Custom Chopping Every Day () ~rheay Despite the recent Fire which destroyed our Flour Mill, we are again in a position to do Best Quality of Flour & Feed Roval Househ‘d Flour, per bag 450| Chopped Oats, per 100 Ibs 1.50 Majesitic Flour, per bag .... 4.25 | Crimped Oats_per 100 Ibs 1.50 0 Canada Flour, per bag.... ?25 Strong Chop, per 100 Ibs 1.50 King Edward Flour, per bag..4£.00 | Crimped Oats, per ton . .27.00 Feed Flowr, per bag ........ 200 | Oat Chop, per ton ax«« Â¥t.00 Calla Lily Flour, 24 Ib bag.. 1.00 | Mixed Chop, per ton 27.00 Canadian Reauty, 24 Ib bag.. 1.00 ‘ Gunn‘s Tankage, 100 Ibs 3.25 BLATCHFORD‘S CALF, PIG AND POULTRY FEEDS. Also GUNNԤ$ BIG 60 BEEF SCRAP AN D POULTRY FEEDS. Get our Price before you Sell your Wheat . as 1 intend buying Wheat to ship by the Car load. GOODS DELIVERED IN TOWN EV ERY DAY. PHONE NO. 8, DAY OR NIGHT Two holes directly geer ihe fire. * e mainp o * i; CosyHome fl]} Qu)ébec io shalle parehore THE PEOPLE‘S MILLS JOHN McGOWAN We solicit your patronage. _ We handle the $. HUNTER & SON, Durham and sell them at Reasonable Prices A remarkable stove for summer or winter It heatsâ€"It cooks â€"It bakes â€"Provides hot water â€" Burns any fuel â€"Moderate in price A combination heater and rangéeâ€"made in sizes suitable for any kitchen. You can have the Cosy Homewiqaorwithout oven, with or without water front or reservoir. Grates are adjustable to shallow firebox for all fuels for summer use. A large top feed door. Extension fuel pocket takes 21 inch wood. The Cosy Home is a really remarkable stove. Come in toâ€"day and let us show you how well it can serve you. Happy Thought Furnaces save fuel and Mr Frank Hopkins arrivedl home from the West Monday of this week. Mr Prosper Porter returned with him. The boys report very cold and unpleasant weather and little work during their two month‘s stay in Sask. Threshing is the order of the day on the line. Mr Wm Vessie of the Rocky is busy with his threshing outft and has already cleaned up the majority of the barns around here and is doing good work. Wm Grierâ€" son, Jr. is assisting Mr Vessie. Mrs Chas. Lawrence returned home Saturday evening from visiting her daughter, Mrs Jas, McGirr in Detroit. We were sorry to learn of the acâ€" cident which befel Mr Wm Vessie, Saturday afternoon last. While starâ€" ting a certain wheel on the separaâ€" tor, his glove became entangled in it and resulted in his arm being brokâ€" en just above the wrist and his hand somewhat mangled. Hope it will soon be alright again and that Mr Vessie will have full use of his hand and arm again. Mrs Alex. Lawson is spending a week with friends in Sarnia and also with her brother, Mr Frank Smith in Detroit, Mich. These few fine days are very acâ€" ceptable after the few days last week of real winter. Suppose the next will be Indian summer for we feel sure NORTH BENTINCK Valuable Lessons to be Learned from Past Failures. Heretofore we have always taken it for grantedâ€"without much careful thought, perhapsâ€"that it was farmer immigrants we most wanted,â€"people who would settle on our vacant land in the West, and produce more from the soil. And complaints being loud and numerous that farming in Canada was not as proâ€" fitable as it should be, we have tried to convert an unattractive situation into an attractive one by lowering the tariff on manufactured goods, in the hope of thereby lowering farm production costs, and so increasing the farmer‘s net. Has that plan gotten us anywhere ? In 1924, despite tariff reductions made ostensibly to benefit agriculture, there were actually fewer farm immigrants than in 1923 ! ‘And when, against the total immiâ€" gration for 1923 and 1924, we offset the total emigration from our towns and cities, we find that the country has suffered a net loss ! So, obviously there is something wrongâ€" somewhereâ€"in the plan we have been following,â€"either in the assumption that it is farmers we most want, or in our method of attracting them. Perhaps it‘s a combinâ€" ation of the two. Population Increases Should be Properly Balanced. In shaping our policy as above, we have certainly overlooked one very important point. Farmers as a rule don‘t sell to farmers, but to town and city folk. So when we try to increase farm population by methods that operate to decrease town and city population, we are actually making things worse for the very people we are trying to benefit. We are curtailing a domestic market that our farmers can control, and we are increasing their deâ€" which they have no control! VOTE CONSERVATIVE city population we want to attract. An Alternative Plan that Promises Better Success. Let us now go back to the beginning zain, and start from the alternative sumption that it‘s primarily town and mmuth trnindbveishaidt â€" lefbaticecss Frtuln| ~ Riorkatcitaiatce. â€" ssintintatedaind m mt mt 4 not only willing to work but for whom profitable work can be found, and all the pressing problems that now beset our country will be well on the way to solution.‘‘ â€"What Everybody Says. ; do so! But to be sure we‘re on the straight and sure road to our goal, let us no some clear thinkingâ€"some hard thinkingâ€"on these twoimportant questions : "Start a great big immigration movement into (ila‘nada, we have had squaw winter. Threshing is in full swing again as Mr John McDonald returned to this line last week with his threshing octâ€" fit. Mrs Geo. Gray of Durham spent a couple ‘days last week with her parâ€" ents, Mr and Mrs Jas. Heslip. h l2 tlccs, 3t ons h ds t t ratat t sc o nds Mr and Mrs L. Chapman and Mrs. Geo. Stewart of Glenelg, also Miss Ethel Bell of Toronto, spent a day last week with Mr and Mrs Fred Cuf Mr John MeDonald had the misâ€" fortune to lose one of his horses on Thursday last. + 9 ï¬t;s- _Nellie: Mervyn of Durham, spent over the week end with her friend. Miss Ruby Heslip. _ % Our beefâ€"ring finished on Saturday last and the ring intends holding a business: meeting on Monday evening October 19th. A number of the members of this line attended the Rocky U.F.W.O. meeting held at the home of Mrs. Kelsey. Owing to the disagreeable day, there was not a very large atâ€" tendance, but we hope for a larger crowd on Nov. 13th, when the meetâ€" ing will be held at the home of Mrs. George Noble Licensed Auctioneer for Co. of Grey ‘werms, reasonable. Sale dates must be arranged at the Review Office. Durham. Residence: R. R. No. 2, Pricevilie FOR HIGHER TARIFF AND FOR LOWER TAXATION THE DURHAM REVIEW JOHN O‘NEIL While Canada has been lowering her tariff, these 63 countries have been raising theirs:â€" Algeria Japan Argentina Latvia Australia _ Luxembourg Austria Madagascar Belgium Malta Bolivia Mesopotamia Brazil _ Mexico BritishEast Africa Netherland East Dependencies Britisfl Guiana British Honduras British West Indies Bulgaria Cbife China Colombia Czechoâ€"Slovakia Ecuador Egypt . Esthonia Finland France Repub. of Georgia Germany Gold Coast Colony Greece Guatemala Holland Honduras India Irish Free State Italy Irish Free State United States Italy Uruguay And now even the United Kinidom has begun to protect her home markets. 63 Countries have been makâ€" ing it more difficult for Canada to sell in their markets, while Canada has been making it easier for the whole worlg to sell in hers! Have they all blundered? Has ‘Canada alone shown wisdom? Mr and Mrs Angus McArINUT NSS returned â€" home after spending A pleasant vacation with friends in Toronto. ! The annual Thankâ€"offering meeting of the W. M. S.. was held in the church last Wednesday. There was a strong, Toronto, is expected °0 °C here next Sunday. The U.F. W.O. held their October meeting at the home of Mrs F. W. Kelsey last Friday. Though the atâ€" tendance was not as large as some former meetings, yet an interesting time was spent. Mrs Kelsey gave & paper on ‘Character‘ which was much to the point and enjoyed by ‘all. Mrs. Arthur Edge gave A lengthy paper on ‘Democracy‘ which must have takâ€" en much time in preparation and which was full of good suggestions. Also community singing and business made a very full meeting after which an abundant lunch was served. The next meeting which is the business one, is to be held at the home of Mrs Geo. Noble on Friday, Nov. 13th. Mr Alex Lawson spent a few days with his sister in Belleville. Mrs Neil McLean spent a day this week with Mrs And. Hastie, Crawâ€" ford Miss Isabel Kelsey is spending a holiday with her sister Mrs Ira Yake, Egremont. Mr Jerry Allord took in Markdale Fair and visited friends while there. Mr and Mrs Angus McArthur has returned â€" home after spending A vleasant vacation with friends in éâ€"(â€")&l' â€" attendance and most on Sunday. TORONTO occupied the pulâ€" Indies Newfoundland New Zealand Nigeria Norway Paraguay Persia Peru Poland Portugal Roumania Russia Samoa San Salvador Sarawak Serbâ€"Croatâ€" Slovene State Seychelles Sierra Leone South Africa Sweden Switzerland Tunis of the and young. Mrs Geo. Turnbull is spending A g)llllple of days with her mother, Mrs. 1. Very sorry to hear Mr Wm Vessic had the misfortune of having his arm broken, it coming in contact in some manner with a belt on the thrashing machine. * Pursuant to @d met on above dat sent. Minutes of read and adopted Turnbullâ€"Grierson : TnAL USUTT Mess be paid $61.25 for erecting 245 rods wire fence, and W. G. Hastic $1.50 . for inspecting. â€"Carried. ‘ Magwood â€"Grierson : That sheep claims be paid as follows: James Charlton $14, John Bailey $10, Mrs. A. Noble, $8, Geo. Wright $11, Hugh Riddell,, inspecting $1.50; Thos. H. Lawrence, do., $3.00; w. Wright, do. $1.50.â€"Carried. Turnbullâ€" Bailey: That, as the sheep of Murray Ritchie were killed Bentinck Council to adjourm;;;{: _ Council re date. Members all pre "Yes," you say, "but what about our farm population? We want it to increase too!" Of course we do! _ But with town and city population increasing, can farm population do other than increase in proâ€" portion? With more customers for farm produce, and with a higher purchasing power per customer due to higher wages, isn‘t it inevitable that a domestic supply will be forthcoming to meet a domestic demand, particularly if we protect farm products in the same way that we propose to protect manufactured products? We have tried the plan of lower tarifis, as a means of attracting farmer immigraâ€" tion, and we see that it has signally failed, and we know the reasons why it has failed. Why not now try the alternative plan of higher tarifis, as a means of attracting urban immigration, when it seems perâ€" fectly clear that it must bring farmer immigration in its train? of‘ 'la:s}. meeting were Even if the latter were mere theory, that would be no valid reason for rejecting it in favor of a policy we have tried, and found to be barren of results. But we know that it is far beyond the theory stage. The United States offers a practical demonstration of its success! By the plan of higher tarifis, to benefit all classes of population, the United States has managed to attract the biggest and longest sustained immigration movement the world has ever known! want ? &A Precedent That Shows What Can Sept. 21, 1925 That ~Oscar of people Vintery Commnenn 900 Ray Ooq Terenent Be Done! i due on cement |............ 0 @.33 Hanover Cement Co., 25 barâ€" \ rels of cement ............ 71.75 |G. H. Mitchell, printing ...... 96.85 |C. C. Middlebro, solicitor fees 4.00 Ferd. Breutigam, pay sheet .. 8.8i Jos. Dirstein, tile ............ 17.00 ,Hunover Iron Works, cut bars 2.00 John Urstadt, labor, cement..107 60 Frank Schmidt, 16 hours ...... 6‘40 J. H. Chittick, 3rd quarter‘s S&IBRKY .....sssaxass12ss..... 90,00 One meeting of Council ...... 13.75 Turnbullâ€"Magwood: That we adâ€" journ to meet on Saturday, the 7th day of November. MECGrRAEE T ECE WE S E piece of land lying between old road allowance and the deviation at Aberâ€" deen, we authorize the Reeve and Deputyâ€"Reeve to act in behalf of the Council.â€"Carried. Magwoodâ€"Grierson : That ByJaw No. 96, re parking of cars, be â€" read a third time and finally passed.â€"C‘d Turnbullâ€"Bailey: That Clerk pre pare a byâ€"law authorizing Treasurer to collect taxes through the different banks: Standard Bank, Durham: the Bank of Montreal, Hanover: Roval Bank, Hanover, Elmwood, and Dw ham.â€"Carried. _i"ngvoodvâ€"';brlerson: That the fol lowing accounts be paid : Hanover Cement Co., balance OCT. 15, 1928 J. H. Chittick, Clerk The marriage took place on Tues day, Oct. Ith, at Queen Street Unii ed Parsonage, of Mr Harold Mel« lan Lawrence, Egremont, son of M: and Mrs John Lawrence, to Mis MHazel Annie Firth, Glenelg, daug) of Mr Joseph Firth, Gueiph _‘ ceremony was per ormed at 2 p by Rev. J. E. Peters, B. A., of the quietest possibl« There were no attendants, : aunt and sister Gladys only witnesses. The bride was attractiv in a one piece dress « canton crepe, with h to match. With this wore a string of pear the groom. . Immediately after mid much confetti friends and well wis couple left by mot Lake and Owen Soun honeymoon, _ previ down on the groon Egremont. . Lawrence â€"â€" Firth Nuptials The bride is one of Zion young ladies and will 1 missed in church and Inst where she proved hersel! member. . The groom i favorably known in this di the best wishes ol the 1 low them in their new rel In Hamilton, on Tuesda the marriage was solemni Percy Harding, son oi West PLLOt ) peopeâ€"â€"â€"â€"uor®r_â€"â€"=â€"==0 Liberal C« Grey. Treasurer‘s Sale of Lan Ayton, Thursday, Neustadt, Friday. Dundalk, Saturday Chatsworth, Mond Durham, Tuesday. Walter‘s Falls, W Townsend Lake, 1 Holstein, Friday, C Oth:r M:stings Announ‘e PUBLIC HARDING Meetings comnu dressed by ths First published 28 Descriptio 5 of Lot 4¢ Con I 15, . 6. C Con Con. nservat Con Con. Con. it in Sunâ€"Times TOWNS TOWNSH D D D Ro Ro Road Road JOH N Mr Ma ua ple t