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The Huron Expositor, 1905-03-17, Page 6kat tarelle Lg.E FOR SA B (melee ts for inle or to . HAYS, Seelorth. 19428 riARSS FOR SA .eains r the Townships a et and amh, County of Karoo. , Inquire tet mos. WM CAMPBELL, Ellyth, Out Matt • -- hiagliannt0 here e041,aabB.-eror esle, aeveral isertble buildlog Oter. In the liown Ot SOS* forth Thom I tte are, eitainad In one of the best parts ot th town and tell welt planted with tbe chr't("13t'l "it OtPela kie W. D. bleiinfse. tbe Exeesnon tree 02, Losf04 1940.tt L't.Ri Feu 4eta-Fei Bele, the at half of lot 4, on the lith 0000ertX,on of Tuekerentith, can. tn 50 tierce, neerl,t eloan ired d tat a good of eultivetien henna it On the prorated, a -good hank b %rat 40 ft x ft. and a oentfortable dwelling houen lee a Iroolnahsrd of winter fruit. TerU2* *eat mob's. o Jetta WeilTallAN, Olde-liaurett, Ont. • 1948x4 P.S8, than $6,000 will Wet Lot 88, Coneession 7, efeltidep. This JAM contains 100 sores of -rad land, has or. it a herr hank -84x64 teet. with 8 t etene stablintoi :tied a good 8 -roomed briolt haute, orchard, g &o. It In rlin retie* tvelt Serifotth sod 1 thjlou froni teor.etance poet Vince POSStind0/1 given stance. Applyto WM. R. BLANSEIARD or E. HIM:10MT Seatorth. 1925-tf ARM FOR SAL.-50ere, lot 32 and west belt of lot ill. Coneeste4h 2, H. R. 8., Tucker - smith. Will be veld in blot* or at eapartao pareole. Agood ftrro tor mixed taterting wit* the teal or e taconite tte -t ee raisin e ee ,e leuildi F. areagood omnprisiest a, ineek boule feed herr aud eht end stone stabling. Apply to ' 'OSBERT Ciftleled, Sea - forth in 0., ea to W. BRYDONE, Olinton, Ontario. 19,0 5 WARM FOR 8ALEet---Fot Sale lot 29, tonciession 2, .1t ' H. R. Se Tooker reititlh containing 100 acres, ll tti th achaired except whom, fie t sore of good hard- wood. All und. !drat ad, we t tenoed arta la a good Mateo/ cultivetion; a good e ' - ok trause and two harnsone wIth eteoo. ale niegt Onderobeth. Plenty Opiate water and a kited bearing erehard. This fenn is well agitated for Other stock or grin. Abed midway between SeaS. le and Clinton.- Ap- ply on the premien* or Sett • ,.:1'. O. a TOWN- 8,11..Ti..-------.. lo.-' .. "4 t f ARM FOR 4,6Ilt -Pei ital,it kit 22, coneetsien II, tVonthip of :Ittibbett,Ltiontathing 100 acres, ahont anaeree °tetrad, -underatalood, well fenced. and In *high getter .61 oultivation, the bal wee le well timbered with tierdwthele. There is -a good larlek hone and bank batn, eThera la plenty of good waterand a 'clod oreharat Ibis' whittle a mile Anti a hat 04 GrOMAitty and *Wilt severe milea from A railway. Wilt be sold on eat% terms. Apply on ,. the premises, or address 0. li, ,itEltSLAKE, Creed- ar4 P. O. 4. 191x4 WARM FOR. SALE. -For ,eiri Lot 21, London J. Road, -cleared, t I balanoe iagood wood thither. The berianley, containitie: 00 acres, 03 saes lam is wel uaderdrained and tell fenced, and in gOodeondition, in every pulled*. This is an ex. cattail feinp, no better lathe tritenehip. It is .five miles from Clinton and i inilee from Brumfield-. Will he eold on reatoosole termite as the proprietor le in the impieraent Walnut* Apply to F. TOMLINSON. Brumillidd. 1924-tt FARII nat. SALE. -In thi, liati),eiship of tfaborne, beteg Lot 13, Concessimi tejeonsisidng of the ' best 100 acres of land in the towiiiihip, well fetioed and in good Blase- of onizivatioti.,,Aiood brick house and frame barn, ponvenient itehool, chinch and tharket, being Only 2-tniles front 'Exeter. For fur- ther pertiouliwe apply to D C. Iii,PINNES, Exeter, Or TRW. 11IGGIN8, eXOCUtOf ot _tbe estate of it. alining, deceased, or to GLADMAN az STANSURY, Solicitors, Exeter, 1913 -ti 'DON SALE CHEAP. -In Harphdrhey, a cromfort, able triek cottage with fivetraoms and hall. with kitohen sod woodahed attachtd. h ,rd and matt water, stabling ter tbree head cif taittle or horsee. with hen h use and pig pee, tan good well and pump in stable, two turd a halt, eoletesof hied on which are the choioest varietioe f ell kinds of fruit. This is a rc oat desirable property , ;tor any person emitting a comfortable borne. Apply on she prem. Ir**4 or address JOHN McDONOC11I, Seaforth P. 0, 1940-tt HfaaiSE AND LOTS FOR SALE.4 W For e, brit& bowie and 2 iota in Seatorthe One lot tapes on North Main Street and the atheist, on Weab Wil - lithe Street. The 120US0 Is a otiendortable brick oottage and coutaine bedroome, dating room, sit. ling room and kitchen, with good Wier under the whole home. Herd and eoti water -1 ia the house. There is alto 5 good stable and, drieing shed All kinds of blab on the lot. Apple tote'. .1.4 ALLAN, Londeshoro, or to a W. ATKINSOlti Seatorth. 190ex4t1 let -1 EACTIFCL Wiled FOR SALE-1,For ale cheap, el) that beeu.titul farm in the towliebip of Men - lop, known as 4' The Meoles," situeted one end a half fence north of 8 afettla the Rana contains cue hundree ores of th choiciesei.a. There is a bank barn, 1.rge frame house; with heautital large rooms, gcod water. a (track marriage:A through the farm. Geed oreleard and vineyatd, all under ..ed- tivatien and w 11 drained. The eituittion is excel- lent, near country sehtol and: near fitollegiii: e In- stitute. It it an idea LI country heritei Immediate peateseion. Apply to .WM. GOVENLOCK, deatorch. ' 3922.5! 'WIEST CLASS EIGHTY -ACRE A gal FOR SALE eU -tieing West pert of Lots i hint 2, Corwin. ton 2, L. It. S., Tuekersreith. Med aconorete, 11 reamed harm, 40x?4, with kitchen, eteoodshed and buggy home attached There is a new bank barn nate with wing extending te the oath, 24 feet. Aleo btiolt arched roothouth, 40 teat Oeng, wider gangway. All buildings in good repeat. Orohard =tits' a two and a bait mores ot choice') winter fruit. There are two never failing wella, b aores of bush. 'This terra Is in a good etate of .,eb1tivation, well fenced and uudeedralped, situated Iles from the villatze of Honealle For further ha dare apply to THOMAS- RELOAD:1K, tioneall, Ontafloe 189641 TeelESIliABLE PROPERTY FOR SAJLE.-In Egt eter mondville, & conit nteble tive ,atorey frame homer with bleak toundetionec ettalits Odor, sitting rooto, (Amine moue kitehen, eix,,: bedrooms with cloteui and Mile and gool cedar uhdett the house. Bard and soft weter convenient. Ttlert3 it also a good barn e0x80 'feet. Liver an AOC ot land on which oretthe choicest varieties of ilil kihde of trui The fentes are in god rend r and tilt piece is weff ntaterdmineti, It is situated on OM,let, the finest lets in Egmonciville arid will be eold toeasonably. Apply to NEIL HILL, Box 79. ileecetttiE O. 19430 TiLLAGle PROPERTY FOR SALE. For sale in V Egmondville, a oonitortable Hetet bailee with three acres of land in a very feitihi, condition eith plenty of large and -smell trulte for family use ale° large bare and outbuildinge in geed repair. The houee has been recently everhuniet Old contains seven rooms with choice cellar, fuli izei good wood shed, mho summer kitchen and an eicceOnt spring well arid geed cistern. Any person dee ' ng a corn. iortable, quiet home of that demeriptioth coveniont to town, shout& not miss this opporterlity. Will be sold reasonably and on easy teranit per f hrther particulars apply on tbe premises or whines Bre nioneviile P. O., WM. BTJBOLZ• '• 1943 it DARM FOR SALE.-Fot sale on reathilible terms r the farm of the audersigeed ori ;the Nortb Ontvel read,. 110E1110p, a mile north- Ot Seaforth. 11 contain 176 acres eel cleared except :abatis ten. acres. It la well nr.der.drahled, wellletiaed and in a high date et onitivattnel There J. ue two etorey brick house, bank bete" end otheil necessary outbuildings-. Tinare is a flowing spring Ohne to the buildiega. A lerge orehard of ohoioe ',fruilt and About two A0188 of a vinery. This hi Mee of the eholoeut lama in /ninon and there is ,htei a foot of waste lend on it. It ie all seeded to grams except about C0 aeree. There STO ten aorta tenth to feel wheat and the fall plowing done. Apple ao the pro. prietoe, fleetertti, ROBERT GOVENLOOR. . - 1020- 1.41.1ftell.11.11:Y -VIA P.M FOR SALE -For Belo lot 29, tin the Oth 11 concession et Ilibbert, containing 150 aoreatal in a good state of cultivation. There is On the pre- miees a brick bowie and brick kitoheri $tel a gold *teller. There is aide a large bank bon, E0 x 40 and a leant° of 12 feet, with atone stabling Underneath. Also a ehed 80 x 30 15 and a driving notiee with everything complete. There are three ia$ver failing Fleid09 slee premiss, there is Mao a Urge orchard nith a good gimlet]. There are 10e sates of tali wheat sown and there are 40 acres teceded dove. Either aultebie for hat or peuturt. 6,II the fall ploughing is done. Tee farm Is well uetierdrained with tile and well teneed with wiro It le in good localite, being tuated two ahd hll miles temps. a s e from OhiBeittur,rt, wnere there is a pesoffice and two ehurabest l from ficanolli Methodist and Preebyterien, 8 miles end there le a good greivt. I. tread run- iiMg put thfarm. It is in goed conditien and e volt be sold ea reauunable terms as the heroprieter whites to retire. For furteer pertiohlerapply on e the promisee or to 011 Anita.) EBERIIART, Szaffa 0., oneario. 1941-4 tIVE SORR CRUSHES ORE FORMIDABLE AND MORE AWFUL. ENEMY THAN DEATH. LAW OF: LOVE IS UNEQUAL One Who Makes Sacrifices Has Strong - or Affection Than the One for Whom the Sacrifices Are Made -"A Foolish Son Is the Heaviness of His Mother," Saith the Preacher Entered according to ,kot of Perlin /tient of Cato. rida, in the year Ma by Frederick Diver. of Toronto. &V the Dep' of Anoicul Lure. Oi wo- „ Los Angeles, Cal., March 12.-1n al- most every home throughout the land the topic chosen by the preacher in. this sermon is a more or less' familiar one. The text Proverbs x, I, "A feglish son is the heaviness of his mother." Death is an enemy: The Bible distinctly declares it I remember some years ago, when visiting one of the New Zealand cities, this thought Was impressed upon me as never before. A young man, a MUSICal genius, had late- ly come from London and captured that Whole- eity by his org-an playing, He •was -to play that Sunday in the church where we were worshippingi The night before, coming home frora practicing upon the keys, 'he sat down to eat din- ner Nati his Wife and two children. Suddenly he began to '‘gitep. A fish- bone had, caught in his throat. In a fewa.d . minutes he was de, The whele city Wag shocked ht. the awful 'as - gedy. The church was draped in black. The organ was covered • with crape. Among the sobs of the dead • man's friends his pastor preached a, eulogy upon this young man's life from L Co- rinthians, xv., 26, "The last enemy that shall be, destroyed is death." As the preacher uttered those .solemn words they sank into his hearers' consciences, an axiomatic truth. • Oh, yes, death is an enemy. Death at times seems to be a cruel and a merciless enemy. It. breaks asunder the marital bands, It lifts the little baby out of the crib and shuts her for- ever from our eyes by the closing of the coffin lid. It strikes down the strong man who is proclaiming God's word in the pulpit. It empties the office of the 'physician who is bending over the pa- tient. It sometime -a sends the pleading laiviger to the grave even before the murderer whom he ha.d defended expi- ates his crime upon the gallows. Oh, yes, dea.th an enemy. It snatches the mother away from the child just at the critical period when her pres- ence seems to be essential for the moral life of her child: . But when lie tening to that serrnon in the far-off °wintry of New Zealand 1 soliloquized thus: "That widow is to- day having her heart crushed by the hearse's wheels. even as the Indian juggernaut used to mangle the bodies of the Hindoo devotees. But a. living sorrow can be. more formidable and a more awful enemy than a sorrow of the grave. The fiendish acts of a dissolute, a debauched, a drunken, a cruel or an unfaithful husband ,can weigh more heavily upon trait wife's heart than the corpse of a dead husband. And by the raise reasoning the evil deeds Of an un- dutiful or unfaithful son fall upon the parental heart with a more crushing weight than the sod that falls upon the- .eoffin lid of a dead child- Thus, to -day, from a -parental standpoint, 1 . would preath upon the agorae -lag sufferings of a4father and a mother when their children go astray and do wrong. I in- cludei here the father's sufferings, as well as the motherhe The full wording of the -verso of my text includes both parents. "A wise eon rnaketh a glad father." That seutence, interpreted from the negative standpoint, Means, "A bad boy maketh a sad father, and a foolish son is the heaviness of his mother." Why sad? Why heavy? First be- cause the true father and mother can never separate their joys and sorrows from the joys, and sorrows of 'their child, Though a man may live after his right arm has been amputated, the hand and the arm cease to live as soon as the surgeon's knife has cut the ar- teries and the bones which unite them to the shoulder. But here nature seems to reverse the conditions of life. Though a, child may live independent of his parent, a true parent can never live Independent of his thildren. From the parental standpoint the parental life and the child life are not only bone of one bone and flesh of one flesh, but their 'existences are truly grafted upon each other. They derive their joys from the same source; their sorrows Make both hearts beat as one; they are interde- pendent. Like the Siamese twins, they have the same flow of blood through their arterial systems. From the standpoint of a child you may not believe this, You ask: Is not the love between (parent and child a mutual tove? Why, then, should not its seearation affect the one equally with the other? Oh, no! The law of love is unequal. The one who makes sacrifices has a stronger affection than the one for whom the sacrifices are made. go into the sculptor's studio, and I say: "Thorwaldsen, why art thou bending so lovingly over yonder piece of eold marble? Has the stone a heart?" "Ohe no," answers the Dan- ish sculptor. "I de not love this stone because it has a heart. I love it be- cause I -have put my heart into it in my effort to bring out the beautiful tia- MRS. VVM SANDERS 1 For $10 Thrall give a 85 byellem f reei 104 teach any , , Dress Cutting Salop!. lady bow to cut, ilt and put together say artiole in 1 Iwo yeere. Just think of it i For $.6_o A will teach dregs or mentle waking in 2 weeka trera the plainest ' waist to the ree et elaborate dress that cob be found fa the faahion book, without the Use ottpaeer pat- terne. I have taught over .,600 this leat six years, and offer 803 to auyoee 1 caul teach, t+can prove to me they eau !care as much any ,Other place in any ono that ie a dress maker, or geed I. !ewer ard I day, March the 20th, Write for pareleateirs, or the certifioate trete me. Nett class eaciViDn069 Mon - drawer, to teach this course, giving thein my teach- ers' certificat it Strangers msy boatei at schooL invented and had patented, that does itot hold a A suitable raw -given to any one' itiforming me of raw porton ing to teach this bourse, wiaioh I me at my school in Stratford, opposite Windsor Hotel, on Albert street, on Saturclay,teiteoh lath, from 150 6 p.ra. MRS. wet. SANDERS; Teapher in Drees Cutting, Box 159, Stratford P. O. ' 1938-62 sousa Only a Trifling Cold Has been the Lullaby Song of Many a , Victim to their Last Lon t; Sleep. A cough should be loathed as speedily as possible, and all irrita- tion allayed before it settles in the lungs. Once flatted there Brbn- chitisand Consumptiot may follow. DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP is just the remedy you require. Thi virtues of the Norway Pine and Wild Cherry Bark, with other standard pectoral Herbs and Balsams, are •skilfully combined to produce a reliable, safe and effectual remedy fOr all forms of Coughs and Colds. Mr. N. D. Macdonald, Whycoco- magh,_ N.S., writes :-" 1 think it my duty to let people know what great good Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup did for me. I had a bad cold, which settled in ray chest, and I could get nothing to cure it till I tried Dr. Wood's Nor- way Pine Syrup. The first bottle helped me wonderfully, and the third one cured. Tue. Price, 25 cents per bottle. THE RON: Exposmion 7, _9 ar'.* / Household utensils can be macle to look as.good as new by washing in a surkly solution of Sunlight Soap, ''' hey will siniie and glitter, thus helpang to -make the home bright and ieviting. Sunliglit Soar) means Icss than h. If the labor required in washing with com- mon soap -and makes ev rything ep tlessly clean. Suniaght Soap is made of pure oils and fats, contains no ingredient injuridus to the hands or clothing. ASK1 Su;vitight &at Washes t LEVER! OR T E OCTAGON SAR aoti s White and weft' t Injnre the Baas OTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO f 8s MOP". 9..101,••••• 111.01.113i1X ure which there I see sham. ering or beckoning to Me from the c d stone." Why does the artist love his t1an vas and the composer his oratorh?l Because their life's work has gone itto the ma- ations of those masterpie of t or of music. Why dia Christo 14er Wen's life seem to be anchored- t t. P rs Cathedral. and Isaac New o 's life to his laboratory? Bemuse n ' thee places these men ,spent nt s4 of th ir earthly existence in -order to pork o t \ the problems of their lives, I Love inspired by badtille . ! That s true. Theta how can a true father and Mother help loving their chil ren? HoW can they ever separate thei existence from the joys and sorrows the suc- cesses and failures of thei children? Oh, -how many sacrifices 1 hey hav made! , Was it ten yeara of sacrifice ? More .than that -twenty ye. re, Wirt. years, forty/ years. For years an years the burden of 'raising thelr fern flies never left their minds and htar A If I could take you back to your °I horaestead -thirty years ago, 1 woulc find all you thildren sOund a1eep. The motherand,father-what are hPy talk- ing so earnestly about? "Fat er," says the mother, "cannot you meet he mort- gage on the farm unless we ut down our expenses?- Then I will h ve to let the, hired girl go, and I will dc My own cooking and. washing." "We 1," said your father, "we 1111.1.St not e, onomize at the children's. expense. I must make more money. We must raise the chil- dren right. They must be edueated." ! Why did your Mother's heir grow white at thirty-five - years of (age and your father's face begin toe "crow 11 Marked?" Neither in the norning; noon nor night could they be found shrinking from their unceasin labors for feeding, clothing" and e4luoatirrg their children. - Now man, de ytni think it is possible, after a quarter o a cen- tury of the hardest kind of work has gone for the support and deve- of! the childrent that the paren ever be independent of them? Your father practically said: children turn against me, then life be a failure indeed. If :a turn out badly and my girls do opment s, could Oh, no. "If My ell my ta boys not do what they ought to do, then will earth- ly life hold but little joy either for me or their mother." My friends ( your fathers and mothers worked Wo !hard for their children for you to disaphoint thent in the results of their life'. Work. c No matter what you do or say, ,- you cannot make them forget yell ot cease to live for you. Even the -einfille plot of a Hebrew wince to steal from a fa- ther his throne could not make !David doaught but cling to Absalom while he was alive, and sorrow for the wayward boy after he was dead. But another reason why the burden of a sinful child is hard for the parent to bear -no sooner does a bay oria girl _begin to go astray than a true father and mother agonize on account of the stingltigs of a bitter self-reproach. Mark you this, wayward children - your parents do not blame you entirely for your sins. They are blaming -them- selves. They are looking away iback over the scenes 0: the past. Therare saying to their othn hearts: "Did(' do right when I let my boy do this or that or the other thing,? Did 1 set my daughter the wrong example? Did r pray earnestly eaough for my children when they were in my own nursery?" Oh, the sadness; oh, the sorrowe oh, the bitter, bitter pangs of a merciless self -denunciation which comes to the parents, when their boys and girls turn out badly! "A foolish eon is the heavi- ness of his mother." . I But, my friends, though your .par' nte made many mistakes in your brining up, tell me were not most of their er- rors made on account of the gentlefriss rather ! than the meanness of their heart's? Even in their wealmesSes, would you not have had them justt as Riley were? Let me see; you started ymuch. They never thought t at to go astray first because they truer you too you would or could do wrong. When you came home from college they were so proud to see you. They had itept, sending check After check. My, -'hOw. hard it was to get. that money! But*. was for their boy. And, oh, the awful awakening they had :when they. foural! the -money they sent, that herd earned; I rnohey, was being spent for sin! Donl't you remember how their hands trent- I bled when they were placed upon yodr e shoulder and their lips quivered when / they kissed you for the first time after that shock?, Don't you remember holy their tears -not your tears, but theirs4. were left upon your cheek when they I 'kissed you, a prodigal, returning home? Don't you remember how angry your father became when your employer first insinuated that you had embezzled some of his money? Old as he was,1 his clenched fist was ready to knock that employer dos-vn. But after the undeniable proofs were presented what did he do? Did he allow you to be sentl tejail, as you ought to have been? It Idid no good to pay up that deficit orl embezzlement. Since then you have been cheating everyone else you could. No, he did not let you go to jail. He I took every &liar that he had saved up 1 to care for your mother and himself In their old age. He turned it all in and signed notes for a thousand dollars' more to save you from your just pun- ishment. He ought not to have done It, but now in his old age are you still going to In and have him lacerated i by remorse because he has been too kind to you? But is it to be wondered at that Dal*, , rents, on account of their great love for their children, err many ti es over by betng lenient? For years I never had sympathy for fathers and (mothers who, as I expressed it, were Willing to pay their children's expenses tb perdi- tion, I always said if I had any boys and they got drunk once I wohld for- give them and get th.eir clothes out of pawn and, get them on their feet again. f they stole once I would. keep them from geing to jail. But, if they did It the -second time, to •the jail or 'to the 'county poorhouse they --would go. As my own boys are now growing up, do I think I would do it? Perhaps. But I fear / would do just as most fathers do.- I would make the mistake of giv- ing all I had, Of running into debt, and, -, if necessary, _perhaps, of destroying neer own glood rutme, if I could only save my boys. Oh, wayw.ard children, it is not you who should blame your fathers and mothers wbich proves to have been s -mistaken! , They were indulgent to you, they were Mad to your faults, they trusted you, believing that you would do right. You see now, as they, see, that . it: would have been better for you if they had been more strict and severe. But will you blame them for that? It was their love for you that was their fault. How have you repaid that love? Return, I beseech you, and beg their forgiveness and ask God. for pardon for your sins against him and them. But there is another reason why- we sympathize with broken-hearted par- ents who are bearing the heavy burdens, of wayward and sinful children. Those burdens are placed upon backs tots weak to carry them and upon hearts when they are too tender to suffer. It makes a great deal of difference how a man, cari.bear a burden, whether he is old or young, sick or well, tottering or straight limbed. You would not hitch an old horse up to a load he 'could 'easily have drawn in his prime. Neither, foolish son, should you make your par- . eats; in their old age, bear the burdens of your sins: -- How old.: are. -your parents? "Ole," you say, "father is about sixty years of - age, and mother is about the same," You know when our parents .married they did not do as many people of the present day. They .did not wait until they had amassed a fOrtune. Then the daughters were ready to start with the Sons at the bottom of the ladder • to elimb up. Therefore, they married , vhen they were young. Ones young ogether, now they have grown old to - ether." And there your lip quivers as ou say: "But mother is not as strong as she used to be, and that old pain has come back in father's heart, He had •a fainting spell last week." Ah, Yes, t ey are growing old together! Perhaps orte -of them is already gone. Is it not a, mean net, an awfully mean -act, on - , your part to take a broken-down wo- man or an old broken-down man and u pardoned" sins? They once carried ace upon them the burden of your li yeu in their arms; now 'you ought to be willing to let them lean upon .your arm, They .once wiped away your ter; now you shouldbe willing to w pe away theirs. They once lived and . are still living to make you happy:. now . you ought to strive to make their last clays happy. Do not put that heavy buliden of your wickedness upon !their hearts. They are too old to bear it. "Oh," says someone, "would that I could do as you ask! I would do any- i thing on earth if I could only lift. the : burden of my sins, which I compelled : my' dear old father and mother to car - 1 ry, but it is too late -it is, alas, too isle! " They are now forever past . car- rying the burden of any sins. My father died as tlid the father of the -Scotch poet, On his sickbed he was asked by his ;minieter if he was worried about anything. Then my father looked at me its the father, of Bobert Burns looked at his son On a similar occa- sion, and he answered: 'Nothing. I am woriy ing about nothing except my boy Rob rt.' But father Is dead now. 1 can neve' bring him back to tell him how I ha''e repented of my past stns.". Yo r father and mother beyond the burd ,n of your sins? Friend, I do not knowt about that laven in Heaven I think tilky are still longing and hoping for p r salvation. 1 for one cannot unde stand how there can be joy in Heav s over one sinner that repenteth and n 1 any thoughts about us who are etill nrepentant. I do not believe it beyon 1 the range of possibilities for our dear nes to be anxious about our un- repentlent souls. Even now I would not be surprised if they were sendialag forth an angelie meseenger to find oht what our deictsion is to be. Heaven,'beauti- ful 1-Idaveh! Have our redeemed pa- rents any burdens about our unpard- e oned sins in Heaven? Perhaps, by taiiing you on a past journeer to a place where I spent most of my boyhood days 1 might help You to a cleision to give your hearts to Jesus Christ. The journey which you ' are to take occurred a short time after my father's burial. After his body had beer; lal;away to sleep by the side of meny otil ea f said to my sister, "Come, let us go and look at the old house." ' We walked down the street where we :; both had played many years before. As i I went along I began to eall up the I names of the different neighbors. But i the houses now had strange _faces look - Ing out 1 of the windows. The little i ,children who were playing in the street 1 looked much line my old playmates, I They lau bed a-nd shouted and jumped 1 - - - tis 1 jifet" as We used. to jump, lint thillf eyes were different. They edged off from the sidewalk as we came alOng. We were strangers to them. Ale yes, here Ls the old house. stands as a. sentinel overlooking Fort Green Park,- where one of the old Re- volutionary battles was fought, and where some of the old Revolutionary veterails lie burled. From the outside the old hoUse looked about the swim There was the vine mother planted, still crawling over the side and clinging to the rotif and trying to cover up the windOWs. Indeed, the house looked so Much like the past that I thought. for an instant mother would be waiting for me it)„ the front room to welcome me homsdjfrom college. lust to the rear of the house was the old grapevine arbor built ley Captain. Spicer. before he lost his Wife and Manly son, whom I can lust remember, 1 had often ta- ken my dessert of fruit there before I answered the dinner bell. But, comes. I must not linger outside. Here, let me take a peek in at the window. Wonder if yonder policeman will think I am a thief. He wears jut tife same kind of bra.se buttons as did the ()Meer who used tochaseme oft the park grass when I was playing "hound and hares" and climbing up yonder walls rnore like a. trapeze performer titan a hare scurrying for her burrow. hip and through. the house we went, .Each room had for us a history. In each place we could see the livhig and the dead. side by side. Now it was a Oster In her bridal robes, now a death- -tsi4 scene, now -but stop; I cannot go further. YOu would not have me if you could, The history of my cad home was merely the history of yours, only under other names. With us it was Jessie, De Witt, May, Edith, Frank, Daisy, Maude. With you it was Gert- rude, Sarah, Carrie, William, John, Walter. Names differdnt; scenes all the same. That afternoon 1 went away ir0111 the old homestead with a sad heart. "All that scene of love gone forever!" I kept saying, "All gone, all gone& Is ail gone forever? But that night as spedeon west toward my own home. where my wife and children were wait- ing to greet me,. I was looking out of the 'train window. / had Tray clieele rest- ing upon 'any hand, I know not whether I was asleep or awake, But, whether asleep or awake, suddenly a strange i vision carhe to me. I seemed to see the dear faces of rny loved ones who are gone. Among the twinkling stars of the night I saw their bright eyes and feard them speaking to me. They seemed to say: "The past is not dead. We are going to have our reunions again. We are here waiting. We are waiting for you. Will you live for Christ as we lived, that -we may have these reunions?" Are our parents in Heaven Concerned about us? They so loved us here, they were so anxious about our best inter- ests, that I cannot believe they have forgotten us now. What news. eould so gladden their hearts, could the an- gelic messengers that pass from earth to Heaven bring to them, than the news of your repentance? Shall we let them wait and keep waiting for our answer? Father, mother, we are coming! Yes, in a little while, after we have done our work for Christ, we shall come. Oh, sirful child, thou art not an or- phan. You have a Heavenly Father waiting. You have a redeemed earthly' father and mother waiting. Wilt thou not lfft from them the burden of their anxiety? Wilt thou not enhance their • Heavenly joys by the assurance that thou art corning to complete the fam- ily cirole around the throne? • VI RI For Infants and Children. Tho Kid You Have Always Bought Bears the signature of • -Miss Margaret Elizabeth Craig, aged 45 years, who for some, time had resided with her -eget mother in the township of Wolford, about twelve miles from Brockville, !com- mitted euicide , by taking a dose •of Paris green. She lived six hours, and sliorl,ty after :taking the poison informed her mother tha'b she was tired of doing all the work about the farm, re A Guaranteed Cure for Piles. Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Pro- truding Piles. Druggists refund money if PO.= ointment fags, to cure any ease, no matter of how Wag standing., in from 6 to 14 days. First applioation gives ease and rest. 50c., If your druggist hasn't it, send 50o. In stamps and it will be forwarded post-paid by Paris Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo., 1930-6 m. - • soWseitssmsfs***:**7 stIPM*AikVieirMIRAN MILBURN'S Heart and Nerve Pills. Are a specific for all heart and nerve a troubles. Here are some of the symp• - toms.. Any one of them should be a , warning for you to attend to it im- mediately. Don't delay. Serious break- down of the system may follow, if you do: Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Dazed- ness, Palpitation of the Heart, Shortnest of Breath, Rush of Blood to the Head, • Smothering and Sinking Spells, Faint and Weak Spells, Spasm or Pain through the Heart; Cold, Clammy Hand s and Feet. There may be many minor syrup. toms of heart and nerve trouble, but these are the chief ones. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills will -di pel all these symptoms from the aytetn. rice 50 cents per box, or 8 for $1.25. TWEAK SPFLLS CURED. r/frs. L. Dorey, Hemford, N•S., writes us as follows was troubled with dizziness, weak spells and fluttering of the heart: 1 procured a box of Miibtirn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and they did me so much good that 1 got two more boxes and after finishing them 1 was mnpletely cured. 1 must say that 1 cannot maw mend them too highly. easons hv we think ed Rose Tea is the best tea in Canada have been published ia this paper. Have they been convincing enough to induce - you to try the tea? ' If they have, the advertising has done all that was expected. The tea must do the rest, and F. think it will. If you have not yet tried the tea, you will per be interested in learning that several mora 1 easous are yet to follow. , They wel be interesting and weIIworth read mg. T. H. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N. B. . BRANCHES TOSIONTet WINNIPEG. Beauty in Furniture +++44 We invite attention to the mag. nificent assortment of Furniture. Our display -iti large. Selections at this store are made easy and every taste gratified. We are giv- ing exceptional offerings through 'the entire store, • ÷4÷1.4444444.14-144.46444÷1÷14 Promptly attended to night or day. B OADFOOTI BOX & 00, S. T. HOLMES, Manager. Asespgqmompaum EGE,TABLIn. SU.ZILIAN fr enew Makes the hair grow long and heavy,and keeps it sokandg Stops falling hair and cures dandrtiff. And it always min color to gray hair. Sold for My years. uvrtse....dromMg" pesevonmempor,•••••••••=m0 . • M.11.4•NO.MMIMINIIIIMONSIM ja Win -ter Sorting )14++++++++++++++++++++++++ It is at this time of the year that you feel the thin spots in yonr clothes. Rather than get new ones, many shiver. That is sho sighted from both ends. First, you get a cold, and it costs you nre than new clothes, eecondly, and best at this time of the year we am giving exceptional values in all kinds of winter clothes. Clothes that will last you the balance of this season and all a next, and the wet will only be about one-half of what you will have to pay when tjte next cold season comes, Consider the first of these reasons, and at on the second, The new Spring goods will be coming in soon, we want to be xid of the win ter stuff, consequently prices don't gut a very big figure, BRIGHT BROL ELRXIASILERS, SEAFORT11 ....*.a.pampoimost gdmeo.r.,arl, March Sale AT B. B. G uN , C4tli 4-1.444.401444444+4444+++++++++44144 DRY GOODS -Wool Blankets to olear at $2,25 a Raiz; Woo/ Hosiery to deer a pair. HOUSE FURNISHINGS -Carpets, Oil Cloths, Linoleume-speotal ditoounts tb month only, GROCERIES -Fine Japan Tea, 253 lb. Fine blended Black and Green at 30e, and 50e a lh. CLOTHING -Ten dollar suits for $7.50 ; odd oasts irons broken *tam, .$1.50 eeb Boys' odd Vesta from broken omits, 500 am' 753 esoh. Men's odd 'Pante froi broken suits at 75o, $1, snd $1.25 a pair. Wool Fleece Underwear th month sold at 75o a snit. We are paying 20c a lb. for Choice Roll Butter, $1. per bag for 'Good Potatoes, AND 3c A LB. FOR DRIED APPLES. B. GUNN, Seaforth Ear -WATCH OUR WEEKLY OUOTATIONS Executors' Notice. -- --.--s, :NOW° is hereby given that ell Traumas having any claim against the ettate of Mosee Hanna, late , of the townebip et Maintop in the minty of Huron farmer, who died oi or about the lot day of Sep. tember. 1908, arerequired. on or before thcr 26th day of March, 1905, to send or deliver to the under sigeed, solicitor for the exebutore, full particulars of their claim and the security, if any, held by them duly verified by an affidavit. And further take notice that Mier the said 251h day - of March, 1995, the execrators will proceed to distribute the estate among the partiee entitled thereto having reference only to cleans of which they shell then have received notice and after mob distribution the executers will nob be retronsible for Any claim of whith they effiall not hare receivod notice. This nettle.° Is given pursuent to the etatute in that be- helf, Deted a Seatorth the 2nd day of March, 1905. 0 R. S. HAYS, Solicitor for tho out -dors, Jahn Ethane and W. E. Hinehley, 194848 .1.1..1•••••• Sore Throat and Coughs A almole, effective and safe remedy for -alt throat irritations is found in Cresalene Antiseptic Tablets They combine tho germicidal value of Creolenewitli tluz soothing properdes et elipitory elm and 10c. All Drugitosts 109 vie) . That Cooper, • •st thousands IP the same HD& -red her, oridt e sPePsla' e refer. nt Warier) but WI vi ALA. .e this woucten se sea schre the& evanesce tr. X es IIABBUSIS 'V *Mails Veto athe Medical A Olen, sr Aolleitorfor. Doedsiott SOLIIIIMBD atnee sod hone DR. Vilidusitee aine„ rote:ibex. tons otOntsris teegeen sn erlatelfeey Coil tf Oneseire Del ears en the Peri -coltaiee on di .tttdwifery, Resi eetite itione A -r "St, Lot the - s eLosNDCN s c Each pupil is given itt- djyjdu1 instruction. The Shorthand System taught le that used by all ewspaper and rourt re- porters. • Beat systems of • Book- keeping, Penmans Arith- metic, et o , thoroughly , taught. Situations guaranteed to every idra.duate. one-LOGUE, Flint. Wine O. MOO; brA 1*,