The Huron Expositor, 1900-02-23, Page 2L;
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REAL ESTATE FOR BALE.
OrSE AND LOT IN 8EAFORTH FOR SALK-
& mall frame bent* and good lot, PleasentlY
sanated on North Main steet, formetly omerple 1 by
Solomon Quick. A good well and all cons eliences,
near the businees part of tie tnwn, wel h+ acid
cheap. Apply to JOSIAH "‘ ERMAN, Seaf•ete.
1070.4
'el el FOR SALE. -For mole, Lot 6, Conocsaion 6,
Eullett, near village of Kinburn, oontilniag
about ICO awes, all cleared and in a gond state 01
euitivelion. There are good buillngi, good orchard
sad plecty of excellent wider. This is a green lid
ferret -le will he gold cheap lincnediabe posseeelon.
Apply to MRS. SCHOALES, Constance P 0.
1607
ARM DT STANLEY Pcift SL E -For sale Lot
• w 0, Conceasion 1, Leendon Road, near the village
of Batted' id, containing about itt acres, &O acres
cleared and in a good elate of cultivetione the re.
fueled( r is hard word bush. There ere good build -
Inge, ne sere; of wheat, 30 seeded to grass, a good
orchard eed plenty of wane Will be sold <heap
said on emsy tome. Apply to A. J. ROSS, Bruce.
held P, 0, 1076 tf
noARM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 20, Riven Road,
X Ticker smith, containing 08 acres, 88ersoree cl. sir-
ed and 10 aorta of bush. The 'aid Is well eueivated
tied uneerdrdned. On the place is a trame home
said frame biro, with goo'stables. Thole is plenty
of good water, and an oreberd This is a molt de
-
Arable Wm, leeing only oeut two miles from See -
forth. It will be sold t_eap and on easy term. For
further particulars, apply to WM. FOWLER, Huron
Road or f3estforth P. 0. 1646 tf
S
PLENDID FARM FOR SLE -For sale tho
splendid teem of Mr:Robert Govenlock, on the
North Road, a mile and a half from Eteaforth. I
contains 176 stores, nearly all cleared and in a high
state of cultivation, There is a two 'dory brick
eouse, good baulk barn end everything in firsieelass
wendition and well ruiderdealned. It will be sold on
easy terms, ai the proprietor desires to retire. If
not sold before the fall it will be rented. Address
ROBERT GOVENLOCK, teeaforth P. 0. 1593 fa
'MARX TO RENT OR SELL. -A fine 100 asra farm,
eV on the Huron Road, Lot 24, Ilibbert, oppoeite
church and school, stem and post office Four miles
from &Worth and two from Dublin. Land in first
class- shape, being all meded, 2 acres of oreberd, also
_all kinds of mall fruits, frame dwelling house, kitch-
en and wood died, herd and soft water in Moho°.
large frame batik barn 50x62, straw shed 45x45, 10
acres of fall wheat, fall ploughing done, Poseesesion
edveril•t of March. For eurther partimlars apply to
� CARLIN, Ste Columbine, 1077x4
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eriee ARMS FOR SALE. -Two extra fine farms for sale.
- A3 1 have decided to give up farming I will sell
ray two farms adjoining the town of Seaforth. They
have both been in pasture for ebout 20 years and are
In a high *tate of cultivation, clean and well fenced
and drained. About 20 sores of fall wheat, 2r) acres
of stubble land and the balance all in gram, a fine
large bank barn and a gool frame house. For crop.
ping or grasethey are two of the best farms in the
country. A never tailing spring creek running
throughout. Poeeendon given May latest in time to
do srprieg work. 0. WILSON, Seaforth. 166841
TIA.11)18;FOR BALE IN TIIIKERSMITH TOWN.
$HIP. -Lot No. tin the th Conceasion and the
East Lalf rf Lot 4, in the 4th Conecesion, both in the
Huron Road Survey, of the Township of Tuoker•
smith, in the Coenty of Huron, wit be sold together
or in separate parcels *a purchasers may d •sire.
The °wears of these farma aro desirous of making s
gale and aro prepared to sell on reasonable terms
For fat particulars apply to R. S. HAYS, Solicitor
for the owners, &afore], Ontario. Dated at Sea
-
forth, January lath, 1900, 1674-12
DABS( IN STANLEY FOR SALE, -For pale Lot
JV 24, Concession 2, Stanley, °onto ning 100 sores,
about 16 acree of which is unoulled hardwood bush.
The balance is well drained, well fenced, and in an
excellent state of cultivation. 'There are 2 good
wells, 10 acres of fall wheet, and the cultivated land
le all ready for spring sowing. There Is a new bnck
house, a large barn with good deny shabling and a
large r ew implement house. It is 3 miles from
Braced id and 6 miles from Clinton and is consid-
ered ouu of the hest farms in Stanley, For further
inferno tion Apply on the prentiset or address DON-
ALD SMITII, Brumfield. 1679-tf
BM IN HULLETT FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot
Conoession 18, Hullett, containing 76 acres,
all cleared, underdrained well fenced, and about 40
ge.
ng
the
•
for
asy
0.
mores treeteett
There le
orae h runs
house.
venient
net s. !cot
stook releing.
terms.
JANE ROBISON.
10 gr0-63. "XlIer0 aro nur outran
a good orchard, and a never -failing em
through the farm and a good well at
It is near Reboot and pod office, and a
to the best markets. It is a splendid fa
of waste land on it, and is well adapted
It will be sold cheap and on e
Apply to the undersigned, tleaforth P.
1809.
len ESIDENCE
fl, rale,
Square
There le
ocher, hard
conveniences,
reentries,
ill kinde
Also a
xravenient
I e fleaforth
WARD,
IN SEAFORTH FOR BALE. -
cheap, the residence facing on Vete
in Seaferth, the prophet= of Jobe . Wa
a comfortable frarae house, with good at
and soft water, and all oiler !mom
The bons° contains 8 rooms, w
e'so. There are two Iota, well planted w
of fruit mei ornamental trees and ehra
Argo stable. This is one of the beet, m
and most pleasantly sit -tutted readden
and will be eold cheap. Apply to J01
1640.1
DARN
.,U Lob
oorsteiniag
state of
There le
kitchen
inderneeth
cuildings
nites turn
;ravel road.
epply on
ofth P.
IN TUCHERablITH FOR SALE. -For e
24, Concession 8, H, R. El. Teokerami
100 sores, 90 sores cleared and ix a ro
cultivation, 10 acres of good hardwood ba
on the promisee a good brick Muse a
*' a large new bank barn, with stone stabt
i • an open shed ; driving house, and otl
; two good walla and orebard. It is 1
8ertforth and six freak Clinton en a ro
Selsool oleos by. Will be enld ohe
the premises to ROBEetT MoYETY, or 8
0, 1680x4t
,
IGIARM
V Lot
.60 sorer,
meek, n
veil underdralned,
a cultivation.
crass and
risk keine,
lag usiderneath,
end yot
emu% 129
Niers ate
twee mi
a see of
heap and
etire from
Adam
fE.Y.
IN TUCKERSMITH FOR SALE. -For Sr
8, C,encession 6, Tookertgraith. contain
about 16 acres are well timbered w
aple, elm sad ash,. The altered land is
well fenced end in a high at
There are aberes 20 soles seeded
13 acrers of fell wbeat. These le a n
large bank barn with geed slim st
and other belittler'. There h
rig orshard just cernmenchag to bear a
evergreens and other ernameatol lire
three never falling webs. It is wit]
es of Seaforth and oonventient to sohnol.
the best hams in Huron and will be a
on easy terms as the preprieflor wants
farming. Apply on Wae promisee
Egmondvil e poet Mee. DAVID CHI
16764
MAR!
V Lot
ee acres
i is en derdrained,
f cultivation.
erne, stables
3h001 ; is
tiles front
rill be told
ea boat farnortin
key tern
I aeres within
a, wall feneed,
eater or
reas-Egmencleffie
IN TUCKEIISMITII FOR SALE. -For au
11, Coneeterion 8, Tuekersreith, oontaini
allele:wed but about 8 storm at good be
well fenced, and in a high at
There is a good stone house; gc
and out -houses. It reljolns a gc
within Ire miles of eirerforth, and thi
Kippers, . There is plenty of good wat
wHle 07 With011t the mop. It is one
the township, and will be eold
re as the proprietor wants to retire. Al
e mile *eel a quarter, a good greed
bet no buildings. 19111 be sold 1
eeparstely. Appiy on the premlies, or a
P. 0. JAM8S MoTAVIS/I. '
1630 tI
enAltet IN STANLEY FOR. SALE -For sale, I
el $ and the wort half of Ipt 8, on the 12th cone
on, or Brownlee Line, of Stanley. The' farm co
des 160 aeree, all of which is cleared, except Io
sires. It is in a 'date of firateciare cultivation, w
need and all underdrained, mostly with tile. The
a largo frame dwo'ling house as good at now, wi
neistone foundation and cellar, large bank ba
ith 'eon a stabling underneath, and numerous oth
Midis:tee inolading a large pig home Two goi
roller& of choice fruit, also nice shade and orn
lineal tree". There are two spring creeks runnit
trough the farm, and plenty of good water all t
)ar round witlsout pumping. It is well situated 1
artsta, churches, sehcole, post offiee, Sm., and go
rased reeds leading from it in all directions. It
ithis view of Lake Huron, and the boats can
ea pass og up and down from th home. This
te of the best equipped farm .n the county, zu
al be so d on eaey terms, al the proprietor wants
eirs on amount 01 111 health. Apply on the prer
A, or ecldreas Blake P. 0. JOHN BONN. 1649
lARM Iti HAY TOWNSHIP FOR SALE. -F
4 sele Lot 22, on the North Boundary of 111
iwnehlr. This farm contains 100 acres, 85 aor
eared, tee rest good hardwood bush. It is wee u
ndrainea and fenced. There is a good stone hou
ith a No. I cellar '• large bank ba n; implence
led; shrcp house 70x76, with firetede e Gitlin'
id root edlar underneath; a good orchard ; 2 go(
8110 and cleterre There is 12; acres nf fall whe
wed an a riob fallow, well mattered ; 40 am
eded dewn recently, the rot in good shape f
ep. This is a No, I farm, well eituated fi
arkete, -hurchee, schooie, poet office, etc., ra
11 be eel II reasonatey. Apply on the reemises, i
dressliOBERT N. DOUCILAS,Blake,Ont 1608x8t1
I PLENDID FARM FOR SALE. -For sale, a sple
i did term and hotel property. This farm is c
o 131h ceueee Ion of the Township of theeillop, i
e Village et Leadhury. n contain112e acres, s
which tee eleered, except about three F ores. It
*gcod etato of cultivation, being well fenced OE
iderthal led, and riultable for grain grawiug or atm
klieg acd feeding-. There is not a 1 nt of w ei
11 on the farm. There are two good (Nellie
men a arge bank barn with etor•o tempting unde
able a largo implement house and ell nemeses
[listings 0 firste,Jaes repair. There are three o
Ards and four never•failing well*. The farm at
ne the 'Village of leadburi, where aro secrete poi
lee; Weeks/pith shop, school, etc. The well Know
Wormy hdtel la on the horn, and will be sold wt
et a new under lease for a term of years. Th
nie of the best and most profitable •farm prope
a in the COUJ14, of Harem, and will be oold ohea
really ternie of payment. For further partioular
oft on the p-emiees, or Address the usdereigne
Tristor. Leadbury F. 0. JOHNSTON NIEMV,
1658
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•
RELIGION AND 11FALTI
"With Long Life Will 1 Satisfy
THE GOSPEL OF EVERYDAY LIFE
Rev. Dr. Talmage Shows What It Does
For the .Pro,ongaelon of Earthly En -
listener) and lion' to Make It* Devotee's
If p py.
Washington. Feb, 18. — •This ser-
mon of Dr. Talmage presents a, gos-
pel for this life as well as the next
and shows that religion. does for the
prolongation • of earthly existence;
text, Psalm xei, 16, "With long life
will:I satisfy him."
Through the mistake of -its friends
religion has been chiefly associated
with, sickbeds and graveyards. The
whole subject to many people is od-
orous'evith chlorine and carbolic acid.
There are people who cannot pro-
nounce the word religion without
hearing in it the clipping chisel of the
tombstone cutterIt is high time
that i this thing , were changed' and
that religion instead of being repre-
sented as a hearse to carry out the
dead, should be represented as a
chariot in which the living arc to
triumph.
• Religion, so far from subtracting
from -one's vitality, is a glorious ad-
ditioa. It is sanitive, curative, hy-
gienie. It is good for. the eyes, good
for the ears, good for the spleen,
good' for the digestion, good for the
nerves, ood for the eauscles. When
David, in another part of the Psalms
praysthat religion may be dominant,
he dOe. not speak ot ft as a mild
sickness or an emaciation or an at-
tackof moral and spiritual cramp.
He speaks of it as "the saving health
of all nations," while -God in the text
promises longevity to Ethe pious, say-
ing, "With long life will I satisfy -
him," •
The fact is that men and women
die too soon. It. Is high time that
religion joined the hand of medical
f,ciene in attempting .to improve hu-
man longevity. Adam lived 930
years. Methuselah lived 969 years.
As late in the history ,of the world
as Vespasian there`aecire at one time
in his empire 45 people 3.3years
old. So far down as the .pixteenth
centnry Peter Zartaei died at 485
years of age. do not say that re-
ligion will ever take -Che race back •
to antediluvian longevity, but I do
say that the length of human life
will be greatly improved.
It is Said in Isaiah lxv, 29, "The
child ishall die a hundred years old."
Now,i, if, according to Scripture, the
child 18 to be a hundred years old,
may hot the men and women reach
to 300 and 400 and 500? The fact
is that we are mere dwarfs and sleet-
etons, compared with some of the
generations that are 'to come, Take
the African race. They have been
under bondage for centuries. Give
them achance and they develop a
Toussaint l'Ouverture. And if the
white race Shall he brought out from
under the serfdom of sin what shall
be the body? What shall be the
eoul? Religion has only just touch-
ed our world. Give it full power for
a few centuries, and who can tell
what will be the strength of man
and the beauty of woman and the
longevity of all?
My design is to show that practi-
cal . religion is the friend of longe-
vity; 1 prove it, first, from the fact
that it makes the care of our health
a poSitive Christian duty. Whether
we Shall keep early or late hours,
-whether we f4ileall take food digesti-
ble or indigestible, whether there
shall be thorough or incomplete mas-
tication, are questions very often re-
ferred to the -realm of whimsicality,
but the Christian man lifts this whole
problam of health into the a.ccount-
able and the divine. He says, ';'God
has given me this body, a.nd- he has
calledE it the temple of the Holy
Ghost„ arid to • deface its altars' or
mar its .walls or crumble its pillars
Is a God defying sacrilege." He sees
God's icaligraphy in every page—an-
atoinieal and physiological. He says,
"God ;has given me a wonderful body
for ^Iv purposes."
The -Christian ma.n says to 'himself,
"If I hurt my nerves, if I.hitrt ray
brain, if I hint any of my physical
faculties, I insult God 'and call for
dire retribution." Why did GO- tell
the Levites not to offer to him in
sacrifice animals imperfect and dis-
eased'? He *cant to tell us- in all
the ages that we are to ofTer to God
our very best physical condition, and
a man who through irregular Or glut-
tonous eating ruins his health; is not
offering to God such a.sacriflce. Why
did Paul write for his cloak at
Troas? Why should such a. great
man as Paul be anxious about a
thing S'
o insignificant as an -- over-
coat? It was because he knew that
with pneumonia,, and rheumatism he
would not be worth half as much to
God and the church as with respira-
tion easy and foot free.
_An intelligent Christian man would
consider it an absurdity to 'kneel
down at night and pay and ask
God' -protection while at the l same
'time he kept the windows of his bed-
room tight shut against fresh air.
Ife would just as soon think Of go-
ing to[ the top of his house and leap-
ing off and then. praying to God to
keep him from getting hurt. Just as
long as you refer this whole subject
of physical -health to the main' of
whimsicality, or to the pastry cook,
or to the butcher, or to the baker,
or to the apothecary, or to the clo-
thier you are not act ing like a Chris-
tian. Talce care of all your physical
forces — nervous, muscular, bone',
brain, cellular tissue — for all you
must be brought, to judgment.
What right has any man ,or woman
to deface the temple of the Holy
Glidat? What is the ear? Why; it
Is. the Whispering gallery of the hu-
man' 80111. What is the eye? Jt is
the observatory God constructed, its
telescone sweeping the heavens'. So
Nvoncle,rful are these bodies that. God
names his own attributes after dif-
ferent parts of them. His Omnis-
cience -nit is God's eye. His'omni-
presence—it ts Cod's- ear. His pinni.
potence—it is God's arm. The up -
of the midnight heavens—it
is the 'work of God's fingers. His
life giving power—it - is the breath
of the Almighty. His d OM inion—
"the government shall be upon his
shoulder." A body so divinely hon-
ored and se divinely constructed—let
us be careful not to abuse it.
When. it becomes a. Chrietia,n duty
to take care '�t our health, is.not the
whole tendency toward longevity? If
I toss july watch about recklessly and
drop it on the pavement end wind it
Up any time of day or night I hap-
pen, .tao- think of it and often let It
i
run edown while you ar careful 'with
wind it up just at t e same hour
i,,,
your watch and never buse it and
every night and put it in a place
where it will not suffer from the vio-
lent changes of atmosphere, which
watch will last the. longer? Corn -
mon sen St answers. Now, the hu-
man body is God's watch. You see
the hands of the watch. You see the
face of the watch, but the beating
.01 the heart is the ticking of the
watch.' Oh, be careful and do not
let it run down!.
Again, I remark that practical re-
ligion is a . friend of longevity in the
fact that it is a protest against dis-
sipations whick injure and destroy
the health. Bad Men and women
-live a very short life. Their sins
kill them. I know hundred of good
old men, but I do not know half : a,
dozen bad old men, Why? They do
not - get 'o14. Lord Byron died at
Missolonghi at 36 years of age, htiln-
-self ' of his own Nfazeppa, his, Ittn-
bridled passions the horee that dwell-
ed with him into the desert. Edgar
A. Poe died' at Baltimore at 38 years
of age. The black raven that aligh-
ted on the bust above his chamber
door was delirium tremens,
Only this and nothing more.
There are aged people who wou d
have been dead 25 years ago but 1r
the defenses and the eqUipoise of pee.
ligion. You have no more natural
resistance" than hundred's of people
who lie in the cemeteries to -day, slain
by their own vices. pee doctors
made their case as kind and pleasant
as they could, and it was called con-
gestion of the brain or something,
else, but the snake's and the 'bine
flies that seeuted to crawl over the
pillowin the sight of the delirions
,patient - showed wbat Was the mat-
ter with him. You, the aged Chris-
tian man, walked along by that un-
happy one until you came to ,the
golden pillar of the Christian life.
You went to the right; he Went to
the left. • This is all the difference
between you. Oh, if this religion is
a , protest againstall form of dis-
sipation, then it is ea illustrious
friend of longevity.- "With long life
will I satisfy him." ,
Again, religion is a friend of lon-
gevity in the fact that it takes the
worry out of temporalities. It is
not work that kills men, It is worry.
When a man becomes a genuine Chris-
tian; he makes over to God not only
his affection, but his family, his bu-
siness, his reputation, his body, his
• mind, his soul—everything.. Indus-
trious he will be, but never worry-
ing, because God is managing his af-
fairs, How can he worry about
business when in answer 'to his pray-
ers God tells him when to buy and
when to sell, and if he gain that is
best and if he lose that is best?.
Suppose you had a supernatural
neighbor who came in and said: "Sir,
la want you to call 'on me in every
exigency. I' am your fast friens; I
could fall back on $20,000,000; 1
Can foresee a panic ten years; I hold
the controlling stock in 30 of the
best monetary institutions of this
country; whenever you are in any
trouble call on me and I will help
you; you can have my money and
you can have my influence; here '• is
my hand in pledge of it." How much
would you worry about business?
Why, you would say, "I'll do the best
r can, and then I'll depend on my
friend's generosity for the rest."
' Now, more than that is promised
to every Christian business man. God
gays to him: -"I own Now York and
London and St. Petersburg and Pek-
ing and Australia and California are
mine; I can foresee a panic a thous-
and years; I have all the resourcea,
of the universe; and 1 ani your best
friend; when you get in business
trouble or any other trouble, Call on
me and I will help; here is rny
hand in pledge of omnipotent deliver-
ance." How much should that man
worry? Not much. What lion will
dare to put his paw en that Daniel?
Is there not rest in, this? Is there
not an eternal vacation in this?
. "Oh," you say, "here iS a man who
asked God for a, blessing in a certain
enterprise, and he lost $5,000 in it.
Explain- that." I will. Yonder is a
factory, and one wheel is going north,
and the other wheel . is going south,
and one wheel plays latera,lly, and
the other plays vertically. I go to
the manufacturer, and I say: -0
manufacturer, your machinery is a
contradiction. Whr do yOu not make
all the wheels go one way?" "Well,"
he says, "I made them to go in op-
posite directions on purpoee, and they
produce the right result. You go
downstairs and examine the carpets
we are, turning out in this establish-
ment, and you will see." I go down
on the other floor, and I see the ear -
pets, and I am obliged to confess
that,though the wheels in that fac-
tory go in opposite directions, they
turn out a beautiful result, and
while I am standing there looking at
the exquisite fabric an old Scripture
passage comes into my mind, "All
things work. together for good to
them who -lizive God." Is there not
rest in that? Is there not tonic in
that? Is there not longehlty in that?
Suppose a man is all the time wor-
ried about his reputation? One man
says he lies, another says he is stup-
id, another says he is dishonest, and
half a dozen printing establishments
attack him, and he is in a great state
of excitement and worry and futne
and cannot sleep. ..13ut religion comes
to him and says: "Man, God is on
your side. He will take care of your
reputation. If God be for you, who
can be against you?" Hoer much
ehould that man werry about his
reputation? Not much. If that brok-
er who some years ago in Wall street,
after be had lost money sat down
and wrote a , farewell letter to his
wife before he anew out his brain -
11, instead of taking out of his pock-
et a pistol, he had taken out a well
read New Testament., there would
have been one less suicide. 0 ner-
vous and feverish people of the world,
this almighty sedative. You will
live 25 years longer under its sooth-
ing power. It is not chloral that you
want or morphine that you want. It
is the gospel of Jesus Christ. "With
long life will I satisfy him."
I Want to take the strain off your
nerves and the depression off your
soul, and I make two or three experi-
ments. Experiment the firet: When
you go out of this world, it does not
make any difference, whether you have
',been good or bad, , or whether you be-
lieved truth or error, you will go
straight to trlerY. "Inaliassible.".yeu
,
Say. " ertcomnion sense as well ali
my reh "on _ teaches that the . bad and
- the goo I cannot live together for -
0V82 You give me no, ceinfort in
that wci eriment." Experithent the
second: When you leave this world,
you wil ego. Into an intermediate
state w ere you can get Ronverted
and pre aired tor heaven. "Impossi-
ble,". you say; "as the t *ee falleth, so
it must lie, and I canno postpone to
an intermediate state hat reforma-
tion which ought to haVe been effect-
ed in this state." Experiment the
third: There is no fut e World.
When a Illall dies, that is t e 1 st of
him. Do not worry about wha.t you
aria to do in another, state of being;
you will not -do anything. "Impossi-
ble," you say. •"11-tere s something
that- tells • me that death is not the
appendix, but the preh ce; there . is
something that tells me that on this
side of th grave 1 onl get started,
and that shall go on ()raver. My'
power to think says fo ever, my af-
fectionsay forever, my capacity to
enjoy or suffer forever.
, Well, you defeat me in iny three ex-
periments. I have only one more to
make, and, if you defeat ne in that I
am.-exhaueted, A inighty one on a.
-knoll back of Jerusalem ne day, the
skies tiled With forked li htnings and
the .earth filled with v Irani° dis-
turbances, turned his pa, e and agon-
ized face ZowacIs the ljeavens and
said: ' "1 take the sins ancl sorrows
of the, age iato my own heart. I am
the expiation, Witn s earth and
heaveh am.. hell, I am th expiation."
And the hammer struck hini and the
spears : pvnctured him, and heaven
thundered, "The wage of sin is
death!" "The soul tha sinneth it
shall die!" "I .will Iy no means
clear the guilty!" Then there was si-
lence for half an hour, and the light-
nings were drawn back into the seep -
bard of the 'sky and the earth ceased
to (Myer and all the colors of the
sky began to shift themSelves into a
rainbow woven out o the falling
tears of Jesus and there was red as
of the bloodshedding an there was
blue,as of the bruising a d there was
green as of the •beavenly foliage and
there was orange as of tie day dawn.
And along the line of th r blue I saw
the words, "1 Was -bruieed for their
iniquities." And along the line of
the red 1 Sp,'W the words "The blood
of Jesus Christ cleanset from all
E
sin." And, along the line of the green
.1 saw the words, "The leaves of the
tree of life for the healing of the
nations." And *along th line of the
orange I s w the words, "The day -
spring from oe high. hath visited -us."
"And then I saw the stor i was over,
and •the rainbow rose higher. and
higher until it, seemed re, reating to
another heaven and plan hi n g one col-
umn of Re colors on one side th
eternal hill and plantingli the other
colunm of its colors on the other side
the eternal hill it rose *ward and
upward, and, behold, there was a
rainbow about the throne.
Accept that sacrifice midi quit wor-
rying. Take the tonic, the inspira-
tion, the longevity, of , this truth.
Religion is sunshine; that is health.
Religion is fresh air and pure water;
they are heal t I) y. Religion is
waemth; that is healthy. Ask all the
doctors, and they hvill tell you that
a quiet conscience and pleasant an-
ticipations are hygienic. ' I offer you
perfect peace now and her after.
What do you want in the future
world? Tell me, and yo4 shall have
it. Orchards?' There ar trees with
12 manner of fruits, yielding fruit
every month, . Water scenery? There
is the river of life, from under the
throne' of God, clear as ,cirystal, and
the se, of glass mingled with fire.
DO you want music? There are the
oratorio of the "Creation,' led on by
Adam, and the oratorio (1 the "Red
Sea," led on by Moses, aid the ora-
torio of the "Messiah," le on by St.
Paul, while the
swinging baton, cotrITIleilslailhgeell'.with
,0i0
n0
who make tip the orchestra.
Do you want reunion? 'There are
your dead children waith g to kiss
you, waiting to embrace yon, wait-
ing to twit garlands in your hair.
You have been accustom d to open
the door or this side-'th sepulcher;
I open, the door on the ot ter side the
sepulcher. You have bee accustom-
ed to walk in the wet g ass on the
top ot the graveef !anew you the un-
derside of the grave. The bottom
has fallen out, a»d the I ng ropes
with which the pallbearer let down
your dead let them clear through into
heaven. GlOry be to Go4 for this
robust, healthy, religion) It will
have a tent. ency to make
long in this world, and in
to come yoa will have et
"With long ilife will I sati
you live
the world
rnaI life.
ly him."
000tch Dialect,
The' 8cottis1i American has a story
el a north country servant girl, who
was living with an English family in
the neighborhood of Oxford.
One wet day she ha.ppened. to step
into a heap of • mire an returned
home with her clothes muCh soiled.
"What have you been doing?" asked
her mistress, •
"Oh," said she, "I stepped into a
dumplock o' glaur."
"And what's glaur?"
"Just clairts," said the girl.
"But what's clairts?"
"It's just like clabber."
"But, dear, me, what is elabher?"
"Clabber is drookit stou•."[
"But what is drookit stour?" in-
sisted the amazed lady. • •s.'
."Weel, weel," said the jir1, -aye
nae patience vvi' ye ava. • e. sud ken
1114 weel as Inc. is just we t dirt."
•
HOME 18 WOMAN'S CREATION.
It Springs From Her Owe ideal of What
let Good and Fair. .
"In order that a woman may be
successful and happy in hea home life,
she must, inevitably regard her work
as worthy the highest, edii ation and
enthusiasm," writes Kath ine Reich
The Ladies' Home Jourilal, of "The
College -Bred Wotrian in Her Home."
"Let her know, before E She enters
upon it, that it must for Years occu-
py the -greater part of hei thoughts
and time—there will be seaeons when
it must occupy her whole lme—and
be content that, this is so because of
the velae of the result to be attained.
The homelle El,7eehetinrepeace elnd order
reign, and
lluences of indus-
try and education, of courtesy and
religion prevail, is not made by
chance. The woman's thonght, study,
ability have entered into It and de-
termined its character, Where the
servants are indti'triou and quiet,
where the children are healthy, gen-
tle and obedient, where the conversa--
tion shows intellectual life land gen-
erous thought,. and the spitfit of the
home in tte amtivities and pleasures
is love, LUX1 joy, and eace—the
praise 3s due, flrst, to the wom n,
who as Wife, and mother, and_ Is -
tress, and housekeeoer, and ho e -
maker, has made it her study
pleasure to rule her kingdom dili-
gently, with intelligenee and love.
'Me home is her, creation, sprin g
from her own ideal of what is od
and fair, and speaks to mankind as
truly as if her thought had expres ed
itself in writing. It is a, work of
the highest art. If a woman t s
regarded her work at homoe she wId
settle her mind to it without t t
restlessness and discontent she ill
always feel if in her h.eart 'of heats
she regard history, or art, or hig ler
mathematics as being more worthy
her attention."
In Chicago.
Every seat in the North State street
car was taken and .tour or:five per-
sons were standing.. One of the lat-
ter was a_ young woman who stood
near the middle of the car. A tall
young man, rather too slim for his
height from an athletic point of vie
rose from his seat near the rear d or
and stepped forward to inform he;
young woman, who was looking he
other way, that there was a seat for
her. As he did so a man dropped
into it.
"I beg your pardon," said the
young man, "1 didn't'get up to give
you a seat."
"But I got it," said the man.
"I intended it for the young lady,"
said the young fellow.
"But got it," retorted the other,
with a sneer.
He was the bigger man, but the
young fellow's hands descended on his
shoulders and he was on his feet
and on the platform before he knew
It.
"Conductor! Conductor!" he cried;
but the conductor had a faraway
look in his eye and was interested in
something going on down the street.
The man was in the street before he
had time to call out again.
The hero --for he was a. hero in the
eyes of the passengers—re-entered the
car, and lifting 1)18 bat politely said:
"Madam, there's a seat for you."
And the passengers were so tickled
that they actually began to clap
their hands. The young Man simply
smiled, and- said:
"Athletics are of some value now
nnd then."
Then he leaned up against the front
door and became absorbed in a pa-
; While. the woman watched him
edmiringly.
couithernItur Het tinsbrolle.
The i me when umbrellas could he
afforded only by the rich is still with -
is the memory or the tradition of
some remote Scotch neighborhood,
anw
d a Scotch nespaper, qu'oted -some
5() rears ago by Henry Howe, in his
niee of Vininen t, Mechanics," re -
la tlst how pride once went, before be-
wilderment to one of thew,
‘Ihen umbrellas first came into
ilia irgrove, it says, they were sport -
only by the minister and the laird,
and were looked upcm by the common
class 110 perfect, phenomena . One day
Daniel al—e went to Colonel • Mc-
laterson at Blair House: when about
to return, there came on a shower
the Colonel politely offered him the
loan Of all umbrella, which was po-
1;tely kind proudly accepted, and Dan-
i el Wi th hi s h ea d t Ana or three inch-
es higher than usnal. marched off.
Not long a f ter wards, however, to the
colonel's surprise. he saw Dan ie.!
posting towards him, st Overtopped
be- his cotton canopy, which he held
out, calling:
"Rae, hate '<lintel! This Will nev-
er tio• there's no door in all My hefine
thet'll take it in: My verra barn-
ioor whine take it in."
3.„1,-, 1 ft.,- v. 1.1. I 11, is•v•-'•
FOr some time 11,0., PpriSiang lIttVe
had octets:len to vete:eel]) of defects
in the I elephore t•ervire. 111..me was
officially thrown first on the istin-
enza, and. sithsequently on the (.1r-
turbn nee en ueed tee 1'111111..11 ing for
the Metropolitan. but a, third expla-
nation is suggest ez1 by the lune t of
a gang of teen w: -to Moen s'r"l-
Ing
telephoee wiren fer mop ti 0. heir
occupation go 'e them '('SS t Fc'W
-ors. and armed ith iis.sh,ted nip-
pers. they helpe-1 theinsel k (11.131.% to
00 1111:141 copper Wil e as hey could
carry 11 y.
CO 01.1 Th.-, ‘• • r
"T !nee th is pa tt ter n well enough,"
said the et:fitter:or, who had drepeed
in to look e 1 some ribboes. "bet 'm
air:lid the ('001'0iss„,"
taie'st)!" -arm le'. an-
ewered the
patriot 3,:'team
:eote ''Ped,NVI1 i 0 00(1 1 lue! Theen eeoer run!"
• Wheeeupos the vete''
'. i•ought 43
yards.
reae
e. • er .aea
. ,
Mre. ,Tonat—t suppeee marriag,e, is
a lot or,‘
Airs. iliekers-010 . I (100't letow.
coneeler it a gaiee of
.,
••••;+; 14;.'.. I ;
The pu; 1., ion of eereselein has
heerl iteere eitee c•,f late. and
is ee. "thee' f t heee, a8,000
r; re 1-lphri.wq
•
—A violent ramstorm which prevailed
along the lower Hudson, did considerable
damage by washouts. The ice Merl have
lost all the ice which formed the prevteus
se
week and they are almost hopeleef har-
vesting any this season.
The Great Prescriptions of
Dr. A. W. Chase.
(}211 • 6010
br, Chase's tCidney-Liver Pills, 25c, a bee.
Dr. Chase's Pinneent fly 6oc, a box.
Dr. hase's =Food, saa. a bon.
Dr„ hase's Cum, a bon, owerfraa
Dr. Chame's Liver Cure, ac a boa
Dr. Chase's Syrup et Liam* sot patting
far sought av4 01.461, 110. ark
••••••=011111110.11MMIIIIII....*
iselesereitereillillele111101111411111101111101111serts sus I..
tIt(ltfIlltlii111111117n;;;11 Ufttalf;t11111iff1JOIJIThi0
Aist•-1.7=1,1--w.,••
riatilaniainoromarmlmti
SEE
THAT THE
FAC -SIMILE
SIGNATURE
PrceolesiMesfion,Cirerful-
uessouliTest.containsneither
Opium,Morphin nor trineral,
O'r NAIILCOTIC.
Aperfect Reiiiedy for Constipa-
lion. Sour Siomach,Diarttioea,
Worms ,Convulsions,feverishr
ness and LOSS OF 'SUMP.
:CAST-0,MA
IS ON THE
WRAPPER
OF EVERY
BOTTLE OP
EXACT CO
Tee
Y OF WRAPPER.
• &Amin is pat ny in one.nize bottles only. It
Is not sola in bulk. Don't allow suyorie to sell
yon anything else on the pies or promise -eat it
41 "just as good" and "will answer every pnr-
ose." /a -See tbat .you get 04 -8 -T -0-11-1-L
Ito Ito-
slmil
'sienstars
of
tea
efsfy
wrapper.
The est and Cheapest medicine ever
given to a horse.
BEST
Because of the results it produces
Mr. Alexander Ross, of Brumfield,
nude over $50 out of a 50c package of
P'ear's Conditibn Powder.
t Every farmer who uses it once
4ever buys any other.
CHEAPEST
Becanse a teaspoonful of it is all you -
feed at-one-el—all other powders require.
a -tablespoonful.
You get three pounds for 50e, Or
!even pounds for $1.00.
This is the time I180
Mr. Wm. Fortune had a horse that he could not feed ittehO conditions be-
qause its legs always broke out. He tried Fear's Condition Powders at last,
and before Christmas sold his horse for $150.
BEFORE USING.
AFTER USING,
Fear's Drug Store, Seafertit.
SI=
Youlfifill
Be Surprised
to learn bow cheap *e are selling fencing
this year considering the cost of wire. Bet.
ter see about it before you buy, No other
fences made of wire like ours. PutPage up
with good end posts, it will stay
there tight add 111C45.-
1HE PAGE WIRE! ENCE COM)
Walkdrviliet Ont.
MINI
MIMI MI
1011MS Walk
.10MMUR 001.1.1.0 .011111.11
1.101.0*Millftill NOME., 011...16 Waft.. MOMMIM. MINOMININI
W. T.
MBF
RS,
_A_C4-1\TTS,
1 7, 129 and 778 Yonge Street, Toronto
• Is coming, and vi1I be at the
Commercial liotel, Beaforth, Thursday, March 1st,
Hicks House, Mitchell, Friday, " 2nd,
Aiion Hotel, Stratford, Saturday and Monday, March 3rd and 5th,
Windsor Hotel, St Marys, Tuesday, March 6th,
With a large stock of hair goods of the latest styles and finest quality—Bags,u
Waves, Wigs, Head Coverings and Switches in natural, waTy and straight,If
you wish s switch you can dress in an artistic coiffierA in one minute, buy a
natural wavy one. We show you how to dress it. Collie early and bare your
hair Wowed, singed and dressed by an expert, Ladies, our goods and prices
will suit pu. Comet if it is only to see. Wax figures for millinery purposes.
,s
7 pule'
t the
at 2 o'elci
in MA]
niithro
omelette
hi a Anti
1caLie or
'mute an
emir of A
;fend. 11
Deeded, e
erg been
fenced
lof he fin
ree trot
Terms Of
000 teret
balsnee I
Or may gl
purchase
paeticulal
WILSON.
LEAB
AN3
lnatructe
4ion on 14
1inile em
e900, at 1
ey, viz, ea
newly-eal
2 heifers
* *tears_
2 yet
ore
.ms on 011i
areith, on ti
Pell, 00 Wi
ishalp,1
mare 12 ya
old, 1 riga
March, let
*teens, the
1 yealino
eac4., P.ge
implemeal
mower,
on hay rak
geneeal
wagon!, 11
_ hay reek, I
yoke, 1 ed
writer iron
sip polls at
1 waehing
net, A num
number of
Leghorn en
told withoi
.farnt. Ter
theefowl.
be gives or
count et Si
cash no el
proprietor
A 131-116
1-1 FR
Mr,Thentei
Mrs, Jelsse
day, Mama
1O0.!, /Jee
!Arm etook
;turps:eel=
ute.r,e In fri
mare in Io
00111100o
lilby ringi
old, 1 iron;
filly 2 year
Cattle -4 e
Ey cows, /
will -calve I
two year*
2 ,'ears olt
hay rake
01 leo
ox, 1 bey:
ousel'
a 1
inibo froml
2nd Come
County cf -
stone dwel
ti
retool hate
two first el
vation. fel
Is giving 111
oh Stock si
be allowed'
notes. 8n
6 per tient.
peymentee
May rental
of years w
balance of
further pa
Seafortle,
IIANNA.II
-
eeell