Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 20 Oct 1910, p. 7

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Bakery S3 Lati Bakety Goods 25c till Jan. Ist. l9ll to J» ‘bc’b O O ‘D ..§.”..W a 1:4: 9.; '2 :18 co 090900.00": "a w oomemW Ming 0038 m Oatmeal .ooooooooowom . Soda . 7mm ll 01) ‘5 M19 ,9 Inflow HEX“. ICE CREAM .VHHADE. Lemonad. COVFEI *Grocery ll ECTIONEI “INNER... p« )isoned an ‘umitoba FIOUI’O at} U want“! U g: mam Ila") (:t )Ukt km} 3183“ ..-§':i n; lowest prices. We ha Childrens’ Full and W if you want. we luucuu u. WWW, them. Ladies‘ ()uehicn Soled Show, vici kid. pat. tip. Ladieo‘ Belinda Patent Colt. good your welt ............ [Julie-3' Dull Us" Button Show. flexiblo Dole ............ len'l Fine Box Calf. blucbor cut, good your welt . ..... Ian's Fine Velour Gulf. bluchor cut. good year welt. . . . Ito's Leather Lined Box Call and Willow Gulf. . .. . Also l.mliea' and Genu‘ Shoes at $1.25, 81.60. 81.75 .nd. lamt lut The Big Shoe Store ‘8 is the place to get the BEST 511008 111 wwu lur prices. We have a full line of Ladies’, Gents’ and 38’ Full and Winter Boots and Shoesfin stock, and want the latest in shoes, here is the place to get 1910 Thos. Hcfirath’s the BEST Shoes in town for tip. latent. lat, good you welt..8.76 p, $1.75 nod. .. . . A T CASH SUNDAY SCHOOL. 1 Lesson lV.â€"Fourth Quarter, F0! Oct. 23. 1910. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text 'of the Lesson. Comprehensive Quarterly Review â€" Golden Text. Luke ix, 51â€"Comrnentery Prepared by Rev. D. M. Steerne. As the reviews thus far this yeut have not come at or near the end oi the quarter. I feel led to do with this as with the last review and give the lessons and Golden Texts and then a summary of the teaching as probably the most profitable way to handle the fourteen lessons. Third quarter: No. 3. Peter Confession. Matt. xvi. 13-28. G. '1‘.. Matt. xvi, 16. No. 5. Forgiveness. Matt. xvul. 21. 35. G. T.. Matt. vi. 14. No. 4. The Transfiguration. Matt. xvii. 1-8. 14-20. G. T.. Matt. xvii. 5. No. 6. On to Jerusalem. Matt. xix. L 2, 13-26. G. T., Matt. xix. l4. 'No. 7. The Laborers. Matt. xx. 1-16. G. T.. Matt. xix. 30. No. 8. Nearing Jerusalem. Matt. xx. 17-31. G. T.. Matt. xx. 28. No. 10. Wicked Servants. Matt. xxl. 3346. G. T.. Matt. xxi. 43. No. 9. Entering Jerusalem, Matt. xxl, 1-17. G. '1‘.. Matt. xxl. 9. No. 11. Marriage Feast. Matt. 1111. 1-14. G. T.. Matt. xx“. 14. No. 12. Three Questions, Matt. nil. 15-46. G. T.. Matt. xx". 21. No. 13. Temperance. Gal. v. 15-26. G. T.. Gal. v. 25. Fourth quarter: No. 1. Wise and Foolish. Matt. xxv. 1-13. G. '1‘.. Luke x11. 40. No. 2. The Talents. Matt. xxv. 14-30. G. T.. Matt. xxv. 21. No. 3. Judgment of Nations. Matt. xxv. 31-46. G. T., Matt. xxv. 40. We must keep before us in all these studies in Matthew that we are con- sidering Jesus as the King of the Jews. As such He was born. and as such He was crucified (ii. 2; xxvil. 37). He is mentioned in chapter l. 1. as “Son of David. son of Abraham.” and we need to remember the unconditional promises to both. all of which shall be fulfilled in due time. There are many who see in Jesus only a Saviour by whom they may reach heaven when they have to die. but such is not the revelation of Him in the Scriptures. He is the King of kings and Lord of lords. the prince of the king of the earth. before whom all kings shall fall down and whom all nations shall serve (I Tim. vi. 15; Rev. xvii. l4; xix, 16; i. 5; Ps. lxxii. 11). The kingdom. which is to include all nations. with lsrael .as a righteous nation at the center. 1 was plainly and fully revealed in the |Old Testament and was preached by lJohn and Jesus and the twelve and the seventy as at hand. That the Mes- siah of israel should suffer before He should reign was also plainly stated and typified in the lives of Joseph. Moses. David and others. but that a long period. an age. should intervene between the sufferings and the glory was not revealed in the Old Testa- ment. This is the mystery kept secret I | cially revealed to Paul (Rom. xvi. ‘25. 26: Eph. ill. i-il; Col. i. 26. 27). When Peter. by the Spirit of God. confessed Jesus as the Christ. the Son of God. then Jesus for the first time spoke of His church which He would build on that foundation truth. Hut Peter. not understanding the Scrip- tures nor the purpose of God. rebelled at the thought of Jesus’ sufferings. Then our Lord taught that all disciples must be willing to suffer with Him. but that there would surely be a re- ward and that. though He and His followers were for a time to be con- tent to suffer. the kingdom would sure- ly come as shadowed forth in the great event of the transMuration. With such a kingdom before us. made sure to us by a risen and glorified Christ. and having been made partak- ers of it by His great sufferings for us. by which we have the forgiveness of sins. we should walk worthy of such a kingdom. freely forgiving every one and by fasting and prayer over- coming the devil. As He steadfastly set His face toward Jerusalem. know. tag all that awaited Him there. so we. His followers. must be steadfast. un- movable. always abounding in the work of the Lord (I Cor. xv. 58). We must let His love constrain us to ac- Bim. quite certain that the Judge of all the earth will always do right. We should be inspired by the assur- ance that as truly as all the Scrip- tures concerning His humiliation were literally fulfilled. even to His riding upon an ass’ colt. so literally will all that is written concerning His glory be fulfilled also. Therefore we should w ll< 0 l si cept any manner of service gladly. not . for reward. but in real gratitude to ‘ rely upon Him to keep these temples no of our bodies wholly for Himself. _ cleansed by His word and Spirit. that accepted as the necessary pruning of the branches in order to the bearing of more and better fruit unto Him. The flesh is to be reckoned dead. and we are to live in the Spirit. walk in the Spirit and be led by the Spirit. and thus show forth His praises. Being made ready for His call either to be absent from the body or to be caught up in the body at His coming for Bis _. _s ALLA“... ”A... It‘ll“ by Hi! flgnteouaum u I Wu; given to u. my the Spirit .0 on u t t our light may no shin. berm MMmMouhM. THE DURHAM CHRONICLE The PILLAR OF LIGHT; Chen and commended the clean'finéss of the cook, Jackson, when they had washed the dishes and discovered the whereabouts of the “tea-things," they suddenly determined that it was much nicer aloft in the sky parlor than in these dim little rooms. “I dont see why they don‘t hme decent Windows, said Enid. "Of course it blows hard here in a gale, but just look at that tiny ventilator, no bigéér than a ship‘s port-hole, wit-.1 a. donuc storm-shutter to secure it 1f you pica-ac, 1ij gll the world as it the sea rose so high. Constance took thought for a while. “I suppose the sea never does reach this height," she said. . Enid, in order to look out, had to thrust her head and shoulders through an aperture two feet square and three? feet in depth. They were in the liv-; ing-room at that momentâ€"full seventy feet above the spring tide high-water mark. Sixty feet higher, the cornice of the gallery was given its graceful outer slope to shoot the climbing wave-crests of an Atlantic gale away from the lantern. The girls could not realize this stupendous fact. Brand had never told thein,. He wished them to sleep peacefully on stormy nights when he was away from home. They laughed now at the fanciful no- tion that the sea could ever so much as toss its spray at the window of the living-room. They passed into the narrow stair- way. Their voices and footsteps sounded hollow. It was to the floor he- neath that Bates had fallen. Odyâ€"v-- ‘I don't think I like living in a light- house," cxied Enid. “It gives one the creeps." A._A.. -vv “burely, there are neither ghosts nor ghouls here.” said Constance. “It? is modern. scientific, utilitarian in? every atom of its solid granite.” I vl‘iudt Una statsâ€"silent. as they climbed the steep stairs. Once she stopped and peeped into her father’s bed- room. “That is where they brought me “hen I firs (came to the rock," she whispeled. “It used to be Mr. Jones's 100m. I remember dad saying so.’ vv-Uv Constance, on whose shoulders the reassuring cloak of science hung some- what loosely, placed her arm around her sister’s waist in a sudden access of tenderness. "You have improved in appearance since then, Enid," she said. “(VHFâ€"“t“; “nailed little chip I must |Continued from page 6. oA.S.flUNTER Have your kitchen appoint- ments beautiful as well as useful. It makes the house- work easier and pleasanter. This Chancellor Range would be an ornament to the most richly furnished home in the country. And there is just as much ntisftction as there is beauty in it. is'a perfect baker. The di- vided flue spreads the bent evenly over the whole oven. It has broiler top, ash-door guard, oven thermometer-â€" if wanted,â€"patent grates and best of all saves you 20% of your coal. There’s no other range design in the country which com- Let us show you this Chan- cellor, for your own satis- faction. We have a complete show them to you. C “0. Connie." she w.alled “I shall ; hate to leave you and dad. W by has- I nt Jack got a brother as nice as him. SCAf." \x'hereupon Constance laughed loud and long. I The relief was grateful to both. Enid's idea of a happy solution of the .(ioznestic difficulty appealed to their \(‘ht‘ily stirred sense of humor. N9\(r mind, dcar,’ gasped ion- 1 Sim. ce at last. "You shall marry your ulatk and invite all the nice men to 'dinner. Good gracious! I will have ltue pick of the navy. Perhaps the ‘ Admiral may be a \xidoxter.’ \\'ith flushed faces they reached the region of light. Brand was writ- ing at a small desk in the service- room. “Something seems to have amused you,” he said. “I have heard weird poals ascending from the depths." “Connie is going to splice the admir- al," eXplained Enid. “What admiral?" “Any old admiral." “Indeed. I will not take an old ad- miral," protested the elder. milieu. you had better take him when he is a lieutenant," said Brand. _ “This offered too good an Opening to be resisted. “Enid has already secured the lien- tenant,” she murmured. with a swift glance at the other. Brand looked up quizzically. “Dear me,” he cried, “it my congrat- ulations are not l)elated~â€"" Enid was blushing again. She threw her arms about his_t_1_ecl§. “Don’t believe her. dad," she said. “She's jealous!" Constance saw a book lying on the table: “Regulations for the Light- house Service.” She opened it. Brand stroked Enid’s hair gently, and resumed the writing of his daily Jour- nal. Vvvv-vâ€" â€"~â€"â€"-_. “And dress in velvet cloaks and buckled emcee ?" “Andâ€"â€"" “And any ‘Boo' to naughty little girls who won't let me complete my diary," shouted Brand. “Be off, both of you. Keep a lookout for the next ten mln- utes. It you see any signals from the mainland. or cutch night of the Lance- lot, call me,” _ . .- . O _I__ __ ._A.._A “‘T'I‘he Elder Brethren!" whispered 10%;.1Intitl-fll;tilâ€"lt;frnnt,iop:-l Constance. “DO they wear 10118 white ma down beards?" A __ _ __ H: r: 'cllv ."I- - -- the external gallery. ()bedient to in- structions, they searched the Lands End and the wide reach of Mount's Bay beyond Carn du. Save a scud- ding sail or two beating in from the Lizard and a couple of big steamers hurrying from the Eastâ€"one a Trans- atlantic Transport liner from Lon- donâ€"there was nothing visible. In the far distance the sea looked smooth enough, though they needed no ex- )planation of the reality when they saw the irregular white patches glistening against the hull of a Penzance iishing- smack. "0, Connie. the reef!" said Enid. suddenly. in a lowvo-ice. ,L.’ _-‘_A-‘ "Skid carry wands?" added the re covered Enid. .v V, vâ€"â€"â€" â€" They clinibed to the trimming stage of the lantern. which y'_as.level with Duuuwaa-J, -â€" w -- V They glanced at the turbid retreat of the tide over the submerged rocks. The sea was heavier. the noise louder. now that they listened to it. than when they arrived in the Daisy. little more than an hour earlier. Some giant force seemed to be wrestling there. raging against its bonds, striving fev- erishly to tear. rend. utterly destroy its invisible tetters. Sometimes, after an unusually impetuous surge. a dark _‘ *A“ uuu'u-IIJ lac-r â€" v -â€" w v â€" a .. . shspe. trsilins witch-tresses of weed. showed for an instant in the pit of the osuldrou. Then 9. mad whirl of wster would pounce on it with s iesrsome spring and the tang of rock would be smothered ten feet deep. I. n __A ‘_“. IIAIULIICIVVI WI. -v'v w-_-_ For some reuon they did not talk. They were tucineted by the power. the grandeur. the untemed energy of the spectacle. The voice of the reef held them spellbound. They listened mutely. Beneath. Brand wrote. with acholan ly ease: “Therefore I decided that it would! beat serve the interests of the Board‘ it I sent Bates and Jackson to Pen- ance in the boat in which my daugh- terâ€"" he paused an instant and add- ed an “a" to the wordâ€""fortunately happened to visit me. A: I would be alone on the rock, and the two girls might be helpful until the relief came. I retained them.”_ Hague. o In another book he entered the ex- act records. A column headed “Wind direction and force," caused him to look up at the wind vane. He whis- tled softly. "S. W.." he wrote, and after a sec- ond's thought, inserted the figure 6. The sailor's scale, ye landsman. dif- ters from yours. What you term a sale at sea he joyfully balls as a fresh breeze. No. 6 is a point above this limit, when a well-conditioned clipper iship can carry single reefs and t0p- ‘ gallant sails. in chase full and by. No. ' 12 is a hurricane. "Bare poles." says l the scale. l Slowly mounting the iron ladder, he stood beside the silent watchers. The Bay was nearly deserted. No sturdy â€"---|â€"â€" 4â€"...“ in... I I C wuulvu ....... He glunced at the weather-glu- in front of him and made a note: "Buopeter filling. Temperature higher.” __ a I . _._A--AA Ohn A'- u-’ 7‘ "I, “vâ€"â€" 'd tug-boat was pouring smoke from her tunnel and staggering towards the rock. Northwest and west the dark- ness was spreading and lowering. He did not trouble to examine the‘ Ireef. Its signs and tokens were too 'famlliar to him. It's definite bellow ‘or muttered threat was part of the prevailing influence of the hour or :day. He heard its voice too often to ' ilnd an omen in it now. “This time I must congratulate both of you," he saidflquietly. ‘ â€"‘ ‘JA‘ ‘â€" II-‘-An ment is uh. _ “Ledlee seldom. it ever pm e night ch53“! an e rock lighthouse. on will hue young thet me “Nile”? “deuce Enld clapped her hendl. , drug. i ? 3m W'W-- U; JV“. “V 'â€" â€" ‘_V. ' “On what?‘ they cried in uni-on. nhflll with umcknowlodud "p""--‘--‘- vâ€"--~c -~'v-vv-vvâ€"‘â€" . r. . sacchard 0 “'ill «Ill lea-s than 825 III acre. A bau‘anin surely. 1 A HARDWARE and 'l‘insmhh Hull- nessfirey County. pom Hfficu in cmmH‘ ion. Lana than $10.01” Will buy 40 news (*f 3811‘. . More tud dwellimt. barn, ”Th8? fun. i dwelling: Ind 33 000 Mark. No mun who doies. luminous with H. H. |Mi|l~r is ever ut‘-1md |U go uiauwhoro. Our methods seem to please. MI. [and Hunts! [99k Here 325 ACRES dose tn l’rntun Station. brick dwellingfine largo uutohuildinm Windmill (‘.: hay. 2 turn to m': a». nu! 85.1%”. Knocks the sunshim- «AT A berm bargains. 633 ACRES no" l’ruhm Station 80 Sumac" Junctiuu tins brick m-idonco. splendid- burns: splendid. mil KU'») “nor. GENERAL COUNTRY SI‘URE 11v. miles from Durhum; very dear». Largo number of cheap farm properties. Money to Lvnd M Ltm Rates. Lands b'nurht. an! BUM. [Mbtsmllootol All kinds of writings drawn. "Mw‘y’ Prompt. â€" Never Ragtimg." “o “o MILLER :- “"Pt‘ulc Then-.1 5.005;. “;“ ta) 1:30 “ (“um Jot " 8.35 M 'R. MACFARLANE. - Town Agum Thins have Durham at 7.2134 "1.. mud a” p13. Trains uriva at Dun-bum at 1030 a.m.. I.” p m.. and 8.55 p m. EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY Q. '1‘. Bell. J. l) .‘d; .‘an'H. G. P. Agent :3. P. Amrt. Montreal . oronh. CANADIAN PACIFIC RAIHWAY TIME TABLE W" "q, I. v-câ€"nâ€"u â€"- ---- m a." cm. Our {uh Junior 1'“ miâ€"vgubjm'idonoo. vm‘hd, Kim m not. Rook-hoping and Writing. [[88 NJIKLLDA lofil'fifiUh‘g LA. omn- «00'. on vm . nus. . ”sanguine“. Arithmetic. I!” AMY 300'. Drum”. of Show 0! Education. Sine-II: ”mature. C an. Gunning. dutory sud Art. hunch; undon- obonld GIN no; on; “the“ if poufihlo. M an algal“ Mk nun. Durban 1. 3 *“‘-‘-- “ A â€"_. M. no. pct soul. in “van“. J. P TILIVOQD. U uAHILJ DURHAM SCHCJ' ‘1 Pumps, Curbing. Tile. TI-ains will arrim and depart as fol- ANYONE ONE Hummus New Pumps, Pump Ro- pairs, Cement Curbing or Culvert Tile. see . . JNO. SCHULTZ or myulf at U: - qup.‘ In Mum. «mm! cunnin- an I- AA- 1‘80; _ muggy-n “8H1. x‘u Grand Trunk h *9st TlME-TABL.3 asked Constance. “I think so. At any raw. r- acle Will enable the Mg. before tomorrow, and . not. frequent occunpnces g. ”JIâ€"Rn'ow of one," was: 1-1.1”!1 ment, with great seriousness xur Ho rend her thouzhg. You are not experimeming 1).: aux-self when you take Chamber- in’s Cough Remedy for 3: “<1. that preparation has won ‘.':. g vat reputation end extensive 9.11101. by itl remarkable curt-n cw. (fuluu, cln nlways he depended 'z; 1 .. It II egnlly vnluablz: for each. m and ,chfl an, and mtzy Me 5W - w l oung children \xiih imp"«-i‘. M‘ . l Hence, t!_ {t 0"" {ins no harmf'ti va IVâ€"â€" â€"V- w- _‘,_~ “I wu you'nger then." he smile” “Now I m fifty. tad the world ha;- The Hanover Conveyancer H. H. MILLER "WHY" mere be a storm, w! “Mind. J. Towger. Lou! Agent 81"" AND WU {PUEI’A Lv. Wulkarton At. £60 Mbple lllll “ 9.21 [hummer " 0 1. Allan Put " 9.11 Darla-u " 8.51 VIIIIulw-u n. .. 2, u it 0"" wins no hnr'nf'ii Sold by Gan”: Drug Store. To be continued. 7" -w-‘vv asking it an.“ XII” Put Durham Mow il‘innn Prion illu 232$- 1%" P... P 911 It

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