Press Alt + R to read the document text or Alt + P to download or print.
This document contains no pages.
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1901-11-08, Page 2- THE
HURON EXPOSITOR
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
VOlt SALE.—The house and grounds betougieg to R .1
ECT C1RCLEr the late 8. G. McCaughey, corner of Churob laud •
Centre streets, Seaforth., The property will be sold
eheap _and on °say ternts. F. HOLitalSTED, Sea -
forth. 1784-tf
i
ri
020 ACRE ream FOR SALE.—In best wheel; holt
0 in Southern Manitobe. Ninety acres ready for
wheat next year: 80 acres hay. Good new stable
and gratery. 'Twelve dollars per acre. Several
other t nproved and prairie farms for side. Write
CHAS. E. SHAW, 13ox 17, Bolssevain, Manitoba.
17574f
VARII FOR SALE. --For sale Lot 27, Con -
U cession 4, MoKillop, oontaining 100 acres, all
of whiohis cleared, well fenoed, underdridatal and
in a latgh state of oultivation. There la it good
meek house, largo batik barn with -stonestabling,
plenty of water and a good orohard. It la wallies
two -mites of Seatorth and within a mile from a
school. Apply on the premises or lo &Worth P. 0.
WM., GRIEVE. 1767-tt
rtARM FOR SALE. -e -Farm in Stanley for sale, Lot
r ate, Concession 2,- containing 100 sores. All
clear but 16 soma of hardwood bush. It is In a goad
state of oultivation, well formed and underdrainei.
Thereto on the farm two barns, with stabliog, and l a
large dwelling home. 11 10 conveniently' situated,
8- mites from Clinton and a• mile from Bird's mho -4.
Address all 111(11111'1es to JOHN MoGREGOR, on the
premises. or MRS. D. McGREGOR, 2nd Concession,
Tuekersmith, Seatorth, Ont. 1768•tt
'DAM IN STANLEY FOR SALE.—For sale Lot 11
U and.South half of Lot 12, Coneeesion 4, Stanley,
containing: 160 acres, 90 acres cleared and in a feir
sada Of cultivation. There is strarne dwelling house
with cellar, bank barn -with. stone stabling, atone pig
pen, stave silo, two good wells- *Ise a river rums at
the back of the farm. 11 18 convenient to churehee,
schools and markets, being 3 miles from Brimfield_
and 9 miles from Seaterth. Apply on tha premisea :
o address THOMAS GEMIELL, Brucelleld.
172211
MIAMI FOR &L.—For eale,. Lot 9 aad half of 10
je on the 14111 Concession of elesKillop, containing
*bout 160 acres, of which between 60 and 70 acres
are cleared. The buildines are fairly good, the
house being nearly new. It is w‘thin 6 miles of the
Village of Walton. It la a goed farm And suitsble
for either grain or pasture, A smaller farm would
be taken in exchange as part payment. If not sold
soon, will be rented for a. term of years. Apply on
the protohes or addrees Walton P. 0. J AMES
CAMPBELL. -1785-tf
MURK FOR SALE.—For sale that very -desirable
farm on the Mill Road, Tuokerstnith, adj ening
the village of Egmondville. It contains 97 acre 4,
nearly all cleared and in a. good state of cultivatioe,
and well underdrained. There is a comfortable
brick cottage and gond barn% with root cellar ani
Outbuildines. The buildings are situated near the
centre of the farm and on the Mill Roe& it ie well
watered, and plenty of soft water in the kitolien.
16 ie conveniently situated for ohuroh and school
end within a mile and it half of Seaforth. Will be
sold cheap and on easy terms of payment. Apply
to the proprietor, ROBERT FANSON, Ssaforth.
1748.11
MUM IN HAY TOWNSHIP FOR SALE.—For
17 sale, Lot 22, on the North Boundary of Hay
Townehtp. This farm &attains 100 aores, 85 acres
cleared, the rest good hardwood bush. It lo well un-
derdrained and famed. There is a good stone houie
• with a No. 1 cellar; large bank barn; feepternent
,hod Kama house 70x75, with first.oliee etebling
and root cellar underneath, a good OtOha ' 2 good
wells and cistern. There is 12i aores of t .1 wheat
sowed on a eob fallow, well manured , sores
oeeded down recently, the rest in good - ape for
orop. This is a No. 1 farm, well situated for
markets, churches, Khoo's, poet office, eto., and
will be sold reationably., Apply on the p-meleestOr
address ROBERT N. DOUGLAS,Blake,Onb.1888xtitf-
_
FARM IN STANLEY FOR SALE—For eale, Lot
7, C,Oncession 7, Parr Line, Stanley, containing
100 aoree, 90 sores of which are tinder cultivation ;
well fenced and well tile drained. The balance is
good bush. There are comfortable buildings, and
all in good repair. The farm Is within five milts of
Kippen station; three miles from Varna, and one
and a halt miles 1 om Hitls Oreen, where are
churchea, etre, post office, arc. There is a school
on the corner of the farm. There is a good matured
and a never failing spring of water convenient to the
buildings. This is an exCeptionally good farm, de•
eirably situated, and will be sold cheap and on essy
terms. Apply on the prent!sei or address 'Hine
Green P. 0. JAMES WORKMAN. 1788-11
VA.RII FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 1, in the Town.
U ship cf Tucketsmith, Concession 3, 100 acmes of
land, 95 ammo cleared, well un4erdrained. Splendid
farm for grain or stock, well watered, a running
spring the whole year runs through the farm. Also
on the farm is a apiendid bulk barn, tic r y ne
which as 0004, with etone stabling underneath.
Also frame house 24x18, and kitchen 18)00, with
good stone cellar, and two good wells. Thii pro.
perty is eituated in a very desirable locality with
splendid grevel roads to market, on'y 31 miles to
Seaforth. Also a good dwelliog house to Seatorte,
situated on Coleman street, close to Victoria. Park,
This house Is emptied of 8 rooms, well finished,
plenty of bard and soft water, and kitchen 20x
with pantry and waah room attached, and a good
woodshed. A good stable 24x18. All of this property
must be sold lie the undersigned is moving to the
United &des. All particulars coneerniheIbir
property can be had by applying at Tits EXPOSITOR..
Office or to the prep deter, JAMES 11E110E, SOS
forth. 176241
VARM IN STANLet.FOR SALE—For eale, Lot
2 0 and the west halt of Lot 8, on the 121h conces-
sion, or Bronson Line, of Stanley, This term co -I-
nane 160 acres, all of which Is cleared, except feu r
acres. It is In a state of first.class cultivation, w U;
fenced and all underdrained,mosbly with tile. There
Is a large frame deelling house as good as new with
good coma foundation and cellar, largo ir.nit" barn
with stone stabling underneath, aud numerous attest'
huileings, inoludiag a 14rge pighouse. Two good
orchards of chokes fruit, also nice elude and orna-
neentel trees. There aro two tp-ing creeks runaiag
through the farna, and plenty of good water all the
year rouncl withput pumping. at is well situated for
markets, churohereeehoolit, post ofli,e, etc, and good
gravel roade leading from it in all directions. It is
within view of Lake liuroe, and the boats oan be
seen passing up and down drain the houaa. Thi13
one of the beat equipped farms in the 0 'nay, a id
Will be sold on easy term% as the proprietor wear to
retire on amount of 111 health. Apply on the plasma
see, or cadres% Blake P. O. JOHN DUNN. 174441
YOU May Need
dinifitiet
For
Cuts
Burris
Bruises
Cramps
Diarrhoeze
All Bowel
Cornplairits
11. is a sure,safe and ("Clack remedy.
Thereat only one PAIN -KILLER
PltnnY
Two sizes, 250. and 500.
Increase
your wages.
The boy who starts
work, after a couree
this' college, will start at
wages two •or three. times greater than he
eoted hope to obtain without this spacial
training. Colleges et L -,n ion-, Torento,
Hamilton, Ottawa, Sarnia, Berlin, Gelt,
Guelph, St. Catharines. Now is a, rod
time to enter. All pert i Mere from.
FOREST CITY BUSINESS COLLEGE,
Y. M. C. A. Building, Lendon, Ont.
1751.26 WESTERVELT, Prin.
Grip=
Quinine
Tablets
ON EVERY 80X.
ITOCOLATIC)
ee COATED /
Cure COUGHS, -COLDS
and GRIPPE in one day.
maimalawasommenomeRk
SEAFORTH DYE WORKS
Ladiesand gentlemen, thanking you all for past
peteenage and now that a new seasen is at hand
wish to let you know thet I am atilt in the builecaa.
:may to do my beat ter give you cvery satisfectian
in doing your work in the line of Gleaning and dyeing'
gentlemen's and lactase' olothine, done without being
ripped as well as to have them ripped. All wool
geode guaranteed ta give good satisfaction on shnk-
est notice. Shawls, curtatna, ete , at InOlerate
priOto Pleisa do not bait to give me a call. Butter
and eggs taken in exchange for work. HENRY
alIOHOLviote the ternary, north Main street
g=1.1 16914f•
t Is He The't Sitteth Upon the.
Circle of- the Earth."
WORK OF THE GREAT ARCHITECT
r•
The Circle of Hiatory—Bad.Deeds Come
Back—Resolve to Do Good—Slander's
Foul Poison—Filial engratitue•—G cid 'a
• Mitlity Memory—The Eternal Circle.-
. .
Entered accorciing to Act of Parliament of Cnn•
ada, tii tho year 1901. by William Bally, of To.
rentaat the Departmenb of Agrioulture.
Ottawa.
Waehington, Nov. 3.—In thie dis
coursb ler. Talmage show e that the
good or evil.' we do returns to bless
or blast us; text, Isaiah. xle 22, ".Lt
is he that sitteth upon the circle of
the earth."
While yet people thought that the
world was fiat -and thousands of
years before they found out that it
was `round Isaiah, in my text, inti-
mated the sha.pe of it -- God sitting
upoa the circle .of the earth. - The
most beautiful figure in all geometry
is the ircle: God mede the universe
on a elan of the eirele.
There are in the natural world
straight . lines, engles,
paraliel-
ograrn1, diagonals, quadrangles, but
these evidently are 4ote God's favor-
ites. Almost everywhere where you
find him geometrizing you find the
circle dominant, and if not the circle
• then, the curve, which is a circle that
died young.- If it had lived. long
enough it. would eave been a • full
orb, a periphery. An ellipse is a cir-
cle pressed only a eittle. too hard at
the sides.
• Giant's causeway in Ireland shows
what . God thinks of mathematics.
There; are over 35,00Q columns • of
.rocks. octagonal, hexagonal, pen-
tagonal. These rocks seem to have
. been made by rule and compass.. Ev-
ery artist has his molding room
where he may make fifty shapes', but
he chooses one shape as preferable to
all others. I will not say that the
Giant's causeway , was the world's
molding room, but I do say out Of
a great many .figures God seems to
have selected the circle as the best.
"It is he that sitteth on the. tied°
of the earth." ,The stars in a circle,
the moon in a circle, the sun in a
circle, the universe in a circle and
the throne of God the centre of that
circle.. • .
•
Appreciation ,of this would correct
thearchitecture of churches, whose
shape is often a .deflance of divine
suggestion. .When men build churches
they ought to imitate the idea, of the
Great Architect and put the audience
in a circle, knowing that the tides of
emotion roll More easily that Way
than in straight lines. Six thousand
years ago Gocl flung the world out
of his right hand. Bet he did not
throw it in a straight] line, but air-
vilinear, with a leash of love hold-
ing it so as to bring it back again.
The world started frem his hand
pure and Edeiric. It has been rolling
on thrOugh regions of moral iceruad
• distemper. Hove long it will ,roll,
God only knows, leet it will -in dee
time make complete circuit and come
back to the place where it started—
the hand of God pure and Edenic.
ThoGircie of History.
The history of the world goes in a
circle. , Why is it that the. shipping
in our day is improving so rapidly?
A scientific shipbuilder says It is be-
cause men are imitating ia epine re-
spects what the small Wits.' deride,
the old model of Noah's ark, not as
we see it in old time pictures, but as
it really was according to the ac-
count given. Great ships have We
now, but where is the ship on the
sea to -day that could outride a de-
luge in which the .heaven and the
earth were wrecked, landing all the
passengers in safety, twp of each
kind of living creatures,' hendreds of
• thousands. of species?
•• Pomology will go on with its ach-
ievements until sifter many centuries
the world will lieVe plums and pears
• equa.1 to the paradisaical. • The art
of gardening will grow for centuries,
and alter the -Downings and Mitchells
of the world have done their best, in
.the far future the art of gardening
come up to 'the teebpreseence of
the year I. If the makers' of colored
glass go on improving, they may in
some centuries be able to make some-
thing equal to the east window of
York minster, which was built in the
year -1290. We are six centuries •be-
-hind those artists. But, the world
inust keep on toiling until . it shall
make the complete circuit and cora.e
up to the skill of those veeyemee.
If the world continues to improve
in masonry, _ we shall have after
awhile, perhaps after the advance of
centuriesemortar equal to that which
1 saw in the wall of an exhumed
English city built in the time of the
*Romans 1,60Q years ago, that'anor-
tar to -slay as good as the .dayin
which it was made, having Outlasted
the -brick and the stone. say, af-
ter hundreds of years masonry may
advance to that point.
If the world stands long enough,
we may have a city as large as they
had in old times a- Babylon, five
times the size of London-. .You go
let° the potteries of England, and
you, find them Making: cups and vases
aftee the style of the ,ts- ups and vases
exhumed from Pompeii. • The world
Is not -going baelf.. • Oh, no! But iet
is swinging in a circle and will .comee
arounct to the 'styles of pottery
known so long ego as the days of
POMpeii. The world must _keep on
Progressing until it makes the cone
pieta circuit. . The curve is in the
right direction; the curve Will keep
on until it becomes the circle. ee '
Bee DCtidi COM° Back,....
Weil, now, what' is trueein the Ma-
terial universe is true in God's 11101111
government end spiritual arrange-
ment. That Is the- men.ning of Teze-
kiel's wheel. All commentators agree
in saying that the wheel means God's
provideace. But a ;wheel is of no
use unless it turns, en& if it turn it
turns around, and if it turas around
It moves in a. circle. Whet then? 'Are
we parts of a great iron machine
whirled around and around whether
WE) will or not, the victims of inexor-
able fate? No! So far from that.
I shall show you that we ourseivee
Start the circle of good or. bad • ac-
tions 'and that it will surely come
around again to us unless by divine
eitervention it be hindered. Those
bad or good actions may make the
circuit,- of many years, but ceme
back to us they Will as certainly as
that God sits on the circle of the
a
,
earth.
Jezebel, the worst woman of the
• Bible — .5Intkohpeare 'copying his
"Lad :V Araebeill." from her picture—
slew Naboth because she wanted his
vineyard.' 'While the dogs were eat-
ing the body of Naboth Elijeh the
_Prophet put down his compass end
marked a circle from these dogs clear
around- to the dogs tifat should eat
the body of Jezebel, the Murderess.
"impossible!" the people Said. 'That
will never happen."• Who is that
being- flung out of the palace win-
ddw? Jezebel A few hours after
they came • around, hoping 1,o bury
her; They find only the palms - of
the halide and the' sieull, The .dogs
that devoured 'Jezebel and the dogs
that devoured Naboth. 'Oh, what a
swift, what an awful circuit!
Bet it le sometimes the .case that
this ',circle' sweeps through 'a century.
Or through many centuries. • :The
wined -started with eetheocracy for
governthent — that is, God was the
president and emperor of, the World.
People got tired of a theocracy. They
said: "We don't want God directly
interfering with the affairs f the
world. Give us a monarchy," The
world fled e taonarchy. From e 'mon-
archy itis going to leave a limited,
monarchy. After awl -file the limited
inonaxchy will be given up and tho
republican forni of govern:Meet will
be -eyeryweere dominant and recog-
nized; Then the world will get tired
of the republican form of govern-
ment, and it will have an anarchy,
which Is no government at all.. .And
then all nations,' finding out that
marl is net capa,ble of righteously
governing man-, -will cry out again
for theocracy and say, "Let Cod
come- back and conduct the a.ffaire-- of
the world." Every step—monarcl
-monarche, republicanism,
archy — only different steps betw n
the first theocracy and the last. -theo-
cracy or segments of the great cir-
cle of the earth pn which God sits,
Resolve to Do Good.
But donot become impatient be-
cause you cell mit see the curve of
events and, therefore conclude that
0°0 government is 'going to break
down. History tells us that in the
making- of the pyramids it took 2,-
000 men twoyears to drag one great
stone from the iivarry and put it
into , the pyramids. if men short -
lived- • can afford to work
so slowly as that, cannot Clod in the
building 61, eternities afford to wide?
What though God shoirld stake 10,-
000. -years to draw a Wee? Shall
we take ourelittee watch white we
have towind up every night lost it
ren down and hold it.up beside the
clock of eternal ages? .11, accordring
to the Bibl& a thousand years aro
he God's sight as one day, then, ac-
cdrding to that calculation the (3,-
000 years1 of the world's existence
has been only to God as from Aloe -
day to Satueday,
• But it, is often the case that the re-
bound is picker,. the return is much
cie 'deer, Until that. • The circle is
sooner completed. ,You reaolve that
u will do what good you can. In
one week you put a word of counsel
in the beart of a Sabbath school
child. During that same week you
give a letter of introduction to. a
young man struggling in business.
During the same week you make an
exhortation in a prayer meeting. It
is all gone. You will never -hear of
it perhaps, you think. A few years
after. a man comes up to you mid
.says, "You don't know me, do you?"
-Tint say, "No; I don't remember ever
to. have seen yo u . - "Why," he sa.ye,
"I was in the Sabbath school class
over which you were the teacher. One
Sunday you invited me to Christ; I
accepted the offer. You see that
church with two towers yonder?"
"Yes," you say. lie says, • 'That Is
where 1 preach,' or: "Do you see
that governor's house? That is
where I live." •
Slander's Foul Poison.
One day e. man conies to you and
says, "Good morning." You look
at him and say, "Why, yob have the
advantage of me; T. cannot place
you." - He says, "Don't you remem-
ber thirty years ago giving a letter
of introduction to a -young man —.a,
letter of introduction to William E.
Dodge?" "Yes, yes, I do." ITe
says : '`I am the mate That was
my first -step toward a, fortune: But
T have retired froni business now and
run giving my' time to philanteroPies
and public interests. Come up to
my house and -see inc."
But sometimes it is a. wider circle
and *does ,not return for a great
while. 1 saw a pill of expenses ifor
burning Letimer and 'R
nidr
ley.
bill of expenses has these items
•among others:
Shillings. Pence,
One load of fire fagots....: a 3 • -4
Cartage for four loads of
Wood
Item, a post I— 1 4
Item, twO chains 3 1
. two staple's
.Itena, four laborers 2 8
making ,n all 25s, 8d. That was
cheap fire, considering all the circum -
!tames, but it kindled a, tight which
-shone"all :around the world and
aroused the .Martyr spirit, and out
from that burning of Latimer and
Ridley relied tho circlewider and
wider, .stneting other circles, convol-
uting, overrunning, circumscribing-,
ovevarching all heaven — a circle. -
But .what is true of the good is
just as true of the bad. You • utter
•Slender against your neighbor. It
has gone forth.from your teeth. It
will never comeback, you think. You
have done the Mare all the mischief
you can. .You .x•ejoice to see , him.
wince. You say, "Didn't I give it to
li i!" That • word has gone out,
th t slanderous word,on its 'poison-
ous nd blasted way. • You think it
_will n .ver do. you any harm. 13ut 1
em we hing that word, end I see it
beginnin to curve, and' it curves
around, • nd it is aiming' at your
heart. You had bettee dodge it. Yoe
cannot 'dodge it, it rolls into your
,bosom, and aft iterolle in a, word
of- an oldbook r Ils in after it, say-
ing, "With what n easure ye Mete it
shall.be measured t you again,"
Ingrat ude.
You maltreated( an aged parent.
Yoie begrudge him the te om in your
house -You are impatiett of hie
whimsicalities and garrul'ty. It
makes you. Mad to. hear him tell the
same Story twiee. You give him
food he cannot mesticate. You wish
he was away. You wonder if he ie
goiug to live forever. tie will
gone very Avon. His steps ar
shorter and shorter. He is going to
stop. -But God has an account to
settle, •with you on that subject. Af-
ter ae,--hile your eye will be dim, and
your Wait, -will halt. and the sound
ox tne grmoing Will be 10W, and you
will tell the same story twice, and
your children will wesder if you will
never be taken away. They called
you "father" once. Now they call
•you the- "old man." If you live a
few years longer, they wiel cafl yoe
the "old chap" What are those
rough words with •which your child-
ren are accosting you? They are
the echo of the very words you used
in the ear -of your old father forty
years ago. What is that which you
are trying to chew, but find it un-
masticatabte and your jaws ache
and you surrender the - atteapt?
Perhaps' it may be the gristle which
you gave to your father for his
breakfast forty years ago.
God's Mighty Memory.
Oh I woeld like to See Paul, the
invalid missionary, at the moment
when his influence comes to full orb
— his influence rolling, out through
Antioch, through Cye?rus, through
Lystra, through Corinth, through
Athens, through Asia, through Eu-
rope, through America, through the
first century, through five centuries,
through twenty centuries, through
earth, through 'heaven, and at last
the wave of influence, having Made
full circuit, strikes hie soul. Oh,
then I would like to see him! No
ene can tell the wide sweep of the
circle of Paul's influence Sa.VO the
'one who is seated on the circle of,
the eerth.
shouhe not like to see the coun-
tenance of Voltaire when his infiu-
mace conies to fell orb. When the
fatal hemorrhage-:- seized leim
eighty-three years of age, his influ-
• ence did not cease. The most bell -
Bent man of his century, he had
• used all his faceilties for assaulting
Christianity, his bad influence wid-
ening through France,' widening out
through Germany, widening all
through Europe, widening through
America, widening through the 123
years that have gone since he died,
wideaing through earth, widening
through, the great future, until at
last the accumulated influence of his
baleful teachings and dissolute life
Will beat agninst his dismayed spir-
it, and at that moment it will be
enough to 'mike the black hair of
eternal da Nieces turn white with
horror. • No one can tell how that
bad inn n 's influence (deified the
earth snve the one Who is eeated on
the circle of. -the earth.— the Lord
"Weer, now," say some, "this, in
some respects, is a very glad theory
and in otherS a very sad one. We
would like to have the good we
have "done come back to tie, but the
thouglet that all the sins we have
ever committed will come back to
us fills us with affright." My bro-
ther, I have to tell you God can
break that circle and will do eto at
your call. 1 call bring twenty pas-
sages of Scripture to prove that
when God, for Christ's sake, for-
gives n man the sins of his past'
life never come back. Tee wheel
may roll • on and on, but you take
your position behind the cress, and
the wheel strikes :the cross:. and • is
shattered forever. The sins fly off
from the _circle and fall at right
angles with complete oblivion. For-
given! Forgiven! The meanest
thing a man can do is after some
difficulty ha's been settled to bring it
up- again, and God will not do any-
. thing like that God's memory is
-Mighty enough to hold all the events
of. the ages, but theee is one thing
that is sure to slip his memory, one
thing he is sure to forget, and that.
Is pardoned transgression. ITow do
I know it? T will prove it) 'eTheir
sins and their iniquities will I re-
member no more."
The Eternal Circle.,
But do not 'mike the mistake of
thinking that this doctrine of the
circle stops with this life. It rolls
, through heaven. You might
quote in opposition to me what St.
John says about the.city of heaven.
He says it "Iieth four square."
That does seem to Militate against
this idea of a c.iicle. But do you
not know the_re is many a square
house that has a fatally circle fac-
ing each other and in aecircle mov-
ing, and I cau prove that this is so
•in regard-- to heaven: St. John
says, "I heard the voice of many
angels round about the throne and
the • beasts and the elders." And
again he says, "I saw round about
the throne fatr and twenty Seats."
And again- be says, "There was a
rainbow rotinib about the throne."
The two foi•mer imply a circle; the
last, either a eeircle or a, semicircle.
The seats - fabifig each other, the
angels facing each other, the men
facing each other. Heaven an am-
phitheatre .of glory. Circumference
of patriarch • and prophet and
apostle. Circumference of Scotch
Covenanters and Theban legion and
Albigenses. -Circumference of the
good of all ages. Petiphery of
splendor unimagined and indescrine
able. A circle! A circle!
But every circumference must have
a centre, and what is the centre of
this heavenly circumference? Qhrist.
His all the glory; him all the praise;
his all the crowns. All heaven
wreathed • into a garland round aboeit
him. Take off the imperial sandal
from his foot and behold- the scar of
the spike'. Lift the coronet of do-
minion from his brow. and see where
was the laceration of the briers.
)Come closer, all heaven. .Narrow
.'the circle around his great heart. 0
LChrist, the Saviour! 0 Christ, I he
man! 0 Christ, 1 hp God! keep
thy 1 1 roue for ever, ie.(' ted • no I he
ei re:- of t he • eh rt le seated on the
• ch de Of heaven.
. SENDS HIS BILLS TO THE MEN.
A Shopkeeper Who Found That They Paid
More Promptly Than the Women.
"There is a man in an eastern city.
who does a large biesinessIn,.babies'
dresses, ane clothing for very 'young
-children,e writes Edward 'Bok, • in
The Ladies' I-Ionie journal. . "He
makes and sells -nothing else.
trade almost eneirely with wo-
name Up to within three years ago
he would seud out to his customers
bills *mounting to as much as $10,-
000. la six months' time he would
receive less than $3,000 in return.
Yet hie customers all !stood nen'
and were Considered .women of easy
means. Then' he deliberately chang-
ed his methodof rendering bills. Lie
went overenis books and found that
he had scene $12,000 worth of une
paid accounts./ Ile made out the
bills, and addressed them to hus-
bands or fathers of his customers,
h•ecting the bills to their offices,
1, 'thin sixty days he hail received
$9, 00 in checks. His invariable'
rule iew is to send all his bills to
P0 0 R
0 P Y
siaszssanotasse
tne nusbands, fathers or male. mem-
bers of his customers' families, When
no male member exists he insists
- upon a cash transaction."
• Popular Christian Names.
Some romantic parents love to
• christen their infants with .high-
falutin' names. Religious paretfts
search the Scriptures before the bap-
tismal ceremony. Parents in. search
of a fortune will label their luckless
babes with the surnames of the ex-
• pected testator. But, nevertheless,
the list of common English Chris-
tian names is a very small oiled
• Out of every hundred fathers and
mothers of male' children some eigh-
1 ty-feur limit their choice to fifteen
familiar names,
The favorite name is undoubtedly,
William, In all ranks of society —
in the peerage as hi the ,woilchouse—
Williaxa is the commonest of male
. Christian names.
Stop the first thousand men you
meet in the street—no fewer than
170 are Williams A long wav bee
hind come the Johns, closely follow-
ed by the Georges. Of every thou-
sand men ninety-four are called John
and ninety-two George.
, The next commonest is Thomas,
which has seventy-four owners, while
James claims seventy-two. Henry,
and Harry between them. are iseven.-
, ty in number. Of these about one
! in four has received the name of
Rarry at the baptismal font. Fol-
lowing them Come Frederick with
• fifty-seven; Charles, with fifty-eight;
• Alfred with forty-five, and Albert
some ways behind, with thirty-one.
—London Tit -Bits.
Questions Worth Consideration.
elev. Mark Guy Pearse asks:
"Is it too much to hope that the
time will come when men in whom
are many instincts that are noble and
generous, sheet feel that it is a, mean
and miserable thing to And their
pleasure in excessive drinking, mud-
dling • their brains, degrading their
thanhoode and unfitting themselves
for their best work?
"Is it too much to hope that the
time -Will soon come when fathers
and husbands shall feel it an utterly
.shameful thing to spend in their own
sel f-indu Igence which mi gh t n dd
largely to the voinforte af home; to
the benefit of the chiltli•en. as well as
providing for tinieS of sicknese and
oI cl age? •
Is it t().) Innen tm hope that 1 he
tine. will 0(11111, when either ns niAnn-
fact:livers or shareholdvrs, inpn fdh111
reflise (0 fat ten upon the ]1115' 'hi''. of
heir fellow -men and to make a for-
tune .out of that which prodneee euch
widespread destitutiOn and nnet. eet,
sad" Want and curse? • leor thae (Lei-
la us hope. For that (he: Work. For
that day let us prny."
St. 1.4411iS Ixposi11on JluiltLliigs.
The principal buildings for the St,
Louis expositioneas officially deceled
upon, will in ninny cases be la rgetr
the n bail di neas constructed for simi-
lar purposes at previous expositions.
There' is to be an agricultural build-
ing, 70.0 by 2,01)0 feet: a manufac-
turers' building, 600 by 600 feet; a,
liberal arts buil ding, 600 by 1,200
feet; a social economy building, 550
hy 700 feet; a transportation. build-
eitg', 600 by 1,200 feet; an education
550 by 700 feet; an art
building, 300 by 600 feet, with two
wiegs. each 200 by 300 feet: a mines
and metallurgy building-, 600 by 1,-
200 feet: an electricity building-, 600
by 550 feel , and a government build-
ing to cover 100,000 square feet.
The estimated cost of these buildings
is $7,000,000. To these will prob-
ably be added buildings for fish and
fisheries, for machinery, Ion forestry
and for horticulture. Work of de-
signing buildiogs whose dimensions
are given 11a8 been assigned to arch-
itects, and, as in other expositions,
t he preliminary plans will be com-
pared to secureharmony in design.
Very Curious.
The Yale Reword reports that "an
unknown friend" has lately presented
some choice specimens to the -Pea-
body Museum. A few of them are as
follows:
A wag from the "Tale of Two
Cities," some water from "all's
well," the rollers from the "shades
of evening," a drink from a "sand-
bar," a rocker froth .the "cradle of
the deep," a. Tree lunch from the
Sandwich Islands.
meaning of Chiropody.
It would be interesting, at least
to a, philologist. to find out why- it
is that chiropody has .come to mean
only the care of the feet. Chirop-
°dyes. true meaning is the care of the
hands and feet, for it is derived from
the Greek nouns cheir, the hand,
and pous, the foot. Everywhere,
thougli, chiropody is used with ref-
erence to the feetea.lone, while mani-
curing relates to the hands.
_When Clutent lle•ta charm.
Mr. .1 uckson T done hab my rab-
bit's foot er:ong. but bile give me de
mettle,. henht, jes' same!
r. .ioleeent•— elebbe she done hab
her rablet's foot eriong..tool
•
—When the snow is on the ground the
poultry will be better off if they are kept in
doom.
RheurnaileawarpOd Limbs,
Pain and Suffering.
Not a Trace of Itheasnatiem Left.
After 1101.714. Dr. Chase/u
Liver Pillx.
If you are a sufferer from rheuma-
tism it is possible that you have tried
many remedies without reaping much
benefit. Judging from the number
of cures that have been reported, Dr.
Chase's Kedneyelever Pills must be
about the best medicine obtainable for
rheumatiern. It cures thoroughly, by
ridding 'the blood of uric add poisons,
the cause of rheumatism and severe
body pains.
Mr. S. Mann, Stitteville, Carleton Co„
Ont., writes : "I was afflicted with
rheumatism, had severe pains in the
knees, hip joints and across the batk.
Rheumatism, remedies did not help me
and I began using Dr, Chase's Kidney -
Liver Pills, which have since complete-
ly cured .me. There is, not the least.
trace of rheumatism left, and I am no
longer subject to biliousness, headache
r d 'stomach sickness, which formerly
et:Lacked me frequently."
chase -'0 iclney-Livor Pins have
a. 1.11 -ger sale by far than any similar
remedy. teThey cure when otherdis-
appoint. One pill a doee, 25 cents a
box, at all dealers, or Edenanson, Bates
er, Co., Toronto.
NOVEMBER 8 1901
What is
a; . _eaae...e-aseeeeeaW seeeeeN
-..-e\akeeeeesevaSe.,
,;„\.,"\\, ",‘
Clastoria 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. Et -is Pleasant• .
Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions •et
Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish-
ness. Castoria cures Diarrhwa and Wind Colic. Castoria
relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and
Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates
the Stomath and Bowels of Infants and Children, giving
healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is the Childsen'i
Panacea—The Mother's Friend.
Castoria.
"Cestoria is an excellent medicine for
children. Mothers ;have repeatedly told sue
of its good effect upon their children."
DR. G. C. osectere Lowell, Man'.
Castoria.
"Castor's is so well adapted to childrea
that I recommend it as superior to any fre.
seription known toAne."
}LA. AttC11.ER, M. D. Brooklyn, r
THE FAC -SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
APPEARS ON EVERY ,WRAPPER.
THIle otteraue comrsai
, 77 MURRAY 11111.111MT, PitW YORK CITY,
tGanti
Waikfng Shoes.
"Sovereign" shoes for ladies'
walking, wear are good shoes.
Made with heavy flexible welt
soles_easy as a glove, beautiful in
design and perfect in fit.
• World famous Puritan Kid uppers,
patent leather tips, double thick welt
soles, $3.00, $3.5o ; rubber heels,
$3.50, $4.O0.
Also made in Empire Calf.
Uppers sewn with silk, soles with
pure linen.
Men's and women's $3.00, $3.50
and $4.00 per pair.
See that they are stamped
Sov-nrelig2 Oho°.TV
Richardson & Molnnie, Sole Agents for Seaferth.
For pure blood, a bright eye, a clear
complexion, a keen appetite, a good
digestion and refreshing sleep, TAKE
BRISTOL'S Sarsaparilla.
• It arouses the Liver, quickens the -
circulation, brightens the spirits and
generally irnproves the health.
Sixty-eight years trial have proved it to be, the mod reliable BLOOD parifICT known.
All druggists sell -BRISTOL'S:
eason's Change.
§AMAAAAAAAMONAAMAAAAAAAN
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. Summe
suits must give place to fall suits and overcoats. You should s( e
OUT range of suitings and overcoatings at once. We carry only
the best at moderate prices. The fabrics are such as to meet the
approval of all. We make a specialty of ordered clothing and
consequently are prepared to give you entire satisfaction in you
• fall and winter suits and overcoats.
WOOPAAAMMAAAAAAAAAAAN
BRIGHT BROS
FURXIS.HERS, SEAFORTII.
Furniture Cheaper than Ever.
1 On account of great reduction in expenses, and manufacturing special lines
w are now able to put furniture on the market cheaper than ever. All intend
in purchasers will do well to call at our warerooms, where full lines of uptc-
dat'e furniture are sold tt right prim.
•EDRINIMMIENINNOWNEMBHM
-0-1•TIDEMM.A.atA..1\TO-..
This department is complete with a large selection of the best goodsi and
obliging attention given to this branch of the business.
Night calls promptly attended to by our Undertake; Mr. S. T. Holmes
Goderich street, -Seaferth, opppsite the lfethoclistt church.
BROADFOOTI -BOX & Cal
SM.A.FORTEE-
0-01neaf,
8111:01
,endet1veree
,eaminal In
pealing thi
made bre(
three or fri,
hills of a
chiefly ewi
• heal systei
e,haraeteriaa
One or t
are to curl
to notice• 1
VIII. poiS,
he penis
hich was
Wes, 'Mai
broth pre,
ter's famill
more of
was repeal
of retalia.
37, Edwai
those wini
tons. it
was repe
Crimes of
wife Vali
master,
held petit
and halig
burned. -
We see
fri the an
that the
scourged
sack with
then. Aire
Wins, w
Arst who
year of
But t
modern E
on March
bis &nigh
in a harry
ley and
Another
bbsolete,
• 8.CQUailitea
chamber I
most free
that the I
weaken th
an arm or
advocated
that on a
euniehmen
Build th
readily be
Young
but are in
The hes
chickens i
When
pIan of -
plans.
One me
It should
fly down
Eggshel
Crush th
them lest
eating eg
Introdu
yard by
males.
purchase
One of
surplus
needed as
tnarketabl
Qeese
• liberty of
pond or
feathers
white.
The siZ
what upo
manner h
Generally
the fowls
One _gri
Itreeris
hat th4
• they are
ly go vile
Feed th
*day alt
the youne
pot easile
dueed to
be got in
The wat
"Lot's Wi
drench it'
250 feet a
surf fi0111;
-eye» witi
haps the
.direction.
twenty -fir.
tnile Ion;
the island
est sighf-:
said to lee
blowing sI
miles awa:
Fres
Alphonse,
Alphem
been cent
Ethel's
Mary Jai
Mary
Ethel's_
the ninth
Ile might
anX1OUS 4
eeinsve
"Tii a te
Miss IN
dreadful
*yi 7antinaN,1
Sinniel;
charity it
h 08:1 Ili le Inniacknl,
sort des
Teah
elude thBrigbtz
It preyed
It is
starvb
ter er ti
. that it f
mach.
1111
Win
Lumber,
IF Our haul)
and Pine, h
Red Cedar:
your hills,
faetorily:-