West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 1 Apr 1915, p. 3

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John Edward Blake, Who dis- tinguished himself by heroic rasâ€" cue work at the time éof the Sarnit Tunnel disaster eleven years ago, is dead of pneumonia. For full particmm's consult 6."! ticket Agents 0. wrin- E. HHRN IN’G (’Disc. Pa». Ageng. Toron W'. Calder. Tuwn Agent, thw 3;; J. Towner. Station Agent thw 1: Rt-Lm'n Win» 3 w“ 1m issuvt! all stniiuns in U-Hmdd ens? Arthur and to Den-m: and Pm guish‘. Huffl’n, Black RIM-k. EASTER hXUU 810M DU REA)! ZENUS CLARK G ‘ 10d PLANING MILLS Aflifiated with the Sfl‘dtfm'd Bu .iness Colieg’. and Elliot Bus- iness UovaP, Tol'tnllo. \Vrite for free natuluguv. D. A. McL-‘whlun President” - G. M. He-nrx‘, Pv'inicipnl. Shingles and Lath .'~\hvays on Hand At Right Prices. 5 am YEAR TERM FRO \1 JAN. 4. 4.09 7.18 “ McWilliams“ 11. 4.12 7.21 “ Glen ' “ 11. 4.22 7.31 “ Priceville “ 11.‘ 4.35 7.45 " Saugeen J. " 11.: 11011.2)111'. Toronto Lv. 7.-_ R I . .\ ACFARLANE. - Town Unmpéteut instruvtm-s. Special training fm- trachea. Specia! F:tr'llwl"s )nlct‘st‘. and NE“? t0 The undersigned begs to announce t9 residents of Durham and surroundmg a"u1};2LX'y. that he has his Planning Min and Factory smzxplurvd and is‘ prepared FARE AND ONE THIRD Gm»! going Apr” 1. 2. 3am! 5, 1915. return Iimic April 6. 1915. (Minimum Charge- 25?.) g l g I w Partiuuhu-s from U.P.R. kaet Auwllls. m- writr- M. G. Murphy, U.P.A.. annnln. § 5' R. Macimlane, l'own Agent 5 E. A. Hay, Station Agent, 5 310 CIVIL SERVICE CDIIASES'E i the Gnud going Friday April 2. 1915. return .imit, Friday. April 2, 1915 SHORTHANO, BUSINESS AND Trains will arrive and depart as fol owe. until further notice:~- Canadian Pacific Railway iTime Table Custom Sawing Promptly At- tended To Trains art-we at Durham at 11.55am. 2.0) p.m., and 8.55 p.11). EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY 6- T- 39“. C. E. Homing, G.P. Agent, D. P. Agent. Muntreal. Turonto. J. TOW’NER. Depot Agent W. CALDER, Town Agent MOUNT FOREST Business College ~â€" and all kinds of - fiouse Fittings in he orders Easter Excursions SUVGLE FARE April 1, 1915. “f“?i‘mgfligiag 51mm sonnet. uin r.m. I". _.- a Z) v.“’alkerton Ar.12.55 10.335 .34 " Maple Hill " 12.38 10.22 43 “ Hanover 12.30 10.14 ‘ Allan Park 12 20 10.04 .0: “ Durham “ 12.06 9.5:, a I Na 0 SINGLE FARE :nul :t-tvu'ni! 20‘}, Only. M cWilliams“ Glyn ' Pxiceville “ Sfugeen J. " for l. P338? Hf ONTARIO us“ 11.5% “ 11.51 “ 11.41 . " 11.30 Lv. 7.45 i l ‘m r" ‘. C a 64-Iit3l. just about as secure as seals or soldiers Will make things today. but all Was unavailing. He makes us safe forever by His precious blood. sealing Us by His Holy Spirit. and no power. can break the bundle of life in which We are bound nor pluck us out of His hat-l 41 Sam. xxv. 2:); John x, 2.8). i like lllllt'h the great words of Acts 1, 3. ."He.showed Himself alive after His passion by many infallible proofs, being seen of them forty days. and Speaking of the things pertaining to the Kingdom of God." It is all so grand and suggestive-Himself. infalli- ble proofs. forty days. the things of the kingdom. He had just as infalli- bly foretold by the prophets and more plainly by His own words that He ’ Wullltl stiller and (lie and rise from ”E s ’l l E E i u mamm‘mmmrcworr as -n the dead the third day. and it His (lis- Cilvlt-s llzltl ”lily believed His words hmv illlll‘il Sut‘mw they might have been sprites} and how amen more Joy th'ey might have had! It is heipf‘ul to keep in mind the live appearam-es of the resllt'revtion day. which were prob 8113." in this ordervto Mary Magdalene. the other women, Simon Peter. the Emmmxs walk. the ten in the evening. Iter-vntly in .lnzlges we saw how God honored Deborah and other women. Now it is Mary and the other women. and. although Mary Magdalene saw Him first. the other women are'the first to touch Him (verse 9'. The rea- son is plainly given in John xx. 17. im- 7 . plying that between the.two appear- gs He had ascended and returned. What He did at His several appear- lags during those forty days gives us 1 a sample of what we can do in our 1 glorified bodies. What an inspiration ‘ it should be to us to consider it! These 1 I devoted to Him. not expecting His : ] which to anoint His dead body when 1 the Sabbath was past. but they never t ‘litl. Believing His word will prevent t (as from spending money unwisely. Love is in some respects the greatest. Y but in the matter of service it must be c faith working by love (I Cor xiii. 13;. :5 Gal. r. 6). Note the ministry of angels at His birth. in the wilderness and in s Gethsemane. as well as 'in our lesson. and take comfort from Heb. i. 14. Note the “Fear not" of the angel (verse 5: Luke ii. 10) and compare the Lord's “Peace be onto you" of Luke xxiv. 36. y; and hear His own Voice to you in many it similar sayings. for all His thoughts N to His people. hoivever unworthy we C may be. are thoughts of peace (Jer. d: :xix.’ 11;.Ps. ,xxix. 11>. Since Christ q is risen our great commission is. “Go. tell!" “Go teach all nations!” “Go into tr fill the world!” (Verses 7. 10. 19: Mark 31 “1. lil And if we are not obedient in great will be our loss. It is ours to 86 he obedient. to go quickly and tell. He '01 Still see to the results. There is no use“ th talking about the power of ms m..- “h: A29: money to have a lie . 11.15). but our Lord sénds us forth SD .011- 835$? trust in His finished work. then we may safely rest on Eph. t. 6. 7: John Vi. 37. 47; Rom iii. 24. and joyfully an- tiripate I These. iv, 16. 17; I John iii. 1. 2; (.‘ol. iii. 4. His enemies made His tomb as sure as they could by a seal and a guard of soldiers (Matt. xxvil. â€"' 'v' I'“‘v' 111;.(01' an “alive Vforevermore" peo~ pie to reign with Him. If we have seen ourselves as guilty. condemned our sins in His own body and raised (mm the dead and ascended to the 111;: how alive forevermore. the Prince ot the Kings of the earth. King of kings and Lord of lords. the true Son of David: yet to occupy the throne of David and reign forever. but waiting for His kingdom as David had to wait The Scripture is full of the safer- 1112s of Christ. from Gen. iii. 15. 21. on and the glory. \Villingly and of His own accurd Be humiliated Himself mm» Bethlehem and Nazareth and Guttuthu that the St'ripture might be fulfilled. but God raised Him from the dead and gave Him glory and all pow- 9r in heuveuquul in earth that He might rid the earth of the devil and the curse and make it His own fair Wurld. as in Gen. i. He is our “alive forevermure" king (Rev. 1. 5. 18) wall:- T.“ Of tho Lmn, THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Lesson l.-Second Quarter, For April 4, 1915. by Rev. D. mammfi 1 mo Lesson, Matt. xxvifl, 1-10. Dry Verses, 5, 6â€".Goldon Text. >. xv, Monumental-y Préparod nts. There is no 389 power of His resur- : love constrains us A commentator re- 7-..... a... u “‘9 gout ucsugq LACGL’p'u. Some of the men are rather ser- ious}; ' wo naded, but on the other hand. he had learned that in the ma- jority of cases the Patricia' 5 wounded will soon be able to take their places at the front. ‘ “ In common with about half his company; he said that he occupied a trenh waist deep in water and slush almost continually from the first week in January, with the result that when severe frost set in, about the middle “of January, more than a dozen of them succumbed to the frost. Craig has smce been at the hosiptal base in France, where, lie-says, several of the Princess Pats are still being treated. Private C. H. Craig. of Calgary, to whom belongs the distinction of be- ing the first and only Canadian to be received into the newly-equipped Canadian military hospital at Clive- den, was invalided back in conse- quence of badly frost-bitten feet. Capt. Fletcher has volunteered for service at the front With the overseas forces. In 1912, the year following that in which Capt. Fletcher received his captaincy, he was successful in pass» ing the examin°ations to qualify for a. field oflicer. . Capt. Fletcher, whose home is on Madison axenue. London. has com- pleted twenty-four years of service in the army. He entered military life in 1891, enlisting with the Oxford Ri- fles; but in 1896 he transferred to the Twenty-Sixth Middlesex Regiment with which he has since been con- nected, steadily rising till he obtain- ed his captaincy. His courses of in-, struction for the various ranks which he has held have been taken at the Royal Military Colege, from which he has received seven certificates, among them being a military drill instruct- tor’s certificate. Capt. J. C. Fletcher. of the Twenty- Sixth Middlesex Regiment, has just rewived from Ottawa a colonial auxi- liary forces long servicé medal. Without any other treatment, the petrified skeletons are ready for mounting. With the aid of strong wires, channel irons and steel sup- ports, the huge fossil frames are set up and placed on exhibition. In the laboratory of the museum the sacking is stripped off and ex- perienced men set to work with ham- mer and chisel (thinning away the' stone ‘ncaeing the bones. When all the bones are freed they are assem- bled and made ready for mounting. Bones that have been weathered = out are very often Cracked and crum- bling. and over these is poured White i shellac. The shellac sevps into the broken and porous onrfs of the bones and hoYds them sm‘id‘xy together. â€"â€"v ww.’ -_° av. On occasions their'ey‘es would de- tect‘something on a lofty ledge; per- - haps a bone weathered out and lying exposed to view. Then the party would leave the boat and climb to examine the “find.” One look at a bone tells the scientist what part of the reptile it is. A trench is dug completely around the rock incasing the skeleton, grad- ually undermining it. When this is done, a mixture of plaster of parts and water is poured over the stone to hold it together and prevent its cracking or breaking with the bones tncased within. The detached stone is then rolled over and more plaster of paris and water poured upon it. The whole mass is done up in gunny sacking, hauled down to the boat and brought hack to camp to be shipped in that condition to the mu- seum. say, in what direction is the head and what the tailâ€"the fossil collec- tors set themselves to find out how far in both directions the remains run. This is done by chiselling away the rock, partially exposing the bones, until they terminate. It was in the region of Red Deer River Canyon that Prof. Barnum Brown and his fossil-hunting ex- ~ pedition camped. They requisitioned a large flat-boat on which they float- ed slowly down the stream between the frowning walls. No artist ‘or scenic voluptuary, drunk with beauty, ever scanned his surround- ings with such avid eyes as did these fossil hunters. They searched the region with candles, as the saying is. Now for the quarrying. Having satisfied themselves as to how the boneg of g skeleton 1ieâ€"-that is to vv_v~ I these?‘he inquired. Professor Brown i would. Mr. Wagner said .that he i came from the region of the Red ’ Deer River Canyon, in Alberta. In the vicinity of his ranch he had seen many such bones. *' Acting on the directions of Wag- ; ner, Prof. Brown made a preliminary trip in 1910. He found the Red Deer River region rich in fossil bones. He went again a rat later; and in June of 1914 made his most recent and thorough exploration,§ which lasted all summer and into the tall. The skeletons he brought back were those of the ankylosaurus, the monoclonius. the triceratcps. the orinthomimus, and the tyrranosau-g How Prof. Brown came to find them is an interesting story. Some years ago a man named Wagner stood in' the Hall of Reptiles in the Museum of Natural History examin- ing with'great curiosity the skeleton of the Jurassic brontosaurus. Then he went up to the omce of Professor Brown. He in‘r‘oduced himself as J. L. Wagner of Aiberta. Canada. He ation. Would Mr. Brown be inter-i ested in eollecting such bones as] LL- Badly Frost-bitten Feet. History. He had beéEâ€"ém'in Elberta engaged in the greatest of modern sports-fibuming dinosaurs. He got five. The, man was Barnum Brown, as- sociate curator of fossil reptiles in the American; Museum of . Natural A man returned East nOt 'long‘ since from a hunting trip in Alberta 7 h. z a with a most remarkable bag 0135') game. It weighed many tons. 9Q, Still More Service. A DIXOSAC RUS m2 zrm: of Styrcesa. ° Corn is : ;o.dry out W511} in Hm Shook :roquent freezing and ‘ the Vitalityof the cum 'S'nm Seed Corn Fro‘m Shock. Seed corn taken from shock corn WhiC‘h has stood in the field _most of the vintor {151:4 hQC-‘Il fining] tn :3:in n0 better germin'it‘inn test, than 31:5» rmr cont iu‘samw instances. Sum corn cmmot be used fm- seed mm: any do- z'rm: of success. ‘ Cornâ€"i: afinwod 1.1 . urgwx' gtz‘mumnnn res-t. Tim!) 1] cent in ‘ SEVEN.“ immnt‘ws Such cannot be' used for seed Wm: :11 1 “Plowsole.” § This is an artifieial hardpan very {commonly formed in the practice of ‘plowing to. the same depth year after iyear. A pneked layer is thus formed ibx the action of the plow. which acts exactly like natural hardpan in pre- Iwilting the passage of water down- ;ward and the mni§ture upward. This condition. or “plowsoleJ‘ is more often found in clayey soils and greatly in- :reases the difficulty of working them. Of course it is perfeotly easy to pre-' vent this trouble by plowing at various depths from time to time. In this case 'ime {vill generally be found useful in materially aiding. the disintegration of s O 3 Handy Ule'."01H'-H3d plants are found 'to be among: the Lost for starting a new piece The pizulls begin to hear the year after [naming uml (-nme into ‘full maturity in the third year. If they are given «are they win prudnee paying crops fur a were of years. Pruning shuuld he done in the early (Spring. cutting out all the dead and ,' weak branvhes and heading Inn-k most ; vigorous growth. .. tit-\â€" yl -Ilavl\.,.' The methods of caring for the gauge- berry plants are practit'ally the same as those used in dealing with Currants. It was formerly thought that goose- berries would do best in a shady place, but this is not true. Mildew will at- tack them if they are kept shaded. The only thing to prevent this is to have the plants kept open at the top. It will be seen that the currant is an 9385’ Plant to raise as well as a very profitable one. ’l‘hesnme is true of the gooseherry. Very few diseases attzw' these plants. The ('urmnt worm can be killed by applying Wretlirum pow- der. If there is any disease found to be among the branches it is best. to cut ofi’ the aiilicted ones at once and thus prevent the spread of the trouble. r The ground shuuid he wnrked thor: 0113:;th and drop before setting out the lnsthes. for after the planting unly a very shallow «ultix'nliun mm to «lune. as the Currants are :1 surface rooting plant. lottod Manure is «me of the best fertilizers tar wurking into the land. and after tho «~11mmr bushes have been set out this will be fmmd excel‘ lent as mulch Prepare the grox potatoes, making plants Set the 5 _ -vwrwv. I I‘,” l in severe latitudes is not to be recom- mended. None of ,the red raspberry family is of ironclad hardiness. and the * young plants when transplanted in the fall"are much more subject to severe or fatal injury from freezing than they would be it well established. Spring planting is by all means preferable in sections of the country where the tem- perature drops to or below zero. The plants of the red sorts are termed suck- ers and should be transplanted at one yea r old. at which age they rarely have more than one came. which should he cut back to eight or ten inches at time of transplanting. Raspberries luru' many a rough and idle sput into profitable land. A farm- er_\\'ho dues not make a' few hundred (ldllars a year from berries is not up to snutl‘. Black raspberries are usually set him and one-half feet apart in the row, with the rows six feet apart. Planted among the trees of an orchard the red raspberry will do rather better than the black. It is not best to put them closer than eight feet from the trees. Fall planting of red raspberries f unamm CHRONICLE. the ground as; H'um’lal narupan very led in the practive of same depth year after 1 Myer is thus formed f the plow. which acts mud as; for a crop of : furrows for the young plants in the 'uSpberries be recom- Qz¢¢$fi$$§¢§§¢§¢t§§++66§§ fiOOb‘OO‘QQOOOOziz O: 690009990§§§§§§§§§¢§§O§§§ Av Central Drug Store ¢+¢§6§§¢§‘¢¢¢¢o¢¢oooo¢o‘0- Central Dru g Store The If Vmi “ant ”and iwaw miXed fi‘fld tiv “Chieftain Corn Peed” it an 91s (mud mh‘d‘ ,, By Using the Celebrated Opposite the 01d Stand Special Reduction Sale Manufactured and forgSaIeRme at“ Special prices in over five ton Intending purchases ma} rest: assured r even better bargains than we offmed la: A min! mder will convince you. Come in for p: ices. S. SCOTT In order to reduce our general stock of Dry Goods. Groceries, Ready Mades, Blankets. Sheeting etc“ We have decided to gumke a Special Reduction on Everything in stock. starting on Chesney’s Alterative Pocwder The best 8100 ° legs, grease, scratches, etc, etc (Ehesney’s Dry Murrain Powders for Acute Indigestion. A " Remedy. ' PHONES Uhesney’s Horse and Cattle Spice an All Round Tonic and Digestive SATURDAY, JANUARY l6. .19I5 We Are Paying 60c for Oats at nur Elevator Oatmeal Millers. y rest assured of getting we offm'ed last Spring. 4and26 Durham, Untar'u. and ask lots >~bO¢§.‘

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