Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 23 Aug 1906, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ton AGENCY l H RTAINS a 1e (G _ GOODS Ltd. 23 1906 AN, Agent) ELLS ted. now in LO CHEAP it ~pring r Seedâ€" rs and 4 rth of EVIE W ntion. hers, nders asers. llers Blora Block HINES i styles Trunks, Valises, Club Bags, Remember the placeâ€"â€" G, Lawrence‘s old Stand David and Goliath xzififizfizfiéfi%gs@'w%w Daily ascensions of a navigable airsiip. always under perfect control,. The most wonderful invention of the age. Royal Venetian Band, the most celebrated European musical organization, under the great leader, Victor, will give concerts daily Fireworks on a more magnificent and imposing scale, picturing the great Carnival of Venice. Many splendid educational features for the boys and girls. For information write { X’MI }l}gllql?r' g::::z::; LONDON Western Fair AUGUST 23, 1906 fireproof roofs The Exhibition that made Fali Fairs Famous An ideal occasion for a family outing Paterson‘s "Wire Edge" Ready Roofing Goliath was a very much surprised man when David hit him with a stone, _ Such a thing never entered his head before. Did it ever enter your head that Mcliraith‘s is the correct place for correct Boots and Shoes at correct prices ? Correct your ideas and collect a little money and come and see us for your next pair of Boots or Shoes. TELESCOPES, &c., at lowest prices, â€" Custom work and Reâ€" pairing as usual. TERMSâ€"CASH,. Eggs taken same as Cash J. S. MecILRAITH September 7â€"â€"15 1906. But the child can not always study nature iu the fields or woods, and for the time he can not go abroad the school museum should supply the deâ€" fcieney. The children of the school can and will williâ€"gly help to make this museum a centre of interest,. Thevy will readily provide a collection of birds‘ nests; robin, orioe, English spamow. kingbird, swift, phoebe, and chinping sparrow. These uot only suive to show the different muaterials otft which birds build nests but they also show the different kinas of work manship and give a clue to the character of the bird itâ€" self, In their efforts to get these nests the children will learn where to look for the nests of the varus birds, and from the places in which they find ther. they will learno something ot the characters of the birds. In some sases they may be able to determine where the birds‘ food is procured. These nests, of course, will not be taken nntil the autumn, when the birds have no further use for them [f birds‘ eggs are taken tor the museâ€" um the children must be cautioned not to take them from the nests unless the birds have ‘eft them. On the whole I think is is better not to have the childâ€" ren attempt to get the eggs. In the game season the children will be able to obtain specimens of birds‘ claws or feet and also of beaks. ‘These will be valoable in classifying birds and in showing the means that nature proâ€" vides for the birds‘ pretection and susâ€" tenance. Mounted specimens of birds orsome small animals may be obtained, and the children may be able to get teeth or skulls or even whole skeletons of some of the emaller wild animals. Skeletons of different kinds of fish, the shells of tartles and various kinds of land and sea shells may be found useâ€" ful both in Geography and io Nature Study, and the bones might be made to illustrate the Physiology Lesson. The cluld should be led to mahe obâ€" servations, This can be,done by askâ€" ing questions which he canuot answer without carefuily obserying the natâ€" urul objects. Collecting objects for the schcol museum will aid along this line. Objects may be brought into the school room for use but the child should be enâ€" souaged to look for them in field or forest as be will be better able to underâ€" stand their natural habitat. He will alâ€" so learn in what kind of places to look for certain plants or animals or minerals, At the rsopening of the schools is a fitting time to introduce the above subâ€" ject. ‘The article that follows is from the "Normal Star" of July 1906,. a magâ€" azine published at Ottawa Normal yearâ€" ly and the author is Miss Mildred Leeâ€" son, of Varney. Those who knew Miss Leeson and have seen tha collection of natural curios in her home will recognize her fitness to discuss the subject, as the Normal School authoritiee have done. The article is unot published by request sanction, nor acquiescence of the authâ€" or but is a piece of pure stealing on our part, the theft being justified by the meriv and timeliness of the topic.â€"Ed. The chief aim of teaching Nature Btudy in the Public Schools is to train the child‘s power of observation and in this way to develop his chararter. In the Vegetable Kingdom plants o# various kinds may be collected throughâ€" out the summer, The children should be taught how to collect specimens so as not to destroy the plants, The leaves, flowers, buds avd fruit should be takeu when possible and the children should learo how to dry, mount and label their specimens. A collection of dry and hard fruits should also be made and the time of ripening uoted, Cones of pines, balsam, spruce, larch and white cedar can be easily obtained in many places. Then they can get Acorns Chestuuts. Horsechestnut«, Beechnuts, Walnuts, Butternute and Hazelnuts and the keys or Sawaras of the yvarious Mapâ€" les, and the Ash, Elm and Basswood. To these might be added the fruits of the Wild Rose, Sweet Briar, Burning Bush, Climbing Bittersweet and Barâ€" berry, ail of which cau be dried without losing their color or shape. The pods of Milkweed and the feathery sprays of the Wild Clematis will help to give the children an idea of seed dispersal. Subscription priceâ€"$1.00 year if paid in advance ; 8??2') if ll’lflot so paid. i. Advertising rates on application to C. RAMAGE, Publisher A leading weekly Journal, minence to lomllg‘tfews o(y Durham mu Grey, with special attention to the South Riding. To these specimens of the animal and vegetable Kingdoms the children will be able to add the different kinds of rocks to be found in the neighborhood, as well as fossils and specimens of ore. Che Burkham Review Undertaking BARCLAY & BELL We have opened up Undertaking Rooms in Thos. Swallow‘s buildâ€" ing opposite the Middaugh House and are prepared to do business with any person requiring underâ€" taking. Satisfaction guaranteed in Embalming, â€" Our stock of funeral supplies has arrived ; also a full line of Catholic robes, etc. THURSDAY, AUG. 23. 1906. The School Museum. By a Normal Graduate, and Embalming And as McKelvie sums up the sitâ€" uation, ‘* We have been sawing wood ever since. " When there was hard work to be done A. A. Mc. was always in the lead. He learned to burle a log like a riverdriver and to take his duckâ€" ings and they were frequent with as good a grace. On one occasion he stood up tu his neck for two hours in the cold lake water while a daudling boy found a rope. On the boat up the lake he met his present partner, McCamus, who was also spying out the land and on arâ€" riving at the Wabishared with him his tent and blanket. The two free lancessaw that a mill was greatly needed, for the nearest buzz saw was at Ville Marie, some twenty miles away. 1 was always mighty careful," said McKelvie. Too careful, perâ€" baps, but at all events he used his vacation in the summer of ‘95 in prospecting the Temiskaming Disâ€" trict. He was delighted and next fall resigned his rod in fayor of axe and cant hook. * He was a hardy and strenuous worker and he carried his vim even into politics. . He is a mason, which perbaps, accounts for his glad hana and hearty grip; he is an elder of the Presbyterian church and viceâ€" Eresident of the Temiskaming and udson Bay mining Co. _ Added to this he is well posted in public affairs and his retentive memory for little pleasing incidents makes him a hard man to beat. He is a great politician but more than that he is a truly patâ€" riotic citizen. _ A little work never frightens him when he believes it for the public good. _ During his first winter in the country he and Mr Thos Chester of Dymond T‘p, walked a distance by foot of 120 miles, to join a deputation whose object was to induce the Governmens to build a Temiskaming railway. The Mayor of New Liskeard cumâ€" menced life as a school teacher. His father was a farmer and Anguas still tells stories of helping to clear the farm. That gave bim his rugged constivution and his ready hand to any kind of work. But how often the farmer‘s son yearns for an exâ€" perience broader than that of burnâ€" ing stumps and gloughing fields on the old homestead. _ Angus decided on the paths of learning. â€" But folloâ€" wing knowledge like a "sinking star‘" is a long voyage, and besides, kidâ€" walloping was not altogether in the line of the soft hearted McKelvie. "The world is as we make it, a philosophy more or less untrue though sometimes exemplified in a striking way in the livyes of optimistic charâ€" acters. Laugh and the world laughs with you. is the motto, the guiding star as it were, by which Angus A. McKelvie, Mayor of New Liskeard, and happiest man in the Temiskamâ€" ing District, finds easy grades on every road. Angus McKelvie is a modern Mark Tapley who can laugh when the days are bright, laugh when things go wrong, laugh at his enemies, laugh with his friends. He sees all things through his gently rose tinted spectacles and he laughs his way through life. Mr McKelvic was prominent from the first in the pubiic affairs of this countryv. _ He was made Township clerk of Dymond Tp at its municiâ€" pal organization, and resigned the position in 1903 to run successfully for Reeve. In the following April the town of New Liskeard was foundâ€" ed and McKelyie resigned the townâ€" ship chief magistrate to take a position as councillor on the village public board. He has now been mayor of L‘skeard for two terms and it is safe to say that Temiskaming has no public office too good or tro important for Angus A. McKelyie. . ThefNew Liskeard Herald is publishâ€" mf‘ series of cartoons of local notâ€" ables and chose for its first the mayor of the town a wellâ€"known former citiâ€" zen and native of south Gmfi' whose parents Mr and Mrs John McKelyie are still with us Accompanying the cartoon, which is the work of J. W. Bengough, is a highly complhmentary write up trom which we have pleasure in extracting as follows, The school is thoroughly equll_})ped in teachin& ability, in chemical and electrical supglies aAn fittings, &e., for full Junior Leaving and Matricâ€" ulation work. The following competent staff are in charge : THOS. ALLAN, 1st Class Certificate, Principal MISS L. m. FORF..R, B. A., Classics, Moderns and English. MISS FLOSSIi¢ McKERRACHER, First Class Certificate and third year undergraduate of Queen‘s Universlfl_. Science, History and‘Geography. Intending Students should enter at the beginâ€" ning of the term if possible. _ Board can be obâ€" tained at reasonable rates. Durham is a healthy and attractive town, making it a most desirable place for residence. FEES: $1 per month in advance. Wm.Jonaston, Jr., C. Ramage, Chairman. Secreta MDTURL FRE INSURANGE GOMPANY FARMERS‘ CENTRAL The strongest purerl‘r Mutual Fire In surane Co. in Ontario. A record without a P&nllel and a just reward for honest efforts. Licensed and insé)ecu.-d by the Government ; insures residence and farm property upon the latest known plans. 3 or 4 year blanke: policies issued ou the annual instalment or one drsyment system under the most favorable conditions to the insured. Insure in the best. If your insurance expires this year, call on, or drop a card to Durham School NEIL MeCANNEL, Agent, Durham Angus A. Staff and Equipment. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Fat exists in milk in the form of an emulsion of extraordinary perfection, one of the most complete emulsions. It is estimated that there are one and a half millions of globules of fat in a drop of milk the size of a pin head. The finer it is divided, the more easy it is of digestion. Being lighter than water, it rises to the top in the form of cream. Souring of milk is due to the changing of this lactose into lactic acid. It is thought by some that the souring of milk during a storm is not due to electricity but to the increased temperature just before the storm ocâ€" eurs and that placing the vessel conâ€" taining the milk in a pan of cold water would prevent souring. The Lactic acid bacilli which do the harm increase at a favorable temperature, and in unclean vessels. 4. â€" Waterâ€"found in greater or less quantities in all foods. It constitutes about two thirds of the weight of the body, and is in all tissue and fluids ; theretore its abundant use is necessary 5. Mineral matterâ€"regulates and builds up the bones of our bodies. The average composition of milk is as follows : 88 %, water $.6 â€"â€" fat 3.2 proteids, which are chiefly made up of 2%%, casein, and 7¢% albumen, a small amount of mineral matter and of carboâ€"hydrates in the form of lactose. Of the two proteids already menâ€" tioned, it might be said that when milk is heated a skin gathers on the surface. This is the albumen and if this heating is allowed to continue for some time, a portion of the food yalue of milk is lessened, _ When milk sours or is heated, the white curdy substance which falls to the bottom of the dish is called casein or is more commonly known as curds: this is also the case when rennet is added, it is coagulated. _ The carboâ€" hydrate in the form of lactose is present in a small amount, 3. Fats and Oilsâ€"These store up energy and heat to be used when needed. 2. â€" Carboâ€"Hydratesâ€"furnish enerâ€" gy and maintain heat, As an examâ€" ple of these we have sugars, starch, dextrin, etc. The water is used to hold other ingredients in more or less complete solution. The nutritive constituents of food are classified according to the funcâ€" tions they perform in the body. In all foods we have one or more of the following substances : f 6. .”P;)tre}a.;,râ€"fi-which build up and repair tissues,. They furnish energy. It only requires a few months at this Instituâ€" tion to comé)lew A thorough practical Business Course, or Shorthand an 'k‘ypewmmg Course, and fit you for a remunerative position. Students admitted at any time, _ Full particu Tats at any sime frge. â€" _ ) c cu.0l0}03u} In order to have an idea of the food value of milk, it is necessary to know something of its composition, Except in meat there is no food which varies so much in composition and it has been found that the most uniform milk is that obtained from a herd of cows. The Food Value of Milk â€"â€"â€"Its Composition [ HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS )) All the machinery of the above well known firm in stock or can be seâ€" cured at short notice. : Gray & Sons, Chatâ€" Buggles ham. BarrieCarriage Co, Canada Carriage Co., Brockville, VERITY PLOWS : Walking & Rid ing and Gang Ploughs, DISC HARROWS and Harrows of all kinds. SEED DRILLS ; Hayâ€"loaders, side dGelivery and tedders; Proven and Beattie Hay Tracks. Singer Sewing Machines, BELL Organs & Pianos 4 Owen Sound Commences September 3, 1906 Our Goods are firstâ€"class, prices mo detate. Call anyway. Daisy Churns & Washers Shop west of the Middaugh Hous MASSEYâ€" HARRIS ! KRESS, McQueen & Morice Has a full line of Curtain Poles, Window Shades, Picture Frames Frames to order of all kinds, We are having an uphol<terâ€" er the first week in every mounth, Anyone wishing old goods renoâ€" vated to look good as new should advise usâ€"we will be pleased to attend to it at once. Night Calls for Undertaking promptly _ attended _ to. One door south of Post Office. En. mms FALL TERM at the AADâ€"NWORTHERNL ;2 C. A. FLEMING, Principal The _/> Undertaker § Is good Bread, well made and # properly bakedâ€"the bread that ; is made by Stinson. ‘This is the Â¥ perfect breadâ€"made of the best ; flour, leavened and seasoned just right, thoroughly kneaded and § baked to perfection, it is easily W digested and it builds health and g strength for those who eat it. Â¥ Give it a trial. e e yR SR We solicit the business of Manufacturers, Engineers and others who realize the advisabil ity of having their Patent business transacted by Experts, Preliminary advice free, Charges moderate, Our Inventor‘s Adviser sent upon rcâ€" qauest, Marion & Marion, Reg*d., New York Life nest, Marion & Marion, Reg G., ANCW 2000 1A ‘hdz, Moutreal ; and Washington, D.C., U.S.A. ‘ AJ R BPTANT T " RRTW PCO w 5 & Dpappepecessecececsccecset We have some bargains in Worsted Trousers, neat patterns worth $4.00 for 3.00, We have also some heavy tweed trousers for only $%2. These are also snaps. Call in, we may have a pair amongst them to suit you. Remember it‘s the savings that count. with bibs. _ Cottonade and mokeskin trousers and a good line of MEN‘S Heavy SHIRTS at right prices. RBlack and RBlue Overatls Worsted and Cweed C. BR Srant Peel, the Shoeman LEATHER Solid Leather Ogilvie‘s "Royal Household" Keewatin * Five Roses"â€"The very best Keewatin maka, A carload just received. F L OU R Clover and Timothy and all varâ€" ieties of Garden ~<eeds in aâ€" bundance for Spring growing S E E D S Is the stock you get in the Shoes you buy at Peel‘s. Leave your foot measure for fall STINSON, The Baker. The Best Cure For Dyspepsia MATTHEWS & LATIMER FIELD AND GARDEN. OMPTLY: Highest grades only. FrOUSCTS W t uh U Pa) MHONOR GRADUATE of Toronto University, graduate of Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Rooms Over J & J HUNTER‘S Naw Shaws Ofliceâ€"Calder‘s Block, ov HONOR GRADUATE Toronto wate Royal College Dental Dentistry in all its branches. W. C, PICKERING D. D S., L. D. & Office, 13 Frost 8t, Barristers, Soucl:ors. Conveyancers ( h4 k Money to Loan, J. G. HUTTON, M.D., C. M Late assistant to Moorfleld‘s London, to Knapp‘s (New York) ére no-m;hu‘.) A. G. MacKay K.C.: W. F Dunn {*)fice and Residence Cor. Garafraxa and Ge« â€" â€" mt., wt r0otof Hill, _ Old Moodic Corner, Barrister, Solicitor in Supreme Court Notary Public, Commissioner, &c. _ JOHN CLARK Do you want to know where to buy D. McPHAIL _â€"»~ Durham, Nov 150 Acres above Durham, well improved. $i000 , above Durham, well built, well | _ 250 ?emwcn watered, good land, for $7300. | Normanby, well improved and lo * * AEREE ie than Sior " * - near {Allan Park, 150 acres wbbtatani .:3 ¢ *4 â€"~~4 A large number of other properties for sale in Durâ€" ham town and Townships. . Inâ€" surances placed, debts drawn. C, P. &mmu? <% A nways Prowrr, Never Ngouroext." PrvslCIAX & Surc®o®, Office over J. &1J. Hunter‘s Store nc <uk: M IP A,M, OFFICE HOURS 9â€"11 a. m 2â€"4 p. m. 7â€"Q p. M Telephone Connection No. 10 KS Fail Term opens SEPT. 4th Licensed Auctioneer for Co. Grey ‘ Terms moderate, Anwneuu for sales as to aates, &c., must be at the Review Ofâ€" fice, Durham, #* Correspondence addressed there, or to Ceylon P.O., will be promptiy@® attended to, Terms on application to our graduates this year is Licensed Auctioneer for the Co, of Grey, Sales mpfly attended to. _ rates reasonable rs may be left at his Implement Wareâ€" rooms, McKinnon‘s old stand, or at the R=vi£w Insurance Agent, Money to Loan Issuer of Marriage Licenses, A gen eral financial business transacted Will be at the l(lddnufih House, Durham, the first Wednesday of each month from 10 a. m. till 4 p. m. ARTHUR GUN, M. D., #@> Special attention given to Discases of Women and Children, x § Member Ph College ylu:nudm Eye, Ear, Nose & Throat ARTHUR H. JACKSON flice, McIntyre Block, over the Bank flice, over Gordon‘s Jewelry Stor DE DLDD LCA «4a=ioCtilioneecrs. or to . F. GRANT D.D.S, L MACKAY & DUNN, 4 a A HIGH GRADE sCHOO Notary Public, Commissioner DURHAM. ONT. (1 ly, _ It to at y for mu'?o':ue, w s daudky o.A J & J HUNTER‘S New Store n nite â€"»(a S â€" Cin wl HOURS THE HANOVER CONVEYANCER H. H. Miller, TORONTO, ONT. J. P. TELFORD D. MePHAIL, Ceylon P. 0« C. RAMAGE, Durhan CONVEYANCER. &ec Ceylon has a telephone offic« DR. BURT Money to Loan 16 Licensed , Auctioneer fo the County of Grey,? ower Town) Caiy Surg Owen Sound st Office rad and

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy