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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1896-10-30, Page 2aes:ssesesseieemeasseettt"""'"'"'"a SEAFORTH CARRIAGE WORKS, The best Buggies and. Wagons My steel; t f Carr7a4t h 13 very complete': all hand made, under on • o.k n enpervi-icin. Don't Ink: f oreign factory Wade bligidis, when ;vim rim gct better made at home, and'its cheap, if net cheaper •than the wor brought in from outside towns.j Why spend money money in building up riva1 to ne and injure you own, when you can do bater,at hozne. -Call and see ., me and be cominced. All kinds of blacksmithing an repthing promptly and satisfactorily done. A full stoek of Cutters of the best material and latest stylest-which will be sold rheap. . Lewis Mc onaldi SEAFOR H. 1480 Winter Fl wering Bu!.s For two weeks. commenciag Saturday, October 24th„ I will give FREE with every 25a cash purchase, your choice of a fine Hyacinth or Narcissus Bulb. W. PAPST BOOKS, STATIONERY, FANCY GOODS, JEWELRY, WATCHES, &c., SEAPORTS. FACT 1)E4l) SURE THE "IRON EXPOSITOR OCTOBER 30, 1896. REAL- ESTATE FOR. 'SALE. VARM TO To rent, a 200 aore farm, 2i .12 miles from WInghain, with first-elass buildings, and:well watered. It is all in'pesture, and is an ex- cellent chance for either farming or pasturing cattle. For , particulars, apply to Box 125, Wingham 1478tf FMM FOR SALE,..For sale, lot 7, concession I Hibbert, contaiilThg 76 acres of elioloi Tnere are 8 acres in bard wood bush and 14 acres in _fall wheat. Also good buildings ;lad good. orchard. It is convenient to School and church. Apply to ' HUGH MACLEAY, on the premises, or Staffa P. O. 1508x8 The .TobaccoHabit Cured U NOLE M'S TobaCco Cure. Read t e Strongest Endorsenientiever given. ny Remedy : "Tlje United States health reports have examiijed and investigated many prepara- tions, nd in. the light of our examination and tests of UNCLE SAM'S TOBACCO CURE we are but performing a duty to the Public *hen we endorse the seine and tamp st as the crowning achievement of the Nineteenth Century in the way of destroy- ing aeliabit as disgusting as it is common, for only $L Hence we earnestly advise you to write them for full particulars." . Ittit SALK BY V. FEAR, Druggist. - i477.30 THE SEAFORTH Musical - Instrument E MPORIU ESTABLISHED, 1873. Owing to hard times we have con- . eluded to sell Pianos and Organs at. •Greatly Reduced Prices, Organs at $25 and upwards, and Pianos at Corresponding prices. SEE ITS BEFORE PURCHASING. • SCOTT BROS, J. C. Smith, cos, A General Banking business transacted. Farmers' notes discounted. Drafts bought and sold Interest allowed en deposits at he rate el 5 per cent, per alltalM. SALE NOTES discounted, or a ken for collection. OFFICE—Firet door north of Wilsoe's Hardware Store. SEAFVETH. Reid & THE FARMERS' Banking - House, CD TUT _ (in connection with the Bank of Montreal.) - LOGAN & CO BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENTS. OFFICE—In the COMMercial Hotel build- ing, next to the Town Hall. A General Banking Busin.se done. Drafts 1 -sued and castled_ Interest allowed on deposits. MONEY TO LEND On good notes or mortgages. ROBERT LOGAN, Mee -Miele. 1053 (ZODER9OH Steam Boiler Works, (ESTABLISHED 1.830.) H Y L SI:WM.80r to Chrystal & Mack, Manniacturers .of all kinds of Stationary Marine, Upright & Tubular BOILER Salt Pans, woke Stacks, Sheet tree Work, etc., eto. Also dealers in Upright and Horizontal Slide Vaive nglnes. Automatic Cut-`)ff Engines a ape:laity. 11 Ins of pipe and pipe -fitting constantly on han tote -oaths furnished on short notice. Works—Opposite G. T. R: Station, Goderich, 'VARIES FOR SALE.—The upders1gied has twenty 12 Cholas Farms for sale la East Thiron, the bars- = County of the Provinoe ; alt sizesaand prices to sato For hill information, write or call personally, No /rouble to show them. F. S. SCOTT, l3ruseels P. 0. 139141 iiMFORSALt-100 aes,sthe po wnsh4)Ftcreynears08gor319ontnear61 acts of bush. about half black deh, the rest hard- wood. A never-failiog spring of ivater runs through thellot. Will be.sold at a big.bargain. For particu- lars, apply to MISS. JANE WALKER, Box 2/9, Br ssels. .1470 Mtai -FoR SALE OR RENT.—That farm known as t2, McKill , near Seaforth, containing 100 acres, at J._1! h; Hugh Grieve farm, being lot 21, comma - present 4:erupted by the subscriber, is now offered !cascade on very easy terms. If not gold by Ootober 10th, will be rented for a term of years, or I ould sell a half interest as I am going into other bus nese. The is a good chance to get a lint -class farm. For all particulars apply personally,or address RIC ARD COMMON Seaforth P. 0. 150 -18 OPLEN 1 ID FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 1.0, c 0, skin 8, township of Stanley, eentainio acres. TMs is one of the best farms in the to and is situated in a good and pleasant neighbo Soil of tho best and not a rod of waete land There are all the buildings on it that are req - The whole farm has been newly fenced and dr An orohard of 70 bearing bees, plenty of water, convenient to schools, churches, pest and market. Apply to WM. SIN al, SIR, Vas a P. - neon- - 100 'whip hood. n it. ired. ined. good office O. or to WU. COPP.Seaforth. , 1491-tf PLENDID FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 25,' Conces- sion 6, Townshiptif Morris, containing 150 aerie- su table for grain or sok, situated .two and .a half nti1ee from the thrivini village of Brussels, a good gr vel road leading thereto; 120 acres cleared and fr C frorn stumpe, 8 acres cedar and ash and balance ha wood. Barn 61x60 with straw and hay shed 40k7°, stone stabling naderneath both The house Is rick, 22x132 with kitchen 18x28, cellar, underneath boh buildings. All are new. There is u large young ornhard. School on next lot. The land has a good natural drainage, and the farm is in good condition. Satisfactory realions for selling. Apply at TEEM Ex- rearroa OFF103,, or on the premises. WM. BA.R.RIE, 1836-tf Biussels. , _ _ , ROUSE AND LOT FOR SALE.—For ssle; cheap, the house and lot in Harpurhey, on the Rox- boeo road, adjoining the property of Mr. F. Holmes - dad. There is a quarter sore of land well planted v itli bearing- fruit tree,. Also a good stable. Tee ho ie contains 6 rooms, woodshed, stone cellar, ha d acid soft water and all other conveaiences It is coy pleasantly sit uatectand is an admirablepima 1,30 a retired farmer. Six acres of land also adjoin- ing this property, will be sold with it or ssparattly.! Apply to D. GRUMMET, Harpurhey. € 1491341xlm MIARII FOR SALE --For sale, lot 36, concession .1.1, 2, Kinloss, containing 100 Bores, 85 cleared and th e balsnce in good hardwood bush. The land Is in a good state of cultivation, is well underdrained and well fericed. There is a frame barn and logshouse on the property', a never -failing spring with windmill, also about 2 Ream; of orchard. It is. an ex-ellent finin and hi within one mile of Whitechurch station, where .there are stores, blacksmith shop and churches. There is a acirsol on the opposite lot. It is six miles from Wingham and six from ;Lueknow, with good roada leadiog in all directions. This dee sirable property will be aold on reasonable terms. For further particulars apply to JAMES MITCHELL, Varna P. 0. 1495-15044f tiARM FOR SALE.—For sale, lot 8, and part lot JD 9, concession 10, Grey township, containing 105 acres, all cleared except twenty acres, .which ia a good hardwood bush. The land is in a high skate of cultivat'on, well underdrained and well • fenced, without any waste land. There is a good frame honse, with summer kitchen and woodshed • a large bank bins, 81x52, with sterns stabling uadernoath, and other outbuildings. 'There are fou acre of orchard of one of the hist varieties of • Nilt ; t ree goOd, never -failing wells with pumps in them. 118 a mile and three-quarters from the village of B 3- eels,.wivh good reads leading in all directions. his excellent property will be sold cheap and on aey terms. Ap.sly on the prem'ses or by leiter to ox 1513, Brussels P. 0. JOHN IHILLt 14894 tiOR SALE OR TO RENT ON EASY TERM .-- 12, As the owner wishes to retirafrom busines on account of ill health; the follgwing valuable prop rty atiWinthrop, 44 ndles north of Seaforth, on lea Icg road to Brussels, will be sold or rented as one f rm or,in parts to suit purchaser: about 500 acre of splendid farming land, with about 400 under 6 op, the balance in pasture. There are large barns and aU other buildings necessary for the implements, ve gales, ete. This land ili well watered, has ood fr me and brick dwelling houses, etc There are g-rist and saw mills and store which will' be sol • or rented on advantageous terms. - Also on 171h can- cetsion, Grey towuship, 100 acres of land, 40 in paWire, the balance in timber. Possession given after hsrvest of farm lands; m Aills at ones. For par- ticulars apply to NDREW GOVENLOCK, Winthrop. 1 14.3641 4UMBER - YARD. P. KEATING D'eler in Lumber and Shingles: lesIlikinds of LUMBER, always on hand ant of the very bet quality. Give me a call, and see if I casaft give you what you want. , fr.:number' yard and office on the _Huron Read, near the fax mill. 14978 Barr§ Dye Work's Ve are again established in Seaforth and we think we can help to make those Bard Times Easier For _ You. N arly everybody has clothes which are too shabby to wear and too good to throw away. Now it you will just bring those clothes ta us we can, in moat of cases, make them look like new goods. Just give us4a trial and we are sure you wi'l be pleased with the results. Works on Market street, first door west of Pickani's store. 1504,1 yr lir Manufacturing, Interets.- I What a Hamilton Manufacturer Has toiSay. , stamen Brayley speaks for the public good. THE PROPER POLICY. Our representative iuterviewed Mr. James Brayley, of Hamilton, at his office, 68 King William Street. Mr. Bray] ey is an euterprisbag busiaess mausilndspoo of Hamilton's foremost i anufacturers. His goods, Saddlery hard- ' are, punches, dies, etc., are knowu from ralifax to "Vancouver, and, stand very high in - - be estimatien of the trade. i Mr. Bra.yley said: "For years I have been troubled with gravel and weakness 44 tile kidneys. I had to stand up and clench my teeth wheu urinating, so intense was the pain: The. ! pains around my loin s where almostintolerable, and I felt as theugh a cat were being pulled down my back by the hind legs.- . "1 went from bad to worse till at last I could i not urinate at all, and had to .be: operated on. I had no coafidence iu anything, and'inade up. lay mind to suffer torture to my. dying day. Roading the testimony published. by the Doan 1 IS id ney Pills Co., and, being da co them EL trial,. an Spackman's druo Square. - 1" It did mo no another, until I about giving up te take them till ani now as limbo up a dozen times than once now. clear and has no • I am d.eliglate Kidney Pills, as §LLW a similar case to my own, istant agony, decided to give. goto. box of the pills from store, at the corner of Market good, so I got another, and ad taken four boxes, and was honrelief came. I continued the pain left my back, and I anan eel. Instead of getting a night I never -get up more The urine is now perfectly claimant of any kind. • • io testify in behalf of Dorm'a they cured me after the last AtITJAN POEASTRY. REV. DR. TALMAGE DELIVERS ANOTH- ER SEASONABLE SERMON. olVe All Do ll'ade asa Leaf"—The Glory of the 'Woods—How' Like the Leaf Is Our Life—From 'Youth to Age. 'WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.—The season of the year -adds much appositeness to .Dr. Talmage's sermon, which we send out to - flay. His s bject is "ThePageantry of the . -Weeds," ft d his text Isaiah Ixiv, 6, "We ill do fade s a leaf." • It is so hard for us to und.orstaud re- ligions truth that God constantly reiterates. As the ncl oolmaster takes a blackboard end puts a milt figutes and diagrams, so that the se oolar may not only got hie lesson. through th s ear, but also through the eye, - so God tak draws the world. C man, 'went ,ray o f hope had lo s all the truths of his Bible and out in diagram on the natural ampollion, the famous French - down into Egypt to study the hieroglyph cs on monuments and teMples. After mach labor he deciphered them, and announced to the learned world the result of his investigations. The wisdom, good- - tiess and power of God are written in hiero- glyphics all over the earth and all toter the neaven. God grant! that we may have un- derstanding enough to decipher them. There are Soripturalpassages, like m !which need to be studied in the ver enee of tho oatural world. Habakkuk says, "Thou rankest my feet like hind's feet, " a passalge which means nth nothing save to the man at knoss that the feet of the red deer, or hind, aro pecul- iarly constructed, so that they can walk I , among slippery ro ks without falliug. Koowiog that fact, we understand that , when Habakkuk ea s, "Thou makest my feet. like hind's feet," be sets forth that the ,Chtistlan can walk anaid the most dangerous and slippery platei without falling. In Lamm oatdons we read that "the- daughter of my people is cruel, file the ostrichee of the wilderness," a pas- sage that has no meaning -save to the man who knows that the ostrich. leaves its egg in the sand to be hatched out by the sun, and that the young ostrich goes forth un- attended 'by. any maternal kindness. .11nowing this, the passage is significant, "The daughter of my people is cruel, like the ostriches of the wilderness." \ Those know but little of the meaning of the natural woild- who have looked at. it through the eyes of other te and from book or canvas teekonetheir impression. There are some faces so mobile that photogra- phers cannot take them, and the face of na- ture has such a flush_and sparkle and life that no human' description can gather them. No one knows the pathos of a bird's voice unless he has sat a summer evening tide at the edge of a wood and listened to the ory of the whippoorwill. - Autumnal Glories. ' There is today more alert in one branch of supine than a painter could put on a whole forest of maples. God bath struck Into the allthit113/11 leaf a glance that none seetut those who come face to face—the mountain -looking upon the maii, and the man looking upon the mountain. text, pres- For several autumns, I have made a tour to the far west, and one autumn, about this time, saw that which I shall never forget. I have seen the autumnal sketches of Crop- sey and other skillful pencils, but that week I saw a pageant 2,000 miles long. Let artist stand back when God 'stretches his canvaaf A grander spectacle was never kindled before mortal oyes.1 Along by the rivers, and up and clown tbe, sides of the great hills,'and by the banIs of the lakes there was an indescribable mingling of n and saffron, maroon, now owlet. Here If just their . In the morn - gold and orange and crims now sobering into drab an fianiing into solferino and and there the trees looked tips had blossomed.ieto fire •inglight the forests *Med as if they had been transfigured, and in the evening hour they looked as if the Isauset had bu at and ea ues- n hin- t kin - sprig; branch ed the eo just 1 there ore,it dropped upon theslealves. more . tered spots, where the frosts had be dered in their work, we save the fir dling of the flames•of color it a lowl then they rushedap from bean ch to nntil the glory of the LordIsubmer forest. Here you would . find aet -making up its mind to -change, an one looked as if, wounded at every stood bathed •in carnage. Along the banks of Lake Huron there were hills overvebich- there teemed tossed up ,and the reeks. TI we saw oceasio though it were t flagration. If at one end of the woods a coinmanding ree would set up its crimson batmen the wl Ole forest prepared to follow. IfiGod's urn f colors svpre not infinite, 'OLIO swamp that I sate along the Maumee would have extansted it forever. It seem- - ed as if the sea ot divine glory had dashed its -surf to the toptop of the Allegliauies, and thou'it bad 'wile dripping down to lowest leaf and deepest cavern. Most persons preaching from this text And only in it a vein of sadnesst I find that I halve twri strings to this gospel harp —a stririg of -sadness and •a striug of . joy infinite. . "We all do fade as a leaf.' pouring cataracts of fire, down and every whither by rough s-ometof the ravines nally a foaining stream, as rushing to put out the con - First. illy. Th felt the fr Fading Foliage, Like the foliage, 'we fade gradn. let,ves which week before last st; have any by dey been chang- ing in tint and will for many days yet cling to he bough waiting for the fist of- - the wiud to strike them. Suppose you that the pctured leaf that you holdi hand tool On its eolor in au hour, •0 day, or in a week? NO; deeper and et the flueh, -till all the wine of its lif s now seeui opened • and bleediug away.. After Awhile,leaf after le tf, they fall. No those ches, then those ,most st spark of the gleam - boon gnonehed. ass .away. From day the change. But the us. The work of, decay slight cold. Now a Now a fever. Now n stitch in the she. Now •a neuralgic) thrust Now a rhe matte twinge, Now a fail..Little by litt a Pant by -pain. Less steady,Of limb. Sight not so deer. Ear not so 'alert. Attu awhile we take a staff. non, after much resistance, we conic to speetaeles. Instead of bounding into the vehicle, we are williogto be belped iia. At last the octogenarian tall Forty years of 'elecayinte No suddeo go. No fierce can umuding of the b t ies of life, but a Wing away—slowly g lually. As the leaf, as the leaf ! . • A Look Again, like the le room for others. No be as grandly "foliagec your • in a deep - on •the outer 'bra hidden, until the I log forge shall hay 'So gradually we to day we hardly s (rests have touched Is going on. . Now season of overfatig ead. we fade, to make t year's forests will as this. There are °thee genetatione of oils le.aves to take the of those which this autumn perish. Kett May the cradle of the wind will rock - tite yca.148.. buds. The weeds will be all tletium ssiih the chorus af leafy voices. If tale tree In front of your house, like Elijah, taken uebneinteof, tree tha waulars, aslas_lall upon Elisha. lf, in the blast of these au- tumnal ba elates, so many ranks fall, there aro reservel focrcs to take their place to de. feud the fclrtress of the hills. The beaters of gold lei beat. Thc the head o handed do the • blasts for other 1 ' So, whei f will have more gold leaf to crown that drops. today from • the oak will be picked.up and vn for other kings to wear. .Let come. They only Make .room we -go, others take our spheres: We do not gruUg tte rutute generations] comes on trio morning 'gm rno neattele - thoir places. We will have bad our good • ring again and again with the coronation. time. Let them come ;on and have their The 10 gates of heaven are crowded with good time. There is no sighing among the ascending righteous. I see the accumu.- these leaves today because other leaves are lated glories of a thousand Christian death - to follow theta. After a lifetime of preach- ing, doctoring, selling, sewing or digging, let us cheerfully give way for those who e preaching, doctoring, nd digging. God grant y be brighter than ours get older 'do not let us oung men and women We will have had our t let them have' theirs. come on to do t selling, sewiog that their life in has been. As w be affronted if crowd us a little day, aul we 13.3 1.1 Whoour voices got co -naked, let us not snartat those who can warble. When our knees aro stiffened, lot us have patience with those who go fleet as the deer. Be- cause our leaf it fading do pot lot us de- spise the onfrosted. .Autuma must uot envy the spring. Old men must be patient with boys. Dt. Guthrie stood up in Soot - land and said: "You need not think I am old because my hair is white. I never was so young as I am- now." 1 leek back to my childhood days and remember when in winter nights' in the sitting room the chil- dren played the blitheseeend the gayest of all the company Were father and moth- er. Although reaching fourscore years of age, they never got old. Do not be iiisturbed as you see good and great men die. People orry when some important petsollage pa and say, "His place will But neither. the church suffer for There wi the places. When God takes one man away, be has -another right back of hint. God ie so rich in resources that he 'could spare 5,000 Summerfields and Sarins, if there were so Many. There will be other leaves- as green, ite exquisite- ly veined, as gracefully etched, as well pointed. However prominent 'the place we filt our death will pot jar the world. One falling leaf does not shake the Adirout dean A ship is not Well manned unless there be an extra supply of h working on -deck, some sotto their hammooks.God. has I world very well. There will b men on deok when you and I She cabin sound asleep in the h The Dead 'peeves. Agana as with the loaves, ive fade and fall aanid myriads of others. One cannot hich these ills. They will drilt ses off the stage never be taken." or the state will be others to take -beds—anautumnal forest illumined by an autumnal sunset. They died not in shame, but itttiumpla. As the leaf! As the leaf! • seere 1 . The Resurrection. Lastly, as the leaves fade and fall only to rise, so do we. All this golden shower of the woods is making the ground richer, and in the juice and sap and life of the tree the leaves will come up agate. Next May the south wind will .blow the resure realm trumpet, and they will rise. So we falln the dust only to 'rise agaiol. "The houi is coming when all who are in their gra es shall hear his voice and come forth. " It would be a horrible coneteteration to think that our bodies were always to lie hi the ground. However beautiful the flow= ers you plant there, we do not want to make our everlasting residence in such a , place. I have with these eyes seen so many of the glories of the natural world and the radiant faces of ray friends, tbat I do not want to think that when I close them in death I shall never open them again. It is sad enough to have a hand or foot ampu- tated. In a hospital, after a soldier had had, his hand taken eff, he said, "Goodby, dear old hand, you have done me a great deal of good service," and burst into tears. It is a more awful thing to think of hav- ing the whole body amputated from the soul forever. I must have my body again, to see with, to hear with, to 'walk with. With this hand I must clasp the hand of my loved 01298 'when I have passed dean over Jordan and with it wave the triumphs of my king. Aha, we shall rise again! We shall- rise again! As the leaf! AS the leaf! . . Crossing the Atlantic the ship may founder aod our bodies be eaten by the sharks, but God tameth leviathan, and we eshall come again. In awful explosion of nds—some factory boiler our bodies may be sbattered asleep in Into a hundred fragments in the air, but anned this God watches the disaster, and ; we shall other sea- come again. He will drag the deep, and re down in ransack the tomb, and upturn the wilder,- mmocks. ness, and torture the mountain, but he will find us and fetch us out and up to judginent and to victory. We shall come up with perfect eye, with perfect hand, with perfect foot and with perfect body. All our weaknesses left be- hind. We fall, but we rise; we die, but we live again! We molder away, but we come to bigher unfolding! As the leaf! As the leaf! - - ... Imagination and If. appinese. "You can see lots of human nature in a jeweler's," remarked the man who was ar- ranging a tray of gems in the svindovv so as to give them their greatest allurement. "One of the things I have noticed is that most people dislike to depend on their own judgment. They don't appreciate any:. thing until they know its value." Just then a young man came in and asked to see some rings. He was not long In making a selection, and, pulling out a roll of notes, he asked the price. "Five pounds," replied the jeweler,. The young man put the money back into his pocket. "Is that all?" he ingnired regretfully. "Yes. I wouldn't be justified in charg- ing any More. But its a handsome ring." 7 - "Five pounds doesn't seem enough to pay for a ring for this young lady," the youth remarked. "That's a pretty ring, and I think she'd like it very nnich if she didn't find out -what the price was. I'll tell pin what I'll do.1 I'll buy the ring if you'll put a 420 pito() ticket on it and let it stay in the windotv until the day after tomor- row." ' , ' "I don't q-uite see what good that will do you." . "I've set nay mind on seeing het wear this particular ring. I know she wit like its style when she first sees it. But you know what women are—they're newt con- tent until they hear how much everything costs. Tomorrow I'll take her out for a walk, and we'll pass your window. We'll stop and look in. .1 won't say a word, but she'll notice that it's arked ...20 and will feel that it is not only a line 1 oking ring, but that it is ell right ts to pr`ce, and then We can all be hatopy. " Pears n's Weekly. count the 'number of plumes frosts are plucking • from the will strew all the streams, the into the caverns, they will sof en the ild beast's. lair and fill the eagle'sJ ityrie. All -the aisles of the forest w 11 be coter- ed with their carpet and the teps of the hills glow with a wealth -of color and shape that will defy tho looms of Axmitistet 'What urn could hold -the ashes of all these dead leaves? Who could count the hosts that burn on this funeral pyre of the moun- tains? So we die in concert - The clock thnt strikeSthe hour 'of our going will sound the going of many thousends. .' Keeping step with the feet of those who carry us out will be the tramp of .hundreds dot g the same -errand. Between 50 and 70 pe ple every day -lie down in Greenwood. Thit place has over 200,000 of the dead. I sad' to the man at the gate, "Then, if there a ni so many here, you must have the large t cemetery." He said there were twO Rent Catholic cemeteries in the city each which bad more than this. We are all d - lug. Lendon and Peking are not he gra, t cities of the world. The grave is he great city. •It hath mightiet populatio , longer .streets, brighter lights, thicker daifkne.sses. Cresar is there and all his•subjee s. Nero is there and all his victims. City of kings and paupers! It has swallowed up in its imnaigrations Thebes and Tyre and Baby- lon and will swallow all our cities. Yet city of silence. No voice., No hoof. No wheel. No clash. No smiting of .ham- mer. No clack of flying loom. No jar. Nco whisper.- Great city of silence! Of all its million million bends not one of them is lifted. . Of all its million- million eyes ' not one of them sparkles. Of all itsmillion million hearts not one pulsates. The living are itt Small minority.- • If, itt the moyement of time, seine great question between the living and the dead ehouid be put and God. called up all the dead,and the living to decide it, as we lift- ed our hands, and from ell tho resting splacee of the dead they lifted their hands, the dead would outvote as. Why, the mul- titude of the , dying and . tho dead are -as these autumnal leaves drifting•under our foot today. Wel march et toward eternity, not by companies of 100, or regiments of 1,000, or brigades of 10,000, but 1,600,000,- 000 abreast! Marching On! Marching onl A Great Variety. Again, as with variety of appearance the leaves depart,. so do we. You have noti ed that some trees at the first touch of frost lose all their .beauty. They sta withered and unconiely and ragged we ing for the northeast storm to drive th into the mire. The min. shilling at no day gilds them with no ,beauty. . Rag leaves. • Dead leaves. No one stands study them: They are :gathered in no va They are hung on no wall. So de smites many. There is no beauty iu th departs -lee.- One sharp frost of sickness ono blast off tho cold waters and they gene. No tinge of hope. No prophecy heaven. Their spring was all abloom w bright prospects. Their summer th* foliaged with opportunities. But Octol came, and their glory went Frostedi early autumn the frosts come, bat do not seem to damage vegetation. They aro light frosts. But some morning you look out of the window and say, "There was a black frost last night," and you know that from that day everything will wither. So men seem to get along without religion amid tho annoyances and vexations of life that nip them slightly here andnip them there. But after awhile death conies. It is a black frost, and all is ended. , Oh, what withering and scattering death makes among those not prepared to meet it! They leave everything pleasant behiod them—their house, their families, their friends, their books, their pictures,' and step out of the sunshine into the shad- ow. They quit the presence of bird. and bloom and wave to go unheekoned and un - welcomed. The bower in which they stood and sang and WQVO chaplets and made themselves merry has gobe down- under •an awful equinoctical. No bell can toll one-half Abe dolefalness of their condi- tion. Frosted! But, thank God, that is not the way peo- ple always die.. Tell mo on wloat - day of all the year the leaves of the wopdbine are as bright as they are today? So Christian character is neve p so attractive dying hour. •, Such go into the a.s. faaxene and. ha driven Into a kennel, Wit they pass away calm' brightly, sweetly, grand y.- As the leaf! -s the 10311 Wile go to the deathbed. -of distinguished men hen there is hardly -a house on this street out from it a Christian has departed? When. your baby died, there -were enough angels in the room to lia,ve ehauted a coro- nation. When your father died, you sat watching, and after awhile felt of his wrists and then put your hand under his arm to seesif there were any warmth left and- placed the nurfor to the mouth to see if there were any sign ;of breathing, and When all was over you thought how grand- ly he slept—a giant resting after a battle. Ch, there are many Christian deathbeds! The etariots of :God, come to take his Chil- dren home, are speeding every whither. This one halts at thegate of the alms -1 house, that one at the gate et princes. The shout of captives brealebag their chaine he it- n- ocl to 0, th or rp of th cis" er la .as in the rave, not eit yokel The Rarest 1 Elrev rs. ' Among the books a c Imperatively recent date, if the seve teenth century call be described as such, i as therElzevir col- lector well knows, th famems "Patissier Francois," a small di °decline printed by Louys and Daniel El ,evir at Amsterdam in 1655. A faulty an poor reimpressioa of a work of, little value -issued in Paris two years previously, this book has become the most sought after of all the Elzovir works just beca,ute it is wrongly thought to be tluescarcest. It has fetched price `reaching in France so high as 4,600 francs The reason for the suppotied rarity is, o course, that, instead of being placed on it • first appearanceon the shelves of the curi ous or the studious, the little volume wa thiunbed to 'pieces by the greasy hands o cooks and kitchemnaids. Genuine ens thusiasts in the printer's art have hope to see the price diminished in pretence o the revelations lately furoished concern ing it. Its rnarket value, hewever, show no signs of diminution, and the one cop sold in England ditring the last se.ven o eight years fetched at Sotheby's on Jun 10, 1896, the sale being that of the Earl o Orford, the preposterous price of 41.00. %entlenusn's Magazine. The Vagaries of Luck. . SOme time ago ,an • Austrian peasant who' was cleaning an -old picture for his aunt found 50,000 florins in paper money in it.; He claimed the usual 10 per cent as rewa• d and got it. There were two aunts, -Ft and ts each claimed the picture as her own, an expensive lawsuit resulted. Final- ly the sisters decided to go hal-ves, but when the bank notes were examined they were found null and void, the gotern- inent's.. term for redeeming them hating expired. The peasant . refused to rethro the 5,000 florins which he received in ur- rent money, wherefore his aunts have ow sued him. —St. Louis Globe -Democrat. ISOMISCISESIM T vres 0 Science is knowing how." The only secret about Soott's 813.Talaion is years of s.sit2nce. When made in larg-3 quantities and by im- proving methods, an emul- sion must. be more perfect than when made in the old- time way with mortar and pestle a few ounces at a Eine. This is why- Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver oil v er separates, keeps sweet for years, and why every spoonful is equal to every other spoonful: An evetn product ihroughout. In other emuLsions you are liable to get an uneven benefits -either an over or under dose. Get Scott's. Genuine hos a salmon -colored wrapper. rdans NEW Store. Headquarters Fcr everything in the Grocery business AT Choice and New— THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE FOR CASH OR TRADE. Choice butter and eggs wanted, for which we will pay .the highest market price. M. JORDAN, Seaforth. wenty-five cents isn't much, But will buy a pound of delicious 15 EYLON TEA tbroW your grocer a quarter, and it's yours; L€ at1i:oackets only. From all grocers. p. EOKAFDT & 00., Toronto, Wholesale Agents. DOMINION --:- BANK. `9APITAL, REST, (PAID U OP SE AIN STREET, 1111 191 S1,500,000. $1.500,000. ORTH BRANCH. . - SEAFOBT11. i A general banking basinees transacted. Drafts on all parts of the United States; cireat Britain and Eurr.pe bou.ght and sold. Letters of credit issued, available in all pert, cif Europe, China and J apan. !Farmers' Sale Notes collected, and advances made on sam 1, t lowest rates. SAVi DIGS DEPARTMENT. Deposits of One Dollar and upwards received, and interest allowed at highest =reit rates, Jnterest added to prmneipal twice each year—at the end of June and December • No noti e of withdrawal is required for the Whole pr any portion ota deposit. R S HAYS, Solicitor. W. K. PRARCE, Agent. 1.00 K BEFORE U LEAP Is vn a age -which has saved many persons from the twinges of con-cieice and. from the depths of remorse. ; But not only has it asst red:the of peace of mind, aad consequently happiness,but it has :many i nes spared HEIR ..A.nd tin S 11 them' th 1 good wo kn stock and p of knowng minimuni p POCKETBOOK, a we have raised them materially. We have given e4t doilies to be had, and at Prices consistent with anship and supetior fit and finish. By looking at our ices before buying, you will always have the pleasure that you have the best and latest clothes at the iceS. BRIGHT BROS., SEAFORTH. Attagemiggentattraga2Fass zgzamtaiPIEMUIRCINSIXassiasatrzaaaattafas=acivarsausgsstaamairsaisi: Lviallette's The finest Remedy in the I E Cures World. for all Affcc- cCooulth, s . lions of the Throat & Lungs. z Grippe, Croup, E -Whoop ngOucTh UN 11 simersussiazza MMMMMM sissamissmegiummucusmosigarlimnissuil Mk/ PAY YOU TO EXAMINE OTTR ENITURE We are till adding to our already large stock, and we are now pre are to meet the wants of every one requiring fur- niture. It vll pay you to examine our goods before pur- chasing else bere, as -we are sure to please you in price, style and qu lity. DERTAKI G 9 • Our un ertaking department is complete in every respect, and we gua antee satisfaction. S. T Holmes, Funeral Director Residence next door to Drs. Scott & McKay's office. BROADFOOT, BOX & CO _ '1 Main Street, Seaforth Porter's Old Stand IMPORT% tot 100. each at iitigENNA,. Do Surveyor, Mere stereayers, Dub ATM, County usi, Loni fit prows fo machinery, gue free. Add the manufactursr, 10 ON EY TO LEN; JJ $1,000 ord ppvi lowest rates of nate! borrower. Moils is ris ohoiceTuckeremita fa COSENSk finit Egroundville, 3.••••••••••••••0•••••............••••••••...-• Minn.—Be Oa VY for Canada en ber Life and Reign, Inifferin. A thrilling the Queen as girl, al like am:muses ; grand' Istelas en time ; pros elusive territeu ; 101 1.,'EriGARRETSON West, Toronto, Ont. 1 300 Privat $ S00 rates of $ 700 borrowe $1,000 pleted $1,600 thii 12,500 &WAYS, "REAL ES -0,s.Bit FOR SALE sr 5,13th coneessi one block or divided good bush land. Ne All fenced and dra apply to JOHN' 0. or to W. G. G01.11).4 "[TILLAGE PROPE V the thriving vi upon which is ere house nearly new c dry /done cellar. th and two tides of the ilettin.g. The eorfl acre with the buildin ately if desired. Th one-quirrter acre tete atelY- This iwopert avenue. The best strel bought at a very rein terms. For particul address Box 71, J:1011 a STOC OHEEP and ewe Umbel ear -old Shorthorn a sold at reasonabl nession 32, 11,bbe DUSCAN aleletItEs Tlem WS FOR SA1,1 undersigned, 1 ahlreeluna for salelst also keep for servic4 -lased from Mr. Oa —$1 payable at the 4 of returning if nem! DORRANCE, Let 0 forth P. 0. . BOARS filAMWORTEI )30i Signed 1llke Oheese Factory, WW1 registered ped time of service sill • say. fnesie*ORTli PR Signed has for McKillop, a thorol limited number of extra good pig and cross their nerkslai Terms $1, with tri 3011.141 McMILLAN 'DIGS FOR SERI tfor service on ewe English Berksl obssed from Jain .Yorkshire Boar. Terms—$1, payabh privilege of return:I Brucefield P. 0, TEAC frE1011E11. WAN Wroxeter pnl -salary aid be mei THOMAS RAE, Se TEACHER WAI Section ;,%Zo. 3 teacher holdinz a Applications to sti references, to be before the Wattle Winthrop P. 0. ALE TEA:01 IVI School Sect secondseless prole to commence the eiclebsg testimenie -desired, will be re . November 10th, 11 red, JAMES A Brueefiesd P. 0, • Ncrq Daitej S T :drtolerwien:ipilyeiblifqlst;T,leosarv.:elPpa.e.reours s132:F.:410402:311: longer as may be Butter -making, V ii 01Arculaddrremen4114 Supt. 111DAPO THISSIAT 14111000 ,R1E PILODXECE3 lanE RESULTS se Si Nervous niseaa Pwresia,Steeple stone, ete.,caus zo shrunken 33r4 31,estlaaahostr pocket. Prieel writtereavarlo Wan linitatia tg:Iratuggiat 1 SOLD by j.- leading drnti Desires to stab the business so James Williair OARRI In the test as =net reasonabl Halted, SHOP—A8 Works, Goderi,