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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Expositor, 1869-11-05, Page 6- Ftla Nrinc "NARERoemst TtLeirt; 0,LT R.I. tc inforn [County It class SADE eerTI----/ 1 o pay cash for all ylishment. he can luet-ments to any s here. darly, are acknow- t judges to be su- county, and from e with the wants ,:istied that all who ranage will have beina aiven to all sh(p, pIaCes him all work sold by the nimble six - Come along selves. N 0- charge , - • H(Qithc Importer and rdanufacturer of al. d the farm- l k111 s of HuroDy HOUSEHOLD FUR IV lTURE Such as , LERT SOFAs,LouNGEs. St Office, Seaforth. OLCVER; g is66,y -e Lawton Com lege. Study isive, I) CHEAP. rnplete the course K one year is all h. it without extra ..S . in:advence. (et 'iliebeled.,) eirenlar • Which -41a addaess • ZAK: 'iGoclerieh„ Ont. 89.-o105. Rk3lovED to- Lipied by E. Hick - to pay the high- nantity of Food ;shop, Main WI.LSON- 72-tt. iT ()F 1864 FER- tt Ittsolvent. tt.it day of No- elersigned will e Colony Court for a dit,charge Pe -SON. kERON, iS Attorney. D. 12,49.91-2 I Re lint,e at 1. I' 'lees I. HOODS L-cp_„cr,LBS RD- CASH. 53- ly • - incession of "iI. Tait- .rood. vers :1kt/tit, Fitz CENTRE TARLES, MATTRASSES .1 DINING & BREAK FAST TABLES, ' B UREA l' S, CHAIRS, and BEDSTEADS, in Great Variet Mr. R. has great confidence in offeiing log 41-‘ goods to the public, 41.3 th.f..3r are made of Good Seasoned Lumber, and by First -Qua Workinen. CO•FFEN MADE TO OR DEri On the Shortest No:ice. WOOD TURNING Done with Neatness and Despateh. - Wareroorn-s - TWO DOORS SOUTH SHARP'S HOTEL MainStreet. Sexforth. Jan. 6th. 1869. GOOD NEWS ° Tot Farmers and Others. THaumnitlig:fiecrIslita'cii-tn,ssg antey-1,13: ifinttendloil he is now grinding for every FIFTEENTH BUSHE4 Or exchanging flour for goo -1 what at 41 lbsto the Wald. - TIE HIGHEST PRICE IN CASH PAW FOR 57-tt N.: HEAT. Al.,FRED BREWER, Roxburgh Mills, r'eaforth., June 4th, 1869. 78-3ra. J.SE.TTER — EXCHANGE BROKER And dealer in Pure DRUGS, CHEMICALS & STUFFS: The Drug Department is under the spec* care of an experienced Chemist, I It. M. PEARSON. January Vat, 1869. urnittito 1T.0 -R E. r:44* • has now on nand the larJest stock in aforth, of every des- cription of Furniture, from the commonestte the finest, and all at the lowest prices.. Qual., ity of material employed, and workmanship, guaranteed, in all its departments, attended to in. a satis taetorY manner. A Hearse for hire. T. BELL'S PATENT SPENO IVIATTRASS Kept constantly OD hand, and fitted to any bedstead. This article is the best and cheap est made, as attested to by all who have us- ed it. Warranted to give t-atisfaction. Witt -member the - Pe- POSIT IDD & M'MULKIN'S, - Seaforth, Aug-. 5, 1869. =87-tf RATEll &Jr Oa your lioramades (Nit Out .14 With Economy & Taste AT SUTHERLAND BE02s, TA IT,OM4„ Gociericif, Street. 0 0 iD And Workinanillip ('<uarantec.d. s TED. G R c ES IVIODENP-T5 f."e 1. „ NEXT DOOR TO h11 urriscle-n-s Drug S wr. GRATIS. ] To The SEAFORTH, NOV. 5, 1869. { iGRTIS. FALL CAMPAIGN II THE SEAFORTH "EXPOSITOR," AND -.SUPPLEMENT, - - The Official Paper of the County, and the Largest -published in Huron. • THEExPosrron ipreeminently the Local Paper for every resident of the tounty. s - of Huron. J t contains,. all the Official An- . nouncenoents ; County and Township Council Proceedings Reports of County and other -Courts; Reliable Market ReporLs, Seaforth, Clinton, Goderieh, and Toronto :Laeal intel- irom all parts of the Oomxty;-Supp:i- ed by careful reporters and. special c, +rreszaai- dents ; :Editorials on all the_quesLiens times ; a comprehensive digest of Provi.••,•,.! Fore.2.-n and General News; and a readable, interesting, and instructive Miscellay, in which will be found, weehl r, Isom : .in" t- able for every member of . r•Jsir.1 ho d. Everytning of an immoral tendency is most scrupulously a ided in compiling for its columns, making it s proper and casilable visitor to all families. f1.0118C-, datang Three Months RA. I ! • min Exeosrron -.1-pp-* .1 'ror- the lst of October ne',.4; t 1 • ej. 1 10, for on year a s o : --• )), to thOse subscrib'ng on or befa:..... e •‘bcr and to those who -subscii')e • , and before the 1st of :January, 1: 0,L1lo time or''.` rubscri . Thooe terms 2..p. in either the case of Clubs or Single iSdoscribers. CLUBS CLUB Greenland and - . TRE -RECENT VISIT oF DR. HAYES AND 'HR. BRADFORD. PrOPI, the B08474 Transcript, Oct. H. The visit of Dr. Hayes and Sir. Brad- dotcl o ate. ,land and Lab dor has 1 -:_en a gre' at succese. The party .reacb ed Boston last Frir?ey evening; much elded at fi ig t eneselvei -onee more in a vil 1 nd. Di. Haves has made exte 'fre e. :thatiops of hither- to it visited place-, an has. mode -ar- range 'ts fo another season. Mr. Brae d has 400 photographic nega- tiv a and inn erable aketches, and their con:manic; had plen ty- of ,ad ven- tui es e an abundanCe of shooting: Ti. -e party went out in a c.' atrtered• steam er fr. ,i, St. John's Newfoundland, lea -big them July 3, and returie.g the Herne place Sept. 28. Meanwhile •y stile 000 miles, go'ng d coming and v• •ted, both coasts of Baffin Bay. They leached as far north -as the middle of Melville Bay,. lattitede 750, and enceuntered Fome rough handling in the "Middle Peek." The seaton has been unfavorable for ice na. ' on in the upper waters o B -t n ay, and several whaleships are reported as unsucce.sful in - finding a . . passage in the quarter w iere our party - had there hardest ett iunters Nvetta "thi -e.bbed ire." One vessel, ' e Alexander wee1 t, but her 're* wes • . In Meltide Bay many , .‘ar - were Seen, and thee were y elough to. 81106, six. tie, I) qrs were literally ran town by tie -r petveefel steamer, plowing through and tearing lup the ice driviag .he game from i , i fie'd to icefield, until they were finally brought to bay. A curious incident o': this novel chase *as that while pursti- ing the bears the filiotographei.s, (M Dunmore Sz Critcherto 's) sto.' io-a d on the top -gallant -fore -castle, tool -the portraits of thebears while theran, a feat in tile ph egrephic , art probably quiet new, and not likely to be , n re ted ln th;s vie-'aity, • at a place called the Devil's Th p. • as I . ratik, at Jacobsboon, in Disko Bay, well a : at kukpadlartok, near Theo- ' and at Kraksiment. So lth GreenLnd, e party visited, .. •) viteed and pi -tato- ! • ., goethed irimense glaeiers ; and in one instance made a considerable journey ueon the great ice- - , or mer de g which cove. s the interim oftGreen le ntl. From o e of the glaciers' they had n ..rrow esc. pe.e Anchoring tear i!.8 front, which iotie. more than 200 feet high in ape, p• rOicalar-wall, they et - in the aot e sur*eying end photograph- ipg it when they were seddenly startled by loud and deafening r .. erts wh;ch e, , FORwerfollowed by the clischarge of sev- :a club of Ten members, the getter -up 1 will receive a copy of the EXPOSITOR. from the time of completion, till the end of; 1870. 1 • PRIZES PRIZES! r0 persons gettin;! pp large clubs, tne iowing prizes wiil be ve : For a e.t.d.) of .11w.mty, a copy of he .!:-.L.ZPOSITOR from the time ten are reported, till the end of .1870, and on the comp e ion of thd (1'03 a hand- some copy of &tiler of the Britiogi aets. For a club of Thirty, all the last mentioned, with a copy of the WEEKLY GLOBE" for one' year, on the con3pletion of the club. For a club of Forty, all the last mentioned, and an Album. . A • SPECIAL PRIZE! S l'CIAL prize of a first-class Patent Lever Watch, which may be seen at M. R. _Counter's, will be given for the -Larg- est club exceeding Fifty, reported before the ist of January, 1870. Ulub names with the cash, should be re- reported weekly. , TERMS. :--:-Positively. cash 'in advance, with all arrearages paid up. • larFor Specimen Copies, etc, address ROSS & LUXTON Seaforth, Sept. 17th, 1869. Private Boarding. rpW0 or three respectable gent1emen1 can be accommodated with private board. For particulars enqnire at this office,' Seafoith, Sept. 3. • eral enormove melte s. Tins disrup- tieee t the waters rolling In gigantto - es r wn ward, and it seeteed st a r ',ads t let in the fea,r. r il c- (1 disturbance which folloWee the: . not the tied pieces. The photo - 'ling ?arty was on the shore, and ely escaped by climbing tee rocks, while all the'Y implements Were CPUR-'- ed to atoms by the forge of the waves, the world where that valuable mineral which is. &Imo: prr.v s .a—hits been ivered. The aim :al proeuction of the tritee is about 12,000 to, , tt.e half of which is sh"ppi -d to the United States. B ide Polar b!so our vor found altun.den, . 4,ame, in the shape Of ds, toeny of alit . were ot,- es - ducks. The Greenland ceast, like that of Labrador, &bow. ds in -bird life, durip, • the summer, many va 'e lei of weici4otivl, niierating there to breed. • Among the motif interesting places visited was Upernavick in latitude 72. 5th 0, -e most northern point of Christian occupation on the lobe. At an outpost of tied. place- they fell 'in with Dr. Reyes! old interpreter and dog m;inager, Peter 'Jenson, who :was the onlYwhite 'man. in the. settlement, and has now for many years. lived, been warmly attached ft, Emily: but _ . getber till my friettd came in, and I re- • ally felt myetif beginni :to expeiience . a very.affec 'on& e ' .pui . towards her, , of couree, that she was his . tiece,. cousi or ething.of th_ t sort. But in e cou o ot the evening I asked him whether his wife wils at home and if so. wen he proposed to let me .e her. To my astonishment he replied,— . This lady is Mrs, De Yorse t I thought weie already aware of the act.' Of • urse I blyshed and felt lotribly uncomfortable, and that I was not aware that he had lost Emil. Oh,' he 'Emily is 'very well, and has married a net. of tnine, we were divor d, you L -row, about six .months ago, and married my present wife laet week.' Well, 1 did't feel quite so affection. ate towards her- after ihat, for 1 had hunted ana prospered within 1,000 we said no more about the matter, an miles of - Pole. I went away vowing to never get my The party me. with no serious acci- self into such a ecrape again asking aft - dents. At the duet Islands their ves- er anyhte:y's wife. I did not sea my sel reel upon a slinken rock; but escap- friend's Dew wife for about a month ed without any very serious injury, .afterwards, until I one day met her in and at Cape Desolation clueing a gale the house of a mutual acquaintance, and wind they eyrie in some peril from in the course of conveitettion said to her ick wen heir, and b id anchintage. The By-ele-way might ask you to say to stocks of both their anchors were car- your husband that I want him to come to my office some day next week . 'I don't think you know my husb- and ' she replied tallith -11y. What do you. mean I said I, getting rather nervome Why, my new husband is named Smith, she answered. I was separated oin Mr. De Vose. yestet day morning badly ebeset." and their vessel v as and married Mr. Smith last night. ried away the Wm end vor to bold on in a most dreary and forbidding. rIace, where nobody has probably ever been before, or ever will be, or perhaps wish to be again. Of course they bad their adventures with ice -burgs and ieefloes, which were, quite legitimate and to be elm ed. They were once sedly "nipped," while the young ice (in A u gust ?) was forming at an uncom fortably rapid rate, and everything be- et -Atoned a Winter in the drifting "pa&c." But from this they were -mere eifully spared by a chaege of wind. The party was DI OSt hospitably re- ceived everywhere by the Danish 011i- e:els and people in Orecidend. That I left that honse, pretty rapidly, and registered fli a second vow to the ect, that would never, to my dying day, ask a Chicago lady about her husband again. The two mistakes IAA already made, as to Chicago wives and husb- ands. - made me decidedly shy of them. Bur, the very next flay went to De Voree's store (corn, pork and provisii,ns) country it is known, is owned by Den- end found him engaged in conversation mai , and trading stati<Ins, u(..1) aftoi with a. Len ibly female who. the niauner of the II odsOn's Bay Com- looked like eoineoeuel of a i\low Eng- pany, are the nemeroes altnig fhe 1:.nd old maid Western woman's (east. right, lecturer, and an Arkansas scinat- It is one of the most eingular3 fee- , eoarse pitied me end h _ when the terrible femele left, 1 remetto e For ten successive days they s w the suu at midnight, and durieg two months they never once hell ted their lamps. The temperature was at no time very old, though fires were generally Ile. eessary in the cabin. On one occasion the temp m! are rose seventy de- -. This Nv,as the Southern t4reert- 1. od, where ehey found many pleesart p pie., ad as a set off to it, an im- mense qiiantiter of musquitoes slid tor- menting fliee, by which Dr. Hayes -ye. : once driven from the shore to the ship .:.tile in the act of surveying a glacier - red Mr. Bradford had the same fate h mires of this summer voyage, teat umet of' it was perfoined'* itt constant day ter's wife, i• <e of which is reprewnt 1Jo have .en thirty ..ept high. Those Green- land glaciers are the source of all. the eberge which come do en into the Nort'i Atlantic, to the. great peril of ships and/or the wonder of voya- ge • . • - • ' They visited numerous places of in- terest on the Greenland Cast, begin•;'. ning of Julianashaah in the South and the -ice working 'North. They have been entirely .,.. iccess : al in et: rv objec ; of their vogage, and have been singu- larly favoi.ed with good weather and - gad fot tuee. Not ieast among the objects of in- terest visited by the party was the old Norse ruin at Krakatok, or Gardar, in S th Greenland, at which place there' once flou• 'shed an extensive colony, f nded in the year 6, a son of the founder named Thorwald being, in 1001 the filit discoverer of Newfoundland. A incwg the rnints'Of this anc'er t col t'y (which oy all account Was a very- prospefons one) the party discovered the wail's of old cathedral .in a tole -- able state of fire.ervat. n. They pro- duce many evidences that the elimate ef teeenland, since the Norse occupation has. grown much oolde.. They paid a visit :o the fainoes kryo- lite mine at Ivigtut, the only place in • Alotogether ibe success of the jour- ney has been remarkable, and the amount of autistic and scientific meter- s collected during the short voyage has well repaid the 'Cost. Marriage in Chicago. •••••••••••••••••• The New York correspondent ot the Mobile 1?Pgi8ter sae* : I once met a Chi- eae,o `-twyer who advocated marriegeand who explained his reason to me for so doing. -Forsutha Man to .do much a thing, w ' say theereaet, Surprising. I listened with I-Teathless interest while he gave me a brief history of his experieace, dining the fii ten yens of his iesidence in that celebrated city. Se• he : "I first came to Chicago fitteea yeates ago. I had a frie 4 living here whom 1 had known while be hail res'ded in New 'Yt.' and conducted himself' like a o*.,vilized me,n • a civilized community. As he had written to me to vis, himself and his wife when I came to Chicago, I ; remembered the invi ion when 1 did ;.t the city, and immediately on toy arrival proceeded to his house. He was not at home just at the.moreent. and so: I asked to see his -wife; whom I had known only a year before in New York.' In answer to my enquiry for Mrs. De Vorse a pretty, black-eyed girl came ) into the draWitig-room, and received me quite warmly. Well, we chatted very pleasantly to- , REPEAT ed, "i congratuiNto you 1 ynur ave ; that horrible wornatt would have ex- hausted any man's patienee in -ten um- inen tf3 'conversation." *hut was my horror when he replied " I must re- quest you to speak more respectfully of ' that lady ; she F at preeent my wife— a feet of which you are of college rot aware, as we were married very private- ly 1. .t night." I never said a word, but fled abrupt- ly from ins presence. Once more swore—and I went before a not .•ye who had the biggest kind of a, Bible, as to make tee oath more binding— - that never, ne 'er would 1 speakdispa- . ragueely of any Chicago woman to any man. After that I felt better, and for -two weeks avoided making any more iuistakes. • At the end of that tinr,, however, 1 met the new and angular Mrs. De 'trot- eee tta whom -1 in tbe Meantime been intro:lucee, having the liveliest kind of a quarrel with e big prize- fiehting looking eePow, who was apper- ender in the act of kirockeng her down. Ofcoure I flew to he m. cue, and de- manded to know of the fellow -what he meant; elso if he was aware who that lad.? wasi • iv -A who her husband was? To which he briefly replied, 'Thunder !' 1 paid no further' at ention to him, out turning to Mts.` De Vorse, sa Madam, perm* mel to protect y from that r iffaisn's insolence.! Instead of thankine- lee., she actually his wife the -Nebel° time 1 lived in New - York, but hese I havegot into more. awkward places and bad morefights. than I can count, just because no man, or woman stays married mere than a month at flirthe.st.” - We drank weak kmonade together in solemn thoughtfulness, am*1 parted front him with a feeling that, 'mei as it is to be indimlubly connected with au unpleaoint naother-intbairit is better than to be constantly bothered by a. hange ofwife.. Wililam Ewart, A London weekly paper publishes: the Man of t1wHourin these words. There is a portrait which: from the shop window stares you in the fitce in. the midst of very ordinary-lookieg roy- al highnesses; seiene dukes, and emi- nent preachest; and elicits from, the tow es man; to his country cousins,— There's Gladetane - It it4 a heavy, gloomy face:. rocky, massi,e, seamed with age and weari- ness of feeling. The faults of photo,- graohy ate just these ,.which exaggerate. the prominent characteristics of this; face; but at NN orst aspects these carter de visite, as such portraits are foolishly called, ---no sane man, Ino gentleman ever having used one for a visiting card—will reproduce its leading fea- tur s at ks most unfavorable aspect. As yon look into it you sev, .Ah,. and that men has achieved the highest am- bition; he is de facto a constitutional kink, inech in re powerful than Presi- dent Grant; of .tinieriete over a, sixth part of the globe, eigt million six hundred thoesend square miles of ter- ritory ; PP d what, he does, or says, cam materially effect the millions of people„: acteally one-lifat part of the human. race? He is the chief Minister of the Crown of Vie most ancient inotatrchy in Enrolee the leader of the mod bril- liant' and eloquent aeserably of the mother of Pailiaaients, and Of the: freest pooplo in the world L lie start- ed in life is a Liverpool lad, the son of a menthaire of that town.. He was a .sehoel fellow iZtitii Chei les E een, thee aetee, who frettedhis little life away eitt.id paint and spangles, and now lies - dead, aged sixty; while Gradstone, with bis Eton echseation, his double fist at 0 :bed, his laek, pineki his undoubt- ed hard wet*, is,. about the same age, the most poputar Minister that wit have known for years— most powerful.. (hardle exeeptmg Coi it Bis/4a,r10, who, • will pull down the Irish Church, and, in a contest wits the Route of Lords, beat that historic and august as- sembly. It is worth -while being: Prime Minister. Some such reflection the face must calf up. Scored and soered as it is, we see in it extinct passions—yet not so extinct but that the underlyisg fires may burst forth. The 'head is large anti very fine; the ear love but too. large; the breiat power from hack to, froat, enormous e the hair thin, and iron gray, is worn from the foreheeid, Which justifiel the noi-elliseit adjectavet ‘nituisive tireeyes are sleep, and gleam .from urelier strong, Ilia eye- brows, so deepihut some one said -- but he must have been 4spoonyi-tbat 'looking into them was likeroOking in- to the universe; The nose is cogitive the mouth stern„ Cruel Lea -vindictive the chin square; ter jaw shuts with vulpine ex.pressiok, sad -exhibits im- mense power. The face is a remarkable face, its possessor was once called . 'handsome Gladstone It is perfiaps as.handsome a?) er ; but it was never attractive. Two historical fteees are - somehow calledup by it when 'ou look ixt it—two faces set against emit other n their day—the one is Strafford, who ost his head through Laud an4Charles. slapped my face, an-cl said, I'll teach 1 you to interfere between man and wife. 1 I., the other ie °Jiver Cromwell, -who- was at the back of that power who, That's my husband, and we've been married three &Lys. It's a pretty hard thin* if a wiftt-can't stop in the street t to speak to hueband without having some idiot come and make a muss about it.' "New, centirlued the lawyer,. "this. is not Only a true story, but it is a fair example of the continued trouhle that a mangetsinto who lives in Chicago and dosen't know how to, hold; his tongue. You now underetatal why I d hate Obitagoi t astorus, and whygo ia for indissoluble Marriage, never made a raigtake asking,.& man about Ps • ook all their heads away. It'ut Glad - tone has not that singular,. liandsonm ohann of Strafford, nor,. &Tao' more than the age, has be the warm. tender- ness awil sweet affection which shines; out of the best portraits of ragged, war - worn Oliver Cromwell. But dross up Gladstoae ilk a buff suit, a laze {Alai., and thesingular sigular het handsomett ploi reser of a Puritan, leader, and you would be ijearried back to then seyen- t,eenth centatt?, such is the shape et' his face;.. POOR COPY