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The Huron Expositor, 1900-01-26, Page 2f-,1•••••"%•••!Er••-"ilf • HE HURON EXPOSITOR ' REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. Ay ARM FOR SALE.—For We, Lot 5, Conceselon 6, Hullett, near village of Kinburn, centeining ut 1C0 ice, all ()leered and in a goed state of tivetion. There are good buninge, good orchard plenty of excellent water. This is 4 splendid and mill he 811d cheap. Immediate poeiession. ly to MRS. SCHOALn, Couetence P 0. 1607 Id FOR SALE.—For tale, Lot 2.3, Hann Road Tuokeninalth, containing 98 acres, 88 sores dear- nd 10 *ores of bush. The land is well cultivated underdreined. On the place is -a frame home e barn, with poi stables. There is plenty d water, and an orchard Thia is a most de- lete farm, being oniv oeut two miles Irani Se; - It will be sold es. eep and on elegy terms. For her pertieulars, apply to WM. FO WLR, Huron or Segorth P. 0. 1646 tf LENDID FARM FOR. SALE.—For solo tho splendidfarm of Mr. Robert Gevenlook, on the th Peed, a relic and a half from Seaforth. 1 eo tains' 175 Acres, nearly ell cleared and in a high eta o of cultivation, There le e two dory brick ace se, good bank barn and everything in flreleolass oat dition and well underdraine& n will be sold on o y terms+, as the proprietor desires to retire. If no sold hetore the fall 1t will be rented.. Addrees BERT GOVENLOOK, So orth P. 0. 1593 tf R SALE.—That volaobl.) property eituated on West William street, in the village of Efwond- vil e and consisting of two acres, rf good land. nen dr ined and cultivated. There is a comfortable fra e "1.0114e, a good etable, pig pen and other nece Sal sof str onteuildings on the premises, also hard and water. There are also 14 eood. fruit trees, apples and pears, beside some cheiee small fruits, Wterries and raepberri s. Terre teseeonable, y on the premises to W. C. CLARK, owr, or, or to .ox53, Seaforth P. O. 14372x8 GOOD CHANCE.—House and lot for sale; or to rent in EgmondvIlle, situated on the to Clu- e szoa of Tuckeremith ; going wed from the E nondville bridge the 2od elsouse pest the 'cone- ', on the right tierid side There is holl an acre of end and a number of good frutt trees On it. The ho se hes good one with good cellar and soft water els rn. The aseeseor gays it is worth 1360.3 en. I w I tMte S500.00 for it if rot rented soon. WILT,1.4.11 C Pt,Seaforth. 1071-tf ARMS *FOR SALE IN TUOKERSMITH TOWN. SHIP. —Lot No, 418 the eth Coneeseion and the Ea ball cf Lot 4, io the 41h Coacestion, both lc tho ton Bread Survey, of the Townehip of Tueker- sni tb, in the Coenty of Huron, w II be sold together or in eeparate parcels as epurchagers may d sire. owners of these faring ate desirous of making a ea e and are prepared to sell on reasenable terms, Fo full particulars apply to R. S. VAYS, Solicitor fo the owners, Seaforth, 3ntario. Dated at Sea- fo th, January tOth, I000; 1674-12 ire or ho ve no te ARM IN HULLETT FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 4, Concession 13. Hullett, containing 75 acres. cleared, underdralned, well fenced, and about 40 es seeded to gran •There are fair buildings. ere is a good orchard, And se never -failing spring ek runs through the farm and a good well at the se. Ms neer schoel and post office, and con- tent to the best markets It is a splendid farm, a foot of Waste land on it, and is well adapted for ok raking. 11 will be sold oheap and on easy Apply to the nuclersigned, Seaforth P. 0. ROBISON. 1669. tt 1LLAGE LOTS FOR SALE.—For sale in the Village of 131syneld, the following tots: Lot 8, In Range F, In the township of Stanley (excepting th refrom 1/ sores owned by Ifra. L. (Jlark). th land to be sold containing seven acres; second— N rtheast corner of 1,04 7, in Range F, in the town - p01 Stanley, containing three acres These Lots teeth situated on the Reynol& road, within the co • ration of Bayfield. Immediate possession will be ven. Title free from all encumbrances. For fn er particulars apply to the undersigned. RI BERT WATSON, Bruceneld ; HENRY PEOK, Bs field, Executors; 168541 - sr ESIDENCE IN SEAFORTH FOR SALE.—For gale, cheap, the residence facing on Victoria Sq are in Sealegeb the property of John Ward. ere is a- comforiNI:le frame house, with good stone see sr, hard and soft water, and all ober 'locoman, eso veniences. The house contains 8 roomswith tries, etc. There are two lots, well planted with all kinds of ftuR and ornamental trees and shrtibs. Al a large stable. Tide is one of the hest, most oo venient and most pleasently situated reiddenoes In eakath sud will be geld cheap. Apply to JOHN W D. 1640-tf ki tu3 A 10 ARM IN TITOKERSIITTEt FOR SALE.—For sale Lot 24, Concession 3, H. R. S., Tuokersmith, taining 100 acres, 90 sores cleared and in a good lie of cultivation, 10 aores of good hardwood bush. are is on the premises a good brick house and hen; *large new bank bun, with stone stabling • erneatir ; an open shed ;driving house, and other dings; two good wells and orchard. It is five Ie e from Seaforth and six from Clinton on a good vel road. School dont by. Will be sold cheap. ly on the premises to ROBERT MeVETY, or Sea - h P. 0. 1639x411 MISES AND LOTS FOR SALE.—For sale two comfortable frame helloes in Seaforth. One is el tedspi the corner of Market and James streets an the other on Jarvis street, both only two blocks fr Main street. The howiee are both comfortable s ry and a half frame ones and there is one lot to planted with -fruit trees, else two loti oa tries street. The property is most desirably lo- os and will be sold cheap. The undersigned also h for sale a good frame ertore,with dwelling over it, in the village of St Jeeeph. For further re Maulers a y to LEVI MTH, St. Joseph, or te LOF'TUS fe ARK, Seaforth. ,• -1668 tt ha ID of hi co th do ARMS FOR SALE.—Two extra fine fume for sale. As I have decided to give up farming I will sell two fanns adjoining the town of Seaforth. They e both been in pasture for about 20 yeare and are high state of cultivation, olean and well fenced drained. About 20 sores of fail wheat, 2) sores ubble land and the balance all in grave a fine e bank bani and a good frame house. For crop - g or grass they are two of the best fume in the ntry. A never failing spring creek running ough eaoh. Posseseon given May lster in time to spring week. C. WILSON, Seaforth. 1663-11 ARM IN TUCKERSMITH FOR SALE.—For ssle Lot 11, Ooncession 8, Tuokersmith, containing ACM, all cleared but about 8 aoree of good bush. uederdrained, well fenced, and in a high state ot oultivatiore There is a good stone house; good ba I, stables and out -houses. It Adjoins a good I ; is within five miles of Seaforth, and three ▪ ea from Kippen. There ie plenty of greed water. W be told with or without 'the crop. It is one of th best turns in the township, and will be gold on ternia es the proprietor wants to retire. Also 50 ret within a mile and a quarter, a good grafting 1 well feneed, but no buildings. Will be sold to • ge her or separately. Apply on the premises, or ad- . dr sis Egmondville P. 0. -.JAMES Mc:TAMIL 1639t1 ARM FOR SALE.—Lot 88, Conconsion 4, Emit Wawanosh, containing 125 acres. There is on th place a good brick dwelling helm 2028,)(wibn eel g 18x28, 1/ storey legh ; stone cellar full size •, fill e summer kitchen and woodshed ltbc A ; bard soft water; frame bern 56x58, with done stables un erneeth ; (ranee pig pen leen : two good or. oh rds ; 03 sores °leered, behance is good hardwood bu h; welt lowed with cedar rails, and well watered by three good ming wells.; school and church con- geal lent ; five miles. from Blyth, 12 miles fro Wing. ha 17 miles from Goderieh ; must be geld to close th estate. Apply to JOHN WA.LLA0E, Executor bo the Joseph Jackson -estate, Meth P. 0., or to C Ha Mon, Blyth. 16554e an ARM IN STANLEY FOR SALE —Tor stele, Lot 9 and the wed hail of Lnt 8, on the 12th oonees- eio , or Brownron Line, of &Inlay. This farm con - tat s 1e0 woe, all of which Is oieared, except four • es. It la in a state of tirst-claes cultivation, well fe ced and all underdrainedorrostly with tile, There Is largo keine dwe ling house as good ai new, with go d stole fiundation and teener, ;large bank bun wi h stone AA -ling underneath, Iola, numerous other bo Mingo, Inefudeng a large pig 'ho'ese Two good or buds of choice fruit, also nice shade ani area• in ntal tree'. There are two spring oreeke unnine th ough the farm, and plenty of poi waterall th; ye r roued w thout pumping. It is well &tided for m rkets, churches!, gehrols, poet ell o, &c., riled goo gr vel roads lesding from it in all direetione. Is es wi hin view !')1 Lake Huron, and -the boats; can be se n passing no end dewn frons th house, This 18 On Ot the !Jett equippoi farm, .n tbe county, and wi 1 be sold 01 eaiy term", a: Xlio prop :letsr want, to re Ire on axeount of 111 health. Apply on the prem. fee , or aedress Wake P. 0, JOHN MIN, 1049.t1 To ole de wt eh an we S O see er ma wit ad ARM IN HAY TOWNSHIP FOR SALE.—For sale, Lct 22, on the North 'Boundary of Hay nelee, This farm contains 106 sorer, 85 stores red, the rest _iz)aki bard wo:d hasb. 14 18 well un- drained and fenced There is a good doers houee h a No. 1 colter; leege bank bier) ; in p'ement ; eherp house 70x75, with firAeils a etabling root °afar undOrm,ath ; a rod r collard; 2 good Is and cistern. There is 12e acres of hell whcat ed on a rich fallow, well manured ; 40 acres ed deiva re •ently, the rest In goad Oar) -fer p. Thil 18 a No. I farm, well ritereted for Trots, churches, echools, post reties, etc., and be soli rearonth s. Apply on the prtiniece, or rem ROBERT N. DOUGLAS, Witke,Ont.160Witi SUNDID FAS hi FOR. SAI,E.--For salei a spien- , did farm and hotel pranerty. This farm is on 114 th ISth cOnC e i- ,r of the Townihip of hie 'glop, at th Village o• Leadbuty. it contalos 112/ tee, all of filch are c'eared, except aboist throe no is, It is In good state of eultivatioe, being well fepeed and un erdmi,ied, ant suitable for grain growing or ateck ra ug and feeding. Tilers is not e foot of w ete Ian on the farm. Thete arc to good dwelli sg ho gee a Large bank barn with stone stabling under- ne th, a largo implement house and all r eaesstry but dings in fiteteeass repair. There are ree oto cha de and four neYer.,ailing wells. The arm ad. jOi • the Village of L adbur3, where are stores, post efli , blaokiinuth shop, echo). ote. The well known Ls •bury hi tel ie on the In. m, and will be eleld w th it, life now under lease for *OM of years. Th:s is o • e of the best and meet profitabis farm, proper. ties in the Com ty of }futon, and will be sold ahem, on e ey teens of paymeht. For hirther paitimeare app y on the p =Rea or address the tinders( pre rietor, Leadbury P. O. JOHNSTON KINN . I 1653 GIFT OF EVIL TONCLO -Dr. Talmage Portrays Two Kiricli of Busybodies. HOW WE CAN TALK OF OTHERS. eeme ,M., eople Seem to Bo Whfn Talking of the Vaults.. of Others —We Sheuiti Take a. ittenevoieot en - teres e In Lila ,ilfrairs . of Our Neiehbor Washington, Jan. 21. — In thi -discourse Dr. Talmage shovirst how a, e should interest ourselves ,...ida t he at *- fairs �f others for their :bet -cent, -b .t never ifor their damage; text, 1 -Peter, eiv., - 15, "A busybody in other trienjs: -le:Wei-78:s Homan nature is the same lee all ages-. la • the -second century of the world's .existence - people had : .t1 e :nine cheracteristica as people in e le nineteenth century, thc]. only diff r- ence being that they- had the char e- terieties for a 'longer time. It. ve e r.00 .years of goodness or 500 -yea's. of meenness instead of goodness r meanness for 40 or 50 years. Wel, : bums .Peter,,who was a keen obs r-- \er of what was going on - arourd him, one clay caught sight of a, in n whose characteristics were severe Il- se-et:Win and 'blatant criticism of.t e ea -lairs belonging et Epeople ior Wh sne 1,0 had no respon lenity and Wi ,h. the= ha nd once bro elect an(1. hardend by fishing tackle ew this portr it. for all subsequent ages: ."A elm y - body in- other men's matters." . filial, kind of person has been ruble maker in every country sit Cie world stood. ' Appointing hi• self to the work of exploration a d detection, he. gees forth misc ef !asking. Ile generally begins by e - porting the infelicity •diseoVered, 1 c ie the advertising agent of intirteitt!s_ ene domestic. inharz-nony and occir- eencee that but for him would neve'. have eoine tothe public eye or ear. 1!. -.,-•feels that. the secret ought, to Ai iitiled ant into light and heralds ft he ean get one line of it into t le newspapen% that he feels to be. , a noble achievement to start .-witi., Ilut he must not let it stop. • I e aeoepers , it to his , neighbors, ayl teee, in turie• whisper et to • they iaighbors until the wholetownis )t- le:en z and agog. . You can o .nni e co;ch it or put it down than you co_n a malaria.. It is in • the air •al d on tho • wing and afloat. •Taken N itS.elf it seems of little importanc 1,1:t after a hundred people ha\ e bandied it and each has given- it an eiStii:ional twist it becomes a •stoi y in size- and sha,pe 'marvelous. , Firs I, not ice that sucha mission s most4undestrablet because we all .r .- 01.ire all the time we can get to te.ke care of our own affairs. - o verge atereelves _through :the treacl / rors- straits of this life demanc s Oa 1 we all the time keep our hantd r•n the wheel of our own craf VAiile, as 1 shall show you before I 1. et 'through, we all have a missi n of _kindness to others we have •1 o I line to ' waste in doing tliat which is damaging- to others . - There is our worl4ly calling which 'nest be looked after or it will b,- eoine n failure. Who succeeds in . t 11 init. without concentrating': -all.-- h s piltIrgioS .upon that one thing? 'A 1 l'sose who 'try to do many ehings. ee t`) pitTeS, either as totheir health r Ile- it- fortune, - They go on -untilthcy- pay 10 cents on the dollar, or Th. y -their body in TO the gree. We ta a riot manage the affairs of others at d laep: our own affairs • prosperods. While we are ingeiring how precar- lows_ is she business of anottier -mere chant' and' finding out how mailly notes he has unpaid and how soen he will probably be wound up .hr niake an assignment or. bear the 0:edit's haunner smite the counter oer own: affairs are getting mixed 31, null endengered.. While we "are criti- cising our neighbor for his poor crepe we are negeectiros the fertilization of oar own fierds or allowing•rheaceeds to choke our o-wn corn.. While' ve ere 'trying to extract the mo1e• fr m our neighbor's eye we fall under he weight of the beam in our own e, 'e. lf 'Cod' had given us whole we ks and monthanddays, with nothii.g to do but, gauge. and measure a id Scrutinize , the &Tales of Whigs; tlure might: bee *some excuse for such e 11- jkloynteat, but I do riot 'know anyo ie ‘‘ho has such a surplus of time a ul energy and quelilication that; he e a afford much of the time to it as a coroner upon the dead failure's of others. I canimagine that . an., as- tronomical • crank could get .eo a.h- eorbeel in examining 'the spots on the stie as to .neglecteclearing the spolts off his. own character. - A very etje- eessfut Mall was asked how he hed. ereumulated such vast .fortune. He replied, "I have- accurmilated . abolit one-half of Any property by attending -.: Het ly to my business and the other eel( by letting other people's alonei:" Furthermine, -we are incapacilated for the supervisal of . others because we cannot see all sides of tho affair . teeireheiided. People are genera,ly ree. go Intlell to blame as we stip- pose. It. is never right to do wrong,' but tin re may be alleviations.. Th -00 may have arisen a conjunction of circumstauces • which would have Sung any _one of us.. The world ra ea only one side of the transaction and timt is always the worst. side.. That defaulter at the bank who loan - 1 money lie. ought not to have • loanta. did if for the advantage of _ ahother, not for . his own. That eising. inan Who purloined from his employer did so becausehis mother e its de ing for the lack of niediciee. That young woman -who weet wrong did eot, get enough wages to keep her from starving to death. Most people, ii -he make. moral -shipwreck %Opted de right in some exigency, but they .11ave not the courage to say so. i Better die than do the leaswrong, loft moderate your anathema -against thy wrongdoer by the ciecurnstances n hich may yet develop,. .13e econo- inieal of your curses 'when all the ronininnily is hounding some man or -,-,-,eilan, . Wait, consider:, prose and le ee that which iee-eharg0 IS -a' base ateicafion, l)o not be likd a jury ' e shall render verdict against the . . ; -• . defendant without allowing him to.. Present his side of ! the case. Furthermore, we !make ourselves a disgusting spectacle when we be- cmne busybodies.i NSrlia.t a, diabolical enterprise those- anedertake .who are ever looking fors'tlie. moral lapse or the downfall of others! As the hu- man- race fe a motit imperfect race, allsuchhunters find plenty of game. There have, been *Ming societies in flappy Only , erairenes which tore to pieces- MOVE reputations than they made garments fur the po'or. With th9ir " sareasins : end sly hints and depreciation of • Motives ' they punctured mom good names than they had needles. With their scissors - they Cut characters bias, and backstitched every evil re- port they gat hold of. Meeting c f board of directors have pometimes ruined good business men by !mint.- ations against them. The had work .maynot have been done so intaili-b \words, for they would be libelote, but by a twinkle of the eye or t shrug of the shoulder or a, sarcastic accentuation of a word. "Yes, he is all right where. he is sober. ' "Have you 'inquired into that man history?" "Po you know what bt • BirleSS he ,W118 in before he entered this?" "I move that the applicalion be laid on the table until some hived- tigations now going on are consume cited." It is easy enough to start a suspicion that will never down, but What it despicable man is the one who started 11! There' is not an holiest man in Washington or New 'York: or any , other city who cannot be damaged • hy such infernalism. In a village where I once lived a steamboat ever day came to the -wharf. An mem of the steamboat company asked one day, "1. \voila& if that steamboat 1LS safe?'' The man who -heard the que..- tion soon said to his ' neighbo , "There is some suspicion about tae :allay of that steamboat." And ti c eext one -ivho got hold of it sal( , "'There is an impression aboard that -there will soon lie' an accident on that steamer." Soon all that con - ilitmity began to say, "That steam r is very unsafe," and as a consequen e wo all took the stage rather tha 1 eisk our lives on the river, l While I belie-ve .enough m in huan depravity to be orthodox, I tell you. that the most ofpeople Whom I !MOW are doing the best they cal Faults? • Oh, yes. All people a cep!, you and. 1 have faults: Di t they are sorry about it, repentant 0 ;account of it and are tryieg to do better. About all the married pe 7 pl(1 I know of are 'married to the,me person best euited. Nearly all t e parents with whom I am acquaintcl ere doing the best they can for their children. All the clerks in stores, so far as 1 know, -are honest, and alt persons .in -official position,'city, state or nation, are :fulfilling their. missioe as Well as they can. The twist cf: those ivho have failed in busines.e so far as I know, httlre failed home lee All people make mistakes — sae, things that afteraards they are sorry for, and missopportunity of uttet- ing the right eword and doing the right thine. 43.tit when they see their prayers at. night these ek.fects are sure to be irientioned somewhere between the name of the Lord for Whose mercy they - plead and the - amen that closes the supplication. —That has not been my observation,'' says same one. Well, 1 am sorry for you, my brother,' my sister". Whate an awful crowd you must have got- ten into! Or, as is • More probatae- eou are one of the- characters tha't my text sketches. • you htive not been hunting for partridges and (veil but •for vultures. You have been Ill icroseopiZing the .world's fault .. 'N cm have been - down in the marshes 'when roil ought to have been on ti e - -ti ',lands. 'I haV6 caught yieu at las ' You area busybody -in .other men s Mattere. ". . _ ! How iS it that you can always fin :two- °pie:ions about any one an.1 those two -opinions exactly opposit ? T -will tell you •the reason. Jt s because there are two sides to evar character — the best -side and 11 e worst side. Asavell disposed man chieflv. seeks the best si-de; the badly diseroeed seeks chiefly the worst De OW s the desire to see the b t side, for it. is healthier for us told and etirse admiration, which IS •al elevated stele, while the desire• t : Ihrd the Worst side keeps one in spirit of. (lisquietyde and diSgIlSt an! meate suspicion, and that, is -11, pollin down Of olis• *OWn 'nature, . a disfigun . ; . i, enent of our own character. I rea afraid the imper ections , of othe s vill kill usyet. s 1! one he cynical about the charae er of •others and: chiefly observant cf defects and glad to find something wrong in character, the feet is apt:t be Oenion'strated in his lookS. ,ITox ever regular his features -and thou.. eonstructed according to the la ws 1 Kasper Lavater, his -visage is sou 1 -le may • *smile, but it is a sotr Smile. There is a sneer in .the it- flation of the nostril, There is: 01000 eurvature to the lip. There a bad look in the eye.. The devil f , eercasin and malevolence and sus!? _ don has teken possession of bin , end you see it. as plainly as thou'oei from the hair line of the forehead t tee lowest, point„in the round Of his -chin it vere written: ellline! AIM ! -J. the demon of the pit, have eourel his visagu with my curse. Look .at 11401! He Chose_ a diet of CarP1011. lie gloated over the misdeeds of other. te took all my Menial' engineery' t mah.e him nhat he is—`a busybod In other 111(ill's matters.' " The slanderer ehnost always a tempts to escape- the scandal he is responsible for. When in 1741 Johl Wesley was preaching at Bristol an showing what reason he had to triet in the Captain of His Salvatioe, hearer cried met : "Who was your car - lain when you ,hanged yourself? I know the man Who saw yOu Whe 1 you were cut down." John Wesle esRed 'the audience to make room an hit- the slanderer Coyne to the iron but when the way Was Open the slat derer, Instead of- comiug forward,fle the room. The author or distribute r o‘f,o,rskl.n.nclers never wants to face his N . 1 On the day of Pentecost there Wel' peeple endowed with what was cal ed the "gift, of - tongues," and- the spake for God in many language But there are people in out time wh seem to have lhe gift of evil tongue and there is tip end to their-iniquitou gabble. • Every city, -village an 1 neighborholpf the eath has h 1 driven thr gh it, these scavenge carts. When attything is said to yoz defamatory of the charcater of other imitate Joarph John Gurney of En land, who, when -a bad report wa brought to 'him concerning. anybede nsked: "Dose thou know any goo thing - to - tell us conce. ning her! Since there -Is no good to vela, NVottId it. not be kinder to be silen em the evil? Charity rejoiceth not i iniquity," But there is a worthy and Christ ian way of looking abroad upo others, not for the purpose of brin ing them to disadvantage or adver tising their weakneesee or putting i • ''great primer" or “paragon" typ their frailities. btit to offer help, sy- , pathy and reecue: That, is Cnristiuse, and he who doe se wins the ap- plans° Of the hi h heaerente • Just look abroad .for 4ho people who have 'Made great mist kes and put, a big plaster of condol nce on their lacer - tons, Such 'pe phi ere hever vie- pethized with, a1though they need an infinity of whim Domestid mis- eakes. Social Mistakes-. Ecclesiasti- cal Mistakes. PPlitical mistakes. 'I `.1) e world has for au 171 only jocosity and gesture of deplori tion.1 There is an unoccupied field fibr you, my brother. No one has been there. Tilk6 your case of medieines1 and go: there and ask them where t ley are hurt• and ape ply die inc medicament.. • Elear it: The more you go busy- hies- yourselves •in Other men's mate term the better if you have design Of offering relief.. Search out the quar- rels, that you may settle them; the fallen, that. you may lift them; the pangs, that you ,may assuage them. Arm youreelf wit 1 Ma bottles of di- vine •medicine, ti e one a tonic and the other an anaesthetic, the latter to soothe land 'q det, the former to st im mate, to , ins sire • to sublime, ac- tion. That man't. matters need look- ing after in this irespect. There are 1-0,000 men and women W110 need your help and --teed it right away. They do not sit co,wri and cry. They make no appeal or help, but within ten yards of where you sit in church and within ten n'inutes' walk of .your li owe 'there are people in enough trouble to make them shriek out with agony if they had net resolved upon suppression. . If you are rightly interested in other men's matters, go to those who are •jtist starting .in their occupations or professions arid give them a boost 'Isiiiiee old physicians do riot want your • help, for . they ere surrounded with more patients than they can at- tend to, but cheer those young doe - tors who are counting outeieheir first drops to patients Who cannot afford to pay. Those old attorneys at the -law -want no help Jrom yon, for they •take retainers only from the more prosperous clients; but cheer those edung attorneys who have not had a 1.riei at all lperative.. Those old .ineechants , have their business So Well estaplished that they feel inde- penilent of banks, of all changes in ieiriffs, el all panics, but cheer those young - merchants .who are making their first. mistakes in bargain and ale, That old fanner who has 200 acres in best, tillage, and his barns full' of harvested erops, and the grain merchant-, having bought his wheat .at high priceS before it was reaped, 4eeds no sympathy from you, but cheer up that yeung farmer whose noes are covered with a .big mort- gage and- the drought strikes them the first ' year: ;Go forth to be a busybody in other men's matters, so •fat as you can helping them out, and help them on. The world is full of .instarices of those glee spend their life in such alleviations, but -there is One in- stance. that overtops and eclipses all othere. Ile had -lived in a palace.. Radiant ones Waited upon him. He was charioted _ along streets yellow with gold, and stopped at •gates glis- tening with pearls, and hosannaed by immortals corneted and in snowy white. . Centuries gave him not a pain. .The sun that- rose ' on him never set. His dominions could not he enlarged, for they had no boiled- aries, and uncontested was his reign. Upon all that luster and renown and environment of splendors he •turned: his back and put down his crown at the loot of his throne,and on a bleak December night trod his way down to -a stone house in Bethlehem of our world. Wrapped in what plain, shawl, and pursued with what enemies on swift camels, and howled at with what brigands, and thrust with what sharp lances, and !hidden in what sepulchral crypt, until the sub- sequent centuries have tried .in vain to tell the story by sculptured cross, need painted canvas, and resounding doxologies, and domed cathedral, and redeemed nations. He could not see a woman doubled lip with rheumatism but .he touched her, and inflamed muscles relaxed, and she stood straight up. He could not meet a funeral of a young man but he broke up the proceesien and gave him back to his widowed_ mo- ther. With spittle on the tip of ' his linger he turned the midnight of total blindness into the midlioon Of perfect sight. Tie scolded . only twice that I re- monilices once at the hypocrites with elongated visage and. the other time when a sinful crowd had arraigned nii unfortunate woman, and the Lord,. with the most superb sarcasm that 1\1:::i ever ut_tered, gave permission to ony one who: felt himself entirely commendable to hurl the first mis- elle. All for -others. His berth for cohere. ell'is ministry for others. Hie (teeth for others. . His ascension for °Fillers. His finthroopmeut for others. And, now my words are to the in-. A isihie multitudes I reach week hya week. but yet- will never see In_ this. World, but whota I expect to meet, at tlie bar of God and hope to see in ehe blessed heaven. The last Word that. Dwight L. Moody, the great evangelist, said to me at •Plainfield, X,J, to others, was, "Never ., a lid b e repeated the mbesesecgteuenf)cr ti7 ed maler any circumstances to give up your weekly publication of ser- mons- throughout.the world:" That solemn charge I will heed as long as I have strength to give thein and the. newspeefir types desire to take them. A NEW MAN. Eh_ What Vernon 13romley Says about- Dodd's Kidney Pills for Rheumatism, TRENTON, Jen. 23. —Vernon Bromley, clerk of the Gilbert !louse here, and a well. known man about town, has entirely rem,- ered from his attack of Sciatica. The theta matie taint has been eradicated from his system permauently by the use of Dodd's Pilb. "1 had been a martyr to Rheumatism and Scistica for years," says Mr, Bromley. I have always been against any patent medi. eine until I read uurefatable st memento of cures ,of thin dhadful disease. I heeitated, but everything_else having. fated, I got half a dozen boxes of Dodd's KiMey Pills. I have now used twelve boxes altogether, and am cured. Dodd's Kidney Pills made a new man of Me!' • —Mr. Edward Welsh. who is employed as 'clerk with Mr. O. MoIlhargev, of Strat- ford, met with a serious accident one even- ing recently. He was on his way home from work, when it 41004 vessel in his head broke and he was taken to his Wine. It bled fOr twenty.fogr hoers steadily, and be is,now in a very precarious condition. He is one of Stretford's Mat highly respected young J. THE SHEEP ATE HIS SHOES. Vegetarian Soots, Invented to Replace Leather Ones. Baer* teleadratOtages. Vegetarian shoe leather is tha lat- est fad 'for those who decry tho slaughter of living creatures used for. food. But according to the. London. Telegraph the new shoes have their disadvantages, and cites the following instance as narrated by their wear- er. He says that a kind gentleman 'gave him a pair of these articles, which he. found 'very eonifortablea :Yesterday afternoon, while quietly! resting himself in Regent's Park, hel fell, asleep under the shade of 'a tree. How long the sleet& lasted he does not quite know, but he was. awaken- ed by a peculiar sensation itt his feet, a.ncl, to his intense ainazemeat found two sheep quietly nibbling at -his new boots and enjoying the feast immensely. About half the ,uppers had gone. The sheep ,eVidently thought. they had come a-crossi a nes and delicious vegetable, and forsoo the ordinary grass in its favor. :Whe the wearer was able to shake th animals off he returned home in pair of sandals, and writes that i future he will, when amid pastora surroundings, wear ordinary leather The others are too tempting to her bivorous animals. nront Eurth's Four Cerixers. London's city directory. weigh 111/2 pounds. Iron mining gives employment t more than 17,000 persons ill Eng- land.h Tnatives of Hawaii ,still teas on taro, raw fish, and poi, and are still the careless, lazy people they, have always been. - It is estimated that at thc. begine ring ot the new century England will have 82,000,000,000 tons o coal still- unused and aVallalge. There are just as many Physicians dentists and lawyers in Iltmalulu a there are in any city of the sa,m size in the United States. ' • A great auk's egg, four and three- ' narters inches long and pneof the thrgest 'known, was sold in l',ondon lately for $1,560, though: it. , was slightly cracked. Tn New Zealand, late legislation provides a state system of pensions. for all persons over • 65 who heard been unable to secure themselvee - against -want, by means of a genera taxation of the country. Thierehie does away with workhouses, 'refuge and other state charities. • 1 Leipzig is to -have a new rathhaufs; 'costing $1,600,000. •-It will stand -on, part of ,the ground covered by the old Plelsenberg, Where Luther hell his deputation, --Which has been tor down. A tower of the old cestl still stands, and will he worked Seto 'the -architectural design of the city hall. Future of the Bicycle. T bicycloaw,es a fad 'has become a thing of the past. Utility has ta.k- :en the place of enthusiasm, and the wheel hes ceased to be a craze. It still" however, has a, future as an excellent method of exercise and of quick locomotion. The Baltimore Sun, fookitig into the statistics of the trade, finds there has been a heavy decline, in exports from the U ni Led States, rrotw th- standing the great decline in prices; tad that original investors in cycle works have met with great lossese The same.is true in England. In the first eight, months of 1895 that coupe try sold abroad $5,350,000 -: worth of bicycles and in 1806 sold '$5,946,4 500, but a decline set in itt • 1897 and in the flret • eight months Of 1899 it sold only $2,393,500. .worth: Of the companies org•anized in Enge land in 1896 ' and since '40 with shares aggregating $13,750,000 have gone. into liquidation. Shires of 36e. leading companies show fails aggiel gating 30 per cent., some falling reach as 75 per cent. The commo Otock of such companies is now a Most absolutely- worthless.: Probab- ly this is the history of the trade al over. Like everything else, aft r the no- velty wears off, the bicyci4 has ceas- ed to be simply an inst lument of pleasure . a nd popular divers on, but has come to the demands of 'practi- cal use, and that is its future, An old endow. A quaint old custom still prevails in the beautiful country on' both sides of the Danube, ": SOme hundred miles above Vienna, 'common -Ay called the Wachnote Atthe stanmer eols- tice fires are' lit on all the more prominent heights of the Mountain that give the Wechnau its; ,peculiat charm. The picturesque totvns and villages on both shores are beaUti fully illuminated and the, bridge across the great river are ablaze witb a million lights. The most charming sight of all this. year was the 1111$ miltation of the ruins of Ceetle DuS enstein,- above Krems, the llegendary castle where Richard Coueil de Liod heard Blondel sing outside his pri+ son walls.' This festival is- now call+ ed Johannisfier, or Ste John's fete; •by a devout population, but the old people call It by its real Papare name, Sonnenwendfeuer Soletice.. Pointed Paragraph . • A flirt at 20' is apt to iie an old maid at 30. Everything collies to tdoee wheI wait,. It is now tho autumn leaves' tuA"Man finds himself in the hands cif a hard creditor when he -borrow trouble. Hair dye deceives people who iise it into thinking they are deceiving other people. It is a -pity the average man can't borrow money as easily - as lid can borrow trouble. Everything comes to the limb who ‘'%1,%7:rtolt,Seti, but We fierent Vvith some A man's reputation often* depends' upoh the things that are not found out about hina About the straightest thing en this -ereinked world. is the outline of rail- way on the map issued .by the com- pany. The Vegetarian's Heart. The heart of a vegetariari beats on an average 68 to the minute; that of the meat eater 75. This represents a difference of 20,000 beats in twen- ty-four hours. —Henry Hessou, son of the lair: John Rceeen, of Stretford, brie joined the second contingent at Regina'Northwest Territory. Mr. Hessen has been a Member of the - mounted Felice for font° time, —Mrs, F. H. ThOmpson, of Mitchell, went to Toront# last week, to soy good,bye Orangeville, who -hesitate in thmount- iime to her 'brother, Mr. W. Stewart, of ed infintry, and ishound for South Africa. • )IIijifl)flhIiUUh)lIlIflh1tHl)I$IIlIIIfIlDl1IJIJ)IJflfItftI,Jtj)j ME= 111111,111i1M113111111 811111:11WIWIE=IIIMITI1111 kregetablePreparationforAs- shnilathig Wood and Ilegula- 14 the Stomachs andBowels, c!tf ••••••••••••••••• • 1••••••••••••••..••• • PromotesDi4estion,Cheerful- mess andRestkontains neither ppum,Fiorphine nor limeraIt. BOT NAB C 0 TIC . •••••••••••• • • • Reaps ottlkilkaIWZMPLFTHER Porrp7do 84e.1- ...4Lcierintr Roolefle Sara ..fecd,,b katrwtone&Solzp * Kam Seed - 041..lred r tiqva: Aperfec Reritedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stonwh,Diarrhoea, Worms ,Convuisions,Feverish- ness and Loss OF SLEEP. TacSimile Signature of 'NEW YORK. EXAe:1" COPY OF \MAPPER. e‘e THAT THE FAC -SIMILE SIGNATURE 1•1••••••11•1111, 0 IS ON THE WRAPPER 011 EVERY _ BOTTLE OF Osstoria is put up in 011esidte 'bottles only. It isnot sold in bulk. Don't allow suede to sea you anything else on the pies or prornisalliat It is "just as goal, and "will answer every pur- pose,' sar Bee that 7on get The W- ee& statue iiitele entry of wrassar„ ilree e -eteeregeieree geeerge. ondition Powder The Best and Oheapeit medicine ever given to a hQrse. BEST CHEAPEST Because of the results it produces. Mr. Alexander ROW, of Bruceekl, n3ade over $50 out of a 50e package of Fear's Condition Powder. Every farmer who uses it oriel; never buys any other. Because a teaspoonful DE it is all you feed at once—all other powders require a tablespoonful. You'get three pounds for 50c, or seven pounds for $1.00. This is the ti11113 to use it. Mr. Wm. Portune had a horse that he could not feed into condition, be- cause its legs always broke out lie Teed Fear's Condition Powders at last, and before Christmas 8oid his horse for $150. BEFORE USING: AFTER USING. - Fear's Drug Store, Seaford". Anticipated Wants 4-1-1•-:÷1÷1-4+14-14-1-1-+++4 +!1-14+ A New Winter St A limy Overcoat Wann Underwear Flasidanable Furnishings 44-14-:÷104-•144-1-14++++4-1-1-444-l• FURNISIIERS, SEIFORTII .0coutit- Books Day Books, Ledgers, Journals, Order Books, Indexed Books, &c. A large assortment and best vain e in the market. NeVINWAIIMMANINtA0W40W Envelopes Note Paper, Pens, Ink, Pencils, And aU kinds of Stationery Supplies at bottom prices at . • LUTA DEN & WILSON'S SCOTT'S 111.90K, MAIN STREET, BEAFORTH, - Ontario. East Huron Farmers': Inti11ute. Meetings of East Huron Farriers' Inotitatel r the discussion of Agrianitural and kindred aubjecti will be held in Ethel, January POtli, IMO. at -La p, u. and 7.30 p. rn ; hi Constance, Jemmy 3list, at 1.89 p. se. and 7.130 p. m.; in Burnie* Seheol Hone4, Feb- ruary let, st 1.30 p. in. and 7-$0 p. m. ; le Fo dwich on itebruaty let at Leo p. 01. -and 7.30 p. are coldisIy itivsted to attend and Oki *reit ,oe-the 'meetings, that the knowledge we inthvlJualb bare acquired may be bnputed to eters twattetnn. Mete be received by all. GEORGE HOOD, Sacra 1671-2 ••••••••••••••••••••••tetto•••• • ------ • 11-01.111031Ce Tenders eel I be reeeived by Lail until Fehruiry leth or *1 Leadbu y nee" on Febinavy 121hofor 4,000 feet of Sineh Rock Elm, 14 feet long, And 2,200 fret of shah o k, 1.6 tee long to be delivered at the Cleric's residence, near Winthrop. At* tenders for 4 nbuteneiate, for bridges, an. near Leadbery, the other zeal Ns inthrop, fo be bailie* either Von* or cement. The Paid &butt:netts wei be about -8 org 1osjhIiwttbw1.g& T.4m4ab.onmuebper eul4eyerde•Noteement, Owen Send reemene tab* wool, if of alone, to le SO elms and average aloe. Tsfidges So be renetted by JOAN C. MORRISON, Wintitepp P. 0. tee.' et Wave bane Arne e let9Z in tr ofeth ande lorth ary, Pee 1 diret retst scene Beat, bysf Siglk °fits 43red bred draft' logs for ISAA BROS ne sin trees, and whea White a nu el ten unde