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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1894-04-06, Page 22 ow THE HURON EXPOSITOR. A Good B s ness, L The undersigned offers for sale his entire stick of Dry Goods and Groceries Which is all new and fresh. The whole stock amounts, to $3,000 or more. _ This is a good chance for any one wishing to go into business, being a first-class stand, a good brick store and a good business done. Satisfac- tory reasons given for wishing to sell. For further information, apply to George Sflit'hers MAIN STREET, SEAA.FORTH, CLEAR IKG SALE .-0E— BOOTS and SHOES. In order to reduce our present stock and make room for Spring goods, we are going to slaughter goods for the next month. NV e have a large stock of Men's Felt Boots, Socks, Rubbers and Overshoes. Also Women's Felt Goods in button, ba1morals and bush - ins, which must be sold, as we do not want to carry them •over.; Now is your time if you want bar- gains in these lines. All other lines at reduced prices. Remember, we will not be under- sold. Richardson . & McInnis, SEAFORTH, The Leading Shoe House in Town. 1344 GODERICH Steam Boiler Works. (ESTABLISHED 1880.) A S. CH RYSTA L, Snoceteor to Chrystal & Black, Manufacturers of all kinds of Stationary Marine, Upright & Tubular BOILERS Salt Pans, Smoke Stacks, Sheet Iror Works, etc., etc.. Also dealers in Upright and Horizontal Slide Valve engines. 'Automatic Cut-11ff Engines a specialty. All lees of pipe and pipe -fitting constantly on hand. lunates furnished on short notice. Works—Opposite G. T. R. Station, Goderich. THE FARMERS' Banking - House, SR2'33_ (In connection with the Bank- of Montreal.) LOGAN i 00., BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENT REMOVE]) To the Commercial Hotel Building, Main Street A General Banking Business donedrafts issue and cashed. Interest allowed on deposits. MONEY TO LEND On good notes or mortgages. ROBERT LOGAN, MANAOEP 1058 DUN N' AKINC POWDE THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. HURON AND BRUCE Loan and Investment QOP.46, This Company is Loaning Money or Farm Security at lowest Rates of ILterest. Mortgages Purchased. SAVINGS BANK BRANCH. 3, 4 and 5 per Cent. Interest Allowed ex Deposits, according to automat and time left. OFFICE.—Corner of Market Sgaart and North Street, Goderich. HORAOE FIORTON, Ooderfoh, August 5th,1885 PORTRAIT JOHN Co CRICH Ras opened an ART STUDIO --IN— CADY'S BLOCK Opposite THE COMMERCIAL HOTEL Where he is prepared to do all kinds of Portrait work from small pictures or from life, any size desired. Parties wishing to have Portraits made earl have them made la any style they wish and at. Oeasonable prices. Portraits in Oil, Crayon, Pastel, India Ink, Sepia and Mono- chrome. Landscapes and Marines Painted. li structions Given - - - -- - Satisfaction Guaranteed. 1366-28 STAMPS WANTED. ' Old Canadian and Foreign Stamps, as used 25 to 40 years ago, for many of which I pay from 50 cents to $2 a eh. GEORGE A. LOWE, 49 Adelaide Street ERA Toronto. ° 1868.0E INFLUENZA, Or La Grippe, though occasionally epi- demic, is always more or less prevalent. The best remedy for this complaint_' is Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. "Last Spring, I was taken . down with La Grippe. At times I was completelypros- trated, and so dimcult was my breathing that my breast seemed as if confined In an iron cage. I procured a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and no sooner had I began , taking it than relief followed. I coU d not be- Neve that the effect would be so rapid and the cure so complete. It is truly a wonderful med- icine." -W. H. Warr reale, Crook City, S. D. - . AYER'S Cherry Pectoral Prompt to act, sure to cure REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. 'TARN FOR SALE OR TO RENT.—For sale or to I rent, lot 3, concession 4, H. R. S., Tuckersmith, containing 100 acres. For further particulars apply to ROBERT CHARTERS, Egmondv llo. 1349-0 f csi OOD FARM FOR SA3.E.—For Bale, north half Ur Lot 81, Concession 2, East Wawanosh, 100 acres good fences, good orchard and never -failing creek. Apply to III . D. COOKE, Barrister, Blyth, or PHILIP HOL .. Goderich. 1278 M,iARM FOR SALE.—I of 30, Concession 6, L. j` S., Tuokersruith, 13b acres, situated on ;he Mi Road, 3 miles from Seaforth. Conver..ent to churches, schools, etc. Fair buildings and good orchard and plentyof water. Apply on the property to PETER CAMRON, or to F. HOLMESTED, Seaforth. 18694 f FARM FOR. SALE.—Being South half of Lot 1, 6th Concession of Tuckersmith. Good bank barn 60x58, other barn- 50x30. Good: frame house with stone cellar. Good orchard and water. This is a first class farm and in a good state of cultivation. Also east half of lot 4. Will be sold cheap and on easy terms. Apply to P. KE.ttING,'.Seaforth. 1367-t VILLAGE PROPERTY FOR SALE.—For sale, a one storey dwelling House on yietoria Street, Egmondville. The house contains 0 rooms and is very comfortable and convenient. The garden con. tains several good plum trees and a lot of small fruit. There is a good cellar under the house. The place will besold cheap and on reasonable terms. Apply to E. MARTIN, Seaforth P. 0. 1861-tt 20® ACRE FARM . FOR SALE, The 200 oars �J farm, being lots 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, &e School house within 40 rods. 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, - 1299-tf FARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 2,3rd Conces- sion of Tuckeramith, containin100 acres, all cleared and seeded down to grass. 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 extra good stook 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. 1347-tf TJ ARM IN McKILLtP FOR SALE. -For sale the _U south half of lots 1 and lot 2, coocession 4, - Me- Ki;lop, being 150 acres of very choice land mostly in a good state of cultivation. There is a good house 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 pproprietors on the ppremises, MESSRS. DENT & HODGE, Mitchell, or at TIm ` Heater Exrosrros Office, Seaforth. JOHN O'BRIEN, Proprietor. 12984f FARM FOR SALE. Being north hall of Lot 40, on the tenth Concession of East Wawanosii The farm contains 100 acres of land, more or less, 80 acres are cleared. Well fenced, and, in a good state of enl- tivation. Two never failing wells. There is 'a. good house, barn and stables on the premises ,:and a good bearing orchard. The farm is within five miles of the Town of Wingham. For further partiiculars apply to ESAIAS PEAREN, on the premises,] or to HENRY J. PEAREN, Wingham P. 0., Ont. 1357x25 FARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 4, Concession 13, township of Mullett, containing 75 acres, There is on the place a good frame . barn and shed, and a first-class orchard of choice fruit, a never.fail- ing spring well, and a spring creek, and all the fall ploughing done. Convenient to church and school. For further particulars apply on the premises, or to JANE ROBISON, Hat!lock°P. 0. 13e0tt 1 LOTS FOR SALE. --Offers will be received by the undersigned up to May lst, 1894, for the pur- chase of Lots 14, 15, 16, 19, 20 and 21, Block F, in Bay's Survey of Lot 11, 1st Concession, south of Huron Road, in the town of Seaforth, containing about 3 acres. Intending purchasers, in addition',, to the amount of their offer, will state the terms' of payment they propose. WILLIAM STARK,10 Court Street, Toronto. 1888x8 ARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 21, 13th Conces- 1 sion of McKillop, containing 75 acres, 54 acres cleared, the balance good hardwood bush. The farm is wellr d nine da and in aa0 d state g ofi aft cult v ' n with good fences. There is a good bearing orchard and two never -failing wells, one at the house and the other at the barn. The house is concrete, 32x24 and kitchen 18x21. Good cellar underneath. There is'a good bank barn, wipe stone stabling, also driving house 50x24, a pig h use and a sheep house. The farm is ten miles frioln Seaforth, 7 from Brussels and 8 miles from Blyth. Apply on the premises or to Walton P.O. JOHN STAFFORD. 1362 -ti FIRST CLASS FARIl! FOR SALE IN THE TOWN- SHIP OF McKILLOP.—The undersigned offers hie very fine farm of 160 acres situated in McKillop,'. being Lot 8 and east half of Lot 9, Concession 6.1 There are about 20 acres of bush and the remaining 130 acres are cleared, free tram stumps and in a good' state of cultivation. The land is well underdrained and contains 3 never failing wells of first class water, Good bank barn 58x00. Hewn log barn, and other good outbuildings. There;see two splendid bearing orchards and a good hewn log dwelling house. It is only 7 miles from the thriving town of Seaforth and is convenient to sohools, churches, etc. It is one of the beat farms in McKillop, and will be sold an easy terms as the proprietor desires to retire. Apply on the premises or address WM. EVANS, Beechwood P. 0. 1353.t 1 FARM FOR SALE.—For sale, a good hundred acre farm, being part of Lots 16 and 17, on the Bay- field Road, Stanley. One half a mile West of Varna, where there are churches, schools, stores, etc. Tho farm is well underdrained, well fenced with cedar. and in a very high state of cultivation. There are 85 acres cleared, the balance in bush.. There is an it a brick house, frame barn and frame shed. with cow stable attached. There is a g.ood spring well 'at the house and a never -failing spring in the centre of the farm, sufficient to water all the stock. There is also a good bearing orchard. Tho farm will be sold on very reasonable terms. Apply on the premises, or to Varna P. 0. ANDREW DUNKIN. 1362-t f SPLENDID FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 25, Conces- sion 6, Township of Mortis, containing 160 acres suitable for grain or stock, situated two and a half miles from the thriving village of Brussels, a good gravel road free from stumps, leading 7 acres cedar thereto ; and ash and acres cleared balance hardwood. Barn 51x60 with straw and hay shed 40x70, stone stabling underneath both. The house Is brick, 22x32 with kitchen 18x20, 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 Tns Ex- PosITOR. OFFICE, or on the premises. W. BARRIE, Brussels. 1335-tf WARM FOR SALE.—For Sale, 80 acres in Sanilao County, Michigan 75 acres cleared and hi 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 tai ing well: The buildings consist of a frame house, stab: ng for 12 horses with four box stalls, tib head of cattis I nd 100 sheep. Ninety ewes were win- tered Iast years:ld $630 in wool and lambs this sum- mer. There aro also pig and hen houses. The .un- dersigned also has 63 acres, with buildings, but not -so well improved, w.•. ch he will sell either in 40 aoro lots or as a 1 are in localities, eon enientto to properties schools Bood and churches. The proprietorisforced 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, Sanilao County. Michi• Kam 129ex3-;f EASTER :IN GREEN WOOD. OR. TALMAGE' PREACHES ON THE RESURRECTION. Description of D'Qachpelah, the First Cjemetery Ever Laid Out—The Preacher Gives a Lucid Explanation of the Com- irlg to Life;of Jesus Christ, ROOKLYN, Mareii 25, 1894.—The Has er services in the Tabernacle to -day wet attended by immense audiences. Bea tiful doral decorations almost hid the pulpit from view, and the great orgau gave forth its most rapturous strains in honor of the day. In tite fore- noon Rev. Dee Talmage delivered an eloquent sermon tar "Easter in Green- wood," the -text being taken from Genesis 23:17, 18 --"And the field of Hebron, which was in Maclipelali, which was [afore Marme, the field, and the cave which was therein, and all the trees that were .in the field, that were in all the borders round about, were made sure unto Abraham. Here is the first cemetery ever laid .out. Machpelath was its name. It was an arborescent beauty, where the wound of death was bandaged with foliage. Abraham, a rich man, not being able to bribe the King of Terrors, proposes Here, as far as possible, to cover up the ravages. He had, no doubt, previously noticed this region, and now that Sarah, his wife, had died—that remarkable person who, at ninety years of age, had born to her the son Isaac, and who now, after she had reached her one hundred and twenty-seven years, had expired—Abraham is negotiating for a family plot for her last slumber. Ephron owned this real estate, and after, in mock sympathy for Abraham, refusing to takeanything for it; now sticks on a big price—four hundred shekels of .sil- ver. The cemetery lot is paid for, and the transfer made,- in the presence of witnesses in a public place, for there were no deeds and no halls of. record in, those early times. Then in a cavern of limestone rock Abraham put Sarah, and, a few years after, himself followed. :Ind then Isaac and Rebekah,. and then Jacob and Leah. Embowered, pictur- esque and memorable Maclipelalr ! That "God's Acre" dedicated by Abraham has been the mother cif innumerable mortuary oeservauces. `j -The necropolis of every civilized land has vied with its metropolis. The most beautiful hills of Europe outside tile great cities are covered with obelisk anti funeral vase and arched gateways and columns and parterres in honor of the iuhuutated, '1'he Appian Way of Rome was bordered by sepul- chral coinmemoraeions. For this pur- pose Pisa has its arcades of marble sculptured into excellent bas reliefs, and the features of dear faces that have vanished. Genoa has its terraces cut uto tocols; and Cor.stau tinuple covers with cypress the silent habitations; and Paris has its Pere la Chaise, on whose !eights rest Balzac and David and Iarshal Ney and Cuvier and La Place ind Moliere, and a !eighty group of arriors and poets and painters and " ttusicians. In all foreign nations ut- uust genius on all sides is expended in ice a ort: of ititerutent, luumiuification nd incineration. Our own country- consents to be sec- nd to none: in respect to the lifeless Every city and toum and neigh- ornood of any intelligence or virtue as, not many Guiles away, its sacred en- losur-e, where affection has engaged ie sculptor's chisel and ,florist's spade cid artificer in metals. Our own city as shown its religion as well as its art the manner in which it Bolds the ceumry of those who have passed for - ver away by its Cypress Hills, and its-:- 'vergreens, and its Calvary, and Holy ross and Frieutl:,' cemeteries. All the orld knows of our Gre(nwood, with oar about two hundred and seventy ousand iuhabitauts sleeping among le hills that overlook the sea, and by kes etubosonied in an Eden of flowers; r. American Westminster Abbey, an cropolis of mortuary architecture, a utheon of rniguty ones ascended, es iii stone, ili,rds in niarb'e, whole aerations iu peace waiting for other aerations to join -them. No dormitory breathless sleepers in all the world s so many mighty dead. Among the preachers of the gospel, thune and Thomas DeWitt, and sloop Janes and Tyng. and Abeel, the ssionary, and Beecher aud Budding - u, and McClintock and Inskip, and ngs and Chapin, and Noah Schenck d Samuel Hanson Cox. Among mu - hots, the renowned -Gottschalk and holy Thomas. Hastings. Among ilauthropists, Peter Couper and Isaac Hopper, and Lucretia:=blott and Isa- • la Graham, and Henry Bergh, the stle of mercy to the brute creation. tong the literati, the Carys, Alice and oebe; James K. Paulding and John Saxe. Among journalists, Bennett Raymond a nd Greeley. ey, Anloiig nests, Ormsby Mitchell, warrior ;is 1 as astronotner, and lovingly called his soldiers "Old Stars;" Professor (tor and the Drapers, splendid men, well know, one of them my teach - the other my class -mate. mong inventors, Elias Howe, who ough the sew machine, did more to viate the toils of womanhood than man that ever lived, and Professor se, who gave us magnetic tele- phy; the former doing his work with needle, the latter with the tltuuder- Aucong physicians and surgeons, kph C. Hutchinson, and Marion s, and Dr. Valentine Mott, tivith the wing epitaph, which he ordered cut onor of Christian religion, "Afv itn- t faith and hope is in a merciful Re- ef; who is the - resurrection and de. Amen and Amen." This is American. Maclipelah, as sacred to s the Machpelalc iu Canaan, of h Jacob uttered that pastoral poem e verse, "There they buried Abra. , and Sarah, his wife; there they 'd -Isaac, and Rebekah, his wife, I buried Leah." this Easter service I ask and au - what may seem a novel question, it will be found, before - I get gh, a practical and useful and tre- ous question: What will resur•rec- day do for the cemetries? First, ^ark, it will be their supernal beau - on. At certain seasons it is eus- ry in all Iands to strew flowers over oundd of the departed. It . may been suggested by the fact that is tomb was in a garden. And I say garden I do,. not mean a gar - f these latitudes. The late frosts Ing and the early frosty of autumn near each other that there are a few months of flowers in the All the flowers we see to -day had petted and coaxed and put under r, or they would not have bloom - all. They are the children of the r'atories. But at this season 1.1 in 11 tl la ou A Pa gi ge ge f 1111 Be Bt ini to Ba all sic the T. bel An Ph G. and scie w el by Pro as 1 er, A thr alle any Mor gra the bolt Jose folio in 11 plici ' deem the I OUT us a Whie in on ham there serer but throu mend non ticati tema the m liave Chris when den o of spr are so only to be shelte ed at conie andthrough the most of the year, the Holy land is all ablush with floral opu- "Well, then," you say, "bow can you make out that the Resurrection Day will beautify the cetileteries? Will it -not leave them a plowed up ground ? Ou that day there will be an earthquake, and will not this split the polished Aber- deen granite. as well as the nlain slab . Children Cry for meat can nitons taut two word$, 'OUT Mary,'.or 'Our Charley?' " Well, I will tell you bow Resurrection Day will beau tify the cemeteries. 'It will be by bring- ing up the faces that were to us once, and in our memories are to us now, more beautiful than any calla lily, and the forms that are to us more graceful than any willow by the waters. Can you think of anything more beautiful than the - reappearance of those from whom we have been parted? I do not care which way the tree falls in the Blatt of the Judgment hurricane, or if the plowshare that day shall turn under the last rose leaf and the last china as- ter, it but of the broken sod shall come the bodies of our loved ones not damag- ed, but irradilated. The idea of the resurrection gets easier to. understand as I hear the phonograph • unroll some voice that talked into it a year ago, . just before our friend's decease. You touch the lever, and thou comes forth the very tones, the ve y song of the person that breathed into it once but is now depart- ed, If a man can do that, cannot Al- mighty God, without half trying, return the voice of your departed? And if He can return the voice, why not the lips, and the tongue and the throat that fashioned the voice? And if the lips and the tongue and the throat, why not the brain that suggested the words ? And if the brain, why not the nerves, of which the brain is the headquarters? And if he can return the nerves, why not the muscles, which are less ingeni- ous? And if the muscles, why not the bones, that are less wonderful? • And if the voice and the brain and the muscles and the bone, why not the entire body? If man can do the phonograph, God can do the resurrection. Will it be the same ,body that in the last day shall be reanimated ? Yes, but infinitely improved. Our bodies change every' seven years, and yet in one sense it is the same body. On my wrist and the second finger of my right hand there is a scar. 1 made that at twelve years of age, when, disgusted at the presence of two warts, I took a red-hot ron and burned thein off and burned them out. Since then my ' body. has hanged at least a half-dozen times, but those scars prove it is the same body. We never lose our identity. If God oan and does sometimes rebuild a man five, ix, ten' times, in this world, is it mys- terious that lie can rebuild him once more, and that in the resurrection ? If He,can do it ten times, I think He can o it eleven times. Then, look at the eventeen'year locusts. For seventeen ears gone; at the end of seventeen ears they appear, and by rubbing the ind leg against the wing make that attle at ;which all the husbandmen and ino dressers tremble as the insectile ost takes up the march of devastation, surrection every seventeen years, a onderful tact 1 Another consideration makes the idea f resurrection easier. God made Adam. e was not fashioned after any model, here had never been a human organism, nd so there was nothing to copy. At e first attempt God made a perfect an. He made him out of the dust of e earth. If out of ordinary dust of the rth, and without a model, God could ake a perfect man, surely out of the traordinary dust -of mortal body, and ith millions of models, God can make ch one of um a perfect being in the surrection, Surely the last undertak- g would not be greater than the first. e the gospel algebra ; ordinary dust nus a model equals a perfect man ; traordinary dust and plus a model uals a resurrection body. Mysteries out it? Oh, yes ; but that is one ason why I believe it. It would not much of a God who could do things ly as far as I can understand. Mys- ies? Oh, yes; but no more about the urrection of your body than about its sent existence. will explain to you the last mystery the resurrection, and make it as plain you as that two and two make four, you wine, tell me how your mind, icii is entirely independent' of your y, • can act upon your body so that at ur will your eyes open, or your foot lks, or your hand is extended. So I d nothing in the Bible statement con- ning the resurrection that staggers for a moment. All doubts clear m my mind. I say that the cence- es, however beautiful now, will be re beautiful when the bodies of our ved one come up in the morning of resurrection. hey will come iii improved condi- They will come up rested. The t of them lay down at the last very. d. How often you have heard them "Lem so tired 1" The fact is, it is red world. If I should go through audience, and go round the world, uld not find a person in any style of ignorant of the sensation of fatigue, not believe there, are fifty persons in audience who are not tired. Your d. is tired, or your back is tired, or, r -foot is tired, or your brain is -tired, our nerves are tired. Long journey- , or business application, or bereave - t, or sickness has put on you heavy ht. So the vast majority of,. those went out of this world went out ued. About the poorest place to in is this world. Its atmosphere, rroundiugs, and even its hilarties xhausting. So God stops our earth- ee and mercifully "closes the eyes, more especially give quiescence to ung and heart, that have not fiad inutes' rest from the first respira- and the first beat, a drummer boy were compelled in may to beat his drum for twenty- ours without stopping, his officer d.be courtmartialed for cruelty. If rummer boy should be commanded t his drum for a weak without g, day and night, he would die in pting it. But under your vest - is a poor heart that began its drum ur the march of life thirty, or or sixty, or eighty years ago, and had no furlough by day or night; nether in conscious or comatose it went right on, for if it had stop - yen seconds your life would have And your heart will keep going ome time after your spirit has for the auscultatoi says that after t respiration of lung and the last of pulse, and after the spirit is re - 1 C .S 6 yy Re th th ea m ex w ea re in Se mi ex eq to be on tel res pre of to if wh bod yo wa fin ser me fro teri MO to the tion MOS tire say, a ti this I co life I do this hes you or y ings men weig who fatig rest its su are e ly lif and the l ten m tion If the a four 11 woul the d to bea ceasin attent "tient beat f ,forty, it has and w state, ped se closed until s flown, the las throb leased, the heart keeps on beating for a time, What a meitcv, then, it is that the grave is the place ‘vliere that won- drous machinery of ventricle and artery can hale Under the healthful chemistry of the soil all the wear and tear of nerve and muscle and bone will he subtracted atid that bath of good, fresh, clean soil will I wash off the last ache, and then some of I the same style of dust -out of which the body of Adam was constructed may be , infused into She resurrection body. How I can the bodies of the human race, which have had no replenishment front the dust since the time of Adam in Para- dise, get any recuperation from the , storehouse from • which he was con- I structed without going back into the ' ust? That original, life-giving ma- I terial having been added to the bbody as it once waseand all the defects left be- I hind,. what a body will be the resurrec- tion body A:nd will not hundreds of I thousands of such appearing above the I Gowanus heights make Greenwood ap- pear more beautiful than any June morning after a shower ? The dust of the earth being the original material for the fashioning of the firat human beinee Pitcher's Castoria. we nave to go baste to the sauce pia get a perfect human body. Factories are apt to be rough p1 end those svho toil in thein have garmeiats grimy and their hands stn ed. But who cares for that when turn out for us beautiful musics strunleu is or exquisite ' uphols What though the grave is a r pt:.ce, it is a resurrection body m factory, and from it shall come radiant •and resplendent forms of friends on the brightest morning world' ever saw. You put into a fac cotton, and 11 comes out apparel. put into a factory lumber and lead, it comes out pianos and organs, so into the factory of the grave, you iu pueumouias and consumptions - they c0tne out health, You pu groans and they come out halleluj For us,,oh the final day, the most tractive l)ii ces will not be the park tee gardens, or the palaces, but cemeteries, We are not told in what; season day will come. If it should be win those •who Come up will be more lust Luau the snow that covered them. I the autumn, those wlio come up wil more gorgeous than the woods after frosts had penciled them. .ff in spring, the bloom on which they tr ' . itl be dull compared with the rubic of their cheer: Oh, the perfect re rection body ! Almost everybody some defective spot on his physical. c stitution ; a dull ear, or a dim eye, o rheumatic foot, or a neuralgic brow. a twisted muscle, or a weak side, or inflamed tonsil, or some point at wh the east wind'. or a season of overw assaults hind. But the resurrection b shall be without one weak spot, and that the doctors and nurses and apot caries of earttr will thereafter have to will be to rest 'without interruption of the broken nights of their earthly ex tense. allot only will that day be Leautificatioii of well -kept cemeteri but some of the graveyards that ha been neglected. and been the pastu ground for cattle and rotting places swine, will her the first time have tractiveness given them, It was a shame that in that place u grateful generations planted no tre and twisted no garlands, and sculptur no marble for their Christian 'aucestr but on the day of which I speak the surrected shall ntal.•°e the place of the deet glorious. From uuder the shado of the church, where they slumber among nettles,, and mullein stalks, a thistles, and slabs aslant, they shall ri with a glory that shall flush the wi (lows of tiie village 0tturctt, and by ti bell tower that used to call them to wo ship, and above the old spire besi w tech their prayers formerly ascende 1Vhat triumphal procession never d for a street, what an oratorio Never d for an academic, what an orator nev did for ;l brilliant auditors, what obeli:4 Hever did for a king, resurrection will d fur all we cemeteries. 'T'ine Easter tells'us that in Christ's r surrectton our resurrectiou,if we are !ti fid the resurrection of all the piou ,lead, is assured, l'or He was "the fir fruits of them that slept. Renan sa lie did not rise: but hive hundred au eighty witnesses, sixty of tltetn Christ enetuies, say He dirt. rise, for they sa l.iiln after Ile had arisen. If he did no -1 Ise, flow did sixty armed soldiers le Him get away ? Surely sixty livin, soldiers ought to be able to keep on dead man 1 Blessed be 'God 1 He di get away. After his resurrectio Mary Magdalene saw him. Cleopa saw ltilti, Ten discip:es in an uppe roost at Jerusalem saw Him. On mountain the eleven° saw Him. Fiv hundred at once saw Hint. Profess() Ernest Renan, who did not see Him, wil excuse us for taking the testimony o_ the five hundred and, eig.tty who did see Wim. Yes, y, s : 11e got array. And tfiat snakes me sure that our departed loved ones .and we ourselves shall get away.' Freed himself froin the shackles of clod, he is not going to leave us and ours in the lurcic, There will be no door knob ou the in- side of our family sepulchre, for we can- not souse out of ourselves; but there is a door knob on the outside, and that Jesus shall lay hold of, and, opening, will say, "Good snorting 1 You have slept long elougii 1 , Arise 1 Arise !" And tneu what flutter of ,wings, and what flashing of rekindled eyes, and NV hat gladsome rushing, across the faun! v lot, with cries of, "Father, i.1 that you ?" "Mother, is that you ?" ."My darling, is that you ?" "How you all have saran eJ 1 The cough is gone, the croup gent. ate consumption gone, the paralysis gone, the weariness gene. Come, let us ascend together 1 Tile older onto first, the younger' ones next I Quick iiow, get into line 1 The skyward pro_ cessi ou has already! St ,- by that embankmnt started of cloudl for the clearest gate !" And, as we ascend, on one side the earth gets smaller until it is no larger than a mountain, and smaller until it is no larger than a pal- ace. and smaller until it is no larger than a:lii � and •i ship,smaller until itis no larger than a wheel, and smaller until it is no larger than a speck. Farewell, dissolving earth! But on the other side, as we rise, heaven at first appears no gorget than V-uut' bend. And nearer it looks like a chariot, and nearer it. looks like a throne, and nearer it looks l:kte a star, and nearer it looks litre a sun, and nearer it looks like a universe. Hail, sceptres that shall always wave! llaiianthems that shall always lull 1 Hail, companions never a:g;ti11 t0 (5111! That is what resurrec- tion day mill do for all the cemeteries and graveyards, front the Machpelah, tet t was opened by Father Abrahams in llebrou, to the Macliltelali yesterday consecrated, And that makes Lade 1Tuht igtoies immortal rhytli01 n o)1 at,. liosite �5'hcn Thou, my righteous ,luclge, shall com To take Thy ransomed people home, • Shall I among theta stand'? Shall such 1 wot'Lhlesa worm as I, Who sometime, ant afraid to die, Be found at Thr right hand? Among Thy saint:; let Me hi fou 2 '±',i When'er th' ar.'hangel', tramp :It:,tl > % To see Thy sniilimg fare ; Then loudest of the thio:.„ l'tl While heaven's re-.ounrI1;t. stylus r1ng With 51!1:1 i'; of so‘.111- L''!r tzrnve.. (:0 iu aces, their utch- tirey 1 in- tery ? °ugh anu- the our the tory You and And put and t in ahs. at - OT the that ter, rous f in 1 be the the ead and sur - has on- ra or an ich ork ody all he - do ter is - the es, ve i.e. for at- n es, ed y; 1•e- ir ed nd se n- ae r - de d. id id er k O e- 5, s st `a 's ♦v a HEAD AND SHOULDER! above every other blood - purifier, stands Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. See the evi- dence of it. It's sold in every case, on trial. If it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back In restoring your strength, when you're "run-down" and used - up;" in cleansing your blood from every Impur- ity, whether it's a simple eruption or the worst and in building u wh 1 flmesrdhfulal wh;en you're thin and weak—there's e nothing to equal the "Discovery." In every disease caused by a torpid liver or impure blood, it's the only -guaranteed remedy. Ohio, writes: • My itt boy WAS SO afflicted with liver trouble and other diseases that our family physician said he could not live. In fact, they all thought so. I gave him Dr. Pierce'e Ciolden Medical Discovery and Pellets and they saved his life. We have used the ' Dis- covery ' for throat and bronchial trouble. and found such perfect relief that wo can ream - /nand it very highly." APRIL 6, 1894. YOU WILL FIND AT THE Golden Lion A Choice Selection of Spring Novelties in Dress Goods, Dress Trimmings, gimps, Silks, Laces, Embroideries, &c. Large range of Prints, Sateens, Wool Delaines, Delainettea and Chambrays. Always complete with the very best goods, and at close prices. Special -line of Colored Silks at half price. It will pay you to inspect them at the Golden Lion store, Seaforth. SMTTII SIMainT Have a Very Bad Cough Are Suffering from Lung Troubles, Have Last FleAh through Illness, Are Threatened with Consumption, emember that the • IS WHAT YOU .IEQUIRE. DOMINION BANK, MAIN STREET (NEAR ROYAL HOTEL), GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED. Interest allowed on deposits of $1.00 and upwards at highest current ratee, No NOTICE OF WITHDRAWAL REQUIRED. Drafts bought and sold. Collections made on all points at lOwest "rates. Farmers' Sale Notes collected, and advances made on same ; favorable terms. Ear BUSINESS ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. A Beautiful Gown. It is a frequent experience with ladies that when the dress is bought with care, and made with taste, some indefin- able thing is lacking to give it the perfect touch of beauty. It is the supplying of this that has made PRIESTLEY'S DRESS FABRICS universally esteemed. Priestley's Black Dress Goods, made in Henriettas, Crape Cloths, etc., are such a cunning and effective blend of silk and wool that when the dress is made it drapes in perfect gracefulness, giving to the figure that charm without which the costliest dress that Worth ever made is a mere distress. CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE ESTABLISHED 1867. HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. OAPITA,L (PAID UP) SIX MILLION DOLLARS - se,000,000 REST - - - - B. E. WALKER, GENERAL MANAGER. SEAFORTH BRANCH. A General Banking Business Transacted. Farmers' Notes discounted, Drafts issued, payable at all points in Canada and the principal cities in the United States, Great Britain, Fra,nce, Bermuda, &c. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT, Deposits of $1.00 and up -wards received, and current Nates of interest - allowed. tErInterest added to the principal at the end of May and Novell. - ber in each year. Special attention given to the collection of Commercial Paper and Far niers' Sales Notes. F. HOLMESTED, Solicitor. M. MORRIS. Manager. TRY UNDO` SOAP IT BRINGS COMFORT ON WASH DAY WHAT EVERYBODY WANTS. We have them now, a marvel of cheapness—Curtain Poles, either red mahogony, black or oak colorsi five feet long, complete with brass ends, brack- ets and rings, only 25c each. A large stock of the newest styles in fringe and lace designs just to hand, and we think the finest goods for the money ever shown in town. We are always on the look -out for bargains in this line, and we can assure those who contemplate papering that we have never had such nice papers for the money as we show this Spring. Elegant desians,. with borders and ceilings to match, selling at the price of common goods. t'Also a lot of remnants, two to ten roli lots, selling off at about half price. Do not miss this chance. Call and see the goods and prices, glad to show them, whether you- wish to buy or not. TATIVISDEN & WILSON, SCOTT'S BLOCK, MAIN STREET, Aby M4116 IC HOUSE, MOWN PROP • acres of Jan ROBERT FAME, TOON Prat Breeder of re Pigs. EA ourt, Coen veysneer, Land, /tweeted t HO WANTS imle, as If you Want, a your JMO Shorthorn color. plenty of ei sexerap. JAS. pASTURE TO 50 acres Of lir Road and within ti never -foiling 'miter] STRONG, Beaforthl CI TOOK FOR SAI 0 purpose fillies rising 4. Also ei • undereignexi Stanley, sone tin)) owner CP.11 have the ing charges and I sion lifeKdio rge bay horse,* Any information 4 suitably rewarded: throp P. j_ signed offers h nearly new. It is a as he intends goi HENRY SMITH, B TF YOU WANT j_ Bulls in the co profit after using DAVID MILNE of registered Eng. for use, fet tale. 11). LLS FOR SA Min er," All of whi Apply on Tun smith, or to , NOC AN. TWILHAM BULL Thoroughb eoloy dark rad, Ben book, sired by seen on the farm LES 4E, Seaforth P 11_ signed effete bis property in quarter sere of Ian general stOte which is a eplendid house and stable. of the richest and and. this is * viers new:num with particular's, add $ 300 Priv $ .500 rates $1,000 pleted 11,500 *within $2,500 S.HAY proved Yorkshire 24, Conoomelon 2, 1011PERKSHIRE DO 1,3 signed has on vice. Terms,—Sil ondville, P. 0. DOAR FOR SER LI Boar for servid at the time of eervio ing, if necessary, 1 Rams for sale, Lo TEPROVED YO I will keep for th 28, Conoeselon 8, proved Yorkshire fernas....41 payable privilege of returnin the best bred pigs ia IloOARS FOR SE service a them- e thoroughbred Tan Concession 6, Hulleti by Snell, of Eduionte Awe of service, witi necessary. Also a M service for sale. Thl SCROALILS, '00/4 51PROVZD BEI! breeder of impr4, for Bervite the celeh Royal Star. (imp:, :LW, and. for regis regisUation, 82.00.„, service, with the prei -Also ea hene other young stock lel 12564 Address A. Post 0 Frmti SPEC Applee in nice for pie 4 cans for Pears, Plums assortment Jams and Jel Evaporate Jersey bra Highland Choice se Try our CR SUME SEAF