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The Huron Expositor, 1898-10-07, Page 2HURON REAL E'StATE FOR SALE. oR SALE.—Fifty-four and a hilt scree of bush • ]and, being the east half of the south half of Lot No. 8, in the eeeond concession ef the Township of Turnberry, County of Huron. On this lot there is a quantity of valuable timber, end it will be so'd cheap. Apply to J. COWAN, Wroxeter. 180041 ARMS FOR BALE.—The undersigned hu twenty • Choice Farms for sale in East Huron, the ban- ner County of the Province ; all sizes, and prices to suit. For full information, write or cell personally. No trouble to show them. F. S. BOOM, Brunele P. 0, 189141 0R SALE, OR TO LET.—A dwelling house situated on Goderioh street, containing ten rooms, good miler, hard and sofa waterr and good ant -buildings. Now occupied -by J. L. Smith, mer- chant. Posaesefon given about the let of August. Apply to A. G. AULT, Seabed's. 15074f Q etej le 111 purchase the bomiortable and pleas- iitA/ antly actuated o tta on Jamie street, Seaforth, at . present moue ed y Mr. A. Scott. There aro 8 rooms, with has ansoft water, also a large etabei.. The lot is a cornerof and well planted with fruit and ornamental,' trees. Apply to A. COTT, Seaforth. 1493-tf 1:141ESIDENCE IN 13RUOEFIELD FOR SALE.- Lir For sale the frame dwelling -house and lot near the railway station in Bruoellel. The house con taint ten rooms; a stone cellar nd hard and soft water to the hotted =ales a good ',stable. There is a quarter acre of land. Apply to t1LEX. MUSTARD, Brucefleld< OR SALE The north west homer of Lot 2i, Concession 4, MoKilisp,. containing 21 acres of land, good orohrird, handsomel situated, with an abundant supply of hard and sof water. For fur• thor particulars, apply to MRB8.F,. . HURDLE, on the premises, or to PETER KERR or WM. 51U&DIE, Seaforth P. 0. 18024f 1 0E$ALE.—Fol isle 220 acre farm in MoKillop, being Lots 24 and 26, Concession 10 and north part of Lot 26, Concession 9. This land has been in pasture sincefirst cleared, %6 or 80 years ago, therefore Is rich and free from foul weeds. It is situated on the gravel road, five miles north of Sea - forth and nine from Brussels. Terme of payment made to suit purchaser. For perticulare• apply to W. t10VENLOCK, Seaforth. 16944! FARM FOR SALE.—For sale, in the Township of SicKiltop, the north 60 scrod et Lot 16, Conces- sion 14, boundary line. About 47 acres oceared, three. acres of good hardwood bush,bout two acres of choice fruit trees, soil unsurpese , well drained and fended ; school half a mile a lay, post office and ' church convenient ; will be eel cheap. For par - touters, apply to the proprietor on the premises, or Walton 1'. 0. DANIEL MoMILL N, Proprietor{ 1599•tt MIAMI FOR SALE OR TO RENT.— For sate or to rent, Lot 6, Concession 8, Hallett, near the village of Conttaneo, containing about 100 acres. ,All cleared and :in a good state of cultivation. There are good f buildings, good _orchard,and plenty of excellent water. There are 11 acres of fall wheat ; and 36 asset seeded to grass. This is a splendid farm, and will be sold cheap. If not sold by spring it will be rented. Immediate poeeoseion. Apply to b?RS. SCIIOALES, Constance. 16774f FARM IN ALGOMA FOR SALE.—For Bale the South East quarter of section F., township of Laird, containing 160 soros. There are forty- acres cleared and free from stumps and under crop. Com- fortable tog buildings, The balance is well timbered. It is within four miles of Echobay railway station, and six miles of the prosperous village of Port Findlay. This is a good lot, and will bo sold cheap, and on easy terms. Apply to WILLIAM SIMPSON on the promisee,- or to ALEX. 5UJST; .RD, Bruce - field. 164841 BUILDINCI LOT FOR SALE.—The very desirable ` building lots, being number3 87, 88, 89 and' fa situated on Main street of Egmondville ;and Sea - forth. The whole contains about one acres and will oe sold in separate parcels or together to :snit the purchaser. This property is just south`, of the Woollen Mills, and Mr. S.Dickson`s property south of the corporation, and is coneiderod the most desirable building site either for private resident 'e or a factory. It ie high and convenient. and h a street south and west. Apply to JANE or JOHN PROAT, Egmondville P. 0., Executors to the Matti ot the John Sproat. :15834f • SPLENDID FARM FOR SALE.—For sale the �7 splendid farm of Mr. Robert Govenlock, on the North Road, a mile and a half from Seaforth. I contains 176 acres, nearly ail cleared and in a high state of cultivation, Tnere is a two story brick house, good bank barn and everything to first-class condition and well underdrained. It will by sold on easy terms, se the proprietor desires to retire. If not sold before the fall it will be rented. Address ROBERT OOVKNLOEOK, Seaforth P. 0. 1593 tf -DEBIDENCE IN SEAFORTH FOR SALE. -Fur J aide the comfortable cottage on North Main street, Seaforth, belonging to the estate of the late Moore Boyd. Tho house contains seven rooms, be- sides a large summer kitchen and a good stone cellar and stable. Also hard and soft water. Tho property will be sold cheap, as the estate mu3t be wound up. In the mean time it will be rented, and the tenant will be given &leased for six months if de. sired. Apply to JOHN LANDSBOROUGH, Soaforth. 1597-t1 CIARM IN RULLETT F3R SALE.—For sale, the centre pari of Lobe 6 and 7 on the 14th Con- cession of Hallett, containing 105 acres, all ololead - and in a good state of oultivetion. Noxi frame house and barn and stone stabling under :barn. Plenty of good spring water. Four miles from BIyth and about twelve miles from Seaforth and Clinton, good gravel roads running in every direction. Sehoot withlu a mile. A gond plane and rr'd2 be sold cheap. For partioulare apply to either the undersigned Exeoutors of the estate. ALEXANDER R1CID j RR Harlock P. 0. 1592-tf ARS IN MORRIS FOR SAGE.—The north-west J quarter of lot 14, in the 8th concession, town- ship of Morris, containing fifty' acres, forty-six of which are cleared and under cultivation. The soil is good clay loam. There is a house,bunk barn, orchard and plenty of water. Also the south half of lot 16, in the 7th concession, continuing one bunered sores, lifay•fve of which ara cleared. Tnere is ` a good frame hopes and small frame barn. These properties will bo sold together or sep stately, on easy terms ani chelp. For further partieuiars appfy to ROBERT HUGHES, Blyth past el- .160 t-tf MARS FOR SALE.—The undereleced niters his L 100 acre farm tar stile, beiug the south hs14 of lot 29, ooncession 2. Morris. There ere 80 acres cleared and well fenoed, balance of about six acres in cedar swamp, remainder In hardwood hu -h There is a -good brick haus.: with kiteeeu, woodsh,d and collar complete, l.rge bank barn with etabiing,- orchard, two goad wells, and other convooiences. Situated 4 miles from Brussels and 11 mules from Jarneetown. Pose salon given 1st of March. Fall wheat will be put in by tenant. 1',r price and terms apply to Harrow P. O., Essex county. JOHN WILSON, Proprietor;. 1804xtf FARM IN GREY 'FOR SALE.—For sale, Lot 8, and part of Lot 9, Coneeseion LO, Grey, contain- ing 165 acres ; about 140 ecru cleared, well fenced. underdrained sled in a first-class state of auitivation, The soil is as good as any in the county. There is a wood frame houee, large bank barn, with Stone stab- ling, and other necessary buildings, alt in good re- pair ; e -pair; a good bearing orchard and plenty of good water. It is within a mile anda hall of the proap: r- oua Village of Bruseols, It is a splendid farui, and will be sold cheap and on very easy terms, as the proprietor le R ithout help and must retire. Apply on the premises, or addrees Brussels P. 0. JOAN HILL, Brueeele. 180112 FARMS FOR BALE OR TO REN C.—Farms in Tuokorsmith, being Lots 2 and 13 on the 3rd Conces i mi. - Lot 2 being all seeded to. grass ; on Lot 13 there is a large frame house, with at';e cellar, heated with furnace ; large frame brrn, with stone etabiing underneath, and well bandy, with windmill to pump water ; large atone pie pen ;- frame driving shed ; itnplemont house ; work shop and woodshod. It is wail fenced and in a good state of cultivation, being well watered and a good clay soil. 11 is a mile and a hall from Seaforrh op the Bayfield road. This is a choice place and will be sold or rented on reasonable terms. Apply to WILLIAM ABERHART on the promises, or to Seaforth P. 0. 160141. BCS/NES ' .0477R0/7;',Ael/Chr.f. The best place in America for -young men and ` women to secure a Business Education, Shorthand, Meohanical Drawing or Penmanship Thorough eye - tem of Actual Business.. Session entire year. Students i begin any time. OataIogue Free. Reference, -all Detroit. W. F. -Jew -tor', fres. P. R. SPENCER, See. Special. Attention to Horseshoeing and General Jobbing. Robert Devereux I.ACKSMITH and CARRIAGE Opp; MAKER 1otel. e Goderich street, - - Seaforth. May .Quench L LU. • Washington, Ont. D. T lmage,I drawing him fllustrati ns from I a deer hunt, in this discourse a11s all the pure sued,and troubled of th earth t come and slake their thirs at the de p river of divine comfort; next,, Psalms xli1, 1, "As the hart panteth atter th water brooks, so panteth my tout after thee, 0 God." David, who -must sons. time hale seen a deer hunt, points ns here to a hunted stag making for the water. The fascinat- ing animal called in sty text the hart is the same animal that In sacred end pro- fane literature is called the sag, the roebuck, the hind, the gazelle, the rein- deer. In Central . Syr ro in Bibles times there wore whole pas re fields it thein, as Solomon suggests w en he s ys, "I charge you by the h nds of th field." Their antlers. -jutted fr m the long grass as they lay down. No hunter who has been long in "John Br wn'e trash" will Wonder that in the ibi they were classed among clean ni ale, • for the dews, the showers, the lakes washed theta as Olean as the sky. W on Isaac, the patriarch, longed for venin n, Esau shot and- brought home a roebuck. Isaiah compares the sprightliness of the restored cripple of millennial timet to the long and quick jump of the stag, staying, "The lame obeli lep as the art." 'Solomon expressed his cgiegust 34 a hunt- er who, having shot a deer,,11 too I zy to cook it, saying; "The slothf;h1 roan oast. eth "not that which he took 'sin hun ing." But one day David, While' far fro the home .. from whioh be had been driven, and sitting near the mouth of a onely cave, where he had lodged, and n the banks of a pond or river, heard -a p ok ot hounds in swift pursuit. Became t the previous silence of the forest the of ngor startles him, and he says to himsel , "I wonder what those doge areafter." Then there ,is a creating in the brush ood, and the loud breathing- of come rushing wonder of the woods and the antlers of a deer rend the leaves of the thicket and by . an instinct* whioh all hunters recognize the creature plunges into a pool olake. -or river to,000l its thirs' and at tee same % time by its'. capacity for swifter and long- er swimming to get aw y from the earn- ing harriers. David stays to his self: "Aha, that is myself ! Sau1 afte • me, Absalom sifter me, enemies w tbout number after mese I ain chased; thein bloody muzzles at ney heels, barks a at my good name, _ barking after my body, barking after my soul Oh, the ho nds, the hounds! But look there," says avid to himself "that reindeer bas sp embed into the water. It puts its hot lip and nc}etrile into the pool wave that ashes it® lathered flanks and it swims away from the fiery oanines and it is free at last. Oh, that I might .find in the deep, wide lake of God's mercy and consolation escape from. any pursuers! Oh, for -the Waters of life and reeouel 'As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so p nteth my soul after thee, 0 God.' " The Adirondaoks are now pop lous with hunters, and., the _ deer are eing slain by -the snore. `'Talking one empamer' with a hunter, I thought I -would l ke to see whether my text -vas aoourate in its allusion, and as I heard the dogs baying a little way off and supposed they were, on the track of a deer, I said' to one of the hunters in rough corduroy, "De the deer always make for water when they are 'pursued?" He said: "Oh, yes, mister. You see they area bot and thirsty animal and they know where the water-le,and when they hear danger in the distance they lift thtir antlers and sniff the breeze and start for the Baguet or Loon or Saranac, and we get into slur oedar shell boat or stand by the 'runaway' with rifle loaded and ready to blaze away." Bible Allusions True to Nature. My friends, that is one reason why I like the Bible "so muoh—its allusions" are so true to nature. .Its -partridges are real partridges,. its ostriches real ostriches and its reindeer real reindeer. : I do not wonder that this antlered glory of the text intakes the hunter's eye sparkle and his cheek glow and his respiration quick- en.l To say nothing of its ruefulness,. although it is the meet useful of all game, .iae flesh delicious, its skin turned into humau an-parel, its sinews fashioned into bowstrings, its antlers putting handless on cutlery and the shavings .of its horn used as a pungent restorative, the name taken from the hart and caned hartshorn. But putting aside its useful- ness, this enchanting creature wine made out__ of gracefulness -and elasticity. What an eye, with a liquid brightness as ifgathered up from a hundred lakes at sunset! The horns, a ,00renal branching into every possible curve, and after it seems complete ascending'into other pro jections of exquisiteness, a tree of polish- ed bone, uplifted in pride for swung down for awful oo bat. The Katt is velooity•embodied : Jim dity impersonated; the enchantment et t e woods. Inceye luetrous in life and pathetic in death. Deer at fay. Well, now, let all those who have coming after them the lean .hounds of poverty, or the{ blank hounds of persecu- tion, or the- spotted' hounds -of vioissi• tilde, or the pale hounds of death, or who are in any wise pursued, run to the wide, deep glorious lake of divine solace and rescue. The most of the men and women whoa* x happened to know at different 'Warts, If not now, have had trouble attee them.' ikon) mueslis! trot. blas, swift troubles, all devouring troubles. Many of you have made the mistake of trying to tight them. Some- . body meanly attacked you, and you attacked them. They' depreciated you, i you deprefsiated them, or they overreached you in, a bargain, and you tried, in Wall . street -parlance, to get a Corner on them, . or you have had a be eavement, and, instead of being submissive, you are 1 fighting that bereavement. t You oharg• I on liithe doctors who failed to, erect a oure. ' From the Life of David. or you scams On line carelessness ox one railroad oeinpany through whioh' the aooldent 000urred, or you.are a ohronio invalid, and you fret and worry and scold and wonder why you cannot •be well like other :people, and you angrily blame the neuralgia, or the laryngitis, or the ague, or the sink headvohe. The fast -is you aro a deer tit bay. Instead of running to the waters of ; divine consolation and slaking your thirst and 000lingyour body and soul in the good cheer of the gospel and swimming away o intothe mighty deeps of Ood'e love you are fighting a whole kennel of harriers. 11 saw in the Adisoodaeke a dog lying across the road, and he eoepled unable to get up, and I said to some hunters near by, '.`What IS the matter with that dog?" Tbey answered, "A deer hurt! him:" And I saw he had a groat swolle paw and a battered head, showing wher the antlers struck bite. And the probe Witty -is that some of you 'might give mighty Clip to your pursuer*, you migh damage their business, you might " wort them into ill health, You might hur them - u much • as they have hurt you; but, after all, it is not worth while. You only have hurt a hound.. Better be off for the upper Serapes, into which the mountains of God's eternal strength look down and moor their shadows. I saw whole chains of ']] lakes in the Adirondaoks; and from on height you can see 80, and there aro ee d 10 be over 800 in the great wilderneoe of New York. So near are they to .ash other that your mountain guide pioks up and carries the boat'from lake to lake, -•the small distance between them for that reason called a "carry." And the realm of God's word 1s ons long chain of bright, 'refreshing lakes, each- prom's a lake, silvery short , and, 'though for ages been drinking_egt of up to the' top of. the the same David' de - hey seem so neer to - roe different planes he a .00ntinuous river, a river the streams stag which, after Hing at the to tlioket and gorge the doge on its sight Of Soroon projeoting and b drop of dew irelr attempt to setisf when flying from anything less deep and immense an than Ood. His tic sows all distress. Off all ; bondage. E all Were. Hie t makes': ns all right right 'with the i God, all right w forever. Lamarti Nimrod said to hii three Vases, and on amberand another which you will _ha having first oloi� gold, on. whish "Empire," and found to contain second son, Inak chose the vase of the word "Glory, contained the asl once called great. vase of clay and empty, but on tl scribed the name c EX.PQSITOR nom, pelta l0 gm ono, see Ofle wnom lug, rine reuntahn or VOODOOS a a Love, vid found.. You might 445 well inset a the author of life tonVOODOOSporal and ternal, ve Da carry between the the pursued have them, they fare full green banks, and scribes them, and t gather that inth speaks of them is saying, "There is whereof shall make glad the city of God." "Thou Ahalt make therm drink of the rivers of thy pleas res," "Thou greatly enrtcheet it with the river of 'Giod, whish is full u: water." Shed Yc sir Kerns. But many of you- have turned your book _ on that sup ly and confront your troubles and you re soured with your circumstances, and , you .are fighting re fighting a pursuing es, instead of driving ke of heavenly cpm- stop and turn around sgciety, and you a world, and troubl you into the cool la fort, have made you and lower your head, audit is simply antler against tooth Probably under 'tb I would have done all wrong. You n ed to do as the rein- deer does in Feb uary and March -1t sheds its horns. Ti a rabbinical writers allude to this resigpation of antlers by by say of a man who in risky ' enterprises he stag's horns, and east tells a man'wbs liis fortune to go and deer sheds her burns. e!antagoniem of your Imisanthrophy, quit h tng into your $pur- h next spring will be Adirondaoks. Shod you whe',ar• wrong• d if in any assembly t Golden Gate, San asked that all those netimes badly treated ' sir hands and full re- edit. there would be ands lifted as persons . I do not blame you. s semi circumstances ,worse. But you are the °'stag when th ventures his money he has hung it on 4 a proverb in the far has foolishly lost find it where the My brother, quit tli circumstances, quit complaint, quit pitc suers; be as wise a all the deer of the your horns. But very many of od of the world—an between hers a Francisco, it were that bad been s -should raise both'. sponse should be twice as many i presout—I say m 'ley of you . would de- clare, "We have a ways done the best we oould and tried _ be useful, and why we should become the victims of malign- spent or invalidism or mishap is inscrut- .able.•' Why, do you know the Auer a deer and the more elegant .its prop rtions and the more ben tiful its bearing the more anxious the h nters and the hounds are to capture i,? Had the roe uok a ragged fur and b oken hoofs a d as obliterated eye- an a limping g it the hunter's would have said, "Pshaw don't let up waste our ammunition on a sick deer.' And the hounds would hay given a few sniffs .of the scent, and then darted off in. another direction for better game.. But when they see a deer with antlers lifted in mighty challenge to •arch' and• sky, and the sleek hide looks as if i:' had been smoothed by invisible hands, and the fat sides inclose the richest' pasture that could be nibbled from the banks of rillssoclear they seem to •have dropped out of heaven, and the stamp of its, toot defies the jaok'shooting lantern and the rifle, the horn, and the hound, that i deer . they will hare if they must needs break their necks in the rapids. So if there' were no noble efuff in your make up, if you Were a bifurcated nothing, if you ' were a forlorn failure, you would be allowed to go undisturbed, but the fast that the whole pack: is in full cry after you is proof positive that you are splehdid game and worth oitpturing.. Therefore sarcasm drawn en :.you its "finest bead. Therefore the world goes gunning for you with itsi best Maynard breeohloader. Highest oou3plimene is it to your talent, or your virtue, or your usefulness, You will be assnlied in proportion td your great achievements. The best and the mightiest being the world over law had set - after him all the hounds, terrestrial and d'abplio, and they lapped his blood after the Calvarean massacre. The world paid nothing to its Redeemer : bat ''w bramble, four spikes and a cross.'` Many who have done their best -to make the world better have had suoh a rough time of it that all their pleasure is in anticipation of the next world, and they oould express their own feelings in the words of the Baroness of Nairn at the close of her long life, when frisked if she would like to, live her lite•over again: 'Would you be young again? So would not I; One tear of memory given, Onward I'll hie; I Life's a dark wave forded O'er, 11 but at rest on shore, Say;' would you plunge ones rihsrs, With homeso nigh? It you might, would you now Retrace your wart • Wander through stormy wilds, Faint and astray? Night's gloomy watobes tied, Morning all beaming rod.: 1 Hope's smile around us shed, Heavenward, away. Relief for Trouble. - I Yes, for ms people in this world there seems n let up. They art pursued from- youth manhood and fr m man hood into old go. Very dlstineutshed are Lord . Staffer 's hounds, the Earl of Yarborougb's hounds, and Queein Vic- toris pays $8, 00 per year to her master of buokhound . But all of then put to- gether do not qual in number or speed or power tohunt down the greet kennel of hounds of hich s n and trouble are owner and m ter. But what' a rel' f for all this pursuit of trouble and annoyance and pain and bereavement? My text gives it to you in a word oft letters, but each letter is a ohariot if you would triumph, or a throne if you ant to be crowned or a Lake if you w uld slake your thirst—yes, a chain of h lakes -(led) the one for b its Iixt mile at run- niest peed through atnd with the breath of beef , h s come in full aka land try to coolits lista al tongue with a a a Marie --of grass as to y an Immortal soul, trouble and sin, with and high and broad d infinite and eternal mfort—}why, it eniblos- His a m, itwrenobes :is hand it wipes away lhriiftly atonement, it with the past and all uture, all right with lth man and all right ne tellej us that King three @one: "Here are is of clay, another of ot gold. Choose now ve." The eldest son, • e; chole the vase of was wren the word when pened it wap hums , blood. The Ing the next choice, amber., nsorlbed with andlwhen opened it les of those who were The third son took the opening it, found it ie bottom 'of it was in- t! God. King Nimrod asked his court] rs which vase they thought weighed he moot, The evari- ofous men of his o urt said the v e of gold. The poets said the one of m ber. But the Wisest rn n said the unapt vase, f God because one lette o1the name outweighedunlit'rte. The World Toe Uncertain. For him j thir t; for his grape on his promise I build my all. W hien I cannot be h ppy. I have tri world, and it does it goes, but it is 1 too evanescent a prejudiced witnes against this world. the 'most fortun te, or, to use a more Christian word, o e of the most blessed of men—blessed 1 my parents, blessed in the place of 1 'y nativity, blessed in my health, blessed in my field of work, blessed in my natural temperament, blessed in my f wily, blessed in my opportunities. blessed in a comfortable livelihood, blessed' In the hope that my' heaven through the of r od, and my body, at : ea or cremated In , will lie down in the ood among.my kindred e :lreardy gone and ter e. Life to man tint ant, but to me 1 ant surprise, and yet - not feel that Go and ever preen etched and terror t more of bilis. X text and preached until with all: the I beg; ithout ed the well enough ail far as oo uncertain a World, world, I am not a h, I have nothing I have been one of soul will go to pardoning mercy unless it be lost some conflagration gardens of Greenfl and friends, sofas others to come of has been a disappc has been a pleas declare' that if I did 'was now my friend help I - should b w 'Woken. But Iwas have thought oven ibis this sermon to myself aroused energies of wy body, mind' nd soul I can cry OU, ''i s the hart pen eth after tho water hr of s, ,so panteth my soul after thee, 0 Go - " Faith In varsity. Through Jesus Chi t make this •d your God, and you an withstand ny- thing and everythin , and that w !oh affrights others will nspire'you. As in time of an °artpquake when an old Christian woman' was asked whether she N was scared, anewe that I have a world;" or, as in a Christian mer did not fear he "Yes, I shall b Psalm breaks, it 'Call upon e is will deliver thee red, cod aff'# sha>�+lou •ak lir th nd me.' " Oh, Christian pursued of annoya: remember that thi hunt cm a hunt in ever. If ever a wh ices 3 hu full elp ready to slink out of s the Adirondaoks a deo ous - plunge into Big away from him, The ine mime in a tittle swims out agaili a humiliated yawn at master. And how abased alt your earthly troub have dashed into th the throne ef God, and depths of heaven are your pm mere. We are xxil,..'`Without) Bre I cgr:rlu le there is hounds outside the gat when a master goes i kis dog lies on the ritel to Dome out, so the tr may follow us to they cannot get in \khan• Been dogs a would loot bo eh heavenly city. S "No; I ams glad ho clan shake the armlet,panio, whoa was asked if be break, answered: when the Fifeieth fifteenth verse: day of trouble. 1 hou shalt glorify men and women, and exasperations, t, whether a still cry, will ' soon be' ooks ashamed and ght; it ise when in byone tremend- Tiiper lake gets disappointed can - ay, but, defeated, nd cringes with the feet of his and ashamed will es be when you river from under the heights and between you and told' in Revelation dogs" by which a whole kennel of a of heaven, or, as n through a door ie waiting for hire �util® of this life the shining door, but . "Without are dogs 1i" nd • wned dogs that 1 agri ed to ■pe in the use of the grand old re t • costat ulary of itar plaes, and tar ly p oteation for • 0f watch the bo ogs who hes in s years have been the o wife %nd ohild; om dogs that drive b ok t away the nooks fr en preolpice, and sones nook and paw La dee -made immortal, ould ting them out fro th pal 1 A Glor Oh, when so will be like what " hu pushing his oanoeifar and amid the ice does be thought, fr m beings.. He was star heard a steppingon cooked the rifle sad 'that cares near. e f footed' and Inman fr approaching him.1 Ta 'taloa and kindling fir he restored him 'nd f had jived and too hi fours'![[ all the village 1. ons e 0 A hundred men w lost man, and h rushed out to IL' been agreed, at hii wore rung and gC quets _sprees:, ,and presents. Well, v out of this wild been chilled and ti amid the icebergs, ings of all the vil andyour friends welooming }ties, th another soul for• caterers of heaven and the bellinen in the tower, and at the feast and th turrets it will be a pray God I may the celestial merrl break and the s thou 'like a roe or mountain of Bethe ere fel f est firs ns he hen rne- rn int+ ag sus ne er •e lay hil bel 0001 e th tint, ado' yot ,, 1, • wo oing f th r, th not gat he elle ves and too noa dogs P painter nd ime, ehut - of' ohnirig he> d bank rt e hoe , has Relic e. you get th ter t: lis of p no thinwin nd 100 mi ny led the to and m 10 ing e to ;warn Bund put who to his borne great excite• reit vhen • 8, ther b man ns day ];e ice, an le set any hing lis man, •art!• lg expo tiro, him in his I# int, •he and ink this ends had ells n. n. ith step aye loot eet- 'fled you A lis the Pet, rope rope slick the lgI t in day be r s : rohing for roily and fr him, and, as appearance ere fired and (ismer loaded some of you s, where you nd sometimes the warm g of the glo out to give s that the awed will cal read the bane hold of the the ohalioes s clang from e so uplift's ire .to take pal "Until the vs flee array ng hart upon the Christ's aw Christ's law of love tion. I It •mbraoes a 1 th looks upward to God good, Sad outwa being. It excludes no enemy; for event a en as one's self, .Abe e get God. It recognizes vernal VOLT. the f Love. knows no excep- t can be loved. It the giver of all every human forsig nd no my is loved I, it does not .for - Him as the uni- role of evefir bl!- through whose Son lyre, have sa v&blobl, —Some interesting facts I have recently been oo piled with ieferience to sh rrli which h ve the' po or of gene ti 'which is found in 00 Ba. of Bigoay; d belongs to the elude family;- the oleo r o eel of the Orinoco; land the thund Milo found in the Nil al other Afri n waters. The allege is de eloped by so to which the eleotrie n e filament" ea and in some instano the diecharim s from the head to the 11, while in t e case of other fishes the reveres hotrue. n _ the voltage is probably na 800 te $ n' volts, and is easily capabl of stunning - a man. The momenta currents] itie sufficient to defleot Ivanometer or magnetize a needle. It Se to be oted that the generation an inteneity 0 t 4 discharge are under the control of he animal, which is appa ently in no I affected by the action. Also, there are o insulating materials i Oil fish, and'', t • greatest eoonerny is sh wa in the goner tion of the electrical e ergY. Wisdom From a Lusatia. land, Where a railway rao runefor onto distance beside the ono of a In otie asylum. At one ti o ome wor men Wore busy repairing t e rack who art inmate of the asylum ap 'stitched o 0 of the laborers, and from his poet= on *he inner side of the Inol ure, began a sante- what personal oonver "Hard work, that," he Staid. "Troth, an' it is," plied the labor7. "Sixteen bob a wank." "Are ye mairret?" "I am, worse luok—and hairs siIx ohildren besides." A pause; then said the unatio: thinking, nut man, Ye're on the ran* side o' the fence!" No Wonder They Roared. A man, who reoently went to N gaze Falls on a brIdal trip slays that e was considerably taken aback by th old guide whom he had hired. The gui e had several times appeared displeased at the Louisville map's rather open lavishment of affection upon his new found mate, but he said nothing till he found a chance to niake his etroke a telling one. "What a roar the falls make!" said the bridegroom, "It is wonderful!" The old guide looked disgusted. "That's nuthin' wonderful," he said. "If you had to stay here like thein poot old falls and listen to' all the stuff these here bridal couples gat off you'd roar too."—Louisvi le Dispatch.' Family Affection Among the Poor. Charles Dickens, who has opened to view the heart of the poor, wrote: "If ever household affections and looes aro graceful things, they are graceful n the poor. Thee -ties that bled the wean y and the proud -to home may I; fo ged earth, but those which lin th poor man to his humble hearth are of t e. true metal. and boar the stemp f eaeaa. His household gods are of fies an blood, with no alloy of silver, gold or pfsscious stmes, and when they endear Ibex.? floozs and walls, despite of toil end scanty meals, that man has his love trorsi God, and his rude hut becomes a aolemn "Don't you -know," said the! politician, "that some of those islands 1M the Papilla Ooean are the work of coral insects?" "What has that to do with our taking po,s,smesysiotrnieonfdt,hyeoumr are wholly deficient in the forosiaht that makes a /statesman. ' Supposing some ship with a cargo of ' inseot powder was to founder in the neigh borbood?"—Washiiegton Star. g Home Influences Eaoh one of us is bound to make th• little circle whioh hoilives bettor _an happier. eadh of us is bound to see th t out of that small circle the widest get may flow; each of us may hay. fixed 1 his mind the thought that ouraf a sing • household may flow influences whio shall stimulate the whole oomnionwerilt and the whole civilized world.—Thra Stanley. - --A serious accident happened last Wedik teaming cordwood to Sclater's and while driving down the street some of the wood slid off tbe wagon, taking Mt. Cole with it, one of the front wheels of the wagon parsing over the left side of his bod On exe.mination it was found he had r ceived a compound fracture of the le t shoulder, and that three ribs on the le t aide, over the lung, were also injured. 1 Many persons cannot tak0 plain cod-liver oil. They cannot digest it. It upsets the stomach. Knowing these things, -w0 have digested the, oil i4 Scott's- Emulsion of Cod liver Oil with Hypophos- phites, that is, we have. b,roken it up into little glob -1, ules, .or droplets. the work of the digestivel organs, and you obtain, dui good effects of the digested! oil at once. That is why you, can take Scott's Emulsion. I eoe. and $:.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto. OCTOBER 7, 1898 be Canadian Bank of Commerce. Oi PI Ai., .(PAID UP) SIX MILLION DOLLARS - $8 1000000 SEAFORTH SRANOH. A g neral banking business transacted. Ferniers' Notesdlsaounted., gad sp•oi*I iilttentlion given to the collection of Sale Notes. SAV NGS BAN K.—inter st allowed an deposits of $1 and upwards. i Spieolal"laolilties for --transection of business in the Klondike District, P. UOLMEStTED, Solioitor. F. Q. {I. MINTY, Manager. Money Orders, payable at any bank, issued at the following rates ; Tinder $10 .08 $20 to $30 .12 $10 to $20 '.10 $30 to $50 ,12 4037V cArrall:#11130i0115i, Indian Fres from the gardens India to the tea tables of' Canada. he Seasons hange And with the change in the weather a change in your cloth ing is necessary for your comfort. In a ,week or two the weather will be too cold for Summer suite, and the thoughtful man will be prepared for the first cold snap. We are in a position to assist you. Our line of Fall Overcoatings is large and vaiied, but the prices are small, while we guarantee the fit and. finish of each coat to be better than u cal. It is perhaps, a Fall suit you require, and in these WS ar fully prepared to satisfy you ATISFACTION, hi—QUALITY and PRICE. BRIGHT BROS., Half a Tailor More Properly Speaking half his charges— may be saved by buying Shorey's Ready4o=Wear Clothing It keeps its shape for the reason that the goods are thoroughly sponged and shruuk befgre being cut. Each pocket, vent and button -hole is firmly stayed. and tacked. If a " Shorey garment gives out in auy partiCular take it back and get your - omfort and Satisfaction Comfort is not the only desirable feature in buying easy Furniture. You should carefully determine that the quality us equal ,to the repose, whiCh you desire from your purchase. -Unless the chair is well made you'll 4:lever be able to get pleasure out of khe 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. larger s4lection t Ian ever before, and prices to suit every one's' needs. We have a quan ty of suimble chairs to be used at funerals, which we will lend free of charge, nd any orders that we are favored with shall receive our best attention. Night 'dills prorriptly attended to by our undertaker, Mr. S. T. Holmes, Goder. ich stre t, Seaforth, opposite the Methodist church, BROAPFOOT 'Come early ,of SOves. -d Et1130.- ar 811 TOVE NVITATION. c loose from the largest and best assortnaent If all kinds ever showed in Seaforth. It don't erence what sort of stove you want, we have it, lave a fine line of second-hand stoves, which we going to ,Sell away down, to make room for new goods. al heaters, with Or withont ovens ; coal and wood. ranges, nges, wood cooks, etc.; also a fine line of small sto;i7es, e for fall use. Old stoves taken in exchange, el r tab MULLETT CO., ARE)*AFkE MERCHANTS, SEAFORTH. FARK TO a term of North half Lot 24,, north tlf Brussels, .00averdent in the t ewe/ the beet ate ter, 9* acres in (owl , 15 acids of fa Work!, 30 TEAC nip TEACHERS. School Sadie fro TEACHERS. sectiOn NO. of 10$ or 2nd claes, 01 2bd or ard clues J anuary, 1899-- Ft HODGERT, Sem ▪ EAOHER WA/ McKillop, ma to begin on let of STOt - born bulls, di horn tows and herr and ran lambs; al mares. Prime .1,1 DAVID MILNE, El eligible /or reelinn arid white. Tenn SON# lot 25, conce Brumfield ,L undersigned, *hie keep *V IMMO and winner at Itee payable at Us iretersde _Hued fORS.Ali Loa -rvoAu mu ,B01 keep for ilt .$1, payable at the - or returning if nee "DULL FOR 15 LI keep for men *thoroughbred I beers Januarys 1 DOAR FOR erstnith, of thorn hated item urvice with el; payable et iirs torning Mow. bred young Tam 11 Aped belie Mated number V exits gondtrig Taus /1, with JOHN Molt .tt, For tale eb4 finished two store good Iota. She all oonvonientems -G. el. BUTHERLA JOHN HEMP, ARM TO REI the west ha on the 41h C contalne 1C0 ac Unseen. There A good orchard, 1 acres of fall whe and schools. rcl ZUllekk or to 1 ernithanop and Let 0, Concesefot alto the School IV country, and is At poses. _There ism !mit trees, also W WATSON, Seafoti Si• 800 good brlek orchard. feet convenient to to loan et loweet; "EIABM POR S1 about 100 scres,1 cultivation, The and plenty of ex limn and will he Apply to MRS. t is! Fire and Life Bent, Beall RAVMOND facturing SO moderate. Agent for the WHITE AN SHINGLES The underliA of Ilzett.ece Let oral he seen at 15 and Hemlock Orders ote be 11 158341, Notie NkrrICI Jo hero oci,kre require said 17th -day el eeeel to diatribe amocg the part' only So -ClaimaP