HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1873-02-28, Page 7'IceLnelry #
the past
Wax.
XLS. ,
.e
OR
heap,- WeII-Made and Nea
GO TO
T. K. _ANEIERSON'S,
SEAFGRTIL
FOR
Fashionable and Sea.§-onable
.GENTS' FURNISHINGS,
GO TO
T. K. ANDERSON'S,
SEAFORTH.
xvcak.
ads and Neat
CLOTHIN
GO TO
T. K. ANDERSON'S,
MAIN -ST., SEAPORTS.
FOR
Fashionable and Seasonable
GENTS' FURNISHINGS,
GO TO
ANDERSbN'S;
MAIN -ST., SEAPORTS.
FOR
11 -Made and NEYat,
fltOTHING,
E40
T. K. ANDERSON'S,
MAIN -ST,,_ SEAPORTS.
FOR
Fashionable and S easonable-
GENTS' FURNISHINGS,
(4-0 TO
Anderson's,
SEAFORTIt
FOR
Cheap WeII-Made and Neat
CLOThtW,
GO TO
T.. K ANDERSON'S,
SEAFORTH.
NOTICE.
All partiea indebted to T. L ANDERSON tenet
settle+ eit ouce, or their accounts will be placed in
1 Court without further notice. •
The pplas.Born of Life.
'1 don% eject,' Said the quarter
master on Sunday 1.inorning, while
our ship was ruiin ng free before
the tropical wind, ‘ don't object to
players when it blows hard, or
when we are on a lee -shore. But
here we are 'called aft to praYers
when the weather is as ate as ever
was made, fair 'winds every day;
royals and studding Sails set, not A
brace or 4 I s'ileet, u4e1ayed . for
weeks ; the ship so;steady that She
could carry a glass of wine on that
capstan and not spill a drop of it !
But prayers it is, according to .or-
ders, even when we are in„.a dead
calm. Now, what's.thepod of it7
This sentiment is but the counter-
part of a natural anq prevalent feel-
ing in prosperous men. What is
the use of this thinking about toT•
morrow and to-raorrOw and to -mor-
row, aS-if it were th laist Syllable of
i
recorded time ? Wh;a t is the good
of perplexing °urge ves , about the
future, while theta* is *balmy Mid
the skies are blue every gay? They
. talk like the roaming quartermaster.
The calms which seem to.siirround
their accomplished anibitions, or the
trade wpeff; which blow with tropic-
al regularity, into their bellying
sales'make them so thorouilily con-
'teneed with themselves and what
they have done, ' -that they think
every day.will be like the present,
or °tight to be *like it,
in. time the ship presses the equa-
tor, and is remning-leward the low-
er limit of ;the tropics - 'while the
sun, no longer vertica, is behind
her, thrbwingt shadows ahead. The
ship enters the temperate latitudes
where the days grow shorter, the
nights clarker,, the. wind is -cooler,
the sky is changeable, the sea is
confused.. She begialfs to meet with
gays'. weather. Ai0.1' now she, rolls
and pitches and stuns, and can
hardly- keep her head in her :ce.urSe.
Every day, as she foilees herway
through the ugly .sea, she is com-
pelled to take in wore sail and send
down more spars from aloft At
last she is enveloped in serpetu0
snow -storms; and while the -winds
howl and. the seas ar-e around her,
She tries to make h rself ready tLx.
encounter the furies qf Cape Herm
Men are not as L eky as ships.
Very few of them can weather their
Capp- Horn. The number of men
who succeed in carrying their gains,
their ,. property, safely- through' life,
is very, smalls ---not l'iore than one
in twenty, pcording to the records.
The majority of men know this fact
business life thecha!' des of Wealth
at _the outset. They now that in a
bus
are against them in. the end. Noi.
matter what their busineSs is, it Tan
rests So much on a trust in huriaan
nature—thd most untruitwortty of
all natures—that it is impossible to
be sure of a final profit, however
satisfactory the profit is to -day. *
Therefore, While we are sepiaing
closely the credit valup of their cus-
tomers, on whose suceess their own
success depends, they ought to il1j!
vestigate their own credit with efie i
future. .How much an the future
trust them for? How nruch will it
• be able to pay to their wife -and chil-
dren, should death take charge. of 1
their estate to-morrOW7 Is there
anything to be, depended:. Upon for\
their families, if their business were
dosed by- death t� -night? .
It is this very kiricrtainty which
makes - Life . Insuradee valuable -se
valuable to everybedy 3. -valuable to
the insured, -and va Liableto his
family. It is notx fo the business
man t� waits as the quartermasters
would wait for pri ers, until it
blows, or until a lee- hore is close
aboard ; but to inane his future by
insuring- his life whil the weather
is fair anti the, heart il cheerful, and
Cape Horn is yetunder the horizon.
---4116-0.----L--
SUCOGSS under pifficulties.
,
Helpless, Defornied, and Blinci
itian, Manages a Piosperous Busi-
ness. ' •
A correspondent of the Cincirt,.
iaati Times ani'l Chronicle- gives the
folldwing aecount of the remarkable
afflictions of. a successful business
man in Lewis County; Kentucky :-
William H. Stone was born in
Lewis County, Kentucky, in 1835;
and is thirty-eight years old and uns
married. ,, Atthe age of five he was
attacked with inflammatory rheum-
atism, confining him to his room
and bed. Hence his educa.tioh was
neglected from that cla.ite, but by hi3
individual efforts and perseverance
he mastered the obstructing difacul-
ties, and could read and write well
before he was ten years old. His
father,. Thomas ‘Stone,' received or-
ders for specialkinds of roots. _and
herbs, which -he tra.nsferred to his _
clippled son, William, who bartered
the same in exchange for groceries,
superintending these little transac-
tions as a pastime and employment
withifi his Ilodging 'room. Business
in.creased until a special room had
to he built. Then- IIon. William
H. Wadsworth had a post -office
,established, making William H.
Stone Postmaster. A better or more
faithful officer could not be found.
This enalsled him to improve his in-
quiring mind and to extend oppor-
tunities for instruction; and it was
saicl .sthet he was -Olgtof -the best
poated men On genend litisiniss and
politics in the country. Yew could
write a better business letter.
In 1853 he lost the use of his
lower liinbs, and under the Who
tion his knees were drawn up sb as
to toucl& his busaat. This unriaturai
position he has held since. '"./1.- few
years afterward the disease reached
his baek, then extended to his arms,
hands and fingers, presenting a piti-
Ail sight, and thus he- lost hig; power
to write,. T. year ago his eye-
sight Tailed him. This latter inflic-
tion is the nioat distressing of all -his
protracted sufferings., And with
all these bodily infirthities his busi-
ness grows and prospers, his vivaci-
ty does no seem to he less, his voice
is sweet and clear, and his mind is
unaffected. His wants are attended
by a doting 'mothei, who is ever at
his bedside, and teikind father and
brother, who report every transao-
tion to him, afid receive the orders
and 'disposal Of the business.
over twenty yens he has been cbn-
fined to his room. .Ile never mur-
murs Isecatise he is .unable to get
about, but of late deeply feels the
total 1082 cif his eyesight
Catching Seals in Arctic
.Realms.
;Samoyedes are suctessfulltunters,
and profit in the business. to which
they ale devoted by imitating the
craft of polar white bears, who fee4
chiefly on seals. They are far *larg-
er than the black variety and evinee
suilerior sagaeity. Some full grown
white boars are more than nine feet
long. -
When the -pangs of hunger become
urgent theycreep about quietlyOn
the jc to discover the breathing
hole of a seal or walrus.' They are
a little sty of the long hook tusks
of the latter; for if once these are
fairly !set in the neck oftcne of those
feromous arctic monsters, the walrna
finds it fine sport to drag him offhs
slippery standpoint under water.
There is no retreat, an drowning is
his certain fate.
.AfterSelectingfan opening that-
indiCatea when seals come far fresh
an, Bruin covershimself completely
with snow, Thus concealed --with a
clear way for Ision—he slides a tip
of a*fore paw oyer the, margin into
the water. and by -as: 'seal
cautiously approaches under the ice;
kee epin.careful watch as he nears
the holteTto be certain the coast:is
clear qthe greatest enemy of the
race, wilh the exception of man.
Carefully raising his he0aboye the
ice lexel for a widerraiie ef vision,
while* drawing in a long breakle- a
mighty blow of the unnoticed paw
buries a row of sickled shaped nails
deep in. ;the -unsuspecting
who is drawn ,un. And deepAtched
with an, aldermanip appetite. Is
there rf3asoning in this management,
or is it blintl instindt without cal-
culation or reference to epecitie de-
- 1.‘
sien.7
SHROUDS SHROUDS'
M.' R01.3XRTSON, .
CARDIET MAKER AND UNDE1tTAKElt,
Johnson's Old Stand,
Main stedet, Seaforth, .has now on hand a good
• assortment of I
' 81-1i=t0O-CTIDS
Which he can furnish cheaPer than tWean be
got elsewhere. .1 205
TO DAIRYMEN.
MILK CANS AND "l1).AILS.
/1(//0. Wx1-/ITNE Y
Would staie to Dairymen kat she has commenced
to manufa.cture •
Milk Cans and Pails,
et;
Of all kinds, and. can supply them •
AS CHEAP AS ANY IN TRY'. TRADE.
Stoves and 7.'inzi;are On hand as usual.
*11930pairinAleg 0.d.ILEave
d'roughing promptly attend'
for sallaWholesale and Retail.
ed to.
MRS. WHITNEY,
Maio -street, Seaforth.'*
AUDITOR'S REPORT.
JOHN LOGAN, TREASURER,
TN ACC0T4IT with the Tuckersmith Branch
Agricultural Society for 1872.
DR
To Julius Dun.ean, Treaeurer, 'balance due '4*
hum. $5795
"gash for impaid prizes in 1871 10 oo
" " to McLean Brothers, for printing
account 1872- 2925
" A. X. McLeod, for Judges, *fresh-
ments 1872 I 12 25
" to Johnson Bros., hardware ad. '71 14 84
## hi - • " 1872. 80
" to John M. Martin, building water
closets 10 00
" to See'y and Treasurer's salary_ _ 87 oo
" to Thos. Patton, to retire note100 00
cc interest on borrowed money. 52 00
forincidental expenses, part arrears 79 60
" to prizes awarded at Spring Seed ,
Show 1872......... .'. ... . . 48 50
to prizes awarded atFall Show 1872 .362 25'
t C
CC
I t
t C
LC
( C
t
4#
## a ## " extras, '1/2 20 25
a
#4, 4#
At Fat Cattle Show 1872 , 30 00
Total $86417
CR.
Dy amount of unpaid prizes in 1871 $ 11 75
" one bag, 40c., 941bs. fall wheat, $2.20.- 2 60
hi cash for pasture rent of Show Ground31 00
;: ffooir, booths rent. - 29 00
Show Gate Foes ..... ....,260 84
h` IC for Gevernmenb Grant ... . : . ea_ 186 38
" ia for members' subscription as Per
list 1872..... ... ....... . . 362 00
for Rod Crop entries. 6 00
"balance due John Logan, Treasurer24 60
T64 17
Seaforth, -, Feb.Feb-. 12, 1873. ::r1-2 .
. LIST OF LETTERS,
-REMAINING iu Seaforth Post-offibe on the 4th
-11-1' of February, 1873. I .
Boxall, John Malcolm, Alex.
Barrie, Jas. Mitchell, B. A. .•
Brassey, Wm. MeLaughlin, David
Biggins, W. J. McLeod; H.
Conway, Thos. McDonald, Miss T.
Gammon, Geo.
Helliwell, 0. L.
Hill, John
Jackson, 2no.
Rake, Albert
270
McKay, Mass M.
Norman, Chas.
Noxon, Mr. -
Robertson, Geo. S.
Sherrill, Miss C.
S. DIOKSON, I'. M.
•
THE VE
AFTER A FAIR TEST THE VERDICT OF THE PEOPLE IS
•• THAT THE
*CRQI.IERED STORE AND TEA DEPOT,
Is the place to get the cheapest ant best
TEAS AND .GENERAL. GROCERIES.
- • r •
The Proprietor of the CHEQUERED STORE AND TEA DEPOT hes Pleasure_ in stating that bis
. first st2ok having moved off so -rapidly, he has already purchased a fresh supply,and as a result of quick
sales be is enabled to still further reduce prices. TO parties taking TEA by Me Caddie, half chest er
chest
iI 8.PECIAL REDUCTION WILT? BE MADE.
Farmare and others living at a distance should remember that our roads may soon break up, and that
now is the time •and
Seaforth is the Town- toget the Highest Prices
'kr what they hare to sell, and that the
.CHEQUERED STORE AND THAI DEPOT
Is the place to get the best bargains in
TEAS AND GENERAL GROCERIES.
If theiebe any who have doubt on this point, they have only to make trial and they will be convinc-
ed of the fact. "
.50 13arrels`lLabrador Herrings,
250 Bartels Lake Huron Herrings,
A large lot of dry Fish, Salmon Trout, and. White Fish, .
ALL OP FIRST QUALITY AND AT LOW PRICES AT THE
CHEQUERED STORE AND TEA DEPOT)
!
MAIN -STREET, SEAFORTHi
JAMES MURPilY.
cINTO
led%
NIORRISO.N, S
-T-
CARRIAGE FACTORY.
It has now become an established fact that MoINTOSH 86 MORRISON are doing the largest,' Car-
riage, Buggy and Wagon bueiness in the County of Huron, and the reason is
They use none but the best Zxtra. and Secoe' d-gro:wth Hickory, well seasonefl.
They employ none but first-class WOrknien in every department.
They makotheawork draft, neat and durable. •
Tirey finish their work seeond to none.
They use steel tyre on all light work. •
They warrant their Springs oil -tempered and the best English steed.
Theykse J. Doty' e Axle, made specially to order, case hardened and of the best Low Moor Iron.
Viey they've thorough knowledge of the business.
They sell for cash or short time, consequently they can afford to sell first -Ilan work cheaper than
establishments that gime long time.
Special inducetrientiVbffered to Livery liien ahd parties laying wholesale.
Remitting attended to with diirmitch.
BOY WANTED in the Bleciesmith Shop.
268
L.
MeIN,TOSH & MORRIS6N.
FARMERS t
5,000 Farmers' Sons and Daughtefs Wanted
TO PURCHASE
NVIILSON & YOUNG'S CROCKERY.
JUST RECEIVED,
A LARGE CONSIGNMENT OF UROCXERYI
Consisting of Tea and Dinner Sets complete, Chamber Sets, in a great variety of patterns. Also, a
etery complete -Stock of
CHINA AND GLASSWARE
-All their Crockery is of the best. No second or third ware kept. This Crockery, has been bought cheap
and will lae sold ceeap.
TEAS.
,
Just receivea, another consignment of that superior Tea, at from 40 ots. to $1 per pound. All other
kinds of Groceries es usual. •
Remember WILSON & YOUNG'S is the place to get choice Liquors and Aloe, and the only place ,
where Carling's pelebrated XXX Ale Ls quarter barrels for family use is kept.
WILSON & yOUNG
Main -street, Seaforth.
0'
SEAFORTII
Of all knpurities
Oua-ranteed .13.e
The sou of perfec
if. C. Lai(llaw's
zon,
Tea
• t.; f:
These Teas are guaranteed to the, public as being
Zreih3 Perfectly P4re, Strong, Ricii and Lasting. =
1, -
The demand for this -Tea is the best proof that oan be given that the public. consider Laidlaw's Tea as
WORTH BUM G.
si
THOSE WRO HAVE NOT YET PURCHASED IT AEE RECOMMENDED TO
°GIVE IT ATRIAL
J C
, •
LAIDLAW
THQ1VISON & WILLIAMS'
ILL ANi) EN9iNE WORKS,
MITO'HELL, ONT:
s N. F. Burnham's Patent Turbine W.-atpr Wheel.
UTE have now thoroughly tested the above wheel and guarantee it equal or impel -ler to the befit wheels
v now in use, while stronger and more durable. References to well-known and reliable mill owners,
who have them in use, given on ainplication. - We build ell sizes and kinds of
STMA_M
Stationary, Portable and Uptight, and guarantee them unsurpassed by any in use- We use on a our
Engines the celebrated el U DSON COVER N 0 R. We are prepared to contract for the erec-
tion of all kinds of Grist, Flour and Saw -mind, with all the latest improvements. ;
. Lath 'Wills, Bolters, Shingle Mills, Double and Single Jointers, Heading Machines, Prea.tling, Turn-
ers' and Planers' Stave Machines, and all kinds of Flax Machinery, &c., &e., manufactured largely.
Our Boiler Shop is in foll blast, and we have as foreman of this important department, Mr. 301IN
WRIGHT, who, for 20 years was 'foreman of the Brantford Boiler Works. Having a good force of ex-
perienced holler makers, we ac hrepared to attend to boiler repairs either at the shop or at mills
promptly. GIVE US A CeT.Te
We have found out what every Farmer wants. It is
TIIE TWO-ECORSE POWER SAWING MACHINE,
The power of which is supplied with strong fly wheel, suited to driving a Straw Cutter, Graindmsher
and other Machinery, with no extra charge, except for the belt. This narichine.is well stilted to every
farmer's own use, ashe can with two horses and from three to four men or boys out from 20 to 30 cords
of wood per day. Our machine has been thoroughly tested, and is strong enongli to do all we reeom-
jmend it to do. It is supplied, with friction flanged. by which the saw is stopped, -whorl caught or
pinched, before it would be pOssible to stop the horses.
1
A TRIAL 01aKelliED.
I We are building reat numbers of the Cumming's Straw (utter, for hand or horse power. Also,
Grain Crushers, with iron and wood frames, Fanning Mills, Horse Powers of all kinds, Gang Plow,
Steel Plows, with wrought iron beams, wood beams and east iron beams, Horse Hoes, Weeders, Culti-
vators, &e., &c. Repairs of all Idnds done promptly. Orders by mail or otherwise solicited. Addrees,
267 THOMSON & WTT,T,r AMS, Mitchell, Ont.
•
(1
s‘fooux
'ED
0
Ci)
CD
SEWING MAOHINE_. S.
A NEW Sl3PPDY OF
The Howe and: ;the 'Osborn
SEWING .MACHINES,
with all the blest iraprhvements, just received at
W. N.. WATSON'S,
SEAFORTH.
Call and see them. Theh• well-established repu-
tation renders it uneecessary to parlarize their
superior qualities, fiiiilier then that ey are ,-the
beat and cheapest made. • •
Sewing-mist:likes of all ithads repaired, cleaned
and put in perfect order, atmy office, by a thorough-
ly practical machinist from Toronto.
WM. N. WATSON, Sealorth.
SEAFORTH PACKING HOUSE,
I SEAFORTH, 017T.
„Mt. THOMAS STEPHENS
Takes much pleasure in informing his numerous
customers that he has recommenced the Pork -
Packing business in his -
Old Stand, North Main -street.
Having secured the services of n. Praetical SATJ
SAG4-areTi1iR, the public eau rely on getting a
FinsTicLAss4kuTicLE in either • .
SAUSAGEOR SITGAR-OTIRED maws.
Those in need of mach would do well to give hima
call before purchasing elsewhere. All orders
promptly attended to.
THOMAS STEPTTENS,
264 . Main -street, Seaforth;
ALNLEYVILLE
PLANING MILL, •
SASH, DOOR AND BLIND FACTORY
The subscriber having bought ent the above
Aria, also the good -will of the late firm, is ROW
_prepared to fill all orders in his line of business.
- - - - -
'Sash, Doors and Mouldings
ON HANb AND -
MADE TO ORDER
On the shortest notice.
0UFT01.4 PLANING
StijogY attended Q.
HOUSE BLOCKING .ALWAYS ON RAND ANia
. Promptly supplied.
JAMES BENNETT.
Ainlevville, May 16, 1872. tee 282-47
•
PHOTOGRAPHIC,
D. STEWART,
TN returning thalsks to his numerous friends for
-t• their patronage in the past, takes, pleasure in
informing th.em that his Photographie Gallety
he re -opened on Tuesday, the I:8th eg February, On
William -street, near the new Presbyterhiti Church,
BRUSSELS
Where he hopes to meet again with his old friends
and patrons, and as many new ones as mee, see fit
to favor 'him with a call. "
Splendid Wall Pictures kept Constantly
o1
N. B. -No busin.ess.41:14inaenindihis Gallery on Tues-
days and Fridays. '
271e13 DANIEL STEWART, Artist.
PROSPEC417S FOR, 1873. --SIXTH Y.
THE ALDINE-
,
An Illustrated Monthly Journal, universally ad-
mitted to be the handsomest periodital in the
world. A repreeentative and champion of Ameri-
can taste,
,
Not for sale in. Booz op v ews tore&
Th n ALDINI:, while issued with all the regular-
ity, has none of the *mporary -or timely interests
characteristie of ordinary periodicals. It is an
elegant miscellany of pure; light and graeeful
literature; and a collection of pictures, the rarest
-tpecimens of artistie skill, ini black and white. Al-
though °ail. Succeedhig number afford e a fresh
pleasure to its friends, the real 'value and beatity
of Lae ALDINI.; will be most appreciated after it
has been bound -up at the elose-of the TORT. While
other publications may claim superior cheapness,
as compared with rivals of a similar class, Tire.
ALDDIB is a unique and original coneeption-alone
and unapproached-absolutely without ccanpeti-
tion in price or character. The possessor of .a
complete volume cannot duplieite the quantity of
fine paper and engravings in any other shape or
number of volumes fotten times its cost, and then,
there are the chromes, besides -1
-
PREMIUM essitosios FOR 1873,
Every *subscriber to THE ALbilsTE, who pays in
. advance for the year 15.73; will receive -without ad-
ditional charge, a pair of beautiful oil ehromou,
after 3, j. Hill, the eminent English painter. The
pictures, entitled "The Village Belle," and
Crossing the Moor," are 14 x 20- inches -are
pr inted from 25 different plates, requiring 25 im-
pressions and tints to perfeet each picture. The
gftIlle ehtomos are sold fer $30 per pair in
the art stores. As it is the determination, of its
conductors to keep TRE ALDINE .40Rt of the reach
of competition in eveiy department, the chronstos
will be found correspondingly ahead of anfthat
can be offered by other periodioals. Every sub-
scriber will receive a eertificate, over the signature
of the publishers, guaranteeing that the chromes
delivered shall be equal to the temples furnished
the agent, or the money 'will be refunded. The
distribution of pictures of this grade free to the
subseribers to a five doller periodical, will Mark an
epoch in the history 'Of Art ; and, tonsideling the
imprecedented cheapness of theprice for Tim
A.I.DINE itself, the 'marvel falls little shwa of a
miracle, even to those best acquainted with the
achievements of inventive genius and improved
mechanical appliances.
arf-TP. LITERARY DEPARTMENT •
will continue under the es* of Mr. Richard Henry
Stoddard, assisted by the best wiiters and poets of e
the day, who will skive to have the literature of
TRE ALDINE always in keeping with its artistio
attractions.
TERM8-$5 per mmum, in advanee, with Oil
Chromes free.
AGENTS WANTED. -Any person wishing to
_act permanently as a local agent, will receive full
and prompt infotion by applying to
jakarES SUTTON a 0o.eleiblisheria
266 6, 8 Maiden Lane, New York.
A Repository of _Fashion, Pleasure, and
Instructidn."
•
H AR .1) Et BAZAR.
NOTICES OF THE PREss. 2
The BAzAn is edited with a contribution of tact
and talent that we seldom find in any inmost,
and the journal itself is the organ of the great
world of faehione-Boston Traveller.
The BAPAracommends itself to every member of
the household -to the children hy droll andpretty
pictunas, to the young ladies by its fa3hionaplarres
in endless variety, to the providerft matron by -its
pattenis for the children's clothes, to paterfinnil-
his 'by its tasteful designs for embroidered slippers
and luxuriant dressing gowns. But the reading
matter el the.B.AzAn. is uniformly di great extel-
lence. aiie paper licts acquired a wide popularity
for the .fireside enjoyment it affords -N. Y. Even-
ing Post. s
SUBSCRIPTIONS:L-1878.
TERMS:
Haurtn's BAzAn, one year.. , - ..... .1$4 00.
An extra eopy of either the MAGAZINE, War reaah,
or RazAn will be supplied gratis fer every Club of
Five Subscribers at $4 each, in one remittance;
or, Six Cepies for $20, without extra. coPY-
Si-Ascriptions to HARPER'S MAGAZINE, WEENLY
Said BA 7.,Ali, to one address for one year, $i0; or;
two of Harper's Periodicals, to one address for one
year, $7.
Back numbers caii he supplied at any time.
The five volumes of .Thanran's BAZAR, for the
years 1868, '69, '7,0, '71, '72,4. elegaetly1ound in
green morocco Cloth, will be sent by express,
freight prepaid, for $7 each. •
The Postage on HARPER'S BAzAn is 20 cents a
year, which must be paid at the sullscribers Post
Office. Address,
HARPER & BROTLIEBIS, New York.
LEGAL NOTICE.
To the crafters of JAMES GALT:FINS, deceated,
and all others having Weems against hiaestate:
• -I-
THE creditors of lames Callens, late of the
Township of Tuckersmith, in the County of
Hereon, and Province of Ontario, laborer'who died
on,or ahout the thirtieth day of July, A. 'D. 1872,
and. all others are hereby notified to spud in a
statement of their claims against the estate of the
said James Callens by post to the undersigned ad-
trator -or to the undersigned administiutrix
or tIiBENSON & MEYER, their Solicitors, t a the
villn.g0 of Seaforth, in the said County, °nor before
the seventh day of- AprilA.D. 1f1713i et the expira-
tion of which time the said adnaisistmtor and
administratrix will proceed to distribute the as-
sets of the said tiecerieed amongst the parties en-
titled thereto, having regard to the claims of which
they then have notice, and the said administrator
and a.dministratrix will not be liable for the assets
so iflistributed or any part thikof anypersen of
whose claim they shall not have had notice at the
time of such distribution.
This notice is given under 29 Vic., Cap. 28, Sec. 27.
Dated this fourth day of Febrhary, A. D. 1873.
JOHN S. PORTER,
AGNIES GEDLYELL,
Administrator and Administratrix.
BENSON & MEYER,
Solicitors for Administrator and Admix. 270-8
DISSOLTJTION OF PARTNERSHIP; „
THE partnership hitherto existing between the
undereigned, as merchants and tinders, in .the
vW.age of Varna, County al Huron, under the name
,and etyle of 'WILSON & FOOTE; has been this day
dissolved by mutuni consent. All liabilities 'in-
curred by the late firm will be liquidated by JAS.
FOOTE, and ell debts due the firm must be paid
to him without delay.
Varna, Feb. 11, 1878.
AGNES WILSON,
271iY4 JAMES FOOTE.
NOTICE. ,
TH4-• partnership heretofore existing between the
undersigned, es Cabinet-makers, at Seaforth,
hail this day been diseolved liy mutual consent.
All debts dim and owing to the said lirm -will be
payable to WALTER SCOTT, (who continues the,
business) who will also discharge all debts and
liabilities due by the said firm.
Witness, WILLIAM SPARLING,
F. HOLMF.STED, WALTER SCOTT.
. Seaforth, Feb. 12, 1873. 271-44
EXTRACTING TEETH WITHOUT
PAIN.
CARTWRIGHT, L. D. So Surgeon Dentiet
attends in Seaforth, at Tinox's Hotel, the first
Tuesday endiVednesdity #.4 eath month; in Clinton,
at the Cominereial Hotel, on the following Theis -
days and Fridays. The remainder of the time at
his Stratford office.
Parties requiring new teeth are requested to tall,
if at Seaforth and Clinton, OR the first days of at-
tendance. •
T'estamonials of over 500 patients who have had
their teeth extraded by tbe. use of the Gee, may
be seen at ley office in Stratford.
Teeth inserted in the most substantial and ii-.
proved styles.
Fining done in gold, &e., in a nienner which ean-
not be Surpassed, 267-