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The Huron Expositor, 1904-09-02, Page 6-v&Crettlea,—.1rn LimAXSTATE. FOR sane °II Ill F&UK FOR fiALE.—Good-hoinistead, 100 sores, In the to.nnship of Morris, Huron County. For particulars apply to E. W. BRUCE, 246 Borden Street, Toronto. 1911x8 "MS FOR SALE.—Rare bargains in forme in the Townehlee titlett, Morris,- and Wawa- notia,GOunty of "Huron. Inquire ate once. VFM OLDLPIIRLL, Myth, Ont. . 17744f - MIGHTY LAW OF SEQUENCE house and 2 lets in Seatortb. One lot faces or. North Main Stceee and the other on West li= Street. The house is aa comfortable brick Events of Human Life g'HE HATH MADE EVERYTHING BEAU- TIFUL IN HIS TIME." CIOUSE AND LOTS FOR, SALE -For We, brick cottage and contains 8 bedrooins, dining room, alt. ting room and kitelten, whit good cellar under the ° whole house. Hard and soft water in the house. There is ale) a good steble and driving shed. AU kinds of fruit on the lot. Apply to J. L. ALLAN, Loodesbore, or to 0, W. /ATKINSON, Seaforth. 1906x4tf MAIM FOR SALE. --South belt of lot 83, concert _U eon 16, Goderich townehip. 40 acres, good olay loam, 5 scree fall wheat, good frame home and kitchen, a good cellar, soft and hard water, frame barn 2 frame stables, aheep bowie and pig palm. A goodnevev-falling spring oreek 1111)8 througn the lot, To be sold, aa the proprietor is not able to work it. Is 18 a quarter of a mile from a Frehixit and two miles from Clinton. Apply to WALTON DODSWOliTII, on the premiees, or Clinton P. 0. 18004.1. tt ARIL FOR SALE.—The undereigned offers for U sale her fine fame, being' north half Lot 14, Commotion 14. KlUop township. There are 'five aoree of good haadwood Uush and bhnca Ou the pvernises is a comfortable brick house, bank bin, driving shed and Windmill enpplyhig water to both house and stables. Wen ionoed, we on e - drained, young orchard, Szo. Poeseselon this fall if dealred. Farm hi one cf the cleanest in the town- ship. Only 12, mile from school end. 8 masa from Walton village. For further partioultre se to price, tering, etc., apply on the premises to MRS. THOS. - OAKLEY, or Wa18168 lton P. 0. . Marshaled Aa An Army By the Wise King—The Fitness of Things—wmare Is a Time 'to 13o Born and a Time to Pia"—“A Time to Laugh and a Time to 'Weep.", Ln loud aecording to Act of Paelienten t of Oan ada, in the year 1901, by William Bully, of To- • ronto. at, the Don't of earriculture. Ottawa, Los Angeles, Cal., Aug., 28.—At the season when nature is displaying her glories in greatest abundance the 1••• preacher chooses as a theme forhis serehon the beauty of thing's audible and visible and contrasts it with the higher beauty which comes to those whose li -es are in harmony with the Divine )4fo. The text is Ecclesiastes iii., 11, "He hath made everything beentifu in his tic." The Solomonic writings are often epigrarainatic in stYle. Like priceless jewels cut and polished by the lapi- daries and collected, in caskets, irre- spective of size or color, his .verses ° GOOD FARM FOR SALE.—BeIng Lot ea Con. as verbal gems are clustered into A ceselon 10, Hibb-ert, containing 100 acres, 16 chapters, with but little attempt at trait garden. Ge the preemies* a asp &voting con. secutive arrangement: Indeed, house suitable tor two families if degred. with King Solomon f or the most part summer kitchen and woodshed, bank barn 46 3r 66, seems to me to beilkei a writer of a frame 'table and driving shed 84 x 60. A power mill on barn. a neve:galling spring creek runs notebooks. In the King's juciginent through the barnyardtile one quarter of a mile hall or on the street or out upon the Oora the village of CtiOmartYi .here there "ft 1 hillsides under the blue donie of the church, poet onloa etores, blacksmith shops, etc. aru_,T, _ when a great thought is di- themarty.O. For further particulars Apply to _NEIL GILLESPIE, . i , 1914-4 , vInely inspired within his brain,, he P ' acres of bush, mostly hardwood, good oreherd and Jots that thought down in menioran- WIARM FOR BALE.4-LoCNo. 1, on Concession 12 aunt. Then at the end of the day or .1.` Tooke:en:1th, oontaining 100 acres, scatty tit cleared, well fenoad and .-ssined and hi a high the week. or the month or the year &tate of eultivation. he collects these different thoughts, There is a first elses frame toge,h0nactrdq,ntewvoorgtitiolinba;keuboartionsdaniwdoothgooder oubearintbuildg- irrespective of their leser,ict?.I sequence, °rehandle It adjoins ;be village of Chlsethuret, to into a chapter or -a book and has which there ie a daily ant% and Is within four the court stenographer write them &lee ofaenmel elm m te Is one of hbesIn . the township ari'far d will he staid on easy terthe out. again full. They are often as rater desires so rethe 013 aceoUnt of -as tbad uneonnect e e as the definitions of th. Half the puschase money can remain one Webster's Dictionary, They ' change Interot for a terns of years. Apply on the premien.? their subjects very often. They are or address Chiseiburst P. 0. ROBERT NICW142‘. 1909-11 ; like nuggets of golde.ortietinies found •; by the Australian miners in the dust ARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot II?, Concesidon ! by the roadsides or lin the river bieds a o. R. S., Ttickeismith, containin100 aoree. . • • , - Talon and well faced and underdrained. There le , veins. The land. is all cleared and in a good ,tate of oultl- ontirely separated 1 /rout any gold s that Xi a good barn 8,9xM 56 feet ilt a 9 foot stone wall I • The modern critics tell underneath. Two hnplement ,houses and two iing Solomon rdld iiot write the frame 8tableg, There is also a good frame house book of Ecclesiastes, that its style e with kitohen and woodehed. The home is belted i; by a furnace. ThIs excellent farm le eitueded on' and diction belong to a later date. the mill road, ene mile from Bruoefield, where it appears to me-, however, that its there is every convenience. Also 6 milea from goa- tee -11o. There le a eohool house on the (tomer of the i tone and its depressing refrain are auto, poseeNion can be bad three weeks alter characteristic of a man who led such purchese, For further particulars apply to CHAS, 1 lotto a life of ease and self-indulgence as MASON, Briieefleld, VIRST CLASS EIGHTY -ACRE FARM FOR SALE J.! —Being West. Part of Lots 1 and 2, Conoees- ion 2, L. R. S., Tueleremith. Good concrete, 11 roomed house, 40x28, with kitehen, weadshed and buggy house attsohed. There is a new bank barn 88x36, with wing extending to the south, 24 feet. Aleo brick afohed roothouse, 40 feet long, noder gangway. Ail buildings in good repair. Orchard ootateine two and 1 half acrea of choice winter fruit. There are two never falling welle, 6 BOMB of bush. This farm In In a good stateof eultivatiou, well eeneed and underdrained, situated 2 milee from the villaee of tumuli. For further particulars apply to THOMAS REMICK, Hansa% Oahe°. 1896•tf CIARIA FOU SALE OR RENT,—For sale or rent, U Lot 20, Bayfield Road, North Stanley, adjoie- ing the village of Varna The farm cord:aims 134 acres, 128 acres under oultivation and the balenoe good hardwood bush. There are twd gond baro with two sheda audatables, alga a oo brick house plenty of water and a windmill flor pumping. Selene -is a good orchard of apples, p ma and cher- tier. The farm Is oae ot the ve y best n tbe °omit). It le in a high state of cultivation and the land is oIettal well fenced and well drained. Will he sold on reasonable terms or will be rented. Extra good terms for footing to a first class Man with plenty of stook, rent not as ranch it consider- ation as the care of the farm. Apply to S. A. MOFFAT, 73 Barron Ave., London, or to REV. T. DAVIDSON, Varna, 191841 MIAMI FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 28, In the let U Concession' of the township of Hay, London Itoad, and the south east part of Lot 27, adjoining, containing hi all 126 aeree, more or less. Trio pro- perty ie all well fenced and drained and well seeded down with the exception of about 16 acres under woody. Theme is a frame dwelling house and barn 19x60, cow hone°, driving house, stable and large ebedover 100 feet long. Two splendid wells, good new wind milI, pumps and abundance of water. ,Chere are also two good orchards meetly Northern Spiee. This fine farm property as within a miles of Mansell and the eame distance from _Kippen and is on the London road. This land is No. 1 and will be sold cheap and on favorable terms as the pro- priebr intenis giving up the farm. For partieulare apply to GEORGE PETTY, sr., liensell, ea to G. J. SUTHERLAND, Conveyancer, Henson. 1889.41 WARM FOR SALE.—Lot it, Concession fl, Hul- 1 lett, (Containing 100 sores of land, all cleared, and in fineeiondition. lb le at present all seeded to geese and In good ehape either ror bay, pasture or cropping. There is acorefortable frame house with summer kitchen attaehed, two bsnas, one 84 x 60 feet and the other 80 x 60 feet, and other out build - lugs. This fann is eitnated nine miles from Sea - forth, seven and one half miles from Clinton and just one mile and a quarter from the village of Kinburn, where there are two general stores, two blacksmith ahem poet offiee and school. This farm Is well eituated and will be sold cheap as the pro- prietor is anxious to sell. For further partioulers apply to R. S. HAYS, Barrister, Seaforth, or on the premises, WILLIAM LEITCH, Constance, Ont. 100541 VARM FOR SALE—For Rale 16 the township of EIN Tuolcersintth, Lot 1, Jonciassion 8, containing leo-acres, nearly all cleared and in a good etate of cultivation, newly underchained, well fenced, two good wells. There 'son the place a good comfortable frame house, large new bank ham with brick base- ; went, striving house, hog pen and large hen house, about an acre.of young orchard just beginning to bear. The farm is nearly all seeded to past, and is in excellenrcondition for either grain growing or stock raising. This excellent farm is well- situated, being two miles front a school, poet office, store and blacksmith shop, and six miles from Seaforth. Good roadie in all directions. Buyers should come and see the farm while the crop is on. Posseseion can be given after harvest. Apply on the premises or addrinis Seaforth poet offloe. SAMUEL CLUFF. 100541 FTY AGRIC FARM .F0B. SLE,—The west half 'of lot 29,.coeeession 8. MciEdlop with ex- cellent. build1ngs. eatuated 6 mites from the town of Seaforth, a half mile from school, one mile from church, post ofilce stor,ee, blackemith shop, mills, tile and brickyard.* There is a good frame house and kitchen 1.vith cellar, frame barn 70 x 56 •wlth ane stabling, deo ood wells, we fenced and drained. There is :Ignite young bush. This farm Is in excellent condition, 80 aches seeded down. Orchard of ohoioe young fruit trees. Thiele & pleas- ant and oonvenlently situated farm, blaok eley loam meltable for either grain or stook raising. Terms eaey, made to era purchaser. Also three ohoioe building lots 14, 17 and 18, Coleman survey, town of Seaforth, vale a new brick etable ereoted thereon. Apply on the premises or address DUNCAN Me- CALLUM., Seaforth P. 0. • ,19114f Farms for Sale. 180 acres, Rurosi County, well improved, geed soil, ehoicelocatioc, at right price. 160 acre farm, Huron County, °lay loam, good house, large barns, a good property. 220 sere farm near Seaforth; all ander graSS, Can be bought at price well within value and on easy terms. ,100 acre farm near Seaforth, good buildinee, fertile soil. 154 acres near laicknow, extra7good buildings, en easy terms. THE INTERCOLONIAL REALTY 00°Y, LIMITED, London, Canada. R. Z. HAYS, Agent, Seaforth B. S. PHILLIPS -,1907-52 ; Solomon led, and that at the end of i it, satiated with pleasure and study, - as he must have been, it .was pre- • eisely the kind Of hook that . would come from/ his pen,- and the conclu- sions utteyk\lin that book, just such , as would be ikely to be reached by a man who, having strayed from , God, was. disfippointed and dissatis- fied •with his life. , In the. absen.ce, therefore, of definite knowledge I shall assume that the first verse of the book indicates him as the au- thor, "The- son of David, King in Jerusalem." , • But, though Kin* Solomon was not, as a rule, a. connected writer, yet in the book of i Ecclesiastes he Makes an exception • to his usual Cus- tom. In this third chapter, for ex- ample, there is clear sequence. No man can interpret my text aright un- less he Uses the words, -"Ile hath made everything beautiful in his time," as a glorious climax to the ten verses which precede them., Solo- mon is here enunciating the mighty law of sequence. He is marshaling the events. .of a huinan life as . an army. Each event must have its right position. • In the language of the chapter, he says, "There is. a time to be born ,and a time to die." There As a time for ia cradle and a time when the wood of that cradle should be changed into a corm lid. • "There is a time to plant and a ' time to reap that which is planted." The plow and the..sickle cannot, have the rust rublbed off their faces at the • same time. "There is a time to weep and •a time to laugh." That means that a joke or a cachionation at a fi vete is a discord. A tear and a so pl ce. ' A wedding march is never 1.i coronation are also out of at a .- played iri a minor key, neither is the °I.lattle Hymn of the Republic" sung to. the accompaniment of the "Dead March," from - "Saul," nor is a Christmas carol imprisoned behind the Musical bars of a Mozart's re- getiem. - Then, after the author ofid..ny text has sung the changes of the "Gospel Harmonies of Sequence:" the meadow landand upon the mountain top, in sea and on land, by cradles and by opened graves; during the times when thes dove of peace is hovering over man, and during the time when the -black- raven of war is flapping his wings above bloody battlefields, fritig Solomon • generalizes all his statements in one -.great conclusion. He practically .eays, "All the differ- ent heart beats jot joy and sorrow, life and death, peace and conflict, hope and despair,- have their purpose to serve, -if they only come to man in the right way and at their' ap- pointed seasons." For God "hath made everything beautiful in its time.- This is the keynote of Chris- tianity. Man in hi S sinful state is a monstor of ugliness, a blemish on creation, . a .discord, but man' re- deemed, is haloed with divine beauty, and, as Ralph Waldo Trine has said, .J "Ifir is in tune .with the inflate." He' becomes part of the universal har- mony, and his thoughts are in spirL itual symmetry with the thoughts of C od. • We find an analogy for inan's spir- itual beaute in the painter's brush and the artist's easel According to Samuel Coleridge,. the English poet alio literary critic, the true definition. of "beauty" is "multitude in ' uni- Lot me illustrate what an artist's "multitude in Unity" means. When: raid Gustave Dore first paintedhis famous picture, "Christ Leavingthe Praetortuen," the judgment hall was lett lied in the giowing sun of the noontide. The hillsides about Jeru- salem were blistering under the heat, of a Syrian .mid -noon spring. The people who had come to hear the verdict of that trial had left their work in the heat of the day. In that • first picture you could alraost hear above the spectators' taunting words, the shrill cries of trade in the busy marts of the Hebrew capital. Just before Dore was about to send his picture to the French 'Salon he called in a friend who was a givit Bible ...eatedeot. as well as art critic. THE HURON on= team:eV niartiora st000e nekoe the carivas,i'Dore saW he wae, distp- pornted 'What is wrong with the Picturd, Hartford?" he asked. "The picture has a wrong setting," said ,Cation, Hartford. "Christ •Wile not tried at noon. Christ was tried in the early morning.The blazing light of that sun Shoulld be darkened in order to make the,. picture historical- ly true." Though Dore had worked on that picture already for nearly three long years, because in that praetorium there were not the "mul- titudes of colors in blending unity/' 1/ore changed the whole' type of that picture. He overcast the sky and re- presented Christ leaving the, presence of Pilate in the early morniing. An artist's beauty is a "ilnultitude in unity." We know that Samuel Coleridge's definition in reference to -the painter's easel is true. We See a "multitode of colors in. unity" *hen Turner, the , most brilliant artistic colorist England ever produeed, makes the sea it creature of life. NoW it is a 'beautiful boulevard, of gold, paving its way to the throne of a setting sun; now a perfect pande- monium of furies; now it is a' burial scene,- evhen. Sir David Wilkie finds a sepulchre .in tit mighty deep, whose waves b6at thqfmeelves into pieces .on the GibraItaefcrags. But, though there may be many different tints blending in t1 colors of a rainbow or in the he4itiefiush of a rose, -did you, ever stopitoi realize' that all col- ors come from but three Primal col- eors? Just the' same as !all nature. MI the animad and. vegetable e and mineral -kingdinns have but sixty-six different basic elements, of which they are all composed. So In the 'artistic world we find that all col- ors originally come from • but three primary colors—the red; the yellow and the blue. Now, if GOdcan form the artistic beauty Of the ' sky, the sea, the land, out ofthe simple red, the simple yellow and the simple vio- let, is it absurd to suppeste that God • can spiritually make us extistically beautiful, no matter how crude and sinful we .may , be, if we only, allow , our thoughts an.d lives to be ;cone- bined in symmetry with his thoUghts • and with Christ's life. Qh, the beau- ty of blending ',colors! From the' bril- liant pictorials of ao autumnal leaf let mei learn. -the sPirittial lesson for man that God hath ' made and can make everything beautiful in its time. • • 'EXPO ITOR Badly Cri pled with L me Bck Was almost u4sd luip With kidney cllsoitSe, but cure (Mine with 'the UR. of Dr. Ohass's Kidney.. Ller Pills. MR. PIERRE D'Aseous, Farmer, St.' Marie Rimouski Co., Que., writes: —"For years I wfus troubled with a weak, lame, itching back, and had become no crippled that I could scarcely lift anything at all, I also had paine Is the arms and legs and began to consider myself about used up at sixty-seven years of age." • '4 One day I received a book describing kidney disease and its symptoms an4 found out the nature ofir ailment. I began us g Dr. Chase's Kidney. Li Pills and noticed a m rked improvement wh n •the first box was fie shed. I continued to But what, aecording to the law of sound, do -we' an.ean by. -being, "in tune with the infinite?" I went hunte ing some time ago. As I lay in a ' dugout by a *ater hole, hidden by . the leaves,waiting for the birds to come down to drink, I asked rayself this question,' What is music'? Why .is it that all these voices of :the woods have eueli a wonderful influence over me? Why does not the harsh. call of the fishmonger hawking his food at . my city door, oe the deep voice of the fog -horn on s ipboard off the • banks of Newfound and, or the rasp . of a Saw, or the ...iv ioing cry of a spoiled child, enchaht me as now do - the voice signalings of the pheasants, ; whiclie I can now see way off under • yonder trees, or the chirp of the f3Wa,116WS ilying over my head, or the , • beautiful 'sounds that come to my ear as the 'harpists of the winds finger the long, slender vines .as • thOugh they were harp 'dtrings?- know that some pf the repellant cries I have heard • Ara the fish- moeger Richard Wagner has repro- - duced in his •matchless operas. know the deep voice of 'the fog -horn rolls and thunders and swells and dies. away in the choruses of many a great musical master., In order to answer' this question I made a study of the laws of musical • sound. Dudley Buck, the great Am- erican coinposer, 'taught me that • "sweet music was merely a succes- sion of combinations of -sound . ar- ranged with such connection and mu- tual relations as to express to the, car some distinct form or train of thought -and awaken certain corre- sponding emotions." He .told me that anusic is thought expressed in sound, even as a great painting is thought expressed in. color.' A..jura- hie of colors is a daub, net a pic- ture. A riot of sounds, promiscuous - ler pushing and jostling each other,. even as the stronger limbed members of a stailapeding mob knock down and trample upon the weaker,- is merely a collection of' discords. It is only when "multitudes of sounds" are marshaled -eogether in "harmonious eunity'd that we have music. So. When . began ta know • what true Music ,n at, , then I said to myself: "Yes, ye e • now knew what Ralph Waldo rlYiet means when he speaks of man being 'in tune with the in- . finite.' " Alan inhim.self may be sO distracted by sin as to be like a discordin inusic. His voice in na— ture ". may beSO discordant by rea- son of his corrupt •condition, as,to rend the ear as does the shrill cry of the vender on the street, But when his nature is redeemed his voice falls .into its right t.place in the song of creation and of Moses and the lamb a'fid becomes harmonious and oleic,- diroruhse. • 'symmetries of straight lines and curves in. Sculpture and architec- ture also form •analogies for man's spiritual beauty. Wandering among the famous buildings of Europe, I find that,. architecturally, a great building has a syinmetrical unity, just as a perfect statue is chiseled after the physical formations of a perfect'man. Many years ago there • was exhumed from the buried •ruins • of old Rome a marble leg, broken from off oneAor the statues of old. That brokert fragment is still pre- served in the Vatican. :Michael An- gelo, as a sculptor, .used to study teat leg by the. day, the week, 1he month and the year, "because," sa;d the gyeat Italian master, "1 con:e sine/. that piece of stone the most perfect formation of physical ana- tomy ever carved by the chisel of man." Now, the symmetrical laws •ol,ser- ved in true sculpture are ateo mond to exist • in true architecture. •11_ great builder like i 0 eller ren . did not start -in to erect St. Paul's, cathedral at haphazarn. lee ery part of the walls, the dome, and di, eap- stone were gleefully and hurnionioipe- ltr designed and properly proportion- ed before one spadeful of dirt was dug out of the heart of mother earth to excavate the cellars of London's architecturak pride. And the wonder- ful part Of the masterfully designt.d buildings of Europe, is how deceptive theY' are as to their size when first • seen by the human eye. WJe.n one sees, the dome of St. 'Steel- s at Rodin, lifting itself toward the sties • or the ,spires of the Cologn Cathe- dral, like the =lifted ferefineyr of an orator Pointing heavenward, •or us them from thee to e and to -Slay I am real weil, entirely cured of ha kache an d kidney., di ease." Dr. Chase's K dney-Livee Fills, o n e SUL D'ASTOUS p' I a dose, 25' omits a box. To prctect yoi Igainat imitations the portrak and signeture of Dr. A. W. Chase, the moue receipt book author, are on rimy box. aeleateaseee, the roof of the Milan Cathedral, peopled with 'myriads of saints and aPosties carved in stone, the lengths and the breadths and the heights of those Structures rarely imprees the tourist at first. Why? Because all .are -in perfect , symmetrical propor- tion. A truly great building is "multitudes of stones arranged in unity." It is thought expressed in stone, -as a painting is thought ex- pressein colors, or as music is thought expressed' in soond. Now, as true architecture is beauti- ful thought expressed in the curves .and lines of the roof and tlic walls and the foundation stones of a build- ing, I would go one step further in my subject. I would say to the de- signers of the greet Episcopalian Cathedral now ' being built in New York city e "Oh, architects, of what material are you building these walls? Where are to be found ' the mighty beams to hold up yonder roof?" Then these architec s take inc down. into the. quarries, 4uid amid the dust aild the dirt 1 see Ithe mighty roeks b ing hewed- Out. lrhen they ',take ind to the foundries, f where the steel beams are. being mo ded. Then they take me out into tho forests, where the great tree trttnks are being dragged to the saw ills. • Then- they say: "Oh, preacheee we are making this beautiful tathedral of St. John the Divine out of such materials as these. All these rocks and steel beams and tree trunks, a multitude of different elements, shall blend to- gether- in beautiful architectural unity." • Then I turn to the archi- tects and say e "Oh, designers, if you can make yooder stone beautiful by placing -it in symmetrical harmony •with other stones, cannot my Lord and my God make redeemed man beautiful when he becomes part of the heavenly temple by union . with :Jesus Christ? For 'I saw no temple therein, for the Lord God Alinighty and the Lamb are the temple of it.' As the apostle says, 'Ye also as liv- ing stones are built up a spiritual house.' Is the one achievement from an earthly tendpoint any more won- derful than the second achievement front a heavenly standpoint?" Yes, I see to -day, het the beautiful 'in architecture, :analogies that show that God lide made and God is now making and will continue to make redeemed niai beautiful in his tixne. Let us loitclr for a little while in the "poets' orner" of Westminster Abbey. As we listen the sweet bards of the Englisb language seem to lift 1 their beans rorn their pillows i of dust and beg n to sing,. and we find man's spiritual beauty in the analo- gies of poetry as well as in paineneg and music and sculpture and arehi- tecture. For Las painting is rhythm in color • and .musio is rhythm j in sound and sculpture and architec ure aro rhythm in stone, so poetry is rhythm in words. Aye, poetry more than, mere rhythm. An ng- lish writer' once well said, "Poetify in the flower garden of human langltage is the blossom and tb.e fragranOe of all _human knowledge, human thoughts, human passions and quo - tions." — I3ut tholfgh poetry is rhyth in words, yet words themselves, as in- dividuals, are not poetry. The words • Burns used in his poems, and Arili liam •Shakespeare -used .in his poems, and -Longfellow used in his poems, land Whittier and Holmes and LoweU1 and Bayard Taylor used in their p ems were for the most part only the simple words we used in ever day life by our own firesides. The be uty of these poets' words are entirely due to their juxta.position with their ur- rthinding words. •- Are ypu and 1; ready to bec me part of God's beautiful creation? re we ready to ecoine beautiful in ur- selv-es by becjoming., beautiful in h m? Even the lowest and vilest, sayed by his grace an redeemed by his blo d, can become a true part of Chri Vs beautiful life.Many years ago wl en the yellow feVer plague was raging in. Memphis, Terin;, a rough looking man applied to the' city relief committee and said, "I Wish to nurse." It was at a time when most people who could were fleeing from the. stricken .and - desolated homes. The death carts seemed to be going everywhere. At first the physician declined the rough rrian's services, but as4le could get no one -else to do the work this man was - sent to • one of .the most filthy and dangerous wards- of the city. Wherever he went he was .• a messenger Of love. He would net tell his name; he said simply, "Call ene John." Time passed on, and after awhile John, whose name was now famous through the city, sickened and died. - While his body was being Prepared for an unmarked grave, Sod- denly upon his arm was found a liVid nriark, which proved that John was an ,ex -convict. John had been one of the most dangerous 'criminals of all the eolith. Once he was a murderer, but now, through the blood of Jesus, he became a minietering angel. Once he was horrible in his depraved mal- formation. Now he was made beau- tiful by bringing his life in symmet- rical touch with Jesus' life. -My friends, will you not let Christ fill you with his spiritual beauty? Will you not only in the future . be spiritually beautiful, but bean Iful now itt your preeent life? - Will rpu not become transformed as was J bae tin: redeemed nurSe, laboring for his Master in plague 'strickea MemphiS? 1 SEPTEMBE 19 0 4 PYF•AitirenuazotrUiSa, The Burrowed Drtyn. 4.ccording t� a Scottish fireside rhyme, alluded to by Sir Thomas Brown in his "Vulgar, Errors," three • days were borrowed by March front April, with a view to the deaeruction of some sheep, but the popular fietion of the borrowed days is really of older • date. In the l'Conplaynt of Scotland," printed ha 154.8, we find... "There eftle entrit 1 ane grene •forest, to eon- • tempill the tender yong frutes, becaue the borlal blasti.s of the three borouing dais of Marche hed chaissit fragrant flurelse of evy0e frut-tree far athourt • the field's." The origin and meaning of the ex- pression are obscure. It probably be founded. upon that reit* into win- try weather which is often noticed at the close of March and which seems to snatch a few days from the promise of ooening spring. A similar fancy has prevailed in the highlands of Scot- land. 1 connec en with the firet two months of the ear.—London Answers. A Quaint Introduction. It is told of the late ,Clarence King, the ethnologist, that he met John Rus- kin in a pi1. ct re shop, and his cora- , runts were is delightfully phrased' that Ruskin to4k him to his heart, in- viting him to ' Coniston and offering him one of his tveo greatest) water col- ors by Turner.; "One good Turner," said King, "deserves another," and 'took both. 1• King once wrOte from San Francisco to John HO the following letter of in- troduction; ''My j Dear John—My friend, Horace F. cutter, in the next geolog- ical period wil):go east. It would be a catastrophe if be did not know you. You will %waren in,' as the Germane say. when you meet. Lest I should not be there t� expose Mr. Cutter's alias I take this! opportunity to divulge to you that thei police are divided in opinion as to whether he is Socratea or Don Quixote. 11 know better; he Is both." • A Japainene Gardener, Sir Edwin Arnold had a great many stories in illustration of Japanese traits. "The jaPanes gardeners," he once said, "haVe car led their art further than we have ferried .ours. A.land- scape gardener n Japan is esteemed highly.. He is 1 oked on quite as we look on a poet 0 a painter. And these Japanese garde rs are truly remark- able men. I w s riding with one of them near Kiot on an August after- noon, and we ea e to a steep hillside. "Tell me,' I • aid, 'how would you plan a road to ti e top of that c?Ifilcult hill?' "The gardener miled humorously. "'1 think,' he s id, `that I Would first turn some cows 1 'ose and see how they got up.'" PeCuliar T1 Chatham islan of New Zealand, ocean, is pecuIla one of the few h globe where th changes. It Is j demarcation bet 12 noon on Sunda instantly Monde. Sunday comes in the east side and the time it passe door. A man sit day dinner on Su day noon before Lon Globe. o RegnIsttions. lying off the coast In the south Pacific ly sitnated, as it is bitable points of the day of the week st on the line of the een dates. There at , 8unday ceasesaand meridian begins. o a man's house on becomes Monday by out of the western down to his noon- iday, and it is Mon- o finishes it—Lon- 1 The One Who nisn't Whipped. It was in a larg school, and one of the boys had conimitted seme grave Infraction of disci line. The teacher announced that hJ would thrash tit' whole class if sol e one did not tel him who had collimated the °Irene,. All were silent, and he began vs: ffrst boy and thrashed every cm class until finally he readied • one. Then be saidi "Now, if : tell me who did t is 1 won' you." "All right. sir, I did it." reply. TomorrovOs Mons= • Money counts today, but of today is worthless tower. multimtlilonaire of Tuesday, is .buried Is forgotten on Ti man who has some and beyond trading ons himself Jaior is r lars, never dies. Monne); a.. , on n Wednesday and ursday. The real bing to him above who 'neither reek- ckoned by his' dol- -A. Turk's Riddle. Hre is an old T rkish riddle which has been handed d Wn for many cen- turies and yet his never been an- swered: • "There was once a beggar who Mewls dreani d he was a` pasha, and there was a asha who always dreamed be was a irnggar. Which was the happier?" Why She Wax In It. Short told me the ,referred blond girls. be rniettaken. He t week, and I am a Phyills—True, dear, a fair income. • Phyllis --Charlie other day that he Isabel—You must proposed to me la decided brunette. but then YOU hav The C0111411C1ng Argument. Young Lady ShOpper—This piece of dress goods suits nie, except that I do not think the figtre in it is pretty. 'Subtle Salesman— but you surely will when it is ma1e up and you bave the dress on. • Something tO Give Them. "Mary," said the invalid. to hisewife, when the doctor pronounced it a case of sctrrlet fever, "if any. of my creditors call. tell them that, I nm at last in a condition to give them something." During a long life I have proved that not one kind word ever spoken, not one kind deed ever done, but sooner or later returns to bless the given—Lord Shaftesbury. • The Baby's Troubles. The greatest suffering of childhood ie caueed by mizeme, weld head, ohafitig or other forms of skin irritation or eruption. Because of its extraordinary soothing, healing power Dr. phate's Ointment is of inestimable value in the henne where there aro email children. No mother 'who hes learned the scores of ways in which Dr. Chase's Ointment can be uesed,...ovvo.td, think of being vrithout it In the h To have 'a' truly delicious steak— rich and juicy, done to a turn—it must be broiled. Yet most ranges don't make proper provision for broiling. The broiling and toastingdoor of the -41' 0 •• it area, a . cp,e, erial Lrx o Range is particularly capaciNis. You can get a large broiler easily into the door and over the glowing 'coals, without stooping or getting the i" heat of the fre_yourself Call at one of our agen- cies or write to us for booklet The Gurney Foundry Co. yeiimitect Teeort Waextroal Wiesiaisead Assorseeceower FOR SALE BY SILLS & NELT DIE, SEAFORT Round $ I 0 0 Trip GODERICH and DETROIT •Saturday, September fO Return Monday, September g2 Lea* Detroit 8.00 A. M. September 9 Iv. Goderich 8.30 A. M. September 1.0 Sunday in Detroit Return Leave Detroit 1.80 P. M. Sept. 111 Ret 'n I,v. Goderich 8.80 A. M. Sept. 16 STEAMER GREYHOUND E. H. AYR% Excursion Agelit No young man should enter any calling in life without a business training. 'Doesn't matter whether the calling is a profession, a trade or in the mercantile world, a man can do his work better if he knows how to apply business methods. The Forest City Business and Shorthand College teaches business in a practical way—does things:just the same as a business office. Students may enter any time during: term. Booklet free. miestarnatraindr.soz" Ayer's PiIL Ayer's Pills. Ayer's Pills. Keep saying this over cad over again. The best laxative. fiaasgmt: Want your moustache or beard OCKINGlia'S BYE &ballad brow* or Mt black? Use vine era GIP MMUS OBILV.Milkotteitantsares. To L-1 Li I 11 Your Furniture Wants can be ;best supplied by us. We have the etoOr that will please you, and our prices for all kinds of Deman your attention for a short time. We will give a Special Reducgon On Couches,Parlor Suites,- Springs and Mattrasees FOR OA Promptly attended to night or day. BROA. FOOT, BOX & co., S. T. ROL ES, Manager. it iiys to Buy BLUE BIBB II Binder Twine • because yoii are sure of getting • the best va!ue for your money on the markt. Every Pound Guar • - anteed to run 650 ft, * Our stock of Hay Fork Rope, Sling Ropes Machine Oil, • Pulleys ' is eor41ete. WWI E3,2. 45. d• SiH S Murd e ROWARE, S `1'3E1 Diainond _Rings We have added some new dia./mind rings to our etook, espeolally one•at $13,00 and one at $88..00, which we think is as good value for the price anywhere. JOHN E3ULGERt JEWELLER, BE &FORTH. Fail a d Winter Apples nte The undersigned aro prepared to buy a qu tity of Fall and Winter Apples, within packing disions. of Beater:h. For f =her paitioulare apply at this office of D. D. WILSON &Co., Seaforth. 191842 4 of Erie sleets of tbeHe itityar ruri d ney. is .others! u. ottn: un 0 BES Notary 1'anetls bocikr ID . Gradu• ate • eine. 733= gems of On OUnIealfi�b eel, London. London, Eng *tore, Main f calls 41:1181Ver# erieb tare 0. *MAT. member' Sergeant, Ito -MAT, sold med cadge of, pt 0 meek, Prieto. nr no pea, At Lot less at5nd.aS 4i MARR