Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 1 Jan 1925, p. 2

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. W54 PM!» l T MEN MAY RISE 0N STEPPING STONES OF THEIR solves to higher things. Al (N: 'l‘l.\l l1 WHEN LI’I‘HER wAs IN GREAT PERPLEXITY .mol her. he traced with his tinger upon the table: “He lives! “0‘ llw'sf" This though so thrilled him that his perplexities vanished; vourage took the place of fear. “Whom this consciousness of a living Christ, Christianity Would seem llkt‘ a sun without heat, like a bridge ending in the murky waters of a turbid and swollen stream. Then take heart 3'» tearful ones! Take courage for the great sorrows of life: patience. which bringeth peace, for the small perplexities; and after having accomplished your daily task, go to sleep in peace. Jesus Christ lives! What need is than. nf 1: mm... mm.-."- 'l‘lw man flung up his hands in ~hall I go last of all?" The stury pf the» resurrection VI hand In supphcahon. We say, “4 heathen.“ but who is to blame to who bt‘liO'VPS in the resurrection 01 of this blame. ll' ls chr Tm: LEAP AT THE START BUT THE gum: on that 3019 there. God's provisim .ln hii alllh'. t'hnwr WF. HAVE BEEN ASK“) 'I‘II that ”It‘.\n10.‘lilall I’I‘vslm hozuds ill" to m'cum jnintlv IIIIII: olo'III nIIIIIIlIIIIIIIl namvs Hill}. No simpler Hl‘ mow IIIIIM' Punk! [)0 dPVisvd. '\I\'Hllll,ll SHALL l M) AMER I DIE?” ASKED A DYING HINDU 1n. m»! .:‘;1_lzn1nl prwst tn \VhHm ho had given money to pray for Ni \.‘l \8 l0”. 'l’lw Brahman w'lvsl l‘l‘pllmlt "Ynu will first. of all go into a lmly quadrugwl." ' “lfut.” said tl'n- Hindu, "\Vllm'e shall I go then?" wlho") Wu “’1” gm mm a singing bird." lmt. fzuol tlw poor man. “where then shall I go?" .J‘ ' ' lllt'll. Sillol lllo‘ nrmel “vnn “'ill on {non n Immune“: An :I my I my d than mspi HERE IS .\ fnuml truth wntom'v: himsvlf.‘ “rhoâ€"Angels in Hw Kitchc'n faith. llkltli IS .\ 't'ltnl'till'l' mu 'I‘Hl‘l .\'l'l\\'. YEAH. IN THE LOUVRE at. Paris. tllO‘rP is a great painting by Murillo. The scene is a kitc-tu-n m whit-h tlw tulle-rs mow to and fro. One is putting tlw ko-Hlv on tho- Iirv; :mutho'r is lifting a pail of water, a third i~ at. tlu- olro-s‘svr taking; «tomn the plates; another is moving here and thvrv. 'l'iio-H' tarps au'o' radiant, their forms are beautiful, ttwy arr not, rtmt in ordinary unrh; they are beautiful, white- wingml ango'ls, unit. as on" writer puts it. the charm Of the pirturv lies in ”w hurt that. no inrongruity strikes the beholder. "'l'ho- Mun-ls m ttw Kitrln-n" that is the spirit 01' our Christian 'l‘lns critirlsm applies to not. wally ho‘lp Hm heal'm :Ililo' W'W'llltl luv lllSl SalC llfn I ll m- umm' llmnkc dutim. I lmw, nu sulf. b1 l'IIllIIVV'iIII.’ W‘l"lillal IIxIIIII'iIInItII: My ~IIlIIIIIl was IIIIII that UVV’IIs Its very existence III ”III IIlIIII'ImlI ”III! is IIIIIII‘II5._'IIa‘II_IIl with the clerical “million. and \I'l l IIIIIIIII. IHIImIIn'llIIII at single sermon in \\llll‘ ll HII- IIII-Ii III HIII I ZIhIIIII il working out the spiritual and HIV i: I! ah: lllHll III ”III \wi‘lIl was ever insisted upon. \lmivs \\ II \VI‘I'I‘ III niiIiIlIIIl III’ IIIIII duty at school to play :I ml and it) \\Hl' k III II Il. WI- \Vl‘ III tolIl oi the inIIstimable ;:r_IIl\:IIIII - wI- lH’SM‘SSlll IIxIII IIthIIIIs of our own age .II << l'HltllllillI‘ tlIIIII “lll'SI‘lYt‘S. and :It the end. we were III\;IIIi:IlIl_\ IIIIgIIIl IIIII III I'III'gIII in our after-life, what- "\'I'l' Ulll' III'I'II'I~<sIIIII Ul' lIIIsiIIIIss might. lIII. the lesson \\'I' lIII-II'IIIIIl \Villllll IIIIIII \ViillS of Olll‘ hIIautifIIl chapel. It was all IIilil'IIlly IIIaIlIIqutII. 'l'lII- III'IIIIII~III :IIIIIlIIIs III not a few sermons of today, which IIII I‘I'llll} IIIIIII HIII lIIIzII'III'~'. \VlIIIthIIII young pIIIIple or adults. :IIIIII \Vl'llIIl' has just and III II company of ministers: “All Mr I “IN“ ll'I\I'l' IIIzIIIkIIIl II IIIIIII simply for pointing out IlIItIIw‘. l lImII. IIIIsI-H'. lIIIIIn :IlIiII always to find more duties I_| l'IIlllIl [II-III'III'III. What I haw IIIIIIIlIIIl has linen help and III'rleIIII.” .\IIIl llll.‘ I» [HNSllllll OlllV through the grace Of . 'I'lII lIIIII IIIIIHI'lIiIIJ. lllII".IIIl'nIII Will IIlanI emphasize ~I [IlH\l IIIII I‘IIII III:.III and Him IIIIIII will readily respond and $4.53. 403231 2.55:5 :.I._._:./:.._ 7.1. C z.._._..I./.7.._.x.: IS .\ BRIEF WHIH) THAT nur pl'ol‘vs‘sinn 01' urnm! Within four 5 all mhfullv mad ”9' HI H For The Quiet Hour l'h flvs'm sun! thu Hindu. “\Vlwro shall I go then?" wu will gn mm a singing bird." sun! tlw poor man. “wherv thou shall I go?" ' sum tlw privst. "you will go into a beautiful H l‘hu Irma] mum]. Uu- cummou task. WI“ furnish all \w ought to ask. Ilunm tn .h-m muse 1ch a road In hum: us daily Humor (304]. that taiwth up IIII- DUNN)" uf HII- fainting, MI lli'ih his Imn IIIaIL \lmiglm will put "is arms IInIiormvath him; shall MIII llpOll Hm. Lord. ~51” I~‘ Hw \wy III' the helpers, I'IIIIIIIIIniIIIIs IIf iho Christ. -â€"~HIIIII'y \Im Dykv. 0n :1 waysidv pulpit Tn man is so» vmplx #Each man is Guptain of his Soul, And each man his own em, But the Pilot knows the Unknown Seas. And He will bring us through. We break new was local,â€" Our eager keels quest unaccustomed. waters, And from they»: uncharted w The mystic circles leap . ...:el. "hue“! mihililia _ AAA-- ”fl" urâ€"w II... . . -5md shoals and shifting man? -â€"And Calm and gtenns? And clouds end mum sales? -And wreck and loss? --And valiant t1 hting times? Mid. maybe, Dee Land 90, the Lat-1 For should the Pilot deem it best To cut the voyage short, He sees beyond the sky-line. and He‘ll bring us into Port. \nd, maybe, Golden Days, "Full frmghtcd with depght} ml. maybe, Life,â€"â€"Life on a bounding tide, And chance of glorious deeds;â€" Uf help swift-borne to drowning mariners; 0! cheer to ships distrusted In the sale; of succuurs given unasked and joyfully; 0f mighty service to all needy souls. slyâ€"Ho {or the Pilot's orders, Whatever course He makes! Fnl‘ “0 WWW beyond the sky-line. And He never makes mistakes. Fm- much man captains _his own Soul. And chooses his own Crew, But the Pilot knuws the Unknown Seas, \nol Ht: wnll bring us through. ~~luhn ()xenham. And wide. free seas 3f Enimagined bliss, And 'l‘ruusure Isles, and Kingdoms to be “(011, -.\ml l'ndismn'crml Countries, and New Km. SKI-.1) I'H FALL XI'I‘I'ZNTIUN TO THE FACT 1 i'wshytvrlnu and Mvthmhst missionary }' ,inintly thv island of Santa Dumingo. drop- :! nzunws and using th titln "Evangelical" Hr I‘nm-v vt‘l‘o'vtiw way of realizing church ‘ _â€"-- v Wu 5m. “God have pity 11de ”file poor a In hlanw for their ignorance? Everyone wun-nctinn of Christ. should shoulder some surl‘vctinn would have lowered that man's ‘l' U _.V -_Vâ€", 0" UV OIDUV Ill What need is there of a more blessed gaoumnssc t‘ \RRH‘S \VI’IH l’l" \ PRO- m Suliuhmy England is this 2% ”w mm whn is full of agony and cried: “But where -â€"John Wanamaker Tennyson. VCV vv Xre yarn? children under-weight? Being underweight does not. neces- sarily mean being undernourisnegi. During school age there are adenoids and diseased tonsils to he watched. There are ear-aches and eye-strains to be relieved, and teeth to be treated. There are skin and scalp diseases. Spinal curve and weak feet, all of which can he helped and corrected if treated in time. A delicate child is no longer Medical examinations in the school is not a fad. It is based on medical research and confirmed by experience. When the war broke out, over twenty-five per cent of our boys were physically unfit. We must not repeat that neglect to the rising generation. Systematic mediâ€" cal supervision must be given to our children during the years they are at school. Careful medical exam,- ination should be given every child entering the school. And the mother should be present to hear what the doctor has to say, and im turn to ask questions for the benefit of the child. Especially so, in the case of non-Anglo-Saxon mothers. Thus they will come to understand that the school-doctor is trying to help their child. And the mothers‘ intelligent viiâ€"operation is needed to attain the best results. Our schools aim at wholesome citi- zenship, and whether your boy goes into professional life or into indus- trial life, sound health is essential to his success. What then can we do to make our boys and girls fit for the work of life? ‘ihnada aLand of Opportunities!” we say, and yet in this land are we breeding a race that shows appal- ling signs of deterioration? Statis- tics show an average of one physical defect for each school child in the United States. Fully twenty-five Hurrah! school has opened again! And what of the halth oi the boys and girls? “Keep a child robust and sound in body until he is eighteen” say medical experts. “and the chances are he will remain so throughout life”. How imortant tailed. A word to parents. Are your children free from frequent colds, enlarged tonsils, adenoids, decaying teeth? These are serious hindrances to their health. Are they free from eyestrain? Do they hear wel'l? Are they sound in body and limb? If not, then in school they lose a golden opportunity. Maximum Security at Minimum Cost "nil Int-1'! SAFETY Deposit Box in the A nearest branch of the Standard Bank will relieve any anxiety regarding the whereabouts of your valuables while permitting free ac- cess to them by you or a duly auth- orized person at any time during banking hours. The cost is less than one cent per day; the value received is an in‘estimable sense of security. Aberdeenâ€"“To lot, a shop in the Jewish quarter.” Japansâ€"“My marvellous paper is as solid as the hide of an elephant. My goods are forwarded with the speed ofa bullet.” South America.-~Alongsidc a huge restaurant was a little Chinese chop- suey restaurant. The big place put, out a. gigantic electric Sign, “We never close.“ The (Jhinaman hung out a card, “Me wakee, too." It all comes to this. We consider our reputation lost if our young people come from our schools illli- terate. Is our reputation secure it they come from our schools with needless physical defects and handi- caps. Let every boy and girl in Canada be given a chance to be physically strong. Amusing specimens of natural humor in advertisements have been collected by the “Canadian Digest,” which says of them that “some are conscinus, and some are merely unconscious, and some merely stunâ€" ned.” Some ul’ the examples are: Irish.â€"â€"4“Hay, straw, bran, oats and dripping sold here. and the fiddle taught after six o’clock." noes, surfing with adenoide, hard- ening meat or a cold, may become impossible to remedy, unless taken at the beginning. 13 your child to be under a handicap? Eye and ear defects are in a large measure responsible for inattentiveness. bad discipline and failure to be pro- mated. Frenchrâ€"Inscriptimb (or epitaph." on a tin of imported sardines: “The oil is guarantee. The fish she is very small." Boston. (Mass.)~â€"Keep of the grass. If yflu want to roam join the navy." What of the child's welh? [I teeth are lost, food cannot. be chew- ed, if they- are defective, disease germs lodge in them. if teeth and sums are diseased, poison invades the sysem and undermines the health. The child suffers pain, and no one can be at his best mentally or physioally_whil_e enffering. ___l What. of the Child‘s sight and hearing? Eyc-struin or defecive vision may cause irritability, head- aches, nausea, loss of meme, not infrequently bliqdness. And .ded- as‘we meager w on uww y, ashamed to be unhealthy, we are awake to the ideal of our genera» looked upon with pyide: tion. ADVERTISING LAUGHS to be healthy; Tom Bill also provoked another of Hook’s puns. An ingenious gentleman had been showed at a dinner table how he could cut a pig out of orange peel. Hill tried again and again to accomplish the feat, but after strewing the table about him with the peel of a dozen oranges he exclaimed, “Hang the pig! I can‘t make him.“ When Richard Bentley started his Miscellany Hook said, “An nm- nious titleâ€"Missâ€"sellâ€"any." Mrs. Smith, toax'fully: "A hungry. stray vat ramp. in this morning and ate. tlw canary. I am all upset. over it. I had the rat. killnd. of mursv. Howm'ur, I think I ran «at a nine l-L‘mh‘l' squah on (mist. “Why, Hill," said Hook. “you have done more; instead of one pig you‘ve made a litter!" Far wittier was the reply of some one else to Bentley when he said that he had at first thought of naming it the Wit’s Miscellany and afterward changed it to Bentley's Miscellany. “You needn‘t have gone to the other extreme." observed the other. ()m: of the best. known and harmi- est of Hook’s puns was uttered to a visitor to his house at Fulham. Lunking at Pulnoy Bridgc'. the \‘iSi- {W said he had heard that it was a good investment and. turning in his host. asked if that was wally su. [001.113 rm A century ago punning was more in fashion as an exercise of wit than it is nowadays. One of the well-known humorous writers of the time was Theodore Hook. many of whose bright sayings have been recorded in Mr. Walter Jerrold‘s A Bookof Famous Wits. Tom Hill, the reputed original of Paul Pry in the play of that name. was an old mm of whom the wits made fre- quent fun. All his friends pretend- ed to regard him as a Meumselnh, for no one knew his use. James Smith averred that it could never be ascertained. for the parish register where it wus entered had been destroyed in the Great Fire of “I really don‘t know," was the answer. ‘but, you have: only to (-I-uss 1t and you are sure to be told." CONSISTBNCY Mr. Smith, ordering lunch: “What’s the math-r. dear. aren‘t yuu fw'lillg well?" “Pooh! Pooh I" broke in Hook. “He is one of the little Hills that are spoken of as skipping in the Psalms.“ M5'Jncle wait M "w had fallen. m and W h the hawk'l mom '0' 3 weasel; it. was m but '9” still struggling vie-kl! that it had severed and" 00 5"?" dead. Chevrolet Sales and Service A. NOBLE. Pmp. GUARANTEED HEPAIRI NH H cadquarters for Greases M “('1' (“to V! 8. “Hr («'1' whit“? Klalnh ‘ ”Ollie [Hz-mu. an :flllt‘. \( Intion M m hm II ncummm- Mn: 6 plaguv L- n ‘ mdents. [ult‘hvxzhu bonic form M m WMHJWJ 1H ”H! “0.8. Thu [Imp ?. r118 an llltw hum W08 me “Ah ins. BPSldvs m~ of ground MHHY‘I munkleu- mu 1.. 6t gonhvr :H-v ~ -n that aw «mum». The". [mo-1mm H- gpre‘d Vdil'w'H} WIUIOIN Nu» m “ORG. “In 15‘ spread by cm the infevuuus Early Symptom K..\. ll.1_~'.~i symptun lungs?" hacknu: duri THE PASSPORT ‘Xi‘l‘l'h' 'l'lu-I' animal Stallvw relatiw pet, Ii nevm‘ I nus fu an an” nboy. \‘c slam ques 1w :1 that Iar rm! H our dun special a [norsnn But \\ mad in mm. a; beings. [Yndnuln the Inwm' that soc-m tor with van: I belie-\v HM animal's ”2"! when umn'ua When 1““ n @MS' Mug”: [8 being mud m at xpm'ho 'l‘hvn Unclear) Condm Gum! Nmn “11} Note: Dr. Sm public prim1 accompanied Dr. W. J. Sc cerlaln :Imnu (Copyright, 1 HE. In [from furl mm Lil-u ll 0' h rms ‘ ughi sum He

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