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The Huron Expositor, 1897-04-02, Page 2- , . I �� �� I - I, I - 1. I I 8. Ne . . . . I A6 .MW . I . . ­ �Q � ' . . . . . I - I . I I .- . . - , ­ - . - � � ,-,=.��.3,---..�,,�.�-,,.�--i.-�.�,.�-.;,-...�..--. - - . - - 601010hilfu � I , I .1 - . I 1- - .. � ­ - . . ­ ­ . -,-. ­­ -11, ­ �� ­ .. I I I - - � - - - ­ - --1 .­ = ­J�1­­­­1­­j-­­- . .1 .. I I .1 1. . - . �, . ­ .. ­ - .­ ­ ­ ­ .. ­ -, .. - - , I - . - ------ -- . ---- - �, - - - I - -- ­- - - - .---- - . - - I . I I � - . I . . I I I . I I - I' .1 ---- ­ � � - I ;; I ; . . . � I . , � . . . . � el I . - � . - . - � i , I k I , , - - 'I- k - .. . I I . ; � . . . -XW - - I -tw %"I jrour;owor thimr, ftomies, am or 11�10�n , I -1 , . � � ­ . . . .. . ----- . ­ ­!� I � ",'"',', ...... I I I . - - A 1"y hanw. JE � 4�� � I . Vft& td-� a Aift W voaie . . � - -� , . imvh.� o4 - � I ­ � - `�, I .�� . � i , ,; 1. I � . .... . V - : I opuld not - *appmpristely employ Pours At Oat time, In Greek � counibil. of war, - of thb city sends'me the itatitment of 1� I *1 - � I � � 7. I . I SIM debtor to the AT* - generals ' r -1 . 8, FO R OREECE . - -the- - - � i I . �� -. - � - ,. � � ,mj&oulstion and #&y, 11 I were for beginning the what oocurred &Iew clays ago among . 11 1� "", I— - I � I � . ­­ 1. I FOR r - ,� ,;.� . SUN GHT - .!e, � ..WA.WM� I I I � ?" we&V,,;&0st -it. . Wim. mines of, 13rIW&­Col#=b1k. T$ � seems, , ..-.; �� ­ , � I - . - I I .11 - I 6"46. I �� - . -- , K 3 1 - . . I .� . I - I , h -� ". . � , , � T - �� V --Paul had, got ftuch at "the councils of war, : that- ft� Cartoon and Jent Smith were ,. .­ . 01, 2 1 . -A The fact is this �, i - � - �� r , I _ � � Ir ad� � ,� . REV. DR. T ,LMAGE ON A SUBJECT th I ­ - I � I - . . of his oratorlog power of ew,"siontmm Ing vote, and hilitiadoi down Itt.the narrow shaft of a 3Aine. i - --- I I I . .il.-- . . .. - � . 'A'S .- 4 i.11 , � .OF VV61kOWiDE INTEREST. the Qrooks. That he bad studied their Addressed him, saying:- , . They had loadbd on iron� bucket *lth I I , . . , - � I , . - , .� . . . I .. i-1- . I i . - I , . ; I � I F 11 I SOAP' . � . . . L - i F. . . . 116=turs" was evident when, standing in - "It now res�s machus, ; wO, and JIxn 116moworth, - stanift ng I I o I I t, I � � 1V - . . I - with yolf, CAIll . . . P P . I , It _jp �, I I I I P - - I I R V . His Shows What We Owe the Greeks -A ,the presence of an audieum of G,mk . either to enoNve Athons,or,,:by Insuling above ground, was hauling the. bucket . . � i � ... I I . - I I i . � . �] � poholirs on Mars hill, which overlooks, her freedom, to w1n, yours'elf an Immor- ' U b Indlass, when the windlass broke, - � . �, lj I �� .. . - 1-1 Wrapper Oompetition, 1. - I � �. ' . 11 - . 4 - � Debt In "ngusge, Ai% Heroism ond Athens, he dared t4 quote from one of tality of faane, for never since the Athon- I and the loaded bucket was descending I : . . . . . - � .� I u I I � � I iz '. Z - �� 1. - t I L their own Greek poets, either Cleimthus , ians were a people we - � ­ - ., 1Z - �, . 189T Notdicine-The Best WjL* to Pay the Deb re thpT in such upon the two miners. Then Jim Hems- I r February I � . - - I I : 13� 1 1 � - . ,I or A-tatus, declaring, "As certain also of danger as they are In at this �moment. If I worth, seeing what must be certairi death I . I I p . , -- I Z . -1. - . I - � � Washington, March -28 �-As Dr. Tal- your own poets have said, I For we we they bow the knee to theme'Medes, they I to the miners beneath, threw himself . � ', 1 4 � ­ 11 . I � I . I- mage's sermons are pulilished i on both also bis offspring. I " And he made ac- are to be given up to Hipphw, and you against the cogs -of the whirling wind- I � ­ � ., t -r - I I , � 1. I . I .1� � � ' � I . � A I � The following me the Winners in District No. Is sides of tbe,� ocoah, this dtic6urse on a curate quotation, Cleanthus, one of the know whb.t they will then have to suffer lase, and though hiEr flesh was thrn and .1 � �. . 1. . . I I � a *' � unues of York, I . � � I , comprildra the City at TomnW Cd � ; 11 11 I , i - - subjeotof w0ildwide Interest Will attract poets, having written,:- but lf;Athens comes victorious out 6' his bones were broken - he' stopped the I � -j�a an ()ounties West and South of theft. Of : � . ,I � k Z almoe . 1D 1. . � , � ,-: I universal at-Wntlon. His text was Ro- . . . I ­ I �- . t - ; 1� 1-' , For we tMne offspring are. All things this contest she has It in her power to whirling windlass and arrested the de- : 11 � . . 11 I I " I . I � , I - � -1 � . become the &at city of Greece. Your vote soondIng bucket and saved the lives of . � - . IF � L � . Winners of Stearns! BioYeles maw 1, 14, 011 am debtor both to the I .. I �;. . I � j�. that creep ' � � I � I - . . - . . i Greeks and to the barbarians. " I � I I i � ,. - �rr 4 ; . Are but the echo of the voice divine. to to d6cide whether we are to join battle the two miners beneath. � The supertri- I . I I i-� I to. . ­ . - . - 1 - I - I or .we - I , � I I mir. jo'en Ford, 53 Wolaeley St., Toron At this U06, when that behemoth of not. - If - I do not bring .on a battle tendent of- the mine flew to the rescue - . � -n poets, - � I .... I Mr. - A, E. Mountain, 23 Burton 'Street, abominations, Mohammedanism, after And Aratus, one of their ow F ... --; I .1 . , ! - . presently. some factious intrigue Will and blocked the machinery. When Jim 11 . . LL � .�� .� . Hamilton. , . having gorg6d Itself on the carcassses of had written: : L. � 7�� - - disunite the Athenians, and.the city will Heinsworth's bleeding and broken body . .11 101w, �- I ........ --. LL - . Doth oare perplex? . . �, L I I . � 100,000 Arm6nians, is trying to put its Is lowering danger, be betrayed to the Medea, but if we fight was put on .a litter an(I carried home- in A � � . , - � : LL . � ,,, - wimers of GoIld Watches . I I - . I , .. . 11 � I J- �� I � . I paws upon One of the fairest of all na- I nigh? _ - before there Is anything rotten in the ward and some one exclainted, "Jim, this . - I - �, 11 I ' 'tiQ P . - i III f � no that of the Greeks. I preach this We are his offspring, and to Jove we fly. � �1 1- id G. Holmes, 24 Birch Avenue, is awfull" he replied, "Ob, what's the . . X- 11 �, Mr. Davii , state of Athens I believe that, provided. I � . I � - , - ,I � " sermon of 4mpat-by and protest, for I - - � � ii ��, � Toronto. It was rather a risky t,bing for Paul to ' the gods will give fair fkildt',and no differenoe go long as I saved the boys?" - � - I - I �, : " . . Mr. j. Albert Good, Box 142, -Berlin. every lntelllg�ent person on this side of attempt to quote extemporaneously from favor, we are able to get the lxmt of It in What an illustration It was of su'ffer.- . I . I 'I I- : I " t, � I . . � _- 4..111 . 3USter Mani Palmer Powell, 416 Spadinat the sea, as Well 'as the other side, like a P0.0mAn a language- foreign to his and the engagement." I I I Ing for others, and what a text from It is poor economy to buy cheap Tea, and use t- * I .- � � . . . wice as mud a I I- � - . Faul,wbowmte thetext re ee - . -7 . � � � � � T, " - Alrenu%yoronto. i did it with- � -4-re,k li,rees. - t which to illustrate the behavior of our - � . I . � . - I the Greeks. iThe present crisis is am- . . I , 2 , � I Mr. Frank Cmwford. Pt. FAwstra. , . out stammering ad =thaeknowled Christ, limping and lacerated and broken . and not i6t half ,U Much isatisfaetion as from a good one. A � . i r -� - - � ged That Won 00 vote of Calliumhup, and 91 � I I . : � �'. - I the allied 1,,ef,ore . ­ :.-,I I . � I � . f� - - . Alios Flynn, 387 Chumh Street, pbasized by�tbe guns of the most lat ed audience, and torn and crushed in the work of - 9 --� ­ � Mile I I . i t I ­ - I I soon the battIq opened, and An -full run - '- . -1 . �- i , -111 � 3 - . r . . . i ­1�1, . Tormto. , Powe" Of L*OM ready to bs unlimbe* on the 'plaiket hla� indebtedness to t1le - tfie men of Mlidides'fell. �p*)n the Per. stopping the descending ruin that would . . . . - -'. - I , I , I I . � ; i I I - � . . -1 � ! t ., I 41 � :agabaAt the Aelleneg,, and I am Greeks, crying out' in his oration, "As sian ho 0 destroyed our 'souls I Try 'much a . I . � ... �, �� . . - ­ � I . - Z 1, . hav' I � I % .: 11; e.- � sts. skoutin : "Onf sons of � ­ ,- ,l I 19 G 6 � � , � � out. P�ul, wlih a master Intellwt Ono of your own Nets has said. I I Greece I SirW for the freedom of your scene of vicarious suffering as this . on � � I � 1. t , . speak � I . I :1 . ; - i � , several , � . � . - , � - - la,we have been obliged to diiqas1lfy of the ages, �ot in brilliant Corinth the . " . 11 � 7�,� I I I I . ,­, Ei I that man capable of overthrowing 41 - . , 1. � I ,,,, i 'i February for sending coupon$ taken , "" i . I country I Strike for the freedom of your ;1 i , - competitors for Greek Architecture. I ���- � ----- i : � - L. , I , wnin ' � I i 1, � � �, IN p Iii jiocere stock (889 Rule 8)L great Acro-Qorinthus fortress fro 9 I I . I is, for the truth, and -he . -'�. .. -I- I- I m unsold vos- - children and your wives, for the shrines YOUT argumen - , - from the hel I ht of 1, 686 feet, and in the Furthermore, .aU. the civilized I wiDr1d, .. I �- 1-W 9 . � - - � X I I ', � � of your fathers' gods and foi.- the sepul- will sit down and weep. ]Draw your I . I - r . � � Lxv,= BRos., Ltd., Toronto. house of Gaius, where he was a guest, a like Paul, is indebted to the Greeks for . I � � . � �- . - . ... � . . , I i lm � I - , . Th 7 chers of your' stresill Whlle� only 192 illustrations from the classics, and it is I . �, �; , � architecture. A . . . 11 11-11 I !'' big pile of. m6ney near him, which -he e world before the time ,46 -6iad upon .to him an old story, but Leyden jars and . I �, - . �. � I to �Jerus�iem for the poor. of the Greeks had - I z - Greeks fell 6 0 Persians lay. I L M : was taking built monoliths, obel- . �! . � Tf : � the.field, an electric batteries and telescopes and Greek CEYLON TEA � I - . - , I I I- : �� I - in this lettOr to the Romans, which Usks; cromleohs, sphinxes and pyramids,- . � d many of the Asiatic hosts I i I I . � ig­ , FOR SALE. Who took to the war vessels 1a thehar- drama will. all surrender to the storyof- �, . I . - ' I . . I ,� '41'. '� I REAL ESTATE Chr7% , I In a4mired so much. that he bad but they were moo 1,ly monumental to the � . . �, . Z I . I � i - � m - � 9. . ! I dead whom they h 41Qd to emorialize. bor were consumed In the' .shl�ppin Jim He)nasworth's I I 0h, what's the differ- � I I V-� I . . , � - . I , � - , i; ,��i -The undersigned has twenty . it to hiiii twice a week, Paul prac- . . I s I -- I z . ­ I Z Persian oppres�lon wits rebuked, Grecian , . is a good one and sure to pleas � . - ,If I 8 FOR SALIL .# ence so long a I saved'the boys?" � . i � -� �- i tically says: 411. the apostle, am bank We are. not certain: even of the names of . 0. I 1. � i �. i - - . . . Chaim Amn tor ale in East Huron, the ban- - , . . L liberty wo Ac4leved, the C&Us .'of oiVtJl,. Then, if your illustration of Christ's, . . L- - . I ; L ]�',�. L �, eft to - those in whose col�imemoration the pyra- . . .e � - I ,f� . -1 ! - � �, 1. ner County of the ftovinft; Ali sizes, and pri -rapt. I owe � what I cannot pay, but ? I 11 I . . I I ­ � , � . - . � ! ,�. , � . .- I pay as I*v a percentage as 3: can. - were built. � ) . � V suit. F��r full Information, write or CAR irso Zation wag advaiac�d and the western self sacrifice, idrawn �brorn some scene of � . =- Wil =ids I3ut Greek arobitiecture . 1 . I Notroublato show them. F.. & 80OWB, a 11 totday, And ybur story of what Christ bag . . t - world and 411 nations have felt; the hero- � I . A fie , . I 4-"' k . - � inim It Is. an obligtition for what Greek litera- did most for the ltving.� Ignoring Jkgypt- . . I In Lead Packages 250 50c and 60e. I . l � � . � P. 0. . . , los. Had . --him Into I,;- . I FV I - . , I ; ,F� --�a ,z � - ian precedents and borrowing nothing there been � MiltiaAes there ddne for you. do not quite fetch I I � . 1. . � .. �; �. I � ture and Greek sculpture and Greek archi- -no --+4 - I - 11 � � - I �- I'— . � . I - - � � -OARM FOR 1E. might- have been no WashlngtG.n. . the right way, just say to him, . . � . I , �L.T SAL -100 acres, in' the town6lP Of t6eture and Oreek prowess have done for from other na I a. Greek architecture- - . . � I � �� J I : I , - is on it nia own coli ns) t its � Also at Thefmopylae 800, Greeks -it , fessor-doctor-judge, why was It that - . , � I -ab ! ? � � � . . hard- . -DAPING n-DOCE'Do - �� *1. _V otoy, nou Brussels. There rly 50, me. I will pA' , ar se own pedi- T �, " . acreSoftush' out -half black ash,the rest � y all I can in Insti Iments c ved its , _ long a road only wide enough for a whool Paul declared he was a debtor the . k'-. . I �4 �, �� �- � . wood. A never -failing spring of water runs through of - evangeUmo. I am insolvent to the ments, adjusted its own entablatures, - FROM ALL Un �1 kx�" -"1301 � 11 . - .A- � theJot, Will *@old at a bIgbargaid. Forpatticu- Greeks." Hollas, as the inhabitants C&II"L rounded its own molding and carried out tra6k between a m ountaln and a marsh, C?reeks?" And ask y6ur learned friend "I . . - . I � � , I . - i � -11 - � . . ISM Apply 60 MRS. JANE WALKER- Box 219, it - G , , . died rather' than surrender. Had there to take his Greek testament and translate � . I .1 1 . - 'L , we call it, is .be th .qualities of I L . 1. . I I :1, - . , or - reo0% hs _InsIgnifL- as never before t re6 _ - ---- �' I � Brumwlsw I 14170 . .e for -you, In big own way, from Greek -.6me I Z , t ­ been no T rmopylao there might have .1 - .. . - . cant In size, j6bout it -thiid as large as the right building, cal�ed by an old author I . . , '1- I j . . into English, the splendid peroration of - 1. "L -i �. � � � - . I "Mmitas, utilit", vonustas"-namely, 1 U14 . � - � �� � been no B ker Hill. The eoho' ot . I -.- I . -V0R'6AL% Bargain, 20 aerm one and a fit.11 state of New! York, but what.1t lacks 14 Paul's sermon on Mars bill under the , . - -- ''I � . - ... Athenian and Spartan heroics:was heard . . I I , 11. - - �' mitafrorn Godetich, house,, 8 rooma, sayan breadth - it Up he firr-nness, usefulne . A 1. � X makes in I t� with its 0, beauty. - Although ' t � I f�'.. ­ I - I ' at the gates' of Lucknow, and Sevas- power of which the scholarly Diony'slus . 11 . I .- 4,. - . I &am orchard, Wance pastura, imst the pla--e;for Mountains the Parthenon on the Acropolis of Athens , _ ' 11 � .. ,T�,., � daW or market. garden, all in goad owdeit. Addiess C�lene and Eta an Taygetus topol, and bannockburn, and Lexington S111 -Tendered -namely, "The times of this . , ,� '14, - � - , . � � . i i , � � d Tinuphr4tus, each overr 000 feet In Is only a wreck of the storms and earth- � �11­ � � ­ WILLIAM R&WDEN, Exeter; or & X. LEWIS, an Ignorance God winked at, but now com- - . I.- . .. 11 . . . -and Gettysburg. English Magita Chartar so I'm I P A I � ` #­.. - . i 3- ��� � Gadedeb. 1529-2 eley..atiQn, . it Parnassus, over 8,000.; quakes and bombardments of many cen- ) . . v I . I � . . � . I . � " - ­ . and Declaration of American Independ- mandeth all men e*erywhere to repent, . . i 1, ,� - I - -the 4 and although -Lord Elgin took . I I - - i I , 11 �' -oubtryformightymen to turies, . I - .1 I , V. � 1, . � -LUM FOR SALF.-For age lot 6, concession 12-i JTLEO� , - beborn from one side of that building, at an ex once, and the song of Robert Burns en- because he bath appointed a day' in the -- I � .. ; � ,,.1 -.j --I :" I , - ,­ I all 4ands the most of the intellee- - ' ' t . -.,I I I In � . - . res of titled "A Man's a Man For :: &I That, I I which he will judge the world in righ'- I .� . � �- , - I ' � I 11: i . . : ��, I � : . - � I � 11 � � ­ I . "NTS - .. , �. .1 . � good laud in a xood state , rin 50,000, two shiploads of. � � -V township of ZIbber16 On &Un 3 Ba ac u sculp , I j- Of ozation., Well � t t d morolglants were -not born on the � pense Of $2 - were only the long continued 4everbera- eousness, by ,what :man whom he bath 31� fenced. ; good brick house ; good bank barn and out plain, but f bad for crad -Valley, ture, one shipload ' going down In the CANDID STAT" BUM I �r - J .;e the � ordained, whereof he bath given assur- . I - ­ mi . ; . , . , � - -1 � betw . I f, . � - - I i I � iO buildinis * 18 acna of fall wriest, and V1 eon twol moutains. That couxitry. -no -Mediterranean and the other shipload tion of .what was said and. doi�e 20 cen- I ,!­; --- - I ougbing all $ - . . I � � 11` ? � i - - turies before in that little. ki . afice x1nto all men in that he bath raised . I . - �- 4't ` , - than 40miles from now to -be found In the B tt It muse the I ngdom that I -. � - I . , � I ,ore � - I . . 1 ,'I . . LL �� 11 . . . . . 1 ne' , rl a um? po are now Impostng upon. him from the dead." By ztho time he has -� 7 I . . . � � . part of Which, is, in tho, Parthenon, though In comparative wers . . " � : I -- the sea, has ,�made its Impress upon the - Greece having again and again shown got through the translation from the I I : ..' - . � - " � , L � I - . P.lot, world as, no �Wor. nation, -and it to-fty rulns,,has been an Inspiration to all - Ill � :. ] I t, I ., - ' I i I . . I I . I -_ - I'll A holds a 11ifit ortgage of obligation upon architects for centuries past and will be that 10 men in the right are stronger Greek I thiulp you will see his lip trem- ; : . . I .. . I L Z �� --- I I T-."-" YOU SAM -Ent halt Lot 41. Concession than 100 men in the wro�g, the heroics Ole, -and there will come a pallor on his. FOR THE PIEWOPLE11ki j i ­ , -a all the time from nqw un- I - I . � .1 L 11 . - all I I t ,I I civilized I - . While we must. leave an inspiratto I . � .. ­ . JJ!' !� Township of Fast Wkwanosh, containing I of Leonidas and Aristides and Themis. face like the pallor on the sky at day- . . ; .� i`- � 11 til the world itself , is a temple . . ;. . I � � -i � I 100 &arm This in one of the bat forms -in � to statesm and diplomacy the set- L � of ruin. tocles will not cease their mission, until. break. By the eternal salvation of that I . t , the Township, &M. Is situated in a = �Iseighbor- t1emej# of t4e intricate questions which Oh, that -Parthenon I One never gets over . . 1, . V t I i . . . � , ' ' � � . I I � F � 1 . There are scholar, that great thinker, that splendid . L L I � : '' - -!,(i � the last man on earth is as free as God L . - i, hood, wil of the bed and no waste - d. I I - r I z� ;.-� "'. � on now Involve I oil F,urope and indirectly all having once seen it. But what must it . 4 I A � - I , . i - � the. lam, frame bun and stables, also two &am: made him There, Is not on either side of man, you will have done something to - . , - , � ,11 . . I - . 1. � i i . .." no nations, It U time for all churches,. ial. have been when it stood as its-arohitects I . I � I A � I ;'L �.� L! - aforehard*01enlyof good water, and within7a the Atlan6 to -day a republici that can- r ixidebtedness to the Greeks. , � ' � , I I help !pay you . 1 7 1 , I halt 1�lk no, d Kall1krates, built It out Of - � 1. . 1t " mile, and a from tho Village of schools, all igialversities, all arts, all Uter- not truthfully omploy ,ihe words of the And now to God the Father, ,God the "I : . : i : ..... . -1 . Blytb. For It t ' an ' . to BOX el i m -e ni ab . . ! further P"Culars apply on the pnialses of en Icai We are -Stook so m6 of th cest : A most fashionable t I ! . .. I'll 4 , - - ature, to soigad out -in the most emphatic . arble, white as Mont Blanc placing ill 000, . : �11 � 1614 -if -7 " I - I I --- . � - i - . the de6l6ration,t 11f am debtor to at noonday: and as overwhelming. Height th . I d 10 51. Bly-th P. O.. - * . text and say, -'I I I am debtOr to �he Son and God the Holy Ghost i be honor 4. � - . at it will be your privilege to'see outside thii � . ; i Y., �� - � I . . - ; � I Way I . Greeks. " � � . and glory and dominion and vihory and . . - s store. We have made %". - I � 11 � )i - above hielght. Overtopping the august - . . . . '. - � I I - the Greeks. t ; - . ' ! � - nONFORTABL9 PLACE JFOA SAM: -For Nis ; Debt to the Greeks. song, wjAd without end. Amen. , eldbomte preparation for the Spring tride ; and are now M a Position to �81W � .. .. �� .. - � I 1 4 1 1 - I and majestic pile and rising from Its roof : I . . I . i .- - VLJ ch"p. the furn: of the underftned! In Rupur . The Greek LanZuage. � Goods, which for value, we ilefy� comparison. We -are wing ; . � .. . C I " �� �� - But now comes the practical question' . you � iho " some b : I , � .1 . hey. Then we between 28 and red was a statue of Pallas Promachus in' I - I I � I . , � 30!!rf!�*u oleal �, 1n -the Aral plaw., We ewe to their. 1mg- � bronze, so. tall and flashing that sailors How can we pay that - . A X�w Do ' � ful things in Driess Goods and Tfiminings ; our Emb,roideries and I ill i F �, " drained end in a good date of aul-Wamun. Then in debt or a part of . .ok canvasser. I - I � I . . . . . . . . . . . . . � . . I �' . . . 0 - - � ' � � 1. good hum hous% bm and driving lobed. IS is -,tu All of it was it? For we cannot pay more than 10 per � i I . � � �t i . ! , I age, our Ne* Testament. 10 ; . . I- .. I far out at sewbeheld the plume of her - Here Is a picture of the RomaA book found to excee'd anytiling you hav� seei-i- before. - . . � . . . - - I - . !!! within a mile of Sestorth, and is admim1fly ad first -written 4n tireek, except the book helmet. - ce I 'a . i . I Z 11 "A" : ; �, � I A ly Without the aid of the eternal nt. of that debt n which Paul acknow- canvasser. The snow white Maurijani n' I., % ­ � . - .1 I . ; �' �� ` . . I i : " of Matth and' . . � I ; �, Z I I .! �;� - " I for a msrke� gu4sner or womall IN that, written In the God It never could have been planned, steeds, with - the heaving flanks, the We imported direct through agents all our Table -1-nena Towellingo , , ; � I ­ , . I to ibie prop!�wr on the pnmism= iiii ew� ' ledged himself a bankrupt. 11:� praying F � 1-�� . . . � 152i.t.i. Aramaean'kinguage,'wag Almighty God that be will help Greece 0 f �- � .1, , ­ . I - - . -Belfast 7 - : , . . 'r, I soon 'Put InIO and without the aid of God the chimis pointed ears, the crimson nostrils, are Apron Unens, from the Brookfiela Line*n 06.p A, I - � I �11- I - . Greek by out Saviour's brother James. and trowels never could have wnstructed In its'Present war with Mobammendaniam reined up. From the ch�triot dead I ended ., lTeland� so that i - I � I. - � . . - 1 4 � I enables us to offer you Linens at pricea not hitherto obtainable. ­ ; - r a I � � [ -, t , III- � TO IRZNT! TO the greet language VO Owe tbO best It. There, is not aftne church building In' and the coneerted'empires of 1011rope. .1 I the master, who, giving his flowing toga , - - - � . � ;. . . I I 1 I . - �- I 0 �- chesp, or to not for a tam of yew% the hotel sermon eve* preached, the best letters � an the -world, or a Woperly constru. know AM � . - I � � I t,!. - -� - , In the . I . . ' cted .her queen, a noble, Christlaii *o- an eztra. gr ful fold, entered a house. 11 � 14'� Villige of Blake, in the county of Hurm. . I . , . F : �. I I � . � � ­ hot With all ever wirftan� the best v1dons ever kin- `twui�ouse, or a beautifw Art gailmy, -or 0 � a. Presently a Scythian' � ie,s' Nests . � . ­; . . ,;�. , z- I other necessitry rooms a"MM:21 dled-'All thO parables In Greek. All the an cence and . � I . . , !! hotel contalawair biA I "I . [ , � no man, It r face Cho throne of an benefl- on the Via Aunit' Wad 0 . . .. " I I a deell usually � lov;liness, her lifeuan. example * slavet followed his lo. -d, .� ". I !- - N aPpropriate auditorium, or a tasteful bearing in big ,. I . � found in a Villige, Botel. There is am a Imp bun mirmles, In Greek. The sermon oim . , ; - �, � ; , A ', , the of noble wifehood and'motherhood God sturdy a a p ion f siculus, fulli . - Are models ofbeauty and in them we can please-th� most fastidious.' � . i I -�i and abed, and splendid wslL it is the only hotel� home, whi6h, because of that Parthenon, ­ rms ree a as - . a . I � . I t C . . . I . . � 7 I � 4 1 11 3, I mount In Grbek. The story of Bethlehem whether its style or some other style be helo those pawn- in these days oi awful Illubtmted, up to date and guperb�y . I . ! . . 1� �T I -� 4 In the Plus. and is a popular and oonve*nt stop- . I . I Z . . � _ . i � �f' , i , . - is not directl.v I - � � � I 1, i. and Golgotha, and 011,yet and Jordan adopted exigency I .0fir Amerluatt senate did well bound in Persion cloth. It' . . � � 1� �� 1! R I . )thu how . ,or indirectly a- . wall a Pliny I Lakes' Und-erwear. - ; , I - � I �� � T within four miles. It in a -first obw stand for a. good banks and Galilean beaches and Pauline . the other day, when, in tb; � . - - I 11 I ­ debtor i� the Greeks - at capitol .in 16 volumes, et subscription book. Such . I �. I L L � I � ! � I man and will be sold cheap and on ,eW. Some. Or embarkationi and Pentecostal tongues and But-there'la another art . - bulldlni'g which owes to Grebco Its Col- 'were the , ' � . i I I I , � � : I l L- �*--- wilt t; rented for a tainn of years. There In good � in my mind methods of the canvasser in the We- intend to make a speeia,�ky of La&es' Blouse's, Wrappers and , Undi , t . . , I - , . �� � .-, L , V don attischa, Ion time. seven trumpOs that sounded � over - Pat- - - umnart impressiveness, . I . . : I., i , 9W any" the most facinating, elevating and . . they: passed a palmy days of Rome. L " In Ir I , . . I - %1� . W; I a cOutaina Chure=ftbool, Stairs, Black mos b&ve come to the world In liquid, . hearty resolution of sympathy- for that It we are to'criDdIt a recent florid wear ready to wea'r. , ; � I - . 11 i r � I i v, - Ing of all arts and the nearest th do- I � I 11 ­ smith ,: ke, A on the promises or addna symmetrical' picturesque, philosophic, . : 11 � 3i . 1 .� � � r p . - divine--4for,whielt all the world nation. Would that 11 who Mve potent * ' . : L - - X.W WX � Rt 21, Blake P. 0. 2&l6x4.tf A word . a scription in a leading literary revie*, 'Ready to Wear 010thing fo: * 8 * : . I � , --- unrivaled, Greek, instead of, the gibberish a that can be heard in Euitope would r p-ritng- .. - � � 7 t ,-, - debt to the Hellenes that Will never be 1� the Aoznau method is the way of a cer- . . - I . . i I y � � I - . . �� - -: �]t " - . lan4 I In Wiich immy of the nations paid., I� mean. sculpture. . .. � - I 4 ­ � . ruw . At least 650 utter them now, . when they ary -so much tain kind 4 book agent of to -day. He � . � . . . p - � 4�, ­ I I ULIL-For sale, lot X, concession . _ I I ; �­ I ;I- - I . ; Of the earth 4t that time jabbered. Who I needed'! 1,et us repent to them In English rides in his own coupe, - To hand� and, in - this department we are bound to know no apposifid I - - . . : , ? � . I � 2. o* Containing 100 acres, 85 cleared and YeaXs before Christ the Greeks perpetu- drawn by That I . . - , i ,' - ' - ; - : .7 � �� �' :' : , . the balwee In good: hardwood bush. The land Is in Can f0rget % and who can exaggerate its &ted thei human face and form in-,' what they centuries ago declared to the -the French call a steppare.* The pribeely, Every Man, Youth and Boy 6ordially lvited -to eaU and lool� &A � - . � I t a pod state of pul$!!sliou, is well underd terra � . � thro%gh our . C- - I � �, __ Wned and I a bleosing to the 9 � � ,." - P well fenced.- ­-Thate Is a frame barn and I thr'lling 'rdportanft that ()hrUt and cotta and marble. What world In Greek, "Blessed are 'those who Canvasser never would debase his calling ing, we think 'the magnitude of the stock wiR s � - � � i - og house on � - urprbe those who are In 10- . � ­ � , -4 -failing spring with windmill, - ghteousikess' sake, by carrying the book he Offers bimself- habit of buying wbere small stock$ are kept. - . t4 - I . � heaven werelutroduced to us in the lang- are persecuted for A -T . the pzoperIN a never human family that anen and women, for theirs . I � . - �1 .i . . t ii- I I . � . . I . I - ��� &be about 2 so -es of omb"d It is an excellent Uage of i6 Greeks, the language In to the kinRdom, of.heavert.- His -ant In livery totes it. The'book j . . . . ' . . � - . .. L, "t. - Ini . ­ � I I .911VT useful, who could live only sery I . �1 . f - . . - I - , F - , � r' -C - , lam and Is within one mile of Wisahurch station, which H-6mdr. had sung and Sophooles within a century may be Another way of partly paying -our, debt he works for costs from -$I 000 to $2,500 ; p . where there we stores, blacksmith -perpetuated for I . . I- - i shop and .� I �:- � 1 ,. . draMiStIzed And Pato dialogued and So- flve or six or ton'centruries! :How I wish pp e a copy. It is a volulAe which . common . .ry De.paf!tm , t �­ , � y -4 - f churchm Thers-bat wheal ontho Opposite lot. It . to the Greok6 is by higher h r clation of .. Groce en -1 .-� � L Z .!L �7 �;f . crates discou'reed and Lycurgus legislated that some sculp- . . the lea�rning and self- - I . �k ,` , ­ .�'L . .0, :�f L is six miletfromWinghant and six from:Lucknow, tor contemporaneous with . sacrIfloe of the men people may not buy. It is only offered to ' * ' I , � � . - - � . � � - - - 11 'tkgood:o" And ]Demosthenes thundered- his oration * IF W110111'Our own land stand for all that "shahs, .maharajahs, -emperors, kings, . . omplete with the latest - in every -thing', W-04 � - .- . L . . : - L . frope , Chrlit could have put his matchless form . Our Grocery Department is c ­ il I I , �'7 � I -V I I F=ble aim I I The- Cr�own?" Everlasting . thanks I the ancient Welcome I J.", , . - - ., . -, _ � 1- � �4 - . Ir V , in marble! But for every grand and ex- Greeks 'stood While here presidents.1t Here we Indeed the hordieS under,the direction of Mr. James Purcefl who wffi'be pleased to " - _ he L. I 5 i '. " V:r: . L J 1 a V to God that the waters of life were ndt and there one comer, to public approval of the subs ,1- . - 11.1L # " .o -1 quiiite statue of Martin Luther, of John cription book busine I and i I , � I I ' , bande& to t� as. all to the brightest and hghtest Grocery 8tore in this- County. .,� : I J L "'! � - � ' � ­ . L � . - le world in the unwashed and reward the most of them live in I . - -----,. . � - : . * . I KnOr, of William Penn, of Thomas Chal- � �' .. , ­ . i, it � . L I , Al i � � ;1 . � ig t L I .. . �, .-.1r I � g, . n n of Lafayette, of any privation or on salary disgracefully small. �o -w* what � .. . - � �- ­ -- it, 700R, SALE OR To RENT ON FASY =MS.- CUP of corr:uPt languages frbm which mer of Welli gto , 11nextinculsbable jr1re. - Our aim make this ttore - to the County of I -, . i . I . . R � � 1� j. I 1, -U As the, owner wMea to retire from business on nations had been drinking, bfit in the of the great statesmen,or emancipators or . The scholars, the archaeolr-�Xlsts. the I . I � � ­ i 1 7 1 - . . - I � - � 1 - ac"ur * . 1, � i ,�, I � it of ill health, th,4 following valuable property clesn . brig4t, gold : . - - - ' An extended acount Is given in the FieUs i8 to Chicago, W,Anamakex�s to Thiladelphid, anj Ti.mothy Eatoj&- . � , I abWinthrop,4*xnllesuorWof Sesforth, on leading 08 . . . . + ,, : i . - �: " " � " 3 I I en ltpp�d, emeiald. conquerors Who adorn,your pdrks or 1111 Artists, -the 11terati-m t Of them live up Cincinnati En lZer of John Floyd's dis- Toronto. ' t I I . !7 . t .. I � :1 ­. handled ebaffice of tbe Hollones. qu I '' i � I mad to Brussels, will be sold or rented as one farm Learned the niches of your grand academies, three or four flight of stairs and by small . .� - � 'i �, �- � - L. � � I � . .1 . 'I c . � T I . . a whole volume ab6ut the are dobtors to -the Greeks. They co you - coverY.of a peculiar kind of fire, Inex- , ,-I I � Orin na to suit purchaser: about 5w sores of Curtiustwr4e� windows that do not �et In thi �" , . �- I Z I � ­ ; � I I ­ � vered Our advertisimy a-ent, Professor- qolding, wiU prob "' . �11 ' ; � I I %lenrld farming land, with about 400 under crop, Greek verb.1 Philolo Ists century after 0 full sun- tinguishable when once ignited. It is . I . t) tp . ably' cal -11 oil pa # 14 - � I �, I � gi Acru 'light You pass -them every eVery day in , 1 i - I I 11. , -; . ebalance4upasture. There are Lwge barns wo I � the polls, they 91q,rifled the temples-, rePres(Onted as a substance having the week and will show you literature -that Will 1: ; i �- r�l i �- , A . tury hav6 been measurling the sym- they'adorned the cemeteries t any ,recognition. . . . . . pky to carefuRy.perase. i 'r'�'.; : I : I t 7 . All Other buildings necessary for the implements, # with stat-- . . - 11 I - _ t ­ L *- , , , I metry of 04 e, en th le ue m in consistency of paste and harmless while 11 I : , , con your streets withou . . ,� � �. -, - . t �, . 1. . r , � . n�, � � I ` g, ,I % � -t vehloles,ele. Thislandis well watered, haegood languag lad Wi 0 9Y sy so 6 cedar in ivory, some Grub street, where many of the mighty, in a quiet st to. I �- I - r ­ �­ I ­ t - a , , some r I -. - �; I ,11; Z , � f tram an4,briok dwelling houses,. etd. There are and phiUppi§,: drama and comedy.. 11 Odyri- in gi1v a The. friction caused b.f I . . . I V -,f 4 � � � I : � I !� . I I � t men Ing it against a - hard aniface will, . 11 i i, � I 5 - grist and saw mills and store which win be sold or ap or, some In gold, some in size dim- of- the past suffered, is long enough � � - � 'j;, v," and "nW. rubb 1. ! I . I . � I - i�' � i 1 � 3 L . . . . L � . I � I - - � 1. rented on advantageous terms. Also on 27th can. --" ' ) 2' but'the grandest thing inutiVe and Eome in size colosial. Thanks to reach around the world', No need of however, jet it 'aglow, and nothing w!Ri . � � I A � ' � . I � . I o , I ? CeWOD, Gray. townihip, 290 screq of land, 40 in that wasting our sympathy upo the'UnA� ; �' LL L I . 11 I , -ever W09mPlished to - Phidjas, who - worked in r,tone; to � overcome the flame 2 � Z I . I I 4 �L I , L Greek Ihnguage L � z . ; . I., � pasture, the balance in timber. - Possession given was to , the latter burning . I - - -1 i�. � - m I r- - � I - I .. I . after � orkers of the L _ a I , give to the World the benediction, ce preclated think -ere - and w n: Be �Bs G NN'� SE I I I I I, I I ­ Cleanhus, who work 4 In bronze;'to I ., - �- L ­' ?� - - 11119yest of farm Iftuds; mills at once. For par- the c A pa with & blue light and an Intense heat I I I � . - I . A _ . tiCulaft apply to, ANDREW GOVENLOCK, Winthrop. t, omfort, � the irradiation,- thO mdv&- Dontas, who worked iii gold, and to all .at, though. Linnaeus d9ld 118 works 1i I I V - "� � � L Z,: I- 1�' L . , of the i nt I the oompound -)a completely . de- �'4 , -9spelef the Son of for a single ducat, th . � I --$ �; L� , _, �1, � . . 14wtf � on, God- ancient chisels Of commemoration. Do , , ough Noah. Webster's L - - - I -1-11*!; i - I - aIlling book yieldi3d him mord than his . - . ----- - M - L 7 : . 1-� ka. you not realize, that for many of the won- . effo.,jt upon it. - - , : � �11: For that we W-e debtors to the Groo stroyM by tombustinfi, water having no - � �: ': - j � , : - I I . a . . I � � A L � � I di tionary, though Co I - - 1 "I � I I - ­ - . ­ '0109iml ders of sculpture we are debtors to rregglo, : the great , I 11­,� - ­ And ,while hmaking Of Our Phil the I Dynamite and gunpowder -require a . � I ! .�; 5 ., � , i i -1 � ;� , i � . obligations le.� me call your attention to Greeksp I Painter, receiving for long �c'ontinued THB- � � � :. 7 ; I I I - -. 11 . � - , , - .A � i , "", �', E . . . . I L spark to ignite them, while pow4,_Pr pro- - 11,,�;.,: , � I �4 ivr 3 . I . the fact that iiiany of the intellectuai and I L � , L : . ' . � � , but not a regular CANADIAN BANK 0 i I - LL . . ;.1 - _L � . The Art of Healing. work payment of $39, died fro Mz overjoy; duces an, explosion 010� �, . . , t'; " I I : I- - , moral aiid th4blogical leaders' of theages though when Goldsmith's friends visited . f � , . : . ; � I .-I � � . ]Butt ignite. this compo, � F � �?:��- � I - I L 1. - , � . . ­ . I— i � -qd�effective- - ire 0 und there , . � . -1 .... . � � L, � - it, , , got much of #heir discipline, a Yea, for the science of medicine, the him they were obliged to'sit in- the win- . , . . . i - I ,� i��, ` !. , t - - �- a from Gr4k literature. It is popular great art of healing, we must thank the dow, as he had but 'one chair' Is 3ust tke slightest friction of rubb . � � . I . I �i , � - �� - . ing it . I I , [, � � nes I I �� -1. - I , ; though 11-1 � ­L-X� -1 I U'T , . - to sceft' at th I I dead languages, but 50 Greeks- ' There is the immo I Greek Samuel Boyse, the tar againift some ordinary substanoe--there -- - - - LE � 1867. I.All -.-- ­ . - . Ovr direct coimections Will save y ' i . . 11 I . � ­ " -,.--,. L -i - on 4 rt" great Poet, a ved W- is then no explosion or rapid opreading - HEAD OFFIOEs TORONTO. , . i �; time and money for all points. per amt. of . 0 world's intellectuality doctor, Hippocrates, who first opened the death; though the author of "Hudibratall . - . dmr for disease to go out and health to -, I I � I would have a 3n taken off if through . died In a,garret, though I, paradise Lost" of flames, but v, strange, living fire in- - � .1 . - I . I I - � lemmed inAi*� ions our young men had come in. He first set forth the import- - brought its author only 425 cal5h down, capable of being stamped out or kiiekirt OAPITAL (PAID UP) OX MILLION DOLLARS = 41% ��� , . LLLL I i 4 - . � r�� � I - Canafflan North West I under 0' ance of uleanliness and sleep, making the Witbr- )promise of $50 more ilf the�mle any known. way. Tho inventor states his R . 0 .� a ­- �! ,. . I Zkot'- ompe *bee = - W M 0 do . 11 .. L . � tent pr6fessors, n . � - I . � - Si ff . drill4 unwilitzigness to rnake 4he ingr L 9 , I .. Via Toronto or Chicago, Bd In G*k masterplece' Healod's patignt before, treatment to be washed warra4ted It, so that $75 was- all I I .edlents . I.... . . 94 . s, - . B. R WALKER, Gi qzRAL 3ftwLaim. il:: , British Columbia and Calffornist Wftksandliays," orthe-e�' And iake slumber on the hide of a sucri- was piLjd for what Is that of* this oompo011on known, on amount � 4 ­ � 109i,um by oansidered the I Z I �. , ; I I . I � 'n i ,�! I ficed beast. He first discovered the Im- gMtest poem. written. B � of risks to the public by so doing.- . - . .1 'I L . . points. -, 61monides. of J�he slain in war, or Pin- . � ever otter ,ftm - . , , I ! oUrr&tesstre�tbo.JoWeat. WehaVe them dar's I ' Odes di Victory, I I ,or I I The Recol- h . . - . . SEAFORTH BRANOK . ,;.3 I . �;, I . . p6rtance of tiboroug prognosis and our attention to the fact that there � . I - -1 A., I . bo suit everybody and PULIM" . . lections of S66rates, I I or I'The Art of diagnosis. He formulated - the famous [-at this mom am The charity which advertism It"if -on A'Generhi Bankin BusineW TAnnoted. Farmere .Notes disoomto4 T. . - �. - I . . . I - I , T - I 11 hundreds of, authors othw peepleps uoi* *ould, try tj entw t an . . 11 I 11 - , I I , - I P � . I , 118T CAM for -your accommodation. � Words," bY 06raxi or Xenophon's 11 - oath of Hippocrates which is taken by -painters, sculot6rs, ambitwfil, bi-ain' hsave,&o1i a fog . I issued 4 le I ' d I - 4 _ , i - � -,, � - 7 F Ana- 1. ' a points M 0 'T [a& -the prin-i-I d u� W ii * , - ­ . 1, � 4 ! . .1 I u-j"Ma . t �- - . , . 3 � � I basis." . . FMNPO-. . I I y J� � di, �; , I t i� . � , I W _ � � , 1:1 -� for further information. . physicians of ou)r &4y. He emancipated .workers, without bread and without fuel z heTu States, Greitt Bi 0 1 1 r I I- � I I - . � 14� . . I . . . i . medicine from superstition, empiricism . � - - - .- � . . . - . nt (M., Ber=4 " , . ; I � - �, - . Iffistoatry and the ar"ks. and without competent apparel. As far - . . - . I I - - 1 ­ i I and priestcraft. . He was the father of all as you calf afford it, SAVI GS * BANK ! .... � i f , ; N �: the! Greeks the world buy their se I T. - ' .'- � - # Station G. T. R. Tickilt -Office. From � I : � I , I -Rev. .,�PARTMEN � .. - ,! � , � , � learned ulpture, G. Grant,. of Orillijt, oomknonl.y I .; "I t� - . -1 A` - , I .1 i - how to makeiltistoi the infirmarles, hospitals 4nd'Inediftl read their books, purchase -their pictures, k=Wn " " Xnoxonian," pres.6hed anniver- Deposits of $1.00 and upwards re Av-e4 and ourrftt rates ot int --- ; . ,� J � f� . Train Se vice at Staforth. 1. � . I � -�� , r 7- Had there been no coll,ges of the last 23 centuries. 'Ancient - T . . , I 14 "'. Or . . ; I . 4 . Ifferodotus anA - '011100tIrElge their Pea, their pencil, their 4hry sermons in the First Presbyterian 0owecL IWInterest &&ded to the principal at the end of May aud No- . I -1. ; ; . �. ' - � �. , ". �� Thueydides the" Would medicament and swgeF.- had before that f - I ; - � � � � I - � ,� �T, I - have been chisel, their engraver s knife, their archi. church, Sti. Marys, on Sabbath, 14th inst.0 biff in each ye&r. .. - I � I - ; :11 , J 11 � . ­-� ; - -1 I 1 -- Grank rJ[Lrttlllk Rvafl,my, - - no I-Maeaulay or Bancroft- Had beau anatomical dndpbysiologIcalags&ult te ' "d addrested the an �. - � - � . ­-� . I '. �-. - stations as there been nd 8ophocles in tragedy there ct's.compass. The 'world c4alls tholu . nual social held Mon. . 7 , 'and battern and long after th' - Spedal attention given to the 00.1jection 0 ; . t- � �'. - - Trains leave Sestorib and Clinton I . f 0�mim,.Brci@I raper and , . r , ,I �,, " -1 would have b;a� - 0 tint0-'Of "bOOkworErtiep or $'Dr. Dryaadust,­ but dAY Ilight. All the 'services were largely - . . . . I r . , : . �:... ­ !��- - - n no 'Shakespeare. Had HI � . I � I I - I -.:, � ; - X I , . follow$ , ocrates, the Greek doctor,' where his if there. bad - attedded, and Dr. I . . � I ! - : - ' ' �;pp been no' bookworms or dry I . -i ; : !" "I . GOING *NBT-- SKAPOILTIT. CWTON.� 4 there been nw 4omer there would bp,ve ,Giant?s discourses de- me= WeP. N�O , . T, � . theories I ; . I � ­ ­ . , * , . $ - ­­ I . � I T ­ -­ I . . I .t - � ', - � � - . I were not known, the ]Bible speaks doctors of -law and science and theology 0 had the plimmurg of listenh? � A ! I- -, Passenger .. .. .. .. 12.47 p.m. 2-08 p.m. been no M11WA. The modem -wits who lighted all wh- � z Fj z � �� -, ,. I . 11 � i- 9 . * - _o � , - � � " : � i, so m GrAift : DR, M, - . ,11� . !:, r Iffixed Train--... &45 A. X. : lo.15 p.X ivine le to the' . ' It i� thirty years since Dr. . . . t . - - Passenger .. ­ .., ­ 10.12 P. It. 1 10.27 p.X we now or b4ie been put an th� d' of fatal medical trfttlneint when it says, there- Would have beeik no Apoogypf i HOLM EDl Solicitor. - X. X RIS, anager..A � I - I I I - �n.'his disease he sought not �Ito the angel., They are t I . I - . . .� i � I I ,-, . . ,he Greeks of our coun. Isat preached to this congregation. � - � V �-,- - : Mixed Train .. .... .., I o.15 p. M. 7.06 p. TE.' mission of , the World laugh at th� I;wd I ­ . . -.- . A i ­� ­::: Z o but to the plijsIciang, arlta Asa . - . ! - I �, . � i I . . � Dome ZAw- I . . . :, I P � - " . - - - - - 21 - - . I . i ; 1; I- . . I I � �;, , . i right time, , be tiosed ba�k to. Art Tept.with his fsthers.'� And we jead in try and time and your obligation to tliem, " I I . 1 17 ` . I's I stcl- E , � , . . I . . t r , Faustiger... .. .. ­ 7.55 A., 3f. 7.40 A. X. phanes, the A, and many of tb� 6 I � OAK - � � � � )� Passenger .. ..... .. 3.16 P. M. 1 2.66 p. N. , the-New'TeStftment of the poor V-70man In Infinite. � . - . . =1 �� I . � I -- - .- -rr T�j � I . I I . '', � jocosities th . I - I .1 . � Vi I I � - Mixed Tvalu. .. ...... 5.2o P. ld� 1 .j.81i ]V. ,M. a now taken as . I � : ` new had whobad' been treated b.* . . . . � ! . " , � � . , � - . - , -1 lnco*petent :to pay � ; �� : 11 . their wiffArest Way the Debt.' There are thousand . ,of IMP FURNITURE . I .1 . r ,� - i sinuig-gestilp a 2,800 -s I ; 9 a 9 - :P - years ago in the - I - 4 . - I ­­-- � doctors, who asked large fees, Where It . . - . ­ , x ­ . I i U;. � ­ F I WeMngton, GreY and Brac 64 comedies of master ,ofinerriment. But there is a �better way to p6y them, . 1. . I - - : . 0 �- I , � � .� : 0 . says, "She had ,suffered many ­ things � sickly school -girls - all over � . - I .. : - ­ I ­ F- � . I I I �,� - . t Gojx* NoRm-, res"Wer. mixed. Grecian Of and thatis by. their personal sulvation, . . . - �' � rr . . my . !.4 t. . . - ogy as been . . - the- richest � ­ ... � many physicians and bad spent all that ' � I � . �-, . I - - ; . 'I ;� Ethel-,.... ... 1%40 F. X. 9.19 A X. , mine from which will never come to them:tbrough this broad- land that ara*- We. have starbed the New Year withas fine a H of ; Furniture as ` .�� -. -- , , � il. �� - . . ch 'orotme and eg"Yisft she bad and was nothing better, . . ine - . � . 11 r,� . . 0 " - i, I � Brunet. . ­.... 22.52 - . - � I - 'i -, j..� �11 . O." have drawn Itheir but books or through learned . F.:q I ; -1 Bluevale.. -... - 1.06 - ill:ustrations . and .rather gi-ew worse.,, pmkn4 on, I I L i I- I . -1 - L�, . 20.20 For our h to see, and at pr.'&s that will astonish yon for chei-pnesis. All ow � PIN,!" � � - 1, �, , glorious becAuse in literature an ti dragging thcir way- th . , . ­ �� � ! I painters the 1%en%ee for ihiir canvag,- 1XL%nce of � me d Intel I rough 9 -: . 4 ­ - - Winehant.. - .. 1.15 11.10 ectuft I � i� .� : �, '�4 ­ . I I : - I I dkine and gurgery-moie e warranted to give Satisfaction, and -we e nd td you au invit tio to F-� �. i -i i �- i� Goise Soum- P1114011901- Mixed. and, althougl� ,now an nearly exhausW realms they we masters. They I Xte a ft to , -1 I I � . . 1, .� I for w loan out- . . I . sublLme than astronomy, e haie school -life who might enjO Y. and lu��et ouir large stock of Bed Rw ' ­ . . ; �7 - I jV L I '� wwgharn.... .. 6.56 A.1L 5.30 P'N mine, -Gieciah'' mythology ha. done. ntore t I �� I � � ,� I t r� - - � ,V do with I Mem, outoquotoo outdo4matize you. Not m Suit", Parlor Suites,sidebood-al - � �, � . . . Z Bluivah... ­ .. 7.07 '608 � disease than with the . . . I . ; , 10� 'L -� . a work that nothi K else oouid bave - 'gate of 'the head, b t nsion Tables, Dining Room 0 -hairs, 0(satre Tables Hst jRaekg, L � I ; I . I . - I ; I . � I �- . I Brus"Is.-.....- 7M � 6.87 1 ,1 It , . through the ; It that abundant -life w'hic be.- . I - I I - ­ � t , ; 1'. MCI__. .... 7.31 sh - - I 1 7.02 , AMOMPli representing the Rta"; more beautiful than botany, f,or thrOuSh th1w gate of the hearth you may '.3- . . L!- # . * � �­ ed. orfts, . !�. � - L.� hiffoniere, Bamboo Goods and 0hairs of all ' e know we' - ; �� �� . V I M . . � . * ' 4, Gi V,e L US , When w � I - I i- - north winA;, �l s, rollIng the-gWne bloom of boath in the cheek of wife Capture them. Whelk Men of longs to youth bysi ple at �� I �!'�� ,� - � .- I . � t, , .. I , and lairning and , - . .... � ,,, i I London, Huron and B�ucfb- -up the hill, or to have the ftme thing child is worth 2nore to u I P e. you in - qua4ty and pnee- a trail." - . . .. � . ,­�L , t f R! L . �i� ' - - t I I �L � : I , f, GoRm NORM� � to dolever aga [ ; Tantalus, with fruits rqgos of,,the garden -for 0 th" un the might &--e brought t* God� they we tention to hygienic la nd - I . - � � . - . ' - 1: ' ,_ L rMabser. . this gTande&of brought by the simplest istory of what re. - ws a . . . 1, r',� . . I � � : . t t� London, depart ----- %- 8.15A.M. 4.461X,.M above him t . �; I I I .... he - could- not reach; all scienew, the science of Itealing, every ligion can do for a soul. They have os . . I � I I I ; � -: . I I ,IiL - , . - ]CxeterL 0.30 . 6.071 I every ward - . I �: ; . Z f . I . - n 4qw Christ oom- . L 7 t L.� L I i his - . - : V L'. I � ' LL Hensall- - ---- --- 11.44 01 . e] - L � -1 . I - T � - 'Z V Cestra".. ­............ gag, 5.57 Achilles, with a arrows; loar", wliji Pillow of recoverea Invalid, . children. Oh, tell th I 6 a proper course of treatrnent bidertaking Departwei C � . - %1i .� - - . h7' 'a, flying too neAr the Emm; of American and forted you when you lostj your bright boy -W . . " L ;�. i I- I 1uppen.. n, Eul�apean hospital,' may ith scotes Emulsion. Thles" . . - _ � �� I , - ­­­ the illf man and half beast; well cry, out: "Thank God 'for - ol or blue eyed girl I They have foand life . r . I - I * k6o 8. Dr. � 9 . - 1� L I L. - Brucefield -------- 9.68 S. 0 o d - )u us ,�� � . � � I � , Tq% i - . - , ; . , I - I � ' L f :1 , , � � Clinton- - --- - _. - - 10.16 6,5 3 . Is lyre; Atlas, with the Hippocrates. I, like Paul, am Indebted a struggle. Oh, tell them how Christ has Would make the blood rich . . � �� ,� 7 1 7 . � lwolrii on his � : It Oar Undertaking, department is �e ' ete - � -, �� � '. � - � ' k -all these and marb to the Greeks.,, i I ompl m every respect, suld a$ I I P., . Londesborot ­ - -, - _ _ IM81 T. helped YOU all the -Way through! They. .��, . . L i . jt� . � 7' t urchWO ff 01n first-class m anufacturers only, we can gu e ve L F L ,I .. .have helped litd ature, from the graduates the heart-beat strong; check ! -1 . � ; - . � . . ;�7 �t, BlYth­ - - -- - - - - 10.4-1 7.2 . Furthermore, all the world Is obligated am in bewilderment. Oh, ton th4 with - arante to gi . �i , . em I I - : . I- x, I . . I . - I . I �­ j ." ]Be*nvG- -- -- - -- - - - 10-66 7.8 . i8faction in aU its branelhes, U we' have an Under Inerl , . L . I I 1. IL Wingharn arrive ----- 11.10 ' - to Hellas ]more than 'it can ever pay for how many bands of joy, heaven.. 1)eck taker and kj�bal I 11 ; - � � ?k. � - ! -.- - S. spe.,ech On cOmMeneMPut day to Rufus on$ that tendency to exhaustion - I : I 10 L -1 . ; L - . � J6 (;OnlqG BDUM- ' passenzer , Choate's. eu dt' her(yies in the cause of liberty and YOU upward! "When Greek meets, Grdek, � ' fbeeri years' experience, and any orders we may to favored With shall reL ­ - - I. i ; �- - 1 ". Wingham, depari- - - - . 6.60A.M, 3.30r.i V'= on"Da-niel Webster-aV 1`1911t. United Europe to -clay . had not then comes the. tug of war,"' but -when a and quicken the Ap he very best attention.- DolA fi) . - � � � _-- , .. I ! �. � Be1graVe--­----- 704 Ha5 Dartnioutb. " -agedy" and. comed we ,petite by rget the old stand. - . . � - C ' r better think that - the Greeks will not warm. hearted Christian meets - a man Z I 1. . � � I *Dl*t . ­ - , I I I . Z �� '1� I ]Blyth.... ­ - - - - - - 7.16 400 born in the A E tivals .,of Diony!AiLls a - P. S. Night calls atteiided to by calling at our� Fangral : . I : . I X , . who -needs' pardon -an ;ympathy and I . '. t �-. , � -, Londesboro�- - - - - - - 7.24- CIG Athens. The Frio and elegiac - and opi light- There MAY be fallings back iLnd ' strengthening the digestion, ence First Door East of Dr4. Svott & McKay's Offioe : . or at Dr, 0 i I ­ . - � A �. Isid . � "I � 4 . so - � . 'i� , - I Brucefteld.; -------- 806 .1 �Iop - ... . � 4. poetry of Gree ,� 600 years before Chris Greece is right -no o u, - e incident of self 0 re about 'O - am . . I � I - . - i Clinton.. .., ---- - - - 7.47 . vae-illations and temporary defeat, but if comfort and eternal lif then comes vie- - I . o . � 4.60 all Europe can t put her t rY.' If YO can, 'by sol Our b' ok tells mo ld Office on M i Stree't Seaforth. - . I I � �: :1 I Rippen- ---- -- -- 8.17 has its echoes � the Tenny'sons, Long- down. The other sa,crifice, ' I � � -. � I � . . . ; . i � I : ­ K Mrg _ . nations, before thei brWg to such scholarly men . I . . .� % I ­ . � � � liensall -: - 8.24 5.04 fellows ftud 13 ants of 1,800 and 1,1900 it. Sent free. . � . . - - ! - i- . , ------ - - - � . ii , I - I - . . . open the Portholes of their men.of-war and women -what Christ has done for - . , I � I . : I � � Exeter----.------ , 01,38 5.1ra . years h st. Th�re is , .. � 1�- .. after C I ,rNrP I �� i � � �19 . E I . - � . centratlia 8.5 5.28 . - W J.; I . � I - � - � -1 resc�e, y' , -0 - , . j­.� ��. . 1� tive pu not an eftec- against that small kingdom, hadbetter . their oterna In I ,IBROADF , BOX '& con'l . 1, I ,f I London. (ati�;�),.,:-,;.,-,."--.*-..#*.* 1pit 01, �1- litorial chair or profec SCOTT & BOWZ,r . . � � . - 10.00 A.K 3.0 ,;sor,r, read of the battle of Marathon, *Whe ou may bring the E, Belleville, Ont. I � . . � I .; ; . r_, - .. . I . .re in. Where- Demosthento eloquenceand I . - �' -- . � 1. �; , . � . room.cultured arlor or intelli,golit I I I . . I I ,! � - I i,�- . I . lal"n- 19-OkQ henig,ns, Le,4. op b.Y Miltiades,'. HOXIMW WA-MQU Nmuld ;Q! 4;kLpd1y r - , a ; � I � . , . - A.t-- - I . .rrvn i . Main Street, Seaforth, P,Orteklk Old � -.1 : 4 . I : . , - I . :..Vvr� I . ; ­ � . I I � . . . .1 - , i. � � . I , . � .. �: � . . � I I - I - It ... i . ; I I � 1. . - � I �� � I i 11 A � � � .1 . 4 1 : . ��, i I . � � I . - . . I . . . . . �, I . I I - . :1 I �"" : - . - . . - I -� . � . I I I I I � � I .1 I r g-� � . - . I - I �r . :*I it I � . . . - . - . i , - . - I - � � . . � , I - . I I I - . - I : . . I � I . i I I i I I � , � . . . �, - �, I ­ . , 1, . � i ` -- I- , " . . I � I . - Zl­ �. � - - I ! � - . � -- .. ; -,i ­ -11 � - I . . . � . . . . I � ,1� - I I I I � � . " : - 11 -­ I ­ c � - I i I .. I ­. . . . . . . - -. . ­ I I -1 . . � Z I � . . V . ­ ; � � � . . ­ . � I I I �. . I I . � . I � 1. ; , , . k� �� t:. . � - . ­­­­ �--- , - I . - 1. . I . . I 1. I - . . I . ; ­ I I I ; .- I - ­ - --�­ . . . . ­ , - � ­ , ­ ­ I � -1 I . ­­-­­ -1 I I ­ -1, .­��-I:­.;-­­ '-1 ­­-,'­wl�.- , � .- . . � !, : I - ­ - "­ . .­ -,.--.. I I ­ . I �. � I � I � . I I � � � I � � . � . I . " 'k ,� . � .1 i � -1 - , . - . ­ -1 - I 11 , - � ­ ". ­ ­ - � ­, , .- - . , - - ­ � � I . � � . ­.��. . I . - �­­, � ­�L�­��,---- ­,,�� ,1, - " , - . -1 -- - ­ I i . . I.' . � I . . � I � ­.. -1 �­ . ::- -.:­ *... '? .-:-. 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Vft& td-� a Aift W voaie . . � - -� , . imvh.� o4 - � I ­ � - `�, I .�� . � i , ,; 1. I � . .... . V - : I opuld not - *appmpristely employ Pours At Oat time, In Greek � counibil. of war, - of thb city sends'me the itatitment of 1� I *1 - � I � � 7. I . I SIM debtor to the AT* - generals ' r -1 . 8, FO R OREECE . - -the- - - � i I . �� -. - � - ,. � � ,mj&oulstion and #&y, 11 I were for beginning the what oocurred &Iew clays ago among . 11 1� "", I— - I � I � . ­­ 1. I FOR r - ,� ,;.� . SUN GHT - .!e, � ..WA.WM� I I I � ?" we&V,,;&0st -it. . Wim. mines of, 13rIW&­Col#=b1k. T$ � seems, , ..-.; �� ­ , � I - . - I I .11 - I 6"46. I �� - . -- , K 3 1 - . . I .� . I - I , h -� ". . � , , � T - �� V --Paul had, got ftuch at "the councils of war, : that- ft� Cartoon and Jent Smith were ,. .­ . 01, 2 1 . -A The fact is this �, i - � - �� r , I _ � � Ir ad� � ,� . REV. DR. T ,LMAGE ON A SUBJECT th I ­ - I � I - . . of his oratorlog power of ew,"siontmm Ing vote, and hilitiadoi down Itt.the narrow shaft of a 3Aine. i - --- I I I . .il.-- . . .. - � . 'A'S .- 4 i.11 , � .OF VV61kOWiDE INTEREST. the Qrooks. That he bad studied their Addressed him, saying:- , . They had loadbd on iron� bucket *lth I I , . . , - � I , . - , .� . . . I .. i-1- . I i . - I , . ; I � I F 11 I SOAP' . � . . . L - i F. . . . 116=turs" was evident when, standing in - "It now res�s machus, ; wO, and JIxn 116moworth, - stanift ng I I o I I t, I � � 1V - . . I - with yolf, CAIll . . . P P . I , It _jp �, I I I I P - - I I R V . His Shows What We Owe the Greeks -A ,the presence of an audieum of G,mk . either to enoNve Athons,or,,:by Insuling above ground, was hauling the. bucket . . � i � ... I I . - I I i . � . �] � poholirs on Mars hill, which overlooks, her freedom, to w1n, yours'elf an Immor- ' U b Indlass, when the windlass broke, - � . �, lj I �� .. . - 1-1 Wrapper Oompetition, 1. - I � �. ' . 11 - . 4 - � Debt In "ngusge, Ai% Heroism ond Athens, he dared t4 quote from one of tality of faane, for never since the Athon- I and the loaded bucket was descending I : . . . . . - � .� I u I I � � I iz '. Z - �� 1. - t I L their own Greek poets, either Cleimthus , ians were a people we - � ­ - ., 1Z - �, . 189T Notdicine-The Best WjL* to Pay the Deb re thpT in such upon the two miners. Then Jim Hems- I r February I � . - - I I : 13� 1 1 � - . ,I or A-tatus, declaring, "As certain also of danger as they are In at this �moment. If I worth, seeing what must be certairi death I . I I p . , -- I Z . -1. - . I - � � Washington, March -28 �-As Dr. Tal- your own poets have said, I For we we they bow the knee to theme'Medes, they I to the miners beneath, threw himself . � ', 1 4 � ­ 11 . I � I . I- mage's sermons are pulilished i on both also bis offspring. I " And he made ac- are to be given up to Hipphw, and you against the cogs -of the whirling wind- I � ­ � ., t -r - I I , � 1. I . I .1� � � ' � I . � A I � The following me the Winners in District No. Is sides of tbe,� ocoah, this dtic6urse on a curate quotation, Cleanthus, one of the know whb.t they will then have to suffer lase, and though hiEr flesh was thrn and .1 � �. . 1. . . I I � a *' � unues of York, I . � � I , comprildra the City at TomnW Cd � ; 11 11 I , i - - subjeotof w0ildwide Interest Will attract poets, having written,:- but lf;Athens comes victorious out 6' his bones were broken - he' stopped the I � -j�a an ()ounties West and South of theft. Of : � . ,I � k Z almoe . 1D 1. . � , � ,-: I universal at-Wntlon. His text was Ro- . . . I ­ I �- . t - ; 1� 1-' , For we tMne offspring are. All things this contest she has It in her power to whirling windlass and arrested the de- : 11 � . . 11 I I " I . I � , I - � -1 � . become the &at city of Greece. Your vote soondIng bucket and saved the lives of . � - . IF � L � . Winners of Stearns! BioYeles maw 1, 14, 011 am debtor both to the I .. I �;. . I � j�. that creep ' � � I � I - . . - . . i Greeks and to the barbarians. " I � I I i � ,. - �rr 4 ; . Are but the echo of the voice divine. to to d6cide whether we are to join battle the two miners beneath. � The supertri- I . I I i-� I to. . ­ . - . - 1 - I - I or .we - I , � I I mir. jo'en Ford, 53 Wolaeley St., Toron At this U06, when that behemoth of not. - If - I do not bring .on a battle tendent of- the mine flew to the rescue - . � -n poets, - � I .... I Mr. - A, E. Mountain, 23 Burton 'Street, abominations, Mohammedanism, after And Aratus, one of their ow F ... --; I .1 . , ! - . presently. some factious intrigue Will and blocked the machinery. When Jim 11 . . LL � .�� .� . Hamilton. , . having gorg6d Itself on the carcassses of had written: : L. � 7�� - - disunite the Athenians, and.the city will Heinsworth's bleeding and broken body . .11 101w, �- I ........ --. LL - . Doth oare perplex? . . �, L I I . � 100,000 Arm6nians, is trying to put its Is lowering danger, be betrayed to the Medea, but if we fight was put on .a litter an(I carried home- in A � � . , - � : LL . � ,,, - wimers of GoIld Watches . I I - . I , .. . 11 � I J- �� I � . I paws upon One of the fairest of all na- I nigh? _ - before there Is anything rotten in the ward and some one exclainted, "Jim, this . - I - �, 11 I ' 'tiQ P . - i III f � no that of the Greeks. I preach this We are his offspring, and to Jove we fly. � �1 1- id G. Holmes, 24 Birch Avenue, is awfull" he replied, "Ob, what's the . . X- 11 �, Mr. Davii , state of Athens I believe that, provided. I � . I � - , - ,I � " sermon of 4mpat-by and protest, for I - - � � ii ��, � Toronto. It was rather a risky t,bing for Paul to ' the gods will give fair fkildt',and no differenoe go long as I saved the boys?" - � - I - I �, : " . . Mr. j. Albert Good, Box 142, -Berlin. every lntelllg�ent person on this side of attempt to quote extemporaneously from favor, we are able to get the lxmt of It in What an illustration It was of su'ffer.- . I . I 'I I- : I " t, � I . . � _- 4..111 . 3USter Mani Palmer Powell, 416 Spadinat the sea, as Well 'as the other side, like a P0.0mAn a language- foreign to his and the engagement." I I I Ing for others, and what a text from It is poor economy to buy cheap Tea, and use t- * I .- � � . . . wice as mud a I I- � - . Faul,wbowmte thetext re ee - . -7 . � � � � � T, " - Alrenu%yoronto. i did it with- � -4-re,k li,rees. - t which to illustrate the behavior of our - � . I . � . - I the Greeks. iThe present crisis is am- . . I , 2 , � I Mr. Frank Cmwford. Pt. FAwstra. , . out stammering ad =thaeknowled Christ, limping and lacerated and broken . and not i6t half ,U Much isatisfaetion as from a good one. A � . i r -� - - � ged That Won 00 vote of Calliumhup, and 91 � I I . : � �'. - I the allied 1,,ef,ore . ­ :.-,I I . � I � . f� - - . Alios Flynn, 387 Chumh Street, pbasized by�tbe guns of the most lat ed audience, and torn and crushed in the work of - 9 --� ­ � Mile I I . i t I ­ - I I soon the battIq opened, and An -full run - '- . -1 . �- i , -111 � 3 - . r . . . i ­1�1, . Tormto. , Powe" Of L*OM ready to bs unlimbe* on the 'plaiket hla� indebtedness to t1le - tfie men of Mlidides'fell. �p*)n the Per. stopping the descending ruin that would . . . . - -'. - I , I , I I . � ; i I I - � . . -1 � ! t ., I 41 � :agabaAt the Aelleneg,, and I am Greeks, crying out' in his oration, "As sian ho 0 destroyed our 'souls I Try 'much a . I . � ... �, �� . . - ­ � I . - Z 1, . hav' I � I % .: 11; e.- � sts. skoutin : "Onf sons of � ­ ,- ,l I 19 G 6 � � , � � out. P�ul, wlih a master Intellwt Ono of your own Nets has said. I I Greece I SirW for the freedom of your scene of vicarious suffering as this . on � � I � 1. t , . speak � I . I :1 . ; - i � , several , � . � . - , � - - la,we have been obliged to diiqas1lfy of the ages, �ot in brilliant Corinth the . " . 11 � 7�,� I I I I . ,­, Ei I that man capable of overthrowing 41 - . , 1. � I ,,,, i 'i February for sending coupon$ taken , "" i . I country I Strike for the freedom of your ;1 i , - competitors for Greek Architecture. I ���- � ----- i : � - L. , I , wnin ' � I i 1, � � �, IN p Iii jiocere stock (889 Rule 8)L great Acro-Qorinthus fortress fro 9 I I . I is, for the truth, and -he . -'�. .. -I- I- I m unsold vos- - children and your wives, for the shrines YOUT argumen - , - from the hel I ht of 1, 686 feet, and in the Furthermore, .aU. the civilized I wiDr1d, .. I �- 1-W 9 . � - - � X I I ', � � of your fathers' gods and foi.- the sepul- will sit down and weep. ]Draw your I . I - r . � � Lxv,= BRos., Ltd., Toronto. house of Gaius, where he was a guest, a like Paul, is indebted to the Greeks for . I � � . � �- . - . ... � . . , I i lm � I - , . Th 7 chers of your' stresill Whlle� only 192 illustrations from the classics, and it is I . �, �; , � architecture. A . . . 11 11-11 I !'' big pile of. m6ney near him, which -he e world before the time ,46 -6iad upon .to him an old story, but Leyden jars and . I �, - . �. � I to �Jerus�iem for the poor. of the Greeks had - I z - Greeks fell 6 0 Persians lay. I L M : was taking built monoliths, obel- . �! . � Tf : � the.field, an electric batteries and telescopes and Greek CEYLON TEA � I - . - , I I I- : �� I - in this lettOr to the Romans, which Usks; cromleohs, sphinxes and pyramids,- . � d many of the Asiatic hosts I i I I . � ig­ , FOR SALE. Who took to the war vessels 1a thehar- drama will. all surrender to the storyof- �, . I . - ' I . . I ,� '41'. '� I REAL ESTATE Chr7% , I In a4mired so much. that he bad but they were moo 1,ly monumental to the � . . �, . Z I . I � i - � m - � 9. . ! I dead whom they h 41Qd to emorialize. bor were consumed In the' .shl�ppin Jim He)nasworth's I I 0h, what's the differ- � I I V-� I . . , � - . I , � - , i; ,��i -The undersigned has twenty . it to hiiii twice a week, Paul prac- . . I s I -- I z . ­ I Z Persian oppres�lon wits rebuked, Grecian , . is a good one and sure to pleas � . - ,If I 8 FOR SALIL .# ence so long a I saved'the boys?" � . i � -� �- i tically says: 411. the apostle, am bank We are. not certain: even of the names of . 0. I 1. � i �. i - - . . . Chaim Amn tor ale in East Huron, the ban- - , . . L liberty wo Ac4leved, the C&Us .'of oiVtJl,. Then, if your illustration of Christ's, . . L- - . I ; L ]�',�. L �, eft to - those in whose col�imemoration the pyra- . . .e � - I ,f� . -1 ! - � �, 1. ner County of the ftovinft; Ali sizes, and pri -rapt. I owe � what I cannot pay, but ? I 11 I . . I I ­ � , � . - . � ! ,�. , � . .- I pay as I*v a percentage as 3: can. - were built. � ) . � V suit. F��r full Information, write or CAR irso Zation wag advaiac�d and the western self sacrifice, idrawn �brorn some scene of � . =- Wil =ids I3ut Greek arobitiecture . 1 . I Notroublato show them. F.. & 80OWB, a 11 totday, And ybur story of what Christ bag . . t - world and 411 nations have felt; the hero- � I . A fie , . I 4-"' k . - � inim It Is. an obligtition for what Greek litera- did most for the ltving.� Ignoring Jkgypt- . . I In Lead Packages 250 50c and 60e. I . l � � . � P. 0. . . , los. Had . --him Into I,;- . I FV I - . , I ; ,F� --�a ,z � - ian precedents and borrowing nothing there been � MiltiaAes there ddne for you. do not quite fetch I I � . 1. . � .. �; �. I � ture and Greek sculpture and Greek archi- -no --+4 - I - 11 � � - I �- I'— . � . I - - � � -OARM FOR 1E. might- have been no WashlngtG.n. . the right way, just say to him, . . � . I , �L.T SAL -100 acres, in' the town6lP Of t6eture and Oreek prowess have done for from other na I a. Greek architecture- - . . � I � �� J I : I , - is on it nia own coli ns) t its � Also at Thefmopylae 800, Greeks -it , fessor-doctor-judge, why was It that - . , � I -ab ! ? � � � . . hard- . -DAPING n-DOCE'Do - �� *1. _V otoy, nou Brussels. There rly 50, me. I will pA' , ar se own pedi- T �, " . acreSoftush' out -half black ash,the rest � y all I can in Insti Iments c ved its , _ long a road only wide enough for a whool Paul declared he was a debtor the . k'-. . I �4 �, �� �- � . wood. A never -failing spring of water runs through of - evangeUmo. I am insolvent to the ments, adjusted its own entablatures, - FROM ALL Un �1 kx�" -"1301 � 11 . - .A- � theJot, Will *@old at a bIgbargaid. Forpatticu- Greeks." Hollas, as the inhabitants C&II"L rounded its own molding and carried out tra6k between a m ountaln and a marsh, C?reeks?" And ask y6ur learned friend "I . . - . I � � , I . - i � -11 - � . . ISM Apply 60 MRS. JANE WALKER- Box 219, it - G , , . died rather' than surrender. Had there to take his Greek testament and translate � . I .1 1 . - 'L , we call it, is .be th .qualities of I L . 1. . I I :1, - . , or - reo0% hs _InsIgnifL- as never before t re6 _ - ---- �' I � Brumwlsw I 14170 . .e for -you, In big own way, from Greek -.6me I Z , t ­ been no T rmopylao there might have .1 - .. . - . cant In size, j6bout it -thiid as large as the right building, cal�ed by an old author I . . , '1- I j . . into English, the splendid peroration of - 1. "L -i �. � � � - . I "Mmitas, utilit", vonustas"-namely, 1 U14 . � - � �� � been no B ker Hill. The eoho' ot . I -.- I . -V0R'6AL% Bargain, 20 aerm one and a fit.11 state of New! York, but what.1t lacks 14 Paul's sermon on Mars bill under the , . - -- ''I � . - ... Athenian and Spartan heroics:was heard . . I I , 11. - - �' mitafrorn Godetich, house,, 8 rooma, sayan breadth - it Up he firr-nness, usefulne . A 1. � X makes in I t� with its 0, beauty. - Although ' t � I f�'.. ­ I - I ' at the gates' of Lucknow, and Sevas- power of which the scholarly Diony'slus . 11 . I .- 4,. - . I &am orchard, Wance pastura, imst the pla--e;for Mountains the Parthenon on the Acropolis of Athens , _ ' 11 � .. ,T�,., � daW or market. garden, all in goad owdeit. Addiess C�lene and Eta an Taygetus topol, and bannockburn, and Lexington S111 -Tendered -namely, "The times of this . , ,� '14, - � - , . � � . i i , � � d Tinuphr4tus, each overr 000 feet In Is only a wreck of the storms and earth- � �11­ � � ­ WILLIAM R&WDEN, Exeter; or & X. LEWIS, an Ignorance God winked at, but now com- - . I.- . .. 11 . . . -and Gettysburg. English Magita Chartar so I'm I P A I � ` #­.. - . i 3- ��� � Gadedeb. 1529-2 eley..atiQn, . it Parnassus, over 8,000.; quakes and bombardments of many cen- ) . . v I . I � . . � . I . � " - ­ . and Declaration of American Independ- mandeth all men e*erywhere to repent, . . i 1, ,� - I - -the 4 and although -Lord Elgin took . I I - - i I , 11 �' -oubtryformightymen to turies, . I - .1 I , V. � 1, . � -LUM FOR SALF.-For age lot 6, concession 12-i JTLEO� , - beborn from one side of that building, at an ex once, and the song of Robert Burns en- because he bath appointed a day' in the -- I � .. ; � ,,.1 -.j --I :" I , - ,­ I all 4ands the most of the intellee- - ' ' t . -.,I I I In � . - . res of titled "A Man's a Man For :: &I That, I I which he will judge the world in righ'- I .� . � �- , - I ' � I 11: i . . : ��, I � : . - � I � 11 � � ­ I . "NTS - .. , �. .1 . � good laud in a xood state , rin 50,000, two shiploads of. � � -V township of ZIbber16 On &Un 3 Ba ac u sculp , I j- Of ozation., Well � t t d morolglants were -not born on the � pense Of $2 - were only the long continued 4everbera- eousness, by ,what :man whom he bath 31� fenced. ; good brick house ; good bank barn and out plain, but f bad for crad -Valley, ture, one shipload ' going down In the CANDID STAT" BUM I �r - J .;e the � ordained, whereof he bath given assur- . I - ­ mi . ; . , . , � - -1 � betw . I f, . � - - I i I � iO buildinis * 18 acna of fall wriest, and V1 eon twol moutains. That couxitry. -no -Mediterranean and the other shipload tion of .what was said and. doi�e 20 cen- I ,!­; --- - I ougbing all $ - . . I � � 11` ? � i - - turies before in that little. ki . afice x1nto all men in that he bath raised . I . - �- 4't ` , - than 40miles from now to -be found In the B tt It muse the I ngdom that I -. � - I . , � I ,ore � - I . . 1 ,'I . . LL �� 11 . . . . . 1 ne' , rl a um? po are now Impostng upon. him from the dead." By ztho time he has -� 7 I . . . � � . part of Which, is, in tho, Parthenon, though In comparative wers . . " � : I -- the sea, has ,�made its Impress upon the - Greece having again and again shown got through the translation from the I I : ..' - . � - " � , L � I - . P.lot, world as, no �Wor. nation, -and it to-fty rulns,,has been an Inspiration to all - Ill � :. ] I t, I ., - ' I i I . . I I . I -_ - I'll A holds a 11ifit ortgage of obligation upon architects for centuries past and will be that 10 men in the right are stronger Greek I thiulp you will see his lip trem- ; : . . I .. . I L Z �� --- I I T-."-" YOU SAM -Ent halt Lot 41. Concession than 100 men in the wro�g, the heroics Ole, -and there will come a pallor on his. FOR THE PIEWOPLE11ki j i ­ , -a all the time from nqw un- I - I . � .1 L 11 . - all I I t ,I I civilized I - . While we must. leave an inspiratto I . � .. ­ . JJ!' !� Township of Fast Wkwanosh, containing I of Leonidas and Aristides and Themis. face like the pallor on the sky at day- . . ; .� i`- � 11 til the world itself , is a temple . . ;. . I � � -i � I 100 &arm This in one of the bat forms -in � to statesm and diplomacy the set- L � of ruin. tocles will not cease their mission, until. break. By the eternal salvation of that I . t , the Township, &M. Is situated in a = �Iseighbor- t1emej# of t4e intricate questions which Oh, that -Parthenon I One never gets over . . 1, . V t I i . . . � , ' ' � � . I I � F � 1 . There are scholar, that great thinker, that splendid . L L I � : '' - -!,(i � the last man on earth is as free as God L . - i, hood, wil of the bed and no waste - d. I I - r I z� ;.-� "'. � on now Involve I oil F,urope and indirectly all having once seen it. But what must it . 4 I A � - I , . i - � the. lam, frame bun and stables, also two &am: made him There, Is not on either side of man, you will have done something to - . , - , � ,11 . . I - . 1. � i i . .." no nations, It U time for all churches,. ial. have been when it stood as its-arohitects I . I � I A � I ;'L �.� L! - aforehard*01enlyof good water, and within7a the Atlan6 to -day a republici that can- r ixidebtedness to the Greeks. , � ' � , I I help !pay you . 1 7 1 , I halt 1�lk no, d Kall1krates, built It out Of - � 1. . 1t " mile, and a from tho Village of schools, all igialversities, all arts, all Uter- not truthfully omploy ,ihe words of the And now to God the Father, ,God the "I : . : i : ..... . -1 . Blytb. For It t ' an ' . to BOX el i m -e ni ab . . ! further P"Culars apply on the pnialses of en Icai We are -Stook so m6 of th cest : A most fashionable t I ! . .. I'll 4 , - - ature, to soigad out -in the most emphatic . arble, white as Mont Blanc placing ill 000, . : �11 � 1614 -if -7 " I - I I --- . � - i - . the de6l6ration,t 11f am debtor to at noonday: and as overwhelming. Height th . I d 10 51. Bly-th P. O.. - * . text and say, -'I I I am debtOr to �he Son and God the Holy Ghost i be honor 4. � - . at it will be your privilege to'see outside thii � . ; i Y., �� - � I . . - ; � I Way I . Greeks. " � � . and glory and dominion and vihory and . . - s store. We have made %". - I � 11 � )i - above hielght. Overtopping the august - . . . . '. - � I I - the Greeks. t ; - . ' ! � - nONFORTABL9 PLACE JFOA SAM: -For Nis ; Debt to the Greeks. song, wjAd without end. Amen. , eldbomte preparation for the Spring tride ; and are now M a Position to �81W � .. .. �� .. - � I 1 4 1 1 - I and majestic pile and rising from Its roof : I . . I . i .- - VLJ ch"p. the furn: of the underftned! In Rupur . The Greek LanZuage. � Goods, which for value, we ilefy� comparison. We -are wing ; . � .. . C I " �� �� - But now comes the practical question' . you � iho " some b : I , � .1 . hey. Then we between 28 and red was a statue of Pallas Promachus in' I - I I � I . , � 30!!rf!�*u oleal �, 1n -the Aral plaw., We ewe to their. 1mg- � bronze, so. tall and flashing that sailors How can we pay that - . A X�w Do ' � ful things in Driess Goods and Tfiminings ; our Emb,roideries and I ill i F �, " drained end in a good date of aul-Wamun. Then in debt or a part of . .ok canvasser. I - I � I . . . . . . . . . . . . . � . . I �' . . . 0 - - � ' � � 1. good hum hous% bm and driving lobed. IS is -,tu All of it was it? For we cannot pay more than 10 per � i I . � � �t i . ! , I age, our Ne* Testament. 10 ; . . I- .. I far out at sewbeheld the plume of her - Here Is a picture of the RomaA book found to excee'd anytiling you hav� seei-i- before. - . . � . . . - - I - . !!! within a mile of Sestorth, and is admim1fly ad first -written 4n tireek, except the book helmet. - ce I 'a . i . I Z 11 "A" : ; �, � I A ly Without the aid of the eternal nt. of that debt n which Paul acknow- canvasser. The snow white Maurijani n' I., % ­ � . - .1 I . ; �' �� ` . . I i : " of Matth and' . . � I ; �, Z I I .! �;� - " I for a msrke� gu4sner or womall IN that, written In the God It never could have been planned, steeds, with - the heaving flanks, the We imported direct through agents all our Table -1-nena Towellingo , , ; � I ­ , . I to ibie prop!�wr on the pnmism= iiii ew� ' ledged himself a bankrupt. 11:� praying F � 1-�� . . . � 152i.t.i. Aramaean'kinguage,'wag Almighty God that be will help Greece 0 f �- � .1, , ­ . I - - . -Belfast 7 - : , . . 'r, I soon 'Put InIO and without the aid of God the chimis pointed ears, the crimson nostrils, are Apron Unens, from the Brookfiela Line*n 06.p A, I - � I �11- I - . Greek by out Saviour's brother James. and trowels never could have wnstructed In its'Present war with Mobammendaniam reined up. From the ch�triot dead I ended ., lTeland� so that i - I � I. - � . . - 1 4 � I enables us to offer you Linens at pricea not hitherto obtainable. ­ ; - r a I � � [ -, t , III- � TO IRZNT! TO the greet language VO Owe tbO best It. There, is not aftne church building In' and the coneerted'empires of 1011rope. .1 I the master, who, giving his flowing toga , - - - � . � ;. . . I I 1 I . - �- I 0 �- chesp, or to not for a tam of yew% the hotel sermon eve* preached, the best letters � an the -world, or a Woperly constru. know AM � . - I � � I t,!. - -� - , In the . I . . ' cted .her queen, a noble, Christlaii *o- an eztra. gr ful fold, entered a house. 11 � 14'� Villige of Blake, in the county of Hurm. . I . , . F : �. I I � . � � ­ hot With all ever wirftan� the best v1dons ever kin- `twui�ouse, or a beautifw Art gailmy, -or 0 � a. Presently a Scythian' � ie,s' Nests . � . ­; . . ,;�. , z- I other necessitry rooms a"MM:21 dled-'All thO parables In Greek. All the an cence and . � I . . , !! hotel contalawair biA I "I . [ , � no man, It r face Cho throne of an benefl- on the Via Aunit' Wad 0 . . .. " I I a deell usually � lov;liness, her lifeuan. example * slavet followed his lo. -d, .� ". I !- - N aPpropriate auditorium, or a tasteful bearing in big ,. I . � found in a Villige, Botel. There is am a Imp bun mirmles, In Greek. The sermon oim . , ; - �, � ; , A ', , the of noble wifehood and'motherhood God sturdy a a p ion f siculus, fulli . - Are models ofbeauty and in them we can please-th� most fastidious.' � . i I -�i and abed, and splendid wslL it is the only hotel� home, whi6h, because of that Parthenon, ­ rms ree a as - . a . I � . I t C . . . I . . � 7 I � 4 1 11 3, I mount In Grbek. The story of Bethlehem whether its style or some other style be helo those pawn- in these days oi awful Illubtmted, up to date and guperb�y . I . ! . . 1� �T I -� 4 In the Plus. and is a popular and oonve*nt stop- . I . I Z . . � _ . i � �f' , i , . - is not directl.v I - � � � I 1, i. and Golgotha, and 011,yet and Jordan adopted exigency I .0fir Amerluatt senate did well bound in Persion cloth. It' . . � � 1� �� 1! R I . )thu how . ,or indirectly a- . wall a Pliny I Lakes' Und-erwear. - ; , I - � I �� � T within four miles. It in a -first obw stand for a. good banks and Galilean beaches and Pauline . the other day, when, in tb; � . - - I 11 I ­ debtor i� the Greeks - at capitol .in 16 volumes, et subscription book. Such . I �. I L L � I � ! � I man and will be sold cheap and on ,eW. Some. Or embarkationi and Pentecostal tongues and But-there'la another art . - bulldlni'g which owes to Grebco Its Col- 'were the , ' � . i I I I , � � : I l L- �*--- wilt t; rented for a tainn of years. There In good � in my mind methods of the canvasser in the We- intend to make a speeia,�ky of La&es' Blouse's, Wrappers and , Undi , t . . , I - , . �� � .-, L , V don attischa, Ion time. seven trumpOs that sounded � over - Pat- - - umnart impressiveness, . I . . : I., i , 9W any" the most facinating, elevating and . . they: passed a palmy days of Rome. L " In Ir I , . . I - %1� . W; I a cOutaina Chure=ftbool, Stairs, Black mos b&ve come to the world In liquid, . hearty resolution of sympathy- for that It we are to'criDdIt a recent florid wear ready to wea'r. , ; � I - . 11 i r � I i v, - Ing of all arts and the nearest th do- I � I 11 ­ smith ,: ke, A on the promises or addna symmetrical' picturesque, philosophic, . : 11 � 3i . 1 .� � � r p . - divine--4for,whielt all the world nation. Would that 11 who Mve potent * ' . : L - - X.W WX � Rt 21, Blake P. 0. 2&l6x4.tf A word . a scription in a leading literary revie*, 'Ready to Wear 010thing fo: * 8 * : . I � , --- unrivaled, Greek, instead of, the gibberish a that can be heard in Euitope would r p-ritng- .. - � � 7 t ,-, - debt to the Hellenes that Will never be 1� the Aoznau method is the way of a cer- . . - I . . i I y � � I - . . �� - -: �]t " - . lan4 I In Wiich immy of the nations paid., I� mean. sculpture. . .. � - I 4 ­ � . ruw . At least 650 utter them now, . when they ary -so much tain kind 4 book agent of to -day. He � . � . . . p - � 4�, ­ I I ULIL-For sale, lot X, concession . _ I I ; �­ I ;I- - I . ; Of the earth 4t that time jabbered. Who I needed'! 1,et us repent to them In English rides in his own coupe, - To hand� and, in - this department we are bound to know no apposifid I - - . . : , ? � . I � 2. o* Containing 100 acres, 85 cleared and YeaXs before Christ the Greeks perpetu- drawn by That I . . - , i ,' - ' - ; - : .7 � �� �' :' : , . the balwee In good: hardwood bush. The land Is in Can f0rget % and who can exaggerate its &ted thei human face and form in-,' what they centuries ago declared to the -the French call a steppare.* The pribeely, Every Man, Youth and Boy 6ordially lvited -to eaU and lool� &A � - . � I t a pod state of pul$!!sliou, is well underd terra � . � thro%gh our . C- - I � �, __ Wned and I a bleosing to the 9 � � ,." - P well fenced.- ­-Thate Is a frame barn and I thr'lling 'rdportanft that ()hrUt and cotta and marble. What world In Greek, "Blessed are 'those who Canvasser never would debase his calling ing, we think 'the magnitude of the stock wiR s � - � � i - og house on � - urprbe those who are In 10- . � ­ � , -4 -failing spring with windmill, - ghteousikess' sake, by carrying the book he Offers bimself- habit of buying wbere small stock$ are kept. - . t4 - I . � heaven werelutroduced to us in the lang- are persecuted for A -T . the pzoperIN a never human family that anen and women, for theirs . I � . - �1 .i . . t ii- I I . � . . I . I - ��� &be about 2 so -es of omb"d It is an excellent Uage of i6 Greeks, the language In to the kinRdom, of.heavert.- His -ant In livery totes it. The'book j . . . . ' . . � - . .. L, "t. - Ini . ­ � I I .911VT useful, who could live only sery I . �1 . f - . . - I - , F - , � r' -C - , lam and Is within one mile of Wisahurch station, which H-6mdr. had sung and Sophooles within a century may be Another way of partly paying -our, debt he works for costs from -$I 000 to $2,500 ; p . where there we stores, blacksmith -perpetuated for I . . I- - i shop and .� I �:- � 1 ,. . draMiStIzed And Pato dialogued and So- flve or six or ton'centruries! :How I wish pp e a copy. It is a volulAe which . common . .ry De.paf!tm , t �­ , � y -4 - f churchm Thers-bat wheal ontho Opposite lot. It . to the Greok6 is by higher h r clation of .. Groce en -1 .-� � L Z .!L �7 �;f . crates discou'reed and Lycurgus legislated that some sculp- . . the lea�rning and self- - I . �k ,` , ­ .�'L . .0, :�f L is six miletfromWinghant and six from:Lucknow, tor contemporaneous with . sacrIfloe of the men people may not buy. It is only offered to ' * ' I , � � . - - � . � � - - - 11 'tkgood:o" And ]Demosthenes thundered- his oration * IF W110111'Our own land stand for all that "shahs, .maharajahs, -emperors, kings, . . omplete with the latest - in every -thing', W-04 � - .- . L . . : - L . frope , Chrlit could have put his matchless form . Our Grocery Department is c ­ il I I , �'7 � I -V I I F=ble aim I I The- Cr�own?" Everlasting . thanks I the ancient Welcome I J.", , . - - ., . -, _ � 1- � �4 - . Ir V , in marble! But for every grand and ex- Greeks 'stood While here presidents.1t Here we Indeed the hordieS under,the direction of Mr. James Purcefl who wffi'be pleased to " - _ he L. I 5 i '. " V:r: . L J 1 a V to God that the waters of life were ndt and there one comer, to public approval of the subs ,1- . - 11.1L # " .o -1 quiiite statue of Martin Luther, of John cription book busine I and i I , � I I ' , bande& to t� as. all to the brightest and hghtest Grocery 8tore in this- County. .,� : I J L "'! � - � ' � ­ . L � . - le world in the unwashed and reward the most of them live in I . - -----,. . � - : . * . I KnOr, of William Penn, of Thomas Chal- � �' .. , ­ . i, it � . L I , Al i � � ;1 . � ig t L I .. . �, .-.1r I � g, . n n of Lafayette, of any privation or on salary disgracefully small. �o -w* what � .. . - � �- ­ -- it, 700R, SALE OR To RENT ON FASY =MS.- CUP of corr:uPt languages frbm which mer of Welli gto , 11nextinculsbable jr1re. - Our aim make this ttore - to the County of I -, . i . I . . R � � 1� j. I 1, -U As the, owner wMea to retire from business on nations had been drinking, bfit in the of the great statesmen,or emancipators or . The scholars, the archaeolr-�Xlsts. the I . I � � ­ i 1 7 1 - . . - I � - � 1 - ac"ur * . 1, � i ,�, I � it of ill health, th,4 following valuable property clesn . brig4t, gold : . - - - ' An extended acount Is given in the FieUs i8 to Chicago, W,Anamakex�s to Thiladelphid, anj Ti.mothy Eatoj&- . � , I abWinthrop,4*xnllesuorWof Sesforth, on leading 08 . . . . + ,, : i . - �: " " � " 3 I I en ltpp�d, emeiald. conquerors Who adorn,your pdrks or 1111 Artists, -the 11terati-m t Of them live up Cincinnati En lZer of John Floyd's dis- Toronto. ' t I I . !7 . t .. I � :1 ­. handled ebaffice of tbe Hollones. qu I '' i � I mad to Brussels, will be sold or rented as one farm Learned the niches of your grand academies, three or four flight of stairs and by small . .� - � 'i �, �- � - L. � � I � . .1 . 'I c . � T I . . a whole volume ab6ut the are dobtors to -the Greeks. They co you - coverY.of a peculiar kind of fire, Inex- , ,-I I � Orin na to suit purchaser: about 5w sores of Curtiustwr4e� windows that do not �et In thi �" , . �- I Z I � ­ ; � I I ­ � vered Our advertisimy a-ent, Professor- qolding, wiU prob "' . �11 ' ; � I I %lenrld farming land, with about 400 under crop, Greek verb.1 Philolo Ists century after 0 full sun- tinguishable when once ignited. It is . I . t) tp . ably' cal -11 oil pa # 14 - � I �, I � gi Acru 'light You pass -them every eVery day in , 1 i - I I 11. , -; . ebalance4upasture. There are Lwge barns wo I � the polls, they 91q,rifled the temples-, rePres(Onted as a substance having the week and will show you literature -that Will 1: ; i �- r�l i �- , A . tury hav6 been measurling the sym- they'adorned the cemeteries t any ,recognition. . . . . . pky to carefuRy.perase. i 'r'�'.; : I : I t 7 . All Other buildings necessary for the implements, # with stat-- . . - 11 I - _ t ­ L *- , , , I metry of 04 e, en th le ue m in consistency of paste and harmless while 11 I : , , con your streets withou . . ,� � �. -, - . t �, . 1. . r , � . n�, � � I ` g, ,I % � -t vehloles,ele. Thislandis well watered, haegood languag lad Wi 0 9Y sy so 6 cedar in ivory, some Grub street, where many of the mighty, in a quiet st to. I �- I - r ­ �­ I ­ t - a , , some r I -. - �; I ,11; Z , � f tram an4,briok dwelling houses,. etd. There are and phiUppi§,: drama and comedy.. 11 Odyri- in gi1v a The. friction caused b.f I . . . I V -,f 4 � � � I : � I !� . I I � t men Ing it against a - hard aniface will, . 11 i i, � I 5 - grist and saw mills and store which win be sold or ap or, some In gold, some in size dim- of- the past suffered, is long enough � � - � 'j;, v," and "nW. rubb 1. ! I . I . � I - i�' � i 1 � 3 L . . . . L � . I � I - - � 1. rented on advantageous terms. Also on 27th can. --" ' ) 2' but'the grandest thing inutiVe and Eome in size colosial. Thanks to reach around the world', No need of however, jet it 'aglow, and nothing w!Ri . � � I A � ' � . I � . I o , I ? CeWOD, Gray. townihip, 290 screq of land, 40 in that wasting our sympathy upo the'UnA� ; �' LL L I . 11 I , -ever W09mPlished to - Phidjas, who - worked in r,tone; to � overcome the flame 2 � Z I . I I 4 �L I , L Greek Ihnguage L � z . ; . I., � pasture, the balance in timber. - Possession given was to , the latter burning . I - - -1 i�. � - m I r- - � I - I .. I . after � orkers of the L _ a I , give to the World the benediction, ce preclated think -ere - and w n: Be �Bs G NN'� SE I I I I I, I I ­ Cleanhus, who work 4 In bronze;'to I ., - �- L ­' ?� - - 11119yest of farm Iftuds; mills at once. For par- the c A pa with & blue light and an Intense heat I I I � . - I . A _ . tiCulaft apply to, ANDREW GOVENLOCK, Winthrop. t, omfort, � the irradiation,- thO mdv&- Dontas, who worked iii gold, and to all .at, though. Linnaeus d9ld 118 works 1i I I V - "� � � L Z,: I- 1�' L . , of the i nt I the oompound -)a completely . de- �'4 , -9spelef the Son of for a single ducat, th . � I --$ �; L� , _, �1, � . . 14wtf � on, God- ancient chisels Of commemoration. Do , , ough Noah. Webster's L - - - I -1-11*!; i - I - aIlling book yieldi3d him mord than his . - . ----- - M - L 7 : . 1-� ka. you not realize, that for many of the won- . effo.,jt upon it. - - , : � �11: For that we W-e debtors to the Groo stroyM by tombustinfi, water having no - � �: ': - j � , : - I I . a . . I � � A L � � I di tionary, though Co I - - 1 "I � I I - ­ - . ­ '0109iml ders of sculpture we are debtors to rregglo, : the great , I 11­,� - ­ And ,while hmaking Of Our Phil the I Dynamite and gunpowder -require a . � I ! .�; 5 ., � , i i -1 � ;� , i � . obligations le.� me call your attention to Greeksp I Painter, receiving for long �c'ontinued THB- � � � :. 7 ; I I I - -. 11 . � - , , - .A � i , "", �', E . . . . I L spark to ignite them, while pow4,_Pr pro- - 11,,�;.,: , � I �4 ivr 3 . I . the fact that iiiany of the intellectuai and I L � , L : . ' . � � , but not a regular CANADIAN BANK 0 i I - LL . . ;.1 - _L � . The Art of Healing. work payment of $39, died fro Mz overjoy; duces an, explosion 010� �, . . , t'; " I I : I- - , moral aiid th4blogical leaders' of theages though when Goldsmith's friends visited . f � , . : . ; � I .-I � � . ]Butt ignite. this compo, � F � �?:��- � I - I L 1. - , � . . ­ . I— i � -qd�effective- - ire 0 und there , . � . -1 .... . � � L, � - it, , , got much of #heir discipline, a Yea, for the science of medicine, the him they were obliged to'sit in- the win- . , . . . i - I ,� i��, ` !. , t - - �- a from Gr4k literature. It is popular great art of healing, we must thank the dow, as he had but 'one chair' Is 3ust tke slightest friction of rubb . � � . I . I �i , � - �� - . ing it . I I , [, � � nes I I �� -1. - I , ; though 11-1 � ­L-X� -1 I U'T , . - to sceft' at th I I dead languages, but 50 Greeks- ' There is the immo I Greek Samuel Boyse, the tar againift some ordinary substanoe--there -- - - - LE � 1867. I.All -.-- ­ . - . Ovr direct coimections Will save y ' i . . 11 I . � ­ " -,.--,. L -i - on 4 rt" great Poet, a ved W- is then no explosion or rapid opreading - HEAD OFFIOEs TORONTO. , . i �; time and money for all points. per amt. of . 0 world's intellectuality doctor, Hippocrates, who first opened the death; though the author of "Hudibratall . - . dmr for disease to go out and health to -, I I � I would have a 3n taken off if through . died In a,garret, though I, paradise Lost" of flames, but v, strange, living fire in- - � .1 . - I . I I - � lemmed inAi*� ions our young men had come in. He first set forth the import- - brought its author only 425 cal5h down, capable of being stamped out or kiiekirt OAPITAL (PAID UP) OX MILLION DOLLARS = 41% ��� , . LLLL I i 4 - . � r�� � I - Canafflan North West I under 0' ance of uleanliness and sleep, making the Witbr- )promise of $50 more ilf the�mle any known. way. Tho inventor states his R . 0 .� a ­- �! ,. . I Zkot'- ompe *bee = - W M 0 do . 11 .. L . � tent pr6fessors, n . � - I . � - Si ff . drill4 unwilitzigness to rnake 4he ingr L 9 , I .. Via Toronto or Chicago, Bd In G*k masterplece' Healod's patignt before, treatment to be washed warra4ted It, so that $75 was- all I I .edlents . I.... . . 94 . s, - . B. R WALKER, Gi qzRAL 3ftwLaim. il:: , British Columbia and Calffornist Wftksandliays," orthe-e�' And iake slumber on the hide of a sucri- was piLjd for what Is that of* this oompo011on known, on amount � 4 ­ � 109i,um by oansidered the I Z I �. , ; I I . I � 'n i ,�! I ficed beast. He first discovered the Im- gMtest poem. written. B � of risks to the public by so doing.- . - . .1 'I L . . points. -, 61monides. of J�he slain in war, or Pin- . � ever otter ,ftm - . , , I ! oUrr&tesstre�tbo.JoWeat. WehaVe them dar's I ' Odes di Victory, I I ,or I I The Recol- h . . - . . SEAFORTH BRANOK . ,;.3 I . �;, I . . p6rtance of tiboroug prognosis and our attention to the fact that there � . I - -1 A., I . bo suit everybody and PULIM" . . lections of S66rates, I I or I'The Art of diagnosis. He formulated - the famous [-at this mom am The charity which advertism It"if -on A'Generhi Bankin BusineW TAnnoted. Farmere .Notes disoomto4 T. . - �. - I . . . I - I , T - I 11 hundreds of, authors othw peepleps uoi* *ould, try tj entw t an . . 11 I 11 - , I I , - I P � . I , 118T CAM for -your accommodation. � Words," bY 06raxi or Xenophon's 11 - oath of Hippocrates which is taken by -painters, sculot6rs, ambitwfil, bi-ain' hsave,&o1i a fog . I issued 4 le I ' d I - 4 _ , i - � -,, � - 7 F Ana- 1. ' a points M 0 'T [a& -the prin-i-I d u� W ii * , - ­ . 1, � 4 ! . .1 I u-j"Ma . t �- - . , . 3 � � I basis." . . FMNPO-. . I I y J� � di, �; , I t i� . � , I W _ � � , 1:1 -� for further information. . physicians of ou)r &4y. He emancipated .workers, without bread and without fuel z heTu States, Greitt Bi 0 1 1 r I I- � I I - . � 14� . . I . . . i . medicine from superstition, empiricism . � - - - .- � . . . - . nt (M., Ber=4 " , . ; I � - �, - . Iffistoatry and the ar"ks. and without competent apparel. As far - . . - . I I - - 1 ­ i I and priestcraft. . He was the father of all as you calf afford it, SAVI GS * BANK ! .... � i f , ; N �: the! Greeks the world buy their se I T. - ' .'- � - # Station G. T. R. Tickilt -Office. From � I : � I , I -Rev. .,�PARTMEN � .. - ,! � , � , � learned ulpture, G. Grant,. of Orillijt, oomknonl.y I .; "I t� - . -1 A` - , I .1 i - how to makeiltistoi the infirmarles, hospitals 4nd'Inediftl read their books, purchase -their pictures, k=Wn " " Xnoxonian," pres.6hed anniver- Deposits of $1.00 and upwards re Av-e4 and ourrftt rates ot int --- ; . ,� J � f� . Train Se vice at Staforth. 1. � . I � -�� , r 7- Had there been no coll,ges of the last 23 centuries. 'Ancient - T . . , I 14 "'. Or . . ; I . 4 . Ifferodotus anA - '011100tIrElge their Pea, their pencil, their 4hry sermons in the First Presbyterian 0owecL IWInterest &&ded to the principal at the end of May aud No- . I -1. ; ; . �. ' - � �. , ". �� Thueydides the" Would medicament and swgeF.- had before that f - I ; - � � � � I - � ,� �T, I - have been chisel, their engraver s knife, their archi. church, Sti. Marys, on Sabbath, 14th inst.0 biff in each ye&r. .. - I � I - ; :11 , J 11 � . ­-� ; - -1 I 1 -- Grank rJ[Lrttlllk Rvafl,my, - - no I-Maeaulay or Bancroft- Had beau anatomical dndpbysiologIcalags&ult te ' "d addrested the an �. - � - � . ­-� . I '. �-. - stations as there been nd 8ophocles in tragedy there ct's.compass. The 'world c4alls tholu . nual social held Mon. . 7 , 'and battern and long after th' - Spedal attention given to the 00.1jection 0 ; . t- � �'. - - Trains leave Sestorib and Clinton I . f 0�mim,.Brci@I raper and , . r , ,I �,, " -1 would have b;a� - 0 tint0-'Of "bOOkworErtiep or $'Dr. Dryaadust,­ but dAY Ilight. All the 'services were largely - . . . . I r . , : . �:... ­ !��- - - n no 'Shakespeare. Had HI � . I � I I - I -.:, � ; - X I , . follow$ , ocrates, the Greek doctor,' where his if there. bad - attedded, and Dr. I . . � I ! - : - ' ' �;pp been no' bookworms or dry I . -i ; : !" "I . GOING *NBT-- SKAPOILTIT. CWTON.� 4 there been nw 4omer there would bp,ve ,Giant?s discourses de- me= WeP. N�O , . T, � . theories I ; . I � ­ ­ . , * , . $ - ­­ I . � I T ­ -­ I . . I .t - � ', - � � - . I were not known, the ]Bible speaks doctors of -law and science and theology 0 had the plimmurg of listenh? � A ! I- -, Passenger .. .. .. .. 12.47 p.m. 2-08 p.m. been no M11WA. The modem -wits who lighted all wh- � z Fj z � �� -, ,. I . 11 � i- 9 . * - _o � , - � � " : � i, so m GrAift : DR, M, - . ,11� . !:, r Iffixed Train--... &45 A. X. : lo.15 p.X ivine le to the' . ' It i� thirty years since Dr. . . . t . - - Passenger .. ­ .., ­ 10.12 P. It. 1 10.27 p.X we now or b4ie been put an th� d' of fatal medical trfttlneint when it says, there- Would have beeik no Apoogypf i HOLM EDl Solicitor. - X. X RIS, anager..A � I - I I I - �n.'his disease he sought not �Ito the angel., They are t I . I - . . .� i � I I ,-, . . ,he Greeks of our coun. Isat preached to this congregation. � - � V �-,- - : Mixed Train .. .... .., I o.15 p. M. 7.06 p. TE.' mission of , the World laugh at th� I;wd I ­ . . -.- . A i ­� ­::: Z o but to the plijsIciang, arlta Asa . - . ! - I �, . � i I . . � Dome ZAw- I . . . :, I P � - " . - - - - - 21 - - . I . i ; 1; I- . . I I � �;, , . i right time, , be tiosed ba�k to. Art Tept.with his fsthers.'� And we jead in try and time and your obligation to tliem, " I I . 1 17 ` . I's I stcl- E , � , . . I . . t r , Faustiger... .. .. ­ 7.55 A., 3f. 7.40 A. X. phanes, the A, and many of tb� 6 I � OAK - � � � � )� Passenger .. ..... .. 3.16 P. M. 1 2.66 p. N. , the-New'TeStftment of the poor V-70man In Infinite. � . - . . =1 �� I . � I -- - .- -rr T�j � I . I I . '', � jocosities th . I - I .1 . � Vi I I � - Mixed Tvalu. .. ...... 5.2o P. ld� 1 .j.81i ]V. ,M. a now taken as . I � : ` new had whobad' been treated b.* . . . . � ! . " , � � . , � - . - , -1 lnco*petent :to pay � ; �� : 11 . their wiffArest Way the Debt.' There are thousand . ,of IMP FURNITURE . I .1 . r ,� - i sinuig-gestilp a 2,800 -s I ; 9 a 9 - :P - years ago in the - I - 4 . - I ­­-- � doctors, who asked large fees, Where It . . - . ­ , x ­ . I i U;. � ­ F I WeMngton, GreY and Brac 64 comedies of master ,ofinerriment. But there is a �better way to p6y them, . 1. . I - - : . 0 �- I , � � .� : 0 . says, "She had ,suffered many ­ things � sickly school -girls - all over � . - I .. : - ­ I ­ F- � . I I I �,� - . t Gojx* NoRm-, res"Wer. mixed. Grecian Of and thatis by. their personal sulvation, . . . - �' � rr . . my . !.4 t. . . - ogy as been . . - the- richest � ­ ... � many physicians and bad spent all that ' � I � . �-, . I - - ; . 'I ;� Ethel-,.... ... 1%40 F. X. 9.19 A X. , mine from which will never come to them:tbrough this broad- land that ara*- We. have starbed the New Year withas fine a H of ; Furniture as ` .�� -. -- , , � il. �� - . . ch 'orotme and eg"Yisft she bad and was nothing better, . . ine - . � . 11 r,� . . 0 " - i, I � Brunet. . ­.... 22.52 - . - � I - 'i -, j..� �11 . O." have drawn Itheir but books or through learned . F.:q I ; -1 Bluevale.. -... - 1.06 - ill:ustrations . and .rather gi-ew worse.,, pmkn4 on, I I L i I- I . -1 - L�, . 20.20 For our h to see, and at pr.'&s that will astonish yon for chei-pnesis. All ow � PIN,!" � � - 1, �, , glorious becAuse in literature an ti dragging thcir way- th . , . ­ �� � ! I painters the 1%en%ee for ihiir canvag,- 1XL%nce of � me d Intel I rough 9 -: . 4 ­ - - Winehant.. - .. 1.15 11.10 ectuft I � i� .� : �, '�4 ­ . I I : - I I dkine and gurgery-moie e warranted to give Satisfaction, and -we e nd td you au invit tio to F-� �. i -i i �- i� Goise Soum- P1114011901- Mixed. and, althougl� ,now an nearly exhausW realms they we masters. They I Xte a ft to , -1 I I � . . 1, .� I for w loan out- . . I . sublLme than astronomy, e haie school -life who might enjO Y. and lu��et ouir large stock of Bed Rw ' ­ . . ; �7 - I jV L I '� wwgharn.... .. 6.56 A.1L 5.30 P'N mine, -Gieciah'' mythology ha. done. ntore t I �� I � � ,� I t r� - - � ,V do with I Mem, outoquotoo outdo4matize you. Not m Suit", Parlor Suites,sidebood-al - � �, � . . . Z Bluivah... ­ .. 7.07 '608 � disease than with the . . . I . ; , 10� 'L -� . a work that nothi K else oouid bave - 'gate of 'the head, b t nsion Tables, Dining Room 0 -hairs, 0(satre Tables Hst jRaekg, L � I ; I . I . - I ; I . � I �- . I Brus"Is.-.....- 7M � 6.87 1 ,1 It , . through the ; It that abundant -life w'hic be.- . I - I I - ­ � t , ; 1'. MCI__. .... 7.31 sh - - I 1 7.02 , AMOMPli representing the Rta"; more beautiful than botany, f,or thrOuSh th1w gate of the hearth you may '.3- . . L!- # . * � �­ ed. orfts, . !�. � - L.� hiffoniere, Bamboo Goods and 0hairs of all ' e know we' - ; �� �� . V I M . . � . * ' 4, Gi V,e L US , When w � I - I i- - north winA;, �l s, rollIng the-gWne bloom of boath in the cheek of wife Capture them. Whelk Men of longs to youth bysi ple at �� I �!'�� ,� - � .- I . � t, , .. I , and lairning and , - . .... � ,,, i I London, Huron and B�ucfb- -up the hill, or to have the ftme thing child is worth 2nore to u I P e. you in - qua4ty and pnee- a trail." - . . .. � . ,­�L , t f R! L . �i� ' - - t I I �L � : I , f, GoRm NORM� � to dolever aga [ ; Tantalus, with fruits rqgos of,,the garden -for 0 th" un the might &--e brought t* God� they we tention to hygienic la nd - I . - � � . - . ' - 1: ' ,_ L rMabser. . this gTande&of brought by the simplest istory of what re. - ws a . . . 1, r',� . . I � � : . t t� London, depart ----- %- 8.15A.M. 4.461X,.M above him t . �; I I I .... he - could- not reach; all scienew, the science of Itealing, every ligion can do for a soul. They have os . . I � I I I ; � -: . I I ,IiL - , . - ]CxeterL 0.30 . 6.071 I every ward - . I �: ; . Z f . I . - n 4qw Christ oom- . L 7 t L.� L I i his - . - : V L'. I � ' LL Hensall- - ---- --- 11.44 01 . e] - L � -1 . I - T � - 'Z V Cestra".. ­............ gag, 5.57 Achilles, with a arrows; loar", wliji Pillow of recoverea Invalid, . children. Oh, tell th I 6 a proper course of treatrnent bidertaking Departwei C � . - %1i .� - - . h7' 'a, flying too neAr the Emm; of American and forted you when you lostj your bright boy -W . . " L ;�. i I- I 1uppen.. n, Eul�apean hospital,' may ith scotes Emulsion. Thles" . . - _ � �� I , - ­­­ the illf man and half beast; well cry, out: "Thank God 'for - ol or blue eyed girl I They have foand life . r . I - I * k6o 8. Dr. � 9 . - 1� L I L. - Brucefield -------- 9.68 S. 0 o d - )u us ,�� � . � � I � , Tq% i - . - , ; . , I - I � ' L f :1 , , � � Clinton- - --- - _. - - 10.16 6,5 3 . Is lyre; Atlas, with the Hippocrates. I, like Paul, am Indebted a struggle. Oh, tell them how Christ has Would make the blood rich . . � �� ,� 7 1 7 . � lwolrii on his � : It Oar Undertaking, department is �e ' ete - � -, �� � '. � - � ' k -all these and marb to the Greeks.,, i I ompl m every respect, suld a$ I I P., . Londesborot ­ - -, - _ _ IM81 T. helped YOU all the -Way through! They. .��, . . L i . jt� . � 7' t urchWO ff 01n first-class m anufacturers only, we can gu e ve L F L ,I .. .have helped litd ature, from the graduates the heart-beat strong; check ! -1 . � ; - . � . . ;�7 �t, BlYth­ - - -- - - - - 10.4-1 7.2 . Furthermore, all the world Is obligated am in bewilderment. Oh, ton th4 with - arante to gi . �i , . em I I - : . I- x, I . . I . - I . I �­ j ." ]Be*nvG- -- -- - -- - - - 10-66 7.8 . i8faction in aU its branelhes, U we' have an Under Inerl , . L . I I 1. IL Wingharn arrive ----- 11.10 ' - to Hellas ]more than 'it can ever pay for how many bands of joy, heaven.. 1)eck taker and kj�bal I 11 ; - � � ?k. � - ! -.- - S. spe.,ech On cOmMeneMPut day to Rufus on$ that tendency to exhaustion - I : I 10 L -1 . ; L - . � J6 (;OnlqG BDUM- ' passenzer , Choate's. eu dt' her(yies in the cause of liberty and YOU upward! "When Greek meets, Grdek, � ' fbeeri years' experience, and any orders we may to favored With shall reL ­ - - I. i ; �- - 1 ". Wingham, depari- - - - . 6.60A.M, 3.30r.i V'= on"Da-niel Webster-aV 1`1911t. United Europe to -clay . had not then comes the. tug of war,"' but -when a and quicken the Ap he very best attention.- DolA fi) . - � � � _-- , .. I ! �. � Be1graVe--­----- 704 Ha5 Dartnioutb. " -agedy" and. comed we ,petite by rget the old stand. - . . � - C ' r better think that - the Greeks will not warm. hearted Christian meets - a man Z I 1. . � � I *Dl*t . ­ - , I I I . Z �� '1� I ]Blyth.... ­ - - - - - - 7.16 400 born in the A E tivals .,of Diony!AiLls a - P. S. Night calls atteiided to by calling at our� Fangral : . I : . I X , . who -needs' pardon -an ;ympathy and I . '. t �-. , � -, Londesboro�- - - - - - - 7.24- CIG Athens. The Frio and elegiac - and opi light- There MAY be fallings back iLnd ' strengthening the digestion, ence First Door East of Dr4. Svott & McKay's Offioe : . or at Dr, 0 i I ­ . - � A �. Isid . � "I � 4 . so - � . 'i� , - I Brucefteld.; -------- 806 .1 �Iop - ... . � 4. poetry of Gree ,� 600 years before Chris Greece is right -no o u, - e incident of self 0 re about 'O - am . . I � I - . - i Clinton.. .., ---- - - - 7.47 . vae-illations and temporary defeat, but if comfort and eternal lif then comes vie- - I . o . � 4.60 all Europe can t put her t rY.' If YO can, 'by sol Our b' ok tells mo ld Office on M i Stree't Seaforth. - . I I � �: :1 I Rippen- ---- -- -- 8.17 has its echoes � the Tenny'sons, Long- down. The other sa,crifice, ' I � � -. � I � . . . ; . i � I : ­ K Mrg _ . nations, before thei brWg to such scholarly men . I . . .� % I ­ . � � � liensall -: - 8.24 5.04 fellows ftud 13 ants of 1,800 and 1,1900 it. Sent free. . � . . - - ! - i- . , ------ - - - � . ii , I - I - . . . open the Portholes of their men.of-war and women -what Christ has done for - . , I � I . : I � � Exeter----.------ , 01,38 5.1ra . years h st. Th�re is , .. � 1�- .. after C I ,rNrP I �� i � � �19 . 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