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The Huron Expositor, 1898-11-04, Page 2WONDERFUL ASTHMA RECOVERIES. Clarkene Koh& °Compound OtflolaUy Tented by the British Columbia Gov - at the Home fOrIntur able*, Kamloops, B.C.—The Medical ,Efurteirintandent Pronounced Long - Standing Cases Cured. Many temporary relief asthma remedies bare, during the past few yearn, boon pine- - ent before the publio, but until the introduce tIont to thto medical prefossion of Clarkes Kola Compound, nothing has been found t o have any effect on preventine future tit - tacks. The Medical Superintendent for the Home for Incurables lo Kamloons, 11. €1., has /and probably tho blest chance in Oars - sal to therOughly test this wonderful re- medy for asthma. He reports that on the three cause of asthma whore/ Olarko's Kola. Compound has boon tried, in not a single instainoe did it fall to ottre, and on one partloulae case a lady had been confined to her bed mot of the time for nearly a year previous to taking this remedy, and less thin three bottles have completely cured tter. Over one year has now plumed, and there heel not boon the slightest indication of asthma returning. Three bottles of ' Varke's Kola Compound are guaranteed to ours any ease of asthma. Over 500 mules titters already been ourod In Canada alone by this remedy. Sold by all druggists. Price two dollars; three bottles, with cure guar- anteed, for five dollars,. 'The Oriffiths & Meepherson 0o., sole Canadian Importers. 121 Chunk** Ernst, Woronito, or ;Vancouver, 16. REAL ESTATE- FOR SALE. DOR SALE. ---Fifty-four and s half acres of bush C and, hoax the east half of the south half of Let No. 3, in the Reeond conesesion of the Township of Turnherry, County of Huron. On this lot there is a quantity of valuable timber, and it will be sold cheap. Apply to .1. COWAN, Wroxeter. 16064f -Deems POR SAL—Tho undersigned bee twenty _Jr Mottle Farms for sale In East Huron, the $n. norCounty of the Province all sizes, and peace to suit. For full information, write or mill personally. No trouble to show them. F. S. SOOFT, Bruesiels P. 0. 13914! 1GIOR SALE, OR TO LET.—A dwelling house situated on Goderioh street, containing ten rooms, good cellar, hard and soft water and good ont-buildings. Now ocoupled by .T. L. nitth, men chant. Pooression elven about the let -o! Aut. Apply to A. G. AULT, Seaforth. 169741 $700 vi,....1tplyvrgoittetetdhecootottifeorot: bjlaomaon: Bri)rleeaofit: &Moab, at present occupied by Mr. A. Scott. There are 8 rooms, with hard and soft water, oleo a large stab'e. The lot is a corner lot and well planted with fruit and ornamental tree. Apply to A. SCOTT, &Worth. • 159341 RESIDENCE IN BRUOEFIELD FOR SALE.— For sale the frame dwelling holm and lot near the railway station in Brueefield. The house con- tains ten room ; s stone cellar and hard and soft water in the house; a1d0 a good ;stable. There Is a quarter oared land, Apply to ALEX. MUSTARD, Brimfield. 151641 FOR SALE —The north ,west corner of Lot 25, Genoese -ion 4, MaKillop, containing 2i notes of land, good orehsrd, handsomely situated, with an abundant supply of hard and soft water. For fur- ther particulars, apply to MRS, M. MURDIE, on the premises, cr to PETER KERR or WM. MURDIE, Seaforth P. 0. 1.602-tt MOOR SALE.—For sale 220 sere farm in _IC being Lots 24 and 25, Concession 10, and north part of Lot 25, Concession 9. Thie land has been in pasture since first cleared, 25 or 80 years ago, therefore is rich and free from foul weeds. Itis situated on the gravel road, five miles north of Sea - forth and nine from Brussels. Terms of payment made to suit purchaser. For particulars apply to W. GOVENLOCK, Eleafoith. 15944! MIARM FOR SALE.—For sale, in the Township of _.11 McEntee, the north 60 acres of Lot 16, Conces- sion -14o boundary line. About 47 acres cleared, three acres of good 'hardwood bush, about two acres et choice fruit trees, soli unsurpassed, well drained and fenced; school halt a mile away, post officio ane church convenient; will be sold cheap. E'er par- tioulare, apply to the proprietor on the premises, or Walton P. O. DANIEL MoMILLAN, Proprietor. 15994f ✓ ARM IN ALGOMA FOR SALE.—For elle the _C South East quarter of mitten F., township of Laird, containing 160 sores. There are fort) acme cleared and free from stumpe and under crop. Com- fortable log buildings. The balance is well timbered. It is within four miles of Echobay railway station, and Elbc mike of the prosperous village of Port Findlay. Thiele a good lot, and will be Staid cheap, and on easy terms. Apply to WILLIAM &NINON on the premises, or ALEX. MUSTARD,. Brim- field. 1546-41 lIQUILDING LOT FOR SALE.—The very desirable building lote, being numbers 37, 38, 89 and is situated on Main street of Egmondville and S9a- forth. The whole contains about one acre, and will be sold in separate partials or together to suit the purchaser. This property is ust south of the Woollen ?tills, and Mr. &Dickson 13 property south of the corporation, and is considered the most desirable building site either for private residence's or a factory. It is high and coarenient, and has a street south and west. Apply to JANE or JOHN 8PROAT, Egmondville P. 0., Exeautors to the &tate of the John Sproat. 158841 .QPLENDID FARM FOR SALE.—For sale the 1..j splendid farm of Mr. Robert Govenlock, on the North Road, a mile and a half from Seaforth. I co:eminent acres, nearly all cleared and in a high state of cultivation, There le a two story brick house, good bank barn and everything in fit-IA.01mm oondition and well underdrained. It will be sold on easy terms, as the proprietor desires to retire. It not sold before the fall it will be rented. Address ROBERT GOVENLOCK, Seaforth P. 0. • 19841 RESIDENCE IN SEAFORTH FOR SALE.—Ftr solo the oomfortable cottage on North Main street, 88t'orth, belonging to the estate of the late Moore Boyd. The house eontaine seven rooms, be- sides a largo summer kitchen and a good stone cellar and stable. Also hard and sett water. The property will be @old cheap, as the estate mut he wound up. In the mean time it will be rented, and the tenant will be given a leased tor six months if de- sired. Apply to JOHN LAND81301-WUGH, Seaforth 1597-tf FARM IN MORRIS FOR SALE.—The north-west quarter of lot 14, in the 88h concession, town- ship of Morris, oontaining fifty acme, forty-six of whieh are cleared and under aultiration. The soil is good clay loam. There is a house, bank barn, orchard and plenty of wa.5er. Also the south halt of lot 16, in the 7th conceasion, containing ono bundred sores, filty-five of which aro (neared. There is a good frame house and small frame barn. Theee properties will be sold together or separately, on easy Lerma and oheap. ear further particulars &prey to ROBERT HUGHES, Blytti post office. 160441 'MIAMI FOR SALE.—Farm in township af Tucker. X smith, being Lot 29, Concession 2, 11. R. S., con- taining 100 notes (1 good land, well adaptad for either g.rale or stock raising; land in good state of culeya- non, 8 acmes of good hardwood bush. On the place arotwo good frame barns, stone istabling under one ; driving. shed, never-failiag spring near barn, brick house ani kitchen, soft water inside good well, or- chard, etc. The farm is well situated, being five miles; from Clinton and six from Seaforth, on good gravel road; oonvenient to school, church opposite place; will be sold cheap, as proprietor intends giva ng up fanning. For particularapply on the prem • lace, or to A. E. TURNER, Clinton, Out. 161.04f FMIAMI IN GREY FOP,. SALE.—For eale, Lot 8, and put of Lot 9, Concesaion 10, Grey, contain- ing 105 acres. ; about 140 acres cleared, well fenced. underdrained and in a first-class state of aultivation, The -soil is as good as any in the county. There 19 a good tram house, large bank barn, with stone stab- ling, aro* other necessary buildinge, all in good re- pair ; a good bearing orchard and plenty of good water. It is within a mile arid a hall of the preop one Village of Brussele. It is a splendid farm, and will he sold cheap and on very easy terms, as the proprietor is without help and must retire. Apply on the premises, or address Bniesele It. 0. JOr{& HILL, Bniesele, 1001-12 VA.RMS FrIlt SALE OR 1:0 HE r in Tuektremite. hoetre Lots and 13 ou t °•: 3rd Conciesaion.. Lor, 2 bemg all ,,e,s.ha t) etas.: on Lot 13 there k a large frame house, with stone cellar, hotted with forna .e Lj,rro fr n- an wee stare, etattiin r tin 10li, t h, 4%41 w,:11 b tn .3, tti zi windmill to r•unto %yaw, ; 14.4.fti AGO,11 pie p frame drivine- bri ; it plet•tont non -e ";.° work sii.)p and woodshed i • tt d t: d In .t ..°.t of cultivation, t5iIg well vt atired and it gcod clay soil. It is a mile and a half from Seaforth on the Btaylield road. Thi3 Ps a choice place and will be sold or rented on reasonable terms, Apply no WILLIAM ABERHART on the promises, or to Seaforth P. 0, 160141 Money to Loan. Any amount of money to lean on, pod farm pro. perty, at 5 per cent. par annum. Serai..cht leant, payments made to font borrowert eatisfac tion guar- a.nteed, oharges low. At office Friday aft( rnocri and all day Saturday. ABNER. COS -ENS, MaDonald Bloolo inghare. 1587 TELEZ EN -4. { Heaven--The Illimitable Vastness of 1 1 Wathington,-Oet. 80.--Al1 out of the usual line of sermonizing is this storY of Dy. Talmage conoerning the next world, and it may do good to see things, from a novel standpoint. • The text is Revela- tion xxi, 1,"And / Raw a new heaven," The stereotyped heaven does notmake adequate impression Upon us. We need the old story ton in new etyle in order tct arouse our appreciation. I do not sup- pose that we -are compelled to the old phraseology. King James' imanslatore did not exhaust all the good and graphic words in the tnglish dictionary. I sup- pose if we should take the idea of heaven and translate it into modern phrase we would find thatits 'atmqsphere is a com- bination of early Jima and of the Indian Rummer in October—a place combining the adyantages of oity and lountry, the streets ,mtanding for the one and the 12 manner of fruits for the other; a place ot musical entertainments—harpers, pipers, trumpeters doxologies; ' a place of won- derful architecture—behold!the temples; a plaue where there May be the -higher forms of animal life—the beasts which were on earth beaten, lash Whipped' and galled and in3Llanketed and worked to death, turned; out -among the white horses which 'thebook of Revelation deseribes as being in heaven; a .place of stupendous literature—the books.open; a place of aristocratic .and democratic at- tractiveness—the kings standing for the one, all nations for the other; all botani- Oat, pomologiaal, *ornithological, arbor- esotent, worshipful beauty and grandeur. But my idea now is to speak chiefly of! the improved heaven. People sometimes* talk of heaven as though it were an old city, finished centuries ago, when I have to tell you that no oity n earth during the last 60 years has had suoltaoleanges as heaven. It is not the same pl oi as when Job and David and Paui wrote of it. For hundreds and hundredsof reare it has been going through petelieful Ir.volutlon, and year by year, and rzonth 1 by month, and hour by hour, ad "zroment . by monsent 14 1. changing ial o tinging .fer something better. Awa. ba4 there was ! enly en* residenceIn , tae u iverse—the' residence of the AlinigtOy. , leaven li—d not yeirbeen started. Irnniens ty was tbe park all around about this great resi- once, bill; God's sympathetic) heart after while overflowed in other creations, nd there came all through this vast ouutry of immensity inhabit d village!), ei hie% /raw and enlarged until" they oined each other and heoame one great ntral meteovolis of the universe, street- , gated, timpled, watered, inhabited, ne angel went forth With Abroad, we are Bold, andhe measured !heaven on one side, and "then he !trent forth and measured heaven on the other side, and then St. John tried toltake the census cif thet city, and he hooanse se bewildered that he gave it up. , Improvements la 'Holmes. That brings Me to the first thought ci.f my theme—that heaVen is lyastly inia preyed in numbers. Noting li tie under this head about the mUltitude % f adults - who have gone into glOry during the last 100 or 609 or 1,000 years, II member there are 1,600,000,000' of people in the world, and that the vast majority of peo- ple die in infancy.. How many children mist have gone into beaven ljuriug the last 600 or 1,000 yeas? If ow York , sttuld gather in onekonerat6n 1,000,- 00, population ifl London should gather W-. in one genera Jo 4,000,000 liopulatIon, hat a vast inretest Butw at a mere nothing as �opared with the 500,000, - 000, the 2,00 ,000,0Q0, the 'Imultitude that no roan on nuMber," Ithat have 4oits into that city. Of ()aurae 'all this ta14ea for; gran ed that every !ohila that die goes as • aight intis heaven as ever the! light speed from a etar,.and that is 0114) reaeoia wb heaven will 'Sways be fre h and beau iful—the great ;multitude. i of hildren in t,.. Put 50%000,-00) onildren in country, it will be a blessed and livily country. .,.. But add to hi , if yon will, tb. great multitude of au to- whe have gone into glory, and h w the census et heaven must run up. any years ago ,a clergy - Man stood in evr England Pulpit and said that he ,b lieved that }the vast n3ajor1ty of he 'race would finally be d stroyed, and. 4 at not mor • than one orient out e 000 persons would be nally saved. hers happen d to be a out 2,000 pe to e in the villa where he poached. Nex Sabbath two person. wore heard disoussi g the subject an4 wonder- ing which one of the 2,000 peo le in the vil4ge would nklly reach he yen, and on thought 1 . iwould be the minister, - an the other h ught it won d be the old deacon. o, I have not uch ad- mation for a li eboat which ill go out i i - to i sinking s 1 with )1,000 assengers and get one o 4a eatety an let 1,1999 go to the bot o . Why, heaven menet have been a vi lage when Abell the 1rs$ soul from eart , entered it as f sone red wit the prose t population of that Tat tib,I Evan X ayen Hunt Chan.. ' * gain, -I re ark that heave* as vaitly iirn roved in k owledge. Give! a man 40 or 0 years to • etncly, one soi' noe or all so neat, withl alt the adytt tages of lab ratories ant observatories 4nd phil- oso elo- appara us, Ine will be a urvv1 of lefcirmation. low, into what in "igen°. mutt heaven mount. ang.lh46t and sainthood, ---not after studying f� 40 or 60 years, but for thousaods of year—studying God and titer soul and imiaortelitr V and the uniVerse! How the in elligenee of that world must sweep o and on, with eyesight farther reachin than telescope, with power of ea oulation mightier than all human mat emetics, with powers of analysis surpa sing all chemical laboratory, with speed swifter t1ian telegraphy! What roust Ilea en learn ith all these advantages in a onth, in a year, in a century, in a mill nnium? The difference" between the bith et uni- ' varsity, on ear n and to emanest onus in a primary school as. not be a greater difference tban heaven it now is and heaven as it noe was, Do you not sup- pose that whe Dr. .la es Simpson 'treat up from the, ospitale of Edinburgh into heaven he k ew more than ova the Science of bee th, and that Joseph 4ienry, graduating ir m the SI ithsonien Irma. tution into heaven, awoke into Igher realms of phi osophy, and that Si Wil- liam Hamilto , lifted . to loftier understood b tter the construotidii of the human Intelleot, and that John . Ttlilton took up highe poetry in the aottiAl pres- ence of thing that on earth he ha d tried to deecribe? When the first saints nntered A 13 C of the full literature of Wisdom heaven, they Intuit have studied Only the with which they are now aoquainted. Attain, heaven is va tly ithproved in ite eocietY. During your zaemory holy Malay exquisite spir ti have gone into; it?- If you should tr to mak a list of •Iall the genial. loyin , grad us, bleeeed :oeule that you have known, it would be -ti eery long list—so ls that have gone into glory. Now, dq yot not suuposo they have enriched the soot ty HAN'S they not improved heaven? You tell of what heaven did tor them. Have they done nothing for him en? Take all the gracious soul!, that hoes gone out of your ace quaintanoesbin nd add to- them all the graoloun and! kv utiful souls $hat for 500 or 1,000 patio h ,ve gene out of all the cities ind all ,th villages and ' all the countries of this earth into glory, and how the society f heaven must have been, improved, Snp ose Paul the Apostle were introclueid nto your Nodal circle on •earth; but helav n has added all the apostles. SUpp sa Hannah .More and Charlotte Eliza)) th were introduced into your social oirole on earth; but heaven has added all the blessed and the grim:dons and the holy 'women of the past ages. Suppose that tobert MoCheyne and John Summerfield hould be added to your earthly nirole; but heaven has gathered up all the fai hful and earnest ministry of tile Past. There is not a town, or a city, Dr a village that has so improved in sooietit in the last 100 years as heaven has iMproved. . i ' t A Cluing() of Degree Only. But you say "Hasn't heaven alwaye been perfeott' Oh, yen, but not in the sense that it annot be ,augmented, , It has been rolling an in grandeur. Christ has been there and he never changes— the same yesterday, to -day and toaever, glorious thenland glorious now and glori• .ous forever. Jut I speak now of attrac- tions outside of thia, . and I have to tell you that no lace on earth has improved in society as eaven has within the loft 70 years, for he most -of you within 40 years, within 20 yeara, within 5 years, within 1 year-ein other words, by the aoceesions from your own household. If heaven were pInoed in, groups—an apo. - tone group, a patriarchal -group, a pro- phetic: group, group of martyrs, group of angels and then a group of your own glorified kindred—which group would you cimoset Yen might look around and make comparison, but it livould not take you long to! choome. You Would say: "Give ine baek those whom loved on - earth; let me enter Into their society— !my parents, my _children, my brothers, my sisters. We lived together n earth; 'let us live together in heaven." Oh, is it not a bleesedl thought that h even has been improved by its society. 4 lecoloni• zation from e;eath to heaven? Again, 1 rlimark that heeven has greatlyimpreved in the good cheer of an- nounced victories. Where heaven rejoiced over on'e soul 1t now rojoioes ever 100 or 1,000, ,In t el olden . times, when the • events of huiaa life were scattered Over four or'five be turfs': ot longevity and the world mov slowly,.there were not so man j stirring *yenta to be reported in heaven,' but no, I suppose, all the great events of earth re reported ib heaven. It there is any truth plainly taught in this Bible, it is that heaven Is wrapped up in sympathy with human history, and we look at th!ose inventions of the day— at telegraphy at swift oon3munioation by steam, at all these modern! improvements which seem ? *lye one I almost omni- presence—an Wn_ see only - the seoular relation, but spirits before the throne look out and oee the vast and the eternal relation. While nations rime and fall, While the earth is shaking with revolu- tion, do you not suppose there is -arous- ing intelligence goiug up to the throne of ,God, and that the question is often asked before the throne, "What 11 the news tom- that world—that world that re- belled, but is coming back to its allegi- ance?" ' If ministering spirits, according to the Bible, are sent forth to minister to those that shall be heirs of heaven, when they come down to us to bless us do they not take the news book? Do the ships of light that come out of the celestial harbor into the earthly harbor, laden with cargoes a blessing, go baok un - freighted? Minietering spiriti not only, , but our loved ones leaving us, take up the tidings. Suppose you were in a far city and had been there a good while, and you heard thr some one had arrived from your native place—twine one whe bad recently seen your family and friends —you wouldush up to lia you Would a k all abou home, , And do I you n your child we t up to 0 kindred in heaven gathe asked about you lie whether you wartgettin the struggle of life, to fl you were in any especial swift and mightyj wing down to interoept your that man. and the old folke at 4 suppose when d your glorified ed around and soertain as to along well in d out' whether peril, that with hey might come arils? Oh, yam! Heaven is a greater Weser for news than it used to be—neiss 'enriched through the treats, newe ringing -from the towers, news heralded frCm the palace gate. Glad news! Victorire news! ' Th. Venture Heaven., But the viv citly and sprightliuess of heaven will a1 beyond all conception _when the final vietories come in, when the church shall be triumphant every- where. Oh, what a day in heaven it will be when tne last throne of earthly oppres- sion has fallen, when• t • last chain at serfdom is broken, when the last wound of earthly pain s heale , when the last sinner is pardons, whe the last nation ' Is redeeme1-1 )1,1(hat a time there will be In heaven! Yon aind Iw 11 be in the pro- cession, You and I will thrum' a string in that great !orchestra. hat will be the gteatest day in 111 aven 11 oe the day when ; the Bret hlook,of ;asps was put down ill! fOr-the feund tie and the first hinged i pearl swung. 1 If there 11 a difference be- ! Swoon heaven !noW and heaven as it was, oh, the differs Oe betw n heaven as it ' 11 be and av n as it ndur otuok feet, but Ina an, au rolling u ver. fore's' , I say t in heave in 89 r� • INow, !,:thanise provements In heeven, !reasons. First,' because , of you are impatient to • tired of this world, and,y ese ti a, abte le nOW I Nota rolling on and and rolling iup, ! ings about 'the t the new lin- or three stout Ind that some gone. You are u.vfant to 'get intO that good and a out which you I have been thinking,, praying and talk- ing NO Many yeare. New, be patient. I could f030 why you would want ao go to'ain art gallery if some of the beat piti- tures were to be taken away this wehk Or next week, butllf some one tells yeti i/hat there are ther beautiful pictures !to boine-!--other Kensetts, Raphaels and Aubenses, oth r Masterpieces to be added to! the gallery yoh would say: "I can ff rd t ' it Ti. _ a o o yea .1 n a e li imorovine W4 ono i,iw�. NOV?, the same prinolpl . reietthing heaven and I Not one glory is et ; many glories added. be gone, not one bi of your,glorified fri long practleing tho the Prooeseion Will bow 'brighter, the Anotfier reason w to the changes in improvements in think it will be • a enterprising good p that you have no heaven that wait a centuries ago, Aft 40 or 50 or 60 years to Stop you sudden bere is a progressi accumulative heave foot there before Aggressive knovrled nese, nggreseive po dour.i You will not dowleon the banks in everlasting ino men. I tell you of a is something to do, of the_passage, "Th night," in the lazy A XPOsirrOft NOVEMBER 4, 18i8 twant you to appa; I n this matter of! 14a,lng this world.; be subtracted, but! ot one angel will! reroh 'gone, not one, ads gone. By the : sio will be better,i e longer, the rain-, c ronation grander.! y:I speak in regard! heaven and the new, eaven is because I eolation to busy and plc I see very well Much taste !or a l 'done and finiehed aain have been active! it would be a shook' 7 and forever, ;but e heaven, an ever , 'vast enterprise oni h throne of God. e aggressive good- er aggressive gran - halve to come and sit at the river of life oupation. Oh, busy heaven where therer Tliat is the meaning y rest not day nor aeiisc of resting. 1 ey of t app ing nets ee Ho ted sto fa exh ate mi the ezo Ex wh por red abo dry site fou cou dos Ii Wa of no rep tche temp! wa I it any and the oarve are ly and t and o play e base or a pillar upon which the Mason was a workAt the time of the tastro- phe «lilob overwelmed the city. Tbeitool- markslon this ,base are olearly perneuti- ble, and look as if the workman bed only justitift hie task. .11 1 As to the bridsomr red marble pillar to vehiloh we h ve alluded, it is reason- able fice conjeot re that it was the base for th statue of the god, as it is about feu col ore ancient than Anon otner portions e,wall as have been dist:love d. -J 14 ara to be of Oscan construction, he - b lit of large blooks Of rougb stone ly joined without mortar, lid re- bl 0 Somewhat the facials o "The se of the Surgeon," Which is admit - y 1 Oman archtteeture, though the ell are larger and not so s oothly hi election of the excavations . I being u ted, the ground already appropri- b frig finished, the direetor &W- adi to excavate the small corner near "SeattGate," which was the only un - ✓ ted spot in that part of th city. OP s had long been anxieue to tee ay burled there, for -there we, a lo of a very large an -handsome which had iong been • graiid, and had given Hee o Nun- n the by the wat of the se le Mont g Ago, out a asl,ntativa temple; but, unfortu ately, e s 'making in the rudiments of the befors'its to indicate. to Whom 1$" be dedicated on its completion. evident that, though very smell, radon • city, above njeotures. On removing the ao found to be occupied •tilstions of • temple which set of construction at the time otien Of the oity in 79 A.D. tioultrly interesting, .beca s4ipposd that all the seared he oity 1had been discoverred I lo i portant deity being Wit Tits Old -Fast lo ad Heaven. I epeak these wor a n the change/ in heaven also beoause I Want to ours some of you of the delusi n that your departed Christian friends ha • gone into dullness! andnilenoe and un oosciousness. They! are in a stirring, io ureeque, radient, •ever aceumulative e 6 e. When they left their bodies, they o ly got •riLl of the last hindrance. They aro no ruore hi Oak -i •wood, Laurel Hill or Mount Auburn' than you, in holidayattire, having seat -- ed yourself at a banquet, oan be said Sol be in a dark closet, }where you have left the old apparel thatIwas not fit to wear to the banquet. A OOldier oannot use a sword until he heti On.sheathed it, and i the body of your departed was only the 1. sheath ot a bright and glittering ;spirit, Which,Qod 3as lifte and is swaying in the heavenly triumPh. Acoording to what, I anfltilling you at pr saint, your depart- -ect Christian friends! did not go so !much into the company of the raartyze, and the apostles, and the !prophets, and the potentates of heaven as into the company' of grandfather and grandmother and the, infant sister that tarried:just long enough!' to absorb your tendere t!affection and all, the home circle. Wbfl they landed it was not, as' you IanII ,in Antwerp sr , Hamburg or Havre, Wandering up a Orange wharf, looking at strange faoes, - asking for a strangeihael, They landed; amid your -glorified elOives, who were , : waiting to greet them. ; ' Oh, does not !ibis bri; g heaven nearer? ! Instead et being far it cornea down our necks, and we fag its breath on our . faces. It melts the fri id splen -dor of the : ff , just now, and it. pitts ' oonventional heaven nto a . dorneetit0 scene.. Ili comes eerY nlose to us. If we! hadour choice in heaven,- whom would ' we first see? Rather than look. at the . great potentates ofheairen ire vfould! meet our loved 0111111.! I went to eee Moses' and Paul and Joshua , i311i I would a' o great deal -rather sl ee My father,: who went Away 30 years lag,. I want to see the great Bible heroir, Deborah and Hannah end Abigail , tit I would rather Ise my Mother than to see the archangel. I do net think it as superstitiou• when one Wednesda night I stoottby a deathbed within 'a 1 w blocks of the church where I pram:, ed, and on the same street, and 04w one of the aged Christians of the chilro going into glart :After I had prayed v1 el her I said to her: "We' have all love you very much, and will always ober sh your memory ' In the Christian obuo1 You will see mY son before I see b1i4, j and I wish you* would give him ou ova." She said, "I will, I will," afld i . 20 minutes she Was in heaven—the 1 sti words she ever spoke. It was a awl t'message to the 1 skies. If you had oUr choice between- riding in a heayenly lobarot and ocoupy. 1 ! lug the grandest patoos in heaven and sitting on the throne nxf highest to the throne ot God and ' notl, s eing your de-; parted ones, and on the other hand dwell without crown or ttr ne and without Ing in the humbles lace in heaven, garland and withouttoo pter, yet having your loved ones around you, you would choose the latter. I ay these things be. cause I want -you to kn ve it Is a domes- tic heaven, and oonse u!ntly it is all the time improving. Ey ryl. one that goes up makes it a brighter p tube, end the attracro tions aro increasing njioth by month -and day by day, and heav n so vastly more of a heaven, a thous& d times more of e heaven, than i$ used to .be will be a ibet- ter heaven yet. Oh, I sear this to Intensify" your anticipation. At the Fl a Day. I enter heaven one' y. It is al os exnuty. I enter the einples of wor hip, and there are no worshippers. I Walk i down the.street, and h ro are no imam. gem. I go into the or h stra, and I find the instruments are suspended in tha baronial halls of heft*** , and the reat organs of eternity, wl h multitudi o banks of keys, are dos d. But I nee shining one at, the gate, as though he 61 were standing on gu rd, and I lay' "Sentinel, what does this mean? : thought heaven wail a populous city, Has there been some r t plague sWeepit ing off the population?" "Have you not heard the news?" a a the sentine1.1 "There is a world b rning, there is a great conflagration e t 1 yonder, and all heaven has gone out t /look at the oon-, fiagration and take the victims out of the ruins. This is th day for which all other days are made. , T is is the judg-! ment. This morning ill the chariots and the cavalry and the mounted infantry rumbled and galloped down the sky."! After I had listened . to the sentinel r looked off over the heti' torments, and i paw that the flelde cf Iair were bright with a blazing world. reaid, "Yee, yes, this must be the jud m nt," and while I stood there I hear4 th. rumbling of wheels and the olatt ri g ef hoofs and Site roaring of many 1 voioes, and then I saw the coronets and ; plomes and ban- ners, and I saw that all heaven was com- ing back again—coming to the wall, coming to the gate, and the'multitude thatlwent off in be Mor Ing was aug- mented by a vast mu:itit de caught up alive from the earth, and ,a vast multi- tude of the resurreettid bodies of the Christian dead, leaving 1' the cemeteries and the abbeys and the ausoleums and the graveyards of the ear h empty. Pro- cession moving in thro gh tae gates. And then I found ot Itlat what was fiery judgment day on Siarth was jubilee in heaven, and 1 or ed: " oorkeepers of heaven, shut the g tee; 11 heaven has come in! Doorkee ers ; sirat the 12 gates lest the sorrows and tb• WOes of earth. like bandits, should mime day come up and try to plunder the ot y!" AN ANCIENT T MPLE Discovered at Pompeii uring the Course of Recent ExlavatIone. The excavations of Floinpetii have been continued during the Past year and have resulted chiefly in the idigoovery of mail houses containing objeote of secondary interest and importance. In the neighbor- hood of the Gate of V'esitvius a portion br the city wall belongiingito the earliest Period of Pompeilan huillding was laid bare. and is interesthur. AS 14 is apparent- ' Cp. ••• as intended to rival in its deo temple which existed int though it had scarcely risen ground level, the marble architrave as usual egg and tooth ne ng wound 11 ready to be p e Corinthian capitals, some hers only partly exeouted, si in the enclosure, as well lding, is Up; e dis- am the ' f et long, and the only pisSe of re4 marble found on the site. The par ly executed capitals are extremely int resting, as showing the methodof the Reiman artist who wag engaged npOn :t40 V1ille those that are oompleto are ., ver good specimens indeed, considering tha they belong to an age of decline. I Pompeii itself has not been produe- tiv of sensation this year, a small ex- oa.v tion on titivate grOund only a ' few yer s outside -the wally has mote than ma • up for this by. revealing one othe fin t and' most isa nteresting me' a of ant quity. Surrounded by a•most ai qui- et() garland of floweret, with si theatrioal ma k thrown in here andthere to break the pa tern, is a, picture representing: a gro p f seven philoeophers, ois. of whom Is. td with ai papyrus in hi hand, and the ot ars are grouped ronn4 listening to int-. I the) background are some ruined pil- lars and in the:right .hand upper corner is a representation of the, A opagns .4.1 At ens, with lie rooks and ibuildings. Th incutaio is polychrome and in dimin- uti • cubes of *cry fine workmanship, equ 1 in merit, to those by Diosoorides of So as in the Naples /illisenni, whit% are bell ved to be the only signed nsomaloslof ant • uity. It is About three feet square, and was, no doubt, intended for the! oen re of the pavement of a‘recnie. I I has prebablY never -been ,tised and was a new tnefinto, because it was rioV fou d on the groUnd, but leaning against a w 11, showing i either that it lead been mo ed from some other places, or that . it was about to ba Put down for ;the first tini . Its perfeet condition leads molt* pref r the latter Conjecture. The Govern - me 4 has purobaSed it from Sig. D'Ao- qui o, and it will shortly be exhibited to the subljo in the mosaic department of the Naples Museum. ° It is generally admitted that the earli- est mosaios in Italy date from about 80 13.01, and there on he no:doubt that in Inai7 oases they wore reproductions, or, at a)1 eventio traditions of Ultima pic- ture. In the oakie before Its, the sketch of t e Areopagus,: coneerning this identity of hioh.there oan be n� doubt in the m1u1 of any one who knows the snot •yei int its ;present state, displays the Oro k _origin of the work, and the scene depi ted Lund be either Nome oelebratig .diso melon On "Mars Hill," or, what is mor unlikely, a otainal group of one of the Attic schoolof thought snoh as mig 4 be seen there any day. At any rate, a sketch of the Areopagus which is recognizable at the end of the nineteenth century is no mean treasure, and we are - encoluraged to hope that ono or other a the nrehaeologioal schools of Athens may be a le to throw some light on the sub- ject of this interesting Mosaic. 181 is not thought likely that the D'A quino ereayations . will produce othe objects of great importance, sr the hou e no far has shown no signs of being anything More than a suburban villa. Aftefr the rioh find of silver which was mads some three years ago in a house abo t a mile from Pompeii, and present- ed b Baron Rothschild to the Louvre,' it is uiisafa to speaa with to much confid- ence; but the above is the opinion of the expert who is in charge of the °team. tion1.—London Times. New Chemical Element. Coronium, a chemical elemen• hither* found only by speoOrosoopto examination in the sun's domes, has hien found tot Prof. Nasint in the gases given off by Muer V•StlVitill. It is supposed to .be = lighter than.hydrogen. • — —Tie thirty•third annual Convention of `th S bbath School Association of Ontario being hold this week in Peterboro. It is be,t ing at ended by between three and font' hitn, dred elegates representing various religion* denonjinations in the Province. —Tlic investigation into the charges of political partisanship preferred against Dan ougblin, Deputy Inspector of Weight* and Measures, which was in progress this week t Ailsa Craig, has been adjourned up-, til next Tuesday. S6ott's Emulsion is not "baby food," but is a mo4 e.kcellent food for babi4 who are not well nourishd. A !part of a teaspoo fUl' mixed in milk and gi en every three or four ho rs, give the most haspy results. The cod-liver oil with hyp4liosphites added, as this pa1atal31e emulsion, , only to feeds the child, u,t also regulates its digestive functions. Ask your doctor about thi 50C. and $ L00; all druggiits. SCOTT & BOWNFe Chemitts, Toronto. _ • The Canadian Bank of Commerce. 4:112ITAL (PAID UP) 8IX MILLION DOLLARS - 116,0000130 SEAFORTH BRANOH. A generai banking business transaoted • Farmers' Notes discounted, and specie! attention given to the collection of Sale Notes. SAVINGS BAN K.—Interest allowed on deposits of $i and upwards. Soloist! 1 ollitles for:transaction of business In the Klondike Diatriot. F. ROL ESTED, Solicitor. ' F. C. G. MINTY, Manager, 111Ol2ey Or ere, payable at any bank, issued et tio following rates; Under $10 .0$ $29 to $30 .12 10 to $20 .10 $39 to $50 .12 u Know what you Want it is your own fault if you don't get It. In days gone by dealers were able to sell people just what they pleased, but the public of to -day are inclined to find out for them- selves the best article in every line and they insist upon getting it. I 4 Ielon't take anything that comes along. I go -straight for the 'Gresby' for 1 anow it is the best. ranby Rubbers AND OVERSHOES are known throughout the whole Country to be the bes in!' fit, finish, quality and durability and that is why i:ebple will have Granby' s and no other. The extra thickness at ball and heel makes them last twice as long. GRANBY RUBBERS WEAR LIKE IRON. e Hoffman Stock oving Out Rapidly. Piereiis no uncertaiu sound about it. No disappointment. Values beyond isp t or comparison. Crowds who came last week and could not be waited on. s enough of how the stock is being sold, to call again when our staff of s le4rt n could do them greater justide. * HERE IS YET 20 DAYS TO GET YOUR SHARE OF THE PROFITS B. , ArNDREW§, Manager. SMITH/ SEAFORTLI. 1 eil-n11:1111111 instruirtrutrtartrinn. horey's Cipthing for Youths, BOys and Children •is cut andi tailored in the best style, seWri with linen thread and gives your boy just that appearance you would most desire. It is a mistake to as- sociate style with high prices. It does not ":" cost any more to cut a garment to fit than to cut it badly. It is sold by all up- to-date dealerSand has a Shorey'S Guarantee Card in one of the pockets of each gar- ment which means Satisfaction or your money back. See that you get Shorey's make and take no other: • • • runniiru • • ,...............e.One Day'sWorl llkemu '15(4,411,46440/*Witie4e, 1.---1------asigiffelb'' 1111011111%, — - Wegive this fine Watch, Chain &Charm ::.....• for selling two doz. packages of Exqui- site Perfume at ten ceetso.ach. Send address aud we forward the perfume, postpaid, and our Premium List. No money required. Sell the perfume we send the watch, prepaid. Thss Ise among your friendS, return InOlier, and # gelatine American watch. gueranteeda ,geeri timepiece. Mention this paper. Bettie Spacial ty Co. Oa Vlatetia StTerents Co of mali and are Coa 031 suit STOVE INVITATION. e early and choose from the largest and best assortment toves of all kinds ever showed in Seaforth. It don't e "nrdifference what sort of stove you want, we have it, we also have a fine line of second-hand stoves, which we croing to sell away down, to make room for new goods. heaters, with or without ovens, coal and wood ranges, raiiges, wood cooks, etQ.; also a fine li-ne of small stoves, bie for fall use. Old stoves taken in exchange, A D MULLETT lit CO., ARE MERCHANTS, • SEAFORTH. RIVAT3 sble ye tat. S. Bet J Stirvey DNEY I nmenel t tamers no Apply toJ. 1 TOlitt BE ea Coma, reyenaere 14 in oozed t" n0R1i No) alwayS, of grain; la corn for lith Warehome, PERRIN. STRAY under, abouothe 1 owner coot paying eta P40. FOR SAI bort I horn cows S and ram lat ettaree. Fi DAVID MII .1.0 at• h nlgbt nninth rn Gravel eaforth ERICZB J) for eal following ti boar, 2 be" 'nit Oarii 110ALLIST-11 erd VOOAR D keep -Stanley. et, payable of returning WILL1-1 keepf *h 4 before SCOTT. ,•91••••••••••••••••••• :DAME FN jatt keee eremith, purohnsed Middlesex JO a thorough bred Ir-onos be admitte ofservice White Pig; Iri*fWOH et the -,3trui "rairalrortb • payable turniog 11 bred young limited -o extra good - ernes their-. Tempel, 3'0,13:N -"DIGS FO .1 uncle ehtres,hao Jidet) keep orobased and winter payab iretumin OORRAN orth P. 0. good brie orchard. convenien tee loan at Brimfield, ABM Hull abcut 100 oultivatio and plett) farni and Apply to -fieRorr, smith sho Lot 6, Cop eite the 8c countro, a poses. The trult trees, good well. to 14A.1111 WATSON, ARM the Tuekeretni •eleared, no tivation ; a good ben of fall etc miles from within thr he sold e promisee, TIARM I r containing drained an training There le a with *tone buildings There is best rplall said to el Jobe Wal Clintor, Alto ev:t echool. sigtted, runAc Itte 1899. .rand B flIEACJI Moo - third ane COM tit ene up to No SMITH, rrEAC 1 No. Chia cert.! begin Saturda JOHN Ontario. T' to be th Duties to Is:toting eations r McD0 Algoma,