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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1901-04-26, Page 2eseeeseweenagraseal TIIE GLORY OF CIIRIST Making Fast Time" We are making a_ great record. No other fence can compete successfully with the 'I Page." We now make our own wire and so get just the peculiar quality we need. Hence, we now furnish still hatter fence than ever.. Prices lower this year. Better look into it. Not room here for prices. We also manufacture lawn fences and gates. High in, quality and low in price. The PAGE WIRE FENCE CO. (Ltd.) VIALKIERVILLS, ONT, REAL, ESTATE FOR telle, -;-,A Will buy a goo4 7 -roomed hou e, pleasant - e Ot/t1I siteated in Seaforth, alined; now. Good hard and sofa water. Apply to SCOTT BROS., Seater h. 1721 Of CIOR SALE. -The house end grounds belonging to I. the tete S. G. hiee7aughey, corner of Church and Ceetre streets, Seadort h. The property will be sold ehcap AO on eisey terms. -F. HOLMESTED. Sea - forth. 1734 lf A BeInneIN.- 003 will buy a nice coin'ortbe etie frame house and a quarter of an acre of good land, pleasantly situeted in the vil age of Harpur- - hey, and 1 elite v• -e. t of the theiving towo of Sea forth, has a geed caller and ie well fenced. There area number of good fruit trees and herd and soft water close to the Ileum. App' v te the undereigned. JAMES MoNAMA.RA; Box 14, gestorth P. O. ,17244f inenee IN STANLEY FOR SALE.—For sale Lot 11 U and South Wilt of Let 12, Conceseion 4, Stanley,' ..contiinieg 160 acres, 90 scree cleared and, in re feir state of cultivation. There is *frame dwelling:hem with cellar, bank bent with Stele stabling, etene pig pen, stays -silo, two good wells ale) a river rues at the back of the farm. Ib is coavenient to ohuroln, schools and markets, be eing 3 miles from Brucefield and 0 mile! from geaftiath. Apply on the premiees o addres THOMAS GEMMEL'', firueefield. • I722tf 'LIAM IN HAY FOR SALE.—For sele. Let 25, Coacession 0, Par Line, Hay, containing 100. mores. 95 acres cleared, well underdrained end f n- eed. There is a large b ick house with good cellar good bean, frame etabling, pie pen, 3 aeres of or:h- ard, 2 wells and (Astern. This is a N. 1 Win, well situated for markets, churches, echo )1 and Pnst Officeand will be sold reasocably. Apply On the premiseaor adirees UR/ WM. CURRY, tliEs Ontealo. 1794t GOOD INVESTMENT.—Faneen's %dole blook &rid dwelling in Exeter, for sale. The brick block is well situated on Main street, ie. 70x55 feet. three Ftorye, and contains four stores, offloe and two halls, all leered ; the beet trueinees stand in own. Tlee dwelling is brick, of two sterye, and cents ns 10 rooms; is &deniably adapted for a beerding h use ; must be eold. Terms easy. Artily t IL FAN ON, Exeter, Ont. 17 9-3- TIESIRABLE FB.OPERTY SEAF iRTII F0.1 ,11 SALZ—Beautifully situlted on 'Centre Street adjoining Beattle's Grove. There are two lots pleated with the choicest of fruit trees of all kinds, and ahrube. A frame house, stone cellar underneath the whole house, &sitting room, dining room, warmer and winter kitchens anO four bedrooms, herd and soft water, It is one of the moet pleaes.ntly toe tad, eornforable and eon', enient residences in Sef irth and will be gold cheap, Apply ta JOSIAH W4T - SON, Seaforth. 17094f LURIE IN HULLETT FOR SALES—For le, Lot _ne 4, Concession 18, Mullett, containing 75 acres, all cleared, underd rained, well fenced, and tab trit 40 • orea seeded to gras3. There are fair bui1ding:4. There is a good orchard, and a neversfailing spring creek runs through the farm and a good well at the Image. It is near schoel and post offlee, and con- venient to the hest markets. It is a splendid feral, not a foot of waste land on it, and is well adapted for stink. raising., Ib will be sold cheap and on way terms. Apply to the undersigned, Seater% P. 0. JAN E ROBISON. • 1009 tf -DARR IN HAY TOWNSHIP FOR SALE.—For r sale, Lot 22, on the North Boundary of Illy Townshlp. This farm containe 100 aoree, 8e aor cleared, the rest good hardwood bush. • It Is well un- d'ercirained and fenced. There is a good stone houie with a No. 1 aellsr ; Is.ege bank barn, implement shed; sheep house 70x75, with first-ola• s etebling and root cellar underneath; a good °tabard ; 2 good wells and cistern. There is 12i- acres et fall wheat sowed on a rich fallow, well =enured ; 40 sores eeecled down reeentIy, the rest en good (shape for crop. This le a No. 1 farm, well situated for markets, churches, Ft -chords, pest ornate etre, and will be Bold reaeonehly. Apply on the premaes, or a ddrese ROBERT N. DOUGLAS,Bla.kmOnt Weevil E1ARM IN STANLEY. FOR SALE.—For sale, L t J 9 and the west half of Lot 8, on the 121-h conces- sio a or Bronson Line, of Shirley. This term col - tains_ 160 acres, all of which is cleered, except f aerer. It is in a statesof firet-olase cuitiyatien, w II fere e1 and all underdialuedimestly with tile. There 160, laree frame d oelling house es good a9 new, with good stone feundation and eellar, large bent( birn with Ftene stabling underneath, and numerous edam buildings, ineluding a large pig house. Two good orchards of choices fruit, also nice shede and erns- merstel treee. There are two Fp .ing creeks runeless through the farm, and plenty of good wet e all the yeer rotted eithout pumping. It le well situated for markets, churches, eeh AO's, poet offi tC, ete , and good gravel remit; leading from it in all directiona It is within view; of Lake Huron, and the boats cur be seen passing ap and down from the house. is orm of tire best equipped farms in the ceunty, and will be sold on easy berme, as the proprietor want, to retire on acoount of ill health. Apply on the premi- ses, or address Blake P. 0. JOHN DUNN. 173441 THE HACKNEY STALLION LANGTON'S DANEGELT (336) and-9I- 1ES0RIPTI0N :—Langten's Danegelt —91— Can. Ilan Haekney 8 8, eel (330 American Hitekney S. B., ictia foaled in 1811r, and is oen eirle fou Veen old ; he is a b -antif il dapple cheat c1 er, with stripe on hie.and both front aed near hind stocking .vhit de is a very high knee act Pr, and hock aetioe cermet be excelled. Ila comes from champion_ stock to England and the United States, both his sire and darn having been imparted train Ergland Langton's D otegelb was bred by 11r. Fred C. Stevsnii, ( f SlapleW,03d ..kney 8 u 1, Attica, New York, one of the mit 6itecealfu1 and best known breeders in the Ceited elt tee an I Cleaned a. He was imported te Cereada by lia poent o ener, Mr. E. C. Attrill, and is pronouncei by alt who have eeen him as cite of the test speeime 13 of the Hackney te now in Canada. He 1, al 'sired by Lengt in's Per. er, (4844), Enyland, 242 A meric No, by Garton Duke- Of tleamaueht (3009) Eng ish S. B. Ms d ,in was Lady Danetrelt (8034) E wish II .ek, (72) Amer - loam ; she wee by Danegait (170 English Hackney S. g. This pedigree can be traced beak indefinilely, but breeders who are inte ested in this clam of stock aId readily see that Langto Denegelt stands in the front rank of H.ackney leadere. Terms, 812 to in tre, payable January 1st, 19-2. Route :—On tiondeee April 29, he wi'l fear his on stable. Ridgewoad Park, aid pc weed to Tnotn,s Bell's. Let Conomion, goderteh towuship, for n ton ; thence to Albion Hotel, Bayfield, for nieht. Tueeday ha will prce-ed to John Bathwell's, g ay - field Line, for tame ; thence to Wilson's Ain irii.n,9 House, Brueetield, for ni 2 ht Wednesday will proceed to the Co nmeroial Hotel, Seeforth, for noon ; thence to Samuel Glitsou's, Huroa Read, fcr nieht. Thursday he si ill proceed to bicCaughey's Com- mercial Hotel, Clinton, for not), ; thence to Wm. Colciough's, Ittth Conceseion Goderich tewnship, or night. Friday he will proceed te km. Driver's, 1:01 Road, for noon ; thenee to Ttit's barn, G iderieh ter night, eh,whe-will remain all day Saturday, and than return to Ri igewood. This route will continue du iini the seas in, health and weather permitting. EDWARD C. ATTit ILL, Preprietor ; OTTER B. WILSON, Manager. 1740-4 To Farmers. He Is the Most Conspibuous Charsoter of History. THE BEGINNING AND THE END _ Dr, Talmage Sounds the. Praisee of the World's Redeemer and Puts Before Vs Portraits of Some of His Great Dis- ciples and Exponents. Washington, 'April 21.—in this discourse Dr. Talmage 'sounds • the praises of the world's Redeemer and puts before ue the portraits of some of his great disciples and exponents; text, John iii, 31, "He that cornett from above is above ail." -_ The most cohspicuous character of history steps out upon the platform, The finger Which, • dia.monded with light, pointed down • to him from; the Bethlehem sky was only a ratill-I cation of the finger of prophecy, th finger of genealogy, the finger o events — all five fingers pointing ir one direction. Christ is the, otter topping figure of all time. He is h vox humana in all music, the grace fulest line in all sculpture, the mos exquisite minglihg of lights 'Ian' shades in all painting, the acme all climaxes, the donee of all cathed raled grandeur and the perdration all splendid language. The Greek alphabet • is made up o 24 letters, and when Christ eompar ed himself to the first letter an the last letter, the alpha and th omega, he appropriated to hinisel all the splendors that you can spel out with those' two letters and al the letters between -them. "I am 111 alpha and the omega, the beginnin and the end, the first and t,he last/ or, if you,_prefer the words Of th text, "above all." r• It means after you have piled up rdl Alpine and Himalayan altitudes, the glory of Christ would have to spread its wings and descend a thou- sand leagues to touch those sum- mits. Pelion, a high mountain of Thessaly; Ossa, a high mountain, and Olympus, a high mountain, but mythology tells us when the giants warred against the gads they piled up these three mountains and from the top of them proposed to scale the heavens, but the height was not great enough, and there --was a, com- plete failure. And • after all the giants—Isaiah and Paul, prophetic and apostolic giants; Raphael and Michael Angelo, artistic giants: cher- ubim and seraphim and archangel, celestial giantb—have failed to climb to the top, of Christ's glory they might well all unite in the words of the text and say, "He that cometh from above is above all." First, Christ must be above all else in our preaching. There are so many books on homiletics scattered through the world that all laymen as well as all clergymen have made up their ininds what sermons ought to be. That sermon is most effect- ual which most pointedly puts forth Christ as the pardon of all sin and the correction of all evil, individual, social, political, national. {There is no reason why we should ring the endless changes on a few phrases. There are those who think that if an exhortation or a discourse have fre- quent mention of justification, sanc- tification, covenant of -works and covenant of grace that therefore it must be profoundly evangelical, while they are suspicious of a, dis- course which presents the same truth but under different phraseology. Now, I say there is nothing in all the, opulent realm of Anglo -Saxon - ism or all the word treasures that we inherited from the Latin and the Greek and the Indo-European but we have a right to marshal it in relig- ious discussion. Christ sets the ex -- ample. His illustrations were froth the grass, the flower, the spittle, the salve, the barnyard fowl, the crystals • of salt, as well as from the seas and the stars, and we do not propose in our Sunday school'. teach- ing and ia our pulpit address to be put on the limits. . I know- that there is a great deal said in our day against words, eas • though they were nothing. They • may. be misused, but they have ;an imperial power. They are the bridge between soul. and soul, between Al- mighty God . and the. human race. What did God write upon the, tables of stone? Words. What did Christ utter on Mount Olivet? Words. Out of what did Christ strike thespark for the ithunination of the universe? Out of ,words.- "Let there be light," and light was. Of course thought is the cargo, ande Wordsare only the ship, but how fast would yoUr cargo get on without the ship? What • you need, my friends, in all your work, in your Sunday school class, in your reformatory institutions, and what we all need is to enlarge our vocabu- lary when we (elm° to speak about God and Christ and heaven. We ride a few Old words to death when there is such illimitable resource. Shake- speare employed 15,000 different words for 'cinematic purposes, Milton employed 8,090 different words for poetic punposes, Rules Choate em- ployed over 11,090 different words, for lege] purposes,a bpi the most of u.s. have less than 1,000 words -that we can manhge; less .than 500, and: that makes us -so stupid. When we come to set 'forth the love of t Christ, we are. going Le take the tenderest pbraseOlogy wherever we find it, and if it has nevelt been used in that direction befere all. the mere shall We -use it. - Why] we come to ...enieak of the glory of hrist, the con- queror, we are geeing to draw our similes from triumphal arch and ora- torio and everything rand and. stu- pendous. The French avy have *18 fia.gs by which they gi e signal, but those 18 nags they cin pin into 6.6,- 00 different comb inat tens. And " I Anew to tell you. that these.stand- •ards of the cross may be lifted into mbinations infinite and varieties erlasting. And let nit. say to young -en 'Who are •after aw lite going to each Jesus Cheist, y u will have e hie/zest liberty and uhlimited re- • uree, You only have to nresent. Chrest in your o w!t w a . .Tonathan Rd wardS ' p erached. China t in the fievereSt aretinnen • eVer penned; and .John Bunyan preathed Christ in the sublimest , atleg'ory ed. Ed ward • Pee -son, haus ( ed , lean ed .up_a,git of the pulpit. and -- wept course, While Getpege the Lane' and ,the vo SEED PEAS. co ie I have a car load of seed peva, Coming -in every 111 week from the north, from near Owen Sound ; they • ime eontaio no bua eI shall kmp a supply on bend eo until the 15th of May so thet all Can be eupplied, also leu a lot of eeed barley. It is common sense tliat if all so would sow these peas there would not be s) many huge in this yearle crop and let the 'farmers chop up • and sell their buggy pets. To bani de the hug an muet quit eowing their own peas. It. Pp &red I wi I see that the county and t .wnship cuneij tire the matter into consideration ano her yelr and have the people quit sowing for 2 years and still also see that the counties- of Perth and Ididllesrx net in the mat- ter. It is no use in half or two-1.114dstop sowing, all muet quit for one or t vo years and I know the fume/sue ready to do so in another year for they understand the importance at the pea orop to them. nr, 0. pERRrN, moon, Ont. 1740x2 eve ick ns ou ite GO couipos- and ex - the side his dis- eld, with LZid the THE HIT of an at teneinieu 'if (ivy, J 5 w Id have been a . lhinr Omit hart Edwa '.*(1 to . ' &own ali the pilgrim's progress to the cel teal ciiy or Jo..te ininyai, had - tempted an .essay on the human w Brighter than the light, fres than the fountains, deeper than seas, are these gospel themes. Si has no - melody, floWers have sweetness, sunset sky has no col coMpared . with these glori themes. These harvests of •gr n spring up -quicker thaWe can sic them. Kindling pulpits with th fire and- producingergeolutions • w their pewer, lighting lap dying be With their glory, they are the swe est; thought for • the poet, and ti are .the. . most. thrilling ilhistrati for. the,. orator, • end they offer t most- intense • scene for the anti and they are to the ambassador the sky all enthusiakirn. Corapl pardon- for the' direst guilt. Swe est • comfort . for lghastliest ago Brightest hope for, grimmest deat Grandest res rrection for darke sepulcher. - 0 'wile, a gospel preach! Chris over all in it. I birth, his suffe inge his mira,cles, h parables, his Weat, nis tears, 1 blood, his at. nemenit, hls interc sionn-what glo bus t emes! Do exercise faith? Chitis is its obje Do ' we • ha.v love? It fastens Jesus. Have. •e a fondness for t church? It is because Christ di for it. Have e a hope of heave It is because esus went ahead t herald and the foneruriner. - The royal ro e' of Demetrius w so costly, so b autiful, that after had put it off o one lever dared p his d14- out ea- the that he her monient ill. him. Si ng ward!'' .no of ono of or, put his 1 ous wrist, an ace its halth hie ended he eir grander 1 ith of the w the Mam ley time of ete am now on have fou he finished st, faith. II et- -give me n O EXPOS to Voct nd the levee.. Dr. To,. to condemn( d to burn at. the -take, his way hither brol<e away from t entardsm n and ,t- 'bounding a leaping ind jumping toward the fir glad to 10 to thete and to die f ,Charles Hare in his la lad such rapturous v sio ried, "Upwar( •, upward u And so great,neas the pea Christ's diseiPles that tigers upon the pulse •h I counted' it and obse 'ye g beats until his lifeha e to begin 1n1 heaven. 13t. han that was he testin on rn-out missiohary, wne i i rtine dungcoi he cried ready to be dTered,- an ler departure 1, at hand ht the good fight, I 1iav y course; 1 have kept 1 th nceforth there is laid in fo wn of righteousness, vtiic the righteoui Judge, vi n that day, afrid not to 131 to all them that love h !" Do you pot see that above all in 'dying allevia- OR r, The encounter took place On the 0111 - an skirts of the town,and almost .every - he body in the --pIale was on hand to nd cee the fun, Thn reconds arranged , the two mail in mein ton, by the Sitio or Of each being a half -bushel measure: st 1 filled with large, hard Irish potatoes. n Dowinah threw the first tuber, it Struck his 'opponent and flew. into ce • pieces. he ! A yell of delight went un from the is I crowd which, 'flurried i he desperado, d ' end his pdtato flew wide off the d mark. Bowman Wilt OM his chanve. it, and every time his; opponent stooped y for a pentad another hit him in the n short ribs, 1flocking the whin cone- ot p lately out of him, and doubling II ine the • tip on the grass. The peopfe were I almost crany With laugh t er , Ini L e B oWinan locked aS solemnas if he e . had just been preaching a funeral r • sermon. Th.. desPerado was taken h. e !! je home and put to bed, and stayed 11 there for in re than a' week before he recovered from the effects of the is Irish potato, duel. of me a cr ete the Lord y , only, but h. appearin s.tt ,Christ is to tions? Iis TbWard is ly reside tis see the s es- say, "An We When I c et. night, on parted." he say, "A ed gone fore n? years ha he lightning cade to. as they go he for us, wl tit YOU and It on but this robe Of Christ, richer • than that,the oorest and the wan- nest and th worst may wear. nWhere sin bOunded grace may lunch more ab und." "Oli, my sins, my sins," said Mar- tin' Luther t6 my, brawny Germai a Latin . Bible • quake, • and through Christ Sta,u az, "my sins, he facis that, the , studint had found that lia,d made him when he found how le wa. pardoned and saved he. wrote ,to aj friend saying: I "Come over an join jus, great and awful sinners s ved bi the grace of God. You see to be only a (gen- der Sinner, and you don't much- ex- tol: the. mercy f God but we who have been suc 1 very awful sinners . praise his gran the More now that we have been re deemed." Can it be that you are s desperately egotis--, tical that you eel yourself in first • rate spiritual the root of the toe you are sem What you nee and here It is and wretched - blind and nake( the head to the' of Wounds and health in us. fact that Christ notes against u„ then offered us • And how muc sorrows! We as _cumstances if w Why,'• he ma dungeon, and u John' from des the blast of th• ete. After - all been snuffed that gets bright:r arid brighter unto the perfect day, and after under the hard hoofs of• c twenty all the pools of Worldly enjoyment 'lane been traanpled into d ep mire at the foot ' of the eternal frOM cups of arid vine covered of his soul. the last hour of our earth ce we are spe Oihg. When ring blossom scattered, ther season one forever. ose the Bible on Sabbat • "Anothe .Sabbath dc - When I bur a friend, other earthl attractio er.'' What im, ble.feet th e! The roeb eks and • th run not sot f' st. From de decade,. frOi sky to sky a bound. Tiere ac ether marked' or not, wher will sleep.. he -last sleep .. and the n are now 1 'ving who wil ; with sole n tread, car y us to ou resting. place. Drighte • than a ban qu-eting h throngh ich the ligh feet. of th • dancers go p and. dow ' to tne so Ind of trump ters b e sepu her through hose rifts th holy ligh of heaven s reameth. Go will wate you. He wil' send hie an gels to guard you slumberin ground at. Cl rist's behest they shall roll away th stone. So also Christ Is btbo e all in. limy en. The ible distinct y says tha, Christ is he chief then e of the ce lestial as ription, all ti e thrones ac Ing \his rone; all the lealms waved before his face, all the crowns down at WS fee*. Cher•ubim, to cherubim, seraphim to seraphim, -edeemed s 4r - it to rede-med spirit sl all recite the Saviour's earthly saerif ce.• Stand o some high ill of heaven, and in al the radian sweep the most glorious -object w'll be ,Tek. us. azing on. the sears of his in enema first, afterward orth. into accl mation. The 11 the purer r. the flame hich they pas, ed, esus, for whom we died." es, all the h 'pier for the aad the scour,. ing through y, "This is c.)L1:1 at c tt C or- andt tti • say, 'finis fi in his r us `i the 'storms of the world were too etild and lend brought us • in t 111 s beau ti f place." :rho multitude. -of the. be- reft will y. "This is ti e Jesus ttho comforted us when our cart broke." Many who had - wand red clear off from God anel d plunged ! into vaga- bondism, .but .were sav'by graee, will say: This is -Jesus who pardon- ed us. We were lost on the Mount- ains, and .he brought us home. We were guilty, and he mad us white as. snow. Mercy Windless, race unpar- alleled." And then; alt each one has raciter his peculiar deliverances and peculiar mercies, recited them as by solo, al the voices N ill come to- gether in a great chorus i which'shall make the arches re-ec ',L) with the eteraal reverbera.tion of rladness a ad peace and triumph. Edward n. was 140 anxi us to.go to the Holy land that wl,en he was about to enpire he beque thed $1(50,- 000 to have his heart ter his ce- 1 11 lion tit/Child 41.Platyar llookcy." . Children snmetinws pretend- to be - In to esCapel goini4 to school. Feign - 1 ing illness tio esc4pe duty• is called 1 in the arnty malingering and is al -9 " ways penis ied then detected. A h child who - a.bituelly complains of headache Ju t bt fore school time 1 should be p t on la, sofa. in a dark - n ened room, not ermitted to road; c I not look at ictur.s, and have a. hot 0 water bag paced al, his feet. If the e- 1 e aihth nent is real in is the best treat, , ment for Lille early stages; if it is feigned the sPence and solitude soon 1 0 become so iiiksome that .the culprit • is glad to . do Line thing to es&pe 1 i from them '0 her affected pains r ' should be Itreat .d as if they were. - I real, and it houl be distinctly un - t derstood in t e fat iily that the child n who is too i 1 to r o to school, and e -to learn his essore, is', too ill to be e *out of bed. If a child play - truaat d the lessons h loss.s should be made t uP at home in his play time, and g the mother s lould take pains to see 1• thtit this is 'done, so that he may find truancy unprt fitable He may : he put to be as loon as he returns b 1101110 011 t e assumption that he e must be. ill, ecauee nothing but 111- e ness should eep hiin from going to sehool.—Ladi s' Iln me Journal. trim and that from air to the tip of the less and immaculat is. a looking gle..s in the Bible. Poo and miserable an from the crown sole of the foot, fu utrefyrg sores. N And 1, len take th gathered up all 1.11 and paid them an he receipt. . . We need him in ou e indenendent of eh haVe his g-rae o Pail sing in th der that grace St. late, Patmos heard • apocalyptic trump - other candles have • utethis Is the light e? Myriads s, suffering, ; breaking d martyrs, 04 1hrough 11 "Phis is O The apost e shipwreck e which they went, will s d the Jesus whom we pre •, inth and fn Cappadocia thick and at Jerusalem. dren clad in white will eis the Jesus who took u . .and blesscd us and whe rock the Christain, ranite, lily rimmed puts out the thirst, Again, I remaik• ; that Christ iS above all in ding alleviations. I have not , an, sympathy with the morbidity* &brow about our demise. The Emperor - of Constantinople ar- ranged that on tie day of his coron- ation • the stonet utson should come , and consult ith him about his tombstone that after awhile 'he • would need. An (here: are Men Who are monomaniac 1 on the subieet of departure froni this lite by death and -the more they think of it the less prepared ar they to go. This is an unmanlineas not wor ttry o you, not worthy of me. God* grant th t when that hour tomes you may be at home! You want the nand. of your kindred in your hand. .You want your children to surround „ ou. You want the light on your pil ow, from eyes that have long reflectd your love. You want the room . till. You the ,not want any curious strangers standing around watchin you. You want your kindred, froi afar to hear Your. last Prayer; ti ink that this is th wish of all of us., But is that all? Can earthly frier ds hold' us- when the billows of de th come up to the girdle? Can hum n voice _charm up - 4l . oneaven's gate? 'Can human hands -pilot us throng.' the narrows of death into heaven's harbor? Clam an earthly. friendship shield us from the arrows of death and in the. hour when satan -she. I practice neon us his infernal archery'?, No; no! Alas, poor sounn if tbat is all! Better die in the wilderness, far from tree shadow and • far frbat fountain, :alone, vultures circling through the air waiting. for •ci r body, unknown to men; and t� 1 ave no burial, if only Christ would say through ehe solitudes: wil never leave thee. I "will never .forsa ce ;thee." From that pillow of sto ladder would. soar heavenward, angels roan going, and across the solitude the barrenness_ wo come th notes of heavenly minstrelsy. Gordon Hall, far from home, dying in the door. of a heathen empie, saed, 'Glory:to thee, 0 God!" What did dying Wilberforce. say t his wife? "Come and sit beside n e and let 118 talk of heaven. I never knew what happiness • was. until I • , cease taken and depo. itetil in the ,ifoly Land and hiS t :S • 'Yeept tvas com- plied with. But there are hundreds f• to -day -whc se hearts are already in the holy land of heaven. wn _ere yoar treasures are, there are your hearts :also. John Bunyan, of wiom 1E po4p at the opening of ti e discourse, caught 'a glimpse of thatplace, and • in his quaint way he sai, 1, "And I , heard in ley clreani, s nd, lea the bells of the city rang ai ain lir joy, and as they opened the ates to 131. in the men I looked in after them, - and; lo, the city shone 1 ke the *se a and there Were streets of gold, ead - men walkedon them, halms in their hands to sing praises with all, and. after that they shut • up, the gates, • which -when I had 'seen I wished my- self among them!" ig and. • end sweet pun Christ." What -did dying 1 aneah More say? "To go' to heaven, think what that is! Pogo to Chrisl., who died that 1 'might.; live! H1/4)1.', glorious grave! Oh, wnatt 'a reel -jells thing it is to die! OL, lova of t'hrist, the love of Christ!" rt hat di Mr. Toplady,, the hyminna,kei, Say in his last hour? "Who can m ?a,Sele,. the depth of the 11.ird lioavea? 611, the sunshine that fills illy soil! 1, shall soon be ge.ip,;, for .sureily 0 One can live here after such glorie as Clod has manins'ed lo iny sou .•' What did the det rig .17nneWi1 sny? I "I cah as easily os elope m - eyes I or tura my head in. el T3efore 'a • few hours hay:. n 1 shall stand on Mount Zion a it ?) 11) • one hi ndrell and foet3r atul foui otsael and with the just me... :laid', ierfec , and We shall ascribe He.ies a.nd hon r and `g1.0C,Y, anti, MaiestY and domini.n gummy. Bow the Budget Got it. Name. Probably not,.. 1 per ent, of the British taxpayers who ale just • now anxiously discussing th possibility af Sir Miel ael ch's forth - coining budget are awar of the ori- gin of the terra. A most from time immemorial it was the custom iri Englapd to pnt the stimatee of receipts and expenditur s presented to Parliament in a leatl er bag, the word hiidget being- thus )orrow1 by us from the old Norman word • bou- gette, which signifies a le ther urse Curiously enough, the word has ed back again into ,Pret ce froM us. —London Express. Most Novel of All 1 uels. One way of cembalin an evil practice is to rr, ke it look ridicul- ous, says the) Bost on IIri1d. It was by this 'nears that duelin was stop- ped in a. cer:ain distric • in Kern Lucky. A t-aveling pre cher named bowman—a strong,' in _lexv—a'as conducting sow lucky. At one 'of his - Well-known nesperate*ch aLed a distuebance, and, hely rebuked by BOW111 11:/ a 'challenge to fight. 13( the challenged party, hax f of Weald Ons . ire sel bunliel of . Irjh potatoes, his fist; for each man, a ed that his opponent mu. teen paces distant, and, that only one potato at a Lone should be taken from the measure. The desperado was furidus at being thus freshly insulted, and made an indignant protest, but B wman in- sisted _upon 'his rights as .the chal- lenged man, and ihreate ed to de- in:Melee the de:sperado a a coward if he failed to come to time As there was rio *way out of the fix but to fight. the dosnerado Consented scular fel- ces in Ken- neetings racter cre- being :pub - sent him wman, as. the choice ted a half as big as d stipalat- 1 stand fin POOR COPY Si', ng U / a- Man. A contempo ary Ives the following advice to its fair -enders: "'For. a man's birth, look at his linen and. finger nails, nd 01)serve the! - inflec- tennis of his - voice. . For his ta.stes, study the- col r of his ties, the pat- tern and han of his_ trousers, his . rings; if any. Fori. his propensities rings, if any3.'en his propensities, walk around and look • carefully a.t Val back of h s head: 1 A symmetlical cerebelluM, with \Vell-trinuned lair, 's an inclination of -self-control in d 'nrjrgy. If you want a sueceseful n an. s that he has a neat: foot; he will nove quicker, get over obstacle. fastu, than a man who falls over his 0 vn toes and trips up other folk.. will 'em, too. For his breeding, alk sk.ntiment to him when he is sti- vying and ask hien to 00 rry 11 handl. ox :town 1 he public. street when .051 V( just hati a roW. Test his temp,r, iori him his nose -is a little on on side. anci you don't like the way lis hair grows._ There are other w, ys w deli will sug-eeest t hemselves hal urn Ile to a bright wo- man." . . Where Taxes (10., 410 or t WO ni 'rst ing items of. ex- 11011(1111We are eboan the . accounts Of 1 ho riill ,ohtioLtencics fund._ for 1:49:1-4900, which !..1,ows a balance of ne32,421 18s s;;:y. a London news- paper. One o the inain iteme of ex- -pond iture hum 'red hy 1 -he AdiniralIV lay in conveyii tla remains of t he late Lord lite schen from New Verk to England at a teen of- n1,911 lts nd. Under the )nn 1 of "Repayable Miscellaneous dvances" we find tent the stamp dut es in respect lo let 1 oes patent. of elm( blemein 5 came. 1,- (17P 12s 6d. or inetanee, the 6 ;Amp duty in ereati g Iluronet Cromer a Viscount cos I:20 - 2s, while (lit' barony of • `ir Pauncefot e cuused a disbt rsemeat. of n150 12s, Tine grant of lugmentation of arms- -to Lord Kitchener 18 placed a t only. Feminine nsura ce Morality. A middle-ag•d w man, says the Leeds' Mercury, catlled at an insur- ance agent's in a irovincial town some time ago to a nounce that she wanted to i ure ler house. "For how much?" sired he agent. "Oh, for about £210." "Very well. I'll come up and inv stigate itnt "I don't know m ch about insurance," she said. "IL's , very simple, . ma'am." "If I'm insured for £200 .and the house is burned down, I get the money, do I?" "Certainly," fire?" "Oh, ut tl I ey do. We shall "And they don't ask who set it a want to know all about it." "Then you needn't co e up," she said as she rose to go. "1 ward there was some catch about it somewhere, and now I sae who i • —The McPhail Memo ial Baptist church, Ottawa, has exte ded a pall to the Rev. W. J. McKay, of t e firjt Baptist church Stratford. NO Trifling Wit t o Nerves, .When you ca toss in misery I come, do not y to use morphia;, coe ates. They only bast Let reason ru e. the foundatiorao the up the system by Nerve Food. 't shjep at nights and. ngin for daybreak to eld to the temptation me or other opi- n decay. et right down to trouble and build sing Dr. Chase's This great reoratijvejs In pill form and contains th very elements of na- ture, which go to form new red cor- puscles In the looti and create new nerve cells. ft Is Werth w Ile to remember then Dr. Chase/3,1/er e Fo d is not a patent medicine,.but th gre itest prescription of Dr. A. W. Ch se, a ithor of the lam - oils receipt book. 'Dr. Chase's Nzrve ood is an un-tn- date, scientific repa anon which h2s- proven itself to e s eelfle for all ner- v-eus diseases. I t ca not fan, if used persistently, because J it actually re- builds and revitaliz s .the wasted nerves. It is e peei Ily recommer:drd for ills peculiar t worisen, because the - almost invariabt aris from exhausted nerves. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. 40 cents a box at all dealers, or by mail. r. Clot 123 Nev� Food APRIL 26 1901 What is liCstot a la is for Infants and Children. Castoria i a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrtrns., It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nal.cotie substance. rt is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- ness. Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels of Infants and. Children, giving • healthy and natural slep. Castoria is the Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. • Castoria. "Castor's is an excellent medicine for children. Mothers have repeatedly told Me or its 'good effect upon their children." . Da. G. C. Carao0D, Lowell, Mass. Castoria. "Castoria is so wen' adapted to cantina - that I recommend it as superiorAikamy pea seription known to me." ete4„ir U. A. Areertita, M. D. _Repo yn, erf, THE FAC -SIMILE SIGNATURE OF APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. • BRIGHT BROS., C4th's Leading ClothOg & Furnishing Store NUR OVERCOATS. Will b needed for some time yet and; nciw is the time to get one if you want it cheap. We hate still a good assortment left in black and blue beavers, black and grey •cheviots, brown friezes.and a large stock of assorted colors in boys' sixes. The pr ces will surprise you, sterling quality combined with cheapness. You, ill understand the bargains you are getting in good. value better if you • ome and see them, than if we told you about them here. Oall and see s. BRIGHT BROS., RN'S HER , S_E.J11?OR sLocurs • SUCCESS! m ers of People in qanaa Who are. Being ur d of Cinsumption Is lositive Evidence Of the MArveloits Success of the .51oesun: Syst _ lot all Lung 1 I NO !MOO BIG DOCTORS FEES,1 NO MORE LONG SUFFERING ; Dr,j Slocum's success In Caring all •disesses of no ftng and bronchial tubes Is beyond question Scores of men and women who had believed their con Bon tittrelesi have been restored to health tbr,i gh,the Slocum system of treatment. Bach of the brie pHrparations comprising the Slocum treat eat act toirether until perfect healthresults. If yo stiffer from any form of long trouble what. ever, ea should not lose a minute in applying fur tri of the Slocum system of treatment. Yo are not asked to pay a cent. All you hare to dO to write the T. A. 8L0C1711 CEICKICAL CO., Liau ED, 179 King St. West, Toronto, giving name In 1 u.1. wfllh post oak* and express office address. and R1 TREATMENT will t you promptly on TeCeltit of yeur rs quest Thi Is the most generous offer ewer made by acy m man In this country. Dr. Slocum Is so posit! . of what hip treatment will do that he Makep thII unprecedented offer. fully conffdent of what the sau1ta will be to all those who want to get well. When Wrftlng for them always mention this Persons 1 Canada, seeing Slocum's free offer in American opens will please scud ror eamplee ts • the TOront, laboratories. - • Skims cleanest, runs easiest, S65 on time. The gearing is made of gun metal. The Highest Award —AT THE— !Paris Exposition, 1900 Grand Prize and Gold Medal Has been won by the MELOTTE CREAM SEPARATOR. ;Eight days' free trial to intending par- ebasere. Skims clean and turns easy. 1 . DUBLIN, January 21st, 1001. Having tried three different makes of Cream Sep- , orators, I bought a Melotte. I would recommend It to any farmer with four or five COWL I think It Is itie beet paying article on the farm,—.1.scos Bareaft. Call on or write the local agent, J. D. WALKER, Staffa, Ont. 1738 Fniniture Cheaper than Ever. On 'account ot {Treat.reduction in expenses, and manufacturing special lines, we are pow able to put furniture on the market cheaper than ever. Aii intend- ing pure lasers will do well to call at our Warerooms, where full lines of 11P -t0' date fur iture are sold Et right prices. agggiggEIMMEliregeeir TTI•TIDMIR, Tb's department is complete with a large selection of the best goods, and obliging attention given to this branch of the business. Night calls promptly attended to by our Undertaker, Mr. S. T. Itolmea Goderic$ street, Seaforth, opposite the Methoclistt church. BROADFOOT BOX 8c 00., noe eigned by D hereby carat pernmet bee buret. elleasnUilE X season, K4/10P1 Sittiod fences, !within et mi ofiee- and S feet Ten) nate Brae -eel& A wet sell for puti 11-NCREAS le lug tip honorable pe lifetime. CHEMISTS S ug Detle-gcodtevree • , • e. • Tg, ctuu: 0 e 31,10110 owo!kt n frOM pelt -C • tase site leading ness not Or th LiiVetowVieeity,on -10)151IS F aborou an lulls/rem ftiverelde St P„ 0. TKOS Duaimm•. Moron annuals 40 4. A' otailth, oradd rit SA to 1.8 lng,goc-dco Ale° sxsuznbe *rate prices tOstarto. FO LP sale two Tor regietratt ibinontbe. BROADVOOT frontal, Seat IneiGS FB I for sere' f ue Moron Yorkshire with privil ARTITUR MEOW B -signed teneeselou * • bulls from entintbe • "superior en Also a 31111m lasve recent], aI0 _remain* saade torah) isle P 0. ,A. M. Camp 711E ExPOsr Satisfaction 21.A von° Perth. Ee understandi =Wits, pla prices, eh or 130 pay. at lett 58, ttended to, 0 STOC 1. New Y O. Sretillie's be will be ke WM. CRAP ULLS FO dersig • May, two WI 7 and IS um hred Irons go Dukeo! Ile JOHN BIM 0 PIO • thoroug bred Yea .be admitted of service,* Cana f.)-..xr rates 00 suit ever ffiT OARS .for further Value *none: noise IV rimelenger.! ,Passeliger. - atixa Tsai Mixed Tratn. 0011110 Baiw • Palsengen, Pastenger.' *tied Triln.i We 0•Onso Nogrn Ethel.. ss Brussels,. . Bluevale„. Wing-UM— GOING So Whighamee Bluevale .e. Brussels- .;.; LOU GOMO NOETII London Centralia lExetere. 'tenon— Elppene. ttneefiel Londe' Belgrave Wingit Oeists Boum Wingbran seigrave. Myth es a. Londe. Brucefi Elppense Ifensall,- Exeter. . Centralia • LOT1t10/4 Vero loan, anit botowe ,apendenne :1Vingbauls Petlitkitre. The TAIW1311 Township Fa on first mortg Reeve or Tre P. 0.; -0, N.