West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 25 Jun 1914, p. 6

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Intending Students should en ter at the beginning of the germ if possible. BOaI-d can be obtained at reasonable The record of the School in past years is a flatter mg one. The trustees are progressnve educationally and spare no l‘HOS. ALLAN. Principal -md Pro vincial Model School Teacher lst Class Certificate. The school is thm-onghlv equipped in tegzching abjlity, in chemical and elec- Durham High School Insurance of All Kinds including Stock Toronto, Ont. Where rect instruction and a mining employment, v College open all sum" time. Catalogue free. for a Business Career. Attend Walkerton Business College GEO. SPOTTON, President Ms mww~a~sfl k““‘ H HOME STUDY l1 Tickets and information at all Grand Trunk Ticket. Offices. Round-trip tickets ”0 points in \Vest- ern Canada via. Chicago, St. Paul. Duluth or Sax-nia. and Northern Nan- gation Company, an sale each Tues- day until October 27th, inclusive, at very low farms. SpringPrints Are Nowln We have a Large Range to select from and Prices are Moderate As Well Good going and re- turning July 1. Our '. JOHNSTON Sr. Between all stations in Canada. east of Port Arthur and m Detrcfit and Port Huron.\1ich..Bufl’alo. Black Rock. Niagara Falls and Suspension Bridge, ‘. -- Let Us Prepare You Dominion Day Far W. Calder, Town Agent, Phone 3a J. Townvr. Station Agent Phone 18 Thousands of am bitious young peope are -being instructed in their homes by our Home Study Dept. You may finish at Coll- ‘ege if you desire. Pay when- ever you wish. Thirty Years’ EXpex-ience. Largest trainers in Canada. Enter any day. Positions guaranteed. If you wish to save board and learn while you earn, write for partic- ulars. ’. fl. HARTLEY, J. F. GRANT, Chairman. Secretarv AND ARE A THING 0F BEAUTY! Calder’s Block Homeseekers’ Excursions : $1 per month in advance Single Fare '. H. BEAN The Big4 BIG 4 on and assistance in 0h- >yment when competent. all summer. Enter am' NO V ACATION Good going June June 30. July 1. Return July 2. Fare and One-Third any mg another stone or two to money fl Valparaiso. so we need no muse. which 0 an emerald of great price. wtiich he was loath to accept. but which we pressed upon him. We had little dit- nculty. through his kind emcee. in sellâ€" I paid the captain 6f the" Spanish frigate which had picked us up with There was no war between our Eng- lish king and the Spanish monarch then. and he treated us courteously. gave as food and raiment. assigned a spare cabin to my mistress and berthed me aft with the omcers. He was bound for Valparaiso. Which in due course. without mishap. we reach- ed. There we took ship for the Portu- guese possessions on the other shore of the continent and thence we got a ship from Rio de Janeiro to Lisbon. and so at last we came to England and to Plymouth harbor. whence we had set forth nearly a year ago. calde was an amt-er and a gentleman. .â€"v--- “II. I V| ‘.luc. as if ashamed of her allotted trouble. made it up to us in the end. for in a few days we fell in with a Spanish ship or war in the service of the vice- roy of Peru. which had been exploring the south seas and had been driven far out or her course by the same storm which had wrecked the Rose of Devon. Commander Don Antonio Re- The mast was still lashed to the thwarts, and a boat cloak had been caught under the forward thwart. The painter was still fastened to a ring bolt in the bow. and as soon as i had rowed through the narrow entrance I stepped the mast and improvised a sail with the boat cloak and the painter. The breeze blew softly. We passed the island and then set our course by the compass to the eastward. headed for the great South American coast so many miles away. We ‘had gone through manv perils but had sustained them all. Fortune. When opposite the boat I kicked ofl my shoesâ€"I had on little else but shirt and trousersâ€"jumped into the lagoon. swam to the dinghy and towed her ashore. Assisted by Mistress Lucy, I turned her over. I then hunted up the I turned. and there. bottom upward. floated the dinghy. The sight of her was like a draft of wine. I turned and ran up the sand. followed by my lady. the horizon. tress caught me by the arm. “Look!" she cried. pointing far up L‘. They ”tape from the cave and the is- land. are picked up by‘a. ship, and Hamp- (‘A‘ “an- 0“. IA--- .3 I They are attacked by the savages. led by Pimball and Glibby. Lucy asks Hamp- don to kiss her goodby. They are saved by an earthquake. which routs the savages and mutineers. but closes the mouth of the cave. e ‘â€"â€"â€"â€"°v “aw. uuslUUllucu by masses of human bones and skulls and and the cave mentioned on the map. They discover a vast quantity of gold. silver and precious stones. War canoes of savages approach the island. Hampdon and Lucy flee to the treasure ave. Hampdon and Lucy leave the ship for tho island. which is nearby. island. where they find rude statues and mount a gigantic staircase‘ot stone. The mufinéfi pun-Que Eém. but are stopped by the reef. and Hampdon and Lucy make a search for the hidden treas- ___- vâ€"v ‘-uv 5V. ““1" ing Lucy. fianpdon and Lucy start in t ship for the mum of the Stairs. Hampdon steals 1 kiss. and Lucy has him imprisoned in a cabin. Desperate men in the crew mutiny. Pimban and Glibby demand the map of the island at Hampdon. who pretend: to Join the mutiny. Hampdon demands poe- session of Lucy. He treat: her with respect and ofle‘m to save her from the mutineers. The pair plot to escape to the Island of the Stairs. Hampdon breaks bet-force and damn: father's body. the new: to Lucy Wil- rs a letter tound on her ruined gambler and suicide. is found by Hampdon. a. sailor. Hampdon quarrel- With the Duke of Arouter. The? pass a strano D e altar surrounded wins the love bf i. CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY STAIRS '9”. In Cyrus lmseod M SYNOPSIS Of THE . Help Ono Another. Bachelorz-Why should I get a cook book? I have no wife. Agent-But I have. and I need your commission. Have a [learnâ€"St. Paul Dispatch. “Isn‘t Deeds. the lawyer: a rather ex- travagant man ‘2” “By no means. I‘ve known him to make one suit last for several years."- Boston Transcript. l have had his majesty’n sword laid upon my shoulder after I had led one of the king’s ships to' vlctory in the French wars. and I am now, it you please. Slr John Hampdon. We live at Wllhertorce Castle. and our children play on the award. but the ronl ne- colnde meant not so much to me as that llght blow upon my cheek with “And to punish you for your pre- sumption, although my heart went out to you, I confess, I struck you; and to teach you to be a dutiful hus- band, loving, devoted to me,” she paused and laughed again. “I strike you once more.” a Whereat she laid her hand once again, but in tenderness, upon my cheek. following it with a kiss. “Do you remember that night on the Rose of Devon when first you kissed me?" she asked, laughing. “If I should kiss you a million times, sweetheart, as I mean to do,” I answered boldly, “I should not for- get a single one of them, much less that." ,3 Well, it is not in me to resist after that, and for the third time in my life I held her in my arms, where since that hour she has often been again, and for the third time I drank the sweetness of her- lips. “I have no other friends, I want no other, _and you are my world.” “John. John," came the sweetest voice in the world to me through the darkness. “don’t you see? Don’t you know that I love you and you only, that you have all my life, and that my life. which is yours 'a thousand times on sea and shore, is not worth living without you?” “But your friends, your world,” I protested as she came nearer. “Master Hampdon,” she said. looking at me: her eyes brighter than the dia- monds and Diner than the sapphire upon the table. “you are a tool." “Right well do I know that. mis- tress.” said 1. striving to let . .l smile to matr'h her own. “And a blind man as well.” Whereat I was a blind man indeed. for my eyes misted up, but not with the blood as in the battle. And I, as strong and tough as a mountain oak, was as like to faint as any lovesick A_‘ “And so," she said. without looking at me. “and so it is goodby, then. May you be happy." She extended her hand to me, and I caught it. I kissed it passionately, but when I made to let it go she would not. “These." said I. pointing to the table, “will buy them for you.” “And you have these reterem-es?” “I thought. madam, that your friends In the city might give them to me when they know.” “But I have no friends in the city." she said. “Last night." I replied. "I went down on the docks. A company's snip sails for India next weak. They want a chief mate. and If my references serve they will engage me.” “We have discussed that before." she said. “What of yourself?" “These. Mistress Wilberforce." said I. formally enough. although my heart was beating rapidly! “at? 1993's," 859 wava B‘é’r hind as lf they were of small moment. We were alone Good Mistress F‘ick- Un had given us her parlor for the aft- ernoon. i took from my pockets the canvas pouehes filled with her treas- ure and laid them on the table. We Fell In With a Spanish Ship of War. would he my last interview min her. We had been thrown constantly to- gether during the six monthsthat had elapsed between our great adventures upon the Island of the Stairs and our arrival in England. We had discussed everything else. I think. but I had said naught of my lore. Indeed. each league of sea over which we passed on our way homeward seemed to re- move her farther from me. @173 His Long Suit. LESSON Xll.-The Great Refusal. Mark 1:. 17-31. Golden Text. Luke xvi. l3. “Ye cannot serve God and mam- mon." The great contrast‘ls between 1he empty helpless little children who came tq His arms and were blessed and the rich young ruler. full of his riches and his own righteousness. who went away empty because he was not willing to be emptied. ’ . LESSON XI.â€"The Friend of Sinners.- Lnke xviii. 9-14; xix. 1-10. Golden Text. Mark ii. 17, "I came not to call the righteous. but sinners.” There in no Saviour nor salvation for such as think that they are good enough, but for suCh as the publican in the temple or Zaccheus. for poor or rich, there is abundant mercy and a welcome from Him who came to seek and to save the lost. LESSON X.--The Coming of the King- dom, Luke xvii. 20-37. Golden Text. Luke xvii, 21, “Lo. the kingdom oi God is within you"â€"more correctly. as in 'the margin. “among you." The kingdom which was at hand did not come as He said in Luke xix, 11, 12; The kingdom is postponed and will not come till He shall return in glory with His church. now being gathered. LESSON IX.â€"â€"The Grateful Samaritan xvii. 11-19. Golden Text. Luke xvii 18, “Were there none found that re- turned to give glory to God save this stranger.” We wrote on the Holy Spirit lesson in I Cor. ii. as well as on the leper lesson. and saw that all unbe- lievers as well as Israel are spiritually lepers and unclean. but when the H01, spirit, who alone can convince of sinI shines in us by His word, then come cleansing and real gratitude. i, 31, “He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord." If we do only what seems to be our duty. what we think we ought to do. we are unprofitable. but when the love of Christ constrain- etb. us and we are so occupied with Him and His kingdom and glory as to be above being offended with people or even with Himself, whatever He may do. we shall better glorify Him. LESSON VII.â€"â€"The Rich Man and Laz- arus. Luke xvi, 19-31. Golden Text. Prov. xxi, 13, “Whoso stoppeth his ears at the cry of the poor, he shall also cry, but shall not be hear ” This is a story of the rich poor and the poor rich. The rich man lived only for himself and had no use for God or His word and no belief in a future till he found himself in torment. LESSON VIII.â€"Unprofitable Servants. Luke xvii, 1-10. Golden Text, I Cor. Lassox VL-The Unjust Steward, Luke xvi, 1-13. Golden Text. Luke xvi, 10. “He that is faithful in a very little is faithful also in much, and he that is unrighteous in a very little is un- righteous also in much.” We are stewards of all that with which the Lord has intrusted us, whether it be the gospel or talents or time or money, and we are using it either for ourselves or for Him, for time or eternity. - Lessox V.â€"The Lost Son. Luke xv, 11-24. Golden Text, Luke xv. 18, “I will arise and go to my father and will say unto him. Father, I have sin- ned against heaven and in thy sight.” That was not all he intended to say (verses 18. 19). but it was nearly all that he did say (verse ‘21». The father’s welcome cut it short. The whole para- ble teaches us what God thinks of lost ones and how unwilling He is that any should perish. LESSON IV.â€"The Lost Sheep and the Lost Coin, Luke xv, 1-10. Golden Text. Luke xv. 10. “There is joy in the pres- ence of the angels of God over one sinner that repenteth"-â€"a threefold parable concerning the love of the F8.- ther. the Son and the Holy Spirit. This lesson concerns the Son and the Spirit. The sinner's helplessness and prone ness to stray is seen in the sheep. and his deudness in the piece of money. ed. the cost of our salvation falling wholly on Christ, but the cost of dis- cipleship on the believer. salvation be- ing a gift, but reward in proportion to service. ‘ LESSON [ILâ€"The Cost of Disciple- ship. Luke xiv. 25-35. Golden Text, Matt. xvi. 2."). “Whosoever would save his life shall lose it, and whosoever shall lose his life for my sake shall find it." The difference between being a Christian and a disciple is very mark- LEssox II.â€"The J ourney‘to Emmaus. Luke xxiv. 13-35. Golden Text. Rom. viii. 34, “It is Christ Jesus that diedâ€" yea, rather. that was raised from the dead." Here we see the reality of Christ’s resurrection body having the nail wounds in hands and feet. a tan- gible body of flesh and bones, that could be handled. that could walk and eat and also pass ,through unopened doors and vanish at pleasure. Text of the Lesson, Heb, iv, 14 to xv, 10. Quarterly Revuewâ€"Golden Text, Luke xix, .10â€"Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. Lessox l.»(.'hrist°s Table Talk, Luke xiv, 7-24. Golden 'l‘ext, Luke xiv. 11, "Every one that exulteth himself shall be humbled. and he that humbleth himself shall he exalted"â€"a threefold message in the house in «"ie of the Chief Pharisees who had invited Him to eat bread on the Sabbath day; a message on humility for the‘guests. on recompense at the resurrection for the host and man's inditi'erence to. God’s provision and invitation for one of the guests who spoke of the lgingdom. 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