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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1876-10-06, Page 3OCTOBER 6, 1876. 77 WADDELL & SL'OCESSORS TO GRAY, YOUNG & STARLING. TH iT IS HERE 11 AT HE *RE L. aamer being ig of- iet on at SES manse es of IER We are this week receiving ehipments of Nene Goods every day for THE FALL TRADE, - A -d ievite cnetomers and the General Publie to eall etel eeendue our fetook before purchaein„ seeewhere. Our Steel will be complete in eeci departnatet le a :ley or two- No Pains will be spared eu ear part to give everyone entire satis- faction with then perdu:eke. Special Value win tonne in tee fel:owing leading lines : Black and' Grey Lustres, Black Fre.wh Merinoes, C oil d Frenrh, iferinoes, full revive, PdaPk and. Colored Cobourgs, Crape Cloths, l'aramattas, Dress Goods in all the new COOr8; Plain and Checked Winceys, English, and American Print8, White Cuttons, Factory Cat iiioreS and hosiery. Collars- and cup,_ Fe -Wings, Laces, Fringes, EMbruiderics, Felt Skirts, Jrincey Skirts, Shawls and Jfantles, Scarlet and White Flannels, Creel FlaititelS, aml Plain Apirting8 in all C oil.) re, Tab?,1. Bleached and Half Bleach, • ; Towls add Towelings, Blankets; limp Carpets, Brown and Drab- Ducks, Blue (aid Braun Deltilf181' irotarprohf Tweeds, Scotch a ad Canadian Tweeds, Coatings, Gents' Scarfs, Ties, Collars and au s, Scotch mai Cartadian Shirts -and D caw, r„s, Ceti'sWhite and -Colored Dress Ott at Shi-rtse Hate owl Cettts, dc &c., &c. r ER BUFFALO ROBES. Our Steck will he found one of the largeet that to be Imo beet opened in Seaforth. • mu it A FUEL wrOcIE OF C.'ErVERAI, GROCERIES. many . antion WADDELL & Co, TEAS. TEAS. TEAS. FROM TH fS DATE UNTIL ''Dds' NOVEMBER FIRST lo s, : - 1.riceS. ..s,from Fan Veal I WILL SELL TEAS IN 5 OR 10 POUND LOTS AT riercEs TO SUIT THE TIMES. PRICES WILL RANGE FROM 25 TO 65 C=TS PER POUND. • 00)111E Atia UT YOUR WINTER . STOCK AND. SAVE MONEY • •lly Buying la Lots st- CHEAP Y CASII GROCERY. e Cots , HIGHEST MARKET PRICE - Pat.] C ASII /or 500 33:C.TS1-11.JS OF GOOD !POTATOES, ram 5 ! Pure 1 CHEAP CASH GROCERY. ks. recte tame( the ess suc- L. Dellvezede se the EPEE DELIVERY. - J. FAIRLEY, Seaforth. AT IT AGAIN. YILLLOI CL-NMPBELL, MEM:1121NT TAILOR AND CLOTHIER, SEA-1E0RM. FTER Laving ea ned tbrottele the FiesY Fnr" Lace ie again at lateintsa purified and, regener- ated. Througli the kiedneee of Messrs. Killoran es Re an Le hue Leee permitted to take up • TEMPOR AR Y. QUARTERS in ene eide ef their laree and commodious brick stere, where Le 'iL feed to see and serve big elti halide aed eintorncra. Flo haa yet a 'Superb Stock of Cloths OF ALL KINDS, And ig daily receiving more. so that he ie as veil prepared se evtr to give satisfaction. lienicrebsr len location and call and eee _WM. CAMPBELL' OCTOBER 6, 1876. Permanent Grades. However pleasant and agreeable it is in theory to posses a permanent meadow, the sod of _ev clich shall grow and thicken for a century, in practice we- doubt if such a meadow could be. made profitable even con p d • That it • could be made possibleit 57 the exercise of f skill in management nd the expendi- ture of sufficient money for manure in rare cases upon some soils well fitted for this use, we do not doubt ; but that this ase of land would be unprofitable we feel very sure. It is only in very few cases that specialities in agriculture can be made to nay, and then there must be a combination of favoring circumstances to render them profitable. The dairy, for instance, is one of the most important of the iigriciltnral specialities, and the out- let for its products is wide and extensive. For the prosecution of his industry there e,ould be nothing more desirable than rich and permanent pastures for summer feeding and permanent pastures to yield fodder for winter—if these could be made profitable. But here the dairyman meets with a check. To say nothing of the difficulty or impossibility in most ,cases of maintaining grass lands in a produc- tive Condition, he finds the quantity of The London Telegra land that is needed to support one • neighborhood of Newb cow, far too great at its present value to miles from the very permit a satisfactory profit to be realized Hampden was born a shape of an equivalent which will corn- mand the same amottnt of labor laiy another person, b . urplus, which is the laborei's profit. I is this surpl which, in the aggregat, constitutes tite wealth of the world In proportio then, as labor or capi I can be wise expended are the profits of that labo If only a small amoutiti of labor is e nded the returns ar small; if mu4h labor is expended the it turns are great. T�know how to expendlabor, how mu h to expend, and in what direction, is know one's business, aid the more pr ficient in this knowled e the person the better workman, 1 whether he farmer, miner, or ca ter, he will pro ility to do this or by instnictio .ty for learnin er may be, t experienced, the better a employ labor and the grea I be, at least 've capacity of himself to be. The learned by experience, aided by natural capab Thus the better the fa more skilful, the mor tbe better taught he is, he will be to expend pi capital upon his farm, his returns or crops Wi to the extreme product land. _A Specimen En lish Fanner. h says: "In tlie ry, not a hundr d lace where Jo d bred, a stur4y specimen of wh t in the autumn tf delights and li e arlwood, a farm r bury, and 8Q e years past the prime of 1 his strength,m e a small bet that he ould, singly a d unassisted,cart 20 acr4 of wheat betwe n the earliest- moment 4t which he cou d see in the mornieg an4 the last mome t at which he could see gan his work on Frida on the farm of Mr. N. Crookham, near New at night he had ca •trope her produce. Five acres of pasture and two of meadow for a cow's yearly subsistence is more then he can afford. Where land is worth $50 an acre the in- laborious days. Mr. C terest upon the.cost of seven acres , alone • and miller near Ne will sweep away nearly half the average income from a cow. it is very clear when we consider the average returns from a dairy Cow that it does not, and cannot pay to keep her ou pasture and hay ex- clusively. if this is a fact we may as well abandon all thought of keeping land permanently in grass and all effort to do so. Even upon moist bottom lands 'na- tural to grass' we are satisfied that it will not pay as well to grow grass permanent- tents of the 20 acres. ly as to drain those lands and submit from his carting were yeoman has given us a can he done, even late life, by those who sco re ,s Le 13 them to a regular rotation of cropping in which hay and. pasture, or soiling _crops Sball alternate with grains and roots. If one cow can be kept upon every seven acres upon a farm devoted to varied clops three of which were one ten yards by si which was—as the pantomime—' a little culated that while M under the best system of rotation—as we at work he lifted froix know from ample experience can be done of wheat, and from with ease—it is then very clear that , all straw; and it is said • the crops raised in excess of what is need- thee -ordinary a.gricu ect to subsist the cows,are so much gained. eneire day to get thr If this is true, the farmer who mixes The physical power dairying with grain growing is far better mer has always been e off than the exclusively dairy farmer. the average. But at • The past season has helped to greatly en- seldom that we come large the experience of dairymen, and, is able in the course o as is usual, the new experience has been to pitchfork into the paid for. The 'past summer has been wheat. It is too mu very destruetive to pastures and meadows present to utter ;moil nful prophecies, of centimes; reanimated the flames of Pur - over a large extent of country, and the national decadence, a; d to dehlare.sadly gatery and restored some souls, 6 francs income of thousands of dairymen who and solemnly that the nation is goingto 6 eenettnee ; revived the flames of Hell, . have not practiced 'soiling' more or. less the dogs. As far, h has considerably fallen off. What we made out, the ordivar have learned this season has been very lishnien was never h. much against permanent grass and in fa- and when one an vor of a mixed system. It has long been Channel, land believed by sorae farmers that pasturing carts 20 acres of is a wasteful practice. Many of these , continuous work,, the will now be certain of it. But the length- on to coniplaio. of nati ened rest given to the land by some sea- sons of pasturing is helpfni and valuable, THE HURON EXPOSITOR.; ed as he looked upon the Phillips Exeter Academy, then a great building in his eyes, that the day would. come when the illustrious Alumni of that now ancient institution should hail his name with pride as that of the greatest of their number ? Time brings wonderful changes, bat none more remarkable than that which transformed the country boy, awkwardly handling his knife and. fork at Gen. Peabody's table, to the renowned and influential lawyer, orator, and States- man." Badly Cheated. Mr. of a certain town in Ver- mout, is not 'distinguished for liberality, either of purse or opinion. His ruling passion is a fear of being cheated:. The lose, whether real or fancied, of a few cents would give him more pain than the destruction of an entire navy. He once bought a large hake of tallow at a coun- try store at ten cents a pound. On break- ing it to pieces at home it was found to contain a large Cavity. This he consider- ed a terrible disclosure of cupidity and fraud. He drove furiously back to the store, entering in great excitement, bear- ing the cake of tallow,exclauning vehem- ently: 'Here you rascal, you have cheated me! Do you call that an honest cake of tallow? It is hollow, and there ain't near so much •as there appeared to be. I want you to make it right.' 'Certainly,' replied the merchant, 'I'll make it right. I did'ut know the cake was hollow. You paid ten ce.ntti a pound. Now, Mr. how much do you sup- pose the hole will weigh?' A Quaint Old Bill. The following curious account for re- t night. He e- storing a chapel was engraved in French morning at 3:45 on a watch crystal in the Swiss depart- . Hutchinson', at ury, and by 9:20 d the whOle co The ricks built five in number, of the Vieruile Exposition. The whole was placed on a scroll less than an inch square. A painter had been employed to repair a number of pictures in a con- vent; he did it and presented his bill in en yards by five, full for 59 francs and II. centimes to the , and one more lown says in the ne in.' It ia cal- . Charlwood was 200 to 250 sacks 0 to 60 tons of that it would take tural laborers an ugh such a job. the British far- ceptionally above he saute time it is rose a man who of the High Priest and put carmine on one day's daylight his cheeks, 5 francs 12 centimes; renewed agon 20 acres of Heaven, adjusted two stars, gilded. the h the fashion at sun and renewed the moon, 7 francs 14 curate, who refused to pay it saying that the committee would require a full detail. The painter produced it as follows: Corrected and revised. the Ten Com- mandments, 5 francs 12 centimes; em- bellished and. renewed Pontius Pilate, and put a new ribbon in his bonnet, 3 francs, 6 centimes; put a new tail on the rooster of St. Peter,andinended his comb 3 francs 20 centimes; replumlid and gild- ed the left wing of the Guarclian Angel, 4 francs 17 centimes; washed the servant wever, as can •be put a -new tail on the Devil, mended has PhYsique of -Eng- left hoof and did several jobs for the her than it it neat, Damned, 4 francs 10centimes ; put new , swims across the spatter dishes on the son of Tobias and abler,. single -hand d, dressing- on his back, 2 francs; cleaned wheat in 117.1-ureteof the ears of Balaam'a ass and shod him, 3 is not mu il—t',.48' francs 7 centimes; put ear rings in the nal degen tact" ears of Sarah, 2 frames 4 centime e ; re - bordered the robe of Herod and readjust- li 1 ed his wig 4 francs! 4 centimes ; put a Blrea St. 1 To breakfast lintelhgently raav be; re- new stone in David's sling enlarge the and this fact only tends to strengthen the position we have defended in these • columns, viz.: that a much more extend- , garded as a duty, for 6 good breitkf 't i head of Goliath and extended his legs, 3 followed by good work and- light sp francs 2 centimes • decorated Noah's ark, ed rotation than that ,?usually practiced and therefore !he w is desirable, and would be found profit- • , . • night s fast in ratio io has broke his 3 franc; mended the shirt of the Froth - manner be mes gal Son and cleaned the pigs, 4 francs 9 nd ag eeable o his centimes. Total, 59 francs 11 centimes. e tw disti ctive the m mint, They First and Se°012C1. Honeymoon. as they ever were. able, and in such a lengthened rotatio • dairying falls naturally as one of.the nee- ', ua proportion .neighbors, essary parts of it. Uses For Dry Bread. may be define • The Englishman, wh 1,tre are always glad to have an old. America, or Australi loaf or .a dry one on hand when cookinte fast early- and l largel for there are so many economical little means an act �f suicid ways of using stele or emend rate bread. at 8 and dispatch bee Children like sweat milk boiled and dry_ by a cuptof tea at 9. bread broken -into it; a slice or two is the same idealof bre nice to toast and lay in the bottom of the but apply it . ore ge deep dish into which you take up thick- with porriclg , proce ened milk; it is goad to break up and and wind u , with fry and. steam in a buttered spider, for years ago DreJohnso grandpa's, quiet, enjoyable little break- the Scottish race van fast; and good to use for dressing when a Scottish bteakfast you roast a fowl; good to make toast, or cographer, aS our a - to dry and -brown and lay away for future liked to call him, did emergencies. Puddings made of dry to, the repast set bef bread are excellent; and. it is also avail- quently to his hosts. able in a family of little ones who are loud • fasts as innolt as his of gravies. White gravy, made of cream has an uncomfortabl and butter and flour, seasoned with pep- iced water to his ear per and salt: or brown gravy, made in . his later meals, and seful here a, methods ef le cling in as the the spider after frying beet, veal or chick- en, with flour and boiling water. _ Let the slices of bread be steamed, laid on a large plate and the hot gravy poured over. This is good for little children. We cook -a, fat chicken until it it done ; save the lees and wings to fry for breakfast; pick mer morinnth tit: meat off the .fowl and pet it back in Daniel WrIebste the broth ; -cook and ecasou it well and toast," an &bon:nimbi like toast a ay old, dent been cl opped San Francis o it is breakfast with a pia wonderfully appetizi er deep dish, prese it down compactly, The following stor pour it over slices of stale bread in. a pan a•nd then the next any cut it mit in slices irnication to the and fry in a hut spicier in which is .some rhGyesnie, iPahea, bwIsy,aihvehr melted butter. It makes a very good dinner, arid is so much like. our grand- and after the! war re n;ether's chicken pot -pie that she used to H. During the Su warm. • over on washing clay. —Home nt to pastUre his country, bringing th The Employn-ient of Capital in On one occasion, as t Agriculture. near, he went to t horses were, and asi - The most fertile land is valueless until kpaesetpuerre,''tNovhseohwdahsibso human labor is eepended upon it. Even a certain forenoon. the natural pasture of the West, which ply, •I will send my bears the most reitritic us herbage spon- black horse on that taneously,, ‘wastesits sweetness on the . the appointed day t li desert- idle' until the shepherd comes his gate, a,nd, saw i with his flack to gather its harvest and the road, while on i turn it into, useful meat and wool. The saddle only his own sliephe.rd's flock is his canital, which he along in his shirt sl expends upon the. hitherto practically rough boy, his face barren laud, and causes it to produce an al color having be ineofne, (!apital is lalene• just as the sun. On artiving a reverse the fact, viz., that labor is remarked, 'I have capital. When the proceeds or earnings home, Sir.' e'Yes, are not all expended in sustaining life or General, 'and I am the power of labor and therefore. in the safe and sound. Y effort to'reproduce itself, and there is a early. Wa1k. in. surplus stored -up in the shape of what- ready, and after a r ever may have been the product of the • you must feel hu labor, the acemuulation is capital. It course, accepted th may be gold, silver, clothes, tools, money, seated at the tablet or notes, or ether credits or evidences of boys when growing the existence cif debts due and the right a,ppetite. 130 appea to exact labor- in payment thereof. for he grasped the When a farmer purchases a farm ,for. a clasped hands, w sum of money, it is exactly equivalent to handles at the thu his haviug spent his labor in making that , protrudingdownw tt farm out of land that ei-as previously_ closed litt e ngers. same when he purchases horses, plows, ly and skillfully, an did full ju tice to seed fertilizers or. pays the wages of a the noon meal. uring thehdini er the • hired man to labor for hint. When this General inqaire the boy w at his is clearly understood it is seen that there name was, to which the p ompt r sponse is not a grain of Wheat nor -a blade of was given 'Daniel Webs r.' ,' yes,' grass, not a cow, -sheep, pig, a pint. of remarked 'the Gene 1, 'yOu are he son milk or a pound of butter produced eor of Eb. Webster, w o pastures y hot•-• raised upon the farm, but which repre- ses."Yes,' said tie So • it was, Bents a certain quantity of labor which that that big, dark Skinn d boy teas the has been expended in its production, germ of the great s tes n who e name directly or indirectly. It is equally true in after years was estin d to eLcit the i ti f the orld f r his w nderful pover and learnmg being the greatest and la that could befall them. D was much struck by this Irish character, and it is who tells an affecting sto girl whom he found in a her needle. see you sewing; this is some bri he said, taking up what lo elaborate night-dress. "Tis no wedding gran the girl proudly. , 'Shure st misfortune ouglas Jerrold phase of the he, I think, of a young bin busy at ke in plain al grandeur,' deed like an eur,' replied 'tis my own shroud; let life bring what it may, plaze God have' a decent wa -e.' Gaieties. Can a lover be called a s doesn't suit her? — Would it notibe cruel to "throw physic to the do —Many a lady, now-aed show-window—she takes s with her sash. —"My wife," said a most even-tempered person —she's always mad." —A foie in company, w cant, called out, 'Where's t of mine ?'—on your should lady. — 'How is your wife?' in tor of one of his patients. thank you,' was the witty answer. —In Indianopolis, a sta wing vagrant is engaged in selling his ve' e's wedding rings to buy bread. His average sales are twenty-five rings per eek. —A New York paper good chance for a live m thinking it would be a gra dead one to apply. —'How long will my ch engrily asked a hungry restaurant.—'About five —An old lady in Walhington Was the accurate reply. recently heard to observe, the morning paper, 'I won has been born that I know - -Tame to his death w on the head with a Iong-ha the hands of his wife,' in a recent case in Illinois. --LA little boy at a co favorite singer was called took the starch out of t gs by crying out, 'What's the matter? Didn't she do it right? Are the folks angry 'cause she squalled so?' —A phrenologist told a man that he had combativeness target'? developed, and was of a quarrelsonte disposition. 'That isn't so,' said the Man, angrily, 'and if you repeat it I'll knock you down.' —Douglas Jerrold, at a•party, noticed a doctor in sober black waltzing with a young lady who was dressed in a silk of brilliant blue. 'As I live exclaimed the wit, 'there's a blue pill dancing with a black draught,' —A Milwaukie coroner's jury rendered a verdict that a man whose body was found in the river came to his death by a blow on his head, 'which was given before or after drowning.' , —An Irishman who w reprieved. the night before his execu on, and who wished to get rid of his Wife, wrote to her as follows :—`I was yesterday hang- ed, and died like a hero; do as I did, and bear it like a man.' —An honest dame in New York stand- ing beside the corpse of her deceased husband, bewailing in piteous tones his untimely departure, observed. a pity he's dead, for his teeth are as egood itor when he yot,o, animals ys, is like a much pains ritic, 'is the in the world nting his Ber- t blockhead rs, sir,' said a uired a doe - 'She's dead, I and wicked dvertises, 'A ta,' evidently 1 e error for a ' . 3 DOMINION BLOCK OPENED OUT AOAIN. SEAFORTH, J. BROWNELL HAS JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER JOT OF WARRANTED TO GIVE i SATISFACTION. CASH PAID FOR Be'rTER AND EGGS. J. BROWNELL PLOWS, PLOWS. OR a ' b PI t t MEL - LIS', Itippen, matufactured by p be, waiter?' MONROE & HOGAN, Seaiorth. , Id man in a Persons wanting a good Thistle Cutter would do ches, air,' was well to give them a trial. They are alllwarranted FNam er One ow go o . work or no sale. They will be sold °help for cash or on short time. For on taking up GOOD HORSE SHOEING er if anybody Black,smith Work and Gerilral ile being hit Repairing ndled denim Go to T. MELLIS',Kippen. His work,is too well as the verdict known to the public to need puffing. /iemember the stand, two doom north of Shaff es Hotel, 455 cert, when a KIPPen. THE COIVIMERCIAL LIVERY, SEAFORTH. 11110MAS LEE' FLOUR AND FEED stroxtm 1 Happened to be one of the unfortunate lones that got burned out at the late fire. He lute opened out again in HIS NEW STORE, OPPOSITE THE COMMERCIAL :HOTEL, Where be hopes to be able to sapply his many - , custeraers with GROCERIES CHEAPER THAN EVER. Call and ee for Yourselves. ffify Terms for the Future are Strictly Cask or Produce. Don't forget the Place --Three Doors !North of the Post Office. 'THOMAS LEE. TRY, TRY AGAIN. THE rmdereigned would respectfully inform his -2- old friends and patrons and the world. at largo that he his going to try his luck agaire Now ill the store lately occupied. by Mrs, Itrulile y, one door south Alegarey's new bakery, end oppo site the Farmers' Store, where he will, las in tire pest; endeavor to the very best of his , ability to give all who may favor bircewitb. their patronage the very best value for their money in BOOTS AND SHoES He has a veryLarge Stock of New 'Work tha will be sold at prices to snit the time. Also a large quantity of old stock that must be sold for what it will bring. Parties leaving their Oeders recently Willpleas back, rather call again, se he has 1 LOST HIS MEASURE yooK Containing their Meseares. ' All parties having long standing acccitmts un- paid will please CALL AND SETTLE THEM AT ONCE, As he cannot wait for his money as it the past. nglis and reno'n. The real honeymoon is not always a de- 'Hi! where did you get them trousers?' ther in Brite n, or lightful moment. This, which sounds asked.= Irishman of a man who haprien- , . , as al rule, break- like heresy to the romantic, and blas- ed to be passing with a pair of remark- , deeniingdt by no phemy to the young is a fact which a ably short' trousers on. -±-'I got . them 1 tendencies o rise great many people acknowledge readily where they grew,' was the indignant steak washedidown enough when they have one beyond. the yeply.—`Then, by my conscience,' said The Scotch! have stage at which it sounds like au offense Paddy, 'you've pulled them a year too kfast lin priaciple, to the wife or to the husband who is sup- soon V erousbr, commence posed to have made that period raptur- d to hnimal I food, ous. The new pair have not the easy ac- armalade. f LOng uaintance with each other which makes s prejlidices against the happiness of close companionship; heti at the sight of perhaps they have not that sympathy The greatlexi- with each other's tastes which is almost e -struck an estors a better practical tie than simple lover. ample justic , first • They are half afraidof each other, they re him, and 'subs°. are making discoveries every day of new The Yankee break. points in each others characters, delight - cousin, thoegh he itil or undelightful s may be, which be - tendency to add wilder their first onfidence of union ; ier not less tnan to and' the more mind and feeling there is o indulge in ; ‘`milk between them, :nor likely is this to be mess which' tastes the case. The shallow and superficial which has b acct.- `get on' better than those who have a nto hat water. 1.n great deal of excellence or tender depth comnaon to begin of sentiment to be found out. But after e of fruit, w ich is the pair have come to full acquaintance; g on a brIg1-0 Stlin• after they have lear ed. each other from AB• C up to the m st difficult chapter; after the intercourse of ordinary life has in his outh. borne its fruit, there is nothing in the eem. world so delightful as the honefinooning , is told in Boston Pr vela. which has passed by years the egitim was by prof ssion a of the revolution, ate period of the honeymoon. Sometimes one sees respectable fathers and mothers enjoying it, who sent off their children idecl in Exeter, N. ARTHUR FORBS, T_TAVING purchased the Stock and Trade of the -lel- Commercial Livery, Seaforth, tfrom Mr. Georg Whiteley, begs to state that he intends carryii added forme First - Coyer Doubl Sped g on the business in the -old stand, and has sevei al valuable horses and vehinles to the y large stock. None ba ass Comfortable Vehicles lzrid Good Reliable Horses Will be Xept. • and Open Buggies and Carriages, and and Single Wagons always ready for use. Arrangemeres Made With Com- mercial Itlen. Orders left at the stables or any of the hotels; promi,tly attended to. GOOD NEWS. VE come to the conclusion that I will sell se Two Dozen Sewing Machines at Factory I Hi pries. Come now if you want to make IA BIG --BARGAIN And save your money. Come soon, as ethey are going ont fast, and make JA BIG DAY'S WAGES. I hold t e Agency for first-class machines. Fo further particulars apply at T. Kidd's Liquor St re. THOMA.S D. O'CONNOR, T d door south of the Post Office, Main Street, Seaforth. .145 MARRIAGE iLICENCES iOR CEFLTLFICATES, (Under the new Act,) issued at the EXPOSITOR OFFICE, SEAFORTH • SPECIAL NOTICES. Under authority of the Ideutenant-Governor °I — EPPS'S COCOA —Gratef ul and comforting —"By a thorough,. knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a care- ful application of the fine properties of well -selected cocoa, Mr. Epps has pro- vided our breakfast tables with a delicate- ly flavoured beverage,wh'ch may save us many heavy doctors' bille. It is by the judicious use of such arti les of diet that a constitution may be gr dually built up until strong enough to r sist every ten- dency to disease. Hun reds of subtle maladies are floating aro nci Us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fo ified with pure blood, and a properly no rished frame." Civil Service 6ta;--ette. So d only in pack- ets labelled— " James pps & Co., Ho- mceopathic Chemists, 4., Threadneedle St. ,and 170, Piccadilly, ondon." 421-52 nntrition in aiding IMPOUNDED—In the: • °uteri°. GREENFIELD, & EWART, ARCM' AND DRAW 26 Adelaide Street, -pREPARE Plans, Spe perintend the ereetio TECTS HTSMENI West, TORONTO. ifieations, &c., and en- d Buildings of every description. • Also solic t correspond -nice vrith those who contetnplate f28,9 ATOTTCE,—The Young -'-' proof Coat from the Tnesday Wet had better WHITNEY, Seaforth, a T P. /MINE, Licen c" • County of Huron. parts of the County. -seesaws. Oftice-will be an who took a IV ter- ont of W. Hill's toeson etarn it to WILLIAM save tronble. 459 ed Auctioneer fot the Sales attended' i all 11 orders left at th Ez- romptly attended t e above reward ecovery of a Set of ink —saved from the late . MISS ELIZABETH 459 nye 10 EWARD.—T gieen for the Fars—long boa and zn fire, but lost to the owne CAP.MICHAE L. II be Trasting that his old friends will4ot forget him in his misfortune and -with tha s for the past and hope for the futhre, he will try, tre again. THOMAS COYENTR 485 SE ORTIL P.A. 1VI-M "1.1S Now is Your Chance to -Get CHEAP HARR'ES.S. ; JOHN. WAAD, 1 -SEAFORTH, I HAS on hand a large quantity -of Truss, both Heavy and Light, which wer slightly tar- nished at the Brussels Tire, and eh; although ne arly as good as ever, will be sold•off at il REMARKABLY LOW 'IMES. SINGLE HAR NESS From npwards. C Tee TeJ eAsiERe S From $1 tpwards, And other Goods Proportionately Cheap. CALL SOON BEFORE THESE GOODS ARE ALL GONE, GOOD WORK ON HAND And Made to Order as nenal. A GOOD STOCK OF -VALISES, , TRUNKS, WHIPS, AND FURNISHINGS. -JOHN WARD. WHERE YOU CAN FIND HIM WILLIAM GRAS SIE TTAS again commenced busincee after the fire - in the pretialsee formerly occupied b'y Monroe 8 6;111Ni:1;1:Or:Pea:IT:all MAIN -ST., SEAFORTH, will be glad to meet -with ne many of his old friends and customers rie van niale it con- venient to call on Lem. ound on La 25, co •li 1 t e digestion assimilation of untntion of nourish. rer 19th, 8 a eep. no By ezeitin th f Lig food for the formation of p • re vitalizing blood, claimed they will be sold by auction at the ound a El i I Ph hates on Saturday, October leth. W. BOWIE g e unctions o McKillop oia Septem th mer days he was to the orthodox honeymoon,. aim only Dr. Wheeler s Componn x 0 091) now feel with a sueprised pleasure hoW and Calisaya affords the -on cdy for the treatment of C n orsea hack the , P land - 459 4 17 really radical rem- keePen m home in 11 e Fall. sweet it is to have their own solitude use the patient soon recovera eight and stre t' annaption. By ite a deux, to be left Ito themselves for a ng legumes a laeallitier aspect, and experiences sen - e coldi weath r drew town wh re his ed the ownerlof the h fanner andiavern- lack horse h ine on 'Yes,' was the re - boy down ev-0 your morniug, surh.' On Le General stihid. at appreachm. g along s back, using for a rode eavy, natur- iy the e boy dh otrhs the ri here tarted ahnost Ecu air coarse jacke eves 6 large, ery dare, its! n deepened the gate t rought your o I see,' repli lad to see hi u must have ur dinner is • de in this k gry.' The bley, of invitation, and when roved that, like most he possessed' a good ed awkward enough, nife and fork in his th the tops of the bs, and the blade rd frote ben4th the Still he pled the barren and useless. It is equally the ; implements Of the t ble service v orous- II I that all labor wisely or judiciously ex- adm ra on o little pended not only reproduces itself in the serene and happy moment ; to feel them- sations of returning vigor and comfort. The great number of cases of this (Heels benefiitted by the 1 ' and nearer than they ever SPECIFIC 1?epairing Promptly Attended to. se t es nearer kab Elixir is something remar e. NICHOLS. NTOTICE.—I hereby altralt having stated that Michael H cgan had made away with Mar- garet Fluff and now acknowledge that the said language was a wilful and malicious libel and without any foundation whatever. MICFreEL BLACKSMITHING & WAGON MAKING In all tICI-S.rtirt,LtE Cerried en ferWtfly. 13••••• were before. There is something infin- itely touching and tender in this honey- moon of the old. Perhaps its rarity has something to do with its fascination, Irish Idioisyncrasies. 1 In parts of the nerth of Ireland there was at one time, I some forty or fifty years ago, a rather omantic custom, that when a very you g unmarried woman ilii died, her coffin s ould be carried by - young girls only to the graveyard. As this was situated perhaps fifteen or twen- ty miles from where she lived, it follow- ed that the bearers should be cha.nged every second. mile, and on these occa- sions there was genetally au escort of - running volunteers, who in this way often did their thirty miles in a day. This custom was called 'shifting the coffin,' and a good. many marriages were the result of these excursions ; but the idea was nevertheless pretty and pastoral. The Irish peasantry have an inborn taste for funerals, wed in the amount of honor done to the 'Reputed they lose sight of the actual loss they have suffer- ed. .• 'Och, sure, thin, it was a fine berryin'; there was a sight of people and. a power of cars,' is as great a eulogium as can be accorded any man, and Will quite console the survivors. And the reverse, 'Och, thin, he did not leave enough as would berry him decent;' in fact, they think far more of how they are to be buried than of keeping life itself. The poorest and the Ilnost inaprovittent, lays by some- thing for his or her own wake, and 1 have myaelf known cases of paupers in the hospital wards who were accumulat- ing under their pillows a little store to e divin- i save the disgrace of a pariah coffui, that - DR, WILLIAM GRA MEDICI The Great Remedy is especi commended as a Ing cure for Weakness Spe hes, Impotency, Beior*.diseases that f a sequenee of Self abuse, a Universal Lassitude, Pain in of Vision, Premature Old A diseases that leads to Inset' and a Prematare Grave, all o first caused by deviating fro and over indulgence. The tho result of a life study an perience in treating these op phlet free by mail. The Spec by all Druggists at $1 per pa for $5, or svill be sent by money, by addressing WIL Windsor, Ont. Sold in Seafo Co., J. S. Roberts, R. Lams merchants. DISSOLUTION OF P E. NOTICE.—Any persot having articles frhieh nglish Uy re- unfail- eminal tone and all llow as Atte r. Loss of Memory, the Back, Dimness e, and many other y or Consumption which as a rule are the Path of nature peciffc Medicine is many years of ex - dal diseases. Para - fie Medicine is sold kage, or 6 packages il on reeeipt of the IAM GRAY & CO., h by E. Hickson & en and all druggist 461-52 RTHERSHIP. VOTICE is hereby given te t the partnership -LI heretofore subsisting b tween William Alex- ander Manson and Joseph • derson, the under- signed as tennere, in the ' ge of Wroxeter, has been this day dissolved by eutual eonsent. All debts owing to the said firm if Manson and Ander- son are to be paid by the slid Joseph Anderson at Wroxeter, and all claims sgalnst the said part- nership are to be presentedl to the said Joseph Andersen, by whom the sam will be settled. Dated at Wrozefer th.is—day of August, 1876. WIL1AM A. MANSON. Witness—WILLIAM S Ser.L. JOSEfH ANDERSON. In connection with the ableve the undersigned Joseph Anderson, while cordially thanking the numerous eastomers of t 'etc firm for their support, would take this 0... ity of stating that he intende carrying on tanning at the old stand, where *11 will be w ..e, his motto being quick sales and smallprofit . JOSEPH ANDER- SON. • 4084 were saved from th late fire, and whi h do not belong to them, will pease communicate) with Mrs. 'Whitney, as severe articles such as caepets, tinware and honsehold furniture were removed from her premises and an not now be fOund. MRS. WHITNEY. 457 et 03IMERCIAL LIVERY, Seaforth, Ont. T. A. SHARP, Proprietor. Comfortable and elegant carriages, and first-class reliable horses always ready. Charges moderaie. Office and stables on Huron street, second doer east of Slain root. Orders left at any of the hotels promptly a tend- ed to. 899 ('IABD OF TFfaNKS.---The andersigned d sires to tender his sincere thar ks to the peo le Of Seaforth, who so kindly aseisted in saving por- tion of his property at the late fire. Be ould also acknowledge vrith pleasure the many e pres- eione of sympathy and regret at the di aster which has overtaken him. ROBERT C XI - 459 °Rehr, A POLOGY.—I, Robert Smith, of the To nehip ••c• of Mcitillop, in thelConnty of Huron, f rmer, dId say to different parties that Francis MiCulla, of eaid township and County, farmer, a d my neighbor, poisoned the well on my farm aptd the one used by Mrs. Edward Sperling by ttings into it a qnantity of Paris Green. I nowretract said statement, and say that it is not trae, rnd I am sorry that I said so, and htunbly apo ogize for tlae game. ROBERT SMITH. Witness—S, G. MeCAUGHEY, of $cCaagbey & Holmested, Barristets. Seaforth, Sept. 20,1876. 459y3 MESSRS. BROADY0OT & Box, Sea orth, have now got their large new furniture war -room, on the nuirket square, completed. They hive alo a large stock of furniture of every description on hand which they will clispoee of either wholesale or retail at prices as reesonable as a good' article can be got anywhere. Their lurniture is mmann- rvicle lectured by tselveet ander the stir ion of the practical member el the firm, and t y can consequently recommend all they offer for , as being of the best quality. Puttee desiring to purchase would eertaiti4 find it ,,to their ,advan- Uwe to call and intspect their stock. I Every article in the furniture line kept eonstrtly in stook. 458 459 'WILLIAM GRASSIE. _ FIRE1 FIRE! FIRE I 3wem•mmal.M3E.10. HAVING SAVED ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS WORTH OF , BOOTS AND SHOES From the late Fire, I offer the same stock eaved to the pnblie at LESS THAN COST PRICE. Give cae a Cell, you will find it to your advan- tage. I reqneet an early settlement of all ace ponnts due me it order to help me to build again. Residence—Old Block, Goderich. Street, neer Edward Cash's. 45948 SAMUEL STARK. THE SEAFORTH INSURANCE AND LAND AGENCY. ALONZO STRONG AGENT for Several FireteCless Stock, Fire • • and Life Insurance Companies, and is prepar- ed to take risks ore THE MOST FAVORABLE TERMS. Also Agent for several of the best Loan Som - ties. Almo Agent for the sale and parehase of Ferns Ind VilLsge Property, A NUMBER OF FIRST-CLASS IM- PROVED FARMS FOR SALE, aZ0,000 to teems tee ES Per cent. Interest, 1 OFFICE—Over M. Morrison's Store, ite.tu-St. Seaforth. e