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The Huron Expositor, 1899-12-08, Page 24 • ' 1') I . moKoramiematiootemowbootwoonapponew,-- THE HURON E OSZTO DECEMBER 81 A Guaranteed Catarrh Curo. lapaneee Catarrh Cure -use six boxes - hal them at one time -apply exactly ac- cOrdIng to the directions -and if you are not cared see your druggist; he will arrange ta pay you your money back. There's a p slave guarantee with every box that i 3 panese Catarrh Cure will cure. No e ure, y u get your money back. Guarantee In "eery package. 50 cents at all druggists. 115 • Important to Athlete's. Mr. Mack Wlilte, the well-known trainer o the Toronto. Literosse Club and Osgood* Hall Football • Club, writes: I consider GriffithsMenthol Liniment u.negnallea for athletes or those training. I have used it with the best -success, and can heartily re- eenimend It for stiffness, soreness, sprains all f Orme' of swelling and infiarrima- on. Alt druggists, 25 cas. .22 MEDICAL SCIENCE ADVA-SCES. . , Positive Cure for Asthma Ds Covered. 4 has long been recognized by medic: scientists; throughout the World that natu e his supplied all creation with some remedy i in the vegetable -or mi oral kingdom, wher . with all, •forms a ail- ments can be oared, but it was not until thediscovery by Stan. ley of the wonderful Kola plant along the Congo River in Africa that asthma was per- manently curable. In facait wasnot until the inveralgations in ft d e by Da. Clarke some years later thie dire - Tam KOLA PLANT. ease was found cur able; he found that by combining the ex.. tract of Kola. at with other vegetable extract -Ur the compound obtained would permanently euro Asthma. Olarko's Kola Clonwound was then tried on over 100 oases int different hospitals, with the marvellous reault that over 95 per cent. were permit- ne tly cured in less than 60 days' trest- rn rit. Cilarke's Kola Compound is now reocig- nl ed to be the only permanent cure for th s dreaded disease. Sold by all druggists. Fr cm two dollars : three bottles with cues guaranteed for five dollars. The Griffiths st Iainepherson 0o., 121 Church street, To- rconto, or Vancouver, 13. c., sole Canadian irapor tars. ii puunp Etrka:stingotpound HAvigi.to euro AI FrAnHy Yever All Diug •giets sell it. ;17 Sold by J. 8. Roberts. i &Ka a reet ! I le :relit :SA LK. MIARM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 20, Huron Road, Tuckerereitincontraning 98 acres, 88 mires clear- ed nrid 10 acres of bush. The land Is well cultiveted end Underdrsined'. On Oa place) is a frame house and frame tarn, with goof stables. There is plenty of .ed water, and an orchard This la a most de- fer 4e farm, being one- eeut two miles from ca !ortu, It will be. sold :seep and en easy tering. For ha her partioulare, apply ta WM, FOWLER, Huron Roa or Seatorth P. 0. 1646 tf In the the No obi IWO cori be fur RO Say 1 ILLAGE LOTS FOR SALE. -Foe sine in ' the Village of Bayfield the following lets: Lot 8, nge F, in the township' of Stan ey (excepting and to be sold coetainiug, seven ac es , second- efrom ii acres owned by 'Mr. . . Clarka head corner of Lot 7, In Range E, in the town. 01 Stanley, containing three acres. These lots oth situated on the Bayfield road, within the ration of Bayfteld. Immediate possession will iven. Title free from, all -enounibranees. For er particulars apply to the , undersigned. ERT WATSON, Brueefield ; HENRY PECK, old, Executors. - 1836-11 Tile SIDENCE IN SEAFORTH FOR SALE. -For jai sate, cheap, the residence facing on Victoria Sq re in Sun?, rtb, the properte Of John Ward. Tbere is a comfortable frame house, Sins good stone cellar, hard and soft water, and all orher necessary conveniences. The bowie contains 8 rectos, with prutt lers, eta There are two lots, well planted with all kincls of Mat and ornamental trees and shrubs. Also a bane stable. This is one of the beet, most oonv nient and most pleasantly Galata residences In Se forth and will be said cheap. Apply to JOHN WARD. - 1640-tf , . , •-,1 _ FAtut IN THOSER3MITH FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 24, Concession 3, IL R. S., Tuokeremith eon fling 100,aoree, 90 acres cleared and in a good state of cultivetion, 10 acres of good hardwood bush. Therd is on the premises& good brick house and kitch n ; a large new bank barn, with stone stabling undo neath ; an open shed ; driving bourse and other build nips ; two g Tod wells and orobard. It is five mireafrom Seaforth and six from Clanton on a good gni road. School 01036 by. Will he sold cheap. Appl on the premises; to ROBERT MoVETY, or Sea. forth '''. O. 14339x411 FA M IN GREY FOR SALE. -For see Lob No. 7, n the 14th Concession of Grey, containing 100 acres, ahout 75 cleared and the balance well timbered with bardwood and ash The fermi is all well fenced and s °led to grass and is free from all foul weeds. There.is a` frame house mad large bank barn with stone Istsbling underneath. There is a gond orch trd and a aever failing spring creek running through the farm. f It is good either for grazinifor grain growing and ie. withle three and a half miles of the prosperous vihagn of Brussees, Terms easy. Possession given at any tIrae. For further particulars apply to t e propn tor, Seeforth P. O. STEPHEN LAMB. 16864 11 OIJSES AND LOTS FOR SALE. -For eale two comfortable frame houseri in Seaforili. One's situaton the corner of Market and James streets and te ceher on Jarvis street, both only two bl from Main street. The houses are both comforts le story and a half frame ones and there is one lob to each, planted with fruit trees, also two Iota en Louisa street The property Is most desirably lo- ested and will be sold cheap. The undersigned ea has for sale e good frame store,with dwelling over it, In the'village 01 81. Joseph. For further partioulers apply a Mail SMITH, ht. Joeeph, or to LOFTUS STAR , Setforth. 1808 tf TJ7AR4iS FOR SALE. -Two extra fine farms for sale. Aa I have decided to give up farming I will Pell my two farmsadjoining the town of Seaforth. They bave b th bead in pasture for about 20 years and are in s hi h state of cultivation, clean and well fenced and d •ined. About 20 sores of fall wheat, 23 acres of stub le and and the balance all in gram, a flue large b nk bsrn and a gooi frame house. For crop- ping o grass they are two of the best farms in the countr . A never-. !Mann spring creek running throng wit Poseeseon men May taker in time to do spri g work. C. WILSON, Seeforth. 100841 -DAR IN TUCHERSMITII FOR SALE. -For sale, J L t 11, Conoession 8, Tuckersraith, containing 40 ear ,all °leered buts about 8 noires of good bush. It is ur erdrained, well fenced, and in a high state of min alien, There is a good stone house; good barns, • tables and aut.houses. It adjoins a good taboo! ; is within five miles of Seatorth, and three miles! m Kipple) There is plenty of good water. Will be old wish or without the orop. It i s one 01 the bee arms In the tewnship, and will be sold on easy te m.., as the proprietor wants to retire. Also 60 aerel within a mile and a quarter, a good grasing lot, wel fenced, but no buildings, Will be sold to. gether qr eeparately. Apply on the premins, or ad - drew E mondville p. o. JAMES MoTAVISFI. 109 tf OPLE HID FARM IN HAY FOR SALE, OR TO U NT -Fee sato, West half of Lot 2i, Conces- sion 14 tau h • hreo.quarters of Lot 24, on the 15th Conceal on, and the no th half of Lot 63, on the 15th alonces jon, in the township of Hay, containing in ail in a reo., rel of which is cleared but ten acres. These several parcels comprise one farm and a re lacated lose to asch other. All well fenced tied well underdr Ll d, and in a g ,00d state of cultivation. The ten ie of tee best quality and every foot cin be eultivat . There is a good frame bourse and large bank ba n, also drivieg house, sheds and other build - Inge. here Or a good orchard, and plenty of good w ter. , It adj ens Kalbfislecha mills, and is withi three and three quarter miles from nitride If not sold shortly will -be rented to a good tei ant. Apply on the premises, or address' aerials P 0. J. ICALBFLEISCH. 1659-11 DAUB! FOR SALE. -Lot 38, Concession 4, Eaab Wa annsh, containing 126 acres There is on the plec a good brick dwelling hems 20x28, with wing 18 28„1 storey h'gh ; stone eviler fun size ; frame 's ranter kitchen and woodehed I8cs4 ; hard and soft •ater. ; frame barn 66)08, with stone stables underlie th; frame pig pen 16x32: two good or. chard's; 5 acres cleared, balance is good hsrdwood buns; w li feeced with cedar rails, and well watered by three rod spring wells; school and church con- venient ; five miles from Biyth, 12 miles from Wing ham, 17 Iles from Goderich ; must be sold to close the estat . Apply to JOHN WALLACE, Executor for the J mph Jackson estete, Blyth P. 0., or to C Hamilton Myth. 185311 'DARN N 6TANLEY FOR SALE -For sale, Lot .12 9 an • the west hall of Lot 8, on the 12t11 canoes - elan, or 13 ownson Line, of Stanley. This farm con- tains 150 , all 01 which is cleared, except four acres. It IM in a state of erste:dam oultivetion, well fenoea an all underdrained, mostly With tile. There ie a line rame dweding house ea good as new, with good ston 1uindation arid ea sr, large bank barn with sten etablIng underneath, and numerous other buildiuga including a largo plg house T wa good erases f choice fruit, a so n co shade and Mina - mental tt et. There are two spring creeks running through t e farm, and plenty of good water all the yesr roeu without pumping'. It is welt situated for markets, urches, schools, poet offiee, dno, aid good gravels. .8 leading from it in all directions. it la within vie of lake Huron, and the boats as b teen • a up and down ! use eons th ho. This is orie of the,ge' et equipped farm( in the county, and -will be sola on eau terms, sa the proprietor wants to retire on aeoeurit of ill health. Apply os the prem. taes, or address Bake P. 0. JORK DUNN. 1849ett wrges. 111E' COMING 'CENTIIR nut I say to our tw enty4,Irst cen- . 'Lary escort :j "I cannot understand this. Hve these worshippers no nor - rows, or have they forgotten their sorrow's ?" Our escort, responds : "Sorr o WS ! Why, they 'had sorrows by Dr. Talmage. more than yen could coulf, but by • a divino. illungnation that the eigh- teenth and nIheteenth centuries never '`E -THE WORLD AS IT WILL BE," enjoyed they undqrstand the uties of sorrow and lare cthnfortec. with supernatural condolence such Eis pr._ No storm For wormed spieita-An Era *vious centuri s never experlenct I ask ag in of the intern ay Better Beaitlit-tteatil Will Them "Has death een banished frOa Be Easashed-A Groat Anapriteemont world ?" Tht a,nswer is, "NO, A Discourse on a Novel Subject Lilo spirit or the twest ty-; rst tuty, tells me 4 hat goepeliz 11 1011 ' directly or indirectly done it. W0.2 "a. practical gospel that not changed the; heart, but 1 mcle man honest. A. practical rell which did not expend all s- en in singing, "Ply abroad, thou mighty gospel, " but gave 801)1111)1 11'-, to make it fly. The good wor 3,vas ; helped on bv the fact that it became a r eneral habit among nillionaires and . to j roN ide, church .8 and the not to be built after the ta Lore schools and i»stitutions of nerey, reter,- but were dead, ht4. built Flo that (ha1 el It - It ,o0.1"ch)113e.: views on the matter. In my opinion the tsrgY assessment should be the same on each one hundred acres.. In Meltillop township less than $20 on each one huadred acres would pay all coun yet, under nearly twice about half, from the county, roads and scihools.. I &lad, claim that the same amount of statute labori should be doae for each one hundred acres . - they -Under the present system, .those who do the the least weak use the roads the moat. As, lion an example f these initiations, school see-. tion No. 13 verages $47 per tore for 3,664 acres; No. 2 averages $44 per acre fori 3,614 acres.; No. 4 averages 444 per acre for 3,809 acres. In raising $150 ever the wholel township, foa school purpose, is it fair for' section No. 13 to pay $20 to some other sec- tion with as nany. or more, cres than it has? The - tention of th Act vela th make the str nger section help the weaker, I • but that is. n t the result. These three sec- tions meiitioned are the highest assessed in ' the township, and are, at the same time, the most cut up by the river and the gravel bile. Of ooukse, some people claim that the farms near Seaforth are more valuable than those farther away, but the same might be elaimed in reference to the townships ad- jacent to Goderich in the matter of the county rate, being nearer the county town they should be equalized higher for county purposes. The4 ratepayers in those tee sections are as far from the post office, churches, schools and blacksmith shoPs as any in the township, and why should they pay more taxes into the township treasury when they receive no more benefit from the township? Is it.fair that a man who im- proves his farm and buildings to enhance the value of his property, ehoulcl 'pay more taxes than the •man who makes no im- provements, but lends out his money at in- terest, and who is, in that way, a drone in the community? If I own '100 acre as- sessed at $2,300, and send toschool, wh le my neighbor owns 100 ,acres r e to m pup l An Ideal Assessment DBAn Bxrosrron : I olaitn the whole present system of assessment is Wrong, and wish, through the columns of THE- EX- POsITOII, to give expression to a few of my. In Trude-Th. Extirpatioe of Stn. . I! - Washington, Dec. 3.—I3y a novel urse that they ar c iti- ; doubt going int for will be infini new to live in ;0. ous- their imniedh how was all the our escort. me- gospel power ob- the nineteentl . the not . to be to us int -- lir - and per - in re - we rld pel- ht- and the 111' (1 or ird on, a.st ra- 118 es, it n's etal ng of nt in - he mode flr. Talmage itt this disco shows how the world will look ter it has been revolutionized good ; text II Peter' i•i; 18, "A earth, wherein dwelleth °righte nous.-. Down in the strugg14 to make world better and hap ger we so times get depressed w . th the stades to be _overcom w ork to be accomplish( d. 1,v4-iid lit be a . tonic and an laspiratiOn look- at the world :as it will ' when 11.. has been *rel. gilt back ; paradisaical condition '. ;..So let for a few moments tifansport • ( • selves into the, future and put . o selves forward .in tho centuries see the world in itS rescited and feeted state, as. we Will see it if those tittles we are permitted to ViSiL this planet, as f am sure will. We all .want to see the wo after it has been thoroughly gos ized and all wrongs have been rig - ed. We will Ward. LO C01110 baCk, - WC Will come hack ;to look upon refulgent . consum naticm tw wwo j it ich e'; have bee 1 on larger smaller scale toiling. Having her the opening of he orchestra v•hose sir, Ks some' 1 discords tr ti, ed. we will want, to hear the 1 tritimphan t bar of the perfected o torio. Having seen the. picture t he painter first drow.' its ouil n upon canvas, we ‘vill want to st'hi V. hen it, is am complete as Iteuhe " ile..went from the Cress," or Mich Aelo's '1 4184. Judgment," l'Irt0 Keen the NVOCid 1111(10C the gleam the star . of Bethlehem, We will 11 a to Fee It when, ander the "full sh ing of the ;,,sun of righleousnese, t towers 4ha1I strike 12 a t noon ,_ • There' will he nth Othing in at co hip; ce1nt iry of the world's perfecti 1.) hied( r our terrestrial visit. 0 Jet•.'er- •ind velocity : 5! locomoti -, in iia,0 e been improved infinitely. 1 esiil tot take us long to come -0, ho ...ever. far off In God's uni- r:ze 'he tvea may be. 'The" Bible ,clereS that such visitation iS going o 1. noW. •'Are they nth* all minister.... i; g Si fries sent forth (11 miniSter to :ittse who shall_be- - heirs of l' salva- 1 on ?' ' _Surely the ga ;es of heaven ...e..1-11 -not be bc lied af Ccr the world 114 EddlliZed 50 aS to hinder thc. re - dallied froth deseendine for , a tour 01 insPection and congratulation and tt 1111111h -. . , 1 imagine that we are deseendinr F that period of the world's i coni - pi te gospelization. There AIM be nt peril .in ' such a descent. Great 1:rights and depths have no alarm for glorifi..d..spirits. 'We can conic down t irOugh chasms between `.% orlds without growing ditty and I Cross the spaces of half the uni- eerse without losing our way 'Down And farth r down we come. i As-. we IN:roach his world we breathe the ne•fiane 0 illimitable gardens Alighted on the redeemed earth, We are irst ..ccosted by Lhet spirit of I he wenty-first cant ury, who i pro - we r Without his \ pose. to guide anc 5110W us all that csire, to see , we i would lose our way, for . 1130 world is so ninth changed from the time when we ; lived in it. First. of 'all, he points Out to us a group of abandoned buildings. -, We ask this spirit of the twenty-first cen- tury, "What are those structures whose walls are falling dOivn and a hose 1 gates are rusted I -I . on the hinges ?" Our escort tells US: "Thosc. weren ce pen i ten t iar Les filed with offend .rs,. but the crime of the world has .died out." Mte • passing on amid , columns and s .atues erected in meMory _ of those Ntho have been mighty for goodness: in the world's history, the highest 1 and the most eXquisitely sculptured those in honor lof such as ha.veabeen meet effectua in sav- ing life ,Or improving life ra, her than those renowned for destro r ng life, eve come upon another .group of buildings. that, nit's( have been trans- formed from their original . shape and adapted ..ko other uses: "'What is all this?" we .ask our tort. He w answers 1: "Those ere almshouses .and ihOspitals, but accUracy. in : making and prudence in running ma- ch 'nary of all - sorts have almost. , aliOnshed the list of casualties, and sobriety and industry have nearly ,abolished. pauperism, so that -those. buildings which were once hospitals ,`-a nd al nishouses have been, turned. jinto beautiful homes .for the less ; . prosperous, and if you will ;look in you will see the ,poorest table has 0 leindance, and the smallest' ward- robe luxury, and lhe harp, waiting to have its . strings thrummed, lean- ing against, the piano, waiting fOr 115 keys to be fingered." ;and we believe what our escort days, for as 'we pas8. on we ., find health glowing iti every cheek and !wattling in every eye and springing in every step and articulating . in every utterance, and you and • I w hisper to each other as our es- cort ; has his attention drawn Ito some nen: sunrise totem the morn lig skv, and we say, each to the cith r ; "Who would belleVe that ' this is the world we lived m over 100 ye. rs ago ? Look at those men and o- men we pass on the road i How im- proved- the human race i Sb beauty, such fare gt , such gracefttuel- ' iteas, such genial ty Piteem with- out the mark of Gni sorrow! Cheeks that seera , never to have been wet by one tear 1 ..A race sublimated! A- new. world born t" ' But I say to our escort : "Did all this merely happen so ? Aro all the goad here iipontaneonslY good? How did you get the old ihipwrecked a, orld afloat again, out of the hreak- ers into the smooth seas ?" . "No, no 1" responds our twenty-first cen- tury cort. Do YOU :see those tow - r? T oso are the towers of situreb. es, to ers of -reformatorY institu- tions towers of Christian. schools. Walk 1 ith me, and let usenter some of the e temples." Wo enter, and I find th t the music is in the tia.jor key an none of it in the: minor. "Glori In Excelsis" rising Ithovo "Mori In Excelsis." Tref:nolo-- stop in the organ not ao much Used as . the trumpet stop. More of i Ariel tha u of 'Naomi. More chants than , ..... .. . a people die now only when ihe, phy- sical machine y is worn out, and ; they realize 't is time to go and e.tainly. and without ) a world where they el: better off and are Int nsion that awaits te occupancy." "But this effected ?" _ I ask nswer : I "By flo You 'Who lived century! never s 111- 011 ur on da of . in en a revival of .religion to he compared curred iti the la tter went ie th land -the early teVen ty-fli•st cen titre has been fulfilled that be bore( in a (lay' - r tWenty; or fortv with. what o part of the laart of the The prophecy 'a. nation wit that ,is, ten lion of j)eopl , cenyetted in 24 hours In our !church history we read o tho great . aw kei ing ,of 1857, whe _five hundred ^honse„nd souls wer saved. But that was only a tiro] 1., of OW comfit shdwers that since then took in the kingdom of God tIi Himalaya ..' The evils that. good. i every' ling he the Atlantic ahd title Pt d(le, 1) ween the. Pyrenees and co ne by celes ial forces: What hu - .t‘ people in the lineteenth century were tr Mg' to ch,, ro3r have been .over - ma n weaponr :failed to accomplish has been c pile by onmipotent thun- der -bolts. ''0 spirit o the twon ty-firs 1 cen- tury, will ,you not show. us some- thing of the 'commercial life of Wont' t !me ?" .11 e at swers, "To -morrow 1 will' show you all." And on the mor- row he takes s through the great : marts of rad ! and shows us the , bargain linker - and; 'Cho shelves on which the goo Is. lay and the tierces and hogs end in 'which they are contained. T 1 °Hee ; that the fabrics are of bettor mality than anything T CVer saw in. aur nineteenth centu- ry, for the ,ac. ()ries are more skill- ful, and the w vela that turn and the looms thitj clack and the en- gines that ru nble .are driven by forces that wet e not a century ago discovered. The prices of the fabrics indicate a reasonable pro it, end the firms. in the counting 3( 1)111 and the clerks at the counter an .1 the draynien at the doorway and the errand boy on hie rounds and the!l messenger who brings the mail and the men who open the store in the morning as well as those who close- it at night all look as if they %vet -0 Satisfied and well treated. No- swallowing up of small houses of merOiandise by • great houses, no ruinous underselling Un - (11 :those in the same line are banic;- runt and then the prices lifted, nd unnecessary. • assignment to I defraud creditors, no over -drawing of flip• 001111tS, o 0 abs •ondings, no aharp ma nu fac turer right in leis dealin s praat ice, aim sru p judgments, ! but t e . with the whole •aler, ! and the whol &tier with • the retailer, and the r taller with the customer. • "But what is yonder row of build- ings, majestic, fer architecture ?" The spirit of the !twenty-first century says, "Those are our legislative halls and placeS of public trust, and if you would, like it I will show you the politicall circles, the modes • of preferment, the styles of election; the character 01' public men in this century." "Thank you," 1 rep,y. "I can easily' understand how gos- velization wot 14 -improve individual life and social life, and commercial life, but 1 wot Id like to see what it -can do for political life." "Let me tell you," sa3is I the spirit of the twenty-first century, "that I have read about political; chicanery and corruption of mOre than 100 years ago ---the nineteerith century,in which yoti lived here—but the low political caucus has gone rfrom .the face Of the stuffed ballot box, by money . and by . and the jobs got real and „congresses earth, and the and the bribery promise of office, through legislatu by . lobbyists." • 1 As in company wit 1 our escort we P058 down front t 6 heights On . e , which these • bu din s stand I see a dismounted cal non. planted on the sidof the hill, and I goto examine it, and I read the inscription, cut in. letters of brorizeJI "This is the last ' gun that was filed in the last bat- tle of the last, war that will ever be fought. Presentdd by the last regi- ment of war just disbanding. Glory to -God In the hi hest, and on earth look up, land ou !i escort says: ' D9 f; peace, . good will to men." Then I you see that lar4te Structure -W Our right? That was ,a fortress, but IOW it, 'is a college, and instead of ems aiming out of the port holes are 1ool4ng the stucien*fs of a higher literature and a wiser science and a gra.ndoe civi reation than the world ever befo e imagined. , And th oso students ar taught by a pro- fessorate of - u)erm as renowned far piet3- as for scion e. - .Archaeologist's hammer and geol >gist's crowbar and chemist's laborat ry , and explorer's journey have joind in a confirma- tion of the truth of' the .FIoly. Scrip- tures until there is not at -i unbeliev-• er in all the eartl . The astro !orner morning stror of he Redeemer, ` and through his teles , 01)0 has seen the the geolog st has found the nocic of Ages, and the go metrician has de- inon trate that eaven is the eity Ak hie 'llet four Square, and the lengt an the breadth ' anc the heig t Of it are e 'nal.' " "W at," I say to ou escort, "no skep ics, no infidels, n agnost cs?" His e ly is: "Abeolut ly npne. The last fool who 'said i his heart ' ther - s no God' Was .1 uried hall a cent r,- ago withlout any liturgical service" I "Wel,','.. I say l to our escort, "wher :are T in IN.ine"Age of Rea. - son' and Ing rsoll's rMistakes - of Moses' and avid! Hume's e,nd „Vol- taire's celebrated !tirades' against. the - Bible?', "I xiover1 heard of them," says cf4r escort. 1 "What are you iv, :talking labout? At ! bigger bonfire of . books than that ! hich in apostolic time . was ki n d led i n the streets of Ephesus was lighted in all our Cities and the corrupt literature . of the world turned I to lashes many, many years ago. I taw' the .last leaf curi. up in the flarn4 a id scatter." In response ttl My question as to what lad wrqu ht. all this change— obliterated all Jie evil and fully in-- gaigurated all the good—our escort. y, township, and school rates ; he present system, some pay that amount and others only bile all receive ,equal benefita might be preseSt at the laying of cornerstone an 1 at the dedilca and leave- less Inducement, fo • the heirs-at-law to prove in or ihans' court that whon the testators made their last will1 and testament they were crazy. Ile tylegraphic wires in the air and ;the' cables under the sea thrill with Christian invitation. Phonographs eluirged with gospel sermons stand n every neighbor - 11004. The • 5,0 0,000,000 of the world's fnhall tan are 5,000,000, 00 , "But," i I sa , t spirit of the "you, have sho about ' in tert When, we lived s in that' centUrY disciples. , our, escort, the tiventy-first century, on tis 'flitch, but what ational .-!, conditions?, 011 earth, it was a century, that bled with Marengo and Chalons and Lodi now and Solferin Waterloo and San cort replies, "Con building of white ing .dome." - As Nye .: we are taken into a migh t test and best • all nations are 115S international controVersies. ! enter I hear the presiding. opening the council of arb readieg the second chapter 0 "They, shall beat their swor plowshares and their spea's into -pruning hooks. Nation $ lall not lift up- sword against nail m, neither shall they lenrn war any more." Questions, \\Mich In our ilcng past and France were deciding ithout Al- ta nineteenth century oink! quarrel and bloodfdted, as when Germany Sane arid Lorraine, as !when the United Stites and Spain, wi?re decid- ing about' Cuba—such (pees Lions in this twenty-first century settled in fivo. minutes, one drop of ink doing more than once could' have been Etc- • complished by a river of blood. . But we cannot stay long in thi hair of arbitration, for le is /limos time for us to retrace Our way hea ver4ard. This voluntary exile mus sooi end. And, passing 1 out of thi hall of arbitratiOn, wego through a national museum, where we are shown aniong the curiosities an Eri- water, a llotehkiss nee—curi osi ties to that age, but, al s la no cnriosity to us of the nineteenth century, for some of our own kindred went down. under their . stroke or were carried off the field by those wheels. . "But," I say to our escort, the spirit, of the twenty-first century, and • you and I say to each other, . • "we must go boric-, now, back again to heaven. We have. stayed long ono Ugh on this terrestrial visitation to see that all the best things foretold in the Scriptures and which we read during our earthly residence have come to pass, and all the Da,vidic; Solomonle and Panlinian and Johannean pro- phecies have been fulfilled, and , that the 'earth, Instead of- being a ghastly, failure, is the mightiest success in the universe. A star redeemed. A planet rescued! A world saved! It started with a garden, and it is go- ing to close with a garden. Fare- well, .spirit of the twenty-first cen- tury! Thanks for yotar guldance!. We can stay no longer - away from :the doxologies that never e temples never Closed, in a da has no sundown. Are must re the immortals around the thr transformations we have see victories of truth on land a the hemispheres. irradiated Christ on the throne of earth is on. the throne of heaven." "In that world we have 'just visit- erts are all abletom, and nessos are bright - with Sin is extirpated. Crime 13ricige and Luck - and 'Leipsic and J Lien." Our es - e with me to this n rble and glitter- pasS up a d on room whe .epresentat mibled to A tr 1 the NTS of settle we fficer tion, aiah: into fiehit rifle, a ho shell, an anthill d, in that ort to ne the , the d sea, and as he ed the de the wilde fountains. Is reforme I. Disease is cured. The race is CIranC1patcd. 'The earth is full of the knowledge of Gerd, as the waters co 'er the sea."The redeem- ed of the Lord have come! to Zion with song and everlasting joy, upon their head. .' 'The Lord God Omni- potent rei neth, and', the Kingdoms of the WO d have become the king- doms of 'o ir Lord Jesus Christ.' Let the harperfi of heaven strike the glad tidings fi ni! the strings of their harps, and the trumpeters put them in the mouth of their trumpets, and ; the grebes ras roli them into the gra nd march of the eternities, and 1 all t he cathedral towers of the great cat ita 1 of - the universe chiepe theta all jover heaven." ait often you and 1, ¼$11() were Com1J)anjon 111 the t expedi ion from heaven to earth, seated on the green , bar k of the river that rolli; through the paradise of Cod, will talk over ; the , SC8/10S IVO wi 1 nesse(' in tha t pa - reit ohesis of hen venly bliss in that vac, tion from the skate, it our ter - nee t Vial visitatio —WV NN hp were ear y res i den t Pi in ethe nineteenth cen- tury, escorted by the spirit of the wen (y -first cent ury, w hen we saw what my text describes as "a new earth, wherein dwelloth 3-ighteous7- ness."' ory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy (..'ho'st, as it was in the beginning; is now and. - ever shall be, .world without end. Amen. " VICTIMS OF THE WEATHEB-. GeOlgian Bay District Thankful for Dodd's Kidney Pills. Kincardine, Dec. -4-This month has been the worst in years in the Lake Huron and Georgian Bay districts. Victims of rheum - than, who probably k ep a deem tab on the climatic variations than other people, are all loud in their aaaertiions as to this season being a record breaker for dampness and raw biting winds. If these good people, in- stead 9f keeping tab on the weather, would follow the example of Herbert Brown of Wats n & Malcom's Furniture Factory,Kin- cardin they would be conferring a blessing upon themeelvee. Mr. Brown says : "1 had been feeling very bad with backache from my -Kidneys (Lumbago, a form of rheumatism.) I have taken three boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pilla and the pain has left me." -Out of eight applicants to OU the Vie Caney on the teaching staif of the Listowel u he school, canoed by tbe iesignation of Brooks; the sip' plicat on rslq- Wait Nettie, dtt hter of Wni. - Pelton, of ,filWeici, Was. -Her duties the 'first -of January. 4 asiessed at to school, i twice as m receive the cipalities al statute lab office. towns that all m pelled ould mber to se ip cl I e views, but jeetors. $4,600, and sends but one !pupil it right thathe should; Pay eh school taxesi as I pay, who meter benefit. In local Muni - lands should be equally taxed, •r equal and scilool taxes equal, do away with an assessOr ; an of parliament should be 'eon', ve five years es councillor or rk before they are eligible for peet some will object to my, am prepared ti meet all ob-i JOHN C. 01111.ISON, Catarrh. Statistics prove that 97 pe cent, population is affected with ome Catarrh, but since OttarrhozOne, t medicated air treatment tor Cater kindred diseases, has been intoduc percentage has decreased. )atar never faile to cure Oatarrh,1 Bro Asthma and Hay Fever, an0 4. to cure the most chronic cases eases, even at -be 11 else has fail by inhalation. No danger, ao of our rm of e new h and d, this hozone chitie, warranted f these die- d. itcures *ek, phissure to use. For sale by all druekie s or direct by mail, price $1.00. For brie outfit send 100 in stamps to N. C. POI, ON•& Co., Box 610, Kingston, Ont. Mr. Stratford's Denial. Joseph Stratford, manager of the Farm- ers' Binder Twine Company, gives a yip:m- ous denial to the statement of Matiager Fulton, of the Consumer& Cordage Com- pany. Mr. Stratford says : "Tif this statement is malielon am prepared totneljte ffi single pound ofr fibre in Imy ewh 41 e o and untr e. I avit that hot a nianegeme t of seven years was ever Fes Id by 'this com- pany; that our mill wam c osed down tem- porily for annual repairrj w en' raw material Was actually exhausted 4tr vaiting arrival of what is termed 1 distantibo ght fibre ' ; that during the bevy st of 1898 when we were marketing our eh twine it 71 cents per pounl was almost a a twine famine - country in the tiate with the 0 tire output of , and there , taring the fair ace, I endeavo neumers' Cord to run or operate that company tory at Brantford, offering to s coal, and bench, of which we h awe, and so produce, indepen own capacity, a further large p twine for the harvest of 1898. ever, was apparently iniposeib &boot." ere of tkiis ed to neo - go Oompa y s silent f a- pply fib e, 1. an obit d- ent of our rcentage of This, how - Le to bring •1. The Original. MOM 111 only one remedy known t a cam- ined action on the kidneys and liver ed aures the 1 ost complicated ailments of these d ioate filter - ng organs, and that is D. Chase idney•Liver Ile, the original kidney pill, This 1 orld famous' idney and liver ours has an ononu4uu sale in all arts of Canada and the United State Unhappy Hour 11. I I There is a great deal of tal1 about the uty of women to ma14e home 1appy2 -But, ithe home is nob hap y, whoeB fault is it? g ob in one case in a d4tzen, it nay safety be aid, does the blame est with the woman. f a man makes hi home simply a con- ienient place where h4 may take his meals nd possibly growl or ulk over them, whose ult is it ? If the hoise is simply a lodging lace of last resort, to which he Must repair hen he is shut out everywhere else, whose f ult is that? And if, while ho le' in his ome, he is evidently there kinder con- s raint, pre -occupied with matters abroad, nd fidgeting to be gone, who is to blame fpr that? Not, certainly, the woman, who, forgetful of past and even of habitual die- & pointment, has looked forward with hope f r his return to enliven her solitnde and to, ake care a pleasure by dividing it with hr, lo A REGULAR ACTION of the bowels is necessary to alth. LAXA-LIVER PILLS are the best owes. naLcathartic for family or general use. Price 25o. y druggist. A Trick With Apples Thp landscape gardener has so long and 80 persistently improved upon nature that now he fruit grower thinks he has a right t y. Any person, says the Golden Penny, who wants a supply of apples bear- iglis family crest, has only to send an il- lustration of 11 10 certain growers! at Merv, treuil, France, and he will duly receive the fruit the following season. ji 1 The desired end is obtained by growin t e apples in paper bage, whichare slipped on when the fruit' is about the size Of Di w hint. Being thus sbelterod from tbi sun, the apples do not color as they swell; and when full grosi3n still remin green or yellow. 1 As soon as the reach thjr Maximufli site the bags which cover them areeplaced crest or coat of a has been cut out like a 1. b others, on the e e of which the desired stencil. The sun can now penetrate to that part of the apple exposed and reddens it thoroughly, so that when the bag i again withdrawn the device is seen standing out In red upon the green surface. To obtain the opposite result -that is, a green device on -a red ground -the second bag is not.uaed, but the pattern is cut out in!paper d stuck on to the fruit, the sun pool:pp:nig° omit h.e exposed pada, but leaving green th crest or other Ileme which the ern ,Many Parician fruiters have recently akanted Von them; °thins have ti exeed for sale apples with the arms of R them.itri li monograms, Christian inaniea, arrow -Pierced hearts and 'other tender darioes. . ; 1 V...4_11011=101111.11111111111111111. hat is , \ , \ea \\\ aa.``W•e'aa-at".-e. '''''''''...-N-s-seseaeesee • a.:Oa ea.\ ar,. 'eeeese for Infants and Children. Castoria is a "ths:ri aml s. substitute for 1Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and o thhig Syrups. It contains neither Opium, korphix e nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. Its ar.rtce is thirty years' use by Millions of Mothies Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- ress. 4storia cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieve mach and Bowels ofInfants and Children, giving Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and ncy. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates 1iealtJ and natural sleep. Castoria is the Children's nacea—The Mother's Friend. CaOtOria. ; n‘0astOtrla childe of its good c Is ar4excellent medicine for there jhave repeatedly told me ect u ao their children." R. G. t. Os0000, Lowell, Mass. Castoria. "Castor's Is so well adapted to ehildrea that I recommend it as superior to any pre- scription known to me." IL A. ARCHER, M. a Brooklyn, it y 741-1 i'AC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF APOEARS1 ON EVERY WRAPPER. • , - TN! CrNTAUN COMPANY. 77 11.4UNINAY 157111teT, NW VORA Cr7Y. , Bet and Cheapest medicine ever given to a horse. iBST IifIcituse of th&r‘Sults it produces. - Mr:Alpxander. Ross, of Brucefield, made Over $50 out of a 50c package of Fear'S_Condition Po ,der.' Every11farmer who Uses it once, never bUYs any other. CHEAPEST Because a teaspoonful of it is all you feed at once—all other powders require a tablespoonful. You get three pounds for 50c, or seven pounds for $1.00. Thisis the time to use'it. Mr. Wit. Fortune had a horse that he could not feed into -condition, be its legs always broke out. He tried Fear's Condition Powders last fall, and eforei Ch istrnaS sold his horse for $150. , REFORE AFTER USING. Fear' Drug $tore, Seaforth. TI!liE EXPOSITOR = 9f = the - Century cOMIBINATION Exp4si or, Farming Life 'of Christ for the Nig, Ideal Cook Book The larg announcements that have been appear- ing in t ese columns for some weeks past have given rea ers an idea of the generous offer we are making subscribers for the season 1899-1900. We briefly summarize: --T e Weekly ExpoAitor, than which you will grant there is no bett, and brighter home newspaper in your district, yearly subSerip4on ..... ; .., .. ...... . ... , ... .... . . .... --Fannin*, weekly of Toronto, an ideal paper for the farm and ,home ...1... .. . .... . ..1.... .. . ..... .. , ..... —4,11e of Christ for the Young, by Geo. L. Weed, particulars i or which are given below. ..... . • . • • —l4eat Cook 'Book, a work of more than 300 pages, thoroughly p aetical, substantially' bound in oilcloth ......... ... ........ ur combination—price of the two books and the two $2 00 papers Wo cOst you, taken individually 00 I 00 00 $4 oo Balan ......... • • • • • • ••-• "Life of Christ tor the Young," by Geo. ',- Weed, 'is a particularly attractive book, 400 pages, iivith 75 full-page half -tone illustrations. It has received the commendation of representa- tives oll't the leading Christian churches, irrespec- tive ofi denomination. The author, both by training and sentithent, is thoroughly qualified to writoi such a book,_and bas personally visited the Ho1y Land, enabling hint to speak from experience of the cenes described. It is bound in handsome elotlt with embossed front cover. The pul,lisher's p *ce is $r•oo. We specially tecommend this bc1ok to our readers. of 1$99 Of E*Oositor and Farming Freelo all New Subscrjbers Wide-awake rn0 will avail themselves of this proposi- tion without a 4a 'g.cleiay. ,P.Opers start at once and books are mailed *Ay, post4lid, to :the subecriber. EzvosnoR, SEAFORTH, ONT5 e , sseKVIA SurveYt' 0 tofu eget_ teea njea,OBA114; pet noeN BL &eta% 43°' asyson0Ola wetted *nd Weni' Ware. 10 TO R znbett. - And geti lead would yre neresster, Bee TO UT a tulles Iran di) elIZWed foe. moil met eas 0• , or to MD TEAM ENG sale ebsai IRE EXPO: laborse Powel Are in geodr3 ape *tout era 3 .aeg in a visa &worth, IAX xtina %es iog ail, 2 afternatees, e tato fotaolock rums totem: oraingiy. CB ▪ BEWA131 undend about this arid ell yearling*. ~meetly 84 • osganimdins as shove,and be .Pet STRAY 10 Ei S, L. sot/embers yi have Inc sere , dawn, ALE STRAY PI oeseion 11 *fifer. She is two hind legs a inforreation les ifully received will be przsetn 4 RES 1E1 bred tror type, -of either licALLISTEB, IMILAM ihosoug old, one room Let 22, Cower 1 Isle thre ;from 10 to 11 aeifers, ilireg U• sborne. 01 1110110BE. REA T1ABM F011 sbcut lee ROY cultivation. and plenty of farm and will Aoply to IfBi FLENDID •epleadido rth Reed; contains 175 a state of Dula _Anise, good ix eondition and eits,y terms, as not sold befor ROBERT 043 'VAR)/ ,E• sale, Lot Township. .2 cleared, tbe r derdrainedaa wiIb$o. 1 ehed ; sheep and root oell wells and els *Owed on a seeded down crop. This markets, chu wilt be Itold eiddrass ROB PLENDrD did farm the 15111 400 'the Valve o of which are In a geed sttiej underdtaine raising midi land on the honees, a ism Death, Isre building's in. - chards sad jOiDll the Val -office, blacic Leteibunr h 11. II la no lanue.of th Vas in the and on <trey mot told In a Si A suitable easply on lit xoprietor, ljat 43A.R F0 LP 'service thoroughbr at .titne 018 neceseary. 1000AR FO 1, aped -hisproved Y the time Cf MEL'VThJ. ID keep Stanley,* tkle payable, o!returujii Io on A tboroag bred To he adrol of service,. White Pigs trAt4W-43 „1,_ VICE. al -the Fru Teroworth *1; payabl turning If bred actin nx:ioam *Ewan) j_ algne lhiiited extra good cross their Terme-51e JOHN lae' Mor LOT Tho of the ill reasons DAVID et:▪ e1 *3 erenze vein Of .1. begfa go Petg