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The Huron Expositor, 1898-11-18, Page 22 DON'T USE PLASTERS Griffith's Lintorient applied to Lum- bago, lane book, sore back or side will penetrate and stop pain and soreness in lean VMS than it takes to prepare oneselt for a plaster appeication-it's clean and healing -cures where plasters fail -the quickeet acting rheumatic healer in the whole medicine kingdom. J. Woodward of 138 Shit W street, Toronto, was a great sufferer from rheumatism. Tried many remedies with little success, began applying Griffith's Menthol Uninient. One appliention of It gave him more relief than anything he had ever tried. He says, "It is certainly a wonderful Liniment." 12. 4.tottm ENT ItIrfamvics Tun INSTANT APPLIED. AT ALL DRUGGII8Y1-25 OILNT 8 REAL ESTATE FOR SAL. poit SALE. -Fifty-four and a half acres of bush IC land, being the east half of the eouth half of Lot No. 8, in the second concession of the Township of Turnberry. County of Huron. On this lot there is a quantity of valuable timber, and it will be sold cheap. Apply to J. COWAN, Wroxeter. 160641 eGIARMS FOR SALE -The undersigned has twenty ir Choice Farms for sale in East Huron, the ban- ner County of the Province; all sises, and prices to suit. For full information, write or call personally. No trouble to show them. F. S. 80011, Brussels P, 0. 180141 DOR SALE, OR TO LET. -A dwelling honer) r situated on Goderich street, containing ten roomer good cellar, hard and soft water and good outbuildings. Now °templed by J. L. Smith, none chant. Palmation given about the let of Aosust. Apply to A. G. AULT, &Worth. 169741 $1100 antly situated cottage on James street, Will purchase the comfortable end pleate Sea orth, at present occupied by Mr. A. Scott. There are 8 rootne, with hard and soft water, also a large stab'e. The lot le a corner lot and well planted with fruit and ornamental trees. Apply to A. SCOTT, Seaforth. 15984f RESIDENCE IN BRUCEFIELD FOR SALE.- For sale the frame dwelling house and lot near the railway station in Brirsolleld. The home con- tains ten rooms; a stone cellar And hard and soft water in the house ; a good eptable. There hi a quarter sore of land. Apply to ALEX. MUSTARD, Brucefield. 161641 UDR SALE -The north west corner of Lot 25, 11 Coneemion 4, Ideffillep, containing 2e acres of , lend, good orchard, handsomely situated, with an abundant supply of hard and soft water. Fr fur- ther partiovhars, apply to MRS. M. MURDIE, on the premises, or to PETER KERR or WM. AiURDIE, Seeforth P. 0. 160e41 1DESIDENCE IN SEeFORTH FOR SALE. -For ,..jee) side the comfortable cottage on North Main street, Seaforth, belonging to the estate of the late Moore Boyd. The house contains seven rooms, be- sides a large summer kitchen and a good stone cellar and stable. Also hard and soft water. The property will be sold cheap, as the estate must he wound up. Apply to JOHN LA.NDSBOROOGH, Seaforth. 1697-U 'DOR SALE. -For sale 220 acre farm in McKillop, being Lots 24 and 25, Concession 10, and norch part of Lot 25, Concession (. Thie land has ,been in pasture since first cleared, 25 or 30 year ago, therefore is rich and free from foul weed. It le situated on the gravel road, five miles north oeSea- forth and nine from Brussels. Terms of payment merle to suit purchaser. For particulars seely to W. GOVENLOOK, Seaforth, 1150441 MIAMI FOR SALE. -For sale, In the Township of J.' MaKillop, the north 60 sores of Lot 16, Comes - *ion 14, bourrdery line. About 47 acres cleared, throe sores of good hardwood bush, about two sores of choice fruit trees, soil unsurpassed, well drained and fenced; school half a mile away, post aloe ani churoh convenient ,• will be sold °heap. For par- ticulars, apply to the proprietor on the premises, or Walton P. 0. DANIEL MeMILLAN, Proprietor. 16e9-11 4••••••••••••••••••••••••• VARM IN ALGOMA FOR SALE. -For este the J South East quarter of section F., township of Laird, oontaining ISO acres. There are fort) acres cleared and free from stumps and under crop. Com. fortable log buildings. 1 The halaipe ts well timbered. It is within feur miles of Eohobay railway station, and six miles- ot the prosperous village of Port Findley, Thiele.* good lot, and will be sold cheap, and on easy terms. Apply to WILLIAM SIMPSON on the premises, Of to ALEX. MUSTARD Bruee• neld. 16464f MIARM IN TUCKERSMITH FOR SALE. -For sale, r that splendid farm belonging to the estate of the late Samuel Zlarnoehau, jr„ being compoaed of Lot 22, Concession 3, 'I.R.S., Tuckersmith, canteen. Ing 100 acres, of which all is oleared ex ept 16 *torero which Is uncoiled hardwood bush. There is a wood brick home, large bank barn with gone stabling, and sll other necessary buildings. The farrn is in first -Maas condition, end IS one of the best in the County of Huron. It most le sold to wind up the estate. Apply to JAMES SCOTT, SR., Seaforee P. 0. 1618-11 B'° MIMING LOT FOR SALE -The very deeirable building lots, being number37, 88, 110 and Is situated on Main street of Egmondville and S forth. The whole contains about one acre, and will be sold in separate parcels or together to snit the purchaser". This property is islet south of toe Woollen Mills, and Mr, &Dicker:nee property south of the corporatien, and is considered the moot desirable building pita either- for private reaidence's or a factory. et is high and convenieet. awl has a street south and, west. Apply toJANE nr JOHN SPROAT, Egmondville P. 0„ Executors to the Estate of the John Sproat. 158341 0,PLEN1ID FARM FOR 84E. -.For a1e the splendid farm of Mr, Robert Govenlock, on the North Bead, a mile and a half from Seaforth. I contsine 175 acres,nearly a:1 cle red and in a high state of tult,LvatIon1 Tnere ia a two etory brick house, go4d bank barn and everything in firsieclass condition nd well underdrained. It will be sold on easy term, sethe proprietor dealres to retire. If not field b fore the fall it will be rented, Address ROBERT riOVENLOOK, Seaforth P. 0. 169811 MIAMI IN TUC'‘EftStifITH FOR SALE. -For sale, U the ilast half of Lot 21, Concerialon 4, L. R. 8,, re Tuckem th, contsining 50 acree-a square lot,- all cleared. u elerdrained and fn a drat -Weis atate of col. . tivatIon ; ewe, frame house, frame barn and stables ; a good beating orchard and two good wells ; 0 aores of fall whet and 83 acres in griefs. It is about threo miles !tarn Kippen and six miles from Seaforth ; is within three quarters of a mile from cahoot ; it sill be sold cheap arid on easy terms. Apply on the promisee, dr address Kippen P. 0. JAMES BERRY, 161.04f FARA FDA SALE. -Farm in township of Tucker - smith, being Lot 20, Concession 2, IL R. 8., con- taining 100 aerea et good land, well adapted for either ...stain or ateck raising; land in good state of oultive- Nen, 8 acre); of good hardwood bush. On the place are two ge d frame barns, stone stabling under one • drivlog she never.failing hieing near barn, brick house awl latehen, Heft water inside, zood well, or - tabard, etc. Tho farm 14 well situated, being five miles- from 'Hilton and six from Seaforth, on good gravel mad; convenient to school, church opposite Vacs ; w111 be sold cheap, as proprietor intends rev - ng up farm ng, For particulars apply on the preen. lees, or to . E. TURNER, Clinton, Oat, 161041 ICIARM 1: Kett R SALE -1.'7r elle in tee *0wi�bIp of awanooh, b *ig eompe-tei of Let 42, Conceeeion contaluirig 100 acres t 1 i !Witt, adapted lo either grin r seek ellen:, a I in a good etste f eilltivaceee well feneed and eeder, drainel. Alto filont 8 eeree of teober nn the There is a ere- barn e0x70, wires stens ceeitee undeeneath ; drivi g (.11111"1 tdil Kistir and hpe ti lAle T ‘1•11.ii:rt hmpu- 14 b-rainr, :'lv:; and kit ben ts Kee el 11 a griral c•Ilar it s bee) ; else a wondsh. re, There ' tI Kerte re r ill wit at quenti y tel pleunerec don , a d 2 tiv.*1 of an reharil, Thia Is a fire -class farm, situsted on the g avel road, one mile South of the village of Bekensve :6 miles from Blyth ; 6 milefrom Wine - nem ; 7 mIlts from Brumels ; convenient to schools and churchea and wilt be bold reasenably. GEORGE TAYLOR, Belgreve P. 0., 10:24f Money to Loan. Any amount of money tp leen on good farm pro. petty, at 5 per cont. per annum. Straight loses, payments made to suit borrower, tatisfention guar- anteed, eherges low. At office Friday afternoon end all day Saturday. ABNER CC/ENS, • McDonald Block, WIngharce 1587 ;111-0 Cf) P.k.• oz.* r.z.z c„ = N4 0 0 te- Washington, Nov. 18. -To all those who feel they have no Lospecial mission In the world, this sermon of Dr. Tal- mage will come as a cheering revelation; text, John xviii, 87, "To shim end was I born." After Pilate had suiolded, tradition nays that Ws body WWI thrown into the, Tiber, and such storms ensued on and aboot that river that his body Won taken out and thrown into the Winne and similar disturbances swipe that river andkits banks. Then the ',tidy was taken out and moved to Lauuns, and put in a deeper pool, which immediately became the eanter of similar atmospheric and aqueous disturbances. Though these are fanciful and false traditions, they show the execration with. which the world looked upon Pilate. rt was before this man, when be was in full life and Dower, that Christ was arraigned es in a court of oyer and terminer. Pilate said to bis prisoner, "Art thou a king, then?" and Jesus answered, "To this end was I born." Sure enough, although all earth and bell arose to keep him don, he is to -day empaiaced, enthroned and coronet - sod king of earth and king of heaven. That is what he come for and that is what he aoconapliehed. By the time a child, roaches 10 years he or ' e of age the pareats begin to disconr that ohild'e destiny, but by the tl she reaches 16 years if age the question is on tint childni lips: "What shall I do? What am I going to be? What was I made for?" It Is a sensible and righteous question, and the youth ought to keep asking it until it is so fully answered that the young man or young Inman can say with as much Sloth as ito euthor, though on a less expansive scale. "To this end was I born." The Divine Purpose. There is too much divine- skill shown in the phyeical, mental and moral con- stitution of the ordinary' human Wing to suppose that he was oonatructed Witbout any divine porpoise If you take me out on some vase Wain and show me a pillared temple surmounted by a dome like St. Peter's and having a floor of precious 'tones and arohes that must have taxed the -bre* of the greateat draftsman to design, and walls e and niched and Paneled, and wai and painted, and I should ask yo thig building was pus up for a rolled sooted what d you answered, "For nothing at all, " how could I believe you? And it is impeseible for nee to . bailee* that any ordinary human being Who has in his mugcular, I nervous and cerebral organization more wonders than Christopher Wren lifted in St. Pour., or Phidlaa aver ohiseled on the Acropolis, and built in such a way that it shall Met long after St. Paul's cathedral is as muoh a ruin as the Parthenon -that such a being was con- structed for em purpose, and to execute tno mission, and without any die JOH: in- ention toward some end. The obeot of this gernion.„is to help you to fi d out what you aremade for and help yo i lInd your sphere and assist you into tha con- dition where you can say with (ter minty and ernphasie and enthuslastu and triumph, "To this end wee I born. ' First, I discharge you from. all r spoil- sibility for most of your environ ants. You are not responsible for your prent- age or grandporentage. You are n 1 re- sponsible for any of the cranks tha may haye lived in your ancestral line an who a hundred years before you wore born may have lived a style eV life that more or lees affects you to -day. You ore oot responsible fonthe foot that your temper- ament le sanguine, or melancholic, or bilious, or lymphatic, or nervous. Neither are you responsible for the place of your nativity, whether among the granite hills of New England, or th o cotton planta- tion. of Louisiana, or on the b larks ef the Clyde, Lir the Dot/riper, or th Shan- non, or the Seine. Neither are yo1 re- oponsible for the religion taught in your father's house, ,or the irreligion. Do not bother yourself, about what you cannot help or about oiroutustaticee that yo did not decree. Take things .they are and deoid the question so that you shall be able asfely to Nay; "To this end, was I born." How will you decide it? By directtapplio tion to th o only Being in the universe wbo Is competent to tell :)u -the Lord Al- mighty. Do you kno r the reason why he Is the only one who an tell? Bacau et be can see everything between your cradle and your grave, thou h the grave be 80 year. off. And bee des that he i the r only Being who ca see what has 1been happening in the las 500 years in , our ancestral line'and Id,.'thousands of years clear back to Adam, ind there la not one , parson in all that .a amoral line of 6,000 years but has somehow affected yeur character, and .even old Adam hiruselt will sometimes turn up in your disposi- tion. The only Being who can talc al !, things that pertain to you into cons der! Eiden is God, and he is the one you can ask. Life is so short we bay. no eine to experiment with' ocoupationa and protest eons. The reason we have so many dead failures is that parents decide for children what they ,shall do, or children them- selves, wrought on by some whim or fancy, decide for themselves, without any imploration of divine guidance Mo we have now in pulpit) men making ioermons who ought to be in blaciremith shops making plowshares, and we have in the law those who instead of ruieing the owes of their clients outrht to 'be pound- ing shoo lasts, and &totem. who are the worst hindrances to their patients' bon- y:oleo:eines, and artists trying to p tit landscapes who ought to be whitew sh- ing hoard tentage while thors are others making bricks who ought to be remodel- ing contattutions or shoving planes tvho ought to ne transforming literatures.• Ask God abor what worldly business you shall und rtake until you are so positiVe' You can bb earnestritelle Mite your hand sneireer TI -110. kit tal‘ ______••••-•••• . 1 en your plow banal* or your .oarpentere beton, or your Bisok1tOne's1"Commeni- lates," or your morlioal dfotionary, or rOur Dr. Diok'e "Dldaotio Theology." Saying, "For this end Was I l*grn." There are children wh o early develoonnatural toffinitles for certain otyles of work. When the father of tne astronomer Forbes as going to Landon, he asked his obildrei . what present he should bring eaoh one of them. The .boy who was te be an aittrun- emir cried out, "Bring me a telesetipel" niarns of th• Future. ' ' • 1 , 7 And thero sire children whom you Aid . all by themselves drawing mentos& slatet or en paper ships r houses or birds!, and! you: know they re to be. draftsmen sr architoote of some kind. And on 'find , others ciphering out difficult problems i with rare interest and etweessnand you ik•noOr thy are to 1 mathematics/Inns. And lothers making heels and grange oon- 10ivanOes, and yo know,they are going 46 be machinists. And others arelound eiperimentAng Wi h hoe, and plow and: !Stickle, • nd you ki w they •will be farm- 1 w ties. Ad ethers are alwayol swapping jnokkniyes or ball or bats ond makiug nernething by the ergain, and they, are !going tO be meroh nts. When Abbe do gene° 110 so aa cad in studying Greek that he couldtr inflate Anacreon at 12 years of !age, tliere was no doubt left that he was litend1 1 a scholar. But in e t &Nest every lin th re isomse a tittle when he does not kh w bat he wag ninths for, and hie parentdo not knew, and iis a oriels thot God I on y can decide. Then there are those, • .rn for menu especial. work ad their tit u does not develop until qu te late ! hen Philip Doddridge, whine fe3 mons nd !moire have harvested uncounted soul for glory, began to study 1 for the Mini.1 str , r. Calamy, one of the wisest and best to , Advised him 60 turn his thoughts to sot • other work. Isaac Barrow, : the 0 inent clergyman and Christian Eiden tot._ his books etandard now, Oho. gh he h s been dead over 200 yeare-w s the d sheartenment or his father, who uss to say tbat if it pleased God to take any of his children away he hoped it might is son Isaac. So some of those who ha e ein characterized for their etupidity in boyhood or girlhood, have turned out the mightiest benefaotors or benefactrees. e if the human race. Thou things be ng mo, am I not right in saying that in many oases God only knows what is 0 e most appropriate thing for you to do, .a d be its tho one to ask? And let all pare tit And all schools and all I un:ve fifties'i nd ill colleges recognize thqt and a lar e isumber of those who spent the r best, earn in stumbling about among h einem i and occupations, now trying this- and now trying that and faiIing ,in all, * uld be able to go ahead with a deflnito,!cieolded and tremendous purpose, aying, "i10 this end was I born." I Whoa SkJaLl I Do? 1 i , 1311t my oubject new mounts into the motnentalls; I* Me say that you are made for sefuleess end heaven. I:judge this from the wen you are built. Yon go into a shop 'wirers thiere is only one wheel turning and that byla workman's foot on a Unsettle, and you say te yourself, "Here io something gear being done, yet on a small scale," but ifou gointo I factory cov•ring many goresand you find thous - such) of bands pul ing on thousands of wheelAnd ahuttles firing and the whole scene bewildering wtth activities, driven , by water or Again or elect* power, yen conalude that the- fgottroy *SI put up to do Oreat work and on a vast scale. Now. I leek at you, and if I should find that o!,nerve, if you could you lhad only ons flmity _ of body, only ons muscle, onlyon ' tee but not bear,: or gould bier and not _ see, 'if you -had the woo en only one foot or ono hand, end,! as • to , our higher nature, if you had only one mental faoulty and you had memory but no Judgment, or judgment but no will, and if you had a soul !with only on• capaolty, I would say not mUota III expected of you. - But atand up, eh, misn, and list ms look you squarely in tho fem. Eyes capable of seeing everything. 'Sandia capable of grasping everything. Mind, with more your brain, your ngue, y ears, your heart, y ur lung your feet, your • y, yo soul, your lifer yo r tint for God, feeling in your e d wag I born." It may be help ul if Ir. its my own e perience in thi rega I started for 1 t • :law without as lug a divine dime - ti a. I consulted y OWEI gm I liked lawyers and court °ems- d judges and 1 j ries, and re eed in h nk ths Frei- inghuysens a d the Brad y of the New ,Teirsey bar, *nd as sesta e 1 the oounty lidturalizirl' f eig ere' i o rderl deeds, n. clerk; at 10 y ars o age, I s arched titles, repeived the touts sion f judgments, . ore- wi nestles a d jur e and grand juries, bu after &While !I felt a call to th gospel ministry and is ,t red it, and I f.!t Nome atisfactio in It • work; hut o • stem Or, • whe I wa resting at S aron S rings and whiles ated in ,the k of th t village) 1 said to myself, "If rld, I o ght to flid it eut now," and have a specie work to do in the wi h that determietation I prayed as I bad moven before rayed nd got the diyine direetiob, and wrote t down in pit my memorandum book *'d I saw nay life work then as plainly ite see it now. . Lin. Is Brien!' • , PONJ I 0/3 ur eyes, your , triter hand, mind, your your eternity I, "To this wheels than any Notary every turned, more power than any' Corliss engine over moved. A soul thee will outlive all the universe except hisavon, and would out- live an heaven if the life of ;se other mortals were a moment short of the eternal. Now, what, has the world a right to expect of you? What has God a right to demand of you? God is the greeted of soonemiets in tho universe, and be make. nothing uselessly, and for what purpose rnd he build your body mind and nut ote they aro built? TI ere are only two be ngs 112 the universe 1 ho can aniwer that question. The angels do not know. Th4 chools do not kn w. Your kindred cannot certainly kn w. God knows, and you ought to know. A faotory running at an expense of $500, 00 a year and turning Ott goods worth 1 70 cents a year would net be such an incon- gruity as! you, 0 min, with such semi - infinite equipment doing nothing, or next to nothing, in the Trey of useful- ness. "What shall I; do?" you ask. My brethren, My sisters, do not ask me. Ask God. There's some path of Chrietian uss fulness open. It may be a rough path or It may be e smooth Potts, *Jong path or a short path. It may, be on • mount of conoplouity or in a !valley unobserved, but it is a path on "inch you can skirt with such faith ands, nob satisfaction and ouch certainty tbet you can cry out in the face of earth and hell and heaven, "To this end was 1 born." Act at puree. Do not 'wait for extaordi.nary quaint:10a- tions. Philip, the cotiquetor, gained his greatest victories floated eh a mule, and if you wait for some caparisoned Bu - cephalus to ride into the conflict you will never get Into the 4rorl4wid. fight at all. Samson slew t o Lord's enemies with the jawbone of Ihe stupidest beast °rested. Shamgar sle 6001 of the Lord's enemies with an ox oat! Under God spittle oured the Win maul's eyes in the New Teatatuent story. ;rake all the faculty ou have and say: "0 Lord, here is what I hey! Show in. the field and back me up by omnipotent power. Agywhers, an' ow,' any time for God." Two men rid ng on horseback came to a trough to water the horses. While the horses were drinking one of Oats man said to the thin a few words about the value of the soul, then they rods atitay and An p osite direction But the words nttee were the Hair tion ot the one to whi they were alto od, and.he became the Rev. Mr. Chain ion, one of the most istinguiebed nal - sionaries in heathen T ands. for years wondering who did`for him the Christian kindness, and not finding out until in a bundle of book. sent him to Africa be found the biography lef Brainerd Taylor and a ',future of him' and the miesion- ary reoognized the tsc. in that book as the onan who at the w tering trough for banes had cold the t lag that saved his soul. What opportuntlies you have had in the past What oppertunitieeyou Imre now! What opportunities you will have in the days to uome Put on Toni, hat, 0 woman, this afternoon and go and com- fort that young ,motheowho lost her babe last summer. Tut ea and go over and se* was compelled yesterda signment and tell him your bat, 0 man, as merchant who to make au as- ths everlasting And now I come to t consideration. As! near tiniclimacteric 1 (tan tell you were built for a bappy et'ity, an the disasters which have- happ ;sad ta roar nature to be overcome bjr he blood of the Lomb if you will heartll aeeept thaS °bristly arrangement. Weett e 1111 rejoic- ed at the 'acreage in huMa -Iongevily. People live as near as I can lo sows about tan years longer than they iii ed to. The modern doctors do not bl .e their pati- ents on all oocasiona as di the -former doctors. In thou ernes i a man had fever they bled him; if he 10 consunap- eon they bled him; if he •ad rheunta• Om they bled him and if th y could not make out exactly what wa the twitter they: bled him, Olden tinphlebotonly was death's coadjutor. 411 this nas changed. From the way 11 see people skipping about at 80 year; O age I con- clude that the life ineuranne otimpanies Will have to change their table of rigks and chary a man no: .morit rani= all 70 than they used to do wh4n be Wale 60 ond no more premium ,at0 than when ; he wits 40. By the adv clement of medical eolence and the 'rid r. acqu t- anoe with the laws ofolmaith nd the aot , that the people know better ow to talc* care of themselves bunion 11 15 ii prolong- ed. But do you realize. what. after all, is the brevity - of our earthily state,' In the donee when people lived 00 and 800 yeors the patriarch Jacob 0 id Shot his yer� were few. Looklag *4 the Me Of thS youngest person in tbio assembly 1,0 supposing that he will nye to be 'a f onagenarlan, how abort the time and on gone, while banked UD , iin front Of sj is an eternity so vast thnkarithmetio ad not figures enough ' tie express its • eolYou have examined the aily Bible ith, or breadth, or depthO' r heIgh1. ilions, you 1;3 112,11 explored the family rotor a and ye 3 t ity have seen daguerreotype. of some cif the kindred of previous go hait had photographs taken !o wbat yea We' e in bciyhood or . girlhoodiand what were ton years later, d in resting to any one to be Able to look no at L it is verk . baek upon ploturee of what he was 10, Or r! 20, or 80 years ago, bib have you ever had a picture taken Of what you may b nd-what you will bai if you meek sifter 0o4 and feel the spirit's! regenerat- ing pow rt Where shallplant the to S I Oamera take the picture? .1 plant it on this platform. I direct it toward you, it still or stand still while I take th. picture. It shall be an instantaneous pie. ture. There! I havoit. - It i dorsi). Yoti .Oan see the picture In 'its impt.rfect state end get some idea of whet It will be when thoroughly developed There ie your resurrected body, so byilliant that the noonday sun is a patch Of midnight OoMpared with it. There is your flouts so pure that all the forces of .dianollent could not spot it with an imperfection. There s your being, so thet flight from heaven t Meroury or imighty aard so swifi Mars or Jupiter and book again to heaven would not weary 'ou, and o world on each shoulder %you d not crush, you. An eye that shall never shed a tsar.' An energy that shall never f� I a fatigue. A brow that shall never thro with pain. YOU are young again, thouh you died of decrepitude. .Yon are ell again, though you coughed or ably& ed yourself into the tomb. Your everyd y ameba*s are the apostles and prophets oad martyrs c and most exalted souls, in scull'. and, feminine, of all the conturiem The End of' All Li e. If you realize that it Is a tituperfeoll picture, my apology is wba tho apostle John said, "It doth not yet meter white ! we shall be." "To this end Was I born." If I did not think i�, I weuldobe over- whelmed with melancholy. .! The world ' does very well far a little While,. $O or 100 or 160 years, and I think that human loagevity may yet be inaProved up t•! that prolongation, for novel there in so little room between our cradle and',our , grave we cannot 0000wpl1sh1 nanch, but ' who would want to dwell ij this world , for all eternity. Some thtnl4 this earth will finally be turned nnt a heaven. Perhaps ,It may, but it w uld have to undergo radical repairs an 1 thorough 1 eliminations and evolutions nd melt- , tione and transformations infinite to make i$ desirable for eternal residence. All the east winds would hay to become west winds and all the wini re changed to sprinetides and all the v }canoed itio- tinguished and the oceans °babied „to their beds and the opiderni e -forbidden entrance and the world so fi, 0 up that I think it would take more bi repair this. old world than to make an entirely new one. But I must say I do- not care where heaven is, if we tan only, get there; whether a gardeneed Armoric% or an emparadteed Europe or a werld (timbal to the whole univerae. "To this end was I born." e If daub one ,of uo could eay that, We would go wItl faces* tinning and hopes exhilarant am d earth's ovorst Misr 'fortunes and trials. Only a ii tie while, and then the,rapture Only a 1.tt1e while; and tben the reunion and then the transfi In the seventeet wise threatened wit barbarism, and Vi besieged. The kin fled, and nothing from being overwhel of Poland, John ,Sobieski, to who they had sent for help, shoutd with hi army come down for the relief,' and tro every reef and towor the inlinbitante o Vienna watched and waited and hoped until on the naoralog of Sept.' -'1. 1 .th rising sun threw on unusual and un paralleled brilliancy. It was ithe Mon of the sun,en the words end shield and helmets Of John Sobieski and hi army coming down over the kl1s t th reficue, and that day not ant* Vienna but Europe'was saved. And see: you not, 0 ye .soule, besieged with sin 'and sorrow, that light breaks, in; the swordand th alleles and the helmets of ditties rum bathed In the rising sun of 'heavenl,y deliverance?' Let everything odee g rather than let heaven go. - Only a little while. oration. • oenturr all Europe a wave of Asiatic wasS especially and hicourt had could save the city ad untie.. the kin Aa Ulcerated T•otia. riches remaining for a Inbose who scree Mr. Dobson looked acmes thetable at e Lord. Can you slug? Go and sing for his4 , wife with a smile of irritati g toter- th that man who cannot get well, and you an"• "New these headaches pf yours, will bolo hire 11110 bosun. Let it be, nan dear." hi said. "I ears 't babe &aline/ _ 1WWWIIMMOWWWWWW0v. ' that they sire partly She result of imagin- ation. You are a little prone, I fear, to exaggeroto your sufferings. I think you should guard against tliat tendeacy,tier you'll goon become one of thege chr(ie invalids." Mrs. Dobgon's pate face flushed, bus before she could,reply, her hugband Was appareutlyi seized with a spasm of pain. Lle hastily lea the table with his napkin pressed to his mouth. Mrs. Dobeon fol- lowed, and found hint in the library anxiouily regarding a email, gray1sh lump held In one hand. "The tilling has come out of that whin dom tooth," he mattered, beneath th• napkin. "The dentis* said if the nerve was ever exposed again be feared ulcera- tion; he was only able to put in a toon• porary filling last week. It IA already jumping, and I must hays a hot wet's' bag and do up my face right away or the night, and go to the dentin. the Aiesi thing in the morning." Mrs. Dobson was all symnethy at ones She pseud a wakeful night,Ikeeping ho$ compresses on her husband's' face, but lie suffered agonies from the tooth in spite of all, "It bas begun te ulcerate, I know)" he mumbled behind his swathings In the morning, and, without waiting for break- fast, Mn., Dobson took him, weak from pain, to Doctor Brown's office. "Your face hasn't swollen any yet," maid Doctor Brown, with the °hearten- ness born of long exercise of his profu- sion. "Did you save the filling?" Mee Dobson molemnly handed hint a ienmagilios. lenpceteof paper, which he unrolled "Did you hone any canned stuff Itir dinner?" he asked, With apparent irrevel- anos "Yes, we bad canned corn," said Mr. Dobeon. "Well, this," said the dentist, finlioat- ing the gray lump, "appears to be lump Of insider; nrobebly it came froon the tin can that the oorn was in. I don't believe your tooth will toleerato to -day, Mr. Dobeoul" Since then, when any guest mentions the word "imagination" at the Dobson', the head of the family looks uneasily it his •wite. Treating Snake Bites. "Physicians are no$ agreed on the, treatment for snake bleu," said a lean - log phyolcian, "especially as to adnalnis- tering unlimited draughts of whisky tO persons suffering front the bits. The,fac$ of the matter 11 thee, though there is 1 very general dread of the bilsof $ottnaket there ars few, very few persona ever i bit- ten by thene. In a 'practioe)extendin over thirty years, wen years- of Whio. was In the country district, I have had but three snake bites 10 attend to, and he one of them I was not entirely sure that it was a snake bito at all. The three oases I had cauterized the flesh with nitrate of silver, Any other strong cane - 114 tio would probably ye done as well but the nitrate of silv or lunar *audit: was bendy. I gave ,whisky in small quantitheo but at fregeent intervals. I know thee in a very general IUpregsiofl in existenos that whisky should be lin- ' ly pouret1 down the bitten perso 5 hall pint er so at a tins , the t gory being that the Poison from a snake isutraftzss hi effectthat whisky ordinarfty oatoses am free, to 147 that I would ot fittest* we it ninon a pint of whisky lunder ,anr, iroMnstances; and would not feel safe in , lying a child as zonolOas a querter of 1 int. Tablupoon doses given ot interval, 1 a half hour for two or three bourn ill be all that is. needed, though ist ases where the person used Itimulanti requently I would not be act retul; for large quantity might not do them tiny Zink'of whisky are liable tit do more rm. I feel gunk however, that half-pint 'term bhan a snake bite. It is Much safer! In my judgment, to adroinieter 14 Irhisky hypodermically. The effect is proS need much quicker and more satisfooto ily. Wants and Needs. 11 A "need" is one thing; a "want' is nother thing. We want e great na nr ore things than we neid. A acod pa tit • ants the child to have whatever he sods, and Is ready to Secure such thins' 1 r him if within his pawn. He woad a culpable parent who would givinhis o itld whatever Ohings he wanted, whetber e needed them or not. A _ parent-1os in 1 ot, set to the duty of keeping 'his ohild e- r1 1 om having many a thing he ants, las ell as securing for the child wbateyer needs, Our Heavenly Fathei IS tress ad best of parents in 'this same dieortn !nation of gifts to. His children, H. knowsth what thingi we have need' of before we ask 4ina) We tell Hint the things that we want.' We ought to be grateful that God will not give us the titings that we want unless If• knows that we also have need of them. . Lounging. Hew to Lear,! Sir Jame. Pagi t spoke upon one Gua- m! n of the impo trance of "leerning to le rn," and show d that knowledge, not , 1 noodle:sly met lin Reef, rnan be Om 1 zneans of develop' ig the power of learn- ing. The oultiv tion of the feculty of knowing is of Inc naparably granter im- portance than the mere acquisition; and to the student, this faculty so developed tat when need arises knowledge may b• q iokly obtained, is a better provision f the business of life than is afforded • the largest and richest stores of tu- fo 'nation peeked away In memory. Thus *1» brain property moot worth carrying a out is the power of tiding at pleasure a d learning at will preoleely what id ed. • The Spanish battleship, the Infant ria Theresa, which ILieutenant Hobson seri cted for the purpose of raising, and was su cessful in doing so, has been wrecked in o t orm while being touled in triumph to the U ited States. This is a romanti finish. W th a fine sense of honor, the vex e seems to aye, flout/tied herself and suni, rather thi n become.an inetrument in the b nds of the conquerors. After couolls and c lds the germs of consum ion o ten gain a foothold. Scott's Emulsion of li er Oil with, Hypo 'p ites will no cure ca e; but, if taken in it will cure many. Even when the dise e is fa ther advanced, some re- m rkable cures are effe4ed. In the most advanced silges it prolongs life', and nkes th days far more conij rt - ab e. Everyone suff ng fr m consumption need his food tonic. 5e,c, and 3r.00. all druggists. 1 SCOTT 'et SOWNE,- 'Chemists, Teroate od- OS- ery e, NOVEMBER 189 1898 4.„.....0.0.,.............— 4.....‘,. 141* Canadian BCommerce : .....,.........,.., ,, (*PITA.. PAID UP) SIX MILLION DOLLARS SEAFOWBRANOK 0 5el000000 IA Senora' banking business treriosiettd- Femora' Notes dlitoeunted special attention given to the oolliotion of Sale Notes. i end :SAW N GS BA N K.—Interest el I +Wed on. depositts of $1 and upwards. '901101eLfsioilltOes foraransietleni of huilitese In the Klondike District. , - ie. HQLMF7STED, Solicitor. ! G. MIY, Al 'JaST'ank of . 1 ger. Money Ordors, payible at any bank, issned at the fallowing rates ; yndeir8%0 .081 ' . $20 to $30 .12 oto ! .10 i $30 to 00 .12 Most Rubbers are -Uncomfortable t It is wonder that rubbers which are not the same shape as t e boot should be uncomfortable. It costs money to mploy skilled pattern makers but the result is a satisfa tory fit. Eacb ear the Granby Rubber Co. add new pat- terns to fit all the latest sh�e shapes therefore ran y Rulbers ARE ALWAYS UP-TO-DATE, I hey are honestly made of "ure Rubber. Thin, Light, Elastic, Durable. nxtra thick at ball and heel. Granby Rubber wear like Iron. • ea' Customers. 4.11MMIMON It is our belief tliat the best advertising we can do is to - satisfy our customers. In this line of ad.. writing we are most successful, for style, fit, i)rice and workmanship, to say nothing of the satisfied feelings cif our customers, are constantly bringing us new eustomers and id*turn of old'ones., For the Fall and Winter trade we will still continue to satisfy, and if you want to have that satisfied feeling you will make it a point to leave your order with us for your Fall or Winter Suit and Overcoat. WE SATISFY ALWAYS1 BRIGHT BROS., SEAFORTH. Economy is Wealth 1111111111111nummemeele.mmeemenomml, Why not economize by buying your TVTA.L1.41 113_A_Tal=t Whew, you can get the best value for your money. By buying the large quantities that we do, We can show you all the Newest colorings 10 good quality paper for very IMIe money. Do not forget we also carry the largest assortment in 'Out4' in Poles anC;1' Window Shades. Tili f:'140E TO EOONOMrZE IS 'AT apst's Bookstore Seaforth. Pig in Your Bed. Oftarawf Why 1 the first thought of such a thin.' is enough to make one shudder, but when you think of "the pig as al harmless rubber bag filled with hot Water, imparting dryness' and warmth to the surrounding sheets and blankets, the shuddeg' gives'place to a comfortable 'feeling of delightful anticipation, or in ease a sUdden atta4.- of inflammation fieizes one, nothing affords quicker relief than the bot water boqle, and no hot poUltice so conveniently applied. ; You all know thal a good fountain 13yringe is a great security in any house. No one can !tell when they might require it. Do. you know that you can get a combination for $1.25 o $3.25 (according to quality), that will answer the double purpose of a hot water bottle landla fountain syringe? Call and see the different sizes and prices at its13111DEN &- WILSON'S SOOTT'S BLOOK, -POIR/111-FT MAIN 811-WEI SIM -A 11 1 -.......ememmeggeomollialC . 4 Come early and hoose from the largest and best assortment 'of Stoves of al' kinds ever s*wed in Seaforth. It don't ,make 'any difference what sort of stove you want, we have it, land we alsoi have a fine line of second-hand stoves, wliich we ]are going to sell away down, to make room for new igoods. "Coal beaters vit1x or without ons; coal and wood tanges, , 11 e 3t ranges, wood cooks etc • also a fine line of small Stoves / ./ 5 . , 1 . 8uitabie for fal!. use. Old stove taken in exchange, S. MULL Et r At COs, III 1, HAR WARE MERCHANTS, . - SEAFORTH. NOvE erlennenneell..1.1161.1 1MPOT BMW FUN able yeerly, 5, BAys,D „ farmer4 at ieflodilurvelF0Iee 13 °VEY AT 6 JYL money has b tarn3ers, in sums Apply -to J. ,11,. 31 HIS Etienne noart. 4:101Ini eeyeeete, Land, Lc /oven -tea end te teen? store, Main ITIIMBER FOR S sale ehe tit:eh veseloo 0, McKee ash suitable for whitb will be sol WIG James Lock] sTo nATTLE FOR fi for yard, Tuckersinith '11011 SALE -7 born bulle, X otel cows and he end rani lambs; a mem. Prices II DAVID MILNE, SW° ROB; ENGL undereigned Bien 2, TilekrrOna Berkshire boar. A viD0AP, r0B, EJ keep for se StauLey s tborougl Si, payable at the I of returning If nee - BI- YLL FOR H keep lor serv a, thoroughbred adore Jitatufay, 3 -no no BREED j on Lot 20, Cel a thoroughbred en bred Yoluieniae 11 be admitted to ea of service,,er eL White Pigs der sal Frell.MWORTII 51 j' - VICE. -The 1 eit the Brtteelleidl, Teenwerrth Boer, AI Si; payithie at t rri, turning if 'teems !bred e, Tame quoit , 4gTto i -ettetWORTni Pn I signed bas 10 1140.1lop, a thee( limited norober of extra good pig and prom tbefrierk,bi Tema *i,wtth SOHN Kcal 131013 P-011 undereigned, sedres,bae formae aloe keep for ea &Omega frora and wituter -41 payable a* freturnin rfr ORRAN P,. REA $1,800 1 goers - brick bo _Orchard. 11 1, el convenient to 011 ta loan at lament Brumfield, VARII FOR SA liullett, nes sibent 100 acre *1 cultivation. and pleety of faun And will Apply to MRS. 11010ROPERIY IN: Lie. dwelt the id 'mitt' Coop and e Lot S, Concessien site the School Ho country, and is ad poem There ie on MIR trees, -ante a good well. This to SAMUEL BE WATSON„ Sesta -UNARM IN TUC r Lot 34, Co containing lie drained mid in meening 10 aer There is& good 1 with ttone stabi building.. a larg There is plenty best quality and sold to close up John Walker X °Buten, and t Also Within th school. Appi eigned, B,.uotfid TBA tIIEACHER WA No. n. OreY, claim tertifleate. begin January 2 Saturday, Nove JOHN MoINTOS Ontario. lEACHER W No. 9, Tar to be the holde Duties to begin, ttatingi salary cations received L. elcDONALD, Algoma, Ontario. BON. forma nexus er excess, 'ten --tow°, Opium of price, one ete to/4mm The SOld in Seaforth Snap Barg TIIIRTY DOT 10101-0 first -el Village of Zuric Huren ; gool bu ands most deter short horn bulls service; also eev arta prices right. NIB, Zurich?. 0 Cm An DEALER New Bo Chi Pro On Orders by eeive pr Address Square, Telephone