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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1877-09-07, Page 6the field one day; sit weary way, sinewy hand„ or the good of the land 1 I e sows, a hoes, fl he maws, , the good of the /and. stood his patient wife, said ioy of his life, eea busy hand, for her husband's band; or aim must boll, ashe must broil, a she must toil, good of the home. -when the farmer goes out, t songs, lambs frisk about; softly in the glen, bravely for the good of men; or his saws, d he =owe, Ana he hoes„ All for the good of the land, the -Wife steps about within, the milk to skim; fties buzz abarit--- at home her heart is kept stout; are pies to make, here is, bread to bake, And steps to taker All far the sake of the home. Viewday la Ver, and the evening is corae, The er.,Ituree /led, the milking done, IfAiakeabisrest eeth the old shade tree, Irmititboistbaro the land his thoughts are free; ugh he sows, Md he hoes, d he mows, H.rstafronthoworkoftho1and. lhful e from sun to sun, Takeo burdeulup that's never done, Tb&aiust,Jhoteisrtop1wy, ifer the good of te house she laud work away; or to mend the frock, d to knit the soak, 4iid the cradle to rock, All for the good of the home. is ism, with its rthilling blast, fouler sail:els his crop at hist ; are fnll his fields arehare, e land be ne'er bath care, ,lle it blows, d it snows, 111 winter goes, Ha rgts frora the work of the laud. Sat the wIIIInI wfe, till life's closing day, tba children s gjrnde, the husband's stay; Mar/1'day to day 4he. has done her best, Vail death a1ouej,a give her rest; or after tile test comes the rest, 1411th the b1es4 Inta farmer's heavenly home. nion. U efal Hints. TO KzEr ter mom sconeunio. prevent meat from scorehing in The Mil d.urng the roasting process, simply keep a basin or cup of water in the ovenTie steam generated not Only prevents scorching, but makes the meat cook ilia , roil rnAPPED BA'SDS. Take co on starch and pulverize with the blad of a knife ; every time the hands ar4 taken from water, wipe them, and.whiEie yet damp rub a portion of the staro1 over them thoroughly. • The effect. is agical. nortkro UP oiLloOES. If aeali.co dresa is washed careless- . ly, starched s iff, sunned a day or two, and half iron d, it is not a very comely sight. But f quiekly dried in • the shade, very tl4nly and evenly starched, *aid ironed on the wrong side so that it will not shine it will look like a new , t1ress for a long time. Many pretty blue prints and. teanbrics fade when washed an the usual Way. If they are washed -the ftrst timet strong salt and. water, or water ta w `ch a little beef's gall is *Idea, the colors will be set so that . they will always be as handsome as at first, and ean be washed ever after like other colored goods, TZAMILNE} A HORSE TO PLOW. A horse that has not been used. to the plow is render a fearful by the strange- ness of the iin lament and the manner of hitching., nsuch cases we break the anima to he plow by fust hitching to a log and 4rawing that, leading the horse by the h ad. Then hitch to the *ow with the point upon a plow shoe, lima army th t ; then plough. a light ' o 11 piece of stab le for half a day. By patience and i tadness any horse may be taught to pugh in. a short time in this way. A ITEZ FOR Luxes. A neighbor �f mine had a con hooked by %how. Itjhad. a lump on its side as large as a pecl4 measure, and as hard. as a stone. 1 toii him to rub it'withgoose grease. He did so; a bucketful of mat- -ter ran out of it, and in about six weeks it it had entirely disappeared: Last year I hw had an ox th a. lump on his jaw- bone about as aage as a hen's egg, and. as hard as a tone. I began rubbing it With Witima goOse grease. In about a -week it became very soft, broke open and disappeared. THE SlOt IUSHMEXT IN Eaus. We have see4 dyspeptics who suffer- ed untold torments with almost every kind of food. Bread became a burning acid. Meat atd milk were solid d an liquid. fires. .'t e have semi these same sufferers trying to- avoid food. and drink, and even goina to the enema spring for sustenance ; at'ild, we have seen their • -tormeuts passaway and their hunger XelieNted by living, eggs which ha e been boiled, in bulybding upon the whites bf water for thirtY minutes. At the end of a week, so have given the half yoke of the egg with the white, and upon this diet7 alone, without fluid of any kind, we have Aeen them begin to gain flesh and strength and refreshing sleep. .After weeks of this treatment they have . been able, with care, to begin upon °the: er food; and till this without taking ' medicine. 'Halal boiled e,ros, by the -way; are not half as bail as half boiled ones, and ten Omes as easy to digest as Taw eggs, or even egg-neg. Oleaaapag Saucepans. show 31•Ouhow to clean sauce- pans. No maitter how dirty they may be, if they are idled with cohl water, anti ts little soda iti put into them, and the water is made to boil, they will soon be clean fronx the boiling water oely. Is -there an old birch broolO in the 'must? lf so, bring it tio pie." The bircli broom was brought, the handle taken out, and the thin and tvorn end of the broom tied up tightly1 only about two pieces of the thick end tbeing left untied. The eaucepaus were soon cleaued by aid of tits broom. Those -that resisted had. a tablespoonful et soda and cold water put •in them and tl e contents boiled till the burned matte - came off easily. All saucepans, except those in which meat "Las been. boned, must, directly atter xis - ng t be filled tVith cold water till the Tone ef cleatolig Mils rice, potatoes earn, fieur, &el, dr on the metal if left' aed ee___ _ , et .; .; _ _, will t-wel rz, bor is lost in softerxing taut eettc7 , "In- All dishes having eeeeeee , Ptin . ngs or pastry in them Zus 7icrtwitit into a pan of cold, water, Ain't et urt uever into hot water. • aper or ashes, on a rag, *willrernave discolus oration d b s cae y milk and other matters4mrnedon the edge. The1 List process ts jto dry the pan before the fire;! -wipe the iron covers inside and out, polish the tin covers and. turn the pans upside down on the rack,•hanging each, cover above the pans on nails. Ellen objected to this. To her mind the sauce- pans should be put away covered to keep the dust out. But Miss Seven ex- plained that the raek is of open laths. If thepans are turned down on these the air, whieh purifies all things, enters and. keeps the pans sweet. • Wages for Housework in the OldTime. • All elderly lady Was relating the. other day in our hearing her experience in going out to do housework in her younger days. She engaged with a lady in Colithrbits to do general- hose - work, no price being agreed upon,' and entered. upon her duties at once. :About the first thing -to be done outside the regular housework was to make soap— having assistance in putting up the leaeh, the rest of the work to Make a barrel of soap she performed herself. Killing hogs came next in, order, she trying the lard, taking care of the skins and helping to make sausages. Then OE/MO the butchering of beef, the tripe ofeathich of course must be saved, and this she was required to dress alone. .She spun thewarp for thisty yards of all -wool carpet, and in the meantime the lady was siele, and she officiated. as limn° and. did the washingeironing and cookiag for the family. At the end. of four weeks she was to return ,horne, and her bill was called for. Now, gen- tle reader, what do you tltie• ik she charged. for doing the amount of work narrated. as above? The first week 75 cents the sedond 83 cents, and the last week; ono dollar each, making. 03 58 for four weeks' service. The lady thought the price decidedly too high, and she threw off 25 omits, leaving 03 33 for four of the hardest wee s' la- bor ever put upon a woro.an to pe orm, and yet she never struck for `gher wages, but served her time fait y, and is to -day a hale, hearty old. lady, fast approaching her four score ;years, able to do her own housework and lend a helping hand to a neighbor in need, or wherever duty calls.—Connecticut Jour- nal. The Difference between Meat said Milk. Suppose we take a thrifty steer, 30 months old, weighing 1,000 po-unds, and place him in an excellent pasture, and a fresh nailch cow also weighing 1,000 poupds, and place her in the same pas- ture.. They are both kept there through the season, the steer gaining in live weight 350 pounds, the cow yielding in milk 4,000 pounds. * * *j The 350 pounds of live weight on the steer is composed of at least 60 per cent. of wat- er and 40 per cent. of solid. mater, or 140 pounds of solid. substance ga,' ed. by the steer; while -milk is composec of 87 per cent. water and 13 per cent. solid substance, making 520 pounds of solid substance contained in the milk produced by the cow from her food, tcst40-pounds produced by the steer. * * * A good cow will make 200 pounds of butter in a season, and the skirafnailk, fed to thrifty pigs, will grow 200 peunds of dressed pork; or the same skina.milk fed to a ealf will put on at least 200 pounds of live weight. A good steer fed. in the ordinary way, will ares $00 to 1,000 pound.s at four years,havin.g grown, on the average, 200 to 250 pounds of meat each year, whereas the cove has made 200 pounds of butter and the ref- use of her milk has produced nearly as much meat in pork or growth of young beef in the calf as the average growth of a steer for a year. Or, by another mode of illustrating it, if we compare nailk with the average coxnposition of lean beef and. fat beef, we find the beef to con- tain 46 per cent. of dry substance; in- cluding the mineral matter or ash, and railk to contain 13 per cent. Thus 3t - pounds of milk are equal to one pound of meat; and only estimate a cow to give 4,000 pounds of milk in a year; this would. mike the • cow's product in milk equal, food value, to 1,000 poneds of meat, and this 13000 pounds of meat would require a steer, uuder ordinary feeding, four years to produce, so that the cow produces as much return from her food in one year as a steer does in four. - The Net Produce, On a Pennsylvania railroad a belle of thriving Pennsylvania town the d ugh - ter of a wealthy lumber nierchanj was travelling in the same car with a s old citizen of her native town, ai4t an agreeable gentleman from the Vest, who tells the story. The latter hat been talking to the belle, but, as the night drew on, and the young lady grew drowsy, he gave up his seat to her, and placed himself beside the soniewhat cynical Pennsylvanian. The latter be- gan conversation by pointing to a, high mountain, past which they were whir- ling, and said, "You see that m.o tain? Six or eight yeazs ago it was co ered with as fine a forest as ever grew and worth 010,000 and upward.. Now, th- out a tree, covered with stumps the land is scarcely worth a cent. T e ne procluce of that mountain lies over her in. that seat," and he pointed to t e re cumbent belle. "It has just abs rbed all of that hunber, which her thee owned, to raise and educate that girl, pay for her clothes and jewelry, ring her out in society and maintair her there. Some of you young men, ijf you were given your choice betweeri the mountain yonder, as it now stands, and. the net produce on that seat, would take the net produce; but, as for me, gi -e me the stumps'," - • tory of a Scotch Farm r. - a bright Sabbath morning, 1. y the sid8 of a country road, running along the Hudson, not many miles from New York, two men stood. talking - tog ther. One was a judge of high social standing and legal distinction, the . other teas a stone -mason, and their • coiavereation was about the building of a laew wall near the place where they were tend - bac!, to consult about which the 'udge had. sent for the mason on this Sabbath morning. , . just coming into sight as he tr‘dged along the road ou his way to c urch was a plain Scotch farmer, well liown as a God-fearing, Sabbath-keepingt hon- est, hard-working man, neither fearing nor asking finer of the great or I rich. His chief ambition in life seemed to be to raise a, large family of claildren in the fear of,,Gocl and honorably in the sight of men, which his example wig well fitted to do. In the midst of an animated explan.a- tion of what he wan the judge caught sigh Stopping soddenly, he ‘;‘ There comes Da neyer do to let him Se flees on Sabbath Imo step behind t ti; bit Passes." And the ju ae and ed down behnid the w dies, footstep4 o th faintly in th4 distan man passed fr ra sigh Of the silent riproof hi paused.; while the jud one wopld think, belit erept from hi continue tds 04:Ledo-as eciation of the Lord's The next morning related. to the Urine who was himself a iiehappily, not sq co friend. He told the glee adding: • '14:Whit wad, a,' th ye had. Ede a pooer in judge hide ibehint the o' ye." Is not this an illust ana influence of a character, though dev ments, in this werldt position, wealth or lea together could not resi mon of the good. m brought home to the h eonviction of his sin. d in a new of the fa aid Stuart; us talking ng; wewilJ f wall un waIl er busi jus il he O mason c puch- until theiplod- farmer echoed e, and. the grou e ha gs man ce t des ay. by ii_Lcied.e toswoan otEinasei., t 'ough scientious s hi tory with 130111 ht, naa-un, the, e as to m th all fbr th fea ation; of th fore incere Ch stia id of the dorn - -sight, of pithe 'ng? All thee t the sieut ser n' life, which right§ judge th ,all =con appearan e, with fe ling to his nd'coafess apt We her. It is very le hot weather, o th whole, that cones to s in the Nqrth two or three s elle, us ally not a weelt long, in the entire fo t months o tha only time in the year which we ma not call winter—and what a fus. w make about it with o oompl&inuig and sighing and fretting nd fanning and bathing! And yet th re is no seaso that is so la aly Elysi ',if we know ho to manage it, as the ot season, f.f w wore clothes to suit it, ra dified our be boxier to its action, a op ed our eage • pursuits for a while, nd lived out -of doors twice as mita a w do now. To be out of doors in the shadow, where there is almost a4ways a Vitae Stir of the air, if only he rising o, the hot and the falling of he less hot is the • only way to live in hot Iweather and those who feel themsel 'es entirely wilt] ed down by a bot spe wfl endure the Same "heated term " out feeling it, to speak of. The mina l4as everything io do with the body, n where walls and ceilings oppress, t e iound1essvaiilt of sky and wide hori • .sieems so vast and. airy that life must nqeds be delight- ful beneath it, and on is all the time, when out-of-doors, rec ivng raorentcy- gen into the blood, and o eing strength- ened to endure the ass ts of the sun without surrendering. Many people have dislike to hot weather on account o what they call their looks, the too r day, too shining faces, the hair that los s Crimp amateur', the muslins thatlose stiffness. But the *hole secret -of looks hes at first in not exerting one's self more than is meet, aiad, at last, and above alit in, fretting about them ; for while one is indifferent, one is placid and pleskiant ; as warm as may be, when one worries one is ren- dered doubly as warm by the proeess. When one can be indifferent to looks in this reamed, and. is not unpleasantly af- fected physically by h:a,t, one ca,n take comfort in the expansion ef a high tem- perature, and in pJl tl e eharra of out- door life and mov mei t that it • allows and occasions. d. for our own part,, to tell the truth, vhen we think of slip- pery falls, wet fee, an plumber's bills, and then think of the reedom and. ease with -which people wan eriuncloaked and unbonneted, and 'with ut a dreare of overshoes, in the Del °table Country, the Hills of Beulah, th: Elysian Fields, or the Happy Islands o • za's Dream, we are sure that it is e ause a.11 those blessed regions have xis ther than hot weather. A Toilsonae leasu.re.' One of the most ecce'ic of the great people of the Old Wo la was the late Queen of -the Netherl 3 ids. Her last act was -one of her msst I characteristic —she insisted in being ia4a in her coffin in her wedding dress. she visited Cambridge, and was anxious to be shown over the e quids of one of the most famous colle ea. As she was not able to walk much she was general- ly wheeled about in a Bath chair, and on this occasion tile co e e fellows per- suaded the most olaese d unpopular of their number that it wts Ilis privilege to have been selected to he1 Her Majes- ty about. He readily cemented, and for two hours, beheath al terriblesure- 1 mer sun, the poor Ina panted an. toil- ed. Her Majesty was o feather w ight. If all others in Englea a should. rget her, she will still be b me in niixd by that fat young man. It was a 1teavy thing to undertake, but he went though it with the persistence lid. success of a Briton.. , "T -10;INGS ARtyErND ONCE MOUE ern URON EXPOS' OR. E TIME GREAT SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARING SALE • AND WE commExcp TO OFFER FOR CASH ON{ SATURDAY AUGUST 18TH, 1 1080 Yards of Dress Goods, 37 Summer Skirts, 43 arasols, 62 Sun Hats, _ 29Boys' and Gentle Straw Hats I I 79 Gents' Felt Hats, . LINEN COATS, LUSTRE COATS, SUMMER VESTS, AND A GREAT VARIETY OF SEASONABLE GOODS POSITIVELY AT WHOLESAL4 PRICES To Eff'ect a Clearance Before Open- ing our Roil Stock. JOHN ROGERS, " NOTED " FOR DRY GOODS. 1-1T_TE001%T PLANINGMILL AND—. DOOR SASH BLIND AND MOULDING FACTORY. On Hand, a good Stook of I - Some years agot SEASONED • Novel Loco .. cptives. During the reeent_stri e, a flour -deal- er in one of Our Western cities devised. a, novel plan for, repl nishing his ex- hausted stores. Aecar load. of flow was, ready for him, butthe ailroad co pally were unable to deliver t. By hit hing mules to this car i wa pulled upo the xnain track, and h sta ted on his jour- ney. He had provid d himself with planks, which he pia ed on th 'ties across cattle guards Au bridges, a a.the sure-footed mules , w re enable by walking on the planks' olget salol over the bridges and &guards. !The long-gared "locomotives" were d.e a lied. from the car ;of flour, and ,wer: i,llowed to rest during the night, and is the mor-ningthe flour:was brought te its pla,ce of destina- tion. 1 ' Self pe Many Russian ladies nl St. Petersburg have pledged thernselv s to wear no ex- pensive garments or co tly ornaments, nor to indulge itt anyel ries during the "'resent war. TheyEa, e resolved to de- vote the money they woulcl. otherwise spend on such things t10 the nursing of the sick and wounded. In all cou.neries wonaen have always shown themselves ready to do the same in similar circum- stances. —Housekeepers Can save themselves oonsiderable heating labor in sununer by rising early and 1 cooking the three meals- for the day before 9 o'clock: Boiled ham, pies, puddings, tart's, stew- ed berries, and. fruit, pla,ced where they will keep cool till. 171180,1 time, make:an agreeable variety and save the neces- sity for so much Work over a hot fire at t noon and night on warm days. • LUMBER, Dressed and Undressed. LATH AND SHINGLES, HAY RACKS. CHEESE BOXES, Very Cheap Tr Cash. CUSTOM PLANING WILL RE EWE Prompt A tention. Street, Seaforth. • I' Factory and Lumber Yard: on North Main• ADAM GRAY, AS'eaforth,. THE GENUINE ROYCE REAPER AND -- FIRST PRIZE MOWER FOR SALE AT THE HURON FOUNDRY ---AND--- MACHINE SHOP. REPAIRING OF PROMPTLY AT ALL RINDS NDED TO. Remember the New FoU‘ndry. WHITELAW 210.14E., • 1NEW rTI-IV ARRIVAL$. NEW GOODS. *trench Co tu B1 e -Black 'Luis Al Shades an B Al Shades an 131 ok Velv t, • Filite Bele° ion Ladies' Pa nier • American S • A Large se° Buttons ° La es' Fri41s, t • Be utiful 13130 • Be ded Elroi -Weaving a d • Ladies' E058 o 'I'orels only 5 Th ee Boxes of :And a ' Large Assortment of pure baser, by buying, Will say *HE PION ST ISieTE*BER 7 1877. THE SEAFORTH INtURACE LAND MEW AL -01* 0 'STRONG i:isrstiud Life MEWS. co OOmpanies, and Isprevw TS AGENT: lo • se eral First-Cless Btook, eOtakerlskSOrt e Prints, Suitable for Fall. Wear, es, Always In Fashion. erlin Cloth, Foulard Finish. olored Lustres, Prices. table, for Dresseq. f Ladies' 6-4 Fanpy Coatings: , Ornaolettes an.dpentennial S14rts, Newest les. ! I ment of 2equins Newest Styles in DTOSS o for 5 cents, New York Prices. ent of Slipper Patterns. ered Fenders. arpet Warp. two threads elevating ab 13710 cents, value 20 cents. ents, value 10 cents. Paper Collars for 25 cents. STAPLE and FANCY GOODS Which money, which is quite an ohject these hard. times. any in ending EER CHEAP CASH STORE, MAIN STREET. ALLAN 4ITCHELI4 Seaf rth. THE EAP CA.S1-11 GROCRY 1. HAS JUST 'RECEIVED ANOTHER LAR9E ARRIVAL tFRESH GROERIES New Teas, Lower tha _Ever. Bright Demarara Sug r, the Best and _Purest in the Market. A Large Lot of Fresh, Pickles, Sauces, and Canned Fruit.i Good New Currants ,d Ramns. Flour'Feed, and Provisions alwcyys in stock, Also Hams, Bacon, &c. All poodsH Bought from. me Warranted as .I.Reprented or Cash Refunded. 1 . _ _ATO HUMBUG AT. 17 -IE c4 SH GROCERY. Goods Drlivered Charge in Town, Barpurhey or iggmondville. J. FAIRLEY, SEAFORTH. pi.A.R-NrmsT is AND—t 6. WILLSON, S OMII\Ttb-, EAFORTH, • Is welted for it at his old iitaul. on Main Street where you can 'get any quantity of thosic - celebrated I SHARP'S PATENT SULKY HAY, 14AKE$, Those certainly are the 'beta Rakes in the market, bsing the only Canadian Rake that secured a Con/ tennial medal. This rake was parohased, by the Australian Government for the Sidney ExhiliAtion. ilr REAPERS. REAPERS. FEAPES. JOHNSTON'S REAPER, WOODS' REAPER and the CONQUERER COMBINED , I all manufa Lured by tha/ well li*own firm The Massey Manufacturing Company. MAXWELL'S LIGHT REAPER. Thh is something new and should be examined by farmers before making a purchase. It is the i best light reaper in the market. MOWIITO- WOODS' MOWER, BUCKEYE MOWER, SPRAGUE MOWER and others. All of the abOve • I Machines are sold on the following terms: o Equal or No Sale. SIVIIALL IMPLEMENTS. PLOWS Iof all kinds, TUENIP-IEED SOWERS, Iron and Wooden HORSE HOE 5, Caltilatore, • Gang BOWS and Iron Harrows. All Implement Warranted to be What is Represented. 0. C. WILLSON, SEAFORTH. BUTilER. BUTTER. • BUTTER. MONEY ir MONEY! 111/1710 WANTS 1T? • NO TRUCK NOR TRADE I ]:=)77STA_TRaJi OAS"' PAYING TO14 PRICES FOR GOOD DAIRY BUTTE R IN ANY QUANTITY, AS usuAL, Is AT 1115 OLD AND RELIABLE BUTTER STORE, Goderich Street, Seaforthi WE HEAR A GOOD DEAL ABOUT GREAT CLEARING SALES' UST , . • Nit BUT IF YOU S H TO AVOID ALL SITAm5, AND GET A SIGHT 0 THE • • GE VINE THING, , 1 I i 1 --•QI-0 TO 1:)1\TT'S, 1 .: Who thi !Day Begins ta I.Stell Off in REALITY, as he is Bound to Reduce his Present Stock as mirk as possible before moving into his new stand, - 1 1 t . . i 1 , THS IS NO UMBUG. i I ' Call and be convinced that you an get the most Dr, G ds for the least money at DENT'S •ditring hie • i ! : • ' I • 'GREAT G NU1NE Q!..EAR1NG SALE, WHICH IS NOW rING ON. - , TOE MOST 4VORABLE TER Also Agent for se ieral of the best Loan ssolik. goo. Abe Agent ior the sale and purchase of Fame and Village Propert31. A ,NTJMBER 4F FIRST-CLASS Ma PROVED, ¥RMSFOR SALE. $50,000 to Loan at S. Per Cent*, interest.• Agent for the White Star Line of Stear120M 011'10E—Over Seaforth. Morrison's Store,Main.at VOTER LIST -1877. MUNiOtPALflTY OF THE TOWN. SHIP F STANT,R y. CO:UN OF _HURON. 116--"Se:tiltIoen4i6oEtf°" The Voters' List Act of 1878," the lathheerpeebrytiognsiveranetnhtaiotneldhainvethtraeritecon4tm copies required by said section to be so trans - tatted of the List made,pursuant to the sahl. Act,lof all persons appearing by the last revised Assessment Roll of the said Muricipality, to be entitled to 'vate in the said Municipality at Else,' tions for Members Of the Legislative nsaarshay and at Municipal Elections; ami that said Li* was first posted -ap at my alike, at Varna, en the 21st dayof August, '1877, an remains ettavatiere foerthinesposeiedtioLlistE, alneeatoiris anareyealleomismorittp:t any other errors .are found therein, to take ha. mediate proceedings to have the /same more Cot. reoted. accordingiuitc:Amlaw. wpLuRic .KT Clerk of the saldMTI unicipality. ,Varna, August 21, 1877. 507-8 THE COMMERCIAL. LIVERY, SEAFORTII, ARTHUR FORBES, ANTSaputchased the Stock and Trade of -th. lr Commercial Livery, seatorial, from Kr, George Whiteley, bags to state that be intents carrying or the business in the old stand,ana hit added several valliable horses andvehielesto taig- formerly large stook. Nona but First -Class Comfortable Vehicles and G Reliable Horses Will be _Kept. Covered and Open Buggies and Cartage,and epouble and Single Wagons always ready ferns& ecial Arrangements Made With COM. mercia2 Men. Orders left at the stables or any of the hotel, promOtly atteaded to. ,RISEAT ,PROM THE ASHES. THE HUIli3N CARRIAGE FACTORY.. GRASSIE flAS pleasure in inforroing his onskomers and friends that hes again working lull blast in. his new premises on Goderieh street, on the alto of his old factory, 'rhich was destroyed by fire.. )1e, has on hand a n her of Lumber and Light Wagons, a Dem,ocrat and Buggies, Whi:h for Work= nship and Material he elm . recommend. He is determined to fully sustain his old reputation, and will allow none in -the business to snipes him in Workmanship or price. Bepairing and Custom Work promptly' attended to. Black 'thing in finite branches. 502 WM. G-RASS1E. SAW LOoS WANTED. Messrs. COLEMAN & • GOT:UNLOCK, Will pay the Highest Cash Price for SAW LOGS OF ALL KINDS. Also a quantity of ELIWLOGS suitable for manufacture of Hoops. Custom ISEtwifig attended to prempilys. and as Cheap as at any other rnllL- _Lumber of evefy description, also SU** Lath and Pickets al aye on hand, and at the very' owest market priees. 5000 CEDAR POSTS FOR SALE. COLEMAN & GOUINLOCK, , 417 Seam* BUIITTER TUBS. . S. I TROTT SEAFORTH, • Ts. lady prepared to supply all 4customers wl -A- any numb er of bis SUPERIOR BUTTER .TUBS, At 00 per hnndred, Cash. Thise Tubs are well and favorably known to the trade thatittS unneeesnary to say anything in their rec,omines.- _ dation. • • , MRXTROTT also manufactures a small MN, wood Tub, suitable for washing butter in. Orders by mail or otherwise promptly attend- eduto5. • 5. TROTT, Seaforth• LUMBER FOR SAL& • HEMLOCK, First Quality, V per M. PTh •from V. BILLS CUT TO ORDER, - 2).11 Lengths, frOzo. as to 50 Feet, at ths I POiglr MILL, IN VIORILLO • The Subscriber has also a LtJMBER YARD IN SEAFORTRy Where all kinds of Lumber can be obtained. I 4761 THOMAS DOWNS% HENSAI_L PORK FACTORY' GEORGE & JAMES PETTY, D ALERS in. Smoked and Sugar Cured Maar .3-• iced and Smoked Rolls, Cumberland Ba6Ofts- Clear Sides, Mess Pork, de. All Orders by Mail or Otherosic • Promptly Attended to. A Large Quantity always on hand. 485 G. 86 J. PETTY, Hansa NEW AND -CHEAP GOOD1 MRSR P. MARKEY, . DEALER IN GROCERIES and PROYISIO CONFECTIONERY, tte, —. GOODS DELIVERED FREE OF CHAR • MAIN STREET, SEAFORTi, °mos HAYS' HOTEL. , 3:121) 17:1:y1:ph ;0 wagioomyface; this life, and usualiv carry out their will first, strch utter incarnations of self mot conceive that anything is of m importance than their wishes ; ana.t necome in time, if they are not from 'termination at all hazards. They e te•Ciermisernetudetaorashtarenawsehlavtes.theTybowyaanret the world was made for Queer, into beieg with an understanding There aan certain people who Devotees of Self. • neS5 that tomsttihThel rad.: it, I ia oltdth we yei v:w an if they are happy nobo ifthey • play, let those work that dare; if th ;are sad, the world is turned topsyeture if there are siek, there is no health There is always some excellent re ,son for the tyramy of these devotees .self; Theyought to have the best ehai .they have the lame back, or they g • .tired more easily, or their strengi • needs to be husbanded, or they are del .eate anyway, or else they always hal • had it, and they are not comfortable •,any- other, while those who never haN • had it will of course not feel the di fer noveenlefier. stThitend 0 tehs ne,yt tsal. ikeeu It dh e ihnag ot 11• 3 to read it . they mentioned it first an 'wanted it most; they can't bear to hav A't after-. everybody else has read it. an .knows just what they are feeling, at jut this or that page, and nobody cares abou that; they expect it first, which nobod, else :does; they are the oldest, and hay a right as such, or they are the younp est, and ought to be considered, and. s on. They should have the choice en M the table: their appetite is the moS fastidious ; they can't eat everything 6; way some people can; that is the nios nutritious, and it is well known tha they need. the most nutritious; nobod3 else seems to care for it, and everybed3 Imows they want it. Of course every! ; body knows they want it 1 They bate ,taken precious good care of that. That want is a light- they have not bidden nu, der it bushel; it has been "41.111071110Ca by all the trurn.pets in the sky." They never eat any but dark meat, whether there is dark meat enough .left to give -the rest it tidbit of it or uot ; or the' • want the liver -wing, let who else will' prefer it; the beef must be so wader - - done that the rest of the farrilly must: bear a to like it or go without it, so that • they shall be pleased, or so overdone; that for all the others it is “done toi death," in order that they may not loe';. vaiesxheesd bnyevseerettbhee acetrttahine; had itt alt table where they sit, because the condi- IllelltS, such as garlic, are disgusting to! them, whether desirable to others or not;• and certain vegetables never must be cooked in the house under a,ny cir- eunistances, because they cannot and -will not, endure their smell. And for , the rest—the back seat in the coach, for instance—why, it makes them sick Ito drive the other way, and that dis- turbs their whole day. What if it . !makes others sick? They would stare I with amazement at the idea; what is T that to theme they cannot afford to be 15 does. tllding alt this, the pleasure ef pleasing one's self can never last be f yoncl the moment of the receipt of 1 • the pleaspre; but the pleasure of pleas- ing others lasts for days and years, and ;carries on its good work to be added to e the good work of the eternities. 'Jenny Linde Jetiny Lind writes ahn.ost as well as she used to sing. At56 she has become the mother of a daughter, of whom. and • herself she thus writes from Dresden to 1- a friend in Paris: I want to speak to You of my baby. Well, I must tell you that God has given my dear husband .and myself an adorable little girl, born- I - on the 31st of March last. She is the Perfect image of health and heppiness, She laughs and crows in a way to de- light all sympathetic hearts. We have • :given her a little Katharhie among lier other names, but we call her Jenny I need not sa,y in honor of whom. Our boy Walter will be four years old. the 90. .-of August next. Ile is an intelligent batelligent, very religious; -- and when he has been naughty, it is 'tbuching to see the way beprays to God r to make him ,good again, poor little t .ohicken.1 He adores me, obeys me, and I -understand the child completely, for , he is like myself in nature—very inapres. sionable, active, gay, high -tempered, af- fectionate, shy, good-natured, quick to learn, remembering all that he learns, preferring to the finest toys a horrible C old doll, because it is one with whick he ti "has longest played, caring, nothing about e4 dress, but preferring to be loved rather a than admired.. Is he musical? Not the least in the world. That is my great ee despair. But he is religious and I think he will be a Christian_ As to the baby* , cannot say as much. The little ores. - tare eats, drink§, laughs, mumbles over her shoes, and I have nothing to say against her character. My husband is -now in England looking out for a 1e81-,1 "OdheiTear'efnortow:etitilletelilildihoant ealexTtryllt:0,f the vii 6:1 <1•11aln tarYtipoboy Sire1 -an apeaatt e 0f. ei ntieosi°Tttgixesilehnlrnarr-71 im:Yoctf tiN tr ar:\earehvall Iliaw5' 3 I 313 rnaaht:teaA f rIg:111 neblinese)03tfactory ekt:SbDtael jcPahaeol, lacedbase:1E1needa n:rIvIlittie°I recently otytld- ohtehe710ehtlei ri :1 °. sl ly sh orae r Men. e It is n at most ±10 of the ra world have ii been. a in n, but ox bor a out h st Men s ho n la- th wi p ead d stone r h e syrian xp o hots nel -tha t s no nak arr n famou opened. do; Virilliam. He many ni I discoveries in astronomy, actually went by 'too England when a youth from Ger- grIlaeantYstpawhsterneebtembuesciacmiaen.orgItanwisatsta0 s the Octagen chapel at Bath. Unable ivt°hillmeyitta itehelessecohpuem, telt) meairdeeurnosntealacneds discovered a new planet, then cal/ea the Georgium Sidus. From that mo- 1114alause theaw tainmentthat bite but ptere love of science, Jenner, again, An atanissuensftoaattilintEeshih; ombp pt rol etf v pos ifbs yiro: ; pr •..,:oerki:advieonrtotrweonftvvyaceacrinas itniottn,:hiobc:curis_ for 1 litcriverpetrazin:aefaliaactOecirpeoiteunars;dt,filryaaiinnviydanseiacnuogfrneorarlaiceeedfdo.triseoirlithniwLsammtoshnedbpooihryiti:, ed t h ear ,1,:4414nv :7IanaP°ileealSIODI ZEfirstworhedat ii 0bermateriaisthnwith sucb "Li /35171pots and bottles as he could find r aod •the, kitchen. There is a who mus- (lout -roil of eelebrated names in science cong se 13 11 rem