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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1896-03-20, Page 2• 2 1 CATCH ON TO THIt Best Opporttin4y OF A -I LITT, trimE For buying cheap W nter S oes, Rubbers and Overshoes. is a quick turn on very else mai gins, to make room for our Spring stock.. .CA OH 6N Tb THE That these goods an nolw be bought at prices never before named. No one Should miss taking advantage of t,his LOW PRIOE SALE - Richardson & M'innis MAIN STREE THE SE Musical - I EMPO IMAMS , SEAFORTH. FORTH estiument ITT ED 1673. Owing to hard tithes, we have con- cluded to sell Pianos and Organs at Greatly Belt Prices, Organs. at $25 and uppiards, and Pianos at orreaond1ig prices. SEE US BEFORE PURC ASING. SCO .111PORTA SCHOOL T BROS. T TO BOARDS. . T H Fisk Teache 8 •gency, • BANK OF COMME CE BIIJILD1NG, 25 King Street est, . Toronto. Supplies schkpols wit teaehers for- all gra( es. No eh rges. re make enquiries for onfietential informs ion concerning all applicants, andi our re ornmendations can, ther fore, be relied upon Write us if you rem. ire a teacher. In ormatiOn given to teat era on application. w. O. VieTAG (Toronto Universt Late / Huron County. WALL ARIL!' , B. A., y) Manager, 1442.52 PAPE I c rry the largest stock of good ah the lowest prices otai -New ood sold as cheap as any date goods. Why 1 can do so i nowe bought from 1 to 10 c they ere when old stook was I hay a b g stock and need th from: i centa per toll up. Wi ings, orniee pone, &o. &c., as trade. City Wall raper Haus opposite John St. • ew designs and fined y house in the county. etoek or out of beoauee goods bought nts per toll less than My expenses are low, money. Wall paper dow shades, Mould - cheap a any in the e, Main St. fieaforth, .JAS. GRAVES ' 9 Practical Paper Hanger and Painter. • 1 halm secured the services of three first -Wass paper hanger and can do work at the shortest notice. All work ,sranteed unsurpassed For proof of the „hove 1 fl and see ft, r yourself. Wall paper per trita ed free. , J. C. mith & •CO. $_ A General Banking hue ness transacted. Farmers' notes discounted. Drafts bought and sold '1 Interest allow d on dep its at the rate of 5 per cent. pe annum. . SALE NOTE.disceunte 1, or taken for collection. OFHCE—Fir t door rorth of Reid & Wilson'e Hardao re Store. SE. FORTH. THE FARM RS' Banking -.House SMA,FC::) 11‘33.. (In connection wtlth the Ban of Montreal.) LoGAN & 0.; BANKERS AND FINAN IAL AGENTS. OFFICE—In the Commer ial Rotel build- ing, next to the Town Hal A General Banking Busine done. Drafts issued and eashed. Interest ail wed on deposits. MONEY TO L ND On good notes or mortgagee - ROBERT LOG N, MANAGER. 1058 GODERI H Steam Boller. Works, (ESTABLISHED 1880.) . S. CHRYSTAL, Successor to Chrystal & Black; Manufacturers of all kinds of Stationary Marine, Upright & BO L •haler Sea Pans, Smoke tacks, She t Iron Works, etc., ete. Alto dealer® in Upright and Horl tal Slide Valve ngines. Autennatio Cut -Off Engin a specialty. AH fees of pipe and plea -fitting con try on hand Setirnetee furnished o short not' . Works—Opposite . T. R. Station, Goderieb, ,=I • \A W. IL 'Ward, A LIFE SAVED 13YTAEING ERRY AYER'S ECTORAL 13 "Several years- ago, le tight il. severe cOld -attended with a terrible Cough that allowec Me no rest, either dayr night. The doe t tors Proteptintced my case )(toeless. A friend, learning .of my trouble. ent me a bottle' o Ayers. Cherry Pectoral. By the time I had used the whole bottle, f I Was completely cured, and I believe it saved my life."—W. fl. WARD, 8 Quimby Avd,, Lowell, Mass. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Highest Awards at World's Fair. Lifets 'iiia the Best .Family Physic. ONIIINIMII.11111MIMMUM. REAL ESTATE F`OR SALE. TOR SALE OR TO RENT,—The house -lately vs - 1 onpied by Wm. Carnoohten'East of St. James' Church, Seaforth. Apply to 1/. HOLMESTED. lt53 tf ,( GOOD CHANCE FOR RETIRED FARMERS .L OR MARKET GARDENERS.—For sale, thirty acres of choiceland in Ilarpurheye specially ad spted for a matket garden or small farm. Good bu11dkge and every convenience. Apply to .ISAAC ;MILL on the premises. 1471-tfx1V FARMS FOR SALE.—The undersigned has twen v Choke Farms for sale in East Huron, the ba. ner County of the Province ; all sizes, and prices to suit. For full information; write or call personally. No trouble to show them. 1'. S. SCOTT, BrusselsP. P. 0. 1391-tf FFOR SALE —100 acres, in the township la •Grey, near Brussels. There is on it nearly acres of bush, abaut half black ash, the rest hard wood, A 'never -failing spring of water rune throug the lot. Will be sold at a big bareain. For partici' lars, apply to MRS. JANE WALKER, Box 21s, Brussels.• 1470, FARM t'OR SALE.—For sale, Lot 11, Concession 8, Mullett, containing 100 acres, all cleared, well undetdrained, and in a good state of cultiva tion. There ere 15 acres sawn with fall wheat, and all the fall pleasing done. There is on the place a frame house with kitchen and woodshed attached has two frainsi barns with other outbuildings. This is a gcod farm, well situated, being 0 miles from Sea forth, 7 miles from Clinton, and 1 miles from the village of Kieburn, and will be sold on reasonable terms. Apply to the proprietor on the premises, or address WI LEITCH, Constance P. 0. 1461-tf SPLENDID .FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 25, Conces Won 8, Township of Morris, containing 160 acres suitable for grain or stockt situated two and a half miles trine the thriving village of Brussels, a good gravel road leading theretb ; 120 acres cleared and free from stumps, 8 acres cedar and ash and balance hardwood. Barn 51x00 with straw and hay shed 40x7Q, stotte stabling undoeneath both. • The house is hrieitoetxse 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 fain good condition. Satisfactory reasons for selling. Appyi at Tim Ex- realTOR °Moe, or on the premises.- WM. BARRIE, Bruseels. 1835-tf VADEMARK 14Ind EGISTERED. a.90 Made a well Man of me:, -ft TfliHURON'E THE TINTER BLASDI. REV. DR TALMAGE Si-OWS HOW TO WARM T E WORLD. A Unique Text an, a P werfal Ser The Effect of the Cold -I -Warmth of Church of God—Tie 1,Verld's Flrepl WASHINGTON, M+.11 16.—The'-free blasts which have swept over tho oou Dr. Talmage's- text was Psalin oxlvii at the time wd exp °tied ;spring woe make this sermon specially appropr "Who can stand befere his cold?" The almanac says I that Winter is o ded and spring has cono, but the winds, the frosts, and the tl ermoznoters, in -s places down to zero, eny it. The psal lived in a zoom genial climate than and yet ho must SOI etlines have been by the sharp weather. In this ohapte ashes, the hailstone like math es and speaks of the snow 11re wool, II frost scribes tho congealm nt of ldwest tem ature. We have all 'studied the powe the heat. How few df us have studied power of the frost? 'Who can stand fore his cold?" This uhallenge of the t has many times been accepted. i. Opt. 19, 1812, Na oleon's great ar began its retreat iron Moscow. One h dred and fifty thousa d men, 50,000 hor 600 pieces of cannon, 40,000 stragglers, was bright weathep when they star from Moscow, but son something writ ler than the CoSsitokw swooped upon ti flanks. An army o; waits blasts ts' Icicles for bayonets and hailstones for sh and commanded •by voice of temp marched after them, the flying artill of the heavens in purimit. The trooPe nightfall would gather into circles a huddle themselves together for warn' ut when the day bro e they rose Pal he ravens oily corpses. The oh stuffs of the ea the Russian ea • 4 xposrroit. countenance, he shouted: "it stiqw snoWs!" On the next pile' ci there miserable tenement, and the ddo open, and a child, wan ori kick an goal and wretched, was b king ou he Said, "Oh, my God, i lenows!" to °air circumstances. nt, my friends, winter of gladness or ofillgrief, ode i*I°'1 thorn is mono than one ay of W,anling the up this oold world, for -lb 's a cold world sloe. in more respects than one and I am here to consult with you as to , he best way of fi warming up tho world.; want to have a itry groat heater introduced into all your , los throughout a insdt Ina ;tropics.; It is the powerful heater; it; Is temperate, and the temperate into the and it will turn the arctic zone Into. the the fuel. Once get tbis heater introduced, hich to conduct of divine patent. which to throw tho glorious furpece of Christian syln- pathy.. Tho question ought to be, instead - ell of how much hoot can e absorb, How r he uth heat can we throw out? Thom aro 1 Ike nen who go through 413 world; floating ' cobergs; They freeze ;everything with • Or- their forbluding look. The hand with r of which they shako yours i as cold as the s 1 it you not Willing to make a sacrifice ror was a your king?" And the /majority of those r was Who wore in the beat leaped overboard and d rag- @owned to save their king. How many t, and Men like that would it take to warm up The this cold World? Ellzaboth Fry went into ording the horrors of Nowgato prison, and she turned the imprecation and the obscenity and the filth into prayer and repentance and a reformed life. The Sisters of chari- ty, in 1863, on the northern and southern battlefields, camoto boys in blue and gray W lino they wore blooding to death. The black bonnet, with the sides pinned back and the white bandage on the brow, may Lot have answered all the demands of'*Me- 11 ant taste, but you could not persnade t at soldier dying a thousand miles from Nolle that it was anything but au angel Oat looked him in the foe. Oh, with cheery look, with helpful word, witit kind abtion, try to make the world warm! 4unt that day lost wisese lowi descending sun Views from thy hand no generous action done. Warmed by Christ: I It was his strong sympathy thatibrought hrist from a warm beaten to a cold 'viforld. The land where ho dvvelt had a s rene sky, balsamic atmosphere, tropical lc xuriance.; no storm blasts in .heaven; np chill fountains. On a cold December night Christ stopped out of a warm heaven to the world's frigidity. The thermome- t r in Palestine never drops below zero, '4t December is a cheerless Month, and Lo pasturage Is very poor on the hilltops. Christ stepped out of a warm heaven Into be cold world that cold December night. The world's reception was cold.. Tjasohnedps.uh::: e uloher was cold. Christ came, the fl 1 bestormed Galilee was cold great warmer, to warm the earth, a C ristendorn today feelS the glow. He It11 keep on warming the earth until the lo will drive away the arctic and ibe tarotio. He gave an intimation of her churches and all your bo eta tho world. It is a heater jag It has many pipes with s heat, and it has a door i the aw of a polar boar. If they float into a be- eligiou meeting, the temperature drops ext rom 80 above to 10 degrees below zero. here a e icicles hanging from their eye - my brows. They float into a religious meet- un- fog, and they chill every?hing with their t Seth ' jeremiads. Cold prayers, cold songs, cold = It greetInge, cold sermons. Christianity on t ted • ice! The church a, gr t refrigerator. 413- C,hristiatis gone into inter quarters. leir Hibernation! Op the other hand, there s 'Ph are people who gi throug4 the world like (Al the breath of a spring n °ruing. Warm est, greetings, warm prayers, warn n smiles, 817 warm Christian influen4e, There are at such persons. We bless God for them. nd We rejoice in their compo ionship. th, The Good Sam !tau. for•A general in the Eng for st, Pi - hey were dead, and heir morning Ineal o as strewn with ;the r rought as booty fro al. An invisiblepower seized 100,000 nen hurled them dead' into the snowdrifts nd on the bard Surfaces of the dhill riyers nd into the maws of the clogs that had ollowed them from Moscow. The feeing orror which has appalled history was proof a all ages that it is a vain thing for*any arthly Power to a000pt the challenge Of i y text, " Who cool stand be ore, his 'old?" In the middle of December, 4777, t Valley Forge, 11,00 troops were, with • osted oars and loge hands' and fro ted f et, without shoes, wi hoot blankets, ly- I • g on the white pill() of the snowbank. Frigid Horrors. As during our eivil lwar the cry as, "On to Richmond 1" wen the troops ere not ready to inareb, so in the Revolut on - a y war there was a demand for wintry o unpaign until Washington lost his qui - 1 brium and wrote emphatically, "I asSuro t ore gentlemen it is easy enough seated t be a good fireSide a$ in comfortable h 'm'ss to draw but ampalgns for the merican army, but I ell them 14 19 not s easy to lie on a bleak hillside, without b ankets and without shoes." Oh, tho f igid herrors that gathered around the • mericap army in tlae winter of 17771 Valley Forge was one df the tragedies of MI 0 Mitt ry. Benunabed, senseless, dead! ' "ho can stand frefore his cold?" "Not e," say the frozen lips of Sir John Frank11 a and his men, dying in aretio explora- 4 lin. "Not wo," 'answer Schwatka and h s crew, falling back from tho fortresses o ice which they' had tried in vain to er pturo. "Not we," say the; aband000d a d crushed decks of the Intrepid, the Re- s stance and the Jeannette. "Not we," say 41 e proceSsion of ;American martyrs ;ro- t rued hone for American sepulture, pe ng and his men; The highest pillars of e earth aro pillars of ice—Mont Blanc, ngfrau, the Matterhorn. Tho largest ilories of the world are galleries of lee. me of the mighty rivers much of the ar are in captivity of ice. The greatest ulptors of the ages aro the glaciers, with m and hand and chisel arid hammer of . . The cold is imperial and has a crown glittering crystal and is seated on; a ro e of ice, -with foot Stool of lee and s p er of ico. Who can tell the sufferings of t ie. winter of 1433, when all the birds a G.:many perished, or the winter of 1668 in Els gland, when the stages rolled on the T a es and temporary houses of mer - oh• dise were built on the ice, or the win - •f 1821, in America, When Now York tir was frozen. over and the heaviest s crossed on tho ice to Staten Island? come down ; to Or own winters, there have been so many wrapping selves in furs!, or gathering them- e around fires, or thrashing their about thorn te revIlve oiroulationa- nilllons of =the temPerate and the zones who are compelled to confess, e of us can stand b4ere his cold." Firelests Homes. . e -half of the industries of our day ate 1 yed in battling inclemency of t Ie ber. The furs of;tho I north, the co the south, the flax of our own fields, ool of our oWniflocks, the coal from n mines, the wood from our own s, all employe in battling these 4n- ncies, and' stil every winter, with lips and chat ering teeth, answers, I o of us can at nd before his cold." this being sue a cold world, God out influence to warm it. I am hat the God of the frost Is the God heat; that the God of the snow Is od of the will blossoms; that the f January is t e God of June. The ion as to how shall we warm this up is a quest? n of Immediate and ncompassing racticality. In this .ine and weather t re aro so many fire - ss hearths, sci en ny broken window sane , so many defective roofs that sift the so . Coal and woCci and flannels and ic coat Ye be ter for warming up such pi than tree, s a d Bibles and creeds. ind e that fire! whore it has gone out; rap something !aro ted those sbiverip g nib ; shoe those ba feet; hat that bare ead coat that bare ek;;sleeve that bare m. No rly all the pi lot res a Martha Wash- gto 1 erepresent her in ceurtly dress as we to by ft); lg enZbassadors, but rs, irkland, I hr Interesting book, vas a more inspiring portrait of Martha ash ngton. She conies forth from her ele nd's hut In the encampment, tho 4 • 0 feet long b'-14 fleet wide --she m forth fro Vint iiiii to nurse the k _ se W the p tokg ed ' ents, to con- rgtt le soldiers clYing of. I e cold. That tter picture of 1Mart Washington.' eds cif arntentauhn ire& of tons 1, hundreds; of glairs at broken w naebes, kimaretis of who k3 sealed nd Noiomen,;!ttrci DSCOSEfary to war ntry weather. te What are we doing re viathe eined tion iof those not se ate S we? 'f , the±o are Ihtindroda of thousands i Know ye not, my „ the le who eannottstandi hefore his cold? , seloss to preac to bare feet, and to stomachs i an to unt visages. gave the world a les;s n in common hen, before preachio the gospel to Mtn& in eni'wlIficfr ess, he gave good clipper. I was a lad, I reinernber seeing i gh woodcuts, ut they made more I ion upon me titian any pictures I er seen. no' were on opposite ' The one woodcut re resented the of the snow iti win r and a lad out at the door of a great men- d he was all wrapped in furs, and ks were ruddy and, With glowing INDARO Tile GREAT FORDO° REMEDY PROiYUCES TEE ABOVE REStLTS in 80 DAYS. Cures all Nervous Diseases. Failing Memory, Paresis, Sleeplessness, Nightly Emig- sions,,etc., caused by past a.buses, gives vigor and size to shrunken organs, and quickly but surely restores Lost 31nnitood in old or young. Easily carried in vest pocket. Price *1.00 a patkage. Six for 11)6.00 with a written frutarantee to cure or nioneyrefunded. DOn't buy an imitation, but insist on having INDAPO, It your druggist has not got it, we win send it preps, d. OrientalMedical 0o., Props.. Chicago, M., or our .gens. SOLD by J. V. Fear, SEAFORTH, ONT., aId leading druggists elsewhere. Clearing Sale CROCKERY. As As we intend odiving up the Crockery business now is the tinie to get • s Bargains Nineteen dollar ditiner sets for 813 ; 815 dinncr sets for 810 ; 412 dinner seta for 88 ; 87.50 dinner seta for 5.50;8 89 toilet sets for 5660; 0.50 toilet sets for $4 ; 55.50 tollei sets for 83.75 ; 53.50 toilet • sots for 52.50; $2 toilet sots for 31 45. Lamps and • lamp gooda very cheap the best lantern ever offer- ed in Seaforth for clo, usual prioe,85c ; lake herring, 3 per packa e ; we keep on hand Canned Beef, Tongue, Turkey a d Glasgow Beef Ham. Have you tried Frankfort S4usage, just the thing for tea or liune , ready for use at The ",Popular Store." R0,13)3 BROS., 8 AFOR,TH Ata Glance anyone can See the ciffe. enee be- tween the helm -bar of cleer, pure Stiiiiglit Soap and other lau dry soaps, but you'll know the di rence IN11 en you use it beeanse t leanses with 1 • Less !Lab° Greater Comfort Books for t•oetvteryst.1,243WoRrr0aappoel:rats Ltd., LEVER d 23 Wrappers el paper -bound book will lae sent. te pSeh a 118 I h Pr the 1'Nre 0 ea 011 he Ore le lue No ow end lad jf t od ileS orl 11 11 a 1 lr 0 si s le Is a b Run CO nd • Irld en e w all tu end peo Pt ris se 1111 133 he ro res 00 OS. In In eh ish army, the army having halted for the night, having lost his baggage, laY down! tired and sick without any blanket. .An officer came up li land said: "Why, you ha e no; blanket. 1,11 go and' get you a bla ket." He de- parted fqr a few moments - nd then caine back and covered the gen ral up with a very warm blanket. The general said, "Whose blanket is this?" he offteenre- plied, "I got that from a private soldier in the Scotch regiment, alph McDon- ald." "Now," said the eneral, "you take this blanket right b ok to that sol- dier. Ile can no more do wi hout it than I can do without it. Never b ing to me the blanket of a private soldier. How inahy men like that general wo Id It take to warm the world up? Theivast majority of us aro anxious to get iore blaakets, whether anybody else Is 1danketlo s or not. Look at the fellow fecling dis layed In the rocky defile" between erusale 1 and Jericho In Scripture times. ilore is man who has boon set upon by th bandit, and rn the struggle to keep his p operty 1 e has got wounded and mauled aro stabbed and he lies there half dead. priest rides along. Ho sees him andsays: "Why, what's the matter with tha man? Why, he must be hurt, lying oil itho flat f his back. Ispit it strange that he shou d lio there? But I can't stop. I am o my way to temple servies. Go along you beast, Carry me up to my te ple du les." Aftei awhile a Levite 001DOS up. He ooks over and says: "Why, that inan must be very Much hurt. Gashed (moth° foreli cad. What a piy! Stabbed oilier his :rm. What a pity! Tut, tut! V hat a ity! Why, they .have taken his Clothes n .aely all a ay from him. But I i haven't dine to st p. I lead the choir up In the te nplo servi e. Go along, you beas. Carr U p to my temple duties." Af er awhile a Samaritan ornes alo dg— one he you might suppose beetigh t. na- tiona grudge might have rejected this poor 'mindeIsraelite. Coining alon , he sees 4 iis man and says: "Why that len must be terribly hurt. I so by his fea- tures he is an Israelite, but he is a i.au, and he is a brother." "Whorl" says the Samaleitan, and be gets dowr. Off the 1peast and c mas up to this wetland d man, gets down on Ono knee, listens to ee wil ther the hart of the unfortuate n an Is still beati g, makes un his Juin !there is a chance for resuseitation, goe to wor at him, takes out of his sack a bo t e of oi and a bottle of wine, cleanses the ound v1th some wine, then pours some a the r tor- ative into the wounded mantis lips, hen takes some oil, and with it' eoothes the wound. After awhile 1e take e off a part of his garments for a bandataa Now the sick and wounded man sits 13p, pale and exhausted, but very thankful. Now l the good Samaritan says, "You enust get on my saddle, and I will walk." The Samar- itan helps and tenderly steadies this wounded man until he gets him on toward the tavern, the wounded man holdlog on with the little strength he his lefty ever and anon looking down at the good Sa- maritan and saying: "You ar verykind. I had no right to expeet this thing of a Samaritan when I am an Isr elite. You are very kind to walk and lot no ride." Christian Synapath • Now they have come up t the tavern. The Samaritan, with the help of the land- lord, assists the sick and wou (led man to dismount and puts him to bed. The Bible says the Samaritan staid all n ght. In the morning, I suppose, the Sam: Wan went In to look how his patient W s and ask him how be passed the nigh . Then he comes out, the Samaritan co es out, and says to the landlord: "Here s money to pay that man's board, and, Ihis conva- lescence is not as rapid as I hop for, charge II the whole thing to me. Good morning, all." He gets on the beast an says, "Go along, you beast, but go s/owl, for those bandits 'sweeping through th: land may have somebody else wound' * and half ead." Sympathy! Christian sympathy! How many such men as that w Id it take to warm the cold world up? -amine in ; th Zareptba. Everything drieup. There is a widow with 4 son and no ood except a handful of mea. She is gath -ing sticks .to kindle a fire to nook the handful of meal. Then she is going to wr p her arms around her boy and die. :ere comes Elijah. His tyro Week servants, the ra- vens, have got tired waiting o hien. He hasksaiid f.tohlaotf me 1 14ian fto or fobd. Now that be divide( into three parts. ]3eforej it was to be ivided into two parti. No she says to Elij h, "Come e in and s t dow at Oita solom table and take a bird of tise last mor el." How many women likthat would it take to warm th °old world up? Recen ly an engineer in the southwest, on a loodmotlyo, saw a train merlin with which be must collide. He resolvect to stand at kis post and slow up the train ntil' Mae lat Minte, for there were pas- segems behlu . no 4311310118fry :!Id tea the fiternan: "Jurpi One man Is enough on this Onginei J mp !" The Mem n jumped and was saved The crash earn . The en- gineer died at his post. How any men like that eiogi eor would it 4 a to warm this cold world tep? A vessel ruck on a rooky island. The pssenger and the crew weee'witiout food, and a sailor had a aheilfish under his coat He • as saving It for his last inorsel. He hea d a little child cry to 'her mother: "Oh, mother, I am so hungry! Cis° me someth ng to eat. I,arn so hungry!" Tile sailor took the shellfish from under his coat and said, "Here, take that," How man men like that sailor wetild it take to warn the cold world up? Xerxes fleteing from Ilisenerny. got on board al boat. A great Many Per- ians leaped into the same boat and the boat was sinking Some one 0 id, "Are )30 • • a w1iat he was going to d when be broke u the funeral at the ga of Nair* and tuned it into a reuni n festivaland w en, with his warm lip he melted the G lilean hurricane and st d on the deck and stamped his foot, o log, "Silence!" and the waves crouched, a d the tempests folded their wings. Oh, it was this Christ ho warmed the chillecl disciples when the had no food by giving them plenty to oat and who in the to It of Lazarus shatter d the shackles un il the broken links of 41 e chain of death rat led into the darkest cr 4 of the mau- solum. In his genial pr nce the, girl whp had fallen into the fir; and the wafter Is 1 ealed of the catalepsy, nd the wither- ed arm takes muscular, • ealthy action, am the ear that could not hear an ava- /an he catches a leaf's r stle, and the tongue that could not a tioulate trills a qualtrain, and the blind eye was reillpmed, arid! Christ, instead of sta Ing three days and- three nights in the sepulcher, as was sup °sod, as soon as the wo idly curtain of obs rvation was dropped be1gan the xplo- rati n of all the undorgro nd pa es of eart =and sea, wherever a Chris ia's gra e tnuiy after awhile be, and sta ted a lighIt of Christian hope, re=s rreotion hope, whieh 'shall not go out unt 1 the last cere- MEM b ip taken off and the lost mausoleum breaks open. orb, I am so glad that thc Sun of Right - eon. nese dawned on the poi r night of the nati, ns1 And if Christ ie the great warm- er, Oen tbe church is the great hothouse, with its plants and trees and fruits of rigiteousness. Do youknone my friends, the the church is the institution that pro pos s warmth? 1 hare been for 27 years sin ying how to make the church warmer. Waijrnor architecture, warmer hymnology, warmer Christian salutation. All outside Siberian winter we .must have It a prince's hothouse. The only institution on earth today that proposes to make the world warmer. Universities and observatorie, they all have their work. Theypropose to make the world I light, but they do not propose to make the world warm. Geology informs ine but it is as cold as the rook it han mers. The telescope shows where the otlxjr worlds aro, but an astronomer IS chil ed while looking through it. Chris- tian ty tells us of : strange combinations and bow inferior affinity may be overcome by simerior affinity, but it cannot tell how all things work together for good. World, ly philosophy has a great splendor, but it is We splendor of moonlight on an iceberg. The church of God proposes warmth and hope—warmth for the expeetations, warmth for the sympatbiea Oh, I am so glad 'that these great altar fires have been kindjed. Como in out of the cold. Come in a d have your wounds salved, • Cbme and have your sins pardoned. Come in by the great gospel firelace. i . The World's Fireplace. Nokwithstanding all the modern inven- tions for heating I tell you there is noth- ing so full of geniality and amiability as the oip faahloned country fireplace. The neighbors were to come in for a winter; evenig of sociability. In the middle of tho a tennoony in the best room in the house,' some one brought in a great baek- ltastoth great strain, and put it down on he ba k of the hearth. Then the lighter; acted was put on, armful after armful. Then a shovel of coals was taken from an - Other tioom and put under the dry pile, and thir kindling began, and the cracking, and it -pee until it becaine a roaring flame, which Ailed all the room with geniality and was reflected from the famtly pictures on the !wall. Thenthe =neighbors came in two by l two. They sat down, their faces to the 1ro, which ever and anon was stir- red wll4h tongs and readjusted on the and- irons, ind there were such times of rustic repeat and story telling and mirth as the black stove and bliad register never dreamed of. Meanwhile the table was be- ing sp*ad, ad so fair was the cloth and so cleaa was the cietlery they Olsten and glisten In our mind today. • And then the best luiury of orcherd and farmyard was roasted the ap Oh, Ohrist I and prepared for the table to meet etites sharpened by the eold ride. y friend, the church of J sus the OD, th II I s the world's fireplae, and woods ye from the cedars of Lobe and the fires are fires of love, and the silver tongs of the altar we stir flame and the light is reflected front the family pictures on the wall—plc rei of those who were hereend are gone nnw Ok, 001:00 up close to the firepace. h Have you., won faces transfigured in the light. ey, n. pointine t, celiac, dose up until yon an get waria elerer through. Exohange 'ex- perience talk over the harvestsgathered, toll all t e gospel news. Meanwhile the table is oing Spread. On it bread of lfe. On it grapes of Eshool. On it new w e from tini kingdom. On it a thousand Ilix uriee celbstial. Hark, as a wounded fund raps on the table and a tender voice co es throughsaying: "Come, for ail things re now realy. Eat, oh, friends! Drink, ea, drink abundantly, oh, belneedi" My fniends, that Is the way the cold world is going to be warnied up by the great gdspel fireplace. All nations will come in and sit down at that bang et. While I, was musing the flre bur . "Come in out of the oold I Come in ant of the co dl" —If ev rybody only knew how effect.ive Dr. Lavio ette s Syrup of Turpentine is for the cure a Colds and Bronchitis, the), would neer take any other remedy. It is by far the -most efficacious of all known preparatidne. —Andrw Eamon, of Stratford, bought a fine mare trom Mr. T. Sehrenk, of kiiiver- ton, for $120, awl one from Mr. James By - don, for 017. Put you cold feet, weary of the Jolene close Ui to the blessed oonflagrati Chilled hrough with trouble and di INION C PIT',11.4 (PAID UP) li RST, li NB 1111 MI MN •••••••mis,.., BANK. • $1,50010000. ▪ $1500000. SEAFORTH BRANCH. M 1141 STREET, - - SEAFORTIL Mieral tanking business transacted. Drafts on all iaarts of the United States, Great ritain and Europe bought and sold. Letters of credit issued, available in all parts of Europe, Chiva and Japan. Farmers' Sale Notes collected, and advances made on /Mlle at I eat rtes. SAVINGS DEPARTMtNTJ !Dei rates. No noti 8. • 1111 itS of One Dollar and upward i received, and interest &Hwed at highest ourren tee811 added to principal twice eath year—at the end of June and Decenaber. of wi hdrawal is required for the whole or any portion of a deposit. H.14XS, Solicitor. W. K; PEARCE, Agent. MISIGSSIMISesiluniknalleflaSSIMISMOSSIIISINPINntssustrmasessaressessrererseinmasss sssss *awl Dr.L Colds • e aes- vioIett The finest Remedy in the *rump° World. for all Affec- tons of the Throat & Grippe, Croup, - Lungs.. • Co*hs, WhOoping Cough. TUrP entffiel iumma sssasssosssetsitsassessiassmssissessasisalsaesississsassisissilUSSEISISSIMMISISISS s' la CAPS CLIMA=. We have a splendid. line of caps for fall .wear Knock -abouts for rainy weather and neglige wear. We also have the beat waterproof coats, umbrellas and other requisites for, the season. Have you bought your Fall uit and Hat yet? NEW S " See our line. Good Goods, right prices, entire reliability. BRIGHT BE,OS, REET, SEAFORTH. -=-e--%--r-----__- _ ..-.•....,,..,...1..... -.. .. .... ,,,.....„, ,, .., ,.,. ,,.,-- _ .., .. -...,,,,rk,_ ...'srm, e, ,, '16•' 1` 'INN +,--4, s .„. -4..,,,..Et -"- .41E,1:::khwa 0 r -••••.. c ek4,-; a, - ,, -.,...,,,,.t.r.--- .. Turn Up Mramoommontmonos " Vour Toes • rro.!e each horny, corny deformity1 • Ilk -fitting shoes did it. Putting your feet Into boots that fitted your eye only. Here f • shoe eetleich-is made to fit Nature's feet. It oast $5,000 • to'produce the first perfect pair, but you can now have the 5,000th pair for $3.00. Made fpf the best • imported calf -skin, in black or tan, by the famous • Goodyear Welt process, which gives ease to the foot— . ehiettoity to the sole. $3.00, 14.00, 15.90 t>er noir. he.Slater Shoe (for Men.) ,';',... '"'''. ................ -....-„,,,,,,,... __..-,,,,..--......„---•- maw'""t"*. --o. ",.....-e-j•-•:- :....."''`'```..,0-:- -=- -;•' -,..;•...e- '''-"r- - " ' '` ....:•--- . _ — •.---rw' ` .. -••-••••L ....... -------- - -:- !•••,-------... "-- ; - - • ••••• RT WILLIS, SOLE AGENT FOR SEAFORTH. tle Knowledge ijs not a dangerous thing when it directs your attention to the fact that the - Forest City Business and Shorthand College mowo, Is giving the most practical and business -like course in Canada. Everything strictly high grade. Write for catalogue and College journal. School re- opens January 2nd, 1896. 1442 J. W. WE STEii,VELT7 Principal. IT WILL NT YOU TO EXAMINE OUR MERNITU E -uvuttesmassaassastrismssinszeszetai Ws are still adding to our already large stoek, and we are now prepared to meet the wants of every one requiring fr- niturei It will pay' you to examine our goods before pur- chasing elsewhere, as we are sure to please you in ,price, sty. le and quality. • UNDERTAKING Our undertaking department is complete in every respect, and we guarantee satidaction. S. T. Holmes Funeral Director 'Residence next do4pr to Dr. Scott tk McKay' s office. BOADFOOT BOX & O0, Main Streets Seaforth, Porter's 014 Stand. -4;;;. .4 -aria