Durham Chronicle (1867), 31 Oct 1912, p. 7

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l '7 Wmoo» «momomowwoo»: If you want it 100 A“ One mile South of Williamsfurd. Good buildings. good soil, spring creek, olered at. snap Owner in Went and bound to sell. 100 A“ near Bentinck P. 0. Fair buildings, good farm, very low price and my terms. 180 m Normanby. n'ar Hamp- den. Good buildings. s fine stock farm. Somebody '1“ match this bar- gain quickly, why not you? If you wish to SELL, BORROW or INSURE it will PAY you to see me. If you have HONEY to invést or debts to COLLECT you should con- sult me. 28 year’s experience and knowledge of the locality. counts for something. Do business With me and get the bene- fit of it. 11.“. MILLER, Hanover Many other farms. of all sizes and kinds. for ulo cheap. 6 v OOOOQOOQOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 00990906000900900009000699 99900999999090096009999609 0090999999000999999990999: 9099000OOQQOQOQOOOOQOQOQOO 0699000099409999999099909 O . - - - - v v w- " v 0 O 9099900099.990900999990990 OOOOQOOQOOOOQQQ90900900090 Octobot Int, 1912. Come to the Big Shoe Store Shoes at low Prices T’S HOT Repairing promptly attended to. So now don’t miss getting your- self a pair of the latest in low shoes for midsummer wear, at the lowest possible price. And ,where is the place to get them? At the Big Shoe Store, near the bridge. Don’t fail when in town to call in and imlwct our large stock of Fon'weur, us we have a new stock of Fall Goods coming in. We are offer- ing a full line of Ladies’, Men’s and Children’s Oxfords and Pumps at very low prices. For Flour Feed Seed Fresh Groceries New Fruit and Nuts Choice Confectionery Pure Spices and Vinegars No. I Family and Pure Manitoba Flours Fine Salt. Farmers Produce Wanted BUT you can easily be cooled by calling at ROWE’S Ice Cream Par- lors, where all the choicest iced and cool drinks are served on short not ice. Perhaps you want something cool for your friends at home. lfso try one of our City Dairy ice cream bricks. Nothing better can be pro- cured anywhere. Just call and be convinced. TflOS. MCGRATH TERMSâ€"CASH or EGGS. $UNDERTAKING O ‘5'“ ‘“mmo Sick headache is caused. by a llaordered stomach. Take Cham- berlain’s Tablets and correct that and the headaches will disappear. for aale by all dealera. Mrs. Minnie Bulwinke, of King street, New York, is in the hospi- tal at the point of death as a re- sult of a strange accident. The sun’s rays focused on and reflect- ed from a large reflector which she carried, set fire to her‘cloth- ing, and nearly burned her to death. All that glitters isn’t gold, but it edema to satiety a lot of us. SUN SETS WOMAN ON FIRE. lugs, Oilcloths Window Shades Lace Curtains and all louuhld Furnishings New Stock just. arrived and will be sold at the lowest living profit. Undertaking receives special attention FURNITURE EDWARD KRESS AND Near the Bridge .3191. ' Boot-go A. Reid no the Principal at New Royal Ceriadlan Aca Tomv. G. A. Reid, the well-known artist of she Royal Canadian Academy (i To- 3route. has just been appointed princi- {oal of the new ()ntarin C. 11 ge of Art. . which will commence 0p9f8ti0n$ ()cto. Iber 1. He will ‘re assisted by a very able‘body of teachers. among whom .' are some of the most celebrated paint; ers of the Domini .n. The new college will occupy a portion of The Grange. the residence of the late Goldwin Smith. until such time as the new building is completed. The college will be under the control and manage- ment of ‘he council. wTich will be appointed by the Art Museum. the On- tario Society of Artists. the Canadian Art Club. the Canadian Manufactur- wrru-vâ€" wâ€" "_ The new principal has been for five years president of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, which is the highest honor a Canadian artist can receive, and he is admittedly one of the very foremost of Canadian painters. He was born \ 'v’i:..~zham. (;nt., in 1860, and has devoted his life to the study of art, having studied under the lead- ing masters in the United States, France, ‘pain and Italy. He is best known to the public by his famous paintings “Mortgazing the Home- stead,” “Foreclosing the Mortgage," and “The Arrival of Champlain at Quebec.” He carried off a medal at the Columbian Exhibition in Chicago in 1893 and won medals at a number of other leading exhibitions. In 1889 he also took the Julian prize at the Aca- demy, Paris, and he was one of the jurors of award at the fine arts exhibi- tion in connection with , Pan-Amer- ican at Buffalo in 1901. He excels .s a figure painter and sex' ral of his canvases are in the national gallery at Ottawa. His supremacy in techni- que, color composition and striking individuality of atmosphere is un- questioned among Canadian painters. ers’ Association,.the Trades and Labor Council, the Senate of-the University of Toronto, the Queen City Council. the Canadian National Exhibition, the Graphic Arts Society. the Toronto So- ciety of Art Architects an the Ontario Association of Architects. The train- ing of students will con~ist of the study of the fine arts and preliminary drawing, painting desigr, modelling and working in all branches of the ‘ Rolls of.postage stamps that will be much easier to handle in large quan- jtities than the flat sheets now in use ‘will be issued about September 1 by 'the Dominion postotflce. This inven- tion comes as n resuh of frequent r9 quests made by the Mmufacturera‘ Association. apglied artg. Dr. A. S. Vogt, director of Toronto's Mendelssohn Choir. has a personal reticence in keeping with his musical distinction. One day‘ the late Dr. J. D. Thorburn, a neighbor of Dr. Vogt, saw a small discordant German band playing some distance along Bloor street, and knowing the Men- delssohn director’s horror of such af- fairs, determineâ€"d to play a practical joke. Approaching the bandmaster he made a contract that for the reward of one dollar he should move along to the pavement directly in front of Dr; Vogt’s residence and continue to play his entire repertoire for a full half hour. “Of course,” explained Dr. Thorburn blandly, “you may have a little' diffi- culty with one of the inmates. a short bald man who detests music and has no appreciation for German ideas. But -__ “‘5'â€" pay no attention to him and keep playin for the full half hour.” The andmaster solemnly promised and set off for Dr. Vogt’s, where pres- ently a full bombardment was in pro- gress. Meanwhile, Dr. Thoburn had telephoned all his musical friends in- viting them up “to hear Dr. Vogt’s new orchestra.” Very soon Frank Bl ford, Frank Welsman, Dr. Ain- ger, r. Broome, and a group of others came hastening to the soexe only to find Dr. Vogt expostulating angrily with the stubborn musicians and beg- ging them to leave the neighborhood. Many of the neighbors sent Jnotes over -'-""J -_ begging the Mendelssohn director to postpone his concerts until a more seasonwble time, and his telephone rang incessantly with the pleadings of his friends “to keep his German friends in his cellar or his shed.”â€" Star Weekly. Hero is a new fish story concerning three Canadian authors and one of the most noted fishing groundsin Canada: “vw' Athur McFarlane, Archie McKish- nie, and Arthur Stringer were sharing the some cum) in Algonquin Park. None of them had made an exception- al record as on angler, but what each does not knowâ€"or thinks he knows-â€" shout fish is not worth mentioning. \Onp night as the nimrods sat about their camp fire, McFarlane declared that ho had that day witnessed a 331- mon trout leup ten feet in the air and piglg a butterfly‘ ‘offnthe twig of a. two. â€"â€"â€" - J u‘-cnmh- V.. w 'wvvvâ€"-_' I" - “Quite possible,” agreed Stringer. "I have frequently seen salmon trout leap half-way up a twenty-foot fall, hold themselves midway, by ‘some strange power, and make the remain- ing distance at a single leap.” “And if you notice,” said McKish. nie, “trout usually, in fact always, iump against the wind. just as a wild duck lights against it. They do it to keep their scales from becoming ruf- fled. Last summer I saw a man stand on a narrow strip of land between two of these lakes and catch fifty salmon trout, and he had nothing but an or- dinary lending-net. He caught the ed jumping in pairs and carried away his landing-net, he'd have caught a thousand."â€"Toronto Star. Kingston luatoriCIl Suciety mrchas ed an old building on Queen street. which was used [or the first Parlta went in Canada. and will turn it into a museum In 1792 this. building was the bum uf Lieutenantuovernor and Ladv Simone. To flEAD ART CQLLZG}; INSANE MAN DISROBED TO GO A nnxrn Historic House for MUSOUm. A Joke on Dr. Vogt. Dumps In Rolls. A Big Catch. THE DURHAM CHRONICLE Ernest Darrell started an evan- gelistic meeting at the corner of .Queen and «Yonge streets. sTo- ronto, last week. He was going to convert .the world in a week. After a short address he said he was going above and proceeded . to disrobe for the occasion. Th..- constable interrupted the process - just when Da ell was about to - discard his sh t. There is 1"ttle' doubt concerning the prisoner‘s ‘ mental condition. but the court re- : manded him for the doctors to pronounce upon his case. We promise you that, if you hair is falling out and 30-11 11.1m- inot let it go too far, you can re- Ipair the damage already done by insing Rexall “93” Hair Tonic, \xith lpersistency and regularity, for a greasonable length of time. It is a fscientific, cleansing, antiseptic germicidal preparation, that de- fstroys microbes stimulates good circulation around the hair roots, !promotes hair nourishment, rc- moves dandruff and act to resto1e hair health. It is as pleasant to iuse as pure water, and is delicate- ;ly perfumed. It is a real toilet inecessity. Making a Magnet. The ambient way or magnetizing . bar or steel is that known as “single touch." The bar to be magnetized l. laid on the table and the pole of a powerful magnet is rubbed from ten to twenty times along its length. always in the same direction. if the north pole of the magnet is employed the end of the bar first touched will also be- come a north pole, while the opposite end. at which the magnet is lifted be fore returning. will be a south pole. There are other and more compu. cated methods. known as “divided touch" and “double touch." in which two and even four magnets are em- ployed. A steel bar can also be magnetized by placing it within a coil of insulated wire. through which a galvanic cur- rent is circulating. The magnetism in- duced in this way. however. is weak compared with that which can be pro- cured if the same strength of current In employed through the intervention of an electro-magnet. Disraeli Placated Carlyle. Carlyle’s opinion of Herbert Spencer as “the most unending ass in Christen- dom" must. of course. be read in con- junction with Carlyle’s derision for mankind in general. “Mostly fools," he cheerfully thought of us all. Dar- win. we know. he would not have at any priceâ€"not a word of him. Ruskin was a bottle of soda water. “A bad young man" was his sum-up of another eminent writer. But these hostile phrases were subject to considerable modification if the man against whom they were aimed came near enough to Carlyle to do him a personal favor. even to pay him a personal compli- ment. Disraeli. whom he had describ- ed as a mountebank dancing upon John Bull’s stomach, offered Carlyle a bamnetcy and elicited from him. to- gether with a refusal of the title, many tributes to his magnanimity. He said very little about Disraeli henceforth in print. and in private he spoke of him only a “a very trusted comical tol- You Run No Risk When You Use This Remedy. We want you to try Rexall “93" Hair Tonic with our promise that it will cost you nothing unless you are perfectly satisfied with its use. It comes in two sizes, prices 50c. and [81.00. Remember, you can obtain Rexall Remedies in this community only at our storeâ€"The Rexall Storeâ€"Macfarlane 6: Co. FOR FALLING HAIR. ABOVE. :3; THE ROYAL BANK or CANADA SEAGULLS SACRED IN UTAH It is not only in eastern countries. apparently that animals are held sacred. In Utah the law provides severe penalties for anyone who mav kill a seagull. In the early days when the Mormons settled Salt Lake Valley, the seagulls res- cued the first crops, grown after infinite difficulties, by eating the grasshoppers which Were dev- astating them. To show their gratitude the Mormons are now ahout' to erect a monument to tlieil bird friends. Much Sickness Due to Bowel Dis- orders. A doctor’s first question when consulted by a patient is, “are your Vowels regular ‘1”. He knows that ninety-eight per cent. of ill- ness is attended with inactive Howels and torpid liver, and that this condition must he removed gently and thoroughly Wetore health can he restored. --vâ€"-'â€"â€" Rexall Orderlies are a positive, pleasant and safe remedy for constipation and bowel disorders in general. We are so certain of their great remedial value that we promise to return the urchaser's money in every case w. en they fail to_prgdgce entire satisfaction. Rexall Ord-erlies are eaten like candy, they act quietly and have a soothing, strengthening, healing influence on the entire intestinal tract. They do not purge, gripe. cause nausea, flatulence, excessive IUIIJIL-l‘v, “unv- -â€" -7. he can make it even hotter. Hot ice is made hy putting water un- der extraordinarily heavy pressure and at the same time regulating the temperature of the water. The apparatus used includes a hyâ€" draulic press and a very thick tu‘xe of steel to hold the water. There are jackets on the tu‘vve for keeping the contents constantly at any desired temperature. We are told. the Daily Telegraph says. that the doctor kept the steel hot- tle filled with water and ice until he had oHtained a pressure of over 300,000 pounds to the square inchâ€"and a temperature of 173 degrees Fahrenheit. In appearâ€" ance “hot” ice is similar to the ordinary frozen, ice. Dr. Percy Bridgman, of Boston, has manufactured ice having a tequerature of 173 degrees Fah- renheit, and he is confident that "-4. LONDON. CNG” OFFICE _Bank Ridesâ€"Princes St. Dr. Nurse's “‘ LLCiian {bigot Pi ll THE DOCTOR’S QUESTION. .55. ,JLG‘Sd the direct ' and inevitable result of " .r I ~‘ m- ‘ pr ‘d bowels and -i--t.§- iziivcys and skin. The on . (and and othervaste mat- r ‘xicl; is aliw‘wd to accumulate m5 tlv‘. bi 0d and the whole .4 :a. r: \’:l ) :1. : slnIiian Root Pills C 1 huh. on t K: bowels, regulating cur-«.21 t' e kilnevs, giving them 2 r. mi 1m. gih to properly filter the MAKING “HOT” ICE Oepitel Authorized Cepitel Paid Up Reserve Fund . Total Assets . For pure blooJ and Local 290 Branches mronghoul Canada. THE TRADERS BANK 0F 0mm A General Banking Business 1 ransacted. Savings Departmsnt at all Branches. WITH WHICH IS UNITED INCORPORATED 1869 L‘l‘ looseness, diarrhoea or other an- no ying effect. They are especially good for children,y weak persons or old folks. Two sizes, 25c. and 10c. Sold only at our store-The Renll Store. Macfarlane Co. WHERE INDIANS FOUGH'I‘. Shelburne Economist. 1 About five miles from the south shore of the Manitoulin Island lies Lake Mindfinoya. or in the Indian tongue, ‘Lake of The Old Woman.’ It is about seven miles long and varies f1om one to three miles in width, and, with its prett3. sandy fbeeches. sheltered ba3s and its island, is one of the most beauti- qul lakes in Ontario. It is in the limestone a1ea. and consequently mart of the. shore is fo1 med 113' high, precipitous cliffs of 1111 1 me- ’stonermk,moss-gr1mn.W:-e1tl111ed and cleft b3' frost and stmm ' High up in the face of this 100k, a large ca\e was d1se11\ e11 1 many 3ears ago. A man 1115 \11I‘11i11g along the cliff. when he sud i1nl3 saw before him this huge chaml 11 in the rock Strewn upon the floor were Indian skeletons and weapons just as the3 11111.91 have fallen when hemmed in 113' a hostile tribe. One skeleton was of a gigantic size. As further proof that this was an Indian stronghold, the whole front of the cave was once walled u 1 with flat stones to a considerable height; this defence has fallen ‘down, but still the form of the ,wall can be seen in the mass of 'stones lying on the ground. l About nine miles north-east of the cave lie what are supposed to be the remains of another old Indian fort. A row of stakes ‘planted in a circular form. is all ‘that remains, and most of these idecayed, are just visible above ’the level of the earth. Tradition .says that this was used as a d' lfence during an Indian war. Se eral places near Lake Mindemoya are known as battle grounds be- 'cause of the stone arrowheads and [other weapons found. If You Have Scalp or Hair Trouble Take Advantage of This Offer. We could not afford to so strongly endorse Rexall “93" Hair Tonic and continue to sell it u we do, it it did not do all weiclaim it will. Should our enthusiasm carry us away, and Rexall “93” Hair Tonic not give entire satis- faction to the users, they would lose faith in us and our state'- ments, and in consequence our business would suffer. i We assure you that if your hair is Heginning to unnaturally fall out, or if you have any scalp trou- Me, Rexall “93” 'Hair Tonic is without question the best remedy we know of to eradicate dandruff stimulate hair rowth and prevent premature Hal ness. . 11--.. n O Our faith in Rexall “93" Hair Tonic is so strong that we ask you to try it on our positive guar- antee that your money will he cheerfully refunded if it does not do as we claim. Two sizes, 50c. and $1.00. Sold only at our store The Rexall Store. Maciarlane fl 'hwillbescingtct)a.=l. w o ues eat: of the E1928 Contest. NEW YORK AGENCY Cor. W i'llmm and (‘edargh HAIR HEALTH. 8 25,000,000

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