HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1904-08-12, Page 614STATE FO
hlf FOR SALE.—Good homeliteld 100. acres,
le the township -of 2:Sortie. Heron County.
pertieldere eTply to E.. W. BRUCE, Long
the Toweshio of Hullo% Morris, s,nd Wawa -
emit, Comae of /tenon. Inquire at oe.
0431P.13E.LL, Bled], Ont. ireett
proper or farm lands in the 7rtevinot
with tis is rolicited, end full information,: given
No. 527 Main street, Winnipe_g,Maulotoba. 1 tif
ARK FOlt 8ALE OR TO RENT.—For Belem. to
rent; a good 100 acre fermi being the East half
of Lot 19 and the West half of Lot 20, cm the,9114
Concemion et MoKillop. 14 is all seeded to grase.
There are ten acres of good bush, There is a wind.
• aud epriag :Reek. It le well fenced aed eon,
vectientty attended. Appiy to or address ARTHUR
BE 10 -MOR SIN."
PUT YOUR$ELy I HIS PLACE
ARM f SALIL—Being north half of Lot I7
Coneemion 4-, L. R. S„ TuOkettemith, cents.%
Ing 100 funee, 44 scree eeede-d to grass and the bal
lance in birth. Gravel house, good well at door an
a emelt Orohard. It is situated 6 miles from Sea
fee -Attend 21- mites from KIppen and 1. mile front
hale sedretee. -For anther Polftleulme1
21.1iRIAN' McKee'. 1011x4
—OUSE AND LOTS FORIIALE.—Foksale, briek
house and 2 lots in Sestorth. One lot iseee
-• pith Main Street and the other' on Weft Wilt
Sweet. The house la a oomfortsble brick
coleoge end contain* 8 bedrooms dining room, sit,
-;rtg room mid kitchen, with gooil cellar under the
whole home, Herd and soh 'oratorio the homier
There is elm a good stable and driving shed. All
kiede of fruit on tbe kit. Apply to J. L. ALLAN,i
ARK rOR 8AL:ft.—South ball of lot 83, metes
slon 16, Goderioh township. 40 acres, good
eine 5 acre* fall wbeat, good frame houSe add
, a good cellar, soft and herd water, !ratite
frame 'tables, sheelthotterfeekplg,pene..
erdaillneepting creek inns WINO lithe
• be sold, els the proprietor it not Able to
-It It is a quieter ,of a utile from a school -
two ranee -trent (Hinton. Apply tie WALTON'
BOTIeWORTIle ote.the pedinIsese se 01/Mon P. .0.
MU 3
T• oefashi
oellent
ilealinth one ea
brket
rateedee
reentis
abet
sited fano' Mid'
PAM
LE.--1Foreele, Lot 24, Coneetelon
of oontaining 100 acne
itifeketed 2 miles from the town of
from -then* and school. There
Avid frame bank and. outbulid.
misdeal% well lament and
dereiof egeelleet hard* bush,
-MUM eendition as it has been WI
a ettanbeeisillafe. OrOkOWd Of ,
-tor' tear gaga or Vockf
Id
e, L. R. ii.. Teeketemith, contaloing 100 -sores,
I . kelt ctieitenteted.in et good state of *mitt.
lade zed elegfemistk4red nedirdrained. There is
a g barn 80x66 fee* With 111 9 foot stone wall ,
tend lathe Twe . implement; Ileums and two
frame meals', '.. hisieridh. also ilk good frame home
ret.
-ler*. :There fair 1 house on the corner of the
farm. Posseision, ' beim& three weeks after
e, ,For fur er particulars apply to OHAS.
fbiRST -OL ABS BIOUTY-ACRi FARM FOR SADE
—Beieg Week. part of Lots 1 and Commie
loft 2, L. R. Tuekeesmith. Goad ' concrete; 11
Waned 4048, with kitohen, woodshed and
boistosttsehed. -There is anew Welk barn
with wing extending- ta the south, 24' feet.
Also Wickert:et:ad reothouse, 40 feet long, under
gangway. All buildings in good repair. Orchird
oontaine two feed a half acres of cholas winter fruit.
There are twci never falling welle, 6 mores of bush.
This farm is la a good etote of cultivation, well
fenced sued underdreined, situated 2 miles from the
village of 11811641. For further particulars apply
'CAM FOR 8ALE.—For sale, Lot 26, in the 1st
• Concestion of the township of Ray, London
Road, ancr the south east part of Lot 27, adjoining,
containing in 411126 acres, more or less. The pro-
perly is all wellfenced end drifted and well seeded
_down with Ihe exception of about 16 acres under
wotedls. There is a frame„ dwelling house and barn
40x60, cow honee, driving home. stable and large
shed over 100 feet long. Two splendid wells, good
new wind mill, ptimpe and abundance of water.
There ere also two ;good orchards mostly Northern
Stele& This floe farm property is within intim of
Heneell and the same distance from gippen and is
on the London, toad. Thie land is No, A and will be
gold cheat) and on faverable terms as the pro.
Pdetor intends givingup the farm. For me:deniers-
MIAMI FOR SALE.—Lot 11, Comment 8, Kul -
X tett, containing 100 sores of land, al/ cleared.
and in -fine conditiore• It is. at peesent all seeded to
greeseand in goad shape either ror hay, pasture or
eropplug. There is a eumforteble frame house with'
sweater kitchen attatehed, two barns, orte al x 60
feet and the ob er 80 x 60 feet, and othetoixt build'-
. This far le attested Dille miles from Sea-
th,peven and one tall- miles from Clinton and
one mile and a quarter frorn the village of
rag
fot
Woburn, where there are two general Atm, two
bisokeraith ehops, poet effete and school. Thia farm
'sateen situete4 and will be field obeap as the pro-
prietor is atixiou f to sell. Few further particulers
apply to R. e. Ileete, 13 Artister, 8eaforth,ear on the
promisee. W11,614.H.LEITCR, Constance, Ont.
VARII FOR SALTd—For sale in the town' ship of
U Tuokeramith, Lot 1„ Joneession 8,- containing
100 acres, nearly all clearrel and ia a good state of
to-ultivation, newly euderdreined, welt fenced, two
od Thee* le on the pilule a good comfortable
ratne house, large new hank barn with brink base-
ment. driving tourer, hog pen end large hen house,
about an acre of young orchard just beginning tet
'bear. The farm- le neatly all ,seeded to grass, and, is
in excellent oomilition for eieher grain growing or
etoek ratting. Thle excellent term is well situated,
,being two mike from eohool, pest office, store and
ItiwUrnith`, shop, and six reties from Seaford:1.
Stood reads in all direetions. Buyers should opine
end see the terra whilethe crop le on. Ponesflon
ean be given after harvest. Apply on the premises
leafed
MIA11318 FOR SALE. --For sale. Lot 9, Conoemion
II el, L. R. S. Tuokeramith, 100 acres, all cleared
hut 15 Amos. 10 °eaves of hardwood and 6 acres of
cedar. Theta kJ a Inge uew frame Iseuse, two
geed barns aod other outbuildings, plente of water
and a good orchard. It is within 2e milee of Hell-
feelefion of letbbertrpontaluine 160 notes, nearly all
seeded to gross. A. itood Wok beam and two goad
bftnk berm and drivieg abed. Thies farm( is ao well
known that a further desoribtion Is 'unnecessary.
ft is one of the beat firma 131bbert. Either or
both of these farms will tve sold cheap r s the prop.
welter is not able to work them both. Apply on the ,
Ribbed term or addrees Cromerty P. .0. W. L
eloGAREN Haag
WARN FOR 8ALE.—Lot tido. 1, on Coneefeeton 12
olearixi, well fenced and drained and In a high
home and two good bank barns and other outbuild.
Inger two never feeler, we* and two good bearing,
orcherds. It adjoins the village of (lhiselhurat, tor
whieh there Is a datly midi, and Is within four
sleteaof Heerlen. ,Zre term le one of 'the beet kr
the township and will be *old on easy terms as the
nroprletor desires to retire on a-eoount of had'
health. Hell the purohare money eau remain on
interest for a terra of year& Appiv on the preeekets
or address Chleelberet P. 0. ROBERT .NEWEL
Farms for Salo.
180 acres, lieron Oeunty,,well improved,
good soil, choice leeatiort, at eight price.
160 acre farm,. aurora Couutta tileY lcgono
good house, large barns, a good property.
AO. acre .fo.rm near Seafortn, all nuder
grass, ewe be bought at price well within
value anc1 on eo.sy terms.
; 100 sere term near Seaforth, good build-
ings, fertile soil.
154 acres near laucknow, extra geed
baildinge, on ease* tonne.
THE 4TERCOLOHIAL
REAL:P(00'Y, LIMITEO
London, Canada,
R. S. HAYS, Agent, Seaforti h
B. S. PHILLIPS, Agjent,
1907-52
Property in)Blyth fpr Sale.
Building LOta-V. fe 5. on best
also 2 coveter lots on Drummond 8
nor quatter -acre an got , Appl
rt of gueee St ,
Patinas Illumined
the Facts hf the
?day SynatioUeed
Interpret the Rol*
range &tying at
lelne- Apocalypse
t ered according to et or, f PilT1180.32 en to Of Can •
ads.. in the year 1904..by William Bente ot To -
Los itrigeWs, Cal.
enchanted realm Pet
tion given to ter
sea. The text is. RA
"And there was no
Who was the wri
his feet. planted
derstiSied before one
way 'grasp the Inca
of my text.. Indeed, to properly ape
or the actions of
rst put 'ourselves',
this ceuditiOn
then, 'earuuet etre
-biblical writers'',
to interpret , the
the darkest data
rigreSSnitkak Dixon
entehod the 'White
of his colleagues
Aug. 7.—In this
taken ireto. an
cath the waves,
mystery of the
er? Where Were
hen he saw . the
describes in his
ocalypse? These
stehe clearly un -
Cali aeY true,
inh of the words
p.reciate. the words
any maxt hve most
in that man's place
Wit-' undemtand
everirday -fife. Why
put ourselves in tit
placeaeWhets we -try
holy book? ' During
of tho Civil War C
of New. Xork 4ikate
House with selong
vrhicit ho and some
as through. Then
believe yoe and
truly honeet nem
those criticisms
arati on. But the
ws do not put
ace. If ypu did,
bout what I Ben
how will fix.
patitintly until -he
your 'friends were
when yon drew le
trouble is you fell
YOurselyee in my p
you would do just
those matters., th. te go hone' and
row and tell ti e result, anal
will dee just le at ou want me to
detH
Con_gressman. 11,1 said: "I went
back to 'my ho at eveeing with
.my head high! nong the cloeds,
'white said I self, ',Lhicoln said
I want him e to
that • night •Clen-
He laid th.e white
upon his desk ant
what he wanted Li
hirn to find any-
) Because the
in the president‘s]
felt he weuld do'
s doing and had
ay caute I did
,"neither did e 1
the next. Above.
White House. A
he called out,
did y °et not beep
tht; day
after leer coriversat ion?' 'Because I
was ashamed to d. so.' '.Ah, pee,'
said hfincoln, *I II Ought you would
not donee back.
ferent when you p
manta place, than
them - from an
first put ourselVe.'
place. irk the' first instance, we
notice, he is an ol
work was neaely q
eighty looks at coi
and on earth dill
way a young man
at them. Tho stru
to St. John very
For years he had
Ephesue, in Asia,
el t
he will do aey hin
do; that Makes me
But after slipper
sheets of peper,
bhga ir to plan.
coin to' do, The
difficult -it was for
thing to write. „ W
more he piit himself
, Plate', the more he
just 'as Lincoln w
' not go to the Wh
Congressman D'xon
go the next da,s or
lic reception at the
sident saw erre 'aut
'11 elle; Dixon! :wily
your appointment
Ile actions and
Tear, entirely- &f-
t yourself in that
to rightly
y text, we must
ditions in heaven
et twenty 'looks •
rgles of .life wore
real and iritense,
berm a' mighty fact or.; the spread-
ing ofe the gespel hroxigh ail those
rogione. He lead a ifferod Vit. Christ.,
he had almost beer. mahtyred. , The
t notice, is, that
, Like Napoleon
knew that in all
never agaia go
woek. tinder the -
(Mel island of the
herefore the sea
seCond fact we rau.
St. John is an exil
at St. Tfelente, he
back to hie earthly
this lonely, roek-bo
Mediterranean. `I
meant more to' hen than it might;
shall try, to 'show, Fuld, the "Sea Of
Hate" ;, thirdly, tlei "Sea of Separa,-
tion" ;, and f earthily, the "Sea of
Spiritaistl Otruggle. I' By put ting our-
ili.
upon the ;Island of -)atinos, ). believe
we can sytmbolize alh these facts.
sted. Do we have th go to Earl °hen-
• man• ,. woman or eh Id ever stood up-
ilon the beach and 1 oked off epon the
- mighty deep and nht wondered about
the Olepths -that no
ever yet been able
scientists have unr
t he sea' s rarest cries .
,the ;world that kher
currents flowing ov
'd i St, re n t directions,
perrents of -the 'air
naut to joureeY in
another. By; deep
have brought up
?man depths the p
deposit' perhaps or
They have captured
. which have never b
fathom line -hits
to sound? The
.veled a few of
They h eve shown
-are different sea
r ohe another in
as the different
allow ahe aero -
one direction or
ea" drothhog they
rom the lowest
imeval ooze, the
Anions 'of years.
strange creatures
en seen before by
the eyes of man. The results- of
their investigations have been col-
lected into one of the greatest of
'`1„• look of Oceanogriiihtr." But, after
all, though some qf ,the °coati's my.
most of those snyeteries are as yet
unraveled. They will always remain
as se.yeteries until suitable apparatus
leas been invente,d by'i rosins of which
it
ure through the pat of the sea now
Oh, the raYsteries cif the sea! Who
has ever been able to describe them?
It was my Privilege, soMe wedks
ag 42 , .t.Q, aVe Z.0111.0 311. 't,i).9 jiyonkiere 01 &Roam jiattinz nil gouty 0,,, .,s,t,
elle iniirlity Seep. tools_ sluff apsa 111 -
CZIO
went there for the fishing. I had .Asii0 allarereci what., ea Peet
**alai away back in the east of the OSA fliier Describe.
N'S caiderful sea Sport at that place.
Three DoOters
I heard it was no unusual sight to Baffled. :
ehe there three arid four or five jew- ..
Se Catharines, Ont.,
flea brought hi eaca weighing upwaxd a Wst. MILLER,
of 300 pounds.; that some fish had t :---," My daughter Mary, when six months
beee ceught there 'weighing 'over 500 old, eontracted ease= end for tbret years tise
disease baffled all treatment. Her case was one
phunds. These fishermeri-had told nee
of theworst that had ever came under my nedce,
that there swam the tunaeethe garn4 and she a be, re, !idly suffered Nv.hat nO pen could
est fish of all the seas. There are ever
I had three different doctors u-
tile yetheertails and the barracudas tend to her all to now-
- pose whatever. Finally
and the rock' base and the tvhitefish
I decided 10 tey Dr.
and scorea of other fish, Brit though
Chase's pintment and 52
1 saw. ildli caught at Catalina° Weigh --
liar surprise she Immo-
in e 360 pounds. the mbst marvelous diately begin to improve
sight by far that I OVCr witnessed and was completely cure
ed of that long standing
there was tvieat NVOS reVettled to me
disease. That was foes
in the depths of the sea, by the glass
years ago when we lived
at Cornwali, Ont., and
A strong ' muscled oarsman, who
knew every nook end corner .of that
coast, rowed ue out. The centre' of
the boat had no keel, but, instead, a 1,,
glass flooring,. :AS we rowed on we be, Se
eould See down - and down, fifty, Superintendent, writes :—" 1 am acquainted with
sixty, Seventy and, 'eighty
evere the -rocks, plied up in incon-
way misleading or untrue."
eertneus forms, like unto the Bad 1 luir
Ointment 60 ceets a bee., Portrait 1
Lands of the Dalfhtase There, were Or.
of Dr. A. W. Chase ea every
leans Of roCks, dismantled fortressei. And
ie. crocks, :crunablieg cathedrals in
roeksS shattered Masonry - in reeks,
whole fallen Jerichos in rocks, py-
ramids and palisa,des were in rocks.
mensities and itifinities of rock. In
, yonder caVerie 'a, diet', herMitilke, was
dwelling. We could see his 'bead: as
he silently kept vie, watching the
other , fish- swim . by.. New darted
pest hundreds Of thousands of sardie
nes, chase& hy * larger 110h, In those
depths, as en th.e land, the "survi-
val °tithe fittest" is:the law -of lifer -
the biirlieh eat the smaller Oh. "
. Now we poem to be pushing 'our
eway into -the War e , arta ands,
i Whole gardens of Vegetables ,seenato
be planted upen the rocks, lifttaX of
ithose 'farina' of 'vegetable: = life -are
-named after the tableefoods We grow
in our cOuntty gardens. There are
i the waving wheatilelds and silken
i beirdeddcorn just ready for the huske.
i• .ed With clover topS. ItTow we seem
:to be entering the Iedian and African
and snarled together. They- wail. tO
take up9n themselves all coloringS,
Here are the ; long,i .clinging vines,
theee the !bread, leaves and the nare
row leavee, the short leaves and the
1Chig leaves. Naar. the bare rocks ap,...
. pear egain and _seem to be like mete
mighty mountains in thOr int:three-
SiVeness, crying: "Coine, Man, dome,
and = take my gold! , Come ande take
- my silver! My benem are copper, my
heart is iron; come.' and take, my
shoart is iron; come and take: my
het
, Wealth I:" Ei we wandered on, ,peer-
ing into t is stritage !and unknown
world, I say to myself: "There are
the revealed mysteries of ahe sea
seventy feet deep. W,hat mast be:the
mYsteries of the sea lunidreds of feet
deep,. miles deep, uhfethomably deep?
What must be the mysteries of. the
sea when the 'hew' fish, evoi(ghing one-
half thousan.d pounds, rubs up has. n ot only symbolic . of external
; side against the •whalei weighing eteateeiee,
but also of an , inward
I thousands Upon - thousands . of spiritual strife. When St, John: gave
' houhds?" Yes, the I sea ,de a mYse .his heart hto Christ, in 'one senee he
tory; a great unfathemable mystery,. . was emancipaaed from sin. But Satan
What the mysterions sea -was to never. for en instant, this side of the
the lonely exile lookinh -off apon the grave, leaves off his" struggle to zap-
efediterraneare God always has been tare a gospel stronkholchd The 33ible
and always will be to us on earth.. declares a Christian ' shall not be
He is a mystery. Fe kno* that he tempted by a sin-- greater than he ean.
created the world, hut how? . We can- bear. But Christiatis always have to
not -tell. We know that in the be- be going to Christ for more spiritual
ginning Christ was, and yet he was shrength in order to repel the Satan -
born a helpless babe. How? We can- A onslaughts which are daily being
not tell. We know that John, as the made against the ostrongholds of their,
beloved diseiple, walked and lived hearts.
With Christ. , Yet concereing teeny When sailing upon the ocean, some
facts about the- personality of Jesus days its surface seems as calm as
John was as much in the dark as Loon Lake asleep, ag a smiling child
was Nicodemus when he said, "How in. the broad lap of the Adirondack
can these things be?" Paul com- Mountains. But that is only a slum-
-pares our knowledge of God to a' lit- ber. Within a few hours she may
tle child'S knowledge of a human per- awake with a scowling face, with the
fire of tone. lightnings in her eye and
ent. ...We knew. that our babies can- .
'with the shriekings of the tornadoes
'not fully understand us. Therefore •
/LS 110
:4114'1:7;11120W/I itself since, eite
bol -Teacher end 'Sunday &heel
-oxi Devil's Island, or Victor
Hu
thei
Pat
0; in exile on the island of Guerne
were no more separated from
friends than was St. Jblua on
os, .seriarated from his friends.
Legend tells us that he was sent to
work in the ,Patnios mines as the
.1hissian eXtles are put -to work in the
Siberian mines, But whee the day's
work liVas done 'St. Johh was allow-
ed to freely roam over the Patinas
roe4s. No -prison walls Were more sea
cure then .thls prisoh of 'the apostolic
exile.. And now, .methinhs, I can see -
him,' hip White hair being toSeed
,the wieds. He strains his eyes as he
leoleaeover the Mediterranean waters
to Asia Miner, where he knows his
Christian _ coela,borers aro working
anitiag the churches of Asia. `"Ab,"
saye the old patriarch, "in heavea
phall never be separated from thosee
I lo3ve. I, shall never have to part
agair from those wpo have e labored
by nay' pide in ethe gospel viheyard.
shall never be compelled to .have the
silver cords ef affection snaPped at
the grave. These waves of separation
shall forever and- ever be licked up.
There shall _be no apere sea."
Ienot this re -union vision of the
Isle' of .Patmos to hou a -transcen-
dent thought? Is It not an uplifting
hope that , those who were once
snatched away frotn us by death
shall he given back in all the beauty
and. love of the redemption?, Some --
times we must be •sepaxated from
those we love, evee as St. John on
the Island of Patmos was separated
frpm his friends in Asia Minor; But
in heaven God will give us b-ack our
loved Ones. Yes, there will be no
separations, no partings there; 'For
in heaven, according to the inspired
Apocalypse, "there is no more sea."
But the Mediterranean waveb beat-
ing against the Patinos rocks were
Patil says: "Now we look through *
glass darkly. Now I kndw only in
hart," Do you Wonder that when
Jehn began to uee, the mysterious
ocean as the sYmbol of ca mysterious
God he cried oiit in hthe words of
- my text in refereece to heaven, "And
there was no, more sea?" All the
mysteries of earth shall receive heav-
enly solution when the geeas shall
vidnish away.,
Do you. suppose that if Carthage
had been situated only fa, few miles
frora Rome there would have ever
been a Hamilcar fighting at Mount
Hannibal, being defeated by Scipio
the Great at ZaMa, in 202? The rea-
son Carthago hated Borne and Rome
hated Carthage- was /because they
were separated -by a- `(sea of hate"
called the Mediterranean, two thou-
sand miles long and seven hundred
miles wide. The "sea, of separation"
became, likeethe Dead Sea, a "sea, of
blood." . Do you suppose England -
would. ever, have- treated the Ameri-
can colonies as she did during the
'eighteenth century had she not been
'separated from them by an Atlantle
Omni three thousand miles wide?
Why, the American colonists were Of
the same blood as those -who lived on
English shores. The children of the
Virginia planters and `Of the Massa-
cre all eent ove
lools to be edu-
nd would not
ehusetts aristocrats
ereto the' Engliph me
cated. But no. Engl
treat, her Arneriean uhjects ,as she
did those Who ,:vere •earning their
bread1 on the Londo ;Strand. The
"sea of separation" weenie the "sea
cid , hate," and the bloody Revolu-
tionary war was me ely the echo of -
the Atlaptic's mean rig . waves lap -
Do you-,suppope R me would, have '
ever placed her' iron heel of. tyranny
upon the neck, of t e prostrate He -
ted -from the capita; of the _Caesars
Itome from Carthage' The -greatest
separators of nations
beee the -mighty sea
St. John looked off
of the Mediterraeean
there wan no more sea,'' he meant
practically, this: In +van there shall
be no hate, no bitteiness, no fault -
always have
Poe- the waters
and said, "And
in her voice. In our laves the spirit-
ual struggles keep on to the end. We.
havetthe "good angel" whispering in
one ear to- be good; we have the
"bad angel" whispering in the other
ear to be bad. St. Jolliet even up to
• the end. of .his life, had to fight by
the 'power of the Holy Spirit against
the restless sea, of temptations. So
have we.
About the best illustration of my
thought that I know is the eimple
one- which Dr. Frederick Goss told to
his Chicirmati people a few months
ago. One day :one of his - Sunday
school teachers was teeing to etsplain
to her class that there are two
kinds of lives to live, the good life
and the bad life. "Now, children,"
she said, "all those little girls who
want to live the 'good life, will they
please step over on this nice Warm
carpet; and' those who want to live
the 'bad life' will- stand on that cold,
hard oilcloth?" Much to the teacher's
surpriee, her owe little girl put one
foot upon the carpet and the other
upon the oilcloth. "My dear," mid
the mother in surprise, "you are
standing upon both. ' "I know it,
mamma," said the child, "but you
knovr ‘thotnetimes' I want to be just
a little bad.' So in every Christian
life there has to be a continual war
against the world, the flesh and the
devil. And when St. John tooleltd off
upon the troubled waters of the Me-
diterranean, he not only looked off'?
upon his own spiritualdstruggles, but
at the same time he looked off in
Ari Sion to the time when those spir-
itual. struggles should forever pass
away, when "there shall be no More
Thus my text meane more than a
mere figure ef speech. It has more
than . a mere literal interpretation
that heaven is to be a place without
atmospheric .moisture. It mea.ns thet
the "mountain of Calvary" shall.be
Safge enough to hold all peoples who
.give their hearts to Jesus Chript.
/t means that this "mountain of
Calvary" shall not only be a wide
- mountain, but a, high mountain. It
shall lift us hp and up and up until
it lifts us to the very .gates of heave
that itself. Oh, my brother and sister,
:will you not stand upon this moun-
tain, this blo.pd red Cal -Vary moan-
tain? Will you not to -day let the
Of Patroos be to yolk. a stepping
'Endings, no " bloodeheld, no J ew het- stone to a hea;venly threne? There
ing ROD:1921, no Rom le hating Greek, you will never again heel- the. surge
no Japan Aghting I useia and no ing waves 61- temptation beating
Shain sucking the ife-blood of a.
Phostrate Cuba. The. love and kind -
sacrifice will bind th , hunian family
together, heeause the hseit of heti."
shall forever disappea .
But as the "sea of .seperetion" is vard which shall lead 'up to the
sometimes the "sea 1 ha t e, ". „He it streets of a new Jerusalem, where
ma.y be also the imp 'ssable barrier there shall be "no more sett.,"
which separates friend from friend.
against the rocks of sin and threat-
ening to sweep you out into the un-
fathomable depths. May the sunrise
of a gospel hope aihed to -day its yel-
low beams over, life's troubled wa-
ters and have for you a golden boule-
Ferdi LeesepS Used, he
how n *Pitchman calee to his aid when
oppositien to the SUM 611101. The mitn,
who wi0 a total sthinger. walked into
hie °hien, one day and dreW out Of his
poleket 4 valIet stuffed with bank notes.
"Montieur," said "I' beg the privi-
lege of beingcallowed to subecribe to-
ward tile railway a the Wand of Swee
den." °But, monsieur,"- said .Lesseps,
"it is- not a ,rallroadi it's a canal. It's
not antisland, bat -an isthmus. It IS
tint kweden, but at Suez." "I don't
'capital St, "so 'Ong as it worries Eng-
• Btit esseps had little reason to make
fun o ibis episode if the picture his
own s ti draws of him be true. Becora-
ing in ensed at Some attack made on
the British parliameneand bee
deouately provided with mea.ne
eSS his rage. bis Mind suddenlyf
Ito his linen collar, vehtch Wail
him 4
ing in
'to eep
revert
of,Enhliatt make., He tore it from his
neck, dashed it upon the Beer and
dence4 'on all for hatred of the 'e-
land it came trent. *
Light weight suits
Light weight under-
clothes
Light weight' socks
Outing Shirts
Light Felt [lab
Straw Hats
These are only o. few of the things yo need—not want—but act
need ior summer. We have them. all, and puny more, that will ea.
sure comfort and good health during the hot weather. You will
yo0 purse and rob yourself of comfort if you do not let lie u
your needs along these lines.
gar We make a specialty of High Class Ordered Clothing.
Toward thy close a the reign of
Elizatieth, when the Speniards were
frequently hovering about the south-
west coast of England, a party trona
,their hlitpe landed in the neighborhoen1
of whhite Falmouth stands today, witla .
the in ,,, ntion of burning' the borough of
same istening sonic strollers had set
up in !Penryn market place a- repro -
dents re the life of Sa.mson, including
hie vi tery over the Philistines.
At the! point of Samsonxii onset upen
these ' th•the jawbone of the Asa the
stroll S heat drums and sOunded tr,unt-
pets dleatihe of an alarm, and th•
.8pani ds, who were at that moment
about 0. rush the toWn, believing it to
be f ll of soldiers, bolted for *eir
TP robably occurred in 1595, whea
there is as a Spanish squadron On the
i jils,•
coast,' ifich landed troops and burned!
renza he.
A t er 'in ivory. and rubber writes
iltrt oia the Kafue Wrier*
aft follOws of sport on the Kafue river,
in Af ea: ‘Iiivery morning at daybreak
we go up and scanned the plains With
culled first to say that a herd of wa-
ter buhk or hartbeest w.ga grazing in
sight; specially if the eamp was out
of niea , The river was full of Ash—
barbs bream, pike and tiger fish. The
` brea vere by far the best eating, but
the ti r Ash and big barbel gave the
best Ort. Spoon bait, with strong
pike ekle and a stiff bamboo -rod,
was 1. that was required, and, trolling
we co id soon make a bag. The tiger
fish fit ht gamely and,. breaking wa.ter
repea-: dly, very often succeed pa shak-
-robe' r ih up to/eighty pounds weight,
and a leavy one can tow a canoe along
the sti 'face at some speed."
, Penitent Rent Payer,
IWO el Davitt in his "Fall of E'en- -
dulisii In Ireland" gives the following
as a S mple of the letters that used to
reach; he Land league .ofaces in the
good d a days: "Ballinrebe, Mayo, Jan.
t.
S. 18S' , To the Honorable Land Lague
--Gin hmita In a moment of wakeness
I atalhee rint. I did not no tiler wall
a law aginst it or t wutl, not do it, the
peopllepass by me d.ure as if the small
shim hardens -to min that do rong,
and if Ve will sind me a pardon to put
41. in the Windy for every one to rede it I
thurt it ye write to him at Bal." ,
Sonya ideaeof the delights of traveling t
in Ko -ea is giVen by the following de -
in. that; ceuhtry: A. first class bridge in ,
Ihorete is simply an ' assortment of 1
iplankg; nailed . 'together. These are ;
seance!! A second class bridge Is a
• series 'of isolated stones, from one to
anoth, r of whi01.1 the visitor may jump.
A thi 4 class .'bridge, much the com-
monest, variety, is invisible, its palition
being' indicated bY a couple of posts,
1 each side of the river. They
hatyou may safely wade across,
- water will—probably—hot go
one e
• th
muchl
Cannon. af 1812.
CanOon were small, measured by
,mode4, gitandard, in 1812, but the Ohio
worldiNivas quiet, and the pioneers had
keen' eases. There is much evidence
that I guns of Perry'a squadron were
heard! y settlers living at least thirty-
five 111 les east of 'Cleveland, or nearly
100 rai es in An air line from the scene
of the, famous fight which gave the
contrei/ of the lakes above Niagara
falls the Americans .and did much
to BO the northwest for the Vnited
States.
AU Have yrnetblere.
"Everybody worries about money."
"Oh, don't know. Some men are so
• "Tha te just it, Poor men worry be-
cause hey can't get money, and the
rich m It worries for fear that it will
get a y from him."
In Plain Eng ligh.
Doctor --I found the patient to be
suffering froM abrasion of the cuticle,
tumefaction, ecchyraosie and extrava-
sation in the Integumnnt and !cellular
tissue about the left '-drbit —Judge—
You mean he had a black 'eye?. Doe -
Just oain, ordinary stubbornness
g o/exc.-441118°n Globe.
Londoei cabmen pay from about
12.50,tO ;3 a day for a .hansom, ace
profits a'verage nearly $8 a day.
'If • obild is pate, peevish,
Powatere occasionally,.
and
, lees
will c
BRIGHT B
ake up you. ivcr.
your consgpation. Get.
of your Oiliousness.
for 60 yekrs.
Or
abentitaiirows or ridildackt Cie
Great August Sale.
Here in a grand opportunity to secure seasonable and up-to-date
/We are going to ritsb. out thoulands of dollars' worth
Dry Goods, Millineri, Clothing; Hats, Oaps,
pets, Ouitains, Boots, Shoes and Trunks.
Artspace will hot allow us to quote prices, come early and get ybur c
the
We have in store for you during the month of Au
imminstaxolutuamagammeiam
McBEATH • PRETORIA SLY
BLOCK
1-44
-11
Your Furniture wants can be bes supplied.by us. We ..laavel
'the, stock that will please you, and. our prices for- all kinds ot-
•
•
Demand your attention for a Alit time. We , give iv
Special' Reduction
n Couches, Parlor Suites, Springs and Mattrasses FOR OASH ON
13ROADF Ts BOX &
THAT'S THE SPOT
Right in the Annan el the back.
Do you over got a pain there?
11 eo. do you know,what it Insane?
xure sign of Kidney Trouble.
Don't neglect it. Stop it in time.
If you don't, serinus !Udall,- Trimble*
ure to follow.
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS
curs Backache, Larne Back. Diabetes,
prepsy and ell Kidney efl Bladder
Peke 50o. a box or 3 far $145.611 aulabapth
DOAK ILIDNICT FILL CI*
Tatatailio, Out.
Baby Carriages, Go Carts
-and CarrierS
In he latest up-teeiate etyier AU a
assortment to ehoose'from.
Window Shades.
0::entire stock will be dosed out au
latest idee in Window Screens—different
a geeat reduction in price. We hatie the
A large and varied aesortment of Couches
rockers, dining room end bedroom furni-
turTLe. eatcvertical feed, Davis is the only sew-
,ing machine of ito kind,. and the beet in the
country. We have ia
' The Standard is also a gem machine-
-two one --chain and loch stitch. We
'have it too.
Furn thre Dealers, Undertakers and Em -
ht calla for Undertaking answered a
SIGN
OF THE
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