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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1899-06-30, Page 22 CATA .RR H Alarming StafUtics That NI People in Every Hundred Have_tho Seeds of This Distressing DlseaI* About Them—From Japan, the Land of Many Surprises in Medicine, Comes the Cure that Cares to Ctay Cured. What better evidence of the efficacy. of a remedy could be produced than the words' lat a rnan Who has contracted and suffered for years in that hotbed for oatarrhal troubles, the Paclfio seaboard. • Thomas Crawford, of Vancouver. B. 0, the pioneer policeman. of that western city, was a great sufferer from catarrh for twelve years. He tried everything that s recommended to him, and had special reatments by nose and throat apeoialiete, only to find the ul- timate outcome more r ggravating and the disease intensified. A out two years ago, he commenced takin Jpaanese Catarrh Cure. The first appli cion gave him re- lief like magic. He co inued its use. He says ;—"I am complete oured, and I know Ethers to wham 1 recd mended it are cur- ed also." The only guaranteed catarrh cure. Absolute cure r your money re funded. 50. oents. All druggists or by mail Griffiths & Macpherson Co., Toronto. 108 Important to Athletes. Mr. Mack White, the -well-known trainer of the Toronto Lacrosse Club and Osgoode Hall Football Club, writes: I consider Griffiths' Menthol Liniment unequalled for athletes or those training: I have used it with the best success, and can heartily re- commend it for stiffness, soreness, sprains and all forms of swelling and inflamma- tion. All druggists, 25 cts. TI The Kora Asthma Ctrs. Positive and unlimited con>tdence In the Kola plant as .nature's sure remedy for Asthma has been abundantly sustained in the many remarkable cures obtained through the use of Clarke's Kola Compound. It is a great discovery. Endorsed by the medical profession everywhere. Over 600 cases abseilutely cured in Canada. Cure guaranteed. Sold by all druggists. 21 Sold by J. S. Roberts. RE : ESTATE FOR SALE. FOR SALE —In the Village of Hensen, a fine brick dwellin and store combined, welt situated near centre of vi lage Terms reasonable. Apply to MISS S. CA' LISLE, Mensal!. 1615 -E1ARM FO SALE.—Forsale, Lot 6, Concession 6, 1: Mullett, near village of Kiaburn, containing about 100 a :a, all oleared and fr, a good state of . oultivetion. There are good builings, good orchard and plenty ofexcellent water. This_je a splendid farm and will be sold cheap, Immediate possession. Apply to MRS, SCEOALES, Constance P 0. 1607 FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 30, Concassion 1, town• 8bip of Tuokeremith, 1-I. R. 5., the property of the late William Whitely ie Offered for sale. On he farm iaereoteda two story stone house, barn and sheds. There is also a geed bearing orchard, and the farm is well watered •.vith,a living spring and a wolf. Apply W. S. LAWRENCE, Clinton P. O. ; or to E. WHITELY on the premises. 164241 • 'DARKFOR SALE.—Fos Yale, in the Township of r McKlltop, the north 60 acres of Lot 15, Conees- alon 14, boundary line. Abojat 47 acres cleared, three acres of good hardwood bash, about two acres of 'hoiee fruit trees, soil unsurpassed, well drained and eneed ; eohool half a :le away, post office and church convenient ; will 0 sold cheap. For par- tioulsrs, apply to the pro rietor on the promisee, or Walton P. 0. DANIEL M MILLAN, Proprietor. 159911 • BUILDING LOT FOR SALE.—The very desirable huilding lots, being numbers 37, 38, 89 and 'i's situated on Main street of Egmondviile and Sea- ee rth. The whole contains about one acre, and will purohaNe be sold in separate paroels or together to suit the r. This property ie just south of the Woollefl Mills, and Mr. S.Dckson'e property south of the corporation, and is con idered the most desirable building site either for rivate residence's or a faotory. It Is high and con enient, and has a street south and west. Apply to ANE nr JO HN SPROAT, E ..mondville P. 0., Executors) to the Estate of the to John Sproat. 1683-U SPLENDID FARM F01 SALE.—Foci Endo the splendid farm of Mr. Robert Govenloek, on the North Road, a mile and el half from Sealforth. I contains 175 &crest• nearly aill cleared and in a high state of cultivation, Tnere is a two story brick house, good bank barn and everything in first•elass condition and well underdrained. It will be sold on easy terme, as the proprietor desires to retire. It not sold before the fall it vtriill be rented. Addreee ROBERT QOVENLOCK, Setforth P. 0. 159311 PROPERTY IN HARPTJ HEY FOR BALE.—For sale;; the residence in Harpurhey at present oc- cupied by the undersigned. I There is a good frame house, br ked inside, and eta le, also over an acre and a hal of land, also a spl ndi orchard of all kinds of fruit, both large and mai I is situated on the main street,and has all nece saryr conveniences. Also he park lot immediately in he hear of the above, containing S • aures, on whin there is a good house and large stable, also an orc arca; and well. These properties will be sold together oil separately. These properties are admirably adepteel for a retired farm- er or market gardener. Apply on the premises to the proprietor, or address Seaforth P. 0. WILLIAM DYNES. 16344f FARM FOR SALE.—Good farm for sale, in the township o1 Stanley, county of Huron, °onoes- eion 12, Loc 15, containing 100 acres, over 93 acres cleared ; well watered and a large orchard. There is on the property a large brick house, frame barn, etahles, and sheds. As the present tenant moves on to his own farm in the fall, and the proprietor in• Sends to retire, s) this farm will be sold very cheap, and on easy terms. If not said before the let of August, theu it will be rented. For particulars ap• ply on the premises, or Bayfield P. 0. ROBERT DELGATY, Proprietor. 1839-tf '(TILLAGE LOTS FOR SALE.—For sale in the V Village of Bayfield, the following lots : Lot'8, in Range F, in the township of Stanley (excepting therefrom 1} acres owned by Mrs. fn. Clark). the land to be sold eodtaining seven acres . second— Northeast corner of Lot 7, in Range F, in the town- ship of Stanley, containing three acres. These lots are both eituated on the Bayfield road, within the corporation of Bayfield. Immediate possession will be given. Title free from all encumbrances. For further partioulars apply to the undersigned. ROBERT WATSON, Brucefield ; HENRY PECK, Bayfield, Executors. 163541 VARA! IN TUCKER3MITH FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 24, Concession 3, H. R. S., Tuckersmith, 000taining 100 aores, 90 acres cleared and in a good state of cultivet.on, 10 acres of good hardwood bash. There is on the premises a good brick house and kitchen ; a large new bank barn, with stone stabling underneath ; an opea shed ; driving house, and other buildings ; two gaocc welts and orchard. It is five miles: from Seaforth"and six from Chilton on a good gravel road. School close bv. Will he enld cheap. Apply on the premises to ROBERT McVETY, or Sea- forth P. O. 1639x411 FARM LANDS IN TUCKERStf ITH FOR SALE.— Fur sale thst well-known ant first-c'ass farm on the Mill Roai, Tuokeremith, known as the " Fanson Farm." It 1a close to the viliare of Egmondviile, and within one mile and a half of Seaforth. It contains 97 acres, with brick residenoo and good buildings ; plenty of good water end well underdrained. It will be eold as a whole, or in parts to suit purchasers, and on easy terms of payment. This is a splendid oppo tunity for any person desiring to get a very pleasant location for a residence. Also the residence of the undersigned in Seaforth. A comfortable house and good lot ; convenient to Main street. Ap- ply to the Proprietor, Seaforth, or the Tire EXPOSITOR Otlice. ROBERT FANBON, Seaforth. „1841.11 FARM IN TUCI{ERSMITH FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 11, Concession 8, Tuokeremith, containing 100 acres, all cleared but about 8 acres of good bush. at is ur derdrained, well fenced, and in a high state •ouitivation. There is a good stone house ; good harm, stables and out -houses. It adjoins a good school ; is within five miles of Seaforth, and three Wiles from Kippen. There is plenty of good water. Will be sold with or without the Drop. It is one of the beat farms in the township, and will be sold on easy terms; as the proprietor wants to, retire.- Also 60 acres within a mile and a quarter, agood gracing lot, well kneed, but no buildings. W€( be sold to• gether or separately. Apply on the or mieea or ad- dress Egmondville P. 0. JAMES hicTAVISI3. j 1830 tf FOR SALE.----Bataate 01 the late Mark Cam's.— Being Let Lt, Concession 14, of Eaet Wawanoeh, Huron county, containing 133.,?, acres. It is one half mile south of the thriving town of Wingham.. There is on the prop arty a large bank barn, hay barn, and straw shed, all with atone foundations ; two driving and implement sheds, withworkshop over one and separate frame horse stable ; good frame dwelling, with stone cellar, and good well at door; Also first- class bearing orchard, Soli clay loath ; in a high state of cultivation, well watered with Wrench of Maitland through one corner.: For further parte• Mars apply to the executors : GEORGE CASSELS, Rochester p. o., Mich. ; JAMES GOLLE'Y, Wingham p. o. ; JAMES THOMPSON, Wingham' p. o. ; or to THOMAS CASSELS, on the premises. 1844.5 Snap Bargains in Real Estate and Live Stock. THIRTY DOLLARS an acre will bug a 184 acre farm—a first-class grain and stook farm—near the Village ofZurioh in the township of Hay, Coun.y of Huron ; good buildings, good fences, plenty of water hbred short horn bulls and place; Yorkshire boarsree , all fit for service; also several roadster horses, all good stook, and prices right. For particulars apply to S. RAN- NIE, Zurich P. 0. 1612-tf • La.) -oot 11110114 Wasbingto importent -d blessed the s The Mane able; the geo the square in Ezekiel, the circle_ s of in Iiitiah. the curve alluded to in the rule of fractions mentioned in D the ruin of loss and gain in Mark, 4,4 tte 14) Cn cts c▪ p 0 CD 41) co I— ctrines of the Bible a e by presented in this serm n in al way. Genesis ii, 3, "God venth day." atics of the Bible is n tice-. etry and the arith oda. oke,n here Christ isks the people to cipher mit by that rUle what it would "profit a, man if he gain the' whole world and lose his anti." . But- there is one tnathematical -;le! tiro that is crowned above all others in (au Bible. It is the numeral seven, which the Arabians got from India and ell follOwing ages have taken from the Saabiai s. It stands between the figure six and the figure eight In the Bible all the oth r numerals bow- to it. Over 300 :Imes it is mentioned in the Scriptores, either alone or compounded with other words. In Geneeis the week i rounded into -seven days, and I use my text be - time introduced in a journey -not until in. the close of t elevelat on its monument is i he evalit of heaven in chrysolite the strata of precious stone Bible weeflrid en years tho get worth it, a 7n th serve se teas Wel .thars of prosperity and famine ,Lch's ti le, the seven fat oxen up of the seven lean ,xen, and said to he built'on &Wen pillar ark was flat with the Philistir hat Ja d, fore the first hich halts e book of uilt into which in •is the vi had to ut she ing the Phar- , seven t Lars, arid Newnan, for the cure olf his leprosy, plunged in the Jordan seven (hires.; t ;the house that Ezekiel saW in vision there weee seven steps; the walls of jericheabefoae they 'fell doeten, were ceiepassed seven days; Zechariah describes • a stone DSO & leprous inkled with pi es; in Canaan wn seven ations; left filling seven bask ts, and the losing of people with seven I ves, the frarents passage§ Of the Bi le iare magnificent and hti overwhelining wit the imagery made up of seven clturches, seven stars, seven caadlestieks, kieven seals, seven angels and seven he ds and seven crowns and seven horns .an and save ith seven ouse the doo eons' blood, ere overthr yes; to 61e must be sp seven t seven spirits ana seven phials plagues earl seven thunders-. rite With he Divine Mind. is Yea, -the numerai ven seems a favor- ite with the divine mind outside as well as inside the Bible, efor are there not seven prisi with the r thought -th natic colors?. And when God inbow wrote the comforting at the world would never have another de uge he wrote it on the soroll of the sky in ink of seven colors. He grouped into the Pleiades seveo stars. Rome, the capital of the world, sat on se.ven hille. When God would make the most in human c seven f eyes, the Yea, ou and we g adually shed it for another body after another seven years, and so on, for we are a through Itsis the number of perfection, and so I • use it while I speak of the seven candle- sticks, the seven stars, the seven seals and the seven thunders. „ The seeen golden candlesticks Were and are the churches. Mark you, the Churches never were and never can be candles. They are 'only ca,ndlesticksi. They are not - the. light, but they are to I old -the light. A room in the night nei ht have in it 600 candlesticks and yet you could not see your hand before 1 y ur face, The -only use ef,a candlestick, nd the only use of a church, is to hol up the light. You see it is a dark world, the night of ten, the night of trouble the night of superstition, the night of p rsecution, the night of Poverty, ' the night of sickness, the night of death; aye, a ut 50 nights have interlocked' their hadows. Tho whole race goes stumbling ver prostrated hopes and fatten 'fortune an.d empty 'lour barrels. and desolate ceadles and deathbeds. How much h ve uee for blazing from the top of each o e of them I Light of pardon for 11 sin, Light of comfert for all trouble1. Light of encour- - agoment for ell despondency! Light of eternal riches for all!Doverty! Light of restate for all "persecution! Light of re- union for all the bereft! Lighe of heaven for all the dying!, And that 1light is Christ, who is the light that shall yet irradiate the hemispheres. God's Candleetleks. But mark you, when I say churches are not candles, but candlesticks, I oast no slur on. candleeticks. I believe in beautiful candlestioks. The candlesticke that God ordered for the ancient taber- nacle were semething exquisite. They were a dream of beauty carved out of loveliness. They were made of hammered gold, stood in a foot of gold and had six branches of gold blooming all along in six lilieseof gold each, and lips of gold, fro/ire-Which the candles lifted their holy fire. And the best houses in any city oulght to be the churches--the"best built, th best ventilated, 'the best swept, the be t windowed, and the best chandeliered. dligent thing on earth, the untenance, he fashioned it with tures—the two ears, the two wo nostrils and the mouth. body lasts only seven years, to our bodies septennial eni- o the numeral seven ranges ature and threugh revelation. g cabins may do in neighborhoods where most of the people live in log cabins, but let there be palatial churches for regions where many of the people live in palaces. Do not have a better place for yourself than for your Lord and - King. Do not live in a parlor and put your Christ in a kitehen. s k were not ade of pewter or iron These eeven 4andleaticks of which / ey were golden candlesticks. and gald is not on y tl. valuap�tte, put a metal. }l' ve overy'thiing about church br ht—your us ors with sr moos, your music jubil nt, your' -1 shaking i cordial, your entire 8 attractive. Many poo le feel tha ohurch the must look ull, in ord be reverent al, and ma whose fac other kind f assemb ge show al different p see of emotion have in oh no more ex ession that the back t of a hearse. righten up and be resp ive. If you feel like smiling, smile. you feel incl gnant at some wrong as ed from the ulpit, frown. Do not 1 your nature nese; and resiliency h because it s Sunday morning. If officers of a hurch you meet peopl the church or with a black look, have the m sio, black and the niinisto black preach a black sermon, and fir invocation to benediction have the pression black, few will come, and th who do come will wishithey had not co e at all. Worldly Churches. • Golden candlesticks! Scour up the ix lilies on eac branch and know that the more lovely and bright they are . t . e more fit the are. to hold the light. But a Chrlstless light in a damage to the world rather than a good. Cromwell rtablod his l avalry horses in St. Paul's Cathedral, • r d many now use the church in which toI table vanities and : woridli nese. A wo Idly church is a candlestick without the ndle, and it had its proto- type in St. Sophia, in Constantinople, built to the tory of God by Constantine, but tr'ansforn ed to base -uses by Moham- med' the sec nd. Built out of colored marble, a ou oda with 24 windows soar- ing to a hel ht of 180 feet, the ceiling ono great be ilderment of mosaic, galler- ids supported by eight columns of por- phyry and 67 columns of green jasper, nine bronze d ors with alto relieve work frscinating.to the eye of any artist, vases. and vestment incrusted with all manner of preciops stones. Four walls on fire with indescribable splendor. Though labor was cheap, the building cost $1,500,0011. Ecclesiastical structure, alrnostsurern: tural in pomp and majes- ty. But Mots a ninedanism tore down from tho wall of hat building all the saintly and C i� ristly images, and high up_ in the dome t t e figure of the cross was rubbed out that the crescent pf the bar- barous Turk might be substituted. A great ()Much, ut no Christ! •A gorgeous candlestick, b t no candle! T root youri iling and- rvioe in r to 8 in tho rch heel ns - If tilt ve me afl nd in se 'To 'Destroy Error. Turn pow i ! your Bible to • the seven stars. We art1 distinctly, told. that they are the ministtrs of reliigiOn. Some are large staes, s me of them mall stares some. of them eep a wide rcuit .and some of them small lcircuit but so far from the great entral sura ar und whom as;they are ge ine thiy get 'their light they make rev ution. iLet ea h one keep in his, own s heee. The so ar system would be soon reeked if th stars, in- Mlniseers of re gion should never clash. But in all the nturies of the Christian church , some f these stars have been hunting out ai Edward Irving or a Hort ' ace Bushnell an Albeit Barnes. and the stare that ere in pursuit of the other stars lost heir own orbit, and some of them ;could ver again find it. Alae for the heresy- inters! The best Way to 'destroy error is o preach the truth., The best way to scat er darkness is . to strike a light. :There tis in iinntensity room enough forall he stars andin the church room eneugh f all the ministers. The ministers who ye up righteouitness and the truth will et punishment enough anyhow, for y are "the wandering Stars for ,whom ie reserved the blackness Cf darkness for vIer." am dyin to able truthfully to sax what a captai of the English army, fallen at the he of his column end dy- ing on the Eg ptian battlefield, !said to General Weisel . who came to ciondole with hint: "I 1 d them straight. Didn't I lead them str ight, General?" Grad has put us ministerS as captains in this- bat- tlefield of truth against error. Great at jc last will be our hagrin if we fall/aiding the people the rong way, but great will bo our gladneis f when the battleas over, we can hand our sword back to'our great commander, saying:. "Lord Jesus! We led the people straight. Didn't w lead thorn straight?" Those, ministers w to go off at a tangent and preach some o her gospel are not stars..blit comets, and they flash across the heavens a little while and make people state and thrown down a few meteoric' stones, and then go out of eight if not out of existenca- Brethren in the ministry, let Us remember tnat God calle. us stars, anq our business is to shine and to keep onr own sphere, and then when we get done trying to light up the darkness of thietworld we will wheel into higher spheres, and in Us shall be ful- filled the promise, "Theyi that turn many to righteousness snail shine as the stars forever and ever.", A Mighty lan bar. I pass on to another mighty Bible seven, and they are the s yen Heals. St. John in vision sa a roll with seven. seals, and he hear an a.n el cry: "Whet is worthy to loose t e seals thereof?" Take eight or ten she ts of foolscap papera paste them togetle r an oil them inte a scroll and have the roll at seven different places Sea ed wit sealing wax. You unroll thole roll ti you come to one of these seals, . and hen you go no farther until you reak t t seal. Then unroll again until ou oo e to another, seal, and you can o ma farther until you break that seal. T en yiou go on until all the seven Seals are broken and the con- tents of the eoti e scroll are revealed. Now, that scroll w th seven seals held by the angel wakathe rophecy of what Nees to come on the ear, h. It meant that the knowledge of the f tura was with God, and n ) man and n angel was worthy to open t, but the B1 le says Christ opened it and broke all the seven seals. Ho broke the firet seal and unrolled the scroll, and there Was a picture of a white horse, land that Meant prosperity and triumph for the Reman Empire, and so it really oarne to pasS that for 90 years virtuous emper- and Anteninus. hrist in the vision broke the seoond s 1 and unrolled again, and there was a pieture of a red horse, and that meant bloodshed, and so it really pante to.pess and the next 90 years were red with assetssinations and wars. Then Oerist broke the third seal and un - black liorse, which in all literature means famine, oppression and taxation, and so it refill, Game to pass. Christ went o the seven seals an . Well, the future 1 scroll, and I am glad ist oan open it. Do until e broke al' all of us is a sealed that no' one bat Chr nOt let us join that class of Christians in o r day who are ing to break the seven e Is of the future. They are trying to op into things y have no buSiness Do riot go to spiritualist or sooth to find out what is youreelf or your fai out whethe in yoar the life of he nati world it is going to proverity or the the Present. me necromancer or yer or fortune 'teller oing to happen W- ily or your friends. ks the seal to find own personal life or or the life of the the white korse of berm gt war or the T y d t ti 4 n si the years ave go the h al ng gu; ss you e ill not jI glzat vhile before tall the fu ure `are broken. would 11 e or:in hat day of w w rld is go ng to be demon so o one c so oll of yo tell yot; th be wee thi 11. You w old ii would cotunt rig them, a of ulyiyou'wo ld . rub yo ha told me nod °manner the future." tak r, you N 4th of July,. nee led at m, mi ,ht as dro Iden Oest hnd OAK borse or famine. You ivill ough 04 him paw and hear him n ke care of the present, alod the f ill take are of itself. If la man li ars, his iography is in a scroll ha least selen seals. And let him ring the first ten years of his life look int the twenties, nor the t s into t e thirties, nor the thirties e forties, nor the forties i to 61011 ✓ the fit ies into the six les, nor ties in the seventies. rom the bit of ra ave to w seals o not give am goin at year w. Sup uld break the n xt seal in personal histo and sh t o the next 4th of J uc would yo be glad and that? It would f en be a prolon ed fun ounting the so onths and fri d next r bands r from wish no so ong before. I wish had not broken the seal And meeting orne un ould say: "I ho e you free for -an eng 'gement 1901. That day yon wil house. To sa e time es." I am glad that Ch ped a thhtle veil over the hour of uotion hen he said: " f that hour kn weth no man; Is, tbut ray Father only.' s off -the seven seals. soon eigh. uture ve 70 ving not try wen - into the way the g to the ould poSe the ould after foir rola and ends 4th to- to - one that of dors will the I be yeti ow, rist the Tit Seven Thunder o,1 not • T ere is a other mighty se en of the' ible—name y, the /seven thunders.1 told. and the o -has been mu h ;guessing, 'bout them. But they are chum, we i ire told, befo e the end of all things,' and i he world car not get along wi hoot them .1 `h nder is the speech of lightning. li re are evi .s in our world hich must , e hundered down and which will re- , ui e at least seven volleys prostrate he . There is• drunkenness backed np business. In oxioating liquor enough in his country eo float a navy. ood grain o the aniount of 67,950,000 whets an- ually destr yed to make he deadly 'quid. Breweries, distilleries, gin shops, um palacesa liquor associtteions, our mien -spend ng annually $740,000,000 or rum, resu ting in bankrup y, disease, auperism, ft th, assassinati o, death, i limitable wd . What .will top them? igh license? No. Prohibition laws? No. 'hutches? N . - Moral ' suit ion? No. hunderbolts will do it; no hing else Will. Seven t 1unders! Yonder are in enched inn elity and theism, with th ir magazine of Mara - t ire scoffing t ur Christie ity, their I! oe printing aces es busy day nd night. 'I, here are their i blasphemin . apostles, their drunken Toni Painekk an 'libertine 1 oltaires of t se present as ell as the ;p 1st, re-enfor ed by all the powers of d rkness, fro highest deino to -lowest ii ip. What wi extirpate -thos monsters o infidelity a atheism? Joh Brown's s orter catechi in about "Who ado you" is the chief en of man?" No. Thunder- b.lts! The se en thunders! Fo the im- purities of the World, empalace as well leislation, evh ch at times mkes our li, p eric etench; for superstitions that keep ce tury, their juggernauts Oros ing, their th ir funeral' pyres burning, he seven The Heavenly Wall. Oh, men and women, diehea th bad way t lags often go Own the sky hts in on our - et the Almigli eld them oursel and too fiery i can and God !has failed and sted, then judge 1 rumblin en thunders t us try to w ere too heavy handle, but Go when all.inerc means aro exha tenet'. at ear you o of heavy r side, the ? Do not es. Theyl for us ill, an 11 milde ent wil Ur t what is nal& done under th flash of th seven candleetiaks will be done by the have sometiltnes been saddened at the thought that this world, according to science and revelati n, is to blotted out of. existence ' for it is such a ;beautiful wo Id. But here in his layer of the hea- ve ly wall, where he numera seven is to )e imbedded thi to pe coy tha sea. stratum of green is etuated, the color, of the g ass that foliage the deep rysolite, 1,0 0,000 years after this has been extinguished, till bring to mind just hove it looked i summer and spring, and jr we till say to those who were rn blind on rth and never ita at all' in this world after they have gletetined full eye - rghtow: the earth appeared in June and in heaven,,"If yoo would know August, look -at that seventh layer of the hensaenly wall, the green of the chry- And while we 'stand there and talk, pirit with spirit, that old color of the rt ' which had more sway than all the colors put together, will bring ok to us our eerthly experiences, and, eve th layer of crystallized. tnagnificence, e ay bethink ourselves of the domina- 1 that numeral seven Over all other uin rats and thank Gad that in the dark thhwe left ' behind us we so long en- ved the light of the seven gol en can- nitted to more or rs the eart flits the fo One glen , the color of th est, the color o e at that green c planet j the 11 lesticks and were all of us per • ine among the Seven eters of I es magnitude, 1 and that all he seven s ale of the mySterious future ve been h °ken wide Open for us by a loving hrist, and that the seven hundere, h ving done their work. have ceased ✓ verberation, end that- the numeral yen which did Such tremendous work ii th history 1 nations on Berth., has li. -en iven sae !a high place in that t.lagara, of cot tea, the wall of heaven,. c don a the fourth, emerald• the fifth, rdo yx; the sixth, sardius; the seventh 1, hen shall these eyes thy heaven built And streets of ehining gold!? NEXT T ENGLAND'S. Ships Number 3,693. Ger any's fteetIts now second orely to rchent marine numbered 4,062 ships, W th ,068,000 registered tons et; in 13 Veto had 8,665 ships, with 1, 54,000 to . While the number of sh e is &Pier. the number of tons, compared witn ..1.576, nas increaser!. Ou per cert. The falling off is in sailing ship:I. In 1875 there were ;4,808, with a ca,pacity of' 878,38 tone, and 299 steamers. 'with., 189,098 tons; in 1885 there were 3,0071 sailing ships, with 880,844 tons, and li50 i steamers, With 413,948 tons; in 1895,1 2,622 sailing vesiele, withi 660,856 tons, ; and 1,048 steamers, with 893,046 tons; in 1898, 2,522 sailing vessels, with 585,571 tons, and .1,171 steams ips of 969,800 tons. In general a st rner is bought ti be ablelto carry thne times as much as a sailing vessel of he sarne ize, The fall- ing off in sailing ships from 4,303 in 1875 to 2,522 in 1808 +as more I than made lip for in the increase of steaniers, from ,99 in 1875 to 1,171 in 1898. The reg ilar crews numbered tn 1898 42,428 men. The average was six men to a Sailing hip German write Eli point wi'ds ride to the br the big ,ships were built abroad, they are now Wit in Ger- with German materials eto. 11 that is every part of the World. Thes mus be protected. Gerinany will probably ive attention to building a large and poifer- iful fleet. An archthe con ,of the Church of E g - Arthur Rut edge, the n w ttorney- land has bee Premier of iilasm nia nd ney-General 1 another col ny. be Hon. minister, and theke and other alog us ii General of Queensland, is a ex- esle an have more chances for political tdisti c- eases go to. show that reverend g tlemen - tion in the colonies than they have at home. Mr. Rutledge became a barri r at the mature ago lof 35, and simultaile- land as a colleague of the present Prem'er double -seated constitAtcy with an n- lyear or two h became Attorney -Gene al in the Ministr of Sir Samtiel Grill] h. He has been 0 t of Parliament for sM e ears, hut, the late general. elec n More made; him .Attorney -General. n - other incident* of the Queensland - gen al election is the return of the 'veteran r. Groom, who had been elected by t e same constituency for 40 years veitho t a break, thereby constituting a record f r the southern hemisphere, and one n y beaten in the northern by Mr. Beach, t father of the House of Comm ns. The Late Carlotta G 1st. of 80, is reported from Genev , was t ;e cousin of the More celebt ed Giulia, Grisi, wife of Mario, who die nearly 10 years ago. She was one Of a grOup 1 ibright stare of the ballet, inclitdin IFanny Blister,- Marie Taglioni and Fenn Cerito, in company with whom she ' el - i trifled London in the eart forties with 1"pas de quatre." Carlot was born at IVIisinida, a villa in the dietriet of Mart - ;tie. She began her stage e,areer at the 1early age of 5 at La Scala, Milan: and 'was for some time undecided! whether ' study dancing or. singing. She ;attidi the latter with Malihran, and the form with M. Perrot, whom she afterward married. In 1841 she went Paris, and appeared at the Theatre e la enaissance she was soon engaged as leading dancer at the Grand Operat where !she created the principal part in ! the ballet of timphs in London, howev r. Mme. Grid ii. ;retired from the stage many years ago and has resided of late years at Geneva. , Proper Care of the Finget Nails. Soft white hands ate always one of the - principal points of a ;refined appearancet 4thd for that reason women of all agee have most carefully attended to the bands. The care of the hands cannot b eaid to be neglected nowadays, when sa many pereons employ the manicure, -whet Scrapes the nails and make them of lovet ly pink,. pushes back the skin from the tittle white half-rnoons at the base, cute the nails in a crescent which exactly felt lows the outline of the half-moons, and ends by washing the hands in al prepara-r ton that makes them both smOoth an4: hite temporarily, if not Immanently; '7he hands look extremely well after the thilcure's task. has been- finished, a1-4 t ough _Brasmus' Wilson says that he: rails shaild never be scraped Or clea ed, rith any instrnment save the neilbru he, The only other! implement needed is sniall ivory presser. Tattooloz and Snake Bites. 1 It really beglinS to look as if there were! nOthing pew under the sun. While scien- tific are d'i cussing the anti-toria seruin trhatinent of disease as if it were ta new thing, th people of ancient Bur- mah aro calling ttention te the fact that centuries the naterial they have used ia the common c stem of tattooing has been an effiden anti -toxin for snake- bites. The tattooed Burmese 'regard the bites of poison us anake as harmless. This, at least, is the statement of a gen- tlemen from Butenah, who brings testi- mona to bear in eorro oration of his siagelar statenae t Men jets might well Hi - Heart whale The Greenland ,vard in diameter. • e -A. Spanish diplomat sta wiehes to sell the ICanary CologO Free State, the Islam Germany, and the Balearic upon the condition of fermi and defensive alliance with es that Spain Islands to the of Fernando tp sles to France, g an offensive hose countries. SOslancete DODD MON PILL ALL 4dow AAA elf , 41111):1,',-;',:ii::::::r.,,,,,::::...;,..;:i4,°„:.:A,,,„fill.,..,..E::::11E;;-, ''.g.:01.011;11:,„;;;01;;'idililli If you want a horse worth aid.), you'd be only to Par Sloe fer his photo only. If you d DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS see you'd be silly to buy an DM'S ME SOLD IN BO ES LIKE TOIL insitation TAKE ONLY JUNE 30, 1891 hat is JU NI barna and Its autoti nessji relic Matz the S Pirnaa )11 is for Int: ss substitiste othing Syr ne nor, other starantee is Castoria cures sits and Children. Castoria is a for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops It contains neither Opium, Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. thirty years/ use by Million.s of estroys Worms and allays Feverish. Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castor's. es Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and lency. CastoriU assimilates the Food.;: regulates ()mach and Bolwels of Infants and Children, giving iy and natural sleep. Castoria is ,the Children's .ea—The Mother's Friend. Castoria. children. others haVe repeatedly told me. of its good effect upon their childr n.” E FAC -SI Castoria. "Castor's Is so welI adapted to children that I recommend. it as superior to any pre. scription known to me." II, A. ARCHER, D. Brooklyn, ILE SIGNATURE OF PPEARS ON' EVERY WRAPPER. COMFIRTA TOM %TUE& vra na weathE • LE CLOTHES ORTABLE r has come with 'a rush andperhaps has caught you with all your winter clothes on. You were uncomfortable in con- sequence. We are prepared to make you comfortable. The way we do it is by supplying you with a nobby summer suit, a regul.ar heat defier. Then too we have just the proper underwear for ot weather, to say nothing of a big selection of other sumni r furnishings. You might think that while „this -would sati fy the cravings of the body, it would make the pocket boo uncomfortable, but we stiive to meet both requirements fcir comfort. We think we have succeeded, - try us and see. 11/7-` BROS., &WORTH, Ontario. For a SUMMER CRUISE take the COAST LINE To MACKINAC i71";4= SPEED and SAFETY 0 0 10 1 !Illaclugat, ha tali Ball, Pelosieg, Gigolo 1 Isto other ine offers a panorama of 4I5o miles of equal variety and interest: FOUR TRIPE; RER WEEK BETWEEN DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE BrrwElis Toledo,Dctr it and Mackinac DETROIT AND CLEVELAND Fare, $1,50Esch Direction. Connections eresnadeat Cleveland with. Earliest Trains for all points East, Scnsth and Southwest, and at Detroit for all points North and Northwest. Sunday Trips Jun J Aug.,Sep.,00t. Only IAN() DULUTH. LO RATES to Picturesque Mackinac and Return. including Meals and Berths. from"roledo, $0,25; from Detroit, liga.ye EVERY DAY AVO INIGHT BETWEEN CleireLand, Put-ln,13ay and Toledo. Send le, for Ielustrated Pamphlet.. Address nom find mayealla Novoilim oninfinn A, A. 80tilltilTZ, es p• ass DINTROITa MON . Ullti VIG um wawa PITIRIU BUSINESS PARIS GREEN BOOM INC After having gone to the trouble and expense of applying Paris Green, it is an awful nuisance to find that your i,vcirk has been done for nothing, ana !yotir Money wa tut Some *greens are actually useles but the Paris Green sold at OBERTS' DRUG STORE Is bought in bulk, testd, and packaged hy 'myself, so that I can guarantee it to be alliright, or money will be re: funded. In one pound packages, 25e ; smaller ones at 16ei anFl 10c. J. S. Robeis, C4th Dr. Sheen), fartn, in ght Of Biyth is offered FARM OR SALE. sale ; 21 ;Leto, 160 ale eat ; new land in good con- ditien ; 7 rotes fall loot ; watered by living ap go. Will he sold with ps, implements, etc., Ve lib reiterate. Apply to DREW SLOAN Or ATealles or * tho t. Timber on the p e worth oveirotioal,00o. SHOE STORE Business must boom with these rook- : bottom prices : Women's clongela one strap slipper, patent tip, [sizes 3 to 7, price 760 while they last. Wornews two -button shoe, very neat,sira Women's kid one strap slipper, sizes 4 .to 6, kid lined, price 90e. I Women's tan Oxfords sizes 3 to 7, Price 1 Girls' shoes, sizes 8 to 149i, Stratford peke, tan, ox-bloode black, buttan or lased, price $1. Remember the place—. SICK 1 They also rel Indigestion and fect. remedy fol BadTaste Pain in the Sidt Regulate the BS Small P111, SUbStitUt ihe trim See you I Ask for C insist an< Carter's I Fur Loathe SEA Dkrase,rsininia4sfirsi neatly done. mg, and a choi always on ham prices, and legentintsef,orbesthe,t mastic use, n high price& Taik the Under onr goods from t end guarantee akt ment of our worl it a. point to furr gm -sites fu scientific princip attended to at titmice, direetly .Bank, Leathi Lan SE On. r direct oor time and n Canadiai Via Tor British Coln Our rites are ti to wait everybody TST OARS for ye Oranf3. "1 Mixed Train,- . GOING EAErf;-- fluxed _ Genre Noarn— Ethel Bluevale London, Et Loudon, depart. - Centralia • Winghsra Arrive - QOM SOIrrli-- Wieghati, depart. laPPea Exeter . SMIMEr tinder the Town Clock, &dor* woo Thal ble Devoe, Opiem or SU= ,t.5 Price, one package Vb.* Wand Wilemaelaaggialm