Durham Chronicle (1867), 18 Apr 1912, p. 4

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Brass Lined and‘ Imi-Gfinde}a. sac? om EVERY AFTERNOON Pumps From $2 Upward ALL REPAIRING pmptty and properly attended to. Machine Oil. Harness 011, A106 Grease and H001 Ointment, go to 9W9?!“ Pd #98 Pipiyxu. Brass Inn-lactate: 0! And Dealer h PUMPS OF ALL KINDS W. D. CONNOR +.§..§..;..§..g..g..;.a,.;..;..;4 _.-___.__»rg~m.__-__.___~ -.â€"â€"-.-. { MEN «nu NEEI NERVE 7 .G I 9 .‘u"'.:..§. ‘ ' 0",“ . o . .0 .v.‘ Q . c‘..Â¥"".$* r ‘ . \ .é. I. “9.99:.';‘.'. 3 . f ' ‘3‘.“. O V. O .?‘.‘-o? A r I 9""... ‘ . ~...9‘ ‘ . - ',....‘ ¢ 9 '3‘; ° 9 '07.? ‘ , O .... Wé‘é‘rx M a} Q, J ‘1 . . t uallt) bu 'tute appealapce gogl‘eqCOStly and Never subs;l artide a .tmiidential rather 0110289 xppearance IS p . bot . ‘ Obtaln ___.__v -- vv .AAuUVL ’ UuLo «LL ‘ see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we no patients in our W’indsor offices which are for Corresp Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters DRS. KENNEDY 8r. KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. >Write for our private address. Dns.KENNEDY KENNE'Y S. P. SA UNDERS The Han-nosed: aka) April 18th, 1912 Wonderful Nervous System . D. Connor But Quality Is Essential if best results are to be obtained. Remember that you can follow this example in purchasing any- thing in Tinware, Graniteware, Stoves. Ranges, Furnaces, and General Plumbing Goods from Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St... Detroit, Mich. p o 9 9 9 b..rc.oorur¢§oc‘oozoo:o We? The nerves control _all actions of the body so that any- thing that debilitates them “ill Weaken all organs of the system. Early lndiscretioas and Excuses have ruined thousands 01 'promisin' young men. Unnatural Drains sap their vi gor and vitality and they never develop to :1 proper condition of 1::a::.1ood. They remain weak- lingzs, mentally, physically and sexually. How you feel? Are you nervous and “Talc, despondent and gloomy, specks before the eyes with dark circles under them, weal: back, kidneys irritable, paipitation of the heart. bashful, debilitating dreams, sediment. in urine. pimples on the face, eyes sunken. hollow cheeks. careworn ex- pression, poor memory, lifeless, distrustful, lack energy and strength, tired mornings, restless nights, change- ;Lble moods, premature decay, bone pains, hair loose, etc. This is the condition our New Method Treatment is GUARANT -ED TO CURE We have treatw :I I hoaxes of 3!en_ for almost a life- time and do not have to cxperxmcnt. Consult us NERVOUS DEBIUTY, VARICOSE VEINS. BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES. GLEET. BLADDER URINARY AND KIDNEY COMPLAINTS Free Booklet on Diseases of Men. If unable to can write for EARLY INDISCRETIONS AND EXCESSES HAVE UNDER- MIN ED YOUR SYSTEM and we will O . a .Ifcc 0,. ‘n v .Q A O i O i .V C ‘ 1.03:0”. . foOQnOl. . 00 00 OOoOhb'DCOOOOOOOO‘QO£ .WOOOOW‘OVCQNA QUESTION US” ‘ FOR HOME TREATMENT All letters from Canada must be addressed to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- ment in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to ical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat [ices which are for Correspondence and as only. Address all letters as follows: Sold by Mariano Co 1 tell you vfluether you We guarantee curable ' -â€"- V- 'VVV-w Aliandsomély' ifiuâ€"st' weekl . [APB . culation of any scientific journal. Tex-:2 c1151- Canad 83.75 a on: all n 8. ealers? .postage prepaid. Sold by rm‘ DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS «kc. Anyone sending a sketch _and descri tlon may quickl‘v ascertain our Opimon free w ether an invent on is probably amntable. fommnnlca- tionaamctlyconfldent a1. HANDBOO on Patent. sent. tree. Oldest ency for securing nts. P‘Et?m§}§ki‘hé-£9‘l‘5h Mm; recom- Patents taken ESE-6115:]: mam-3737 upccial notice. without. chime. lathe tell you FREE OF CHARGE are curable or not. cases of '4 Durham. r ? 0 O o g. '3’. ‘b‘ ‘o‘ '3' 4“}. + And first, We must learn to can- trol our thoughts and make them go Where we send them, In too many cases, thoughts wander here and there, with no power govern- We don’t (deed to sit down and Sigh over small mental capaCity, but go to Work at once and build minds for ourselves. Many people have the idea that We are obliged to be satisfied With our dower of mental ability, and so are excusable for failing to {each as ‘high level as some others. i Perhaps it will be interesting to ’ hear of an experiment one man tiied, p1oving that .it was possible to give an animal or a human be- ing more brains, and consequently a better use of the mental facul- ties. During twelve months, for five or six hours a day, she train- ed dogs to discriminate colors. He placed several hundred tin pans painted different tints, in the yard, with the dogs. At one time hel put their food under pans of a] certain tint, When they had learned to go at once to these pans for their food, he changed the col-l ‘or Ag ain he arranged it so that. they would receive an electiic, shock if they touched pans of any i color, save the particular color. They soon learned to avoid all the .pans except those of this tint, so rbv many different methods he trained them to recognize shades and tin’ts until they could discrim- inate between seven shades of red and as many shades of green, and in many ways they manifested more mental ability than any un- trained dog. While these dogs were being trained, another group of dogs were being deprived of the use of sight, by being! kept in a darkened room. At the end of the year both groups of dogs were killed, and their brains dissected.‘ The dogs that had been kept in darkness had less than the usual number of cells in the seeing area and the cells were smaller, while the dogs that had been trained to discriminate between tints and shades of color many times a day, had a far greater number of larger and 'more complex brain cells in the seeing areas than" any dog of that age and species ever had before. Therefore, it proves that “mind activity creates or- ganic structure.” l This is not only interesting, but of value to us When We remember that in cultivating ourselves in any direction we are adding to the welfare of future generations, and if We fail to make brains for our- selves, posterity Will in like degree be defrauded. -- a certain part of the brain, For example, the man Who has culti- vated his :hearing until he can hear sounds inaudible to ordinary men, has made for Ihimself more brain cells in the hearing area. If he has cultivated :his sight assiduous- ly, he has created more visual cells thereby increasing mental ability. We may know that by ‘exercising a certain organ We are building up One Professor tells us that only about ten per cent. of our brains are cultivated; that there is a vast field of brain possibilities 1y- ing undeveloped in each one of us. and that these possibilities are to be developed through cultivation of the senses. i We «have learned that certain areas of brain govern certain movements of body. In the case of a mill girl who was subject to epilepsy, and had pain in her thumb at each attack, it was decided to remove the part of the brain which governed the moâ€" tions of that thumb. This they could do because they knew just where the motor centre lies, and yet they were able to takeout no more than that, for when the wound was healed, she had full use of all her hand except the thumb i. ‘ i When a baby is born, it is deaf, dumb, blind and helpless, but immediately the eternal World 'begins to act upon it. It begins to experience sensations of heat and cold, of hunger, of pain. The eyes begin at once torecognize the light. The ears to become aware of sounds. After a time objects are made clear to its sight, and certain sounds are recognized. It learns its mother’s face and voice, and little by little becomes ac- quainted with all the objects in the world of home. It begins to use its limbs, and in this also it is at work building its mind. We do not sufficiently realize that ev- ery aimless movement of the baby has in reality a great purposeâ€" that of creating brain power, suf- ficient to enable the baby to con- trol itself in all its voluntary movements. We do not think that the fluttering hands and little kicking feet are really building brains, but this -is so. And all of life’s experiences have been build- ing brains for us ever since. The following is a paper read at the last meeting of the W'omen’s Institutez. , BUILDING BRAINS THE DURHAM CHRONICLE. F_--UBER -0 "“95 "MK 8:9 men. ID son, M. Wrigh‘t, M. Haley, K. Cook, E. Wright. Sr. Pt. IIâ€"E. McClocklin, W. Jackson, B. Nelson, R. McClocinn, W. Haley, J. McGiIlivray. Jr. Pt. IIâ€"J. Peart, W. Gray, C. Cook, < . Sr. Iâ€"M. Greenwood, A. Blalr. Jr. Ibâ€"E. Cook, H. Firth, J. B. Haley. ' \ Jr. Iaâ€"W. Haley. . . . Greatest improvement m Wmtmg during termâ€"Winnie Jackson. MRS. J. LOVE, Teacher. V NO. 5, GLENELG, FOR MARCH. Sr. IVâ€"C. Nelson, F. MacRae, E. P-eart. V They have ragaâ€"335d my stomach and bowe}s. I am cured of constipation, and anew.” they have no equal a a medi- FOr over“ half a century Dr. Horse’s 313d? 11001:1 Pillis have been con- .pa onan cg ,inactive ' , 13th 311%? aiélmengédwhich result from an. . ey ans: the whole mm apéyunfy the blooii. Sold amber! “For many years I have been troubled with chronic Constipation. This ail- ment never comes single-handed, and I have been a victim to the many illnelses that constipation brings in its train. Medicine after medicine I have taken in order to find relief, but one and all left me in the same hopeless condition. It seemed that nothing would expel from me the one ailment that caused so much trouble, yet at last I read about these Indian Root Pills. That was indeed a lucky day for Inc, for I was so impressed With the state- ments made that I determined to giv_e them a fair trial. Mr. George Andrews of Halifax, 11.8.! writs: With body poisoned by these pgs- sions, a person cannot feel Well, for the physical organs cannot do good Work unless fed by .pure blood. Benevolent emotions create life-giving germs in the body, so to love others is not only helpful to us but also gives us new life. It is much easier to form ahabit than overcome it. Our emotions, like our thoughts, create habits, but more than this, they create ac- tual physical conditions. A fit of anger will in five minutes create so much poison in the body that half an hour is none too much to eliminate it. Think What must be the bodily state of one who is constantly irritated or angry, who feels jealousy, hatred or revenge. When we are sau'nteri-ng in the wood, we sometimes come upon pathways, and we kanW' at once that many mamy foorsteps of men or animals have been needed to make the paths. -.If those who had walked 'here had wandered each in :his own way, no path would have been made. One pair of feet going often over the same ground will make a path. So the thoughts, traversing the same areas of brain will make records on the brain cells which we may call paths. Every time a thought fol- lows the same line it creates a deeper impression and makes it easier to go over the same terri- tol‘v again. In this Way ‘habits are foimed. If the thoughts are good, the 'habits will be good; if evil, the habits will be bad. ing and guiding them Mr. Andrews praises Dr. Morse’s Indian Root Pills. BURIED 0F BUNSTIPATON Wm. Black, Durham. 3 permanent colors â€" Red, Brown, Green- and natural Slate. Look into it before you decide on that new roof. so Sole Canadian Mfrs. I'll-ISTANBARDPAINTCO. otCuada.umted.IontreaL gives longer and more complete protection, per dollar of cost, than metal roofing, shingles or any other ready roof- ing. With over 300 imitations, Ruâ€"ber-oidis still the best. Made in ' ROOFING and Beauty Life xvii. 20). so we are included in Hisi‘r prsryer. and He ever liveth to make tho: tercession for us. In the order in which we have them in our lesson. the one who denied Him is first. and the one 3 Who betrayed Him is last. and it is the ' same in Matthew and Luke. while the order of the others varies just a little. It must be for a purpose that the weakest and the worst begin and end the list, the one a true disciple, one of the inner three. and after Pentecost used more than either of the others; the other a devil. Yet infinite wisdom did the choosing. and His way is always perfect. so we are dumb and can only wonder that He ever chose us. “chose us before the foundation of the world that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love" (Eph. i, 4). With the exception of Peter and John, how little we know of any of them! Philip and Andrew are to the front, not in the most favorable light, at the feeding of the 5.000; James and John desire first places in the kingdom; Thomas is the last to believe in the resurrection, yet He loved them all. Luke vi. 12. 13. tells of His spending all night in prayer to God and then, when it was day. of His choosing twelve of His disciples, whom He named apostles. I often wonder if we understand prayer as practised by Him. Think of our prayers. a few mo- ments of confession and petition, and. contrast this “continued all night in prayer to God.” He had nothing of sin to confess, so it must have been an all I night of communion with His Father concerning the things of the kingdom and concerning these men whom He was about to set apart specially for Himself. Verse 13 of our lesson says that He called unto Him whom He would and they came unto Him. 0n the last night before he was crucified He said to them. “Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you and or- dained you, that ye should go and bring forth fruit and that your fruit should remain.” When he called these men He had in mind not merely the few years of ministry in a mortal body, with much weakness and failure on their part, but He saw the kingdom and the twelve thrones on which they : would sit ruling the twelve tribes of . Israel (Matt. xix. 28; Luke xxii, 30). I â€"It was not the time to talk with them I of that; but. though He did speak of it I before He‘left them, He also said. “II have yet many things to say unto you ’ but ye cannot hear them now" (John I xv, 16; xvi, 12) He called them thatI they might be “with Him." He want- I ed them not only in His company. but ; to be‘wholly one with Him. seeing things as He did, having His mind I about things, as far as such mortals I could; but oh, how they failed, and} how we fail, and how we must grieve I Him by our unbelief and our ownI thoughts instead of His! He wanted ‘ them with Him that He might send; them forth to preach and to heal.I Whom He blesses He desires to make a blessing to others. and He has left I us here in His stead, saying to His' Father, “1 am no more in the world. but these are in the world ” He also prayed that through us the world might believe and know (John xvii,11: . xxi. 23). He not only prayed for theI; apostles. but for all who should be-I : lieve on Him through their word (JohnI Text of the Lesson, Mark iii, 7-19. Memory Verses, 14, 15â€"Golden Text, John xv, 16, R. V.â€"-Commentary Pre- pared by Rev. D. M. Steal-us. The first part of this lesson is found in Matt. :11. 15-21. as well as in Mark. and the record of the choosing or the twelve is found in Matt. x and Luke vi and in our lesson verses. Our medita- tion is upon the record as found in the several gospels. When Jesus knew that they had determined to kill Him He withdrew with His disciples to the sea. When people resist the gospel and will not hear of our Lord Jesus our in- structions are to let them alone and withdraw from them (Matt. 1:, 14; Acts xiii. 46; II. John 1:. 11). As then multi- tudes followed Jesus because they needed what He had to give. so there are multitudesnow hungering for they know not what. but it is Himself they need. In those days they heard what great things He did, and they came to Him from all parts. even from Tyre and Sidon, as well as from beyond Jordan. and He healed them all and cast out unclean spirits (Matt. xii. 153) and charged the healed ones not to make him known. The crowd so thronged Him that lie bade his disci- ples to bring Him a boat that from it He might be able the better to teach them. We are vessels also. and He de- sires from and through us to make the glad tidings known. but few seem willing to give Him the vessel. The quotation from Isa. xiii. 1-4. in Matt. xii, 15-21. must be understood in the light of the context. and thus it is plain that the bruised reed and smok- ing flax represent His enemies. whom He 'might easily break in pieces. but the time is not yet. Compare 11 Kings xviii. 21. Some see in the reed and flax a suggestion of the weakness of His own people with which He will not deal severely. That phase of the truth is found in Heb. iv, 15. 16. but here we are pointed onward to the time of judgment upon His enemies. and after that the winning or the nations to Himself through Israel. now meekness and submission and sufiering. and then the glory. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Lesson lll.â€"Second Quarter, For April 21, 1912. SUNIM’ SGHIUL Upper Town - Dun-bani iCANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY g TIME TABLE 4.00 4. 11 4.14 4.24 4. 40 5.15 K] fl :1 f] f] :1 RRRRRE O O 6‘ ‘6 6‘ 6‘ Durham Glen “ 11.54 .1 9 9 McVVilliams“ 11.44 9.09 9.06 “ 11.41 Priceville “ 11.31 8.56 " SaugeenJ. “ 11.18 8.43 Toronto R. 3MACFARLANE. “ 11.15 7.55 - Town Agent: N cw Gracery Store Fresh Groceries Always in Stock ."§§‘§§§.§§.9§§§9999§9Q+9 Trains Wili arrive and depart as fol lows. until further notice:â€" P.M A.M. P.) P. 3.15 6 25 Lv.Walkerton ALI-.12. 10. 3.28 6.38 “ Maple Hill " 123-" 9. 3.37 7.47 “ Hanover “ 12-1 9, H b‘ I 05 at 1‘1 “L‘s- V 'â€" Trains leave Durham at 7.15 a.m.. and 2. 45 p. m. Trains arrive at Durham at 10.30 a.m.. :.50pm..and850 pflm EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY " A “_. H. G. Elliott, G. P. Agent, Mont-real. Were offered our graduates dur- ing Morch, according to our Em- ployment Dep‘t File, You never need wait. Thorough prepara- tion with us insures immediate returns in Cash for you. Get; free catalogue. Central Business College, Yonge Gerrard Sts., Toronto. \V. H. SHAW", Pres. Erand Trunk Railway TIME-TABLE DURHAM poplins etc. We have our popular line of Dollar silks in the different shades, also jacquhards at 35 cts., Ginghams in Checks and stripes. Linens and Towelings galore, Check muslins, etc. Kid gloves for Easter, popular price $1.00. ZENUS CLARK Also a limited amount of iron work and machine re- pairs. Acall 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 ié pxepaied to take OldeI'S for 87 POSITIONS P.M. PJI. Lv.Walkerton Ar.12.40 10.05 “ Maple Hill ‘° 12.25 9.50 “ Hanover “ 12.17 9.42 “ Allan Park “ 12.08 9.33 ‘6 Durham ‘ “ McVVilliams “ Glen “ Priceville " SaugeenJ. ‘ " Toronto " o6 House Fittings N'ER Depot Agent R. GUN. Tewn Agent and all kinds of â€"- SEPT SUNDAY A. E. Duff D. P. Agent. ONTARIO THREE. Tordnto.

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