West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 12 Mar 1914, p. 3

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The Brazilian disturbances are confined to the north~ . .Earl Grey cabled from New Zealand that a certain Australian :x was ready to give a large sum 2?."- to the Ulster fund; Trains leave Durham at 7.153 m., ant 2. 43 p. m. Trains arrive at Durham at 10.30 a m L500m.,and8. 509 EVERY DAY EXCEPT S_UNDAY Trains will arrive and depart as'fol lows until further notice-- P. M A. M. P. M. P.M 3. 00 6 20 Lv. \Valkex ton A1.1.00 10.30 3.14 (S. 34 Maple Hill 12.43 10.13 3.24 6.43 “ Hanover “‘ 12.35 10.05 3.33 6.5;. " Allzm Park “ 12.25 9.55 fl++?ww ':I.er-4‘:vu4â€" UH-‘NISCD Durham “ M (,'\\"illiz11ns“ Glen “ Priceville “ Saugeen J. “ Tor-(m to Lv. HHII-‘Hbâ€"I NH???“ 43°21;- tonâ€"I 0:810:3on H. G. Ellintt. G P. Agent. “anneal. Canadian Pacific Railway Time Table R. .MACFARLANE. - I have nmnv other Grey County bar'- gains and some North West land for leas or exclmnge. You are not fair to yourself if ynu buy without; aeeing me. LARGE S'JMS OF MONEY TO‘LEND 'vv "v.7“ ”\"'-â€"â€"vi , ham. good buildings, about $4.000. 300 Acres Glenelg, near Dornoch. Mr. Geo.Twamley’s Farm, owner in West, bound to sell, will not stick for a. dollar in the price. Get busy. 100 Acres Egremont. towards Mt. Forest, fair buildings, good soil, well watered, very cheap for quick sale, ‘IOO Acres Near Listowel, one of the best farms in Perth. Extra goood buildings. orchard. water in stable. phone. Snap at;$7.000. Lot 30. Con. 10, Bentinck, 100 acres, 80 cleared, 20 timber. Fine Stone House. Cheap. 125 Acres Scotch Block, near HampdeL good soil. little bit. hilly, under $3000. 300 Acres Egremont. Lots 22. 2% and 24, Con. 14. Dr. Fettis’ Farm. Bar- 200 Acres near Louise, Good Farm extra good bmldings. timber worth nearly price asked, Land for nothing beats the west all hollow. 1 50 Acres Beotinck,_ North of Dur- . A. nun fl.fl. MILLER, Hanover What About Spring ? Don’t You Want a Farm ? LOOK HERE! J. TOWNER Depot Agent TAKES R GUN Tywn Agpn PLANING MILLS Grand Trunk Railway TlMEeTABLE ZENUS CLARK DURHAM The nndexsigned begs to announce t0 residents of Durham and snrroundmg country. that he has his Planning Mill and Factory completed and is prepared tn take orders for Shingles and Lath Always on Hand At Right Prices. Custom Sawing Promptly At= tended To â€" and all kinds of â€"â€" SASH, DOORS House Fittings Loemg, nig, leader of the Aus- ;pedition to the Antarc- xe will not change his kt‘hat he must ngt b? 12, 0.914. A. E. Duff, D. P. Agent Forontr “ 12.11 9.41 a“ 11.59 9.29 “ 11.56 9.26 “ 11.46 9.16 “ 11.35 9.05 .v. 7.45 23.05 Town Agent ONTARIO f'SUNDAY SBHUUL Them: great foundation truths must never be furgotten: “God is love;" “The Lord is not willing that any should perish." He is still asking. “What more vould have been done that In our second portion He did not say. "Which of you shall see.” but “.Which of you shall have an ox or an ass fallen into a pit." Surely He can save His own property at any time and in any place. hut His pitiful cry ls. “Ye will not come unto me: Israel would have none of me" (John v. 40; Ps. lxxxi. 11». The woman came to Him when He called her (xiii. 12), and so did the little (child. but He ls say- ing 'to many: “I have called. and ye refused. Ye have set at naught all my- counsel and would none of my re- proof" (Prov. i. 2-1. .. Thus it was with Sun! of Tarsus when he saw the some Lord on the way to D:-unascu,s. Thus it will he 'with Israel as :1 nation when they shall see the same Jesus coming in His glory. Thus it has been with multitudes now in glory and multi- tudes still on earth. and thus it might be with every one still bound by Satan if they would let the Lord lay His hand upon them and speak peace to them. for the free gift of God is eternal life. and whosoever will may take it (Rom. vi. 23: Rev. xxii. 17). In our second portion He did not By one word. one touch, from Him who is the end of the law for right- eousness to every one that helieveth the infirmity of eighteen years instant- ly disappeared. the hound one was loosed from the bond of Satan. the people rejoiced. and the adversaries of the Lord were ashamed. Sabbath signifies rest and a ceasing from our own Works (Gen. ii. 1-3: Heb. iv. 3. 4. it)». but these hypocrites were full of their own works. their 0th days. their own feasts and their own ways and were so om-upied with them and blinded by them that they could not' 'see the light t'rom heaven that was in their midst. The sivknesses whit-h He healed were typical of the spiritual (-ondition of the nation and ot‘ the condition of multitudes today. This woman in the synagtmue was like many who are found in our ('hurt-hes. She was long 'years bowed down. bound by Satan and utterly unable to lift herself up. Every unsaved person is bound by Satan and unable to loosen or lift up himself. and neither the synagogue nor any mere human ageney can do any gmid. for by the deeds of the law can no one be justified. for the law. although holy and just and good. can- not give life (Gal. ii. 16; iii. 10. 11. 21; Rom. vii. 12). As He said in the parable of the un- fruitful fie; tl'ee. "Let it alone this year also tilt I shall dig about it and dung it, and if it hear fruit. well. and. it not. then after that thou shalt cut it down" (Luke xiii. li-Iâ€"ll. He is slow to anger and plent'euus in merry. not Will- ing that any should perish. but the day of the Lord will mule (11 Peter iii, 9. 10). He delights in merry and lov- ing kindness. and judgment is His strange wm'k (Jer. ix. 23. 2â€"1: [103. vi, 6: Isa. xxviii. 21). THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. The)“ did not know hmwn from hell, sin from holiness. God from the devil. Their vase was hopeless: The nation was doomed. Yet He was slow to vast them off. lipbmxm was joilwo to idols. Israel would not frame [191' doings to turn unto her (:od. yet His (-r,\‘ was, “How shall I give: thee up?" (1103. iv, 17; v. 4; xi. 5.. Lesson XLâ€"First Quarter, For March 15, l914. Text of the Lesson. Luke xiii, 10-17; xiv, 1-6â€"Memory Verses, 3-5â€"Gold- on Text. Mark ii, 27â€"60mmentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. Both of the pnrtinus assigned for to- day are Sabbath day invideuts. [n the first He healed a wmnan in the synagogue whu had been atflieted eighteen years. and in the second He healed a man Whn had the dmpsy in the house of «me at the vhief Phari- sees. The ruler ut‘ the syhagugue was indignant bet-aase the woman had been healed on the Sabbath day. for the day was more tn them than the Lord who gave them the (1:15. and they had not learned that the one in their midst was the Lard even at the Sabbath day. greater than the tem- ple. and that it was lawful It) at) well on the Sabbath day (Matt. xii. (3-5. 12). abed and not sleep. tn serv Nice For the Doctor. Little George (to physiviflflhSay. I don't think you look like :I duok. Duo torâ€"Who said 'I did? Little Georgeâ€"- Nobody. But mamma told papa you was an old quack.-~ Chicago News. “He went out and got himself an- other jub.”-â€" Lunisx‘ille Courier-Journal. “And what direx-n’un did his unex- pected energy take?" "l4‘urget those dreams, Harold." yawned his wife. “Just bring me a string of perfectly man-hed sausages when you come home tunight.”-.â€"Chi- cago Journal. SaVefi Himself. "It Flnhdnh uadnt displayed some unexpected energy luduy 1 Should have fired him.” All S‘te Asked. “My dear same 01 these days 1 Will bring wu 3 str ng of peltettly match- ed pearls." As luvk wuuld have it. Fitzltny was ammintvd president of the aunt. the finding of whivh was duly I‘m-order] as follows: “The murt. having carefully investigatm all the evidmwe brought before it. has (nine to the convlnsiun that the m'ra died at sunslroke (Signed) I’hil l?‘itzl{0y, Captain and President.” Lines by a Sick Poet. Mr William Watson. when ill in Lon- don and attenuating a dinner for whivh he had no nmwme. scribbled these lines on a 8mm» 01 paper, which he threw to his attendant: Strange. sauce that‘s mingled with the meat. Strange meat that's mingled with the sauceâ€"in vain 1 eat and. wond’ring what and why I eat. Long for the porridge of my youth again. What Killed the Adjutant. There is a story of an English officer. Colonel Fitzitoy. that (late-s hack to 18130. Fitzitoy when in India was pos- sessed of an air gun. and one after- noon he took a shot at an adjntant. a bird whit-h. being an exvellent scaven- ger. is protected from injury by a fine of 100 rupees. Several people Saw the bird fall. but heard ‘iio report There was, of’oonrse. a militant). and a court of inquiry was ordered to investigate the bird's (leath, Mary Jane Yuung‘man. an Austral- ian, who at the use or fiftwu was thir~ ty-n've iurlws lug-.311. - Pall Mall GuZette. Some rhinos are always cross and evil tempered, but many others which are normally good natured now and then have fits of herserker fury. Any- thing conspicuous which arouses their interest may also arouse their hostility. White has an evil attraction for them. My friends the McMillans while trav- eling through a rhino country found that the two white horses of their cav- alcade were so frequently cha rged that they finally painted them khaki color. I have never seen them charge other game, and gazelles and hartebeests feed in their immediate neighlmrhood with indifference. yet I have beenin- formed by trustworthy eyewitnesses of one rhinoceros clmrg‘ing a herd of zebra and another some buffalo. u The rllitu)('°el'os usually gets out of the way 01° the elephant. It will an- questionably on occasions charge mm and donwstiv animals entirely unpro- voked. 'l‘wivo I have known of mw charging 2m oxvn wngun. In one 2130 an UK was killm‘l. in the other the rhino got vntmm‘lvd in the ynkes :unl trvla- tow. and tlw (lrivm‘. :m Afrivzmder. laslwd it hastily with his great whip until it hmke Inuw and run ul'l'. Imn‘iH! the- ox qmn tlllllllll'd in wild ('Olll’nsim) ‘ 'l‘llvudmv lhmsm'e-lt in Sm'ilnwr's. Emotions “Exhibits at the Sught and Odor of Men; / The reoogumad presem-e of men rouses in the rhinoceros seVeral emo- tiOus._, which in the order of their in- tensity I should put as bewilderment. fear. dull vuriosity and trm-ulem-e. If the men are merely seen usually the only emotions aroused are bewilder- ment and curiosity; if smelled fear is the usual result. but in a vertaln num- ber of oases even the sight or the smell of men arouses senseless rage. In 184-} he arm-arm! in England and had an extrmn'dinary slu'cvss. Aftm' extensive travel in bath luauisplwros the “general“ again \‘isilud England in 1557, bllt the) dwarf man, in spite of many‘personal and inh-Ilwtnal quali- ties. 'as less attravtive than the dwarf boy. In the Star 1813 he married the very minute Aim-rival) Lavinia War reu. and dim] in 155:3. Jan Hmmmuu, a Dun-11mm). twenty eight “miles. Some Noted” Liliputians Who Were EXhlblted In England. 0f dwarfs exhilvitvd in England the most celcbmu-d was the Pole. ’mrul- wuaki, who “as horn in 173:1):l'nd died in 1.837. At six‘ hv mmsm'ml svvemm-n influx and finally. in Ins tum-[mu ,wur. reavhcd thirtfs'nine lllrlws. ”t’ Inn! :a sister shot-tel than himswt by Item! and ShUlllUUfS. Burulxx‘naki traveled all on 1611mm», and uuw livs buried at Durham. In the year of his dmth his sm-ves 501', Charles Struuun. known to fmm» as ”Geuwul 'l‘um “numb.” was hum When (went) time he was Ilm'tyune im-hes high. Dun quvisra liidulgo. a Spaniard. twenty-nine im-lws. Other Well Known dwarfs of the past have been: Three ('hildren of a Scuttish Shep- herd named lex‘iuley. the shortest of Whom was forty five im-hes. To wait for what never comes. to lie TINY MEN- AND WOMEN. MOODS OF THE RH’ NO. â€"--London Chronicle. THE DURHAM CHROX EC ..11‘ YOUR HAIR NEEDS PARISIAN'and J.R. ‘Philp be appointed to It Quickly Removes Dandruff. Just because .your hair is full of dandruff, thin, streaky, dull and never will do up to look pret- ty, do nOt despair. Beautiful hair, thick, fluffy, lustrous and abso- lutely free from dandruff is only a matter of care. Parisian Sage frequently ‘nlifid Win ‘1'er \rnndprn .Tnnf nnp ap- receive 50 cents each wry .l, 131% up 1U Lauraâ€"v. Auditors’ Reportâ€"Receipts simce January 1, $1,507.93; Bal. of Co. Grant, $40.51. Total receipts, $1,548.44 : expenditure, $308.85. Balance due, $1,239.59. Certified correct. D. Grier, U. R. Philp, Au- ditors. ‘ Gordonâ€"Fergusonâ€"That the special-audit of books as now au- dited be accepted and the auditors for their Luann: u, servicesâ€"Carried. Parisian Sage frequently ap- plied will work wonders. Just one application steps itching head. re- moves dandruff and all excessive oil. It goes right to 'the hair roots and furnishes the nourish- ment neededâ€"the hair becomes soft. fluffy, abundant and radiant with life. Parisian Stage not only saves the hair, but stimulates it to grow long and heavy. Get a 50-ce'nt bottle from Macfarlane 8: Co. at once. Theme is no other “Just-as- good.” X4 G'omdoin+McRobbâ€"'l‘llat the clerk inform Mfr. (Lane that the parties referred to will be credited by road work pn this year‘s listâ€"Car. The rceve Egave. a detailed list of books. goods and chattels be- longing to rthe township in the treasurer‘s possession £15 requesed by council at last meeting. elem not being able to assist; Robb -â€" Terrgusom â€" That the reeve’s reI-tior the adopted and he receive $2 To: his services.â€"Car. R0bbâ€"Gordo:nâ€"'E‘lmt D. Grier CounCil' met March 5, minutes adopted. Received from the Pro-' vincial Secretary receipt of reso- lution respecting 'the building and Operating an electric railway from Guelph to Owen Sound; also not- ice from *Geo. Lane. pathmaster, of snow shox Selling, _Ietc. v_â€"â€"-â€" "w- v"-v By-law No" 287 to amend By-lzm 'No. 138 Ire Road Beats. r0.- mung certain parties from Beat 1, con. 0 to Beat 3cm Base Line passed. x 9mm *EGREM‘ONT COUNCIL. SAGE. The GM Reliable SENOUR’S FLGOR PAINT It keeps thousands and thousands of floors Spic and span with its freshness and newness and cheery brightness. SENOUR’S FLOOR PAINT is really . WELL painted floor is a sanitary floor-â€" easy to keep clean and bright. Floor paint has to stand the scufl‘ and wearâ€"and stay fresh and bright under all kinds of kicks and rough usage The best Floor Paint for all-around satisfaction is La“ M A; S. HUN We have SENOUR’S FLOOR PAINT in 14 colorsâ€"suitable for every floor you want to paint. ,9 the cheapest, too, because _i_t_ covers more surface and wears longer than any_ other; make a special audit from Janu- ary 1, 1914 up to March 5, 1914.â€"C. Auditors’ _Beport_â€"Re_ce._ipts _siul.ce . By-law No. 286 to appomt a township treasurer passed the usu- al readings. The name of J. R. Philp was fimserted in the by-law as__t¢eas-urer,_salary $100 a yegr‘ M‘Oney orders were granted to the following Reeve, making in- ventorv on foregoing, $2; Treaé~ umer, salary due, $22.85, postage and stationery, $3; Clerk’s quarter salary, $50; D. Grier, auditor, 50c: J. R. Philp, auditor, 50c: W. Lo_u_gheed, _use of council room $2. Thé fdllowimg resolution was ‘.l‘ . w J h w.:£’:.u o 'vu .ln l‘x.‘.t '3“ ,V‘“‘ _’_, "I’ ‘ 7"“ “‘?'3:i-'.~:»'-'r.v;‘éu,c 4).. fight- #/ . g“ ("‘22. 1" i. ' I‘~;""7V.- ‘ C .4 ’ ' .' . .‘I J‘ sfiblail ’ a .0-0 I x‘ W. "s‘ V ’P Q,"%. Vii“ {v.- "' is? Um .1“. v - ~ 9 .3.» ’15:», (4",. ,3, £9: 9‘ ~'\" 0."ka . at: ' s rodents from ca rrymg away your profits. Millions of dollars are lost to farmers each year through the ravages of rodents in crihs and granaries. Part of this loss is paid by every farmer whose crib floor isn't built of concrete. CQUSC THEY keep the rats} squirrels and other _._A -h A...‘.. u.-‘-.- "anafin Concrete is strong, durable and clean. I: utter wears out and needs practically no repairs. It is the cheap- est of all materials for cribs and grmaraes. Write for this free book “\Vhat the Farmer can do with Concrete." It tells all about the uses of con- crete and will help every farmer to have bette buildings and'save money. Farmer’s Information Bureau Canada Cement Company‘iflgited_,.g 523 Herald Building, Montreal “\j oncretv: crib floors and supports stop the waste be- mt inst; E’rotect Your Grain WW’WB‘WM‘ ‘; 5m “3"" a: ////// /////// ..H.M.., ng «3., my 25.? % W43" ‘l3$"‘x.:;"°’9i‘ (1/535; . ”U ..- “.130! {75"‘..' :‘al‘{' 1‘5“ ‘- Resolvedâ€"That we the mem 3’ of Council of the Township of remont take this opportunitv , acknowledging our appreciation .0; the services of our retiring we... urer, Mr. John A. Swanston. PM about seven ‘years he has M charged his duties as Treasurer of the Township of Egremont in _ ,_, capable and efficient manner, and we would not overlook his kind- and obliging dealin s, not only to the Council Board, ut to anvw ‘ whom his duties came in cont And we fully realize and deep regret that the Township of E3 mont is losing a faithful and ef 'ficient servant. We (Wish hi and family health and pros in his new home in the we â€"Johm McArthur, Reex'e.-‘7Carxied. Fergusonâ€"Robbâ€"That we now adjourn. .to meet on May 30 (as a Court of (Revision, and ask for an licants for sanitary inspector, an other business-Carried, read and presented to our treasurer : ~D. Allan, Clerk.

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