HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1896-02-21, Page 10tel
asey &
Seaforth
WILL
For next. --w
30 DAYS
GIVE
Four lbs. good Tear for 5c; Toilet
Co.
Soap away down in
Laundry Soap, 7
price;
five
cent bars for 25p.
Dinner and Tea Sets it greatly
reduced prices
CASEY & CO.,
SEAFORTH.
THE SEAFORTH
Musical - Instrument
EMPORIpt
ESTABLISHED, 1873.
owing ta bard times we have con-
cluded to -sell Pianos e.1 Organs at
Greatly Reduced Prices,
Organs at $25 and upwards, and
Illanos at Correspo ding prices.
SEE US 'BEFORE P RCHASING.
SCOT
BROS.
IMPORTAN TO
SCHOOL OARDS.
THE
Fisk Teachers Agency,
BANK OF COMMERC BUILDING,
25 King Street West, Toronto.
Supplies elhools with tea.chters for all
grades. No charges. We make enquiries
for confideatial information concerning all
applicatits, and our recommendations can,
therefore, be relied upon. Write us if you
require a teacher. Information given to
teachers on application.
W. 0. MeTAQGART, B. A.,
(Toronto University) Manager,
Late of Huron County. 1442.-52
.WALL
I carry the largest stook of nexv designs and fineet
goods at the lowest prices of any house in the county.
New good sold as cheap as any old stock or out of
date goods. Why I eau do so is beoansegoods bought
now axe bought from. 1 to 10 cents per roll less than
they were when old stock was. My expensea are low.
I have a lig stook and need the money. Wall paper
from 34 cents per roll up. Window shades, Mould -
lugs, Cornice polls, 8so. &e. as cheap as any in the
trade. City Wall Paper liouse, Main St. Seaforth,
opposite John St.
JAS. GRAVES,
Practical Paper Hatiger and. Painter.
I have secured the servieeS of three lirst-olass paper
hangers and can do work at the shortest notice. All
work guaranteed unaurparlsed. For proof of the
,bove call and see for yoursalf.
Wall paper trimmed free.
J. C. Smith & CO.,
1:<-=
A General Banking butiness transacted.
Farmers' notes discotuated.
Drafts bought and sold
Interest allowed on deposits at the rate
of 5 per cent. per annum.
SALE NOTES discounted, or taken for
collection.
OFFICE—First door north �f Reid &
- 'Wilson's Hardware Stere.
SEAFORTI-I.
THE FARMERS'
Banking - House,
(In connection. with the. Bank of Montreal.)
LOGAN & COB;
BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENTS.
OFFICE—IU the Commercial Hotel build-
ing, next to the Town Hall.
A General Banking Businets done. Drafts
issued and cashed. Interest allowed on deposits.
MONEY TO LEND
On good notes or mortgages.
ROBERT LOGAN, MANAGER.
1058
GODERICH
Steam Boller Works,
(ESTABLIS D 1880.)
A. S. OH YSTAL
successor to Ohrytail a Eagle
Marailacturera of all kinda of Stationary
Marine, Upright & Tubular
BOILERS
Salt Pans, Smoke Stacks, Sheet Intl Work,
etc., etc.
^
Also dealers in Upright and Horizontal Slide Valve
ngittes. Automatic Cut -Oft Engines a specialty. All
izes of pipe and pipe -fitting raneiantly on hand
Estimates; furnished on ehort notice.
Works -a -Opposite G. T. R. Statiou, Goderleh.
404.•
eteftlegt
sL,
Charles .72: Huteltings,
k Headache
IMED PERMANENTLY
BY TAKING .
er's011s
"1 as troubled a long time with Me -
bead tche-. I tried a good many remedie
reoo mended for this 0011Ppialliti DLit
. was ot until
Bega taking Ayer's effis
that I. received 'permanent tAneflt.
saigl box of these pills free I me from
beads cites, mull am nova well mare'.
—p. . IfuTotmeosttnast ampere, Ine.;
Awar ed Medal at World's Fair
Aier's Sarsaparilla tat te Dast '
RE L ESTATE FOR S.LE.
-LIOR SAL OR TO RENT.—The house lately
12 oupied by Wm. Carnoohan, East Of tilt. Jam
Church, Se forth. • Apply tra. HOLM.aSTED.
1453ti
1G1ARMS F R SALE.—The undersigned hes tweetv
J , Choice Farms for sale in East Huron, the ban-
ner County 1 the Province; all sizes, and prices to
gaits. Fcr 1 11 information, write or call perponally.
No trouble t show them. F. S. soOrT, Brussels
P. 0. 13914
FARM
FOR SALE —100 acres, in the township of
Greyr • ear Brussels. There is on it nearly 60
acres of busl , about balf black ash, the rest har
wood. A ne er-failing spring of water runs. throu h
the lot. Wi I be sold at a big bargain. . For taartio t-
iara. apply to MRS. JANE WALKER, Box 2 9, ,
Brussels. 1470
FARM FO SALE. --For sale, Lot 11, -Concesai n
6, Hul ett, containing, 100 acres, pleare ,
welt underd ained, and in a good state of etetiv
teni. There are 15 acres SW a with fall *heat, a d
all the fall lowing done. There is on tire place a
frame house with kitchen and woodshed attache
has two fran e barns with other *outbuildings. T is
is a pod far 1, well situated, being 9 miles titan Se
forth, 7 mil s from Clinton, and 11 miles from t
village of K .burn, and will be sold on reasona le
terms. Ap y to the proprietor on the pretniaes, r
ruldress W. EITCH, Constance P. 0. • 113.1.-tf
1
BLEND! FARM FOR SALE—Lot 25, Cone 8 -
don 6, ownship of Merris, containing 150 am. ,s
su table for ain or stock, situated two and 1 a -h If
miles from t e thriving village of Brussels, a go. d
ravel road I mil,* thereto; 120 acres cleared a d
tree front s rope, 6 acres cedar and ash and balan e
hardwood. Barn 61x60 with straw and hay sh d
40x70, stone stabling Underneath both. The hou e
is brick, 21. 12 with kitchen 18x26, cellar nndernea h
bah buildin . All are new. There is a large you
orchard. S.. ool on next lot. The land has a go
natural drai age, and the farm' hi in good conditio
Satisfaotory easeins for selling. Apply at TER9 EVE-
rOSITOR 0 CM, Or on the premises. WM. BARRIg,
Brussels. 133541
g •
aring Sale
---OF—
OCKERY.
AS we in ,end giving up the Crock,
hu-iness, now is the time
to'' get
s Bargains •
Nineteen d Ilar dinner sets for $13 ; $15 dinner
to
sets for 810 ; 12 inner sets for 88 ; $7.50 -dinner
sets for $5.60 $9 toilet sets. for $0.50 ; 86.60 tottlt
sets for $4 ; .50 ilet seta for $3.75 ; $3.50 . toilet
sets for 82.5 ; '2 toilet sets for 81.45. Lamps and
lamp goods v ry c eap ; the best lantern ever offer-
ed in Seafort for No, usual price,85e ; lake herring,
$3 per pa.ek ge ; we keep or. hand Canned Beci;
Tongue, Tur 133, a d. Glasgow Beef Ham. Have yoipi
,
tried Frankf rt auaage, just the thing for tea oi
lun It, ready for nee at
The
Popular Store.
ROEB BROS.,
SEAFORTH.
11 1 ;it
1
I
• "---"r
4 el:
No. 1 Hard
What No. 1 Hard is among wheat
The Page Coiled Spring is alum
fences—in 20n1parab;e.
All ban't Raise
No. I Hard
For in f ormatio
call or send f 3
Seafortb, On a
But. all CAN:raise the Page Woven
Wire Fence.
and partieul rs, 0 1
0. C.. WILLSON,
The Page.Fenee‘Mao,
1470
444444
111
4
4
4
4
114
4
* Books for I
* Wrappers
tadisli44444
A Qu
best of
Victoria
Su
4444444444444414
-4
4.
"
will buy. only the
everything. Queen
uya
for use In all her palace
laundries.
But it's a cheap everybody can
afford to se it, in fact as the "best
Is the ch pest" nobody can afford
wet to use Washes clothee,washes
everything with less ilabor, greater
comfort.
Used all
ver the
civilized world. .„4
4
For everyt9 Wrappers sent 1111„,
to Lovian BROS.t Ltd., 23 lie
Scott S4, Toront_ ,o a use. -4
ful paper -bound book will 4,
be sent.
4444444444444
NIL.d 1-1 IJ 11,0N
-•••=-
IN TRUMPET $OUNDS a0Vir lonely the house seems until
• get home I But, alasi for those evh
come heino. Sometlines t seems
REV. DFIt TALMAGE PREACHES A SER -
MON FULL. ,OF HOPE. I I
I
.
I
I I
Help For the Hopeless Through the Mune
,
of _Chrlst—The Need of Sympathy—Fut-
Ailment of a Great Froinise—A Mighty
Gathering. 0
WasrmenToie, Feb.! . 23.—Th1s sermon
sounds the nate of triumph, a note that
all will be glad to hear in these times,
whet so many are lettering and writing
jeremiads of discouragement. Dr. Tal-
mage took as his text GeDOSIS thiliX 10,
i
people be." •
"Unto him shall e gathering othe
Through a supernatural lens, or what
I might call a prophoscope, dying Jacob
looks down through tbe corridors of the
centuries until he sees Christ the center of
all popular attreation, and the greatest be-
ing in all the world, so everywhere ao-
knowledge& I. was not always so. The
world tried hart to put him down and to
put him out. In the' year 120,0, while ex-
eavating for antiquities 53 ini.es northeast
of Rome, a copper plate tablei was found
containing tho death Warrant of the Lord
Jesus Christ, reading in this wise:
"In the year 17 of the empire of Tiberi-
us Ceesar, and on the 255h ozf MarobeI,
Pontius Pilate, :evertor of the Prretore,
condemn Jesus f N4areth to die between
two thieves, Qui tius Jornelius to lead him
forth to the plao: of xecution."
; - Seoffe as orshipera.
The dehth vve 'rant was signed by.sever-
al names. Firs , by Daniel, rabbi, Phari-
see; secondly, b Johannes, rabbi; third-
ly, by Raphael; fourthly, by Capet, a pri-
vate citizen. T ilea 'till punishment was
execnted accord nte t law. The name of
the thief crucifl d or the right hand side
of Christ was t lima ;-' the name of ;the
thief crucified n t! e left hand side of
Christ was Ges us. Pontius Pilate, de-
soribitg the tra edee. ays the whole .world
lighted candlefrom noon until night.
Thirty-three yea sof maltreatment, They
ascribe hie birth to bastardy and his death
to excruciation. A wall of the city, built
about those tim s and recently exposecl. by
archeeologists, s ows a caricature of Jesus
Christ, evidencing the contempt in which
he was held by many in is day—that
caricature on the evalgrepres ntitg.a cross
and a donkey tailed' to it, and under it
tho inscription, "This Is the Christ whom
the people worship." But I rejoice that
Shat day is gone by. ()Ur Christ is coming
out from under the *orld's abuse. The
mostpopular nem° oh Berth today is the
name of Christ. Whore he bad one friend
Christ has a thousand:friends. The scoff-
rs have become the Worshipers. Of the
0 most celebrated infidels in Great Brit -
in in our day 16 have come back to Christ,
trying to und0 the blatant mischief of
har lives -16 but of the 20. Every man
who; writes a . letter or signs a document,
wittingly or unwittitgly, honors . Jesus
Christ. Wo date evetything as B. C. or
.:D. -:-.B. C., before Oprist; A. D., ABDO
Donald, in thoyear of our Lord. Ail the
ages of history on tho pivot of the upright
earn of the croes' of the Son of God, B. C.,
A. D. I do not care what you, call hirn—
whether Congticror, or King, or Morning
Star, or Sun of Righteousness, or Balm of
Gilead, or Lebanon Cedar, or Brether oe
Friend, or take the nano used iu the verse;
from which I teke ni text, and call him'
Shiloh, which eans lfds Son'or the Trani
quilator, or the Peacemaker, S.hiloh. 1 Oil-
y want to tel you that "unto -hint shall
She gathering o the people be."
In the first lace, the people are gath-
red around Ch int for pardon. No sensi-
le man or ho- lthfully ambitious man is
atisfled with is nest life. A fool may
hink he is alt right. A sensible man
-nows be is n et. I 10 not care who the
houghtful ma is, 51i4 review of his life-
ime behavior I efore lGod and man gives
o him no espec al sati faction. "Oh," be
ays, "there Imee been so many things I
awe done I ou 1. ht not to have done, there
eve been so :II any things I have Said I
ught never to ave s id, there have been
;,,
o many thing. 1 I ha e written .,I ought
ever to have'w 'Men, there have eon so
any things 11 eve t ought I ou !at nev-
✓ to have tho -ht. must somehow get
,hiugs readjust d, I must somehow have
be past reconst eteted; there are days and
onths and ye rs whieh cry out against
e in horribl vociferation." A h, my
robber, Christ adjust ii the past by oblitt
rating it. He ems not erascatehe record of
ur misdoing w •th a dash ()Milk from a
11 eggaiisnt es et ' s hispen ,b teuetrd ilni :1 n brow,
nhwis, riagnhdt btannedn,
" rushed," red a the palm, he puts it
( rgiaminsostu aholosupnile laaetdionbsidfe'an
iththe
allthdwose wounds
e rubs out th emu atory ebapter. He
lots out ouf ini uities Oh, never bo anx-
ous abot4 tho future better be anxious
bout the past. , I putt not at the end of .
ley sermon; I put it t the front—mercy
,
nd pardonOr ugh Shiloh, the sin par -
ening Christ. 'Unto him shall the gath-
ing of the peo le be.' "Oh I" says sorne'
xi au, "I have. f r 40 Years been as bad as
1 could be, an( is there any mercy for
i a?" Mercy fo You.- "Oh I" says some
.no here, "I I) d a grand ancestry, the
1 Wiest of fatht s and the tenderest of
lathers, and r • 'my perfidy there is no
e °use. Do yet think there is any mercy
f )r me?" Mercy for yeti. "But," says on-
o her man, "Ile r 1 hata committed mhat
5 ey call thee u apardonable sin, and the
ible says if a n an conimit that sin, Leis
n ither to 'be rgiven in this world nor
,
t e world to con e. Do you think there is
a y mercy for 1 e?" The fact that you
h ve any solici tide abbut the matter at
a 1 proves positively that you have 'not
ct mmitted tho npardoaable sin. Mercy
. f r you? Oh, the grace a God which bring -
t r s salvation 1
For lth Worst Sinners.
i
The grace cif C od! Ldt us take the sure
v :yor's chain nd try - o measure God's'
moray through Jesus Chlrist. Let ODO ser-
ve or take that -chain and go to the north,
a d another surveyor ta ' e that chain and
ge to the south, and alio her surveyor take
th 5 chain and go to tbe east, and another
su •veyor take that cam n and go to the
w strand then make a ro ort of the. square
m les of that vast kiugd m of God's mer-
cy. Aye, you will havo tie wait to ell eter-
ni y for the report of that measurement.
It cannot be measured, Paul tried to
ell b the height of -it, end he -went height
1 ov r height, altitude above altitude, moun-
I tat above mountain, then sank down in
. dis ouragement and gaVe it up, for he
; sa Sierra Nevadas beyend and Matter -
1 ho as beyond, and waving his hands back
to s in the plains he sa si "Past finding
out, unsearchable, that n all things he
ani lit have the pre-emin nee." You no-
'tice that nearly. all the si ners mentioned
as ardoned in the Bible were great sin-
ner —David a greet sinn r, Paul a great
sin er, Rehab a great sinner, Magdalene a
re t sinner, the Prodigal !sou a great sin -
or. The world easily enderstood how
hr st could pardon a half and half .sin -
but what the world Wants to be pert ,
ua ed of Is ttat Christ IvrIll Torgive the
wor t sinner, the hardest ;sinner, the old-
st sinner, the most inexcusable sinner.
o ha sin pardoning Shiloh let all the
at oring of the people -be. „
B 5, I remark again, the people will
at s er around Christ Elsa sympathizer.
I) • we all want sympathy. I hear people
lk as though they were independent of
t. None of us cbeAd live without synapa-
hy. Whet parts et our family are away,
boy an
;rover
s 1/ it
must be impossible. , will tl oir feet
never again tome over the threshol ? Will
they never again sib with us at th table?
Will they never again kneel wit us at
family prayer? Shall weacver ag in look
into their sunny faces?' Shall w never
again ou earth take oounsin -with tem for
our work?
Alas mo, who can stend uncle these
griefs! Oh, Christ, thou (iamb clo i ore for
a bereft soul than auy one else. 5 is he
who stands beside us to tell of th; resur-
rection. It Is he that came to itio 'peace
It Is he that 00111BS to its and reathee
into us the spirit of sibmissio until
we -can look up from tho 'wreck d fulu
of our brightest expeot tions a d say,
"Father, not my -min, but th ne, be
done." Oh, ye whe4ro b reit, ye nguish
bitten, come into this' ref go. Th roll of
those who (mine /or rel'ef td 01 rist is
larger and larger. ' Unto! this Sh loh of
omnipotent sympathy the gathering of
the people shall be. Oh, that Chris would
stand by all. these empty; cradles, nd all
these desolated hot °steads, and all these
broken hearts, and persuade us it 1 • well.
/treed Syinfrathy.
The world canna offerlyou any lelp at
suob atimo. Suppose the World ocn as and
offers ou money. You iold ratl er live
ona crest in a cellar a d have y ur de-
parted laved ones with 3fou than ive in
palati 1 surroundinge aid they away.
-
Suppe e the world offers ou its ho ors to
oonsol you. Wbat is t e presid ney to
Abrah m Lincoln when ittle Wil ie lies
dead . n the White Hous ? i
,Perba s the
world omes and says, "T me will ure it
fill." h, thore aro griefs that hay raged
- on for 30 years and are ra hag yet. And
yet hu dreds :have been' oteforted tilled-
, sands ave been comfort ' raillio. s have
been o tiforted, and Chri t had do e the
work. . Oh, what you want Is syn pathy.
The world's 'heart of sympathy bee s very
-irregularly. Plenty of synapathy w en we
do noSi went it,'Innd often,1 when we are in
appall ng need of it, no sympathy. There
are nilultitudos of people dying f r sym-
pathy tympathy in -ther work, tsympa-
thy i4 their fatigues, sy npathy in their
bereavlernonts, sympathy lin their financial
losses, 1 sympathy in their -physical ail-
ments sympathy in thelrl spiritual anxie-
ties, sympathy in the ithine of deolining
years—wide, deep, high, I everlasting, al-
mighty sympathy. We.niust have it and
-Christ giveS it. nab, in the cord with
which he ie going to iirlitW all nations to
him. - ' .1 . .
At the story of publishment a man's
eye- flashes and his teett set and his fist
clinches, and he proper s io do battle oven
though -rit be against tl it heavens; yet
I Even • a man's
what hearts so hard bet tt will succumb to
the story of compassio
i
sympathy is pleasant! a ell helpful. When
we have been in sono mar of weakness,
to have a brawny man ;stand beside us
• and premise to see es ' through—what
courage it gives to of r ifeart and what
o strength it gives to our r. 1: Still mightier
is a woman's sympathy. Let him tell the
story, who, when all his fortunes were gone
and all the world was egainst him, came
home and found. in that hbine a wife who
could *rite on the top f ; the empty flour
barrel, "The Lord will ttovide," or write
on the door Of the empt, Wardrobe, "Con-
sider the lilies of the field ;; if God so clothai
ed the grass of the field, Will he not clothe'
us and ours?" Or let that young man tel-
tho story who has gone the whole. mend
of dissipation. The shadow of the peni-
tentiary Is upon him, toed, even his father
says: "Be off! Never o&r4e home again!"
Tile. young man finds hti• I his mother's
arm outetretched for hi , and how she
will stand at the wicketi df the prison to
Whisper consolation, or get down on her
knees before the govetinir, bogging for
pardon, hoping on for her wayward boy
after all others are hopeless. Or let her
tell the story Who, undee villainous al-
lurement and impatient of parental re-
ttraint, has veandored off /rem a home of
which she was the idol Into the nnirky
and thunderous midnigh of abandon-
ment, away from God, anc further away,
until some time she is tossed on the beach
of that early home a mere splinter of a
wreck. Who will pity her now? Who will
gather these 'dishonored locks into her
leo? Who will wash off the; blood froin the
gashed forehead? Who will tell her of that
Christ who came to saveithe lost? . Who
will put - that weary head :upon the 'clean
white pillow and watch by day and Watch
• by night until the hoarse Voice of the suf-
ferer becomes the winsper,: and the whis-
per becomes only a faint, motion of the
lips, and the faint motion of the lips is
exchanged for a silent lotik, and the out
feet are still, and the Wea.ty eyes are still,
and the frenzied heart is still, and all is
still? Who Will have coMpassion on her
when no others have compession? Mother!
Mother I ' ,
A Variety of Don' ons. ' .
Oh, there is something beautiful in sym-
pathy—in manly sympathy, wifely sym-
pathy, motherly sympathy; yea, and
neighborly sympathy! Why was it that a
oity was aroused with excitement when a
little child was kidnaped from one of the
streets? Why were whole columns of the
-newspapers filled with the story of a little
child? It was because we aro all. one in
sympathy, end every parent said: "How
if it had been my Lizzie? How, if it had
been my Mary? How if t had been my
Maud? How if it had beenttey child? How
if there had been one unbcoupled pillow
in MIT trundle bed tonight.? flow if my lit-
tle one—bone of my bete end flesh of my
flesh—were tonight ;tarried captive into
tome don of vagabonds, never to come
back to me? How if It hail been my sor-
row tooking out, of th ' -window, watching
and waiting—that erre* worse than
death?" . Then, when they found her, why
did we declare the n ws all through the
households, and everybody that.knew how
to pray say, "Thank God?" Boca -nee we
are all oue, bound b one. great golden
chain of sympathy. ;Oh, Yes, but I have
to tell you that if you will. aggregate all
neighborly, manly, wyely, motherly sym-
pathy, ..it will he found oulyi a 'poor starv-
ing thing compared with the sympathy of
our great Shiloh, wile; has held in bis lap
the sorrows of the ages, abdi Who -is ready
to nurse on his holy.h art the woes of all
•
xi
who will come th hin. Oh , what a God,
what a Saviour We hae! , • .
But in larger vision see the nations in
some kiad of trouble 'ever since the world
was derailed and .hurle down the ene bank-
metts. The demon if sintiame to this
world,. but other 4enionue have gone
through other worlds. The (lemon of con-
flagration, the demon of volisanic disturb-
ance, the demon of de tructiou. .
La Place says be s w one World in the
northern hemisphere 6 months burntng.
Tycho Brahe said he saw
burning. A French astrono. or says that
in 300 years 1,600 worlds have disappear-
ed. I do not see why infld is find it so
hard to believe that two wor cis stopped in
JoShuads time, .when the astrpnorners tell
usthat1,500 worlds have st Pped. .Even
She moon is e wortd -1re1ns ; Stellar, lu-
., .
nar, solar catastrophes Mutt erable. But
it seenis as if the mo sorro 8 have been
reserved for our worldBy One toss of the
world at Ticuboro, of , 12,000; inhabitants
only 26 people escaped. By Ione shako of
the world at Lisbon In five M2nutes.60,000
oln3
perished and 200,00 th
befo*i the ear
stopped rocking. A.- ouniain faits in
Switzerland, burying the villege of Gel -
data A mountain falls in Italy itt. the
night, when 2;000 people are asleep, and
eturhetyhzabr
tevueranarouoskes.uBh irotuo
aconvehlsinio: of a
f3the
oe
.1a
la
vnision of the earth t
ds broken off from A
ds near the mouth of
B 0,000 inhabitants—a
se breaks over theml
5bat day. Alas, alas, for
Lb has been recently di
w tole contin nt has an
!diet connect° Europe a
nts of tba
-5 coming
of Mexico
ssissippi, and we are find -
mains of t moutds and
Mexico, Colorado and
of thowCsi It is a matter
ofJ demonstration that a «holo cottinent
eff the aoaet of
untain of that
SU deseribed that
e multitude of
r: and ite avOul
thoug t it Was
iats ha
he En
titian fl
of the inhabit
so Europo, pa
She tablelands
In
th
tb
lloys of the
now the r
sir cities 1
tablelands
• Caribbean le-
extba. Three is -
he Ganges, With
cah surge of itha
d g14, 000 petish
o r poor world.
covered that a
ke a continent
d timerioa, part
continat t -going
to 1,A/twice over
-UP through the
s gone dow
ftin only th
nkon oontil
co Itinent, its
-it. Inhabitant
d struotion, a
a jornauoo, bu
Ot t ie was hi
th German al
gcjno forth w
0 &longer a
ze le have drat ped anchor, and in
sOandings the have found the c
t Get sunken o ntinetat.
i to Christ.
Oh, there s trouble marked
aka, on tho ky, on the sea, on
a—astronomical
the Azor
highest in
mat. Plat
grandeur,
, its splend
d the wort
archeeolo
tory, and
d the Am
th amine° ogists, and
• the Dolphin an the
dee
nto
re fonnd
lieh end
ets
the
Ga -
sea
r of
✓ t on the
he flora.
a d the fan trot tile,
g ()legion' trohble, oceanic troubl , pati-
o trouble, domestic trouble—a d stet d-
in in the presence of all those stimend us
d vastations, I ask if I am not in
s
ing that the great want of this age
a d all ages is divine sympathy and oen-
ni otent comfort, and they are found tot
in the Brahma of the Hindu° or the Allah
of the Mohammedan, lent in the Christ
unto whom shall the gathering of the peo_
plh be. Other worlds my fall, but this
morning star will never be blotted Irani
the heavens. The earth may quake, but
thIls rook of ages will never -be shaken
/r in its foundations. The same Chaist
who fed the 5,000 will feed all the world's
h nger. The same Christ who cured :n4r-
tulinotis will illumine all lindness. Tile
sane Christ who made t e (lamb speak
w 11 put on every tongue a hosanna. The
sane Christ who awoke L zarus from the
sajoophagus will yet rally a 1 tbepious dead
In glorious resurrection. ' • know that my
It deesmer Jiveth," and tha "to him Omit
th i gathering of the peopl be." Ah, my
frl1ouds, when Christ starts horoughly and
quickly to lift this misera le wreck of a
su ken • world, it will not take him long
to lift it.
have thought that thi particularage
in jwhichwo live may be Ivan up to dis-
coveries and ilIVODtiODS by Mole through
qu ele and instantaneous ommunicatien
allJ cities and all communities ,:and all
leads will be brought tog then end then
In lanothee period perhaps 5 ese inventiotas
n1
-u
w ich have been sed for worldly purpoSes1
wi I be brought out for gospel invitatio ,
asome groat prophet of the Lord w 11
co le and snatch the in sterious, sul e-
l' e and miraculous til ephone cretin
th4 hand of commerce, nd, all lands
an kingdoms connected y a wondroas
wi e, this prophet of th Lord mat
th ough telephonic counnu -ication, in tin '
113 tant announce to all n Wins par*
anul sympathy and life t a rough James
C Tist, and then, putting the wondrons
th)o to the ear of the Lord s prophet, the
:
roslponso shall 'come back, 'I believe in
God, the Father Ahnigh y, Maker Of
;_ heeven and earth, and in Je us Christ, his
on y begotten, Son."
ou and I may not live to see the clay. 1
th nk those of us who are o er 40 years of
1
th
ag can to s scatcoly expect e e day. I
expect before that time our bodies will be
soend asleep in the hammo ks of the old
go pel ship as it goes sa1' ing on. But
il
Cla ist will wake us up in t me to see the
ac ievement. We who have vveated in the
holi harvest _fields will be t the doe; of
th garter when the she ves come in.
Th t work for which in his world We '
toi ed and wept and stru led and IV(D'e
oueselves out Omit not co e to consult- '
mation and wo be oblivious f the achleVe-
me et. We will be allowe( to come out
-an4 shake hands with the victors.
The Great Victory.
We who fought in . the earlier battles
wil bave 'list as muoh rig1t to rejoice es
tho o who reddened their oet in the lalat
Annagedden. Ah, yea, th se who con (.1
onl give a cupful of co11 water in the
na e of a disoiple, those ho could only
scrape a handful of lint or a wounded
soldier, those who could oily administer
to lehl age in its decrepit cle, those who
could only coax a poor wai1 of the str4et
to go back home to her od, those who
could only lift a little child in the arnaslof
Chilist, will have as much right to take
part in the ovation to t e Lord Jests
Chitist ae a Chtysostoni. 5 will be yea*
vietIory and mine, as well s Christ's. Efe
She oonqneror, we shoutin in his trap,
Chtst the victor will plc out the hu‘t-
hie t of bis disciples in he crowd, ad
turtting half around on th white hors ei f
-victory be shall point her sut foaapprotel
by ithe ntultitude as he says, "She Md
whet she could." Then p tting his hand
on the head of some man, who by his 10-
dusry made ono talent 0 the work f
ton, ha will say, "Thou It st been faitlifel
1
o
(wee a few things; I will ake thee teller
even ten cities." Two (1 ilerent theories
abolllt the fulfillment of thts promise.i ,
T ere are people who th'nk Chris will
come in person and sit on a throne.
imp4 he may. I should like to se
scarred feet going up the s airs of a p
'tit aibieh all the glories of the Atha]
and the Taj Mahal,
and
shot
in 1
the Winter palace a
ld like to see the w
Ve for what in did to
teten I 'should like to
groolts of the chargers, h
ruP 44 the king mounts.
rime time it would be on
would break through th
right' here where he has s
have [this prophecy fulfill
shallithe gathering of the
faith* it that, 1 barge'
the itonderous gate of h
when' our Lord comes ba
all nhtions on his brow
I Continued on pe
Per -
the .
lees
bre,
Id St. Mark*
e gathered. II .
rld pay Onriet
im in maltreat -
be one of the:
lding the'stit
Olu what a gl -
earth if Chriet
heavens, I and
ffered andldied
d—"Unto !him
eople be." 1 But
to meet en u tat
ave te on th de .•
k. Garlands . f
of the bronzed
soutaipti
at's tha tim0
If you lzalie a Cough
it is time yon were ta ing
G AY'S of RED
SYRUP PRUC
UNE
TH DLD STANDARD CTJRZ
FOR 4OUGHS, COLDS,
AS11.11 A an all LUNG PPR-CTION.§.
dray's Sy tup has been on trial for morc thee
so years and the verdict o the people that
its the best repiedy kno vn. e. an 4 5o e_
bottle. Sold everyw ere.
Kenay WATSON & Co eROPRIEVRA
(5) 1 a4oNTR.E
P. KEAT
contra tor and Buil
DEABIb
Lureber and So
' Good Hnnlc* Lumber always
wanting I mber don't need to go
they can et it as, cheap at home,
NG
er, Seafcrth,
ingles.
011 hand., Parties
20 or 2.5 milles wheo
and better lunlber.
14(4t
FEBRUARY 2
8964
()MINION
C PITA!, PAID UP)
$1,500000.
$1.500,000.
SEAFORTH BRA CIL
AI ST-4ET, SEAFORTH.
. A eneral baiking business transacted. Drafts on all parts of the United States,
Great Jritam and Europe bought and sold. Letters of credit issued, available in all parts
of Europe,China and Japan. Farmers' Sale Notes collected, and advances made on same
at low4t rates.
De its of
rates. Interest a
No notice of with
I
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.
e Dollar and upwards received, and interest allat Wheat Curren
ded to principal twice each year—at the end of June and December-
wal is required for the whole or any portion of a deposit
I.
R. S. AYS, Solicitor.
W. K. PEARCE, At.
1::4117
. Colds
Coughs,
Grippe, C
2 1171
V1, npopin
fitagassassolissaas sa&
“smsnuitf;anorsumtseut-32m•es.mmuuwz
0 ette The finest Remedy in the
World for all Affec-
tions : of the Throat &
Lungs.1
tinei
asausaaassaassistaasaaattstatassasasteassiasossisststasmassssaimasstessal
,
Hay
Suit
MAIN
We have a splendid line of caps for fall wear
Knock -abouts for rainy weather and neglige wear.
We also have the best waterproof coats, umbrella;
and other requisites for the Season.
you bought your Fall
and Hat yet?
See our line. Good Goods, rig,ht prices, entir
e
reliability.
, BRIGHT BROS.
TRI' , SEAFORTH.
eigilliiiiii*- v o.4- a --4,0•11P111111115,. _......,,
qrAii ,IN r.nr.. iitIASIaafretcliri, ,
....are Made of the same kind of
leather as the Slater Shoes—best
/American ce.lfskin. Money can't
buy better leather, or' better work-
manship, than is put in. these Cana -
dial shoes. They are made on the
lineet and. moat foot -fitting Arneria
COM lasts, by- the famous Goodyear
Welt process superior to hand
made. Made, too, Irt the cheapest labor market onthe
contilern:t—Montreal—which means that there Is more
shoe N eine for the money in them than can be had. in
any -American made shoe --black ortan.
. Ask for World's Fair Prize Winners.
FOR SALE • BY ROBERT VVILLIS, SEAFORTH.
Little Knowledge
a
4rOASIC+.74.4.745
Is not a dangerous thing when. it directs your attention to the
. fact that the
Fore4 City Business and ShOkhand College
'CDH' T.401\41-3,301NT., C.YI\TM.
Is giving ale most practical and business -like course in Canada. Everything
strictly high grade. Write for catalogue and college journal- School re-
opens Jlantary 2nd, 1896.
1442 J. W. WESTERVELT Principal<
IT WILL PAY: YOU
TO EXAMINE 00
JiITJRNTITTJ]{'
VAINIUMMINNEMEZZAT MUM=
We are still adding to our already large stock, and we are
now prepared to meet the *ants of every one requiring fur-
niture. It -win pay you to examine our goods before pur-
chasing elsewhere, as we are sure to please you in prize,
style and quality.
UNDERTAKING .
Our undertaking department is complete in every respect, and
we guarantee satisfaction. S. T. Holmes, Funeral Director.,
Residence next door to Drs. Scott & McKay's office.
ROADFOOT, BOX & CO.,
_
Main Street, Seaforth, Porter's Old Stand.;
'11
OTALl
C.) •811
proven);
J. BX
*torte,
nrldge
a
laves
fat -cane
TOCIi
13£1,
$50 up;
a numb
sisoxth
easy -te
Oats, g
1825—n
also lir
Prus.sial
grain a
Ontario.
hires,
also k
chased
—41 p
retn
DOR
forth I
p
(imiee
Road
lour ,
or Sep
Nagai
• ARG
F. 0..
F°B
half tu
lug cb
from
the p
neath,
house,
frame
woods
eentre
and in
eral t
Price
able
choi
b
For
DEN
fr
Doe
mon
or w
rise
they
bao
out.-
0