West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 10 Jun 1915, p. 3

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Minnesota doctors believe the State is giving too great prestige to the private practice of Dr. - .Mayo, the Rochester surgeon, by taking the famous physician’ 8 $2.- VOOMOO medical foundation gift. ‘ Brewery officials at Passaic, NJ. deny credit to Billy Sunday for closing 33 saloons. They say ,the excise board did it. The first shipment of live cattle since the war‘ is being made readv for the trip in Jersey City now. wm. K. Vanderbilt is accused bv residents of Islip, L.I., of breeding mosquitoes on his estate. fur and first‘class coaches to Nf‘l'th Bay. For full particulars consult G T R. ticket Agents or write Loan-s Toronto 10.15 11.111. daily, ex- cept gSnnday fur Mus'kuka. “'hzu'f, Huntsville. Algunquiu Park and North Bay. (\nmectinns are made at Mus- .knkn “'hnt-f for Muskoka Lakes and at Huntsville for points on the Lake of! Bays. Parlor-LiWary-Buffet car to i Aigmzqnin Park : Parlor-Lib’l‘ary-Cafe 2 en:- a mi firsbclass coaches to erth I Musko’rza Lakes Lake of Bays Georgian Bay ‘ Algonquin Park French River Kawartha Lakes Maganetawan River fimagami, etc. Round trip tourist tickets now on sale from certain stations m Ontarm at very low fares, with liberal stop- overs. ATTRACT] V E T R l PS Dist. Pass. Agent. Toronto \‘x’. ("alder-L Town Agent, 1’11an 33. J. Towner. Station Agent Phone 18 DURHAM ZENUS CLARK .55 7.0!) " Durham “ 12.08 9.50 “4 (5.18 “ Allan Park 12. 2'2 10.04 ..3"..’ (5.37 “ Hanover 1'2. 33 10.14 3.23 €3.28 ” Maple Hill " 12.41} 10.222 5.14) (‘3 1:3 " “'alkerton Ar.12.55 10.35 R. MACFARLANE.‘ ~ ‘Town Agent £006ch 4. 35 4.2!) 4.1!) 4.06 Trains will arrive and depart as f0] 0W5. until further notxcez-- P.” AS“. A 3’. P M 3. 1“ 11.10 AI'. Toronto Lv. 7. 45 5.... 9' 4. 3.3 7.4“ Lv.Saugeen J. " 11. 30 ‘J. 13 4.2!) 7.2:?» " Priceville “ 11.42 9'74 4.1» 7.1.3 Glen ~‘ 11. 52 4.73; 4.06 7.11 “ Mc‘Williams“ 11.56 9.38 PLANiNG MILLS v __ fin.“ tâ€"m UENERAL Lflmmi 0F “um: um 30 MUSKOKA EXPRESS The Idea Canadian Pacific Railway Time Table coxvmamy REACHING Point=Au~Baril French 8: Pickerelkivers Severn River Muskoka Lakes Rideau Lakes Lake Ontario Resorts EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY G. T..Bwll, C. E. Burning. GJ’. Agent. D.P- Agent. Montreal. Toronto. 3. TO\\'NER. Depot Agent \V. CALDER, Town Agent, Trains leave Durham at $.05 a.m., and 3.45 p.11). 0 o)‘ Trams arrive at. Durham at 11....Ja.m. 2.35) (2.0).. and 8.45 p.111. Shingles and Lath Always on Hand At Right Prices. The undersigned begs to announce to residents of Durham and surrounding country. that he has his Planning Mill and Factory completed and is prepared to take orders for Custom Sawing Promptly At- tended To Durham. June 10, 1915» -- and all kinds of - House Fittings SASH, DOORS Grand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE ' (T. E. HORNI‘NG. Vacation Route T0 ONTARIO l Lord our God, with all sincerity. the way wherein we may walk and the thing that we may do (Jer. xlii. 3; Ps. cxliii. 8). in verse 8 of our lesson and in Isa. xxx, 21; Ex. xxiii. 20. we have the assurance of sure guidance it only we are meek enoug, h to be guided (Ps. .xxv. 9). There are horses which can be guided by the faintest whisper. and there are mules which sometimes seem more intelligent than their drivers. but those referred to in verse 9 are without understanding. and there are many such both among horses, mules and men. All such will find sorrows enough (verse 10). but to the trusttul and obe- dient it will be always mercy. and verse 10, with xxxiii. 1. may be their con- stant experience. When we consider the Lord and His grace and His glory there is always abundant cause for the upright in heart to be glad and rejoice ; and shout for joy. 4 A- Inasmuch as “it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps" (J er. x, 3). it becomes us ever to seek from the is no peace consider why; when for- given consider how great His grace.‘ and always meditate upon Him as our refuge. God is unto us a God of delivemnces (Ps. lxviii, 20. R. V). The word “sec lab." used only in the Psalms and in Hub. iii, always suggests that we pause and meditate. Its use here in verses 4, 5, 7, is most suggestive. When there xiv, 1). He may let us go to the fur- nace or the lions den, but we shall come out \xithout any harm whatever. There will be songs of deliverance, for How rich is verse 7, my hiding place. ' our life bid with Christ in God, in God and in Christ! (Col. iii. 3; l Thess. i. 1: II Cor. xii ‘3.) My stxoug habitation. my dwelling place (1’s. lxxi. 3; 110,1)- how absolutely safe. pieserved from -' trouble, for, though we must have trib- I ulatiou, we need not be troubled. and no real evil can befall us (John xvi, 33: ' .,(3 ,are very precious words to me, beginning and cmiing with grace and including accer'nance. iedomption and forgiveness. The truly godly can never perish. but they may wander and need rest ration (verse 6; 1i. 1:2; John x. 28). iag. All are fully accomplished for us by the one great sacrifice on Calvary, and the benefits become ours when with true pentitence we turn to Him. We may actually have the forgiveness and be without the joy because we do not rest on the assurance of His in- fallible word. for joy and peace come only by believing lllom. xv. 13). If we do not acknowledge our sin and seek to cover our iniquity we will he in as bad a case as was David (verses 3-5). but iLwe confess our sins lIe is faith« 1‘11] and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness (I John i. 9). '1 he riches of His "1‘: ce in this psalm are so eXceetlingly abun- dant that the little we can call atten- tion to seems so poor we can only pray that the leader mav by the Spirit see the ocean of fullness that is here. Eph. -11-:11is::1'ession, si11.i11iq11itv. "11110â€"11111 Dr. Adam Cluxke say: that the 1113!: means passing a boundary or doing what is forbidden: the second means missing :1 mark or not doing what is commanded; the third means what is morallv \1‘1011g. contiarv to equity: the fouztli signifies fraud or deceit. To re~ move these evils three acts are men- timed-forgiving. covering. not imputâ€" “things" (Actsxiii. $8.31); Rom 1ii.‘.’4). In \orscs 1. -. 5'). 1110.10 me four dif- ferent “(was used com-orning our guilt -s), -U. xiii. 32-37). Paul refers to our present lesson as coming through David in Rom. iv. 5-8. This is the second psalm beginning with the word "blessed." and it is a plural word meaning literally “Oh. the blessings." Spat-goon says that it means double joys, bundles uf liam‘linoss. monxilains of delight. There can be no real bless- edness till we know «.mr sins forgiven. and the gospel that does not proclaim the forgivonl-ss of sins is not the gos~ Del of God, for that gospel says, “Through this man is preached unto you the I‘m-givoness of sins. and by Him all that believe are justified from ; all things" (Acts xiii,38.:2f); I:mn.‘iii.‘.’4). ‘ I, 2). There can be no doubt that the Lord wrote through him all the psalms attributed to him and many of the others. Our Lord Jesus Spoke of him as writing the One Hundred and Tenth «Matt. xxii. 41-45). The apostles spoke of him as the author of the Sixteenth. the Second and others tActs ii. :30. 31: It is certainly restful and most re. freshing to turn from the record of sin. as in the last lesson. to this record of sin forgiven and to hear the Spirit of the Lord through David tell of this great blessedness. Nathan said to Da- vid. "The Lord hath put away thy sin; * * * howheit by this deed thou hast given great occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme" (11 Sam. xii. 3. Ill. and they have been blasphem- ing ever since. There is forgiveness for the sinner. but it is an awful thing to he a stumbling block in the way of others. It is beautiful to read of such a sinner as David as “the anointed of the God of Jacob and the sweet psalm- ist of Israel." The title. "God of Ja- eoh.” is to me a most wonderfuTname and gives the great encouragement. As to the psalms of David. see how he gives God all the glory, "The Spirit of the Lord spake by me. and His word was in my tongue" «11 Sam. xxiii. SUNDAY SSHWL Text cf the Lesson, Ps. xxxiiâ€"Memory Verse, Sâ€"Golden Text, Ps. xxxii, 1. Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. THE INTER? IATION‘W sames Lesson XLâ€"Second Quarter, For June 13, 1915. Joseph Batewell, aged 14. broke into a New York flat and smoth- ered flames enveloping an 8-year- old girl, and then rushed off to school.“ .1 .. .. Detroit saloons may remain open until one o’clock a.m , stand- yard time; changed hours gives {them an hour’s extra business. High school students at Passaic, N..,J forced a German. band to lead a procession to the tune of “Tipperaer ‘ 3 Angry because a stepdaughter ; wanted a new dress for her grad- nation, John G. Peterson shot his iwife and suicided at Chicago. New York’s coldest day in the month xor eight years was on June 3-; snow fell in New Jersey. Twenty-two foreign language newspapers in Chicago sent a delegation to the school board to Oppose the school book praising the kaiser. For catching one little catfish on Sunday, Joseph Hendrick and his son went to jail at Wilkes- barre, Pa. ‘ In a Buffalo} divorce suit, Mrs. Houard Austeth. accused her husâ€" band, a one-legged man, of kick- ing ,her. ‘ Genéral Thomas Hubbard. Civil \Var veteran and lawyer, of New York, left the bulk of a $1,000,- 000 estate to his Wife and family. The wife of Dr. Anthony Crenla died at Buffalo frcm injuries re- ceived through falling from a hammock attached to a chimnev which it pulled down. Angered at losing a boys base- ball game at Uniontown, P11. Jos Koux')’, aged 15, started to shoot the Winning teamâ€"anal was euual- lv wild. Missouri‘s right to revoke a doctor’s license for giving liquor prescriptions too readily has been upheld by law. Bécauso he married. Ensign Au":- tin was dismissed from the U. S navy and his wife has won the fight for his reinstatement at Washington. The C.P.R. was fined $190 at Bangor, M3, for employing men over 16 hours, contrary to law. Hearing 3 Woman cry when hit by her husband caused a fire ul- arm in Nashua, N.H., and 22,000 people saw the arrest. Dr. G. A.. Kickerson of 11011111er. 31?. claims to have shot his :3an bear in the state. Illinois State Senators refusr--‘l to prohibit themselves 11rd others frOm taking passes from railroads. In the United States during March and April. 11 in 9Vez‘y 10?) workers were unemployed. and another 16 only partly employed. The Chicago courts are asked to dissolve the Co-opmative Farm League so long boosted down in Tux ms. Elizfimth Umberfeld of P;1{:‘k.l1 showing a' friend on a street car how Billy Sunday acts, xeil off and broke her arm. Mrs. Margaret Askins was senâ€" tenced at Jamaica, INCL, police court to “eternal sobriety.” Kitty Kamif, nurse for Mrs. Bal- lington Booth among- pris<mcrs, herself an ex- con H'ict is again un ier arxesc for fraud. Annabélla Schaffer and 1101' SIS- ter Emma, are charged at Bexuu " N. J.. with stealing a young man from his aunt, Mrs. Ethel \Valxwr. Confeieracy, died at Washington. age-:1 80. Julius Baumgzuten. designer of the great seal of the Southern Helen Bovle, serxing ‘23 years for kidnapping 'Wiliie W int” 7 ve ars ago, is asking for release at Hargisburg, Pa. President Wilson signed an or- der for a job for Mrs. F. Pier- rard, Widow of a gunner on 1:113 submarine F-é, sunk near Hono- lulu. Hawaiian Islands. nanover Township. 1321., with Dronerty valuation of $53,700,0i0. is broke. After '20 years as patrolman on Dover, N.H., police fovm- John A‘kv Cornell Was put on night duty and resigned. The editor of The Republican. Waterbury, Conn., fought a Eixil sentence for alieged libel on Senator Peasley, and Won the right to criticize for public; weal. While chopping wood at Niagâ€" ara Falls: Herman Dean cut 'off the end of his little daughter's DOSE. Brooklyn police commission or- dered patrolman Moniz not to eat ice cream while or. duty for the next three months. anover Township. NEWS OF THE U.S.A. â€"â€"w av- the lye on their feet. The lye will sting them, and they will lick it o! and die from its enacts. - .A‘A the ‘ A Way to Kill Rats. ‘ A contributor to the Farm and Fire- side gives the following method for killing rats: Boil concentrated lye in a small amount of water till it forms a thick paste. Then take 3 bacon rind, tack to a wide board. and around the bacon rind spread the lye. Place the board so rats can easily find it. In at- tempting to get the rind the rats get 5|..- 1â€"- ing, and that the chief loss was a me- chanical loss due to dropping of the leaves. Experiments were made both with meadow hay and clover hay that had been stored in the loft. Hay Feeding. A German experiment station has been feeding hay which has ~been stored for from one to three years to find if its digestibility has been influ- enced by storage. The conclusion ar- rived at was that hay was just as di- gestible after storing as before stor- ‘â€"v â€"“- to anotbex, and it will be found to be one of the most useful things used in same bleeding. body of the pen. A small window in the rear end is always advisable, as light is necessary. The pen can easily be removed from one part of the farm Portable Farrowin Pen. The illustration herewith 8110 um how a portable f1111'0111112‘ pen can easily and 0110111111 be 111:1de.'1.‘hc runners 11112 2 111’ (1' and any length desired. Any sound planking will do for the In the doing of all these tIm broaden our minds and add to th mess and interest of country life. i1To tench 11nd bring about the teach- qof subjects to fz'11m 11053 and girls in school»: 11nd clubs “ 111111 WI '11 be of value to {mm men and women. In the doing of all these thinng to 11101111011 our minds and add to the full- To cwopemto in the control of such oontngimm diseases as 1202' cholera, which have been donmnstmted to be lz'lrgely controllable by co-opcrative ef- fort. To m-(mel'nte with other farm bu- reaus in other Counties in this and oth- er smiles in finding markets and tak- ing advdmuge of their bargains. To maintain an exchange department through which we mm learn who wants :1 man and who wants a job: who has pure seed and who wants pure seed: who has :1 farm to sell and who wants to buy: how many will heed Specini seedâ€"for example. which can he bought in ear lots at. n snvir" 1â€"- To 111110 1110 first $1011 111 the county 1011:1111 0119; 111117.111.” the 1111:1031: 011111113 1111111~t1.osâ€"â€"fl1c 1'1'1111111111' industrv. To 11111 and so}! (1101101'1111'015'. It costs mom to mmket 1111111 it does to 9.111.11' \‘1’001111110t 101'011111011120 .1 91's;- 10111 in :1 (1111311111. we (1111 1102111 intelli- gently :11111 (01150111111101): to learn how to 004111011110. To put (1111\01109 in position to get 0111 8111110. of the assist: 111cc \1 Inch the colloqo (11 :1 1"11’ culture 111111 the Lnited States (101111111110111 of .‘igl'fiCUlllllO. are prep: 11011 to give :1 111 for \111i1h \10 pay our si1:11o,\\110tl101- organized to Use it 01° “of. To maintain an (1111(0 111:1 t 11 iii accu- mulate \11111:1i1‘ o s1:1tisti1:11 data per- 131111111." to {1111‘ 1,111111111110 (1ftil1‘ 1011111232 '1‘11 111:1111111111 :1 1"01‘010111‘0 Iiinnrv of 111111111110 bulletins: 111111 books 101' the honviit of 1111:11111 1111110. 1. 01111110. 01111111. 11113 111m} 1:11'1‘1101' W0111d have time to :11‘°(:11111111:1te. In order that; we may have an offi- ciul board made up of us many good farmers as there are townships in the county to assist the farm adviser in helping all the farmers of the county. To circulate infm'mul'ien about farm- ing so that individuals won't have to experiment to find out what state in- stitutions and neighbor farmers have found out. Co-operation Among Farmers ls Es- peciaHy Dwelt Upon. One of the 1‘111'111 :1dxise1's of the Unit- ed St: 1tes department of agriculture in Missouri 11: IS form 13th the following statement as to the objects to he at- t: lined thwugh u1':.;:111i'/.i11g :1 local farm hu1euu: OBJECTS OF A FARM BUREAU. 00.00000000000000000000000 O O 2 MAKING THINGS GROW., 9 Not one man in ten at the present time is sutiiciemly ac- quainted with the needs cf plant life to make even a fair success out of his g:‘1rden, whether larg or small. The knowledge of gar- dening and the love of seeing thing? grow are phases of Euro- pean life from which-we might learn valuable leswns. If the average farmer and his good with realized the 'alne of a good garden and one or two acres of highly cultivated. carefully tend- ed vegetable crops it would in- crease the interest in farming, raise the price of farms and add to the general prosperity of the country. â€"-Correspondent of American Agricultnrist. I would 11 :e to urge the im- portance of e\ e1y 1111111 :1 11d wom- an 1ediscox min; the :11t of mak- i112' things grow. Not 0111: 1mm- 1111 in five takes the intezest in house. plants and hex :9. Gen that her mother and 3111111111101h- er tool-I. THE DURHAM CHRONICLE. ;:\*Xv at ‘s at. a SaU‘in" titer farm bu- I f yo uwant good heavy mi :ed feed trv “Chieftain Corn Feed” it Wives Q'nmi «3+;qu We have a good stock of Corn and Ground Feed on hand, that we are SPHiI‘lg in ton lots at the 8A1]-.. “â€"3â€" ° Chieftain Corn Feed.per tonSgo 00 Rob Roy Cereal Mills Co PHONES We Are In the Market for Any Quantity of Oats Oatmeal Millers. 0" Ives good satis w faction 4 and :26 0111‘ -r

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