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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1933-07-27, Page 3THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1933. THE SEAFORTH NEWS. PAGE THREE: Services We Can Render In the time of need PIROTECTI.ON is your best ',friend. Life Insurance —To ,protectyour LOVED ONES. Auto Insurance— To protect you against LIABILITY to PUBLIC and their PROPERTY. Fire Insurance To protect your HOME and its OONTENTS. Sickness and Accident Insurance-- To nsurance-To protect your f:NCOME ,Any of the above lines we can give you in strong and reliable companies. f° interested, call or write, E. C. CHACIBERLAIN INSURANCE AGENCY Phone 334 Sea'forth, Ont. Use Miller's Worm Powders and the battle . against worms is won,. These .po!wdens correct +the m'orlbid 'candi'tion rof the stomach which nour- ish the worms, ,and these •destructive 'parasites cannot exist after they come in conta'c't with .the 'medicine. The worms are digested' by the powders ,and are speedily evacuated with other refuse from the bo'we'ls. Soundness is imparted to the organs' and the health of the child steadily improves. Popular StaHions SEASON OF 1933 The Hand'some, 'Choicely Bred Olydesdale Sltalllioa "F'LAS'H -ION" No. (25022) (205716) Imported Approved Form I'!Enrolment No. 2096 Monday noon will leave 'his own stable lot 23, con. 5, Logan, and pro- ceed to Peter Hignell's, lot 14, con. 5, McKillop, 'for- night. Tuesday— To Jos. Flannigan's, lot 6, con. 7, sic' Cillop, for noon, thence to Rock "r'Frdros., Brodhagen, for night. Wed- ' nesd'ay-To Thos. Bolton's, tat 19, con. 10, leeKliiilop, for noon, then to Geo. Bennewies iot 8 con '12,Mc- Killop, Mic - Kildop, for night. Thursday -To Amos 'Wic'ke's, lot 29, 'con,, 14, Lo- gan, for noon, thence to George Siemon's, lot 24, :con. 11, Logan, for night. Friday -To his awn sta'b'le for noon, where he will remain until 'the 'following ''Monday noon.: This route will be continued throughout the season, health and weather per- mitting. Terms -1$112 to insure, due Feb. lot, 1934. JACOB H'1GNiELL, Proprietor and Manager. Clydesdale Stallion IHiAIIG (241563) Enrolment No. 4116'. Approved. Form 1 Monday leaves his own stable, lo't 22, con. 93, Hilbert, goes •north miles and west to Ed. MdKay''s for noon. 'Thence west and south 'by way of 'W'hite school - to Walter Madge's for night. Tuesday—West to the 2nd concession of Hay, 'tlfeu south to Earl 'Campbell's for noon, then south ;to Leo Johns far night. Wednesday—East to Larry Taylor's for noon, then east and north to Jack Simpson's for night, Thursday —NN'o'rth by 'way of the boundary to his own stable where •he will remain 'until Saturday morning. Saturday — 'North and east to Donald MoKin- non's for noon, then south to the 12th concession and west to his own sta'ble' where he will remain until the following (Monday morning. 'This route will be co'n'tinued for ,the sea- son; "health and weather permitting. Term's—$10 to insure. WM:. CO1LE (Prop. Enrolment No 26114. Passed. Form 1 STAR LIGHT 14321216 'This handsome choicely bred Per- cheron Stallion will travel the follow- ing route during the season of 1933: Monday will leave his own stabile at 'Munro and wilt go to Ed Rase's, 5 Miles north of Dub'l'in. for night. Tuesday will go to John L. Malone's, one mile west, of Beeohwoo'd, Wed- ne'sd'ay re'tur'ns to his - own stable. 'Thu+rsday goes south to Bruce Coop- er's one mile sout'h of Elimville for night; Friday to' Orville Roger's 11,4 miles north orf K'frldton for noon, (Then home for night. Saturday goes to Carlingford and home by way of +Fullerton. This horse is drawn on trailer and will respond to calls off route. Terris to insure $12; two mares from n 'the same owner, $110. Parties Losing colts will have free service the itellowi'ng year. NORMAN PARSONS, Munro Proprietor and Manager. (Phone 20115, D villin, SHED'S L'IG'HT ON THE BIIBLE. IAmidi a ;des'erlt: !off duet',anld debris ii'ttle groups of spun -burned entlh'u:s'iasltq may be seen in Egypt, in 'P'a'le's'tine, along stibe'Eu'p+h'ra'tes, on !th'e Iconsfimes of ,the ISahlara 'and. in the (heart of Athens itself, toiling year ."+afite'r ,yar 'w!ilth a patience Ith'alt' endures . this- cornfort'anid` d'anesi Ithe ,s'acrffrce !o+f 'health. iitse'llf. IWhlo ere these albrange men, whose sole aim, in il'i'fe it is, ap- tpa•rentily, tto [work .like navvies it+ '.the dirt 1 They are archla!eollogis'ta Tram the Great Blidtai'n, 'fso'm Ithe United States, from lFran!oe, foolm (Germany°. He is a soldier 'of .knowledge, waging 'War' aga'ipst the (brig-totl'erated ,eenztaadh- menits +olf' olb'livion, An 'inisa'tieb'le Pre- sent, :not content :to claim 'the )Feature. alone, is s'eeki'ng also en conquer a re- bellious ian!d Ifulgitive IP'a!sit. +Slhelbered' ifro!m the heat by a eo'rk +hel'melt, he :d'frecis companies of , na 'five's !Who dig 'trenches, ,eadda'vlate pal- aces, +bempll'e's end 'fo'rtresse's 'anld, vin d'eteneed by ancient c'urse's ehall dlo unit :seem 'wholly to have lost their spell, d'el've impiously -into the ,graves of the once 'iliu!s+tri'ous dread. at is On (the rnla'teriel !evidence=a .cup, 'a scrap of inscription, an 'engraved ;gene—+that 'thio .a chaeologi'sst ,con'cen'tr'ate's his gaze, and it is with eager care +tthat 'he sifts the soil'far pets!hiemdis end orna- ments 'beating +the 'finger pri'n'ts of 'time. The world . asks the question, there- fo're, wh'eth'er'thiis pers'istenit activity bias Ibsen, 'worth 'the 'results ob!tlaineld. There is 'on'e circulmstanoe imiploss!lble to ignore. ,B'eyond' ahi ooniteadieti'otn,, there 'has been 'n0 book so widely ,dts 'tr?buted, so devo'ultiy -read, so +fierc'e ly idhlallleinged, as 'th'e !Bible; and w'ftlak interests the p'ubli!e 'more 'than any 'thing else is 'the !fact that :most of 'the. excavation is peaceedin!g in, what we clads 'the 'Bliib'le 'lan'd's. 'Iit is 'Phe +back- grotunid Of the ]Bible, and es'pecial'ly .of +th'e 'artiest records in (the IBtbie, 'thlat is emerging, 'slowly and surely, .into an' 'iillun ti:n!ated land's'cape. For many years it has been :a- ques- tion wthdther IEgylp't or Chalutea was the 'cnadie 'of ci'viliz'ations I't. 'seemed as if nothing +co\nld+ be oder a 'cudlture which '8,000 years ago built •the 'Grea't !Pyrenees ,and. 3,1500 years ago provided 'Twt anieh4Alm+en with this 'tomb. But 's!pad'eewark in •Mesolpot- aniia has revealed at last the truth. We now know thlat as (Rome is re - eerie compered with tEJgypt, an is Egypt, even 'archaic 'Egypt, recent compared With What now we 'call1 'Babylonia'. As Ohi:c'aigo;'built in the n tn'eteen'th 'century, regards 'e 'city like Damascus, which was flourishing in the 'drays 'orf 'the patriarchs, so di'd the Pharaohs, 'who had yet to ,build their peremids, regard the 'moldering amt- tiquity of 'a ISmneeiiatn city like Ur of the Ch'aldees: The 'first 'resu'l't of this archaeo- logical 'outberet of eniengy is 'thus the addition Of what we call a prefa'c'e of, say, '5,000 years to +that -volume of !history ,the !amplitude of Which .ai ready delights the boy and girl at. sohooi. All of ',us have learned a'bou't ISpain and, 'Russia Wand Pola'n'd. So, in the 'future, shall we have to learn 'about 'Oha'Id'ea,.Assyria 'and the .Hit - +lite Empire, Mount 'Cannel, 's'tand'ing sentinel over the iM'edi'terr'anean, where 'Elijah 'confounded the prophets of 'Bad and IEllijlalh's servant 'saw a cloud arise like a Imlan?s \',hand, contains .carves nv'here rude pictures reveal the art of p'rehis'toric mlan. So 'b'egan the drama —a -Garden •of 'Elden 'beyond. the 'Eu - phoebes Valley—end gradually the ex- cavaltot' is restating >legend'! to the realm of ',care Here, in ithe :'M'es'aptam tam desert, we (find huge de'posi'ts of 'mud. Dig 'inito'that mad, drain it with 'motor ;pu'm'ps, and 'far ,beidw, the 'sur- face you reach ,the 'serge. of success- ive 'hu'mnn 'h'ebi!tatio ss, Ties ssu'peri+mpo>s'ed deposit 'd'emon- s'trates' .that Mesop'atemiam• ruvil'iza- (bons has 'bean 'swept by floods nvuc'h more +des'tru!ctive than •imtun'datio+trs' int the Mississippi Valley. Such. a 'dleluige Iburied'th'e earliest .'city of 'Kish under sten 'feet cif s'o'il. A ,secoesd ' city wase. ib':u'itlt and; in 'turn, it also was seb- 'm'erged, only 'to 'be reached 'toldtay art a depth of forty-lfuve 'feet. 'I't was +th'e 'second flood :that, ,presumably, may have 'pr'oduced iNioah, and the recov- ery of inscribed tablets,' eo be deci'pdi- ered; may indicate the actual date of this calamity. In 'view of"ithe 'earlier 'flood, N!oalh's prescience anti 'his pre- cautions., ' 'however poetic be the de- scription of +them, are 'within' the pos- sibilities of ascertained 'history. Tradition, even ;i'f dli's!torited, is 'draw- ing track the 'tru't'h to itself. The mi- grants into 'C!haldea descended from the 'hil'ls and found +th'eimselve's on a plain, +d'e'aid le've'l, flat as a ,p'avpcla'ke. To them, the ,monottony Of that horiz- on' was 'unendurable, and +they sou'gih't to relieve it by developing towers orf 'Babel that should reach +unto heaven. 'Those 'terraced te'mlples preceded the pyranei.ds of 'E)gypft and. 'flanagiarized the!Worild 'wit'h a_dlesign that see'm's 'to 'have reasched Yuca'tan.'('Mex!ico ) With . tee 'Oh'ald'oan!s, therefore, archi- ',ecture on the grand scale elf nnagn'i trade :was an immntesnionital+ heritage. +Three •thlousland years 'before IRo!nte was +founded, the arch and the dro'n'e were consltructed. with skill by the 'bwiiiders of Ur, and !ther'e is an -a'reh antedating +Rome by 2,'000' rears, which .was 'included by the 'Su!m,er- iati's 'o£ INip'pur,in a detain. 'The •Beibyl'o,n of 'Neb'ucheenezzar, with its v'as't adarnmen'ts and 'forti'fi- cation's,..was thus :'the prod'u'ct not otnly df unlimited reserve's' of 'sla've labor, but of an, engineering ;expe.ri- eoee evadi stibated 'aver thousands of years. When he +built 'the 'famous hanging garden's for this wife, Amuhi'a, it was !bemuse She, 'like 'men and wo- men en't'erinig 'Mesopotamia before the flood, .ye'arn'ed for her native mountains of MMedia'. Those 'hangi'n'g gardens were the Tower Of 'Babel trantsdabed' into feminine teens.. ,IItt Wa+s', then, in Ur of the 'Chal- deers, al'rea!dy as aiiolen't ars, , Landon, Paris and Rome ane today, and, Dion\\ sidlerinig 'blue 'state tall civilization, a5 m'a'gn'i'ficent, that the patriarch .A!b'ra- ham grew up as a boy. there dwelt 'his Ifiather, Torah, and his . 'brother, !Niaho,r. "There 'hie married: his wit6e,. 1S'arai, and there was 'been this n'eipth'ew, Lot. Ifle 'was no mere 'Bedouin sheik, bred 'to the no m:el c like, butt a man i'm+m'eraied 'in the Mott ellamorate': eru- dition of his 'p'eriod; and 'the q'u'esltion is why 'his family +ablandoned such am environm'eltnt. What were the circum- stances, 'compelling as 'a divine call, which d,r'ove 'fort'h 'Torah and his faniely from the cdmtfoets of the towns' to the :h!azands of the lteet ? It 'hes, been stuggestte•d that Ab'tla'hsm tied from the calamities Of war, In the IS•criptun+all 'accou'nt's th'er'e is no hint 01 this, and archaeology . furnishes s .simpler amid what ,mtay prove to be a more poign'an't solution of the ei'ddte.. iThe !Oh'addeans were no reoln!sters. As 'neighbors of-Maratham ,they were people +olf our Own flesh and blood. Iltt is literally 'the fact' that in this twentieth century we could oo'ak our food on the very stove 'whidh, with its 'flues, served the kitchen of their 'im- pressive temple, and +the well is 'there as'ehey left it. We could take a board, inlfaiid by 'their art with shell and sil- ver, and play the game off checkers which was'ufamitliler to 'those 'Mes'o- po+temian's. I'n, its museum the uln'i- vensity of Pennsylvania preserves a sceptre in bronze wielded by King 'Du.nga which might 'be 'held by our kings ars 'a sceptre or by our mar- ss1ilalks as a baton. Their !babies, like ours, w'a'ved ,the battle. By rare for- tune, 'there hlas 'been found intact the model of .a si'lv'er yacht, with oars land • canopy :and high stern, and prow, designed as beats are to be seen to this -day, gliding over the broad waters of 'the Tigris and Euphnates. We are familiar with the, famous orchestra orf Ne'bsechadrezzar, with its "`cornet, +flute, sackbu't, ,psaltery and 'hemp." M1 of as 'have read of the in - sentiments, enum'era'ted in ,the .last of Psalms, the Halbl'eluj'ah 'Choru's of lyric verse, an'd with the !harps which the wailed Is'raeli'tes hong on the wil- low !trees, so called, by the waters orf Babylon, But what we mow know is +thee, thou'sands orf years before'Nebu- ehadireznar and the Israelite exile, the !Ohaldeans were d'emand'ing songs. From impressions in the mud, an au- thentic harp has been recon,stru!cted which, with .its inlaid jewelry and golden 'head of a bearded bull, was olidobefore Abraham was both. A curious tablet has been discover- ed which, i'f correctly interpreted, cotutai'nis a song 'set'to mrttsic. ,'Iot ap- pears to suggest ,that .the 'harp had twenty-two sltrin'gs, ,that 'its scale was p'en'tatonic, without 'semi -,tones,' and 'that cluonels were used'. Here, then, is a tradition olf 'melody +and harmony that can be traced direct from the period of the ,Flood wed ' of the Tow- er of'Biabel, through ,David and the (Ps'almis'ts, to Mendelseohn and 'B!ralhres. Deep 'Is the meaning 01 ithe 'saying in Genesis: "Tulbal !was the (father of !such as handle .the pipe and th'e organ, About the cul't'ure of the Ohaldea in 'whic'h' Abraham- spent his childhood 'cher is now no question: !From the wreckage there have been recovered. !beaultiful goblets of fluted ,gold, beau- ;ti'ful pictures of chariots anld ''horses, ,of .sol'di'ers in 'arm'or and of the fears'. 1Th,e 'trou'ble was 'that this culture wars coortt!psnsied by lcruel'ty. ,Ist was a 'crue'lty to us incredible, end against the cruelty of •Chaldlea Abraham Ini- tiabed '-a revolt that 'hiss• ,changed the course of history. IIn the tomb of 'Tut -ankh -Amen death itself was refined into a delight. The co'rp'se is embalmed. iArrayed royal robes, 'the depapted monarch is accompanied into the next ,world by imulges relpres'entim,g his servants, his courtiers, his animals. 'Bet in, 'Ur of elle Ohand'ees we see the original and awful rites of which the Egyptian •refinements elf a la'ter dobe were no more than' la revised' ver- sion. Ln the prolific romances of Rid- er Haggard '',bene are grim visions of What was meant in days of long ago by the pagan cerem'onia'l which aic- comp'anied 'the bu'ri'al 01 mOnlarc'hs. But 'fiction itself liras never d'evi'sed a spectacle more appalling .in its human significance (than the 'tomb of King Meskalam-dug art Ur, which the amch- aealogi,st has revealed to Ian •asto'nieh- ed twentieth century. Whether 'this '.mo'na'rch died a nat- neat death, who +knows ? The fear was, of course, that if the monarch so died, the cattle of the c'oun'try, to say north- in'g of the children, would die with him. A king, when sick, was apt sud- denly to receive this quietus. How- ever that mlay be, the obsequies of this king were a massacre and, to this day, his sepulchre is a s'hembies. At ant age, estimated to have 'been 28 Tea'rs, and in all the :loveliness of her youth, t'h'ere 'lies bis queen, Shull -ad, a wonderful chlalplet of ,goddaa' leaves on her head, bracelets on her arms, rings on her fingers and a bead'ed cor- set cla'sp'ed at her 'shoulders. Thus ar- rayed she was killed by -a ,stroke on her skull. 'Su+eh an atrocity stamps the 'civil- izetion !that p'e'r'm'itted it, and fd Ab- raham emigrated from Ur of the +Citaldees, we can surmise an exeeil- lent reason. Reform was hopelesls; the only ,plan was to escape, 'Aibraham`s idea, •th'e•refore, was to ',std ,a new 'country in wlec'h he could start life afresh. Avoiding the desert, he made .his, way, to Daanas'cus, and through ISytyia to'Palestine, .+souRhward also as 'fair as Eigypt, then, black again to the Holly :Land, Hence, we are faced by a, further question. Why was it that ,this partri- arch, 'seeking a;bome, could not find one -?'Why, as a wanderer, did he fail to discover any country where, in peace ,and safety, he could dwell un- der his own vine and his own .fig din Scripture 'there' are a 'number of 'casual e'l'usions oto .a +peopl'e called Rhe lflitti'tes: Most 'readers of the Bible !have supposed •+th'at the Hittites, like the IHivites land st'h'e ;Perizites and t'h'e resit ,of .them, were an obscure stelae, living ipo'ssd!bly in 'the mountains, and anyway in!s'ign fican't, Hence, the sur- prise when the archaeologist arrived with t'h'e newts ithet,',for 'ten lung cen- turies, the H'itti'te tEnvpioe shared with Egypt +and'B'abyl'on+ the gove'nn- !men't' of the ;ancient 'world, ;Ninety miles from Angora, the present tal of Turkey, 'there has 'been dis'coly- ,eried the royal library elf the ;Hittites, containiing no fewer +ttvan 20,000 tab- lets, closely ius!orfsbed in tcun'eiionm 'cha'racters. ;For 3,000• years here 'has been .a deald language, 'but, like Ith'e. 'hieroglyp!h'ios on eh:e +Rosetta Stone, it bas ibeen deciphered, clad the 'fbrm- i'dlable task of transl'atin'g what may +bre d+es'erlbed as a parl'iam'entary Tec- ord, is 'proceeding. 'Alread'y 'there is found a mention of !Atreus, King of the tAchaea'ns, who appears in IHatn- er as the (father 'af.IAgamemnoln', bhe 'le'ad'er orf 'the 'Greeks' agtainist Troy. The reputed date of that notable siege is confirmed 'by 'the +Hittiite rec- ord. Having left'Ohaidea .behind, there - fare, Abraham did not plunge into the 'vacancy ,of a veldt or the open spaces of e. 'prairie. On the ,contrary, he entered ,territories already occup- ied and dwoekped. Many sites er•e!be- in'g u+n.c'ov'ered, and among 'the .tri- umphs of archaeo!logy',has been 'the excavation of the 'great fortress of IBetsh.an, 'facing Nazareth, Which, in the 'patrieechel +period, was the Egytp- learn Gibraltar Here 'was one elf those cities, 'wall unto 'heaven, 'that in due course was' iso greatly to discourage all the II'sraeli'bish spies, except •Joshua amid 'Caleb. The decision to +be made dy Abra- ham was thus simple. 'Was he or was he not to 'join himself unto "the pe'o- ple 'of the Hand." By •sebtlinsg in Sod- om, the 'nephew of 1Atbrehank 'Lott, answered .that question in +fh'e affirm- etive, and with. disastrous 'results. But Abraham •determined still to stand aloof front +his`,environmen+t. His andy dealing with the Hittites was the ,pur- chase of a cave at ,Macpeleh, close to ' Hebron, 'That property was sold to him +by 1Elphron' the Hittite. it be- came the itom'b of the patriarchs, and las such, it is closely guarded 'to this day by the Arabs. Why did 'Abraham ,persist thus ob- :A'roun'd her +there are grouped 'her women, a dozen of them, with :traces still remaining of 'their finery tied shells at their side with cosmetics; yet +see me'd to death 'wi'th a ,blow, Six sentinels, accoutred in their helmets, keep gu'a'rd over 'heir mausoleum, ev- ery one .of them clubbed to dearth by a nemorseles's et'ique'tte. The very oxen Who drew .th'e'ir wagons into ,the samc- Ituamy of di'stres's, 'there ended a 'hum- ble career. The hideous sequel to 'a ,tragedy, so appalling must be left to the .i'maginatien'. s;tinattel'y in ibis is elation, ? The people of Piales'tine were :not all 'evil. We read. of a certain mysterious' Melchizedek,. King of !Selene 'wlto brought •bread and twine to A'bra'ham ;a'nd!blessed +the p'atria'rch in 'the ratite if the most Nigh God, since which gestures' of eourt'csy this "King of 'P'eace," scribed as "without father, without mother, wi'bhotrt descent, having nei- ther 'b:eginnli'n!g of days nor end ,of has been revered as the ,Nigh priest of a gracious hospitality. Wee. iMelohiz'ed+ek 'mythical ? On the con- 'trary, the .excavator has revealed the - :wall of a J'erusal'em, alder .by mane' ,centuries than the Jebu'sibe 'city vehicle, (David ,captured, a Jerusalem that was lancien'b long before 'Abraham was- h!orn, and the remains include shrines• for worship..I't is the ,S:glom of Mist- chizedek, I3'ut the very disCin'c'tidn accorded to this kindly king sulggesbs'that fess 'courtesy was •excep'tional. `'The ideal (far which •Abraham 's'trove was not the ideaal of !the :p'eop'les around hint. [We a-ead 'that, in due c'ou'rse, Esau mlarri'ed two 'Hittite 'wives, and so :great was ,the "grief of mind" to !kis- parents .that 'Rebekah said weauBy,. 111 Jacob 'bakes a (wife 'of the 'dettgh-- ters of .Heth, what good shall My life do 'me 1" At a. later date, it erias- B'atthahalb'ah, the wife of (U75ah the, ;H'i'ttite, who fascinated a mature - David and became at once the mother: of Solo'mo'n an'd, as such, an influencer on Ihds lux'urian't era. Preventing Pig' Losses One of O ethe c e nim o on causes vs: death among sucking +pigs is rtutri-- tional anaemia. The critical period is - between tw+o and four weeks of a'gee During this period and until' weaning,. the sucking pig 'must have access to, some coerce of iron in addition to thee mother's ,milk. 'Professor Knox, O. A- C., states that 'one of the simplest means of prevention 'of foss is to place. sods, tone foot square in size, which• have 'been treated with a solution of ferric sulphate, in a small pen, one sod for each .pig each week. This sul- phate can be sprinkled on the sod' with an ordinary watering can, ands' the strength of the solution should be- rme teaspoonful of ferric sulphate to, one quart of Water per sod. It is wise• to secure gods from areas where pigs have not frequented for at least one year, in order to prevent possible; parasitic infection. (Persian B'a'lm is a time elixir <IF Adds a youthful charm to the com— plexion. ]Softens and 'beautifies the • skin. Maikes hands flawlessly white.. Indispensable to the woman who ap— preciates subtle distinction. Delight-- ful to use. 'Delicateiy fragrant.. Soothes dry and irritated skin- Cor— rects and preserve's. A : flawless toBet requisite 'Inc every discerning woman.. A true aid to beauty, Mrs. Newlywed: "'I get so upset: when I ask my husband for money: (Were you that way?" 'Mrs:. Old -Timer: "No, indeed. I'. just remained calm—and collected." • Want and For Sale .Ads. 1 time, 25c.. • We Are Selling Quality Books Books are Well Made, Carbon is Clean and Copies Readily. All styles, Carbon Leaf and Black Back. Prices as Low as ,;You Can Get Anywhere. Get our Quotation on Your Next Order. • The Seaforth \ews v,Li,w'nik[,n�AMpck,4"'vs".•a, SEAFORTH, ONTARIO.