'I‘HH eople’ 5 Mills A blend of) Manitoba and; Ontario lheat and is a strictly ï¬rst, class “111in flour \ small or large bag of a ï¬ne grain Jhite, nutritious flour, is sold as our and. Have you ever tried it? Get our grocer to give you our kind next we and see the superior bakin qual- ities it possesses. Better an more F‘holesome. because of a secretproceis at we put the wheat through. Don’t forget. 1+++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ m++++++++++$+++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++..:.. _ F TheflownannShoeStme: J. 8 WWW 66666660 66666666666666666666666666666666666 666666 i .g. I .3. + 4. .3. i 4- ~1- 4. 1 .g. .3. .5. .g. .g. .g. + 4. .g. 4- + 4- .3. 3: 4. .g. Never substitute appeaiance for quality but rather choose an article a- trifle .more costly and obtain both. Appearance is prudential H++++~H~ +~r+++++~i~ °§° Iur pure Manitoba flour, made from To. 1 Manitoba. wheat cannot. be beat pr either bakers or domestic use December 5th, 1912. made from selected winter whe d is a superior article for making pastry, etc. :- grocer-does not keep it. come to mill and we will use you right Call us up by telephonolNo. 8. kinda of Bull bought st Into! See our goods and prices before purchasing elsw here. Sax. Stockings, Mitts and Gloves of many kinds and prices in abundance. Trunks, Valises Suit Cases, Telescopes, Club-bags. etc., in differ- ent styles and prices. In Boots and Shoes, Leggings. Rubbers, Moccasins, Felt Boots, ’ etc., for Men Boys and Youths. Call at once and get a pair of some of these lines to keep your feet Warm. - up-to-date flour and feed and ms keeppur floqr fox-Lula. John McGowan 58 delivered aï¬vwhere in tow: Waterman’s Fountain Pens Christmas But Quality Is Essential if best results are to be obtained. Remember that you can follow this example in purchasing any- thing in Tinvirare, Graniteware, Stoves, Ranges, Furnaces, and General Plumbing Goods from Start now, by buying due or two pieces, show vour friends and it will make their minds easy as to what would please you as a gift. Leather Hand Bags and Music Rolls Two new patterns. Open stock. The prettiest decoration yet. See our splendid values from 50c to 810.“). A large variety to choose from. The kind that. always gives sagiqfacgion from $2.50 up. We also keep the clieaper grades from 31.“) up. PASTRY FLOUR ’QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQRQWQQQQQQâ€QQQMm} Bodnction on Flour 1: 5 ud 10_Bag Lops. acfarlane 8: C0. \Ve ha ve a. large stock of suitable wear for these seasons. Dainty Dinner Ware SOVEREIGN ~ THE REXALI. STORE C. P. R. Town Ticket Ofï¬ce. Buv It is Time to Prepare For Fall and Winter ' ECLIPSE Done Every Day Suggestions N. H. STERNALL No urging to buy goods you don’t want. Bran Lined and Iron - Cï¬indere SHOP OPEN EVERY AFTERNOOI‘ Pumps From $2 Upward ALL REPAIRING promptly am properly attended to. W. D. CONNOR galvanjqod 3nd Inga Pipipg,_ Bpab PUMPS OF ALL KINDE Winter Term from Jan. )fl) ELLIOTT †M School ; High]! former students. W. D. Con‘nor FREE TO GIRLSâ€" GOLD LOCKET AND CHAIN. A Rolled Gold Locket and Chain 14 inches long, given free to any girl who will sell 30 sets of Xmas Cards at 10 cents a set. ' Send us our name and we will send you e cards to sell. When sold send us the money and we will send ou the Gold Locket and Chain wit all charges prepaid. gonRaWARREN 00.. Dept 166, Graduates in strong demand. Write for new catalogue. Toronto. Machine Oil. Harness 011 Ame Grease and Boo Ointment, go to . P. SAUNDERS Emulators: of And Duh: in High Class Commercial Highly recommended by TORONTO, ONT The da}n;s§x}1â€"aâ€"ke «w In verses 11-13 we have what might ; be called a summary of the three par- ables of Luke xv. showing the joy in heaven over one sinner repenting. If we are not thus seeking lost ones, can we be said to have the mind of Christ? ‘ The incident in Matt. xix. 13-15, which ,is also found in Mark I, 13-16; Luke l xviii, 15.17. of the little children whom {He took up in His arms and blessed and said. “0! such is the kingdom of God.†when the diaciplea would have ‘ driven them away, ahowa us again Ell heart toward them and remind: III at loch. VIII. _ _-, _-~__ ___-‘ - 0-.- The Scriptures, the reading of which the Roman Catholics do not encourage, teach us plainly that only the blood of Jesus can cleanse our sins and that His absolutely perfect righteousness, which He gives freely to all who receive Him, is our only ï¬tness for the presence of God (Rom. iii, 24: v, 1, 9; I Cor. i, 30). A very little child is helpless. teach- able, trustful. comes when called. as this child did. When we come to Him in our emptiness all His fullness be- comes ours, and then we become indeed His little ones, who believe in Him (verse 6), and He counts all treatment of such little ones as done to Himself (verses 5-9). Awful indeed are some of the words in these verses and in Mark ix, 42-48, concerning the possibility of being cast into everlasting hell ï¬re, but how bless- ed the assurance that this fearful place was never prepared for man, but for the devil and his angels; that the Lord is not willing that any should perish and that those to whom He gives eter- nal life can never perish (verses'b, 14, 25-41; 11 Pet. iii, 9; John x, 28). The ministry of angels is beautifully re- ferred to in verse 10, and that they al- ways have access to our Father in heaven, that they minister to us here on the earth, is taught by Heb. i. 14, and many other passages. It is blessed to be able to say, because we really believe it and know something ,of the joy and peace of it, “I am never alone; the Lord Jesus and the angels are alo- ways with me.†0n the occasion of our lesson He called a little child and set him in the midst and by an object lesson taught them humility and true greatness and also that to enter the kingdom one must bef‘m’ne as a little child (2-4). A little child does not suggest innocence as its principal feature, for it is marvelous how early 3 very little child shows wil- fullness and temper, yet I once heard a Roman Catholic bishop use these words about becoming’ as little children as a proof of the need of a purgatory. where we could somehow work off our sins until, as when we were innocent chil- dren, we would be fit for the kingdom. Not only on this occasion did the idea of personal greatness lay hold of the disciples. but just after He had the second time foretold His death they by the way disputed among themselves who should be the greatest (Mark ix, 81-.34) On another occasion both James and John and their mother asked for seats on His right and left hand in His kingdom and glory (Matt. xx, 20. 21; Mark x. 35-37). Then again at the last passover, on the night of His be- trayal. after He had indicated Judas as His betrayer. there was a strife among them which of them would be account- ed the greatest (Luke xxii. 21-24). He always taught them that genuine hu- mility was true greatness, and. as to places in His kingdom, the Father had arranged all that. and we must leave it with Him. The man will yet come. it he is not already in sight. who will accept this offer of the devil, and all the world will worship him whose names are not in the Book of Life (Dan. xi. 36-38. 43; Rev. xiii: 8). We need to understand this in order to he delivered from the ambi- tion to be great even in the kingdom. He must be blind indeed who would do- sire greatness or power in this present evil age unless he could use it wholly for God. The lifelong motto of every believer should be. “The Lord alone shall be exalted†(Isa. ll, 11, 17). The late Dr. Weston said that the Bible is the record of the conflict’ between God and the devil for man and his inheritance, the earth. When people join house to house and ï¬eld to ï¬eld. that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth (Isa. v, 8). on which principle all trusts and combines seem ; to be carried on. it is not difï¬cult to recognize the unseen ambitious. wicked one back of it all. who oflered to our Lord all the kingdoms of this world ' and' the glory of them if He would! worship him (Luke iv. 517). Text of the Lesson, Matt. xvia'i, 1-14. MOMOPY V0'3“. 2. 3â€"Golden Text. Matt. xviii, 10-â€"Commentary Prepar- ed by Rev. D. M. Steal-no. The question or the disciples with which this lesson begins. “Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?†carries us far back in the history of man on the earth. even to the sugges- tion of the old serpent to Eve. “Ye shall be as gods" (Gen. iii. 5). His own ambition is seen in Isa. xiv, 13, 14: “I' will exalt my throne above the stars of God. " " ‘ I will be like the Most High.†The signiï¬cance of the title “Most High God" is seen in the ï¬rst use of it in Gen. xiv. 18-22, where it evidently refers to God as the possessor of heaven. and earth. The great adversary’s ambition. therefore. ls to possess the earth and the people upon it. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Lesson x.â€"Fourth Quarter. For Dec.8.1912. SUNDA‘ THE DURHAM CHRONICLE It is worth notiee that both Slaith- unite anl the moor are in a constio tuency which used to return a Social- ist member. In South Wales, also, a visit was paid to Mr. Keir Hardie's district. Most sovereigns would have left such places severely alone. That is not King George’s way. not Queen Mary’s. Just as he seized the slander K which affected them both and crush- ; ed it for all the world to see. so now I he went boldly among those who were. I supposedâ€"quite wrongly, as the event proved-to be hostile to the institu- ;ti<m cf monarchy. The domestic tour, as an institution marks a new stage in the development ml the relations between.King and people. Acting upon their own judg- ment and good feeling, thoir Majes- t'es determined that a new departure “as desirable. In the old days, when llfltinils were perpetually at war. mono arehs identified themselves with the national life by leading our armies to battle. Now that peace is the settled state, only at intervals broken in upon rudely hy the clash of arms. other means must be sought. 8« vereigns must place themselves. as it. were. at the head of the armies (I Industry. They must encourage their peoples forward alr‘ng aths of progress other than those w ich are hewn out by the sword. Nothing could [Lure successfully draw tighter the :‘rings of aflection and loynlty than these Vinita. In both districts they were received But with mere mmrt-esy but \xith ac- clamations by the whole mass of in- habitants. From politics in the party sense King George, of course, holds scrupulously aloof. But he is entitled t) congratulate himself on the happy issue of his courageous resolve, and further we must he gratciil to him frr having settled all doubts. if any existed, as to England and Wales be- ing unanimous in support of the in- stitution that forms the strongest tie between the different states of.the Empire. As an endurance test. these journeys made it plain that their Majesties are, happily, very strong. It would be ab- surd to say they were not tired after. long days of motoring, with the noise of cheering about them and with hun- dreds, sometimes thousands of eager ey_e_§ upon them almost all the time. In only one case was any notice given. This was at Aberdare. It made very little difference but it was not the King’s plan. He wanted to see cottages and cottagers just as they 115-3. Suddenly he would have his mo- tor-car stopped. He would get out and ask the astonished owner, “May we come in?†At Slaithwaithe the wash- ing was hung up to dry on a square frame near‘ the ceiling (a device, I think. peculiar to the North country). '.' Queen joined them and said she tlmmuuhly enjnyed it. And V'hat is more the hostess and the other guests enjayed it thoroughly too. The constant bowing, and lifting of the hat must have been Eositively painful at the close of we a day. varied by the fatigue of going over factories (sometimes three or four). Probably these domestic tours, as we may call them, were more fatiguing than the state processions of last year. En revanche, they were more interesting, both in their incidents, homely and human, and in their en- tire novelty. and happily their Majes- tie_.~j_ were never overtired. At Woodlands model village the. housewife was cooking the midday dinner. At the little farm on the moors the farmer’s wife was entertain- ing th friends at “farmhouse tea.†King George and Queen Mary are not content with arid details as to “cubic feet of atmosphere†or with Board of Trade “index numbers.†They want to see the kind of houses in which th ise who do the rough hard work live. Hence their surprise visits to small houses in South Wales and South Yorkshire. Other rulers may have read Blue- books about coal mines. What have they got from them. save headaches. King George goes down a coal mine. Takes a lamp and stumbles alon dark roadways. orrows a pick and ï¬earns for himse what it must mean to hew into the coalface for hours at a stretch. Uther rulers may have stud- ied reports on “Housing.†The very term betrays the spirit in which they are written; shows that the matter has been taken from the free air of reality into the vapid vacuum of Par- liamentary debate. Here is : imething new in the annals of monarchy. No British sovereign. no sovereign of any other kingdom, no president of any commonwealth, has ever until now made a systematic ef- fort to understand industrial processes and industrial problems by studying them on the spot. That is, of course. the only way. to _win any vivid knowl- - '-- -J vv â€"J. vv "--. -..J '0' I“ “DOV" edge of them. Print can prove any- thing, but can with difï¬culty make it live. It is intimate personal 1:!) pression that kindles the imagination; and without imaginatnn the dry bones of fact and ï¬gure rattle tediously in the ea'r. Britain’s Monarch Cannot Disguise Himsell and Go About But Never- theless He Loves to See His Bub- .jects at Work and Understand ' Their Needsâ€"The Queen at Ten With Farmer’s Wife. King George is the modern Haroun. al-Raschid. Like the ruler celebrated in "The Arabian Nights," he is set urnn seeing how his subjects live. He cannot disguise himself and make midnight eXpedit'Imis. alter the man- ner oi the Eastern calih. Photography and the newspaper press make that impossible. Besides. at midn' ht there are few workers employed, nd it is above all, his people at work that King George wishes to see†So in open day he goes among them, watches them at bench or lwm. sees how thev make iron and steel, how they get Coal, how by rough and hard work with their hands they are helping to keep up the industries of England upon which the very existence of Eng- land’s millions depends. KING GEORGE IS A'BIT OF A HAROUN AL-RASCHID. stipation. {a destroyer of the white scourge‘ iwhich such men 21 Prof. Schleich‘ of the Virchow pital, declare will mark one of the greatest epo_chs in the higtory of medicine. We will give One Hundred Dol- lars for any case of Deafness caus- ed by Catarrh that cannot be cured bv Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. _A____.___ A AA m-I_J- n by local ap lications, as they can- not reach t e diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by con- stitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the lining of the Eustachian Tube, When this tube is inflamed, you have a rumbling sound or im- perfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the re- sult, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube res- tored to its normal condition, hear- ing will be destroyed forever: nine cases out of ten are caused by Ca- tarrh, which is nothing but an in- flamedcondition of the mucous Dr. Friedman is so deluged with letters and pathetic pleas for treat- ment and by telegraphic and cable requests from physicians for the serum, and offers to buy the rights that for the moment his work has 'Most stopped. Dr. Friedman will not distribute the serum until he is properly protected in the prin- cipal countries, but will personally treat cases here. He will open an institute in Berlin next Week. Up to the present he has treated about 1,100 cases. In the course of the investiga- tion, the correspondent visited a poor working family, whose child had not walked in four months. owing to tuberculosis of the knee, and also of the lungs. The child received an injection of the serum seven weeks ago, and is now able to run and dance. Another case was that of a young man whom amputation of a limb had failed to cure. The doctors declared that amputation of the leg at the hip was necessary, but the young man was cured in less than three months by the use of the serum, according to statements made by himself and his mother. Numerous physicians and tuber- culosis specialists are on the way to Berlin from Australia, the Unit- ed States. South America and other countries, to study and investigate the new discovery. Australia is said to be sending a Government commissioner. English physicians are already here. surfaces. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED The correspondent also talked With the father of two children, both of whom had been suffering from bone tuberculosis. One was cured by Dr. Friedman in six weeks. The other has been under treatment by one of Berlin’s most famous specialists ' for seven months. 'The specialist has now asked Dr. Friedman to take the case. ' While some of these cases seem to a layman to be little short of miraculous, Dr. Friedman does not claim that his discovery will cure hopeless cases or the third stages of the disease, and strongly warns people against building up hopes for_ any such result. The correspondent visited and interrogated numerous patients who had been treated for tuber- culosis, including pulmonary throat trouble and glandular and knee bone tuberculosis. These patients all asserted that they had been cured after one to three in- jections of the serum. Scx'eral of these cases of bone tuberculosis were of long standing, which showed scars where once there had been running sores. which healed ‘up'in a few weeks. In two of these cases, amputation had failed to cure. WHITE PLAGUE DESTROYER FOUND BY BERLIN DOCTOR Berlin, Nov. 30,â€"A correspond- ent this week investigated the newlyâ€"announced discovery of an actual cure for tubberculosis, and if the history of the cases and the testimony of persons who say they were cured may .be trusted. it seems, at least, to the eyes of a layman who had much experience in the consumption camps of Arizona and California, that Dr. Freiderich Franz Friedman, 3 Berlin physician, after a. decade of experimenting, has finally solv- ed the problem where Dr. Koch failed, and has given to the world “but“; U, - '. J. CHEM}? 00., Toledo, 0. Sold 1) dru giats, 75c. Take 311’: amily Pills {or con- Scott ’3 Emulsion corrects nervousnessâ€"it is essentially a foodâ€"a concentrated, nourish- ing. curative food to restore the healthy action of body cells. fortify the blood, sharpen the appetite, make strength, health. energy and vigor. As pure as milk. it is readily assimilatedâ€"nourishes every organ and every tissue. Phy- sicians everywhere recom- mend Scott ’3 Emulsion with absolute conï¬dence in its beneï¬cial results. Don't wait f-start now, but insist on S C O TT’S. _ [V9 99:0th or drugs. are actually weak, run- downâ€"they are slowly deterioratingâ€"they need strength and nourishment for body and brain. Scott Bownc, Toronto, 0:1th 12-65 The Rev. Irl R. Hicks’ Almanac for 1913 is now ready. It is the most splendid number of this popular Year Book ever printed. Its value has been more than ever proven by remarkable fulfillments of its storm, weather and earth- quake torecasts this year. Profes- sor Hicks djustly merits the con- fidence an support of all the Eeople. Don’t fail to send 35c. for is 1913 Almanac, or only 81.00 for his splendidna asine and Almanac for one year. he best one dollar investment possible in any home or business. Bendto Word and Works Publishin Co 3401 Frank- lin 1170., St. La . o. ruins lave Durlum at 7 15 a m., und 2 4_.') pin. 3.15 3.37 CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE 4.00 7.10 “ Durham “ 11.54 9.19 4.11 7.21 “ McVVilliams“ 11.44 0.09 4.14 7.24 “ Glen “ 11.41 0m 4.24 7.34 “ Priceville “ 11.31 8.56 4.40 7.50. " SaugeeuJ. 11.18 8.43 5.15 7.50 “ Toronto “ 11.15 7.55 R. MACFARLANE. - Town Agent H G Elliott, G P. Agent, Mantreal Trains will arrive and depart as fol- lows. until further noLicezâ€" 'I‘rhius nrrive ut Durham at 10.30 o..n.. 1.50 pfm.. and 8.50 pm. EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY A hundadmely mustmud Weekly. Largest, ctr- culauon of any wicmmc journal. 'Jerms tot (anada. h.“ .5 a your. postage prepaid. Sold by all neWSGcalers. MUNN Co. WM New quk OMQFSL. Wuh “Walla ‘ Tana: MARK. Dcsucus Comments 8c. Anyone sending u sketch and donormnnn may quickly ascertain our Opinion free wmhor an invenunn Ia probably pawntnhleo (Tummunlm. Momatrictlyconfldentml. HANDB OK on Patent. sent free. Oldest envy {or room-mg patents. Patents taken t much Mann Co. receive mega! Mace. without. char“. in the AA... THE REV. IRL R. HICKS’ 1913 ALMANAC. J. 'I‘OWNER Depot Agent JAMES R. GUN. Town Ageu» Scientiï¬c flmcrlcan. All-wool blankets, flan- nelette blankets, ï¬ne all- wool grey blankets. Furs, Ladies’ and Gent’s sweater coats, Child ren’s sweater coats, Child ren’s clouds, Ladies’ Misses and Children’s cashmere hose, plain, ï¬ne and heavy ribbed- Boy’s heavy worsted hose, hockey caps. avia- tion caps, Ladies’ and Misses’ hoods. Don’t forget Stanï¬eld‘s un shrinkable underwear when buy inn. They are the best. »- 8 001113 to us when you wanc‘ any of the above goods. .3 a Grand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE ZENUS CLARK DURHAM PLANING MILLS GR 6 25 Lv. \Valkerton ..\r 6. 38 “ Maple Hill ° 7. 47 “ Humver “ 6. 55 “ Allan Park “ C. L. GRANT Also a limited amount of iron work and machine re- pairs. A call solicited. Ask for quotations on your next job. 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 House Fittings SASH, DOORS â€" and all kinds of â€" Durham “ Mc\Villiams“ Glen Piicev ille “ Saugeeu J. “ Toronto “ A. E. Duff 0. P. Agent. 1.0..“an ONTARIO )plQ, .41â€. 2)“). I111 12.4“ 10.05 :3:- n‘1 ( rial 9. 42