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Durham Review (1897), 12 Oct 1922, p. 4

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[# l a‘: tA ts# % v Pu Eo4 CA (64 tm Sead o t 54 ifto i ‘,;e“ M B R l ER Sume.)) e es iB e Che Durham HReview Sunday, Sept. 17th, 1916, was u.”'brewerie' and distilleries would throw first day of Provincial prohibition in| so many men out of work that there Ontario. The Ontario Temperance would be widespread business deâ€" Act was passed during the war perâ€" pression. The ultimate consequence iod, with the promise that after nor.| would be that all tourists and immiâ€" mal conditions had returned a vote or| grants would shun us. our factories the clectors would be taken. That and foundries would close, and the vote was taken on Oct. 20, 1919, and grass would grow in our streeis. ounly so, but 741,007 votes were cast| This was a cheerful prospect surely, against the Act, as against 193_942‘ but the fact that 574 out of 851 muniâ€" for its continuance. Not only so but Cipalities in the Province were alâ€" 141,007 votes were cast against the|ready dry, and had experienced no sale of light beer through governâ€"/serious results from the fact, made ment agencies, and only 401,%93 fay. the people of Ontario quite willing to ored it. And so Ontario has had the try the experiment on a wider scaie. benefit of siz years of Provincial proâ€"j Now we have had six years experâ€" hibition and is able to speak some ience of the benefits or evils of pro-‘ what definitely concerning it. hibition, and the results speak for 1 Fordson Tractor ‘ 1 Wilkinson Cutting Box with pipes ‘ for silo filling 1 Cireular Sawing Machine 50 feet Canvas Belting 1 Mas.â€"Harris Binder, used 2 seasons 1 Masseyâ€"Marris Fertilizer Drill Sums of $10 and under, cash. Over that amount, 10 months credit on approved joint notes, bearing interest at 7 per cent. 1922, at i o‘clock, the following Choice Stock & Implements : Wednesday, Oct. 18th Driving hoese, 12 years old Cow, call at foot Cow 3 yrs. old, supposed in calf black Cows, 3 yrs.old, supp.in calf Cow, 4 yis. old, supposed in calf black Heifers, 3 years old Yearlings Purebred Shropshire Ram. Public Auction Sale ARTHUR GREENWOOD, Prop. D. McPHAIL, Auctioneer Six Years of Prohibition When writing, kindly state sex, and age or ages last birthday. = Canada‘s Best Buy â€" % Tue ECONOMY rackace _y‘ib'NW OOF (mso reocursers. of Farm Stock and Implements Lot 45, Con. + Glene]g, on There will be sold by Public Auction at 5 1922 TERMS OF SALE 1 Masseyâ€"Harris High Spreader * 1 McCormick Spreader 1 McCormick Mower 1 McCormick Sulky Rake 1 International stiff tooth Cultivator 1 Steel Roller. 1 Dise Harrow. 1 set Iron Harrows. 1 Scuffler. 1 Turnip Sower. 2 Long Ploughs. 1 Masseyâ€" Harris Gang Plough. 1 Melotte Cream Separator. 1 Waggon. 1 Basket Hay Rack. 1 Tolton Pea Harvester. 1 Top Buggy. 2 Sugar Ketiies. 2000 Clay Tile, three inch. 1 Extension Table, and numerous other articles. \ When first it was mooted we were told very plainly that it would mean financial ruin. _ The province could not get along without its share of liquor revenue : the municipalities could not do without theirs : the closâ€" ing of the bars would mean ruin to the hotels : and the closing of the breweries and distilleries would throw so many men out of work that there would be widespread business deâ€" pression. The ultimate consequence Â¥z Ib. Pacuace 15¢) $4 ers. Jr. Pr.â€" B. Classâ€"G. Bieman, D. B An asterisk dance during Pr. ers Rev. J. A. Matheson of Mono Mills, and formerly of Priceville, was a popular nominee for Moderator of the Synod of Toronto and Kingsion, meeting in Toronto this week. He failed to win out however, Dr. Mc Gillivray of Guelph being the newly elected Moderator. 4thâ€"D. Twamley Biemann, lam, R. 4 The only local sufferer we have heard of is a son of John McArthur of the Glen, whose home and garage in Haileybury was clean swept away, escaping only with their lives. The origin of the fire is found in many little fires, farmers burning brush and waste and the sudden onâ€" coming of a violent wind fanned them to dimensions past all fignting. The prompt response in offers of help from outside the burnt disâ€" trict, has also been remarkable and gratifying, Toronto especially having been most generous in car loads of food and clothing. Stories of hardship and suffering are heartrending and the gloom is lightened by other stories of heroic action in the great crisis. One reads with deep feeling the efforts of car owners, who nobly drove even through flames to save the threatened population, and but for this timeiy work, there would have been hundâ€" reds on the death roll. While we went to press last week, a fire of huge dimensions blighted a large area of Northern Ontario, causâ€" ing a loss of life of 45 or 50, and a property damage of $8,000,000 or more. _ The town of Haileybury was in the main path of the flames and but few habitable houses remain of this once flourishing town. Churches, Cathedral, hotels and costly public buildings all now in ruins. A dozen or more other urban communities have also suffered severely, and great districts of farming communities are swept clean. themselves. In the first place the evil results predicted by our wet friends, havé not materialized. _ inâ€" stead of prohibition acting as a drag on the commercial life of the country, it has been a real help. During the difficult period of postâ€"war readjustment, our path has been smoothed not a little by the fact that the stumbling block of the legalized liquor traffic has been removed. Inâ€" stead of losing population we have gained. Instead of immigrants shunâ€" ning our borders,we have found ii necessary to restrict immigration by law. This is no fairy tale, but the records are written in black and white in bank ledgers, in manufacturâ€" er‘s statistics, and in the Provincial records. Ontario is not the poorer, but the richer, for six years of proâ€" hibition. It is worthy of note here that during the recent Exposition in Toronto, when a million and a quarâ€" ter people attended the fair, police made only one arrest. Surely this is a noteworthy fact that certainly does not tend to discredit prohibition. i ~GOOD TEETH Sr Northern Ontario‘s Calamity Adlam Reay*, Scott‘s Emulsion Dunn*, L. Dt [. Aird*, U. E. Biemann nourishes the whole body. It contains elements that build strm boneâ€"structure healthy dentition. Scott & Bowne, Torento, Ont. 246 mean a well Mulock 4thâ€"L. 1 m, Bessie A *, B. Adlam McCallum, S Adlam and the boneâ€"structure y supplied with lime. â€"L. ReRay Hastie, M . Bailey Bailey, . Torry Aird*, denotes 1 the month School nourished Fiddis ‘. McDougall, A Brunt, R. Brunt s perfect atten: ith of Septem: Report. M. Brown. MceCallum Teacher 3rd Ad Jr. _ Let us not dare to add to the burâ€" der of another, the pain of our jucgâ€" ment. If we would guard our lips from expressing, we must control our mind, we must stop this continual sitting in judgment on the acts of others, even in private. Let us by daily exercise in self control learn to turn off the process of judging. Let us eliminate pride, passion, personal feeling, prejudice and pettiness from our mind and higher, purer emotions will rush in. Let us cultivate charicy in judging ; let us seek to draw out latent good in others rather than io discover hidden evil. Let us, if we. would rise to the full glory of our. privilege, to dignity of true living,l take for our watchword the injunction of the Supreme Ruler of the worlc,‘ "Judge not." We know nothing of the sorrows, trials, and temptations of those aâ€" round us, of the secret cares, strugâ€" gles and worries that shorten life and leave their mark in character chanâ€" ged and almost recreated in a few days. The individual can attain selfâ€"conâ€" trol in great things only through self control in little things. He must ‘stu(ly himself to discover what is his weak point and what it is that keeps him from his fullest success. Then he should live day by day as if it were his only day left for him to conâ€" quer all that is worst in him. Will he be king, or will he be slave ? The first most deadly instrument of destruction is the human tongue. It kills reputations, and often ruins characters. The crimes of the tongue are words of unkindness, of anger, of malice, of envy, of bitterness, of harsh criticism, gossip, lying and scandal. Theft and murder are awfui crimes, yet the sorrow, pain and sufâ€" fering they cause is small in comparâ€" ison with the sorrows that come from the crimes of the tongue. At the hands of the thief or murâ€" derer few of us suffer, even indirectâ€" ly, but from the careless tongue or a friend, the cruel tongue of an enâ€" emy, who is free ? Our flippant, careâ€" less words of judgment of the charâ€" acter of someone, words lightly spoâ€" ken, may be carried by unknown currents and bring sorrow, misery and shame to the innocent. A cruel smile Selfâ€"control may be developed in the same manner as we tone up a weak muscleâ€"by little exercises day by day. Let us each day do a few acts that are disagreeable to us, the doing of which will help us in our hour of need. The exercises may be very simpleâ€"such as dropping for a time a very interesting book at the most thrilling part of the storyâ€"talkâ€" ing to some disagreeable person and trying to make the conversation pleaâ€" sant. Such exercises as these and dozens of others will have a wonâ€" drous effect on the whole moral naâ€" ture. Any man may attain self control if he only will. He cannot make a habit in a moment or break it in a moment but at any moment he may begin to make or break any habit. At each moment of his life, he is either a king or a slave. As he surâ€" renders to a wrong appetite, to any human weakness or failure, he is a slave. As he day by day crushes out human weakness and day by day reâ€" creates a new self from the sin and folly of his pastâ€"then he is a king. He is a king ruling with wisdom over himself. Alexander conquered the wholé world exceptâ€"Alexander. Man often looks with envy upon the possessions of others and wishes they were his own; sometimes even growâ€" ing bitter and storming at the wrong distribution of the good things of life, and then relapses into a helpless acâ€" ceptance of his condition. a feeble worm of the dust" idea, and more of, the conception "I am a great human soul with marvellous possibiâ€" lities" as a vital element in his daily working religion. With this view ot life, he sees how he may attain his kingship through self control. When a man fails in life he usâ€" ually says "I am as God made me." When he succeeds, he proudly proâ€" claims himself "a selfâ€"made man." Man is placed in this world a§ a posâ€" sibility and his greatest enemy is himself. He needs less of the "I am The Kingship of Self Control It is said man has two creatorsâ€" his God and himself. His first Creaâ€" tor furnishes him the raw material of his life and the laws in conformity with which he can make that life what he will. His second creatorâ€" himselfâ€" has marvellous powers ne rarely realizes. It is what a man makes of himself that really counts. Prepareq and read at the October moeeting of the Women‘s Institute by ‘Mrs. Will Glass. ONTARIO ARCHIVEs TORONTO THE DUBHAM REVIEW Funny what peculiar places woâ€" men hide things. If you don‘t believe it just try to find an extra quilt some sharp night when your wife is away on her holidays. DURKHAM BAPTIST CHURCH ECAMERON, B. A., B. Th., Pastor Sunday, October 15th, 1922 11 a.m.â€""I was not ‘disobedient." . 7 p.m.â€""The First Recorded Autumn Altar" (Cain and Abel.) & Special Notice â€"Remember Anniverâ€" sary Sunday, Oct. 29th. All ladies of the Saugeen Red Cross Society are requested to meet at the home of Mrs. G. Boyd, Oct. 18, for the purpose of making comrorâ€" ters for the new hospital in Durham. All ladies are welcome who are interâ€" ested. _ ; Messrs M. Kenney and Jas. Hesâ€" lip, have been buying stock cattle for feeding. The bridge over the Saugeen River at Glenroaden, has been reâ€"covered. Mr. McCuaig and Mr. H. Vaughan did the work. The threshing is all finished in this part for another year. Miss Muriel Heft spent the week end with her cousin, Florence Robâ€" ertson. Miss Merle Robertson left on Saturâ€" day to spend a few monhs in Toronâ€" to. We â€"wish her all success in her first start out in life. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Givens ana daughter Eileen, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shewell. Sorry to hear Mr. Chas. Mortley is under the doctor‘s care and may have to undergo an operation. _ We hope though after an Xâ€" ray examination it will not be found necessary. Mr. and Mrs. C. Mcintosh, Mr. &.; and Miss Margaret Mcintosh, spent Sunday with Mrs. A. MciIntosh. Heartiest congratulations are exâ€" tended to Miss Janet Livingstone of Townsend‘s Lake, on her marriage to Mr. C. Oldfield of Corbetton , which took place last week. Mrs. C. MciIntosh and daughter Peggy left on Tuesday for Kingston to spend a few days with friends beâ€" fore leaving for her western home. Mr. and Mrs. White and son Albert, also Mrs. Lowe of Chesley, spent the firs! of the week at the Dargavei‘s. The steam shovel has moved as far north as Dornoch. We hope soon to have the roads in better conâ€" dition. Miss Lamb, our popular teacher, is attending the Teachers‘ Convenâ€" tion in Markdale. Mr. and Mrs. T. Lauder and Mr. and Mrs. R. Lawson, spent a day the first of the week visiting Owen Sound friends. Mrs. Elms of Hamilton, is spend ing a few days with her aunt, Mrs Arch. McKechnie. Congratulations to the Durham high school pupils on coming off vieâ€" tors on Field Day. Mrs. Arch. McKechnie is still very ill and at time of writing is suffering a great deal of pain. Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Watson arfd famâ€" ily of Toronto, spent the week end with friends in these parts. ROCKY SAUGEEN The W. M. S. held their annual thank offering in the church. In the absence of Mrs. Lane who was unabâ€" le to be present, Mrs. Sillars gave a splendid address. There was a gooGg attendance and an interesting time spent. The offering was $18. . The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. D. McKechnie on Weq., Nov. iIst. The weather has turned very cool and wet. After having such lovely weather last week, folks feel the change very much. Mr. Jack and Miss Sara Ferguson, and Mr. and Mrs. Jno. F. McDonald and Messrs Peter and Gordon Mcâ€" Donald of Proton, took in the barn raising at Mr. Hugh McDonald‘s. Mr. Dougald Clark has been under the weather lately but we are pleasâ€" ed to say he is better again. Mr. Alex. Fletcher and sisters, Misâ€" ses Margaret and Lottie, visited friends in Paisley last week. Mr. Hugh McDonald had his barn successfully raised last Thursday aftâ€" ernoon under the direction of Mr. Alex. Morton. The day was fine and everything went off first rate. Mr. Hugh McPhail of Priceville, visited at .Mr. Arch. McCormick‘s the first of the week. _ _Mrs. Hector McDonald of Mulock, spent a few days last week visiting friends on this line. Mrs. Waiker who has been in attenâ€" dance on Mrs. Dougald Clark, for the past ten days, has returned to her home in Glenelg. Mr. Jas. Ewens and Mr. and Mrs. D. Lamb and daughter Miss Mary, motored to Hanover Saturday afterâ€" noon last. GLENROADEN DORNOCH % S. McBETH | Beggs‘ Store, ;.fi(-IEEGEEEGG"’EGG GGE&EEE&E(‘G@ GARDEN COURT A _ TOILET PREPARATIONS 2 c e n ;# 33232222 232223323332333 3» If you have Grain to â€" call us up. We are in the market for any quantity of Milling Oats, Feed Oats, Barley, Peas and Mixed Grain. Will pay highest prices. For full particulars apply to Grand Trunk Ticket Agents. W. CaALDE®, Town Agent, Central Drug Store, ‘Telephone Ka. 3 ____Ar ‘TORONTO .................. 11.10 am _ 7.40 p m â€"â€"â€" Returningâ€"Leave Toronto 6.50 a.m. and 5.02 p m. Parlor Buffet car Palmerston to Toronto on morBing train and Guelph to Toronto on evening srain. Terms Cash Business Hours 8 a m t>5 p m. GRAND TRUNK Railway System Are the finest on the market. _ We carry a full @ line of these choice preparations. * PorfUMO®.....:1..sersrvrrrerrer isnn is asr +s s+:s»+ $ 00 BP OZ, A Talcum Powder, white or flesh, Tins â€" 35¢ MA We have fruit jars now in all sizesâ€"pint jars, quart jars, half gallon jars Bring us your Eggs â€" We pay the highest price at all times. In Fruit the only thing thats left now is grapes and peaches. Peaches are nearly over and grapes are just at their best. We will have grapes in a good supply this week. We Want Eggs Grapes and Peaches We want wheat and will take your wheat and pay you the highest market price for it in exchange for flour. Consult us before you sell. Purity Flour . Pige Tree Flour Five Rose Flour Milverton Jewel Flour Cream of the West Flour Royal Household Flour Pie Crust Pastry Flour in 24 Ib, bags makes good Pies We‘ll Take your Wheat The place where you are able to buy Canada‘s best flours and you don‘t pay any more, flours that make pure white and wholesome bread. Fruit Jars Durham‘s Flour Store ROB ROY ROB ROY MILLS, We have a stock of Ground Feed on hand that we are selling cheap while it lasts. Face Powder, all shades ......... Benzoin and Almond Cream...... CONE UONOBIM..,..51,.21.++*Â¥51 k5 218 2484852 Vanishing Cream ..................... Ar Ar Lv. Ly Ly Ly Grain Wanted BRANTFORD .. ... HAMILTON. ...... DURHAM...... .. MoUNT FOREST PALMERSTON .. FERGUS ........ GUELPH ........ IMPROVED TRAIN SERVICE Daily except sell or want to buy feed, No Town Delivery Telephone day No 4, Night 81 Sunday Druggist and Stationer DURH A M 1 00 p m 1 00 p m 7.05 a m 7 38 a m 8.28 a m 9.15 a m 9.45 a m OCT 12. 1922 PHEONE 50 Durham 8 35 p m 8 30 p m 3.15 p m 3.51 p m 4.23 p m 5.05 p m 5.36 p m ENEAAA The weather day evening of got some rain day. Our Fall F fine weather Of dast wee new member; extensively _ pleased with prizes they y exhibit in +. several fine ; but the entri were small () gams booth and a pull« the HI Well line tain 0 moI H M H The P PRICEVIL: D The Cash UURUHAM AT McF. Suco Men‘s Men‘s L( JQ eavnle § A\ N

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