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The Huron Expositor, 1899-12-01, Page 2— THE HURON EXPOSITOR SORE BACK - Lumbngo, pains in the back or side, sore - Less, swellings or Inflammation, find no standing ground after an application. of Griffith's Liiniment-pertetrates In a ute, dteeels the pain, stops the suf- fering. You wiI find it better than plasters. Mr. Mack White, well-known trainer of the Toronto Lacrosse Club and the Osgoode Football Club, says: -Griffith's Menthol Liniment is unequalled for ath etes and those in training. I have used ',with the best of success for sore back, stiffness, sore- ness, spratne and all forms of swellings and inflammation." , 14. 1 tiPTIKTIL.Le I ° RZLINVICS MC INSTANT APPLIFIX AT AU. DaUGCOSTS-25t2nNTS Catarrhal Deafnes8 The It stage development of Nasal Ca- - tarrh. Japanese Catarrh Cure goes away past the points where even specialists on the diem% have been able to reach. It's a pene- trating, soothing, healing and strengthening compound, allaying the Inflammation and healing without leaving the slightest bad after -results. The only guaranteed Catarrh eure. bac at all druggists, The Kora Asthma cure. Positive and unlimited confidence 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 Clarke's Kola Cempound. It is a great discovery. Endorse41 by the medical profession. everywhere. Over 600 cases absolutely cured in Caned Cure Canada.. guaranteed. Sold by all druggists. 27 Sold by J. S. Itoberts. 41•7161112VIIIIMISIR REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. MUM FOR SALE. -For eate, Lot 20, Huron Road, Tuokersmith, containing 98 acres, 88 acres clear- ed and 10 acres of bush. The land le well -cultivated . end underdraineci. On the place Is a frame house and frame barn, with gooi stables. There is plenty of good water, and an orchard This is a niost de - arable farm, being only • out two miles from 803 - forth. It will be sold aa tap and on easy terms. For further particulars, apply to WM. FOWLER, ffuron Road, or Seaforth P. O. 1646-tf JJOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE.—For sale a house and lot situated on North Main Street, Sea, forth. The house is a story and a half trame, in flret.class repair. It contains five bed rooms, parlor, dining room and closets. Good hard anl soft water. The lot bontains a fith of an lucre and is planted with .arge and mall frulte, For further partioulars apply to THE EXPOSITOR OFFICE, or to WM. A. ANDERSON, efelCiSoe. 16044 ITILLAGE LOTS FOR SALE.—For sale in the V Village of Bayfield, the following lots: Lot 8, In Range F, In the townehip of Stanley (excepting therefrom 1i sores owned by Mae L. Clark). the land to be sold containing seven acres ; second— Northeast corner of Lot 7, in Range F, in the town- ship of Stanley, containing three aoree. These lots are both situated on the Bayfield road, within the corporation of Bayfield. Immediate possession will be given. Title free from all encumbrances. 'or further particulars apply to the undersigeked. ROBERT WATSON, Brimefield ; HENRY PECIK, Sayfidd, Executors. • 1636rtf — RESIDENOE IN SEAFORTH FOR SAUL—I-For sale, cheap, the residence facing on Victoria Square In Seaforth, the property of John Ward. There is a comfortable frame house, with good stone cellar, hard and eat water, and all o'her neceseary oonveniences. The house contains 8 rooms, vnth pantries, etc. There are two lots, well planted with all kinds of fruit and ornamental trees and shrubs. Also a large stable. This is one of the best, Omit convenient and most pleasantly situated residences In Seaforth and will be sold cheap. Apply to JOHN WARD. 1840.tf E1ARM IN TUOKER3MITH FOR, SALE.—Foye r Lot 24, Concession 3, H. R. S., Tuckers= oontaining 100 aores, 90 acres cleared and in a g state of oultivaeon, 10 acres of good hardwood b le, th, od sh. There is on the premises a good brick house nd kitchen ; a large new bank barn, with stone stabling underneath an open shed ; driving house, and ot or buildinge ; ewe good wells and orchard. It f ive miles from Seaforth and ElbC from* Clinton on a g od gravel road. School dose by. Will be sold doe p. Apply on the premises to ROBERT MoVETY, or ea - forth P. 0. 1639x4 f "DARR FOR SALE. -For sale Lot 21, Concess on X 10, MoKillep, containing 100 acres. EIg ty acres cleared and in -a good state of oultivati n. The remainder ie in bush and pasture. It Isis ell fenced with cedar and black ah and is well ,und r - drained. There Is on the place a good frame b rn and stablit 51x80 feet, together with sheep ho se and pig pen 30x30 feet. There is also a good fra4ne dwelling. Plenty of good water and a small orcha d. This farm is 2 miles from Winthrop, where there is a store, blacksmith shop, and post office, and 7i miles from Seaforth ; school within a mile and a half and is convenient to churches. It will be sold on reasonable terms. For further particulars apply to WM. MORRISON, Winthrop P. 0. 1665x4 VARM IN GREY FOR SALE.—For,sale Lot No. 7, X in the 14th Concession of Grey, oontaining 100 acres, about 75 cleared and the balance well timbered with hardwood and ash The farm is all well fenced and seeded te gram and is free from all foul weeds There is a frame house and large bank barn with stone stabling underneath. There is a goo oroh krd and a never failing sprincreek running thr3ugh the farm. It hi good either for grazing or grain growing 1g and is within three and 4 half miles of the prosperous village of Bruseels. Terms easy. Possesehin given at any time. For further particulars appla to the proprietor, Seaforth P. O. STEPHEN LAMU. 1666-4 -VARIN TUCKERSMITH FOR SALE.—For sale, r A! Lot 11, Concession 8, Tuckeramith, containing 100 acmes, all cleared but about 8 aores of good bush. It is tuderdrained, well fenced, and in,a high state of cultivation. There is a good stone house; good barns, stables and out -houses. Ib adjoins a good Khoo' ; is within_ five miles of Seaforth, and three tallest from Kippen. There is plenty of good water. Will be told with or althoul the prop. It is one of the best farrnein the township, and will be sold on easy terms, as the proprietor wants te retire. Also 60 area within a mile arid a quarter, a good grasing lot, well fenced, but no buildings. Will be sold to. gether or separately. Apply on the premiaee, or ad- dress Egmondville P. 0. JAMES MoTAVISH. 1630 tf SPLENDID FARM IN HAY FOR SALE, OR TO RENT.—For sale, West half of Lot 2'i, Conces- sion 14 ; south three-quarters of Lot 24, on the 16th Concession, and the no:th half of Lot 63, on the 16th 'Jonces ion, in the township of Hay, containing in all 175 tierce, all of which is cleared but ten acres. These several parcels comprise one farm and are located close to each other. All well fenced and well ainderdrained, and iu a g sood etate of cultivation. The land is of the best quality and every foot can be cultivated. There is a good frartu house and large bank barn, also driving house, sheds and other build- ings. There is a good orchard, and plenty of good water. It adjoins Kalbfleisch's mills, and is withia three aed three quarter miles from Zurich. If not sold shortly will be rented to a good tenant. Apply on the premises, Qr addreis 'Zurich P. 0. J. G. KALBFLKISCH. 165D-tf. VARM FOR SALE.—Lot 83, Concession 4, East Wawatiosh, containing 126 acres. There is on the place a -good brick dwelling house 20x28, with wing 18x28, 1i storey high; stone cellar full size; frame summer kitchen and woodshed 16x14; hard and soft water; frame barn 56x68, with stone stables underneath; frame pig pen 16x32: two good or ; �5 aoree cleared, balance is good hardwood bosh; well fenced with cedar raile, and well watered by three good pring wells; school and church con- venient ; five miles from Blyth, 12 miles from Wing. ham, 17 miles from Goderich ; must be eold to close the estate. Apply to JOHN WALLACE, Executor for the Joseph Jackson eetrate, Blyth P. 0., or to 0 Hamilton, Blyth. _ 1663t1 -ElARM IN STANLEY FOR SALE --For sale, Lot X 9 and the west half of Lot 8, on the 12th conces- elan, or Blowneon Line, of Stanley. This fann con- tains 150 acre'', all of which is cleared, except four acres. It ia in a state of first-class cultivation, well fenced and all underdrained, mostly with tile. There ie a large frame dwe ling house se good as new, with good atone foundation and cellar, large bank' bam with stone stabling underneath, 'Ind numerous other buildings, including a large pig house. Two good orchards of choice fruit, also nice shade and *as - mental treee. There *re two spring credal running through the farm, and plenty of good water all the year round without pun3ping. It Is well eituated for markete, churches, wheelie past oftioe, ewe and good grevelroads leading froni it in all directione. It is within view of Lake Huron, and the boats can be seer, pasting up and down from tb house. This is one of the best equipped farmr in the county, and will be sold on easy terms as the proprietor wants to retire on amount of ill health. Apply on the prene tees, or addrese Blake P. 0. JOHN DUNN. 164811 RUSH OF THE WHEEL. But hark to the lyizz of wheels in the distance ! The farmer has taken his throne on a reaper. He once walked ; now he rides ; once -Worked with arm of flesh, now with rod of A ThankstNing Sermon by ,Rev.iron., fTe St iris at the end of the wheatfield, beads his hoists to the Opposite enc of the field, then rides on. At the trots° of his iron chariot the gsild of the grain is ,surrendered, the machi to rolling thia way and - rolli g that, this way la Domestic Life the Wheel leas Datiaed .ceiglich would `have been ! that until `: until the work Dr. Talmage. ALL HONOR TO THE INVENTOR,S, plished in n any days is accomplish - a Great Revolution—The Worir of the ed•in a • few hour, the grainfield • Wheel in tire Agricultural, Indus- prostrate Eeftife the harvesters. Can you ,iatagiiie anything more beautiful tlu le the sea island cotton? I take up the unmelted snow in my hand. How beautiful it is ! But do trial and Literary Worlds. Washington, Nov. Z.—The course of Dr. • Talmage is a. ser of preparation for the national servance of this week and in an usual way -calls for the gratitude the neople ; the text, Ezesiel x, -As ftir the wheels, it was at unte them in any hearing, o Text. Thutsday aill, by proel ftt ion -Of President a,nd Governors, o!,served in thankagie ing for time al mercies With W -111.1.t silir It SI 0 enter upon it? For nearly year and a half- this nation has celebrating the triumph of sW and gun and battery. Ike have st martial airs on tI cheered retu lung heroes and sou uded the. requite I. for the sisal) in battle. 'Methinks it will Le a. healthful change if this Thinks-. giving week, in church and ome- s lead, we cele'ira te the victori ,s of eeetee-, for nothing was done al. ia go or. Menne t ha t of more importance than that which it the lest year has been done in far ier's field. and mechanio's shop, and au- thor's study les those who J iever were an epaulet or shot a Spa dard or went a hundred miles- flkom their - n doorsill. And tfow I call your ett tention to the wheel of tie text. . Man, a small 'speck in the universe, wes set ,down in a big woeld, high mountains teeing Lefte him, deep seas. - arresting h!'s-, paIna *ay, and \V 1 d beasts capable of his destruc- tion,. yet he was to conqtte•. It was eot to be by physical fcrce,for compare' his arta with the :ix's horn and the elephant's tusk; and hoe/ eak he is !, It could no be :by ehysical for camper him to, the antelope's- eiloot andapti rmigan's Nt leg. and how \slow: he is! it could t be by physThal capacit to soar or plunge, for the condor Leats him ie one direction and the p rpoise in t L-fe -Luther. Yet he was ' conquer I.! e W orld. Tao eyes, 'two handsee e tiff1 We foot were insullici nt. Fle` ne.st be re -enforced, so God sent the wle el. ,I11 domestic life the w,1 eel :has wrought revolution. Beh ld the ' . . cee mg machine. It has she teredthe ene-wee s bolida,ge and r rolonged leennee's life &Led- added • inuneasur- able. advantages. The needle for ages had . punctured the eyes and pierced the eyes and inade terrible nuts- secre.: To prepare the garments 1 of it whole household in the spring for se:inner and in the autumn for Win- ter was an exhausting - , process. "atiteh, stitch, stitch !" Thotnas food set it to. poetry, but millions of persons have found it agonizing he Y • 18 at cl he P- fe g - a t. • dis- mon ob- you know b what painstaking - and en_ tedious toil it passed Into anything of like practicality ? If you examined 13, that cotton erou would find it fell of :kid seeds. It was a severe process - by •jt" which the seed was to be extracted ana from the fibein Vent populations were be leaving the south •because they could not make any living out of s'nei - this product. One pound of green been ord trig 1 rose. lain by the sword, we buried t hero with "Dead -March in Saul, and hags at, hulf mast. Slain b the nee(1le, no- one knew it but ti hoesehold that watched her ihealt i bag- away. The winter after th 'he children were ragged and, col and hungry or in the alinshotnie. T land that -svielded the needle ha forgotten its cunning. Soul and 1)0(11 parted at the seam. The . thin hie had dropped from the Palsie inge,e. The threu eacl of life had: sitel and let a suffering human li !roil into ti -.e grave. The spool wa tll unwound. Her -sepulcher wad di •ed, not with sexton'sa spade, hu s ith a -sharper and shorter instru ddle. Besides-':- all the sewing done fo he household at home, there ar undreds Of thousands of sewing wo nen. The tragedy of the -needle i he tragedy of hunger and cold an stilt and: homesicknees and suicid -five acts. But. I hear the rush of a wheel V omen puts on the band and adjust he • instrument, puts her foot on th readle and beseles. Before the whi nd rattle, pleurisies, consomptions e tdachee, backaches, he trtriches, a c iclacheV, backaches, heartaches ar outed. -The needle, once an oppress- ive tyrant, becomes a cheerful slay roll and rumble and roar unti he family wardrobe is gathered,and -inter is defied, and summer is wel nned, and the ardours and severi es of the seasons are overcome -inding the bobbin, threading the inttie, tucking, q u il 1 ing, ruff] ing ording, .embroidering, underbraid g, seL to music ; lock stitch, tvs ist- 1 hoop stitch, crochet stitch:, a scinating ingenuity. All honors to e memory of Alsop and Duncan 111- (lie -enough and Singer and Wil - )e and Grover and Wilcox for their forts to emancipate woman from o slavere- of toil. ! But, more an that, let there be monumental munenora.tion Of -Elias Howe, the en tor of the first complete sew - e machine. What it has 'saved of veat and tears God only can esti/n- (1. In- the making' of men's and )ys' clothing in New -York City in 10 year it saved $7,500,000, and in Maseachusetts,_ in the making of oo s and shoes, in one year it sav- ed 7,000,000. Secondly, I look into the agricul- ral world to see what the wheel has tccompd. lishe-Look at the stalks of fo 'heat and oats, the one bread r nan, the other bread for horses. Coa off and with a cra,dle made out five or six fingers of wood and e of sharp steel, the harvester. eit across the field, stroke after tolLe, perspiration rolling down ethettcl #01c1 cheek and chest, head stored by the consuming sun and parched by the consuming August , at noon the workmen lying half td under the trees. One of my st painful boyhood memoriee is t of my father in harvest asap ling from exha,ustion over tat or -step, too tired to eat, pale and nting: as he, sat down. The grain tight to the barn, the shea,ves re unbound and spread on a ashing floor, and two inen with Is stood opposite sa.ch other,hour a a ti el in 01 fa th al sf et' th th e ill 111 6X t Ltd 01 b tu of 011 xx. 811 fur air dui mo tha ree do fai bro ,thr flat after hour and day after day,pound- ing tho wheat out of the stalk. Two strokes and then ea cessation of sound. Thump, thump; thump, thump, thump, thump 1 Pounded once, and then turned °vier to bo ponded again, low, very s1ow7 The hens cackled and clucked by the door and picked up the loose grains and the horses half asleap and doz- ing over the mangers where the ha z had been, seed cotton was all that a man couldprepare in one day, but Eli Whitney., a Massachusetts Yankee, woke up, got a handful of cotton, ancl went to constructing a wheel for the parting if the fiber and the seed. , . Teeth on cylinders, brushes on cy- linders, : wheels . on wheels. South Carolina gave WM, $50.000 for 111s 1 invention, and instead of one man taking a whole day to prepare , a posnicl Of cotton for the market now he may prepare t lire,: hundred 1[ weight, and the south is . enricheS, and the commerce of the .world is revoletionized, and over 8•,000,000 bales of cotton .were prepared this '- year, enough to keep at -svorls: in this country 14,800,000 spindles, em- ploying 270,000 hands and enlisting $281,400,000 of capital, . When I see coming forth froth this cotton production -and cotton manu- facture enough cloth ,to cover.. the • tames- of a nation, and enough spool ' thread to sew &yews,- rent garment, and enough hoisery to warm the nation's feet, and enough cordage to fly the sails of :all the shipping, and -enough wadding to supply the guns of all the. -American- sportsmen, - Thi rdly, 'I - look to see what the -wheel has done for the travelling world. No one can tell ' how many noble and self-sacrificing inventors have' been crushed -be -ween the coach wheel and the modern locomotive, between the paddle cnd the ocean, steamer. , • I will not enter into the contro- versy aS to whether John Fitch or Robert , Fulton or Th )inas Somerset was the inventor of he steamboat. They all' suffered and were martyrs of the_ wheel, and the , shall be hon- ored. John Fitch . wro e ; The 21 et of January, 1873, was the fatal time of bringing me into existence. I know of nothing so per- pleXing and vexatious to a. man of -feeling- as a ttarbule it wife and steamboat build ing. I experienced the ' former and quit in season, and. had, I been in my right senses I should undoubtedly halve treated the latter in the sante manner ; but, for one man_ to be. teased . w ith both, he must be loOked upon as the most unfortunate man in the world. Surely John Fitch was in a had predicament. If the steamboat boil- er did not blow -him up, his wife Would. In all ages there are those to -prophesy the failure of any use - fill invention. You do not know what the inventors,' of the day suf- fer. When it was proposed to light London with gas,- Sir 'HumphryDavy, :, tt e great philosepher, said that he should -as . soon think of cutting a slice from the moon and setting it upon a pole to. light the city. Through all abuse and -cgricature, Fitch and Fulton went Until yonder the w heel is its motion, and the Clermont,the first steamboat-, is g-oing, tip the North river, running the . distance—hold your breath a hile I tell you—froin New York in 82 hours. But the steamboat wheel multiplied its velocities until the Lueania of the Cunard and the, Mae jestic of the White Star line anehthe Kaiser • Wilhelm • of the North Ger- man Lloyd line cross the Atlantic ocean in • six days. or less, communi - cation between the two countries so rapid and so constant that whereas once. those Who had been: to Europe took no •airs for the rest of their inortal lives—and to me for many years the most disagreeable- man I could meet was thaman who had been to Europe, despising all Ameri- can pictures and American music and American society because they had seen European i pictures and heard European music and mingled in European society ---.now : a trans- atlantic Voyage is so common that a sensible man could no more boast of it than if he had been to ' New -York or Boston, What . a difference between John Fitedil-s -steamboat, 60, feet long, and the Oceanic, 704 feet long ! The .ocean wheel :turns sveif ter and swift- er, filliSig op the- distance between the hemispheres and has the time si oken of in the -Bok10of Re- velatim, when there shall be no more sea. • • While' this has been doing on the water James Watts wheel has done so much on the land. How Well I Ir i Sanderson's stagecoach, fedni New Brunswick to as .he.- drove through Somer- . J., turning no to the post - id dropping the plait bags letters and two or three ers, , Sanderson himself on 6 feet 2 inches and " well , ren) 01111) running Easton, ville, N office . with te newsp a the box proportioned, long lash whip itihjg c reins of six horses in the Le "leaders" lathered along of the traces, foam drip - hand, t other, t the line ping froin the bits! It was the stag ambition the event -of the day when came. It, was our highest to, become a stage driver. Some of the boys climbed on the great leathern boot of the stage, and those of us who could not got on shouted "Cut behind It" I aaw the old stage driver not long ago and I expressed to him my surprise that one around whose head I had cer I be seen a halo of glory in my boyhood time was only a man like the rest of us. Between Sanderson's stage- coach and a Chicago expre.ss train, what a difference, all the great cities of the nation etrung on an Iron thread of railways ! See the train shove out of one of our great depots for a thousand mile journey ! All aboard 1 Tickets clip- ped and baggage checked and port- ers attentive to every'want, under tunnels dripping with dampness that never saw the light, along ledges there where an inch eft the track would ing - he the. gtttsrenc_e bOWsen a, hundred haw marl Irving anu a nenureu , head of steam and two meii ia loeornotive chareed with all t e ponsibility of whistle and Wee house brake. Clank ! clank e the rocks. Small villanes only 1 the thunder and see the whirl as the train, shoots past, a cite the wing. Thrilling, startling., s magnilicent specie( le-- a train in lightning proce-seit n. While the world , has lie •n roll on the eight wheals of the 01111 or the four wheels of the carritie t the two wheels of lJio gig it wets until 1876, at the Cestennial exp tion at, Philadelphia, the t the n acle of -the nineteenth century rol in—the bicycle. The svorld cj not believe its own eyes, and • until quite far on in the eight -were the continents enchanted w the whirling, flashing, d t speetacle of a machine that was do so much' for the pleasure, business, the healthandthe profit nations. The world had 110e:1( d for 6,000 years. Alan's slowness locomotion was a mystery. Was of 3110re importance that, the re deer or the eagle rapidly exchan jungles or crags than that n should got swiftly from place place? Was the business of the b or the roebuck more urgent th that of the incarnated immort No. At last WO have the oblite lion of distance by pnemna.tic ti At last we have wings. And wh has this invention. done for woma The cynics and constitutional gros ers would deny her this emancipati and say, "What better exercise c she- have than a broom or a das or a. churn or rocking a cradle running up and down stairs or walk to church with a prayer bo under her arm?' : And theyrat} rejoice to find her disabled broken pedal or punctured tire h way out to Chevy Chase or Con Island. But all sensible people w know the tonic of freeh air and t health in deep respirationnitlid t awakening: of disused intiscles the exhilaration of velocitS, will joice that wife and mother a (laughter may have this new reere tion. -Indeed life to so many is Herd a grind that I am glad at t arrival of any now mode of healt ful recreat ion. We need have anxiety about this invasion of t world's stupidity by the vivaelo and laughing and jubilia.nt whe except that we always want it roll in the right direction, towar place of business, towards good. r creation, toward- .philanthrophy, t wards usefulness, towards places divine worship, and never: tower inunorality or Sabbath dOecratio Fourthly, I look into the literar world and see what the wheel h accomplished. I am more as toundc with this than with anything th has preceded Behold the almo miraculous printing press! Do yo I NI debtor. "I got tired disappointing so many '111d door with noiseless emphasis. • - (Jail Again." And he filled up the last un- ritsi,.": they see that sign that ib means You May -ho occupied corner of the blotting -pad with o r his signature, as the collector slammed the of you fellows. Most of them know when --• Early Rismg and Success. 0(11 , Although there is no necessary connection between early rising and a brilliant career, ing it is an interesting fact that many of our car rnest eminent men and women spend less or time in their beds and leave them earlier not than most of us. Os i- Through the whole of his working life the lir- late Presi4ent Feuer was rarely, if ever, in led bed after 5 o'clock in the morning. Even uld when president he invariably rose at 5 not o'clock, arid was immersed in his books in ie d his library' by 6 o'clock. ith Alexandler Von Humboldt, the great Ger- ing Man philopopher and traveller, rarely spent to more than i fbur hours in bed, and, on the the. testimony of Sir James Sawyer, was fro - of content with two hours; and it. Littre, who lived to be 80, thought thataleto of spend more than five hours a day in bed was it shameful self-indulgence. Although his in - in_ • variable hour of rising was at 8 o'clock, he ged scarcely ever lett his desk until 3 in the tan mprning, or until sunrise warned him thet to a inew day had dawned. ird There are few earlier risers that the king? an and queens of Europe, who might pardon: 1? ably indulge in later hours than their sub - a jade. In his younger days the Austrian ra- Emperor used to rise at half -past 4 in surn-' re. mer and 5 o'clock in the winter, and was at paying his morning visit to the stables whet' ni? neerly all Vienna was sleeping. v"-- The German Einperor has never been .e. on shiggard, and is usually hard at work in hts ait stndy at 5 o'clock and on horseback ati 6, ter while the Empress shares her husband's lov or of the morning hours, and may be seen e a- tering on her favorite mare two hours bef ok the world breaks its fast, ler King Oscar, of Sweden and Norway, usnally to be found among his belo alf books between 6 and 7 every morning, a eY' the kings of Italy and Roumania have a ho left their beds at this hour. he The young Queen of Holland, like he mother, rises at 7, and about the same h nd the; Queen Regent of Spain may be seen, ro- /somber black -"fat and florid, on her nad, to mass. 0 he no he ho us el-, to ds e- 0 - of ds n. as at st not feehe ground shake witmachinery of the New York, Brook- lyn, Bost n, Philadelphia, Wash- ington an western papers? l hthesomeof us re ember when the hand ink roller wa run over the cylinder and by great este 800 copies of the vil- lage new paper were issued in one day and no lives lost. But inven- tion has crowded invention, and . wheel j or tied wheel, stereotyping electrotyp ng, _taking 'their places. Benjamin Franklin's press giving way to the Lord Stanhope press, an the Washington press, and the Vi press have been set up,, Together tory, press and the Hoe perfectin with the newspapers comes the pub- lication- of - innumerable books of history, of poetry, of romance, of art, of travel, of biography, of re- ligion, dictionaries, encyclopediall and Bibles. Some of those presses send forth he most accursed stuff, but the good Predominates. Turn on with wider sweep and greater ve- locity, 0 wheel—wheel of light, wheel of civilization, wheel of Chris- tianity, wheel of divine momentum! And now I gather on an imaginary platform, as I literally. did when preached in Brooklyn, specimens of our American products, and it seems as if the waves of agricultural, min- eralogical, pomological wealth dasS to the platform, and there, are four 1 beautiful beings that walk in, and ! they are garlanded, and one is gar- landed with -wheat and blossoms of i snow, and I find she is the north. and another comes in, and her brow Is garlanded with rice and blossoms of magnolia, and 1 fins she is the 'south, and another con es in, and I find she is garlanded s'ith seaweed and blossoms of- spraele and I find she is the east, and another comes in, and I find she is ga landed with silk of corn and radiant with Cali- fornia gold, and I find she is the west, and 'taming face o face, they take off their garlands and they twist them together wi It something that looks like a wreath, but it is a wheel,. the wheel of national Prop- . verity, and I say in an outburst of 'Thanksgiving joy for wl at God _has done for the north and the south and the east and the svcst, "0 wheel! ' At different times in Europe they have tried to get a cong ess of kings at I3erlin or at Paris Or at St. Pe- tersburg-, but it has alwas-s been a. failure. Only a few kings have come. But on this imaginary plat- form that I have built, -we have a - Convention of all the kings --N. Ing COrti; King C011.011, _king Rice, 1K ing Wheat, King Oats, King Iron, Ki. g Coal, Ring Silver, Ring Gold --they all bow before the Ring of Ki.•eat, to \X 110111 be all the glory of this s esr's -wonderful itr od tic Lion. • A MANITOBA WOMAN Who Advises Her Friends to Take Dodd's Kidney Pills, Neepawa, Man., -Nov. 27th, -Mrs. T. H. McKee, of this place, was cured of Bright's Disease by Dodd'e Kidney Pills. Since then she has been the means of saving the lives of dozens of her friends in Manitoba besides banishing the unnecessary suffering of many who were unaware that there was a cure at hand. 1 In a letter written lately in response to an enquiry as to her experience with Dodd's ' ney Pills, Mrs. McKee Baas, "1 oan tainly recommend Dodd's Kidney Pills. lieve they saved my life with our bless- ed Maker's wish. I have the greatest faith in them and have advised dozens of our Neepawa friends to take them." What Y. M. C. A. Meant. "You are a nice member of the Young Men's Christian Association, to make me calla dozen times for this little' bill ? " said an irate collector. "Young Men's Christian .Association 1" responded the impecunious one: "I ain't any young men's -Ohristian 1" "What do you have Y. M. a A. !stuck- up for, then ?" asked the collector, point. to a paper, posted over the door. "Oh, en't you seen that haters ?" replied the .. Guaranteed Cure for Patarrh Ciatarrhozene;ozonated air cure, is gua anteed to cure Chronic Catarrh, .Asthm Bronchitis and Hay Fever. It cures by i halation. The medicated air is carried di. redly to the diseased parts, where -it the germ life that causes Catarrh,and at th same time heals up all sore places, and permanent cure, is effected. Catarrhozon when inhaled in volatile enough to impre nate the minutest cells of the lungs anjI bronchial tubes, where it attacks the diseas at its foundation. It cures because it i sure to reach the right spot. -Sold by all druegists or by mail, price $1.00. For trial, outfit send 100 in stamps to N. C. PO 'SON & Co., Box 610, Kingston, Ont. • Punishing Children. Most children, even the very little ones, seem to be born with a keen sense of justice. They weigh this and that in their small minds, and nothing hurts er offends a child more than the feeling that he has been un- justly punished, either for someone else's fault or for something which he has done accidentally, and not, knowing it to be wrong. My advice, writes a mother, to all parents in the case of older as well as younger chil- dren, is to pause before giving even a slight punishment, and try to find oub feom a ire - liable eye -witness exactly what has happi3n- ed, before you decide whom you will puni h, and how much. Where quite small children are eencern d, it is; far better to deprive thern of so e prornised treat than it is to forbid them e r- tain favorite food, or to give them ex ra lessons to do. To insist that a child's go d behaviour shall be rewarded by the eat' g of jani or cake or fruit is to put a prerni m on greediness, while it is infinitely wor e, from my point of view, to allow the chil- dren, ever to associate lessons and puni h. ment. Punishments of all kinds should be f w and far between, and I an convinced th t except for such grave offenees as deliber to untruth, cruelty te animals, or intentio al disobedience, punishments should be avor ed by parents as much as possible. Merry nervous, sensitive children a e driven into telling lies, solely and entire y through dread of being punished. T mother says, "Did you break such and sit h a thing 7" in a tone which implies, "if yeti did you know the consequences." Instant- ly the child says "No," probably withotit realizing that he is saying what is not true, ed.' so frightened is he lest he should be i;tnisli- In this way very often the evil habit of untruthfulness is established, a habit which years of punishing and reprimanding later on will be quite powerless to cure. . • is ea ad BO Or 41 To Cure a Cold in 9ne Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. 25e. E. W. Grove'S signature is on each box. Trifles Whioh Bring War. Some of the most memorial wars in his- tory have been brought about by the veriest trifles. We all know that the beginning of the terrible Indian Mutiny, which wrought an uneasy feeling created among the Sepoys by the belief that the grease used in the pre- paration of their cartridges coneisted ota mixture of the fat of the cows and pigs, animals abborrent to both Hindoo and Mo- hammedans. It was declared, too, by a London newspaper that the recent trouble in India was "all about a mud hut." When the world was • many " centuries younger than it is to -day -.in 1006, in fact --a disastrous war was caused in Europe by the theft of a bucket. 'Some soldiers of Modena took the bucket from a publie well belonging to the State of Bologna. The soldier* refused to give up the bucket, and a seriee of deadly battles was fought, in which Henry, King of Sardinia, was taken prisoner. Henry's father, who was Emper- or of 6. ermany, offered a chain of gold that would, encircle Bologna for his son's release, but in 'vain. Henry died in prison after twentY-Neven years of confinement. His- tory, is silent as to the reason why this par- ticular bucket was so precious, but it is still to be seen in the Tower of Mo 'ena Cathedral, where it is enclosed in an ion "get. It seeme absurd to say that a war as ever °aimed by the shaving of a king but.it is not Hitch an exaggeration as it appears to be. Early in the twelfth century the h - bishop of Rome decreed that all men also ld be clean shaven, on penalty of excommuni- cation. Louis VIL of Franoe submlttedl to the deeree, thereby offending his ife Eleanor. Their relations became so etre n - ed that in 1152 the marriage was dissolv d, and in a few weeks Eleanor married Hen y, Duke of Normandy, afterwards. Henry I. of England. Then began those awful w rs which lasted nearly three hundred years, in which the dead were numbered literally yi millions, the real and only, cause of e whole trouble being that a Xing shaved chin to please an Archbishop Starved Nerves. When the blood Is title and sassry, usnerves a • actually 'fervid, and sorts= emboittotion and p iratien.loott f11ow,. teed -the pomp with Dr. A. Chases Dorn hod, sad yon will Impart to thew e new life and vigor el perfect hesIth,ell'acie cat apd faestimiliesegnidatatat Ds. LW.Obese on every box at the maim. DECEMBER, 1, 1899 +1.4iwassitsismaham~aswitmmo„„,„....4 BCE 11101111111111111111111111111111111111111411111111111111111111inifiwindtso 1,1,1ZVU111111tItttlfiltrilltillittli1ntittlli1tIMMIIMMITRIIIIMITIMIlt egetAblePxeprationforAs- ung !Wood andile ula- Og the.stootichs =Wow of PronulteglAgi estion,Cheerful- ness and Rest.contains neither ritMorphhie nor litherat. OTt. 1STArit.0 0 TIC . 1 • • • , JitaimarffalkaMOWTITErl? rulEpkin' , 411xtrearig'• Roclatiarlir AWL • =lint - antat.ralcv • m "ea- - emitted Surer rfirmoymen, A perfec t Reniedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea. Worms,Convulsions,Feverish, ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Tex Simile Signature of NEW YORK. SEE THAT Ti FAG -SIMILE SIGNATURE gXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. woheh% nit IS ON THE WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTLE OF CASTORIA °Astoria is put up In one -size tottles only. It Is not sold in bulk. Don't allow anyone to Ka you anything else on the plea or premise that it is "just as good" and "will answer every pur- pose." Sir See that you get 0 -A -6 -11 -041 -I -A,, Tho fat - simile eignature of Ian lb a =_A_TUS ondition Powder The Best and Cheapest medicine ever given to a horse. BEST CHEAPEST Because of the results it produces. Mr. Alexander ROSSI of Brucefield, ade jover $50 out of a 50c package of ear' S Condition Powder. Evtpry farmer who uses it once, ver buys any other. Because a teaspoonful of it is all you feed at once—all other powders require a tablespoonful. You get three pounds for 50e, or seven pounds for $1.00. This is the time to use it. Mr..Wm. Fortune had a horse that he could not feed into condition, be - use its legs always broke out. Ile tried Fear's Condition Powders last fall, d before Christriaas sold his horse for $150. Feor's Exp 1 AFTER USING. Drug Store, _ Seaford, TnIE EXPOSITOR d =of= the= Century COMBINATION sitar, Westininster, Life, of Christ for the Young, Ideal Cook Book Tljie 1arg4 announcements that have been appear- - in in t gi en rea m king S briefly sin eekly xpositor, than which you will grant there is no better and brightcliT home newspaper -111 your district, yearly ' Westminster,io4 We;,weekly, of tlia Toronto, t has deservedly earned ese columns for some weeks past have- ers an idea of the generous offer we are , DScribers for the season 1899-1900. We rize: ti the name of Ca ada's ideal family paper -Life of Christ for the Young, by Geo. L. Weed, p.a.rticul.a‘rs i :of which are given below IIdeal Cook Oook, a work of more than 300 pages, thoroughly ............. I practical, substantially bound in oi!cloth • • • • Would cost you, taken individually • $5 00 combination --price of the two books and the two papers . • • • • • „ • , • $2 60 1 00 2 00 1 00 1 00 "Life of Christ for the Young," by Geo. L. Weed, is a particularly attractive book, - 400 pages, with 75 full-page half -tone illustrations, It has received the commendation of representa- tives of the leading Christian churches, irrespec- tive of denopination. The author, both by training and sentiment, is -thoroughly qualified to write such a book, and has personally visited the Holy Land, enabling him to speak from experience of the scenes described. It is bound in handsome cloth with embossed front cover. The publisher's price is Pao°. "We specially recommend this book to our readers. Balance a 1899 of Expositor and Westminster Free to all New Subscribers Wide-awake m n will avail themselves of this proposi- tioni . without a day' delay. Papers start at once and books are mailed immediately, post-paid, to the subscriber. EXPOSITOR, SEAFORTH, ONT. .- oefef BILLTTLge Dean; Oeuntv „rowers =goad" Ioi "vecttd"ato gate ansoftetore, f!AUM TO BENT Ribber t. Tea 11109,_ atad get full pi bred would prefer t:4 wstea For PAO waster, soatortb,! , mo LAT REM( les from Biel bums ete. ,Any ni or allowed for. Ste oalred next Wing. tocRAS, $TEAM ENGINE sale ettesp, the EXPOsIT-01 32 Woe power end sre in gcocl 'working tweabouteix yearai Vagina gerzlinera WM*. rrii- NOTICE -SI taxes for 110 al Beta, Seefor *Remove, until an 12 to 5 (Mock, for I Parties Intereeted airdeeely, CHARM ILSWARD.-Sti undersignede -sboutNae end of Mi .11 yearimge. The b *tater =only red an oession !Wing t) tit -as Above, and any pe be proiecuted, ESTE STRAY /DUERR 3, L. TI September a yearline bare tue mane by' sehatve. ALEX. BR 'fl8TRkYSTEL- underslgiied, bout the Bret Nol *wrier can have tbe Ming ohilrge°' -fig STRAY tession 11, ma heifer. She 18 red wi two hind legs widte,-1 information leading* lUuJy received and ari will be proseeuted. 9 WIST'RAY BEI-FEB1 Ea Thames Johesi Hey, elle reooleyh - bleck with some gre on the bellls AnY will lead to her reoo trouble. THOMAS ST bred from helm - type, _of either sex,.. meauarER, Vara • • • .d• • • • • • • • • 1AURIIAlt BUL jj :Ithorermhbred old, Ote roan and th Lot 22, Concession 1 ROROUGHSIIED -sale three goo front 3.0 to 12 mont eaters, ell registered 8, Usborne, tor addr :111DMORE. REAL ES "LULU FOR S r Mullett, near s.beut 100 acres, a eultivation. There and plenty of excell farm and will be sold Apply to MRS. SOH PLENDID sPlendid term ti oath Road, a -mile sontahls175 acme n state of cultivetion, -elm, good batik ba Onndition wad well elkily tenni, as the p not sold before the fa ROBERT (40V-Wi1A) QPLEND/D PARM ja did farm And h the IStli toneeselon the Village el Leadb of which are eleared, --In s good state of e underdraltied, and sru =tiling and feeding. bald on the !attn. housee, a lane batik math, a large impl buildings in firebei ehards aed four ne joins the Village of blackemith sh Leadbury hotel is on it. 11 1. now under Is one of the best an ties in the County and im easy terms ,of tot told in a reasons. if * suitisble tenant e apply on the premise roPristee, Leadbury STOOK ilillaiOAR FOR SERVI I) service on Lot Improved Yorkshire the time of service wi MELV1NJ. BLANCH 'DOAK FOR SE 11 keep for se Stanley, a thoroughb payable at the ti of eturning if neet PXo en bred YOUNSHULE 11.01-111t hOos r v egit:b0Mi e bWehaditenlPigsittedfotorZ.' friklltWORTEE BOA 1. VICE. --The At the *welted eh Teroveseth Beate, wi ; Meble At trim - Ilurh%ig if -necessary- bred -young 'Teeny -0 1117OR itoOARTISKY 11AltWORTil PIO signed hiat for 1637010P, e, there)) ilintied number ef extra geed pig and hr -prose their berkehlre Tit fa, wlthprl JOHN NoILILL&N Morton LOT 27, CON Thoroughbr Heifer of the Most fashio reasonable priees DAVID RILL, 8 The best place in -reeleh to zoeuro & ...Ameehanleal Drawl e nil -of Actual Duslues "Wan 11147 time. ca Detroit. NV • F. JR:w