HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1894-06-29, Page 2777—
• - -
''-=.".!*EiZ,7-.40410.410600i0110144KONOgirAgi MOW
NEW
JUST RECEIVED...
ROBERTS'....
DRUG A
STORE T
Strictly Pure Paris Green
Sulphate of Copper
Liquid Amonia,
Sodium Carbonate
Sulphur.,
Copper Carbonate
Sulphate of Iron.
Insect Powder
Pure Powdered Helebore
And all Fungicides and Insecticides
used by Fruit Growers and Gardeners and
Stock Owners, all of which will be quoted
EXCEPTIONALLY
LOW PRICES
CALL AND GET QUOTATIONS
M. Broderick,
MANUFACTURER OF
FTNE AND HEAVY
HARNESS,
AND DEALER IN
Whips & Horse Furnishings.
Special attention given to Horse
Collars, and satisfaction guaranteed.
All kinds of Light Harness to order
a specialty.
N. B.—Carriage Trimming done to
order.
Give us a. call.
Corner Main and John Streets,
Seaforth.
13124f
The Old, Established.
BROADFOOT'S
Planing Mil and
Sash and Door Factory,
SMA_MIOTVT13-
This old and well-known establishment Is still
running at full blast, and now has better facilities
than ever before to torn out a good article for a
moderate price. Sash and doors of all patterns al-
ways on hand or made to order. Lumber dressed on
short notice and in any way desired. All kind 1 of
lumber for sale on reasonable terms. Shingles kept
constantly an hand. Estimates for the furnishiog
of buildings in whole or in part given on application.
None but the best of material used and workman-
ship guaranteed. Patronage aoliciteci.
1269 J. H; BROADFOOT, Seaforth
Big Claim and
Easily Decided.
I claim the finest line of . .
Wall Paper,
Window Shades,
Wall Mouldings,- .14c.d.,
For the lowest price of any house in Ontario. To de-
cide this, call at the Cita Wall Paper House and in-
spect. You are welcome whether you buy or not.
Wall Papers 8 cents with ceiling and one band )frieze
printed to match, five shades of Ingrain ceiling and
frieze to match; Window Shades from 60c. up, hung
on best Hartshorn roller; Wall mouldings from
cents per foot up; Cornice poles 20 cents complete.
My goods: are all new. My- reason for selling so
cheap is, I have a big stock,, times are hard and
naorley is scarce. Why I can afford is, I pay no rent,
and my expensea are low otherwise. Paper hanging,
ceiling and sidewall, 10 cents per roll.
Shop West William Strat, block from Royal
Hotel. Come and see me.
JAMES GRAVES,
Seaforth.
1375-t f
GODERICH
Steam Boiler Works.
(ESTABLISHED isack.)
A. S. CHRYSTALS
Successor to Chrystal & Black,
Manufacturers of all kinds of Stationary
Marine, Upright & Tubular
BOILERS
Salt Pads, Smoke Stacks, heat Iror Werke, -
etc., etc.
Also dealers in Upright and Horizontal Slide Valve
Engines. Automatic Cut -'911 Engines a specialty. All
izes of pipe and pipe -fitting constantly on hand.
Estimates furnished on short notice.
Works—Opposite G. T. R. Station, Godericb.
THE FARMERS'
Banking - House,
SMA...E" O1=1113
(In connection with the Bank of Montreal.)
LOGAN & OO.
BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENT
REMOVED
To the Commercial Hotel Building, Main Street
A General Banking Business done, drafts ierhie and
cashed. Interest allowed on deposits.
MONEY TO LEND
On good notes or mortgages.
ROBERT LOGAN, MANAGE')
1058
HURON AND BRUCE
Loan and Investtnen1
ClaMICP.A
This Company is Loaning Money o,
„Farm Security at lowest Rates
of Interest.
(Mortgages Purchased.
SAVINGS BANK BRANCH.
3, 4 and 5 per Cent.baterest Allowed et
Deposits, acoording to amount and
time left.
OFFICE.—Corner of Market Square and
Worth Street, Goderioh.
HORACE HORTON,
MAN AG frai
Gaderfeb, August 5ith.1 5.
A FRIEND
Speaks through the Boothbay (Me.) Register,
of the beneficial results he has received from
a regular use of Ayer's Pills. He says: "I
was feeling sick and tired and my stomach -
seemed all out of order. I tried a mamba
of remedies, but none seemed to give me
relief until I was induced to try the old reit&
ble Ayer's. Pills. I have taken only one
box, but I feel like a new man. I think they
are the most pleasant and easyto take of
anything I ever used, being so finely sugar-
coated that even a child will take them.
urge upon all who are in need. of a laxative
to try Ayer', Pills. They will 'do good."
For all diseases of the Stomach, Liver,
and Bowels, take _
AYER'S PILLS
Preiared by Dr. J. C. Ayer it Co., Lowell, Mai&
Every Dose Effective
REAL ESTATE FOR SA:LE.
QOOD FARM FOR SALE.—For sale, north half
Lot 31, Concession 2, East Wawanosh, 100
acres good fences, good orchard and never -failing
creek. Apply to PRIMP HOLT, Goderich. 1278
-DARM FOR SALE.—Lot 30, Concession 5, L.
S., Tuoltersmith, 136 acres, situated on ;he Mi
Road, 3 miles from Seaforth. Conven_ent to
churehes, schools, etc. Fair, buildings and good
orchard and plenty of water. Apply on the property
to PETER CAMERON, or to F. HOLMESTED,
Seaforth. 1369-t f
MIARM FOR. SALE.—Being south half of Lot 1, 6th
r Concession of Tuekersmith. Good bank barn
69x58, 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 toP. KEATING, Seaforth.
1367-tf
200 .21Tb2:11L.T.V.L;—
cTohneces2soioontkolr6e
Grey, is offi3red for Sale. 120 acres are cleared and
the balance is well timbered. Buildings first-class.
Orchard, well, Ste. -School house within 40 rods.
Possession given at once if desired. The lots will
be sold either together or separately. For further
particulars as to price , terms, etc. apply to MRS.
WALKER, Roseville P.O., or to NELSON BRICKER,
on the farm. 1299-tf
TIARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 4, Concession 13,
X township of Hullett, 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, IFIrirlock P. 0. 1360.t f
FARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 6, Concession 8,
Hullett, containing 100 hares, about 90 acres
cleared and the balance good hardwood bush. The
land is all well underdrained and well fenced. There
is on the premises good frame stables and frame
barns, and small frame house. Two good wells, one
at the house and the other at the barn. Also a good
orchard of one acre. The farm is one and a quarter
miles from post office, church and school. It io nine
miles from Seaforth, and has good gravel roads run-
ning in all directions. For further particulars apply
on the premises, or address, HUGH OKE, Exeter.
138241
F1
ARM FOR SALE.—For sale, north half of not 2
of the 141h Concession of isicKillep, containing
92 acres, suitable for grain or stock, situated one
and a half miles from the village of Walton. It is
convenient to churches, schools, etc. There are 70
acres cleared and the balance a good hard -wood
'snob. There is on the farm a good frame barn 86x36
with cow shed and straw shed attached, a log house,
a good orchard and a never -failing well. The land is
well underdrained. For further particulars as to
price, terms, etc., apply to PETER GARDINER,
Cromarty, Ont. 1382
"FARM FOR SALE.—This farm contains 100 acres
X of first class land, situated in the Township of
Hibbert, Lot 25, Concession 12 ; 95 acres in good
state of cultivation, and remainder hardwood bush.
14 18 thoroughly underdrained, well fenced and well
watered and is suitable for either grain or pasture.
The house is a comfortable brick, with wood and
driving houses attached. Good frame barn and
stables. Good orchard. This farm will be sold at a
reasonable figure. If not sold previously will be
offered by public auction on Thursday, July 10th, on
the premises. For particulars apply to JOHN
MAUDSON, Chiselhurat, Ont., or W. H. MAUDSON,
Bradford, Ont. 1378-t f
FARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 2, 3rd Conces-
sion of Tuckersmith, containing 100 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 stock farm and is also well adapted to grain
raising. It is within two miles and a halt of Seaforth.
Will be sold cheap and on terms to suit the purchas-
er. Apply to D. DONOVAN, Seaforth. 1347-tf
FARM IN MeKILLOP FOR SALE.—For sale the
south half of lots 1 and lot 2, concession 4, Mc-
Killop, being 150 acres of very choice land mostly in
a good state of cultivation. There ia 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 proprietor on the
premises, MESSRS. DENT & HODGE, Mitchell, or at
TILE HURON EXPOSITOR Office, Seaforth. JOHN
O'BRIEN, Proprietor. 1298-41
FOR SALE, VALUABLE FARM AND VILLAGE
PROPERTY.—A good hundred acre farm in a,
fair state of cultivation, being lot 16, in the 12th
concession, of the township of Grey. A good Brick
Hotel, in the 'Village of Cranbrook, in the mid town-
ship, known as "The Beck House", also saw mill
and a good frame store in said village. Anyone
thinking of investing would do well to examine this
property, which will be sold at a very reasonable
price, in one or more parcels to suit purchasers.
Further information will be freely supplied to any-
one addressing the undersigned, at Brussels. G. F.
BLAIR, Solicitor; F. S. SCOTT, Auctioneer.
137941
ASPLENDID BUSINESS CHANCE.—The under
signed offers for sale cheap, and on easy terms
his property in Hills Green. It consists of one
quarter acre of land, on which is altuated a good
general store with dwelling attached, and under
which is a splendid cellar. There is also a large ware-
house and stable. Hills Green is the centre of me
of the richest and best farming districts in Ontario,
and this is a splendid opening for a good, live busi-
ness man with some means to make money. For
particulars, address CHARLES TROYER, Hills
Green. 1265t1
T1ARM FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 21,13th Conces-
X sion of McKillop, containing 75 acres, 54 acres
cleared, the balance good hardwood bush. The farm
is well drained and in a good state of cultivation,
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 ia concrete, 32x24 and
kitchen 18x21. Good cellar underneath. There is a
good bank barn, with stone stabling, also driving
house 50x24, a pig house and a sheep house. The
farm is ten miles from Seaforth, 7.1- from Brussels
and 8 miles frorn Blyth. Apply on the premises or
to Walton P.O. JOHN STAFFORD. 1362-4f
FIRST CLASS FARM FOR SALE IN THE TOWN
SHIP OF MoKILLOP.—The undersigned offers
his very fine farm of 150 acres situated in McKillop,
being Lot 8 and east half of Lot 9, Concession 6.
There are about 20 acres of bush and the remaining
, 130 acres are cleared, free from 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 58x60. Hewn log barn, and other
good outbuildings. There are 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 beet farms in McKillop, and will be sold on easy
terms as the proprietor desires to retire. Appiy- on
the premises or addreas0VM. EVANS, Beeehwood
P. 0. 1353.4
SPLENDID FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 26, Conces-
sion 6, Township of Morris, containing HO acres
suitable for grain or stock, situated two and a half
miles from the thrivina village of Brussels, a good
gravel road leading thereto; 120 acres cleared and
free front stumps, 6 acres cedar and ash and balance
hardwood. Barn 51x60 with straw and hay shed
40x70, stone stabling underneath both. The house
Is brick, 22x32 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 Tax Ex-
POSITOR, OPTuni, Or On the premises. W11. BARRIE,
Brussels. 133541
THE HURON EXPOSITOR.
FUTURE REFORMATION.
DR. TALMAGE DOES NOT THINK THE
PROSPECT A BRIGHT ONE.'
Far Less Probable Than in This Life it
all Events—The Hovering Hope That
There Would be Opportunity la the
Next World to Correct the Mistakes of
This Should Therefore be Abandoned.
-BROOKLYN, June: 17. ---Rev. Dr. Tal-
mage . who is now on his round -the -
world journey, has selected as the sub-
ject for his sermon through the press to-
day, "Another Chance," the text being
taken from Eccles. 11-3; "If the tree
fall toward the south . or toward the
• north, in the place where the tree .falleth
there it shall be."
There is a hovering hope in the minds
of a vast multitude thatt there will be an
opportunity in the next word to cor-
rect the mistakes of this; Mier, if we do
make coMpiete shipwreek of eur earthly
life, it will be on a shore up -which we
rtia.y. walk to a palace; that, sisa defen-
daut may lose his case in tee Circuit
Court, and carry it up to the Supreme
Court or Court of Chancery and get a
reversal of judgment in his benalf„ alt
costs being- thrown over on the :other
party, so, if we fail, in the earthly trial,
we may in the higher jurisdiction of
eternity have the judgment of the lower
court set aside, all the Costs remitted,
and we may be victorious defendant for-
ever. My object in this sermon is to
show that cottunon sense, as well, as my
text, declares that such an expectation
is chimerical. Yen say that the impen-
itent may, 'having got into the next
eworld and seeing the disaster, will, as
a result of that disaster, turn, the pain
the cause of his reformation, But you
can find ten thousand inetances in this
.world of men who have thine wrong and
distress overtook them suddenly. Did
the distress heal them! No; they went
right on.
That man was flung of dissipations.
"You must stop drinking,", said the doc-
tor, "and quit the fast life younre lead-
ing, or it will destroy you." The patient
suffers paroxysneafter paroxysm ; but,
under skilful Medical treatment, • he
_begins to sit up, begins to walk about the
room, begins. to go to business. And,
lo 1he goes back tp the seine grog -shops
for his morning dram, and his evening
dram, and the drams betweep. Flat
down again ! Same doctor 1 Same
physical anguish. Same medical WWII -
nig. Now, the illness is more pieitracted;
the liver is more stubborn, the stomach
'more irritable, and the digestive organs
are more rebellious. But after awhile
he is out again, goes back to the same
dramshops, and goes tike same , round of
sacrilege againsthis physical health.
He sees that his downward course is
ruining- his household, that his life is a
perpetual peri against his marriage
vow, that that broken-hearted woman is
as unlike the roseate young wife whom
he married, that her old schoolienates do
not recognize her ; that his.sons are to be
taumed for a fife•time by the father's
(hunkenness, thaethe daughters tu-e to
pass into life under the scarification of
disreputable'ancestor., He is drinking
up their happiness
'their prospects for
this life, and, perhaps, fur the . life . to
come. Sometimes- au appreciation of
what, he is doing collies upon him. His
. nervous system .is all a -tangle. Front
orowu of nead to sole. of foot he ie one
i.caing, rasping, crucifying. damning
rtorture. Where is lie?. In hell ou .ea th.
Does it refoem him ?
After atvhile he has the delirium
tremens, NN Idle a whole jungle of hiss-
ing reptiles let out on his pillow, aud
Itis screams horrify the neighbors as he
dashes out of his bed, crying, "Take
these things off me 1" As he sits pale
mid convalescent, Llie doctor says,
-Now I want to have a plain talk with
you, my dear fellow. The next attack
of this kiud you have, you will be be-
yond all medical skill, and you will die."
He gets better and goes forth into the
sante round again. This time medicine
takes no effect. Consultations of physi-
cians agree in baying there is no hope.
Death ends the scene.
That • process of inebriation, w4ning
and dissolution is going on Within stone's
t hrow of you, going; on in all the neigh-
borhoods of Citrisendoin. Pain does
not, correct. Suffering does, not reform.
What is true itt one .sense is true to all
sensesequid forever will be so, and yet
men are expecting iu the next world
purgatorial rejuvenation. Take up the
rinted reports of the prisons Of the
United States, and you will field that the
east majority of incarcerated have been
the're before, some of them four, five,
•eix thnee. Witte a million illustratioes
;Al working the other way in this werld,
people are expecting that distress in the
'text st:he vill be salva.tory. You cannot
imagine any woree torture in atty ether
\t Or Id tliitii that which some men have
suffered here, and wiithout auy salutary
colisequence.
Furthermore, thee prospect of a refor-
mation in the next world is. more impro-
bable than a reformation here, . Tu this
world the life started with innocence of
infancy. Iu the case supposed, the
other life will open with all the accumu-
lated bad habits of many years • upoe -
hint, Surely,- it • is easier to build a
strong ship out of new timber than out
of an old hulk that has been ground Ito
in the breakers. If with innocence to
start tvith in this life a man does not be-
come godly, what prospect is there that
- in the next world, starting with sin,
there wbuld be a seraph evoluted?
Surely the sculptor has more prospect of
making a. fine statue out of a block of
pure •white Parian marble than out of
an old black rock seamed and cracked
with the storms of a half century. Sure-
ly upon a clean white sheet of paper .it
is easier to write a deed or a will, than
upon a sheet of paper all scribbled • and
blotted and torn from top to bottom.
Yet men seem to thluk that, though the
I de that began here comparatively per-
fect turned out badly, the next life will
succeed though it starts with a dead
fail
"'Bthe.
"But," says -some one, "I think we
ought to have a phance itt tlie, next life,
because this life is so short it allows only
a small opportunity. We hardly have
time to turu around between the cradle
and the tomb, the wood of one almost
touching the marble of the other," But
do you know what made the ancient de-
luge a necessity. It was the lougevity
of the antediluvians. They were .worse
in the second century of their life -time.
than in the first hundred years, and st'll
worse in the third century, and still
%terse aft the way on to seven, eight,
and nine hundred years, aod the eartu
had to be washed, and scrubbed, and
and anchored clear out et sight
fur more than a mouth betore it could
Le nide lit for decent people to live in.
L ingevity net-er cures impenitence. All
t,.e pictures of Time represent hien with
a Suyitte to cut, but I never saw any pic-
ture of Time with a case - ot medicines
to heal. Seneca says that Nere for the
first five years of his public litat tvas set
up for an example of cleatencv and
kindness, but his pant' all the wav de-
scended until at sixty-eight he 1 ecitme
a suicide. If eight hundred years did
not make antedilultians any Letter, but
only made them worse. the :ores .of
Children Cry for
eternity swum hav-e no ettece except
prolongation of depravity.
"But,» says some one, "in the future
state, evil surroundings will be with-
drawn and elevated influences substi-
tuted, and hence expurgation, and sub-
limation, and glorification." But the
righteous, all their sins forgiven,' have
passed on into a beatific state and
, consequently the unsaved will be
left alone. It cannot be expected
that Doctor -.Duff, who exhausted
himself in teaching Hindoos the way
to heaven, and Doctor Abeel, who gave
his life in the evangelization of China,
aud .Adoniram judison, who toiled for
the • redemption of Borneo, should be
sent down by some celestial missionary
society to educate those who wasted all
their earthly . existence. Evangelistic
and miisionaiy efforts are ended. The
entire kingdom of the morally bankrupt
by themselves, where are the salvatory
influences to come from ? Can one
speckled and bad apple in a barrel of
diseased apples turn the other apples
good? Can those who are themselves
down help others up? Can those who
have themselves failed in the.business of
tile soul pay the debts of their spiritual
-insolvents? Can a million wrongs make
one right?
Poneropolis was a city where Xing
Philip of Thracia put all the bad people
of his kingdom. it any man had open-
ed a primary school at Poneropolis, I do
not think the .parents from other cities
would:have Stint their children -there.
Instead of amendment in the. ,other
world, all - the associations, now
that the good are evolved, will be ile- -
-,generating and down. You would
not want ,to send. a man to a
cholera or .yellow fever hospital for his
health ; and the great lazaretto of the
next world, bontaining the diseased and
plague -struck, will be a poor place for a
moral recovery. If the surroundingsvin
this world Were crowded of temptation,
the surroundings of the nevt world,after
the righteous have passed up and on,
will be a thousand percent. more crowd-
ed of temptation.
The Count of Chateaubriand made his
little son sleep at night at the top of a
castle turret, where the winds liewled
and where spectres were said to haunt
the place; and. while the mother and sis-
ters almost died with fright, the son
tells us that the process gave him nerves
that could not tremble and a courage
.that never faltered. But I don't think
that towers of darkness and the spectre
world swept by strocco and euroclydona
will ever tit one for the laud of eternal
sunshine. I wonder what is the curri-
culum of that college of Inferno, where,
after proper preparation by tile sins of
this life, the candidate enters, passing
on front- freshman class of depravity to
sopholiaore of abandonment, and from
sophomore to junior, and junior to seni-
or; and day of graduatibu comes, and
with diploma signed by Satan, the pre-
sident, and other professional demoni-
acs, attesting that the caudidate has
been long enough under that drill, he
passes up to eater heaven! Pandemoni-
um a preparative course for heavenly -
admission! Ab, my friends, Satan and
his cohorts have fitted uncounted multi-
tudes for ruin, but never fitted one soul
for happiness.
Furthermore, it would not be sate for
this world if men had another chance in
the next. If it had been announced
that, however wickedly a man might
act in this world, he could. fix up -all
right in the next, society would be
terribly demoralized, and the human
race demolished in a few years. The .
fear that, if we are bad and unforgiyen
here, it will not be well for us in the neat
existence, is the chief influence that
keeps civilization from rushing back to
semi -barbarism, . and semi-barbaCsn.i
and midnight savagery from extincti). n;
from rushing into midnight savag ry,
forit is the astringent impression of all
nations, Christian and heathen, that
there is no future chance for those who
have wasted this.
Multitudes of men who are kept with-
in bounds would say, “Go to, now I
Let me get all out of this life there is in
it. Come, gluttony, and inebriation,
and uncleanness, and revenge, and all
sensualities, and wait upon me 1 My
life may be somewhat shortened in this
world by dissoluteness, but that will
only make heavenly indulgence on a 1
larger 'scale the sooner possible. I will
overtake the saints at last, and will I
enter the Heavenly Temple only a little
later than those who behaved them-
selves here. I will. on my waY to
heaven take a little wider excursion
than those who were on earth pious,and
I shall go to heaven via Gehenna and
via Sheol." Another chance in the next
world means free Hoene and wild
abandonment in this.
Suppose you were a party in an, im-
portant case at law, and you knew from
consultation with judges and attorneys
that it would be tried twice, and the
first trial would be of little importance,
but that the second would decide eyery=
thing; for which trial would you make
the most preparation, for which retain
theablest lawyers, for which be most
anxious about the attendance of wit-
nesses. - You would put all the stress
upon the second trial, all the anxiety,
all the expenditure, saying, "The first is
nothing, the last is everything." Give
the race assurance of a second and more
important trial in the subsequent life,
and all the preparation for eternity
_would be "post-mortem," post-fuueral,
post -sepulchral, and the world with one
jerk be pitched off into impiety and god-
lessness.
Furthermore, let me ask why a
chance should be given in the uext
world if we have refused innumerable i.
chauces in this? Suppose you give a '
banquet and you invite a vast number :
of ttiends, but one man declines to '
come, or teats your invitation with in- i
difference. You in the course of twenty ;
years give twenty banquets, and the 1
same man is invited to theni all, 1
and treats them all in the same ;
ounoxious way. After awhile you 1
remove to another house, larger :
and better, and you again invite your ;
friends, but send no invitation te the 1
man who declined or neglected the other 1
invitations. Are you to blame? Has he i
a right to expect to be invited after all .
the indignities he has done you? God 1
int this world has invited us all to the
banquet of His grace. He invited us by i
His Provideuce and His Spirit three hun- ;
dred and sixty-five dates of every year!
since we knew our !right hand from our l
left. If we declined it every time, or 1
treated the invitation with ndifference.
and gave twenty or fortYaiii fifty years ,
of indignity on our par!towardthe Ban. 1
queter, and at last He spreads the ban- 1
quet in a more luxurious and kingly i
place, amid the heavenly gardens, have
we a right to expect Hint to invite us ;
again. and have we a right to blame 1
Him if He does not invite us?
If twelve gates of salvation stood Mien i
twenty years or fifty years for our ad- '
mission, and at the end of that time they 'I
are closed, can we cotnplaiti of it .ia i
say: "These gates ought to be open '
again. Give us another chance?" If 1
the steamer is to sail for Hamburg, and 1
we wantto get to Germany by thettline,
and we read in every evening aud every
morning newspaper that it will sail on a
certain day, for two weeks we have that
advertisement before our eyes, and then
we go down to the docks fifteen minutes
after it has shoved off into the stream 1
and say: "Come back. Give me another 1
chalice., It is not fair to treat MA in iiii-u 1
Pitcher's Castoria.
way. owing u1. to tne dock- again, and
throw out planks, aud let Us come on
board." Such behavior would invite
arrest as a madman.
And if, after the Gospel ship has laie
at anchor before our eyes for years and
years, and all the benign voices otearth
and heaven have - -urged ut to go on
board, as she might sail away at any
moment, aud after awhile she sails with-
out us, is i1 C0111111011 souse to expect her
to come back? You might as well go
out on the. Highlanis at Neversink and
call to the "Majestic" after she has been
three days out, and expect her to re-
turn, as to call back an opportunity for
heaven when it once has sped away.
All heaven offered us as a gratuity, and
for a life -time we refuse to take it. and
then rush on the bosses of Jehovah's
buckler demanding another chance.
There °tight to be, there can be, there
will be no such thing as posthumous
opportunity. Thus, our common sense
:nix( es with my text : "If -the tree fall
toward the south, or toward the north,
in the plane where the tree falleth, there
it shall be.'
You see that this idea lifts this' world
up from an unimportant way -station to
it platform of stupendous issues and
makes all eternity whirl around this
hour. But one trial for which all the
preparation must be made in this world,
or never made at all. That piles up all
the emphases and all the climaxes and
all t:,e destinies into life here. No other
chance 1 011, hew that augments .the fl
value atid the importance of this chance!
A lexander, with his army, used to
surround a city, and then Would lift a
great light in token to the people that,
11 'they surrendered before •tliat ligtit
weut ont, all would be well ; but if ouce
the light went out, then the battering -
rains would swing against the wall, and
demolition and disaster would follow,
Well, all we need do for our present and'
everlasting safety is to make surrender
b) .Christ, the' King and Conqueror.
-surrender of our hearts, SLIPMI-
(:er of our lives, surrender of every-
thing! And He keeps a great light
1 urning, light of Gospt 1 invitation,figut
kindled' with the wood of the cross, and 1.
flailling up against 6110 dark night of our '
ton and writ -owe Surrender while that,
reat Ikea continues to Limn, for after
it goes 'LAIL there will be no opportun-
ity of making peace with God through
our Lord Jesus Christ. Talk of an-
other chancel 'Why, this is a supernal
mince!
In the time of Edward the Sixth, at
the battle of Musselburgh, a private sol-
dier- seeing that theEitrl of Huntley,
had lost his helmet, took off his own
helmet :tild put it upon the head of tne
earl; and the head of the private soldier
tincovered, he was soon slain, while his
cemmander rode safely out of the bat-
tle. But in our case, instead of it private
Loldier offering his helmet to an earl, Is
is a King- putting his own crown upon
uneorthv 50-1wject, the Kine- dying
1..at we mie-ht bre. Tell it to till points
uf the compass. Tell it to nighi and day.
Tell it to all earth and heaven. Tell it
to all Centuries, all ages, all millenni-
ums. the t we have a magnificent chime.°
in this world that we • need no .other
citanee in the next. •
1 am itt tne burnished Judgment Hall
of the Last, Day. •A great white thrmie
is lifted, but the Judge has not yet taken
it. tV into we are waiting for his arrival
.1 near immortal spirits in conversatio
"What are you waiting here for ?" satis
a soul that went, up from Madaga'car 40
it soul that ascended from Americee
Tee latter says, came from America,
where forty years 1 heard the Gospel
preaciied, and Bible read, and from ti
p. aver that 1 learned in infancy at My
mother's knee until my last hour I had
Gospel advantage, but, for .some .reasOp,
1 did not ntake tue Christian choice, and
1 am hele waiting for the Judge to giVe
we a.. new trial aud • anoteer ohanc4."
"8trange 1" says the otiier; "I had but
one. Gospel call in Madagascar, and; I
accepted 11, and 1 do not need auother
chance."
"Why are you here ?" says • one who
0.1 earth ltd feeblest intellect to one
who Itad gyeat brain, aud silvery -
tongue, and sceptres of influence. The
latter responds, •'011, I knew more thau
niy fellows. 1 Mastered libraries, and
had learned titles from colleges, and Im-
mune was a synonym for eloquence
power. And yet, 1 neglected my Soul,
and 1 atii here waiting here for a Ue w
trial. "Saange," says the one of. the
feeble earthly- capacity ; "1 knew .but
little of worldly knowledge, but I knew
_Curist, and made him illy partner. .and
I have no need of another chance."
Now the ground trembles with theap-
proachieg chariue The greite foldnige
doors of the Hall swing open. "Stand
back 1" cry Lite celestial ushers. "Stand
back, and let the Judge of quick and
dead pass through 1" He takes the
throne, mid looking' over bee throng of
nations,- He says : "Conte to judgment,
the last judgment, the only judgment. 1"
Iiy one Hash from the throne all the' his-
tory of each one flames forth to:. the
vision of Himself and all others.
vide 1" says the Judge to the assedibly.
r echo tee walls. "Divide
cry the guards angelic.
And now the immortals separate,
rushing this way and that, and itfter
awhile there is a great aisle bet4seen
them, and a. great vacuum widening
aud widening, and the. Judge, turning-,
to the t1Trong on one side, says, !."He
that is righteous, let him be rightieoue
still, aud he that is holy, let him bedioly
still ;" and then, turning toward the
throng., on the Opposite side, lie savs :
"lie that is unjust, let him be Unjust
still,and he that is lilthy,let him be filth: -
still;" and then, lifting one hand toward
each group, He declares "If the tree
fall toward the seutlt or toward the
north, in the place where the eree fall-
ow, there it shall oe." And then r hear
something jar with a great sound. It is
tne closing of the Book of Judginent.
The Judge ascends the stairs behind the .
throne. Tne hall of the last assieeitt
cleared and phut. The high court of
eternity is adjourned forever.
Nimrod Up t o litg.te.
"Do you know," remarked Barton at
the club, "that Trotter is 'such an a'rdent
sportsman that when the game laws are
in force in the spring he amu.' -es himself
watt going house -hunting ?"—Ilarper's
Bazar.
Carbnnelee Large is Hetes Ieggist
MTS. NANNIR GOULD-MAN, Of ISeutahvitte,
King Williata Co.. Va., write!' as lama:
"For about eight or ten years my?
father,
Col. T. U. Fogg, of West Point, Va., Ntas laid
up with carbuncles, the worst that' 1 ever saw.
He tried everything he hear4 001n, h1doctorfor octr
could o
him. Had Mx or
seven ilarbutveles ate
time, as large ashen's
eggsalleegodm
tszsowueek
andureoh
he could notwalk a
step. la Mt he had
his bed put in the
middle ef his room
and got en it to die.
mNo e doincea: It; eiactecodvhime ry
Dr. Pierce's Golden
to get . He saw
advised for all blood
disorders. Wfore he
had taken ^` half -a -
bottle of *Discov-
ery' they bggan to
go away. Two bottles entirely cured ifim. He
Is now 78 years old. and enjoy. good health."
ORE
COL. T. U. Foci.%
1E
RCEA NGTUEAE SR A
011 RIONElir IS IMIEFUNDIIIII.
JUNE 29, 1894.
1.41.17111.111"1""1"...111.11"11111111.1.11.111.11.11"1."11111"11.11"11.1.11.-4-1..11
Positively no End to Bargains.
We buy goods in tremenduous quantities and take advantage o all 0A8R
discounts.
ASA RESULT
Styles are the newest, qualities the finest and values the best. You not only
get here the best there is to be had, but every advantage of big retailing.
Specials, for This Month.
700 yards Black Dress Goods, all wool, 144 per yard; 650 yards Bletk
press Goods, Beautiful designs, 42 inches, regular price 550 and 60; the lot
ping at 26c and 30c per yard ; about 15 pieces of all wool, 39 inch, Colored
Dress Goods at 190 per yard, 401 patterns in prints to be cleared, look it
the prices 5c, 6c 7/0, 8e and 441special at Tic worth 121c. We have, subject
to your approval, 49 patterns of I5e1aines, prices from 19c to 36c, all wool.
A Big Drive in the Staple Department.
Grey Cotton away down, White Cotton away down. Table Linen, best
value ever shown. Piles of big bargains all through the Men's Department
en's Tweed Pants at $1 a pair, Men's Suits from $3.50 up, Special at VA
orth $12.50; Men's Suits to order at $9.98 worth $15.
You may have any hat in our Millinery depaxtment at half price. Very
interesting, figures tell the story. Save money by buying from us.
PICKARD,
BARGAIN DRY GOODS AND CLOTHING HOUSE,
S.A_H14:31R,111:4:.
Perry Davis'PAIN-KII4LER I
Buy NO OTHER MEDICIR ON EARTH isesggfficg1=
:igt-tale5c. Cholera. Cramps, Chills; Diarrhosa, Dysentery, Cholera
Morbus, Cholera Infantum and 1111 Bowel Complaints.
0
1.aSiii=v\T
We have something to say that will interest you. On hand,
a large assortment of STICK PINS. The ladies say they are
too cute for anything.
You can hear on all sides praise from the owners of our
Watches as to their beauty, durability and reliability. This is
the kind of testiinony that am ounts to something. Call and
examine our stock; it contains everything pertaining to the
jewelry trade.
MERCER„ SEAFORTH
OPPOSITE THE COMMERCIAL,HOTEL.
DON'T
WORRY!
TRY
UNLICHT SoAp
IT BRINGt
COMFORT
ON
WASH
DAY
M E AC K4°194
NEURAIGIA,PLEURISY,SCIATICA GEED EVERY TIME
AND RHEUMATISM
MN " D. TENT': PLASTER USED.
CrilY GROCERY,
MAIN STREET, SEAFORTH.
HEADQUARTERS' FOR
TEAS and FINE GROCERIES.
—.A.C4- il\TTS Elcazz—
Ram Lars s, Beasdorp's Cocoas, 1-ngions7
"
EurM and Diamond Crystal Salt.
JORDAN \& DEVEREAUX.
:
eirnmsesfortb-
m..715A1Z. Ix" snarynetriett,
LI
res
.E Jot
tj. otilOtimitiff-algT:CgSA
Th
Ait$65*,e,
Berkistliedashisrellge°._ch!
Yc
"Wilted' end to
ilO
oBli BEATTIE,
Court, __Countv
.rowitel
purehaseLpshorral. DornAVsi:
inns tfit for],
Vela op. 3A13.
.13eleirs'"B;s..dwtai.tL)IU'L.aacispl,itaeA:u,nP*ieitbsesty"ofrf:eirtsizestwAini
E TO
lislImpeinvebteb:d:D11.181lira°b:irtn:Mri114wa.:::11111ttli
-DOLLS FOR SAL
Oonoession 4, IL R.
vIlle P. O. WM. 04
,
ri000 BUSINES
LT store with dW
township Of Osborn
the cadre of one e
rjanada. Tern3B-1
DINEEN, Lumley.
OlEtORTSIDENS 11
0 horn bulls lit .
cows and -heifers in
eaelr tering. ARAI'
or Blyth P.O. NEI
flaw 0FTit&
tj return than
suranoe Company
tory manner in wh
sustained by havin
From our experien
Insurance Compan
it to the public.
'DULLS FOR SA
j,..P sale two Shor
reds. The dams.?
'3axon (105117)
head of one et the
Province. One of
ported Defiance si
position. TheOth
huff, at a very low,
suit thapurehawr.
Tuckersmith, er
BROTHERS.
llOUSE FOR S
nimble to
nearly opposite th
Good cellar lull
well and cistern
water. Furnace
through the hou
veniences. For
WILSON'S OFFI
$ 300 Pri
$ 500 rates
$ 700 borr
$1,000 pieta
$1,500 wit'
$2,500 S.
ATORKSHIR
I On LOt 1.5s
Yorkshire Boar, t
will be taken. T
service. with the
DAVID MACK.
'IMPROVED YO
J._ has for sale
roved Yorksbire
94, ConnetKlion 2
rucefteld P. 0.
pERKSHIRE
signed has
McKillop, a thor
J. G. Schnell, E
McAllister, VS
sows will he take
of service, -with p
JAMES DORS.
OLA.ND
tinders -
Poland China
Ont. Terme-4
previlege of retu
the above nam
moderate prices,
6, Stanley, Yarn
la signed has
Tuckersmith a t
vice. Terms. -8
privilege of retur
Egmondville, P.
100AR FOR 13
I) Boar for se
at the time of se
Ing, If nece
Rams for sale,
TASKER, Earl
MPROVED Y
will keep to
33, Concession
Proved Yorkshir
whichliml
torrac-41paya
privilege of re
the hest bred
moCiaa8 FOR
13 service a
a thoroughbred
GoneessionS
by Snell, of Um
-hire-and 41.50
Imoof service,
necessary. Also
service for sale.
H. SOHOAT.ES.
TlfPROVED
_IL breeder of 1
for service the
Royal Star,
Daughter, (Int
S1.00, and for
registration,
service, with t
Also on hand a
other yottng
13664 f
Post
Bosom
Fruits
SP
Apples
nice for
4 cans
Pears, Plir
assortmeni
Jams and
Evapori
Peaches.
Jersey
Highlar
Christie
Choice
rant&
Try our
A. Cf
sum
SEA1