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The Huron Expositor, 1898-09-30, Page 2REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. UltiR 8ALE.—F1ity4our and s half acres of 'hash U land, being the east half ot the South half rif Lot Na. 8, in the second concession r f the Township of Turnberry, County of Huron. On thie let there le * quantity of valuable timber, and it, es ill he reed cheap, Allele' to J, COWAN, Wrogeter. .160641 •"'DARNS FGR SALE, -The undersigned ham twenty J. °holes Farms for' tato in East Huron, the ban- ner Diorite* of the Provinoe ;ill hies, and pro°. to suit. For full information, write or call pereouelly. No trouble to show them. O. 8. scorr. Brunelle P. 0, 1$9 tett MIOR SAI,E, OR TO LET.—A dwelling bonne _U situated on Goderich atreet, containing ten mem, good cellar, hard and soft water and good ont.buildings. Now °coupled by J. L. Smith, titer. chant. Posteesion given about the 1st of Aleutit. Apply to A, G. AULT, Seaforth. , le9741 $700 "annItyuritefitirtetib°cocgagmirotanble ePtireemet. Seaforth, at present occupied by Mr.. A. Scott. There are rooms, with hard and soft water, alao a large stab e. The lot la a corner lot and well planted with fruit and ornamental troes Apply to A. Corr, eforth. 16984f 1DXSIDEN0 E IN BRUCIEFIELD FOR SALE.— eiLli For side the frame dwelling house and lot near the railway station in Bell:toff-Mid. The house eon -- tains ten rooms ; a stone cellar and hard end soft water in the hotlee ; also a good stable, There le a wader sore of lend. Apply to ALEX. MUSTARD, Brucetteld. 161641 ranoil. SALE —The north west corner of Lot 21, Conceseion 4, MoKillep, containing '4 acres of d, good orchard, handitoniely situated, a ith an abundant gupply of bard and soft water. For fur. ther pastictgars, apply to MRS. M. IMURDIE. on the premises or to PETER KERR or Wit. inlanin, Seaforth P. O. - 160241 'DOR SALE.—For sale 220 acre farm In Molfillop, .12 being Lots 24 and 25, Concession 10, and north part of Lot 28, Concession 9. This land has been in pasture since first °leered, 25 or 80 years ago, therefore is rich and free /ram foul weeds. his situated on the gravel road, ffve miles north of Sea - forth and nine from Brussels. Terms of payment made to snit purchaser. For particulars apply to W. GOVENLOOK, Seaforth. 159441 MI -ARM FOR SA.LE.—For sale, fo the Township of X Menlo!). the north 50 acres of Lot 15, Conces- sion 14, boundary line. About 47 sores cleared, three acres of g ood hardwood hush, about two acres of ohptce fruit Beek soil unsurpassed, well drained and fe .ed ; school half a rnile away, post officio and et*broh convenient; will be sold cheap. For par- ticulars, apply to the proprietor on the premise*, or Welton P. 0. DANIEL MoMILLAN, Proprietor. 15994f WARM FOR SALE OR TO RENT.—Fr _U sale or to rent, Let 5, Concession 6, Hallett, near the village of Constance, contaioing about 100 acres. All cleared and in a good state of cultivation. There Are good buildings, good orchardoend plenty of exteellentnvater. There are 11 I acres of fall wheat; grid 86 acres seeded to grass. This le a splendid farm. and will be •sold cheap. If not sold by wring it will be- rented. Immediate -poesession: Apply to MRS. SOHOALES, Coestance. 167741 VARM IN ALGOMA FOB. SALE.—For sale the ▪ South East quarter of section P., township of Laird, dontitining 160 scree. There are forte acres cleared Ind free from stumps and under crop. Com- fortable log buildings. The balance is well timbered. ia Within four miles of &honey railway station, and. si3C miles of the prosperoue village of Port Findley' This is a good lot, and will be sold cheep, and on riasy terms, Apply to WILLIAM SIMPSON on the premises, or to ALP,X. MUSTARD, Bniceo field. 154641 1 BILDING LOT FOR SALE.—The very desirable •building lots: being numbere 87, 88, 89 and is situated on Main street of Egmondville and Sea. forth. • The whole contains about one acre, and will be sold In separate parcels on together to suit the purchaser. •'This property is just south of the Woollen ktills, and Mr. S.Dickson's property south of the corpora -Hon, and is considered the most desirable building site either for private residence's or a factory. It is high and convenient, and has a etreet south and west. Apply to JANE nr JOHN SPROAT, Egmondville P. 0., Executors to the Estate of the John Sproat. • 15884f SPLENDID FARM FOR SALE.—For sale the splendid, farm of Mr. Robert Govenlock, on the North IRoad, a mile and a half from Seaforth. I contain' 176 acres, pearly ad cleared and in a high state of cultivatioe, Tnere is a two 'story brick house, good bank biro and everything in first-class °audition and well underdrained. It will be eold dn easy -terms, as the proprietor desires to retire. If not sold before the fall it will he rented. Address ROBERT GOVENLOOK, Seaforth P. 0. 1698 11 _ 1110ESIDENCE IN SEAFORTH FOR SALE.—F-rr lie sale the corcfortable cottage on North Main street, Seaforth, belonging to the estate of the late Moore Boyd. The house contains seven rooms, be- sides a large summer kitchen and a good stone cellar and stable. Also hard and soft water. The property will be geld cheap, as the estate met be wound up. In the mean time it will be rented, and the tenant will be given a leased for six months if de. sired. Apply to JOHN LANDSBOROUGH, Seaforth. • 169741 _ • 1AR6! IN HULLETT F 111 8 ALK—For sale, the X centre part of Lots 6 and 7 oo the 14th Con- cession of Hallett, containing 106 acres all ale tred and in a good snitte of caltivetion. 'Nem 1 ramet house and barn and stone stabling under barn; Plenty of good spring water. Four mites from Blyth wid about twelve miles from Seatorth and Clinton, good gravel roads running in every nireotion. Sottool withiu a mile. A good place and Mil be *old cheep. For particulars apply to either the undereigned Executors of the estate. . ALEXANDER REID } E RIt. WATT • farlook 1592-tf -UMW IN MORRIS FOR SALE.—The north-west X quarter of lot 14, in the 810 eonceeelon, town- ehip of Morris, containing fifty acres, forty-six of which are cleared and under cultivation. The soil is.zooti clay loam. There is a holm, b tnk btrn, orchard and plenty of weter. Also the eouth half of lot 16, in the 7th concession; containing one hen trod acres,fifty-flee of wnich . are cleared. There le a goodfranie house and small frame barn. These propertiee will be sold together or sep•rately, ori easy tonne ani chew. FJC further p sriieuiare apply to ROBERT HUaHfte, Myth pelt ail ie 1C0141 WARM FOR SALE. --The undersigned offere hlo U 100 acre feem for sale, being the eolith belf lot 29, ecinceesion 2 Mirriii. Tnere are 80 scree cleared and web fenced, balance of idaeus etx acree in cedar .wamp, rern.itidw in hardwood budi There is a grind brick h me! with leitenen, weiedened and cellar oomplete, 1 ,re bank b int with etebling, orchard, two goad wells, and other convenleones. Situated 4 miles from Eli t149818 and n miles from Jsmeetown. Posseemidn given let ofhierch , Pail wheat will be pus ie hy tenant. For prie.e' and -terms applYto Harrow' P. 0., resex county. JOHN WILSON, Proprietor. 1604xtf ARM IN1 GREY FOIL SALE.—For sale,. Lot 8, 12 and pa:rt of Lot 9, Coneeselon 10, Grey, contain -1 Ing 165 acres; about 140 acres cleared, web fenced. underdrained and in a first-class state of aultivation, The soil ls al3 good as aey in the county. There is a good frsme house, large blank barn, with etme and). ling, ard other necesearr building, all in good Te - pair; a zood bearing orchard and plenty of eved water. It le within a mile and a half of the proep r- oue Village ef Bruesels. It is 4 eplendid -farm, sted will be sold ipheao and on very easy terms, as the proprietor is without help and moat retire. Apply on the prehises, or addrees Brussels P. O. JOHN HILL, le le. 1601 12 yonARIsIS FOR SALE OR TO RENE—Forme in Tuckersmith, being Lots 2 and 18 ou tne 3rd 'ceselon. Loe 2 being all seeded to erase ; on Lot 13 there 18 a large frame home), with st me cellar, heated with Milian ; large frame b trio with atone stabling- widen:leach, and web handy, with windmill to pump water; lerge stone pig. pen ; frame delving shed '• implement house ; work shop and woodshed. It ie wed fenced Suci in a good etete of cultivation, being well watered and a good clay soil. It is a mile and a half from Seaforth on toe Bitylield road. Thie is a choice place and will be sold or rented on- reasonable terms Apply to WILLIAM ABEREIART on the premises, or to Seaforth P. 0. 16o1-111 400:511,11ESS „a, e-e- ..0e7R017; MICH. re The best place in America for young men and women to secure a Business Education, Shorthand, MeobanIcei Drawing or Penmanship. Thorough sys- tem of Actual Business. Session entire year. Studente begin any time. Catalogue Free. Reference, all Detroit. W.F. JEWLL,Fre$. P. R. SPENOM, See, Special Attention to Eterseshoeing and General Jobbing. ••••••=•••••• Robert Devereux BLACKSMITH and GARRJACE 0„p. MAKER atiocir Goderich street, - • - Seaforth. &le lanommi E1MMI Discourses on the Excessive Wealth. Washington, Sept sage of SoripturOnat•probably,no other clergyman tree epteaohed from Rey. Dr. Talmage intt 01i - discourse sets forth a - triith very fepp apriate for those who have unhealthy, ant bition for great wealth .or fame. . The text is I, • Chronicles xx, 8, 7: . . "A man of great stature, whose fing- ers and toes were four andiwenty, six on each hand and six on eaoh foot, and he also was the son ore -giant. But, when - he defied Israel,- Jonatban, thee son of &drum, David's brothere'ilew him." f Malformation photographed, and. for 'what reaeou? Did : not •thliepassage ilip by mtettike into the sacred Seriptures, as somatfules a paragraph utterly obnoxi- ous to the editor gets into libezewspaper during his absence? Is not thle Scriptur- al errata? No, no; there is nothing hap- hazard about the Bible. This, passage of Soripture was as certainly intended to, be put in the Bible as the verse, "In the beginning God oreated the heavenand the earth," or "God so hived the world that he gave his only .begotten Son." • . And I select it for my text to -day be cause it iv charged withipractical and tromendoue meaning. By th.e peeple of God the Philistines had been coloquered, with. the exception of a few giants. The race Of giants is mostlY extinct, I am glad to say: There is - 00 use for giants now except to enlarge i the income of museums. But there were many of them in olden times. Goliath I was, aotordin to the Bible, 11 feet 44 inches high, or, if you doubt this, the fathom; Pliny de- clare.; that at Crete leva en earthquake a monument was broken open, discovering the remains a a giant 4� cubitslong, or 69 feet high. So, whether . you take isacriator profane history,' you must ciente to the conclusion that there were in toose times eases of human altitude monstrous andeppalling, ; - T.- .' David had smashedetheitakull of one of these giauts, but there Were three giants that the Davidoan wars' bad not yet sub- dued, and one of thank stands In my text.' He was not only of Alpine stature, but had a surplus ot digits. To the ordin-, ary fingers was annexed an additional finger, and the foot had also a superflous addenduin. to had 24 torniinations to hands and feet. where others have 20. It Was, not the oily instance of the kind.. Tavernier, the learned wri ter, says that c the Emperor of Java ha a son endowed with the same number of extremities. Voloatime the poet, had six! !loiters on each hand. Maupertuis, Ia hia celebrated letters, speaks of two fain lies n ar Berlin similarly equipped of hand and foot. All "of which I can believe, for I bav. seen two cases of the sante .physlisal super- abundance. But this giant of the text is in battle, and as David, the stripling twarrior, had disnatehed. one giant, tbe nephew of David slays this monster of my text, and there he lies after the battle In (lath, a dead giant. Hie staturedid ., not save him, and his guperfluous append- ices of band and foot did not save him. The probability was that in the battle his sixth finger on his band made him clumsy in the nes of his weapon, And hiitaeixth toe crippled his gait. Behold • the'pietstrate. and malformed giant of the text: "A man of great stature, whose fingers and toes were four and twenty, sly on each hand and six on each foot,1 and he also Was the son of a giant. But when be defied Israel, Jonathan,, the sore -of Shienea, David's brother, slew hirn.':' Behold how superfluities are a _hind- rance rether than _a help! In all thee ' battles at (3atit that day there was not re - man with ordinary stature that was not better off than fthis physioal curiosity of my text. A dWarf on the right side ii stronger than a tient on the wrong side, and all the body a,nd mind and estateand opportunity that you cannot use,for God and the betterment of the world are a sixth finger and a sixth toe and a terrible igadranoe. The enort ()tithe good done in. Ifirei world and the most of those who; Win the battles for the right are ordinary people. Count the fingers of their right hand, and they have just 'five—no more and no less. One Dr. Duff aneong mis- i sioneriese but 3,000 missionaries that would tell you they hare only common endowment. One Florence Nightingale to nurse the eiok in conipicuous places, but 10,000 women who are just as good nurses, though never eard of. The "Swamp Angel" wail &4 big . gun that during the civil war inad a big noise, but muskets of Ordinary oalibre and shell of ordinary heft did the eSecution. Pripet - dent Tyler and his Cabinet go. down the Potomac one day to experiment with the "Peacemaker," a great iron gun that was to affright with its thunder foreign navies. The gunner touches It off, and it explodes and kitten Cabinet Ministers doad on the deck, while at that ,time, all up and down our coasts, were oannou of ordinary bore, able to be the defense of the nation and ready at the .first touch to waken to duty. The curse of the world Is big guna. After the politicians, who . have made all the noise, go home hoarse from angry discuision on the evening of • the first Monday in.November, the next iii • day the people, with the silent ballots, will settle everything and settle i right, a million of the wl.ite slips of pa Or they drop rhaking about as much note as the, _fall of an apple blossom. Clear hack in the country to -da there are mothers in plain apron an shoed fashioned an a rough last by a sho maker at the end ot the lane, rookin fbahies that are in be ties Martin Luthe e and the Faradays and the Edisons a d the Bismarcke and the Gladstones, and tho Washingtons and the Cleorge Whit fielda of the future. The longer I live tit more I like oominon folks. They do the orld's work, bearing the world's burdens, weep- ing the world's sympathies, oarryi g the world's ConsOlation. Among dewy re we mai rise up a Rufus Choate or a William Wirt or a Samuel L. Southard, but society would go td pleoee toottorrow if • riHE HURON IX mere 'Wire no, mousanas of 00 pion lawyer* to we that men andwomen get their rights. A Valentine Mott or a, Wil- lard ,Parker Mee up eminent in the medical **(melon, but -what an inlintit- ed Sweep Would pneumonia and diph- theria and scarlet fever have in - the WOrld if it W ----it not tor 10,000 common doctoral The ed physician. in his gig. driving Up th lane of the far house or riding on hor °hack, his medial es in the saddlebags, riving on the ninth day of the fever, od coming in to take hold of the pulse of the patient, While the family, pale ith anxiety, ani looking on and walti g for his doolelon in regard to the patio t, and hearing him say, "Thank God, I have master the case; ,he is getting ell!" exoites iji me an admiration quite equal to the Intention of the lane; of the great mOtropolitan doctors of th past .or the illtettrioue live Ins neon of t • present. _ • Yet what d wows in all departments? People not is isfied with ordinary shares of work and rdinary duties. negad of trying to sea hat they can o with a hand of fly. ngers, they want six. In- stead of usua endowment of 20 manual • 1 and pedal add oda, they want 4. A oar• tain amount f money for live) hood, and for the suppl of thew whom we I ave behind us af r we . have departed this .1ife, le impor rit, for we have the best authority for eying, "He that provide* not for his o n, and especially those Of his own ho toehold, is -worse than an infidel," but he large and fabulous sums for which many struggle, if obtained, 4 would be a hi dranee rather than an ad- vantage. , The anxiet as and annoyances of those whose estates have become plethoric cat only -be told b those who possess them. It will „ be a good thing wheu, through your industr and prosperity, Y�u own the the hous , in _which you Bye. But suppose you 'o n 50 houses and yen have all those ran a to collect and„ ill those tenants to p ease. Suppose f yen have branched out n business suooesses until - In almost ever direction you hive invest .ments. The fire bell rings at night; you rush upstarts a -look out of the ,window, V; sao if it Is ny of your mill.. Epidemic of.orime con] , and there are entbazzle- • ments and abs ending in ail, directions, and- you wo der whether any of yonr bookkeepers w 11 nreive recreant. A panic strikes the fin niiiiii world, and You are like a bon und r a sky full of hawks and trying with nxious cluck to get your • overgrown chi kens safely under wing. After a certai stage of success has been reaohed you aye to trust so Many in - portant things to Others that you are apt to becoine th ' pray of others, and yeti, are swindled and defrauded, and the anxiety you h d on your brow when yon • were 'earning Your - first $1,000 obi not equal tothe nxiety on ;tour brow now that you base on your $800,000.: The trouble with such a one is, he is spread out .11 e tho unfortunate one in mfatext. You ave more fingers and toes than you-kno what to do with. Twenty were useful; 4 are a hindering super- fluity . Disraeli ears that _a. Kiug of Poland abdicated his throne and joined the peo- ple and beoam • a porter to carry bnrdene. And Horne -one asked him why he did so. and he replied "Upon my Minor, gentle- men, the load hioh I cast off was by far heavier than the one you see me carry. The weighties is but a straw when com- pared to this weight . under whioh I labored. I hay slept more in four nights than I have d ring all my reign. / begin to live and to •e it king myself. Elea* 1whom you oho se. As for one, I am so I well it woul be madness to return to „ 1.00urt." • "Well," sus a somebody; "such over- loaded person ought to he pitied, for their Worrim nts are real, and their in- somnia and th ir nervous prostration aro genuine:" I r ply that they oould get rid of the bothe some surplus by giving it away. If am;n has more houses tban he earl catry wit out vexaelon, let him drop a few of them If his estate is so greet he cannot im nage it without getting nervous dyepe lila from having toti much, let hint divi e with those who have nervous dysp pole because they oannot get enough. o, theY guard their sixth finger with m re care than they did the original five. hey go limping with what -they call go t and know not that, like the giant of •y text, thy are lamed ' by it superfluous -toe. A few of them by 'oharitlei bleed hemselyee of this financial °batty and m notary plethora, but -many of them hang n to the hindering super- fluity tilt de th, and thein as they are compelled to :4ve the ntoneY up anyhow,' in their last will and testatnent they generously giv wine of it to the Lord, -expecting, no doubt, that he will feel very much obl gad to them. Thank God that once in 'awhile we have a Peter Cooper, who, vening an i teeest in the Iron works at renton, said 110 Mr. Lester: "I do not 1 1 quite eris about the azimut we a making. Wrrking under one of our pa ats, we have a monopoly which' seems to me' Nome hing wrong. Everybody has to acme to e for it, and we are makin money, too fat" So they reduced the rice, and thi while our - philanthropist was bundin Cooper In- stitute, which mother e tt h ndred inati• lutes -of kindn ea and Deem all over the land. But th world had o wiiit 5,800 !years for Pete 'Coo r 1 1 I am glad or th hewer lout • institu- tions that go a 1 gaby fr M men who during their II e wer as sti gy as death, but who IL th ir las witl a d testament bestowed mo ey o heel)l ale and mis- sionary NOW s, but for au h testators I h -ave no ridepec . Th y woul hate taken every cent of i vtith them it they could and bought p half of hea en and let it out at ruinou rent r loan the money to celestial citi ,ens a p per nt: a n3onth and got a • 'learn r" on barpi' and trumpets, The Dye in thi _ world 50 or 60 years in • ha - p eeence of appalling suffering and ant: nd ma a no efforts for their roll f. T. o' char ties of ;melt people are in the 'Paulo post future" tense. They • re go ng to do them. The probability. is thee if mach one In his last will by a &motion t benevolent 1400186183 tries to 'atone for his lifetime oloeefieledness the heirs at aw will try W Irak t!-.0 will by pro ing that the old man was senile or c azy, and the expense • of t o litigation will about leaft in the lawyer's han s what was atfor the ible sooiety. 0 ye •cieer• ted, su cessful busineso men. whether this sermon rue youiear or your eves, let say that lf yoga Aire mosekrated wib anxieties a keeping or Inciatiag 6 treniendo s fortunes 1' oan tel you be your health b than by drinking gallon. et water at Saratcga, Hamburg —give to CI& , -humanity a 10 per cent all your in will make a ew man of yo restlesi welkin of the floor shall have eigh hours' sleep help of bronai e of potassiu no appetite y u will hardl wait for yoor wan cheek wil fill ,up, an die the blessin s of those wh would have per shed will blo your grave. Perhaps so_ of you ev advioe, but th most of y And you will t y to cure y hand by getti on 11 more your rheumati foot by g more toes. an there will you oan do more to get ak ana your piritareised bad tasting or Carlsbad d the Bible ome, and. it , and from t night you wi thou)] ;the and from ba able to regular meals, and :your when you but for you m all over 11 take this u will note ur swollen! fingers, and tting on iti be it sigh of th TOR rimer wnsn on, are gone out • 1 snip World, and -w en Over, you rental s the minister reel s the IWorde, "Bless d are the dead wb die in 4h. rd," p�rsons • who hate kee appree tion of the Judie - crone Will h tiny he able to keep their faces straigh . But :Whet er in that direction my ords do•good or not, I am , anxious that 11 who, have nly ordinary equipment thankfttl f r what they have and righ ly emnloy it I think you all have, Agar tively; as well es literally, lingers enoug . Do not lang for hinder' ing superfluities Standing in the pros - 01300 of this fallen giant of .my text and In this post morbem examination of hi let ue learn how much hett r off' we a • with jutt the usual hand, i tie usual foot. You have thanked God If r a theme d things, but I warrant you 4ever thank him for Mosel two mplei4ents of wotik and locornotio that no one but the inft. nits and, omni otent 'God o uld have ev r plannedor me e—th hand and the foot, Sir Charle Bell was so impress , with the wondrous construction of tls human hand that wh.n the Earl f Bridgewater aye 40,000 for ewer; n 110 wisdom nd g odnese of -God, ax4d eight bo km ere written, Sir Cheri a Bell wro e his entire book on the wisdo and go nese CI God as displayed in t • human land. '.1:10 27 bones in the- ha d and writ with oartilages and ligamen s and pha just rea to pull plow, give frie fingers reason The brid whole ea The han as distin we bit treat, w sham in ljoy, n. and d. and eohii ange of the finger" all ma • to 14n11, to row, to build u down to weave, to write, o d, to wheel, to battle, 10 pou dly a lutation. The tips of r; e iin many telegraph office' f their eensitiveness of touch. es, t e tunnels, the cities of the 13 th are the Victories of the hand. e are not dtimb, but often speak tly 4 the Iiine With our hen' s , we repel, I we invoke, we e i wrin benedioti giant's usual ha qu Lai tely human g the repro be m o in grief or al p d them abroad in !formation of the in the text glorifies t ashioned of God more e • wondrousl nism that y than a was -aver 00 Woad, 1 char e y054 to use it for Gd and the, lifting of Ith. world out of 11. moral p edicament. Employ it In t • sublime work of g spal handshaking. You ea see the hand is just made for that. Fo r fingers jut set right to ton,h your neighbor's haod on one side, aid your thu ib set so at to olinoh it on the other •1i. By all Its bones and joints and mum les and cartilages and ligaments the. vole of n tura jbins with the voles of God -13 roma ding you to shake hands. The oust m 1 as old as the Bible, any!. how. Je:n sal to Jeionad b: "Is thine heart rl bit it my heart howith thine heart? I it be, give me thine hand." When ha de j in in Christian ealutation', a gospel ole tricity thril s across this palm fr m h art to LheartI and from the shoulder of no to the oulder of the other. With tbe timid and for t eir enoouraget, merit, shake hands. With 11*. troubled 110 warm hearted sympathy, shake han With the young man just entering bu '- nem and discouraged at the small sa ins and the large expenses, shake hien a,. With the chid who is new from God aid started on unending journey, for which gather great supply of who can hardly reach up beeause you are so muolt ands. Aorm4 cradles and nd graves, shake handin mies who hate done all to hurt you, but whom yell forgive, shak ' hands. At the churches where people at the do4r of churohell hande. Let ew and Sb - eek day, and en. Olt, the he est en • he need' to strength, and to you now taller, shake dying beds': With your en defame and oan afford to the door of mute in, an where people go out, slia pulpit shake hands with bath day shake hands with earth shake hands with hea strange, the mighty, the Undefined t mysterious, the eternal power of an bon handshaking! The difference betw these times • nd the millennial times is that now ems shake hands, but Mien all will she e hands, throne and foot. stool, across imas, mition with nation, God and m n. church militant and church triu phant. Yca, the giant's foot for which thanked God are the.adrni arch of the f and it poise stantine's a not equal. they were foot is an aro,h, a flyin :mints innu $1 alformation o glorifier the fear you ha The 26 bon ation of the a ot, fashioned that Trajanha arch or POn. oh or any other larch &told Those arches Istand where tented, but hi0 arch of I the djuistable arch, a yielding arch, and reedy for move - arable. The human foot se this fallen rdniary root, e never once s of the foot atomist. The ith it grans fashioned a , W ermine a man to stand uptight -as re other creature, and inure the/ hand that would otherwise havl to help in Warming the body free for a*e• , thing it chooses. The foot of the cartel fasnioned for the sand, the foot of • the bird fashioned for the tree branch, the foot el the , hind fashioned for the slip, pery rook, t. foot of the lion fashioned to rend its prey, the . foot of the horse fashioned fori the solid earth, but the foot of man. ma4l. to cross the' desert, or • climb the trele, orscale the cliff, or walk the earth, or go anywhere ie needs to go. With that divmn. triumph of anatomy in -your pe,_. sion_where do you walk? In Whet pet et righteousness, or what path Of "in he you set 11 down? Whore have you left t • mark of your footsteps? -Anald the !factions in the reek. • have been fo nd the mark' of the fee of birda ankrbea ts of thonaan s of years go. And God os4 trove out all the foots pe of your 0100 e, and those you made 5$ years ago are as plain as t ose made: eln ' the last soft weather, all et, them petrifi- ed for the judgment day. Oh, the (not! Give The th• autobiography;of your foot from th• time you stepp6d out of the .oradle until to -day, and I *Ill tell your exact . oharaotee now and what are your prospects fortho world to That is .the nesse beeettifol foot that goes about paths of grea st tiaefulutsm, and that the mosl beautiful hand that does the. mese to bels ebb 3.. I Wel -read. Ing of three eirann„ in rivalry about the appearanee f the hand. And the ono reddened ' h hand with berries and •.010d . the betutlftl tinge Made hers the most beantmtuI. And anher put her • hand in the mountain brok and said as the 'waters dripped off that her hand was. the mo$ bee tifule And another plucked . blownflowersootiolf - he bank, and under the • ded that her hand was 0 most attreedite. That a poor old SWO • horeppOpiet atul, a d, looklag Op in her dee ked Leir elms.lAnd it woman who had not token part in' the rivalry gave 1 her a .. And allithe women re- solved to 1 re to this beggar the ques- tion am -to w !oh .of all the hands,present was the m at oltraotive and she said, "The meet beentiful of hhem all is the one that gay' relief to -mr hathsolOas•!' And as she s said her wrcinkles and 'rags and her decrepitude an her body dis- appeared, and in place thereof stood the Christ, who long ago said, "Inasmuch as ye did it to one of the least of these ye did it unto met" t IN THE CZAR'S RICHE T CHURCH. . ______, Lilian Bell Describes the \ Famous -Mase St Salta Isaac's In St. Pjeterriburg. "The fa,mons mass held ,i)n Christmas Eve in the C thedral of Saikit Isaao was one01the en at beautiful se. lees I ever ill attended," w its, Lilian Be I from St. Petersburg, Unlr it. In the dies' Home rournat. "In sne tirst place, tialnt Isaac's is the richest Aural: in all ;Emit slit It has, too, the most wonderful choir, for the Czar loves music, and itirho$ ever in all his Empire a beitutifut 'CO is found, the boy is brought to St. P' burg and educated- by the `State ta the Emperor's choir. When we entered the ohuroh the service had been ittplifS green for five bout. That immense ehurch was peeked to suffooation; In the Greek church every one stands, no matter hoW long the service, for there are no seats. "By degrees we worked out Way toward the space reserved for the DiplomatiO Corps, where we were invited to enter. Our wraps were taken and chairs wore given to us. We found ourselves on the platform with the priest, just back of the chair. What Heavenly voigeel What Won, derful velem! • The bass holds ott to the Iasi note, and the rumblaand echo of it rolls through those --vaulted domes like the tones of an organ. The long-haired priest, too, had it wanderfully resonant !vibe for intoning. Hepassed directly by te in his gorgeous oloth of gold vest Monti, as he went out." OA I • Making Buttonholes for One's Hostess. "When you that your friends tr' tie pay for your board by being it helpful visitor'," says Alice. H. Poore in the Ladies' Home Jouroot. "I do not mean the Yon are to pay in „dollars and cents., Yo4r entertainer gives to you that which; can ot be measured or handled. I know' thee is joy in giving, hoping fornothing in return; and a -hostess, if she be one in the fullest sense, bestows far nore than food upon her guesti. She gives to them free entrance to one of the most sacred shrines upon earth—the home. Do not fail to *etc that you ore appreciatite of the efforts made for yew comtort and pleasure. If you do this in a sincere and pleasing way' it will oorrY You Uri iota thin good graces of your entertainers., Said a friend to mit not long since: 'I Ilia it great deal—often without hope of entertaining my friend" in return. I ant not ;brilliant, but I can make buttonholea and I am pretty sure to discover that that is something my friends chink; to de for themselves.' Noir the spirt; whieh prompted the little buttonhole maker was better than the work itself, and both would he appreciated by any busy hostess." I, , PC it w -nooe .1uju ••••••••,. ••=111==•1•1 Have Patience. hear your murmuring and repining, uld seem that you are the :most in-, ri soul living, and that it is great tics that you are not admitted In* the celestial paradise. Remember how i you ll ave offended God, and you must ack;owledge His righteous dealing wit you. Contest; to Him with the hu4, minty of the prodigal son, • "Father, 1 have, "finned against Heaven and Thee;" I know how I am indebted to Thy jus- tioe, but I have not myself the courage to disoharge the debt . If it were left to me, I should deosive, I should spare, X ; oho ld betray myself. But Thy rnercifu h*nc executes what I should never hav had the courage to do; it corrects me i love Grant also that I may endure wit patience its salutary corrections. If it sinT ner has a just indignation against him, • self,tbe least he can dol. to receive the oorr otion which ho has not the fortitude to o 000e. The Finished Character. There are, within the range of ',every- one' life, processes of lite which must 10 solitary; passages of duty which throw one absolutely upon hie individual moral fora to and admit of no isid whatever fro another. Alone we must stand homer times; and if our better nature is not to shri k into weakness' we must take with us t e thought whichwas the strength of Chr fit: "Yet 1 am not alone, because the Fat er is with me." The mile of right oau more readily enaurate -the tender tha melt the rooky soul, and that Is the mo t finished character which begins In boa ty and endin power; that leans on the' love of kindred while it may. and wh n it may not eon stand erect in the love of God; that shelters itself amid the domesticities of life while duty wills, and when it forbids can go forth under the expanse of immortality, and face the storin that lies beneath the canopy. Grumbling at One's (Self. • Dion't be deceived. In grumbling at youteelf you may be really complaining against God and against His permiseive If net His active,' providence. Moreover, groWling at yourself only keeps up in you spirit of complaining. What right you to -murmur against youraelf more _that. against others ond against Are you sure that these groaning. et yourself are not eie many valve. • hav any God eget by Nyhioh you ventilate a complaining dimp sition that daros not ventilate itself on bod, on others, on your eircumetances? Can you not findsome better busitiesi' tha4 finding fault even with yomeelft Try 1 repentance, reform, regeneration, enti sanotifloation—auything but growl, ing.1 Faith in the Invisible 'World T4 get the best onjoyrnent froin earthly thin s, we need faith an the! invisible vrorl . That unseen realm includes the soul of God and the spirits of men. Chri t is the trae mientist. for He shows that the physlco and spirituel world' are he twin hern spheres of a perfeet ant - vets . The pur ose of His life is to Urea e our knovvl dge of Uod, and to re- veal to us the tie less marvels of our own natures. T o most aeourate deflni- Won of self-knowledge is God -knowledge. • Little Etirl's Prayers A ittle girl petitioned tbe Lord for fair weather, and the next morning the sun shone bright and clear. She told of her prayer tol her grand mother, who said—" Well, now, whynitan't you pray to•night that it may be warer to•morrow 80 grandma' e rheumatism will e better?"' "All right, I will," iviaal the r e onse, and that night as elle linelt she i orporated this request in her 1it1eI pray.r "0 God, make it hot for grand- ma." oughs and colds need not be endured; they caii be cured, and that quicklt. any in tures are tem- poraJry in efFect, but Scott's Er4iiision of Cod-liver Oil witF Hypophosphitcs is a, per anent remedy. the oil feeds the blood and warms the body; the hypophosphites tone up the nerves; the glycerine soothes the inflamed throat and lungs. he combination cures. Thi may prevent serious lung troubles. 50c. and $000 ; alt druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto. SEPTEMBER 300.898. e Canadian Bank of Commerce. (PAID UP) 81X MILLION DOLLARS •1116.000000 • SEAFORTH BRAN011. A Worn, banking business trannnatod- Farntors` Alitton dlicountsd, tag tapOetial athention gloom to tits collet:61On of Solo Nat.*. SAW Now BA N K.—I nearest allowed an deposits Of $1 and upwards. S isoleil-faallitios for transaction of businoiss In this Klondike Distrie F. lionoeyLOMrdEerSoTt EpiDribi,SeCalitCaintOyr0. G t. ank, iteued, F. . MINTY, Manager at the following rates; • Unde$10 .08 IWO to $30 .12 -' • r 130 $10 to $20 .10 ' to $50 .12 OO • • • • • • • • • • • • fI 0 • • • 11 ••0 ••• 0 • • • 1 Three teaspoonfuls will make pi, al good cup of Teafor six People, conottlic / il 1 f; l` Even if by using' double the ntity of tea, one can get the rength yet no amount will produce e fine flavor. Bulk teas lose their „ ne qualitips through evaporation, . ut Ram Lal's Pure Indian Ten comes in air tight packets. e Seaso ange 11 And with the change ill 'the weather a change n your cloth- ing is necessary for yoni comfort. In a week or two the weather will be too cold for Summer suits, and the thoughtful man wi# be prepared for the first told snap.' We are in a position to-' assist you. Our line of Fall Overcoatings is large and varied, but the prices are small, while we guarantee the fit and finish of each coat to be better than usual. It is, perhaps, a Fall suit you require and in these we are fully prepared to satisfy you §ATISFACTIQN in lit-TEITY and PRia. BRIC4-11T BROS., SEAFORTH; 11" The Ready-to=Wear Idea Is what gives horey's Clothing its prestige. That idea shotild suggest another to you. The saving of lhalf your Tailor's Bills. It does ti6t matter what your Sha • is, Tall and Slim or Short and Stout, Shorey's Clotliing will fit you and to aI appearance you will still be a Tailor Made Man. pock e that Shorey's Guar tee Card is in the t of eaCh garment, it is worth remembering. hat it means Satfsfaction or your Money 4ack. • fort And Satisfaktion —44.4r9kOteen!-- Comfort is not the only desirable feature in buying easy Furniture. -You should carefully determine that .• the quality is equal to the repoge, which you desire from your purchase. -Unless the chair is well made youil never be able to get pleasure out of the money you spent for it. In fact we know we can suit you, if you will call and look over the choice line we have to offer. t'a e.)0teLe.ne-- • TJasTIDURT.A...3KING-.. Our Undertaking. „Department is complete and strictly up-to-date, with a larger selection than ever before, and prices to suit every one's needs. We have • a quantity of suitable chairs to be used at funerals, which we -will lend free of 'charge, and any orders that we are favored with shall receive our best attention. Night calls promptly attended to by ctur undertaker, Mr. S. T. Rolmes, Goder- kb. street, St-aforth, opposite the 'Methodist church, BIIOADOOT, BOX & 00 'LOVE jNITITATUJX. Com9 early and choose from the largest and best assortment of &loves of all kinds ever -showed. in .Seaforth. It don't !make, any difference what sort of stove you want, we have it, and we also have a fine line of second-hand stoves, which wta lare going to sell away down, 10 make room for new goods. 'Coal heaters, with or without ovens coal and wood ranges, ,Isteel ranges, wood cooks, etc.:, also a fine line of small stoves, 'suitable for fall us. Old. stoliTes taken in exchange, S. MIILLFTT Az. CO., HARDWARE E ROHA NTS, - SEAFORTh. LiiLA Ow. Surveyerfa OFIKT AT 6; jIl -mOney bee, tarMsrs, in sums, Atypiy tO totTSE TO NI to tent, cos water, *good veil J ACOBS, Stefottl RN swam court, _co= MAUS; Aldrall•L ,inveSteti ared twos' store, KAI TRAI TEACHER School Secti second or third g rewired up till 0( Secretary, Lakele TEACHER section 'NO. of lit or 2nd olaet of Ind or 8rd else January; 1S99. nlli*tloni TeCeIVI ODGERT, Beer Ontario. ni4CR5R WA tastlironlai.". taco to begin on ItA,NCE, 0008tan STO UBA'S% 14 RN .- ol - hie for itglittr ilie • white. .Tern SON, list 25, coup Sinal3efield Pe G. STOCI -nos FOB till keep for ei essaley,stheroug int payable at the of returning If.neo TULTj FOE ezas thinliet before January' i SCOTT. -"DOAK rox S It" keel '<weer evendth, 4 aorc Itm 04unty senior With VA JOHN*. itOtill • TICK.—The at the Brooeiteldi Terarrorth Boar, 1 di; vayable at tio terring 34flow—..1 •bred young T. KM Altai IUMWORT e__eigned •ladMoilop,4 Mier notitadoineber o enrol an; croft remelt, wbthpr J OHN MoMILLAI A NICE REST; For Ale the finished two store good lote. 'net *11 Onnynaleneekis 0, J. SUTHERLAI JONN 'KEMP, MIARN 70 RBI 11 tbe west -ha 34, on the 4%0 coutaies 100 140 Lir Mien, There' A good orchard, J acres of fell wbe and schools.- Pei endeoi or to • SHINGLES A The undersip • ateOnd clan Pm] of Hamaoce IX* 01111 be *eon PA KI and Ilernloek Pis enter* can be iet 1582.41 WN S E Fire and Life • Bent, Real BAYMOND an lecturing Se, Sewing Mi moderate, Agent fot The WHITE MU First -Class 1 THE usical ESTA1 Owing to 1 zluded to eel Greatly Organs at Pianos st Ess tZ3 Steam A. C into. ifientrisoturen Marin, BO Salt Fanstmoi Akio dealers a SOW. An aer of