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The Huron Expositor, 1905-11-10, Page 6k NalleillenOMMINIIMIOINISIMIllialrall...11.111.11111011.111.1.1111.11110a REAL ESTATE FOR SA.LR -CIA.Ral FOR SAL—For fah, the east bail of lot .111 4, on the lith eorceetion of Tuokersmith, non. icing 50 stereo. neerly all °leered and in a g Aid ate of culeivetion. There ie, on the promisee, a ood bank barn, 40 ft x 66 ft, and a, conetortseble welling house, els° a good orchatel of winter fruit. Terme reasonable. Apply to JOEIN WHITEN( eN, Chiselhirat, Ontario • 1971.8 elIROFITABLE INVESTMENTS.—I own- lend tr money on Improved quarter 0i�t 160 scree each at from ft to 10 per cont. per annum. Only Snit mortgages taken. Ample security elven Torrefis Titles System is perfect. From $800 up cantes lent on tarn e worth from et,000 to 82,000. For further partioularit write te me. 1, A. JAIK. SON, Barrister, etc., Ponoka, Alberta. 1969.0 VARM FOR SALS.—Lot Si, Concession 8, Mill Road. Tuokerstoith, at:Metairie 1.04 a,ores, a high etate of mitigation and well underdrained and well fenced. A good brick house and bank bard, 60 x 9afeet, with idiom, stabling underneath. Plenty of good water. It is within a niiie an a half of Brooefield station and five milehorn Sea. forth. It is ono of the choiceet farms in the county there not being one foot of weste lend on it Ap- ply on the premises or airldess DUNCAN feleTAV- 811, Brueefield. 1970-tf ' VIARM FOR SALE OR TO RENT.—For sale or J1 rent lot 29, cone 2, El. R. 8„ Tuckerstnitb, containing 100 aorta all cleared except about five acre,s of good hardwood. All underdrained, well fenced and In a good state of cultivation. A good briok house and two barns one with stone stebling underneath. Plenty of good water and a eood bear- ing orchard. This farm is well adapted for either etock or grain. About midway between Seatorth and Clinton. Apply on the promisee or Boatmen P. 0. H. TOWNeEND, Proprietor. 194241 corOUSi AND LOTS FOR SALE.—For tole, briok Yet house and 2 lots in Seatorth. One lot isms On North Main Street and the other on West Wile Rem Street The home is a, ooratortable brick Mttage and contains 8 bedrooms dining room, sit- ting roona and kitchen, with good cellar under the whole house. Hard and soft water in the house. There te alao a good stable and driving shed. All Muds of fruit on the lot Apply to J. L. ALLA.N, Lendetboro, or to 0. W. ATKINSON, Seaforth. 1906x4tf 0r SALE—A farm containing 100 acres of land, ✓ being Lot 6, Concession:7, in the Toweship of Tuckersmitsto five miles from Seaforth and helong- ing to the estate of the late ellobael O'Keefe. This farm ie suitable for cultivation or pasture and will be sold on fecemnable terms. For full partioulare apply to THOMAS BROWN, Auctioneert Reefer% P. 0, >196141 --PARM FOB. SALE—Lot 88, Conceesion 7, Mo- ."! Killop. This farm contains 100 mow) of good land, has on it a bank barn 64 x64 with Meet stone stabling. Also a good taroomed brick hoctse, or ettard, good water, eto. P tweb mites from Sei. forth and la miles from Constance epee ofee. Apply to W. R. BleANSHARD, Sturgeon Fella, Ont. or to E. HINCEILEY, Seaforth. 1964.tt riARat TO RENT IN TIJOKEtteSMITH.—To rent J . for one or more years, In 14, eon. 2, L. R. S., oontainine-100 earea, SO sores of which are cleared -and ander oulttvation. Tbis is one of the beet lama In the Township, and is well suttee for either grain growing °retook raisine. The buildings are first claw. This larra la situated about 7 mitee from Seaforth, and 8 from Hawaii, and &barb 1a from Kippen. For terms, eto., apply to the proprietor, W. M. P010, L. Ti. B. Barrister, Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., Micas in NewtM Building. 1977-4 RM FOR SALE.—For sale, lot 18, conceesion 4, in Bibbed, containing 100 acreet On the place is brie& d veiling home. with frame kitehon, with all necessary outbuildings and lots of good etabling ; well fenced, weli drained and plenty of good water. There are 9 acres of bush. It is situated two and a half miles from Dublin etation, where there Is a good .market. Convenient to sobools and ohurchee of all denominations. Apply •on the premises or address A.NDOEW MeLELLAN, Dublin P. 0. 196641 LURK AND MILL PROPERTY FOR SALE.— J For sale the old Bell Farm end Mill Property, on the London road, Tuokeramibb, recently mow pied by the late John MoNeYin. There are 100 acres, all cleared but about four aarea. -Good buildings and the farm well tunderdreined and in a high state of oulbivation, all seeded to graet! except about 80 sores. Alm the grit and stew mill prop. erty on the farm. It is within half a mile of Kippen dation and 2 miles from Hermit and a goad bus!. flees hut always been done at the mills. The farm and mill property will be Bold together ot teparate. iy to suit purcheser. Terms easy. Apply to DAVID C. MeLEAN, Kippen. 19684f VARA! FOR SLLE.—For eale, Lob 23, Conceesion U 2, H. it, 8 , one of tbe best farms in Tinker - smith, contatnine 100 scree lb is an exception Illy clean farm with n3 waste lend ;alt seeded to grass most of- it bowleg been in pasture five or six years. It le extra well supplied with water. Oa the farm te a good brick house and two barna with stone stabling leader nsath with cement fleole. Plenty ot emit tram of different kinds. It ie pleasantly sit. rested la a good neighborhood, twine oae.hill mile from school and se miles from Seaforth. Apply on the preml8e3 or address JOHN ROBB, Seaforth P. 0., Ont. 196441 4••••••.••erm...* MURK FOR SALE—North half of Lot 12, Con - r cession 6, Morrie, containing 100 acme, situated r41k the gravel road. four and a bell miles wet of Bruesela and four milea from Below°. There are SO acres ale trod, well drained, formed and in a good state el culttvation, at present eetded down. The rear:mining 20 sates is oovered wieh exoellent timber, There is a good frame bowie with gone cellar, goad frame bare with stone stabling under. neath, a good bowing orchard and en abundanoe of goad water. There le Et church and n poet office within half a mile ani a school within three quer- , tera of a mile. For furtrar particulate apply to MRS. B. SMILLIE, Hensall. 1983x3t1 44. RE IltRON '.2(1)0SITOR ree Gifts of Toilet Soa Use StINLIGHT SOAP and GET THE PREMIUMS 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. Users of SUNLIGHT and CHEERFUL SOAPS can get their TOILET SOAPS for nothing. Read circular in every package, or write us for Prethium 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 get something you need and use every day, SAVE SUNLIGHT SOAP COUPONS Lever Brother s Limited, Torozatol,`Cassadas mNOVEMBER 10, 1905 Asissisar THE SACRIFICE OF SELF jTJtLRI FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 18, Ceneeetaion 8, Hay, contereing 100 items in a good slate of -Cultivation. There are on the premises a good frame house 22 x 32 also a frame kitthen and wood shed, 18 x 40, all wile cellar underneath. There ta ale° a leage bank barn, 40 x 70, with good brick stablteg underneath and all cement none Al 3a a driving shed, 28 x 60, all in good repair. There are three never -failing wells on the premises and a good beariog orohard, Alio 18 awes of gond herdwood bush The farm is well fenced and well underdrein- el with tile. It is tetuated within a mile and a hell of the yillesee of Hensel1 and school within helf mile of farm. As the propietnr wiehes to retire It will be sold on easy terms, For further particulars apply on the preeelaes or to fleneall P. 0. J &MKS LINTII RON. 19674f ONE OF THE CHIEF ESSENTIALS OF A NOBLE CHARACTER. GREAT RULE OF TRUE LIFE The Need Sensed the Service Required' Be Made Promptly and Cheerfully— Rights of Others Clearly Set Forth —A Talmage lermon That Is of the It/lost Timely Order and Points Way to Mutual Concessions. Entered occordipg to Act of Parliameat of Canada, in the year ieds. by Frederick Diver. of Toronto, at the Departnlient of Agocuiture. Ottawa. Los Angeles, Cal., :Nov. 5.—In this sermon the virtue of self sacrifice and generous recegnition of the rights of etheris clearly set forth and is shown to, be one ,of the chief essentials of a noble character. The text is Matthew v., 41, !41,VhosOevcr shall compel: thee to go with him ohe mile, go with him twain." What Sir Walter Scott was to the feeNE OF Tile: BEa'T FARMS in the township of Hibbert for ad 3.—Ltt 29, concestion 10. 1.111). herb, containing 100 ares, 10 acres Melee hard- wo od, meetly nartple ; three good wells, one at the barn and one at the butia, windmill and pumps. Two good benk taros, 40x66 and 381t60 both with good atabling and etttelet are w311 aupplied w ith -eater there ming a pump under the barn. Exoel- lent henhouse and driviag abed; good storey and a half brick house w.te frame kitthen and w eodehed attached, good cellar welt cement filo° e (mute re- cently remodelled i 'aide and out.) Oae acre ot good. areherd ; SO) rode of Carter woe feace nettey erected, moatiy fitted wale hon gates all in geed condition. There are at preeent 8 acres of ftll wheat, 25 acres fall plov,ing done, the balance Al- ine seeded in grim euttable for hay or pature. This farm la in the very bei 0:petition Dein; absolut Ily free from wild oats and all noxious weeds. It is situated one and a half Mica from tne village of Chleelharet, where there are petal"' le, store,bieek- smith shop, Pretbyterien Anti Meth nliet eherohet. Five and a half miles tom II:email, the same from Kleteen and 9 from Seefoeth. Thia farm will be sold reasonably as the proprietar ie golug, Weet. For particulars, etc. apply to JOHN TAYLOR, Ohiselhuret P, 0. 3.9774f— only text we should take some -of Rem- eineeton's "Frontier Sketches" in refer - e - I ence to the. pony express and give, thern an oriental -coloring and put them ". among the Palestine hills of 1,000— ; -aye, of over 2,000—years ago. Albert Barnes tells us that the word "compel" of my text is of Persian ore- ; gin. It comes from the royal court of Cyrus the Great who died in 529 B. C.. ; There was no postal system in that ,tlay. King Cyrus planned a system of pony expresses all over his empire. 'Thus'by a system of relays of horses, ' when the king wishea to send a royal ; command to one of the governors of , his provinces, his message could be :hauded from courier to courier with ,the 'greatest expedition. As these cow ;rierii had to go through wild regions, ;like those traveled by the messengers . of the pony express during the fifties and the sixties, they bad a right to compel any man theey met to go with them and protect tlem as the count sheriff to -day has a right to compel - you or me to help him arrest an of- fender against the law. ; This extensive system of pony ex - :presses not only spread .throughout Persia, _but in Christ's time spread through all the Roman Empire and Caesar's provinces. Thus Jesus, in or- • der to showhow his disciples should be willing to sacrifice for any right au- :thority, used a very simple and com- mon. illustration. He says, "If any courier shall compel .thee to go with moors and glens of old Scotland, ro- him one :mile ga with him !twain." mantic- with their legends and folklore, That means when an authority asks and what Charles Dickens was to the 'you to do a certain amount of work quaint vernacular of " the London you should be willing to do twice what he ask. Can we not to -day make -this streets and what. Fenimore Cooper application of sublime gospel conee&• was to the North American Indian, sion to the home and to our relations with his wigwam and his campfires, with 'employers, our churches and the his hates and his loves, Frederic Rem- .great world at large as well as to ington, the great American figure and Caesar's couriers?, Chri's command of cheerful sub - animal painter, has been to the habits st ',mission applies to,the home. As in the and customs, the comedies and trage- government, the exeeutive, legislative dies of the western cowboy, now al- and judicial departrrients have theh! most a relic of the past. Future stu- place. and their separate functions, so dents of our Past histlery reading Theo- In the home there are co-ordinate pow- dore Roosevelt's "Winning of the ers, each with its duties and" its rights. ° West" will gain a clearer idea of the " The husband and wife, the parents an& scenes and the people there described children, all come under this divine in - if those four volumes are illustrated junction of mutual concession and in with Remingtoes famous pictures— ' fulfilling it will promote domestic "The Last Stand," "The Crooked happiness. If any one in the home has Trail,'" "The Frontier Sketches" and need of a service it should be cheer - '4A Dash For the Timber." But above fully rendered—aye, in double the all the pictures that Frederic Reming- measure required. ton has sketched I do not believe there It is unwillingness to -go the twain are any more powerful than those in mile in -the home tehicl causes most which -he depicts the daring exploits of of the difficulties of the' domestic cir- the messengers of "the pony expresses. cle. You know it by personal experi- Now the east and the west have been ence. You hear angry words coming married by the wedding ring of the from the children's bedroom. "What Iron rail and the swift locomotive is the matter, girls?" I hear you esk. dashes across the .contineet, but in "Why this trouble?" "Oh," answers former times th8 gold fields of Cali- your daughter Mary, "I cannot stand fornia would have been cut off from eTennis's disorder any longer! She was communication with the busy east if playing with her dolls yesterday, anti, It had not been for the useful system she left her doll trunk out in the mid - of the pony relays. dle of the floor.at have stumbled over Every thirty or forty miles there was it a station. This chain of stations again and again. Now I have fallen. and hurt my kne. Then, mother, just stretched clear across the continent. look at that bed. It is a perfect sight. Then between these stations every day It is her time to make it up to -day. .acewboy would ride, Alone upon hie made it yesterday." 'Then you say, luirse he rode forth with the mailand- with his saddlebagrs often loaded down "Daughter, why did you not put the trunk away and make up the bed your - 'with gold and precioes stones. He s rode. straight outil•reto the dh deserts and With that Mary angrily tosses over the pralries;'-he rode forth in de- eerf.r'head as she answers: "I simply will not do Jennie's work. I am ready fiance of Indian murderer and white- to do my own work, but I am not will - skinned highwaymen and feroeiOt tette ing to do hers." Why are the girls wild . beast; he rode with .his fife eta quarreling.? They are both standing pending not so mach upon the surenees upon their rights. They are not for-, of hiaim and the steadiness of his bearing to each other. They are not gun as upon the swiftness of the four - willing to carry each other's burdens. 4 footed beast he bestrode. There in They are not willing to go the twain some of Frederic Remington's, "Fron- mile. They are writing to do what they tier Sketches" you can see the messen- have to do, but they are not willing to ger of the "pony express" riding with do what they do not have to do few a score of red -skinned savages on his each other. tne love or work, If we sacrtnee tor- : them, even though at the time they 1 • may seem to amount to naught, our "dead lions" will become "living lions." . When a man works for love, then a .. man, like Sir EdWin. Landseer, will I make everything he touches redound 1 to his own success. "If in the mere ! cantile world thy employer compel i thee to go with him one mile, go with I him twain." . l But there is another authority that has a right to subpoena your _time and your sacrifice, just as Caesar's courier had a right to compel the Hebrew to protect him 'when he was carrying the royal , message over the Judaean hills. This authority is the church. It has a right to corne to you in the home, in the store—anywhere you may be—and says: "God wants your money. God wants your tame, God wants your personal sacrifices. Come with me for at least one mile." Now Christ says: "Irf the name of the church you should not only be *veining to go one mile for God's church; you should be willing to go the twain mile." Yet how few pc°- , ple are willing to give up their ineney and time and personal sacrifices for the church of God as they might!' You seem to have time for almost Are we an, for our 'd ear ones' sakes; every other line of work on earth but 'ready to travel the twain mile of mead- that of the church. 3 go to you to -day : Ace? MI d say: "Mrs. So-and-so, I doe wish Are we ready to do for our dear ones you would come and work in our Sun - what I saw a noble friend of mine do day school. I have one of the finest for his helpless, tongue-tied and Men- classes of gir s you ever saw. There tally beclouqd vette, who a few months are almost tve nty girls in it. They are ago Went to 'b•er heavenly rest. This: just at the critical age of life. If we gentleman at the time I knew him had can only holdthem for five or six years passed his threescore years and ten. longer they will make grand workere His wife had a fatal disease creeping for God. But they must have the right over her that was rendering her more kind of a teacher. Will you come?" helpless every day. Instead of the old And inevitably I hear an answer some - gentleman leaving her at home to be thing like this: 'Oh, I can't come. That cared for by servants he waited on her means I will have to get up early Sem- as gallantly and devotedly as though day *morning and always be there. -You _she were a young girL Ile cut for her had better a,sk some one else who can the food at table. When he ha..d guests be more faithful andAetter fitted for she was klways by leis side to eat with that work than 1." Med so I am put them. When she sPilt her cup ofloof- off from getting the right kind of fee, as she sometimes di& he woitlenot teachers for my Sunday school, just as apologize to us, hitt ;sweetly say to leer, nearly all pastors and Sunday school "Never mind, Jennie; never mind. It superintendents are put oft The aver - is all right." When we went out to age church members are willing to go hear one of the greatest singers in the the first mile for God. in the church. !al world he took her along because even 4 The chipurpose for which the In her physical and mental weakness ; church was \started was the saving ot she always loved m.usic.- Then lie a ouls. Could any work be More im- would, say to me: "Ah, if you only bad portant? Some years ago I saw an known her when she was well! I ettli officer of the law pursuing a thief. A never be too good to her for what, she . ca,rriaege drove by. Without one *um - has been to me." Yes, in the home we ment's hesitation the officer command - should never forget what our dear ; the the driver to halt. He leaped into ones have done for us. They have . the carriage, took the reins and hit the traveled the twain .mile often enough horse with the 'whip. He made that for us. Shall we not -travel the twain horse run at full speed after the Pke- i • mile for them? , hag thief. You say at ()nee: "That is One day a young artist called uPOn ' right, The officer had a perfect -right A,udubon, the great naturalist, and . to dm that," Well, my friends, then I showed •some drawings to him. Audu- would ask you this question, If that of - bon: looked at these drawing's a mo- ficer had a right to take a man and his ment. Then, he said: "I like those carriage and.pursue a fleeing thief, has drawings very much, but they are not not my Lord and my God a right to true. You have painted the legs of this summon you to come and work in his partridge nicely, except in one respect. church, where Christian people are The scales are exact in Shape and col- *working and praying in order to de - or, but you have not arranged them velop boys and girls andmen and wo- correctly as to numbers. Now, upon men so that they will not become this upper ridge of the partridge's leg thieves and social ceatcasts. Is thiel there'. are just so many scales. You fireman's work, who rushes to a. burn -.have painted too many. Examine the ing building, any more important than legs of a thouean'd partridges, and you 1 that of a Sir Humphry Davy, who will find the scales always the same in manufactures the little mining lamp, number." Then Audubon said: "Young 1 that there may not be a fatal explosion man, it Is only when you become wed- ded to year work—body, mind and wail —that you will make a. success out of It. You must be willing to work day in an,d day out, week in and week out, year in and year out, to investigate to the minutest detail; otherwise you can never master it. When you work for science you must work entirely above the, idea of mercenary remuneration. . You must work for love." • What is true in reference to science and professional life is equally true in yet, when our country is callng as business. The young man who makes rind needs our aid, how many of us Es. success in business is the one who turn deaf ears to those calls! For the makes his employer's interests his own. peace and happiness of our dear native It is not the young Man who simply land are we ready to fight its internal does what he is told to who is promot- enemies as well as its foreign foes? ed in the store. It is not the Young Are we ready to fight .the saloon and man who works with his eyes upon all its sinful dives and all the; evil the clock, re.ady to drop his- tools at the vampires that. are trying to suck out first stroke of the bell, who becernes the lifeblood of our social organism? the foreman of the factory. It iS the Are we willing to be true to the na- young man who is a perfect glutton tion and come to her help, as the He - for work who finally sits in the glass brews should have been willing to office. It is the young man who is will- spring to the aid of Caesar's couriers ing to do what he is not asked to do, and go with them not one mile, but and what other clerks are ianwilling to twain? do, who' finally gets the promotion. In Thus my text has not, as some peo- other words, the -successful man in the ple might euppose, a literal but a figur- mercantile World is the successful man ative interpretation. It does not `sim- in the scientific or the professional ply mean that you should be willing world, the man who for others is ready to travel with a man c" 2,000 paces, to travel the twain mile. which was double the distance of the Oh, the neglected opportunities of Roman mile, but it means that in the business, to which some of us shut our home, the store, the church and as an eyes! These neglected opportunities American citizen you should render un - are Tying about, despIrga everywhere to God the very best service you can. around us. The story is told that one You should sacrifice for his name; no day a couple of humorists were wan- *natter how great the sacrifices inasy tiering through the zoological gardens seetn to be. It is said that after one of London. While there they saw the of the famous Spartan battles a La et- oarcass of a huge lion being dragged daemonian mother hailed the courier from its cage. In a spirit of fun they who brought the news from the front RANGES. ;1;1: gr„Mvi Welcome National Grown Huron and 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 La,urel Base Burner is the heater you require, George A. Sills, Seaforth - - Ontario. McMann & McMann, John MoMann, sr. John M Alarm, Jr. (Suoceezors to John MoMann, sr.) Are now prepared to handle all kin& of horses. Buyere may purchase horses at their sale etablee, Egmondville, ab any time. 16444! trail. , You can a.lnaost hear the pant- ings of his exhausted horse and the whizzing. of the rifle balls as they fly past the cowboy's ears. There he is digging in the spurs in his Pace with death, or, rather, in hits race for life. Now, in order to get a clear aaa.se USED MEN -AT THE OFFICE U WOMEN IN THE HOME AND CHILDREN AT SCHOOL Every day in the week and TIREDevery week in the year men, women and children feel all ed up and tired out. OUT used strain of business, the cares of home and social life and the task of study cause terrible suffer- ing from heart and nerve troubles. The efforts put forth to keep up to the modern "high pressure" mode of life in this age soon wears out the strongest eystem, shatters the nerves and weakens the heart. Thousand* find life a burden and others an early grave. The strain on the system" oau.see nervousness, palpitation of the heart, nervous prostration, sleeplessness, faint and dizzy spells, skip beats, weak and irregular pulse'smothering and sinking spells, etc. The blood becomes weak and watery and eventually causes decline. ,Milburn's Heart and Nerve /1. Rills are inclicateil for all diseases arising from - a weak and' debilitated condition of the heart or of the nerve -centres. Mrs. Thos. Hall, Keldon, Ont., writes : "For the past two or three years I have been troubled with reervoti'alless and heart failure, and the doctors failed to give me any relief. 'I decided at last to give Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills a trial, and I would not now be without them if they cost twice az much. I have recommended them to my neighbors and friends. Milburn's Heart and- Nerve Pills 50 cts. per box or 3 for ,$.1.25, all dealers, or The • T. =burn Co., Lina4ed, Toronto, Ont. What is true about the difficulties be- tween the children of a home is also bought it and sent the dead lion as a true in reference to most of the difficul- Joke to their friend, Sir Edwin Land - ties between husbands and wives. In- seer. It arrived at the great artist's stead of some men and women looking 110use early one morning. The servant., in amazement, wen) and awoke his master to ask him what he should do with it. Landseer at once dressed and went down to see it. He stood a mo- ment and looked at the huge body. Then he said, "Bring it into my study." They carried it in. Then Lantlseer took np his brush and commenced to paint. He painted that dead lion in the midst of a great expanse of sand. He called the picture "The Desert" It became his most famous masterpiece. The model which his friends tossed aside as a joke he took and made out of it. a stepping stone to a throne. So in professional. as well as in mercantile life there are opportunities lying about us everywhere.- If we grasp them. in in the mine? But I cannot close without speaking one or two words with direct reference to Caesar's couriers. Christ is here enunciating the doctrine he preached te the Pharisees when he saidtcRender unto Caesar the things which are Cae- sar's ate well as to God the things which are God's." Shall we not, in the best 911 in the truest sense, be sub- limely submissive to our city and state and national government? And. upon the °marriage altar as an oppor- tunity for promoting the happiness of their marital partners, they look upon it as a stepping stone to a throne, where ehey can make their husbands or wives work for them. Their mar- riage altar is not symbolized by the beautiful nuptial ceremony which the Cherokee Indians used to have. There the young bride and groom used to stand upon the opposite banks of a brook and clasp hands over the run- ning water to show that hereafter their interests and work were to flow together as the watersof a running stream. But instead of some husbands being willing to go the twain mile for the wife, or some wives being willing to go the twain mile for the hus- band, each says, "I will do for you what I am compelled to do, and I will not do anything else." A. young man wooes, *wins and mar- ries a young girl. She has been brought up in a well-to-do father's home. She was an only daughter, and to a great extent She has been. spoiled. Time passes on. The young husband tries to keep up a home to the standard in which his wife has been accustomed to jive, but the income is too small to meet the outgo. Day after day he. keeps eayinge "Nellie, you must economize, You must lessen -our expenses. Cannot you make your old hat do this winter? Cannot you send the children to the p-ublic sohool?" ''No," she. answers, "I shall not. You Married me, and it is your place to take care of me. I never heard this nagging question of money, money, money, in my father's home, and I ought not to hear it now." The young man staggers on in his struggle. He takes to drink. Kind words are now exchanged for angry ones. The domestic difficulties culminate in the divorce court. Why? The wife was unwilling to go the twain mile for her husband's LOVe. On the other hand, the husband is just as much to- blame as the wife. From sickness or OVerw-Ork the wife may become a net -Vous wreck: In her weakness is he always gentle? Is he always kind? Is he always thoughtful? Does he try to shield her as he ought? Do the two angels Bear and Forbear hover oyer bis firesWe? Assinearaa Faith You cannot he expected to have faith in Shiloh'. Consumption Cure, the Lung Tonic, as a cure for Colds, Coughs and all diseases of the air passages a you haveinot tri•ed it. We have faith in it, anci to convince you that it will cure you we guarantee it. If it doesn't cure you it costs you nothing. IE it doea it costs you 25c. That's fair. Try it ' to•cl ay. Shiloh .4 - las cured many thouunds of the most obstinate cases, and we do not hesitate to say that it will cute any Cold, Cough, Throat or Lung trouble. If we did not believe this we would not guarantee 11 absolutely as we do. Shiloh has had an unbroken record of emcees for thirty Yew. It hes dood every possible test without failure. !nit that proof of its curative properties. Further Proof is found in the many testimonials oF those who have tried Shiloh and been cured. Mrs. Archie Taylor, Asaph, Pa., writes — I bought a bottle of Shiloh's Consumption Cure and found it very berieficial. I have two children and they had a terrible cough. I gave them everything I could think of, but they got no better until one evening my husband bought a bole of Shiloh. We gave it to the children when they went to bed, and they slept all night. It cured them completely. I shall always keep it ha the louse.SHI'" 6o2 Istr;' 25c. with guarantee wherever medicine is sold. etilltettiMtar,Stettisit • Vietteliteasittalteadtatete "Where one fellow reads a man's character in 111:s lace, a hundred read it in his clothes.' How do the hundreds read yours —well dressed, therefore careful, has good taste, and is prosperous? Or badly dressed—therefore careless and "not doing well"? SS On .11.1 Pro-gters claunents is the clothing for men who want their appearance to count FOR them, instead of against them, it looks good, and it makes the man in it look good. There is success ahead for the man \vho backs up his good appearance in Ptc:-,ress Brand Clothes, with oodxvorlz. Clothes can't make a gentleman. 1 'ttst.-91) mit i1.ic Is ONE, "Progress Brand" ss -- -1011 will make him look. the part. GRE1G 034,•STEWAR7 Look for it Tuke no other ,e Mooney here's nothing go into Ma A' KERS, r that Canada butter and cr Canada's Elrnouscl. roduce, and tlipped bakery ir convert 1i:1C:in - I crac.,:ixs yci eciU They are ccd rne and Crisp, 'asice,„ - A SI" infaxits =id - You -Have This mother had five sons fighting in the army. "How goes the battler called she. "Alas," said the courier, "all thy boys are slain!" The brave mother answered: "I did not ask thee how 'fared my boys, but how fares my country. If the battle is won, all is well, no matter what has happened to my sons," So may it be with us. May we not work to find out how it shall be with us, but. how it shall be with others. May we work and continue to work not for our individual selves, but 'for the best interest of the home, the store, -the church. the country. Then we shall be working for God. and hu- manity. Oh, men and women, will you travel for others to -day the twain mile? • —Mr: and Mrs. R. 5, Williams, Of Goderich, have returned from an extended trip to Europe. liatal11111111611.1111.11.1MIMPOMEare OBSTINATE COUGHS AND COLDS. The Hind That Stick. The Hind That Tur,n To BRONCHITIS. The Kind That End In CONSUMPTION. Do not give a cold the chance to settle on your lungs, but on the first siga of it go' to your druggist and get a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. It cures Cough', Colds, Bronchitis, Sore Throat, Pains in the Chest, Hoarseness, or any affection of the Throat or Lungs. Mrs. Gou- shaw, 42 Claremont Street, Toronto, writes: "I wish to thank you for the wonderful good Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup has done for my husband and two children. It is a wonderful medicine, it is 60 healing and eoothing to a die- treseing cough. We are never without a bottle of it in the house." Cou't accept a substitute: for Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. It is put up in a yellow wrapper, three pine trees the trade mark, and price 26 cents, at n11 dealers. !s.g. 0"6, 4-drilvd** The thermometer on the Pandora range oven means precisely in ac- curacy to the cook what the square and compass mean to the _draftsman. Without the sqUare and compass the draftsman would have' to work en- tirely by guess, just as you do without an. ac- curate and reliable thermometer on your oven. The Pandora thermometer reduces cooking to an exact science. You know precisely how much heat you have and what it will do in a given time. It is one of the small things which makes the Pandora so much different and better than common raqgesi s andora Warehouses and nactorisat London, Toronto, Montreal. Winrsipeg, Vancouver, St. John, N.B., Hamilton A. LA TIMER Sole Agent, Seaforth. Don Enter Business College emee ten', fr Seel! •••• 111 1!.0i1 r f until you havo read our handsome, new, illustrated catalogue. It tells about a thoroughly good commercial school, one w hose growth has been remarkable in tire last few years and whose only claim for patronage has been that of genuine merit. It is the most rapidly growing college in Ontario' has aprofession- ally trained staffof teachers, new quarters and equipment. Unsurpassed anywhere. All its graduates get positions. Enter at any time. BENIN One of the famous Federated Colleges. W. D. EULER, Principal. the - of VETERINA GRIEVE, • Veterinary C011ege. 1Westedo Calls pro tr!traersite. Veterluete reeldence on Geed Of Dr Watt's otfice ,Se MARBURN V. Se—Hor Oti4lO Veterltery Onl Medical Assoc:two] ege, Treats direcasee oet modern crlesipl suecialty. Ofoe Ifteeet,Seefortb., All Oe1YO Prompt attentlor LEGA. JAMES L. 1! sinister.solidtor.satiri . in Seaferth 11:foredayo Ofiltee open itegery Vet MflfL Main street, Sesforth. S. M #fiouctiorivonveor ottor for the Dominion 81 .Thwilnion Batik% BEST, Barrister* Notary bookstore, liticStre MCKIM, weasel McCaughey *Ifolumis weer, and Meta* mit -of Counneree. e. Oftlee INSON AND, GARR re, eto, Ooderich. •,CHataItli DENTE , The Well -Dressed Man. Hot weather or cold, a man now -a -days nand 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 to attend to. If this were not so we would. -not attempt, during the dog days, to talk about anything so substantial as our tailored clothing. But there is a time coming when you Will equite to think about it, and a few timely hints, thrown out now, Inay assist you raaterially later on.' We don't often puff oarselves but what we say now we know to be he*, and have gained our knowledge by every experience. We build the cloths that leave ow 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. a fit and style that can only be obtained from thoroughly praetiefd tailors. G-ood tailoring is our hobby, hence we get pleasureout of every right fitting garment we make you. Then there is a finish and style about OW clothes that bespeaks the well-dressed man. It is to your interest to remember this. RIGHT BR OS. FURNISHERS, SE4FORTE He Je DENT] Graduate of Royel enteric). Socceeltor taD A. Young's grocery store, DR. BE DEKIST, moved from 418 St offices, 486 Young Dr. John Mee and B.siden SEAF 'PhOzie 73 DR. H. St Oraduate of Univerel nine, tuember ef 0oiIe getout of Ontarlo ; peek daloal School, Chicago i, 1,011/107:1, England ; or do). England. Offie c !et Mein Street, Sesta atewered from reside OR. SMAX °Woo end Retldeuoe—E Methodist March. - T SUMO Muer for the County is etre urge= • SWEAT),rQnr geld medal! . .3ellege of Pb AU0 i EMUS BROWN, Counties of Bur tu M. Campbell% impl Tun Emesteen Office, atleftwtion patient ES G. MeMICEi the county of Hu the county at 41earanteed. Orders 41' on Lot 2, Come -empt attention, TIONEERIle Auctioueer lo 414410- Being a p anderstandieg the mentos places me in Otioca. Charges mod ritnopay. AiLorde _, lea 28, Ceneesai tittended to. We •p our bus -and a Prices ente Furd