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The Huron Expositor, 1906-11-16, Page 9gee- ete vet; w ending li7e.dditaaere ta impresiyou ea eentained the ppiy gun With NIVinntete snted kind a ef Wairciier Shoe Felt Stnr Ire the era the ben ere values ar -Mr.. W. J. Wiletont nblit village arrived ' of this week wife!, nay* well and raver - Miss Rodd, of Woon, are now cOmfOrtablif new home, on the ri and Oxford streetre .. their many friends long and continned ShirraY mid dough - t left here nearing tm Detroit to spent a h Mrs. Sidrray's son, aides H. Moks Whet a month or so With bere left this we her little daughter, tether in Alabama. - 4 of grain are co - rid meets with ready nd prices. -The first Young Pet:Tien So- edis church was tient .evening of last Week social time was tiew Johnston and on =idea road, have der - week clisposed Of a forma in this county the homestead rar. uloek. senior menzber Manning Organ tot. in the village thin buSiness and re- fti line, fartin, of Exeter, preaehed two( he Presbyterian church here ead the notice officially dealer - t. Next Sunday wilt be the applicanta-Lest Wedneeday ehow e ever put on the Ina a fair audienee.-Next Mon- et Eckhart Family are eel tient.- in industry hall here a hie house. -We underatand tt are getting up a good play sprine.-Mrs. D. McGill paw- n East Wawanosh last Wednes- illness. The remains werecon- are on Saturday, Dr. McLean, ting the funerdservieee. SEra noem here, as, before she am eel a dressmaking establish. LT her marriage herself and her r fora wbile.-Mr. Stevens= tuilding his carriage factory, _!eided whether it will be at R.. tracks as both assietant t here In.st week offering to build at their tracks, se he receive a benefit by the ar.o. ff. -mi( was in Clinton on evening. -Mr. E. Livingstane :tractioneneine white drawing try swamp ast week„ weierehy' wit into the dithh t to aefore they got it home. - lo has been in Louden all sum - ie. -Mr. Adam McKenzie was eel room in town this xvinteie il meeting the councillors ali him to go ahead. but when he last meeting they were all` ceneral opinion that as it ifs n da,y, notmeiffors vt,ere afraiti tot -Me If. hfccerarriawbo the Presbyterian church for Sr, ofilmenelly: to find the dutrete resigninge-Mr. Alevander eaiting relations here for the ted to hi a home in Edmonton eekbrough. who bee been vie - 'for the past caeNale of mongol, in Montana this week. -Mrs. velem, spent Saturday with lthe intention of Thomas tO near future. where he is to Organ & Piano Co. -Mr. T. eited his brother in town over Popplescone is at present in r. who le very sick. -Mr. J. te after Mr. Johnstonee bar - turned home Saturday? -Mr. threshing in the Wtst for the Fried home Lest week, having DINER .0,) Anyo CS% athievemente of ou t the faehiOnablie in greys, :at Vet recedent hared by the test 1. the new shades-- ork styles, with best will please the most LtLI $9. '1GBlyth HiERS .f Ines charges as Satisfied. With, ilia medicine medy for any • tubes, and is 'T ndia Pale Ale .costs consu Brewed' (roils se.. lected hops, choice barley snalt and pure spring water, with the utmost care. Bottled at the brewery depots to -"ensure proper handling. That is why Labatt's Ale is equal to the fin- est, surpassed by none, though it only about half as much as imported goods. sk• sfi. ex • 2 Nib& "Buy 'Maple Leaf' Rubbers if you want a neat, smart, aeourate fit." -Wireless from "the old woman who lived in st shoe. Light and pliable, because' no wear -destroying adulterants arp mixed with the finest Para gura. f Conform to the shape of the shoe—give a glove -like, accurate, 1 stylish. fit Stay in shape. Wear long. tiongSweazat. '440.10:01°. All depends on the tuition you receive in a college whether you will make a success of business life. If your teacher allows you to depend on other students and look in the back of the book for answers, your course will be a failure. There are no answers given in OUR books—we teach you to stand alone. You need, no sup- port, so that when you start life in earnest you have that confidence in yourself so essential to a business. man. We have the reputation of giving a thorough and effi- cient training in both our Business and Shorthand departinente. Booklet free. School term : Sept. till June, inclusive. Students may enter at any time. Forest City Business College J. W. WES TE WELT, V. M. C. A. Bidg., Princiaal. LONDON'. 4ft cs55114' other ;dour little Ones 'are a constant 'ore la all "and Winter weather. They WM catch cokl. 1)0 you knew about Shiloh' Contuniption Cure, the Lung Tonic, and what it has done for stirosny? it h to he the only salable 'remedy for ell diseases of the air passages in children. his absolutely harmlerts and pleasant to take. itissuarantoed toeure or your money h returned. The price h 25t. per bottle, and all dealers in mediate ete " • - This erne* eveh*0 ok‘Ineil ' u - BORE THE DIVINE IMAGE HUMAN RACE THE APEX OF GOD'S ' CREATION OF THE WORLD. "BEHOLD IT WAS, VERY GOOD" His Own image Was Not a Material One, But Afteil God's -Spirit-1m- mortality the Root of the God -Like- ness of Man -Once Alive, Man Never Dies, But Is Translated to Another Life -A Wonderful Fact. Entered according to Act of l'irliament of Can- ada, in the year nee by Frederick Diver, To. ronto, in the Dept. of Agriculture, Ottawa. Los Ang les, Cale Nov. 11. -The in- ferences fr/rni the Scripteral etatement that the man race originally bore the nivine image are ImPreseively pointed out by the prea.cher in this sermon, from the ?text Genesis 1, 2ti, "no God created man in his own Image." • The first teaf of- the world's history had been turned. The stupendous task of creation approached completion.' God surveyed it and pronounced it very good. The Illuminating fires had been kindled, and the command had gone forth, "Let there be light, and there was light." The heavens were bung with tapestries of blue, and the white clouds of the day were rimmed with gold and the black curtains of the night bespangled. Every star was agleam. "And God eavr the light that it was good, and God divided the light from tliendarlmess. And God caned the light day, and the deatness he coned night. And the evening and the morn- ing were tho first day.' That the dry land might be separated •from, the dee n Betts the waters were driven neck until they crouched and growled and fawned at the f.00t of the mountains. The great hollows were scooped out of the ocean beds and tossed into heaps, The elvers were turned loose and allowed to cut their ,way through the -valleys and squirm .among the hills and push on and on in their serpentine windings until they were Jost in the great bosom of the seas.. Then Mount Shasta arose and etood sentinel over the Pacific. The Matterhorn was detailed: to •Iteep fts eyeupon the Mediterranean, and Mount Washington was stationed to watch the Atlantic. Then the voice-, roes had their hemorrhages and breath- e* forth their hot breath and vomited in their awful agonies. Then Flora rambled forth to cover up the ghastly wounds of a suffering World, with her bandages of green and !yellow and white. She planted ' the crocus at the foot of the snow bank, and ,tioyered the hillsides with forests, and Iscattered. her seeds far and wide in the ,valleys. There _chatted tile slot:news COUGH DROPS jr Quick relief and cartidn cum for coughs. b colds aoro throat and all irritationti t 2 of .he mucous Membrane. Malicious flavor. Physic:Mu recommend them. Aak for the threo-coniered kind in the red and 'yellow hoz. 1 THEY WILL CURE nilitarnifnliftffeen, tenie eiprang erten -the leWlande and climbed tne lofty olutohing tbin'orivvestsenatid that !drag, balancing her and nestling there iijxtlIeit last the rocke, like Jandins fa - veldts sine stood bedecked in garments* of many Colors,. The garden of Eden was ablooni. The desert was blossent- ing as the rage. The White lily and the red rime and the. blue forgistmenot, as Wet priestesses befone the ntars of the mountains, were swinging their In., cense of praltie; ".A.ndothe earth brought forth grans and herb, yielding seed af- ter its kind, and the tree yielding trait whone seed was in itself after its kind, and God saw that it was good. And the evening and the morning were the third day." Then God reach,ed forth his hand and touched the waters, and ?the mighty leviathans of the deep began to move. The goldfish swam among the entan- gled thickets a kelp. The spat:Aden trout leaped teem the eddy, The won- derful aquariums of the_ seas bad their myriads of inhabitants. Then God touched the land, and the woods were turned into a great menagerie, and the valleys Oreename a great pasture Aeld, filled with browsing herds, Then he teuehed the air, and the heavens were filled with- vibrating wings and made melodious with songs of the prima donnas of the skies. And God saw that all the works of his hand were good. "And the evening and the morning were the fifth day." Everywhere we turn we see the bless- ing of God's creation. No grass could be greener, no sky could be bluer, no songs could be sweeter. All the seas and the lands and the.skies were filled with glories. Thus all things were ready for man's advent. The curtain of the world's drama was lifted for the chief, actors about to perform their parte. Two mighty thrones of power were pushed forward, upon which were to sitethe twain who were created only a little lower than the angels. So on the sixth day "God created man in his own image; male and female created he them. And God blessed them. And God eald unto theme Be fruitful and nuntiply and replenish the earth and subdue it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea„ and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.. And God saw everything that he b,ad made, and, be- hold, it was very good. And the even- ing and the morning were the sixth day."' Now, what does the word "Image" in the great climax of God's creation mean? When God seers, "I have made man in my own image," does it mean, as a great author suggests, that God inteeded to say that he *as only "a. magnified man?" hOh, no," you an- swer; "that is not the meaning of tat passage. The catechism tells us that God isa spirit, infinite, eternal aneun- changeeble. The idea of worshipping God as a physical body is a material- ism little different from that of the savage. If we do this, we can bow be- fore any painted idol just A,s the heath- ens have their hideous painted images, before which they kneel." That is true, my friend; that is absolutely true. If we -are going to worship God sim- ply as a physical being, we are in ex- aotly the same position as some of the Asiatic worshippers, who used to bring food every night and lay it upon the altar of their idol for their god to eat. Then because the rats in the night came and stole the food they thought their god ate it. 'Furthermore, they would ,not believe Miele -idol did not eat this food until a northern. corn queror lifted his battlettxe and smote the idol and broke it and pointed to the rats scurrying out of its ruins as they flee from a sinking ship. Thus when we say, "God made man after his, own Image," we mean, "Man was created after the spirit of God? We are an ready to grant that. One little drop of water is like unto all the great wat- ers of the mighty deep. Thus, ae an infinitesimal drop of water, man was created like unto the infinite spirit of God. Now, let us study for a little while in what sense man.was created In the image of God. The first god -like quality which over- whelins the students of eschatology is the fact that man is an immertal be- ing. Though we may open the Bible and write up the family records and say metnether.wes bernenam tt, 1432, esassalsweemeneeseueseates From F LL modern science goes to prove that herbal medicines are , vastly superior to 'those con- taining mineral ingredients. The herbs of the field and the trees of the 01 forest constitute nature's " medicine chest ; " and the highest benefit which A Pollee Officer's Evidence Indigestion and Constipation Cured Mr. Alexander Gordon., a retired.Poliee Sergeant, of Merry Street,'Motherwell, :Jaya :;---" Up to two or three years ago I enjoyed excellent health. Then my bowla became disordered and I suffered most fearful pain. Indigestion also attacked me and eating became very unpleasant on amount of the nauseus after-effeets and bad taste in the mouth. I also sufferect from :-. eakneete and terrible pains in the back. . I was %Tie- ill when Bileans were brought to my notice. I deeidcd to give them a trial. Obtaining a supply, I was .delight- ed te find thee soon often commencing the course I obtained relief. I persevered,' with the result that the constipta' on and ip hater pains were overcome, and the indigestion (Map eared. I am now as healthy as ever and can eat my food with re het. Change of Season Ailments. At this time of the year the body needs toning up to meet the demands that will be n e upon it by the coming winter. signs of this need are heada Hs, a weakly "run down" feeling, biliousness, indiges on, eta A short course of Means %vie hese the effect of tonin up and bmeing up the whole Flys - tem. Bileans for Ziliousness Cure lieadache, Constipation, Piles, Liver Troublee, Indigestion, Pal- pitation, Lea of Appetite, Flatulence, Dizzieerta, Debility, An- aemia, and all female ailments. Of all druggists, 50c a box, or post free from the'llileans Co, Toronto, upon receipt of price. 6 boxes for V-50 science can confer on man, is the discovery of nature's medicinal bahns anctessences, and their preParation in form suitable for use by the people. , Bileans for Biliousness -the great Austral:rm cure for indigestion, head- ache_ debility, liver trouble, etc. -are pUrely vegetable. They -ar3 entirely different and superior to ordinary liver and stomach medicines It is well known that liver medicines hitherto in use mostly contain bismuth, mercury, and other harmtul mineral:products, and rely upon these ingredients for their temporary effects. , These mineral constituents are very- injurious if takeni for long, and producc..‘ istich effects as that of loosening the teeth, causing the hair to fall out,,etc.• Elileans are entirely! superior. They are compounded from extraets and juice of the finest known medicinal plants. In taking them there - is no fear whatever of any harmful- secondary effects. They cure that which they are taken to cure, and do not leave behind them evils worse than the original ones. They do not mere:y purge and weaken, like the old-fashioned medicines, or do the work which the liver and stomach should do. They tone up and enable these organs to fulfil their proper functions, so that when a cure is effected and Bileans are left off, the organs remain strong and healthy. Users of Bileans need therefore never fear their use will lead to the cOntracting of the terrible "pill -taking" habit. Cut this out and post to Mean Co., Toronto, with cent stamp to pay I return postage. and frac I 1 eample box wiff be sent you. , Many Women Sui UNTOLD AGONY FROM KIDNEY TROUBLE., Veryoften they think it Is from so-called Female Disease." There is less female trouble than they think. Women suffer from backache, sleeplessness, nervousness, irritability, and a dragging -down feeling in the loins. Sc, do men, and they do not have "Iomtle trouble." Why, then, blarne'all y6ur trouble to Female Disease? With healthy kidneys, few women will ever have "female disorders." The kidneys are so closely connected with all the internal organs, that when the lridneYs go wrong, everything goes wrong. Much distress would be saved if women would only take DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS M stated intervals. Price 50 cents per box or three boxes for $1.25, all dealers or sent direct on receipt of price. The Doan Kidney Pill Co.. Toronto, Ont. we arave no rrgut-to Inty -nen ere, nteo. April In 1902. We ma.y speak of a child as having been born into this world on a certain hour of a certain day; but, once born, that child will never die. He may die to our eight, but he is not really dead, but is trans- lated to another life. He will never die. He win live on, as nee monarchy of a European throne lives on. No sooner did Queen Victoria of England breathe 'her last than the Prince of Wales became king. Aye, man shall live on longer than that. He will live on through, the centuries and the mil- lenniums and the ages. He will live on until the constellations of the heav- ens shall be snuffed, out. He will live on until the very rooks under our toot crumble MO dust with age and the mountains above is -are incinerated and scattered to the four corners cd space. Still Inane will live on. He will live forever and ever. He will never - die. When God created man he made him immortal, as he is immortal. This immortality of man Is the most wonderful fact to me about man, for when I try to fully grasp what that one word. "immortality" means X feel as though. mighty mountain ranges were towering one above another into endless space. When I try to conceive that man, with all his powers of love and bate, joy and suffering, will live Oil and on forever, then I say, "Now I realize why the salvation of man was so important that Christ came here to suffer and die to achieve it" Immor- tality; Oh what a word! As a bird it can fly swifter than the light, yet its wino never tire. Those -wings will continue to fly on forever and ever. "The wandering Jew" that Eugene Sue pictures was condemned on account of a past sin to live on until he outlived. *all his generation. He lived on, suf- fering the agonies of remorse, until he begged God to let him die. But, man does not live on as did the great char- acter of the French novelist. If man sins and is condemned for his sins, be must suffer an eternal punishment. He may plead with God to let him die, as the wounded soldier sometimes pleads with his comrades to shoot him to end his agony, but man by histiinherent nature can never die. Man is immortal. Man will live on and on forever. To prove to you that man is immortal we do not have to turn the leaves of the Bible alone. We find that this in- finite truth is inborn in every human heart. We wander among the tombs of the ancient Greeks, and what do we find? A piece of coin placed in the mouths of the dead to pay their way over the river Styx, for the -ferryman of the river, of Death was supposed to be paid, nice every other ferryman. We go among the ancient Arabs, and what do we find? The mourners about this corpse are not saying, "He is dead," but "He is alive." We pass to the inhabit- ants of the islands of the seas, and to the Aztecs of ancient Mexico, and to the old -mound builders a America, and everywhere we find the universal belief that the grave does not end ail. Now, my friends, do you believe that this universal belief of the human race in the immartality of man is a mere superstition. Listen to these words of Henry Ward Beecher; I would have each one of them burn itself into y -our soul: id never sa,w a man who did not believe tn the immortality of love when following the body of a loved one t) the grave. 1 have seen men under oth- er circumstances that did: not believe in it, but I never saw a man who, when he stood looking upon the form of one - that he really loved stretched out for burial, did not revolt from ,saying: 'It has all come to that, The hours of sweet compahionship, the wondrous in- terlacing of congenial souls, the joy', the hopes, the trusts, the unutterable yearnings -there they all lie No man cam stand and look Itt a c Alin upon the body of a fellow creature and remem- ber the flaming intelligence, the blos- soming love, the whole range of divine faculties, which so lately animated dint cold clay, and say, 'These have all collapsed and gone.' No person can witness the last sad ceremonials which - are performed over tbe remains of a human being, the sealing down of the unopenable lid, the following of the rumbling procession to the place of burial, the letting of the dust down° into the dust, the falling of the earth upon the, hollow coffin, with those sounds which are worse than thunder, and the piecing of the green sod over the grave -no person, unless he be a beast, can witness- these. things and then turn awa.y and say, 'I have buried my wife; I have buried my child; 1 have buried my sister, my brother, my love.' No, no. No man can say that. Deep down in every heart there is a divine truth' calling which cannot be stilled," At the brink of the grave, above all places, We know it. Man, like God, is immortal, Suns may rise and set, but man shalt live. Stars may flicker and go out, but man shall live. But man is made after the image f God. in another respect. The great Creator of the universe has made man a ruler and a treater also. In his dwn sphere man is like a king upon his throne. He is a free agent. He can rule his own domain as be wins. He can do right or do wrong. He can gov- ern well or govern badly He can build or he can destroy in a figurative sense, no one can say him nay. Let me try to illustrate my thought by some of the ordinary happenings of everyday life. Man is a ruler in a material sense. You cannot think of a king without a. material kingdom. Man, the ruler,. has veneent his material throne. God gave him do- , gineettee minion over the fish of the sea, overtho .fowls t ee ofi_ttletare aainrvanjaaad o.aveort esrtsrhisynalinv: ed - e heefrineihturet'a $11 LhS swims itx, the sent an w*lk* upon the land? Aye, has not nsart /eye -Tied how to make the very elements fitinit his purpfrees? The me.nxmai Is 'etrlinker, but: man is his lting. The ttereedis sigifted the foi, shrewder, the henens. keener eyed; the eagle, with flap or. wing, mounts and 'disappears into the bluo abyss above, but man Is king. The mighty lirlibed African lion, with wild roar, makes the forest 'echo and all the tribe -intents of the jungle crouch and tremble. But the lion retreats be- fore the advance of man; for man is king. - Net only Is man a ruler of the beasts of the fields and ,the fowls of the air and the fish of the seas, but man has learned laow to tame the elements and make them hie servants. Franklln went torth anea cowboy upon the west - re prairie and, sending his etett l wire into the heavens, ittencied electrteMe Which More trained for a message earlier. ,George Stephenson harnessed steam into block traces and triode the lion locomotive take the bit. Daguerre has made the sun print our pictures. Robert Fulton pointed the ship's prow into the teeth of the northeast wind Thomas Edison has turned midnight Into raidnoon. Yes, man; in a material sense, is king. As the psalmist sang of the great Jehovah: "He cottereth him- self with light as with a garznent Re layeth the beams of his chambers tne waters. He maketh the elouds-his chariots. He walketh upou the ivvings of the wind." Not only Is man a ruler in a, material sense; he Is also a 'dug in a personal tense. He has obsolute, control oven his own actions. He is entree agent* God endowed him with this freedom, warning him of the consequences of using it to do wrong. Yet bow have men abused it! It is as when a boy leaves his father's house bind goes out into the world. His father might keep him at home under parental restraint, but that would not be the way to make a man of him. He must go out and learn to resist temptation. Sometimes he learnt only by bitter experience what are the consequences of yielding. pc, God lett man free, and the first use he Made of his freedomwas to dinette/. God says to him; 'Man, you are a free agent You can -do as you 'wilt. I have made the ruler ever the beasts of the fields and over the birdof the air and the fish of the sea and also oveznyour own actions. You are made after my Image. You are an independent being In your own dornain or sphere. You are independent as long as you ilve on earth, but do not forget that there is a day of Judgntent." But, though God has made us free agents, he has not left us without guid ance H has put within each one of us a moral and spiritual compase; • This moral and spiritual compass 14 called conscience. It tells us what we ought to -do. It distingaishes for US the difference between wrong and 'right. And, like every other °oneness, It ivould keep us off the rocks of evil and guide us into channels of justice and purity and truth. God pats within each one of us a moral and spiritual compass which shows us when we no wrong, for we are made after God's image. Wherefore God has given to us the means to be just and true and good, as he Is just and pure and true and good. But, alas, alas! Instead of following the leanings of our conscience we have wandered. oft into the paths of sin. We , have -done what our conscience hat warned us not to do. To -day our con- science is pleading with us to do right, as a loving mother would plead with a wayward child. It is taking us by the hand and saying: "Won't you give up your -sins? Won't you try to undo the "wrongs you have done others? Won't you follow the leanings of Jesus Christ?" That conscience of ours will never stop its pleadings with us to do right, it has, too, the power to punish. It is said that when Prof. Webster of Harvard college was awaiting his trial Lor killing a brother professor he call- ed into his cell one day the warden of the jail and. said: "Cannot you ntop the other prisoners from insulting me? Every little while one of them keeps calling, 'Webster, you are a murderer You are a, +Woody .man." The warden made an Investigation. He said id will stop it" But he -could not stop it, for the word e which Webster heard name not from the other prisoners' cells, but were spoken by his own con- science. So all about us we hear the words of our conscience pleading with us to avoid evil and repent of our sin. Our conscience Ands a voice in the street floggings and the walls and the bedpoets and the chairs, which Is call- • ing to us, as it did to Prof. Webster in the Boston Jail, saying; "You are a sin - nen Yon must repent and renounce, your sin.. You must corne to Christ." We are made in God's image. God has put conscience within us for a. purpese. We should obey it, for we can never be truly happy until we are pure and true and good and just, as God is pure and true and good and Just Are you. readtotdat to obey the pleadings of your 'conscience? Now, my friends, are we ready to: .obey God's will and become like unto himself through the redeznptien and the blood of Jesus Christ? We have been talking about man as God first creeted him in his purity and simplic- ity. But sin has come into the world and so malformed us that we are far from perfect. The divine image is soil- ed and incrusted with the mire of sin. As we say of a man who has yielded to the power of drink that his mother would scarcely recogntze in the sodden, blotched visage the face of the child she cherished in infancy, so we do not see God's linage in the sinful man; but, as Paul said to the people whozn he had led to Christ, "Such were some of you, btzt ye are wasben, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified." And he says, too, that they who behold Pas in a mirror the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image," so the Image that Is overlaid or lost. Is re- stored or brought to light by Christ, , Christ says, "Ye are my friends If ye do whatsoever X cominand you." That means, "You shall again be stamped in my Image if you will accept my'atone- ment and my love and sacrifice." Win you do It? Will you to -day throw your- self upon his mercy and become pure, as he is pure, and dwell with him on earth and dwell with him: forever and ever? .Tesue said, "1 am the way." Will you take that way to become ilke unto himself and dwell with hint in heaven es his friend throughout eter- nity? The opportunity is yours if dott will accept hipn for God will recreate you In his own spiritual image. "Bo God ereated man In his own image' as not 'man t or a: n af•la "De JndYou Have Mways A PERFECT FIT VET YIELDS TO ERY MOVON .thulerwear tnat pulls up on your arm or leg every time yoisuagSrtreatthle tuff t is migilt: dee wear. You know that your- self. ff k ERWEAR s manufactured in a special way which gives every garment all eiastic- ity of hand -made goods. Without being loose and baggy it yields to every motion of the body. It will never get out of shape 0t become bard in washing and absolutely guaranteed not to shrill Insist upon seeing this - trade mark. 11 Ceetee Is an:treat:la: eiltai.m te,:iei it bac) and your dealer 1. ia leading dealers have it.; PP 1—D V_ LiLL. Cn-Ainfenentetent 'rlf1WMVXM You cannot possibly have a hetter Cocoa than A delicious drink and a sustainlng food. Fragrant, nutritious and economical. This excellent Cocoa maintains the system in robust health, aod enables it to resist tees extreme Sold by Grocers and zore epers in 1.1b. and ip.lb This APRON PATTERN 3EI31EL This Is the best apron pattern ?.ver offered, and his aemething very lady needs. You cannot fail to be pleased with this one, 1:111 all new subscribern to THE HOME JOURNAL will receive one free. This is o, prize pattern, all sizes from 22 to 42 Inches bust. TEM Flomia JOURNAL is a fine, beautifully illustrated in sine for women and gir 1%111 of bright, interesting serial and shortleries, and well edited departinents on fancy work, household hints ef great value, health and beauty, etiquette, cooking, dowers, boys' and girls'page, fashione, wit and humertete. It la being humored -with every issue. It would be abet* ateri.00 per year, butin order to introiluce Our InagazIno to readers, we send Titz }Lowe YOUNNAl.a full year and the apron, pattern for )nly 25e. Address DIEOTTLATION DE 'T ROMEJOURNAL Tosorro. te*• MI&WANTED UrclITT.Ziet, E throughout nested states and Canada fo Advertise our goods, f.saking up show cards entroes. formagAbridges, and ell conspicuous places ; its. tributing amalleedvertising matter. ComMission or vast -1r Sao a month angt exp es VA) lir dear. ineptly -employ- inent to goad reliable men. We ley eut your work 112re you, No exPerlance needed. Write In particulars. 8ALU2 MEDICINAL 00.. London. Ontario, Candela H You Suffer with Rheumatism 1.....0.2•••••••• . Sheep's Rheumatic Rem dy Bring the Utmost Relief Medicine Can. The one remedy 'n- il gze R m . r. Shoo, firm - e LanimwiahloobsabretitheeTitse is -Of earl iSlaelelin, futon to free the systena of ., .„ heumatio Poise ag i ar Cab DRI: -?c• 317 ar In experimenting he -/..for. be diseovcred pombined chemicals ich mane possibio bne almost always e retell uctilrepr:, wain...that Is Suootes Rizzo1. MJ'V1C - Rheureatiam, ete, ntj tan turn bon p ,:i Ifs. rdE 71117: al:1- : 11 drivn ;Welling'. And from. the us e le)a":c1(111: Benutdiotfctonheapria: il 1/1141 , :ndad_Wballetaiti 11113:1:eni theen_dof theeuf- niedy7aeree plaprurtisultWpIlhineeriltanieba4Iteerroer 1 d foem---nelt toe:i la it iS novel eithon. You -who have snftored and are suf. tering today irom pahis end =bee which 701; know to be Rheumaltemt you Who experieneni aotTrti: (1,rarbigs 4z3z1 Ptill in (till" Iveiller 7 . - ily co 0 t ff e.'n mete witho apparent cause-letst try DR. SHOOP'S leHErre tdArrio CURE. it is Just the kind of a rem that aoe_oraplishes results, $old and re =ended by CHAS, ABERHART. DR. WOOD'S 1 Stops the Ir atlng eoUgh# 1003 - ens the phlegm, soothes the fn. flamed tissues of the lungs and. bronehiai tubes, and produces ft quick and permanent cure in all eases of Coughs, Colds, Brm- chitis, Asthma, Hoarseness, S31'e Throat and the first stages a ConsumptiOn. Mrs. Norma Swanston, Camp, Ont., %vrites "1 take great pleasure m recent. tnending Dr. Wood's Norwayriue Syrup. 1 had a very bad cold, -could not sleep at night for the coughing and bad pains in my chest and lungslonly used half a bottle of Dr. Wood'sNorway Pirie 8 and was perfectly well again!' Pries 25 cents bottle.