HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1894-11-09, Page 22
T,•••
THE HURON EXPOSITOR.
in the Surrogate Court, County
of Huron.
IN TUE ESTATE OF DANIEL McGREGOR. BIL,
DECEASED.
All persona having any claim. against the estate of
Daniel McGregor, the elder, late of the village of
liarperhey, book -binder, are required on or before
ibt day of December, Ila9.4 to send to the under-
signed, executor of this estate, full parCculaes of
their claim& and of the security (if any) held by
them, duly verified by affidevit. After said let day
cf December, 1894, the executor will proceed to dis-
tdbute the assets of this eatate among the parties
entitled thereto, having reference only to the claims
of which notice tea been given, and after such distri-
bution they will not be liable for any parted the &s-
eater of the estate to any creditor of whose claim they
shall not have reeeived notice.
F. ROLIIESTED, Executor.
Seatorth, Oethber 3113e, 1894. 1103 4
In the Surrogate Court, County
Of Huron.
•
IN THE. ESTATE OF ClIAR• LES SAGE, DE-
CEASED.
All pereons having any claim against the estate of
Charles Sage, late of the village of Walton, betel
keeper, are required on or before the let day of De-
cember, 1894, to send to the undersigned, Soliciter
for the Executive, full particulars of their claim&
and of the security (if an)) held by themduly veri.
fled by affidavid. After said 1st December, 1894, the
Exectitrix will proceed to distribute the a.ssete of the
estate among i he parties entitled thereto, having
referenceonly to the claims of which she shall have
received notice, and after such distribution she will
not be liable for any part of the assets of the estate
teeny creditor of wnose claim ehe ehall not have re-
ceived notice.
F HOLMESTED,
Solieitor for Mra. Alice Sage, Executrix.
I403-4 Seaforth, Oct. 3I8t, 1894.
Post Office Grocery.
Seasonable Groceries -new
Fruits and Canned Goods.
SPECIAL LINES.
Apples in gallon cans (these are
nice for pies,); Canned Pumpkins -
4 cans for 25.e; Canned Peaches,
Pears, Plums, Pine Apple, and a full
assortraent of Crosse & Blackwell's
Jams and Jellies.
Evaporated Apricots, Pears and
Peaches.
Jersey brand Condensed 03ffee.
Highland brand Evaporated Cream
Christie's Fancy Biscuits.
Choice selected Raisins and Cur-
rants.
Try our 30c Japan Tea.
A. CROZIER & CO.,
sucoEssoRs TO J. FAIRLY.
SEAFORTH, ONT.
127
LEICESTER RAMS
-AND-
- DURHAM BULLS FOR SALE
-AT-
FA RMERS' PRICES.
Farm half a mile from Exeter Station.
H. & W. SMITH, Hay P. 0.
1400
The Old Established.
BROADFOOT'S
Planing Mill and
Sash and Door Factory,
sm_e_Po
This oId and well-known establishment Is still
running at full blast, and now has better faxilities
than ever before to turh 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 kinds of
lumber for sale on reasonahle terms. Shingles kept
constantly on hand. Eetimates for the furnishing
of buildings In whole or in part given on application.
None but the best of material ueed and workman-
ship guaranteed. Patronage aolicited.
1269 J. II BROADFOOT, Seater%
DON'T DESPAIR
WILL CURE YOU
We guarantee Dodd's Kidney Pills to cure any
case of Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Lumbago,
Dropsy, Rheumatism, Heart Disease, Female
Troubles, Impure Blood -or money refunded.
Sold by all dealers in medicine, or by mail on
receipt of price, eoc. per box, or Six boxes p.m,.
DR. L. A. SMITH & CO., Toronto.
GODERICH
Steam Boiler Works.
(ESTABLISHED 1880.)
A. S. OFIRYSTAL,
Succeesor to Chrystal & Black,
Manufacturera of all kinds of Stationary
Marine, Upright & Tubular
BOILERS
Salt Pans, Smoke Stacks, Sheet irer Works,
etc., etc.
••••••••••••••••••
Also dealers in Upright and Horinontal Slide Valve
Engines. Automatic Cit-')ff Engines a specialty. All
izes of pipe and pipe -fitting °militantly on hand.
ItetSrna,tea furnished on short notice'.
Warks--Oppoelte O. T. R. State DU, Goderich.
THE FARMERS'
Banking House
OR11133..
um connection with the Bank of Montreal.)
LOGAN 84 00.,
BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENT
REMOVED
To the Commercial Hotel Building, Main Street
A General Banking Business done, drafts Issue and
milted. Interest allowed on depotits.
MONEY TO LEND
cft.00d notes or mortgagee.
RoBERT LOGAN, MANAGER
1068
AYER'S
SARSAPARI
Ran OKA
IC UM YOU
ElriOlt Lad,
Ten years of age, but litho declines to give his
name to the public, flakes this authorized,
confidential statement to us:
"When 1 was one yer old, my mamma died
of consumption. Tile doctor said that I,
too, would soondie, and all our neighbors
thought that even if j did not die, I would
never be able to waik, because I was so
weak and puny. .A sathering formed and
broke under my a•rm.,,, I hurt my finger and
It gathered and threte out pieces of bone.
If I hurt myself so as to break the skin. it
Was sure to become 4, running sore. I had
to take lots of medicine, but nothing has
done me so much good as Ayer's Sarsapa-
rilia. It has made me well and strong." -
T. D. M., Norcatur, Raps.
AYER'S Sarsaparilla
Prepared by Dr. J.C.Ayfr ft Co., Lowell, Mites.
Cures others, will cure you
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
G00D FARM FOR SLE, -For sale, north half
Lot 31, Concession 2, &Let Wawanosh. 100
stores good fences, good orchard and never -failing
creek. Apply to PHILIP ROLT. Goderich. 1278
-UNARMS FOR SALE. -The undersigned has twentt
12 Choice Farms for sale in East Huron, the ban-
ner county of the Province ; ell eizes, and prices to
suit. For full information, write or call personally.
No trouble to show them. F. S. scorT, Brunets
P. 0.• •
139141
,
MIAil 24 FOR SALE. -Being south half of Lot 1, 6th
Concession of Teckersteith. Good bank barn
60x58, other barn 50x30. Good frame house with
stone cellar. Good orchard end water. This is a
first ekes farm and in • geed -state of cultivation.
Also eaet half of lot 4. Will he sold cheap and on
easy terms. Apply to P. KES,TING, Seaforth.
y 1367 -ti
maARII FOR SALE. -For gale, Lot 8, Concession 8,
Tuckersmith, containing l00 acres, all cleared,
well fenctd and underdrained. There is a good bank
barn with stabling underneatlyend a frame house.
There is a good orchard and a pever halite( well. It
ie within five miles of Seaforth and is well situated.
It will be sold cheap and on easy term& Apply on
the premises or addrets Seafprth P. 0. JOsEPR
GIBSON, Proprietor, 1398x4 -t 1.
MUM SALE. -Good farm tor gale, Lot 15, Comma -
bion 12, in the township of Stanley, containing
110 acres, 90 acrea cleared. Frame barn, sheds and
stables, large brick house apd large orchard of
eplendicl fruit. This farm will be sold OR very easy
terms as the proprietor wishes te retire. No encuin-
brance, convenient to school and churches, and well
watered. Apply on the premises to ROBERT
DELGATY, or Box 14, Bee field 1386-tf
IleeROPERTY FOR SALE. -For sale, 40 acres of
land, being north part of Lot No. 30, of the 8th
conceseion of Mcieris, 30 acres improved, the rest a
good hardwood birth. Also 330 pores in Manitoba,
wi'hin five miles of Killarney, on the Pembina River,
being composed of the west hal section No. 18, in
township No. 3, in the' County or Turtle Mountain.
Also six village tote in Brussels, that will be sold
cheap, either in pairs or singly. el. N. KNECHTEL,
Brussels. 13904f
ci ACRE FARM FOR SALE. -The 200 sore
4,1 ju farrn, being loth 11 and '12, concession 16,
Grey, is offered for Sale. 120 acre it are cleared and
the balance is well timbered. Bnildings first -claw.
Orchard, wel;, &c. School house within 40 rods.
Possession given at once if desired. The tote will
be sold either together or separately. For further
particulars as to price , terms, eto apply to MRS.
WALKER, Roseville P.O., or to NELSON BRICKER,
on the farm. 1299-tf
-DARR FOR SALE. -A 160 acne farm for sale, le
J t mites from; the Village of Brussels, being Lot 8,
and east half of Lot 2, Concession le, township of
Grey; 13; acres are cleared, 12 sores good hardwood
bush. This farm is well fenced, well underdrained,
and in a good state of gultivation. On thia farm are
two houses, two good orehardsetwo good wells, good
bank barn and other outbuildings. Will be sold to.
gether or separately. *or further particulars, apply
on the weans. s, or to JOHN or AARON McFAD-
DEN, Brussels P. 0. 1895x13
-EIARM FOR SALE. -Being the nterth half of Lot
12 40, Concession 10, East Wawanosh, containing
100 acre& more or less; 80 aerea cleared, 20 acres of
hardwood bush. On the premises are a frame house,
frame barn and stables, and two neyer-fai:ing wells,
and eight acres of -fall wheat. !Price; *1,5.00. A large
amount of the purchase money fuay remain on
mortgage. For particulars, apply to leSAIAS PEAR -
EN, on the prentiees, or to ;HENRY J. PEARFN,
1Vingham P. 0., Ont. 1397x10
]ARM IN IfIcKILLOP FOR SALE. -For sale the
r south half of lots 1 and lot 2, ooeceasion 4, Zdo-
Killop, being 150 acres of verrchoice iand mostly in
a good state of cultiveation. There is 'a good how%
and bank barn, a good young bearing orchard and
plenty of never failing water. A considerable
portion seeded to grass. Convenient to markets
and ochools and good gravel roads in all directions.
Will be sold cheap. Apply to the proprietor on the
premises, MESSES. DENT & HODGE, Mitchell, or at
/hoc HURON EXPOSITOR Office, Seaforth. JOHN
O'BRIEN, Proprietor. 129841
-1L1OR SALE, VALUABLE FARM AND VILLAGE
PROPERTY. -A good hundred acre farm in a
fair state of cultivation, being lot 16, in tbe 12th'
concession, of the township of Grey. a good Brick
Hotel, in the Village of Cranbrook. in the said town.
ship, known as "The Beck House", also a 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 parcele to suit purchasers.
Further information will be freely supplied to any-
one addressing the undersiened, at Brussels. G. F.
BLAIR, Solicitor; F. S. SCOTT, Auctioneer.
137841
ASPLENDID BUSINESS CHANCEt-The under
signed offers for sale cheap, and on ohm tering
his property in Hills Green. It consists of one
quarter acre of land, on which is situated'a good
general store with dwelline attached, and under
which is a splendid cellar. There is also &large ware-
house and stable. Hills Green is the oehtre et orm
teethe richest and best fanning distriotatin Ontario,
and this is a 'splendid opening for a good, live bush
nese man with some means to make Money. For
particulers, address CHARLES TROYER, Hills
Green. 1265tf
PLENDID FARM FOR SALE. -Lot 26, Conces-
sion 6, Township of Morris, containing 150 acres
suitable for grain or stock, situated two end a half
miles from the thriving village of Brussel& a good
gravel road leading thereto; 120 acres cleared and
free front stumps, 6 acres cedar and ash and balance
hardwood. Bern 51x60 with straw and bay shed
40x70, stone stabling underneath both. The house
is brick, 22x82 i1th 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 att TIIR Ex-
posrroe Orrica'or on the premises. Wit. BARRIE,
Brussels. 1335-tf
FMW FOR SALE -For sale, the East half of
Lot la, and the North half of Lot 12, south
boundary, Stanley, containing 100 acres, about 75
agree cleared, the balance well timbered with hard-
wood. The farm is well fenced, under drained, and
nearly free from stump& There are two good dem 1.
•ing houses, one brick and the other frame, also a
good barn and commodious stable and other out-
buildings. There is a good bearing orchard and
never failing water. It is three miles and three
quarters from Kippen station and the same from,
Hensel!, and is convenient to churches and school&
It will be sold cheap as the proprietor is anxious to
retire. It IS one of the beet farms in the county and
in a splendid ifeiehborhood. Apply on the premises
or address Hills Green P. 0. DAVID CLARKE.
139741
A GOOD 011ANCE.-200 acre farm for sale, Lots
11., 21 and 22, Concession B, Turnberry, 2t miles
from Wingham. This farm is in good shape to fann
having been nearly all in pasture for the past 10
years. The greater part of it is well underdrained,
has first class buildings and never failing stream of
water rune aoroes the fan. Also Lots 32, 83 and 34,
Concession 12, Turnberry, containing 883 acres.
This is mostly new land, well drained with Govern.nent drains, which are nearly all paid for. A lot of
valuable timber on them. A splendid chance for a
large neck farm. The above land is all connected
but will be sold together or separately to suit pur.
chaser. Also a firet class saw mill on the 200 acre
farm. A siding of the railroad ram through the
lumber yard to the mull. It will be sold with the
farm or separately. Good and sufficient reasons for-
sellifig. Apply to GEORGE THOMSON, Box 1e5,
Wing harn.
14014
VICTORY OVER PAIN.
REV. DR. TALMAGE WRITES OF THE
HEAVENLY CITY.
A. Vivid Word Picture of the Joys of Im-
mortality -Consolation For the Weary
and Sorrowful -The rains of Living
Joys of Heaven.
BROOKLYN, Nov. 4.-Rov. Dr. Talmage,
who is now nearing the close of his globe
circling tour and will shortly roach Amer-
ican shores, has selected as the subject of
today's sermon through- the press "'Vic-
tory Over Pain," the text chosen being
-Revelation xxl, 4, "Neither shall there be
any more pain."
The first questions that you ask when
about to change your residence to any (sky
Is: "What lathe health of the place? Is it
shaken of terrible disorders? What are the
bills of mortality? What is the death rate?
How high rises the thermometer?" And
am I not reasonable in asking, What aro
the sanitary conditions of the heavenly
city into which we all hope to move? My
text answers it by saying, "Neither shall
there be any more pain."
First„ I remark, there will be no pain of
disappointment in heaven. If I could put
the picture of what you anticipated of life
when you began it beside tho picture of
what you bare realized, I would find a
great difference. You have stumbled upon
great disappointments. , Perhaps you ex-
pected riches, and you hav,o worked hard
enough to gain them. You have planned
and worried and persisted until your
hands were worn and your brain was
racked and your heart fainted, and at the
end of this long strife with misfortune you
find that if y-ou have not been positively
defeated it has been a drawn battle. It is
still tug and tussle, this year losing what
you gained last, financial uncertaintites
pulling down faster than you bnild. For
perhaps 20 or 30 years you have been run-
ning your craft straight into the teeth of
the wind.
Perhaps you have had domestio disa' p-
pointment. Your children, upon whose
education you lavished your hard earned
dollars, have not turned out as expected.
Notwithstanding all your counsels and
-prayers and painetaking they will not do
right. Many a good father has had a bad
boy. Abaalom trod on David's heart.
That mother never imagined -all this as 20
or 30 years ago she sat by that child's cra-
dle.
No More Blasted Hopes,
Your life has been a chapter of disap-
pointments, but coine with me, and I will
show you a different scene. By God's
grace, entering the other city you will
never again have a blasted hope. The
most jubilant of expectations will not
reach the realization. Coming to the top
of one hill of joy, there will be other
heights rising upon the vision. This song
of transport will but lift 'you to higher an -
thetas, the sweetest choral but a prelude
to more tremendous harmony, all things
better than you had anticipated -the robe
richer, the crown brighter, the temple
grander, the throng mighter. -
Further, I remark, there will be no pain
of weariness. It may be many hours since
you quit work, but many of you are un-
rested, some from overwork, and some
from dullness of trade, the latter more ex-
hausting than the former. Your ankles
ache; your spirits flag; you want rest. Are
these wheels always to turn, these shut-
tles to fly, these axes to hew, these shovels
to delve, these pens to fly, these books to
be posted, these goods to be sold?
'Ale the great holiday approaches! No
more curse of taskmasters; no more stoop-
ing until the back aches; no more calcula-
tion until the brain is bewildered; no more
pain; no more carpentry, for the mansions
-
are al/ built; no more masonry, for the
walls are all roared; no more diamond cut-
ting, for the genie are all set; no more
gold beating, for the crowns aro all com-
pleted; no more agriculture, for the hare_
vests are spontaneous.
Further, there will be no more pain or
poverty. It is a hard thing to be really
poor, to have your coat wear out and no
money to get another, to-leop your flour
barrel empty and nothing To buy bread
with for your children, to live in an un-
healthy row and no means to change your
habitation, to have your child sick with
some mytserious disease and not bo able
to secure eminent medical ability, to have
son or daughter begin the world and you
not have anything to help them in start-
ing, with a mind capable of research and
higl contemplation to be perpetually fixed
on questions of more livelihood.
Poets try to throw a romance about the
poor man's cot, but there is no romance
about it. Poverty is hard, cruel, unrelent-
ing. But Lazarus waked up without his
rags and his diseases, and so all of Christ's
poor wake up at last without any of their
disadvantages -no almshouses, for they
are all princes; no rents to pay, for the
residence is gratuitous; no garments to
buy, for the robes aro divinely fashioned;
no seats in church for poen folks, but
equality among temple worshipers; no
hovels; no hard crusts; no insufficent ap-
parel. "They shall hunger no more, nei-
ther thirst any more, neither shall the sun
light on them nor any heat" No more
pain.
and
No Farewells.
Further, there will be no pain of part-
ing. All these associations must some
thne break up. Wo clasp hands and walk
together and talk and laugh and weep to-
gether, but we must after awhile separate.
Your grave will bo in ono place, mine in
another. We look each other full in the
face for the last time. We will be sitting
together some evening or vealkingtogethor
some day, and nothing will be unusual in
our appearance or our • conversation, but
God knows that it is the last tine, and
messengers from eternity on their errand
to take us away know it is the last time,
and in heaven, where they xnake ready for
our departing spirits, they know it is the
last time.
Oh, the long agony of earthly separa-
tion! It is awful to stand in your nursery
fighting death back from the couch of your
child and try to hold fast the little one and
see all the time that he is gettiug weaker
and the breath is shorter, and make outcry
to God , to help us and to tho doctors to
save him and see it is of no avail, and then
to know that his spirit is gone, and that
you have nothing left butlethe casket that
held the jewel, and that in two or three
days you must even put that away and
walk around about the house and find it
desolate, somethnes feeling rebellious, and
then to resolve to. feeledifferently, and to
resolve on self control, and just as you
have come to what you think is perfect self
control to suddenly come upon some little
coat or picture or shoe half worn out, and
how all the floods of the soul burst in ono
wild wail of agony! Oh,- rny God, how
hard it is to part, to close the eyes that
never can look merry at our coming, to
kiss the hand that will never again do us
a kindness! I know religion gives great
consolation in such an hour, and we ought.
to be comforted, but anyhow and anyway
you make it, Itis awful.
On steamboat wharf and at rail car
window we may smile when we say fare-
well, but those goodbys at the deathbed,
they just take hold of the heart with iron
pinchers and tear it out by th'e roots until
all the fibers quiver and curl in the [texture
and drop thick blood. These separations
are wine presses into which our hearts,
like red clusters, are thrown, and then
trouble turns the windlass round °"d
ak.uaau, union we are utterly cameu anu aeon a aunstaamon. -Alla, 10, neara a
have no more capacity to suffer, and we voice from heaven, as the voice of many
stop crying because we have wept all our waters!"
tears.
On every street, at every doorstep, by
every couch, there have been partings. But
once past the heavenly portals, and you
are through with such scenes forever. In
that land there are many hand claspings
and etnbracings, but only in recognition.
That great home circle never breaks.
Once find you comrades there, and you
have them forever. No crape floats from
the door of that blissful residence. No
oil:inside where the dead sleep. All
awe -,, wide awake, and forever. No push-
ing -but of emigrant ship for foreign shore.
No tolling of bell as the funeral passes.
Whole generations in glory. Hand to
hand, heart to heart, joy to joy. No creep-
Ingup the limbs of the death chill, the
feet cold until hot flannels cannot warm
them. - No rattle of sepulchral gates. No
parting, no pain. •
There Is No ,Pain In Heaven.
Further, the heavenly city will have no
pain of body. The race is pierced with
sharp distresses. The surgeon's knife must
out. The dentist's pinchers must pull.
Pain is fought with pain. The world is a
hosisital. • Scores of diseases, like vultures
contending for a carcass, struggle as to
which shall have it Our natures are In-
finitely susceptible to suffering. T,Iee eye,
the foot, the hand, with immense capacity
of anguish.
The little child meets at the entrance of
life manifold diseases. You hear the shrill
. cry of infancy as the lancet strikes into
the swollen gum. You see its head toss in
consuming fevers that take more than
half of them into the dust. Old age passes,
dizzy and weak and short breathed and
dim sighted. On every northeast wind
come down pleurisies and pneumonias.
War lifts lts sword and hacks away the
life of whole generations. The hospitala
of the earth groan into the ear of God their
comidaint. Asiatic choleras and ship fe-
vers and typhoids and London plagues
make the world's knees knock together.
Pain has gone through every street and
up every ladder" and down every shaft. It
is on the wave, on the -mast, on tbe beach.
Wounds front elip of elephant's tusk and
adder's sting and crocodile's tooth and
horse's hoof and wheel's xevolution. We
gather up the infLrrnities of our parents
and transmit to our children the inherit-
ance augmented by our own sicknesses,
and they add to them their own disorders,
to pass the inheritance to other genera-
tions. In A. D. 262 the plague in Rome
smote into the dust 5,000 citizens daily.
In 544, in Constantinople'1,000 grave-
diggers were not enough to bury the dead.
In 1813 lophthalmia seized the whole Prus-
sian ariny. .At times the earth has swel-
tered with suffering.
Count up the pains of Austerlitz, where
30,00 fell; of Fontenoy, where 100,000
fell; of Chalons, whore 300,000 fell; of
Marius' fight, in which 290,000 fell; of the
tragedy at Herat, where Genghis Khan
massacred 1,600,000 men, and of Nishar,
where he slew 1,747,000 people; of the 18,-
000,000 this monster sacrificed in 14 years,
as he Went forth to do, as he declared, to
exterminate the entire Chinese nation and
make tho empire a pasture for cattle.
Think of the death throes of the 5,000,000
men sacrificed in one campaign of Xerxes.
Think of the 120,000 that perished in the
siege of Ostend, of 300,000 dead at Acre,
of 1,100,000 dead in the siege of Jerusa-
lem, of 1,816,000 of the dead at Troy, and
then complete the review by considering
the stupendous estimate of Edmund Burke
-that the lossby war had been 35 times
the entire then present population of the
globe.
Tale of the Battlefield.
Go through and examine the lacerations,
the gunshot fractures, the saber wounds,
the gashes of the battleax, the slain of
bombshell and exploded mine and falling
wall, and those destroyed under the gun
carriage anci the hoof of the cavalry horse,
the burning thirsts, the camp fevers, the
frostsethat shivered, the tropical suns that
smote. Add it up, gather it foto one line,
compr6ss It into one word, Spell it in one
syllable, clank it in one chain, pour it out
In one groan, distill it into one tear.
Aye, the world has writhed in 6,000
years of suffering. Why doubt the possi-
bilty of a future world of suffering when
WO see the tortures that have been inflicted
in this? A deserter from Sevastopol coin-
ing over to the army of the allies pointed
back to the fortress and Said, "That place
Is a perfect hell." -
Our lexicographers, aware of the im-
mense necessity of having plenty of words
to express the different shades of trouble,
have strewn over their pages such words as
"annoyance," `-distress," "grief," "bitter-
ness," "heartache," "misery," "twinge,"
"pang," "torture," "affliction," "an-
guish," "tribulation," `wretchedness,"
"woe." But I have a glad sound for every
hospital, for every sickroom, for every
lifelong invalid, for every broken heart.
"There shall be no more pain." Thank
God! Thank God! No malarias float in
the air. No bruised foot treads that street.
No weary arm. No painful respiration.
No hectic' flush. No one can drink of that.
healthy fountain and keep faint haarted
or faint headed. He whose foot touches
that pavement becometh an athlete. The
first kiss of that summer air will take the
wrinkles from the old marfs cheek. Amid
the multitude of songsters not one diseased
throat. The first flash of the throne will
scatter the darkness of those who were
born blind. See, the lame man leaps as a
hart and the dumb sing. From that bath
of infinite delight we shall step forth, our
weariness forgotten. Who aro those radi-
ant ones? Why, that ono had Ms jaw shot
off at Fredericksburg; that QM lost his
eyes in a powder blast; that ono had his
back broken by a fall from the ship's hal-
yards; that one died of gangrene in the
hospital. No more pain,
Sure enough, here is Robert Hall, who
never before saw a well day, and Edward
Payson, whose body was ever torn of dis-
tress, and Richard Baxter, who passed
through untold physical torture. All
well. No more pain. Here, too, are the
Theban legion; a great host of 6,666 put to
the sword for Christ's sake. No distortion
on their countenance. No fires to hurt
thein, or floods to drown them, or racks
to tear them. All well. Here are the
Scotch Covenanters, none to hunt them
now. The dark cave and imprecations of
Lord Claverhouse exchanged for temple
service, and the presence of him who
helped Hugh Latimer out of the fire. All
well. No more pain.,
Sweet Waters.
I set open the door of heaven until there
blows on you this refreshing breeze The
fountains of God have made It cool, ants
the gardens have made it sweet. I do not
know that Solomon ever heard on a hot
day the ice click in an ice pitcher, brit he
wrote as if he did when he said, "As cold
waters to a thirsty soul, so is good news
from a far country."
Clambering among the Green moun-
tains I was tired and hot and thirsty, and
I shall not forget how refreshing it was
when after awhile I heard the mountain
brook tuniblieg over the rocks. I had no
cup, no chalice, so I got down on my
knees and face to drink. Oh, ye climbers
on the journey, with cut feet and parched
tongues and fevered temples; listen to the
rumbling of sapphire brooks, amid flow-
ered banks,, over Olden shelvings! Listen!
"The lamb which is in the midst of the
throne shall lead them unto living foun-
tains of water." I do not offer it to you
in a chalice. To take this you must bend.
Get down on your knees and on your face
and drink out of this great fountain of
The Plaint of the Korean.
"What is the use of working and mak-
ing money," said once a Korean to me,
"if, when the work Is done and the money
made, this is taken away from you by the
officials, and you aro worn out for havidg
done the work and as poor as before, if,
mind you, you aro fortunate enough not
to be exiled to a distant province by the
angry magistrate who has enriched him-
self at your expense? Now," added the
Korean, looking earnestly into my face,
"would you work under tlaoso circum-
stances?"
"I am bonged if I would," were the
words which, to the best of my ability, I
struggled' hard to translate into the io-
rean language to show my approval othis
philosophic way of thinking.
There is no doubt that what the Korean
said to me was perfectly true, and that the
system of "squeezing," is carried on on a
very large scale by the magistrates, just
the seine as in China, and it naturally has
a very depressing effect on the people
"squeezed."
It is really painful, when you first land
In Korea, to notice the careworn, sad ex-
pression on everybody's face. There they
lie about idle and pensive, doubtful as to
what will happen to them tomorrow, all
anxious for generations that a reform
rnight take place In the mode of govern-
ment, yet all for centuries too lazy to at-
tempt to better their position. Such is hu-
man nature! It is hard indeed to suffer,
but it is nothing as compared with the
trouble and worry of improving one's own
standing, and no one better than the Ko-
reans knows this. -A. H. Savage Lander
in Fortnightly Review.
Early Iron Making In America.
A little over 300 years marks the inter-
val between the present time and the re-
puted discovery of iron ere in North Amer-
ica, the first recorded shipment of which
was in 1608, but the earliest attempted
known use of the mineral locally was in
1622. However, successful practical iron
manufacture in the United States has a
history of less than 234 centuries, and as
European methods were introdueed and
European specialists employed Ainerioan
Iron mahufacture did not pnss through
the primitive methods of open heaps and
low mud furnaces, some of which antedate
the Christian ora. It is probable that all
of the iron produced in America was ob-
tained either from blast furnacekor modi-
fied Catalan forge fires, and that these
were' actuated by blast supplied by other
than animal,. power. While today it may
be possible to find in various portions of
the world all methods of Iron production,
from the open heap to the modern blast
furnace, blown by all types of pneumatic
apparatus, ranging from the skins bf ,ani-
mals sewed into bags and trodden by the
workers' feet, or the tubes of bamboo,
whose pistons are alternately actuated by
the arms or legs of attendants, to a mass-
ive blowing- engine driven by steam, in
the area covered by the United States no
appliances are known to have been used
cruder than are represented by the forge or
blast furnace to which air was supplied by
wooden or leather bellows, actuated by a
water wheel, or the tromp°, into the tube
of which a column of falling watehdrew
air and forced it under pressure from a
windbox.-John Birkinbine in Cassier's
Magazine.
Cowboy and Artist.
Frederic Remington was born in Can-
ton, a small village in St. Lawrence coun-
ty, N. Y., in 1860. His father, a newspa-
per man, wanted to train him to his own
profession, but his taste for dabbling in
art was too stroug. In 1879 he joined the
Yale Art school and found out a little
about art and a great deal about football.
Academie routine was not to his taste,
however, and for awhile he tried life as
the confidential clerk of Governor Cornell
at Albany. Still restless, he threw that
-up for the more congenial occupation of,
as be expresses it, "punching cows" in
Montana.
In other words, he became a genuine
cowboy, and to his four years in the sad-
dle he owes the accurate, minute knowl-
edge of plain life and horses that marks
his work as that of an expert. For four
years he roughed it as cowboy. Then he
went to Kansas and started a mule ranch,
making some money, with which he wan-
dered south, acting in turn as ranohman
scout, guide and, in fact, anything,that
offered. Hissavings gone, his thoughts
reverted to art. . As he says:
"Now that I was poor, there seemed to
be no reason why I should not gratify my
inclination for an artist's career. In art,
to be conventional, ono must be penni-
less." -Book Buyer.
What Became of Aunty.
A belated tourist was obliged to ask for
a bed at a farmhouse, having wandered
far from his hotel.
On rising in the morning he found him-
self without tooth powder.
Looking about him, he espied on the
mantelpiece a small box containing pow-
der, which he used.
When he paid for his bed, he apologized
to the farmer's wife for having used her
tooth powder.
"Tooth powder?" she queried. "We
have none."
"Yes, my good woman. It was in a
Small round box on the inantelpiece."
"That," she screamed, "that was not
tooth powder! That was aunty!"
Aunty had been cremated. -Exchange.
A. Newsboy's Bicycle.
Two ragged newsboys, one white, the
other colored, stood on an Olive street cor-
ner as an athletic young man flashed by
on a handsome safety bicycle. "I wish
had lots o' money," said the little coon,
"so's I could buy mo one o' deM wheels."
"Oh, dat's easy, coolly!" responded the
other. "No trouble 'tall. Take de rub-
ber outer yer neck an de wheels outer yer
head an put 'em togeder, and den you got
a bicycle. See?" -St. Louis Post -Dispatch.
•
-Mrs. Winks-" Well, dear; just back
from abroad -two years of it, you know.
What kind of season did you have ?" Mrs.
Blinks-" 011, just lovely. Made a hit in.
amateur theatricals; did not miss a ball
worth going to; buried my husband, and
am studying for the professional stage."
r,
A LIOHT HEART,
strong nerves, bod-
ily comfort - these
come to a woman,
with. the use of Dr.
Pierce's Favorite
• Prescription. You
can't be anything
else but nervous and
spiritless, as long as
you suffer from any
womanly ills.
The "Prescrip-
tion" relieves every
such condition. It builds up your general
health, too, better than any ordinary tonic
PIERCE CUE.
CURE.
can do -and, by restoring the natural tune..tion, it brings back health and strength.
St. Matthews, Orangeburgh Co., S. C.
Da, R. V. PINRCE Dear Sir -Por four
months my wife tried your "Favorite Pre-
scription," and I ani able to flay that it has
Cone all that it claims to do. She can always
praise thls medicine for all womb troubles.
Your truly,
C6s-d-i-ae4,./*
NOVEMBER 9 1894.
•
ATTHE artOTA-31\1-eiio
Extra values in Dress Goods, with trimmings to
match.
Large stock of Silks, Velvets, Velveteens and
Plushes.
Ladies' Fur and Beaver Cloth Jackets, Fur Capes,
Storm Collars and Muffs in great variety.
Flannels, Flannelettes -good values.
Men's and Boys' Underwear -large assortment
and at rock prices.
Agents for Butterick's Patterns, large stock on hand. Cali
and get November sheet of Fashions,
SI/ITT= & S=ET,
SUCCESSORS TO R JAMIESON.
CITY e GROCERY,
MAIN STREET, SEAFORTH.
HEADQUARTERS FOR
TEALS and FINE GROCERIES.
-.A_G-MWTS HI CD -
Ram Lal's Teas, Beasdorp's Cocoas, Higgins'
" Eureka " and Diamond Crystal Salt.
ILL JOIna.A..1\1"-..
INTERESTING PUCE.
•M.•OIMID
In something everybody is looking for. The most interesting store in
Seaforth is that of the Big Dry Goods and Clothing sore of Wm. Pickard
Co. You always see them busy from morning until night. Why Because
here is to be found the largest assortment of goods and at the closest possible
prices. Every department is now in full blast, and full of the choicest goods
ever shown in town.
Dress Goods Department.
Mottled Tweed Effects, Cheviots and
Serges, plain and fancy Hopsacks'Craven-
ettes and Imperials, Box Cloth Suitings,
Cashmeres and. Diagonals, a beautiful range
of evening shades; also our famous cloth
in all shades, selling at 25c, 42 inches in
width -over 1,500 yards of this line in
stock.
Clothing Department.
'Never in the history of our trade has this
department done for us as it is now doing.
Men's Suits at all prices, in an endless va-
riety of makes and styles. -Boys' Suits in
all sizes cheap. Stacks of Overcoats in all
makes -the big frieze Ulster Coat, the Cape
Tweed. Coat, the Dress Coat in newest style,
in fact ankthing you want from size 22 to
46. Prices will astonish you in. this depart-
ment.
Staple and Furnishings Dept.
Grey Flannels Cottons, Towellings, Tick-
ings, Flannelettes (English make), Tabling,
Hollands Prints, Shirtings in union and all -
wool, Cotton Shirting, fast dye. See our
Cotton -at ne, see our all -wool Flannel at
16 cents.
Millinery and Mantle Dept.
This week thousands ,of people will visit
this department, which is second to none in
this county. Everything shown will be
entirely new, and past seasons have proven
to the people that this is the place for the
right stuff. Over 300 garments in this de-
partment, all new and nobby, all sizes and
kinds, Atnerican-and Gelman make.
Fur Department.
•We open the season with the largest stock
ever carried in Seaforth. Forty-five Men's
Fur Coats in all kinds; Ladies' Coats in
Grey Lamb and Astrachan. Fifty Capes -
consisting of Sable, Grey Lamb, Astrachan,
Greenland Seal, Possum itt black and na-
tural, Cony, Beaver, &c. Collars and Muffs
in all the above Furs, Caps in an endless
quantity (in wedges and bands) of the above
skins. This is the largest stock, and at the
closest prices, ever given in the trade in the -
County of Huron.
Carpet Department.
Enlarged and removed to more spacious
quarters. We have the most complete
stock of ingrain Carpets -all wool, union
and hemps ; tapestry and moquette, Brus-
sels mats and rugs of all kinds; moquette
mats in elegant designs; floorOil Cloth and
Linoleum all widths; Lace Curtains and
Drapery of all kinds.
Space will not allow us to go into the particulars of the other departments, but all are
alike interesting. This season will outshine any previous attempt. We. take pleasure in
showing you through our different departments.
WM. PICKARD & CO.,
CORNER MAIN AND MARKET STREETS,
THE BARGAIN DRY GOODS HOUSE OF THE TOWN.
THE EYE.
Not only to catch your eye, but help
your pocketbook, and give you the
utmost satisfaction, I _am offering at
hard -times prices everything usually found
in a well -kept jewelry establishment.
Watches roirce,ptehrafotrmearaentebees
pbeatand,
Spectacles To pansuMit all sights d. all rices.
-Large stock,of gold frame&
RINCS-ini-chddingpl
in. gs,.Keepers, Giem and Diamond Rings. AN0
Large assortment of Jewelry and Silverware. Headquarters for repairs.
R. MERCER, - - SEAFORTH,
OPPOSITE THE 00361EROIAL HOTEL,
j. MoKENNA, Demi
Surveyor, Member 0
urveyors, Dublin, On
OR SALE OR T
rent, het 8, concession
000ta1ning 100 acres. For
so ROBERT CHARTERS,
E:CFOB. SALE. -Da
Breeder of Thoroughb
e rigs. Young eto
TORN BEATTIE, Clerk
tal
Court, County COMIlli
4.31131001`, Land, Lean snd I
invested and to Loan.
Livens' store, Main street,
ESTRAY STEER, ewe
Concession 5, Statile
her, a two year old steer,
'may have the tame on prole'
-expenses. THOMAS l'ARS
efeISTRAY CATTLE, *tray
_re the undersigned oho
last; one red steer, eoraing
heifer, same age ; also a
Any person giving snob n.
their recovery will be eel
pay00, JoiMston's Mills,
CATTLpure bred shearling
E AND SHEEP
ram lambs. Also a few go
St for, service, at nrices
tenon to suit. dome
MILNR, Ethel Ontario.
eir,ISTRAY CATTLE. -St
_JD elan 14, Iffeltillop, ab:
eleven head of cattle as
three, red and white; six y'
one black with white
steers ad one red 1
tion that will lead to the rei
evili be liberally rewarded.
'"ftlSTRAY STEER.--eStra
ye el et 3, ILR.S., TAM
October, a yearling -steer.
land bail no white werke.
tothe reeovery of this an
warded. JAMES CARNO
$ 300 Private fu
$ 500 rats of int
• 700 borrowers.
314000 pleted and
$1,500 within two
$2,500 8.11AYs,Ba
HROPSHIRE SHEEP 1
10 number of thoroughhl
-eluding twelve shearlang et
also two and three year old
ewes and rams. Many
winners, all from importh
the lembs, levee regibtered
ePgible for registration.
at prices to suit the tine
field Read, north. Stank.]
ANDREW DUNKIN.
BOARS FOP
IMPROVED YORKSII
has for vale a num
proved Yorkshire Pigs, of
24, Conoeseion 2, L. It.
Beucefield Pe 0. WM. 011
lea0Alt FOR SERVICE.
bis premises. Lot 2,.
thoroughbeed Chester Win
-421. 'mashie at the time of
ere of returning if Decor
STRONG, Constance P.O.'
TKPROVED YoRKSHIRI
will keep for the imprt
38,Concession il, L. R. t
proved Yorkshire Boar
which & limited number-
' terms. -41 payable at the 1
.privikge of returning if
the beet -bred pigs in the C
-DIGS 1 PIGS !-The und
ses, lot 2,e00etee8ion
bred Berkshire seals and hI
prices,also a 'Ittey Of MOM
to wean. He also has a tbl
a thoroughbred Tamworth]
payable at the time of servl
returning if neoeseary,
SCHOALES, Conettece P.
4
TIEPROVED BERKSHII
1. breeder of improved B
torservice the celebrated
Royal Star. (imp.) All
Daughter, (imp.) (1219).
$1.00, and for registered
registration. 22.00. Fees
Service, with the privilege I
Also on hand a few choice
other young stock ler age.
13584
✓ A mSERVICEw'TH-Am/4 -1 u
nd
Tamworth Boar, bred be
Gun Hill Reliance (imp.))
cess 2nd (imp ) 160; by G
11111 Prinseeas (2820); by Ne
.(2802) by Saeribo 2h.d (890,
thoroughbred Berkshire B
of Hibbert. HECTOR R
Stanley, Brucefield P. O.
ThiOAR FOR SERVICE.
.1.11 McKillop, the tho
" Election," No. 2978,
1.81t,ribor;eindbyowter?Wm. 0 .
Sire, London Champion (I
Enterprise, imp.. (148) ;
by Paragon (424); Lady
(sea-470)u;:d.. lyeIlamis_.104ryli2.vand:a4
Tregenna by Tim Whiffler
134DOuRthrRAPPiNCE.LadY 81111
with the privilege of roe
Notice to
N THE MATTER OF
CEASED.
The creditors of James
township of Hay, in the
who died on or about
1894, are, on or before
1894, to send by poet, pre
M. D Bayfield post o
deeeaeed, their ehristian
descriptions, with full pit
**gement of their accou
eecurity elf any)tield by t
the said administrator wi
said estate having regard
*hall have notice oL
CAMERON, II
Solicitors for
Dated this 10th day of Oo
T. Y. It,
POO
The opening
success, and I am
the res.,ults. Ther
to be had in all
Shoes, as the R.
sacrificed at pric
equalled elsewhere
Goods bought
eheap.
You will save
to examine goods
New stock for
arriving daily, qu
T. Ve
Alain Street, Sea