West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 13 Apr 1916, p. 5

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Sss n a e it i up ‘Our urham A T Â¥oU r Liver iver Salts ron T onie " y i ire _ run us and lepressed c and 1.00 . 13, 1916 Small Profits seeds, Formalin der when arkets. Iway Ticket western mear n p« 14 Ticket eI D ints s of t1 WEEKLY JAS PATTISON & CO, PRICEVILLE We have just received a large and well-assort'fsd stock in Pails, Tubs, of WOOdeflware Wash _ Boards, White Wash Brushes, Butter Prints and Ladles, Egg Crates, Humpty Dumptys, Baskets, Mops, Brooms, Butter Boxes, ete. We haye set aside a department for the exâ€" hibit of these and there you may use your ireeâ€" dom in looking over our Sample Books without having to be shown. Just a look will be sufficiâ€" cut as a warranty to you making your choice. If you do not think that your purse will allow you to buy one of these, we are offering a range of Readyâ€"mades in all sizes in some snappy effects, wellâ€"tailored throughout, at astonâ€" ishingly low prices. Come in and look them over. NO TROUBLE TO sHOW GOODS. Sherwinâ€"Williams in Wall, Ceiling, Floor, etc. Varnishes, Shellacs, Stains, Oils, Turpenâ€" tine, Brushes for every purpoSe. There is nothing wanting that we know of in this Dept. "The ‘Right‘ Paint to Paint Right " We want your Proâ€" duce and will always pay the best prices This week we wish to announce to you that we are Sole Agents in this locality for the 4 4 * the tailors that guarantee style and fit in every HouSsE OF HOBBERLIN particular in Men‘s Tailorâ€"made Clothing. How about that Spring Suit ? msisting of 150 acres in the nship of Egremont, Co. of Grey, g Lots No. 17 and 18, on the Concession, 8o acres cleared, nce under timberâ€"muixed hard soft wood; Conventent to chureh school, spring creek and good . _ Price (4000.00) Four Thousand irs. _ Apply to John M. Findlay, Dromore, or Aun J. Garson, 282 Evelyn Ave., Toronto Between all Stations in Canada, Fort William and East, and to Sault Ste. Marie, Detroit, Mich, Buffalo and Niagara Falls, N. Y. i (Good GOING â€"â€" APRIL 21st, 1916 Single Fare uETugN fimicâ€"APRIL 2ist 1916 ® & (Good goingâ€"April 20th, 21st, Fare and Oneâ€"Third $ da‘Sm oc Return limitâ€"April 25, 1916. Minimam Charge 25 cents. Particnlars from any Canadian Pacifie Ticket Agent, or from W. B Howard, D. P. A., Toronto. Easter Excursion Fares THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE APRIL 13, 1916 TO CANADIAN FARMERS, DAIRYMEN WHAT IS NEEDED 7 +uese in THE CALL OF EMPIRE comes AcAin iN 1916 We must feed ourselves, feed our soldiers, and help feed the Allies. The 1916 than it was in 1915. The difficulties are greater, the task i need is more urgent, the call 10 BEfrIGHSH 18 Lnrclay.._ Fhounl. PRICEVILLE ... Mo ze c oo ols T0 9n T CBTkel‘s TICE SUOR O NEGL need is more urgent, the call to patriotism is louderâ€"therefore be thrifty and produce to the limit. THE AGRICULT!JRAIT‘_ WAK BOOK FOR I916" :« usw in the acas m Farm for Sale roduction and [hrift WHEAT, OATS, HAY, BEEF, PORK, BACON, CHEESE, EGGS, BUTTER, POULTRY heavy burden of d no gain the course last yearâ€"they m that may be made live stock, the wor Wall Papers R. MacFARLANE, Agent, Durham er Kum _.2, * _ _ °s Hâ€"StOre for us all is tragic conflict is over, tut not one of us doubts the issue, idians will do their duty in the highest sense of that great HOX. MARTIN BURRELL, Mirister of Agriculture, Minimum Charge 25 cents râ€" "THE LEADING HOUSE" Marmalade Oranges a Specialty this week at 25¢ doz. The Publicati +HE GOVERNMENT or camadA and I " The Leading House‘s " Those contemplating a trip to Paciâ€" fic Coast points, including Victoria, B. C., Vancouver, B. C., Seattle, Wash., Portland, Ore., etc., should consult â€" Canadian _ Pacifie Ticket Agents for particulars of low fares in effect daily until April 14th. mimpnitirestiatint Shrisics l ds itits ness, it is the imperative duty of every that he can, to work doubly hard while in order that the resources of the country increased, for the great struggle that lie is a good motto for Warâ€"time."â€"SJ R of Finance, Mopes®s on s eneet Coihe _AANPite s affairs has been laid. Gain or farmers of Canada is as clear as it was abundantly in order to meet the demands ‘ve this to be especially true in regard to OF WRLniy avcccam Li 0 99M S } Special One Way Fares to Pacific Coast Points Daily until April 14th Branch, ])('[):lrfl;lt‘ll'l ol en ooe, mt AeeCure well as by men and by munitions y ie 48W T 1 war is BULLET/IN ~2"~.y nard while our soldiers are in the trenches, irces of the country may not only be conserved, but it struggle that lies before us. _‘ Work and Save* Warâ€"time."â€"SIR THOMAXN WHITE, Minister made by resources, by money anewulp es cb oe h 902 LoD id such as Salt in bbis. at.. .. ...... 1.45 bbi. so Ib. at...... ...... ....35¢ Sack Coal Oil at...... .. .... 16¢ gallon Flogur, Bran, Shorts, Middlings, Screenings, Low Grade Flour. , FRUIT GROWERS, GARDENERS We carry Trunks, Valises, Suit Cases, Club Bags, Lunch Baskets, and many other necessaries for the traveller. Oranges, â€" Lemons, Canned Raspberries, Cherries, Blue wrries, Pumpkins. Seed, Rape Seed, and all kinds and varieties of Garden Seeds, » We are stocked complete in Mammoth, Red, Alsike, Sweet (white) Clovers, _ Also Timothy PARTICULAR CANNED FRUITS, FRUIT JAMS, SUGAR, HONEY, WOOL, FLAX FIBRE BEANS, PEAS, DRIZD VEGETABLES How about that Seed ? For you that anticipate Travelling â€" CSources, by money, by foodstuffs, as nunitions. While war is our first busiâ€" of every man in Canada to produce all e ecdeenh c L0 in l e es ! 1 is nOW Agriculture THE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE A Few Staples The quilting of the red cross quilt will be carried on this week in the basemeut of the Pres. Church on Tharsday afternoon as usual. _ Also the next weekly meeting will be held in the basement on the followâ€" ing Tharsday. All Red Cross workâ€" ers requested to be present if possible at these meetings. Mr J. S. McDermid and bride, nee Downie Watson bave taken ur their abode in our midat. Congratalations and best wishes for a long and bhapâ€" py life to them. (Quite a number of our soldier boys are spending the week end at their homes here. Mr. W. Sackett bhas returned from the city for the purpose of moving his family down there but as he is under the weather at the present time, will not be able to get moyed as soon as he expected to. Mrs, P. F. MeArthur is spending a few days with relatives in Durham. Quite a puamberof new residents are moying in and we would extend & hearty welcome to all. Miss Mather desires to announce that she will do trimming at the house this spring, and will endeavor to give satisfaction to patrons old and new at reasonable prices, VICINITY PRICEVILLE VILLAGE press. To be had from is heavier, the need is greater in If you look at the map of Lenmcs you will see the town of Castron on the west, It is an ancient place bwilt on & beautifual cove with shelving sanay beach. _ We epent a day thl'r's"' the week before leaving. _ The cove is | divided by a great rock projecting outâ€". wars two or three hundred feet high, | On the summit is built an ancient fort, | whose masonry in che distance ml-l peais iotact, but on closer inspeciion| is crumbling awayâ€"bailt by the Genâ€"| oese ‘iis said A canmon equaily or| more ancient still rests there and the| ground is strewn with cannon balls of | the same date. The gun bears a Latin | inscription to Philip V of Spain dated | 1595 of Spain, _ A splendid view is obâ€"| tained from the fort over the sea on | the one band, where the I<le of Asthos | risesâ€"the home of a body of monksâ€" i and over the rown up into the hills on | the other, _ The town might shelter a | population of 1000, perbaps, _ It is f bwit of stone, the house square shaped | with cott:ge roofs made of tile. A| Mohommedan minaret denotes the in â€"| fluence ef the Turk and gives one a, feeling of still greater remoteness from the spirit of the place, The day was| glorious, | We went over In a Red Cross motor van,. Ourroad is one built of stone with no other bond than muad. 1t exâ€" tends from Mudros, skirting the harâ€" bor as far as Turk‘s Head and then winding up through the hills to the west coastâ€"a distance of 17 miles. We pass Thermos on the way where are the Hot Springs and a crowd of British Towmies waiting to enter the baths, _ The water ruos directly int o bath by an inch pipe and then flows on again to join the mountain brock that trebles down among the rocks Its temperature is higher than body bheatâ€"about 110 degrees I would jugge, In our busy life at Loemnos the is}â€" and presented a variety of activity Most frequent and continuous by day and night was the Red Cross moto: ambulance plyiog from pier to the various hospital units distributed oyer the island, Then there were contiouallp ariivâ€" ing troops from the peninsula to resi camps On the island, and other bodies of troops from home en route for the peniusula or â€" Salonika. _ Striking among these are the Scotch regiments with their bagâ€"pipes leading onâ€"th» sbrill romantic skirl carries one back Alexandra is our destination for the momentâ€"two days vsoyage and then wherever the fates may lead, we have not a hint of where, And so our presâ€" ent is full of the interest of expectancy in a new venture, the scope and direeâ€" tion of which is hidden from our view, Whateyer it may be no one regrets leaving Lemnos, L never heard of any one who did and yet underneath the pleasure of departing, I had the con sciousness of saying good bye, February 8th What e delicious morning ! We are passing the Island of Rhodes on our left and Karpathos on our right. Rhodes has the benefit otf the sunshine upon her and looks besautiful indeed. Karpathos is more in the shadow and looks gloomy and threatening, The skies are charming. Our skies at Lemâ€" nos as [ have told you were lovely, but they probably will he still more lovely in Egypt. The air is becoming balmier as we pass southward ; th« difference is already marked. The sea is calm and our boat gives no sense of motion. How delightful it all i=! I wish we could sail on and on, _ It is like dreamland after the realities of Lenmos, _ But it lasts only till toâ€" morrow morning, We shall be in Alexandra yery early, During the past weeks we haye been waiiing, expecting to hbear the orders to go, Our patients are nearly all gone and most of our tents struck and packed with equipment. _ There we were teased and played withâ€"it‘s a way they have in the army. > "We leave in two days," came the order. The two days went but we did not. "Stand by and be ready to pack in two hours," came a delightful second order, We stood by anrd watched the days pass by and leave us, _ Then we were to leave in four or five days on the arrival of a certain ship. But one rainy morning we got definite orders that wo were to board the Carisbhrook Castle next morning. The raim which h4 been pouring on us for 24 hours uddenly ceased, The wind sprang up and the sun shone out as though enâ€" tively for our benefit, Then sitting in our tents at 2.30 we suddenly got the word that the Carisbrook Castle was steaming into harbor and we were to be at the pier at 4.30, _ While we were one and all M O‘s and sisters and oway we went in our launch to board the Castle Liner, now converted into a delightful hospital ship, _ How cleap everything seemed ! The white paint, the well scrubbed floors, tne clean linen, the wholesome odours sand the: well prepar«ed food, _ What a luxury for the body and a rest for the mind ! Wo drank deeply of the enjoyment with some consciousness that we were a little queer, out of place, sc long had | we been disconnected with civilized life, _ Forty eight hours we rested in harbor and now the morning of the Tth February we are sweeping out into the deep blue sea, _ One by one the landmarks bhave faded from our view, the village of old Mudros with its conspicuous church on the height ; the windmills resting on the hilltops, one of the most conspicuous features of Lemnos ciyvilization ; the dotting tents and huts of fragments of units still ‘remaining. _ We have left the harbor with its ships, behind us and all that remains to our view is the faint outline of her hills against the sky. At last we are off, sweeping out to seaâ€"a thrilling sensation, _ Fer six months we have been immured in old Lemnosâ€"barren, arid, spiritless, dead Lemnos. (I never realized the fact as I do now, restored to liberty and a new life, Every day had its duty and its allied interest, The time bung heavily on my mind. It was simply a probationery spell whose end I knew would come, and did not concern myâ€" self particularly looking for it. _ But now it‘has come and tbhe freshness and luxury and lightsomeness of the change are very gratifying. The dust storms and the grind and dirt of tent life, the poor food and the listless enâ€" yvironment have, I now realize, played upon my mind and it is rebounding in the atmosphere of a new venture. [Rev. Dr. Farquharson kindly sends the following letter from his brotherâ€"inâ€" law, Dr. Coutts, which is one of the best of its kind that has come our way. His style is vivid and picturesque.â€"Ed.] Interesting Description of Conditions in the Mediterranean by Lieut. Couttsâ€"scenes at Lemnos form subject of a cleverly writâ€" ten letter. With the Royal Army Medical Corps at Lemnos and Alexandria TIE DURHAM REVIEW immninmmmmntmmane s _ l The yervous system is the alarm system of the human body. ‘ In perfect health we hardly realize that | we have a network of nerves, but when l hea‘th is cbbing, when strength is declinâ€" ing, the same nervous system gives the ! alarm in headaches, tiredness, dreamful | sleep, irritability and unless corrected, | leads straight to a breakdown, To correct nervousness, Scott‘s Emulâ€" , sion is exactly what you should take; its | rich nutriment gets into the blood and |rich blood feeds the tiny nerveâ€"cells while the whole system responds to its I;_%fresh- ing tohic forge. Free fro xluw rugs. € sfcolf& Bowne, ‘l‘oemtb. & WHY YCOU ARE NERYOUS The Council adjourned to May 6th at 10 a, m. J 8. BLACK, Clerk Turnbull â€" Mclonis â€" That this Council, while regretting the canse and necessity of so many of our young men having to leave the farms of Glenelg, degires to put on record our sincere appreciation of the spirit of patriotism made manifest by the numâ€" ber who are so willing to put their own lives in danger for the protection of the‘r homes and libertiecs and that the Clerk be instructed to devote a page of the Minute Book for the regâ€" istering of their names, pending the time wheu recruiting in Glenelg is exbausted, when such other means may be adopted to commemorate their sacrifice as the Council may see fit.â€" Carried. Accounts were paid as follows : 35 recruits at $8.00 euch, $280.00 4A the Clerk on salary, $50.00 ; the Asâ€" sessor on salary, $20.00 ; Municlpal World account, $6.85 ; the reeve, $3.60 on Sanitary work ; Mal. Meâ€" lnnes, $1.00 on Sanitary work ; Lenâ€" aban & McKechnie, 400. pail for Hell ; Children‘s Aid Society, $5.00 grant ; Margaret McCall, to be relieved from Tp. taxes, â€" Daniel Edgo was appoint. ed to represent Glenelg on the Ontarâ€" i0 Board of Agriculture. Mr MeJams refunded $1.50 unexpended gravel money. s250.00 was appropriated for each ward to improve roads. for aid, McLean reports, T J Hanmâ€" gan Hydro Electric, Exeter Manufac. turng Compavy Price List, Municipal World account, Geo Campbell report as Truant Officer, Ontario Dep. of Agriculture to have a director appoint. ed, Bond Corporation C.rcular, R J Torry asking for snowfence, Margaret MeColl asking to be relieved from taxes for 1916 on account of fire, Ivan and SE Edwards and T A Lauder, expressiog grattude for faâ€" vors grauted them as recruite. From the Cletk, list of recruits from Glen.â€" elg. MARRIED, WauirrEkâ€"WHITEâ€"â€"At Owen Sound on Wedne=day, March 20, Miss Maggie W hite of Saugeen Junction, to Pte. 1. B. White of Owen Sound, formerâ€" The Ceuncil met April 1st, pursuâ€" ant to aCjournment. All the memâ€" bers present, the Reeve in the ebair. Minutes of last meeting read ana conâ€" firmed. Communications read as folâ€" lows : From Children‘s Aid Bociety February 11, 1916. Here we are encamped two miles outside of Alexandra, in a truly Afâ€" rican, delightful, balmy air, but dim and silent. High paina irees surround us with yery lictle foliage. We are said to be going to Port Said soon, possibly we are destined for the Perâ€" sian (Gulf, No one knows,. We haye been destined for many a place that we have never reached. I got your parcels, intended for OChristmas, toâ€"day, O. K, Thank all the donors for me. To add to our variecy, we had occaâ€" sional visits from enemy Taubes, who dropped bombs to impress us with their reality. These never hit anyâ€" thing but land and water, and I am sure we all would have been willing to pay a good entrance fee to see their gratis performance, to the glens and mountains and eraggy woods with their romance of story and poetry. Then the Australâ€" ians, by the thousands, youns giants, with faces that betoken a dauntless enemy, and the New Zealanders e‘ud- ly keen fighters, and perhaps of fner mould. There are also the mule and horse transport seotions, Thousands of these animals tethered in long rows and farâ€"from the least interesting are the R. N. A. 8. with their bird maâ€" chines. They showed us most interâ€" esting pictures taken from the air, of trenches and submerged boats, the Turkish trencbes, deeper «nd showing darker than the British. Then there is the quaint native life of the island. Liattle donkeys as high as a man‘s waist, most docile and obedient, kindly little creatures, strong for their sis», footing it alone carrying a man lookâ€" ing larger than the beast he rides on, or a woman with forebead and chin and mouth veiled, or a big load of maâ€" terials set astride the saddle, secured to a pad fitting the donkey‘s back, seâ€" cured fore and aft. They are beasts of burden, means of transport, or joyâ€" riders or pets, They emit the most bideons sounds I ever heard when they bray. I can compare it to nothâ€" ing for I never heard anyth:ing like it. It & L & Liniment in K. tm mss Yes, the Pain goes! Chamberlains The very first rub gives relief and as you massage in the healâ€" ing, penetrating oils of Chamâ€" berlain‘s Liniment, you exiper- ience a feeling of ease, comfort, and relief, that assure you a real cure is taf(inÂ¥ place. This fine old family safeguard t Priceville GLENELG COUNCIL ++ 4 3 + GRANTS # o s e tihe clge olge on S aife alje oije oo o * in Serges, Voiles *# z and *# Fancy Stripes ?fi: Call and inspect at *Â¥ Rockfast Drills, M Eftriis¢ter®4 C . # * New Printsâ€" Terms of Sale + Ten per cent of the amount of parchase money at time of sale and balance thereof within thirty days without interest, Further particulars may be hbad from the Administrator, JoH® RroNngkâ€" oUSE, or Srle commences at two «‘clock sharp, ‘The property will be affcred for enle subjoct to a reserved bid : D. McPHAIL. Auctioneer _ _ _ _ Dated at Durhamw, March 27th, 1916, In purevance of the powers vested in him, the Administrator of the Esâ€" strte of the late Martin &toneouse deâ€" ceased, will offer for sale by Pubhc Auction at HAHN‘S HOTEL, Durbam Thursday, April 20th, 1916 the lands belooging to the said estate, eonsisting of the following property : Lots Number 89 and 40 in the Fireat Coneession »ortp of the Durâ€" ham Roa:, ia the Township of Glenelg, in the County of Grey, containing one hundred acres more or lo«s, ADMINISTRATOR‘$ A. D., 1013, are required to send by post prepaid or otherwise deliver to J. P. Teltera, of the Town of Durham, Belicitor for the administrator, on or betore the 2uth day of April, A, D., their names, addresses and descripâ€" tions and a full statement of particuâ€" lars of their claims and the nature of the security, (if aoy) held by them, duly certified, and that after the sard day the administrator will proceed to disribute the assets of the estate among the parties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of whieh he shall then have notice. Dated the #ith day of March, A, D., 1916. In the matter of the Estate of Martin Stoncouse, late of the Township of Glenelg, in the County of Grey, Jarmer, deceased, FOTIOCE is hereby given, pursuant to Revised Statutes of Ontario, 1914, Cap, 121, Sec. 56, that all persons hay ing claims against the estate of the said Martin Stoneouse, who died on or about the 15th day of January, Ociober 8lst imelusive,. _ Particalars from any Canadian Pacific JAgert, or W. B. Howard, Distrct Passenger Agent, Toronto. Homeseckers‘ Excursions to West erp Cansda at low fares via Canadian Pacific, cach Tuesday, March 7th to This great Fertilizer, Bydney Basic Slug, £20,00 per ton. Apply to Wa, WrEin, R. R. i{o. 1, DPurbam Homeseekers‘ Excursions to the Land of Wheat Netional & Chemical Co. ¢:ol"’~ Camd!z,mh-ihd. Toronto. Notice to Creditors Gin Pills are 50c. a box, or 6 boxes for §2.50 at your dealer‘s, A trial treatment will be sent upon request, to 18 ,_Itisimportant to know, in the case of conâ€" stipated patients, thit Gin Pills do not mct barshly on the bowels; there is no .r.iFi-g. but a gradua! and tle restoration of the function. Try Gin fiffl for constipation. In thus relieving the bowels, you saieguard yourâ€" seli ngainst possible Kidney trouble, But users of Gin Pills have discovered that this inveluable remedy a/so acts as a mild cathartic. The evidence of hundreds of letters we have received establishes the very Iogul fact that in compounding a medicine to heal and ture up the Kidneys and Bladder certain of the ingredients have a mmuuu-%oeam upon the other organs, especially the bowels. A Gin Plll‘h o:re acknowledged med‘l.d': “i“ argest sa a propdeury m e in Canadaâ€"an .chle'v’e-ul solely due to their remasknble virtue as a Kiduey and Bladder remedy, Reliove Constipation Jeux StexEous® Administrater, by bis Solicitor, J. P. TEtrorp. In the Surrogate Court of the County of Grey Rogulate Kidneys AND Dress Goods CRUM‘Sâ€"The Best : Quality . ie Fertilizer for Sale J. P. Tenrorp hicitor for Administrator BALB OB LANDS ONTARIO A 4| < PLAI as on % ?;mv::dtJ SASH, | x of ‘H #° se | Shingles # | hand at o# | Sawing ; # 4 | fls tor, %*| NEV * or rid S asy to ha oip | Fuvttied * Ca Â¥#e «* ZF ta DURGAM, â€"a Also Bole Agent and Dealer for Durâ€" ham and vicimity of the Shingles and Lath always en hard at right prices. Custom Sawigg promptly attended to SASH, DOORS, and all kinds of HOUSE FITTINGS The undersigned begs to announce to residents of Durhawm and surroundâ€" m“nnlry. that he has his Planing and factory fsily equipped and is prepared to take onders for OURHK AM PLANING MILLS 0 pypils have c M‘LUUH and a school iwthorougniy equipped in teact ty, in cheomical A elcctrical suppiies , &c., forfull Junior Loaving and Mat won work. The ‘glowing competent & are m carrge : THOE. ALLAN, Principal and Provinclal A losurance Agent. Money to Loar Issuer of Marmage Licenses, _A gei eral financial business transacted. or interior of |~xu|dinfuâ€"lmlu‘ and heaper than lath «nd plaster, ARTHUR H. JACKSON Barrister, Solic Court Notary Pu} HonoRr GRaDpuA University, graduaue « of Dental Surgeons of #gr NMrMcPhail dence in Ceylon. J. G. HUTTON M.D., C. M HONOK GRADUATE Toronto University, w duate Royal Uoliege Doutal Surgeon Denustry in ul’ its oraucues, fllceâ€"Over Jeweliry store nd opp « sive Post Ofice, Ferms, moderate Arrangements for sales +« o gafes «c., must be made at the Review Of fice, Durham, 4@ Coâ€"tespondence aUdressed there, or to Ceylon i‘. O., will be promptly wttended to, Terms on application to or Dentui Surfieon.a ol Untario 100L Jver J & J HUNTEI S New Store 9â€"11 a. m 2 Telephone Commun Resido: W.C, PICKERING D. D S., LDSs Twilied Sheeting, 2 yds wide.25% yd Heayy bleached Shccting * _ .40c yd Bleached table linon, 70 in wide, 50¢ ya New Goods coming in every week OFl"lCE _ Over J. epposite Registry RESLDENCE : Gecon oflee on cast sige 81 in wide, 2 40 in wide, 2 17 m wide, 3 All Lace Cu W. H. BEAN New Curtain le border c New Spring Goods LACE CURTAINS BIG 4 Rprrarr l FPomats PHoge adfug Btudents s E}!%u term if poss lat reasonable rat attractive town, m: for residence, ‘he record of the Ec H. & KO°E DURH A M HIGH SCHOOL OWEN soUND ’ Three practical complete and upâ€" toâ€"date courses of *udy : Business, Bhortkand and Iypewricing and Preparatory, Worthy students asâ€" sisted to good paying positions, We have an unrivalled connection with best business houses where our graâ€" duates are regular!y cmployed, _ Write for E&ih;»l\'lq-if'b‘h'lf inforâ€" mation sent free on spplication, C A FLEMING, FCA â€" G. D. FLEMING fering one. The bvm§‘ and epare pupils have eve Licensed Auctiogeer for Co, Grey ZENUS CLARK NEW FIBRE BOARD Member Qolloge 1 J. F.GRANT D.0.5., L.D.S. Money 1 flice on Lambr j Walpole‘s & The Wiater Torm now on at the DURHAR, ONT. (Lower Town Notary Public, Commissic CONYEYANCER. &e Prifitipal for 85 years Recretary Ciaa irm ar @l Bebool Teaco» J. P.TELFORD, YOUR OPPORTUNITY Staff ans Egquipment D. MePEHAIL, Ceylon oP to C. RAMAGE, Durham oPFrIQ Dra y« ds Onta ory 86 in wide coubâ€" or whute .... . 16¢ yd itor in Suprem 1.s Commissioner TE of Torono, f Royal COollege Ontario Rooms aus and Burgeons 1N &A oSt Gegiraine ONTARIQ x + > » a + » » POM qo *1 and 1.00 pr linished tops i. P. SR&NT ing and Matricâ€" ompetent stafÂ¥ He Sells Cheap rovinplal No ass O@rtfiicate T at t mM oo opposite oftice, nearly ionet Heorotary 7â€"9 p. . Oflice and d Registry

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