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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1899-02-24, Page 2atarrh Japanese Catarrh Cure did for Miss A. Nott of Bea,chvflle, Ont., what physi- cians, specialists and ordinary practi- tioners and a score of Catarrh remedies failed to do. She was a great sufferer from this distressing :and disgusting disease for 'years; all the painful ac- oompanilnente of deep-seated Catarrh were hers; her head was so stopped up that she could not breathe through her nostrils, her breath was the foulest, she had constant pain over her eyes, a con- tinual dropping in the throat, but from. the first application of this pleasant pomade cure she experienced great re- ilief, and in t very short while after commencingo use it she found her head cleared up, the nasal (passages all healed, th breath pure arid sweet, and not a pal left in her head,; this all happened Ion enough ago to convince her that the disease has ]eft her for good and all, and she rejoices at es- caping, as shy calls it, from a living death. With every ackage of Japanese Ca- tarrh Cure here is enclosed a cure guarantee. t is: the only guaranteed cure. Pure n bar 1 m d ass and leaves the patient,a clear-headed, light- hearted, heahy man or woman. 150 cents -at all Druggists or by mail. CRIFFITHS St MACPHERSON 00., TORONTO Sold by LJ} S. Roberts. , REAL ES 'A'l E FOR SALE. MIOR SALE CHEAP. -For sale, Lot 1, 2, 3 and 4, r Ranre L ; Lot 8, Ranee N. and Lot 4 Range M, in the Village of Bayfle]d, containing 691 dens. The land is in a good state of cultivation and hrie on it a frame dwelling,, It will be sold cheap and ou easy terms. Apply to B. R. HIGGINS, Brimfield. ,- -- - 1827.4 FARM FOR SALE -For tale, the west 60 ao� es of Lot 6, on the 7th Coneeseion of McKillop. here is a bank barn and flame house • it is in tiret•otass condition, well fenced and undercjrained, suitable for grain or pasture. MICHAELGIVLIN, Beechwood P. O.• 1621x8 . Q'jRill purchase the comfortable and pleas- antly xituated cottage on James street, Seaforth, at present occupied by Mr. A. Scott. There are 8 rooms, with hard and soft water, also a large stab"e. The lot is a corner lot and well planted with fruit and ornamental trees. Apply to A. SCOTT, Seaforth, 1593-tf RESIDENCE IN BRUOEFIELD FOR SALE.- For sale the frame dwelling house and lot near the railway station in Bru^aflold. The house con- tains ten rooms ; a stone cellar and bard and soft water is the house ; also a good !stable. There ie a quarter acre of land. Apply to ALEX. MUSTARD, Brimfield. - 151641 OUSE FOlt SALE OR TO RENT. -For sale or 1,1 to rent, the house on Sperling street, at nee - sent owned and occupied by Sir. Andrew Tyreman. It contains a parlor, dinning room, kitchen, 4 bed rooms and woodshed. There is plenty of hard and soft water, and the lot is planted with a number of choice fruit tree; and small fruit'- For particulars apply to ANDREW TYRE SAN, Seaforth. 18.28x4 FARM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 6, Concession 8, Hullett, near village of Kinburn, containing about 100 acres, all cleared and in a good state of cultivation. There are good buiiings, good orchard and plenty of excellent water. This is a splenlid farm and will be sold cheap. Immediate possession. Apply to MRS. SCHOALES, Canstanoo P. 0. 1607 110R SALE.-Foi sale 220 acre farm in McKillop, .L' being Lots 24 and 26, Concession 10, and north part of Lot 25, Concession 9. This land has been in pasture since _first . cleared, 26 or 30 years ago, therefore is rich and free from foul weeds. It is situated 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. GOVENLOCK, Seaforth. 16944f 1 ARM FOR SALE. -For sale, in the Township of t J 'McKillop, the north 60 acres of Lot 15, Conoos-; cion 14, boundary line. About 47 acres cleared, three awe of good hardwood bush, about two acres of choice fruit trees, soil unsurpassed, well drained and fended ; school half a mile away, post ofoe and church convenient ; will be sold cheap. For par- ticulars, apply to the proprietor on the premises, or Walton P. 0. DANIEL MoMILLAN, Proprietor. 1599-tf TIMMBERED FARM FOR SALE. -For sale, the 1 north half of Lot 9, Concession 14, McKillop, containing 88 acres, about 30 acres of which are clear- ed, well fenced and under good cultivation ; the hal-, anoe is well timbered with saw loge, rails, etc. This property is valuable for its timber, and will be sold cheap. Thirty or forty acres .of the timber will be' sold without the land if desired. Apply on the ad -I joining farm, or to Walton P. 0. JAMES CAMP BELL. 1619.1 L ARM IN ALGOMA FOR SALE. -For sale the' South East quarter of section F., township of Laird, containing 160 acres. There are forty sores' cleared and free from stumps and under crop. Com- fortable log buildings. The balance is welltlmbered, It Is within four miles of Echobay railway station; and six miles of the prosperous village of Port Findley. This its a good lot, and will be sold oheap, Ind on easy terms. Apply to WILLIAM SIMPSON on the premises, or to ALEX. MUSTARD, Bruce- field.- 1646-tf HOTEL FOR SALE OR TO RENT. -For sale or to rent the Blake Hotel, a good country stand, situated about 4 miles from Zurich, 9 miles from Bayfield, and 7 miles from Kipper) station. The village consists of store, blacksmith shop, and all other convenienoes. Half a mile from school and church. Tne house contains six bad rooms ; plenty of hard and soft, water ; good garden, stable and yard. Possession must be taken on May let. Open for rent until March 16th. For particulars apply to MRS. WILLIAM NICHOLSON, Dashwood P. 0. 162441 'BUILDING LOT FOR SALE. -The very desirable building Iota, being numbers 87, 88, 39 and •s situated on Main street of Egmondville and Ssa- forth. The whole contains about one acre, and will ne sold in separate parcels or together to suit the purchaser. This property is bleat south of the - Woollen Mills, and Mr. S. Dickson a property south of the corporation, and is considered the most desirable building site either fol private residence's or a factory. It is high and convenient, and has a street south and west. Apply to JANE or JOHN SPROAT, Egmondville P. 0., Exeoutors to the Estate of the late John Sprott*. 158341 § PLENDID FARM FOR SALE. -For ale the splendid farm of Mr. Robert Govenloek on the orth Road, a mile and a half from Sea orth. I contains 175 acres, nearly all cleared and: i a high state of cultivation, There ie a two sto :brick house, good bank barn and everything in fi st•olase condition and well underdrained. It will be sold on easy terms, as the proprietor desires to ie ire. If not sold before the fall it will be rented.' ddrese ROBERT GOVENLOCK, Seaforth P. 0. I 693 tf 1OR SALE OR TO RENT --That excelie 1 farm, Lot 39, Concession 3, T.rokersmith, L. R. S. containing 96 acres ; 8 of whioh is in fall w eat, 12 acres of good bosh, the -balance 76 sores in a high state of cultivation. Fall plowing done- T ore is a good frame house and frame barns, also a rge pig house. Plenty of splendid water and good o chard, 11 is about 11 utiles from schools ; 3 mil:: from Brucefieid ; miles from Seaforth and 6 Hailes from Clinton- Apply to W. SCOTT & CO., Bruce t old. 1622 TIRM AFOR SALE. -Farm in townshipp of cker- emith, being Lot 29, Concession 2, 11 R. ., con- taining 100 acres i,f good land, well adapted to either Main or stock raising ; land in good state o ultiva- tion, 8 acres of good hardwood bush. On th place are two good frame barns, atone stabling orad r one ; driving shed, never -failing &prina near barn brick house and kitchen, soft water inside, good e11, or- chard, etc- The farm is well situated, being five miles from Clinton and six from Seaforth, ion good gravel road ; convenient to sobool, church! oaposito place; will bo sold cheap, as proprietor iotepde giv- ng up farming, For particulars apply on the prem - laee, or to A. E. TURNER, Clinton,: Ont. 181041 Snap Bargains in Real Estate and Live Stock. THIRTY DOLLARS an acre will bur a 1, t acro farm -a first-class grain and btock farm -pe, r the Village of Zurich, in the township of Hay, Qo nay of Huron ; goof buildings, goad fences, plenty,o water and a mast desirable place; also three thou hbred short horn bulls and three Yorkshire boars, all fid for service; alio several roadster hordes, all good ttooir, and prices right. For particulars apply to 8, RAN - NIE, Zurich P. 0. 161.211 Special Attention to Horseshoeing and General Jobbing. Goderich street, Robe Deverux KLACKSMI1 and CARRIAGE opp.. MAKERHoc - • Seaorth. THE ON EX 'OST ft U L. a) a) ULee v1 O O v (1) > O I" •� E to c 0 -a ur C = o w � O N -..v C 0 tee sE o a'c w E O 050 o c s - ai •C cC m ''- as "rs O (r) fn o O E C O z m c O z N U Washingto., Feb, 19 --In this discourse Dr. Talmage gives words of good cheer to commoruia travellers and tells of their sai`eguards an. their opportunities; text, Nahum ii, 4, "The chariots shall rage in' tho streets; t ey shall justle one against another in the broad ways; t/bey shall seam like tor hes; they shall run like the lightning -" - It has been found out that many of the arts and discoveries which we supposed were peculiar to our awn age aro merely the restoratio of the arts and discoveries of thousands f years ago. I suppose'that tho past cult ries have' forgotten more than .,he tiresint century mows. It seems to rrie that th y roust have known thous- ands of years Igo, ii "the days of Nine• ct-h, of the us:,s of steam and its applica- tion to swift t avel. In my text, I hear COO rush of th : rail train, the clang of tho wheels an the jam . ing of the oar couplings. "T e chariots _, shall rage in ti,e streets; th:y shall jus Te ono against another in the broad ••aye; they shall seem like tore es; they sb:11 run like the a a fa te lo tr ta co 5 th 60 ev tr or as ro th tin wa th tee 680 an ag eh sba bro the you the you the to did kne hel are to of me in et pie loo nat has mar the Let thei n OW deb eam tioo hav of t long all a put You You sten valis wora r position in depat along the rail train ret you heard like the coin- ve the flash of emotive as it look into that vs ise, but as I am your on these oonifort hie articles of apparel . The seasons aiLle s changeable you have not taken a slitgl precaution too many. Some night you get out in the snow• bank and have o walk three or four miles until yo et to the railroad eta - tion, and you will want all these com- forts and (wimp' noes. But Will YOU ex - o se me it 1 mage a ' Wggeetlon a Out this valise? You say. "Car as we are having a plain, frank w 11 not be offended at any no 6u ggestlon. Put in among your baggage son felly selected, wholesome reading. b in history, or a poem, or a b p re fiction, or some volume tb Fri o you information in regard, t e of nusinoss. Then add to B ble in round, beautiful', type -•small ty.o is bad for tho eyes anywhere, but p; •ullarly killing in the jolt of a rail tr in. Put your railroad guide and your B blo side by side -the one to sho th route through this world a oter to show you the route to th w:rld. "Oh," you say, "that is su o s, for now in all the botele, to t to , you will find • Bible, and in al the rooms of the guests you wi • el" But, my brother, that is no 13 hie,' You want your own hat o • n coat, your own blanket, your Bible. "But," you say, "I am C ristian, and you ought not to. m to carry a Bible.", My troth gr cit many people ark not Ohr w o carry a Bible, Besides that, yo. get home you might become a ti n, and you would feel awkWard•with- uut a copy. Besides that, you might get ba news from home. I rise you with trembling hand opeeing the telegram ■a- ing, "George is dying," or "Fannie is cad; oomo home�l"1 Oh, as you sit in th train, stunned with the calamity, go - in; home, you will have no taste for fine so.nery, or for conversation, and yet you met keep your thoughts employed or yo . will 'go stark .road. Then you will w nt a Bible, whether you road it or no , It will be a comfort to have it near yo -that book full of promises which ha a comforted other people in like cal. amity. Whether you study the promises or :.ot you will want that book near you A I riot wise when I say put in the Bi le? ow, you are all ready to start. You .ha a your valise in ;the right band and yo have your blanket and shawl strap in he left hand. Goodbye! May you have a p osperous journey, largo sales, great per entages. Oh, there is one thing I for- got to ask you about -what train are you going to take? "Well," you say, "I wil take the :6 o'clock Sunday afternoon train," Why? "Oh," you say, "I shall say a' day by that, and on Monday rho ;ring I will be in the distant pity in the commercial establishment by the time the merchant comes down!" My brother, you are starting wrong. If you clip, off something from the Lord's day, the Lord wilt clip off something from your life- time successes. Sabbath breaking pays no bettor for this world than it pays for the next. T `sere was a large eetabiishmen t in New York that said to a young man; "We Want you to start to -morrow after- noon -Sunday afternoon -at 5 o'clock for Pittsburg," "Oh," replied the young man, "I never travel on Sunday." "Well," said the head man of the firm, "yo i must go. We have got to make tiihho, and you must go tomorrow after- noon -at 5 o'clock." The young man said "I can't go; it is against my con- sole o0; I can't go." "Well," said the het man of the firm, "then you will hav to lose your situation, There are plan y of men who would like to go." The temptation was too great for the young man, and he suoeumbed to it. He 'obe ed orders. He left on the 6 o'clock trait. Sunday afternoon for Pittsburg. Do ou want the sequel in very short mets? That young man has gone down into a life of dissipation. What has be- oom. of the business firm? Bankrupt - one .f the firm a confirmed Rambler. Out of every week get 24 hours;for your- self. Your employer, young man, has no righ to 'swindle you out of that rest. The bitter nurse of Almighty Clod will rest upon that commercial establishment whi ,h expects its employee to break the Sabbath. What right bas a Christian mer Kant to alt down in church on the Sabi ath when his clerks are . traveHing abro; d through the land on that day? Get up, professed Christian merchant so acti g. You have no business hero. Go out nd call that boy back. There was, a in ,rohant n 1837 who wrote: "I should hay = been a dead man had it not been for the Sabath. Obliged to work from; mor ing un il. night through the whole wee : , I felt on Saturday, especially on Satu day a ternoon,' that I must,have rest.. It wa like going into a dense fog. Eve vthing ,00l;ed dark and gloomy, as if n. thing o utd be slaved. I dismissed all and . ept the Sabbath in the old way. On onday It was all sunshine, but bad it n t been r or. the Sabbath I have no dou .t 1 91,0 1E1 have been in my grave." Now I say, if the Sabbath is good for the mploye it is good for the employe. You! g man, the dollar that you earn on the ' abbath is a redhot dollar, and if you ut it into a bag with 6,000 honest :colla s that redhot dollar will burn a holo through the bottom of the bag and lot o t all the 5,000 honest dollars with it. of two • nom tai•lly; mer talk I eiz f norablo 1• meta y a; time, and ne wrote to ant in London saying, "Se et a i theology, and about as h�si e, and near a t yard o ' foliol"- There is o eke ting information if pportunities of Dom er. mprove your mind}. Re ear' ed Blacksmith," f who, g he bellows sot its b t e brink .ork, end to ` with 60 anguagos. so olarly or d, wire, y w ice wrought out the arith lith his awl on a piece law i l o care. I a ma Ian Let it the rare ook of travel at will the " o your blowi that a agains Acqua! ber th appren proble w you Cher. nd the enatob e next five mi perilu- sion, a he par- ethics. n early i11 find Be a t your fruits you* the loo own yards t hot a about t expect lite, ab her, a market laughs people before politica Chris- about t yards of Learn a of Cart • Read al mighty pies. Y• meroha. ily. Oh years of Tak th wal ing the Pl view th • wait ng the opo ing he and ook you ill time to is co nin and eletr whioh y•u ;o pass a mon tip h phers app the ogee 1 But y.0 your rail motion o the patent rings the stops l' You die.. tbo hot I. -very g1 across th; interested assigned' ing apart to make spend the there you sitting ar elevation vertiseme sunken i, tored all patches o will not among th letters o You begi there are to remelia you get will not s except b somebody custom. gives as b "treating' that get i a 000K nearing of it, Wrote to the 'father Oil the nd me , young Inas in the ' country, saying much 1 "Come and take your `son away. He wil of civil never make ; merchant," Tho ftthe use for name in agitation, wondering what( hi he have boy had been doing, and the head ;rne merciat of the firm said: "Why your: son too member here at this �bounterlland pointed Out while fraoture in the silk, and of conrso the ook up lady wouldn't take it, We are not re - became sponsible for the igilor tnoe of clustoI{ ers. tiemew- Customers must look Out for theme° ves, bile an and we look out for ourselves. 'lone son metioal ' Will never mako a merchant." "Is that of lea- all?" said the father. 'Ah 1 I am pro der A Place to Study. But I see you change your mind, and you re going on Monday morning, and I see you take the train -Pennsylvania, or th Baltimore & Ohto, or the Hudson Rive , or the Erie, at' the Harlem, or the New laver: train. For a few weeks now yon ill pass half of your time in the rail t ulna How are you going to occupy the time? Open the valise and take out a bop and begin to reaa. Magnificent oppor unities have our commeroial trav- ellers for gaining information above all other clerks or merchants. Tbe best plebe -in th world to study is a rail train. I know it by experience. Do not do as some ommeroial travellers do -as many of the e do, as most of thine do -sit read! g the same newspaper over and over gaiii and all the advertisements throu It and through, thentsit for two or three ours calculating the' profits they expeo to make, then spending two or throe ours looking listlessly out of the _wind° , then spending three or four hours in the smoking oar, the nastiest plaoe n Christendom, talking with men .who d not know as much as you do. Instea of that, call William Shakespeare, Bancr ft and Macaulay, the historians, th d amatist, and John Buskin, :the and E, aided and ll'aul, the inepired men of God and ask them to sit with you and ta k with you, as they will if you could et out of this buslneu of oom- merola travelling. I don't like it." My broth° , why don't you read yourself outf Give me a young man of ordinary intel- lect an goodi eyesight, and let -hint de- vote t valuable reading the time not aotuall occupied in commercial errand, and in ix years he will be qualified tor any po Mon for which he is ambitious. "Oh, ' you say, "I have no taste for readin ." NOW, that Is the trouble, but it is no tumuli. There was a time, my brother when you bad rio taste for cigars, they m de you very sick, but you per- severed until cigars have beconte to yon a luxu y. New, if you[ can afford to struggl on to get a bad habit, is it not worth bile to struggle on te get a good habit li e that of reading?; I am amazed to find ow many merehants and com- mercial travellers presorts; their ignor since fr m year to year, notwithstanding all thei opportunities. It was well illus- trated y one who bad been largely elle- oessftil. and who wanted the show of a R member Aberoremble, d ;ere and dere a Ifragrn u s from an exhausting prnfes+ d wrote immortal I treatises on A ROyaI Family, hatned to sell foreign fa bries or nle�ss you know something, about s hat wove them for the vine- at'grew them. Umierstand all e aws that control I commercial ut!banking, about tariffs, about. bout navigation, about foreign thbir oharacteristied and , their ✓ :volutions as they affect ours; e arvests of Russia, the vino- It ly, the teafields of China. • ' t the great oommoroial contras and Assyria and Phoenicia. bout the Medici of Florence, trade, mightier in philanthro- u u along to the royal family of y Be worthy of that royal ram- pe take my advice and turn the e'er found the path ariness into years of luxury. honor or happiness or o hours you spend at the depot or heaven through tho the delayed train and make "'roll," you say, "T gu h heights from which you can i e to -I gnome T will go who Of my boy than I evoi{ was, !John, got entary : your hat and come home," But it is almost night, and yo hack to tho hotel. Now,00rnes the nii tug for the commercial traveller, tee where be. spends hie evenings, a' Will tell you where, ho will spend etorn- wbat will b�, his e is an abundance a Igo ;hty 1 ell ity, and I will tell you vljorldly prospects, The of choice. Thee is yo.r room with the , books. There are the Y i bras- tian Association room. the eyeek night services . ,can ol�urobes, There Is the There is the theater. of infamy. � I }. P snip of But which, O inemcrta God, which? "Well," y I will --I guess I will g DC you think the tarryi nti111 o'clock at n ur bodly health or yo obs or your eternal f. n t romised land. When you are the train hour atter hour in do not epend your time read- ing machine advertisements ng up the time tables of routes h door to see whether the train ei liver take, going the twentieth , bothering the ticket agent m scqoon." You will first yen will go to play, Yo pelt] will make 500, $1,000, you will make will lose all. Then you ney 80 as to start ke $50, you will mak ike $800 -then you wi ph operator with questions wretches of the gambli ask raerely because you want how to tempt you. But y the time. But rather Rum- amblers diepoor. The great eseayists and philosa- tunes -great I fortunes -- tory tellers and thinkers of them d have them entertain you. Ile Pure have come near the end of d travel, I can tell by the "Well," yo he oar that they are pulling theater and i rakes down. The engineer saloon, then b 11 at the croseing. The train to the house I mitt" cries the conduotor. travellers bay o nt from the train. You reach be* at the he U;he landlord is glad to see you their arrival t dr! He stretches out his hand solloltatiou in egistry book with all the dis- avvey from ho mend] of a brother! You are Cobaniercial t goee in that Halt! There through whio 00E08 out, but fled the commercial traeellees wh1ch snaps hi und a long table with a great there is damne in the center covered with ad- be oomparativ tie while' there are inkstands but be is on el apartment. In that uninvit- nt you stay only long enough Irself presentable. You de- nto the reading moth, and be bed of the table, and scat- ound rusty steel pens and lotting paper. Of sours° you y there. You saunter out, eerohants. You present your ntroduction and authority. business. Now, let me say, o or three things you ought e . First, that all the trade 'the practice' of "treating" ick. If you cermet get custom ipping a wine glass with y u bad better not get his old commercial traveller s experience that trade got by always damages the house onexay the other. Besides tb t, you oan ot afford to in- jure yours 1 for the p rpose of benefit- • tells you .h. t you cannot get .into the habit of t lei* strong drink to please others wit ut getting that habit fast- ened on y n I'do not now whether to tell it or- . I think I Will. A close carriage to the do r of my church in Brookl. n one night :t the close of a religions er ice. Some one said, "‘A you." I ed into th carriage, and there sat ne a males an and as ele• gent a ge man as Ne York ever saw, but that t he was intoxicated. Ile said he w n d, to put h niself under my tire. He • d be had le t home, and he the carria e with him and rode with him until af midnigh trying to per- euade hint t go home I have been poems of t es to Glreen ood, following the dead, that was t e most doleful ride I eve ok. After midnight I per- suaded hi o go home. We alighted al his door. V walked thr ugh his beauti- put him t d. Where is that home now? All r ken up. W ere ire the wife Where is e 'Man himsel ? Dead by the violence o a own band 0 commercial traveller, ho gh youe fl I, may give you the largos s lary of a .7 man in your line, thou hey might ive you ten per 50 per oen r 99 per co t., they cannot pay enoug make it w rth your while mercial ho never corn onset°. a man who has see morally nined in their employ. y ling man i Philadelphia was turns oat from his niploy because of inebriat on, got in the eervioe of the merchant ho employed ins, and here im the letter he wrote to h s employer: . "Sir, I 13 e into your service unoor- rupt in pri el les and in orals, ut rtiles of yo r house requir d me to Biwa tainment amusement in search o customers. To:acoomplis my work i your servioe, was oblige to drink wit anent and j in them in th ir pursuits co pleasure. It was not my eholoe, bat th rule of the o se. I went with them t the theater nd the billiard table, but i satanic police bring him in a Pint now t Whore will you conameroial tr ung Men's 0 There are f the Chris ambling saloon. 'here is the house places to � to. man, which?/ 0 u say, "I guess to the theater." . g in tbat place ght will improve ✓ financial pros- rtune? No man to usefulness or mmeroial success merican theater. so, then, I Will to the gambling o to look. Then will make $100, you will make ,600 -then yon ill borrow some new. You will X1200, you will I lose all. These g saloon know mark this -all may make for- •ut they lose n Thought elle Action. • I can't go to the gambling guess -I ess will go told me t at in he letter ey have h d lett rs of evil that dire tion. It islar e. Nobo y will know it. evil path. Why not yeti? are other gates of lain a man ay go and yet hat gate h s a spring look m in forev r. He who goes already. e ma, seem to ly free fo a lit Ie while, y on the limits and the ave their es upon hien to any moment. e question is retill open, spend you eveniteg? Oh, veliors, how mach will yea give me to put you on the right track? presoribe for you a plan hich will save yon for this w rld 1.nd he ne*t if you will take it. G before yo leave:home to the,Young Me 'a Christie Assoeation of the city where ou live. et from them hitters of intro notion. C rry them out tO the towns a d cities vr ere you go. If there be no suo associati n in the Place yeti visit, then present th m at the door of Christian hurches a d hand them over to:the pas ors. Be n t sioky to arise in the devotio al meetin a d! an a y: "I ern a commercial travell r. I 'ane far away from hoi e, and'I cilia° in here to- night to seek Christien ocietyl." The bast houses a 4E11 the hl hest WI. of aindsement wit open borer you, and in- stead of your b ing dawn ent upon the leprous crew w °Jiang aro nd th hotels, Whoting tO sho you all the slime of the city on the one condition thee you will pay their expen. es, you will get t e bens- diption of God n every -WWII you visit. Reinember this, that what ver p ace you viSit bad influ noes wile. oak ou out. GOoti influences ou must s ek on While I stand here I bet ink yself of a oonimeroial tr yeller who was mem- ber Of my chum in Philad lphia. He was a Splendid youn man, th Kid of his witiOwed inothe and of his isters. It was posJ he postponed his own xparria 1, day. He thrived in b sinese and atter awhile eet up his own ousehold. Leavi that qui ir in regard him. ben T 'made city 'for another ity, I had no op, rtu.n- ity for three or Tar years o mak pa in - sue inquiry, , was tol that he Was dea Trio store was, h wais largely gen rous and kind hearted. arid genial and eocial, and he.got into the habit of . "tr ating" custoniers and of showing thorn all the sights of the town, and be began rapidly to gia clown, a d h lost his meMber, and he boat his po ielo in the cominerolal house of whio Ihe was the bestiagent, and his beautiful yIou g wife end is sick old mother a d I bi sisters wen Into destitutiOn, antijhe, lee result of hie dissipation. died hi 10.ricb ids In - gene, Asylum. I the ail sustaining grace of God! T ere are two kinds of dap; when you are es, ecially in need cif divine grace. The otie. the day when you have no'nuccess-When you fail to make it sale, and you go tick to your botell; disConefited. That nigh you will be tem ted to go tb strong drink and rush Into !bad surroandIngs. The other day a When, y u will especially need divine d grace Tel I be h you ave bed a clay of r- great swims ar the devil ells yon,you 1 1 taus !go and tut °brats that. saocess. Then • will need to be !Christians, and that will f Yes Ithsre will be third d when you o ba the last day 'of your lif higisIbiledrrateoinn. dOtI. Where yen will spend t. Perhatni be faintly at ain Of your he depot of Iling. The be get@ of ts washed FERIIART 249 1899 OFF SEASO .cClothing, It is the O Season"just f� s now for l 1 {�othn but there is no " Off Season " for Furnishings. Shirts wear out irrespective of seasons. We can also su ppl'y you and you` are sure to be satisfied, as you can select from a large and choice stock, while the prices are what you can afford. It may be that you require some new socks. We have them in all weights, all grades and at all prices. In all other lines of Furnishings we are up-to-date both in style, quality and price. We satisfy always. RIGHT BROS., SEz1 OR TB Ontaitio. Style and Stamina 1 iiyi• Clanct be expected in a horse which is "run down," -"out f stilts " throcigh impoverishment of the blood, -but build him up with Dick's Wood Purifier and he has both. It destroys all the impuritias in his system and fortifies it. He. feels good and his spirit is high. It aids digestion - gives gloss to his coat -brightness to his eye -vim to his action. It will double Lis usefulness and value. 50 CENTS A PACKAGE, TRIAL SIZE 25 CENTS - DICK & CO., PROPRIETORS. LEEMING, MILES & Co., MONTREAL, AGENTS, Dick's Blood Purifier Only six weeks from the gardens of India Indian to our breakfast tables. MEN1171( A 10 ,.„I ,t11,6 it URATTRAY •Ct .M0:1111°E1ArLie:S Fidim of Every one andsome Furniture The molltitude of sensible pelople who are tired ure we hav collected for this se on's trade. 3Iere are hosts of handsome leces you will find nowhere else. Oddments hatmill give a full return in use ,nd pleasufelor every cent of the extremely ow prices we ask. • 1107•WE DELI ER FURNITURE FREE. of giving and receiving' selection of Fine Furni- Our Undertaking Departnien is complete and strictly up-to-date, with a a., rger selection than ever before, a d prices to suit every one's needs. We have quantity of suitable chairs to be used at.funeralf3, which we will lend free of rge, and any orders that we are favored with shall receive our best attention ight calls promptly attended to by our undertaker, Mr. S. T. Holmes, Geder- i h street, Seaforth, opposite the ethodist church, BOX & Cat wa3 not my °bolo.. 1 L:1 not wish to ao I went in y ug service. It was not m pleasure so t ' 4 o, but I was the con ei ones, void ik of understanding and o principle, 1 tibelr.sinful pleasures and deeds of dee eri darkness, that I neigh retain them as your customers. Your In toren requi ed It. I have added thousands of dollars t • profits of your trade, but at what a pease you now see. and I know too w 11. You have beeteme wealthy, bn I am poor indeed. And now this cruel d m ssal from your employ is ruined and ,p•ots blasted in helping tO make yo rich man!" Alas for the matt who g uch a letter as that! Again, I c argo you, tell the Whole truth about anything you sell. Lying commercial ragelleri will precede you. Lying corm ereial travellers will come right after y u into the same store. Do not lelheir unfair competition tempt you fr m hia straight lime, It is an awful barge n that a man makes when he sells his gOods and his soul at the same time.- A. oung man in one of the stores of N w ; York was selling some silks. He w s hiding them up when he said. to the 1 dy custonaer, "It is my duty to show; you tliat there is a fracture in that sil " bepooked at it and rejected the goo s, he head nian of tbe firm. t know Yo oar, Or aateamer, or the stra • Yon have bidden goodbye to • hontell for! the lama time. The - earth y oilstones* is nearing the grave. The brakes are bell rings at the terminus. 'tonal All out for etvenity. ticket now for getting into in the blood of the Lamb. Cookery for Eo s. It itt not in reason perhaps to expect the boys of the family to be brou t up tic, a knowledge of cookery. Stilli every 'hey should. be sufficiently instructedl in this art to be ble to cook without making . a Adis. guetin and unpalatable mess ofit, the army, ration or any other equally simple and com- MGR a ticles of food. All boys need not be and shbuld not be cooks, hue every, yoeng man oil 18 or 20 years should, for the sake of being hie to meet a possible emergencyl in The idea that it is beneath the dignity or domes ic or national life know how to hoil rice, s ew fruit, fly bacon and make, coffee. does nOt belong to the duties of the boys of the families to assist their mothers and sis- ters when occasion. requires in the demestio realm is inimical to the production of good soldiers, and, it may be added, of geoci hue- bands..Portland Oregonian. hat is rt that Cures When Others Fail? That obstinate and distres ing cough which so often follows la grippe -it is Royal Glycera ed Balsam of Fir, Many people in Seaforrth and vicinity, after suffering for weeks, and almost in dispair, have been relieved by a few doses. Its healing and soothing properties are truly wonderful. We do not say that it will cure every case, but we do say that it will cure a larger percentage of -eases than any other remedy you can use. For sale by all dealeis.1 Manufactured 'only by LOUDEN & WILSON SCOTT'S E3LO6K, MAIN STREET, EAFORTEry Money to Loak. amdunt of money to loan on goocE farm ro- pe v, at 61 per cent. per annum. Stris$glot I ns, po. ents Made to suit borrower, eatisfricition an d, °bargee low. At office Friday aftitrnoon nd all ay Sattaday. McDonald Block, viringhani. CANCERS. External or internal permanently cured without surgical operation or caustics, or causing palm Write for book on cancers and tumors. Numerous DR. SMITH, Cancer Specialist, Port Huron, litiahlean. 161645 MISS reyan lova ivena THO A ellen a soft w and At last To TROM su which HALL. ing all Solt conven Idontre of Pe as in well Rs sub isg N. 13 at once, MORE, from I are good 23706, dark Alto P. frig; te rag PLECILOP field P. 0 Statile of return thorough able at th turning i ierv thoroughb eery. He ehire boar 110 P10 bred YORK be admit ef service VI at the Tamworth /11; payah turning df bred yo IMMIX WO extra -a- comes th Terme JOHN also keep 1 and winner of reeurnin DDRBAN orth O. ottioek p. Concession - under entity tura, balsa) and ear side stabling und tered schools, elm cent, 4)n daS ance may 1-5 JAMES J0,, - „et Brow Grieve to se 28th, 199, a in March ; 1 calves ; 2 on thorough 1 brood sow, the oore the Propri working a Terms - All approved jo per cent. pe THOMAS B. DUBUC IMPLF Mr. John De sell by publi on Thursday lowing pro 3 mare 7 yea filly rising 2 1 year old, 2 her awns, sleighs, 1 en eet tingle ha 1 land roller, plow, 1 iron 1 weigh male chains of al auger kettle. Will, 'de - zinc, 1 cook tub, a num tO0 Romero All SOILS Of- anontheerea joint notee. ed off for