HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1881-04-01, Page 3•
ACK
ER St
; Peois gala
bY rhe God_
11134/151 and
Yearff
11 the taade
ive proirtlat
ed.
ladred. also
&c., at reit.
repalred
defy c»
;0nel-tea.
Tell&
gortb,--we,t
ARKET
TR,
di kind. ot
at the roost
StgaLpieed Beet
Spied
isba bought
EApER
procured la
q• parties to
kg. Several
tt there will
tfOrtii.
3AR
I
if all kinda
Rifies,Re-
Goods is
that he tree
Bone
:dno's Hall,
All kinds
"l'aus, Revel-
: /nate,
Sewing 31:a.
7. -a -s, Skate%
d repaired.
Silver. OM
All work
ended to 01,
Seaforth.
U M
uunierous
re} for their
• years, mad
attention to
ad trade in
hia pren.
tared tolpay
PRICE.
delivered
PRTH.
>f good dry
LsSON
iCTORY
•
ZER
te to Order,
Kea, Thaw
deleintheir
r own
fele both ai
r cannot be
bleats,. .
Give tiffa a
tisfy you sta
bile, having
years.
LBERER.
FERSKIP.
ng between
thee makers
at or Huron,
B- &
al constant.
alS, Wit -
0 affairs of
ikkfallis must
lite the said
ndersigned,
e. And to
rouse be
INTYRE.
6914.
UP.
'BURN.
Mr. Henry
his Vicinity
a general
County, we
ble to give
and to
ble manner.
iglu!, Cut
w& kept on
sthop.
ranteed or
LIAMS.
GAN
osioin all
d harmony
t to write
mposers to
1 attention
oat approv-
d develop -
haat extra
e; charges!
'treet; first
S70
PRS Rail
`ORK and
LONDON
erry, Glea-
ms -low ea!
to persons
nehor Line
e and corn -
e, Seaforth
IONS.
WAY
n on
Tra,
t Weatern
•Freight at
pply
Centralia,
t,
Exeter.
APRIL 1, 1881.
A Little Ragamuffin.
Ile's oovetedwith dirt andwith grime,
His clothes, and his face, hands and feet
Betoken that ho is, in truth
An out -end -out boy of the street,
He's ready for frolie and fun,
For sports that are manly and free;
For deeds that are noble and good,
No boy is more ready than he.
An seat in the parlor he shuns;
And oh, what a wigglesomo guest
Ta he, when oompelled to remain
Dressed up in his Sunday
best!.
He'd much rather be out of doors,
And, had he his choice, he would fain
Go off with a gypsyish band,
Or with Indians scour the plain.
fie minds not a pretty hard scratch,
Nor weeps Rt 9. serious hurt,
And the blushing or blanching of oheek,
J e hid 'neath a coating of dirt.
His eyes like twin lakes glisten out,
Though in mountains of mud. ensphered,
And. manly the heart that's behind
The coat with molasses well smeared.
True beauty is more than skin deep,
And dirt lying thick on the skin
Can harm not the beautiful eon'
That lieth all purely within.
And, spite of his mischievous ways,
That boy is cur pride and our hope,
Who has riot a stain on his hand
That oannot be washed off with -soap.
Yon meet him when out on the street.
His coat and his manners are rough,
He's covered with dirt, bat his heart
Is made of reliable stuff,
To -day he is only a boy,
Delighting in misehief and sport;
To -morrow, you'll find him a man,
And one of the manliest sort I
So don't let's be hard on him now.
And drive him away to the bad
Beoackee ho just happens tabs
A natural, garrotes lad ;
Bat, rather in frolic and fun,
Allow him the length of the rope,
And patiently wait till he bikes
as a bay would who had been brought up -
in a stable."
"Your boys don't read dime novels
surreptitiously
"That is hardly conceiva.ble."
"Why r'
"Because from their earliest child-
hood they have always regarded. me as
their best friend and most intimate con-
fidant. They conceal nothing from me,
because they are not afraid of me."
"Of course you don't encourage either
of them to report -to yon the peccadil-
loes of the other ?"
"No. whole theory and practice
of education and government with both
my boys has been to levelope manli-
ness and to set up in their minds asan
ideal a type of manly frankness, truth-
fulness, courage and purity. I have
discouraged everything that mulitated
against this, encouraged every-
thing that worked for it, and
generally in everything I have
done I have given them the reason in
order that they might understand what
I was trying to make out of them and
work with me to the same end. If one
has not tried it he.wonld be surprised to
discover how readily boys may be made
to feel that parental action is designed
for their good and improvement end
happiness, and how heartily they will
second every effort in that direetion--
precisely as they will help you to get
you' fishing tackle ready if you propose
a day's fishing in which they are to
Join." -
"Perhaps your boys are exceptionally
good boys ?"
"Not atall. There is not a trait of
the prig in either of them."
Moro kindly to water and Reaps "They have in their lives done what
rn
de a tvealattp
t as oppolsitio
TH
pt to dissuade him,
only increased his
excitement and It was evident that his
end was very near, she humored him.
His paints brushes and canvas were
brought :to
arranged the co
that they woul
apery of his sta
a limit
St la
beautiy
d
work with
a frenzy.
"At last
fond the
over all theyworl
He pai
gently bel
Show the
although
tion of th
d his tea al relatives
rings . of he bed so
look more like the
He began his
amounting almost to
" he cried, "I have
which all.rny Iife and
I have been struggling
ted faster and faster, evi-
;Ving at the canvas would
a be, ty that he conceived,
ttwaa truth a sad realize, -
Ono ition. It was late in
began his death -bed
darker and darker as
his sorrowing farpily
powerlesS to ease his
t last it grew so dark
is excitement nOticed
the studio," he cried,
=
to -night. 'Wait until
to the studio," he ,
an effort to rise to his I
pon his strength was
out another word . he
illows dead.
eins of the Earth.
the day w pn
tcture. t gre
e went OIL an
Lhirrt
ate.
hie in,
go to
; DO
te-morro W."
"We muOt gq
claimed, iaalakia
feet. The Itax
too great, j wit
fill back ea hi
t smut
lrast mom'
that even
it.
"Let nit
suddenly.
"No, n
Tappan
If we
*noes in
drawing
the liqui
cis
1t1
)3: E*.POITOR.
1
tty j4ge from recenxper-
1ng1$id, the process of with-
roM. subterranean sources
ora ns of the earth's crust,
tali ely practised in different
ire, is likely to be at-
isaetrous results. The
n, in ordinary mining
&using a subsidence of
surface are largely in
Jos
—epliiiie Pollard. I yoti would call bad things—like other whih
;
I boys ?".parts of the ein
The Management of Boys. j aYes, and I regard their conduct as I tended- * th I
do a had cold, and I have tried to cure risks 11"' re t
A Man of Letters, who haR Two of thrm
Recites his Methodof Home-Train1 it as I would a cold, because it would operations of
and Explainle.:8 8access—A
(.on- • hurt them, and I have taught i them to the suPe
s -
s
took at it in the Sarno way." t creased
rersation of Interest ti Mothers whom.
• ' Do your boys ever fight each in a fluid
caution c
ceitt
en, tile material abstracted to
ortn, in which case no pre.,
taen, 88 in regular
Boys Bother fltem. • o thn
e?" k
'You see," he said, "that 1 raeke ' "Yes, a good deal." tain by artificial sup -
1 "What do you do ?" ' ports tho' ry
basis. I like boys—in fact I like noth- er eying strata. in the
companions of my boys, and in aoveru- i
mines, to l ru
ing them, I make compa.nionship the "I interfere and stop the fight. I treat neighborh od ; f Dudley and Wolverr
that as auother bad cold." hamptonl 'here
ing else so well ; and my theory is that
cquiaintaaiee the subei nee
py
"Way not let them fight it out ?"
"Bacause I don't think the indulgecause sernce that pro
by eultiVating child
in ps.- ssien s good '
rly
ifor them."
you get an insight iuto his nature, and US
are thereby enabled to adapt your 's
teaching to his peculiarities." . n
The speaker was a man of letters, Pti
well known in this city. He has two for
interesting boys, aged respectively 11 to
"If they were twins would you let
them fight it out ?" .
"No ; they see enough of fighting in
the streets."
"What would you do if some street
boys had an altercation with them ?"
"I have taught them they must not
violate a street boy's. rights in any way,
but that self-defence is a right of ,th, making i
"Well, a short time ago I told ono of theirs
and that they must exercise it."
them that so far as smoking was
"Hopportunities they ever had opportunities of tending i
corned I should have no objection
t 1 n
whatever to his smoking, if he thought putting into practibe your
best after he became a man, but that I that point ?" .
"Lots of them. "My oldest boy (11 terranea
being re
head. T
where,. a
process
salt in th
the for
cavities,
overlying
are also
extent in
11
and 8 years.
"Suppose you found that oue of your
boys had been smoking ?"
eachings on P
twomea
should object to his doing so until he
was of age. I explained to him that
the highest authorities had decided that
this practice in youth stunted the
growth, impairet the intellectual and
physical forces and shortened life by
producing or encouraging certain func-
tional troubles that were by this habit come home across the lots, but come
home down Lewis avenue. 'Why ?'
developed into something else after -
said the little fellow. 'Because 'that
ward. Then. he said, 'I shall not smoke
until after I am twenty-one, and not big boy will be waiting 'for you in the
then if I think it hurts me.' I have lot.' 'I don't care,' he replied; 'I am
since found out that vigorous efforts not going to be driven from one street to
another. The streets are public. I am
have been rcia,de by other boys to in-
duce him to sraoke, without success." going to come the usual way.' 'Well,'
"My boys," I observed, "every
said his mother, 'What if he attacks
and then, especially after returning fight him.'
you?"I will lay down my books and
from Sunday School, ask for categoric -
The street boy did attack
now
I him and got him dowa. My boy wrig- ,
information with regard to Various the-
°logical dogmas, which I am entirely gled, until he got his legs free, and then
by vigorous kicking he brought his ad. -
unable to give thorn. They want to versary to reason. Then he brushed
know if certain things that have been
taught them are true, but in my present
state of mind I don't know whether
these are true or not. What's a ma:n
years old) had a difficulty with a boy
about his own age and. thrashedehim ;
whereupon this lad cried out, "I'll take
it out of your little brother' (eight .years
old). Next morning my wife said to the
eight:year-older, 'You. had better not
iw
tie
an
i
uS
the.
sp
ea
Ovfai
blLartIe jy
wi
op.
trti
t
her
in
at
tjfa
nec
Tilt SEAF
USICAL INS RU
MPORI4M.
1..
MEAT
TF1ERS
ORS.
WEBER
PIA.NOVOR ES.
less e Ag ,ts for
otinci4g that
SCOtiT ]3R0
PR
OPRIET
NEW YORK
We h ve great plea sure
we have bee appointed Wh
these M ni cent Instru ment
0 R G
NS. 0 RANS.
HE EXCE SfOR
USTRIAL EXHI-
r,
1880.
13
Leads t e TORONTO -IN
ITION, Septemb
, .
- • .
. .
1 . -
is ample evidence, uu
0 In Conapetition with the 0 leb
of large areas of land,. suede, the EXCELSIOR ORG
constructed mines mo ed ed a Diplonta for special features
mage to property over Tim others, while embodying a
•
3
HO]'FMAN B4OTHRAIS' CHEAP CASH STORE.
-ated Filters of
S were award -
not contained
t the same time
poitts on which any lothr exhibitor re -
an award.
H .E EXCE
They are the Best in
ORGAN OF OTHER M
A gent
uger is greatly increase calved
e case of Cheshire, the
ping up the dissolved
of brine has resulted hi
of large subterraneaa BU'
g nothing to support thp
11
11
a
SI
11
being ho
will prob
aster si
befallen
and. Na
threaten
partial d
expect t
profits o
pumPin
chance o
MOUS 13
conseqn
cartreho
on or nel
salt well
for the r
up origii
in the e
been gr
and is a
II II
ht. Similar processes
on to a considerable
da, not only the salt
ry, which is rapidly ex -
colony, but also in the
ings regioas. By thees
mons quantities of sub
ter in a liquid form ae
, and the earth's crust
mbed in a manner whidh
ne day result in a die
o that which has so ofte
ighborhood of Droitwiel
, and which just no
of those towns wit
tion. It is too much t
anada can give up the SCOTT BR
salt making and petrolen
ustries, on the possibl
all portion of her ender-
, suddenly subsiding ii
but it will be as well the
d e taken not to build towbs
t sites of these wells. Thp
particularly treacheroup
that the brine pumped
ally formed a solid ingredient
nal
Wanted,' on sale,
•J`
LSIOR.
he Market.
MORE
RES SUPPLIED
his olothes, picked np• his books, came
while n eye
tr
home and said to his mother: 'Now I
shan't have any trouble. If I had silent destrti
come around by Lewis avenue he would
to do ? Is he to make agnostics of hie have waited for me another day. He Ne-vad
children at once, or is he to be insincere hasn't been troubled since ; and in all ;
and a liar ?" "I make it a rule," he such matters I teach him that it is. The ap
replied, "never to teach dogmatically best not to "come round. by• Lewis
anything which I don't believe." . avenue." tain larg al
whioh only'
them prioda
to teach my boys anything which
4 " 1 also make it' a rule never
I don't regard as demonstrable. I give
Solid. Sense.
At a meeting in New York City, where
diplomas were being distributed to a
graduating class, the Rev. Robert Coll-
yer was called on to make a few re-
marks,' and, among other things, he.
gave the young men just starting out in
life this advice
Any kind of an honest job is better
than no job at all.
Take a dollar a day for your work if
yon can get no more.
A man's beat frieads are his ten fing-
ere.
When evil days oome, as evil days
will, no man deserves the title of a
gentleman if he does not take honest
work to do, regardless of social in-
fluences.
A good farmer is better than a poor
doctor, and a good. horse-shoer is better
than a bishop who preaches sermons
that nobody wants to hear.
A good day's work of what you can
best do is the hard pan to which all
must come.
Society says one thing, and nature
lltah every
course is n
them facts. If I don't know clearly land irri a
what to think about a matter I tell grain, ve
them frankly that I don't know, and is a cloVer
then I give them the_ coramon teaching several Y13a
_ and. my own opinion of it ; but I in- of the raOs
struet them that my opinions are by no ous, gra,Ss
means infallible ; that opinions grow in al
rest upon evidence, and that by and by it can be n
they must gather and weigh all such ple of `D•
evidence for themselves. I talk to a future is 0
boy of wipe as _feaakly upon a theolog- ahead hut
ical subject as apiiii anything else—as
e
crust, which, however, has
y eaten away by the water,
ted in the form of brine,
can see the progress of t e
,tion.
as an Agricultural'
Country. •
ent deserts of Nevada co
as of fine farming laic
require irrigation to naake
tive. Both in Nevada and
stream, spring and. watl
ized in irrigation, and t
d produces heavy -crop
bies and alfalfa. 'Alfalfa
ntroduced into California
s ago from Chili. It is Oise
!hardy, prolific -and nutriti-
i ever cultivated. It '111
oat any kind of soil wh ire
urished by water. • The p6o-
da, now that the naiaiPg
dubious, can see nothipg
agriculture, a,nd, as it has
strated that the soil is good,
oblem is water. In one or
alleys artesian wells la ve
which give a strong float of
h is used in irrigation, If
ter can be procured in
es of now desert la.nd, elf
own, and. Nevada would
safest cattle' State in
me folks may think t
f
1111
• •
been de
upon the question, for instance, whether the grea
steamer that comes into port. If he two of
or not the City of Berlin is the largest
asked me that question I should say been b
that I did not know; that I heard that water,
others were the largest, but whether artesia
vast str
that the City of Berlin and one or two
she was larger than the others I could would
not say. Then I would tell him that I come
Union
had a friend who could give him exact
I could give him that friend's address in are a
information aboat steamshipe, and that
case he should wish to obtain definite when
information. But I don't let him says another. ods in
flamer
not know." 0 The o
overd
think that I know what, in fact, I do Have a reserve force that will com
"But in Oases where exact informa-
taci
pae
(1
be -
a
e the
Is II ere
r�;41 many cattle in the State
Ie l consider the political Mth-
vo e there, but there are also
qu• erdsof four-foothd ca le.
attl business has been ler ely
eie by over -grazing the railes,
e Sh te still continues to su ly
nian and Eastern m kets
quantinee of fine h
e artesian well experi ent
it ccess, the State of Nev a
fi years from now be able to
e entire Union with
g a number of wells wi be
y ivate enterprise, but it i the
many people in Nevada hat
ut aid should be in some raa
e n the reclamation of this ast
nd. There have i been fore Congress Congress foe the
(aunties for boring arta
e desert lands between'
out when you need it. but th
tion is not obtainable ?" A Dying Man's Vision. the Ca
with
"In those cases I tell him that it is John Pope, pupil of Coutre, associate
not obtaanable, at the Boma time assur- of the New York National Academy, prove
Shoul
ing him that I may be mistaken in the one of the founders of the Artists' Fund will
matter. I give him all the inforriaa-
tion that, is accessible, but-- I never
wain, him to think that subtect is ex-
hausted; and I try to leave' the ques-
tion open for future discussion, so that
his mind is free to think healthily about
the matter iu future. I don't want him
when he has grown _up ever to look
back upon anything and say: 'My
father showed. there a want of respect
for truth. Further, I don't want him
ever to get in his own mind. any lack of
• reverence for truth from an observa-
part. I want him th see that I never pictures m which the background of
Society and an enthusiast in his pro- euppl
fession, died at his home on fourth This
avenue, New York city, a couple of mean
weeks ago, believing that at last, after opini
forty years of labor, he had found the Gevea
secret of perfected art. A man more
throughly enraptured with his calling
never lived. He painted while day-
light lasted, and then spent the evening
in producing the crayon drawing ti so
much admired in the exhibitions at ithe
Academy of Design. Though as a por
trait painter he excelled, the dream of
tion of lack of such reverence on my his life was to produce strong figure
told him as truth anything which was
not true, and that I never told him as
true things which I merely had reason
to erappoSe might be true."
"Bys sometimes pick up bad words
from street boys, and the first thing
you know they are ventilating their
acquisitions upon their nurse or moth-
er.-
"Well, tell my boy that as a gentle-
man's son he is under obligations to
himself to be better and decenter in his
life and. habits than the boys in the
street are; and I have explained to him
that - swearing and blackguardism
generally are wholly unworthy of a
gentleman. A boy who has a gentle-
woman for a mother and a gentleman
for a father ought not, I tell him, to act
landscape would form as effective a
part as the figures themselves. This
was his xuling passion in life, and as
he neared the end the passion grew
stronger.
On his last evening, as he lay
back on his pillows, very weak and ill
with henaorrhage of the lungs, his wife,
who with their two children was
watching at his side, was startled by his
suddenly rising in bed and crying fever-
ishly
"Quick' give me my palette and
brush. I roust paint. Don't attempt
to stop me now, for at last I see it all.
I can do it now, for I have just dis-
cOvered the art through the influence
of visions of. exquisitely graduated
MUSic. It is plain as day at last."
His wife, alarmed at his excitement,
. I .
exte
area
posit On
ian
ay-
mentOf
the
well n
Misso ri River and the Sierra N yada
Monntais, but they have not met1 with
much !Oen I think it would ide a
cheap is •estment for the GovernMent,
as it Wo lid make productive andl open
up to se tlement millions on milliOns of
l
acris of land that now serve no t her
OHO than to hold the world tog ther
to form a pathway for the PalciflC
oad to pass over.—New rork
Seaforth,
ruE
r con:mission.
T H gRS,
Onta/rtoi.
11
SEA RiTH
AGRIC_UL RAL
PORIUM.
SPRING GOOD JUST TO HAND 1
AT
OFFMAN BROTH
•UR STOCK 1$ E.
tore
d L
oods
IP
11
e ma
llow
artme
h,e by,
show c
tihose
very
IMPLEMENT
0. C. WILLSON,
11
•
Z :
Hag now on hand a
SEWING M
UCKEFISMITH.
, •
WA ING--Complaint having been I fla tide
tha lome of the road e in the township:were
jost i passable on account of logs and Cord -
oil le t thereon, a Speciabbleeting of qoiuncul
sirld nd the following resolution p ased
ved y Mr. Blundell, seoonded by Mr Zan-
th t all persona having logs,wood b lother
rue, ns on the highwe.ye within the Town -
be nested to remove the atiMe there -
they will be held responsi le for
or any accidents occurring fro such
us—Carried. '
WM. McCONNELL, lerk.
OPEIETOft,
11 Stook of
HINES I
Consisting of the follOwing kinds:
anzer C.,
an,zer
IMPORTANT NOTICE
To the Farmers of Huroit,
T. meLus, OF K1PPEN
AGAIN READY FOR BITSINESS.
ARlidERS, ' you want good Scotch Diamond
-12 Harrows, ith 72 teeth, the best harrow in
the market, se d in yonr orders at onee to la
Mellis, Kipper' for he has a good supply on band,
ERS, SEAFoRTH,
If you want yo r old harrows and plows repaired
and is still ma ing more to supply the demand.
now is the tirn, to fetch them along. Another
supply of Blo roe's (Seeforth) Plows tin hand.
Thistle Plows Sod PlowFil
104/6.easrtailOgrsurP°ef 418451
Plows and Goa en Plows.
kinds always o hand. El orae -hoeing and
OW COM PLErE. General Blackeinithing o one with neat-
ness and deepatola. T. Meths still holds his high
reputation in his line of business, and his large
increase of tra e during the past yeahrehvessialiithom
am f G th all the Leading It/fakes. more confiden e than ever, shelving t
right man in t e right place. A larga Stook of
0 Gooc.
Barn and Gate Hinges always on hand. Fenn
test Styes.W show a larger stock of Dress
and Garden Ir n Gates made to order. All cue -
tom -work don en short notice and at starvation
prices. A call solicited from ell. Rou. will 14-
. ways find me eady for business. Remember the
Sign:
his season than any 4ther House in the 'Couty.
,.
e this departnie a specialty. .Space does not KIPPEN CARRIAGE WORKS
Waggon , Carriages and Buggies.
. 1
VDGAR & k 11 LLIS, of Kippen, are now mean-
s to enumerate t 1 d erent Fabrics in ithis De-
— facturin Carriages and Wagone on a larger
scale than ev a in order to supply the ever
1creasing demand. Parties wanting Carriages,
t but solicit a all from Every Lady, whether
1 trade will an it to their intercet to give Edgar
Waggons, B ggies, or anything in our line Ot
& Melds a trial. Old Waggons and Bugg*
s or not, as we do not consider it any trouNe to
turned in si - out and inade into new one,-
Waggone an Buggies Be -Painted onhort ne-
.
, tioe. Pepe ng ot all kinds entrusW to anr
stomers through bur stock. Another Ra4 e of
done red s as low goouod mar oriel and good workmaa-
care will ive r ; best attention. All wort
, ship will elle .
EDG-AR & MELLIS, Iippn.1
ustomer's eye. . 689-12
eautiful Black as meres to hand, which takes
_ ..T FA CT.
THOMAS MELLIS, Kippen..
no
f ha
hich
hen
Seeing
ever s
Aid other makes always in k. It is now an
seknowledged fact that t 6 Wan= series of
Sewing Machines are aheadlof any ha the market,
the Weimer C. being
.
OMETHING
OUR MILL
nearly complet
illinery aterial.
ds, is now busy
particulars will b
he Ladies of Sea o
ERY STOCK
Untrimmed Hats, Boninets,
ur Milliner, with a fug staff
S. J. Sha
with th
on, Esq. Treasurer, in Accoulit
Municipality of McKillop.
RECEIPTS.
To balance n hand since last audit $652 55.1
May, 6.188d To cash from Donald .
Scott, bah nee of license fund for
the veer 879... . ..... 8 88
June 26, To -ash from Donald Scott,
first dist bution °I the license
fund for t e ar 1880............- 107 40
June T ash irom County reas.
preparing ,or thing
e Open, of nrer, non resident laud tax.
September , To eash from Provincial
Clergy Reserve money..
To cash from Township
Boundary Line money..
To cash frona Gcenge
Poundkeeper, fine for
298 711
29 93
r Treasurer
e qiven in, next weeks i)aper, 8 enelobrarI 17 28
September
• -
74 and vicinity can depend OM rtvilinuce 50
. DecemberEir 'iledoash trom County
Treaaure,
rl Boundary Line money 182 54
December 8 To -cash from A. Goven- •
look, EN-- U. P., line ..... .... 1 80
15 00
one of the Gran e.4 Displays of Millinery Goods
own in Seaforth on Our Opening Days.
LADIES RE9UIAING ANYTHING
In th Millinery Line biefore the 0 enin,g takes place can
be accommodated, as the Stock is now Very Large, with
more rriving every day
EAUTIFUL
s principal points of exo Ilence being the large
d roomy space under th larm, the adjastabil-
cipai ones being of
of tip its parts; the p
ardennd steel;
are ordially Invited th
AVE MONEY BY
TiqF
CARD
BIM
STEEL FEED
n both sides of the nee
ar, with oil oup; niekle
ith loose pulley; Posit
;
1atsr.edtbalantisre
v take ;
needle
wheel,
K.
IS EXTREMELY LI HT RUNNING,
With little or no noise.i These are some of the
leading features in this Pognlar mathine.
Machine' Oil, and Needles
ALWAYS ON HAND.
Sewing Machi Repaired on
the Sho t7 Notice.
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS
-A full Stook of Ho
Grain Csushers, Sawi
and all Machinery bel
Call and
owers, Straw Cutters,
aehines, Root Cutters,
g to the beefless.
See Our Goods!
Before puroha ing elsewhere.
O. C. WILLSN,
PIANOS
December , To cash from. R—eeve of
Morris, Bluuudary Line money....
December 8.Fe cash from A. Goven-
lock, 3".
December
lector's
Total
'.,fine 15 00
, To total amount of CoI-
oll for the year 188010,504 0.
eceipts
$11,907 Mt
XPENDITURES.
By amoun paid for Roads Bidges,
and ma
By amoun
By anion
ByCanaclulaoll
irect from New York. All t
nal therefor, 1880 $3,74417
of L oal Soboot ran paid 1,149 02
t paid County Treasurer,
te B,48195
paid on Salaries for the
84620
By GIDOIID, paid ss Charities.. . ... 15525
By anima paid for Printing, &o. 80 48
...
By amotua of Errors in Taxes...—.
30 8
By &moans of Interest to Bank of
By°1°immomueral °eel. EllSS
lectron expenses....
By ambu t of Defaulters' List for
By 18a8000.La t
O. a
of balunce on hand to
date,.
12 85
6
8 00
' aear 1
all and _Inspect Our Goods.
BUYINGFROM US.
AN BROTHERS, SOfrorth.
AND ORGIANS.
• The Very Latest an MOB Important Announcement yet
mad 1 the fact that we have
REDUC D THE PRICES
In Pian,04 and Organs,
So tha‘ all may have an opPortunity of enjoyingthe plessures
and henefite of a Musical Us trument. Through our large and
increasing trade we are in a position to eOpply PIANOS
from tbe Best Canadian and Ameri: an Factorise, including
STEINWAY, CHIC ERINC, DECKER, WEBER,
And ethers too numerous to mention, at prime and terms
that cannot fail to give satisfacton. The fabulous prices
charged for Pianos and Organs in this locality, previous to our
appearance on the scene. have been swept away, and not only
low Permit but genuine quip ity in inetrumente biliVe been in-
trodneed. We make it, SpeCialty of the
DOWN I ON 11ORGANS AND PIANOS,
Believing they are lequal, if not superior in quality, to any
Instrument in the market.
Old Instrumerias tgken in Exchange. Pianos
and Organs to Rent.
SEWIIIG MACHINES.
We are Agents fo the Raymond Sewing Machines. which are
kept in stock and redneedlin price. We have a number of good
second-hand Mach nes, hich will be sold cheap.
PHOTOGRAPHING AND PICTURE FRAMING
CARRIED ON EXTENSIVELY.
WADE BROTHERS, Seaforth.
• wilITKE BLCK.
_4805
Expenditure ..... .....$11,907' 801
We he by certify that we have examined the
above ac unts and vouchers therefor, and found
them eo ant.
We also find that the Treasnrer has received
the sum Of 11,168 20, interest of Surplus Fara
secured by mortgages, and has paid out $1,106
06 to 043 different Schools in the Township,
which leaves a balance of $2 14 in his hands for
Sohool purposes.
JOSEPH EVANS, Auditom.
WILLIAM POLLARD,
Dated this 24th day of February, A. D.1881.
k
1 CH4NGE OF BUSINESS
- - SEAFORTH.
MRS. E. WHITNEY,
..3PA.POIR,T1-1,
TIES ES to state to her customers and the
j-ita lia that she has disposed of her Tin and
Stoveusiness to her sons, CHARLES end
) GEORolE WHITNEY, who have had the piaci-
' pal ehsti e of the business tor several years, and •
she ho es the same liberal patronage will be
extended to them that has been aceorded to her-
self for so many years.
ADDRESS tQ THE ELECTORS.
1
SMITH.—" Good morning Sones, where etre you going to 2"
JONES.—" I am gding down to M. ROBERTSON'S Furniture Warerooms, to get some new
1urn1t4e, you see mine in getting pl yed oht and I want to get some first rate fnmithre at very low
priced!. ; Ons baby wants a new cradle arid they say that he has the very best and cheapest in the
eounty," I
AD.pRESS.—lo the Free nd Independent People ot Huron .4
Id. ItIOBERTSON begs to state tha he has removed to the premises lately °sampled by Mr. John
Kidd, ti!.s a Hardwareetore and that e is ow prepared -to furnieh everything in the Furniture line
ill find it greatly to their advent a to call and,
exami
at rern4akably low prices. 'Intending nrola
e his stook before purchasing e1sewiere, Repairing promptly attended toruniture made
a specialty. All work guaranteed. Farm Produce,
to order on very short notice. Piot e fra
featheas, wood and ltrmber taken in Ube ge.
'
HIS UNDE TAKING DEPARTMENT
le, se ormerly, under his own superesion and will be conduotedwith the greatest etre and atten-
tion. His stook of Ceskete, Coffins, 4: hron'
tle &o., will be found complte, end at tho very lowest
rate. Funerals attended in the country. 1. Hearse for hire. Remember the place.
M. .ROBRTSON, SEAORTH.
TE HURON FOUNDRY, SEAFoRTH. F
ig Shop to drine Lathes, Planes and Drills, independent of
Machinery, perties wanting work done cant have it at any
Lay.
5, MILLS AND OTHER MACHINERY
pb:gertrartre with tpheeyarilli:ohnetiunnadee rtsolt:spd
on hair, at the Old Stand, a loll stock of
STOVES OF ALL KINDS
—AND--
Tinihare of Every Dscription. We
aro alo prepared to do Custom
Work of ,Every Pescription aitttie
Shortest Notice, and Cheap.
- Havn g a thorough practical knowledgeof the
,i.
busin es in all its branches, they hope 40 son,
tinue, he large patronage whio` h has beeflven
to Oa o41 and well-known house for mo many
years., ,,
*HITNEY BROTHERS.
W. .-An parties indebted to Mn.)91411co7
p ease settle their indebtedness with her M
once, as the new firm open new books and
old buslnees mast be dosed. Parties 4sbill8110
nettle eau do so at the store of Whitney; BM:
until the lint of October- After that 4ii..tlie
*neonate will he put into ether bands for col-
lection.
685 MRS. E. WHITNEY.
THE ZURICH
SDDLERY, HARNESS,
—AND—
RNITURE ESTABLISHMENT .
EitkON WELL, Propriakm
ItA I& put an Engine into theFitt*
the Plow Grinding and PoOshin
time, as steam will be up every Wo king
ALL REPAIRS ON EN IN
Atte ded to on short notice. On
Clatters Land Rollets,Gang Plows i
and and made to order, Horse Powers Grain Crushers, Straw
Grate Bars, eco. Plow Castings madeto order from patterns
fa shad by parties wanting the
ame. Plow Pointa a specialty, made from Genitine Plow Point
Iron, and werranted hard arid tort . Wil] also Fit, Grind and Polish Plow Castings as the
shot is fitted with Grinding Stones and Emery Wheele for snail work. Will also Contrasts for
En es, Boilers, Grist and Flouring Mlls, Saw Mills turd other Mahinery. W111 nsike Plans ,and
Speefiestions for Affile, &c. All Alte dons onldills or Engines attended to. iU sloo =law via'
natio s on all kind* of Machinery.
8. -As Mr J. S. Bunciman has
Runciman until his return.'
S. kUNCIMAN Seaforth.
gone away for the winer, the business will be oamed. ow by
OD Stook of Harness of all kinds always
LAontobandthieWbgeatihineregiwi.thwehroryth willbing beliee .10:4-11
.
nIig eJp8r
ebil iallthayulloevwer.
price. given to new maul
F RN TURE, FURNITpRE.
colt les requiring furniture. Call ;an4 see my
�tO4k andprices before purchasing e1.evbI5SM
V will save money by doing iso.
HERItON WELL, Zaifsk.
TI S. CAMPBLL, Provineisl LAO Strewn
• andOivilltngincer. Orden by sudlymmpt
ly ttended to.
79 I). S. CA/dPBELL, ltiteltelL
i1
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