The Huron Expositor, 1924-01-18, Page 2,
'
Jet. 0 4
4tiQn b4
'ore 043, 1'707 .RPkist'
wb'cLot
heTitage to Igo.,
'open fer wMA.
, •
Ovens.* or might's- hosts,
gt»g steeds or warlike boasts
am. overthrow,
will s#ve from (loath "and
tigmne
Snwho fear tual trust Ms name
d'tlasy lixiaSt Shall know.
• gATER
41343.1gktY God we stand afa 0 a and
with .;buizferl, bead,, listening to bear
ee calling us to come nigh. We
thank Thee that the way is open,
that a great Deliverer has 'brought us
out of darkness into light and that
*ere is now no condemnation to those
who are in Chriat Jesus. May we
ever see in the cross cur 'redemption
from sin with all its guilt and power.
Thanks be unto Gqd who giveth us
the victory through Jesus Christ our
Lord. Amen. •
S. S. LESSON FOR JAN 20th, 1924
Lesson Title -"Moses Called to De-
liver IsraeL"
Lesson Passage-Exod. 3; 1-2.
Golden Text -Heb. 11:24, 25.
In the second chapter of Exodus we
read all the Bible tells of the birth
and early life of Moses. He was born
of the tribe of Levi, at the time when
the bondage, with which the Egypt -
lane made the lives of the children of
Israel bitter, was most severe and
when an order had gone out to destroy
all the male children at birth. The
story of 'his deliverance shows plain-
ly the hand of God stretched out to-
ward the persecuted people. This de-
liverance and his training at the
court of Pharaoh were providential
• peeparatiorts for his future work
"And Moses was learned in all the
wisdom of the Egyptians, and was
mighty in words and in deeds." (Acts
7;22). All this life at court with its
advantages came to a sudden and
seemingly inglorious end. He mur-
dered an Egyptian taskmaster -whiz
forced him to flee to Midian to es-
cape the wrath of Pharaoh.
The life of Moses was, divided into
three periods of forty years each.
The first forty were spent at the
Court of Pharaoh; the second as
herdsman in Midian and the third a
head of God's chosen people. Ile had
now finished his second forty when h
was commissioned to return to Egypt
He was born for this vera purpose
yet heard never a whisper of it until
he was eighty years of age.
o• -
';Verse 1. -Moses' Occupation When
• He was tending another man's floc
.---Jethro, his father-in-law, the pries
of Midian. It was surely a poor oc
cupation .for a man brought ;tM an
educated as he had been butthusi
was those traits of character wer
perfected for which he was more not
ed in Scripture than for all his learn-
ing. Moses held communion wit
God in the desert more than at an
time in his previous life. So w
learn that desert places are not nee
essarily waste places but holy groun
where man holds fellowship with God
Wisdom, physical endurance and
meekness were all to be employed i
the work before him. He was bus
about his humble work when a visio
burst upon his sight, just as the shop
herds were tendingtheir flocks whe
"the glary of the Lord shone ronn
about them,"
yerse 2. -The Strange Appearance.
Abraham saw a burning lamp who
Israel's bondage and deliverance wer
foretold to him by God, so now Mose
saw a flame of fire out of the adds
of a bush which though burning wa
not consumed. g
Verse 3. -is Curiosity.
"I shall turn aside and see." It wa
a sight such as in all his shepherd lif
in the desert he had not conic acros
until now. Where had the fire corn
from that had kindled the bush? H
decided to look into it for whateve
the cause he ought to enquire th
meaning of it.
Verse 4. -God's Call and Moses'
Answer.
God's eye was upon Moses an
when He saw that the burning bus
hadaerrested his attention even to hi
leaving his work to go nearer to se
what it actually was, He called ti
him., Had Moses shown, no desire
investigate this strange appearanc
as something of no moment he woul
most probably have bat the golde
opportunity of a talk • with Go
"Draw nigh to God and Ire will a
nigh to you" 'was hiseexperience tha
day. There was no mistaking thi
call for it was his own name he hear
There could be no mistaking it fo
another for it was emphasized in be
repeated -"Moses„ Moses." Sur
'.-0.10-elised at the sight of a bush burn
*ithouViieing consumed he Inns
itzre beeentore than ever 'surprise
.the 'sound of a voice in that lonel
Idays,to come Motes *as
eagia-ritore fully that he had fon
:A04 -fit dod.'s sight and, „that Eu
Audo-hint try isms. (tE,. 33112-1'1).
TO thia rentrarTrable call Meets gay
ztoderemiy (glare am re,
,irecs;,51.11.-Gall'n 'Centime.
, zready
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4it ea- Oisii•Aift.', a: feet'. heOguAle that
,fr 4.44114141100,4*.micl to litOIF "itito :tIle
' . Q.:A:I taa. ooyeaaat.paakiug endeepire
4.40,,Too.p44e94vim
feated. in nature., but the 'mom vire
. .
learn et Ole love Und.grace rtialUfeate ,
ed in Jeatta, Christ the more htattialY
1 mercy seat Ys7arlY do, we .aPPrtMeh the
.
Versea 74,--Goirs Notice •ea ins
. reoplc's .A.gfilletiaaa,..' •
'While in this attitude God spoke to
XOSOS and gave luta to understand he
had neVer lost Sight Of the sorrows ef'
the ehildree of Jima Their ery bad
entered His ears though apparently
deaf to it all and He had seen the
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a dateata, ,,
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waratan,•ince .tee ,g0tueo or a, itrarov,
et, hlaree rf,,iy delia#0663 ,:thrrel 'tile
forest Metes, aThen • whene elniOner
hekt bajna.,,, unb all, tins, beauty: at.,,.lie.
btlea 31SeLl ' eCOMPS 4 wenaerrill .
symphony of thoae,. eadorafthaV, 940e
most frequently sees l'u . °TaPaP4e
prints -a sYMPliOnY of ethereal blue
and, silver, the dim blue. raf fort*,
depths shot through. With iticanales-
cent sunlight and the silver of Wk-
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'''innal). itteiei NUN •SII Illsat44'0kor
.,•- - ' • .. ' ' '.• ', , , a.,,,.. aa , ,•., e.,,,., , ...
eelleat place fer.the• animal'. .;"
'Meer whet's' there AO, W64 ilreeneSe
: rf";,011 PartalPar *0..000 10i*,10014
, ft. 44:03111).. Vat/1;1114. tp,tAlltegg04:1404
' of Wild Pine Fare '. Ranoie '‘, e
eeeetee,,, eiear, .011,40•0•,,,...044,, ••••$,k.
place .where more:. Oro, *bolo ,1(004100.f
.:.pr sltuaks,' ead all free afroiee' that
;Ili -Savored Onell. . The A1494':1444 -1,A=
'.hy' apt TO, Ingot and gr ',,P,'.4.,04,e-•
fer
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*army of their oppressors and now
the time had come for a speedy de.
Hamm -nee. The them was ripe and the
deliverer was at hand ready prepared
for" the undertaking and this was
what God was making plain to Moses.
When God has some special Work. in
less branches and trunks, standing'
out Witkauch distmetneee that ' they
ar
bak as etched bete the very all'
itself' . . , • ':
No Australian painter -and there
are m any who have tried -has yet
trapped upon f s canv,as t e co ors
hi . h I
the bush -in Summer time apreads
health a ..,.:**- ....!‘, ....,, A - 0,7 .
.a.xi% Wala•Isa,a4 A v'c'7
' "FraiteOlveallOpti can give Such '',
happY. ataiSuctie , mt remits beeenSe
".Fruit-eatiYea is the fa•MO„na,Ate,d.t.‘-.'.
cunernadefroinfrldtjuicesandttelle$7.,.
'ir 'At H•t- ,,' 1 asanf ta t4e ^1
4 r laa, ivea, is p e ,, • ,.
and will,..adyraYs. restore the health '
stoue the raising o,rooltkefttlat
Will .eroduce tine NI% free:: 0, ..•9*, 001. a..0; .
. :S. Oh sething is not • impOestlelealea
a little sitygery. W. 4ii, -the-Shank .10,,'
baby and the thirig. ite:done6 _ 'To Aft;
mei haa two sceof glende frota•Wil eh
it ejects a secretioa, the inuell.. of
i '. ' t 't th t ' ' • *
which s so persle eP. 0.,AP'-ametle..
'fronl
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' -
hend He is isaid to come down• to do
it. "Oh that thou wouldst rend the
heavens, that thou wouldet come
down, that the mountains might flow
daily before him. • a
Unlike theforests of British Co,-
lumbia, or of Quebec, the Australian
bush has little or no undergrowth.
when ts,keia' regularly as ,,direata',,,
,
50e. a bogy, 0 for $2.50, trial -size 25e.
At • dealers . or . from Finiba4tives.
Limited) (*was OLIO. -
of w,ashing Will reartivi •.if
clethee impremiatecT" with it Tii.e.
ranchers at Teigacembe ere not rielt-:
ing anything of that kiint, ere) the
glands
•
„
.
, I , , ,, , . , ,
,
• , , :.
, a , -
down at Thy presence?' (Isa. 64:1).
One can easily penetrate it and
• , e c
are remeved when the skunks.
are too tiny to object -
• . •
, - „
Verse 10.—MosesCommunion
'
He was not only sent as a leader to
the children of Israel but as an am-
bassador to Pharaohs court
'.' What
a prospect for a herdsmen! It struck
him as an impossible thing.'
Verse 11. -Moses' Estimate of ,
Himself. .
He regarded himself as quite unfit
for and unequal to the task. How
could he appear before Pharaoh and
demand that he let the children of
Israel go? . •
God answered.. his objections' by pro-
mising His presence and giving him a
pledge of His faithfulness -"Certain-
ly I will be with thee; and this shall
be a token unto thee, that I have sent
thee: When thou hest brought forth
the people out of Egypt ye 'shall
serve God upon this mountain,"
God is the fountain of power and
the powers that be are ordained of
though it has little animal life -the
rat, the snake and the wallaby are
the chief -it has a large never -rest-
ing human population drifting
through it every month in the year.
"Sundowners" Making their way
"Out Back," men down on their luck
and on the wallaby," `swaggies' with
their packs on their back and "billy"
in their hand, seeking' work and
often praying.•they may not get it,
sheep and cattle men searching for
lost stock -a -All may; be me with from
time to time carhped beside the track,
It is a cornamin picture •when the
brilliant southern stars are coming
out in the still evening over the tree
tops to see e little ahead and to the
side of the red -soil track through the
bush, the little wandering fires and
dark silhouette of a "swagman" pre-
Paring his "damper" and boiling his
soot -black "billy" for his night meal.
He makes his bed on the ground, he
curls up in his blanket beside his tiny
splattering' blaze of sweet-smelling
.
,
. '
point in winter. It is a mere legend
that the Australian has never seen
snow. Manf. Sydneir people spend-
their Christmas • on Mount Kos:
cuisko and 'with skiing and sncek
shoeing on 'could not tell that one
were not spending it at Revelstoke,
British Columbia. _.
Howeveee ethe weather is all im.-
portant ta the pioneers of the Aus••
tralian bush. Given only enough
rainfall mid he can -face the isola-
tion of hielenely life with courage if •
not with -Pleasure. 'he Australian
pjoneer laekS, neither' grit nor stub-
,•
bernness. ' Ile makes sometimes a
fortune, seinetimes a bare living. But
he is always •hopeful. The spirit ef
the bush, seems' to have entered into
him and be follOws the trail of life
always .sure , that there -is something
better for bine. just. a little around the
next turn Of' it. ,
.. e•
.
It is sugesteci that the nauseous
Secretion pas thereeentical virtuesa
and cons,eqeently Whether it hais Of. commercial
value. s or no we
"
are not dealing in It, says ranche.
' We want furs for which there
ielsareal market.
. " „
Thus the little bit of surgery ex-
ere is no ob
plains why there noxions
smell on the Wild Pine Fur Renate
which consists of 25 'acres of rough
moor and pine woods with wire net-
ting runs and pens and a wooden
shack in which Mr. Jo.hnstone resides.
Operations were begun a year ago
with 45 skunks. Thirty- from
America were added and the populaa'
.
tion since inereesed to 150, including
100 'females. There is no question
of financial results yet, as the enter-
Priee is only in its infancy, and the
ranchers aim e a stock of 2,00()
females. Then. will be the time for
eee fees, The average price Of
skunk furs is from 80s. to £2 -and
no doubt women will ae soon buy the
English as. the Americen'article.
., .
1. ' •
„
,t;
\
e.
1 e ,.
,_
,
' To Clear means for YOU
.
\ price or lesathan it is
. ' ' • .
. Would have
.
Ladies' Dresses
. .
Made of Trieotine Gabardine
f
.-
. ....
•
Ladies' Coats
.. ‚(only 10 in all), a few
$50.00 akd
!
.
! '
2,- ,
,,. „., , . k
• ..
,
,
, . ,
. '
th get things athalf the •
.
really Worth •.or. that you
to. pay- othervirise.. , ,
•. . ,
. . . ,
' , ,
• and Serges from ,
' ' •,, ,
f‘' $7.5.0
', ' ' -
— , ...., ,
. ,
of them are worth up to
'
more. From -
$12.95 to ,
tha.t fetched a shepherd out of a des-
ert to be the planter bf a Jewish
church afterward fetched fishermen
from their ships, to be the planters
gumwood and he sleepathrough the
wage night, in peace and security.
e may be out or work; he may
not have a. shilling in the world, but
he has not a care The bush
, ,
J
Could -MA Straighten
\ nis Back
It is said that the experts have
tiever succeeded in breeding skunks
at the Zoo, but. the animals are, flour-'
Jailing on Dartmoor, and it is
-$31.50 .
,
•.: ilia A I • •
:A.! linllreits-Dr $ses. • .
,
I i' •
of the Christian church, that the ex-
ceiling of the • power might be of
either.
is all before him, kindly and shelter-
ing, and he knowS he has only to ap-
.---,-.
THEN ',QURREC" MAN. USED
DODD*S 'KIDNEY PILLS
that the furs being produced are as
• . . '
good as any raised in Canada.
. ,
. ' Made of heavy Wool Serge in five different
. . .•
styles. Sizei from 4 to 1.4. ';''TO clear from •
God." (Matthew Henry).
pear at sundown at the nearest ate-
.,
. -• • •
, ,
, idelichildren
°Ths verance of the 'of
Israel from the hand of their op-
pressor by the hand of Moses and the
bringing of them into, the land of
, promise was typical of our redeme-
• , tion 'by Christ, whom God, by His
I grace delivers out of a spiritual Egypt
He will bring to"a-lreavenly Canaan.,
,know
........_.
tion or farm for food to be forth-
coining for that day's needs at all
events.
The hospitality of the bush is of-
ten abused but no matter how often,
it is never lacking. Because the bush
can be grim and terrible as well as
warm and sheltering and those who
it, -'best best are readiest th help
. ______ --- --
Mr. E. D. Tremblay is delighted with
the resillia obtained.
Pointe Atix, ' Otitardes, •.Que., Janu-
ary 14th.- (Special).-Th.e Stelling-
value of Dedd's Kidney Pills as a kid-
ney remedy ia• shown by the following
statement of Mr. E. D, Tremblay of
this Mwn. . . •
"I have suffered for nearly six
History of a Phraee.
"The- Thin Red Line" is so well
established as a desoription of British
forces in battle array that it is (little
cult to realize that it is comparatively
modern. It has been gen,erally
, credited to William Howard eRnssell,
the famous war correspondent, in his
account of Balaclava, in the London
Times, in 1854. is
.
'Sa;35.---to
, ,
-s Coat- . . .
'Children . .
' ,
Sizes, from ,4 to 12 only. From .
_.
- ' - ' $3.50 to 67..95
' ,
.
• WORLD MISSIONS ..
The Value Value of His Faith. -'as
, A story told of the Methodist -work
, in Singapore is so striking that it has
. been widely quoted: A- Chinese boy
in"Singapore had arranged to be bap-
those waylaid by it,
When the wave 'of after -the -war
unemployment submerged Australia
it did most of thereat of the world
thousands of out -of -arm -1m took to
the bush and the back- blocks, hunt-
ing for whatever might tide them
over a. -"bad spell." They found lit-
tle, it is true, fol wool prices had
years from rheumatism and bad kid-
„
neys and was mot able to stand up
straight. I. ,took two boxes of your
Dedd's Kidney Pills, and am now com-
pletely relieved of my trouble." e
What Mr. Tremblay states is all
,
that has ever been claimed for Dodd's
-.-•
tudney Pills -that they 'are good for
•This not quite
correct, as 'is pointed out by J. B.
Atkins, in a letter tie the /Times: .,
When I wrote the life of Sir
Ilam Russell I yeas interested to find
,that there had been a good deal of
discussion about this phrase "thin red
line." The facts are these: Russell
in describing the charge of the Rue-
We reduced the prices for the month of January
on practically everything that we handle in our
Store., , -
e , '
We Invi. te you all to -visit Our store and -he.
convinced. ' •,
-
r ,
.
, tized shortly after his graduation, but
, to his surprise he won' a scholarship
. of $500 a year for feur years in the
Hong Kong University. One of the
. conditions was, the winner must be a
• Confucianist. To a student the
"slumped" and the drought was bad
-yer they managed to get a daily
meal and they survived until winter
drove them back to Sydney and the
hospitality of the government again.
On most of the big station "out back".
sick kidneysA
_
It is astounding how some people
.-
wai go on suffering day after day
with aches and pains rheumatism
and backache. They s'uffer because
they are not aware a the fact that
sia,n cavalry against/ the 93rd High-
an M his letter dated October
25, 1854, wrote: "The ground files
beneath their horses' feet; ga.therhig
eed at every stride, they dash on,
'toward that thin red streak tipped
. • _ • • •
e , ,
Cheifetz Bros.,Seaforth
,
poor
, temptation to defer baptism was very
. great, but he resisted and stood be-
, fore the altar for baptism at the ap-
there is a hut for the Om -downer
when he arrives at the end. of his
days tramp. . .
'fe
they can get relief. Strengthen the
kidney*, which are the source of the
• h
trouhle and •- these pains vams .
Dodd's Kidney Pills directly
with a line of steel." In the Times,
"tipped" was printed "topped." Rus-
. sell revised his Crimean letters El`v-
eral times for various editions. In
. .
.
. , ,
,
, pointed time. A friend, a Confucian -one
ist, stood next in line for his scholar-
, ship, but he was so impressed that
• he refused the scholarship, saying:-
, "If Christianity is worth so much to
in the interior is rough' and
Temperatures reach 112 at tunes
hoLtiTempera ..
and the artesian water as et pours
from the earth is ofteia scalding to
the hand. Droughts are' the standing
ineneee--fer weeks a sky of glass,
act on
the kidneys. They heal and strength-
en them so that they do their full
work of strauung all the impuritieS,
out Of the bleed.
-,,..,
of these revisions the original
. phrase became "thin red line tipped
with steel." So I find it In the edi-
tion of 1877. In that ,edition the
words are printed in italics -a fact
_ ,
, CREAM WANTED
• . .
„ ,.•
.
._
rIEE McKILLOP MUTUAL,
'INSURANCE
. my classmate, it can be worth no less
.
, to meI will be a Christian . " He
blue 411d cloudless ; sometimes -a
passing -thunderstorm- which serves
WHY THE EIGHTEENTH I
which surprised Russell when it was
Pointed out to him. Perhaps the
printer, recognizing that some trim-
.---..a..,-
We are not only a Cream Varket
for but we are -E large
ME CO'Xii
_ , .
also was baptized
[ .
'(Missionary Review).
,
only to fill the galvanized iron water
tanks which ,are the Most prominent
feature of Australian farmhouses in
the 'drought
AMENDMENT?
Do not misunderstand us. We are
not against its enforcement. The
ble had been spent on the phrase,.
thought that Russell would like the
emphasis! Russell was mot a careful
you, also
Daky Industry in Yonc C0r0innult7,
We respectfully solicit Yolir Cream.
,
HEAD OFFICESEAFORpla:orri.
OFFICERS:
J. Connolly, President
.----40.--
section -but do not save
the crops or the farmer from,
Eighteenth Amendment is\ -.''-apart of
Proefreader. .. , !
_ Our Mott'o.
•Goderich - -
Jas. Evans, Beechwood, vice-preelden#
' AUSTRALIA'S BUSH IS UNIQUE
I IN THE WORLD
;
The bush dominates Australia. How
; gen_
s hall one degcribe it? A whole
eration of minor poets has been hard
at work attempting to do it. Yet it
cannot be said that any of them have
I.
caught the spirit of it even as well as
! Pauline Johnson or Carrnen or Lamp_
; man caught the atmosphere of those
Gothic glooms that are the Canadian
forest, the shadows and sunlight that
'• set its rivers agleam or the cold
! beauty of its snows. '
Henry Kendall is the acknowledged
best of the Australian nature poets-
he certainly wrote some pieces full
of inspiration, but one reads him and
then sees the reality/only to feel that
I
per-
haps, ruin.
It would be quite wrong, hovvever,
to assume that Australia is a land
of drought. New South Wales in
spite of its heat, has large areas .of
wheat lands and areas_ suitable for
mixed farming where the rainfall is
always sufficient. Huge irrigation,
dams are being n
' built in the dry areas'
.
ancl these will enable the farmer to
defy. the worst that the heavens can
do to him.
f fact, has al -
iIn point o ..
most every kind 0f-self/nate there -m.
You can find the torrid zone in the
north where the bananas. and sugar
cane grow and the. Canadian snows
in Tasmania where ,on the hills the
temperature is rarely above freezing
the Constitution of the United States.
So long as t his is true, all law-abid-
•
o citizens should recognize their
jig c
duty to conform to its requirements
ald to sustain the authorities that
are established for its enforcement.
To disregard law, to say, "Beceuse I
,
ao not approye of a law I am nt
der obligation th observe " ioe un- un-
Americaan& subversive of that re-
n,
spect `for law Without Which no gov-
eminent can long endhre. But why
,
so insistent old persistent the de-
nland..tha.. t this Amendment be enforc-
ed 'w'hile wholly indifferent to Other
amendments no less 'a part of the
constitution and to the exif e in t
or e en
of which those in power .have solenm-
ly given, their oath? -",
In the Fourteenth Apiendment it
is declared, "Representatives be
Watering a Desert. ,
.
Watering a desert with the largest
dam ha the world •will make a garden.
of Sind, India. The project_ was in -
augurated by. Sir George Lloyd, re-
tiring -Governor of Bombay, who de-
scribed it as the greatest of its kind
the worithad ever seen It dives
'
Indus waters, to . provide Irrigation
for. and.render poesible, the cultiva-
arm of an area eqiia1 tii that of any'
-
five of the larger. English countiee.
Three canals carrying of the' -waters
of thO'Indu's are wider than the Sue.z
canal. There is also a supply cliaa-
nel ' more then 'doable the width of
i li ., _ . t., e
he Mane ester Ship Canal. n
great In
Indus or dam baxrage blingt
8,000,900 acres of barren lead under
cultivation. Its cost is £3,500,000:
The 100
Guaranteed Accurate Weights and.,
Tests. ' • .
courteous and prompt servk.ce.
Highest Market Values.
Cream Gradm* g. •
A difference of,„8 cents per pound
Butter -Fat Paid between No. ). and
No. 2 Grade Cream.
,. • -
Cash Por Creaill,
Cash _paid. to any ,-Patzron 'wishing
It when Cream is delivered,
,. Creamery. 'open Wednesna'-y and
' Saturday - Evenings.
firth C . III
• The Sea-- 1.rt. Orr.
,_ ,
, ,
.
D. F. lieGregor, Seaforth, SecAlreas...
AGENTS: •
- Alex. Leitch, R, R, No. 1, Clinton'
W. E. Iiinchley, Seaforth; John Ott:
.ray, Egmohdville; J. 'W. Yee, Gode-
rich; R. G. Jarniuth, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS: '
Wam Rinn, No. 2, Seafortlig,
John Bertnewies ' Brodbagett,i, 'alatee$,
Evans, Ileechworial slitle lIcrwen, (Mini.
tont James Co oil" Goderich-Aim
c4BrimeaviNtos.. 1rw( ttlti).So'Z' tif6vtb". 'Jtria; G:
Hari:pelt. George McGarthey No. 11,
Seeforth; lifutta3i Gz ,so i Breeeffeldo
12 ii
e ,
.
• ,
,
he has fallen far short.
i English writers like Douglas Sla-
1 den and others have given destrip-
t tions of the bush emphasis
a
• , ,
• . , •
kils DAyliS
shall
apportioned gallant the several states
according to their 'respective numbers,
counting the *hryIe number of,, pee.
iongeet canal runs for miles.
The barrage- Will , carry two mightY,
bridges aCro.iiirthe Indus, each five
times larger, than London bridge.-
.
' , \ , . .. 1
,
placing
>
. . . e
5 ' '
in Indiane
•,... -
on its weird nor is it always melan-
) eholy. Here is a samples: e
t "Some see no beauty in our trees
I without shade, in birds that cannot
I fly, in flowers that have no perfume,
, , . , . - -
- NERvous..wREcK
' • ' • e ' •
sons each,state, excluding
not taxed. ant when the hight to
vote at any election for the choice .of
Electors for Tresident and Vice-
President of United States,, Ite,,,
Birds.' Sense of Smell , ,
The great majority sof of
go lyj:,
sight alone.Stlid t bird Ilf
tell us that only three of the comteen,
'
, ,
.
.
°vac
. in, beasts -that cannot walk on all-
i fours. YeYthe dweller in this wilder-
t nese, whispered to by its myriad ton-
gues, learns the language of ' the
barren and uncouth and can reed the
ea Tv via vie - m ....' ".' - .
lellSw*Vr ° .rn e "atff 2 e tw a Lydiair I
to • rated . await'''. by aomE.
'finkhamtes vegebbie conround
.aa
.the
presentatives to Congress, etc.., is
denied to any of the male members
of such State,. being of twenty-one
years of age 40a Citizens of the Unit-
ed States, or, in any . way abridged,
ter& use the sense of smell in pit.
. ,,t
suit of their instincts. These are
the d turfl.eaAdaoyae,,etyhec.otumeltey buzzard
„ thec , ,.1 et The haoa...1_3' 1,._
whisky JacKe-ouzzartua'
. •
' e .
(1 ". CLOTI-IES OF .QUALrry -,-,.,.
.
r hieroglyphics of the haggard gum-
. trees blown into odd shapes, distort-
ed with fierce hot -winds ot cramped
,
Wittnieek, Man. -a I ehnnot apeak
taateahly at whet Lydia E,,,phelehapees
• ' ' . Vegetable Com.
..
except for partieipaticin in rebellion
or other crime) the basis of represen-
tation therein shall be reduced in the
:
gather freetir wherever carrion is die.
played, and are notoribtie tiobvengers.'
,
• Tnere are plenty 'of evideuese that'
.
, PEATURINd
. '' ••'-, a,
.
.
. in the cold nights when the Southern
t Cross freezes in the sky. The built
I then interprete itself to the poet Of
, its' desolation"
' - To An extent this description is true
)
, tinoUgb. Bat it is only. a small part
: of the troth. 'The hush is not altvals
,--,...fra not..1. A alWays Melancholy.
,
:
.,..: . : • .
, ..
,
...-7/
,
//.:
,,
'
pmind has done for
mg
.,. I wad anervous
,Wreekaoritlabad
toftneeinyself to do
thy work,- Even the
•ebtmdathkevre.ehilk
dit,04 blaybig tirade
itte Meta if I must
proportion wilt& the number of eueli
male citizens ',shall bear to the whole
number of mile . cititetiss, twenty-one
years age in such state," If the
Federal Qoverimaent pays' !AY attest,
tion t th rt eiriefit Of thie a end
o e e eFe , • ' , In 5,'
nient... we pbchlid adt glad' to near. a
.4„e
'1- .
thesebirds a,ctually cle rely neon their`
sef seir." Ntl,
nse omor rAPPPri
find elutched in it trap they had'aeti
for A Mink or otber far-Oiting,Marti-'.,
inai, .n..it alateitealaek, or brozzo4,,i.
' linds; Stich a trap,he is pret0,, Jiltelr,
te rests Mid spritialt; , ' ''' • .
,, . . ,s.
'
,
'
• Miss Vanada" and 'IVliss.Clia—a*.te
i -
.
,
• "
Ulste_r Overcoats. or,,,,
.
.
• '
•-atzlies '
-
._,.
.,, Titt4 the • white AOstit arms of the
3 tribes- freebie' shritelled into fantastic
"shalfee W.:the intense heat and the
tattObr of .beirk..hariging about their'
,
;
ifr ,
• `cre• :
.114), ',..7”
I: . , . .
. '.. ..4.ii',A.,
f
*create if they,. did
not, get away fort
me. I could net ev,:.•,,
epee riCat to my
hut doe*
.
._.. he Fifteenth Anteridlia..:W lt, IS,
amirniti tted
zells. of Pie ,, IlIettel '04"f4e• • rl'.,,te.
dierIld
, ,
• , • • ' Ditinaliteiote0.. .0, ,
'The' term Detailileila id . zapp 1.11.1°4
generally to. tha,.e.06gO4Veralag Itrit'i.
, .
F
% ,
s .
. ' MADE To 'otiltiEtt, ONLIC. ' ,,.. . . ... '. ' .,":..'...•'
. ,. , . ., .,
.. . ,
'' ifISS -CANAD °° tw ' ' ' '11 s '#ie 'bid 'tad 'Oedeli ttitt-'alit
mitt' a, belt a d all ' ha, ' ' ' Ai6V6S• 'bialtliOW!:' - lit'k 04 -
It_singie it_ , _the, et,t,48,,r1--.,,,_,4_,,,hstr„/t,nha
t treee , never.., Mae !''xe,,,„exlv,leavee'-'4671,ro•
I„ Ashton ttratetAit. 4PPeethne.,,,,e, ,,,,_ItmP
0 :1601r.4ig..4.0ttPig.ralltia,i,he vree-re
' ' ' - t • the '''fadlital
400,,t, :;to,,,,9 Al „„1 i. . , ttg
-oltdothiglikiVatior4it ' thi troVitohle
:f0,*.at•,.• gqt4,!•.•
' ter • ' Alt Utt. ' th '
to . fi
. and. Tate
saidbeCenid,ileaintlaingfor me. Whirs-
batiti'S inetherikivieedine. te,' feWrihe .
VogetableCoMijound an& I stetted% t
Ode: 't Volta al44 to.,.46 .y4' ,. vok .14.0.4
. . ' ..- • - ' 44 : ,.-t ' .
itore slid it wake, plo, ,, th, • a, bur-
don htow I have a fine,' itring baby
' . - ' ' ' • • .
•,oraohowtotiguchor,ori
net be,Nelinid, of'hittligai- 0Y.
the linked gtuteenilay any htete on
acootint of' r4Piee.ae#144 or liva910110`
condition of sgt:tiltlider..atitt 'ICOngreefi';
shall have cittAt••io 'tiirtitee ilii3••titt
• • P ,,a, • ' . .. ,. , .••1 ,-
vigiong of 04.,liedis jor ,Appriviikt
' ) '' .1 ti r • ' '" '' ra ' - thit
Ogre a on." .i. ningthe la el: ;reap o ..
tali pestieettiond beYbrid ;the lleati; aila
Weiler the Word does eat 10 -ail eati0t4'
•' form part of their naritea, Ita- .0,
case n't Canada the ..*Orele jti'art".'Of
tho A0'04" bill nth, is...xibt tb t, ,tigeo,c
c . .. . • . ' . a . , ,,,,. • a „,,t• a „La,
, tor dustaseo. uL thst,V00A -ox ra-,041.0
-.. . r 44 -,4r..- ei - ,,„ ,,,s a '
At I " . 'tit CeninfliWe lth '
f
,
'
4
'
;am- a . ta ea,. , . etral-"Ni „IT
"•"'"ad th'elre et8 gla ''' elk , -.,....', . ' ...-.•• ' ., , ,, .. '.. ,,,,, ,.:,, . i
thelbee011eatleatUre retagetitrOcr.',; 4404,1,600,tatu ea- , _ ..,, -
iota ,fiulaLedi with :/tOet$14'441110 e4t %)tia40,44 4iitt ' ''''"
#00,ellghtig lifted Wif,k,',3ltiuMitilk40.:i -i#S,'''.,l1-,,:- 0. , , ,. : , ••
. '
' 4 . ' ' ' ' ' d'' • '' to t iiii" ' ciothio le 0 ttad'Ola l'a'i ' '
r ISO, CNADVOT; , . ''..A'.' ...M.! la, ,14. . ' 1' a ea.....e., .. „,
' ',,-1
..:,o:„ ,,motp-••
.; Alfier -$,, :1:: '14,-Ote-, at toit0s, roo,
140,.-4i . - ''' " " 4,q,', Oot t'vtotk• zoit,
"
' '" ' ' i , .„ .': " "' ' ' 'Y'019*. '014'; • 1
': " r"',,,'. .' , too ,-,':640:•Itiiiiflii,
, ." ' '"';•,• ••. . . ' ti !,• ' .„
• ', kW ' a.' ''' t taa .0 • f'' ' 1
• , .
: . • • ,, .
'
„tom tio.
, Intaiity, ro,rk., -1; ,ottiot.lielo leo*.
Idendigitttisth't tokheitit tittl'sliX0340'
' ' ' ' ' ' - - .t 1 ' 0! 4. i a *./
,rl'aq/JP ii On me .104 k o0 ,p ,0.1 .
'' .. '1,0••' .:' ' 4 ' , ' 1
, OM 0 ' .,, , ''' • ,=, a. ,g.n; ","' , ,,'
' .' ea a.," Vi?,14" ' '
,,
. . , ' " - ' ..,'• -
, , ",
he *dim 7.4.4alti,,okitedo, tiltiik
ewe,' a 4;,t,,b,',I, 44,44rA*--' Aldo*, ' 'Alm'''. -4' tkiu'
''''''''t I'," e'r'," ,a '"hit-7:41ii,-*
dghtesio tar ''• ,,,,•• • ' Z• .11tOti 4!:H;
1,,.. tt, ;,, .. ,,., ‘,,,,, ,:,,
ets . a •0143 , ••' ,, •-' ,e'
'Peteiir ' •. ;
' 7 '' :' ,:, 1St , ...
kiiiit.tle• , •"' ' ^ ' ,,,t, 6 6 .•
j,',I',;'•Attit
'''. AnattaiW. nor ,tri it. tliertaire tif''''t
woe fob sireis,.,t0Ot la .tlitf;:px ,
di lia tete ,e4a-U Ati, ifetrilnitine.f;':r. ,-
• . .. - ; ,,- .., ,.. ,•4.,,, . ,. ,,,
... ,,,,, .„ t .,..,,,, ,, ,,,,,,,,,„..?, ,
a ' ' • ' , - •i,:,,,,,ka,
•• ''41 - ' •;, .•••• ..00-,,
'
in a hetet AloSaititl,:,.. It ' iit':' s,,:ottTri:
iktiiti.O.Ndiolttit.$,g, ''''lititi,•.:1
'40'elet telek.e1h4,.0 t '01 ' .
,
, litt-i-, - :, 0
. „ ,- •
A%
ti; ',*li
aH ' Ia
0-, 0-.
liTirtivf44' 4 .7..
totital belt , .1. ,, ' '..
pSdkata hats fitti4:'. ' `i;
L.:,,;, , , , ,, ,,, ::,.,
. ,
., •, - , .,
'
'
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,,,,
4v,i,,..4.,, „,,,'
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A ' ,310*;'
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akt'
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'''
'',..,',V •.' ',1'''' ' ; .'' ,I.V..;.'' . ' ' ',444 .,:, : .,..' ,',.:,''''? '';e'' i';''::'i.Y:,''' ,•j',14,,ji4i,(,,,' •', , ', .f,,V,? t ,!'„,.,',,,-;,9,!,2,,,!j1..,,i'; 4,,,, , , ,'S,? ri
• ,„.„ • „I., ,„
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1.74
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4*,