HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1893-04-14, Page 2•
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LOOK HERE.
NEW ARRIVALS OF
Spring Goods
—AT THE—
Post Office Store,
• We have a large stook of Tweeds and Fine Worsted
Suitings, andu big selection of Fine Pantings, and
aa we have secured the services of Mr. W. A. Mac -
Wayne, a first-class tailor, we are prepared to turn
out Snits from $11 and upwards ; Fine Pants from
$4 and upwards; ehoioe Worsted Pants from 66 to
47, well trimmed and well -made, and a good fit guar-
anteed every time. Give Mao, our jolly tailor, a
trial ; he is sure to please you. ladies' Mantles cut
and made to fit.
1318
JOSEPH MORROW.
THE FARMERS'
Banking - House,
(In connection with the Bank of Montreal.)
LOGIAN & CO.,
BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENT
REMOVED
To the Commercial Hotel Building, Main Street
A General Banking Business done, drafts haus and
cashed. Interest allowed on deposits.
MONEY TO LEND
On good notes or mortgages.
ROBERT LOGAN, MANAGEP
1068
Every owner of a
Wanted hcowkrseno:whowwantt:
to
keep his a nimal in
good nealth while in the stable on dry /odder.
DICK'S BLOOD PURIFIER is now recognized
as the best Condition Powders, it gives a good
appetite and str4gthens the digestion so that all the
food is assimilated and forms flesh, thus savingmore
than it costs. It regulates the Bowels and Kidneys
and turns a rough coat into a smooth and glossy one.
Sound Horses are al -
this alibn when they
Ways in demand and at
BL
are so liable to slips andund
strains DICK'S BLIS-
TER will be found a
stable necessity; it will
remove a curb, spavin,
splint or thoroughpin or any swelling, Dick's Lini-
ment cures a strain or lameness and removes inflam-
mation from cuts and bruises. For Sale by all Drug-
gists. Dick's Blood Purifier 50c. Dick's Blister 50c.
Dick's Liniment 25c. Dick's Ointment 25c.
Send a
nurses
at Cattle
F rrstfiatillcararp d-
ticulars, Sr
a book of valuable household and farra recipes will
be sent free..
DICK & CO., P.O. Box 482, MONTREAL.
BUGGIES
—AND—
WAGONS.
•
Ti -4F HURON! EXPOSITOR,
PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST.
Contains no Alum, Ammonia, Lime,
Phosphates, or any Iniusiant.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
SLEEPERS AWAKENED
CHRISTIAN SALUTATION IN A GLORI-
OUS EAST ER MORNING.
Waiting for Resuireotion—Dr. Talmage
Fashions a Soft, Cool Bandage out of
Easter Flowers for Broken Hearts
MIAMI FOR SALE.—For sale an improved, 100
X acre farm, within two and a half miles of the
town of Seaforth. For further particulars apply on
the promisee, Lot 12, Concession 4, H. R. S., Tucker -
smith, or by mail W JOHN PRENDERGAST, Sea -
forth P. O. 1290
VARM IN STANLEY FOR SALE.—For sale
X °heap, the East half of Lot 20, Bayfield Road,
Stanley, containing 64 sores, of which 62 acres are
clearedand in a good state of cultivation. The bal.
ance le welltimbered with hardwood. There are
good buildiigs, a bearing orchard and plenty of
water. It is within half a mile of the Village of
Varna iand three miles from Brucefield station.
Poseeslion at any time. This is a rare chanoe to
buy a= first clams farm pleasantly situated. Apply
to ARTHUR FORBES, Seaforth. 1144t1
"DARK IN McKILLSP FOR SALE.—For sale the
r south half of lots 1 and lot 2, concession 4, Me-
Killop, being 160 acres of very choiceland mostly in
a good state of cultivation. 'There is a good home
and bank barn, a good young bearing orchard and
plenty of never failing water. a considerable
portion seeded to grass. Convenient to markets
and schools and good gravel roads in all directions.
Will be sold cheap. Apply to the proprietor on the
premises, MESSRS. DENT & HODGE, Mitchell, or at
'Ins HURON ExPosITOR Office, Seaforth. JOHN
O'BRIEN, Proprietor. 1298-11
'LAM IN TUCKERSUITH FOR SALE.—For sale
Lot 8, Concession 7, Tiickersmith,-containing
100 acres, nearly all cleared, free from stumps, well
underdrained, and in a high stste of cultivation.
The land is high and dry, and no waste laud, There
is a good brick residence, two good borne, one with
stone etabling underneath, and all other necessary
• uildings ; two never -failing wells, and a good
. ng Oltard. It is within four miles of Seaforth.
It is one of the best farms in Huron, and will be sold
on easy terms, as the proprietor desires to retire.
Possession on the lit October. Apply on thiewperem-
Igoe, or address Seaforth P. 0. WM. ALLAN.
The greatest number and largest as-
sortment of Buggies, Wagons and
Road Carts to be found itt any one
house outside of the cities, isat
0. C. WILLSON'S,
I SMA.POIVI11-
Yhey are from the following oelebrated
• makers : Gananoque Carriage Com-
pany, Brantford Carriage Company,
and W. J. Thompson's, of London.
These buggies are guaranteed first-
class in all parts, and we make good
any breakages for one year from date
of purchase that comes from fault of
material or -workmanship. We do no
patching, but furnish new parts. I
mean what I advertise, and back up
what I say. Wagons rom Chatham,
Woodstock and Paris, which is enough
about them. Five styles of Road
Carts. All kinds of Agricultural Im-
plements. 0
O. C. WILLSON,. Seaforth,
was amputated ; he lived years after in
England, and there he had an arm ampu-
tated ; he is buried to -day in Greenwood;
in the resurrection will the foot come from
China, wilt the arm come from England,
and will the different parts of the body be
reconstructed in the resurrection? How is
that possible ?"
You say that "the hurnan body changes
every seven years, and by seventy years of
oge a man has had ten bodies; in the resur-
rection which will come up ?" You say.
"A man will die and his body crumble
into the dust, and that dust be taken up
into the life of the vegetable ; an animal
may eat the vegetable, men eat the animal;
in the resurrection, that body distributed
in so many directions, how shall it be
gathered up ?" Have you any more ques-
tions of this style to ask? Come on, and
ask them. I fell back upon the announce-
ment of God's Word : "All who are in
their graves shall come forth."
You have notiteei, I suppose, in reading
the story of the resurrection, that almost
every account of the Bible gives the idea
that the characteristic. of that day will be a
Treat sound. I do not know that it will
be very loud, but I know it will be very
penetrating. In the mausoleum, where
silence has reigened a thousand years, that
voice inust penetrate. In the coral cave of
the deep that voice must penetrate. Mil-
lions of spirits will come through the gates
of eternity, and they will come to the
tombs of the earth, and they will cry:
"Give us back our bodies; we gave them to
on iu corruption, surrender them now in
incorruption. Hundreds of spirits hoveriug
about the crags of Gettysburg, for there
the bodies are buried. A hundred thousand
spirits coining to Greenwood, for there the
bodies are buried, waiting for the reunion
of body and soul.
"But," you say, "if this doctrine of the
resurrection is true as prefigured by this
Easter morning, Christ, 'the first -fruits of
them that slept,' Christ rising a promise
and a prophecy of the rising of all His
people, can you tell us something about
the resurrecteo body?" I can. There are
mysteries about that, but 1 shall tell you
three or four things in regard to the resur-
rected body that are beyond guest...11g and
beyond mistake.
M the first place, I remark in regard to
your resurrected body ; it will be a glotious
body. The body we have now is a mere
skeleton of what it would have been if sin
had not marred and defaced it. Take the
most exquisite statue that was ever made
by an artist, and chip it here and chip it
there with a chisel, ttled batter and bruise
it here and there, aff$ then stand it out in
the storms of a hundred years, and the
beauty would be gone. Well, the human
body has been chipped, and battered, and
bruised, and damaged with the storms of
thousands of years—the physical defects of
other generawns coming down front gen-
eration to generation, we inheriting the in
felicities of past generations; but in the
morning of the resnrrection the body will
be adorned and beautified according to the
original model. And there is no suCh dif-
ference between a gyinnast and an emaciat-
ed wretch in a lazaretto, as there will be a
difference between our bodies as they •are
now and our resurrected forms.
There you will see the perfect eye after
the waters of death have washed out the
atains of tears and study. There you will
see the perfect hand, after the knots of toil
have been untied from the knuckles. There
you will see the form erect and classic, after
the burdens have gone off the shoulder—the
very life of God in the body.
In this world the most impressive thing,
the most expressive thing, is the hunian
face ; but that face is veiled with the griefs
of a thousand years ; -but in the resurrec-
tion morn that veil will be taken away
from the face, and the noon -day sun is
dull and dim and stupid compared with
the outflaming glories of the countenances
of the saved. When those faces of the
righteous, those resurrected faces turn to-
ward the gate, or look up toward t)ie
throne, it will be like the dawning o
new morning on the bosom of everiasti g
day 0 glorious, resurrected body !
But I remark also in regard to that
body, which you are to get in the resur-
rection, it will, be au immortal body.
These bodies are wasting away. Some-
body has said as soon as we begin to live
we begin to die. Unless we keep putting
the fuel into the furnace the furnace dies
out. The blood vessels are canals taking
the breadstuffs to all parts of the system.
We must be reconstructed hour by hour,
day by day. Sickness and death are
all the time trying to get their prey under
their tenement, or to push it off the em-
bankment of the grave, but bleased be God,
in the resurrection we will get a body im-
mortal. No malaria in the air, no cough,
no neuralgic twinge, no rheumatic pains,
no fluttering of the heart, no shortness of
breath, no ambulance, no dispensary, no
hospital, no invalid's chair, no spectacles to
improve the dim vision ; but health, immor-
tal health! 0 ye who have aches and
pains indescribable this morning -0 ye who
are never well -0 ye who are lacerated
with physical distresses, let me tell you of
the resurrected body, free from all disease.
Immortal! Immortal !
BROOKLYN, April 2.—The Tabernacle was
elaborately decorated with flowers to -day,
and an unusually large audience assembled
to hear Rev. Dr. Talmage's Easter morning
sermon. The subject was : "The Sleepers
Awakened ;" the text chosen being from I.
Cor. 15, 20 : "Now is Christ risen from the
dead, and become the first fruits of them
that slept."
On this glorious Easter morning, amid
the music and the flowers, I give. you Chris
tian salutation. This morning, Russian
meeting Russian in the streets of St. Peters-
burg hails him with the salutation, "Christ
is risen !" and in answered by his friend inl
salutation, "He is risen indeed 1" In some
parts of England 4nd Ireland, to this very
day, there is the giperetiti0fl that on Easter
morning the Sun dances in the heavens
and well may we forgive such a superstk-
tion which illustrates the fact that the na-
tural world seems to sympathize with the
spiritual. .
Hall ! Easter morning. Flowers
Flowers! All of them a -voice, all of teem
a -tongue, all of them full of speech td -day.
I bend over one of the lilies and I hear it
say: "Consider the lilies .of the field, how
they grow; they toil not, neither do they
spin, yet Solomon in all Ins iglbeoryndnotvwonser4
i
arrayed like one of these.,"
rose and it seems to whisper: "I am the
Rose of Sharon." And theu I stand and
listen. From all aides there conies the
chorus of flowers'saying: "If God sn
clothed the grass of the field, which to -day
is, and to -morrow is cast into the oven,
shall he not much more clothe you, 0 ye
of little faith? Flowers! Flowers! Braid
them into the bride's hair. Flowers!
Flowers! Strew them over the graves of
the dead, sweet prophecy of resurrection.
Flowers! Flowers! - Twist them into a
garland for my Lord Jesus on Easter
morning. "GlOry be to the Father, and
to the Son, 'an to the Holy Ghost; as it
;
was in the begi ning is now and ever shall
be.'
Oh, how bright add how beautiful the
flowers, and how much they make. me
think of Christ and his religion, that
brightens our life, brightens our character,
brightens society, brightens the Church,
brightens everything ! You who go with
gloomy countenance pretending that you
are better than I. am because of your
lugubriousness, you cannot cheat me.
Pretty case you are for a man that professes
to be more than a conqueror. It is not
religion that makes you gloomy, it is the
lack of it. There is just as much religion
in a wedding as in a burial, just as much
religion in a smile as in a tear. Those
gloomy Christians we sometimes see are
the people to whom I like to lend money,
for I never see them again 1 The women
came to the Saviour's tomb and they
dropped spices all around the tomb, and
those spices were the seed that began to
grow, and from them came all the flowers
of this Easter Morn. The two angels
robed in white took hold of the stone at
the Saviour's tomb and:they hurled it
with such force down the hill that it
crushed in the door of the world's sepul-
chre, and the stark and thedead must come
forth. ,
I care not how labyrinthine the manila-
leum, or how costly the sarcophagus, or
however beautifully parterred the family
grounds, we want, them all broken up by
the Lord of the resurrection. They must
come out. Father and mother—they must
come out. Husband and wife—they must
come out. Brother and sister—they inust
come out. Our darling children—they
must come out. The eyes that we close
with such 'trembling fingers must open
again in the radiance of that morn.
The arms we folded in dust must join ours
in an embrace of reunion. The voice
that was hushed -in our dwelling must be
retuned. Oh, how long some of you seem
to be waiting—waiting for the resurrection,
waiting! And for these broken hearts to-
day I make a soft, cool bandage out of
Easter flowers.
My friends, I find in the risen Christ a
prophecy of our own resurrection, my text
setting forth the idea, that, as Christ has
risen, so His people will rise. He "the
first -fruits of them that slept." Before I
get through this morning I will walk
through all the cemeteries ot the dead,
through all the country graveyards, where
your loved ones are buried, and I will pluck
off these flowers, and I will drop a sweet
promise of the gospel—a rose of hope, a lily
of joy on every tomb—the child's tomb, the
husband's tomb, the wife's tomb, the fath-
er's grave, the mother's rave,;and, while
we celebrate the resurrection of all the good.
"Christ the firstefruite of them that
slept. .
VARM' FOR SALE.—For Sale, 80 acres in Senile°
j: County, Michigan 76 acres cleared and in a good
state of tultivation Otto raise any kind of a crop.
It is well fenced and has a good orchard on it, and a
never failing well. The buildings consist of a framehouso,
house, stabling tor 12 horses with four box stalls, 86
head otcattle and 100 sheep. Ninety ewes were win-
tered 1sei year,sold 8630 in wool and lambs this sum-
mer. There are also pig and hen houses. The un-
dersigned also has 80 acres, with buildings
'but not
so well improved, which he will sell either in 40 acre
lots or a a whole. These properties are in good
localitiee„ convenient to markets, schools and
churches. The proprietor is forced to sell on ac,
count of ill health. It will be a bargain for the right
man as it will be sold on easy terms. GEORGE A.
TEMPLETON, Doronington, SFinilac County, Michi-
gan. 1298x4 -t -f
The Kippen Mills.
Gristing and Sawing Cheaper than the
Cheapest.
JOHN NVNEVIN
Desires to thank the public for their liberal patronage
kr, the past, and he wishes to inform them that he
can now do better for them than -ever before. He
will do chopping for 4 cents per bag from now to the
lst of May, and satisfaction guaranteed. '
GRISTING also a specialty, and as good Flour as
can be made guaranteed.
LOGS WANTED.—He will pay the highest price
in cash for Hard Maple, Basswood and Soft Elm Logs.
Also Custom Sawing promptly attended to. Mr.
MoNevin gives his personal attention to the business,
and can guarantee the beet satisfaction every time.
Remember the Kippen Mills.
JMIN MoNEVIN •
FOR MANITOBA.
ARM FOR SALE.—For sale, that desirable and
conveniently situated fartn,adjoining the village
of Redgerville, being Lot 14, let Concession, Hay,
mile from Itodgerville pqst-office, and one and a
half miles south of Henson on the London Road.
There are 97 and a quarter acres, of which nearly all
is cleared and in a high state of eultivation.• Good
frame house storeys, 8 rooms, a large leitchen also
attached with bedrooms and pantry &o. Good cellar
under main part of house, stable holds over a car-
load of horses, besides exercising stables, two _barns
two drive houses, one long wood -shed, good cow -
stable also pig and hen houses, three good wells with
pimps. Farm well fenced and underdrained.
Veranda attached to honse. Good bearing orchard.
The farm will be sold cheap and on easy terms, as
the undersigned has retired from farming. ,
For par-
ticulars apply to JAMES WHITE, Proprietor Hen-
sel'. 5 1275t1
1GIIRST GLASS FARM FOR SALE.—For sale Lot 12
ea Concession 6, H. R. 8 Tuckersmlth, containing
100 'acres of choice land, nearly all cleared and in s
high state of cultivation, with 90 acres seeded to
grase. It is thoroughly underdrained and well fenced
with straight rail, board and wire fences and does
not contain a foot of waste land. There is also an
orchard of two acres of choice fruit,trees ; two good
wells, one at the house, the other with a windmill
on it at the out buildings, on the premises is an ex-
cellent frame house, containing eleven rooms and
cellar under whole house, and soft and hard water
convenient. There are two good bank berme the one
32 feet by 72 feet and the other 86 feet by 66 feet
with stabling for 60 head of cattle and eight horses.
Besides these there are sheep, hen and pig houses and
an Implement shed. The farm is well adapted for
Frain or stook raising and ie one of the finest farms
in the country. It is situated 3- miles from Seatorth
Station, 5 from Brucefield and Kippen with good
gravel re a leading to each. It is also convenient
to churches, poet office and school and will be sold
cheap and on easy terms. For further partioulare
apply to the proprietor on the premises or by letter
to THOMAS G. SHILLINGLAW, Eginondville P. 0.
1285 tf
Parties going to Manitoba should
call on
W. G. DUFF
The agent for the Canadian Pacific
Railway, Seaforth, who can give
-
through tickets to any part of Mani-
toba and the Northwest on the most
reasonable terms.
Remember, Mr. Duff is the only
agent for the 0. P. R. in Seaforth and
parties going by the C. P. R. would
consult their own interests by calling
on him.
Office—next the Commercial Hotel
and opposite W. Pickard's store.
W. G. DUFF, Seaforth.
HAND -MADE
Boots and Shoes
D. McINTYRE
Eason hand a largo number of Boots and Shoes of his
own make, best material and
Warranted to give Satisfaction.
you want your feet kept dry come and get a pair o.
our boots, which will be sold
Valu able Farm for Sale
Lot 31, Concession 2, Goderich Township, situated
on gravel road, four miles from Bayfield I and eight
miles from Goderich, 'comprising 80 acres, of which
10 acres are good hardwood bush. Soil, Clay loam.
Good fratne house with ten rooms, on stone founda-
tion ; also good bank barn. On the premiSes ars two
acres young, bearing orchard, also a good creek and
never -failing well. Apply to
DANIEL J. NAFTEL, Goderich`P.O.
March lst, 1893. 131611
CHEAP FOR CASH.
Repairing promptly attended to. All kinds of Boots
and Shoes made to order. All parties who have not
paid their accounts for last year will plow call and
settle up.
1162 D. MeINTYRE, beaforth,
On
ei ay b ate tioy
a bottle- of
glAirie*X)dvis'
n
ille.r
wick ba.
rjoily fit cettaex
dna CURE cm_iy
ore
broil
/kw roR THE taw
Bis 257 Bona"
constitutional amendment was adopt -
ed forever prohibiting the man
facture and sale of intoxicating li-
quors, except :for medicinal, mechanical,
and scientific purposes. This was
enforced by appropriate legislation, and the
validity of the amendment and of the
statutes wee sustained by the Supreme
Courts, After futile and costly resistance,
the dram -shop traffic has disappeared from
the State. Surreptitious sales continue,
club drinking and "joints,' are not un-
known, but the saloon has vanished, and
the tlaw has been better enforced than
similar legislationlese where. In the larger
towns prohibition is not so strictly observ-
ed as in the rural districts, where public
opinion is more rigid; but in all localities
the beneficent results arc apparent in the
diminution of crime, poverty and disorder.
'Banned by law, the occupation is stigmatiz-
ed, and becomes disreputable. If the
offender avoids punishment, he does not
escope contempt. Drinking being in secret,
temptation is diminished, the weak are
protected from their infirmiteee, and the
young from their appetites and passions.
—From ‘`Kaunas, 1541-1891," by John
James in Harper's Magazine for
April.
If I should come to you this morning and
ask you for the names of the great con-
querors of the world you world say Alexan-
der, Cfesar, Philip, Napoleon I. Ah ! my
friends, you have forgotten to mention the
name of a greater conqueror than all these
—a, cruel, a ghastly conqueror. He ,rode
on a black horse across Watetloo and At-
lanta and Chalons, the bloody hoofs crush.
ing the hearts of nations. It is the con-
cmeror Death.
He carries a black flag, and he takes no
prisoners. He digs a trench across the
hemispheres and fills it with the carcasses -
of nations. Fifty times would the world
have been depopulated had not God kept
making new generations. Fifty times the
world would have swung lifeless through
the air—no man on the mountain, no man
on the sea, an abandoned ship ploughing
through immensity. Again and again has
He done this work with all generations.
He is a monarch as well as a conqueror;
His palace a sepulchre ; His fountains ,the
falling tears of a world. Blessed be God,
in the light of this Easter morning I sec
the prophecy that his sceptre shall be
broken, and his palace shall be demolished.
The hour is coming when all who are in
their graves shall come forth. Christ
risen, we shall rise. Jesus, "the first fruits
of them that slept." Now, around the doc-
trine of the resurrection, there are a great
many mysteries.
You come to me this morning ani say:
a ---If the bodies of the dead are to be raised,
how is this and how is that? and you ask
me a thousand questions I am incompetent
to answer-; but there are a great many
things you believe that yon are not able to
explain. Yon would be a very foolish mail
to say :—"I won't believe anything I can't
understand."
Why, putting down one kind of flower -
seed, comes there up a flower of this color?
Why, putting down another flower -seed,
comes there up a, flower of this color? One
flower white, another flower yellow,
anoth-
er, flower crimson. Why the difference
w en the seed looks to he very much alike
—are very much alike? Explain these
tailings. Explain that wart on the finger.
Explain why the oak -leaf is different from
the leaf of the hickory. Tell me how the
I,ord Almighty can turn the chariot of hie
omnipotence on a rose -leaf. You ask me
questions about the resurrection I cannot
answer. I will ask you a thousand ques-
tions about every -day life you cannot
answer.
I find my strength in this passage ;
"All who arein their graves shall come
forth." I do not pretend to make the ex-
planation. You can go on and say :
"Suppose a returned missionary dies in
Brooklyn; when he was in China his foot
Ingalls,
The Eclipse of the sun.
Scientists are awaiting with interest
news from the parties sent out in South
America and Africa to observe the total
eclipse of the sua, which occurred on .the
16th of this month. The phenomena could
not last at any particular place more than
between seven and eight minutes, and
about four minutes was set down as the
duration of the eclipse in Brazil and Sene-
gambia. The special subject on which it
was hoped to obtain fresh light on this oc-
casion was that of the nature and constitu-
tion of the corona, which during a total
eclipse is seen to surround the sun for a
short time before totality commences until
about an equal interval after it is over.
Accounts of ancient eclipses are often of
great use in helping to settle disputed
points in chronologY. The earliest of which
we have a certain record is described in a
Chinese work, and iappears to have occurred
in a year corresponding to 776 B.C. The
next known to have been recorded took
place thirteen years later, and is mention-
ed in a Nineveh tablet. The Greek his-
torian, Herodotus, states that an eclipse of
the sun interrupted a battle between the
Medea and Lydians, and modern investiga-
tion has shown that the date of this was in
all probability in 585 B.C.
NEW
APRIL 14, 1898.
SPRING GOODS
Coming to hand daily. Case
Goods are finding their way
placing upon our shelves th
Austria, Germany and the
We can safely assert that n
were we in a position to sho
give as close prices, as we w
all the newest fabrics, styled and designs. Prints in immense variety. Linens,
Muslins, Hosiery, Gloves aiid Ties in profusion.
upon cases, anct bale upon bale of new Spring
into our store, keeping us busy marking and
products of Great Britain, France, Switzerland,
nited States, as well as our own beloved Oaneela.
ver before in the annals of our trade in Seaforth
v so large a variety, so well -selected stock, or to
11 be enabled to do this spring. Dress Goods in
Gents' Fu nishing Department
Will be replete with the napst elegant goods in Shirts, Ties, Collar;, Under-
wear, Hats and daps in abUndance.
Readymade Clothing epartment well assorted.
In House Furnishing we show a magnificent range of Carpets, Curtains,
Linoleums, Oil Cloths and Draperies.
Our new milliner, IISS SHEPPARD, with her several assistants,
is on hand, supported by he most elegant stock of Millinery ever yet shown
by us in Seaforth.
We invite all to call and inspect our magnificent range of new Spring
Goods at the Bargain Dry Goods, Clothing and Millinery House of Seaforth,
Hada Long Balloon Trip.
M. Maurice Mallet describes what he
claims to be the longest balloon ascent on
record. His balloon, Les Inventions Nou-
velles'started from the gas works of La Vil-
lette, Paris, on Oct. 23, and the voyage tar.
minated at Wahien, in central Germany, at
6 a.m. on the 25th, after a total journey of
36 hours 10 minutes above ground. The
flight was interrupted several times by the
snow which fell in the higher regions of
the atmosphere. When lower strata were
reached the snow melted and the balloon
regained its ascending power. During one
of these descents it was stopped and exam-
ined by a Prussian gendarme, who had fol-
lowed it at a gallop for some distance. The
route passed over part of Belgium, the
Taunus and the Odeuwald, and the towns
of Metz and Frankfort were recognized in
passing.—London Public Opinion.
Speed the Parting Guest.
There is an easy, graceful, and entirely
polite method sf speeding the parting guest
in vogue with American naval officers when
the ship lies in the stream'. When a caller
has said all he has to say and heard all
that anybody has to say in reply, and yet
has not the grace to take himself off, some-
body rnnounces that the nexe boat ashore
will depart itt fifteen minutes. Only the
dullest landsman fails to take this hint.
Is It Going to Pieces?
Signs are not wanting that the Republi-
can party is going, or at any rate may pre-
sently go, to pieces and signs are fairly
abundant that the Democratic party is
rapidly being made over by the stirring
and disturbing energy of the extraordinary
man who is now President. It may be that
Mr. Gresham's accession to the Democratic
cabinet means the great interests and great
forces of thought in the Northwest are now
turning abut to the assistance of the De-
mocratic plirrty, Judge Gresham being their
gift to the counsels of that party. Mr.
Cleveland has been steadily effecting a re-
volution in the purposes and methods of
the Democratic party by drawing so many
new men about him, by assisting to shelve
so many older men of the Democratic
party of former days. The party has
grown bold and aggressive and certain of
its own mind in consequence of the change.
Mr. Cleveland's present term of office may
afford him time and opportunity to com-
plete the transformation. Y oung men are
eager to `serve him ; and a Democratic
party of young men is the most formidable
danger the Republic -am have to fear—the
best hope that the Democrats have to cher-
ish.—Woodrow Wilson in The Review of
Reviews.
HiNTS ON ETIQUETTE.
It Is the Correct and Common
Thing in Conversation.
To remember that brevity is the soul of
wit.
Defying the Storm.
"In moderately stormy weather nowa-
days," said a promenader, "one meets
more people than ever before carrying
their umbrellas rolled. In these days
when our men and women are taller and
stronger and finer than those of any former
generations, there are manv who seem to
find a pleasure in their storm -defying quali-
ties, and we wonld rather get a little wet
than take the trouble of carrying an open
umbrella."
Seizes
WM.
PICKARD.
To talk in such a way as to amuse or
entertain one's interlocutor, or, better
still, so that both parties may be amused or
instructed as the case may be.
To make the topic suit the time and
place, avoid ' sermons in ball -rooms, and
political or religious discussions in mixed
assemblies.
To sustain one's faia share of the burdens
of conversation, and to start new topics
when the old ones become worn or grow
peracM
A successful Experiment in Prohibition.
The curse and bane of frontier life is
drunkenness. The literature of the mining
camp, the cross-roads, and the cattle
ranch reeks with whisky. In every new
settlement the saloon precedes the school-
house and the church, is the rendezvous of
ruffians, the harbor of criminals, the re-
cruiting station of the murderer, the gamb-
ler, the harlot, and the thief ; a perpetual
menace to social order, intelligence, and
morality.
Agitation against the evils of intemper-
ance was contemporary with the political
organization of the Territory of Kansas.
The founders of Topeka and Lawrence for-
bade the sale of intoxicating beverages
within their corporate limits, and the de-
bate continued until 1881. when a
To re ember that the agreeable man is
he who can and will listen attentively, in-
telligently and sympathetically.
GREAT BREAK IN PRICES.
SM.A.SON isea.
Now is your chance td make home attractive at a small cost. Such an
opportunity is worth taking advantage of.
To avoid repetition of the matter of
story -telling, personal reminiscences, and
the like, repeating, like the newspapers,
only once in ten years.
To remember that it is better to be
agreeable than to talk about one's own
affairs.
To remember that every other parent
considers that his children are prodigies
also, and, therefore, will resent the claims
to extraordinary genius made in behalf of
your infant phenomenon.
To think before you speak.
The newest designs of the best makers in immense variety. We claim
the largest stock, the &oldest goods, the best value at
LUMSDEN & - WILSON'S
To wait until another person has finished
what ha has to say, and then to say polite-
ly that you differ from him, or teat you
have heard the story told otherwise,
where justice to the absent demands this
course.
To "sink the shop;" that is, to avoid
talking about one's business or profe.ssion.
To talk about one's profession or cellists
with a person who has expressed a wish
—sincere to all appearancea—to hear Onset
it.
H
SPaR/II\TC+,
0
1.893.
Our stock for this season is very complete. In Colored Dress .Goods we
are showing all the new shade. In Black Goods we have a full stock, in.
eluding Bengalines, Silk Wars, lienriettas, etc, We are showing a large
stock of Trimmings, Black and Colored Gimps, Surah Silks, Shot Surahs and
Check Silks, New Opera Flannels, New Delaines, New Prints, New Embreid
eries, New Brussels and Tapestry Carpets, Men's Melissa Waterproof Coats,
To remember that frequent puns break'
up the thread of conversation, and that
the habitual -punster is apt to become
tedious.
Ladies' Waterproof Coats.
A somacTrmix
R. JAMIESON, SEAFORM
p,GA 1 1\7" S
AT
MULLETT & JACKSON
DURING THE NEXT
30 - D.A.YS 30
In Cook Stoves of every description.
Also Heaters for either Coal or
Wood.
I
THE NEXT MORNING i FEEL BRIGHT AND
NEW AND NIY°GONIPLEXION IS BETTER.
My doctor says it acts gently on the atoms* -
liver and kidneys, and is apleasant laxative. This
drink is made from herbs. and is prepared for use
as easily as tea. It is called
lailiNES MEDICINE
.A.11 dreggLsts sell it for fonc. and 41.00 perpaokage.
Buy one to -day. Lane's Family Mettleipe
moves the bowels each day, la order to Pe
he :Abe this is memory-,
5.0•M•••••=.00reamimmenni•II
MULLETT & JACKSON, Seatorth,
STOVES, TINWARE AND HOUSE FURNISIIING tMPORIVA
Important
SS AI
• S
Announcement,
BRIGHT BROTHERS,
SM.A.PCDP,T1=1
The Leading Clothiers of Huron,
Beg to inform the people of Seaforth and surrounding -antry, that they have
added to their large ordered clothing trade one of the
Most Complete and best selected stocks of Boys', Youths'
and Men's Readymade Clothing
THE COUNTY.— -
Prices Unequalled. We lead the Trade.
Remember the Old Stand, Campbell's Block, opposite the Royal Ilottls
Seaforth.
BRIGHT BROTHER&
APRIL 4,,
COU
In our lust cointi
ti
circle containing -546 do
fn from 300 to 2,00).000.
our customers counted
, the close of the ,eoni
notified of their success,
Plat as we advertised. „A
an evidence that we haV
cur patrons, we will send
(excepting those ohjec
address On receipt of a 3
We do this instead of pn
of the list being so ve
competition we present
customers to count the.
ln the circle. 'With it
To the first three pors
ausvrer we will g ve
WATCH, with E
D13EBER 11AMPIt
movement. We will gi
of the three correct an.
front the first- and th
sending in the last ti
each be giant watches
ill,. TRIS MAKE
ORES. RA011 OF
AT 8100, that will
sample watch is now
Andean be seen byany
sincerity is doubted th
a friend do so, and see
Remember each one
accompanied hy af21
WE PRESENT GO
competition in prefe
GOLD because as a
ran, for years fifterl
delighted posseasorse
easetly as we promise,
sent in ladies' or ge
lEn addition we will
EXTRA PRESEN
PATTERN'S. VA
nowELLEnT. ti
ARTICLES FOR
for intermediate ir,01T
be xto correct answer
tributetl among those
the correct number.
accompanied by ae•cen
for a box of Dr. 14farz-'f,
the pills and giVe you
who Is ditisatisfied a
exactly as we represen
money. Our sole obje
nary offer is to intr
into every borne In 'A
AS 4 Totile
worn-ousiness
adapted to his ease.
energy.. and make
MAItZ'S HEAL
TELEX TINE - B
THE IMAM
YQIING MEN
men a worry_, over-
use Heath rills,
give youu energy
yourself Ag_ain..._
YailiNG Vie
vase ess,seantine
nese, liea.daehe, w
bearing down pain
They restore the m
the system, enrich
plump bri ht and
M OD f
1 -
kidnej orb c
adder tr
follies, loss of encri,
should use Illealth
upon the bladder 4
vigor of youth to al
and mental.
" ill) 0.114
-c tange o life:"
constipation, rile,
pression, should u.
all these symptom
the nerves, regulat
in ever,eqty.. ._ _
TO THE AG
stre.ngth to the ne
and ease to the bo
bears less heavily
If the persons
tribute our presen
that no mention
respect their wisi
presents to any a
knowledge of ever
e -4 -tions Addressed
and all correspon.
fidential. Inwriti
MEDICAL CO.
to 3a ADELAI
14
Musical
mmir.
Scott
PRI
SEAFOR
PlANO1
Bell & Co" GA
pany, Bowinai
°ROAR
Dominion Or
D, W. KIM
Tbe above In
good second -kw
frm upwar
inept plan, or
loneeetinas and
amigo, books ttt
Lead
MAI
My !soli
pared 10mery
spell kneel
antooxi.
hand. 1
and rehab
fa"' 43k,
RES1D4
J. C.
A Gener0
Farmers1
Drafts b
Interest.
SALE
ollectiou
OFFIC
Wilson's 1
MAR
THE N
810
NO 1