The Huron Expositor, 1871-11-10, Page 2&:
•
THE HURON
EXPOSITOR.
Nov. 10 171.
THE. WANDERING JEW.
I chancedonce, upon the occas-
ion of a visit to Paris, to ascend she
Vendome 'Column for the purpose
of contemplating the city ft•om that
lofty elevation. At my feet was
spread oat the busy panorema of
the people meving across the Place,
or entering it fromathetcontiguous
streets, the Rua de la Pais. and the
Rue de Castigimuet
}low long I had been, there,. I dis
not know—for the time passed very
quickly, absorbed as I: was in gazing
at the points of interest in the great
eity a but I was aroused, after a
while, by feeling a gentle tap upon
the shottiden At this touch, a little
'Startled 'as I was, I turned,. and. look-
ed behind we.
Near enough to admit , of my
touching him, hadI desite to do
•
. so, I saw a Mall of grave • aid som
ber ex•,ression of countenanceeand
With a Jnr, flowing, gray _beard.
As I. 1 edeer at him questioningly, a
s arniL v.alle upon his faceeand for a
moment impet•ted a cheerfulness to
• it saltnote immediately upou my
obsorvieg him he advanced to my
tide.
" l'erdee," he said, "for thus in7
terrupteeg y ,ur meditations. You
are a etranger to Paris, I presume'
"Yes." • '
a An Englishman, perhaps ?:'
"Yes."
a Ah I"
Then., he gazed at me with what
seem.ed to me to be a serious expres,
aion in his eyes., .
a Tuis is a favorable place from
which to view Patis," he continued,
in. as grave a manner ea had marked,
- his eoutiuct from the beginning. "1
sometimes come here myself; that,
is, a !:teel. get a chance to do ete The
streete• are too Much croweect for
coed tre and from the stieet nothing
can ne seen ; but, up at this height,
one feels free --free ?"
1.7.1r. an instant, as the stranger
apehe; a restless gleam' came into
his eyes; but this passed away al-
most, instantlyeand the sonsbe: ex:
preeeiion regained its influence in
his face. -
"You, sir," I remarked, after a
alight pause, " are, of course,. a
Parisian ?" tp ••
a At present, yes.. 1 have for
some time resided heee ;. and in that
sense, I aria a Parisian. Rather,
should I say, however, that I em at
eosmopelite." -
"Indeed! Then, sir, you have
been -a great traveller, doubtless ?"
- " Y.- e have surmised correctly,
sir," tsedi. d the Stranger. "I have
where ---in every clime,
am..r -.;(11.7.- people!" 0 Then. be
.. •
ile e.t. h a sud•den • energy that
st t: t 1 - 1. "Do I look old, orfeeble,• i.
or at tee.; .vith years fr . i
•,,,t, all, sir—not .at all. You, ?
- • ape ae, • ei the conttary, to be a very f11
'f!1•"/: tr 1.71:-! 111a -011e, I should say,. 1
bear a great deal of i.
lettetel." se
'I t etranger shook his head c
we... , -1
•eet I am a very old man," f
a
s "For a moment, sir, I trembled
to think of that hour." • • • !
" bah !" he continued, It is no-
_
thing to ehink of it ; you should haveseen
seen the spectacle" ,
"Ab, that meet. have leen hor-
rible, indeed !" I
"It WEIS hoerible ! I was. therb !
I had juet arvived in .Plutie froin
Asia Minor. / The sissaesine who
flocked in the Streets of Petrie, that
night, shouting,. 'Death to; the
Huguenots!' slew Men, women, and
children ; but- hone of theneeslew
me L I was elisions to fde. I threw
myself in their Way, crying, 'Live
the Duke of Gttise l' in order to pro-
voke the,m, to slay me. But they
passed me by. kveat in Unit mo -
Inept et horror -I was avoided as if
the plague attached to my person.
t
ITpliftedswoids byu
lhndreds threat-
ened me for a, tnoment ahd were
then miraculously turned• away,
while the arms of those who wield-
ed them were paralyzed. I bared
my breast in the path of the soldiers,
crying, ' ' Ki.1, kill,' but . though
blood was ' shed on every side on
that fatal Light, none 'would pity me
—none would hay mercy ttiters the
h
wretched Leaittert &! The l ' death
which I sought, a d yet -ailed. foe,
•
was denied me."I turned, with a sudden nee of
horror. as I undet•S od the t. Let that
1 was alone uptin the 'Vendome
Chi ilnin a ith a madman..
__." Ha!" I exelai tede with an in-
voluntary frenzy, t e reed of my
intensenerVous exc temente "You
(then, are the Wand .ring JeW ?"
"-Ay, the Wendt:ling ,T,ew . Look,
-now, still further t • the. left of us.
• Do you see that column: tie' t rises.
• abcve the roofs of ti e houses? That
is the Column of tin y at the Palace
de la Revolution. here stood th
ete
euillotine duchies the first revolucion.
On that oecasien, t o,, when blood
ran in steeala I. a as in.Paid's.. .1
l' -
thought -that et la t my hour was
come.W
t he -n heads Were fal ing in-
to thi;:gory basket% t every ninute
of the day, I stood f Tim morMg to
i.,
evening, at the fop of the guillo-
tine, imploring the to 'pia e tny
neck under the gliste ng knil e but
the executioneirs , r buffed me, de-
claring that; I $vas lad, and drove
, .
me from the death th 't ItpraYed for.
I tried, too, when th s tuitibri s were
ou their way from ti. e Ohniciergerie
to the guillotine, be triog th, coe-
demned, to smingle Myself ,imong
the doomed me* ; bi 11 was letect-
ed and seourged, emit the hookng ef
the people. All me had thCir op-.
portunity to die; bet death ' neyer
came to tite.,"
• During this speed having some-
what recovered my c Mpoeure, I had
rapidly made u:m
lp in ind to the
course that I s tould pursue. The'
nartiec had wor ed h Mself up to a
taroxysm of lunacy;h nd was staring
i )
a me with the yes 0 • a fiend. Be -
ore he •had time to et rmiee •m, per-
sose, I made a suddet spring f r the
iperture, .with the ptrpose ' o des -
ending .the spiral ' staircase ; but
juick as I' -was, the Madm tui as no
l
ess expeditious; for • be stretched
orth his bedS and clutehei me
round the waist:
I struggled desperately to *ape:
But what was my str egth cotper-
d to that of this raging mania • fi'
" Let go your holt !"- I shouted.
' Why doeyou detain me T'
"You seek to escape me, then ?"
e replied in a hissin, voice. " Yen
hall nOw eithe/ thro% me ever the
ailingeor I will toss you from elle
°lentil ! Quick ! Afelse your
hoice I My life,- r yours! I
iould hale death I ive it to me
r die!"
Step by step, as - he spok he
ragged rite to th rail ng ---the only
epedinient that pres rved tisfroin
istant 'death ! Not a word passed
ber,ween 14S ia this struggle for life.
My efroete were made to elude his
grtsp, -and attain the, staircase. I-Iis,
t(!,-- reach -the baltistrad- which over-- scu
looked the steeet ibeloa. '' (pie
AS tt‘o• Moilleuts 1 as. -ed, I, felt and
myself gradually • gt•oving weaker. hot
The Inaniao'S. het OM, th came 'hits
My face, and his gra. p nearly su
located me: With 1 error I , ap
preciated the fact that 1 waS lOS
ing ground. al d that the desetrat
•
.itt choose to -express any
wtiT-a-t.„11e had just told me
bet -h eight -that he Was amusing
leas et my expense. As it was,
I cgiuning to feel 'nervous,
ete, as 1 was, with ' Mall
suartner was, to say the least,
un
,u have been a traveller," I
sri,t reetunine the conveesa-
tio ; eray ask wriealter you have
est to England
s 'awn, very often ! Of late
ye. however, I lia•-e not been
the: s'
, 'tam, have, douhtless, also visit- n
ed st. aud Africa ?" I continued. it
Itnese continents haveI titiverS-
ed. My fate has carried We eVery-
vvry w re !II •
t\lay .1 ask v. ho you are, sir ?•''
seid, elitions L -now the reline of
ray es a o ge iu terloeu tot .
" _Pardon he esclaimed, lifting
hand dela ecating-ly. L0t. my
manic ue unknown. to your
" As you phetee, sir," 1 replied,
idea:tautly.
I turned and begau to view the
city spread out at my feet. A few man was gettieg the better of me. boll
I heard the encouraging. venees .ot
Ghe mei' rushing in • the staireese.
Otte moment more, and I SIM
them emerge from he aperture.
They sprang upon the madman",
and, tore him 'irom ie ; and in that
instant, yielding -o a reactioat 1
fainted and F311 un onscious.
When 1 reCoveted• toy senses, I
told my story se th horror stricken
listeners, and 1 was ieformed, int re-
turn, of the identity of the -Man
who had so nearly Succeeded in de-
etroying ree. 1Iie wee :a noel
hepatic. who had eecaped, two days.
before, -from a nelighboring tnad-
house,. and the symptoms (If his
lunacy were.as the reader in.ay sur-
mise, that he waS the ytet•itable
" Wandet•ing Jew,'" _whom. death
„could never reach.
How an Inventor Struggled and
•• • Wo
In the Scientific American
story of the etruggl $ anu triumphs
of an inventor, wit h is .worth'pres-
erVation. 'the sub‘tence of it is as
follows es -
La, 18$8, Mr. Thclnies Sheehan-, of
Dunkirk, Nev York, • foreman in
the blacksmith' delete talent of the
Eeie railway show,
patented it ,, StVan
which,. tht,1101 afl i
lion,. proved to he
there wa lit,t,le dentaud. This was
hie first invention; and the (test of
its completion, together wieh one
veer's 'struggle to manufactute •and
introduce it, contpletely exhausted
bheehan's means, anti reduced
hid, to the extreapest poverty. He
was, in fact, in pretty nearly the
same condition as Palissy the Potter,
at th.e, moment of his greatest dis-
tress. A wife an eight children in
Sheehan'e family were redueed
to the verge of destitution, and: i1les.
Sheehan became uncommonly bitter.
Just.at this crisis, Mr. S. D. Col-
well, General Freight Agent of the
Eie Railroad at Dimkirk, chanced.
to teeet Mr. Sheehan in the streets
of the town, and eccosted him with:
"Well, Thorns, • , how are the
grapples? I hear they have used
you hp."
• " Yes," was the answer. " the
gkapples have done niy besieess ;. I
wish a had never seer thews"
"Throw 'emaway," ad vid Mr.
" Have you. any finished ?"
"1 have one almost'Aone," said
Thomas. •.
" Finish- that e I will pay .you
$40 for it, and have it used for pick-
ing up coal at tne duels. The money
will help you'in your preeeut emer-
gency, and you can go back to your
.old place in the shop itnd .earn
good living for. your
I Will," said Thomas.
Back to his humb
the inventor, with n
te•east, and Set binned
grapple with, ail du
at that place,.
nine grapple,.
igettioes iuven-
one for which
e home went
,w hope ia, his
to finish the
speed. But
getthat into thie iron in the pre
prop rtiou, 1 should have steel,.
faun that my tape ansh fisaudi
gt•apPle,
I With tittle faith or. Itepe, iilitiU he
should succeed, he took •Sk1111E7 0l the
1 e, and 4d.tiingwithout any par-
e:tiler reason for so doing, so
altpetre and common salt, mai
este a•itle iJiie eolutiots and aha
rodged saucerful of .the, little
alining fiber these was in the hot
e theu fortged the tap, and -en veil
g it in the paste, put the wh
i to a Lu d1 iron box and exposed
t the heat for two hours iu a We
smiths- breTo hi toy and 'et
rise, when he took it eute it
ard euough . to cut cast steel. T
was finished,- and forty
tire flowed into the family teeaat
f Thomas Sheehan._ He went be
his old work, disguated vi
acents,. and resolved never to ha
per But I wish to rental k that if I do
t walk, you had better not inteefere
my ith me." •
• "Oh ! 'walk a' won't say a vford
about it:"
"Well, clon'a When addressed
or interfered with, I am apt to get
me fut•inus1 needy brained a poor
e a man with a dog iron the o her
V(1- t."
re -
"The deuce you did."
ise.. • '4 -Yes I did."
op- " Well, that's rather disagreeable.
ole A fellow might, under an impulse,
it blurt out something' to you."
ck- " Better not." •
me "No, 1 should think not "
as A long pause fidlowed this._ At
he last the now wide-awake lodgerltske
01- ed abruptly :
try Did you notice
ck floor ?"
th "1 believe I did."
se "If you • walk, you know,,
ut rather you wouldn't step in it."
rd- " 1'11 bear that in mind."
till • After another pause he again.ask-
eal ed:
ht "Did you notice, that door on the
ri- -left ?" '
Ile "1 saw a deor on the left."
" Weil, if you walk I advise $-ou
to not to go out there. • It opens 'out
ths on a porch, only the porch hastilt
ng heep built, and it's twenty feet down
into the stable yaid."
"I don't believe I -shall walk out
that door "
"Don't think I would if I evalsed
ed • much."
ng I supposed: my- inqpisititee friend
a• was dropping asleep, when he agtin
breke out: '
" I say, did •you really brai
man with a dog iron T'
" I tried pretty bird."
then clime a silence that was not
broisen. Alter a little while I he
my bed fellow creeping. softly fn
the other side of the bed. I cot
heat) him feeling about fee his 1 at
,ind his clothes. Then f had be
satisfaction that the dooe had cloeed
softly on my retreating tormentor.
I rolled over and slept a sleep•of in-
nocence.
The -next morning: on descendi
to breakfast I found. an old _frit?, at ,
seated at the table: We had not
met for years.. After a cordial
peeting, I Said :
"Are you stopping here r
"1 have been 'trying ; but I am
nearly dead. I slept on a bench in
o- the bar room amid a lot of dramk6
brutes, who sang Bingo for wagers
of drink all nieht." 1
6
"Could you get no bed ?"
"\e, I had a double,bed to my-
self, when thlit stupid landlordese it
up a crazy fellow, who wItlked aekd
struck out with dog irons."
" Good heavens, Gillespie, AV s
that you '?"
• "Arid, hang you, Weston, y u
don't mean to say you served i le
that trick'?"
It wes a case that called for diplo-
matic) explanation.
1
anything to do With ci.ie again., 13
t le- remembt•once of the tap, ea
e ed in, so uuique a manlier, e
haunted Man" . Having a good 0,
o e day he would repe4 the exp,
I,
o case hardeeing to de, •he thou
n ent upon a -large scale, Which
did with perfeet eucCeeie . i
For twelve mouths Ile went on
e 'periuntut, pet chasing the materit
etth•his oWli Money, nd worki
it secret by niglib, and • t odd hours,
t the: end of twelve u oaths, lie re-
censulered his sentence f °widen na-
tion on patents, and ap rlied for ue
o i ' his proeees, which wafinglratitei,it
'S ptember 4, 1860, the cla
fcr a conOination of damaged fldu
p itash lye, or lye from hatd w Hid
ashes, nitre, eommon salt, and . ul-
p rate of zine, for case harden ng
it n, •,, In 1867 he. patented an In -
p ovement on the above-nan ed
pores. In 1868 he .tet k out ID
-
o hos patent for ah. 6iitirely new
in ecoss, which. Consists in the use of
raw limestone, charcoal, black ox de
ou
or
is
he
my ]):at on
the
I'd
of manganese, and eoda, count
sa a pulveeized rosin, combieetl, •
cu vetting iron inttasteel, Whicl
nc at •widely used, and &en which
has reaped 'quite e fortune.. .
No less then tweotyrthree of he
le = ding railways in Arnerica 1) m
uS • this. proCeSs, under Ilieence frtsn
th 3 .patentee, for lan'tlening the
li its, guides, pins,. and nuts of 6 -
co notives, effecting, we 'ire told, o
le -s a saving than from five to ix
hundred doilare annuall on each o -
'for licen.ses under his patient of
for $45,000.
et --
4.. e
to,
icioirikos,t,igied,diens,o,blny
lio i conseTtent upon.' t6 wear of
tinier of his paten in Ameri
he inventor has alreitcly receiv d
.6..5 0, and has just 1Sold the
I 1868,
back at the end of a weary da
(ileiatitiiung'set':le lost
-
My Eedtello-cs• .
!
nto country town, and durit
cot rt W eek, 1 . Oneo rode -on holt
s -'ed in a con tinuone . mud hel
aided with stir mps end ornamer t -
rd
ro
Id
upou what slender -threads do the pa
fortunes of men hang ! tap, the eti
only one -our itiventor had of the ed
size required, suddenly snapped cal
asunder, and, as it was essential to elo
the progress of the work, be must ho
have a new one or he could. not go th
on. fro
In this strait, be applied. to his
wife to lend him twenty-five cents,
to buy the' neceesary steel to forge.
the, tap. But ebe, having no faith
in the grapple, refused for • two
e -
tar
e -
with loge; that a besieged ()inlet) y
ed , roach._ Night had alma( y
.ed in, andI was guided to ti e
ttl by a thoupand.aed one boy If
e• place, and the noise isetting
in the bar moth, as I approache
less disagree -able. 1 found t
llorci shut .up in a Omer pe
ing one lineid insatiity to
owers, To thy &pest for sun
and .a •bed .he responded that I
d. eat my fill, but that there w•
a, bed wiengaged or' hot, occur)
n the house, 1 persisted • wher
wretch- informed me; that thete
a "feller" in number six (met -
pying a double bed, and 1 coul
" roll in there" if so minded,
sO
very good' teasons'—firsa thet she
believed the money would be thrown
away if she gave it to her husband ;
and secoud, that she had- not tthe
money to eiVe him, even if eo dis-
posed. The refusal was seasoned
with some very hot word -spice that
made it very unpalatable to Thotnas.
Bat he bethought him of. a merch-
ant, who,'in. brighter dap, had seen
the eolor of his Money, and who,
perhaps, would noW give him credit
l'or the small modieutueof steel he re-
quired for the ten.
To this meechent he hied, and,
iewhat reluctant to, prefer his le,
ea began beating about the bush,
timdlye steaying into politics,
words' passed bet weeu thempand
friend, feeling his manliness
lld suffer- tee keenly by asking
lit for the steel, came away with -
it.
Vith no definite purpose he went
ie, pondering upon how he should
wept t ties noW no tritling, ob-
le of the lestken tap,. e
) oer
raottients of silence, passed. • Then
ho, 1 knew; wes
watching me close! v, al • hotielt 1 witS
net 10 .,,king at IiiaL direct- poke
'111011, as- he cried extiliingly, uht.;
-Ito you sce that ,Oleient looking " Du;Itesetalee tnee, in your oh-.
Ntf'etrie to Ott' ft of tt- stillaCV !" - 1 (-rave. a lorel cry, to at dims
Aftee't the' lapse of a mi e \\
spent in these struggle', tne:manie
• g ri l nal ly foreed me to. Ai& ba 1 as
0 SUII
tt-mie
- • -lie .fourici his wife making lye, for
soft soaps het htieecidity in no Ivey.
traliZed. by tin, alkaline reaction.
pondont and di:seen/teed, he sat
11, iti. eu very ent,da ole mood,
n he -chanced to spy a piece of
lying twat- the tubs at which
spouse was •workrog.
upon how lie could melee that
e of iron hard ettouli lo" it tap,"
vas
•
tz•ree tptttrzers of tt 11 1 w -ay 1" he .t.r;tet the yassers-liy 1 low ine. 1 \vile
11;i1 11, rdliting- il1. the direction leal clutelicel.orre of the, rztilitigs to ircm
ferted to. wleclt .f..• Aenecioesly. Me his.
s, I letee notieed that *build- . filen 'dow-nWartiS, extended ing
wtmc is it ?" ovt r ti.Eift ft oni- that sitte
Th.et, sir," eselled l e sneer, position 1 e,m1c1 See.t lie hte
!it." taatielt ef two or these tusit• lo
•eh. teeenain I' aexereis ztini ta t,11-) cif -the column.
Il '1 toi•N;li Ag 1111 1shouted it ti
1 tht; f It•11 li ttr of the " nelp, help
1,-;!.•,, on), ,w ALts,,er,..."-- • They he.trd rut-, ttlid
\-V::,-1`..er it wa:-; i• c•f the illy epecalt; and I saw,
1:, lir totii!, •:31.c,itise-uf in;e. of unse,ealtalde t
e •dr. iefttl ilett titer were comine t
I
s.e.: tee teeetitm f the St. 'rho hope of tteeistas
eetelsler:s1 rrew strength. I inat.t.
k--. •
. 't (fort to disongnge 11,:i so f Iron' !be tht-e
'the( 11,h,frang1 1u lie hold of ti 11) thine ; and, "
• • .ts 1 succeecled in eesin u.v fect, 1p-,"
: • e
kiiig up to A
, the
e top. of :My
11 11,1en,f90(1
W711 tfi el- tebt
esokfulnees. Psis
niy 19escue.
gaVe Lue. C11011
0110 111010 Vo..1
.1tATI1.1:12. RUDE EXPE111.1r1.:'a,
esalts whirli have in 1110 end
e hint a ri:vher man than beiever
teed eft tadug. . -
St) happened that from ;. (lis-
t ulative, a ilannon
hi in 111'1;1.11d,0ll frit`11(1 had Lil-
ted quite a library -of'. wurks 011
listry,..eonie of • them yare and
able. Ile had read 501110 d
hOukS to very good purpose,
ere is surely earbon ill that
•01g1"1 Fr" 111 i2ou1!..1 only
a
no
Ian
dea
ens
per
.cou
tot
ed
the
was
was diSirlai, but my- sisly hope
fter the .evening inaigestiou
bed the rough stairs (o nuilibe
I was told byethe landlord t
wall- in without knocking, and di 1
.1.4.; Was • a cheerless -room withon
carpet upon the fluor, or eutteins t
,hut out the blank light of. tit,
' win( owS thet seemed to stere. blind
hy ii On one, and wink as the candl
I flare 1 in the• wind. 1 found in ,
C011) eimon taleastning offelis drearnA
SO.
•,
hy
troves, end 1urdres5ing " rolled
in" s the landlord suggested. -Mv
steer ger turned over with something
iike t growl and grunt, as I crept to
las
lit•ed as was, I could not sleep.
The )ed-tielt felt tte if it were stelftel
with grasshoppers, and the pillows
-; were of the sort to slip op one's "twit,
tl e night, and he sneezed out
; smite time during the day. .13eseles
• this nite bed fellow i,titored :de -Hein-
: ably. It sounded like a giant, try- ;
ieg to Wow " "
: through a tinhorn a iteont knotying
exavtly luta,. I bore this 111(1 111.1'
us long as .1: could end at last eaves
my friend a dilf in the rii)F,
.eXCLLi 111-
1i14 at the same tithe :
sav:,
t:
afik Eq.
" 1
think.
that
,t
a W
I i10 — elt —what is it ?" he
, in a confused way.
0111 sorry to dittirli yon, hut
11 my duty to inform you
Walk in lily
'eh-, walk "
fy Christian friend, am a ell
that this is a free country,
f a man wishes to walk in his
• SPECIAL NOTICES.
The simplicity of medhanism em-
ployed in the Osborn Sewing Machine, RS
Well as its lasting qualities is tne sec*
Of its unrivalled SUCCeSS.
Amongst the symptoms of-consempti4.
which firasent themselves as the diseaseprogresseS, are cold chills, cough, short-
• ness of bread), restlessness at nighty ltAs
of appetite, loss. of flesh, night sweats,.
hectic, expectoration of white Mucous,
pellets,also yellow and bluish or gray
matter, sometimes streaked with blood ;
burning pains in ;the chest, diarrhcca,
general :prostration and incapacity for
the ordinary duties of lice. -As the
patient becomes reduced, other compli-
cations appear and he 'rapidly sink -s, A
remarkable and very eoinnion physical
sign among consumptives is their exemp-
tion from alarm ; notwithstanding the
dangerous character of their disease the
believe_ in ultimate recovery. This erfr
Confidence prevent the patients from, r
sorting to the only means of cure, an 1
that watchfuliivss necussaly in so criti
al a tithe, un til finally they lapse iht..)
hopeless irreco very.. -Ike the first a
venturoUS boatman that rowed dow
from Erie ; broad and smooth was th
river, rapid his progress, and pleasan
his anticipations. Alas; the tide wine
drifted. him so rapidly was one of destru
tion, and when he Would retrace his wa
he foUnd the current too strong to sten
and that he drew nearer every it istant t
the mighty „Niagara. Down, down h
was carried amidst the seething spray
and with his bark was dashed to pieces.
The consumptive is admonished to re
-sort to Fellows' Compound 'Syrup o
1-1 ypophosphitotk When the ilrst symptom
presents itself, as it . is the only surT
TO THE FARMERS OF HURON.
AGRICULTURAL IMPLE31ENTIC-
PIRST
GRAIN CRUSHERS
TRAW CUTTEliS.
0. G L S ON
sole gent for the County10 'Juror', for the firrn:
of
XWELL &TNIHITLAVir
of iaris, is now prepared to furnish farmers
with their celebrated
Cranarcrs and g.traw Catteire..
Gra n
These rnaehines ti)“k he First Prhe at the Pro-
vincht Trial ft.r impleinents held in
Paris in .7uiv kt, at..i are w'ilumt doubt the best
311111,11 ItetTlrf.:1 111 i rOVillet`. MIlithilleS kept
e0118.0 nib" on liaVd., '11; 1.1 Zi.) be seen by intending
pack: se'',Itt an. :1 ....It the ...‘larket,-Seafarth.
Alva
ferent
'Celeb
d'OI•
a 1) .13 )7: os; PLOWS, of four
dlf-
0111.11,,ect front the
ated ManUfaCtOry
or
t, A Y a: t ., GLASGOW,.
The e pla-ws ear. la.. 4, nvarly 25 per int. less
th..ai11 nhi4r!
P1ow f Culmiii;11) Inanulaettzre,
All other -varieties of agrienitural implementQ
kept constantly on hand, tvhich will be told at
manufacturers paces.
0. C. WILSON.
197
ROXB()R() MILLS!
HANDs.
TirFandersig:4-11 having purchaFed the noxhoro
Gri. Flouring Mins, inere1se.1 the :Ma-
chinery. and put the 'Mill in a thorough state of
relair, are now la( pared to do
•
GRISTING CHOP/111G
u
D
All other kinds of general Custom Work
on the shortest notice.
They would also desire to itate t() f1111/10113 alla
0011111-1, 11111i a0 the work Will be done under their
own safervision„ they haven() lxsitation in guaran-
teeing eutire satifaction.
A. trial is resT:ectfuny solicited.
B. SHANTZ & BROTHED.
Boxbtro ,/une ,1871. •
1S4-tf.
W..GRASSIE,
CARRIAGE AHD WAGON MAKER,-
• Code.rich Sealura.
SLEIGH,
CUTP EDS,
• CAIIRINGES,
BUGGIES,
WAGONS, aza,
1 Built in ii. superior manner, to order, on the short-
, est 'loth e.
Partitnlat attention paid to horse -shoeing and
general 1.1aeks.nirbin 167
DANIEL IVPGIREGOR,
BOOKBINDER, HULETT,
just received a iarge Stock of the .
_ILE materials used in the business, and
13 noQully prepared to execute on the •
shortest notice and in the -latest style; .
all orders he may be favoured with.
Registers, Ledgers,
A.1\-`,1)
1314 -A.1\1 -at 13 °Olt S
kkw oF ANY RIND,
Ruled, Prz Ricci cold Made
To old( r, on the hortest notice, and a.
pr tes which defy competition.
LA IES' WORK BOXES •
AND
F NCY CASES,
Made to order. -
OLT AND N '14.1JW 1300 KS
- .liu ',VD 1 YD 12..EPAIRED
At city prices.
Perso is residing at & distam'e by
leaving -heir books at the- Signal &ex
Store, ;odcrieh, or at the ExPOSITC:,.
office, S.taforth, or at J. R. Grant's, Ain-
leyville, stating style, may rely upon
th.61.11 bting well bound.
AlT comminieations addressed to the
undersit ned, will receive prompt atten-
tion.
-
DANIEL 21100 REG OR
Constance, 1), 0,
ullett.
remedy.
-Many suffer rather than nauseou
medicines. All \vim sulicr front cough$.
colds, irritation of the bronollial tilLes 01
tendanev to constimptimi, 0,,'j:1 find 1)r
NN'edar's Balsam' of .11-ild Cherry re
mots'. a•-: fo the patient as ef
it Is .1 powtrful remedy ; it is a speLd3.
remedy ; it is a remedy that enrc.ts
The seapson for co..glis. arni col.ls
rapidly approachnm ant! one,
be prepared to clit.ek 1 i,t lirs
s-ympto:n.;, a-- it, ciiugh coo !ract...9.1 bowel:Di
Dow, and not:, fr• qnni 1 larzts all
W inter. Th. -re is uo I) • or railway than.
J1,1111son's "‘n().1:,1"tt 1.1101000t. For all
iltheatt,s .,f llie 11)1oat awl 'kings it bhouldi
be ust-tt iote-nally and 0 at not.ly.
IA;I1,fo‘ or, 'n COM, catarrhal
foyer, and 1,11:=a1 discharge of it brom-nish
color in hornet:, nov, ehe •keil at once
b-., libt.ral use of Sherutar i UZLVitiry COn-
,
POWt:CTS
. , •r. f••••-• • y
-
and C. YE,), A UOTIONEER,
bleep tlittl e no coestitutional Enu- SEAFORTH,
win attend to any 1-ilde in the Countr,
tO pre\ cut hint doing so - near of cia cl.thatt., eb.-aph.
Seafort
LINEA LING EYE PRESERVERS.
, Nov. 9, 1870.
TIIE hurt- proof i;wity;:e.
Perh.ete 1 Slat"; ae1; , i, tip -
1 tie( ibry
!ti.pr.eig r 11 ord
that the scans sr tes :sheet:Lae
tee uh...tir,-,1 Lloa tt,11;114. tin; 1
1°;14:3Lesa, /3,.1:
111 if ilifr 'Ts!
I p r t -41.111t, tlet
1144•!-1
.r.oua on tri .1, that the re -alit eon:
not he other... istl thin it has,. in th
id:nog gi.n( tbr
BRAYED
Ily )1
With a fall iutuwie ig.! of 111'. ;taw: -
of the ai,-ertion, ci,tiol 1 bit Oa .1
;ire vt:rit,a I•Ni
▪ '127.,'X'Ifliein re -i1. 1.6
]S=P...-.Ceit..;1;iti 7,;,;ete-ralt: il "
I114.Pst
NittltItIS & CO.
Ileve apririn tad 11.4" Agent,
GOUlirr.1-1,
Stafvrea..
stese---"T;
„
ThiCov. '0, 187
TO A " LIVE SOLO
liAlo NOV, /00
kw sweetly dot thou _
,
gem
A Tose reposing "mid ts
gifts,
• A rilv, spotless, -wowa
• By II -eat -ell -1 0133 breez
would set,k
. To match, in torne ine
form. '
We press, with loving
pure,
While Jost in w41).d.:2r
muse- -
'' can form so tender, se
For soul undying ----fres'
- mist,
A gem $0
,
e..1.--,...,"
. -
}lbw -closely vieilol thin.t'
seem -le sodl,
So late 'mid g.,orics br
• gaze ,,
1 hi earthly Se le But
• • 1.1
tains rise ;
From portaLs ir
• the soul
• And -views- ifs
• feeble waijs
Proclaim its lading
tones 1
Shall calm thy 111et
timill dovit
While nigh is •heard,
bright •
•Charged with t'hy sin
thou on --
if fnund too feeble,
bear, .,
A grassy monad s
sign
Who'll hear tl e bud totart,i
.1.,
To yield its pe•fame in ,
'Vet gi!d thee ',tor the a
ei own
• Shall deck tliy victor 1
returned,
Whi*.eeeraeh etrainsii
prayers an old,
That vainly plead the tr.
Ite,.p.
Theft rise to claii i for ti
•
ward.
•
„Turn, look to ear, h, ly
- sprit _
Bedecke,1 with Ihr.ci.rs
fi e :ion tentis,
Bedewed with tearS,
.. ''''t brat:ett she.t
where mouhis inA
hone
Awaiting thy -mturati
• on.
b17.'
battle
JE 'non
-----
A set golden pu p'e. „
lf :eh snit 111011
An Indian on thv hill
In autumn -eft m as,sc
lie was a irttive
• By the onlarnentvalrf
is fur young Indian q.
Far in the valley
-On the bank.; of thei
lii:linnet r be was fon
• And the slopes of Lake
Ile i.:4113.1 1)is huiatin
• Ile lovt tl his nal ive fore
With slopitag 1
• Mut dark seelude,llvall
-So in:I of moisy
Af tr in the Wilil wOo4l1a.
And low c sha,14
Win -re the k -1S 4les. w;
• 1.1.0 the briiht s01i10\
'iii reftec Mill stem ity,
• ‘. it h dame 3 atiti'e 210 s
WIIS t1-. camp of this e,
• And his warlriors bra
Anil -of:en, w11,111 in I
e .-.1,1e t flu- ELJIIS
To tr‘ his hipl.o.
And (leek hi head A
MAlly,ye:11's this eh'',
how. 2tir1'1jN1 20141
Bro'aght T10: tryot. from
And laid low the -• 1ii
:His bark canoe and p
AVaA bolluingt thr.
The ant Innu iLr wail 423
• A fawn lay itits gort
•
When1114•! :1 1,Vi14
to 1 ht:
:-.3uott; his •t• •
“1:01nrailei ! we tips:
• P,ravely did his; warn
lh•turn tilt bloody (she
War
• With arrow WI With .
• Thi ','tain of the :13
\Vela 410WII 1111(11) tho
Theu !i.a bre:in-le as
And 14f4r(1s 1%01 dowu t
The Mum) chief lay "dyl
Ills %%anion, ,by his
i'io 1 ri.quoi3 ruAitai 1'11
To swell the bloody 31)
- h Intrritr and with
NVith fiendish, yt Us
S('').'t I/ 11.0)1VS like
• tped up the flytng
D.0-3 are dxone and wp
• the wild
The pak fact," a:4ms
td,i Lake Huron's s
. An.' the 'bones of this c'
Ltk. \visit his %van ioas
Lie mou.tierin,,- milotow
10 an Ithitan e.
0:A. 2 -t, J$1.
BRIEF ITOTE
Rochefort i.14 gfoi to
tory of Napoleett
The best :mutton ie
from Rhode Island.
;State :tiers the it
end ditels.s.
oiul not
killed tilos. for
— Printing TLuuse
York, is to 1-e •r
1•.LattIe of F' uikiiu,
pedestal 13 fcgtt high
—Some of tliv jou
are :1411,-ocatiIig tLe
kW making edneation
--- A voting lady in
ty, planted a Nva
'iastepriog that •t,r