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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-10-13, Page 6TATE FOE. S AT) B RAZINO Pk FOR. SA.LE OR RENT -.. kXCain tarter. iteuley townenip, 145 scree. Apply to R. S. RAY3, Barrisler, Seatorth. 1955-tt 10 MI FOR kLE—For elle, the east half of let et? 4. °nth* itth corn,es glen of Tuokerstnith, on hang 50 %ore& needy all clear ,d And in 15. gmci ate et criltivathe. There Is. on the premlsee, a geed benk berm 40 ft x 66 ft, and a comfortable dwelling hem, also a good orchard of winter fruit. Terme rearroinbIe. Apply to 3013IN WHITEtf AN, Chiselhutat, °uteri° 197t-8 -4-4110FITABLE INVE3TUENTS.—I cern lend JE money on tranroved (tinder sections cif 160 acres eaele at from 8 to 10 per eent. per annuin. Only firab mortgaeee taken. Ample Aecurity given Termer; Titles System is perfect. From $300 up can be lent on %ram woeth from Sl,000 to 82,000. For further perticulara write to me. J. A. JACK. SON, Barrister, etc.. Ponoks. Alberte. 1969.t - "DARN FOR. SALE.—Lot 81, Concession 8, Mill J' Rom!. Tackeranatt, conteinine 100 acres, in high etate of cultivation and well underdrained and well fenced. A Rood briok house and bank barn, 60 x 00 feet. with Atone steblino underneath. Plenty of good water. It is within a tulle and a bon et Brumfield etstion and five utiles from SOA - forth. It is one of the cholooet terms in the eounty thlre not battle one foot of west° lend on it An. ply on the premien or aiddess DUNCAN MoTAV. SH, Bruoefield. 1970.tt WARM FOR, BALE OR TO RENT.—Foresale or ret Intl 29. con.. 2, H. R. 8., Tuckennitith, contaleing 100 tierce ell ()leaved exempt about five *ores of good haedwood. All uuderdrained, well tenced and in a good state of cultivation. A good brink Ileum and two bantam:le with stone snarling underneath. Plenty of good water and aceed hear- ing orohard, Thie farm is well adopte& for either stotk or grain. Abeut midway between Sestorth Joni Clinton. Amply on the premises or Seaforth P. O. H. TOWNSEND, Proprietor. 1012ett --------e (TOM AIM LOTS FOR SALE. --For eale, brick _la house sod 2 lots in Seatorth. One lot fanes on North Main Street and the other on West WlI Ilam Street The house ts a comforteble brick zettage and contains 3 bedrooms, dining room, alt.' ting room and kitehen, with good ,cellar under the whole home. Hard and soft water in the house: There is also *good stable and driving shed. All kinds of fruit on the lot. Apply to 3. L. ALLAN, Londeshero, or to C. W. ATKINSON, Seaforth. 1905x4tf -DOR flieLE—k farm containing- 100 acres of lend, _E beine Lot 6, Concession 7, In the Toweshlp of Tuckersutith, five miles from Seatorth and belong- ing to tbe estate of the late Michael O'Keefe. This faun is imitable tor cultivation or paeture and will be sold on reasontehle terms. For full particulars apply- to THOMAS BROWN, Auctioneer, Seatorth P.O. 1961.-t1 "DARK FOR BALE,—Lot 10, Conceselon 4, Hits bed, containing 100 acres, more or less • It is offered for sale on elsy terms. On the place &Mee pod frame house, large barn with good stab- fing undetneath. There Is 11130 one acre of btu& and the form la well drained and in a splendid state of euitivntien. Handy to market, school and ohureh • For blether ptertioulaes apply on the place to ROBERT LAVERY. 1934x4tf clf trIARM FOR SALE. —Lot 33, Cenceselon 7, tic - ,U Killop. Thle farm containe 100 acres cf good lan& has on It a bank barn 64 x 64 with 8400t etone simbling. Mao a good 8 -roomed brick house, or thard, gnod water, etm. It is sir. milea from See - forth and 1 miles from Constonce post offie. Apply to WM. R. BGANSHARD, Sturgeon Falls, Ont. or to K. HINCHLEY, Seaforth, 1964 -if 00IT FARM FOR SALE.—For "sale, East half keit of Lot 14. 001100nt011 3. Mullett, containing 50 acres, all cleared, well fenced and in a good state of cultivation. Thera le a good brick houee, bank barn, driving house, pir pen, de., There is n good orchard end never failing epring. About three miles from Constance, 8 from Loodesbero station and 7 wiles from Clinton. This le a choice farm and will be sold on easy terms. Apply on the /sena or address, Constance P. a, A. MERIT 1969x3 MIOR SALK—Freme house and lot taunted in the U village of Kinburn. seven and one.half miles from Seaforth. The house is one and one.helf storeys, heving five roems, Bummer kitchen mid woodshed contreeted, also good steno foundation and (teller; also good trame stable on ersinent floor and stone foundation. The honse is imitable:. for a doctor retired farmer or clergyman. There Is a'so a omit shep in connection, suiteble for doc- tor's office or shoe shy. The buildings are to eood _repair, painted, and the premiaes well fenced and supplied with herd and eons water. For parbienlers apply to JAMES ST kNLIEY, Constance. 1972x1 VARNI FOR SALE—Lot 3, concession 1,1Tsborne, r contening 99 acres, situated on the London Road, 1 mile from Hemmen, and 4 miles from Boee. er. It is in a first elate stete nf cultivation bottle well drained eith tile, nearly all summer flowed and seeded to grass nearly all farmed with new .Car- ter wire fence. On the farm is a stone home and plenty of outbuildiege, including one of the, firma poultry houeee in Ontario. There are two twells, a spring creek, and a flowing sprino that would fill a three-inch tile. Apply on the farm or to nimmall post office. BENJAMIN HOGG ARTH. 196841 'DARR FOR SALE.—For rode, lot 18, concession tri 4, in Ilibberb, contain:ng 100 incren. Ou the piece la a briok d vellien kluge, with frame kitehert, with all necessary outbuildings and lots et good stabling; well fenced, well drained and plenty of good water. There are 9 acres of bush. It la situated two and A half miles feom Dublin etation, where, there ier a good market. Convenient to schoda and ()hutches rt all denominetione. Apply on the premieee or address ANDREW KeLELLAN, Dublin P. 0. 1965-11 'TRION EXPOSITOR Free Gifts of Toilet Soa Use SUNLIGHT SOAP and SAVE THE COUPONS. The Coupons are the same as cash because they. Cah be exchanged for Toilet Soall for -which you have to pay out money every week. , User of SUNLIGHT and CHEERFUL SOAPS can get their TOILET SOAPS for nothing. Ask your grocer for pat ticulars 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 Coupons you can`gct something you need and ,use every day. 2000 1.014"VER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO, CANADA. . E CALLS OF OUR LIFE THE DIVINE' VOICE IS CONSTANT- LY SPEAKING TO MANKIND. , HOW WE MAY RECOGNIZE IT God Generally Calls To the Higher SpiritUal Life In the "Silent Places," and It Will Be Well For Us to An- , . swer, as Did Samuel, "Speak, Lord, For Thy Servant Heareth." 'Entered according to Act of Parliament of Canada, in the year Ines, by Frederick Diver, of Toronto, at the Department of Agriculture; Ottawa. Los Angeles, Cal., Oct. 8.—In this ser- mon the preacher show a how the di- vine ,voice is constantly speaking to Man and how we may recognize and obey tit. The text is t Samuel iii., 9, "SpeA, Lord, for thy servant heareth." HOw the mighty mere and women of the world found their leanings in life would make very iliteresting reading. Sometimes a genius, like Mozart, Is born. From his cradle his parents knew what vocation this child would pursue. At three years of age, with his little chubby fingers, he could Make the piano speak with the touch of a master. At five years he appeared in public at the University' of Salzburg. At six, with. his •little sister Marianne, he was traveling about Europe on a concert tour, the pet of kings and queens and the wonder and a,stonish- raent of the mueical world. But, though it Wolfgang zart was born to music, most of our great men and women live years and years .and years before they recognize their right stili:eres in _life. Some of them try four or five different lines of work before they place their feet upon A the lowest steps to mount their thrones of power. Some, like 'Odysseus, the Horderic hero of the Trojan war, had to be bound hand and Dept to the masts of duty, else the'34 would. have leaped overboard- and fol- lowed the false wooing Of the siren'S song. .. George Washington didnot wish to be a soldier, but a sailor. A British man-of-war came to Chesapeake Bay when he -was a young man. He want -- DARK AND MILL PROPERTY FOR SALE.— .0 For sale the old Bell Farm end Mill Property, on the London road, Tuckeramith, recently mu - pied by the late John MeNevin. There are 100 sterns, all cleared but about four alren. Good buildings and the farm welt :underdrained atid in a kigh gate of cultivation, all seeded to green except e,bout 30 acne. Aho the grit and saw roill prop- erty on the farm. It te within half a mile of Kippen atatton and 2 miles from Hensell and a good bugle news: hes alwaye been done at the mills. The faun andlmill property will be sold to eether or separate., iy to suit purchaser. Terms easy. Apply to DAVID C. McLEAN, Kippen. 196811 'XT1LLAGE PROPERTY FOR SALE.—For sale in V Egmondville, a oornfortable frame house with three acres at land in a very fertile condition with plenty of large and small fruitfor family use alto large barn and outbuildings in good repair. The house has been recently overhauled and matelots eeven rooms with chola cellar, fUll 8118, good wood ;tiled, alert summer kitchen and an excellent spring well and good cistern. Any perm deetring a elm • fortable, quiet home of this desoription, coveelent to town, should not mins this opportunity. Will be sold reasonably- mad on eaty berms. For further perticulare apply on the pretenses or address Eq.-. mondville P. 0., W51. BUBOLZ• 191341 DARK FOR SALE.—For eale, Lot 23, Conceseioa U 2, H. R. 8, one of the best farms in Tucker - smith, conteinine 100 acre.). lb le au exeeption illy clean farm with 113 waste land ; all seeded to grass most of It having been in pasture five or eix years. It is extra well supplied with water. Oa the farm e good brick house and two barns with stow stabling underneath with cement fieore. Plenty of fruit trees of different kinds. It is pleasently sit. , rested in a good neighborhood, being one.htlf mile from school and 8i race from Seatorth. Apply on the premises or address JOHN OBB, Seaforth P. 0., Ont. 1964-11 FARld FOR SALE—North half of Lot 12, Con - melon 0, Morris, oontainine 160 acres, eltueted on the e,evel road, four and a half miler' west of Brunets and four miles from Bolgeave. Them are 80 sere* °leered, well drained, fenced and in a good gate of cultivation, at present seeded," down. The remeinieg 20 aoree le covered %nth exoellent timber, There fa a -good ,frame home witheutone good frame barn with stone atabling-lander- neath, a good bead rig orehard and an abundance of ersood water. There In a chards and a poet office within half a mile an 1 a school within three gear - tete of a mile. For furtrer partfoulara apply to MRS. B. SUILLIE, Hansa% 1968x3tf ARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Let 18, Concession 8, Hey, contenting 100 acres in a good elate of cultivation. There are on the premises a good frame house 22 x 32, also a frame Molten and wood elle& 18 x 40, all with cellar underneath. There is also a large bank barn, 40 x 70, with good briek stabling under -teeth and all cement fleore. Mee a driving shed, 28 x 60, all in goad repair. There Are three never -failing wells on the premises and a good bearing orchard. Also 18 area of good herdwood lamb The farm is well fenced and well underdrain- ed with tile. 11 18 situated within a mile and a heti of the village of Herman and school within half a mile of farm. As the propietor wiehes to retire It will be sold on eaey tonne, For further partioulare apply on the premises or to Heneall P. 0. JAMES BONTHRON. 1967-11 - ARK FOR SA.LE.—For eels lot 20, on gee Ole ooneension of Hilbert, cacteining 00 aerataell ha a good etete of oultivetiom There i on the pre. ledges a break houee and brick kitchea and a good cellar. There le also a large bank burl, 80 x 40 and A. Leant° of 12 feet, with stone *Ambling underne Nth. Mao a abed 80 x 80 ft. and a driving house with everything complete. There are three never tontine wells =the premises, there la alao a large oreturd and good garden. There are ten earns of fall wheat sown and there are 40 aores seeded down. Either anthill° for hey or pasture. All the fall pletiohing In done. The farm is well underdrained with tile and well formed with wire fawns, I is in a good lemality, being siensteci two and a half miles from Chiselburat, wture there Is a peat office rine two churchee, Mothodiat and Presbyterian, 8 milee from &death and there le a good gravel road running pant the ferns. It le in pod cendrtion and wilt be isoid ore,reasonable berets as the proprietor wishee to retire. For further particular& apply on the premises or to CHARLES EBERHART, Sfisfie • ., Ontario. 194741. ed to enlist. A midshipman's commis- sion was obtained for him by hp eelder brother Lawrence. His trurad Was already packed and placed board ship. But his widowed mothr. could not bear to let her "baby" be)y leave her side. For her sake he turned his back upon the quarter deck of d British- warship and thereby paved hil way for the wonderful career Which has made his name the most famous in American history. Oliver Cromwell wanted tO emigrate to America. He and his family were down at the dock with their tickets in their _pockets, and lead their berths engaged when a royal command forbade him leaving the Icing's country. Frederick W. Robert- son came frem a long ancestral line oil British officers.' He a wanted to be a soldier. Indeed,- for a time he did wear the soldier's uniform, but physical in- firmity made hire forego camp life. He entered Edinburgh University. When he became pastor of Trinity Chapel at Brighton he found his right position, which mightily in;fluericed his own gen- eration and will also influence the Eng- lish-speaking rase for all time. Thus many of our most famous men and wo- men have been iaompelled to grope and struggle along, sometimes for years, for their right vo ations in life, just the same as you d 1 have done in the nast or Max be n w doing in the Dres- ent Where there Is one Mozart :who was born a child genius there are a thousand Frederick W. Robertsons whose intellect and material life have ,developed gradually. First carne the 'seed, then the 'Sprout, then the blos- som and then the luscious fruit. The -first calls of the temporal life, as a rulg, fall° upon unheeding ears. The. first a1ls of the spiritual life in the same way usually fall upon unheeding ears. When God first called to Satnuel in the midnight hour, "Samuel, Sam- uel!" the lad.leaped up and ran to the old 'priest, Eli, supposing that it waS he who called him, and said, "Here am I." Then Eli answered: "My son, I have not called thee. -Go back to bed." Again Samuel heard God's voice, and again he mistook it for a human voice. 'Samuel, Samuel!" "What is it, Eli?" asked the boy. 'Here I atte I am al- ways ready to wait -upon thee:" Again the old man answered, "My son, I have not called thee." Then a third time God called, and old Eli said to Samuel: "My son, it is not 1 calling thee, but God. When God calls to thee again do , not run to me, but an- swer; 'Speak, Lord, for thy servant heareth."' Thus young Samuel was taught to listen to the voice of the -Lord in the midnight hour. Thus I would beg you to heed God's voice when he speaks; to you in the "silent places' of life. God generally calls us to our higher spiritual life in the "si- lent places," as he called Samuel to be- come the prophet of Israel in the still- ness of the midnight darkness. Where are these "silent places" in vehicle you and I can hear the voice of the Lord? In the first pace, I would state that God calls us in the hours of darkness. He calls to us as he call- ed Salimel after the first sleep of the night is over, and we suddenly awake and feel that some one is very near to us and speaking. We cannot see him, but we feel him and hear him. We feel his presence and hear him just the -same as we used to recognize our mother's hand and her kiss and her "Good night, my boy," when we were children and she would -come and take a last look at us, to see that we were all right before going to bed. Perhaps the reason *why God is able to `speak to us so clearly in the early hoers of the morning can be explained upon natural grounds. Have you never notieed the fact that most of' our friends *die about 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning? As Solomon beautifully sym- bolized it, when was the silver cord loosed or the golden bowl broken or the pitcher broken at the fountain or the 'wheel broken at the cistern when your dear one we re trail:sin:red ? Your bro- ther, how (lid he go? Your mother said to the nuree, "Now. nurse. I think Joh -a is bolter to-nielit, but if you need me 'just give ei2 rap upon the floor and r4vil1 come up." It s,ferace that YOU 01"C_` aeleen only a ifteie while when cominotl nn in )10u:;e made you leer ,o-stt of led. -.1-ou rushee to your bro.; rore'rra: 7dou .eaw the breo.hing DO YOU KNOW THAT BACKACHE IS THE FIRST SYMPTOM OF KIDKY TROUBLE It i I and you cannot be too earef about it. A llt1e backache lei run will finally cause serious kidney troub e. Stop it in time. TAK DQA1\l'S Kli7NPf PILLS� • They cure, where all others fail. As a *eine for Backaches and Kidney Troubles they have no equaL Here Is what GEO. H. SOMERVILLE, of Stew rton, N.B., writes: "I was se troubled with a sore back I coald not get out of bed in the mornings for over a year. got a box of Doan's Kidney Pills and before I had them half tekess I could see I was deriving swine beeefit ' from them, and before I had, taken them all my back was 0.K. and I havewnot been troubled _ noor of a, great cathedral, yet -large enough to gather into it one of the.na- tions of the world. From each side of this floor rise two precipitous basaltic walls over a thousand feet in height, scarred and seamed with battling the elements of the ages, down which at intertvals detached rocks thunder, dull- ing the crash of artillery. Here the "Rock of Ages," „of -richest blood red tinge, glitters and sparkles in the even- ing twilight. From yonder cliff a for- tress seems to loom, on whose watch- tower keen -eyed eagles have perched their eyries, from which ever and anon one rises and, flying in graceful cir- cles, with sweep of eye reconn.olters the land. 'Yonder soar up Moran and Bier- stadt ordints, from whose heights those artists painted their famous pictures, varied in every hue and capped with coronets of green foliage. There the river, 'with serpentine and graceful windings, slowly crawls along to empty her waters into the sea. Then sud- denly, like a mad horse, she rears her- self axed takes the bit into her teeth. With foaming flank and wild roar she dashes and makes one awful leap over the dizzy heights of 'Yellowstone Falls. There, breaking into millions of pearls, she hides„ herself behind a curtain of white, at the foot of which glistens a rainbow, a fitting pa.ssementerie for the robe of an angel, And so perfect there is the symmetry of the horizon that you cannot tell whether the wa- ters were lost behind curtainsrof earth- ly 'mist or curtains of heavenly cloud. A scene stupendous, canopied by arch of heaven and lit by light.of sun! No one spoke. It seemed as though the .,angel who had once stood at the gate of paradise had again unsheathed the sword of fire and cut a deep gash into old Mother Earth deep enough to ta,ke out her very heart. Then as -we stood there my father with his deep voice said, "What a magnificent place in which the nations of the world could be gathered and assembled before the judgment seat of Christ!" "Yea, yea," we all answered. "And what a mag- nificent place," 1- said, "for men and women to come and learn about the mercies of the gospel of Jesua Christ! If a sinner would not feel the presence of a loving God here he would not feel it anywhere." 'Aye," said father, "that is true." As we listened to the voice of,God calling out of the silence of Yellowstone Park, so you may hear the divine voice whenever you go forth to the country hills. You may hear his voice by the moaning sea, in the voices of the woods and in the calm, quiet, overpowering simplicity of the blue sky. One of the "silent places" in which we can hear the voice Of God speaking to us is in the hushed home after the undertaker has come and robbed us of the father or mother or wife or hus- band or prattling child. How still it is! The friends who attended the funeral are all gone. Still, still—everything is still. There was a time when We used to talk about our neryes. We would say, "The doctors tell me I must be quiet." But God knows it is quiet enough now. Why, the old home is so still that there is not the echo of even one pair of romping feet. It is so still that you can hear your heart 'thump and pound in anguish under your flesh. 0 God, how still it is! Still, still, ap- pallingly still. But, my friends, though the bereft home is so still, if you lis- ten carefully in its silence I think you can hear the voice of God speaking. becoming heavier and heavier. At last the doctor said, "He is gone." You looked at the clock, and you heard it striking, "One, two, three." When did your mother die? At /aeon? In the even- ing twilight when the flush Of the set- ting sun was slowly fading away and its ball of fire was sinking behind the western hills'? Oh no. You. had .been awake all night worrying about. her. The last relapse came about 2 o'clock in •the morning. Her life went out with the crowing of the cock and tvith the first glimpse of the dawn. The reason why most people die in the early hours Of the morning is because the sun has long been very far away from us. - At that time there is less vitality in the air. Then our physical hold on earthly life is weakest. So my friends, as earth grips us less about 2 or 3 o'clock In the morning let the Holy Spirit grip us closer to Christ.Letthese few min- utes in the early morning be to us sa- cred moments for communion with God. When we awaken don't rebuke the Holy Spirit and break the divine spell. Let us then hear old Eli saying: "The Lord would commune with thee. Listen, child; listen, listen to the voice of the Lord." But the voice of the Lord is heard in The daylight as well as in the darkness, when we are standisig upon our feet as well as when we are tramping over the hillsides, or sitting- by the seashore, or watching the mad rush of the whirlpool rapids of Niagara Falls, or when we are in the presence ot the pyrotechnics of a thunderstorm, or when we watch a bird build her nest, or the wild flower lift up its cheeks to be kissed by the sunbeams in mountain glen, or when we hear the rippling of the brook leap- ing over the rocks to find a bathing pool in which the feathered songsters can take their morning' bath. And of all places where the voice of the Lord can be heard distinctly speaking to ue I believe that voice can best be heard In the "silent places" of nature, far away from the habitations of man. If a human being cannot hear the voice of the Lord in- the woods and on the boundless prairies or- from the deck or a steamer or sailing ship cutting the, waters of the mighty deep, then I be- lieve it is almost impossible for him to hear the divine voice speaking under cathedral tower or from pulpit in the village kirk. -Yet some people make a boast that for them the lips of nature are absolutely dumb. In it they can neither hear the loae of man 'nor tile love Of God calling them to the better and the nobler and the higher life.. The care and the protection of the divine Father's love always speak te me in the "silent places" of eatteee Many years ago the voices of nature' sounded for me their divine lesSone in one mighty chonus. I stood upon \ob- servatory Point and looked off uptni the wonderful Grand canyon of Yelicrw- stone park. It is one of the most mar- vellous places of . the World. There before you is a valley smooth as the „. and more hotnesiele -Oh; lioWWarle=ss 1 was! That evening 1 was in 13oston.. IC walked up and down the.streets 'with- out a friend1 stood in the depot and saw the happy fathers, with their big bundles on their arms, heading for home. To -morrow was Thanksgiving. I saw the young married folks, with smile and good cheer, taking the grandchildren back to the old home- stead. I saw even some who were dressed in black smiling for the sake of others. But, though there was laughter and frolic and family gather- ings all around me, I was alone. I was in a, "silent place." No one cared for me No one In all that big city spoke to me except on business. 1 was in a "silent place." As my mind runs back those twenty years 1 say to --myeelf and to you, "How many of us are spiritua ally living in 'silent places?'" Are your neighbors part of you? Do they gratefully watch you? When you go through the wands not one leaf turns toward you unless you make it turn. Why? The leaves know you not. When you go through the streets r f a great city you meet men; you meet hundreds of men; you meet thousands of men. Do they spiritually see you..? Are you spiritually in the city and yet not part of it? How many of the rnen you pass in daily life look up at you with a smile and say, "You helped Me to Christ." "You extended to me a saving hand when I was struggling in the quicksands of a great temptation." "By the noble work of Your life you have been a Christian example which, has inspired me to lead a Christian life." How. many of all the men and women you have known in this City life can speak thus to you? One? Ten? One hundred? A thousand? Are you spiritually to your friends what I was in Boston many years ago? Are you in one of the "silent places?" Then, my brother, if you have neg- lected the spiritual opportunities of life for the great outside world, how have you dealt with those of your own home? Did you neven realize that a husband and wife could live side by side for years and never know each other in the deeper and in the holier sense? Did you never realize that there can be great "silent places" between brothers and sisters, between parents and children, between children and par- ents? "Silent plates" there are in which people's souls do not coxnmingle and know each other in holt/ fellow- ship. My God, dan it be that there are spiritual "silent places" between •us and the lives- of our dear ones? Can it be that there is any mother here who has not talked with her children a,bOut Christ? - Is there any wife here who haa not talked to her husband about Christ? Are there any men or women here who have spiritual "silent places" in which God is c'alling them to go and work in his vineyard? Will you go and labor for him? - But, strange to say, I find the "silent places'' where we should hear God's voice in the busy noise and bustle and hum of a great city. I find them amid the clanging of the electric cars. I find them in the rumble of the big. factories. I find them amid the hilarities of social gatherings as well as in the silence of the death chamber. These awful "si- lent places" should speak to us to -day In God's name; they should rouse us to the unfulfilled opportunities of Chris- tian work as never before. Let me illus.-. trate my thought by a simple experi- ence of my life which shows how a man can be in the world and yet not of it. Many years ago, when a college student, I had an opportunity to de- liver a few lectures during my Thanks- giving vacation in old New England. Mother did not want me to go, but I wished to make a beginning in the practice of public speaking as soon as possible, I left my Brooklyn home with a happy heart, but when Thanks- giving eve drew near I became more Faith You essnot6 exmicA to hare isith in Shiloh's con.umptioa Cure, the Lung Tonic, as a cum for Colds.ughs and all diseases of the atpseerj and 9, citnartetr .birieges, toatest- $100 Reward, $1(X) The readers 'of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that ecience has been able to oure In all i ts stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical , fraternity. Catarrh, being a constituvional dis- ease, Ter:in-Ares Constiteitine 11 treat- ment. Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foun- dation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred. Dollars for any case that it tails to cure. Send for a list of testimon- ials. Address F. J. CHENEY & Co., To- ledo, Ohio. Sold by all druggists, '75c, Take Hall's Family Pills for c nsti- pation. • The Doukhobors Alt Right. Mr. Malcolm MciVfillana, iof the McDonald, McMiltan Co., :railway eontiractors, ,efi Portage lba. Prairie, 11tanitolba, 'has just rretualn,ed from a business trip to !the, Dotukhdboir set- tlement, whiere e?aaele leontract with the foommunity idol do some of 'the hfeaviest ,work buillailn,g the Inns df itihe G. T. P. 'between PW-tage tia Pr,airia and thle T,ouelliVviond The. !Wendt:m(1d, McMillian Cot have for stoimie years itemplloyednitimbers of Dookhlobors in {Miele- {railhead builld- in-g ,operatiions, and hes a thigh opin- ion id the.le. capacity foir work of t;hiis kind. Some miernbeirs (tb& ecommulniter are inow 'quite in raid-- road' eviolrk, and two of there, who have in the past worked with t.lhe McDonaild, peorple, 'hove now, Or? 113e;hallt lote the iceman -unity, elrftterea in6o a fOrmall tontract to builld wane ithe la,eaviest portions elf the road eilanig the Assimilaoine asitl Qu'AppeiLle iriv,ers. Ncit. mach Witll be done leg exact this bat jelairaly thie spring the Daukhloilaoris, win put at work at least 1,000 Men, ain.d belleve,en 200 and ZOO' teams: Mr. MeMilllara says the Doullefbor community are ;thriving lin an excep- tional. d.eeereee 'They had this year veiry fine Crow. Halt Of that ;grain is t;hlreelbled., ania. Jit is of expellant quality. Tho ceinairatunity eigth t - eon. traetina engines,arith these- have broken a (large ameluirut tot land, in ireedireces for next iseason. A visitor is moist ritmipiresseel with" the immactel- ate ineatness of the Dpukhobor afage, Italie {evident Apes &fciOn- ten Ement proeperity, Thie colnaniunity vointinwe /to tliesinlay leinberprisie in varriouis ;ways. There :VMS Man ul a.atu red - fthis season, one if you 6ve not tried. it. We hese faith st. lly for ,use In. the villages. Oen:tient , blocks ore (ASV !beiorti, raanufe.ettrFed et on a ilarrIte scale near Yorkton, whiere, the community parchased tied:ally lairge sand pit. Prepare. - tions arde Asia ibeing mode for the es- tablishment of a wileolegaler wore - has aired marz thousands of the -most el31612` ate hotns0 Yrolrk tan to supply the col- /to/told. Cough. Throat or Lung trouble. If we , absolutely as we do. Sluloh has had au unbroken 110 convince you that it will .eure you we it. If tt doesn't cure you a eats you uo it does it cons you 25c. That fair. to -day. Shiloh cases and we not hesitate to ro that it will cute vales. Thie Wald areoted and 'the' enterprise gong on with in Ai not believe this we would not guarantee it 00 record of success for thirty yearn k has stood every possible test without failure. Itul that proof of its curative properties. Further Proof is found in the many testimonials qf those •who hays • tried Shiloh and been cured. Mr*. Archie Taylor. 'Asal bought Pe.,ughtnwritesbottlof Shiloh's Consumption Cure and found it very benefiCial I have two children asnd they had a terrible cough. 1 gave them evetything 1 could think of, but they 901 00 befter *mtil one evening my husband bought a bottle of Shiloh. We gave it to the children when they event to bed, and they slept all night. It cured them completely. I shall always keep it an the tome.** 603 filo 25e. with guarantee wherever .xnedicine is sold. Get Rid of That Cough Before them:tomer comes. Dr Wood's Norway Pine Syrup conquere Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Hoarseness'Bronchitie, and all Ditseases of the Throat andImngs sis Wherever there are sickly people with weak hearts arid deranged nerves, lifilbona's Heart and Nerve Pills will be found an effectual medicine They restore enfeebled, enervated,, -exhausted, de. vttallzed or over.worksx1 men and Icemen to vigor- ous health vie** Spring Medicine. As a spring medioine Burdtx k Blood Bitters has no, equal It tonal uo tbe system and removers al impurities from Ilse blood, sae takes away that tir- ed, weary feeling so prevalent in thespring • Suddenly Attacked. Children are often attacked 5a4deoly by painfu and dangerous colic, Cramps,Diarrhoes, Dysentery, 1 rare euro, which should altraye be kept in the house 7.holera Morbus, Cholera Intim..., eto Dr Fowl- er's Extract of Wild Strawberry is a prompt and OCTOBER Tlkere Is Quiclt Relief From 9 0 IWID LTV R, 131 in Trait -a -dyes. And they are a positive cure or constipatiou and alt blood impurities. Those who have used these marvelous little fruitliver tablets are the ones who praise them warmest. Here is one of hundreds of testimonials fron(those who owe their good health to Truit-a-tives "We tried Fruit -a -Hoes and like them exceedingly. We happened to need such o tintsedild athrierad blaanrindd lanessithiveeyr tdom ortist c ensod.mi suhrtcantood.keep„}trztillits-as bitylcinnAe aRDIvrasy,scat,uorawrytiTisTt I.whaxv"e or Fruit. Liver Tablets. 500;44130x. At druggists. Idanufactureil by Frult-n-tives limited. Ottawa. eeenetweseeeetiteesetteeneteneteetetteektedmittesttmteettteet" "The label that protects" 66 " TVhen a young feliow isn' anything in particular, it's a mighty valuable asset iJT he LOOKS like something special." • On si" Paw.; rogressBran Ctoe 2 makes it a downright economy t 170 0 Y. right, • the e "Progress Brand" costs just as little as good c", ,,hes n be made for. And that is as little as any man can L.Tord ;_o pay. Right fabrics—right tailoring— right style5 — right fit — bave dollar -and -cent market _value. Look for it Prog,ress Brand" bothing sets the price standard, just as it sets 14, t• 1, the qualt iy -standard. '1 Tliia ineene31 te you. hicke ii bealtlay roofs leak —and you'll oick-stoCk thou pat Read Paters -ores tight, water -pee tien nor -baro -s, c out-buildingn. etto trounde, uo Zet us rend y f our itRI-Uf. When writing eater ;carries 1' .r.ofing, meet• ! PATERSON . Toronto VETE OBIEVE, V. Veterinar, COI Is bested. Ci ntochisate. Vs, tit/ teeidenG04 IDI 2tot1fe-c1 If MOURN V. enteric) Veterie, bar ttb4 Medical A...e SmareCellege. Trts, - elexmottrdere' a specialty. treet, Benterth eive prompt a -A GRE1G lig, STEWART The Pandora Reservoir 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 dirtIt has no sharp angles. All angles -are made with roundino, curves, and tile whole reservoir is • beautifully enamelled. IVicClary's are the only range makers in Canada with a plant for making enamelled steel reservoirs, and that is why the Pandora is the only range that has a one-piece reservoiT. laryt Pan Warehouses and Factories s London, Toronto, Montreal. Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, N.B., Et avsaiit liken TIM"- 47frarle I E. A. LATIMER Sole Agent, Seaforth. Don°1 Enter Business eollege • ", r ..A 'nes° until you have read our handsome, new, illustrated catalogue. It tells about a thoroughly good commercial school, one whose growth has been remarkable in the Past few years and whose only claim for patronage has been that of genuine merit. It is the most rapidly growing collegein Ontario' has a.profession- ally trained staffof teachers, new quarters and equipment. Unsttrpassed anywheee. All its graduates get positions. Enter at any time. El? IN One of the famous Fedeeated Colleges. W. D. E L R, Principal.rt VEGETA3L flair Rene Makes the hair grow long and heavy, and keeps ft saftandgi Stops falling hair and -cures dandruff. And it always color to gra hair. Sold for fifty years. 11.1"ViVal"".111= A, Special Furniture Sale ismixEmgmemxgass. FOR THE NEXT 30 DAYS We will give a large discount on on all Furniture. This is an opportunity that shrewd buyers cannot afford to miss. Our stock is large, Don't fail Da call and secure the bargains that will be offered at this big discount sale., noraptly attended to night or day. BROADFOOT, BOX & 00.1 S. T. HOLMES, Manager. w▪ in Rolidtsr, 0 the Donal • k, Serefr • X. T., Bar e beOkStOre, Xi jtccmtighe Cmve mem r - at • INICKINSON AND la ore, ete.. Geder B. 1,13. DEMI oved from Inas, 436 at'd Dr. Jc Office and 11 ibtdee 78 Graduate of Valve nine, member el 1 Retina of 0eter16; ainical.School,Ch • nal, London, En 1 . London, Engiaud. • sterse Main titre asteestvered Isom OM -a -and Itesi del Methodist thumb. Tat, Coroner for theCse DRS. SC puma Goderieh street.op J. 41.30011, gradi member Ont* Sargeotit CO C.tor LURAY, gall medalist College bf Phy :A 4 11071070Eit LA. Auctioneer eerth. Being emieretending t eeents, places me prices. tlhs. 110-PMe AlI at Lei S,Lo sitsterledte, 19.11.1•11.1011.1M alive o pay the Quota