HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1902-06-12, Page 7Junewi2th 1902 THE CLINTON 11E17ir5.RECOR1 7
111.1r 11111.11,-.111.
The Molsons Bank
Ineorporated by
Act of Parliameot, 1855.
Capital $2,500,000
Rest 2,150,000
HEAD OFFICE - -MONTREAL.
Molson Macpherson, President.
James Elliot, General hlanager.
Notes discounted. Collections made.
_ Drafts issued. Sterling aud Amer-
ican Exchange bought and sold.
Interest allowed on deposits.
SAVINGS BANK
Ness Interest allowed on sums of $1 and
up.
FARMERS.
Money advanced to farmers on their I
oun notes with one or more en -
dot seis. No mortgage required as
security,
IL C. BREWER, Manager, Clinton. '
G. D. McTaggart
BANKBA.
A General 13.1nSing Business transact-
ed. Notes disconated. Drafts
issued. Interest allowcal oi de -
P051 Ls.
Albeit street - - Clinton.
J. SCOTT,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC,
Money to loan. •
Office -Elliott Block - - Clinton.
sr -
W. BRYDONE,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR.
Notary, Public, Etc.
Oflice-Beaver Block - - - Clinton.
RIDOCT & HALE,
Conveyancers, Commissionere, • Real
Estate and Lusurance Agency.
Money to loan.
C. B. HALE JOHN RIDOUT
DR. W. (;UNN,
R. C. 1'. and L. R. C. S., Edinburgh.
Night calls at froti door of residence
on Rattenbury street, opposite
Presbyterian church.
Oflice-Ontario street - - Clinton,
DR. SILAW,
.1.1.1
11,•1,1.,111M011,111 1• J L !Ili i
Directory.
CLINTON.
Wesley Chureh-Suuday servicee. at
11 a. na. and 7 p. m. .Suaday Wait)t
at 2.30 p. in. Wilbur Manning, Sun-
-day school 'superintendent ;
choir leader ; Miss Hallie Combe., or -
Rev. W. 0. Houston, pester..
OM, t. .Church -Sunday services at
It a. sus mut 7 p.ni. in�ay
school at 2.30 p.° 10. Jacob Taylor,
Sunday sthool superintendent IL J.
Oibbings, choir leader ; Miss AZie
Gibbings, organist ; Rev, Dr. -Gifford,
pastor.
St. Paul's Clairch-Sunday services
at It as au. and 7 p. in. 'Sunday
5c11001 At 2.3.0 1). rn Sullthty SC11001
superintendent, Rev, C. R. Octane, M.
A.; choir leader, Mr. W. U. Lator-
; organiath llieS May Bentley.;
ream-, (7. R. (*unite, M. A.
Baptist Chureli- Sunday services at
11 a, tn. and 7; p. in. Sunday school
at 2.30 p. ut. Sundayschool superin-
tendents Mr. I). K. Prior ; choir lesaI•
er, Ur. J. 13. Hoover ; organist, Miss.
Ltda Hoover s pastor, Rev. J, C:
Dunlop,. '.
Willis Cluireh-Sundasr services.. at
II a. tn. and 7 p. in. Sunday school
at. 2.30 p. in. Sunday school seperin-
tenclent, Mr. Jas, Scott ; assistant,
Bliss Wilson.;..choir leader, Mr. 11% P.
Spaulding ; oreaniits, Miss Maude.
0,00.lain ; pastor, Rev. Dr, Stewart,
St, Joseph's Church, CatholicahSun-
day eervices at m30 a, nt, mai 7 ph
111. every end 'Sondes,. Suuday school
at 3 p. -in. every end Sunday. Sun-
day sehoor superintendent,' Rtre,
McMenamin ; choir leader, Mr. Chas.
Gravelle ; organist,- Miss Minnie Rey -
fluids ; priest, Rev. D.,• P. WAD:amnia,
Plymouth. Brethern-Service at tx a.'
m. on 'Sunday. Reading meetings at
7 p. in. Sunday and Friday evenings,
Town Couneilt-Marar,'Thatnas
'3 ack-
son ; Councillors, H. B. Colube, J, A.
Ford, C. 3, •Stevensoia. Alex, MacKea-
zie, C. Overbury, Thos. 'MacKenzie ;
Clerk and Treasurer, W. Coats, Meets'
the first Monday in each•nuantla .
'Public Library Board -President, -W.
Brydone •, Secretary, W, .E. Rand;
W. R; Lotigli, Dr. Shaw,. W. Coats
and E. M. MeLean.• • .
Public- Sehool Board -Wilbur Mane
ming, -(7. B. Hale, 'V.. T. -O'Neil, J, W,
Irwin, Dr. Aguew, Y. R. Hodgens,
Beacons, Secretary,. J,sCunniughaine ;
treasurer, W. Coats, •
Collegiate: Itistitute Board -Chair-
man, .1 mime. Scott •; secretary, M. 1).
MeTaggert ; tre.aseret, Jackson ;
1). A. •FoaresterS J, Ransford, 11.
Plunisteel, W. H. Manning. Meets
first Wednesday .in each spend"...
•'
• GODERICII TOWNSHIP,
Township Counell-Reeve, Thomas
Churchill, CliOtain Councillor, John
Middleton, ' Clinton ; John Woods,
Porter's Hill • 'Janies. Cox Porter's
Hill ; J-Sanep Johnstone, Goderich
• Clerk, Nixon Sturdy; Goderich s. As-
sessor, John 'J7honi1son, Ctinton ,
Treastirer, Whitely, Goderich .Cole
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. lector, LouiS.AndersothfClinten.
Board .of Clerk,johe
Office -Ontario street - - Clinton. J0116 , Salkeld -;-Si;; Albert Can-••
Opposite St. -Paul's church. • telon. • .•
DR. C. W. THOMPSON
PHYSICIAN .AND SURGEON.
Special attention given to diseases of
the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat..
Office and Residence-
Albett street, East, Clinton.
North of Rattenbury street.
DR. AGNEW,
DENTIST. ' -
Will be at Baylield every Wednesday
afternoon.
Office-
AdjoiningHenry's Photo Gallery,
Clinton.
DR. 0. ERNEST HOLMES,
Specialist in Crown and Bridge Work.
D. D. Sha -Graduate of the Royal Col-
lege of Dental Surgeons of Ontar-
io. .
L. D. S. -First class honor graduate
of Dental Department of Toronto
University.
Special attention paid to preservation
of children's teeth.
Will be at the River Hotel, Bayfield,
every Monday from to 11. In. to 6
p. m.
DR J. -FREEMAN,
VETERINARY SURGEON.
A member of the Veterinary Medical
Associations of London.and Edin-
burghand Graduate of the Ontar-
io Veterinary College.
Oflice-Ontario street - - Clinton
Opposite St. Paul's church. •
Phone 97.
BLACKALL & BALL,
VETERINARY SURGEONS, GOV-
ERNMh;NT VETERINARY IN-
SPECTORS.
Office -Isaac street - - Clinton
Residence-Allort street _ - Clinton,
THOS. BROWN,
LICENS1,..1) AUCTIONEER.
Sales conducted in all parts of the
counties of Huron and Perth.Or-
ders left. at The News -Record, of-
fice, Clinton, or addressed to Sea-
ford' 1'. 0. will receive prompt
attention. Satisfaction guaran-
teed or no charges. Your pat-
ronage solicited.
z
,
7
I
i'!...r1::: ti. g ',ill Id t.4 0 1
MONTHLY MAG/INE'
A FAMILY LIBRARY
; :13 Eat b Curfcrit Litorature
12 Cott METE NOVELS YEARLY
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I NO CONTINUED STORIES :
1! EVERY NUMBER COMPLETE Mate :
_j4 iO Vri
• Eh:Pr...US SIC•el
t "'• sr,
TgAba MARKS
te• DESIGNS
COpvrtiarrs &C.
Anyone Rene Ina a eke( eh and fiestriptien may
rinceitty ascertain onr opinion tree "simmer no
ineeneen is probably patentable, eeranninlea•
liana strietly ronedentitaatittialbodlt on Patents
sent tree. Oldest inteneY Ter Seenringpitenta.
Patents talten throWth Munn & recoaa
"metal notice., without, chino, 111 the
$diftUkJittitritati.
it lintslanmely Aftiatreted Weekly. Urged .eIr.
(mi"I'l°Pf 11
fl
M1'q°sIg""n lggi"3
isrciftrropl.,Si. . tt40et
e
& COa
91 1 Oteittiveay, rin flfl
Waugh oleo, the 10 et. Washita -toe. 0.
• STANLEY TOWNSHIP.
Township' • Couticilh---ReeVe, jOha
McNaughton,Varna.; Couneillors, W.
r. Stioson, hayfield ; W. L. -Keys,
Varna r • Jainesh./ohnetone., Bayfield
MeDiermid ;- -Clerk, 3. E, Harnwelh•
Verna ; Treasurer, John Reid,''Varna;
Assessor, John • Tough, hayfield ;
Col-
ketor, 'Thos. Wiley, .Varria.. •
. • .
The Killop Mutual Fire
Insurance Canipany.
' DIVINE FACE OF JESUS thnoeltayWitt?
eweet and tender and loving face, al-
fitafhothsevattrsovnatrigof afearcoess9.
i
a hittSburg Park, a little c•hild .ran
.
-,.........-. up to him and took his hand; then,
as -a
Dr. Tolmage Draws o Pen Ploturo LokinguPiQthatgt°(i4c.
atacetharueverharan;btter_
of
the Lineament', nese against auy one, but only for-
• giveness-the child asked, "L say,
T
CHARACTER AND THE FACE sieotec,.ea.eyou od/
1rnu5•tnoOtth'"
ink •
'of Christ's
face only as an intelligent faee, a face
of power, but also as A. loving, Sym- s
•
some of Clirlet'e Mesta' and Spirttusl
charsoneristies Recounted -A. sympa-
thole Epee-Irergtveussi is Ms Vsa.
turce-itecord Of the Seelli-illeseleed.
by Loye.-134e1oe Emye Net UMW.
Entered Aceordiue to Act of Parliament of Cam.
410.11, the year luee. by W1111100 luny, of To-
ronto. at Malice% a aterleuatira. Wawa.
Chicago,. Jane 8.-.A. pen pictUre of
the lineaments of the divine lace of
!Christ is presented by Rev. Frank
De Witt Talmagein this discourse ort
the text, 11. Corinthians iv, 6, "The
face of Jesus. Christ."
Character is stamped upoo the hit-
.
man face. By that I do not mean 0,
good man aecessarily _has 11. beautiful
face and a bad mem a homely Pape.
Some of the most sinful men have
the handsomest laces. The morally
corrupt and evil minded Edward IV,
of England had is face of such sing•u-
lar•beauty that It bac:tone the idol of
London. When the king asked a rich
lady 'for '410 to help carry 00 the
war agitiost France, she replied,
"For the comely face thou shalt
have twenty," When the king 'kiss-
ed her With his smiling, lips, the rich
old lady made the gift £40 instead
of £20. On the other hand, seine
of tbe kindest and best men have fa-
cial features which shock every artis-
tic idea of harmonious proportions,
But when 1 state that character can
be read in the face I inea.n that if a
man is a goOd man there is general-
ly something iu the smile of his -lip,
the glance of his eye, the wrinkles of
his cheek, -the set 1 his jaw, which
suggests that he t good man. It
a loan is bads t are telltale signs.
In the face w 'e that he is a
baB1
dc 11)1(1)1g
01*
-'
• ei.%.* or
have tem:ilea ttah; , evealing pow-
er of tho face is true. You lustivesalso
learned that your wife . can read the
chshiteter in the human face a great
drill better than her hosband, When
a yotinger inan, ' you nsed to bring
your. friends home to spend the even -
Mg. ....After those friends had/ gene
you would turnandsay, "My dear,
.
how 'did you 'like Sosand-so'?"
Your wife would answer: "I do not
like him at all; .is pot a man to
• be tempted. :Vim had better beware
and not get mixed up- in any puss.
hatees deatiegs with that man s I de
. not like face" • Or yonr wife
would -answerh hl -like . that man. I
swish you would invit hilti np again.
to the .house, I like his eye•and the
eurhe Of his lip. I like his face,"
• In almost .elVery 'case, as you 'found.
out, litters.. your 'wife'sestimate of
. your friends' eintractei•s was . right.
Shjudged them by the face. '
• . .
! . • Now • Paul declares that the' glory
I
,• e
of God was revealed to men 'in the
• . face of jukes 'Christ. , As „we have n0.
nut:heath:pittui,e of Jest's 1 woillth
trY. to paint a wordpicture of . the
divine .face 'bjh reecienting . some "sof .
Christ's Mental and spiritual chare
acteristirs. : ' . s!
This was the mettied .by which We- .
• obtained a picture of ,my brother af-
ter he was dead. For years before .
his demiee lie had net been to a
photographer., .Se after •the fuoeral,
we took te •artiat. all' the pietto•es
which hay brother had taken in his
boyhood. We. also took a • lock of
.his hair. We stela the artist .about,
Stay brother's l'apPY 'nature, told how '
the jokes witieh 110 perpetrated
Would-
be reaealed In. ilia smile and laughing
eye Wo -,talked about his :nature, so •
--that the artist might paant that ht
thee' in .the yoeng
• Emperor William. I. 'di Ger any .
wanted an artist to paint the iitco of "
hip mother; Pri0CCSS .L01,11.Se, As she
.waS 'inAlm prime' of her physical
beauty, thok • all the different .
Pictures of the •dertd empress to the
artist's *studio. • There the royal , sots
toldthat artiet th.e 'characteristics of
Ids mother.- Front. hisVerbal 'per-
trettaire that. rustist•opanited. the . fa -
10005 ideal pittimat ef Prinrees I.gatise
(seem t steps- of her, pa ace.
11tay Ood_ help ine -•to-cia.y to • paint
. aright the fate of Jesus Christ !" .-
Jeetts must have had an intelligent
face. Phrenologists teach that the
seat of the brain is under the dome •
of the skull, They.' assert that eel" -
stain. charaCteristics of the brain can':
'he .reaci by -the contour of the sktill,
1(14a blind man with his fingers reada
by the raised letters of the fliaille
.alphabet. But., the intelligence of the;
, brain can be traced in the fneeh , as
well hs .11pon •the.top of thehead, •in
the • formation- of the month tis '
ate 'in' the.; pheetiologleal charts nittp-
ped Main the back of the skull. 1
•The• thin hp of the. Catiensian'ip I
1 irely different front the -thick lip of
the Afriettn; the tleopeet eyes • and
.oVerluingieg brows, of the 'university
scholar are totally s different from the
twinkling tsees and, antigow frontal
•bones of the Australian ab\oeigines.
Some nien's faces are so expressive
that when they turn their keen esais
wain yt)11 they seem to bore a hole
: right into the heath of .yoiir very
being. if you try to deceive. theist,
the look strain their fttees reveals the
. faht that they know you are not tell -
big the ti•uth.
Jesus •Christ's face wasalso a symh
Ipat het ic arid forgiving faces • , 1 To w
many men we. haVe seen whowe falafel-
represented intelligent powee lett
without. meecy-faces • •sincit hs. Nom
(amid ,etticily Imagine a llobosiderhe
might have had Or 0 Frankeesteln or
any of the great leadera of the in-
cieisition 1 Those were the reeve of
men like Napoleon, who, hearing a
inarehal of France. 'after bloody
battle express regrel. over the- awful
slaughter of human life, replied: °Oh
that 114 nothing. In order to make
an omelet you intiet break a few
eggs," Those were the fiteeS Of Mew
like Prince Nawab, who drove 146
British. prisonere into the Black IRA()
of Calcutta, a stifling rooin 'only
eighteen feet equare, and 'left theta
there 04'01 • the nifserY of all. but
tWonty-three was 'ended by stiffoect-
don, Those were tho kind of raves
that must have beet posseseed by
men like Nana, Sahib, the • fiend of
Cawnpur, and women like ell Uterine
Modiel, the evil spirit of St. Btu-
tholoinewhi mitesaere, when 80,000
Preach Huguenots were slate in ono
day, mud by Detillah, the betrayer of
a Samson, and Jezebel, the destroy -
ti of a Naboth.
But all strong faces are not OVA
faces. Soine of the strongest faces
we have O'er Seen have boon the
sweetest and Mott itnagnanintoUs.
nese faces had a love attracting
powee for the behOlders, like the faect
of old Dr. ISItinter, one of the Strorige
est inert the Ablegican pulpit ever
broduced. Dr, Pluiner'S faCe WaS
sxperience "you
Farm and Isolated' Town Proper•-•
. • ty Only InSured.
. • OFFICERS •
J. 13. -.McLean, President; Kippen 1'.
0. ; • Thos. Fraser, Vice -President,
Brucelleld P.' 0, ; le...HayS'• See. -
Treasurer, Seaforth P, -0. ; W. .G.
Broadfoot, .Inspector of :Lossest Sea-
. •
forth. P. 0., .
• •. • DIRECTORS'. • ..
W. G. Broadforit; Seaforth ; Jolio
Grieve, WinthroP-; 'George .Dale, • Sea-
ford' ;. John. Watt,. John
13enoewies; Bradhagans James Evans,
Beechwood.; James Connolly, Clintota
John McLean';Kippen: • •
AGENTS."; . 's
Robert Smith, .1.Iarlock ; • Robert, Me-
. Seasforth:;*. James -Cummings,
EgniondviUe -; '3, '.Ws Yeo,. Holioes-
Ville. ' • . • • •
Parties desirents to • °fleet insurance.
or transact • other business will he
promptly attended to on, application
to any of the abaft oflicers addressed
to their respective postollices.
• . •
. .
.H111131(f1Y.SYSTEM
. .
TIMB. TABLET:•
Trains will arrivi. at and depart
from Clinton Station - as follows :
111.1PrALO AND GODIMICH DIV.
Cloing East Express 7.38 a, 111,.. 2,55 p
‘. Mixed . 4.15 p. tn.
• " West 10,15; a. in.
" " Express 12.55 p.
7.05 a. tn.
.. • 10,27 p. in.
LONDON, 1IITIZON Aiq BRUCE DIV,,
Going South Express 7,47 a. tn:
•' Mixed. 4.15 p. in.
11 North Express • to,15 a. m.
Mixed 6.55 p.
A. O. PATTISOE, F. R. IIODGENS,
• Agent.- Towit Ticket Ag,
M. C, DICKSON,
District Pass, Ag., Toronto
ray
wr
r L.0.164.1_
(J have used Ayer's Hai'Vigor
for over thirty years. It has kept
_ my scalp free from dandruff and
has prevented my hair from turn-
ing gray." ---Mrs. P. A. SOule,
_ Billings, Mont.
There is this peculiar
thing about Ayer's Hair
Vigor it is a hair food,
not a dye. Your hair does
not suddenly turn black,
look dead and lifeless.
Bat gradually tile old color
- conies back, -all the rich,
' dark color it used to have.
The hair stops falling, too.
$1.0 a Wk. All distill*,
If your druggist cannot supply you,
• send us one dollar and Ire will express
you a bottle. ma sure and give the name
of year heareat express owe, Address,
J. 0, A.3Mit, CO., Lowell, Mass,
•
pnlust
t haitiihket 111(1)21;gal; irtviriattret'the' slalcene
of a fare your earthly father may
have had. You remember when, in
the past, you did what you? father
4hualcril ftiourIbiki,(ilideyn.-you'o(11.laC11
141l4 to s lap (121(1 side
and
cried, "Father, will you forgive nut?"' 1
Then 'you remember how he took you I
U p in his great, strong arms. What
lea csewlee tt 01 cisokl 111,11;111e) tirnetracib iheids a Inodv ighuis
eyes filled . With tears as lie said:
"111y boy, my dear little soil, I was
in hopes that you would come- to Um
as you have done. My heart was al-
most breaking, my child, bemuse you
did wrong. Bet it was breaking the :
more because My little son did not '
mini' to his father and -ask to be
forgiven," And thee you found that
the tears • whith trickled down your
cheek .wet•e not those which came
front -your eyee alone. Mingled With •
them were the tear's which flowed
from your earthly parent's eyes.
Yes, our Christ's fate, althorgh a
.strong face, was a sympathetic face,
And my Otti•let's face must have
been a forgivrng face because it was
such an Intelligent 'face, Ire knows
all that we have done and suffered.'
He also well .knows how hard some
of us have struggled in our own
strength to do right,
we have grappled eacihIenicfn°u‘svswhiotilt v ,
•
his awn besetting sin, which we dare
not tell to 'any hinnan ear, 11a
knows -yes, he . knows -how imrios-
slide it is for us to succeed in a ti -
Ing that sin Inour own stet. th.
So when we eome to Christ to ,-.1c
Lor help to resist the evil present.g.and
to avert the evil Inter° as w.914' as• -
to swipe Out the evil past, oh, thens
the strong face of .Christ becomes a
tender, sympathetic, ,forgiving face..
Our Saviour's eyes will fill with tears
of joy. Our SaViour's lip will quiv-
er. Our Saviour's *look will be tine'
of pardon and of unotterable loves .
' Christ's' face 'is a. scarred face.
"No, no," says seine ene; please do
nottell me that Christ's face is • a
scarfed -face. • ' I . have always
thought of Jeans' face as ;the Most
beautiful ever owned by man; I have
always believed his face, was•ap beau-
tiful ns :the tiltrist face described- •in
tile exquisite Portrait cagved nowt an
emerald 'bytho order of Tiberius Cries.
stir fotehead was Plain. and
'very deltdate; hal, face was , Without
spot or wrinkle; •beautifiecl with .
'lovely. redi 'his nose and iitotith Were..
so ?firmed that nOth:ng- eotild• be rePe
•rehended; hie beard waS thickiela ,in
color. like his hair, not very long,
but forked; ;his Toole was innecent
and- ‚.nature his .eS•res were. pleat. •and
quick. •XleWasal, man for his singu-
lar heautr-strepassiog the; ehildr6.1 pi
1.1•1130116t, my friends, that portreit of
' Christ's tete 'which was -canted ripen.
. the 'emerald by Caesar's °Mos has
heett peoeset he 'archaeOl ogist s to.
have been a. description takenfront a
spurious. tablets It was a' forgery
• and Was not written until 200 years'
• after .Christ's death.-sSo, in order to.
find whether, oh no' Christ' ti face was
a scarred face, We 'twist • turn . to th 3
Words of- the 13ible„ -Was his fore-
head scarred? Oh, yeas the 'cracifiers
plaited a, breavn of thorna upon his'
head. As the acharti. thorns; were driv-'
en into the. white ski0. the blood must
have IlOwed: the skin Must have been
...lacerated. Read from:Isaiah lin, 14;
"His visage was so. marred,. More
• than any • man, and his' form more
" than. the Sons men." Turn to the
fourteenth chapter of Mark, ."And
ssome:hegao to spit on him and to
.cover facie' anel to buffet hint .and
to say unto .hlin; Prophesy; And -the •
servants did. strike him with . the
palnIti o1. their hands." After the
agonies of the eruciflxien could
chins:Vs face besother than a seed
face • . . ' .• . . • .. •
• And Christ"S faceis. : a. scareed fade.
because it is the • face of ane who
retihiziid theawful atattere of sin.
• Theugh • Christ could ' forgive . US
r
• .
. ousins by. ' the sacrifice :of- 'blood,
s
ing the Saviour's face suds, a ;sad ,
face ,and if our repentanee will make.
Christ's. face Such an illumined face,
should we not be willing to brighten
up our Saviour's face SIBCQ it „httS
Stiff004 40. 1.1111Ch.
But the sweetest thought to Me of
nal IS that -Christ's face is a face tha.t
wants to loved.' Scene portraits
have an indescribable something
about them which proves that those
feces crave affection. If the closed
lips could speak, they would say:
"I liVe for other e in order that oth-
ers might -live for me. I love in or*
der that 1 can be loved. I suffer in
order that others ean be Marie hap-
py. Alai, being happy, they -can
pour mit their gratitude upon me."
1 02113/ awoke to the fact a few
yearsago. that Christ's face was a
face that wanted to be loved. I used
to think that .1 must lave, Christ be-
cause Christ, could and would save
Me if I asked 111111. But now I have
learned to love him -because he loves
me and *ants me to love him. He
lovesme with a love that passes all
understanding. But that love isin-
complete unless I respond to it and
love es I am loved. Mr. Moody told
a pathetic story how 41, short time
after his .father's, • death his elder
brother ran away front hoin.e, Then
he .deserlbeci how his mother used to
be continually watching • for 'the re-.
turn of the prodigal, how elle. would
send the children every clay down to
the postohlee to find out if there was
a letter from her absent boy. Thoy
would hear- her praying at night for
the return 'uf her eon, that he might'
give her his love. Well, toeclay
Christ's face Is a face craving
affeetiett.
Buts sad to relate, • after all Chri
Bet
.has suffered and done for es,. hie face
may- be a condemning face. The di -
Nine love may be great • enough to
surpass . all human imdersta.nding,
yet the divine love is not Wind. The
spirit of :God .will aot always strihe
with man, In Ezekiel we reach "My
face will I also turn front them,"- Oh,
the- avant moment when Christ's lace
on :aenount, of otir unt•epented sine,
shall become a modernising face; This
is one characteristic of • Christ' which
all unrepentant sinnees - and some
ateinistera pi•eaching in the sacred put,
'pits are trying eel; to se.e. But 11
. is not to. have a condemning
face 'for the unrepentant Stoner hoW
C1111 3/00 account fc r the parable 'of
the. 1;1101)11(1kt .Silp4rating. the • .sheep
.front Ilm• goat's ? • .There is .going- to
(some a clay when (11 jet shall gather.
'before the judgment seat • of 'clod till
the nation's the earth.. Crash
crash, h crash ! will !go every tomb-
stone.' The niameoletons • shall' • rock
and heave -as thc-PhilipPlom
trembled clueing- the night of .Paid's
end Silas' inhareeetttion.. 'Every' gate
ani 'slab door will fly _Open.. me tall
•cemetei•y- ehall tunible • tip ;•61;c1,
the _walls of ...lericho atthe blast of
the rant's horn; .The hodics of ',the
sailors...sleeping by '1. he • coral !reefs,
he. einigretn-s- when eeess-
•iiis tho 1 rarie the- arctic 'expl orerch
heeled i'.11(1.er. -the.
111 Is54i011:111i'S W110 died- tip 'the ;Chat-
o-atliey . , all cense up.,
(lead- .a h li taept nneleis the. (thine 'of
a- slail salt.h.il antrolit. •poor unknown
I alma (Pod 'in the etinnty hos-
pital: 1443)1 0114 se hotly wits lehrltd ia
the ent•thr's ;:e1d hall coute•up. fflie
bo.die4 .e>f the Itch r rid the poor. alike,
,the .b.rtiek :and. this. white, the . jaw
.and Oen:tile-they Shalt cli coma
Then . h bit 'ttehai•ate this
Multitude • which. is. gathered.. before
..him as a • .aimplietd Separatesh his
sheep Nein- 1 he ' goistS . Tuwnids. the
-elven the Sit -cisme •wile turn a -for-
giving face, . bet towards the goats
ha shallatur». ;it • ; dOndemning fate
mh-n, he. sahs; "Depert froth 1110, •3/e
.eureedinto everlasting' fires" . •
. 11' Cli.hat isnot to 'have . - core,
aamningsface t0. those • who 'have not,
rept ntect. of their :einS, how min yea
aecount Tor the .seene in the .ptiresbich
of the too •eirginS ? ..Ae 'read- that
parable we'see •,the. ave foolish vir-
gins . who. had not .preparedsfor the
Bridegroom's 'coming. standing - 'with -
oat. and pounding upon the door of
the' bauquet hall,/ We soon hear- them
crying ."Lorels Lord,- (nun ,te. ',us
But he -answered Lind' said; •VerDY
;say "into .yosti; . • .1.. hnow yon- 'not."
Two teen shall' be working in the
iieltip;. the 6na shall -be. taken. aridthe
theta left, wobi ea eke.] • be
grinding, at .the mill; 002 .6ne shall be
' yet he 'could nettake Way the pun, •
ishrnent, for sin.• . So ha efleaed his
own faee to be lacerated. He offered
his lioe to. become .parched • and
••bleeding-, He -.offered his eyes
home glassy • in -death, ...Yet the -scar-
red and dieflgureds fate Of Christ will
be More beautiful to . the tedeemed
. ;whits 1i1 the heastenly land than 11
those divine. •feittitree' Were without .
Soot -or blemish. *The. setti•e upon his
face „will aPPeal to oslo the same
way 'that the wrinkles. upon Our
mother's . thee • . touched onr hearts
when she lay aaleepain the casket.
We looked tit the -wrinkles and. said
"That. wrinkle came -when she took
care of nit?' while WAS. :0i01C With
:This Wrinkle Catlin wittd1
ray Oro thee died. That other .wriolc. •
lo etone when shewas prehariog my .
elothes for college.. Yonder wriakle
came' the night I Watt married. : tnd
-Left lionia.". Therefore to. 014 anilth•en .
those weinkles Were beautiful because '
they told the story of hue .vieartous
love and Suffering. . Yee, in In oven •
WO 40 "See 011r Mot her' Wrink,,
lei, 1 hat CAMS a14 the hal (le 5(ars of .
life while fighting for bee child:an
In .110a3en aleo want, to- See the
scarred face of Jesus, width scars
were cut late his faith skiu while sufe
,
fering. int our redemption.
She scat't'ed-faee of t heist is an
face., tfitve. you ever 03e0
a Sad colintelianee light up with a
smile ? nave you ever I.,,ard a little
child burst forth into a latish 'ri the
midst of a fit of crying -latish whin
a tear is yet glistening upon the
wet cheek ? Well, 1 hrist's face,
though in one, sense it sad face,
scarred face, is yet an illiiinhied face.
It has Jo;v In the eye, Joe cm tha lip,
Joy ott, the cheek, Joy everywhere,
when 4)110 .01 his leved, oneti has been
saved by the sacrifice, of his blood,
There .lo more JOy In- that divine 'face
over one sinner that repentoth than
over nitiely mid aloe lund persons
that need no repentance,
If Christ's had net been un illum-
ined, face the little Children would
tint have loved to rim to }hu, Chil-
dren are atteneted by o. smile. They
ars amid Or 100314. Yet everywhere,
nit Jeintih 'smiling face appears, we
hear the children calling to ovic
another 1 '(1,2!4)15, come 1 Vero is
,leses 1 Come, roma 1" If Jesus' weS
not an illumined face he eottld never
hate 141/01O 31 tritilill'Itsillt, words
as those which lie spol‘e to him (tick
of the palsy, "Son, be of good cheer;
thy gins are forgiVen thee." 110
could neVer have spoken 5114•11 words.
of commendation as those he spoke
hi reference to the centurian, "Verily,
I say unto you, 1 have not found no
great faith, nO. not bts Israel." And,
Vvlit brother if Otir Bilitt ate Make
•
• •
taken and the other left. Two ime
mortals shall he standing at the
marriage altar; the A)All' 510411 bo 1a1)-
013 11114 t110 1)11201' left. (-h. 1113/
friends, I beg and plead with. You to
hsok into the forgiving fare of Christ
while there is yet time! Po not let
the Saviour's face ever become to
you a condemning lace.
,lcxerelee the one.' Mayo.
'The brood mare' should -have rept.
tar esterase, but it should 114. t s
carried to the point of 1ati411o.
THE SUNDAY SC11001.4.
LESSON XI, SECOND QUAFiTER, INTER-
NATIONAL SERIES, JUNE 15.
Text or the Lesson, Acts *vt,
Memory Yeescs, 0, 19-Colde14 Text,
Acts Xti, 15 -Commentary proper.,
.ed by Hey, 12 M. atearni.
(00Py1'1alit, 1902, by American Press Asioe
elation.]
Ar11).1tvif ZzlicfnutIleyrelliodn ggirteGtinrotreghaonul
were forbidden of gthe Holy GThost to
Preach (he word in Asia.
This is WrIttea of Paul and Silas on
the secon(1 missionary tour. We left
Paul and Silas o.nd Barnabas and oth-
ers in the last' lesson at Antlech
Syria preaching the word of the Lord.
Then Paul Suggested to Barnabas that
they 'revisit the cities where they had
preached and see how the brethren
were doing. Barnabas wished to take
Mark with them, but Paul refused be-
cause he had left them on the previous
journey. There was a sharp conten- .
tion, sand they) separated, Barnabas
taking Mark and sailing to Cyprus,
where they began the first -tour and to
-which Island Barnabas belonged (Acts
x3.11, 4; fv,•36); while Paul took Silas
end started through Syria 4n4 Cilicia,
confirming the churches (chapter Xv,
36-41). It ie interesting to note that
the time came when Paul thought bet-
ter of Mark and was glad t� have him
with him (Col iv 10; II Thu. iv, 11).
7. After they were come to MysIa they
essayee to go Into•Bithynia, but the Spirit.
euttered them not.
In teaching this lesson and the other •
missionary lessons a map is essential
td the understanding of the lesson. One
orthe.most striking things in this book .
Is the partnership of the Holy Spirit
and the apostles just as JeSus bad said
that it would be Palm xiv, 16, 17; xv,
26, 27; xt:1, 13, 14; Acts 1, 8), and as it •
Was manifestedto be 111such pas-
sages as Acte y, 82; viii, 29; xiii, 2;
xv,. 28. It has been well said that our
fidelity to our Master IS es -thoroughly
erenaplitied in our 'refraining from do,
Ing what the Spirit .forbids as in our. •THE LEN NOX R E.COU NT.
doing wbat Re coixonands. . .
8, 9. come'ever into Maceclonia;and help
Us. • .
Being hindered in going either north
or:south, as they waited at Terms this •
Is what they heard aud saw .in a vision..
We may be sure.of this -that if we are
wholly nuclei the 'Spirit's control, seek-
VitilIppi and tannit ten Milea alitent
from It. Although we are not told of
anything accomplished on the voyage
over, we may be- sure that Ile who
teaches us to "buy up the opportuni-
ties'. v, 10, R. V. Margin) Was
not slow to do the same. .
12. And from thence to Philippi, which
is the Ole city of that part of lieface.,
donia end a colony, and we wero in that
city abiding certain days.
Strangers in a strange land, no one
to meet and welcome them, no kindly
greeting, not expected by -any (mei
What a good time fOr Satan to get in
some work on his linel And probably
be tried it, perhaps after this fashion:
Well, Paul, YOU are quite a distance
from home, and nobody knows you or
wants you 'bore. Your man in the
vision who called you this way is not
UP- to time.. Perhaps ,you have made
a tnistake. Uatin't you better get hack
where people know you?
•
13. And on the Sabbath we went out of
e,th.eenetitty0 bbye arl mode,ver :111(14e, we
ehesraet dowprayeraWa la;
mike unto the women which resorted
thither.
What Is Me but a wimen's prayer
meeting at whin the gospel is Brat
preached in Europe? Thank God for
Me women who love -to meet for pray..
er and who labor in the gospel either
by prochilining it or helping those .who
do (Phil. 1v, 3; Ps. 11, R. V.).
14. And a certaln. woman' named .
a eener of, purple, Of the city of Thyatira,
which worshiped, Clod, heard us, whose
beart the lord opened that she attendea
urpatu0l. the ahtnes. winch were spoken of
We can readily imagine the topic of
Paul's theme, for she had but one -one
Person had taken him captive (Acts lx,
20; xvii, 2, 3; xxviii, 23, 31.; Cor. 11,
2). Patti was not suffered at this time
to -go into the province caned A,sia, but
here was a woman' of Asia. who UP to -
her,light worshiped God and doubtless
eagerly:prayed for more light; and now •
elle has received it by a special Mes-
senger all the way from Syria and but
recently from tire -holy city Jerusalem,
one wbo bad hinIself seen the Lord (I'
Com xv„ 8). • '
15, Anti when she was baptized and her
household she besought as, seying, It ye
have tufted me to lee faithful- to the
Lord, mine into •house •ad abide . ••
there. Ane atm eenstrained ha •
Now ihe' apostles and their eon:many
nre not so -lonely, • .They haveseen. the
good hand Of our God upon them and
havesseen souls receiviog and Confess-
-
. Ins; Christ. Happy Indeed are those' •
viho not only receive 'Jesus Into their
'hearts, but cheerfully hand toTer tO
fljin spirit. soul and body.
•
Madole Wins tile Seat tSe Vote Shying
a Tie -The 'Standing . tlie
'
,Ing �nly...the glorY. of Gb(1, He will..
guide Os la .sonin unmistakable Way•
(Ps. Exxii, 8; Is. xxx„ 21). Opposition
Is not oecessartly tin Avidenee that we
are to- native on or cease the work, but
often it Is an encouragement to con: .
.tinue. ,:See Chapter kiv, 2, 3; xviii, 0,.
0, 10; I Cot% xvi, 0. •
..10. And after he had seen. the Vision Ira-
meetately- we endeavored to go Into Mace--
donla, asstiredlygathering that the Lord
bed. called..us for: to preach the gospel .
unto therci. .
The pronoun "we" 'which no* be:,
gins to :be used may indiente that
Luke, the writer of the book, had now 1
joined the party. Pteviond to this it is
he, speaking of Paul, and,"they,"
speaking of the.party, See Col. iv; 14h• •
24; II Tim. iv, 11; for further ref- i
ereneeS to Luke. • I
11. Therefore loosing from Troas.. we
came With straight course to Sainoa
thracia and tae !met day to Neapolle, ,
By consulting the map We find' that
Samothracie was an island' in the
;Eel:an sea;, 'almost in a ..line., direct
.frotn.Troas t� Neapolle and &emit half 1
wav:across, .Neapolis being the nort:of
•
• Nominee, June '7.".--Therecta nt yes- .:
terclay before . hie .klbnor •Ju ge W11-
, -
1,Mson .11:Stilted in 'favor of ho Lib-
•
erals, The votes were' criti ized by
the •,Iitclge• to be. ahtie, anti the rea *..
teinuiceilletoe.• o. 121,7. ist .cest hi.. ballot
that:, Wh0 Will therefore be. .declared
for Mr. Madole, the Libeled • Candi- •
' .necount lo.'N'Orth Gkey.
• , •
• OWOO • SOUNtl, Jun 7. -The 'Official .
•
count for Noetits Grey --reeelted yes-. '
terclity in .9 majorith for A. G. Mac, ,
Nay, -"Liberal. • ,
Alin heat ion has been made: nix.
:ree'nunt, which tidies place Tuesday. ' •
tiextbefore Judges Mo,rvisott,
• .t2;e0ent In itali•iiiistinge.
• , . •
Pellpville, Jane 43. -1 -Application for.
a reetnint in East Hastings 'has' beea-
20(131(1 1111(1 i* • ,
1)11(121 on Monday :next: before judge • •
Lavier. This will undoubtedly, lead-
ing Conservatives- say, be .followed by .
a protest. . ••
: • • •• . • •
•. • i 111, di ‘1, .need.
•
tt'aiwtt; • June-. .ca.ble from.
•. •
South Africa, says Chaples hfurphy of ..
Edmonton and Ildgrir • 'Be -Wield, of:
Halifax' Me.:ciangerously PercY
.1)everpux of British Colembi•a, died
of 'wounds. • ' .
rimiiirsiliosielaatWeiwis‘.*Iamvsiversesiva.itesite.
WHITE STAR II N E
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