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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1899-06-02, Page 2FT see HURON OR 0 The last atage development of Waled Ca- tarrh. estprineee Catarrh Cure goes away past the peints where even speeialists ou the Oesease have been able toi reagh. It's a pene- rtrating, soothing, healing and strength.eaing ealirtg without leaving the slightest bed after -results. The only guaranteed Cats rrh time. 50e at all druggists. • up Canada's Greatest LIztirlieSt. Griffiths' Menthol Liniment is the great - curative discovery of the age. Peae- tes muscle, membrane Lad tissue to the ry New, banishes pain,s end aches with a newer Impossible with any other reme Y. Vee it. tor rheumatism, rteuraigia, he d - lichee and all soreness, ;swelling and re nammetion. All druggists, 26 eta. STH As Ilia Birthright — e Cured If the hardships and sae; flees of life eeploration of the Dark Co tinent hand b discovered to humanity the ola paint, t proven specific for Asthm it would worth all that it has cost. Riglit in t heart of the African Jung es sueli note explorere as Livingstone an Stanley ma many discovekles of medic' al plants; b t uri to date this one overt° s them 411 a healer tie this heretofore in ura'ble diseas Contracted disease is bad e ough to battl. always prov y• ears old, ha Ince his birth, ew worse An Y. wife had to be coOtinn him medlein nelglibl. ha • witlabut the hereditary form most stubborn In resisting Jas. Kirkland, 62 Princess a B.C., writes :--"Our boy. nin been troubled with Asthma In spite of medical aid it Worse. Neither myself nor night'a rest for a year—had ally poulticIng and feeding to keep him from. choking. been cured by Clarke's-Kola. we resolved to try it mime result that to -day onr child is complete! cured. We used about two b ttles, and It I trouble has appettred. He healthy ah strong. We give the credit to this wonder ful remedy." Sol two dollars; thre aiiteed, five doll plierson Co„ sole Church St., Toren ompoun an - yes, with th by all druggists. Prie bottles with cure guar s. The Gr ftiths & Mac Canadian mportera, 12 Sold J. S. aberta 1 ESTAT FOR SALE./ X dwelling and store con bined, ell situated nea centre 'of vintage. ernes reason ble. Apply t MISS 8. CARLISLE, ensa I. 1616 J2 being Lots 24 an 26, Co meal n 10, and ort part ot Lot 26, Concession 9. Thi land has !bee in pasture since first olear d, 26 or 80.yearsl ago, therefore is rich and free fr ul weRds. It i situated on the gravel road, fl e mi es north o Sea - forth and nine from Brugge! . Te ms of pa ent made to suit purchaser. Fo Far °Wars app yr to 60 a Lot iseqo owe bait bus abot uhoice fruit treea, soil unsurpassed, church convenient ; will be sold c Menhirs, applly to the proprietor on Walton P. 0' DANIEL MoMILLAN MeKillop, the north talon IA, boundary line. A scree of geed hardwoo es of aor 'ell dre.lne and post official and eap. Fortner - be premis s, or ci Proprieter 15 -tf Mai UILDIN0 LOT POR SALE.—Th very clesi LI building. lots, being nu bers 7, 38, 89 ti, ;a situated on Main street of 'gm° ville and forth. The whole contains ab ut co' e acre, and be sold in 'separate meek; or toget er to suit purchaser. 1 This property is filet south of Woollen Mills, and M party Bout umet deal south and west. Apply to JANE nr OHN SPR ondville P. 0, Executors to the Estate of IJohn Sproat len the corporatt.n, and building site either is considered th for private r OPLENDITY, FARM' FOR SALE. 0, splendid farm. of Mr. Robert Go North Road, a mile and a half Ire contains 176 Acres, nearly all cleare state of cultivation, There is a a honseagood bank barn and everythin oondition and well underdrained, It easy terms, aa the proprietor desires not sold before the fall it will be re ROBERT GOVENLOCK, Seaforth P, able and will the the of ble r a reels AT, the CI For sale the °Week. on the and in a igh o story b ick in first. lase 111 be sol on to retire. If ted. Add eas X sale, tee residence in Harpurhe at prawn oc- cupied, by the undersigned. There a good fr me bouse,!bricked inside, and a etabie al o over an ere and a half of land, also a spieadid cinch rd of all lends of fruit, both large and small. It is ituated en the main street, and has ail necessary con eniences. leo the park lot immediately in the rear of the ab ve, oontaining acres, on which there in a goof h use nd large stable, also an orchard au well. mat roperties will be sold ;nether or sep rately. T ase roperties are admirably adapted for rettred fa m - r or market gardener. Apply cm t e premise to RM FORISAGE.—Good farm fo sale, in the township of Stanley, county of uron, Con es - ion 12, Lot 16, containing 100 wires, over 9) a res o tho property a large brick hoes , frame b rn, tab es, and glade. As the present te ant move on o own farm in the fa14 and the roprietor in. ends to retire so this farm will be sol very eh p, nd on easy _terms. If n b saki bef re the la of 13 ugnst, then IT will be ren A. For articulars p- ly ou the premises, or ayfield P. O. ROBERT ILLA.GE LOTS FOR SALE.—Fo sale in Village of Bayfleld, the fonowin lots Lo i Range F, in the township of Stan' y (except t erefrora 1i 'acres owned by Mai le Cla ortheast corner of Let 7, ni Range F in the tot fp ey, contenting three urea These 1 he given. Title free from all enourul rances. further particulars apply to the udersign ROBERT WATSON, Brucetleld ; HE RY PE Hayfield, Executors. 16354 he 8, ng ts he .or d. DARTil FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot , Colleen on -X 8, Hullett, containing 100 tore% acres ale r- ed, the balance in titneer and t pasture and. Th re is a large barn with at me stabling und rneath, a so. - a Toad brick house with. kitchen attache , and pie ty of hard and soft water ; there is also ai out an a re at d half of orchard. The faran is in a ood state of cultivation*, and is all uriderdreirie 1 wit tile. I is about 10 miles from Seaforth, 8 miles fr m Clint n, an 7 miles from Blyth. It is miles from o - e, an 11 miles from at sohool. For furt er pa Honiara tap to AleGEtE0Olt BR o S., on he pr (nixes, or Constanoe pout offlue. 1636-1. R31 IN TUOKER3MITH POR SAL eo tainine 1o0 acres, 00 acres cleared a etaite of cultivation, 10 acres ofigood har Th re is on the premises a geod brick ki hen ; e large new bank barn, with ' at buildings ; two g ad wells an'd orchard na s from Seaforth and six from Clinton gra el road. School eloie 1)3,1 Will he Ap ly on the premises to ROBERT MeV for ha 0. ekersmi h, It is ve on a go d old che p. X Fur sale thiit well-known and first -el ss farm. u wit in one mile and a half of Seaforth. t oontai 07 ores; with beck residence and ood buildin ; pre ty of g.00d nit -ter end well- under rained. t will be sold as a whole, or in parts tt suit urchase , opp toady for any person desiring to get a ve y ply the Proprietor, Seaforth,1or the Tux EXPOSIT "El Rlif IN TUCKERSITITH FOR SALE _U- Lot 11, Concession 8, Tuckersmith, 100 res, all cleared -but about 8 acrs of It is ur derdrained, well fenced, an in a at , stables and out -houses. It adjoi ho 1 ; is within five mites of So forth, Ile from Klepen. There is plea of g Ill e relit- with or without the c p. 1 he est farms in the township, and will b For sal ontainin ood hieh stat nd titre od wate is one sold o asy @rine as the proprietor wante to re fro. Ala lot, ell fenced, but no buildings. Will e sold to. 4etheir or areparately. Apply on the premi es, or ed reselEgreonciville P. 0. JAMES MeTAVI H. 1639 tf §rta Bargains in Real Est te an Live Stock. TII 11TX DOLLARS an acre will bur a far a firat-class grain and stook .farai Salim of Zurich, in the township of Hay, nevi ' end a abort servio . also several roadster horses, all go and p cos right. For partioulars apply' to 4arioh P. 0. 181 acre near the may of , goo uridlngs, good fences, plenty of watet ost desirable place; also three thor orn bulls and three Yorkshire boars ughbred 11 fit for d stock, PzEzeneil rerairLa co sa cn FEY CC al • 0 Washington, May 28.—In this discourse Dr. "Thilinage speaks of some of the perils -that threaten our American institutions, and poMts out the path of- safety; text, Iseiali leii, 4, "Thy land shall be mar - As the greater includes the lees, so does the circle of feture joy around our entire world include the epicycle ot our awn republic, Bold. exhilarant, unique, divine imagery or the text. At , the close of a' week in Which for th ee days our pational melte' 'NVI1S a pagean and all that" grand national ant telltS c uld do, celebrated pe.tte, it may not be napt to antieipate tee time Who the P ince of Peace' and eee heir of ii ivergal °minion shall take 1-)0.43ession of -his net on, anti "thy land shall be married." In diecuesing the fl al destiny a this world whether we a on the way to a Sneered or a, wedding. The Bible leaves no doubt on this subj t.' In pfdtfts and en platforms and places of public 4. or course, I hear so iany of the innffled ertints of .evil pr p ecy sounded,/ as int( rinceit, and besi Thebes and B len and'' Tyre in i cemetery of nations our republi as to be onto] to be „obsequies, ,but u.ptials; not 1 :Au, orange blossoms; not req Dom, but AN t acling march; for "thy lam shal I propose to name some of t who aro elaiming the hand of t lie. This land is so fain so b hy- ead bed, not ess, is re 41!14ient that it has many suite s, an aepend much upon yotr ad liesher this or that shall be a cepte ejected. In the first iplace, y/ho comes in as suitor seeking 0 roma- moniter the hand 11U1SRO by the name sof monopoly. is . eepter is made out of the iron of the il does everything for hid own advan end for the robbery of the people Thi nt on from bad to worse until in —.Jae legislatures of - New York, N Jersey and Pennsylvania for a lo time monopoly decided everything. monopoly favor a law, it passes; if m ceoly oppose a law, it is rejected. Mo oeoly stands in the railroad denot putti into his pockets in one year $T200,000,0 in excess of all reasonable charges fo services. Monopoly holds in his one hen he steam bow xr of l000mation and in J publican par ()orate par oeket. Mo opoly deck!. nominati ns and election city electione, Ise state elec ions, national e actions. Wi h bribes he cures the votes of legislator , ments to needy relatives to lucrative positions, employing them as attorney* be re ub- so it ice or ge gs he If other the elect Mon, Monopol in one pocket n the other icity of sw has the nd the De lawyers, carrying their goods 15 Rex. pent. less if they are merchanter lid if the find a case very stubborn as yell a very important puts down before iim the hard °ash of bribery. Powerl of Monopoly. But onOpoly a not so easily caught low as when d ring the term of Mi. ne of our etates explored and exposed. he manner in which a certain railway ompany had obtained a donation of pub- ic land. It was found gut that 13 of th enatoes of that state receivPd $176,00 enong 'them, 60 membere of the Lowe House f that state received etween $6, '00 an $10,000 each, ° the overnor o t rat et ,te received $50,000, hi . clerk re :310,000 was divided among the 'ebb ents, That thing on a larger or smalle elle is all the time going oh n some() t le states of the Union, but t is not s u unuering tie it used to be, and therefor n t so easily exposed or arrested. I tel Lieted States to -day is mon poly. H its his hend upon every bushel o heat, upon every sack of salt, upo cry ten of coal, and every man, woma d child in the -United States feels th r uch of that moneyed despotism. 1 re jo ce that in 24 states of the Unio al atuly antienonopoly leagues have bee es ablishea. God speed them in the wor I h ve nothing to say against capital leis; man has a right to all the mone , h cm make honestly. I have nothing tol sa. a ainst corporations as such; with out th m no great enterprise would It po -sib e, but what I do say is that the sa ne rinciples are to be applied to cap / itl lists and to corporations that are ap- pl led to the poorest man and the plainest °rex.. What is wrong for me is wrong geeat corporations. If f take from you sation, I am ,a thief, and, if a railway ages the ;property of the people with - making any adequate compensation, t is a gigantic theft. What is wrong a small iseale is wrong on a large le. Monopoly in England has ground dreds of thousands of her best people o semi -starvation, and in ' land has dri eh multitudinous tenants lmost to es• to take the wealth of 1 60 or 70 lions of .people and put it in a tow en wallets. onopoly, brazen -faced, iron -fingered, ure-hearted monopoly, offers his hand his republic. He stretches it out over lakes and up the great roilroads and the telegraph poles of the continent says: "I:lere are my heart and hand. e ine forever." Let the millions of eople, north, south, east and west C. fal la fo yo pe da ou th oil sot hu in Pc mi vul to - the ova and Be the fer teem at tele 04105 box, forbid miens on the platform} forbid them by great organizattObs; forbid them by the over- wheln 14' sel titment of an outraged nation, fOrbl theta by the protest of the chum of God, forbid the prayer to high eaven. That Hero sha kmot have this A igail. It shall not to alltdevour- ing nionopoly that this land sis to be Ano he sUitor claiming the hand of this repu .io is nihilism. He is nothing but a knife fpr bomb for universal explosion. He believes in no Go , nol government, no heaven and no h 1 ex° lit what he can make on earth. He slew he Czar of Russia, keeps many a king practically imprigoned, killed A rahan Lincoln, would put to death eve kin and president on earth, and, if he had he powee, would climb up untfl he con d drive the God of heaven from his t trone and take it himself, the universal butah r. In France it is called corm/Innis ; in the United States it Is called ana ohism'; in Russia it is called nihilism, ut that last is the t graphic and dewed tive term. It means Oomplete the holdin of property a criine, and it would driv'e a dagger through yaw heart and put a torah to your dwelling and is whole land into the posses - t and' lust and raPine and turn over sion of the the town's nd cities of this la d. It offers its hand te this fair republic, It proposes o tear to pieces, the ballot bo , the legis - t would take this land and divide it up, r.rather, -d vide it down. It ould give much to the idler as to. the worker, to 'he bad as o the *good. Nihilism! This panthe ha log prowled aor ss other lands as s t itePaw on our oil, and it is Only waiting, for the tirag i which to Pittsburg daring the great ri ts; it was nihilism that slow black p 'pie in our northern elides during the w r; it was uihilism that maulectto death the Chi- nese immigitauts years ago; it i that glares out • of the wind ws of the drunkeries upon sober people is theylgo by. Ah, power has nev Yet b4en tested. I pray God -its power ay never be fully te, tad. It would, if it had the *power, loav every church, oho esl, cathe- drals, school ouse tind college i ashes. Let see s it ja_ the worst enemy of the 'abort/11g classes in any ooui try. The honest cry1fOr refers's lifted by oppressed laborang Men is ;drowned ou by tho vociferation tor anarehy. The criminals and the wig sbonds who rang throegh our cities talking about their lits, when ey could be hushed up, and e down- dden lab ting men of thi country b ead for hu gry children. . In this land, w g is for the, people or gathere up any mos erity. Ill this land the bes weapon is n the club, not the shillala , not fire- arm e but the ballot. Let !not our op- ed laboring men be lbe uiled to Omni gundef the- bloody bailiahe of nihil- ism. It will make your axe -heavier, your wages sMaller, your table scantier'. your children hungrier, • your suffering greater. Yet Ws nihilism, wit feet red - of slaughter, domes forth and offers its hand for ehis republic. Shall he -banns be proclaimed? If so, where hall the marriage altaa be? and who wil be the officiatlng priest? and what wil be the musiet That altar will have to be white with- bleached skulls, the filciating priest must be a dripping ass ssin, the music) Must be the smothered groan of multitedinoua victims, the garla ds must be twisted of iiiight shade, the fr its must be epples of Sedoin, the wine in st be the blood of Se. 13artholomew's assacre. No! It ie not to be to nihilism, t ie sangu- inary monster, that this Ian is to be Inildelleees Threat. Another suitor, for the han of this nation is infidelieys When the nidnight ruffians despoiled the grave A. T. Stesvart in St. ,Marks' ohurchyaid every- body was shocked; but infide ity pro - seises something worse than hat—ethe robbing of all the graves of Christendom of the hope of it resurrection. It proposes to ehisel out from the tombstones of your Chrietian dead the words "Asleep in .Teeus-," and substitute the words, "Oblit- eration—annihilation.'' Infid pro- poses to take the letter from e world's - Father, invitipg the nations to irtue and happiness, and tear it up into fragments so small that sem cannot read a word of it. -It proposes -to take the c nsolation froni the brokenhearted and- th soothing • pillow from the dying. Infl lity pro- poses to eweae in the Pres! enti of.the United States, and the supre e court, and the governors of states, an the wit- nesses in the cohrtroom with their right hand [on Paipe's "Age of Reason." -or Volta re's "Philosophy of History." It pr po t7 ent tio del es to take away item this country ok that makes the difference tee- the United States and the kingdom a id Bornesian cannibal wo ild in 20 nations bac thee f Orn sei wohld be bet that t is wor d has ever had has come The only irulse in the rikht direction from t e It was ttr mother of lemaart law end of healthf I jurisprud- ence. That bee& has been the mother of all reforms and all charities-I—mother. of English magna chute and American +ration of independence! Benjamin onklin, holdine that holy book in his ris and read to them out of the prophe- , and the Jinfidels, not k was, declared it hey.had, ever heard. 115 George , Washing on down on big kne s in the snew at Val ey Forge, and led the dying prince Alb t to ask some one tis sing "Reek of Ages." I tell you that the woret attempted crime of the century is the attempt to destroy this! book. Yet infi elity, loath - could destroy the criptures, it years turn the civilized to semi -bar arism, *and i -barbarism into midnight il the morals of -a menagerie lesnakes and chimpanzees Inman race. . er than the mivals of the ht cies of Habakkuk knowing what bo was the best pi:Mt That book brou. some, stenehful, rotten monster, iohorons with the thahand of this r t through sed leprous, / pestiferous, tretches oat its hand, second death, to take Ictive magazines, and rough lyceum leatures, and through rioatures of rell ion. It asks for all that rt., of the contin nt already fully settled and the two -third not yet counted. It says: "Give me a least of the Mississippi, with the keys o the church and with me Wyoming, giv me Alaska: give me Monta -Colerado, give nee all ces and keep them by right long before the gospel And presses his case appal- lingly. nns of that marriage tes west of this suitor Shall the be preclaimed? of whom the worl amid fe tigues an what e and our ildren have suffered A man once we ferbid the:bawls of 'that marriarre I" the mighty En JUNE 2 189 ••Xvoll say all patriotic) vOloes. ''Qu In- stitut One were bought at too dear a price and were defended at too great a sacrifice to be onettply surrendered. " " 1" says t e God of Bunker Hill and de- pendence Hall, and Gettysburg. "I did. not dot this nation for such a fame," "No!" exy 10,000 voices. "To infidelity this nd shall not be married!" t Pledged to Chriat. But ther4 is another suitor that ipre- gents is claim for the ha,nd of WO lowin my ext where it s. "4. shall t yGd rejoice over thect." DO not my figbre. It is ehe figure oft -the 131ire. -Christ is s desirous to have thie w' rld love hiM th t he stops at no humilitrn of sine a e compares his grace to it - Me on he e es of . the blind snail. He compareg himself to a hen gathering the chickens, and in s_ny text he compares himself; to a suitor begging i, handlin Illavrit40. Does this Christ, he Kistg. deserve, this land? I Behold Pil to's b 11 , and t1.1 insulting taixpectoratiol on e face o - Christ. Behold the alvareart massacre and the awful hemnrrhage of five woends. .Tacob served 14 years for )11/m1101db-tit Christ, my Lord, the King, :suffered; in torture 88 years to win the love of this world. As often prilicesses at their very birth are pledged in treaty bf marriage. to princes or kings of earth, eo this nett= at its birth wits ledged to Christ fOr Divine marriage. B fore Coa- Santa Marla; the Pinta and the Nina fin. their wcsnder Iii voyage. what was the last; thing th y,did? They sat own and glimpse pf this :cohntry and the gun f After Chlumbus and his 120 men had stopped frotn the Fillip' deck to the solid knelt' and nseerated he new World te God. \Vim did the H guenots do after the, lande in the Car lines? What. did the Hollan refugees d "after they had lam ed in ew 'York? What did the Pilt grin. nth irs do after they landed in No\ Ensl lid? With bended knee an upr ted tic and heaven -besieging praye the, tool p ssession of this continent fo God H ev was -the -first American me gresis ope ie I' By prayer, in the mune o Jessis Oh is FroM itg birth this natio Christ. . re- fel - the so And th in see how good Geld has bee* to us! Ju a open the map ofithe continent and SOO 1101, it is ghaped for immeasur-1 able prospe ities. Navigable elvers, more cl in numb lid greater than of any other land, Toni down on all sides into _the sea. proph vim: large manufactures and sy comme 00. Look at the great ranges o muumuu s thnbered with wealth on t se tops a c ides, Metalled witli wealth thonsand is E are miles of iron. The land. so contour a hat extreme weather hardly ever lasts iln e than three days—extreme heat or ex r one -col& Climate for the most part b acing and favorable for brawn and rain. All fruits, all minerals, all harves Sae ery displaying an autumnal geantr that no land on earth prat s to ri al. No Sauth Amer- ican earth 1411.es. o Scotch inists, No Lention fogs. No E ptian plagues. No Germanic visions. The people of the 'United Stat s are h ppier than any peo- ple on earth It is 5 e testimony of every' man that lia travel ed abroad. For the poor, inore:s inpath ; for the industries, more opport mity. h, how good God With to our f therse nd how good be has cross and t4unaph, to him who still re- inembere the pray° of the Huguenots and Hennaed refuge s and the Pilgrim Fathers—te him sh 11 this land be mar- ried. Oh, you Christ an patriots, by your contributions and yo r prayers hasten on 'leaf in the 4 ighty to e of our national We have been tu ning an important at the gates of this 0 emigrants arrived. nissioner of emigre - Hy was that in that rants would arrive f commerce. crottlinent is going th its population? have not been to you have not been you have not been smack to -day on s well be afraid of 1 the next°ten gen- to be afraid of be - reign populations ne state of Texas is Austrian empire, e supports 35,000,-, state of Texas is and France sup - The one state of size the German ic empire supports tell you the great tes is more popu- ay stand at the ress out as far be - can press out be - to foreign 4ations, 11 ye peo le'who ous and od lov- am so afr id that prejudices or for- lant them here." ck of the govern - reseed them, and I Give them the . Throw around spitalities. They and hard arned and then w will and ''th land where sha 1 the .it be the oky gh artificial and history. 0 a yea I was told the co tion that t probabi one year 60 000 emi at the diffe ent gates Beam P to be ovOror wded Sy Ali, thee ehows yo California, hat show - to Oregon, hat show to Texas. fishing Lake Ontario might night as for any one oration of inericans in this oun ry. The yet the tAns Ian emp 000 people. The - on larger than all France Texas far s passes in he Germa empire, yet want of the lation. While som gates, of the foreign popu yond them a, saying, "Co are honest an people ity sayin tions, I d beckon 0, come, industr they will bring their ign governments and bsurd. They are s nents that hey want fre reat gospel -o hem all C ill add their dedicate all shall be maeri marriage Alta Mountains. w 8,V9 op Americ welcoin industr ountry, o Chris be? Le en thr mighty irriga to , all covered. as th y ill and orchards nd grai the marriage lta let the Boston a, d th the Charleston o the and there bet ee the nations kneel, and t the loudest thtinders Sierra Nevada the foundation other side sho Wedding mare could not dro would `take t on the of the , that the v e hand nations, saying, "as joiceth. over a bride, so OV437 thee." At that ma platters shall b of Nev chalices of Cali ornia g ;of northern oe nerds !southern grov s and facture free n ump lan American man 'No!" say the home lations from th west, a martyr band from all the tr , is not worthy, toiling ven. And so "t malaria and starve - we ean help it. By heir tops shallebe e, with vineyards fields. l'Phen let w Yorke -and the o coast come to ne side. and then NeW Yorks and tlantic coast come let th s bride of en if ,th -organ of at ever shook the ne side r moved lleghan es on the full di pason of organ of thunders ice of him who of thie bride of bridegroom re - thy God rejoiceth lege banquet the da Silver, and the Id and the fruits nd the spices of the tapestry of and the congratu- ons of _earth and armless of him - hall be married. " elf a se. alked long the banks of hrates iver.: Its waters Moved softly and sile tiy long. 'Why / del not the waters surg a roar?" asked the man. And the er replied, "I need net relent aloud; na name Is known WAdely enough. The green meadows which 1 water and e lofty trees -upon my banles—these to ho ame" The Man came aft yards to the Tigris with al ude of foam, "Holloa, how loud river, y shouting 11 es not help me tit all, r ill am not praised like other The I tan wont furth ;He saw treeg with tl e costliest and Most beautiful fruit. Why so stills geed trees?" he asked. "Why not rued° 3i4e your com- panions in the wood?"1"We are known," they rep led; "by the fruit ;we bear, how- eber silent we aro." S on the man came wood whose trees thwarted to the sky, apd whose empty create kept, up a con- stant rear. "Ah.," they renlied, "we have shonted loud and long and yet we are a. vitt Areated as we desert Start a Bank Aciebunt. business WOMLITI, hose experience has been lone and succe sfal, said to me the Other day; I could think of for *Yoting women who are earningtheir own living, or who have the epees and expenses of a household to look' after, and if I had to confine myself to jelst four words, I should say; 'Start a batik aecount.' It is an easy matter to do se nowadays, when I th the savings banks arid others offer w tuen every pos- Besides, it is a good hing to do, for several reasons. It 'fos ers a feeling of independence and devel ps businesslike habits, two essentials for successfsil busi- ness ,Woman. Then, too, is a conveniene and desirable thing to pa bills by means of checks where it is poss ble to do so. It preserves a record of the ansaction, and acconnt, even though it be a email one should be looked upon as la ne essity who lias business affairs. of any nse- It Pays to Be Concerned. Yet ng men who have no conce anon h ooncern in regard to their own affairs to xna,ke their own a filleCOSS. A clerk, behind either, the counter or the desk, 'is 'only 'of value to his eniployer when be exerts himeelf in behalf of that empIoiver, and the :measure :of his ;value is the measure of his exertion. !! Therefore, the more a y 'mg man does for hit! eniployer directly, ' the more he is doing for himself indirect . By honest ellort—and h fleet effort is doing all he can—the oung n an not only becomes entitled to higher wages, but he is at the me inle ac suiring snore 4nowledge and skill, e° hicl shall fit hint the better to ca n b siness on his .own account who ppo tunity offers. lb boys to be concerined lit your eat- ployer'e. business; it does oti pay to be WINO 900nRops VegetablePreparationforAs- the_Stainachsandnowo of OT isTiatc one. , eforkilinKfitiOLWitifli 71T:eart Steer ifirderp002, flung: • s Lk)SS OF SLEEP. eSienile Signature of I IS ON THE TheY 21543 toiligeStiOn toss, Bad Tas rate esa the Si $S711:11thteiPtfri.11 see you Ask. for Insist ar etst for le not Sharks Afraid of olio. The cowardliness of sh rks is well known unong men who ha e heen much to sea southern waters inf sted by man- eaters. The fiercest shark s ill gpt out of 1 the seal ay in a very greae hurry if: thel swinern r, noticing its appr sets up . a noisy plashing. A. shar la in deadly I fear o any sort of livin ;thing that 1 splashe in the water. Atno g the Sout Sea Islands the natives never go. to sea b thing alone, but always in parties of ha f a dozen or so, in order that • t ey in )7 make the .scare t o sharks awe On in a while natives foolishly de °hes mseefrom his swimming party and nomentarily: forgets to keep up hi sp shing. Then there is a swish, and t e re -eater comes C.,f.ttS'T COPY OF i.AVRAPPE14. ery The fat - signature OIRTAPLE. CLOTH- NCOMEORTIBLE MIL m veather has come with a rush aid perhaps has caught you with ali your winter clothes onT\ You =were uncomfortable 4in con- sequence, We are prepared to make you comfortable. The way we do it 4S by supplying you with a nobby summer sui a regular heat defier. Then too we have just the proper underwear for hot weather, to say nothing of a big selec of other summer furnishings. You 'night think that whi this would satisfy the cravings of the body, it would the pocket book uncomfortable, but we strive to meet both requirements for comfort. We think we have succeeded, try us and seeyi. SE Dealers in f kinds, in WA neatly done., mg, and a et always on. ha prices, and Agents for t Machine, bei inestie use, the Thxd cur goods iron of bur* Int to f's oes better Arterial sad icientific print attended to deuce, direetle BROS., SEAFOtR171, Ontario. Every Mau His Own Sod ountialtal. acid, gas to liquid form, an e proposes to sell i to the public in lit 1 steel cap- eules. s all enough to be ca led ha the vest pee -et. By this inventi every man (tan hav a soda fountain wi him wher- ever he oes, for by unscre ing the cap - Stile an dropping its contents into a Pitcher r bottle of water the liquid dis- golves i to gas again and ;charges the tai or siphon. A company is being for ied 1 r the purpose of making cap- sule an charging them with. the liquid ga';. It i proposed to put thei1-1 up in the littl bo es to be supplied to the puhlic thr ugh uggists and grocers and furn- ish thei to hospitals, steams' ips, armies and navies in quantity. No One Knows. EINf tilACkftAC Little larence (after a, season of coei- esti n)— a, why are- peeler !ornaments canc.' ornaments? . Callipers—My son, I ca not tell a lie; do bot know. I le LOW Ret PProxi row Tot I at eieu Witen. Genius Gets a 81 ow. hy 19 it the mind is brig iter when is past 40;" f ter that age the snan gets genee h net to eat too much." Her Regret. :" I am se sorry my husband as defeated " That iein't the point. It w s so much easier and pl asanter to aye hi write his opmions and peak thern•than t make me COMFORT, SPEED and SAFETY Perfection yet attained in Boat Cons▪ truction—Luxurious eat. Artistic Pornisbtag, Decoration and Efficient Service Geotpali Bag, Peloskegy Citiago ine offers a Panorama of 46o miles of equal variety and interest. RIP ;. ft WEEK; BETWEEN t and Mackinac ANO ATESto Picturesque Mackinac te Costireen Cleveland, $19,30 o,St6.2s; from Detroit, $13.75 EVERY DAY A4D NIGHT BETWEEN Cleveland, Eirztarlii-43ay and Toledo. eild 2C. or Illustrated Pam Wet. Addrem DAY ANC NIGHT SERVICE BETWEEN DETROIT AND CIEVEILAND Pare. Si 50 Each Direction. Bertha, 75ei, it. Stateroom, 31.75. ConnectionsaremadeatClevelandwith Earliest Trains for all points Zest, South and Southwest, and at Detroit for ale points North and Northwest. Sunday TrIpsitme, July, Aug„Sep.,Oct. Only si down an,d listen to them." wThhereinel are three conditiorls: When the blood is pooi,; more flesh is needed; of the throat dr lung There is one cure: that I Scott's Emulsio It contains the be t cod- er oil emulsified, or di-, g cerine. It promise mare p cimpt relief and mo e last - in benefit in these cas than c n be obtained fro the mie of any other remedy. and $r.00, ail druggists, The Right 9f Citizenship. Business Established. 33_ SMialii Successor to it W. Ffoffnaan, importer of foreign and domestic staple and fancy dry goods an illinery., Everything ready for a large Spring trade. Our busi- ness methods dash, produce and one price. Samples given on application; money reftind in ad cases when so lesired, and no questions asked ; employees not alliowed t alk patrons into buying—the price and quality must sell the, goods. The B. Smith Dry Goods eompany have done business in the county _ for 30 years ; t ey have the run of the best wholesale houses; they- are armed with t e nerv ability and capital to successfully carry on the dry goods husi busine s with em during the busy days of_ last fall, when they conducted the Hoffni n eta& ale, the distribution of Which caused such satisfaction. In cross ing sw rds in en 3 riVa ry with thei other business firms, they do so without misgivings. Nowadays busineis friendship and sentiment is, to a great, extent) cast aside, and people go where they g4t the best value for the outlay. ' If the new, firm can give y u this, they deser e your patronage ; if they succeed in no ing this, it will lie d ne by straight ho est business methods. There is some dignlity remaining e en in the dry go business, and we are with the other reliable business ho ses in maintaining it. The R. B. Smith Dry Goods Co; ex- tend', a cordial invita tO visit their new millinery department, under the man- agenient of Miss St chan, of London, and the dress goods and general stock under the supervisio bf Mr. Andrews. R. Do its Trrl .11: Seafor Our direct time an; ana a rBrr: te e si aaC: bo suit very': TST OARS for' for fstrther °IimmixesiestaeWdriTgtrar:......e Mixed Treit.ss..., teem neer— Wein borne News._ BlUevale -Goma Nonni— London, lie Londesboro Wu -wham et Goyim 3Sorrs-e Wilighenied Myth Londisbortes KIPPen— Exeter residon. (ern