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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1901-11-29, Page 2••••••.,, THE HIMON EXPOSITOR REAL ESTATE FOR SALE, OR SM -'The hOUVIS And grounds aolonging to • the htto S. G. lite0aughey, oornerat Chtiroh and. Centro streets, Seaforth . The propertv will be sold cheap and on easy terms. F. rtoesutISTED, Sea. forth. - 1734•tf a -a20 ACRE F.Attal FOR SALE, -!fl best wheat balb e) In Sou'llern Manitoba. Ninety eons ready for whr at next year: 00 acmes hay. Good new stali/e and granary. Twelve dollars per acre. Several other 1 oproved and prattle far.ns for sale. Write CHAS. E. SHAW, Box 17, Balasevain, Manitoba,. 1767-tt LIARM .FOR SALF.-For sale Lot 27, Cori. U cession 4, Maintop, containing 100 acres, all of which ia . cleared, welt fenced, underdrele-d and In a high date of cultivation. There is a good prick house, large bank barn with stone stabling, plenty of water and a good orchard. It N within two miles of Soafortb, and within a mile frorn a school. Apply on the remieee or to Seaforth P. 0. WM. GRIEVE, 1767-0 btABi FOR stax.—loartn in Stanley fatalist°, Lot 20 Q riccs ion 2, containing 100 acme. All clear but la acres of hardwood huah. It is In a goad tate of cultivation, well fenced and underrtrainei. There le on the farm two borne, with stabling., and a large da-elhog house. It is conveniently situated, 3 miler from Clinton and mile from Baird's sehool. Addreas all inquiries to SO FLN McGREGOR, on the oremisce, or MRS, D. hieGREGOR, 2nd Conoeseiou, notteremith, Soriforth, Ont. 1758-tf MtARM IN STANLEY FOR SALE.-Forsale Lot 11 and South half of Lot 12, Concession 4. Stanley, containing 160 acres, 90 acres cleared and in a fair state of oultivition. There is a frame dwelling house with eater, bank barn with stone stabling, stone pig pen, stave silo, two good wells also a river rims at the back of the 1ar111. It Is convenlont to ahurcher, eatools and markete, being 2 miles from Brimfield and 9 miles from Seaforth. Apply on the promises o addres THOMAS GE3151ELL, Bruceneld. 1722tf , RAI FOR SALE -For sate, Lot 9 and half of 10, on the 14th Conceesion of_ Maintop, cantata la cy about 150 acres, of vehioh between 00 and 70 ao es are &arid. The buildings are fairly good, the brume being -nearly now. It Is within 6 mites ot the Village of Platten. It la a good farm and suit ble for either grain or posture. A smaller farm w uld be taken In exchange as part payment. If not sold soon, will be rented for a terra of years. Apply on the promirea or addresa- Walton P. 0. .1 AATE3 CAMPBELL. 170541. , -U1ARM FOR BALE. -For sate that very desirable 1.! farm on the Mill Road, Tuekersmith, adDining the v,llage 01 Egmondvillo. It contains 97 %area, nearly all cleared and In a good state of cultivation, and wall underdrained. There is a comfortable - brick cottage and good barns, with root collar and outbuildings. The buildings are situated near the centre of the farm and on the, Mill Road. It is well watered, and plenty ot soft water in the kitohen. It is conveniently situated for oburohand aohool and withln,ramile and a halt of Seaforth. Witt bo sold cheap and on easy terAs of.payment. Apply to the proprietor, nosearn. &SON; Saaforth. 1748-tf , tilaRM IN HAY TOWNSHIP FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 22, PO the North Boundary of Hay Tosirnsitip. This farm contains 100 aorea, 86 wares (neared, the rest good hardwood bush. It 19 welt flfl. derdrained and fenced. There is a good stooe heal() with *No. 1 cellar; large bank barn ; i element thee!; sheep house 70x76, with 'first -ohne itabling and root cellar underneath; a good otoha ; 2 good atone and cistern, Thorp Is 121 • sores of f . 1 wheat sowed on a riab fallow, well manured , acres atederl down:recently, the rest in good P .ape for orop. This Is a No, 1 farm, well intuited for market& churches, richools, post Oleo, etc., and will he sold reaaonably. Apply, on the p-emises, or add rose ROBERT N. DOUGLAS,Blake,Ont.1668x8t1 MIAMI IN STANLEY FOR SALL-For sale, Lot 2 7, COneeasion -7, Parr Lino, Stanley, containing 100 urea, 90 acreof which aro under cultivation ; well fenced and Weil tile drained. Tho balance is good bush There are comfortable buildings, and all in good repair. The farm Is within five nail Is of Klapen station • three miles from .Varna, arid one and a half mile) f om Hills Green, where aro chnrohee, atom post office, (tc, There 13 a school on the corner a the feral.. There is a good orchard and a never tailing spring of water eonvenleat to the buildings. Thts isarl exceptionally good farm, de. sizably situated, and will he sold cheap and on okay termer. Apply on the pretureei or address Hills Green P. O. JAMEta WORKMAN. 1708-tf veRsi FOR SALE. -For attle, Loi 1, In the 'lawn. r ship cf Tnakersmith, Conooesion El, 100 acres of land, Oa acres cleared, wen un ferdrained. Splendid farm for grain or stook, well watered, a running spring the whole year runs through the farm. AISO on the farm is i splendid bank barn, near y now, which N 60x54, with atone stabling underneath. Also frame house 24x18, and kitchen 18x10, with good stone cellar, and two good wens. Thi pro- perty is situated In a very desirahlalocality with splendid gravel rode to market, on'y 3/ miles to Seaforth. Also a good &rolling 11000 in Seafott 1, situated on Coleman street, 010813 to Victoria Park. This houee is composed of 8 rooms, well flashed, plenty of hard and soft water, and kitchen 20x13, with pantry and wadi room attached, and a good wooclehect A good stable -24x18, All Of this property mint be sold as the underehmed is moving to the United Stites. All particulars concerning this property can be had 43, applying at Tux Exeostroa Office or to the proprietor, JAMES KEFIOE, Sea - forth, 176241 - — VARM IN STeaNLEY FOR SAL -For gale, Lot J - 9 and the west half of Lot 8, on the 12th conces- sion, or granger( Line, of Stanley. Thle farm con- tains 160 acres, all of whiat is cleared, except Lair acres'. it's In ik sbate,of first -ease oulivation, wtI fenced and all underdrained,mostly with tile. There is a largo frame dwelling holm as good as new, with good alone foundation and cellar, large bank barn with htane stabling underneath, and numerous othar inoludiog a large pig home. -Two good orchards of choice fruit, aleo nice shade and o ens- raontAl trees. There are two ep ina creeka runolog through the farm, and plenty of gad water all the year round without pumping, It Is well situated tor markets, churches, schoo!e, post oftl e, et, , and good gravel reale leading from it in all directions. 11 18 within view of Lake Huron, and the boats can ha 11Sell passing up and down from the house. Thh is one of the bed equipped farina in the onnity, a al will be sad on easy terms, as the proprietor wanti to retire on account 01111 health. Appiv•on the promi- ses, or address Blake P. 0, JOHN DUla. 1734-4( The Whole Story fn letter: in'XL lie' (rEfuor n-mtre%) From Capt. F.- f,ove, Pollee Station ..No. 6, blontreal a 'frequently tic Prouty pavre ler poina ia the stind- orh„ rheumatism, eillness,• frost rramps„ and all offilatione which befall men in onr posidian, 1 have nc . hesia taloa in toying that Paax-iirra.xit is the t'est remedy to have near at haad." t'and Tnternoly arid, Externally. Two Sizea, 25c. and 500. bottlee. Increase - 1 The boy who starte work, after a course in . this colleges will start at wages two or three times greater than he cutlet hope to obtain without this spacial training. Colleges at tan ion, Toronto, Hamilton, Ottawa, Sarnia, Berlin, Gait, Guelph, St. Catharinea. Now is a good timeto enter. All p kr: i Altars from. FORhIST CITY BUSINESS COLLEGE, Y. M. C. A. Building, London, Ont. 1761;26 J. W. WE$T ER V E LT,:Prin • Grip -Qui n i ne Tablets Ward -off, break-up and cure cod of _all kinds. - Every. body catches cold. Everybody needs. Grip-QUinine Tablets (cholate coated). When you feel Mean, take Grip -Quinine. If 014 EVERY cax. you want to feel fine, take Grip - Quinine. The best personal and family medicine. Relief in a dose. Cure in a day. For sale by dealers generally. Price 25 cents. SEAFORTH DYE WORKS Ladies and gentlemen, thanking you all for pat patronage and now that a new seam is at hand wish to let you know that I am stilt in the liminess, ready to do my best to give you every eattafaction in dolog your work in the line of Weaning and dyolno gentlemen's and ladhae clothing, done without being ripped as wen as to have them ripped. All wool geode etnitanteed to' give good satisfaction on eh art. rat notice. Shawls, codeine, etc , at moderate prices Pinged° not- fail to sive me a call. Buttar •d e p taken In exchange for work, HENRY opposite the Laundry, north Hain street. 11391-11 THANKSGIVING -7. AehleeeMents Of Brain and Hand •• During the Past Year. -- FULLNESS OF OUR HARVESTS Rev-. Dr. Talmage, in an Eloquent Ws- .. course, 8 -tint -file Hearts of His Hearers to Joyful Thaniggiving by itecounting the itlert,31es Vouchsafed to Them by an All-Wis. Greaior. ' Entered according tO Act of Parliament of Can- ada, in the year Mt, by William Bally, Of To- ronto, at the Dee% of Agriculture, Ottavrit, Washington, Nov,- ,.24. -This thee ceurse of Dr. Talmage is a national congratulati.on over the achierpments 1- of brain and hand during the:, past tortilla; Months. The texta are : 1 Corinthians ix, .3.0-,--1,..-4404 ,'' that ploweth should plow in hope"; Is- aiah. xli, 7, • "He that sniootheth with the halinner"; raadges v,. 1, `!They that handl� the, pen of the writer." - ' i There is a table being. spread across the top of the two great ran- ges -of emountains whichridge this -continent, a table which reaches from the Atlantic eti the Pacific sea. It is the Thanksgiving tile of. the nation. They will come from the east and the west- and, the merth. e_ and the eotith ailid sit at it. . Welconie, Thanksgiving -day! What- ever we_ Inlay think of No England theology; we all like NeW England. Thanksgiving day. , What -means. the .steady rush to the. depots leild the long rail _trains' dartingtheir lanterns , albng the tracks, . of the Boston and . Lowell, the Geoegia, Central, the Chicago Great Wt),ste ern, the 8t. Patel • and Dulieth , and the Southern railway ? Ask the happy group". .in. the -New .England farm house; ask the villagers, Whose song of praise in the morning will come over the -Berkshire hills; .; ask all the plantations of the South which have adoPted, the New Eng- landcustom of -setting apart a -day of thanksgiving. ch,- it ,is a great day of national , festiVitiy l 014 your. hands, ye people, • and shout, aloud for joy! Through the 'organ pipes let there ceme down the thun- der of a natioxi'S rejoicing! , Blow the ,_ cornet! ,' . Wave' the pal brandhes! '`Oh thai m . fneo Would praise the Lord fOe His goodness and for His woAderfal works to the children of men!" • . . Things have mar vel ous I y ,ch an ged. Time was when the stern ,edict of. Governments forting° religious • as.- semblages.Those who dared to be so unloyal to their -King as to ac- knowledge loyalty to the • Head' of the universe were punished.. Churches /awfully silent in worship suddenly heard their doors . swung open, . and down upon a church aisle a.score of musket8 thumped as the. leaders bade them - "Grottacf, arms!" This custonk /of having thd fathers, -the husbands; the sons. and brothers at the entrance of the eSeve is a custom which came down fromolden time, when it - was absolutely neCessary that the father.or brothershould sit at the end of the ehurch pew fully. armed to defend the helpless por- tion of the family, But.now how - changed! Severe : penalties are threatened against any one .Who shall interrupt - religious. perviceS, and a.nnuallY, at the cOinniand of the highest official; in the ' United States, We gather together fpr thanksgiving and. -holy worship. 'To- day I would stir your souls to joy- ful thanksgiving while f speak of the mercies of God and in uncen- veational was rec,ouet the con- quests of the plow, the liaminer and the pen. Most, of the timplements of hus- bandry have been superseded -by modern inventions, but the. • plow has never lost its rap. It ha.s fur- rowed its way through all the ages. Its victories have been waved by the barley of Palestine,_ the ---eewifeat of Persia, the flax- of Germany,., the ricestalks 61 China, the rich grasses' of Italy. -• It: • has turned up the mammoth of Siberia, the mastodon of Egypt, and the pine groves of Thessaly, Its . iron foot has march- ed where Moses wrote and Homer sang and Aristotle taught and Alex- ander mounted his warallergen it hath . wrung its colter on Norwegian wilds and ripped_eitit the stumps of . the American ferest, pushing its way through the savannas eJethe Care - limes and trembling. in the grasp of - the New Hampshire yeomanry. Am- erican civilization hap kept step with the rattle of its sleviges, and on its beam_ hath ridden thrift, and national Plenty. . I do not wonder that the Japanese and the Chinese and the Phoenicians so pareicularly extolled husbandry or that Ciacinnatue went from ' the coneuls-hip to the plow or ' that Noah . was a farmer before he : became a shipbuilder- or that, Elxisha, Was - in the nerd- ' plowing with twelve yOke of oxen when the mantle fell on him' or that the Egypt:hula in their- pag- thiem worshiped the- ox.,a0 a tiller of their lands. . e Pilthetts, the Xin , found some IP turned all the population to dig- ir Sch. gold mines in his province, e so ging in the mines. Tillage was useleceed; and there came • a great amipe. One day the wife of the <ing invited him. to a great ban- cittet ; 0114' he 'came in and sat do wn, - Ind there were piecs ot gold in the hape of' bread and' pieces of gold in the shape of biscuits and. pieces of geld . in the shape, of joints of meat, a'red,the King was disgusted, and he said, "I cannot Nit tine," "Neither can the people," • said his wife most suggestive:1.Y,, and then they went back to the tillage. , To get and appreciation of what the AmeriCan plow ha aecomPlished 1 take you into the Western wil- derness. Here ie. the dense '• forest I find a collection of Indian wig- wams. With belts Of wampum the men lazily sit on. the skins of deer, smoking their feathered calumetS, -1 or, driven forth by • hunger t track their Moccasins •far away as they make -the forest echoes cra.ey 1 with. tneir wild halloo or ilsh in the .14 arias ti.ee Cleared. woit;11111pS, Vie • . umnumentS of slain forests,. crumble and nee !Awned Villages 'appear, with smiths' at tlfe- bellows, masons on the NV all, earpeitters on the house - I -top. Churches risie • in honor of the Great Spirit whom thereet men ig- norantly worship. • Steamer's on the lake -66fittey Merchandise to her wharf and carry east the uncounted bueliels that Amy° cane ' to th0 market. - Bring .hitheeewreaths of wheat and. -crowns of rye and let the Mills and the machinery of barn and field unite their voices to cele- brate the triumph, for the wilderness hath .retreated -and "the plow . hath conquered. ; Parts of the country, under in- dustrious tillage, have bee-othe an i Eden o1. fruitfulness, in. which reli- gion stands as elee---14,e0 of life and educational advantages as the tree , of knowledge, of. good and evil, and 0110' of them forbidden; • We are our- selves surrounded by well cultured -• farms. e:They were worked by. your fathers, and perhaps your mothers helped spread the. hay in the field. kOn their headstones are the names you .bear. Aseewhen you. were boys, in. the sultry noon you sought for the -harvest field. with refresh- • thents for your. fathers aria found thee" taking their noon spell sound asleep. under the trees', so peacefully now they sleep in 'SOMe country churchyard. No more fatigued. Death has plowed for them the deep furrow of a grave. . Although most of us have, noth- ing directly to do with theitillage of the soil, yet in our beeupa- tions we feel the effect of successful or blighted industry. We nmste in all our occupations, rejoice over the victories of Atte plow to -day. The earth Was once cursed for 1110.11'S sake, and. occasionally the soil re- venges1 itself on us by refusing a • bountiflil harvest- I suppose that but for sin the earth wouid•be pro- ducing wheat and corn and eweet fruits. as naturally nlow it pro- . duces- Mullein stalks and Canada • thistles. • There Is hardly a hil- 1 lock between the forests of Maine . and .the. lagoons' of Florida, between the peach orchards of New Jersey end the pines of Oregon, that has • not, . sometimes shown its •natural and total depravity. The thorn and thistle seem to have, usurped • the soil, and. nothing but the rebellion of the plow -can Uproot the evil supremacy. But God is good. New, •one. of our seasons partially proves -a failure the earth SCeins to. repent of it the next summert in more muni- ficent -supply.% Praise_ God- for the great haniests that htive been reaped this', last year 1 Some • of them mimed by drought or einsecOs or fresh- ets were ' floe as'. bountiful as L1811ai, others - far in excess of what, have ever before been gathered, while higher , prices will help make UP 101' ally decreaSed Sure sign of agricul tu Val presp,erity we Wive in nthe fact that cattle and horses and sheep and sWin0 and all farm animals have during the ..-- last two years increased in 'valve. Twenty' inililoti swine slaughtered this last year, and yet so many hogs left. Enorments paying off of farm mort- gages has spbiled the old, speeches! Of - the - calamity • howlers , If the an- cients .in their festival§ presented their rejbicings before. Ceresi, the god- dess of corn and tillage, shall We ne.- -glect to- rejoice in the presence of the great God now? -From Atlantic to Pacif1e'. let the American nation celebrate the victories of •the plow, I come next to speak of the cen- quests of the,American hammer." Its iron arm has fought its way down 'from -the beginning to the present, • 'Under its swing the city of Enoch rose, and the foundry of Tubal Cain resounded, and the ark floated on the deluge, At its clang anelent tem-, pies spread their magnificence and chariots rushed out fit for the bat- tle. Its iron fist smote the. marble of Faros, .and it rose in sculptured Minervae tend . struck the -Pentelican minee Until from them a. 'Parthenon was reared whiter than a palace of lee and pure as an angel's dream. Damascus and Jerusalem ancl Rome and Venice. and Paris and London and Philadelphia and New York and - Washington 'are but the long pro- tra.cted echoes of the hammer. 'Under the hammer - everywhero dwellings ,have gone up, ornate and luxurious. 'Se.hoolhouses, lyceums, hospitals and Aeyhons have added additional glory to the enterprise as well as the bene- ficence of the American people. Vast public works have been constructed, bridges have been built over rivers and tunnels dug under mountains and churches of matchless beauty have gone -up .for him who had not where to lay. his 'head, and the old theory Is exploded that because Christ was born in a • manger we, must always worship hine in a barn.' Rallreads of fabulous length ha,ve been completedA oyor which Western trains resit past the iiWift footed deer, -making the frightened birds to -dart into the heavens at the ,Cough of the smoke pipes and the. savage yell of the steam whistle, In hot haste •• our national Industry ad- vances, her breath the air. of 10,000 'urnaces, her song the voice of un - *tinted factories, • her footstep the fiash of wheel'buckets and the tread of the shaft rind the stamp of foun- dries. Talk, about antediluvian lon- gevity! I think the average of hu- man life is more now than it ever was., Through mechanical facilities men work so much faster and accom- plish so 'much more in a lifetime that a man can afford to die now at ferty years as well as one of old at 000; I think the average of human life in point. Of accomplishment is now equivalent .to about 890 years, ye near as 1 can calculate. In all our occupations and professions We feel the effect of a .crippled or enlarged met:haul-cal -enterprise, We all hays stock in every.: house that is builded° and in every public conveyance that is -constructed and. in every ship that is sailed.. When we sea the hard- working men of the land living in comfortable abodes, with luxuries upon their tables that -onae even cings could noterifford, having the eislyantage of thorough education, of tieconiplishment and art, we are ell •eittler at this season to unite .with thenn inepraise to cod for his good - waters of the still lake. New tribes challenge, and council fires .61aze, and warwhoops. ring, and chiefs lift the tomahawks for battle. A f Ler awhile wagons from the Atlantic coast come to these ferests. 13y day trees are felled, and by night bonfires keep off the .wolvee. - Log cabins rise, and the great trees be- gin to throw their branches in the path of the conuuering white man, tests: - • • Now come to speak of the ccrn- queets, of the pen. This is the syma bol Of all intellectuality, The paint- er'e pencil and 'the sculptor's chisel and the philosopher's laboritiorY itre -All wailers to the pen, and therefore tine may be used- as a symbol of in - tell eeeial .advanceinent. 'There are tho e disposed to decry everything Ainerican. . Having seen Melrose and tetaietonoury oy moonnget, eney never beheld among us an iluPtessiev etructure, or, having .strolled through -the pleture galleries of the Louvr and the .Luxembourg, they -are dis gusted with .our academiee. of art It .nualses me sick to hear these peo pia' who have been to Nurope --cern home talking with a foreign amen' and aping foreign ceistoms and talk ing of moonlight on castles by the sea. I think the biggest fool .111 the he country is ttraveled fool. But, ainsidering the youth of ow nation and the fatm ethat copara tively few persons devote theneselves • entirely to -literature, I think We have great reason 1.0 thank God for the progress of our American litera ture. As historians have we not hat en the past such men as Bancroft. anc 'Prescott, as essayists Irving and Emerson, as jurists Story and Mar shall and Keit, as theologians Ed wards and Hodge; as poets Pierre pont and Sprague and Longfellow arid Bryant, as sculptors. Powers and C,rawford and Palmer,. as paint- ers such inn as West and Cole and Inmanand Kensett? And among the living Americans what galaxies of in- tellectual splendor and power! Ed- ward Eggleston and Will • Carleton and. Mark Twain and .John Kendrick Bangs and Marion Harland and Mar garet Sangster and Stockton and Churchill and Hopkinson Smith and Irving Bacheller and Julia Ward Howe and Amelia, Barr and Brander Matthews i and Thomas Nelson Page and Eliza.betle Stuart Phelps and Wil- liam Dean. Howells and a score of others, sonic. Of them fixed stars and some ineteoes, As the pen has advanced our col- leges and universities and observa- tories have fotlowed the waving of ite plume. Our literature is of . two kinds - that on feet and that on the wing. By the former I mean the firm, and s. ubstantial works which will go 'down through the centuries. When, on theeother hand, I speak of literature on the wing, Mean the newspapers .of the land. How things have marvelously changed! We used to cry because we bad to go to school. Now children cry if they cannot go. Many of them cart intelligently discuss ',poli- tical 'topics long before they have seen a ballot box or, teased by some poetic muse, r coMpose articles fo the newspapers. Philosophy and as- tronomy and chemistry have been.so improved that lie• must be a genius • at dullness who knows nothing about them. On one shelf of a peer man's library is more peactical knowledge than in -the 1400,000 volumes of an- cient Alexandria, and education is possible. for the most indigent, and no legislature or congress •for the la.st fifty years has a.ssembled which ha S not had in it rail smatters and farmers and drovers or men who have.been accustomed to toiling with the hand and the foot. The grain. fields have passed their harvests above the ht veto of droug and deluge, The freight cars are not large enough to bring down , the grain to the seaboard. The canal boats Inc Crowded witli breadstuffs. Hark to the eushing of the wheat through the great Chicago Corn ele- vators! Hark to the rolling of the hogsheads of the Cincinnati pork packers! Enough to ea t, and al low prices;, 'enough to wear, and of home manufacture. If some have and some have note then may God help those who have to 111(11(1 over to those who 'have not! Clear the track for the rail trains that rush on bringing the wheat and the cotton and the rice and 'the barley and the oats and the hops and the lumber and the leather and everything for -man and every- thing for beast! ' • Lift up 3your eyes, 0 nation of God's right: band, at the glorious prospects! 'Build larger Your barns for the harvests; dig deeper the vats for the sposil of- the vineyards; en- large the wareltouSeS for the mer- chandise; multiply galleries of art fer the .pictures and statues. Ad- vance, .0 nation of •Oodis. right hand, but remember that national wealth, if unsanctilied, is sumptuous waste, is moral ruin, is magnificent woe, is splendid 't otterineSS, is gilded death, Woe to us for the wine vats if drunisennesS we.11oWs in them! Woe to -us for the harvests if greed Sickles them/ Woe to us for the merchan- dise if avarice swallows it! Woe to us for the cities if misrule , walks them! Woe to -the. land if God defy- ing crime debauches it! . Our only safety is in more Bibles, more churches, more free schools, more geod men and More good women, More consecrated printing presses, more of the gleriottelrospel of the Son of God, Whith.well yet extir- pate all wriengs and iniroduce all blessedness, e - But the preachers, on Thanksgiving morning will not detain with long vermeils their hearers from the home' group. The housekeepers will be an- gry if the guests do not arrive until the viands are cold. Set the theirs to the table - the easy chairs for grandfather and grandmother, if they be still alive; the high chair for- the youngest but not the least. Then' put out your hand to take the full cup of- thanksgiving. Lift it end bring it toward your lips, your bends trembling with emotion, and RI I le! I ice shall overflow and- triekle a few drops on the table do not he disturbed, hut let ft suggest to you the words of the psalmist and heel sou thunkfulty to say, "My cup rim! 1,1 '' NOVEMBER 29, 1901 Priedrichsrulte, the capaerty ot Inc e Liater for beer awl tobacco being well known. A Un laWho neVer Silloked e at table, only just lasten d oe. or - two of the most simple dishes, and , drank only a glass of one kind of - wine, always mixed With water, and O