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The Huron Expositor, 1898-10-14, Page 22 THE HURO OCTOBER 145 1898, REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. VIOR SALE. --Fifty-four and a ball acres of bush ID Land, being the east half of the south half of Got No. 3, in the second concession of the Township of Tarnberry, County of Huron. On this lot there is a quantity of valuable timber, and it will be sold cheap. Apply to J, COWAN, Wroxater. 1606-tf VARMS FOR SALE.—The undersigned has twenty J Cacao° Farris for- sale in East Buren, the ban. nor County of the Province; all sties, and praxis to suit. ,For full information, write or call personally. No trouble to show them. F. S. soon, Brussels P. O. 1391-tt "COR SALE, OR TO LET.—A dwelling holm .1! situated on Goderich street, containing ten rooms, good cellar, hard and soft water and good orithuildinge. Now occupied, by J. L. Smith, mer- chant. Possession given about the lab of Aastust. Apply to A. 0-. AULT, Seaforth. 15974e $700 ,s811111tilu,rocii:uasetea tdhocotomfeoortb jaemanesd street, Beaforth, at present occupied by Mr. A. Scott. There are 8 rooms, with hardand soft water, also a large deltic. The lot is a. earner lot and well planted with fruit and ornamental trees. Apply to A. SCOTT, Seaforth.. 1593.1f 11111ESIDENCE IN BRUOEFIELD FOR SAILE.— .11-b For sale the frame dweittag- house and lot near the railway station in Breriefield. The house con- - tains ten rooms; a stone cellar and hard and soft water in the house; also a OK'd astable. There is a quarter acre of land, Apply o ALEX. MUSTARD, Bruceffeld. •1516-10 I tLIOR SALE.—The north v4st corner of Lob 25, Concession 4, MoKillop, containing 2i. aores of land, good orchard, handsomely situated, with an abundant supply of hard and soft water. Fcr far- ther particelars, apply to eiRel. M. MURDIE. on the • premises, or to PETER .KERR or WM. MURDIE, Seaforth P. 0. 11302.14 -DOR SALE.—Pot sale 220 aore farm in MoKillop, JC being Lots 24 and 26, Concession 10, and north rt of Lot 26, Concession 9. This land has been n pasture since first cleared, 25 or 80 years ago, therefore is rich and free from foul weeds. It is situated on the gravel road, five miles north of Sea= forthand nine from Brussels. Terms of payment made to mutt Pureheser. For particulate apply to GIOVENLOCK, Seaforth. 1694-tf MIARM FOR SALE.—For Sale, in the Township of MoKillop, the north 60 stores of Lot 16, Conces- sion 14, boundary lino. About 47 acres cleared, three sores of good hardwood bush, about two sores of choice fruit trees, soil unsurpassed, well drained and fenced; school half a mile away, post officio and : church convenient' will be sold cheap. For patal Wiliam, apply to the proprietor on the premises, or Walton P.O. DANIEL McMILLAN, Proprietor. 1699.tf VIAB.M IN ALGOMA FOR SALE.—For sale the ✓ South East quarter of section F., township of Laird, containing 160 acres. There are forty acres' cleared and free from stumps and under crop. Com- fortable log buildings. The balance Is well timbered., It is within four miles of Eehobay railway station,1 and six miles of the prosperous village of Port Findlay. This is a good lot, and will be sold cheap, and on easy terms. Apply to WILLIAM SIMPSON ' on the premises, or to ALEX. MUSTARD, Bruce. field. 164641 10pUILDING LOT FOR SALE —The very desirable. building lots, being numbere 37, 38, 89 and, is situated on Main street of Egmondville and Sae' forth. The whole conteins about one Acre, and will no sold, in separate parcels or together to suit the purchaser. This property is just south of the Woollen Mills, and Mr. S.Dickson's property south of - the corporation, and is considered the most desirable' buildingsite either for private residence's or a factory. It is high and convenient, and hes a "street south and wed. Apply to JANE or JOHNISPROAT, Egniondville P. 0., Executors- to the Estate of the John Sproat. 1583-tf SPLENDID FARM FOR SALE.—For sale the splendid farm of Mr. Robert Goveniock, on the North Road, a mile and a ball from Seaforth. I contains 175 acres, nearly 'all cleared and in it high state of cultivation, There is s two story brick house, good bank barn and everything in firetolasit condition and well underdrained. It will be sold on , easy term, as the proprietor desires to retire. If not sold before the fall it will be rented. Address ROBERT GOVENLOCK;Seaforth P.O. 1693.tf J ESIDENCE IN SE4FORTI1 FOR SALE.—For sale the comfortable cottage on North Main street, Seaforth, belonging to the (estate of the late Meer° 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 sold cheap, as the estate must 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. 1697-tf CIARM IN nuLt,Err FOR SALE.—For sale, the ,E centre pert of Lots 6 and 7 on the late Con. cession of Buffett, containing 105 acres, all cleared and in a good state of cultivation. No rf frame home and barn and stone stabling under barn. Plenty of good .sprleg water. Four miles from Blyth and about twelve miles from Seat rth and , Clinton, good gravel roads running Iievery direction. Shoot within a mile. A good piace and . will be sold cheap. For particulars apply to either the undersigned Executors of the estate. ALEXANDER REID) R. R. WATT r Harlock P. O. .11592-tf , MIARM IN MORRIS FOR SALE.—The north-west „U quarter of lot 14, in the 8th concession, town- ship of Morris, containing fifty acres, forty-six of which ao cleared and under cultivation. The soil is good lay loam. The ee Is A hos*, bank barn, a orchard and plenty of water. Also Ole eouth half of lot 16, in the 7th concession, containing one hundred acres fifty-five of which are cleared. There is a good house and small frame barn. Those propertiee will be sold together ot separately, on easy terms and cheep. For further parcieulars apply to ROBERT HUGHES, Blyth post offiee. 1604-tf FARM FOR SALE. —Tee undersigned offers his 100 acre farm for sale, being the south half of let 29, coteceselon 2, Morris. There are 80 acres cleared and well fenced, balance of about six acres in cedar swamp, rem %teeter in bardwood bush There is a good brick homewith kiteeea, woceished and cellar complete, lerge bank bans with etsbling, orchard, two geed wells, andother conrenieneee. Situated 4 miles from 'Brueeele And 11 milestrim Jamestown. Possession given let of March. Fall wheat will be put in by tenant. For price and terms apply to Harrow P. 0., Liao, county. JOHN vaLsorr, Proprietor. 160441 "LIARM IN" GREY FOR SALE.—For Bale, Lot 8, 1.: and part of Lot 9, Concession 10, Grey, contain- ing 165 acres ; about 140 acres cleared, well fenced. underdraincd and in a fireaciass state of anicivation, The soil is as good as illy in the county. There is a good frame house, large bank burn, with mtnc stab - Hog, eati other necessary buildings, all in good re- pair ; a good bearing orehard and plenty of eood water. It is within a nate and a hail of the prosper- ous Viltaze of Brussei4. It is a splendid farm, and will be lend cheat) and on very easy terms, as the proprietor is without help and must retire. Apply on the premises, or address Brussels P. 0. JOLIN HILL,"Bruseele. MI 12 -DARNS FOR SALE OR TO REN a. —F ;ants in Tuckersmith, being Lots 2 and 13 on the 3rd Concession. Lot 2 being all seeded to g ass ; on Lot 13 there is a large frame house, wi h at inc , cellar, heated with f emcee) ; larae frame be n, with atone stabling underneath, and well ban y, with windmill to pump water; large stone p g pen ; frame driving shed ; implement house ; w rk shop and woodshed. It i' well fenced and in a gobe state of cultivation, being well watered and .a' good clay soil. It is a mite and a half from 8oetotai on the Ba -yield road. This is a choice place and will be sold or rented on reasonable terms. 'Apply to WILLIAM ABERHART on -the prendsee, or to Seeforth P. 0. Money to Loan. Any amount of money to loan on good farm pro. perty, at 6 per coat. per annum. Straight leant, paymente made to suit borrower, satisfaction guar- anteed, charges low. At office Friday afternoon and all day Saturday. ABNER COSENS, McDonald Block, Wingham. 1587 The best place In America for young men.,, -.And women to secure a Business Education, Shorthand, Mechanical Drawing or Penmanship. Thorough Sys. tem of Actual Business. Session entire year. Students begin any time. Catalogue Free. Reference, all petroft. F. JEWELL, Pres. P. H. SPENCER, See. Special Attention to Worseshoeing and (4eneral Jobbing. Robert Devereux BLACKSMITH and CARRIAGE op, MAKER 21uoPtell' e Goderich street, - Seaforth. c - ct; a" C- O N E 0 .0 4.4 0 =, > I. 1. O a -0 0 0 •;--- - %...s 0 so 0 -c 0 0 •••• .0 oi Net.— to 0 .0 -o - ties Transmi Waishington, sot. 9.—The augmenta- tion of parental influence as the centuries go by Dr. Talmage here sets forth while discourerg about ,one of the grand- mothers of Bible times. The text is II. faith that Ai thy grand - Paul, the mothy, the Imp ' record is ally says; mother you than most Timothy 1, 6, "The unfeIgn Is in thee, which dwelt first mother Lois." In this- pastoral letter whi old minister, is writing to T young minister, the famil brought out. Paul practi "Timothy, what a good gran had! You ought to be tette folks, because not only was our mother\ good, but 'your grandmother Was goecti. also. Two preceding generations of piety' ought to give you a mighty' push in the right direction." The fact Wall that Tim- othy needed_encouragement. ',He was in poor health, haying a weak stomach, and was a dyspeptic, and Paul presofited for him a tonic, "a little wine for thy stom- ach's sake—not much wine, but a lit- tle wino, andonlyas a medicine. And if the wine then bad been as much adulter- ated with logwood and strychnine as our n wines he would not have pre. any. But Timothy, not strong ally, is encouraged spiritually by ital 'of grandmotherly excellence, intieg to him, as I hint this to hat god sometimes gathers up as eservoir, away back of the active tient of to -day, a -godly influence en, in response to prayer, lets mode scribe physi the re Paul you, in a , goner andy: down the power upon children and grand- children and great-grandaildren. The World: is woefully in wisnt of a table of statistics in regard to what is the pro- traotednese and immensity of influence of one good woman in the church and world: We have accounts of how much evil has been wrought by a woman who lived nearly a hundred years ago, and of how many oriminals her descendants furnished for the penitentiary and the gallows, and bow many hundreds of thousands of dollars they cost our coun• try in their arraignment and prison sem • port, as well as in the propertyethey burglarized and destroyed, but will not some one come out with brain compre- hensive enough and heart warm enough and pen keen enough to give us the facts in regard to some gond woman of a hundred years age and let us know 'how many Christen man and women itnci, re,, 15 formers . and useful eoplo have been found among her dose ndants, and how many ittelains and collsges and churches 1 they I i, and bow -uany millions of eel contributed for humanlitar- lan and Christian purposes? ' iet: Good Women's. Influence. ; The good women whose tombs !Were planted in the eighteenth oar late more alive for good in the ninet ;century than they were before, a ,good women of this nineteenth car iwill be more alive for geed in the tw lath century then now, Mark you, I !no idea that the grand others were !better than their gra ddaughters. cannot get very old pe ple to talk about how things were when they 1 boys and girls. They h ve a retioeno nonoommittali na blob make ehink they feel the nseIves to be the ous- todiaps at the reputation of their arly Cernrades. While our dear old folk are rehears' g the, follies of the peeseet, if ri3 Out hem on the ritness stand and ornss-ex znine them as to how things 'Irbil. 70 years ago the silent* b ernes inepressilee. ' 'The Celebrated Frenchman, oiney, 'Visited this country in 1796, and e says •;«fiifoinan'a diet in those times, `If a premiuM was offered for a regime most destruceive to health, none could be de- vised more it/Ileac:16ns for those ends than that in toe among these people." That °Ellipses our lobster salad at midnight. gverybody talks about the dissipation of eaolere society and how.w,emanly h alth goes down under it, but it was orse 100 years ago, for the chaplain of a F enoh regiment In our Revolutionary war rote In 1782 in his "Book of American Wo- men," sayieg: "They are tall and well proportioned; their features are gen rally regular; their complereons are gen rally fair anti without color. At 2) ye s of age the women have no longer the testi- ness of youth. , At 80 or 40 they ar de- crepit." Iii 1812 at foreign comae! rote a Ibook entitled "A Sketch of the TT ited States at the Commencement of the res- ent Century," and he says of the w men of those times, "At the age of 30 all their charms have disappeared." One g anoe at the portraits of the women 100 ears ago, and their style of dress makes us wonder hott they ever got their beeath. All this makes me think that the express rail train is no more an improvement on the old canal boat or the telegraph no more an improvement on the old time saddlebags than the women of our day 'are an insprOvement on the women of the last century. ones tory enth the tury out! - hays any You such were and me A Glorious name. But mein, notwithstanding that those ;times were so much 'worse than ours ,there. was a glorious race, of godly womee 70 and le° years ago who held the world 'back from Sin and lifted it toward vir- tue, and without their exalted and eano- tilled influence ebefore this the last good , influence would have perished from the ' earth. Indeed all over this land there are Iseated to-day—not so much in churches, ; for many of them are too feeble to come ' —a great many aged grandmothers. They sometimes feel that the world lime gone past them, and they have an. idea that they are of ' little acooune Their head sometimes gets aching from the racket or the grandchildren downstairs or in the next room. They steady themselves by the banisters as they go up and down. When they1 get a ()old, it hangs on them longer than it used to. They cannot beer to have the grandchildren punished, even -wheel they deserve it, and have so relaxed their ideas' of family disoinline I. 1 that they would of the household These old tel great troubles co lug and soothing_power in the an aged band tb4bt is almost supe They feel they azie, almost thro the journey of it4e and read the more than they ised to, hardly which Most they I enjoy, the ment or the NeW, and often dwell tearfully over the tam th half way betwee . We hail e , whether in the house of. God . homestead. Bleed is that bon has in it a grandmother Lois. is angels arehovering round an In the room. May her last day those lovely autumnal days that we call Indian summer.] Is it not time; that you and I do two things—swing open a picture gallery of the 'wrinkled faeces and stooped eihouldere of the past and; call down fr heavenly thrones the godly gran to give them oar thanks, an persuade the mothers of to -day are living for all time and that the sides of eyery cradle in whio Is rocked boat the .two eternities For Good or Zvil. Here we have an untried, untlisoussed and unexplored 'subeect. You often .hear about your influence upon ,yeue own children. Iam not talking abut that. -What about yitur influence upon the twentieth oenteryt upon the thirtieth century, upen the ear -Meth century, upon the, year 2,000, npop the year 4,000, 11th. world lasts so long. The world stood 4,000 years before Christ came, It is not unreasonable tO suppose that it may stand 4,000 years actor his arrival. Four thousand years elle world swung off in sin, 4,000 years et May be swinging back Into righteou of multiple:3a tion in a con poll all the y by too great le le are the r it, and there ungsters. old fain 'male record. rt when with ms‘ a °atm_ • and mar tonoh of man wa natural. Jeminta toe with there oh Id book great -gr knowing Id Testa - stop and There ly record moths to.day, celnote or at the George hold that Brookl here she among God is niggles be like avenge gran the oh are no and p you re wends letter, widow vation ing go it ly Bibl ordain wo ng I tfull Let som septuai enailan look clear u onlthe page of births ages an 11 me Who that wo- with th o d fashioned neon° of or Bet y or Mehitabele Alt, is, the qid grandinother, or ndmothe ho had ehough eg- o saturate a 3.tury. Trans it ed Power. ' 'he is, t ear old soul. Grand - Lois. I eautiful Greenwood there s the resting place of . Bethien once a minister of iz Height*, 'cis name miter spoken ntelligen Americans without I g two b nip—eloquence and 1 m. In tie same tomb sleeps his ther, Tea elle Graham, who was inspirati ri of his minietry.- You urprised t the poetry end pathos It powerlof, the grandee* when. of the Meth anddevotion of his 1 anceste tee 'When you read this it whieb soul in o ou Will zdi rations h v 1 in their mothers,, then to hat they against a child nese. By the Ordinary rate iun (4 the world's popula- ury ylour - descendants will be over 800, land , by two centneies over 2 5,000, and up n er one of tem you, the mother of to di y, will have au influ- egood or for gooor evil. And i:in four centuries . yeetr deecendants shall have , with their naineatIlled a scroll of hun- drede of thoueands; will Immo aegel from I heaven, to whom is Piven the! capacity , to calculate , the number of the stars of , heaven and the sands of thelseashore, , step down and tell us how many descend- 1 ants you will have in the four thousandth! year of the world's possible continuance? ' Do not let the grandmothers any longer think that they are retired and sit elear back out of -sight from the world, feeling that they have no relation to it. The mothers of the last Century are to -day in the person Of their desoendants, l. the senate, the narliamente, the palaces, the pulpits, that banking houses, the praise - Monet ohaire) the prisons, the almshouses, the compane of midnight brigands,: the cellars, the ditches of this century. 'Yon have been thinking about the important* of halting the right Influence upon one nursery. You have been thinking of the Importance of getting those two little feet on theright path. You have -been think- . ing oeyour child's destiny for the 'next 80 years if it should pass on ti be as That is well, but my sub - thousand yeate„ a million trillion of years. I 'cannot radio. I am looking at the each all around the world octogenarian jeot sweeps ri years, a qua stop at one cradles that and across all time. I am not talking of Mother Eunice:, I am talking of Grand- mother Lois. The only way you can tell the force of a current is by sating up stream or the force of an ocean wave by running the ship against it. Running along with•it, we cannot appreciate the force. In estimating maternal influence we generally run along with it down the stream of time, and so we don't under- stand the full force. Let us come up to it from the eternity side, after it has been working on for centuries and see all the good it has dope and all the evil It has accomplished multiplied ml mag- nificent or impelling eovapound interest. Mother's Tefluenee. If a mother tell a child if he is not good some bugaboo will come and catch himt the fear excited may make the child a coward, and the fact that he finds that there is no hugaboo may make him a *liar, and th echo of that false alarm may be hear after 15 generations I have been born arid have expired. If a *other promises a 'child a reward for good be- havior and hfter the good behavior tot - gets to give the reward, the cheat may 'crop out ie some faithlessness half a thousand years farther on. If a mother cultivate achild's vanity and eulogize his curls an, extol the night black or sky blue or nut brown of this child's eyes and call out in of spectator be prolong° recorde hav ther expresii of the Holy; long after' t have closeil is presence t , pride and after half been oblitera doubt about s admiration rrgance may dozen family ed. If a me- mo statement Bible in a ohild'!e presence, e gates of this historical. era nd the gates of another era have opened. the result may be seen in a champion 'blasphemer. But, on the other hand, if a n: other walking with a child see a sufferi g one by the wayside and says, "My child, give that 10 cent' piece to that lame boy," the' ikesult May be seen on the I other side of the following century in some George Muller building a whole village of orphanages. If a me- ost evely evening by the f a. child and ,teaoh 'it lee - jour's love ands Savioutee he importance of truth and: a" lie and the virtues of: kindness and sympathy and ' long after the mother has child has gone and the lot- h the tombstc,nes shall have I out by the storms of in-. numerable Winters there may be stand- ing as a tomtit of those trundle bed- les- sons flaming (mitigate, world moving re- formers, seraphic Sum merfields, weeping Paysons, thundering White fields, mance pating Washingtons. , Gnod Never Forgets. • . Good or bad influence may skip one „generation er two generations, but it -will be sure to land in the third, or fourth generation,1 ments, spea on farnilies, owl general Lewend and father generation- the eraei op ental in jump ove down fir and I s then sit al trundle bed sons of a Sa example, ofd the horror industry an self sacrifice gone and t tering on b been washe Just as the Ten Command-, ing of the visitation of God Hays nothing about the soo-e s the, earth ies et our th Ion, but entirely ski peaks of the third and "visiting the inigui upon, the third and f them that hate me." Par - u noe, right and wrong, may a generation, but it will come her on as sure as you sit there nd here. Timothy's ministry was projeoted by his grandmother, Lois. There are men and women here, the sons and daughters of the Christian church, who are suc14 as a result of the consecra- tion o yote hink the Lord is? You talk tion o gre, t-great•grandmothers. Why, as th ugh nig memory was weak. He can as wet ly remember a prayer offered five mufti lee ago as; a prayer offered five' minu es ag . This explains what we often ee—s' m• rnaLl or woman dieting - were !distinguished or penu- uishe for h nevolence when tii a father and other: riteue OSS, o. woma wit moth r coin and make t sing under in confers o the matter great piety i parental vt avelain it t you see some youn man or a i bad father an a hard out gloriously f r Christ e ohnrch sob and shout and heir exhortations. e stand the Vestry and whl per over nd eye "How is this, such sone and daughter of pole ridliness and sin -1' I will you If von will fet4jh ma the "Th ter w launch Lord him to more t He ha and ill from tumult the wi mother "I a him; I alive. not th me; it dergo; him rn cannot prom's 1 he poured out her gings for a ismer sal - wonder thet slimed - been bleseed: "Ne ark, May 2l, 1791. s day my y son left e in hit - t ginge o heart, He is again on the n—God's ocean. The ed him f shipwreck brought y home a d allowed me once Indulge y affections ever him. 14mm with e but a short time, ,have I in roved it: he is gone Y, sight, a d my heart bursts with ens grief. ord, have mercy on Ow's son, the only ion of his li nothing s Iv repeat myalp lee him anger of th i. not the a II is not t !• in this discern th in him. c birth nee its true, but every eymptom of °apt dity to fallen- the world *lid self - Will. hie, this is Vf hat (Mitre ses and in phut o from forget his Sa die ilk tures, ment 'and a bait th ing wi coma' rest, 0 lieh a are pole and ex Take t him o corn for they 'el lion. word, hope i 'Leave serve I spiritu hantit a ee With not ha Bethur ed thro saving / God such' g go up I Surely them o I Amon be. " , point , her, Qv 'bent o straigh .blindin arrolea pains o tat he carnati on the my gr Mary When I Glasgo diffiden telling &teeth shout o easy as n all thii world for tition, Save his soul Mon from sin. It is seas that distresses &hips he must un - IS 1r.ad of never seeing w rld; it is because I fulfilment of the nnot discern the new onneotion with this his being 4istians. ih t up with these who from:orclin poem at a distance d, profane his name and I break the. 31 n wee often lie* and' beasts, y t are accountable area - ho must answer for every mo - f time nn 0 every word,' thought; tion. Oh, L, rd, many , wonders p shown mu; thy -ways of deat- h Inc and ml e have not been nones; a d th s wonder to the i It , °entree , ice notate and estab- a lor in t o ftit .--Lord, all things ble With thee. Glorify thy Son rid his k ngdor by ones and land. • prey fr m -,t e ,strong. 1 I roll upon thee. any friends try to me; in ser4ble comforters are Thou art,t e God of console. ly cowl m ,to me thy precious Which I thou oausedet me to he day .Whteki thou midst to me, y fatherlees children,:I will pro- m alive. Only Ilet this life be a 1 life, an 111 put a bleu: in thy Ito all tor Pore' things. at for th atilvation. Am u." itch a rentlinother, weuld you e a right tsp' expect a George W. elt And el tIbs thousands convert - u h his ne nistr may date the p wer ba k .0 -is belle Graham. .flfl the ea thi and he heivens with afidmotho el * We must eeme day than ItiMee dear oid souls, ed Will lee us go up and tell the rem 1 a of their ihfluenoe. ur first. tott10 s in heaven will ere is gr ncletet or?" They will. out, foxj iet we ld hardly- know if we hiut. her on eartb, se cIt wit so o oe and there so „le di Of e e throngh the of earth y tears and notv her eye es heave , s4 f 11 of aehes and be and n er So a lie with odes - t -h, the. 1 kles blooming into 0 roses a 4 her tap like: the roe 'ountain Yes, I'must see her, iiidnsrtbeij, On y. father's side, Cot des endant of the I Scotch. first lip ke , to , an andlence in S otla 4, , and felt ;somewhat bet g i stranger, I. began by theth In grandmother was a oma, aid then there Went up e veisl ome whloh made me feel as dollterie I Must see he! Land on Ifteirl.o!1I. those womei of the ineeeeeth centm4ry and eenthitoentury, the- an - yore is in your welfare all elle aged wc1men up and and in all lands 1 ng for Pomponius Atti• eking the funeral ad- , ke Reli You n nit se early pre.1 of the those et' the eight ewer of Iv hose pit to-day.ind bless and do n the What a happy th one to s y when dress of IbIs mother, "Tough I have re- sided vrt h her 671 years, I was never once reconoile to her, because there never once hat en d eh leest discord between us, and onsaqheitly there was no need of esoon lia n.' Make t asl'easy for the ted fouls as you min. Wen they are sick, get °It them the beet doctors. I Give them y ur arm when th streets are elippery. Say with them al the tim yeti can. Go h rite and see the f Ike. Fiiid tile place for ehem in the hym book. ever be ashamed if they prefer et les of apparel which are a lit le antiquati d. Never say anything hat im- plies the th.y are in the way. ake the road forethe net Mile as smooth as You can. O, y, how you will , los her when sh is tone I How much mild I give to e 'ay other! I have o niftily things Id 1 ke tell her, things / that ha pen d i the 80 yea 0 since aka wen aw y. h orning, noon a d night let us th nk codor the good in minces ; that ha-te co e• d wie frees thecel other. all the vtav .aok. ; ' - --- e i A I:/issistro a bile elf the ereat n Mill navy Was OD oft er of the as c stomary S t veesel ve ruction' Jo actical joke Jack ath oh In he d rd t and 0. e of ibis rn. tie y, when it present ng the dee the arke4, is core- r. Ha- ; don't ." Ha - surprise s if he yen the enty of de and em for top -men drawn. uarter • otly not ereupon ed that so tire - t prove en as dismissed from oe for this bit ot pleas ntry.— Argonaht. wa tor the gu the officer cora henever he left or boa ship. 0ne day (papt. Hurd tt re as thee were going through t mony before he went ashore: " of this guar who come bac thorn. V am call it gal thorn d d lo t the captain had. Whe side on the afte knees, manes on the0 Hathorn hi master. T delight Sather after th some, a weloom the serv -gu nd tire wh t, but he managed to ultelas horoughly that !dig itary came etur , he found t'- rd d '-wri on their ha s absi serving t ails, wlt the Mazzo aoks with butlasses self was astride a • metal.n was disti with tl4e spectacle, w explained that be euppo old fashion had proved reception by cavalry mig Bathe ' , i hotogra hy Under Wate • A wonderful in has ecently been de teed by which photograu s may be takin under ater The light for this purpoie is furnished by an ince «dasoent lamp pieced in a steel ease 'in th diver's head -plea., the himin us rays be ng stepro- jected biy a fletor placed in the rear ot the , 1 mils, an the electricity provided by meerke of a small dynamo carried in the boat ahem The photograph! appar- atus it lf o no's s of a common earners aoeti within an imam runner Sn'reinPor e front of which ill glaze, and the echine is regulated and pictures taken pressing buttons tereugh the India bber covering. The roe It is such All to pronounced an aohiev[a ant, for-lt has • eon demonstrated thati laureation lb* t ken under water of b sots at -a dis- hes of ten or twelve let as eastlyeas t ey can be obtained iteve in the full I ghteof day. --London Docked Tails o arse& -The following from alitax' may be an object lesson to dealers in horses , and admirers of docked tail", An °Meer recently arrived wanted 0 charger, and aecitizen undertook to provide one. AO ptoduced a very fine mare at as cost , Of 000, with a certificate as to soundness. n being taken to the officer the dealer as astonished by his saying it will not sit. "Why not?' he asked. "It is • a s lendld animal." "Yes," said the officer, but its tail is docked, and the Quetertht gulatiane prevent us from using it. Iliki rijestyhi orders are that horses -With ()eked tittle are not to be used in the service." The result was, as Raligoniene are not admirers of docked taile„ that are wesoventually eold for $60, a hese he the dealer, of $140. . ' "IP ' A Quick Witted Maptist. One of- the candidates for'the Steil Senate down in Jefferson County, Ali., was a prominent Baptist, and he expect' ed his fellow, churchmen to help push Min along. The !tory goes that he gab campaigning on a country beat and' hat the good fortune to fall ka with a who', congregation of Baptists. Whether i a prayer meeting had just been beld or What the occasion of the gathering W,ass 10 not known. About dill time a light shower came up, and the candidate , at once raised a large umbrella; which.he was carrying. rerrYaing. 'Ynot afraid of this little 1 s5ower, are you, Brother 1----te ee. marked one, good Baptist, etanding near. "Not at all," responded the foie* witted candidate, "but you now I em opposed to all forms of 'ipritikiing' "'He carried that beat solidly. , An Easy One. *Another problem has been handed in far mathematicians to struggl with. No answers wanted at this office. We have problems of our own. Tell th answer to the policeman. "A man owed 1 and had but 76 cents. He went to the pawnshop and pawned the 75 cents for 6 cents, ge met a friend and sold hixfl the paion ticket calling for 75 oento tom - SO cents. He thus had' two fifty -cent pie es—Vein fact—with vithich be paid hie ebt. Was anybody out, and how muolir" IS1 EA NAMES. The Adriatic sea indicates of Ad.rain or Hadrian, Lake Miligan signifies in natty. :)* tongue "a 'noir for fish." The Caribbean sea washes e berritOry ei the Caribs, whose name m ns "cruel men." The Dead sea is thus twined us ei no fish of any kind has ever been nd in its waters. The Baltic sea denotes in rdanee with the Swedish bait a straik a isea of belts or straits. The Caspian sea preserves the name of the Caspii, a tribe who originally formed a settlement on its short*. I. Lake Erie is the lake of the "Wikloat," the name given to a fierce tribe of Indione exterminated by the Iroquois. . The Mediterranean sea expressos the, Latin (rnedius, middle, and terra, earth) for the sea between two oontinents--viz, Vnrope and Africa. The Dardanelles derive their 1:111.1)38 front t1h. ancient city of Dardantis, founded by &tetanus, the ancestor of Priam, whOe -t14. castle now stands on the Asiatic side. Lake Huron owes its mune to the Frani& word "Imre," a head of hair, in reference to the Wyandottes, whothe French set - tiers designated Hurons, Owing be theit profusion of hail'. 1 The Paden ocean was ne named by Ma', gellat owing to its calm and pacific cher actor, in striking contrast to hts tonspeetu- ouspaiisage through the strait of Magel- lan, from which he emerged Nov. $7, lno. ,The Atlantic ocean, known be thei Greeks by the"nanie of Atiandkos pe1agUs,1 was originally so called from the Isle ett Atlantis, which both Plato and Honer i4nagined to be situated beyond the strait: e Gibraltar. The White sea is so called from its mea - 1 ity to the sterile regions of snow and lee; the Bleck sea because it abounds with 141ack roclpi; the Red Sea'on aociOunt of the red soil which forms its bottom; the OTesn eta, otherwise the Persian gulf, �w-- itig to a peculiar strip of green always di cernible along the Arabian shore; the Y how sea from the color of the waterii— ' amiss and Their Meanings." CURTAIN RAISERS. Merrle Osborn has been engaged for "Tes Tereus," Jessie Mae Hall is to stae in "The Pr1n- tee s of Patohes." averly's minstrel short hall more vane° agents than a circus, 1 . There are said to be over 300 "sist10" teams in the vAdeville business. "What Happened to Jonee" cleared $ tf30 last season for Brosidhurst Bros. Jefferson de Angelis end his comp by ere rehearsing in "The Jolly klusketee Frank Deshon, Oscar irard and Ar1Ine- Crater aro members of a Wachinglon oplra company. Siegfried Wagner's Dr comic opens, "The Idler," will probe ly be produced at Munich in November, Josef Hofmann, the youthful pianik carried book $30,000 te Iffurepe as the ye - suit of his spring concert tour. Truly Shuttuck heads its Bowery Nee- lesquers this season. Evidently this Emma a preponderance et eurele thrhts. Thin in flesh? Perhaps it's natural. If perfectly well, this is probably the case, , But many are suffering from frequent colds, nervous debility, 11,110r, and a hu- dreE aches and pains, simply bed.use they' are are not fleshy eno`ngh. i Scott's Emulsion of od- liver Oil with Flypophos- phites strengthens the d gm, - tion, gives new force to1 the nerves, and makes rich, r(k1 blood. It is a food in itself. eoc. and Sado ell druggists. SCOTT St BOWNE, Chemists, Thrones. The Canadian Bank of Commerce. A gilimr I banking business transacted. carmeters'oNf $ ot: asaddiscuopuvniaterdacend bAPITAL (PAID UP/ SIX spacial ntion given to the collection of SFa.lou. Notesa.31 sS Ap eValiNa 1G: sofiritAieNsKf;-7-rItnrtaenrseasettaiolnlowo7bdolesivd.pin the Kiondi.k. Distelot. F. HOL MED, Solicitor. SEAFORTH MILLI°N DCM-LARSINm TY, Manager. =Mon y 0 dem, payable at any bank, issued at the following rates, Under $10 .108 $$L0 to $50 trzo$30 .12 .12 $10 to $20 Exquisite Flavo These are the four corners on which this famous In- dian tea hAs built up such an enormous trade in Eng - Great, Strenith land, and it; 1$' on the same foundation that the trade is being built In i Canada. §:IMP FOR SA 4, Toe Leiceeter Ram 111) SWATH 41' L able JesrlY. soli. S. la ANIS, iThisj tea is grown in India, under European supervision, r the English Market, the most exacting in the world. it is not an ' pensive tea, for though it costs a little more per pound it more th4n makes Up the difference in strength, It is put up In sealed packets only. Ask your grocer for Uniform Quality Ram Lars Pure Indian Tea Delicate Aroma e Seasons ange II And with the change in the weather a -change in your cloth Lug is necessary for your cOhort. In a week or tWo the weather will be too cold for Summe suits, and the thoughtful man will be prepared fbr the first eel(' snap. We are in al positibn. to assist you. Our line of Fal vereoatings is large and varied, but the prices are Small, whil 'we guarantee the fitiand finish of each coat to hs better tha- , usuaL It is, perhaps, a Fall suit you require, and in these w are fully prepared tc satisfy you SATISFACTION in 41-TALITY and PRICE. BRiGHT BROS., SEAFORTH, .1k11414:03111 -111,11-1h11411111 Satisfaction or Your Money Back. There is a difference in Guarantees-. f Some are only vague promises made by salesmen with nothing back of them. We put a guarantee card in the pocket of each garment, which is as strong and binding as a Notarial Contract. Here it iSz This card is a Guarantee that The cloth in this garment has been thor- oughly SPONGED and SHRUNK and the worknianShip is fully guaranteed. mitoRzir te, Co. Montreal. ShOrCy'S Ready -to -Wear clothing can be pUrchased from at least one reputable dealer in every town and village in Canada. Ask for Shorey's Ready -to -Wear Clothing and insist on seeing thei Guarantee Ticket. TWIT INMATION. Com learly and choose from the largest and best assortment of &dyes of all kinds ever showed in Seaforth. It don't - make ny difference what sort of stove you want, we have it, and e also have a fine line of second-hand stoves, which we are ging to sell away down, to make room for new goods. 09iLl, heat rs, With or without ovens, coal and wood ranges,' 3 el. ra,ng s, wood cooks, etc.; also a -fine line of small stoves, suitable fo r fall use. Old stoves taken in exchange. S. MULLETT & HARDWMiE MEROHANTS2 - SEAFORTK le A-0NET AT 111_ money bas tabrin gra, in sums Alt/Ay to J. B l'58B TO REl -to rent, cool , got cella AOOBS, Seaforth. TOXIN BEATTIEj al °curt, Countl vs7aneer, land, Lo envested and to !von? Ooze, Main MortlasbatelTfrIL Lot 2N41 11, siOrth of Bruceels, ocroveidene in the 1 one Of the beet at< ter, 90 scree tntrou bling, 15 urea of t Carriage Werke, Pm VISTRAT LAMB. xj undersigned, about the Middle there Is a private same on proving ROBERT BARBOU N THE BURRO( OP ceased. All person of the said deeseast first day of Novena undersigned, -duly Executor will -dits' among the parties only to the clalisim JAMES WALICEI Bated, October is -veyaricer, Etc Bru TiNOTFREIEWSUR.SONR.°- ceased. All person of the said deceeS 31st -day of October undersigned, duly, Executors will -distl among the parties] only to the claims given. JOHN PRA ors, Bayfield P. < EIGGINS, Com STO1 WOE BALE. -11 tIC born bulls, born cows end hell and ram...lambs ; imam recall 111 DAVID laffNE, liDOAR FOR JD keep for Stanley, the SI, payable It the of returning it 1DIILL FOR „LPI keep for se atboroughlared before January, SOOT?. Ilsk0Alt io keel 'or serl aszoith, a thorS mobssed itouu saddles= _ service, with JOHN W. ROD mpO PIG BEBE onLo it 26 thoroughbred C bred TORS$111118 be admitted to -ea of service, tor 111. White Pip for sal AMWORTH ae Bregseteld worth Hoer, able at --a -ea— WORTH signed haa elifflop, a the hotted number etas podpiga errametheir berks Terms $1, 554th OEN NebilL GS FOR undersign settee,hes for *al also keep for as archssed from said winner sAM —111 payable Interning if n rOnEANCT, Le orth P.O.. REAL 110ROPICRTY _It cheap the smith shop and Lot 6, Conceesi site the School country, and Is poses. There Is trait trees, also good welL Thi to SAMUEL R WATSON, Seale $1,800 good brick ho orchard. It is e convenient to to loan at lowe Brumfield. 1CI,A.Itisf FOR Mullett, ti about 160 acres, cultivation, T and plenty of e farm and will h Apply to NES. T MELCIIBB. W 11, clese. Personal received up til Secretary Tre mo TEACHE WO No, 3. 9Jed or 3rd 'Oa January, 1899, 22nd, 1E98. A kioleswerth P. W2 Fire aid Li Rent, Rea RAYmn,NT, facturing Sewing moderate Agent jr‘iy WRITE A Firsvaas Not In the Sar Huron Shirray! NOTICIS is be cinema againet od, are requi October, leas, Executors of partieulars of arid 17th day -- -coed to iiistri among the pa s only to els. notice,