West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 10 Aug 1916, p. 3

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p "Avg-In u. ,‘ E Trains amve at Durham at 11.;Oa.m. 2.30 p.m., and 8.45 p.111. EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY Trains leave Durham at 7.05 a..m., and 3.45 p.111. Canadian Pacific Railway Time Table Iraias will arrive and depart as fol- IJWS, until urther notice:â€" G. T. Bell. P.M A.M 1022 T05 .. 10.35 1.20 .. R. BIACFARI The school is thoroughlv equipped: 9 teaching ability, in chemical and elec- trical supfilies and fittings, etc., for full Junior eaving and Matriculation work. l‘HOS. ALLAN: -Pripc'i‘pal and Pro L llUUo “HULAL" .. -----_ vincial Model School T‘e‘ooher 181: Class Certificate. Intending Students should'enter at the beginning of the term if possible. Board can be obtained at reasonable rates. Durham IS a healthy and at- tractive town. making it a most desir- able place f’? r residence. The record of the School in past years is a flattering one. The trustees are progressive educationally and spare no ains to see that teachers and pupils ave every advantage for the pro- per presentation and acquistion of knowledge. FEES : $1 per month in advance . RAMAGE, J. F. GRANT, Chair-than. Secretarv Durham High School ........ :11[ 1mm? . ZZZZd 09). g“?! I Wgw .QWLWK ,,,,,,,, ,,,,,, SFURNITURE l [0.00 ATTRACTIVE TRIPS Muskoka Lam Georgian Bay French River G.P. Agent, D.P. Ag‘ Montreal. T01 J. TOWN ER. Depot. Agent W. CALDER, Town Agent §§§§§§§§§§“§§“§§§§“W Round trip tourist, sale from certain s xio at very low rat stopovers. Leaves Toronto 12.01 p.111. daily. ex- cept Sunday. and 2.05 a..m. daily. for Muskokn \Vharf. Connections are made at Muskcma \Vhax-f for Mus- koka Lakes. Leave Toronto 10.15 mm. daily except Sunday, and 2.05 a..m. daily for Huntsvnlle, points on Lake of Bays. "Equipment ,the finest. MUSKOKA EXPRESS RI“! particulars on application to Grand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE Rugs, Oilcloths Window Shades Lace Curtains and all Household Furnishings TINSMITHING Mr. M. Kress has opened a shop at the rear of the furniture show: room and is prepared to do all ’. kinds of tinsmithing. i Undertaking receives special~ attention UN DERT AKIN G EDWARD KRESS Chairman. Maganetawan River Temagami, etc. August 10, 1916. TO .akes Lake of Bays gay Algonquin Park ,8, Kawartha Lakes A.M. Toronto Un. Ar. 11.35 en Mc‘Villiams‘ Du rham ‘ ' Alla-m Park 'oronto N. Saugeen J. " an O Priceville Glen “ Mc‘Villiams“ Dux ham “ Allan P: u k 0 O 0 8.10 7. " 4.35 7.40 4.20 7.30 4.10 7.26 4.06 7.15 3.55 7.01 3.41 6.52 3.32 R .12 233 Hanover Maple Hill VValkerton JANE. ' C. E. Homing. D.P. Agent, Toronto. AND eville stations " 6.43 3.23 l 630 3.10 Town Agent Agents P.M ‘stores of this country within ate reach of all sufierers. , Simpiy ask for Doctor Piercc ’Tablets. There canbe no ! Every package of “Anuric” i be Doctor Pierce’s. You wi} ; signature on the package in [do on Dr. Pierce’s Favorite ! tion, the ever-famous friend ! women, and Dr. Pierce’s G01 3 A 2novel method of raising re- 'c1‘uiting funds has been struck. Supon by the 238th Forestry 15:11- ;talion who, seeing that they a1e :calling 101 men ail ove1 the p1ov- ince, aie giv1ng the whole 01 Unnâ€" ;1iu an oppo1tunity of shaiing 1n the expenses of musing the unit. While the headquaiters of this non-combatant unit me at Otta- NEW STRENGTH FOR LAME BACK. Dear Mr. Editor â€" I suffered form lame back and a constant tired, worn-out feeling. At times I was unable to stand erect and scarcer able to get around. It would usually come on at first with crick in small of my back. I took one box of Dr. Pierce’s Anuric Tablets and my back commenced to get better soon after starting to take them. I did not have to walk doubled over as I did before using the “Anuric.” It is the best remedy I have ever taken for what it is intended to relieve. 1 hope those who are in need of such a remedy will give the “Anuric Tablets” 3 trial. NOTE: Up to thi time, has not been on sale to the by the persuasion of many p the increased demand for tt fuL healing tablet, Doctor finally decided to put it int icai Discovery, proven Dy the greatest general tonic. cents to Dr. V. M. Pierce, Bu for Earge triai package. At any rate dmz’t give being cured of your malad a few doses of “ Anuric" ! that it will make you Latter Tells quona-looked-for Prescription. ALI] wuv -‘_ V “V _. being mired of your malady until just a few doses of “ Anuric’” have proven that it will make you feel like a different person. . EDITORâ€"Please -insert this letter in some conspicuous place in your paper. wa. the central recruiting depot [or the province is at 55 Queen Street West, Toronto, and this ol- l‘ice has found it necessary to purchase an automobile to faciliâ€" tate its Work. When the Battalion is up to strength the officials Will give this machine to some one of the patriotic supporters of the unit, the Winner to be determined by a drawing contest ‘to be. held on September 1. The battalion is sending out the call for contri- butions 01' $1 each, to be applied to recruitingexpenses, and to each contributor it will present a num- bered ticket which will entitle tne donor to one chance ofâ€" Winning This is not a lottery or a raffle, but merely an attempt to give the general public a chance to help along the recruiting of a very essential unit, and the sanc- tion of the Department of the Attorney General has been se- cured. The car is a __ve_r_y desirable one. It is a Maxwell, five-passen- ger‘ self-starter, up-to-date $1,000 machine, with full electrical equip- ment, and it is an undisputed last that some civilian Who donates a dollar to the battalion funds will receive their car on September 1. Without further cost, as the bat- talion will no longer have use lor it. No persons connected with the battalion will receive tickets, re- gardless of the size of their con- tributions. The dollar donations WHY SUFFER FROM HEAT IN THE CITY WHEN YOU CAN COOL OFF ON THE GREAT LAKES? Take Canadian Pacific Steamship Express from Toronto any Tues- day, Thursday or Saturday at 3.30 pm. for Port McNicoll, Where direct connection is made with either the Assiniboia or Kee- watin for Sault Ste. Marie, Port Arthur and Fort William. An ideal vacation trip at small cost. Par- ticulars from any Canadian Pacific Ticket Agent, or W. B. Howard, District Passenger Agent, Toronto. FALHERM UPE 1/) ELLEO'TT onge and Charles Sts., Toronto was 2 ’ed to fill more than thirty times as many positions as they had graduates during the last, twelve months. W7 1t? tod my fox 9: Lralogue. This col- lege 18 noted for high grade training. ACE-LENS}: {'0 W124 A2; AJTO Nowopen in Shaw’s Business Schools, Toronto. continues until August 28th when Fall Term begins. No vacations Enter any time. Free catalogue. Write W. ll. Shaw, President. SUMMER SESSION (Signed) A. G. DRAKE. "T '1 on 83 :is time, “Anuric' 19 to the public, but M UPEflS W628 -‘LSOTT (7" :ufierers. Doctor Pierce’s Anuric canbe no imitation. I “Anuric” is sure to ’8. You will find the package just as you Favozite Prescrip- mous friend to ailing 1’ erce’s Goiden Med- rmen by years to be a! tonic. Send 10 itrce Buflalo,N. Y” why. r give up We. 0? nany patients and 1 for this wonder- )octor Pierce has 5 it into the drug v within immedi- SUNDAY SGHBBL THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Lesson VILâ€"Third Quarter, For Aug. 13, 1916. The topic of this lesson is “The Grace of Giving” and covers chapter viii. as well as our lesson chapter. but we can- not refrain from a glance at the whole epistle even though we shall have an~ other study in it in a few weeks. Sec- ond epistles are apt to have special reference to things future. and this one is no exception. Notice the resurrec- tion, and the glory. and the things un- seen and eternal of chapter iv. 14-18. The heart of the lesson is to me the last verse of our chapter. “Thanks be unto God for His unspeakable gift" (ix, 15), or as Weymonth has it. “His unspeakably precisus gift." The word “unspeakable" is used only three times â€"here and chapter xii, «1; and 1 Pet. i, 8. In each place it is a different Greek word. and used only this once. If such a gift from such a God does not constrain us to be all that He would like us to be and do all that he would like us to do it is only another evidence of our blindness and hardness of heart. This letter is from Paul and Timothy and has a good deal in it con- cerning suffering and deliverance and comfort. but specially conceming com~ fort, as in i. 3. 4: ii. 7: vii. 4. 6. 7. 13: xiii. 11. Text of the Lesson, ll Cor. ixâ€"Mem- 9 cry Verses, 10, 11â€"Golden Text. Act: ! 20-35â€"Commentary Prepared by Rev ; D. M. Stearns. : All our service must be from the heart, unto the Lord and cheerfully willing, for God loveth a cheerful or hilarious giver (verse 7). God gives so bountifully, first IIis beloved Son and then with Him freely all things (John iii. 16; Rom. viii. 32). But our giving is not always on those lines, and we need to remember verse 6. with Prov. xi, 24: “He who soweth sparingly shall reap also sparingly, and he who soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully;” “There is that scat tereth and yet increaseth, and there is that withholdeth more than is meat. but it tendeth to poverty." When the tabernacle of Moses was built the peo- ple gave so willingly that they had to be restrained from bringing, and the same spirit was manifest on the part' . of David and his people in the matter ? of gifts for the temple (Ex. xxxv, 21. ; 29; mvi, 5-7; I Chron. xxix. 1-9. 17). ‘ Ever since 1884 l have found pleas- ure and profit in giving to the Lord . at least one-tenth of all that He sends l | l 1 me as an evidence that I recognize that all is His, and l have found much blessing in doing this and earnestly commend the plan to others. It is not Jewish, for it is at least as old as the time of Abraham. Neither is there any bondage in it, but the most per- fect freedom. I have associated in _ mymind viii, 9, and ix, 8, of these two chapters (the figures are easily re- : membered) and rejoice in the grace of ; Him who became poor that we might be rich and who is able to make all‘ grace abound toward us, that we. hav. , ing such all suficiency, may abound to every good work. I have seen such' cheerful giving on the part of my own congregation of less than 200 people, resulting in as much as $10,000 a year for missions, that I desire the same blessing for others. See my tract “Se- cret of Missionary Interest.” Bo: 216. The great adversary is mentioned as Satan. the God of this world. the ser- pent (ii, 11; iv, 4; xi. 3). We are taken back to the first recorded words of God in the Bible, “Let there be light." and are taught to find there a foreshadow- ing of the light that shines into our souls when We are born again by re- ceiving His word liV, 6;. Such love and grace as were seen in the Lord Je- sus Christ becoming poor for us that We might share His riches constrain- ed these people first to give their own selves to the Lord and then. in great affliction and deep poverty. prove the sincerity of their love by unusual lib- erality (chapters v, 14: viii, 1-9) They were so enriched spiritually in every- thing-in faith. in utterance. in knowl- edge. in diligence. in loveâ€".that they abounded in giving to othefi, so that Paul wrote them that it was superflu- ous for him to say anything to them concerning ministering to the saints (I Cor. i, 4. 5; II Cor. viii. 7: ix. 1. 11, 12). He encouraged them by saying that their zeal had provoked many to do likewise. and now he trusted that they would be on time with their gifts. so that his boasting might not seem in vain (ix, 2-5). There had been the read- iness to do a full year ago, and now it only remained for them to perform the doing of it. N 0 one was to be burdened. and there was to be no anxious longing to do more than they were able. but all must remember that a willing mind was ev- erything, and God only expected them to do that which He gave them the ability to do (chapter viii, 10-12). Many waste time and breath talking of what they would do if they could, or if they had the time and money which some one else has, but I am constantly thankful that we are only responsible for the use or what God gives us ei- ther of time, or money. or talents. or ability of any kind. Harrisburg, Pa. And note that all this giving of $50,000 a year from my church and Bible classes is wholly on premmenmal 11116, according to I Cor. II Cor. iv. 14, 17; i7, 10 the coming of Christ for His saints and then with us to set up His kingdom being the lnspirationtoletHimnseustothent- most tam? @W 9-3.1.1.. - THE DURHAM CHRONICLE. 1 WHY PRODUCE GOES BAD Professor C. H. Lee of Manitoba Agricultural College writes as follows: The practice of preserving food for future use is as old as the human race itself. In fact, the lower animals in many cases still instinctively set aside their surplus against a day of scarcity. The honey bee is a marvel in this respect. Their system of concentrat- ing, canning and capping is so perfect that they seldom lose their summer’s pack. The dog, too, instinctively buries his surplus bone and hopes to return to find it mellow and appetiz- ing, and this in much the same way as his pioneer Western master may have buried his pemmican or his Dead Products Commence Decaying QUickIy and Naturally Eastern syrup. There is a science underneath this 1 food preservation and the enormous advance which man has made in methods of saving good food for future ‘use has been made by building the process on a scientific basis. Science itself is useless in this re- spect if not applied. The art of do- ing what science demands is all im- portant. Woe is the day when the pantry shows that the meat has spoil- ed, the milk goes sour, the butter rancid, the eggs rotten and the fruit which was so‘faithfully “put down" refuses to stay down, while the peas which you “put up” likewise refuse to remain in the condition in which you think you put them. In a word, they have all “gone bad.” This going bad is simply going in the way that nature intended. Just so soon as any agency interferes with the life cycle of either plant or animal matter to the extent that it dies, im- mediately that material becomes de- fenceless and in the natural process it forms the foo-cl for other living things. or in other words it decays. “Dust thou art to dust returnest,” was certainly spoken of all dead animal and vegetable matter. If the peas above had been allowed to. ripen nature would have preserved them in her own way by keeping them alive and that for 10 years or more. The potato likewiSe fights off the toe of decay so long as it remains alive, but freeze it to death and it soon becomes a putrid mass. The matter of proper tire care is perhaps about the most important consideration of the average motor- ist, for it is more vital to his pocket- book than anything else in Connec- tion with his car. The views of authorities vary so Widely that the car owner often is at sea as to just what is the best for his tires. In snme piaces he reads that inflation to ti e riakers’ recommended pres- sure is not advisable; he has it hinted to him that the manufacturers are swayed by commercialism and hence they favor abnormal pressures to further s;â€" ies of tires through more rag. id bar-32:5; out. This actually was told to a motor ist by a garageman who had had enough experience to know better. Such a statement is foolish on the face of it. The tire r1. 1-07‘5 v ant to have their tires last as long as they can, for it means satisfied customers and more busi- ness. They, therefore, are the logical am? best source from which to gain valuable information on proper care Keep Pressure at Proper Point in Automobiles oi tires. The first and most import- ant tire. rule is to pay strict atten- :ion to the recommended inflation pressure for the particular size and make oi‘ tire you are using, and main- tain that pressure to the best of your ability. The supply of common sense never exceeds the demand. English girls at work upon war muni- tlons. Thousands of women who were unused to hard manual labor responded when the call came to release the men for active service and keep them supplied with shells and cartridges. ' FIRST RULE FER TIRES Helping Defend the Empire mistress her jars of maple vegetable stains from white goods, heap salt on the spot, rnb hard. and rinse it in cold' Water 111 which considerable borax has been dissolved. 9 99999999990999009990000 00.0 0999009 09999999999990 6§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§#00” +0000§§§§§N§§§§§§§M§§¢§ ifizzQOOOOQQOOOOOQQO§§¢§§Q§§§§zzzz§§§ « ‘ an: m» .4osooooooooooooo¢¢vvvvvoo o¢¢¢¢o+o¢++o§++oo+¢¢¢o¢+¢§ To remove tea, coffee, fruit 519d ' The energy used i o9to¢.oooooo++oooooooo+o++ooooooooooooooooo++ooooo+ow Oi§z§§z§z§zz§§§00¢§§§§§t§§§§§§§§33§4§6 The Above are All Made from Sound and Whole Grains Special Reduction on Flour and Feed in Quantities OUR SHOES embrace all the good leathers, made in Patent‘ Gun Me tal; and Dongola, on the latest model lasts. They are stylish, dur- able and handsome shoes. No better footwear is manufactured and they are priced accogdgng to quality.hpome in and inspect our new Militafy Lasts in Men’s Win-king Shoes. Best; on the market. We have just received a. shipment of Suit Cases and Club Bags. prices ranging from $1.40 to $5.50. Also we have stocked a line of Chi ldren’s School Cases which sell at. 60c. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY l. S‘ McllraithzThe Down Town Shoe Store E. A. ROWE : T l he People’s Mills “Did you know that they can make Shoes out of all kinds of Skins ?” “How about Banana Skins ?” â€"â€" “They make Slippers out of them.” OYSTERS AND FRUIT IN SEASON 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 Milcn Cows Milk and puts Horses in prime condition 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 pricesfifor Cash. All kinds of Grain houghé and sold. JOHN McGOWAN Sovereign Flour Eclipse Flour Pastry Flour Low Grade Flour Rolled Oats Breakfast Cereal For all kinds of Bakery Goods Cooked and Cured Meats. \Ve have a quantity of the celebrated USE FOR ALL! E. A. ROWE’S Molassine Meal The energy used in our bOdlCS for the Work of circulation, respir- ation, digestion and keeping up thetemperature is equal in one day to raising 2,800 tons one foot high. Bran, Shorts Middlings Corn Chnp (JrackedeD Chicken Corn Climped Oats 1‘01 H01 ses Barley and Wheat. Chop Mixed Chop PAGE THREE. "rr’s ALI. RIGHT“ Confectioner and Grocer ”RTE PART Old dating I'i atre ‘. Albert strec Jukson. ave-ms“ i323? PART OF LOP MDERS FOF I walls, ceiling teriox W‘uodn in the next 0 mived h 1 " to Wedncsda Dart-iculars a} ly or R. T. E w‘t Harkdale. v.96, bush, res€ outivation. Po Nov. lat; 19139 denim. 3W“ in John Sta] House am For Sa’i I A comma L u concession of pection A ea In! lots, and vith the buil - desired by dwelling CO: convepieqces. 5.1 will be sc ‘ good comic: “maimed an aquipment shc once. Buying 1 apply to DB SALEâ€"1 outfit, 1 cem1 half acre of pump busines éontirued as Apply to Ge one of the tario, is of paying prc for selling. Durham, .0 be sold on contains a; : comfortable hard and sof frame b Jackson mperty in I has to the la lag orchard a nation. Apply Thou. Ritchie executors. tion engi 1w : With stacker first-class c0 O’Neil Bros., {No fruit jar t I for weeks : 51039 puttipiz Farms 1 boiling in si an ounces 0‘ :1 pint of n ondinary Tender 1, Durham med hot in y 60 that TOIN of runmn SPLE 38 No

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