HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-06-16, Page 6ei
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WILSO
FLY PAD
ESTATE FOR SALE
ste ItAZtaa e• St Fait SALE OR RENT,—
,Caetir. tweet Stanley tewnselp, 145 acres.
Apply'to R. S. HAYS. Berrisler, Sweetish.
' 19554
leeleOUSE FOR tikLE.--Elouth of the railway Sas-
f I forth, a frapoe house oath th e rooms, eater
to MARGARET Mabee!), Seatorth P. 0. 19364f
Ter0II3E AND LOT FOR fest.LE—For sale, a
Irk good hem° end lotetauttted on Weet Will -
all other owns-v(01105e For terms, etc., apnly
IIILDING Late FOR li&LE.--For Kate, several
detireble building iota in „the town of Sea -
forth. Theiso lots ate situated in one of the best
plats of the town etel are well planted with the
eholeeet nf fruit. :Apply to wr. D. McLean, at the
TY0133E AND LOT IN SEAPORT/I FOR SALE. -
11111 —For Rale tliff kesidenee on West street, re-
liantly (Jemmied by ,1,11 to. Jetties. It contains five
rooms, with. woodseade well and 'Whew. Also a
good lot, planted with tra t trees. It fa in one of
JOSEPH ATILIN86,N, gegen& P. O. e 19563t4
g, R. 8.4 Taokersmith, °entrant:4r too aerea,
ail cleared except latent five tioees of godd hard-
wood. All underdrained, well fenced and in te good
state of cultivation., A good brink house and two
of goo• d water and a tcood beadng orchard. This
farm is well whetted for etther stock or grAin.
About midway between Seatorth and Clinton. Ap-
ply on the preraisee iet Seater% P., 0, Fir. TOWN -
SEND. Proprietor. 194.2-tf
11 house imid 2. to Seatorth. One lot fame
on North Main Stree, and the other on West Wit-
tier° Street The heuse is a' ooneforbeble brick
tingroom and kitobed, with good cellar under the
whole hone°. Hard end soft water in the houset
There tette.° a good stable and driving shed. ill
kinds. of fruit on the lot Apply to 1. ALI,AN,
Londesboro, or to Cs 'W. A.TKINSON, Seaforth.
ty sitirtted in the township ot Morrie. ia the
connty of Huron. ed lining the village of Blyth,
contaiving let scree °longing to the estate of the
let° Junes Logan le w offered tor sale. On the
premise% are a goad, e story brick house, large
barn with stone baseline:it. stables. drive house, bog
-village of Blyth, °outlining °tie sore, more or lase
It uot previously sold this propetty will be offered
by public auetion attain the middle of June. For
further particulars apple tn J 4.11E3 LOG&N, JR.,
Blyth or S. B. GORWILL, 871 Wellington 84e. Len -
don, Ont. 1953-tf.
NT1LLAGE PROPERTY FOR RALE.—For sale in
three acres of land in it eery fettile condition with
plenty of large and stliall fruits for fanally tiae also
large barn sod outbuitilinge in Rood repair. The
home haft been receetly overheuled and amides
seven_ rooms with oheice °eller, full sizeyeood wood
elto summer kitohen and an exultant sprite;
well end good distant Any lemon desiting a com-
fortable, quiet home Of this description, covenient
to town, should not Went tide opportunity. Will be
sold review:131y and be easy terms. For further
particulate apply on the premised or address Egt
FOR SALE—Three tittertere of an acre of land In
The land is well foment, hag a hard water welt also
nearly an the materiel for bulleine ; keine sand,
gravel, bricks ane the cellar dug out. This property
is in tbe choicest locelity in the village,right Weide
the rearea,tion grounes and oonyeeleat to the busi-
ness part of Seafortli. The property will be sold
cheap lig Mr. Little bee bowies out McGoe's pro-
perty and the 86/Ifte 411d i3 ATIX10119 tO. lien the pro.
pterty in Egmondville. Apply to R. 8. H4YS, Elea -
forth or to HAaRlt LeTTLE, stage driver Omit
r For sale the old 13 ell Fann Slid Milt Property,
on the London road„ Tuokersmibb, reoeatly .oceto
pled by the late ,lotat MoNevin. There are 100
acree, all cleared bee about four - acres. Good
buildings and the farm well underdrained and in a
legit state of cultivation, all seeded to OrMEI except
about 39 acres. Alssi the 04.4 ani elm mill prop-
erty on the farm. It is within hall smile of Ripper'
station and 2 miles from Renee! ani a goad bust -
runs has alwaye toted, done at the mills. The farm
and mill property will be soLi together or reparate-
iy stilt purcheaer. TOrrati easy. Apply to
DAVID C. MeLEAN, Kippen. 195442
'LURK FOR ts.DE.,For este let 29. on the 9th
metes a twilit house and beiok kitchen and. a good
cellar. There Is alio a large bank barn, fiet ic 40 and
a beento of t2 feet erith stone stabling underne tete
Also a shed SO x 30 ft. and a driving bluets wite
everything- complete. There are three never tailing
wells on the prembote, fermi. is also a Urge orahord
and good garden. There are ten screed fall wheat
sown and there ere ,40 awes seeied dtwn. Either.
le done. The far Is well uedercirained with tile
.and well fenced w th wire lennes. It is in a good
locality, being (dusted two aloe a belt milea front
Chiselhurat, where there pest ofR3e an 1 two
Se• aforth and there is a good gravel. road runnioe
poet the fem. It is in good oenditien and will be
sold on reasolable ter xis as the proprleter wishes
to retire. For , further pertiatilars apply ort
premises or to OHARLEI Easeamte, StIff P.
O., Ontario. 1947-tf.
FOR SALE.
0- hal for se e on Let 16, Coneession 2. thy, a
number of diets -dame thoroughbred Shorthorn
bias. they are ot the low eat blocky type, dark rad
in. color and of choice breeding. They are ail elig-
ible for reristrittion and will be soli reasonably.
JOHN ELDER, Hensel'. P. 0. 1948 -if
.FOR SALE.—The :undersigned has for side sev
eral thoronghbted Leicester Sheep hod Durban
Cettle of both sexes. Address Egmondville P. 0. 0
Apply at farm, Mill Road, Tuokersmith. ROREP.
MIARTEREt is SONS. 1372-11
grees, 8 to 21 Menthe Primo from 851 to 630, if
taken soon, aleo.cows and Mien at about the seine
HORTEfORNI3 FOR 8 &LE.—For sale four young
0 Scotch 8Iforthorns, aged from 9 to 16 months,
three reds and one roan. These °elves are all sired
by imported, " Trumpeter," and are the vety best
of stook, Apply on Lot 21. Conceteeon 4. II. R. Se
Tuakeremith, or Seaforth P. a„ A. & J. BRO AD
FOOT. 1938-tf
IMtIORTANT NOTICES.
BULL FOR SERVICE.—The uniersigned Aq11
keep lot service a thorobred Durham bull oh
JOHN ARCHIBALD, Seatotth P. 0. 195434
AV:WET LOAN,—To loan for a term of
yearee from 5500 to 5300 on that morteage on
!area Or towiii property. also from 8801 to $1,009 on
apply at THE EXPOSITOR OFFICE, Seatorth.
ellEACHER WANTED.—Fart. 8. No. 6, Tucker -
jt, eroithst male or female teacher, holding a 2ad
class certificate. Duties te commence utter sum-
mer holidayie Appliestions adireseed to the un.
dereigned received until Saturday, Jane 24th. Per.
eteorehtry,letatorth. 1955.4
Me -LACK MARE STRAYED—Strayed front lot 0,
conaeRIOn ElOtith Do chest. r, Blain ()aunty
on May 22nd. A black mare, 7 yeare old, 15 banes
IncheS Wel. weighing about 963 pounda, bran 1-
54 on left shoulder, main stands up behind ears and
star inside of left stifle. Last heard ot la Fullerton
township. eterth of 113311011, on the 24tbt of May, 50
miles from home awl suppesed to be Inekine for
Lake Hurtle. Any informative letdine to tbe re-
covery ot thin animal will be Itberally rewsrdel.
Addrato the ownee Springfield P. 0. I. R PRAT.
QUARD. 1966.3
•
EARTH S LITTLE THINGS $unii hit $oap is a well ma Soap
The making of soap is no longer, a ehance mixture o rascellane-
otis fats. Expert chemists carefully vhatch and test every step hi the
milking dr
Sunlight -Siop
REVEAL THE POWER OF GOD'S'
LOVE 'AND CARE OF CREATION.
THE ANT AS MAN'S TEACHER
°Considel"Fier Ways and Be Wiser"
Said K'ing Soloman, Noted Through-.
out the Ages For His Wisdom—Oh-
jeot Lesson From the insect World,
Showing the Importance of Little
Entered according to Act of 'Parliament of,Canad a,
in the year veoe, by Frederick Divot. of Toronto,
at the Department of Agrictgiure. Ottawa. •
•
Los Angeles, Cal., June 4,--sIn his set. -
mon the preacher, drawing an ol2ject
the importance in human. affairs of
honest, hitelligent, unremitting. indus-
try and the felly of those who. belittle
or undervalue it. The text is Proverbs
vi, 6, "Go to the' ante.thou sluggard,
consider tier ways and be wise."
It was a hot; snitry afternoon in
summer on the famous Chauta.uqua,
gromid of New York when Bishop
John IL Vincent 'mocked at Wilbur
Chapnaan's door, "Come in," (sailed
the evangelist In walked the tounder
of the Chautauqua, movement in thie
country. He said, "Chapman, I. want
you to go and hear a lectule this after -
college professor. ..The lecture Is en-
titled 'My friends the Gila, Monster,
the Ilorned,Owl, the Opossum and the
Rat.'" "No, bishop," said Dr. Chap-
man; "I cannot go. 1 am utterly worn
Mit by speaking. Besides that, I have
a big meeting for toenight for which I
must rest and prepare. You must let
me off"tthie once." "No, Chapman, I
will not let you off. You natst come.
There is A great treat in store for
you.' So, under the pleading demands
of Bishop Vincent, he went.
"At first," said Dr. €hapman after-
ward, "I sat away back in the audi-
enee, tnat I might be able to slip away
unseen. But as the speaker began to
talk about his novel friends I became
more and more absorbed. Uncon-
aisle and took a seat " nearer to the
speaker. Then, as he talked on and
on, I crept further, and further unttl I
Was in the front seat. There I sat for
nearly two long hours laug-hing and
crying and learning the great lessons
Of life from the livei of the most hum-
ble of God's creatures.; I never before
'realized that there was so much lOve
and affection and unselffshness and
brain power in creeping things and
loathsome reptiles and poisonous liz-
ards and repulsive rats."
The little things of earth reveal the
power of God's love and care, as well
as the greater things. Ring Solomon
would introduce to us One of his little
friends. He would have us use an ant
hill for a, pulpit. He would have for
the pirea.ch.er of the morning one of the
ordinary, commonplace, large ma.ndi-
bled, many jointed, long antennaed,
sixe legged insects that we can see in
almost every country bypath. He
would tell us that the ant's intelligent
forethought, her persevering energy,
her litany secial affinities, her mortal
hatreds, her sensitiveness to smell and
color, her architectural genius with
which she constructs the palace in
which are to be deposited the precioue
eggs, her slaves and rsurses who serve
her in peace, her military captains who
marshal her great armies in war, her
care for the cocoons in which the grubs
are developed Into the perfect insects,
as the caterpillar unfolds theetransfig-
ured life of a butterfly, offer unlimited
fields for goepel illustration. "Go to
the ant, thou sluggard, consider her
ways and be wise."
Busy, busy, bus.y. "Busy' as an ant"
is an old proverb. Whether she iB car-
ing for her eggs'or finding the grubs;
whether she belongs to a foraging par-
ty or is going forth upon aewar of con-
quest to (capture the eggs, of another
hive, which eggs she intends to devel-
op into future slaves; whether she is
migrating from one part of 'the country
to another or is building•the walls and
the hallways, squaring the chambers,
laying the foundations or arching the
dome of a new house, the ant is al-
ways busy. She works during the day,
she works while she sleeps. Her ambi-
tion is not to find out how little she
can do, but how much she can do. She
works, and works, and works. She
keeps on working. To do something is
the very breath of her existence.
This proverb is axiomatic. You go
out for a summer stroll and one of your
little children calls: "Oh, mother, come '
and look. See these little black things.
What are they?" "Ants, my dear,"
you say. Then you stoop over that hive
and watch them. They are moving, al-
ways moving. Some are busy house
cleaning. If you could enter the cham-
ber of .an ant Mound, you would find
that each room and connecting " hall-
way are absolutely clean. Every par-
ticle of dust which once choked those
galleries has been carried out, piece by
piece, and deposited afar off, where it
will not obstruct theopenings of the
ant hill. Some of these ants are house
cleaning. Some are going after food.
Some are caring for thP grubs. But
they are all working—the ants are al-
ways working. Their working hours
are simply unlimited, Sir John Lub-
bock, the famous naturalist, reported
that he once watched a single ant who
worked without intermission or relaxa-
tion from 6 o'clock in the morning until
nearly 10 o'clock at night. For sixteen
hours that ant continued diligently at
her task. You cannot dream of a lot
of ants getting together, as do some
men to -day, whose chief elm seems to
be to find out how little work they
can do in life and what is the maxi-
mum of pay they can force out of
their employers for a minimum of la -
bar. Oh, no, That is not the ant's
way. No sooner does the sunlight crawl
ever the eastern hills than the ant hive
becomes busy. The different ants say:
"Cotete, sisters, we must get to work..
Hurry up now. We have so much work
to do and such a little time in eivhich
man foot may have ofteyi crushed an
ant in the pathway, but ,I doubt if it
eVer killed an ant taking an afternoon
nap. When an ant ie staler in the coon-,
try road she is always hurrying some-
where or trying to get back to her
hive after she has accomplished the
purpose of her Journeet. She is work-
ing. She is continually working. She
Is always working.
Idleness has no place in God's econ-
omy. Life is work; life means a con-
tinual struggle for physical as well as
moral and spiritual existence. G-od
would not send the snows of winter,
the drafts of surreneri, the winds, the
frosts and the hungefunless hp meant
man to work; God would not have
made helplessness ,duririg- infancy and
childhood unless he meant a patent to
The fats and oils nins't be perfectly pure and at evely sta e of the
process the soap must come up to Sunlight standard. That s why it
cleanses your clothes perfectly, makes' your blankets sof a d fluffy,
does not destroy your mast dainty linens or injure your hand .
Sunlight Soap washes equally well in hard or soft wate e Your
dealer is authorized to return the purchase money if vou are not
LEVER BROTHERS LIMITEO, TORONTO
1002
•
The Sunlight Maids are throkh their washing by noon—thatle-
I the SunlIgilt way
work; God woulki not eend sickness
and helpless old age unless he desired
all people to work diiriag the strength
and viper of .neenhood and womanhood.
"If aIny won't' not work, neither should
he eat," is the Pauline invehtive against ;
sloth. "Go to thel ant, thou sluggard.
Consider her wa.ys- and be wise." .All
happiness and health, all mental, so -
Cie', spiritual arid financial progrese
depend upon p ereevering ;toil. The soon-
er bur growing' boys and girls realize
that thay must work for a, livelihood
the better it will be for them and the
b-etter it Will be for us who are caring
for them during the years of their ele-
Unremitting toil, an essential' for hu-
man life, is the firet lesson the ant hill
teaches; os to-dny. But the ability to
make the right use of toil, to conserve
energy so that the maximum of results
are- produced from the minimum of la -
Isms to perform work so thsproughly and
intelligently that- it is not useless and
has to be done over, is the -second
teaching of my text. "Go to the ant,
thou sluggard, consider her ways -and
be wiee," does -not any more to
-the ceaseless activity of the, ant then it
does to her marvelous foreeight, with
which she plans out her 'Work and ac-
complishes her results.
°The ant uses her brain aS well as her
mandibles or legs. She uses her eyes
to see' where she 18 going as well as
her feet to walk. Study the ant as an
architect or a builder. ,..Some of us
have etood in _awe before the architee-
tural wonders of the cathedrals and
the palaces of the cast. We have seen -
wails an'd columns and domeS and
minarets and spires that are "frozen
music in stone." We have climbed the
heights of Milan cathedral, whose tow-
ers and walls are people with almost
as great numbers of apostles and
saints and martyrs and priesta carved
in solid stone' as there are worshipers
who ever gather at one prise before its
sacred shrines'. We have seen St. Pe-
ter's of Rome connected with the Won-
elerful Vatican and St. Mark's, More
poetic than the Venetian canals. We
have seen the marvelous conceptions of
a Christopher Wren and the wonderful
structure at Cologne, only a, few Years
ago dedicated after having consumed
centurie.s in blinding, These transcend-
ent buildings have_ lifted themselves up
even as 'did the temple of Ring Solo-
mon. Why? Every -beam, every stone,
had its appointed pla.ce. "Each part, as
a small mite, fitted into a great united
whole. But as I stand to -day beeore
Westminster Abbey or a St. Paul og
London I emphatically assert that
these structures eompared to the
strength and intenigence of the build-
ers are not as wonderful as an ordln-
ary, everyday, commonplace ant hive
we may see in the country road,
To -build the Cathedral of St Sohn
the Dayine in New York city blasting
powder had to be used. The fou,nda-
tions had to be excavated out of solid
rock. True. But the ants often build
their hiees by excava.ting the. solid
rock. The Walls of Canterbury cathe-
dral must be absolutely straight. True.
But 'mason's plumb tine ever ereaed
er walls than the walls oft an
's cha.mbers. The rooms Of ithe
must be arranged in orderly
•fa.shion. All the chambers of an :ant
hill open into -long corridors. Each
room has -Its connecting hallways. A
well regulated cathddral must have its
proper system of drainage, The ant
hive is so built that it will shed all eVa-
ters No rainstorm can deluge its 4e1 -
tars. No water overflowing the r vet.
bank earl destroy is foundatione. - .; Ise
encient Roma.ns Always, built -their.
eities upon the hilltops for prottcdon.
The ants build their hives mi. high
pla.ces, where storm .and -water cannot
The. ant's wisdom should be emulat- gie for daily b
cd as much as her activity. The -Ara- more than two
str
ant
Vatic
a great Multitude
an army, Read y t
centurion: "For I leo
authority, having
and I say unto on
and to another, `C
and .to my serve
men as well as est
der authority, we
so set under malt
Every industrio
successful alway
other lives. Ev
perfect human 4 an
human talent sh
fill in the great
'When I go and
wonderful rnosai
and ceilings of tl
old Spanish Moor
individual stones
themselves. Man;
hUrnan beings be -
re of life called
e .words of the
am a man under
er me soldiers,
mei' arid he cometh,
wl Ile we find that
eel
nd
rit
anay be set un -
that ants are al-
uman life that is
o -operates -with
rer ideal human or-
rge -scale must be a
'IOC. -E-verywhere
e re yonf going to
iis
loi ly examine the
e, Alhambra of. the
Tido not find these
of them are only
.common peb'bles that! we might spurn
with our feet in 1.1
when these con -o
clividuals, are co
placed side by .,1
other stones they
.oni pebbles, as int.
• d polished and
le in contrast with..
fo m the beautiful
mosaics of the A teuebra„ which are
'o'ne of - the mane le ef this century.
You as.an indiVid tat may not amount
to much, but if e t and Polished and
fitted into' the el at niche, for which
you were intendea by God you can be-
come part of the perfect walls of the
Temple Bea,utif el. lofts the ant,' Wia
thority? -Will yo e a co-operative
ity which yol e by' doing the
work for which y re especially fit-
ted by brain an dy, as. faithfully
and willingly and ely as the single,
ant performs iste lotted task in a
great busy home
The ant teaches rn,n. more than les-
sons of activity na wisdom and co-
operation. Some men may be active
and worldly wise eat yet have a heart
as dead to all kin,. ne. s and love as IA a
stone. The ant i eutially a, spirit-
ual as well as a t art oral teacher. She
teaches man the I -.vs, of leove and mer-
cy and gentleness-. She teaches these
spiritual lessons ore powerfully, I be-
lieve, than any inseet 'or repti;e found
'he biologists. Some
Ct whether ants knew
red for their own. a
But 1 carmot 'cIose without -one sim-
ple Paragraph, to State - *hat . this ,
Mon of alt sermons shaseld teeth
leeson to our navels and *rafters and
eistere and daughters ae.no other ser-
mon 1 have 'ever, preached. Have you
not notieed how' 1 - have always used
tint, "She dotal tithe" ''4,SISce does that.'
"She dOes the other thing." The
.eon I speak One ie because the nett r-
`allet tells us het the little black ant
14:1"‘ I;o0 in the, renOlvay belongs to the
ft-wall:el gendiet Tee, the hard work--
ihsn the male ant Oivappezes. So,
"f find int vitnisfe- thet the Wives and the
reothen and the :deters and the daugh-
ters are the leadere there in Christian
work, As the.inotte r rocks the Cradle,
FO is Ulf, chilli develop( d for God. It
is the sie:sr's Christian life that leads
the bretiar to CtIriet. It is the way
in witiela a wile lives that decides the
to -day, with the ant hill ate my pulpit,
I ask you willlyou not go to work for
Christ? 'Will ;ecru not, hole and • now,
Eves for the witivation of your fathere
and brothers awl husbands and- sone
to God? 04 powerful 'preacher ofs
this morning Is a prieetess—the ant.
WM you not .T.plseal with your lovert
ones to bow at Christ's altar, which is
as low even cl,s an ant hill? 0 Godeo
give us one g,neration of women Ar
11,
Christ, and the. we shall have a Whole
in the studies of
years ago, to pros.
each other and ce
paturalist took two bottles and.covered
their mouths wits muslin. In one of
Ov
\these bottles he
ants. In the sec
thendly ants. ti
placed these two
entrance of an a
ants swarmed 'fo.th by the hundreds.
With their mane ibles they tried to
break through: tits muslin covering of
the strange ants nd 'destroy them, but
fer their friends hey had not a stroke
nor a blow.
Not only will nt.S. refuse to attack
one of the memb rs of their own hive,
but if they find ne of their own kind
wounded or in t ouble or blinded or
crippled,- then w 11 the ants of some
species, though p .3.'1.3aps not of -all, ten-
derly care for th t gick sister ant, as
though 'it were °blessing so -tot do.
Cripple an ant i a country road, and_
her sisters will nd• her and tenderiSr
carry her back t the hive and protc-ct
her there until sl e dies. -They will care
for her as tende ly as the good phy-
sician cares for t e sick soul. They will
never leave her, or let her hunger nor
freeze with the -old if they can help
her. 0 man, is ne of the missions of
your life to look after the halt and the
maimed and th blind and the help-
less? When a s ream of gold began to
flow through our counting room;
when you -got b rand the awful strug-
ead; when you had
et down upon your
"0 God, thank thee
ven me much. 1 thank
w give to others in thy
be eyes for the blind
the, naked and food
and. shelter for the
yon, do you make that
he ant, are you trying
people from outside
he ant, are you trying
less and care for thoze
Iy, physically and spir-
, unless you come to
Oassed two strange
ond he placed two
ben -the naturalint
ottles in front of the
ithive. At once the:
biane held the ant's wisdom in such re-
spect that after the birth of .a male.
child theY would place one of these in-.
sects in the baby's hand while they.*
made the earnest prayer, "0 Ged, may
the boy turn out as clever and as wi-3,:e
as the ant!" The hutna-n being who.'
does not work .with intelligent fore-
thonght is a useless and a dangerous
worker. Fire and steam are alike po-
tent, but the harm caused by irriprie-
on ed fire nlay be greater than the g-ood
that is done by harnessed steam. Will-
ingness to labor will not weave togeth-
er a carpet unless. intelligence has
The intelligence of the ant is startling-
ly significant. It is as worthy of imita-
tion as is her persevering energy.
Snowshoes are useless in Florida. Cal -
robe, did you
knees and say,
that thou haft g
thee that I can n
name. Now c
and clothing fo
for the hungry
homeless?" Did
prayer? Like
to protect you
.dangers? Like
to help the hel
who are menta
doome
their rescue?
.The thought
her sisters wa
by an incident
sage of Philad
lin. One day
ul love of the ant for
)3eautif tiny illustrated
in the lifesof the noted
lphia, Benjamin. Frank-
e discovered a number
leo dresses are an a.bsurdity in the of ants feastin in a molasses pail. ;Hp.
Arefie. A ship's keel laid in the centre drove them oult and suepended the Pail
of the western prairies had better be
split up into kindlings. A telescope is
utterly valueless except for the power
of the brain which adapts the lens to
the astronomer's eye. Be wise, he wise!
Intelligent and wise architects are
they. Yes. -But study the ants as sol-
diers and submissive members of their
great co-operative social orga.nizations.
In factory the cogs fit into each oth-
er, Because of this perfect fitting the
great leather bands move round and
the spindles fly, the elevators lift and
the walking beams rise and fall, the
hammers strilZe and the wheat is
ground a.nd the wood is cut, and the
'shoe and the ax and the saw and the
chair and the stove are offered for sale
by the city merchantmen. Because of
this same kind of perfect fitting of one
man's cogs. intathe cogs of other men
in midair fro' a hOok in the centr'e of
the ceiling'. =Al ch to his surprise, after
Franklin had een reading for awhile,
he saw an o eriooked ant which had
been hidden i the pail crawl out and
climb up the handle to the string and
up to the cei ing, across the ceileng to
the side wall down the side wall and
disappear. short time afterward the
philosopher s yr that same ant leading
a retinue of /other ants. The proces-
sion followed her up the wail, over the
ceiling to the 1100k, down the string,
along the handle and into the pail of
mola,sses aghin, where she and - her
friends gorged themselves with mo-
lasses until, they could hold no more.
In the illustratiOn of the ant going to
find her sisters that they might enjoy
a meal instead of eating selfishly alone
cannot you and find a spiritual les-
becoming eweetene'd an ended,
but when the stalls are occupied
most of' the dlayi and. all night
through, it is doubles ft:epee-Dant
,tjtat tile et attics should be kept
clean *and seve,it. -
• No man ;worth, his -salt neglect
to remove the droppings at least
once a day, iand twice will be better
atill. See thlat 'the stall is well setp-
plied with: Jitter. It is, however, La
.mis taken idee, to think that (the
Platte sIna.ser there -is piled about the
hOrse tile ;more comforteklei he will
bo. A moderate quantity ev•61-1
spread is "setter. Do not allow rub-
bish; to rtecumulate ,aboulh the man-
ger. Piling it tet the head a the
"Oorse sta.nding in tlie stable, as foul
ammonia gasses. are givon off, be-
etdes enoouraging teats and mice to
'harbor in it.
. In addition to- mairiag the sur-
roundings of the animal as 'clean and
wholesome las possible, it is eeesees-
limess of the tanineal Retell. Groom -
f Iattention, and on lab account
should the work sooroped, Obser-
vation 'leads tone to form the opinion
that This pant of stable management
once di,d,` nor as much as it dews:rives.
The feet also require attentiron.
When a. team hat betel out on a wet
day, eepecially gen beams, land, the
feef will ebe filled up with, 'earth,
evhich ouglit to be eleased oat at
Do not forget that! essoreise is es-
senttal to all horsesi when they -sate
standing in the stable the Aay long.
Tio give the opium' a short run will
put new life info him, besides- pro-
moting his ;gene -teal health. NO horse
oats be expected to pull alon weight
to allarket or bring laome a similar
quantity, ot' etuft if he has been
standing_ in the. Aible : the most of
a week evithout has4ng been out of
the ethiele door. Exerrdse should,
theeefore, be given somes-tiene dar-
ing th.e slay. Of 'course, there ere
generally, a few odd _jobs- to do on
the. iiarm, which, „if all- the !horses
get their turn, will rcilake exercise
less neoesslary.
. Float i'atent in China.
The Chines4 Government, according
to German paPerse has -granted its
first patent, It is for an electric lamp,
the inventor of wbfob. it an inhabitant
'of Nanking, the old calaital of the Chin-
ese empire, who calls Irie lamp the
"brfght-moonlight,'" and- asserts that
it is far supez or to foreign, glow lights
thatfhitherto ave been sold at Shang-
hai end. etheri Chinese cities.
A number r of years ago when the
United StateS by its congress was mak-
ing a tali -I( bill one of the sections
enumerated iv -hat articles should be ad-
mitted froe etf duty. Among the many
articles spectlied were "all foreign fruit -
plants," etc., meoning plants imported
for transplanting, propagation or ex-
periment. "a:he enrolling clerk in copy-
ing the " bill F accidentally changed the
hyphen in tile compound word "fruit -
plants" to 4 eomma, making it read,
"all foreigithfruits, plants," etc. As a
result of tills simple mistake for a
year, or uatil congress could remedy
the blundeat all the oranges, lemons,
bananas, gimes and other foreign
fruits were 4dmitted free of duty. This
little mistaI4, evhich any ate would. be
liable to make, yet coujd have'a.voided
by carefuln0s, cost the government,
not less thaii $2,000,000. ea. pietty cost -
Ne comma that. '
Firist Rook Auction. .
Speaking ot a.uctions and auctioneers,
a book dealir says: "The first book
auction in England of which. we have
any record. of a date as far back as
1676, when the library of Dr. Seaman
was brought to the hammer. Prefixed
to the catalogue there is an address
Which thus liegins: 'Reader, it bath not
been usual here in England to make
sale of books by way of auction, or
who will give the most for them; but,
it having beqn practiced in other coun-
tries to the advantage of both buyers
and. sellers, waft therefore conceived
(for the encquragement of leaening) to
publish the eale of these books in this
When Louisan. Ix -
When a very dense fog settled over
the Thamete valley a few Sundays ago
and 1.11013t densely over London it im-
posed a complete silence on animal life.
London waff itself as silent as the
grave, fors all traffic was stopped, and,
as on Sunday traffic of auy kind is re-
duced to a minimum, the great city
was almost as still as a country vil-
lage at midnight. The streets and even
the riVer were almost without a sound,
for not a single tug was moving on
. the Thames. In the country no birsI
littered. a solinde They all sat still, si-.
lent and moping.
The filet forestry reserves -were made
for the general object of preserving the
forest and witholit specific relation to
the great problem for wbich later they
were to provide the only solution. Now
theY are seen to stand at the, center of
pnblic lend policy of- the notion, for
out of nein come the wood and the wa-
ter and the grass whieh are indispensa-
ble for the founding of homes.
•
Care of Horses.
The importance of being; 'regular
in feeding and. nae.naging horses, saye-
a writer in an English excitaage,caaa-
not be over estimated. 'Xf an animal
'gets its food given regularly it rill
be mueh better able to ao Its Work.
Not only is tile time a feeding im-
portant, bat the qyantity ecinal-
ly, so ; starving them one 'time and
gorging them enother, is the sur-
est way to bring, on disease. and to
unfit a hawse far ;rightly, penform-
ing its daily work, It should be re-
membered that the horse has a, small
'etsonsaelf, and sleotild therefore bp
Ted pretty; often—rat 'least three
times h day: 1'
al 'disinclination to eat up y,crhat has
lain 'before them for *cone tirn.e,
if as mach, food is placed before
'tleem as mai be eaten .up in a short
tirae, it twill be better relished and
a saving effected.
Keep their mangers and feeding
:troughs %icon, arid .allow no ageism -
relations of filth. When horses are
feeding see that theyi are distu.rbed
as 'little as p,ossible, for to be up-
eet by' any 'distracting noise induces
in 'horses the bad habit of bolting
their fratad.
supply' of fresh water. when in tbe
stable. An animal fed on old hay
or dry food may appeal. to . be quite
satisfied, butt When a drink - of
water is Igiven it' will oftentimes
begin to eat with: renewed avidity.
)"' Water sh00% he given to horses
-before any,thing else in the /nom -
tag, and one hottr1 should elapse be-
fore they are brought out sto ev.ork,
This will ensure them having bad
saffizient time fto get a good meal
before starting the tlay's work.
When at ;work in SW:rimer time
and when the horse. is turned out
ip the evenings onto the pastures,
Pie stable ihao then a good ohanoe
Eyo
Trots -hi es
Glasses fitted properly.
Dr. Ovens
Lc staort.
Treats Eye, Ear, Nose
and Throat. Will be at
Commercial Hotel, Reaforth,
Day Thursday, June 29.
Next Visit August 3.
The following Popular &Alio
stand for the Improvement of
this season, health and weather per.
mitting
KINa CHARMING.
Geiger & Hudson, Proprietore.
Monday, May leave own
stable, Hensel', and proeeed isy way of the
London road to -Shear's Hotel, Kippttee
for noon ; then east to George Streqa
Hotel, Tuckerstnith, for night Tuesday
North and east to Henry Cheariefsofee
-noon ; then to James Dick's Hotel, Sew
forth, for night. Wedtesday—By woy
tne 2nd concession, Tuckersmith, Hume
'Survey, to Thomas Coleme.hat, for nem ;
then across to Mill road, end west to
to Charles Wileon's Hotel, Brucefield, foe
night. Thersday—vVeet, to Cook's HoK
Varna for noon ; then south by way of
Parr fine, to Isaac nucleon's, Hills Greens
ter night. Friday—West te Niolsolsotei
Hotel, Blake, for noon ; then south to John
Geiger's, lob 21, concession 12, Hay, foe
night. Sattirday—Easb to dames liegaa's
Parr Line, for noon ; then to his ow*
stable, where he will reale/a until the fol.
1651
Monday morning.
Monday, lilay let—Will leave his own
stable, Brucefield, s,nd proceed to E. Balra
the Commercial Hotel, Clinton, for tbe
I ship, for noon ; then to Wilson's, Holmes.
vine, for the night. Wednesitty
proceed to John Hudie's, 7th con
Township for the night Thursday—Wilt
proceed to John Stowerile, Baydeld Limo
for noon ; then to Cook's Hotel, Vasna, lee
4 the night. Friday—Will preeeed tc; Adam
Stewart's, 4th poncession, Stanleye
noon ; then to hie own stable for the ni
ooneessiob, Tucker/mall, for noon ; then to
A, Broatifoothe 4th concession, for- one
hour ; then to his own stable, where he
will remain until the following Mon
morning. za\ 16524,
PRINCE 01' MIDLOTHIAN,
James Leiper, Proprietor.
Will stand for the improvement of stosk
st his own stable Lot 10, Otro3essioa
Efullett, except on Thursdays, wlen
willi go to Winthrop forinoon, then beat.*
hie own stable. Mares can be met by sp-
. pointment also awes from a dietaries will
be kept free of °barge. Thitehosse is tee
well known as stock home .to need any
further conunent Terms to insure,Vasiles
Also wanted a nuirtber of good draught
oolts. 19504
Get Rid of That Cough.
Before thesummer emote Dr Wood's', Norway
Pine Syrup °conquers Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat,
Hoarseness, Bronchitis, and all Diseases of the
Throat and Lungs\
eta ea ow
Wherever there are sickly people with weak
hearts and derapged nerves, Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills will be found au effectual *medicine
They restore enfeebled, enervated, exhausted,. de-
vitalized or over.worked men and women to vigor-
ous health
For Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantutn, Cramps,
Collo,Diairhoea,Dysentery and Summer Complaint,
Dr Fowler'e Extract of Wild etrarberry is a prompt.
safe and sure cure that has been a popular favorite
for nearly 60 years
Domes Rowel Pima act on the kidneys, blauder
and urinary organs only/ They cure backaches.
weak back, rheumatism, diabetes. congestion, in
fismination, gravel, Bright's disease and all other
Mamma arising from wrong action of the kidneys
and bledder
Suddenly .Attaoked.
Children are often attacked suddenly byl paten
and dangerous colic, Cramps,Dlarrhoeit, Dysentery,
2holera 1dorbus, Cholera etc Dr Fowl-
er's Extract of Wild Strawberry is a prompt and
sure once, which should alwaye be kept in the house
•
Spring Medicine.
tea 41 Os
AS a spring medicine Burdock Blood Bitters
no equal It tones up the velem and removes
impurities from tbo blood, and takes away that tir-
ed, weary feeling so prevalent in the spring
Cook's Cotton Root Compound.
Ladies' Favorite,
Is the only safe, reliable
eeguiator which woman
can. depend "in the eusier
and. time Of need,"
Prepared in two degrees of
No. 1.—Por ordieary cases!
is by far the hest dollar
medicine known.
loo. 2—For apecial cases -10 degrees
otrouger—three dollars per box. ,
Ladies—ask your drugglet for Cookie.
Cotton Root Compound. Take no other
as all pills. mixtures and imitations are
dangerous. No. 1 and No. 2 are.sold and
recommended by all druggiste In the Do-
minion of Canada. Mailed to any address
011 recetpt Of_price and four 2 -cent postage
stamps,. mile Cook COMpft317,
Windsor.; Outs
erts, I. V. Fear. and. Alex. Wilson,
Can Eat Anything Not
How many D'sf,speptics can
say that ?
Or perhaps you are dyspeptic
and don't know it.
Have you any of these
symptoms ?
Variable appetite, a faint gnawing feel-
ing at the pit of the stomach, unsatiified
hunger, a loathing of food, rising and
souring of food, a painful load at the
pit of the stomach, constipation, or are
you gloomy and miserable? Then you
are a dyspeptic. The cure is careful diet ;
Imola stimulants and narcotica, do not
drink at meals, keep regular habits, and
regulate the stomach and bowels with
- BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS,
Nature's specific for Dyspepsia.
Miss Laura Chicoine, Belle Anse, Que.,
says of its wonderful curative powers
Last winter was very thin, and was
fast losing flesh owing to the run-down
state of my system. I suffered from
Dyspepsia, loss of appetite and bad blood.
nalpurpose ; then finally started to use
Burdock Blood Bitters. From the first
day I felt the good effect of the medicine,
and am now feeling strong and well again.
I can eat anything now without any ill
I after-effects. It gives me great pleasure
to recommend Burdock Blood Bitters, for
ELECTRIC 13.
Berrrand Blair, Proprietors. e
Mbnday, May 1.—Will leave hie MTh
stable,4 /die south of Brucefield aed go
south to Rippers and eant to Wm. Work-
man's, 10th concesoion,Tuokersmith, noon fr
then east, by way of Oromarty and nordli
to A.ndrew Wright's, lot 17, concession 12.
Hibbert, for night. Tuesday–LEut to
Ranneldn.ies for noon ; then to Mitchell at
the Hicks House for night. Wednesday --
To Dublin, at the Dominion Hotel. fir
noon ; then to Seetorth, at Dick's Hotel,
for night. Thursday—To Walton, at Bo-
igh's Hotel, for noon ; then to Myth, et
the MOOD House for night. Friday --Te
Clinton, at the Conuneretar Hotel for DOM
and remain anti' Saturday morning, Sat-
urday—To bin own stable, where he will
remain uatil the following Monday morn-
ing, 1956-tf.
STOCK, HORSES
The following Horses will etand for ser-
vice this at the stables of
- GARTLY GOLD.
TERM13.—To insure, $15 ; $5 peyable at the
-time of service ; the bassos when
mates prove in foal.
L PRIOR'S HERO,
No. 17,536.
Tenies.—To insure, $12 ; payable when
mares prove in foal.
SCOTLA.ND'S STAMP.
No. 11,522.
mares prove in foal.
-Idow.amek fad
NATBY ROYAL,
No. 20,755.
TERMs.—To. insure, $8.; payable when
mares prove in foal.
Hay Forks
F2-4
Get the Old Bailie
Oshawa
Track.
Puttip in first-elass work-,
Fel( particular/ -apply to
John ()ha:14ton,
GENERAL AGENT, EXETIfft.
THOS-. FLANNIGAN, Agent, Beeeherootle
LOGS WANTED.
The nedeesigned preptired to pay the
oft Elm, Rock Elm, Baetwood, Mapis
Beech, Ash, Hemlock and Oak Logs
Delivered at the sesforth Saw sod Stave Mill. lag
to be cut an even length, except Soft Elm. Son Elar
to be cut 11, 13 and 16 teat. Will ale* buy
Basswood Heeding Bolts,
40 Inches long, at $3.50 per cord, deliver0.
Will also buy timber by measurement or by bulk -
bosh. Special attention paid vo custom sawing,*
tiefaction guaranteed.
Larner's School of
Entirely a new system of Instruction.
preparation in railway tele graphee
ard User rules sod reguletiont, pee g
195 stestford, the
ender
nd fir
n too
the
rite f
sod let
does h
tl Wire
PATe
DS
ualse
rstrr
ed
serener lo
s:Mit COT
mamba
an Errs
trine psi
Lot
CARg
PR
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Parti
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Joint
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