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The Huron Expositor, 1905-10-06, Page 6re 0 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE' Geeetest etellii roe seer OP. eikOl1T1 farm Stanley township, 14a• acres. Apply to les. HAYS, Batriater, fieriferth. 19,5-54 latTILDING LOTS FOR SALE.—For sale, several 10110 dealrabkt building" lots in the town at Rea - forth. These tots aye eituated iri one et the beet parts et the town and are well pleated with the ehoicest et fruit. Apple to W. D. McLean, &tithe '194tati Exerseeea Leaforth. —1-tROFITABLE INVERTMENTS.-1 own lone money/on improved quarter sections of 180 scree eneh at from 8 to 10 per cent per (mount. Only tint mortgagee taken. Ample eecurity Riven Torzeus Titiee System is nerteot. From $300 up can be lent on farms worthfrom8i,00a to $2,000. For further particulara write to me. J. A. JACK. SON, Barrister, dee Ponolca Alberti. 19594f 'CARR FOR SALE.—Lot St, Conceesion 8, Mill I- Road. Tuakeromith, conteinine 100 sores, in a high Feet/ of -cultivation and well underdrained and well fenceda good Week house and bank barn, 60 x 90 feet, with stone stabling underneath. Plenty of goad water. It is within a mile and a ben of Brumfield station ane five miles from Sea - forth. It 1A 000 of the choicest terms in the county there not beine one toot of weste lend on it An ply en the nremises or ividdess DUNCAN MoTA.V- Brucefield. 1970.ti MIARM FOR BALI OR TO. UENT.—For sale or rent lot 2e, co 2, H. R. S., Tackeramith, containing 100 acroeall cleared except 'bent ii -VO 140100 01 good hardwood. All underdrained, well fenced and in good BUM of Cultivation. A good Wick homer snd two barnsone with atone stabling underneath. Plenty of geed water and a kood bear- ing Orchard. This ham is well adapted for either stock or grain. About midway between Seeferth and Clinton. Apply on the premises -or Seater* P. 0. H. TOWNSEND, Proprietor. 19$24t —I -OUSE AND LOTS FOR SALE.—For sale, brick 11 house and 2 lots in Seatorth. one lot faces tra North Main Street and the other on West' Wil. Um Street. The home is a oomforteble brit* vettage and eontaine 8 beelrome, dining; room, sit. ting room and kitchen, with good cellar under the whole house. Hard and soft water in the house. There is else a good stable and driving shed. All kin.ds of fruit on the lot. Apply to J. L. ALLAN, Londeebero, or to 0. W. ATKINSON, ti.eatigoort5hx.401 FOR SALE --A. farm containing' 100 wares of Isncli, being. Lot a, Concession 70in the Tow ship ot Tuckersmith, five miles from Seaforth and belong- ing to the estate of the late Michael _O'Keefe. This term is suitable for cultivation or pasture and will be sold on reasonable terns. For full pertleulars apply tee THOMAS BROWN, Auctioneer, Seaforth P.O. 19614f "ENARM FOR BALE,—Lob' 10, Concession 4, Hil) J' best, containing 100 acres, more or less It is offered for sale on easy terms. On the place ere a geed frame house, Pogo bare with good stab. Ung undesmath. There la also one acre of bneh and the fern) le well drained and in a splendid state nt cultivation. Mutely to ;market, ,aohool end church Forel -titer paitionlare AFPle on the Plane to HOBERT LaVERY. 1954x4ti tLIARM FOR SALE. —Lot 88. Concession Ma- r Killeet This farm contains 100 acres nf geed 4and, hae ee it a bank barn 64 x 64 with lefeet stone' stabling. Also e good 8-reemed briok house, or thud, gned water ate. It is six miles trete riee. forth and 1 miles from Cr:meter:ice poet olEo. Apply to wM. R. to E. HI 001) FARM FOR SALE.—For 'sale, East bait ur of 1.04 14, Conceesion 8. Hulled, containing 50 $cree, all clearedwelt fenced and in a geed state ei cultivation,- Thera is a good brick heuse, bank barndrivinghouse, pie pen, etc., There le a. geed orchard and never failing epring. About 'three miles from Censtavee, 11 from Loodesbnro , station zed 7 wiles from Olinton. Tills is a °beim farm teed will be geld on easy tame. Apply on the larm or address, Conetence Itt-0„ A. TYER51 AN. I969x8 _n pees, n „ Ot 11,414R HARD. skirgeu - ULU, Seaforth. leatti THE CIIIIONIG GRUMBLER PESSIMISTS 'WHO WERE BORN UNDER ABSENCE OF LIGHT. 'GIVING THANKS UNTO'GOD" Blessings That All Men, Even the Chronic Qrumbler, Should Feel and Express Thanks ;Foe—Stellar Set- ' tines of Gold To Be Found In the Lives of Most, Accercling to t6 Preacher. -Entered according to Act of Parliament of Canada, in the year mos, by Frederick Diver, of Toronto, at the Department oestaricifiture, Ottawa. . • Los Angeles, Cal., Sept. preacher to -day, taking for his theme ;vacations' end; wherathe multitudes are flocking back from seashore and mann- 'tain, shows us that home has its own izseculiar blessings, which are never 'better appreciated than on return after absence. The text is Ephesisms v., 20, "Giving thanks always for all 'things `unto God." Some people are "weeping Jere- rniahs." They are always seeing om- inous visions and dreaming portentous dreams and prophesying evil. Their prophecies are never like the chirps of the red -breasted robins, harbingers ot the spring. They are like the _au- tumnal frosts, forerunners of winter's storms. They prophesy pains and mis- eries and wars and massacres an tomahawks and tortures at the stake, amid a chorus of blood -curdling yells tand Indian whoops. They are not like ithe ancient astrologers, who used to foretell a glorious career for the new- born babe from the relative position of the stars of the solar- system hov- ering over the cradle on the night Of the babe's nativity. They never see stellar letters of gold. They only see eclipses and tornadoes and absence of all light. In the black pages of the night they read the histories of the troables. that &re past and the fore- casts of the troubles that are to come. These pessimists are always droning a dirge. They never make an inven- tory of their blessing. They are never happy for what they have. They are always dwelling on the things which they have not- and which they would like to have. These modern pessimists are like the farmer who when it rains grumbles and says: "This rain is kill- ing my„ corn. Corn needs stinshine." 'And wlien the sun shines then he com- plains that the drought is killing his hay. "Grass," he says, "needs rain, not sunshine," These pessimists are always grumbling, always complain- ing: Every Monday is for them a blue Moaday and every Sunday -a blue Sun- day. They grumble1nthe morning. They grumble at night. They grumble all the time. They think they live in the poorest country, surrounded by the meanest people, at the most unfortun- ate of all times. The country is for them always rushing toward hopeless smashup. They are never happy un- less they are miserable. If they ever reach heaven, Walesa their natures are completely changed before-. they get there, they will complain about the architecture of 'tke White mansions and complain about the glare of the streets of gold and complain about the weak - MSS of the gates of pearl and corn - Plain about the style of -the celestial music. These pessimists were not born under "a lucky :titan" They were born; according to the teaching of ancient . astrology, amid the absence of all light, unless that light was the flashing light of the lightnings. These pessi- mists derive the motive of their music from the grovelings of a tempest and not from the notes of a sweet -throated, happy nightingale. Paul, in the words of my teat, hurls his anathema against the chronic grumblers. He bids us look upon the bright side and not the dark side of life. We should find a sweet nectar in every flower and a blessing in every moment We ehould be like a bee gathering honey and not like a wasp thrueting a sting. 1,Te should have that beautiful spirit of contentment and thankfulness to God as had an ateed octogenarian. Some one said to litm, "Grandpa; when is the happiest time of life?" He answered: "When epring comes and under the influence Of the gentle warrhth of the atmos- phr re the buds commence to turn into flowers I think to. niyaelf, 'Oh, 'what a beautiful season is sprinter Then, v. hen summer ()clues and covers the. trete; Wi'h ;hick foliage:. when the birds ere eo happy in singing-. their pretty eoneet, I say to myself, 'Oh, summer is a fine thing!' Then when autumn comes and I see the same trees loaded tvitle the most tempting fruits, 1 ere out, 'Oh, how, mareeiflcent IS. autumn!' TiAIW FOR SALE—Lot 3, coneessien atitberne, containing 99- ammo, sittuiteel on the'tIonden Road, 1 mike:rem Haman, and 4 mites frnm Eves. er. It is In a Brat elan stet° of cultivation being well draioed u ite _tile, nearly all summer Yellowed and seeded to graesineariy all fenced with new Car- ter wire fence. On the farm is a stone hOuse and vitiate- of outbuildings, inoluding one pf the finest I poultry homes In Ontario. There aretwo !wells, a spring creek, and a flowingeprine that would fill a three-inch tile. Apply on the farm or to Kensall svet office, BENJAMIN HOGGARTEL 1958-tf MeAltld FOR SALE—For sale, int 18, Denceisian P 4, in Ribbed, contain'ng 100 aoree. On the place is a brlok d veiling tone% wish freme kit2hen, with alt necessary outbuildings and iota of good stabling ; well fenced, well drained and plea), of good water. There are 9 aorea of boob. It ia situated two and a half roliee from Dublin station, where ther3 is a good market. Convenient t) schema and chinches rf 01 derominatione. Apply 4CITI the premises or address ANDitEW etcLELLAN, Dublin P 0. 1965-tf nARM» AND MILL PROPERTY FOR SALE.— C For sate the old Bell Farm end Mill Propertye on the London road. Tuoketsmith, recently occu- pied by the late John MeNevio, There are 100 sues, all cleared but about tour acres. Good buildinge and the farm well tunderdrained and in a high state of cultivation, all seeded to grass except about 30 acres. Ale) the griet era saw mill prop- erty on the farn3. It is within ball smile of Kippen station and 2 ulnae trona Tiensell ani a good busi- ness has always been done at the mills. The farm and will property will be sold together or eeparate. iy to suit puroheeer, •Teroas easy. Apply to DAVID a MeLEAN, Kippen. 1968-4f tXT1I,E.A.GE PROPERTY FOR SALE.—For sale in V Egmondville, a eorniortable flame home wit& three acres of land In a very fertile conditiou with lenty el large and small fruits tor family use alio -see barn and euebuiltinge to goad repair. The home Ms been recently overlieulad and m13691101:1 seven moms with choice cellar full glee, good wood shed, elle surnmer kitchen end an excellent epring welt and good cistern. Any parson deeiring a com- fortable, quiet home of WI description, coveeient to town, ehould pot miss this ooportunity. Will be sold reasonably end on easy terms. For further perticulers apply on the prefteises or addreas Eg- mondville P. O., WM. BUBOLZ" 1943-1t FARM FOR I.—For rale, Lot 23, Concession 2', H. it. Se one of the beat terms in Tucker - smith, containing 100 scree. It is an exoeption illy olean farm withrie waste bud ; all seeded to grass mo -t of le hivieg beet) in pasture flve er six years. It is extra well supplied with water On the farm is a good brick houee and two berns with stone stebling node, pi.arth with cement Beare. Plenty ot fruit trees of chfferent kinds. It is pleasultiv sit. meted Ia s good neighborhood, ban g onelelf mile from ochool e.nd Pei miles from Seaforth. Wply on the ptm1e dr addrees SOtiN ROBB, Seaforth P. 0., Ont. I 1984-41 ARK FOR liALE—North half of Lot 12, Con - (wagon 0. Morrie, oontainixag 100 acres, situated on the grevel road, four and a Ir.lf ranee -west- of Brawl and tom ineee tram Bilgrave. There are '80 aeres °leered, well d_tained, fenced and in a _good state of cultivation, at present touted down. The romeining 20 sorei is covered with exeetteet timber, Tame le It good frame house with etooe cellar, good Irani° barn with stone etabling under- neath, a good bearing orehard and an ebundanne of go,3d water. There is a Murillo and a pest office within half a Mile and a echoed within three mime -tors of a mile.. For furtrer partieulsrs apply to MRS. B. SMILLIE, Hensall. 1988x3tt THE - Ana nnatly, *Men Vie rude, hard Wine ter makes' its appearance and. there are nether leaves nor fruits on the trees, then through their naked branches I look upward and perceive better 'than I could ever do before the stars that glitter in the sky." -Aye, like the aged Christian and like Paul of my text, amid all things we should learn to dive thanks unto God. Give thanks unto God 'for all things. Yes, we ought to bo ready to do that. ut in 'order to bring our spiritual les- eson a little nearer home let us make an inventory of some of the -blessings which naturally have come to those of us Who have -just returned home from our summer 'vacations: Many of u� during the past summer_ have - been away to the mountains (e down to the seashore, seeking rest and physical and mental strength and recreation. We are now back to the old treadmills of city life. Some of us when board- ing the train for home did so with a sigh. "Wela" we said, "fun is over for one year. ' Now for another twelve months of harcirind." We sighed thus, as though 1 the pleasures of life were found id -vacations. Are they? Let us see, Let us study for a little while the blessed resuscitation which should come to every healthy man and healthy womart frpm a summer vaca- tion. Let us make a, short summary of the blessings of our city lives and see how much there is in them for which we ought to thank God. It is a strange fact that, is Order to appreciate our city homes as- well as our Other blessings, most of us have to be detirived of them for awhile. We must be separated for a -Virile from our blessings in order to. appreciate them when the Y come hack to us. We are tESA-RM FOR SeLE.—Fer seta Lot 18, Concession _,U 3, Hay, containing 100 acres in a good state of oultivation. There are en the premises a good frame home 2232, also a frame kitehen and wood shed, 18x 40, all with cellar underneath. There Is zleo a large bank barn, 40 x 70, with good briok atabhng undern sib and all cement fleors. Also a driving shed, 2 x 60, all in good repair. There are three never -failing wells on the premises and a good bearing orohard. Aldo 18 cores of good 'hardwood hush. The farm is well fenced and welt underdrats. eed with tile. It is situated within a mile and a half of the village of Haman and 'school within hell a mile of farm. As the propletor wishes to retire le wilt be told on cagy teems, For further particulars apply on thaprecnises or to Harebell P. 0. JAMES BONTTRON. 1987-tf MIAMI FOR SALE.—For sale lot 29, on the 9th U concession Al Hibbert, containing 00 aorereall in a good state of oultivetimr. Therei on the pre. naisee a briek house and brink kitchen and a good -cellar. There is oleo a large bank barn, 00 x 40 and A leant° of 1.2 feet. with stone shabling underneeth, Also a shed 80 x 80 fie anti a driving house with 'everything complete. There are three never failing wells on the premises, there is also a large oroha rd and good garden. There are ten acres of fall wheat gown and there are 40 %ores eeeded down. Either eultable for hay or pesture., All the fall ploughing is done. The farm is well underdrained with tile and well fumed with wire ltnees. It is le a gocal loaelity, being situated two and a half miles from Chieelburst, where there ie a poet office and two churches, Methodist and Presbyterian, 8 miles from Seaforth and there Is a good grevel road running past the farm. It is in goad oondition and will be sold on reasonable tereis as the proprietor wishes to retire. For further perelculars apply on the promisees or to osteteress EBERIIART, Stiffs P .. Ontario. 1947-tr VOTERS' LIST COURT. Notice is hereby given that a Court wilt be held pursuant to the Ontario Voters' List Act by His Honer The Judge of the County ()Jure of tbe County of Huron, at Scarlett'e Hall, Wiothropon the litla day Of Ootober. 1906. at the hour of 10 o'-' cloek, a. m.. to hear and determine the several complaints of errore and =lesions in the Voters Liet cf the Municipality of the Towoship of Mo- Killop for 1906. All persons having businese at the Court, are required to attend et tha Bald time and place - M. WORM. Clerk of McEntee. Dated Male 19th day of September, 1e05. 1071;td • :HVTh...N like some people living in theclimate of -southern California, one of the most glorious climates in all thlaworld. Here people some times grow absolute- ly tired of the sunshine. ."Oh,': said a man to me some- time ago, "I wish 1 could get rid of the sun. I am so tired of looking at it, it is beautiful ay atter beautiful day for week in -nd week. -ont and for month in and month out. I wpuld that I could see just.one old fashioned New England fitterm or Teinois blizzard;" "Yes," I answered my friend. "You wish you could see a Chicago blizzard again, but as soon as It begins to howl about your ears and send its chills running up and down your backbdne and make you hug the fire you would. mighty quick wish you could feel again the glowing warmth of the California- sun." It does seem strande that •perpetualblessings can pall upon us. We must be deprived of blessings for a little while to appre- ciate them when we get them back. This fact is especiall true of the com- forts of our .city homes. • When the summer months drew near last spring the city house did not look ad attraetive to us as it is to -day. -We longed. for that • little cottage by the seashore:. or we longed to give up bausekeeping and have a change -of cooking and go and board at the sum- rner hotels. We .pictured the beauti- ful visions of sitting under the trees and hearing the bees hum. Our mouthp watered at the id -ea of eating the frash laid eggs and drinking the, rich mfik, thicker than our city cream. The trunks -Were packed; the tidttets were bought; the city house was de- sened. For what? Instead of the beautiful cottage by the sea,_ some of ue .exchanged our comfortable .city homes for a little bandbox of a house. It was so smell that we had to go out into the front yard to turn around, or else we might have 'done ourselves a physical injury. Or, instead of the great 'wide parlors of our city home, we were shut up. in two or three little rooms of a hotel, where it was so hot that, like the chickens on a sultry day, we had to keep our mouths open most of the time to catch our breath. Then the food. Rich milk? Fresh laid eggs? Delicious vegetables? Oh, no! The best of the farm products are Sent to the city markets, not to the country. We were crowded and jostled. We had to read our books in stiff backed, un- comfortable chairs, or sit down unper the trees, 'where we were always afraid of being sturig by the "yeilciiv jack4s," Instead oe our great big ' 0.ty cioe:ets we had to live for the most ParCl.n- trunks. And the beds! Oh„nty. he mattresses must have been made 'lea of ehtvings. And everywheie you turned you kept longing for the com- forts of your city home. Now, rny friends, we are back to our city homes. Lei_ us thank God for them. Let us thank God for the simple, wholesome meals we have. Let us thank laim for the sitting rooms, with their big, com- fortable chairs, and. for the bedrooms, where we have a place for 'everything and everything in its place. . tDo not talk to me of the sublime blessings of a summer watering place, but of the sublime blessings and comforts of our onm city homes. . ll We should also thank God for our city homes in a broad sense. What the gold setting is to - the precious SllOrle, the halls, the walls, the fire- places, the bedrooms, the 'sitting and dining rooms and the parlors are to the family jewels we call our, wives, oar husbands, our fathers and mothers and children and brothers and sisters. 'Ilhere is an old motto which we often liar upon the street, "What is home Without a mother?" We sometimes hear it flippantly spoken. But I not , Only ask this question in a reverential sense, but I ask the same kind of a question in a broader .sense. I ask, "What would home be without all the children and. the parents ' being gather- ed tpather under. the same roof?" In truth, it would not .be a home. Thus 0 -day, amid the blessings of our vaca- den compensa4ons, I thank God'. that one families are reunited. I thank GO. that'. father sits at one end of the table and' that mother sits at the -other end ef the table and that all the chil- dren, from the biggest to the youndest, are lined up between, with the two pl4tces of honor next to the mother re - se ved for the two youngest in the family. - No;•there is not one missing. As you look about the long table at your Sun- datr dinner to -day you will find them all there. Many a day has passe'd since the first day of last July that you would have given a good deal to have the whole family about you, as you have this Sabbath morning, In the first place, no sooner did the schools close last summer than the children wesit every whither. One of your boys went camping, ;erre of your daughters weet to visit a' school . friend in the eaSt or on the ranch, your wife had to take the sick child down to the sea- shore, You as the husband and father w re away for some time on a business tr p, a.nd when you returned you had to spend most of your time in the city. -Yalu snatched. your Sundays off and a , few days here and there to go to the country, but for • the most part you were alone. Now the fa -telly is reunite ed. Schools have opened. The boys Can Eat Anything Nowa How many Dyspeptics can say that ? Or perhaps you are dyspeptic and don't know it. Have you any of these symptoms? ITOR Dear Motlfer 1 Variable appetite, a faint gnsewing feel- ing at the pit of the stomach, unsatisfied hunger, a loathing of food, rising and souring of food, a painful load at the pit of the stomach, constipation, or are you gloomy and miserable? Then you are a dyspeptic. The cure is careful diet; s.void stimulants and narcotics, do not drink at meals, keep regular habits, and regulate the stomach and bowels with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, Nature's specific for Dyspepsia. Miss Laura Chicoine, Belle Anse, Que., says of its wonderful curative powers :— " Last winter I was very thin, and was fast losing flesh owing teethe run-down state of my system. I suffered from. Dyspepsia, lOss of appetite and bad blood. I tried everythieg I could get, but to no purpose • then finally started to use Burdock B4od Bitters. From the first day I felt the good effect of the medicine, and am now -feeling strong and well again. I can eat anything now without any ill alter -effects. It gives me gauaapleasure to recommend Burdock 131(e‘d Bitters, for I feel it saved rues lifet" kez VA: - Your li e oneseara. a constant the in Fall an SVinter weather. They will catch cold. Do you know about Shiloh's Consumption Cure, the Lung Tonic, and whet it has done for so many ? it is said , to be the only reliable remedy for all diseases of the au passages M children. : it is absolutely harmless and pleasant to take. It is guaranteed to cure or your money insretri dedealerThs inmdicin The priece isesei25ci per bottle,rud: SHILOH] This remedy should be irs every house_0_101e. 1 1 norne again, safe and well. Thank God to -day for your reunited families! "Arleen! Amen" 1 can bear from cloa- ens of grateful lips as a great climax to this domestic thanksgiving. • Then, again, I want you to thank God that you have returned, to the Work et the store, or the factory, Or the office,' Let me see; how long -were you out in -the country? Two weeks? Three weeks? Ten pays? Oh, it does not matter much how Jong. I know one fact about you, and that is You were away long enough to know that the hardest Work a strong, healthy man ever has to do Is to learn, how to do nothing. 'When you left the city some months ago you went off in high hopes. "Nothing to clo; nothing to do," was your cangratulatory cry. The first night you went to bed in the country Yott sold to yourself: "Now I am going to stay in bed just as long as I -wish. am not going to get rep until II o'clock if I do not desire." Did you stay in bed until 11 °Week? Oh, no. You arose at your regular time. Old habits caanot be broken in day. ' Then attter a few. fishing trips and a few,, rnowittrain climbs you began to grow restless. You wanted to get babes to work. Then, if I mistake not, it has been your good fortune eurire this va- cation„ to be thrown with a few chron- ically unhappy men. Unhappy because they have nothing to do, Perhaps on account of inherited wealth or from the fact that they have made money they retired from business t� have a good time, What a: miserable mistake they have made. Instead of being hap- py with nothing to do, you halve found that they are the most unhappy of men. They spend most of their time in playing nurse girl -or -picking up pins or in finding fault with/ their children or in making the lives of their wives as -miserable as their own. The simple fact is a full-blooded man like you has no business loafing around the house with nothing, to do. If you loiter about the house thus you will degenerate in- to nothing but a first-class "fusser" and a genuine masculine nuisance. You know that you never felt happier than • 'When you boarded the street car the other day and started for the store. In my time I have met hundreds of healthy' men who had retired from bustiness because they , had amassed a competency. I never envied one of them. I have always thanked God, first, that he has given me health; sec- ondly, that he has compelled ma to work. Thank God to -day that you have been able to off the inactivities of a vacation and have been compelled to go back to the daily treadmills of man- ual and. mental toil. The financial struggles of life not only earn bread for our children, but also -unlimited joys for our own healthful, physical and mental existence. Then again, I gladly welcome you back as worshipers to your own church pew. You know as well as I know that most of- the good we get from a goepel sermon is due not so much to the in- trinsic worth and to the brilliancy of the sermon as to the spiritual prepara- tions we make at home for the recep- tion of the Bread of Life. This Sab- bath. day, an a Christian home, you awoke in a spiritual atmosphere. You did not see any fishing poles. You did not see the carriages being driven up for the long mountain rides. 'You did not see the pleasure parties starting out for a yachting trip. You arose in the spirit of prayer. After breakfast you gathered the children about the family altar. Then before you started for Sunday sahool you all knelt. Then you uttered a prayer like this: "0 God, like Enoch, may we walk with thee this day. Be -with ; our Sunday school. Give the teachers power to expound thy word. Give the scholars receptive hearts to listen to thy lessons. And 0 Father, thou great and omnip- otent King, be with our pastor. He is one 'of us. May we lif 1 up his arms. May he to -day be a man with mighty power for God. May just the right word be spoken which will bring down a shower of blessings to our hearts." .re not those prayers having re- sults? Why, friends, as I speak this .morning I feel a strange influence lift- ing me up. That influence, oh, my people, comes front the prayers of the family altars of my church. That power comes from the prayers of my people here in this church home, pray- ing for me. That power comes from the fact that when you started for church you and your households were In a praying atmosphere. It is hard, awfully hard, to make the necessary spiritual preparations for a Sunday service when we are out in the country in a worldly slimmer hotel. I con- gratulate you that you have been able to start this holy Sabbath in the right way upon your knees before your fam- ily altars. • Then I . also congratulate the home - comers 'because you have come back to your opportunities of religious work as well as to your temporal work and to your church worship. A vacation from the Store invariably means a va— cation from church labors and church work. You may have attended the church, servtices, but you went to church simply as worshipers and not as workere. .And, my friends, true Christianity is not developed simply by bending the knee in prayer, but in laboring in God's vineyard. . The vineyards of Christ's great chy are now. ripe for the plucking.. You Sunday school class is ready to wel- come you back. The boys and the girls ought all to be brought into the Chris- tian life this winter. The missionary society needs building up as never be- fore. You must go to work there this winter. You only gave half-hearted service last year. You must do bettef this year. The young people's mee:Inge need reinforcement as never before. All these opportunities' of gospel work are opening to you. Oh, I weleome yie back not simply to worship, but n consecrated labor in God's vineyards and in God's great harvest fielde, Thus, *wherever I look, I find the . re- sults of our vac tione are blessed. Horne, store,. .church, with theiromercies. N nere; the year will soon -be gone. Let us eonseerete ourselves and our church and our Sunday schools and our praye er meetings and Our missionary socie- ties to leis dear service as never be- fore. Let us bow our heads as we say: "Lord, take -this pulpit and taltes, these Pews and take us all into ehy keeping, and for the work of thy grace may this church year be the best year of our lives. When the vacations- of next year come around, may we go forth into the mountains or down by the seashore, feeling that we have not worked in vain. And if during the year some of us will leaire, not for the vaeations of earth, but for the triumphs of heaven, may thoee of rus -who ,go carry the news heavenward that the dear old church to which we belong is doing a work which 111 gladden the hearts of angels and make the, celes- tial welkin ring with never ending joy, And all these results we ask in the power of the 1101Y Spirit, who alone can make our gospel consecration r' triumph; possible. For Jesus' ea S'e we again make the earnest rule era Amen arra amen," • For a Weak Diaeatiatl. No medicine pan 'replace food, but Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets will ;help eroa W digest yew feed. It is mot the quantity of foo'd taken levet gives strength and vigor tsi ethe eystiems bat the amount' digested and assimilated. If troub- led webh a, weak digestion, (Icon fail to give these Talelets a 'trial. Thousands have been benefited -by their use. 'They only reset a quar- ter. l'or stale; ',13y Afeex,Wasaeajae ag- gist, Seefortle. a a id g11s have to come back, to their )oks.- The many dangers . .df travel e past Say what you wIIl,you Wor- ried a great. -deal about that boy of yours using that ran. Yes: You. , ete'ee Canada. —A fire en teee Ratbesun lumber eserds, at Gasevetehterst, destroyed! over' seven feet ote lumber and several dwelling ;houses. —A file tin St. Thomas on Satter.: day did eteroage bhe emoitent of $13,000. -Bowlase Brost. Sky ;goods, weee, the plrincipal suiferers. _:James Evans; of Hammond, meter Bosockviele, feel Vora 'the roof oe his ham. la !distance of 60 fleet, a- lighting on a pile of teires. His Up- per end lower -jaws were beeken, and ese !also sustained numerous in- ternal injuries. —Joeeple leobleletson, of Otiffoirel, Ont., fele from a Area COT in Lon- don, the other day, receiving suela ,injueles that be died in a few- hours. He was in the eity cin business; He stepped ,oef the street car before it &twilled, 'and slipped san the pave- ment . —Lona Gilt, a bright' ' of 'eight eyeare, if Tirockvilee,etraes- ed ;from ;home one day last, week and. the Most diligent searelh find her. ¶1Th rernairts ware dis- covered on Tuesday lal. a -bush ebont two miles trent town. If is sup-- posed sihie tgot lost in the woods and becoming exhausted, bay down and died from coed and exposuret —While driving tin Hamieben on Moneay leveeing east, Mr. Edwin ST. Dynes, a meichteat of Quebec, who wes visiting lin the city, lead his A- bide struck by an electric *Garr and was thrown out lend. bad his leg flooklen. Miss Dotty N,aeht a young lady of Obit it who; was in the trig with; 'him, was keeled. —Sperks from a elireshing ma- chene engine set' fire to e. straw stack on Ole tam of E. L. Sather -I lend, nea'r eeennin,gten, Oxford can- tee Satarday afternoon, and thine asei hars togethier ;with their °entente, were burned to tehe ground. Murtray 'brothers, tlhle tenants, whio were wotking ta'rm, host the entire seeson's erep. —Hon. Mr. Monteith, Minister of Age la u it u.re, who has recee tIly re- funn'ed from the Rainy River dis- trict, ears the 'Government wiill once dispolse of the, Government farm set D'ryden as be does net con - eider it of sufficeent advaertaee tes the eettisers to 'compensate for 'else cost of I mulling it. Dryden, Mr. Monteith; eays, is lone of the most progressivie settlements the eves' vis- ited.I _elen Mauch, a -red 22 years, wihose father rives a Pe te rsb ter er, in* WaterboO county, eix metes fwtest ef Berlin, was tatailly shot at a wed- ding charivari about eight miles west af New Hambueg, Omit 'nine o'eleek lost Weelialesday evening. There were 100 guest at the wedding of L,avina Waagesber be Charles, Hee,- bottle., of -Waterloo, ,aeskt about fif t.y others participated in a dbaeliveri, emit earrying firearms. In the in- discriminate firing, young Hatuoh NVIaS Shot and kild letnetantly. —Attihe tale assizes at Conn -Wail - lest week e mart neeneel. John Leiz- ert WP s found guilty Of nuenslughe - er and was sententied by justice Street to six rnentihs in the, COM - Men jail. On May 1.3 )of -ye,ar, , Leizert, while under the ineleence of liquor, -arrived at bhe 'home ot .Trames Dundas connty, and gave.abottle of evshiakey, which ihe enrried.„ to Ohl& 'three ti.ttJIe thild- ;ten of the Fars -ell fa.mily, egad 6, 10 and 12 years. It Wats, sthown en the evidec ne that the liquor was 'fre- quently baleen ins t he FaTrifil 'home, and that ,the children 'hadpuirtA-en of it. Evidence was ads° 'given to the efflect that e he eIdesti boy bad. asked LeizeIrt for drink. Teeizert left the placte, 'ibut xreeeting Mrs. Far nettle ried wilb hiOT, alid they found. two of the children very 111. Some of the ;neighbors atbered in and Lleizert, sobered by the situation went for Dr. Ferrier, lo,t. South Mountain, who found the youngest ichild in a dyinig condition. Despite the (lector's efforts the child died,. The sentence seems a eery sight one for st.e. serious an offence, the only extenuateng •eirouanstanee being that the. offender WAS drunk. - 11 surround me: w, my friend with ith these mighty pportuniti es of Christian usef ulness and Chilettan growth surrounding us, we are stand- ing upon the threshold of a new chureli year, . What are we going to clo with it? Shall the 'church year of itlOti and 1906 be a mighty year for spiritual ret - sults in our lives.? The year is now OCTOBER 41 01 It Is So Easy to Cure Yourself. CONST1PAT Vrttitesetives will do it—surely and quickly. We say io— people you may know who have been cured of biliousness headaches an constipation. Here is the experience of one who tried these wonderfttl. Fruit Liver Tablets:— is striae -fives are perfect for constipated persons. They are easy and nem% action and leave no unpleasant after-effeets. I have recommended theta to my friends... A. 1S0B13, Amherst, N.& ar or Fruit laver Tab ese. abox. Atilt -nests. Manufactured by Fr a-tives Litnited, • = n vir r e ist a solid e roof roo -buildi house. romplet cement, ere—es, eleeM Beei ieut to any aell laud tell us if 3 dle Pater; dy Roofing PATERSON; The thermometer on the Pandbra range O. means precisely i:, ac- curacy to the coo.. what the square and /1.;mpass mean to the craftsman.Without the tquare and compass- thrl draftsman would have to work en- tirely by guess, jusras you do without an ac- -curate and reliable thermometer on .your oven. The Pandora. thermometer reduces cooking to - an exact science. You know precisely how much heat you have and what it will do in a given time. is one of the small things which makes the andora so much different and better than -common ranges. VETE •mapassael..m.e. pee,T SBIEVE, V. TeteriperyCol ele emitted. Ce - veeetette, Ver nd etteidence A Di ecesit's cl MARSDEN V. j - Ward° Veterint the liedleel Cellege. Treats most =Om *realty. rear,. swarth evert-00A 0 0 0 elfi teen tw *Apra Main etreete Se OTAMBraDi wn boy k , end I; k of Commie tOflee leeapolsoarassers and Factories a London, Toronto, )lorstre 'Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, N.B., Hamilton 4 A msott .11-433 1 eto., Goderic E. I CH DEe •""fr".1 —A very unusual, eveset, showing the ,constaney of women, lea niece Torlonto jesa.ei a few days trgo. George Brown, avrho was awaiting transfer to the Central Prison, to serve twelve moratbs for theft, was matried itt the jail oorailder to Amy Ohappel, who was keeping com- pany with 'him at the time of hie arreet. She never 'wavered in her belief that 'he was innocent, and the nuptials -were brou.ght about ltearough the instrumentality of Staff -Inspector "Arohibald. edise Oho.ppel visited the eati daily, and from tihe first urged t e onions, to which the authorities ebnallty gon - wanted. The jail, chaplaiin performed the cer emiony. Reeve admi bed ba v - Lae, stolen .a bank dep;oeit of $836 from his empio'yers, ,groeeles, of Tor- onto. He was areested. at Sarnia. ter ehe cerenaeny the maple part - d in good spirits at the end of the jail corridler, the young wife pre- mising to attend at the esrieein -each vatting day. Mrs. Brown teexte Toners:Me from Bezels and BTkevirle1 be- longed- to' Satelt Ste. Marie. The 'newly wedded couplle have postpon- ed ebeir honeymoon Wail, after the zetease, or the husband. E. A. LA TIMER Sole Agent, Seaforth. 1 (''.4S: 4,4'0 I Pr4t_iois_...ift 1 ereere reattrert fit'ssAV-1 rat' Thee - how we do it. Send postal for a copy. Good School' Good Students Good Positions Practically every office in the Twin Citereas in it a Berlin Business College Student. s We have applications nearlyevety day for office help. When a bright student takes a course with us he is practically certain of a positioan. -i.Ve have a. largeschool, splCdicity equipped, with an unusually capable 'stair of instructors. Our large, illustrated catalogu, tells what wedefor our students and Enter at any time. ta. W. D. ELME!, Prim Ilya. One of the famous Federated Colleges. JaWastaxicateggnea,-famaarxe-sta. Keep them in the house. Take one when you feel bil- ious or dizzy. They act d' rectiy on the Iiver.Ustr. Want your moustache or beard BUCKINGHAM'S fl abeautiful breicrn er richblack? Use Inert 17MM 01.0001ZILAMALr.gLa,k00../TAISMAS it Special Furniture Sale FOR THE NEXT 30 DAYt We will give a large discount on on all Furniture. This is au opportti that shrewd bryers cannot afford to miss. Our stock is large, Don't ra call and secure the bargains that will be offered. at this big discount sale. 171\1-1DMITITMTG-. nomptly attended to night or day. BROADFOOTI BOX & C SU.A...M"O= - S. T. HOLMES, Manager. s Ladiee—If emu apprecisee the added charm and the younger appearance ientt0t face by having beautiful hair, do not fail to see the grand assortment of Switches; Bang), Pompadours, Wavy fronts and wigs, which Prof. Dorenwend will have ert him- Consultations entirely free andelemoustrations given regarding these beattelei conceptions in nataral hair. Gentlemen who are Bald, 8',,.,, 44,....i, though you are bald or partially so you OM Prof. Dorenwend Of Toronto. The Grea'test Hair Goods Artist in America . . Is Coming To Soafortl Commercial Flotei, Wednes day, October regal* your former appearance by wearing Dorenwend's Wigs and Toupee!. They are wale to match any shade of hair. They are a protection to the head and a cure for ehroreo cold in the bead and catarrh. They are perfectly fitted to the head and bear no tree! of Artificiality. Prof. Dorenwend will take measuremente and demonstrate the mere& 1 of his wigs. Don't forget the day and date. DR. I DEN!' rene ed -from-4 sew -offices, 436 Yt Dr. do] Office end Bel Rhone 78 -DEC,HL raduate. of UtilVett 415e. meenleer of -CI pone of 0nterie ; nlolB1booi, elle s1, Lr den, Enter 'Jan. Engin& ee, Main Street., f * isnewered Ott. F. A SM A sad Beaten( at demote Term tsr for the Dour R& SCC rsixsioris.) .0h Street, -opi gradna ontarl Core -hone --- etdnttit Te a Physi AUC AS BROW Ceenntiee of Z 411eCampbell'o ire X.KPOoltOk. Can gamin AMES FG. Mail( lest tonnty of I tithe (mete* steed, Gram "tot te Cone *sehtit attention. VCTIONKLRII, enetioceer c`stila. Being a p eederstanding th placeo Vitargee my. All ord Isot 4b,Concee ed 0V06 eOrge shmes ; thezzas IPPen .eh4. Strati,. B .sielnee enaurnbag P- e • Geese deearv Partite Ze Fitt ether business, ealeeellcatiees us se /flair sespectiv ARRIA MON R&M WITN