#¢% iA & [ Nortonâ€" "It‘s got so bad nowadays that a man can‘t marry unless he can‘ show a girl two licenses." Peblar: "I don‘t ‘ollew you." Norton : "Why, marâ€"| riage and motor car." Accountancy, stenography, typewritâ€" ing and general improvement courses; superior instruction only. Students assisted to positions. Open all year. Write for prospectus. Enter now. Phone No. 4 Clansman Stock Feed per ton.........$40.00 sacks included Chieftain Mixed Feed per ton......... 38.00 s Ground Feed Wheat per ton............ 25.00 y Oat Shorts per ton......................... 35.00 * Ground American Corn per 100 lbs... 2.20 :# Whole American Corn per 100 lbs.... 2.10 £* Whole American Corn per 100 lbe.... 2.00 without sacks Special Prices in Five ton lots. f Above prices are Strictly Cash. Town orders delivered if paid in advance. Orders for shipment to outside points filled at above prites F.O0:B. Durham, Cash must be sent with all outside orders. We are in the market for any kind of Graie. Highest prices We have a large stock of Feed on hand that we are ofâ€" fering at following prices at Durham : Special Prices on Feed Yonge and Charles Sts., Toronto ROB ROY MILLS, Limited : No. 4 DURHAM, ONTâ€" Business Hoursâ€"â€"â€"8 a. m. to 5 p. m. W. J. Elliott, Principal ‘*CGOOSE WEXAT WANTED stein spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs P. Cornisk, » Mrs. Gillespie of Galt who was here attending the funeral of her sister returned to her bhome on Monâ€" day, Mr. John Kirby and family wish to thank their many friends and neighbors for their kinduess during their sad bereavement. . Also for their many floral tributes. y Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Pinder of Holâ€" m 25.00 35.00 2.20 2.10 ORCHARD ( Holstein this summer will partâ€" icipate in League foetball for the first time having been grouped with ’Mt. Forest in the Intermediate West. ern Football Assn. â€" The two teams compose Group 10o, and a double schedule will be drawn up on April 25 in Mt. Forest. Thereare 34 teams entered in the Int. series and we predict our boys will make a credit. able showing in their first league contests. Ros Rovy Frourâ€"Pure Manitoba Patent Flour $5.00 per sack, at the mills. Clansman Pastry flour $1.25 for two 4 lb sacks, delivered. _ _ _ _ _ Egremont may wel!l be proud of its Referendum vote. With 779 majâ€" ority, it has the largest of any munâ€" icipality in Grey County and Holstein poll with 241 majority is the largest of any township poli in the County, No. 6 poli had the largest pereentage favoring the Referendam in the townâ€" ship with 115 yes to 5 no, or 23 to 1 The yote will be found on this page. Mrs D. Grier bhas returned afte‘ |spending some © weeks with her daughter, Mrs Ezra® Halliday, Glen Rden. â€" _ Mrs Thos. Allan, Durham, visited Mr and Mrs D. Allan:aud other friends this week,. Mr and Mrs Jno. Williamson, Pailm. erston, spent over last week end with Mr and Mrs D. Allan. * Some time ago it appeared as though an early seeding was assured. It wili yet be about the usual time. Some sowing was done before the sleet storm. It was rather a blue outlook for the cream gatherers starting out Monday mornivg: E. Smith with team and Coburn:Bros: with truek. However Smith emptied otice and Cobnrn twice the first day, . A good beginning unâ€" der adverse conditions. By reports the sleet and rain did considerable damage in different parts but apart from some slight damages to telephone systems, nothâ€" ing to report. Mr Gordon Sceott of Gueiph spent over the week end at the manse. F. Allingbam spent a few days with his family last and this week, Holstein on the Football Map. Cablemen are repairing the teleâ€" phone wires which were damaged by a recent storm. It is reported the management of the telephone will change hands on May 1. € Locat AnD PERsoRAL The Misses Drumm, Toronto, spent Sunday with their parents returning The regular meeting of the Readâ€" ing Gircle met on Tuesday eve at the home of Miss Ross. Mrs Seaman ‘Sr., is visiting her mother in Clifford at present,. _‘ Nurse Fettes is attending Mrs Mickleborough at present. The James family (Indiaus) who spent two or three weeks in the vilâ€" lage left Saturday morning. Miss Lizzie Brownis visiting her mother and other friends. HOLSTEIN LEADFE R. S. McGowan Phone 83 | i(_’epf;d_'s’?i?i,é"ih!th& wondéris if anything }wl} Wwaken people up other than an ‘emâ€" pty stomach or a bare back. The gospel of work is needed toâ€"day as much as the gospel of salvation. They are practically the one thing. There will be no prosâ€" perity in this or any .country until men and women get down to doing an honest day‘s work and forget all about the high pay they got during the war. But work is not alone sufficient. We need to cut ‘ out waste. Lack of judgement and scandalous profligacy have been throw*| ing earnings to the winds. The head ' of the scavenging department in one of, our large cities said recently that there is five.times as much waste to be found | toâ€"day that there was during the war.â€" | Solomon in Shoe and Leather Journal. | TIB DURBAM RRVIRW ~ 0 d atics ciniictes S riie in nres C atan i hk t so unpopulact. The"Mceping‘‘ ibgase is anidesnin‘bnÂ¥ the wardania‘if anotHinn _ Herd work is the oniy sure road to to any kind of success. You never find a man who is unafraid of hurting his his muscles, in the bread line. "Much food is in the tillage of the poor, but there is much that is destroyed for want of judgement." We are just now feelâ€" ing the effects of the distaste that has growrn on people fer what they call "mere grubhbing"; . There never was a time in the history.of the world when work mas | Disease causes a yearly financial loss to Ontario farmers due to smut at least $2,720,000. ~Itis claimed that at least $1,800,000, is the loss in oats alone. Yet it is known: by careful management, that at least 75 per cent of that loss could be eliminated by treatiug the seed graiu with formalin. Loose smut of oats, stinking smut of wheat and the covered smut of barley, can be preâ€" vented. Why won‘t more farmers use thetreatment? It pays every year. The cost is practically nothing yet the benâ€" efits derived are worth while. How to treatâ€"Easily done Take one pint 6f Formalin, put it into 40 gallons of water. Thoroughly mix the solution . Heap the grain on an old oil cloth or canvas on the floor. Sprinkâ€" ;e the Formalin solution over the grain by means of a watering can and turn the heap over with a shovel. Turn the seed over till every grain is dampenee Cover the pile with a canvas or sacking and leave for three or four hours. At the end of that timespread out thinly to dry If the grain is shovelled over two or three times it will dry quicker. Forty gallons is enough to treat 30 to 40 bushels of seed. If less then that amount is reâ€" quired tor seed use less Formalin and water but be sure that the proportion is the same. Winter was again with us last Sat: n(} Sunday, bat . made only a brief call. y Sorry to report Alex. McDonald is bothered with heart trouble. He has let his farms out on shares as hired help is scarce : one place to Stanley Williams and the other to J. Wilson. Rverybody has started plowing in our burg, Mr George Lane is digging the cellar for his new house. Mrs Albert Bel! was also happy to vote, though sworn, which may be taken as a tribute to her youthful apâ€" pearance, Mr Thos. Harrison had the misforâ€" tuoe to have his right â€"hand drawn into a cutting box last week and had part of the index fingertaken off, the two next fingers broken® and his arm badly lacerated below the elbow. We are high!y gratiffed:@at the vote of our good old township on Monday last in spite of the fulminations and abusive langnage of Prof. Leacock and Messrs Hellmuth and Flyno, A majority of nearly $00 will scarcely be equ{Ied in the County. Mr W. L. Dixon, with characterisâ€" tic zeal for a good cause, though sevâ€" erely indisposed got Mr Thos. Harriâ€" son to draw him to the poll and xeci?rded his yote against the great evil. > Hall, Dromore, Wriday, April s2nd. The program ists of recitetions, songs, drills, clubswinging and the funny play.entitied "From Pympkin Ridge." Don‘t miss\this It is a real treat. Admission 35r and 15c. Proâ€" gram starts at 8 p. m.\sharp. Treat your Grain for Smut SACKETT‘S CORNER NORTH Work #ipopular t TORONTO | _The town that never has anything to | do in a public way is on the road to the: | cemetery.sa;s an exchange. The citâ€" | izen who will do nothing for his town |\ is helping to dig the grave. The man | that curses the town furnishes the coffin . | The man who says he has no time fromhis | business to give to municipal matters . \is making the shroud. The man who | ,*C‘mï¬ot advertise is driying the hearse. The man who is so stingy as to be forâ€" "mr howling hbard times preaches the Auneral sErmon, sings the dozoiogy, and thus theâ€"town lies buried: from ail| Sorrow and care, and the mayor Mu1 nevet leave town without a crepe band| A Surmpay IncipE®sT in WarxERtO®. â€"At a time when the local preachers were, or should have been, on the home stretch on their morning sermons last Sunday the fire bell rang, and the conâ€" gregations were suddenly swept from thinking of an eternal blaze that can‘t be quenched to a home fire that needed extinction right in their midst. Alâ€" though the congregations, seemed deeply interested in both fires, yet if we are to judge by the way some people got up and walked out, together with the restâ€" lese stirring of the others who remained, the competition between the pulpit and the bell showed somewhat to the advan* tage of the brass tocsin, thus demonstratâ€" Jng that man is more alarmed over some concrete physical blaze here than over the great abstract conflagration of hereafter. ‘Not even a Billy Sunday can make them ‘bit ‘the Sawdust trail" like a fire bel} will for the door on the Sabbath. Many | peoplé; including some preachers, don‘t | believe there is a hell fire, and while it is a beautiful thought, yet like Rachel cryâ€" ing for her children and won‘t be comâ€" forted, we would feel more satisfied to know that Satan was dead and his kingâ€" dom floodedover with water.â€"Walkerton ‘ Heraldâ€"Times. | ! 1 Orange Hall 91 14 _‘ 77 2 Flesherton _ 68 _ 11 67 3 Proton Stn _ 71 15 56 4 Ceylon y 5 Priceville 6 Vandeleur 93 3 90 7 Eugenia 56 â€" 23 33 8 Portlaw DUNDALKâ€"Yes majority 196 1 266 _ 70 196 ~ FLESHERTONâ€"Yes majority 140 .___ HANOVERâ€"Yes majority 147 NEUSTADTâ€"No majority 84 1 13 97 MARKDALEâ€"Yes majority 253 1 345 92 253 OSPREY 2 Maxwell 97 38 59 5§ Mcintyre 57 10 47 HOLLAND 1 Arnetts 91 14 77 3 Berkeley 141 _ 44 97 4 Moggie 91 _ 40 51_ 5 Holl. Centre 125 45 80 6 Massie 102 2 °* 100 SULLIVAN Kinghurst 51 49 2 4 Peabody 88 ° 33 55 1 Arnetts 3 Berkeley 4 Moggie 5 Holl. Centre 6 Massie 8 Proton Stn 53 9 1 Alsfeldt 2 Ayton 3 Ford‘s 4 Hampden & Blyth‘s 6 Nenagh 7 Gleneden PROTONâ€"Yes majority 431 1 Cedarville 1 Ritchie‘s 130 2 Glen 15 3 Markdale § Tp. Hail 1 Tobermory 2 Clark‘s 70 3 Hutton Hill â€" 57 4 Allan Park 104 5 Camp. Cor. 6 Lamlash 113 8 Eimwood Referendum Vote, S.£. Grey Why Some Towns are dend Yes No Yes No _ maj. maj DURHAMâ€"Yes majority 359 1 North 118 45 18 2 East 166 _ 44 122 3 West 215 81 164 EGREMONTâ€"Yes majority 779 1 Allan‘s 83 13 Kid 2 Dromore 131 11 120 3 Holstein 263 22 241 4 Yeovil 151 19 132 5 Mt.Forest 127 â€" 21 106 6 Drury‘s 115 5 110 Incomplete figures below give a ‘Yes‘ majority of 3600 for prohibiting importâ€" ation of liquor. â€" Complete returns will likely put the majority over 4000 Jesboro â€" 87 100 CHATSWORTHâ€"Yes majority 95 146 51 95 ARTEMESIA 11 91 14 NORMANBY GLENELG 110 16 113 â€" 88 67 15 93 19 7200 21 18 42 91 21 24 19 109 51 82 74 §1 12 14 15 13 11 a â€" Penslar Dynamic Tonic.......... ... ... M (A bitter appetizing and Nerve Tonic) aA Wanpole'sCodLiverCo-puu.‘......... : M ('l"'he year round tonic) . ‘C ~Compound Syrup of pophosphites . .. . . . A * ’(Anavyendtiuu“fl.) AA Compound Extract of Sarsaparitia __ _ 7 3223326E66Ee EbtEEErErccec, â€" 2 SPRING TonNics ent, or write General Passenger ment. Toronto. $4 Alternative train from Toronto leaves 8.45 p. m., routing via Sudbury, Port Arthur, and Fort William. For full particulars, apply to nearest Canadian Nat'ional or Grand Trunk Ag» pnF me cveine #XL00 Feme uo 1_ ' The National, leaving Toronto 11.00 p. m. daily, carries through Tourist sleeping and Colonist Cars, Toronto to Winnipeg, with connection at the latter point for ' Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia points The Tourist Cars on these trains are of exceptionall y fine design, of stee! construction, electric lighted, and include the many little conâ€" veniences heretofore embodied in stan daâ€" ard sleeping Cars only. In fact. the only difference between the two cars is in the upholstering, which in the Tourist Car is of leather, rather than plush. On these cars, therefore, the traveller is aff» orded the maximun of comfort and conâ€" venience at modefate Tourist sleeping Car rates. there and to these the service afforded via the Canadian National Railways has a particular appeal. With the approaching Spring season, many are oonumplat_ing the journey to The National Way to Western Canac!a to their hï¬; l;;;ut: Deline previously had a bad police record. In Ohio in 1917 he was given not less than one year nor more 15 years in *the Ohio State Penitentiary for burglary. The name Deline used at that time was ‘"‘Jacob Deline". months term for B, O. T. A. was tried last week before Police Magistrate Creasor on two charges of theft preferrâ€" ed against him by local citizens, and was convicted on each charge, _ Deline was given not less than one year nor more than eighteen months in the the Ontario Reformatcry on each charge terms to run concurrently. The first conviction was for the theft of a gold watch chain and locket valued at $73 from Mr. J. R.Crowe. The second conviction was for the theft of gold coin from Mrs. Caroline McDonwAId. Deline ‘ was also acquitted on another ch|r|e1 of theft of $23 from a Mrs. Thompson.| John Deline, the notorious individual who was caught near Dornoch last week and brought to the <County Gaol, where he had begun to servea two “s. "acaem Mflnd Stationer, Durham ! "‘Mighest Prices Paid for all Produce. 33323233292 2222232323323 3" TAYLOR & CO‘Y Does a lightâ€"fingered Gent. Polarine Motor Oil in. Light, Mediam apd Heavy at $1.20 a gal. or 5 gals. for 5.50 Goes to Reformatory Every person, young and4 old alike., should the spring. _ We have a large range ol first to choose from. Here are a few of the 1. . _DROMORE, ONT. PHONE : Store, 2 on 15 ; House, 2â€"â€"3 on 15 Get yours before it is too late. are offering for a short time only â€" Late last fall we were fortunate enough to buy a quantity of POLARINE Motor Oil and since then the price has been steadily increasing. ‘ In order to give our customâ€" ers & chance to secure a season‘s supply at loss than toâ€"day‘s wholesale price, we Western Canada You Use (A blood mpound . .. .... ... ... ... I.OOQ.‘ year round tonic) . Fos : ‘arge range ol firstâ€"class Tonics are a few of the leading ones : soss+s«>>...>.; T5c and 1.50 Durham is an attractive and healthy town and good accommndation can be obtained at reasonable rates. Antending pupils should prepare to enâ€" ter at the beginning of the fall term. Information as to courses may be obâ€" tained fro n the Principal. The School has a creditable record in the past which it hopes to maintain in the future . The School is thoroughi uipped to take up the‘following c:ur:c:q he* 1.Jua rii0r atrieulation 2. Entrance to the Normal Bchools 3. Benior Matriculation SCHOOL ’ASK FOR IT M E.xApgct‘ to find Each member of the staff is a Univâ€" sity graduate and an experienced cos INDIGESTION will always ask for Krâ€"MOoIDS _ _ _(Tablets or Granutes) should @ke a tonic in Scott & Bowne, Toronto, Ont. “.I' H. R. KOCH, Chairman ALEX. SCAMPBELL ; Principa) 91 «k Pe e S \ VO It the e looks lik only 1 v polled t and whi was an «d and the issue there by who ca imion in probably down in Even wil osa easil Ontamo jand H of Hano\ ghan bui hardware The four handles J ranges ef line of h will be d doubties less in t« the mert the new H. C Ros J ing 40 t« ley, Oc $1.20 to this wee Busi®| with has business reet . C dressed LIDrary 8 o‘clo« Aid Soc foo Migheay Stock Dan, M Farm ham. ; eel The OR ro8