West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 1 Mar 1923, p. 7

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FOR SALE (Mud double house an frame house m l'pper wood floors. twn mant comforilahle W/n ; "hard- , hot air heating; large clot in bed- rooms; good cistern se; one- h‘alr acre of gum v' - ,1. Cheap to quick buyer. .. Matthews, 3 2 t! Durham. 313 1101'ch 1'0 CRBDPI'ORS All persons having claims against the estate of Mrs. Eliza Colbert, de- ceased, are requested to send such elnims by mail or otherwise on or before Suturday, the 31 at day of lurch, ms, to the undersigned. lioholu Udall, 180 acres adjoining: town ol’ Dur- ham; in good state of cultivation: 6 acres fall wheat: ploughing nearly all done: spring water piped to house and stable; comfortable frame house. 6 rooms; hank barn, cement floors; terms easy. Apply to S. E. Langrill, R. R. 3, Durham. 2155a! lmt 7. 41cm. 3|. Egrcmont. contain- um um arm-s: ahuut 85 acres unlvr rulhx'alinn. halum'P hardwoml bu'vs'n: cmm'nicnt to school; on the prom- mu- :m» a franw barn 42x65 wzth slmto- t'cmmlatinn: concrete statics; alsu hay barn 30x50 with stone hasn- FOR SALE I second-hand Gasnl'me horsepower. in growl runn for $25.00. A130 Pumps. the easivst cheapest pump on th Ind [ILLâ€"\V. D. CO uric). "ll'llll hog pen 20x40; twech-Pm'm'i lH'H'lg hullse'. furnacn hmlcd, also franw wnmlshml; drilled well clow- ln house with windmill, concrntv walm' tanks: 30 acrvs $00.le l0 hay: 10 acres to sweet. clover: this farm is well fenced and in a good stale of culliValimi. For infnrmatiun apply Watson’s Dairy, RR. 4, Durham. 2 1'2” fibro prbmptly attended t0. to J. RAINPOIID Piano Tuner Durham, Ontario. General export. Repairs 3 special; Qy. Orders 19ft agAH. ._I. ‘Spfsll’s Music “I..â€" DAN. chBAN lm'o'nn’ml Auctinnm'l‘ fm‘ {ll‘mnty 0f fire-y. Satist‘actitm guaranteed. Rea- sonahlo tvrms. Dam nf salo-s made at Tho- Chrnnivlv ”them or with him- self. Rarrish'rs, Sulicitm-s. NC. A mamâ€" bm' ut’ thv firm will [)0 in Durham 0n Saturday of vach \Vm'k. Appnint- moms may hp mach» with thn Clerk in tbv offim‘. l. B. Luvus, K. (1. W. I). anry, B. A. Markalalo: Durham Dundalk J. 3'. GMT, U. u. 9., u. u. a. Hnnwx' Graduatv l'niwrsity nf Turâ€" nntn. Hl'mlualo- lim'al (lullo-gv Dvntal Surge-um nf Hntariu. Dnntistry in all its lbl’allt'hoN. Hfl'irv, OVPI‘ I). C. 'nm'n“ .lmw-Ho'l'y Stul'v. 4 A. B. OURBBY Barnstm- and Snlmtnr. mey tn loan. Durham and Hannwr, Ont. DR. W. C. PICKBRING, DENTIST (”Tina owr .I. «k .I, Hunter‘s stnro'. Durham. Hntarin. 0330. “5865838 0! Eye e, Ear, and Throat Neustadt, 0m. DR. BURT. Lain Assistant Rnyal lmmlun Op- thalmit' Hnspiml. England. and to Gulch-n Squaw 'l‘hrnat. and NUS“ Hus- pitul. Spo'cialist : Eyv. Ear. Throat and .VHSP. Ufl'icv: 13 Frnst Strwt. UWPII Smlml. DIS. JLIIBSON JAIIBSON Office and I'vsidvnm‘ a short dist- amu- was! of thp Hahn Housw ' 0n Lambtnn SN‘PM. Imwwr Tuwn, Dur- ham. Ull'ivv hum-s 2 to .3 p.11)" 7 M 8 [n.m. (o-xcvpt Sundays). «urn-.- anol m-siclvnce, corner of Uiuntvss and Lamhton StI‘M'tS. 0mm- SH” HM Pow! Ufl'imn ”(“00 NONE?! 9 in H a.m.. Limb”: l».n1..7109p.m. (Sundays and 'l‘humlay :Iflvrnnnns t-xm-ph-d) . J. G. BUTTON, I. D., C. I. “mt-n, HW'I‘ A. B. Currey's Office. nearly nppositv tho Registry Uffico. Ro-sitlvnm- : Sow-um! house south Hf Ro'uidl‘y Ufl'it'o' NH East Side Of Albert Stro-o-t. ()tfim- hnurs : 9 In Ha.m.., 2 to .3 gun. and 7 M 9 um. 'l‘elvphmw c-unmmniratinn hc-twwcn nfl'icv and I-o-wh'm-o- at all [mun-z. DR. BROWN L....,RCP London, En land. Grad- uate of London New ork_ and Chi- Mvazfl-emonta n! rm} inch or I... 35 on. for first insertion. and 16 can for each «thug-om. insertion. On! Jan in‘ and under mm inch. «Io-bk the shove amount. You” I... on W. J. I... surrn, 11.3., n. c. P. s. o. PARK FOR SALE OR RENT nanny, larch 1, 1923. Med (cal Dzreclorv. Dental Direclorv Legal 'Dtrectorv FARM FOR SALE LUCAS 8: HENRY SMALL ADS; Executors. Implements. Massey-Harris Binder. 6 fl. ('lll. nearly new: Massey-Harris (lnlli- valor. l? lemlh. nearly new; Masseyâ€" Harris fi-section Harrow. nearly new: Uockshutt Riding Plow. 2-furrnw. nearly new; Stock Ruck; Tudhone- Anderson \Valking Plow, new; High Wagon: Skeleton Sleigh, nearly new: Wagon Box spring seat; Cutter; Steel 'l’rui-k Wagon, mearly new; Yard Gravel Box. new; Huhlwr-tirml H111:- g)‘. nearly new: Set Heavy Harness. new lllgs and tops: Sei. Plow Har- ness; So'l Single Harness; 4 Horse Collars; Ili-Laval Separator. nearly new; Hay Fork; Barrel of Salt; Ayl- mm' Pump, filter! for 20-ft. well. nearly new; 160 bus. Oats; 300 bus. Potatoes; Forks, Chains, Robes. Rims and other articles too numerous t.“ mention. Everything must. [)0 mid as “I" Pruprietor is giving up farming. Sale at 1 o‘clock sharp. 'l‘i-rms.â€"â€"(lr:iin. Putatues, Fowl and all sums of $10.00 and under, (hish: over that. amount 12 months’ credit will be given on approved joint. notes bearing interest at 5 per 'cent. Juno: W. chirr, Rom. Brigham: PrOprietor. Auctioneer Still Hope For Them. (St. Catharines tandard.) King Tutenkhamen, ,000 years old, still gets on the front page. Cana- dian Senators should nqt feel dis- Farm Stock Implements 'l‘hv umlm'signml Auctioneer has hmm instrlu'le-«l to sell by Public Allutinn at LUI‘ 68. CON. 3. EUR" (SLENELH, on Cattle. Red (low. 8 yvars 0M. (1110 May 1: .Ivrsny (20w, 6 years old. dun April 6: Mark an. frvsh. rising li yvars: '3 Kim's. furrow. milking: 18 Steers. rising 3 yvars; Huil'vr. rising 3 years: 3 Hvifm‘s. rising 2 yvars: Stoor. risâ€" ing :3 yi-ars; Calf. 2 months old. All Cattle dehorned and in good Horses. Black Hnrsv, 10 yvars uld; Brown Hnl'sv. 7 years UM; Bay HOI‘SP, 9 yrs. 0141; Bay Marc. 9 years 0M, supposed in fun]. FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1923 the {allowing Farm Stuck and Im- plvnwnts : cnmlil inn Sheep. 4 \wll hrml Lo-ic'c-stvl llwos nut «hw till aftm- \[u il 1'); l \mmg thwâ€" oughbred Leicester Ram, eligible fm Iw‘gisfl'ation. PIGS FOR SALE 10 baconâ€"type pigs. w ight about 35 pnunds. Apply Jan hackle- ton, corner 4th of u v and the. Chesloy Road. (\ 21 U Swine. Yorkshire Sow, rarrymg sm'nml littm'. dun tu fart-0w March 13: Yurkshire- Snw. carrying second litâ€" tm'. chip in {arrnw March M; 7 ank- shirv Suws. 7 mnnths 014], (luv to farrow in May; ‘10 Fat Hogs, if not moviously sold. WOOD FOR 8A; Hard. and soft. Clark, Durham. p NOTICE TO PAM!" The Durham U.F.O. Live Stock Association will sh‘p stock from Durham on Tuesdays. Shippers are requested to give three days? notice. James Lawrence, Hunger, Phone 606r3 Durham. R.R. i 1127”. Tilâ€"r. Arnold l). Noble informs us that hematter he will ship Hogs from Durham awry Saturday fore- nt.)0n Highest pi ices paid.1123tf Ladiesâ€"Cell at once and rt m 800GB. Intending buyers wil do well to examine our large stock now on hand. Any style and size. Prices from $4.50 up. TIE SPIRBLLA PARLORS lrs. J. C. Nichol Nov. 281yr, Representative. Poultry. Gander; 4 Geese; 60 Hons. {Inllin Dug. SPIRELLA CORSETS SHIPPING EVERY SATURDAY All Our Graduates Enter any day. Write. on“ or phone for information. CENTRAL 30811038 COLLEGE Stratford and Mount Forest have been placed to date and still there are calls for more. Gel yaur course NOW. If YOU do not. get it you pay for it anyway in smaller earnings and lost Opportunities. AUCTION SALE 6 Zenus 7 27 ff The co-operative selling agency must be builded from strong lucul co-Operatives. Do not use your power to charge a higher price than the market warrants. Keep away from moving ma- chinery. Do not stand in front 61 a mover or binder to tree the knives while the team is bitched. Place edze tools with the cutting mntce I0 am the panel-by will not' to injured by mm“ W 0.. Every stockman should aim at im- proving his herd or flock, and to do this it is necessary to stay with one breed, use the best herd sire of that breed available, carefully select the breeding female, and feed a ration that will promote thriftiness and maximum development. â€" Maritime Farmer. The time to coâ€"operate is now long overdue. Officers must get the facts bvrure its members, whether things go mm: or wrong. The gossip route is mighty hard to cure and is often fatal. Hire a good manager and pay him what he is worth. Fight out your diflerencee in the meeting, act as a unit, and forget there was a division. Have the gumption to stick during foul weather as well as fair weather. Never attempt to make repairs 'to a machine while it is in operation. There is a flckleness of mind with many tarmers, and they follow it by switching from one breed of bull to another to head their herds. They are rarely able to give a definite rea- nn for their separate choices, or what they expect from the operation. Many ot the prevailing popular ideas ex- hibit a lack of knowledge as to where the crossing of breeds will land. This lack of knowledge is all the more remarkable seeing that there are hun- dreds of cases in any county or sec- tion to show that it means retrogres- Iion, rather than progress. If a man has a fancy for dairying. he should choose the breed which ap- peals to him and best fills the de- mands of the market he intends to supply, then always use a nerd sire of that breed, and carefully select the heifers which are to be retained in the breeding herd. It is always found to be much more profitable to stay with one breed than to be con- tinually switching. loss, but it never gets the individual tarmer who adopts it, anywhere near success. Neither does it give any in- spiration to his family to stay with an industry that. is fascinating. healthy and profitable, When under- taken where pure-bred or intelligent- ly bred nerds are kept. If a person would make up his mind as to what breed of animal was desired, and then use the best sire available for that breed there would be a possibility of greatly improving the breed. Pickleness of Mind In Breeding Lin Stock ls Fain] to Success. As the landscape speeds past while one travels by road or rail, it is dis- sppointing to see a diflerent breed or cross of cattle on practically every other farm. This practice causes more loss to the live stock industry than any other, owing to its almost universal adoption over very large areas. Not only is it a great national The writer visited a tarm lately where a farmer tried the “in and out" game between the dairy and beef breeds of cattle. He had a herd of good useful grade dairy cows, and when the boom came to beef cattle. during the war, he used a Shorthorn bull on these dairy cows. Before he reached anything definite the price of beef had dropped and milk was com- manding a more profitable price. He is now using a very poor specimen of a Holstein bull on the crosses the beet bull gave him, and the progeny are miserable specimens, that will pro- duce neither milk nor beet. The results of tinkering with dif- terent breeds always ends in a. mon- gred herd, neither good to look at nor profitable at the pail or feed lot. The first generation of a cross may prove satisfactory, but carried be- yond the first generation it 18 inevit- ably a failure. A farmer cannot keep two pure-breeds profitably for the purpose of crossing, when the prog- eny are unsuitable as breeding cattle. [HE SflMMEfl ”110W (Contributed by Ontario Department 0" Agriculture. Toronto.) There is no soil so rich that it can stand the long continued practice of summer tallowing without decline in fertility. Experiments have shown that when summer tallowing is prac- ;iced, five times more nitrogen is ren- iered soluble and available than is 'equired for the crop. The occasional {allowing of land to destroy pests either insect or weed may be justified even if it does destroy considerable legetable matter. Cultivated and soil improvement crops whereby the soil is kept in use have largely taken :he place of the summer fallow on many of the best operated Ontario farms. Rotation of crops and after- ‘aarvest tillage well practiced elimi- nate to a large extent any necessity for summer fallowing.â€"L. Stevenson. Poronto. hot 50 Good as Cultivation and Soil Improvement. flood Occasionally for the Destruction; 0! Weeds and Insect NH” STICK TO ONE BREED. Pointers on Co-operauun. At Work. THE DURHAM CHRONICLE .UUI“|D (DWI J "v Watson’ 3 Dairy, 3.1L 4, Dnrhain. 2 1 2t! FARM FOR SALE North part of Lots 7 and 8. (Inn. 22. t'lu'l'o-mont, containing 66 acres; ‘5?) fwrvs cleared. balance hardwood bush; in good state Of cultivation; t'rame harn 44x50. stone basement. concrete stables; drilled well and renwnt tank at. barn. Also Lots 6 and 7. Con. 1:. S.D.R., Glenelg, con- taming.r 110 acres; 100 acres cleared and in good state of cultivation; on the premises are a brick house con- taining seven rooms, with good frame woodshed attached; drilled well at, door; never tailing springs on this farm, making a choice stock t‘arm; this property will be sold right to quick purchaser For par- ticulars apply at _ _ _ _ - I chronicle Job Donal-taunt. For quality printing try our job MEDICINE HAT.~â€"\\'iiifii11 tin: past year, three locomotive entrim‘crs of the Medicine Hat division. James Fisher, Tom Penhale and Henry Hardy. have been retired i1 em active service of the Canadian Pacifn R: 1i]- way on pensions. All three _21re veterans in service, have fired and driven construction trains in the pioneer days of road buiidintx and for many years of late have been pmmoted to passenger runs. Tom Penhale is the oldest in service with the company, having enlisted in 1881. He has taken an active civic part in the community. and was an alderman of the city for several years. “Jim” Fisher has spent fifty- one years of his life railroading, cov- ering during the entire period over two million miles in the cab of a locomotive. He started as firen an on the Intercoioniai. and joined the Canadian Pacific in 1881â€"havinz pulled a passenger train for the part thirty-six years. Harry Hardy 1111 r1 with the company in 1887 at 13mm:- view. and later worked on :1 mm. struction engine on the Prince All“ 1: branch in 1890. PORT ARTHURPAn official an- nouncement by the C. P. R. at Win- nipeg says :-â€"“At Port Arthur addi- tional trackage will be provided to accommodate grain consigned to the terminal elevators at Current River." QUEBEC, Quaâ€"The request made by Mayor Curley of Boston for the return or the small gun said to have been captured by the British on June 17. 1775, at the battle of Bunker 1111', and which now stands on the square of the Quebec Citadel, has been referred to the Minister of Militia at Ottawa. KOBE. â€" Sixty tons of Canadian commodities of various kinds have arrived at Shanghai to be placed in the newly- established Canadian sam- ple salesrooms originated by Dr. J. W. Ross, Canadian Government trade commissioner at Shanghai. The show rooms will be in charge of D. B. Sparks, who has spent several years in China as a representative of Canadian manufacturers. Dr. Ross states that Canada is more in- terested than ever in the uphuiidlng of trade with the Orient, and the opening of the sales rooms at Shana- hai is a tangible indication of the efforts being made to accomplish that purpose. CALGARY. â€" Those who knew Grant Hall, Vice-President ("c.naclian Pacific Railway, in the olden days in the West. can recall his remark- able prowess with a 9.1m. Although he now has little time for hunting expeditions he has by w: Y‘l!"PnS lost his well-known aim. While his train was m'neeeding at a ran” speed be- tween Weyburn and Lethhridge his party noticed a coyote some fifty yr rds away. "Odis H 'm'*'=.":‘.'t hit it." remarked one of the guests. “Taken” said the Vim Pro‘s'idévfivtw.‘ Bang went his gun and the coyote rolled over. “The ( ‘all n." the West. " remarked the Vice-President with a smile. K lNflSTON. â€" Prominent officials of the (‘anadian Pacific ’Railway were in the city in connetcion with local matters connected with the railway service. H. .1. Main. super- tendent of the Trenton diyision. and (‘01. Ripley. district engineer. inspect- ed the new overhead bridge on the new line entering the city and which is now about completed. The rails are being laid and soon the trains of the (‘anadian National line, as well as those of the C. P. R. will be running over them and a great source of danger will be removed in the diamond switch that has been in Operation for so many years at heavy expense. ST. JOHN. N.B. â€" At the present rate of shipment of grain. the 20.- 000.000 mark may be attained this season. For the present season to the end of Jammr, the total export of cereal through the C. I‘. R. eleva- tors was officially given at 8.904.335 bushels. compared with 4,576,233 bushels for the previous winter sea- son. The increase for this winter to the end of January is I‘."28.10f’. Grain shipments on February lst of this year had equalled the total to March 10th last year. LETHBRIDGE. â€"â€" C. C. Stihbard. 0.8.0., for some time (1‘. P. R. train- master here, has been transferred to I’entietnn. 1312. where he will occupy the same position on the Kettle Val- ley Railway, a branch .of the Cana- dian Pacific. Mr. Stibbard is suc- ceeded here by C. E. Legg. of Pen- tlcton. Mr. Legg will assume his new duties at once. (‘oming to Leth- hririge from overseas August 1. 1920, Mr. Siibbard has been a resident of the city continuously since that time. Hare and There mph “as fooliuglv madI' in Mr. NU'HP IIII [whim of IIinw-li and his 08“!“ 2N0 parinvr and “It“ i‘t'nlaililh‘i' of Hip night was sin-Iii iII gamvs and dancing. 1 FHHUWHH.’ is ”In :I ll“'¢‘.~‘." : ', 'I‘II Mr. and Mrs. NIIIIiI' : \ [M'H' FI'iIIIIIIs. â€"-\~' v-III mm :IiIIIIIII III smvl' \Hlll' IIIIIIII'I'IIIIIIS \\ iilI HII~M IIIIigIIlIIIIlIIIIIIi. \w haw aSSI‘IIIIIII‘I‘ iII yIIuI' IIIIIIII- III slum IIIII aIIIIIIII'IIIiiIIIIE III' yIm iiSJlI'iL Mimi" and um I'IIuI-III‘ at yIIIII' II'I-IIaIIuII'. As HII' IiIIII'; draws ”WW. \\‘I' l'l‘llilt‘ IIIHI'I‘ ‘IH‘I‘xII \w shall IIIfss yIIII. \‘Iru \VI'I‘I‘ :Il-‘ ways gum]. IIiIliuiIII: IIIIiuIIIIIII's :IIIII yHlll' Iimvly assisimfl't' sn I‘I‘IUHH’ {giVIIII shall Milli! 1w I'I'HWIIIIIIII'I‘II. lMl's. Nflhll‘ IIy IN'I' ‘III'IIIIS IIl' kilIIhII'ss Iill crisvs IIl' SiI°kliI'S.~3. has IIIII\\'iIII-Il ‘hI‘I'SI‘H. in HIP lli‘al'l (If many. .\ 'I- “‘01 that \w ill‘l‘ IIIII IIIII)‘ IIIsiIIg gum! nIIigiIhIII's. iIIIl I'lIIsu t‘I'II'IIIIs. ADDRESS “D PRBSBITATIOI On Friday night about a hundred friends and neighburs assembled at the home of Mr. and “15.60011?" Noble of Hutton Hill to e\p1ess their good “ishes and to sax genll- in en the me Of their (lepa1ttne for Dm- l1an1.\\he1ethey haw cletidetl tn spend the balance of their lines. .-\f- te1- taking pnssessibn nt‘ the heme. Mr. and Mrs. Nnhle were called «111 by Mr. Frank Mlmloek who acted as (hailman. 'l‘he act-unwaming aci- chess \\ as then lead In \11.Rnhe1t liupkins and the mesenlntmn made by Mr. Elijah Armstrong. A suitable The lowest or any Lender not. no- ressarily :lcrepted. \V. A. MCLEA.X. Deputy Minister of Highways. Department of Public Higlnvays. (m- 'Lario, Toronto, February 21. 1923. (I. A. llnlmine. Durham. (i. A. annvy, \Vzalko-l‘luu. A marked choqnv l'm‘ $1.000. pay- ahlo t0 lllu Ministnr 0f l’uhliv Wurk: and Highways, Ontario, or a Guar- zmly (anpany‘s hid lwnd fur a simi- lar amuunl must lw allaclu'd (H M]- dm's fur pmvnwnls. I'uzulxx‘ay< haw cmu‘sn and hridgu wnslmvtiun. and on all MIN-r lvnclvr: tlw almw wmli- lions apply. but tho» :unnunl Hf lmml 0" cthuv I'c‘qnll‘ml is $7~lHlJllL A Guaranty Company‘s (Innll'avl. Hum! for 50 nor (mm. of llw amuunl uf llm tender will b0 furnislu-d by mm- lraclnr when cuntract is signnd. .\ll hands must. be mado out. an Dopam- montal forms. Grading: Glnntmvt Nu. 9N3. Kunilwuz'th Nurth 4.0 mill-s. ('anm'avt Nu. 912. frum ;’ milvs \szt of Clifl'urcl wo‘slvrly 2,5 milvjs‘. (Inntravt Nu. 9:13. l'mrhtnn Sunfll. 7.0 milvs. Hl‘iclgv Almtmvnls I 'Innh'm't NH. 93?. I'Ixh'llsiwn In {\VH sh't'l lH'idm-s «m Sll'ull't I‘dâ€"dimlâ€" m‘ivh Rnacl. Plans. spc'cifif‘aiinns. int'urnmtiun tn bilMPl'S. toxnlvr l'ut'ms‘. and h-nnlo-r c'HVl‘lHIN‘S may hp uhtfxinm! um and aftor \\'mlnvs«lay. Fuhrutu') 28. 192:. at Hm ul'l'im- nf th- nmh-rsignm‘l. (n‘ fmm Hu- fullmving Rnsidvnt lingin- 001's 2 Signml un lwhali' of yuur migh- l'pors.-â€"+Zlijah Armstrong, HHIJM‘I Hupkins. Svparalv svalml tondvrs markm! “'l‘vmlm‘ fur (Zunlravl NU” will [no I'M‘vix'ml hy thu nmh-rsignnd until I'.’ H't'lnvk nmm nu \thlvsdmfi Marvin 2|. 192:. Ml“ llw Mllcmix‘: \wrk 4m H10 l’rmim'ial High“ .1.»- : 'l‘ho-rv's hardly a mun-u surinus tremble. far ”in t'o-mmim- mind than a run in lhv mum's silk stacking. Bufl'alu «Zunmwm'ial. Tu shuw ulll' cwm-m fur yuu. and as a mvmc-niu. \w would ask 5m; In m'm'pt Huw- gifts :1 M! of diningâ€"mum (ulail‘s nu! siclv (31010). that in thv future “12"“ wu Junk nu llH'llI you may 1w rmnindml 0f your happy 31"?!‘5 sgwnl at HIIHHH Hill. With our bust \x’ishvs I'nr many yvars Hf guud hualth and (huh Mussâ€" im: in your nvw lwnw. “"0 3w glad. IHHU'VI‘I‘. IIIIH yuur (it now humv is IIut su I'.II° I'I‘HIII II~‘ :IIII! : IIHié‘ that VIIII max. fmm timu In limv. 731”” lw “i“! us in um lmmt .~ and «n ial I II! .. gw'IHII-IIIIQS. :H' I Navy Blue Radium Lace, yard Heavy Crepe De Chines; yard All Wool Black Serge, per yard Colored Marquisette, at per yard Children's black Sateen Rompers Men's Shirts at 1.15, 1.59 and GRAN T’S AD. . L. GRANT Lnst Friday (February 23 saw the conclusion M "w Short (‘mu'sa 8t. Clarksburu and llnlslmn. Alto- gothm‘ they “mm «with mun-55ml. altlmugh a largo'r alh-ndmcv mould haw m'vatml m'c-atvr imn'ost. An ax'vragv nf 30 mm aftvmh-d vach murm- daily. ”wins: tn tho fnrvnmn "h’lldalifl lwimr wry small mam impm‘tant sulnjm'ts “film \01‘}' sum‘x'limally «Iv-alt with or nmith-«I Hum-0|}; This is in lw I'vgl‘oHc-d hm it iu. sinm-I‘o’ly lmlwd that fuhm- mum-s \\i|l H‘- sult in the. fullvst «woneichu'atiun (of vwry phasc- ul' agrh-ulmm! [warm-u. I“ su far as ”mu. m «Hal'm- Hf HIP, El'nm‘w" :n'u «mum-r! wi ‘ISfTiN' H 10 {say Hm! [hm lump '1.» mo'mlwm Ehaw l'm‘ulxwl mmv nu; mum: and Elwllo. Lustly. Hlo- (vfl'lt'tax- a: Markâ€" ‘sziv 'm-‘t Ihvy h"\v ~hw- 'v Hm! wrâ€" Hit“ N Hwir.\\:m-!.~.\.w, '1 c! that Hm L‘A'i-Jlfll'h sumo-«l H Man "J” man: Hu' i'llilcw‘t [Ht-5.5m ..-.~ 'I that Sal‘- HI) March 3. 5 and (3. a special train ”1' Plug» Hrml Stuck will Slop "no day at llmnlalk. Murk'lalv and «mm- wm‘tll. (m this. train tlmrv will be sum:- lmlls [ourl‘has‘ml l’mm Grey {luunty bl'c-mivl's. In addition to (“ll- tlv thm'c- will also lu~ purv bred host. lixamplvs 01' the Vifl‘l'llh‘ grados mm which (luwrmmml hm; graders diâ€" Vicle- Canadian hogs \\ l“ he an exhi- luliun. Stock Improvement Train. Stark illlln'uh'llwhf m ”Mario is lwillg.’ I'lll‘chI'o-(l tn Hw prc'ah'st p08- silrfu uxtvnt. (arc-y tlwuzm Is not be- hind in any way and in sumo res- ]N'vl~‘ runsidvl'ahh m :uh'am'c'. In 'lu- past hm )‘c'ars umxanls Hf 250 farmvrs haw secured gin-vmiums for win: l'uro- Bro-«l lhnw h‘cr tlw first firm. In thv last, Hn'mr months at lc-as! H Hm: Clubs haw lwvn organ- ill'd. \\ “”0 this “aim w in I-ryt- County It shuutd bt}\ isited I. .3 (HPI'y farmer wlm van find it (‘IIIIU'IIIQ‘DL to Visit it. 'l'hv Work Is «'IItII'vix miucatIVO and instructive. i'spot'IalLV' in matters pertaining tn stuck InllII‘HVPHIOHL and Illal‘kvting t_°t'lltjititttl.~‘ (It the) world in its ri-latiun tn agricultural pro-â€" ducts. 'l‘hvi'vt'ui'v nmiw it a point tn \i<it thv tiziin n: Min (“"08 in Match. “I“ I'llilc'ii I) New m ”in 1 nvrr futurv. Incl: HI Mme haw Insulin! n but s: wall 310 nun an mulmvhwss will lw mailingtlw ~mm~ mu mum; lfil‘um'fl all Marl loath Short Courses Completed. Problems of the Fa rm Priceville Fox Co., United Priceville. Out. at $100. Par Value All registered pure bred stock. Low capitaliza- tion. All comon stock. Absolutely no watered stock. Ten years ex- perience breeding. Stock from P.E.I. i1'w\ Silver Black Foxes Contributed by (key County Department of Agriculture Write for 'furthcr particular: to hi A limited number of shares for sale in 0H ILHUIH} H" Illvrvasim , yard $1.50 PRICEVILLE. out. 31-" “PL"! Hf ‘1'“ Hug Cluk a. "VA! mm} m. w ; n.~.'< aw wry .2: mmdwr. Abnut Hri'lml mm “19h m1 m w in the 1-: n1 alm'livatmn («I H‘. s'mllt‘ delay om hand an that tw OLWH'I'VW‘ in mum HN' Hwy Mzn'kdalv. PAGE 88"“ ~75 2.25 .3 0. .60

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