Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1899-08-04, Page 2• 24 •4!•1 ' - [14 [ 111 2 441" -.1.---117l.ZT-4---"74,3414-4,risr[ri-gr "1,[rr• rssErrriiirririfirrierrir [ - • - r • , 44.1-1-rriti-4-4.01-444,4•-ra: r1S, 7 geerreesee-steeee,-- . , •., THE HU*ON EXPOSITOR' Catarrhal Deafness. The last stage development of Nasal Ca- tarrh. Japanese Catarrh Cure goes away pant the points where even specialists on the disease have been able to reach. It's a pene- trating, soothing, healing and strengthening compound, allaying the inflammatioa and healing without leaving the slightest bad after -results. The only guaranteed Catarrh cure. 50e at all druggists. 118 Canada's Greatest Liniment. Griffiths' Menthol Liniment is the great - lest curative discovery- of the age. Pene- trates muscle, membrane and tissue to the very bone, banishes pales and aches with a power impossible with any other remedy. tree It for rleumatisn, neuralgia, head- aches and art sorenes , swelling and in- flammation. All druggl ts, 25 cta. 82 Why (loathing. *olds Ont Her Grine — Naturo to Hap Yon— Olarko's Kobe, Comp�und Has Suwon - fully Coped With *s Dread Disease and Cnrod to Stay Citirsd. In the Kola plant—a edicinal botanical peoduct discovered In 1 Africa—has been found the mecca for ant ma patients. Com- pounds of this wonderlTul medicinal plant have been tested in ve y aggravated and distressing cases of long standing and prov- ed to not only relieve in tautly, but perform 'greedy and permanent c re. Clarke's Kola Compound has had mo5t successful tests in the leading hospitals o England, and the IIrkited States and Cana a. In three years In the Dominion alone eve hundred testi- monials have been recelvjed. Wm. Brown of 500 Burrard street, Vanciouver, B.C., says:— '1 have been a great s fferer from asthma for four years. For four months I could not work a day. I lost y appetite and lost 40 pounds In weight. hysicians told me to leave the country o I could not live. Just about this time 1 rocured a bottle of Clarke's Kola Compound and in one week I was back to work. I have taken the treatment two months and 1 am a_ cured man." Sold by druggist at two dollars per bottle; three bottles, wi h cure guaranteed, , for live dollars. GrIfflt &Macpherson Co., 121 Church street. Tor to. Ontario. 7. Sold by J. 13. Roberts. WEAL ESTATE F011, SALE. LURK FOR SALE.—South half of 30 and North 131 halt of 29, 5th Concession, township of Hay, known as the Sturgeon farm. The soil is unexcelled; with good fences and underdraining. The buildings are fair. Tnis is a splendid farmin a good locakinn and will be sold cheep. Apply to SAMUEL El/OLLIE, Hansen. ' 1618 tf • IMA.1131 FOB. SALE.—For sale, Lob 5, Conceselon 6, • r Hallett, near village of Milburn, containing - about 149esores, all cleared and in a good state of • cultivation. There are good builinge, good orcherd and plenty of excellent water. This is a Bolen lid farm &nd will be sold ohears immediate poisession. Apply to MRS. f10110ALES, Constance P 0. 1607 s., rsN, sis ,r sr. "ARM FOR SALE.—Lot 30, Conuession 1, town. X ratio of Tuokersmith. H. R. s.'the property of the late William Whitely is offered for erne. On the farm Is erected a two story stone house, barn and sheds-. There is also a good bearing orchsrd, and the farm is well watered with a livine opting and a welL Apply W. S. LAWRENCE, Clinton P. 0. • or to E. WHITELY on the premises. 164241 PLENDID FARE FOR SALE.—For sale the splendid farm of Mr. Robert Govenlock, on4the _ orth Road, a mile_ and a half from Seaforth. I contains 175 sores, nearly all cleared and in a high state of oultivation, There is a two story briok house, good bank barn and everything in &stoles' condition and well undordrained. It will be sold on easy terms, as the proprietor desires to retire. If not sold before the fall it will be rented. Address ROBERT GOVENLOC1K, Seaforth P. 0. 1593 tf PROPERTY IN HARPURHEY FOR SALE.—For sale, the residence in Harpurhey at present no. oupied by the undereigned. There le a good frame house, bricked inside, and a etable, also over an acre and a half of land, also a splendid orchard of all kinds of fruit, both large and small. It is situated on the main street, and has all neceseary conveniences. Also he park lot immediately in the rear of the above, oontsioins Se sures, on whioh there is a gooa house and large stable, &ISO an orchard and well. These properties will be sold together or separately., These properties are admirably adapted for a retired farm- er or market gardener. Apply on the promises to the proprietor, or address Seaforth P. 0. WILLIAM DYNES. TILLAGE LOTS FOR .SALE.—For sale in the V Village of Bayfield, the followine lots : Lot 8, In Range F, in the township of Stanley (excepting tberefrom le scree owned by Mrs. L. ()lark). the land to be sold containing iteven sores- ; eecond— Northeast corner of Lot 7, in Range F, in the town- ship of &splay, containing- ibre3 acres. Them lots are both situatt:d -on the Bayfield road, within the corporation of Bayfield. Immediate posseeeion wilt be given. Title free from all encumbrances. For further particulars apply to the undersigned. ROBERT :WATSON, Brucefield ; HENRY PECK, Bayfield, Execrator'. 1636-tf MIA.RM IN TUCKER3MITH FOR SALE—For sale, :eU Lot 24, Coneeesion 8, H. R. S., Tookersmith, containing 100 sores, 90 sores °leered and in a good state of cultivation, 10 acres of good hardwood bush. There is on the premises a good brick house and kitchen; 1 large new bank bsrn, with stone etabling underneath; an open shed ; driving house, and other buildinge ; two god wells and orohard. It is five miles from Seaforth and six from Clinton on a good gravel road. School elm by. Will he gold oheap. Apply on the premises- to ROBERT eleVETY, or Sea - forth P. 0. 1639x4t1 1G1ARBI LANDS IN TUCKERSMITH FOR SALE.— For sale thit well-known an arsteclass farm on the Mill Reel, Tuckeremith, known se the " Fanson Farce," It is close to the villaee of Emeondville, and within one tnile and a half of Seaforth, It °anteing 97 acres, with brick residence and good buildings; plenty of good water and well underdrained. It will be sold as a whole, or in parts te suit purchavere, and on easy terms of payment. This is a splendid oppo &nifty for any person desiring to got a very pleasant location fcer a reildence 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 Tiis EXPOSITOR Office. ROBERT EAMON, Seaforth. 1641-tf V1A.RM IN TUCKERSMITH Foa SALE.—For sale, U -sot Il, Concession 8, Tuckersmitle, conealoing 100 soros, all cleared but about 8 aeries of gooe bush. It is tir derdrained, wen fenced, and in a high state of cultivation. There is a g ood stone house good barns, stablett and out -houses. It adjoins at good `gehool ; is within five miles of Seaforth, and throe miles from Kippena There is plenty of good water. Will be fold with or without the crop. 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 aquarter, a good ragog lot, well fenced, but no buildings. Will bo sold to, gether or separately Apply on the profiting, or ad - dregs Egtnondeille P. 0. JAMES hicTAVISIL 1630t1 1444013 SALK—I/date of the late Mark Cassels.— Being Lot 42, Oonoeselon 14, of East Wawanosh, Huron county, containing. 183e ao es. It is onr helf mile south of the thriving town of Wingham. There is on the propsrty a large bank arn, hay barn, and straw shod, ail with stone foundat'ons ; two drivina and implement sheds, with work hop over one and separate Inane horee stable ; go.d frame dwelling, with atone cellar, and good well at door. Also first - °lase boring orchard. Soil cla !mon ; in a high state of ouitivation, wen watere with wallah of Maitland through one corner. or further partio- ulsrs apply to the executors: ORGE CASSELS, Rooleester p. re, Mich. ; JAMES G LLEY, Wingham p. o. ; JAMES T E1OMPSON, Win ham p, o. ; or to THOMAS CASSELS, on the premi of. 1644-6 WARM IN STANLEY FOR SAL —For sale, Lot le 9 and the weat half of Lot 8, n the 12th coneee- sion, or Brownson Line, of Stanley. This farm eon. tains Meares, all of which is ol eyed, except four aores. It. is in s state of drst-clae cultivation, well fenced and all underdrained, motel with tile. There lea large frame derailing house As good al new, with good stone foundation and cellar, largo bank barn with stone stabling underneath, an numerous other buildings, inoluding a large pig ouse Two good orchards of choice fruit, also nice shade and onea. mental trees. There are two sprin oreeke running through the farm, and plenty of g od water all the year round without pumping. It 1 well eituated for markets, churches, sehoole, post o ea, etc , and good gravel made leading from it In all directioos. It is within view of Lake Huron, and he boats can be seen passing up and down from th house. This is one Of the best equipped farms in the county, and will be sold on crew terms, as the p oprietor wants to retire on account o1111 health. Ap ly on the peen:l- ime or address Blake P. 0. JOHN DUNN. 1649-tf Snap Bargains in Real Estate and Live Stock. THIRTY DOLLARS an acre will buy a 184 acre farm—a first-class grain and stockfarm—near the Village of Zurich, in the township ofHay. County of Huron; good buildings, god fences, plenty of water and a most desirable place; also three thoronehbred short horn bulls and three Yorkshire boars, all fit for service; also several roadater horses, all good stook, and pricers rights For p allays apply to S. RAN- NIE, Zurich P. 0. 1612-11 1 AUGUST 4, 1899 0 •4-) L. o tr'134 '4.; 7 0 ce 9.. + .0 ": Ev--04i' 0 Z 1-" , Washington, July 80.-4n this discourse Dr. Talnutge sets forth the glories of the meld to come and the attractiveness of the Christ, who opens the way; text, Psalms xlv, 8, "All thy garments smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia out of the Ivory palaces." , ' Among the grand adornments of the City of Paris is the Ohurch of Notre Dame, with its great towers and elabor- nte rose windows and asnIpturing of the last judgment, with the trumpeting angels and rising dead; ite battlements or quatre foil; its sacristy, with ribbed ceiling and statues of saints. But there cs:as nothing in all that building which more vividly ' appealed to my plain re- p-oblioan tastes than the costly restnsents lvihieh :lay in oaken presses—robes that Illad been embroidered with gold and een worn by popes and archbishops on seat occasions. There was a robe that ad been worn by Pius VIL at the crowning of the first Napoleon. There .as also a vestment that had been worn : s the baptiam of Napoleon IL As our ; tilde opened : the oaken presses and sought out these vestments of fabulous . ost and lifted them up the fragrance of i ai pungent aromatics in which they had leen prtserved filled the place with a ,svpotriese that was almost oppressive. _. :1. -othing 1that had been done in stone i ;me vi idly impressed me than these ihiegs that had been done in cloth and ontl,roicie'ry and perfume. But to -day 1[1 open the drawer of this text, and I look (Ton the kingly robes of Christand se I l'it the7 flashing with eternal jewels, the whol house is filled with the aroms of these garments, which "smell of myrrh end drools and cassia out of the ivory sellices," ‘ - In my text the King steps forth. His robes rulstle and blaze as he advances. Pas pomp and power and glory over- It:aster the spectator. More brilliant is be :hail Queen Vashti, moving amid the Persian princes: than Marie Antoinette' on the day when Louis XVL put upon 1.cr the necklace of 800 diamonds; than A nne Eoleyn the day when Henry VIII. weloomed her to his palace—all beauty and all pomp forgotten while, we stand In the presence of this imperial glory, King of Zion, King of earth, King of heaven, King ferever 1 His garments not worn out, not dust bedraggled, but radi- ant and jeWelled and redolent. It seems /LA if they must have been pressed a hutidred years amid the flowers of heatsen. The wardrobes from which they have been taken must have been sweet wit clusters of camphire, and frankin- een e, and all manner of precious wood. Do vou not inhale the odors? Aye, aYe, •ley smell of myrrh and aloes and CM. ia out of the ivory palaces." Your first curiosity is to know why t 0 rob.s of Christ are odorous with myrr ,This- was a bright leafed Abyssini n plant. It was trifoliated. Tne Gree a .1, gyptians, Ronsans and Jews bought a d sold it at a high price. The first prese t that was e er given to Christ was a mpr g of myrrh t rown on,his infantile ,bed n Bethlehem, and the last gift tbat:Chri t ever had was myrrh pressed into the o p of his orecifixion. The natives I wou d take_a, stone and bruise the tree, and th n it would exude a gum that would sat rate all the ground beneath: Thi' ern Was used for purposes of meads ndi One piece of it no larger than aarhestn t would whelm a whole room with ' odor It was put in closets, in chests, in dra era, in rooms, and its perfume aciher d almost interminably* to anything th t was anywhere near it. So when in y text I read that Christ's garments sme 1 of myrrh I immediately conclude the e quisite sweetness of Jesus. ' 1 know that to many he is only 1ibe ny historical person—another Joh reward, another philanthropic Oberlin, nether Confucius, a grand subject for a painting. a heroic, themo for a poem, a wautiful form for a statue, but to those vho have heard his voice and felt his ardon and received his benediction he is eusic and light and warmth and thrill nd eternal fragrance, sweet as a friend Welting to you when all else betray, litt- ng you up while others try to push you IOWD, not so much like morning glories hut bloom only when the 13111.1 is coming p. nor like "four o'clocks," that bloom illy when the sun is going down, but Ike myrrh, perpettially aromatic, the erne merning, nocn and night, yester• ay, to -day, forever. It seenis as if we annot wear him oub. We put on him all ur burdens and afflict him with all our rids and set him foremost in all our attles, and yet he is ready to lift and to yinpathize and to help. We have so im- one(' :upon him that one would think in borne' affront he would quit our soul, nd yet to -day he addresses us with the Line tenderness, dawne upon us with tbe une smile, pities us with the same com- aseion. There is no name like his.for us. It is ore imperial than Caesar's, more musk, - than Beethoven's, more conquering an Charlemagne's, more eloquent than loero's. It throbs with all life. it weeps ith all pathos. It groans with all pain. : Stoops with all eondesoension, It 'eathes with all perfume. Who like esus to set a brokeh bone, to pity a orneless orphan, to nurse a sick man, , take a prodigal back without any aiding, to illumine I a cemetery- all owed with graves. tOI nsake a queen nto' God out of the lost Woman, te catch e tear. of human sorrow in a laehryma- 1 ing Star to Heaven. 1411: tory that shall never be broken? Who has euoh an eye to see ani' need, suoh a Hp to kiss away our sorzow, such a hand to snatch us out of the tire, such aifoot to trample our enemies, suoh a heart to ern - brae all our neeoessities? I struggle for some metaphor with which to express him—he is not like the bursting forth of a full orchestra; that Is too loud. He is not like the sea when lashed to rage by the tenaniStssPhat le too twisteroue. He is 105 1110 1-411 ) 10 Within, its brow wreath- ed avail the tary. G Ivo- conspriPison, wit ear. Oh, oth nos 000110S upo heaven Y ling and all Would th lightnings; that is too wa- lls a softer type, a gentler We have seemed to see him our eyes and to hear him with our and to touch him with our hands. that tcsday be might appear to some a. one of our five senses! Aye, the 11 sha 1 diecover his presence. He us like opice gales from his garments smell of last- t1rvasive myrrh. ..: . 1 i t you all knew his sweritnems -Hofr soon s•au would turn from all other attijaotions! If the philosopher leaped out et is bat in a frenzy of joy and claps ped his ha de and rushed through thti atrets beast se he had found the solution of a ruath matical problem, howl will youj feel lea ing fromthe fountain of •13 ye gav our's eroy an pardon. ashe cl n and • ade white as .now, when th quo tioneha been solv cl. "How can in sou be save ?' '-‘/Caked, frostbitten, storn las ed soul let Jests this hour thro aro nd thee the "gariienta that smell o myifrh and loos and 1 cassia out of th ivoijy palace, ." our sec° d curios! obeli of Jesus are e is so e differen re these loos gros e lime, what is ance of the herb. me to k ow that this w rld over, s with arments the Th wh of pea and nes corn nos of a Sa Culz. odor t ever suoh —nlights on gee, nights 1 sue a hard hostelry the and: termin yelltng mob on his back where he wa spec° on his he' was not c sp ke struck • al r throug 0 , long, ,de es! ohn lean slo did Ch re n fed by The sympathy of a Saviour's heart going out to the le er and the adulteress; but Christ? He had 'a fit place e: born nor to din. A" poor ✓ lad! A poor young man I as. a taper to cheer his dying he candle of the Fein snuffed ot all aloes? Our sins, sor- al Is to know whyl dorous with aloes. e of opinion abont • what is the color! the partiOular ap Sulfide it for you oise mean oitter- and when Christ miring that parti- ey euggest. to me the bitter- iour's sufferings. Were there ights as Jesus lived, through he mountains,Inighte on thea the desert eception as , rst. an. unjust ✓ another, a f he last. Was s Vide as you • I -not whipped Was there a brow an inch Foqtrare where t of the briera? When the at the insteps did it not go to the holloVy of the foot? p, bitter pilgrimage! Aloes, d his head on Christ, but ist lean on? Five thousand. he Saviour. Who fed Jesus? ho ever had eerie bad? A trial in oyer hill 'mouthed, there a space two fingers • vac, soothed : ne ther to ba el - A po Not so much ; hours. Dien ou . Was it .rceilvs, bereav ments, losses ani all the ' ag nies of ea h and hell p1okel up as .in , on ) cluster and squeezed Into one 'cup :an 1 that p essed to his lip until the : "f10 Id, naus'ting, i bitter draft vas swal- loN ed with • distorted countenance and , a hud:der Item bead to footand a gurg- ; lin strangul tion. Aloes! AloesI Nothing bu aloes1 All this for himselfI? -All this I to et the fame in the world of being a I ,martyr? All this in a spirit of stuboorn- neas, because he -did not like Caesar? No. no All this because he wanted to pluck , .me and you from hell. Because he.wiant• aid to raise me and you to heaven, Be. cause' - we Were lost, and he wanted us found. Because we were blind, and :he wanted us tO see. Beeause we were serfs, and he wanted us manumitted. 0 ye in whose cup o life the saccharine has pre- dominated; / 0 Ye who have bad bright and sparkling beverages, how do you feel tocsin -0 him who in your stead and to purob:ase yor disinthraliment tciok the aloes,1 the unsavory aloes, the bitter aloes? -Yonr thir Curiosity is to know why these . germ nts of Christ are odorous with cassia. This was a plant which grew in India and the adjoining islands. You -do not are to bear what kind of a flower it had or what kind of a stalk. It is enough for me to tell you that !it was used medicinally. In that land and in that age,here tbey knew, but little isr about phari soy, cassia was used to arrest many forms of disease. So, when in my text we find i Christ coming with garments that smell la cessia, it suggests to me the bealings and curative power of the Son of God. "Oh," you. say, "now you have a supe fluou idea! We are not slok. Why do we vent, cassia? We are athletic. Otir respirat on il perfect. Our limbs are lithe, and on bright cool days we feel we could bound like roe." I beg to differ,. my brother, from you. None of you can be better in phys cal health than I am, and yet I mIlat y we are all sick. I have taken lhed gnosis of yourtase and nave exami ed 11 the best authorities on the sub'ect, ind I,have to tell you that you are "full of wounds and bruises and putrefying Sores, which have not been bound rip or mollified with oint- ment" The marasmuS of sin is on us, the palsy, the drepsy, the leprosy. The man that is expiring to -night in the next street—the allopathic and homeopathic doctors hay • giv n him up and his friends now tand ng around to take his last words— s no ore certainly dying as to his body tha - you and I are dying unlees wo ha e tis en the medicine -from God's apotheiary. All the leaves of this Bible- are o ly o many premorintions from the Di ine hymiean„ written, not in Latin, lik4 the resoriptions of earthly physicians, but w itten in plain English SO that a "man. tough a fool, need not err therein,"' Thank God that the Sav- iour's garments sirsI1 of cassia! Suppose a mar were sick, and there wes a 'Adel on his mantelpiece with medicine he knew would oure him, and he:refused :t0 take it, what would you say of him? Ille is a suioide: And what dq you say of Ithab man who, sick in sin, g medicine of God's grace d refuses to take „it? If a suicide. People talk as man and led him eath, as though he the cliffs and then no! When a man is God pushes him bus the heall o ered him ,a h dies, he is thpugh God took a otit to darkness and brought him up to peshed him off. Oh, lo t, it is not • beoaus of; it is beca4iae he jtimps off. In olden times a suioIdh was bariod at the ()rose - roads, and the peoplefSvere accustomed to throw stones Upon hi grave. Ste it sans to me there may be at this time a man who is destroVing his soul, ancitas though •Is the angels of trod vrere hero to bury him at the point Where the roads of life and death cross each other, throwing upon the grave the broken 1 w and a great pile of misirnproved privil ges, so that those going by may look at the fearful mound and learn whet a sticide it is when an immortal soul fer whi h Jesus died puts itself out of the way. When Christ trod this planet with foot of flesh, the people r shed after him— Le;pgs 1 e Owho k efir; 00 .1 id not walk, were k and those who, b ught by their friends. Here I SOO a rn ther holdliup her little ohild, ory- in : "Gure tha croup, Lord Jesus! Cure th s scarlet fever!" And others: "Cure th s ophthalmia, Give ease and reit to th s spinal distress! Straighten this club f t!" Christ made every house where he stop ed a dispensary. I do not believe th t in he 19 centuries which have gone by sine , his heart has got hard, I feel 01 t w can come now with all our wounds of soil and get his benediction. 0 esus here tve are! We want healing. We wa t sight. We want health. We want lif "T1ie whole need not a physi- °tan, b t they that are sick." Blessed be god that Jesu Christ comes though this aisemble,ge no*, his "garments smelling of 4ziyrrh"—thM means fragrance --"and 0101)st -r-ther mean bitter allorilloial -. memories—"end casela"—that ne medicine and etire. According t4 mv text, he comes ' ef the ivory palsoes." Itou know, o you do not knotv, I will -tell you that some of the palaces of olden ti were adorned !with ivory. Ahab Solomon had their homes .furnis with it. The tiasks of African and A tio elephants were twisted into all m ners of: ' shapes, and there were stair ivory and chairs of Ivory and tables ivory and floors of ivory and pillar ivory and windows of ivory and fou eine that Cropped into basins of iv and rooms that bad ceilings of ivory. White and *overmastering beauty! Or tree branches sweeping the vrhite ou Tapestry trailing the snowy floors. Br ets of light flashing on the luetrotis 0 roundings. -Silvery music rippling on the beaoh of the arches. The more thought of it almost stuns my brain, and you say: "Oh, if I could only have walked over such floors! If I could have throWn myself in such a. chair! If I could have heard the drip and dash ot those fount-- sins!" You shall have something better than that if you only let Christ introdinse you. From that place he came, and to that place be propoles to, transport you, for his "garments 'smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia out Of the ivory palaces." What a piece heave must be! The Tull- ri erica; of the Franc, the Windsor Castle of :the English, the Spaniels- Alhambra. the Russian Krem/in, are Mere dungeons compared with it! Not so many castles on either side the Rhine as on both sides of the river of God—the ivory palaces! One for the angels, insufferably bright, winged, fire eyed, tempest charloted; one for the martyrs, with bleed red robes from under the altar; one for the King, the stops of his palace the crown of the church militant; one for the singers, who lead the one hundred and forty , and four thousand; one for you, ransemed from sin; one for me, plucked from the burning. Oh, the ivory palaces! . To -day it seems to me as if the :win- doWs of those palaces were illumined for some : great victory, and I look and See climbing the stairs of ivory and walking on the floors of ivory and looking from the windows of ivory some whom we ,knew and loved on earth. Yes, 1 know them. There are father and mother, not 82 years and 79 years as when they left us, but blithe and young as when on their wedding day. And there are brothers and sisters, merrier than when we trs0 to romp- across. the meadows to- gethei. The cough gone. The cancer cered The erysipelas healed. The heart- break over. Oh, haw fairthey are .in the ivory palaces! And your dear little:child- reh 'that went out from you—Christ did not lot one of them drop -as he lifted them. He, did not wrench one of them from you. No, They went as from one they loved well to one whom they loved better; If I should take your little child 'and press its soft face against My rough cheek', I might keep it a little while; but when you. the- mother, came :along It would Istruggleito go with you. And so you stood holding your dying child when Jesus !passed by in the room and the lit- tle one sprang out to greet him. That is all. Your Christian dead did not -go down into the dust and the gravel and the mud. Though it rained all that funeral day -and the water oame up to the wheel's hub as you drove out to the elmetery. it made no difference to them,. ; for they &tapped from the home -here to ; the home there, right into the ivory i Palaces. All is weli. with them. All ! Well. . It' is not a dead weight that you 1111 : ; when you carry a Christian out. Jesus 1 makes the bed up soft with velvet Ipromises, and he says: "Put her down i here very gently. Put that head which !Will never ache again on this pillosa of !halleluiahs. Send, up word that the pro - !cession is coming. Ring the bells. Ring! 'Open your gates,: ye ivory palmier'!" And so your loved ones are there. They are just as certainly there, having died in Christ. as that you are here, There is only -one thing more they want. Indeed, there is one thing inrheaven they have not got. They want it. N'hat i it? Your company! But, oh, My brother, unless you change your track you ca not reach that harbor! You might as w 1 take the Southern Pacific Railroad. ex eoting in that direction to reach Toronto, as to go on In the way Home of you sre going and yet expect to reach' the ivo palaces. Your lo4ed ones are looking 4ut of the windows! of heaven now, ani yet you seem to !turn your back upon hem. You do not 'seem to know tbe ecru d of their voices as well as you used o or to be moved b - the sight 91 their dear faces. Call lou ler, ye departed ones! Jall louder from th ivory palaces! And h eons iraee t116 cO11re6 of • prairie grass as few 'out do. r, 11 Just before W. V. now Kan., goes to bed h Ines beard in a muslin' bae and tered the bed he pu hed pillow. His beard i long. an; David Rankin. th 8 of of Missouri, says th of a Colt revolver and s of me," he adds, "there ntr. eleventh commandn3 "Y sell corn.' " Oh, een rbs, rick- ur- When Col speech in th he always sta the stunfp of top of a desk vorite attitud P. Lee Phi gress has bei Royal Geogr Mr. Philips 'collection of rare the library foil severe Virgil E. Trouant carries a silver Alas values very highly. sign, bearing the da pieked up at the 01 grandfather over 30 Edgar D. Crawfor ad nutted to the bariat Atlan vv youngest layer in ti at state, the country. He is nst quite v,i, old, but was recently raduated honors from the la school o univereity. Major James .1. P+rson, th business _ menager and one of the owne s of the . Chaeleston '(W. Va.) Mail -Tri une, has accepted the position of confid ntial in- terpreter to Major G neral Oti , who is in command of the army in t e Philip-) pines. The salary at ached to he office is $3,500. Major Pe ersor served four yea rs . under the Harr son adpiirijstration . at Tegueigaipa. Hond ras. : s _ nel 11 house ds in his an eside lips of n elect phical as be single xcept.Ir ! man over: Wiens can rnith of Florence, .arefully places his After- he has en- s the bag under his Mealy eight feet I millienaiire farmer he hegai life with doll r id!). "For as a wte, s been an t, "Thou shalt not 49. a 11 1 ders9n r e al utat IS pre le a al 1 makes a en tative.s, d throws g on the is his fue e libraty of con - a rell w of the •ciety. o London. in char e of the s and charts in ears.' 1 Au sta, n c chitin which he t is of: ol time de - e of 1779 and -was town isle: d by his ears ago. , who wa recently a, is the if not in 17 years with first Mercer . 14 Is HINTS ON' SE After dressing take half an hour. On entering the wa be conifortably warm. August and Septe months for sea bathi A first bath shoul thaq a quarter of an Never remain longer in the water, however suit you. If bathing is ound bathe once ever day, oftener. If feeling ch vious to 9nterin utes' brig walk Boys and girl is shou d be earl to swim. This exercise expands more than any other. - After the bath a p easing gl the whole surface of t e by s felt and the ap etite j creatired. If coldness an I lassl no circumstance shoul bathing. These sympto entering the wa er whi of the body is t o low. BAT ING. a brisk !walk for er the skin should ber ere the best N not: la t longer our. than half an hour well bathing may o be invi orating, but on no account Ily, 4rm yeur the ea by a TO ell pre- ew min - taught he chest w over ould he ude be fe t, under you continue sea s ma' arise fronl e the temperature is Chicago is jus people as it was arias Times. The datesit d Chicago drinkin enough to pour. . If the march: its lick they'll so of a sister south re I ask you to solve a mystery that has been oppreseing me fo 80 years, I have been asking itsof lootori of divinity who have been studying theology ihalf a century, and they have given me k no satisfitctory tITISW0f, I b7e. e turned over all the boos in my lirary, but got no s lution te the questio , and to- day I cor e and sok you for a explana- tion. B what logie was: Chri t induced to exohaijige the ivory palaces 4,1 heaven earth? I 119n years problem, 1 as the sots that ine with thorns in is heart, "God so his only believeth ever - for the crucifixion agonies of shall take the first thousand mi in heaven to stu meanwl+ and n tenderesti mighti Christ d spikes It his brow, to save loved th begotten in him s ave lasting 11 a," Oh,1 Christ; whel all our souls wit thy coMptismion I Mow* them down like summer grain with the harvest- ing sickle of thy grace! Ride through to -day this conqureror,thy garments smelling "of myrrh and aloes and cassia out of the ivory palaces!'" Ly out the w, taking st- of all d come, that he his feet, cairns with came with Spears in ou and to SUMO me. world that he gave Son, that whosoever ould not perish, but Railway leuellder Dead. Basle, Switzerland, July 26,—Nicholas Ruggenbach. the blinder of the Right Railway,is dead. MEN or MARK. Lieutenant Geverner Woodruff of New York, it Is said, kr oWs over 1,000 funny stories. Jeremiah Curtin, the translator of most of §ieukiewlcz's 'boo s, le one of the best linguists ever gift u ted from Harvard. Ile speaks 18 long ages. Colonel Roosevelt is a confirmed smok- er, but is said to prefer a rough pipe, which was his companion in the west, to the highest prie d cigar in New York. "For 35 years," ays Senator Hoar, "I :have never missed, while in this country, my Sunday mornin breakfast of codfish • brills. Can any one accuse me of being a traitor to New England?" Senator Chandler Of New Hampshire, besides writing most of the editorials in the Concord ISioniter reads a good deal l of eopy and makes: lroff.p the paper on his managing editor's a Governor Pingrea as at 14 a hand in a cotton factory at aco, Me., siX years later a shoe cutter I, Hopkinton, Mass., and two years after ti, at a private in the Fist Massachusetts I eavy.artillery. When General N. . Miles was fight- ing Indians in the est, he learned the art of "trailing" so at he Wee able, to as di with ily bu wat ty with 2 letin sho r is alm 0, inn I1$ s tha Clev land Lea esrt thi Impr6vement l4ee s u n he clhanging tite am rn cit to Auto FM bit' A.1a.—LouirsVille Eveni g POO. The Marl who first su pectpd that dea men were an the city p y rolls ratty hay received his im ressio -from at hin some of the employees t work.—Ph cag Record. If the pew chimney 1 the Mil auke Electric Railway and ight corn any i 100 feet high, with an interior d aMete of 16 feet, hqvr Many ci bie miles 411 smu will It pour into the fa es of inh bitant of the city hallbefore the smolfe oat nanee is enforced? Milwatikere Wis consin. i , asaSe\sa a'Ss- ' k a saa IMPOSTANI - - .letiolEFIEN: irn.:1.: Uroo 4':":"-------"---first."---re rage.1 woriekONET:101-i0:40trs. or,--Tt - 42:101' 21711C,ty Cvdr ':;;"-----"'"-------QotLrt 0=0 iieffei; .San[4:0=1:410:dc•• .1....".'--....*". ‘-[-------t.21=-01 ff1 411.1to.:1:1119:nthide009:3;171,1)4' 4: Solos, lied, ,good . u '. niscOod elass,oertilicete ; _st 1.67-------:*seet:Est:7.7.,2':14.7.11:4::: .0.0.41111:441T BrArito7teeDrtliiti . : Thlowtel:111:11111h.3::".01106.1 41.11;4,c1:1-0r4okilihrd°9:418-1e.111! lisieingathrOturtthbeflArL:C.nt—,b4 its,}11:11411r,:inlgasiiroX1::::00:041 Sibnat.siOctiAhlteant:elliEwlitionsetordi,dit:' : ussz 1:03T.:—Lett o tirnoieentiDilbuilick jatokirnepuAnri- : oaasainedlie in bills en& _soorotarysestifloete..iiDaoutetienns tee: r7:413 eau4s_iiii:171:_itsLing t 119radleespoitt1384—frhir'o :811 to donp :hair oo ,. ILAamoitereet of switek -*v0 ast's:exchanged. She -: -:- of 'Wok beir, Residen ' Market Streets, Seeforth. Vet. S.&e.-SosSasaseaa, -, ssa'ass sssevasas CaStory, is for Infants, and Children. Castoria isit harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and 'Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphe nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant, Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions et Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish. Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castarlit rei gves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and F4tit ency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates otnach awl Bowels of Infants and Children, giving Lui y and n tural sep. Castoria is the Children's ta ea—The Iotheris Friend IlefeSS 11 4'c .ochildr iof its Castolia. st ri is an excel tt e others have o d effect upon th est. C. C. OSG . 1.4 taggiWgia EFA cut epc- 'r el medicine for tediy told me ildren." OD, Lowell, Mass. Castoria. "Castoria Is so well adapted to elates*" that I recommend it as superior to _any pre., scription known to me." 11. A. Alcmene., M. D. Brooklyn, If, y —SIMILE SIGNATURE OF PEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. +4:4,1 r 4. 4, Pl.rs Y , 77 1141JRNAY fiTTIPZT. NEW YORK CITY. - Our tion to a somethin Thi obliging Night ich stree BR piing4Stock. ad irers of good furniture to inspect our stock. We have Spri stock of bumiture is complete.- We extend a special ainbrviitsis. neW to show you in new designs and finish at close prices. —CrIV33/1R/11/..A.3KIMSTCT.. department is coraplete with a large seleetion of- the best goods, and ,ttentiou given to this branch of the business. Calls promptly attended to by our undertaker, Mr. S. T. Holmes, God*. Seaforth, opposite the Methodist church. AD' FOOT, BOX & 00.1 OUR GI LS. Woman is bound to b slave and is usually m N e ws. Why don't some of learn to ride bicycles ournal. The woman most gre hose days is she who h r.—Philadelphia- Tim It takes a woman to is unhappy worrying ov shi, would be more unh .e. him to worry o l'r "he girl- who says s man's doff.: not hi., tiler's collar when sh het shirt waists mann leans Picayune. either n+ter or! ster.—Galveston the , pretty ,,girls too?7,`oniserville tly to :be envied s naturally curly 4. [ - e happy that she ✓ a :Man because ppy 11slit didn't 'er.—New York te Will weir no ulna takirg her wants to set off ishly.—New NEXT I you go into a barber shcp arid find them not busy, they say it s the first sin ,k spell that day.—Washington Dem- of.A. it. A Holton (Kan.) barber advertie s that he ham "two complete lifts of tools—one' for white men and one for Iediees."1— Kenna City Star. • —D. E. Shepperd, barrister of °quo, was bit on the face y a kissing bug; and the effects were so pal ful that he had to be brought to the Ge eral !hospital at Kingston for treatment. hysicians fear he will lose the sight of his ri ht eye. all Beautiful Designs, sell- ing at 3c, 4e 'andi 5c per roll. SMA_PORTIEE. Window Shades, cloth rollers, price from 25c up. Papers LUMSDEN & WILSON, .00TT 8 BLOCK MAIN STREET, EAFORTIL - Ontario. ye Comfort is obtainabli through thle aid of perfect 'fitting glasses, pur sOlct4cles and lenses are guaiuriteed Perfect in it and focus. 4. S. ROB RTS, DRUGGIST AND OPTICIAN,i SEAFORTH. _ [ Te cont Cree Lot nod on n WO r ball row cou ng el 3.STOTICE3. ders will be received by the tuidersignei for ai act of straightening in the Township o. 18, in tt e 8rd orly a distance of 11, aving its outlet, rth half Lot 8, Con esion 2. Profile of the : 'may be seen at the cove's residence on north Lot 8, Concession 8 UffiCient Security for the cit. Tenbe Tenders to p tied at th Coencil meet- letion of the ' contpi t ' will be equired by the n the 7th AugUst next 1 W. CLARK Blyth P. 0. rk's Office, Morris, flak leth, 18S9. • 1649,3 and en f :Morris, Oncessio 00 feet • rgine Garnisse ommencing on sand running; 0•• .1114:11;11:47444:12:4:41:11,",811::;44tD1.1ilii:rinfini";':: • I LLS rf •‘...••1014V \„I aft ALL g •ES :0:47:11s° DODD'S SIDNEY !las, the only positive, never-fasiu cure, Ora earth, for all Kidney:amass. Take Ne ()thee.. OM the Clenalse. its lerltati hers s Only othe Wirt_ ; M 1111 TCLAIR RIVER SAONIA.ONTARIO. OOf our graduates seouri d good po sitions Ohne January 3d. FALL TERM opens Sept mber Rh. Good board can be obtained her for $2.50 per Week. Write ncw for our new eats - Lague. 1616.52 A. 5, NIMMO, Proprietor., THOIL A. HAW Organist St. Tho Organ or Piano Bleck, Seaforth, it 8 p. m. At Brit Terms cia applio* flIB Chetah, Sea give us at: his Music m Soott's m pi Friday 11s, in, Monday do the remainder of the week. '1 1615-tf HIGH GRADE Furniture EMPORIUM Leatheisdale Lands,borough SEAFORTH, Dealers in first-class Furniture of all kinds, in latest designs. Upholstering neatly done. We also do picture fram-: mg, and a choice Pelection of pictures always on hand. Curtain poles at all prices, and put up. We ate al. Agents for the New William's Sewing Machine, best in the market for do- mostic use, no travelling agents, no high prices. 1:71\TDMMV.E.A.MIZTC31-. In the Undertaking Department, We our goods from the best houses in Otitis* and guarantee satiefaction in every depart: merit of our work. We have always MAN • It a point to furnish chairs„and all other*. quisites for funerals, FREE OF onms, Prioes better than heretofore. Arterial and cavity embalming done Oa scientific principles. P. S. Night and Sunday calls will :I* attended to at Mr. Landsboroughie red' denee, directly in the rear of the DO/11We* Bank. Leatherdale Se Landsborough SEAFORTH. McLEOD'S System Renovator —AND OTHER— TESTED - REMEDIES! ti Ar= wortidate for Imsrur;i„ Weak 044,141::, , ron of the HearktZlitl'otrpllent, N -1" i of Meniory, Bronohltile Csilsom=0111 se, ± Jam:Wm Rhino and Urinary Si. I Danes, Female inegalerisies and General romp ef LABORATORY—Godsgioh, Ontario. - i:11J. M. McLEOD, Proprietor and Mint 1 . facture?. I Sold by IL B. RoBERT81 Seaforth. ' ISOIL.tt 11500LIVERY AND BEES, serried pen el large j lifisolltie in color, 11 beat stook in Canada. B1 goodookrand fine tee fei Meoloolte ief Italian Bees lull line of Beekeepers. sup Elves, Smokers, Eatreon *rah Exttactor. Bees'. Ire= WILLIAM HMI 110/11-4 ESTAZ - VIOR SAVE.—In the VDU „E dwelling and store cm °entre Of. illisge. Tema XiBig 43. CARLISLE, Henn ' ARII FOR SALE,—For 11 Tuckerensittecentaini And 10 sores of bush. and underdreined,On tam And thane bars, -with goal afgood weter, and an -or eitable farm, being only e forth. It v411 be sold ein further partionlavs, apply . Road, or Sesforth P...u. -EorsiDEbTeE IN SEA- ejet tale, caress there Square in Seaarth, the - Tnere is a -comfortable hard and soft water conveniences. The house pantries,sae. There are ti kindsIna and ore' Also a large etsble, Trils convenient aledenost pleas In Beafetth and will be sol' WARD. ARM FOR SALE. -11 Reset, Tuekeremith, item cleared and in a very • the balance is good hard well fenced and well mei new bank barn, a good or Itis within a utile and a kik miles. from Clinton. mid ivili be sold cheap en merit, For further MOWN% Itrdoefield, PLENI3ID FARM FOR South 'names Boad, runes, 95 acres under eulti wood. Good brkk reel& irOOdibtd, iitld Info bank and good driving home, drained with tile and In vatiOn. There Is* good 00 the grounds are well set It is within lour miles churches, blethediat and within* mile. There le 1 ., house and etables. Mo' grinding, tto. This is one! county of Huron., and le I respect and will be sold er proprietor desires to retire _ or sddreaseTharoes Road P lasOAR FOR SERV 111) kecp for !service o Stonleas *thoroughbred: di, :payable at the time of. nf returning if neotissery. 0 PIG BREEDkRS..-- on Lot 24, Cone-esedo a tborotighbreel Cinema bred YOsessttraa Pao. A 11 he admitted to each, Te of service, or $1.50 If chi White Pigs for sale. JAM etWORTH BOAR VZ., -4 -The under. M the Bruce/field 01:1001/* Tattworth Boer, with r 11 payable M leave of inirM0g If heosiesary. bred younr Temwoetb Wan MCCARTNEY, le MG FOR nee tor /BMW -Qt./Ovid T Omitted )10,113bit 01 IOW& Antra -goodesig and broede cross theirberkelfire lows SOHN M Teems III, with rivilege STOCK rel/BHAM BULLS FO SLR_ thoroughbred Durhe 4)„, Ja_e 01111r,tarr-and the othe w; -22r 0000016i0I1 11, Mc . MONEY Money to Toms at 4ffl Any Annum, on first -elate ply to R 13. HAYS, Dami forth. BARd ' Ho do they se a _ _ SMI L They have tic thing new. WE p.A...s Theyi have no loss the ‘xpense of Oashilbayers will theilfehoes there. THE NEW S Under the Town