HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1904-03-04, Page 6ELECTRIC BELTS ill
THE REACH OF AF
Wo aro Selling the Cost Etentri
Dalt in ,the World at la Price
Within the Reach of the Poore
Sufferor.
Or lroH
etlay No,7 igh $
hirtruhr Wads 4
BELT
'for only
Our No. 7 Electric Belt (with stotp*nsory f ,r
pito or ladien attachment) is guaranteed to peers*
*sore power, more current, mare -equal d:strilmecu
• durrent. better suality and finish th,n any other
Electric Bele =de, regardless of pr'i•-e.
'rile Pref. KAM Belt is a, sure cure IrNervotts,
Weakness. ninny, Liver and Stomach Cornrlairt,
Rheumatism, Lame Back, Pain or Aches la a:I i..*rt
ef the body. Wear the nth eeti e you stern. and in
• morning' you will feel year younger ticos when
y r.1 went to hod,
Dzig3re of th03C W/10 ask you to pay front $`.9 tc)
t:7 f.,ran Riectric Belt, not, half so good ss
i!xtu's which we sell for only $.1 00. We have cal./
ese prize. We do not ask you 40 dollars first, aral
If you do not Issly, try and sell you- the Larne bet at
any *Id price.
Our limiest Offer.—ifyou 4o no care to serd
five doliarswet will scud you one of our 1.4.::ts your
nrarest eayess eflIce„ C.O.D. $5.01), svi.h privilege
of examination, if satisfactory. pay the express a:.;eitt
SI (Gond express charges and tst:e the7ft. If Pet
resented you need not av one cent. If you
t 1 c..tsh with order we prep.ty p -stage
We Ars manufactir ers f . kinds of ect, tric
*ppan' es. Write u4 (r our b *els, giving pritxs
• fit -I peeticulass. It is sent trre
o not buy unt 4 you *ee our Itio:7 Ili
role Write Lt Addret.s
' a
jaaffi EAng co 11-2 Victoria. St.
• Tor..,ato,
SEAL ESTneTE FOR !SALE,
vARMS FOS SALE.—Itare bentsins in farms in
.10 the Townships of Millet, Morrie, and Wawa-
noeteCounty of Surma, Inquire M once, WM
CAMPBELL, Blyth, Ont. 177444
VCR SALE.—Honee and four acres of lani. 7 The
JU boned contains Mx room, hard and sett water
in kitchen, first. Cla,f cellar and stone foundation,
newt stable and poultry heti e Aar' young bearing
orchard. Apply at, EXPOSII0R, IFFIOE. t8714f
VCR SALE ClIZAP.—Ainlept Iwo acres of land
J n with dwellieg hems°, u r,euth of the
ssilway, cet Mein *tries, Sesicelh. There are, on
the pendent. Nth hard arid wit wafer, grind fruit
trees end the lend is well underdiained. For par
-
Menhir* apply to MRS, W. I. LAIRD or to R. ta
HAYS, Solicitorefieaferth. • ' 1 8 4
LUSH roa 8ALE.—T$1112 In Stanley ferule, Lot
r29 Concession 2, containing 100 sorsa All
&ear but 1.6 mores -of hardwood bush. D I in i geed
etate of cultivation, well fenced and underdrainen.
There bon the form two beret, with stabling. sad a
lane dwelling haute..., It is conveniently situated,
miles from Clinton and r utile tresuBsietsfalioni,
Addrems all inquiries to JOHN Me01111001te on the
premises, or MR8 D ItoGREGOR, Ind Ceneession,
Tookommitkilkaferth, Ont175841.
0111111•••••••=•=1.1.0......ai
VAR"! FOR SALE.—The underrigned often his
X farm, Si Lot 9 and South halt 10, Conceetion 12
Hallett, containing 10e acres, for este on re isonable
tame. On_ nee piece le a story and is half frame
heave with enure cellar; driving- kouse, barna, *beds
and all necespery outbuildings, one small orchard,
never felling 'Wog (week sod cover failing well,
(Atone 90 tore. cleared, 10 acres binh. One mils
aud a quarter from church, wheel and pest officer.
For full partleulart apply to R. K. KNOX, Elva),
Ontario. 185544I
E1ARUFO SALE.—Fer sale, west half of Lot 12
and east balt of Lot 18, on the ileh concession
of MoKillop, containing 75 acres, in good slate of
cultivation, well fenced and underarained. There
is a log house, first- dam bank bernewith stone slab.
Ming,* geed beadle/ orchard and a never failing
orpring. 14 11 within miles of Sereferth and eon-
venient to wheel sad other convenienna Thie
farm will be eold cheap In nr eir to wind up the
estate. 11 net sold by the 10th ofeepril, will be
rented Apply to ARCHIE MENZIES, Wintisron or
HUHU GORDON, Seaferth. 1828 -if
Eta,RMS FOK SALE ALSO IIRIOK RVHDENOE
r IN inneFORTII, ONTaglet—The underelgned
ha e for setae number et choice feems.in tbis vicinity
all drat Mess lands with varying improvements. One
a good 220 awe gimes term. Plenty of money can be
made Out cif this and with little trouble, simply buy
-
tog cattle in sheepdog. grazing them for the sum -
met end selling in the fell. In fant'this Aloe his
mede money In this way, every year for the pet
thirty yew, Also a tine residence In Sea( wth with
about 4 acres of °tabard, gardens and pleasure
grouted' *0 40 had at a bergain. Terms reasonable.
Ter pinking,. apply te W. °OVERLOOK, Seaferth.
18$641
LIARS! FOR SALE —For sale, Lot 24. Concession
J 4 Townehicip of ificKilbpg containini 100 acres
of excellent bee Situated 2 mile. from he town of
Foaforth, ODO niile from church and school. Tilers
is a geed brick house and frame barn 'and faun:Mild-
Ingle/deo geed wells and windmill, well termed and
underdrained, 8 acres of excellent hardwood bush.
This farm in in exceilent condition we it Ms been all
seeded te grass for a ntmeber of ream Orotund of
°holes fruit trees. This is a moot conveniently. situ-
ated farm and suitable for either grain or *nook.
TOIDIS caw. Apple on the pretaiees or to Seaforth
P. O. JAMES LOCKHART. 185241
-LetOR SALE OR TO , RENT.—That deeirable pro
11 perty known at the ColPe homestead, in Eg-
teendrille. This property consists of 3 acres ot
- land on which It erected a mint erteble frame home,
aleo & good stable, which has been thoroughly over-
hauled thie pale summer and iv now as good as new.
This prnperty would make a comfortable home for a
retired farmer. It will be sold oheap and on easy
terms. For particulars apply to WM. ABERTIART,
Egmondville. 1877 -It
F'AI FOR SALE.—I'or sale, Lot 23, Concession
3, ideation, containing 100 acres, all pleated
and in a splendid date of cultivation, Well fenced and
well underthanied. There is on the pisee a good
Urge brick house and kitchen, two good barns, one
with stone stabling underneath, almost new ; mew
driving abed, pig pens and hen houses, Their is
plenty of geed water end e creed oroherd. There
HO eight worts of WI wheat, 10 memo Ian Plowed
endethe ingenue In grass. This is age et the best
farm* in the township and Is moat convenient')
tocstee14 being Only two mace fiQn1 tjeRfOrth, Foy
farther pertlealers apply on the Ineeelees or 044rovt
Hotor$1) I', 0 Til'0,4, W, Mh4lf9. itIetatf
rit IP/ OtIPA rOg gAlrXerrer PP, gelA
gomporos of 14 0, gonowion '14
tAir tee •; l( vitintiteok. It ffiitolli4
'10 on* of Hi*MLj fon, linei igel get -tenet *IA
14440.4(ofit gi-w*tr4 on the lank of ft* owl ?bora
tallfl Itis faird a itiftmof golf). citlikti 4 iot*lo44,
flo * atito tofetievit
offelerdretted mid h** it* !hone femme, Wok
tor* *nit driifto (Med, it kg adefetited td ilitrkett,
&ode, stet (Sae and diocese It * meat de.
eitable Wee slid will be Of& eliefip tied fin exile
tonna Di OW OiOttef tO sfettout to tette°. Apply
Pt.p. ontiset or oldtess oltA14011001( P. 0, etlia,
TifOileeeleftnge„, 188641
ARM FOR SALg.—For sale. Let 26, in the lot
Conoession of the township of Hay, London
Road, and tho south east part of Lot 27, adjoining,
containing in all 126 scree, more or less. The pro-
perty is all well fenced and drained and wellaeeded
down with the cxeoption of about te sem under
weeds. Tbere is i frame dwelling- house and bun
iox00, cow Mine, driving heueedebt() and large
sheet ever 100 feet long. Two rplendid wells, geed
new wind mill, platen and grandame of water.
There are Mort two geed orchards meetly Northern
Spies.- Tisk tine farm property le within li miles of
Itensell and the same, dletanee from Nippon and is
on the London teed. This land le No. 1 and will be
sold eheae and on tavorable terms as the pre-
priet ir Intenis giving up the farm. For particulars
apply te GEOROE eaTTY, er., tionsalleer to G. J.
altmattheNti, nowt eyancer, floneall. 18094f
F,OR D, in the village of Myth, con-
taining 10 scree of land. There is on the place
a handsome brink residence 26x46 feet with wing
1isx'24 feet, 2story, 22 foot 'brick wall with el tte roof.
The house contains eleven renins. 3 bay .Window, 8
vereadaha geed atone cellar full size of
frame ettelien and woodshed 13x24 feet. There are
hard and soft, water in the building and a good fur.
mien. There is also a brick driving house end stable
21x82 feet with frame addition 18x28 feet. The
groan to arc beautiful, commodious ornamen•
tatrrertf, shrubs and dowere in front. Also orchard
01 iiheice fruit trees, nearly 200 trees of appleS, near*,
plume, cherries, etc. Will be acid et a bargain.
.Fer 111 p,articrulare. ROO tbq Proprietress on the
OM* DI 0* HAMILTON, at Dlytte 18484f
THE OTHER FELLO'i S
APPEAL AGAINST Tri, EVILS OF RACE
AND SOCIAL PREJUDICE,
WITH .IESU T1IRO9 SAMARIA
l'eandid and Friendly Dealings With Hsieh
40thor ha Ali Cis ilt•latisas at L. lie
leceleated— Vale* et Trarei in Broad-
_
ening the Man's Horizon lt•yond th•
Faro!), Personal Aspects uf Things.
•
•
lored aimording to A et. of Puri's( Inenl,of Gait •
ado, m she your 1904 oy Wlliiam lituly,ut To- -
41, tha Det?,t t Agrioul Lure, 01, lawn.,
(i)
es, Cal., Feb. 23.—In this
Los Alige
Sern1Pri tlie preacher makes a, strong
appeal against the" evils of race and
social pechudice and in favor -of can-
did and friendly .dt...n.lings with -each
Other in an the relations of lee,
'rink text is Johne iv, 4, "And he
most needs go t !trough Samaria.' ,
No mair's education ii complete ‘
unless -he has traveled.. There is a ,
higher diploma 'than that. of 'late,
liarvard, Princeton, Oxford, Cam-
bridge, Heidotberg or the University
of Paris. 'The rough diamond muse
be cut, and • polished before it • can
sparkle and glitter and flash. The
scholar's raged metal edges- should -
be smoothed, CilT by personal cofitact
with. those -peoples whose histories
he - has been •studyiog as a ?twins()
and ak a delver in musty tomes.
To 'fully realize this scene hi which
our LOrcVe interview with the wo-
man took place one ."must needs go
through Sahnarra." I remember well
that . hill anice croivned - nith the
capital of- Samaria at the foot of
which• still- grow -the descendants of
those far fained olive groves, and
whose pathways are still 'resonant
with the personal histories of an
Ontri, an _Ahab, a. Ahaeiah, a Jehu,
a Jehoahaa, a—Joash, a -Herod Anti -
pas, a Herodias, a John the leapthet
and' the evangelist Philip. I- cannot
portray that scene so grand and
majestic in its- lonely beauty, but.
I would haat' you- realize. setae of
the cikehmstances which gash.: special
significance to that momentous jour-
ney of . our Lord and present sown
of the' reasons .w hy ' • 1 fe most needs
go 1 hrorigh Salt,Ceill.•• ,
One reason. 1 - think, was that
Jesus wished to reprove:racial anti-
pathy. . The ' Samaritan colonists
were interlopers, They Were not in-
digenous to ,the wit, After the
Simi maneseri a n co n quest -the Assy-
rian king conned away ten . out. of
the twelve 1 lebrew tribeinto cap-
tivity:. hen the eastern conqueror-,
having'd opulatecl the best part of
the - land "flowing with milk and
holley,". - I - , refleopled t with hu
own, folloWere. a in other words, the
Assyrian king gave to his own foie
I oWers a right to Settle upon and
cultivate and owu that land, just
as 'King .1 tunes .1 ; gave a charter to
William Penn foe the American tract
of land now MUNI PelllifiYIVtIllia and
Charles I, gave. a charter, to Lord
Baltimore to take Possession of the
present Fifth* of Ma ryInnele to be
settled by hith and his Catholic
friends, Aftpr the Jews had return-
ed from , the Babylorrish captivity .
and had rebuilt thea*Terusalem walls
and temple r they Wanted to drive
out these foreigh colonists from tlie
garden spot of Palestine. 1.3ut they
could oot. Year after year, decade
after decade and century after cen-
tury .the_S inweitans , held on to the
region lyip d i reedy bet ween 3 udaca
or ncrthel Galilee,. and the Jerusa-
lem eapiltal . There theeseen dwelt, ,
ready ,to slay any 'Jew or election
of Jews who. Attempted to molest
them. There they continued to
I
dwell, Each year the haired be-
tween i the two races grew more ' bit-
ter and mortal. , . .
. .
Though the .. manlaritan and the
Jew for centuries laid iived Side by
side, yet, they hated each other only
as a Cart lui gen ia n could hate a
Roman, a Moor could hate' a Casti-
lian, a. Turk could • hath an Armee-
late, a Mexican Antee could hate a ,
Spaniard. These taFie pee:416s hake&
each other • unto death, yet when
.J estis,- with the ,Object of setting at
rest the invidiotis comments of the
Pharisees on his rivalry of John the
Baptist, left ,l'Iltia.ett for his home in
Galilee he decided to pass through
Samaria. Ila did so, thong"' he was
fully p.wart4.- of t he _ fact that every .
man; isif oinah and child in Santaria.
fleeted ,the Jew as eery Jew heted.
the Samaritans: . .
By that journey Jesus .said to all
mankind: l'Th e mun with the fiat-
teniql nose and the thick lip of t he
negro and with t he aquiline - nose of
the I iebreftv and with the low fore-
head &)t- 't he . A ust mina n aborigines
and with , t her valveless 'hob of' the
Bengali a od wit h the stunted stat-
Lti'l of, the Eskimo and with the her-
- culenn form of tne Saxon .c.ttid the
gli4e•ulie Slav are All brothers. The.
.It', hes no right to hale the Se -
!towhee; .,.in it her . has the Samaritan,
a riteht to bete the Jew," .
',Out •through i he Samar' t an S110011.1
itPst? OW 41t,m, a4,(i the *Jpi,V itP.1' the
ehiekerileie him etude- hew the old
reehil oariehiere egaiest file i lableeW
pap., 4:..4 N.,:i3*i*4-44!) ei...rpitot it , ith 414
t.7,q4{4" t 0; ,:' 14,44', ' Piailit *rim:0in);
li,", ;:c.:17.;i: iiili,,,,,Init It,ii;ritilAttilif 46' 0)4,":141 .141ot
11,4 it et : f ,-,e,tt tuft, , it twte. Off ii twine Of '
(tie 11-t.: a f kik fi Ili 1, ;-:- tif tenefet f (e4e end
Xte-, tileri, , lie e, a il ifii'l$f 1 Ht. • V.1 ii# •
;threat 5e-7. fee eeht. 1 o in,A ti'n. IS- .
hind 1 o -fra- flaw*. loiltultuni;t• 1 reated if
than i, t. 1; (4% q. iiiIttF1,r1 I'. (mid allow
ally l!riti (s; tvo.itt It (17,1filf, tyrtite! 1.10
Vt
as a Jet( ! Whs thihrinerilehness of
the ghot to? . Ilecntige t.141.. gentile by
- i
seeers alai erohs. refuses to associate
with ' the Jew. therefore the Jew
finds u-,4'1 of 14 04 tiSSOC la t iOnS with
the. .14-e. : V*Ite. the public ridicule
a:gait-let e 04 es or !two %%hp are the.
great (-sr iiilitiltli•I'M SITHI 11111!4ters of
Int t•ter . and 'gel!) of t he es odd? Bee
erinten ft 'r, ren -et -ries the Jew had no
way ' of neakieg t. lik i Erg except .
through bar( er And ga in and as a
motley lender. 114 could itot hold
land, ;for 1 he pr nees and the people
would • rob hinf of his hind. Ife
could 'tea go 1, In o statecraft or into
the army, 'hecoehe there he was not
t
allowed to go. Though social re-
cognition in rer'ain regtOnS iii now
fiecorded to the 11/ nrew race, as
the Brie ish II o tale of e ores has been
opened, to thew, *..4, eN on to -clay
strong • ba rrier 1 0 se r ia 1 pre (11-1114*V 1
is the fact of tt.nnie Orlonging to
that race, a repre44•4 40 t i\ r• Of which
Shakespeare inosior aleted in Shy-
lock, thseertiej ithti n morseless credi-
RON EXPOSITOR
• I
ontend :tilat raeIai prejudice is
..ed tp the op rin elf (-twist and
• —stianity, and I base -nty
• ou Ibis. johrney that our Lord
..00k through Samaria; oecondly, on
count of the leeeon which Christ
.tanght in the parable of the ."good
Samaritan," • Whiela he spake unto
.the Arent lawyer -Who was trying
-to entrap' him by aj series of catch
questions., Thirdly, I plead for this
obliteration of social _prejudice be-
cause the Jew le not, only as honest
as the gentile, but mentally, moral-
' iy and physically is in every way his
equal, if not his superior.
equal is the Jew to the gentile in
the sweetness and Purity of his do-
mestic life. Not only are they faith-
ne as a race as husbands and wives,
ut they 'are also ,irreproachable in
heir eelations as parents and child -
nn. You never lueir a Hebrew girl
kitisulting 1141. mother. You never see
a Hebrew son sitting in the ptesence
if an old father when- that father
„kite to stand.' Phiat duty is always
.-:acticed in, the Helerew home, The
eebrew fireside is as pure and noble
as any gentile fireside.
A second reason, I think, why
nrist poist needs go through Sam-
aria wi.0.8 that he wished to reprove
a 'social prejudice, He held converse
on that journey with a notorious
female outcast. She was not a "re-
spectahle" sinner.. By that I mean
She was `not one of those able to
travel 'forbidden paths and yet cover
her sinful tracks so that the
world's prying eyes did not see
them. 'She waft not a hypocrite, liv-
ing two 'separate lives—One life
which made her outward reputation
good and another life which showed
her inner character to be bad, She
did not sin in secret, She sinned
openly. She was one who not only
openlysinned, but boastfully . and
defiantly seemed to glory in her sin.
To show her that he knew . how
stained was her life Christ said unto
her: "Tbou • hast Well said, I have
no husband. • For thou bast had five
. husbands,, and. bo Whom thou- now
hest is not thy husband." She was
a woman at that, tithe living in open
adultery. Yet it was to such a so-
cial outcast, as this that Christ of-
fered theO "water of life." It was to
such a human being as this that
Jesus resealed himself- and permitted
her to become a gospel messenger to
summon lher people to hear his dis-
course.
0 ye evangelists and gospel
preachers; why do we spend most of
*our time ' trying to oiler the "bread
of life" . .only to the "respectable"
sinners oi society, who . will not re-
ceive it? Why do we uot .do as'
Christ' did—go into the enemy's
country alrid talk with the outcasts
• by the Samnritan well, who are
willing—oh, so willing, to receive the
-gospel if we only go to them in
Christ's moue? Like the Samaritan
woman, have not the greatest 'sin-
ners believed in Christ and SOlne-
times .beeinue the greatest of his dise
chiles and martyrs? Have not the
Peters who denied -him thrice and the
Petits Who were oncc the greatest
persecutors of hie followers been
willing tO ,ieal their testimony for
Christ with their lifeblood? Who was
'Richard Baxter, who wrote "Saint's
Rest?" Once a notorious sinner. Who
woe- John Bunyan, the dreamer 'of
immortal dreams? Once a notorious
sipper, Who Was Fathdr Taylor, the
great sailor preacher of toston?
Once a notorious sinner. Who were
Harry Munroe and Jerry McAuley
-and Peter Cartwright and ,john Som-
erville and John D. Gough? All once
notorious sinnhrs. Ah, it is worth
while for us to take a long journey
if we can oniei ,send forth a "woman
of Satnaria"I els a messenger of Jes-
us Christ.. It isworth while to go
long distances—aye, • a very long die-
tanee—if, like the good Ananias, We
can only say rto the chief of sinners,
"Brother Saul, the laord, even Jesus
that appeared unto thee in the way
as thou earnest, hath sent me- -that
thou mightest receive thy sight and
le- filled with the Holy Ghost." It IS
for easier for Jesus Christ to save
a seventy deviled sinner who knows
'that he is all wrong than to AaVe a
eo-called "respectnble" sinner who
thinks that he is all right.
Christ was the Saviour of the so-
cial outcast at the Samaritan well.
'Vet the strange fact remains .that
most Christian evungelists' seem to
act upon the stippo.sition that it is
easier • t o save t he so-called "little"
sininer than !the big. We seem to be
unwilling to reach out -after the out-
cn See. •
Aoother reason why Christ- ."Inuat
needs go ,ehrough Sainaria'2 was that
he wanted 't o reprove ecclesiasti-
cal and religious prejudice. The dis-
ciples of John the Dapeist and of
,Tanus were antagonistic and jealous
of each other, just as the Episco-
palians and the Puritans were bitter
during t he third year of t he Flee -
mouth settlement. The disciples of
.1 ohn the Dant iste angrily declared
that. John had Leapt ized more feel ow-
ers than Jesus Christ , while .the fol-
lowers of .1 Peals angrily replied t hat
Christ had baptized more disciples'
, than John. le was in order to stop'
t this bitterness; 111,41 Jesus left J
tt-
llneft and si ailed ttnrt h toward fetke
kind went by the wily of Ha-
i-IA.1de- wes ieedy to JO ,
;moat emething to eon) the inteerini
dieeeneinee omelet tinge/
W1nn/1.11,1/ 'iwolit Win P -ti
'14 CHIttiof Wflitit
Piti. hei itgli 1101 y
Om%$11§
44 otf; for 1 ae Pi ter nhinee etore
eiter.eb flee volt 4.t 1,, g floOhl„,
ltuttelt:t1""i:;•;.!;etc:.:ry is it
Christian- rreof itt e another
I tr tort,1 lies ri! 11a!, 11 r:44trc!) (*krime
tho-man of rb. teoeld into their
midst ith ili
the gospel."
there are seri
church es :in this lard which are proc•
tically some,• t1 iheee,eion to the
world instel t• 1111614M lutr-
mony. They, k re rent and t orn into
factions by jietereel strife. The
Young People s eoviety is pulling -
against the .sseen the session is
ending fault i4 i h board of trus-
tees; the La lire,' ;Aid
stalking heeatist4 its members do izo 1.
like the minis or a wife. nst end of
people of 1. he ehureit,
gettmg t eget wr .1 t:'ur
cuell, Other an i tr! nic, t.o help each
other for the ood ell 1 he church they
arc now ma re tonne each tit heir •s
faults and mi Mg each t't hers vir-
tues.
Want of 5!,e1 .linrinony in
church, alt hough 11 be composed of
only a long sorb s 01 lilt le iret inns
and disturbanta will after aWhile
*en erinet ing peace oth
. my brut her,
res and hundreds of
t he Christian '
excir eut the ye's blood end kill the
Institut esS of a church, Indeed, the
little church disturbances, like the
little sins of life, are reore to he
dre d than the great church tor-
nadoe which, -.may arise and sub-
side fsi a day; In church work, the
little JfrlctIons, the little bitterness-
; es, t 0 little "fault findings," like
the f tal leeches of the Teester Val-
ley, an destroy the spiritual life of
any church. Christian friends, as
with ,phrist when he took his Sa-
rnaritian • journey, pray hard, saeri-
flee, Plead, apologize, overlook fanc-
ied Jesuit, do anything and every-
thing in your church family that iv
hono able rather 'than have ,one pew
un0htlstianly find fault with anoth-
er pcv, A -forgiving layman bowing
at th mercy seat la just, as essen-
tial ther church harmony as a forgiv-
ing minister breaking the bread and
pourlfrig out the Wine at the table of
i the Iioly cotarhunion.
' L tly I think Christ took this
Sam ritan journey to prove that the
short st way in life's work is gener-
ally he best way; This , is not abso-
-Intel an invariable rtile, but it
hold. good in nearly every ease. The
&inn ry of Samaria lay directly be-
tween Jerusalem and Galilee. It was
as much between these two regions
as the State's of Indiana and Ohio
Ile irk the direct line between New
York and Chicago. But, because the
Jew hated the Samaritan he would
not go through the Samaritan land.
Therefore, he made a big detour. in
one Sense he made as big a detour
as the traveler coining from New
York to Chicago would make if he
went by the Way of Louisville, Ky.,
instead of by the way of Buffalo or
Pittsburg. Christ in journeying to
Galilee pimply took the straight
path. Be went as a bird would fly
-overland. He went to Galilee
through Samaria.
The straight path is nearly always
the Iiight path. When that young
mark, comes into your store and asks
for Li, position, if you helve not any
vacant place for Win tell him so. Do
not .say to yourself, "Now I do not
want to hurt that ooung man's feel-
ings, therefore I will tell him to
cony back next ; week or next
month," By such an answer you are
doing an injustice to the young man,
and you are doing an injustice to
yourself. The shortest way out 01 a
diftieulty is generally the right way.
-Evea for a surgeon it is never a
pleasant act to drive a knife into
the cluivering flesh to cut out the
Vint' ent cancer. Neither is it al -
way a pleasant task to ten a per-
son of hi h,ults. But When that,
young girl wh is doing wrong Conies
to you for a vice tell ler the truth,
Warn her as you would like some
one to warn your morally endanger-
( ed child. The direct way out of a
j difficulty is generally the right way.
So, my brother„ when you yourself
have don* wrong—wrong to your
fellow men end wrong. to God—be a
,Christian man and straighten out
the • wrong and make restitution for
your moral _deficiencies. Confess
your sins to God. The shortest way
out of a difficulty .is generally the
right Way—the Chrietian way. Tinre-
fore, 0 man, 0 Woman,, will you not
to -day at the Samaritan well seek
Christ and ask his pardon for your
sins? Will you not, do as did . the
60Cial • outcast who at the Samari-
um well found there her Saviour -
many centuries -ago?
The Word "Samaria" as a Christie
refuge in -all probability will always
iticoin more to me than to any one
else gathered to -day. within these
walls. On the afternoon of Oct. 26,
3804, with a. brother minister, (1. 13.
Trout by name, 1 was resting among
the Palestine hills. Our dragoman
bad left us _some two- hours before
to hunt up a, saddle -bags which had
fallen from my horse. While there,
intone and unarmed, we were attack-
ed .by the eastern bandits. We were
iti tacked in almost . the identical
place where, three Weeks before., two
English travelers had been slain. We
were driven back and back to the
edge of the precipice. I saw the
club raised to strike down my com-
panion and knew that my turn was
to come next, wheri succor and res-
cue suddenly came to hand„. That
night was dark when we -ended our
journay in Samaria, but, oh, in the
darkness what joy- and peace came to
us both when, by. the Samaritan
well, we knew that, .we at last had
safety! As we found physical refuge
in Samaria on that Oetober night
so may you find spiritual safety. 0
man, 0 woman, for you, too, Christ
"must needs go through Samaria!"
Not for .that degraded woman alone
wak that journey taken. The revela-
tion of himself- that he made
by that well is an: eloquent invita-
t ion to all in every age to come to
hint, fOr the "Water of life." Are you
weary with the troubles of the Way?
Are you athiret for the water that
will satisfy the longings or your
scant? Are you fearful of the grave
and the judgment of God? Come to
the well and hear him say that to
al 1!;who come he will living
water, whereof if a man drink he
shall never die.
'in rrerersienais.
l4rhen Professor ltoki t anski of
V) meta was ask. ed if he hud any SQ1)3
hp answered, "Fhphr."
nd whnt. pfrofeesione have the),
nt son?"
Two Mt's,' And t we heal," woe
11» itiinribe 171)P/ -
A tinfoils of hi:t. Min* firo 1)0101 -
PT§ ultd tin' tither !teo *pie din info,
TIMBER IN RIVER BEI)S,
PUIPI tiff Aeertnim 1114' itteetitetk tiff a
Iletioyd d Itereover It
"if some scheme could be devised,"
said a Stillwater DI !nn.) man, "by
which the sunken logs which fihl the
beds of rivers and creeks in the log-
ging sections of this country could only
be recovered, immense fortunes would
be made. Along the St. Croix waters it
is estimateti that logs enough are im-
bedded in the sand of river bottoms to
keep mills running for years. Under
present conditions the loss is total, for
no Successful method has ever been de-
vised to effect this saving.
"Occasionally logs cut years ago are
forced by the washings of floods from
their sand beds and driven upon the
shoees, where the action of sun and
wind dries them out sufficiently so that
theyi will float down stream, but the
p-ertntage of logs recovered is small,
and millioes of dollars' worth of prop-
erty Is lost heyoud recovery until some
enterprising genius invents a machine
or process to recover the timber.
-- "Al Stillwater logs occasionally come
to tie sorting boons bearing marks in
appear the Old lumbermen grow rettm17-
use Ilaif century ago, and
Wilma of men who have been long
forgotten, but who were important
operators in the pioneer logging daye
of Wisconsin and Minnesota.
"No possible estimate can be mode
of the amount of timber thus Iota. but
lumbermen estimate that the rivers of
'Wisconsin, In the value of the loge
buried in their liands. have fortunes of
millions of del rs if the logs eould be
recovered, Wits onsin has been one of
the big pine tates, and your Chip-
pewa, Wiscons n, St. Croix and Me-
nominee rivers and their tributaries
contain fortune in sunken timber.
"Strange as 1 may appear, the value
of the thnber is not lessened. even after
it has been ' bmerged for half or
quarter of a ee tury, Efforts have been
I occasionally m de to recover sunken
logs. At one ante a conipany was or-
ganized at Still ater to dredge streams
and thus reco er some of the timber,
but the plan 4id not work ivith any
great degree of success, this method
being found too expensive. Some one
will come aIoni some day with a plan,
and this frame sely valuable iiroduct,
now lost will be recovered."
1,
Rest is the 3weet sauce of labor.—
Plutarch.
To read with ut reflecting is like eat-
ing without dIg1Sting.—Burke.
Better a Intl chiding than a greitt
deal of heartbr ak.—Shakespeare.
Repentance tke golden key that
opens the pale e of eternity.—Milton.
A straight II e is the shortest in mor-
als as In mat ematics.—Maria Edge-
worth.
Think twice efore you speak or act
once, and you will speak or act the
more wisely fo Re—Franklin.
There Is no 1 possibility to him who
stands prepar to conquer every haz-
ard. The fear14il are the failing.—S. J.
Hale:
There never was a person who did
anything wort1 doing that did not re-
ceive more t an he gave.—IL W.
Beecher.
Refinement eates beauty every-
where. It is thle grossness of the epee-
tator that dieovera anything like
grossness in th4 object.—Elazlitt.
Itratn.
The brain 1 an important organ,
serving as it 4oea to keep the head
from collapsing. Almost all styles of
doing the hair all for a head ef some
sort. Again, there is nothing like a
bead tosetoff a fine neck. Finally, we
should feel rather foolish without our
heads..
For a long time scientists were una-
' ble to discover 'why it is that the brain
Is divided into White and gray matter.
it remained for a clever French Havant
to solve the difficulty.
"Quite likely,'t said he, "the loud col-
ors had not yet porno in when man wan
created."
Psy6hology deals with the organie
aspect of thought. To psychology we
owe the knowledge that calt's brain
----------good soUp.
•
Mr Cella Camobell's Cilaastaaisa,
Sirken.the Duke of Wellington Was hi
lMIae "discoypred". the soldier who
afte*ard became Sir Colin Campbell.
That dashing warrior was in the co*
tufssariat service and had volunteered
tor an.assault on a. hill fort The duke
sty *little round man run up a ladder
Rad, recebing a pike thrust at the top,
roll down like a, ball to the bottom. Ile
Intik liowevqr, up again in an instant
and, tirtnitt; up like a squirrel, was
the tirst or among the first in the place.
The duke laughed, inquired about him
and procurethim a commission.
•
Ilifidttlerts infoirusrlit.
When an 4vertimid visitor from tho
Iffy once commented to the poet Whlt-
tier upon the insecurity ,that seemed
inseparablo from so many doors open-
ing out from all aides of the largo old
country, home, tite master of the house
strove gently to restore confidence by,
pleading 1.1m4 mopt of them were lock.
• ed at night • •
Not to liss Thong/ft Of.
Mrs. Newlywed—Yes, Harry has only
one fault, dear fellow! He will smoke
cigarettes. Mrs. Oldgirl—Why don't
you break him oft it? Mrs. Newlywed
—And. leave. me nothing to scold him
about? No, indeed!
Layison Down the 'Law.
Lady (entertaining friend's little girl)
—Do you take sugar, darling? The Dar-
ling—Yes, please. Lady—How many
lumps? The Darling—Oh, about seven,
and when I'm out to tea I start with
tate.--aPii nett
esamrcemiumeiceniwini
Relteff Reduced,
The gtleon's fJoL.eI, TOMO* Batiks
from f -2,M) pr 44y, with bath from
pt dve 104-9
-
This Bey was
Yisak and Languid
Mi pareat4 beeAtlid *termed and used 10r,
Chase's Jerre food wifis splendid remits.
MRS. OZORGE F. BRIsBIN, Lake Street,
Peterbore', Ont., states :—" One of my chil-
dren, a boy of about fifteen years, did not have
good health for a year or more. He seemed
to have no eeergy, was weak and languid and
suffered from nervousness. . The doctors said
that he was growing too fast, but we bccakne
alarmed about him, and
begae using Dr. Chase's
Nerve Food. It was not
long wail we noticed
great change in his con-
dition. His appetite im-
proved, he had a better
color and soon became
etronger and heelthier,
lie is still using, the Nerve
Food, and we are perfect-
ly confident that he is
improving right along
under tins treatment,"
Dr. Chase3 Nerve Food, the great blood
builder and nerve restorative, so cents a box,
at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates and Co.,
Toronto. To protect yee againit imitations
the portrait and signature of Di. A. W. Chase,
the famous receipt book autliera, are on every
box °Ibis rcmcdci.
*
Stands any Test
The most severe judgment of the expert tea taster pronounc
Blue Ribbon Tea absolutely the best. Why?
It is free from tannin and other bitter substances—no coa,
fibrous leaves employed in its making.
The taste is pure, rich and creamy—that narneless qual. ity th
signifies to the expert and lovers of true tea that it is the
leaves and shoots of the tea plant properly cured.
IS ue Ribb
evion Te
40c. =db.
11111/aalg, Mired
Carlon Groom
Azle for
Rod
t. John
spe'
id 414:-':
as
Bt
gr. Chas.
4r
ea uPrig!'. t P04
-vertousii
egrhing-
cher'
a hot'
Established 1879
Whooping Cough, Croup
Bronchitis, Cough Grip,
Asthma, Diphtheri
CRESOLENE IS A BOON TO ASTHMATICS
Cazseerene is Along established iind standard iernedy for the diseases indicate&
cares because the air rendered -strongly -antiseptic is carried over the diseased surisoes
of the bronchial tubes uith over breath, giving Prolonged and constant treatment,
Those ,.f.. consUmptive tendencv, or sufferers from airoote bronchitis, find immeduit4
relief from coughs or inflamed ce5nditiens of the throat. Descriptive booklet free.
IDEILIIING, MILES at CO.. 1851 Notre Dame St., Montreal, tatnadlen Ag
Cresolene
Antiseptic Tablets
4.••••••••••=•m.....
dissolved in the outh are effective and
coughs and irritation of the throat.
lee a box. ALL DriuGGisra
THE. '‘.GREAT tiSli
-ewe ese illechhes•relehhheitetheileteeleMi
Spring Goods are Amvin
AMAAAAAAANVINAt
We have just received a consignment of beautiful Lace insertioni
fancy lace collars for dress trimmings, izz the very newest designs, sises
consignment of Lace Curtains!,
A splendid rot of Dress Shirts for men and boys.
A large _consignment of Boots and Shoes.
In the above lines we can save you mono y, as they We bought
the raise in prim.
Also to hand a large consignment of Trunks and Valises.
We have still some snaps in Winter Goods,
Any quantity of Butter and E .g3 taken in exchango for goods.
..-1:::therenee eine,
a
PRETORIA° BLYT
em nd
• .4c". ess t
eh" hsh
: roe vs.oe •,?,ait
Cartaild: -mr.; , 11.1..t.tu • • ;. evroiercialeitterpriees aro devel-
oping so eepeny eteer te. -i4,11 4i prepekly trained1.911tii311.4.z5
else' ker :le it lee) ie very large city ;eel town ia
greater then the eikenhe. .111-4 t y !-I1114•1;t iron1 the ; ..roAt City
r•;:*44:1**.:*.d. g%* j,ciditoKly Trot Whit 0
bitn•it.
y t.e.4.v1ti-fra of the teed t;
leiehhet fh`e'..kee
4*44tv,4.
Si.•••.:11ii.. 4,r l.*.r LI I Id
;ttit' t,
;.. 1111.. ,r),• a.Vie
Th,- tinta eeee-v
or Si-teeth:Jed i teal
the cee aa 11 need: tree
e
Pf' L
lets-M1/47...tlearereelgratte"-'-":
e_.
11111 t4) 0
in either Lusinese
a. etre: oat. year ;
raaa ler a postal.
43
•••..
Y. M. C. A. Buloreeree, LONDPit
'Vida Winter Weather
gegen eet,
We are right in the midst of it—that is, the midst of wilt
and by this time you will have found the cold spots in y
1)9n't delay gettiog them eleeed up the
might be serious, Ntter far have a small elothing
big 4oetvr'e MIL We 0411 promiho for yon, Art4 ail
grivtion to the very LItter, Drop fp, g0,9 ginpo of our
cold ilefim,
B CHT BROS
11/101.18BERS,
"PORTE
,SFASON HE
• 4 6
11.4.
The season for the 1ooking about for Furniture is at hand. The
dos let matter, but the quality is everything. We can sell you any
but only one quality, and that is the best.
An inspection of our stock would prove a mutual pleasure and benefit.
111111X6117111111111M11111.10mml
This department is complete with a large selection of the best oodvi
obliging attention given to this branch of the business.
Night calls promptly attended to by our Undertake Mr, 8, T. Helm
Goderich street, SeAforth, opposite the Methotlistt ,church.
BRO
FOOT BOX & •
A 'WO I-4..
A
r.
SUTAI
I