Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1901-03-15, Page 2A HO Consumptives LeaveThe1r Owt1 Homes to be Cured. not The SlOcuin. System. 61 Treatment Is Offered you Ah. soluteiy Free. - , 'A consideration not to be -overlooked es th-e. treatment of consumptives is the txpense in quesi of health. Some of our tedical Men are now advising their Patients -to go long distances in the hope tat change of air will do them good, •A et of solemn nonsense is being said, and written, about change of climate,. and its influence on the patient. "Stick to low dtitudes" says one: "Go the mountains", - lays another. How is a poor perplexed tufferer with sore lungs, to decide among hese different authorities? The fact is, People die of consumption in all climate. ['hey recover from it too, in all climate., Is L they are treated properly. The sositive cure for the disease is to kill the rams that produce it. This is accomi- 'fished under the Slocum system cif reatment. The disease must have notli ag to feed on. That is the 'principle inderlying the Slocum system. You car.• Sy it at your home. _ - POSITIVELY FREE. Yea or your sick Mende can bare a FREE cour4 If Treatment. Shure r write to THE T. A. SLOCIll 111,111110.41, C'e., Limited, ere King St. West, 1oron,1- e. orbit post entice and express °Moe address.. Ewell be free medicine (The Slocum Cure) will be Womptly mane. 1. When writing for them aiways mention MI War. Personain Canada, seeing Slocum's free offer it Aramaean papers will plearre send for tainelas i &Os 'Formate iaboratortea. REAL ESTATE FOR SALN. Will buy it good 7 -roomed houee, pleasal.- $55Vl lesituated in SerVerth, almost no j. hard and soft water.: Apply to SCOT BROS., Seaforth. 1721V VOR SALE.—The house and grounds belonging _U the late 8. G. McCaughey, corner of Church an Centre streets, Seaforth. The property will be sol cheap ard on easy terrors. F. HOLMESTED, Se forth. 1784 tt MIOR SALE.—Nine mores of land for Bele, beth U Lot 1.2, floneession 8, Hay. There is a tram house and barn eso-small orchard. Partlouls upon application. chtltS. ROBERT KYOD, SR. Zurich. 1699-tf "OAHU IN TUOICERSMITH FOR SALE.—For il r West half Lot 30, on the 4th Comession, L. R 8. This farm contalne 50 acres, 45 acres seeded t grass, the halftime is in bush Will be sold cheap au on easy terms, For farther petioulars apply t EDWARD PAPPLE, Brumfield P. 0, „ 1730-tf .,„ VASIL FOR SALE—One hundred acre -farm, Lo r 18, Concession 13, Hay, on Bronson Line, con taining 100 sores, all ole.tred, good laud tied weli fenced. There are 2 wells of good water, 3 sores orchard, frame house 22x32, good cellar, barn 47x60 on foundation, pig pen and implanaent house. Pritri 83,f 00. For terms apply to the owner, JOHN PRANG, Zurich. 1730.8 MIAMI FOR SALE.—Lot 11, L. R. W., Bauble Line, Stanley. =sifting of 129 acres, 115 acres under good state of cultivation, 10 sores- fall wheat. Good etone house, kitchen and wood 'hod, cellar full ides of house and kitchen with stonecistern, good hard water well. Barn snd stable with convenient well and creek, good orchard and 10 acres good ash reed maple grove. For particulars apply on realism. HERBERT E. JOHNSTON, Hayfield. 1723-tf ABARGAIN.- 8309 will buy a nice comfort vbie frame house and a quarter of an sore of good land, pleasantly situated in the vii age of Ilarpur- hey, and 1 mile we -t of the thriving town of Sea. forth, has a grod cellar and is well fenced. There are a number of good fruit trees and hard and soft water Wow to the borne. Apply -to the undereigned. JAMES MoNAMARA., Box 14, Seaforth I'. 0. 1724-tt MIAMI IN STANLEY FOR SALE.—Foreale Lot 11 J2 and South half of Let 12, Conceesion 4, Stanley, oonteining 150 aorese90 acres cleared and in a fair state of cultivation. There is a frame dwellinghouse with cellar, bank barn with stone stabling, stone pig pen, stave silo, two good wells also a river rues at the back of theism. It is convenient to Churches, schools and merkets, being 3 miles from Brumfield nd 9 mile, from Seaforth. Apply on the prerniaes raddres THOMAS GEMIELL, Brumfield. 1722tf EIAR FOR SALE.—For sale North half of Lot 27, .12 Concernion 15, Hay, containing .50 items, all tear tei,lotsof water and good fences, mostly wire, and well underdrained, 12 acrefall ploughed and 6 acres in fall wheat, 1 acre of good orchard and a prick house and good barns. Convenient to church, echool and poet Oleo. It is one hell a mile north of J. C. Ealbrieisch's mills. JOSEPH OESCH, Sr, Blake P. 0. 1728x8 DESI1 A13LE PROPERTY IN SEAFORTH FOR SALE—Beautifully situated on Centre Street adjoining Beattie s Grove. There aro two lots planted with the choicest of fruit trees of all kinds and shrubs. A frame house, stone cellar undeentath the whole house, a sitting, room, dining room; suibmer and winter kitchens and four bedrooms, herd and soft water. niacin -0 of the moat plement y loeated, 2om1ortab1e and convenient residences iz Seat irth and will be sold cheap. Apply to JOSI. WAT- SON, Seeforth. 1700-tf 'GUAM IN EUILLETT FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot X 4, Coneeselon 13, Hullett, containing 75 acres, all cleared, undercirained, well fenced, and about 40 _ores seeded to grass. There are fair buildlngs. There is a good orchard, and a never -failing spring oreek rune through the farm and a good well at the house It is near echool and post office, and con- venient to the best markets, It is a splendid feral, not a foot of waste land on it, and is well adapted for stoek raising. It will be sold cheap and on easy terms. Apply to the undersigned, Seaforth P. 0. YANE ROMSON. 1689- tt ITOUSE AND LOT IN HARPURHEY I SALE.—For gale the comfortable frame at tine in Harpurhey belonging to the Undersigned. It contain& three bed rooms, sitting room, dining room, kitchen and pantry. It is on a stone found a- i tion with a good nellar; alec hard and sofb weer. The lot coetains of an nerd of land, has on it a g .ol stable and is well planted with various kinds of target 'and smelt fruits. /0 is pleaiantly situated and will I he sold cheap. Apply to the owner, MR 3. :GEORG `1, STLLERY, Ses.f.:rth, or to JAMES W s TSON, 5 a1 ort 1716t1 CPIOICE FARM FOR SALE.—For sale Lots 16,17 and IS, Concessicri 10, Morris, oentsining 102 ores, 150 wares clear and free from stumps an all In grass excepting 2 acres. Being pastured for a number of years a i In eac.dlent oondition for crop- ping-. There is a good conorete houee and two barns one a bank barn also other nezessary outbuildings, a good orchard, two wells and a spring creek, and ia rnitee from Elyth. If not errId by March let will be rented for a year for grazing- purposed. For par tie- -Ware apply on the preariet.s or box 64, Bly'h P. O. NEIL McDONALD. 1726x10 VA= IN HAY TOWNSHIP FOR SALE.—For 12 sale, Lot 22, on the North Boundary of Hay Townstep. This farm contains 100 norm, 85 acres ' cleared, the rest good harder° -A bush. It is well un- derdraineei and fenced. There is a geed stone house with.a No. 1 cellar; large bank ban; shed; she( p house 70x75, with fir,t-ola a et Oiling and root c liar underneath; a good orchard ; 2 toed wells and cistern. There is 12i acres at fall wheat sowed on a rich fallow, well manured ; 40 anres seeded down reeently, the rest in good regale for crop. This la a No. 1 farm, well eituvel for markets. churches, schools, post office, eta., and will be sold retusoneb'y. Apply on the premises, or address ROBERT N. D3UGLAg,8lake,Ont.1663xt f MUM IN STANLEY FOR SALE. --For sale,' Let 9 and the west half of Lot 8, cm the 12th conc.sion, Or Bronson Line, of Stanley. This farm ersa-i tains 150 acres, ail of which 18 olpared, exnept 1 ur acres. It la In a state of first.class cuttivatien, w 11 fenced and all underclrainedancetly with tile. Tecre fa a 'Arta: frame dwelling helm a gaod as now, with good stone faundation and (eller, largo beak bern' with etone elabling underneath, and numerous other buildings, inaludieg a large pig hou-e. Two gaod orchard e of choles Ir flt as, Lice shule and omit- naentll treee. There are two E p ring ereeki tunatig through the farm, and plenty GI road wen!: all the year round eithout pumping. It ie well situated for markets, ohurches, v.11-0 s, poet oIll e,etc , and good gravel roofs leading from it in all directions. It is within view of Lake Huron, and the boats can be seen peeing up and down from the house. This is one of the best Equipped farms in 'the counie , and will be acid ere easy twine. aa the proprietor want' to retire on account of 111 health. Apple on the premi- ses, or address Blake P. 0. JOHN DUNN. 1744-tf Money To Loan. The Townehip of Tnekersarith has about 83,000 of Township Funds to lou at current rates of it terest on first mortgage on farm- property. Apply to the Reeve or Treasurer. H. HORTOX, Reeve, Hensel! P. O.; G. N. TURNER, Treasurer, Clinton P. 0. 178841 "MINISTRY OF TEARS." An Inspiring Discourse by Rev. Dr. Talmage. WILL WIPE AWAY ALLTEAR$ I The _Eminent DLyIne Puts the MI -fortunes of In a theekful Ligigt Shelving That 11* They Are Borne in the Right 13pIrit TheT Misty Provo- Adrantagootts New York, March 10,—A vast' au- dience crowded the. A.cEtderny of Mu- sic in this City to -day to hear Dr, Talmagd, Discoursing on "The Min-; istry 6f Tears," he put tire misfor- tunes -cif life in a cheerful showing :thae if .thdy, were borne in the right, sprit- they might prove to be advantages. His- text was Rev. - 17 "Ant God shall wipe away. all tears fr0n their eyes." • What sp etacle a few weeks ago --when the riations were in tearsl -.Queen Victoria ascended from the 'highest throe on earth to a throne in heaven. The prayer More.. -often offered than an prayer for the last 64 years had been answered, and God did save the Queer': All round the world the bells were toiling, and the minute guns were ,boomingat - the obsequiee of the. most honored woman of many centuries. As near four years ago the English and Am- eriettn natiOns shook hands in con- gratulation at the Queen's .jubilee so in these tinres two nations shook halide in monenful synipathy at the Queen's depahture. • No _people out- side Great Britain o . deeply - felt that mighty rief as our people. The cradles- of many ' of our ancestors were rocked i Great Britain.. Those. anee,store- ed in childhood on the banks of , the Tweed or the Thames - or the .Sh nnon. Take from our veins then1isi blood or the.Welsh blood or th1 ijlsh blood or the' Scotch blood ani the strea,m of our life would be a ere ,shail ow. They are over ther p ne Of -otir bona- and flesh of our esle. It is our Wilber- force; our Co eridge, our De Quincey; our Itobert B irne„ one John 'Wesley, out John Kn • x, our ,Thomas Chain- ber. or Walter. Scott, our Bishop' Charnoek, ou Li:rehear, our our Robert I! Meet, our Daniel- O'Co our Hebert Ernmet, our Daniel; O'Connell, ow- Havelock, our • Rus- kin, our 'Gladstone, oar good end great and gl eiotte Victoria,: T1 e langu ge .in which we offered the English n tion our condolence. LS - the same ilan tw.ge intwhich John. 1311n an ' circa 'ed and Wilton sang and Shakesp are • drathatized and Ric] ard Bax er 'prayed and George Whit efield ,tlat der ed: 'The Prince of. Wales, now King, p4ici reverential visit to Washi gton's tjomb a,t,Mount. Vernon, arid Longfel ow's statee. adorns eVestrninseer Abbey, and 'Ab- raham Lincoln .in bronze looks down. upon Scotlamcits capital. It was.a-, tural that . these two nations be in tears. But I am not going to, speak of' national tears, but of individual tears and Bible tears. Riding acrosS1 a western prairie-, wild flowers uP • to the hub of the carriage wheel, and whi16 a long .dis- team front any ,Shelter, there came a sudden shower, and, while the rain was falling in torrents, the sun was shirring as brightly as I ever sate it shine, and t thought, What a beauti- ful spectacle is this! So 'the tears of the Bible are not 'midnight storm, but rain on pansied prairies in ,God's sweet and golden sunlight. You remember that bottle which David labeled as .containing tears, and Mary's tears and Paul's tears , and Christ's tears, and the •arvest. of joy that is to Spring froi1 the sowing of tears. G-od mixes them; od • rounds them; Cod , shows them where to fall;. God exhales tile i. A census is taken of them, and t 'ere is a record as to the moment when they] were born and as to th place. of their grave.. Tears of ba men ' are not kept. Alexander .in hi sor- row had the hair clipped leen his horses and mules and made a great ado about his grief, but in all the vases of heaven there is not o e of Alexander's tears-. • I speak o the tears of God's children. Alas me, they are falling all the tim ! In summer you sometimes he r the growling -thunder, and you in'i there is a storm miles away, but yo know from the drift ,eif the 'olouds t tet, it will not come anywherenear you. So, though it may be all bright around about you, there is A howcr of trouble soniewhere all the Wife, Tears, tears! Whtit is the .use of them a yhow? kVliv iot substitute- laughter? Why not make this a world wlw e all t he )eople are • well and tt ern al tran rers to pains and • aches? What is tin use of an eastez•rx storn when WC might have a perpetual n W0S- ter? Why, when a huffily is 1141. to- gethe , liOt have them' all -sta,r 01., if the • Must be -I Transplanted to make the r homes, t hen have I he 1 alt live, he family record telling story f matrriages and births, but of no. ;tithe? Why not have the h rvests' lase each other without fa iguing oil? Why the hard pillow, the hard -tiet, the hard struggle? It is easy ough 'to explain a smile or a sett- les Or a con!gtattila t ion, but come )w. and brill* all your diet i'maries rid all your, p iilosophies at d ITU air religionSI and help me .1 Xpl a in tear. A. clioplist will tell ycit that is inade• up of salt and lim ) and, thee component parts, but he inisseS It chief inganklients—the• acid of a niroci life, th viperine sting of a 1 ter 1 lam oral,. the f r 11lefltj of a .okei heart, - 1—will tell yei what I"ar ltj is agony oin so titian, ear, 11011, WIhilC 1 diecourse of the' inistry of tears or One. practical " es of norrowF. First, it. is khe design of rouble keep this World from ,bein.r 100 t ract Something muse 1. e done make us Willing to quit th s ex - eller. if it were not for trouble is world1 would be a good ( nough liven for us. You and 1 NVOUl(1. be nine to take a lease of ti is, life r a .itincired !million years i there e‘e no troube. The earth, cush- ned aerd tiPholstered and pillared d chandeliered at such experse, ho ory of othee worlds could enchant, We Would say: "Le well ough donee If you want to die d have -your body, disintegi ledin - e dust and ;'our .soul gee o t on a lestial adventure, then you an go, this world is , good- enou h for as. .wall Iry to a 0 tit CI 11( tt Y ( a it (1 i 11 rit ree 1<) RA. o is I 1 h I5o wi to lO an st US eri an th ce bu I 1:41.1 J 7-- 7: - Thi AU • A'."1"- W80 n13-8 )1 .1 Mere(' t e bolt at Paris and Lei) hint 10 h eaten to the picture f411 ries of ertife Florence. " . he_ w uld s "what is the UHL' 1 my go ng -the !There are RemitrandtS and,.Ruber and- Titians he.e that 1 1 aval looked at yet," No man antle go. Out of this world or ou of11 house until he has a better houae. - It is trouble, my frien , t makes us- feel our depeude ce up Clad. We do not know •u'r o weakaess or God's strength until last plank breaks. It Is ontem ibla in . us that only when there nothing else to take hold o we ea hold of God, Why, do y u kn who the Lord Js? He It no an a ocrate seated far up in pala from which he emerges once a ye preceded by heralds swingin swo to clear the way. No. He s a fa er 'Willing at our call to st nd by in every crisis and predica ent life. *1 tell you what some of ir business men make, me think of. A man is unfortunate in busin as. He has to raise a good ,deal o money, and raise it quickly.He• b rkoWs on word ad. note all he can borrow. After a while he puts a mo tgage on his house, After awhile he puts a second mortgage on his ho se. Then he puts a lien ;on his furnit re. Then he, makes Over his life i surance. Then he assigns- all his roperty. Then he goes to his fat er-in-law and asks for help. Well, ha ing fail- ed everywhere, completely f iled, he gets down on his knees nd says, "Oh; Lord, I have tried e erybody and 'everything; now help out lof this • financial trouble." I e naakes Gtod the last resort instead of the first resort.; A young man goes off fro home Lo ears his fortune. He go $ with his motheil consent and ben diction. She hae._laege Wealth, but e wants to make his own fortune. He goes -far away, falls sick, gets out of ineiney. He sends for the h tel keep- er where' he is staying, ask ng for leniefice, and the answer he gets is, "Jf•• yeti o • not pay up aturday night, you'l be removed to he hos- pital." Th young man se ds to a comrade in the same bunch g, No help. ITe writes to a bank r who was a Men' of his decease father. No relief. Saturday nigh comes, nnd he is moved to the ospwitiatlh. Getting he •e, he is frenzie grief, and h borrows a, ehee of pa- per and a postage stamp, am he sits down, and he, Writes home, saying: "Dear mother, I am sick unt death. Come." It! ie 20 minutes of 10 o'clock when slie gets the le ter. At 10 o'clock the train starts. She is fiveminutes front. the depot , She gets there in One to have fivei min- utes to spare. She wonders why the train that can go m le an . hour cannot, go 80 miles a hour. She rushes into the hospita She says: "My son, wha doesa all this men? Wh . did you . not .send for Me? You sent, to everybody. but , me. You knew I could and would help y4u.-1.8 thiis the reward I get for m kind - 11058 to you always?" She bundles him him home takes hihome rtn. I gets him well very soon. Now, some of you treat 0- as that youeig man treated hi er; When you get into a fl -rv vre aran. off Bethany a or them 4. ay, caldron, a re of the Oos Isaa potion i wi not that ever to 1477 and ON EXPOSITOR en I ponr in the _tears of Golgotha. Theelkytir en I kindl underthe O made out of the wood i• and one drop of ; 'that thire the wlorst sickness afflicted a Ihuman soul. artha, shall eceive their any Lazarus: fro.t the tomb.1 The i damsel - sh 11! risend on the d rkness shall hat b'ealc the e meting, a d Ghd will pe; away 11 tears frox theft. eyes. °Sus had 'eftough tr al to make n Sympat etic with a1. trial, 'The pt- s ortestj ver:e in th.e Bi le tells the es story, "tiles $ wept." Th scar on the tea back of his i her hand, the scar 0 ow thn arch of e ther fOot, the row o ut- scars along h line Of i4ie hair, wi ea, lkehp ali hea a thinking. Oh, tha fir, a/feat Weepe iis just the one to sil eels enee all eartily trouble, ,wipe out al th- stains of ear hly grief! (Gentle! Why I us his step is s•fter than, th.e step of th of dew. It w 11 not -be a tyrant bid ou ding Yoe hu le your crying. It wil be a father ho will take you on hi lef arm, h s ,face !beaming int yours, while with the!soft tips of th flii ers of • e right 1 band he shal wi e away tears from your eyes. ethin s r will t/e us some Um to get u ed o heave , the fruits o 0, el wi ho one speck, the fres : pastures wit out one nettle, the or chestra ith • ut one. snapped string the river of gladness without on torn bank, t o solferino and the saff rou of the s ise of the eternal da that beaters om Godl's face. Friends, if e could get any appre- ciation' of ev at God , has in resery foe us it wo Id make !us so homesick we would be unfit for our everyday work. Prole sor Leonard, formerly of Iowa uni _ersity, put in my hand a meteoric stone—a, stone thrown off eame other world to this. How sug gestive it w s to me- And 1 hav to tell you he hest representation we have of haven arei only aerolites flung off fro that weirld which rolls on, bearieg ehe multitude of the re- deemed. We ; analyze Ithese aerolites and find thein cryst Ilizations of onder, fling off from d shal1,1wipe away all Ir eyes. '` ny appreciation of the bus times your friends , heaven?' How different, fy get news there of a 4 ath from w hat it is differenCe between em - d • coming into port. pends' ui on which side u stand when you, hear 's death. • If you stand f the river, you mourn If you ,stand on the the river, you refoice e. Oh, the difference neral on earth and a aven—between requiem ph there; pa,rting here ere! Tegether I Have ught of? They itre one of your departed land and another in but together in differ - 1 the sante house—the ma.nsions I Together! ood cheer home with tears of bereavement tit. cheekj and of persee trial are ;not always to motherlY hand of God all aWay. What is e way te such a con - at is the Wm of fret - thing? 011, what an ought 1-0 be 111 Chris - See yeti the pinnacles y? It ie the city of e are approaching it. asar in the days that alsam on the wounds Rejoice at the thought leparted friends have that you have ii, pros - making your own es- lie.erfully the re &leis try exult at tbe thought to be ended. • . march tip the heaven - on W wn tho hi ; eus „peresforn. They re very ex - pens' moderate spec mens sellrng for . and finely narked ones bring gr„from $75 to $300. No that marry ladies of rank in - Might d have catteries, he price of high , bred cats is constantly in- creasieg. Champion Lord South* ampton, a white- Persia. owned by Mrs. Greenwood, was sol I for $350, and $250 was refused . fo Zelda, a former cat show charnel( n. And in Arneriea,, of course, as lli 13 prices as anywhere -are obtained. what Ago? n There has been no end i f papers! of supposed d i Mc 11 census 1 takers had in Mete t-' age of lwenien. Here is a pecitnen: -, Census Taker—What is your age, 1 , madani? . Mrs. Neighbor—Did th • e next dbor give her age? - Census Taker—Certainly 1 Mrs. : Neighbor-eWell, e years Younger than she is. o Ariother woman would 1 o age, bttt told how old she 1 e that she had been married el. 1 marrie . In answering : questio , the census ta f and thus got at her age, h 13ut here is a rule you _ out yourself; ' One day there came to t e. a king a gray-haired prat _ amused, the king greatly. y the monarch a nuinber of I never knew before and the ' delighted. But finally it e point where the ruler know the nanie of the pro he thought of a matheina ! hla u 1 "Ahem!" said the king. -T have an a interesting 811111 for you; i is a trial - ' in mental arithmetic. 'I 11 iik of the number of the month of y( ur birth.'' e Now, the professor was sixty years old, and had been born tw days be- ' fore Christmas, so he t ought of twelve. December being the twelfth month. "Yes," said the professo . Multiply . it by two," continued _ the king. the comic id ties the tiring the j tie t moth- nancial • perplexity, .3toU call on the banker, you call on Ithe broker, you call on your. crediters, . you tan 01 your lawyer for legal counsel, you call •upor) everyb dy, and when v ( an - O to , '01)10 )fmy s:0111.01i; hour. 'tad for na tine - you." God let tears,o syme he old hav- thteier yh e now pa,thy: e •like people they' they sing, W1hiyk?e. e an and come rough ming young babe. that felt e owed that. "dark n the the all ess in loaf. goes everee t it. and aeh dh dropsgs con- appe- and doe - the not get, any God. You . to -thee. If perplexi though it is Ife says; eW help then you i ay: "Oh, Lord, lp me now . seat And the _Cord in the eleveath, iy did you not e me before? As one whom his comforteth, soewill 1 comfort It is to throw its back' upo that we havc this ministry o Again,' it i?. the use of teou capacitate u - pathy. The dispensation, ing water 'hands, • feet sprinkling of set ajtart to When we at' to have a g for the office of priests, under -were set apart sprinkled upon and head, and -tears people a the office of sy in- ,prosperity, eat many young around us, a. id we laugh whe laugh, • and we romp When romp, anti w sing when they but when we: have trouble w plenty of o d folksearound. They know how to tfalk. Ta aged mother, 75 years of age sire is alien. t omnipotent in fort. Why? She. hs been ti .it all. .At, 7 o'clock in the m she goes ov e to comfort a 'Mother who has just lost her .Grandmother knows all about trouble, Ffty years ago sh it, .At 12 o'clock of that da goes over to comfort a wi soul, She knows all about She has beet walking in that valley 20 yet rs. At 4 o'clock afternoon 50 e one knocks . a door, wa.ntin bread. She kno about thaf.1- Two or three ti her life she nine to her last At 10 o'clock that eight she over to sit, ip with Some one ly sick. , 5 re knows all abo She knows all about fevers pleurisies an broken bones. 5 been. doctorn g all her life,. spr plasters and. pouring out bitter and shaking up hot, pillows an treeing thines to tempt a poor tile: Drs. 'Abernethy and Rus Ilosack and. Tarvey were great tors, but .he greatest doctor world ever aw. is an old Chrstia.n woman; De :tr. me! Do we n t re- memhereher bout the room wh er. we were sick in our boyhood? Was there any oneewh • could ever so toil •1i a sere withou hurting it! And when She lifted he spectacles against her Wrinkled .forehead: so she could look cloece at th wound it was hree- fourths heal d. .And when the Lord took her 11.0110, although yob may have been m m and women 30, 40, 50 years :of age you lay on the offin lid end se abed' as though you were only 5 or it years of age. , Where did Paul . get the ink with which -to write his 'comforting epis- tles? Where did David get, 'the ink to 'write his comforting psalms? Where did J hn get the ink to rite his comforti ee Revelation? Thee got. it Out of th ir (Mu tears, Wilt a a man has gone throughthecurriculum and has tak er a course of denee:ens and impriso ments, he is me. titled for the wor of sympathy. I am an herb doctor I put, into the caldron the root. out of dry ground, without form Or eOilleril Then I put in the rose of sharm and the lily of the valley. Then 1 mit into thdoaldron some of 'the 1 aves froni the tree of life and the b a.nch that was thrown into the wilde mess 11 1 woman I'm two ot tell her was when me other er learned ten years, •an figure re court of ssor, who - He told things he king was •ame to a anted to essor; SO ical prob- tears. No heaven! "0 tears froni th HaVe You goodnd glo are h ving.I it is he th 'Christian's d here!. barka Every of the of a' on thi t is th ion a hing dt riVer y hriStia side 'that they go. other side of that trey co betwe n a f Jubilee 1» h here a d eriu . arid reunien you ever, ' th together.:No friends in on - another land ent • rooms house oe man Take thiS you These that course y cution and of be there. Th will wipe the the use on tl stimmation—w ling about an exhilaration i t ian workt against the sli our God, and _Oh, let us be !remain for us! I put .fhis of your heart: of what your got rid of and peel ,of so soo cape. Bear of tears and that soon it. 1 There we shall ly street And ground ot Do I yoti not glimpse of tlie hear a nolo of Some of you , Crystal .palace York. I came home a verda that Crystal musie 1. had' e COnCeat tiler voices and 3,0 strinnente, an( pressed with contr011ed the tion Of his h time 'with the with the othe whelining.._ 13 Compared WI sound when ti from the oast north' and the the Iiingdom myri4ds, gal and Ohrist wi will rise with wounded hand will conduct voi('e of many of mighty thu Lamb that W 014 and honor World without 0 ✓ arms at Jesus' feet. this moment ' catch a towers? Do you not the eternal harmony? ley remember the old in- this city of New in from my country t lad and heard in palace the first great er heard. Jullien. gave , and there were 3,000 0 players upon in - I was mightily im- he felt that Jullien harmony with the mo- ral aed ,foot, beating one and emphasizing . To ille it was over- t all that was tame 11 the ecene and the e ransomed shall come and the ;west, and the south awl sit down in , f God, myriads above cries above galleries, 1 rise, and all heaven him, ard with . his a at itarne ny, "Like the it'nd WotWed foot he waters, ilike the voice idernigs,. Worthy, is the s slain te receive rich_. 1)11 glahy and power, end." , Won' Airs,' Nation ment egainst clans The Ch -fair and gentl lice and lililit n's Versatility. (11H1ros es the argu- .0inan suffrage, de- cag-o Iteeord, that, the sex could not do po- ry duty.! BIG PRIG Lady mare ns 11 Are Siamese ca markings and are now favc women in specte they a They folloW j would; they a ! ate and in and they me() ly, as if teyii deaf person More vivacity the lot of cat color they through sha lateThere t temple' cats about Mtn 011 two varlet ies breed is darke The kmly s ever left the I given, to Dr. of special . f Siam. The new owner HA arP ADA the S FOR PET CATS. mesrord's Siamese Kittens u Big Demand. S, 'wi till their curious loud disdordant voices, ri t es Witil fashionable gland. ,Tn many re- -() unique among eats their owners as dog • exCedingly affection- st mion being nursed, V loudly and constant - g to talk, and to a at that. They have than useally falls to ' and less- dignity. In vary from pale fawn les of brown to choto- re two varieties, the and the palace -cats; • differvnee between the being that, the palace • in color, erect temple eats that thcl of their birth were ightingale as a mark vor by ,the King Of were named by their nieo and Juliet, and roperty of Lady Mar - .0 OR COP Y "Add five." answered the pro essor, do- , ing so. 'Now multiply by fifty.' eyeee, "A dd your. age." "Subtract :165.'t 14yes.11 t. "Add 115." "And now," said the kin "might ask what the result is?' "Twelve hundred and si ty," re- plied the professor, wonder ngly. "Thank you," was the king's re- sponse. "So you were bo n in De- cember, sixty years ago, e i?" "Why, how e in , the world do you kn ow?" cried the professor "Why," retorted the ki g, from ,your answer -L-1,260. The month of your birth was the twelfth and the last A, Wo figures give your go.'' ''tia, ha!" laughed the rofessor. -Capital idea. 111 try t on. the rwxt person. It's a polite .way of finding Mit people's ages," fo Get on Milers Cully J114.nhle 1. Sir NVelnyss Held tells a eharacter- bit ic story of how they do things at 1111' Treasury, A' 1•ni.b.-c1 public man, when he d a c --rt a in (l overn- ni"n1 depart inteit as a tin i >1. lork. w.1.15 1.;,,, wit 11, of hat filled h in] 111. vii1:0!-1,v lt ;Ann ticho W1.1.,1 EP•i! 1 .41 is 1 ;1nil/1i. ihnek 111 ho same room :i:a ,in.1 his (1,e.1,1,11 room r ),en from his seat, (1,•1.tgg, (1 ve t he tirenla re, 1.111(1,, 5,•!,-ine- 1he a: • %1=1. •d the ' offencliiit..] e of furni:nre 1. What, V001110(1 10 11vr 115114U ol ful•;.•. When he 1)11(1 is-oken 1,.g 0:f the ce-eic his _pession seemed te he exhauetee, Ito flung the dawaged s int.( 001 -11 - vi• of 1 Ito ruin!), 14:,11. LIT mi,),Iier ('11011'. en lin ly (1 Ids 1.1. o: I; as 11101110 1101!litsg 1. 11.. My friend on I. i\ ..j" Lizi V it: 'Oat 11fleratom . Vont t.! Clerk W110 had 1,4 a wit scene what it .010., sponse. this kind?" )• . was he inn I or "31r. -Is Air. stlbj t 0 at' arksv(i)iut X--- !" Mere was not 11 i rig Wi th hin he re- set), one of the castors had come off t chair, and tile trreasury won't, replace cast ors; they ;will re- ligbir nothing less serious 1 ham a broken. leg. So he broke °lee of the legs, and now he win get the castor put on again.'='. Gold Product of Canada. It is estitnated that the Oanadian gold fields yielded last yea t 1,257,- 862 ounces of gold, valued at $26,- 000,000. Compared with the pre- ceding year, 1899, this is .a,n increase in ounces of about 250,000) and in value of $5,000,000.. :Dogs Tfixed b v Weight In Ilamburgi dogs are texed by woight, the hotevier the dog It he larg- er the, tax tb.a./has to be paid for —Hugh Forsyth, 6,Ji line Morris, has leased his ferm to David line, of the same line, and *pi, with his fajmily, move to Manitoba this coming spring. He has a son at Alameda, *he to9k up a half section a year ago. , In With rez rn Mrs. R. StodLarcl, Delhb, Norf J'k County Ont„ wri es as follow:—'I w.4s troubled with 1:-.; •;..eina or Sail t for over tivelve ycair, anti during that time doctored w th four diffcirent phy- sicians, buVfound that they ((mild only give tempohary ' relief. I saw Dr. Chase's OIntmei t advertised, deelie.1 to try it, and bef pre I had used half a box found great 'eller and change. Al- together I have use.1 three looeee anl am now complet .1y cured. 1 have r, - commended it to y neighbors, anti ran say it is the best I ever us,t-,1 anol in ,my ettimation worth its v. eight in • The keen miserly which maay endure from the torturej of skin ilf!14;;F:, most appalling, a la so much thi: wer,:e because it l3. 14. •••., iff. nintrnent stands none aF tr.1 4, failing remedy fo • reit rip tree sc•a.ld head and • ,-. - skin disease. 00 e rte. A be : t'! I./. • _ ers', or Edmaner leale.e onto. Dr. Chse' Ointment. 1 411 CH 15 1.901 astOria Is /or I harmless su stit nfants and Children. Castoria is a ute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, 'Drops '.0yrupii. It. contains neither Opium, Ler Narcotic substance. It Is Pleasant. $ thirty years' use by Millions of destroys Worms, and allays Feveris.h- res Diarrha andiWhol Colie. Castoria Troubles, eures Constipation and ria, assimilates the Food, regulates Bgwels of Infants and Children, giving rat- sleep. Castoria is the Children's r pg18111 n:e.tal iinntorl 'ee° t Mi4thers. Castor ne, s. 'Castorld, e relieves 'Teeth -in Flatulency. Cas the Stomach and healthy' and nat Panacea—The McIther's Friend. . Castori "Castorla is an excellen medicine for children.. Mothers have rep tedly told me of its good effect upon their hildreu." DR. G.C. OSGOOD, Lowell, Mass. Castoria. Castor's ls so well adapted to children that 1 recpmmend it AS Superior to any pre- scription ignown to me." .11., A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, Y THE FACifAILE SIGNATURE OF APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. TUE OtNTAUN COMPANY. TT 1111111RAV -111TRICZT,, NAM TOOK elTIG • e . BRIGHT BROS., C4th' eading Clothing & Furnishing Store Will be n ch We have ch The price w" co us. NAAAAAAANAAAAAAAAAANNAAN ER OVERCOATS. ed d for some time yet and now is the thie to get one If you waitt it ap, till a good assortment left in black and blue beavers, black and grey viots, brown friezes.and a large stock of aSsorted colors th boys' sixes. will surprise you, sterling quality combined with cheapness. You I understand the bargains you are getting in good value betta if you e and see them, than if we told you about them here. Call and see _RIGHT .7.7. BROS, FERXIS.q.ERS, SE.IFORT11. CANADIAN RUBBER CP,. Made by the Canada's odes( and hest Rubber 711; ufacturers. An extra thick corrugated proleci band of inn e rubber coming- % the um. r (see the cent). hit* sea of pure rubber pild 1:ees and heels extra strength and t'aincss. These are soles that wear as long .t he uppers. They are the strongest and best ben.vy rubbers in Canada. Look for tb is trade mark on the soles. Made by THE CANADIAN RUBBER CO., TORONTO, MONTREAL, WINNIPEG, PAT. 1 SEPT. '00. Furniture Cheaper than Ever. On account of great leduction in expenses, and manufactining itpecial lines, we are now able to put furniture on the market cheaper than ever. kB intend- ing purchasers will do well to eallat our warewoms, where full lines of 1.1p -to - date furniture are sold:at fight prices. 3,t x-rtirwq, This de?artment is complete with a large selection of the best goods, ,ind obliging attention given to this branch of the business. Night calls promptly attended to by our Undertaker, Mr. S. T. Holmos Goderich street, Seaforth, Opposite the Methodistt church. BR0ADF09T1 BOX & 00. 8M.11%...F101TTia A WONDERFUL AliTUSEPTIO comrouND 1W-INTIO A Meditated oilet Soap of the Purest. Awarded Silieer Medal • Britain Exbibitionl 1897. A FEW REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD USE NO/0. Reg, No. 3007. WHAT IT WILL DO. 1—Prevents all contagious ptiseases from 6—It will clean and remeve paint, oil and approaching where it is used. 2—It will clean and palish peint work and not kill the gloss of the painh. 3—It will clean carpets without taking them up. 4—It will clean linoleirms like new. 5—It will clean bicycle chain and rims. i Novo is claimed to he the cheapest a*d best palest eleaner on market. Try It on finger Marks on doors. G ater grease stains from woolen and cotton cloth ing. Also cleans coat milers and hats. 7—It contains no alkali and is strongly re commended for washing the head, as It imparts a silky and nathral glOSS to the hair, and is especially useful for children. 11031110E lee and 20e a BLOCK Full directions on bloeks, 1687-52 by the Vi • JAMES or add 11 ownel bou e borne, tote and Way BOBER Lot ing WO drained on the p Min, la and othe 60,180 fee doors, la eapaci -house at There is pumping atiOn of Egmotd -Sewed ic growing able t-er or addr Being the 3rd and 3rd ing 10 state 01 0! Ivan /rut berrlea graPee• Wine of forth, P Beek, tct Wilson,: STED„ 33. 27th, 11)0 to a regi malt inAI rising to 2, L. R. - of Rippe 115 sal Durbanol pld. Be old ate' M these selves, ] seed, it: the proV JOHN bulls Ire months, euperim Also an have rei are recto suede le dale P. A. M. C, Tux E.1 Batisfae At' Perth. underet menfe,1 pricee. er 110su at Lct; funded )10 I /0 /Wrong •retinsi 3011N 1 G ots Mat bred YE be acii* of eerie 0 B1 be Te1330Vt; Wan t4d wilt 1,* further service, 0. BBB