HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1871-11-24, Page 3Nov. 24, 1€ 71
ARMERS ° OF OUR N,
t'VRALtJPL Err ls..
Patz
1 CRUSHE S
AND
W CUTTERS..
WILSO
Comity of Huron,: fer the fir
of
L& WH1TLA
-prepared to frtreieh farmers
Chrivr elebreteud
ria and Straw Cut
k the First Prize et the
i.nitttral ituplemente holo i
and are without doubt the be
Province. Ia;ehnes;
and eau bo seen by ittten •
e. at the Market, Seaforth.
IRON PLOWS, of on air-
ed direct from the
h Plow M$n>rfaetory
tee
k Co., GLASGOW‘
-sold nearly 25 par cent. hese
eanauli maga factare.
sof eieri •Church implement€
. id, which e ill be sold at
O. C. WILSON.
0 MILL
Ea HANDS.
.car rrtrt hawed the Rokboro.
tee Mille, 11 rr <'F.F,,.l ..lir Ala-
in a t!re+r, . h ::tate of
- v rrF'peree to (10
CHCPPI'1►
LN D
eneral Custom Work
'rte.t este .
F• to rta5 to fernners..nnFI
will lit. (b.e,, rill ler thein'
ye tin hesitat.ien in guariu-
fitfully solicited.
NTZ & BROTHEZ;-
1S4-te
SSIE,
a CON 4 AKER,
•S'ert forth
•
i.GES,
WA (IONS, &c.,:
tci orFler,on the short =.
to ltvr e-el:toeing and
Ifa'7
t`.7 .Fri.: EGO'R,
RULaETT,.
iarge Stock of the
tlkti letisiireee, th{i
tF> execute on the
;hs latent styles,
i.vou t:• e cl with.
Ledgers,
N c,,
and Mad&
;•t nutice, and a,
ta]ntieGii iEtIi.
< BOXES;
SE„,
kr.
V OAK
Pal zicE_Li
s distance by
t �3iial Boo,.
he Exi'osiTtit;
t=r°�tilt's, Airt .
-ay rely U OL
-ressecl to e -
{t
F -f ,Inlat attett....
EGt 11'
ffs,a.:&ee, - 0.
Hulot.
SERVERS.
'tap rtt,_rtt<,. of
f.'kl:fti &
cps the lunge ita.1
t t?zE°t :v etrrld be
.
€ tie.h(.eFt° ahstl
t t adeleitage e
tie. bt Fttttihtl
and cotnturt,
ut Fteem:taint:el
wen:, en,1 the
deee rive iu all
4e y H0
• result coulel
a it 1 ae in the
t.f the C ELL -
i Ir1't,GT:1-
i t]it.h rattly.
of tht,, va*nr:
ta.tit that thA-y
1.e ai Fii•lr Pers
`i r,.-• e.e,eeeeee
tart At ti
GLrs
4
Nov. 24, 1871.
BRIEF NOTES.
The evidence in favor of cooking
feed for stock is almost unanimous.
— An Iowan gathered this year,
from one tree, two crops of apples of
the red •June variety.
--- Fruit has been plenty enough
this year to place cholera morbus
within the reach of the poorest fam-
ilies.
— A factory for preserving wood
and rendering it incombustible was
destroyed recently by fire in San
Francisco.
=— It is said that at no time since
the Irish famine has the potato, drop
Tit -rived se great a failure as this
year in some portions of England.
-- Among the . proposed novelties
for next season is "a new potato in-
sect from California.” It is des-
cribed as olive green, and about half
the size of a flaxseed.
-- A calf from a native cow, sired
by a thorough -bred Darltam, will be
two-thirds Durham, so much. pre-
gonderance is there in the breeding
*qualities of high -bred stock.
-A lady editor in Wisconsin ad-
-vertises in her Own paper for a hus-
band. She says he insist be a print-
er and possess sufficient means to
buy a new press.
— A correspondent explains that
if care is taken in scalding. hogs of
the Essex and Berkshire breeds,
-they will dress as white as white
Logs. T1ie water should not be so
hot as is usually used.
----Mr. Billings always litres to
tee business lively. He -says, " If
you have got a loss that you ask
$200 for, and are offered $75 for
l,irl,
alus sell him ; don't spile a
good loss trade fot $125."
— The Queen of the Belgians
bas been summoned by a dress-
maker to pay her bill, amounting to
15,400. Her Majesty refuses to
discharge - it, on the grounds that
the prices are exorbitant.
A. correspondent says, " In all
Northern Colorado, which includes
six or eight towns, no liquor is sold,
except in Boulder and Evans, which
is remarkable here in the Far West.
.A. liquor saloon was in. operation
yet Longmont early in the summer,
but somehow it burned down ---
which fate had befallein one in
(-oeeley some time bfore."
In his lecture in °Boston on
'" Cheerfulness," Mr. iFields said
that Washington Irving was one of
the most cheerful nen he bad - ever
known, and that Charles Dickens
'had such portable faculties of good
cheer that wherever he moved he
carried happin ess'with hint..
— A. novel entitled the "Elixir
of Life," the story of a pian who`
could not die, leas lately been found
among Hawthorne's papers, and is
•to appear next year in America and
in England.
— An impromptu -bull-fight was
one of the entettainments at the
Oregon S tate; Fair.
— Six blindfold games of chess at
once is what a German player has
-achieved.
— A Sioux City girl has $18,000
in the bank. The rush of inlmi-
grantsinto the city in the shape of
single men and widowers is said to
be unparalleled.
GAIETIES.
"Sir, you have the advantage of
me." Quite right; you are quite.
right, sir. Almost everybody of
.common sense has."
— A lady lately entered a drug-
store and inquired for Consecrated
Lye. The clerk gave her Concen-
trated Lye, and• left that part of the
-store rather suddenly.
—One who wishes the world to
know what he knows about farm-
ing says that the best way to raise
strawberries is with a spoon.
—A Georgia laundress of color
-wept because some paper collars
which she tried to renovate " done
wash all to flinder, for true."
—"James," said a young wife to
Ler husband a few days after rnar-
i lade, " you were honest enough to
tell me that -the chimney smoked,
but why didn't you tell me that you
:smoked yourself ?"
— A strong mind is sometimes
1nore easily impressed than a weak
-one. For instance, von cannot so
easily convince a fool that you are a
;philosopher, as you can a philoso-
pher that you are a fool.
—Why are women like churches'?
First, because there is no' living
without . one ; secondly, because
there is many a -spire to them ; third-
ly, because they are objects of ador-
.ation ; and lastly, but by ,no means
eastly, because they have a loud
clapper in their upper story. ,
— A ;preacher, whose custom it
was to preach very long= sertnons,
,exchanged with one -Who only
At about
as
A
'preached halflong.
the customary- time for dismissing,
the audience began to go out. This
'hegira contirnned until nearly all
had left, when the sexton, who had -
stood it as long as he could, walked
up the pulpit stairs, and sat'd to the
preacher in a whisper,"When you
have got through, lock up, will you,
.and leave the key at my house,:
next to the church."
—" How many genders are there"
"asked a schoolmaster. <" Three, sir,"
promptly replied little blue eyes,
"masculinf, feminine and neuter."
"Give mean _example of each," said
the .inaste. "Why, you are mas-
culine, because you are a pian ;- and
I am feminine, because I ain a girl."
"Veil, well. Proceed." "I don't'
know," sad the little girl, but I
reek! n M . Jenkins is neuter, as
he's to of bachelor."
• -to leer -
Greenland Parliament.
It is pl asant to contemplate the
'change whish .has coque over the
E8quimaurc of Greenland since the
Christian missionaries first carne
among them. At the time when
they' overbarue the Northtncn, ,and
occuP ied the country whi,;h a hardy
Christian people had for a long while
possessed .n peace, they led a pure-
ly nt rn idic life, and dressed only in
the 'skins of -wild beasts. Now,
they. live in permanent comultini-
tins, and have .adopted the, habits
and, lin some measure, the costume
of i!ivilized men. Unlike many
siva e peoples, the introdnction of
-the urmsof-civilization among thecal
has not been attended with the
usu 1 corresponding mischief ----a cit-
cum tance due, in great measure, if
not holly, to the paternal care -of
thee. Danish Govern ment, which, be-
ginning with the first missionary,
Ha Is Egdde, iu 1721, has been con-
tinu' d with tnuch skill by his s'ic-
cess Ers, and l,y .none more couspicu-
ousl ` than Dr. Henry Rink, who
has wised a considerable portion of
his, tini'e in. Greenland,, and was, un-
til lately, royal inspector for the
sou kern districts.
T e principal feature of Dr.
Rin ° 's administration is the Parlia-
me t of natives, and in the estab-
lishinent of thio arrangement its
author has earned as much credit for
skiled benevolence as he had before
acquired for scientific exploration:
The idea of an Esquiinaux parlia-
`nient struck we as : something ludi-
crous when" first heard of it, but
upon gaining an intimate acqualn.
tance with its workings, I changed
my Ojai and became convinced that
other Iiarliaments might imitate
them with advantage.
Each little town or hunting sta
tion of the District is xt liberty t
send up a t'epressntative to a sea
in the Parliament at Ju lianshaab, th
number of representatives beinL
twelve. The most important town..
besides the capital atm Nenortalik
Frcdericksdaal; Lichtenau, Igallik'
and; Kraksimeut. '
The parliament was in sessio
during our stay, and T visited it a'
a privileged guest ; for, be it known,
theJulianshaab parliament sits with
closed doors. The parliament hous
is net an _imposing edifice. - I shoul
sayk its dimensions are about sixtee
by twenty feet. It is one story high,
is built - of rough 'pine boards, line 1
on:the inside and painted blue, an
on the outside is plastered over with
pit h. It has no -lobby for the a
commodation of people who come
to the capital with'axes for the put -
lic''� grindstone, and no committee
rooms for the better confusion of thl
public ',business. . •
In the middle of the one rooru, o�
kali, stood a plain pine table, with
a filain bench on either side of it,
and on' each bench sat six Parlia-
mentariaus, diessed in sealskin pan-
taloons and boots, and Guernsey
frobks. across which there was a very
lame display of suspenders. Each
parliamentarian head was covei e°
wi h a capcomposed of the briohtes't
a
ki&I of scarlet cloth, ornamented
with abroad gilt band. The royal
entbleniss were embroidered in front,
and above these was a .golden, hear,'
with a crown -on his head, standing
uniiomfortably on his hind legs, to
tYpifv Greenland. There was a
thirteenth cap at the head of tic
table and this (was worn by Mr. Ab-
thon, pastor of Julianshaab, and
president of tue Julianshaab par-
lialInlenl ex officio.
l'he aggregate amount of dignity
possessed by this- parliament w s
-sornetling wonderful to see. To e
sure, the parliamentarians were
somewhat • irpregnated with a fish
aroma, indicative of their nationa
and calling , but neiuher e
fishy aroma nor the dignity appeare
to interfere with the transaction cf
business; on the contrary, the
seemed to be working away li e
beavers .; and, indeed, they di
posed of the matters brought b
fore thew with such an amazing d
gree of promptness, that I fell o
wondering whether dignity woul
not be a good thing to introduce in o
parliaments, congresses, assenibii s
and such like things generally.
The first business was in form : f
a petiti n for relief. The petition r
-in the
r u looking in so
stood th re e
p , g
very picture of .forlorn destitutiot
He stated.that he had lost his can �e
(kayak) andhe produced evidence
enough to show, without any swea--
ing, false or otherwise, that it bald
been cit}shed and lost in the i.c
The math, .who had hardly clothes o
his back to - cover ;his nakedne.• ,
showed further that he . had a wife
and family who had no friends to as -
assist them, and were entirely de-
pendent upon himreli for. suppor
I thought it a. doubtful support ; t
THE HURO
EXPOSITOR.
best, and so appeared to. think the
parliament for they voted an ord€ r
for a certain daily allowance. Th
next case was of a young hunte
whose kayak had been crushed b
the ice, and wlio had not the meal s
to build a new one. They vote
him a loan. A third case was an of
rnan who received a dollar to bey
spear with ; another was partly
loanand partly a gift to a man wh
had a family of girls, and requite
materials for an oowiair. Still a
other made application for and. r
ceived assistance to bury a dea
husband:—Dr. L I. -Mayes in Iia
per's Magazine.
aFw FRIJIT
JUST ARRIVED,
Splendid quality and cheap, at
206 SCOTT ROBERTSON'S.
QUEEN
Insurance Cora pan
OF LIVERPOOL & LONDON.
CAPITAL - $2,000,000 Sterli
0
CHIEF OFFICES—Queen Buildings, Liv s-
pool, And Gracechurch Street, .tondo
CANADA BRAN CII UFFI.GE—Exchange
Buildings, Montreal.
BOARD—Wm. Mortoa, Esq., Chairmapp
Henry Thomas, Esq., David Torrande,
Esq., andthe Hon. James Ferrier.
BAN KERS—Molson's Bank.
LEO AL ADVISERS— Messrs. Ritch-e,
Morris & Erose.
MEDICAL A.DVIS5R—William Sutherland,
Esq. M. D.
SuRVEROR—Thomas S. Scott, Esq.
Alrnl.Toi—Thomas R. Johnson, Esq
RESIDENT SECRETARY AND GENERAL
AGENT,—A. Mackenzie Forbes, 3 St.
Sacrenfeut Street, Montreal. .'-
The undersigned having been appoint-
ed Agent for the above Company, parties
desiring to insure against hiss by fire can
d.o so ou the moat favourable terms.
Life Policies granted on as advantage
ous terms as any other respectable Com-
pany doing business in. Canada.
JAMES if. BENSON,
Agent
OFF/CB—BENSON & MEYER'S
Law Office,
Seaforth.
153-tf.—
Seaforth, Nov. 8, 1870.
MR. JOHN THOMPSON
THANKS his numerous customers for
their liberal - patronage during the
last fifteen years, and trusts he will re-
ceive its continuance,
• He has now on hand a largeass rt-
ment of Good Sound
Green Hemlock 1
Which he warrants wil! give satisfaction.
- ALSO
FENCING AND DRAINING
LUMBER,
ALWAYS KEPT ON HAND.
—ALSO -
200,00 FEET OF PINE
CUT FOR
BUILDING AND GENERAL PURPOSES
Which he offers on liberal terms. Or-
ders will be promptly atended to.
The Mill is situated on the-Townline
of McKillop' and Hullett, 3 and - miles
from the Huron Road.
Seaforth, Nov. 16, 1870. 84-tL.
NOTICE.
LABORERS wanting work for a Yew
weeks will' find employment ea tar
GOVERNMENT DRAINS,
In Grey. WAGES, $1 25 per day.
Enquire of t5e foreman on this work.
or apply to the agent at the office, Jas,
T. Blain.
G. BLAIN, Contracto
Grey, May 12, 18;1. 180-tf
MONEY !
$5,000 TO LEND.
IHAVE the above sum on hand for
investment on good Farm Security, at
8 and 9 per cent.,—Private Funds.
JOHN S. PORTER.
SEAFORTH, July 25, 1870. 139,-
2 oaeGenaine unless signed 1. Buns.
The Great Female Remedy.
JOB ttOBEB' PERIODICAL PILLS:
THIS invaluable medicine is unfailing
cure of all those painful and dangerous die
to which the female constitution is subjec
moderates all excess and removes all obstruc
and a speedy cure ins y be relied on.
To married ladies it is peculiarly suited. It
in a short time, bring on the monthly period
regularity.
-
regn }
These Pills should not be taken by Fe
during the first three months of Prognaoy, as
are sure to bring on Miscarriage, but at any
time they are safe.
In all eases of Nervous and Spinal Affect
pains in the back and limbs, fatigue on slig
ortion, palpitation of the heart, hrsterics,
whites, these pills will effect a sure when all
means have failed ; and although a po
remedy, do not contain iron, calomel, antimo
anything hurtful to the conetitution.
Full directions in the pamphlet around
package, which should be carefully preserved.
Job Moses, New York, Sole Proprietor. $1.
12i cents for postage, enclosed to Northop u4
Newcastle, Out., general agents for the Domi
will insure a battle, containing over 60 p
return maSL
Sold in Seaforth by E. I rlieksoa t Co.
R. Lumsden.
hes
ions
will,
with
ales
they
ther
one,
t ex -
and
ther
erful
y, or
each
and
3.
JUST RECEIVID,
Some more of that
Choice Java Coffee,
At SCOTT ROBERTSON'S.
U. YEO, AUCTLONEER,
SEAFORTH,
Will attend to any Sale in - the County.
Residence—Rear o` the Catholic Church. 196-26
War anted by the Makers.
THE RUSSEL WATCH
For Durability, Quality, Finish and
Neatness,
CANNOT BE EQUALED.
A new stock of the above Watches just
received.
A. COMPLETE STOCK OF
FINE GOLD AND SILVER
JEWELRY
ALWAYS ON HAND.
Watches, Clocks and Jewelry of every
description repaired with neatness and
despatch, and warranted to give satis-
faction.
$5,000 worth of Old Gold and Silver
wanted, for which the highest price in
cash or trade will be paid.
M. R. COUNTER,
179 Main street, Seaforth.
GUELPH SEWING MACHINE CO.
THE OSBORN
Lock -Stitch Sewing
MACHINE.
Thousands throughcut Canada are
now using these machines. They have
been tested beyond all question, make
the favorite lock -stitch, alike on both
sides, and are pr pounced superior to
any other machine offered the public.
For wide range of work, perfection,
beauty and excellence of mechanism,
adaptability, strength and durability,
The Osborn Sewing Machine Has
Ho Rival.
Ta - Improvements have lately been
made, e.iabling the manufacturers to
claim it as the ne plus ultra of Sewing
machines. Hundreds of testimonials are
being received daily from obi as well as
new operators attesting its wonderful
capabilities. Will do all kinds of do-
mestic sewing, from the finest cambric
to the coarsest overcoat or upper leather.
GUARANTEED TO BE AS REPRESENTED,
OR NO SALE, WARRANTED FOR
THREE YEARS.
The Osborn Outfit is complete and
readily comprehended. Is sold at one-
half the price hitherto charged for ma-
chines doing a like range of work, the
manufaYturers being determined to place
it within the reach of every family in
the country. `
A TRIAL FEFORE PURCHASE will con-
vince all that our machines are un-
equaled.
-THE GUELPH REVERSIBLE
Is pre-emiuehtly the best Single -Thread
Machine offered to the public—hence its
marvelous success Will do all varieties
of domestic sewing. PRICES GREATLY
REDUCED.
Hand Machine, with full outfit, $12 ;
Treadle do., $17. tiv Each machine
guaranteed.
its- Agents wanted everywhere. Splen-
did inducements to mate money. •
Apply to
GUELPH SEWING MACHINE CO.,
GUELPH, CANADA.
W. N. WATSON, Agent,
180-ly SEAFORTH.
WM. N. WATSON
ALWAYS HAS ON HAND THE
BEST
SEWING MACHINES
IN THE MARKET,
Either for Family use, or for Manufac-
turing purposes. Both single -threaded
and double -threaded, and loci -stitch
Machines can be supplied.
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed; and
instructions given to purchasers gratis.
WM. N. WATSON
C'i.n also insure property agaimt Fire and
Marine Disaster, and Life and Linib
against death and accident, with the
best Companies, being Agent for
The Liverpool and London and Globe,
The Provinci(English.al ) of Canada, (Canada.)
The Gore District Mutual, (Village and
Farm.
Thi Niagara) District Mutual, (Village
d Fan n.
The Travelers of Hartford, (Life and
Aeeident. )
Losi'esLiberallyAdjusted and
Promptly Settled.
ONEY TO LEND
At moderate rates of interest. No oem-
by mission, and moderate.
MORTGAG bought oh equitable
;F a term*. 100
SUMMER IS GONE,
BUT THERE IS
Just Received
A COMPLETE STOCK OF
WOOLLENS
Embracing the largest designs in
TWEEDS,
BROADCLOTHS
DOESKINS
VENETIANS, &C.,
FOR FALL WEAR
AT
Campbells Clothing Establishment,
NEW YORK HOUSE)
SEAFORTH.
W. C. would call special attention to some line
of Canadian Tweode, bought very low, and first
class goods.
WM. CAMPBELL.
197.
IMPORTANT
TO
HOUSEKEEPERS.
GOOD FLOUR I
AT ALL TIMES.
W. A. SHEARSON & CO.,
Proprietors of the
SEAFORTH MILLS !
Are now Manufacturing the best
FAMILY & PASTRY FLOURS
In the Dominion.
Intending purchasers in Seaforth and vicinity
can rely upon getting our Family and Pastry Floors
from the following Dealers, ONLY :—Thos. Lee, A
DS. Strong, John Walsh, James C. Laidlaw, Alex
Ault, Thomas Kidd. J. McGinnis, William Ault
G. & H. Jackson, Egmondville, and at the Seaforti.
Mills. Orders left at onr office, Market Sonare, wiL
receive prompt attention.
Farmers desiring to exchange their Wheat
for Flour, at the Mill,
May always rely upon getting our beat Family or
Pastry Flour in exchange, in quantities according
to the value of their wheat.
• W. A. SHEARSON & CO{
184-tf. -
FLOCS!
FLOUR!
HAVING purchased and thoroughly refitted th
mills formerly owned by the Metiers. SCO.BIE
I am now prepared to inrnish
FAMILY FLOUR,
Second to NONE[ IN SEAFORTII,
And that will
Compare favorably with any in the Do
- n�rnon,
If yon want A 1 FLOOR, go to the followin
Dealers and ask for MARSFALT; le—B.enumbe
McRSHALL'S FLOUR :
W. SCOTT. ROBERTSON,
J. WIIITESI DE,
SIMON POWELL,
JOHN CAVANAGH,
Wm. THOMSON, Egmondvilie,
Or at W. MARSHALL'S Mills.
Orders left with W. S. ROBERTSON will b+
promptly attended to.
Parties who wish to
Exchange Wheat for Flour,
J1re Sertain toreceive proper quantity, and an art
¢le that will defy competition.
W. MARSHALL.
186-tf
ROOMS TO LET.
J LET, in Scott's Block, tsro comnlOdlons
Rooms on thr second flat. lhpply to
195 hicCAC(gildY h IIOLIISTLD.
DRIED. APPLES,
This Beason,.
BRIGHT AND CLEAN,
At SCOTT ROBERTSON'S.
LUMBER! LUMBER l
LATH and SHINGLES.
T
HE Undersigned have on hand at
their Mill, one hall mile North of
Ainleyville, a large Stock of Dry Pine
Lumber, part (about 35,000 feet) of which
is Dressed 1-1' and 1-11 Flooring. They
hare also on hand
75, 000 ft. of Strip Lath
which is warranted first-class,
and no slabs.
Their Shingle Machine will start about
the 18th instant, after which date a plen-
tiful supply of SHINGLES will be kept
on hand.
Prompt attention given to orders from
a distance.
M. & T. SMITH.
Dingle, April 12, 1871. 170-tf.
CHEAP FARMS. FREE HOMES.
ON THE LINE OF Tie r; ,
UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD.
A LAND GRANT OF
12.000.000 ACRES
OF THE
Best Farming and Mineral Lands in America.
3,000,000 Acres of Choice Farming and Graz-
ing Lands on the line of the road, in the
State of NEBRASKA, in the Great Platte Valley,
NOW FOR SATE for cash or long credit.
These lands ere in a mild and healthy climate,
and for grain -growing and stock -raising unsur-
passed by any in the United States.
Prices Range from $2 to $10 per acre.
HOMESTEADS FOR ACTUAL SETTLERS.
2,500,000 acres of Government Land be-
tween Omaha and North Platte, open for entry as
Homesteads only.
Persons of Foreign Birth are entitled to the
Benefit of the Homestead Law,
On declaring their intention to become citizens of
the United States, and may avail themselves of this
provision immediately after their arrival.
Send for the new edition of descriptive pem-
phlet, with new maps, mailed free everywhere.
Address 0. F. DAVIS,
Land Commissioner U. P. R. R. Co.,
196-18t oaAnA, NEB.
Unquestionably the best sustained
work of the kind in the World."
HARPER'S MAGAZINE
NOTICES OF THE PRESS.
There are few intelligent families in which Har -
per's Magazine would not be an appreciated and
highly welcome guest. There is no monthly
Magazine an intelligent reading family can less at
ford to be without. Many Magazines are accumu-
lated. Harper's is edited. There is not a Maga,
zinc that is printed which shows more intelligent
pains expended on its articles and mechanical exe-
cution. There is not a cheaper magazine pub -
fished. There is not, confessedly, a more popular
magazine in the world.—[New England. Home-
stead.
A repository of biography and history, litera-
ture, science and art, unequaled by any other
American publieation. " * ' The volumes are
as valuable as a mere work of reference as any
cyclopedia we can place in our libraries. Harper'e
Magazine is a record of travel everywhere since
the hour of its establishment. Livingstone and
Gordon Cumming in Africa, Strain among the
Andes and Rose Browne in the East, Speke on the
Nile and Macgregor on the Jordan—indeed, all re-
cent travellers of note have seen their most im-
portant discoveries reproduced in these pages.
Most of our younger and many of our older writ -
ere find here their literary biography. Our artists
see the best evidences of their genius and the
most enduring specimens of their work in the
Magazine.—[New York Standard.
It is one of the wonders of journalism—tire edi-
torial management of Harper's.—The Nation, N.Y.
SUBSCRIPTIONS, 1872.
TERMS:
Harper's Magazine, one year. $4 00
An extra copy of either the Magazine, Weekly
or Bazar will be supplied gmtis to every club of
five subscribers at $4 00 each, in one remittance ;
or, Six Copies for $20, without extra copy,
Subscriptions to Harper's Magazine, Weekly and
Bazar, to one address for one year, $10; or, two
of Harper's Periodicals to one address for one
year, $7.
Back Numbers can be supplied at any time.
A Complete Set of Harper's Magazine, now com-
prising 48 volumes, in neat cloth `binding, will be
scut by express, freight at expense of purchaser,
for $2 25 per volume. Single volumes, by mail,
postpaid, $8. Cloth cases, for binding, 58 cents,
by mail, postpaid.
The postage on Harper's Magazine is 24 cents n,
year, which mast be paid at the subscriber's post -
office. Address HARPER & BROTHERS,
204 New York.
"A Complete Pictorial History of the
Times."
The Best, Cheapest and Most Successful
Family Paper of the Tines. - -
Harper's Weekly
SPLENDIDLY ILLUSTRATED.
NOTICES 07 THE PRESS.
The model newspaper of our country. Complete
in ell the departments of an American Family Pa-
per, Harper's Weekly has earned for Itself a right
to the title, "A Journal of Civilization,"—[New-
York Evening Post.
The best publication of its class in America, and
so far ahead of all other weekly journals as not to
permit of any comparison between it and any of
thou number. Its columns contain the finest col-
lections of reading matter that are printed. *
Its illustrations are numerous and beautiful, being
furnished by the chief artists of, the country.—
Boston Traveller.
Harper's Weekly is the best and most interest-
ing illnstrated newspaper. Nor does its value de-
pend upon its illustrations alone. Its reading
matter is of a high order of literary merit—varied,
instructive, entertaining and unexceptionable.—
N. Y. Sun.
SUBSCRIPTIONS, 1.872.
TERMS:
Harper's Weekly, one year ...... _ $4 00
An extra copy of either the Magazine, Weekly or
Bazar will be supplied gratis for every club of five
subscribers at $4 each, in one remittance; or, sir
copies for $20, without extra copy.
Subscriptions to Harper's Magazine, Weekly and
Bazar, to one address for one year, $10; or two of
Harper's Periodicals to one address for one year,$7.
Back numbers can be supplied at any time. '
The simnel volumes of Harper's Weekly in neat
cloth binding, will be sent by express, free of ex-
pense, for $7 each. A. complete set, comprising
fifteen volumes, sent on receipt of dash at the rate
of $5 25 per ecd., freight at expense of purchaser.
The postage on Herper's Weekly is 20 acute a
year, which must be paid at the subscriber's post.
office. Address FfAR,PER & BROTHERS,
205 New York.
STOVES, TINWARE AND
COAL OIL.
iTWHITNEYhas received a large stook
,
RS. just£t
of Cooking, Parlor and Box Stoves, of the best
manufacture, whiuh she can sell as cheap as itey
in the trade.
TINWARE, of every description,
kept constantly on laandand made to order.
Also, Stove Pipes, Eave Troughing, etc.
Custom -work promptly attended to, and outside
work will reocive every attention.
COAL. OIL.
A large stock of the very beat Coal Oil kept con-
stantly on hand, and will be sold wholesale end
retail.
Remember the place, Carmichael's Block, Main
street, Seaforth,
Parties indebted by note or book account are
quest.& d to settle immediately.
Rugs, wool -pickings, old iron, brass, cowers etc.,
taken in e.ehuuge for good.. 14'
re-
t