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The Huron Expositor, 1899-09-22, Page 2v THE Catarr Japanese Catarrh Cure did for Miss EA. Nett of Beachville, Ont" what physi- cians, Epecialists and ordinary practi- tioners and a. score of Catarrh remedies Yelled to do. She was a great sufferer tram this distressing and disgusting disease for years; all. the painful ac- companiments of deep-seated Catarrh were hers; her head was so stopped Up that she could, not breathe through her nostrils, her breath was the foulest, she had constant pain over her eyes, a con- tinual dropping in the throat, but from the first application of this pleasant pomade cure she experienced great re- lief, and in a. very short while after .commencing to use it she feund her bead cleared up, the nasal passages alt healed, the breath pure and sweet, and. not a pain left in her head; this all happened long enough ago to convince her that the disease has left her for good and ail, and she retolces at es- caping, as she Oalls it, from a living death. With every package of Japanese Ca- tarrh Cure there Is enclosed a cure guarantee. It Is the only guaranteed cure. Pure and harmless and leaves the patient a elear-bended, light- hearted, healthy man or woman. 50 cents—at all Druggists or by mail. CRiFFITHS & MACPHERSON Can TORONTO Important to Athletes. Mr. Mack 'White, the well-known trainer of the Toronto Lacrosse 'Club and Ougoode Bail Football Club, writes: I consider Griffiths' Menthol Liniment unequalled for athletes or those training. I have used It with the best success, and CRII heartily re- commend It for stiffness, soreness, sprelne and all forms of swelling and inflamma- tion. All druggists, 25 ets. 22 129 The Kola Asthma Core. Positive and unlimitedconfidenee In the Kola plant as nature's sure remedy for Asthma has been abundantly sustained In the many remarkable cures obtained through the use of Claxke's Kola Compound. It Is a great discovery. Endorsed by the medical profession everywhere. Over 500 eases absolutely cured In Canada. (lure guaranteed. Sold by all druggists. Sold by J. S. Roberts. COMINIXE51111111111161120•116 REAL ESTATE ifl1 SAak, F Seale—In the Village of licnsall, a fine briatc _U dwelling and store combined, web situated near centre of village Terms reasonable. Apdly to MISS S. CARLISLE, Ilens3.11. 1615 FVARM FOR SALg.- So Ith half of 30 Nth halt of 29. 6th Cd'acessioo. t)wriAilp of Ray, known a. the St trgenn farm. Th., 6,41 is tin exr.,11ed, with good fences and underdraining. Tho are fair, Tois is a splendid farm, in a good loca`ion and will ha sold chirp. Apply to SAUULA, SaIlLLIE Mensal'. 168 tt FARSI FOR SME.—For sale, Lot 5, Conicsaion 6, Mullett, near village of K 1.burti, containing about 100aeres, all cleared and k a go id state of cultivation. There arogood buil ngs, gr)oci orlhar3 and plerty at excellent water. This is a splen lid farm and will bo sold cheap. Trn-ntdiato pisaessIon. Apply to MSS. SOEIOALES, Constance P 0. 1607 VARA FOR SALE.. ---Lot 30, Con most .11 1, town• shpof Tucker maid) II. R. $., th s proparky the late WilUnxi Wnitily is offe el for sale. Oa the farm is erect id a two story stone bou-so, barn an sheds. There N also a good bearing o:ch trd, awl the farm is well w.:t3red with a living spring and a well. Apply W. F. LAWRENCE, Clinton P. 0 ; or to E. WHITELY en tr e premises. 1642-tf SPLENDTD FARti FOR SALE. —For sale the splendid farm at Mr. Robert Goyenlock, on the North Road, a mile -and a half from Seaforth. contains 175 acres, nearly a I cleared and in a high state of eultivati in, There is a two s'o,-37 brick house, good bank bank and everything In Hest class condition and well uoderdrained. It walbe sold on easy tcrms, as the proprietor desires to reti e. 11 not sold before the fall it will be rented. AdJress ROBERT GOVENLOCK, Sonforth P. 0. 193 tf FARNI FOR SALE.—For sale, in the Towns ip of MaKilloo, Cho north 50 awes of Lot 15, 0r,00s.sion 14. 1 oundary line. About 47 acres cleared, three acres of god hardwood bush, abut two ac es of ',hole° fruit trees, Boil unsurpassed, well draincrti and enced ; school half a mile away, paat et, o ani church convonieht ; will be sold ch spFtr p.1-r.iculivsapply to the proprietor on the premises, or Walton P. 0. DANIEL Mcn1ILLAN, Proprietor- 1399-tf pROPERTYIN BARPURFIEY FOR setae—For sole, tan reeiden.e in Harpurhey at r resent an. cupied hy the undersigned. There is a good frame house, bricked inside, and a stab e, also ov,,r an acre and a half of land, also a splendid orchard ot fill kinds of fruit, broh lame and small. It is siotated on the main street, and has all necesiary conveniences. Also he pe.,k lot immedktaly in the rear of the above, contai ares, on whiih there is a gco 1 house and large stable, also an oreh..rci and well.. These properties will be sold •;o2,-ei her or separately. Th .se properties aro adndrably adapted for a rctircd farm- er or n arket gardt ner. Apply on the pr mi -es to the proprietor, or addrese Sesforth P. 0. WILLEAll DYNES. 16 4 51 MIAMI FOR SALE—For sale, Lat. 30, (torment m _U 10, McKillop, con aiuin: 100 ac -o, all cleared and free from stun p3. On it is a larg-e frame croc bank Unto hay shed, impletnent hoe o and pi; pen, with' a good orchid an 1 three wells. There aro 60 acres feecied to grass, with good f -mries and drains It -is %Rhin tedo miles of Winthrop, where are st3res, grist a d sxw mi 1 and church -s, and N within three quarters of a mile of school, with pod rad s in ev• direcVon. Rxr partleu'ars, apply t, aka JAMES If. WRIGHT, Poitit EJward P. 0, Onta-lo. 1633x8 FAR.11 IN TUCKERSAIITil SALE.—For kle, Lot 24, Concession 3, II it. 8., Tooke:smich. zontainin4 100 acres, 90 acres cleared and in a ono .d state of cultiost on, 10 mann of g-1111 hird woo 1 b ,sh. There is on toe premises a g), -id b ick imix-,c an 1 •klteto n ; a 1 trge new bank b stn, eth e.on' Alt) in.. undern qith • an open skied ; driving h wee, an i oth- r buildings ; t'am g oci well; and o chard. It i3 five mites from Sear noh and six f on II ntm on a goof gravel road. School do bv. win he snin ;hal). Apply nnhe premists t ROBERT MoVe:TY, o 8 a - for th P. rt. 1639x4( VARA LANDS IN TUCKERSMTEI FOR SALE.— r Fe' sI ) th t well-koavit sn 1 ir -t-erkis farm oo the Mill Itr al, Tookorstnith, ki:o.vn as the " Fan3^n Farm.' ft is ()lore to the vill e45 E mond vine, And within one nine a --d a h tlf of Sea'o -tri. It e In tains 97 acres, with b ick ro3id -rote aOd gorl buiolings ; plea/ o' good %Ater and en undo d al e I. lt will be sotcl al a a, hol^i, or iq parts 5, suit pure:laser., and on easy terms of plyinent. Thisis a speadid oppo toitity for, any perstm detirint to get a vety pleasant tomtit)) for a ie ilkoico- Also hi et 8 donee of the undersigned in Se do thA ()mix t house and good lot : convitriitrt to :Shin f-trerit. A s- pty to ten feo nibr, Feaforth, or the Toe Exsostron. Ofitice. ROBERT FANSON, Self rtn. 1641-5f -LIAM IN TUCKER UITH FoR SAI.E.—F0 sale, i. t 11, Goneetision 8, Tu.t.kersmith, cor.dnjig -100 acre-, all ('lslared but about S a not of rood broil. It is to derd rained, we't Emoted, and lo a Nth state of cultivati The.° is a good tocto- Ionise ; go d barns, 'stables and o toh its..s. It a Ofo'n3 a go ni school ; is within Bee miles of Slaforth, and th-e° wiles from Kl.tpen There is plat of g-"od water. Will be ol I wi h o without th croo. It is one of the beet firms in ti,. t )X31 4htp, and will b 3 sold on easy Ono) 4. as the proprit to. wan 8 to retire Also 60 nerve within a mile a .d a (loaner, a good grasi g lot, well 1. 11 .ed, but t;o tot Wilt b t ) gether pa-atall'. AprOk on the weir; .es, or al - dress Egniondville P. 0. J A NI ES AI :TA.V1311. 1639 tf FARM FOR SALE.—Lot 33, Co te s i m 4, E ett Womanish, cr,ritaini.,g 121 ac Ther, is tbeplare a gotd brek dwdling h uso 2024,s wing 16x-'4, 11 st •ny hgh; stone renar fol. vizi ; frame summer knenen and won4s1-0,1 16/c 4 ; Lar 1 wok soft ii' -der ; frame b trn F6x58 wi, h stone .,ti11, 8 utMerneath ; frame pig pen tw k oto d or chards; 31.; acres leared. ba'ane.! is g k-41 h ..rdwood bush ; wet le .t el w,th molar roil 4, 8111. Well wl` cred .bY-three fra d rPor g eat ; s 1 a,' a ch Ilell non- venient ; five ruiboi frank 13 k th i2 miles (o W,ng hare. 1 n Hes from Goderien -, mutt I.e s .1.1 10 close the estate. A p..ly .1011-g WALLAU":. ntor for the Joon) h J eicnit tot oe, 13! 51 P. it., or to o Hamilton, f lyth 16:Ott FARM IN ST NNLEY F q Lot 9 and the we t,ha f nf 1.•t 8, tot tl.ti 12 h s- cion, or Beare ef Qt rd,3•: it•ei cat- talos 160 aeres, all of ea et is ea Jed, 4 x..)..1 t four .aeres. It 11 Iti A 80.58 r f first ca s c .tiVV1011 'lei' fenced ani a't un 'e drAinei, toned innh -tic*. 7 he -a is a large tronn dv, c hi ; t 0 'Se as irro 1 alnw, ct It good sto aindati in an -1 0.11.1r, ,to hank 1,Arn with stone •.tkliiior oath.) n ath, n outo.eroms other buildings, 'ip.'ucE•ig a ar.N. pi; ho TW1 pod orchards ot rhooni fruit t-ti.de and or tor mental 5- er. 1" or ) "re t o snrinn cook; rano n4. through 5ne arm, a- picot 0* o wut r all ilk ) year rot) .o w t lout pimp:Atm-, in is w 11 81; 1at1 for markets, c:in, elm+, st h ()rt. p I ill Ete . a d goo i gravel ton,,1:1..iadin; frout it in 101 di -'(010 s. It 14 within t 5 1.1.ka linron, and the troos can be seen passi IZ it ruld do.vil from th . haw. T•tis is one of tit- loot coitiope 1 farm= in t C. -runty, a -d will be sold on may terw, a the prig) 1,ft rr %Via to retire on account of 111 hea,th. Apply on the prem. it3e3, Or edreis Bake P. 0. JOHN DUNN. 16195f P0-64050-4 “04 T L4r) et=mall 6 1.44,4 Washington, Sept. 17.—Dr. Talmage in this discourse discusses a question of na- tienal importance, which is confessedly rei difficult as it is urgent. The text is 'net -thew xix, 6, "What therefore God hath joined together let not man put asunder." hat there are hundreds and thousands of infelicitous 1: omesOin A-Merle/13 no one will doubt. If there were only ore skele- ton in the cloSat, that might be looked aed abandoned, but in many a home there is a skeleton in the initlway and a elreleton in all the apartment. "Unhap- pily married" are two words descriptive cf many a 'homestead. It needs no ortho- (1 3X minister to prove to a badly mated p 3 ir that -there is a hell. They are there •n iw. Sometimes a gland and gracious woman will bo thus incarecrated, and life will beet crucifixion, as was the (tee with airs. Sigourney, the great poet - and the greet soul Somethnes a oon- aarated man will be united to a fury, as wn .7-ohn Wtsley, or united to a .vixen, ea; was Jan Milton. Sometimes, and geeerrilly, lath parties are to blare°, and 1.1G11.1 as Calle le is an intolerable grum- ler, and his Wife has a pungent retort el ,'ay e ready, and Fronde, the nistorien, pieagod to tell the plain truth, has to f nil aside the curtain.from the lifelong teeabble at Craigenputteck and 6 Cheyne 2 d eenne say that for the alleviation of all. ileac domestic disorders of which we i-eir easy divorce is a good prescription. Cid scrnetimes antborizes divorce as cer- teinly as Le authorizes inarriaee. 1 have jest; as much regard for one lawfully divorced as I have for one lawfully mar- Tiltut you know end I .know that wholesale divcrce is one of cur national ssearees. I ant not surprised at this when I think of the influenees which have been ebroad militating against the marriage ;cietion. For rnany years the platforms cf. the country rang With talk about a free love millennium. There were meets - lees of this kind held in the Academy of in laic, Brooklyn; Co'per Institute, NeW ork ; Tremont Temple, Boston, and all I over the land. Some of the women who i were most prominent in that movement I have sitice been distinguished for great T-1,0111tscuos1ty of affection. Popularl teemes for such oocasions were the tyranny at Man; the oppression of the marriage relation, women's" rights and t: affinities: Prominent speakers were V; cnnan with short curl -sand short dress and very large tongue, everlastingly at weir with God because they wore created wdnien. while on the platform sat meek nen with soft accent and cowed demean - °r. apologetic for masculinity and. hold - ;.1.e the parasols while the termagant .: itors went on preaching the gospel of free loee. That campaign of about 20 ea 3 Sat morealevils into the marriage Ltion than will be exorcised in the ;eat 60. Men and women went home air n such meetings so !permanenthy con - fu ..d as to who were their wives and eu 1 -ands that they never got out of the pe: laxity, and the -criminal and the cis I courts tried to disentangle the Iliad tf °es, and this one got alimony, and. rha'i one got a limited divorce, and this nether kept the children on condition that the father could sometimes come :eft look at them, and these went into - ;an -houses, and those went into an insane ,,--rum, and those went into disselute italic life, and all went to destruction fiel mightiest war ever made aeainst the eteriage institution was that free love empaign, sometimes under one name e-1(1 tornetimes under another. , ' 't he System of Poort:nlity. Another influence One has warred :pee the marriage relation has been iderg-amy in Utah. That is a stereotyed tal icature of the marriage relation and eolioned the whole land. You might et well think that you can hav4 an arm in r..state of mortification and !yet. the Nvi.o; e body not be sickened as to have ere Territories or States polygainized i tal yet the body of the nation - not feel t .ee putaefaction. Hear it, gobd men and I‘iiren cf America, that so long ago as i sea a law was passed by Congress for- i,..t!tiing polygamy in the Territories and in all the places where they had jurisdic- retie Thirty-seven years have passed rtanr; and nine administrations, yet not ten tee passage of the Edmunds law in - ax a was any active polloy of polygrunio aetiressionfaclooted. .Arrned with all the eeer of government and having an f .v..1;- at their distlicreal, the first brielt :1.1 hot till thEn been knocked from that G1'11 OSS of libertinism. Every new presi- cia; in his iraugnral tickled that . mon- ur with the stiaw of condenmatim. and letra Congress stultified, itself in propos-- le tem° plan that Woula not work, elsgamy stood in Utah and in other of , o Ierritories; more intrenched, more r.lzt , more - puissant, mere braggart ed 1 :ore internal than_ at any time in -; history. James Buchanan, a much maid rnan of his day, did -mere for the tirpation of this villainy than all the laiequept administrations dared to do i to 1882. Mr. Buchanan sent out an my. and, although it was haltedein It. eke still he accomplished more than e eubsequept administrations, which - retthing but telk, talk, talk. Even at is late day and with the Edmunds Act foree the evil has net been wholly ex - rated. Polygamy in Utah, though out - ed, is still practiced, in secret. , It hair real against the Marriage relation oughout the land. It is ;impossible to e such ant awful ee'wer of iniquity ding up Its miasma, itthich is wafted the winds north, soaker, (-net and west, bout the whole lard being affected it. ' 1 troth er influence t rat has warred lust the marriage relation in this ntry has been a pustulous literature, h its millions of heats every week ked with stories of Iomes5io wrong, ilikklelitleS ann zn usaores and out- yen ; i tat 11 11 11. a: 01 111 tb ba ger by wi by ag cot wi oh eateeteette. tad...attar rages, tram tu is a, wonder to no tnat there are any decencies or any clommon .eense left on tho subject of merriage. One-half of the flew, stands of odr great cities reek with the filth. ipese Ditaarces Condemned "Nova" say sone, "we admit ell these evils, and the only way to olear them out or to correct them is .ba easy divorce." Well, before we yield to that ory let us find out hew easy it is pow. I have lotoked: over- the laws of I all the Statesaand I find that, while in 11Ci1110 States it is easier than in others, in every State it, is easy. The State of Illinois, through its Legislature, recites a long list of proper mimes for divorce and then closes up by giving to the courts the • right to make a decree of divorce in an' ease where they deem it expedien . After that you . are not surprised at the an- nouncement that in ane couna of the State of Illinois in one year there were 833 divorces. If you want to kno v how eastelt is, you have only to look ver the records of the States—in Massachusetts, 600divorces in one year; in Maine, 478 In one year; In Conneetiout, 401 divorces In one year; in the city of San Francisco. 333 divorces in one year,; in New Eng- land in one year, 2,113 divorces, and in 20 years in New England, 20,000.1 Is that not easy enough? If the same ra;lo con - f tinues, the ratio of multiplied divorce and multiplied ca.usee of dieorce, e aro not far from the time when our courts will have to set apart whole (apt for application, and •all you will have to prove against a mart will be tha , he left his slippers in the middle of t e floor, - and alt you will have to'prove ainst a woman will be that her husband' over- coat wes buttouless, Causes of liveree doubled in England and doubled in the United States. To show how very .3/4 it Is, I have to tell you that in West rrelte- serval Ohio, the proportion of (liv nee to marriages celebrated was in one year 1 to 11;! in Rhode Island, 1 to 13; n Ver- monal 1 to 14. Is not that easy eno igh? • I Want you to notice -that frequ noy of divorce always goes along with th disso- auteness of society. Rome for 50 years had not one case of divorce. Thos were tier d ye of glory and virtue, T en the reign r vice began, and divorce 0,111T19 epiderric. If yoa want to kno y how rapidly the empire went down, ask Gib- bon. 30 you know how the reign of! terror was i rtrofftwel in France? By gum cases f divorce in one year in Pares, What wo want in this country and in all lands is that divorce be made more nnd mote difficult. Then people before they (utter that - relation will be phrstuided that tire will probably no no escape from t except through the door of the sepulcher. Then they will pause on the t cage of that relation until they are fully satisfl d that it is best, and that it is right, and that Itis happiest, then wo shall ave no more marriages in fun, Shen- oen and women will not enter the relation with the idea it is only a trial trip a, d if they do not like it -t-hey can got out at the first landing, then this whole question will bo taken out of the frivolous into the tremendous, a d there will b= no more joking about 13410 blos- soms iu a brideho hall. than a ut the oypres on a' coffin: uniform Low Required. Wha we want is that the .Cong 035 of the Ui ited,States move for the chenging of the national constitution so that a law OA 1 be passed which shall be 11111 - form a 1 over the country gnd wh t shall be rig t in one State shall be righ in all the S ates and what is wrong in one state ill be wrong in all the States How i it now? If a party in t o mar- riage r lation gets dissatisfied, it i only IICO€SS ry to ILOVO to another state to achiov liberation from the dome tic tie. anci di ores is e.ffeetedi so easily tat the firedi o e party knows ' of it is by seeing it in t e newspaper that Rev. Dr. Sonre- hod-tea few days or weeks afterty rd in- troduc-d into, a new marriage rel tion a mombe of the househald who 1, ant off on a pleasure excursion to Newp rt or a busine s excursion to Thicago. A arried at the ride's home); no cards. Th re are States f the Union whieh praotically. put a reminm upon the disinte ration of the r tarriege relation, while th re are other States, like the State of New York, which haS the pre eminent idi ca of makin marriage lawful at 12 nd 14 .years o age. The Congress of • the Unitel States needs a:relieve for a changel of t e na- . ticnal eonstitution and then to appoint a committee—not made up of single entice men, b it of men of families, and their families in Washington—who shal pre- pare a good, itonesa. righteous, compre- hensive, &Worm law that will °envoi everything frem Sandy Hook t the Golden' Gate. That will put an End to I brckerages in marriage. That wil ssnd diacree lawyersinto a decant bus ness. That will set people agitated. for fatly years on the quastion of ho vr they shall ' get away from each other to pia ning, Low they can adjust 'themselves t the :,.ore or less unfavorable oirounist nces. ,MOIII difficult divorce will put an stop - pal -to a great extent upon marriag as 9 Latincial speculation. There are men who eo into the relation just as th y go i Ito Wall streeet to purohase shares The female to be invited into the...par-in rehip of wedlock is utterly unattractive aid In disposition a suppressed Vesuvius. F ery- body know's it, but this masculine oan- delete for matrimonial oruers, thr ugh the commereial agency or throes the county records finds -out how much state is to be inherited, and he caloula a it. Ho thinks out how long it will be before tee old man will die and whether h :can stand the refractory temper until he does c.ie, anTri then he enters the relation, for he say, "If I cannot stand it, there througlii the divorce) law I will back out." That aroceas is going on al the tnne, and men enter into the relation of stock speoulation as anything that withotit any moral principle, wit out any affection, and It is as much a m tter was transacted yesterday in nion Pacific, Wabash and Delaware & L cka- wanna. Now, suppose a men tinders od, that if he goes into tbat relation th e is no possibility of his getting out r no probability. Ho would be more slo to put his neck in the yoke. ,Ile shoul say to himself, "Rather than a Carib ean tvhirlwind with a whole fleet of ehip Ing in its arms, give me la zephyr off elds of' sunshine and gardens of peace." 31 urringe to nererneeleii. Rigorous divorce law will also hi der women from the fatal mistake of m ray- ing men to reform them. • If a y ung man, by 25 years of age or 80 yea s of age, have. the habit of strong drink xed on him, he 'is as certainly botind or a drunicard's grave ns that a train star ing out from the Grand Central depot 8 o'clock to -morrow morning is bound for Albany. The train may not reach Al- bany, for it may be thrown from the traek. The young man may not rea h a drunkard's grave, for something ray throw him off the iron track tof evil habit. But the prohability is that the! train that &tans to-morrosv inornin, t 8 &deck for Alba* will get there, and the probability 13 that the Young naan ho has tho baba of strong drink fixod! on him before 25 or 30 years of age will arrive at a drunkard's grave. She km:aye he drinks, although he tries to hide it by chewing cloves. Everybody knows he drinks. Parents warn; neighbors and friends warn. She will rnarry bim; she I reform WM. If She 11 i1flMfl0QQUL gweareareeneeieragreetanerteekieseaterate ear-- HURON` EXPOSITOR ln me expertment, wny, men, toe aivoroe la *ill emancipate her, because habit- drnukenness is a (rause for divorce in Indiana, Seliatuoky, Florida, Connecticut and pearly all the States. So the poor tittg goes to the altar of sacrifice. If ye Will show me the poverty struck etneets in any city, I will show you the henna' of the women who married rnen to reform them. In one case out of ten theueand it May be a sucoemsful experi- ment. I never saw the successful experi- ment, But have a rigorous divorce law, and that Woman Will sey, "If I am affianced to tlhat man, it is for life, and if now, in the ardor of his young love and 1 the prize to be won, he will not give up his qups,-when he has won the prize timely he will not giye up his cups." And so that' woman will say to the man: "No, sir; you are already mar- ried to the club, and you are married to that evil habit, and you are married twice, and yOu are a bigamist. Go!" A rigorou divorce law will also ao i muoh to hin er hasty and ineaneiclerate marriages, nder the irnpression that one can be easily released, people enter the relation ,without inquiry and without reflection. Thin -lame and 'inputs° rule the day. Perhaps the only ground for the marriage con -react is that she likes his looks, and he admires the graceful way she passes areund the ice cream at the picnic' It fir all they know about each other. It is all the.preparation for life. A Man not—atre to pay his own board bill, With no a dollar in his possession, will stand at the altar and take the lov- ing hand and say, "With all my worldly goods I thee endow.•' A woman that could not make a loaf of bread to save her life will ewear to love and keep him in sickness and in health. A Christian wilt marry an atheist and that always makes conjoined wrotchedneas; for if a 3na,n dies not believe there is a God he is neither to be trusted with a dollar nor with your lifelopg happiness. Having read much about love in a cottage, peo- ple brought up in ease will go and starve In a hovel. Renaway matches and elope- ments, nine her -Aired and ninety-nine out of a thousand of which mean death a,nd bell, multiplying-Z*8,11 hands,. You see them in every day's newspapers. Clergymen Left Defuneeless. : Our ministers in some regions have no , defense such as they have in other regions where the bannimust be ;previ- ouelet, published and an officer of the law mast' give.a certificate that all is right, so clergymen are left defenseless and unite those who ought never to be united. Perhaps they are too young, or perhape they are standing already In some doMestio compact. By the -wreck of ten thousand homes, by the holocaust lof ten thousand sacrificed men and women, by tho hearthstone of the family, w rich is the cornerstone of the state, and in the name of that God who hath set up the family institution and who bath made the breaking or the marital oath the most appalling of all pereurial, I implore the Congress of the United States ' to make some righteous, uniform law fel- all the States and from oaten to ocean on this illibject of mar- riage and divorce. Let me say $o all young people, before you ive your heart and hand in holy allianoe, use a I caution. Inquire outside eh to habits, explore the disposition, scrutinize the este, question the ancestry and find out he ambitions. Do not take the heroes an 1 the heroines of oheap novels for a in del. Do not put your life- time happinee. in the keeping of a man who has a rep Witten for being a little looea in inora s er in the keeping of a woman who dresses immodestly. Remem- ber Tat while good looks are a kindly gift o God, wrinkles or accident may despell them. Remember that Byron WW1 no 1ndre celebrated for his beauty than for hi S depravity. Remember that Absa.- lom's hair was' not more splendid than his hearts were despicable. Hear 1131 Hear it! The only foundation for happy mar- riaze that ever has been or ever will be is geed character. Ask the counsel of father and mother in thie most important step of your life. They are good advisers, They are the best friends you ever had. They made more sacrifices for yeti than any one else ever did, and they Will do more to -day for your happiness than - any other ple. Ask them, and above all, ask Go • -I used te smile at John Brown el Had ing- ton beeause, wben he was about to ffer his hand and heart in marriage to one who Leanne hilt lifelong (companion, he opened the conecrtation by saying, "Let tis pray." But I have seen so many ship- wrecks on the Sea of matrimonyi I have made up my mind that aohn Brown of Haddington was right. A union formed in prayer will be a happy union, though sickness p!tle the cheek and poverty empty the brea I tray and death open 'the entail graves and. all the path of Wei be strewn , with thorns,. from the marriage altar with i -es wedding march and orange blossoms clear on down to the last fare- well at that gate where Isaac and Re- becca, Abraham and Sarahy Adam and Eve, parted. And let me say to you who aredn this relation, if you make one man or woman happy you have not lived In vain: Christ says that what he is co - the church you ought tab° to each other, and if sometimes, through the difference of opinion or difference of disposition, you make up your mind that your mar- riage was a mistake patiently bear and forbear, remembering that there is glory In the patient endurance of a sad yoke. Life at the longest is short, and for those who have been badly raated in thiS world death Will give quiok and final hill of divmcement written in letters of green grass orl quiet graves. And perhaps, my brother, my sister, perhaps you may appreoiate each other better in heaven than you have appreciated each other on earth. ; Fellow -citizens as well as fellow -Chris- tiane, let us have a divine rage against anything that wars on the marriage state. Blessed institattion1 Instead of two /II MS to 'fight the battle of life, four; ia- stead of two eyes to scrutinize the path of life, four; Inst ad of two shoulders to lift the burden 0 life, four; twice tha energy, twioe the courage, twice the holy ambition, twice the probability of world- ly- SUOCCSS, twice the prospects of heaven. Into that matrimonial bower. God fetches two sous. Outside the bower, room for all cent oversies, but inside that bower -there .11 room for only one guest—the argel oflove. Let that angel stand at the, floral doorway ot this Edenic bower with drawn sword to hew down the "twat foe of that bower—easy divorce. And for every paradise lost may there be e paradise regained. And after we quit .our home, here may we have a brighter Lome in heaven, at the Wille:OWS of which, dale moment, are familiar faces watohing for our arrival and wondering why so lonc'we tarry." cstaert-ota4: Opals. - Chit uney Depow al wa.3s wears an opal, thinking it a. sort of hitary stone. He also admires the gem for i:s own sake. Russell Sage has worn an opal for years. He once said .he wore the stone because it was the black sheep of the jetvel family, and he hacl always found what was' bad for the mob was good for She choseo few. Few etage people can be induoed to Wear an opal or anything else that is considered unlucky. However, there are seine excelaign441„Maipmmateell is fond k:EPTEMBER 22 R. or opals, ana ; Dams Ivo:. ilites them so well she buys them by thadozen. Isadore Rush is anothei actress who is net afraid to wear tills gent. During the peat two years mere opals have been sold and warn than for the previous 25 years. Most of the stones now come from Ausbralita because • the beautiful Hungarian variety is apt to crack. It improves opals te be pit in an occasional alcohol bath. In spite Of their beauty, opals are not ranked among the costly gems, for, while oecasionally- as much. as $100 a karat has been paid for them, the price is usuallv Mach less. Daa;:or la Cheap sp lotacIoS. A surprising number of people buy their glasses from venders on the streets, says The New York Eveniirg Pose They get glasses for 50 cents Which seem to them just as good as a pain they would, pay $5 for having 1113d0 011 an mullet's presoription. and they think. they h. vo saved money. Glasses acquired in all sorts of ways, by inheritanee orate:change from a friend, or even glasses found on the streets, are used to the detriment, even to the destruction, of the wearer's sight. "People seem to think glasses are like clothes," said an oculist the othisr day, "and if they are fairly conlifortable and look well they ask no further questions." Another way in which people damage their eyes is through oareleSsness in try- ing to remove dust or cinders freini them. They try themselves, a friend !tries a rub, the nearest drug store, and the near- est optician are called on, ell before ap oculist is consulted. The result is that the eyeball is often badl* rubbed and scraped, and in nany instances perman- ent injury is don,' A astral Ian Horses. An A.ustrallan colt, bred Upton any well-erassed run, owned by any capable breeder, is an animal rubbed up, well boned and barrelled, such as might hold his own for line a.nd symeneterY and gameness of eye in almost tiny English meadow, Every drop of his bright blood Is English, or maybe thereas a clash of finer fluid st117—,,he Arab etrainl But your bush -bred 2 -year-old has Yet to meet his master. He knows l nothing of the sheltered life. of his Itngliah kinlsman. Born and begotten under the I open; "sky, he has never stood beneath a ineanar root He has found and tried his etrengh in a free and untitled earth, and h'ils thriven and hardened upon what it gave him. 021C0) and only once, the hand of man hae been laid upon him, when in.re, rage of terror lie was roped and thrown; and felt the station brand sizzle arid sting on is shoelder. 1 whai is set -i:0,1?; "Traine6 and organized coinmon sense," is !Frofes5or Huxleyht defluition o' science.. There is probably no better. The popular mind persists in thinking that there is a wide difference between science and knowledge in geperal. ! Yes, Shore is a wide difference, but it isjust the tdifference that there is between a trained and organized body 'of men far the accomplishing, of some great Work, and a crowd of men unorganized and undisciplined. What unscientific knowl- edge has accomplished may be reeghly seen in the condition of savage races to- day; while the changes wrought by knowledge trained and organized, 4n en- larging the sum of knoweedgej in e tend- ing men's 'petite; of perception, end in increasing the facilities not, merely for living, but for living well, ate ohanges In comparison with which all !others - recorded in history are trifiingl Prehistoric rkssy,r1olo4y. A correspondent of The London 'Ilmes, writing from Bushire, Persia, Istate al that excavations at Susa have produced in- letriptioneand relics 4f a very interesting character. Susa wasj probably the most ancient and importa t city in the world's history, compared with waich lboth The exoavationse which are being con - Babylon and Ninevei were mochtles. ilern ducted by French scientists. have already given us the names Of 11 kings at Susa hitherto unknown to history. Anew cuneiform inecription is" now ibeing de- ciphered. The data aee supposed to: be- long to a period whet' Egyptian ciyliza- tion was in its infaney. Some fine .speci- mons of the Flint Age have been foend. Susa, it is stated Wait at one tineS the capital of the Chaldean Bingdern. • Official Cariliptien Iii Cklna. lord Charles Beretforct gives several ; rather striking illustrations of a few of the causes which have brought Caine into her present condition. He rnentIons a general who is supposed to have 101000 seldiers under his !command. Eight:hen- deed is the ordinary 'lumber he keept in service, but upon inspection days thou - sends of coolies are hired at 11 centslper Mani, so that full 1154 can herI turned to Pekin and pay obtained for he larger iforaber. Ainandarinl with a consiticr- able appropriation, has eharge ct i the street lighting of Pekin, yeti cub,' ais Fights can he fourd ti ere Officials from the lowest to the highest are paid Very Seiall salaries, with tbe re ;nit tbat a Vast system of peeulatiOn I as developed. ' Carp Is AntolitorrittIv ntiote. People marvel at tha meohnnism of the; human body, with ite elet hence Hetet 63 ; arteries. But lean is simple in thia re- spect compared altn the carp ri hat ; re- markable fish 'naval no fewer than 4581. bones_ana muscle.; eyery time it hre.athes. It has 4,820 veins, to say riictiLiog Of its 09 ieliscles. • Au E lady co a visit to (11.3.,gew thiliks highly of th Scotch bairns. The oilier svciiing while out. cycling she was gree'eri wi h a ety—" Eh my a What a bonny ledy 1" and she states that! the dal- e of the Soceelacieldren 18 only ; equalLid their tl'aerimination. Bo on Your ..• ;lap PI L NAX THE BEST is always 'Imitated. Ducid's Kidney Pills, sold only in boxes ilk* this, are; widely Imitated, 1 ecause thty' aro the hest Kidney cure. Take none but 1 D-0- retetat 9111191191111111,911111111111111111911/19199,•911j;119111mmitiqv4 900 DROPS ege tablePreppration for As'.1 imitating &rood andRegulafl theStomadis andBowels aril SEE THAT THE FAC—SIMILE SIGNATURE TO of tat as, Conces BREVE. 246 Bord 114-Y BI0.--Caom twders1ene0o Lot rig, black. 'The o ,ropeaty and P ' ontotesprgestiongheerfut • ss and Rest.Contains neittlei itinnri,Morphine nor Ivruleral, I ' txr NAR.0 0 TIC Rave or Of BralsfMETIUHER lionpAyn Sea- ...41.r.Senntr Adair Sar - dinin Sete #. Appernant Jh Cathanrkrearin, Vann Seed - (Istri&d Sugra- frintaprrin, /Yam perfect liertiedy for Cons tipa- • n, Sour 8 tomach, Piarrhoe4 ortns ,Convulsions,Feverish- .55 and Loss OF SLEEP. CXAOT COPY 07 WRAPPER. ISONTH WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTLE OF CASTORIA Oastorla, is put up in one -size -bottles only. It Is younoatusyttgdlingla ern on tDoteu, rptieala loorwpauroirdieyene ttliallt Is "just as good" and "will answer ennyper. pose." /0i -flee that rou get 0 -A -8-T-0-2-14. Thciemrs- rignature eve, Sprin Stock. , Cur pring stock of Furniture is comptete. We extend a special invita- tion to all admirers of good furniture to inspect our stock. We have always something new to show you in new designs aud finish at close prices. ..1:3-3Aaj=3; This department is complete -with a large selection of the best goods, and obliging attention given to this branch of the business. Night calls promptly attended to by our Undertaker, Mr. S. T. 'Holmes, Godsr ich street, Scaforth, opposite the Methodist church. BROADFOOT, Ips0X & 00., Appearance counts , . , Fra Great Deal, 1 , ...../..m...... , You 'Imay not have considered, the matter, but the way a man is clothed may change the whole trend of his life. The well dressed. Man invariably gains- the pre- ference over his brother of less tidy get-up. ' E3RIGH1'S OLOTHES are a guarantee of the .perfect garment. They do not eo-t any more than the inferior kind, but look better. wear'!better, feel better., IGHT'S CLOTHES aro good cluthes: Be sure your have the name Bright,in them, and you Win always have the satisfied, feeling of a well dressed man. IGHT IROS., FURNISIIERfS, SEJEOPTII. HOOL AliM164111111•111 'A ail.). we come to -I he front in t!,e sqoe with i lii uewebt atal west f.nIiio3 ab'e on the maiket.: We h. Ni,.= a s,,leridid a soitateut in, I lined for Pall awl Winter wear.' ecial in Chibiren's School Shoes, wrorg and •durable, leather lined, st Miat is needed for wet:. eatlikr. You wid. Make up• rni,take, as ali our Fill and 1.1,inter s ock is' new, t.d ev!--ry poir is a treat, to the, . w are"; in e ,rnfu t . and price. ords cnunot tell al 1, eo c .11 and b. convince -d. - 11 8 14 - HE NEW SHOE STORE, ,flo m ri Bros.' :Old Stand, Sesfoith. In t Ca3h.and; One. Price. -U1 tice to Creditors. e th&lter of the Estate of Cue -mita Me- lt( neee decerteed 008 having 933% f!l$ i a:sink the & e o stalf ; Al ie 0, b. -i t n (*We' ael, : .tr. of- the towns] ip of II t I ett, (atre a i c loci, n't 06e1-11 to- 30th da' of Jun J tlin n.otitin'oEs rat or to, t ie n ill rf thaid Gil - e, s L8, rftquirert 40 1r hef ,re' :13 i ist do of Octoh- sr, 'Si , ti s.-nd p it oU!sre of their tithe., en.3, 1 v -rill d b affii- d at . lo :he nneere Ivied Solicit-ir for M.. t 5, cM (hall, liar o:•.,k P. .3 Al er said$ dato, the t o- wilt pro t'Ciii t )4413o) ute ills atsets of amotg Vie tkott•A 1! t citd thereto, hay - I e olly to t c o'alir s of v bleb he h •s re - ice, and efot r such 411-=tribui4E1 he nill not s id Fxin, the t n 1 r - cow no be 1 al le f w o ri si Thi- FirAle bat all Dat d a )r pait ot tee as e 9 to ray ored 'T of Seafortb. - 'e athar dale & he slonl rot l -ave rftnik-^r1 netine. Is give,n pursoont ta the s'atote in ththe egte day of Anuct, 1899.at F. HOLM ESTED, ,So'iti:toF for _hn CrEoextoiceuotor. 10550 HICH CRADE Furniture EA1PORIUNI Leatherdale Landsborough SEA FORTH, De.:ders in first-class Furniture o all kinds, in latest designs. Upholstering neat y done. We allo do picture fram- ing. and a choice selection of pictures alwayq on hand. Curtain poles at al pri:es, and put up. We are else AL:out, for the New William's *Win Machine, best in the market for de - in s-ic use, no travelling agents, cP high prices. iin the Undertaking Department, we Ira' i our geode from the best houees in °aerie, 1 erel guarantee satiefaction in every eta ; meet of our work. We have always, medet :Trliele“'eorshetforter ln t it a point to furnish chairs, and all other IT - Arterial and cavity embalming done scientitie principles. torr 'attended to at Mr, Landsborougha resit ,tuaneheretofore.rals ,niEEOF CRAW% 0 P. S. Night and Sunday calls ,wili bk' !dence, direetly in the rear of the Dona& 11- , Bank. = es , Landsborought SEAFORTH. TO BEN cession 3, Mai rot eiase lend, good VW be let tor a term o pay to the proprieWr, _EACOEBS WANI Sections No. 4, 8 sub:Polo, bolding se -ten apphoatiosis rec.-trod us*. AnotY to Thom stetlig 'EV107; dootrges esatiaret 1900. write; tesober." TB0X18 rllO TUE LADIES,— the ladles of Beaf peed 50 40 up bear An aseratnrent of su evdteheetzehauged. 1 -or black hair. Res' ibirket Strsetts,-Sealot 'iflUjY AND S a grand pen off inorosi—Irme ora best,stotir in Carad tosdeocraud1ue t SO eo1o51eIo1 Italian lull jj,�o1 BeekeePe Elves, Brooltere, Era *Roth Utrauter. Bt arWIL tLIA M REAL EST: - 4,an ree tiOri FA' sli %teased, underdreta eerie teeded to greet Ilsere le a good orchai creek runs through th house. 'tilt rear id tedentto the hest Ina vitet &toot watte Ian 'dock taisina. It wil toms. Apply to the 3Alf.R ROBISON. TOR SAVE:. X Tockersreith,e01 ed and 3.0acres of bus and uuderdralued. and triune barn, with eggood water, and an sirablelartn, being nnl Sortie It will be sold -further particula-s,r1 Bead, Seeiorth P.* -1-111810BNCE IN *ale, zbtaPi Square in Beat-r0L. There le a tornfortabi hard and eort.1 oonveulerces. The pastes:9,de. There, alt ithads of butt and Alios. lane stable. -001avetifalt and most irk &sloth and will e WARD. FARMM FY:a SA L, R.., 'nickel sties cleared. and The land le nil in ttnderkirodued and owl *geed tR'e Storey bri 130 fest square, witirsi is au *emend a halll is satiated two miles raw good roadeieadhi mile mid a quarter saine,dfat.ece from thew psitleals" a)* EginoudvIlle P. 0, 'TflLAO LOTS Village 'of Bay in go in the t vaeretvsn 1 aeres the land to be sold ec Xertbeast -corner et ehip of Stanley, eonl are both situated on corporation of Bayfit be aim. Title Irel futther particulars ROBERT WATSON Executors. VARM FOR SALE Let 2e, Coalmen acres, 45 *cies clean hush. The land is well underdrained a premises good Iti *tabling ler 19 head are seta two neveali 1.imUeands-gnarl is peat cffioe, church Cromarty and five ri sold etereaserable t get mere land. Fo the Tirtmlies, or STONEMAN. 0 prar.spip PARII tp South Thames, aeri e, 05 acres nada wood. Good brick; woodshed, and larg4 and good drivingl drained with tile vation. There is ail Ilia groUnde urn we It is .withlis tour churches, fethcdie within a mile. Ti house and stables grinding, ate. Thil -county ot Boron, respect and will be, proprietor dteirsel or address_Thamen 0 PLENDID FAN JO -did-farm and t the laith =nceasioa the 'Village el Leadl of which are clear 41 in a aced state ot - underdrained, and raising a.ad feedlot land on the font homes, a large ban -math, 4 large inoi "buildings In fact-ol chards and four nl jolt)! the Village o offiee, blackstoith Leadbury hctel is I it. is is now arda is one of tbe beet 1 ties in the County and on 4 say terms not fold in a masa if a suitable !twat apply on ihe pre ' roprietor, Leo.db STOC1 , Bo.s.n FOR $ keep for al latkOley. thorou SI, payable at the of returning it n thoroughb.. bred YORRIPHRI be admitted to es. of aierviee, White Figs for ea fpli,xWORTH VICE. ---The *11 the Bruoefle Tunworth Boat, SI aa; yahle eft.rnkg bred young 11130li lictOAR SO