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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1904-09-16, Page 6SErTEMBER 16 1904 • annaa'are 111111111110•111110e The old-fashioned bake -oven was the best our great grand- mothers could get. They baked in it in -a kind of a way and were satisfied with it because they knew nothing better. But the,modern housewife wastes time and good food when she fails to avail herself of the improvements of the Imperial Oxford Range No other range On the market -canldo . the baking this oven does. iThe oven is kept evenly supplied with fresh super- heated air all the time. • See this range at your dealers or write to us direct. The Gurney Foundry Co.. Limited Toronto, Canada Wilsnived Pdontroal been ly sixty Yea ar a comp] doses ha er retried is Pleasi tua; e Vankcatair‘ar 12' FOR. SALE BY SILLS & NITTRDIE, SEAFORTEL Wart' rcotatrelon.notuaen.ran rf rt. r.j toren ri flfl n r! rt 1 "V no n rn "Progress" - Aatom rui ki ygort.aluisto:er • 4ssursc INTERIOR CONSTRtICTIO ora PROORt85BPAND COAT Fine fabrics and trimming alohe won't produce fine clothing. Fit and shaplinees, and wear, leo, depend on i1e hidden parte-the work - you don't see. This illaseration shears the anatomy of "PROGRESS Clothing. Note. the enoulder and theeve pads- the felt, hair cloth, and pure linen cenves, thorouehly, shrunk. All thcee pariz are neeneled. la hard and held in ette.pe by thoueende of eny stitches. It isonly by hand worn, ty expert tenons, that '• PROGRESS" Cloth:sae gain their el-minim:as, and hod their perfect form. " "PROGRESS" Cloth ing is the Pnert fabrics and best trimmings, motided ly specielists into permanent shape. evo7 even- t ine -PROGRE.545- Cra Soffi by. leadir,g eloalicrs throughout Cartada yuvuumn rU111.11-11.0./tr1J1114U U U Progress Brand Clothing may be .fUi.LJUi1UtJU U1. Saint Cu Substitute VETE alitlieVete Veterinary Cott *rooted. -(14 meaeratee-V residenee s *We ea 140fITIZEtter, ECinti,t. wiss4, SS 7.1., 1.1 LS i..1#.11n3 had from Greig ct Stewart, C4th p * .- Sugar-coated, easy to— ers1•sm....11.02,01.i johue_sy,,cer sick-hesdache. Want your moustache or beard R 0 KIN GH im , DI abeautifulbrowa ankh black? Use • w 11/27 (res OP DIWOOISP3'011 .2. a tf *, & 00.. sAsiall.x, ra-e— 4i Speed and Le 1-0-717117- A shorthand system to be of any'use must be rapid and'afterwritten must be readable. The Gregg system is both easy to write and transcribe because there is no shadIng, no arbitrary positions and no use of vowels—no other systems have these important features. Over 400 leading schools, including the Forest City Business and Shorthand College, have adopted the Gregg and discarded the older ones. Students may enter any time during term. Booklet free. J. W. Westervelt, Prinelpol, Building, London. ON EXPOSITOR a on 1.6g adful Itching 0 nEAL SheVAT.E FOR 8AIell FOR SaLt.--alood homestead, 100 acre% On the township of Morris, Huron County. For pareioubre apply to E. W. BRUGE, 246 Borden skeet, Toren1911x8te. , RMS FOR. S.ALE.-Rare barbs in fame in theTownshipe of Mullett, orris, end Wawa. nosh, County of Huron. Inquire at once. WM CAMPBELL, Blyth, Ont. 1774-tf • ESIRASLE PROPERTY FOR SALE. -For sale jJ in Harpurbov, a comfottable Int& cottage, With kiteleen and woodshed attaohed. Herd and Batt waterAlso 2a acute of land, et whit& are the choicest varketiee or all kinds tee lt is a moat decatable property for any Pereon Wanting a com- fortable holge. Apple' on the premisee, or adclrees &startle P. 0. .101IN MoDONOGII. 1917t • jeiterOUSE AND /OW FOR SALE.-Eor sale, black VI house and late in Seaterthone lot bees oil North Slain Street and the other on West* Wil. Item Skeet. To home is a coneforteble briok cottage and contain 3 bedrooms, dining room, sit= ting room anti kitchen, with good cellar under the whole home). Hard and soh waterin the house. There is oleo a good fitcobte and driving shed All kiedti of fruit on the lot, Apply to j. L. ALL&N, Lcialesboro, or t3 0 W. ATKIN8oar Seaforth. 190bx411 semmassma.. rtARX FOR SALE. -South half of Id TS, oorieeS Edon 15 Goderieh township. .40 acres, good oley loom, 5 acres fall wheat, good frame house and kikaten, a geod cellar, sort and hard -water, frame barn, 2 frame gables, sheep house and pig pens. A good never -falling spriog creek rune through the lot To be eold, as the proprietor is not able to work it. We a quarter of s mile -from a school sod Ufa miles front Clinton. Apply to WALTON DonSwOnu, on the yrembes, or ()baton P. 0. 3.8efet.t. OOD iiau FOS. SALE.-Thefarm of the lato Andrew Moreanan, In the townehIpi of Ilibbe being Lot ity. Maceration 4, containing 100 sore, which is nearly all eleated, withno waste land. This an excellent farm with a never blank Ppring -also two well& well underdratried and well fenoed, teeth a bank barn, 40 x 60, haymow 28 %pc pig pen hen honse, driving shed, a dwelling house, kitchen and ffood shed. It ie convenient to school and• churches, withee a minim of e splendid Insrket, 7 miles iron. Seefortt, there fen° incontinence pave lame given from day of sale to do all workeP045edon atee_eete the Int of April. For further wick:Wars eMe ant on Lot 18 or 19 eo WILLIAM or ANDREW CELLA, Dublin P. O., Ontario. 199941 ARM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 82, Conception 2,L. R. 8., Tnekeesmith, containing 100 acre. The land la all dleared and in a1 'tete of oultl- vatimemni welt fenced and node nea. There is ago& ba.rei 80x56 feet with a 9 foot stone veldt underneath. Two implement houses and two frame stable& There is also a good frame Mose with nitohoa and woodshed. The house is heated by *furnace. This excellent farm, b situated on the mill road, one toile from Bruoefield, where *Isere itevery convenience. Also 6 miles from Seco - forth. There is a school house on the corner of the farm. Poeseseion can be had three weeks after purobsae For further particulars epply to CHAS. MASON, Etrucelleta. 189141 Vann MASS EIGHTT40RE FARM FOB:Sail r -Being Weat part of •Lets 1 and 2, Conoco'. Ion 2, L. R. S., Tuekerereith. Googi eoperetot11 roomed Mettle, 4048, with kitchen, weodshedand 88x36, with wing extending the uth, 24 feet. buggy houee attached. There is a rr bank barn to Also holok molted roothouse, 40 feet long, under aonaraeaY. ,A11 buildings in good repair. Orchard oontaws tan and a half scree of caseate wioter fruit. There aro two never failing wells,. 6-, sores of bush. This farm le in a good etate-af cultivation, wen fenced and underdrained, situated 2 miles from the village et tenable, For further particulars apply to THOMAS BERNICK, Hensel, Ontario. 189841 OOD PARM IN MAILLOP FOR SALE. -For kJ sale, Lots 15 and 19, on the 18th Comeesion of ticKillere ecrotaining Ion aortaof which 100 acres see elesree, well fenced and in a good etate of cultivation. There are 7a aoree of hardwood bash. There Is a good frame house and .break barn, with stebling underneath. Thera Is a good well at the house, a spring oreek rennin past ehe barn, and e spring on the baok of the farm. There is a good young orchard of °hobo fruit, 14 in within a mile and a (router of the village of Leadbuey, where is Post °file& store, blaokanith shop and school, and close to a obaroh. It is a splendid, farm, and will be Bold cheap and on eat), tame, as the °weer is -unable to work it, and dealres to retire. Apply- on the prenciees'-or addrees Leadbury P. 0. MREI. MARGARET 00ATEO. • 1917x8 ARM FOIL SALE. -That very desirable and con.' veniently attested farm, being Lot 18, Comes - don 11, MAUI 3p, containing 100 sores. There are et4ht earea of bush, mostly hardwood, and the bal- ance is •all thoroughly cultivated. There is two sores of good bearing fade drohard,two good sprino vrells„ a windmill for pumping water, snd is well fenced and well underdrained, there not being one foot of waste bud. It also contains e large bank bara with stone stabling underaeath, and good frame house with Mane cellar, and it free of all en. cumbrance& It is pleasantly sibuitted, being about 2a miler' from Winthrop, with good grevol road leading to the piece. For further particulate apply on the premises et' address JOHN GA.LBRAITH, Winthrop P. O. 19 il-tf 1 eGIABM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 26, in the let C Concession of the township of Hey, London Road, and the south end part of Lob 2T,, adjoining, containing in oll 126 aeres, more or lees. Tne pro- perty ie all wellfenced and drained and well seeded down vrith the exception of about 16 acres under wood. There is a frame dwelling Youse and bare 40x60, oow house, driving house, stable and large shed over 100 feet4ong. Two eplendid welar, goad new wind. mill, pump- and abundance of water. There are also two good orchards mostly Northern Spica. Thia floe farm property is within la miles of Hensall and the flame distance from Eippen and is On the London road. This land ie No. 1 and will be_ sold cheap and on favorable terms as the pro- prietor intends giving up the farm. For partioulars apply to GEORGE PETTY, sr., Henn% or to G. J. SUTelaiRLAND, %.lonveyancer, Heneall. 186941 ARM FOR SALE. -Lot 111 Coueeeston 6, Hui- contaiong 100 sores of land, all cleared., and in fine ootrdition. 14 le at pretreat all seeded to grass and in pied shape either ror hay, pasture or cropping. There is a comfortable frame house with summer kitehea atteahed, two barn& one 31 x 60 feet and the other 30 x 60 feet, and other Litt build- ings. • This farm is situated nine miles from See - forth, eeven and one half miles from Canton and just one mile and a quarter 'rem the village of lainbura, where there are two general stores, two blacksmith shone, past liaise and Bohm'. This farm le well Eituated end will be eald cheap as the pro priator in anxious to vett. For further partioulers apaly to R. S. HAYS, Barrleter, Seaforth, or on the prendees. WILLIAM eeirona Constance, Ont. •! 1O05-tf FA"FOR SALE. -For sale in the township of • Tuckeramith Lot 1, Damnation 8, containing 100 acres, nearly all cleared and in a good state of oultivation, newly inaderdrained, , well fenced, two Eared well. There ism the place a good comfortable frame home, large new beak bane with brit* base- ment,. driviog home, hog pen and large hen house about an acre of young orahard just beginning Ix; beer. • The faun is nearly all seeded to grass, and is in excelleat oondition for either grain growinglor stook raising. This excellent farm is web situated, being two miles from a eohool, pest office, stare,and blacksmith shop, and six mileefrom siesferth. Good roads in all directions. Buyers should °erne and see the farm while the crop is on, Posseetion ean be given after harvest. Apply on the premises or addresti Seaforth pest offloe. SAMUEL MUFF. 190641 rtIFTY ACRE FARM. FOR SALE. ---The west 1! half of ht. 29, aot.eeesion 8, McKillop with eX. . °silent buildings, situated 0 miles from the town of Sestorth, a halt toile Atom school, one mile from church poet onto& fiUres, blaoh.smith shop, mills, ti, and brick -yard. There is a good frame house a id kiteben with cellar, !rattle barn 70 x 66 with s ne etabling, ale° 000d welle. well fenced and drained. There is a" nice young bush. This farm is in excellence condition, 30 apres eeeded down. Orchard of choice your g f ruit trees. Thar is a pleos- ant and eonvenisntly situated firm, blaok clay loKm imitable for either grainor etock' raising. Terme eeey, mode to snit purohmer. Also three choice building tote lit, 17 and 18. Colenian survey, town of 8eaforth, with o new brit* dilate erected thereon. Aeply on the preneeeel or addrese DUNCAN Mc- OAIILIIM, eeaforth la. O. 191.141 .,. Farms for Sale. lan wen, Huron County, well improved, good soil, Olean location, at) right price. Macre farm, Heron Ceunty, clay loam, good house, large barns, a good property. 220 aore ferm near Seafortb, all under • gram, can he betieht at price well within value and on easy terms. 100 acre farm, near b'eaferth, good build; inge, fertile soil. 154 acres near Lueknow, • extra::good buildings, on easy terms. • THE INTERCOLONIAL REALTY COT, LIMITED, London, (Canada. R. S. HAYS, Agent, Seaferth :„B. S. PHILLIPS Agent,t_liensail. 1907-52 HOW GOES TREMONT?' ••• PREACHER SCO RES BESETTING SINS OF 1009ERN SOCIETY. torial upon"1..S age AbOrannations." It lately appear greatest secular present- day. Th written. by a! ini Man who pnrh -tie in one of the Erg,A newapapers of the v.wmlir s editoeial was not ister, but by. a lay - never enters a church, Xt said "It. does Wet ' Seelti :Possible that the public will much . Raw pat longer tolerate hp abominations that' • EVILS COVERER BY DARKNSS are constantly Ging inflicted Uponalt yea froreCbehind tilt footlights of the , • • •- -theattes of the 'present day. Surely meat . . the vulgarities and indecencies of - Theatre Pointed • Out -The . Saloens and I el.gY erilasellem"Itimthoest curgilika •who sabsti nth filth and nile In- . brought trulhyt mgmlarvuetilebusy itsanuds tions for wit andehumor are i woods can do is to get frightened. The 11.0t SO licensed that they- can be an- -• mw*Les* truly dangerous enemy is not the cold einue lowed to go, oi foreven withont ita , Raw, 0.11illeicg; Itching sores which stubbornly or the huger so much as the fear. It, is fear -that robs the wanderer of hts Kuke. The nasty mid effensiVe. jokes, refuse to yi orto any other treatnaent are soon healedand'ettred by this great. ointment and the judgnaent and of lels limb Power; it is the inan omen e tli on and the language • of the slums and the Vile resort are skin is left smooth, soft and natural without scar fear that turns the' passing experience Dr h of flesh for twelw• &Si* came with the n Chaise's Oirrtithent 1-0eaT IN THE WOODS. Such A Cane Fear IS One/n Moat Dangerous Itnexerr. Every woodman -yes, every Indian - gets lost at some time -that is, loses his bearinge and has W11101114 get -- ting to ainee. • As a matter el fact, the wild birds and. beasts will sometimes get lost; although they are wonderfully equipped .for finding their way home. Vulgarities Rini Wichadnesses of a Vile orS and actr sses 'on! the present The h g Power of Dr, Chase's Ointment The worat thing a person lost in the the, Dance -Halls Also .0O2110 in For Condeaanation-A. Dance That Cost the Life of a Saint -An Eloquent Appeal, En Lered oecerdiner I 0.-' et, of Pariiti Mona of Can - Ada, in the wear lien; ley ,Willinin /luny, of To- run -W, aL eheetaerat 44 A.grameturee the a wa. :Los Angeles, -Cal, Sept. 11. --/In this sermon the preacher,. coneiders s some of the besetting- sins of modern Society and warrth ,Christians against Yielding' to - their allurements. The text is Isaiah xxi., 11, "Watchman, whq of the night?" _ . . klave you an ,active imagination? If so, you. do not need to go s.to . Pales, inee the land in Which the ancient: ilprophet. wrote, for an ilitsVation of , t the words of. ray text. There are watchmen enerywhereehinen ! %vim., at night" - while othet-s sletT, ore on guard protecting property ' and by their viiilarihe foiling the plans of • thieve & and see/aspirators who prowl around he the darkness. 1 was deeply impressed with. this duty of the Watchman by a Vet - tacit 1 witnessed eome years ago in • the •British capital. It was that of the ancient ceremony, anl onserved, of mounting guard at the old Tower ' of London. This tOwer, as you may know, its not really1 a towers_ but, a collection of buildings heoveldng an area of thirteen acres. They are sur- • rounded by- a strong and high wall in which there are -four -gates, called respectively the: Iron gates, the Wa- ter gate, the Traitors' 'gate and tehe Lion's gate. Within those walls sorne of tife ancient kings held their collets and passed the nights in wild orgies and licentious dissipations. It was • the •place also where some ofthorn defended. theineelves *behind the bara . red gates 'against domestic exannies, as -Ken as foreign -foes. I'dre also many -of tbe insuriectionists; Were in- carcerated' and i)in t� deet h. The execution axes a -Odell to -duh- hang up- on the museum walls were wetted with the blood of ' many victiths, Up- on the blood-stained block, whichais still kept as a gruesome reminder of the awful past, many bodice; were decapitated. The frightened eyta tnat looked up at the rising sun • nor the last time, from that block did pot all • belong to the„ masculinh Se.N. There poor Lady .Jane Grey died as well as the handsome Ji3arl of Leicester, and Lords Kilmarnock and Balmeriao and- L°‘u'att" am -d• Bigressing from me- sub- ject. I would not have you ' loiter_ longer among these historic ntones merely to see a few crown • jewels and• , regalia, which are guarded in the • jewel house. ' I would not have' you linger long& among the breastplates and helmets and battleaxes and pikes and spears and -casting pets of chivalric times which are now on en- hibition Side .by side with the pins and bayonets; 'told swords and can - nen. of the modern British soldiers. IStft I would hasten. you out into the operh square, whtn'e the shrill fifes are calling I. and. the rolling of the drums! tell us the guards are forming to take their places by and in these watep-towers, just as the watchmen did away back in the -time of W il- nage the Conqueror and fleeing the ragns of the Plantagenet kings. , -Stand back, stand back!" cry the officials to the sightseers. "You must keep •off the parade ground •and give the soldiers rooin." A field °Meer in gold lace and (thinking sword comes out of his quarters and takes his po- sition on the right of the ground. "Fall in, fall in!" Cry the corporals to their men. The different squads are quickly fornied into one line. The sergeants repoat to the adnitant, the adjutant reports to the commandant of the Tower. Thb evening orders are new read. The bandmaster lifts *his signal: The musician's pass down in. front of the line and wheel back to their places. Tattoo is sounded. •The flag .1s- lo wered .1 The sunset *gnu hs gut- tural voice is ;heard. Then the sol- diers march to their respective posts, • and through the night, as on every • night for well 'nigh 800 years on ev- fete tower and at all the gates a sol- dier is stationed as a military watch- ni a n to keep vigil until the day breaks. .It is merely1 formal routine deity that the Dritieh sentinel on the tow- er now has td perform., but in form- er times there was peen of all his yignialice. From his watch -tower • he might see the, approach of . a • foreign foe, or -in -some part of the great shoat -Id -ring pity spread out on • eon - sides below him he might witness the feithi eale of , insurrection. .We can imagine how aexious in those unquiet times might be the tone of the offi- cer of the guard,. who, visiting him, would- ask, "Watchman, what of the night?" That means: "How' goes the • night? What is the news? - Tell me ‘vhat you have seen. What are the prospec ts ahead?' ' • As 1. Sno the sun sink behind the Los Angeles !nills I see ignited one by one the different lights of the Dimly places . of perilieiOns uniuSe- invni . tr4lese , different lights, as de- stroying iseirtes, begin to beckon the young inen Iliad the young women in- to their faacinat int haunts. 7 nn the stage ctirtainIs lifted berme ninny an - alluring group of actresses and chor- us grels, soon as was .seen in, the weanhy capital. of Samaria on the night when a disreputable dancing girn 5.--;;-i1oine liy name., danced among the lititentious guests. of her si eplath- • er, Moroi, arid by sinuous movements of limb and suggestive look of sin so • captivated the drunken King -that he . pro I ill* d . her anything that she , i miela eek of him, even to the halt of ) his kingdom. : ' Jolla the. -lhaptist lost his life on are. tint et- ti, • But Irianet dance B 3' . r• . , a IV i -i, not. like John, in prison, but 1 in orchestra 1 chak, has Jost his head, -efli morallY and spiritually, as the result of it Immoral show on the theatre beards. There may be good tht•atres. I !mow that some people whom' IC respect attendthe theatre. But I lemoW then' e are also vile the - or blemish all too frequeetly forced upon the '• inta a final tragedy. Only keep cool, ea r and seeri in the streets .and pub- MI- ALEr+ Mai,cDoramAe Postinalter, amid and all vvill be well. Iic places of the town without being; Cove, Marsh, N.S., writes se -la For twelve -years A man of little experience usually flaunted in our faces when we pay I sf,la feat sufferer from echeirra fatheidnirde go 0(1 money for a seat in the the- abouto h mete out at a run when he is lost. He ethrei Iincheesresqw:asrean-aranYrhae iteg:ing es 1 hes to travel twice as fast as usual, atzee If the s age has become so im- something fearful. Dr. Chase's Ointmeet coin. Wands or course that merely wears him rt c1 ti at it must rescirt 11 to pletely Cure i out and sends him farther astray. If he dirtitiess and s iggestive vice to ',fain- heakel up t , rr4len - skinAtease. sits down calaily he will not only spars hiinself, but. will help his friends to taia. itself it were better to abolish reconimein it entirely as. an institution," me, took away the itching MA e sore. I have no hesitation, la it as a wonderful cure for itching • this editorial goes more Into detail Dr. Chaise Ointment, 60 cents- a box. The find him, and this he can do by shout - to clenOunce the trend of the modern portrait and eignature of Dr. A. W. Chas% 1 hag at intervals and, above all, by get- theatr e which blasts the lives of its the famous receipt book author, are on only box. i ting on as, high and open a place as ,possible and there: making two smoke fires, the recognized signal, "I am lost." -Ernest 11'horripson Seton in Country Life In America. andiences by -what they .see as well as hear. Does any man .in the face of such a. powerful philippic declare. that thousands, and tens of thou - sande of men and women every year ' are not morally ,contarainated by the filthy streams ef conversation Which playwrights and actors and aetresses roll over thenriln- the theatres in the • lone -winter niglith - • Bt'ut as a watehman I must not al - hew ray eyes to follow only one class of people. While the- theatrie audi- ences are moving through thel streets to witness these distorted and often 'impossible plays, through the open* , doors of the saloons 'I oart- see. the stages on which .are being enacted scores and hundreds and .thousands of tragedies in real life. Each :-one of these tragedies is as pathetic as that of a- Hamlet, an Othello, a, 14erchant of. Venice. Each one has rhore. of pathos • within it than could , ever be found in the misery and Woe of Dickens' "Tale • of Two Cities," or a Seton Thompson's' "Autobiography of a Grizzly. Bean"- Oh, the *agedies of the saloons! As a -watchman- on God's watch -tower who can ever re- fraia , from !sympathizing with thein and shedding tears of deepest Sorrow for . them? "Oh, no," exclaims some cynical man, "I, have no sympathy for the. drunkard. If a man wants to stop ' drinking he can stop.• The only reason why the drunkards do. • not stop. is because they do not want to stop." Ah, my cynical friend, you • are Wrong. I have no. sympathy for that egotistic and !Selfeinflated young man. who • to be smart haafs about a saloon_ and deliberately' cultivates a tantesefor drink. But there are thou- --:.aidh fof \ men who •do not Want to drinklh They do not ineow how to stop drinking. , They lii&e never yet beard of the grace 4of God. which will save them if they wotild only let him save them. Aye, I go further than that. I believe there .are thousands of drunkards to -night Who would be willing. to take an axe and • with it cut off -their right, hands if they could only be freed from the curse of drink. They are fighting drink ev- ery day of their lives, but in. their own strength they cannot stop, And so to -night. as a watchma on God's i tower I see thousands of the ftneet brained men and women going tO de- • struction through the rapide which head toward the awful Niagara of. delirium tremens. I hear them' shout- ing and cursing ,and see them tumbl- ing and flentiog and resisting' aid yet yielding- and going down and down and down. Through the likhts coming from the open doors of the saloons I see these -victims heading toward eternal death. "But, watchrtian,"' some one asks, "are these all the sights and sounds of death that you see and hear?" Alas, alas, no! For, while one crowd is passing throtIgh the hallways and ascending the stair of the immoral theatres, and another crowd is stag- gering slowly on with flushed cheeks, hurrying toward the bar behind which liquor is 'sold, Which in the end will prove as fatal as tho poisonous hem- lock quaffed by a Greek philosopher, I see still another -multitude of ' death seekers. These pass me not in rags or with slow and leaden steps: They are' dressed for the ball -rooms and • the low dance halls. They move in. regular step, not evith the tramp, tramp. tramp of many soldiers, but with t he Ftliding and graceful step of the waltz, the two-step, the polka and dances which we should not and. will not mention. ' "Are all dances . bad?" asks some young girl. "Is every one a dace of death? Are all our young people en- emies of Christ and bad who ever visit dance halls?" This is a ques- tion which is often honestly. and an- • xiously put to me. by my young peo- ple. Well, iny young friend, you have asked me a blunt questeon, and I will answer you in just the same Way. First, I will pay and emphatically say, that I do not believe all young people wno go to our dance halls are intentionally bad. I. believe, yes, I know, some of them go there witlaout one impure thought. • They .go for the pleasure of ,ineeting other young peo- nle and of passing an evening in each other's company. In the next place I will empliattcally sta te ' that I - be- • lieae one of the. most periricions, one -of the most awful cause e of spiritual death in our cities to -day is .the dance hall. And in support of my second etatement I will Pay that in all the *United States yon cannot find ono *minieter - or layman noted • foi. spiritual or evangelistic power a ho Is not an cosmos; of the dance hall, through and through, out and out. They all. without an exception, be - neve'', that the dance hall is thc. de - 'plater of spiritual life, consequently they are and always Will be, out and out, through and tin-bug:di, enem- ies of this destroyer, . this insidious foe of spiritual life. - As I spoke in reference to regular th.eatre goers, I now :speak in refer- enc,e to the regular dance hall de- votee. You never saw in all your life person who was conspicuous for her love for the dance hall who was at the beanie time conspicuous for her devotion. to the service of Jesus. The two loves do not exist in the same heart. They are altogether incon- gruous. You never in your life saw atres. I also know some o f these dtep spiritual consecration for Clusist and love for the dance hall exist toe vile tliee.tres are attended rcg-ularly nether . in 'the same human heart. The by seine so-called good people, And ' also know that thee vile how s modern dance is a foe to all spirit- aros the hauual development and' a harrier -to ate of apiritual and ph eical death. i progress in the Chaistiege life. When I wrote this sermon there lay But smarming in the watch tower 11DCM etudx d..ak a nowarfui erne to-aight I Re more than the eleaen- prentatagetnnne • Dr. Ohase's Backache Plaster quicidy re- lieves whs. aad &Ches. ...!......... mg eights of the evil resores ineing the victims to their fascinating but fatal, haunts. I NCO dark shadows in the streets where no lights are. I see these dark shadow's , following the 1 burglar and the "hold up' man and ' the murderer with his pistol and knife. II see the dark and tiehtly • closed houses from which no ray of • 1 light is oming: These houses look deserted, but they are not deserted, - They. are outposts of p'erdition, siltnt but haunted with- outcasts and game biers an conspirators` who are flag- rantly b eaking the laws of the land. I see thei low dives of a great city 1 : reeking 'With human vermin. I see . also wile& the counterfeiters are I silently doing their work in the still- ness of the night. Night is a symbol . , of social calamity, sin and death. nna we find that most of the lowest ;nut- : casts of society try to conceal their ' evil, actions in' the danhness of the -• night. It is the time when the de - vothes Of sinhold their high carni- val: It "s when the death dealers are I able to deliver their, hardest blows with the least . chance. of detection. But Iwitn God the night is not only tho embem. of calamity,. it is also the haringer of the day, for as Isaiah ti1. aveled forth into the dark- ness as it divine prophet lie "sae* the, gleam Cif the sunrise coming or the eastern hills." Yes, he saw Ilia time when nighteousness would claim' its disciples as well as the time when the enemies , of God should ,be hurried away td their eternal incarceration. "What 7(34 the night, Isaiah? What of the night?" cries the °deer of the guard. :Then the prophetic watch- man cal s, "I see the morning conieth and alsb the night;." 'That means: "I see the righteous triumph through God. I !see also the enemies of God • scattered in complete defeat." "What of the 'night? What of the night?" You call to me I answer. "The morning ponaeth for the disciples of Jesus Ohrist, I see also the eternal night, ,eastning for those who will net yield themselves to Christ's love." That these words of My text eam truly bee changed into the lightness • of an eternal and p•eaceful day was never More impressed upon me than Wile years- ago 'when I was going around the world. As I found the opening description of this text not among Syrian hills, but among the "wilderness of rock" in the London metropcilis, sCi I will find my closing scene net in Jerusalem, but upon thu. troubled waters of an -,angry Pacific. Por daYs and weeks1. we had beeu treadin4 the. quiet paths of the "trackless deep." The oeean had heretofore been very kind to us. It was trnly pacific in every way that its neene signified. But then, like some of our old friends, it changed. Its heart of kindness became .a /heart of hate: It seemed to have not the purpose to be loving, but only Lim •deeire to destroy, Day in and day out ewe 'battled with the tempest. "The worst storm I ever j.cnew," Said theheaptain. "Many inood ships have been, foundered iln less storms than this." The surface of the son was a raging mob of demons. The wind, shrieking 'thinugh our rigging,' was like a chorus of lost souls yellingt out in rage. , e After three days of storm I went to ineh berth and tried to sleep. Hour after hour we were wedged he our berths, unable to sleep. At last in.. the darkness 4iI arose to dress and go up,ot deck. 'No sooner did 1 step upon the door than the heaving ship hurled Me across the stateroom, out through: the door and clear across the,deek. ' I picked myself up, bruised and stunned; then I looked seeout me. What'. was my ' surprise to find the storm \ over and 'th:e stars put. A sailor turned to me and said: "Mate, It will \soon bei clear. ! We shall soon have a See Yo horizon The sur stood calm sea. The storm is past. der star. by the -,,edge of the That is the Morning star. wilt soon be up." Yes, as I here holding to the ship's ropes I knew the sea 'was growing calm. 'Soon quietly and peacefully the sun arose.' The angry waves stop- ped their batterings; the winds cease. ed to laugh and yell. That afternoon we sail4d into the harbor. The morning ha4 come • for the end of the tempese So at last for all those who Mire Christ the night is not the emblem of calarnity„but of the itiorning, The morning with its h. okiven1, day breaketh-the morning, with its ,.emblem of eternal peace. Will you. not' to -night, with Christ's help, take the night, as the emblem of the day? Intelligent Chimpanzees. The two young chimpanzees recent- ly brought froni West Afriea for the Zoological Gardens in Regent' S Park, are said to be showing re- v intelligence in learning the which they are being dailye. in eating and drinking with ands and in rnannet'S getterally. DresS has been provided for them, and if is amusing, says a. Scotsman contx.iiretor, to note the, anxiety they show to get into clothes before taking their morning stroll or after- noon tea in the Fellows' Pavilion. They. oho beth quite young apes, so that there is no reason why in emn•se , of time they should not, in the hands of their painstaking men- tors, rival in aecomplishmfant the fa - MOUS app Consul. London ma rk a b lessons taught their h ECLIPSE FORECASTS.' The First One Was Made lair Tholes •to the iirrottanis. The eclipse Of May 28, 585 B. C. (total in the east of Asia Minor), is the first that can be fixed with cer- tainty, She prediction of it by Thalee to the Ionians brought him lasting fame and excited- among the IXellenes the love of science. Its occurrence dur- ing a great battle ended a five years' war between the Medea and the Lyd- fans and led to a permanent peace. • The Chinese boast of a. series a eclipses recorded in their annals ex- tending over 3,858 years. But these are of very doubtful character. The Egyp- tians said' they had accurately ob- served 373 eclipses of the sun and 832 of the moon before the time of Alex- ander the Great, who died 323 B. 0. An eclipse observed at Nineveh, June • 15, 763 B. C., is recorded on an As- syrian tablet now in the British mu- seum. A lunar eclipse, occurring at 8:40 p. m., March 19, 721 B. C., was ob- served, according to Ptolemy, with much accuracy at Babylon. Each cen- tral eclipse visible in our time is one of an unbroken eeries. extending frons the earliest historic times to the pres- ent and recurring at regular intervals. THE FIRST ENVELOPES. They Were Used In a Private Penny Post In Paris. The first mention of envelopes occurs in 103. when M. de Valayer set up; under royal patronage, a private penny post in Paris, and boxes were placed at street corners for the reception of letters wrapped. in post paid envelopes. The earliest uses of the word in Eng- lish were by Bishop Burnet in 1714 and Dean Swift in 1726. That the "little bags called envelopes," as Row- land 11111 described them, were nothing but a revival and were in use as a covering for postal purposes long be- fore 1840, when his postal' reform was established, is evident from the follow- ing: Under date July 21, 1627, Secretary Conway gives an account of his "open- ing a letter in the presence of the king, which contained a blank sheet," Lamb mentions them in 1825, and in "Harry Lorrequer," p'ublished by Charles Lever in 1837, we find, "The waiter entered with a small note in an envelope." The early covers were probably rude enough, as machine made enveloees were unknown before 1840, and the "lick of the gum" did not make its ap- pearance till the succeeding year. The Armenians. The Armenians are one of the most ancient races is the world. Their cow try le mentioned by Xenophon and IFize kiel and in the cuneiform ineeiteeee of Babylon and' Assyria. All the na- tions that surrounded them have pees - ed away, but they remain, though tneir country has bees harried with fire and sword for centuries. The speaker as- cribed the permanence of the Arme- nian race to the virtue of their women and the exceptional purity and stabili- ty of their family life. Even is their heathen days polygamy was unknown to them. 'They have been a Oltristian nation for more than 1,500 years and , have undergone perpetual persecution for their faith from the surrounding oriental peoples. Route 01 the Bobolink. The amount' of traveling done by some of our birds is astonishing. Dr. Cooke says that the common night hawk spends the summer in Alaska and the winter in Patagonia. The bobo- link, which is the reedbird of the mid- dle states and the ricebird of the south, winters on the waving pampas of southern Brazil. It covers 700 miles from Cuba to the South American coast in a single flight, following a track not popular with other birds, which might be called the bobolink route. Bound to Collie. Mamma -My dear, what are you do- ing? Little Daughter -Making a dolly for my little sister. Mamma -But you haven't any little sister. Little Daugh- ter -No, not yet.; but Sally Stuckup has just got one, and 1 know we always get everything the Stuckups do. k4m1. Your Furniture wants can be best supplied by us. We hav3, the stock that wili please you, and our prices for all kinds of Hi-pa:Ravi TT3-= Demand your attention for a short time. We wili give- a *IPSO& .1a1 • -On On Couches, Parlor Suites, Springs and MattrasQes FOR- OASH ONLY. "CT1•11DMIRIFIl_A3KII\TC÷. PxomPtly attended. to night or day. BROADFOOT BOX & LiO fi S 11 EL T. HOLMES, Manager. eat -Ker to the • "Why is it that Ethel has never mar. Diamond Rings ried?" • "She has -Coo many Pretty girl friends." Did you ever see a car No. 1 on the railroad.? What becomes of ear How to Keep Well. The hest efforts of the great pluck:Mons are now expending In finding how to keep people well and prevent serious dieeese. Dr. Colossi's Nerve Food was prepared with this ohjeot in view. It Is not 011. ly a ours for diseases of the nerves, but also a re- storative to be used when vitality rune Iow and the weakened condition of the system invites alt ask by fevers or contagious diseases. We have added some DOW dia. mond rings to our stock, especially one at $13.00 and one at $88.00, which we think is as good value for the price anywhere.' JOHN bULGE JEWELLER, SE &FORTH. Fail and Winter •Apples Wanted. The ur dersigneci are peepered to bay a gamete' f Fall and Winter Applee, within peokine ("Lettuce of Seater b. For further pa tioulera apply 14 oak° of D. D. WILSON az Co.. Sadorth. 19164 klanlop Dirnotory for 1903. MICHAEL MURDIE, Reeve, Winthrop P. O. • JO FfN 3. BROWN, Ommoillor, Seaforth P. 0. CHARLES LITPLE, Oouroullor, Winthrop P. ge.: JOHN MURRAY, Counrellor, Beachwood P. O. • JOHN M. GOVENLOCK, Councillor, Winthrea DEN C. MORRISON, clink, Winthrop P.0, DAVID te. ROSS, `areaeurer„ Winthrop Poeet.. -• SOLOMON J. SHANNON, J. P., /bonen' -1100=aolav• Winthrop P. O. V. I Veterina Voatee ern p neatorth. pt st JAMES nearisteanolieltere sea. In Seoferfla a ay Offien tipenev tem Main street, SC A901. EOL F* 11 tuoved bora • oMeea, 486T etel°'.(3"1211rdGghl:adtVi ecect;larisattend Ontario Collea laTir, sad - DR. H tOoaduate of theive eine, timber of C geeing oI Ont,arlo ilIbteI1 Sehool, Ch fiI, Loader', Eagl• e Loridcr. Roglaad,. •etore, Bak; Streak .ealle Imo -wend from. Oft. orene end Rosideu 'Methodist church. ner for the Co - OR OOdeitoh tare 10OTT„ grad Me -arbor Onkel' Sualeteene. Co lIaoliA.T, boot) irold roadelat CH:digit& Of Phial u and Phyla • tory coneys -I) 'tweet olwome ber A1'70144010 denceend office 1*1 bate!. Pbo AU 91RO BROW Counties Of H Oartitabora Ito IX -MOMS MI aatkaseiticat guar* TAMES G. ale .t.P the minty o Part of the couretx, gem:sat-sad. 02.0 Op st IAA a, ottention.