HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1879-07-25, Page 6•••
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THE
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HURON EXPOSITOR.
The Fear of •Lig tning.
Ant may be, of Advantage to
T'kose Whose Di•ead i Now, Macon
!
trolla,ble. I
The painful story in last Monday's
papers, of two haply children. killed
while sitting in thei garden seat under
the tree by a Stroke of lightning, will
deepen the horror .of, those who suffer
from fear of lightning, and. a count of
those whose lives are really embittered
by this dread would number scores of
thousands, many of•them persons who
know no other fear.
Twenty years agd, the writer remem
bers turning with a smile to ether
who shrank and. cried at the peals of
terrible storm in a. country house. Th
glare of a bolt coming down the centr
of the room caught !the eye at that ver
instant; the next Was an explosion tha
shook the house, and insensibility fol
lowed. Two men in the sane room
were burned by the bolt, though n
lives were lost; but II have never been
able to smile at lightning again. T
give any idea of the terror left on a nee
vows organization by the 'shock would
involve extravagance of terms.
But, unfortunateV, so far from being
an exception, there are many who suf-
fer the same harassments with me.
Nor are women alone -subject to this
nervousness. I knew a school superin-
tendent and. canal icontractor, a man
over 50, with a large family, who would
Tucks in a closet in a storm, and had
been known to rush from his bed with
fright at lightning. Many will remem-
ber the Professor at Bowdoin College
who always retreated to the cellar in a
thunder storm, although his house was
bristling with lightning rods. The
strongest man -I ever knew, who could
throw another man across the street,
and work a hand -press in a printing
office as if he were a part of the ma-
chine, was'distharged as a reporter be-
cause his desk was vacant every time
there was a thunder storm. The
point above Bach chimney or pinnacle
of the roof, joining the main rod by
curves, not angles, and running into the
ground down to permanently moist
soil. It should be held by glass insula-
tors'fixed in blocks of wood, held to the •
house by wooden pegs, not spiked to the
wall, to give connection with the in-
terior. .A friend, who, afraid of light-
ning, slept half the summer in a
newly rented house, with a, stout
rod, till ore day, happening = to
look at the ground. connectiou, he found
it rusted in just above the sod, and a
athundred times more cTangerous than no
rod at all.
So far from lightning being a danger
a rnost difficult to avoid, it has very sim-
o ple laws, and may be almost entirely
• guarded against by proper conductors.
Y Witness the British navy, which met
t with five hundred disasters a year by
lightning till the ships were provided.
with conductors, by which the fatalities
o were reduced to 50, among ships in the
tropics, exposed to violent storms, and
o thee may be fairly charged to careless-
ness in regard to the conductors.— N.
Y. Sun.
Remembered, but Twisted a
Little.
I know a lady who keeps a boarding-
house—a charming woman, always so-
licitous of the comfort of. her house-
hold, but with a peculiarity. She re-
members faces, but not names. Now
it never mattered to me that. with every
cup of coffee or tea she gave me- I was
re -christened. On the contrary, I
found it very entertaining. But this
did distress her daughter. All in vain, -
she labored with her mother, 'who
smilingly went on in her own way in
spite of her. But there came a time
and occasion when her daughter set her
heart on her mother's addressing a gen-
tleman stranger correctly: All through
the day of the evening on which he was
expected, the daughter could, be heard
to -say, as she followed her mother from
room to room, "Now, remember, his
name is Mr. Cowdryl" to which the
mother in every instance would reply,
"Yes, dear, I'm sure I know it. Cow-
dry." The stranger took his seat at
the table. That blessed woman, with
a smile like an angers and a self-posses-
sion I have never seen surpassed,looked
sweetly across the board and inquired,
'Mr. Dry -cow, do you take cream in
your coffee ?"—Boston Transcript.
mother of Washington was afraid of
lightning, and never failed to retreat
to her room at the first flash of aestorm,
where she stayed till the last flash died
away. The physical Weds of this
fear are most depressing. One wo-
man knows .when a storm is coming
hours before,by a.prostration of strength
- and spirits, accompanied with symp-
toms like cholera. One of the most
dauntless young women I know was
sick in bed for hours after the great
storm at Springfield, Mass., last month.
She had received a shock of lightning
years before, and never fails to be ill in
a thunder -storm since.
Reason and study of the laws Of light-
ning have done much to lessen the fear
of it. It is true we live between two
magazines of electricity—one in the
earth and the other in the air—and a
cloud charged with electricity passing
over a point or body in a negative con-
dition will discharge its surplus by the
very quickest and most congenial me-
diunewhich it finds in. the human body,
a tree, or house, indifferently. But it
is also trite that, provide the lightning
with a convenient and- easy conductor,
in the shape -of an iron. rod higher than
any point of a house and. reaching
well
into the ground, where electricity may
scatter harmlessly in the damp earth,
it will prefer that conducting • rod to
anything in its vicinity, and people who
stay indoors in a well protected house
are safer from lightniug than any
bomb -proof from burstina°shells. Every
accident from this causeI ever knew of
came from careless exposure in situa-
tions known to be unsafe. The first I
noticed after my own accident was that
of a missionary's dauebter, killed. while
_ passi.hg an open window,°just as a wo-
man was on Long Island last summer,
while sitting at her sewing machine.
A young man in Malden, I think-, was
killed while sitting out on a porch with
his chair tipped back and his head
against the knob of the door bell, mak-
ing an excellent connection with the
bell wire. Many men have been struck
while riding into a barn on a lead of
hay. Many will remember tho 'fright-
ful calamity at Scranton, Pennsylvania,
_ where a party of women, out picking
berries on one of the high hills, crowded
into a deserted log hut in a sudden
storm, aild seven were killed. with one
bolt. Steep hills with mineral, veins
cropping out are not places for any one
to live on who wishes to escape light-
ning, and unprotected houses there are
doubly dangerous.
It is .neyer too soon to go in the house
when a storm. is rising. When the
clouds are fully charged with electricity
they are most dangerous, and this fluid
. obeys a subtle attraction which acts at
great distances and. all directions. A
woman told me of a bolt which came
'down her mother's chimney from a ris-
ing cloud when the sun. was shining
overhead. N. P. Willis writes of a
young girl killed while passing under
a telegraph wire on the brow of a
hill, while she was hurrying home be-
fore a storm. Sunday's sad accident at
Morrisania should warn every mother
that it is not safe to let children stay
out of doors till the last minute before
the storm falls. People should ,not be
fool -hardy about sitting on porches .or
by open windows, whether the storm is
hard or not. Mild showers often carry
a single charge -which falls with deadly
effect. It inay or may not be fatal to
be. out ; it is safe to be in the house,
with the windows and doors shut. Tho
dry air in a house is a readier conduc-
too than the damp air outside, and any
draught of air invites it. A hot fire in
a chimney attracts it, so to speak, and
it is prudent for those who would be
sure of safety to use kerosene or gas
stoves in summer, and avoid heating
the chimneys of the house. People are
very. ignorant or reckless about light-
ning. I have seen a girl of eighteen
crying with fear of lightning, and run-
ning every other • moment to the win-
dow to see if the storm was not abating,
unconscious that she was putting- her-
self in danger. If every one would
hurry to shelter as soon as a storm
cloud was half way up the sky, when
certain it was corning nearer, if they
would shut the doors and. windows, and
keep away from them afterward, and
from bell wires, stovepipes. , mantels,
chimney breasts, heaters, and mirrors,
with their silvered backs, which carry
electricity, and keep away from light-
ning rods and their vicinity, and from
metal water spouts, with good rods on
their houses, they might dismiss the
fear of lightning from their minds, so
far as it is a thing of reason and not of
impression.
A good lightning rod. is one that is
thick enough to carry a heavy charge ef
electricity, not less than three-fourths
= of an inch in diameter, which has a
The Angora G -oat in Cali-
fornia.
The introduction of the Angora goat
into California falls very far short of ex-
pectations. The animals have a healthy
look, the fleece is beautiful and very
prepossessing in appearance, the best
qualities of wool command a good price,
the pelts make beautiful robes and
rugs, the meat of the kids is a delicacy,
the tanned skins are good material for
gloves t but the breeding of the Angora
goat for its fleece is a failure in Cali-
forniat. where it has been tried for
twenty . years, as in Kentucky and
Georgia for thirty years, and in France
for half a century. In five years after
the Merino sheep had been brought to
California for wool -growing purposes,
the first importer had made a fortune,
and wool had become a prominent ar-
ticle of exportation. In twenty years
the Angora goat wool has not been able
to obtain a mention in the ordinary an-
nual summaries of exports. The men
who have goats for sale at high prices
tell about shipments of Angora wool,
but the records of the commercial news-
papers know nothing of them, and the
large shippers of wool and the annual
wool circulars take rio account of them.
So far as is generally known, no herd
of goats in that State, yields enough
wool to pay the interest on their 'cost
and the expense of keeping them, and
every person prominent as the owner of
them looks for his main profit not to
his wool clip, but to the purchase of his
bucks by ignorant and deceived persons.
The production of Angora wool may ul-
timately be a success in California.;
hitherto it'has been a complete failure
as a source of profit to those who made
the venture. It is reported that there
are 20,000 high-grade goats in that
State.—Con.
•
Terrible. Fate of a Missing .
Ship.;
It will beaamembered by many in this
community that several years ago the
ship Alaska left Burrard Inlet for Chi-
na with a cargo of lumber. She ar-
rived at her destination in safety, and
was announced to have Sailed again for
this port to' receive a second cargo.
Time rolled on, and at the expiration of
thp usual number of days allowed for
the passage from China, the good ship
Alaska was announced as due. She
failed, however, to put ;in an appear-
ance ; but this was not considered at
all extraordinary, as voyages from
China vary in duration as much as
voyages to or from any other plaoe.
But the. days she was overdue gradually
creptento weeks, and the weeks into
months, and after she had been report-
ed "missing" for a long time the con-
clusion arrived at was that, she had
doubtless foundered or had become the
victim of foul play. Years passed by
- and no- word came of the rescue of any
one who had been on board the. ill-
fated ship, and at last the faint glimmer
of hope, which had sustained the hearts
of the friends of officers •and crew, died
out. The wife of the super -cargo of the
vessel, who had been "watching and
waiting" for many years, succumbed to
the effects of the terrible suspense, and
was soon followed by her only child,.
The fact that during the time which
would be necessary for ,the Alaska to
make the passage to this port.there had
been no heavy winds or storms was the
main reason for the suspicions of foul
play; and amongst those who- enter-
tained.them was a gentleman who hap-
pened to meet a drunken sailor in a sa-
looe in Japan. The oldadage in vino
veritas was again verified (as will be
quickly seen), for the sailor quickly bet'
• gan to give a disjointed _ narrative of
intitiny and bloodshed. The ,gentle-
man kept the narrative in his naemory,
and, following up his determination to
unravel the mystery surrounding the
fate of the ship, encompassed the are
rest of several sailors who had been in-
criminated by their drunken compan-
ion. One of these sailors admitted that
he had belonged to the, crew of the
Alaska, and made a full confession of
the circumstances concerning her loss.
He stated that when hilt a few days
out from Hong Kong, sailing under a
light breeze off the coast of Japan, the
crew n.autinied, and without a moment's
warning threw overboard the second
mate, who was the only officer on deck
at the time. Hearing a cofnmotion the
captain and first officer rushed up, and
were immediately -murdered and given
to the sea. The supercargo, Mr.
Thorndike, brother of the owner of the
ship, who had $5,000 in coin on board,
shared the same fate as the other offi-
cers, and the crew, having secured the
money and everything else of value
that could be readily moved, set fire to
the vessel, and, taking to the boats,
pulled for the coast of Japan. Having
landed in safety-, they divided the spoils,
cherishing the hope that every trace of
their foul deed had been obliterated.
But time, the certain avenger of crime,
has proyed that their hope was fal-
lacious, as, following closely on the con-
fession above referred to, the arrest of
all but two of the criminals was effect-
ed, and they will in all probability
quickly be called on to pay the penalty
demand
d by justice.— Victoria Colonist.
Th Patriarch of, Turtles.
The Pilatka (Florida) Herald says :
We received a turtlea few days ago on
whose back was marked the date 1700,
and also the Spanish coat -of -arms, in-
dieating that this old resident was in
existence one hundred and seventy-
nine years ago. What changes this old
fellow of the deep has seen 1 The rise
and fall of empires, and the continent
on whish he partly lived, emerged. from
the thraldom of despotism, with the
rise of a republic that has become the
great conservator of freedom, the ad-
vancement of civilization, and the glory
of the world. , A few words in Spanish
on the shell were translated, which say:
" Caught in 1700 by Herando Gomez, fn
the St. Seba.stin, and was carried. to
Matanzas by Indians ; from there to
the Great Wekiva " (which is now the
St. John's River). On Tuesday, the
17th of June, the turtle was turned
adrift on the St. John's River at Palat-
ka, with the inscription on his back :
"Eastern gerald, Palatka, Florida;
1879." It may be supposed that by
this time the old fellow has scented salt
water, and gone over the bar at high
tide, and probably a few generations
hence may take him up at a Spanish
port on the other side.
•
Courage in Every Day Life.
Have the courage to discharge a
debt while you have the money in Lyour
pocket.
Have the courage to do without what
you do not need, however much jyour
eyes may covet it.
Have the courage to speak your mind
when it is necessary you should do so,
and to hold your tongue when it is pru-
dent you should do so. '•
Have the courage to speak to a friend
in a seedy coataeven though you are in
company with 4 rich one, and richly
attired.
Have the courage to make a will and
just one.
Have the courage to tell a man why
you will not lend faim your money.
Have the courage to "cut" the most
agreeable acquaintance you have when
you are convinced that he lacks princi-
ple. "A friend should bear with a
friend's infirmities," but not with his
vices. .
Have the courage to show your re-
spect for honesty, in whatever guise
it appears; and your contempt for
dishonest duplicity, by whomsoever ex-
hibited. -
Have the courage to wear your old
clothes until you pay for your new
ones.
=Have the 'courage to obey your Maker
at the risk of being ridiculed by man.
Have the courage to prefer com-
fort and prosperity to fashion in all
tin
Have the courage to acknowledge
your- ignorance, rather than to seek
credit for knowledge under false- pre-
tences.
Have the courage to provide enter-
taiuxnent for your friends 'within your
means—not beyond.
•
A G-ciod Work.
I We heard lately of a joke on an edit,
tor, who going away, left his paper in
charge of a minister. During the min-
ister's stay in his sanctum, the follow-
ing letter came from a country sub-
scriber: " You know d— well I paid
nay subscription to your paper the last
time I Was in town. If I get any more'
such letters from you as I received last
week, I will come to town and maul
h— out of you." The minister an-
swered : " I have been trying to maul
that thing out of the editor for ten
years past ; and if you will come to
town and maul it out of him, then,
my dear sir, I have twenty members of
my church I will also get you to oper-
ate on."
After war, pestilence and intemper-
ance—colds lead to the greatest de-
struction of human life, mainly because
it is considered by many to be of no
consequence, and hence systematically
neglected, until a simple, curable dis-.
ease is converted into a fatal .pulmon-
ary one. Every one troubled with
what is called a slight cold or cough,
should immediately use "Bryan's Pul-
monic Wafers." They allay irritation
at once, and exert a most beneficial
fluence on all the bronchial and pul-
monary organs. Sold by all druggists
and country dealers at 25 cents a box.
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Great Western Railway.
_Trains leve Brussels station, north and south
as under:
. GOING NORTH. GOING SOUTH.
Mixed 10:25 A. M. Mail 6.15 A. M.
9:08 P. M. Acco12.15 A. M
Accom........m
Mail ...... ....2:58 P. M. Mixed..,.....7:95 P. M
Grand Trunk Railway.
Trains leave Seaforth and Clinton Stations as
follows :
GOING WEST— SEAFORTH. CLINTON.
Express.. .... . . 3:10 P. M. . 3:30 P. M.
Express 8 52 P. M. 9:15 P. M.
Mixed Train......5:35 A. M. 6:08 A. M.
Mixed Train._ _11:35 A. M. 12:35 P. M.
GOING EAST— SEAFORTH. CLINTON.
Express ... ..... , . 8:00 A. M. 7:37 A. M.
Eress T • ...12:58 P. M. 12:35 P. M.
Mixed Train ......4:15 P. M. 3:30 P. M.
Mixed Train.....10:27 A. M. 9:55 A. M.
London, Huron and Bruce.
GOING NORTH— Mail. Mixed.
P. M. A. M.
London-, depart 2 15 . 5. 55
Exeter 3 85 8 0.5
HensellI 3 62 8 34
Kippen .. 3 58 - 8 44
Brucefield 4 08 9 00
Clinton 4 25 9 45
Blyth 4 52 10 32
Wingham, arrive 5 25 11 30
GOING SOUTH— Mail. Mixed.
AM. A. M
Wiugharo, depart...,10 55 7 00
Blyth 12 15 7 85
Clinton , .1 10 8 01
Brumfield. 1 40 8 18
Rippe& 1 57 8 28
Henna 2 05 834
Exeter "2 50 849
Express.
P. M.
6 15
7. 85
7 51
7 58
8 08
8 25
8 52
9 25
Express.
P. M.
6 15
6 55
7 24
743
758
8 04
823
NATIONAL POLICY.
0 ng to"the Beneficial E.ffects of the
National Policy 1 have
RE UCED THE PRICE OF ALES
La
Cos
Ru.
AS FOLLOWS.
ing's Ale, in bottles, per dozen) $1.
att's Ale, in bottles, per dozen, $1.
ove's Ale, in bottles, per dozeu, $1.
sell's Ale, in bottles, per dozen, $1.
A D ALL OTHER LIQUORS
IN PROPORTION.
R MEMBER THE PLACE :
First Door North of Kil loran & Ryan's
Grocery.
TROIKAS D. R,YAAT.
N. B.—All Orders Promptly Delivered at any
residence in Snfortii or Egmondville. 603-13
THE CHEAPEST GOODS.
.A.. _ .A. TT 1_, 111 ,
IS NOW RECEIVING A
A -Very Ldrge Stock of alt kinds Of
Groceries and Provisions.
A Fresh Lot of Canned Fruits, and
Honey and Jellies.
A Fresh Lot of those very choice
Teas in Black, Green and Japan.
All Grades of Sugars, 'Syrups and
Molasses.
Currants, Raisins, Prunes, Dried
.Apples, Oatmeal, Cornmeal,
Cracked Wheat, _Pot Barley, Flour,
Shorts, best of Hams and Bacon.
All kinds of Fresh, Garden Seeds,
lop Onions, Potato Onions and
Set Onions and Potatoes.
Crean. Crocks, Milk Pans, Flower
Pots, &c.
Lard, Butter, _Eggs, and a good va-
riety of .Soaps.
Soda ;Biscuits in 3 pound boxes, at 25c .
and pure ground Coffee. Also tha t
Celebrated Erfglish Excelsior Horse an d
Cattle Fond. All are invited to come and g et
some of the Cheapest Goods in the Dominic, n.
Don't forget the place :
,591
A. G. AULT'S GROCERY,
Main Street, SEAPORT 11
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
01 Evory Description Cheap.
EAVE TROUGHS AND CONDUCT.
ING PIPE
Put n
on the Shortest Notice and Warranted.
Spe Inducements to Cash, and
rompt Paying Customers.
JOAN KIDD.
HIR DRESSING.
MISS STARK
IS :1 8 to inform the Ladies of Seaforth and
Vi inity that she is prepared to make up
SWI ICHES, CURLS, BRAIDS, &c.,
I the Latest Fashion from Combings.
Price Moderate, and all orders punctually at-
tended to. A Call solicited. Residence—Main
Street, leaforth.
HENSALL.
F
it
L
UR
St
owers
ottos,
y. G
598
RNE ROOMS,
ooms arenow open for the summer trade
aloof Millinery new and fashionable.
Feathers, Ornaments,Berlin Wools
c. Dress and Mantle aking special:
d • fits guaranteed.
MARY MITCHELL, Hensall.
T II E 0-0 I 33% 1\T D 1 0 1\T,
1879—
••••• -•••••••\•.•••••••••/.....or•-•••"•••••••••••/
1879
R. JAMIESON, OF THE GOLDEN LION,
HAS A LOT OF
REMNANTS OF DRESS GOODS, TWEEDS, &c.,
Which he is Anxious to Sell Out Cheap.
REMEMBERTHE PLACE:
GOLDEN LION, SEAFORTH.
•
D. D. ROSE, FAMILY GROCER,
SM1A...FORTI-1
Has Pleasure in announcing to his Friends and Cus-
• tourers that every Department is fully stocked with
First–Class • Goods. Hundreds' of Families testify
to the value given at _Rose's Grocery in the past, and
he looks forward to the future with every confidence.
No Prices quoted. Come and see, and be convinced
of the advantages offered. No trouble to show Goods
and give samples. Flour, Corn, Oatmeal, Buckwheat
Flour, Cracked Wheat, Hominy, &c., always kept in,
Stock. D. D. _ROSE, Seaforth.
.••
•
ADDRESS TO THE ELECTORS.
SMITH.—" Good morning jonos, where are \ yori going to ?"
JONES.--" I ani going down to M. ROBERTSON'S Furniture Warerooms, to get some new
furniture, you see mine is getting played out and I want to get some first rate furniture at very low
prices. Our baby wants a new cradle, and they say that he has the very beat and cheapest in the
county."
I)DRJEJSS.
7o the Free and Independent People of Huron : •
M. ROBERTSON begs to state that he has removed to the premises lately ocumpied by Mr.1 John
Kidd, as a Hardware store, and that he is now prepared to furnish everything in the Furniture line
at remarkably low prices. Intending purchasers will find it greatly to their advantage to call and
examine his stock before purchasing elsewhere. Repairing promptly attended to. Furniture made
to order on very short notice. Picture framing a specialty. All work guaranteed. Farm produce,
feathers, wood and lumber taken in exchange.
HIS UNDERTAKING DEPARTMENT
Is, as formerly, under his own supervision, and will bo conducted with the greatest care and atten-
tion. His stock of Caskets, Coffins, Shrouds,
&e., will be found complete, and at the very lowest
rate. Funerals attended in tho country. AHearse for hire. Remember the place.
•
•
M. ROBERTSON, SEAFORTIi.
FANS. FAiNS.
z
co
z
FANS. FAN6.
m
z
fn
A Large Line of .Black and White French _Dress
Fans, Received Direct fromthe Factory, at about one -
hall the usual prices.
Call and See my Fifteen cent Fans—the same as
sold last season, for Twenty -Five cents.
C. W. PAPST, Cardno's Block, Seaforth.
•
'SNYd -SNY.d -SNVA "SNVA
JUL I 251 1879.
H
11
m
t4J
FTj
0
c.0
cfi
743
N
o z
'ON.I/kliAl.00
--1
0
S
PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRIES.
Why go abroad for your Fuirnitur4
when you ..can get as Good Value
for your money in Hensall asit&
any other Town, in Canada.
SYDNEY FAIRBAIRN
Has now on hand a Splendid Stook of
OF ETERY DESCRIPTION,
Which he will seli at Prices to
. Suit the Times. -
UNDERTAKING
IN ALL 1TS BRANCHES PROMP1.
LY ATTENDED TO,
Also a First- Class Horse
Which he will furnish for FUNERALS on res.
sonable terms.
Contracts for Buildings of every description
taken on most reasonable terms. Material fur-
nished if desired.
Remember the Herman Furniture and under-
taking Establishment.
576 S. FAIRBAIRN.
THE CONSOLIDATED BANK
OF CANADA.
CAPITAL, - - $4,000.000.
CITY BANK OF MONTREAL,Intorporate41833
. and ROYAL CANADIAN BANK,
Incorporated 1861.
SEAFORTH BRANCH,.
DOMINION BLOCK, MAIN -ST.
SEAFORTH.
Drafts on New York Payable at sai
Bank in the UnitedStates.
111111, of Exchange on London papa
at all Chief Cities of the 'United Kingdom.
•
AT HIS POST AS OF OLD.
J 011 INT WA. IR, ID, .A_P10
While returning thanks to his many customers for their patronage in the
past, also to those who so liberally patronized his !late sale, -he begs to
inform them and as many new ones as will fovar him that lie
WILL STILL BE FOUND IN HIS OLD STAND
As ready and willing to serve them as before.
HARNESS, TRUNKS, WHIPS AND GENERAL FURNISHINGS ON HAND
AS USUAL. ALSO HARNESS MADE TO ORDER AND RE-
PAIRING PROMTTLY ATTENDED TO.
JOHN WARD, SEAF'ORTH.
HAY AND OATS TAKEN IN. EXCHANGE FOR HARNESS.
ITOTICEL
All Accounts due the Goderich Foundry and Manufacturing Com-
pany, Limited, must be promptly settled to avoid costs. No persons
are authorized to receive payments or make settlements on behalf of
the Company except the undersigned.
HORACE HORTON, President.
JOHN CHRISTIAE, Secretary.
GODERICH, June 13th, 1879.,
INTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS.
TRUSSES. TRUSSES
TRUSSES
For the Radical Cure of RUP-
TURE accurately Fitted by a
Competent person at
ROBERTS' DRUG STORE.
All the Latest Improved Styles
on hand at Moderate Prices.
011POSITE CAR_D_NO'S 11AL4
SEAFORTH.
BROADFO OT & BOX,
SEAFORTH,
UNDERTAKERS, &O.
FUNERALS' ATTEN.DED UH Ti
SHORTEST NOTICE.
COFFINS AND SHROWIS
ALWAYS ON HAND.
HEARSE FOR HIRE.
by
etil
Nms
erW
took 'oit
suse-,o.shes
I more. -an
as
- say
yo
oke do,
a sw
Layi
keli
-hate ti°
Ur th
wife
31T -Y
bulse-o
Ahatinan ru'
0
thst iS
imisihOnti
-japnibi.S7A)
wake the ca
dle, Those
whatea
One mane
Do yoube
tsr, ana the
but is Pr°
res
allotting an
esugtt the
this pojtit he
g it is Iwzt BO
var.') A
bamougtor
Joel on the
liises.sy ohs:*
our" in.Bro
e
A, correspo
littin gives t
thrilling aee
that city 4
bead of' ca'
street, drive
same time
walking ne
irfi/yoars
three or four
vild vi
a large bl
ra
nal, seeing
ing the othe
could not ru
bill, The
edto head t
not being a
vhen the ho
Mary Lawre
skeet, and s
once conapre
hounded an
&egging aft
Indian let g
prising for o
tightened h
and at <nice
BOW was wit
little child,
Beale& A.43
110re en wh
risked her 11
very fast.
for me to tel
chna, and it
endeavor, th
- tow was app
Puttiug her:
'when Miss
over the -co
the ebiid
The frighte
cloak flying
was the cow
in time to. h -
Over her.
cloak off he
etarge, the
42M, and s
the base
saddle and r
laY 'word f
11ea5 gre
never before
Lives g
unwary, eta
„let think tai
'4 Sim Ding
-What Ate di
1
up int
tilg -thrown,
Ind frighten
41, man, ana
e."
Rough Ti
bona the ho
hel tubs,:
tS
SI in -
ha
' !Bd°'Irtoathvee
._.
raise
voa
4,,jxcal'Ilsere:tiela5r5InultiltetililelWial)
pro
ri:r"oie
a e tato
Zito -the stor
1.11°I)Per
_ a tea.
hien it Iii
' for
at es.