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The Huron Expositor, 1877-01-19, Page 4pore the toff,. lays its one far one ex t pf othe dn for °wn- stent- rvviee= arnit- eri:"ta fs line itude:- rdinal Roar - ix Sea, - w. the re le d f611S.25. 44,1 AND these fed ,to "not rates: 1 toot &pee dent - Bawl omers ntinn- o. ership Sans LOSS in :alters, Row- mpOn- er the to said e paid nay book rill be ,Jana- TE.. HIP. earth Book- poived. will be r0$; a rner- ;ry lib- rsineas ;whey,, a Sea - 1 upte Ifry. •Liver• iek a $32 63 int roved Eif and nieuee (rth et par Hand Fatmea r Oats,. eQN.. i)f se saw - for sash: Oak, , Birch, Ian. Lin evil ;tsiness, .T own - ng the ne Hun- iffhcien.t Lrtiess. aeper. Ills ~•lief ship .trsignea is, Pias - lay been.. FA S. 471-4 :JANUARY 19, 1877 E: HURON EXPOSITOR. 'Gaieties. An Irish housemaid, boasting of her industrious habits,: said she rose at four, made a firli, put on the kettles red the breakfast, and made all the beds ;be- fore anyone in the house ,was up. "Sarubo, can you explaiu.do nature ob de 'letrio telegraph ?" "Ob course I can,,Pete. lie .a i like what you call a big dog—you, tread of hie -tail in Philadelphia, and he bark iu New York.' ' Conclusive;—Tier--"An' is it me health ye'd be caking afther ? Sure an' it's half dead Tam, coining down to work in all that rain this mornin . Mike-- "Divil a bit did ye, Tint. By the hockey, I. come down in part of it meselj " —A mother, trying to get her little daughter of three years to sleep one might; said, "Anna, why don't you try to go to sleep ?" "I am taring," she re- plied. ``But you haven't shut your eyes." "Well, can't help it ; ums comes unbuttoned." —A boy who was sent to ask how an ol• d lady named Wilkii a was in health, delivered' his message thus : "Please, ma'am, missus wants toknow bow old Mrs. Wilkins is ?" To which she re- plied. "She is just 74." - -The thrifty Mr. Samuel Smiles who turns out books in a periect cascade, has been making an aphorism. `iThose whose God hath joined in matrimony," he says, `sill -cooked joints and ill -- boiled potatoes have very often put as- under.' —Atthe show the other evening, a gentleman sarcastically asked a man standing up in front of him if he was. aware- that he was opaque ? The other _ denied the allegation. He said he was not opaque. " His name was O'Brien. There is more philosophy and enter- prise in a bee'a lower extremity, than there is in that class of Mick -,whittlers who think -their mission upon earth is to button -hole editors and tell them just how to run a newspaper. --Many a good -minded mother has in- nocently warped her son's character by arguing -that gray could -be insetted. into his black pantaloons without the 'other boys being able to detect the dif- ference.. ---"You haven't got such a thing as a pair of old trousers, have yen ?" "No, my man," said the merchant ; "I don't keep my wardrobe in my -warehouse," Where do you live ?" rejoined Pat, "and I'll call in the morning for the ould pair you've got on." —From the following paragraph one would think there is an intention to raise tall:students out in Wisconsin. An exchange paper says.: "It's board of education.has resolved to erect a build- ing large enough to accommodate 500 students three stories high. —Never, except on one occasion, was a certain prominent newspaper man of Norwich known to refuse: to_take a joke, and. that was when the boys inked his eye -glasses and set him home with a Lantern to apologize, to his landlady for being out till midnight. • —A would-be school teacher in To- ledo rejently replied to a question by one of the examiners : "Do you think the world is round or fiat ? by aaying, "Well, some people think one way and some another,, and. I'll teach them round or flat just as the parents please." -What an editor is. An' editor is described as.a, man who is liable to errors of grammar, toothache, typographical errors, and lapses of memory, and has twenty-five thousand people watching to catch him tripping—a man of .sorrow and acquainteci with grief ;. poorly esti- mated, yet envied by some of the great men he has made. . - ---A son of Mr. Grahame, the author of "The Sabbath," was very tall ar}d exceedingly thin.{ One day, walking An the floor of the Parliament House, he attracted the notice of Mr. Clark. "Who is that ?" asked the wit. He was answered, "the son of 'The Sabbath." "Is: he, indeed ?" said Clark. "He looks more hke the son of the Fast -day." —A stranger who called recently at the office of a country newspaper on the day of its publication, was surprised to find a notice on the door saying : "Office closed. Paper will be out to -morrow." Upon enquiry, it turned out there was a base -ball match in • progress in - the suburbs, and all hands had gone out to witness it. —Talking about smallness. we were told a fact the other day which is about as small as we have heard for some tune. A lady from Seaforth who was trayel- • ling alone from here to Chicago, asked a lawyer, who was also on the train, if he' would get her a cap of coffee at Men- dota. This student of Blackstone fid as requested, paying ten cents for the coffee and charging fifteen cents for it, taking five cents commission for his gal- lantry. —"You'll never marry agin, Susie, you grieve so arter Izick. Was it twice't you fainted., or three times, at the grave ?" "Bless ye soul, Sary, it was free times I fainted, an' de last time 1 nebber like to kum to." "Oh, Susie, you'll nebber marry agin, will yer ?" "Bless ye soul, Frank Dunn axt me 'bout dis bf-fore my husband died, an' I promised him if he died I'd have` him, an' I b'longs to de church, an' 1 won't tell a lie.# The Man who Gave Odds. After a strange man had finished eat- ing a hearty meal at one of the stands in the City Hall Market yesterday, he re- marked to the woman : "As I was sitting down to this meal I said to myself that I'd bet $1 against the dinner that the greenback candidates would not carry a single State. If they do you have won the dollar, and shall have it." "I want thirty-five cents of you," 4he replied, pulling off her comforter. "Or, I'll bet you $5 against a meal that the Democrats carry New York State," he continued. "I want my pay, or there'll be trouble rights here !" she exclaime , slipping off her bonnet. . Uris, Ill bet the same same su on the teri,that the Republicans will- carry it,", he remarked, as he wiped off his sandy goatee. "I never bet, and I want my pay," she called out, being now all ready for action. • "Great heavens ! but look at the odds 1 offer you!" he gasped.' "I not only letyou bet on either side, but 1 offer you the most fearful odds that have ever been given since the advent the Christ- ian era !" "I can't help the odds," she answered as she got hold of his coat tails. "You don't leave here till I get niy money.' "` ``Or, Ell bet you $35 . t"this 35 cent debt- " he went on, 'neither Hayes nor Tilden will be, elected. - `One of them must be, but I offer to bet they won't be, simply to permit you to coin 335 out of y hard earnings.' Great Jia ! but such another offer was never known since Oliver Cromwell kept a fighting dogg !'' " rty►-five gents," she shrieked pull- ing him around, "Last, but not least. Pll bet you forty to one that I haven't had thirty- five cents about me for a month ! Come, now, I offer you every chance to, win." She gave him two solid kicks, and was designing and drafting a third, -when he made a bolt and left a coat thil in her grasp:' While an officer Was looking for him around the -market, he was placidly surveying the Soldiers' Monument sad picking' his_teeth9with a straw.—Detroit Fres Pres&. Nothing Loo by Christian Qharity. One of those toil -hardened, true - hearted ohapa:often read of is romance made his appearance on the Campus Martina yesterday, ,and his sympathies were at once; aroused by the sight of three ;Or •four old men standing ,around with their buck -saws and wait- ing for work. be hanged if it isn't tough," he replied when they told him they hadn't = had any- work for a month. "How, would you like some oysters?" They smacked their lipe by way of reply, and Be gathered up a crowd of eight, marched there to a res- taurant and ordered oyster stew for each one. • "If just does my soul -good to see them eat !" he said to the owner of the shop as the eight got to work. "Yes ; it's a beautiful night," was the reply. ``It makes me feel good in here," con -el the stranger, laying his hand on his heart. - "A good deed brings its own reward," was the soft answer of the restaurateur as he calculated his profits. "I can't rest here. I must do further good," said the big-hearted atranger, and he rushed out and brodglit in three negroea, a chimney sweep, two boya.and an old woman and ordered more oysters. - The fifteen people went for oyster soup is a manner to amaze, and their guar- dian nudged the restaurateur in the ribs and said: - "See the gentle lambs ! Ob, that I could feed the poor ef all America,!" _ 'You are a good man, and heaven, will. reward you," replied the proprietor, as he filled the dishes up again. The stranger said he wanted to bring in just five more, :so as to say that he had fed an even score, and he rushed out after t#em, while the restaurateur sent after more oysters -and(trackers. The stranger didn't return. He was last seen climbing into a farmer's sleigh on State street. and guiding his teem to the west. The fifteen in the ;restaurant licked their plates clean and departed in joyful procession, and the last one - had passed out before tbe man who furnish- ed the soup had gotthrough waiting for. the return of the big-hearted stranger, There were oaths and slang .phrases and watch words and expressions, delivered in the purest English, but what mattered it to the fifteenth soup - devourers who drew up in line opposite and "Resolved, ;That them oysters just touched the spot.''—Detroit Free Press. The Benevolent Stranger. There were a dozen men in a Michigan avenue tobacco store yesterday, smoking time away or playing checkers, when a dreary -looking, middle-aged stranger en- tered and crowded in behind tbe stove. When he had thawed out a little and wiped a tear from his •nose, he looked around and asked : "Did any of you read about that ter- rible cyclone in the East?" One or two replied that they had seen an account of it. ' "Well, gentlemen; there will be the tallest kind of suffering down there this. winter, and it is the duty of every man who can spare a dollar to send - it to the poor victims.' I will now pass around the hat." He passed it, and i when he had com- pleted the circuit,- it was - as empty as when he started. "Gentlemen, I am surprised and sad- dened," he remarked, as he put on his hat ; "those people need money, and though I'm al poor man, I'm going to forward my share. Is there any one here who will take' a five -dollar bill and send it :across the ocean for me ?" "I suppose I could send it," .:replied . the tobacconist, shoving a cigar at the stranger. "Yes— ahem -- could, eh ?" replied the latter, as he bit the cigar and light- ed it. "I'll take it !" cabled out seven or eight -others. "That's good. - Do any of you happen to have any fine cut about you ?" A full pouch was handed out, and he lifted half the contents in his vest pocket and went on Yes, I want to send them five dol - !ars, and I want some of you to take the money, and s' oot it across the ocean in regular business style. I will now go out and borrow the five:" There was.a grand rush for him, but he was twenty-five feet ahead and gain- ing as he turned into Fifth street.—De- troit Free Pass. The Dejvi l's Four Servants. The devil has a great many servants, and they are all busy, active ones. • They ride in the railway trains, they sail on the steamboats, they swarm along the highways of the country and the thoroughfares, of the cities ; they do business in the busy 'marts, they enter houses and break open shops ; they are everywhere, and in all places. Some are so vile looking that one instinctively turns from them in disgust ; but some. are so sociab e, le that they almost deceive, e, insinuating and plausi- d i at t eve tunes the very elect Among the latter class are to be found the devil's four chief ser- vants. Here r.re their names : "THERE IS NO DANGER." That is one. "ONLY THISONCE." That is another. "EVERYBODY DOES so." That is the third, "By-AffD-DY." That is the fourth. When tempted from the path of strict rectitude, and "There's ' no' danger" urges you nn, say, "Get ghee behind me, Satan." When tempted to give the Sunday up to pleasure, or to do a - little labor in the workshop or the counting - room, and "only this_once," or "Every- body does so,", Whisper!. at out:` elbow, do not liitten -for a nwmenfrit.k the , clang. . erous counsel. = If the -Holy pirit bias fastened upon your conscience -the solemn warnings of a faithful teacher or friend, and brought to mind a tender mother's prayers for your conversion, do not let • "B► -and -by" steal away your confidence, and, by persuading' you to put away ser -ions things, rob yon of your life. All four are cheats and liars. They mean to deceive you and cheat your soul of heaven. "Behold !" says God, "now► is the; accepted time, now is the day . of salvation." He • has' no promise for "liy-and-by. "—Chrietiali at iVork. `bat's Jess Wat I'se t)ome_Fo ." Mr. J. H. Arnold, who is one of the most prominent salesmen in Cincinnati, was standing, with , others, in the front entrance ' of. -an establishment in Pearl street, when they noticed a colored man coming,ahambling up the street with a watldgrwg look that bespoke him 1 at once. ,a strapgerl As ' the darkey ap- proached, Mr. Arnold began to smell a "large political -mouse," and he accord- inglyaccosted the fellow after this mari- ner : "Hellon, boss ! When didyou come to town ?" ,, - "Jes 'rived, sah, die minute, maa'r." - "Where are you going ?" - , "I'm done gwyne outen , Walnut Bills;" "What are you going to Flo out there, snowball ?" • "Yah ! yah ! Bogs, I'a got a uncle lib - ben up dar sbm're, an' I's jes gwyue up to scar' him up." "You're from Kentucky, I guess ?" "Yer right, boss ; mighty, right. I's a Eaintuck nigger, 1 is." 1 "I am acquainted all through Ken- tucky. What partzdo you some from ?" "Geawgetowu, Squire." " Georgetown, eh*? Why, I know ) everybody about Georgeto.wn.. For whom: did you work for, my friend, in Georgetown. - . "Work fo' ? Why—why, tell yer boss, I worked on de road." - "Now, see here, my friend," said Mr. . Arnold, taking him =aside with a com- panion.. "Between you and me, I want you to stay in. Cincinnati tilt after the election, and -vote iihe Republican ticket next Tuesday, which -you know is a vote for Hayes and Wheeler. Now, ifyou'll promised to do so,; I'll give you $10 at the Gibson House if you'll meet me there tbe- night before the 'electron. - I'll see that no• harm comes to you. ; Come ! What do you say to it-?" The darkey, thrown competely off bis guard, smiled from sliat}lder to shoulder, and confidentially said in an undertone, while he looked 'around to see that no oneelse but the two white men were near; "Golly, boss, (let's jess wat I'se cone for. "—Cincinnati Enquirer. r Sojourner Truthand the Mob. At one time she was at a camp meet- ing, and a mob of young ruffians were determined to break up the meeting. She at first hid herself from fear, but afterward said to herself "What ! shalll run away and hide from the devil—one, a servant of the living God ? Have I not faith enough to go out and quell that mob, when I know it is written : 'One shall chase a thous- and, and two'pt ten thousand to flight ?' 4_-_ I'll go to the rescue, and the Lord will - go with me to protect me." - AR our Mr. JAMIESON intends Sailing fro She went pia into . the open field, . AIN, to make our among the Wild and reckless mob, and - E commenced to sing in the moat fervid DDDD RItRR Y Y manner and with powerful voice— D D R - ` R Y Y It was early in the morning, it was early D - D R R Y Y D D RRRR YY SEE SPECIAL BARGAINS ---AT . DUN-OAN & DU OAN'S, SEAFORTH. WE ARE THIS WEEK OF1fERING .SPFCIAL BARGAINS IN DDDDD RRRRR EEEEE S►98SS - SSSSS D D R R E S S S D. D R R D D RRRRR D D R -R D DDD D R R GGGGGGG G G G G G G GO - GG G G GGG GOGG G 0000000 0 0 0 O 0 0 o .0 0 O O 0 O 0 o 0. 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 0 0000000 All Seasonable 0 E S 3 ' EEE SSSSS 888 1118 E S - S E ' S S S S EEEEE SSSSS SSSSS 000000 0 00 00 0 0 000000• DDA. DDD D D D -D D D D D D D D D D 0 DDD,DDDD • Linen and Winter floods Gs erally. SSSSSSSS S S S 5 2 SSSSSSSS= . S 5 S 8 S SSSSSSSS Drees Goods worth 20 cents for..... $0 I24 Dress Goods . worth 30 cents for...... 0 20 Dress Goods, in Check, Brocaded ad Plain, worth 37'e cents, ,for 0 25 I i -A' The above are new and just to hand. A Checked and Plain Costume Cloths, worth 60 cents, for 0, 35 Breakfast Shawls, worth $1 25 for.. Breakfast Shawls, worth $1, for.. Breakfast Shawls, worth 90 cents, Soutane, worth 75 cents, for or 0 75 . O 60 0 40 0 50 A LARGE LOT OF CHI DREN'S WOOLEN GOODS FOR THE PRIE OFFTHE WOOL. f . Ladies' Shawls worth $4 for $2 50 ; Thirty f Dozen. Clouds for 124 and 15 cents each. Wineeys in all colors_ from }i cents to 10 conts per yard. DTTI‘TCA1\T d.c DTJNCAN"_ F 0- O . L DE T LI in the morning,:. Just at the break of day, When He rose, when He rose, when He rose, And went to Heaven on a cloud. Soon the crowd surrounded her, arm- ed with clubs and sticks. As she ceased, one spoke up : "Sing on, old woman ! nobody shall hurt you." Another said : "Talk to us, old woman !" Another : - "Pray, old woman, and tell us your experi- ence xperience' !" So she talked, and sung; and prayed, untilthe subdued and `convicted mob quietly dispersed, and the exercises of the camp meeting proceeded peacefully to the close.— Working Church. • Mr. Spicer's Experiment. The • subject, says; the Boston Com- mercial Bulletin, was. the employ- ment of women as saleswomen, or "salesladies," as`the latest euphemism has it. Mrs. Spicer said she always "hated to buy anything of a wpmae." "That is because one. woman does not know.how to use another," said Spicer ; "men have no difficulty in dealing with shopwomen ; lemme show you," and they entered the to store ; he blandly approached an apple -faced girl, with flaxen hair done up in small pats over her forehead, and slightly raising his hat asked to be shown some toys suit- able for a child of, three. Apple -face turned a cheap locket, hanging at her neck, right; side out, smiled and said, "Yes; air." Spicer turned his eyes around in triumph, but his ears ' unfortunately heard the shop girl say, 8otte voce : "Jenny, 'show this bald-headed old noodle some cheap stiff, will you ; there's Jim Spooner jess come in, and I want to see him." Mrs. Spicer chuckled, . and Spicer - thought they had better walk on and see what there was alt the further end of the store. . Hints About Carpets. If you are about to re -arrange your sitting -room, thing: what color ycu would like to live in and first see that your carpets and *ails will give you . the ground -word:, the key -note you prefer. I, your walls are to be papered, select some quiet, neutral' tinted paper, and where it joins the ceiling, let it. have a parr w bordering of dead gold: . Then, if your room is small, let the pattern of your carpet be a small one—a tiny trail- ing vine on a ground of green, or gray, or crimson, or one of those Persian pat terns, where the figures are set in like mosaics, A small room is dwarfed and made hideous by 'an immense, staring, showy -figured carpet, which seems as if its main business was to call attention to itself. - Whatever tint you select for the predominant onesee that nothing in the room quarrels with it. If you have ever so handsome a single piece of furniture that is in glaringcontrast with every- thing else, be reentless in . condemning it to go to some other part of : the'.house. • FISH, --WILSON & YOUNG have just received a : large -AO of, Labrador o $i err ,I.a i d a $th Whitu 1?' h Trout,- 11 Vis 'eatdh, ►nn'' l atra'14ted` first -dabs, io chili- wale/1 at thelowest rice tor inane D D I R Y ODER Y DDDD R R: ' Y NEW YORK on January 27th, for GREAT BRIT - SPRING PURCHASES' of - GGG 000 000 DDDD SSSS G 0-00000 DS S G 0 0 0• 0 D D S - G 0 0 0 0 D D SSSS G GG O 0 0 O D D 8 G GO 0000 DS 3 GGGG 000 000 000D SSSS We will give S 'ECIAL BARGAINS in READYMADE CLOTHING, HATS, OAPS, &C. FOR THE NETT THREE TPEEKS, - SO AS TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW GOODS. We have a Line of Coats arcl Pea Jackets, which w _will Sell at Auction Sale Pricer. LOGAN JAMIESON, Sigof the GOLDEN L IOE, Seaforth. WONDERFUL BARGAINS FOR THE HQLDAYS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT AT RRRRRR R R It I -t R - R RRRRRR R R R R R. 00000 O 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 •0 0 O 0 :0 0 00000 GGGGG G G G 0 0- 0- G G GG G 0- GO-00G- EEEEEEE E - GO-00G- EEEEEEEE E EEEE E EEEEEEE DRESS GOODS, Seal Brown and Navy, BLACK SILKS, Special Line at $1 25, COLORED SILKS, Brown, Blue and Drab, WOOL FRINGES, Leading Colors, REAL HAIR SWITCHES, only $1 60 each, SCRAFS AND CLOUDS, Endless Variety, LADIES' FUR SETTS, Very cheap, CHILDREN'S FUR SETTS, Very nine, SHAWLS AND MANTLES, Very Stylish, . KID MITTS and GLOVES, very comfortable, RRRRRR R R 1ti R - RRRRRR R R R R R R R R ssssss S S S SSSSSS S S S° S S •SSSSSS OVERCOATS, Boys' and Men's, ' Ci OTH AND FTTR CAPS, Full Stock, SHIRTS AND DRAWERS, cheaper than ever, TWEED SUITS, Boys' and Men's, GLOVES, Cloth, Kid and Buck, BLANKETS, $1 50; to $2 50, TAPESTRY CARPETS, at wholesale prices, WINCEYS, at usual figures, GREY COTTONS, ,5c, 8c and 10o per yard. WOOL HOSIERY, all colors. Suitable Goods for Christmas and New Yesra Gifts at our Popular Prices. . - . P. ROGEl S, - Seafdrth. SPECT• -ACL E+ S AT 000 000 U , . U NNI`, TTTTT EEEEE RRRR SSSS C 0 0 0 U, U NN T E R R S, C 0 0 U U N N N T EEE RRRR SSSS C 0 0 0 U U N N1'�� T E R R S CCC 000 - UUU N NN T EEEEE R R SSSS For 250 40o, 50o5c 1$1 25,2 , 7 , $ , $ , $2 5C, $8, $7 and $12 per pair. A ossa given with every pair. Sole Agents in Seaforth and vicinity for Lazarus, Morris & Co.'s, and Louis Black & Co: s celebrated Spectacles. The above can be exchanged any, time within three mons if not soiled or broken. WATCHES AND CLOC _ S. A full line of American, English, Russell and Swiss Watches. American and French Clocks on hand. The above goods that are warranted to customers will be exchanged within one year if satis- faction is not given, provided they are not damaged or broken. ; I - JEWELRY. A fine assortment of C olo ed Gold Sete, Bright Gold Seta, Gold Broaches, Gold Ear Rings, , Gold Cuff Buttons, Studs, Ge m Seal, Guard -and Wedding Rings, 0014 Guards and Albert- Chains, Sealy, 1 eys,:Looketo, Pene,,ua, Acme of the above goods will.belakemback after two weeks --or at alt if worn-Tit/MO when the good8 do. not turn pert; as represented. '£.Large Stook of Silver Plated Ware, Plate gelry, Black Jewelry, Polity , olina, bele Uhea dor` Ca - • Witehee •clocks and Joialr pf ooqq�� p la . + ' �. uy�,a�riRtion�•Repatred- by:SW-clam has workmen and warranted la give satisfaction. Work. ust be;patdi S4;'g: delivere.... - , . Mr , R. co V12 R, Practical Watchnaker, ,Seaforth, I 3 1878 WINTER. - 1876 O. C. WILLSON'S Agricultwral Impleinent and Sewing Machine ,Emporium, MAIN STREET, SEAFORTH. T HAVF1 on hand a good supply of Maxwell's Celebrated STRAW CUTTERS. These Straw Cotters are entitled to rank as the Joest in the World, having beaten all competitors at the ''`' CENTENNIAL EXHIBITION, SECURING THE INTERNATIONAL MEDAL. Also Grain Crushers, .horse Rowers, Large_ and Small, Sawing Ma- dams and Root Cutters, Washing Machines, Wringers, &c. Sewing Machines. In the Sawing Machine Department he keeps a fall selection of all the best naachines made, in- cluding Oa celebrated FLORENCE, Which is becoming rad re popular every day. Resides the Florence he .keeps in Stock at all times the SINGER, WHEELER & WILSON, ROYAL, AND WEBSTER. About FIFTY Second -Band Machines, Various Makes, for Sale Cheap. STAMPING FOR BRAIDING, New Style, the Neatest Thing Ont. REPAIRS. Sewing Machines Repaired on the Shortest Notice, anti cheap ; also Sewing Machine Oil, Attachments and Repairs always on hand. - 0. C. WILLSON, Seaforth. 1�USIO! WILLSON & SCOTT'S MUSIC STORE Is now acknowledged, to be the Place to get • VALUE VALUE LIN . MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. PIANOS. They have now secured the exclusive right of the the Dominion for selling that BEAUTIFUL AND. POWERFUL PIANO Manufactured by CABLE & SON, OF NEW YORK. - This Piano has gained a World Wide Repute- tion, 'and at home enjoys the -enviable position of having the Largest Retail. business in that Cita. These Pianos are sold at as low prieea as it is possible to make a respectable and reliable -Instrument, for we don't propose to sell instruments for half price as some dealers are doing. knowing that Instruments sold at such Prices are worthless even at the money asked for them. -. A good article can not be sold at hall its value. WILLSON & SCOTT'S is also the only place to get That Wendel—Ally Celebrated "VOGEL & LINCOLN" OR CI-.AJ\T, Manufactured by that Company. These organs have surpassed everything that has been placed. in opposition on the Canadian Market. They are also remarkable for theirbeanti- fol Quality of Tone; Variety of Orchestral Effects, and Combination Excellence of all Material need, Thorough Construction, Finish and Elegance of Design. • The high degree of perfection which these - Instruments .have attained has been acquired only by the employment of extraordinary ingen- nity and_ekilt;with-the ald'of extensive capitals and earnest endeavors to excel- and the .odes, they have met with Is unparalleled in the -history of the inalmfaettire of2dnsical Instruments: The Trade Liberally Dealt with. Beni for ,Erica Lists and circulars. WILLSON & SCOTT, Seaforth. r fl