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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1873-12-12, Page 3• --"••••'-,-"ata. aatat , EC. 12 1 3 L • NOTICE y given -01# thto partnership lately flub. -1-Jetweelt f•Xelin Goverdoek an Bob , bath of the township of AlcMop, in the of !lEturon,1 Sm! Millers, under the firm of tt. alq•iliani,‘" was on the twentrylfth • eptetaber, dIssolved by mutua - ,afft l con- klebts °Wing t the said partnership are. =Wed by the said ;olio Govenlockr t -4 at Seaforth! th ti day of November., Ll$73, • !JOHN GOir ..KNLOCE,. Ii01.1-1,14T GRatkAf, T ER YARD. IABEE & MACDOALfl to inform. thepublie that they have open, ed. trutrober atdr in t•zt. aforth, near Shearsim's 4n the ground formerly used as Lturber • by Mr. Tho•nnts Lee. y win kee? eoustautly on hand goodassiart- of ALT. Ii:INDS OF Irl -:),1131;:n-, dressed ivad ssedr Also, LATH AND STILNGLES, aTil of tltei. arept-epared to sell at the lowest peeei. ' ires, for Cash. lolerF.4 and others will And it to their ad.vant- ) upset our stook- and aseertain our pr- cea rpurrhasingelsewhere, av• we are in a ion good inducement a to cash parchasers, .• MABEE & MACD-ON EAFORTI-1 PLANING MILL, 5OR AND BLIND FACTOY Atfteriberbewi Iea-ve to thank his nrimenons 1(4teMers for the liberal patronage extended to bioe :commencing business nSeaforth, and that he may be favored with a continuance same. ties intending to build would do well to fgive ait he will continue to keep on ban,,a a ktoet oall kinds of DRY PINE LITNIBER, S,41. 14! E DtaRS,, BT.-INDS, MOULDINGS, SHINGLES,. LAT -1, ETC. feels coriadeut of giving satisfsztion to those U sy favonv him with their par maga, aa none t-elasawerkraen. art empieyetd. iPartiertlar.attention paid to Custom Planing. JOHNH. BROADFOOT. SEAFORTH ' IOTOGit.A_PH ROOMS. E undersigned desires to state that he has Arenasen from mr. PlaANIT. PALTRIDGE Ographing business, which he will hereafter net, . YrtillES OF ALL KINIOS ax. in the latest and best styles of the Ar Lviughad long experience in the business, the ubscriber has too hesitation in guarautceing e satisfaction, and trust a to receive a con - wee of the liberal patrone,:ze bestowed on his ccessor. THE aui NEGATIVES ON.HAND ARLES MOOR %forth, Tali,. 1811S. 92 MOVED.. RemovED. .11. ROBERTSON, • Cabinet-maker anti Undertake; S REAM -VIED -his ware -rooms ta JOHNSON'S OLD STAND, main -street, Sesforth, re he has en hani s superior stock of tura of every description. CALL A_YD S.ELT IT. urni • UNDERTARING., tying purchased :Err, Thomas Dell's H P. SR t prepared to attend funerals on the shortest e, either in torn or coaritry. . -Coffins, AU Sizes, t constantly en hand. SHROUDS! SHROTTDSI! M. ROBERTSON, ';-!\R•INET MAXEI:,- AND UNDERTA Johnson's Old Stand, n street, Seaforth, has now on hand a good assortment of - ST-1±-toCD-F...T3D'S telathe can furnish cheaper than they c got e1• -!;where. n be 25 • FORTH GARRIAGE WOR INTER COMING WILLIAM GRASSIE reparation for the slei,4h.ing Season, 1us in construction a large number of I EIGHS ANDE, S CUTT eh will be sold, as usual, cheap for cash, or on ] t time. The repatittion of this! establishment. Jae drtrability and elegance of articles tinned by it, is sufficient gultrantee unset purch receive satiafaetion. • 1 number of Liatsing-le• and Double RIGS, in wa=3- of Wagonstand Buggiera ye on, hand Itv WILLIAM GR , SSIB, Godelielt street, Seaforth. SMOKERS. EACH PLUG OF THE RTLE NAVY whaufs (IF At POUND, •ILE TBE IMITATIONS - ONLY WEIGH OF A FOUNA). ft: giving yoa a poorer article and less of it for your nioney. EACH GENUINE PLUG STAMPED rr- eiltort, Sept. 11,1373. 305 11 F.• • EC 12, 873. TH 0 EXPbSITOR. TMBER _ .1:UMBER - • TOM STEAM SAW MILL. OITENLOOK & • now got their new Steam Saw Mil on the • rthern Gravel Road, six miles north of Sea- 'Li:running at full blast, and are prepared to mish • • Oataber of All Kinds, - AND MILDING MATER$AJ- e • a as 31apie, Beek. Elm, Birch, Basswood, Oak d Elm.. A -.tuck of ..N(..!ING AND I)/AIN LUglIER Kept constantly cou hand. '-mi; afreasy as can be hod elsewhere. r. natter delivered in Seaforth, required. to Faber of any deseription can be sapplied from t 23 feet in length. ,vera deseription, embracing a quantiqaof AO JIARD WOOD, • • GOVENLOCK & GRAHAM. ori t- t !War CHART 'RS 1Ror SWINBURNE. f love were hat the rose is, - • And. I wer like the leaf, ar lives wo kl grow together •n sad or sin g weather, Brown fields or flowerful closes, - Green plea, ttre or gray grief; If love were hat the rose And I wei e like the leaf, If I were wh t the words are • And love ere like the tune, - With double sound and single, Delight our iiss would mingle, t With, kisses jacl. as birds are, That get e v-eet ram . at noon ; If I were what the words are, And hav ere like the tune. If you weie e, my darling, And I, your love, were death, We'd shine and snow together Ere March made weet the weather With daffodil and starling, And hours of fruitful breath; If you were life, my darling, And.I, your love, were death. If you Were thrall to sorrow And I were page to joy, We'd play for lives and seasons, With loving looks and. treasons, And tears of night and. morrow, And laughs of maid and boy ; If on were thrall to seyrow •And I were page to Joy. If you were .Aprirs lady, I • And 1 were lord in May, We'd throw with leaves for hours,. • , And draw for days with flowers; • Till day like night were shady, Axel night were bright like day; . .1f you were April's lady, And I were lord in Mair. If you were queen of pleaeure, And I were king of pain, We'd hunt down love together,. Pluck out 11'..s flying feather, And teach his feet a measure, And find his mouth a rein ; If you were queen of pleasure, . And 1 were king -of pain. GAIETIES. ' Vhat key is the hardest t� turn? A ey. Why do people eenerally dislike ea -cake ? Because ite' is nothing to (w )eat. It is very easy to say, take things as th y come; but suppose they on't ones got trusted for that hat, and he now feels a consciousness of being in d t "over head and ears." am, why am de dogs de most in - gent folks in de world? Because they eberyting. • 1 The pale of society in the milk dis- tricts—The waterpail. ---When is a gun -barrel ' e;hicken ? s When it is a little fowl. The young man who boasted that he co . 4 marry any girl he pleased, found t at he couldn't please any. When Jonah's • fellow -passengers pi hed bira overboard, they evidently ✓ ded him as neither profit nor loss. - A clergyman removing from one city to another markecl a large box contain - in his sermons; " Keep dry." I They did. A schoolmaster said of himself, "I like a hone; I sharpen a number of bl des, but Iwear myself out in doing it." Two pair of stairs are necessary to e ery newspaper office in North Carolina: e for the editor to go down as the caller co es up the other. •-•-liaWisconsin, a man reported that he coulcln't find a word in the diction- ary, becausethe blasted book hadn't got an index. ; I —Two fatigued travelers, _having • to travel ten miles further, comforted. them- - selves by the calculatton that it was only vemiles each. —An old, German, while on his way from Indianapolis to Lafayette, froze his nose. While thawing the frost out of that necessary member he remarked*: By jinka I, I no understand dis ting. 1 have carry dat nose forty years and he • never freezed hisself before 1" —The Donkey and. his Double—Judge Norbury was interrupted in his charge to a jury once by the loud braying of a donkey in the street of the assize town. " What's that ?" asked. his. 'lordship. Mr. 'arsons (with whom his lordship • had just had a fiery flare-up) rose and gravely assured him that it was merely the," echo` of the court," the Retain Catholi promised to give lar &nee. The Marquis tion will b0 £50,000. —The nUmber 0 shi the BritishRavy act ?tall id 200. These are squadrons, independ on special service. laid up in the dock of England at the the above, is given • —A special telegr scribes an exploit of on the train from ped,by ten armed near Chided Real, was stripped of thieves did not ta leggage, but everyt shape of money, was collected. • —Germany has b en the wealth she wru g frc lieving that becaus ;the land Directors raise the they must have bee in condition,'the Ger tually communicat ville, and. offered to Bank of England n politely declined, a in Threadneedle str —While we bear deeds of English " ing to know that th badly off as they ar One has recently di House with more t sion, and a further bank. Another in accumalated quite a ing tobacco in the after all to be on E starve. —Although few made toopen mine Ireland, extensive ly been commence , County Tyrone. kind has been pure dreds of colliers ha ons have been pro ways constructed. the prodUctionis reach 850 tons per of the other colleri carried on quite as ing to- a recent est' rone contains 30, lent coal, includin gas coal. --Fuller details fish seen oft.St. Jo • he was even larger to be. The fish • creature in broad it and examined. signs of life, or • 11 1 1 f 1 e 11 at, rese 500 m f rig bo n at nd s y tiae ing port etch s, o istoo can ute' a be at f ve mb s an t ti or 6 ni nds e, I as ver lua $ t 11 I • t. 10 01 dupe y -ar re in n $ ou he mal our lis 1 1 I 11 00 I111 • BRIEF NOTES. 11 The tea kettle is the only singer that never gets cold. • —In the small State of Rhode Island there are no fewer than seven divisions of Baptists. .. —It has cost $10,000;000 in cash and 136 lived, to bore the Hoosac tunnel. • ' —A couple who registered themselves the other day at a Chicago hotel as "Georgti Lord and lady, Stewartville, New York." left a baby behind them 'When they paid their bill. The landlord being childless concluded to accept the offering of the Lord, and adopted the foundling. —The name of Roger Tichborne will be handed down to posterity by other means than 17 the fame of the great trial Which is now going on. i The re- turns from th local registrars .., in Eng- land. how lanhow thatnearly 100- childien have, by ' their parents, been named Roger Tichborne. —A nice question of taste : Jeweller— What kind of a (lain would: You like? Young man --Well, I don't know, hard- ly. What kind of a chain weuld you _ think I ought to have; that is, . what style would you think most becoming for a young man what carries groceries to some of the best families in the Own? . • —The authorities of Jasz-bereny, a Hungarian town, have just had the fol- lowing notice pulish.ed to the !sound of the drum : "Seeing that oaths and blas- phemies are the real causes Of earth- quakes, every one, no matter who, is for-, bidden to sw-ear or use bad language, under a penalty of receiving twenty-five stripes with a rod, and. payiug a fine o twenty flories." —A Van Wert, Ohio, couple, recently divorced, were walking out of thecourt room together, chattine about their sep- motion, when the old inlady suddenly, as if having forgotten something, said, "‘1 say, old- nem, can't yon treat to the beer?" "Of course," answered the lib- er ed lord of creation, and_ off they jog- ge Aogether to wash away the memory of -t-lie past in a glass of lager be r. —The Marquis and Marchioness of Bute, accompanied by Monseignor Capel, have loft England for Rome. It is said their visit is connected with the estab- lishment of a Raman Catholic uni- versity in England. If - the scheme • receives the sanction of the Pope tte on o era in 1v1acl lased be red, and rein one expected ay, whil the wor tensivel ate, the 6,000 ton seams of re81.1 m F Ban ate ve rove th yuchsThe uch ,, • so not reser Ialin 0 in It in arae aey, have ary itssist- contribu. onOng to a is about to jelevetx sels!placed r ofl ships reserves e, besides 0. ' ' adfid de- erpetrated was stop - all station passenger les, The ble ,j amine in the welery rng upon . Be - o Eng - f di4count, destitute ntrint ac- rd, Gran- cie tigainst offer was mu4ement the mis- is gratify - always as ted Ito be. ton Union his !posses - he iavings place has cap tal by sell - I is better pau er than to pts ha4!, been ,lar e Scale in ions have late - he ollories of leer of every and. fixed, hun- n en aged, wag- thetram- miO0' alone shortly to at Many •is 'being' . Accord- -Linty Ty. - of excel - cannel or 11 1 o especting tllLe devil 's, N. F., han sit fir rmen wh ay. and. we 't before i larmed" th show that tlescribed saw the I e cloae to gave any ir. by its movements, decla positivelly Ithat its length was not les its diameterfive.f fully ten feet acro. scribe as being "t keg." With this struck their boat menced winding Alarmed. by thes man, seized hie ax which were arou these arms was t ArtyInchcs ness, but the port On amPuta more than six fee in length. has, unfortunate' , been lost, t4e fisher- men having thro n it 'away. The longer arm they brought to St. Jelin.rs, but not before six feet of t was destr. Yrd. The portion now imm served in the mus length, and the m ten feet at least b body of the fish, lengthqmist have Thiscorroborates the body, for onl work such enorm ! than sixt eet and et, while it s. Its bea. e size of a formidable lolently an its arms movemen and qut ofi d • th boa ail was they de - six gallon Weapon it then coin - r und it. fisher - t o arms One of fl thick - d was not This arm, large scale„ He is alrei ten ive business in Hupp for his implements and i ing and genera1 jo ke p pace with his fast ne s; he must have e for doing work. !IVIr.l• ma to some very import in he way of new bui na chinery. To make pa -tiler will be needed. foi e, a good. opening h ex *Hence and capital. pa -tiler be forthcoming im o rovements will be inspring, and it is th t Mr. Wilson May ce s to which his end w ll. entitle him. -Post 7 doing an-ex- ymg the demand atending to re- bi g work. To in reasing busi- ar ed' appliances ails n is about to nt improvements dings and more success sure, a %ere is, there - re !for a inti of But whether a or not, extensive adein; the corn- ur sincere wish eet with the suc- y and ability so HE NEW NO K TIMES. Daily, )9emi-Weekt and Weekly. THE NEW YORK AILY TIMES STH ONLY REPUBLIC rsed itt spiri um is ninet n say that hind, attach BO that it been thirt heir tale of a large b us arms. Blew PROGRESS OF BROSS 111. 'S SA MILL 1 mill is si tlated on • li tle be lona the and Bruce Railway was forme ly owned. . Smith, bu waa • re - by `i Messr . Philip e of Seafort - It is a . The ene is 18 SPARLIN • Sparling's saw Turnberry street, Wellington, Gre station. The mil by Messrs. M. & cently purchased. SParling & Son, la steam power mi horse power and tr e They have in `l saw, a butting s bolter. A No. 1 purehased, and The Messrs. Spar mill all winter. is enstom work, a disposed of in th average amount o mill is 50,000 feet quantity of hemlo hand.. Logs are c fully, and a busy THE DRUM This establishm street, not far fr It at present cons buildings, the bl malehine shop and. size of the blacks feet; the centre shop, is 60x30 feet, an is 28x2O feet. Mr. Wil year to connect the cen the paint shop; the n then be the machine shop. building will be 45X30 f ; a of 30 feet will also be ra de to ti in shop. The engine s an 8 h 1dand pre - n feet in they left to the original ve feet. be size of ily could T 1211 It th tet be ti na pa ne an de ve PI e boiler 4011orse powe• usen inse ted foothi a ath m II awl/ a urnii4g lathe as been be set u Ishortly. ng in end ru lining the ost of the IN ork thine d the surpin is easily horae mar t. The timber sa at this per week. A large k is always kept on ming in ve 7 plenti- easOil is an cipated. , LS FOC/WI:a * 0 it is situate m lumber y street.. ststhree igieparate cksn'iith's op, the he a aint s otp. The th a shop is 45x24 uilding, or naehine the p nit shop inte as next re buil Mg with. w buil' ng will Ilhe new addition mould- rse pow - boiler. shops is fie of ag- , plows, ) general ere most plowing ...ron and Ike shop • . ".• on. Mill er one, with a 15 hor e pow r The work done at Mr. Vilson' varied, including the m nufactt ricultural implerael ts (specie. blacksmithing, hor e-sh eing, an jobbing. Mr. Wil on's .plows suocessful at the 1rece t Gre match. He Manuf et es bot w mien *plows. Ii ti e mach ve observed a lathe, ii ted wi centreing chuck anal a vertica, first-class machinet. - large g is ivorked by belti4g c nnected shafting. • A polis ing wheel for polishii g The machines in t is d intended for woilking radaiding shop is 0 fe the addition menti ned • italthe apartment ill 60X30 feet. On t e moulding ahlip th p Th 'e foundry has a `ine wek, when an av rag cast. Above the ac woodworking dep rtm. ed ,a vertical saw, Or c fancy patterns, ant als Attached to the 1 tte contrivance for boing three forges in tjie b and a large amour'.hl of descriptions is don '13. who is a thorougijily tends going into tile ricultural implem eits 11 IN THE CITY 01' he high charadtex IES has borne in the rantee for its condu ill continue to ad v public, without ref ests of individuals. - spared in the mainte n as the foremost. o It is the best d er in the country. s, the best fereig the largest ;staff of ts. All objectiona tisementa are rigidl TERMS TO MAIL S o Daily Times, per anni unday ediion...,. T e Daily Times, per nuuz 'unday edition T e Sunday edition, per an nm. N JOURNAL EW YORK. hich THE DAILY est isa eufficient t in the future. cate the cause of rence to the in: No expense will mice of its peg - American .jour- . , family news - t has the latest correspondence, he e ciarrespon- le jnews and exluded. CRIBERS. in, including the . . ..... ..$12 , ex.clusive of the 10 le 2 The Semi- Wee /y Pima. THE SEMI-WHICILLY Turns contains a ry careful epitome of onr foreign and me correspondence ; 1 an interestinitaie- don of currentliter tu f reign and domestic m ga ✓ riety of agridultur 1 • ry latest neWslap to th t press. Termii-43 r r tes—two copieS, o e c pies, one year, $25, n f ee. New names ma b a any time during t e ye 10 01 The /* e from the best incs ; a choice atter, and the hour of going annum. Club year, $5; ten one extra copy added to clubs r, at club rates. kl T mes. THE WEEKLY TIM S s undoubtedly e best paper for tl e armer, for the echanic, and for all hb live in looi- es which are serve( only by weekly ails. It contains addition to edi- rial comments on c /Teat topics, an ex - Dent condensation if the news of the eek; the most inapo tant events, both eine and foreign, aae eviewed at length, nd a large quantity f matter is given specially interesting o the farmer and echauic. Its Mar oet reports are the ullest and most aecu at in the country. erms--2 per anu. Club rates of The EEKLY—all to one ost office address—fi e copies, per an - um, $7.50; ten c pies, per annuni, 12.50; twenty e.cpi s, per annum, $22; hirty copies, per an um, $30, and one xtra copy to each cl b. For every club f fifty, one copy Of 'HE SEMI-WEEKLY IMES to ths getter -u of the club. When the names o subscribers are re-. uired to be written poll each paper of he club at one po t office address, ten Grits for each cep additional to the bove rates. . 00 THE SEMI-WEEKLY and WEEKLY ailed one year to clergymen at the low - t rates. Theso prices are nvatiable. Remit in rafts cin New York or Post Offioe Money niers, if possible, and whore neither f these eau be precured send the money a registered letter. Terms cash in advance. ! THE NEW YORK TIMES, New York City. 01 1 THE INDEPENDENT, trITSECTARLkN RELIGIOUS rVirEEICLY. leirty-two. Pas , Size sof "Har - per's (wkly." As in tkaa past, the I DEPENDENr will _continue be the largest and by far the best religions week- ly published in the wor d. A large number of the fist writers in Amen a$ Europe are regular . c utributors. It has epa tments devoted to Re- ligion, Literature, Poet cience, Misions, Sun - d y Schools (explanati us nd comments upon the Iliternational Series o Su day (ichol. Lessons), ducation, Ministerial Registers, Editorial, Edi- trial Notes, Young an 0 d, Commercial Inter- ets, Dry Goods (wit la est ant most correct quotations, Market • evie s (comprising latest quotations of Groceri s, ountry Prodnce, Ben- eral Markets, &c.), F' ane , Ineuranee, and Farm and Garden; making i by ar the best paper for the -clergyman, businaot m n, and fndly. • Among the contribn ors to the INDEPENDENT during 1873 may be m tio ed: Louise M. Alcott, Jacob Abbott, Maul k mer Ame, H. W. Bel- lows D. D., Horace B shn 11, D. D., Leonard Ba - T. L. Cuyler, D. D., Lydia n, Clrk, , D. D., Rose D., George 1'. Fisher, son, Mrs.. Grenough, V. Higgiiison, Father Edward E. Hale, J. J. times MeCosh, LL. D., r, D. D., J.&. Platt, irana Rich, A. P. San - Harriet Prescott Spof- , Celia Theater, W. M. ridge, Henry Wilson, Wen sive and liberal. Our elegant Chromo, en- ood " from an original orld renowned artist, F. B pal ted expressly for the SIDRIPTIdIN : eon, D. D., C. P. Crane Maria Child, James nem Terry Cook, F. C. Ewe , D. D., William Lloyd ar H. H., Gail Hamilton T Hyaeinthe, Gilbert Ha an, Jerves'Charles Kingel y, W. E. H. Lecky, Ray alm Elizabeth Stuart Phel s, ley, D. D., R. H. Stoddird, ford, J. P. Thompso, it Taylor, D. D, J. T.1 Susan•Warner, John' . W Its Premium Liseis new Premium for 1874 is a titled " Memories of Ihul Oil Painting by the!' Carpenter, which ara INDEFENDENT. TERRIS Or • CHEAPER TELE SUBSCRLBER HAVING RECENTLY • TEAS SU THAN EVER. URCHASED A LARGE QUANTITY OP ARS, FRUITS, AND CENE AL GROCERIES, .AT PRICES gum LOWER TIT Is enabled. t • BETTER BARGAIN The goods are now itt stock, and the get their sho.re of the 01: Only $3 per year, in cl i ding night Frolic " and "So' 'Memories of Chili ood SteelEngraving, t rant win M. Stanton." tl 25 per year—CF a slf- • mos drill_a 'So Tired." mouned "Memories of Cal hoo nus -bone rolled, ready for fra With the " First Readings of r emery on, is ,a, so here.. partine it are all in na A. The t squaa ; when above i done to e a 'aria, one— ooring hove the tterns ite kept. t " abot V once a of 52 •exes are me sheP is the nt. obkrve rtting 0 teves and o a circ &ix saw. is an ingenious vood. acre are acksmit IS shop, work of different re. M . Wilson, ractical man, in- nufactt re of a next y 411' 011 a 9-oing at the the Chromes, " Good- ired," ntunounted; or " unmounted; or the and Wilson," or " Ed- " Good-nibt Frolic," n binders'-boardor ," mounted on canvas, g ; or Steel Engraving, the iiinaneipatiOn Proclam- ation," or Athor. of t e United States. mos "Good -night Frolic," mte on stretchers. seri ers—The " Providence lacquered Store. THE CURRENT MARKET VALUE, give the public even THAN HERETOFORE. 1: abitants of Town and Country are invited to come and JAMES MURPHY, _Main -Street, Seaforh. $3 50 per year—Clirt and " So Tired," mo $9 and Three New Su Wringer." Agents Wanted elusive Territory iven—Large om*issions Offered. Send for simple co y, wi h a full list of premi- us, and inducement. to ,ents. SabAbe nowt Rtmittances to be so t to HE R C. BOWEN, Publisher, No v York, P. 0. Boa: 2787. 3 4 No . 3, Park -pie _ GENTS WAN: 1\1" Of the DO n • Profits from $200 t n nt employment. 1-6 ED sell TAILORING AND GENTS' FURNISHINGS AT CAMBELL'S CLOTHING EMPORIUM. Fall Stoc Now Cor41ete in Every Department. 1,900 Overcoats aind Pea Jackets Class 1Readyxnade. GOOD BAR liar Remember my Stock this Fal' AINS FOR CASH. First Surpasses anything 1 have opened before. WILLIAM, CAMPBELL. EVERYWHERE our IV' Jai.. of Canada. ' 3 0 per mouth. Puma - TROY & Co., Hi g stjreet Bast,' Toronto. STRONG & FA_IRLEY Are now read ing large additions to their STOCK O GROCERIES, • Which th;y offer Cheap for Cash. The CASH I3UYERS will find it to their advantage to GIVE US A CALL. Fine Flavor Tea Bright Sugars, 1 Rice, 20 pounds Raisins, 12 pou Tobaccoes from • I from 50 cents np, , 10 and 9 pounds for $1, or p, for $1, cents per pound upwards, Aim a large Sck toof Pickles, Sauces, Spice all kinds, Flavorings, Extracts, &c. great ar1ety. Salmi , Mackerel, Lobsters, Sardines, &c. Canned Goods in - 3. MONTREAL HOUSE. DUNCAN:::&,• • PUNQAN4 -E HAVE much pleasure in calling your attention to our stock of Dry Goods, Clothing, Gents' Furnishings, Boots and Shoes, and. Hats and. 'Caps, . which have been seleetecl with great care, >. and with a view to first-class Value, and. will be found replete with all the novel- ties of the season in the various Depart- ments, viz: • FLOUR AND FEED AL AYS ON HAND, AND !SOLD' AT ILL PRICES. , 1 VEGETABLES RECEIVED FR SH FROM THE GARDEN EVERY DAY. FRUITS ALWAYS ON HAND DURING THEIR SEASON. orne one -and all and give us a call, and w will guarantee to give you Groceries as good low a figure as any house in town. Goods deliver d as usnal free of charge. STRONG & FAIR,LEY. 306 and at as 71 SETS 04: LADIES' FURS pick from Fr m 2 75 a Set. 39 LAWS' 41141CKET$. AT DENT'S, Beautiful Goods, oin $1 25 up. n Endless Stock of ILLINERY and all the Novell s o the Season at - DENT'S Cheap Dry Goods Establishment, Seforth. GOLD WIT) And the bent way to sav EAS, SUGARS AN EE'S-FLOUR lour, Oat and Cornmeal, Provisions, Han TO PREVENT DYSPEPS A Choice lot of plendid bargains in Fruit ars. Call au B.—CEDAR POSTS and SHINGLES IS GOLD vsrozt,. EIJD cs-vm13, it it to purchkse a genuine article in D GE,I4ERAL. GROCERIES, ery cheap, at AND SEED ST0E s, Bacon, Fruit, Vegetables constantly on hand. TRY OUR GRANULATED WIINIT. rockery and Gla.ssware. see liem. Goods delivered tree of charge: DRESS GOODS. Black Colored Cobourgsy, Crape Cloths, Persian COrd8) A 11- Wodl Black Lustres, Bcuratheei, Paramattas, Swiss Rpp, Figured_Lustres, * 1?ussell Cord. -9; FANCY DRESS GOODS IN GREAT VARIETY. FRENCH MERINOES, DELAINES, EMPRESS CLOTH, ALL WOOL REPPS. SILKS AND POPLINS. We would draw especial attention to this class of Goods, as we have secur- ed more than usual value in Black Silb, Colored Silks, Poplins,inblackankcol'd. Japanese Silks. till on hand. OIVIAS LEE, SeafOrth, Ont.. SEAFORT KERR, FOUNDRY. ILKIE 8c CO.1 A CHEAP LOT OF WOOL SHAWLS. WINCEYS. • • • • • Aberdeen and Manchester Winoeys, in. all Shades of Colors, at Low.Brices. 11 GENERAL STAPLE GOODS. Hollands, Linens, Denims, Grey and! White Cottons, Shirting! and. Sheetings. 't tali to informthe people of •Hnion and p blic generally that they have leased the Seaforth Foundry fo a term of years, and are now prepared to manufacture all kinds of astings, Straw C tters, Sawing Machines, Plow -s, and othe Farming Implements We are also prepared to do REPAIRING The undersigned have had long eaperien s tisfaction in all their work. 287 411 every description. ! • Ct. ill the Foundry business, and are prepared to guarantee KERR, WILKIE CO. OUR OVERCOATINGS„CLOTHS, • TWEEDS, AND CENTS' FUR- NISHING DEPARTMENT • Will be found on examination woithy the attention of the closest bayer, as.aval also our stock in Beavers, Pilots, Presi dent Cloth, Broad Cloth. Trowserings, Doeskins, Tweeds, Fancy Coatings, Vest- ing, Waterproofs, &c. Shirts, Tie, Scarfs, Braces, Collars, &e. . HATS, CAPS & FUR GOODS. BLANKETS AND FLANNELS* Flannels in all Colors of Lancashir. Saxony and. Welsh Plain and Stripe Shirtings. Printea Flannels. BLANKETS -01r stock is very full and of first-class value—White Blankets, Brown Shanty Blankets, Blueand Brown Horse' Blankets, Railroad Wrappers— Plain, Striped, and Fancy. TIMBRE44S. Silk, Cotton, and. Zanillrin all the Latest London Syles. GIT.TTT_ArTs_ Marseilles, Honeyconab and. Caored. CLOTHING. - A. full assortment of Overcoats and Pea Jackets, as well as Men's and Boys' Clothing generally. ' Special attention paid to ordered work, all fits guaranteed. BOOTS AND SHOES. A full stock d all seasonable goods in Men's Cowhide„ Kip and Calf Boots, and Shoepacka Ladies Goat, Seal, Stin, Calf, otca Misses' and Children'., in full line4., • • ours, eco.1 DUNCAN & DUNAN' • 44 14 - ' 11 - 11 44. 14 4244 14 42 14 4. 44 14 4.4 44 44 • 5. 5 _ 44 4 44 14 •