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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-11-03, Page 6• REAL ESTATE IrOE1 r1-1-1-74 boat ot tah 4, +=the llth copereedon of Tuokerantieh, non. irking 60 sores, nearly all cleared and in a pock &tad oultivstiote There ire on the prerillita, a good bank barn,40 ft x 56 ft, and a comforbeble dwelling home, else a gond orchard of winter f (nit. Termareatooable. Apply to JOHN WHITE eN, Chtselhurste Ontario 1971-8 "fing ROFITABLE IN VINTMENTS.—I on lend money on. improved quarter notions of 160 acres each at from 8 to 10 per centper anautn. Only first mortgages taken. Ample Flecur y given -Taerans Tittes System is pr3rfeot. Frond 8800 ue can• beleut on farms worth from $1,00) to $L000. For further partieulars writtete ma 3. A. JA -P.11 - SON, Barrister, eta, Feriae, Alberta. 196941 - WARM FOR SALF.—Lot 81, Concession 3, Mill Road.Tuckerstalth.qouteinine 100 acres, in a high state of cultivation and well uuderdrained and well fenced. A good brick home and bank barn, 50 x 90 feet, with stone seebling underneath. Plenty of -good water. It is within a ,mile and a half of Brood:told station and five miles from Sea - forth. It is one of the choicest lasses in the county there not being one foot of weds Iend on it Ap- ply on the premises or Ridden DUNCAN MeTAV- BH, Brucefield. 197041 "CIARM FOR SALE OR TO RENT.—For eeie or Xrent Int 29, eon., 2, 11. R. fa, Tuckerszpith, oontaining 100 armee all cleared except about five urea of good hardwood. All underdraieed, well fenced An d in a good stets of cultivation. A good brick house and two learns one with stone wattling underooath. Plenty of Rood water and re eood bear- ing orchard. This farm is well adapted for (nth& etock or grain. A,bout midway between Seaforth and Clinton, Apply on the premises or Seaforth P. 0. H, TOWNSEND, Proprietor. 1942.11 flOUSE AND LOTS FOR SALE.—For sale briok bowie and 2 lots in Sestorth. One IA •fanes on North Main Street and tho other on West Wil- liam Street. The house le a comfortable brick nottege and contains; 8 bedroom, dining loom, sit - tag room and kitehete, with good cellar- under the whole house. Hard and soft waterin the house. There is also a good stable and driving shed. All kinds of fruit on the lot. Apply to J. L. ALLAN, Londeaboro, or to C. W. ATKINSON, SeafOrth. 1906x411 F" -BALE -A farm conteinhan 100 acres of land, ne' Lot 6, Concession 7, in the Towship of Timitersmith, awe miles from Seaton and belong- -big to the estate of the late Miebael O'Keefe. This farm is suitable for cultivation or pasture and will be sold on reasonable tertns. For full particulars apply to THOMAS BROWN, Auctioneer, Stator% P.O. •1961-tf WARM FOR SALE.—Lot _88. Onacession 7, Ma- r Killep. °This lam contains 100 acme nf good land. has on it a bank barn 64 x 64 with 8 -foot stone stabling. Also a good 8-toomed brick house, Or chard, good water, eto. It is six miles from Se - forth and l mike frob Constonee pobt dfflo. APply to WU R. BLANSHARD, Sturgeon Falls, Ont. or to E. HINCKLEY, Seaforth. 1984.11 WARM FOR SALE—Lot oonsession l',Usborne, U contatning 99 acres, situated on the London Rod, 1 mile from Hansen, and 4 mike f ram Exet. er. It is in a firet class stete nt cultivation being well drained with tile, newly all summer !allowed and seeded to gramenearly all fenced with new car- ter wire fence. On the 1armi9i OPP bowie .apd plenty of outbuilding% including one of the finest poultry heuees in Ontario, There are two twelle, a spring. creek, and a flowing spring that would fill a three-mbh tile. Apply on the farm or to Mensall post office. BENJAMIN HOGGARTEE. 1958-11 MIAMI FOR. SALE.—For sale, lot 18, conceslon r 4, in Hibbert, conteireng 100 acres. On the piece is a brio& dwelline house. with frame kitshen, with all necessary outbuildings and lots of good stabling ; well fowled, well drained and plenty of good water,. There are 9 pores of bush. It is situated two and a half miles from Dublin station, where there is a good market. Couvenient schoolnd ohurchea of all denominetions. Apply on the premises or address ANDREW MoLELLAN, Dublin P. 0. 19654e --- VIARN AND MILL PROPERTY FOR SALE.— U- For ask the old Bell Farm end Mill Property, on the London road, Tuckersmibb, recently occu- pied by ths late John McNevin. There are 100 acres, all cleered but about four acres. Good buildinge and the farm well ninderdrained and in a high state of cultivation, ell eeeded to grans except about 30 sores, Alva the grist and saw mill prop. erty on the farm. It is within half a mile of Kippeo station and 2 miles from Heosell and a good busi- ness has always been done at the mills. The farm and mill property will be sold together or eeparate- ly to sult purcheeer. Terms easy. Apply to DAVID C. MeLEAN, Kippen. 19(18-tf "%TILLAGE PROPERTY FOR SALE.—For sale in V Egniondville, a oomfortabie frame house with three acres of land in a very fertile condition with plenty of large and small fruits for family use also Letge barn and outbuildings in good repair. The house has been recently overhauled and contains seven rooms with ohoiee cellar' full oleo, good wood ehed, alto summer kitchen andan -excellent spring well and good cistern. Any pram desiring a com- fortable, quiet home of this desoriptinn, covemient to town, should not miss this opportunity. Will be sold reasonably aad on eaey terms. For further perticulare apply on the premises or address Eg- mondville P. O., WM. BUBOLZ•• 1948-tf DARPA FOR SALE—The undersigned offers for X sale the North half of iitt No. 8, in the first C0130PS310la of Tuekeremith, on Loadon Road and within one-half wile of the fieurishing vellage of Heneall. There is s'nuated on this fine property a good frerne dwalling. 24x28 and 14x20 and bank barn- 5x42. The Lim is all under 'good gram', well fenced and drained with three good wells, including windmill. It Is a most °desirable property for anyone wantine to purchase arid will be sold on eesy terms, The QUC30% Hotel at Hentall le also of7ere4 by the undersigned far sale and is well equipped and welt situated Fo: pertioulars apply to JAMES COXWORTH, Heinen P. 0. 1974-4 LIAM FOR SALE.—Por sale, Lot 28, Concession U e, H. it. 8 , one of the best farms in Tucker- efentatoine 100 acre. It is an exeeption clean farm with na waste land ; all seeded to grass mot of it having been in pasture five or six years. It is extra well supplied with water On the farm 15 a good brick beuse and too berm with atone stabling unde-neath with cement flame. Plenty of fruit trees of dfferent kinds. 11 is pleasentiv sit- • uated in a good neighborhood, battle one -h df mile from school and Be miles f rom Seaforth. Apply on the premises or address JO/IN ROBB, Seaforth P. 0., Ont. 196441 ARM FOR SALE—North half of Lob 12, Cou- r cession 6, Morris, containing 100 acres, situated on the gravel road, four and a htlf miles weeb of Bruesels and four mites from Beigreve. There aro 80 aerea cleared, well drained, feueed tied in a good state of cultivation, at preeent eeeded done. The remaining 20 notes is covered with excellent timber, Tnere le a good frame hens° with stole cellar, goad !ream barn with steno stabling under- neath, a geod bead og orchard and an abundance of geed water. Vlore is a church and a post office wiehin half a mile ani a school within three quar- ters ole mile. For furtrer pertfeulain apply to MR. B. SMILLIE, Hensell. 1963x3t1 THE Iree-Gifts.. of Toilet.'SO.p.s. • Use SUNLIGHT SOAP and SAVE THE COUPONS The Coupons are the same as cash because they can be exchanged for Toilet Soaps for which you have to pay out money every week. 01•••••••••••••••1M•q••••••••••=a• USei'S of SUNLIGHT and CHEERFUL SOAPS can get their TOILET Ss'tret‘ PS for nothing. Ask yo grocer for pal ticulars or wfite 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 Conpops you can get something you need and use every day. LEVER • BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO, CANADA. 4 "...40.....eserm0YRrilligrAVRI34.rarrwmparwat All WHO TRUST IN GOD SUBJEOTS OF SOLICITOUS DIVINE CARE AND PROTECTliON. OUR LIVES A DEVELOPMENT ',ARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 18, Concession X 8, Hay, containing 100 sores in a good slate of cultivation. There are on the premiees a good frame house 22 x 32, also a frame kitnhen and wood shed. is x 40, all with cellar underneath. There le - oleo a large bank barn, die x 70, with good brink atabling underneath and all cement fieort. Also a driving shed, 28 x 60, all ia good repair. There are three never -failing wells on the prenneEs and a good bearing orchard. Also 18 aores of good hardwood bush The farm le well fenced and well underdrain- ed with tile. It is situated within manic and a half of the village of Hensell and school within half a mite of farm. As the propietcr wishes to rotire It will be sold on easy term% For further pertioulars apply on the premises 6r• to Heneall P, 0. JAMES BONTHRON. 1967-11 RANGES. 1-••• • • t. • .1a Welcome National • Crown Huron and 1 Souvenir Ranges Are recognized as the best in price and quality. A full line on, display. Our experi- ence in Stoves and Ranges is the longest in., Seaforth. ' Take our word for it, an Oxford Laurel Base Burner Cs the heater you require. George A. Sills, Seaforth - Ontario. McMann & Mann, John MeMann, sr. John Mellann, jr. (Successors to John Biolesnu, sr.) Are now prepared to handle all kinds nf horses. Doyen, may purchane hordes at their sele stables, Egmondeille, at any time. • 1914.11 a eu Like a True Parent God Plans For Hie Earthly Children Whet Is Best For Them,' But.Gives Them -Free Will to GraveStrong -Amid the Troubles.and Temrstatione of Our Life • Here Belo. Entered aceori;ng to Ae.. of Parliament of Canada. in the year icon by Fredrick Diver. of Toronto, at the Department of Agriculture., Ottawa. Los Angeles, Cal., Oct. 29.—That our lives here are a process of develop- ment and that the divine care and pro- tection sterround all who trust in G-od Is the theme of the preacher in. this sermon. The text is Psalm xl., 17, "The Lord thinketh upon me." Spiritualistic medal:nes perpetrate mrtler frauds. But the greatest of their :absurdities is not found in the rappings and. groanings by Which they appar- ently summond the dead to their dark peanelled rooms and compel -them to spea.k to their, insane victims. It is found in the ridigulous photography in which the dupes of spiritualistic med- iums have their pictures taken, sur- rounded, as they are led to believe, by the sPirit faces of their loved, ones who are near to yet not of this earth. Have you ever seen any of these fic- titious. pictures? Within a few. blocks of any old eastern home was a little stationery store whit had its show windows filled with them. .Raphael painted his "Sistine 'Madonna" sur- rounded by,clouds of angel faces. Those deceitful phOtographs that I saw in that window showed believers in spiritual- ism surrounded by the faces of their departed kindred and dear ones and friends. There they were in those plc - tures, the living with the dead, side by side. Could any fraud be more bold, more cruel and more corrupt than that which declares that such pictures are genuine? And yet as I would stop and Study these pictures on my way home during the winter afternoons I often: said to myself, "Absurd ethose pictures are in reality, but how true they are figuratively!" A man is nev- er a true man unless he always has many faces about him. You may think he is alone, but he is not alone. These faces, these many unseen faces, hover over him in benediction. They smile at him when he smiles. They go with him to places of evil resort and rebuke him while he is there. They joke with him.. They plead with him. They praya with him. They come and sit by his bed when he is about to fall asleep. They greet him the moment when he awakens in the itnerning. Some • of these faces are old. " )me are young. Some are just buildin into young ' womanhood. Some ar But these faces are ways about ue. They are about you. They are about me. They are about us when we are at. home; they are about us whenwe are • away from home. We may .be travel- ing in a railroad train a thouktnd miles away from our own firesides. It is the evening hour. We are tlrecl of reading the bObk. We threw it don ,and 'rest our:heads upon our hands and look out of the, window and begin -to see many faces. "Yes," WO say to ourselves ,"this is the evening hour. Our wives are putting the babies lo Can Eat Allything Not How many Dyspeptics can • say that ? Or perhaps you are dyspeptic and don't know it. alapa /a a• Have you any of these • symptoms? -intr.- People may say we are alone in a railroad train, but we are not We are home. I tell you we are home. We feel Gthe baby boy climb up into our lap and beg us to tell him a story", we see our little girls sitting by, the table studying their lessons. After the prayers have been said and the bed- room lights turned' out, and the last journey to the crib has been taken, with its drinking water and the good- night kiss, we see our wives go and get the darning bag filled with a lot of the children's stockings. She sits down by our side. Then she looks up with a sweet smile and says, "MY dear, jet us have a good talk." AsWe talk she sews the big holes the boys have made in their stockings when they slid down the cellar door, which is their favorite toboggan. There she sits in the rail- road train conversing. While we are thinking of our absent dear ones, by the telepathy of love we know they are thinking of us. They are constantly by our side. It is because they are ever present with us in thought that we try to be just as good and pure and true as If we could kiss their lips and. talk to them in the flesh as well as in the spirit. But are the face e of a fathero a mo- ther, a wife, a child, the only ones that are ever present with ug, because they are always thinking of us as we are of there? Oh, no. David, the sweet singer of Israel says there is another face which we must place over and above the human faces hovering about us. That is the face of God. He is think- ing about us. He is planning for us. He is pleading -with us. I want to im- press on your minds the fact that the Lord's face is ever present with us and that he is continually thinking about us. • God. plans for us as a developing friend. He is like a true parent who has a child given into his care by the birth angel. The true father does not look into the face of a child and say: • "Now, I have a child. I will shield him. I will always keep him by my side as a helpless child." Oh, no. That Is not the .true father's way. No soon- er is the little child born into the home than at once the parent begins to plan ahead for that child. He plans for him as- a baby, as a boy, as a youth and as a fully developed man. He starts this planning ahead when he chooses the name for the christening. The selection of the baby's name is no easy task. The mother may be of a poetic temperament. She may desire to give her son a name euphonious as some of the rorriantic names of the wild woods. But the father says: "No. My son in all probability Is not going to be a poet or a muefeian. He is go- ing to be a plain, prnetical business man or a lawyer or a doctor or a,min- ii,hter. He must have a good, sound, Common-sense name t bat will not make him a laug:thig-stock among his associa.tes and nee that can casily be romenebered. Ca ll lefro Joseph or James oe Medlin in or Edward or John." Variable appetite, a faint gnawing feel- ing at the pit of the stomach, unsatisfied hunger, a loathing of food, rising and souring of food, a painful load at the pit of the stomach, constipation, or are you gloomy and miserable? Then you are a dyspeptic. The cure is careful diet; avoid stimulants and narcotics, do not drink at meals, keep regular habits, and regul4te the stomach and bowels with - BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, Nature's specific for Dyspepsia. Miss Laura Chicoine, Belle Anse, Que., says of its wonderful curative powers :— " Last winter I was very thin, and wp.s fast losing flesh owing to the run-down state of my system. 1 suffered from Dyspepsia, loss of appetite and bad blood. tried everything 1 could get, but to no purpose; then finally started to use Burdock Blood Bitters. From the first day 1 felt the good effect of the medicine, and am now feeling strong and well again. I can eat anything now without any ill after-effects. It gives me great pleasure to recommend Burdock Blood Bitters, for I feel 11saved.. lag life." The Planning of the parents for the child .starts at the christening. Then comes the question of 'school. , Perhaps the father has amassed some wealth. The money question is not a pressing one in the home. Where shall the boy get his education? The mother May .desire to have her son go to one of the aristocratic private schools of the City, where he will have for com- panions the sons of wealthy families. Again the hard-headed common-sense of the father comes to the rescue. "No,' he says. "No private. school for my boy. -My 'father sent me to a pri- vate school. There I dabbled a little in en dozen different studies and did not master any one of them. My boy shall go to a common public school, vnhere the foundations and the rudi- rrients of an education are pounded into him. I want him to master the 'three Rs'--4.eaeling, writing and arith- metic, I want him at fifteen years of age to know how to write a letter. That is what thousands of college -bred men do not know. I want. him to learn to Spell and punctuate correctly. After the rudiments of an 'education have been noaked into him, then we can talk about private schools or a university. course." After the school days are over what happens? The common-sense father makes the boy start out for himself. -71 the lad enters business, he makes him work in another store where the father is not. If possible, he sends the son away for so little while, to work in another city among strangers, so that the boy learns to think for himself and stand upon his owe. feet. The wise father does all 'this not because he is hard hearted; not because he wants to get rid of the boy. He puts the burden -of life upon the boy because he is a true friend to the child, planning his best development. He wants to make the most out of his son and bring him to the highest phySical, mental, moral arrd spiritual development. God is do- ing for us in a wide sense what the earthly parent is doing for his child. in a limited sense. He is placing his bur- dens upon us to develop us. He is not making us struggle for the mere pleas- ure of seeing us suffer. He is com- pelling us to be caretakers that we may grow in strength and climb the higher mountain peaks of inepiration and power which he has lifted for our thrones, and• yet to -day there are but very few who have grace enough to thank 'God for the divine hand -which has smitten, them as well as for the divine lip which is ready to speak the words of conifort and good cheer. Troubles are beneficent when packed upon a man's back in certain cluanti-` ties. They may and do develop the physical and mental and spiritual man. But though the soldier goes forth with a bravetheart to fight the battles of his country, .with a haversack upon his shoulder, he could not fight, no matter how brave his heart, if he had a con- vict's chain riveted to his ankle and a mountain of oppression tumbled over XIII9Pei1 DreSinsts VIM& While it Is ,the ciety of a true parent to put certain burdens and cares upon Ms child to de- velop him, • it is also the father's duty to see that his child shall not have too great- burdens to bear, which will break his back and crush his will. As does a true father, so God plans for us. "Whom the Lord loveth he chas- teneth. God dealeth with you as with sons. For what son is he whom the father chasteneth not?" That means as, the father reproves, rebukes and exhorts and develops the child by the heavy hand of trouble so God the Fa- ther deals with his own. But in Corin- thians I also read these words as a qualifying clause: "God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able, but will with the temptation also make a way to 'es- cape that ye may be able to bear it." That means that when troubles or temptations come upon us greater than we can bear then the Lord, who is al- ways planning for us, will step in and stand between ue and that temptation. Thus I find God the developing friend. In the next place I find God the pro- tector, God the shielder, God, the ward- er off of tWO- great dangers when we are not able to care for ourselves. Let me illustrate hose well nigh im- possible it is for some men to help themselves unless, they are first helped by others. Last summer it was my privilege, with a couple of sa-entlemen, to go camping through the mountains of southern California. For a long time I had wished to penetrate these momf- tains and go and live for awhile upon some of the Indian reservations. The great "San Luis Rey festival" was to take place among a couple of these tribes. We timed our trip to witness this festival, so important in Indian life. There I saw some of the old In- dians, almost as ignorant and super- stitious as their ancestors were cen- turies ago. An old Indian missionary told me some of the strangest facts about them. Said he: "Do you know ians believe in just as did that many of these In ghosts and apparition their grandparents?„Though they talk but little during the day, yet they hesi- tate to go out at night because they are afraid of the darkness. They . al- ways whistle or sing to keep the spirits from tearing them to pieces. Then there is another peculiarity about them. With all the advancement of civiliza- tion everywhere seen, many of these Indians have never learned even the commonest laws of health. They build their adobe houses with no adequate means of ventilation. When they be- come sick some of them will go to bed. Then they will have erected four posts at the four corners of the bed, in the old Louis xfv style. I have, seen the friends cover these posts. Over with blankets and not leave one loophole for the fresh air to get in. There the sick - man will lie and simply be smothered to death. On account of bad ventila- tion we find that most of these Indians die of consumption, although these mountains furnish the air which cures the white men of consumption when they come here and live in the open.” These are only a few of many similar statements made to me about the In- dian's backwardness. Amazing is the ignorance of the In- dian. There in these festivals you see the old men dancing in their, bare feet to the wailing songs of the old squaws, the same kind of dances their forefa- thers danced fifty, sixty, seventy, years ago. Instead of being men and women they seem to be just little children. As lambs(they are led to the slaughter by the mils of the white man. The Christian church must go in and put her strong arm between these Indians and sin, ignorance and superstitipn. It must go in, else the Indian shah be wiped off the face of the earth. The cOver Of his wings. He Will lift you up, is you would run to the reSeue ot your boy when he is confronting some sudden and immleent danger, if you will only call to him as your ehild. calls to you: "Help, father! Help! Help!" The Lord sends us trouble to develop 'us, never to crush us. Those over- whelming 'mountains of trouble and temptation that are rolled upon us do not proceed from his hand. These mountains, • these • insurmountable mountains 61 temptation, are every- where aroend. Then it behooves us to stay -very close to the side of that lov- ing Father who is always thinking and, planning for us. Stay by the Lord. who will always protect us when it Is for us to be spiritually pro- tected. The threatening danger& ahead in the Christian's life are insignificant in comparison to the peril from which Christ delivered him in the past, when he said to him, "Thy sins are forgiven thee!! Those ahead may he compared to the ship in the last throes of the tor- nado. The cordage is being streell.:4.1 to the Utmost. The sails, like bal- loom filled with gas, are swelling larg- er and larger, until they seem about to burst, The helmsmen are clinging frantically to the wheel. The great. beams and the planks of the hull are groaning, while the huge waves toss -it as a chip is turned a somersault over the mill wheel. All is anxiety. The pumps are at work. The danger is great, but there is yet hope ahead. With -a strong.keel under him and. the sails still holding to the masts, the sea captain has hOpe, no matter how loud may be the shrieking of the euro- clydon. Let us return to the peaceful scene of my text. As we climb the Judaeanhills, where sits the shepherd poet ewatch- ing his sheep, we see a transcendent beauty shining from the face of the Psalmist. We look at his raptured face a moment. Then we ask: "What is It, David? What do you see? What do you hear? What treasure is yours?" He look es about at first dazed. Then he comes back to -earth • as he answers: "Why, 1 was softly singing to myself that Fortieth Psalm. I composed it many years ago. I did. not then realize all I wrote. When 1 came to the words, 'The Lord thinketh upon me,' began to summarize all the care God has taken of me in this world. Then I began to see visions of the glories of the land which _he is preparing for me beyond. God is thinking or me. Yes, he is preparing them all for me when the right time comes for imp to possess them. Look, cannot you see those glo- ries now?" As David talks his inter- pretation of my text seems very Plain and very simple. God is again dealing with. us as a father would deal with hid child. God says, "Nothing Is too good for his children. when the right time comes." So he thinks ahead lind plans • ahea'd for us. When the Ight time comes—and come it will—Go, is going to give us a great mansion in heaven. Yes; you can picture it—a white mar- ble palace, with mosaic floors and rain - bowed fountains. It may have ter- raced gardens surrounding it. Our palace will be as good as, that. There is nothing too good for God's heavenly children. There he is going to give us health—immortal health. No pain, no suffering, no heartache, is to be there. Nothing is, then, too good for us when the right time c:omes. Then he is go- ing 10 give us 'back our loved ones. Some of us are very lonely now. We ill set10-11 eilillnpnaboneti obtnoesohliopgn.6eol dyT hfteohinGu. 0,s dNiNsno,tulisci nge le,g; give est a crown. Then we shall have endless communion with his own dear setf. Oh, my friends, will you not let God'go on planning for you and thinking for you? Was it to be wondered eet that the rad- iant face we saw as if e climbed the Juclaean hills and looked at theeshop- herel poet of Israel was celestial in its reflection when we realize that David wns catching a glimpse about what the Lord was planning for Win beyond the grave? Will you let God plan for you • such a future? eeason the old western proverb "There is no good Indian except a dead In- dian" has such a universal acceptation is because the American Indian, unless helped by the Christian day school, the Christian church and the Christian missionary, will never be able to help himself. The white man's sins will smite the red ma.n down before he has time to open his eyes to see the white man's virtues. God speed the arduous work of the American missionary for the salvation of the red man and the red woman! These poor aborigines are being tuinbled into :drunkard's graves by the white man's whiskey; they are being morally corrupted by the white man's licentiousness; they are being ground down into misery and want by the hell fires of the white man's gam- bling passions, which are destroying their lives for this world and for the next. It is impossible for some men to'overcome some temptations in their own strength. But, thank God, the dangers and temptations that surround you and me are not insurmountable, if we only can on God for help. The true father places his strong' arm about his boy's heart when the surges of temptation roll in to submerge hirn. God the Father win. throttle the hissing throat of the dead- ly serpent of evil if we will only beg him to rescue us. He will take away that agonizing ,thirst for drink. You k.now you have been fighting it for years. Yes, he will make you pure in mind and heart if you only run to the Dear Mother tvZ. Your little ones are a constant care in Fall and Winter weather. They will catch cold. Do you know about ShiloWs Consumption Cure, the Lung Tonic,, and: what it has done for so many? It is said to be the only reliable remedy for all diseases of the air passages in children. It is absolutely harmless and pleasant to take. It isguaranteed to cure or your money is returned. The pnce is 25c. per bottle, and all dealers in medicine sell 314 SHILOH 'This remedy should be in eves), household. • • Sy ci BOYS CLOTHES Made Like The Men's. Clothes with 'snap" and style—made (up With that touch of "mannishness" that all boys like. 1. 4 is built for red boys. Every garment is 'made for SerViene—te) stand .che hard wear that boys give to their clothes. Put your boys in "Prog- ress Brand.',' Suits and F• Overcoats — and see how much longer the pi7061ss -'the'wear. —GREIG & STEWART The Parent of Radium. If the earth, says Professor E. Ruth- erford, were supposed to have been composed initially of pure radium the activity- 20,000 years laterwould not be greater than the activity observed in pitchblende to -day. But since there, is no doubt that the earth's age vastly exceeds 20,000 years it is necessary in order to account for the existence of radium at all in the earth to suppose that it is continuously produced from some other substance. At the pepsent time it seems most probable that ura- nium is this 'Arent substance. The. ob- served activity in a good specimen of pitchblende is about what should be expected if the uranium contained in it spontaneously breaks Up into ra- dium. Radium itself is continuously transformed into an emanation, which In turn is changed into other types of matter, and there is no evidence that the process is reversible. Tennis was played in London in the sixt eenth century in covered courts erected for the purpose. Her Explanation. "Your honor," said the lawyer, "my client acknowledges that she struck the book agent' with a piece of gas pipe, but she pleads that it was a case of mistaken identity." "How's that?" asked the judge. "Well, she thought it was her hus. band." CURES Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Cramps, Cont.', rain s In the Stomach, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, Sea Sid& ries, Summer Com -plaint, and all Fluxes of the Dowels. Has been in nee for nearly Captors and has never failed to give relief. Did you ever f--ve your range a e3 burn out? If you did you willsknow - what that means in com- mon ranges it means plumbers, delay, muss and big bills —because cOmmon ranges are built that way. As range grates must ,some time burn out you are certain to have that kind of trouble if yours is- a common range. If you have the Pandora you won't have any trouble, because you ean take out the old grates and put in the new ones in ten minutes; and a ten cent piece for a screw -driver does it easier in the Pandora than a whole kit of plumbers' tools will do it in common ranges. y e2.t a bise but when y t eating you tykaincv s Crser-n-7-1 $p, deliciot bsolutely ior to any Say "Mooney VETER BEV, V.S. navy pellet eeted. Celli eirate. Vete residence en • Sccals cMc EfAllBITAZI V. Ontario Veterb3sr3 of the Medical Assoc liege. 'Treats dis oet dens pri 0 ee h. e pro pt Atte Li AMES L 2te; In Seaforth Moi •t.flice open ever, Main street,'Seah A ten -cent piece for a screw -driver is alt you need to take -out °Mond put in, neto Preetdorts grates. R8. tor, Con, Demi)* Beaton ryt Pandora ge Warehouse* wed Factorises s London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, N.B., Hamilton •m153. E. A. LATIMER Sole Agent, Seaforth. BUT, Barris Nam? Publia 4 bookstoreiMain GLMFATED, koCaughey onveystoer, and idea Bank cd Comm see sale. Offloe In trearortla rtAICKINSOIN.1 AND G Ijr ots, eto., Goderi 1 how we do it. Send poste' for a copy. Good School Good Students Good Positions 1)E Grodurde of Royal 10etsrlo. Sueeesso A. Ycurga3grocery st. Practically every office in the Twin City has in it a Berlin Business College Student. • We have applications nearly every day for office help. When a bright student takes a course with us he is practically -certain of a position. We have a iargeschool, splendidly equipped, with an unusually capable staff 6f instructors. Our large, illustrated catalogue tells what we do for ouretudents and Enter at any time. DR. DENT'S removed from 418 ow offices, 436 To hone 78 DR. nate of 13 en member GI Onteelo ; cal School, CIO London„ Ian op, Engls se, Main Street, answered from r One of the famous Federated Colleges. IMONIESKIEINSImmatatopors. W. D. auLER, Principal. P. BMA. and Resideu at church. Tam et for the Own loderieh 3. G. :10017, gradua ;umber Onleurio urgeoel (JO Ma0ILAY, tonor 431d geadattat Tri inliege of rive - AU The WelinDressed Man Hot weather or cold, a man now -a -days must be well dressed. it is not a luxury, it is a necessity. He has to do it in his business; appearances must be kept up, or there will be no business tG attend to. If this were not so we would not attempt, during dog days, to talk about anything so substantial as our tailerece clothing. But there is a time coming when you will require to think about it, and a few timely hints, thrown out now, ma, assist you materially later on. We don't often puff ourselves UP, but what we say now we know to be facts, and bave gained our knowledge by every experience. We build the cloths that leave our establishment. They are not done on the hap -hazard principle. We use the best materials. It costs us a little more, but the satisfaction you get repays us. We guarantee 6 fit and style that can only be obtained from thoroughly practical tailors. Good tailoring is our hobby, hence we get pleasure out, of every right fitting garment we make you. Then there is a- finish and style about our clothes that bespeaks the well-dressed ' man., It is to your interest to remember this. • BRIGHT • BROS!, FURNISBERS, SEIFORTIL UCTI ISERRIN .auctionses ierth: •Being Pi ernderstanaleg the %Mae, places me in *does. • Gene pgy. *4 144 28, isttmded to. Reduc We pu or ba and Prices echt Furn MARRIA 15 Uri MIRO 0 NO MTN