HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-07-28, Page 6777—,
28
AMINO FLASH .. Suidigiffit So.4 "does not
haricten or: shr sit*oollenks
TYPIFIES SUDDENNESS OF THE
COMING OF CHRIST,
1
TATE FOR SALE
GBAZINa FARM FOR SALE OR RENT.—
Castile firm. .Stmlev townehip, 145 acree.
Apply to B a HAYS, Barrister, Seaforth.
1955 -ti
fl OUSE FOR SALE.—South of the railway Sea.
Lt forth, 9 !rem° house with the rooms, cellar
and Well, Alio three Tete end a good tillable. Apply
to MARGARET MoLEOD, S eatorth P. 0. 195641
11OUILDIN0 LOTS FOR SALE.—Fer sale, several
deeirable building lots in the town ot Sera
forth. These lots are eituated in one of the best
parts of the town end are well planted, with the
cholaest of fruits Apply to W. D. MoLeen, at the
Rxnerron OFywn, Leaforth.1 1940.tf
ACRE FARM FOR SALE—Being the east
ej half of Lot 8, in the 1st concession ot the
towtethip of Hallett, county ot Huron. This le dt
good ferni and will be sold on easy terms. For
particulars- apply to J. M. BEST, Beeforth, Ontar'o,
Solicitor tor TONEY NEIS DALE, 1962-5
MaROFITABLE MVESTMENTS.—I own lend
,JL money on improved quarter lections of 160
acres each at from 8 to 10 per centper annum.
Only first mortgages taken. Ample reocurIty given
Torrens Titles System io perfect. From 8800 up
can be lent on farms worth from $1,000 to • 82,000.
For further particulars- write to ma. J. A. JACK.
SON, Banister, etc, Ponoka Alberta 195941
WARM FOR SALE— Rat ballot lot 5, Oonceta
ston MoKillop, two end a half utiles from
Beeohwood and four and, a halt miles from Dublin.
50 acres crisped land all seeded down, 2$ mores has
been seeded for ammeter of years. On the lend is
a big house, frame kitchen, barn 80 f. x 50 it stable
and driving abed and an orchard of one.half acre ot
choice fruit. The land is well Mrstined end fenced
'mine two good wells that have never run dry.
PHILIP ENRIGHT. Dublin. 19604-
MIA11/11'FOR SALE.—For sale lot 29, nonoeulon 2,
AH. R. O., Tuckentmith, containing 100 acres,
all cleared except about five acres of good hard.
wood. All untiordrained, well fenoad`and in a good
dataof cultivation. A good brink honse and two
benison° with stone &tabling underneeth. Plenty
of good water and a Rood bearing orchard. Thia
farm is well adapted for either stook or grai
About midway between Seatorth and Olintoa. An
ply on the premises or Seaforth P. 0. H. 'TOWN
SEND, Proprietor. 194241
fEOUSE AND LOTS FOR SALE.—For sale, brick
e house and 2. lots in Seatorthi One lot faces.
on North Main Street and the other on West Wil•
Ram Street. The house is a comfortable briok
nottsge and contains 8 bedroom% dining room, sit.
Eng room and kitohen, with good cellar under the
whole house. Hard and soft water in the house.
There le also a good stable and driving shed. All
kinds of fruit on the lot. Apply to J. L. ALLAN,
Landesbero, or to C. W, ATKINSON, Seaforth.
liitaxatt
MIOR SA -LE --A farm containinz 100 scree of lend,
bin e Lot 6, Concession 7, in the TOW eihip of
Tucaeremith, five miles from Seatorth and belong-
ing to the estate of the late Miabael O'Keefe. This
/arm is sultrible for cultivation or pasture and will
be sold an recappable terms. For full partioulare
apply to THOMAS BROWN, Auctioneer, Seeforth
P. 0. 1961.tt
kgsEIARM FOR SALE. -200 acres on the Thames
U Road, adjoholog Exeter. If more convenieot
to purchesey I will sell 150 acres, formerly known
as the " Jory Farm." No waste land, 12 sores of
timber. geed twoatorav brick house, modern out-
buildings, two wiadmilis, day loam soli. This is a
splendid opportunity to enure a well improveand
conveniently shaded farm at a reaeonable mice.
Inspection or correspondence invited. W. H.
HARVKY, Exeter. 19614
.„—
"DESIDENCE FOR SALE —For sale that neat
ret and comfortable residence on Goderioh street
{tweed and occupied „jay Mrs. Peters. There is a
pular, dining- room, kitohen, summer kitchen aad
Woedshed besides beirooms and pantries. Hard
and Raft water. The bailding is in first.olass repeir.
There is ale° a good garden filled with ornamental
Maas and earubi and the varioue varieties of small
fruits. It lie corner let A.pyly on the premises
to the proprietress or address Sezforth P. O. MRS.
PETERS. 146241
ARA FOR'ALE—Lot 8t, concession 1,Usborne,
.0 containing 90 acre,''situated on the London
Road; 1 mile from Hensa11, and 4 miles from Exet.
er. It is In aTirst ,clase state of oultivation being.
welt drained eitti tile, pearly all summer !allowed
and eeeded to grass,nearly all fenced with new Car-
ter wire feriae. On the farm is a stone house and
plenty of outbuildings, including one of the finest
poultry houses in Ontarlo. There are two iwells, a
spring creek, and a flowing spring that would fill
three-inch tile. Apply on the farm or to rfense.11
post office. BENJAMIN BOGGeRTH. 196841
TeletAGE PROPERTY FOR SALE.—For sale in
✓ Egmondville, a comfortable frame house with
three acres of land in e very fertile condition with
plenty Of large and small fruits for family MC aleo
large barn and outbuildings in good repair. The
house has been recently overhauled and eonteina
eeven tOOMO with choice cellar, full size, good wood
shed, tiro eummer kitchen and an excellent spring
well and good cistern. Any person desiring a cam.
fortable, quiet home of thie desoription, covenient
to town, ehould not mire this opportunity. Will bo
sold reasonably mid oe eau' terms. For further
partictilare apply on tbe premises or addreaa Ega
mondville P. 0, WM. BUBOLZ.. leiatt
CIA.Ret AND MILL r aOPERTY FOR SALE.—
• For sale the old Bell Farm and Mill Property,
-on the tondon road, Tuokereniibh, recently orieu.
pied bk the late Joh q MoNevin. There are 1.00
!term, AR (Seared but about four acres. Good
buildings and the farm well ;undordrained and itt
high state of cultivation, all seeded to grass except
about 130 aores. Alio the grist and saw mill prop.
erty on the farm. It its within half a mile of Kippen
etatioreand 2 miles from Hensel' and a good busi-
nees has always been clone at the mills. The facie
and mill property will be sold together or separate.
iy ap eult parchaaer. Terms easy. Apply to
DAVID C. MeLEAN, Kippen. 1954-12
AND FARM PROPERTY FOR SALE.—
Properly is Lot 29, Conceselon InaTownship
of Grey, °pinny of Huron, containing 100 acres, 86
acres tamed; and fenced, balance bush and pasture
land. Thera are two good dwelling hnuees, drivIrt
shed, two stables. also saw, lath, ehlegle and chop -
pine Mil all In good working order anct surrounded
by gtied couttry, 5 aeme of toed gravel and sand
with lots of deniand, also moulds for manufacturing
cteceeht tile. 1)roperty will be sold oheap if sold at
meets the proprietor wiehee to go We t. For fur.
ther intti.allarii apply to PETER TARE, lilneorlef
P.0. 1992.4
F'M FOR SALE—For eale south half of Lot 17,
bo the ath oonceesion of Tuckeremith, L. R. 8.
vontalning 60 sores, all cleared, exleot about five
acres, which ishardwood bush. Nearly all under.
.drained, well fenced and In a good state of (mak"- ;
ation, a,good frame Buse with a zood cell tr under -1
neath, also ahem 8i x 40with stone eteblIng un-
derneath, plenty of good water and a. go ,d bearing
orchetd of choice fruit& Thi a farm is well adapted.
foreither stook or grsin, it is about neldaey be.
tweed Seaforth and Hen -all. Aleo the privilege of
buying the north 60 mum, as well, which is all un-
der gtasa. Apoty on the premises or address Kip.
pen P. 0, GUY CALDWELL. 1968 4
ARIL FOR Wile—For sele lot 29, on the 9th
eonceselon of Hibbeet, oontaining 00 aormeall
in a geed state of a:titivation. There I on the pre.
mine 4 brink house and brick kitchen and a good
cellar. There la alio a lerge batik barn, 00 x 40 and
a Nadia of 12 feet, with stone etehling made rue eth.
Also 4 ehed 80 x 110 ft and a driving house with
(werything complete. There are three never tailing
woflttin the promisee, thire le also a largo o tett P rd
and god garden. There are ten cement tall wheat
sown and there are 40 aoree sealed down. Either
suitable for hay or pestare. All thetall ploughing
is done. The farm is well underdrelned with tile
and well fenced with wire feneess It is in a g ood
tomtit*, being situated tem end a half Milo 4 from
'Chiselhuret, where there he post office ant two
churche3, Methodist and Presbyterian, 8 miles f rom
Seedorth end there is a good gravel road run ning
pest the fann. It is in pee conditten and wi II be
avid ott reaeortable terms as the proprietor w taboo
to retiree Far further pertieuleas apply on the
premises or to CEIARLE8 EBEKKART, Staff 0, P.
O., Ontario. 1947-11.
FOR SALE.
.ta HORTHORNS POR SME.—The undereigned
hetor sale on Lot 10, Oonoemeion 2, [Tay, e
number of up-to-date thoroughbred Shorthern
bulls, they are of the low get biooky type, clerk rod
oolot and of choice breeding. They are all elig-
ible- for registration and will he toll reaeonably.
JOHN ELDER, Hansen P. O. 194841
MESTER SHEEP AND SHORTHORN CATTL
FOR SALE.—The :underaigned bee for sale sev
eral. thoroughbred Lacester Sheep and Butter
Cattle of both sexes. Address Egmoadville P. 0. 0
Apply at tante WS Road, Tuckeranith. ROBEF:
,OHARTF,ItS Se SONS. 1872.1
HORTHORNS FOR 8 4.1,E.— For sale four young
Scotch Shorthorns, aeed from 9 to 16 months
three eds and one roan. These Gahm] are au efeeci
by imported "Trumpeter," and are the very best
of stook. Apply on Lot 21. Ceneeeeion 4, II. R. S.,
Tuoirerenelth, or Seaforth P. Q, A. it J. BROA.D
FOOT. 193841
S
HORTHORN 3 FOR SATSE.-4. few Grandly brel
Scotch Shorthorn Belle with realetered peal -
greet% 8 to 21. months, Priem tram 860 10 M., if
taken soon, ale, cows and heifera at about the seme
privet,. Mao a few Berkshire sows four months' old
DAVID MILE, Ethel, Ont, 1982-11
IT IS A GLORIOUS SPECTACLE
Not As a Babe In a Manger Will the
Master's Next Coming Be, Burt He
Shall Come In All the Splendour of
the Kings of Old—The First and the
Second Comings of Christ Vividly
Contrasted.
Entered according to Act of Parliament Of Canada,
in the year nova by Frederick Diver, of Toronto,
at the Department of Agriculture, Ottawa.
Los Angeles, Cele July these
midsummer days of frequent electrical
display the preacher finds a lesson in
the lightning's liash, which he likens
to th.e suddenness of Christ's promised
reappearance on earth. The text is
Matthew XXIV, 27, "As the lightning
cometh out of the east."
The misforttine of being terrorized
by the, lightnings has never come to
me. Some of the bravest and noblest
men and women tremble like an aspen
leaf shaken in the rough grasp of the,
wind whenever the lightnings flash and
the thunder e growl because years ago -
they lived through some awful hor-
ror of an electric storm:" They can
never come out ,from under theashadow
of that danger. Like Paulon the road
to Damascus, blinded and , dazed they
were flung into the dirt by an electric
thunderbolt, or by It they had their
homes shattered and burned, or they
had a dear loved one killed by their
side. To be frighre,ned by a storm un-
der such circumatioes is not neces- '
sexily to be cowardly.
The raging of a thunderstorm has
always impressed me a good deal as'
it did my only brother. A few weeks
before his 'death there was a terrific
electric storm in Brooklyn. Crash,
crash, crash, crash, went the thunder.
It seemed then as though all parts of
the heavens became at times great
prairie conflagrations, great rivers of
fire, great cataracts and shoeting jave-
lins of fire. Father and mother be-
came nervous about the storm. They
wanted their children all about them.
So father went upstairs to my broth-
er's Study to bring him down. The
room was empty. He began to call:
"De Witt! De witu Where are you?"
After awhile, amid a hill in the storm,
he heard a. voice calling: "Here, fath-
er! What do you want?" Then my
father went up into the cupola, which
stood upon the top of our house. There
he found my brother. "What are you
doing here?" said father. "Better come
down with the rest of the family. You
might get struck here." "Oh," an-
swered my brother, "there is no dan-
ger. Let us stay up here and watch '
the etorm. Is it not wonderful? Fath
er, is not that play of lightning glor-
ious?" Yes, the lightning is glorious
if .you have never been frightened by
the touch of its fingers of fire. It has
always been to me a, glorious specta.
cie. I am thrilled by its grandeu'r as
draw for you, the symbol of "the
coming Christ" in the "lightning which
cometh out of the east and seineth
even unto the west." May God help
me In this sermon to impress upoti you
the ever present nearness of our Sav-
iour and our divine King.
Christ's second advent, in the first
place, shall be a glorious spectacle. He
shall come not as a babe to be born in
a stable and cradled in a stone crib;
he shall come not as a fugitive in his
mother's arms upon the back of a
humble beast of burden, fleeing into
Egypt; he :than come not as a carpen-
ter, with the roiled garments of toil;
he shall come not as an outcast, con-
demned culprit, staggering toward Cal'.
very's heights under the oppressive
weight of the cross upon which he has
to be crudified, leut he shall come in
all the speendor of the kings of old.
The glittering spears shad be by his
Fide. The burnished helmets and the
flashing shields and the waving swords
shall be reflecting the liehts of his mil-
:ennial approach, The white steeds 'of
viaory then shall be champing their
lilts and stamping their golden hoofs.
The rumblitig wheels of myriads of
chariots and the vociferating cheers of
the charioteers and horsemen shall be
-making thr Nve:kiti ring with their hal-
a-halals of joy. The cloud's shall be his
uhrtelo is. The. white horse of victory
shall be his brightly caparleoned char-
ger. The armies of the h&vens shall
follow him clothed in fine linen. And
on his thigh shall be written, "King of
kings and Lords of lords." The sublime
panorama of the flashing lightnings of
My text symbolize it.
Could we find ta more resplendent
eageantry for the second coming of
thteet than in tha chariots of clouils,
with the flashlights of dazzling light-
ning.? "Gird the sword uDon thy Thirh.
Dm Restored Thousands of
Canadian Women to
Health and Strength.
There is no need for so many women to
suffer pain and weakness, nervousness,
sleeplessness'anamite, faint and. dizzy
spells and tile numerous troubles which
render the life of woman a round of sick-
ness and suffering.
Young girisebudding into womanhood,
who suffer wtth pn.iris and headaches, and
whose face is pale and the blood watery,
will find Milburn's Heart and Netve
Pills help them greatly during this period.
Women at the change of life, who are
nervous, subject to hot flushes, feeling of
pins and needles, palpitation of the heart,
etc., are tided over the trying time of
their hfe by the use of this wonderful
remedy.
It has a wonderful effect on a woman's
system, makes pains and aches vanish,
brings color to the pale cheek and sparkle
to the eye.
They build up the system, renew lost
vitality, improve the appetite, make rich,
red blood and dispel that weak, tired,
"listless, no -ambition feeling.
Soo. PEO BOX, OR 3 FOR $1.25
ALL DEALERS.
The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont,
I
It is injurious chemicals and adul erations itt common soaps that
destroy' your clothes, is adulterati ns that harden your; woollens
and the excess alkali that destroysman shrinks them
$iirtiighL Soap
1
C011tal,pS no amulteration or excess al all. It is just pure saponified
fats and oils. That is why it cleanse your clothes perfectly in hard.
or soft
water and does not injure the 1.
All dealers are authorized to ret rn your purchase money if you
find ay cause for complaint.
LEVER BROTHERS LI ITED, TORONTO ' 1004
4-tetktrat
The fluhlIght Maids find that flannels do ot shrink when washed the Sunlight sum
MC;
Id
0 most miglity, with thy glory and thy
majesty!" cies the psalmist. Yes, we
have seen yhrist in symbol girding on
his sword and clothing 'himself in the
glory and qt the majesty of the storm.
Some yeaks ago we took a long drive
of some fitly miles over the Michigan
hills. I3efore we got back to Our sum-
mer cottagb an awful storm overtook
us. The night settled in. The black
clouds ecliised for us the light of every
star. It was •as black as the plague of
darknese iii Egypt. From an aclJaeent
farmhouse We borrowed a lantern. The
way became s0. black that even the
horses cod not see the read. Thehi jit-
I
tle childre the stage crept up close
to their raIbthers in fear. •The silence
became as still as the famous half hour'
of silence In heaven when The celestial
hosts, horlior struck, could not Utter a
whisper ifornediately after the dying
agony of palvary's tragedy was- ended.
Then ea* the rushing of mighty
winds, It seemed as though all the
spirits deMoniac, as well as celestial
were sweeping past me and meeting
in mighty, conflict. Then the whole
heavens heeame sheete of fire. North,
east, south and west, everywhere 'th
heavens Were ablaze. The flames seem
ed to meunt higher and higher, a
though tliey were climbing up a thou
sand stofy building. Then it Kerne(
as though the clouds with their might
Niagaras' rushed toward them an
' drowned leut those hissing furnaces o
Nebuchadnezzar, seven times, aye, se
enty tinatis heated. Then the huge tree
alongside the road would bend' an
groan like shuddering Laocoon in deat
grip of huge monsters. Ahead of the
horses I waked with the lantern t
show the wave Now ,I could see t e
big stage following after me. No
after the thunders had rolled and swel
ed and died away, I could hear t e
faint cry of a child or the soothing
tones of a mother trying to quiet , h r
babe, see, the mother, just as fright-
ened as . the child. Then suddenly e
ery tree, every rock, every hillsi
wpuld come out co clear in outine
during the day. Then midnoon in..
instant ,awould be changed into mi
night. Power, power, omnipotent,
finite p9wer! Do you;,wonder that t
glory arid 'the 'majesty of the comb
Christ was symbolized by Jesus hi
self in the sublime scenic effects
' "the lightnings coming out of the e
and ehining even untie the west?"
I fear that our artists and poets a
rehglous° teachers have too often dw
upon the hunaanity end the humil
and the lielplessness of -Christ and h
not emphasized enough his glory
majesty and power es symbolized
the Lightnings and the chariot clo
of his econd coming!. It is right
;
just th t we should impress upon (
hearers and scholars the helplessn
of Christ incarnated In the flesh o
little chilch eThe master artists dreer a
true leeson for us wilen he made M
and the divine infant sleep betw
the gr4at paws of the old Egypt
statue! There was the moon hover
over the silent, bleak desert as .
omnimelent eye of God the Fat
watchiiig his only begotten e
There was joseph, the carpenter, g im
and silent as a sentillel, keeping gu rd
There in the background rises the h
statue, hal man, helf beast, chie
and anchored to its . foundations t
sands ef years before Christ was b
and still there wetehing, watch
waiting, waiting th9usands of y
after .Christ is dead.i Christ, the h
lees Christ thera., became helpless
sympathy with us. put older .than
oldest ,!rocks of the pyramids was
same Ifte of that divine Christ. Lo
than those rocks shell ever. exist s
the ete'rnal existence of Christ end
Greater than the power of Herod,
meele •Pethlehem a. slaughter hous
innoceirt blood, and greater than
splenders Of Rameses II., whose pa
grounCs were once iapped by the
tors of; 'the river Nile and whose -w
men trade the desert 'blossom as
rose, ere the strength and the p
and eeeentior of that sleeping c
Christ second advent shall re
•him anq ofinnipotent, an omnisciept
an orim present Clod. -Ch'rist's
comink shall be visible to ell pe•
as he le girded with glory and mai
By th ie flaming swords of the light,
flings ii-iy text in symbol picturs
glprimis, a sublime, a resplenden
celestial panorama. Let me repeat
you the glorious message of my
}tear how the sublimity, of . that.
lenelai day echoes down the ha.14
time, ,!As the lightning corneth o
ehe -•e.aest .and shineth into the wes
shalt the coming of the Son of ma
But the glory of the lightning
not impress nee any more than the
dennese of its appearance. One
inent It is here, the nextait is gone.
One, el -Omen t it seems to )e far away,
thenext it seems to be bi eing at your
feefl. pne moment it seems_ to be start.
Mg e iforest fire in yonder moun.ain,
away 'above the snow line, the next: it
seems ' to be plowing up the ground
atar your . chicken coop in the back
yard. You cannot flee it if you would.
You canrlot sock . It if you iveuld. It Philadelphia, when Benjamin Franklin
comes an goes, in a -flash. claimed that with a kite string he had
Lightning travels swifter than the drawn electricity out of a storm cloud?
biars wing, ewif,er than a rithee .bue Are we going to llee the miraculous
n.
le
of
st
It
tle
ve
In
ds
nd
ur
ss
a
ry
!en
an
ng
he
er
on.
led
ou•
ng,
ars
lp-
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the
the
ger
all
re.
vho
of
the
ace
wa-
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wer
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eel
and
ext
pie
sty.
S
,a
for
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mil -
of
t of
, so
oes
sud-
m0-
earen seen by the glearn of the blazing
lightnings, always -appear to be stand-
ing still. For the light that you see
flashing across the heavens only ap-
pears before your eyes in the small-
est part, of a second.
When Christ shall come to earth the
second time he will not only come With
the glory of the lightning, but -with the
velocity of the lighetning. He will corne
quicker than theftinds, quicker than
the gasp of your breath. He will not
come as an ordinary human visitor. He
will flash before ycru as an electric
spark. Could the suddenness of Christ's
coming be pictured More ViVidlY? Some
years ago I was standing upon the ho-
tel piazza, in Waynesburg, W. Va.,
watching a magnificent thunderstorm.
Suddenly a great ball of fire seemed
to alight upon the eaves at the end of
the porch. With a Jump I leaped clear
across the porch and into the hallway
of 'the hotel. Then, with a nervous
laugh, I turned in the 'hall, and went
out again upon the piazza. "Why," I
said to myself. "if that lightning had
ever hit me it would have struck me
before I knew it. In an instant I
would have been dead." There was no
more need of my jumping than there
was need of the soldier boy of the late
civil war squirming behind the trenches
when he heard the hell singing over
his head. If that shell was to kill him
it would kill kihn before he could hear
it sing. The lightning comes in a fldsh.
In a flash "shall the second. corning of
the son of man be."
The geory of the lightning is over-
powering. The suddenness of its ap-
pearance is startling. But the univer-
sality of the electric atmospheric for-
ces and currents is jhst as suggestive
in its divine significance. How this
electric power gets into the atmosphere
,,no scientist has ever yet been able
.to explain. There are many theories,
but theories are not necessarily facts.
The scientists cannot positively 'tell
us why the electric substances are in
the atmosphere any more than they
can positively *state what causes an
earthquake or why Mount Vesuvius or
why "gigantic Kilauea, the greatest of
all volcanoes, have their vomiting
spells. But this fact we do know:
everywhere in the atmosphere are these
electric forces. Thud, when two mighty
storm clouds drift toward one another
one seems bo be filled with the positive
forces of electricity and the other
seems to be filled with the negative
forces of electricity. Then these two
forces leap together On account of their
affinities, Then theee is p. flash, and
the, explosion soon follows. Thus we
find the causes of electeieity every-
where. When the diVine lightning shall
appear at the second advent, it will
not be Christ coming to any one place
or to any one people.
Away up in the Arceics among the
polar bears and the spouting whales
and the obelisks of ice the Edkirno in
the untanned slciais shall, see •him.
Down among the beautiful flowers of
the tropics, amid I the scented air
Within sound of thee prima donnas of
'storm, Siemen &ear forth electric
seiarke from his metal' -water gourd.
The sight of these sparks o terrorized
the Bedouin guides that away they ran
and never came back. A.h, no, let us
not deride nor flee Christ's ealvation.
Let us take Christ at his word. In the
gospel of john he distinctly stgtes that
he is going to heaven for a little while
'to prepare a place for is Then what
does he say? "I will come. again and
receive you unto myself, that where I
am there ye may be _also." Will you
believe that he is coning?
Christ nevcr breaks his word.. He
would no more break it with us than
you would intentionally break 'a prom -
le child. Many
Wellington v.,eas
{London bridges
Ise made with your lit
years ago the Duke of
crossing one of the
With his little son. He placed him in a
certain seat and said: ?'Now wait here,
my boy, until I come back. I have a
very important erran
and then 1 .will corn
After the errand the
about hie son. But I
• noon he remembered
and the promise he
anxious father hurri
bridge, and there he
"Were you tired, my
you wait so patient'
the boy, "I got tired, f
ed because I knew
You haVe never yet
you made with me."
have forgotten his
would return to his s
will never break the
made to his children
He is surely coming.
that he will corne t
"As the lightning c
east and shineth ev
so shall the corning
Christ will surely
no doubt about that
any minute of any
There is also no d
Christ said it. He 1
suddenly, but also
peoted 'time. In M
Christ's own words
fore, for ye know n
Lord doth oorne, "f
Noah were, so shall 'also the coming
of Son of man IA.' Therefore this
is the great practical application of
this sermon: When Christ does come,
shall we be prepared 'to meet him?
,When he does coma -whore do you
think Christ wants to find us? When
Christ comes, as cone he may at any
minute; I think he would like to find
us in our ordinary a orking apparel do-
ing the. Christian wOrk he has given 1.18
to do. He wants tq find us earnesftly,
ly delng the work
rs, Christian lath-
ess men and Chris -
the woods, the black rnan of the
rican forests shall see him. In the
temperate zone the king shall see him
at his palace door and the poor man in
his hut. Then "the glory of the Lord
shall cover 'the earth, even as the wa-
ters cover the seas." • Yes, yes; the
second, coming of Jesus Christ • shall
not be. hemmed in by any one race or
by any one people or by any one clime.
Christ, like the. electric forces in the
air, shall be seen everywhere at once.
Christ shall come as a universal =ea-
ter, for God has "given him a name,
which is above every name; that at
the name of Jesus every )(nee should
bow of things in heaven and things on
earth and things under the earth, that
every tongue should confess that Jesus
Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the
Father."
Christ will come to earth. No doubt
is there about the second advent. But
why is Christ 'to Come to earth? Let
us ask -the lightning and ask -Christ
their missions. I look Up arid cry, "0
lightning, what is thy missionr I
hear it say.; "My mission is to empty
yonder clouds of their moisture. See
me' strike. See 'the men beating down
into the valleys below. See how I am
purifying and clarifying the atmos-
phere." So when I cry, "Oh, Christ,
for what purpose art thou coming to
earth?" I hear Jesus say:—"I am com-
ing to claim my own. Yes, as the
lightning shines out of the. darkness
of the night and the black cloud of the
day, so out of the blackness of your
sins, 0 man, I am coming to bring sal-
Vation and eternal life." "What," I
says, "can Christ save me out of the
darkness of my, sins?" Yes, he can.
He will if we will only let him save
us.
Cannot yeti and I take Christ at his
word and prepare to let him save us?
Are we going to sneer at and ridicule
his statements and divine authority, as
Frederick the Great and all his Prus-
sian court and the Royal Society of
London at first ridiculed and buffooned
the statements of the great sage of
let, swifter than a. hutater's halloo,
swifter thain any other agency . of life
or dieeth in tilt' woral. "Within a few
seconds it can aielt the whole globe and
come hack to the place from wheel' it
started. It is so swift in its moilons
that the swiftest moving objects on
and divine saving power of Jesus
Christ, the power to save us from sin,
as the Bedouin guides fled *from the
side‘of th scientist, Herr Werner Sie-
j
men, whet they were caught in a thun-
der stormti pon the, top of the Egyptian
pyramid? There, in the midst of that
1 wish to do,
and get you."
duke forgot all
te in the after -
hat he had Cone
ad made. The
d beak to the
found his boy.
son? Why did
?" "Well," said
ther, but I wait-
eit would come.
roken a promise
The duke may
rornise that he
n, but our Christ
promise he has
He is coming.
He has promised,
claim his own.
meth out: of he
n unto the west,
f the Son of Man
come. There is
He may come
ur of any day.
12131 about that.
not only coming
t the most unex-
tthew we read
"Watch, there -
t what hour your
r "as the days of
prayerfully, faithfu
of Christian moth
ers, Christian buniti
tian church members. Christ was not
ashamed to work ih a carpenter shop.
Should we be ashamed to meet Christ
as CC/Mir-tan Christian workmen and
workwomen?
Would that we were as faithful in
the tasks Christ has given to us as
was that noble Cheistian statesman of
14 Wlkt during the
en were prophesy-
ermination of the
ecticut Legislature
which this Christian
was a member. fenddenly in tele broad
daylight the sun
there was darkne
the earth like
when Christ was
the members were
moved to adjourn
ble Puritan aros
lows: "Mr, Chair
our duties are
many years -ago.
time when many
ing the speedy
'world. The Con
was ire session, of
mane overcast, and
s upon the face of
asiful black Friday
crucified. Some of
greatly alarmed and
With thaethis no -
and spoke as fol -
an, we are told that
ways imminent and
obligatory. Som in this house are
afraid that the Itst day of the world
Is come. It may he they are right. But
as our ,duties ne'reer cease, instead of
Moving that we !adjourn I move that
the candles be brought In and that we
proceed with the order of the day. If
Christ is to come to -day I want him to
find me at my pcist of duty." If Christ
comes to -day well he find us at our
re we fafthful Chris -
any homes? Are 'we
siness men and true
post of duty?
than disciples of
true Christian b
.Christian church! members? Oh, friend,
if Christ comes to -day he Wants to find
us doing the Cl#Istian, work for which
we were sent. /are we at our posts of
Christian duty ad prepared to answer
"Here am. I, Lor ," when. hob opmes?
•
ASTOR A
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought,
Bears the
Signature of
•
—The ministxr of Education- is, pre-
piired to grant le echolarahipts, to
the value of . 50 in the case itlf erteh
woman, a.pd $75 in the case of each
man, to teachers taking the three ..
menthe co uxsqs commencing Sept.
18, at the MacDonald Institute,
Guolph. An a 14:mance ails° at the
iate of five oeJnts per mile, for ithe
a at ual d is tance fromthe teactlese
so)ao 01 is ofte, d from ithe Macdon-
ald Rural So, ools, Fund, together
with an alio% anco of $25 to each
tea ober whio takeis tihe full counse
sat istfa etorily. Candidates are ex-
pected to hol at least second-class
a.).flovincial tifilcates, and to wettid
a .ae,nt if i rate of. rec ommend a.t ion
from; the public, school inspectior.
Tho applicatinns must be treeAlved
by the DeputY Minisitor of the Edu-
cation Departnenit, Ton= to, accom-
panied by the! inspac.tor's, recommen-
dation, not later tliAn., August 12h.
To Cure a Cold in One Day,
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab-
lets. All druggists refund the
money if it fails to cure. E. W.
Grove's signature is on each, box.
Prim, 25o. 19a0-1 yr.
—Rev. Dr. lend iMrs. 13tewart, of
Clinton, have ti;one ibo Lachate to
spend their o1id.ays.
KILLED SUDDENLY
wine .
SEVERAL THOUSANCef
Dee
Just about the meanest
thing a furnae can have
is a dinky little door.
Ever have -one? Litt the edge
as often as ,the hole? One has
to be an expert stolier to shovel
coal into sozne fuzinaces. If
you're not an exped you'll get
as much on the fio6r as in the
furnace.
The Sunshine ;furnace is
equipped 'with a go4cl, big door.
You can put your Lhovel in and drop the coal just where it is
wanted—no trouble, no taking aim, na missing, no scattering, or
annoyance.
Everythingabout the Sunshine furnace is on the ianie scale
of thoughtfulness.
Sold by all entirprising dealers. Write for booklet.
E. A. tATIMER, Sole Agent, Sea orth.
How Red Rosetea is Grown
TEA is a rjative plant of Northern India. Trans-
planted to Ceylon it lost much of its strength
and ichness,Lbut gained in fragrance and delicacy.
That 'is !why Ceylon tea is not a strong tea.
That is] why I blend Indian and Ceylon teas
together—that is how the strength and richness,
fragrance and delicacy of Red Rose Tea are
secured—that is why Red Rose Tea has that rich
fruity flavor.r
is good Tea
T. H. Estabroolts
Si. John, N.B., Toronto, %In
VEGETABLE SIC LI
Hair Renew
Why not stop this falling of your hair? At this rate you will
be without.any hairi Just remember that HalVs Hair Renewer
stops falling hair, and makes hair grow. 'Irezz.thRtLetrecm=r1.4u"
arshal
Sanitary lia tre
*Puseree: c, C.,
11.4. • -I •
41ttiitintiliptiphift1ti t• -k
4NOWING
CONSTRUCTION
' The coolest, mostlresilient and comfortable mettress made, is the MarehiL ible
thoroughly yentilated' and every movemenb of the body °mine a current of air dire*
cotton pocket, and th whole heavily upholetered with ourled.bair. Thus made it 0'
it. It is very resilion , containing over a thousand springs, each one in a sepia*
forms to the 'shape of the body, and supporta it at all points, and is, therefore, deb
frilly comtortablft. Lying-in patients find bed sores heal up naturally on a Wasiak
sanitary. Try one an1 you will have no other.
,
For solo by
TKNECH EL & McKENZIE
Furniture Dealers an
Tjndertabers, SEAFORTff.
CO ING
W. PEMBER, CANADA'S
jr KT
Representative, Wynn. Tregwin, will be at the
Commercial Hotel, C4th, Friday July 28t
vited. Will call at
here again for three
WT. PErg'
Don't fail to see the exhibition of
goods of every description that will be ea
view, including the latest masterpie-ee as at
plied to Toupees, Wigs, Bangs and Wits.ViZ.: a natural scalp parting, so natural 1T
zppearance that you forget it is artifievi!,
This deseriptiJn- aptly applies to all ham
goods from this house. Seize the opporten-
ity of parehaaing Qn the above date. ras
selection. placed More you will be compl.,
in every respect, and the prices as low 2$
our store, Switches of straight and wavY
hair from $3 to $15, Pompadour Bangs fre!A
$4.50 upwards. Inspection cordially ID'
residence if you leave message ot hotel. Sh.all net ba
months.
IBER, 127-129 Yonge st., Toronto.
;-
,
NIXS. 1,3;1. SANDERS, 1
•••. lmVtAttor
Mrs.W21"Sanders Dress CuttiniCourse
:nyv:ited in 18991 1 respirovord in 1905
T HAVE improved ray Dress Cuttlrig Course so it can be taught at
,etter than by personal instructions. ,It can be
taught in from 2 tO 30Ueeks, Charge no more than making of a
dress. bo paid by cash or installment plan. lteacb you a perfect
course in dressmakine, from taking a measure to finish. I will per-
sonally examine all lestons, for who can instruct SA well as tbo
3nventort No experience necessary. bio adv. genuine withont these
photos. A 7ewurt1 given to anyone that can prove that this
improved course is not thebeat course being taugbt, either by mail
or personal instruetions, and will be taught by no one exceptmy.
-A
sweiLri,tethi
we 4evenlvfotorrp, eartticuitac, sTaimon ,
• e 1,11R8. WM. SAM/Elle 08588 *curette solo
• — ONT. DOX
' ,•
wee.we. sesiaas-
IR 3
On
st sbiVale$
the sun
r
When
1 and
c
A1ERSO
srs
imitegyza-gate.
*Da /Amen
V
cee-
most eccder,
41,• SpeeillitY.-
t; See
°Ito:100w
A
6
ialth
ce iopen
end
e.
1.
1888 -if
Dr.
°Mee teed
Methodist oh
itilOtbar for tee
; oderich pule*
somx,
StIrreOrtt,
IfeoNA.T.,
- media
To
came aaa
aelept s
v
FAR
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