West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 4 May 1916, p. 4

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4Â¥ 1 Farmers ! Why remain idle all winâ€" r when you can take up a paying rency ? (bnfi‘r list of yameties for Spring anting. Liberal Terms. Handsome «e Outht. Excinsive â€" territory, /rite now for particulars. ~5o John VcGowan Al\ kinds of grain bought at market price * on Flour and Feed in ton: sovereigna, Eclipse and Pastry Flour o ammamomedmerincl wewkp 500 tons of No 1 Mixed Chop . wWwHCAT AND BARLEY Large Quantity of No. 1 Feeding Hay Wh Bay them nere. We havse a Frosh and varied stock of the choicest Grocer os. Oranges, Leomons, Peels Dates, Nuts, Candies of all kinds, an d evorythiag required tor the Holiday festivities. Jar prices will suit your purse. Give us a call. L Representative Wanted Highest pr Butter and 7 HE CITY BAKEFRY Your _ Holiday _ Groceries, Fruits and Confections 16e Tor Hd Reliable Fontbill Nurseries F0 Wl Yellow Corn ; The RXob Roy Cercal Mills Co. FHONES : Day §4, Night $ 26 We have a ire offering at TH STONE & WELLINGTON, Toronto, Ontario If you want Feed shipped to outside stations, call us ) and get delivered prices. We are in the market for Milling Oats, Feefl Oats, ixed Grain and Barley, and will pay highest prices for iy quantity at our Elevator. for DURHAM and District for Special Prices on Feed cat Chiecftain Corn Feed per ton, $27.00, sacks included Ground Feed Wheat per ton, 25.90, sacks included Oat Shorts, per ton, 23.00, sacks included Fresbjand Clean, the very best. _ See this Hay before purchasing elsewhere. i will pay you. Fvery bag guarantoed. T? not satisfactory bring it back and got your money. l s O E. A. ROWE k4 wi Shoe Store n and inspect our new st on the market. ou know that they can ma How about banana skins ? Ssarley and Oats Chop PEOPLE‘S MILLS REPAIRING PROMPTL\ embrace all the good rola, on the latest mc adsome Shoes, No l e priced aceording to st received a shipment of Suitâ€"cases and Clubbags, rom $1.40 to 5.50. Use for A**! JCKCG a good stock of other Feed on hand that we following prices in ton lots : Confectionery We have Yellow Corn in stock that we are selling in ton lots at......;.. of Childrer to aua | who is a soâ€"{«iv worker, to act as our | represenialive and to look after new \and ronewnl suvscriptions, We will \make the work easy, pleasant and | yery profitabl«. Qur terms are very liberal a: the proceeds will be very | acceptable to vou or to your favorite | patriotic socsety, _ Write at once for |terms and resouved district." Canaâ€" |dian Home Joarnal, 71â€"81 Richmond . 8. NMceILRAITH Military St., W.. e wa Toronto pecial Reduction $1.50 per 100 lbs. t in Men‘s Working 1 Bakery goods il of all kinds of make slippers out Oc !â€" in patent, gun Phey are stylish, ic is manufacturâ€" ne woman in Durbam iworker, to act as our nd in look after new wcriptions, We will © easy, pleasant and . Our terms are very proceeds will be very rou or to your favorite Cases which To Weak, Nervous, Runâ€"Down Women So. Cumberland, Md.â€"*"For a long time I suffered from a nervous breakâ€" down. _ I could not eat or sleep and was so weak I could hardly walk. My husâ€" band heard about Vinol and got me to try it. Now I have a Â¥ood appetite, sleep soundly and am well and strong. Every nervous, weak, runâ€"down woman should try Vinol. â€"Mrs. D. W. KErns. Vino! is a delicious cod liver and iron tonic, without oil, which we guarantee to create a healthy appetite, aid digesâ€" tion and make pure healthy blood. Mactarlane & Co., Druggists, ’ This year thero must be no backing up, The sitwation is more intense than it was. There is more suffering there are more widows aud orphans, and there are twice as many men cn the fighting line and under arms, As the war progresses the slaughter beâ€" comes greater, more shipping and more property are ruthlessly destroyed and the ery for help is keener, Were is not for the British Navy our allegiâ€" ance would cost us dear. Were it not for the united armies and for the or. ganization for protection from assass. ing, traitors and imeendiaries that exâ€" ists in our own land, we should be at the mercy of the same cruel and barâ€" barous forces that have oyerrun and laid waste Belgium, Poland and Serâ€" bia. We should be taxed beyond all bearing. Beliefontaine, Ohio.â€"“M‘i blood was very poorâ€"1I was in a weak, nervous, runâ€"down condition. I tried different remedies without benefit and one dai my druggist told me about Vinol. tried it and it built me up in eve? war â€" blood, strength and nerves, and I tell my friends it is the best medicine on earth.‘‘â€" Mrs. EAaRL BRUNSON. Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic without oil, sharpens the appetite, aids digestion, enriches the blood and in this Haturd'lflliihéigre;i'et;&-e;:x-tf Macfarlane & Co., Druggists, Darkham, Ont. WEAK, NERVOUS OHIO WOMAN Made Well By Delicious Vinol We hope our readers have giyen due hoeed to the articles on * Producâ€" tion and Thrift," issued by the Voâ€" minion government, the last of which articles appear this week on page 4. The fourfold advice should be taken seriously to heart and msmorized, so that it may constantly furnish a stimâ€" ulus to action. We repeat it here ; â€"Produce More and Save More. â€"Make Your Labor Efficient, â€"Do Not Waste Material, â€"SBpend Your Money Wisely. Last year Canada responded magâ€" nificently to the call of the Empire. The soil was cultivated to its utmost linut, with the result that a bountiful _harvest was reaped, Boys and girls united with their parents in showing the good will and the proud nationai spirit that they posseased. They bent their emergies towards making the land produce all that it was capable of doing, When the crops were gathâ€" ered granariee were full to overflow mg. Canada hbad cause for the celeâ€" bration of the greatest, most intenss, most earnest thanksgiving she had eyer known. That there was no un mindfuiness of the source from which all blessings flow was shown in action as well as in words. Patriotic gilts came from many direetions in many ways. The women worked with life and love. They gave the fruits of their labours and they gave their offâ€" spring. The men deyoted their acres and their services to the cause of the Empire. > Che Purkam Review Although still in oppostion the Liberals, under the leadersh1ip of Mr Rowell, actually obtained many reâ€" forms in the Legislature tais Session that they have striven for for years, with the result that such a Conseryaâ€" tiye paper as the Hamilton Spectator, for example, contains the following item : 1. Radical programme of social reform in aid of the working men and the working. 2. A thoroughâ€"going advance in agriculture, 8. Votes for women. 4. . Destruction of vhe patronage system. 5. Government control ot nickel. 6. Heaviee taxation of private aickel companies, Among the reforms accomplished this session by Mr Rowell and the Liberal party are the following ; 1. Prohibition, 2. Establishmeot of a Trades and Labor Branch . 8. War Resources Committee. 4, Northern Ontario development, 5. Hydro power for Eastern Onâ€" tario, as well as for the west. 6. Equal treatment for Ontario citizens in the armies of the Allies, 7. Submission to the House of T. N. 0. and Hydro aceounts, On the other hand, among the reâ€" forms advocated are : 7. Tax reform and to exclude tile drainage in taxation of farm property. «* Mr Scott Davidson, Luberal M. L, A. for North Brant in speakâ€" mg at London on Saturday. claimed that Mr N. W. Rowell was practicalâ€" ly leading the Legisiature, Quite a few people will consider the remark is more thar balf true." Summary of 1916 Legislature MRS. KERNS‘ ADVICE Production, Thrift, Economy $1.50 per year. $1.00 if paid E: advance. Durham, Ont. The Clarion Call MAY 41, 1916 THE DUBHAM REVIEV charge 2icâ€"all to be prepaid. Advertising Ratesâ€"Cards of Thanks Complimentary Addresses, 5 cents per line, minimum charge 50c ; notices of entertainments to be held, also notices of Lost, Found, Wanted or For Sale, 1c per word each insertion, minimum R H Fortune, 1st quarter salâ€" ary as olerk .....::..... «.+ 170 O0 Jas H Ellis, 1st quarter salary as treasurer................ 87 50 F D Schaus, one No 3 Ramâ€" bought in 1915............. 10 00 O Widmeyer, printing Audiâ€" tor‘s Report, Assossors‘ schedâ€" ules, etc., to date.......... 30 30 The Council adjourned to mee. in the Township Hall, Ayton, on Monâ€" day, May 29tbh, at 10 a. m., as a Court of Revision and for general business. ‘ CBLC .: .vs, Hnxkulix sls ts + ons 44 Trustees P. 8. No 16, balance of debentaure money ...... .. Commissioners looking after Tp business, Fischer 4.50, Filsinger 3.00, Barber 3.00 SObAL . : +Â¥ ¢1sx 1x s 1rr4%sss‘a‘s H Witherow, to pay parties rep washout cons 5 & 6 and <â€"Adair‘s bridges.......; ... .. Barberâ€"Fischerâ€"That the followâ€" ing accounts be paid : Council meeting at date... ....$16 20 alun. World sappites, ete. to Filsinger â€" Fisher â€" That Jacob Grein be allowed 2 days st. labor for repair drain on 9 and 10 con at lot 24. Carried. Barberâ€"â€"Filsinoger That the Counâ€" cil be a committee to make an inspecâ€" tion of a aumber of conerete culyerts and bridges, arches, etc., in the township of Minto, collecting all the information possible before huilding any more bridges in the Township of Normanby. â€"Carried. Barberâ€"KFilsinger â€" That Conrad Fischer be given the use of the townâ€" ship park on the same terms as last year, namely to loek after and keep clean, ete. Uimbachâ€"Barberâ€"That the Cletk be appointed as committee to inyestiâ€" gate the securicies of the Township Treasurer and report at the next meeting. â€"â€"Carried . Fischer â€" Filsinger â€" That Com Fischer be maintained to have the Ayton steel bridge repainted this spriog.â€"Carried . The Manicipal Council of the Townâ€" ship of Normanby met in the Clerk‘s oflise, Ayton, un Thursday, April 20th, at 1U a. m. Ali the members were present, the Reeve in the chair, The minutes of the last regalar meetâ€" ing were read and passed. TORONTO A few of the families nround here who have been knitting socks for the soldiers through the winter, have sent in over thirty pairs te the Ladies‘ Aid of the Pres. church, Durkham, besides other sewing, and are atill busy. Mr Stanley Mountain, Poplar Hili, is hired with W.J. Derby for the summer montlhs, The future of the empire rested in a large measure with Canads at the beginning. It rests with us to a greater extent now. We have inâ€" creased our responsibility, We bhave voluntarily added to the weight of our share of the titanic burden. We must bear the self imposed load cheerfully and generous!y, We must show our worthiness of the trust asâ€" sumed,. We must do all this and we must perform our taskse with. if at all possibte, increased zeal. u nâ€"=<. To halt or pause would be fatai, U« works of charity must continue to «i~ full and be added to. Our eye, not only on the present but also on the fumre, must neyer hesitate or waver. When peace comes our granaries and our stalls must be full. Pie. J. M, Derby, of the 147t6, Owen Sound, spent over Bunday at his bome here. The farmers of this locality are all pleased to see the fine weather and owing to the lateness of the season, will be extra busy for some aime. We are glad to see Mr James Park able to be out again after his long illâ€" ness. Read the article on page 4 and see that you memorize the fourfold inâ€" Junction 1,â€"â€"Produce More and Save More, 2.â€"Make Your Labor Efficient. 8.â€"Do Not Waste Material. 4.â€"Spend Your Money Wisely, Miss Ethel Derby visited for a few days with Allan Park triends. Miss Evelyn MclLean viaited for week with friends at Walkerton. To day we are called upon to do our share of the fighting, to care fori the sick and wounded, to honour the dead and to admire the living heroâ€" and they are all heroes who go fortbh â€"toâ€"morrow we may be summoued to replenish the earth, to help in the arts of peace and to do all we can to assist in repairing the termible ravages of a war that has taken on such proâ€" portions in magnitude and eayagery that eyen " Armageddon " is scarcely vhought a fitting descriptive term. In short, it is our duty to be prepared for any and every eventuality, both present and future. At war, we are yet not at war, We can plough, sow and reapâ€"and tend our flocks and herds undisturbed by the thunder of artillery, We can carry on our inâ€" dustries . without let or hindrance. Ve oan win glory on the battlefield or ~we tan live our own lives amid peace and plenty. Ail that is deâ€" manded is remembrance of our counâ€" try and truth to ourselves. That is the clarion call. Mrs A,. Corbett spent a few days last week at Owen bourd with her son Fred, who is training with the 147th, also with other friends. NORMANBY *COUNCIL SOUTH BENTINCK =â€"â€"â€"Â¥# 4 â€"_â€"__ . R. H. ForTUXNE, Clerk 81 40 10 50 T5 30 gfl imE y > Fishing 5& C P. K. Town Oiliice Duy your Uurets Horo & 1 No migue on aaare comemnen nn permenne tot Ried S Reres â€" Sieia 0 oR & EL Departmental Store You have double sport when you fish with a satieâ€" factory fishing tackle. We have everything necessary, â€"steel poles, split bamboo, all the latest in lines and hooks. C P. R. Town Office Sales # Practise economy in the home by eliminating luxurâ€" I Spefld Your MOfle’ WBCIY | ies. ‘Wastimg our doliars here weakens our strength at the Front. Your savings will help Canada to finance the war. Save your money for the next Dominion War issue. There can be no better investment. THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE THE DEPARTV The Empire needs food. _ If you are not in the fightâ€" | Pl'Odnce Mm'e and Save Mflre I ing line pyou may be in the producing line. Labour T is limitedâ€"all the more reason to do more than ever before. Grow food for the men who are fighting for you. The Allies need all the food that you can produce. Every little helps. You are responsible for your own work. If you cannot produce as much as you would like, produce all you can. Work with the right spirit. Put fighting energy into your effort and produce now when it counts. The more you produce the more you can save. Producing and saving are warâ€"service. * In warâ€"time do not waste time and energy on unimâ€" I Make Your l.abom' Ehm | portant and unprofitable work. Economize labour. T Put off unproductive work till after the war, and, if possible, help in preducing something mneeded now. Let us not waste labour. Canada needs it all. If possible help to feed theâ€"Allies. Make your backyard a productive garden. Cultivate it with a will. Make your labour count for as much as possible. 5 * There should be no waste in warâ€"time. Canada could Do NO[ Waste M&tfl'lll’s pay the annual interest on her war expenditure out of what we waste on our farms, in our factories, in our homes. Every pound of feod saved from waste is as good as a pound of increased production. ‘The way fer a nation to save is for every individual to save. France is strong toâ€"day because of thrift in time of peace. The mer and women of Great Britain are not only " doing ‘‘ but are learning to * «o without." roduction and [hrift Boys‘ Heavy Split Bluc, plain and very soft stock .. * e toe £ap.:.: :: :!x. saahaxras We have full lines in all Children‘s Shoes. If you have a weak or sore foot Women‘s Pliable Chrome Bals, good and comfortable. i Heavy Grain Bals, guaranteed waterproof.. (% xa plain and Al stock..... We will quote prices on a few of our lines : Men‘s heavy Split Bluc, a good serviceable shoe..... *4 14 *‘ + » » 200 _ extra heavy Split Bluc, guaranteed to be waterproof.... 2.75 _ heavy Reinforced Elk Shoe, a snap while they last.... 3.00 _ heavy Tan Blk, ons of the best on the market..... ... 3.50 We have a special shoe for Men for Heavy wear, built on the Military last. Don‘t fail to see t when you call. It sells at 3.10 Having bought it nearly a year ago when prices by giving everyone a chaunce to buy good Shoes We have it and Lots of it for Spring is here again GOOD FOOTWEAR MacFARLANE & CO. BUY YOUR SHOES NoW G. & J. McKECHNIE McKechnie‘s Weekly News s Highest Price for all 27 " _ " Yea‘" or sore foot, try a pair of our Double E Donâ€" gola Sheesâ€"they will give you eomfort. ‘The old price... 2. CANADA‘S CALL FOR SERVICE AT HOME Tackle for weak, puny children, builds up the system,increasâ€" es the appetite. A thorough builder s'-w Wine of Cod Liver Extract Sav e the Â¥are Coupons Buy your tickets here , Women, Girls, Boys and Children ICH ED BLOOD good and comfortable.. . ... THE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE of exssmEsEs sR , | Wall were lower, thereâ€" at the old prices. and with it comes the need of PAY We still have alarge stock from which to make your choice in al} designs and colors to suit everyone. Others are well satisfied. Why not you ? All colors and designs Window Durham MAY 4, ic 1.75 2.15 Paper Shades The undersigne Commercial Hore Pricevilie. Immed en. For further po the premises, Pare brea 5. T. for sale. As the un moving away trom sime during the m will sell setiings « setting until time o W. Sacl arranged . lor will be sold a rumhm«-r ve a enediate ; Youean purc} Well situate ham, contain in tie more mo: time own a: ing lots alon; it desined eall at ®r wii Chambe Liniment gives promp in @ll muse deep seated rheumatiem efficient. All druggists 25c. : lumbego, e rnd.-d to rul chest for c «nd coughs. 1« dom in lo0} having to be ent as a wat pain from + the joints, « hibit Make ¢ healing wonly in C ment. | "The *Ri; RHEU M etc. \Varm tine, Brus nothing w We hay JAS How a We wa duce ar Every W MAY 4 Residence Rest and i; tonig ht | Eggs for la Woo For & shes © ® in AI J

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