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The Huron Expositor, 1905-12-01, Page 6- ea Baal, ESTATIt FOR BATA pao aTMENTS.-I wait lend maney o eel q eerier seatioas of 100 soros eaeh at froo 8 LO per on pot miaow, Only first mart taken Ample eeeurIty adven Torrene Titles tystein is psrfeot, Front $300 up- ' can be. lent in tune woriee tr un kt1,001 be $2,0h0. Far further pertioulare write to tue. J. A. JADE' SON, laurfater, etc.. Ponoka, Albette. 1950.11 11.1001......1.•,••••••••.1“.01, agiAnu roe. sALE OR TO RENT. -For sate or elte reel Int 20, eon., 2, H. R. S., Teekersmith, containing 100 lames sll cleared except !shout five sexes ot good haedwood. All underdrained, well fenced and to* good to of cultivation. A good brink house and two barns one with stone soebling underneeth Plenty ot Rood water and a good bear- ing mallard. Thal farm eis well Oared for either stock or grain. Ahout midway bmween Seatorth and Clinton. Apply on the preaniees or Seaforth P. 0. H. TOWNSEND, Proprietor. 1912-t1 OUSE AD LOTS FOR SALE. -For sale, brkii home tend 2 Iota in Seatorth. One IM ewes on NOrtai Main Street and the other on West W11. Dam Street. The haulm is a comfortable brit* 2ottage and nontidne s bedrooms, dining room, sit. lIng room and kitthen, wish good cellar under the whole home. Hard anel sole water he the houee. There le aleo a good stable and driving shed. All kinds ad fruit on the lot. Apply to J. L. ALLAN, Londesboro, wrap C. W. ATAINSON, Seaforth. 1906x4M erIARM FOR SALE. -Lot 83, Conceselon 7, Me- Killop. This fano oentaine100 -aoree of good land, has on it a bank bare 64 x 134 with 8 -foot stone 'stabling. A150 a geed 8-rooroeil briok home, or °bawd, good water, Me. It le eix miles from See - forth and ta miles from Constonee poet alio. Apply to WM. R. ilaANSHARD, Sturgeon Falls, Ont., or to E. HINCHLEY, Seaforth. 1964-tf ARNE AND MILL PROPERTY ros SALE. - For sale the old Bell Funs and Mill Property, on the London road, Tookeretnith, reoently mono pkd by the late John MoNevin. eThere are 100 acres, all eleerrd but about four acres. Good buildings andhhe fannyell ‘underdrained and in* high state ofeultivatish, all seeded to grails exeept abet Leste4. Abei the griat and saw Millprop. erty on the farm. It is within half Simile of Rippen station and 2 mires from Hensel' •and a good 'bush no has always been doter at the mills. The farm and mill propeety will be sold together or eeparate. ly to er_dt •o, ureheeeer. Terries easy. Apply to DAVID 0. KoLEAN, Nippon. 196831 oRm not 8L -For tale, Lot 23, Coneemeloa a, II. LS., OEM of the beet farms in Tueher- smith, containing 100 acre'. It Is in exceptionally clean harm with ne waste lend ; all seeded to geese zeoet of it /saving been in pieture five or Mx years. It is extra well -supplied wlth water. Oo the farm le a good brick house and t wo buns with stone atabling undo/not% with cement fleore. Plenty of trait tree, of different kinds. It le pleasently seated in a goad neighborhood, being one-half mile leaweeichool and Sa milea from Seatorth. Apply on ties uremia's* or address 30111i ROBB, Seaforth P.10., Ont. 1943441 •••19•• ARM FOR SALE -North half of Lot 12, Con. etitiOD 6, Morris, eontaining 100 amea, situated • the oravel road. four and a hill miles wait of Br -camels and four miles from BeIgnore. There are dal sere* cleared, well drMneda• fenced and in a good state of cultivation, at- present seeded down. The remainleg 20 scree fa •covered with excellent timber, Tear(' fa a good frame 'house with stone cellar, good fraine barn with stone stabling under. math, a geed beatiog °retard and an abundance of good water. There to* ahem* and a post office within half a mile aid a echool within" three quer Sere of a mile. For fortrer partfonisrs apple to MBA. B. EIMILLIE, Heiman. 1963x3U rdOOD FARM FOR, SALE -Farm for sele, Lot 26, ‘..1- on the 3rd Concession of Tucker -smith, eon. taining 100 sores, being all seeled and pastured. There are, On the premises, two good barns, ene 40 x 60, with stone siebling underneath and cement tome, tbe other hem 80 x 34 with drive shed, stone :shag for pigs andlans and a comforeeble =frame house with atone caller and oemnt floor. & never - falling epring near the bun and good well at the home. There are about seven acres of bush, the rest in a good state of cultivation, well underdrain- ed with tile and well Mooed, good orchardIt is Mtuated within two and a half miles of BrucefteId and six and a half miles from Seefoith and the same from Hensall. This term will be sold on reaeonable tennis, as the proprietor is going Wait. For further partieulere apply so H. J. CALDWELL, Box 83, Brumfield P. 0., Ontario, 1979-41 ARM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot al, and East half of Lot 22, Conceselon 10, Ribbed, oene taining 160 mores all in a good Mate of cultivation and moat of it well underdrained with file. There le a nice stone house with kitchen and cellar; large bank bsro 60 x 90 It, with atone etabl ng un-' derneath. aloe a etraw deed 36 x 50 and a driving home 20 x 30. There Is a power windmill on the barn, which suppliee water and grinde grain. There are 2 good wells and a epring creek. It is all seeded to gres,s exeepe 30 acres, which is No. 1 bash. Tbere is a gond oreherd. The farm Is 1 mile -from Cromarty and seven unties from two good mar. keta. 14 1, one of the beet farms in Ontario and will be sold on easy term45 the proprietor desires to relit's. For _further particulars' apply on the oramiees or eddreas Cromarty P. 0., ALCX. oi AMP - BELL. 1879x4 (INS OF TEM BEST FARMS in the township of Hibbert for 'ob.-Lot 29, concession 10, Rib - hart, containing 100 tures, 10 acres choice hard. wood, roott/y maple; three goad wells, one at the barn and one at the bust:, windmill and pumps. Two good bank tame, 40x60 and 38r50 both with good stabling and stades are will supplied with -view there being a pomp under the barn. Expel- lent henhouse and driviag shed; good storey and a half brick house wail:frame kitchen and weodshed attseeed, good cellar with cement filoor (house re- cently remodelled inside and out.) One sore of good orchard ; 80) rods of Carter wire fence newly erected, mostly fitted with iron gates all in good condition. Thera are at present 8 cores of fall wheat, 25 sores fall plowing- dime, the balence be- ing seeded to pm suitable for bay or pasture. This farm fain she very beet eendition being absolutely free from. wild °ate and all noxious weeds. It is situated one and a half miles from the village of Ohtselhorste where there are postoffieestore black. smith shop. Presbyterian nue e(Mhoellet churehee. Five mid a bale miles tram FIeasell, the same from Kippen and 9 from Seafosth. Thia farm will be sold reaeonabey as the proprietor 14 oing West. For partioulam, etc. apply )2 JOHN TAYLOR., Chiselhnrat P. 0. 197741 Going to Sell The Wed halt of seetioa 28, Township 8. Renee 19; also the South East quarter of Section 85, Range 19, and the North East quarter of Soudan 27, Reno .19, Manitoba. On the Ilret named parcel there aro 166 aeries br Aten ; a three-roemed frame dwelling, sod stable, a good wall end 25 acres of Fedora On the 2nd parcel there are 125 acres broken, a freme home that cost $300. a log stable and abeut 10 ROM tamed for pasture. This prop- erty is within three miles of the tows ta Ninga, in the far famed Turtle Mountain district and affords a most cleeireble opportunity to puttee desirina to !weft in the very garden of Manitoba. I% to well adepted to mixed tanning and will be eold separaa ely or In one paroel. Prose 810,000, oneautlf cash flud the balsnee on time at 6 per emu. Far further particulars address THOMAS JOHNSTON, • a HE Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. - To appreciate the simplicity and ease of washing with Sunlight Soap in the unlight way you shoukrfollow.direction% * After rubbing on the soap, roll up each piece, imindrse in the water, and go away. ht will do its work in thirty to sixty minutes. Your clothes will be cleaner and whiter than if washed in the old-fashioned way with boiler and hard rubbing. Buy it and follow IW ale , directions. %nig Lever Brother* Limited, Toronto lee TOUCH OF TRUE MASTER POWERFUL TO TEACH GREATEST • OF LIFE'S LESSONS. POINT TO ONLY COMFORTER 1 utiesus, the itri 'n'e of Peace," the So- , lade of Men 'in These Latter Days of Countlees Materia i Blessings Pe- culiar t� This Progressive Age— Causes fo Nation's" Thankfulness , Pointed 0 t lily Preaeher. . t • • i • Entered =cot:dine; to Act of Parliamest of Canada, in die year rem; by Frederick Direr. of Toronto., at the Department of Agriculture, Ottawa. Los Angeletv Cal., Nov. 26.7 -For the countless material blessings peculiar to this progressive -age, As well as for the many spiritual blessings of our day, the preacher in this sermon gives ex- pression to the nation's thankfulness. The text Is Ecclesiastes_ vit., 29, "They have sought Out nany inventions." A new star has arisen in the artrstio firmament. Meteoolike a new star his. flashed its light over the westernhori- zon. A new Star. has come to lead us down to the 'manger of Bethlehem of , Judaea. • What General Lew 'Wallace has done with the novelist's pen young Byarn Shaw fs doing with the painter's brush. The Indiana author and the young English artist, the latter born in Madras and educated in European studios, have:both been bold, strong, powerful and independent interpreters - ef religious themes. Lew Wallace's "Ben-Hur," "The Prince of India" and "The Boyhood of Christ" teach lessons similar to those crf Byam ShaW'S "The Comforter," "The Outcast" and "Nei- ther Hath He Power In the Day of Death." With the - touch. of true mas- ters the inspired elovelisneand the in- spired artist both teach that the only true comforter in times of earthly trou- ble is that 'Saviour whom we lovingly call, "Jesus, the Prince of Peace." • But, though Byam Shaw has painted many pictures, there is one, based upon the book of JEcclesiastes, which has specially impressed me. It is one il- lustrating the theme of My text. The • young artist in his original way seems to open for us one of the rooms of -the British musgarn. In the foreground of .his picture he places a Londoner, a British aristoerat, dressed in the height of fashion of the time of Disraeli. Then he seems to surround 'this man, clothed in 'kid gloves, siIk hat and im-e maculate linen, with the mighty Brit- ish library of :over 2,000,000 volumes, in which are recorded the scientific and social triumphs of past ages. As you gaze on that: picture, in imagination you seem ,to hear the whfstle of fac- tory, the click of trowel, the signal -of the railroad [engine, and the hoarse voice af the great Cemarder's fog horn sending her 'warning call among the mists of Newfoundland, and the ring- ing of the telephone bell, and we seem to see the flash of the electric spark. Then, under this powerful picture with. its up-to-date Bible application, the Young English artist has written the words of my text, "So this only have 1 fecund that God hath made men up- right, but they have sought out many liaventions." Never did these Solomonic words burn:themselves into my mind and heart more deeply than when I saw them in the brilliant colors of Byam Shaw's, strange and yet powerful and startling picture. But when studying that picture I asked myself these questions: "Do all modern inventions truly make men asimmosioisagri Asomiemosegerammons 1078x12• Box 46, Boissevain, MatTeciTia If ow is RANGES WA h 74/17 MME Welcome National Grown Huron and Souvenir Ranges Are recognized as the best in price and quality. A full line on display. Our eiperi- ence in Stoves and Ranges is the longest in Seaforth. Take our word for it, an Oxford Laurel Base Burner Es the heater, you require, George A. Sills, Seaforth • Ontario Wood's rho*iphodine• The threat Engikb Remedy, is an old, well estate lished and reliable preparation. Has been prescribed andused over 40 years. Alldruee gists in the Dominion of Canada sell and recommend as being _Before and After, the only medicine of its kind that 'cures and gives -universal satisfaction. It promptly and permanently cores all forms of Nervous Weak, nes*, Erilite0118, Spermatorrluxa, Impotently. and all effects of abuse or 0-XCe8Set3 ; the excessfre nee of Tobacco, Opium or St/mu/ante, itientaf and Bra In 'Worry, all of whieh lead to Infirmity, tosauity, Coneuraption and an Early Grave. Price $1 per package or six for $5. One will prelate,six. toitt more. Mailed prompty on re- zeipt of pnce. Send for free pamphlet. Addrest The Wood company, Windsor, Ont, Ci :da, For sale by C.rAtorihart, J. S. Rob.l e:rtet, L N'„ Fear, and Alex, Wilaoni elff'-'11101:0 „ Your Cold? Every place you go- you hear the same question asked. Do you know that there is nothing so dangerous as a neglected cold? Do you know that a neglected colcl wifl tarn into Chronic Bronchitis, Pneumonia, ' disgusting Catarrh and the most cleadly of all, the " White Plague," Consumption. Many a life history would read:different if, on the firat appearanee of a cough, it had been remedied with Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup This wonderful cough and cold medicine contaitus all those very pine principles which make the pine woods so valuable in the treatment of lung affections. Combined with this ,are Wild Cherry Bark and the soothing, healing and ex- pectorant properties of other pectoral herbs and barks. t For Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Pain in . the Chest, Asthma, Croup, Whooping Cough, Hoarseness or any affection ofthc- Throat or L1ungs. You will find a sure cumin Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. • , Mrs. C. N. Ipomer, Berwick, N.S. rites: "I have Used Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup fOr coughs and colds, and have always foundit to give instant relief. I also recominencied it t6 one of my neigh- bors and she was ihore that pleased with the. results." • 'Dr " Wood's Norway Pine Syrup 25 dee ..... per bottle at all dealers. Put up in yellow wrapper, andthree pine trees the trade mark. Refuse substitutes. ) There is only one Norway Pine Syrup and that one is DA Wood's, Wretched and miserablee as King Solo mon implies? Did King \Solomon/ him self mean that all modern inventlonss were bad? Of course the greater op portunities of life, Which come through the revolving wheels Of machinery and the • coneeetratien of capital, do nat- urally offer greater opportunities for wicked -men to do evil, but are ail great inventions agents of evil?" "No" ' I answered. "As greater opportunitiee of life offer greater' evIIS for wicked men, so greater opportunities of Ma- chhtery and inventions afford greater opportunities of good for good men." Thus on this Sabbath preceding our national Thank-serleing day I will cata- logue some of the blessings which, ,in a good sense, come to good men from the- sewing machine, the railroad, the Ifactory, the telephone, the typewriter, the Printing press and from all the other inventions that have made, the I past century the most remarkable in a scientiilc sense, of all the ages. Most blessed of inventiens, in the first place, those that deal with health, among which we class • the sewerage pipes, by which a great city is kept pure and clean,- and the great aque- ducts through which it is supplibd with life-giving water to drink. What Vip- sanius Agrippa tried to do when he built- the - famous aqueduct of Nimes, which brought the water of the Foun- tain D'Eure, twenty miles away, to the baths of Diana; what the Emperor Claudlue did when he carried the minter from the Alban hills down to the/ cap- ital of the Caesars', which aquedua still bears -his name; what King Solo- mon did when he built his three, fa- mous pools, from which reservoirs he carried the water by subterranean pas- sages to the city of Jerusalem; what Tarquinius Priscus did 600 years be- fore Christ when he built the famous canal Cloaca. Maxima, the oldest and the most famous drainage canal in the , world and which is still used to carry the refuse mit. of the *city of Rome to the Tiber, the great engineers on an enlarged scale are doing for our own cities. These engineers may not have the title "Mel)." affixed to their names. but they areNthe greatest of all prevent- ers of disease. Truly they have done. their work well. If you do not realize how well they have succeeded, then study Iftider- ground New York or Chicago or Ialella,- delphia, or St. Louis, or Boston. Mar- , velous, staggering', ovonderfth and al- most inconceivable are the eights you there can witness. SUMO years ago it was thy privilege to see underground • New York beingexcavated for the great subway rail/se:tad. I heve seen the noted Chicago drainage canal, built at the expense of many Millions of dol- lars. My favorite walk when g stu- dent upon the banks of the Hudson wae over the noted Croton aquedu et.. through which the water was brought from over thirty miles away to quench the thirst of the 4,000,000 inhabitan.s of the metropolis. But, after all, the excavation for the New York under- ground railroad l'impressed me more t than all the engineering feats I ever ,aatv. A$ I looked doovn into those big subways I always fblt as though I were inan operating room and seeing the surgeon's knife cutting its way. Those excavations were to me a vast laParotomin operation upon the great city of New York. But, while thanking God for the res- ervoirs and the aqueducts and the pipe lines which bring to us pure water and the waste pipes which carry away the disease -breeding refuse, shall we not thank him also for the marvelous ma- chinery which puts upon our tables the best -Viands that the harvest fields and the orchards afford? And when I speak of this machinery -I am neSt only alluding to the reapers and the plows and the seed scatterers Which we saw exhibited at the St. Lduis and Portland world's fairs, but I. also allude to the wonderful freight cars and the huge Atlantic and Pacific steamers, with their refrigerators and cold storage plants, that bring to us the rarest and the choicest of fruits and vdgetables and aaimal meats and fish and bird' meats and mollusks, no matte e where they may grow or breathe the breath of life. . Some people !naive' at the mechan- ism which makes' it possible for the farmer to sow and reap fields of wheat -hundreds and thousands of acres wide where their ancestors had only a few acres to a farm. 'Tis true, we must gaze in awe at the wonderful poshibil- ities of the modern farm through the miracles of modern machinery. Last summer while riding through the coun- try I saw a. great machine going over the prairie wheere once' the 'farmer went swinging his scythe. This mar- velous machine was called "a cornbin- ed harvester." It was drawn by thir- ty-two horses, driven chariot -like, four abreast. That machine cat the wheat, thrashed the wheat, gathered the clean kernels into bags, sewed up .the bags, threw them to one side and tossed the straw into heaps. All this happened while the farmer was out taking lis plea.sure ride behind ,his thirty-two horses. Marvelous, marVelous, Won- derful, wonderful "combined harves- ter!" But the benefits which came to 'our table from "a combined haves - .ter" are as nothing compared to t` ose: that come from the freight car d from the steamer, • . Have you ever stopped to consi4ler froth how many -various sources our food comes? ram nearing the coastiof Sydney, _Australia. I see alongside the tailroad track great numbers of rt)h- bit's strung up. There are thousands and tens of thousands ef them. I See the hillsides of New 'South Wales cov- ered with sheep. 1 go' -to the wharfs, and there I find the great steamers be- ing loaded with them. "What is the good of taldng-these thousands of sheep and rabbits to London'?" 1 say to the captain. "It will take you at least three or four weeks to 'sail there, That meat 'will then be malodorous and stenchful and sickening." "No, no," answers the captain. "That meat is being stored In refrigerators. By running liquid ammonia throUgh the pipes and letting it evaporate -we can make our own ice on shipboard. That meat will be sold In London markets as fresh as it is to -day." By the -wonderful cold storage system of freight car and of steamship we can to -day eat the choicest fruits of the east and the west. and have he ten- derest ,of meats catTled throngh the Red Sea. and Suez Canal, The New Yorker can banquet Upon. . California fruits, and the inhabitants of San Fran- cisca watching the seals.allinbink over "Seal Rocks" in the 'Cliff House res- taurant. May order his .oysters brought from Maryland: Bay. Wonderful, won- derful food. provider is machinery! •But I muse stop describing the many different sources from which our Thanksgiving: dinner comes, or :else your hunger for material Ithlogs will crowd out your desire for a spiritual Thanksgiving. Suffice to say the rail- road track and the ocean greyhound as well as the wonderful modern reaper and mower of the farm are spreading for us a Thanksgiving banquet of which the Romans and the Greeks and the Hebrew's or even our oWn, a.ncestOrs of a hundred years ago in the wildest flights of their imagination could never conceive Or. dream. No wonder all the menus or the bills of fare of all our large eity restaurants' are printed in a foreign language. Foreign lands bon - tribute a great part to ail American banquets. Thank God, Japan can fur- nish„Massachusetts her rice as well ais elfouligafta, her sugar and China her tea. But, though 13yam Shaw's- pictures were dressed in garments a quarter of a century old, yet, like our own clothes, they were all machine made garments. The linen came from the Belfast rnillS. The wools were woven not with a. Pris-° cilia's spinning Wheel, but by the looms of the Manchester factory. The silks came froth the silk mills, the kid gloves from the kid glove factories. The poke - bonnets were made in the hat factories, The high silk hats, without which no British aristocrat feels that be is dress- ed as a gentleman, also came fritri the hat factory. And when we go trough our own wardrobes we hear machinery humming one perpetual sentenoe: "1 made, you. I made you. 1 made you. I made the cloth of that coat. I made the cloth of that dress, 1 ma,de.that underwear. I ,.made those shoes and those hats am:1'4 those gloves. I' made you.. I made you." And.why has ma- chinery Made all our Tlothes? For two reasons—first, because machinery can make our clothes much chealper than the human hand can make them; real - son the second, -machinery can make those clothes much bettez\' and more 'suitable for comfort and etese. You say you _like the old' hand -made clothes, hard to make, but clothes which, after they were made, never wore out. How would yon like your great-grandmother to knit for you a pair of stockings like those your great- grandfather wore? You say these modern stocking are always getting holes in them. Yes, they are, but there was no danger ?If your grandfather's stookings having holes in them. Why? They were made as thick as a bed - quilt. The the beauty of them was that, -like a modern Mother rfubbard dress, they -would cantinualiy stretch and be made to fit any one, or, rather, they would never truly fit a,ny one. Then about their lasting — my, how they lasted! They Milted so long that after awhile they got as stiff as a board. They lasted so long 1114 they would stretch all out of shape end kink up and make your grandfather think that his big, clumsy, hand -made boots were filled with briers and nettles, but these stockings were too good, even then, to throw away, and our great- grandfather had to keep on wearing them, and the only place where those bedquilt stockings finished their period of service was when the old gentleman wore them in his casket. For rnY part, I would prefer my wife to have other duties than making my stockings. I prefer to trust machinery to make them rather than have her hands make them. But, after discussing for a little while the benefits which machinery has giv- en to us in our eating and drinking and our sanitation and in our wearing apparel, shall we stop there? Shall we not at least hint at the wonderful bene- fits that have come to us from tele- phone and telegraph and the modern 'newspapers and the lights by which we read in 1 the evening hours, and from the typeverlter, which has so lift- ed the onerous burdens of professional and mercantile life, and the electric cars which for 6 cents make it .possible for a business man to be in his office at half -past eight in the morning and yet take his evening meal in a. subur- ban home surrounded by flowers and grass -grown yard, as well as by wife and children? Shall we not thank God for the wonderful inventions of the biologist'laboratory, "for the micro- scope, the Roentgen rays and all thel wonderful means by which disease is being halted in its onward march and driven back and by which the crooked limbs are madestraight? Shall we not thank God for the wonderful system of street lamps we have, which ma -es midnight 'in a/ large city almost as bright as midday and 4thich light is the greatest of all [crime preventers? And, above all, sha 1 we not thank God for our library shelves-- filled with books, cheap books, yet books ready to serve us when we stretch out our hands for them; for books which will summon the best men of all the ages to come and tell Us how to be good and true and pure and upright and Chris- tian, as well as materially great? And the me,evelous fact to me about all these inVentions 1 have mentioned is that Without exception they have all come to their great development (lur- ing the past century. .We ar living in a "wonderful age. 1 wonderftiljt 18notone of us can truly grasp IC was never more- im- Pressed with the rapid advancement of material blessings and of inventions thar(wh.en reading recently a synopsis of a lectureelleiered by the late Bishop II Clarke of Rhode !tIsland in 1866. At that iltime t ere Were no bicycles, no automobiles, no typewriting machines, no telephenos, no -,Atlantic cables, no .1. tranSeontineptat railroad, no great eteaneship lines as we conceive them, no successful airships, no sleeping cars, no la,Irge offlde Inaliclings; with their ele- vator, and no tptaris cars. The title of this lecture '3S "The Next Finer Years." Thette ate isorne of the prophe- cleeBishop fillaril teen made: "We have madels wonderful .iprogress in traveling 1'0,0114 es during tlie last half century, but do you think improvement is going to stop there? N",ar. Posterity will not be corstent to traVe at the slow rate of Only thirty imileS fan hour, seated in these Ilie arroW. cars, istified with bad air and art. It coeds effort no great eort to imagit0 fifteyears hence a splendd i IocomOtive, with11 tiotel, spacious jinx - lora ' dining-rooitis and dormtthries, the bird flies over a 4rf and bordered by Sweet shrubs from pisco In four days." 1. bishop's prophecies riie true? Shall we continent from the J a in less than four pi Clark goes on and fl the wonderful in - dome to pass in the he electric battery, Id our cities strikes i 1 may be made at f our street lamps e perfect uniformity Iiiti clocks and kindle iidreary rocks in the .beings now endure range rous solitude." the celestial heighte citric lights -shining lere lonely islanders mankind. Speak , rn road gent y att Ti ad rpeted by , shade trees and - Boston to SanFr Have te not the goOe: . not soon leap th Atlantic to the P days? Then Bis vPerenntihoeSsletahaittOrnhate 1) electriworl : which itow in so" the rntrinight ho evening to lirt at one•flash, seen of time in our pu a beacon on thes sea, where Mime, s. inelaneholy audit' Bishop,'Plark :f ro ' might Zee these e torday.-. Speak out • now in touch ,vit AS $1011014 C1 p°11rotp? liee ies of 1"the I may Om permit Looldeig ahead, I wonderful world. shall die I sae t tions of the 'past in producing powe &lines •calling to ?enough • bread for ' make enough' clot I will bad enough can sleep. I I will for •all to read. temples - in Which Then, 0, man, If t of your generation tian duty the bum learn the fatherlio the brotherhood of of the few having In 1855 spoke in ext fifty years," so d• to- speak mine.' ee a strange and fore my children wohderful 2inven- nifin1te1y developed I I hear these Ina - 0: "I will make lli. to eat. I will sl for all to wear. 4^Auses in which all nt enough .books will build enough all can Worship. e Christian people ill 00 their Chels- ea will not only a God, but also an. Then, thstead ttio much and the many having noth ig, there shall be enough bread for al ' and to spare. May God help us t(6 hear to -day thewoloe of God in the voice of machinery bidding us to love th a Lor41Cur God -with all our mind and stren th and our neigh- bors as ourselves!Ipi 1 . Thus in closing t 1$ sermon. en this Thanksgiving Sabbaith;I would have us one and alt, amid th great hurnlof fac- tory and by the flas ' of electric: spark, make this one pra r: "0 God, make' me thankful for the 1tQod I eat, for the clothing' I wear Oar for the many, many blessings of !inventions round about me. Fill me With the holy de- sire not to build for myself a. hang- ing garden of BabYlon, but to be so blessed through the help of Modern in- vention that :out of My abundance I may igife to thee and to thy children." May this be the Thlenkagiving prayer of every heart. Than instead of ma- terial wealth being the cause of our 'spiritual overthrow it will be the means by Which we otirselnee may be lifted by lifting a hUnkeY etid a naked and a l i. fallen. race up toevar . God and hea,ven. Then, indeed, shall the e desert blossom as the rose and the barren places of the earth thrOugh the power of inven- tion be filled with the glory of the Lord as the waters: cover the sea. Then will ' our Thanksgiving day be a glorions Thanksgiving day 1 r those we love and for those whom ve snail bleee. Not Menet wring. "Mr. Stalate," said Ithe bashful youn- ger sister, "I asked silrter if she thought you would get up and go i home like the other young man did if I. recited 'Cur few Shall Not Ring Tonight.'" "SM said there *ouldn‘t e any "And what did she say?" harm in trying." Hard to Please. Nobody outside the Journalistic pro- fession has any idea how difficult it is for an editor, to please some of his pa- trons. For instance, referring to a man's reputation for carelessness in the matter of his tolilet, a paper an- nounced, "Mr. Magaile will wash him- self 'before be assuMes the office of town Clerk." This Made Maguire fu- rious, and be idemanded a. retraction, which appeared thus: "Mr. Maguire re- . quests us toi deny t at he will wash himself before he assiimes the office of town clerk.", Oddly enough, this only enraged Maguire the hiore. Ms Women Folk. "What a beautiful home you have!" said the old time frienkt "You mustn't let mother and the girls hear you speak of it so patronizingly," answered Mr. Cumro . "This ain't a borne; this is a residence." DYSPEPSIA AND STOMACH DISORDERS •MAY BE QUICefiLY AND PERMANENTLY CUBED BY BURDOCK BLOOD BITT RS. Mr. P. A. Labelle Maniwitki, Que., writes us ae falowtst "I desire to thank you for your won- derfuroura; 'Burdock Blood BiCters. Three oitears ego I had a very- severe attack of Dyspeppla. I tried five of the best doctors I could find but they could do me no good. I was advised by a frieruPto try Burdock Blood Bitters and to my great surprise, after taking two bottles, I was no, perfectly cured that I have not hada sign cg Dyspepsia since. I cannot proisetit too highty to all sufferers. In my experience'4 is tile best Id ever used. Noth- ing for me like B.B.B.I Don'theeeeptihe substitute or Burdock Blood Bitters. There is nothing ",iust an good." ECEMB Bovril the Kitchen Economist When looking over your market accounts do you realize how much of what you pay for is wasted? Often the bits that you usually throw out because ;you cannot serve thern as they are, can be transformed into delicious, toothsome dishes with the help of a little . BOVRIL. Here's a dainty Luncheon Dish from the remnants of roast mutton: muTTON PRITTBAS. Fingerahaped slices ot eooked mutton should be coated -with a little salad oil and vinegar and lefe awhile, then spread light - In; With Bovril, ecated with thick frying batter. and cooked a ince brewn in hot fat. A. Ifttle grate& Eight pounds' of prime beef is concentrsted in Imertgat on the meat er provementt four ounces of BOVItiL. brain well and serve very , hot. lpovril is peeparoo only by BOVRIL 4IIITED, LONDON, ENG., and MONTREAL CANADA • By special. appointment Purveyois to ;His Majesty King Edward VII. sae* Coupon ever meek of *Ade' and get Bs essilful Premium Pte.:Are, 1 her's. Trai The Mooney Baker ce anything bette ooney s Perfe. Cream Soda The very best of flop cream—the most the, very best a. A bjscuit s her you have eve y Mooney's" to you A.MeaTne s 'ARE cleceiiyuli— bul so longs /c4y are, /here's noihimg like having //rept deceive FOR 24S, insteatttof 4 GAI,INST u4." Y Ai "The label that On all mains pro:tear • ' PresteaCeiewee "Progress Clothing creates good impreSSiOns. • r,` Progress Brand " Siiits and Overcoats give mdn the -appearance that Pashion &M -ads. A man who depend)?ou 1'.15rogress clothes need not read fashion notes tlo find out 17114 is new and proper l to wear, 1 • "Pro.greSs Brand" sets the!st3 not followthet4:. ".Progress Bra creates fashiOn4not imitates it Make yptir 4lothes connt POR von, by wearingr"Progress Brand." 140PKREAL _RE.ss This:11ms to yea. VE.Tg X, V. S., horror pear dime . °sib promptly el aa ...tate, Veterinary Dentisi d reeidertee on Goderkis otto lir .Seott's �ee ileaforth. N V. 8.---tren0rar7 r Veto:bay Co)legega E astoolstioo of tin 4 . Treats discuss of a do] kr =slurp principles Dent Wee , forth. AP ve prompt sttednUon.:igh tie Calf ESS STEWART BROTHERS eed;" a, e• or▪ odt aaree- t ---- fill 12Y p .......,,, ,,.,...„ ..- ..--.--....„ ,inri4:4..-, -1--_, F 4-%r i , Thl:I I., 12.„` ...fti......7----'-- --'----s• ._.:.,..,,. ,. ---„,-,..„•-,._ how we do it. Send postal for a coy. Good School Good Students Good Positions Practically every office in the Twin City ha.s in it a Berlin Business College Studen6, ; We have appl i cat ions nearly every clay for office help. Men a bright student takes a course w4h us he is practically certain of a position. We have a large school, splendidly equipped, with an unusually capable puff of instructors. Our large, illustrated ratalogue tells what we do for our students and Enter at any time. Barrhster, Solioitore Naterry Pnblio M in Seaforth Mondani; Feeideen dee Office opoe evory week day. 0 elgne,-*sln street, sesttAb. 1.1.01•••••••••••1. R S. HAYS, Solledfor, Coneeyatitor and ai Dominion Benk. Seaforele. limey -to le Bale:Mere lio1joil0r, - bile,; Mon irp aki a, t1n 004,2.4000 W. D. RULER, Pringlpa One of the famous Federated Colleges. Wake up your liver. Cir your constipatior4 i'Get r 4of your biliousnets.Sohl for 60 years. artIV1 CKINGRAM'S DYE Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use ritrrt cra. or opium= es a. e. naea,msau4's,j& I immsos AND DATCROW., to., Godtetrich, On -UK& B. tat MORMON. CHABLZSOARIW H J HOD(.21 ENTIST. Otadnate of Beyel Cargo el Britt* Criteria Suceestior to Br. Tweddle. Yeurg's stem ry stole, kametreate DR. BELDEb DENTIST. TORO{ removed fram 418 Sberhourne St w offices, 488 Young Ste OPO011te _•••• MEDICAL, Dr. John MCGinr Office and Resideoce-ddietonft - SEAFORTH e 73 DM H. HUGH RI at et lanivereity of Toronto etc ember of College ti royMois es of Ontario ; piem eradteete oen •School, Chicago ;-Iloyal Ophil don, Roglatuel linhemeity Dor Eoglana. °aloe -Over Or= n Street, Seatorth, Thome ered Isom residence, VittlAtia Eye Troublea Quickly arid per- manently -Glasscs fitted proJper14, 41 Dr,. Ovens 4. . London. 1 Trehts Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat. Willbe at Commercial Hotel, Seaforthi, All Day Wednesday, Dee. 1 th. rho zikKinop Mutuai Fu, -Insurance Cotapany, FARIPA AND ISOLATED TOWK PROPERTY ONLY INSURE? °mons. J. B. McLean, President, Kippen P. 00 Thotuaa Ffs140 evice-presid,ent,Bmeefix:11 P. O. ; Thomas' E. fleys, lksforth P. fi auntroe Mown Chesney gestorth ; John G. Grits* *in. tirdep ; George Dale, filesforth ; JohnBonnet Qublin ; James 'tying, Seeehweed ; John W tiarfock ; Thorns+, Fraser, Brnceileld Aim B... Nosa,,Kippen ; lames Connolly, Clinton. &MEM Batt. Statith. litsrlook ,4 E. Hinohleil Josses Cnicoming temendyillel s rine P. do George !Audis sad ;Oka • • &Ion A Book that no Favrnerca afford to be Without THE FARMERS' MANI; and VETERINARY G1HD Complied by the AgrioultUral Editors of the Family Herald and Weekly Star of -.Montreal at the liequese of Hundreds of Reeder& VON* IMIM Maw It Can be Had FRES The most complete Arnim' Handbook endIT unary Guide ever Issued-8bn* aucl-•Pmctical fortnation of the greatest value to every alnis'* Three hundred and fifty-eight subjects dealt isi.b. every ono of interest and many of then) ..illotrated. Our Special er - ,1 We offer a full year's subseription to E EX OSITOR, a full year's subsbription est fall Weeklies,. the Family Herakt in 8 of Montreal, including their beautiful il "-Q, een Alexandra, her Grandchildren. and Doge, and a eopv of "The Fanners' Manual and Veterinail Gui lie," all for 81.96. A sample copy ec the piefOu'e and book can be Been at this office. . WAN BRO., 8(wforth. M Killop Directory for 1905 D EL MAMMY, Reeve, Be-eel:wood P. O. M. WLAND. Councillor, Walton P. 0, oftUAID, Counciilor, St. Cdumban P, 0. CH ELLE3 urrut, Ooneoluor, Winthrop P.O. JO N X. GOVENLOOK, Councilior,Whishrop MIC EL MURDIE, Clerk, Wfuthrop P, 0. Ds ID M. ROO, Treasurer. WInthro P. O. soLinfoN S. SHANNON, 4. P. 8ani 7 leg: - Winthrop PA 0* F URO Milos and Rosidenod-Golettela Wee Methodist churl). Tuarnaes to, 46, dream /or the County of Moron. _ 4as Pirractisis AND EITROZO st, opposite kistbudat eh e 'ode VIMotia 'and AY143 Coh"-Ke ef P1 Oo"oner for OlsV. 0 onor greduate Trim _Sy Mediae! Coll snd Bargee- ; AUCTIONEERS. 0 BROWN, Licenee Oouatlee of Hozon and Perth. hell'a implement warm -one KJct'OStron Office, will retesive preen aniion guaranteed ox no &arse, ' 131 °MARL, Relented a Huron. Sales attee at moderate ratet,ar left at the Seefort Oonceesion 2, Mullett, ING.-B. 8, Ph1111 AflOttoneer for the counties ti a practical farmer an g the velem of farm stai late° me in a better position* Ohargoe moderate-. detkfacthl . All orderelele at Hansen ; re'oncession 2, Hey, wili UMBER, and SHINGLE EDAR PO CLUFF S BEIt YARD and PLANI SFAFOliTH.