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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-09-15, Page 6I Best ree Gifts o • L STATE FOB SAL E GRAZING 'FARM FOR SALE OR RENTi- Cant% term qtenlev townsp, hip 145 acres Apply to R. S. RAYS, Barriseer, eleaforth. • 1955-tf BU ILDING LOTS FOR, SALE. -For sele, several deeireble building IMe in the town of Sea - forth. The8,. tote are situated in one oe the. best parte of the town and fief° well planted With the • onnieeet nf fruit. Apply to W. D. MoLee.U. at the • Faxesirott Orr fon, Leatorth, 194044 TaRoFITABLE' INVIeSTMENTS,-I den lend I ynnney on' improved (fleeter eectiohe of 160 acres Koh at from 8 to 10 per cent. pe, annum, Only firet mortgeeee taken. Ample ft ecu Ity elveta Torrene Titter; System le perfect. Fro $300 up Oen he lent oo ferino worth from 81,001 to 82,00ce For further pertionlere write to ma. .I. A. JAM., BM, Barrister, etc.. Fonda; Alberta. 1 1959-tf FARM FOR, SALE. -For sale iut 29, co canton 2, H. R. S., Tackersroith, containing 109 acres, all cleared except about five, sores o giod hard- wood. All underdralteed, well fenced and in a good otee of cultivation. A good bdok h se and two barna one with stone stebling undorridtl, Plenty rd. Thio or grain. ton, Au- . TOWN. 191tete of good water and a peed bearing oro !atm is well adapted for either stock About mIdway between Seaford' and ell ply on the premises or Seaforth P. 0. SEND, Peoprietor. HOUSE AND LOTS FOR SA.LE-For gale, brick I I house end 2 lots bn Reatorth. One lot Wes on North 11ain Street and the ether on West Wile., Kam Street. The bowie le a comfortable belt* aottege and containe 8 bedrooms, dining room, tilt - ling room andekitehen, with goad cellar under the whole house. -Hard and eoft water in the home. There is alio good stable and driving shed. All kindled fruit on the lot. Apply to 3. L. ALLAN, Londesboeo,or to 0. W. ATKINSON, Seaforth. 1906x4tf MIOR SALE -A farm containing 100 acres cif 13,nd, X being Lot 6, Coneeesion 7, In the Tow ship of Tuckeremith, five miles from Seatorth and belong. big to the estate of She late Michael O'Keefe. This farm iesultititie for oultIvation pastime and will be sold on reasonable terree. For full particulars apply to THOMAS BROWN, AUetioneer, Seeforth P. 0. 1961etf , WARM FOR SALE, -Lot 10, Conoeseime 4, Min bert, containing 100 scree, more or less te offered for sale on easy tonne. On the plate are a good frame home, lerge barn with good stab- ling- underneath. There is aloe _one Aare of burly and the terra is well drained and in a splendid state et ruleivatien. • Handy to tnarketeeeohool end church. For fu .ther paitioulare apply os the place to ROBERT LAVERY. 1964x4t1 WARM FOR Sax-LetSL Cenoession 7, Me - X Killeen This farm containe 100 sores cf good land. has on it a bank barn 64 x 64 with 8 -foot stoner stabling. Alm) * good 8 -roomed bride hotte.e, or chard, good,water. eto. it siK mites from dee. forele and le, ranee from °endorsee poet offio. Apply to WM. R. titataISHAB.1), Sturgeon Fella, Ont., or to E. EINCHLEY, Seaforth. 1964-tf - - now FARM FOR SALE. -For 'fide, Etat half ea of Lot 14, Conmeslon 8. Mullett, oontaining 50' AC/60, all chafed, welt fenced and in a good state of cultivation. There le a good brick house, bank bard, driving house, pig pen, etc., There le a good -orehaed and never falling opting. About three miles from Censtanoe, 3 from Loidesbero dation and 7 te Iles from Clinton. This le a chole farm and will be sold on eagy terms. Apply on the faun or address, Constance?. 0., A. TURMAN. 1969x8 WOR SALE-Thae ?laborite' farm Property late 16 X and 17. on idle 12th concession of Ilibbert, on which there is a fret ohm brick hello, Wee" bank barn and excellent hoe pew capable of helding hwo or three hued re I hngi, ttvo good oreharde and, two Dever -failing artesian weile ; there Is alio a flee creek running threugh the farm, Poseisbn Mardi 1st, 1906 Arrangements for possession sooner may be arranged for, in say nue the purchaser will }neve the right td ,pull in fall *beet and do other fell work. Apptv to JOIIN WHITE Sr., Mitchell, Oat., or TEE WA'YrE PACKING GO. Limited. 'Oral - ford, Ontario. 1.9674 "MUM FOR SALE -Lot V, concession leUsborne, 1.1 contalning 90 acres, situated on the Landon Road, 1 mile from Hensel!, and 4 mites from Exalt. er. It le In a first' claps stet° of cultivation being' welt draiped ith tile, nearly all summer billowed and seeded to gramonearig all fenced with new Car- ter wire fence. On the farm ler a stone house and plenty of outbuildings, including one of the finest tebultry honeee in Ontario. There are two reveille a minting creek. and a flowing spring thet would till N tbree.inch tile. Apply CH the farm or to Reheat' post Milo°. BENJAMIN 110GGARTH. 1958-U WARM EOR SALE. -For este, lot 18, ooncenden • 4„ in Bibbed, oontaintng 100 acme, On the pleee le a briok d veiling houie, with trims kihohel, with a1 neeessary onthuildinge and Iota of good etahline ; well termed, weltdrairted and pteuty of good water. There are 9 agree of built. It ie Austad two an l a half mile° Icom Dublin dation, where ther3 le a good merket. Convenient to schoote and ohurches of all denotninetione. Apply on the promisee or address ANDREW !dant aN, Dublin 0. •1965-41 VAitli AND Airtai Pa0rwer---46R L* For eale the old Belt Perot end htill Preperty, ort the London road, Tuokeeseofeb, recently wow pied by the tete John Ittoreleyin. There are 100 acres, all ()leered but about - four aero. God buildings and the farm well euaderdrained and in a itigh state of cultivation, all eeeded to grave exeept about 80 Acres. Alio the griee ani saw mill prop. erty on, the fano. It le within half audio of Kippen etation and 2 adios from Henson, ant a good bud - nos has aiwaya been done at the mills. The farm and milt property will be sold together or eeperete. ty to suit mower. Terms eney. Anon, te DAVID C. McLEAN, Ktppen. 1968.tf -‘7.*-ILLA0E PROPERTY FOR SALE. -For Bele In V Egmondville, a oomfortable-fre.me house with three acres of laud in a very fertile condition with plenty of large and emelt butte for funny . uo also large barn and ontboildiage in good repair. The home has been reoently overhauled and conbeine neat Nonni with oholee cellar, full size, e ood wood shed, deo summer kitettea and an exeellent spring well and good cletern. Any preen deeirine a cam. tortable, (pleb home of thii desoriptioe, cove tient to town, should not miee tide opportunity. Will be sold reeeenebly lead 'on easy terms. For further perticulere apply on the premises or adivese Ege menden) I'. 0., W51. BUBOLZ' • 194841 HURON, EXPOSITOR mid Soaps • Use SUNLIGHT SOAP and SAVE THE COUPONS, The Coupons are the same as cash b6cause they can be exchanged -for Toilet Soaps for which you have to pa,y out money ever31 week. Users of SUNLIGHT • and CHEERrUL SOAPS can get their TOILET SOAPS for nothing. Ask your grocer for patticulars or write us for Premium List A gift is of 'little value if it consists of something you have no use for. In exchange for Sunlight Soap Couf)o9s you can g-ct something you need and use every day. SEPTEMBER 2000 LEVER BROTHERS LiMITED, TORONTO, CANADA. THE MISSION OF HELP CHRISTTAUGHT IT IN EVERY MIR- ACLE HE PERFOR'MED. MASTER ASKS CO-OPERATION Some Hints From the Preacher of the Ways by Which the Helpful Man May Fulfil the Law of Christ - Loosening of Bonds Physical and Mental a Part of Duty. Entered actording to Act of Parliament of Canada, in the Year Torre, by Frederick Diver, of Toronto, at the Deparunent of:Agriculture, Ottawa. Los Angeles, Cats Sept, 10. -In this sermon the preacher describes man's mission of helpfulness tb hls fellows and indicates the lines upon which that mission may be,cariled out. The text is John xi., 44, "Loose him and let him go." Never was _human leader sin closer touch with his followers than Jesus GhrietS He walked and ate and slept With his disciples. -He was closer than nave lumen awl Law), Lney are struggling,to-day. Oh, the awful trag-r edy•of being merita.11y blinded and be- ing unable to gate. right conception of God! 'Yet there_ are thousands of men and women who by constLution of ,brain .end inteilect• are .natutal born doubters. They suspect the sincerity of every good work, and therefore they naturally' doebt God's goodness and love. An Incident In She life of Michael Angelo well illustrates -how you and have to -continually run up against. and overcome men's prejudices. The Flor- entine master had already chiseled some of hie greatest pieces og sculp.- ture, but, strange to Aay, there were a great many Florentines, as there are " men in our.day, who could not see any - perfection in any picture • or pieces of dtatuary unless it was hundreds of years Old, so Michael Angelo, to convert his critics, made a new sttieue, He then broke off one of the arms of tlitat sta- tue and kept it. Then he staihed the rest Of the statue and buried it- un- der one of the old churches, and then had one of his friends find it. At.once all the art critics of Florence gathered around this exhumed piece of stone and declared it was one of the finest pieces of sculpture ever chiseled by man. "0,h1q they cried. "Where can we find a modern sculptor able to mould that. He shared their joys and sor- a body like that?" After Florenee had rows and privations. He •set them an, praised this statue for some months, example of s'eIf- sacrifibe. He . never asked his followers to make any Bene- fice whichshe _himself was not willing to make. If they wept, he wept With them. If they were a -hungered, he starved with them. When he warned them that they might have to lay down their lives for his sake, he set them the example of martyrdom by yielding !himself to the cross. thee of the great- est elements whieh. bind a human heart to another heart is the willieg- ness of man to make sacrifices for a friend ora neighbor., But, • though -Christ never asked his followers to make any sacrifice which he himself was unwilling to make, yet as I study the miracles of • Christ I find that almost without exception he sought co-operation from those whom he would help,- He was willing to mon concerning God. feed the multitude with a few loaves And how many causes for doubts in and fishee, but he made thU disciples reference to God we see everywhere! distribute the bread and the fish and Here, for, instance, are all the doubts collect- the fragments- that. 'remained, men have in reference to the mysteries He was ready to give his disciplesa, of the Bible. Was there ever a corn - great catch of fish' on Lake Galilee, pass which needed to beseurer or truer but he made them launch their boat in the dark and almost impenetrable out into the deep and let down the net foi ests than the star of Bethlehem to and bring the fish to -hand. He 'aa 4 guide the mental doubters out of the ready -and willing to resurrect the dead mys..eries. of. God's providence? Here Lazarus, • but he called Upon the by- are all the mysteries- of sorrow. The standers - to loose he graVeclothes doubter perhaps has lost a little child which bound him hand and foot. Not or the mothec-of his children. He can-, until they obeyed could the brether of not understand why God took his loved, Mary and Martha go forth free: What ones. Shall- we. pass over these MY'S- Christ did of old Christ is doing to -day. teries of sorrow With a mere. wave of He is ready to save men, but he ex. the hand? Here are all the shortcom- pects his -disciples to help him in man's ings of Christians- whieh• blind the liberation, mental., financial moral, doubter's, eyes. Perhaps some elder physical and spiritual. I want to show of a church has cheated him in a buei- how weean aid in, the emancipation a ness deal. Shall not the doubter he helpless men, as the:disciples took off talked to lovingly in reference to that the gra,veclothes of resurrected Lan- matter and shown how there have been atue to "loose him ad let him go." Judases among Christ's professed 101 - Christ bids us he.p liber.V the in- lowers at all times? Yes, Christ wants telloctual Man who is strugaitnes in his to draw to his arms those who are mental difficulties, He wants us to Ca mentally blinded.. , He would have us emender the old bonds of prejudice lead them as carefully as I saw .the sva.h which they are born and which other day a boy leading his little are gripping them ahnost as power- brother of eight summers, who was fully as the officer's. handcuffs hold the blind in both eyes, across a countrY criminal by his Nde. He would have field. As I saw those two boys going in not laugh at or Sneer at or ridicule past me there were tears in my eY'M en doubter and the skeptic and the for an especial reason. As they were othelqt. He bids,...,41:-.; not hurl our passing I was told that only a year taunts at the'peor dff•Jetal Cripples who, before that littleboy's eyes were as with hot, bilsterInefeet, are painfully good as your or I mine. But his own limping over the awful deserts of l'leeettinee, agnosticism. But he bids us 10 our brethren in montal or intsi- leetual difficulties and kindly and ge:ely and lovingly, yet firmly, lead tlietn out of the bot:s and the quag- • If, %•.1 Rd roll late,- aa . • „a, er cieltei FOR SALE. -For sale, Leh 28, °enamellers U 2, II it. 8, ono of the beat tiring in Tacker - smith, conteinine 100 acre% It is an exoeption ,Ily Mean farm with to waste 16nd ; all seeded to grass mo t of ie having been in pasture five or vix years. It le txtra well supplied with water Ou the (area a good brick home and two berne with stone etabling undo nee% with eement Lime. Plenty of emit trees ot different kinds:. fe is pleaseutly tt 'crated in a good neighborhood, being one.h6lf mile from echool and ai f-orn Seatorth. Apply on) the premieee or address jOtlier ROBB, s 'nee P. G., Oat. 19644f ' MIAMI FOR RALE -North heat of Lot 12, Con. T cession 0 Morrie, containing 100 acres, situated on the gravel roe& tour and a h df mike' weit of Brussel; and four miles from Beigrave. There are tat/agree °tetrad, well &Lined, faucet teed in a good date of ettitivatioa, atpresent ro3ded do ern, The remaining 20 aurae le covered with • eXeellent tio3ber, Tame le a good frente home with do in cellar* gold keine barn with etene etahling muter. neittb, a good be view prettied and an ahem's:toe of good water. There hia otturott and a past °Mee within half a mile an 1 teschool within three (par - tare Of 4 milk., For furter partfaulare apple t3 MRS. B. MULLIS, Bengali. 1968x811 irr ARE FOR SALE. -For foie, Lot 18, Conceselon X 8, 'lay, contenting 100 Ames in a good elate of cultivation. There ana on the pr grilses a good ;ranee house 22 x 82, deo a frame ettehen and wood shed, 18 x 40, all with cellar underneath. There to 5140 a. large bank barn, 40 x 70, with good brick stabling undernetth and all cement them Also is driving shed, 28 x 60, all le good repair. There are three never.fatling wells on the premises sod a good bearing orahard. Alin 18 mires of good hirdweed bush The farm le well fenced and well underdrein. t with tile. It is Austad within a mile and a hel t of the village of Hamill and adios1 within helf a mite ot farm. As the propleenr wiehos to retire It will be to 400 easy terms. For further perticulars apply en the premises or to Homan P. 0. .7 w BONTIIRON. 1913741 -DARX FOR SALE. -Far ode lot 29, on the 9th le concession ot Hobert, ceatainiog 00 aeree,e11 In a geed state of celtiv Aloe. There' oa the pre. Mine a hrlak home ani WW1< kitchen and a geed eater. There le ale, a tenni bank barn, 60 x 40 and k 'tante of 12 feet. with steno Beebline underne Also a shed $0 x 30 fc. and a driving h noel witn overythime complete. There are three never felline wells on the prernieee, there ie alio a leap r3h'rd • good. gardea. There ari ten Acme of fall whet eowo and there are 40 (tares seeded down. Either ;imitable for hly or ptaturk All the tall plo ozhing la dons. The farm to w,11 underdrained with tile and well funned with Nviro fwee. It is in a good twenty, halite aitaated to and s ireff milei frIn- Ohba liourst, where there is a past °aloe 001 t Azo churches, Methodist and Preebyterien. 8 Pail from Saatorth and there Is a goad 14 raxet road ruinirw put the farm. Ws in good >Witt= and will be sold en remonable terns a� tloe proprietor wising to retire. For furthor p t-Oeulars %poly on Oa premisei or JO OfiA1tI,E3E3ELtiiAar, sleff, F. ti., Ontario. 194741. Michael Angelo came ,forward with the broken arm of white marble which he had kept in his studio. 'He fitted it on the exhumed statue and he declared: "I can make ka,statue as good as, that. See, I have made this one myself! The broken arns is a perfect fit." His eritics were confounded, as they well might be, but as I. lead that story I did, not cOn,clerrin, those .Florentines as many have done, I said to myself: "Yes, those men who criticised the rising sculptor were natural born doubters. There are some men who, by their nat- ural mental 'makeup, find fault with everybodS, and everytlaing; therefore, if we are going to lead men, to Christ, we must learnt how to overcome the intellettual - doubts, the intellectual skepticisms, Wilich trouble so many DO YOU KNOW THAT BACKACHE IS THE FIRST SYMPTOM OF KIDNEY TROUBLE. It is! and you cannot be too careful about it. A little backache let run will finally cause serious kidney trouble. Stop it in time. TAKE DQAN'S KIDNEY, They cure where all others fail. As a specific for Backaches and Kidney Troubles they have no equal. Here Is_what MR. GEO. 11. SOMERVILLE, of Stewarton, NB., writes: "I was so troubled with a, sore back I could not get out of bed in the mornings for over a year. I got a box of Doan's Kidney Pills and before I had, them half taken I could see I was deriving some benefit from them, and before I had taken them all my book was O.K. and I have not been troubled since." • brother, who was then leading him, while hunting one day had accid.en- and steal inevitably you will fled that tally discharged his gun and shot his they were first led astray because hun- brothel's sight away. '10 God." 1 er or cold or financial exigency of said to myself, "can it be that some of some sort drove them to crime. God us, by our own sins of commission or inspire us to help those who are in pens of omission, have made some, of finanelal difficulties to weather their thy children mentally blind to thy love? few- months of financial storm. Help Can it be that doubters and skeptics that man financially. Do you not hear a,nd agnostics and mental antagonists the words of my text, "Loose him and to Gad are resisting him to -day merely because we will not take away e the bands which are blinding their eyes - because there is no one to uncover their eyes -as the disciples of old took off the bands from the eye sockets of helpless Lazarus? 0 God, to -day give us more sympathy for the honest deubter! Insiere us with holy. zeal to try to scatter these doubts away when-. ever and wherever they are!" But as I go -up to the open tomb where elept the dead Lazarus I find that not only was he blinded, but his move- ments were restrained. His resurrect- ed body has its graveclothes bound. around s the arms and the hands, the legs and the feet and the stomach,. as ruin. In ninety-nine cases out of a, well es around the forehead, the hundred this can be done if we only lips .and the eyes. Indeed, so helpless place around the young folks the right was Lazarus physically that he could kind of Christian assopiations. not have stepped out of his crypt of the tomb, as you and I would throw back the bedclothes of a 'morning and himself, "if 1 earl only tide myself over this winter I know „everythi.lsg win come out right." Shall he sur- renden Shall he hand over to ills creditors the store and _walk out a barrkrupt, or shall he borrow some of the motley of his friends estate and put it Into his business? It is all well enough for you to denounce the miskippropriation of trust funds. But, supposing you were in that man's place and your creditors were knocking ,..at your door, what would you do.? Wear you might do just as thousands of men have done in the past,' who have been bound hand and foot with the grave vlothel of debt. You would be 'dishonest, as they were dishonest The 9,nancia1 temptation would fling you. Or take another view ,Of the same eupject. SUpposing you are not a merchant, but a clerk or a. laborer. On account of the hard times you have lost your position in the store or the mine. Supposing you have tramped the streets day after day looking for work and never have been able to find it. And then, supposing hunger is beginning to gnaw at your vitals and the bitter cold to send its chills playing "hare and hounds" up and down your back, what would you do?. You may have learned what cold and hunger are when some time you were out hunting or tramping through the woods and you were lost, You re- member how you tramped on and on until sFou became faint from lack of food, and perhaps your lips became 'swollen for water to drink, but there was o Water, no food, no house itt sight. How, then, did you look aA life? Dees a hungry man, a cold man, have the s,ame thence Cor virtne and honesty and purity as e. well fed,man and a warm man? Oh, my friends, if you and. I ever finda time 'which we can relieve some of these esses I believe we will take away a large per cent. of the crimes and the dishonesties of the world. Indeed, I know what I say is true. Mdiet Men are not dishonest for mere pleasure, but only when they have become bru- talized by hunger and bodily wants and financial necessities. The majority of men are honest at heart,` This truth was forced upon me solne months ago in a powerful way. I met one of the boys of one of the old farm - ere of my Bushhill,ehurch, where -I preached] for two summers as a theo- logical /Student, thirteen -miles from a railroad.. From being a farmer's son he had worked his way through college and was traveling through the country In a camping wagon leeLuring at the little towns- and schoolhasee upon the. "Anthracite Coal Beds of Pennsyle venire" As a lecturer that man had ben everywhere. On the deserts, in the mountains, at mining camps and in railroad towns he had spoken. He had camped alone in ravines and by Mexican dugouts and by Indian vil- lages. "Were you ever afraid of be- ing attacked and robbed)" I asked him. "Never," said he. 'I started out years ago believing that most people were honest and that if you trust them they would not betray you. I have been among the cowboys and had Indiansi ride up to me upon the desert miles away from any human being, and I have never been molested.. Further- more, I have never carried a, firearm, either gun or pistol. I never locked up my things. But I'd go away from my wagon for days at a time, and When I came back I always found my goods just where 1 left them. If you believe people Are honest and trust them they will not betray you." So saYS 1. Fro-tn a rather varied experi- ence I feel sure that most people want to do right. If men do cheat, forge list him go?" God will save that man ib, financial distress if you disciples will db. your part. We must save rnen morally as well as help *them intellectualiy and finan- cially. I apply that word "morally" to all that is Trost vile and corrupt in hu- man. nature. I do not, however, apply it in the sense that you and 1 should go into the city slums and lift up the social outcasts, although their rescue should and must be done by the proper Christian workers. 33ut I do apply it In the meaning that we shonld reach out a helping band and keep men and women and young boys and girls from slipping over the 'precipices of Morai There are many influences which de- velop the moral life besides environ- ment. I believe absolutely and em - have had to .give a lurch and roll out Phatically in heredity. The reason the leap out upon the floor, !but he must upon the stones 'of the tomb. Then he domestic dog circles around two or three times before he lies down to struggled to his feet and stood like a etatue. Thus stood Lazarus' resur- rected body. As I go on up and ex- amine the man's; bound hands and feet sleep at the kitchen stove. is because his wild ancestor in the eastern woods or en western prairie _circled around in the same way to track down the leaves I say to 'myself, "Yes; how much ill or the 'grasses befere he lay down' to symbol does Lazarus look as a man sleep beneath the*Campfires Of the glit- bound hand and foot with financial tering stars. The reason the Jew is the debt!" The man in financial distress shrewdest end most successful buyer sometimes cannot _make one move if and money lender of the world is he - he would. So I believe Christ's words, cause for centuries he was downtrod - "Loose him and let him go," have their den by the Gentiles. He could hold no application in reference to a, financial liberation as ..well as a mental or in- telectual. How much of a financial liberation many people need but ,few of us have any adequate Conception, .Financial liberation is needed in the store. The temptations of business life are mighty. Here is a merchant who has been left an executor of a friend's estate. For years and years he has led an honorable life. But the hard times have come. The people who once So -tight his goods cannot buy them. now, for they have no 4n onPy with which to buy. "Oh," he says to real property. If he was a landowner his estate was confiecated at the whims of his neighbors. The only means of livelihood opened to Shylock was that of a trader and money lender. The reason the American Indian is what he is to -day is because the wild, romantic life depicted in Fenimore. Cooper's "Leatherstocking Tales" is rein 131 his brood, and the redskin seems to be unable to anchor his existence to a farm and C'honge his wigwam to a stone fireside. But, thoughLI believe much in prenatal infleences, I also be - 'neve much in environment. ex „visa and 1 place the right kind ova,ssoeiates about our -youg folks we can • inevit- ably save them for God if we will. And so, my friends, if by the help of the Holy Spirit you and 1 are going to snve the young people We must throw aboul them.the right kind of Christian. companionship. We must woo them to the church fellowship. We must make our ybung people's meetings so attractive that the saloon and the bil- liard parlor and the dancp hall and the low7 theatres cannot successfully bec- kon them Or sb nights of the week, and we preach to them only on Sun- days. We should cling to the young folks of our cities. We should go af- ter them and hold to them all the time, The Sunday school teacher who never finds aneveningto visit her pu- pils during the week will never have pti'pils who will have tiMe. to sit at her feet on Sundays. The young peo- ple of your churcb who neye'r invite the strangers to their houses or visit ;them in their rooms or arrange semi - social gatherings" for them in the church wil never have the newemnrs crowdingeth.eir serviees. • But, lastly, I remark, we must try to liberate helpless men' during their time of pitYsica.1 infirmities as well as dur- ing their time o physical 'strength and gootl lfealth. Of all times during which we., can most appeal to helpless man the best is when he VI lying upon an ireealld's bed oy in times of agonizing sickness. Sometimes a strong man or woman is not easily swefeptible to kindness. But once let the 'strength leave the arm, once let the brow On - come hot andtfeverish, once let the stomach rause to retain its nourish- ment, and then the slightest kindness, as a rule, will bring tears of gratitude to the eye and words of thankfulneis to the trembling hp. But, though the stok bed is the•greatest and best of all pulpits over which to preach, how few of us ever embrace the opportunity to , Minister tfiere in Gods liable as we should! Indeed, as horses will nearly always ehy and run away from a etek horse inch is lying upon. the ground, so 1 tffrna well people, as a rule, shun and fear sick people. But Thefore I close I bethink myself of one fact. Perhaps you are not yet fitted to go forth on these errands of gospel mercy. Why. Perhaps you are to -day. hearing God's voice whichi spoke at tire tomb of the dead Lazarus and yet youeyourself are sitting or stand- ing before me bound hand and foot with the graveclothes, of past EiDS. Then, my friend, will you let me re- move, them in Moist's name? -win you let me talte away that sin -Of the hand, that sin of the foot, that in of the eye, that sin of the lip, that sin cf heart.? Paul, the chief of sinners, VIM once bound as you, 'Will you let me, In Christ's name, speak unto you the words of hope? Then, like the good Anaelas of old, I will say unto thee, blinded with sin, "Brother Saul, 33ro- ther Saul, the Lord, e'ven Jesus, whom thou hest sen on,etheaDanittscus road, hath sent me thatifluin mighteet receive thy sight and be filled with the HelY Ghost." ' In Christ's name your eyes may be epened. Then you will be ready for his service. Will you here and now consecrate your life to taking of the graveclothes which ate binding sinful men as you yourself were 'once bound helpless in the viselike grip of sin? To Cure a Cold in One Day. . Take Laxative, Bromo_, Quinine Tab- lets. All clinIggists refund the money If it fails to pure. E. W. Grove's sifgnature is on each box. Price, 25o. . 1930-1 yr. •11EAPACHES Won't you be guided by the stesssesies-ese ee of - - they took -and cure. foureelf as ebey cured themselv-? pj a-tives care the causedof the headache. They remove the t. poi.zons which cause it entirely relieve eopstipatiou avid tone up the ner This letter is the proof that puts as end tb, doubt " Move tried Pt -mit -a -dyes and found thine -splendid fir lemclaclaes. r feels* better sine I commenced taking2enem. 1 thujk*tbny are. eSplendid enedne; and recommending theneto aIl my freetide." Mrs. J. W. D11r,01101 Tbameseille, Out. �r Frit LiverTablets. 50e. a box. Ali druggigs.. Pinfoulactured by Frulten-tives Lbntted. raterson's ing keeps jogs as ti kitchen. • -under proof, » no Ana hre-pr own roofin last a. lifet' oult. FR oaighty con COMMON, ranges rnake the coal man itlitBURN Is your Goal Wasted or Used? 11 It is comparativeli_t 'ZIG" rz71:14 easy to build a range that will make a lot of heat, but it requires the exact science of Pandora range building to produpe a range that will use all the heat in the coal without 'Ste. A common range may burn twice the coal that a Pandora will, and yet do Only half the work. If yOu use a Pandora range you can be certala that your coal money is not wasted; but used. de a 6 AME 771173;iici Navy P-abl sWkskre, -T,he lotibeti• morning Obarres Cot- lins, 0. xespooted residen,t of Claret - we. st, iwas .oallied by death without any vrevioas sign of iLkness. 'Re was sun. active member of the Salva- tion Array,- and was in his keiseee lin the ssaTadeUhie grevioas ,night. About Tfour tthe motniv he twit up Ito cover tihe eihildren who ihad. kieketr alive bed ototthes off. He re - twined itlo bed land t4hort1y after - wands kis wife noticed that he nP- paved to be smotlharing. She tried ireLieve hint, ibut tn less 1-itan 'Dive minutes the hadwassed away with- out ailten Lag a word. lie. was 0, ;native of New•Denendiand and 33 yeins of age. • Beare the Signature of C3 gr I. -EN. a, 11a12a:w6 Alviavs BaiOt 1 -Leon Pothpore, son of W. J. Pd -u - prim, M. P., of Montreal, witilo boat- ing iat Morrisburg, fell. 1,11,10 She river and was drowned. He was 20 year's la axe, send had . not ;finished his tooter se :at Ottawa Cloelege. -Nbe, 11'41AI:tips and Mrs. Mum - merv<dt, o.f St. Thomas, mei with veey se,rious accident whim driving the other day. Just as they were appr1oaellan4 tate over -heed bridge, on Talbot street .easi., :,orfah boys =started 'their horse, whielhi belted, throwing botth ladies violentily to the igtound. Mrs., Finnernervelt ..had both tee s broken, the right a.rm ilt the ,shoulder'Me left at the ehbow, and )her facto was also badly cut. 'Mrs. Phillips escaped with a rew. brags - es and a severe obaking up. There is more Ciatarrh in this heel : - tion of 'the cou.ntry than all pither diseases put together, and wail the last few years Wori supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a, looal dis- ease land presciribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to entre with tlocul. 'treatment, pronounced it ineurable. Science ihas proven Cat- arrh- Ito be a constitutional disease, n nd thex e fore -requires 031114i tution a treatment. II all's Cu tarrh. Core, mariu.factucted jby F. J. Oheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only. coAstitu- tional 10,i1Te .011" tise market. It Es taken inteeronaily in doses from 110 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts di - irk -witty on the blood and mucous sur- face of the system. They offer ore hundzed dollars for any cas0' tit tails to ettre. Send for circulars and tes- timonials. Address F. J. Cheney & 4t., Toledo, Ohio. , Sold 'by Druggists, 75e. '- Take lIati's Fa/rally .Pills for cen- stipation. • -Merles Beatty, n Kinzs1on pioneer, aged 87 years, a native of Ireland, died on 1!,to4n-d1y from 4 ;heart affect Lon. He came to Can- ada, 53 years ago, and Vras titon,g, ide60- f lwitlh S d WIN c.Jxuiroh, -The ,Glove taus] Mit Nan Ufneli UT - el s' gsAssociation of °nestle :held its third annual meet Lag, in Toronto last week. A reso1utLo,n Wis passed to t he' id feet that gen e•reount of ithe in cost of ;raw material it was absolutely necessary to make art adv ante 101 10 to 15 per cent. In the price of gloves tfor the COM1117e; >Kea - 8011. E. A. Warshouses arid ractorliiiii toricton, Toronto, Iffontraa 'Virinnifteg, Vancouvor, St. John, N.B., Hamilton LATIMER Sole Agent, Seaforth. Wit 008817 Red Roc Tea Uniformity A TEA that is good to -day and poor to -morrow is un- " reliable. Have you ever noticed variations in the quality of the tea you_use? One package good, the next bitter, herby, perhaps wea.k and insipid. A lack of expert knowledge by the tasters and blenders of that tea produced that result. There was a failure at a vital pAint, an ignorance of combining qualities in teas, pour jut ig ment in the blending of that maker's teas, a weak- ness which invariably gives just such results .as your poor tea. Every cheit of Red Rose Tea is tested at the gardens, again by the Eastern Red Rose shippers, then at the Red Rose warehouse upon its arrival b.lfore bleeding; atter that an experimental blend is tested, and. the final or actual blend is alFo tested before being:packed. Nothing is left to chance. That is why that "rich ft bity flavor" is always pr in Red Rose 1 ea. Why Red Rose Tea is always uniform, why A.......m.onegembodM 18 g o d Tea T. H. Estabroo St John, N.B., Toronto, Win VE.GETAIlle SiCI Hair Renei. A -high-class preparation for the hair. Keeps the hair soft glossy andprevents splitting at the ends. Cures dsndr always restores color to gray Iftir. Gregg Shorthand — is .easy to learn, _easy to write and easy to read after it is written. The students of the Forest City Business and Shorthand College are subjected to the test of the Business Educators' Associalion of Canada for diplomas. 95`,',/, pass and 65% take honors. Catalogue will give you some pointers about otiP system and is free for the dsking. School term—Sept. till June inclusive. J. W. 'WES VELT, Y. M. C. A. Bldg., NDONt ONT. DI 42 abet o Z4. .35E- 0 rngian C Strc1 !I 11 3 ee and Rodi eithoditia churet el-NeIXAre for the 4 derie fr40 Z1GOTT. fa -amber Surgeons. t alecKAT, told ,erdalie w*Of AROMAS BD remake° elia °withal? Exioesime estss A UCT'IONEE Anotinne Being tutding- tolaCee FARM .0 PROP 3, B, eLea F sue r.viceX Uaya,*Cy-are William Chet Upon e Georg 13111bJamii easietoek ; Then LW; Kippen KObt. &mitt 41440.0. s Domini vale _le Ire Gel Fartice -dee: bneinci AePPlleaticre o their tempt &Ma' John MeM (Sue u Are may prl icaY _A w