The Huron Expositor, 1906-01-05, Page 60
A T 5, Con
eolith% village of Con 0 eon, act-
teeeon a ire,
res, all
under celtivation except, ghoul here are
'
• 5 acres of bush e batik barn, good, stone found, -
tion,hot a rosseelon ghee on mettle ; MAN WILL GIVE UP ALL HIS POS.
7th next.
ot Geo. Hall 1 i t present in the oemmation 1 -
SESSIONT
. i Roland Snell, proprietor: S O SAVE IT.
For terther t.icnIare apply to J. M. BEST, 13ar- 0
Aster to. eaf rth , • ; 19E434
DESIRABLE PROP - TY FOIL SALE,—That
,
-1, 28 acre faral on lee $0, Careeesion 1, WKS -
lop, containteg a fireteoltees hokum Witie ail modern
improvement, a good bare With etabling for 12 head
of .took, plenty of room fer grainned hay. A No. 1
hoe house, good implement shoe, carriage house and -
PIE Pen, %Rood wens convenient to hotelo and barn
a small orotund containing a geodassOrtment tektite,
all enclosed by the best reotiern knees and a, most
desirebIe location for ached privilegeo., • For -hirthee
perdoulars apply on the 4premises or address D. J,
AITOBIESehN, Elmfortb. 1086-tt
mtellei FOR EALB.—F r sale, Lot 0, Concession re
Stanley, containing 100 aeres, 20 acres buebethe
remainder is well fenwd, well underdmined and in a
good stated mativation. There is= a emme house
stud bank barn with done stabling and ether good
buildings. Tbere is an orehard of &oleo fruit and
never failing seeing of water convenient to the build -
bap. There go 11 =mot fall wheat in and all the
fall plowing done. It le Within four mites of Bruce -
field sMtiort and will be sold cheap and ma easytenne.
Apply on the premises or to Brueefield la O. Jolla
CHAPMAN. 198341
'VARA{ FOR El-ATM.—For sale, Lot 24, Conee,ssion 2,
tle Stanley, containing 100 acres. Ninety acres are
releared and in a geed stet* of cultivadon ; there are
10 aeres of good him/wood bush. The fame is all
well underehnined and well fenced. There is a two'
storey brick house with slate roof, a lirst-chtes farm
!epee. Bank barn, 401t, et 801 t., cement silo, pigpen,
eltivIng 'house; There are two never -failing wells,
and anaere of orchard and smell fruit. Thi excellent
farm is three miles from: limeefield and See mites
from Moue with good gTo,yel rooele. For further
-attendees apply on the p melees or addressALBERT
OTT, (Minton P. O. 3984-tf
pROFITABLE elm lend
money otteinforoved qoeiter 'seotioee of 160'
sores ea* t froui 8 to 10 per mt. per annum,
• Only firstrnortges tee,. Ample necurity dem
TerrenseTielee System ie perfect. : From -$800 up
terthileattonfamm worth -from $1.,0(Ye 0=0,000.
For ftwaleereeereleuleaseinite to me. J. A. JAOR.
SON, Berrleter, etc., Ponolne Alberta. 195941
-
'IRM FOR SALEORTO IIENT.—For "eale or
,Re Tent let eti. S00.4 2, ti. K. TU00,101014
containing 100 acme edi Cleared exoept about five
acres of good hardwood, All -underdminid, wefl
fetreed eed in a good Mete of aultleation. -A ,good
brick hem and two beeneone with atone evabliog
underneath. Plenty of geed water end e toot' bear-
ing orchard. This farm is woll elepted for'elther
stook or grain, About Midway between *OM*
and ainton, Apply on the premises, or Seeder*
le, D. H. TOWNSEND., Proprietor. 19424
flO
AND LOTS FOR tra.Lle.—For sale, brick
use and 2 lois in Seatorth. One lot foes'
on No Saha Street end the other on West. Wit -
thin /..; The hati_40 { is a menefortible .brick
eotteg and eonlains 8 bedroiome, -dining room.. sit-
ting And kitchen, with good miller under the
whole house. Hard au& soft water in ehe house.
!team is alma -good steble and driving abed. All
Mode of fruit an kite Apply to J. le ALLAN,
toondiabaroeor t.o CI. IC ATKINSON, &Worth.
1906x411
DARN AND MILL PROPERTY FOR SALE.—
[' For sale the old Bell' Firm and Mill Property,
on the London road, Tuckersmitb, qeeeetly emu•
pied by the late John MoNevin. There are 100
acres, ell cleared but about four sores. Gsod
buildings end the farm weel einderdreitned and in a
high titatfi of cultivation, all seeded to graw except
about BO acres. Also the grist awl SIIM mill prop.
erty on theism, lb Is within -half a mile of Oven(
station and 2 miles erom 'Hensel' an& a good bust+
netts bee abesere been done et the mill. The farm
and mill property will besold together or separate.
ly to suit pueofteeser. Terms easy. Apply to
. DAVID C. MeLEAN, Inmate 19684f
-
"CURIE FOR SALF±,Norith half of Lot 12, • Oen-
en oessienn. Morrie, containing -100 sores, situated
• en the eravel road, four and a leaf miles west of
Brussels and four miles from Belgrave. There are
SO awes dewed? well drained, -Seated And la a
ood state of cultivation, at present fouled down.
he remaining 20 mews is 'covered with excellent
timber, There is a gone item house's with atone
,. cellar, god frame barn with stone stabling under-.
nestle, a good bating oroh Meted an atiundettee of
good water. finere is a oh rob and o, posh office
within half a mile ani a selmel within three quar-
terof a mita. For furtree -partfettlard apply to
MRS. B. MULLIS, lianI.as% 10613x3tf
G001) FARB Fnit SALE—Farnt for sale, Lot 26,
on the Bed emcee:00o of Tuckersmitio, con.
teining leo acres, = being sil seeeed and pestered.
There are, on the premises, two goodbarns, ene 40
x60, with !tone stabling uoderneath and cement
Some. the other bare 80 x 84. with drive shed, stone
tabling for pigs and hens rted a corn fore tble frame
eouse with Wine Mier and eement neer& neve(
failing spring near the barn and good well at the
home. There are ebone fievon acres of busb, the
rest in a good etude of oultivetioo, well underdmin.
ed with tile and well emcee, good °where. It Is
situated wishin two and a hell miles of 13rucefield
and six and a half miles front Seeforth and the same
from Heneall. This farm will b a sold on reesoneble
tame, as the proprietor is %cling We t. For, further
particulars apply to Fe j. 'CALDWELL, Sex 83,
Brueefield P. O., Ontario. = 1979-tf
Going to Seli
Tho West hell of notion 2e, Township B. tanee
aleosthe South East quarter of Section Bee
Bengali% and the North Beet quarter of Sootier; 27,
Itstreee19,1Manitoba. On the fleet named pelmet
-there aroe.66 acres br mia, three.roemed frame
dwelling , sod stable, a good Well and 26 *acres of
pasture. On the 2nd wad there are 125 acme
broken, eefreroehonee tint oost 3300 a leg AIWA
and about jO aeres f snood for pasture. This prop-
erty is within three miles of the towe of Ninge, Le
the far famed Turtle Mot:0Mo dietriet and afferde
amen desireble opportunity to perties desiring
ta lento in the very garden of Stenitoba. It is wall
edeptee to nexed terming end will be cold seperat
Ay or in one p areel, Price $10,000, one-half cash
end the:Wince oe time et 6 per eent. -Far futoer
particulars address
THOMAS, JOHNSTON, •
I978x12 Box 46, Belesevain, !Manitoba
cook's Cotton Root Compound.
Ladies' Favorite
Is the only safe, reliable
regalator on which woman
can depend -"In the hour
and time Of need."
Prepared. in two degreesof
Strength. No. 1 and. No. 2.
No. 1.—Vor ordioary cases
.is by far the ;blest dollar
-medicine known,
vo. 2—For special eases -10 ilegrees4
atroneer—three &Maces per box.
Locties--etek ; your druggist for Cooler(
tottoni Root vorrepound. Take no other'
as olltpilla mixtures and imitations are
dangereuas NO. le and No. 2 Etre sold and
.recoramended ,by all druggists in the Do-.
'online/1_ of Canada. Mailed to ahy address•
On'reeelpt efepriee and four 2 -cent postage
- eleamP134 Whe Cook Company, .
Windsor; One.
,1
For tale by 0. gtberhart,i J. S. Bob.
eats, I. V. Fear, and. Alex. Wilson,
tioefortla -
rho cKU1opMutual 11.11.1
Insurance Company,
FARM AND ISOLATED TOWS
PROPERTY ONLY INSURED
moaselawaeleoeut
011101111.
J. B.Mclean, Preteens, Itipmi la 0. I Thomas
ease e eietteeresident, Brucenele P. 0,; Thomas Z.
Hays, Secoetreme. Seeforth P. 0.,
DIRICIORS.
Willlatt3 Marley &morel I John G. thin% Win.
SIVOP I George Dale, Seaforth Jelon Sonneweis,
Dublin; UMW Evans, Ileeeinvood ; John 'Watt.
Dewlook * Thermo Framr, Brueetleld ; Jahn B. Mo
Lem, Fel6en ; ;Imes Connolly, Clinton.
AMMO.
ache Smith. Ilarlook E. aleohley, Seaforth
mile* Dreaming Egettondrille 1 3.W. Teo, Holmes
13.; George Needle mad John 0. ilorriems,
alters
McKillop Directory for ,1905,
DANIEL .11A.NLEV, ROM), Beaelerrood P. O.
M. ROWLAND. Counoillorielton. P. O.
F Meel
feAID. Councillor, Si.t. Ceiumben P. O. '
CHAReE4 LITTLE, ClounellI3r, Winthrop P, O.
JOHN M. GOVENLOOK, CouncillortiVinthrop P.
MICHAEL muaurg Clerk, Wiuthrop le 0.
DAVID M. 1e038. Treasurer, Winthrop P. 0.
SOLOMON S. file eldNON, J. P. Sanitary Inapectot
Win* op P. O.
Annual Meetings
Tee Animetmeetme of the inumbere ef the Mc-
Rillop Mutual Fire Insurance Cooweny veil be held
in the Town Hale Sereforth, on Friday, January little
1000, at one &dock p, m., for the purpose of -receiv-
ing the Annual Reports and the Election of Three
Direetors and other businees ter the good and wel-
fare of the company. The retiritee directors are 3.13.
elefeeen, Seaforth P. 0. Thos, Fraser, Brucetleld
P.O. and Wm. Chesney, igmondvilie P. 0., who are
elIgeble for re-eiection.
etu0s, E. PAYS, Secretary.
J. B. MoLEAN, Freeident 1985-3
WINO LIPp OVER AGAIN
Not thri`,Best Way to Ease the Disco!).
tent of the Hetman Heart — Last
Sermon on Last Sunday of the Year
Furnishes Dr. Talmage With Food
For Fictrospeot of Years That Are
Gone.
Entered aceording to Act of Parliament of Caned*,
in the year tete. by Frederick Diver, of Toronto,
at the Department of Agriculture, Ottawa.
Los Angeles, Cal., Dec. 81.—In this
sermon at, the elose of the old year
the preacher deals with, the discontent
in the human heart, eybich often in-
spires the -wish that we relight live, life
eeteet. again. The text is Job Be 4, "All
that a reran bath will he give for his
life." '
This 'question .naturally arises on
this last Sunday of the year: "Would/
we nice to -live our lives over again?
Would We like to have the year of
1905 again greet us in the swaddling
.clothes of a new-born babe? :Would
we like to make the plea of the old
poet, when in rhyme he sang thee
now -familiar lines:
Baokward, turn backward, oh, time in
your night!
Make me a child again just for to..
night. . • -
Some of us frankly admit that we
would like to live our past years over
again. Others Just, per frankly state
that they do not SO desire Benjamin
Franklin belonged to the first group.
In one of his letters to his son/he Wrote.
thus: "I should have no objeetion to a
repetition of my life from its begin-
ning, only asking the lvantages au-
thors have -in a second edition to cor-
rect some faults /of the first So I
might, besides correcting the faults,
change, some sinister accidents and
events Of it far others more,favorable.
But, though this were cleated, I should
still -accept the offer." But perhaps
Benjamin Franklin would not have
Written thus if he had taken all the
possibilities into aceount I WoUld
like to show you in this sermon that
God's way of giving enter one earthly
life to One man is the best way. .May
God help us to -day as weevil_ this last
Sunday of the., year, take a retrospect
of tile years that are one
No manin the first'iplace, could take
the jovetiey of life rietier again unless
he took with it the !dangers that he
escaped in his first experience, whgch
miglit be fatal to hire in his second,
nor could he be sure of achieving again
the successes that E he\ had before. X,
have been told that *hen gold was
discovered in California every boat in
New .York harbor 'that c,euld be
ought or rented was drafted into
he service ‘, to carry to the Western
Shores those who were possessed bY
thegold fovea So anxious were•men
to dig in California hills that they
were ready to risk their lives in any
Wel hulk, Some three or four hundred'
crazy crafts 4n tlie year 1850 1 rounded
Cape Horn. Sorne of these tubs were
not fit to sail across Lake Michigan ou
a stmuner da3r. One, 1 haver been told,
was nothing but a ferryboat. Bttt,
strange to say, all those cranky boats
reached California in safety., Not oree
was wreaked that year. Many an iron
boat with screw propeller has since
been destroyed upon the dangerous
rocks .of South America. But during
the first year of the California.. gold
-
fever not.one boat was lost on the
voyage. We know not how we ha,ve
weathered the financial and the do-
rn?sti.,c storms, but we have. We know
only too weU how' fierce the cyclones
have blown off our Cape Horns. But,
having weathered them once and real-
ized what the dangers were, we have
grave doubts whether -we should ever
be able to weather them again,
Do you not remembe r that awful
etruggle you liadeto gee. established in
business? Night after night you used
to walk the floor. Then, when you
just got,a foothold and things seemed
to be comlng your way, do yoa not
remember those years of panic and
hard thnee? Would you like to live
those years over again? Your
busi-
nss partner broke down at that time
with nervous prostration. He. died hi
an insane asylum. Your awn brain
was almost crazed. Your hair is white
to -day from those trials. Would' you
like to live Vieth -over again? How
do you know you would come through
them next time as succeesfully as you
have done? You know that it seemed
a mere chance that. your fother'e old
friend came to your rescae at. that
time or that oil was dipeoVered upon
your farm land, which land, you. could
ow is
our Cold?
Every place you go you hear the same
question asked.
Do you know that there is nothing 130
dangerous as a neglected cold? s
DOyou know that a, neglected cold will
tai
rn nto Chrorde Bronchitis, Pneumonia,
disgusting Catarrh and the most deadly of
all, the White Plague," Consumption.
Merle( a hie history would read different
oa3the first appearance of a cough, it
had Oen remedied with
Re...Wood s
Norway
Pine Syrup
Thirwonclerful eough and eold medicine
contains all those very pine principles
which make the pine woods so valuable in
the treatment of lung affections.
Combined with this are Wild Cher
Bark and the soothing, keeling and e
peatorant properties of other pectoral
herbs and barks.
For Coughs Colds, Bronchitis Pain in
the Chest, Asthma,. Croup, Whooping
Cough, Hoarseness er any affection of the
Throat or Lung& You will find a, sure
cure in Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. ,
Mrs. C. N.Loome ,r Berwiek, N.S.,
Writes: "I have used Dr. Wood's Norway
,Piee Syrup for coughs and colds, and have
always found it to give instant relief. I
also revuemended it to one . of my neigh-
-bors'and she was more that pleased with
the resulte."
e•Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrep 25 eta,.
per bottle at all dealers. Put up in yellow
wrapper, and three .pine trees the trade
mark. Refuse substrtneee. There is only
o_ne...7.7o0orlatz Fine .0
,ae Syrup and that vac 1
Di
ruinsago
ete ilnetitElie tetlefe-D. -
PAID8Y
YkNONTO.ONT PERFECTLY
*ANY PERIION VOIOCAN isiROVItTgAt FRE P008 eetnafetefung ALLut.
leflevettene,teotovweleiggele,°":,,-7' AtteitOnIzeo TO RETURN PURCHASE te o Hee
=mete s 4K,uffieusoricAts To ANYON EIDJNO eAtsee roe cetePLA114?.,
LESS LABOUR
GREATER COMFORT
Your
140111011
-Refunded
be the dealer
&ern whom
you buy Sun-
light Soap if
you find apy
cause fo'r
complaint.
,,Sunlight Soiip is better
,
tlhan other soaps, but is
( . *
hest' when used in the
qv
Sunlight ii ay'.
5c. Buy it and folloi directions.
$5,000
reward will
be paid to any
portion w ho
proves that
StedightSoap
emitter:a any
injurious
ahead:10s or
any form of
adulteration,
5.
Lower Brotlimis Limitd,Toroatto
never give merely _before and which
land you were almost tempted to let
go .to 'liquidate the taxes. Would yo
hike to be caught again in, that rail-
road accident? Perhaps you' were on
a train that was wrecked, itt which
many passengers were crushed or rnle•-•
Mated. You do not know how it 'hap-
pened, You were sitting in theecar
reading. quddenly the engine gave a
shriek; the brakes were jammed hard
down. Then you awoke itt a dazed
condition. You heard groanings and
prayers being uttered all about you.
You escaped, like job; by the skin Of
your teeth. The man who sat within
three feet Of you was dead "Or, what
is worse, Physically mangled for life.
If y013. 4ad :to go through that aceident
again, would you be physically well
and whole as you are to -day? Oh, no!
Most of ns do not wish j•te run again
the risks we ran during mir pa.st lives,
Fiaaneial rielts, dorneettle rtsks, physi-
cal risks! They nearlY destroyed ns.
We could not b.ure that we should
-have the same chances for, success
over again if we had to meet, the
same dangers. ,Most of -our friends
who have been destroyed were wreck-
ed bys. chance trivial as a hair, Most
of us, if not all of us, on the other
hand, have been saved by that turning
ef a. hair, Almost were We destroyed,
btit almost was not quite! enough to
innihilake us.
a '
We fear to meet our pant financial
and physical and domestic dangers
agiten.lerkre should also tremble when
we look back upon our peat spiritual
temptations.)It is absurd for some of
US to say 114 Nre had our lives to live
over again We would do any different-
ly spiritually than we did in the days
that are gond. In all probability we
would do just the same as we did in
Ithe past if not worse. Why? Because
to -day, with all: our experiences and
vhcirtcomings, we are going ahead sin-
ning all the time.
'
Does knowledge about the tdietary
and gastronomic laws iTiake the nhYsi^
clan careful about Oat het, eats and
how he eats? Oh, no. -Doctors can
prescribe all right for their patients.
But they are proverbial iconoelasts at
all the shrines of health when they ap-
ply those -laws to their own tables,'
Their doctlne is, "De not eat as I do,
but eat as I say." Let a convention of
physicians assemble, ahd they will
have the most intellectual papers read
before them upon the proper treatment
of dyspepsia. Then they adjourn and
go to the table and eat twice as much.
as.they ,ought to eat a,n_d eat that une
masticated food in 'half the time they
ought to eat it, Then they will return
to their honies and have their meals
at irregular hours. The physiolan
weuld never let his dyspeptic patients
eat as he dos. Hee knows what he
ought to do, but he does it not: Now,
if we had to live out. lives over again
in all probability we would do in refer-
ence to temptation just as the average
physician does.in reference to his well
known gastronomic laws. We would
fall before temptation as he yields to
the temptatlon of the palate. And I for
one would be very much surprised if
we would turn out again spiritually as
well as we have dOne.
a
I force myself to this belief for a seI-
ond reason. We had but little exper
ence in the past. But we did—Iia,ve
some experience and knowledge of sin.
We did uot fall into'sin as -a trap is
sprung upon the unwary bird. We
walked straight over the precipice of
sin with our eyes wide open. For
many years you Were addicted to
drink. You have been in the past a
drunkard. You are a refor•med one
now., You know all the miseries and
hoirdrs of a drunkard's life. But tell,
me about your first glass. Did you not
have just as much a horror of liquor
then as you do now? Did you not lie
awake all night long, feeling that fiery
liquor burning its way down your
throat and into your heart after your
first drink? Yet did that experience
lead you to forswear drink? Did you
not return -to your tempter again and
again? You have been a desecrater of.
the Sabbath day. You can see the aw-
ful results of what it. godless Sabbath
is upon your present life Why do you
not make Sunday a; holy day? Didlathe
Sin of a broken Sabbath ever appear to
you more beinous than when on the
first Sabbath you stayed away from
church and went with some sinful boys
picnicking in the woods? Ale Christ
was right when in the parable of Dives
and Lazarus he represented the rich
man in hell who had asked him to send
Lazarus back to earth to warn his five
brothers "lest they come into this plade
of torment" as receiving the answer
from Abraham, "If . they hear net
Moses and the prophets neither will
they be persuaded though one rose'
from the dead." If we_ deliberately
sinned when we tint went through life
we should surely deliberately sin if we
went through.life o second time. In all
probability if we had lire to live over
again we would not turn out spiritually,
as well as we have already dem.
Then consider another fact. If we
were going to live *ix? lives over again
We would have to change time. In-
stead of being /Seventy, sixty, fifty or
forty years of, age we would ho-ve to
become ten, twenty or thirty years of
age. What does that mean? Why, it
means when we call back our 'fathers
and mothers and, sisters and brothers
and run around, again as a curly -head -
B
ed child we would have to give -up our
wives and husbands and children and
grandchildren. Would, you like to do
that? Of course if- you Were a little,
girl of eleven yeas of age you could
not have a, husband ,and a lot of ba-
bies as you have now. Of course lf
you were a schoolboy you could not
have of couple of other schoolboys run-
. fling around and calling* you "papa!'
•and asking you what they 'should do.
Were. you happier when you were
young than you are now? doubt it
I doubt if the opportunity of being or-
dered Around by your teachers andby
your parents and by your elder broth-
ers and sisters were laid alongside of
you present opportunfties you would
say,- "Give me back my youth." I
think that you would say: "Let me
stay as ,I am. 1 -wouldSprefer to be a
man rather than a boy or' a wife and
a nuither rather than a, little child be-
ing put to sleep in a trundle bed."
We lovedand still do love our fa-
thers and mothers and sisters and
brothers But do we not also love and
cling to our wives and husbands and
children? We -seem to grow a bigger
baby about them every day. When we,
go away from home now we long to get
back, just as a little child cries for ita
mother How would you like to go
back to childhood and live ten, twenty
or thirty !years before you had the
Pleasure of domestie life that you
have now? Are you sure that you
would find a wife as wel adapted to
you as she who is now your companion
and. helper? You know hinie fa,ithfullY
she has clung to you. She is like a. sap-
ling..' She knows how to bend before
the angry tOrnadoes; but, nue the sap-
ling, she never loses her anchorage.
When the storm of anger subsides she
rights herself and compels you to do
the same I do not believe there is
another woman in ail the world who is
more 'fitted to be the companion ot
your life than she has been. If I were
you I would not ask to go back to
childhood and ;risk losing her. It was
hard enough in the beginning to win
her. All her school friends were amaz-
ed to see her choose you when, from
a worldly standpoint, so many suitors
had laid siege to her heart and hand.
Then the' babies! Itow could we give
them up, even for a. little while? I
onee read of a little girl who, with her
brother, was watching a knife grinder
sharpening some scissors. Her father,
*quite nearsighted and deaf, turned to
the boy and said: "My son, here is
some money. Ask the organ grinder
to play another tune." With that the
boy began to laugh. His sister turned
upon him a look of sharp rebuke as
she answered, "Yes, father, we will."
Then she turned and gave the organ
grinder another pair of scissors to
sharpen, and. the nearsighted and dear
father turned smilingly away, think-
ing he had made his children, happy,
whereas, in feet, it was the daughter
Whe had made the father happy. So
when we grow older our children have
a. habit ef covering up our weaknesses.
We do not know why it Is, bat weeare
growing more and more dependent up-
on them every day. Ala yes, those
boys and girls of ours, how much they
are to us! The hair may be gray trP-
on cur heads, the hand may he fee-
ble, ,but we would not have raven
looks and stout limbs if we had to be
separated few:, them even-foi Et, year.
If we went back to childhood days,
could we improve our lot? Could we
have any better children than are now
blessing air lives?
Our past lives cannot be lived with-
out surrendering the present; WA
telemk GO, we can live out the future
with the present and the past to a
great" extent combined into one. And
we can combine the present and the
past in the year which is to come by
guarding against the most awful mts-
take we made in past years. We have
tried to fight the battle of life alone.
We have tried to conquer in our
own strength rather than in the
strength of the Lord God Almighty,
who has always promised to suetaln
us' if we would put our trust in hint.
We can now grip a hold of the arm of
the Almighty God.if we "will. Ancl
my friends, if we put our trust in
Christ do you not believe that with his
help we could during the corning years
overcome many of the mistakes of the
past?. We can make the past, purified
or its evils, live and breathe again in
the future. We can! Yes, we tan! If
we only enter the new year with
Christ's help we should be able to undo
many of ,the wrongs of the past, be-
eide$ taking advantage of the blessed
opportunities of the future.
Not only that, but still another bless-
ing may be ours, Ire Christ we may be
able to live again during the years ot
the coming eternity with those who
have made the past year for us so
happy, We shall not be at that. there
like the -old lady who lived for many
years in the city or Los Angeles, She
died there at eighty-four year of age
in November, 1905. When she died it
was found out that for the last twen-
ty-eight years -of her life she had con-
cealcd'in her attic the dead body of he
Oldest daughter. This was the body ot
a young girl of twenty-seven year;
who had breathed her last in the far
east, and her betty had been shipped
from Amherst, kiass., to the home of
her mother in the far west. For nearly
thirty long year this broken-hearted
mother had elnag to the body Of her
POOR COPY
I eniirt Ann i d it w .1, till weal.
•
ISo f3erne oi Us have been vibe a)
the dead, �oajts of oeir lo•te ;
whith Were bu led many, mine
' ago. But if , e will onlY give11
hearts- to Christ here and me oe'.,:it the
last Sunday of the year Cle let will
some day give our loved vase ii:itl
back to us, Then we will ne. Irtve t
.•choose between wife and en 'it ir
husband and, 1ather or brother and
child. Then we shall have them ell't4t-
gether again. hen the ps.si and the
present and thel future shali be united
into one. Th4n father and motle3a
brother •and sis er, wife and husband,
-children and grandchildren shill ail ae-
sembie together before the throne a
God to forever sing the song ef alosge
and the Lamb. Oh, Yny Mende, will
you let your least life live again in
Christ?'
Thus in elosi e this sermon. On the
last Sunday of ho year I do not feel
a sense of satin ss each as I have of-
ten Telt upon si liar oceasions in the
past; Wheneve I have attended the
watohnight meetings of previous Nr'l
Year's eves the ringing of the ball
when the clock struck 12 has always
sounded to Me like the tolling of a
dirge. It has been to me a death -
knell. It has been Iike the tolling of
the bell when the hears ,:e enters the
cemetery. As _the clock struck 1, 2, 3,
4, 5, 6, 1, 8, 9, -1 , 11, 12, it seemed to
call: "Dead and gene! , The years ot
1900 and 1901 a d 1902 and 1903 and
1904 •and 1905 are dead and gone!
They are dead aed gone forever! Bear
It, ye living! Deed and -gone forever!"
But as I hear the clock striking the
midnight hour th-night it Will not be
a dirge, but a Oomise of reunion. It
Will ring: "The iyear of 1906 is not
dead and gone °revere. Tbou shalt
meet it with It sanctified joys and
sorrows. Thou shalt meet it again
smiling with th faces Of those) Who
have made tiff pat twelve months
happy and blessed. Thou shalt_ Meet
the year of 1905 corning forth tie ,greet
thee, 0 Christi n, with the altered
years of 1.890 an 1880 and 1870 ily ite
-side. All ethesd ears shall live again
If thou wilt pu thy faith in Christ
and have him 11 e in thee and thou in
him." 'My frien a on this list Sun-
day of the 'year wilt thou have the
midnight bell tol for thee a dirge or
ring out for the a gospel triumph?
You can here a d now decide fa- you
shall live over again your ItaPPY•paat.
Thou blessed past with our hallowed
dear ones? Art thou alive? Shall it
come forth to greet us at the 'day' of
judgment and, Purified of all evil, live
with us through all the coming'eternia
ties? It will. Thpu year of 1905, go
forth and assemble for us the dear
yeare that are; gone. Assertible them
to greet us when,1 like Christ, we shall
rise _from our, ttecensidu mount, and
time ?Or .is shall be no Integer exeept
reS we spend that itune With Vlatist. :
, •
STAeTE 0I1 OHIO$COY OF ToLseee.
14170AS CotiNene.
mireIk J. Cheney Makes oath thst he is
senior partner of the firm 9f F. J. Cheney
& Co., doing busineu in the City of Toledo.
County and Stets afire/aid, and that mild
firm will pay the au . of ONE HUNDRED
DOLLARS for etteadand every case of Cat-
arrh that cannot be eared by the use of
Hall's Catarrh Care. FRANK T. CHENEY
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence this 6th"day of December, A. D.,
1886. .,
,
(SEAL) A. W. GLEASON;
NorABY PI7BLIO,
iikAA 4-44...e tat
ow • ":"'
Hales Catarrh Ca is taken internally,
and mots (1 -i -reedy on he blood and mucous
surfaces ottheevebec. Send for testimon-
ials free.
F. J. °RENE & Co., Toledo, 0.
Sold by all Drive ts. 75e.
Pills for constipation,
'Take Hall's Famil
—Hon. Dr. Re
Public Works
granted permiss
bag of muskrats
jacent counties du
son. He had. rem!,
quests for this,
rats are injuring
eta., throughout
ume, Minister of
oz Ontario, has
for the shoot -
in ;Re n t and ad-'
beg the elose eea-
ved muxterous Ere -
cause the, musk -
he dykes, drains,
the country, The
open season Will omnaenee -on .an-
uary lat, and extend until May let,
but, under the pr sent lexteneien, fl
will he legal, there, to shoot the
rats at any time til they are
terminated..
Coughs, colds, hoar
Alments are quickly -
tablets, ten cents per be
se; and other brort
e Served by Pre ienG
All druggists ;
—A grahd clan liter Of ifenator
W. A. Clark, of a ontarta, Was born
on Christmas Day, lat an Mateo, the
parents being Mr. tid. Mrs, Chas. W.
Clark, the mother lhaving bowl 3Yfies
iCelia Tobin, of San rrancisco. When
informed of the 13 rth of the baby,
Senator Clark an ounced that he
would give the -11 tie girl S1,000,-
060; following the 1 example v bet by
himself at the bi th of his first
grand-ehild.
Chamberlain's cough Remedy
Absolutely Harmless.
The fault of giriitg fdhildren Medi-
cine containing int ions substanee%
is sometimes mor disastrous. than
the disease from ieh they are ent-
ering. Every mo her ethould know
that Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
is.: perfectly eafe or children to
take. It contains 1 °thing harmful,
,and for coughs, col and croup it is
unsurpassed. Eor sale by Alex.
Wilson, druggist, forth.
—Dr. William Osier, regius pro-
fessor of medicine at the University
of Oxford, England arrived at New
.York on Sunday, froth Europe to
spend the holidays in iToronto, his
native city. •
-expectant
Mothers
should take " I3u-ju " during
this trying ime. The extra
strain, wcigbt and undue pres-
sure on the delicate organs often
irritate and inflame the kidneys.
This not only increases the dan-
ger of childbirth, but places the
health of the baby in jeopardy.
THE GENTLE KIDNEY PILL
keeps the lAdneys strong and
vigorous—act as a mild tonic
on all the fena1e organs, and
ptevents cons ipation.
A " 3311-3u •ill at _bedtime is
the best prate tion against Kid-
ney Trouble d ring pregru!mcy.
At nil druggists, or direct on receipt
of price, 'oc per bor.
THE e Fiere CHEMICAL CO. LiMITED
WINDSOA, ONT.
After the trials of a
nP 1;1/ nts-11711 or
t
round of calls, ther IS
I freshen you up so quickly 'as a
cup of hot BOVRIL.
All the flavor,, essence,nutrment
and all that's food in prhne
concentrated in BOVRIL.
Once 'you realize the eco
BOVRIL you'll always have it in your
kitchen.. 101
6 6
PS
" The label thatA suit that does not fity is on augttn ,
prowlslike bread. .0.thput salt Fit Pwammscla;ieri",
-
depends more 011 what you -
don.'t see, than on,what you do. It is the hand r -'
—hand stitching and Iland mouldirtg—that
Shoulders, collars and balcks into grace andsynr....
ji
erfec t
ss Brand"
Look for it
Progress Brand" Clothes
hold, their faultless fit because
the inside work—the careful,
skilful handwork—is there.
New styles are uncommonly
choice. See them.
STEWART BROME
d, easvto
n action. They
linden, bilious
sIck-iieadaehe
Want your moustache orbeard
/
' beautiful brown orricablack? Use sinx
-Don 1 Enter Busine
until ave read oar handsom
new, Must ated catalogue.
It tells about a thoroughly gni
commercial' school, one wifoe
growth has been remarkable in the
last few 3. -ears and whose only claim
for patronage has been that of
genuine merit.
It is the most rapidly growing
eollegein Ontario has apr:fession-
ally trained staff! of teachers, new
quarters and equipment,
Unsurpassed' anywhere.
e
Ali its graduates get positio
Enter atany time.
One Of the famous
Federated Colleges.
, Prim! I.
tomac
atarrh
1
It is a fatal waste of time to trifle with snuffs, powders,
inhalers, or other dangerous nostrums, with the idea of curin
Catarrh of the Stomach. Once Catarrh has =died the
stomach it can only be eradicated bycreating pure,
rich blood. Catarrh is a germ disease. The stomach and
intestines become nests for myriads of these tiny germs.Local
applications have no effect on them. They must be driven ut
—the stomach cleansed, the blood purified, the system toned
up. " PsYcHINE ", will positively cure the worst form
Stomach Catarrh, by purifying the blood, cleansintg th
stomach, and destroying germ life. Thousart& have
cured of the prevalent malady, through this rernarkau_
covery, PSYCHiNE." Druggists recoilime.nd it.
GREATEST OAP ALL Tiorkuce
kf47.
TRONOUNCEli SloKEEN
11111111111111•111111111MIS
DRUOGIIMIN.ONg DOLLAR...TRIAL FRU
11. T. A. UM, Limited
etapi
ea in
prices,
lower
&mot Wee, Throb, Car
-e
eehe 1.