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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1901-09-13, Page 2THE HURON EXPOSITOR SEPTEMBER 3, 1901 REAL ESTATE Far SALE.. oe,„.ta buy good. 7 --roomed hotpot pleasant- .47t/t4ltf ly situated in Soreforth, almost n ow. Good hard and soft water. Apply to SCOTT altos., Worth. 172141 ESOR Sitl*—The hottee and paunch belonging to JO the late S. G. McCaughey, corner of Church and Centre streets, Seaforth. Tho property will be eold cheap aed on easy terms, F, 110LME5TED, Sea. 17344f -GURU 1N -STANLEY FOR SALE.—Foreale Lot 11 u and South half of Let 12, CentoestliOn ot, Stanley, conteining 160 stereel 90 acres cleared and in a fair stete of cultivation -a There is a frame dwelling house with cellar, bank barn with stone stabling, stone pig pen, stave silo, two good wells else a river runs ate the back of the farm. It is conventoot to (Mulches, echools and markets, being 3 mike fromollrucellold and 9 initee froM Seaforth. Apply on tine promises o Odra TEtoetee GIENMELL, Brucefield. 1722t1 _ 'VARA IN HIBBERT FOR SALE.—For sale, West X halt at Let 23, on the 6th fieneoseion of Hibbert, containing 60 acren more or less, ell cleared and in a good saste at cultivation. - There are good fences, and it is well underdrained, There are on the premises a grod frame barn and stable log house and frame kitchen. There la also plenty , of water on the beck ancinfront ot the farm also a. . good orchard. It is convenient to sohoole, churohee and post office. Apply to WILLIAM BURKE, NO- prletori,or to St. Oolumban P.O. 176 at! TIMM FOR SALE.—For sale that very drieirable' 12 fartneen the Mill ReadaTuekeramith, ad) lining the enlage of Egmondville. It =talus 97 actrei, newly all eeared and in a gold state of eultivatioe, and well underdreined. There is a 'comfortable tart* mallet, and good barns, with riot °altar and Outbulklinee. The buildings are situeted neSr the centre of theefirm and on the Mill Road. It is well watered, and plenty of eon water in the kitohen. It is conveniently situated for church and Reheat and within a mile and a hall of Seriforte. Will be sold cheap and on may terms of psyment. Apply to the proprietor, ROBERT FANSON, Seaforth. 174841 VARIf FOR. SALE.—For sate the farm of the late ✓ George Brown. Lot 8, Concession 6, Nutiott, containing 400 acres, of which about 90 sores are cleared and in a good otat e of cultivation, the balance good hard wood. There is a new two-story brittle home, with furnace, herd and sott water and all modern oonvenienctes. There a a large bank barn, with stone stabling, sheep louse, implement house and all other neoesearv out buildings. There are two good welts and a flowing @prin. A good orchard.. There are about 70 acres seeded to gnus, Ibis within three•marterskof a mile from the village of Canstance, where are stemsschool, churches, etc. Apply to the undersigned, Constance P. 0. GEORGE STEPHENSON, Exelutor. 1741 MIARM IN HAY TOWNSHIP FOR SALE. --•For 12 sale, Lot 22, on the Norbit Boundary of Hay Township. This farm contains 100 aoren_85 sores cleared, the rent goad hardwood bash. It is web un- dor.irained and termed. There is a good stone holism • with a No, I °eller ; large bank been ;Implement ehed ; sheep house 70x75, with flrat-ola,s stebling and root cellar underneath, a good orobard ; 2 good wells and cistern. There ia 12 amen, of fall wheat sewed on a riob fallow, well tnanured ; 40 acres tootle& down recently, the relit in good gegen! Or crop. -T-hla is a No. 1 farm, well eituxted •for markets, churches, schools, post office, eta., and wilt be sold reasonab'y. Apply on the 1. -mitres, or a eldresa RO BERT' N. DOUG1A6,Blake,Oto 60Sx31.1 TIARM IN HERBERT FOR SALE,—Fe ' eale, Lea U., 30, Concession 7, Hibbert, contalnine 100 acres; 00 acres cleared and 10 mores of um 3ullocl herd voqd 'bush. The farm is all well fe iced, all tile draiaed and in a high state of cultivation. Thor e is a In go two &tory briok hauee, with cellar under whole house, with hard and soft water in tae heuse There is a good bank barn with atone stabling- and cement floors, and other good outbuildings. There io a large orchard of choice fruit trees and the farm is nicely plat:del with shade and er namentel treeo. There ie plenty of water for stock In the barn and stables. It is within six miles of Seaforth and seven of Dublin. Thie is one et the very best as well ea beat equipped farms in Perth or Huron and will be sold ou may -terms as the Proprietor wants to retire. Apply on the premiaes or address Seaforth P 0. JAM MenONNELL. 176041 iri„e ARAI FOR SALE—Fat-sale, Lot 1, in the Town. U ship of Tuokeramith. Conceesion 3, 100 acreof land, 05 nares oleared, well unlerdrained, Splendid farm for grain or stook, wen watered, a ritareng spring the whole year rune through thenarm. Also on the farm its a splendid bink barn, ne w y ne v, a blob i 60x54, with atone stabling underaernh. Also frame house 20c18, and kitchen IWO, with good atone caller, and two good wane, Thi r pro- perfy Is -situated in a very desirable locality with spiendil gravel roods to market, on'y 37 mllea to Seafortia. Also a good dwelling house in eleafort situated on Coleman street, close to Victoria Park. This hewer a corapesed of 8 rams, web finished, plenty of hard and soft water, and kitehon 20x1.6, with pantry and welsh room atteohed, snd a good woodshed. A good staine text& All of this property rouet be sold as the underaioned is inevIng to the Ironed Stites. All particuelare concernino this property can be hed by applying at TRH F,xeoerren, Office or to the proprietor, JAMES REHOE, Sea - forth. 175241 IN STANLEY F,OR SALE. - For sale, Lot 12 0 and the wrest half of Lot 8, on the 121h e_laces- elan, or Braneon Line, of Ettiniey. Thie farm eoa- taias 150 acres, all of which is °lowed, exeept nue acute. It la In a state of first-class culivation, will fenced and all undordrainednuestly with tile. Tnere is a large frame dwelling 11)We as goad as new, with good stone foundation and cellar, large b nettbarn with Ptorie stabling underneath, and numerous other buillings, inaluding a isrge pig home. Teel rood orcherde of choice fruit, Mee iiiee eittne and orna. ment&t trees. There -.are twa trine melt e Neel or through the farm, and plenty of aood wet tr a'l tae year round without pumplog. It is web sltoeted 1er mark, ohurehes, s. hos, poet ern re, etc , and good gravet roots leading from it in an direqleno. 1: to Rhin view of Like Huron, and the bat e on bo. seen paseIng net aril dean from the house. ?hit ie one of the hest equipped farms- in the amity, old will be old on may term, am the proprietor wanti to retire on account of 111 health. Apply on the preel. eae, or sditrees Blake P. 0. JOHN DUNN, 1744-tt Cook's Cotton Boot Compound Is anceetedully used monthly by over I0,000Ladies. Safe,effeotual. Ladies ask your druggist for foek's Gotta Seat Com- * pent Take no other, as all Mixtures, pills ande imitations are dangerotts. !sloe, No. 1,11 per bort No. 1,10 degrees stronger, es per box. No. 1 or 2,msiled on receipt of price and two a-een t efazilpti. 'rho Cook Company Madness, Ont. IM—Nos. 1 snd 2 sold and recommended by all respousible Dragglate in Caned*. Red in Self Ale by Alex. Wilsen, Y. S.11toberte and /. V. Fear, druggists. YOU CAN MAKE MOREY 111 STOCKS WITH OUR INFO4MATION. Fortu les are wide aid lest daily in buying and sell g Iidiway Striae. They aro loot becaute the toter d o no: know the condition of the morket, aii terty are made bauxite m tin twee aeini epo Libra are invarielny furnistint with velueale lame informa,tien. Nin' •teetes of the millierenres aril wealthy mon of enter ex to day have stunt 1 a fort Inca Conn- dat on ulth mover. an 1 hive aceurn dela tito'r weeteh by recelv n r 11 e 1))1qt0(0. nitride infarinetion en the cood.tim a: th market ie beim; received lt,2 us daily and will tot wire 1 I you tf you d .ort to no a swami -fel s c.outito: 40 make a tertune quickly. Write u. Railway Snick Information Bureau, Chareli Street, TOrontri. 1761-20 20,000 Students Have received their com- mercial and shorthand training in theze schoala Celleeesi iu Lendon, Toronto,Ham- ilton, Ottawa, Sarnia, Berlin, Wit, Guelph, St. Catharine,. Now term opens Septem-• bei 3rd. For general information, write to the FOREST BUSINESS COLLEGE, V M. C, A. Building, Landon, Oat. 1761.20 J. W. WESTERVELT, Prin, Stock For Sale The tailoitiag Stock is offered for silo on easy terms: _ Hoeses.—One opal of working home, one heavy draught breeding mare, 6 yesre old, suppoeel to be in foal to art imporeed horse; oee very superior driving mare, coming four, well broke and thorough, ly reliable. CATTIA—Five young cove, with calves at foot; 4 enters coming three. CARREMM—One three treated covered carriage. The stock feat! good and in good oonditoj. poly to S. RANNIE. Zurieh, I758x4 PLUMS. Lareeat stook of Plums In tho Counts-, probably :1,000 b erkete, of choicest veriettee, sold direct to you from the tree ab right priory. Atte a I it of peers, best kind. Abair; 100 baekete of poaches, later kinds. Over ono to of No. I hoaey for sale. C. HOARE, Proprietor, Clinton, Ont. 17684 BORROWING fROBLE. Oa. Has a Tendency toMk Us Oyer 100k PfeSent 1319ssings. YE ARE THECHILDREN OF LIG..T. -.God Has Promised to Take Caro of Ali— The Biltle •Bloomii With Assurances of This Fact, Therefore the Habit, of Borrowing Trottble Id a Sign of VII - ballet Washington, Sept, 8.—In this .diS_ course' the Talmage shows. the folly .of allowing the forebodiegs to intlu- us and how expectatioa of evil Weakuess aad deetroys; text,. • Mat - then/ vi, 34, "Sufficient unto the day is tho evil thereof." Tho, life of every man, woman and child is as closely under the divine care as though such 1erk4on were the only 111011., women or child. There ict•e no (facidents. As there is- M. law of storms inethe natural world, so there is tielaw Of trouble, a law of disaster, a law of misfortune; but the majority of troubles Of life are inatiiinary, and the most of *those alltiCIPated never come. At any rate, there is no cause of complaint against Clod. -See how muchhe has do -no to make y.o.0 happy, his bun - shine filling the earth with glory, making rainbow forthe storm and halo for the mountain, greenness for th4,. moss, saffron for the 'cloud and crystal for the biilbW and procession of bauriered flame through the (Sperl- ing gates of the mornime, chaffinches to sing, rivers to glitter, seas to ' chaat and.. springs to blossoms, and overpowering all other sounds with its song and overarching all other splendor • with its teiuneph, covering up all other beauty with its gar- lands and oetflashing ail thrones with its dominion—deliverance for a lost world through the Great Re- deemer. • I discourse ,or the sinof borrow - tug trouble. First,such a. habit of mind- and heart is wrong, because it, puts one into a despondency that ill fits., m for duty. . I planted two l'OSCIMighOS ill my gardens the ono thriered beau- tifully, the other- perished. I ,found the dead one , on -the shady side of the house.- Our dieposition-S,,likG our plants, need 'sunshine. Expect - alley of repulse is the cause Of many secular and religious failures. Fear of:bankruptcy has lepton' many a fine business and sent the man—dodg7 • ing alining the not shavers. Fear of slander and abuse has Often ine vitae.' all the long beaked vultures Of scorn and backbiting. gany Of the misfortunes 'of life, like hyenas,flee u if yocourageously meet. them. j Ilow poorly prepared for religious duty is a man who sits down under the glootn of- expected misfortune! 11 he prays, he says, do not think I shall be anewered." If he gives, he says, "1 expect they will steal the money." . Helen (Milliners told me that her father, Thomas, Chalmet•s, in the darkest, hour of tie" his dry of the Free Church of Scotland and when the woes of 1 -Ito rand seemed to weigh upon his heart. said to his children, "Come, let us go out and play ball or fly kite," and the only difficulty in the. play Was that. the children could not keep up withitheir fa t her. The McGheynes • and the Stwonerfieeds of the church who did. .1 he most good Wiled in the sun- light„ Away with the .horrors! They distill poison; they diggraves, toedif they could climb so high they would drown the rejoicings .of 'heaven with` sobs and w -ailing, You • will have nothing but misfor- tune in the future if you sedulously wetclt for it. HOW shall a man cat ch the right kind of flail if he ler- teieges his dine and hoolc. and bait. to vetch lizards: and water serpents? limit for bats and hawks, and bats awl hawks you will find. Hunt for robin redbreasts, and you will find robin red breas te. One 'night an eagle and an owl get into a. fierce battle, . the eagle, unused to the night, e was . no match for the owl, which is most at home in 'the dark- • and the king 4f the air fell helplesse But the Ateorning rose,. and with it *se the eagle, and the owls and the night hawks and the bats came a. secotid timo to; the ce-m- bat. Now, the eagle in the sun- light, with a. Woke 0! hill talonsaad t1 gt•eat cry, cleared the air, and hiseeneuties, with tore, feathers and sphished with blood, tumbled, into the thickets. Ye ane the thildren. of light. In the night of deepondency • you will have no chant against your enemies that flock up from be- neath ;- but, trusting iti od a nch standing in the sunshine of the peomeses, you ehall 1"renew your youth like the eagle." Again, thehabit of borrowing trouble is wrong becaUSe it has a tendency to make us-, 01'er1001C pre - Seal blesSitig. ' TO slake man's thirst the rock is cleft, end cool waters leap into his brimming cup. To feea his hunghr the fields bow down with lending wheel., and the cattle come 210W11 (1'0111 1110 CIO'Ver IHI81.111P8 1.0 give him milk, and the ot•chards yel- low and- rippea, casting their 1111C3' frillif; 111111 lliS Alas, that nand such exuberanee of blessing man should growl as though he were LI soldier .im half rations or e ealloe ou short allowance; hot a num should stolid neck deep in harveato looking forward to famine; tha1 one should feel the strong pulses of teal th me feeling with reel' I ei• • t read thi•ough all the- avenuee of life end yet tremble at •the expeeted Usstitilt of sickness; that a -Man should sit in his pleasant h Mee, fee r ftt 1 thet ruthless ‘vant will some -day rattle the broken, Ivindowl sash with tem- pest and sweep. thee coals from - the hearth " and pour hunger into the bread trey; that man fed by him who owns all the harvests should (m- ood, to starve; that one whotn God loves and surrounds with benedic- tion and attends with 'angelic es - curt and hovers over. with More than motherly fondness should be looking for a heritage of tears! this God hoop hard with thee that 'thou 1 efioul(1st be foreboding? Has he stinted thy beard? - Hes he'covered thee with rags?' Has he Spread - traps for thy feet.- and galled thy cup, and reepeci thy sold, and wreck- ed thee with eturna eind thundered upon thee with a life full of calame. ity?. If your father or brother come into your bank N—V110Ce gold and silver W.* lYir..1g about,. you d 119t WatCh rii it, far yOU )(now tney aretiOlien b if an enure. stranger come b ti safe You keep . y our eye: on hie .1(1 ewe do 1101, know his designs S • ne 111011. treat. God; not, as a 'fat • . bet a stranger, and act 84 81 ci usly toward. him. 11, is high. 01 t Itegatt to thank. God for preset blissing. Thank, him for your chit te 1 , happy; buoyant and 1)01111(1 In •i#ntiere hini for your home, with i t ntein of song and laughter. Ado hit ,for morning light and evenin slat (low. TraiAe him for fresh, co , w tter bubbling from •the rock,Joap- 111 ! into the easeful°, soaring. in -te eni de falling in the shower, dashin toe dust' the rock and clapping i he ids in the tempest- Love him f(- th .graes that cushions the cart at. 1 tile clouds curtain -_the sk ah I the foliage that waves inti forst. Thank Win fin- a Biple t cl reAand a Saviour to deliver. Nlany•-Christians• thinkeit ba sign to be jubilant, anh d teir wo1 elf, examinatio is a hewing (1 mw their brighter experiences. Lit ey with a new jaek14111fe, 110014111 rything he cona ies croes, so the examination is a. religions cm e to pleees of the greenest th. ng tiny can: lay. their "meads on. Tin nit gine they al e' doing God's servi wlt 1 they are going about bort o'.lila: trouble, and borrowing it at 13 pet cent., Whiell '1,8 always a em precursor of bankruptek. gain, the - Intbit ef borrowin :sable is wrong because, the presei is' ..ufficiently taked witti trial. see that . we ail need: a •certel 0.1 11 /WA of trouble, and so lie a Potions it for all the days an yet.re of our life. - Alas or the po icy of gathering it all tip for 01 die. or year! Cruel thing to put n the back of one camel all the caro (led for the entire cara- vel • I never look at my memo •an - ilei 1 book to see what, engagements am duties are far ahead. Let every we k bear its own burdens. , The sIl ado ws of to -day are thiCk enot gh Slehe implore the presenee of other shadows? the enip is already ills- " toe -end. 'Why halloo to disas..ers far •distant to come and wring out 121-0 •e, 'gall in the bitterness? Are wo 811-P A. 0118 t hat, haying won the hel . former enn eoliterel, We can go foe h challenge all the future? ere are bliAilleSS 111011 :lust to ma legeaffairs nit they mean are. heY con pity their rent and meet t not 28. and manage affairs as they 1101 are, bet how if a .panic 811( Uld 00 10 and my investmts enshould fell? (lc to -morrow 1111(1 Write on your y hook or 011' your ledger, on 3.•our ) ley safe, '''Suflicient unto the, day is the evil thereof," not worry a bo notes that are . far from ( ue. not pile up on your counting esk Clipfinancial anxieties of the next 20 yenos. The God who has taken (ere of roue Worldly , 'occupation, • gus rd - Mg your stole) from the torch of the inc /allure' and the key Of the In rg- into will be as faithful. in 1910 as. in • POI.' God's hand is migh ier tha the Machinn atios of st ick pan biers or the plots of pont cal den agogues or t he red riglat arm of 1'0V( 1 and the derkness vill fly Ind the storm fall dead at feet L, oVeraren ono thrones line anu y crystalline founteins leap on it, arid n, the Pathway ends at gates that aro a pearl and streets that are- gold .-an(1 1,01111)10(4that are always open and 31- lulls that quake with perpetual song ne and- a city minglielet forever Sabbath 14, and jubilee and triumph and corona- tion. g. . Ls Let :pleasure chant her siren song; re 'Tis not the song for me, g To weeping it will turn ere long, el ! For this is heaven's decree. le But there's. a song the ransomed Sing g TO Jesus, their exalted King, Ls With joyful. heart and tongue. Oh, that's the song for me. h I Courage, my brother! The father does not give to his son at • sch001 • ..ennngh money to last I him several years, tint, as the billA for euitioh end boatel and clothin and rebooks - .1e- come in, pays them, So. God will not give you grace all at once for the (0 future, but will Meet- all your extge 8. elides -as they come. Through etti'n- h. est erayer trust trien - People as, t_ eribe the success of a Certain line 8 of stettmcfrs ,to business skill an I know not the fact that when tha e [he Of steamers started the wife of • the proprietor passed the whole of o each day when a steamer started in 13 prayer to God for its safety and the success of the line. Put everythise e 'in God's halide and leave it there: - b Large interest money to pay will d soon cat up a farm, a store, an es tate, and the interest an borrowe troubles will SWal11P anybodea "Sufi - P— ficient unto the •day is the evil le I •- Alcohol and Athletics. • All good trainers and goo (l. ugTee 011 the -rule tha • t cm abreti nence fr0111 alcoholic fluids and beverages is absolutely neceseary. am myself an abert al ner, because being one I am stronger, lighter an( better • than if I were not, and Cal get through much work, mental ane physical, with ease and pleasure. also teach the practice of elistent. ence unhesitatingly and boldly for the persoutel reaS011S iinnied, and for many Other rettSonS resting on scieni- tific. data, Pe1 this does not influence me in 22 hal 1 am now teaching. Athletic4. ism is an exceptiOnal prtietiee, an4 1 fel1 that alcoholic fluids would, an. dri oleS, help the athlete under anY circumstances. I W041 id say use them excepthimillY, just as I might sey in cases of disease. No, what, influences the is an exPerienee gained long before I was` an alet sitainete 1 knew the value, of alai- stinence during the priod of training' •aad. the do tiger of indulgence. Se long as you ere in course of prepar7 talon touch not the hurtful 'thing it will he sure (0 undermine all .the qualities on which you depend for streeeSe. I1 will injure yout preeieion, your decision, -your area ,eenee of mind neul your endurance. The famous t rutiner who taught me the four quhlities put 1110 Up to that/ Ile wns not .well when he was hinni self trainitig for a great race, mu lineljug him below par in the mettle of circulatory power, L advised I him to indulge 111 a lit tie alcohol to help him through. _ lie resented -thiseee 044 once. It. would take aenay every (Italica as it, llid in the cuse of Oa of his opponents. Weston gave thu se me i esti molly. AVhen he wal ked 400 miles in flee (1012'S he abstained tota113-e and when he walked the 5,- 000 miles in 1(2.) deys lie abstained totally; and when he walked his long and , uninterrupted course fron Brighton to London he assured let , that a single gless of sherry or nip of brands would reduce his ac tivity/ Ile was not regularly en "abstainer, When he was. at liberty -he enjoyed as a luxury a glass of wine or a, tumbler of ale, but when he was in competition it was abso- lutely necessary for him to refrain al together. ,CO 11 So there are persons c in fe( health, encl they are worried ab the future:They make out very floe but they are bothering th selv s. about future pleurisioe rhe matistns and neuteilgitts and eel's. Their eyesight is feeble, and t a re it, the, enti und pho ble tut '011 te- nd ev- ey worried lest they entirely. loso 'heir hearing is tndistinct, i hd -are -alantned lest they bete me 'ely 'deaf. They felt chilly to-dny are expecting an attack of tee- d. They have heen troubled for weel.s with some perplexing, mall, dy and -decent becoming lifelong inva- lids, Take care of your ,health now trust- God for the future. I3e not y of the blasphemy of asking to telot care of vou Whilevon wrt at ice be It to nd !st 'e - of Sleep with ,VOLIr windows tight dr or el t, Chicken salad at 11 o'clock night .or sit down —00 a cake of to cool off. 130 peach:tit, and 1 le n , Cord pie dent. Some of the sickest, p lave been the most useful. was .80 with Payson, who died dete doll; , and Robert Hall, who Ivied stO . in the midst of his sermon ( lie own, on the pulpitnsofit to r and then go OW again. TI eodore I, ling titysen had a great torror r till 1.he. time camel and 1.1 peacefully'. Take care of nt,. and let the futur look ( tself. "Sufficient unt1 the c is tt e evil thereof." - • 1 . A a inhabit of bor 'owing re , the. fort ute is wronge because _ it Ull us ft r it when it a*tually doeA (.01 WO- annot always have einooth at _ Moo Life's path will eometie tutu le among deciivities- ind elm 0 St1c'[) and be thorea plet—ed, .1)11 will kisa our cheek and ti eti eell will try to crucify tis be ween t foe 30 pieces of silver. IT it tan see thie es. We -rill hem. the iron .g of 41 e sepulehee creak and grind it sl uts in OUP 1411idred. :OUt We C1 -fl - not. getready . for these 1 h ings by fore! ()ding's. They who fight imag- n- itre' woes will come out of ' bret th into conflict with the armed disneti rs of he, future, Their, ammunition - will have been wasted long bee re . they come under the guns of real misfot•ttine. Boys in attempt i lig* ' to I1(1)1 t a .Wrill sometimes go so er la)'..111(teli: ed. , get /brie ireali Fit tl()itfel.; ti, surencese Von t' hunger will be - fc youi• dyin wee pres for 012 I 11 L13 i8 - its 10 11 - ICH 118 218 111 tO 228 in order to get impetus thnt 1 hey enmic up they are eXhanat- nd 1 hese long races - An order to epring enough to vault trouble s 115 up tit hist t;C) the dread ul y With our strength gone. idly, the habit of borrowi le is wrong because it is untie - God has promised to take Care . The Bible blooms With (4- d; sickness will be alleyieted; yo sorr( ws will be healed. God will sell-, dal otir feet and smodith your- path, land along by frowning Crag a id .'pen ng grave sound the 'voices . -victory and good cheer. The eumm clout s that seem thunder el eltrgyd retell, • carry In theit• bosom herv(OS Is leo, end shocks of coen and vino) ards enfrpling for the wine- press. 'The wrathful wetve will Id -8 the f ‘et of the great Storm, r. Otto 'eat dosheit will comniarid. told . ahoy( yoUr emit the sun_ of prosper - i ty ill sinnel still. I3leak and IVO Shall IlitY0 aPoCalY 1 - tic v sion, lid you shall henr thc cry f elders and the sweep of win s and rumpets of salvation and the voiee Of hotlentialt unto Clod fo vilaY max wind along dungy •- ous ridle paths - and amid wolf s howl and the scream of -the vultur but t le, way still Winds upward tilt angel guard it. and trees of li e Of IV • - Where Was the ''Ethel,'' said Lionel Bertram Jones,. 448 he dropped his slice o. bread in the plate with a noise that set the canary in the gilt cage over head, chirping merrily, "Ethel, I have something to say to you." They had been married only four weeks and the 131111? had not arrived - NV het1 she (11(1 all the saying. '"Do ..you remember the day I proposed to yoirV" "Yes," she replied, "Iwill never forget it " "no 3'011 roilli'vlber,'." he went on as he abetractedly driIled 0 hele in the loaf with point of the. taming knife_ "how, how when I rang the bell oou creme to the. dims* withfin- ger.-. ickv with dough and said you thought it Was y011r little brother ' who Witniltd to get in?" ,,yes,11 "0, Ethel! How could could you?" • "How could I ed; as a guilty fece. "How could. tint of such a you? How whet?" Ishe respond - 1 ook crept into her 31011. Make 1118 the viz - swindle." Fashifon Domination by Lace. liter() wA.s noViol' a time in all the history of feshion when lece was so univerSally worn, Evening gowns are wholly nettle of it. Silken gowns revel in it for docorotion, ciresere, are la vishIV (aliened with it, end C'Vt`11 2', .Thnnes are decorate ed modeetly wi Lli it. SURPRISES FOR THE COLONEL — . A Kentucky Gentleman Who M00% t All Negroes Spoke Alike. "Brought up in Kentucky as I was," said a man who gets around some, "it never occurred to me that a negro could speak any other language than his mas- ter had taught WM, and as his master was always plain American it was nat- ural that he should speak the language of the Americans. The first time I went to New Orlean.s and heard the colored roust- abouts and stevedores on tlis wharfs and the nurses with their whit c charges on the street jabbering away ia French I could scarcely realize that the Louisiana darky was of the same nation as his Ken- tucky confrere, although quite as apt as not the parents of the French speaking roustabouts in New Orleans had been born in Kentucky and sold south. "At that time I first heard the joke that was current along the Ohio and Mb- sissigpi about the German immigrant who had got a job as a. deckhand on a steamboat. About the second day of his cruise a darky who spoke German was added to the crew, and as the raw Ger- man listened to his talk in •astonishment his fellow deckhands told him that ths Mk* mail used tQ be as white fie he was. nut taut two or tome 'trips m soutnern .waters always turned a Dutchman black, and at the very next landiug the giant slipped ashore and dieappeared. "Orice in Venice when I was pretty hungry to see something American I saw a black man who looked as natural as if he were*: fresh from the blue grass, and h Heil him as a men and brother, quite ✓ gardlees of the fact that we have 'Jim C'ow.' cars in Kentucky. Instead, heave- • er,lof his talking Ito me in my 02211 lan- gi age he- started in on some unknown 'to gue, and at one he seemed to me to b quite the barbarian, and I got away fr m him as fast as I could. Later I le rued that he was a sailer from a G 'eek ship hi the harbor. He looked like a ome darky, just the same. 'But it is in NewlYork city that I have to nd the oddest specimens. Sometimes bl ek,but oftener 'yellow, these darkies at at work as waitars, elevator boys and at other light labor,' and I had frequently hard them talk INI,ith an accent which Wis accounted for by the tact that they were from the Went Indies. I supposed th ir broken English was the result of th ir efforts to get aiwiry from their moth- er tongue, but recent inquiry develops tlio fa t that in a great many instances th' k ow only broken English and had been ta ght to speak it So, or rather they had no been taught at all, but had picked up thb language as -they heard it spoke& by th ir parents and elders. 'The last one I talked to was an ele- vaor boy, and he appeared to speak with su h an effort thatl I began to question - hi u how long he had been in the United St tes and where he had come from. At tigua was his home, he had been in th United States a year, and he only knew broken Englisb and had never known any other lariguage. -I could hard- ly believe him and watched closely to catch him lapsing into his mother tongue, but he did not, , simply because broken English was all he knew. • He haean ex- cellent cohnnaud of that, but excellence hiethis regard is hardly to be commended, I !rink. It is noticeable that these West In la colored people' do not talk after the fa hien of our southern negroes, and they us the 'r' as freely as do northern peo- pl .to 11••••••• The Advantages of Tact. once knew a Man who appeared to m an unessential nincompoop, but ho bo - cane a millionaire in two years. I will tel you how he did it, said Beerbohm -Tr e in in addresia en "The Drama." One day I met him in the street. "How well you're lookingl" he said to me. I w a flattered and asked him to dinner, du dug which he confided to me how fat tut e had come to him. He waen't look - in . at all well, With the familiarity which is distilled from wine, I asked him he v he, a man of utterly contemptible br ins as deelpared With the pauper who. w s entertaining at dinner, had man- ag (.1 to amass so large a fortune. I will tell you, my dear fellow," he re lied. "It is the SiMplest thing in the wo Id—all tact. I went up to everyboy I et in the street and said, 'How well yo 're looking!' In that way I made he ts of friends. they put me into all th ir good things, and in two years I re- tir d from business. Thank you for an ex ellent dinner. Goodby. How well yo 're looking!" a Hand Ruling In Old Booka. as attention ever been drawn to the fa t that the ruling of lines in old books Is one by hand? That this was the case Is roved by the frequent unevenness of th work. Here and there one can see th t the ink gave out before the lino was en ed. Almost all the title pages of sev- ent enth century sermons are hand ruled, the page being set, as it were, in a frame. In some cases the ruling is carried thr ugh the volume in this „fashion. I ma cite as examples the 1623 and 1632 Sh kespeare folios, Sydenham's "Ser- mons" (1037) and Wase's Dictionary (1o$32). In the hist instance the page is rul el into three columns. This work mu t have been done after the printing, while the book was in sheets, and it mukt have employed many workmen.— 1 No es and Queries. .1 Her Idea of Ilse Fire Senses. Ai small maiden in the primary grade in One of the pi liIlC rechonla was asked in 'an examinatien. to name the five senses, This was her answer:. THE FIVE SENSES. Cilean your teeth well. Keep the "little pores in your body open. , Spreed your clothes out every night. Don't drink cold water a hilt, you eat Breathe through one nose, and not 3.ou mouth. A Roland For no ()Liver. "To give a !totem.) ler en Oliver." in the eenee of matching er,''• .1.: wore or les$ ince ielible aniithet 11.4. 1121(1. to the times' or clinril irr.goi, 4m3 -pee -a -Hine() Otete...-. is • .1 ee2 I.ilc: and eo nee deariel 4 by ho old writers. A e two or", h. n. fan tiue of Mese le.re roke,seei, ly t (114 11)08 t•I Rola nil erol r d•: • 1121 PS 101 gained the olvl.liatea tint :revolved in the .ph if of ii %.**- • 011r Cha char On was The new _up som win and thre ther and -not amee Smith, who said he hailed from, ham, was arrested in Stratford on a e of burglarizing a house in that city. Is person was found a gold watch whieh stolen from the house in question. hief locked him up in the cella of the city hall, and theu went out to bunt oro evidence. When he returned hour e later hie bird had flown. The owe of the cell.room are yet unbarred, some outside friend of the prisoner a key through the window, Smith upon quickly unlocked his cell door limbed out of the window. He has oen seen since. bit. CHASE' CHASE'S REMEDIES. Dr. Chase's KIdney-Liver Pills, one till; a do e, 25 rents( a box, five boxes for $1 tee Dr. 'base's Nereo. Food, 50 cone n b eix b.xos for $2.5Q. Dr. Chase's Oltittneut, on e1. ee ts a box. Dr. Chatie's Liver ce Ins a bottle.. • Dr. Chase's Syrup of Lins d and Turnentine, 25 eente a bottle. All e eept the leat two will be sent post- paid •n receipt of price, by Etnnauson, Bate 4; Compauyi ts a box. DrI ChhSe'S Catorrh rere. What is CSNks.\\\ ‘2‘,..‘,\X\\\\, • .- Castoria is for Infants and Children. Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic -substance. It Is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions 4-4 Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays„,Feverish- ness. Castoria cures Diarilioaa and WindColic. Castoria - relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. ,.--Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach' and Bowels of Infants and Children, givint healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is the Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. Castoria. Castoria. "Caustorla is an excellent medicine for I Castorla Is so well adapts th children children. Mothers have repeatedly told me that I recommehd it as superisSr sny pre. of its good effect upon their children." scription known to ane."' Da. G, C. OSGOOD, Lowell, 111455,1 11, A. ARCITER, M. D. Brooklyn, ee. y 1 THE FAC -SIMILE SIGNATURE OF APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. . ?NC diENTAUN COMPANY. 71 MURRAY CAYNCEY. NEW YONN CITY- . Season's Change. 4AAAAAAMAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN The season is rapidly changing. The hot -weather of summer is giving place to the cool of autumn, followed soon by the cold of winter. This change requires a change of clothing. Summer suits must give place, to fall suits and overcoats. You should see our range of suitings and overcoatings at once. We carry wily the best at moderate prices. The fabric 3 are such as to nafet the approval of all. We make a specialty of ordered clothing and consequently are prepared to give you entire satisfaction in your fall and winter suits and overcoats. WAAAAAANAAMMAAAAANYV BRIGHT BROS, ff&RXISIIERS, SEIFORTH. For pure blood, a bright eye, a clear complexion, a keen appetite, a good digestion and refreshing sleep, TAKE BR.ISTOL'S Sarsekpaxillek. It arouses the Liver, quickens the circulation, brightens tiee spirits and 1 generally improves the health. Sixty-eight years trial have 'proved it to be, the most reliable BLOOD purifier known. All druggists sell -BRISTOL'S." Furniture Cheaper than Ever. On account of great reduction in expenses, and manufacturing special lines we are now able to put furniture on the market cheaper than ever. Ali intend ing purchasers will do well to call at our warerooins, where full lines of up-to- date furniture are sold a right prices. ITiNTI)MIZMA.3KIT\TC+. Tlais 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. Holmes Goderich street, Seafortb, opposite the Methodistt church. BROADFOOT, BOX & CO., SM.A.TIORTIEE. THE BEST IS BETTER THAN EVER. CANADA BUSINESS COLLEGE, CHATHAM, ONT. 1 CENTRAL Hardware Store. 1 Canada's greatest School ot Shorthand and'Busi- ; new training: FALL TERM RE -OPENED TUESDAY, SEPT. it 29 years of suceesaful work is our record. 1 The pant year the most suoceesful in the history of i cur School. Set of our pupils secured good positions during I the 12 months ending June 3d, 1901. Results are 1 the grand teat to apply to the wink of any &shoot If 1. tereeted, write for the handsomest gattlogue I termed by any Busineas College On the crootinent, and for a list of where these 804 pupils were flitted. Within the rant few days we have received three j colleges, besides several calls f om hiatuses house, calla to supply commercial teachers for other for office help. The graduate, of this sohool are not to be found anywhere seeking fpealtions in vain. It will pay the intending student to keep thia point in view. We pay the railway fare up to SS to students from a distance. Good board at $2.50 per week for gents and $2 for ladies. If you hears not Been our catatogue you are not yet familiar with the best Canada has to offer in the line of Business or Shorthand training. Write for it. D. McLACHLAFI & CO., Chatham, Ont. 1754 MONEY' TO LOAN Money to- loan at 4i. per eent on good farm seem- ity. Apply to JAS. L. KILLORAN, Barrister, sea, , tertb, 1712.41 • CEMENTS. We have a stock enband of Beaver" Portland Cements- and Thorold Hy- draulic Cements. The best goods eh the lowest price. Give us a call, MEXICAN" FLY EXTERMINATOR. We have a stock of fine oil for spraying cattle. Don't let your animals suffer. ELASTIC CARBON ROOF The only paint suitable for iron roofs; will stop a leak and good for years. Call and get prices. Sills & Murdie HARDWARE, Counter's Old Stand. Seaforth. Money To Loan, Yamm••••••••••••11.. The Township of Tuokersinith has about gt,41100411 Township Funds to loan at current rates of leterast On first mortgage on farm property. Apply to th. Reeve or Treaeurer. II. HORTON, Reeve, Hew* P. 0.; G. N. TURNER, Treasurer, Clinton F.0 The Ibe 30 or# better stela OA the Irate tbrougb fon* t never brute. "O'Ke rAsesSe tam fro dustries he Is .IPeect vale" bat art Ione' and re go “In babe Is beast, b ever he the sr -ea distance the brut istence t3clenc Virst 11 *re the her Vote glexand 4Vhe Cb an," al the **lc fancy r lowing NI whom h the longatio "The - 1- - Soling.= longer a • iperba,.. Is seion are tgroa Olatif StA intIOUS ii) “The b panY tbjl %ye:Ives habits, al more libi 'sedation with strl ...„ objects hequeatij ing Mail l'A.s th1 faulllY '12 _oldest Or, romainin easily he Whieli S Strongc 1 members they la g• grEssii On etrt whom th hostile A ,. - - Ane.E Is generj ship ,et 1 Ungined EgyPtiai tbe date I to the ii and BO - el 'More Egypl tie perk hoe -11, - hong, - 7 ti eep, 1 by the 0 .3, -de 1.111 X11141 wer. are cons! sycalnori Xastened ' but no 1 year's old their etp "These with- the, modern I seen in a was al -ail round, 11 ing exan t inner1 Intailur 111 Tbe n vernes rooming ed to ove oId shoe Bain," ti your goc "She's It's nae Jost three The mi poor nee .-eXpteeSed naent. orm 41 sleep;" be on lb the boost ea' in an, end Of y no' sayi Scottish Sta A star comes tr standing, outside look, as denly it could he box -oft peeted b' *Ion .till observai that the ten in winder,. Coione In this I bim to MaJ r ed.. boa be Celen believe Tbini tbe man Lai for :all reopl LIMht I he resil swain& Went to Irward ) ver