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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-04-07, Page 64¢, seereaes EXPO TOR r;� AP REAL ESTILI ALR ZINO FAInielb sifts tor vain or" to feet. FOR SALE.—iisre b ins ha fasms in County of wok. Inquire ;at once. WM ghle Blyie, Ora 17,7444 C A A PAUPE LOATH TO UNLOAD HIS RICHES AND BEND KNEE TO CHRIST. r.0 RENT 0 Concesidon 3, ortb, immediate on, good archer .-1OO acre lams tot miles noifth of eersion. good buildings, fine all wheat Apply to W. .goodbouse ondellpi, situated on West Will. eareet,Seelotth. TO house contaies six rooms, •--ed and soft wide r retigerator in kitolien and :her ocrivenioncesre For terms, dee apply to uss TO RENT.eeTo rent, the comfortable house at pi omit, Roccupted by Mre. W. Lea - The home le neieiy now. There are seven and herd and eat water. Apply to rasa DA EY, at Beattie% lelitt store, lleatorth. 1946x4 " LDING Lon Era SALE.—For sale, several ..1.30 desirable buildingilots in the town of Sea - These iota are Situated la one of the beet orthe terve and, etre well planted with the eho cost of fruit. AppIP to W. D. McLean, at the FFOR SALE.-41or sale, the islet half of lot 4, on the lite- eatieessem of Tuckertirolth, con. e 60 acres, !marl, ,all cleared and in a good eta of cultivation. There is. on the premises, o, goo bank bun, 40 fe.5 lc 60 ft. and a comfortable el ling house, also eAt bed orchard of winter fruit. MoKillop. This term -contains 100 sores of land, has or. it a batik barn 6404 feet, with 8 stone stabling. Mao a good 8 -roomed brick se, orchard, good water, &a. It bele mike ft Seaforth and Wiles from Constsame post SHARD or E. MIMIILEY, Seaforth. MS TO BENT. outh part ot lot 17, fiances. sioa=2, McKillop. 85 acres, and east half of lot 17, concession)3, MoKilitip. 60 acres. This land is ell leafed and the greater part underdrained. It been under grass gout 42 years. There Is a epring on the property. The farms may be fed either jointly et separately and for tilling or ng porpotes. ApPly to J. L. KILLORAN, Sol. r, Seesforth. 1946-4 ARM FOR SALE. --,-For sale lot 29. concession 2, IL S., Tuckeinteith, containing 100 acres, lowed exeept abditi five sores of good hard. . Ail underdrideOd. well fenced and in a good of cultivation. A. good brisk house and two be one with etone OliMing underneath. Plenty water and a :toed beefing orchard, This a le well adapUd for either steel or grain. • on tee premium oreSthforth O. II. TOWN. Proprietor. 19124f 11 ARIL FOR SALE.—kor sale, Lot 21, London Road, fitioley, °captaining 100 sores, 96 &nee , the balance is good hardwood timber. The is well underdrathed and well fenced, and in condition in ev,Patirticadare This Le an ex. ant farm, no better in the township. It is five es from Clinton add 11 ranee from Brumfield. be sold on reesentole terms se the proprietor the implement ,budnene Appiy to F. MON, Brucetteld. 19244f lit FOR SALE.t-In the township ef Usborne, being Lot 13, Concession 2, Modeling of the 100 scree of land le the township, well fenced in good state of ottitivation. Good briok house en frAMS barn. convenient to school, ohm& and rket, being only 2 trilles from Exeter. For fur. or OS. HIGOINts, executers of the estate of B. I. gins, deceased, or ie OLADMAN & STANBURY, So otters, Exeter - 4 WILL NOT GIVE UP HIS ALL able brick ()oblate with five mime and hall, kitohert and woodthed attached, harel and soft r, stabling for Olive head of cattle or horses evi h hen house and! pig pen, also good well and p in stable, two itnri a halt acres of land on are the ohoicestvarieties ot all kinds of fruit. TiT is e roost desir ble property tor any person thog a cointortab e home. Apply =the prem - 194041 ijOUSE AND FOR SALE.—For sale, brick house and 2 in_ Seaforth. Ons lot faces North Main Btree and the other on West Wit, Street. The halm le a comfortable lark& and contains $ bedrooms, dining room, sit - roam and kisehee, with good cellar under the ole house. third kid soft water in the house. ia also a good ato, ble and driving shed, AU de of fruit on the tot. Apply to J. L. ALLAN, eehoro, or to C. W. ATKINSON. Seaforth. I,LLAGE PROPERTY FOR SALE.—For sale in Egmondville, a, eomfortable frame house with ee acres of land iri it very fertile condition with nty of large and instill fruits for tinnily use also La ge barn and outbuildings in good repair. The h ure has been recently overhsulod and contains se en rooms with chigoe Geller, full size, good wood e ed, also summer kitchen and an excellent spring to town, • °slid not Mem this opportunity. Will be d reasonably and on easy terms. For further p rticulars apply on the premises or address Eg- dville P. 0, WM. RUBOLZ• 194341 RS. WM. SANDERS r er gee I -will give rite 'Totem free, and teach any la • y bow to eut, fit and put togtither any &Mole in d or mantle making in 2 weeke from the plainest w t,o ths moot elaborate dress that can he found 1 the fashion book, without the use of paper pat- e . I have taught over 4500 this last six years, d offer 6100 to anyone can't teach. or oan preve to me they can learn ns much any other place in two years. 34,11t think of it For $50 I will teech way one that le a dregs maker, or good sewer ard drewer, to tee& this eourse, giving them my teach- er? certificate. Mongers may board at school. (suitable rerend given to any one informing me oil tiny person trying to teaeh tide course, which I Inivented and hadpatented, that does not hold a c te t tee Next class commences Mon. • , April the 3rd. Write for perticulars, or gee woe at eebocd iti Stratford. opporite Windsor 11 otel. on Albett street, -on Saturdsy, April let Ir m 1 to. 5 p MRS. WM. PANDERS, Teacher in D ens Cutting, Bee 169, Stratford P. 0, 1938-62 Troubles Quickly and per- manently adjusted. Glasses fitted properly. Dr. Ovens • London. Treats Eye, Hee Nose and Throat. Will be at Commercial Hotel, Beiforth All day Wednesday,- April 19th. NEXT VISIT MAY 24th - Notice to Creditors. lin the matter of Daniel Steinbach, of the village • Zurich, in the County of Huron, merchant, In. so vent. %dice Is hereby given that the said Daniel Stein. b h, carrying on business as a merchant at the d Village of Zurich, has made an Lodgment un. dits and effeets, to Joseph Snell of the Village of D hwood, Banker, and John F. Rlokbeil, of the VI loge of Zurich, implement tweet, for the general be efit of his ereditors- A ineetibg of creditors will' be held at the Dominion hotel, in the said village of Zurich, on Wednesday, the 5th day of epril, A. D 4 1905. at the hour of 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to receive * statement of affairs. appoint inspeotors, and for the ordering of the Weirs of the eatate generally. Creditors are requested to file their chilms with the asignees with proofs and particulars as:required by the said act, on or beton the day of Web meeting. AO notice is further given thet after die 26th day of April, 1905, the maignees will prbeeed to distribute the assets of the estate among the parties entitled thereto, having regard only to th -claims of which shell then have been given and th t they will not be liable for the assets or any thereof am distributed. to any person or persona of whose claims he ehall not then have had natio°. A uvulas. Dated at Exeter thie 27th day of March, Wanted, Town Clerk and Treasurer.. Appliestione tor the ofileee of Clerk and Treasurer (combined) for the Town of seatorth will be received at the Clerk's office up till April 10th next. Wary $4C0 per annum. Duties to commence May and, 1965, WM. ELLIOTT, Clerk. $oeforth, March 26th, 1905. 1946-2 Even to Obtain a Seat in the Kingdum of God Rich M a n Finds It Hard to Surrender His Earthly Possessions and Get Down On His Knees at thee Mercy Seat. gniered accordine to Act of Parliament of Can- ada. in the year 1906, by Frederiek Diver, et Los Angeles, Cal., .A.pril 2.—The self sufficiency of wealth, the obstacles ite possession opposes to spiritual prog- ress- and how these may be OVerctime is the theme of to-dayS3 sermon, the preacher choosing, as his text Mark x. 26, "Than for a rich. man to enter int? the kingdom of Godes thankful that,' was so fortun- ate as to visit Palestine before the rail- road engineers had rnade their surveys and built their bridg,es and erected their 'depots and profaned thee sacred hills with the shriekings of an onrushing locomotive: How can the Holy Land remain much. longer distinguished btr the habits and customs, the usages and conventionalisms of Abrahamic arid Davidic and Solomonic and prophetic and apostolic days when the iron rails hatre been run near the farelly bury-ing ground of the Machpela.h mere. when the freight cars briag the luggage for - Mealy carried in the camels' packs and when the dragornan's strange, weird, thrilling stories and midnight tales have given place to the harsh and metallic voice of the conductors wbo (fall: "Next station is Bethlehem!" "Change cars for Jericho and the Dead Sea!" "All aboard for. the Grand TAnk line for Sychar and Damascus!" "Pas- sengers for Capernaurn and. Magdala take forward cars!" "Ten minutes for refreshments at Jericho's well!" "All aboard! All aboard!" Almost sacrilegious does it seem to tnention a railroad train in connection ',with these sacred. plaCes. In order to interpret literature of the Bible arig,ht you must read it by the customs and the habits and the lives of the peo- ple of past centuries. You must have the. sandals and the walled, in towns and the ,robbers upon the hillsides and the shepherds add the wild beasts. You Must have just such a 1-101y Land as 1 visited a few years ago and the Holy Land which I hope you may yet be able to visit, before the railroad tracks have honeY"combed the sacred hills, as they are now running up and down the length and breadth of our own land. But if you are to see the Holy Land as I saw it you must hasten there. Even now there are railroad trains running from Joppa. to jerusalem and from Damascus to Beirut. Soon all those eastern cities will have their dif- ferent depots and their rival railroad We would'not use to -day the railroad depoe for a pulpit. By the ancient cam- el's pack, and not by the modern freight car, I would interpret the words of my text. I,see in the evening hour two merchants coming over the west- ern hills toward Jerusalem. They are pounding and. prodding and driving their camels alOng as fast as they can make them travel. But the camele'lLre very heavy laden. The road is steep. The pace is slow. I hear on& of the drivers turre to the other and say, "Isaac, I doubt if we will get to the city walls before the gate -is shut." "Too bad," Says the other man. "Th t means we are koing to have an aw. ul struggle making the old camels go through the needle's eye." "Yes," an- swered the first speaker, "hut we meet do it, or else the robbers will steal from us all we have. There, see, the gates are shut. We will have a hard job ahead _of us." The two men approach the city wall with its shut gates. "Ho, watchman, ho!" they cry. "Open unto us; open unte us!" "Nay, nay," says tke watch- man; "that is against ,ahe la*, But will open for you the needle's eye if nyou wish." "All right," anewer the merchantmen; "we will come lb by the oeedles eye." With that the watchman descends from his lookout tower, and within the gate he opens a door. This heavy door is cut into the gate as a panel can be cut out of a door. It is called the needle's eye. In the - meantime the camels are unloaded. Then the own- ers command the big stupid brutes to kneel, and by coaxings and beatings and growlings and cursings the cam- els oil their knees are compelled to drag themselves through this small door. All the baggage which was pack- ed upon .the camels' backs is carried within the city walls in the arms of the merchantmen. Then the door, or the needle's eye, is shut, and the great city, fearless of outside foes, eleeps on, it was no easy matter to make a camel gct through the needle's eye. It is no easy manner for a rich man to enter into the kingdom. of God. Christ says it. In the one case as in the other the difficulty is almost insurmountable. Why? Why is it "easier for a. camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich mall to enter the kingdom of The rich ,man, in the .first place, is loath to bend the knee and come to Christ as a suppliant pauper. He dis-' likes to .surrender his gold and silver and railroad tionds and warehouses and a big bank account and to unload all at the mercy seat. He hat& to Fay, "Lord, all that I am and all that 1 have, ,thine." And yet that is just the way the rich man must come. He must come exactly in the same way and with the same spirit'which Christ indicated when ,he told the rich young ruler of the east to surrender his pos- sessions. Christ practically said to this would be disciple: "Young man, unloose your gold and silver, your 'farms and plantations and your herds from off your back. Go and sell all that thou hast and give to the poor. Then down on your knees at the mercy seat, as an unloaded camel crawls through the needle's eye, and thou shalt have treasuee in heaven and come and. follow me." 0 man, to -day are yo.0 ready to lay your open pocketbook at the Master's feet as well as your prayers? leersonaley I do not see how any one cells make any other leterpretation out or this text. Some commentators eta. dare that this passage of Scripture means, "If any man trust In riches it is as impossible for hire to enter the kingdom of God, e,s for a great, big, huge, long necked, thick lipped, hump- backed, crooked limbed camel to go through the eye of a sewing girl's needle!' Others assert that the Greek' word for "camel" translated in a broad sense means a "cable rope," even as the three English letters r-o:w on the 4 Maid° ere always through thell, wamh at twelve o'clock. The Sunlight OAP With ordinary soap a woman ,has to work -So hard and so long on wash day she has nostime for preparine.anei of the family meals. Wash day is a trial, and the good wife faces each with a sighlof despair. . Sunlight Soap makes all the difference in the worin. No toiling—no rubbing— no boiling—less than half the labor With much better results. Most women are all through their wash by twelve o'clock when duly wash with Sunlight Soap the Sun- light way. It makes child's play of work. ' 1 ASK -FOR THE OC Sunlkht washes the clothes ash: LEVER BROTHERS LIM AGOI\I BAR. e ant! wol4t injure the hands. TEDe TORONTO. 9a one name might mean a row or can- baze heads in a vegetable garden and, on the other hand, a barroom fight. These latter two•substantives are -spelt in the same way as the Greek word for camel, which. sometimes.signifies a "ca- ble rope." Bht I take the third inter- pretation of the commentatorti. I teem the, third because to my mind as a traveler in the east I think the door or the needle's eye cut into one of the 'great gates of Jerusalem and into the great gates of other eastern cities is the only rational simile. With my own eyes have seen the Needle's Eye, that very door about which Mark says Christ spoke. And in imagination I saw a great, grunting, groaning camel letting pulled through on his bended knees. Ah, see him tug at the rope and leek back his head. See him fight and bite'. See in that symbol of the camel the rich man struggling to hold on to and to grip his gold, refusing to bend the knee to Christ. • Merchant, is it not harder for:you to feel your dependence upon 'God now since you have rnade financial suc- cess in life than- when you were finan- cially poor? When as a poor farmer's boy you started for the great city to make a living you then felt your de- pendence upon God. There was no doubt about it. You prayed hard the night before you left home- that God would care for you. In the railroad train just entering the depot you put - your head epon your hand in the car seat and said: "Lord, lead me. I am absolutely weak and helpless. Lead me." Do you make that prayer now? With a big bank account and a home -upon a 'fine boulevard and jmultitudes kd friends, do you get dowh on your knees every Oay, like a camel going through the eye of the needle, and say: "Lord, thou who dost feed the birds of the air and clothe the lilies Of the field, _ clothe and feed me, guide me, pre - toot me. am helpless without thee?" Do you make that prayer daily? Oh, rich man, rich in money, but poor in - grace, down on your knees. Down oo people are your knees in 'supplication. Lift high - them and er' to -day the throne of God by bend - But as I ing low over the lowest throne step. Down, rich man! in the name of Jesus, The needle's eye of the Jerusalem gate is very lowe I also find that it is very narrow. Not sexily does the camel hoer° to bend his knee to get through it, but he also has to have his packs taken off his back. If this is not done the camel, with its distending leads hanging upon its sides like our grandee father's saddlebags on a horse, could not get through the narrow door. The rich man cannot get through the nee- dle's eye of the kingdom of God unlese he stops carrying around with him his great packs of meannesses and con- temptibilities and selfish actions, -with which often he is accustomed to deal with his fellow men. And yet how hard it must be for -a rich xnan to he absolutely just. and kind and, truthful and forgiving to those whom he meets in the ordinary walks of life. Indeed, the more 1 see of rich men the more I feel that, as far as their dispositions are concerned, they are in the unenvi- able position of those iwho were brought up. as an only child in a fam- ily and have every temptation under the sun to make them spoiled children and spoiled men. Selfishness? In those days you did not kndw what selfishness was. You did not have a wife to wait on you, as some of us have now. And you, grown woman, you remember the first time you awoke to what a truly selfish life meant A little cousin visited your fether's home. She was an only child. Instead of letting you play with her doll she kept it all to herself. When she had it box of candy she would eat a piece and then put the rept away in her bureau drawer. If she went for a carriage ride she always wanted to drive or Ose she would cry. If there Was a game she always wanted, to be the leader or else she would not play. \ She was selfish; she was just mean and contemptibly selfish. _You could not understand heir actions until your moth- er took you in sOside room and said: "May, I am sorryl that you and Helen cannot play lia.ppilegtogether. But you must be very patient with your cousin. Remember she is an only child. Re- member at home everything she wants is given to her, and no one ever crosses her. You must be patient with her, my daughter. She has been spoiled, and she is not alone to be blamed for The rich man.xna.y not be all to blame for being _selfish. As the eastern camel goes swinging along with his head high up and cares not what little child he may kick in the street, so the rich man may not be entirely at fault because he treads upon the rights of others. Re cannot look at the world through ordi- nary eyes, The world toadies to him and cringes anti fawns over him until after awhile he is apt to think he is the smartest, noblest, kindest, sweetest being who ever lived. He begins to think his blood different from all other, blood and his life better than all other lives. Now, rich men, amid all the sycophants fasvning 'and cringing about you, I want to tell you clearly and ern- pha.tically that God has not one code of rnorals for the Moll and another for the poor. You and' I must bow to the same rules of justice and kindness and gen- tleness and forgiveness and love in our dealings with our fellow men. The needle's eye is a low door. T'ne low doer means that we must bend to God. it is a narrow door. The- narrow door means that we must be just and true to those with whom we come in contact in the walks of daily life. Let me digress here a moment and speak' a few words in reference to spoiled women. I do not believe there are aa Many spoiled men as spoiled women. i Men, as a rule, have not as great -a ohance to be spoiled down at the store as some women have to be spoiled in the home. They -would 'be- come juet as spoiled if they had the chance. , But the women! Oh, how many of them are spoiled in the home! Did you ever stop to think that a great deal of the so-called nervous troubles of this wOeld among women are simply due to fite of temper? The young girl grows. heel tte 61/611.0. ehild in nor 4- ther's honse. Then she marries. She boasts that no one has ever been able to govern her. She is right. She wili not even' govern herself. Then, when soMething goes wrong in the home, as a married woman she scolds and sulles and refuees to eat and to sleep. She cries andigoes on until she works up a few spasms of hysteria and physically becomes tts rigid as a board. I have been in Many homes as pastor and friend. I have seen there many wom- en said to, be nervous wrecks who were not nervons as you or 1 might become nervous from overwork. They were nervous simply because they let their tempers as spoiled children get the better of them. Many nervous women could be I cured of the hysteria if some one could give them a good, wholesome rebuke and put them to bed, as Mothers punish their children and then Put them to bed if they did wrong. The symbol of the cainel as applied te the rich man -in reference to his m annesses toward -his fellow' men migh also lila applied to many so called ner ous women who let their tempers g t the better of them merelY because t ey are spoiled children. Of course in aldng this eWeeping state - not saying that all nervous evil tempered, but sconet of many of them certainly are. see these richly laden cam- els coming over the hillsides toward ales of the Jerusalem walls cling in the distance other dyeare the robbers and the the highwaymen. They are ers who for one roll of sloth filing to cut a man's throat. erchantmen hesitate one loading their camels and in m go through the eye of the n these miscreants will ey will slay the owners anti the goods as rich spoils. o merchants had been onlY the shut forms. ,T thieves an the murde Would be .If these hour in u making th needle, do swoop. T carry awa If these hihnble pe sante. if they had been: go - Ing afoot cr astride a cheap four foot- ed beast of burden, such as Mary, the snother of 4"esus, rode when Joseph, the Carpenter, 'was taking her dOwn to Bethlehem 'the night before the most memorable of all Christmaa days, no attention Would have been paid therm but there they are this evening riding camels. Bech camel is worth a large sUm of money. Each one of these cam- els was Aeavily laden with the richest of merchandise. Do you wonder that those robbers skulking upon the hill- sides are on the alert? And do you also wonder that rich men always have they robbers hoVering around them, ready to steal their morals, their good names, their souls las well as their gold? The wealthier a man becomes, the higher up the ladder of fame he climbs, the more awfull are the destroying mon- sters who hover above him and flank him and crawl beneath him, "I fear you are in great 3danger," fA aid a friend to a church; menfeer as he was leaving the service bne Sunday morning. "Why do you warn me thus?" psked the gen- tleman. "Because," answered the friehd, "I hear you are becoming rich. Take care, ior it is the road by -which the devil leads thousands to destruc- tion." No flan has great wealth un- less at the same time the moral thieves are ready steal hiS good name -and head h4m off from finding safety In the city of God. But, al te all, I believe one of the greatest mural and spiritual dangers besetting tl e rich man is not innate hardnees o heart or 'selfishness, but lack- of personal Ciiristian service. By this I do no mean the rich man is un- willing to d• anything for Jesus Christ; but, being r ch, he gets others to do the work he sh uld be willing to do him- self. In ot er words, he is like a man drafted as a soldier to fight for his country wh ends a substitute. Ile is a man who ets others to do his gospel singiog an. others to do his gospel praying an othees to do his gospel preaching a d sometimes others to do his visiting encl. thus he himself be- Rith man, rich woman, the reason you do not grow in grace is because you do not work for Jesus Christ. When there is a sick woman to be vis- ited you ser d some one else. Go your- self. When there is a mission to be started in t e slums with your pocket- book you hire a missionary. You be a missionary—go youfeelf, No one can do the work as well as you. If there is a Sunday school superintendent or a Sunday school teacher needed and your pastor does' not know where to turn do not say: "liastor, here is money. Hire assistanit." Say; "Pastor, here am I. I want to help others, but also want to get the good which alone can come from Christian service." "Lord, send me!" should be the ersr of every rich or Rich man, God is calling Yeti tO and work in his vineyard: The bervest is ripe, the laborers are few. What Would you think if when the thirteen. colonies Were in a death grapple for their libertief3 George Washington hild stayed at home and sent a. substitute to the war? If George Washington, thq rich man could afford to give up ev- erything, 'for his native land, you can service. Christ wants your money? Yes, he also wants you. Woman, soci- ety woman, woman with your die - mends and silks, you cannot afford to send a servant to represent you in service for Jesus Christ. The reason you, and your husband are drifting away from. grace is due to lack of Christian service. Daughter, son, chil- dren of wealthy parents, never think you are above Worldng in the young people's societies' for Christ Christ wants you. Ile 'wants you to conse- crate your possessions to his cause, but he also wants you. Let the rich rnao and the deli woman, the rich son and the rich daughter, as well as the Christian, harness themselves to -day to the gospel chariot and pull all together. • EASON HOU!. USE Niagara in Harness. On the Canadian side of Niagara, power stations aggregating 285,000 horse power are under construction, and -Chia total is to be increased after a time to 405,000 horsepower. This stupend- ous figure is compared by The Elect* cal Review* with the grand total for the World, which is only 1,483,000 horse power. On the A.merican side of the falls 150,000 horse power is developed, and in the entire Niagara Falls district about 625,000. Long-distance transinis- sion 'will have to be resorted to if the power developed is to be utilized in the next 30 years. The United States has at present 627,467 horse power, Can- ada 228,225, Italy 210,000, France, 161,- 343, Switzerland 133,202, Germany 81,- 077,..and Sweden 71,000. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of —A, fatal shooting accident occur- red mear Ayr on Settirdax;'-when Percy, second son of Mr. and MTS. R. Babcock, was ieistantly killed by the aocidental discharge of aia gun. It tappears that young Babcock, ac- oompanied by two or three friends, was tout muskrat shooting, and when orossing the railway bridge • he lee - marked lhow easily it would be for a (gun to slip through the bridge. In trying the experimCnt his zun was diseharged, the contents extecring his face, almost instantjy killing Becatise it is always fresh and sweet. My teas are shipped to St. John direct from where they grow, instead of being imported from London, where teas often lie in warehouse for several months. The ales of Red Rose Tea are so large that any one lot of tea eldom remains on hand more than a few weeks; fresh lots rrive by every steamer. Then in the grocery store, Red Rose Tea ver dead stoc . Except where being first introduced, the demand i such that each shipment is sold in a very few From start to finish, Red Rose Tea • handled so that the consumer is sure to get it while it is fresh arid sweet. A Guaranteed Cure for Piles. itching, Blind, Bleeding or Pro- truding Piles. Druggists refund money if Pazo Ointieent fails to owe any case, no matter of how 'Ion standing, in from 6 to 14 days. First application gives ettse and rest. 50o. If your druggist hasn't it, mead 50c. istamps and it_ will be forwarded post-paid by Paris liedicirse Coe• -:-Nearly twee tbousand passengers on 'two ocean steamships .were in peril iof their lives early Sunday ev- ening toff the entranoe to Halifax barber, when the Parisian, of the iLine, and the Albano, of the Hamburg -American Line, crashed together. Both vessels were ser- iously damaged, and the passengers on eadbi were thrown into a panic:, ;but trio person wai ihurt mad eaoh steamship suceeeded in reaeling its dook and disembarking its- passen- gers. To Cure a Cold in One ,Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab- lets. All druggists refund the money if it lathe to cure. E. W. Grave's signatur6 is on each box. —.T. ;Y. Griffin & Company's pork packIng establishment, located on the Red Rimer 'banks, opposite win-- hipeg, was destroyed by fire last week. The faetory is the largest in the west. The loss .will be about $200,000. The entire f wotory was burned. There was a fierce wind blowing, accompanied by {3110W and eleet, but the firemen prevented _the ispread Of the flames to the opposite side !of the river, where are located big lumber yards and the Ogilvie Obstinate Coughs and A Colds. The Kind That Stick. .606 The Kind That Turn To The Kind That End In Con. • Consumption is, in thoueande of cues, nothing 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 using DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP. The first dose will convince you that it will cure you. Miss Hannah P. Fleming, traded a cold that took such a bold. 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." Price 25 cents per bottle. Do not accept substitutes for Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. Be sure and insist on having the MX T. MmeuRN 1.4131-Trat, ESTABROOKS, St; John, N. B. BRANCHES TORONTO, WINNIPEG. Beantylin Furniture VETE ogN 1.1 Veterieary 00111 treated. risi astete. Vat roe-gen:2o -41 eget of Dr Seeder effi.1 prompt at. We invite attention to the mag- nifice;it assortment of Furniture. Our 'splay is large. Selections at s store are made easy and every taste gratified. We are giv- ing exceptional offerings through the ektire store, DMItir Blft0ADFOOTI BOX & Cay S. T. HOLMES, Manager. ers Ili S They cur constipatio . biliousness, sick -headache. BUCKINGHAM S Want your mouitache or beard talll ot JAMES Dee. ingeatorth are Office open fie etere, Mein street, SO, golicitor for the Dominion Week, SW al leceeryriebUct • seam Bente Gomm tor sale. OMee Seelorthe jef ore, eta., Gode • 'AGAIN Spri g has come again and come quic1{13r. it has, perh caught yr unprepared in the matter of clothing. The probabilita are that it has, but we -were ready for it and are busy tura*. suitable garments for those who were before hand. There is chance for you. Dur range of spring suitings and overcoattn still large, of the best quality and the latest style. Com to us and we clothe you like spring and make feel like ring. RIGHT BROS._ of ext _grocery siore,*eller Nee r bred fron o ne offices, 433,1 erste ud OR, 144 eine, member of ;. irons or Ontario Zlintealecheol, Ole Crandon. Englend oldie answered Iron bilte S. ce land await laltirob.' Tre uer tor the C SC DR Gorr, grad member Ont gold modelle' C011eee Of Pk, The Robert Bell Engine & Thresher C Authorized Capital $200,000.00 Paid up Capital 891,900. M. Y. McLEAN, President A. YOUNG, Vice -President. Y. MeLEAN A. YOUNG MANAGING DIRECTOR—ROBT. BELL In order to meet the increale in buoinen which le offeriug, and to artia premises for building Separators Wind Stackers and Feeders, which hu already commenced, the Directors have decided to offer $10,000.00 stock for sale at per - cent. payable on appli tion ; balance as coaled for by the Company, in MIMS no't to0 0* - ita coed 15 per cent. motet ly, until all is paid up. The whole amount can be paid at say time at option of subseeiber, aild dividend* will (tete from payment of full amouct. ‘ The Dividends will be payable yearly on February lat. The remaining profit*, in each and every year over and above the amouut mats dividends, shall be set aside to form a Reserve And, until au& Reserve Fun -d. s emit $25,600/30. This re a successful going concern, which has risen from -stnall brg;nnings, and , already paid the 7 per cent. 'dividend promptly each year, besides aceminelating a ince stantiel reserve. it r the count guaranteed. Orli -or at teet exempt etteeteeee UCTIONEER • Being a ding lams or no pee; Ail tteneed to, The Mel FARM Dividends/paid in 1904 Bills Rec. Reserve , 114,092.22 6,943 38 5,208 50 There is no watered stook. Every shareholder is on equal footle& Every eh represents actuel value: The Robert Bell .E.ogine & Threeher Co., Limitedehas tablished bneiness, whieb. is increasieg rapidly, and pest the experimental stage. IT is no speculation, but a legitimate proposition for inveetment, yielding 7 per cent. Go -emulating a yeserve which will largely inereese the par value of the ehatiee. The Engine and Thresher lattainees in Canada ie only is its infancy. The market Is aimed aullmited. Abeut seven -eights of all the Threshing Engines and Separate= n in Manitoba 'aud the NOrbhweet are imported from the United States. These worla be bought from the holt° maeufacturers if they could supply the demand. There is,,e duty of 25 per cent. on ,all goods of this class impoeted into Canada, which gives trot Canadian Manufacturer a decided advantage. Send subsorptions write for information to ThP Rob Win Engirt - Or R. S. HAYS, Soiie or, Seaforth, Ont. firs C cir ;11 IMITED EAFORTH, ON 1945 lee iiedro mpliestionet to steht leaped. The ti Soft Elm, Delivered et th to hetut eye Bat 40 inehee will alto buy tt bash. steeled, tisfaetion gni MARR