Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 28 Mar 1912, p. 7

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‘1‘ Will be kept. for service at Lot 30. Con. 4, N. D. R., Bentinck, during the season of 1912. THOROBRED DURHAM BULL PEDIGREE OF “ BROADHOOKS CHIEF ” Red, little White, calved May 131;, 1910. bred by Thos. Scarf Sons, Rocky Saugeen, Ont" 2nd owner Wm Brown, Aberdeen, Ont. Young Fanny Young Dimplb (971) Old Fanny Layton (2190) F ashion Helen Mar Albina. Lute FASHION (Imp) _[1771 Grand Duke ’ -674- King Cyrus -735« Nicholas -S77- {6248) Locomotive -149- (4242) Young Don Juan 13610) A. ‘I Grizzlé Fashion} Eggcy 4th [90957] ' Fashion’q F_ancy Fashion’s Fancy Fashion 7th Fashion of Maple __ _ A Hall 2nd F rshion 2nd Fashion Helen Mar Albina. Lute Hopedale Sensatnon Tomato The earliest. best flavored and smoothest in the World. DAM " BROADHOOKS CHIEF” 2nd 82288- Come to the Big Shoe Stor‘ March 28th, 1912; JOHN BURNS, Pr0prietor Misses’, b0§s and youths’ fine and heavy shoes at lowest prices. Now is your time to bu;7 cheap rubbers. We have a. full stock on hand for spring. Don’t fail to see our trunks, suit cases and travelling baO's. All we “ant is a call at the bio Shoe Store mean the bridge. We have also a new line for men, known as the “Monarch” Shoe, rang- mg in price from $3.00 to $5.00. riving and as we have selected our stock from some of the lead - ing Canadian factories, we have no doubt the most up-to-date lines that money can buy. OITR SPRING GOUDS are now ar- We are the sole agents’ for the Relindo Shoe, fox-meriy known as the J. D. King Shoe, which is the leading- shoe for ladies’ in style and quality, made on the stage last, short vamps, high heel, Goodâ€"year weit in ’ Gun Metal Calf, Tan Calf, Pat. Colt and Vici Kid in blucher or buttoned styles. 36125- Geo. Bruce -25507- Lancaster? .7552- K.C.B. 2nd -141- «38489) Duke of Airdme Premier Earl -1281- Broadhooks Chief (Imp.) -50017- Verschoyle (Imp) -‘Aâ€" ‘â€" Studley Gm nge THOS. MCGRATH 2:3; SIRE TERMSâ€"CASH 01° EC} GS (.1483) (48454) sow. Uur catalogue [or 131;: IS Dlgger anu better than ever. Tells you all about over 1,500 kinds of Field Roots, Grains, Veget- ables, and Flower Seeds, Small Fruits, Flowering Shrubs, Plants, Implements, etc. If you cut this out sending it to us with your name and Post Office Address our Catalogue will be sent you and a present with it. Do it to-day, ADDRESS, Darch Hunter Seed C0., Dept. ~32 London, Ont. 'er Commencing April lst, Durham barbers Will adopt the following price schedule; Shave... 10c. Massage 15c. Witch Hazel Steam ...... 15c. Hair Tonic... 10c. §_m_ge§ng......m 15c. That’s the place to go for all kinds of Wall Decorations. Wall Paper, Burlaps, Sanitas, Varnish Tiles for kitchen or Bathroom. Lincrusta. Decorators’ Living Cloth, Etc. Will be pleased to call at your house with my samples, or be at the shop by appointment. Local Representative of the largest Manufacturers of Wall Paper in America. New Wall Paper Store IT’S COMING Children’s Hair Cut... Shampoo...... Olive Oil Shampoo... 33.201; Honed...... Hair Cut" Beard TrMedLQT. ...... Neck Shave...... (In Calders’ Block. next to the Post Office.) BARBERS’ PRICES 10c. 15c. Steam ...... 15c. 10c. 15c. . 20c. {air Cut ...... 15c. {ear the kridge ADDRESS. Limited, ...25c. 35c. 25c. 10c. 11 I “Mr. Fleming,” he said. in the same ’even-tempercd. cquuble tone he had j used throughout the discussion, “I Icould deceive you easily; I could pro- mise to be guided by you and return .to town to-mc'row; I could promfse anything you might choose to put for- ward and still keep my appointment 'at Weyberne Church to-morrow; but my mode of procedure is more like that of a bold, bad, don’t-care boy . chasing a butterfly. I mean to hate 3 the beautiful, gauzy, downy thing, but. I'll pursue it openly; I don’t care ; which way you look, whether I am in ‘ your line of vision or not; whether I ' catch it fields ahead of you, or right down under your very nose. You tell Hare’s lips formed a long thin crimâ€" son line. “Will it suit your tactics to treat me with the same openness I have shown you?” “Certainly; I shall drive straight to “Such an undertaking cannot but DrOVe Jejune and utterly barren of good results. Good-night, Hare, I am sorry to be obliged to oppose you. but I feel bound to do What lies in my power to st0p this mockery to-mor~ row.” woman is wanton, shameless, and no doubt it’s an unmitigated active fact; still, no one is wholly bad, sir; the devil himself is hardly so black as some would have him painted. Sure- ly such a cascade of beauty must be sweet and pure at its source, though it has and may run through narrow. muddy channels. I have a fancy, Mr. Fleming, that with careful tenderness' under a gracious Providence I shall! delve down to the silver ripple of that' pure source.” V 5 “Like most other things,” Felix said, rising, “the market value must be measured by the gain it brings. Your “Iggy, .nge, may cost you dear." “I shall not cavil at the cost if I cag_stir a fresh fount and sweeten it. " Austin and laid shoulder. prosecute. 13-1“ drive \lr. Farley Weyberne. H 5119 is \Vic‘ fled she be puiiishee; i1 insane, she 11111: taken proper care of; and wha means are employed to ensure Farlevs peace and satety, it's e tial they should be quiet, unobtrt and devoid of scandal.” me dc know circurr men I fiends beauti man 1i with 3 Hands “NC Provi value He laughed, kicked the burnir with hiSIbOOT. and lit a cigar. “I don’t. know how to turn course of an undammed mill sti‘ he said, throwing away the main] smiling afur it; “but if I possm sense, the Sill‘eng'th. and the no don’t see \‘x'iw l shouldn’t trv." there the 1111(11ess ends. A “tori-111111 3:1 love, a b attilul, high-spirited. bold. dashing 110322111. a true Eve, will 11» almost an; :ztans to gain her 1;) in, and think 3'1} is fair in love and Wt". Your anxiety regarding Mr. Farley has warped your better judgment. sir." “You own she is mad on my friend. then how. in heaven’s name, do you purpose turning this torrent of passion from him to vourself? Don’t try 111 touch things that are too high for '012, Hare.” 30 (‘Fal‘ NIT. F1! so far 1 was ten also be vc-rr; out of She to court In fled mania< said this to be per “1 know have con scrupulous nn' souL point to s Inorerau OD 1K8 t If she di credited '. man ever. the prope either pm state of I “Excusc “Unless the woman is demented the whole story is a monstrous outrageous absurditv, ’ ’1 911:1 said. “I made :1 m1; take, I perceive, an idiotic blundtr when I hit upon this scheme, but my original idea “as 9th are a detactixe in Farley’s place for a meek or moze as a. dew}, in order to fathom what her designs and intentions really were. If she did not go to the lengths l credited her with, I anticipated two man eV'eiitLt-tiij' handing her ovei ti the proper authorities, who would “As much as it is now. If she touch- es me the law will lay its heavy fin- gel on her and irretrievably stop her career; whereas, under harmless rea. sonable conditions, she is at liberty to reject the devotion and amends 01 an honorable man and return to Wey. heme and prosecute her pursuit 01 Mr. Farley.” THE SECRET 0f PAUL FARLEY A scarlet stain dyed the Squire’s face. ”And what do you think your life will be worth when Rowena Wycher.y discovers the fraud?” i go back to London to-night and Mr. Farley returns to Weyberne, either by the mail to-night or to-morrow. The widow has the license, the ring, the man to execute her kidnapping in- structions, and a closed carriage to poet here, there, and anywhere. What do you suppose Mr. Farley’s life would be worth if he did not consent to the I)” marriage. In ,1; ac: east 'ner' vengeance ‘orr me man who has tricked her? I wouldn’t be in your shoes, Hare, when she finds you out. Take my advice," he urged, “take my advice, like a. sensible fel- low, and give it up.” “For the sake of argument, Mn Fleming, let gs s_ay I do give it up: Continued from page 6. as Hare crossed the hearthrug his hand on the Squire's 'e d Igth. am should: . are be] I] He and TIC ive 8211‘. . Fleming, but you considered 3T THE DURHALM CHRONICLE. IOI'E inquire ., she must be and whatever to ensure Mr. and I sho Du voluntar fool-hardine in n E t11€ ,1ry of a b .e present daring, 1.; it's esse :1, but u! revelatic [ am m1. into h th 21 1d Knows No Pity. “Is he very bitter against the man who ran away with his Wife?” “Almost too bitter. He insists upon getting a divorce so that she can marry h1m.”â€"Houston Post. Made the Sale. “Mr. Whflker. l have seen It stated that women’s feet are becoming lar- ger. How about that '2” “Them may be some truth in it. but among all my customers I don’t know a single (me that it applies to, madam.” â€"-Chicago Tribune. Ewiuflona of Custom. “My son." said Mrs. McGudley, “he tore I married your father I made him promise that he would not smoke or play cards for money.” “Yes?" “Times have changed. if you decide to propose to a woman I want you to exact a similar assurance.”-â€"Waahing- ton Star. Rexall “93” Hair Tonic is as pleasant to use as clear spring water. It is delightfully perfumed and does not grease or gum the hair. Two sizes, 500. and $1.00. With our guarantee aback bf it. you certainly take no risk. Sold only at our storeâ€"The Rexall Macfiarlan-e Co. and hair roots, stop falling hair and grow new hair, that we per- sonally give our positive guaran- tee to refund every penny paid us- for it in every instance Where it does not give. entire satisfaction to the user. ‘ ~it is, and'wemean it to be. and no one should doubt it until they have put our claims to an actual test. “Get along, you silly jade,” he said, grasping his whip, and then the white gate smashed to, and a small, ill-star- red, fluttering form rushed across the road and scrambled through an open- ing in the Opposite fence. The mare reared, curvetted. leapt forward, and dashed headlong down the road. The man and woman leaned over the hedge, stretched their necks in tense anticipation of disaster, watched the mare stumble, saw her struggle fran- tically for a foothold, and go down with a sicizti'iing thud. accompanied by a ghasfiy nasal 03' wood and metal and the shire: 01' glass. investigation. and his obstinate con- viction that calumny and ridicule en- tailed by publicity would go far to blight the budding promise of a re- markable career. “The deuce take the woman!” he ejaculated, as the steeple of Weyberne Church loomed a whitish grey in the moonlight. “1 wishâ€"â€" hello, sweethearts” he muttered soft- ly, turning a keen eye on the figures of a man and woman standing on the further side 'of the trim hedge border- ing the grounds to the Larches. “I 'wlshâ€"whoa, steady, you nervous hus- sy‘” he exclaimed, as a plover rose up almost under the mare’s nose and startled hc . They Pilgrim‘ terrified “It would have been better and sim- pler,” he mused, “to have persuaded Farley to appeal to the nearest magis- trate for protection, and take out a summons agaiusr Mrs. Wycherly for intimidation and threatened bodily harm, and demanded to have the wo- man bound owr to keep the peace for at last six months." And yetâ€"could he have izn‘lt‘et'ncetl the lad to such a The trend of events had knotted it- self into such a sudden and unexpected twist that Felix felt incapable of deal- ing with the disentanglement of it single-handed. He blamed himself for not having used stronger and more potent arguments to dissuade Hare out of his mad chimerical project, and he blamed himself still more for his share in adding extra confusion to the general prevailing disorder and dis- comfort. He decided as he drove along to get his grim interview over with the Rev. Arthur Hay, then pro- ceed to the. Hall and explain Paul’s enforced absence to Sir Thomas. Felix left him smiling at the glowing end of his cigar and went silently out into the yaid. Gathering the reins in one hand, he climbed to his high seat, throwing a half-crown to the hostlei in response to his God- -,speed and drove through the town and out into the country deep in thought. W'Wcarage on my way home and lay ;. 0 facts of the grim episode before ‘«Mr. Hay, and leave him to deal with it as he thinks best.” Felix turned and held out his hand. “To a certain extent we are; I am acting your friend, although you don t think so. I still have hopes of you, Hare. Perhaps when you have slept over it you \\ 11 think better of it.” “Perhaps ” he returned, smiling, “who can tell?” HIV SEC-1‘11 IIKG “I should like 16 have mparted friends,” Austin Hare remarked, smil- ing. “I shall have done my duty.” Felix said, putting on his hat, "which is all thgg can be expected of a man.” “Suppose. despite your amiable ef- forts you don't succeed?" he asked, with a sneer. Any One L did Grow ontinued t1” WU"? DY} TGITIG Of nis nervous dread of 1 his obstinate con~ any and ridicule en- ty would go far to T1( xt Week (l II DI‘E 1b sitiv hat (1 An evil speaker only wants an op- portunity to become an Winonaâ€"Quin- A Matter of Practicum Riggsâ€"My half brother is engaged to my wife’s half sister. Diggsâ€"When will they be made one?â€"â€"Boston Tran- script. Jolting Hie Lawyer. Church-What was the name you called your lawyer? Gothamâ€"Necessity. “But that’s a funny name. Why do you call him Necessity ?" “Because he knows no law.”â€"Yon- kers Statesman. Dancing and Kissing. The old time ballroom smacked at the kiss. Without it the dance waq' incomplete It was claimed as a right. And given freely. The very idea at such an omission would have caused a strike. as these lines foretold: But some reply, What toole would dunno. If that when daunce is doone . He may not have at ladye's lips That which in daunce he woon? “Well." frowns the physician, “from these symptoms I should say offhand that you have too many relatives."â€" Chicago Post. The Real Trouble. “Oh, doctor," sighed the patient. “I am so glad you have come. i feel dreadful, and I don't know what in the world is the matter with me. My husband says it is nothing but nerv- ous indigestion. but his mother is posi- tive I am going to have appendicitis, and my mother declares l have inter- mittent fever, and my sister says it looks to her like creeping paralysis, and Aunt Henrietta says I’ve got malaria. What do you think I’ve got. doctor?” “This phrase caught the jury. and Robinson won his case. but one does not hear any such ‘oratory’ as that nowadays.”-Case and Comment. “There was a lawyer in Cleveland years ago-Bill Robinson was his name â€"whose addresses to a jury always at- tracted a crowd I will forever remem- ber one of his sentences. The man he was fighting in the suit had a reputa- tion as something of a miser. “"Who is this manâ€"who is he?‘ thun- dered Robinson. ‘You know and [ know that he boils his potatoes in wid- ows’ tears.’ Oratory No Longer Soars. “Oratory is a lost art," said a Cleve- land man the other day. “I used to go down ‘to the courts just to hear the lurid speeches. Nothing doing in that line any more. The iawyers do not talk about flowers, rainbows and sun- beams today. “The Boer is not long lived One seldom met an aged Boer of the old stock. Oom Paul Kruger. who was seventy-five years old when he died. was an exception. Hatred toward the ultlander and the lust for gold and power were what kept the fires of life burning at white heat within him.”- Health Culture. “The farmer depends upon his ten or eighteen children of all sizes to help him. A Kafflr as an employee is unde- pendahle as the winds that blow. Yet that Kaflir is the hired man in the mines and elsewhere in South Africa. The white man as a day laborer is a general failure. He cannot be worked in droves like the Kaffir from the in- terior. whose language. in clicks and vowel sounds. is hardly human. “The women are mute beings. ac- cepting their destiny with deep still- ness. The wife gives up her strength to the limit. and dies after giving birth to a dozen or more children. to make way for wife No. 2. who gives another dozen children to her country. He: adobe house. with its dirt floor made of ant hill clay mixed with beef gall. is a chamber of horrors to an Ameri- can traveler. “This Boer family was one of the wealthiesr of their kind. There was not a ripple of fun or exuberant life in anything but the live stock. Con~ versation was a dead language-un- known. the fig and enjoying the soft fruit. with its tropical taste, I had a refresh- ing night’s sleep, only to awaken in the morning pretty well scared. for my tongue was so swollen and black that I could not talk. "Then. again, when I was hungry to: butter on my bread a white. clammy substance made from sheep’s tail fat; was handed to me. and 1 could not 211- { low the farmer's wife to see me quiver. She sold her butter in the village close by at 75 cents a pound. more or less. I Sour bread and green strawberries i (plenty of thenm were considered good f enough. l “The farmer and his family lived chiefly on sour bread and sour skim milk. and l was therefore hungry most of the time. and the ripe figs hanging in clusters were pretty allub ing. After pushing back the skin 01 “The Boer wife laughed and enjoyed my discomfort and explainml that the skin or the fig had numerous fine thorns and I had not been careful to remove them when eating. “When I told the farmer’s wife that I liked buttermilk in quantity I no- ticed that I had a cupful or so given me. but she threw it by the pailful to the pigs. They were of far more con- sequence to her than I. for they would stay longer with her and were. bet; “fa millars. I was not. ny." she writes. “was broken by the roaring of the ostrivhes under our win- dow. We thong-u: it was a tame lion. Tho House 3 Chamber of Horrors. the Housowifo Hopelessly Dull. An American Woman traveling in South Africa was detained by floods and compelled to spend a month on a Boer farm. "The first night’s monoto- LIFE ON A BOER FARM. -London Tatler. ° Children are 'much more likely to contract the. contagious diseases when they have colds. Whooping cough. diphtheria, scarlet fever and consumption are diseases that are often contracted when the child has a cold. That is Why ,all med- ical authorities say beware of colds. For the quick cure of colds you Will find nothing better than Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It can always be depended ufaon, .and is pleasant and safe to take. For sale by all dealers. 533 ACRES near Proton Static and Saugeen Junction. tine brick residence Splendid barns: splendid soil, good water orchard c. Will sell less than 3‘25 an acre. A bargain surely. A H ARI) WARE and Tinsmith B'US- ness.Grey Cmmty. post office in connection Less than $10,000 will buy 40 acres of land store and dwelling. barn. other frame dwelling and $4 000 stock. miles from Durhami very chub. No man who doies business with H. H \hll r is ever satsfied to go elsewhere Our methods seem to please. ”Always Prompt, â€" Never Negligent. H. H. MILER O u r .\’0. Large number m cacao farm properties M01037 to Land at Low Rates. Landb bought and sold. Debts collect“! All kinds of writings drawn. A blend 0 Wheat ant 325 ACRES cln>e In P] uwn Station. brick dwellingfine large nut-buildings windmill o.: hay. :2 tons to acre, only $5.500. Kllnvks ”I“ sunshine Off Al“ b.- 11» bargains. thn \\ No charge for berth. Through Trains Toronto to Colonist Cars on all Trains \V ML [and Huntel Look HBIB or either qnoppmg People’s Mills MANITOBA, ALBERTA SASKATCHEWAN ll] 9E§ER4L COUNTRY STORE five Each TUESDAY mac" and mm l0.20 PM. Will have Toronto Special Trains For ocular: travelling with livestock Ind LOW COLONIST RATES The onlx ure Manit Manitoba H. H. MILLER The Hanovr Conveyancer PASTRY FLOUR Have SOVEREIGN ECLIPSE \l U w h mitx '1‘}! E th TRAINS through line automating." l0.20 PM. Daily Regular Trains leaving Toronto flour \V _'[o_. :1 ar ctlv Opposite The Reid House. Hanover. {HI SEVEN. )W3 11 (er whe making On Lane at Mass 1 TO 1,] e from we beat 311C

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