Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Oct 1887, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Jon. E. Gumour. of '1`. Gilmour & Co. Wholudp. Gmoon. Bwekviuo. says: 1 haviuood Tamarac Elixir" for a severe Cold` and Couch wh!chltlmmed1at.elyro- ` dourod. nova B11301`. Lumber and Cheoeo mum Doglnr Nor!-hAuu Ont., . : T - nnollixis-Is a. void 1xx'::<':1`oxno:"':': '1'hrootsndL Oom- Coldl. 9%: '1` ?.w1sn::3 dgubt t.);:`?oumodi- ov dmmgit We . or {:5 horse`. I These Reliable Stoves are for 5311: only at the EW STOVE DEPOT. BIBBY & VIRTUE, IMPOSSIBLE. Also A Large Stock of Silk Ties, Braces, Linen Collars and Cutfu. Woolen Gloves. Kid (jlorea, Cashmere, Squares, (`L-lluloid Collar: and Cutlh, Cull` Buttons, Collar Bur ` tons. Neck Scarf Pius. &c. UH-lb: Top Shirts 50. 60, 75c and up. Men's Laundried and Unlaundriod Shirts Cheap. Inn`: manual RH!-in in Lm-NI and Rnnnul And a big stock of Ready-Made Clothing always at Lowest Prices at Murray & Tay|or s, WUII- U0`.-4 Fine All-Wool Pant Cloths at Lowest Prices. Fine All-Wool Suitings Vory Cheap. ne All-Wool Corkscrew Coatings. Fine All-Wool Diagonal Coatings. Wool Underwear. best value over shown at 25. 30. 40. 50c; Bettergoods equally cheap. Q44 null Qua:-Cal [inn Ill-/nnl of 0% n M: 40. UV. `IV. UV\.:. LIDIVUUI svvua vniunuj vuuuvp. See our Spocxal Lmo. All-Wool, at 95c 11 ~ Suit. III-.. |_:4_ EA All WE- -...I .._ mu 1' Iuuugu. Also Snumher of New and Second-Hand Pnnfnnn nn ]).A:`nIIa - Heavy All-Wool Tweeds at 35c. worth 45c. 40c worth 500, 45c worth 600. 506 worth 650. All I"l'...l Y|__A l`I,.AL. -1 Y.....--A Englna and Boilers for all urposes, from 1 to IIX)-horse power, and ful y guaranteed. Steam Rock Drill And Mining Repair: constantly on hand. Cheese Factory Boiler: and Fittings. `Inn tnumhor nf Nam and QnnnvidJTAnrl (`all and we the Bargain: we are giving in the following lines: Thin lemon vro lmverlaccil this he rt- mont in the front part 0 our store and an-. given special _at.tention to Uentlenn-n'o \\"(`l|l' In every pnrucnlur, and have now 3 Lom plete Stock READY for INSPECTION. Murray & Taylor's. STOVES AND HARDWARE. This Powdu uvor v;rIeI. A marvel of purity. uuuuth and what men. More economical tlnnlho onltlur Ends, nncl can- not no laid in comnallon w 11: the mulmudo N0 1' York. economical tlunlho omuur Imdn. and not on sold In oompollllou the multitude of low tut. uhort weight. Alum o! hm lune powders. Ilomounrnn mun. R0 AL MK- v\'0k POWDER. C0.. Ill Wnll Huwt. New (I . MEN S DEPARTMTI mi::1's Flannel Shirts in Laced and Buttonod. 5150 I ll|lllllll.'l' UK 1` A. Engine: and Boilers. Are the Leading Stoves of the day ; also the new 176 PRINCESS STREET. `ifu0i] VI;l-`(#3.-F?SEY &. co; 335 and 337 King Street. -I-\b;)|ute|y Pure: . MISCELLANEOUS. A SPECIALTY at Machixie, Engina_;nd Boiler Works. I IEHOVU Lulu. uuu nun uuus swer to our prayer and in `tait.b,andpocanhenlourbo uidif our Ioul is All twistalnnd and hate and mamed withs he can straighten that also a and lean. Aye, you will `_ sundown torgivenossot mg. At. me prencners rmu-rauux _m mu words: Will you bolieve! Do yo boliovel Do you bellow now!" ,I heard thi- oor sic_k woman say, with unomphasis wh` through the building: I do be then she laid her twistodurm an straight as your arm and ham . I had new one rise from the do: I Would not huvo been much morothrlllev 31300 than I bolleve umaoa will don; in an.- ......... 4.. 4.... nnnunin nil!` In _anuu ca. Other things being equal the man who pre- serves good temper will come out ahead. An old exayist mya that the celebrated John Henderson of Bristol, England, was at a dining party where political excitement ran high and the debate get angry, and while Henderson was speaking his opponent. un- able to answer his argument, dashed n glam of wine in his face, when the speakcrdclilnel`- atcly wiped the liquid from his facuand said: This, sir, is 11 digression; now, if you please, for the 'm.-tin argument. \\'hilo worldly philosophy could help but very few to such equipoiso of spirit the grace of God could help any man to such a triumph. Im- possible," you say, I would have either left the table in anger or have knocked the man lown." But I have come to believe that nothing is impossible, if God help, since what I saw at Iiethshan faith cure in London, England, two sum- mers ago. While the religious service was going on Rev. Dr. Bodrdman, glorious man, since gone to his heavenly rest, was telling the scores of sick people pnesent that Christ was there es_of- old to heal all-diseases, and that, if they would only believe, their sick- ness would depart. I saw a woman near me, with hand and arm twisted of rheumatism and her mist was Iicry with inammptir. 4, land 'it_ looked like them cases of chgvnic rheumnt'i`*"whioh we have all seen ann's_vm- pathized with,cascs beyond all hum heal- ing. At the prencher`s rciteratioi lo! the Will vou vo' wnrrlu 3 I i i I Ell!` Dull $'I IRVIUIY9 (Fur lldlllpr Qtll. First. because twelve hours is long enough to he cross about my wrong lnicml upon us Nothing is so exhausting to physical health or mental faculty as a protrecteql in- dulgence of ill humor. It racks the nervous system It hurts the digestion, it hosts the blood in brain nnxl heartuntil the Wllull` body is first ovorln-atul and then dc-pmaa-d. Be- side that. it sours the (lispmitinn, tnrms one aside from his legitimate work, expemls en- ergies that nuglit to be better employed, and does us more harm than it luvs our ant&go- -_ nlst. Paul gives us in good, wido el- lowanco of time for logitimnte denunciation, from 6 o`clock to 6 o`clock, but says: Stop there! Watch the descending orb of day, and when it reaches the horizon taken reef in your disposition. Unlooso your collar mnl cool o Change the subject to soinothing (lv-` lightfully pleasant. Unroll your tight fist and shake hmnls with some one Bank up the `tires at tho curfew boll. Drive the growling dog of enmity back to its kennel. The hours of this morning will pass by, and the afternoon will arrive, and the sun will ` begin meet, and I beg you on its blazing hem-ch throw all your feuds. inv'ti\'es and atirea l\LL.._ 4I.!-~.~ Lat...` ........I LI... ...__ _..L- _._- IJIU nun Kl! HUI II III] yuur "5". 7 Why that linnitatiun to one`: anger! Why that period of naming vapor wt to punctuate A amingdlspusitionr What has the sunset got. to do with one`: resomful emotions! Was it a haphazard sentiment written by Paul without spa-id signicance? .\'o. no; I think of five rmsnns why we should not let the sun not bufnm our temper net; First, hnmumn twnlvn hmn-A in Inn}: annual. nun. npu.- -v -xv --~ nfnunr Hum-y F41 Brmmo mmlonvl on tho urgnn om nrln with vurlntlum, by (`rnmu-r. 'l'lu~n-st uf than-rmon was from I-Zpluuluu Iv. as: `*1;-t not the sun go duVI n upon your wrath. Dr. Tnlnuuzv-`Ill: Wlmtn pilluw 4-mlnmkk-ml 0! all Ml-`rs hnth tlu-4l_\'ln-,: clay. The crmllv of rlnuclu {rum N7hlrh tho nun rlnm ll lnvnutlful eunuch. but lt in nurpuutwl by tho many mlunnl mausulc-um In which I! ovenlng It In burial. = Rum:-t liming tho mountains! It nlmmt taken one`: hroath away to rwnll the route. The lung shadows Ittn-tchlng over the plain make the glory of the tleputing light. on than tlptop crap and truck uluat through the foliage the mom trunsplcuoul. Sulfrou and gold, purple unl (`riluun oouuninglo-I. All tlw 1-uutlm uf (`loud in connxrutlun. llum~ lng Mulcown on the sky. llnnglng gutlcnuo of rununt their dc!-pvt hluah. llonnt-not vapors. red as ll` from mrnngn. in the halo of I-b8,t`h'llI(`DlI|. Tho hunter unung tho Adl- rumlaclu and the Hwln villager uuung the Alps know what la I Iunnt among the nununtnlnn. After I umrm at In the rolling grandeur into which the sun you-u dumltnlnatlw at nightfall in sunk-thing to main weird and splendid dreuns out of top 0 llfetlnna. Alexander l-1mith`ln hla poem oom- pnms the nun:-t to "tlw lnrrw lunch 0! hell." but this wundvrful spectacle 0! nature Innhm mv think of the humlshedwnll of heaven. Paul in prison writing my text |"o|no||1[grg mum of the gnrgoous nuw Among the nmunuinn of Au : Minonnnd how he had om-n am-n tho tuworn of Damn:-us blue in the clue ul lllv Oriental days, Ind ho gghu; ..... nL..o . .L, A___A _n , I Buuuxux, (Ia-t. '.:I.-'l'ho Rev. 1'. Downs Tnlnugv-,lI. 1).. pron:-but tn the BI-90: ): 1 ulnvruuu-lath!-Ina-nlnmnntholuhjnctz " ur- I gin-maul:-tutu uululonfn. 'Aa~r ex um; Iunapnnxxuc-oow1|lng Hccukhh, Dr. 'l'nl- ` mun nw out the following hymn. which \ lnunngby Ihecuugngauon: - 11:1. glarlou bop mam (mt ('ourI|'o by tho way. \\`hslu- PA4'I| In upndntksn lint And loop In no the du. Profr-nr E5119 n-mined vurlatlmu. I'M.` hunt I H... -.-nun --nu lnun I`nI|Innn Why We nlmulcl I-`on-glvv-lI| Honor Mr 1 lumulng tu l'hynlc-al uul llrnhl III-Alli. Thou! Wm I'n-an-rs TIOII` Tl-Opt! II 4 llohou uonornlly (`nun on Ahead. DR. TALMAGFS SERMON AT THE BROOKLYN TABERNACLE. AT l i{.\I`l-I \\'l'l'lI |C.\'E.\|I|S. Owing to the rush of businom on nccount of the large number of Stoves and Ranges which we are selling. we tlnd it impossible to exhibit at the Central Fair, but we shall be pleased lo show to visitors the large array of GURN E YS. liANGIjJS and STOVESM. our Wurcrooms. X0. 189 PRINCESS STREET. THE BRITISH Wlll(x`. .\l()NDAY- ()(]`'l`. '24. `erasing p0(`t. nu; l0x`[;I`.'vm-.s:; lur um gu-uu-A vn uv:u we are not willing to forgive others the less] Napoleon was oncuinnged to undertake the of the Alps hocause Charlemagne had previously crowed them. Andnll this rugged path of forgivenmbears the bleeding footsteps of him who conquered through su'erin;:. and we ought to be willing to t`ol~ lon On the night of_ our (leparturo from this life into the next, out; one plea will have to be for mercy, and it will have to be offered in the presence` of him who has said: If you forgive not men their tres- posacs neither wilg;-iur heavenly Father {or- give your trespn ` " __ What asorry plight i if we .~:tnml there hating this one, and hating that one, and \`u'iSl.|ll`.;{ this one I damage, and ' wishing some one else a cam ity, and we ourselves needing for-givenes to 10,000 times 10,000 ohliqnitics ot heart and life; VVhen our last hour comes, we want it to find us all right. Iiardlyaliytting atfects me so much in tho u:1w\'ering of ancient Pompeii as the account of the soldier who, after the city had for many centuries been covered with the ashes and scorize ol Vesuvius, was found standing in his place on guard, hand on spear . and helmet on head. Others ed at the awful submorger-.:'cnt, but the explorer, 1700 years after, found the body of that bravo fellow in, right position. `And in will be in grand thing` ' if, when our. last moment cameo, we are . found in right position toward the world. as well as" in right position toward God, on guard and unnlfrlghted bythouhu from the mountnlnotdeuth. Ido not suppose that I nmauymoro~ota.oovnrd thnnmootpoople, hnttahnlnmhnwmnti-nanmdnnm ll] lluy muru U1 5 cuwuu ullun Iuvuu pvupu.-, butldochntqyouthntlwould notdu-ow .l'(`l"ll.'lpS uuu !lIu_v uuvu uunugcu Au III that way so as to make _ tho equ- trnst the mom glorious. l have seen sunshiny days in this world that must have been nlmmt like the radiance of heaven. But as most. people leave the earth between sun- down and sunrise. they quit this world at its darkest, and heaven, always bright, will be the brighter for that contrast. Out. of black- nmsinto irmkliution. Shall we then leap over the rusuut-- hunk of sunset into the fuvnrita hunting grouzul n! disease and death, czirry, 1 ing our nxiiiiiusitios with us! \\'hu would want to confront his God, against whom we haw nll.done manner things than un_\"_>o "has ever done against us,ca.rryin;: old pwuilgcs! How can we ex- pect his f0x`gi\'mi0s:: for the greater when we .m nnf. willinn` to fomive others the UU` UPUH HIS \\'l'lll.Kl. Again: Wu uught not to allow the sun set before fnrgi\'um~.-u takes place. because we might not live to she another day. And whn if we should be ushered into the presence of our Mzikur with I grudge upon our soul! The majority of people depart this life in the night. Ben.-mn 11 o'clock p. In. and 3 o'clock 1. in. them is something in the atmosphere which relaxes the grip which the body has on the soul, and most of people enter the next world through the shadows of this world. , Perliups` God may have arranged it in nun 'n\' Lil nq tn vnnlm thu non- :1 you retain that \ mile-inn-." .\ luv in .`~'gx.-irm. luiring .~tnh-n a fox. kept him under his vent. and, lhnugh thn fux was p,:iiawiu;: his Vitals, ho subiuntul tn it rather than 1-xi-av libs Inisdwul. .\lnn_\' n mmi v\ ith lltillllllll): fnw has under his jun-lcct an ani- lIl\I~`lI_\` that is gnawing away the .~1ru~ii;.'th of his l-ml)` null tliu iiita-grity -3-f hi. .--ul. Better get rial u! that liltlllvll fux cu s-Inn us inmibli-_ The-re au\- huudivls uf d-:m~.~tiu circles where that whit-li must in` iiwclul is lhu spirit of for- givciiem Brothers apart and sizm-is apart mid 1-an-nus nnd children apart. Solomon iui_\'sn lnrnthur utfendul is harder to he won than n strmig city. Are there not enuugh snort-I iuviuurius ul your childhood to bring you In-;:i-tin-I`! The mbbiml rm-count how that Kchurlmdnm-1z'ir`s sun had such :1 spite against his father that after he was lead he had his father bumed to ashes, and then put the ashes into four such, and tied them to four esglai` necks which flow away in opposite directions. And there are now domistic uuitipathiel which swin forever to have scattered all parental memories to the four winds of heaven. How far the mglue y with that sacred n. The hour of sundown mnkm to that fiunily no practical suggattion Thomas (`arl_vle, in his biography uf Frederick the (in-at, says the old king was told by the cou- fcmir he must be at peace with his enemies if he wanted to enter heaven. Then he said to his wife, the qiioen: Write to your brother after I run dead that I forgive him." Rolo , tho confi-a'ur.. said: Her I11ajt`.\I_\' hail hotter write him iuum-di:1tol_\`." .\'u," mid tho king, after I am dead; that will be safer." So he let the sunof his ea.rth.|y existence go down upun his wrath. .\.min- \l.`.-mmht nnt. tn Allow the sun set .......-. .~\fl-r R h` ulnizqn-rul. WI m-wr l.lI|' !'iIII'v\ Nrllnvn Ii. lo`. I. 0-, u, 1. a no you an mzlmling pnu-ripllon for I'|k1-l'ul- u-..:. m-n.| llw o-vrniug hour: mlxnrning >'u||I` \\|\-tint nncl the Inuit WI) M winging llu-In. llnl-l u 1-nun-ntion of {ends on this sulnjecl. lu your parlor or olvo at 8 or ii ox-lurk. (`lose the evening by writing 3 hit- ter letter, npnuning your n-ntlmenu. Take lroin tlaoclu-I or pigoon hole the pupa! in tho canton-{nah your with your oven- lug`! Incunne-nu. Thou down and wait for tho mining of the day, and it will coma I fun nlwp vnml, or your Ilp I1" he I WOP~ rial qnlmn-Iwe. uni. If you tske the pumm- lion in lie-jut on your book 1 frightful night- nnaro. Why not put a bound loyour animosi- ty! Why let your fun.-4 come into the mm-miuu of your dormitory! Why It-tthru-`alanulc-rem who luu-u ulrumly turn your reputation to pic-u or Injured your business, bvud over your nmiuight pillow and drive (rum you one of the gr:-mutt blaming: that God can om-IH uwqet, rvfnuhing, all invigorating nleepl Why not fence out your enemies by the gululun lnra of the nmact! Why not stand in-hmd tho lrnrrivailo of evening cloud and my to them: Thus far and no farther!" .\lnu_v a man and many A woman is having the houlth or body as well as the health of muleutc-n uwny l-y n nmlc-volt-nt uplrlt. I have in tinw ofrvllgious awake-nlng lnnl |I`l`~ sun: night nit--r nigh! mine inn the inquiry l'l|0lll unal get no want` of soul. Aftrr (1 _..Ln, I L... ||.....|.. ...l~...l I....-. la 0|...-4. \\'lIiln` IR: ll I'WV ljluullu . Agulu. we ought not to let the sun go down on our wnnln. l-u-uunw we will Ilovp hem-r ll train at pram with evaryhotly. lmomnll in avttlnggo he uno ut the moat pn-val:-nl ul dluunkll How few people HM?!` It 10 u`vlnc-I at nlght and nlu-p 1-Incl llu-nugh to 0 In the murninal To n-Hove tlsluliumklr all nu-count. and minus-w. and chlnml, and lnmmido of poumluun. and nu-alnc and lu- luxl--nnta nrv maul, hut uutllinz ls mun Im- |vul1ant than I qulvl Imrit if we would win r`-vnmulz-nee. Haw ls I luau sum; to Ilenp ulu-n he la In miucl punnnug an enemy! Wnth what m-rmmolwitn-ll hawill can out of` I drum! That new plan. fur mnu-ring his rm will knogu lmu 'wi<|o awake while tlw '1--`R Ixlrilmd ll. IL . I. 2. 3,4. [give ..-.l-ah . . n . . _ _.n-inlinn full n-nIrnfuI_ Hum pulls that their mama: Imunl you any hope: Inmthu-aualugu.-ul thOIMlhlngI" ut.wurk In-,;o~Ih--I` fur gtludl {hum Hut love out?` I huu hul zlnullcluof lrlonnln, lvutl have (mud in any own uyorlenno that (Bod-u u-rm ltthutbogrulat uppnrtunlueu of, lulu` that have but up-newt In-In fuss m-reoponul by annulus had when; an ugu, they mnupirqd Igllnu III`, thpropom-d all Chrmoudumtouu-u I 1 glwhieh to [Iran-h the ung:-I. Ho you harm-an your uztngumnl to your but lnwn-nu and comp-I lh to dust you on In lI"t$1!l' work and higher u-lander. uppme. tuanmduf waiting until iil uunuuu pm 5 o`r|m-I this awning, when the man will let, you trmanrt ma glorlum vurkul furglvw nun IIHIIIN meridian .l ...l.. u... ......Ln ....n 5. I41 II... uaI- an An-an umnnuod on pogo throo. L`l Illl 'II`l'l| bluntly u - against u an. Inn! I l`\lIIl`3 lull llll` aw _\' naked he-r: |( whnm you not wijling to K Nun she has "he-n llnivl tn hm - with Guul us g.-t:;;'i_`._"t; p."`: p.|1'ghU_\' n.. Ln... u\'.\.. {i5EW}&RMLSLIPTPERS%f J?L5`c: [-M M AHoN s.- A. .1, Mo/MAH0/V, AlltheNew0dIoise{ndStyIesincloakigs JUST ARRIVED AT ` Uomb/nation Suite for 0/2//a ren, D. MGEWEN & sow. John Laidlaw & Son. GOOD VALUE IN WOOL HOSIERY. WO0L UNDERWEAR--SPECIAL PRICES. Wonu+n n Warm I/dnecl Ft-It Slippers, extra t`(`llfl( ,, 45`. Women : Leather Slippers -36. ` H'o1mm s Cloth Siippers 25. CIu ldren s Strong Lace Boots 50. ` Mince strong Lace Boots, zen 11 to 2, 65. our F311" Prico List will to iuiud Io'o. Look out for it; SPENGE & UBUHLEY. FINE OPERA FLANNELS, BEAUTIFUL NEW DRESS MATERIALS. FANUY WOOL PLAIDS. SPENCE 85 CBUMLEY F. X. GUUSINEAU & G0. BREAKFAST SHAWLS, OPERA SHAWLS, u.;`i..u." ` :me..~." 'ameT' `';`.`,`:`1`1`. .`.'....`r.`?'i NEW ULUUDS, FASGINATURS, SELL FANOY WOOL OOOOS The `Best Value in the city at $1, $1.25, 51,50 and upwards. Don't fai`l to see them. % 50 PER PAIR HURRY UP AND SEE THE GLDVER AT 50 PER PAIR. I2 Dozens Children's Lined Lisle Gloves from 5 to Re per pnir. I5 Dozens Ladies Lined Lisle sud Silk Gloves at 15c per pair. H Dozens Lsdies` Lined Silk and (`loch Gloves at 25 per pair. 3 Dozens Ladies Gauntlet Kid Gloves, slightly spot_tel. 25c per pair. 6 Dozens Lined Kid Gloves and Mitts at 50 per Ir. Also another Great Show of New Millinery and .\ sntles to-morrow. Will sell To-day and To-morrow 50 Dozen Heavy Lined Gloves and Mitts at the Following Prices: Come at once and secure a Bargain. Hoods, Sleveless Vests, Children's Wool Jackets, Gaiters, Mitts, Bootees, Tuques, Tam O'Shanters, Caps,&c. In endless variety and all marked to uv/mm gram HA|NES&.. LOCKETT. _ AT SIGHT. Fu r Caps, Etc. Comb/nation Suits for Ladies 770 Princess 8treez`. 132 and 134 Princess Street. FIRE KING, IN 4 SIZES. A

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy