HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-10-20, Page 6,
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REAL ESTATE FOR BATA
RAZING FARM FOR, SALE OR RENT.-
Cantin farm, Stanley township, 145 aoros.
Apply to R. S. HAYS, Barrister, &Worth.
1955-tf
WARM FOR RALE -For Bele, the east half of lob
4, on the Ilth csooeeslion of TuokeramIth, eon
-
being 60 sores, needy all cleared and la a geed
ate of oultivetion. There is, on the promisee, a
Weed bank barn, 40 ft x 56 ft, and a oomforteble
dwelling house, also a good orehard of winter fruit.
Terme mace:Able. Apply to JOHN WHITEMAN,
Chiselhurst, Ontario 1971.8
ileiROFITABLE INVESTMENTS. -I on lend
I money on improved quarter sections of 160
acres each at from 8 to 10 per cent. per annum.
Only first mortgaeos taken. Ample amenity given
Torrent' Titles System la perfect. From $800 up
CMZ be lent on farms worth froth $1,000 to $2,000.
Fordurther particulars write to -m. J. A. JACK.
SON, Barrister, etc.. Ponoka, Albert. 1959.1if
"E1LRM FOR SALE. -Lot 81, Conceselon 3, Mill
J' Road. Tuckeremith, contnining 100 aores, in
a high etste of cultivation and well uuderdrained
and well fenced. A gond briok house and bank
bane 50 x 90 feet, with stone stabling underneath.
Plenty of good. water. It ie within a tulle and a
half of Brumfield station and five miles from Sea.
forth. It is ane of the choicest farms in the °Minty
there not being one foot of WA5i0 land on it. AP-
ly on the premises or addclese DUNCAN MoTAN-
H, Brumfield. • 1970-tf
MURK FOR SALE OR TO RENT. -For sale or
1. rent lot 20. con.. 2, EL R. S., Tackersmith,
containing 100 acres U cleared except about nye
storm of good hardwood. All underdrained, well
fenced and In a good state of cultivation, A good
brlok house and two berusone with stone stabling
underneath. Plenty of good water and a good bear-
ing orohard. Thie Cann is well adapted for either
stock or grain. About midway between Seatorth
and Clinton. Apply on the premises or Seafarer
P. O. H. TOWNSEND, Proprietor. 194241
_at -OUSE AND -LOTS FOR SALE. -For sale, briok
• house and 2 lots in Seatorth. One lot 'sees
on North Main Street and the other on West Wil-
liam, Street. The house is a comforipabla brick
eotiage and contains 3 bedroones, dining room, sit-
ting room and kitchen, with good cellar under the
whole house. Herd and soft water in the house.
There Isola) a good stable and driving shed. All
kinds of fruit on the lot Apply to 3. L. ALLA.V,
Londeaboro, or 50 0. W. ATKINSON, Seaforth.
1905x4tf
-DOR SALE -A farm conteinino 100 acres of land,
✓ beine Lot 6, Conceseion 7, in the Towrship of
Tuckersmith, five miles from Seaforth and belong-
ing to the estate of the late Michael O'Keefe: This
farm issuitable for cultivation or pasture and will
be sold on reasonable terms. For full partioulars
apply to THOMAS BROWN, Auctioneer, 8eaforth
P. O. •196141
'ETARM FOR SALE, -Lot 10, Concesaion 4, Hlb
✓ bert, conterning /00 sores, more or less It is
offered for sale on easy tonna. On the place
are a good frame house, large barn with goad stab-
ling underneath. There's also one acre of bush
and the farm is well drained and in a splendid
atate of ouitivation. Handy to market, school and
church. For further particulars apply on the place
to ROBERT LAVERY. 1954x4tf
'LURK FOR SALE. -Lot 88. Concession 7, tie-
r Killop. This farm contains 100 scree of good
lend, has on It a bank barn 64 x 64 with 8-foet stone
stabling. Also a good 8 -roomed btiok house, or
chard, good water, eta. It is six miles from Se'i.
forth and itt miles from Constance post offica Apply
- to WIL R. BLANSEEARD, Sturgeon Fella, Ont. or
tio E. HINCHLEY, &taloa. 1964.f
flOOD FARM FOR eaLE.-For 'sale, East half
'jr of Lot 14, Concession 8 Hullett. containing 60
woree,. all cleared; well fenced and in a good state of
cultivation. There is a good brick house, bank
barn, driving house, pig pen, etc.. There le a good
orehavii and never failing spring. About three
miles from Censtance, 3 from Londeaborn station
and 7 wiles from Clinton: This is a choice farm
and will be sold on easy terms. Apply on the
farm or address, Constar:1°13P. 0„ A. TYERMAN.
1969x8
OR SALE. -Frame howls and lot situated in the
viltaee of Kinburn. seven and one-half miles
from Seeforth.. The house is one and one-helf
storeys, heving nye roems, summer kitchen and
woodshed cotineeted, also good stone foundation
end cellar; also good frame stebte on cement
floor and stone foundation. The house is suitable
for a doctor, s aired farmer or clergyman. Theta
is also a neat shop in conneetion, suitable for doe.
torts office or shoe shnp. The buildings are in good
repeire painted, and the premises well fenced and
supplied with hard and soft water. For particulars
apply to JAMES STANLEY. Constance. 1972x4
eARM FOR SALE -Lot 35, concession LUeborne,
contalning 99 acres, situated on ethe London
Road, 1 mile from Henseli, and 4 miles from Exet-
er. It is in a first class state of cultivation being
wen drained st itti tile, newly all summer bellowed
and seeded to grassomarly all fenced with new Car-
ter wire fence. On the farm is a stone home and
plenty of autbulldings, including one of the finest
poultry houma in Ontario. There are two twelle, a
spring creek, and a flowing spring that would fill a
three-inch tile. Apply on the farm or to Kemal'
ptist office. BENJAMIN HOGGARTEL 195841
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MIARM FOR SALE. -For gale, lot 18, oonceision
je 4, in Hibbert, contain:ng 100 acres. On the
place is a brlok d gelling 110390, wish frame
kitaben, with ail necessary outbuildings and lots of
good etabline ; well fenced, wen drained and plenty
of good water. There are 9 scree of buah. It Is
situated two and a half miles from Dublin (dation,
where there to a. good market. Convenient to
salmis! and °touches of all denorninstions. Apply
on the premisea or address ANDREW MeLELLAN,
Dublin P. O. 196511
LIAM AND MILL PROPERTY FOR SALE. -
✓ For sale the old Bell Farm and Mill Property,
on the London road, Tuckersmith, remony emu.
pied by the late John MoNevin. There are 100
acres, all °leafed but about four acres. Good
buildings and the farm well ;underdrained and Jo a
high state of ooltivation, all meded to grate except
about 80 acres. Alm the grist ant saw mill prop-
erty on the farm. It is within half a mile of Kippen
station and 2 miles from Rens alt and a good busi-
ness has alwaye been done at the mills. The farin
and mill property will be sold together or ceparate.
ly to Bulb purohasier. Terms easy. Apply to
DAVID C. liicLEAN, Kippent I968-51
VILLAGE PROPERTY FOR SALE. -For sale in
Egmondville, a comfortable frame housiewith
three acres of laud in a very fertile condition with
plenty of large and small fruits for family use also
lenge barn and outbuildings in good repair. The
house has been recently overhauled and contains
seven rooms with chola° cellar, full Mee, good wood
eked, &leo summer kitchen and an excellent spring
well and good ofetern. Anyperson desiring a elm-
fortable, quiet Ware of this description, covenient
to town, should not miss this opportunity. Will be
sold reaeonably and on easy terms. For further
perticulare apply on the premises or address Eg.
mondville P. O., WM. BUBOLZ* 194311
eVAR/11 FOR SALE -The undersigned enter for
X sale the North half of Let No. 8, in the first
conoestion of Tuckeramith, on London Road and
within ono -half mile of the fieurishing village of
Hensall. There Is situated o this tine property a
good frame dwelling, 24x28 ad 14x20 and bank
barn 50x42. The 1 arm is all undr good greed, well
fenced end drained with three gckd wells, including
a windmill. ft Is a most desi ble property for
anyone wanting' to purchase a.nd will be sold on
eager terms. The Queen's Hotel at Heneall Is ale°
offered by the undersigned for eale and. is wall
equipped and well situated. For partioulers apply
to JAMES COXWORTEL Hensell P. 0. 19744
• FOR SALE. -For sale,Lot 28, Conoesaion
X 2, II. R. S, one of the betrb farms in Tucker-
graith, aonteining 100 sores. It IV an exieption Illy
clean farm with n3 waste land; all seeded to grass
hunt of its having been In pasture five or eiX years.
It is extra well supplied with water. On the farm
le a good brick house and tgo hems with stone
stabling underneath with cement flaore. Plenty of
fruit trees of different kind. It is pleasantly alt.
*laded in a good neighborhood, being one-half mile
from echoed and 8t. miles from 8-eafortio Apply on
the prenneea or address JOHN ROBB, Seaforth
P. 0„ Ont. 1964.51
ARM FOR SA.LE-North half of Lob 12, Con.
X oesalon 6, Morris, containing 100 acres, siturded
on the gravel road, four and a half miles west of
Bruezeht and four miles from Belgrave. There are
80 aeres °leered, web • drained, fenced and in a
good state of cultivation, at present seeded down.
The remaining 20 sores is covered with excellent
timber, There is a good frame house with stone
cellar, good frame barn with stone stabling under-
neath. a good bearing orohard and an abundance of
good water. There is a ohuroh and a post dile
within half a mile ant a Reheat within three quar-
ters ole mile. For furtrer partfeulara apply to
MRS. B. &MILLIE, Hensel!. 1968x351
ARM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 18, C incession
3, Hay, contnening 100 sores in a good slate
of cultivation. There are on the premiees a good
frame house 22 x 32, aleo a frame kitehen and wood
shed. 18 x 40, all with cellar underneath. There la
also a large bank bean. 40 x 70, with good brick
stabling underneath and all cement floor). Also a
driving shed, 28 x 60, all in good repair. There are
three never -failing wells on the premises and a good
bearing orehard. Aldo 18 aeres of good hardwood
busk The farm is web fenced and well underdrain-
ed with tile. 15 18 situated within a mile and a half
of the village of Hensell and school within halt a
mile of farm. As the propieisor whams to retire It
will be (sold oa easy tenons. For farther particulars
apply on the premises or 53 Hemel! P. 0. JAMES
BUT/MON. 1967.51
Itanatill:Rin.:: 71:7
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Sunlight Soap means less than half the labor reqUired in washing With corn -
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LEVER BRoT RS LIMITED, TORONTO • 1 8a
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THE MEANEST OF SINS
INGRATITUDE MAY BE FRUITFUL.
OF THE WORST RESULTS.
THE UPS AND DOWNS OF .LIFE
Troubles Forgotten May Affect ,
Again In Kind Unless We Cease
• Practicing the Same Sins That
Flung Us into Our Past and Gone
• Difficulties—The Trying- School of
Life.
' Entered according to Act of Parliament of Canada,
in the year mon by Frederick Diver, of Toronto,
at the Department of Agriculture, Ottawa.
; Los Angeles, Cal., Oct. 15. -That in-
gratitude may be one of the meanest
of sins and fruitful of the worst results
is shown in this sermon, the preacher
taking his text from Genesis xl., 23,
"But forgat him."
How soon "the Plowman can over -
;take the reaper," as the ancient pro-
phet said. How soon after the harvest
field glows with its crop a ripening
grain, ready for cutting and garnering,
does the plow come to tear un the rich
soil vvith its ruthless share! How soon
the midnight frosts cover the fruits
with their cold, clam.my death sweat!
The favorites of fortune are sometimes
rapidly lifted to success, but not so
quickly as the victims of misfortune
are dragged. down to ruin The stone
drops from the highest cliff t6 the bot-
tom of the deep canyon more swiftly
than the powerfully winged eagle soars
up and up until he dyes his feathers
with the golden pigments of the rising
sun. The king's frown and the .king's
smile may follow each other even more
rapidly than the changes' of the fickle
weather of the spring, which King
Solomon 'described when he said, "And
the clouds return after the rain."
Could any lark with a broken pinion
fall' to the ground more suddenly than
Napeileon ,I11. fell from his throne? In
1359 he was considered the most pow- •
erful ruler of all Europe. His great
uncle's name, his brilliant Coup d'etat,
which placed him upon the -French
throne after he haerbeen elected presi-
dent for ten years; his fostering of the
arts in his kingdom; ,his past military
record, circled a halo around his pet-
sonaliteh and made him "the man of the
hour." When the Suez Canal was open-
ed. November 16, 1869, all Europe came
to participate in the marriage of the
waters of the Mediterranean with the
waters of the Red Sea. Many kings
and queens, princes and princesses
were there, but the royal yacht, which
carried on board the;beautiful EmpresS
Eugenie, was the centre of all eyes. At
that, gathering she was the ruler ol
kings and the queen of queens. No black;
cloud. darkened her horizon. Yet in a
little over one year the Franco-Prus-
,slan war broke out. Napoleon Ms in
a short time was an ex -emperor, Sedan
had been. fought, the Tuileries was ex-
changed for,Chiselhurst. Then the only,
crown of Eugenie was a crown of
thorns, pressed into her agonized brain.
PILLS
Rave Restored Thousands of
Canallian Women to
Health and Strength.
I There is no need kr so many women ta
suffer pain and weakness, nervousness,
sleeplessness, anaemia, faint and dizzy
spells and the numerous troubles which
render the life of woman a round of sick.
ness and suffering.
Yeun$ girls budding into womanhood,
who suffer with pains and headacheseand
whose face is pale and the blood watery,
will find Milburn's Heart and Nerve
rills help them greatly during this period.
Women at the change ef life, who are
nervous, subject te hot flushes, feeling .of
pins and needles, palpitation of the heart,
etc., are tided over the trying time of
their life by the use of this wonderful
remedy.
• It has a wonderful effect on a woman's
eystem, makes pains and aches vanish,
brings color to the pale cheek and sparkle
to the eye.
They build up the system, renew lost
vitality, improve the appetite, Make rich,
red blood and dispel that weak, tirede
listlesseno-ambition feeling.
son. Pre 10X, QR 3 FOR R1.25
ALL DCAIERS.
T1,e1 . ilburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
- - - -
-wan one mighty -crash the N poleonic
dynasty fell into a heap of r ins.
"Poor Empress 'Eugenie!" you say.
Why poor Eugenie? She l hak po mo-
nopoly of trouble. To be hurled in a
few months from a throne into exile
-was a startling fate, but to how Many
have misfortunea come as swiftly and
as poignantly? They potince upon us
as swifily as a hawk darts for his
prey. They come upon Ili as quickly as
they. came to Joseph and to the chief
baker and the chief butler tin the Egyie-
tian Prison. But though they have
come to us quickly in the past, 'yet
many of us are like the chief butler of
Pharaoh's court. As soon las our trine/
bles leave us we forget, all about them
and their wounds. We foriget that the
same kind of troubles may afflict us
again. Thus we go on practicing the
same sins that flung. us into our past
difficulties. Let me draw from thiS
simple Bible story some 'practi-
cal gospel lessons. May erdu and I not
be like the fergetful butler,' but like the
-45
unforgetful Joseph, who' in his pros-
perity remembered his eld In
Jacob
and his brethren and who ,n his beau-
tifula forgiving nature will' always re-
main as one of the Old iTestarnent's
pure and noble types of the life, of
Jesus Christ.
Like the restored butler 'are we be-
cauSe, in the first Place, We have for-
gotten the promises we made when go-
ing through the struggles of youth.
When injustices were praCticed upon
us, when we were working during, the
day: and studying during the night for
an education, When we had to wear
shabby clothes and had to hear the
sneers and the taunts of the world,
what did .we then say? "Ah, if_I ever
succeed in life I will help all the young
men and women I can who are in the
same predicament as I am." We have
succeeded. Are we fulfilling our -prome
ises? As successful Ministers have we
'sympathy with young ministers? As
successful doctors have we sympathy
with young physicians? As successful
merchants have we syrripathy with
young merchants? .As suecessful con-
tractors have we symp_athyt with young
contractors? No. That As not the gen-
eral rule. When the door e of 'Phara-
oh's court were opened for. us and suc-
cess was ours, like the chief butler we
forgot all about out past promises and
the Josephs whom we lett behind in
prison. We forgot Our troubles almost
immediately. This statement is true
not only of one, but of Many depart-
ments of life.
How was it in reference l to your 'col-
lege days? Who was the 'meanest and
the most contemptible man on your
faculty? Was he the great brained
and world -honored Markt Hopkins or
Eliphalet Neat or Timothy Dwight or,
as the boys used to .lovingly call him,
Jitrony MeCosh, who, thoUgh the ablest
of theologians and me-..aplaysicians,
with hi.s' north of Ireland brogue, al-
ways talked about "Me clollege?" Was
he the man who, in a Word, had the
whole university at his feet? No. The
meanest and most, confeinptible edu-
cator in your college faculty was a
young tutor. He, was juiit out of col-
lege himself. He ought' to have had
sympathy with the trUggleS of college
life .11 any one. should have had. He
was disliked by his own classmates.
You learned that from your older bro-
ther, wile graduated the year before
you entered the univerSity. But though
that young tutor was just out of col-
lege himeelf and ought to have had
sympathy with the boys, Yet he spent
Most of his time spying upon them. He
"conditioned" as many as he could at
exa,minalions. He asked the most un-
fair kind of questions in the class
room. He had a perfect genius for
saying bitter things. He seemed to
feel that the chief end of every college
tutor Was to make the lives of the stu-
dents just as miserable as possible.
Not' only that, but outside of the class
room he ewas alvrays reaming around
the halls and the grounds and the town
to find some delinquent and to report
,some breaking of the collegee rules.
The chief butler of Pharaoh's court in
college life forgets the Josephs whom
he has left behind in prison.
What is true in reference to school
life is equally true- in reference to the
factory and the departmental store. The
head of the department who is most
cruel and hard-hearted and remorse-
less to those ander him is the man who,
only a few years ago, groaned and suf-
fered and prayed to God for deliver-
ance under a like treatment. What is
true about overseers is true about capi-
talists. The rich man who is the most
cruel in collecting the last dollar, the
last cent, owing him a,nd who will`
strike the hardest bargain is invariably
the man who was once so poor that he
knew all the pangs -of hunger, all the
benumbments of cold, all the horrors
that come from facing a flinty -eyed
creditor. My friend, where is the chief
butler of Pharaohs .court who- has for-
gotten the trials and agonies of the
past struggles of life in his dealings
with others?
Oh, that we -would be ore likerJos-
eph and less like the c lief butler in
our dealings with our fellow men! If
you are a man you have without doubt
read that book which is so dear to near-
ly all boys'.heartsi, called "Tom Ilron-n
at Rugby." There the English author,
Thomas Hughes, writes an. autobiogra-
phy of his early life, He gives an ac-
count. of the "fag system" of the grat
public school of England, the school in
which -Dr. Arnold made his name as a
o_
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teacher honored for all time. The art- get an educatIon and go to cortege, nut
tie boys In Hughesday were not only she could not She did, however, eclue
allowed to be "hazed" by the big boys, oath herself enough to become a. 001117 -
but they had to be their servants, They. try schooltee..cher. But what she could
had to carry the Water and blaek the not do herself she oet her heart on
shoes and rftn the 'errands of the older :: 7 ur doing. You were her only bro-
students. On bitterly cold nights, with t 'er. When you were a little fellow run -
their little shivering bodies, they had n ng barefooted about your father's
to crawl- in between the sheets of the farm, caring more for fishing and play -
big boys' beds and warm them before ing baseball with the boys than for
they could go AZ their own beds. They Work, she would call you in and say:
had to do everything the big boys or- eNow, Samtiel, you must come and get
dered them to do,. There we find the your lesson‚ Remember, some day you
law of Rugby was the same as is the are going to college. You must study
universal law of life. As a rule, the hard. You are to be a great, rich law -
boy who had the hardest time as a lit- Yet- for sister to be proud of,"
tie boy was the hardest upon his "fag" You finished your course at the coun-
when he became • a big boy. What try school, Your father said you must
American boy has not Dad the big
lump ,porrie into his throft when he
read of the struggles a little Tom
Brown? And, • oh, the prayer of grate-
fulness we uttered when the "big boy"
of that book, that "gond bigeboy," came
to the rescue of little Tom! My friends,
cannot we be the "good big boys" of
life? All of us have served our ap-
prenticeshAps as "fags." We have had
our hard times. Shall we not try to
make the burdens of the little "fags"
about us lighter, as Joseph tried to do,
or are we going to be hard upon our
fellow men, as was the chief butler
who forgot about the troubles of Jos-
eph, who was once his fellow prison-
er?
There is a. centripetal as well as a
centrifugal lesson, resulting from this
butler of my text ignoring his past mis-
fortunes. The one forgetfulness blinds
his eyes and hardens his heart to the
suffering's of .others. ''The second for-
getfulness blinds his eyes and hardens
his heart to the threatening misfortunes
which are ahead. • Because this chief
butler had safely weathered one hueri-
f lif h. i very a t
cane on the sea o e es IT P.
to forget to ipok to the eeaworthiness
of the craft and to feel that from now
on there -will be nothing. but asmooth
pa age and no threatening storms
ah d.
three days after the interpretation
of the chief butler's and the chief bak-
er's dreams is past. Joseph had said to
to the baker "You must die"; to the
butler, "You shall be restored as the
cuprbearer of the king." We hear the
tramp of the soldiers. The warden of
the prison enters. He first points to
the baker and announces to him that
the king has condemned him and or-
ders him out to be hanged. To the
butler the warden turns and says:
"Cup -bearer, thou art free. The king
bids thee hasten as his faithful servant
to his palace." The interpretation of
the two dreams came true. Now, if
the chief butler had feared that he
might be flung again into prison and
suffer the fate of the baker, what would
he have done :when he donned the uni-
form of a royal servant? The same as
you would do in a similar condition.
Methinks I might see him as soon las
he goes to his room after the first
night's banquet is over. He paces up
up and down as he says: "I must get
Joseph out of prison; I must have him
by •i-ar side; I must have this interpre-
ter of dreams here to warn me against.
any dangers which are ahead. He
must keep me from doing wrong
again." But, no. That was not the
chief butler's way. After the different
court officials had congratulated
him he hunted up his gold
chalices and looked at their
sides. There he sees his own smiling
face. Then he said: "Aha, I am safe!
I `am safe! No' danger now! I am safe
forever!" Then in his supposed safe-
ty he 'forgot the warning signals of
the past. , Perhaps he fell into the same
evil ways which he once followed, which
evil ways may ultimately have caused
his execution, like the baker's. His
decomposing flesh may have been eat --
en by the hyenas and the vultures who
banquet off the dead bodies of all
Egyptian criminals. My brother, can
it be that we are forgetting our past
misfortunes? Have we forgotten the
awful results of our past sins? Do we
forget the patience and the pardon a
the love of God, which once rescuet
us, as the butler was pardoned froM As I speak to father, as I speak to
go to work on the farm, "No, fattier,"
said she; "Samuel must go to college,"
"But I cannot afford it." "Well," she
aid, "I can do extra work after the
sehool is over. I am saving up my
school rrioay for Samuel's college
bilis." Your mother did not have mueh
to say. Your sister did it all, .IIer
money helped pay your way. Her -rit
pushed you through. What liar • you
ever done for her? "Oh," you aeswer,
paid her back her money, with in-
terest," The few dollars you gave her
did. not cost you anything. I tell you,
it cost your sister her very blood. Don't
leave her Up there in the country a3
though ismu were ashamed ,of her. Don't
tell me that she is not fitted to move
In your wife's social circle. I tell you,
she is a queen; 'I tell you, the best room
in your house is not too good for her.
0 butler, what have you done for the
Joseph who gave you your educational
start in life? :--
Then 'what have you done for that
man who helped you in a time of great
persecution? I do not know what that
time was, but you do. The whole
world became black before you. Ev-
erybody was turning toward you a look
of suspicion. Even your best friends
seemed to be wavering. Then that
'man came forward and with pen or
voice or cheque book tided you over
the difficult place. You told him then
you would never forget him: • You told
him if he was ever in trouble half of
what. you have would be his. Is it?
Have you ever divided with him? He
has had his troubles since your day
of troubles. Have you gone to him
with help? You say, "Hehas not come
and asked me for help?" Did you ask
himforhelp when in that darkest day.
of your life he sprang to your side?
No. He came because you needed him.
0 main, how have you treated your
Joseph, enjailed to -day in the Egyp-
tian dungeon?
But I cannot close without just one
more thought suggested by my text.
The greatest opportunities of gospel
service may com_e to a man through
his past experience if he renounces his
sins and remembers his faults. I have
absolutely no more respect for this sel-
fish character of the butler than I have
for a Judas or an Ia.go or for a Lad7
Macbeth or a Jezebel. He was a miser-
able, contemptible, despicable hireling,
with a heart of stone. He would for-
get any one who had served him. But
no sooner did Pharaoh dream his dream
'and no one could interpret it than at
once the butler thought of Joseph. You
can see him, with flushed cheek and
gea.ssy eye, pushing his way into the
throne room. You can see him with
reverence and sorrow written upon his
face. "Ah,' he says, "master, I have
done wrong. I have forgotten my
friend Joseph, who is now in prison.
Send for him; and he will interpret thy
dream." Pharaoh sent for Joseph. Jos-
eph came. Tbe chief butler at the
last moment was able and willing to
open the way for the future prime min-
ister to save a nation from disease and
hunger and death. -My friends, at this
the sixth hour, the ninth hour, the
tenth hour, the eleventh hour, of your
refusal to do your duty to the King
kings and Lord of lords will you not
speak the right word? Will you come
to Christ and bring your sinful friends
to Christ as the ungrateful butler
brought Joseph and Pharaoh face to
face?
death by his royal master?
The misfortunes of the past can be
reproduced in our lives if we go, on re-
producing the evils which once caused
our downfall. The forgetfulness of the
butler may be compared to the dyspep-
tic's forgetfulness of his physical ago-
nies. Nature takes him in hand and
flays him with scorpions. By eating
what he ought not to eat some night
he nearly dies. He is careful one day,
one week, perhaps one month. Then
the past sufferings are forgotten. The
cravings of a gourmand are satisfied.
Another night of horror or perhaps
even death is the result. The butler's
forgetfulness is like that of the drunk-
erd. Delirium tremens has gripped
him. He imagines serpents are crawl-
ing over his bed. Demons, with eyes
of burning coals of fire, are glaring at
him. Wild beasts, with their angry
roar and their glittering white teeth
and their lolling red tongues and their
sharp claws working convulsively, are
springing upon him. But in a few
weeks he feels so well and strong that
he forgets his past terrors. Another
glass of fiery liquid turns his brain into
a madhouse. ,Th betler is like you or
me if we forget the past evils which
we brought upon ourselves through our
past sins. Oh God, teach us never to
take our eyes off the awful precipices
of temptation over which we have tum-
bled again and again into the yawning
chasms of despair unless it be to raise
them in gratitude to the face of our
Saviour who, though exalted 'to the
right hand of God, remembers us still.
Let us never forget our rescue and our
deliverer as the butler forgot Joseph.
Is the ingratitude ofthe chief butler
to Joseph duplicated, 0 man, in your
life? You are a successful lawyer.
Your income may be ten or twenty
thousand dollars a year. You are one
Of the most honored men in the com-
munity. How did you get. a start in
life? "Oh," you answer with pride, "I
started myself. When I came to this
city I did not have a frieed here. I
worked my own way through college.
I was a poor farmer's boy. I am a self
made man." Are you? Oh, you miser-
able boaster! You are a contemptible
butler of haraoh's court. You have
forgotter our Joseph. You are no
more a self made man than I am.
Away back on your father's farm you
had an older sister. She was the "peek..
horse" Of the family. She wanted to
Cash or Cure
If Shiloh's Consumption Cure fails to cure
e •
your Cold or Cough, you get back all you
IL paid for it. You are sure of a Cure or
1 - the Cash:
If it wasn't a sure mire, this offer would
not be made.
r Can, anything be fairer
tE.- If you have a Cold, Cough, or any disease
t. of the Throat, Lungs or Air Passages, try
SHILOH
313
25c. per bottle. All dealers guarantee it.
1
mother, ,as I speak to wayward friends,
thus may I be speaking to the stranger
within the gates who thinks he has no
friend. Stranger, think not thus any
mora This is not a strange place. This,.
Is God's house. Perhaps years tie -,o'
there was some young man or some
young woman who might have brought
you to Christ if he or she had tried.
But the opportunity was neglected.
You say you are parted forever. Nay,
not forever, You are not parted even
now. Let me lead you to the king. Let
me utter the words that another neg-
lected to speak.
I speak unto thee these same words
which Peter spake unto the cripple at
the beautiful gate. "Silver and gold
have Itnone, but such as I have give I
unto three. In the name of Jesus rise
up , and walk." Wilt thou rise and
walk? Then thou art with My Mas-
ter. Then I am the butler who, by the
power of the holy spirit, bath brought
joseph and Pharaoh into royal and
heavenly companionship.
0
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought;
Bears the
Signatura of
— sbartne and Hibber ual
Fire Insurance" °company !have (made
a CajIlli of 5 cents oo the dallor for.
The year's losses.
—In Mitchell there a:1'1U eomething
like eighty pilaces of business along
tiheir Main street, and in the reethIgie
OUB belief thiey are as floalows ;—
*Iffethodists, 44; Ohu.rch, 16;
Presbyterians, 15; Ca Males, 5; Gut'.
man. Clleureli, 1. - '
To Cure a Cold in,One 'Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab-
lets. All drug -gists refund_ the
money if it fails to cure. E. W.
Grove's signature is on each box.
Price, 25o. 1930-1 yr.
-The bartns ailed season's oriel) of
James Brenton, a Oorbeyviale, near
'Belleville, were Idestroyid by ?ire
tray Saturday m-orning. The cheese
If actors- it -Neerthi Smith. man Lake -
field arid about $2,000 evairthtof
Falls, was burned oin Saturday
barn of J. G. Oadbiaan, mar Niagaira
Palls, were bullied ton. Sat u.rday
night. Two 'La -totting %oases were
burned in itbe builtdings,
--Tba Postmlastelr-Genelnal has de-
cided to thirloW opei positions in the
oity past rofficettleroughout °meads
'to deaf mutes. Six are 'W 'be ap-
pointed .at once in the Toronto post
offioe„ and ,a piroportionale .numbea-
in othee city post offices. They *ill
require .tt be autfiniontly educated
tip perform the ordinary sok•tation ote
,mattlere, and be ulndeT five age
of thirty_ years.
When the,Head aches and
the Tongue is Coated
it is Biliousness or Constipatiop-. Torpid Liver Is
at the bottom of the trouhlt-- And it takes
Fruit-a-tives to make thatlazy liver work.
Fresh fruit is fine for these troubles, but one
can't eat enough fruit to do much good. The medicinal
elements are in too small proportiothe ripe fruits:
A clever Ottawa n, in tawa physician discovered a method by
Which fruit juices could be combined so that their
'medicinal action would be increased many times.
Fruit-a-tives are these fruit juices in tablet form. Thor
sweeten and tone the stomach and liver, cure Constipation and
remove all blood impurities. One rruit-a-tives tablet has the
same curative effect on liver and bowels as dozens .of oranges,
apples, figs and prunes. And this action is as gentle as the
fruit juices themselves.
I have been suffering with Torpid Liver and Constipation, and
find` that Pruit-a-tives are just vzhat my syetem requires to relieve
these complaints. I hope many more sufferers will try them."
MRS. WM. TREFORY, Burnside, Often,
abtnglts117
gem eun-ecalt
or snows.
.'Velien en
find thos
13.
Paterso
eater .1
PRI
Ken
N fiF1
mato
or Fruit Liveti:Tablets.
se. a bax. At all druggists. Manufactured by FrUit-aatives
V.Viit0o04PO____Wii\tioi Z4PeRg
1.
MONTiltine
--(Zet
eltr, se
"r6 fabel.that
protects
di
"Where one fellow reads a man's
character in his face, a hundred read
il in his dolhes."
How do the hundreds read yours
—well dressed, the.refore careful,
has good taste, and is prosperous?
Or badly dres:=.cd—therefore careless
and not doing well' ?
rogres‘e.D Brand" Cl
tee,
06 q:5:s
On Aiemttitm '
Ptogress te.nnetts
ES
Sesferth
Bolleiton;
tfliee open ewers
Main Amer Sesfor
I
RS.
0011V4
tat fOribCDOtrath011
Blittrkt Seam&
99;1
IL Oast Bulb*
way Puislio. 431
abeekstore, Kalil 3
is the clothing for men whO want their appearance to coutt
FOR them, instead of against them. It 10°1:5- good, and it
makes the man in it 1ooz good.
Theresuccess ahead for the maii
who backs up his gOod appearance
in Progress Brand Clothes, with
good work.
Clothes can't niake a gentleman.
L.4
9
REIG & STEWAR1:
But if he IS "Progress Brand' F.' .51
rqothes-will make him look the part. I—
Look for it
Tale Do
eitera
Yoe*
Anna
oak of Com
e. *Wee in
BONAW
, eta, Goelerl
5L.
DR.
DBN
removed from 418
ew teem 436 Y4
Common ranges maks size co 4i man mit&
is your Coal
Wasted or Used?
a,
- It is comparatively
easy to build a range
that will* make a lot of heat, but it requires the
exact science of Pandora range building to produce
a range that will use all the heat in the coal without
waste.
A common rang 6 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 certain
Tae Pandrffe Renee makes ths
ItottietAra stale.
rife
that your coal money is not wasted but used.,
artdora
Wareelacuses and Factories
London, Toronto; Montreal"
Winnipeg, Vancenvor,
St. John, N.B., Hamilton
Wffigira§32ThiMP7Pa5"W""r'P "'?°' g`.4''t'tiEMESWEVINSEMMINIEW
E . A. LATIMER Sole Agent, Seaforth.
BENIN
rMiee 73
,m
Ditue. r 44
Coii
School, Chime
_
goons el Ontarlo, ps
.Englana. Of
ere, Main Street, Sem
answered from real
ip
SM.A.J
m»o*nd Besi denote
t*tboiIst church.
oner TedOvele
for the Count
DRS e sea
rich street. OPPdg
graduete
member Onterio -
rgeoes. Corm
gala heeler
g�lri medalist Tea
Vollege of rayed
AB BROW!,
unties of Hui
mpbeire imp
bion ROBIN
-Auto
tecd Orderg
wee Lot 2, CORZOA
)roelpt attentiore
VOTIONBERINC
auetioneek foi
.rtb. Being e pro
erstanding she
, 'pieces me
es mai
eteeier
Ites'OercesM
ARRIACi
E
ShA,FOR
NO WIT-NE1
We havepoeitively the fineet Busi-
nese College premises and equip-
ment in Western Ontario. Our
attendance has trebled in the last
three years ad the College has
grown to be easily the leading
school in the West.
This is not a school living onit
reputation. It is practical first,
last and all the time.
ALL OUR GRADUATES GET POSITIONS.
Don't attend Business College
until you have read our handsome
ez page catalogue. IT IS FREE.,
W. D. EULER, Principal.
ONE OF THE FAMOUS FEDERATED COLLEGE&
Ayers Pilis I.Seepethe rhowemis ..r.eguis
_ Ana ne g eat . The great great ru e e
I
Ayer's Pills. :66,4
z a A
Want your moustache or beard BUCKINGHAM'S
a beautiful in ma. rich WA? Use ak-wagetterfaittasZfaalleaCee
alive or t
Day the Hi
Quotationl
RAVEL