West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 8 Aug 1912, p. 4

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' V oumooumuooeumm mmmomo A small or large bag 01 a. fine grain white. nutritious flour, is sold :1: our brand. Have you ever tried it? Get your grocer to give you our kind next time and see the superior baking qual- ities it possesses. Better an d more wholesome. because of a secretprocess that. we put the Wheat through. Don’t forget. A blend of); Manitoba. and {g-Ontarlc wheat and is a strictly first class family flour Our pure Manitoba. flofiur, made from No. 1 Manitoba. Wheat cannot be beat for either bakers or domestic use. Is made from selected Winter whe and is a superior article for making - pastry, etc.. All up-to-date flour and feed grocers keep‘our flou_r for sale Chopping Done Every Dz) â€" v - thv your grocer‘dues notâ€"Eeep it cor.ne t6 the mill and we‘will use you right Call us up by telephone No. 8. All kinds of Grain. bought at Market People’s Mills $z$*$$*****$****§ n..m. i O M a M. q a A 4 ¢ ¢ a 4 . ImoON +0.0...O‘ O +‘V'559M0 O fMOQVO'o5‘${99.0Qc.00.h09.r'h09r6 . I I I i . “I ”.6 V EGGS TAKEN The UnwanwnShneS tore : J. SiMc mmooooooua mamaooommome ~ \ August 8th, 1912. John McGowan A good talcum powder giv- es returns in comfort, out of all proportion to What; it: costs and. if iL is pure, itiS' absolutely harmless. Our is just talc ground to an im- palpable fineness and preg- nated with the daintiest of violet odors. You can get nothing better. Just . Pure Talcum. . ++++++++++++++1 But Quality Is Essential if best results are to be obtained. Remember that you can follow this example in purchasing any- thing in Tinware, Graniteware, Stoves, Ranges, Furnaces, and General Plumbing Goods from Never substitute appeal ance for quality but rather choose an article ;a trifle more costly and obtain both. Appearance is prudential Price 25 Cents We also have Men- nen’s Rural Vinolin Colgate’s, and all the other popular talcum powders. acfarlane 8: Co. Violet Dulce SOVEREIGN C. P. R. Town Ticket Office ECLIPSE SHOES THAT SUIT THE Nod-N1 . N. H. STERNALL town Galvanized and Iron Piping, Bras Brass Lined and Iron Cylinder;- SE'CP OPEN EVERY AFTERN 001‘ Pumps From $2 Upward ALL REPAIRING promptly anr properly attended to. Manufacturer of And Dealer in PUMPS OF ALL KINDS Stands in alclass by itself for strictly first-class work. Open all year. Write to-day for handsome catalogue. " If you are in need of a, supply it will pay you to consult the Also Agents for the Baker B ing Direct Stroke and Back Pumping Windmills, Pum Supplies. Fall Term. from Sepi. WATER 2 WATER! \Ve make examinations free and can determine the exact condition of your vis- ion. Glasses are never- reco- mended A unless positively needed. Any person who has head- ache should make sure that the eyes are not the source of trouble. Headaches come from eye. strain oftener than from anv other cause. Often head- aches that have persisted from childhood will Wholly disappear when the eyes aye properly. fitted. 01‘ Head- ashes DRUGGISTS AND STATIO NERS Eyestrain LOUISE WELL DRILLERS rite and have us call on you. atisfaction Guaranteed . u'ou Patronage Solicited. Machine Oil. Harness Om, Ame Grease and Ham Ointment, go to S. P. SAUNDERS Buy Your Tickets Here . D. CONNOR from 150. to 500. Trunks. Valises. Teles- COpeS. Suit Cases. c., in stock or- supplied on shot-1: able prices You can find some extra good value in Hosiery here for Men, Ladies, Misses, Boys and Children. Prices n'otice. Custom \Vork and Repair- ing as Usual. . D. Connor ARE the Ideals you have in mind. You can realize that idea] by purchasing a pair here. \Ve have a large stock of Shoes for all kinds of wear and at reson- EGGS TAKEN AS CASH. PRATT BROS, TORONTO, ONT. The Harnessxil aka LOUISE P. [HA TH ' Y 'OIOOR‘IOO‘OO‘: It is easy to see why these blessings of. Restitution and uplifting out of sin and death conditions did not begin before the first advent of the Redeem- er. The uplifting work could not be accomplished until two things would first be done. One was that a redemp- tive price needed to be given. Adam’s life was forfeited. The life of a Re- deem-er must be given in his stead. This was what Jesus did. He left His; heavenly glory, humbled Himself to human nature, and then the Man”. Christ Jesus gave ‘Himself a Ransom- price for all. This is plain. The signs that we are in the morn- ing, the gray light of the New Day, are already manifest to those who are awake. The wonderful blessings that have come to mankind during the last century, and particularly during the last fifty years, are foregle-ams of the great Day of Messiah. the Day of earth’s reconciliation, the day of the cancelling of the penalty oi death, the Day in which God, through Messiah, will wipe away all tears from off all faces. The result of that Day, a thou- sond years long, will 'be that all the willing and obedient will be upifted and all the wilfully disobe-dient and wicked will be remanded to deathâ€" “the Second Death.”â€"Revelation xx, 14. The conclusion is described then: “Every knee shall bow and every tongue confess to the glory of God”; “Then the knowledge oi the glory of God will fill the whole earth as the waiters cover the sea.” But, according to the will of God, instead of beginning: the blessing of} the world, He did first another worlf, namely, the gathering of the Chlurcn to be His Bride. These have been gathered from Jews and Gentilesâ€"- from-every nation, people, kindred, tongue and denomination. Their invi- tation is to suffer with Him and to' reign with Himâ€"to present their b0d-; ies living sacrifices, holy and accept-1 able-tn God through Christ. (Rom-ans xii’, 1.2 So consecrated, the flesh of all believers is counted as the flesh of Jesus, and suffers, as such, trials, ' -, nominiesâ€"“Let us go to Him outsi 6’; the camp, bearing His reproach” ; “A13 ways hearing about in the body the. dying of the Lord J fluffâ€"Hebrew, vii- 13; .11.. 00:11.1.th 1‘71““).- 4 A.-- u The Scriptures speak of the past and present as a night time of sorrow and pain and trouble, but tell of the New Dispensation, when the curse shall be removed, and style that a Glorious Day, in which the Sun of Righteous- ness shall shine forth and drive sin’s clouds away. God through the Proph- et declares, ‘Weeping may endure for the night, but joy cometh in thermom- mg”, “Joy In the Morning." This penalty passed upon Father Adamâ€"he lost the right to live and fell under the sentence, “Dying, thou shalt die”; “In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread until thou return unto the ground from which thou wast taken.” (Genesis iii, 19.) The fallen. death-sentenced Adam could not give to his children rights which he had lost. Hence we are all sinners by inheritance. We are all dying. By one man’s disobedience sin entered in- to the world and death as a result of sin, and thus death passed upon all men because all are sinnersâ€"Romans v, 12. The fact that man dies has led some to the conclusion that he is a spirit being and at death merely finds-re- lease from his body of flesh and soars back again to a spirit condition in which he once was. How inconsistent! How illogical! The Bible tells, on the contrary, that God made man as He desi ed to have himâ€"adapted exactly to the conditions provided for himâ€" an earthly Eden, Paradise. The Bible tells that God proposed to him ever- lasting life as a man on condition of continued obedience. It explains that dying is not going home, nor going to eteinal torment, but simply ceasing to e. Once he and other Bible students confused with the errors of the Dark Ages, thought of man as a spirit being inhabiting a body of flesh, coming into it at birth and departing from it at death. Bible study is rapidly driving away that error. The Bible clearly tells that the genus homo is an ani- mal being, of the earth earthyâ€"not a heavenly or spirit being. This is in harmony with what science has been telling usâ€"that which we could not receive until we found it to be the Message of God. The Bible does not place man upon an equality with the brute, but far above. His superiority is that of form and specie. His larger brain and its better shape than that of the brutes indicates his knowledge and intellectual superiority over them. He is to them God’s representativeâ€" th-eir king, created in the moral image and likeness of his Creator. ~~ ~- ._ Paris, August 11. â€"-O-ne of Past-or Ruésell’s address- es to-day was from Psalm viii, 4. “What Is Man?” He remarked that although he had been several times in Paris this was his first public ad- dress thereâ€"on in- vitation of the 10- ...-..- -.-‘;.;..-- a“... cal Class of Bible ' .. H . ~Students Associa- P O 7U55£ , tion. He had heard that Bible students were scarce in France, but already he had found some very alert for clearer light upon the Word of God now due because we are in the dawning of the New Dispensation._ And Has Pg: Been Promised Angelic I Nature Futureâ€"He Is “of the Earth Earthy” â€" Christ Redeemed Him With a View to His Restora- tion. Man Never Fell From the Angelic Nature. BUT WHAT IS EA?” THE IIBLE ANSWER THE DURHAM CHRONICLE. A Good Talker. “Does your son take after you?" “I used to think he was going to. but now that he’s in college he shows ev- ery sign of taking after his mother.” “That so?" “Yes: the only thing he’s made since he’s been there is the debating so- ciety.”-Detroit Free Press. ' The Trouble With Alice. “Alice has a very poor figure. She has no waist, and so she doesn’t yearn for clothes.” Coloring a Meerschaum. “The sevret or .-u|on‘hg a meerscbaum pipe.” said a man Who makes them. “is in not allowing the DOWI to get too hot. All meerschaum pipes are boiled in wax. which penetrates the clayâ€"for *hat’s all meerschaum isâ€"and which earries the tobacco oil to all parts 01 the surface. preventing its exuding. The‘hature of heat is to drive any 11- QUid away. and if the pipe is smoked “Our interlocutors cannot end their explanations." he says. “With the best Will in the world they cannot pro- ‘nounce rapidly such words as this: ‘Antialkoholcongressmitgliederverzeich- nissesdruckkostenvoranschlagprufungs- commissionsversam m lungein l a d u n gs- karten.’ This little word means 'Invi- tation cards for the meeting or the commission for verifying the accounts of the expenses of printing the list of members of the anti-alcoholic con- gress.’ " l The effect of the German tongue is thus seen to be the exact opposite of What it might be supposed to be. It is a deterrent to war instead of a provo- cation. Sesquipedalian Words. Mark Twain is not the only person to find amusement m the German lan- guage. A writer in the Paris Siecle accounts for the deliberation with which the negotiations over the Moroc- can difficulty were carried on. “It seems to be all right." said the Jeweler, handing it back to her. “You ought to keep it Wound up though." “It looks very simple when you do it,” replied. the girl. "but I could wind it all day and it wouldn't go for me.” Dead Languages. “Now. boys.” queried the teacher. dead languages?" . “They are languages that were killed by being studied too hard." answered the boy at the foot of the classâ€"Chl- cago News. “I see. It’s a case of waist not. want not.”-Smart Set Magazine. too fast the heat generated will drive the wax to the extremes. That is why most meerschaums show color first in those places. Just as soon as the wax islall driven out there is an end to the hope of coloring the pipe unless it is reboiled. And then the jeweler saw where the difficulty was. “N0 wonder." he said, laughing. “I see you are left handed, and instead of Winding it_up you‘ve been turning the stem the wrong way.” -â€"NeW York Press. Masks and Faces. ; Masks are of very ancient origin. In a tomb 3,000 years old at Mycenae Dr. Schliemann found two bodies with ,taces covered by masks of gold. One of the masks represented the head of a lion. Among ancient Greeks the lion mask was a sign of distinction. With the Peruvians of old it was a mark of royal lineage. In a grave of considerav ble antiquity in Peru a silver mask was found on the head of a mummy. The mummy of a prince who lived in the reign of Rameses ll... discovered in a small vault at Memphis. in Egypt. had a mask or gold leaf over the face. ally and was discriminating in the selection of food. Terrapin. which he insisted upon pronouncing tarrapin. was his favorite dish. and he would order oysters by the barrel from Nor- folk. On one occasion he attended a banquet where all the states of the Union were represented by a dish in some way characteristic of each com- monwealth. Pennsylvania was repre- sented by a bowl of sauerkraut. and in speaking of the fact the next morn- ing the general remarked. "l partook of it with tears in my eyes." A Southpaw Winder. “I Wish you would tell me What is the matter With my watch,” said the girL It was her first watch. a birthday present, and as the jeweler took it and deftly wound the Stem between the thumb and index finger of. his right hand she watched him closely as it it were an operation involving some mys- terious incantation. “To prevent this burning smoke slow ly. with long. steady puth. 1f the bowl gets hot lay the pipe aside at once. Also. let the pipe be thoroughly cold before refilling it after smoking Nothing will ruin your pipe sooner than keeping it steadily in use.”-â€"New York Times. Wept as He Ate. General Winfield Scott was a nota- ble figure in the Washington society of sixty years ago described by Mrs. Marion Gouverneur in her volume or reminiscences. ”As 1 Remember." The. general was something of an epicure. Mrs. Gouverneur recalls seeing him sit down with great satisfaction to a meal consisting principally of jowl. He did the family marketing person- While Ho Waited In the Parlor. Mr. Sooper (to her kid brothemâ€"May I hope to see your ‘sister pretty soon? Kid Brotherâ€"You’ll see her pretty. all right, She’s been flxin' up to beat the band.â€"Exchange He that History avers that women with au- burn hair wielded a strong influence in all ages. The women familiar to history who belonged to this sister- hood were Isabella of Castile, Helen of Tray, Catherine I. of Russia, Joan of Arc, Elizabeth of England, Mary Stuart, Anne of Russia, ex-Empress Eugenie, Lucrezia Borgia and Beatrice Cenci. Writer Asserts Its Praises Have Been Too Loudly Sung. The idea held by the world in gen- eral that the German army is a model for all others, and that it is far stronger than any other, is challeng- ed by Hilaire Belloc, member of the English Parliament and critical writ- er. Mr. Belloc has served as a con- script in the French army, and has also studied the strong and weak points of the German forces for years. He says as a result of his investiga- tions that the German army will be discovered to be something much on The active principle of all plants is strongest just when the flowering pro- cess is going on, but before seeds are actually formed, and this is, there- fore, the best time for cutting 8nd 491.989.911’9; . .__.._---__.-,...,. Mi It Was Doing Duty. An Irish soldier while on furlough lost his left eye; but, not wishing to leave the service, he got a glass one in its place before returning to his regiment. Being somewhat absent- minded, however, he appeared on pa- rade one day without it. “Pat,” said the sergeant-major, “you are impro- perly dressed. You have come on pa- rade with only one eye.” Pat was in no way nonplused, however. With characteristic Irish readiness he an- swered, “I left it in my quarters. sorr, to keep an eye on my kit. ’ Among the advantages he reckons that no army will be mobilized so smoothly as the German. The Ger- man proletariat has shown no capac- ity for resistance to the orders of government, or of their economic masters. “The Socialist vote is only a par with any other consEript force, with advantages and also with (115-. advantages of its own. a vote,” and has no appreciable ef- fect on the conduct of affairsâ€"none whatever on the military arrange: ments. It is otherwise in France or in Russia. Secondly. he says the Ger- mans have not to fear jealously be- tween their chief commanders, and lastly, that the rapidly increasing population of Germany ensures a choice of the best material for their fighting force. But conscription in Germany is not universalâ€"as it is in France, for ex- ample. Every single person you see in France has been a private soldier. But of five German men not three have been real soldiers. The large German population allows for an in- creasing number oi exceptions. The young men let off have a few weeks’ training, and form the compensatory reserve. Hence the nation is not the army, as in France. Mr. Belloc sug- gests, as a parallel, a population with 20, 30, or 40 per cent. of illiterates, as compared with a universally edu- cated Apeople. chapel near lns lnnne in jDraymni Gardens, Chelsea. Mr. Brandon has been a minister in Chelsea sixty-four years, and has lived there seventy-two. A remarkable fact concerning‘ Mr. Brandon is that he has been a cripple since he was a baby of two, when one of his legs became paralyzed. Another wonderful Baptist minister. is Rev. Grey Hazlerigg, who, although' minty-three years of age, gaged in ministerial work in Leices- ter, in which town he has lived and: worked for a period of sixty-one' years. Probably the oldest officiating ister of any denomination in Br is Rev2 Alfred Brandon, who, th« he is just past his 95th birth stillpreaches at least once a m in the little creeper-clad Ba chapel near his home in Dra Gardens, Chelsea. Mr. Brandon been a. minister in Chelsea sixty- years, and has lived there seventy- “The Eskimo lives his own life, and depends .on his own faculties of brain and eye and nose and ear; he is an individual. And yet, in spite of this, Eskimo society is organized on a Socialistic, almost a Communis- tic, basis. This is their rule; ‘I have made a bad catch to-day, but I shall make a better to-morrow, so will you give me some of your fish? Then, to- morrow, if you have bad luck, you shall have some of my fish’.” “The Eskimos have plenty of time for this kind of exploration, their civi- lization is a good one and a fine one.' They have very little art, it is true,‘ but they havey beautiful fairy tales. Their folk- songs are good, too, their‘ music is rather melancholy and rath-' er monotonous, like most primitive music. They have a scale of five or six notes. But they pick up modern music with surprising ease. In Germany, also, what he calls the articulate part of the nation â€" those who write and speak and direct thought, though they wear a uniform and are called soldiers for one yearâ€"- do not live as private soldiers in the barracks, as do Frenchmen of the same class. The writer says that the Polish element in the army is a source of weakness and in addition he finds fault with too much system. System is overdone; it kills initiative, it spells utter collapse when circum- stances upset the systematic plan. In his recently -published book, “In Northern Mists.” Dr. Nansen has ex- pressed great regret at the ineVitable disappearance of the Eskimo civiliza-‘ tion before what he calls the “trivial” civilization of the rest of the world. “Our civilization levels up all in- equalities, and in the process it de- stroys personality to a ver3 great ex- tent. We have the frightful prospect of a world-wide monotony before us. The modern man is a machine- made creature; and he lives so much in the trivial rush and hurry of life that he has no time to find himselfâ€"which is the most important of all discov- eries . A. " «hm ._ ..1,.'.a. ‘ 1 THE GER A 313qu Explorer and the Eskimo. Auburn Haired Women. Cutting Herbs. Preaching at 95. Ifiiciating min- ion in Britain _. w ho, though 35th birthday, once a month w++++ vâ€"I-L-tx'n-‘H OlO-é-nhrâ€"I CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE P. M low R. M ACF [I Afiandsomeli musfmt'EdVéekl . Larges ' cnlation 91' any scientific jam-nil. Term: (it; mats a you-moan“ would. Sold by a ‘ ‘ nn-QAMIAâ€" W‘ TRADE MARKS 02:5:ch COPYRIGHTS c. Anyone sending a sketch and descriptlnn may quickly ascertaxn our opinion tree whether an invenuon is probably Patentable. Communica. tions strictly confident al. HANDBOOK on Pm; sent. free. Oldest. ency for securing patents. Patents taken t. touch Mann 00. receive “Afl‘n' -A‘IA‘ -.“A_. AL‘-_- A... 4‘ _ J. TOWNER Depot Agent JAMES R. GUN. Town Agent [rams 163Vl h p m. Drains arriv 30 p m.. and You will find a nice selection 0 Dress goods in Serges. White black. blue. gray and other col- ors. Also Whip cords. poplins etc; We have our popular line of Dollar silks in the different shades, also jacquhaxds 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 ngtifiéffifiim 'x'a,ins will arrive and depart as fol '5. until further notice:â€" Grand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE ZENUS CLARK DURHAM C. L. GRANT m.. and 8 50 p m. EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY Elliott, A. E. Dufl, . P. Agent. 1). P. Age: Montreal. ft Planning Mill and Factory completed and is prepared to take orders for Also a limited amount of iron work and. machine re- pairs. Acall solicited. Ask for quotations on your nextjob. Custom Sawing Promptly At- tended To EDUCATION PAYS â€" and all kinds of â€" leave Durham at 7.15 3.03.. and House Fittings “ Hanover “ 12.17 9.12 “ Allan Park “ 1.2 .0 8 9. 33 W. A. M. “ Dmham “ 11. 54 9.19 “ MdVilii-ams“ 11. ~14 9.09 “ Glen “ 11. 41 9 .06 “ Priceville “ 11.31 S. 56 " Sangeen J. “ 11.18 8. 4:8 “ Toronto “ 11.15 7 .55 ARLANE. - Town Agent v.\V.-lee1ton Ar.12.~10 10.05 \Iaple Hill ° 12. 25 9. 5O ' Hanover “ 12.17 9.12 Allan Park “ 12.08 9. 33 4t. Durham at 10.30 3.111 THREE. P. Agent. fox-onto 10.26 ONTARIO oron t0- P.M. PoM.

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