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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1901-6-27, Page 34111.1.111.— emieerws7i YE hair a week you wish. guesswork it's sure eve To re - Store color to gray hair use, te using for two or threeweeksnotice hovi much younger you 2p - pear, ten years younger tlt least. Ayer's Hair Vigor also cures dandruff,.prevents falling of the hair, makes hair grow, and is a splen- did Hair dressing. it cannot help but do things, for it's a lltilr-food. When the hair s well fed, it cannot help but grow. it males the scalp licaltily and this cures the disease that causes r a .01e beide. A.lt dry colas. ': x`t, cameo; vet badly, tett Flea Vigor steered tiz`* 'logien t +1'x1 n aa::dee uv L'tu' Very tl+a, tti ewtt rath14 darker that before, 1 t ;; t ilet.ie+ is tethioh Lil o i0 ter eD,a+1°• +a 6 Zeri:e ,tfee. Yet row, I.T. Look .in your mirror today. Take a last look at your gray hair. Itsure.- ly may be the last if you wash it so; you needn'tkeep your gray longer than There'sno about this; ry time. liy+a.1 11,1 oeseto all tee hrertaie et deers- se ve ;to nee at sale Visa m a+oto tla a fes :ease st. A el-eiaa, lie. J. 4.. A. Snit, rues, BRITISH TROOP OIL LINIMENT FOR Sprains, Strains, Cuts, Wotands, 'Ulcera, Oen Sores, Bruises, Stiff Joints, Bites and Stings of Insects, Coughs, Colds, Contracted •Cords, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Bronchitis, Croup, Sore Throat, Quinseyy Whooping Cough and all Painful Swellings. A LARGE BOTTLE, 25o. FOR OVRR FIFTY YEA.RS • •'AN OLD AND WELL-TETSn Remr.nS'. Mrs 'Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used for .over t1f:y years, by millions of mothers for their .,children while teething, with perfectsuccese It soothes the child, softens the gums. allays al pain, cures wind colic. and is the hest remedy for Diarrhoeal. It is pleasant to the taste. Sold by druggists in every part of the world. 25 .cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. lie sure and ask for Mrs Winsiow's 'Soothing ,:Syrup and take no other kind. .'lir. illhre, stntinn agent, Brucetield, left on .Mundee- for Atwood. where he has a better position ; during his stay here he hie: made many friends who sincereiy regret his departure. Mr. 'Grey, St, Catharines, has taken Mr. More's place. ABS L TE EC !TY. Cenuirie Carters 'Little Liver p a lls. .+fast, ear Signature of • ":ap, PaceSlmile ,Wrapper Below. Terminal and as dewy to take as sugar. rooru AOACHE, FOR bllilllESS FOR HLL10usNESL FORITO,RPID LiYER. OO CONSTIPA1JON�ti FORsALI,owaKrC FOR,ITHE COMPLEXION. I'lOd,, 1,0E41;v1ari ` w.wro. NATO t. 2s, cont, PerelltYegetaDle .„,,. ,,snc� CURE SICK HEAbhCNlg. CAR TE. RS 1I'ER THE SEWER'S FAITII, TH HARVEST TRULY COMETH NOT BY OBSERVATION. LIONS IN THE WAY AT SEEDTIME Why Ono Ougitt taways to 1)o One's Duty --Its Inilaeuce L'pon Others Is :`ot to Ile ]Ieasureil by Words and rhrases— The crisis That Was Not acct awl the V.easou For the Failure. Washington, June 23.—Front a pas- sage of Scripture unobserved by most readers Ilr. Talmage in this dis- course shows the importance of prompt action in anything we have to do fon: ourselves or others; text, Ecclesiastes xi, d, "Ile that obsery Beth the wind shall not sow:" What do you find is this packs sentence of Solomon's monologue? I find in i,t a limiter at his front door examining 'thea weather. It is seed - time. Ills fields have been plowed and harrowed. The wheat is in the barn in sacks, ready to be taken afield and scattered. Now is the titrate to saw•. But the wind is not faavor,tlele'. It may blow up as :storm le -fore night, and he may get wet if ce ,tarts out for the sowing; or it nay be a long stow, that will brash acct the seed from the soil; or there a iWy have been a Ions; drought, and the wind may Cunt ince to blow dry we'athe'r. The parched tiel(15 may not take in the gratin. and the birds zuay pick it up, and the laabor a s we'll a9 the seed may lee ousted. ; o llt gives up the work for that day anti goes into the house :end waits to see whet it will be on the morrow. On the morrow the wind is still in the 'wrong direction. and for a whole week and for a month. laid you ever see emit a long spell of tad weather? The lethargic and overcautious and dilaattu,v agriculturist allows the sea- son to hays without sowing. and no soteing. of a•Aatr--,', no harvest. That whet :.olonuns mains when he eityS in hie text, "Ile that ° een-tetlt 11S tegad shall not sew," As much in our time any in Soho It*(tnic tittles there is abroad at. fatal l►^Sitaancy, as disposition to let little clingy st.e)I' its. to ruinous adjoaarn- y I11ent, We all went 10 des Solute good in the world, but suety easily We are lt:iled'.al in our endeavors. Perhaps we are solicitors for bonne great charity. There is as good xtutn wino has large *gleans, and he is accustomed to give liberally to asylums, to hospitals. to reforiat eargaanizattionS, to schools, to eiten'rh4'S, to comcuIInitie5 desolat- ed with flood or devastated with fires. I.lut. that goofs man, like many a good man, is mercurial in his tem- perament. Ile is depressed by at- mospheric changes. lIi is always victimi.ed dry tltr east wind. For this or that reason you postpone the charitable solicit at ion. Meanwhile the suffering that you wish to allevi- ate does its awful work, and that op- portunity for relief is past. If the wind had been from the west or northwest, you would have entered the philanthropist's counting room and sought the gift, but the wind was blowing from the east or north- east, and you did not, make the at- tempt, and you thoroughly Illustrat- ed ms text, "lie that ohserveth the wind shall not sow." 'There. conies a dark Sabbath morn- ing. The pastor looks out of the window and sees the clouds gather and then discharge their burdens of rain, Instead. of a, full church it will be a handful of people with wet feet and the dripping umbrella at the doorway or in the end of the pew. The pastor has prepared one of his best sermons. It has cost him great research, and he has been much in prayer while preparing it. He puts the sermon aside for a clear day and talks platitudes and goes home quite depressed, but at the same time feel- ing that. he has clone his fluty. Ile diel not realize that in that small audience there was at Beast two per- j sons who ought to have had better treatment. One of these hearers was a man in a crisis of struggle with evil appetite. A carefully • prepared discourse under the divine blessing -would have been to him complete vic- tory. The fires of sin would have been extinguished, and his keen and brilliant mind would have been con- secrated to the gospel ministry, and he would have been a mighty evan- gel, and tens of thousands of souls would have, under the spell of his Christian eloquence, given up sin and started a new life, and throughout all the heavens there would have been congratulation and hosanna. and after many ages of eternity had passed there would be celebration among the ransomed gof what was accomplished one stormy Sunday in a church on earth under a mighty gospel sermon delivered to 15 or 20 people. But the crisis I speak of was not. properly meet. The man • in struggle with evil habit heard that stormy clay no word that moved ,him. `He went out in the rain unin-. vited and unhelped back to his evil way • and clown to his overthrow. HIatl it been.: a sunshiny Sabbath he wouldhaveheard sonttething worth hearing. But the wind blew from the storniy direction that Sabbath day. That gospel husbandman noticed it and acted upon its suggestion and may discover some clay his great mis- take, : Ile had a 'sack full' of the fin- estofthe wheat ,but he withheld it, and some day he will find, when the whole story' is told,. that he was a vivid illustration of the - truth of my text, "I -ie that observeth the wind shall reit sow.'e There was another person in that stormy Sunday audience that de- served something better from that •pastor, than extemporized nothing- ness. It'was la mother who was half awakened, to' a sense of responsibil- ity' in, regard to her household. She had begun ,to question herself as to. whether it would not' be better to introduce, • i to her.religion n h home a � .iti on that, would decide aright thee destiny of hex ,sons • and daughters. IEer home had so far been eontrolled soniy by worldly principles. She had dar- ed the riot of the elements that morning and lead found her way to church, hoping to hear sotuethiug that would help her to decide the do- ntestic question 'which was to her a solicitude. A good, strong sermon under the divine blessing would have led her into, the Kingdom of God and afterward her whole . family. The children, whether they became farm- ers or mechanics or merchants or artists or men of learned profession or wonnett at the head of households, would have dotce their work in a Christian way and after lives of use- fulness on earth would have taken thrones in heaven. It would have been a whole fancily saved, for time and saved for eterinity. But the pas- tor had adjourned the strong and effective discourse` to a clear Sun- day. The mother went home chilled in body, wind and soul and coil - eluded not to trouble herself or her household about• the future and to let to -morrow take care of itself and d, keep on 'doing as they had been do- ing. No God in that hone. No re- ligfous consolation in time of Tee- rea.'venlentt. No fortuation of thor- ough Christian character in the lives of those growing up boys and girls, They will go out into the world to. meet Its vicissitudes without any sublime re-anforcecuent of the gospel, What a pity it was that he slid not put down the leaanlitieript of 11142 well prepared sermon on the bible if he preachers from notes oe iuur It out of his soul if he bad lodged it there through c reful preparation', N ..HI'o allowed that opportunity. which could n'ver return, to pass into eter- nity iminlplove;d, Ile observCt1 by tle way the rain dashed against the windows of the parsonage. and the windows of the eltureit that, the Wind Wates front the east ear the nortiteaast, but he did not, sow Or sowed that Which was not, worth sowing.. In all departtcteuts of life there are these hindered lay the wind of pub- lic oI'i*tion. It Inas become an aphor- i;nnc in polities and in all great move.. ntents, -lie is waiting to see Which way the wind blows," And it is no sasy thing to defy- public opinion, to be rttn alltetnt by newspapers. to be ove'rhalatird in so:'sul circles, to Ue anathematized by those who hereto- fore Were friends and admirers. It requires a,, heroism which few pos as5, Yet no great reformatory or s'b'v.aat-, ing movement has ever been aceom- Plish(al until some one was willing to defy what the world Humid thins. or �aay or do, flat; there have been *.Heen at*ad women of that Lind. They stand all up and tiown the corridors of his- tory, acawples for us to follow. Communities and ciattrcltes and na- tions sometimes are thrown into hys- teria, and it requires a man of great equiposo to maintain a right posi- tion. Thirty-three years ago there vaunt 1a time or bitterness in Ameri- can politics, and the impeaelttn.+tat of a President of the United States was demanded. Two or three 1 attri- otie num, at the risk of losing their senatorial position, stood out against the demand. of their Iaolltieal 1tsSolaates end saved the vountret from khat which all people of all parties now see would have been a calamity and would have lout every subsequent president at the .mercy of Itis opponents. It only required the waiting of a few months, when time itself removed all controversy.. now many there are who give too much time to watching the weather vada anti studying elle barometeJr.i Make up your mind what you are go- ing to do and then go ahead and do it. 'There always will 1.e hindrances. It is a moral di'ateter if you allow prudence to overin.ttater all the other graces. The 11111,' makes more of courage and faith and perseverance than it does of caution. It is not once a year thatthe great ocean' steamers fail to sail at the appoint- ed time because of the storm signals. Let Lite weather bureau prophesy what hut -Henze or cyclone it may, next Wednesday, next Thursday, next Saturday, the steamers will put out from New York and Philadelphia and Boston harbors and will reach Liv- erpool and Southampton and Glas- gow and Brennen, their arrivals as certain as their embarkation. They cannot afford to consult the wind, nor can you in your life voyage. The grandest and best things ever accomplished have been in the teeth of hostility. Consider the grandest enterprise of the eternities—the sal- vation of a world. Did the Roman empire send up invitation's to the Heavens inviting the Lord to descend amid vociferation of welcome to comp and take possession of the most capacious anis ornate of the palaces and sail Galilee with richest imper- ial flotilla and walk over flowers of Solomn's gardens, which were still l in the outskirts of Jerusalem? No. It struck him. with ins It as soon as it could reach him. Let the camel drivers in the Bethlehem caravansary testify. See the vilest hate pursue him to the borders of the Niles Watch his arraignment as a criminal in the courts! See how they belie his, every action, ni.isinteipret his best words, howl at him with worst mobs, wear him out with sleepless nights on cord mountains! See him hoisted into a martyrdom at which. the noonday cowled itself with mid- niight shadows, and the rocks shook into cataclysm, and the dead started out of their sepulcher, feeling it was no time to sleep when such horrors c' were being enacted. Just call over the names of. the men and women who' have done most for our poor old world, and you will call the names of those who had mobs after. deem.. They were 'shun- ned shun-ned by the elite, they were cartooned by the satirists, they lived on. • food which you and •I would , not throw to a kennel., Some of then' 'died prison, 'some of . them' were burned at the stake, some of them were buried at public expense because of the laws of sanitation. They were hou•nele'd through the world and hounded •out of it. " Now we 'cross the ocean to see, the room in whichthey were born' or died and look up at the monu- ments which the church of the world has reared to their matchless fidelity and courage, Afters :lOCi or 200 0 300 yr ars ill world has mad ten it s. 7.nnind Lhat-,in,.cad ',oI hiin^ Cag('11a1, ed they oval. to laavo been garlrl,;nd- ed instead of cave of the xltounta.it fon, residence they ought to have hat bestowed stowed ui.aon them an Alhambra, Young unan,, you have planned what you are going to be and do in the world, but ,rou are waiting for cir curbstanees to become more favor- able. You are, like the farmer in, the text, observing the mind. Better start now. Obstaeles will help you if you conquer them. Cut your way through. Peter Coopor, the million- aire philanthropist, who will bless all succeeding centuries with the Institu— tion. he founded, worked five years for $+25 a year and his board. Many of us who are now preachers of the. gospel or medical practitioners or members of the bar or merchants or citizens in various kinds of business had very poor opportunity at the start because we had it too easy --- far too easy. We never appreciated what it is to get en education be - move our fathers or older brothers paid the schooling, and we slid not get the muscle which nothing but lht'rd work can develop. I congratu- late you, e ming man, if to you life is as struggle. It is out of stall cir- cutnstaneas (.sod nnnIeee heroes. if they are willing to be made. Cut your way through. If it. were proper to do so and you should stand in any board of ban&z directors, in any board of trade, in any legislature, state or national, and ask all who were brought up In luxury enol case to lift their haul. here unit' there a hand might be lifted. But ask those wile had an aerial hard time at the start to lift their hangs, aril most of the stands would be lifted. The heroes of church and state were not brought up oft confectionery and .cake, But ley subject takes another step, Through Medical science and den- tistry that has improved the world's 1nastication ants stronger defense agatilts t ellHlattic etbanAes and better un410*'Stpnding of the laws of health 1tunman lite has been greatly prolong- ed. But at centenarian is still a won- der. clow many people do pee know a hundred years old? I do not l:stow one. we balk of a. century as though it were at eery long reach of tince. But abet is one century on earth eo1nlaared with centuries that we are to live some'r:lu•re, somehow -len ecu- turieas. a million eentttiriee. as quintil- lion of centuries We are all determ- ined to get ready for .ti*' longer life we are to live after our exit frotu thibiNg sadelaan;ni'y, We are waiting for more propitious opportunity. We have too mutt busitcehs to attend to reeor or tan tench pleasure to allow anything to iuterfere withits bril- liant toreigrese. We are wait- ing until the wind blows in the right direction. We are go- ing to hon and sow the very best grain. and we area going to raise an eternal harvest of happiness. 11 `e like "haat you say about heaven, and we are going there. and at the right time we will get ready. But tuy lungs are sound, my digestion is good, the examining physician of the life insurance company .says my heart beats just the right number of times a minute. and I am cautious about sitting in a draft, and I ob- serve all the laws of hygiene, and my fatter and mother lived to be very old, and I come from a long lived. family, So we adjourn and postpone until, Iike the farmer suggested by Iny text, we allow the seeding to Inass. and sudden pneumonia or a reckless bicycle or an ungoverned au- tomobile put us out of life with all its magnificent opportunities of de- ciding aright the question of over -j lasting residence. A Spanish pro- verb says: "The renal of By and By leads to the town Of Never." Whether in your life it is it south wind or a north wind, a west wind Fr an east wind, that is now blow- ing, do you not feel like saying: "This whole subject I now decide. Lord God, through thy Son Jesus Christ, my Saviour, I am thine for- ever. I throw myself, reckless of everything else, into the fathomless ocean o,f thy mercy." "Tint," says someone in a frivolous and rollicking way,. "I am not like the farmer you find in your text, I do not watch the wine'. What do I care about the weather vane? I am sow- ing now." What are you' sowing, my brother? Are you sowing evil - habits? Are you sowing infidel and atheistic beliefs? Are you sowing hatreds, revenges, discontents, un- clean thoughts or unclean actions? If so, you will raise a big crop—a very big crop, The farmer some- times plants things that do not come op, andyhe has to plant them over again. But those evil things that you have planted will take root and come up in harvest of disappoint- ment, in harvest, of pain, in harvest of despair, in harvest of fire. Hosea, one- of the first of all the writing prophets, although Your of the otter prophets are put before him in the ;canon of Setipture, wrote an. as- tounding metaphor that may be quot- edas es zn d e i ze pt'v of chase, who do evil.They have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind." Some one has said, "Children may be strangled, but deeds never. There are other persons who truth- fully say: "I am doing the best ' I can. The clouds are thick and the Wind blows the wrong way, but I am. sowying • prayers and sowing kind- nesses' and sowing helpfulness and sowing ,hopes of a better world." Good for. you, my brother, my sis- ter! What you plant will come up. What you sow will rise into a hero - est the wealth of which you will not know until You go up higher. I hear the rustling of your harvest in the bright fields of heaven. The soft gales of that land, as they pass. bend the full headed grain in curves of beauty. It is golden- in the light of the sun that never sets. As you pass • F O P SHE VARIETY, The of Sovereign" rlioe for ladie is made in every kind of shoe) style. The very latest fashion is not too new for the " Sovereign shoe.. Handsome dress shoes. Strong, comfortable, mannish. walking shoes. Dainty,' fashionable, light shoes for receptions or otll,r itch:or social functions. Flexible welts, shit stitched uppers, fine imported leathers, beau- tiful fitlish and absolutely correct fit, $'3.00, $3.50 gall .+i.00. Late shoes $_.00, $�.Sc and $,3,ao. Stamped on the sole, Sovereign Shea' R. i-1, i41sVIa ET FX.LTE . FOR CHILDREN AND ADULTS CURES Diarrhtea, Dysentery, Cholera, Cramps, Colic, Cholera tnfantum, Cholera Morbus, Summer Com -- plaint and all Fluxes of the Bowels. HAS BEEN. IN USE FOR HALF A CENTURY. Harmless, Reliable, Effectual, and should be in every home. SURE REMEDY. Mr. F. Churchill, Cornell, Oat., I writes : "We We have used Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry in the home and always find it a sure remedy for dysentery." in you will not have to gird on the sickle for the reaping, and there will. be .nothing to remind you of weary husbandmen toiling under hot sum- mer sun on earth and lying down un- der the shadow' of the tree at noon- tide, sowere 1 tired w e e L1neY, so' very tir- ed. No, no; .your harvest will be reaped without any toil of your hand,,., ; without any besweating of yo,ir brow. Christ, i one of hi ser- t• rit, : 1 old how your harvest. witbe ha lao'vtllrn he saidr "The reap are a1nee's,-' USED 9 YEARS. Mrs. Jones, Northwood, Ont., writes : et‘ My baby, eight months old, was very bad with dysentery. We gave her Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry and it saved ber life. We have used it in our family far the last cline years and would not be without it." ACTION \WONDERFUL. Mrs. W. Varner, New Germany, N.S., writes , "1 have great con- fidence in Dr. Fowler's Extract of 'Wild Strawberry for various dis- eases in old and young. 9 My little boy had a severe attack of summer complaint and I could get nothing. to help him until I gave him Straw- berry. The action of this remedy was wonderful and soon had him perfectly welL" Lonccn,• Huron GOING Nonni— London. depart.,..... Centralia, Exeter Hensalt ...,.,.......... 1.ippcn Iirucafield Clinton Winglttm, arrive. Gem; Sourit— Winghaiu, depart Clinton 7.4e 4.2.5 ' Brucefleld 8.05 4.40 ippen 5.15 Heesagl 3.22 ' 5 02' Exeter 8.3.5 5.11 Centralia 8.40 5,25 London, arrive . 9.37 6.12 and Bruce i Messrs. Steric & Letheriand, Sea- . forth, have dissolved partaet ship, Mr. Passengor, ' Letherlandr'etirine holes 1' 0' business. • 8,15 ;e x, 4 40r, u. rs6 Goo , He intends retnrtaing t Sarnia or • 9.42 615, 9.50 6.25 9.58 6.33 ▪ t0.t5 G 55 A. women who is weak, nervous and 16%1°3 11U a:seC6r sloe.le a • tc tvliu li,i: +n r I' ,a ge p s „t t I , t l i hands end 653l..M. 3.t5r:lt, feet. enunof fe(t and u�t like a well person. O.ea;set's Iran Pills equalizise the circulation, 10:nnve nervottrness,. and give strength and rest. i Port Huron. Mr. St a: is hats taken in- to partuerar`p another gentlemen, e named McKay, from Toronto. BROWNING'S tigL Headquarters For Dyspepsia Cure Blood and Nerve Tonic Stomach and Liver Pills Iron Blood Pills Liver and Kidney Pills Kidney Mixture Sciatica Remedy Sarsaparilla, Cough; 2 Cough Mixture Cholera and biarrhoea, Mix hire Chilb]ain Lotion. Try- any of these preparations and their wonder you will be astonished at tiv.,n w ful healing and curing properties. A' Fei1.i1 line of Patent Medicines ;on hand, TOILET ARTICLES SCHOOL BOOKS AND SUPPLIES 1V C)'11.0ViNifiG 'Q 'nion La g dor ' Tbis signature is on every box of the genuine = Tablets v ltlt� lli�i�e Laxative �r® the remedy that cares a cold in one day ME TRc t who uial.os tla<i suit you me dee here t1 all make it right- he'll •put ea10101. conscientious work into every ditch. That will i faire its durability, We have some ; Bargfains J in seasonable suitings that we'd like to close out, You can save a few dollars lust as well as not.. P a� l'i le 1' gait/\TC` .TAI [.0111 EXETER.