West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 5 Sep 1912, p. 3

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aceueeeemeumeoemmeemew‘ [ 3 Closing Out Sale of :all Brokanlenes i Goods delivered navwhere in town Epoch! Reduction on Flour in 5 and lO‘Bag tha. h ‘ ‘ I. All up-to-date flour and feed and grocers keep our flour for sale. your grocer does not keep it come to the _mill end we will use you right Chopping Done Every Day Call us up by telephone No. 8. ' All m of an}! bought 3t lam Our pure Manitoba flour, made from No. 1 Manitoba. wheat cannot be beat for either bakers or domestic use ls made from selected winter whe and is a superior article for making past”. etc. A small or large bag 0! a fine grain white, nutritious flour, is sold as 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. secret process that we put the wheat through. Don’t forget. A blend of; I wheat and is People’s Mills . +4.4 4....a,.:..:«:«;-.:«:«:-++++++++++++ WW Never substitute appeaiauce for quality but rather choose an article .a trifle more costly and obtain both. Appearance is prudential John McGowan ”We want the money and room for New Fall Goods now arriving. These prices ought to clear them out in the next. two week . T Cash on all Reduced Lines. 9 5 arms Ihe annannShneStme : J. S .MclLfiIfi 22 imir Miuu‘ Strap Blip rs, 81.15 to 01.25 for . . . .... 17 pair Misses’ White Ox Ol‘dl, worth 81.00 to $1.25, for... 4 pair Women’s Ton Canvas Pumps, worth 81.50, for. . . . . 6 pair Women's White Canvas Pumps. worth 81.40 for . . . 12 pair Women’s White Oxfords. worth 81.25 to 81.50 for. Of Women’s and Misses’ Oxfords, Slippers and Pumps. 8 10 pair of Patent Oxfords, worth 83.00 for ....... ... ..... .. .1 21 pair of Patent Oxfords, worth 82.50 and 32.75, for ........ 15 pair of Patent Pumps. worth 83.00 for only. . ........ . . . . . 1! pair of Patent Pumps, worth 82.25 and 02.50 for ..... . . . . . 5 pair of Tan Pumps. worth $3.00, for only 6 pair of Tun Pumps. worth 82.50 for. . . ... ..... . ........... . 3 pair of Chocolate Pumps. worth 88.25 for only ......... .... 50 pair Dongola Oxfords. worth 81.50 to 82.25. for only . . . . .. :fl pair gongolg Strap__S_lipporsL§l.__50 to §l.75. for ..... . ..... . COME TO US FOR ANY SCHOOL WANTS F O R School Opening we have stock of all the new SCHflfll BOOKS AND SUPPLIES But Quality Is Essential ii 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 PASTRY FLOUR We try to keep our stock “Up to the Minute” acfarlane Co. wir- mwmnaaééwmwwk SOVEREIGN ECLIPSE , Manitoba and; Ontano is a strictly first class family flour . P. R. Town Ticket Office High and' Public School Books. and a fine assort- THE 5th, 1912. Stands in a‘class by itself for strictly first-class work. Open all year. Write today for handsome catalogue. Also Agents fur the Baker Ball Bear- ing Direct Stroke and Back Geared Pumping \Vindmills. Pumps and Supplies. a", If you are in need of a supply it will pay you to consult the Btu. Lind and “131311391; 8m om EVERY AFTERNOOB Pumps From $2 Upward ALL REPAIRING promptly anc‘ propel-b attended to. W. D. CONNOR Galvanised and Inca Piping, Bras: _B_ruo Lind and Iron Cylinders And bani-i ii PUMPS OF ALL KlNDS \\ rite ti DRUGGISTS AND STATIONERS t9. and have us call on you satisfaction Guaranteed v'ou Patronage Solicited. Buy Your Tickets Here . D. Connor PRATT BROS The Hangs-s {Jim LOUISE P. O. complete .75 .75 And now that we see it clearly it is the duty and privilege of all of God’s people to get right with God by m- nouncing that which is so abominable in His sightâ€"the setting aside of the one perpetual sacrifice of Christ and the substituting. in part theretor, o! the sacrifices of the Mus, pedomd many times every dog throughout!» I share with many other Bible Students the view that the Desolating Abomination mention by the Prophet Daniel and by Jesus is the doctrine of the Mass. It was introduced about the middle of the fourth century. It has had a corrupting influence since. And now that we see it clearlv it is Nearly nineteen centuries ago our Redeemer mentioned.“The Abomina- tion of Desolation spoken of by the PrOphet Daniel.” (Matt. xxiv, 15.) The Master declared that when this Abomination should be seen, those noting it should understand and flee. I For long centuries it was supposed that the Great Teacher referred to events which culminated A.D. 70 in the destruction of Jerusalem. The Abomination was supposed to refer to the carrying of Roman banners with- in the holy precincts of the Temple. It did seem strange that so compara- tively insignificant a matter should be mentioned by Jehovah through Damel the Prophet and should then be referrtd to by Jesus Himself; but We_ Saw "no other interpretations“ v"- ‘-vâ€"_â€".. v- the _ w _- e worldâ€"pm p’réacfilag ‘39 c?) e. God's pro- vision in Christ for the venue of sin: is applicable only to dam’a. or on nal. sin and to such weaknesses as ave come tohia children from that original sin by heredity. God does not propose in any manner to forgive sins wilfully committed. They receive stripes. or punishment}. in proportion to their wilfulness. What. ever pmportion of sin is directly ’or indirectly the result of Adam’s dia- obedience and human imperfection is ooverable through the merit of the one sacrifice of Christ, which cover- ing is to be obtained by the trans- gressor’s approaching the Throne of the Heavenly Grace, that he may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of needâ€"Hebrews iv, 16. Our need, then, is not to attend Low Mass or High Mass, but to go directly to the Lord in the name and merit of our Advocate. Thus the Apostle enjoins us saying, “If any man (in the Church) sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the Righteous.” (I. John ii, 1.) The thought that sin in every instance requires atonement is quite Scriptural and the thought that “without the shedding of blood there is no remission of sins” is Scriptural. (Hebrews ix, 22.) But the thought that Christ needs to die more than once is antagonistic to the Scriptures, as we have already seen. The fact is that good and great people have made serious errors in theology along nearly every line. _ into the Church about the fourth centuryâ€"the doctrine of the Man. This doctrine holds that the death of Christ cancels original‘adn {01; beli_ey- _"-' The Bible is most explicit in in de- ‘claration that Jesus, as the antitypical High Priest, offers but one sacrifice of Himself for the sins of world. In our context St. Paul points to the fact that the typical priests of the Jewish era re. peated their sacrifices yearly, on each succeeding Atonement Day. He notes the fact that those were merely typical sacrifices “which could never take away sin,” and then he tells us that the one sacrifice on the Antitypical Atonement Day, by the antitypical High Priest, is so complete as to leave nothing further to be done-â€" “Christ dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over Him.” Rom. vi, 9.) This He did once when He offered up Himself without spot unto God. A matter so well established we should settle in our mim’. and not allow any theory or supposed necessity to move us therefrom. Sacrifice of the Man. However we behold two great Christian communions holding a dif- ferent viewâ€"the High Church of England and the Church of Rome. Both hold the doctrine introduced One Sacrifice for Sins Forever Perfecting All. Christ Dieth No More; Death" Hath No More Dominion Over Him”â€"A Different View of the Manâ€"A Long Standing Mistake. CHRIST’S SACRIFICE SUNDAY SCHOOL; 33E“ UQNEMEN NTi brethren' patch a com- ow Man. for 8030111,“!!! 'THB DURHAM CHRONICLE. â€"Paator Russell's text for to-da was: “Afte: He ( eeus) had offered one sacrifice for nine forever. He sat down on the right hand of God. ' " ° for by one otter He hath perjecte forever them that are sanctified.”â€" Hebreyvs‘ x, 12-14. liondon. _Sept.l £8. 81. and the comfort to be obtain- ed by considering even sparrows. Not. in verses 37-39 the whole hearted. Id! renouncing devotion to Hun-alt which Eamondtnmumm ummm 4‘.--_.._- with His spirit must expect to find themselves as sheep in the midst of wolves, hated for His sake. persecuted. treated as He was. for the disciple is not above his Master. In emergencies, when under arrest. we can trust the Holy Spirit to speak through us (verse 50). and we should be so filled that He can speak through us at all times. He is always ready to make true to His messengers Ex. iv. 12; Jet. 1. 7-0. those whom He sends must be with- rut tear of any kind. even of death. Bee the three “tear noes” or vanes 28. ent ruler, whom He will send to the pit when He sets up His kingdom. Those who are truly His and filled There are truths in this chapter which apply to the whole of this age, while some have special reference to the sending forth of the twelve. He ls always the same. and the world will be the same as long as it has its prea- The great question in any good work is generally that or funds to carry it on. but He told them not to be anxious about that. as He would see to it. Matt. vi, 33, stands always. or, as some one has put it, Make thou His service thy delight; He’ll make thy wants His care. As in Deut. xx. 10-12. they were to carry peace everywhere. leaving it to the people to accept or reject it. I‘here was one seemingly strange thing about their commission They were not to go to either entiles or Samaritans, but only to Is ~l. and He'said to the woman of Tyre-and Sldon. “I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel" (Matt. xv, 24). It was not until Israel had rejected Him and :ruclfied Him and He was risen from the dead that He gave commission to go into all the world. all. even to Judas Iscarlot. They were His. all but Judas. who betrayed Him. and the power was His. all was of film. and they were Hls messengers. As the Father spoke through Him and wrought through Him. so He would speak and work through them. l‘hey were for Him; He was for and with than and would see to the re- sults. So it is or should be stillâ€"God working in us to will and to do of Hls good pleasure (Phil. ll, 13). through Mose. end man end Ell-he. tome of judgment some of mercy. but never before bad a commission lu‘et like this been given to men. and it seems to have been glven equally to forthtodounohudhoondoluâ€" preach the kingdom of heaven I: a hand. haul the sick. cleanse the 139011. Moth-dead. cutoutdovflnnnd.“ the has! truly received tho power. IO bestow, 91' benefit: (rm .1; The work of the devil has been so long manifest in the result of sin and the curse that it is generally accepted as the normal condition. and no other is looked for. Jesus had ever before Him the joy and glory of this kingdom of which He loved to tell and give samples of it, and, looking upon the earth bound multitudes who knew not of it, He was filled with compassion upon them as He saw them groveling and no one to tell them of the glory and how to get it. A plenteous har- vest to be reaped. but few laborers. I'herefore ask the Lord to send forth the laborers. It sounds a little strange to ask the Lord of the harvest to see to His own affairs. It is His harvest. and He cares. and yet we are to ask Him to send forth the laborers. In lsa. vi. 8. He asks, “Whom shall I send. and who will go for us?" And it is for the willing ones to say: “Here am 1. Send me." The question there nemstobethatofIChmmxxiLB. "Who. then. is willing to consecrate his service this day unto the Lord?" this of our lesson seems to refer the matter back to the Lord. but there is at least this in it: We cannot honestly ssk Him to send forth laborers unless we are willing to say. Here am I: send me. nisseemstobeimpuedaleoin what He then did. for He called the twelve unto Rim. gave them power ever unclean spirits and all manner of sickness and disease and sent them and righteousness on this earth over which we shall reign with the Lord Jesus Christ in bodies like His glori- fied body and never again be. weak or weary or sick or die. disease among the people” (almost identical with iv. 23). and end with. “When Jesus had made an end at commanding His twelve disciples Ho departed thence to teach and to preach In their cities." Thus is summarized the daily life of Jesus and His follow- ers, telling of the kingdom and show- ing how our mortal bodies will then be aflected. It seems to me that there is a great difference between teaching peo- ple how to reach heaven when they have to leave these mortal bodies and telling them of a kingdom of peace Text of tho Luzon. Matt. ix, 35. to x, 15. Memory Vol-cu, 7, Sâ€"Goldon Text. Matt. x, 40â€"Commontnry Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stout-no. If we consider the full portion u- 31Sued by the committee for the leo- son today we begin with ix. 35. “Jesus Went about all the cities and villages teaching in their synagogues and preaching the gospel of the kingdom and healing every sickness and every Lesson X.â€"Third Quarter, For Sept. 8, 1912. '- THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. “Never mind what Shakespeare said about it." said the magistrate “He will be summoned to testify for him- aeit it he knows anything about the cane.”-London Tit-Bite. “0h, nothing at consequence," re- plied the witness. “‘A beggarly ac. count of empty boxes: as Shakespeare says." It In Impossible to found a 1mm power upon lunatic. and anchor].- “You said that you made a personal examination of the premises. What did you and?" No Hoar-say Evidence. A rural magistrate. listening to tho testimony of the witness. tnterrupted him. saying: On the whole. the stoker is no un~ amiable man He may growl at his food, though he often fares “like a fighting cock" aboard; he may have a vocabulary which would make the av- erage bargee green with envy. but he will laugh you to scorn if you suggest that his work is too hard and that he is not “game" to the backbone-London Answers. It is not only that the flreman's mus~ ;cles and stamina must bear this inhu- ‘man strain. He must watch the gauge glasses with the keen eyes of a lynx to see that the line of bubbling beads never rises above or falls below the level that denotes safety. He must know his boilers as a Jockey knows his mount; which of them requires coaxing and which requires forcing to stimu- late its sluggishness. for boilers. it is said, have as many whims and caprlcea as a woman. His ship may be sinking. the thrush- ing water swirling knee deep over the plates on which he is standing. but no thought of the boats and an escape to life is for him. He must stick to his ‘post until the last are is drawn and it he has time to race up the escape lad- der to the boat deck well and good It not-the odds are all against himâ€"he goes down. a “mute. inglorlous" hero. to his death. It is all part of the day's work for which he draws his meager pay. with a cheeer acceptance of the fact that his life will be short and cerâ€" tainly not merry. for you find i‘ew stokers who have passed their forty- fltth birthday. --.~. ii other man wouT‘d iii saw; to Hui} dlnnora. At any moment a tustblo plug may fly. a boiler tube collapao. a ago glaaa may splinter, and the cap- ln may have occulon to “regret" that name good man or other baa ran- an a victim to hla duty. aide in eome corner, with e little tepid weter deehed on hie tece. and there he le left until he “oomee round.” while hie fellowe ply ehovel end “slice” (the letter to cleer the tire periodically from retuee) with e ilercer energy then before, edding the fellen men'e lehor to their own. The moment h re- covere conedoueneee he etrugglee to hie feet. eeieee the ehovel end in et it egeln. “Go oi! wetchr' Not he! He'e eecoodemeneeeny.endthedremen never knowe when he'e heeten. To eel! euch men heroee ie no ehnee of en often mieunderetood word. They ere not only the leet word in humen grit end pluck-tor your firemen will die rether then give inâ€"they ere he- roee who tece deeth every time they gate: the 993211.912, 9. 1.1311912er ll other men would sit down to their Thou Models of Human Grit Prae- tically Bravo Death Every Time They Face the Blistering Soaring Blasts of Heat From the Glowing Furnaces. An Inferno. all smoke and heat and One and nakedness. is the stokehold of an ocean liner. As you enter it. pick. tag your way over the burning ashes. the hot blast trom.the furnace mouths smites you In the face; it scorches your eyes and sears your lungs with every gasping breath you draw. Your 1m- pulse Is to turn and fly. Life seems impossible in such an atmosphere. HEROES OF THE STOKEHOLD. And yet the inferno hums with lite and strenuous. almost savage. industry. Opposite the. huge boilers. quivering with suppressed power, like so many chained giants, are the figures of men as if carved in ebony. glistening with the sweat that streams from every pore. They are working furiously. with muscles swelling and knotting as If they would burst through their sheath of skin-humans in quick suc- ceeding poses of fierce labor which would delight the eye of the sculptor and baffle his skill. Grimy Vulcans That Feed the Fires on Ocean Liners. - Gathering up a shovelful of coals. each man propels them with a quick forward thrust of the body into the white hot heart of the furnace and with a dextrous turn of the wrlst spreads them evenly over the fire. Then. quick as the eye can follow. an- other shovelful succeeds and another, as if life Itself hung on the breathless leftness of the sequence. THE BLACK SQUAI] at a atretch“ until the last “ounce” 1: taken out of them. and they crawl hack to their quarters for a well earn- ed eight hours of rest. Such is the stokehold in which the vulcans of our mammoth liners and battleships feed the greedy turnaces. which keep the propellers revolving to the tune of twenty knots and more an hour-the men of the “black gang" who, clad in. trousers almost as _black as their grimy bodies. and with a filthy “sweat rag" loosely knotted round their necks. toll thus for four hours It a fireman hints. overcome by the heat and oxlnnwon, be I: quickly laid 4.00 7.10 “ Durham “ 11.54 9.19 4.11 7.21 “ McVVilliams“ 11.44 9.1.9 4.14 7.24 “ Glen “ 11.41 915 4.24 7.3-1 ” Priceville “ 11.31 8.56 4.40 7.50 " Sangecn J. “ 11.18 8.48 5.15 7.50 “ lTomum “ 11.15 7.55 R. MACFARLANE. - Town Agent Trains will arrive and depart u fol lows. until further mince:â€" P.M A.M. PJI. an. 3.15 6 2.5 Lv.Walkert.ou “.12.“! 10.“ 3.29 6.38 “ Maple Hill ‘° 12.25 9.50 37 7.47 " Hanover “ 12.17 9.42 3. 3.4;) 6.55 “ Allan Park “ 12.08 9.32 CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE H. G Elliott G.P Agent Mont-ml Tnins lave Durbm at 7.15 um. I“ 2.45 pan. Trains arrive at Durban It 10.30 1.... [.50 p.m.. 3nd 8.50 pm. Egan DAY near; SUNDAY J. TOWN'ER Depot “ant JARS R. GUN. Town Agent Yonge Gerrard Ste..Toronto \V. H. SHA‘V. Pres. Grand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE Child’s Knickers and a few Children’s Suits. sizes 30to33. knee pants. worth $5.50 for only Renders of The Chronicle ore ndvioed thnt the Fall Term in Show' s Schools. Toronto. is now open end thnt students will be neon. Shorthand, Civil Service or Telegnphy. The new catn- logue just issued is interesting in its details and is mailed free on request. W'rite for a copy to “’9 have just received Men's Black J eau Pants and Overalls. also Workshirts and something special in Youth’s Pants, size from 30 to 32. at the rémukahle low price of “’9 have some good Sheeting to show you, also White Cot- tons, etc. Call and see us. GRANTS ZENUS CLARK ovum . . ou'rmo C. L. GRANT Central Business College, Planning Mill and Factory completed and is prepared to take onders for Also n.1imited amount of iron work and machine re- pars. A call solicited. Ask for quotation: on your next job. Custom Sawing Promptly At- tended To SASH,DOORS â€" and all kinds 0! House Fittings Lv. \Valkertou '° Maple Hill “ Hanover “ Allan Park Durham ‘ Mc\Villiams Glen Pliceville ' Saugeen J. ‘ IToronbo “ $l.25 $4.00 A. E. Duff, . Ascot. l‘oronto.

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