v9a9¢9999999999 QQCQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQheeeéctt. A smail or large bag 01 a ï¬ne grain white, nutritious flour, is sold as our brand. Have you ever tri'--d it? Get our grucer to give you our kind next 'me and see the superior baking qual- ies it meek-sees. Better an d more Phnlesmue. because of a momtnrm... a Dar pure Manitoba flour, made frou. For ei Manitoba wheat. cannot he heat that bakers or domestic use . blend of} 'heat and i ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++$++++++++++++$+++é+++.v Lat, 39+++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++W+ Never substitute appealance for quality but rather choose an article a trifle more costly and obtain both. Appearance is prudential ++++++++ 322123333: m _ m E; :I made from selected winter win I is a superior article for making pastry. etc. Vvâ€"â€" u-vv‘ wu‘. col-i keep our flour for Isle. u- grocer does not. keep it come to mill and we will use you right Onll an up by telephone W0. 8. nu- “ a!!! “It 0! lurk» John McGowan eople’s Mills W- 0- COï¬nOI‘ up-to-dato flour md feed In Bouts and Shoes, Lemmings. Rubbers, Moccasins. Felt Boots, etc... fur Men Boys and Yuuths. Call at unce and get a pair 01' some of these lines to keep your fee-t. Warm. See our goods and prices before purchasing :15» here. 80x. Stockings, Mitts and Gloves of many kinds and prices in abundance. Trunks, Valises Suit Cases, Telescopes. Club-bags. etc, in differ. ent styles and prices. Macfarlane 8: Co. we put the wheat th‘râ€"ouâ€"g'h; Don’t forget. ' They will go quickly at the prices asked. Do you want one at a Bargain. We have a few stand and hanging lamps we are clearing at prices that should move them out. 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 a of; Manitoba and) Ontam and is a strictly ï¬rst class family flour PASTRY FLOUR delivered unï¬tâ€"lie†in town. Reduction on Flour in 5 no . 10.3w Lott \Ve have a large stock of suitable Wear for these seasons. TIIB IBXALL STORE C. P. I. Town mm 0"!“ Buy It is Time to Prepare ECLIPSE sea. ' Better and more acause of a secret proce; s 'l‘ H E For Fall and Winter Every 03) N. H. STERNALL No urging to buy goods you don’t want. Canada’s High Schnol ; H i8“! former students. Winter Term from Jan )fl) ELLIOTT I)? AA DOMESTICS ARE NEEDED. Walkerton, Nov. 15.â€"-The demand for domestic labor is very great in Walkerton and South Bruce. The Children’s Aid Society has no trouble in finding good homes for meny girls, but is not so tortunate in findln places {or boys. 31: children min; the year have been laced in foster homes. , Forty- our requests were received and mgzahtflrggfl calls made by Galvanized 3nd Iron Piping, Bras Brau Lined and Iron Cylinder:- SBCP OPEN EVERY AFTERNOOb Pumps From $2 Upward ALL REPAIRING promptly am properly attended to. PUMPS OF ALL KINDS 20 per cent. discount off Cut Glass this month Come and see the bar- gains we are offering. Annual November Sale of China DOMESTICS S. P. SAUNDERS V1 achihe Uil. Harness 011 A818 Grease and H00 Umtment, go to DRUGGIS‘I‘S AND STATIONERS Buy Your Tickets [lore IS NOW ON lannfactnrer of And Dealer in High Class Commercial Highly recommended “by TORONTO. ONT . CONNOR The Harnersmvmï¬m 3 New Life Saving Jacket. A public test was recently carried jacket. During the demonstration this apparatus was used by a woman and three men. The garment consists of a loose sack. about the length of an ordi- nary lounge jacket. having a ribbing ï¬tted with a substance or greater bony- ancy than cork. it is so constructed that the heads of the users are com- pletely out of water, thus permitting than tank. fad whthmmwgta. A Tricycle Street Cleaner. Jacquelin. the French champion bicy- cle rider, is not satisï¬ed with the tri- umphs be has achieved in the rink and long distance races. He has turned out to be an inventor of a very practice] bent of mind. Jacquelin has just se- cured a patent for a tricycle to be used in street cleaning. A cylindrical brush is fastened by gas pipes to the tricycle. In front of it and between the two rear wheels is a basket or 3000;} for the sweepings. The machine does the street sweeping more quickly and thor- oughly than a number of men can ac- complish it. Watches Al‘e Sensitive. There is in Cleveland a central oï¬icA for the inspection of watches which serves sixty different railways. Twice a month every railway servant must take his watch to a local inspector to be regulated. and once a year it must be cleaned. Neglect of these rules may be followed by suspension or discharge. The oflicials of this inspection depart- ment have found that the watches of engine drivers with regular runs keep much better time than those of men who work in long stretches followed by a long rest. And the watch resents even a change of pocket. Balls Pitched In a Game. It is possible for a [littllul' to throw only twent) seven halls in a nine in- ning game. No am-urate revord of the 'smallest number of balls thrown in any game exists as no one counts every ball in every game. 1 seored one game in which Ed \\ alsh pitrhed only ei99l1tv- eight balls seven of \"hit'h were fouls, whiv h I re9'9ud as 1':i91111rkal1le. I saw Coomhs pitch se1 enteen halls to one batter last summer. The greatest num- ber of pitched halls 1 ever counted in a game was 211. George(“ltul1e"1 Wad- dell being the virtim. and he weaken- ed in the ninth and allowed ï¬ve runs ~showing that the strain was too great even for a man of his marvelOUS power and enduranceâ€"[lugh S. Fullerton in American Magazine ' “The question of whether the sun ls gro‘lvlng hotter or cooler and the effect the cooling of the body would have upon the earth is still debatable. It would take us thousands of years to ascertain whether the sun is becoming cooler.â€â€"t\'ew York World. "As far as we know." said Professor W. S. Adams. assistant. to Professor George F. Hale. head of the local Car- negie astronomical Institution. “these spots are cooler than the other parts of the sun’s surface. Professor Ferdinand Ellerman has headed the work of photographically capturing the spot. which is now mov- ing westward. MONSTER SUN SPOT. The Newest Ono Nearly Ten Times the of Size of North America. The largest sun spot which has been detected within a year. a coal patch on the sun's surface. 10.000 miles in diam- eter. though its mark on the seventeen inch image at the Mount Wilson ob servatory measures but a ï¬fth of an inch across. is now under observation at the Carnegie observatory and has been photographed several times since its appearance. on June 18. “A arm nf tho nun annf to onnnn'i- ' Saturday’s illustrated Globe con- tained an excellent photogravure a former Flesherton young ilady, Miss Ella Cora Hind, now a leading journalist in Winnipeg. tM'iss Hind attended the recent In- ternational Congress of Farm éWomen at Lethbridge, AJta., and referring to her, the Globe corres- pondent said: Miss E. Cora Hind of the Winnipeg Free Press, the ‘best journalistic authority on ‘agricultural conditions in Western The area of the sun spot is approxi‘ mateiy “(8.540.000 square miles. a" sur. face nearly ten times the size of North America and in which twentyiive countries of the size of the United States might be placed with plenty of margin around the edge. The ancient Greek: never had and modern savages never have X legs, which. Profemor Francke says. are consequenres of civilization and tend to imply physical inferiority.â€"Chicago inter Ocean. Children born with O or straight legs tend to become X legged while learning to walk. but this condition tends to disappear in men up to the twenty-third year or in perhaps 25 per cent up to the thirty-eighth year. Wo- men. however. tend to remain knock- kneed or X legged throughout life. as a result of their skirts and their lack of exercise. 0 legs always look like strong limbs. while X legs give the impression of weak members. Professor b‘rancke lays down the rule that if when stand- ing in a natural position the knees and ankles touch without forcing the sub- Ject has straight legs. It. with the ankles touching, there is as much as two centimeters between the knees. it is bowlegged. if. with the knees touching, there be two centimeters be- tween the ankles. lt is knockkneed. or X leg: and 0 legs are the names given to bowlegl and knockknoea by Professor Francke, writing In the Huenchener Mediclnlsche Wocben- Ichrlft. who bales his remarks upon the examinatlon of 1.100 pairs of legs taken at random. Cure They Are Not. Nobody hu straight legitâ€"that ll. let- that are perfectly parallel. Whet are commonly so called are the mlldeet degree of x less. while those thlt If. technically moat nearly stralght are the mlldeet degree of 0 legs. Pufï¬n» Franck. any. H. I. Pratt, A MONSTER SUN SPOT. THE DURHAH CHRONICLE [DON’T ENVY A GLORIOUS HEAD } OF HAIR. Your hair may not be as heavy as other women’s, Young Lady: it may not radiate its lustrous splen- dor; it may not be free from dan- xdruff; but that’s no reason why you should Worry. Sold by dealer: everywhere for only 50 cents. Mactarlane 8: Co. on money back plan. It stops Icalp itch lnntantly and preserves the natural color and beauty of the m. ' r tonic, grower, dhndrutf remover and beautitier. P' In Paris all women who care have fascinating hair; in Canada all women, young ladies and girls who know about PARISIAN Sage have a wealth of brilliant hair and give credit where credit is due; to wonderful, delightful PARISIAN Sage, the ideal hair Mr John Wright, tax collector. is now collecting the village rev- enue The Georgian Bay Power Co. having rccently sold the power plant at Eugenia, to the Hydro- Electr'c Commission, a movement is on foot here now to induce the Hydro-Electric to again operate the Eugenia plant and restore to this village the former lighting at as__ear13_'__a date as possible. A _ 'Q Miss Florence Thu‘reten â€" 'visited the past Week with friends at Ki_r_nbe1:ley. Mr. A. F. McKenzie, of Detroit, is visiting his nephew, Mr. Joseph Duncan, and other relatives. Mr. John Pedlar leaves this week to visit his brother at Loup City, Ncbraska. Miss Maud Richardson visited the past week with her sister in Toronto. Mrs. Flynn is visiting her daugh- teLat Qlangeville this week. Mrs. George Stuart and children have returned from visiting her parents at Thornbury. At the League meeting in the Methodist church, the programme was literary and interesting pap- ers were given on the Balkanâ€" Turkish warâ€"its cause, progress and probable results. of Toronto. Rev. W. Daniels, of Toronto, preached a very able missionary sermon in the Baptist church on Sunday. A Laymen’s Missionary banquet was held in the church on Monday evening, addressed by on during the week, found time to send from two to seven columns of “copy†every day to her paper in Winnipeg. To one of her news~ paper friends, she said when leav- ing Lethbridge at the end 'of the week, “Come to see me when you are in Winnipeg, and I’ll show you the kind of hot biscuits and tea I can make.†Canada, was not only interested in the cause of advancement in the farm homes, but was also a keen participant in several of the discussions which followed the reading of papers in the men s ses- sions. She was to be seen every- where, and besides taking an act- ive interest in all that was going Masonic auspices. Mr. Ferguson was initiated into Masonry in sided at Priceville. He is survived by his widow, one son and one daughter, the latter teaching in resides with her daughter. Mrs. Geo.- Rutherford, of Shelburne. At a meeting of the hockey club held on. Friday night, the following officers were elected: Patron Committee, J.A. Boyd, C. H. Munshaw, Geo. Mitchell, W. J. Boyd, D. McTavish; Hon. Pres., M. Scully; Pres., R.G. Holland; ,Vice Pres., Dr. E.C. Murray; ,Manager, Ed. Thompson; Sec., -C.J. Crossley; Trea., C.N. Richardson; Capt, H. A. Mitchell; Man. Com., H. Smith C. N. Richardson and H. Brown. 1 Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Welton have moved to the neat new residence completed by W. A. Armstrong on Durham street. The hunters from here to Parry Sound returned safely last week with their full complement of deer. All report a very enjoyable outing. :cv Mr. Daniels and Mr. Senior, FLESHERTON. Blessed are all who see the glory of His kingdom. endeavor now to walk worthy of it and live to hasten tt. As they came down from the mount He charged them to tell no one of the wonders they had seen till the Son 0! Man should he rlsen from the dead. but Just what that saying meant not one of them could tell (verse 10). for they did not bel‘eve that He me to dle. They remembered some of the last words at Malachi concerning Elijah and spoke at them. and Jenna tndoreed them and aid that they would surely be tul- fllled. but that the" bed been already I fulï¬llment In John the m That is a good word for us. “Awake, thou that sleepest. and arise from the dead. and Christ shall give thee light" (Eph. ii. 14). As Peter spoke a cloud overshadowed them. and a voice came out of the cloud, saying: “This is my beloved Son. in whom i am well pleased. Hear ye H im.†And they saw no man any more save Jesus only with themselves (verses 7, 8; Matt. xxvil. 5-8). To Him give all the prophets witness. and so it must be Jesus only. The Lord alone shall be exalted. See now the kingdom in miniatureâ€"the Lord .lesul gloriï¬ed and with Him the risen saints represented by Moses and the trans- lated saints represented by Elijah. The three disciples may represent all Israel made 'righteous and the multitude a] the foot of the hill the people to be blessed when the kingdom comes. gSIINIJM' SCHOOL By virtue of that atoninz death they and all the redeemed from Abel on- ward had enjoyed centuries of bliss. as it were. on a promissory note now about to be paid. None are in glory nor ever can he except by virtue of that precious blood In due time shed on Golgotha. it is the blood that maketh atonement. and without shedding of blood there is no remission of sins (Lev. xvii, 11; Heb. ix. 22L The disciples were heavy with sleep (Luke ix. 32). and so it was also in Gethsemane. Are we not all in a measure asleep to the great things of God? How often we talk al foolishly as Peter. who suggested tho three tabernacles, not knowing what to it was over 1,400 years since Mose. died and was buried on Mount Nebo (Deut. xxxiv» and perhaps 900 years since Elijah was taken from the side of Elisha on the east of Jordan by a whirlwind and horses and chariot of ï¬re (11 Kings ll). yet here they are, alive and well and recognized. as no doubt we shall know all in the glory without introductions. They talked with Jesus about His decease. which He should accomplish at Jerusalem (Luke ix. 31). light. He did not wear the veil when he went in to talk with the Lord and possibly only after he had done talking with the people. Stephen’s face seems to have reflected something of the same light (Acts vi. 15). How wonderful the statements concerning us in Matt. xiii. 43; I John iii. 2. Consider for a little these two men from heaven who are talking with Jesus and whom the three favored disciples saw and seemed to know. for Peter mentions them by name. His face did shine as the sun, and ' His raiment was white and glistening. shining. white as the light. white as snow. When Moses came down from the mount the skin of his face shone so that he had to wear a veil while he talked with the people (Ex. xxxiv. 29- 35). That must have been reflected In connection with the coming of Christ in glory which He mentioned in last week's lesson He said that some or those who stood there would not taste of death till they had seen the kingdom of God come with power or the Son of Man coming in His king- dom. Then after six intervening days. or. as Luke says. about eight days. He took Peter and James and John into a high mountain, apart by them- selves. and as He prayed He was trans- flgured before them. It seems to me that the wonder was not that the glory now shone through the veil of His flesh. but that it was always there. yet concealed But it was. as to His whole life. the time of His appearing as one to us, sin excepted «Heb. ii. 14). ï¬lm was allowed to ahlne through In this particular way. In the tabernacle and tn the temple the glory of God waa always 1n the holy of bones above the mercy aeat. between the cherublm. but the vell concealed ltâ€"the vell which was rent in twain from the top to the bottom in the midst when He died and which. we are told in Heb. x. 20. repre- aented ma flesh or body. John aayl AI he makes no record of the trunn- ï¬guration. poulbly he refers to It in this am. to well no to His whole life on urth. Peter nndonbtedlv reteu to tho transnzurntlon wnen he an. “We made known unto you the now end coming of our Lord Jesus Chrllt and were eyewltneues of all m1.- ty.†for he mentions the holy mount end the words from the Father (John 1. 14; 11 Pet. l. 16-18). that “the word was made flesh and tabernacled umong us. and we beheld Text of the Lesson. Mark 3:91-18. Memory Vet-m. 9, loâ€"Golden Text. Luke ix, 35 (R. V.)â€"Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Steam; This lesson. like the last. is recorded by Matthew and Luke as well as by Mark. It was the one occasion on which the glory which was always ln THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Lesson Vlll.-Fourth Quarter. For Nov. 24. 1912. time ago by Charles Spence. The letter was written in both Japan- eee and English, and it wee a little over I yeer‘on its journe ecrou the Pacific, although t may have been knocking wound the eoeet ton seven] months he- {on being pickid in]; BOTTLE CROSSED PACIFIC. That a sealed bottle placed in the Japan current near Japan, bar- ring -accident, will reach the northern shores of Graham Island has been satisfactorily proven. No further proof of thin assertion. says the Manet, B. 0., Leader, is needed than the letter which wu in a mall bottle picked up near the beach at Tow Hill a short 5.15 R. MACFARLANE. - ruins luvs Uurhaun at 715 am" 2 4.3 pm. Trains "rive gt Durham a 10.301 .50 n m.. and 8.50 p m. EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY ' H 6 Elliott, A. E. Duff, (1}. P Agent, D. P. Agent. Mont-real. 1 are _ _ _ _ __ - â€" v - â€" - â€"vv A handsome)! mustmh 3.1 Weekly. Luaost cur- Cuiation of any I»: .a arm journal. Terms for Luanda, $1.75 3 year. watage prom“. 501d b, 6U newmcM-rs. mug 60.38'me York MflbFï¬t‘WuhmnomD.c. IHUH‘J I â€"'v .â€" Patent. taken {Munch mefi-tbamflwmwfl â€â€˜1‘“ 2““- !"3'905 “1330. In the “ TBA cc SIAM. ‘zzscms COWCJCZ-ZTS dc. Anyone sending I sketch and dmcr‘w'km may quickly ascertain our opmiun tree “in!!! hor an invention I! probably pnwntahie. . (‘nmmuninp ï¬rms at ricflycnnfldmniul. HANDBOOK on Patent. sent. (roe. Oldest agronr‘yjogpocunjxg‘xmtcma, In...-.-.n- ‘..L.... 4 Ssiéiiflï¬Ã© Mé’ï¬ca: . All-wool blankets, flan- nelette blankets, ï¬ne all- wool grey blankets. Furs, Ladies’ and Gent’s sweater coats, Child ren ’s sweater coats, Children’s clouds, Ladies’ Misses and Children’s cashmere hose, plain, ï¬ne and heavy ribbed Boy’ s heavy worsted hose, hockey caps. avia- tion caps, Ladies’ and Misses’ hoods. Don’t forget~ Stanï¬eld's un- shrinkable underwear when buy- ing: They are the best. Grand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE DURHAM GRANT’S AD. v‘v 7.10 7.21 C. L. GRANT pairs. A call solicited. Ask for quotations on yuur next jub. announce to maiden“ of Durham and surrounding country. that he has his Planning Mill and Factory completed and is prepared to take orders for M â€" and all kinds of House Fittings Lv.\\'.~1lkermn Av “ Maple Hill " “ Hanuver “ “ Allan Park “ TIME TABLE Um ham ‘ MC \\ illituus GI: 11 Pr 196 ill? ‘ Saugeeu J. ° Tut-onto ‘ Tu“ n Agent you want 7 l5 1 "1.. and ONTARIO 11.34 11.44 11.41 11.31 11.18 11.15 H;N\Y m 10.05 '35 9.50 17 9.42 )8 9.33 (is 01'0““). 8.56 9.19 fol