Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1893-10-13, Page 2Agricultural Implement EMPORIUM. 0.0. WILLSON, SEAFORTH Has a full assortment of the following goods: IN PLOWS -I have the Fleury, Wilkinson, Gowdy and Cockshutt ; in Gang Plows -the Cockshutb, Wil- kinson and Floury; eine° and double Furrow Sulky Pima, Spade Harrows, Disc Harrows and Diamond Harrows, Spring Tooth Cultivators, Hoosier single ant combined Drilla. In Horse Powers -I have one, two and three horee American Tread Powers and American Ensilage Cutters; two, four, six and eight horse Sweep Powers and Canadian Ensilage Cutters all kinds of Grain Crushers, and a now and improved GRAIN GRINDER, guaranteed to do good work arid give satisfaction. Gananoque and Brantford Bug- gies, Phaetons and Fancy Carriages of all patterns. Five different styles of Road Carts, also the:Wood etock-Bain wagon. Inwashing machinee, the Improved Ideal, the Knoll, the Dowsweil and Standard; Clothes Wringers in six different etyles, ranging from nee to 87.00 each. In Wind Mills the I X L, a fine solid wheel; the Challenge,a first-class open wheel,and the Woodstock Steel Wheel and Steel Tower, the best of its kind in Canada. Mills put op for pumping water on short notice. A full stook of plow castings and repairs for . all kinds of plows Including the Hendry and Hogan plows. The Davisand Williams Sewing Machines, all kinds of sewing machine nOdles and oils. 0. C. WILLSON, Seaforth. Cluff d Bennett's Planing Mill. The undersigned would beg: leave to thank their many customers for their very liberal eupport for the past and would say that they are in a reuch better position to serve them than ever before, as they are adding a new Engine and Boiler, alsn a dry kiln and enlarging their -building • which will enable them to . burn out work on short notice. Lumber, Sash, Doors, Mould- ings, Shingles, and Lath always on hand. Contracts taken and Estimates furnished. Oluff & Bennett. e. S.—All in arreara please pay up. neat GROCERIES. If you wantu, good article in. Groceries, Canned Goods o Fruits You can be supplied at the POST c)FFICE • STIOTZ_ Choice Shoulders, Breakfast -Bacon and Spiced Roll Kept constantly on hand. Tele- phone connection. A ca/1 solicited. A. CROZIER & CO., SUCCESSORS TO J. FAIRLEY. SEAFORTH, ON". THE FARMERS' Banking - House, (In connection with the Bank of Montreal.) LOGAN & 0 BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENT REMOVED To the Commercial Hotel Building, Main Street A General Banking Buell -lees done, drafts haze and castled. Interest allowed on deposit& MONEY TO LEND On good notes or mortgages. 0 ROBERT LOGAN, MANAGEB 1058 Every owner of a \Van -Led Itioo rskenoorwco chvo:anttos • . : . keep his animal in zood nealth w l..le in the stable on dry /odder. DICK'S -MA A )1) PURI FT ER is now recognized gs the best Condition Powdrrs, it gives a good ippetite and strengthens the digestion so that all the ood is assimilated and forms flesh, thus saving more .1i.ta it costs. h regulates the Bowels and Kidneys .aul turns a rough coat into a smooth and glossy one. Sound Horses are al- ways in demand andat this season when they are s 'liable to slips and &netts DICK'S I3LIS- T1 R wilt be found a sable necessity; it will L•emove a curb, spavin, :plint or thoroughpin or any swelling. Dick's Lini- ment cures a strain or lameness and removes inflam- mation from cuts and bruises. For Sale by all Drug- gists. Dick's Blood Purifier 50c. Dick's Blister 50c. Dick's Liniment 25c. Dick's Ointment 25c. Ft Cattle Send a apostal card for full par- ticulars, & a book of valuable household and farm recipes will be sent free. DICK & CO., P.O. Box 482, MONTREAL. Sound 11 orses HURON 'AND BRUCE Loan and Investment 00MP-6 This Company is Loaning Money OL Farm Security at lowest Rates of Interest. Mortgages Purchased. SAVINGS BANK BRANCH, 3, 4 and 6 per Cent, Interest Allowed OD Deposits, according to amount and time left. OFFICE. --Corner of Market Square and North Street, Goderieh, HORACE HORTON, MANAGIR, Goderlob, August bth,I885, • PUREST 1 LI' STRONCESTg BEST, REAL E.§TATE FOR SALE. oila will y a good farm in the Township 4/ OW of MoKiliop. There are 69 acres, 1W under good cultivation, it is well watered and no waste land. It is within half a mile of a prosperous village. There is a good frame house and barn and a good orchard. This is a splendid chance to got a good •farm cheap. Apply at THE EXPOSITOR OFFICE, Seaforth. 134341 200 tgr,.jiAtqltlItteF?1RaYit—Mesis0i2natiel Grey, is offered fon sale. 120 acres are cleared and the balance is well timbered. Buildings -first-class. Orchard, well, &o School house within 40 rods. Possession given at once if desired. For further particulars mato price , terms, etc., apply to MRS. WALKER, Roseville P:O., or to NELSON BRICKER, on the farm; 12994f TIOUSE FOR SALE. -On North Street, Egmond. xi Ville, about five minutes walk from the church a frame house, one story and a half, with seven roome, very comfortable and beautifully finished. There is a quarter of an acre of land, well fenced, with a few good fruit trees and la large number of currant bushes, good cistern and well, woodshed and coal house. This is an exceptionally pretty and com- fortable place. Apply to MRS. C. HOWARD, on the premises, or Write t� Seaforth P. 0. 1323-41 VARM IN STANLEY FOR SALE. -For sale 17 cheap, the East half of Lot 20, Bayfleld Road, • Stanley, containing 64 scree, of which 52 acres are cleared and in a good state of" cultivation. The bal. aim is well timbered with hardwood. There are good buildings, a bearing orchard and plenty of water. It is within half a mile • of the Village of Varna and three miles from Brumfield station. Possession at any time. This is a rare chance to buy a first class farm pleasantly situated. Apply to ARTHUR FORBES, Seaforth. • 1144t1 -DAM IN McKILL4P FOR SALE. -For sale the oouth half of lots 1 and lot 2, concession 4, Me - being 160 acres of very choice land mostly in a good state of cultivation. There is a good home and bank barn, a good young bearing orchard andl plenty of never failing water. A considerable portion seeded to grass. Convenient to markets and schools and good gravel roads in all directions. Will be sold cheap. Apply to the proprietor on the premises, MESSRS. DENT & HODGE, Mitchell, or at Till, HURON EXPOSITOR Office, Seaforth. JOHN O'BRIEN, Proprietor. • 1298-tf G°°') FAR/41 FOR SALE. -For sale, Lot 11, Con- cession 9, H. R. S., Tuckersmith, containing 88 acres of excellent land, all seeded to, grass. The buildings are fairly good. It is close to a good school and within five miles of Seaforth and in one of the best neighborhoods in Canada. Apply to the proprietor on the premises, or address Kippen P. 0. ROBERT McGOWAN. 1337x12 OPLENDID FARM FOR SALE. -Lot 26, Conces. sion 6, Township of Morris, containing 160 acres suitable for grain or stock, situated two and a half miles from the thriving village of Brussels, a good gravel road leading thereto ;1.20 acres cleared abd free from stumps, 6 acres cedar and ash and balance hardwood. •Barn 51x60 with straw and hay shed 40x70, stone stabling underneath both. The house is brick, 22x32 with kitchen 18x26, cellar underneath both building& All are new. There is a large young orchard. School oranext lot. The land has a good natural drainage, and the firm is, in geed condition. Satisfactory reasons for selling. Apply at ToeEx- poSITOR OFPIOE, or on the premises. WM. BARRIE, Brunel& •183541 FARM FOR SALE. -For sale, lot 6, concession 1, H. R. S., township et Tuakersmith, containing one hundred acres more or less, 97 acres cleared, 56 of which are seeded to grass, well underdrained, three never failing wells. On one fifty of said lot there is a log house, frame barn and very good orchard, and on the other a good frame house and barn, stables, and good orchard. The whole will be sold together or each fifty separately to suit pur- chasers. located la miles from Seaforth, will be sold reasonable and on easy terms, as the proprietor is re- tiring from farming. For further particulars apply to the undersigned on the premises, and if by letter to Seaforth P. 0. MICHAEL DORSEY. 132341 • FARM IN TIJOKERSMITH FOR SALE. -For sale Lot 8, Concession 7, Tuckersmith, cootaining 100 acres, nearly all cleared, free from stumps, we underdrained, and in a high state of cultivation. The land is high and dry, and no waste land. There is a good brick residence, two good barne, one with stone stabling underneath, and all other (necessary outbuildings; two never -failing wells, and a good bearing orchard. It is within four miles of Seaforth. It is pne of the best farms. n Huron, and will be sold on easy terms, as .the proprietor desires to retire. Possession on the ist October. Apply on the prem- ises, or address Seaforth P. 0. WM. ALLAN. 1276 TIARM FOR SALE. -For alo, 80 acres in •Sanilac County, Michigan 76 acripti cleared and in a good state of cultivation, fit to raise any kind of a crop. It is well fenced and has a good orchard on it, and a never failing well. The buildings consist of a frame house, stabling for 12 horses with four box stalls, 36 head of cattle and 100 sheep. Ninety ewes were win- tered last year,sold 8630 in wool and Iambs this sum- mer. There are also pig and hen houses. The un- dersigned also has 80 acres, with buildings, but not so well improved, which he will sell either in 40 limit lots or as a whole. These properties are in good localities, convenient to markets, schools and churches. The proprietor is forced to sell on ac• count of ill health. It will be a bargain for the right man as it will be sold on easy terms.at °KGB A. TEMPLETON, Doronington, Sanilae County, Michi- gan. . • 1298x4 -t -f FIRST CLASS FARM FOR SALE. -For sale Lot 12 Concession 6, H. R. S Tuckerstnith,,containing 100 acres of choice land, nearly all cleared and in a high slate of cultivation, with 90 acres seeded to grass. It is thoroughly underdrained and well fenced with straight rail, board and wire fences and does not contain a foot of waste land. There is also an orchard of two acres of choice fruittroes ; two good wells, ono at the house, the other with a wind -mill on it at the out buildings, on the promises is an ex- cellent frame house, containing eleven rooms and cellar under whole house, and soft and hard water convenient. There are two good bank barns, the one 32 feet by 72 feet and the other 36 feet by 66 feet with stabling for 60 la ad of cattle and eight horses. Besides these there are sheep, hen and pig houses and an Implement shed: The tamp is well adapted for grain or etock raising and is one of the finest farms in the country. It is situated 3i miles from Seaforth Station, 6 from Brucefield and Kippen with good gravel re a leading to each. It is also convenient to churches, poet office and school and will be sold cheap and o0. easy terms. For further particulars apply to the proprietor on the premises or by letter to THOMAS G. SHILLINGLAW, Egmondville P. 0. • 1285.tf When we assert that Dodd's et/efaiterVerti'Vernal Kidney Pills WWWWWW~~w‘ Cure Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bright's Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed Troubles, by the testimony of all who have used them. THEY CURE TO STAY CURED, 50Bcentdruffit.sr. NianUn&reert'I'IrPornfit: • THE HURON EXPOSITOR GARDENS OF THE SEA, THE BOTANY_OF THE BIBLE, OR GOD • AMONG THE FLOWERS. "The Weeds Were . Wrapped j About . lib, Plead"—Talmage Discourses Iti Flower% Picked in Holy Places, aud 'rdollesi44 That Boats Will Yet Sall Un4er Water, . I .. . BROOKLYN, Oct. 1, 1893.e-Iri his Ser - men this forenoon in tile ;Brooklyn Tabernacle,as in many other discourses, • Rev. T. De Witt Talmage took hi8 hear- ers and 'readers through ae untried region of 'thought and found i.. subject ! for most practical Gospelizatio in "The • Gardens of the Sea." The text selected . was Jonah .2:5, :"The weeds we -8 wrap. ped about my head." • - The Botany .of the Bible, or eGod among the Flowers, is a fasciae ing subs: jeet. 1 hold in myehauds a : bo.k 'which 1 brought from Palestine, boun in olive woods and within it are pressed flowers which have not Only retained th ir color, but their. aroma; flowers from Bethle- hem, flowers from Jerusalem, flowers from Gethsemane, flowers from Mount of Olives, flower e freuri Bethany. flowers from Siloarii, flower from the lley of - Jehoshaphat, red alnemones, • a • d wild mignonette, butter- 'ape, daisies, . cycla- mens, ch-aanomile'blue.bells. ferns, mossere grasses, and a wealth )f flora that keep me fascinated by the h ureend every time I open it it is a new revela- tion. It is the New Testament of the fields. But -my text leads us into nother realn Of the botanical kingdom. • Ha ing spoken to you in a .cou seof serm ree about God Everywhere; m the Astro omy of the Bible, or God ,:mong the Stars; the Ornithology of the Bible, or Go41 among the Birds; the I tally - oleo of the Bible, or God amon the • Fishes; the Mineralogy of the Bit) e, or -God among the Amethysts a the onch- ology of the Bible, or : God • anion the Shelia; the Chronology of the Bib) , or God among the Centuries, 1. speak now to you,about the Botany of the Bi le, or God in the Gardens of the Sea. • -Al- though I .purposely take -thie mo ping - for consideration the least -observed • and least•apprecieted of -all the botanical products- of the world we shall fin I the contemplation very absorbing. I all our Theological Seminaries wher we make ministers, there ought to be pro- fessors to give lessohe in Natural His- • tory. -Physical 'Science ought e be taughtaide by 8idl3 NVith Revelation. It is the eame God who inspires the pa e of thenatural world as the,' page of the Scriptural -world.' What a „freshening up it would be to our sermons to gess. into them eveii a fragment: • of Me c iter-, ranean sea -weed. We should have "ew- er sermons awfully di ry f we imitated our blessed Lord. and in our discourses, like Han, we would let a lily bloon ,- or a crow fly, or a hen brood her chic -ens or a crywal of salaflash out the press r ye- tive qualities of religion.. The trou -le is Oita en Many of our Theologieal -Se inn- aries men who are so dry thews Ives they. never could get people to ceme and hear them preach, are now ti'yni to teach young men how to preach'an the student is putnetween two great pr sss of dogmata; theologyand squaezed ntil there is is nolife left fre him, Give the - poor victim at least one lesson on the Botany of the Bible. That was an awfui plunge that the recreant prophet Jonah made wl ea, dropped over the'gunwales of the Mediterranean- ship, _ be sank ni ny fathoms down into a tempestuous ea. Both before and after the monster of the - deep swallowed him, he was enta,n led in sea -weed. The jungles of • the eep threw their cordage of vegetation aro nd him. Some of this sea, -weed was an- chored to the bottom of the wa ry abysm,: and some of iv was afloat nd swallowed by the_ great sea-risons -er, 86 that, while the prophet was at tl e bottom . of the deep, after he as h rribly imprisoned, and he co Id 'exclaim, and did exclaim, in he svirds :Of my texta 'The weeds at re \\Tapped about my head." Jonah \ ras the first to record that there are grow hs upon the bottom of the sea, as well as mien land. The first picture I evereseen- ed -vas a handful of sea -weed pressed on -a page, and I called them "The Sh rn Locks of Neptune." These products of the eep, whether brown or green or els. low r purple or red or inter -shot of man colors, are most fascinati • g. They are distributed all over the dere hs and rori Arctic to Anarctic, That 1od thin s well of them I conclude from he fact khat he has made six thousa d species of them. •Sometimes these wat i- nfants are four -handred or seven h n• deed f et long, and they cable the s a,, One s ecimen has a growth of fifteen hundr d feet. On the north-west .sh re of aur ountry is a sea -weed with leaes thirty ir forty feet long,amid which ehe sea-ott i• makes las - home, resting hi 1 - self on the buoyancy of the leaf a al stem. ' he thickest, iungles of the trop es ire not more full ot vegetation than tile clepths t the sea. .There. are fore ts doNen. here and c vast prairies nil abtoom, and God walks there as He valked in the Garden of Eden ' iu he cool of the day." Oh,. what ens rancernient, this sub -aqueous world! Ole Ile Gudeeiven Nvouders of the sea -weed! ts birtl place is a palace of cryets 1. rho era le that iocks it is the storm. ts g -rave is i a sarcophagus of' beryl iti d apphire There is no night down. thew filere ar creatures of God on the le t- ool of 0 e sea so constructed thateareN es, ill along t hey enteee a firmament • be- prent N dth stars, constellatioas al d -al:Jades )If imposing lustre. The Sr l- eatherm i . a lamplighter. The gymnot is s an ele trician and he' is surchare d.• 1 e ith ele ctricity andmakes t he • de !right w th the lightning of the se 'he g-org na flashes like_ jewels. The e. . I.' re sea . anemones ablaze . with ligi t. 'here -is Lite star -fish and the nmon-fis 1, o calk 1 bec•auSe they so powerful y uggest teller annti d lo ' illumina° 1. le thee . midnight lanterns of the eetin et veins; these processions of flame yet tho while floor of the deep; • tne:e 10 initiations three miles down und a• stea these: gorgeously upholster Id • 1 1 14 ;I -0 1 ne ceetiee1 the Almighty in the utak r- seorat! The author or the text felt the pull of he hidden vegetation of the _Atwater entean, whether- or not he : r.reciate its beauty, as lie erii-s UL The w ,eds were wrappea about n 11000." Let n y subject- cheer all those. w 10 1.a1 fritlias we° have beers buried at ts,a r 0LI' great American lakes. Whi of us in ought up on - tae At co; lit has t had kindred or friend th is eepuhehrtet ? ‘Ve• had the 'Ise!! hon. of I bin, 1314 that 1 heya,vore denied proi We said : th had lit ql to come ashore, end lied th il eapired 1 What an alieviatioe of o trouble it woulddiave been to put the n iu SOW heautiful family plot, NTTlere N.e could have planted flo were and trees ever tL an." . Why, t;ad did better* f e.• 1110111 than We cotild have done for theta They yere let down into be:tailed '• garden s Before they _lied reached 1u bottom, they lied earlands !shoat Ilwia brow, itt wort.. eia hoya te and tidorh-d place t tan we COI id he ye etrorded 1 110111, they Nrero put away for the ln4 slum (4'.. Heai i t1 mothers aud fathers rit' r.tIll .11 er (toys, wee's° snip went down in our last August hurricane! There are no Green- wOods or Laurel Hills or Mount Auburns so beautiful on the land, as there are banked and terraced and scooped and hung in the depths of the sea. The •bodies of our foundered and sunken friends are girdled and canopied and housed with such glories as attend no other Necropolis. They were swamped in life -boats, or they struck on the . Goodwin Sands or Deal Beach or the Skerries and were never heard of, or disappeared with the City of Boston or the Villa de ,Havre or the Cymbria, or Were run down in a fishing smack that put out fronaNew- foundland. But dismiss your previous gloom about the horrors of ocean en- tombment. When, Sebastopol was besieged in the Anglo-French war, Prince Meutschikofr, commanding the Russian Navy, saw that, the only way to keep the English out of the harbor was to sink all of the Russian ships of war in tile roadstead, and so oue hundred vessels sank. When, after .the war was over, our American engineer, Gowan, descended to the depths in a diving -bell, it was an im- pressive spectacle. One hundred buried ships! But it is that way nearly all across the Atlautic Ocean. Ships stink not by command -of Admirals, but by the command of cyclones. But they all had sublime burial, and the surroundings amid which they sleep the last sleep are ino'ati imposing than the Taj Mahal, the' Mausoleum.. with - walls encrust- ed with • precious stones, and built by the Great Mogul of India over his Empress. Your . departed ones • were buried in the Gardens of the Sea, fenced off by hedges of conaline. The greatest obsequies ever known on the land were those of Moses, where no one but God was present. The sublime report of that entombment is in the Book. of Deuter- • onomy, which says that the Lad buried him, and of those who have gone down - to slumber in' the deep, the same may be said : "The Lord buried them." As Christ was buried in a garden, so your ehipwrecked friends, and those • who could not survive till they reached pert, were put down amid iridescence ----"In the midst of the garden _there was a sepulchre.," It has always been a mys- tery what Was the particular mode by which George G. Cookman,„ the. pulpit orator of the Methodist Church and the Chaplain of the American Congress, left "this life after wharking for England on the steamship President; March 11th, 1841. That ship never arrived in port. No one ever signaled her, and on .hoth sides of the oceaneit has :for fifty years •been questioued • What became of her. But this I know about Cookinan, that Whether it was iceberg, or conflagration mid -sea, or coins on, he had more gar- lands on. his ocean tomb than if, ex- piring on land, :each of his million triends had put a bouquet on his casket. In the midst of the garden was his !sepulchre. . But ,hat brings nse to notice the mis- nomer in this . Jonahitac expression of the text. !The propilet not onlY made a mistake by tryiug to go to Nineveh, but he made a mistake when he styled as weeds these growtlis that- enwrapped hins ontheday ohe sank. • A weed is , something that is useless. It is some- thing you throw Out from the garden. it is soe iethiug that, chokes the wheat. i lt is! sdelethm ing to be grubbed out fro among the cotton. It is eonfething un- sig1tt1y4o the •eae.- It is an invader of the vegeta,ble or floral world. But this growth that sprang up from the depth of the Mediterranean, or fleeted on WI surface, was among 'the most beautiful things that God ever makes. It was a. water plant known as the red -colored Algae- and no weed at all. It conies psfirtionmt the loom of Infinite beauty. ed by heavenly love. It is the star Of a sunken firmament. It is a 'atilt) wli icli the Lord kindled. It is a cord by which to bind whole sheaves of, practical sug- gestion. It is a poem all whose cantos are, rung by Divine goodness. Yet we ali make the mistake that Jonah 'made in, regard to it, and call ' it a Weed. "The weeds were wrapped about my head." Ah ! that is the trouble on Une land as on the sea. We- call those weeds thatare flowers. Pitched up on the beach of society are chiidren with- out home, without opportunity for any- thing but sin, seemingly without God. They are washed up helpless. They are called ragamuffins. They are spoken of as the rakings of the world. They are waifs. They are street , Arabs. They are flotsam and jetsam of the social sea. They are somethinz to be left alone, or something to be trod ,on, or something to -give up to decay. Nothing but weeds. hey are up the rick -ay stairs of that atret. They are do ei in the cellar of hat tenement house. They swelter in (limners when they ee not one blade of Teen grass, and shiver in winters that allow theist not one warm coat or shawl r shoe. Such the city missionary found a one of our city rookeries, and when he poor woman was asked if she sent ier children to _school, she replied : 'No, sir, 1 -. never did send 'em ce school. I know it, they ought o • learn, but I couldn't. I try 0 shame him sometimes (it is my hus- and, sir,) but lie drinks and then ueate ie. (Look at that bruise ou my face), ad I tell him to see what is cominf to is children. There's Peggy goes sellin' alit every night . in those cellars in Vater street, and they're hells, sir he's learning all sorts of bad 'von's e ierand duet get back till 12 o'clock t night. If it wasn't for her parnin' a tillin' or two in thern places I should terve. 101,, I wish they was out of the ity. Yee, it is the truth; I would rather ave all my children dead than on ,the met, but I can't help it." Another one f those poor women, found by a Re- ormatory Association, recited her story f want and woe, and looked. up and id: "I felt so hard to lose the children hen they died. but now rin glad thefe one." Ask any one of a thousand such fildren on the streets: "Where do you ve?" and they .will answer: "I don't ve nowhere." They will sleep to -night ash -barrels, or under outdoor airs, or on the • wharf, kieked nd bruised and hungry. Who res for them ? ()ace in a while a, city issionary or a tract distributor or a acher of ragged schools will rescue one them, but for most people they are ly weeds. Yeti Jonah did not more mpletely misrepresent the Red Algae mit his head in the Mediterranean than ost people misjudee these poor and for- th and dying children or .the street, hey are not weeds. They are immortal were. Down in the deep !sea of woe, • - 11 f. ti a 81 st 0 sa el li li 111 st 'ca 111 te of on co ab lo fio no man can numaer ot the vagrant have heen lifted into respectability an usefulues8 and . a Christian life. • Man of teeth have homes- of their own Though ragged boys once and stree girls, noar at the head of prosperou futilities, honored on eerth and to b gloriorts in heaven. Some of them hay been governors of states. Some of that are ministers of the Gospel. In all de partments of life those who ware though to be weed; have turned out to be 'flow ers, One of these rescued lads from th streets of our cities wrote to another saying: have heard you are .etudyin for the ministry', so am I." My hearers implead you for the newsboys of the streets, may' of them the brightes children of.the city; but no. chance. Do not step on their bate feet. Do not when they steal a ride, cut behind. When the paper is three cents, °nee in a while give them a five -cent piece and tell then to keep the change. I like the ring o the letter the newsboy sent back from Indiana, where he had been sent to a good hoint4. to a New York newsboys lodging house : "Boys, we should show ourselves that we are no fools, that -we can become as respectable as any Of the eountryinen, for Franklin and Webstet and Clay were poor boys once, and even George Law and Vanderbilt and Astor. And now, -boys, stand up and let Mein see youChave got the real stuff - in you. Come out 'here and make respectable and honorable men, so they - cau Say 'There, that boy was once a newsboy.' " My hearers, join the Christiaia sphilan- thropiets whoetee changing organ -grind- ers and bootblacks and newsboys and astreet Arabs and cigar girls into those who shall be kings and -queens -unto,God forever. It'. is high time tha denath . finds out that that which is abOtthhins is not weeds but fliwees. As I examine this red Alga, which was about the reeeant prophet dowa in the Mediterranean depths, when, • in the words of my- text, be cried out: 'The .weeds were wrappped about Illy head," :and I am led theaeby to further examine this submarine world, I am compelled to exclaim, • 'What a -wonderful Gol we have! I tea glad that, bv.divingdeell and `'Brooks Deep -Sea Sounding Apparatus," and ever improving ntachinery, %Nio. are permitted to walk the 'floors of the -ocean and report the wondenswrought by the great God,. Study these- gardens'of the sea. Easier and (ma'am shall the profounds of the ocean becomes to us,and more and .more its opulence of culor and phi tit unroll, especially Os "Villeroy's Submarine boat" has been c6nstructed, making it pessible to 1111Vika. te ander the seal :11010:.,t as well as °tithe surface of the 8011, ItilleS8God in Mercy baniSlieS \val. fr0111 b the earth, whole tleete ef armed • ships add yet far down ander the water move on to blow • up the_ argosies diet iloat the surface. May such •submarine. Kelps be used • for lay- ing upon the %Yowlers of God's workings in the great, deep and never for human devastation 1 011, the marvels of the water Nvorld ! Tnese so -Called sea -weeds are the pester,: fields and the forage of she innuineeable aniinals of the. deep. Not one speeies of them' can be spared from the economy of nature. Valleys :tad mounheine and plants miles ander- neath the waves are all covered with 'tura and fauna. Sunken Alps and Apennines and -Himalayas of Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, A coetiaeut that once connected Eurepe and America, so that in the ages past men came On foot acres from where England is to where how stand, all sunken, and now' cov- ered with the growths of the' sea,, les 11 once was covered with growths of the land, England and Ireland once all one piece of laud, but Why much of it so far saukeie as to make a channel, and Ireland has become an island. The islandsrefor the most part, are only the foreheads of sunken conti- nents. 'The sea conquering the laud all along the Coasts, and crumbliug the hemispheres, wider and adder be - conic the sulaaciavous doniinions. Thank God that skilled hydrographers have made uS maps ined charts of the rivers and lakes and seas, and shown us some- thing of the work of the Eternal •God in the NN'ater-NVOI'lLIS. Thank God that the great Virgiuian, Lieutenant 'Maury,. lived • to give us "The • Physical Geograp•hy of the and that - of asetims have gone forth to study the so-called weeds that ‘vrapped about Jonah's head and have found them to be coronals of beauty, and when the tide receded, these bi.iientists' have Waded down and picked up Divinely - pictured leaves -of the °cern,' Walters, gathering them from the bench of Long Island Sound, and Dr. Blodgett preserv- • ing them from the shore of Key' -West, and Professors Emerson and ,Gray find- ing them 'along Boston Harbor, and Professor -Gibbs gathering them from Charleston Harbor, and for all the other triumphs of Algology, or the Science of Sea -Weed. - Why coeliac ourselves to the old and hackneyed illustrations of - the wonder -workings of Clod, when there are at least five great .seas _full of illustrations as yet not marshalled, every root 'and frond and cell and color and movement and habit of oceanic veeetatiole, eryieg out: God ! God 1 Lie made us. Ile clothed us. He adorned_ us. - lie was the God of oUr .ances:ors clear back to the first sea -growth, when God divided the \Netters which were above the firma- • ment from the waters which were under the firm:talent, and shall be the OA of our descendants clear down to the day when the sea shallgive up its dead. We. hove heard His command and we have - obeyed: 'Praise the Lord, dragoons ;nal all deeps,' " And now I_ make the •mariiie doxology of David My peroration i for it. was writ- ten about forty or fifty miles .1 rom the place where the scene of the text was enacted. "Tim Sea is IIis end made it! Lind His hands formed the dry land. 0, come. let us evorship and bow down; let us kneel before the lord our Maker, for, Ile is our God, _and we are tile people of His easture," Amen. n • • but -flowers. When society and -the church of God come to appreciate their eternal value, there will be more C. L. Braces and more Van Meters and more Angels of Mercy spending their fortune and their lives in the rescue. Hear it, Oh, ye philanthropic and Christian and merciful souls ; not weeds, but . flowers. I adjure you as the friend of all News- boys' Lodging Houses, of all Industrial Schools. of all Homes for Friendless Girls, and for 'the many reformatories and, humane associations now on foot. How much they have alread y ace° 111 pl isti - ed. Out of what wretchednese, into what good homes. Of twentyeene thousand of those picked up ou, of the streets and sent into country homes, only twelve turned out badly. In the last thirty Tears a number that .moves the bowels each day. la order w 'maw' this is neeC55;ary, Ideas Not. Wanted. Author --I have a great idea for a farce -comedy. Manager—A.11 right; go ahead and write it. Only leave the idea out. THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIO,HT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS SETTER. My doctor says It acts gently on the stomach, liver and kidneys, and is a pleasant laxative. This drink is made from herbs, and is prepared for use as easily as tea. It is called LANES IVIEDIGINK All druggists It for 80c. and SIM per Buy one to -day sine's FarnfI OCTOBER 13, 1893, PURE; CoFFE THIS IS THE COFFEE THAT WON THE GREAT WORLD'S FAIR CONTRACT. GUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY PURE. BEWARE • OF IMITATION , CHASE & SANBORN 9 IRONTON! MONTREAL! 10. C• HICAGO OMINION .11•1• BANK, MAIN STREET (NEAR ROYAL HOTEL), GENERAL BANKING • BUSINESS TRANSACTED. Interest allowed on deposits of $1.00 and upwards at highest current rates. No NOTICE OF WITHDRAWAL REQUIRED. • Drafts bought and sold. Collections Made on all points at lowest rates, Farmers' Sale Notes collected, and advances made on same ; favorable terms. tar BUSINESS ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. • THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE ESTABLISHED 1867. HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. CAPITAL (PAID UP) SIX MILLION DOLLARS REST - - - - - - - B. E. WALKER, GENERAL MANAGER,' SEAFORTH, BRANCH. A General Banking Business Transacte4. Farmers' Notes discounted, Drafts issued, payable at all points in Canada and the principal cities in the United States, Great Britain, Fiance, Bermuda, &c. ' SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT. Deposits of $1.00 and upwards received, and current rates of interest allowed. 'Elf -Interest added to the principal at the end of May and Novem- ber in each year. Special attention given to the collection •of Commercial Paper •and Far mers' Sales Notes. F. HOLMESTED, Solicitor. NM $64000,000 $ 1,10%000 M. MORRIS. Manager. 1893_ For the best value in Stoves of every kind, including Steel Ranges, Coal and Wood Cooks, Parlor and Box Stoves, Furnaces 8cc., GO TO MULLETT & JACKSON, Sealorth, N. B.—We also carry a complete stock of Gross -cut Saws, Axes, and General Hardware. • he Difference Between the old time sun -dial and the modern marvelous Watch, is the wonder of the century. An- other wonder isthe cheapness -with which a good. reliable Watch is sold. Good reliable Watches of all the best makers kept constantly in stock, and I keep no others. I have arso on hand a large and well -selected stock of everything pertaining to the jewelry trade. For repairs can't be beat. .MERCER, SEAFORTH, OPPOSITE THE COMMERCIAL HOTEL, GET A MOVE ON We have got a move on, and are now ill our new Warerooras, ready 40 wait upon you to show you one of the finest stocks of Furniture in Western Ontario. We make a specialty of pleasing all our customers. NOW that we are in our new Warerooms, we are in a better position than ever to meet our friends, and show them goods, that are worth buying. Come right along and satisfy yourselves that our Furniture is all We claim for it—the latest designs, best of workmanship, and finest finish. We sell cheap all the year round. Popular Goods, Popular Prices at the Popular Firm of The M. Robertson Furniture Emporium, STRONG'S RED BLOCK, MAIN STREET, SEAFORTH. OTO The 311cLE Contract will. to 2110 040 10 to 5 140 '2 If the adv taw° per mo made en th Its.tes for cation t th Bueiness aluarters of ' Advertise exceeding month 1500. Advertise F tint exceed sepueat tr.io 'Advertise each insert parties who Decal ad beadiug• 5c Traneient first insertz foaertion, 11 Advertise inserted till Births, m TEN EXPO whieh inea 20,000 read medium in -LrousE °cell "XX ULES in, mule Apply to D. Trait GI .'fornr she is pr lataide out .sfa-aet Sbr -DULL F jfill 4, Tu 9 months Will be so roondville IfItOPS 0 43100 Rams and .JOIEN T. D L-ISTRAY r4 Rice, • Awe* 1st, peeeteg p RICO, -Oro rS itAY jrj imde on Thursda _months -01 tion will be BELL , TWIN B ed Court, veyancer, invested /Avenel, stee OUSE inid ousekee work, and saultabI to T. MEL -DOR SA X by th Gowinlacle on Viotoria tortable co ent tin the For partic HOLMEST "MR SA je The acro, hes fenced,lin it It is lilted' reed sold for situated Apply tO WORN SPL sign his ;prope quaMr acr general s which Is as Muse and of the rich and this is neas Wan particulars Green, — is* 300 $ 500 I 8 700 1 $1,000 I $1,500 $2,500 BO keepl bert, duran Berltehire them receia diploma for class at the one Chestei Terms -4I, Iege of retu eerviee fee month will above termt to. PETE rnEAcliz or tint 12, Stephee 1st of Janul For further Grand Bent rilEACHF ja with t Section N4 will be rem, 21st Octob tenders in 1 KINNEY, MEA.CHE A, Eleatic holding as Applicatior received lil MORRIS01 Arlo. DERKSE durin (don 3, T1 Pro. whi, privilege a OAR F 4_1.44813perret SIM mai returning i brOOd sow These are Constance. ja C:0 A G011.1 Farmei Drafts' listen's SALE ellectioe OFFIl sVileon's, MAF