HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1893-11-24, Page 2irmeiNE
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THE HURON EXPOSITnP
Agricultural Implement
EMPORIUM.
a Cs WILLSON,
SEAFORTH
Has a full assortment of the following
goods:
IN PLOWS—I have the Floury, Wilkinson, Gowdy
and Cookshutt ; in Gang Plows—the Cockshutt, Wil-
kinson and Fleury; single and double Furrow Sulky
Plows, Specie Harrows, Disc Harrows and Diamond
Harrows, Spring Tooth Cultivators, Hoosier single
and combined Drilla. In Hone Powers—I have one,
two and three horse American Tread Powers and
Atneriesn Ensilage -Cutters; two, four, six and eight
horse Sweep Powers and Canadian Ensilage Cutters
all kinds of Grain Crushers, and a new and improved
2-; GRAIN GRINDER, guaranteed to do good Work and
give satisfaction.
Gananoque and Brantford Bug-
,
s gies, Phaetons and Fancy
,
Carriages of all patterns.
::,..,
Five different styles of Road Carts, also the:Wood
stock -Bain wagon, ,
- In washing reachinee, the Improved Ideal, the
Knoll, the Dowswoll and Standard; Clothes Wringera
in Mx different styles, ranging from $2.50 to $7.00
each.
In Wind Mills the I X L, a fine solid wheel; tho
Challenge,a first.elass open wheel,and the Woodstock
Steel Wheel and Steel Tower, the best of its kind in
Canada. Mills put up for pumping water on short
notice. 1 A full stook of plow castings and repairs for
all kind's of plows including the Hendry and Hogan
fl
plows. The Davisand Williams Sewing Machines, all
kinds o sewing machine needles and oils.
0. '. WILLSON, Seaforth.
CIuff d Bennett's
Planing Mill.
The undersigned would beg leave to thank their
many customers for their very liberal support for the
poet lind would say that they are in a much better
position to serve them than ever before, tut they are
Adding a new Engine and Boiler, also a dryi. kiln and
enlarging their building, which will enable them to
turn out work on short notice.
• Lumber, Sash, Doors, Mould-
ings, Shingles, and Lath
always on hand.
Contracts taken and Estimates
furnished.
Cluff & Bennett.
P. S.—All in arrears please pay up.
13214 •
GROCERIES.
If you want a 'good article in
Groceries,
Canned Goods ,
or Fruits
You can be supplied at the
POST OFFICE
STOPM_
Choice Hams,
Shoulders,
Breakfast Bacon
and Spiced Roll
Kept constantly on hand. Tele-
phone connection.
A call solicited.
A. CROZIER & CO.,
SITCPESSORS TO J. FAIRLEY,
SEAFORTH, ONT.
1327
THE FARMERS'
_Banking - House,
sM.A.141 01V1"1-1..
(In connection with the Bank of Montreal.)
LOGAN & 00.,
BANNERS AND FINANCIAL AGENT
REMOVED.
To the Corninercial Hotel Building, Main Street
A General Banking Business done, drafts issue and
cashed. Interest allowed on deposits.
MONEY TO LEND
On good notes or mortgagee._
ROBERT LOGAN, MANAG,ER,
1068
Awaits those who prepare for it.,
Central Business College,
STRATFORD, ONT.,•
Unquestionably Western Ontario's
greatest, _most practical and-- best
commercial school.
Young men, young women, let us help you.
Others have taken our courses of training, They
were satisfied. They are now making money. Why
don't you follow in their footsteps ? Write for
catalognes, and mention this paper.
SH AW & ELLIOTT,. Proprietors.
PHINEAS AfoINTOSH, Principe 1337-26
HURON AND BRUCE
Loan and Investment
0 CI
This Company is Lcianing Money
Farm Security at lowest Rates
of Interest.
Mortgages Purchased.
SAVINGS BANS BRANCH.
3, 4 and 6 per Cent. Interest Allowed en
Deposits, according to amount and
tine left.
OFFICE.—Corner of Market Square and
North Street, Goderioh.
HORACE HORTON,
MANAGE -a
RIR ESTI,
STROM ESTI
BEIM
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
TURK FOR SALE.—For sale an improved, 100
X sore farm, within two and a half miles of the
town of Seaforth. For further particulars apply on
the premises, Lot 12, Concession 4, H. R. EL, Tucker.
smith, or by mail to JOIIIN PRENDERGAST, Sea.
forth P. O. . 1290
200 ACRE FARM s;FOR SALE.—The 200 acre
farm'being tote 11 and 12, concession 16,
Grey, is offered for Sale.', 120 acres are cleared and
the balance is well timbered. • Buildings first-class.
Orchard, well, &c, School house within 40 rode.
Possession given at once if desired. For further
particulars as to price, terms, etc, apply to MRS.
WALKER, Roseville P.O., or to NELSON BRICKER,
on the farm, 129941
MIARM FOR SALE.—For sale lot 9 and half of lot
X 10, on the 14th concession of McKillop, contain-
ing about 140 acres of which about 40 acres are
cleared. There are about 97i acres of lot 9 well titre
bered, There are fair buildings on lot 10; but none
on lot 9. These places will be sold together or separ-
ately to suit purehasers and can be got cheap.
Apply on the premises or to Walton O. JAMES
CAMPBELL. 13494 f
TIARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lots 16 and 16, Con -
.cession 0, in the township of Howick, contain -
ng 100 acres, 70 acres are cleared and the balance
h .rdwood bush. It is situated 3 miles from the vil-
lage of Wroxeter. There is a good bank barn etand-
ing up on poets and train° house with oellar under-
neath, a good bearing orchard, also a well, This
property:belonged to the late Adam Hislop. Im-
mediate posseesidn cin be given. For further par-
ticulars apply to ROBERT DODDS, on the premises,
or ALEXANDER HISLOP, Wroxeter P. 0. 1350x4
TIARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 2, 3rd Conces-
X Won of Tuokersmith, containing 100 scree, all
cleared and seeded down to grate. It is all well
underdrained, has good buildings and a young or --
chard. It is well watered by a never failing stream•
running through the back end. This is an wars
good stock farm and is also well adapted to grain
raising. It is within two miles and a half of Seaforth.
Will be sold cheap and on terms to suit the purchas-
er. Apply to D. DONOVAN, Seaforth. 134741
TIOUSE FOR SALE.—On North Steeet, Egmonde
vine, about five minutes walk from the church
a frame house, one story and a -half, with 'Jewell
rooms'very comfortable and beautifully finished.
There is a quarter of an acre of land, well fenced,
with a few good,frhit trees and a large number of
currant bushes, good *tern and well, woodshed and
coal house. This is an exceptionally pretty and com-
fortable place. Apply to MRS. C. HOWARD, on the
premises, cm write to Seaforth P. 0. 132341
MIARM IN McKILLOP FOR SALE.—For 'sale the
r south half of lots 1 and lot 2, conceSsion 4, Mo,
Killop, being 160 acres of very choice land mostly in
a good state of cultivation. Theriris 'a good house
and bank barn, a good young bearing orchard and
plenty of never failing -water. A coneiderable
portion seeded to grass. Cohvenient to merkets
and sohoole and good gravel roads in all directions.
Will be sold cheap. Apply to the proprietor on the
premises, MESSRS. DENT & HODGE, Mitchell, or at
Tee Hums EXPOSITOR Office, eSeaforth. JOHN
O'BRIEN, Proprietor. 129841
PLENDID FARM FOR SALEI-Lot 25, Conces:
sion 6, Township of Morris, containing 160 acres
suitable for grain or stock, situated two and a half
miles from the thrivine village of,Brussels, a good
gravel road leading thereto; 120 acres cleared and
free from sturnps,,6 acres cedar and ash and balance
hardwood. Barn 51x60 with straw and hay shed
4670, stone stabling underneath both. The house
Is brick, 22x82 with kitchen 18x26, cellar underneath
both buildings. All are new. There is a•large young
orchard. School on next lot. The land has a good
natural drainage, and the farm is in good condition.
Satisfactory reasons for selling. Apply at Tint Ex-
POSITOR OFFICE, or on the promisee. WM: BARRIE,
Brussels. 133541
VARA' FOR SALE.—For sale, lot 5, concession 1,
J-, 1H. R. S., township of Tuckersmithe containing
one hundred acres more or less, 97 acres cleared, be
of which are seeded to gratis, well underdrained,
three never failing wells. On one fifty of said lot
there is a log house, frame barn and very good
orchard, and on the other a good frame house and
barn, stables, and good orchard. The whole will be
pold together or each fifty separately to suit pur-
chasers, located 1. miles from Seaforth, will be sold
reasonable and on easy terms, as the proprietor ie re-
tiring from farming. For further particulars apply
to the undersigned on the premises, and if by letter
to Seaforth P. 0. MICHAEL DORSEY, 13234
FAB,M FOR SALE.—For Sale, 80 acres in Sanilao
County, Michigan 75 acres cleared and in a good
state of cultivation, fit to 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 frame
house, stabling for 12 horses with four box stalls, ps
head of cattle and 100 sheep. Ninety ewes were win-
tered last 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 as a whole. These properties are in, good.
localities, convenient to inarkete, schools and
churches, The proprietor is forced to sell on ac•
count of ill health. It will be a leargain for the right'
man as it will be sold on easy teems. GEORGE: A,
TEAIPLETON, Doronington, Sanilac County, Michi-
gan. 1298x4 -t -f
FIRST CLASS FARM FOR SALE. ---For elle Lot 12
Concession 6, II. R. S Tuckersmith, containing
100 acres of choice land, nearly ell cleared and in a
high slate of cultivation, with 90 acres seeded to
grass. 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 truit•trees; two good
wells, one at the house, the other with a wind -mill
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 barns, the one
32 feet by 72 feet and the other 36 feet by 56 foot
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
grain or stock raising and is one of the finest farms
in the country. It is situated miles from Seaforth
Station, 6 trope Brimfield and Kippen with good
gravel ro a leading to each. It is also convenient
to churches, post office and school and will be sold
cheap and on easy terms. For further particulars
apply to the proprietor on the premises or by letter
to THOMAS G. SHILLINGLAW Eganoedville P. 0.
,
1286 tf,
When we assert that
Dodd's
On
Goderloh, August 6th,1886.
Mr. Charles Dodds, Tax Collector for the township -
of MoKillop, will be at the Royal Hotel, Seaforth,
eves,- Mabarday until December 14th, for the con
ventenoe of Ratepayers. All taxes must be in by the
above mentioned date- 1363-4
Kidney Pills
...„.„,......,„,,i,
Cure Backache, Oropsy,
Lumbago, Bright's Dis-
ease, Rheumatism and all
other forms of Kidaey
i.Troubles, we are backed
by -the testimony of all
Who have used them.
. .
THEY CURE TO STAY CURED,
sot atlst. d ruelt.s If !std7i8creCc::!rt4Ifu-pot:
OBLIVION, A MONSTER.
THE HUMAN RA9E FINDS A CEME-
TERY IN FOR ETFULNESS. •
'Oblivion a Confla"gration in Which
1
Everything Is Co, Ituined—But It Has
Its Defeats—Oblivion Does Not Swat -
low Up What Bad; Better Not Be Re-
,
moved.
BROOK' YN, Nov. 12, 1893—Rev. Dr.
Talmage to -day preached a sermon of
unusual nncl marvelous consolation to
the usualthrongs, lifter they had sung:
There 1 no sorrow that Heaven cannot heal.
The subject was Oblivion and its De-
feats, The texts seleeitecl were Job 24, 20:
"Ile shall be DO more remethbered;" and
Palms 112, 6:- "The righteous shall be.
ting remei
n and its
y. There
in?leverla
' lOblivi
jeet to -d
that swrIlows dos qi everything. It
crunchesindividual , families,communie
ties, states, nations continents, . hemis-'
diet is made up of
I ages, of cycles of
is. That monster is
lister and . all other
dictionar es, Obliv on. . It is a steep
. down which everything rolls. . It is a
°outlaw- tion in '
consumel. It is a
orchestras play, an
everythi g stops.
the burnt n race. t is the domain of
forgetfulness. -Oblivion ! At times it
throws a shadow so
would net pronoune
not come armed in
Eternal God on yo.
to rout it to demoli
Why, -just look at
of the earth disappear. For a while
-they are . together, • nseparable, and, to
each. olher indispensable, and then they
part. Some by marriege going to estab-
.1ish other homes, and some leave this
life, and :a century is long enough to
plant a family, ' de elop it, prosper it,
and obliterate it. So e generations
vanish. Walk up 0 ethadway, New York;
State street, Bost?) ' ; Chestnut street,
.Philadelphia; The' Strand.. London; .
.Princess ,- street, , E inburgh.; Champs
Elysees, Paris; Untjr den Linden, Ber-
lin; and you will nse t in this year eigh- '
teen hundred and nety-three not one
person" who walke9 there in the year
seventeen hundre and ninety-three.
What engolfment 1:1 . All the ordinary
efforts at perpetuati n are dead failures.
Walter Scott's "OIcij Mortality" may go
round with - his' iisel - torecut the
faded epitaphs on.1 ombstones,.but Old
Oblivion hasa iicker chisel with
-which he can ct out a thousand
epitaphs while "01.c lortality" is cutting
...jet one epitaph.. .W1 le 'libraries -.of bio-
•.graphies - devoured f book worms, or
unread of the risii generations. All
' the signs of the stoi, s and warehouses of
great firms have 0 landed, unless .the
grandsons think thaA; itisan advantage
to keep. the old' si n up, because.. the
mine of the uiestllir was more com-
mendatory than tift. ame of the descen-
dant. The city of Ronie, Italy, stands
to -day, but dig dowqi deep enough, and
you come to another Rome buried, and
go down still. further, and you will find
a third Rome. Jertis lem stands to -day,
but:dig clown deep en ugh, and, you will
find a Jerusalem und rileath, and go on
and deeper. down, a third Jernsalem,
Alexandria, Egypt, o the top of Alex-
andria, and:the seco d on top of the
third. Many of the ancient cities are
buried thirty feet deep, or fifty feet deep,
or one hundred feet 'deep. What was
the matter? Any, speeial ealamity,? No.
The: winds and ivaves and sands and
flying dust are I all undertakers and
gravediggers, and if he world ,stands
Nang enough, the pres nt BrooklyP and
New York and London, will have on
top of them other Br oklyns and New
Yorks and Loudons, a d only aft r dig-
ging and boring and blasting wi 1 the
archmolpgist of far distant ceturies
come • down as far as the highest spires
and domeand turrete of our. p •esent
American and European cities. Call
the roll of the armies ! of.. Baldwin the
First, or of Charles l‘Firtel or of Teri -
borough, or of Mithridt.tes, or of I-rince
Frederick, or of Cortez; and not o e an-
swer will you hear. Sand them ir line
and call the roll of thelone million. men
in the army of Thebes. Not one answer.
Stand them in line, the million, Seven
hundred thousand infantry and the two
hundred thousand cavalry of the. As-
syrian army under Ninus, and call the
roll. Not one answer.' Stand in line the
ene Million men of Sesestris, the 11 one
milliOn two hundred thOusand men of
Artaxerxes at Cunaxa, the two million
six hundred and forty-one thousand itiert
under Xerxes at Thermopylee, and call
the long toll. Not one answer. At, the
opening of our Civil War, the men of the
Northern and Southern armies were told
that if they fell in battle their names
would never be forgotteWby their cOun-
try. Out -of the million Men who fell in
battle or died in militaryl hospitals,' You
camnot call thonames of a. thousand, nor
the names. of live hundred, nor the names
0f onehn
undred, nor the ames of fifty
•
Oblivion ! • Are the feet Of the di:Indere
who at the ball of the Duchess of 1-Zich-
mond at I nssels the night beforeWa,ter-
loo all Of 1, . All still. Are all theears
-
that heard Nie guns ofaBunker Hill 'all
deaf? All dear. Are theeyes that saw
the coronation of George the Third all
-closed ? All closed. ObliSion ! A hun-
dred years from now, there \ Val not be
a being on this earth that knew we ever
lived.
berance."
efeats is my sub -
is an old monster
pheres, Nt
years, oT
millepnit
called by
°ride. Its
centuries,
ms, of aso
Noah W
Inch everything is
dirge in which all
a period -at which
It is the cemetery of
er all of us, and I
it to -day, if I did
the strength of the
r behalf to attack it,
h it,
the way the families
In some old fasnily _record a descen-
dant studying up the ancestral line may
spell out our name, and trona the nearly
faded Mk, with great, efforie find that '
sone person by our , name was born
somewhere between 1818 e/ad 1890, but
they ‘vill know do- snore about us than
\ye knew about tile color of a chi id's
eyes born last night in a:village in Pata-
gonia. Tell me something:Mut your
great-grandfather. What were his fea-
tures? What did he do? ., What 3, -ear
did he die? And your great-grand-
mother? you describe the style of
the hat that she wore, and how did she
and your great-grandfather get on in
eac:ii other's compa.nionship'. Was it
March weather or June Oblivion? That
mountain surase rolls over everything-.
Even the.. pyramids are dying. Not a
day passe -is but there is'nhiseled off a
chip of that granite. The sea is tri-
nlinphing ever the land, and what is going
on at Coney Island is going on all around
-the e orhr, and the contineitts are clams-
blieg into' the 1N-aves. And \riffle this
tiaaspiring on the 'outside of.
Me v.1.11,1. the hot ohisel of the internal
tire is diggine, under the foundatiou of
he/eirth and ctii 1 mg its ‘vey out to -
weeds the eerie lee 11 surprises me to
hear people say they do not think the
N% <trill iil finally be 1 mated tip, w heii
\\•;11 11:int 11 11:1; fur
aw..r• tp (.11 tire. Why, there is only a
erns: het -via -en es and the tut -nacres inside
raginis ite get out. Oblivion ! The
worai ii -' !f Nvill roll hoe 11,11S eir:411N: a
,scluillovs itidia 1•11160r runs down
a Idif, ;Old vjlet: onr
int-01.1(1Cli( d hy 13' W (.3. gl 11 V 1,ih Liii
with other werhis Ili 1 1.11(23' 111.114u 0,1.).
anti so tar srom 'laving our memory
perpetuated by a monument of Aber•
deen granite in this world, there is no
world in sight of our strongest telescope
that will be a sure pediment for any
slab of commemoration of the ,fact
that we ever lived or died at all.
Our earth is struck with death. The
axle -tree of the Conetellations will break
and let down the Ovulations cif other
worlds. Stellar, lunar, solar -Mortality.
Oblivion 1 It can' swallow . and will
swallow whole galaxies of worlds as
easy as ft crocodile takes down a frog.
Yet oblivion does not remove or swal-
low 01)) thing that had better not be re-
moved or swallowed. The old monster
is welcome to his meal. This world
would long ago have been overcrowded
if not for the merciful removal of na-
tions and generations. What if all the
books had lived that were ever written
and printed and published. The libraries
would by their immensity have obstruct-
ed intelligence and Made all research
impossible. The fatal epidemic of books
was a inerciful epidemic. Many of the
States and National libraries to-dayare
only morgues, in which dead books are
waiting for someone to come and recog-
nize them. What if all. the people that
had been born werestill alive? We would
have been elbowed by our ancestors of
ten centuries ago, and people who ought
to have said their last word three thou-
sand years ago, would snarl at •us, say-
ing: "What are you doind here?"
There would have been no room to turn
around. Some of the past generations
of mankind were not worth remember-
ing. The first uselul thing that many
people did was to die; their cradle a mis-
fortune and their grave a boon. This
world was hardly a comfortable place to
live in before the middle of the last cen-
tury. So many things have come into
dip' world that were not fit to stay in, we
ought to be glad they were put out.
The.waters of Lethe the fountain of for-
getfulness, are a healthful draught. The
history we -have of the world in ages
past is always one-sided, and cannot be
depended on.. History :is fiction illus-
trated by a few straggling facts'. In all
the Pantheon _the weakest goddess
is Clio, the goddess of • History,
and instead of being represented by
sculptors as holding a scroll, might
better be represented as limping on
crutches. Faithfill history is, the saving
of a few things out of moie. things lost.
The immortality that comes from pomp
of obsequies, or granite shaft, or build-
ingnamed after its founder, or page of
recognition in some encyclopmdia is an
immortality unworthy of one's ambition,
-for it Will -cease, and is no immortality
Oblivion!at a11. A hundred years.
But while I recognize this universal sub-
mergence of things earthly, who wants
to be forgotten? Not one of Us. Absent
for a few weeks or months from home,
it cheers us to know that we are remem-
bered there. It is a phrase we have all
pronounced :—"I hope you missed me.-"
Meeting some frieDds from whom we
have been ,parted many years, we eu- -
quire:—"Did you ever see me before?"
.and they say, "Yes," and call us by
name, and we feel a delightful sensation
thrilling through their hand into our
hand, and running up from elbow to
shoulder, and then parting, the one cur-
rent of delight ascending to the
brow - and the other descending
to • the' foot, Moving round
and round in concentric 'circles until
every nerve and muscle and capacity of
body and mind aud soul is permeated
with delight. Afew days ago, visiting
the place of my boyhood, 1 met one
whom I had not seen since we Played t� -
gaiter at ten years of age, and I had pe-
culiar pleasure in puzzling hitn a little
as to who I was, and I can hardly de-
scribe the sensation, as, after gwhile, he
stumbled out: "Let me see. Yes, you
are DeWitt." We all like to be remem-
bered.
Another defeat of Oblivion will be
found in the character of , those Ivhom
we rescue, uplift or save. Character 'is
eternal. Suppose by a right influence
*NV -c aid in transforming- a bad mau. into a
good wan, a dolorous man into a happy
man, a dishefttetted man into a courage -
mitt Man, every stroke of that work done
will he• inunortelizecl. There may never
be so much as one line in a newspaper
regarding it, or no mortal -tongue may
ever- whisper it iuto human ear, but
wherever that Soul- shall go, your
Nvoric upon it shall go ; wherever that
soul rises your work on it will rise,
and so long as that soul vill last, your
work on it will last. Do you suppose
there will ever come such an idiotic
lapse in the history of that soul in
heaven that it shall forget that you in-
vited him to Christ, that you, -by prayer
or Gospel word, turned him around from
the wrong way ,to the 1 ight way ? No
such insanity will ever smite a heavenly
citizen. it is not half as well on earth
known that Christopher Wren planned
and built St'Paul's as'it will be known
in all 1 -leaven t•hat you were the instru•
mentality- of building a temple for the
sky. We teach a Sabbath -class, or put
a Christian tract in the hands of • a pass-
erby, or testify for Christ in a prayer -
meeting, or preach a sermon, and go
home discouraged, as though nothing
had been accomplished, when we had
been character building with a Material
that no frost or earthquake or rolling
of the centuries can damage or
bring down. There is no sublimer art
-on earth than architecture. AVith pen-
cil and rule and compass, the architect
sits down alone and in silence,and eve:dyes
from his own brain a cathedral or a
national capitol or a massive home be-
fore he leaves that table, and then he
goes out and unrolls his plans, and calls
oarpenters and masons and artizans of
all sorts to execute his design, and when
it is finished he walks around the vast
structure, and sees the completion of the
work with high satisfaction, and pn a
stone at some corner cf the building the
arcItitect's name may be chiseled. But
the storms do their work-, and Tina°,
that takes down everything, will yet
take down that structure, until there
shall not be one stone left upon another.
But there, is a soul in Heaven. Through
your instrumentality it was put there.
Under God's grace you are the architect
of its eternal happiness. Your name is
written, not on one corner of its nature,
but inwrought into its every fibre
and energy. Will the storms of
winter wash out the story of what you
have Wrought upon that spiritual struc
ture? No. There are no storras in that
land and there is no winter. Will time
wear out the inscription which shows
your fidelity? No. Time is past and it is
an Everlasting Now. Built into the
foundation of that imperishable atm°.
ture, built into its pillars, built into it
capstone, is your name, either the nam
you have on earth or the name by which
celestials shall call you. I know the
Biblesays in one place that God is a
jealous God, but that refers to the work
of those who worship some other god. A
true father is not jealous of his child. -
With what glee you. show the picture
your child penciled, or a toy -ship your
child hewed out, or recite the noble deed
your child accompliehed, and G-od never
was jealous of 'a Joshua, never
was jealous of a Paul, never was
jealous of . a Francis.- Haverdal
never was jealous of a man or
woman who tried to heal wounds and
wipe away tears and lift burdens and
save souls, and while all is of grace, and
arofir self -abnegating utterance will he:
NOVEMBER 24, 18
--tam unto us, not unto Us, Dat unto Thy
name ! Oh, Lord, give glory!" you shall
always feel a -heavenly satisfaction in:
every good thing you did on earth; and
if iconoclasm, borne from beneath,
should break through the gates of
heaven and efface one record of your
earthly fidelity, methinks Christ would
take one of the nails of His own cross
and write .somewhere on the crystal or
the amethyst or the jacinth or the
chrysopraeus your name, and just undo
it the im-criptian of my text: "The
righteous shall be held in everlasting re•
inetnerance." Oh, this character build
ing! You and I are every moment busy
in that tremendous occupation. You
are making me better or worse, and I
am making; you better or worse, and
we shall, .i,hough all eternity
bear the makk of this- benediction
of blasting. Let others have the
thrones of heaven, those who
have more naightily wrought for God
and thetruth, but it will be heaver
enough for you and me if ever and anon
we meet'sonte4 radiant soul on the boule-
vards of the -Great Citywho shall say :
"You he ped me once. You encouraged
nie whei I was in earthly struggle. I
do not k ow that I would have reached
this shining place had if not been foi
you," an 1 we will laugh with heavenly
glee, and say, "Ha! ha I Do you really
remembe4.- twit talk ? Do you remene
ber.that yarning? Do YOU remember
tian invitation? What a mem-
ave 1 Why, that Must have
1 there in 'Brooklyn or' New
t least ten :thousand million
" And the answer will be,
that Chri
ory you I
been don,
°Heinle
years ago
"Yes, it vas as long -as that, but I re-
member it as well aSthough it were yes-
terday," Oh, this, character building 1
Tee strulpture lasting independent of
passing centuries, independent of crum-
bling mansoleums, independent of the
wliole planetary systena Aye, if
the mater'al universe, which seem e all
bound toasether like one piece of machin-
ery, should some day meet with an ac-.
cident that should send worlds crashing
into each fother like 'telescoped railway
trains, andall the wheels of constella-
tions and galaxies, should stop; and
down tut° one one Chasm of immensity
all the tuns and moons and stars should
tumble like the midnight express at
Ashtabula, that ‘vould not toilets us, and
would not hurt God, for God is a spirit,
and e'etracter and memory are irnnior-
I.L over that grave of a wrecked
masertal universe might truthfully be
‘vaitten: "The righ..eous shall be Icld in
everlasting. remembrance." Oli, Time,
we• • defy thee! -Oh, Death, we stamp
theein the dust of thine own sepulchres!
. There is another aud a more complete
defeat for Oblivion, add tnat . is, in the
heart of God himself. You have seen a
sailor roll up his sleeve and show you
his atm tattoeed %vitt' the figure of a
favorite ship, perhaps the first one in
which he ever sailed. You have seen a -
soldier roll up his sleeve and show you
hisarm tattooed With the figure of it
fortress wheralte was garrisoned, or the
face :of a great general under whom he
fought. You. have seen many a. hand
taatotsed with the face of a loved•one be-
fore or after mai riage. This tattooing
is iihnost es Old -as the world. It is
some colored liquid punctured into the
fleslaso indelibly that nothing can wash
it aut. It may have been there fifty
years,.. but NN hen the man goes into his
coffin, that picture w,11 go with him
on hand • or arty. Now. God says
that He has tattooed us upon His
hands. There can be ,no other.
meaning in the forty-ninth chapter of
fsaiah, where God says : '"Behold, I
haa e gaven thee on the palms of
ly halide." It was as much as to say,
-1 unmet °penally hand to help,' but I
thiuk of you. I cannot spread abroad
Mrhands tohless you, but I think of
you. Wherever 14to up and down the
Heavens 1 take these two pictures. of
you With M. They are so inwrought -
into My being that -I cannot lose them
As long as My hands last, the memory
of you vill last. Not on the back of My
hands, as though to . announce you to
others, but on the palms of Myhands for
Myself to look at and study and love.
Not on the palm of one hand alone, but
on the 'palms of both hands, 1 n- while I
am looking upon one hand and thinking
of you, I must have the other hand free
to protect you, free to strike back
your enemy, free to lift if you fall.
Palms of My hands indelibly tat -
toped. And though I hold the
winds in My fist, no cyclone shall
uproot the inscription of your name
and your face, and though I
hold the ocean in the hollow oftMy
hand, its billowing shall not wash out
the record of My remembrances. Behold
I have graven thee on the palms of My
hands." What joy, what honor can
there be comparable to that of being re-
membered by the mightiest and kindest
and loveliest and tenderest and most
affectionate being o Ire universe. Think
of it, to hold an es -
sing place in the
heart of God. '1 rt of God 1 The
most beautiful pa 'a the universe.
Let the archangr'
some palace as
grand as that ,ie can. Let
hint crumble up the stars of
yesterday night and to -morrow night,
and !put them together as mosaics
•for Such a palace floor. Let him take
all the sunrises and sunsets of all the
days, and the auroras of all the nights,
and hang them as upholstery at its win-
dows. Let him take- all the rivers and
all -the lakes and all the Oceans, and toss
them into the fountains of this palace
court. Let him take all the gold of all
the hills and and hang it in its chande-
liers, and all the pearls of all the .seas
and all the diamonds of all the fields,
and with them arch the doorways of
that palace;_ and then invite into it alt
the glories that Esther ever saw at a
Persian banquet, or Daniel ever
walked amongst in Babylonian cas-
tles, or Joseph ever witnessed
in Pharoah's throne -room, and than
yourself enter this castle of archan-
gelio construction aud see how pocr a
palace itiscompared with the greater
palace tit some ofyou have already
found in the heart of the loving -and par-
doning God, and into which all the
music and all the prayers. and all the
sermonic consideration of thie day are
trying to introduce you through the
blood of the Slain Lamb.
/AT
13 0111°
Pala
A
PLEASANT
MRIS
ti
• it
THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND
NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER.
My doctor says it acts gently on the stomach,
liver and kidneys, and Is a pleasant laxative. This
drink 10 made from herbs. and Is prepared for use
as easily as tea. It is ealled,
'
LAKE'S 1111
All drueeiets see it for 60e. and .1.00 per
Buy one to -day. Lane's ninety
eleven the howela ench day. In
usayny Ulla is neut.:warp
What is
CASTOR IA
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants
and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harinless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil.
- It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays
feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd*
cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves
teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency..
Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach
and bowels, giving healthy ant natural sleep. Cases
toria' is the Children's Panacea—the Mother's Friends
Castoria.
"Castor's, is an excellent medicine for chil-
dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its
good effect upon their children."
Da. G. C. OSGOOD,
Lowell, Mass.
" Ontario. is the best remedy for children of
which I am acquainted. I hope the day is not
far distant when mothers will consider the real
interest of their children, and use Castor's, in-
stead of the various quack nostrums which are
destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium,
morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful
agents down their throats, thereby sending
there to premature graves."
DR. J. F. KINCHELOE,
Conway, Ark.
Castoria.
Castorla Is so well adapted to children Sae
I recommend it aisuperiortoanyprescriptiou
known to me."
H. A. &tonna, X Rs
111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
"Our physicians in the children's depart-
ment have spoken highly of their expert.
ence in their outside practice es/Rhea/Mork
and although we , only have among our
medical supplies what is known as regular
products, yet we are free to _confess that gut
merits of Csstoria has won us kilo* With
favor upon it."
UNITED FlOsinTAL AND DiseelletSMe
Boston, hem
ALLEN C. SMITn, Pres.,
The Centaur Company, TT Murray Street, Neu! York City.
DOWNION -:- BANK,
MAIN STREET (NEAR RaYAL HOTEL),
01\TTA_RIO.
GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED,
Interest allowed on deposits of $1.-.00 and upwards at highest current
rates. No NOTICE OF WITHDRAWAL REQUIRED.
Drafts bought and sold. Collections made on all points at rowest rates.
Farmers' Sale Notes collected, and advances made on same; faverable
terms. gar BUSINESS ACCOUNTS SOLICITED.
• THE
CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE)
ESTABLISHED 1867.
HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO.
CAPITAL (PAID UP) SIX MILLION DOLLARS - 166,000,000
REST - - at $ i,100,000
B. E. WALKER, GENERAL MANAGER.,
• SEAFORTH BRANCH.
A General Banking Business Transacted. Farmers' Notes discounted, Drafts
issued, payahle at all points in Canada and the principal cities in
the United States, Great Britain, France, Bermuda, Lim
SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT.
Deposits of 81.00 and upwards received, and current rates of interesto
allowed. IrrInterest added to the principal at the 'end of May and Novem.
ber in each year.
Special attention given to the collection of Commercial Paper and Far
mers' Sales Notes.
F. HOLMESTED, Solicitor.
M. MORRIS. Manager.
A. BIG MANCE AT THE
STORE,
S A P 0 ill II
In order to wind up the affairs of the Estate of the late Robert Jamieson,
it is that the entire stock should be disposed of at once. For this
p
A Discount of 15 Per Cent. will be Allowed-
,
to Cash Custoniers.
•
This is a great chance to get bargains. The stock is all new and good and
those who come first will have the best choice. DON'T WAIT.
Estate of 1.7, diplifE8 IV, 8eaforth1
The Busiest You know where it is,
Corner ./T ulce You have been there,
growav cat* You buy lots of things there,
AND YOU ARE ALWAYS WELOOME.
iisTi)=30
But you never found the clerks too busy to be pleasant. But you never found
the goods to be other than represented.
1•TO,
Come in and see the many bargains we have in store for you. Amongst
others we might mention special drives in Dress Goods, Hosiery, Flannelettes,
Tweeds and Clothing.
A big stock of Men's and Ladies' Fur Coats, Capes, Caps to be sold at
close prices..
PICKARD,
NOVEMBER ,
The
ura
SEAFOI
goliBANBBO
ADVERM
Contract advertiserre
it to 21 inches, inclusiv4
to 10 1{.
1 t° 5 "
1 to
If the advertiser clecti
000 per month, a redo(
vide on the above quot4
Bates for special pose
ration attbilSoffice,
- Business or profession
-eitattees of an inch, $a
Advertisements of St
deeding one Inca, one
reouth 500.
Advertisements of pal
- „at exceeding 11; inchem
esquent month 750.
Advertisements on lo
each insertion, with a
parties wheeler, have re
Doeid Advertisemente
heading, So per line eael
Transient advertisers
lest insertion, three cen
Insertion, nonpareil toe
Adverthaesents witho
wetted till forbid, and ,
Births, Marriages Slid
VIE EXPOSITOR goes it
which means, on a cense
%Goo readers every we
Medium in Western Ont
IM PORTA
ALL OUR SliEET
, Catalogue tree, I
rolt, Michigan,
31ULES FOR- SALE
Mules, warrante
Apply to ID. NICOL, Ile!
TIAIR GOODS.—Mrs
form the "edict
she is prepared to ni
braids out of hair com
Market Street, Semuel
13ULL FOR SALE.—
4, Tuckeremith, a
9 months old .,taid of r
Will be, sold reasonabl
mondville P. O.
frEACRER WANTED,
j_ Rey, for the junio
eeed 9200. Application
1st, 1893. Address JA
Hensel',
RROPSIBRE RAMS
Lot 4, Cencesaion
ed Shropshiredown
smaller of Ewes and
THOMAS ANDERSON,
TORN BEATTIE, CI
d Court, Count* 01:,
veyancer, Land, Loan
Invested and to
Livens' store, Main it
A GOOD' OPENING.
11. on reasonable
dwelling in connection,
is a splendid business e
yid be given for wantin
KYLE, Kippen.
"EiSTRAY HEIFER.
MI lion 10, McKiriop,
sled yearling heifer.
=Mon as will lead to h
rewarded. M. BLAN
'DOR SALE.—That ve
by the late L.
GeivInlock's Bury -4w, 8
on Victoria Square, an
fortable oottage, stable.
ent in the occupancy
For particulars and
ROLMESTED, Barriste
ARBLE SLABS F
Ili. one marble itiab,
inones, also One slab
inches. Each slab is
been used as Butchers'
good. Also a Rocker
Apply to GEORGE EW
tIOR SALE.—A nice
.X The lot contain
lore, has,. nice stable,
fenced, and has plenty
it. It 133 situated 31
sted's rosidence, to the
sold for MO, about hal
Amsted for a retired
Apply to II. A. STROH
o JOHN hieN,AMARA,
— --
A SPLENDID WEI
21,_ signed (Zero for
his „property in Rills
quarter acre of lend,
general store with d
Which Is a splendid cell
house and stable. nil
tithe richest and best
and this 18 a splendid o
nese roan • with Borne
particulars, addrees
fi'reen.
$ 300 Private
$ 500 rates of i
$ 700 borrower
$1,000 pleted
$1,500 -within
$2,500 S.ILiss
BOARS
DERKSIIIRE PIGS,
1.) during the pr
don 3, Tuckerstaith
Pee to which a limited'
Terms, --11, payable at
privilege of returning-
ebillItliQoArkoltueegp:fhoOrrelser"SiegieteEieRell
imported stook on bot
Snell, Edmonton. 7
serrice with the privil
DANIEL MeMILLAN,
B0in
ottSiete*ITIr
pfriozer sienrVaiceinotonntos
,189. Terms—e1.00,
-1000AR F011 SERV
19 Boar for service.
st the time of service,
if necessary, also ant
sale, on lot 3, eoneoSSI
r arlook P. 0.
DERKSHIRE PIGS
_LP during the preee
3; Stanley, a young t
which a limited numb
thoroughbred Berkshi
--One -dollar with tbe
neY. II. Reid, Prop
- -
ickt ERKSIIIRE PIG.
JLP premises in Rill
Shire pig, 6 months ol
chased from Mr. Geor
This fine pig was bred
aware, Ontario. He'
sides and has taken 11
limited number of so
Terms —Ope dollar e
the privilege Of retu
TROYER, Hills Gree
- -
IMPROVED YORK
1. will keepTor the
33. Concession 2, L.
proved Yorkshire B
-which a limited
Ter1is.--41 payable
privilege of returning
the beet bred pigs in
BOARS FOR SERI
service a thorou
a thoroughbred Tani
Concession 6, Ilellett
be Snell, of Ednionto
shirwand $1.60 for t
time -of -service, with
necessary. Also a nu
service for sale.. Th
R. SCROALES, Con
DIGS AND EULL.
A_ Lot 2,0", Conceits
leant of stock this
-China Plg, recently p
ham, and 'from
Ile Will also keep
terms for each Pig.
vissoes with the privi
,ALD has also for Bale,
Wed Durham Yea
Illlifraville P. O.