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The Huron Expositor, 1896-01-24, Page 2eee eaaeae":e.:a 2 assormieumassimor START 10;'" NEIN LING 5,000 Vol nteers WANTEtI AT A. G. AULT'S Gro ery, crockery and Provision Store. •••••••••• As I have made up change in my butiness,I stock of China, Crockery COST. 1 have a_well a will dear out ail at cost time will sell all kinds down at quiek-send pric few of the many art-it:tea 8 lbs. Sulphur for 26o; 8 6 lbs. Currants for 20; for 2o; Broome, 15c eac bars soap for 25o; 8 lb& apple butter10c per can - 2 ; 5 lbs. boneless flab f 2. lbs. for 250; 4 lb'. mixe lbs, figs for 25e; 3 packa 250; 4 lbs. dates for 26c and tomatoes for 200 ; 1 pies for 200; oringes per dozen ; firet-cless b fresh eggs 16o per dozon alien tivru s, 40 and 5 100 per lb.- c ease 12e pe per bag ; the best limn lbs. for 25c; Ealmon, boards, 15c each ; all kin prices y mint' to make a ow offer my entire and Glassware at sorted :stook and and. at" the same of Grociiies right s. I wilt quote a or cash : be. StiVe for 25c ; boxes of tnatchee or 2 for 25e ; 12 ea dust for 25e ; 8 cans sardines for r 250 ; pure honey • candy for 25e ; 5 - ea corn starch for 3 cans corn, peas gallon maned sp- end lemons 2eo tter 15o per lb.; sweet cider 25e per c per gallon ; lard, lb.; potaMee, 30a stook raisins,_ 4i Oa par can ; wash 3 of tette at bottom A. G.AULT, Seaforth. • IMPORTANT TO scHoot ripARDS. . . Tit Fisk Teach° BANK OF COME 25 King Street s' Agency, CE BUILDING, est, Toronto. Supplies schoole with teacher); for 11 grades. No charges. Ve -make enquiri s for confidential inform tion concerning 11 applicants, and our re •ommenclations ca , therefore„ be relied ape . Write us if y u require a teacher. In ormation given o teachers on application. W. 0. McTAG (Toronto 'Univers L%te of Huron County. ART B A y) Manager, 1442-62 WAIL APE I carry the largest stook of eve designs and fine t goods at the lowest prices Wei y house in the count. New good sold as eheap as an oldstock or out f date good& Why I can do so a becausegoods bougl t now are bought from 1 to 10 c nth per roll less th n they were when old stock w . My expenses are Io% I have a le'g stook and need t o money. Wall pap r from n cents per roll up. W ndow elides, Mould- ings, Cornice polls, &e. Ate., a cheapas .any In the trade, City Wall Paper Hou e, Main st. Seaforth, opposite John St. JAS. GR VES, Practical Paper Han er and Painter. 1 1 have secured the serviette 1 three first-chies paper haugere and can do work at e shortest notice. All worL guaranteed unsurpas d. For proof of the si/ON e call and see for youree f. Wall paper tri med free. •••••••••••••••••••• J. C. Smit & CO., MIZS- General Banking usiness transacted. 3 antlers' notes disco nted. )rafts bought and so d nterest allowed, on eposits at the rate of ) per cent. per annu . )`ALE, NOTESdisconted, or taken for cot ection. • FFICE—First cloo no Isee's Hardware Sto e. SEPIF7R:r THE SEft usical - Ins PIP° ESTABLIS Owing to hard ti es, we have con- ci idea to sell Piano &al Organs at th of Reid & ORTH trument M. 1873. featly Red 0 Organs at $25 a -id ianos at Corre po d Prices, pwards, and ding prices. SEE T.TE.1 BEFORI PL RCHASINO. SCO The old it BROS. BROAD Planing Mill an Sash an stablithed. OOT'S Nor Factory, ITII This old and well -know running at full blast, and than ever before to turn o moderate price. Sash and ways on hand or made to o short noMoe and In any w lumber for sale on reasonab constantly on hand. Esti of buildingei in whole or in None bub he best of meter ship guaranteed. Patrons 1269 J. H. establishment Is still ow has better facilities t a good article for a oora Oi all patterns al. der. Lumber dressed On y desired. All kinds of e terms. Shingles kept 11 ates for the furnishing tart given on application. used and workman - e solicited. ROADFOOT, Seaforth GOD RICH Steam Bo' er Works, • (ESTABLIS ED 1880.) A. S. CH YSTAL/ Suooessor to sal & Black, Manafaotttrers of aft kinds of Stationary Marine, Uprig t & Tubular BOT ERS Salt Pane, Smoke Stec s, Sheet 'roe Works, ' eto., • Also dealers In Upright a d liorizontal Slide Valve • ngines. Automatic, Cut- • Engines a specialty. All Lasa of pipe and pipe-fitti g constantly on hand Set'matee furnished on sho notice. Works—Opposite CC; T. . Station, Ooderichi, DISEASED LUNGS. CURED BY TAKING YER'S.CherrSr -Pectoral, -I contracted a severe cold, which settled on my lungs, atid I did -what is often done En such case s, neglected it. I then consulted a doctor, xv,io found, on examining me, that the upper 'etrt of the left lung was badly affected. The medicines he gave me did not seem to-do any good, ‘ 'Ind 1 determined t try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. After taking few doses my trouble was relieved, and be fore I had finished the bottle 1 was cured.' LUIFLAR, watchmaker, Orangeville, Ont Ayer's .Cherry Pectora Highest Awartie at World'elvain elyer's .Pilla Cure Indigestion • RE4 ESTATE. FOR' SALE. "uliOR SALE OR TO RENT.—The house lately. �c - copied y Wm. Cartiochan, East of St. Jatnes' Ohurch, Seat rth. Apply to F. HOLMESTED. 1463 tf TT OUSE T sirable pied by J. 0. Hicks, Egmo LET DR FOR SALE —That very de - Property in Egmondville, occu-- ose. Terms reasonable. Apply to R. •dville, or to I. V. Fear, Beaforth. 1429-tf 12iA1111S-F0 I! Choice F ner County of eult. For full No trouble to 2.0. SALE.—The umiersigned hes twentr me for sale in Emit Huron, the ban he Province ; all sizes, and prices to information, write or call personally. how them. F: S. SOOTT, Brussels 139141 GOOD I "VESTMENT.—For sale,. at a bargain, jj. a fine 2 s orey brick block with good store- houses at rear nd all covered with iron roofing. This block corr prim three fine stores with dwelling rooms above and all tinted to good tenants. The growth and prosperity of fiensallasurrounded as it is with the finest farad g country, make sthis an A No. 1 in- voettnent for nyone having capital. Satisfactory reasons for sell ng. For farther particulars apply to either J. P. M RSHALL, owner, or G. J. SUTHER- LAND, Notary r ublic and Conveyancer, Hensall P.O. Ontario. 14184 PLF,NDID ARM FOR. SALE.—Lot 26, Concert- eion 6, To nahlp of Morris, containing 150 acres suitable for grain or stockt situated two and a half miles from the thriving village of Brunel% a good gravel road leading, thereto; 120 acres cleared and free front stump's, 6 aurae cedar and ash and balance hardwood. Barn 51x130 with straw and hay shed 40x70, stone stabling underneath both. The hottest le brick, 223(32 With kitchen 18x26, cellar underneath both buildings. All are new. There is r• large young orchard. School on next lot. The land has a good natural drainage, and the farm lain good condition. Satisfactory reasons for selling. Apply at Tim Ex- posrroa Orrroz, or on the premises. WM. BARRIE, Brussels. 133541 FABM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 19, and part of 18, Coneession 12, MeKillop, containing about 108 acres, of which about 100 acres aro under grass and crop and the balance hard wood bush. • It is underdramedt well ferried and there is no waate land. There is a frame house and bank barn. There ie a never fa:ling spring creek running past the barn through the 'elects so that there is no water to pump for stock either summer or winter. There is also a spring well at the house. It le within a mile and a half of Leadbury where there is at post -office, attire, school, blacksmith shop, &c. It is half way between Seaforth and Brussele and good gravel roads In every direction, It is a choice farm and good for either stock or grain and will be sold on slay terms as the owner Is not able to work and desires to retire. Are ply on the premises or address Leadbury P 0. JAMES COATES. 1440 -ti MIARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 11,- Concesdon •_U 6, Hullett, coritaining."100 acres, all cleared, well underdrained, and in a good state of cultiva- tion. There are 15 acres sawn with fall wheat, and all the fall plowing done. There is on the plan a frame home with kitchen and woodshed ratite ed, has two frame barns with otlatr outbuildinge. Thia is a tr:od farm, well situated, being 9 miles from Sea - forth, 7 miles from Clinton, and li miles from the vielage elf Rieburn, and will be eold on reasonable teens. Apply to the proprietor on the premises, or address W. LEITCH', Constance P. 0. - 1461-tf FARM FOR SALE.—Beieg the west half of Lot 41, in the second concession of the township of East Wawanoeh, in the County of Huron. The farm contains 102 acres, 90 tierce are cleared ad in a first - cleat date of cultivation, the balance of three acres is timbered with hardwood, maple and beech ;55 acres are in gran, five acres in fall wheat, and14 acres of good orchard, the balance Is all fail plowed. The soil is a rich clay laane and there is on the farm a good frame barn and stabling, with dwelling house, also good fences. On the next farm there is a new brick cheese factory built last year. The farm is eituated about on'e rnib from the go. -head village of Blyth Tina is a chance for any intending pur- chaser to get one of the beet farina in the County of Huron, as it will be sold right. Possession given any time. For further particulars apply to WILLIAM CAMPBELL, Blyth, or on the farm to Wm. Ross. 14644 FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 22, Concession 12, Mc,. Killop, containing 100 acres of excerient land - 80 acres;cleared and 20 acres hardwood bugh.• It is well underdrained, well fenced and •a never failing spring creek runs past the barn. There is a good frame house with cellar, also a bank barn 40x00, with straw shed attached, 40x30: A180 north half Lot 21, Coneeseion 12, McKillop, containing. 50 acres cleared d lan, well fenced and drained. There is a comfort. able house, log barn and fraine barn, with staii ing. Therm farms ad j An each - other and will be sold either together or separately. They are wit in a -mile of Loadlairy, where thereeie a school, post -odic°, ' blaeksmith shop, store, &o, and half way betWeen Seaforth and Brussels. Also most detirable fern); Lot 28, Conceseion 11, McKillop, on the gravel road, eix miles from Seaforth and within half a ml e of Leadbury school and post office ; containing 75 t eves of choice land, all in grass, well fenced and on w ich is a log house, good Well and orchard. These desir4 able farms will all be sold on easy terms 1 paynIent. For particulars apply to S. DICKSON, Se forth. - 1466x4 A iTreasury of Information . . . THE . . , SUNLIGHT ALLlifiANAC 1" kr Containing 480 pages 'of uSeful InformIon • for all members o(the household GIVEN FREE TO SUNLIGHT SOA Wow TO Commencing November, OBTAIN 1895, and until the books are all gilien, pure A COPY chasers of 3 packages, or 9 bars of SUNLIGHT SOAP, Will receive from their grocer, x SUNLIGHT. . ALMANACFREE • • • • • • • . *MEWS The book contains complete Calendar matter, Biography, Literature, Home Management, • Language Of Flowers, Fashions, Games and Amuse- rnents, Recipes, Drearns and their significance* Poultry, etc. , yo 'mums"' BCAPPOINTMBuy early IILINT 4111, • • • • .* 4 4 4 4 6 • •••••••• -711- • k • :NW NI •eatitie'• TH HURON EXPOSITOR. RACTICAL SERMON lf SO" THE SUBJECT OF DR. -rm.- MAGE'S DISC URSE. Th Eminent Divine Believes In Outspoken eliglon— Nothing Can Stand fluters P yer—Let the Redeemed Show Their • lors---rersonal ,Testimony. ASHINGTON, Jan. li).—Rev. Dr. al- ma e never produced a n ore pra,ctical old ., u gestive sermon than this of today. We bel eve 1w111 stir Christ ndom. Els ub- Joewas "Say Sot" and tho. text saleeted wa Psalms ovii, 2, "Let the redeem°of the Lord say so." • n overture, ail anti lion, a doxolo y is thi chapter, and in int text David calls for, an outspoken religio and request all wbo have been rescue and blessed no 10 ger to hide the sple did facts, but tq re Ito them, publish th 1 and, as fit as po Milo, let all the wor now abou it. " et the redeemed of ti e ord say a." T ore is a sinful reticen e hich has ecu al est canonized, The cp10 aro q ite •as utspokon as they et su jeets Of politics and '1lb e on the Venezuelan questiot and m Galli= and tariffs, b ghi and low ref odeled, and. female ugrage, and ha le to skillfully wate f our chan yo.i want to put into th a Ms.() cony tie o modest suggestio on the subject of divine g ex )9r1enee and • eternal sadness ar9 not only silent, but oa tful of t • re 'canoe. NoW 11 you h ve been redee of , he Lord -why do yo f not say so? yo, Ihave in your heart- t e .pearl of PAPP, worth more ,th n the Kohi oor among Victorian jewels, whir not lot th- ers see it? If you gate the wreck in the breakers, why not tell of the icrew.and, the etotit lifeboat that safely -landed you t If from the fourth story yo aro rescue in ti e of conflagration; w y not toll of the fir inan and the ladde down whiel he carried you. If you ha a inansio in hooten awaiting you, w iy not show . the • dead to those who may • y -the same p oc- ess get an emerald ea le on: the s ine • bonlevatd? By the last two Words of !my tett avoid calls upon al .of ts who have recieived any mere)/at th hand Of Go4 to stop-impersonatiog the. asylunis for he duinb, and in the-Presen e of men, w in- etni angels, devils and all worlds, "says ." A Universal °viva'. In these January, d ys thousands of infirister); and private 0 ristians aro w n - de Ines about the best aye of - startin a revival of religien. I c n toll you a Way of starting a revival, c ntinental, hot I, spheric and worldwidn. You say a revi 'al starts in heaven. Well, 1 starts in ilea en just as a prosperous -hate, st starts in heav- en. 'The sun must shi e, and the rains •nuts -descend, but unle s you plow and L• soW nd cultivate the es th you will not 'mho) a bush II of wheat r a peck of cern betev en no and the - nd of• the World. How then, e mil a UMW sal revival start? By a 1 Chris ian people fling the storylof th ir own co version. et ten men end wo i n get P next w k in your prayer meet ng, am, not in conventional or °anti g or d AIM way ut in the same tone they ch ploy in t family or place of b shifts, tell how hey crossed the line, and the revival wi begin then and ther if the 1 rayet me tng has _not been so ,dt 11 as to rivo out a except those eon- - - ()mini g Whoi i it was f reordaineci from u alt e nity hat they hould be theee: T er are so i any cliff r nt ways of being co v rtod tha wo wan to hear all kinds, -so' h t our OS u ease i i y be helped. II It always puts- n e back t 1 ear °ply ono kind of experience such as man gives when he tells of his auntie c version—how he WO knocked senseless, and then hada wition and h ard voice and after a cer- tain number of days. of orror got up and • shouted for joy. All t t diseourages inc. for I was never knock t senseless, and I never had such a suddee burst of religious rapture that I lost my equilibrium. But • after awhile a Christi;' man got up in scitie- meeting and • to il us how he was brought -pp bye devout arentage and had always been thoughtf 1 about religious things, and gradually 51 peace of the gos- pel came into his soul 1 to tho clawn of the nillorhing—•no percepti e difference be- tween moment and 1 oment—but• after • awhile all perturhatie settled down into a hope that had- donsol and strengthened him during all the mid- situdos of a - life - tine. I said, " That ifs xhilarating; that wars my experience.I" And so I was strengthened. In another prayer in ting a man gOt. up aid told us how he o 0 hated God, and w nt through all the round.of iniquity uttil we wore all on ne ties lest hoshould g(. too much into the p -rticulars, but one day he was by some roll Ions pewer hurled flat, and then got np a! hristian, and had ever since been going around with a aX- ter Bible with largo flatis'under his a floating evangelist. 'Well undez story many aro not hel ed at all, for kuow they never hetet. God and Were never dissolute. But. after a nie Christian woman arises and " have nething exttao dinary to tell. I think the cares of ife, . the anxi about my Ich ldron, and two graves op it our famil3 plot mad mo fool the •'of God, and reek and ielpless and h broken I flung myself upon his m and I feel wl at the Bi le calls the' ot God will° 1 passoth al under,Stand and 1 ask yOur pray° s that r may • -nearer to tho Christ wh has done so n fOr me." -.I 'd Wart? that before that wo , gpt through e were al crying, not bitter tears, but to rs of joyf d in three days that nei il the leeth it g- -had gone out of time freshet of salvati deemed of th Lord say re - Po ghp to be o all efluent and'vol- bi- ou e if sa- of our own, but od ess, religious ble they eir ed _ If eat rtn, this hey they If Ile ays: Yet ties •nett oed art- ray,' 00 00 ng,' live uoh I an 1 I °Motion, a hborhood all river in a sp D. "Let th croons). S so." 1 I have but little inte est in what pLple say about r ligion as a abstraction, but I have Mini table into est in what people say about w iat they h ve pordonally felt of religion. It was ao expression of his otvn gratit de for orsonal salvation Which led C arles Wes ey, after a season of great despondency a tout his soul and -Christ had 'spoken pa don, to write that immortal hymn: Oh, for a thiousanc tongues to sing My great Redeem() Is praise! vation. It was after Abrahazi comforted in the loss • boy of the White Hous now see as never befo of God's love in Jesus are brought near to Go What a thrill went t in Portland, Or., wh general of the MAW fiald: "Last night 10 prayers of God's peOpl. LincOln had been f Tad, the bright , that he said, "I e the preciousness hrist and jtow we as our Father by rough the meeting ii an ex -attorney States arose and 5 up and asked the . I feel now per- ectly satisfied. The burden is rolled off • and all gone, and I fee or fly into the arms of I What a record for al Was made by Gellaciet the theater at Heliopolis. A burlesque of. I:ihristion IV was put derision of the ordin pathtub, filled with t ater, was put upon the stage, and another actor, in awful blasphemy, dipped Ge lacius, pronouncing over Jilin the words, "I baptize thee in the tame of the Fa her, o II lyiGhost." Butco burlesqued bap is and was changeld, OWIlenon: fl Shat I could. run esus Christ." -• time and eternity , the play actor,. in pon the stage. In (woe of baptism a , the Son kiind of the ing forth from the o looked changed nd he cried out to the Christian. I will die • as a :1'nougn he was mane° " ought tit be outirloken. Airlon1 than a fl out and stoned to death, they could not those ho go on a journey, W at an en drown the testimony made nnder Pooh pork] ity you have, you whol spend El awful circumstances. "1 am a Christian. Much ot your time on rail traite or o I will cite as a Christian." "Let the re• shipb ard, whether on lake or ri er Or seal SPrea the story of God's goodnees and your t wn redemption whorevet yOu gd. slpf eailli! I sYLute to kV 111 have many a horn yen *ill ever see agai ng riclo besid ne who 1 waiting or one Word or cons lation. ake booty ra I nd steam a moving palaeo of save Casual c nverso,tio s have harve mat host or God. l're are n ny Christ en Workers i the crop; if all parents who prayed for a pulpi s, in mis ion statio is, in Sabbat , s, in unli ard of pla es who %re d wandering son to come home would tell how, not long after, they heard the boy'E ring ecogti r God, an withont an hand on the latch of the front door. ey go an coino, and n fiamnel Hick, an English Mothodisi 0130 preaohor, solicited aid for West India rule- Ulu their deemed of the Lord say so." . Efficacy of Prayer. who had answers to prayers would What a eani3.rmation vvould oome 501110 out; if all merchants in tight places be. Cane° of hard times would toll how, Ill re- res" sponse to supplication, they got 08113013(u kli•an to pay the note; if all farmers in time oi souls. drought would toll bow, in answer tc a prayer, the rain canie just in tirno to save hhi dr- best f T leers then . _Pother] all the rower 'et Is hard -criticism, or repolse, o W11 fatigi c. you have °Yell heat I good they have done, lot them kn it. If you find sonic ote benefite lir alms, or their prayers. ot thel ng word, go and tell them. I The a:, almost ready to give up their ins They may be almost ;in despair lie; of the seemitg lock of:results. ODD sins from a' -rich iniser and failed. Then the minister dropped on his knees, and the iniSer 'said, "I will give thee_ la guinea 11 thou wilt give_ over." 13ut the minister continued to pray, until the miser saitl, "I will give thee 0 guineas ilf thou wilt give over."' Then the money was taken to the tnissionary meeting - 011, the pthver of prayer! Molahchthon, utterly d is. •couraged, was passing along a place where children were heard praying, Anil he came back, saying: "Brethren, take courage. The children are praying for us." Nothe. • ling can stand before prayer. An infidel mine into a Bibl ' class to a k piazzling - questions, Man of the neig bors Cri.1110 in to hear tha isouselon. ho infidel arose- and said to the loader •of . the Bible class. "I hear you allow questions asked?" "Oh, yes," said the leader, ` but at the start let us knee down and ask. God tc guide us!" '.'01, no," said the infidel, "I did not come t pray! I came to dis- cuss." "But," s id the leader, "you will of course submit t 'our rule, and -Viet ie always to begin w th prayer." The leadei knelt in prayer, an then arose alid said tc the infidel, "Now ou pray." The infidel replied: "I caundt ray. I 'have 130 God to pray to. Let me eo I Let nie go!" The spectators, who ex looted fun, foond noth- ing but overpoweril g solemnity and a re- vival. started, and among the ilrst who were brought in as the infidel. Thal prayer did it., In 11 our lives there have been tinies whop w o felt that prayer was ansivered. Then lb us say so. • Thera lingers on this side of the- river that divides earth nd heaven, ready at any limo t cross over, the apostle of prayer for 5 ils tont iry, Jetemjah Calvin Lanphier, 51 e founc or of the Fulton street prayer meet ng, an if be should put on his spectaal •s a id r old this 1 saluto him as more - qt ali eel than any man since Bible times in emonstrating %Om 5,prayer .1 can do. 1 ear Br ther Lanphior! The high heaven a o ful of his fame. HaVing announced I m eti.n for 12 o'clock Sept. 23, 1857, he sat in ti e upperroom on Ful- ton street, A e .Yor , waiting for people to come. 1 o N• alto for a half hour, and thou a footf ill vas 11 ard on the steps, and -after awhile in ell 6 persons arrived, but the next c1a3 20, endithe next clay 40, and from that tiiie to this, for over 88 years, every day, Sabbath excepted, that Fulton street prayer meeting has been a place whop people have asked prayer and an- swers to prayer have been announced, and the throb of that great heart of supplica- tion has thrilled not I nly into the hooey. ens, but clear around t ie world, more than any spot on 04rt1). 'hat has been the place where th redeen ed of the Lord said so 1 The Va ue of Ind Words. Let the SLIM o utspo enness be employed toward those by whom 'shave been person- ally advantaged. WO an until they are . dead before we ay so, Your parents have planned for yo r best interests all those years. . They n ay so ethnes, their nerv- ous system use up bY he cares, the losses, the, disappoint] lents, the worriments of life, he more ir itable han they ought to • be, and they p eibabl have faults which have become op ressiv as the years go by. But those eyes, long dere they took on spectacles, were watchi g for your welfare, • and their hand , not a smooth and much • More deeply li ed .th in once, have done for yen many good dayte work. Life i has been to them more of a struggle than !you will ever •now a out, and much of tho struggle ha been for you, and how I much they aro wrappel.up in your wel- fare you will n tow ap reciate. ' Have you by word o gift or behaviox expressed your hanks' Cit if you cannot ; • quite get tip t say iti face to face, )aavs you written it 1 some holiday salutotioni The time will eon pass and they will be gone out of you sighta and their ears- will not hear, and t icir eyes *ill not see. If i you' owe them a iy kiudness of deed or any iwords of appree ation, w.hy do you not say iso? How num we inight all of us save I ourselves in the matter of regrets if Wee did Ina delay until too late an express on of :obligation that would have niade t o last 'years of earthly life more attraotive. • The -grave is deafaa d epitaphs on cold arble 'cannot make re =alien. • In conjugal I fei the honeymoon i soon past, and the wain take it for panted that each is tho mighty understood. How • dependent on 0:0)3 other they become, and the years go b , and perhaps nothing Is said to make t le other fully undo stand thatsenee of del endetice. Impatient ords soniotimes cern;forth, and Moth- s aro misinterpreted, end it is taken as mat- ter of cease ti ot the two will wa k the path of life sic e by side -until abo it the same time theii journey shall 'bo nded, but s01.130 Budd° and appalling nine s un- loosens the rig t hands that were c aspod years before at the altar of orange blos- • soms, the penal ig takes place, and mong the worst of al the sorrow is tha you , did not oftener,: if you ever -did at all, tell her or toll him ow indispensable she was, or how indispe sable he was to your hap- piness, and that in some plain, square talk long ago you d d not ask for forgiveness for infirmities and neglects, -and by some unlimited utte aneo make it understood that you fully ppreciated the fidelity and re-enforoomout ,of - many years. Alas, how many suc have to lament the rest of their lives, "0 , if I had only said so " • The Christian Ideal. My subject akos a wider range, The Lord has bond ods of thousands of p °pie among those ho have never' joind his array because o some high ideal of w at a •Chrtstian shou d be, orbecause of a feat that they may ot hold out, or because of • a spirit of pr crastinsition. They have neyer publiel professed Christ. They . have as inuoh ight to the sacraments and as Much right o all the privileges of the church as thot sands wile) have for years been enrolled it churcff membership, and yet they have 1• ade no positive utterance- ty whin the World may knovothey love God and are on the road to heaven. They are redeemed of the Lord, and yet do not say so. Oh, what an augmentation it would be if by scene divine impulse all those outsiders ehould become insiders! I tell you what Would bring them to their right places, an •perhaps nothing else will. Dhys of pe2esect lion! If they were com- •pelled to take si es as between Christ and his enemies, th y would take the stde of Christ, and th faggots, and the instru- ments of torte a and the. anathemas of all earth .and h di would not make them blanch. Marty s are made out of such stuff as they ar . But let them not wait for such days, a I pray ,to God may never conic. Drawn the souse of fairness and justice and obli ation, let them shove their colors. Let the redeemed of the Lord say sol . This chapter rom witichl take my text mentiona. SOVOX g DIABBO_ Of oersells.W112 of an nbou by th cheer may sion. pause word from you may be an ordination that will tart them on the chief -work of their lifeti no. • A Christian woman said to her paste : "My usefuln ss is done. I do no4 kno why my life i spared any longer, becat el can do no good." Then the pasto ery S you first the e sewn and and I oft 'oboe thin bofo Th have 130 01 are a ment turn replied, "You do me great good ev- bbath." Sho nskcd, 'How do I do ny good?". and he replied, "In the flaw you are always in your Seat in lurch, and that helps me, and In the place you are always wide awake lort, looking right up into n4r face , - lot helps me; a id' in the third pl co n see tears *toning down,' your s, and that Ihelp' me." What 1a, good be did not walsb until she wets doted he said sol Helpfulness of APpreelation.i re are hundreds of inheistells w hard work to Make BOX:MO s be, eau n. I Th nicod th erhaps °spool text, anisi aytIcFinitf)14 o expresses an raid of making the benediction n their heels a appreciati him vain. Is pronou d go out. was a subject on whigh ho had p pain . tIe sought for the righ then did•his ' best to put the ol into 4the new shape. He had p it in ght go to the hearts of t i le peopkli. ad added to the argumen illustrations he could thi livered ail with a power 30 1 He vivid had him Incrvously exhausted. 3l'tvd hitnclre poop); may 'hive been blessed by it, an resol ocl upottfa higher life and nobler poi poses Yet a1l. he hears is the clank of th pew Icor, or the shuffling a .feet, in the aisle, the that have wom to to fully man inie, God hint nerv the d resul agon Bu spok be a and. God how and 1 brou WOM ful a ceive to a quee high ,st realms of prosperity; the sons took the cam sphe liftec mos k o. ,tr that lef or porno remark about the weather, st resort of inanity. Why Aid not nen come up and say frankly, "Yon; lone me good?" Why did no SOMO 11 COnio pp and say, "I shall go home e up the burden of life more cheer,. ' Why did not some prole, sional me up and say: "Thank you deni- er that good advice?. I will take it. less yoo.." 'Why did they not tell o? I have known ministers, in the - us reaction that conies to soinc after livery of a sermon with no scerning • to go home and roll 071 the floor in to make ;up for this lapt of out-. 11 religion there needs to be and will reat day when, amid the 801010i:lilies randeurs of a listening universe, 111 "say db." No statist' s can state nary mothers have roc ed orad les ovored over infantile sicknesses and lit up their families to in nhood and inhood and launched them upon uset id successful lives and yet never re,. one "Thank you!" that arnt)unted ything. Tho daughters became s in social life or were affianced in Soci say /3 that rst honors of the university 11 radiant In monetary or profes es. Now the secret of all th 'ad be- stiounpal. maternal influence must con*) out. ty did not say so the church did not t, the world did not say so, lut on ay of ell other days, the las . day, God ill say so. There are men to whom life is a grind and confliet, hereditary tendencies to be oine,, accidental environments to be red, appalling opposition. to .be met onquered, and they never se much d a rose pinned to their coat lopeeldlin d - inat dre; l tle is 0 htwoo' ll yy 00Ur- rdect algnsrbi ,dt, OTO end and as h admiration. They never had a sot cate to their name. They nevelt booI presented to them with a "c mon ary word on the fly leaf. A hay to show for their lifetime ba scat* But in the last day the stor aonat Out, and that life will be pnt'l and transcendent rhythm, and thel age nd persistence and , faith and will not only be announ4d, but rew "Thtse are they th-at came out of trib lation and had their robea and nade white in the blood of the L God will say so! Last Judgment. W miss ono of the cIlef ideas of a last I jnd ment. Wo put inIo tho pletture the fire, and the smoke, an the earthquake, and he descending tuna,- and the ,upris- ing ead, but we et „sit into the pic- ture that which ma.a..aa tile hist judgment a in gnipcent opportunity. We oniit the fact that it is to be a day of glorious ex - plan tion and eommendationi. The first just co that milli° s of unreward 'd and unr oognized and nappreciated in n ard won en get will bo n that day who serv- ices 'that never call cl forth so much as a new paper lino of i nest pearl or diamond type as the print rs term it, shall ho calltd up for corona Ion. That will ho the illy f euthroneme t for those whenthe wor 11 called "nob dies." •Joshua, 1who corn Handed the s n and M10011 to stand still needs no test j dgment to get justtee don him, but tho e men do need la last jud Inept who at ti es, in all arnilos, un- der he most violen assault, in obediience to c mmand, them Ives stood still. Deb - oral a who °metro, ed Barak to br vet, in b ttle against th - oppressors of Is al. nee s ZiO last judg ent to get justice n o - her, for thousands .f years have cia peel her applause. Bu the wiyes who all age have encoura ned their' htisban s in ; Continue On page 3:) .od-liver oil isuggest4 coi sumption, w1ii1i is a1 nic st. unfortt nate. Its best u~ is bgfore you feajr consun ption ; •wl-en yo begin to -et thin, we ru 1. down ; then is the p -u- de rt time to begu to tz4ke care, and the best way to take care is to spilply the sy;,tem with need'ecl fatand strength. Scott's Emuoi of cod-11\eroil, with Po - phosphites, will brfng 1.-ack plitimpness to tlaose •vho halve lost • it, and steno -di where :nLw c.). laver oil would be a bur en.: culwillte wilv imth itates e on,W114. & Dellev; tic, Ont. •-tax. SCOT •OMINIO PITAL, (.PAID UP) *I BANK. SEAFORTH B11,4_NOTT. IN STREET, SI,500,000.:1 $1,5001000.- SEAFORTIL general banking business transacted. Drafts on • all parts •of the United Etat% Britain and Europe bought and sold. Letters of credit issued, available in all parts c•pe,' China and Japan. Farmers' Sale Notes collected, and advances made on EftD141 eat rates. ' SAVINGS DEPARTMENTi eposits of One Dollar and upwards 'received, and interest' allowed at highest current • Interest added to principal twice each year—at the end of June and December. tiee of withdrawal is required for the whole ot any portion of a deposit.- • •- , S. HAY -S, Solicitor. W. K. PEARCE, Agent. , . ; 1•..,:ms.,...ffs....gm.................g........„0.......„ : tLavidetters The. . 1 fnest Remedy in the I World for all Affec- i 111 i' Of * the t olds, 1, t' ris` ofThroa & i ..:, ' Lgs. „, Appe, Croup, ' u pientme, .,, Vhooping Cough. , iii. 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