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The Huron Expositor, 1896-12-11, Page 2! 1 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. WARN! TO 1tbt1T.-• To 'rent, a 200 acre faraa, miles from %%Ingham, with first-class buildings, and well watered. It is all in p.eture, and is an ex` t client chance for either farming or l.�a_turing cattle. For 'particulars, apply to Box 1`:,5, H`inghani 1473ft ,&.RMS FOR SALE.—The undersigned had twenty Choice Farms for nate in East Huron, the: ban. ner County of the Province; all r izos, and primes to suit` Fur full information, write or call pe Sonaael No trouble to show thaw. F. S. SuOT ., Brussels P. O, tf mural FOR SALE —100 mires, in the township of Grey, near Brussels, There is on it nearly 50- acres, of bush, about half black ash, the rest hard- wood, A never -failing spring of water runs through thelot, Will be sold at a big bargain._ For ',artieu- lars, apply to AIRS. JANE WALKER, Boa 219, Brussels. 1470 FLENDll? FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 10, Donee- cion 6, township of !Realty, Outlining 100 scree: This is one of the best farina in the township and is situated in a, good and pleasant neighborhood. Soil of the best. and not a rod of waste land on it.. There are all the buildings on it that are required. The whole faun has been newly fenced and drained.. An orchard: of 70 bearing trees, plenty of good water, convenient to echoo1e,k; churches, post office and market. Apply to WM.- SINCLAIR, Varna P. O., or to WM. COPP, Seaforth.. 14.91-tf t PLEND1 D FARM[ FOR SALE,—Lot 25, Conces- sion 6, Township of Morris, containing 160 aoraa • suitable for grain or stook, situated two and a ball =Hash= the thriving village of Brussels, a good gravel road leading thereto ` 120 acres cleared and free from stumps, 6: acres cedar and ash and balance hardwood. Barn 61x60 with straw and hay shed 40x70, atone stablingunderneath both- The house Is brick, 22x32 with kitc:ien 18x26, cellar underneath bath buildings; All are new. There is a large young orchard: School on next lot- The land has a. good natural drainage, and the farm lain good condition. Satisfactory reasons for selling. Apply at Tao Ex- ro&toa Onus, or on: the preiiisee. WM. BARRIE, Brussels. V1hLAGE PROPERTY FOP. SALE.—For sale, in the thriving village of Hensel', an acre of land, • upon 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 sides of the property is fenced with wire netting. The corner lot, containing one-quarter acre with the building and well, will be sold separ- ately if desired. The three building sites, containing one-quarter acre each, may also be bought separ- ately. Ttus property is situated on London road avenue. the best street in the village, and may be bought at a very reasonable figure and on favorable terms, For particulars apply on the premises, or address Box 71, Heasall, Ontario. D. STEWA8T. 1606-tf :ETARM FOR SALE,—For sale, lot 36, concession 2; l;:inlosa, containing 100 acres, 85 cleared `and the balance in good hardwood bush. The land Is in a good state of cultivation, is well underdrainecl and well fenced. There is a frame barn and log house on the property, a never -failing spring with windmill, also about 2 aces of orchard. It is an excellent farm and is within one mile of Whitechurch station, where there aro stores, blacksmith shop and churches. There is a school on the opposite lot. It is six miles from Wingham and six from �Luckuow, with good roads leading in all direeti ns. This de - sizable property will be sold on yeas nable terms.. For further particulars apply to JAMIE' AureliE LL,. Varna P. O. 1495-1504•tf ARM FORSALE.—For sale, lot 8, and part lot 9, concession 10, Grey township, containing 165 acres. alt cleared except twenty acres, which is a good hardwood bush. The land is in a high state of cultivat'on, well underdrained and well fenced, without any waste land. There is a good frame ,house, with summer kitchen and woodshed • a large bank barn, 84x52, pith: storm stabling undernaatn, and other outbuildings: There are four acres of orchard of one of the best varieties of fruit ; three good. never -failing wells with pumps in them. It is a mile andthree-quarters_froni the village of Brus- sels. with good roads leading in all dizeotions.. This excellent property will be sold cheap and on easy terms. Apody on the prem'ses or by letter to box 13, Brussels P. O. JOHN HILL. 1489-tt FOR SALE OR TO REIN ON EASY TERMS .— As tis the owner wishes to retire from business on account of ill health, the following valuable property at Winthrop, 44 miles north of Seaforth, on leading road to Brussels, will be sold or rented as one farm or in. parts to suit purchaser : about 500 acres of splendid farming land, with about 400. under crop, the balance io. pasture. There are large barns and all other buildings necessary for -the implements, vehicles, etc. This land is well watered, has good. fiarne and brick dwellinghouses, etc. There are grist and saw twills and store which will be sold' or rented. on. advantageous terms .Also On 17th con- cession Grey township,, 190 acres of land, 40 in pasture, the balance m timber. Possession given after harvest of farm lands ; mills at once. For par- ticulars art culars apply to ANDREW GOVENLOCK, Winthrop. 148641 SE &F`ORTH LUMBER -' YARD • P. KEATING, Dealer in Lumber and Shingles. AR kinds of LUMBER always on hand • and of the very hest quality. Give me a call, and see if I can't give you. what you want. `Lumber yard and office. on the Huron Road,. near the flax main. 14975 McK1LLOP TAXES. Charles Dodds, collector of taxes for. the Town- ship of McKillop, Kill be at the Royel Hotel,. Sea - forth. every Saturday afternoon for the receiving- of the same. Tax payers will please take notice. CHARLES- DODDi, Collector. 1507-tf J. C. Smith & CO. A General Banking business transacted. Farmers' notes discounted. _ Drafts bought and sold. Interest allowed on deposits at the rate if 5 per cent. per annum. SALE NOTES discounted, or taken for collection, OFFICE—First door north of Reid & Wilson's Hardware Store. SERF ORTH. gs Ixiiiucy P i s.,,.,irst proved to the !people Unit i idrteydiseaseiscurable. Being the tori_;ilial :Haney remedy in pill form, the cures they have made, and the fame they have 'tt+ained have opened the way for a hunt 4tf imitations aficl substitutes, but those lwho have been cured of Complaints through the use of this won- derful medicine, those whose larno back is new free from pain, those who now have no headaches, those who have escaped from, the death grip of Diabetes and Bright's disease by tlio use of Doan's Kidney P1LLS are the ones whose opinion is valuabe. When scares or such people come forward and tell publicly that Doan's Kidney Pills c.zrfd thele after other means failed, it is evidc,ut that the only i6mi f r E.iclney Disease, Bladder and Urinary ct:iizic ultie::, Larne Back, and the number- l �.os results of disordered Kidneys is Doan's Hi.l:iey Fills. Be sure to get Doan's. is ries fifty cents per box. Por sale by For sale by I'. V. Friar, Seaforth. WORK. AFTER DEATH. DR. TALMAGE'S IDEA OF EMPLOYMENT' IN HEAVEN. A Unique View of tlio Celestial World. Enaployment Suited to the Worker' lifu- sioiane, Soldiers, Historians, Artists, All Will 7iind Congenial Occupation. WASIIINGTOV, Deo. 6.—Dr,% Talmage's sermon today gives a very tintss`emiview of the celestial world and is !one of the most unique discourses of the . great preacher. The text is Ezekiel i 1, "Now it came to pass in the thirtieth year, inothe fourth month, in the fifth d y of the month, as I was among the captives by the river of Chebar, that the heavens were opened." Ezekiel, with others, had been expatri- ated, and while in foreign slavery, stand- ing on the : banks of the royal canal which he and others serfs had been con- demned to dig by the order of Nebuchad- bezzar—I:his royal canal in the text called the river of Chebar--the illustriou/ exile bad visions of heaven. Indeed- it almost always so—that the brightest visions of heaven Dome not • to those who are on mountain top of, prosperity, but - to, some John on desolate Pa os, or to some Paul in Mamert]ne dungen , or to some Ezekiel standing on the bank of a ditch he had. been compelled to dig . yea, to the. weary, to the heartbroken, to hose whom sorrow has banished. The to t is very particular to give us the exact ti a of the vision. It was in the thirtieth ye .and in the fourth month and in the fife day -of the month: So you have had visions of earth you shall never forget. Yea remember the year, you remember the month, you remember the day, you remember the hour: Why may we not have some such vision now and it be in the twelfth month and in sixth day of the month? Occupation After Death: The question is often silently. asked, though perhaps never audibly propounded,_ "What are our departed Christian friends doing now?" The, question is more easily answered than you might perhaps suppose. Though there has come< no recent intelli- gence from the heavenly' city, and we seem dependent upon the story of 18 cepturles ago, still I think we may from stl inference decide what are the meson nations of our transferred kinsfolk. God bas made a nature he never eradicates `, the chief characteristic of its -temperament. You never knew a man phleglatio in temperament to become sanguine i ,em- perament. You never knew a man san- guine in temperament- to become phleg- matic in temperament. Conversion plants new principles in the soul, but Paul and John are just as different from each other after conversion as they ware different from each other before conversion. If con- version does not eradicate the prominent . charadteristics of temperament, neither will death eradicate them. Paul and Joh are « s different from each other in heave as they were different from each other i Asia. Minor. You have, then, only bya stun it sub traction and a sum in addition to deci what are the employments of your depa ed']ends in. the better world. You' are t subtract from thein all . earthly grossnes and add all earthly goodness, and then you are to come to the conclusion that they are doing now in heaven what in their best moment they did on earth. The reason whytso many people never startler heaven is because they could not stand it if they got there if it should turn out to be the rigid and foranal place some people photo- graph it. We like to come to church, but we would not want to stay here till next - summer. We like to hear the "Halleluiah Chorus," but we would not want to.hear it all the time for 50 centuriiate It might be on some great occasion it would be pos- sibly comfortable to wear a crown of gold weighing several pounds, but it would be an affliction to wear such a Drown forever. In other words, we run the descriptions of heaven into the ground while we make ' that which -was intended as especial and ceiebrativeito be the exclusive employment in heaven. You might as well, if asked. to describe the habits of American society, ribo ai, Decoration day or a Fourth of y or an autuinnal Thanksgiving, as ugh it were all the time that way` II am not going to speculate in' regard to the future world, but I must, by inevitable laws of inference and deduction and.com- mon sense, conclude that in 7ieafieu we will be just as different from each other as we are now different, and hence that there will be - at least as many different eln�ilcy- nments In the celestial world as the a are • employments here. Christ is to b the; g oat love, the great joy, the great ra ture, ' t e great worship of heaven, but will that a olish employments? No more than love 'o earth—paternal, filial, fraternal, con - j gal lave—abolishes earthly occupation. Congenial Work, • In the first place, I remark that all those o our departed Christian friends ' who o earth found great joy in the lino arts are now indulging their tastes in the shine direction. On earth they had their glad- dest pleasures amid pictures and statuary and in the study of the laws of light and shade and perspective. Ilave,you any idea that .that affluence of faculty at death'col- lapsed and perished? Why so, when there is more for theist to look at and they have keener appreciation of the .beautiful and they stand aani'd the very looms where the sunsets and tho rainbows and the spring mornings aro woven? Are you so abtus as to suppose, because the painter drops his easel and the sculptor his chisel and the engraver his knife, that therefore that taste which ho was enlarging and in- tonsifying for 40 or. 60 years �s -entirely obliterated? These artists, er those friends of art on earth, worked in coerso material and with imperfect brain 'and with frail hand. Now' they have carried their art into larger liberties and into wider circumfer- ence. They are at their old business y t, but without the fatigues, without the lir 1- itations, without tho 1iinclriannes of the to rosti'ial studio. Raphael ponld improve upon his -waste piece of "Michael: the Archangel" no v that ho has soon him, and could impro •o upon his masterpiece of the ".Holy`Trini- ty" rini-• ty".now that he has visited them.- Michael Angelo could better present the "Last Judgment" after he had seen its flash and heard the rumbling buttering rams of its thunder. Exquisite colors here, graceful: lines hero, powerful. chiaroscuro here, but I am persuaded that the grander stud' s and the brighter galleries are higher a by the winding marble stairs df tho•sejil cher,' and that Turner. and Holman Hui and lembrandtand Titian and Pahl VE onese, if they oxereised saving faith. •n the Christ whoui they portrayed upon th can- vas, are painting yet, but their st ngth of faculty multiplied ten thousandfold. Their hand has forgotten its cunning, put the spirit has faculties as far superior to four fingers and a thumb as the supernat- ural is superior to the human.' The reason that • God took 'away thelir eye and their band and their brain was that he might give them something more limber, more wieldy, more skillful, more niultipliant. Do not therefore bo naelane:holy amdrig the tapestries,- and the hric-a-brac, and the entbroiderios, and the water colors, and the works of art which your departed friends used to admire._ . Do not say, "I am so sorry they had to leave all these things." Rather say, "I am glad they have gone up to higher artistic oT)nortuni• on gest t accu- A.fter des Ju the URO* EXPOSITOR ty ana appreciation." our rrie, as woo ninizln--battles, bloodless, groanless,lfaint round so aiauoh jca�.in the fine arts on earth t ,angels of - evil to be fought dosfzl . are now luxuriating in Louvres and Lux- i.eQ° einbourgs celestial. and fought out, other rebellious worlds A .Grand Itrusicale. , . to be conquered, worlds: to be put to tint remark again that all our departed torch, world to be saved, worlds to " be Christian friends who in this world wore demolished, worlds to be stank, world; :; innately fond of In lisle are still regal- to be hoisted. Besides that, in our own -ingp. as world there are battles for the right and Bible that taste in the world celestial. The Against the wro g where we must have Bi le says so much about the music of ;against heaven>Ey mil tart', That is what keep: heiuvciia that it cannot all be figurative, us Christian ref rulers so buoyant. Sc few good then ag tiiist so many bad _non; so few churches against so many grog. shops; so Many pare printing presses against so ninny polluted printing presses, and yet we are buoyant and courageous, because, -while vveknow that the armies cii evil in the world are larger in nulilbers than the army of `truth, there are celestial cohorts in the air fighting on our side. ] have not so much faith in the aranyon the ground as I have in the army in the air. O God, open' aur eros that we may see them—the military spirits that went up from earth to join the military spirits be- fore the throne—Joshua and Caleb and 'Gideon and David and Samson and the hundreds of Christian warriors . who on earth. fought with fleshly arae, and now,- aving gone up on high, are coming down the bills of heaven ready to fight among the invisibles. Our. departed Christian friends who had the military spirit in them sanctified are in the celostiel army. -W1M,her . belonging to the artillery, or the cavalry, Cr the infantry, I know not. I only know that they have started out for fleet service a.nd courageous service and everlasting .seric]co. Perhaps they may. 001130 this ;?Pity to -fight On our side and drive rain and meanness and ratan, from all o'•-• hearts, wonder they are coaling, comm e Did .you ..a r them as they pwejili by? r• lienverO Mathematics. But what are o .r mathematical ,fricncl3 , to Flo -in the neat world? They found their joy and delight In mutziltelnatie5. - ,Timate wns.Iltore poetry` to thorn in Euclid than in JoI10 111i1ton. They ivoro 08 passionate- ly -fond of mathematics as Plato, 'who wrote over his .door, "Lot no ono on ter hore who is net acquninted with geome- try." What are they doing now? , They are busy with figures yet. No place in all the universe like heaven for figures. Numbers infinite, distances infinite, calcu- lations infinite. 11 they want them, arith- motics and algebras and geainotries and. tri gonom otri es for alI eternity, Wba4.4 fields of space to be surveyed! What ma, - �nitudes to measure!. What diameters, who t .circunmfere- nes, what tri ;tlteleis, Whit t i►eing'$tted out for some -part of t�otl;s i9 d ll lens ef: earthly obsei vatory, abut. lith �_ Tom, Wh ebc4an and o heave all this talk about halleluiahs and n the Mass and trumpets and harps torios and organs? The Bible over er again speaks of the songs of 'If heaven had no songs of its own, o vast number of those on earth would have been taken up by the earthly emigrants. Surely the Christian at death ops not lose. his memory. Then there must -be millions. of (souls in heaven who 1 know "Coronation" and "Antioch" mad "Mount Plsgah" and "Old Hundred." The leader of thb eternal orchestra need only once tap his baton, and all heaven will be ready for the halleluiah. If heaven should ever get out o , music, -Thomas Hastings and Lowell -Mason and Bradbury would start up a hundred old magnificent'nhorals., But what with the new song that John mentions, and tifie various doxologies alluded to, and the im- portation of. sublunar harmonies, a Chris- tian `fond of • nausio, dying, will have an abundance of regalement. What though th, what, though ssoluticti4, are you hat the spirit will or patch sweet sing? Hove often uisite singing by Inch soul inlher Irs or the voice be gone in dei the, ear be fallen in di therefore to conclude t have no power to mak sounds? Cannot the soul we eon pliment some ex. saying, "There was so mount forests all the not be s one stroke of wing going right ter and Mara and Mercury and Saturn and Orion and the Pleiades, overtakine and passing the swiftest comet In their flight. , Herschel died a Christlan. Have you al* doubt abont what Herschel is do- ing? Isa Newton died a Chrietian. Have , oubt about what Isaa Newton Joseph Henry died a Aristian. doing? They were in d scusidon, all these stionomer0 of earth, about what the aurora borealis was, and none of heart could guess. They know DOW; they have been out there to see for themselves. ' Divine Chemistry. . What are o-ar departed Christian enr ids doing?. FolloWing out their own . el Jeanie, following ,out and followin out f r ever. Since they died they bevel et lved 1 ,000 questions which puzzled the hly I boratory. They strand on the othe side o the thin wall of electrioity—the thin ve 11 that seerns to divide the physical from t e spiritual world; the thin wall of eleo- ' t city, so thin the waU that eyer and anon it seems to be almost broken thinugh— broken through from one side by telephonic from the other side by strange influences which men in their ignorance call spirit- ualistic manifestations. ,All , that matter +eared up. They laughing at us as older brothers will laughnt inexperienced broth- ers, as they see us with contracted brow experimenting and experimenting, only t; wishing they could show us the way amid his student explorers down in Brazil) coming across some great novelty in 'the rocks, taking off his Mt and saying: "Gentlemen, let us pray. We must have divine illumination. We want wisdom from the Creator to study theirs) rocke. He made them. Let us pray." .Agassiz going erivgehr.t :)n with his studies forever and for - But what are the Men of the law, who in this world found their chief joy in the legal profession—what are they doing now? Studying law in a universe where everything is controlled by law from the flight of humming bled to flight of world —law not dry and bard and drudging, but righteous and magnificent law, before whieh lnan and cherub and seraph and. archangel and God himself bow; the chain of law long enough to wind around_ the 'rumen ties and infinity and eternity. Chain of la . What a place to study law, whore all t e links of the chain are in the What are our departed Christian friends you any is doing? Have yO Henry is a of unless On or about Vebruary lst, 1897, there will be a change take place in our business, nd in order,to reduce our stock, and. at the same time give you an:opportunity to replenish your wardrOle, we have placed at your disposal the below mentioned goods at the f011owing HOP, CAST—I $26 -Black Worsted. $24 Black Worsted $22 Black Worsted for $19. $20 • Black Worsted for $18. $22 Fan Suit, bound edgeF.g, Suit; bound edges, Suit, bound edges, Suit, bound edges, .y Worsted Suit, stitched $22 Scotch Tweed Suit, Scotch 'weed 5uit, for $16. $18 Scotch Tweed Suit, for $15- $16 Domestic Tweed edges, for $14. $151 Domestic Tweed edges, for $13. stitched edges, stitched edges, stitched edges, Suit, stitched Suit, stitche61 an:i $13 Domestic. Tweed Suit stitched edges, for $10. • $26 Genuine • Iri-h; Frieze Ulster for $19. $24 G uine Irish Frieze Ulster for' $20 Genuine Irish Frieze Ulster for $15. $15 Canadian Frieze Ulbter for $11, A orrespondingly deep 'cut on all Beaver and Melton Overcoatings, Fancy Trouserings, Hats, Caps, Underwear,_ Waterproof Coats, &c. In COST Our stock of the above mentioned goods is limited so if you wish to benefit by the low prices oftered, come early. parties indebted to us, will please call and settle] tlnir;_accounts at once and oblige and Black and fact our entire Merchant Tailors an Gents' Furnishers, Seaforth. mind to, make a few harps and trumpets I and organs. Grand old Haydn, sic,k and wornout, .was carried for theelest time into the musk, athere he heard hie oratorio of ''the " Croa tibia " History says that as the orchrestra came to that famous passage, .I'Let there be light!" the whole audiewe rose and cheered, and Haydn waved .his hand toward heayen and said, • "It comes .__from therel" Overwhelmed ei'lebehis oWn -music, he was carried out in his chair, .and as he came to the door be, .spread. his hand towardsthe orchestra as in benediction. Haydn was `right when he waved -his hand toward- heaven and said, "It comes froth there." Maisie was bore in heavenaand it will ever have its highest theone in heaven, and I want you to un- derstand that our depiarted friends whc were passionately fond of music bore are now at the headquarters of harmony. think that.the grand old church tuaes thal died when your grandfathers .died have gone with them to heaven. When those tunes died, they did not 'stay on earth, and they could not haye been banished to .per- dition, and so I think they must be in ehe corridors of alabaster and Lebanon cedar: Battles, but Bloodless. • Agaie, I remark that those of OUT de- _ perted phristian friends who in this world battle.. :* There are hundreds of peopl born loag to regiments iretime of peace. They cannot hear n drum Or a fife witho ,t try- ing to keep step to the music. They are Christian; and when they, fight they fight On.the si e. Now, when these our CIrristian frie ds who had natural aed. powerful mili ary spirit- entered heaven they entered the celestial army. The deal Of heaven scarcely opens but you hear a military demenstration. David cried out, "The chariots of God nre.20,000!". Ensile sa-va., the mountains filled with celestial cavalry. St. John said, "The armies which,' ara in heaven followed 'him on white horses." Now, when those -who had the military spirit on ecirth sanctified en- tered glory, I suppose they right away en- listed in someaheavenly. campaign; they volunteered right away. ,Therenaust needs be in heaven soldiers with a soldierly epirit. There are grand, parade days, when the King reviews the troops. There must be armed escort- sent .out to bring up from parth to heaven those who wereluore than coneuerors. There must be crusades ever lelograms, what conic sections! .The di- dactic Dr. Dick said lie really toeght that the redeemed in heaven spouts moot their time with the higher branche of mathe- matics. • So of our transferre and trens- ing now? Studying the human allied, only under better circumstances than they nsed to study it. They used to study tlie mind sheathed in the dull' human body. Now the epirit unsheatthed—now they are study- ing the sword outside the scabbard., Have You any doubt about what Sir William Hamilton is doing in heaven, Or what Jonathan Edwardi is doing in heaven or the multitudes on earth Who .had a passio for metaphysics sanctified by the grace o GOd? No difficulty in guessing. Metaphy metaphysics. . What aro our departed Christian frieedS who are explorers doing Dow. Exploeing yet, but witb lightairag locomotion, with elision microscopic and telescopic. at the same time, ,A continent tit a glance, a 'world 'in a second, a planetary system in , a day. Christian John Franklin, no more in disabled Erebus. pushing toward the north pole; Christian De Leng, no more trying to free 'blockaded Jeannette from the ice; 'Christian Livingston'e, no more . amid African- malarlas, trying to make revelation of a dark continent, but all of them in the twinkling of an eye staking in that which was. once unapproachable. Mont Blanc scaled without alpenstock, the coral, depths of the ocean explored Without • a diving bell, the mountains unbarred and opened without Sir Hum - :what. are our departed friends who found their chief joy in study doing now? Studying yet, but, instead of a few then - sand volumes on a few shelves, all t volumes of the unifverse open befere the tante, astronomic, philosophic. No mo need of Leyden jars or voltaic piles or electri c .batteries, standing as they do Pule to face with the facts -of the universe. What ate the histprians doing now? Studyling history yet, but not the history of a few centuries of our planet only, but the history of the eternities—whole millen- Moses or Adain was born. History of one world, histox7 of an worlds. What are our departed astronomers doing? Study - ire astronomy yet. but not through the who in this world had their—joyan the healing art doing now? Busy at their old business. No sickness in heaven, but plentY of sickness on earth, plenty of wounds in the different parts !of God's do- minion to be healed and to be medicated; those glorified souls coming doWn not in lazy doctor's gig, but withlightning loco- motion. You cannot understandlwby that patient got well after all the skillful doc- tors had said he must die. Perhaps Aber- crombie touched him—Abercronibie, who, after many years doctoring the bodies and the -souls' of people in Scotland, went up to God in 1844. Perhaps Abercrombie touched him. I should not wonder if my old friend Dr. John Brown, who died in Edinburgh—John Brown, the author of "Rab and His Friends," John Brown, who was as huMble a Christian as he was authbr—I should not wonder if he had been laack again and again to see sonae of his old patients. Those who had their joy in healing the sickness and the woes of earth, gone np to -heaven, are come forth again for benignant medicament. But what are our 'friends who found their chief joy in conversation and in so- ciality doing now? In brighter conversation there and in grander sociality. ":What a place to visit in where your neitl dock. neighbors are kings and queens, you yourselves kingiy and queenly! If they want to know more.particularly about the first paradise, they h ve only to go over and ask Adam. If the want ,to know how the- sun and the xno n halted, they have only to go over and a k Joihna. If they '4, ant to iliinow how t e sterna pelted Sod- om, they have only t go over and ask Lot. If they want know more about the arrogance of Haman, they have only to go over and: ask Mordecai. If they want to know how the Red sea boiled when it was cloven, they have only to go oyer an ask Moses. If they want to know th particulars about the Bethiehern -adven they have only to go over and ask th serenading angels who stood that Chris mas night in the balco.nies of crystal. they want to know more of the particulars of the OrlICIEXIOD, they have only to go over and ask those who were personal spectators while the mountains crouched and the heavens got black- in the face at the spectacle. If they want to know more about the snfferings of the Scotch Cove- nanters, they have only to go over and ask Andrew If they want to know (Continued on Page 3) 4 M DE(E E 1 .� est, we are ea tver given Toilet Sets. choose below z found coin giving ext, ugh currants last year,..we at 5c per ra ns NEW Store. Headquarters For eve thing in the Grocery •business hoice and New, AT THE LOWEST' POSSIBLE PRICE FOR CASH OR TRADE. n Choice butterl and eggs wanted, for which we will pay the highest market price. M. JORDAN,. Seaforth. "L OP 51 CEYLON TEA your 'house means that you are lookirig after the health of your.family. guaran— teed pure, and you can get it from grocers, In Lead. packets only -25c, 400, 50c and 60c.. Wholesale Agents. DONI,INTON CAPITAL, (PAID UP) REST, . BANK. _•_ SEAFORTH BRANCH. MAIN STREET, 114. 1111,500.000. A general banking besiness transacted. Drafts on all parts of the United' States Great Britain and Europe bought and sold. Letters of credit issued, available in all parte of Europe, China and Japan. Fanners' Sale Notes collected, and advances made on eam at lowest rates. Deposits of One Dollar and upwards received, and interest allaiVed at highest carrell ratAs. Interest added to43rincipal twice each year—at the end of June and December - No notice of withdrawal ' required for the whole or any portion of a deposit. • • 1 ilirLavidettes _ , ..n nThe finest Reinedy in the : World for all Affe 11171117.1 I.E Grippe, CTO -up; . Turpentine? 2 il Who9ping Cough. . - ilinsemaigissitaimlwassimmummingessisimusessissilissummusisisinasstassisaassmareassaa LOOli BEFORE YOU -LEAP Is an adage which has saved many persons from the twinges of /conscience and from the depths of remorse. But not only has it assured them of peace of mind, and consequently happiness,but -it has many Muds spared HEIR POCKETBOOK,. -And thus'may we have 'raised. them materia4 "We have given the co. the beet clothes to be had, and at prices consistent with good workmanship and superior fit and finish. By looking at oUr stock and prices before buying, you.will always have the pleasure of knowing tha' you have the best and latest clothes at the minimum price, BRIGHT 13ROS., T-1101 PAY IOU TO EXAMINE OUR IT 1_41 e are adding to our already large stock, and we are ow prepared to meet the wants of every one requiring fur- niture. It will pay you to examine our goods before pur- _chasing elsewhere, as Ave are sure to please you in price, style and quality. UNDERTAkING . . . Our undertaking department is complete in every respect, and we guarantee satisfaction. S.' T. Hohnes, Funeral Director Itesildence next door to Drs. Scott & McKay's office. BROADFOO BOX & CO., Main Street, Seaforth Porter's Old Stand SEAi Ve :TURNIP] • As Cheap AndVi Before A Dunn We keep: We have sret CAS; The MO FARM PROP Geo. Wttt, Jas. Brosdi Uttar; 'George SeafOrtla; M- aintop ; Tho Lean, Nippon, Thos. Ns James Cumm John IC ottlAlier bold esigloa Se, Impede VHS antliT MINDOO PrirODUM toshrunken lasehltealt pocket. Pri bops* 4 ealktiefla SOLD by leading Ban earl OFFI issued an On good. 408 •