The Huron Expositor, 1906-04-20, Page 6e—
see
v."'#all'a*ifemffmtwa.**mialkhassy
ARAL WI F
•For sale, Went bait of Lot 4,
eentaining 76 mires, all
r failing spring creek, good
If not sold, will be tented
pply tu JU1 ROBISONaSeatorth P. O.
1,906-tf
AGE FOR 8 LE -A *tory and a half brick
tageIn Harpt hev. The house is heated with
44
HU
PO 0
, ee-
FORGETTING SPIRITUAL THINGS'
ARE SPIRITUALLY DISCERNED.
-
and lies a frame Idtelien end woodshed at. '
toelod. There ht &good wen, 800a-' Atehle end hell FOR DOUBTINO THOMASES
home on the property. There are 14 acres of land.
Apply on thepremboa FRANCIS FOWLER.
T INVESTMENTS. - I can lend k Amplification of Our Conoeptione of
200(etf
oney on improved emitter seetiens leo
God Wilil Lead Us! Away From Hu -
front SX. tolOet Pee admire. Onlat first
. Ample secnrity giver). Terms man Error and Misconceptions of the
riefeb. From t400 up Can be lent
owl .4„st
%too°JtoAJACKSO
For furthAlmighty este eete'sreeeple Faith i
to me, . . N, %trite er A `
beta. 1959.tf. Obedietioe Wherein Ara Found Peace
stent is
G1 I8th WO
SALE, aeomfortabie frame house in ondt
with three eons of lend, cellar -en also a
stable. The hoecenteine 3. bed mono. parlor, din-
ing room_ and kitehentiowe etoins floater° bed rooms
and fe large hall upstairs. There is plenty of hard
arid Oft water. The property is elose to both church
and schota ` Will be sold cheap. Apply - to JAMES
#1. BROWN, er Box 857; Seafortie P. O. 1900-9
SQPLENDIO FARM FOR„SALE.-For Sale, the FAst
half of Lot a and lot a on the lath Concesion of
Mullett, oontaining 225 awes, alt oleared exeept 15
ilexes of good hardwood bush. It is well fenced and
tile drained. There le a frame house and .two good
book barna with stone sta,blinge under both, and
other outbuildings. A spring creek runs acioeti the
hum. Itis well adapted either for grain or. grass.
It la withtfi 7 Miles of Blyth, and three-quartere of a
mite from Harlockwhere there is a store, black-
muith shore post office and sohooL Will be sold on
onsy terms as the proprietor want., to retire. Apply
on the premises or ad -dress, Harlock P. 0., S. PLUM -
TREE. 1995-tf
1LIAltil FOR SALE.-Forleale, Lot en. Coneeesion
X Stanley; containing 100 acres. Ninety acres are
clearedend in a good elate of cultivation ; there are
10 ie of good hardwood Moth. The farm is all
Well underdrained and well fenced. There is a two-
storey brick house with state roof, a first-class farn2
house. Bank barn, 401t, x 801t., cement Silo, pig pen,
driving house; There are two never -failing wells,
andan acro of orchard and small fruit. This excellent
farm is three miles froin Ifrueefleld and ,five ,trilles
froM Clinton, with good gravel roads. For further
particulars apply on the premises or addrese ALBERT
MAT, Clinton P. O. sesSet
"WARM ANIY MILL PROPERTY FORSALE.-Por
• eate the old Bell -Farm and Mill Property, on
the London road, Tuckersmith, recently ocouoied by
the lateJohn =Sevin. There are 100 acres all clear-
ed but about 4 acres. Good buildings and the farm
well underdmined anden a high state of cultivation,
all seeded to grass except about 30 acres. Also the
'tit mill and saw min property on the farm. A is
'within mile of Kipper'. and 2 miles from Hensel!,
and a good business has always been done at the
milk The term and mill property will be sold to
• or separately to suit purchaser. Terms easy.
pply to DAVID -C. MoLEAN, Rippen.
ARMS FOR SALE -100 acres, Lot S, Concessioti
6, 11. R. 8., Tuokersmith, Huron County, all
seeded to grass, except 16 acres of bush. Frame
house„ orchard, 2 good wane, land and bush the best.
Also West half of Lot 5, Concession 4, Tuokersrnith,
50- scree, , school on corner, Bayfield river crossing it.
On thin place there is a bank barn, briok house,
work -shop, driving house, pig and hen house, young
bearing orchard with handsome shade trees, 2 wells,
eater first olasa. The buildings are new and up-to-
date and the land in the beet conpition. A good to -
cation, a miles from Seaforth on a good road. These
farms are offered for sale together or separately. If
not sold soon may be offered for tent. A. fly to
JOHN SPItOAT, Eginonciville P. O., Ont. tf
fet_001) FARM FOR SALE. -For sale cheap and on
Nell- easy terms, Lot 25, Concession 4, MoKillop.
This farra contains On ecres, all cleared and in fine
condition. Fifty nem are seeded to grass, six or
leaven in fall wheat and the rest all ploughed and
readyfor spring crop. There is a fine spring for
_ watering the stock close to the buildings, a good
brick house, two large barns, one with good streiline
underneath, also horse stable and implement house
and &large orchard. It is within it mile and a half
of the lawn of Seaforth. If not sold, will be leased
for a term of years. Apply to the nndersigned, box
192, Settforth P. O., ROBERT GO VENLOCK.
1991-tf
feesOOD FARM FOR SALE OR RENT. -This farm
kit
is conveniently situated in the village of Chisel -
'burst, being: Lot 1, on the 12th Concession of Tucker -
smith, and is known fee the "Davey Farm." The
farm contains 00 floret, 85 acres cleared end in fine
.condition 77 acres being seeded to grummet 7 acres
ploughed: There are 14 acres of good bush and there
Vials° a small spring creek on the farm. There is a
good frame home, also two frame bares, one having
good stabling underneath, also an implement shed.
Fosseselon given March 1st. This farm will be either
sold or rented on ewer terms. For further particulars
apply teJAMES TAYLOR, Reiman P.O., or to WM.
DAVEY, the Proprietor, Gilroy P. O., California,
U. S. 1090-tf
FARM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 8, Concession 3,
L. R. S.,,Tuckersmith, containing 100 ares, of
which 9 acres is good hardwood bush. The balance
is well fenced, tiledmined and in first-class coriditiou.
There are two (coed barns, one a bankleen 36 x 78 ft.
with stone stabling underneath and the other 56 x
ItOft., and a comfortable frame house, three good
voile and a never failing spring at the rear of the lot,
and a good bearing orchard. The ploughing is all
done and 14 acres of fall wheat. It is within two
miles of the flourishing- village of Hensall and within
half a mile of eschool house. Apply on the premises
Or kr& CALDWELL, Hensel' P. 0. 10874f
fel OOD FARM le01t- &OLE -Farm for sale, Lot 26,
Nol- on the 3rd Concession of Tuckersmith, eon
-
Mining 100 acres, being all fieeded end pastured.
There are on the premises two good barns, one 40
x 60 with stone stabling underneath and ceinent
beers, the other barn 80 x 34, with drive shed, stone
tabling for pigs and hens, and a comfortable fmme
_ house with stone cellar and cetnent floor. A never
failing spring at, the barn and good well at the
house. There are about seven acres of bush, the
rest is in a good state of cultivation, well underdrain-
ed with tile, and well fenced, good orchard. Itie
situated within tWO and a hall miles from erneeffeel,
and six and a half mires from Seaforth, and the same
from HensalL This from will be sold on reasonable
terms, as the proprietor is going West. For further
articulare apply to E J CALDWELL, Box 83,
OlnicefleId P. 0., Ontario. ' J.970 -t!
FARK FOR SALE. -For sale Lot 20, on the Oth
FOR
of Ribbed, containing 100 acres, all
in a good state of cultivation. There is on the prem-
ises a brick house with brick kitchen and a g&xl eel -
Jar. There is also a large bank barn, 60 x 40, and a
lean to of 12 feet, with stone stabling underneath.
Also a shed, 80 x 30, and a driving- house with every-
thing, complete. There are three never -failing wells
on the premise, there is also a large orchard and
good garden, There Etre 3:0 acres of fall wheat sown
and there ere 40 acres seeded down. Either suitable
for hay or pasture. All the fall ploughing is done.
The farm of well unciedrained with tile and well
fenced with wire fences. It is in a good locality, be.
log situated two -and -a -half miles from Chiselhurst,
where there is a post oflice and two churches, Meth-
odist and Presbyterian, 8 miles frem Seaforth and
there is a good enevei road running past the farm. It
is in good condition and will be sold on reasonable
terms as the proprietor wishes to retire. For further
particulate apply on the prettifies or to CHARLES
ABERHART, Staffa P. 0., Ontario. 1089-tf
Property for Sale
• If you want to buy a farm or town property, you
will do well by selecting from my Mt, which con-
tains a number of farms in Tuckerstuith, from 50 to
100 acres. All have peel buildings and are in a first-
class state of cultivation. Will be sold cheap and on
easy terms.
A130 several good houses in town, ranging in
pries from $700 to $2,500. Each one a bargain..
Selected Saskatchewan Land For Sale. -In the
centre of the heed wheat district, good shipping
facilitiem, Low prices and easy terms. For further
particulars as to any of the above properties call or
write to
•
A. A. WATT, Real Estate Agent;
BRIT6EFIELD, ONTAI40.
1990-tf
Established 1879.
Whooping Cough, Croup, Bronchitis
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crasolono is a boon to Asthmatics
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fel- dm diseases indicated. It cures because the air ref).
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prolonged anti e stunt treatment. These of a COMMIT -
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Inunedlato relief from coughs or inflamed condltiotiff 0
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VaPo.Cresolono is sold
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A Vapo.Cresolene out-
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fres illustrated booklet.
Llmstixo 3111.sa CO., Ltd.,
Agents, 288 St. Janes13t.,
Montreal, Canada. /106
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ef
100-'-
ile
and, Joy.
Entered according to Act of Pediment of Can-
ada, in tee yealelO00, 3.yFrederiek Diver, To -
Mato, at tile Dept. of Agriculture, Ottawa.
Los Angeles, Cal., April 15. -In thie
semen the preaeher shows how our
human misconceptions of God and his
promises lead us. into error and that
the remedy is simple faith and obedi-
ence. Tho text is John iv,- 48, "Excel)
ye see signs and wonders, ye Wilt no
believe." ' - -
We are always demanding gosPe
proof, Like Gideon of old, we want ou
faith bolstered up by the wet fieeee
Like doubting Thomas, We want to see
Christ in the flesh and to thrust on
fingers into the tom palm of the hand
and -into the wounded side before w
will believe that he is -riseri froin th
dead. When any.fact about Gocl or th
{prophecies of the Bible is told es W
j at once say, "Give us the evidence or*
will net believe." Now, I want to shOW
you not only that "faith is the sub
stance of things hoped for, the evidene
of things not seen," but that we shoul
believe and trust God and accept Id
words and promises, even when ther
are no .signs and wonders vis!ble t
confirm out faith.
Signe And wonders theological hay
Grim to us. God and his attributes ass all the realms of human explana.-
tim. The etory is told that one day
Michael Angelo entered the studio , o
Raphael. You know that the Floren-
tine maeter was nearly a decade older
than the painter of the Sistine Madon-
na. - As an artist who had won his
.
spurs, he had a, right to give advice no
the younger man. Michael Angelo stood
for•eome time before one of Raphael's
ehsels. The young ma.n at this time
was absent from hie studio. Angelo
lifted a pencil and drew the curves of
ti
ie figure upon thetcanvas alqng broad-
er lines, Then under the picture he
wrote this one word three birnes: "Am-
plify! Amplify! Amplify!" You, who
have stood before the wonderful crea-
tions of the architect of St. Peter's of
Rome know what he meant by that
n-ord. He meant "Increase the concep-
tion of yoar subJeets." Olt, Raphael,
knot the muscles . of your model's
arms and Make_ swarthier necks and
broader shoulders and more leonine
eountenances. The taunting Philistine
Is not aadware but •a giant. The ma.s-
ter builders of history are not pygmies,
but Titans. Neptune's trident does not
rule a mill pond, but has for its realm
the mighty deep. Amplify! Amplify!
Amplify! Good_ advice that for Ra-
phael, in an artistic sense. Good 'advice
for us in a theological sense. We have
,recelved certain revolationS given In
reference to God's personality, 'but we
must not stop with these revelations.
We must be cont-ually enlarging our
ideas of God. We must try to gain a
conception of him greater than our
eyes can see and greater than OW hu-
man intellects can explain.
We must amplify our belief of God's
personality 4n reference to his eternal
existence. The first verse of the .fIrst
chapter of ,Genesis says, 'tin the begin-
ning God created the heaven and the
earth." But that "beginning"' simply
alludes to the creation ca the world
and the planetary system. Friend, did
not God- exist -before whet? "Oh, yes"
you anewer; "Qod has always existed."
But what do You mean by "always?"
I follow Hugh Miller, the Scottish geo-
logist, in his "Testimony of the
Roeks"-and in •hls "Footprints of the
Creator,'" and he tells me that the six
days of creation were not .six days of
twenty-four "hours each, but that each
day represented ages upon ages of
time. This -6i:inception of . the time of
the creation was well expressed by the
Psalmist when he said, "A thousand
years in thy' sight are but as yesterday
when it is past, and as a watch in the
nignst." In the creation of the world
the seconds of time are centuries, and
the minutes are millenniunis, the hours
are eras, and the -days are ages -ypon
ages. If you go and eta,nd by the falls
of .Niagara, the scientists will tel you
w
that the falling . waters 'ear away
about six feet of rock every ear. -Then
they :will take you for miles down the
repids, toward Lake Ontarioaand show
you where those rocks have gradually
been worn away by the failing waters
of thousands of yeare. Next these geo-
logists will open the leaves of the
rocks. and. tell you that those rocks
which have beer worn away took ages
upon ages to form. Then, after we go
back thousands upon thousands of
years to the creation of the world, you
are not- yet at the beginning of God's
eternal existence, for God existed be-
fore the world was. Backward to the
birth cradle of this world youemuat go;
backward, still backward and back-
ward, until time. loses itself you must
go, and there you will still find God's
eternal existence. Am I not right in,
saying that the eternal life ;of God
passes all human conception and expla-
nation? _
What the eternal existence of God
means cannot be better illustrated than
by the following words of M. Camille
Flammarion, the celebrated astrono-
mer. 'What this Freech writer says
about the heavens we can easily apply
to the duration of tiine: "Let us imag-
ine that we sail a Million years with
the velocity of light, 1841,000 miles' a
second, Are. we -at the confines ofth
visible. uniyerse? See the black im-
mensities 'we must cross! But yonder
new stars are lit up in the depth of the
beavees. We push on toward them;
we reach them -again a million years,
new revela,tions, new starry splendors,
new systems, new worlds, new earths,
What, riever an end? ' We are at the
vestibule of the infinite. We have ad-
vanced but a single step. We are al-
ways at the same point -the centre ev-
erywhere, the circumference nowhere
we see before us the infinita of which
, the study is not yet begun__ We have
seen nothing. We recoil In teener. We
might fall in a Straight line during a
whole eternity, nor ever reach the ban
tom. It Is Intl:lite In all directions."
So wherever we a.,, into the past let
weal:rase; tetee re ,-= -, s ..,- o ...se.
t Sow is better than othersoaps,
but est when used in the Sunlight way.
To ppreciate the simplicity and ease of
washi g with Sunlight Soap in the Sunlight
way you should follow directions.
Aft r rubbing on the soap, roll up each
piece, mmerse in the water, and go away.
unli
will do its work in
Your clothes will b
iti-the old-fashioned
Buy k and follow Mega
directions, AO gaits
ht Soap
hirty to sixty minutes.
cleaner and whiter than if washed
ay with boiler and hard rubbing.
(LONOOs)
India. Pule Ale
Preiudiced unscruotdous vendoril nuty suggest others. but coin it any
way you wIll-purit , freedom from. acidity. palatablettesse-Labalt's Ale le it urpasre
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er e
tion 111
ailorm
Lev" Brothers Limited, Toronto
.
ja1.1
t •
t ba4k. Barsky/lard we can go ages upon
, ages, trillions and quadrillions of years,
1 ana there we still find God's eternal
✓ existence, - Am I wrong in saying am-
. Islifr? Am/MY! AnePlifY Your con-
ceptions of the life of God In the past
r %end arnplify- your conceptions of the
s 114 on God In the future.. '
e Not only must we amplify our ideas
e in (reference to God's 'eternal existence,
e . but we mizst also amplify them he rar-
e manic to God's personal presence.- The
e • Bible tells us that we are made atter
Gad's. image. "So God created man in
- hie own image, in the image of God
e created he him, male and female emelt-
d ed he them." Does this imply that God
g Is like unto us phyelottlly-a-that he has
e . two -eyes, two hands, two feet and a
o beating heart? just as X find . queen
1 Vi torials face stamped upon the Paige
e lis shilling, se some people think God's
fa e, in a physical sense, is stamped
Urion
us But is this true? Nay. Am-
plify! Amplify your Idea of God's Per -
f sohality. In the One - thindred and
Tbirty-ninth Psalm I read theee Words:
"Whither shall X go. from thy spirit
on whither shall I flee ' frOm thy pres-
ence? If I ascend up into heaven, thou
art there; if I make my , bed In hell,
behold, thou art there; if I take the
wings of the Morning and dwell In the
uttermost parts of the sea, even there
thy right hand shall hold me,' Yea, the
darkness hideth not from thee, but the
, slight shineth as the day. The darkness
and the light are both- alike to thee."
1
1 In other words, • God IS here, God is
i
there, God is everywhere at once. How.
f ean all this- be and yet God be like
ourselves in a, physical sense? Men in-
capable of conceiving pure spirit have
I supposed that God has a human form,
: as did the ancient; Emthropornorphitess
or, an animal form, as did the ancient
.- idolaters, but the Bible doctrine as ex-
pounded by Jesus is, God is a spirit,
and they that warship bim must wor-
ship him in spirit.
Not only does the ornnipresenete of
GO pass all human conception and
explanation, but his personality, -Called
the Trinity, also passes human . ex..
planatithe Here- we have ad the Fa-
ther, God the Son and God the Holy
Spirit. How can you interpret it? A
dear friend of mine told me how an
old Spanish arUst °sloe tried to explain
It, A.bove 'one of the altars of -a iVIexi-
'can cathedral was a picture amid
clouds. Out of these clouds appeared
the faces of three men. These three
faces were all the same. Under the
pictiere, in Latin, were the words, "The
. Father, the Son apd. the Holy Ghost,"
These three faces were all alike; they
, were like three photographs tof one
face taken from the same negative.
:But had that artist caught a true con-
{ Option of the Trinity? No. He no
retire pictured the true G-oa than did
{ the artist who tried to picture the face
of the Trinity as that of one man. The
full conception of Gocre eternal exist-
ence and of God's personality passes all
human. grasp.
' ;But, though I have dwelt long upon
y first point, I believe It is the least
portant of any I shall present, for it
1
Is almost an impossibility for any one
(4 us to get away from our belief in an
overruling' God who was the creater of'
the universe 'after we haoie studied the
- wonderful harmonies of the natural
'World. We are like the lEtudertt of skep-
; tical tendencies who was seated at the
feet of that master of anatomy, Dr.
Marshall. The great professor was ex-
plaining to his class the marvels of the
- pints of the knee or of the hand. Af-
ter he had finished his talk this student
exclaimed, "A man must be a fool in-
: deed who, after duly studying his own
I, body, oa,n remain an atheist?' So .we
says "A men must be e, fool who can
- ,stndy the harmonies of nature and not
'believe that a master Mind, called the
Creator and the Ruler, is molding and
influericing a I." But, after we have
i studied the 4tgns and the wanders of
' the heaven 'a, earth and have an-
. cepted a 'belief in a God, the next ques-
tion which naturally confronts us is
this: "How do we know that this God
t4e _creator is the God who Is the
anthor of the book we call the 331ble,
in which the 'coming of Christ is fore-
told' and. the promises of forgiveness of
' sin in Christ's blood are made to a d.y-
; frig human race?" How do we know
that God is the author of this Bible?
Why, by the testimony of the Bible Its
self. The internal evidences of a menu-
seript carry their own proof of gene
uineness. For centuries upon centuries
the Aible nes had the test of internal
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told. Me About
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criticism applied' to It. .
Let the first chapter of Genesis otrie
forth and speak That is to me o e of
the most -wonderful of all paleag s of
the Bible* Rave you ever ear fully ,
studied it? Supposelithat•LUther Bur
bank, California's wizard of is were0
and fruits, should, bring to us a new I
kind Of fruit.' This fruit may b dif-
ferent from any Otber fruit ever own• •
Then suppose he told us how h got I
that trifle Perhaps it was (Thee oped
.by .grafting an Italian grape 'up n a
certain kind of American grapey! ,
heetold us all thie, and we knew that
no other such grape had ever been
grown, we Would believe that. h had
developed that grape, Well, -1 the
same way thousands of years ag God
told _Moses how he had create the -
-world. First came the water, the the
land, then the gress, then the. Wing
creatures In the water, then th
rnels, then man. "Oh," you gay', "that
Is a simple story." Yea it is so simple
that for thousands of years the Scien-
tists were trying to discover -the !order
of creation, and now, much to 'their
surprise, the biologists have found out
that the orderas written by Moses
thousands of years ago is the scientific-
ally accepted order of creation of to-
day. Does not the first book of the Bi-
ble bear upon It the stamp of latod'e
authorship? Was not its story of crea-
tion told before science was born?
Then the miracles of jesns and the
recorded biographies of Christ, { How
are you going to get around them?
Are you going to regard Chriet, as a
-fraud and. an imposter and yet cal him
the best of men, as nearly all infidels
and agnostics do? I can understand
how Voltaire could despise and {blas-
pheme Chrest, but I do not understand
how Rousseau and Jean Paul R chter
could be. so illogical as to rep esent
Christeat the same time as s. ma el for
humanity and yet as a self -de eived
fanatic.
Are you going to take the ridi ulous
ditor
and illogical stand which a noted
of a city newspaper did wheu he kvrote
to a lawyer friend of mine a letter that
went thus: "A man who drinke' can
preach a better temperance iectut than
all the fanatics On earth. But yo can-
not make men good. by law. 1-anot
a believer in religion, so called, but I
was convinced long ago that th ulti-
mate redemption of the children cf men
must come through the inculcation in
.their hearts of the religion of Jesus
Christ. If men make Christ the node3,
even though It be a superstition as I
believe, virtue will dominate the woeld
of vice and sih will be minimized. But
It must come through moral s asion
t
and not through force and cm
opu sion."
Now, my friend, is. that your Ill gicae
stand? Are you prepared to assert with
your one breath that Jesus Ch ist is
the best of all human being's an4 then
to assert with your next breatll that
Christ is a deceiver. Nay, nay, nee
that. As kin intelligent man you
should ibe ready to say here and now:
"No man could have uttered such
words as did Jesus Christ unless he
was true. And therefore, if Christ is
true, Christ is the Son of God." By the
law, of.logic and common sense Wo can-
not get away from this conclusion.
The Bible biographies of Chri t, by
their internal evidence, prove that
Christ's life was divine, ,
Now, having seen'enough of th signs
and wonders of the Bible to provte that
It is of divine authorship,. I am ready
to make a confession. I em re dy- to
confess that this holy book is filled
with mysteries. Like a blind an, I
hump up against them eyery here.
But because I cannot understan why
God should so love the world t at he
gaire his only begotten Son that ovho-
eoever belleveth on.him should. no per- '
ish, but have everlasting life, i that
any reason why I should rejec that
divine offer of pardon and eternal life?
"Nay, nay," again I say. 'Why all the
promises of God are given to us I can-
not conceive. But those promises are
there. And because they are there I
wi I accept them and live by thern and
leav the explanations for eterni y. I
haye hail given to me enough pr of to
know that the Bible is true. Thetrefore
I Shall accept upon the faith o1!J those
prOrnises the things I cannot nder-
stand.
But now, believing that God is lov-
ing Father and that the Bible Is give
to us by divine inspiration, the next
difficult question which confronts us is
this: "W.hy does a loving Father who
Is preparing such felicity fou s (in the
other side of the grave, aI1/3-w so Much
misery and suffering and Injustice to
his dear ones on this side I of the
grave?" for we all can say w1tl the
Psahnist, "I have seen the wick d in
great pow_er and Spreading lams° f like
a green bay tree." Yes, we have seen
wicked Dives in a palace and good
Lazarus as a beggar dying Meth gut-
ter. But that is net the universa rule.
Religion has in it the Proml.4e cf Oa
life that now is. A proof of the fact we
may see around 'US in prosperous, hap-
py men, who are leading good liris-
tian lives.
Let me prove this statement b tho
testimony of one of the greate t of
English statesmen of the past ce tury.
Hon. William E. Gladstone, who once
said: "Chriayhnity is the religi n in
the commarail of whese profess( rs is
lodged a prcIpertion of power fa ex-
ceeding its superiority of numberf, , ana
this power is both moral and ma erial.
CASTOR 1
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bo4ht,
Bears the
isignatura of
In the realm of colitrOVerey It can
hardly be said to have a. serious antes
mist. Force, secular or physical, is
accumulated In the hands of Chrlistians
In {a proportion abso1utely overwhelm-
ing, and the ace illation of influence
18 not less remarkable than that of
force. "This Is not surprising, for all
the elements of influence lave their
home within the ' Christian precinct.
The art, the literature, the systematiz-
ed Industry, invention and eonomerce-
in one word, the power of the world -
are almost wholly Christian, Tile na-
tions of Christendom are everywhere
arbiters of the fate of non-Christian
nations." Wben people a.s a nation luxe
honored God; there God has always
honored and 'blessed those people The
signs of these blessings everywhere
prove that God is looking after and
caring for hie own. Now, having seen
how God blesses hie own in great num-
bers, I am ready to believe that he is
13w1 he ys s hgo uhilas n:weevencew,hept hae bPieTs
by
not
as
this trouble cornea but I am 'ready
tt
faith to accept it as a blessing. And
the heavy hand of trquble to fall upon
them, I cannot understand alwaya why
ng
the troubles which come to God's dear
ones, although we cannot underetan4
why these troubles come? Do we le
as parents, often have to do that wig
may seem cruel or hard to bur 0141-
dren, and yet we thus aifilet for site
children's good?
In closing I would bid you set rm.
gaspel compass. I want you to be l
the traveler going througlr the weattra
country guided y the beacon light of
the rising and setting sun, I want you
to be like a voyager setting Ban across
the Atlantic, He does not go in a, ilap-
hazard way to a fisherman of Nan-
tucket and say, "Will you with your
sailboat take me to Europe?" But he
goes down to the office of a great trans-
atlantic line There he selects his
steamer. He knows that this steamer
Is managed by a competent crew and
commanded by an able captain. When
the storms edme and the -winds blow
and the billows heave, he does not rush
upon the deck and say, "Let me take
that wheel." Nay. He says, "The cap-
tain knows- best, arid he will see us
through" So may It be with us In
life's voyage, May we step into the
gospel ship and say to Jesus: "Master,
Commander, wherever thou takest me
I know it Is best' for me to go. Tell
me what to do, and 3. will do it! But
thou, 0 Divine Captain, stand upon the
quarter deck and command, and all
will be well."
Some time ago a little girl was out
driving with her father. Suddenly the
horse ,shied, and in great "fright the
daughter grabbed the reins from her.
father's hand, and the lea.ping horse
nearly caused an accident. With that
the father said: "Daughter, never do
that again. You should learn to trust'
me, 3. svill not let any harm come to
you when I have lield of the linee."
We must walk by faith and not bY
sight. We must let our God take us
where he wilt Friend, child, are you
ready to let God drive? Knowing that
he loves us, will you (rust him even
when you cannot always understand
him? Drive on, thou King of kings,
drive on! '
$100 Reward, $1%.
The readers ef this paper will be
pleased to learn that there Ts_ at least
one dreaded disease that science' lees
been able to oure in all 1 Ls stages,
and 'that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure -is the only positive tune now
known to the medical feeternity.
Catarrh, being a constitutional dis-
ease, requires a coustitp.tirmul treat-
ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken
internally, acting directly upon the.
blood and mucous surfaces of the
system, (thereby destroying the foun-
dation of the disease, and giving the
patient strength by building up the
constitution and assisting nature in
doing its woek. The proprietors
have so tnuch faith in its euzative
powers that they offersOne Hundred
Dollars tor any ease that it fails to
cure. Send for a list of testimon-
ials!.
Address F. J. CHENEY & CM, To-
ledo, Ohio. •
Sold by all druggists, 750.
Take Hall's Family Pills for consti-
pation.
•
Manitoba and Northwest Notes
-The town semis:mil of Morris has
offered three prizes, 48, 1$.5, and 02,
tor Ithe Ithree beat ,eompositions of
not Wore 'than 1,000 words -or less
than 4300 isbowtng tee advantages of
the town trout a. commercial and in-
dustrial Standpoint
-The !town ot Medicine Hat wants
a ibiseuit !factory, a foundry, a itan-
nery, 'knitting mills and other in-
dustries. It is alaimed the cheapest
power !and !fuel . Arnerica i f ar-
nished (by .the natural gas at Medi-
cine eat, which is to be 'had thi aburn.-
datum.
-As ethe tresult of a infeeting ac-
entiantk which occurred in !the Stan-
ley house,, Winkler, Manitoba, a
young Than named Ste,ele, crupl.oyed
by the (Northern Elevator Co., was
shot through the palm of theright
hand, !the bullet carrying away a
piece of nue af the bones.
-The inew howls ,erf Eaterhazey,
filaSkatchewan, is going ahead. Be-
sides a new mifl, bank and furnitare
store going tap, there are !going to
be (several private houses, and /near-
ly !every ithLY there is talk of 'game
of 'the business men enfazging their
places ton tac$evint of increased trade.
' -The!balai*es-zof the Cirnand estate
lying between Portage Avenue and
the IA:ssinibeine elver, in Winnipeg,
and ladinining the Tight of way of
fhe 0, nT. Be Gretna branch, ou the
east side, !was sold on Saturday for
030,00o tash. The iparca soeraprises
between ten and eleven acres.
Every self.res eeting man likes to appear well, and, -as his clothes
long way towa as attaining that object, he must have his clothes ,
in the latest le and by the best tailors. ft our aim. to tn.
clothes that fil these very iequirements. Our long experience iz
business has enabled US to reach that perfection which only
perience can g ie. Added to this, our staff of work people is the
SAIL work is pe smelly inspected before it leaves the shop, and if
right we make it right.
you wish to be ell dressed, you must have clothes made by ub.
with your nex order, and we will convince you of the genuinen
our argument.
IGH T BRO
IS BEE'S, SLY:FORTH
IA/13H OUR OWNER
WOULD USE PATERSONS
WIRE EDGE ROOFING AND
KEEP .1,15 DRY:
If you don't want siol poultry, keep
tliem under
Paterson's " e
Ready Roofing
Leaks and damptiese are bound to
creep in if you roof the buildings wiUi
shingles or tin.
PATERSON'S "WIRE 3".1O:t4 " MAW
roofs air -tight, water -proof and fire -proof -
and lasts a lifetime. It keeps barns, chicken
houses and tool sheds always dry. Cheaper
than shingles.
Yon can de the roofing yourself. Our booklet
tells how. Write for it and a fiee sample of the
best reoang made.
Rai -aware dealers everywhere have it or will
get it for you.
PATERSON MFG. CO. Limited, Toronto and MenUesi
a is
WEAK
TIRED
WOMEN
How many women
there aee that get no re-
freshreent from sleep.
They wake in the morn-
ing and feel tireder than
when -they went to bed.
They have a dizzy se
the heazt palpitates; t
and nervous, weak an
the lightest household
daySeene to be a drag.
n in the head,
are irritable
! worn out, and
uties during the
a burden...,
MILBURN'S HEART
AND NERVE PILLS
are the veryremedy tha, weak, nervous,
tired out, sickly women need to restore
them the blessings of goed health.
They give sound, restfiil sleep, tone up
the nerves, strengthen the heart, and
Tnelre rich blood. Mrs McDonald,
Portage la Prairie, Man4 writes: I was
e
troubled with shortness f breath, I
palpi-
tation of the heart and weak sp
got four bone§ of lifilb rn's Elea and
Nerve Fills, and after taking them I was
completely cured.
Price 50 cents per bog or three boaes
for $1,25, all dealers or f,he The T. Mil-
burn Co., Limited, Torono, Ont.
Sore Throat ejn Coughs
A simple, effective and safe remedy for all throe
irritations in found in
Cresolene Antieeppe Teeblets
They combine the germicidal vaAte of Cresolenewitt
'oho soothing properties of slippei-yeelm and licorice,
WO. MI Deueloote
How Is
Your cold,
;
Everyplace you go you hear the same
question asked. ,
Do you know that theta is nothing so
dangerous as a neglected pold?
Do.yois know that a nrIglected cold will
tumult° Chronic Bronc ids, Pneumonia,
disgusting Catarrh and the most deacay of
all, the "White Plague,: Consumption.
Many a life history weuld read different
if, on the first appearaec,e of a cough, it
hid been remedied with
!
Dr. Wpod's
Norway
1 -
Pine 4yr u p
This wonderful cough and oaki medicine
contains all those very pine principles
which make the pine woods so valuable ia
the treatment of lung affections.
Combined with this are Wild Cherry
Bark and. the soothing, healing and ex-
pectorant propertieS of other pectoral
herbs and barks. ,
For Coughs, Colds; Bronchitis, Pain in
the Cheat, Asthma, Croup, Whooping
Cough, Hoarseness ow any affection of the
Throat or Lungs. You will- find a sure
cure in Dr. Weed's Norway Pine Syrup.
Mrs. 0. N.. Loemer, Berwick, .5.
mites: "1 have used Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup for coughs and colds, and have
always found it toi give instant relief, /
also recommended lit to one of my neigh-
bors and she was More that pleased with
the results." ,
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup 9.5 et's.
per betas at all dealers. Put up PM yellow
wrapper, and three nine trees the -trade
merit. Refuse bstiteites. There is only
one Norway. Syrup and that one Is
Dri Wood's,
Notice t� Creditors.
n the estate of Ellen Shea, late of the Towns
Hilbert, in the County of Perth, Widow,
ceased. ,
Notice is hereby given pursuant to R. S. 0.,
129, Section 88, that all`pemons having claims
the estate of the said E len Shea, who died
4th day of December, , are required on or
the 1st day of May, 1900, to mid by peel: p
deliver to a L. Kilior^ , Seaforth, Ontario,
for Moine Shea, the administrator of the
their names and addresses, full partionlare
elaims, duly verified, and the nature of the
if any, I :-.• by them. And notice is forth
that after the said date the said administ
proceed to distribute the asset', of the _
among, the persons entitled -thereto, having
only to the claims ef which he shall then hav
.T. L. KILLORAN,
Seaforth, Ontario.
Solicitor for the Admi
Dated this 5th (tiro of .April, 1e06.
DYSPEPSIA
STOMACH 0130
a
answer
Goderseh
rchr
eaeka
Trin
the Del
geons,
MAY BE QUICKLY AND
PERMANENTLY CORED Or
r.B.U.RDO:1(
.noop
BITTERS.
Mr. P. A. Lebelle exasimakt,
as follows; "I desire to thank you for your
derful cure, Burdock Blood Bitters.
Three years ago I had a very severe
Dyspepsia. I tried five a the best dootc
could find but they weld do me
I was advised by a friend to try
Blood Bitter e and to my great surp •
teidng two bottles, I was so perfectly
that I have not had a sign of Daspeesla
3. cannot probe it too highly to all rufferere.'
my emoerience it is the best I ever'nscd. Notiee -
ng for me like B.B.13.
Don't accept a,stihstitute for Burdoc
Bitters. There is notiaiog "just se
811
ea,
a
F
SEEPS
ok a
a better
Prices,
tat' ion
Represent the survival of the fittest. We
have become the largestieed taeomin tee
werld because our media arebeseer Vey"
oMera. Do you wish to grow fee =et -
beautiful Bowers and the Bneet vege, -
fables? Plant the best seeds -For -41.,
190e Seed Annual free to all
applicants.
Ds tn. irEltitY & CM, -
Detroit, Mielse
B, A
SingleTI
Harness
Call and inspect our genuine
trimmed harness at V0.00 ;
value thau any $25.00 faetery
We guarantee th-ern because we mak
ourselves;
material, style and q
are the best. They are tbe best
to be bad in single harness anti.
will stake our reputation for good
ness upon them,
A complete stook of Bishop,
way and Seskatehewan aU
prices.
as usual we have the very hue
des in horse biankete. QuelitY
bes5 and price* the lowest.
M. BRODERICK,
CADY BLOCK, SEAF0
E.
pupil
Oman
eximin
ty at
'6' relict