Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1905-09-08, Page 6MEN OF ONE TALENT ' REV. DR. TALMAGE'S fiERMON FOR REAL ESTATE FOR SALE ri -Fume() rellee Pea seLE olt RENT, - Cantle !arm. = Sturlev township, 3.45 acres. Apply te H. S. Hays, Berrisber., Seaforth. 195541 ZIOR SALE at Seaforth oatmeal mill, a qoantity of orrIvage wheat, sold either kiln dried or un - dried at 60e mar boshel nr t 55o in e'er lots. War TER THOMPSON & SONS, Limited. 196241 MISTRAY CATTLE-Streyed from the promiees of _Ej the underAgeed, Let 1.. Cenereseien 7, Tucker - smith, on Augnst 15th. 27 head of yearlings. two year olds and three yea e olds. Last aerie at Peter McCann* Ilibbert. Any infcrmation touting to their recovery will be liberally rewarded. JAMES MeCONNELL, Seaford: P. 0. 19664 portVILDING -LOTS FOR SALE. --For sale, several desirable building lo te in the town of Sea - h. These lots are situaled in one of the beet parte of the town and are well planted with the ohoieeet of fruit, .Apoly to W. D. McLean, at the nrosrrou Ornes, Leatorth. 191041 likkit0FITABLE INVESTMENTS. -I evn lend j„. -money on imnroved (pewter sections of 160 acme eaeh at from 8 to 10 per oent per annum. Only first mortga.ces taken. Ample ineurity elven Torrens ?Aloe System is perfect. From MO up can ho lent on farine worth from 81,00n to 82,000, For further partioulare write to me. 3. A. JACK- SON, Baerister, etc.. Ponoka, Alberta. 195941 1LIARld• FOR SALE. -For sale lot W. coneeselon 2, fleR. S.. Tuokersmith, containing 100 acres, all cleared except about five sores of gnod hard- wood. All underdrained, well fenced end in a good state of cultivation. A good brink hone and two barns one with stone Wiling underneath. Plenty of good water and a ;Cod bearing orobard. This fsrm is well adapted for either stock or- grain. About mideesy between Serstorth and Clinton.. Ara ply on the premises or S'eaforble P. 0. H. TOWN - SEND, Proprietor. 19424f or OUSE AND LOTS FOR MAL, -For tele, brick house and 2 Iota in Seatorth. One lot lanes on North Main Street and the other on Wesb Wil- liam Street. The hone is s comfortable brick -..rottage and contains 8 bedrooms, dining room, eh - ting room and kitchen, with good cellar under the whole house. Hard and soh water in the house, There le £‘140 a good stable and driving shed. All. kinds of fruit on the lot. Apply to J. L. ALLAN, Londesboro, or to C. W. ATKINSON, Seatorth. 1905x4ti ese -IDOR SALE -A farm containing. 100 anres of land, X being Lot 6, Concession 7, in the Tow ship of Tuckeramith, five mites from Seek:rib and 'belone. Ing to the estate of the late Idle:eel O'Keefe. Thle farm is' suitable for cultivation nr pasture and will be sold on reraeonable terms. For full pertionlars apply to THOMAS BROWN, Auctioneer, ?Worth P. 0. 1061.41 riARM FOR SALE, -Lob 10, Concession '4, . Ellb- bert, containing 1o0 armee, more or less 14 i offeeed for sale on easy terms. On the place are a good frame house, lerge barn with good etab. ling underneath. There is 8190 one acre of birth and the farm is well drained and in a epleseliel state nf cultivation: Handy to .market, school and church For further peatioulare apply on the plias to ROBERT LAVERY. 1.964x4t1 ARK FOR SALE. -Lot 83, Onnoession 7, Mo- Killop. This farm Contains 100 scree ef good land. has on it a hank barn 64 x 64 with 8 -loot atone etabillig. Alec a good 8-roemed brio k Ilene, or chard, good water eto, It is six miles from ries - forth and 1 miles from Conetonee post dila. Apply to WM. R, BI.ANSEtaRD, Sturgean Fella Ont.. or to E. IIINCHLEY, Seeforth. 196441 "LIOR SALE -That epleadid farm :einem:Ay Iota 16 X and 17. on the 12th ooncessien at Hibbert, on which there is a first class briok house, la-ge bank barn sod excellent hoe pen a capable of I -Adler ewo or three hundr e I hers, two good orchards and two never -failing arteelan ; there is aloe a fioe creek running through the farm. Posinsim March 1st, 1906 Arrangements for possession sooner may baarranged for, in ay ease the purchaser will have the right to pne In fa'l wheet and do othes fell work. Anp‘v to JOHN WHITE Sr,, Mitchell, Oat., or THE WHYTE PACKING CO. Liruited, Rtrat- ford, Ontario. 1967-4 ARM FOR SALE -Lot 3, cptweBsIon 1,Usborne, contakning 99 acres, situ fed on the London Road, 3. mile from Hensall, MEd 4 mites (ram Emit. et. It is in a Brat dem state at cultivation beine well drained vitt: tile, nearly all summer 49,11ov:red and seeded to grass,nearly all fenced with new Car- ter wire fence'On the farm is a stone house, and plenty of outbulidiege, including ono of the "fteest poultry heueee In Onterio. There are two .weite, a spring creek, and a flowing sprier thet would fill x three -Inch tile. Apply on the farm or to gramma Isoiti office. BENJAMIN HOGG ARTEL 1968 tf 10ARM FOR SALE, -For sake lot 18, ooneeesion r 4, in Hibbort, cootal,1 ng 100 acres. On the place is briok dwelling heti4e, wieh frame kibehen, with ail necessary put%nildings and lots of good etablinz ; well fenced, well drained and plenty or wood water. There are 0 acres of hush. It le situated two and a hell wales f •om Dublin etation, where there is a good Inaricet. Convenient to sehooie and churches rf all denominetione. Apply on the premises or address ANDREW McLP1f,f. N, Dublin P O. 196641 • VARA AND MILL PROPERTY FOR SALE. - For Bale the old Bell Farm end Mill Pneerry, on die London road, Tuokeremith, re:rot:My °cola pied by the late Rho MeNeyin. There are 130 acres, all cleared hut about Ifour acres. Gaud buildings and the farm well '„underdrained and in a high state of cultivation, all seeded to grase exeept about 30 acres. Ale) the grist and paw 111111 prop arty on the tarin. It is within half a mile of Kiopen station and 2 miles train Ilensell and a gond htlfil IMRE has alwaye been done at the mil's. The farm and mill nroperty wit he sole to ;ether or I eperate iy ro uit purehaeer. Terms °1d'. Apolv to DAVID- C. McLEAN, Kippen. 19684f LABOR DAY. tis ,E HURON* EXPOSITOR All Soap is not Pure Soap That is the reason why $500moo reward will be paid by Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto, to any person who can prove that BRIVINq THE LAST SPIKE 3' The Preacher Shows What the Humble Ever:), 'Day ,Workers Can Po For the • Welfare and Happiness of a Nation . -No Worlamen Are Useless - The , liehreW Talent -"To Another One." Entered according to Act of Perrier:rent of Canada, in the -year teoe, by Frederick Diver. of Toronto, • nt the Department of Agriculture: Ottawa. • ; Los Angeles, Cal., ' Sent a -In this ;Labor day sermon the preacher appro- priately takes for hip themethe great army. of -humble eVery !day Workers 't,ipon whose, faithful use .df their .single talent in their particular sphere de- pends the welfare and _happiness of a :nation. The text is 'Matthew xxv, '15, ,"To another one." : ' • ! "The Driving of the Last. Spoke' is '.to me one of .the meet suggestive Pie - !tures ever painted. Not because It is ,the work of Thonia.s Hill, one of Americas famous- artists, 4 Who: in his ,lifetime has been atwa.rded thirty-tw-o firstemedars in competipn with other painters; not -becauee copies of that picture have -been distributed broad- . cast over ,the cOuntry , in thousands .of wood cuts, not because I personally *have seen the old artist' in his lec,,st days, lbelpless Hata little Child and therefore,. on account of the ipersonality' df the -man have ' been unduly. influenced by ! the power of the pieture, but trand t pic- .ture his thrilled me throu through because it is an epoch'marking 'picture. It is a picture which shows a marriage- altar; where the far east .ane- the far west e -a where- the Union 'railroad and 'the Central Pacific rail- road -were united by the wedding ring of a steel rail. Itedllustrates the dra- matic moment wheIe the great work of Leland Spanford and C. P. Huntington and 'Charles Crocker and Mark Hopkins was eonsnmrnated. In .the pre's-- eget of some of the most prominent men, .north, south, east and west, the golden spike was driven which forever made the east and the west, the metro- polis of New York and the Metropolis of California nextldoor neighbors. Vast was the amount of brain and physical energy eXpended. which made the scene of that picture possible. Over ,the mountains dOwn into the valleys, the leaping riversand the ravines, has gone the shelek Of that locomotive we ,see'puffing and panting behind Leland Stanford as the first president of the .Central Pacific drives in the last spike. Far, far away from any human resi- dence went the Workmen. Cannot you see the deer and the buffalo and. the prairie dogs look up in ,wonderment as that strange loo dng creature called a 4 railrdad train d shes by? "How could a man have hundreds and thousands and -tens of thoUscends of men at -work for him, as did Leland Stanford, and not have thousands of flnancia.1 leak- ages, which wotIld sweep away his en- -tire fortune?" I; asked a great railroad contractor when4 talking about the les- sons of this picture. "Simply by per- fect organization," he. answered..yEach man has his allOtted work to do. Each man is regpons.ible for a gang of men Irr for certain iseetions of the', work, unlit you get clown to the loWelat boss ancl the lowest ,Workman digging in the ditch. The sficess of. Leland Stan - ,ford's railroad i enterprises, depends as much 1.1D011 tha men of one talent doing their work honestly as it does upon the men of fivc or ten talents doing their work honestly iand well." Great lesson is that -great i in temporal' life, great in epiritual. God has no insignificant workmen in the purpose for which the hurgan race was created. The people who are considered ordinary folks are ;list as essential in God's great econe Only .0 S the Men styled mental giants. No a -eel -men Useless or unimportant in God's sight. Oh, yes, we can prove that by the value of the old Hebrew telent as well as by the conversation iif the great railroad contractor in ref- e:ence to Thomas Hill's "Driving of the Jesuit Spike." 'Was tne, Hel‘rew talent a email capital with which to start life's battles? No. That talent repre- eent, (1 about 3,000 shekels of silver pr ehout $1,916 in American money. Then when -you _furthermore estimate that laboOr in (1nrist's day .received only a penny .a day, which in our time would be an equivalent of about 18 tuts, you can readily underStand that the good man of the parable of my text gave to even thz.i humblest, of his ser- vaihs an equivalent of about $2,000 in our Money. That is no small amount of m)ncy to put out at interest. And So ;his Labor Sundayto the'clerk, the e i.‘ re a41t, the laborers in the ditch, the coihmon soldier and the common church member God gives "A poweiful One 1-1, ,. I- ,' "t*r ar . t .1-.4.--. t- , - 4.. 4" 11, P l'n''f .- A-TILLaGE PROPERTY FOR SALE. -For sale in V Egmondville, a oonifortable frame house with three acres of laud In a very fertile condition eith plenty of large and small fruits for family me ale° Lege barn and outimil Hugs in good repair. The house hae been receatly overhauled and contains seven rooms with oheloe collar, full sive gond wood tithed, also summer kitchen and an excellent spring well and good °Intern. Any person desiring' a corn- _ , forteble quiet home of Ode deseripelon, covenient to town, should nut miss this opportunity. Will be sold reasonably arid an easy terms. For further perticulats apply on tbe premises or address Eg- niondville P. o., WM. BUBOLZ• 1948-tf — EgiATIM FOR SALE -For sale, Let 23, COI1309SiOn C. 2, 11. R. 5, one of the best farms in Tusher - smith, ormtatning 100 acres. It is an exeeptionilly clean fern: with n3 Waste lend ; all seeded to grass mo ,t of It havine been in pasture five or eIx yparF, it fft extra well sepplied with water. On the fartri IR a good brick house and two bern3 with stone stabling unde.ntath,with cement ft mi. Plenty of fruit trees of d ffereet Idodit. 14 18 pleeseetle sit. uated in a good neighborhood, being oce.h :if mile frcin school aid 3?, 'Aloe front Seatorth. AeplY on the premised or ddress JOUN ROBB, Santee -dr P. O., Ont. 4 19544! 4111•MMIMI, MIAMI FOR BALE -North half of Lot 12, Con - 1' cordon 8 Morrie, containing 100 acres, situated on the gravel roed, four and a half rallee west of Bruise's and four miles from Beigrave. There are 80 nares °leered, well drained, teemed and In a good state ofcultivationtat prevent sesded down. The remaining 20 acme ie covered with excellent timber, There is a good frame }reuse with sto re cellar, god frame barn with stone steelier under. neath, a good hearing orchard and so ahundance of good water. Tnere Is a church and a peat °thee within half a mile an *school within three quar- ters of a nano. For furtrer partfoulara epplv to MRS. B. SHILLIE, Hensell. 1963x3tt W•ARM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 18, Concession X 3, Hay, contateing 100 sores in a good slate of oultivailon. There are on the premised a good frame holies 22 x 82 aleo a frame kItehen and wood shad. 18 x 40, all with cellar underneath. There fa also a large bank barn, 40 x 70, with good brick stabling underneath, and ell cement there. Also a driving shed, 28 x 60, all io rood repair. There are three never -failing wells on the premiers and a good bearing oruhaed. Aldo 18 area ot good hardwood bush The farm le well fenced and well underdrein- rid with tile. It is ettueted within a mile and a belt of the village of fiensall and sehonl eithin hilt a mite of farm. As the propietnr wishes to retire Is will be so d on easy tenni, 'For further pertioulars apply on the promisee or tie Heneall P. 0. JeNfEa BONTHRON. 10674f MUM( FOR SALE. -For sale lot 29, on the 9th concession or Wobert, containing 00 aer 08,41 in a good state of eultivitioa. There I on the pre. miees a brill( bowie and brick kitcheu and a good cellar. -There is aloe a large hank ben:, ao x 90 and s leriato of 12 lint, with stone fee.bling underne ath. Also a shed 80 x 30 It. and a driving house wite everything co eeletc. There are three oever failing wells on the premium, there la also a large emelt rd and good garden. There are ten acres of fall wheat sown and there are 40 aotes seeded down. Either suitable for hey or pasture. All the fall plrernhing is done. The farm is well underdrained with tile and well fenced with wire' fences. It is in a good locality, being situated two and a halt miles fr,nr. Ohieelluirst, whYe then i; a pleb office and two churches, Methodist and Preebyteriart, 8 miles from asaforth and there Is a good gravel road running past the farm. It is in good exidition and will be sold on reasonable terms as the preprictor wishes to retire. For further pareinulare apply on the prerniaes or to OaARLES EBEttLIARA St.ff% F. 0., Ontario. 19d7-tf. Call Eat Anything Now. How many Dyspeptics can say that? Or per11-4s you are dyspeptic and don't know it. Have you any of these symptoms? unllight Soap SEPTEMBER contains any form of adulteration whatsoever, or contains any in- jurious chemicals. Shrunken woolens, frayed linens and sore chapped bands are evidence that all soaps are not pure soaps. Sunlight Soap is guaranteed to be a pure soap. Dealers are authorized to return purchase money to any one finding eause for complaint. Sunlight Soap is equally good in bard or softyvater. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO 1001. teeniest, le dependent a1so upon me eer- altai a it$ one talented members, When Christ established his charch from whence did he draw his first recruits? Did they come from the palace, Did the' Cane from the merchant prince? mansion? Did they come from the tents of the Roman generals? Oh, no. They came from the fisherman's hut, from the laborer's fields, from the homes of the one talented folks. The first 'Christian church had its congrega- tion not clothed in silks or satins, but' in homespun. The aristocracy despised Christ's diselpIes on account of their humble social positions. "The com- mon people heard him gladly." Not the ten talented men and women were they Not the geniuses in finance and. statecraft. His People were the ordin- ary, commonplace, one talented wor- shipers. It Was the one talented Christians who composed the Christian church. Has it not always been the one talent- ed. folks who have carried it on? Who were the Christians who made the re- formation of Martin Luther pose!ble? Who were the Christians who lielped John Knox shake ord Scotland and shake the world? Who were the Chris- tians who came over in the Mayflower and established the Puritan church of ' the PlymOuth colony? From whence did John Wesley and Charles Wesley and George Wnitefleld draw most of their followers? Who made Finney and Moody the mighty religious fac- tors the,y were? For the most part, the great- mases of church members have been and are to -da Y taken from the ranks of the comnion people. It is the oncatalented folks who crowd our pews to -day. When you take the one talented forete out the church, like Samson, whose .hair was shorn by the shears of an evil emistrese, will decay and as a.ernightyispirituil and temporal power will' lose. her entire strength. Man -one talented man-yck think you do not amount to much in God's church! Woman -one talentedewoman-you do not fully -reckon your influence in pray- er meeting and in Sunday school •and In -church ,pew! The church of Jesus Christ is dependent for most of its laborers and members upon the one talented people, 'You may' belong. to that -class. Never desert the temple of God, which he .calls his divine church. But as I itM trying to shcav the im- portance of the one talented people in the store.. the factory, the hom.e and the church, I must not end here. I must threw you that, though your in- fluence is worldwide, yet there is no class of people on earth who are so ready to shirk theirtasks as the one - talented folks. The teaching of Oils parable is absolutely true. The Ave talented men went to work. They are in the treadmills. They cannot stop and get out. Theyhave to go ahead or be ground to 'pieces. But the one talented men think their -workTis of so little importance thai they can stop any time and no one cares. I enter a great merchant's store. "Come," I say, "let us hie ourselves of to the woods." "Nay, nay," says he. I. cannot stop. If I did not keep working and keep my men 'working the payroll of my business would soon land me in thebankruptcy court." "Come," I say to a minister of Jesus. Christ, "come, let us run away from town." "I cannot go,' says he. 'The congregation will meet Sunday morn- ing. If I am not there there will be no one to lead them in worship." But though the great merchant feels the importance of his positionin the store and the minister of his position in the pulpit; how very few of the commonpetipe feel the importance,. of their work and their presence hitthe churel‘ of God for the salvation of the world for Christ? There's easy, goOd washing ahead for the eunfight'Malds mela."..kcut. Here is a, aiierl or fern; there is a branch of what is to be a flower. _He works on and on patientlx. -After awhile, when the work on that block is done, the foreinan comes and gives to him another stone. i Atter awhile that stone and still another are taken away. He has no idea, what use will be made of these stones, , but one day, walking down the street in 'front of the art gallery, over the doorway he sees the fitones upon which he has worked. He did not keow what those stones Were for, but the architect did, and as he stands looking at his work, which is the beauty of the whole 'street, . the tears drop dewn from- his eyes and he says, "I am glad I did it well," and .every day as he passes that way he says to himself exultantly: "I did it well! Ale I am glad I did it well!" Ale, yes, that stonecutter had ,a right to exultantly cry, "1 did it WA" for had he not done his work well the design of the archi- o-d tect would have been utterly helpless without his execution. Thus ay find every stone wall and every print- ing press and every pav'ed street and every house and every railroad and every ship and every bridge and every tower and ever Y aqueduct a pulpit for the one talented Man. The carpenters and the masons and the mechanics and the laborers ara all calling to us from these rostrums:, "I made these tall buildings. Without me they could not have been; lited. I made them.' I am the one takented mechanic. Did I not do my work Well? Ah, ye laborers and mechanics in overall*, never .neg- loct the essential work God has given YOU to do. But I must- sPeak to another class of s. .They are the house - ch the parable of my y na.nee. They are the servants, the tilled servants, who, as Ic2ing Solomon expressed it, "were born in my house." I They grew . up under the very eye of 1 their master. . Because he felt he couldtrust them he delivered unto them his precious possessions. Let me illustrate the parable. The master'is about to leave for the coun- try. All the different men and women about the farm and the fields are gath- ered into one room. The master turns to one and says "John, I will make you responsible for my cattle." To another he says, "Peter,. I will let you tend Co the plowing and the sowing." To an- other he says, "James, you take care Of the sheep and see that their wool is sheared at the right time." - These are all five talented men. Each one is a -superintendent of a department and has a large number of employes under him. Then, after giving forth some of the two talents and also some of the bne talents, at last the master turns to one of his servante. l\lethinles I see him look at her searchingly, tenderly,. lov- ingly and pleadingly. She does not look as though she was a mental genius. But she had a good face. She looks as -though she .was faithful and true. Then the good master says: "Mary, can give to thee,but,one talent. That is' all thou art able to Use. But, oh, it Is a talent dear_ to me. I am going to freest to thee my children. While I am away I am going to leave them in thy Charge/. Thou art, to be their nurse. Thouart to remain behind as a house - place. You are not a drop of water hold servants." And of all one talented amid are ocean ofTheaving billows. You people do you know of any who have are not a leaf or candle _light din -lined greater opportunities of usefulness and by the glory Of the noontide sun, but you greater responsibilities for doing good are the cogs of a wheel which are abso- than the one talented household ser- lutely essential to Make the •wheel move. vants-the cook, the chambermaid and If the little cogs are gone, then the wheel stops. If the -wheel stops, ain't all the vast machinery of the factoryis hefted. In the great railroad engine the boiler, generating the steam which draws the long line of freight cars, is tasolulely essential, but are not the piston rods arid the driving wheels and the truck and the coal‘tender and the furnace mad all the other parts of the Ie t °motive Oust as esSential? What wduld you think of the long bianehes of a great tree looking down in disgust at the -roots just exposed when the sod :is turned ever by the farmer's spade? What would you think if those branches would say': "Oh, you filthy, dirty roots. Why are . you in yonder darkness? Can you not array yourselves in my coat of. many colors? I will have none of you?" Well, to -day the owner of the great dry goods store can no more be independent of his clerks than the tree-branch..can be in- dep&ndent of the tree root • What would yothi think of the wood of the tall mast despising the wood of the ship's keel? Can the .hand say to the wrist, "I have .no need of thee?" Can the foot say to the eye, "I have no need of thee?" Can the heart say to the lung, "I have no need of thee?" Nei- ther can the glass office say to the counter, "I have no need of thee." The one talent clerk Ls just as essential for the marvelous developments of the merc'antile. world as is the ten talent merchant or the ten talent capitalist. The Hebrew talent is no insignificant Capital Which God places in the hand of the, Ordinary, everyday, common- place clerk who sells us our' goods over the store counter. The chisel of the one talented stone- cutter writes whole pages in. tile chap- ters. ottlie world's progress as well as the pen of the statesman, the architect and the social sage. Henry Ward Beecher sorne years ago in a sermon 'vividly described an expert stonecutter coming into thie coUritry as an immi- grant. He knows: no one and no one knows him, but When: he applies for work at one of the big stoneyards in Brook - some of the one talented people. I would show their Vast influence upon. the _great wide world. I would' also show why all of us ordinary folks should employ well the talent God has given us to use. In the first place, study the influence of the one talented folks in the mer - N eantile world. Your wife some day says to you: "Come, my dear, let us go( shopping. You have a day off. There is no:reaton for you not spend- ing the day with me."/ In a moment of mental weakness you go Shopping. Why do I say in a. moment of mental weakness? I do not believe •any man on earth can look. more out, of place and feel more uncomfortable and mis- erable .than in an average dry goods store. Thera the wornen push you frene side to side. When you are not stepping on your Own feet you are al- most sure to be stepping on some lady's dress. Then'before you have any time to say, "Iilxcuse me, madam," some Other, woman knocks you, in the back, and Your head flies back, until your neck feels as though it had spinal men- ingitis. And then if you are unfortun- ate enough to. get near to a city bar- gain counter you feel that every one is there training for a college football field and you are the "centre rush," while every woman has a right to push -you, and you are called ."no gentle- man" if you dare. to push back. Women have certain rights, where no man has any rights. One of their lights is to be left in undisputed possession of a woman's dry goods store. But, though. you may have many un- fortunate experience while shopping with your wife in a great city, there is one powerful lesson you will learn sson: When you goods emporium.' °liars' worth of year, the floor- -walker who greets you at the door, the clerk who sells you the goods over the counter, the deliveryi boy who hands the parcels in at the door, are all one talented folks. If that clerk • is disre- spectful, if the .young man in the shoe department does not wait upon you patiently and kindly, you leave that store .in disgust. In a large dry goods store as an ordinary customer you never meet the manager or the great Etropean buyer or the owner of the store. You deal with the common one talent clerk. Nearly all the goods in a large retail storeare sold by one talent clerks, and the way those clerks treat their employer's customers decides how much those customers will buy. It not thist illustration an1 overwhelming proof to tu of the mighty influence and pow r of the one talent people? The one talent clerk may saye-"I am only an insignificant atOm in my em- ployer's business. I am only a drop of :water in a great ocean, two and one- half miles deep and 3,000 miles wide. I am only a leaf amid a whole forest Of autumnal foliage. I am only a lit- tle 'flickering candle light in a horizon .tilylaze with the ,flaming chariots of the nobnticle stn. Iido not amount to anything." Oh, yes, my •brother, you do. As a clerk in the store, as a type- writer or a salesman or a saleswoman you are not an insignificant atom, though youcmay be 'occupying a small Variable appetite,ifaint gnawing feel- ing at the pit of the stomach, unsatisfied 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 i dyspeptic. The cure is careful diet; avoid stitnulants and narcotics, 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, e. says of its wonderful curative powers :- "Last winter I 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. I tried everything- I could get, but to no purpose; then finally started to use Burdock Blood Bitters._ From the first day I felt tlae good effect of the medicine, and am now feeling strong and well:again. I can eat anything ,now without any ill after-effects. It gives me great pleasure to reconnnend Burdock Blood Bitters, for feel Weaved in! there. This Is the 1 enter a great dry where millions of goods are sold \every one. talented fo hold servan text mentions the nurse? Weigh her one talent as she bends over the cradle as nurse. Next to be- ing a mother, the most tremendous re- sponsibility that can come to any or- dinary 'young woman is to be left in sole charge of a nursery. How great an influence that is but few people seem to realize! Some time ago a worldly man was taunting a celebrated pastor because his great congregations were made up, for the most part, of common people and servant girls. • "I know it," said the noted divine. "My church is composed foT the most part of just such converts as Christ and his apostles gained. But as for the ser- vant girls, I had rather be instrumen- tal in converting them than almost any other class of people, for the servant girls as nurses have charge of all the growing children." Bute though the greatest opportunity on earth that can come to the average one talented young woman is to be a nurse, yet many wo- men seem to flee that noble occupation as they would a. virulent plague: They would rather go and peddle groceries or pin cushions or tend to factory bob- bins than mould boys and girls into mighty men and women for God. Oh, ye nurses! Oh, ye young women whom God has Sent as faithful Miriams to watch the infant Moses, great is your calling! Do your work well. That boy, 'by your side if you are faithful and true under God may some day lead his neople out of an Egyptian bondage. That young girl, through your prayers, may some day be able to raise a whole family of Christian sons and daughters. Oh, the transcendent one talent of a Christian nurse upon the home life! What we say in reference to the In -.- fluence of the Christian nurse we can say to almost as great an extent about the influence upon the home of the Christian cook and the Christian cham- bermaid. Never neglect the humble but far reaching life's work of the one talented household domestic. If the nation is dependent upon the loyali.y of its one talented workers how much more truly can we state that our lithe forerhara gives hrrn o Stnn- tn church, the beloved 'church of Jesus 2 ofolOMOityP.r•-7-7-7:rr- MeirMeat The Pandora R,eservoir The Pandora is the only range with a reser- voir stamped in one single piece of steel and enamelled. It -is the only reservoir without seams, rivets or places to catch dirt It has no sharp angles. Ali angles are made with rounding curves, and the whole reservoir is beautifully enamelled. McClary's are the only range*makers in Canada with a plant for making enamelled steel reservoirs, and that is vtlay the Pandora, is the only rafige that has a one-piece reservoir. , Oh, ye one talented folk's, never let a day pass without reckoning up the importance Of your prayers, yotir ser- vice and your consecration to God for the consummation of Chris's mission on earth! May you here and now"-, in your ordinary lives, says: "0, Christ, take me! Take my home, take meY children, takepny all for thy servicei Teach me to make good use of the oze talent which is mine and thine!" To 'Cure a Cold m One Day. Take LaXative Bromo Quinine Tab- lets. All druggists refund t he monq if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on each box. 1930-1 yr. Priee, 25e. -Oliver.. Olmstead, the 17 -year -did son of Geo. Olmstead, a. 'we'll -known farmer, residing seven milek gior t h - eves t of Cheberey, Manitoba, was killed by 'lightning loiae *day (last week ;while putting eattle-in the pasture field. The bolt strurek tihe boy on the head, and death was •instnintan- -eons. The hair avas singed and one leg badly burned. The trousers. were b urn ed and t he boots torn from the. deet. • Ci IS vr C70 10- 1. A- a Iho Kind Bars the You 1-lavo Always Bought Signature of 40.• ALfred M. Regan, a lumber merobant of Toronto, dropped dead on Jintdarn, sEreet Ln that city ion Thursday of last week. He had ii,ust eom ct of the _Bank of Cpnimp.i,oe bUndifq and was !terming down Jor- dan, street the fell ,to the ;pave- ment. He died in a, few- eniintiltes from an attapk oIC heart He was 48 years of age rind leaves a wife but trio tan:Lily. Mrs. cRegvn is a daughter: of Rev. Mr. obb, for mer pastor tAo Me.talicdkst ea Kidney Disorders Are no respecter of persons. 0' People in every walk of life are troubled. Have you a Backache? If you have it is the first sign that the kidneys are not , working properly. A neglected Backache leads to serious Kidney Trouble. - . Check it in time by taking DOAN'S KIDNEY PILL "THE GREAT KIDNEY -pPECIITIC," They cure all kinds of Kidney Troublea , from Backache to Bright's Disease. 50c. a box or 3 for 4;1.25 1all dealers or THE DOA.N KIDNEY PIP. CO., Toronto, Ont, ot ange Wiltir'012.0111509 asad Ettet-,:r2dies 2 London, Toranta, 7*/ -371.troo Winnipeg" Vas-.t.•)taver. St. John, N.B.. 1-1.-znitton. E. A. LAT/MER Sole Agent, Seafol th. • Neithr Indian nor Ceylon ttto, produces the Red Rose flav-or produee a tea with the "rich fruity flavor" 4. of Red Rose Tea from ,either Ceylon ur Indian alone is impossible. Neither Indian nor Ceylon in itself possesses the Red Rose flavor, but combined in proper, proportions they produce the "rich fruity flavur" that has made Red Rose Tea famous—that makes Red Rose Tea the only tea used in any home where it is once tried. —it alt 111 - Only abingtes in 4it the oe F.110WS. When seld. will And this heat in, i:eFi) 44 ei Ready - efts heat and col air.e.S a roof that id Ask your dealer - sample aud lat roofing, 7+4.el PATERSON MI Toronto vErzw OSIEVE, V. 5, Antrim Oclieg treated. Call•a enaste.Vetei mildew:3e oia, spiiik if Dr Scott's ofecit IC OntetioNliterlaii the Itedloal AieO Ilege. Treats dit meet reedern epeeielty, 0 eet,Sealoetb, Prompt att ES stioator. ierth Id oe -epee evera *so, Main street, Sods RS. Solidter, .00al or the .Dorninic ank, is good. Tea T. H. Estabroo St. John., N.B., Toronto, Winnipeg Pill Ayer's Pills. Ayer's Pg Ayees Pills. Keep siylng this over and over again. The best laxative. tWirr's4 BUCKINGHAM'S BY Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? use =Tr CrEL OF lageaUrri, ORMUILAILk 00,4MUUtlia t ,leaese•-te-,.. • Touch Typewriting The students of the Forest City Busitiess and ghorthand College are taught Typewriting on Machines with blank keys—blindfold the students •and they will ' operate at a high speed, A touch operator can do more work and gets more money than a sight operator. "Can you write by 'touch," is the first question now usually asked the applicant for a position. School term—Sept. till June inclusive. Booklet free for the asking. J. W1. WESTERVELT, Principal. . M. C. A. Bldg., LONDON, ONT. '41)1,0 r • Marshall Sanitary Ma tress EN SNOWiNG cosaraeepoet' The (melee; matt reallient &ea comfortable mIttress made, Is the Marshall. Ws thoroughly ventilated, and every movement of the body, cause,' a eurrent.of air through it. It le very reoilient, oontAiaing over a° thonsend eprines each One in a senses* Gotten pocket, and the whole heavily u,pholetered with cutl;d hair. Thus made it 00.31' forms to the shape of the body, and totpports it at all points, and is, therefore, deligilt faily comtortable. Lying-in patients find bed sores heal up naturally on a Manama sanitary. Try one and you will have no other. KNECHTEL McKENZIE, Vimiture Dealers, and Undertakers, SEAFORTIL elri0 BLACKSMITHS -For sale or to :Int, a good j_ blacksmith shop and business in sonnet:Alen with a wood werking,shop. Situated in flie viltage of Walton, .4.rst-class business is being done. Or a good stas.dy blacksmith who understands Ms butinese wfll be takes as a partner. Apply to W. H. HUMPHRIES & SON, Walton, Ontario. 106,8x4 Township of Hullett Bridge Closed, , _........._ Notice le herebygiven that the bridge on con- cessions 2 and 3, opp-she lots 2, between the farms of William Aitoheson and Jemes G. McMichael, is I closedas being uneafe for publio travel. - THOMAS MOMILLAN. Reeve IS6S-3 . BM% Baslit Natal Public. 4 bookstore, Main oaftSTHIs, race othanghey Ifs •Ho • sad No 00413121011 •-t„ rtICIallSON AIM 6 je." or, ate., Ooderlel L 1111341 DEN F. W. I" DE Royal Coll greduste to lV Sehool, Ch etion 0110 SealoAb. DR TIS s removed from 411 ris* ces1485 Yot - MIl Dr. Joh e end Reel BEI e 7$ R. ii. of Uelverel ismnaber of Ce flPit et -Ontario ; eltikeal School, Chlei tatelee, Englanc emelon, Reeked. fl Skye, Rain -street, gi tanewered from 1 Og. SM.11.; sod Resideuel -Amato choral. Tsosi er for tbe Conn RS. SOC yaysiotti deh tie4.0PP4 COTT, greduS anembeir Ootarli leargeona. Com fiseHAY, hone* gad da1tTr 4weis of .7b,vel OXAS BOWl Oruntiestot 411. pbelVs in ISZPOSITCM01 *WM= glUretUl AEU G. Xoli1( fJ the ecninty ell • leitheeceinty • Aleitited. Order „ ..11Lot 2, Cone attenttlun. 1ONBB11 iotloneer Being a ; erstsnding th lam* places nie t lioriant. Charges= eg ma pay; Am =4 Let 23,041nopi ntionded tO. . B. lie C reasel P. O.; Gle sin es, Heatiens sir eeepeetie Oar Just Arrived. N s CLUFF & SONS LUMBER YARD and PLANING Ixt SEAFORTH. MARRI THE iuI