West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 25 Oct 1928, p. 4

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4 J Subscribers are reminded that when remitting subscriptions to the Review by cheque that exchange should be added. Bank money orders or ex press money orders do not need the exchange, neither do postal money orders or postal notes. The undersigned offer for sale that desirable 100 acre farm, being lot 7, con 21, Township of Egremont, (the lato John Lawrence farm). _ Applica tions to be made to the undersigned, who will furnish information as to terms, etc. (On the farm is a good brick house, bank barn, hay barn, pig pen, silo, windmill, ete. . (Good water. A snap for quick buyer. Philip Lawrence, _ W. J. Lawrence, Durham Durham We collect old notes, accounts, judements. anywhere. We â€"seldom fail. Write for particulars. No collectionâ€"no charge CANADIAN CREDITORS‘ assoc‘Nn, P. 0. Box 951, Owen Sound, Ont. Eu1 0 J 0 porâ€" 10L 0 e omm â€"Aomorâ€"â€"â€"=~=â€"3 Part of Lot Fifty nine in the Seeâ€" ond concession east of the Garafraxa Road, containing nineâ€"tenths of an acre, with 7 room brick house, barn and drilled well, and parts of lots numbers Fiftyâ€"eight asd Fiftyâ€"nine in the 2nd concession, E. G. R. in the Tp. of Glenelg, containing ninetsen and onequarter acres. Administrators of the Estate of James Ritchie, deceased, or J. H. MeQUARRIE, Durham, Their Solicitor Apply to Murray Ritchie or Her bert Ritchie, R. R. 1, Durham, Lot 4, con 19, Proton, 121 acres, good condition. _ Rent $165.00 and taxes. _ Apply Wm Frook, Priceville, or Mrs Sophia Phillips, 96 Haverson Bl‘vd, Toronto:. For Sale the following lands : WANTED Fresh eggs and live poultry, any quantity,. Write for weekly price list. Twin City Produce Market, Box 264, Kitchener, Ont. FOR SALE Oxford Ram, 2 years old and Shearâ€" ling ram. Apply to Henry Eckhardt, Priceville. Phone 605, ring 3. On Durham Road, containing 200 acres more or lass. Eight miles from Durham, two from Priceville. Apply ALEX. STONEOUSE, / R. R 1, Priceville 4 135 acres south of Durham on Proâ€" vincial Highway. Good state of culâ€" tivation ; well watered, well fenced, good buildings. Terms reasonable. Apply on premises for full particu lars. OLD ACCOUNTS COLLECTED J. S. McILRAITH 100 ACRE FARM FOR SALE WOMEN‘S PATENT PUMPS Covered Spike Heels, a real snapp; dress shoe. BUSINESS ADS. Special for Saturday Oct. 27 These Bonds ars a closed First Mortgage on most favorably situated highestâ€"class Apartment or Office nildinge in Toronto, may be secured in $100, $500 to 100) deaomiaations, and mature in 20 years. Asinking fand retires a propertion of these bonds each year thus increasiog the security. |nvest Now in Sound 7°, First Mortgage Real Estate Bonds Offered by a bond house who have never had a loss of one ceat to any client on any bond sold. Administrators‘ Sale that Cish Discount Coupons will not be accepted on this line of shoss at this price. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY All sizes from 24 to 614. _ Regular price $4,50 to $5.00. SATURDAY, only \ . RAMAGE, Durham, Local Dealers Safety firstâ€"we handle nothing speculative Write, call, or phone No. 6 for particulars. FARM TO RENT FARM FOR SALE FARM TO RENT PALMER PATTERSON, This price is for ‘ash on!v. _ Please note After every such spectacular oo| PVT IEIOMNRUOH . SW 1O DDSE POLARL currence on the stock exchange,vues' game laws, train service, etc., there is a new crop of investors who consult nearest Canadian Pacific agâ€" hope to go into the market and make ent. a killing, as they other people have woâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"@ o â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" done. They persuade themselves that ; they are sure to win. Someone glvesi' GLCNROADEN them a tip and they are certain it | m se n meuscags cannot be wrong. That people are The farmers on ‘southern end of constantly being ruined by speculaâ€" new phone line have their poles erâ€" tion they will admit . But these canâ€" ected to Glenroaden. It sure looks not be men of their own calibre and fine. The rise in International Nickel on the stock market has made a number of people rich. a number of people poor and a number of people venturesome. The work for which he became famous, was as Organizer for the Liberal party. For years his shrewdâ€" ness and ability was everywhere recâ€" ognized. especially by the Liberal party. He had his hand on the pubâ€" lic pulse as few men had and rarely were his predictions astray. He was 62 years of age, made his home with a sister who has been flooded with expressions of sympathy in her bereavement. Premier King cabled her from England and many other public men expressed their sympaâ€" thy Four members of the governâ€" ment , in cluding Finance Minister Robb and Geo. P. Graham attended ‘he funeral and an array of promâ€" inent men and old friends joined with the relatives in paying tribute. EASY MONEY MADE ON THE STOCK MARKET ? Death came suddenly to this wellâ€" known public man on Thursday of last week. He was only two days ill. His funeral to Port Elgin, his early home, on Saturday last was a marked tribute of respect and ap preciation of his many fine qualities, ALEXANDER SMITH, K. C., DIES IN OTTAWA Somewhat in tune with this is a sesolution by Dr Bisset, one of the Manitoba Liberals. He is concerned about Canadian nationalism. He will present a resolution in the House that in official documents or in the census enumeration, Canadians shall be called Canadians and nothing else. Those who are now described as Canâ€" adian ‘Nationals‘, or those whites whose family tree is Canadian for three generations, shall be officially "Canadians." P but Canada lacked any such insignia. Anything about a flag always arouses enthsiasm and the predicted discusâ€" sion at the next session of Parliament will be taken up re this matter. Mr Cameron Mcintosh, M. P. wants Canada to show her individualism in having a flag of her very own, He would not abandon the use of the Union Jack but would put someâ€" where on it, a distinctive Canadian design. He says they have such a thing in Australia and New Zealand and that, at the Olympic games their athletes were distinguished by this special mark on the British flag Member Canadian Weekly Newspap C. RAMAGE & SON, Editor and Proâ€" EarDurbounm Beview The Cash Store Store Wants a Canadian Flag $3.95 The seasons for vig game in Onâ€" tario this year are as follows : North of the Mattawa River and main line of the Can. Pacific Ry. to Heron Bay on Lake Superior and south of main : line of Canadian National Ry. â€"Oct. 20 to Nov. 25 inclusive; north of Lake Nipissing and the French river ‘and south of Canadian Pacific main railway line to Heron Bay.â€"Nov, 1 !to Nov. 25 inclusive except that on | St Joseph‘s Island in District of Alâ€" goma, season is Nov. 10 to Nov. 25 , inclusive South of French and Matâ€" ‘ tawa Rivers Nov. 5 to Nov. 20 inclusâ€" ive. Mr and Mrs J A Boyd spent Sunâ€" day with Mr and Mrs Isaac Hooper of North Egremont. Mrs D C McKechnie spent a week with Owen Sound friends. Mr and Mrs Herbert Trafford and sons Gordon and Albert, also Mrs. B Marsales spent Sunday with old friends at Glen Williams. Jas I spent and 1 For information as to best localiâ€" ties, game laws, train service, etc., consult nearest Canadian Pacific agâ€" ent. ness to h end The WMS will of Miss Ada Ban} Messrs Jno. Mc Boyd have treate« riding plows. Mr Bert Marsa Jack McKechnie poles in his lane Glad to see Will Kenney able to be out again after being on sick list Mr Special Hunters‘ trains leaves Torâ€" onto 10.00 p.m. for Sudbury Nov. 1, 2 and 3. So they want to produce a disâ€" tinctly Canadian type of ‘people in Canada. At present time Canada is auite distinctive over the uneviable notoriety she is receiving over the Simcoe Postmastership job. | _ There is, of course, a difference beâ€"‘ tween speculation and lnvemnent.§ , but the trouble is that every specuâ€"| | lator is able to convince himself | that he is an investor. He may be| verturing money or margin â€"money | which he cannot afford to loseâ€" and j venturing it without real knowledge: of the intrinsic value of the stock he is buying or selling. But to him it is an investment. It is an investâ€". mont because he is sure to win.: And when he doesn‘t he is sour upâ€" on fate which has treated a wise man so scurvily. ! The man who has surplus funds t,oi invest in a stock about which he has made adequate enquiries and who ‘does invest those funds by the actual outright purchase of stockâ€"such an ; investor is putting his spare money | to work in a legitimate way, a.nd! while eventually he may sustain a> loss where he hoped to make a proâ€" fit, that, after all, is the hazard comâ€"| mon to all businesses. But the man| who risks money (money he cannot ; afford to lose) in an effort to guess : the course which certain stocks wllli take : who risks a complete loss in‘ the hope of an inordinate pmfltâ€"i that man, if he fails in his venture.i has no one to blame but himseif. And | if he succeeds. he is tempted to risk | anew and may, in the end, lose all.! The appetite for easy money is easiâ€" ly created and not easily assuaged. At this time when deer runs thro‘ the forest and the tracks of moose and bear are found along the streams there is aroused in every hunter an urge, a desire to invade the great North West, and there in their natâ€" ural habitat, match his hunter‘s skill against the instinct and cunning of these prized forest denizens. Three hundred and thirty cars of Mcintosh apples rolled from Vernon, British Columbia, in the first day of shipment permitted by the Control Board. On each of the two succeedâ€" ing days forty cars went forwardâ€" an evidence that the market is not overloaded. There are men who make a businâ€" ess of creating it. They will create it by citing the recent rise in Interâ€" national Nickel. and they will perâ€" suade investors that fortunes can be just as readly made in some utterly worthless stock which they are offerâ€" ing themselves. Inside information on the stock market is very valuable but one nevâ€" er knows whether it is inside or not. At least, the outsider doesn‘t.â€"St. Catharines Standard. judgment. These must be people ‘who get the wrong dope‘ or do not gauge the market with the skill and acumen which they themselves are persuaded they possess. Miss ss of hear Mr S Sorry CHALLENGE OF THE WILD WHEN IS IT "INSIDE? they purpose rei brother Archie. Rebecca Banks nks and â€" Chas. M is mother in Durham. $ will be held at the home ra Banks on Oct. 30th. no. McKechnie and John treated themselves to new les is erect assisting Mr. his telephone Toronto Smith, | R IH B: soon serious | illâ€" ie and hope the week to, Mr , Zion, Banks, UONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO ‘ seemed | be desi and de "That is to be my rock garden, a flagstone path to the road," Mrs. Picard explained : "We plan to build pergolas over the concrete platform all along the east and north here. We‘ll paint the house and pergolas and gates white like the lattice fence and the roofs red. Then we‘ll train red rambler roses over the pergolas. We have planted hundreds of bulbs and we‘re to have tulips in the winâ€" dow boxes too." One could just picâ€" ture it. Within the house, because one enâ€" ergetic woman could carry forward the work there much faster alone than she could out of doors, there Here, on the lawn which has been built up at some expenditure of labâ€" or of men and teams, shrubs, snowâ€" ball and hydrangeas are strategicalâ€" ly planted to soften the lines of the house. But why does the lawn not extend to the row of spruce trees aâ€" long the road Did the workers weâ€" ary and leave the lawn to drop down into the miniature gully that runs paralle!l with the highway ? the living roomâ€"a room of cheerâ€" ful comfort, walls in plain lemon yellow paper, woodwork in black paint and white wicker chairs and table in Chinese red. "We lost the lid of this quaint little writing desk on its way up from Toronto," Mrs. Picard smiled, "so I painted the inside of the desk and the pigeon holes," The desk in black with the pigeon holes in red, looked as if it had not been intended to have a lid. A couch covered in black chintz boasted red and blue figures and chimed in pleasantly with the blue congoleum rug with flecks of the red and white and black of the room recurring in its design. Leading around #o the front again, Mrs Picard showed us minutely the specimens of the perennial border that lines the lattice fence along the north of the houseâ€"yard. Purple and deep blue and pink dephiniums, rose bushes, costly plants hobnobbing a:â€" mong some wild flower that her boys had uprooted on some fishing trip and brought back and planted in their mother‘s absence. They knew she would like them. k buff and red, while the guest room‘ down stairs is very pleasant in Perâ€" sian lilac and ivory. _ Beyond the‘ living room the big farm kitchen makes the dining room very attracâ€" tive with orange gingham curtains, a big oldâ€"fashioned corner cupboard, with yellow dishes behind its glass doors, table and chairs painted in delf blue with black lines. The panâ€" try has been converted into a kitchâ€" enette, with lettuce green walls and catâ€"tail pattern in the paper, neat eâ€" namel sink, gasoline stove for all cooking purposes and the miraculous Upstairs one of the sleeping rooms is done in green and rose, another in "We are going to have the river side built up," Mrs Picard remarked with evident happy anticipation, "clean up the river and have spawn placed in it. Do you know we caught trout that measured 13 inches here this spring ?" tance and the garden, leads a deâ€" lightful path of flagstones to the rivâ€" er, (This path is one of the new feaâ€" tures of the place.) One could see. One could underâ€" stand also, that this kind of sumâ€" mer home is not to be the kind that groups itself about a hammock as the main attraction. There has been and will be work here, for all the family. A vegetable garden too, is so varâ€" ied that Mrs Picard finds she needs 0 buy few viands for the table on her weekâ€"end visits or weekâ€"long visâ€" its from her home in the city. From the back door, from which we were viewing the orchard field in the disâ€" "Yes, we planted 350 apple trees," she confirmed the report, "quite a number of them Mcintosh Reds. Then there are plums and pears and cherries too‘ and all the small fruits there are! We have 50 grape vines and a tremendous asparagus patch as you can see." ago Mrs Picard decided that since she and her family liked to come back in summer to the old home, they might as well establish a sumâ€" mer home here. There was only one place to which they were especially attracted and that was to this farm, where their mother had played and whose owner, Mrs Watt, now gone to her rest, they had all loved. We knew Mrs Picard had been making changes on a large scale, evâ€" en to the fields beyond. We asked her about the orchard. (London Free Press) 2 By Christine McGillivray Campbell "If you are curious to know just what is being started on the farm just north of the river Styx, on the Garafraxa Road, where that white lattice fence, with its attractive gate way catches your attention, and if you are lucky enough to find her there, it is a very charming lady who meets you at the door. This is Mrs Picard,, who was once little Maud Dargavel and who used to run over here to play every time she got a chance when she lived aâ€" cross the road, where her mother and brother still live. Some years Mrs. Pcard and The Formor.Dornoch Lady‘s Diversion remodelling her Summer Home THE DURHAM REVUGW med to us desired in _ delightful he front living comfort, way up smiled door opens d roomâ€"a _ roon walls in pl r, â€" woodwork hite wicker inese red. "V her Summer Home house, be _ could re much ld out .« little m« d out of « little more the way of furnishings. because one enâ€" _ _carry forward h faster alone of doors, there more that could iy of decoration is directly room of c c in black chairs and We lost the writing desk e pigeon with the as if it y into cheerâ€" lemon black s and st the | _ Though she married early and is ‘devoted to her family, Mrs Picard has never sunk her personality into being a mere housekeeper. Even ‘whlle her children were small she Iwas interested in selling mining | stock and realized a small fortune in her own stockbroker‘s business in | Toronto. This work laid the foundaâ€" tion for her two sons‘ present busâ€" iness in the city. She has done many | things. Among them was the taking | charge of a demonstrator‘s booth at the Canadian National Exhibition one fall, One of the things she could not do was to settle down to afterâ€" gnoon teas and bridge and live on | her husband‘s ample CPR income. which opens off the dining room, we sat down to talk. Exceedingly inter «csting this nook is with its bright orange paper, with: foldingâ€"leaf tabâ€" le, curios cabinet and chairs n blue and sand, with motifs and with the most startling eriginal curtains in black sateen with valance appliqued in golors. _ Much more delightful of necessity is this lady who has had such adventure in pots of paint and rolls of paper, while producing all these effects to suit her own personâ€" ality. Very sensibly, Mrs Picard and her husband have taken an apartment in the city, leaving their sons to make their own separate homes, but a matter of fact tho‘, she mot only looks young, she really is quite young. _ Married early, she has witâ€" nessed the marriages of hertwo sons Harold, now 25, and Irving, as yet only 19. There are five grandchildren. We knew about them of course, but thus far we have purposely refrained from mentioning them so that the reader would not keep a picture of a grandâ€" motherly lady throughout our story. Why, evren the great grandmother who lives across the road, has nothâ€" ing of the traditional grandmotherly gait. Mrs Picard has inherited her mother‘s deft movements, her clever ways of accomplishing much withâ€" out weariness or worried looks. As ‘Did you notice my little chairs *" she asked, indicating one. "I have painted one apiece for my grandâ€" children." "Oh yes, I went to school here at Latona," she said in reply to a quesâ€" tion, adding with a laugh, ‘"and the rest of my education I got in the school of hard knocks." Now that her sons, who both reâ€" ceived a good education, are marâ€" ried, the three families are all quite absorbed in this thrilling enterprise of making a fine summer home. Picard prises her refrigerator &# A household help. One of her first pre cautions was to have ice stored in the big farm barn. Yet so few farâ€" mers nowadays store ico as they us ed to do. But the man whose labours by the favour of Providence has been mainiy responsible for all this. His threshing done, he has time now to think of other things than wheat and rair and frost and sun and harvesters, and the rail and steamship companies are anticipating his thought. In a few weeks now, there will be a feverish packing of bags, a collecting of the children, a donuing of new hats and shoes and a rush for the trains. This. say the transportation officials will be the year of the bomeâ€"going. The English, the Jersey Islanders, the Seotch and the Irish and the Continâ€" entals too. Te Canadian Pacific officials foresce so great a trek, that they have already planned many apecial trains out: of the West, and many steamship sallings which wili facilitate the movement and enâ€" sure Christmas and New Year‘s with the old folk and an inerpensive journey in comfort and luxury. There nas been a record crop. The West will conâ€" tinue to flourish, In a thousand cases, a few years of struggle with nature has been rewarded. And what will it mean? more roads, more cars, more machinery, more strvets and stores and homes and radios. A brisker trade, more industrial activity in the east, more shipping and more car loadings per mile. More wheels turning all over the country. + y . Eons Desc o bole n io ies ic Pok t us _ _ks 1/\ VJ y ~ , pii2tit"wat is L isA \ & EBM * _ C es sR lN‘“.-i;;;‘v_x:isl‘:?;f:“':f:':=§w: e C h brmsss e e tA sc resgn c ~oxs ,,w‘f’sfif"’7fg§" «;(i Pil > > 3 hy . en n e T" o i oo ae in s o. d The s o o d n haia i L * B ¢ ol > ... a e uy 00.3 "fi%“'&i‘: <,f‘f§}‘f?§" 47A = 7XÂ¥ _ xt /~ # -s'r‘f:‘%t ol vali ud int 9. y y %fif * Clile sns _ â€" U ;) Edonll : Bs on ul antiy t t P (ek B c teLe : NOR C BR Lc OA palebe tam en s 2 o vaeebke $ o N . COEPcR NA EiL s § c n 5 hee e e ns s e e e i 1 ie SA ~*. >( _ c t PA . o s e o ut 4 . .1 L se es f 1 mA o inA eomaer esd s ) W : C iW eeiineas . F6 1. o speiasp &‘ 4 |D $ f 2# f,‘ * WÂ¥ .‘ ’;%;v% :iz’ifi‘" 7 l ; > ' f L so P E. i e t Ee mss teag . 43 4. o P 1 TR opaie WB c 0 ( io x Pwiliat / HKEs ie \,;“‘s‘;?;':?:, dr h ho. > C\ } e e . o s ies «. 2 ~ /R 4 \o oi 0 °j v PeCur: "s.2".0. o \ §;é$ e ;‘;:,‘;‘,"?;%: a \.é ?"“6"-‘;);/ o toe ‘ ‘ E203 i t e :f ‘ c h. poe o ht 6 d e inne 120. 9e e s e a yc ta. «BA _ s Oe + m < ioi £ .. m P46 4 2 ‘é’} e %‘féé y cA ctay i bycroraiiay * .é'r. 2149 t M r s it c .A /ok on C i,’ A T2 i. ./ . oollliomgs."~ â€"< ~â€" . g2 g3V8 4st s o Nee _ gA42.] â€" ~ailio e ** 7 ~~~~. â€" § | o en it /.. is‘ o d . en TR § y Ne iA rizie +A > â€"â€" CHHP F‘( w # %3' wreer s 4 e fi t ie o : Lar ty : 7 # g } . is "e", oeme t eleraptaieh €.â€" .: 4. g@ue 0 4 C Py s 29 l 6 s + t se hh t asR2 . / ooR » > > [# 2M n ame 27 P $ C it .. .c * 6. > Faa Plune s 2 4 i ~allle : opta~n a*" m .. P 5 ‘ *bl' & & svomapsess The reaper thresher garners a bumper crop, and the man of the ig. ‘w ue k€ west contemplates the gniden stream as it poured from wagon le c $s 4 a \ to n:cyu. (Insetyâ€"On the Luchess of Atholl, homeward Ceapaigenit n /. AO2 i 10e ies > > . attlh ® C e ‘;f'm' » . s M j There nas been a record crop. The West will conâ€" Ceoak > * es + * 5 a meign eeang n . . s o tinue to flourish,. In a thousand cases, a few "-5-.-::;-’,_.1;;;;. seA i years of struggle with nature has been rewarded. M And what will it maun? mawa raude mara mare mare tiny breakfast room, THE YEAR OF HOMEGOING. Mr Geo. Lunney and son Keith moâ€" tored up from Toronto Saturday and are spending several days with the former‘s parents, Mr and Mrs Wm. Lunney. Mr Millard Fisk, Miss Vera Miller and Miss Edith Long, of Walkerton, were guests of Mr and Mrs Wm. Fulâ€" ton on Sunday. "If I hadn‘t, I‘d bave ruined MY orchard by too early pruning," she admitted frankly. Now she is planning a trip to the coast, and one can understand how much so keen a lover of gardens will find to make her happy in the gardâ€" en cities of the Pacific. The regular monthly meeting of the Women‘s Missionary Society was held last Tuesday at the home of Mrs Archie McDougall The president, Mrs James McDougall, occupiled the chair and took charge of the meeting. After the opening exercises and disâ€" cussion of business, the lesson from the study book was read by Miss Elâ€" sie Boyce. Miss Tena Livingstone read the scripture lesson and Miss M McGilivray offered prayer. At the close Mrs McDougall served a dainty lunch. terest in the EXperIINORURI !""" "" Ottawa. â€" Finally, to prove that she is not old, either physically or menâ€" tally. Mrs Picard attended H. J. Moore‘s lectures and the short course in horticulture given . at the O.A.C. at Guelph last year. e 2 e L e ies end were Mrs Gee, CaIgarJ ®m* 7"*" Butchard, Listowel, cousins of Mrs, Adlam. Mr and Mrs Richard Boyce, Durâ€" ham, with Mr and Mrs Geo H Torry. Mr and Mrs Jno. Sworby and friend of Holland Centre, Mr Code and Miss Empke of Hanover were recent guests of Mr and Mrs G. Brown and family. Rev. H. Crickington motored to Rock Mills Sunday evening and bapâ€" wives. and Mrs. Cameron Sr. The Walkertotn B. Y. P. U. have invited Mulock BYPU to be their guests next Friday evening, Oct. 26. Mulock young people will supply the program and the home Society the lunch and other social features. tized several candidates for Rev, Saunders. Baptist pastor of Rock Mills. Mr Duncan and Miss Tena Livingâ€" stone were pleased to have as their guests friends from Tiverton, Messrs Welcome guests ue S MULOCK ;;vd";nmfly over the week rs Gee, Calgary and Mrs Just to illlustrate to what great extent a food western crop effects industry; one printing establishâ€" ment was kept busier than usual for some time printing an extra order of Canadian Pacific travellers cheques and money orders. These will, an official said, be sent or carried by homegoers to practically every quarter of the civilized world. Whatever the work! crop conditions may be, the Canadian cro will be appreciated almost wherever men eat hut The Minnedosa will give the more fortunate ones a sailing from Montreal on November 28 for Glasgow, Belfast and Liverpool. On the seventh of December the Metagama and Montclare will sail from Saint John, one for Cherbourg, Southampton and Antwerp and the other for the Liverpool run. The Melita, sailing on the fourteenth, will stop em route at St. Helier with a large number of homeâ€"going Channel Islanders and the Duchess of Atholl sailing on the fifteenth will take the last of those going home for Christmas via Glasgow or Liverpool. Th« sailing of the Montroyal on the twentyâ€"first is for those to whom New Year‘s means more. of Mr and Mrs. Mr and Mrs A. Symon visited with Riverdale friends recently. Wm Campbell has been a suffere, from inflammation of the nerves 0; the eyes. We are pleased to repor he is improving. Mr Jno,. Hastie from the West, ; visiting relatives here and with ); aged father, T. R. Hastie. Mr and Mrs L Shildroth, nes;» Chesley, visited with the Vessic (fam ily recently. Mr and Mrs Duncan Cameron of Tiverton, were guests Sunday of Duncan and Miss Tena Livingston» The YPS held an enjoyable weine; roast Monday evening. Games and ; spelling match were enjoyed. Wei, ers, pumpkin pie and cake were s» ved at the close of the fun. Mr and Mrs C. MceClocklin, Zion visited with Wm and Mrs Campbe} Mrs L. McLean has had as visi ors this week, her sister, Mrs Por guson of Chicago, with her son and his wife. Messrs L A. and Camphbell M Lean and Misg, Esther, and Mr Pere, McQuarrie, spent the week end in Hamilton. Mr and Mrs Lance Rumble and son Bobbie, Toronto, and Miss Isabe] Lawson, all of Toronto, visited at M Robt. Lawson‘s over the week end social time. The U, F. W. O. Club of the Ro« ky are entertaining this Friday » enring the three Varney Clubs to a Take it. Eat better. Sleep, work, play better. Mother Nature‘s own good herbs, rich in hedm‘w ving power, these are what make s Tonic and System Builder so good. It really works wonders for people who are constipated, rundown, urvwz':olk who have skin diseases. Even aded Ecesema yiclds to it. Try a bottle. It will keep you clear of cold weather ills Bold, as other Galâ€" lagher Herbal Household Remedics are, Gallagher‘s Keeps You Wonderfully Herbs, all Herbs, ROCKY 8. McBETH, Durham Well Don‘t forget the Anni ices in the Hall on Sun« Rev. J. C, Ross, Waterd: the special preacher. On Monday night. Rev Nelson will give an ad« recent trip to Ireland. Sorry to report Mrs bell on the sick list ax her a speedy recovery. Misses Reta Wilson a Cannel, teacher at the | spent the week end at . Mr Jim MeDougall, T the week end in Pricevi Miss Beth Hincks friend, Miss Mable Nict Messrs Edgar and Leod, Swinton Park,. Mr D Hincks‘. Rev, Mr Lee occupied the Hall on Sunday an very impressive sermon Hincks and Miss Jean M a duet at the evening . Miss Minnie Ferguso an operation for appen ham Hospital Friday 1i Mr Dan MacArth his touring car for Everybody . get ; costumes ready for Halloween Social w Hall. Swinton Park pected over. Mr and Mrs Jos. M er of Markdale, Sun Aldcorn‘s. Rev. Dr. Banks Nel® will deliver a lecture Recent visit to Irelan« by lantern slides, in N Priceville, on Monday, mission 50¢ and e o F »IM2G Enamas o PRIG SIMPLE Bron GIVI CHOPPIN Best 1 R« M King Get M BLA TC GUNN Goo00 PRICE SPECIAL NO You or a W h hig W he; can J O [ T H OUI m e( it‘ CA

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