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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1896-11-06, Page 2SEAFORTH CARRIAGE WORKS. The best Buggies and Wagons • My stock. ef Carriare"-s ie very complete ‘• all hand mede, under ou- owe 1-tieerviqou. Don't hu3 forelgir factery.maele bu+ellen sou tan get better made a home, and as cheap, it not -cheaper their the work brought in from outmda tows. Why iskeend money moues in building up rival towns and injure your own, when you cart do better at home. Call and see meand be convinced. • All kinds at blaekentithing and repairing promptly and satisfactorily done. -• - A fun stock of Cutters of the. best material and latest Styiee, which will be sold Cheap. Lewis McDonald, SEAFORTB. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. -DARK TO RENT.- -To rent, a' 200 acre farm, 21. J2 miles from IN ingliairOvith first-olass buildings, And well watered. It is all in pasture:and is an ex- cellent chance for either farming or pasturing cattle. For particulars, apply to Box 126, Wingham 1173tf ARM FOR SA,LE:—For sale, lot 7, concession Hibbert, containing 76 acres of choioe land. rThere are 6 acres in hard wood Dush and 14 acres in fall wheat. Also good buildings and good orchard. It is conveuient to school and church. Apply to HUGH MACLEAY, on the premises, or Staffa P. 0. 1503x8 ifilARMS FOR SALE.—The undersigned has twenty Choice Farms for sale in Bast Huron, the ban- ner County of the Province'; all sizes, and prices to suit. For full information, write or call personally. No trouble to show them. F. S. SCOTT, Brussels P. O. 1.8914f FAlig FOR SALE —100 turret', in the township of Grey, neax Brussels. There is on it nearly 60 - acres of bush. About halt black ah, the rest hard- wood. A never -failing spring of water runs through the lot. Will be sold at a big hargainee-Vor particu- lars, apply to MRS. JANE WALKER, Box 219, Brussels. • .1470 1430 1GSARM FOR SALE —350 acres, lots 32, 33, 34 and _U 36, 8th concession, McKillop. Will be sold, in one block or divided to suit: purchasers. 36 acres of good bush land. New bank barn, house with cellar. All fenced and drained. For further information Apply to 30BN C. MORRISON, Winthrop,. Ontario, or to W. G. GQU1NLOCK, Wareaw, N. Y. 1505-4 Great— Bargains AT THE Seaforth Tea Store I have nem, the best values in all kinds of Teas ever offered in Seaforth. I Will war- rant every pound to give satisfaction, or money refunded. I have a large stock in all grades of Japans, Blacks, Greens, Gun- powders, Monsoon and tea 'dust. Sugars of all grades, new raisins, new figs, new cur- rants cleaned ready for use, new codfish, a fresh and well -assorted stock of Groceries at bottom price, also Crockery and Glassware. 'A choice lot of fresh butter on hanct, also fresh lard in 20 lb pails or in bulk; prunes raisins and cooking figs at 5e a lb. If you want a fine toilet, dinner or tea set, give me a call, and you can get them cheaper than the cheapest ten lbs. sulphur for 250; ten lbs. salts for 25c; five per cent. discount to all cash customers. - Wanted—ohickens, cluCk.s, fresh eggs, for which the highest prices will be paid. A. G. AULT9 C4th. FACT DEAD SURE The Tobacco Habit Cured —13Y— UNCLE SAM'S Tobacco Cure. •I Read the Strongest Endorsement, ever given any Remedy: 1‘ The United. States health reports have examined and investigated many prepara- tions, and in the light of our examination and tests of UNCLE SAM'S TOBACCO CURE we are but performing a duty to the Public when we endorse the same end tamp it as the crowning achievement of. the Nineteenth Century in the way of destroy- ing a habit as disgusting as it is common, for only $I. Hence we earnestly advise you to write them for full particulars." FOR SALE BY L V. FEAR, Druggist. 1177-30 THE SAFORTH Musical - Instrument EMPORIUM. ESTABLISHED, 1873. Owing to hard times, we have con- cluded to sell Piaaos and Organs at Greatly Reduced Prices. Organs at $25 and upwards, and Pianos at Corresponding prices. SEE US BEFORE PURCHASING. SCOTT BROS. J. C. Smith & CO., ERS A General Banking business transacted. Farmers' notes discounted. Drafts bought and sold Interest allowed on deposits at the rate el 5 per cent. per annum. SALE NOTES discounted, or taken 'for collection, OFFICE—First door north of Reid & Wilson's Hardware Store. • SEAFORTH. THE FARMERS' Banking - House, (In connection with the Bank of Montreal.) LOGAN & CO., BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENTS. OFFICE—In the Commercial 1{ot6.1 build- ing, next to the Town Hall. A. General Banking Businees done. Drafts issued and cashed. Interest ellowed on depoeite.. 1VIONEY TO LEND On good notes or mortgagee. ROBERT LOGAN, M-ANAOER. 1, 1058 GODERICH Steam Boiler Works, (ESTABLISHED 1880.) A. CHRYST Summer to Chrystal & Black, Manufaeturers of all kinds of Stationa Marine, Upright & Tubular BOILERS Salt Pans, make Stacks, Sheet Iror Works, etc., eto. --_.---- Lis° dealers in Upright and Horizontal Slide Valve Ilene& Automatic, Cut -Off Engines a specialty. All Lees of pipe and pipe -fitting constantly on hand Tettimates furnished on short notice. Works—Opposite G. T. R. Sheldon, Goderiab, QPLENDID FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 10, conces- sion 6, township' of Stanley, cOntaining 100 acres. This is one o the best farms in the townshi and is situated in a ood and pleasant nelghborbood. Soil of the best and sot a rod of waste land on jt. There are all the bu 'dings on it that are required. The whole farm has een newly fenced and drained. An oroherd of 70 searing trees, plenty of good water, convenient to schools, churches, post office and market. Apply o WM. SINOL UR, Varna P. 0., or to WM. COPP Seaforth. - 1491 -ti PLENDID FAR ••1 FOR SALE.—Lot 25, Comes- sion 6, Townshi of Morris, containing 160 acres suitable for grain Or tock, situatedtwo and a half miles from the thri ••g village of Brussels, a good gravel road leading hereto ; 120 acres °leered and free from stumps, 6 'res cedar and ash and balance hardwood. Barn 5 x60 with straw and hay shed 10x70, stone stabling underneath both. The house Is brick, 22x32 with kitahen 18x26, cellar underneath both buildings. All are new. There is a large young orchard. School on nerit lot. The land has a good natural drainage, and the farm is in good condition. 'Satisfactory reasons fore selling. Apply at Ex- Arosrrou OFFICS, or on the premises. WM. BARRIE, Brussels. 13854f ITOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE.—For sale, cheap, the house and lot in Harpurhey, on the Rox- boro road, adjoining the property of Kr. F. Holmes - ted. There is a quarter acre of land well planted ith bearing fruit trees. Also a good stable. Tan ouse contains 6 rooms, woodshed, Etone cellar, ard and soft water and all other conveniences. It S very pleasantly situated and is an admirable place or a retired farmer. Six acres bf land also adjoin - ng this property will be sold with it or separately. pply to D. G RUMME rr, Harpurhey. 14964fxlm 'VILLAGE PROPERXY- FOR SALE.—For sale, in the thriving village ot Hensel!, an acre of land, ppon which is erected a neat comfortable frame house, nearly new, containing six rooms, with a good dry stone cellar. There is a good well and stable, and two sidea of the property te fenced with wire netting. The corner lot, containing one-quarter acre with the building and well, will be sold sopar. ately- if deeired. The three -building sites, -contair-ing one-quarter acre each, may also be bought separ- etely. This property eis situated on London road avenue, the best street in the village, and may be bought at a very eeasonablelfigure and on favorable terms. For particulars allay en the prenrises, .or address Box 71, Bengali,. Outario. D. STEWART. . 160641 _FARM FOR SALE.—For sale, lo 36, coneession 9 Kinlose, containing 100 acre., 85 cleared and. the belence in good ha dwood bush, The land Is in a good state of cultiva ion, is well einderdrained and well fenced. There is a frame barn -and log house on the property, a never- ailing spring with windmill, also about 2. ac -es of orchard. It is an excellent farm and is within. one mile of WIrit church station, where there are stores, blackss ith shop and churches. There ie a schsol on the pposite lot. It is !six miles from Wingham and- six from eLucknow, with good roeds leading in. all diree ions. This de- sirable property will be eold on re sonable terme. For' further particulars apply to JAMES MITCHELL, Varna P. 0. 1495-15044f FARM FOR SALE—For sale, lot and pert lot 9, concession 10, Grey townsi p, containing 165 acres, all cleared except twenty sores, which is a good hardwood bush. The land is n a high l s'iate of cultivat'on, well underdrained and well fenced, without any wa.ste land_ There is a good helve house, witI3 summer kitchen and woodshed ; a large bank barn, 81x52, with storm stabling underneath, and other outbuilding& There are four acres of orchard of one of the beet varieties of fruit; three good, never -failing wells with pumps in them. It is a mile and three-quarters from the village of Brae - eels, with good roads leading in all directions. This excellent pro • will be field cheap and on easy terms. Ap?11 on the premises or by lettqr to box 1.3, Brussels O. JOHN HILL. 11394f FOR SALE OR TO RENT ON EASY TERMS.— As the owner wishes to retire from business on acceunt 01 111 health, the following valuable property at Winthrop, 4,1_. miles north of Seaforth, on leading road ta Brussels, will be sold or rented as one farm or in parts to suit purchaser : about 600 acres of splendid farming land, with about 400 under crop, the balance in pasture. There are large barns and all other buildings necessary for the implements, vehicles, etc. This -land is well watered, has good frame and brick" dwelling (houses, etc There are grist and saw mills and store which will be sold or rented on advantageous terms. Also on 17th. eon - cession, Grey towt.Ship, 190 acres of land, 40 in - pasture, the balance in timber. Possession given after harvest of farm lands • reins at once. For par- ticulars apply to ANDREW'GOVENLOCK, Winthrop. 14864f LUITZETT-PIIIYARD. P. KEATING, Dealer in Lumber and Shingles.. All kinds of LUMBER always on land and of the very best quality.' Give me a call, and.see if I can't giv you what you want. • Alai -Lumber yard and office on the lffuron - Road, near the flax mill. 14975 'NE CHIEF ENGINEER. The "Empress of India's" Chief 1 Engineer Tells an Interesting Story. - 7! Mr. Francis Somerville,' one of the best known men in the steamboat traffic on the rivers and lakes of Ontario1 having been engaged in this business for fifty years, a.ndavho ilesides At No. 195 lJiper Colborne Street, Kingston, speaks' as follows of his recovery from thesickness which has affected him for some tirh . .e, Said Mr. Somerville: "The -grip left , me with kidney troubles and gravel. I, • I had severe -pain over the kidneys and in" the small of my back, also Detw een the shoulders and in th bladder. "The urine was yew dark -colored with a great'deal of muddy sediment. I went - to Mr. McLeOd's drug store, and bought two bOxes of Doan's Kidney Pills. I ave taken them with lhat people' tell 3t3 e is, the usual good result. "They have cleared the urine, removed the sediment, relieved me of distressing pain in the back and between the•should- ers, and have built me up in .a surprising manner. In fact, I am entirely free from the troubles which affected me before taking these remarkable pills, and I recommend them As a certain cure for all troubles arising from kidney disorders." — Whear, Kingston.. t . . . • THE HURON EXPOSITOR MANT OF THE STARS MUSIC WAS THE THEME OF REV, DR TALMAGE'S SERMON. A Prediction That tianize the Wor - Hastening the T Will Again He I Harmony Shall Chrie- d—Saered Songs Are lumph—The Universe Tune.- . WASHINGTON, No 1.—The musical re- sources of all nations seem drawn -upon by Dr. Talmage in th 's sermon to illustrate a most practioal truth. His subject was. "The Chant of th Stars," and the text Job 88, 8, 7, "Who laid the cornerstone thereof, whenathe orning stars sang to- gether?' We have all seen the ceremony at thE laying of the corner tone of church, asylum or Masonic temple. Into the hollaw of the stone were placed scrolls of history and important documents, to be suggestive if,1 10asor 200 years after, the building should be destroyed by fire or torn down. We re. 'member the silver tro el or iron hammen that smote the square lece of granite late. sanctity. We remember some venerable than who presided wilding the trowel en hammer. We remember also the music at the choir atopd on the Scattered stones and timber of tae building about to be con- structed. The leaves of the notebooks flut tiered in the wiad and were turned ovei with a great rustling, and we remembei 'how the bass, barytone, tenor, °entrant and solirann voices commingled. They had for many days been rehearsing tin special pro ramme that it might be worth) of the corn rstone laying. 7 In my te t the poet of Uz calls us to a grander cer mony-a--the laying of the foun- dation of his great temple of a world. The corner tone was a block of light, and the trowel was of celestial crystal. Al] about and n the embankments of cloudt stood the a gelicchorfsters unrolling that librettos ot. overture, and other worlds clapped shining cymbals while the cere- mony went on, and God, the Architect, by stroke of light after atroke of light, dedi- • cated this great cathedral of a world, with • mountains for pillars and sky for frescoed --ceiling and flowering fields for a floor and sunrise and „midnight aurora or uphol- stery. "Who laid the cornerstone thereof, when the morning stars sang together?" God's Perfect Harmony. Tbe fact is that the whole universe WAt a complete cadence, an unbroken dithy. ramb, a musical portfolio. The -greet sheet of immensity. had been spread out, and written on it were the stars, the smaller el them minims,. the larger efi.thein sustain- ed notes. The meteors marked the stac- cato passages, the whole havens a gamut with all sounds, intonation, modulations, the space between the worlds a musical in- terval, trembling of stellar light a quaver, the thunder a bass clef, the wind , among tees a treble clef. That is tlie way God made all things a perfect harmony. . But one day a• harp string snapped in the great orchestra. One day a voice S012114ed out of tune. One day a discord, harshi and terrific, grated upon the glori- ous antiphon. It was sin that made the dissonance, and that harsh discord has been sounding through the centuries. All - the work of Christians and philanthropists and 'reformers of all ages is to stop that discord and get all things back into the perfect harmony which was hoard at the lazing of the cornerstone when the morn- ing stars- sang together. Before .I get 'through, if I -am divinely; helped, I will make it plain that sin is discord and righteousness harmony; that in general things,are out of tune is as plain. as to a musician 's•ear is the unhappy clash of clar- inet and bassoon in an orchestral ren- d.' 6-rihneworld'sg..- health Tout of tune; weak lungs and the atmosphere in; collision, dis- ordered eye and 'noonday light in quarrel, rheumatic limb and damp weather in struggle; neuralgias, and pneumonias, and consumptions, and epileptics in flocks • sweep, the neighborhoods and cities. Where you find one person with sound throat, and keen eyesight,and alert ear, and easy respiration, and regular pulsation, and • supple limb, and prime digestion, and steady nerves, you find 100 who have to be .very' careful because this or that or the ether physical function is disordered. ' Things Out of -Tune. • The human intellect out or tune; the judgment wrongly swerved, or the mem- ory leaky, or the will weak, or the tempos inflammable, the well balanced mind ex- ceptional. Domestic, life ant of tune; only here and there& conaugal outbreak of incompatabil- ity of temper through the divorce courts, • 0f. a filial outbreak about a _ father's will through the surrogate's court, or a case of wife beating or husband poisoning througb the critninal courts, but thousands of fam- ilies with June outside and January with- in. : . Society out of tupe; labor and capital; their hands on each other's throat; spirit of daste keeping those down in the social scale who are struggling to get up, and putting those who are up in anxiety lest they have to come down. No wonder the old pianoforte of society is all out of tune, when hypoceisy, and lying, nd subterfuge, and double 'healing, and oophancy, and charlatanistn, and reven! J have for 6,000 years been !banging ,awa at the keys and stamping the pedals. On all sides there is a shipwreck of har- monies—nations in discord without real- izing it. So wrong is the feeling of nation for nation that isymbols chosen are fierce and destructive!. • In this country, where our skies are fUll'of robins and delves and morning larks, we have our national sym- bol, the fierce and filthy eagle, as cruel a .bird as can be found in all the ornitholog- ical catalogues. . In Great' Britain, where they have lambs ond fallow deer, their symbol is the merdiless lien. In Russia, where from between her frozen north and blooming south all kindly beasts dwell, they chose the growling bear, and in the world's heraldry a favorite figure is the - dragon, the fabled winged serpent, feron clouts and dreadful. And so fond is the world 6f contention that we climb out through the heavens and baptize one of the other planets vvith the spirit of battle and call it Mars, after the god of war, and we give to the eighth sign of the zodiac the name of. the scorpion, a creature which IS chiefly celebrated for its deadly sting. But, after all, these synibols are expressive of the way nation feels toward nation--dis, c,ortl wide as the co tbeept land bridging tbe. seas. - , The Belgn of Discord. I suppose you have noticed bow warmly In love dry goods stores are with other dry goods tores, and how highly grocery men l the sal o street, and in what a eulogistic s think e f the sugars of the grocery man on way allopathic and homeopathic) doctors speak, of each , other, and how ministers _will sofnetimes ut ministers on that beau- tiful cooking -it strument which the Eng- lish call "a spit an iron roller with spikes on it and tur ed by a crank before a hot aLre—and then, if the ministee beingreasted cries out against it, the men who are turn ing him say, "Hush, my brother; we are turning this spit for the glory of God and the good of your soul, and you 'must la euict, while We close the service with: Blest be the tio that binds Our boarts in Christian love. The earth is diametored and eicrumfer enced with discord, and the musio that was rendered at the 'laying of the world's c,ornerstone when the morning stars sane tOgethe Is not heard now, and thougr here and there from this and that part ol society land from this and that part of the earth there comes up a thrilling solo oi love, or a warble of worship, or a sweet duet of lpatIeflce, they are drowned out by a disco*d that shakes the ort. Pauij says, "The whole creation groan- eth." nd while the nightingale, and the woodla k, and the canary, and the plovei somotlilnes sing so sweetly that their note: have bon written out in musical notation, and it is found that the cuckoo sings re the key of D and that the cormorant is t basso lel the winged choir, yet sportsman': gun and the autumnal blast often leate them ruffled and bleeding or dead in mead ow or forest. Paul was right, for tiu groan in nature drowns out the prim dolmas' of the sky. Tartini, the great musical composer, dreamed one night that ho made a centred with seam, the latter to be ever in the compoder's eervice. But one night he handed to satan a violin, on which Diabo. lus played such sweet music that; the corn poser Was awakened by the einotion and tried td reproduce the sounds, 4.nd there- from Was written Tartini's mot famoul piece, The Devil's Sonata," a 4lroam in geniou , but faulty, for all m lody de- scends rorn heaven and only di cords as cend f om hell. All hatreds, f uds, con troverses, backbitings and revenges art the de l's sonata, ,are diabolic fugue, art demon ao phantasy, aro grand march o: doom, are. allegro of perdition. Definition of Sin. .. But f in this world things in genera! are ou of tune to our frail ear, how much more so tct beings angelio and deltic! It takes a, skilled artist to fully appreciatt disagreement of sound. ,Many have no cw pacity to detect a defect of musical execu tion, and though -there were in one bar at many offenses against harmony as coula crowd in between the lower F of the bast and the higher G of the soprano it would o the educated artist beads of per - give tip. no disco.nifort, while on the fore- headapiratien - would stand out as a result ot the hattowlng diseotiance. While an anise ' teur was Performing on a piano and ha just stuck the wrong chOrd, John Sebas- tian Bach, the immortal compeser, entered the room, and the amateur rose in embar- rassment, and Bach rushed past theshost; who stepped forward to greet lam and be- fore the keyboard had stopped vlbrating put his adroit hand upon the keys and changed the painful inharmany into glori ons cadence. Then Bach turned and gala Salutation to the host. But the svorst of all discord Is moral dis- cord. If society and the world fire pain fully discordant to imperfect man, whai must they be to a perfeet God? People tea to define what sin is, It -seems to me that sin is getting out of harmony with God,' e disagreeinent with his holiness, with hi: purity, with his lave, with his commands, our will clashing with his will, the finite dashing against the imanite, the frail against the puissant, the created against the creptor. If 1,000 musicians, with flute and co not -a -piston and trumpet and vice loncell ,the hautboy and trombone and all -the wind and strieged instruments that ev r ._ athered. in a Dusseldorf jubilee sh tail resolve that they would play out ol tut e a 3d put concord to the rack and make tlu pi co wild with shrieking and grabble and ra ping sounds, they could not make such a pandemonium as that which rages . in a sinful soul when God listens to thE play of its thoughts, passions and onto tions 'discord, lifelong discord, madden. Ing di cord. The Iworld pays more for discord than it does far consonance. High -prices have been p iid for music. One man gave $22! to hea the Swedishsongstress in Non York-, nd another $625.to hear her in Bos ten, a d another $650 to hear her in Provi. dence. Fabulous prices have been pad foi - sweet sounds, but far more has been paid for dis ord. The primeen war cost $1,700,- 000,00 and tho akmerican civil war oyez $9,500;000,000, and the war debts of pro- fessed Christian nations are about $15, 000,000,000. The world pays for this red ticket, which admits it to thenaturnalie of broken bones and death agonies and de- stroyed cities and plowed graves and crushea hearts, any amount of money see tan asks. Disoordl -Discord! i The Stars Will Sing Again. . But I have to tell you that the song that 'the morning stars 643.1g -together at the lay- ing of the world's (30 nertsone is to resound again. Mozart's g eate$t overture wat compo ed one night when he was several times veepowered with sleep, and: artisti say th y can tell the places in the music where he was falling asleep and the places where, he awakened. So the overture of the morning stars spoken of in my text has boon asleep, hut it will awaken and be more grandly rendered by the evening stars of the world's existence than by the • inornipg stars, and the vespers will be Sweeter than the matinee The work of ali geed men and women and of all gooe churches.and all reform associations hell to bri3g the race back to the original har 1 mons?. The rebellious heart to be attuned, social lfe to be attuned, commercial ethics to be attuned, internationality to be at- tuned,hemispheres to be attuned. In olden times the choristers had a tun- ing fo k with two prongs, and they would strike t on the back of pew or mast° rack and pi4t it to the ear and then start the tune 4nd all the other voices would join. In mo ern orchestra the leader has a com- plete ilistrament rightly attuned and he sounds that, and all the other perfermers tune.t 8 keys of their instruraents t make them iorrespond and draw the bov ovor the string and listen, and sound it over again iintil all the keys are screvved to con- cert pi ch, and the discords melt into one great symphony, and the curtain hoists,. and th baton taps, and audiences are rap- tured ith Schumann's "Paradise and the Peri," or Rossini's "Stabat Mater," or Bach's "M ill t" in D Now, our world can never be attuned by an im erfect instrument. tven a Cremo- na would not do. 1 Heaven has ordained the only instrument, and it is made out of the wood of the cross, and the voices that accompany it are imported voices, canta- trices of the first Christmas night, when heaven serenaded the earth with "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peaco, off and get lost in generalities, we had bet - good will to men." Lest we start t o far ter begin with ourselves, get our own hearts end lives in harmony with the eter- nal Christ. Oh, for his almighty spirit to attune 'us, to chord our will with 'hie will, to modhlate our life with his life and bring us into unison with all that is pure and self sacrificing and heavenly! The strings of our fiature are all broken and twisted, and th, bow is so slack it cannot evoke _ anything mellifluous. The instrument made or heaven to play on hes been roughly twanged and struck by influences worldly' and demoniac. 0 master hand of Cbrist, 'restore this split and fractured and despoiled and unstrung nature until first it' shalawail out for ounsin and then thrill with dinine pardon! the Whole Wqrld Attuned. The whole world meet also be attuned by the same power. I was in the Fair- banks weighing scale manufactory of Ver- mont. Six hundred hands, and they have never had a strike! Complete harmony be- tween labor and capital, the operatives of scores Of years in their beautiful homes near by the mansions of the manufacturers, ovhose invention and Christian behavior Made the great enteaprise. So, all the world over, labor and capital will bo brought into euphony. You may -have heard what is called the "Anvil Chorus," composed by Verdiaa iune played by hame NOVEMBER 6 1896. mers, great anti email, now with mighty stroke and now with heavy stroke, beating • a great iron an-vil. That is what the world has got to come to—anvil chorus, yardstick chorus, shuttle chorus, trowel chorus, crowbar chorus, pickax -chorus, gold mine chorus, rail track chorus, loco- motive chorus. It can be done; and it will be done; so all social life will be attuned by the gospel harp. There will be as many classes in society as now, but the classes will not be regulat- ed by birth or wealth . or accident, but by the scale of virtue and benevolence, and people will be assigned to their places as good, or very good, or most excellent. So also commercial life will be attuned, ad there will be 12 in every dozen and 6 ounces in every_ pound, and apples at t e bottoni of the barrel will be as sound s those on the top, and silk' goods will njot be -cotton, and sellers will not Mao to charge honest people more than the rig t price because others will not pay, and goods will come to you corresponding with the sample by which you purchased them, and coffee will not be chicoried, and sugar will not be sanded, and milk will not be chalked, and adulteration of food will be a state prison offense. Aye, all things shall be attuned. Elections in England and the United States will no more be a grand car- nival of defamation and scurrility, but the elevation of righteous men in a righteous way. Wonderful Christianity. ,t133 the sixteenth century the singera called the Fischer brothers reached the , lowest bass ever recorded, and the highest note every trilled was by La B stardella and Catalini's voice bad a corn ass of 1:1 octaves. but Christianity is more wonder- ful, for it runs all up and down the great- est heights and the deepest depths of the world's necessity, and it will compass ev- erything and bring it in accord with the .song which the morning stars sang at the laying of the world's cornerstone. All the metered music in homes and concert halls and churclies tends toward this consum- mation. Make it more and more hearty. Sing in your families. Sing in your places of business. If we with proper spirit use teiesse. faculties, we are rehearsing for the skh , Heaven is to have a new song, an en- tirely new so g. But I should not wonder . if, as omothhcs on earth, a tune is fash- ioned out of many tunes, or it is one tune with the va#iations; so some of the songs of the redeemed may have playing through them the songs of earth. And how thrill- ing, as coming through the great anthem! of the saved, pocomparfied by harpers with their harps and trumpeters with their trumpets, if we should hear some of the strains of "Antioch" and "Mount Pis- gah" apd "Coronation" and "Lenox" and "St. Martin's" and aFountain" and "Ariel" and "Old Hundred!" How they would bring to mindi tho pray- ing circles and communion days, and the Christmas festivals, and the church worship in which on earth we mingled! I have no idea that when we hid farewell to earth we are to bid farewell to all these grand old gospel hymns which melted and raptured our souls for so many years. Now, if sin is discord and righteousness is harmony, lot us get out of the one and en - tor the other. . - Jubilee of Peace. After Our- dreadful civil war was over, In the SU33.1711q of 1869, a great national peace jubilee was held in Boston, and as an elder of my church had been honored by the selection of some of his music to be rendered on that occasion I accompanied him to the jubilee. Forty thousand people sat and stood in the great coliseum erected for that purpose. Thousands of wind and stringed instruments. Twelve thousand trained voices. The masterpieces of all ages rendered, hour after hour and day after day—Handel 's "Judas Maccabasus," Spohr's "Last Judgment," Beethoven's "Moupt of Olives," Haydn's "Creation," Mendelssohn's "Elijah," Meyerbeer's "Coroaation March," rolling on and up in surges that billowed against the heavens. The mighty cadences within were ac- companied on the outside bythe ringing of the bells of the city, and cannon on th conunons discharged by electricity, in exae time with the music, thundering their aw ful .bars of a harmony that astounded al nations, sometimes I bowed my head and. wept. Sometimes I stood up in the en- chantment, and sometimes the effect was so overpowering I felt I could not endure it, especially when all the voices were in full chorus, and alt the batons were in full wave, and all the ore estra in full tri- umph, and 100 anvils tnder mighty ham- mers were in full clan, and all the towers of the city rolled in their majestic sweet- ness, and the whole building quaked vvith the boom of 80 cannon. Parepa Rosa, with a voice that will never again be equaled on earth until the archangelic voice proclaims that time shall be no lon- ger, rose above all other sounds in her ren- dering of our national air, "The Star Span- gled Banner." It was too much for a mortal—quite enough for an immortal—to hear. And while some fainted, one woman- ly spirit, released under its power, aped away to be with God. 0 Lord, our God, quickly usher in the Whole word's peace jubilee, and all islands of the sea oin the .five continents, and all the voices nd all the musical instruments of all nati ns combine, and all the organs that ever sounded requiem of sorrow sound only a grand march of joy, and all the bells that tolled for burial ring for resurrection, and all the cannon that ever hurled death across the nations sound forth eternal vic- tory. And over all acclaini of earth and minstrelsy of heaven there will be heard one voice sweeter and mightier than any human or angelic voice, a voice once full of tears, but now full of triumph, the voice of Christ, saying, "I' am alpha and omega, the beginning and the end, the last." Then, at the laying first and thof the top st ne of the world's history, tlhe l! same voices hall be heard as when, at the laying of the world's cornerstone!, "the morning stars sang together." In Noble county, Ind., there'is a fathom,. less sea—of small area, to be sure—of oil and salt water from which gas escapes With a tremenddus roar. teseaettaaamssameeeeta.aesesterteatar nyallsion The cream of purest Norwegian cod-liver oil, with hypophosphites, adapted to th2 weakest digestion. Almost as palatable as milk. Two Sizes -50 cents and $1.00 COTT & BOWNE, Belleville,Onte itatORTA 0 UrVeYerei Jord ns NEw Store. Headquarters For everythihg in the Grocery business 4•1----C1'oice and AT THE LOWEST- POSSIBLE PRICE FOR CASH OR TRADE.. Choice butter and eggs wanted, for which we will pay the highest market price. J. JO DAN, Seaforth. FOIITY OE TS Isn't much when you. have it but it will buy a pound of Brown .Label CVL N TEA When once used, alwrhys used. Lead packets only. From all grocers. P. ECKARDT & CO., Toronto, 5 9 Wholesale Agents. MINION B A N K. CAPITAL, (PAID UP) ▪ $I„500,000. REST, im in • Sl.„500,0004... SEAFORTH BRANCII. MAIN STREET, - SEAFORTH. A generalbankiag business transacted. Drafts on all parts of the United States, Great Britain and Rurope bought and sold. Letters of credit issued, available in all parte of Europe, China and Japan. _Farmers' Sale Notes collected, and advances madeon ISM at lowest rates. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. Depesitssaf One Dollar and upwards received, and interest allowed at highestcurren rates. Interest added to principal twice each year—at the end of June and December. No notice of withdrawal is required kr the whole or any portion of a deposit. R. S. HAYS, Solicitor. W. K. PEARCE, Agent. LOOK PEFORE YOU LEAP s an adage 41iich has saved many persons from the twinges of onscience and from the depths of remorse. But not only has it assured them of peace of mind, and consequently happiness,but it has Many times spared POCKET13' 00K, And thus may we have raised them. materially. We have given them, the best clothles to be had, and • at prices consistent with 11 good wOrkm nship and superior fit and fini.sh. By looking at our stock and p ces hellore buying, you will always have the pleasure of knowing that you have the best and latest clothes at the minimum prices. BRIGHT BROS., SEAFORTH, ..oessitassastssminntrasesnatortms4aanssmernronnturrnmasawassassormismawaseasesamws D„Couircieitssil4,; avioltte's The finest Remedy in the World for all .ikffec- up of' tionsiof the Throat & 1 1 El. Gnppo, Croup, Lungs. . . : coughs, 4 • I S , _.9 Whooping Cough - Tun) ett tint ... • Chasseassissssislasamsesesssiiisr;assaisss sessseesissessussissesssessissUssississississsitsamsssa • 1 1 IT WILL PAY YOU TO EXAMINE atm :FTJRNITTJEE -::::migazzmunge,ersesratmce We are still adding to our already large stock, and we are now prepared to meet the wants of every one requiring fur- niture. It will pay you to examine our goods before pur- chasing elsewhere, as we are sure to please you in price, style and qualiti,, UNDERTAKING • • Our undertaking department -is complete in every respect, and we guarantee satisfaction. 5. T. -Holmes, Funeral Director Residence next door to Drs. Scott & McKay's office. BROADFOOT BOX & CO. I :i1 Main Street, Seaforth Porter's Old Stand (AMY TO LEND $4000 ard ups lowest rates of inter herrowee. 'This is net eletiee TuckerEurtith far „fte. -OWENS, trail doe laemendellie, ANTED.—Enght - VY;1s4 Canada and bey Life -and Iteign," Marais. ' A thrilling the Queen as girl, ma. ' lite romance; grandly boots on time ; prospi throve territory, lots 1.3V-OlatftETS0N CO West, Toroute, Ont. • II -300 Private 500 rates -9i i 106 borrower 11,000 pleted VIM within 42,500 Z.HAW ESTRA TRAYED HEIFER October, a red ben last' seen it bed information that sill lo anal, will be liberally STODDARD, Egmond, -CISTRAY SHEEP. -- ,124 elOu 3, McKillop, live *Inv and two lam marked. Any informs will be libtrally rem harboring the same, 2A13}I, i3eaforth P. O. STOOK ,OBEEP AND B7L1 0 and ewe Iamb -50 year-ola Shorthorn h be sold at reasonable oesision 1, Hibbert, DUNCAN ItieLAREN. Ante GS FOR BATX: . X undersigned,. br shires,has for sale post , also keep for service 1 .based from Mr. Geer; payable at the th of returning if neceSsa DORIELANCE, Lot 26,' forth P. O. BOARS numworra BOA1 j. atgried will 'mei Chew Factory, a with registered pedlg Sime of service with tory. BUGUMOCAB rinAlIWORTH PIO JIL signed bas for no thoro'bi limited number of -e( extra good pig and br crows their nerkshir Terms el, with privil JOHN MeMILLAN ' DIGS FOR SERVI I for serrisin DU I Inge English Berkshi chased from James Yorkshire Boar.' na Terms -41, payable a privilege of returnin Ameefleld P. 0. --lopomts FOR SER Concesplon 7,S by Thornae Teasdalei Lee;Ath (3444)elain bredby T. G. Snell,' nne (imp) (3071,) Terms SL ler grad_ at time of yerviee, necessary. WM. Mol g filEAOHER WAN' tion No 6 Tue ing second or third mence January lat, I testimonials and 86114 the unclersigned ROBERT LEA.Tlia.: forth le 0.1 -- - ALE TEACHEI School Seen() secondeelass paofest to commence the fir closing testimonials desired, will Wree November 10t13, 1S9 red. JAMES Alli Brucefield P. O. Teact Wanted for &hoc for the year 1897. second ‘clees, Oren plieations s'atieg sa undersigned up te SON, Beigrave. Dairy STI Wfli t -e -open Nov gentlemen.. Slio;t: longeraa may be 4 lautter-makieg, t3) Cream Separators dairy work. Full , topic& Well furn Diplomas granted t tion fee $1 OD. Circular on app'.11 Aticheea Supt. We 1505-4 11104000 REM PROPUCZEITUZ RESULTS In SO Nervous Diseases. Paresta,Sleeplees islonseete, causedl to altrunkemergan IL•stillstalsooSin Docket. l'xice$1.1 verfttesensarsitts batman ,itnitatfon,11 vrnireilltai•druggist has itealonl '—SOLD by J. V. leading elruggir BER1 padres to stele t the business so le James 1Villiases, CARRI1 In the best and , roost -reasonable Belted. SHOP—As for Works, Ooderieht St 1470 -ti