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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1877-05-11, Page 7y 1877. 1 hereby inform their newer the nubile generally af` then*. cry and Lumber Yard to new. )icy premises on LAI N- STREE:TIt used facilities and some new eat make, they will continue k fa all orders for :, Blinds, Mouldindgs . all kinds of D LUMBER; to Suit the Times. Fay Racks, Cheese kkre , &C Seasoned. Lumber on fid. ND SHINGLES. d enatom Planing wire • Prompt Attenttou, hereby th,' m1 : their numerous! ,iberal patronage extended to st, and hope, by strict iuteg- ation, to business, to merit s. crease of the same. ie accounts are overdue we give to pay up. CRAY SCOTT. 1 SpecifieetIorzs for Bteiidiz ration. ANTI PRICES TO SUIT IE TIMES, AAD SHOES TY -SS VARIBTY AT COVENTRY'S. NING my Spring Stock corn-. latest Styles in Ladies`, Gents' `.ear. I have: bought from the trade, for Cash, and I am there- not to be undersold; and asI ally hard up, I am determined. 'ore respectfully 'invite the cash leaforttl and its surroundings to ere busying elsewhere. STOM DEPARTMENT buy none bat the best material tybest of workmen- Myrepair- r a style that cannot fail to give with thanks for peat patronage, kith in a better time coming, Ey don't forget the place THE BIG BOOT, street, Seaforth. 'C'OVENTRY, Seaforth. riOLIDATED BANK CANADA. E 54.000.000. 51O11TREAL, Incorporated 1833; 1,11 CANADIAN BANK, rcorporated 1864: STH BRANCH. BLOCKMAIN-STs IEAFORTH. V'ewv York Payable at any a States. [change en London payable r of the United Kingdom. PAID ON DEPOSITS. M. P. HAYES, MANAG a DGS WANTED, EMAN & GOUINLOCK he Highest Cash Price for FS OF ALL KINDS. 1 of ELM LOGS suitable for the Loops. Ewing attended to promptly, t any other milt_ very description, also Shingles, always on hand„ and at the very es. • 01 POSTS FGR SALE. AN & GOUINLOCK,. Seaforth EMPORIUM. r hereby thanks hie numerous cants and others) for their liberal the past seven years, and hopes,. andelose attention to business,, fidence and trade in the future. y enlarged his premises, during now prepared to pay the T CASH PRICE y of good fresh eggs, delivered EGG EMPORIUM, Main Street, Seaforth- e su-bscriber 25: tons of good dry ATL \v. a:e .:. WILSON. 1-- -'CT STEWART, 'r and "Dealer -!in ail kinds of E, SASHES, DOORS„ FRAMES, IGS, TURNING, ETC.., fade: to order.; Also a good as- sortreent (3 AKING SUPPLIES .WAYS ON H;iND.. WART and hii will give you as p can be got ae2ee other place. c D. STEVyART, Biuevale` kl PLANING MILL, R A SLIND FACTORY kbegaleave to thank his numerous r the liberal patronage extendedtc encing busineee is Seaforth, and: y be favored with a continuance ing to build would do well to give will continue to keep on hand tt kinds (if PINE LUMBER, t AKit€t<$�4, 1L1NDS, MOULDINGS re` LES, LATH, .ETC. nt of givingsatisfactiontoUwe, him with theirpatronage, an nota. trkmen are employe('. attention paid, to Custom Planing SRN I3. BItOADFOOT. 41111-110110101.111•116111.01,i1.111.1„ `110' — iilism CFrennaway Brownlgw Ex -Governor Brownlow died at his res- idence in Knoxville, Tenn., on Sunday -afternoon, April 30th, after an illness of only a few hours. Mr. Brownlow was .born in Wythe county, Viiisinia, on August =29th, 1805. At the age f fourteen he lost both fath- er and mo er, and from that time until hewas eight een, he_lived with his moth- er's family, where -he was obliged to earn hia bread by hard labor on a farm. He then removed to Abingdon, Va., and be- came an apirentice to a house carpenter.- All his surplus earnings he devoted to the acquisition of an education for which he had- hitherto had ` very .ineagre •opportunities, and' bythe time he reached the age of 21 was deemed fitted to enter upen the duties of a minister of the Methodist denomination., The next 10 years of his life were spent in the hard experiences of an itinerant preacher. After the close of the war Mr. Brown- low supported the Congressional plan of reconstruction, and in 1865 was elected Governor cif Tennessee, a position° which hg held for upward of tbreeyears. Of himself, Parson Brownlow said in 1862 : " I' have been a laboring man all 'my life loin a and have been acting upon the Scriptural maxim of eating my bread in the sweat of my brow: Though a Southern man in feeling and principle, I. do not think it degrading to a man to la- bor, as do most Southern disunionists. Whether E. st or West, North or South, I- recognize th&digt its of labor, aad' Idok forward to when educe of this vast 1 am know breadth of son,' while I may say, without incurring the charge of egotism, that no man is ble; as my neighbors` will tes- �ys poor,, and always oppress- urity debts, few men in my E 'HURON • day, not very far distant, ted labor will be the salvation country ! * *' * * i throughout the length and he land as the `Fighting Par. - more peace tify. Alw ed with sec section, and of my limited means have given away more in the course' of each year to charitable objects. I have never been arraigned in the church for immor- ality. I never played a card. I never ' was a profane swearer. - I never drank a dram of liquor until within a few years, when it was taken as a medicine.. I never had a cigar or a chew of tobacco in my mouth. I never was in attendance at a theatre. I never attended a . horse race,. and never witnessed their running, .save on the fair ;grounds of my own county. I never courted but one woman; and her I married. I am about six feet high and have weighed as high as 175 pounds— have had as fine a constitution as any man need desire. I have very few gray hairs in my head, and although rather hard -favored than otherwise, I will pass for a man of 40 years, I have had as strong a voice as any man in East Ten- nessee, where I have resided for the last thirty years and have had a family of seven children." The Eql of a Useful Life. By the delfth of Mrs. Chisholm, the world has loot another of its heroines,and humanity one of its greatest benefactors. Her labors were such as to make all men blush that they should have been needed and when needed that they should have been done Iby a woman. She refor sed the manners and conver- sation of the barrack room,and helped to abolish the filthy and abominable canteen. She established schools of industrial training for the daughters of the common soldier, outof „which sprang the perma- nent orphaiage, which is called after the soldier's name. These early efforts were confined to India. The state of her husband's health requiring his removal to the renovating climate of Australia, she began to organ- ize the disjointed and distracted. life of the feinale atriigrant,as it existed in New South Wales, in Victoria and Van Die - man's Laney. She found women ia a more degraded condition than they are to be seen at the Curragh of Kildare or in the slums of oor seaport towns, and she. re- stored them to their better selves ; she established homes for the fallen and the wretched, and snatched from destruction or despair hundreds of human beings to whom her iiame is sweeter than music or the perfume of flowers; and what she did Snakes all men and women rejoice, for she has left a heritage of hope and good- ness to those who, like her,- are working in the cause of our common humanity. Mrs. Chisholm established the Family Colonization Loan Society, by means of which immigration is robbed of its chief terrors and assured of success,1and this and alt the other good and nolle things she did were in no way done for her own profit, but solely for the' profit and ad- vantage of those who could not help themselves. -.London Examiner. A Cha u ber of Horrors for Cred- itors. A gentleman has just died here who owed most of his celebrity to the quaint manner in which he managed to disem- barrass himself of his creditors. No sooner did a dun present himself than he was usherd into a room hung around with a va "ety of mirrors, some - convex othersconiave, &c., &c. .In one theun- fortunate creditor beheld himself with a head as flat as a flounder, in another his features were nearly as sharp as a knife; in a third he had several heads ; in a fourth he was upside down. Here he had the broad grin of the clown, there the long -drawn visage of an undertaker. On one sidle of the room he saw himself all head aid no body, on the other side it seemedas if a dwarf had put on the boots of 4giant. No applicant, how- ever pressing, was known to resist this chamber of horrors for more than a quarter of an hour. —Pall Mall Gazette's Paris Correspondence. • A Cellar Cow House. Here and there is found a man who has put his cows in the cellar, thinking the cellar more valuable for this purpose than for manure; although this is one of the new ways I incline to accept it as having in it more of common sense than having the animals up stairs. 1 t is, however, open to much objection unless the cellar is dry and light enough for the outer air to get in to remove from the premises all the close feeling cellars are apt to have. The sudden changes of out -doors will not so soon fin,d their way in doors, and the extremes of temperature will not be so great. One can have. daylight— yes, streaming sunshine in a cellar as well as up stairs. ` I would have stone walls oil three sides only ; the fourth Side, at t6'c south, I wduld have of wood with a Linc of windows the whole length; these win- dows should be well up from the ground both that the cows shall not 'get their horns env way against the glass;and that it may better light the central portion of the room. The windows should be Iarge and everyone hizlged; a curtain of coarse cloth can be let down the coldest nights, for: the air within shluld not be eoole4 l much from the sides cif the building; the cooling should rather me aaan *Went of `ventilation and so very considerably under our control. t is well to have some glass on the w t side; the declin- ing sun cheers the ows, and a little lengthening of the da is a very pleasant thing if we are a littl belated about the chores, and abundan glass will often= times save the lightin of the lantern.- Correspondence Begets,! Farmer.. Boys 'QST nted. Men are wanted . So they are. But boys 'are wanted --honest, manly, noble'' boys. - Such boys will make the desired men. Some one has : declared, and truly, that these 'boys should possess ten points, which are thus given 1. Honest. 2. Intelligent. 3. Active. 4. Industrious. 5. Obedient. 6. Steady: 7. Obliging. 8. Polite. 9. Neat. 10. Truthful. - One thousand first rate places are open for one thousand bo s who come np_to the standard. Eac boy can suit hi> taste as to' the kid of business her would prefer.. The laces are ready in every kind of occupy on. Manyof them are filled by boys wh lack some most im i portant quality, but they will soon be vacant. Some situ tions will soon be vacant, because th boys have been poisoned by reading ad books, such as they would never dar show their fathl'. ers, and would be asliamed to have them', mothers see., The impure thoughts sug gested by these book will lead to viciouth acts, the boys will be ruined, and thein places must be- fill'ed. Who will be ready for ono, of thes. vacancies ? Disl guished ministers, ilful physicians) successful merchan , must all soon leave their places for somebody elsetai fill. One by one t y are removed by death. Mind your en points, boys they will prepaae yo to step into' vajj'. cancies in the front ank. Every mats who is worthy to em oy a boy is look1 ing for you if you e the points. - Do not fear that you w 1 be overlooked: A young person ha ' g these qualities will shine as brightly s a star at night. • Rough an There are same pe scratching you by t and impatient ways, wrong with them "th unplaned board if' with the ,grain, you be annoyed with the A gentleman, at the person next to h. pass the mustard. " Sir," said the m me for a waiter ?" No," was the rej for a gentleman." That man, the me his pride, threw out the porcupine does hi Kind words cost no a world of worry They have a wonderf ing over the rough pl, work. • e Smooth. le who are always eir short answers things go at all . are like -a rough u don't handle it re very certain to linters. ating house asked if he would please "do you mistake y, I mistook you ent you touched is sharp words as quills. hing,and they save d fretful feeling: 1 knack of smooth. es' in ourplay and . -Leg . he. I A " Relieved Mothter" writes to the Chicago Tribune- to t.11 another mother how to relieve this rea y distressing pain: "When one of the s e 11 fry makes night hideous with the cri4 of 'leg ache,' let herrise, wring a domain towel out of cool water,wrap it aroundl he offending mem; ber its whole length, ,.ndinstantly cove it with flannel. A fla o rel skirt is usual ly the most convenieil article and should be thoroughly wrappe . around and pin= ned, or tied to its 1: ce. The mother can then return to h r bed, and the pa- tient -- after one gap — will howl no more." ELECTRICITY. -Tho as' Excelsior Eclec- tric Oil ! Worth ten times its weight in gold. -Pain cannot st y where it is used ! It is the cheapest m d.icine ever made. One dose cures comm n sore throat. One bottle has cured Bro hitis. Fifty cents' worth has cured an o d standing cough. It positively cures c tarrh, asthma, and croup. Fifty cents w rth has cured crick in the back, and the ame quantity lame back of eight years Landing. It cures swelled neek, tumors, rheumatism, neu- ralgiaa contraction of the muscles, stiff joints, spinal difficul ies, and pain and soreness in any part, no matter where it pray{ be, nor from what cause it may arise, it always does°you good: Twenty five cents' worth has cured bad cases of chronic and -bloody ysentery. One tea spoonful cures collie n 15 minutes. - It will cure any case ofpiles that it is pssi- ble to curer . Six or eight applications is warranted to cure any case of excoriated nipples or inflamed b east. For bruises, if applied often and ound 'up there is never the slightestiscoloration to the skin. It stops the pain of a burn as soon as applied. (aures frosted feet, boils, warts and c rn-s, and wounds of every descriptio' on man or beast. Sold by all medicine dealers. Price, 25 cents. S. N. Tho as, Phelps, N. Y. Northrop & Lyman, Toronto, Ont., sole agents for the Dom on. NOTE. —Eclec- tris—Selected and el(Ictrized. EPPS'S COCOA.—Grateful and comforting —"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which g . vern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a care- ful application of thele fine properties of -well-selected cocoa, lMr. Epps has pro- vided our breakfast t4bles with a delicate- ly flavoured beverag ,which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It is by the judicious use of such' articles of, diet that a constitution may b gradually built u} until strong enough o resist every ten- dency to disease. undreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever thea is a weak point. We may escape ma y a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves we 1 fortified with pure blood, and a proper. nourished frame." Civil Service Gazette. Sold only in pack- ets labelled- "Jams Epps & Co., Ho mceopathic Chemists, 48, Threadneedle St.,ancr170, Piccadily, London. 4S2-5 BE WISE.—Too offen a cold or slight cough is considered a very ordinary tri- fling affair, just as Tell left to go as it came,and hence systfmatically neglect 'd until a simple curablaffection is conver = ed into a: serious pulmonary disease. T e more prudent, aware that a cough r cold should never beltrifled with,promp'� ly use " Bryan's Pulmonic Wafers, have sustained their reputation for ov 20 years. • They ar always eicacioui, and exert a most be efieial influence on all the bronchial an pulmonary organs. Sold by all drulgis s and country deal- ers at 25 cents per x. 7s h `SIi[HI011g NOSNHOf `Iaarais NIYI\T 'HDi03vas 0 1-40 mCD cle 0) UFpeed3 to and Pale Boiled Linseed Oil. • PICID Orcl CD 0 1 . tV cD CP 0 te 0 .1 CD rn N C 0 CCD • bld let Ps 5 P'Barl °VIA& pc r CD ::11• CD CDuscel CD tee 0 Crq cr CD 0 cla O rn • CD c -r CD � ct rn CD CD o) ca CD 0 PaCD CD t 1 0 ch LUMBER FOR S LE. HEMLOCK, First Quality, $6 per M. PINE from $8. BILLS CUT TO ORDER, - All Lengths, from 10 to '50 Feet, at the PONY MILL, IN McKILLOP. The Subscriber has also a LUMBER YARD IN SEAFOiTH, Where all kindalof Lumber can be obtained. 479 THOMAS DOWNEY, SIGN OF THE WY1111M "00 ?8 NOS uJ38Oa 'H1UO.d1v3S `133111S NIVW THEM, PLATFORM SCALES STAMPED AND 'a31O3dS•N 0 00 0 ci m 0 r C r m 0 O 0 X. m 0 2 I) Z 0 Z m 0 z cn m FOR ORR'S PATENT PAINT—THE f1OA 1NIdd IS3dV3HO 2 a31NVadVM-3911 `•V f7 `s?1aO.i • •SYS ,IV'InO II3 m D fn .71 m -i 0 n m "D CO -1 0) 2 171 --I 0 -11 i 0 0 o I ch o m t1 rn y 3 O c m CARD_ S. CAMPBELL, Provincial Land Surveyor • and Civil Engineer. Orders by mail prompt- ly attended to. 479 D. S. CAMPBELL, Mitchell. EXPOSITOR. C► A N 43L --t?' A M I ' s O N" _ 1877 AT THE GOLDEN 1877 LION, SEAFORTH, v Men's White S irts, - Men's Regatta S irts, Men's H oxnemad - Cotton . Socks, Men's Ties, Colla s, &c. - SPECIAL L,2NE'S-_ LOGAN & -JAMIES • N, SEAFORTH. CENTENNIAL MEDAL AND DIPLOMAS AWARD ©D TO MALCOLM ONROE, • SEAFORTH, FOR WOOD HANDLE AND WROUGHT IRON BEAM PLOW. MAL COLM MONROE has pleasure in annonncin is better prepared this reason than ever to fur. his Plows are the Bert in the Market be has only to him obtained the IyNTERNATIONAL PRIZE AN HE ALSO MANUFAC- TITBEs IRON PLOWS„ Hill's Patent Plows, SCUF'LERS, IRON A Y to the Farmers of Huron and. Perth that he ish a first-class article. As proof positive that refer to the fact that the Plow Manufactured by, DIPLOMA at the Centennial Exhibition. Thistle Cutter Plows, Alsoa - o CI Qoc X ce. Q. One -Horse 'Plow Suitable for Plowing Gardens. D WOOD PLOWS. • i This Plow is universally' admitted to be the best G it a trial before purchasing any other. - All these Implements aremanufaeturedby himself, mor e durable than those got up by Large establishm ranted to give satisfaetioir. Prices as low as those turns out a good article. 'Plows of all the above kin his S1...._ at ...-.. i-:.....:. IRON HA The Scotch Diamend Harrow§ kept constantly on h stantly on hand. $emember the shop, Main Street • g Plow now in use, and Farmers should give j f the very best material, and are betterand nts ior catch sales. Every Implement war of any other respectable establishment that s kept constantly on hand and can be seen at nd ' Repairs fcr all kinds of Plows kept con eaforth, East Side. _ T : E GREATEST WONDER OF MOD- ERN TIMES. HO LLOWAYIS PILLS & G1 .TiMiEN r% KIDD'S HARDWARE. RECEIVED DIRECT FROM MANUFACTURERS: AMERICAN CUT NAILS, SPADES, SHOVELS, FORKS, HOES AND RAKES, GLASS, PAINTS, OILS, &c FENCING WIRE AND BUILDING HARDWARE Of Every Description Cheap. EAVE TROUGHS 'AND CONDUCT- ING PIPE Put up on the Shortest Notice and Warranted. Special inducements to Cash and Prompt Paying Customers. !JOHN KIDD. DR.. WILLIAM GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE. The Great English Remedy is especially re- commended as anunfail- ing care for Seminal Weakness Spermatorr- hea, Impotency, and all Before. diseases that follow as'A ft 0 r. a sequenee of Self ,abuse, as Loss of Memory, Universal Lassitude, Pain in. the Back, Dimness of Vision, Premature Old Age, and many other diseases that leads to Insanity or Consumption and a Premature Grave, all of which as a rale are first caused by deviating from the Path of nature and over indulgence. The Specific Medicine is the result of a life study and many years of ex- perience in treating these special diseases. Pam- phlet free by mail. The Specific Medicine is sold by all Druggists at $1 per package, or 6 packages for $5; or will be sent by mail on receipt of the money, by addressing WILT.TAM GRAY & CO-, Windsor, Ont. Sold in Seaforth by E. Hickson & Co., J. S. Roberts, R. Lumsden and all druggist merchants. he Pills Purify the Blood, correct all disorders the Liver, Stomach, Kidneys: o.nd Bowels, and invaluable in all complaints incidental to males. he Ointment is the only reliable remedy bad Legs, Old Wounds, Sores and Ulcers however long standing. For Bronchitis, Dip- eria, Coughs, Colds Gout, Rheumatism, and Skin Diseases it has no equal. WARE OF NEW YORK COUN- TERFEITS. pnrions imitations of "Holloway's Pills d Ointment," are manufactured and sold under e name of "Hol- • - loway's & Co.," Curran, & Co.,' also by the Me ane Company 4n assumed —Again o n e of New York,. counterfeits of J. F. Henry, . ggists, a n d �politan Medi - New York,witt de mark, thug: seph Haydock, ewise passesoff s own make under the name of Holloway & Co., ving for a trade mark a crescent and serpent; cKesson & Robins, of New York, are agents for- e same. - These persons, the better to deceive you, un- ushingly caution the public in the small books 4 directions which accompany their medicines, w•'ch are really the spurious imitations, to Be - w: re of Counterfeits. Unscrupulous dealers obtain them at very low p 'des and sell them to the public in Canada as y genuine Pills and Ointment. I most earnestly and respectfully appeal to the of amili and other Ladies C ergs, to mothers F res , a,rd to the public generally of British North A e erica, that they may be pleased to denounce • I sparingly these frauds. Purchasers should took to the Label o the Pots and Boxes. If the address 3 not 533, Oxford Street, Loudon, -t ey are Counterfeits. Each Pot' and Box of the genuine Medicines b 'ars the British Government Stamp, with the rds, "HOLLOWAY'S PILLS AND OINT3MENT, NDON," engraved thereon. On the label is e address, 533, OXFORD STREET, LoNDON,where a one they ere manufactured; Parties who may be defrauded by Vendors selling spurious Holloway's Pills and Ointment aof my genuine make, shall on communicating the particulars to me, be amply remunerated, and t eir names never divulged. Signed THOMAS HOLLOW_ Y. London, Jan. 1, 1877. 77 AN OLD FRIEND THE ;BES FRIEND. 3. FRESH ARRIVALS. .1 A FRESH SUPPLY OF 'STALL PAPER, MUSIC, MUSIC FOLIOS, zvOVEI S. AND PLAIN AND FANCY STA- TIONERY AT C. W. `_PAPST'S. Tri LAKESIDE LIBRARY, . From No.1 to No. 85, only 10 cents each, at C. W..PAPST'S, Dominion Block, Seaforth. GANG PLOWS, - GANG PLOWS, HILL PLOWS, HILL PLOWS, LAND ROLLERS, LAND ROLLERS, FOR SALF. AT THE HURON FOUNDRY AND -MACHINE SHOP. PLOWS And PLOW CASTINGS Made from the CELEBRATED DIAMOND IRON. Farmers world do well to call and e xamine be fore purchasing elsewhere. j WHITELAW & MORE. N-OTIOM, - NEW, SHOE' SHOP. T AE undersigned begs to notify the inhabitants of Seaforth and surrounding country that he has commenced business IN SEAFORTH, In the Shop next door to Pillman's Carriage Fac- tory, where he intends to carry on The Custom Shoe Business IN ;ALL ITS BRANCHES. The ;Stock raving been carefully selected, and - none but FIRST'CLASS WORKMEN EMPLOYED, And by strict attention to businees, the public can rely on getting good -value for their money. - REPAIR, ING done with Neatness - and 'Dispatch. 485 ! J. J. SCOTT. {THE SEAFORTH INSURANCE AND LAND AGENCY. ALONZO- STRONG -. IS AGENT lo Several First -Class Stock, Fire and Life Insurance Companies, and is prepar- ed to take risks on - THE MOST FAVORABLE TERMS. Also Agent for several of the best Loan Socie- ties. Also Agent for the sale and purchase of Farm and Village Property. A. NUMBER OF FIRST-CLASS IM- PROVED FARMS FOR SALE. $3O,000 to Loan at S Per Cent. Interest. Agent for the White Star Line of Steamers. OFFICE—Over M. Morrison's Store, Main -St Seaforth. NEW AND CHEAP GOOD -S. MRS, P. MARKEY, DEALER IN GROCERIES and PRO VISIONS, CONFECTIONERY, &c, COBS DELIVERED FREE OF CHARGE. MAIN STREET, SEAFORTH, OPPOSITE HAYS' HOTEL. 485 HENSALL PORK FACTORY GEORGE & JAMES PETTY) DEALERS in Smoked and Sugar Cured Hams, Spiced and Smoked Rolls,Cnmberland Bacon, j Clear Sides, Mess Pork, :&e. 1)V. H. OLIVER, SEAFORTH, Aa Orders by Mail or Otherwise Promptly Attended to. A Large Quantity always on hand. 485 G. & J. PETTY," Hcnsall. EGS to acquaint his many friends and costo -a mers tbnthe has removed two doors north of s old stand, McIntyre's Block, where he has a s ock equal to any in the business, and at the ost favorable prices. All kinds of Repairing d•ne on the shortest notice. A good Stock of ranks, Valises, Whips, Combs, Bradlee, and all o her such articles required constantly on hand. ememoer your old Friend. Sign of the Scotch Cellar. 481 W. H. OLIVER, Seaforth. ARRIAGE LICENCES OR CERTIFICATES, (Under the new Act,) issued at the EXPOSITOR OFFICE, SEAFORTH. U. der authority of the Lieutenant -Governor of On raiz. ECLIPSE _OATMEAL MILLS, SEAFORTH. NOW IN FULL OPERATION. Oat Meal, Split Peas, Pot Barley, Corn. Meal Chopped, And All Kinds of Mill Feed Constantly on Hand Chopping done Tuesdays and Fridays. Oatmeal exchanged forats. Highestpriee paid for Oats, Peas and Barlej 419 CURRIE & EOMSON.