West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 4 Jul 1912, p. 3

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All up-to-date flour and feed and grocers keep our flour for sale. your grocer does not keep it come to the mill and we. will use you right Call us up by telephone No. 8. All kinds of Graig boughti at Market Special Reduction on Flour in 5 and 10 ‘Bag ths. QAAJâ€" J-‘. Chopping Done Every Day Is made from selected Winter whe and is a. superior article for making pastry, etc. Our pure Manitoba. flour, made from No. 1 Manitoba wheat cannot be beat for either bakers or domestic use A blend of wheat and A small or large bag of white, nutritious flour, brand. Have you ever your grocer to give you time and see the superic ities it possesses. Ref. People’s Mills John McGowan “ 3 “Minennwn rawh‘smaia t P 9 a ~j-o.oo:oo‘oo‘ We put; the Wh. Don’t: forget. PASTRY FLOUR Macfarlane Co. July 4th, 1912. 250 a bottle other applied 'ciry insecticides But Quality 15 Essential if best results are to be obtained. Remember that vou can foilou this example in p1110hasino any- thing in Tinw are, Graniteware, St(,)ves Rano es Fu111aces, and General Plumbino Goods from SOVEREIGN Never substitute appeaiance for quality but rather choose an article ‘a trifle more costly and obtain both. Appearance is prudential 25calb. fa}. .Ianitoba. and g Ontario I is a. strictly first class family flour: STRICTLY PURE Church’s Bug Finish â€"A.\'Dâ€" ECLIPSE 3. P. R. Town Ticket Office (English) THE SHOES THAT sunT Hen Lice Exterminator tpe PARIS No More Hen Lice fine grain 'I'W +M+++++ town after using our -“HHLU Also Agents for the Baker Ball ing Direct Stroke and Back 6 Pumping \Vindxnills, Pumps Supplies. ' \\ rite and have us call on you fiatisfaction Guaranteed u'ou Patronage Solicited. E‘Jf you are in need of pay you to consult the . STERNALL galvangzged gnd 1mg WATER 2 WATER I , uu (we. 1n need of a supply it will you to consult the LOUISE WELL DRILLERS .me-m” DRUGGISTS AND STATIONERS D U R H A M _V‘. from 150. to 50c. Trunks. Valises. Teles- copes. Suit Cases. c.. in stock or supplied un short notice. Uusmm \Vork and Repair- ing as Usual. u l " _'â€"D " pair here. \V e have a large stock of Shoes for all kinds of wear and at reson- able prices You can find some extra good value in Hosiery here for Men. Ladies, Misses, Boys and Children. Prices AREJLhezldealsgynu'ghave m mmd. You can reali'ze J TORONTO, ONT. Buy Your Tickets Here PRATT BROS EGGS TAKEN AS CASH. J. S .MCILHMTH NO TROUBLE N0 MUSS NO FUSS v00 0... 0.0.0 0.3. 0.0.0 0.4.. ON. ON“. '0. OK? 0. v u y r o t y 0V The Hajnessm ake Baker Ball Bear- and Back Geared 118. Pumps and LOUISE P. 0 Piping, Bras: nu Cylinders If you are a housewife you can- not reasonably hope to be heal- thy or beautiful by Washing dishes, sweeping or doing housework all day, and crawling into bed dead tired at night. You must get out into the open air and sunlight. 13f you do this every day and keep your stomach and bowels in good order by taking: Chamberlain's tablets when needed, you should become both healthy and beauti-- ful. For sale by *all dealers ' F r ,a place in the rushing business or lthe city. Up to the present time they have had their quarters in ;the Arlington Apartment House, 1but they expect before long to move to their new residence. on 28th street. At Fort Winiat’m I tried to call up Mr. W. Harris, hat the press men find they can sleep With less disturbance in a house Where there is no phone, and so I had to content myself with leaV- mg a message for him in the office. So the long journey comes to an end and after the strenuous days at the Assembly and the tiredness and strain of travelling most look wistfully homeward as after all the seat of the, heart’s affections and the place of peace and rest. “There is no place like home.” J-Wm porn-“Lumen“ M1 was to pass their several sta- ‘Itions. Your readers will be glad [to know that .Mr. T. H. Coutts is well and is finding a sphere of usefulness in the city f Edmon- ton. Mr. and Mrs, Poucher of Dor- noch. have grown 'with the city, and evidently have made the most of their special adVantages. Their new home is not only comfortable. but elegant. Mr. and Mrs. Petch and Miss M. Ector are comfortably located and are well and happy. I had the pleasure of seeing Miss M. Harris for a few minutes at the station at CNS, and was glad to see the west is doing nvell by her. Rev. Mr. Graham. formerly of Dor- noch, "is western agent for the “Presbyterian,” and has had sufficient encouragement from the ;successes of his yesterdays to awaken the anticipation of bright to-morrows. Rev. Acheson. also a former Dornoch minister was at the Assembly and seems much stronger since his removal to the west. Mrs. A. C. Beaton has‘ so far recovered from her illness of last spring as to be able to be back from the hospital and in- tends going out for the ummer on a their farm. The twins t o are .well : and busy at work in the Crown 1 Lands office,\'hich. by the way. 5 is one of the busiest places m ‘ Edmonton. Readers of The Chronâ€" icle will be pleased to know that ‘ Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Grant are com- i fortably located, and that Mr. t Grant is winning for himself 1 --- .‘I' call of business during Assembly time made social intercourse im~ Dossihle‘ and the uncertainty as to the time'the business would ter- minate prevented me sending word to others as to the time at which {tance Lots in western cities are ’Stilked off and sold in the east that ’could only have value as town property if the cities in which they are situated were to grow to have millions of inhabitants. Ev- eryone sees the folly of much of the lmying. each hopes the boom I will last his time, and so the game goes on faster and faster. All the {indications point to :1 disaster ithut will he a lesson for days to come. One man told 'me he had {been looking for the break for the l13.5.11: ten years and .yet the prices {mount higher and higher. Wlmt the future will he. {will be hard to forecast. A good crop or two would do much to put everything I much regret having missed 11' sight of many whom Iwould have had pleasure in meeting. The close on a 'firm basis. A failure that would test .faith in the country would push many a rash specu- lutor to the wall. The lone man and woman and all the thousands who are building their hopes on sand. need more than all else the gospel of love and ,the hope that maketh not ashamed. _ . - __ -_-_, v.“-- --vu; u1k11\.1,‘:. 3L iis needless to say that he is not 'only an accomplished navigator, ghut a genial, pleasant man. The 'only regret as to the companion- .‘ship on the Athabasca is that it :‘is doomed to terminate so soon. §It has been very restful after the gland journey, to have a couple of Mays on the water. i On the mind of an Easterner the ' ‘rournev over the Wide Western land [lE’TIVES two indellihle impressions: the one is that of indiscrilf-al'iir loneliness of. the settler, the other ‘ of excited. hope of‘the citizens of the ftoxvns. Evidences of the former ’are found not only in the Ion calwins scattered over the thous- ands of miles of prairies, but in {the signs over places of amuse- !ment so prominently exhibited in levery rising town or station. No :0n‘e‘ can meet with western people i l lTo The Editor of The Chrc-nicfe: We are once more on our home- Ward iourney, Edmonton. Saska- toon, W'innipeg. Fort W'illiam and the Sault are all in the rear, and on the Steamship Athabasca, we are ploughing the Waters of Lake Huron. The cool lake breezc-s have been very refreshing: the night on Lake Superior might be said to have been cold. " '- The comforts of a fourney by u‘ater far surpass those of a iourney on land, at least when skies are clear and the pathway open. Our trip has been all that could he desired and the provisâ€" ion of the (7. P. R. as to our com- forts leaves nothing to he Wished for. The ship‘s captain is James McCannell. of the same stock as those of the clan from G-lenelg‘. "it HIE? F3313? EDDLONITON :32 $239115; A Word to sm- . homewzird 31-5 Snellpaardelooszoondeerspoorwegpit- of the heart's roolrljtungâ€"that's the technical and place 6f peace locally accepted name 01‘ the automo- . no place like bile in Flanders. “Snell” (note that l- Farquharson. the second letter is n. not m) means ""'"" “rapid.” “paardeloos” means “horse- ewife you can- ,. . ,. ‘ 'e to be heal- less. ‘zoondeerspcorweg is the rec- vashing dishes, ognized way of describing a thing housework all “without rails." and. finally. “pitrool- into bed dead rijtnng” implies a thing “driven by must get out petroleum” Soyou have it. quiteslm- 3d sunlight. H 61!. and mere white whizzers and drab ay and ke‘e OWels in 2.003 devils are outclassed. But how'd you Chamberlain's like to be hit by a real “snellm ,, you_ Should loaf-mm Loni: Republic. THE DURHAM CHRONICLE Curious Names. Curious Christian names are occa- sionally to be encountered among the gypsies. Mrs. Brightwen. the natural- ist, tells in her autobiography of a gypsy woman she once met named Trinity Smith, who had a family at daughters named respectively Kevise, Centina, Cinnaminti. Cinderella and Siberenia. “These were rather out of the way names.” writes Mrs. Bright- wen, “but I was still more puzzled as to what could be the origin of a little girl being called L’eviathan. I asked the father one day how he came to give his child such a name. His reply. was: ‘Well, ye see, it were the name ’ of the big ship (the Great Eastern was first called the Leviathan), and I thought it was a pretty name and 1‘ would name my next boy after it; but, however, it corned a gal. and .I thought it didn’t matter. so she were named so.’ ”â€"Pall Mall Gazette. A Ghost Test. When you think you see a ghost, how can you tell whether it really is a ghost or not? A writer gives the following scientific method: “We as- sume that a person sees an apparition. It may be objectiveâ€"i. e., having ex- istence outside the observer’s mindâ€"or merely a creature of a disordered brain, subjective. The seer, while look- ing at the vision with both his eyes, gently depresses one eyeball with his forefinger from outside the top eyelid, so causing a squint. If objective, whether bogus or not, two outlines of the ‘ghost’ will be seen. but one. of course, if it be subjective. One may prove this by trial any time with any object. near or far. I mention this be- 1 cause or the many nervous and brain wearied people who see spooks and to whom it would be better that they should know that the trouble is With- I in themselves and so seek a capable doctor than continue to be haunted, as they believe, by the supernatural.” an aureole. The only thought I could frame when I recovered from this first shock was that such a being could not possibly die; that such a mighty organ- ization, such a stupendous genius, should never perish. l inwardly awarded him double immortality.â€" From the Memoirs of the Countess Po- tocka. As for me, I experienced a sort of stupor, a mute surprise, like that which seizes one at the aspect of a prodigy. It seemed to me that he wore So many portraits exist of this aston- ishing man, his history has been so much written about, all the stories told by the children of his old soldiers will live so long, that the generations to come will know him almost as well as ourselves. But what will be ditficult to grasp is how deep and unexpected the impression was which those felt who saw him for the first time. ed. with a loud and intelligible voice uttering the magic word that made the world tremble. “The emperor.” Imme- diately Napoleon made his appearance and halted for a minute as if to be admired. Queer Impression the Emperor Made Upon Countess Potocka. We waited rather long; and it must be acknowledged our curiosit; was not unmingled with fright. Of a sudden the silence was broken by a swift ru- mor, the Wings of the door opened noisily, and M. de Talleyrand advanc- The main difference between chronic dyspepsia and acute indigestion is that one is slow death and the other quick. The moral as to dietetic habits, eating and drinking. is too obvious to need pointing outâ€"Indianapolis News. In cases of acute indigestion or dys- pepsia there generally is intense pain, often followed by sickness and vomit- ing'of the surplus or offensive matter by which the stomach seeks to correct the effects of abuse and regain a nor- mal condition. But it does not always succeed. Other measures of relief also fail. the machinery breaks down, and death ensues. th n Indigestion, Chronic THE AMERICAN DISEASE.‘ AWED BY NAPOLEON. and Acute, and tho As he was told that His mother and His brethren were Without, desiring to speak to Him. He stretched forth His hand toward his disciples and said. “Behold my mother and my brethren. for whoever shall do the will of my Is‘a- ther, which is In heaven. the same is my brother and sister and mother” (verses ’ 31-35; Matt. xil, 46-50). On another oc- casion He said. “My mother and my brethren are these which hear the word of God and do it” (Luke viii, 21). When a certain one spoke of the bless- edness of beiig His mother He said, "Yea. rather blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it” (Luke xv, 28). We cannot but think of His ,words on the last night concerning such as keep His words becoming a a mansion in which both He and His ‘ Father would dwell. At the same time: He told His Father that certain ones had received the words which the Fa- ther had given Him for them (John xiv. 23: xvii. 8). I am greatly im- pressed by the't'act that receiving His words made Him so glad that He told His Father of It. How it must grieve Him to have His words treated as many of His professed friends treat them today. seemingly forgetting that all His words were not His, but His Father‘s (John til. 49; xiv, 10). “We mm do nothing against the truth. bin {at the truth" (11 Car. nu, 8), The unpardonable sin of verses 29. 30, makes us think of I John v, 16: "There is a sin unto death. I do not say that he shall pray for it.” Let us not forget verse 28 of our lesson, “All sins shall be forgiven unto the sons of Imen and blaspheniies wherewith so- : ever they shall blaspheme,” and also I John i, 7, “The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all sin.” What. then, can this sin he that hath never forgive- ness. but the persistent refusal to listen to the voice of the Spirit, whose de- light is to point to Jesus Christ, Who alone can forgive sins? As there is “none other name” (Acts iv, 12), if that name is refused or dishonored there can he no forgiveness. but only eternal damnation (verse 30). is everything. How utterly foolish seemed their accusation in the light of His question. “How can Satan cast out Satan '2" (Verse 23.) How great and far- reaching His saying in verse 27. “No 'man can enter into a strong man’s house and spoil his goods except he first bind the strong man.” The devil is the god of this world, blinding the minds of all unbelievers. The whole world lieth in the wicked one. And it was not wholly an untruth when he said to 011' Lord as he showed Him all the kingdoms of this world and the glory of them. “All that is delivered unto me, and to whomsoever I will I give it.” (11 Cor. iv, 4; I John v, 19; ‘ Matt. iv. 8; Luke iv, 6). Those who i talk of winning the world for Christ ! do not seem to believe these euths nor consider the necessity of getting rid of ' the devil. but it stands, as our Lord saidâ€"the strong one must be bound before his goods can be taken. _-.-â€"v_w to make war with God’s people. Israel, and the Lamb of God Himself. but beast and false prophet shall go alive to the lake of fire and the devil to the bottomless pit (Rev. xvii, 14; xix, 19, l 20; xx, 1-3; ZeclL xiv, 1, 2. Like the multitudes who clung to Him when here in humiliation and upon whom He always had compas- sion. there are multitudes now who would listen to the gospel if they could hear it, but many of the religious lead- ers of today are as much against the gospel of God concerning His Son, Je- sus Christ, as were the scribes and Pharisees against Jesus Christ. Those who today believe that Jesus is God, the Creator of all things, who died. for us. bearing our sins in His own body on the cross, rose from the dead. as- cended to Heaven and is coming again to set up His kingdom of righteousness and peace on this earth. are accounted unlearned. ignorant, behind the times, narrow and all else that unbelieving words can describe. But his approval â€"â€"- “v“ to my voice, and Israel would none or me.” Even in the days of Enoch. the seventh from Adam, we read of the ungodly and their words and deeds (Jude 15). It is also written that at the end of this age. to which we are fast hastening. there shall be only a form of godliness without the power and sound doctrine will not be endured (II Tim. iii. 1-5; iv. 3). The great ad- versary, the father of lies, who to Eve questioned the word of God and made God a liar, will yet gather the nations mart. x11. 14. itjs written that "the Pharisees went out and held a council against Him. how they might destroy Him.” It was the old story of Ps. lxxxi. 11, “My people would not harken Text oi the Lesson. Mark iii, 20-35. Memory Verses. 28. 29â€"Golden Text, John iii, 19â€"Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. This lesson is found in Matt. xii as well as in Mark iii and is a sample of their treatment of Him whom they should have welcomed as their Mes- siah, but of whom it is written: “He was in the world. and the world was made by Him. and the world knew Him not. He came unto His own, and His own received Him not” (John i, 10, ll). In our lesson. verses 21, 22, it is written that they said: “He is beside Himself. He hath Beelzebub and by the prince of the devils casteth He out devils." They frequently told Him that He had a devil (John vii. :20; viii, 52; x, 20). and as early in the record as Matt. xii. 14. ith written that “tho THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Lesson l.-â€"Third Quarter, For July 7, 1912. MY Sfiééfifll. wwrrwrr #583558 QSEEKES ?flflflflqfl “ Durham ‘ “ \IcW'illiams “ Glen “ Pxicexille " “ Saugeen J. ‘ “ Toronto ‘ ARLANE. - T H a All " u o (.“ 7 4 6.55 5 :57 3.45 vow-wot, uuoo CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE Trains leave Durham at 7.15 3.111., and 2.45 pm. Trains arrive at Durham at 10.30 3.111.. 1.50 p m.. and 8.50 pm. ' JRY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY H.G L‘Uiott, ~ A. E. Duti‘, G. P. Agent. D. P. Agent, Montreal. Pox-onto. J. TOWNER Depot Agent JAMES R. GUN. Town Agent Summer Session from July 2nd merges into our Autumn Perm from August 215. Many teachers and senior stu- dents will take advantage of our Summer Term and many will continue until graduation in four or six months leads them direct into a good salaried po- sition. Let us send you parti- culars about our courses. Central Business College, Yonge Gerrard Sts., Toronto. \V. H. SHA\\'. Pres. Grand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE DURHAM ZENUS CLARK PLANING MILLS You will find a nice selection of Dress goods in Serge-s. white, black. blue. gray and other col- ors. Also whip cor s. poplins etc. \Ve have our popular line of Dollar silks in the dili'erent shades, also jacquhai ds at 35 cts., Ginghams in Checks and stripes. Linens and Towelings galore, Check muslins. etc. Kid gloves for Easter. popular price $1.00. Come and see us. GRANTS next job Also a limited an. iron work and mac pairs. Acall solicit for quotations 0 The 'fi‘ndersigned begs ~to announce to residents of Durham and surrounding country. that he has his Planning Mill and Factory completed and is pmpared to take orders for C. L. GRANT Custom Sawing Promptly At= tended To â€" and all kinds of â€" SASH,DOORS House Fittings quotations own Agent 11.54 11. 44 11. 41 11.31 11.18 11.15 ONTARIO 5' 0 ur THREE. 1‘8- 8.43 9. 19

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