HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1900-03-02, Page 2---
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- REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
efs0t.TS1 AND LOT IN SRAFORTH FOR'S-ALE -
11 A email ftame hone* and good lot, pleasantly
situ -reed on North Main eteet, formerly °couple -I by
Solo non Quick,- A good well and all eono notices,
neer the htlsinees part of the town. Wia be told
cheap. Apply to JOSIAH TYERMAN, Seal eta.
1679.4
4 RM FOR SALE.-Foreale, Lot 5, Conceselon St
Hellcat, near village of Ininhurn, writhe -ling
boat 100 stores, all cleared and in a gocd state of
ant valeta There are good buillegengood orehard
and plenty of exaellent aviator. This is a aplen lid
fame and will be seed cheap Immediate pessession.
A.pp ye° MRn. SOHOALICS, Coustanco I) 0.
1607
HOt"SE AND LOT FOR SALE OR TO RENT.-
Ilene(' situated corner of Crombie and Chelk
streets, opp lilt • tee Big Mill, Seaforth. Contains 4
bedroom, 8 clothes closets, hall, parloredining- roam,
kitenen and paretre, alto summer kitchen, hard and
soft water, 2 stoves and other household articles.
To he sold at a hatnain as the proprietor fa leaving
towr. WM. McKAY. 1680-4
RMIN STaNLEY FOR SALE -For Fate Lot
r 9, Conceseion 1, London Road, near the village
of Diem( It Id, vonteining about re0 Acres, 90 notes
ne Oen ed and in a good state cf oultivatiOn, the re -
a mato& r is h rd need hush. There are ge-el build.
Ing3 12 aerte Of Wheat, SO seeded to grass, a good
oreLarda d t lenty of water. Will bo sold otteap
and an easy terms. Apply to A. J. ROSS, Brum-
field P. 0. 1670-tf
eGIARM FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 2), Huron Road,
X Tuckersruitie containing 98 tierce, 88 sores clear-
ed and 10 -sores of bush. The land is well cultivated
and underdrained. On the place Is a frame house
and frame barn, with gaol stables. There is plenty
of gpod water, and an orchard This is a most de-
eiranle team, being only mut two miles from Sea.
tort's. It will be sold sate]) and on easy terms. For
further perticulane apply to WM. FOWLER, Huron
Roa 1 or Seaforth P. 0. 1644 tf
ELENDID TARA( FOR SALE. -For sale the
ernenclid farm of Ma Robert Govoulock, on the
wile Road, a mile and a half from Seeforth. I
conitains 175 saran nearly an &cared teed In a high
state of cultivation, There le a two story brick
-owe, good bank barn and everything in first•claes
eceellitIon and well underdralned. It will be sold on
Atm terms, as the propriethr desires to retire. If
not sold before the fall it will be rented. Address •
ROBERT GOVEIILOCR, Seaforth In O. 1698 ti
I_
len, ARMS FOR SALE. -Two extra tine harms for sale.
r As I have deeded to give up farming I will sell
Eny twa farms adjoining tho town of Seaforth. They
beefs both heen in pasture for about £0 years and. are
In a high state ol aunty/aeon, clean and well- fenced
and drained. About 20 acres of fall wheat, 2) acres
of stubble land and the belanee all in grass, a fine
lenge bank barn and a gool frame house. For crop -
plug or gress they are two of the best farms in the
couetry. A never failinn seeing creek running
threunh eaeh. Possess, on given May lsebr In time to
do leering work. C. WILSON, Seaforth. 1668af
nrIetRMS TOR SkLE IN TUnKERSMITH TOWN-
SHIP. -Lot No. 4 in the 5th Coneeesion and the
FAB half • f Lot 4 in the 4th Concession, both in th
Huron Road Survey, or the Township of Tucker.
smith, in the Coenty of -Huron, w 11 be sold together
or n separate percale air purchasers ratty d sire.
The owners of them farms are deeirous of making e
sale and aro prepared to sell on reasonable terms
For full particulars apply to It. S. HAYS; Solloiter
for the ower, Scaforth, Ontario. Dated at Sea-
ted , January 10th, 1900. .1674-12
FARM IN STANLEY FOR. SALE. -;For sale Lot
24, Conceesion 2, Stanley, conte n!ng 100 acres,
about 16 acreei of which is uncurled hardwood bush.
The balance ie well drained, well fenced, and in an
excellent state of cultivation. There are 2 good
well , 10 acres of fall wecat, and the cultivated land
is al ready for spell* sowing. There is a new brick
house, a large barn with good stale stabling and a
larg row implement house. It is 3 miles from
Brai efield and 6 miles nem Clinton, and is conetd-
ered one of the hest farms in Stanley, For further
info mation apply on the prentieee or addreaa DON-
ALD SMITH, Brueefield. 1679•tf
-DARN IN EfULLETT FOR eALE.-For sale, Lot
X 4, Concesaion 13, Hullett, containing 75 acres.
all c eared, underdrained, well fenced, and about 40
acre seeded to gra. There are fair building.
There is a good orchard, and a never -failing- spring
oreek, runs through the farm and a good well at the
houth It is near sohoel and post cam, and eon-
venitnt to the best earkets It is a splendid farm,
not foot of weette land on it, and is well adapted for
stock raisine It will be sold' cheap and on easy
terms. Apple to the undereigned, Seaforth P. 0
JANE ROBLSON. 1669, tf
neiSIDENICE IN SEAFORTH FOR SALE. -For
Xi, epee, cheap, the reef -demo facing on Victoria
elqu re in Saab rth, the property of John Ward
There Is a comfortable frame house, with good stone
cellse hard and soft water, and all o'her necessary
°temente/aces. The house containa 8 rooms, with
pantries, etc. There are two lots, well planted with
alt kends of fruit a ;d ornamental trees and shrubs.
Mao a large friable. Thie is one of the best, meet
ooneentent and most pleasantly situated residences
In freaforth and will be sold cheap. Apply to JOHN
WAPD. 1640-tf
F11 IN TUOICER3MITH FOR SALE. -For sale
Lot 24, Concession 8, H. R. S., Tuokeremith,
cont. Ming 100 aores, 90 sores cleared and in a good
state of cultivation, 10 acres of good hardwood bush
The is on the premises a good brick house and
Wee en ; a largo new bank barn, with stone stabling
elude eath '• an open shed ; driving house, and other
buildnge ; two le- ad wells and 'owl:lard. It is Eve
reilite from Seaforth and six from Clinton on a good
gravel road. Schoen close by. Will be sold cheap.
Apply on the premas to ROBERT MoVETY, or Sea.otth P. 0. 1639x4tf
t4A Rai IN TUCKERSMITH FOR SALE. -For Sale,
Lot e, Conoeselon 6, Tuokersmith, containine
100.6%‘res, abort'. 15 acres are well timbered with
be , maple, elm and sale. The cleared land is all
peel enderdrained, well fenced and in a high state
of etntivation. There are abeut 20 acres seeded to
gram and IS acres of fall wheat. There Is a new
brick bolero, large bank barn with good stone seab-
ling inderneath, and other buildings. There is a
geed young or hard just eosetneneiag to bear and
anon 120 evergreens and other ornamental trees.
There are three never falling wells. It is vdthin
three smiles of Seaforth and cenvenlent to sehool, ft
le ant of flao best ferule in *mon and will be told
cheer and on easy terms as the proprietor wants to
retire from farmieg. Apply on the prearisee or
Wren Egmondvil e poet aloe. DAVID CUBS.
NEY. 1870 -If
TAM IN TTICKER9MITH FOR SALE. -For sale
J' Lot 11, Coneession 8, Tuokersmith, containing
100 acree, all cleared but about 8 acres of good bush.
It leen- derdrained, well fenced, and in a high state
of eultivatien. There is a good stone home ; good
hams stables and out -houses. It adjoins a good
schoo ; is within flee miles of Seaforth, and three
*elm trona Inippen. There is plenty ef good water.
Will be told Whit or without the crop. It is one of
the base isms in the township, and will be sold on
easy Urine, as the proprietor wants to retire. A1s6
50 aerie within a mile and a quarter, a good grasing
let, well feneed, but no bnileNngs.Will be sold .to•
gethe or eeparately. Apply on the premises, or ad-
dress Sgenendville P. 0. JAMES MoTATISIL
1680 tl
ttAltent IN STANLEY FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot
X' 9 and the west half of Lot 8, oa the 124h emcee-
eion, or Deoonson Line, of Shelley. Tins farm con-
tains 150 acres, ail of which is °leered, except four
aewse. It is in a state- of first -elates cultivation, well
feneed and alt underdrained, meetty with tile. There
le a large frame dwelling hearth as rest as new, with
good atone foundation and cellar, large bank barn
wttb stone stabling underneath, and numerous other
buildings, inetuding a large pig house. Two good
orchares of choice fruit, also niee shade and erns -
manta trete.. There are toe spring tereeks running
tkrough the farm, and plenty of good water all the
year round w:thout pumping. It le well situated for
rearkess, churehee, eohools, post office, Jko., and good
gravel marls leading from it in all directions. It is
within view of Lake Huron, and the boats can be
seen passing up and down from th bonne This is
one of the 1feet equipped farmarethe county, and
will be sold on easy terms, as the proprietor wants to
retire en account 01411 health. Apply on the prem.
fees, or address Blake P. 0. JOHN DUNN, 1649-11
.IN HAY TOWNSHIP FOR SALE,-FAROBle, Lot 22, on the North Boundary of Hay
- Townealp. This farm contains 100 acres, 85 acres
°leen , the rest good hardwood bush. It is well un•
derdrrened and fenced. There is a good stone house
with a No. 1 eeller ; large bank barn ; implement
shed; theft) house 70x75, with fIrst-olats etabling
wed rot allen underneath; a good orohard ; 2 good
wells and cietere. There is 12e acree 'of fall wheat
eowed im a rich fallow, well manured ; 40 acres
.seeded down recently, the rod in good shape ter
crop. Thi e is a No. 1 farm, well eituated for
markets, ehurches, schools, post office, etc., and
will be soil! reatonabte. Apply on the premises, or
addresi ROBERT N. DOTZGLA.S,Blake,Ont.I668xEtf
PLENDID FARM FOR SALE. -For sale, a splen-
did farm ar d hotel property. This farm is on
the leta cornes•ion of the Township of Moltillop, at
the eel agc o' Leadbury. It canteens 112.1 acres, all
of wile; I are e eared, except about three acres. It is
iua gel ;d nitto cf cultivation, being well fenced and
underd aiad, end suitable for grain growingor stock
raising and feedin4. There is not a foot of wiste
land ni the' farm. There are two good dwelling
hotat•e=,a lar„e bank barn with stone stabling under.
neath, i. largo implement house and all neeessary
buildinee10 netass repair. There are three on
cher& end fate' never -failing wells. The farm ad•
joins tie Village of leatibure , where are storesepost
enice, ilacksiu1ih shop, echool. etc. The well known
Asadhuy h Acl is on the !atm, and v,•Ill be sold with
ft. It le now under lean for a term of years. This
Is one of the neat and most profitable farm proper.
ties in tee Coenty of Huron, and will be sold oheap
on easy ternisof payment. For further partioulare,
apply or tho p•emises, or address the undersigned
proprietor, Leadbury P. 0. JOHNSTON KINNEY.
1653
RBA
,Rev. D
ION OF GHOSTS,
Talmatile Discourses
an Unique Subject.
THE FA
inet Deno
'eery-
_LACIES 6F SPIRITUALISM -
ie.
noes It a4 Witchcraft and Sor-
Ve -Are Surrounded by Mystery
-A Vast Lusatia Unexplored Which
.Science May Yee nap our. •
'V
cot
never
this tini
what he
tet,
there is
iliar epi
gansed h
ment,
with hin
man by
Tr oubl
trouble
no wha
conclude(
medium r a witOi or anything that
you please to call her — a. woman
Who ha communication with the
spirits o the eternal world. It was
a Very crtficult, thing to do, for Saul
-
r slain all the witches or
them to stop business. A
ne day said to Icing Saul,
of a spiritue,1 medium down
lage Of En -dor." "Do you?"
king. Night falls; Saul,
n the dress of a plain citi-
two servants, goes out to
this medium.
d his ,servants after awhile
e village, and 'they say, "1
f this -is .the house," and
in, and they see the hag -
rd and shriveled up spiritu-
m- sitting by the light and
ble Sculptured images and
rods and poisonous images
les and vases. They say,
st be the place." One
s the woman to the
she stands there, hold -
le or lamp a,bove her
peering .out into the dark -
says, "Who is here!" The
informs her that he has
ave his fortune told. When
that, she trembles and al -
p8 .the light, for she knows
ce chance for a fortune tel-
piritual medium in all the
land. But Saul having sworn that
no harm shall come to her, she says,
"Well, w d. shall I bring up from the
dead?" Saul says, "Bring up, Sam-
uel," Thati was" the prophet who
had died a ;little while before.
ISsee herwaving a wand, or stir-
ring up ome poisonpus herbs in re
caldron, or. hear her muttering over
sonie niations, or staraping with
her -foot s she cries out to the realm
of the thad: "Samuel, Samisen" Lo,
the freezi g horror! The floor of the
tenement opens, and the gray hairs
float up led the forehead, the eyes,
the lips, the shoulders, the arms,
the fee the entire body of the dead
Samuel Trapped in sepulchral robe,
appearin to the astonished group,
who staliger back and hold- fast and
catch eheir breath and shiver with
terror.
The dead -prophet, white and awful
fronn the, tomb, begins to move his
ashen lip , and he glares upon. King
Saul and cries out: "What did you
bring m up for? What do you
mean, Ki ig Saul?" Saul, trying to
compose and control himself, makes -
this stan mering' and 'affrighted ut-
terance a .he says to the dead pro-
phet: " he Lord is against me, and
I have c me to you for help. What
ahall I do?" The dead prophet
stretched forth his -finger to King
Saul and said: "Die to -morrow !
Come with me into, the sepulcher.
ant going now. Come, come with
mol!' And, lo, the floor again opens,
e,nd. the feet of the dead prophet dis-
appear aiid the. arms and the shoule
ders an the forehead/ The floor
closes. Oh, that was an awful
seance!
We are surrounded by mystery—be-
fore us, behind us, to the right of
us, to the left of us, mystery. There
is a vast' realm unexplored that sci-
ence, I have _no- doubt, will yet map
out, He who explores that realm-
wili do the world more service than
did T.ever a Columbus or an Amerigo
Vespucci. There are so many things
that cannot _be accounted for, so
many sounds and appearances which
defy acoustics and investigation, so
many things approximating to the
speetrni, So many effects which do
not seem to have a sufficient cauee.
Spiritualism in America was born
In Hydesville, Wayne County, N.Y.,
when one night 'there was a loud rap
heard against the door of Michael
Weekman; a rap a second time, .a
rap a third time, and all three times,
when the door was opened, there was
nothing found there, the knocking
having been made seemingly by in-
visible knucklea. In that ssarae house
there was a young woman who had
a cold hand passed over her ' face,
and, there being seemingly no ' arra
attached to it, ghostly suspicions
were excited.
After awhile Mr. Fox with his fam-
ily moved into that .house, and then
thee had hangings at the door every
night. One night Mr. Fox cried out,
"Are you a spirit?" Two raps—ans-
wer in the affirmative. "!Are you an
injured spirit'?" Two raps—answer
in the aflieniative. Then they knew
-right ttevae' that it was the spirit
of a peddler who had been murdered
in that houso years before and who
had been robbed of his $500. Whe-
ther the spirit of the peddler came
back to collect his $500 or his bones
I (10 not know.
The excitement spread. There was
11111 V el -S/1 "rumpus. The Hon. Judge
Edmonds declared in a book /that
he had actually seen a bell ,--start
from the top shelf of a cloeet,. heard
it ring over the people that were
standing in the closet: then, sWung
ny free -NMI o hands, it rang over the
people ine-the ba cls parlor and floated
through the folding doors to the
front parlor, rang over the people
ile•re and then -dropped on the floor.
senator of tire -United States, af-
erwiirde ernes*. of Wisconsin,, bad
his head quite turned vilth spiritual-
iStie dettiotist ratiOrts.
The tutees tipped, and the stools
til Led, and tile bedsteads raised, and
the chairs Upset, and it, seemed as if
the spirits everywhere, had gone into
the turn i ter° business ! Well, the
people said "We have got something
new in this, country. It la a new re-
liglon!" Oh, no, my friand, thous-
and e of year e age we find in our
ashin ton, Feb 25. — In this die-
trs,e D Talmane discusses a thenie
re under. exploration than at
and warns people against
calls a religion of ghosts ;
Samuel ,xviii, 7: "Behold,
a woman that hath .a ftiernn
it at En-lor. And Saul dis-
mself and put 'on other rai-
d he went, and two men
, and they came to the wo-
ight," -
to the
the lef
to do.
to se
right of him and
of him, Saul knew
As a last resort he
k out a spiritual
had ,eith
compelle
servant
"I know
at the vi
said th
putting
zen, wit
hunt up
Saul a
reached
wonder
they loo
gard, w
al mediu
on the I
divining
a,nd bot
"Yee, th s mr
loud rap brin
door, an as
ins's, the cand
head an
ness, she
tall kin
come to
she hear
most dr
there is
ler or
I)
I
•i
THE• HU11,0$ 6Fai POSITOR
wee, a apirituanstic seancel
Nothing in the' spiritualistic circl
of; our day has been more ,.stranee,
iiresterioue - and wonderful th 1 n
ngs whichhave been seen in pa.t
,centuries of the world. In all ag
there have been. necromancers, tho
who c6.iisult with, the spirits of ti
deaarted; charmers, -those who p
their subjects in. a mesmeric stat
sorcerers, those who by taking p.ol
onous drugs -see everything and h
everything and tell everything; drea
erE , people who in their sleeping m
merits can see the future world a d
hes .d consultation with spirits. Y
before the time of Christ, the Br
hmans went throsigh all the tab e
moving, all the furniture eicitemen ,
which the spirits have exploited 'n
our day, precisely the same , th
over and over again, under the ma
iptlation of the Brahmans. Now,
you say that spiritualism is differe • t
frein thes ? I answer, all these d
lusions I have mentioned belong
the same amily. They are exhum
tions fron the unseen world.
What dres Godthink of all these
delusions? He -thinks so severely of
thsm that he never speaks of them
but with livid thunders of indigna-
tion. _ He says, "I win be a ewift
witness a ainst the sorcerer." Ile
says, "Thou shalt not suffer a witch
to live." And lest you might make
some important distinction between
spiritualism and witchcraft God says
in so .many words, "There shall not
be among you a consulter of familiar
spirits, or wizards, or necromancer.
for they that do these things .are an
abomination unto the Lord." The
Lord -God Almighty in a score of pas-
sages which I have not now time to
quote utters his indignation against
all this great family of delusions.
After that be a spiritualist if you
dare!
ou lose a friend; you want the
spiritual world opened, so that you
may have communication with him.
In a .highly 'wrought, nervous and
diseased state Of mind you go and
put yourself in that- -contratinication,
That is why I hate spiritualism. rt
takes advantage of one in, a moment
of weakness, which may 'come upon
us at any time. We lose a friend.
The trial is keen, sharp, suffocating,
almoet, maddening. If we could
maeshal a host and storm the eter-
nal world and recapture our loved
one, the host would soon bo marshal-
ed. The house is so lonely. ,The
• world is so dark, The separation is
sea, ,insuffera.ble. But spiritualism
says, "We will open the future world,
and your sieved ene can come back
and talk, to you." Though we may
not hear his voice, we may hear the
rap of his hand. So clear the table. Sit
down.
331Put your hands on the ta-
bgone. r
the tabl
It
1.
.5
very quiet. Five minutes
en minutes. No motion of
No response from. the fu-
ture world. Twenty minutes. Thir-
ty minutes." Nervous excitement all
the time increasing. Forty rainutes.
The table shivers. Two raps from
the future world. The letters of the
alphabet are called over. The de-
parted friend's name is John. At the
pronunciation of the letter 3 'two
raps. At the pronunciation of the
letter 0 two raps. At the pronun-
ciation of the letter .H two raps. At
the pronunciation of the letter N two
raps. There you have 'the whole
name spelled out—J-o-h-n, John.
Now, the spirit being present, you _
say "John, are you happy?" Two
raps give an affirmative answer.
Pretty soon the hand of the med-
ium begins 'to twich and toss and
.begins to write out, after paper and
ink are furnished, a meseage from
the eternal World, What is remark-
able, the departed spirit, although it
has been amid the ilhunination of
the heaven, cannot spell as well as
it used to. It ha,s-lost all grammati-
cal accuracy and cannot write as dis-
tinctly. I 'received a letter through
a medium once. I sent it back. I
said, "Just please to tell these ghosts
the had better go t� school and get,
improved in " their orthography."
Now, just -think of spirits, that the
13ible represents as enthroned in glo-
ry, aoming down to crawl under the
table and break crockery and ring
tea bells before supper is ready and
rap the window shutter on a gusty
night!' What consolation in such
miserable stuff as oompare.d with the
consolation of our departed friends
free from toll and sin and pain are
forayerhappy and that we will, join
theni, not in mysterious and half ut-
terance which makes the hair stand
on end and makes cold chills creep
the back, but, in a reunion most bless-
ed aid happy and glorious!
.And none shall miumer or miedoubt
he God's great sunrise Ilnds us out.
]earn still further from this sub-
ject Ithat splritualiem and necroman-
cy are affairs of darkness. Why did
not Saul go. in the day? He was
ied t� go. [ Besides that, he
kneM that this .spiritual mediu.m, like
all 1er. succeseors, !Performed her . ex-
ploits in the night.' The ,Davenports,
the Fowlers, the Foxes, the spiritual
medituass of all ages, have chosen the
night or a darkened room. - Why ?
The imajority ef their wonders have
been swindles; and dec,eptions pros-
pere best in the night.
You have all seen strange and un-
accountable things in the night. Al-
most every man has at some time
had a. touch of hallucination. Some
time ago, after I had been over -
tempted to eat something indigesti-
ble before retiring for the night, after
retiring I saw the president of one of
the prominent colleges astride the
foot of the bed, while he demanded of
me a loan of 5 cents! When I awak-
ened, I had no' idea, it was anything
supernatural. And .1 have to advise
you, if you hear and see strange
things at sight, to stop eating hot
mince pie, and take a dose of billious
medicine. It is an outraged physical
organism, enough to deceive the very
elect after sundown and does nearly
all its work in the night. The witch
of En -dor hold her seances at night;
so do they all. Away with this re-
ligion of spooks1
Still further, I learn from my text.
that, spiritualism is (loom and death.
to its disciples. King Saul thought
that .he would get help from the "me-
dium," but the first that he sees •
makes him swoon away, and no soon-
er is he resuscitated th.n he is told
he must die. Spiritual sm is doom
and death to every one hat yields to
it.. It ruins the body. ook in upon
an audience of spirituali ts—cadaver-
ous, weak, nervous, exit usted, hands
clammy and cold, voice sepulchral
and eiminous, bewildered with raps. -
I never knew a confirme spiritualist
who had a healthy nervous system.
It iS Incipient epilepsy a d catalepsy. •
Destroy your nervous sytem. and you ,
.might as well be dead. I have not-'
iced Tat people Who axe hearing raps 1
...,e ore avorld
strength left to bear t
this world. A man
Only one- lumgor with
happy, as men have b
aliiieti ' s, b tc-woe b
whose erves; are shat
aliens srtites firet of all,
ttgainst •the iiorvous s
makes life iniaerable.
-A. man in 13elievue
ircim wundsiade by
was as ed Whyhe t
suicide,. and heSsaid. "
me to." Parente have
children and when a
.did it replied,- -`-`Spiri
ed 'it." It is the patr
.ager for the in4dhous
niansds,in Broadway T
York, delivering' a lee
spiritualism, adini tted.
words, "There 'is a fas
consultation with the
dead that has a. tenden
-ple off feorn their right
to instill into ahem. a, f
is revolting to the nat
It not . only rins its
it ruins, the mediums a,
It time. The Gadarene
banks of the Issike of Ga
-er became spiritual zn
down they werst in an
pork, to the coristernat
herdsmen. • The- Office
bad for a manisad for
for a beast.
r bring againaaathis delusion a more
fearful indictinent—it ruins the soul
iminortal. Firaig it makes a man a
quarter of areeiriYldel; then it makes
him half an infidel; then it makes him
-a whole infidet ,O The whole system,
as I conceive 1t; is founded on the in-
sufficiency of the word of God as a
revelatioh. Go il says the Bible is
enough for youato know abput the
future world.. You say it is n.ot
enough, and there is where you and
the Lord differ':And altho gh the
Scriptures say, ' "Add thou n t unto
his words, lest' he reprove thee and
thou be found "a liar," You risk it
and say: "Come ' back, star t of my
departed father; come back, sPirit of
my departed mother, of my compan-
ions, of my little child, and tell me
some things 1 don't, know about you
and about th unseen world.''
"Put," sass some one, "-6-ouldn't
It be cif adva tage to hear f om the
future world Don't you 4hink it
would stren then Christians There
are a. great many material sts who
d not belies there are soul, but -if
s irits from he future worl I should
ki ock and tal over to us they would
b persuaded. ' To that I,answer
the ringing, v, ords of the Son of God,
"1 they bel eve not Moses and the
prophets, nei her will they be per-
suaded thou rh one rose ,. from the
d."
believe hese are the days of
v ich the a.po tle spake when he said,
the latte - times some shall de-
part from t e faath, giving heed to
segueing spiri s." Audiences in this
day need to 1 aye reiterated in their
hearing the a,ssages .I quoted soma
minutes ago, "Tnere shaelel not be
among you consulter. f familiar
spirits, or w zard, or necromancer,
for they that do these things are an
abomination unto the Lord," and
"The soul t at turnet after such
as have famil ar spirits I will set my
as have fami iar 'spirit I will set
myself agains them, ad they shall
be tut off fro their pe
But.:1. invite you no to a Christ-
ian •seance, a noonday seance. This
'congregation is only one great
family. Here is the 4clitirch .table.
Con
ie around the churc table; take
your seats for this great Christian
seance; put your Bible pn the table,
put..yours hands on top of the Bible
and then- listen and heat' if there are
any voices coiaiing fro4i the eternal
wOrld. I think ther are. Listen!
"Secret things belong u to the Lord,
our God, but things th t are reveal-
ed belong unto us and to our chil-
dren." Sarely that is ti e Voice from
the spirit world. Bu before you
rise from this Christian eance I.want
you to promise me you vin be satis-
fied with the divine res elation until
the light of the eternal hrone breaks
upon yoor vision. Donot go after
the witch of En -dor. o not sit
down at table rappin s either in
sport or in earnest.
Teach your children t tere are no
ghosts to be seen or h ard in this
world save those which valk on two
feet or four—human or bestial. Re-
member that splritualisr at the best
is a useless thing, for if it tells what.
the Bible reveals it is superfluity,
and if it tells what the Bible does
not reveal it is a lie. I stead of go-
ing out to . get othe4 people to
tell, your fortune tel your own
fortune by putting your trust
In God anddoing tl'e best you
-can. I will tell your fortune: "All
things can work tegethe for good to
them that love God." Insult not
your depaeted friends by asking them
to come dbwn and scrabble under an
extension table. Re ember that
there 4 only one spirit kvhse dicta-
tion ,yau have a right to invoke, and
that is the holy, blessed and omnipo-
tent . spirit of God. Hak! He is
rapping now, not on a table or the
floor, but rapping on the door of
your heart, and every rap is a.n invi-
tation to Christ and a Warning of
judgment to come. Oh, grieve hina
not away! Quench him not. He has
been all around you this morning.
He was all around you last night.
He has been around you all your
lives. Hark! There cornea a voice
with tender, overmastering intona-
tion, saying, "My spirit shall not al-
ways strive."
tin
MARCH 2. 1900
is
a%\„
o.‘4:'•:4,s2N
as, .eeeeet-e .geeseee eeeeteeet
•••••••••••••••••••
and Children. Castoria is a
r Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops
It contains neither Opium,
cotic substance. It is Pleasant.
rty ;ars' use by Millions of
keys orms and allays Feverish-
iarrhcea and Wind Colic. Castoria
ubles,I cures Constipation and
assimilates the Food, regulates
8 of Infants and Children, giving
eep. Castoria is the Children's
Friel#1.
Afraid
THE DRESSY W
114AN.
The use of chiffon, choux and rosettes
on bats of fur or velvet is becoining more
and more fashionable.
Kilt, plaits, tucking and ifollls will be
used in the spring on every g rment to
which they caw possibly be app ie,d.
The outloek for tbe summer eenson in-
dicates an even greater rage f(!ir elegant
diaphanous black materials than existed
last summers
Chic and charming are the riding and
sleighing hoods of gray angora trimmed
with bands i of chinebilla fur and rich
damson velVet bordered with mink.
Women Who like the effeict of velvet
trimmings VIMI be glad to k ow that this
1
rich fabric, in many shades nd varieties,
will be in merked demand i the decora-
tion of smart spring toilets.
House gowns of oriental cashtuere fig-
ured with fine brilliant Per, tan atterne
have plain red silk blouse fr nts 4iid pet-
ticoats, open Turkish sleeve lin d with
the silk and are fastened with a red silk
cord girdle.
A pretty style with faehionable young
ladies is the wearing of ski ts of black
velvet. satin or corded sil1, or, again,
those of dark Ruesidu glee faille, with
sive "Ratal" to the 'bah
comp.—San Francisco Call.
It is believed that even more money
will be raised in this country for educa-
tion during the current year ' than was
raised last year, some estimates of the
amount that will be given in 1900 going
as high as $100,000,000.—At1anta Jour-
nal.
The iceman has not done ranch smiling
so far this winter, but he will have his
turn 'next summers unless current- re-
ports are all wronle The present mild
weather will afford him an ample excuse
to cry "short crop" and screw up the
price on consumers. -Omaha Bee.
Russia Is looking greedily upon India,
upon Chi a, upon Finland, but may meet
with an niexpected check. The nation
that atte pts to crush out civilization
and scho arship, science and art will
meet wit opposition in these 'days. -
Memphis Commercial Appeal.
ORC
ARD AND GARDEN.
Currant and gooseberries should. be
pruned one a year:
Trim and clean up the orchard; gather
up the brush and burn it.
Poultry for the plum trees and swine
for the aprle orchard is a good combina-
tion.
Plant life cannot be sustained without
proper foed any more than animal life
can. •
In wateiting house plants the best plan
Is to give enough Water at a time thor-
oughly to Moisten all the contents of the'
pot to the very bottom.
Small frhit culture will always be most
successful on the intensive plan. Pleat
only a smiall area at a time and give it
the best ppssible culture.
Grafts 6r -spring setting may be cut
now at aay time when the weather is
mild. Lt4ie1 them correctly and pack
theni in saWdust until ready for use.
Sudden 4nd severe pruning, such at the,
chopping pff of large limbs or t king
away of as undue quantity of wood in a
single season, is apt to ruin the en uing
fruit crop.
Unless the manure is well rotted and
thoroughly fined it should not be all wed
to touch -0 e roots of the fruit trees 4 In
nearly all cases it is beat to scattr it
evenly ove the surface.
THE KAISER.
Emperor' isn't in in ciag :words.
As Captain Coghlaa wonld saY, I"Hoch
de' kaiser!" - Bosten Jonronl. !
The Plinperor Will -snap seems to he; get-
ting himself in the humor to send back
some of those bougnets the Poltiali ga ve
hNiemws..
during his regent visit. -Baltimore
Kaiser Wilhelm lins now the best ex -
Mise possible to ineg.nse his navy, omlin
alrout the year l'eletlic aell be alne to
d alare the war ' iv1;11 (!rent
hieh his subjects se 1'-6.11117, desire to be
d red now - New Yawn. Press. •
ing his trip 1:1 Eine:lend it Wns Oh-
s Teed •Ilent the to -de of I:II:perm. Bill's
n usterhins drooped Id«o rtified flower.
bit since the saiense 1, f hose (;0:11;:m
V '145(15 his mustache etaiiiL up ince ine
ti II of n terrier te the eetion (nee
ord "tretts!" • NI emphie cononerein 1 a.
MUNICIPAL M .T.TERS
San Frnntereo t'i:i uikan
(el in Chinese.
Nev York lea •
phone exeeeeee
eeev (isle:ea i
trneeene ile
New t,esee.e.
the teeit ve!ene•
5;oi1111-'t1ly t:, •
'1
+4
Ut
r'ff..4
i- '1 ri int/ ; lee
PiPle tir• -
1,1'1.1(9* 10 the vete
'ale ke
1
pa per print -
local tele -
a' et Id
v hietorieni
f t he Lon-
'
lore than
.0 a and eon-
: : ill(' taXt'S.
,4111I-111. Or.,
tree yt'a I'S.
n-
'01 I
:1
to enm-
a bring ng
tt five miles
•
—Mr. John OiDonoghne, of Stratford, has
been elected president, ot the South Perth'
Conservative Association, and Mr. Rishard
Clyne, of the Downie association.
The End is Paralysis.
If the Wasted Nerves are not restored
revitalized by Dr. Obase's
Nerve Food.
"A living mind in a dead body" is the way
paralysis is sometimes described. What can, be
, more horrible than to Tose all control of the body
and feel death gradually claiming you for its own?
Sleeplessness, nervousness, headache, loss of
energy and vitality, gloomy forebodings,' easy
fatigue and weakness of the body are symptoms
of the nerve exhaustion which will finally end in
paralysis, nervous prostration or insanity.
Whether overwork, worry or irregular habits
were the cause, restoration can be most effectu-
ally brought about by a few months' treatment
j with Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, the great restore-
s tive in pill form.
Dr. Chase's Nerve Food instils vital energy
Into the body, stops the wasting process and
gradually but surely builds up the system,
creates new nerve force and permanently cures
all nervous disorders and Weaknesses of inen,
women and children. I
As a restorative its effi4cy is unrivalled by
any preparation known to science. It restores
color to the cheeks, roundnss to the form and
elasticity to every raovernen of the body,
so cents a box, at all
m
IIATE8 & Co., Toronto. Book iee.RIMW4°N
free. as
"Castor's is an excellent medicine for
children. Mothers have repeatedly told me
of its good effect upon their children."
Da. G. C. OSGOOD, Lowell, Mass.
Castoria.
Castoria is so well adapted to children
that I recommend it 'as superior to any pre-
snription known to me."
H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, JV e Y
THE FAC -SIMILE IGistIATURE OF
°APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER
TN. CMPITAIWIt COMPANY, IT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY,
Condition Powde
The Bestand Cheapest medicine ever
given to a horse.
i3EST
Because of the results it produces. ,
Mr. Alexander Ross, of Brucefteld„
made over $50 out of a 50c package of
Fear's Condition Powder.
Every farmer who uses it once,
never buys.any *other.
CHEAPEST
Because a teaspoonful of it is all you
fee4 at once—all other powders require
a tablespoonful.
You get three pounds for 50; or
seven pounds for $1.00.
This is the time to use it.
Mr. Wm, Fortune had a horse that he could not feed into condition
cause its legs always broke out. He tried Fear's Condition Powders at
and before Christmas sold his horse for $150,
BEFORE USING.
Fear's Drug
AFTER -USING-.
be -
est,
tore, Seaforth.
You Win
Be Surprised
to learn how cheap we are ?selling fencing
this year considering the cost of wire. Bet-
ter see about it before you buy, No other
fences made of wire like ours. Put Page up
with good -end posts, it will stay
there tight and nice.
THE PAGE WIRE FENCE
WalkervIlie, Ont.
01111111111111
111111111111101111111
111111111111.1
10111•111,01.11111Me
INMIIIMMI
amiriona
isims1111111111111t
01111.111M■11.11111.ftwommisolftmassminw
SOON SINYALO.rATENT A33„.111[1„ OIst Ilmjtom.
,00•KOtt 1#0 rz SEcnceto. SPRING ICOTN cutirtvaTOA
The Universal Favorite
Noxon Disc Harrow,
(OTT -THROW.)
The only Disc Harrow that has adjust-
able pressure springs'. This feature is in-
valuable on hard or uneven ground.
Noxon
NEW SECTIONAL Cultivator
SP4INc4 TOOTH
(fitted with grain and grass sowing at-
tachments if desired)
with -reversible -points, also thistle cutters
if ordered. The lightest draft, best work
--
big and most easily operated cultivator
manufactured. The teeth work directly
under the axle and within the wheel line.
See the new Spring Lift.
THE CELEBRATED
Noxon Drills
Steel Hoosier and Spring Pressure.
Our old reliable Hoosier Drills are so well
and favorably known that -they speak for
theniselves. There are now over 60,000
in uae among the farmers of this country.
We invite the closest inspection of oar Farm Implements and Machinery, which we
are manufacturing for the coming seasonla additiOn to the above, we call Lemma' atten-
tion to our New Victoria Binder and No. 14 Oxford iClipper front cut Mower, also our
patent Spring and Spike Tooth Harrows and Frictioxi and Ratchet Dump Rskee. It will
amply repay all intending purchasers' to see' our lines before placing their orders else-
where. Send for our new MO Catalogue.
The Noxon Ingersoll, Ont.
IOU
loli
Ing
corning
bred bur
steers vo
eine' two,
PIGS.
S mont
PIttle
positivil
she prop
glven on
count of
oath J
'action
A
instructi
auction
day, Ma
ing
pose WS
MILY, 1
-posed to
rialrg
1 heifer
tete.
leer tom
pea ba
1 horns
plow, 1
eragon,
nearly n
double h
OTOSS 4311
/leek yc
• Will pest
tor has s
eaudta,
Ise given
JAMES
Auction
- -
LEA
PL
strueUo
auction
March 9
mere 4
years ol
Jersey
2 years
hered D
Yorirehi
-from Mr
sow top
pigs Mr
a pair tr
buggy, 1
ntaesey-
muffler.
der pill
ter, 1 pi
oapacity
1 bay
1
forks,
roots,
numero
premises
sums ef
months'
joint not
antounits
be sold
hie farm
proprie
A
Jennie -
b bl
at 2
0, in the
emith,r
cession.
is* first
cattle -or
house an
scree of
land. T
seeded,
ing boon
fenced
of then
free fro
Te
00
balenee
er may
purchase
particu
WILSON
TO17
trader '
Mortgsge
there Sill
Cominerr
82t!
at 3 ineitte
Lot Nee 1
ship of *
west one
The bald'
Ing was
purehase
vendor or
money -al
interest.
signed.
1900, F.
Take 32
Town of
or een.en
undeyme
Estaide
inodeelele
lockle SDI
East side
21, Gout!
Goulnloe
es.sb retie
- 24, cloth
▪ feet wir
street ire
te these;
wide. Si
froru -the
Or and Tr
-Anal toet
won the
the front
the Muni
liable to
the owne
'rem the
the office
for inirpe
met of ti
$3,280•20
the gene_
Revision
2nd, A.
of hearth
went or
Ann -lathe
desire to
mutt. I
20th, 190
Ha
We
• Stoves
'171.
Match/
oven];
ket.
RivaL
For
Giirne3
some a
311effi
Ban e
of Ooa
and co
peeial
Rave
Coun
Demi
forms t
or-erte
bacoo,.
of pram
to$14
"'A