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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1899-01-06, Page 24 2 THE HUR, A Guaranteed Catarrh Cure. Japanese Catarrh Cure -use six terms- ibuy them at one time -apply exactly ac- cording to the directions -and If You t re not cured see your druggist; he will akTunge to/ pay you your money back. There's a positive guarantee with every box that Japanese Catarrh Cure will cure, ri•c cure, YOU get your money hack, Guarantee in every package. 50 cents at all druggists. 11$ Important to Athletes i , • Mr. Mack White, the, well-known trainer of the Toronto Lacrosse Club and Osgoode Hall Football Club, writes: I consider Griffiths' Menthol Liniment unequalled for athletes or those -training, I have used It with the best suceese, ima can heartily re- commend it for stiffness, soreness. sprains and all forms of s.welilltig. and inflamma- tion. An druggists, 2,1 cts, 22 ASTH Why Continue Suffering? Mures Holds Out Her Arms to Help You - Clarkes Kola Compound Has S ere - !hilly Coped With This Drawl Ds.aaO and Cured to Stay Cured. In the Kola plant -a medicinal botanical Product discovered in Africa-haS been found the mecca for asthma patiente. Com- pounds of this wonderful medicinal plant have been tested in very aggravated and distressing cases of long standing and prov- ed to not only relieve Instantly, but perform speedy and permanent cure. Clarkes Kola Compound has had meet successful tests in the leading hospitals of gngland ad the treated States and Canada. In three years In the Dominion alone five hundred testi- monials have been received. 'Wm. Brown of 500 Burrard street, Vancouver, B.C., says: - 'I have been a great sufferer from tsthma for four years. For four months could not work a day. I lost my appetite gnd lost' 40 pounds in weight. Physicians tjold me to leave the country or I could nit live. Just about this time I procured a ttle of Clarkes Kola Compound and in on ' week I was back to work. I have takn the -treatment two months and I am fl. cured r man." Sold by druggists at two dollArs per bottle; three bottle, with cure guaranteed, fee Eve dollars. Griffiths tt Macpher on Co., 1.21 Church street, Toronto, Ontario 7. Sold by J. S. Robertd. REAL ESTATE Itteit SALE. FOg„SALE, OR TO LET. -A dwelling hone 8:tuated on Goderich street, contain ng ten rooms, good cellar, hard and soft water a i good ont•buildino. Now °erupted° by J. L. Suit h, mar - shank Poe:leaden elm) about the 1st of ielolt. Apply to A. G. AULT, Seaforth. $701-1 R ill purchase the comfortablef and plena. I) antler eitnated cottage on James street, Seaforth, at present occupied by Mr. A. Scott. There are 8 remota with bard and setts water. also a , large etab e. The lot is a corner lot and well planted with fruit and ornamental trees. Apply to A. SCOTT, Seaforth. 1508 -ti DESIDENCE IN FIRUPEFIELD FOR ALE.- 1.13 For sale the frame dwelling houee and illicit near the railway station in Brueefield. Tho ho ale coo - tains ten rooms; a steno ceder and hard and soft water in the house; also a good Istahle. There is a quarter acre of land. Apply to ALEX. MUSTARD, Bruilefield. 15464f FARM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 5, Conomion 6, Hallett, near village of Renburn, containing about 100 acres, all cleared and In a good. State of cultivation. There are good 'innings, good Orehard and plenty of excellent water. This i4 a splendid farm and will be sold cheap. Immediate pseeeeelon. Apply to MRS. SOHOALES, Constande P. O. 1607 , ohgESIDENOE IN SE 4FORTH FOR SALE. -For 0 sets the comfortable cottage on North Main street, Seaforth, belonging to the estete of the late Moore Boyd. The house contains seven rookne, be- sides a large summer kitchen and a good none cellar and stable. Also hard and soft water, The property will be :sold cheap, a.4 the estate millet he wound up. Apply to JOHN LANDSBOROUGH, Sealorth. 15974f VOR SALE -Fat sale 220 acre farm in McKillop, X being Lots 24 and 25, Concession 10, mai north part of Lot 25, Concession 9. This land has been m pasture since first cleared, 25 or 30 yeers :ego, therefore is rich and free frrm foul weeda It is eituated on the gravel road, five miles north of Sea - forth and nine from Brussels. Terms of payment made to suit purchaser For particulars apply to W. GOVE.NLOCK, Seaforth. 159441 - 1 . - _U MIAMI FOR SALKi -For sale, in the Tcwn hip of ,McKilloo, the north 60 acre@ of Lot ' 5, f 0 noes - elan 14, boundary lilac. About 47 acres cleared, three sores of eocd hardwood bush, about two airgee of ehofee fruit trees, solleundurpaseed, well dated and a fenced; school half a mile away, !met orae ani church convenient; will be sold cheap. Fr par- ticulars, apply to the proprietor on the prendses, or Walton P. O. DANIEL mcMILLAN, Proprieter. _. lti194f filIMBERED FARM FOR SALE. -For sale, the j_ north half of Lot la, Concession 14, McKillop, sontaining 88 sores, about 30 acres of which aclear- ed, well fenced and under good cultivation; tie bal- ance is well timbered with saw logs, rails, etc. This property is valuable for its timber, and will he sold cheap. Thirty or forty acres of the timber will he Gold without the land if desired. Apply on the ad- . joining farm, or to Walton P. 0. JAMES CAMP- BELL. 161941 -},ARM IN ALGOMA FOR SAT.1.-For, Fele the South East quarter of section F., toarnehip of Laird, contaibleg 160 acres. There are feel acres cleared and free from stumps and under or p. Com- fortable log buildings. The balance is well timbered. It is within four milea of Etihoorvy rallwa etation, and six miles of the prosperous villeg of Port Findlay. This is a good lot, and will be a Id cibeap, and on eaey terms. Apply to WILLIAM f M SON on the prernisee, or to ALEX. MUSTOR' field, 154 at 'DUILDING LOT FOR SALE -The very, d. table La building lots, being number, 37, isS, and is situated on Main street of Eemondyille an: Ssa• forth. The whole oeuteins about one acrc, an will ne sold in separate parcels or together to, out the purchaser. This property is jest eouth o the Woollen Mills and Mr. S. Diektion'e properts seteh of the carporati , and Is emaiderecl the meet desirable branding site either tar le ive.to reeidem res or a factory. His high and convenient, and ha a treat south and west. Apply to JANE or JOHN P AT, Egmomiville P. O., Executors to the Estate off the late John Sproat. . 15 •tf PLENDID FARMFOR 3 ALE. -For sale the splendid farm of Mr. Robert Govenloc , on the North Road, a mile an' a bait from Sc.forth. I contains 175 acres, nearly a. I cleared and n a high state of cultivation, There is a two st ry brick house, good bank barn and everything in i rat ,olass condition and well underdrelned. It will b sold on easy terme, as the proprietor dot:ire:3 to rrtire , If not gold before the fall it will be rented, Adifrees ROBERT UOVENLOCK, Seaforth P. 0. 1593 if FAM FOR. SALE, ---Farm in township cf Tucker - smith, being Lot 20, Oonceselon 2, IL RI. 8 , con- taining 100 acres at good land, well adapted f )r either tiTaill or stook raising; land in good state of cultiva- tion, 8 acres c:f good hardwood bush. On the tree are two good frame barns, stone enabling under ne ; driving shed, never -failing spring near barn, brick house and kitchen, soft water irt aide good well or- chard, etc. The farm is well situated, being five miles from Clinton and six from Seaforth, on good gravel. road; convenient to school, _church opixieh.e place; will be sold cheap as proprietor intends giv- ng up farming, For particulars apply on the pram - loos, or to A. E. TURNER, Clinton, Oet. 101,04f mama- teTMEETITiaitT FOri. Lot 34, Coaceueion 2, la R. 8., 'finekelerinlirh, , containing ILO acres., 90 of which areelerxried, un divined and in a hili g°tate of onitivati roe rs- maining 10 acres are uncalled hard wood he.h. There is a good frame house ; a large bank born with stone stabling ; aloe a }ergo shed and ot1hr buildings ; a large orchard of good bearing be een There is plenty of water. The land is of the very be quality and it is a first-cOves term and ni.it be sold to close up the affairof the treestie of the ia'e John Walker It is wihin six miles of gleefori i nd Clinton, and ten mitre from Boseelel s ati Also tore. (pi .rtsre of e e. .‘ ;pod school. A oolv on the premieee, or to the neder- eigsied, Pone. 1k Id P. U. JA,111Es W„I.L,KKii, 141 -tf • Snap Bargains in Real Estate wed Live Stock. THIRTY 1.0i,LA a 4.41/ W'1,(: all hu fr, t. re farm -a fir4:-class grain and etyck farre--:tthlr the Village of Zeirieb, in the township of ay, Coon .y Huron; goad buildings, good fences, plenty of water and a most desirable place; ale) three thoronchbrad shorthorn bulls- and three Yorkehire boars, all fit for service-; also set eral roadster borsce,! all good etock, and prices right. For particulars apply to S. Re O - N'S, Zurieh P. 0. 101241 MONEY TO Moans to losn at 41 and 5 Any aincelot an (het -cave nom ply to R. HAYS, Doleireon forth, ode Washingto J the exit of one y another year are which Dr. Tal course, whiob pr of measuring tim employed; tet, old art thou? The Egypti roposes a n. 1. -Appropriate, to ar and the entrance of he practical suggestions age puts in this dis- pose a different mode •trot* that ordinarily anomie xlvii, 8, "How n capital was the focus of the world's ealt., In ships) and barges there had bee b ought to it from India frankincense an • cinnamon and ivory and diamond ; trimn the north,' marble m and iron; fr Syria, purple and silk.; from Greece, florn of the finest horses of the wqrld, and so e of the most brilli- ant chariots, end rem all the earth that which could please the eve and charm the ear aed gratify the taste. There were tern les aflame with rod sandstone, enters i by the gateways that were gunned by eUlars bewildering with hieroglyphics and wound with brazon serpents id adur ad with winged area - tures -their eye§ nd beaks; and pinions glittering with p eolous stones. There were 'marble eel mils blooming into white flower ibeds. There were stone pillars, at the t p bursting into the shape of the ideas when in full bloom. Along the then ca, lined' with sphinx and fano and Obeli k. there were. princes who came ln g rgeousiy upholetere palanquins, ()seri e by servants in emir! t or elsewhere thaw by vehicles, the snow white horses, golden bitted and six abreast, dashing at full run. On the floors of mosaic t e glories of Pharoah were spelled out in letters of porphyry and beryl and fie e. There were orna- ments twisted fro), the wood of tam- arisk, embossed wi h silver breaking into foam. There were ootetools made out of a single precious stone. There -were beds fashioned out of a crouched lion in ,bronze, There were chairs spotted with ,the sleek hides of leopards. There were and armed with th beaks of blithe As sofah hooted with tileclaws of wild beasts you stand on the level beach of the sea on a suirarner day and -look either way, and there are miles of breakers, 'white with the ocean foarn, dashing shoreward, so it seemed as if the sea of the world's -pomp and wealth in the Egyptian capital for milSe and miles flung itself up into white breakers of marble temple, mauso- leum and obelisk. It we to this capital and the palsoes of Pharoah that Jacob!, the plain shep- herd, came to meet hie son Joseph, who bad become prime minister in the royal apartment. Pharoah and Jacob met, dignity and rusticity, the gracefulness of the court and the plain manners of the field. The king, want ng to make the old country -man at ease and seeing how white his beard is and how feeble his step, looks familiarly `into his face and says to I the agedMan, "How old art Thou?" 'Ways of.kleasuring Time. Last night the gate of eternity opened to let in, amid the great throng of de- parted eenturies, the sour of the dying year. -Under the twelfth stroke of the brazen hammer of the city clock the patriarch fell dead, and the stars of the night were the funeral torches. It is most fortunate that on this , road at life there are so nsany milestones, on which we can read just how fhst we are going toward the journey's end. I feel that it is not an inappropriate question that I ask to -day, when Itikook into your faces and say, as :thane did to Jacob, the patri- arch, "How 014 art thou?" le - Peopwho a e truthful on every other subjece he about their ages, so that I do not solicit from you any liters; response to the question have asked. I would put no one under temptation; but I simply -want the morning to see by what rod it 113 we are measuring our earthly. existents. Th is is a right way and a wrong ,Way of measuring our earthly exigtonee. The e is. a right way vrron why of m asuring a door, or 1 or an aeoh, or a tower, and so there is a right Way and wrong way et4neetisur lier meaning Mat I. lug ou earth' existence. It is with veteran a to thi Ate confront you his morning with the stupendous question a the text, and ask, "How -hoed art t ou?" , There gni m ny who estimate their life by here we Idly gratification, When Lord Dundas w wished a happy new year, he raid,. " t will have to be a hap• vier year than t • past, fur I hadn't one happy moment in all the it manilla that have gone." But that has not been the experienee of most of us. We have found that thoeigh she world Iis blasted with sin it is a very- s hri ht and beautiful place i to reside in. ,W have had toys innumer- able. There is hostility between the gospel and the merriments and the festivities of life. I do not think that we full7 enough appreciate the worldly pleasu ea Gott gives us. When you remount your arilioymenes, you do net go far enough aok. Why do you not go baok to the tirne when you were an Want in your mo her's arena, looking up Into ithe heaven her smile; to those days when You fill the house with the uproar of boleterou merriment; when you shasited as you jdtched the ball on the play- ground; when, on the cold, eharp win- ter night, muffled up, on skates yob shot over the resounding ice of the pond? ave you forgotten all those good days that the Lord giro you? Were yen meter a boy? Were yoh never a girl? between those times and ehis bow many merolee , the Lord hae bestowed upon you! EHow many joys) have breathed up to you froin the hewers and shone down to you with e voice of soaring birds and tumbling , I ' i sonde aid booming sea 'and thunders at with bayonets of fire charged down e moun ain siciel Joy Joy! Joy! If , ere is any one who has e right to the 1 joyraents of the world lit is the Chris- ; an, for God bee given hira a lease of 1 erything In the promise. "All are _ th LOAN. ce th th per (amt. par annum. l th laity. A, - Benk :Buildieg, 8, a• en 1607 • ti T your A who ton grest bath bie f enter of I tune shad thor poun kind login Saln clan' Lane grow Bieh favor lexic life o in to et! on rro • re or Tho Measure of Life. I remark that there are any ate their life on earth by their nd infefortunee. Through a y of your lives the plowshare very deep, turning up a tend- . You have been betrayed and riled and est upon and slapped nenoseemid pounded of mist or. o ethightest life must have its and the smoothest path its n the happiest brood the hawk No escape from trouble of some. ile glorious John Milton was 0 °penlight heheard that was glad of it. While Sherie- tidy was being enacted in Drury atre, London, his enemy sat at it in the stage box. While ooper evae surrounded by the tamed men, his wife took his anusoript, the result of ei long iety and toil, and threw it f 1 an he re. Misfortune, trial, vexation for a mos everyone. Pope, applauded of all the wind, ham a stoop in the shoulder that 4lnn.ys him so much that he has a tunn el dug so that he may go unobserved from garden to grotto and from grotto to garden. Cane, the famous Spanish artist Is disgusted with the crucifix that the priest holds before him because 11 is such poor speoimen of sculpture. And so, soinoeimes througn learned menace and sometimes; through physical distress - aye, i i 10,000 ways -troubles come to hares and annoy. An yet it is unfair to measure a man' life by his misfortunes, because when there is one stalk of nightshade there are 60 marigolds and harebells; wber there is una cloud thunder charged there are hundreds that stray aerate the heave s, the glory of land and sky asleep th ir bosom. Itemises death came and took our child away, did you immeli- ately ergot all the live years, or the ten years, or The 16 years, in weigh The came every night for a kiss, all the tones of your heart pealing forth at the sound of her voice or the soft touch of her hand? Beeau e in some financial Euroolydon your f rtune wont into the breakers, did you fo get all those years in whisk the luxuri 0 and extravagances of life shows �d on your pathway? Alas, that is -an un tee man, an ungrateful man, an , unfair man, an unphilosophio man. and, most fall, an un -Christian man, rile .ineasu as his life on earth by groans and tears arid dyspeptic ht and abuse and scorn Ind terror and neuralgic) thrust, Wasted 1Y•ars. Aga n, I remark thSe there are many , people who estimate their life on earth by th amount of money they have accum hated, They say, "The year 1866, , or 187 , oil 1898, was wasted." Why? "Made no money." Now, it is all cant i and in inc rity to talk against money, as thoughlit lad no value, It may elopement refinenenr and education and 10,000 ' blessed au rundings. It is the spreading of- the ta le that feeds the children's hunge ., It is the lighting of the furnace that k eps you warm. It is the melding of the -bed on which you rest from ear' and an leti. It is the carrying of you out at ast to decent sepulcher and the puttin u of the slab on whioh is °Hassle th story of your Christian hope.. It Is ,sl pl hypocrisy, this tirade in pul- pit an leo ure hall against money. But his all this is so, he who uses money or thinks of money as anything hut a ea e to an end will find out hfs niletak w en the glittering trisaseres slip ou of his nerveless grasp and he goes out of this world without a shilling of mon o a certificate of stook. He might otter have been a Christian por- ter that opened his gate or the begrimed 'workni n who last night heaved the coal bete hi cellar. 'Bonds and mortgages and leases ave their use, but they make a poo: yardstick with which to measure life. " hey that boast themselves in their wealth and trust in the enuititudis of their el has, minaof them can, by any means, redeem his brother or give to God a nsom for him that he should not see corruption." ' But I remark, there are many -I wish there wore more -who estimate their life by theie moral snit spiritual development. It is ieot sinful, egotism for a Christian Man to isay,'"I ahe purer than I used to be. I alio more ohosecrated to Christ than I used to be. T have got over a groat many o the bad habits in which I used to indulge. I am a great, deal better man than I fised to be." There is no sinful egotismlin that. It is not base egotism for a so tiler to sah, "I know more about military tactless than I used to 'before I took a musket in My hand and learned to 'present arms, t and when I was a pest to the drill officer." It is not base egotism for a sailer to say, "I know bet- ter bow to Glow dews the mizzen topsail than I timed tes Where I had ever seen a ship." , _And there is no sinful egotism when a Christian man, fighting the bat - des of ; e Lora, or, if you will have it, voyagi toward a haven of eternal resit, Kaye, ' I know more about spiritual tactics and about voyaging toward heaven than I Used to." Why, 4here are those in this presentee who havi n4eaeured lances with many a foe and n orsed It! There are Christian men her w o have become -swarthy by 1 hammering at the forge of calamity. : They stood on ant:direly different plane 1 of oharecitor from- that which they once i ocoupiedl They are measuring their life i on earth' by goide gated Sabbaths, by , ii pent000stal praye meeting, by cotnenun- ion tattles, y ha tismal font., by I ha-Ue- tb4 tolls. They have stood on h ard I Thunder. They have P eah and looked over into the la d. ' They have stood -on Cal - n the cross bleed. They can,, he a esti& write• en their o bles "light," and "brit for a ! he deirkest night their soul - d, ae was the night over y the faces of those who laim alory and good cheer. -- y waiting for the gate to chains to fall off and elle I , In. ey of Belot Good. air, there are man -and were more -who are e timid - he good they can go. ford said he onus that at 011 121 Whiall tinbsd not, . as, done some goe4. if a ght I cannot -tell many evlYe away, hew �acy bur - lift, how Many b he t, bow many eutoofrte be There have been sage who lulahs hi Sinai ani stood on prom lead vary and a like Pa 1 heaviest moment. Is tread! F Bethlehe , came to ro They are on open and Os glory to hag J I romatk 'I wish tbare beg life lobo hi pen or to man begin r tams he Ma. dens be mu may cowl, may reclaim have givens t direction, ho Ingenuity la cal foreet a They climb Into the thin trudged the folio martyr rsurrect$on eir livee b b the gar npes, by t)� yate every ii ov the trtion of their boor their Image ti man liveth through c blistered, tempest las That teethe the amount em r whole life in the contesting all their mental acumen and d enthusiasm for the mountain and and crossed the - desert and dropped ' graves waiting f f the just. They rue the obelus they bro sate they put upon eked - Iles they travelled to elle- id a suffering. They felt 1 of every nerve, in the y musele, in every throb , in every respiration of C magnificent truth, "No into himself." They went and through heat, foot ek smitten, back eciourged, d, to do their whole duty. ay they measured life -by f mood they could do. , IV 44 EXr0SITOR I -Do you w fit to know how old Lut ' Was; ,how ol Richard Baxter was; h t old Philp , oddridge wee? WhY, cannot calm ate the length, of their Ii by any bum n artehmotiol i Add to -th lives 10,000 Mies- 10,000 years and have not ex Tossed it -what i they h - lived or will Ivo. Oh, what a stand that is to me'sure a man's life by! Th are those in his house who think t .have only ity d 80 years. They will ha lived 1,003- hey have lived 1,000. lb , are those wh think they are 80 years , age. They b ye not even entered up their infaicy for one must hecome a ba ; in Christ to begin at all. A It Oght View. of 'we. know what ur tact or tl t I;I Now, I do ot-lheow what your adva ages .or die dvantages are; I do n not know what may be thefascinati of your manners or. the repulsiveness them; but 1 SillOW this -there is for yo • my hearer, a field to culture, a bars' to reap, a tea to wipe away, a soul save. If yoUhave•wOrldih means, co seprate theeer t(� Christ. If you . ha eloquence'. us then the side that Pa and Wilberforce used theirs. If you ha learning, pnt it all into the poor box the world's uffitring. But if you ba none of these neither wealth, nor e quenoe, nor 1 arninio-you, ' at any ra have a smile with which you 'can (moon age the die eartened; a frown wi which you ni y bias injutitice; a vol with which ,y u may call the wander back to -God, oey..7) n you say, "that is very sancit monioue v ow of life!" It not. It is he .only. eight view of Ii! 1 and it is tie nly bet let view of dent Contrast tile eath sane of a man who has rneasu ad life b the worldly stand- ard with he ,eath 0 one of a man who has memos en lite by the Christiati stand- ard. Quiri, th ' actor, in his last moments, said, 'hi hope this tr gin scene will soon be ovei, and I hope keep my digni to the last " aleshe bes said in his In moments o he con mar; "Hold yo tongue? our wise ble style puts nee i out of c 110e t wit heaven." Lord Chesterilel I: in his In t moments, when he ought •' h 're been praying for his goal, both red himselfabout the proprie- ties of th si kroom and said, "Give Dayboles a oh Ir." Godfrey Kneller spent his last ho re n earth in drawing a dia- gram of. hi: o n monument, Compare th silly and horrible depar- ture of sue en with the seraphio glow on the fao Edward Payton, as be said • in his la omeot: "The breezes of heaven fan m, !float in a see of glory." , Or with au the apostle, who said in his last ho r, 'I am mow ready to be offered up, emit the time of my departure Iis at hand. I have fought the good.fight,, , I have kep the faith. Henceforth there its laid up or e -a Crown. of righteous - noes i !nose whic he ord, the righteous Judge, wi 1 lye e." Or compare it with the •hr stian deathbed that you my friends t is wo id is a fake god. It ci witnessed I your wn household. Oh, will consume you hvith the blaze in Which it a,ee ts your eacrillee, while the righteous ha 1 be hold in everlasting remembran e, and 'when, the thrones have fallen a d the -monumentee.have crumbled . the • woeld has perished they shall uet with the, conquerors of earth ail e hierarehs of heaven. ogle, To,-sley. [ This hi* day in which to begin . a new style of' nseaeurement. How old art thou? Y use. the Christian way of measuring life and the worldly way of measuring i I leave it to you ti say which is 0 wisest and best way. The wheehof ti e as timed very swiftly, and it has un ed na on. The old year has goats. h new year has come. For upon at ItyoGuad 137 I have been launched knows.- Now -let me ask you all, hay u madshany preparation for the tutu You have made prepara- tion for thn y dear brother; have you made any.p sop ration for eternity? Do you wonder th t when that man on the Hudson RI,., in indignation, tore up the tract wh oh was handed to him and just one wo d 1 nded on his ooatsleave- the rest of t•st act being pitched into the. river- r . a one word :aroused his son1P It wa t at one word; so hang, so broad, so hi h, so deep-''eternityl" A dying woma i her last menus:11s said, "Call it bac " They said, "hhhat do you want?" "T m ," elm sail, "call it back!" Oh, t nnot be called back! We might lose ur fortunes Wed call them back, -we mi ht lose our health and, per - hope, /wove it, -we might less our good nonse anti get t at back, but time gone is gon 0 keel/ est New, wh n o minter of thi gs kited? Who a freshman 01+.,? world by th• BI but we all k Of interview summate idea studying hi or weeds. T menthe of ag all Andover New Brunew Does not o that it is b.14r be clear o „ JANUARY 6, 1899. her Through the west," said the smignt-or- ow hand performer. "It was net what ' you you moy call- a startling, financial success, yes but I managed to reach southern Calle eir fern's beim I was stranded. you "It was there that I suddenly awe' ave to the fact that a five -dollar gold pie and wee my entire capital -with the se ere town a good mane, mile)) ohead of int. bey • "There was but one thing to do, a vs 010 was to walk, as I hnew the lit etre Pinney I had would be needed when of arrived for necessary expenees, and On cofildn't afford to waste it on car fare. be 'It wasn't as had a proposal -on as , had looked on the face, the roads Were I geed sbapo, and the air cool and oris and it was in the midst of the orang ot plotting season. 'If the town ahead hadn't been so f ThOight have enjoyed the tramp, but on of it Was, I found mtself grciwing tired, aid esiwas engaged in picking his orange oro. I etopped for a rest where an old rollie "He was a sociable old 'chap, and evil - to • the deptly thought I was looking around fOr ho an, orange orchard, and I didn't Atte* t IA to undeceive him, for I found his arena ve delicious, and as it was growing n# e of meal time I had high. hopes that 00 ve ' might ask me to cline wit b him. He ke ieh reharking that there was money 1 n to, oranges, and I finelly concluded to ho a a little sport with:him. - 1 - r- - 1 th "Palming my sole remaining co piece I reached for an orange and Or Cut it in halves with my knife. WM 's a exelamation of surprise I, pretended i' is pull the coin from the orange, while tis a, oldi man's eyes fairly hung out of hit h. heed_as I did so. h '0.11e reached for the wire, bit ih ran It, hnd then dropped the Sin in his P Ire,t, saying as he did so: , L! 'Wul, by gum! I alivays said the thar wuz money ire oranges, an' nowl kite prove it.' t,,, "I gave a gasp When saw mlh la! • et cent go into the old man's! PoolteN an I tried to explain tee sit-action:Whim ur a the Coster, as can sooner get to the Is he not to be 000gratn- te to be alwohe in lb. We study God in this shoal photograph of him; co , we can in five minutes with a friend get a more of him than we Gan by 50 years through pictures e 111111. ohild that died at 6 2 k -owe more of filed than nd all Princeton and all ok ✓ common sense teach us to he at the center than t on the rim of the wheel, usl fast to the tire lest we ur ed into light and eternal h all - kinds of optical to peer in through he keyholes of heaven - doors of the celestial be swung wide open before vhdon--rushing about theoary shops of this if this is good for that to good for neural - g else is good for a bad suddenly ushered tato ingr health when the says, "I am sick" a all are to prefer the th lb. outer! What a ithvotild be it we should 7aily from this wintry tints orchards of lirao pauperises el sin And teolding miry he soddenly felielq?-- The inetruneente She ("niche a amid that saansion will ear eatran amen( the Workl, wand rbsoiaatlam, , and some Oeu.h. 1.4 el ever What fools !than* ne ar airouniferenco ul 171 dlIii a Re.ii:citaddendy zetr,teed into t • and sorrow should besuddenly broken up by a preeentatio an emperor's ,oastle Surrounded ks with springing fountains and pa 'hs, up and down wiliceh angels of God k two and two! Ultlgtiihty w have a kind of Musical oh resolved that at denioawitgatio ▪ ht would had never been 'beard ads up of the chimes of belie ond t -,barge of (salmon. The experiment perfect (meow)* What with the MD.!ln of the- belle and the port of the s • snag, the oily trembled, d the hills twee with the triumphal arch that as as strange ste It was verwhelming With a most gluttons aooesnpanirne t Will God's dose children Into -their la • residence • when the umpebe shal und and the last day s come. At tie signal given, the belle the towere, ad of the lio thousee, . d of the cit ill strike their sweet- ie- into a in ' hime that- h all ring to the heave ise nd float off upon the , joined by the boom of bursting mine d magazine a' gnaented by all the hedral towe s o, heaven -the /lemon - of earth a d the eyniphonies of the estial real akingl up one great umphal ma oh,F fit to celebrate the , ent of the re hemed to where they-' 11 shine as he tars f raver and -Over. . Money in ,the B -"A number of v are th0 I made a trio right res it end an physi- m riot. o delved and go t legit In r the ha sured of e off, an no in sea Sri cat les eel In eeso sha saying It was only a "Mut the old ma that way. He said cote from the ore belonged to him, h may be found in it "ge was a bigger he wouldn't listen to Pace sadly on. I "T hired out at the next ranch to pie fruit until I could got money eineulgh Pat -nie' joke I woeldn't have ii go, that the oran e saw me take t oe anything the as his, too. • man than I, reaeon, and fare home. i A Lesson la rationed. When the eminent botanist, Protege Altman, of Glasgow, was a small boy bad the present of a silver bit, vihereup his mother was so worried with question meth what he should do With itthat s excleimed, "Really, you had better go Thoneas Elliott's (a well-known pnarrn whet), and buy sixpenies Worth Paib tlene:t" Dvvhe street marched the lad a demanded of the chemist: "Mr, 'Elliott pleases give me sixpence worth PaMtir. °e'' Elliott, taking in toe situation asince, said: "Certainly, sy boy, ther 's a chair. Just sit own and wai till on get it" Ptofesisor Aitman's end avor to p chase patience was a gr at success. I has hover been forgotten by either him self 4Pr his friends. ; Bismarck Never Dis ourte us. , Strange as it may appear in the Ma of Blood and Iron, Biemarok could no be discourteous to people though other were to him. Prof. Lenba h, than who» petheps nobody except Prof. So('nwen n knish' Bismarck so intimately. n tel' me: "In all the years I have kow. Printer) Bismarck I only rememberhi ii speaking hastily on one solitary occasion. iiman servant had shut the door with b ngi. Bismarck rang the bell, and when be &Owed, told the man sharply that h was to leave at the end of his month, bout- a quarter of an !noir afterwards hO rem` g the bell again, and said, in a ollified voice, 'You may 'tea.' That /ill." -Sidney Whitman, In Harper's. f Work of the Queen Bee. Aceording to Father BroWn, in e paper ad before the Scientific Satiety at Pree- n, * queer bee sometimes 'lays at the rte Of two ggs a minute, and the totil w ight of t e eggs is one and a half ti see that of her own body l on a- summer ye , As she lives four or five hears she newt lay about one and a half 'millions In the course of her life. Her ,eyes are smaller than those of the other twee, ow- ing te long *seldom' in the hive, Her ' la stinghe SOO !times smaller in diameter than ` pin, Ond as she can middens draw , it on after Stinging a person, she leaves it in and dies afterward. 1 1 The waid Wes Cautiottej 'T$ other tay an Aberdeen Minister Was *kiting ne ef his flock, who Was a do with) se ant in a well-to-do meroh- ent's family n the west end. , e. said: ' I'm sure you'll like your: eItFuaton, M ry. Your master Is such a' nl4e. ltraightforward Christian man -in sb4rt,a man that always calls a , spade a sp de.i" ' rtant-"Weel, sir, to 'fAsit the truth, I couifc1na say I ever heard him 'anywise ou o' theist evi' the spade, but I widna Mk e ta mention what he whyles osi's the lawn mower." leepansissa of Gunpowder.' * has been caloulated that , ordinary gunpoWder, on exploding, expands abouth 9,060 liImes, or fills a space this irouoh largeras a gas than when in solid form-. - • -41. John Lipp, a respected resident cif We les ey, died vn Wednesday, 14th inst. De as' d, who was 40 years f age, had bee 4I mg for eome time. H , leaves it wid w nd five children. Jo n N. Zinkann, of Well ley, die- pos d 4f bis two farms in one day las wee. The Lisbon farm, ooneieting of ir aores, was sold to Conrad Kniesel, fo . $7,000 in cash, while the Crosshill/ farm af 100 acres was sold to Win. Beiletein, foe SfiSS.X).', .94474/44.WWW221111WEINWS noctors now agree thatl consumption is curable. Three things, if taken ge ca m. va far CO Sc oil to - her, will cure nearly every e lin the irst stages; the oilrity of cases more ad- ced ; and a few of those advanced. ho first is, fresh ir; the se - c14 proper food; the third; ttrs Emulsion of c d -liver With hypophos h tes. To ,be cured, you nust not lose n weight, an& if thin you must gain. Nothing equals Scott's Emulsion to ke p you in good flesh. go. and Shoo, all druggists. OTT &BOWNE, Chemists Toronto., Ii .41Preff 141.2LWWWWWeemett44.414* The Canadian Bank of Commerce. Apn-AL (PAID UP) 181X MILLION DOLLAR $30 to $50 6" I:Ward: -1313 SEAFORTii BRANOH. Argeneessi banking business transacted. Farmers' Notes discounted, and esStiavi attentiongivenNg tnotetrheestcaoillieocwtelodnoonf dtapioesNit:toefsii and Special -facilities for:transaction of bustineFs7 lon,thGa, KmbreAtirlkyo, Dmitatnralgt F.1101,111ESTED, Solicitor. M 0 d • t iny bank, issued at the following rates ; Money els, pays.. e , Under 1$10 .08 $20 to $30 12 10 to '$20 .10 .12 000000 Solid Comfort. 1 , It, is not enough to have rubbers keep out the wet. If the fit be not perfect they will draw the feet. It costs money to emploY skilled i*ttern mi* 1 kers, in order to turn out rub- bers in ' all the latest shoe shapes, but the Graniby Rubber Co. do' it and the reqult is that The -Granby Lined Robber Is Warm, Thy and Comfortable -made in all the shoe shapes, of the very best material. ranby Rubbers othershoes c> are known to be right up-to-date. The thick ball and heel make them last twice as long; while the thin rub- ber used in the other parts makes the whole very light. Insist on seeing he Granby Trade Mark on the sole. GRANBY R63BERS WEAR LIKE IRON. Discount on School Books! Everybody knows the all being one of the aims allowed to I the bookseller's Who desire them. This mental stores to Seize upon at cost in order to give tile cheap. pribper price of School Books. A uniform price to of the department, a small margin of profit is tcf insure there being kept within, the reach of all. state of afftirs has led some of the big depart - School Books as an 'advertising line, selling them impression that they sell all other goods equally To meet this unfair competition we have determined to give a Discount of Ten Per Cent. ON ALL SonooL BOOKS SOLD FOR CASII. When charged, the regular price still prevails at Lumsden Wilson SCOTT'S BLOCK, MAIN STREET, AFORTH, - Ontario. 0.0400•00 "That Tired Feeling" I; just as common and just as ,-: reasonable in horses as it is in 1; lizen. ViThen their blood 5 11/1- ' itOVeliehe'd ths1 appetite and j, energy l -ave them -their Work tw:ce harci. •,% EVaaci Purifier .9 restores this lost vitality -he food is enjoyed. --Every particle is digested.—The bide frees itself. Bots and kindred worms are des- troyed aid the horse thrive. h: 50 Cents A Package. Trial Size, 25 Cents. LEEMNG CO. ilootreal, Aguk DICK &GC Propri/tors 00- 4 • 4 ************** i.e r irsiiivewbibmes,,,sorkivp 'One Day's Werkl. We glee this fine Watch, Chain & Charm for selling two doe. packages of Exqui. site Perfume At ten cents each. Send Address and we forward the lwrfunie, Postpaid, and our Premium List. No stoney required. Sell the perfume we send the watch. pwpaid. This IS.2. among. your friend, return enemy, -and genuine American watch. glinranWed.a to rood timepiece. Mention this paper. BeeisSpocisity Co. 6o Victoria St.Torosto Fine Furniture for Xmas • The multititde of seneih's people who are tired of giving and receiving uselemi nothing e at Ohristmae, will appreciate the magnifizient selection of Fine Furniture we have collected for this season's trade. kiere at karts of handsome pieces you will find nowhere else. Oddments that w11 give a fttlt return in ua! and pleasure for every - ceut of the extremely low pr ces we aok. rirWE DELIVER FURNITURE FREE. 0 ix' Undertaking Department is complete and strictly up-to-date, with a larger selection than ejver before, and prices to suit every one's needs. We halm a quan ity !of suitable chairs to be used at funerals, which we will lend free of charge, andI any orders that we are favored with shall receive our best attention. Night dalls promptly ttended to by our undertaker, Mr. S. T.,Holmes, Goder- ich street, Seaforth, o posite the Methodist church, BE OADFOOT BOX & Co., S.A.P013.1EUEE -e- at els 101,' 3rd con Ex elm Wri esti guar Oen As ;iept Of Pu is be The 00,e to th of th their ect amo only giver roan they