Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1899-10-27, Page 2• e " • t*. , -;selas• - • •THE' HURON EXPOSITR Important to Athletes, , • Mr. Mack 'White, the well-known trainer of the Toronto Lacroege CM and Oagoode aflFootball Club, writes: I consider hiriffithe Menthol Liniment unequalled for athletes or those training, I have used it evith the best success, and can heartily re- commend it for stiffness, soreness, sprains and ail forms of swelling and inftaname- goo. AN druggists, 2.5 cts. 22 The Kora 4istiuna Care. - ' Positive and unlimited confidence In the Kola plant as nature's sure remedy for histhinn has been abundantly sustained In the many remarkable earn obtained through the use of Clarice's Kola Compound. It le a great discovery. Enderted by the medical profession everywhere. Over 500 eases absolutely cured la Canada. Cure guaranteed Sold by all druggists, 27 WONDERFUL ASTHMA RECOVERIES. A Cleriso's Kola Compound Offielaily Tested by the British Columbia Gov- ornnaente at the Horne for Incur- ables, Kamloops, B.C.-The Medical Superintendent Pronounced Long - Standing Cases Cured. Many temporary relief asthma remedies have, during the past few years, been pbse- ed 'before the public), but until the introdue- tient to the medical profession of Clarke's Kola Compound; nothing has 'been found to have any effect on preventiae future at- taeks. Thu Medical Superintendent for the /Tome for Incurables in Kanhooes, 13. hus he t probably the best chance In Can- ada to thoroughly tost this wonderful re- medy for asthma. Ile reports that on the three oases of asthma %shore Clarke's Kola Compound has been tried. iii not a3 single Instanee did it fail to cure, and on, ono partici:ear ease A lady had been confined to her bed nioat of the time for nearly a year previous to taking this remedy, and leas than three bottles have completely cured her. Over one year has now paned, and there hos not been the slightest inclination of asthma -returning. Three bottles of Clarkes Kola Compound are guaranteed to mire any ease of asthma. Over 500 melee have already been, cured In Canada alone by this remedy. Sold by all druggists. Price two dollars; three bottles, with 0(ira guar- anteed, for five dollars. The Griffiths & katepherson Co., sole Canadian importers. 121 Church street, Termite, or Yaneouver, O. O. le, Bold by J. B. Roberta. .41111F;7110.111111,111.1111~Mlf" REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. F-DARK FOR SALE.- South half of 30 and North half of 29, fith Concession, township of Hay, known al the Sturgeon farm. The soil is unexcelled, with good fences and underdraining. The buildings are fair. Tnis is a splendid farm, In a good locettion and will be sold chetp. Apply to SAMUEL SHILLIE Efentsall. 1618 51 "DARR FOR SALE. -Lot 80, Concession 1, town- • ehlp of Tualceremith II. R. S.'the property of the Iato William Whitely i6 offere 1 for sale_ On the titan is- erebted a two. story stone house; bare and shed& There is also a good bearing orchard, and the farm le well watered with a living spring and a wen. Apply W. S. LAWRENCE, Cliuton P. 0.; or to E. WHITELY on the premises. 1642-tt MIAMI FOR SALE -The ekeoutors of the estate of • the late Francois Hohlbein offer for sale Lot No 21, Concession 16, Township of Stephen. This farm contaire 75 acres, an in good cultivation. There is' on the premiees s twa story frame house, a hank barn with windmill wl3ich forces water late the barn, 2 ever living wells; is all tile underdraintd and well fumed. Good bearing orohard, 1 miles from a School and 31 miles from the nourishing Allege of Dashwood, Address EDWARD DEITRICH • St. Clemens,Wellington County,or FRANK HOHLBEIN, Deshwoocl, P. 0. 1661x8 § PLENDID FARM FOR SALE, -For sale the splendid farm of Mr. Robert Goveniook, on the orth Road, *mile and a half from finforth. I contains- 176 sores, nearly all cleared and in a high state of cultivstion, Tnere is a two story brick armee, good bank barn and everything In &Mechem oondition and well underdrained. It will be sold on °say terms, as the proprietor desires to retire. If not sold before the fail it will be rented. Address ROBERT GOVENLOG/I, Seaforth P. 0, 159851 1 -ARM FOR SALE. -For sale, in the Township of . MoKillop, the north 5p sores of Lot 16, Comes - hots 14, boundary line. About 47 sores cleared, three acresof good hardwood bush, about two acre* of 9hofee fruit trees, soil uneurpessed, well drained and enced ; eollool half a mile away, post °Moe and ohureb. convenient ; will be sold cheap. For par- ticulars, apply to the proprietor on the premises, or . Welton P. 0. DANIEL MoMILLAN, Proprietor. - ; 1699-t1 VARSI IN TUOKERSMITH FOR SALE.-Foesale, r Les 24, Concession 8, E. R. S., Tuckersmith, eontainfng 100 eons, 90 sores cleared and in a good state of cultivat"on, 10 acres. of good bardwood bush. There is on the premises a good brick house and kitchen ; a large new bank barn, with stone stabling underneath; an open shed ; driving house, and other buildings; two geed wells and orchard. It is five mites from Seafortfa and six from Clinton on a good gravel road. School close by. Will be Bold &esp. Apply on the premises to ROBERT bleVETY, or Sea - forth P. 0. 1689x4tt FARM IN HAY TOWNSHIP FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 22, on the North Boundary of Hay Township. This term contains 100 mores, 136 &cues elesred, the rest good hard weld bush. It is well un- derdrained and fenced. There le a, good stone house with a No. 1 cellar ; largo bank barn ; implement shed; sheep houeo 70x76, with flesteO tee stabling and root cellar undernewth ; a good orchard; 2 good wells and cletern. There is 12i sores of fall wheat itawed on a rieh fallow, well manured ; 40 aoree seed- ed down recently, the reet in good shaps for atop. This, is a No. farm, well situated for markets, • ohurobes, schools, post office, etc., and will be sold -.reasonably. Apply on the premises, or address ROBERT N. DO1JG/IA.9, Box 1, Blake, Ont. 1658x8 -DAM! IN GREY FOR SALE. -For sale Lot No. 7, in the 14th Concession of Grey, containing 100 acres, about 76 cleared aed the balance well timbered w:th hard wood and ash. The farm is all well fenced and seeded to grass and is free from all foul weeds. There is a trews house and large bank barn with tone stabling uederneath, There is a good orchard and a never failing spring oreek runnieg throueh the farm. It is good either tor graeing or erain growing anil is within three and a half miles of the prosperous vil ge of Brussele. Terme clay. Possession given at a y Uwe- For further particulars apply to the pro rietor, Seriforth P. 0. STEPHEN LAMB. • 1660x4 ROPERTY IN HARPURHEY FOR SALE. -For sale, the residence in Ilarpurhey at present oc- cupied by the undersigned. There fe a good frame house, bricked insides and a stable, also over an aore and e half of land, also a splendid orchard of all kinds of fruit, both large and small. It Is situated on the main street, and. has all neceseary conveniences. Also he park lot immediately In tha rear of the above, contaluing 8 moos, on whioh there is a good house and large stable, also an orchard and well. These* properties will be eold together or separately. These properties are admirably adapted for asreticed farm- er or market gardener. Apply on the prrmises to the proprietor, or address Seaforth P. 0. •WILEJAil DYNES. 183441 MIAMI IN TUCKERSMITII FOR. SALE. -For sale, le Lot 11, Conceosion 8, Tuakeramith, containing 100 acres, all cleared but about 8 notes of good bush. 15 18 urderdralned, well fenced, and in a high state of oultivation. There is a good stone house ; good barns, stables and out -houses. It adjoins a goed school; is within five miles of Sea.fortb, and throe alike from Kippert. There is plenty of good water. Will be told with or without the crop. 15 19 one of She beat farms in the townehip, ead will be sold- on ; easy terra& as the proprietor wants to retire. Also 60 acres within- a mile and a quarter, a good graeing lot, well fenced, but no buildings. Will be eold 50. nether or separately. Apply on the prenfloes, or ad - drum Egmondville P. 0. JAMES 1680 if MIAMI FOR SALE. -Lot 88, Conciesion 4, East Wawanosh, oontaining 125 acres There Is on the place a good brick dwelling house 20x28, with wing 18x28, it eterey lfgh ; stone cellar full etas; frame Summer kitchen and woodshed 16x14; hard and soft water frame barn 5008, with stone stables underneelk ; frame pig pen 16x112 ; two good or. charde ; Itt sores °leered, balance is gocd hardwood bush; well fenced with cedar rails, ane well watered by three geed spring wells; 'wheel and char& eon- ventept ; lye taloa from Blyth, 12 miles from Wing. bens.7 miles trona Goderieh ; must be e31d to close the estate. Apply to JOHN WALLACE, Executor for the Joseph Jae:anion estite, Bly th P. 0., or to 0 Hamilton, Myth, 1868if MIAMI IN STANLEY FOR SALE. --For sale, Lot r 9- and the weet half of Lot 8, on the 12th emcee - elan, or Brownson Line, of Stanley. This farm con- tains 160 scree, all of which' is cleared, except four acres. It lq in -a state of firsteolass cultivatiori, well fene-ed and all unclordrained, meetly with tile. There lea hirge frame dweline house as good a i now, with good stoic foundation and cellar, huge bankbarn ,wtth stone stabling underneath, and; numerous other r.Witting& inoluding a large pig house. Two good Orchards of &oleo fruit, else nice ish3de and *nee ;mental trete,. , There are two inning oreeki running through the fame and plenty ot good water all the year round without pumping. It is well sitnated for markets', churches, 5c:heel& post °Mee &a , and good gravel road e leading from it in all direction. It ts within view of Lake Huron, and the boats can ne seen pasting up and down from th t house. This is one of tile best equipped Wen An the county, and will be sehl on easy tering, lie the proprietor wants to retire on account of ill health. Apply on the prem. ISCS, or addrese Blake P. O. JOHN DUNN, 1619-51 THE STRONG SWIMMER REV. -DR. TALMAGE EMPLOYS A BOLD FIGURE FROM .THE BIBLE, CHRIST THE GREAT RESCUER, The Helpfulness of iteIllgion for Those who Struggle Against Adverse Clr- . cumatanees-Putting Implicit Trust in the Saviour. Washington, Oct. ,22.—In this dis- course Dr. Ta1mage employs •a very bold figure of the Bible to bring. out the helpfulness of religion for all those in any kind of struggle. The text is Isaiah -xxv, 11,, "kie Ethan spread forth his .hands in the midst of them,- as he that swinimeth 'spreadeth forth his 'hands." • In the summer season multitudes of people wade into the pends and lakes, and rivers and seas to dive or float or swim. In a world the most of which is water -all men and:wo- men should learn to t3W1111. 8011-10 of you have learned. the side- stroke in= troduced by George Pewter's in 1850, each stroke of that. kind carrying the swiltimer. a • distance- of 'six feet, and some of you may use the Over -- hand stroke . invented by Gardener, the expert who by it won the 500 3.ard championship in Manchester in 1'802, the swimmer by that stroke carrying his arm in the air for a more lengthened reach, and 'some of you may tread the water as t hough you had been made to walk the sea, Ina most of you. usually take what is called the breast stroke, placing the hands with the backs, upward., about five inches under the water, • tha inside of the wrists touching the breast, then pushing the arms for- ward coineident, with the stroke of gie feet struck 'oat, to the greatest width possible, and you thus tencon- silously• illustrate the meaning of my text, "Ile shall spread forth his hands in the midst of them, as he that swimmeth spreadetit forth his hands to swim." • „ The fisherman seeks out unfre- quented nboks. You -stand all day' on tthe bank of a river in the broil- ing sun and fling out your line and catch nothing, la hile expert an- gler breaks through the jungle and. goes by the shadow of the solitary rock and, in a place wh:ere 110 fisher- man. has been for • ten years, throws -out -his line and comes home at night, his face shining and his bas- ket full. I do not know why we ministers of the gospel need always be fishing in the same stream and preaching from the same texts that ot her people preach front. I cannot understand the policy of the minis -- ter who in illackfriars , London, lateland, every week for 80 years preached from the Epistles La the Hebrews. It is an exhilaration to .nte when 1 come across a tamale which I feel no one else has treated; and my text, is one of that kind. There are fm,ths in God's word that are well beaten by Christian feet. Men men want to quote Scripture, hey quote the old passages that very one has heard. When they vent a. chapter -read, they read a hapter that all the other people ave been reading, so that the ;lurch to -day is ignorant of three- ourths of the Bible. Yea go into the Louvre at Paris. ou confine yolirseIf to one, corridor 1 that opulent gallery- of paintings. s you coin° out, your friend says to hu, "Did you see- that Itemem- remit?" "No." "Did you see that 'Man?" "No." "Did you see that tubens?" "No." "Did you. see that aphael?" "No." "Well," says our friend, "then you did not see he Louvre." Now, my friends, I hink we are toe ranch , apt to con- ne ourselves to One of, the great. naidors of Scripture tituth, and so tech so that there is not one per in out of a million who has ever caked the all suggestive and pow rful picture- in the words of my xt. This text represents Gad as a tong swimmer, strikingout to ash down iniquity and save the nils of men. "He shall spread wth his hands in the midst of tem, as he that swimmeth spread - h forth his •hands to swim." The gum is hold and many sided. Most you know how to 'swim.. Soma you learned it in the city school, . here this art is taught; some of al in boyhood, in the river near au- father's house; somo. • of you nce you came to manhood -or wo- anhoach while summering on the etch of the sea. It is a good thing know how to swim, notonly for mrself, but because you will after chile perhaps have to help others:. 1 do not, know anything more stir- ig or sublime than to see ionie n like Nimman McKenzie lfsping nu the ship Madras into the sea save Charles Turner, who had opped from the royal yard while ying to loosen -the ,sail, bringing back to the deck amid the huz- s of the. passengers and brew. If man has not enthusiasm enough cheer in such circumstance, he serves himself to drop into the sea d have no one to help him. The 3a1 Ifurnane Society of England, ts established in 1774, its object applaud and reward those who add pluck up life from the deep. y one who has performed such a 'd of daring _has all the particu- s of that braveny recorded -in- a blic record and on his breast a da1 done In blue and gold and mze, anchor and nionogram Evid aiption, telling to futuee genera - ns the bravery of the man or wo- at who mired some one from >we ing. n- order to understand the full ce of this figure, you need- to lize that our race is in a sinking dition. You sometimes lacier pee - talking of what they &insider the st beautiful words in ear len- ge. One Man says it is "home," t.her man nays it is the word other," another says it is thi- rd "Jesus," but I tell yen. the terest word in all our Itinguase, word meet angry and baleful, word saturated with the moat uble, the word that accounts for the loathsamenees and the' pans the outra.ge and the .harrowing, that word is "sin." You spell with three letters, and yet those ee letters describe the cireumfer- e and pierce - the diameter of 'ything bad in the universe. Sin sibilant word. You cannot pro- ms it without giving the siss of flame or the hiss of the serpent. And then if you add three lot- to that word it describes eve,rY li 0 A I) 1 1. 11 .ec 11 S( .11 • te t sc fc I i et fi of of Y( Y( si 111 1)1 1,0 1' Y( it X 1 1111 fr o dr t r hi' o to NV; t o Sli ( An de: Jar pit brc me inse tio rna drl fo r rea C011 pie nio a arm W0 bit the the tro • and and it thr enc ever is a no u the Sin! tern • one or us le y nature—sinner. We have outraged the law of God, not. occasionally, or now and then, lent, • perpetually. The liable deelares it. Rark! It thunders two claps; "The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately Wicked." "The sonl that airmail, -it Shall die," What -the Bible says our own conscience af- firms.. After Judge Morgan had sentenced Lady Jane Grey to 'death his con- science troubled him so much for the deed that he became Insane, and all through his lisanity he kept saying: "Take her away frim me! Lady Jane Grey! 'Falco hcr a.way! Lady Jane Grey!" It was the voice. Of conscience. And 110 Ilan ever •does anything wrang, hos ever great or small, but his consci „nee brings that matte before , him, and at every step of •his iniebeh vior it, says, • "Wrong, wrong!" S n is a leprosy; sin is a paralysis; s.ii is a consump- tion; sin is a polluti•n; silt is:death. • Give it a fair chane, and it will swamp you and me, ody, mind and soul, forever. Then what dowe vant? A swim- mer—a, strong swimmer, a swift swimmer! , And blessed be God, in my text we have h'm announced. "He shallspread for1,h his hands in he that swim - his lin.nds to ticed that when escue any one apparel. He tch hived imen t, his' ev- off eet wn ns, ed t ter ng th t of them, as meadoth forth tched a swim - ifs whole body The arms are er ad a.- 1- to n - El, - is to ut he re or of st rf 11 't,- a a- . the midst of thein, 6. meth 'stretched forth swim." You have no a swimmer goes to he puts off his beav mast not have -any s about him if he is g Wig- to de t great- .deed, And -wh at Christ St ped forth to same us he shook the sandals of heaven; and his f were'free, and then h 3 stepped do into ahe wave of our transgressto and it cattle up 'over his wound feet, and it came ah ve the -spc stab in his side ---aye it dashed the lacerated " terriple, the high wa mark , of 'his anguish, ' Then, risi above the flood, "he stretched for his hands in the mid he. that swimmeth s 1-12 hands to swim," • If you have ever we meta, yoa notice that is brotight into play. flexed, thehands dr a e the twat back, the knees are aptly°, the he • h; thrown .back to eseape stanngul tion, the whole body is in propu sion. And when. ChriSt eprang in the deep to sa,ve uh 'tire nature to it—al his godhea i threw his o s in his oniniseience, his ..goodness, h love, - his omnipotence, head, hear eyes, hands, feet.. We Were far 0 on the sea and so deep down in t waves and so far out from the sho that nothing short of an -entire Go could save us. Christ I leaped out f our rescue, saying, "Lo, I come t do thy will!" and all the surges human and satanic hate beat again him, and those who watched --hi from the .gates of heaven feared • h would go down under the wave an instead .of sa.ving others would. him . self perish, but, putting his breas to the foam and shaking the se from his locks, he mune on and a Until he is llow within the reach o every One here, eye oninispient, heal infinite, arm omnipotent, mighty t save, even unto. the Uttermost. •Oh, it was not half a God tha trampled down belloWing Gennesar et; it, was not a quairter of a Go • that mastered the demons of G dare; it was not two-thirds of God that lifted -up Lazarus into. th arms Of his overjoyed isisters; it wa not a fragment of 00d who offere pardon and peace to all the race No. This mighty essiireiner thres his grandeur, his glery, his might his wisdom, his omnipotence and hi eternity into thiS 011e act. 11; too both hands of God to save us—bot feet. How do I prove it? On th cross were not, 1)0 111 hands - nailed On the CVOS.% were not both lee spiked? Ilie entire nature involve in our redemption! Behold, then, -the spectacle of drowning soul and Christ tl:e SWIM 3110r! 1 believe it was in th18 aim there were six English roldie .8 0 the Fifth Fusileers who Were nu ng ing to a capsized boata-a boat tha had been upset by a, equal], th re miles from shore. it vats In th night; but one man swam mightily for the beach, guided by the dark mountains that lifted their Lep through the night. He came to Cho beach, Ire found a phoreman that consented to go with him and save the other men, and they put out. It was some time before they could nett the place where the men were, but after awhile they heard their cry, "Help, help!" and they bore clown to- them, and they saved them - and -brought them to sifere. Oh, that this moment our cry might bo li-Ked long, loud and shrill till Christ, the swimmer, shall come and take us lest we drop a thousand fa- thoms under! If you have been Fetch - by the wa- ter, you.. know very well that When one Is in peril help must. come very quickly, or it will be of no use. One mieute . may decide everything. Im- mediate help the man wants or no help at all. Now, that is just the kind of relief we want. The case hi urgent fallninent, instantaneous. See that soul sinking! Son of God, lay hold: of. him. Be quick, be quick! Oh, I wish you all understood how urgent this gospel is! There was a man in the navy at sea who had been severely whipped for bad ' be- havior, and he was maddened by it and leaped into the sea, mid no soon- er had he leaped into the sea than, quick as lightning, an albatross si,voaped upon him. The drowning man, brought to his senaee, seized hold orthe albatross and held on. The fluttering of ' the bird kept him on the . wave until relief could come.. Would now that the dove* of God's. convicting-, converting and saving; spirit might flash from the throne upon your soul and that you, tak- ing hold Of its potent wing, might live and live forever. Now modes have been invented for resuming a drowning body, but there has been no - new invention for ree- diting a . drown ing soul, re 17t5 Lionel Lakin, a London Nitta build- er, 'fitted up a Norway yawl , as a lifeboat and called it the Insubmergi- ble, and that has been improved up- on until from all the coasts of the round world perfect lifeboats are ready to put out for the relief of marine disasters. In 10 years the French Society For Saving Life From Shipwreck, by their lifeboats and gun apparatus, saved 2,129 lives. The German Association For the Rescue of Life From Shipwreck, the Royal National Lifeboat institution and our United States Me saving service have done a work beyond the power of • statistics to .core.memor- ate, What rocket lines and sling life buoys and tally boards and mor- tars and hammocks and eork niat- tresses and life saving stations filled with xnachinery for saving the bod- • e• tes or tile drowning! But let 'me here .and 'now make it plain that there ha S lbeen_.nO new way invented for the moral and eternal rescue of a strugglingsoul, Vivo hundred ate - tempts at such contrivance have been *made, but -all of them dead failures. Hear it "There is none other name • under heaven given among men Whereby We must be saved" than the name of Jesus. The mightfr.laviminer of my text cornea down off the beach of heaven and through the breakers, COltlag buffet- -ed and bruised, and reddening the waves' from- his own lacerations,- he . cries: "Lay hold of xny arm! Put your head on my . shoulder! near the -beating of my loving heart! Be ye saved, for I am God, and there is no other!" I want to persuade you to lay hold of this strong swimmer. "No," you say; "it is always disastrous, fora drowning man to lay held of a • swimmer." There is not a river Or lake but; has a calamity • resultant front the -fact that when a strong swinuner went out tO ; save a sink- ing man the drowning man clutched him, threw his arms around him, pinioned. his arms, and they both went down together. When you aria saving a man in the water,- you cro not Want to come up by his face. You want to come up by his back. You do not want him to bold you while you tate hold of him. But, blessed be God, Jesus Christ is so strong' a swirl -In -lir he conies not to our back, but to our face, and he asks us to throw aromid him the" arms of our love and then promises to take us .to the beach, and he will do it. Do not trust. that plank of good works. Do not trust that shiv ered spar of your own righteousness• Christ only can give you safe trans- portation, Turn your face upon him, as the dying. martyr did in - olden times when he cried out: "None but Christ! None hut airist!" Jesus has taken millions to the land, and he. is willing to take you there. Oh, .what hardness to thrust hint back when he has . been. swimming all the way front the throne of .0od, where you are now, and is toady to swim all the way back again, taking your re- deri ehdeasrpiriiitlny saying: ."Well; I would like to be a Christian. I am going to work to become a Christ- ian." My brother, you begin wrong.. Whea a man is drowning, and. a strong swimmer comes out to help him, he says to him: "Now be quiet. Pat your. arm on my arm or On my shoulder, but don't struggle, don't try to help yourself, and take you ashore. The more you struggle and the more you try to help your- self the more you impede me. Now, be quiet, and I'll take you ashore." When Christ, the strong swimmer, comes out to save a soul, 'the sinner . says: "That's right. I am glad to see Chaise, and 1 'ant going to help hiln in the work of my redemption. -am going to pray more, and that will help him, and I am going .to weep extravagantly over my sins, and that will help him." No, it will riot. Stop • your doing. Christ will do all or noae, You cannot lift a'n. ounce, you cannot move an inch, in this matter of your redemption. . This is the difficulty -which keeps thousands of souls out of the king- dom of heaven. It is because they cannot consent to let Jesus Christ begin and complete the -work -Of their redemption, "Why," you say, "then is there 'nothing for me to do'?" Only one thing have you to do, and that is , to lay hold of Christ and let him achieve your sal- vation and achieve it all. I do nol 'know -whether I make the matthr plain or not. simply want to show you that a man cannot save himself, but tbat the Almighty Son -of God can do it and will do it if you ask him. Oh, fling your two arms, the armil of your .trust and the arm of your love, around this omni- potent swimmer of the cross! Have you ever stood by and seen some one under process of resuscita- tion after ,long submergence? The strong swinnuer has put him on the beach after a struggle in the waters. To excite. breathing in the almost lifeless body what manipulation, what friction of the cold limbs,what artificial movement 'of the lutigs, what, breu th of the re,scuer blown into the mouth of the rescued! And when breathing- begins, • and after awhile the, 'slight respiration be- comes the deep sigh, and the eyes -open, and the blue lips take on -a smile, what rejoicing, what, clapping of hands all up and down the beach, what congratulation for the strong swimmer :and for all who helped in the restoration, what shouting of "He liveela he lives!" Like this is the gladness when a soul that has been submerged in sin. and sorrow Is "coming to." What -desire on the part of all to help, and, when under the hreath of God and under the manipulation by the wounded hands of Christ, the life eternal of the soul begins to .shoW itself, all through the ranks of spectators, terrestrial and celestial, goes the ory: lives!. Rejoice, for the dead is alive again!" May the living Christ this Koment put out for ;your rescue, "spreading his hands in the saistet'of you, as a swiratner spreadeth his hands to swim!" •••••••=•••••r• A Moine Thrust. Cobwigges—My wife talks of mov- ing. again, but she can't. find a liotiee with enough closets in it. I wonder why -woman always wants so ninny? - 'alerritte--To keep the faniily skele- ton in, I auppose. - • THE SPARE CHAMBER. , Recollections of Bygone Bow Poets Wore Made. We have no spare chamber. I have been troubled about it for a. long while. Yesterdy it occurred to. me that the 13roWins have 310 spare chamber, either, nor the RI 'insans, nor the Stuyvasants, and I am ltaore troubled than ever. The decadence of the spare them-- ber strikes deep. It is the concrete difference beeween past and present. The spare chamber meant a room bli- the house set apart from common life, dedicated to the higher nature. The family might have only three chambers—one of these was sacred, The feather bed rose plump and lin- pregnable in its recesses. The green paper shades shut out all but a chink of light, the cane seat chairs stood stiff against the wall, and clean straw rustled under the taut "store carpet." The stimulus to the Imagination alone! was worth three times the amount of cubic space the spars chamber occupied. YOU tip- toed in. Mother's beet bonnet lay ea the middle of the bed. Some- . , : tames a huge loaf of frtitt cage I sat ii elegantly in one of the_ein irs, _ , There Was always • soil eihing re- served .1a the days of he spare thamber---frult cake and bOnnets. People had best clothes, 114 Were them. on spare days. Suet ay was a spare day. You knew that iit Was Sunday. Grandfather shaved.l(1ion grandfathers shave every Inv' What?. is left, for the seventh?) 1130re Vali , a hush about the house. l's the lay wore on it A deepened; the -hole ft rm lay under its warm, sleeiry. Site 1 , -.7. all' but the Irrepressible 1 en.i The cheerful cackle lingers still, the UOR irreverent thing in mem Jry worked seven , days in, the week t The ncl talked about it. The verly. . silt nee Waited to hear and condtenn.I Amid trolley cars, and bicycle bells, ind • children playing,' and the lka1vation Artny drum, the cackle dies ear -ay in- to a harmleas whisper. I There was spare time tien,I I eo- eP(IlehnularrdPedvicasitlsls7nbii?t, "igiolx:Oidfl 8 0' 1.t.11-11751 hd'-- toned vislls. .The carryall •as`tva- b- led and oiled, Old Flora Ms: care- fully combed and brushed yy gra d- , father, and . then grandfa her I brushed- and combed b. gra -).& I mother. .Atinf Clara. packe the 1 n - i cheon in a, big basket, The e Was al- ways a Spare cricket to iiq im fr: nt I for email folk, with a goo ... -view of Fiore's•!haunches going b 'hill, • d :, a- wide aweep of conntry go ng dm n. I The jotfrney was leisurely, but !full of wild exciteMents. There wa S he !dangerous- railroad crdssit g, !avh re 'grandfather always rot Att,,i r ds . - ahead, and walked caution:: y acro s, looking. two ways at once. The r t of us rode boldly over, wi h a f Ir • ! feeling of -riSk. Grandfather used -to • crack the whip in defiance 1 Ong .. ,erbkre was the oorered Tbri.ges, t o, Old Flora's hoofs echoed in then a d repeated the trampling of araili, s. The loose hoards rattlin Und r- neath held the child on the cric et - breathless, Times have chang pd. Now we speed swiftly ove - eau y open bridges, and. the lege' d,.., ,, o faster than a walk" look; - girin ly down frpm either 'end , t We had a, spare chamber at fir't. I When the -baby came We t riled it ! into a nursery. We cleared o4 a store room for the nurse ind us d the little back room for dryi g room. Grandmother, when Jher lir -t , baby came, took it into her, ON il bed. When - another baby -antO o crowd it out there was th) trim: le day and rolled out at night with a t. bed that stood under the bi bed 11 isleepv rumble. And whqn ma e 'babies still came to crowd the tru 1-- ble bed the first baby, a ' 1.1g bo -', six years now, had a I.ed made 1' r him at the head of the Inek stair, or up garret, under the slopiag t'ave The rain baled hint to sleopj and 5 e snow dr i f ted igi somet Imes. ' in t e spare chamber the big beii lt-,ein untouched. R hovered in hi, cirentn a presence not to be put t3y, I T e snow, the rain, the stars, it,nd ! te Spare chamber made a. poet of ihin We have no poets 11:0W. ; I ! Victory of While much good might be said J Totnnernoc ,. ! to the propriety or improp ietY df men engaging in a six-day bicycle ;race, it is interesting to note, ii ;con- tection with such an event re , ntly held in New York City, the habits of the racers and their relat ve pow- ers of endurance. A mor -severe test of physical strength cajn hardly 130 conceived. It is one ihich re- iquires every nerve and musSde to be in perfect condition and. the general !constitution. to be almost iliaaWlees. , The race was won by Charles ; W. Miller of Chicago, who rode 2;007 ,itailes in six days and night*, halting :in that thne but little oVer nine hours ef sleep. 31111er is a !total ab- stainer, does not use tobaUco, 'and ,during the race subsisted +icily: up- on •fruit, grains, milk and beef : ex- tract—unlit and vegetables beink, tit- ent eondition, while he Ulan botted. He came out of thl race in exclle whom he had considered hi a striatige est opponent, a Swiss r1iIer WhO dra,nk wine frequently, dro ped Out 'at the end of the fourth -11.y. Wal- ler, who took second place, is also an abstainer. A more forcible demoni stration of the value of pla,in livin las a sine qua wilt, for physical enclur ance as well as fbr 'high thinking,' and the utte'r faitility of :alcoholl stimulants to fence a nian ,up' Wil hardly be neecledabythe athletic fra 'ternity or anylutly else. 1 I 1 t Prefereocco. 1 , "Y ou Ski y," remarked the ipedestri an, "that .you have vainly wished for -work." '`Manya tune," -ansWered lyea n der ng Mike. 'What is your favorite occupa- tion?" 'It all 'depends on where happen to be. In Oregon it's pichin' ha- eanas and in Florida it 's alto velin' n ow. "—Wa sh ington Star. ' Luck In Odd . The Siamese have so strong a Su- perst itioti against even numbefs that they will have none of theit, '7'lin number of rooms in a 11011SP Of win- dows or doors in a room, ,.v.t.41 of runtrs on a ladder, must al:Ways be odd. • -Lady Aberdeen will attend the Nation. Council of Women at Hamilton this math. 'Dodd's are the ' medicine t will cure idney L ease this CAM! was y at lea ke is- is- n - pi • :ubiu 0podd,zine;p. • cured it, Doctcfrs themselves conf that without Doci ifildney Pills they a e • pofvoriess against Di -- Wirtos. Dosld's Kidn y Pills are the first medicirie that ever cured Diabetes. Imitations -box, name ar d pill, are advertised to do so, but the "medicine that doIrx sure aliet is Dodd's Kidney Pil Dodd's Kidney Pills fifty cents a box at druggist.", I11 OCTOBER, 27, 1899 * *1 • What is ;•\s‘ ON4t,‘,.:.\.• astoria is for Infitnts and Children. Castoria harmless substitute for Castor 011, Paregoric, Dro ip.nd Soothing. Syrups. , It contains neither 'Opium, ,11Iorp1iine nor, other Narcotic substance. It IS Pleasan !Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millione iMothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverisa".. iness. Castoria, cures )Colarrhcea, and Wind Colic. Castor's ireli3ves 'Teething Tronbles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels of Infants and. Children, giving healthy 'and natural sleep. Castoria of good effect upon their children," seri/Aim-in, knownA.Ai Do. G. C. fleacion, Lowell, Mass, isctonmets.1:, CD.16141.8r0,I111. Panacea -The Mother's Friend. • Castoria„ • Castoria, "Fastierla is an excellent medioine for et Castor's is so well adapted to amen"' chilIdren, .81fethel have repeatedly told me that / recommend it as superior to Any,* • Lour 8 TO ItINT., on 3, lie,f0 lend, 300 beset fora tem aliepreprieter, THE FAG -SMILE SIGNATURE OF APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER ,5riT, TT MURRAY OT8CnT, 74CW YOPIK orry. 111111111/Mr;Wnr!-----,17rff- • F4,11' Our Fall stock ot Furniture is complete. We extend a `special kirk*" tion to all admirers of goal furniture to inspect our stock. We have always something new to show you in new designs and finish at elOSE; prices. ITINTDMIR.T.A..1CMC+. °This department is complete with a large selection of the best goods, eall obliging attention -given t� this branch of the business. Night calls promptly attended to by our undertaker, Mr. .S. T Holmes, ich street, Seaforth, opposite the Methodist church. BROADFOOT, BOX & CO., SM-A.POIRMEE. - Chatham Ontario. Canada's greatest school of Shorthand and business training. When our graduate. are weighed in the balance of the business public's requirements, they are not found wan* ing. BUSINESS MEN requiring book-keeping or stenographic help, should write sa, Only the competent recommended. sirst roses, -*** I;) • ' *Q.v. -nt Statcuavra mom Of *41111.16. olValiaej(60 - a la 1111 eh ;sr. (6)frfrieda, (44,StMeteGialf:*sh 18, 1899. !desist's. D, Ifel,achian te Co., • ' Canada Bus iness c °liege, Chatham,Clentlemeni-tf EwOnitti; pleasure that 7/0 tentitY to th* quall_fl-ca4 . Urine, an an accountant, of tfr.:2red R. siik at the time we took tarn tato our employ atter bevel* attended your college. . s' ire at the start took hold Or the work likea practiced hand and has always given us the best of satisfaction; first, as on accountant, and later as inanageTrorrsoutrur 1S7h:leurne office. Tours es. colt Via TWO HUNDRED AND THIRTY-SIX OP OUR PUPILS secured good position! in 17 months. We can send you the list, We allow railway fare to students from *the. - ; tame. Good board at $2 pqr week for ladies, $2.50 for gentlemen. For catalogue el either department, address D. McLACHLANI Principal, O. B. 0,, Chatham, Oat on't Wait for Winter ! Prepan'3 For It. The cold days. and nights indicate that Fall is here, with Winter following close on its heels. It is altogether probable that you have been caught by a chili with your Sunitner clothes on. Don't let:Winter find you unprepared. We have now in stock a fine range of Old Country.Suitings, just the thing for general wear and yet styling enough for best, and the prices are not high. liave a look at them. RIGHT BROS., FURNISTIE:ES, &WORT& ISMER WANTED,' Highs teeth price red and hi te artk,hard and rook lin. Either st For furt er particulars a GUS, WAG •• Manag for bisak ash, white asb, d soft n3ple, hemlock, soft page or delivered In yard, ly to It, r for the S. 1„Co.,Ereter. 032-51 . • t SEAFORTH YE WORKS • Takey ur olothei to bane thetn dented or 4 new, All work n to give eatisfaetion. HENRY INICKLE,Goderich street, opposite the Catholic Church, flootexth 168041 Sesforth Dye Works And ed and made to leek like - Snap Bargains in Real Eget), Live Stock. THIRTY DOLLARS an acre will buy a IfiCton_ farm --s first-class grain and stock farm -noir ow Villiffe of Zlirleb, in the townehip of Hay, OOtznVOt Huron • good buildings, good femme; pie:Aydin,* snd Most dedrable place also three th short horn bulls and three Yorkethire toste• Onion; also several roadster horses, all good -rink and prim right. For particulars apply to UN; NIE, Zurich P. O. 1.01541. MONEY TO LOAN. Money to loan at 44 and 5 per WE& Per Any amount on first -due farm land pour*: to R 3. HAW,, Doteinlon Bank Rattling. 1 t, liAY cow.- -1-• ell „pit Tneewn -4.‘ProPerululd Pa _ Snoceeels. Ifill.L.--Mr. in Order _ he has oggit WANT otrigl by 114•001ber* "1/1. mcginott,b0id Dufiell tO Aspeospit, to state 10118101. Secretary. triltOf TO THE - rs.taloned not ver credit In *der -or otneent, sal sego for any debts - JIMMY. Segdortia- - Tretalgarlii _ stet s brick combo saw -amdiiiefc ID g, taxis with lbw bolo ascod •to In J.FASII014.1; YOB liett, neat' 't IS Moores, esetkiaron. neves idesty a/ *seine Viola aid will he *old Apply to NIS. SCR 110011.1.14 FOR VAL. •jige"Z•74;;Elftfi MA built by the unde • 111Mi Notember ; 11111aall len thartitalf - OILY, iSWetftngton TMIK IN HULL 4, Ooneession I cleaved, underthal acres seeded to There Iragood min creek runkthrough tb boner- jtii near best= 0t11 -100t 01 Wilde 010ek robing. it wi ernit, Apply: tO the ANE ROBISON. - esasiou SATZ, luelattentiths 00_ and IO -sores of underdrained. _ And frame harnovith - Stood moter,ondon •"livable farm. being on forth. It will he sold , fultheruartioulars s load, or Itesiosth ThreilltnENt 43SesabiErZt.,1! ',knelt a tomfortskl cellar, herd end tort Oonvenletera The pintries etc. There Ali kinds of fruit and Alio At lage ainveniont and most b Beefoltli and Will WARD. ._ 'VILLAGE LOTS • V Village of lIaytt In Range :7,10110 to therefrom 11. acres , the land te be sold con Noithesitooivneroi Stanley, eon an both situated on -ef )UW.10'- 1)8 nu. Title free - -faither particulars ItoBERT WATSON, 5syfleld, 3stentere. — FOR sent, Let 28 anti ith, sonta sact the baiene$ is bp stale a eultiratiOes irell fenced. The-1*W barn 4nd bp -use, plenty This la an excellent fat from Bnieelleid en the 'tessoesale teens or re Applyito JAMES SW F WPI 5'OB ALE. 442"WelJIs let es eier 13. t 29, Coneessio qndcxars1n an. isesgiia :O nardigo9a 3::anklarterratatf •are IW if elliee, &torches le0Vrkl° ". DrtYrelletenstrld SlibvIen Fen get «-re land. For the 1rentlaes, or add oro EitAx PLENDID PARM RENT. --Por tale On 14; eou'h threaq Sioneession tfie ,Ceeeestion:in the to all 17e acres, all of wh These several parcels hosted Ohne to each o Underdraincd, and in The land is of the beet eld/lvated. There is a balik brie, ale° drivin Ing.. There le a good water. It a il witbin three and Zurieb. If not sew Food tenant. Apply Zurich P. K PLEN»ID FARM did Wm and bete Ihe 18th conceesion of She Village of Leadbur of whIeb aro cleared, In geed Mate ef teal underdrained, and sul Rraleing and feeding. :land on the farm homes,* large bank math, s large iinple huildirgs in firkt-class chards and four never lobs the Village et le ofilesi blacksmith ahc Leadbury h•;tel is on t it. It le now under -I bone of the beet and ties% 410 County of - And on -Ingy terms of not feid in roes/male if a eultehle tenant Off *PAY On the premises, ronsiefeer, leeadbury leis La hl 5 1311743e at 1130 II Lug If -awe