West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 22 Jun 1916, p. 3

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The school is thoroughlv 1 teaching ability, in chemic trical sup lies and fittings, Junior aving and M work. Durham High School: tractive town ma able place fan. resi‘ The record of the The record of the School in past years . is a flattemng one. The trustees are ' ive educationally and spare no that teachers and pupils Trains leave Durham at and 3.45 p.m. Trains art-we at Durham at, 11.? _. ‘ _\ 7.05 Canadian Trains will armve uuu up“... - ows, until urther notice:â€" P.M A.M. A.M. 8.1011.10 Ar. Toronto Lv. 7.45 4.35 7.40 Lv.Saugeen J. " 11.30 4.20 7.25 “ Priceville “ 11.42 4.10 7.15 “ Glen “ 11.52 4.06 7.11 “ MCXVilliams“ 11.56 EV ‘RY DAY ELK/131'; UV... 0 E. Homing, 3r. '1‘. Bell. . G.P. Agent, D.P. Ag‘ Montreal T01 §.10 615 °‘ W8»IKE R MACFARLANE A Grand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE _ March? 10001. 3|, Inclusive Tickets valid to "retmn within two months inclusive of date of sale. rmm. Hole head of a £391,115“ ”.0: DRY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY (Lb E.Horning, D. P. Agent, Toronto. The sole head 0: a Iauuu, v. a .. any male over 18 years old. may 3 w homestead . a quarter-sec ' g ' available Dominion land in Mani- . m toba, Saskatchewan or Albertam Applicant must appear in personi at the Dominion Lands Agency or; Sub-Agency for the District. Enaf of his homestead on 1 at least 80 acres, on certain condiâ€" . t tions. A habitable house is re- . l quired except Where residence is' performed in the vicinity. V Proportion ate 11 other points in Saskatchewan c Full particulars and plication to 4 Durham IS_ bins will arrive and depar‘ until urther notice:-â€"â€" June a, 1916. Chairman. W. CALDER. ,roughlv equipped in in chemical and elec- d fittings. etc., fpr full Durham Allan Park Han9"¢}‘ figfle Hm ‘- Walkexaon Ar. e“; if- [â€"Jossible. d at reasonable healthy and at- g it a. most desir- 3iéifiéulation LuthO‘. y low rates to in Manitoba. 1 or Alberta. nd tickets on aP' magenta 6b Town Agen " I P“ The house-fly is the dirtiest of M” 1 vermin It Visits the filthiestl "le 0'3? places imaginable and then dis- 1112 9:24; tributes the filth over our food 11.52 9.34. It carries the germs of typhoid. ‘ 11-56 9-38: infantile diarrhoea, and other in- P’M' ltestinal diseases, and, probably 12.08 9.50' 12.22 10 04% a 12.33 10.31515 Hence, it is not merely 12-40 10":i dirty, but exceedingly dangerous. 1- 9 ~ ' ‘ .-.1~+-°5 _103°{ as well. . \ â€" “A:nn‘- Local Agent .203. m . t as fol EXT‘E 3011‘. 9 St. Catharines, Ontâ€"“Two years ago ‘ I was in a very nervous, generally run- down condition, so that I awoke in the morning more tired ‘ . ,gfi than When I retired. sThedoctorsthought . f” l I had heart trouble and treated me for WW ( to your Invalids’ ' Hotel for anopera- tion (which proved entirely successful) and I at once got the ‘Favorite Prescrip- tion.’ I took hree bottles altogether and at the end of three weeks I felt en- tirely cured and have been well and strong since, without a single bad spell. I stopped taking it about three months ago i and am glad to tell any one how splen- Edidly your medicine has healed me.”â€" iMRs. JOHN LEWIN, 53 Niagara. St., St. i Catharines, Ont. | The mighty restorative power of Dr. {Pierce’s Favorite Prescription speedily ; causes all womanly troubles to disappear and brings back health and strength to l nervous, irritable and exhausted women. 2 .It is a wonderful prescription prepared only from nature's. roots and herbs with 1no alcohol to falsely stimulate and no lnarcotic to wreck the nerves. It ban- ; ishes pain, headache, backmhe. iow spirits, hot flashes, worry and sleeplessness surely ‘ and without loss of time . _.:_L~ 3 .It is a wondm‘ Lonly from Baum fno alcohol to f: ‘narcotic t9 wrc‘ 5 Vs“. â€"_-._ ' Over a million copies of the “The Peo- | , . . . ' ple’s Common Sense M edical Adwscr” are l now in the hands of the people. It is a 1, book that everyone should have and read I in case of accident or sickness. 3 Send fifty cents or stumps to Dr. Pierce, lInvalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and en- . close this notice and you will receive by ‘ return mail, all charges and customs duty prepaid, this valuable book. A Great Book Every E1y defensive measures are enough. The War must be earned 'into the enemy’s cou must be exterminated. To wage war with the adult fly ‘is to go into a ceaseless battle ' that can never be decisive in man’s 'favor. The flies form such a nu- - A L1_,.+ {a ithSSible t0 CU‘UUELL. lev -. 'â€" into the enemy’s country: the must be exterminated. he adult fly ‘ To wage war with t is to go into a ceaseless battle ' favor. T : merous hos ‘kill them all in a sing :and a very few ' - sufficient to propogate host the season follow- Ori tvhich Should then 1' Gallons of water. This a)? 3 with fou t, " kill 98 .to 99 per arden of Eden. Kurna is acknOW‘ he most trying in V -v-v-â€" it now! A11 druggists b :4: M ' |§1 Ar w ‘ I -)‘ "‘3 3" lb. ‘ ‘ ‘? . i {. ,‘I‘)U\.‘\J.LLY 9L5 Alaâ€"'- vâ€"_ 3. The missionaries fof nights when the gregisters not less t1 I The Europeans a ,pass days in under; ‘bers, or serdaubs, ~hov pulls a huge l ledged to be the mo . all the world. _ in the summgr tlme. It is c at Busren. ' ' '. t Busreh tell? of nights when the thermometer registers not less than 125 degrees. The Europeans at Busreh must pass days in underground cham- bers, or serdaubs, While a native lls a huge fan, or punkah- ' ' too PERSONAL. THE GARDEN 0F protection against PORCINE PROPINQUITY Woman Should Have. faus'oti his horse. manure in a NY" ox and. to have it {A 9:11an t0 the Cold Is Not Enough---1 Results Front Let “S pUb WU IOLLAD ...... . . venient place where we can reach 11'. without a day’s journey or a climbing Iouuw. _ refrigerators are hard to ‘ Some clean; some are ice-eaters; some are hard to store the food in economically. in that last fault the general trouble : is covered. Too often when the door . of the refrigerator is Opened a blast of warm air is driven through the ice compartment and not only is ice wast- :d but the food must be chilled again. When the air. circulation is good, minor defects, such as lack of space, s that ( Cociest Near Bottom z 3 As hot air is lighter than cold the ‘ 0001681: Spot in the food chamber will ", be on or-near the bottom of the box. ETwo-thirds of our housekeepers re- imember this and arrange foods acâ€" ! cordingly; the remainder put articles :they want very cold on the upper ‘ shelves “because it is nearer the ice.” E One of the most extravagant ways of ' using ice is to put food directly upon l it; this melts it and does not cool any- \ thing evenly. An ice blanket should .. always be laid upon the ice to keep '. the air from striking it when the lid E is raised. These “blankets” are made ,1 of heavy paper, and one will last -‘several days; housefurnishing stores 9 Bell them. Some refrigerators clean; some are ice-e hard to store the food In that last fault the U“ ~â€"' When the air circulation minor defects, such as lack bad shape of box. sharp a1 are hard to clean and ug] Watch the Drip Pipe When a refrigerator is scalded once a week and washed once a we ' a brush and suds and kept free'from too aged foods, it would seem there could be no cause for trouble, but even with such care we have had reason to think something wrong. As only the drip pipe remained to in- vestigate, the refrigerator was pulled off the zinc mat, the drip pan removed and the drainage carefully examined. Of course it was choked, and needed to be blown out and then sterilized. In order to make it as airtight as , possible, an ambitious maid had stuff- into it, thinking the water would seep through as the ice melted. The drip cup that attaches to the drainage hole of every ice box is so arranged that it prevents air rushing into the ice chamberâ€"nothing else is needed. However, this little cup should be cleaned twice a week at least, or it becomes filled up and the melted ice overflows it.â€"â€"Henrietta Gruel. Transportation facilities of a new e1 type that combine great power and E speedâ€"the steam and electric rail--| ways, good roads and the automobile â€"-â€"have contributed, in a wonderful de- a gree, to annihilate distances in the‘; A countryside. This means that new 1i markets for buying and selling have ti opened up to the farmer, and that the 11 circumference of his business possir v bilities has been extended at least a hundred fold. A greater portion of humanity is now dependent on him‘ than formerly, and his opportunities ' for competing with others, have been enlarged, while he finds that his com-_ petitcrs are also greatly increased in :turziber. He is, therefore, forced to ”fairs and become a man of larger a1 keener understanding. His intellectual life is thus stimulated, and his out- , look upon the world greatly broaden. ed. The automobile and the inter- urban car make it possible for him to enjoy the active social relation- ships of people many times farther away than it was possible when he lhad to depend upon the horse. The ' social life of the farm has been eny Fenced, and there is growing up in' the country a true rural aristocracy: of a very high type. E . New transmitters of intelligence 1 have become available to the country. . a fire telephone and daily delivery of t I l 1 I 4 : 15:1 2. - - well preserved to only a half-genera, tion ago. By the use of the commun- telephone, ,often owned by the ....3‘Ll‘.€i'l£ themselves, the whole com- mounity is welded together, and the _ Y:ews of the whole countryside be. e comes known in each home. Engage- 't ments are made by wire, social meet- ' ings 'are arranged, business transact- ... cd, and the young people may have n visits daily with one another. The L daily papers from the urban centres (‘3: bring to the family the latest intelli- a gence of the world’s prOgress. The it? ..~ '3 [e sensor quite as efficiently as for the most favored citizen. .11 COUNTRY LIFE CHANGED g Don’t forget that the bull needs fresh air and exercise. Let him out in a corral every (87:, he will keep THE DURHAM CHRONICLE. of a new the direction Lesson THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lesson, Phil. i, 1-11; iv, 1-9â€"â€"Quarterly Reviewâ€"Golden Text, Phil. iv, 8â€"Commentairy Prepared LESSON I.â€"â€"The conversion of Saul, Acts ix, 1-11, 17-19. Golden Text, I Tim. i. 15. “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners. of whom I am chief.” That God should choose such a vessel for such a purpose is to us a ‘ very great mystery. but we lmow that His way is perfect. and it was a fore- ‘ shadowing of the conversion of Israel ‘ as a nation by His appearing to them in glory, when they shall become a na- tion of Panls, with all his zeal. LESSON II.â€"â€"â€"Aeneas and Dorcas, Acts ix, 32-43. Golden Text, Tit. ii, 7, “In all things showing thyself an example of good works.” The result of these two miracles of health to Aeneas and a return to life in a mortal body to Dorcas (which was no gain to her) was that many turned to the Lord and be- lieved in Him and thus helped to com- plete His body, the church, the one only thing worth living for. n A-“AR‘1G ULLLJ bulimia LESSON 111. â€"â€"Peter" and Cornelius, : Acts x. 1-16. Golden Text, Rom. x, 12, Q “The same Lord is Lord of all and is l: rich unto all that call upon Him.” Be- Q cause of the Easter lesson next week 2 we take the whole chapter and see a \z 0 i Q ‘ ‘ § 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Gentile household, with hinsmen and riends, hearing and receiving the word of the Lord, and in Him forgiveneSS, and the gift of the Holy Spirit (verses 24,- 44). Note the agents. LESSON IV.â€"-The risen Christ, I Cor. xv, 1-11. Golden Text. I Cor. xv, 220, “Now hath Christ been raised from the dead, the first fruits of them that are asleep.” Our salvation and all includ- ed in it depend upon a risen Christ who waits for a company of people in redeemed bodies like His own. Then shall He benin His reign on earth, and we shall reign with Him till He hath subdued all things unto Himself. LESSON V.â€"â€"Peter delivered from pris- on, Acts xii, 1-11. Golden Text, Ps. xxxiv, 7, “The angel of Jehovah en- campeth round about them that fear Him and delivereth them.” The devil hates God and Christ and His people and His truth, and seems to think that he can succeed in Opposmg God, but l I i E wisdom of hell cannot prevail against 1 i . ‘Text, Matt. xxviii, 19, “Go ye there- fore and make disciples of all the na- ‘ tions.” The disciples were so slow to lobeythecommandtogoandtellthat it. the Lord allowed persecution to seat- ter the believers, and all but the aposâ€" tles went forthwith the word of life ‘3 even as far as Antioch. Later the ' _ . Holy Spirit called Paul and Barnabas. ‘ I Lassen VILâ€"Lo, we turn to the gen- IA Aâ€" -- “ww 4.0-.) _v, light of the gentiles.” On this tour the glad tidings were carried in today’s lesson to Cyprus and to Antioch, and ' we have one of Paul’s great sermons. giving the snMnce of his teaching. . which was always Christ crucified and risen and coming again to set up His kingdom and forgiveness for all who receive Acts xiv, 8-20. Golden Text, Isa. x1, 29, “He giveth power to the faint, and to him that hath no might He increasâ€" eth strength.” Everywhere preaching the gospel of the grace of God and the kingdom and magnifying the Lord in life and death, thus they went from place to place (verses 3, 7, 21, 9" 97. 5 power to continue were more wonder- ful than the healing of the lame man. . LESSON IX.â€"â€"-The council at Jerusa- l lem, Acts xv, 1-35. Golden Text. Gal. K v, 1, “For freedom did Christ set us free.” A full salvation through Jesus Christ without any good deeds of ours has always been opposed by the devil from the time of Cain, and never more so than now.- Witness the enmity of ‘ the Unitarians and others to salvation by the blood of Christ alone, yet Tit. iii, 5, and other texts emphasize “not Imou X.â€"-The call of the west. Acts - xvi, 6-15. Golden Text. Acts xvi, 9. * “Come over into Macedonia and help . us.” Farther and farther the glad tid- ings are carried, for God would have all to bear, but the messengers are so ‘ few. In this case human weakness is i overruled by God to send out four in- '| stead of two missionades, the Holy a XIII.â€"â€"$scond Quarter, For June ‘25, 1916. the Spirit teaching. Gal. vi-I Cor. ii. ‘ Iden‘ Text. I 001'. ii, 10. “For the Spirit searcheth all thingsâ€"yea, the alone, then it becomes our privilege to be so given up to the Spirit.that He alone may guide and teach and in all things so control that we shall not sow to the flesh nor build to be destroyed. VU WV Ilwu â€"vâ€" .- LESSON XII.-â€"â€"The Philippian jailer; Acts xvi. 19-34. Golden Text, Acts xvi, 31. “Believe on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved, thou and thy house." The third household saved in the story of the Acts. See Cornelius and Lydia. What strange events in this caseâ€"an evil spirit speaking the truth. a demon cast out, a persecution and imprisonment, praises at midnight with prayer, an earthquake, a house- hold saved. ’ - «r . ifi, 47, ‘21 havey set thee for a. J..-“- :qlLâ€"The cripple of Lystrzy ing, and the gospel is tak‘ “OMONOOOO 9900990990099009009ooooooo¢o¢¢+¢¢¢o§o¢¢ Call at The Above are All Made from Special Reduction onFlou O 9 w¢¢§§on+ooow+u+nwooo «woowoonuwnwuu 4 » on hand. Farmers and Stock Owners should lay in a quan- tity of this Excellent Conditioner for Spring and Summer Feeding. Nothing equals it for Young Pigs, Calves. Etc. Makes Milch Cows Milk and puts Horses in prime condh ion for seeding: in fact it makes everything go that it’s fed to: also Caldwell’s Celebrated Calf Meal. "' Everything in our line at lowest pricesgfor Cash. All kinds} - of Gram bought and sold. JOHN McGOWAN on hand. Farmers and Stock Owners 5] tity of this Excellent; Conditioner for S Feeding. Nothing equals it for Young Makes Milcn Cows Milk and puts Horse 4 â€"â€" --~_--6v1n:nrv Sovereign Flour Eclipse Flour Pastry Flour Low Grade Flour Rolled Oats -â€".â€"â€" TELEPHONE No. 8 (Night or Day) ii'eakiast Cereal For . A. ROWE’S Made f1:om Sound and Whole Grains on Flour andFeed in Quantities Bxcu rs Ions Confectioner and Grocer m PROPER Phihp EYE, 3 Fuller more satimact incinens. call 4 office and get, mtion. UN Dwell THE DUI imply continued 4 Apply to ‘ tario, is paying 1 for 391111 Durham. For Sa A comom chtu re Girl Want plain cooki Mrs David atree t. street, west: good conditi by James M pied by Hufi ticulars app Durham. { tage; gom of land. ml concession east of 1 frame bar Jackson, 1 02' Mach? .a of on Em' A131

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