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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-03-10, Page 6=pea. sua. es hatpinu in farina In the tonnships *orris, and Wawa- woeht_0(4113tY thiro14- 'inquire ;at ono. Wit 13,121PSEIAL, Myth, Onli.tr 11744f • — . ltattriLDIM LOTS 'irEl# SALP.1.-,For sale, several aeor.ble buIldin4s,,lots in the tOwn of See. /atilt 'ratio tff allliaked in one of the best lintrttt ot th te,ku and tke well planked with the vhoiceo -tt fruit. ApPlAto W. 0«, McLean at the Iterom toe Ore cr., Lea1do4h. . 4 - 1940e11 ESS thtri 0,000 will buy Lot 1191 COneession 7, lfrat contains 100 acres of end land, has ar. it a blink barn 04X04 Net, with 8 AND s Sunlight MAY 13g RETAINED BY THE SPIRIT ITHOUGH BODY GROWS OLD. . 1-10W TO RENEW OUR DAYS ootiftene btabling. 0Pd 8 -roomed brick house orebard, goo titer,. &g it le. Ix miles from #8-eaforih and 1 nllus from Ometance pest „office. F06E4.8401) giv 4Lt onoe. applv to WM. I. ISZIAlitW4410 r]. LJThUFI LEY, e""t'll'192641 WARM FOR SALE.- l4) a ros, lot 81 and west half et lot 84. 0.1ittesi n 2, a. R. 8., Tucker. amith Vjfl bi, etid ifjook or in eparate percale. ..4.goed tin for mixed farming witn the b u of taellItit•e Ir 4 ,ek +skiing Poo buildiage see god comprising a brick Willits, good bare and i.h. d and stone stabliogi AppV, • HERMIT OREM 8e• forth P, 0., or to W. 13 YD01764 plIntoli, Ontario. 19 0.5 if ororrirmnrrit....0.11 17'ARM FOR SALt.--io, sale, pot .21, London Road, Stanley, cotitaluing WO acres, 03 sures cleared, sire butanes le good-bardwOod tlittlier. Tho farm le well nude draint and • all fenced, and in gocd condition in evory0 rtieular. Zhis la an ex. oelleat farm, iie barter ha the township. it is five miles from Clinton and ti miles trona Brneefield. Will be sold on reasons, le terms ate the proprietor Is in the, implement, , business, Apply . to F. TOMLINSON, Brnoefiel 19244/ I e FARR FOR SALE. -tin tilt township of Usborne, being Lot la, Oenbeesion 2, ceosisting of the best 100 sores of kind In the township, well fenced and in good state of onlolvation. - Good briok house and frame barn, convenient to school, church and rnarket, being ordy 2 utiles from Exeter. For fur. ther partioulars apply to D C. hicINITES, Exeter, or17100. kilGOINII, 0er:tutors of the estate of B. I. Biggins, deceased, or t6 GLADliAlf& STAN BURY, dicticdtors, Exeter. 19284f A .. f mfoR SALE CUA?g.-In itarphurhey, a comfort. :r ;Mc ail* cottage withfive rooms and hell, with kitethen and woodahed &niched. h.rd and soft water. stabling ter teitile head of cattle or horses with hen h use and 3:11g pen, aletegood well and pomp in stable, two stiri a half sores of land on which are the choicest, %lieges of all kinds of fruit. This is a most desirable property for any person vaulting a conafortabld home. Apply on the prem - tees or address JOHN McDONOGIIi 8saforth P. 0. 191041 11OUSE AND LOTSFoR SALE. -For sale, brick house and 2 lotkin Seaforth. ORO lo faoes on Norte Main Street and the other on Wed Wit. Mani Wallet 'Die bailee le a comfortable brick eottage and centalne &bedrooms, dining room, sit. eh:groom and kitolieni with good cellar under the whole house. Hard abd Kea water in the house. ?liberals aloe a good stiab, le and driving shed All kinds of fruit on the I ,6t. Apple to J. le ALLAN, tondesboro, or to C. W. ATKINSON; Seaforth. ' 1906x4ti1 BAUTIFUL FARM FOR SALE -For sale cheap, that beautiful tetra in the township ot UoKiI Up, known as The Maoles " situated one and a bali vales north of Filaforth. rhe farm contains one hundred liana ot the choicest land. There is a lank barn, lave frairei bout*, with beautiful large rooms, good water a ereek running *tough the lam Good orohard and vineyard, all under _tut - ideation and well drained. The situation is excel- lent, near country sohbol and near Collegians In, giant°. It is an ide A aountry - home, . immediate possessionapply to WM. GOVENLOCK, eesforth. 1922-tf IRST'OLASS FARM FOR SALE JD -Being West pirt of Lots t and 2, 'Genoese - Ion 2, L. R. la, Tneeeremith. Good atom:trete, 11 roomed home, 40x28, with kitchen, woodshed and beggy houue &Macho& . There if) a IlaW bank barn 138x86, with wing extehding Se the Beeth, 24 feet Also briokarchaa roothoures, 40 feet long, under gangway. Ag buildnigs iri good repeir. Orchard eontabn WO and a 411 acres of choice winter fruit. Thera are two- never &Ring wells, If acres of bush. This farm Is in a good state of cultivatIon, well termed and underdealiad, situated '1 miles from the village of Renege For further partleulars apply to -THOMAS KFIRN/Olt, Hermit, Ontario. 1896-11 "DARN FOR SA.LK--For sale on resemiable term L. the fame of the abdersigned cie the North Gravel _road, moirmois, a toile north ;If Seaforth. 14 containe 176 acres ell cleared exeop about ten mores. It is well tinder -drained, welLfeeeed and in a high state or onitivation. There is it fine two storey brick house, bank borne And other necessary outbuildings. Tbere is a amine. spring aloe° to the buildinga A large orshard of choice fruit and about two weret df vinery. Thie le one, of the ehoieest farms in Raton and there is not a foot of wade land on it. It is all beaded to grass except about 60 aorta. There are ten reeres awn 40 fall, wheat and the fall plowing done. Apply to the pro- prietor, 8e01ortir. ROBERT GIOVENLOcK. 1920- -romr 'DAM FOR SALE. -For sale lot 29, on the 91h it concession. ef Hibbert, containing 100 aoresall in a good state of cultivatime. There is on the pre- misee a brick house and briok kitchen and a good cellaa There is also s iarge bank barn, se x 40 and a leant° et te feet, with stone stabling underneath. Also a ebed 80 x 80 11 and a driving house with everything complete. Thera are -ihree never tailing weals on the premisea there isalso a large °tabard with a good garden. There are 10 aores• of fall wheat sown and there are 40 acres seeded down. Kither *mamba for hat or pastur'e. all the fail ploughing is done. Tbe farm is well underdrained with tile and well fenced with wire 1011G,4. It la in &good locality, being atuated two and a half miles from Chiseihuret, where there is a poet offloo and two ehurches, Methodist laud Presbyteulan, 8 miles trona Seatortit and there hi a good gravel read run. ming past the farm. It is in good condition and will be sold on reasonable terms as the proprietor wishes to retire. For further particulars apply on the premises or to .0flAftese EBEREIA.RT. Staffs. P. Ontario. , 1941-4 if You Want to Buy a Farrn Business or residence) consult us or oar agents before making a seleetion. We have a large Het of properties, many obthem are extra good value at the price asked. We can -save you time, money and worry if you will allow us to assiet yon in making a belecuion. Let us know your wante, or get our - oektalogue-it costs you nothing. Daily Association With Young People, Especiajty With Children, IS Essen- tial Many Ways ta a Man's Do- veloprnent—How It Keeps a Man's Heart Young and Teaches Him to Live the Loving Christ Life, Entered accord inir to ..ket of Pitriin mon t of Can - ads., in the year 19M, by Frederick Diver, of 'reroute, at the Dap% of Aviculture. Ottawa. Los Angeles, March 5. -The zo- • cret So long sought by the ancient al- chemists is the. topic discuased by Ulf)" preacher in this sermon, in which he show e how, though the body may grow old,. the spirit may retain its youth and freshness. The text is Job xxix., 5, "When my childern were about me." Misfortunes are generally gregarious. Sqiey are not recluses. They live not a 1 hermit's existence. Like the beasts of 1 the fields or the birds of the air or the I fish . of the sea, they browse in herds or fly in flocks or swim in schools. If one appears upon the edge of our horizon others often folow it with 'grettt ra,pi tiy, as de the April showers when "t lelonds return after the rain." They pi :therriselves upon each other in -gre drifts; as do the snowflakes. They t their death knells in chorus. As "not tag succeeds like success," so "nothi destroys like misfortune." Where the Is- one einissarY of destruction roarnin ,there are, as a rule, many emissari treading closely upon its heels.. By when they are small and insignifica, pley, cripple us by the persistency pair attack. Naturalists- tell Us th the small, insignificant humming bi sometimes alights upon the head of and peeitsshrdlu (wHa nifwyp mfiVy mighty eagle. There he sits and pecl and pecks no matter -how fast or ho high, his huge evinged cafrier may fi There he sits and pecks and pecks ui Ill, after a-vv-hile he buries his srna beak in the brain of his gigantre fo who could crush him as _ easly as hawk might kill a sporraw, 'if the eag could only. get at him. Trouble is lil unto the humraing bird. Wi th it small . bill it 'leeks and pecks at us. drives in blow after , blow -un til at las our strength suceumbe under the con tinuous hammering's. When trouble struck- the grand old patriarch, Joh, it hit him againe and again. First came financial trouble, then domestic trouble, then, physical trouble. It was pain in the head. pain In the heart, pain in the limbs, pain in the back and pain everywhere. Then what happened? Job tried_ to . gain comfort from his reminiscences. Job looked back upon the scene of the hap- piest time of his life. He pictured himself when he was a young husband, planning and working for his future. He thought of himself when. his young wife. was by his side and his little, boys and girls were playing around in his nur- sery. Then Job breaks forth in the la- mentation. of my text, which has come to most fathers and mothers after they have reached their twoscore years and ten: "Qh, ,that I were as in .months Past * evhen my childen wei ail about me!" It is,a pathetic longing, not only that time ,t;e halted in its on- ward sweep, but te4cerripelled to retrace the steps It has already taken. Is Job's longing a sinful desire? Is t wrong for us to want to become young again or at least to stay young us t as long as we can? tro et not. Therefore the purpose of thLs serrnon s to allow how we can turn back the shadow on the dial -of Ahaz, not only en, fifteen, but even twenty and thirty years for some of us. There is on old roverb which .says, "A man is not as id as he looks, but as old as he feels," !am going to prove. that a man cart ale - ways feel about 30 or 25 -years of age, von though hie hair is white, his nose s bridged with a pair of gla.sses, and e has to walk with a staff. How shall we renew the days of our trong, young manhood? First, by as- ockaing with young people, and es- eciaip with children; by ma.king the ntim te companions of •our mature earg and of our old age those who are n the threshold of life or playing in he nursery; by stealing or rather con - in ually borrowing froin. our married ildren their babies; by making our randchildren come home and live with us, or, if we have no married children of our own, by borrowing the children of some neighborly grandfather, and loving them as we woUlcl our own; by firmly and deliberately making a vow with ourselves and -with rod. 'Though I may live to be sixty, seventy. eighty,. ninety or a, hundred years old, I Will never allow myself to outgrow my fondness for little. children, and my sympathy for their joys and sorrows, and my unceasing desire for their dairy companionship. Daily association with young people; especially with children, is essential in. many ways for a man's development. It keeps his -heart young-. Yes, it does More than that. It teaches him what should be his attitude' toward Christ and toward his fe/low-men. Some peo- ple cannot understand what this edu-- eating power of a child's life is upon ft matured heart. Why? Like some of d - he le under the tutelage of c ildren. Some months ago I hired a big wagon. T' put at Into his wagon not onlyi my own Ichil- oll dren, but I went around and raidea the it- neighbors' houses and piled in sor4e of ng theirs. I was he only 1grown persoe. re among them. We took a long driVe of g about fif ten miles. 'The' , at the lead nt ice cream before we started back. As i es of my cohort of little ° es, 1 pro dly en marched into a restauran to give them ee we went n a gentleman tandinee Upon at the sidewalk, said: "My man, I pity rd you! What have you tot there -e -an a orphan asylum?" "No," I answered!; "I P have rCta asylum. I have lot of teach-. ,cs ers here who are making me lave God . ee. and love, inanleind, and love life and Y. love everything God has nade u on'His beautiful earth." 1.- i 11 Wheh we took that lo g ride 1 twas' e, a le re 5 It t - I .ous fats InEal:i i of soap is no longer a chance mixture of miscellane- rt chemists carefully watch and test every step in the ' making of .= 1 ' HURON AXPOSITOR is a wellfmade Sop StItnlight Soap The fats and lolls mu -t be perfectly pure and at every stage of the process the soap ust.coi c up to Sunlight standard. That is why it cleanses your c ot es per ectlee makes your blankets soft .and fluffy, does not eiestro our mo t dainty linens or injure your hands. Sunlight S 'a washe equally, well in hard or soft water. Your dealer is audio ezpd to r turn the purchase money if you are not satisfied. BR THERS LIMITED, TORONTO 1002 The Sunlight Maids 4re through ;their washing by neon -that's tho Sunlight way us, they have not placed themselves THE 14TERCOLONIAL REALTY 00'Y, LIMITED, London, Canada. R. S, REVS, Agent, Seaforth B. S. PHILLIPS Agent,liensall, 1907-52 raIrreClarraliiCraerifIffittorOfitArt. Eke Troubles Quickly and pc rannently adjusted. Glasses fitted properly. Dr. Ovens London. Treats Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat. Will be at Commerciai Hotel, March 15, All Day. Next Visit April lath. McKillop Directory for 1905. •••••• 110.0 MONO • DANIEL MANLEY, !teem Beachwood P. 0.: M. RowLAND Couneillor, Walton P. 0 F lecteltAID, Coubolilor, st Celtenban P. No. CHARGE 4 LITTL,E, Geunoilhr, Winthrop P 0. JOHN M. GovEN-LeCi, Couneiller,Winthrdp I'. 0 MICEIAEL MURDIE, 0 ark, Winthrop P. 0. DAVID M. RO-N, Tr. aturer. Mahn p P. 0. SOLOMeN 8. hileNNON, J. P. Senitary Inspector, Winthrop P. O. MRS. WM SA,NID....RS Dress Cutting Schooi, For $10 1 will give a $yeturn free, and teach any lady how to cut. fit aid put together any article In dress or raentle making in 2 weeks from the plainest waist to the na at elaborate el Tees that can be found in the friebion book, without% the me of pa er pat- terns. I have taught over e506 this lad eix yeare, and offer 8:0) Se aneose 1 caul teach, or oan prove to mo they cvm tram as muchany other place in two yeers. Just think of a! For $60 I will toich any one that Li a dreee m -..ker, or good sewer ar d drawer, to teeth this coma givieg them ray teach - era' certificate. Strangers may hoard at school. A imitable reward given to any one informing me of any person trying to teach this mune, whiola 1 invented and had patented, tint does not hold a -certificate from me. bit xis elass commences Mon- day, March the aah. wste for particulars. or eee toe at my school in Stratford, onprmite Windsor Rote!, on Albert street, on Saturday, Maroli 18111, from 1 to Sp in. MRS. WL SAINTIMRS, Teacher In Drest Cutting, Box 159, Stratford P. 0. 193342 r,:trt ctikeittemket-tevkitt*****oof Nerve Racked Men and Women will find Balm for their Terrible Sufferings In MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS. They tone up and strengthen the nerves, build up the muicles of the heart, and purify and enrich the blood. They put the nervous system in perfect working order, and restore health and vigor to both body and brain. Miss Edythe Lindsay, Strom - nese, Ont., writes :- " It affords me great pleasure to say that I have experienced great relief from your Heart and 'Nerve Pills. For over two years I suffered from violent palpitation of the heart, was very nervous and easily startled. I was in an extremely weak condition before I started to take the pills, but four boxes effected a complete care, 1 cannot praise them too highly to those suffer - flag from nervous weakuess and heart troubles." Price 60 ciente per box, or 3 for 11.25. All dealers, or Ttim T. tiranuate Co., LrilITND, TORONTO, ONT. ten .14-34.4-0-4-3-4-f-cv-4-114 the greatest winner. Wh n those little folks began to sing I find inyself singing in spite of myself. When they talked and asked . questlions, I fotund myself ffaying to myself; "yes, just as as those little children a *e wonde ing about causes and., effecte leich ar so - plain to rne,I am wonderin about trou- bles in this worud the catks of w ich are plain to God, and will yet he m de plain. to mee All that I must do 1 to wait, and God will explair ell.", .Wien the children bee:erne hungry, I foilnd_ nlYself betoming hungry. When they had thelr little differences inthe wagon I found myself the peacernaker, which taught nie a good lessonthOw to be a peacemaker among the big boys sInd girls calle'd grown-up naent arid worn n. And, my friend, if you _e er want to have that old withered he rt of yoUrs beat and 'throb with happl ess, ihiS is what You need to -do: Ga her- all the babies, the boys and the girls of your neighborhood, together, pil -them into a w -c agon if you are out in he ount y, leave your wife and the nu Se at hoti e, or at least make them ri e, along ''n another vehicle, and then by the gra9e of 'God, you go forth and I am one bI the .mightieet lessons of 14e -how t keep young by bearinipart lof the joy and the sorrows of the youritg, Do you know how Thonlas Chalmei was able to accomplish his great wl of life? He always kepti his hea i young and fresh and loving), by associ ating with the young. I-110 daughtea Helen Chalmers, told my father tha. during the darkest days of the Pre Church controversy he would spenc part of each day in playing with ths children in the house or -fl ing kiteS with the .boys upon Edinb rgh cornel mon. Do you laiow howW lter Scot kept his heart young? 11 . always sought the companionship of he young He continually had his childr n' or oth- er people's children about irn. No more beautiful word picture was ever *drawn by an author's pen •-th if de- scription of that love by Soh Brown. In that essay the great author o "Ken- ilworth" is pictured ing through, the snow and the sleet o his neighbor's homes, and there bundling up lel' rjorie Fleming, a little girl of five or 1 sum- mers.- In her shawl or his letak he carries her back to his study., There, while his pen runs rapidly over the pages of his immortal,. books, Marjorie chatters on. Study Eugene Fierd and his love for little children. - Study the lives of our great authors like leongfel- low and our preacherslike Beecpier and our merchants like Cooper ap.d our electricans like Morse, and our i editors like Greeley, arid our Presidents " like McKinley -you Will find that. Without exception, they kept young by keeping In touch with young people. 1 If I did not have any babies 1 of my. own I would adopt some. No m.ri can defy the inroads of time °unless he con- tivally associates with the young. folkt. "What would an engine be in a ehip if it were lying loose in the hull* Said - Beecher, "It* must be fastened to .1:t with bolts and, screws before t 'can propel the vessel. Now, a eh ldles man is like a loose engine. A man must- be bolted and screwed to, the community before he can work well fol' its advaneement, and there are no such screws and bolts as children." That is true. There is no screw or bolt that holds man to the duties of life "firrner than the children. But I go even; fur- ther than did Mr. Beecher. I holdl that . there are no influenits more eff4tua1, to keep us young ;while we are per- '- forming those duties than these qaine . little ones. The test way to see 1 the * sunbeams dance is to watch them through the dancing eyes of a little . child. The best way to smooth out all the wrinkles of old age is to bury them in the dimpled cheek of a smiling baby girl. The best way to send the • blood coursing through the withered arteries of threescore years is to play "blind man's buff" or "hide and seek" with the boys and girls after the stippef. table is cleared and the school lessons have been learned. The best way to grow young is to associate with the young, • God pity you if you cannot find any en- joyment in making the snows of Dke-• cember melt before the life-giving rays of May or June. - • - I This mental_ and physical depletien which comes. from being satisfied with a past success cannot be better illua- trated than by some of the facalties 4;r1 our old colleges. Now, the coiloge fa- culties of both the east and the weat were originally made,up of picked men. The presidents and trlustees of those institutions in almost every case ser lected the very brightest and best stui. dents of their classes. They were the ' honor men. Of the colleges who were asked to fill the honored professoriat chairs. But, marvelous to say, although the college faculties of the old institu- tions in my day had been recruited from the brightest men, yet almost without exception those faculties had a large percentage of men who seemed to be simple relics of the past. They seemed to be mummified men, entirely out of touch with present day events. They were 'walking "cube roots' in- carnated "dative cases" or petrified ex- amples of Doric or Corinthian archi- tecture. They seeinecl to be men who had learned one thing well, but as soon as they had mastered that one line • of study all their /mental faculties were then allowed to become dormant. Thus they withered up _into fossilized and embalmed old age. As a rule, the greatest thinkers and the hardest mental workers in. the world ,have been among the longest - lived men. Study the long list of men old in years, but young in heart, branching out into new work when at 70 years or beyond. Marden, in his book, "Pushing to the Front," has a marvelou4 collection of illustrations in reference to this fact. Dandolo, the Doge of Venice, was a warrior who led his soldiers in battle.at 94, and was of- fered a crown at 96. Titian at 99 was struck _down with the cholera in Ven - ,the, when he was at work on one of his canvases Pope Leo xnr., at 93, was the most powerful personality In all Europe on account of Ills Pontifical throne and his own powerful mental equipMent. When an American bishop said to him: "Your Holiness, we hope God may let you live to becorae a cent. tenarian," the Pope answered: "My frie4d, do not try to limit the power of God. I expect to be as hard at work after I am 100 years old as I am now." Dr. Samuel Johnson wrote his greatest book when nearly 80. James Watt learned German when he was 85. .Isaac Newton. and Benjamin Franklin were hard at work on scientific subjects when over 80. Lord Palmerston d an o ;William E. Gladstone were both Prime S Ministers of England at fourscore years. "Robert Hall," says Marden, s "learned Italian when past 00. Noah Webster mastered 17 lan.guages after t he was 50. And some of tee best works 7 of Longfellow, Whittfer and Tennyson were written after they were 70." ' O Aged friend, the reason you are growing Old and teithering up is be- cause you have stopped branching out. You have taken in -sail and are delft- . Ing, simply drifting, towards the rocks of death, and drifting fast. take a neat lease of life by taking a new interest in .1 things. Study, study, study. Week, I work., work. Go • and hear every fine 1 singer and every good speaker and read 1- every new book that you can. The 1 most foolish law the United States iGovernment ever made. was when it - established Old Soldiers' Homes, where the old veterans of the Civil War could go and live and do nothing. If an old soldier Is physically helpless, then, of course, he should be cared for. But a well soldier in -Danville, Ill., or Santa 1 Monica, Cal., or Milevaukee, Wis., or 1the Old Soldiers' Home in Washington. should be encouraged to work if he is lable to. Stagnation means premature !death, mental and physical, as well as tapiritual. "It is better to wear out than Ito rust telt," is a poor maxim. We have , no right to do either. But I would tell those who are coining on toward old . age there is more danger for most ef ; Us of rusting out than of wearing out. I1 But lastly, I remark, the easiest of all ways to renew youth is to try to fix others to take your place after you are gone. Of course I take for granted that I am to -day talking to Christians. ' i g as aged Christians, you are near - the great dividing, line which is go- . Iti,;ow, - trig to bring you to your eternal reward. AS you are nearing Heaven, shall you - ' spend most of your time talking about Heaven and its eternal rewards? * Oh, n. You must spend nearly all of your la t days in fitting the young men and women by your side to take your place. You must be to your son and your daughter and your friends- what Paul ' was to Timothy and Elijah was to Eli- sha, and Christ was to His disciples. In 1 the anxiety to fit others to put on yoUr own armor, you will find your own heert throbbing with the ambitions of youth. You will then find old age tak- ing on the beauties of youth, even as In 'Ile Indian summer the flowers of the late autumn start to, grow again after the ',forests have incarnadined the leaves witj their life's blood. . Old age 'should pass its twilight hours as t would pass the few intervening dayS prior to Making a long journey away from home. If I was to go to Afriea, or Europe or Asia as an Ameri- can Soldier, would I spend my last days here 'he weeping? Oh, no, I would spend the few days before I sailed in pre- paration. I would say to my wife: "My dear,you do this or that or the other thing after I• am gone. I must put enough money in the bank in your name to meet 'our wants." If I was, a merchant, I would say to my son: "SOD; iyOu are now to take charge of the store.' I do not want you to run into debt. ',Keep the business going along on' its old lines." If I had one boy who was a wayward son, I would talk to him about God and his future. I would try -oh so hard—to lead him to Christ. Each moment of myAfe would be spent 11-1 the' best way I could for those X would leave behind. And in looking atf..tan their interests 1 would fled my 1 -trriormi,oree4/.11Yrrrl.....- lffe irowinfee trt 1, lofy 0(141 in joy. When iny fathcr made his last visit to his old Classmate, Dr. Suydam, he aid: "Wen, Suydam, wei are &ming near the end of our earthly Journey. Row do -you feel about it?", Some of US are not as olds as was my father when he asked that question at 70 years a age, blit we are all heading toward old age. How will he feel about it when it comes? We shall feel about Old age all right if we live according to the Christ la,w. We will. feel about it, ail wrong if we do not do as Christ would have us do in fitting others for lite's battles and fitting ourselves for Hea- ven. May God make the twilight of our earthly life the most beautiful and the happiest part of our daY. May the twi- light of our earthy life, sluicing behind the westertt hillock et our grave, be colored with the same beauties as Is the beautiful sunrise of Heaven, which even now we can see gleaming in the east over the Hill 'of Calvary and over the central cross,upon which once hung the dying body'of Christ, who died that we might forever live in Hint and through Him and with Him. ' * 4F4'1 For Infants and Children. Kind You Have Always Bought :Signature of Bears the - de- -The Stratford Herald ef last week says: The C. P. R. surveyors are said to be at work on a route, through Ellice, going by way of Rateburg. Gadshill and Sebringvidle, which will take the road clear of Strattor d al hogether. Just where the road will igo if these plaices aro included, it is hard. to say, but the original design of eckuneotitna- with Tharalwville were carried cub St. Marys might be included. A number of prominent Ellice peoplei have expressed a desire tO have the -road and will offer a substan- tial ;bonus. . , Ohanapion. Liniment for Rheumatism Charles Drake, a mail carrier at Chapinville,- Conn., says: Cliamber- inin's Pain Balm is the champion of ala linanients. T,he past pear I was troubled & great deal with, rheu- matism. in my shoulder. After try- ing several cures the storekeeper here TeiComme4aded tills remedy and it iconatplieWy curet me.' There is no use of anyone suffering from that painful aliment when this lin- iment ORR be obtained tor a -snialt slum. One application gives prompt relief and its continued use for a short time will produce a perman- ent ewe. For sale by Alex. Wilson, DriuggiM, Seaforth. --• tr —The Mitchell Recorder •ef last weektsflys• In the thirt,y thousand dollar fire at Moosomin, N. W. fr.,a couple of weeks ago, in , which ,,tthe Union Bank was destroyed, Mr. C. W. Yeo, accountant in the bank 'and who together with the cashier oc- cupied the room over the bank, had a very narrow escape from be- ing burped to death. They were both so overeort by smoke and gas that they had t be drazged from their • beds and only escapexi in, their night clothes from a horrible death. Every article of olothinu and 1 r.r•or, REASON N9 'WHY YOU SHOULD USE Because it is full weight. You get a full pound of tea inside the package. Th lead wrapping is not included in the weight. -If is weighed by automatic electric maciiines— machines' that never make mistakes (clerks sometimes do), and the tea is poured into the packages after being - weighed. Put a pound package 'ef Red Rose Tea on a scale and it wiJ1 weigh re to 20 ounces, according to the thick- ness of the lead wrapper; or the tea, poured out) will weigh 16 ounces. Everything about Red Rose Tea is alxv-ays fuli measure—weight, quality, purity, and cleanliness—ancl your satisfaction will be full and complete when you use it4.1 T. H. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N.B. BRANCHES : TORONTO, WINNIPEG. Ihaiity 111 Furniture -010 chlidre ..., , -..v „of : ea 'we ate° ib el: bY infy4 eimatif ' ear WitemsApeese pose ti =1 If)T41:eormill;:eil leave t Ai al.: . , :ssaveit, ww ows swg was ros mew Ast 4: .51:15,:e 40* 4.0* AV 7":"1010.1.,4: titirem °a:, rataj -41000 tln:Tilret:alli # wig Tjg WOOw ewe beC We invite attention to the mag nificent assortment of Furniture. Our display is large. Selections at this store are made easy anil every taste gratified-. We are giv- ing exceptional offerings through the entire store, Pzomptly attenaed -to night or day. BROADFOOT, BOX & 00, S. T, HOLMES, Manager, .01...ratorose, Keep them in the hou Take one when you feel bt 10118 or dizzy. They act & liver1. Want your moustache or bard ucg abeautifalbrownorrichalack? run ere. or przootin-oza.i.anzo "nick knacks" was lost. Mr. Ye° is • the only son of Mr. ,and Mfrs. Gedrge Ye*, of thts town. er A Guarant6ed Cure for Piles. Itching, Elrnd,, Bleeding or Pro- truding • Piles. Druggists refund money if Paso Ointment fai* to cure any case, no meitter of how long standing, in f rom 6 to 14 days. First application gives ease and rest. 50o. 1.1 your druggist hasn't it, send 50o. in. stamps and it will be forwarded post-paid by Paris Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo., 1930-6 m. Obstinate Coughs and Colds. The Kind That Stick. The Kind That Turn To Bronchitis. The Kind That End In Con- . sumption. Conpmption is, in thousands of cues, nothin' more or less than the final result of a neglected cold. Don't give this terrible plague a chance to get a foot -hold on your system. If you do, nothing will save you. Take hold of a cough or cold immediately by ushig DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP. The first dose will convince you that it will cure you. lifiss'Hannah F. Fleming, New Germany, N.$., writes :—"I con- tracted a cold that took such a hold on me that my people thought I was going to die,. Hearing how good Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup was, I procured two bottles and they effected a complete cure." Price25 cents per bottle. Do not accept substitutes for Dr. Wood's Norway Pins Syrup. Be sure and insist on having the genuine. To* T. Idti..numir Co., Latin; TORONTO, ONT. 1 The Kind that has Cured Your Friends and Neighbors 1 in Spring Time... orting rDr IHIt444444.1.4.44444+++++++++++ It is at this time of the year that you feel the thin spots in clothes. Bather than get new ones, many Amer. That IS sighted from both ends. First, you get a cold, and it costs yOU than new clothes, secondly, and best at this time of the year We giving exceptional values in all kinds of winter clothes. Clothes -will last you she balance of this season and all of next, and. the will only be about one-half of' what you will have to pay when, next cold season comes. Consider the fizst of these reasons, and aolthe second. The new Sprit).- goods will be coming in soon, we want to be rid of the ti` ter stuff, consequently prices don't cut a very big figure. BRIGHT B FUELNISILER,S, S.E.I.FORTE OS One Grade Only, I Cook's cotton Root Co and That the Best. I have just received a car load of Mc- Laughlin Cutters. Any person thinking of investing in a new cutter will do well to call on me before purchasing elsewhere. They are not the cheapest cutters in town but the, are the best and re- member, quality remains long after price is forgotten. 1 keep hill line of Genuine Rubber Harnees. alio Robes and Rugs, which you oan buy from me cheap- er than elsewhere. !...era-r.r.rrerrti A. M. Campbell SEAFCRTH, 1910 Sore Throat 'told Coughs A simple, effective and safe remedy for allehrcea irritations is found in Cresolone Antiseptic Te.blets Tey combine the germicidal value of Cresoiene witi2 the soothing properties of slippery elm and licorice. I 10c, AU Drugglistin 100 Ladiee 13estvo Is file only safe, 'regulator on Vhich .can. depend, "in the 410 and time of need." .0 , ‘ , Prepared in two ' Strength. No. 1 and 1 o. ,---- 'INTdi . .i ---For or nary itis by far the beet _ . Medicine lenoWel. Vo. 2 -Por special cases -le are:tiger—exec) dollars per bor. 1.4adies-tek your druggist for Cotton Root Compound. Take n as an pills, mixtures and imitatk. dangerous. No. 1 and No. 2 are ao recommended by all druggistE in t minion of Ctinaft. Mailed to an- Sr on reeelPt Of*rice and four 2 -cent litszope. The Cook Company* . Windsor, For sale by C. Aberhart, J. arts, I. V. Fear, and Alf3X. geaforth. , For Sale. One 4 to 6 h. p. Gasoline Engine Shapley & Muir make i - almost new,. Altoone Maple LealGrinder. One 10 b. p. Pitt's Horse Power. All the above for sale cheap. The ROBERT BELL Engine and Thrasher CO 933-1 050 0111 US OWN IN C4Oneal 461, Up iJondon, 'Sore, mils= USSTiTti rATIONS. Ask