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The Huron Expositor, 1872-07-26, Page 5- ULY 26, .1 as would sttpport him. L II the negroes were for knew from peesoital oh - a, t, Id WOUld ;Milt was g. ning, he h Canelin1 a by a larger major -- 3t thatif the election. aedietely. a Board of Arbitration acid tokeep their pro - absolute- secret. The entatives have evert Into society, lest some aterviewer" should Lt. tt, was made on Thurs. e 18tle to assassinate I Queen of Spain, as ing through the streets ;.hots were fired at their rtunateIy both escap- One of the assailants he spot tat the King's Er two others were cap- e excitement prevailed td all classes of the i in conaeratulations to von his escape, while LI at theoutrita ee is deep - Koas who have been dere in_ the late Oar - have teen arrested of being engaged in assinaterthe King and civet throw- ef the a troy - is believed Mai these ISG concerned in the terteral Prim. The been placed in close await trial. Madrid ' i , phia Press, `detioune- demand of England. , of ten Confederate udecl from the arbitt EI -founded baseless de - and evidently made on of evading asfair on tract Tile Press United States wiil crowniug act of Eng - cannot for a moment Nitre hav-e rights to .are have the ability Lem, and itEngland present course she vt peril. This seems utin.1 the old steamer -In- rich for many years toss the trains from uffalo, sprat -1g a leak terioggedt and had to far repairs. .A. new cernatienai is - being be place of the old lie meantime paseeng- are ferried over in ler Thompson. worm- has appeared State of Mississippi, mage is being done crops. Besides- the ..e rains are doing r some sections of the , ✓ setts it may be re - that Marshal Mac- ieuted to accept the Frantee if Tillers re - Trade -is stagnaat in ads of shops are dos - d a reenetary crisis of Thiers' oId friends , July 23, while arter, was unloading te a boy by filename ris, colored, atanding Wapla, commenced tames, when Kelly Le edgings at Lewis, behind the ear, kill - ,y. Kelly was ini- ec17 and is now await- tio . A jury was Cr. W. R. Chamber - d a verdict return - .0, William Lewis, It from a blow from. rom the hands of Kelly was re - where he will re - I comes off at the W; Harcourt, ex- rliarnent for Heidi -- -ark at half -past six Ling, July 23. The ega promin en t man mty, and while in Lncompro iSi Ite- Oiversally liked by e. His illne.ss was ue aim teas borne a.sienatiotT and ford - alarming decrease a Poland since the le decree that no ;her than Ruasian ie accepted by the sthorities have been r;Led once more to directions to pass. rns claimant claimant has been But now that he wili be remember- succeded in in fraction. of the ad a modicum of sympathy of the Tis cause, a news- stablished in Lon- Tiekbume Cazette. for a penny, and is of coinmunication ant and his sup- - JULY 26, 1872. • porters.. Lists of subscribers to the Ticbborne fund are published, show- ing- the amounts given by ettale These satTiS range from three shil- ijingsto fifteen pounds. An Earl !beads the list, and is followed by teen of all stations and trades. But the claimant rims not stop with urg- ing his claims through a newspaper, series of dramatic entertainments bate been inaugurated iiraLondon to swell the Tichborne dffense fund. :After the predicted successful de- fense for perjury, there is to be an- other effort to gain possession of the Tichborne estates. The next moire of this strange Englishman -be he baronet or butcher, will be aaaited with interest. General Items. . A barrel of ice water, free to all, is one of the "institutions" of Print- teglIouse Square, New York. a - The Nashvillians like their wooden pavements better for fire- wood than to travel on, and 1 are using them accordingly. The Merchants' Exchange in St Louis is -Go be one of the largest and handsomest structures of the kind in the world. - One hunched and fifty tons of coal p ay are consumeby the Cana eteamer Scotia -the only side-wheet steamer crossing the At- " Iantiae -- The emotional insanity plea has spread to the Indians. One of them the other day, when arrested for killing and .5ca1ping some white men, being asked to account for the eccentricity, said, "Me &tip crazy. Me teo much crazy." - The firm of Rothschild lately received thirty-one warms of gold by railway from Gertrany. The con- signment arose from the reimburse- ment of the different war loans, rendered possible by the first dis- tribution of the French indemnity. - On board the steamers of the Cunard, Inman, White Stae and' S'uion lines Divine service is held by the captain or doctor every Sabbath morning in the male saloon. Steeragecrew and cabin. passengers all attend, and oftentimes the sing- ing is very fine. A thrifty Bostonian recently "placed", $10,000 insurance o11 the life of 'his wife, took home a box of little red Maryland plums and en- joyed a whole evening in watching his wife eat them. His enterprise had its reward. Deducting $290 'for funeral expenses, he is now 49,702 richer than be was a week .ago. - -The hay and wheat market has -commenced m Central Illinois. Hay proves to be an excellent crop, and wheat much better than was expect- ed, indeed, fully up to the averaee. -There are now in dailY use on the -Michigan Central, Railroad 51 -ears fitted up expressly for carrying butter, beef ancleggs from Chicago to Bos on and New York. An a ver- atgw -four of these loaded cars start East each day, and are inspected andt received at Detroit before they go further. Each car consumes foal: • tons of ice on, the trip: • - A young merchant who is try- ing to struggle along in a falsely -econoraical way, took a class of one of our Sunday -schools last Sabbath: During the pregress of the lesson he asked "What is solitude'?" and was visibly distarbed when a miserable boy promptly answered --" The store that don't advertise I" -- A large snake of a strange species was killed in Virginia the other day, which had a head in the shape of a diamond, tapering from the eyes to the nose, and from the eye a: back, with beautiful diamond scEdeS covering the top of the head, along, pointed tail, and which, when attacked, made a hissing or blowing noise that could be heard at a dis- tance of one hundred yards. -There is a popular idea that one can take one's family abrOad, "see Paris and London_ and Switzer- land, have a run among the Scottish highlatidt, around the lakes of Kil- larney, and up and down the Rhine," as cheaply ae they can spend three months at SUrnmer'watering`plapes ; but a 'trial will prove the foreign trip the most expensive. Railroad far.es are very much higher abroad than in America, and to live cheaply in Europe one must live in a quiet, retired place, or visit the cities and watering -places out of season. At aII .the German spas the cost of liv- ing is fully (l)able in the Summer month; and during the " season" in London the hotels and lodging - houses are crowded, and prices are very high. Cure for Founder. reiticed in your paper, a few weeks ago, a sine cure for foundered horses. I send you mine, which I have tried on many different horses, and in cases of long standing: Take some old woolen blankets or rags -Le -if woolen rags are not handy, take straw -and wrap the legs tight, up as high as you can conveniently, then take hot water, hot enoughtto scald the hair off a well horse, pobrinct around the horse's legs until they areare well soaked.; then itt an hour serve in the same wey except not essitateamarate, quite so hot, and in two hours he will be as well as ever. This I know to be a sure cure, and there ',48 no dangel! of injuring the aninfal as would be tbe case with turpentine. The 'horse is paralyzed '; the limbs are cold, and the hot wtter will start the, blood- circulating and start the perspiratiore 1 have taken boiling hot water and applied and never in- jured a hair.- Western, Rttra- 1. eatat.------- Corruption at, Washington. Senator Schurz, in a.speech in re- gard to the San Domingo, matter, made the following 3tatement :- When the San Domingo scheme was pending two gentlernee in intimate relations With the White House came to Me, each one _ licking my support o They 'assured me if that support or abstain tion, all the patronage ed would be at *my dist me in that respect One influential mcn in tb of them, gentlemen, admitted to me in •wri offer to me was given .sent of the President said he -h41`withlield t a long tin nt itt spite of 'cations, and made it n the papers have recent Presideet himself put Sertion in a publis,hecIi he (Schurz) has dpitese he had not received as agt; as he wanted. H upon the abuses of p evils of the civil servic there never wasatiri latter was more like drilled and disit‘line political agents. and w terest was more aha ruled by political exig speaking of the need every opieertunity to t tica-1 step in the directi the Senator, liscussed a need of . reconciliation North and South. 1 • parately, so- tbe project would give from opposi- that I desir- tosal, making of tne most land. One ubsequentiy ing„ that:the ith the 'con- imself. He is Statement any provo- wbecause, as ✓ stated, the orth the as- teryiew that' hire beet:urge itt u ch.patron- then dwelt tronage and , stating that e when the thoroughly agency of en public in- elessly over- atcy. After f embracing ke any .prac- n of reform, length the between the The Mania for Lo There is a strange an able tendency in. the A to enlarge names, and triplicate them. Alm now has three names, a dividual is so forlorn as to have but two,. th that nine -tenths of.' h. en ts in wi iting to .him bestow upon hitu a t which he has no right tende.ncy to multiply to be of republican forefathers, before the were content - it11 tw for their child] en, as generally are salt ; and fore, spared the hoeribl ters that infest oui- na Our great national hero old time have simple titles. But suppose w George G. Washingto min B. Franklin, or T ferson! The tendency does not confine its °pet sons. For example, ea itical parties has in e coramittee„ to whieh the general ananageme and which is properly e the State Committee ent and eu-phonious - leavenothing to be - . plained. And yet,ii ant of ten, the politic newspapers will persist the State Central which is entirely sup tautological. We hav stances' in which those charge of printing the other documents of a S tee have for years purp ed the word central' able to overcome the the newspapers .to 1 We suppose the _next st larging inclination wil of State Central -,C0i2N 'National Central C Appleton 's fawn 1. An African iOne of the most extraor vealed. to us by Dr. Living ations in Africa is that t land of the interior, with i tural resources, its noble temperataue, broad inland exhauStible stores of min rendered all but impenetr man, certainly beyond al ouization by one the most significant of caws, a fly. insect is a little brown, fiy, calledthe tsetze, scar our common household pe sting is absolutely fatal. its poison that it is said t will kill the largest ox. bite, which gives Rale or gering and blindness com swells to an enormous turns,rough, and. in a' fe convulsions and: death. ,cleadly poison, under the the horse and ox, the she fall' as if plague stricke harmless to.man, to wild pig, nude, ass and goat. achievement of science th glory to the discoverer -t sorne antidote to the sting mons fly, which would ures of Central Africa to world. g Names. 1 unaccount- erican mind especially to t everybody d. if any na- nd destitute chances are correspond- illgenerally ird name to • title. This antes seems rigin. Our Revolution, • apellations the children e are, there- • middle let - es of to -day. sof the good' nd dignified e had to say or Benaa- onia,s T. Jef- we speak of ation to per - h of our pol- eh State a Cs entrusted • t of affairs, ough named ' a conveni- title. which dcled or ex - cases ans and the in calling it Com mittee,'• rfluous anti known ire who had the -irculars and ate Commit- sely <excl ud- ithout being ropensity of tting it in. • of this en - be to speak ntions,' and mniittees.'---. 0 1 11g. Iinaryfacts re - stone s explor- e high table s rich agricul- flora, its fine seas, and ili- a wealth, is ble to civilized reach, of col - apparently in - This terrible yellow -striped ely larger than ts, but whose SO deadly is ree or four flies oon after the o pain, stag - on; the body ize ; the coat hours follow nd yet this ffeet of which p and the dog is perfectly nimals, to the Here is an t would bring e discover of of this :veno - pen the treas- he use of the • Th nominations fo the Ottawa took place at . nofl day. Mr. J. M. Curri member, and Mr. J. B. barrister of the city, w acclamation. ••••••••••••.••••• city of on Wednes- r, the former wis, a leading re returned. by TO SAVE MICOMG BUY FOR GASH, AT 'in LOWEST CASH PRICES, sawrimeriomplevamemmommilow. AT THE °ASV STORE. LEE & SWITZER, BIRT 1404.4.R.T. -in McKillop, on the 12th ;inst., the wife of Mr G-eorge Lockart, of a sou. Canercic.-At Zuriel; the Wife of William? -son. •MossER.-At Zurich, n the llth inst., the ;wife of Mi -D niel Mosser, of a _ son. • S. on the llth inst., Carrick, •7 Esq of 4. MARRI GARRow-FLETeimn.. • the 17th inst., at t brides father, by sisted by Rev. E. . T. Garrow, Esq., b Belford, eldest daug Fletcher, all qf God Ross- GorzoN.-At lop, ou Thursday, Rev. A..11/1cDiarmi to Miss Jane Gordon 74 GES. On Wednesday, e residenc of the ev. R. , re, as- . Elwood James rrister, td Mary ter of Rev. Chas. ich. he manse, McKil- e 25th July, by , Mr. Peter Ross, all of McKillop. DE A.T S. Ainleyv Ile, on Monday, • 'July 22nd, Hampci i Denny, late of Chesterhurst, Engl nd,, and of Her • Majesty's llth Regi ent Foot. Aged • 29 years. THE MA KETS.- - SEAFORTH, July 25, 1872. 5120 to 125 ... 1 20 to 125 0 45 to 0 50 0 80 to 082 0 50 to 0 50 0 12,1 to 0 00 0 11 to 011 7 00 to- (P00 0 85 to 040 • 8 00 to 10 00 • 5 00 to 700 , 0 20 to 0 25 ' 0 2A to 050 0 10 to 010 Fal1Wheat • Spring -Wheat . . .... . .... Barley. Oats Peas Batter . . . Eggs. . . .. .. ........ • • Flour Potatoes Hay Hides Sheep Pelts. Lamb _Skins . Calf Skins, (veal) per lb., Salt (retail) per barrel.. . ..... 1 00 to 000 Potatoes, (new) per 1 00 to 0 00 Dried Pork-Dacon 0 07 to 0 08 Dried Pork -Ham • 0 08 o 0 09 .8 25 o. 875 Tan .Ba rk Oatmeal It4' brl... . . ... ...... 4 00 to • 4 00 .• CLINTON, July 25, 1872 122 • 1 19 -0 1 22 0 80 g 082 0 45 0 048 0 414 cz-4 050 . 0 12 0 000 Fall Wheat Spring Wheat Oats Barley Peas Butter Eggs Hay, per ton,. Wool, per lb. . . . , ........ .. 8 00 10 00 0 50 0 0 50 • White fall wheat, $.25 to $1.28; 'red LONDON, Ont. July 25; 1872. winter wheat,. $1.2Q to $1.24; , spring wheat, $L25 to $1.-213 ; barley, 50c to 550 ;• peas, 55c to. 58c Corn, 58e to GO; oats, 32c to 33c; butter, rolls, 13c to 15c; cheese, 9c to 11c tallow, rendered, 7c; eggs per dozen, 1 c to 15c; potatoes per bushel, 20c. • TORONT July 25, 1872. ore flour offered hands, or at least to have done so. rted in extra, but yers at $6.40e- Of ffered. It would No. 1 super was . of choice quality d •too brls. spring sold at $6. Oat- • as steady; car would probably Wheat was inac- sitd sellers were n active enquiry ut buyers would 1.32, and holders han $1.35, so flo- e is not much en- ould bring $1.38 good demand.. bulk sad on the but the price was .374c to 38c. One car of bagged sold at 381c on the track, an ,yesterday. a car sold at 39c f.o.b. cars., Barley remained purely nominal. .A. s crop from Oxford Cou Messrs. Aikin & Kirk It was n-ncommonly b There was rather but very little change( very little was reporta There was nothing rep it would have found b fancy there was none sell at $6.10 to $6.15. firm; a lot of 100 brl Sold at $5.95 f.o.c.; a wheat extra, in bags, n.eal may be consiclere lots of good = (platy bring $4.65 to $4.75. tive because buyers apart in. 'their views. prevailed for spring, not pay over $L30 to Would not accept less thing was done.. The quiry for fall, but it to $1.40. • Oats were There were two cars i track on private terms, mple of the new ty was shown by atrick on Change. *ght in color, but very light in weight, robably not over 42 to 43 lbs. to the bushel. There was no movement in peas and the fall in England is likely to act adversely on them. . ' MONTREAL, July 24. FlOur -Market quiet with holders showing anxiety to realize. Sales for local trade mostly in 1 single hundreds. 1,000 brls. of fresh groiincl city brand of super at $5.90 ; medium strong ram„,aing up to $6.25, and exceptional brands of strong firm at $6.60 t $6.75 ; extra in small lots at $6.75 to 6177;!, ; and fancy et $6.65 ; fine sold at 4.72 to $4.714. Wheat-Dallafld n reinal ; no sales of Canada; latest sale of Milwaukee No. 2, at $L32. Peas -Neglected. 'Butter -Quiet at 14 to 15c, for choice new, 7c for Sound old. .• 4. • NEW YORK HORSE MARKET. TUESDA)r, July 23, 1872. In'the general hOrsermarket the busi- ness of the week under review amounted to very little beyond fee current. demandf4r low-priced draught horses, required "chiefly to, ll1 diilac of street -car and stage horses, now rapidly used up by •constant exposure to the merciless rays of the midsummer snn ; these and heavy truck horses, such as are in use before ice-earts, brewery -wagons, etc., are the only classes of horses for which prices are still maintained, the former selling at from $155 to $180; the latter at front •$300 to $400 per head. Very •little of higher -valued stock has changed hands, and this almost entirely under the ham- mer of the leading auction firms. Forty-three head of valuable trotting •stAk, part of the estate of the late Col.' Geo. C. Hail, were sold at Brattleboro', Vt.; realizing $23,552.50, or an average of $547.73 per head. 'The third annual sale of thoroughbreds and trotting stock, at Mr. A. B Conger's stud farm, near Haverstraw, Rockland County, N. Y., was held. on Friday, in presence of a very slim attendance, and only a few horses sold at very indifferent • prices. Some 50 head of horses of all kinds were disposed of during the .week„ at an average of $160 per head, it the Horse Auction Mart of Messrs. Johnston & Van Tassell. BUFFALO LIVE STOCK. Sunday .. Monday ..•. Tuesday .... Total.. - Same time week THURSDAY, July 25. Receipts.' Cattle, Sheep, Hogs, Horses. head. head. head. head. .... 884 1,000 42,800 16 ... 2,635 600 5,500 •48 . 1,462 1,800 600' 32' • 4,981 3,400 8,800 96 last ' • 2,890 3,600 11,800 80 Shipments..• Cattle, Sheep, Hogs, Horses: head. head. head.head. Sunday:..,.f 265 .... 3,400 .112 Monday L 170 1,090 2,600 .... Tuesday. 1,275 •.... 6,100 48 Total 1,700 1,090 12,100 160 Same time ittt week 799 1,200 8,700 144 • CATTLE. Receipts to -day, including 64 cars re- ported to arrive, have been 1,466 head, making the total supply for the week thus far 4,981 head, against 2,890 head for the same time last week. The market opened active this.morning at about a lc advance on last week's prices. . The run of stock was of a fair quality, with a few extra lots. Sales comprised about 1,400 head. Transactions were as follows : No. of • Average1267 Head. • • Weight 36 Ohio steers, 1153 75 1315 34 " 55 Cherokee steers, 1052 1073 40 111. steers, 11410898 5 201 1143 1.9 Mich. " - 0 17 1 • 112083 52 Missouri steers, 1148 33 Texas steers, • ' 1123 And 16 others. Price. $6 50 6 50 6 30 5 25 5 25 6 85 625 6 121 5 00 ' 5 25* 5 751- 5 00 *With $1 per head premium. -tViTith $15 premium. 1 •SHEEP .AND LAUBS. - I Receipts for io-day, including 8 cars reported to arrive, , 1,800 head, making the total supply for the week, 3,400 head, against 3,600 for the same time last week. Market not fairly opened. yet. We note the following sales; No. of Average Head. •Weight. Price. 231 Ohio sheep, • 90 • $5 55 181 " " 84 512& 49. ." lambs, •50 8 00' Receipts to -day, including reported ar- rivals 600 head, making the total snpply for the week, thus far, 8,800 head, against 11,800 head for the same time last week. .The markeNopened with a good demand at about 20e per cwt. advance on last • week's rates, all offerings finding ready purchaser. There is but little stock in the pens. We quote ! the following sales : No. of Average Head. , Weight. • Price. , 108 Illinois, 022 • $4 80 32 " 230 • 465 • 121 ,l,Indiana, 190 • 4 75 6 211 470 118 Michigan,• 234 4 60 • OL. • r-4 S. D. S. •Whi e .....12 0 12 0 27 0 27 0 Ret Wheat .. ... 11 4 11 4 ed int r • 12 0 12 0 Corn 26 6 26 6 Barley.- . 3 8 3 8 29 2 9 Lard.. FOeastss. Pork • 89 0' 89 Q 85 6 85 6 47 0 47 0 . ci• . A A 7'7 PI .-, CS G 7-Z ?" s. 27 11 12 12 26 8 2 35 4'7 88 D. 4 8 9 6 6 S. D. 27 0 11 1 12 0 12 0 26 9 39 29 35 0 47 0 38 6 , GOLD. -The price of Gold in New York is quoted at 1141i. PURSE FOUND.! ITOUND, a purse With a 'small sum of money. 1- The owner can have A qd paying for this no by applying to W. B. WARD, • 242 • Baker, Seaforth. ",--L••••• z ..LOGAN •...JANITE$QN BATE -JUST liECEIVED A •LARGE LOT OF 01--1(DIO= ALSO ON HAND, PRUNES 25 LBS. FOR ONE DOLLAR. SCOTT ROBERTSON'S OLD STAND. JUST RECEIVED AT T.J.A.rip S, 15,000 lbs„ GOOD BRIGHT SUGAR. 10 LBS. FOR ONE DOLLAR. GOOD TEA AT 50 CENTS. CHOICE BLACK AT 80 CENTS. J. C. •LAIDLAW. SOMETHING WORTH KNOWING., OR the Best Teas in town, go to Strong & Fairley's. For the Best and Cheap- est Sugars, go to Strong & Fairley's. For the largest stock and. best quality of Bacon, 'Smoked Hams and Shoulliers, go to Strong & Fairley's. For the best imported Oatmeal, go to Strong & Fairley's, where you can be sup- plied with an article that keiles bbnapetition, at $2 per hundred. For the best Cornmeal in the market, $1.50 per hundred, at Strong & Fairley's. If you wish to be sure of getting W. A. Shearson & Co.'s A No. 1 Flour, go to Strong & Fairley's, as -we keep no other'. For good Wa'sh-tubs Wash -boards, Brooms, Soap, Patent Mop Handles, Scrub, Shoe an Store Brushes, go to Strong & Fairley's. • For good Currants, Raisins, Rice, Ground Rice, Corn. Starch, Dessicated Cocoa- nut, ago,Epps' Breakfast Cocoa, and Taylor's Chocolate, go to Strong & Fairley's. • For the best assortment of Pickles, Sauces, Canned Salmon Mackerel, Lobsters, Cove Oysters, Sardines, &c., &e., go to Strong & Fairley's. To arrive to -day, Four Hundred Bushels of Potatoes, for sale cheap, wholesale, or retail: For the best Tobaccos, go to Strong & Fairley's. Also on hand a large stock of Willow Baskets, Butter -bowls and Churns, cheap for cash, at Strong & Fairley's. Leave your orders at Strong & Fairley's, and have your goods taken home free of charge, and on short notice. Highest market price paid. in cash for good Butter and Eggs. Remember the old Telegraph Office is the place to find • STRONG 84 FA1RLEY. N. NI LIVINCSTONE Offers for sale the balance of HIS STOCK OF TWEEDS AND FLANNELS* AT LAST YEAR'S PRICES, FOR CASH. He invites inspection and comparison with any in the market. N. LIVINGSTONE OFFERS FOR SALE _MUSCOVADO, REFINED, CRUSHED AND- GROUtD, LOAF SUGARS of the finest qualities, and at pric,es which cannot be beaten. N . M. LIVINGSTONE offers the balance of, his large stock of GREEN AND BLACK T EA S AT GREATLY, REDUCED PRICES. • Finest quality imported at $1 per lb. N. M. LIVINGSTOM offers for sale 30'1bs. Prunes for one dollar, 20 lbs. Currants for one dollar, 20 lbs. Rice for one dollar, • 12 LBS. RAISINS FOR ONE D'OLLAR, N. M. Livingstone has just received a large lot of COTTON GRAIN BAGS AND COTTON WARP, • CHEAP FOR CASH. • Wanted, any quantity of butter, eggs and wool. DON'T FORGET THAT DENT'S Great Clearing Sale of Summer Dry Goods • Begins on TUESDAY, July 2d. Now for Cheap Goods -the Whole Will be Cleared Out at Once, • The Best Canadian COTTON YARN col hand. ORGANS Ait'D NIELODEONS. DENT is now- agent for two of the best makers of these instruments, and can supply every --1-1-1,ind.and quality on the very befit terms, and. keeps a few Constantly on hand. gr. DENT has been a practical musician for 20 )Tars past, anderstunds things thoroughly,=4 won't turn- out a poor instrument. • - Hp woulsolieit a call from all intending purchasers.