West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 11 Sep 1924, p. 4

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" tl tt The Review to Jan. tire on ed the Buy hrilerstn's Bread I Phone ll mtEgeEesgEaiiEieIEEeEEEE' FRllEIE a------. FORD TRAVELLING Motion Picture Exhibit Showing Forests, Coal Mines, These Pictures are well worth Seeing Showing original sites of new addition and stages of construction, the completed building covering 15 acres of land. Fords in manufacture at MllTlll BROTHERS GARAGE Sovereign Flour. Eclipse Floor, White Lily Pastry Flour Wheat Cereal, Rolled Oats, Bran, Shorts, Feed, Flour, Oat Chop, Crimped Oats, Mixed Chop, Mixed Grain for Poultry Feed, Blatchford’s calf Meal, Pig Meal and Poultry Feeds. Our prices are of the best quality and our Flour is guaranteed. Our prices are right for spot cash, highest Price paid tor any quantity of wheat delivered at the " Goods delivered every day. Phone No 8, day or night cl. for Sale: Good Bicycle of All known Hyalop make I: otter- a very reasonable rate tor a cash sale. Apply at Review Of- The People's Mills Every Day Bargain Day tiEN0EWON'S BAKERY MOUNT FOREST, Saturday Evening, September 13th ii" $131133; Everybody Come Durham, Friday Evening, Sept. 12th All Neatly Wrapped in Waxed Paper by Machinery Have the Rig Call JOHN McGOWAN THE PEOPLE'S MILLS A Twenty Million Dollar Investment Maintaining Ford Predominance Makers of Good Bread FORD AGE AT But we notice that even the girls who are surest that bobbed hair is here to stay, take home the leaving: and hid" them away in the bureau against the day when they may want a switch. , I925, only 50 cents -showing various operaticns on huge machines at the new Ford Plant. TAKING NO CHANCES Blast Furnaces, Assembly Lines Durham the girls qte purham 31min” Directors and patrons of the Can- adian National Exhibition are rejoic- ing at their success or 1924. They aimed at a million and a half of at, tendance and actually secured 19,000j more when all was counted up lat-1Hi Saturday night. Most visitors think; the exhibits were fully up to pastL years. but are not so ready to say this or the performance before the‘ Grand Stand. "Marching On" wasi distinctly a military spectacle andI though one ot the legends displayed by the tiashlight was "Defence, not Defiance," the pictures and the per- formance showed all the glories of war in enticing form without of coursel the grim and gruesome features in- separable from the real thing. Anoth-‘ er year the Directors should aim to, show the beauties of Peace. l C. RAMAGE & SON. Editor and Pro. With Toronto Show out of the way/ London and a few others wound up,! everybody now waits tor Durham Fall; Exhibition. The dines are Tuesdayi and Wednesday, Sept. 30th and Oct.) Ist. Intending exhibitors should, if. they have not already done BO, secure a Prize Lise trom Bee'y Geo. Binnie! and in the entry form provided begini prletora. Member Canadian Weekly Newspap- era' Association. Subscnptlon Rat”: $2.00 a year in rdvanc: in Canada: $2.50 in Ire United States to fill in the classes they intend to appear in. It would save the Seen" tary an immense amount of bother h' entries could be made early. ' ever he is not grumbling. Plan for entries and plenty of them. Everyone will hope that the Weath- er man will smile on us this year and with the careful and extensive prep- arations made by the Directors, 1921 Show should be a record ttretaer-if good weather prevails. Little or nothing can be accomplish- ed without some trouble and we hope the large farming community of which Durham is the centre will go to a lit- tle trouble and loyalty support their own show by making etttriea and at- tending with their families on Oct. lat. PREPARE FOR S. GREY SHOW The clock or life its wound but once, And no man has the power To tell Just when the lands will stop At late or early hour. Now Is the only the you own .' Live. love, toil with n will; Place no faith in tomorrow. tor The clock may then be atm. . DURHAM, SEPT. ll, 1924 OVER IVa MILLIONS ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO A CLOCK THE DURHAM REVIEW i Nothing should be aid or done, ew 'en In the heat‘of enthusiasm. which will create trnimostties, annuities, an- .tagonlsms that will aurvlve the trot. !lng. There is no need that differen- 'cess or opinion should make bad ‘ friends, either between people in one ;camp, or in opposing camps or in no I camp. When the plebiscite campaign in over, no matter what the remit. alone who now and themselves working against prohibition. or even sitting on the tence, will all have to live togeth- er as citizens in the country of their common allegiance. ', It is the unfair things that are ldone that rankle: it is the nastiness ithat finds expression which makes lbad friends. We will fltrht the better, lenjoy the victory more, and even itake defeat with greater serenity, if, ‘duri-ng the campaign. we keep sweet. 'r--Pioneer. Sight, tight hard, tight to the ut. most limit of your vigor and strength, but Mht fair and keep sweet. These specious words are getting into common conversation in view of the coming Plebiseite and seldom. " ever, was a falser idea conveyed to the ordinary mind. "Government Con- trol" sounds .niee as it is held up to admiration as a sovheitrn remedy for bootlegging and other illicit means of getting liquor I We have government control now under the Ontario Temp- erance Act, and one great argument of the "Wet" forces is that it cannot be enforced, hence get government to .control the evils flowing from the use of liquor as a beverage! Those who can remember the license system with many attendant evils will take no stock in this argument. Government control is simply gov- ernment sale, and the sale of liquor by government will produce the same results as if sold in any other way. We believe not one half, perhaps not one quarter of the liquor sold in lic- ense times is sold in Durham to-day. In license, times the 11 o'clock hour was often violated, so were Saturday evenings and even Sundays, and judg- ing by reports from Quebec and Bri- tish Columbia, government control would set the liquor flowing again in a stream sanctioned by government. There will be bootlegglng as long as there are breweries and legal manu- facturers and vendors of liquor. No law against theft or arson. or murder has ever been completely " fectual, so why condemn the OT. A. , it is the best measure to control the evils of the liquor trattle that Ontario has yet seen. And it can do better still by sympathetic enforcement. The clamor by the vets for its repeal and a new system introduced is evidence that it is working all too well for them. Ontario has a proud record of big majorities in the past for temperance measures Surely now we will repeat a bigger majority than ever' in favor of temperanace legislation of a pro- gressive kind, and not play copy-cat to Western provinces by the dazzling words 'Government Control", We hope every voter in South Grey will by his or her vote testify to the corrvctnoss of statements in the Win. nipeg Free Press. "The liquor busi- ness cannot be controlled. It must be oxterminated What is abundant- ly clear in this city and province is that the government sale of liquor "GOVERNMENT CONTROL" The number of telephones you can reach to do busi- ness with in Ontario and Quebec has more than doubled in the past 9 years. Each year for 9 years Bell telephones in service have increased over 11%. The value of telephone ser- vice may therefore be 11% more each year to those who diligently profit by the op- portunities it offers for saving time and expense. It takes lit years for ca ital to double itself at 6‘7:J in- terestmmpoundedannually. Hpur, much an; you make. tht telephone worth G you’téday? Eadmmwclom nimqfYOUR TOW Your rapidly expanding market KEEP SWEET hornet put a m to the men! we of “can. This evil In no" dur- --- A- A.“ iii/iii. you mm It ll nun It bu ever been." Germany is tar from being repent-l ant. When .11 the world VII "tre ing at the success ot the German Co. ference, they were shocked try the, announcement that she was going to issue s note to all the powers want. ing the admission made that she was innocent as to the starting of the war! Pressure was brought to bear on her to withhold this note as it might overturn the whole recent peace {proceedings agreed to by 46 nations. She has eiihsented on "technical and diplomatic grounds" to withhold the note, but says: 'The moment approp- riate for the note must be kept in ro- serve !' If Germany did not start the war who did t NEWSPAPERS THE LOGICAL MED IUM OF BUSINESS SUCCESS. Declaring that if the 75,000 retail dealers doing business in Canada to. day were to make a success ot busin- ess, W. H. Marsh, Advertising Mana- ger of Burroughs Adding Machine Co. strongly advocated newspapers as the logical medium to be used in an ad- dress to the Border Cities Retail Merchants' Association. He empha- sized as an imperative necessity con- tinued aggressive effort and deplored the tendency of many merchants to- wards desultory and spasmodic ad- vertlslng. Not so long ago we heard quite a little about the wife's right to an eq- uitable share of her husband's prop- erty, and few of us dreamed that the day would come when the husband would be compelled to sue for his rights. Such cases, however, exist, as the records of the Court of King's Bench in Manitoba testify. It seems that in Manitoba and probably in some other provinces. the law does not make a wife responsible for her husband's support, and a case arose where the wife. of a homesteader held not only the homestead but several quarter sections also, which had all been purchased by the proceeds from sale of crops and from the husband working out. The matter came be, fore the Court and the decision was that the property belonged to the husband and must be transferred to him. We must say that in Manitoba the law makes the husband respon- Bible for the support or his wit". The case is an unusual one, yet it ii- lustrstes the dimcu1ty of securing laws which will work with equal Jus- tice towards husband and wife. The wife's case is naturally ditterent to the husband's, and any law which ‘aims at mere equality will certainly work hardship to her in some cases. while in other cases the law which secures equality may need express safeguards to prevent it working in- Justice. THE WIFE'S PROPERTY RIGHTS We have been asked the difference between Plebisclte and Referendum. The former simply asks for an opiu- ion on certain legislation not yet hav. ing taken shape. By the latter the Iegislatiofl goes into force if the ques- tion carries. It was "reterred" to the people for their sanction. Legislation may or may not follow a Plebiscite vote. Under an ad. for gasoline The village blacksmith stands; He's agent for the Jinx machine And several other brands, He hasn't shod a horse for years For fear he'd tsoil his hands. Wrwk in, week out, from morn till; night. - l He 8908 the autos come [ With brakes that are not working right And axles on the bum. With gas, repairs, and grease and oil He makes a tidy sum. He has a staff of skillful men That number twenty-four. Who toil from six B. m. till ten And sometimes even more, The smithy never does a atrokp-. _ He thinks that work's s bore. The children ioming home from school Look in st the open door, And laugh to see some city fool Bet up an awful rou- When called to pay some whopping bill The smith has soaked him for. He goes on Sunday to the kirk His mind quite tree from cares. Because his men are hard st work With punctures snd repsirs. And if the weather's line and warm The smith ssys srstefni prayers. Oilitttr--remiirsg--repairtntr, l Oman-d through lite he goes, ‘And never once despairing i Bo long as his income grows. ‘Esch night the thought ot someone i done l Ailments lns sweet rem He wears a gold watch on his wrist A pearl pin In his tie, His links are made of amethyst, The ttrtettt he could buy, There's not a thing the smithy wears That doesn't please the eye. PLEBISCITE OR REFERENDUM THE VILLAGE BLACKSMITH (1924 Model) STILL UNREPENTANT (Percy Waxman, in Harper's) it Tm' todtw red some mm " not while “be" their when in. Miss Sldle LIV to Mr and MN Hen a- Sunday tstterttoon m G. Boyd. The U. F. W. o. 1 monthly meeting on week at the home of Mrs Ito and with Caswell. LrdBEPP""". Mr and Mrs Louis family, Chesley. and l -. -1 y Mr and Mrs mun: MF-'" family, Chesley. and Mr trnd Mrs Ed, Pratt and family. of Durham. spent a day the Brat ot the week with Mr, and Mrs L. Montana. The U. F. O. and the U. F. Y. P. o, will hold their meeting In the school 7 r-c. n! this week The U.F.o. III“ lu\ .. - will hold their meeting in the school- house on Friday night of this week, this being the tlrtet meeting for the young people since last spring. The W. M. B. held their September meeting at the home of Mrs Neil Me. Lean There was a good attendance considering the busy time. Several ot the members had interesting read- ings and an enjoyable time was spent. The October meeting is the thankof- fering and will be held in the church. We hope all the ladies will help in some way. Major Anderson of Camp Borden. motored home last Friday and spent a day visiting his mother here, return- ing Saturday. Mr and Mrs Jack Sharpe visited with Mr and Mrs Chas. Bailey of Lamlash recently. Mrs J. Derby Sr. is mending a few days with Mrs. Geddes. Mr and Mrs Fry and son John, Mr. and Mrs Mayer and family, also Mr. and Mrs Meatich of Elmira, are stay- ing with Mr and Mrs Noah Manager tor a few days. Mr Wm. Marshall and son Andrew took in the Toronto Exhibition Friday and Saturday. Mr and Mrs Alex. McLean. Mr Thos Derby and Mrs Derby, Sr,, mob cred to Owen Sound and spent a day or so with friends. 'erVss Evelyn McLean spent Lu! week with Guelph friends. harvest is ttdid up on account of the wet weather we are tuviag. Mr and Mrs J. Love and son of Niagara Falls are mum his old home near Crawford and with friends in our burg. Misses Reta McIntosh. Stem Daw idson and Miss Sharp were visitors at the Exhibition, sent by the Wom- en's Institute for Judging ditterent ar- Helen. Mrs E. B. Duane! and daughter, with Mrs J. Love. spent Wednesday in Owen Sound. Our young people have scattered, some toOwen Bound, others no Due ham, to take up studies again after holidays. Latona. Separate and Brick Schools have all changed teachers. Miss La- vina Mortley takes charge of a school at Richmond Hill, Miss Moore the Separate School and Miss Alexander of Owen Sound the Brick School. Mr and Mrs J. o. Dargavel and fam- ily of Rock Mills, spent Sunday with the Dargavel's. Sorry to hear Mr C. McIntyre was taken to Owen Sound Hospital on Wednesday evening and operated up- on that evening and which proved to be successful. We sincerely hope for a speedy recovery. He will be missed an Bible Clans teacher. Miss M McIntosh has returned " ter spending a week with friends in Owen Sound She was accompanied by Mr and Mrs Fred Bleach and daughter. Mrs Geo. Tracy entertained a num- ber of her friends Monday afternoon. Mr .and Mrs A. McClure of Wil- liamsford. spent an afternoon with Mr. and Mrs J. Heft. The Women's Institute will be post- poned to Wednesday, the 17th inet., owing to Owen Sound Fair coming on the 10th. It will be held at the home of Mrs R. H. Ledlngham. The wet weather has delayed harvgsung, but we hope it will last long, In there is I. lot of ttrat the tieldtt yet. Mrs Geo. Duchy and {our children ot Fort Frances. is visiting her sister, Mrs Wm. Weir, Jr. Mrs N. Whitmore and daughter Mary visited friends in Bruce Co. on Sunday last. Min Grace Mange of Egromont. spent the week end with Miss Eliza Paterson nod nttended Sunday School on Bundny. . was Maggie Lyons ot Markdue, spent over the week end with her cousins. Mary and Once Hopkins. Mr and Mrs In. Weir or Exremont. visited the tlrtst of the week nt the home of Mrs John Bell. Mr Campbell Dumanoor has purch- ased a rebuilt (notion steam engine trom the Waterloo Mum‘s Co. ttnd I: now ready for 1 good {lll's thrash. ing. Mr Win Cook of Hollnnd Centre itt ensued for the all to run the engine. Mr Nam: Whitmore nu enacted a gummy ot honey and ia oitering It for me this week. Mr’nnd In Fur hit-once spent Sunny with the formal-'- mm, It lid In. D. MtatttttaygL 'v HAMPDEN Rom. Webber ripent ith her daughter, teat m. “the Lawrence left last Week a position In Toronto. Id Mrs Neil Hebe“: spent a afternoon wtth Mr and Mrs. GREEN GROVE DORNOCH will hold their Frei; ot an- Mists MePhts0, willmlre and iir" the W my getting the week Mrs luck it will not of train In on. ID." B t" consul. In" Cat! I" now“ I noch 3nd Mists l Toronto, trpertt . Mm J. w. Smith - AM and We lei-2w. on. an! s for Milan nth their will. - Oath-HM 11mins. In Robert-o- nnd two son- at Dor, noch and I!“ Beale Conptrell 0. Toronto. spent a dny lut week with In J. W. Smith and family. [In Muyle Venue of the Rock, spent the week end with her mu,” um Matron Ewen. ' muted with last week Mr “(In In. Ewen and famil; went Sunday with Mr and Mrs Tho Tinnitus. --- o In,Wm none“ and Mrs Tho, Buley visited with Mrs Hugh Macdm aid one any lut week. Friends from Pulley visited al 111. home ot Mr Alex Fletcher the fiprst " the-week. . Mother Shipton’s Prophecies Because ot the uncanny manner is which the prophecies ot Mother Ship ton hive been coming to pass dw in; recent yarn, considerable am: tion bu been attracted to m. Itrnnse creature ot four conturiv ago. Even those who have in in put cooled It the weird prediction of this ancient witch Ire now Minn try curiosity to wonder what will nw. occur in this connection. Mother mutton, we JUN' old, w born in Yorkshire, England. in Jul 1488 tttd died than 1559. in boo! ot Information she is described as but mythical English prophet». baptised Ursuln Souhiel. who lair married Tony Shipton, a buildvrl N 'cording to tradition: she Was H; child of Math: Shipton and the (in. The following extracts tram In tanning prophecies were taken mu a scrapbook made more than 40 ya: no Ind owned by a Rochester Wot an '. A house of 31m null com" to pa- In merry Enclund but alas, War vtll follow with the work In the innd of the Turk. And state and state in fierce Suri; Struggle to reach other's lite. Curing“ without horses shall go And maiden“ an the world with y In London Primrose Hill shall be And the centre ot Bishop’s see. Around the world thought shall ll) In the twinkling of an eye. Through the hill: the men shall rid And neither horse nor nus bestrld- Under water men shell walk, Shnll ride, ehnll sleep, shall talk. [ran in the wnter Ihnll ttoat " easily as 1 wooden boat. God than be {ound nnd shown In n lend thni'l now unknown. Fire and Inter nhnlnl wonders do And England shall admit a Jew. Three times three shnll lovely Pram Be led to dance I holy dance ‘Before her people “all be free Jer tyrant rulers shall she see Each springing from 1 different ds' “If. And when the In! great turht is vmr- England and France shall be as my And now a word in uncouth rlnur Of whnt “all be In latter tim" In those wonderful tarot! days Women “all get A strange odd man To dress like men and brew-hem Wm And cut all their beautiful low” t hair. And ride nitride with brazen brois Al witches do on broomsticks now Then love shall die and mama! ceue, And babes and suckling: so don-- That Viva! shnll ftrttdle can: and t And men live much the sam" as L In eighteen hundred and hind) Build your house. of rotten stick, For then Ihlll mighty wars be plat And are Ind sword smwp Oli' land, And those who through. In tear and trembling this will ll, Fly lathe mounulns and to 1mm To bogs nnd forests and wild den.- For tempest: wlll rage and m.- will ronr ' And Gubriel land on sea and sho: And " he toot: ttis Wondrous In Old world: “all die and new b" b, In the air than men be Been In white, In black. in green , Now strange. but yet they shall true, The world umlde down shall bt. And com nun be found at thc itrt of u tree. Thom hull men shall vidc, And horse nor n: be at his mm Expldnlnx the Primrose Hill m. At the tune the pro'phecy was um" ed, Prtmrose Hill was two miles mu London. Now " In nearly in t!. heart ot billion. bet I short distant from Deconv- Put. For “mm! Advertising try 1L. Itevtew ”Imam. Pint clan Cedar lath and Shinci: ' tor Bale. APP” it R. Burma's slot MONhnu! Ordoryour countercbe L books " tho Boviow ottieo. Ask to w Marque. Lo-ttmu-. A mare lover is a man who t.l Tore and] 8 I. m. and Nick» “In the him We him It 5 mm. Home We Shingles for Sal». .\'-I t, $8.0tt per M.: No. i-84.00 pn-r v 9Hr to J. Lula. on hitt premis» Ot cur-o United sate- is um .H In lama In 'ornlty but the pre" one. of the Moe of Wales In that 'entry In on tho ”than may cum I.“ m, Clark of the Rock). 1 D. Lamb one din live the ESQ Centu ICC _tWe:zhl l J. McKECHNI Women's Grey ti 3 to 614, reg Women's Dorup reg. 32.25. r Iliuu' Patent S 32.75. to cle Child's Roman l 'i.25, to Clear at Good Assortment oi 1run J. S. MCILR CAI Why not eun money. with perfe bonds of $50. tloo. tIfitiel. thid at those with small M Grocery 1Bce,cttoice .. 3 lbs. Il (linger Soups. .2 lbs, tl Vatetgcu Oranges. sue Jelly Powders, assorted Balk Sodas, fresh this l Seedless Raisins. _ . . Red Salmon, large tin Choice Pink Salmon, I I Cttipso, ly, lb package We can at any time FA ll y Intormnlion a "tr kind of Bonds If" Week En Durl Bicycles a I, ll, m4 The lito; Earn 7 per , with P. RAM DURHAM F. W. Moo ofC Slran ear a Write, C Repaitin ll rr W , any vabl 3tit

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