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The Huron Expositor, 1899-09-29, Page 2THE H1::TI,O.N EXPOSITOR SEPTE.MBER 29, 1899 COL , Taken internally, apPlied externally, Grit- fitles Menthol Liniment goeft quickly to the Beat a the trouble, gives reiief like magic, effects a epeedy cure and prevents serious 1 lung complications whieh result from i a neglected cough or cold. No r home should be Witheet Its Mrs. 1 Charles Bennet of Yfflecouver, B. C., i writes. "In our family we swear by 1 Griffitbes Menthol Liniment for coughs i and colds. We have used, it in the simplest 1 coughs and In stubborn colds and it ; bas never fulled to give almost instant re- i Lief and a quick cure." , 18. 1 - -- et ii GRIFFI PIENTH LLNI MEN =Unite THE INtrilAtri• Anerli110. AT ALL DRUGGIB*8 25 051TS • • - A Guaranteed Catarrh Cure. ' • Japanese Catarrh taire—ti e six boxes— buy thin at one time—apply exactly ac- cording to the directions -Lan. If you are not 'cured see your druggist; lie will arrange to pay you your money beck. There's a swll cur. No cure, positive guarantee with ezry box that Japanee Catarrh Cure i -you get your money baekei Guarantee in eyery package. 50 cents at al druggiste. U5 IfInety-five Curea In One inndred Oases. Within a period, of sity days, on* him - lied eases of Asthma t eat d by Clarke's Kola Compound howed tho rharvellou.s per- centage of ninety-five a sointe cures—and these figures. are gathered from hospital reeords. 52 a bottle ; three bottles for $6. Bold by all druggists. or The Griffiths & Macpherson Co.. 121 Church. street, Toron- to. 21. Sold by J. S. Roberts. REAL ESTATE FOR SAWS. FM SALE,—In the Village of Ilensall, a fine brick dwelling and store combi ed, welt situated near centre :of v liage„ leans r affeetable‘ Apply to MISS S. CARLISLE, Hensall. 1615 — ' VARM FOR, SALE,- Soeth .,[1 half of 20, 5th Concessi known a , the Sturgeon farm. with good fences and unchrdrei ate fair. Tnis is a splendid fan andwill be sold cheap. Apply t Hensall. elf of 30 and North n, tOwnship of Hay, he sail is unexcelled, ing. The buildings hi a good location 'SAMUEL SMILLIE - 1648t1 FAM FOR SALE.—For aisle,. Lot , Conceseion 0, Hollett, near village of Kireburn,' containing about 100 acres, all cleared and in a seed state of cultivation. There are good b lin 0, good echard and plenty of excellent water.;1 Th el ia splendid farm and will be sold cheap. I' we ate poseession. : e Apply to MRS, SOFIOALES, Col sta e P 0, 1607 (lotto 1, town- ie property Gf reale. On the use, barn and orchard, and spring and a ton P. 0, ; or 1.8424f MIARM FOIL SALE.—Lot 30, ghlo X of Tuckersmith, H. R. ' the. late Wplirten Whitely IA offea 1 te farm is erected a two story sto e sheds. Them is also a good b arhe the farm is well teetered with a 1 ving well. Apply W. te, LAWRENC , to E. WHITELY on tte premise OPLENDID FARM FOR SA Ea-T./Per @ale the 0 splendid farm ot Mr. Robert Go Week, on. the North Foad, a mile and a half frok Seatorth. I contains 176 acres, nearly all cle red and in a high state or cunivatton, -.mere ts a tstc4 house, good bank barn and every thin condition and well underdrained. Itit, eau terms, as the preprietor de8ire:0 not sold before the fall It will be ROBERT OOVENLOOK, Seatorth P. story brie In first•cla ill be sold ( to retire. rotted. Achlre 0 19113 U lEIARM FOR SALE.—For gale, in the ,E,. McKillop, the north 60 (wee of Ilion 14, boundary inc. About 47 sere. acres of good hardwood bush, 10ou lhoice fruit trees, sell ungurpassel, oneed ; scshoel half a 1011e away, church convenient •, will be sole c ticulars, apply to the proprietor pn Walton P. O. DANIEL MoblILLAN, Township t 16, Comte cleared, thri two acres- I drained at oat office ar • .p. For pe t e promisee, : roprietore 15094f , - PROPERTY IN HARPURHEY FO axle, the residence in Harlem bee, =pied by the undersigned. There house, bricked inside, and a etabba, and a half of lend, also a splendid (orchard of fruit, both tante and small. It is main street, and hae all necessary cony he park lot immediately in the rear oontaisinetie sores, on which there. and large stable, also an orchard an1 properties will be sold ',nether or sep properties are admirably adaptedi tor: er or market gardener. Apply o 1 the proprietor, or addrees Seeforth P. DYNES. i , SALE.—T: at present o Isi a good tr re also over an Ioi ot all-kire S tuated on tt :niences. Ale t of the eine i5 a good how well. Thee ately. Thee retired tarn t . pee mioeS t I , WILLIA' 16 4 tf 1E1A1111 FOR SALE —For sale, ot X 10, McKillop, con'ainine ioc so and free from atua p3. On 11 18 a lar bank barn, hay shed, implement once with a good orchard fine three se1I. acres feeded to grass, with gond once: 11 18 within two miles of Wiothro , wh griet and sew mid and clout chee, lanl quarters of a mile of (Owe], e ith good directlon. For full earticulare, ap JAMES H. WEIGHT, Paint Ethiard , — :0, Concessio 5, all cleare g frame t one( and pie per Thera are 6 and dretne re are steret e within thre 3ade in ever ly to MEL8 '. 0 , Ontaric setaxii palter IN TUoimitelieret FOR SA. X Lot 24, Concession 0, H. R. 8„ 300taining 100 a^ree, 00 acres cleared state of cultivet on, 10 acres ot good There is on the pre:unit-es a good bri kitchr n ; a 1 orge new bank horn, e i th undera-ath '• an open shed; driving he buildings ; two g od wens and oecte: eePee front Seatorth and Mx hone Cline gravel road. School (tom bv. Will Apply on the pretniets ti itoBERT Mt: fo.tit P. o. E.—For torah Tuckersmith : nd in a 4o3e to rdword bash :k houee :lone etab'he ise, and othe rd. It is n oe a goo( he Held cheap 'ETV, o- itiefhtetf an: fly: tea 2 , 9( loh el are nil ncl 4 a the ur. 'eat MIAMI FOR ReLteeseor gale, 1,1 12 L. R. 8, TwAterimith, coDtainio arcs c'eered, and the balarreo in hit The land is all in a go xi etete of cunt( underdrained and well fe n ed. On t a good two sto-ev brick It ewe. and a ca tett I (ware. w:th etor e otabline und le an acre and a halt of oret ard. Thiorc is 0,taited two mil$ 4 a• d a hall fr tri bee go31 roads leadine to it in all direet mile and a qu an- from Herr a`,' e oo: same di t nee from Femur elville 'cl ther port'eulara, apply on the prerni Egenondville P. 0. WM. eleGEOC1I. 1, Coneciploo 103 (tore de ood b Alan, Is Iv h. promisee , o 1 bank ban : net th. There xeetlent fi lierAfortn, ions It 0 A, and l For : 9, et add 1662x8 _ FARM IN Ti`CILEIOMITII ["J14 SA AM 11, Conceseien 8, Tuckeremit .00 acres, all cleared but about 8 a.:res it is tir derdraincd, well fenced, and :t cuItivatien. Theie is a itood etone tarns, stables and ()et-he-qrs.:8. It al chool ; le within five reilee of $Oa'or Ales from Kippen There is nicety Yill be :old with or witheut tha crop he beet farms in the tre teedp, aed we ally tonne, as the proprictor wan's 10 0 acres Made a mile and a quarter, : ot, well ft need, bet no building .1 WI ether or separately. Apply on the p rear Eentoralville P. 0. JAMES MeT E.—For I1310, 1, coraeluing :1 good harsh. a high ofiete ouse ; g (ens a geld h, and 12 o god water. It 19 one 1 be doht retire, Also nod graeleg I be sold : tithe', Or VISIL 1630 tt -d ree of on to• ad - on or. 0 , Is is MARII FOR SALE.—Lot 33, Corte 7 wawronetrii, containing 12e ac -ea iTe plata a good back clwe Bing h los ing 18x28, 1i sterey h gh ; Atone eel ante„ summer kechen and woodshed Id eoft wster; trams learn 66x58, with aderneath ; frame pig pen 16x32 : oar& ; 95 acres cleared, balance is go Ash: well felceJ with cedar ralla and t three good spring wdis : st.hool and mleat ; five miles from Blyth, 12 in i lee tm, 17 miles from Goderich ,' tungt be ie estate, Apply to JOHN WALFA r the Jotter h Jacketn eet ate, elete amiltoo, ele th. :don 4, gist There le 20x2, witn ar full 10x 4; hard atone gables twa geed d herdwood well watered church eon- t roll WI nip lid to eloge le,, Executor 1 0,, or ti 1653tf lARM IN STANLEY FOR SALF. - i , 9 and the we• -t hal et Let e, en th n, or ileown :on Line, of St elle% , Teo ies 160 acres, all at wh'eh is c•eired ires. 11 14 in a state of and ca e cu:t need aref ell underdraine I, motell:. wit a, large frame dee 'nix Pause as good eel stone bundati en and cellar, Inree ith tototee retiring undern ath, ond lute rlidinge, including a eare pie he re. chards of (boleti fruit, 11144 Mee Ow ental t4e4. Trere r.re t to spring cc rough the farm-, atd plent: (51 itt.o t er rou id w thout pumping. it a we arkets, churchee, selrols, poet effi •e„ avel road.: leading trout it in all diee thin vtew of Lake Hurou and the en pester& up and down from tha h e of the beet equippee tenni in the II be sold on taay terme, aa the prop de tire on account of 111 health. Apply on I, or addrees Blake P. 0. JOHN DUN r eale, Lot 12 it cent:eo- farm con- /),,..cl.t four :lotion well I tile. Thera 1 i now, with bank barn eroue other Two rood e and or is (fit runn'ug wjt-r all the I satiated for ae.d good :foes. lo i ate een ba ti e. Tele :ounty, and ur want o to the prem. '. 1640.11 98 If 98 11 16 id r• • *10 De Witt Talmage's Prescrip- for LongeLrity a • 4--)4 co Le - LI 0 ID 0 2 01° \ ashington, Sept. 24.—In- this d1 - colt se Dr. Talmage gives prescriptions for the prolongation of life and preac es the gospel of physical bealth. The texJ is letelnis xvi, 16, "W th long life wil I saLlify him.' , 1 hrough the mistake 1 of its friends rc li „ion has been chiefly associatea wiPi tic i bcds and graveytitelS. The veh le st.b cot to many people 114 odorous v1th cl,1 riae and carbolic aci . Thereare pee - tele vho cannot pronouucli the word "re - Ile ion" without hearing in it the clippieg al of the tombstone cutter. It is high rim that thia thing were changed and :-1 et religion, instead of being • represeet- ell 1 s a hearse to carry out the dead, .i o 11 berepresented as a chariot in e.1.1 h the living are to triumph. R disrioni so far from subtracting from • (no • vitality, is -a glorious addition; It si native, curative, hygienic. It is good ke eyes. good for t'ne ears, good for ii ,..5 -plum, good for the eigestion, good f.•? tho nerves, good for the museleal 'S. he David in another part of the psalna ; rdy that religion may be dcrninant, he 04 not speak of iv as a -mild sickness or sa preachttion or an attack of moral and it lintel orarbp. He speaks of it as "the . _ring hcalth of all nations," while God i 1 the text promeses longevity to the M, saying, "With :long life will 4 ,.eiery Min.'. Theittet Is that men ard -,ecilien die too Eooa. It is high tline that !e14;ion joined the hand of medical sei- eee in attempting to improve -human '. p:.4*C.Vi ter. A dam hved 030 years; Metb4- ..1:th lived efie years. As late in the hie - .seer of the world as Vespasian theee were at one time in his empire 45 people 1.15 years cid, So far down as the s1 - nth century Peter Zartan died Sit 1:15 veers of age. I de not say that religi n -eel ever take the race back to antedil - :la:longevity, but I do gay the leug h ,..f life will be inereased. A Flundredi Yearx Old. • It le Held in Isaiah, "The child shell See a hunclrecl years old." Now; ece6rding to Scripture, the child is to be a eundrod years old, may not the iren t.ed women reach to 800 and 400? ¶h. :1! i is that we are mere dwarfs 4nd .i.cletens compared with some of he te et -rations that are to come. Take be .,.. (Heap race. They have been under ; e I. aage for centuries. Give them l a i leruce, and they develop a Freder ok 1.euelass or a Toussaint L'Ouvert re. (von) under the serfdom of sin, w at And, if the white race shall be brourt shell beethe body, what shall be the soul? Religion has only just touched our wortld. (-live it full power for a few centuries, and who can tell what will -- be he $tttngth of man and the beauty of wo- 1 men and the longevity of all? My design is te show that practical religion is the friend of long life. I move it first from the fact that it makes tee care of onr health a positive Chris- ti in duty. Whether we shall keep early m. late hours, whether wo shall take food dierstible or indigmitible, whether there Mein be thorough or incomplete mastica- t len, are queations eery often deferred -to the realm of whimsicality. , I3ut the Christian man lifts triis, whole problem cf health into the accountable and the (Urine-. He says, "God has given me this Ludy, and he has led it the temple of theHoly Ghost, an to deface its altars cs inar its walls or erumble its pillars is a God defying sacrilege " He sees God's celigraphy in leveiy ;page, anatemical and ellysfo1og1ca1.1 Ho sa.ys, "God liaii given use a wonderfel body for noble prposes" —that arm with 82 eurious bcinese-wield- al by -46 curieus muscles and all under i he brain's telegraphy, 850 pounds ef blood rushing through the heart every hour, the beart in 24 hours beating 100,- Ce.,0 times, during the 24 hours the lungs taking in 67 hogsheads of air, and all te.14 moehanism not more mighty than te Dente and easily disturbed aud demol- !Awl. The Christian man says to him- ' .!1', "If I hurt my nerves, if 1 hurt my v -tin, if I hurt any of my physical facul- the, I insult God and clan for dire retie- ladeon " Why did Ged tell the Levites not to offer to him in sacrifice animals !„Iperfect and diseased? He meant to tell es in all the ages that We are to offer to- c:eci our very best physioal condition, and. a :nen who through irr Igular or glutton- ee.4 eating ruins his health is not offer- ;: g to God such a s.Orifice. Why did 1 eel write for bis cloak at Troas? Why J111(1 Slid) a great manes Paul be anx- ioue about a thing so insignificant as an overcoat? It, was beertuee he knew that W 1i1) pneumonia and rheumatism he would nib be worth half as much to God en -I the church as with respiration easy tine foot free, 1 Ctiro for You'rPh yxical Forces. I An intelligent [Christian man would coneider it an absurdity to kneel down al "light and Pray and ask God's proteo- tiun wbile at the seine time he kept the windows of his bedroom tight shut againet fresh air. He would just as soon think of going out ion the bridge between New York and Brooklyn, leaping off and then praying to God to keep him from getting hurt. Just as long is you refer thin whole subject of physical health to -ehe realm of whimsicality or to the pas- try 000k or to tho butcher or to the baker or to the apothecary or to the clothier you are not acting like a Christian. Take care of 'all your physical forees—nervous, n usculer, bone, brain.; cellular ;tissue -- for all you must DS brought to judg- ment. Smoaing your, nervous system into fidgets, burning out the coating of re th your stomach with wine logwooded and stryohnined, walking with thin s nsak.e your feet look delicate, pi ched at In the wahlt until you are nigh cu in two A th and neither part worth anything, groan- , Ing about slok headache and pal . ita of the heart, which you think ea le from mg° folly! God, When they eae from y ow nn on a _t_i_on U" What right ban any man Or woman to defa e the temple of the Holy Ghost? Wha is the ear? It is the whispering gall rt er of the soul. What is the eye?. I is tie ohservatory God °constructed, its , toles ope eweeping the heavens. .Whet -le the 1 and? An instrument so wonderful that, when thaBarl / of Bridgewater be- nne thed in his will $40,000 for treatisee tab written on the wisdom, power and goodness Of , God, Sir Charles Bell, the great English anatomist and surgeon, found his greatest illustration he in the con- struction '0 thunian hand. devoting his whole hook to that eubjects So won- derful arelthese bodies that God names his own attributes after different parts of them. .111is omniscience—it is Godre eye; his omnipiesence—It is God's ear; his omnipotence—ie Is God's arm; the uphol- stery of the midnight heavens—it is the work of , God' S fingers; his life giving power—it le the breath of the Almighty; his dominion—"the government shall be upon his shoulder." A body so divinely honored and so divinely constructed, let us be careful not to abuse it. When it becomes an a Chris- tid tys to take ca -re of our health, is not th whole tendency toward longevity? If I tois my watch about reokiessly and drop 1t on the pavement and wind it up any -th e of day or night I happen to think lof it and often let it run down, while ou are -Careful with your watch and never abuse it and wind it up just at the same hoar °voter night and put it In a place where it will not suffer from the violent charges of atmosphere, whip!' watch will last the longer? Comnsen sense answers. Nose, the human body is God's watch. 'You etc° tho hands of the watch, you see the face of the watoh, but the beating of the heart Is the tick; ing of the waft. Be careful and do not let It run down., • Religion a Pile rid of Longevity. . Again, I remark that practical religion Is a friend of longevity 171 the fact that it Is a protest against dissipations., which injure and destroy the health. Bad men and women live a very short life.' Their sins kill them. I know hundreds of good old men. ,but I do_not know half a dozen bad old men. Why? They do.not get old. Lord Byron died at Missolonghi at 36 years of age, himself his own Mazeppa, his unbridled passions the horse that cashed him into the desert. Edgar A. Poe dial at Baltimore at liti`years of age. The back raven that alighted on the bust shove his door was delirium tre- mens— Cnly this and nothing more. Napoleon Bonaparte lived only fest be yond midlife, then dial at St Helena and one of his doctors said that ease was induced by excessive The hero df Austerlitz, the man one step of hie foot in the 'Europe shook the earth, killed b :box! How many people we hay who have not lived out half t because of their dissipations and °noes! Now. practical religion i against all dissipatione of any "But ''you say, "professors have fallen, professors of roll got drunk, profeseere of rell misappropriated trust funds, of religion have absconded," they threw' away their religi they die their morality. If a White Star Line steamer,- Liverpool, in mici•Atlantic ju board and is &owned, Is that against the White Star Line to take the man across the 06 if a man jumps over the gun religion and goes down never to rise, is that any reason for your believing that rolig:ion has no capacity to take the man clear through? In the one case, if he had kept to the steamer, his body would have been saved; in the other ewe, if he bad kept to his religion, bis morals would heve been saved. There are aged people who would have been deed 25 years ago but Mr the de- fenses and tee equipoise of religion. You ,hava nc more natural resistance than hundreds' of people who lie in the cone- teries to -day, slain by -their own yiees. The doctors made their case as kind and pleasant as they could, and it was cafied congestion of the brain or something else, but the snakes and 'the bluellies that seemed to crawl over the pillow in the sight of the delirioue patient showed what was the matter with him. You, the aged Christian man, walked along -hy that unhappy OTle until you came to the golden pillar or a. Christian life. You went to the right; he went to the left. lhat is all the difference between you. If this I ellgion is a protest against all forms of dissipation, then 11 15 an illus- trious friend of longevity, "With long life will I eatisfy him." - It 'rokos oat the Worry. Again, religion is a friend of longevity in tho fait that it takes the worry out of our temporalities. It is not work that kills men; it is worry-. When a man be - t:01110$ a genuine Christian, he makes over to God not only his affections, but his family. his business, his reputation, his body, his mind, his soul, everything. Industrioue he will be, but never worry-. leg, because God is managing his affairs,. How can he worry about business ' when in armee, to his prayers God tells him when to .)uy and when to sell? And if he gain, -that is best, and if he lose, that is beet. Suppose you had a supernatural neigh- bor who came in and stud: "Sir, I want yOU to call_on nre in every exigency. I UM your fast friend. I, could fall' back on 120,000,000. I can foresee a panic ten yeers. I hold the controlling stook in 30 of the befit monetary institutions of New York. Whenever you are in trouble call on me, and I will help you. You can have my money, and you can have my influence. Here is my band in pledge for it." How inuoh weuld you worry about business? Why, you would say, "I'll do the best I can, and then I'll depend on my friend's generosity for _the rest." Now, more than that is promised to every Christian business man. God says to him: "I own New York and London and St, Petersburg and Peking, and Australia and California, are mine. I can foresee a,panio a hundred years. I.have all the resources of the universe, and I am your letet friend. When you get in business trouble or any other trouble, call on me, and I will help. Here is my hand In pledge of omnipotent deliver- ance," HoW Much should that man worry? Not much, What lion will dare to put his -paw on that Daniel? Is there not rest in this? Is'there not an ..eturnal vacation in this? "Oh," you ev, "here Is a man who asked God for a blessing In a certain enterprise, and he lost $5,01 ai in it. Explain hat." I will, Yonder is n factory, and one wheel is going north, and the other wheel is going south, and one weel plays laterally-, and the other playa vertt- °ally. I go to the manufacturer, and I say: "0 manufacturer, your machinery' Is a contradiction! Why do you not make all the wheels go ono:way?" "Well," he says, "I made them to go in opposite dI4 otions on purpose, and they produce e right result. You go downstairs and mine the carpets we are turning out this establishment, and you will see." go down on the other floor, and I see e carpets, andI am obliged to confess at, though the wheels in that factory In opposite ireetions, they turn out beautiful rent t, and while I am stand - g there lookinig at the exquisite fabric his dis- snuffing, who by center of a snuff - known eir days indulg- a protest rind. 1 religion ion have ion have rofessors es, but n before man on a rind for ps over - anything e capacity an? And ale of his ow: to el° an old scripture passage comes into my mind, "All things week together for good to them who love .God." Is there not a tonic in that?_ Is there not longev- ity in that? Suppose a rnan is all the time worried about hie repntation? One man says he lies. another says he is stupid. another earl he le dishonest, and half a dozen printing establishments attack him, and he is in a great state of eXcitement' and worry and fume and gannet sleep, but religion comes to him and says: "Man, God le on your side. He will take care of your renutation. If God be for you, who can be againet you?" HOW I1111012 should that man worry about hie reputa- tion? Not inuoh, If that broker who some years ago in Wall street, after he had lost money, sat losvn and wrote a fareWell letter to his wife before he blew' hiebraini out—if, instead of takingout of his pocket a pistol, be had taken out a well-read New Testament, there would have bean ono less sLicide. 0 nervous ilnd feverish people of the 'world, try this almighty sedative! You will live 95 y ing powdr. I want or mor ars longer under its Booth - is not chloral that you. hine that you w' nt. It is the gospel of }Jesus e. hrtst. life will I satisfy him." Again, practical religron Is longevity in the face corroding care: about Ever Y man wants to come of him. If yea train,l, you wa t to k it is going to top. a ship, you w nt to bor it is goin to ru tell Me yonih bo your flu polite a wa, did not bell matter settled ture exietenee Had me into r men have u gather would is a state of a aro people wh With long / friend of that it removes all a future existence. know what is to be- get on board a rail ow at what depot 1 you get on board now into what har- And if you should ve no interest in what is to e destiny I wotild, in as s I know how, tell you I ye you. Before I had this with reference to my fif-, the question almost wor- ined11 ealth, The anxieties th on s subject put to- rakea1 martyrdom, This l '1' 111 u healthiness. There fret t emselves to death for leer of dyi • g. I want to take the strain off your i nerves and the depression off your soul, and Iemake two or three experiments.Experirrnt first: When you . go out of thi worlf , it does not make any differentwhee er you have been good or bad, hother you believed truth or error, you ill gO straight to glory. " I in possi ble, " you I say. "My common sense as well 0 'my religion teaches that the bad and t o good cannot live together forever*. You ire nie no comfort in that experiment." 1Experiment the second: When you leads this world, you will go into an interi ediate state, where you ean ), get coniverted nd prepared for heaven. "Tir.possible," you gay. "As tne tree fall- eth, so must 1t lie, and I cannot postpone to an , -intermediate state reformation which ought tO have been effected in this state." lExperirnent the thirst; Teem is »o future word. When a man dies, that Is the lest of him. Do not worry about what you are to do in another state of being. You will not do anything. "Im- possible," you say. "There Is something that tells me that death is ot tne appen- dix, nil the prefaco, fe. There fa earn° bing tha tells inc that on this side of th4 grave I nly get started and that I shall go on f raver. My power to think says) 'forever,' my affections say 'for- ever, i my cepa ety to enjoy or suffer 'for- ever.1" . Peace Now and Ef ereafter, Well, you def eat me in my three ax periments. I have only one more to niake; arid if Su defeat me in that I aln es.hatisted. A mighty One on a knol back of Jerusalem one day, the skie filled with forked lightnings and th earth filled with volcanic disturbances turned his pale and agonized face toward the heavens' and said: "I take the sin nod sorrows of the ages into :my own heart. I am the expiation. Witniess, earth and heaven and hell, am• the expia- tion," And the hammer etruak him, and the spears punctured him, and heaven thundered: "The wages of sin is death!' "The soul that sinned', it shall die!' "I will by no motile clear the guilty!" Then there was silence for half an hour, and the lightnings were drawn back into the scabbard oil the sky, and the earth ceased to quiver, .andi all the colon; of the sky began to shift into a rainbow woven out of the falling tears of Jesits, and there was red as of the bloodsheciding, and there was blue as of the bruising, and there was green as of the heavenly foliage, and there was orange as of the - day' dawn, and along 'the line of the blue I saw the words, "The blcod of Jesus Christ oleanseth from all sin," and along the. line Of the green I saw the words, "The leaves of the Tree of Life for the healing of the nations," and along the line of the orange I saw the words, "The day spring from on high hath vis- ited us," and then I sad, the storm was over, and the rainbow ;rose higher and higher until it seemed retreating to an- other heaven. and, plantiihg ono column of its colors on one side !the eternal hill, and planting the other Column of its col- ors .on the other side the eternal - hill, it rose upward and upward, "and, behold, there wee a rainbow about the throne," Accept that sacrifice and quit worrying. Take ti3e tonic, the inspiration, the longevity, of this truth. Religion is sun- shine; that is health, Religion is fresh air and pure water; they are healthy'. Ask all the dootors, and they will, tell you that a gala conscience and pleasant anticipations are hygienic. I offer you perfect peace now and hereafter. What do you want in the future world? Tell me, and you shall have it, Orchards? There are the- trees with twelve manner of fruits, yielding fruit every month, Water scenery? There le the river of Life from under the throne of God, clear as crystal, and the sea of glass mingled with flre. Do you want inesic? There is the oratorib of the Cre- ation led on by Adam, and the ora,torio of the Red Sea led on by Mceses and the oratorio of the' Meeeiah -led on by St. Paul, while the Archangel with sveinging baton controls the 144.000 who make up the orchestra. Do you want rennion? There aro your children waiting to kiss you, waittng to embrace you, waiting to twist garlands in your hair. You have been. accustomed to open the door on this side the sepnloher. I open the door on the other side the sepulcher. You heve been accustomed to walk in the wet erase on the top of the grave. I ehow you ehe underside of the grave. The bottom has fallen out, and the long ropes with which the pallbearers let down your dead lot them clear through into heaven. Glory be to God for this robust, healthy religion! Ie will have a tendency to make you live long in this world, and in the world to some you will have eternal life. "With long life will I satisfy him." Determining Age of a Horse. Before we can determine the age of a horse by the tectelo it is necessary that we have a general understanding of the form ! and structure of the teeth. The horse has two sets, the temporary and the perman- ent. The temporary teeth of both upper and lower jaws begin to fall out at about the age of three years; first the two center inoisors of the lower and upper jaws, the next adjoining one an each aide come out at about four, and the corner incisors fall out at five. Now the per- naa,nent teeth Ail these planes as fast as wade vacant. Thew Dermanent teeth In POOR COPY • t 0 crown nave a empression or cup three I nes deep or one-fourth of an inch. .But tie cups of the upper incificra are six i Ines or one-balf an ineh deep The teeth 1 r�ar off with ,sa certain rate ( r regular - 1 y, one -twelfth of an inch pe'r yenr, ' t erefore, the lower Iwo middle would be orn smooth at the age of six, the next tfwo at the age oe seven and tie lover c riser ones at the ago of eight. The up- , er incisora are six lines deep . and there- , ! fere the upper two middle incieorel w isle ; be worn off smooth at the 1 ge df nine, the next adjoining one at tsn, died the upper corner ones at the ago of 1 i' 2 bus all are smooth at the ago of 12 ; After the age of 12 these ii re certaln r le hat will apply.—Ora,nge Judd Fairme ---1 Lose F nen Poor 3111kCrA. A good mil er should halve ;Or ng grip in bis ban $. He will breve it 1 he milks cows ma y years. The g ip t oee not necessarily require very letrong muscles, but it IS the conita t Xelloise twice a day which gives the m scica of the hands and fIngere a deceit:11pin t thee nothing else will do. But if a ht el lean has not already such a dev loptisent o mf uscles wm as ill make him a fist Milker, ao not employ him with the , il lug of cows as one of his duties. Whil he is learning to milk a steady and fastrearn he is drying theicow off, as a ter time she ill learn to hold up her milikT. 'hal: on y a little milk Is lm eft after ea° ilk - the cow will very soon go dr wi 1 cost the farmer more tbaiti th lwagee of a good milkerl who will Is ep be cow to h a' standard Until near he time to dr p another cal .—American Cul lvator. IE4o Fble Over Again. A Misohlevone youngstere 4t tb3 Mis- sion airlifting himself wiVi, a vase, man iged after se eral attemp s 'bigot his han through th narrow n*, and was then 'istiable to 0. tricate it. For half an hour 'or more the whole fainily did its best o withdraw the fist of ;the ltickless young offender, •ut In isain, It was a , to,break it. After a fin41 atterript, very 'valuable va e, and, the tfather was loath he gi've up his efforts: indespair, but tried! al last su ,gestion. "Open, your hand" be commnded, "and then draw it fo ph." "I ca 't opete it;:father " de- clare the boy, I've got MY pe .ny in my end" "You yottlig rascal." -thun- dere( ihie father, "drop it at �nce!"I The penn rattled in tho bottom of thel YAW and 4ntcaino tha hand.—San Fre piece Wave, 1 : Immense Ear of Corril W 4t is believed to be the bi ges cern t:} ever ?rotten, in thee pert of th co I:1 try at le et, Jaen exhibition in a -g in Aloe et A kinsone Kate; One ear is 13' 1 ches long, ' and another measures exited ten inche in oiroumfe °nice, Another r is the farm of Georg Liebig of 14% nohes long. efhe corn was on Wet ore, Kan. Many! SAM lea of corn Aro nor- thern Kansas aret corning in, an last year's big ears911111 oxi display are ere dwarfs by °ampere on to thenew tap. The late corn is mtituring, and te.po s of enormous yields are; coming fro all 1 seetiqns of norther* 1Kaneas, 'he3e the I big corn-procluoing rounties of the tate are located. , 1 I • ' A Cemincin I Mistake; : . I It is a mistake toilet weeds go l tolEteedi in tlie garden or around the far , i der!' the impression that they can oe d st :yect if gathered to the fall end burned In the first plata:, the lob . is apt to b for- gotten until most o he weed seeds tkve bee; scattered. Even lf a weed is bu edi its eeds may, not be destroyed Un ese hot 'fire of brush is ,flp4 made jan' the weed gee& are thrown on a M ss of burning coal. If weeds are piled Inpa .of all slow-bu /in, I10I they burn slowly, and as the seed fa the :ground Itis protected from u ing by the strata of carbonic 'acid gati t• t iii. foupd at the bottom fire. i . Rich Poar1 riald Discovers/41 . New pearl fields of reat richness been discovered oft Vhs coast of Caledonia on the west side, aceo di United States Consul SY eW, g tO, olf, it /siou He !says that one shell oontaine the fabulous number of 256 pearls, 41.d one laths boat of.1)4 tons fumnlsijed last yea 22 pounds of pearls. 'On to t is tinie th water has not been 4olinded tlo a gr ate depth than six feet seen Inc es, buij th fisheries are to be further 4zpIo1la4 by Prezio]: and Austrian( syndicates. 1Mr. Wolf says that the quality f tte ,ea-rl, shells is remarkably , Arlo, alnd be urgeS that Americans profit by the iscoverv. 1 11 (i 1- Nt lint 11 Witi ted.! A eadclgoking man. went 1. to 4 drug store • " gan You give me," bol aslredl 'somethly that will driv fr 711 ,;rny mind the thought of sorro bitter rem' eetion?' .And the dmugi ist tocided, and • nt him up a little close of Club:line and 1Or1T.WOod, nnd rh ubarb, an di Epeom salts, and a dash of castor oil, and gave it to him; and for six month. the tian could not think of zinything 1 ' the world iis.cent new fella -Ines, for: gettin the taste out of his mouth. . Pei l',•ii•tiiil (b..lj)ustr aper st ttes a' ler 3 ef ith • ing • A writer in a ea. Paul that he ri,c-olitly Co eve eve road at Fort Worih, Tex., wh eh tt:ented laFt fall witli 13. vr ttIng crude pvt!oieurn. lib says t eat !du five months of (bought, when are otlher roads '.era envelept.d in du 1, this one csas clear- of it, and. that 1,-n 'n heavy rain made mud of the dusty roads this rme remained dry and pleasant, —Mr. John Forde ,has' rented rem Mr.- MPIntosh, Goderich, his farm of 160 -acres, 4th concession, Go4lericb tovens 1p, for a 'term of tea years. a expects to Move on it before very long, It is a good lan, and he pays 3400 a year ent. II yea want a horse worth lel, you'd be silly to pay Poo for his photo only. 0 you need DODD'S KIONSIN PILLS you'd be Jiffy to buy an imitation. DODD'S ARE SOLD IN BOXES LIKE THIS. TAKE ONLY . What is —emeeleren111. Ca4oria is for Infants and Children. Castoria IS a liktr nes- substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops, and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither °phial* rawp1iiic nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant, Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions nr :Mot ierS. Castoria 'destroys Worms and allays Feverish. rtes. C Istoria cures Diarrhcea and Wind Colic. Castoria r1Lpre 'icetiaing Tronbks, cures Constipation and FJailjulencl. Castoria, assimilates the Food, regulates the' qtatimell and Bowelof Infants and Children, giting thy' laird natural sleep. Castoria is the Children's the Mother's thiend. Pa El 21, astoria. I "C4itc,r14 .,, ap.i excellent medicine ror childrcii. 11'001 1-s. lave repeatedly. told Inc ' of its ;1;occfr---ek 11'7 -21 their children," , r--- 1 Illt : I. OSGOOD, Lowell, lilass. I il i Castoria • “Castoria is so well adapted ti thildres that I recommend it as superior to any pro, 5cription known t6 II. A. ARcliER, I& D. Brooklyn, N. y AC -SMILE- SIGNATURE OF raireargitss; ;sess-s res le•R Ie VERY WRAPPER. • • hr TT':,p1.) I`,I1 / 1C'V K CITY. • .5t. Our tion tion to all something This obliging a Night ich street a Fail ktock. 1 ock of Furniture is complete. We extend a special invjtt. ire of good furniture to inspect our stock. We have shwa to how you in new designs and finish at close prices. 13T-11:Z/T–A=INTC+._ dep r.incnt is complete with a large selection of the best goods, -and - en ion given to this branch of the business. lls prd ptly attended to by our undertaker, Mr; S. T. Holmes, Goder Sea' ortli, opposite the Methodist church. FOOT, BOX & Cat ays to Go to the Best • • • • Chatham, Ontario. Canada's gleate t echcol of Shorthand and Businees training, RE -OPENS FOR THE FALL T.rRAI 1 011\T. MI; -9,T SDAY", SME)TM3VEMMIR, 511111. TWO 11IUNDR 'D AND THIRTY-SIX of our pupils eecured good positions intbe seventeen Mouthelen ing June let, 1899. What do you think of such s; record? Our pupils are now in etk ng demand with meny of the leading business houses. When- we tell you that, this large number secured positions, we are also prepared to 'tarnish the list showing Where th y were placed and with whom. If interested, write for The IleSt School is the Cheapest in the End. Wei pay the railway fare of students coming from a distance, provided it does net exceed $8, Which li the limit of our allowance in this connection. °Can eOI3ure good board for gentlemen at $2 to $2.50 per week, and for ladies at $2 per wee Ian N. of t ha Ma woo Dwin tie yen which cloced June 30sh, we lied pupils in attendance from ‘wfountl- th Atlantic:, to Seattle on the Pacific, from Manitobs. en the Not th to 13.001t1P, .. he Sonth. There were 133 cities, towns and villagee in Ocnacia, ant Inc SUMS e Ucatha represented with us. Twenty -tin ee counties and i districts onteide of Char sent is 198 putiile, Chatham and Kent county alone sent us over 100 pupils, while itoba end the Northwest Territories rent us six. WHAT WE GET WE HOLD. ri e, for handsome catalogue of either department.- Mention which catalogue yea McLACH LAN & CO., Chatham Ont 4 L95 filet ttio eat aadomealztidevesworn Jr rinte ...„ Oufgrby express, inotiod to algae it layout- express eine% and a you We represent it and en34r417 ga =t our ipedal chsree bale lar 109 litxailvarlus y Mored. highly Delisted. bow, extra set of ittiao and and swims In tone, G=lets 0588 -ertsinst the pries. Buy direct front us sort soothe daises • Johnston & Marculane, 801 s E. TOPO/itfe et dy from McKillop. This particular lady has so improved in health and 'strength, since mug "II. CLARK'; -3 IMPROVED IRON PILLS," that her friends cannot help. snyos:min,g ti,,ie great. iMprovernent in her general appearance. cleati the &kin, pulthe ifY blood, and put new life atid vigor into . the entir. s or tvo of these 'simple tonicl They never injure anybody, but they -gide* soul of the other townships as well—who wi,nid be equally benelitted by a bo 1 No doubt there, are others in McKillop end Tnekersmith—yes, and in , i 'There gre a grbat, many young pee*, pale and delieate loking, with 110 particular disease, ut i perhaps growing too fast, or too diligent in their studies; th€s• pills are just helm, dicine they requite. Ey a 25e, box, or 50c for a larr boxlit t . sJ 1ii4 'DEN & WILSON'S SCOTT'S BLOCK, MAIN STREET, 'AFORTH, - Ontario. %Wallop DireOtory for 1899. JOUN SIOltilf. ON, Reeve4 Winthrop P. 0, JAMES 0'LAU11L1N, Coloncillor, Beechwood P. 0 JOSE td. C. Al RIU-04 ow:minor, Winthrop P.0 ALIP,X GARD' ER, Conn ilor, Leadbury P. 0. JOHN 1LOR IRO , Cler, , Winthrop P. 0. j0111 O. VE, uncP l ler, Winthrop . 0. DAVI ,) ROS , T assure , Winthrop P. 0. WILLIAM EVE S, M eager, Beechwood P. 0. CHARLES DO DS,fleeter, Beeforth P. 0. RICH D PO Le. D, Soinitary Inspeeter, Levi. bu r. O. FREE! TIL= Iths:11:1 ite plashalueolt ease gold* Ler- ercoflarBut,ton!&VTI , ,4-54143' We send buttons pooPot Bell them, return moo1/4111 wesend ,yon ring, paid. LAveru Box s. E, TOrarto` rhiroR - 0. sioxsint sormon • farmer* D'a 1 BENT.-+ yof Lot A Collo BRAME, 246 Boe sitp, Witighain.. n0,-1ersletee black., Tb °poly/eel r r/g rir MO ISE LADIES. 3, The Wiese Se 'prepared to 402er OA I", An 81880111113(131. 1 111r11AC8eXtb*Wil. Lior meek belie e Ite Vatlitt Streete, 3e8e BEAL FS It SALE AT A dtaired ; *baster vinsge ; VIII ; very clean; ace and leaks re tow to olose the pr voters trotsez yoR SAL rent scomfort] ilreet, &shalt. vie varier, dinhur 10)38 Avila eieder the wl bard and soft waters emitting sufficient lor, be bed at vim A t Worth. FASSI STANLI U. Concession S as which shout 901lej timbered. It le area tidily:Won_ There h b001111,11Aitchen and w aseeraeat,b, Artving Also two good 211, sollsairoda Brneet For further particle IL BOYCE, Btneefielt --- FAFAtConeettion 4,IN MLLE all clot:vele undexdrat sewn *Wel to gee There le argood oreh e reek rens through t home, eels near re replant -to Om best ro net *lootof wstee stocic raising, 14 w terms. Apply to th -ANE ROBISON. FAm' Tneatireinith, ea FOR SALE ed and 10 sorrs ot hu and noderdrsined! A and frame barn, with of goad water, and az sirshle firm, beings)] forth. 11 will he *4 further pink:Wane Road, or &worth EsnANcE Thr alt fate, cheap, ti Square in Seafcrtle There tie a cow:forties cellar, bard and tOft' couvtalenets.The pantrieg, etc. Thert 1.11 Weds el tielt and -,/k110 a large stable. vonvenioit and mote in &Oath *lad will WARD, TrILLAGE LOTS ✓ Village of Bay in Ratige in the t therefrom -1e Acres -the lend to be teed at Nottbeest corner 01 ship of Stanley, eoffl are both situated on- vorp9rodelon of 13aylli be given. Title fret enreber pertieulars HOBERT WATSON Sayfield, F.aceeutoro., ti.u.frt IN HAY X tele, Lot 22, on Tcnrnship. This far cleared, the rest goot d erdretned and fenee with a No. 1 cellar abed ; sheep house and root cellar node, ,‘ wells and eletern• T lamed on a rich fella ed down ?variety, tt This Is a -ohurches, sae:solo, p reasonably. Apply ROBEttT N. now TTILLAGE PROPE ✓ ehe farm'and_ Me, will offerfOr Village of CromartY kept as a tomperanco about half an lvire al and Small fruit tree frame dwelling and 1 tauter ,correr ; weed' tachtd, and a never - miser; have been kg nine but the stand property will be sold BOYLE, Cromarty VIARM FOS. SALE U 28, Coneces acres, -45 AC1-e9 clear. Nab. The land is li well undirdraincd Premises a good 1/4 stabling 10119 head t are also two never,fr a nine and a quafl ts post office. aura. Cromarty and Bre or sold on reasor able le get more land. Foi f,he prsmires. or s STON UAW.. PLENDID FARM did farm and he e 131h emeenseion - be Village of Leadb of which are cleared in a geod state of e underdrained, and si ratting and feeding., land On the lama homes, a large banL nsath, a large inopl buildings in first -ere chards and four TICS joins the Village of = office, leackemitbsi Leadhury hotel is or it. II Is now under is one of the beat al ties in the county and an f sr.y tern:, not told in a rtasent if a suitable tenant I apply on the prema roprietor, Lei/din-1r 6 poAa FOR SE keep for see thorough Int melee at the t 01 returning 11 aeaC1 110 PIG BREEDE els en Lot 28, Oee a thoroughbred Csi bred Tommie -am FN be admitted to cool ef service, or $1.50 White Pigs for sale. f11413EIWORTEC BO VICE.—The St the Brueefteld Temworth Boar, WI payable at tam *leen._ Mg If 080515&1'red Young Tatum' 111110EMo0b.BThg WORTH PIG giied hso for, ro' litnited ear; orces JO kI.72ASE 0SUL: thoroughbred ono sous iuide U, Ceaoserion' di