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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1903-04-23, Page 10April 280, 1903 impommiewiwommiumwompaurrargas The MolsonsBankj Incorporated by Mt of Parliatactile 145 - Capital Rest emoeheci lie,m) OFFICE - -MONTREAL. Woo Igo 'son Macpherson, President. James Elliot,. General Manager. $01e$ discounted. Collections made. Drafts issued. Sterling, and Amer - icon n.changt bought awl sold. Interest allowed on deposits. SAVINGS BANK Interest !Wowed on sums of $e end up, compounded half yearly. FARMERS. setestattiiy advanced to farmers on their n notes with one or more en- d hers. No mortgage required eS I se rity. L. C. -BREWER, Manager, Clinton. tome441,:e_f, STRATFORD, ONT. OUR MOTTO : "HIGH GRADE WORK ONLY 1" Our graduates readily secure good positions bemuse our high grade training prepares them to render first- class services, !Business Inca want first-class worlers atal have no tittle to waste upoe the other kind. Com meme e, coerse now and be ready for ON PLAIN SPEAKING WHEN OUTSPOKEN OHARAOTERIZe ATM 00 A THING IS SEM " FOOLS MAKE A MOCK RISK' aotootat Words -Syr Those Who Dail, With . Evil X44100404 Mike A Mock ot Poop!, aOd A. liteedleto qt•Atho.ct " Wen Datil Xi hp Toe tate-The Metal a position in the fall. Write for tandsowe catalogue. W. J. ELLIOTT, Prineipah G. D. McTaggart B.ANKER. 14 General Banking Bosiness transact- ed. Notes discounted. Drafts issued. Interest allowed on de- posits. street - - Clinton. Al J. SCOTT, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. Money to loan. Office -Elliott Block - - Clinton. W. BRYDONE, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR. Notary, Public, Etc. 011ice-Floatte Mock - - Clinton RIDOUT & HALE, Conveyancers, Cot n i ssioners, Real Estate and Insurance Agency. Money to loan. C. B. 11./tLE JOHN RIDOUT B. R. HIGGINS Conveyancer, Fire and Life Insurance, Mortgages, Deeds, Etc., drawn for fz each. All work neatly and cheaply done. BRUCEFIELD, ONT. DR. W. GUNN, R. C. I'. and L. R. C. S., Edinburgh. Night calls at Iron door of residence on Raltenbury street, opposite Presbyterian church. Office -Ontario street - - Clinton. DR. SHAW, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office -Ontario street - - Clinton. Opposite St. Paul's church. DR. C. W. rIroMs PHYSICIAN AND SUlt&EON. Special attention given to disCases el the Eye lear, Nose and Throat. Office 1-Resta:nee-- best street East, Clinton,: North of. Rattenbury street. .DR. G. W. MANNING SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.. Office formerly occupied by Dr. 'Pal- . lister on Main street. BAYFIELD - - ----- Ont. DR. AGNEW, DENTIST. Will be at 13lyth every second Monday Office -- Adjoining Henry's Photo Gallery, • Clinton. DR. G. ERNEST IIOLMES, Specialist in Crown and Bridge Work D. D. S. -Graduate of the Itoeal Cot 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 io a. no to h p. m. 3DR J. FREEMAN, V ETER 1NARY SURGEON. A member of the Veterinary Medical .Associations of London and Edin- burgh and Graduate of the Ontar- io Veterinary College. • Office -Ontario street - - Clinton. Opposite St. Paul's church. Phone 97. DR. BALL VETERINARY SURGEON, GOV- ERNMENT VETERINARY IN- SPECTOR. eteefiice-Isaac street - - - Clete -toil 'Residence -Albert street - Clinton. • .; _Marriage Licenses ISSUED DV JB. Rumball, Clinton • Ye.,41,;1.2* ,.• teetteoeedir.NCE see,...eeP •4., "s ;•• 0**** 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 For an up-to-date HAIR CUT -1 AND — CLEAN SHAVE try the leading barber. KETT POOR TO IRWIN'S ORNERY George D. Roberto% <> 0 0 0 Oodles Cotton Root Compomul otis succeeefully used monthly by over lietheLadiee. gate, effectual. Ladies ask your druggist for Cook's Cotton Reel Com- pound, Take no other, as all Mixtures, pills and imitations are dangerous. Price. No. 1, II p 1r box -,_No. 2,10 degrees stronger,33 per box. No. 1 or 2, mailed on receipt c,f price and two S.cent seesaw/. The Coos company Windsor, Ont. Rr•-mos. Land 2 sold and recommended by all responsible Druggiste In Oeseda. Nos. i and 2 are sold in Clinton by H. B. Combe, R. P. R.eelcie, Hov- ey and Watts 8; Co. -druggists, • • rhe Killop Mutual Fire Insurance Company Farm and Isolated Town Proper- ' • ty Only. Insured, OFFICERS J. 13. McLean, President,Xippen P, 0. ; Thos. Fraser)Vice-President, Brueefield P, 0. ; T. E.. Hays, Sec.- • Treasurer, Seaforth P. o. • - DIRECTORS • • • WjlIiant Cliesney, Seafortlt •; John Grieve, Winthrop ; George Dile, Sea - forth s John Watt, HarloCk Solin 13ennewies, Bradliagan ; James Evans,. Beechwood ; James Connolly, . Clinton; John McLean; Kippen. . • " AGENTS. •. Robert Smith, Hari:kit ; :Robert Mc- Millan, Seaforth ;James Cummings, Egmondville 4. J. W. Yeo, Hohnes- vine. • • Parties desirous to effeet insurance or transact other business will be promptly attended te on application to any of the •above officersaddressed oe-their resPective posicillices. Losses' inspected by the director "who lives nearest the scene. ' • eigestelT,IWAY "SYSTkisi.; . • TIME TABLE. Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton Station as ,follows:: BUFFALO AND GODEItICH'DIV. Going East Express 7,38 a. m. ' 2,55 r. u. " ixed ".- 4.15 15. m. " M West '' Io,15 a.. Eirpress 12,55'p. m. 7.0e• a. in. 14 11 41 LONDON,: IIIe'RON AND BRUCE DIV. Going 'South Express., ,".• Mixed, 4,15 P -"In. " North Express 10.15 it. lin. " 0' Mixed 6.83 p. in. A. 0. PATTIShON, Agent. . F. R. IIODGLeNS, Town Ticket Agent J. D.. MACDONALD,. District •Paesen-. ger. 'Ageet, Toronto. HENRY nnATTIE (Successor to Mr, Jarnee Scote.) n;%1R12.1SITM, soriicrr)R, ETC, . 'MONEY TO LOAN, office formerly occupied by Mr. Scott, in the Elliott Block " CLINTON, • -- . ON'T. • 741A•Cir MAniin DOSIOtin COPS'enteklIttes0- itheelteetztelte i% tficof rittiandiactoorit t rey Val:4LT i• or.g.typeancbr cwaTanan. IOW xtrJetly oonlisto t ,11•Ndbook POtNit• sent m*. olaag Foley tor flethltifitOittaittir reAltittl tiat04, 4,000 .0101: .4.G CO: tO061,0 ,01YaOt tour,' ',TUG Mitalfttf.01, tOO Scitiig1.11N: Yloltritaii• I • hoodroim•to-Mot4•Of••1 WOOldp;.• c,orOtta t ; ktnit.tta.1 etie• ,. eenni waive 0. .T, ,.I' 410..NIATP1101%. • .141,10 gie,'",„.1611.-430,0, Nevi Atapo kf.$00)104,1 if Oh *lob este,..1>if LIPPINCOTT' , PAON'TH001 AGAZ I 14 'A FamiLV The Best n Current' Literature 12 COMPLETE NOVELS YEARLY ; MANY SHOWN, STORIES AND PAPERS ON TIMELY 1;0ICS $2.60 PIER YEAR ; 26 0.144 A COPY NO CONTINUED STORIES' *VERY RIMIER COMPLETE -IN rraci.r 1 • oorly? "For two years 1 suffered ter- ribly from dyspepsia, With great depression, and was Always feeling poorly. I then tried Ayer's Sarsa- parilla, and in one week I was a new man." -Jelin McDonald) Philadelphia, Pa. Don't forget that it's "Ayer's" Sarsaparilla that will make you strong and hopeful, Don't waste your time and money by trying some other kind. Use the old, tested, tried,. and true Ayees Sarsapa- rilia. ei,edataan6. Ali kite*. Jtk your donee *leo sie think* et Ayer', eat ta natty teddieme, p,nnott shook see t. p111 ;,i;owar.:oixtonin,eolitthisgor,s ;mewl, sto -srr-nr,r.rr,,,--rr • ly reelaarely. loitered according to Act of Parliament of Oats - ads, In the year 1903, by William Bony, et 14* meta at the Deget et agefoulture, octewa„ Chicago. A,pril 19, -In this sermon the preacher draws a realistic Pic- ture of the' nunit:rous class that eel - lies with evil 1. telgence, Making a mock of danee. tend heedless of ad- monition Until it is too late, The text is Provoros xiv, 9, Wools snake a mock at sin," There are times when hints and delicate phraseology are dequate for useful purpose, and when the kindest And wisest course is to uee plain, outspoken chareeserization shot forth on arrest's of denuncia- tion and exeoriation. So in my text Selemon says plainly that the man Who raoeks at sin is 0, fool. When the human body is slowly but surely being • eaten up by a cancer, it is time te use the surgeon's knife. The gangrened limb needs amputatiou, not balms or plasters or poultices or fragrant ointments. And wheu men end women, with wide open eyei'. de- liberately place themselves M a lee- 1 sition where they may inhale the fes tid atmosphere, reeking with the deadly germs Of that contagious anti fatal plague called sin, it is high time that some: one should be bold enough to stigmatize them by an ap- propriate name, They are not mis- "i en who are merely lost In the crooked byways: of life's jour- ney. They ean see the evil reeults of sin everywhere they go 'it they will only. look as they. are capable of looking. They are not, mental weak- lings who have been confined behind th THE CILINTON -11E00111) • s of a lunatic asylum. They can think, and clearly think, if they will And do what they ought to do. Suh nten and woonen are !s- playing suicidal folly, and the onlY appropriate mune for them is that which Solomon applies to them; they are' fools.. • 'Me same kind of warning against. sin' Hugh Latimer gave when he sent to Heney V1II. his king, the -present •of a :New Testi:went with these pun- gent words written. M plain letters upon the fly leaf: 'Ter this ye know thaO .80 unclean person heth any in- heritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God." The same kin(' 'or , warning against sin in • high ' places John Knox used to. give when as court preacher he would look down from' his pulpit and denounce the sins of his ruler . until the beautiful Mary, 'queen of Scots, would grit her teeth and- taro pele and clinch her-' tiny fists iri paroxysms of rage. tot me• show you why the moekers at sin are. fools; also Why men and women in the daily walks of life should kneel. every morning and evening and ask the Heavenly Father t� protect. and guide and save there: frorie the: 'evil temptations Whichbeset theni everywhere they go.. , • Evil terriptations invariably are in7- trodneed to their victim ina poem,- iligly, harmless way: The11 seeh your companionship at first as friends', and not atS enemies. They .do not approach you glaring and..convul- sively working their claws' and leap at y,ou, as • the - man eating ,monster Might , try . to get at year ' throat when in allAis tory. he is caged in • the ,.zoological gardens of Calcutta, But temptateons conte to you : at ,Arst with the soft fur and the:moo ring salutation of the little kitten which might nestle inyour lalo Thee, come rnsidfousy ee the cholera .might reach you wrapped in the beautiful garinent which is 'sent to you:teem farsoff, Jodie.. They collie. With all the fragranee, of .the poison- ous leaf which brings, death to every creaturethattouches it, • Dr...evyle.r. once- gave a Wonderful descriptien of ' one • of the poisonous trees, -aptly called the Judas tree. He said that the islossenos of this tree are of a brilliant red., From fai. and near the fatal. beauty of ' those flOweris at- tracts th,e insects. Stet "every. . bee wandering in aearch of honey that alights upon the blossoms imbibes a Tato' ereate and drops to the earth. Beneath this enticiog tree the earth is strewn with the victims of - Its fatal fast:hi:Won," • That fatal plant is a •vivid.eymbol of the way deadly sin first appeals to its viettnis. Sin in the beginning fascinate s .the eyes as with the brightest . of floral col- ors. ' It reselnateS . the ear' as with the sweetest of harmonies'. It soirtheS the sense of touch as with the velvety soitneSs of a tiger's paw, while beneath is concealedthe sharp claW. it first wcioes its victim to pillow his head upon the lap- of a' beatit4ful Deitlah, and While the sin- ner sleeps hiS lips are parted in el, sloial dam s •he dreams the:happieit of cirnms. is a Sweet poison," °nee wrote Anthony Burgess. "It tick- leth while it akabbeth.. The fitet then it does is to bewitch, then to pet out the eyes, then to take away the sense of feeling," It is when ' the temptation is concealed and hid- den among the attractive seeround- ings that it has Its greatest danger. The mighty furred broin of the Rocky mountains is not caught by the steel trap lying unconeealed in the opened peithway. "Ile Shambles along, snuffs it, pushes It aside With :his pate, moves round it or leaps (W- O it, but when that trap is Condeal- ed tinder the green, grass ' ti, :short dietariee from the tempting meat then the mountain bear WO oeed for fear. No sooner is the great pat,' placed upon the harmless looking covering than the steel teeth of that trap opring Shut. The inageive limb its held In a vise, and the great beast is as helpless as a Murderer abotit to be eiceeuted in the prison yard. Evil temptations should not be de- rided. They assail -a Man at his Weakest pOinta of character, They do not try to assault his impregnable citadel or attack hint at those points of his nature that are protected by massive walls., So high anti thick that the heaviest of battering rams can only make the slightest indent - tions, bet they try to destroy their vletime by strategy, by throwing the% off their guard; Wounding Achilles not through the breast late, but With the wine etlie making T o - g\ but in the heel; conqueritig A ;ten- der the Great not with the sv• ed, Mae Craninee sign his neantatiOn not by the power et niyeinnent, but by the petver Of fear. It only eeette .., aatimorativatio tt,...at 4.11,....... ‘,.... tweethe eyes th tun the most powerful animal which Was ever driven into the Chicago slaughter heuees. It only needs one small sio. ful temptation to appeal to WI the right way to destroy any man unless be is upheld by a di..ine pan-- oplY. ENO, temPtatione alwaYs assail their victims at their weakest points. Is there any man foolish enough to think that his character iS se perfectly formed that there is no weak point ire Ns- moral armor? A constructor who would not try to strengthen his sagging ,g1rder Is, a erilaiDel• Awful was the catastrophe wheu a few years ago a great bridge across the river Seine broke under the feet or the multitudes merely be - Cause one of the iron links siettnPed41 41 - Poor is the general- who would no be vigilant about the weakest par of bis fortifichtions. And can it b that with all your brain and lore and pest experience you do not real ize there is some .helplessness. Som weakness, in your nature? He,Ve you rioter been tempted In the past and ores thrown? Oen you not realiz that ,i,ou zesty be tempted again in the :future and overthrown in th eerie) way? BY hi ing aware of ond trying t strtneth, n our •wetiknesees wear able to supplement Our strength, A well known and thrilling story . i told that the engineer of th Irollend dikes was one night invited to a party. That afternoon an aw rel storm arose, ee the hour drew near for the fe dived the engineer wavered, but at lost , he said: 'No; I will gdo to the dikes, where my . duty calls,. My services. xnay . be needed there."' When he arrived up - .on the dikes,, he found that under the. eeaselese bombardment of the Seas s.nne of the stones in one place had become loosened ane a little water was beginning • to trickle through. That little stream was gradually growing larger. Over the walis the engineer went. He tried to stop that hole first with stones. Then he o e s took off .his coat,' end jammed' it to the 'downed • rocks. • "More elothes!"• And he wade his Men to.ke off their, garments, and at- lest the -dikes were 'sated.Heel that weter been allowed to trickle on end had not the wetik• part Of the wall I..een .strerigthenod • all the dikes : Would have been *wept 'away, and thous - studs of wen, . women and children would have been drowned. .Solonion well said that when a man with 'his wheal weaknesees ssoes At sin he is a tool. 1, I heard the' reformed .1 oen Gough, •' after he had: been foieby years a t.eeeotalete :soh' '"lialher :than eat 'a piece- of minne pie flavored with brandy I would cut off my right arm. II ()Ida no -more tooth it, knowing.iny lysical and moral Weak n f ei lot dr i It, than. I Would be 1 nit • to t•ouch a: lighted mat h to a. keg of n ot•chr " It is Solnetitnes' manly' lo .run from sin; than. itoia to , sin. • God gave us two: feet as well as two. fists, That irteanx; there a,re . certain Vines,-nh n' we should flee from t enter at ion; ti tot • weshould never allow otirsel \ es to be:r laced in a position where WO nuty'be tenipt- ed. Teniptatfort. always fiendishly etri`•e's its. vict , at his • weaeost • ' • 4 1' Cannot vI long It'th er *Wen ough slie limy be bad. But I would tear away the beautiful robs, and under the rip 0 that cloud I would show you A crouching demon Village only music is the agonizing ery of thoee whom - he has got in his clutch**, whose only loy is in tantalieug those whom fs destroying and whose frightened, pleading eyes have no more effect upon his stony heart than the cry of the helplese fawn up- on the boa Constrictor who is wrap. Pine its coils about the trembling body for the fatal hug. The first steps to moral destruc- tion raa.y wind, through & garden, but that floral pathway soon cleangee into the hilly road covered with lege ged rocks and running by the side of yawning precipices. The braeelets of gold are soon changed into the handcuff a or steel, The merrymakers will soon hear the echoes! of their laughter i8 the ishrielcs of the doom- ed and lost There is no permanent iloPniness in sin. Mark that, My brother -no real happiness in sin! Tell me, 0 drunkard, that you, are happy? No, not Any one who has heard John B. Gough deecribe the miseries of ble Peet life icnoWs that no drunkard is happy. Tell me that the libertine is happy when by his crimes he 'mit the respect Of all good men and women? Tell me that the gambler is happy? No, no! When he sat at the gaining table, he not only lost his honor, but hits home, his business, his all. He cannot even buy a pair of shoes for his feet or a coat for his back. Let no man con- sent to be a mocking fool. by sup- poaing that an evil life ever brings happiness this side of the grave. But how much more awful must be the evil results of sin on the other side of the grave! Can a tiger change his striped fur? Can a wolf have his hair bleached into the' white wool of a Iamb? Can a man born in sin, reared in sin and living in sin and dying in sin be emancipated from sin txierely because his body. sleeps for a little while in the tomb? Oh no! The soul that sinneth is the soul tbat must suffer the results of its sin unless. Christ forgives those sins and washes them clean in the blood of the Lamb. And whenever there is sin, whether in this world or the next, there is agony. I do rot care whether you call the place . of eternal punishment a "lake of fire • and brimstone," a great, heaving, molten see, of . burning lava,. a dun- goonor the haunting caverns of ' memory. The sinnerdying unrepent- ant Must suffer and suffer and suffer forever. The Bible :declares it. We must believe it, "My brothers and sisters, Who who heretofore been mocking' at; sin ai I • have been painting fer you a pic- ture, with the dark background of warning, will you not let •me paint . in the bright foreground' a sweet, • divine.loVe? •Will you not let me de- seribe for you the Christ who i9. ready to stand between you •-and. all future temptation,' the Christ who • • will not only forgive the past; but by his- power will keep ,You in • the futurO? Who Is bee The Unchanging Rock, the . Lily of the Valley, the Bright and Miming. Star, the One Who. is altogether lovely, the One who is now stenellog by you side.. Will you receive him.1. Will you hoe • let Christ coine into your :fieart?• • Ye raockera at sin, I would plead thinketh ho stancle:1 take heeddiest he fall." . • 1 . • 'Evil indulgences should net. heode- tided. They dull the moral scnsibile ties. • Their sinful effects cannot be seen so. much in the wasting 'away of the moral tissmis, as Bright's clis- ease mieht wreck the hiditee'S or tue berculosis inixht eat away • the lungs. But .evil. indulgences' have hardening Sr •, a dulling - effect, as cirrhosid lia,rdens the liver or as paresis affects tee. cell tissues of the brain. It is said that ivheo' a: manes right side is benumbed through the effect of. a .paralytic -Stroke the doctor cantake a 'pin and drive it into his limb and the patient is oblivouS tothe..sense of pain. So when a hemais. being is, suffering un- der- the paraleeing effect of sin he loses. his moral sensibilities. • What appeared to him once aswrong now &elvers tobe right, and what . wes once, right tow does not aliPeoe to haVe anyspecial- significance in his life. ' , 'Pile gradual dulliug or .the paralyz- inor of the moral sensibilities by the touch of sin may be seen in the life of a country boY, . who has come to• live in our large cities. When that young man left home, he was as pure ashis sister or his mother. He had a 'delicate, spiritual touch. He could distinguish right from wrong tie readily as a trained artist's eye. Can • telt the harixiony of colors or a mu- .siasileigllilted'steadriselvidsbellsbu°tcakfetder atawlethilee''' that young man allows himself to be led into queetieniable enjoyments..: Wheh the firet saw euchitothig sin, a fiery bliish oriantled his cheek. But atter awhile hiS perceptions- are dull- ed; evil, is no . longer repulsive to him; he begins to believe that the theatre may have a, beneficial influ- mice. He can 'argUe for it With a clear eye and a steady heartbeat. Ar- terawhile he can go and wilh Abso- lutely no quelrne or uple•aidintra of conscience can sit and Beton to the vilest of talks which are being titter. ed upon the stage:. sit there with a yOung • girl .y hith, side who is no More ashamed of what she sees and heave than is her masculine escort. The fa, t that the young man is tilde to argue with you and that he Nees - no wrong in watching a ainful 'play 1 peeves beyond a doubt that he hai Cirrhosis of the soul, a hardening of with: you also." Come to the .fountain of which if one drink he shall never. 1 thirst again.. I would plead as 1. "; have .never pleaded before. Why? De-' I cause I know that under yore sneer* • ;and laughter .you have a.• breaking' , ,heart e know :that you are at heart wearyhef Your sin and dread its t • punishment. Come, then, 'and let Christ save you. DO not be. 'kept beck by .thethought that you are too bad.to be saved. You. are invit- ed and Christ "asgures you that. -none that come to himshall be cat out. I tell you this invitation IS for. • • all: Yes, it is for all. It: is for you. just as it was for that poor drunken loafer who crawled up to the altar . in Pittsburg many years ago., "What Is the good of trying to save him?" . some men said' to Francis .Murphy.. "No good,: answered Murphy, "for me to try to 'save him,' but it :is good to let GO try." And God did save. ,1-1ti plothie divine, fairing, for, giving arm • about ' Captain Barbour •• and the Mockerat ernbecame e re- deemed child' itt the Xing's palace. Oh, iny Sinful:, sorrowing friends, will et ell cease to, follow , On? Win you heee and now surrender yoUr lifee your broken .life, into the hands of the Nellie Master? • Then, at that glad moment, :fat the: celestlalchinibs will ring - out the tidings thatan • immortal is born again, •• Yeti are redeemed,: hut not with pile vete ' You n,re bought, but not with gold, Bought with a price; the blood oi ., Jesus, • • • • precious.price of love untold, THE BriltiZRY C1-4 'AAGES. /Indication's of -the Coulee of Xtfetits Be. fore the .1toyal, • Consatisslon lit ' Toronto Laet Week. • . the 'moral soneibilities, an !nab:My to spiritually distinguish right front • Wrong . Within the walls of My °Vol church 1 have seen 'this paralyzing of the moral sensibilities by sin. I have Seen O. man who once led a noble. womart to the marriage altar not only sacrifice himself, but Sell' his own child into sin for the gratifica- tioo of quenching a drunkarelli thirst, My brother and sister, with suoh ex. arapies before you of the metanio - phasing power of sire can you afto d to run the risk of scoffing at WO Are yoti 'net afraid that, tui in CIree's palate, you may be changed into the form of a littinan brute? Are you not afraid that by the touch of siri your coetteence May become Ito • herdoned that you shall have no trier - al sensibilities left? Evil temptations should not be de- rided. The depth e of human Mittery into which they can fling their vic- time this side of the grave tire un- fathomable. /t le upon the dark side of the resulte of sin 1 Would Opealt. The trouble; with many ot our so- called Chrifitian teachers 1 that we put a halo Over sin, We picture teMptetion ea a, avant° Of beauty boated upon a itilVer clo-ud lined with geld, ahe holds in ono hand a pack of eards and in the ether is goblet Of Whit. The collie Of her elieck, the fieWers caught in the fold* of garment, clinging about her litho formmake her look so itiltateaL ono Toronto, April 20. -On Friday af- ternoon at' 2.40 o'clock the ItoYal Commission adjourned the. trial or Mr. Gamey's bribery charges against Hen. ..IaMes Stratton and • other :Ministers until Monday. On Menday of last week at 10 o'clock Olittlicele Mr Boyd and Chief Justice Falcon - bridge entered the Court room. For the prosecution there were pre - tient: Messes. S. H. Blake, IC.04; 0. 11, Ritchie, k.C.; W. D. tic'Pherst,n, • K.O., and .1. A. Macdonald. For the defence: Messrs, B. le, B. Johnston, X. 0.; W. IL fl1ddelt, X, 0.. and J. M. McEvoy, Mr. Johnston objected • to the width of Mr, Blake's formulated charges Chaucellor Boyd made it dear at once that the Commission would take Mr. Cearney's speeeh in the On- tario Legislature as the primary baste of its Work. Other Matters could be argued Mid decided Otter - wards, After Sonia produetion Witnesses • had produced the dominants and pa- pas; in their possession, Mr. R. R. Gainey, 11X,P,1?. for Manitoulin, was celled and eworn. Ile told the story of his eharges practically the sameas itt the House, and his direet examlnatiott was concluded at three o'clock. Me Johnston followed as eross-examiner, and subjeeted the wituess tet a. most strenuous examin- ation, which continued all Tuesdity and until nearly noon on Wednes- day. Mr, Blake then re-examitied Mr, Gaineyin rebutter, and the Wernher tier Manitoulin then stepped from the witnese box after having been 18 hours on the etroid, Mr, M. O. Thonmonth reporter of The Globe folloWed and told of re- 'eciviier from. Me. Gamey the copy of the iliteetiew published in that pa- per when Mr. Gamey announced his intention of supporting the Govern- inent., no reeelVed the document front Inc. Gamey in the ttefflelittIVO Ball clings. Mr. Croesin, piano manufacturer, followed, and swore that kfr. Ora- Mey had deposited Money of large denontinations In the Trailers' Dank during the last week of the Indus- trial Exhibition, and that Mr. Ga- sheyr. had told hirn the amount was F1,000 and where he got it. Thursday morning Mr. Ayles- worth, /CO.; was the Itrst witness. He swore that a day prior to Inc. Ganeey's visit to his office with Frank Sullivan on the 10th Septerne her, 1902, Mr. Stratton bed told: of Inc. Garaey's conversion, and he advised getting a letter to that ef- fect, and Inc. Stratton drew one up and handed it to hint. Inc. GaineY signed this in his presence, but o41. the latter wanting a loan of $2,000 or $13„000 witness became sugpicioua and would have nothing more to do with him, Inc. Strathy, manager of the Traders' Bank, followed and proved the deposit by Inc. Gamey of 8.1,500 I t Ontario Bank bills on Sept. 11 last. Tiler° were ten one hundreds and ten fifties. He also swore that Mr. Johnstolo .Mr. Stratton's coun- sel, had obtained details of Inc. Gainey's private account in the bank. Inc. W. R. Smyth, kt.p.r. for Al- goma, Swore he saw Mr, Gamey and Prank Sullivan, unknown to them, enter the Orossin photo factory the on the night of March 16 'at 19 minutes after 8 o'clock. Mr. W. IL Priceseoene of the hidden witnesses ire the Crossin factory the. same night, was next exarained, and told what he heard pass hetweext Inc. • Gatney and Inc. Sullivan when sit- ting behind the pianos. • Inc. Percy • G. Price, his brother, also one of the hidden witnesses, followed, but had not. coneludect when the court ad- journed on Thursday. , On Friday after Inc. Percy G. Price tween Gaeoey and Inc. Frank membered . of the conyersation be - had concluded his testiraony, Inc. J. hidden witnesses, told what he re.- A. Kinney, the east- of the trio of Might, 'directory pub- lisher, Was called to say 'tenet Mr, Gamey had told him last August about the approaches of Sullivan, but this eyidence wae ruled met, as .was all of the same sort,. and both sides agreed to send home witnesses of this class, Then .followed Messrs. W. ie. Ryrie and E. L. Young, as paper experts, to pronounce upon the quality and markings of .the paper in the anony- mite documents in comparison with that used in Inc, Stratton's office. They were identically the same, but witnesses adniitted to the crass-ex- aniinee that anybody who kriew • where to go and hod the price could :purchase similar peper., , Inc. Gainey'e brother testified to a visit made 'by Capt. John to Mr. ' Gamey's hottse in August last, M'r. D. Cr; Sturrocic, C,P.11., produced • n telegram to Mr. Gamey' on Jan. 27, , sighed : Prank, and Setiodard Bank manager; 'Ifeld, 'produced documents 'in the • protest case against kr. Conley. A couple of other production witnekses, :Accountant Murrayof the Supreme 'Court and George 'Arinstrong of the bean noose; Com. ;Day; mado pro- duction, and the court adjourned: till MondarY. • 'No Adjournment. • The commission : :meet this raorning at. the • usual hour, • There will be rio adjournment to -day, but an announcement will be made by the• Oba.ncellOr, Sir: John A. Boyd, • that there will be no session on Wed- nesday afternoon, awing to the fun- eral • of the Lieut. -Governor. It has been ,rleemed undesirable to Sspend •the sittings of the commission utitil 'Thursday, as everyone connected with the affairle 'anxious to have it con- • eluded as 'soon a:s•Possible. ' Parliament bonvenes Tuesiliti. • Ho.xt. George W. Ross last evening said that the House would, ,eit on Tuesday andndjeurn, over Wedhe.sclay for the :funeral of Sir Oliver Mowat, The :business of the country. Would then be proceeded with regardless ot the Royal Oisinatissione: ' ..Organist -Lethbridge spent. lAst. .week at his horne in. Glencoe. , .71116 S. 'S. plass id 111r. Shannon,: who has been so ill, called 0.11. .Satur- 'day and presented ben with a • lovely large Easter Ally.'• Mr.. Slituturn ap preciated the theughtful . and prettY 1Stieter• gift. • Dyspepsia and Heart Trouble Mr, George Webber, SL George Street, Chatham, Ont., states;-' I was very ner- vous, troubled some with my heart and suffered a great deal from nervous dyspepsia . and indigestion. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food bas prover. a therough cure in my case, After having used it for some tithe I am pleased to say that I am entirely restored to health. The indigestion does not trouble me, my nerves are strong • and vigorous and the action of my heart is regular." , Dyspepsia and heart trouble frequently go hand in hand. When the blood is thin and watery and the nerves are weak and exhausted, every organ in thelbody is liable to get slow and uncertain in action. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is the most pow- erful blood -builder and nerve restorative that medical science has ever devised. It cures thoroughly and permanently by restoring the whole system to health and vigor. 50 cents a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. Dr i Chase's Nerve Food F Does it not seem more effective to breathe in a remedy, to cure disease of the breathing organs, than to take the remedy into the stomach?. Bstablisha , Cures While Y011 Sleep It cures because the air rendered strongly antiseptic is carried over the diseased Sur" face with every breath, giving prolonged and constant treatment. It is invalu- able to mothers with sniall children. Is a boon to asthmatics. • Whooping Cough, Bronchitis creel) oeughil Catarrh, Colds Grippe and Tfayrever The Vaporizer and Lamp, which should last a lifetime, together with a bottle of Crosolenc, St,50, Extra supplies of Cresolene os cents and O cents. Write for descriptive booklet contain. mg highest testimony as to ats value. VAPO•CSFSOLENt IS SOLO BY oituneism mrsaywnsas. Vapo•Cresolene Co. stto Fulton Street x6r,z Notre Dame Street New York Montreal PF.F. • : LtiCI<NCW. • A very. happy event took phiee at th Jiojije of Inc. and Mrs. ' Hugh Pritchard ()1' Laurier on '1'heraday evening-, the 9th -inst., when their ' eldest datightee wits onited in marriage to Mr. David W, Evans, A former teacher of the. Laurier school. The bride ' was supported. by 'Vise Alberta Baird ' of I•.•incardine and titit " grcymi 1)3731r.J0.4171111 Coiyen of 'Kea- . tail, The itaptiel knet was tied by. Rev.. II. J. Pritchard' of Brantford,: a coedit of the bride, in the presetice of . a largo nuieber 01 frituclo. - d'he eniae ;looked • charming in a Wedding gowu of crepeol eh ene trimmed With silk • etyl up/ill:pie • with bridal vei1 and oeange blossoms. The maid of hopor wore a dress of pink grenadine trim-- • teed with insertion and ribbon. e'lle. peeselits let the bride were many and costly and gave eVitlenee of: the high • esteein in which site is held by hen . untny friends. The Itapey Couple left ,fockeow by the 'ilioreing traln. to visit the frienthl . of the groom • at horelluitur and vicieity . ete the. cone: • . elusion of their honeeeitoOe Mr. and Mrs. ...INans will take up their resi- dence pear Guelph,. where Mr. Evans is teaching school'. , • : Mrs. Helm; 'Widow of :the late. Mr. " 11'i111i Ileljii, passed. away at •her home in 'this village on. Thursday in • the: e64lt year Of her age., Deceased . was. Inc wens eears resielent of Ash- field 'and ..hieldy. esteemed:. She was et devout ineniber Of the Methotliet church.. • FOR OYER •S.IXTY 'YEARS. • Mrs. WinsieW's soOtning Syrup has . been: used by millions of mothers f.ore their children 'while .teething.: If dis- turbed of eight and broken 'of your. • rest • by a sick .child siiCiffering ' and crying with pain of cutting teeth seed at Onto ,ancl get a bottle of 'Mrs.' Wieslow's Soothing Syrup!' for ethid- r.en leetkiling It will relieve the'poor: little sufferer iminecliatelY. Depend upon it, mother's,there is no mistake aboht it. ./t cures Diarelioea,Nregue.. • .• lates the Stomach and Bowels', cures Wind Cello.- softerte the Giuns, retiocee, • Inflainmatuin and .gives. tone, and. en% tee teething 'pleasant to the taste. and is the prescription Of one of the oldest, and best feeler° phyeleiazis and nurses in the United States.. Price cents a bottle. Sold' by all drug- gists throughout the. world,. Be sure ergy to the whole systeri, '! Mrs: - Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for child - and ask for ".Mrs. '1Viete1ow'8 Sooth- ing Syrup." . : • :HXNSAL.L. • 'Rev. Dr. Medd occupied :1115 own... • pulpit fOr the firSt time sinte Novem- ber on Sunday week.. His people. were pleaseclto liav hill7.•. He preached two Easter sermons with, his old time- en- ergy and originality.' ilia evening theme was "The Buried Christ" and. he . pointed out the various' methods ail - opted by the people 'el today to bury the SeViplIN JAI( despite it all IIe tI- Ways rose again toconvert and con- demn. The choir rendered , excellent service ,:lering • the day. The pulpit was surrotincletlewith 110wers. .• A. Very pretty wedding took place on Saturday eventing. at the residence of . R.. Fulton,. .the coutracting parties being -Miss Maybell Fulton ,and Knapp, druggist, of Detroit. : The puptial knot Was deftly tied by Rev'. .T. 5, /Ientlerson 'of Carmel Presby- terian church. , • • The family of Elani Butt of -near Xipeen have moved iitto nensall and have token up residence ho•T. tyne'e propertY, which they recently purchased, • Bliss Alaggie Stewart, who 'has • been in Clintott liespital for an operatiott, . returned 11()1le Oa Thursday •evening. She is now on -a fair way to recovery, . •r: rataNztorasem,,,,.„,,.7, We make Granby Ruibers and Overshoes ‘"Out of pure new rubber. Can as much be said of any other make? We find it pays in the long run, bea.use a last longer, and give better satisfaction in every way. It costs us more, but it costs you less, for one pair does the work of two pairs of ordinary rubbers. " Granby Rubbers wear MO iron." Nkas„ r, .4 -ea