon Stop] and Katherine Lewis. Paul Srarc‘lon (‘liI‘rctNL 'lho (‘pmom for this week will In- supplied by tho- \wll- kntmn 11d”- 1. nm Boys, Panic and Ferdic, in ’Ihn 'l‘ailm -made Chauffeur.” (Luvknuw Sentinel; .-\t. ”In Lisluwol Mhlvtic Associa- timi annual meeting it was found that, Hwy went. behind in sports last \ .z'm. Hockm foil be hind aquI $500. hmihul! abunt $500 and baseball a- bout $75. The rink showed a credit Hf $1.000. 'l‘ho Outstanding liabilities ni’ Hm ussnciation are yvt about $12.- ”Wat is a bad record, but it is n; e mix illustratiu} of tho conditions \xliioh lacv almost (\(‘I‘\ spurt club m' asmwiatinn in tho. conniiy. Ad- mission charges to sport. events are nhnnt double what they used to he. and :u'u as high “as the traffic wili stand.” The public will not pay mnro. The trouble is with the expenses. Huckcy sticks, balls, bats, glows. suits. and trawl and hotel bills come high. This accuunts for the 10530:: nm‘ only in Listmvol but. in almost mvl'y town where sports are lwld. This is the nutrmno of tho sort of srmi-prot'ossitmalism which has rrrpt.‘ into spurt. in rrrrnt ymtrs. Players no longer regard themselves as in thv tram for their own henn- tii amt Pnjoymvnt. Thry havr rum." to think that thry am» doing th.n puhlir a srrvirn by playing, and if thry are not. paid for their svrx iims thry ertainly must, have all nxpa-nsrs tpaid. "Anything in win” is at, 1110 innm Hf thP tl‘nlith. A player sees that thv nianagvr iminxiims to have him. min-1's. ton. arv anxious tn haw' him and hv puts a pi'iw un his sm'vicvs. Hr hvcnmns a hired ("litt'l'iaillm‘ whoâ€" thm' there is a direct bargain tn that Mi'vci 01' nut. 'l‘his sots 11p a bidding: hutwoen managers f 01‘ the good playâ€" ers, and frequently a team is gnuâ€"en ingnthvr which in a very small de- m'vo 01in represents thv town from ,which it gets its name. In this sort inf mmpetitinn the big town wasin unthiils the Smaller one. It’s a mat- tm‘ of which can‘ put up the most. mnnny. SPORT COSTING TOO MUCH THE DURHAM CHRONICLE RONTGBN, OP 1-“? Pill, ‘ IS DEAD AT IUIICI The death a week ago at Munich of Prof. William Conrad Rontgen, discoverer of the X-rays, marks the passing of the scientist whose con- tribution to present-day civilization was one of the most useful, and cer- tainly the most marvellous discovery of the past fifty years. For rays of light which enabled the human eye to see through a plank of oak or to see a piece of metal or a broken bone hidden inside the human body, are loven more miraculous in their 0p- oration than is radio. .Only their indispensahility and constant use has led us to regard the Xâ€"rays as com- mon-place. Their advent marked a 1‘ stage in the onward march of manâ€" t.‘ kimkalmost as important as the dis- 5 covery of cepper, which ended the 3 stone age. It is almost impossible s to envision surgery and dentistry (' without the rays, and the pmver they E have 01' revealing otherwise hidden ( fractures of the bones and concealed l ’trouble in the teeth. 'l‘hey revolu- ( itionized surgery and destistry, Stet I were unknown 29 years ago. 1 Born in 1845. Rontgen. a professor of physics in the university at t \V'urzhurg. Germany, was working ‘ in his laboratory in 1895, passing el- ectric discharges through a vaeuum lube, when he noticed a strange pheâ€" . nomenon. The tube was enclosed in ' a box of black cardboard quite light: proof. Yet a paper covered with barium platinocyanide lying nearby became fluorescent, quite evidently because of some invisible radiation. from the tube. Trying further ex- periments Rontgen found that a ‘coin placed between the tube and a ' plate covered \vith phosphorescent ' l substance cast a sharp shadow on the 1 plate. Pieces of wood or thin plates Llot‘ metal however cast only partial : shadows. thus showing that the agent could trz‘mirse with consider- able freedom bodies Opaque to or- dinary light. He found that the rays 2. passed Iirough solid substances ) would atl'ect a photographic plate. '_ and that if east upon the human 1| hand they penetrated the flesh, re- lvealing the bones. a dark frame- 7 work. Because he did 'not under- stand their nature. Rontgen named the. rays X, signifying the unknown quantity. 3 l ’Ronlgen showed that the cause Of the Iihnsiilmi'escence new knnwn as the l‘lontgen rays is prepagatett in straight. lines starting frum places where the cathode rays strike against a solid obstacle. Thereis n0 refraction of the rays and unlike thel cathode rays they cannot be deflect- ed by magnetic farce. The rays com- ing from «litl'erent discharge tulw have very (litre-rent powers of pew- li'atiun. A tube from which tln- pressure is fairly high will t‘VllIlo' “soft rays,” which are easily 2|)!» SHPde. But, a tube. from which :he l air has been well exhausted gives off “hard rays" with strong lumetl‘atinn. With such a tube. attached to u FOR SALE---One .Gilson Manure Spreader, with wide spreading prepeller. SMITH BROS. FORD SALES AND SERVICE Durham, Holstein and Mt. Forest powerful induction coil it is possin'o to get appreciable "‘én‘ects from raw whio have passed through she'eis of br s or iron several millimetres thick, says a scientific writer. Tl‘he fame of Rontgen's discoverv spread like wildfire. In no time iii-0'. tessors and chemists the world oyer were demonstratiné the new marve: by attaching induction edits to the vacuum-glass tubes which Sir “ ii- liam Crookes had invented to dem- onstrate quite another princinn. many years earlier. it was really this invention of the distinguished. Englishman which made Rontgen‘s discovery possible. Rontgen was honored in England in 1896, the year following his invention. by befittHVilij of the llumford medal of the Royal Society, which, howeyer, he shared jointly with Philip Leonard, who had shown that certain etithode rays could pass through certain Opaque substances. In 1900 Rontgen rereiy- ed the Barnard medal Of Columbia university for the greatest inyention 0f the preceding tiye years. In liltll he was awarded the Nobel prize in ithe department of physics. l’l‘a(:i.i('ai application uf the X~rays quickly followml their discm'ory. and pl'vsmllly U‘Iv lwwsvapcrs WOI'P fillml with Slul‘ivs of this new marwl in surgm‘y. X-ra)‘ [shutogmphy dv- wlupm‘l apuco. But tho \wircl grounâ€" ish light, l‘uqrssossing such uncanny lmwm's. had a halwful influom'v nut at. first SUSIH'N'U‘II. It was discn\'c'l‘â€" lmi'nvd tlw flush and dvstroyed “lt' tissue Hf the “iterator. Sums which i'vt‘nsvd tn heal, and malignant spots (in the hands 01' “Misc who had hwn lung suhjvctvd to the» rays. aiarmvdi the scivntilic world. l"«i1'tiiiiat.vly' tlw short. «ixpnsm‘c nm‘vssai'y of tlwj patimit did nu amiarvnt harm, hut a number Hf tln- [llOllt't'l' surgeons acâ€" tually divd t'mm lllt'il‘ injurit'sm- sumo hrax'vly “hiking. dvspitn tln- Swithm'ing Hf lingers and hands, tl'uv niartyrs. l)iscn\'mg\' that load in plain shwts, in glows Ht" (wen infusâ€" ed in glass, was innwi'x'inus to tho 1in and would pi'dtvct summits. mhhml tlw lil'ut‘t‘SS of its dangvr and tit-day Stll‘gt'uns and Hpm‘atux's can work in safety. Scimtists opino that, yvt other rays may be tllSt‘O\'t‘l’- ed with own more vxtraordinary powm's than that dazzling lit-am of the electric are which ponvtratvs sulid substances. ed that long vxpdsurv to the raysl‘ l 'l‘hf‘ natiun that has to pay fur it is the nation that lost thv warnâ€"- Kincardim- Rovic-w. (,im'many is wall-nigh cumimwl that, it has the worst case uf Fronvh grip 0n vl‘wvl'cl.~â€"(illvlpln Hvrald. 'I‘he bvst town m' city in Canada is that whivh pmwlv always likv [0 gr!) hawk lu.â€"â€"~.Sl, Catharinvs Standard. WOOOO They haven‘t found a self starter on King Tutenkhtmeu‘s ; chariot. Which is proof positive um it. wu- n‘t a Ford.â€"8t. Cnmnrines Bundu‘d. \ BAPTIST clam WV!“ Rev. R. Cameron. B.A., B.’l‘h., Pastor. Sunny, Fanny 2|. A.M.â€"â€"3'Prayer in Straw» l’lacvs." (Second Barman) P.M.~â€"“Christ's Rightful Flaw in the Three Great Languagm 01‘ the \\'0rld." work baking-days are gone. timer to return. Then it was a matter of anxious con- jrcturo as to whether or not that batch of bruad would rise properly. All «41' our baking is :1 scientific suwu-s. Our brad should be one of your standard Emily foods. l N most. homes the old guess- We feature the New Bertha Collar. Nothing newer for ledifs '7 ___.. who appreciate the Iuest 'in Collars. PAGE I":

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