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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1881-07-01, Page 64 6 assenene E HURON E POSIT° JULY 1, 1881. issass.......sissaimssmmwmarmamm' General News IteDas. old hunter tripping over a --Sixty thousand Jews leaving Rue- mediately seized by the ; sia are expected to settle in Spain. struggle for life or death —Lewis Potter, imprisoned in con- Dennison called to the bo nection with the Gthe canoe and save himslasgow Bank frauds, I died on the 7th ult. did.. The little fellow, wh I • —The late Eli Bates bequeathed eight years old, paddled 11,40,000 for a monument to be erected distance of nine miles to , t at Chicago to the late President Lincoln. settlers, who returned wi I —G-eorge D. Runasey, a wealthy grain found the lifeless remains dealer, of Chicaso, died a short time sadly mutilated, an arm, ago, aged sixty. Chicago made in 1839 the other bones being broker first shipment of grain ever made from that city. —On the 22nd. June, in Satthern California, a fire swep ov , cooper shop at Waterloo village, went acres of wheat and other grain, ont with a child of his and a couple ofl destroying everything in its course, in - other little girls to have a row en the, cludiag many farm houses, barns, and dam. By some accident the boa was' much farming machinery. upset at a plaoe too d i3p to ade —There is now being -erected over ashore. The boatman as cons elled the grave of Mrs. Cross (George Eliot), to swim for his life, and had all he in Highgate Cemetery, a hand.some me - could do to assist the ch. ren to hold morial stone. It,is in the form of. an on to the slippery bottom fi the boat, obelisk, twelve feet in height, of blue or Fortunately for all of them - Mrs, Aberdeen granite. 4ence from —The Chicago Tribune gives as the incidence of reason why Massachusetts has se many Mr. lade unmarried women, that "spare and s. his ease in angular girls are entirely out of fashion, at was just and Massachusetts men go outside the est to him, boundaries of New England when they s in pesition., seek for wives." oat he lost —The Panama Canal enterprise is in the seeing of a bad way. Several stations have been in tine to abandoned, and the brigades difibaiaded. Many of the engineers have returned trength had already finnk home, and the workmen have been dis- t was recovs charged. There is a good deal of sick - t safely to ness among the employees. of fortunate —The Rainy River colonists find the activity and place better than they expected ; the a's very near soil is clay loam, with clay subSoil, and cident was timbered with- oak, poplar, halm of Gilead, apruce, elm and balsa)* It is a fine fruit country, and afforols room for thousands of emigrants. 1 —A Chinaman who died in, Boston - had a Christian fnneral, the services be- ing conducted in church by a Metho- dist clergyman, and interpreted to a hundred or naore Chinamen present by one of their own countrymen. The re- mains were not shipped to Chi —It is announced that th mental exaavation of the prop nel under the English channe ceediug at each end at the rat miles a year. In six naonths, pected, a tenth of the whole will be pierced, and a tunnel feet in diameter completed in -five years. —Dr. Carver, the famous rifle shot, now in England, was challenged by a marksman called De Jough, who was said to be a Boer from the Transvaal, and a great shot. They shot several matches, when it transpired that Mr. De Jou& was Ira Paine, a well known professional of New York. —A great sensation has been caused in Mentevideo by tho decree forbidding newspapers on pain of a fine of 5,000 pesos to discuss politics or create ob- stacles for the G-overnmetit. Several deputies and senators have resigned. The legations are crowded with jour- nalists hiding from the authoritioe. The printing offices of three opposition papers have been attacked and one compositor killed and three injured. —Opium smoking threatens, to be- come -a, deep-set vice of the people of San Francisco, and the authorities are de -ns the wa ins - 'ear, w en a n d. run[ to The servant, where Servants are em- , whi h ployed, and the goodi housewife whos 0 WAS 'only husband; cannot afford the luxury of he ca oe a serve, t girl, prepare the pot on Seta he n arest day.' The beans are parboiled until t hi and skim c aoks : they are then placed f De nison the oe skated Boston bean pot, whic a leg and is earthen and much smaller at the to The than at the bottom. , Salt is added o suit the taste, and soinetimes a spoo ful of Molasses. A piece of salt por about aS large as the i first three finger is sliced' through the! rind at distanc s of an eighth of au inch and leesed n the top of the beans, or ' rat er imbe d.ed i theta until thp surface is eve Then the pot is taken to the bakery, a chee received, and: upon -presentati n of th cheek in the morning the Sand y breakfast is returned ready for t e tableS. The streets are full of be n pots thia their bearers. They go to t e cottage, tq Beacon Hill and to Nor h street. The bean the great levell r in Bopton society. On the farms New England the plan of baking is o make a rousing fire in an old firepl and when the wood has been consum d the pet of beans is buried in the co s and ashes, where it remains until Su day morning—and these are the best baked beans ever ate. Cha es$ of Fa$hion in Wo 1. - theta from the same oven. -It is a Mat- ter of curiosity to ',See the bean pot going to the bakery on Saturday night. sue- oeeded ia killing the bear r.nd t en re- turned with the body. —On Sunday, 12th ult.,' man )vork- • 200 ing with Mr. W. Ste ing in the 1 Ii I Archie Lade saw the oo her house, and by a rare fortunate circumstance was at the moment takin, shirt and pants, and his b at the edge of the dam ne unloosed, and with the ofY Rushing headlong to the not an instant in pulling the trouble, arriving just save the children, whose quite given out. One had before he reached them, b ered, and all were brone land. Thus by a chain circumstances are] by th pluck of Mr. Lade, what being an extremely sad prevented. a. experi- sed tun - is pro- of three t is ex- distan ce f seven now raiding the opium. With hope of stamping it att. Boys are in the habit of going to Chinese wash - houses, and there they become initiated into the use of thelorbidden drug, while the hoodluins and loose wo en who smoke opium are fast growing in num- bers. —One day lately a man named Robt. Thompson, for years a resident of East Williams, died iu the House of Indus- try within half an hour of his being brought there. He had just sat down to dinner, and was in the act of swal- lowing a piece of meat when it stuck in his throat. The keeper with a number of inmates went to his assists,nce and succeeded in removing the impehiment, but the effort had proved too iaauch for the old man's strength, and he died in a few mieutes afterwards. He was 88 years of age. --A brave rescue of two children was How to Drive a When a woman has a into the coop, she takes skirts with both hands, quietly at the delinque "Shoo, there !" The h look at the object to co Hen, en to drive old of her hakes them t, and says h tak s one!' Vince erself that it is a woman, andtn staliks mae jestically into the coop. A man doesn't do that way. He goes ont doors and says: "It is singular nobOdy ca4:1 drive a lien but me," and picking up a, stick of wood hurls it at the oi endin biped e, .you thief.'' .her !reason d of tir yard. es aft r her, head I down, by en a,s- uit cains aud man in 010 er the barM d around the he cop,an ly an xoited and observes: "Get in th The hen immediately lo and dashes to the other e The man straightway da She comes back with he her wings out and follow eortment of stove wood, clinkers, a,nd a very mad rear. Then she skims tin and over a fence or two, house, and back again to all the while talking as hen can tall, and all the ed by things convenient and a man whose coat is buck, and whose hat is o and whose perspiration By this time the other h out to take a hand in t help dodge missiles, and1 every hen on the place eh the morning, and puts on goes down the street, a has every one of those h counted in two minutes. • while r h oii th follows rating, 59,W •• he erounde limit, come te and i filar old in ng a Alla W01:0 au ed and a no s hav e deb ra be s th the hou 1 Swiss Far I have wondered if awkward ways of doing of -Egypt as are practise farming implements wo able if they were not mon Cain certainly made scythes than are used h are simply long sharp hole near the top, and a stick in the hole for a forks are big and awkw as heavY as our stable f oftener threshed with til flail than otherwise. do not tramp it out wi would be a slower proce be slow is made a specia The plows are the cli tural montrosities. cumbersome things; I wholly of wood, with the made at Belleville the other day. Two ed on two wooden vshe littlie boys who had ventured Some dis- tal:I& from the shore cm a Jain of logs oa the river, were cut off from the land -by the breaking up of the jam, which left them floating on four or fliVE isolat- ed logs. A young man named John Church after two failures to swim to ut, final - ore with n return - similar them, owing to the swift curr ly reached them and swam as one bay on his back. He the ed and rescued the other in manner. -eel_ despatch from Winni Mr. J. W. Sefton has returne prospecting tour of the coal fie ds on the Rossian River. Ten borings were made in different localities defininp, accurate- ly the situation of the coal. In four of them coal was struck at a depth of 25 feet. The seam varied in thickness from two to six inches, and extended in a northwesterly direction, being at least three-quarters of a mile in breadth. Further search and deeper borings were prevented by the fact that the implements provided were inadequate. Dr. Haanel, of Victoria College, Co- bourg, has pronounced the coal to be a very supelior article of the bituminous kind. —The United_ States Circuit Court, Judge Dundy presiding, was occupied for three days recentry in hearingbthe case of Miss McGowan against the city of Omaha. The plaintiff is a school teacher by profession, and is well known in Omaha. Last year she fell off an unprotected embankment of a street that had been graded, and received serious wad permanent .in arias, for which she brought suit fir r $15,000 damages. The city offered her $500 to settle the matter, but this was refused. She was represented- on the trial by Messrs. Wakelv, Webster and Gaylord, while City Attorney Manderson ap- peared for the city. Mr. Webster in his closing remarks to the jury made a masteety speech, full of eloquence, logic ad wmpailw, and it affected every one in the court room. The jury, after being out but a short time, re- turnecl a verdict of 54,000 in favor of the plaintiff. —The following are the particulars of the killing of a hunter by 4 bear ire the township of Carlow: The famous old hunter and trapper Dennison, of the Big Opeongo Lake, and formerly of Dennison's Bridge, on the Madawaska., having set a trap for a bear, went to ex- amine it in company with a little boy. It appears that- the bear had got _caught, but had broken the chain to which tbe tfrap was attached, and came upon them quite unexpectedly, and the eg says: from his for coal carts. My fr' such a plow yesterday o half deny ownership no of it. It was pulled by men were driving the men were holding the p lowed and looked on. a day plowing half an a I am glad the whole men, cow -drivers, and a and not a part proper o sat on a stone wall for reflected whether it Americans could not m farming profitable, with complete instruments the face of the fact th not only make' a living, on a poor soil, and with ed tools of Egypt to wo I am certain the who economy; in the savin little things that shall the waste of those awk and these slow method not a blade of grass be si vines here, nor a weed' There will not be a twi rot or a potato undug. private garden could ne better kept than is the Switzerland, and culti only bestowed on hoth is common her to everb foot of ground is left uik may take a good deal of slow hands to do it bulp a chip nor a straw is w "We put this little little thing together," "and at the end of a ye good deal. One can or bad farming on lan or ten hundred dollars • g. re are such h'iags outside ere Thp be laugh - t ous Tabal- e ter formed . The axes ges with a rt, straight ndle Hay ,. aacrdiatinwiciise ld fashioned onder they f the oxen. It and how to s udy here. - of agrical- are, great ade !alro.ot b am; mount - big enOugla used jut ur farm. , I henlI think cowls. 1 Two s, and two uI 'fst ywe h cern, ploys - were hired, he farm. ! I an hour and ere 1 possible small special eir Boil aid farmig, in hese People save, money e old fashien- :et. ere o a , elan d Imp Th re, will en ameng the on the faxen. of wood left to gent enictu'is Ie cleaner or ole farrn , in tion, ouch as is s in Anierida, arm. Not - a 3alred. for. It Cm.° with sildh it is done. Not ea. • ng end that • naY frieDd, it Makes . a afford waste fiive, or Big, acre or recce." 1 Jhn L. Hayes, secretary Natio al Asso iation of Wpol Manufacture include" it an address before the sociation the followingewhich is full meaning, and which will. show to fa Merie that no grade of wool can be pended upon with certainty for a length of time. They ,naust keep with the times by reading and by stu ing the eitnetion : „ "No Manufacturer, however disti guished and experienced he May can predict with safety the kind fabrics Which will be in fashion at future time. The formation of a flo *of sheep of a fixed eharaeter is a wo of year, and the 'wool -grower in plans rdust have in vie* the futu more than the present. Ten or twe years ago the quality -witch was des' in wool, above all other, for the ma facture !of worsted good, was lustr and Lincoln wools p saeesing t quality hi a high degree, brought pric above all other wools, e Silesian. Every effort by British manufaeture the production of Lincol fabrics,i such as the shin btilliantines, have Dow of fashion, and dress goo to have or to imitate th texture. Lustre wools, ceased to have anyispeci late Mr. Edmunds, t President of our Wool As °elation, in a speech made at N YPeli in 1869, illustratingthe ficklen of demand in his experi facturer of dress goods, been until very recently art to bring out our dela to !handle, and. in finish to imitate all -wool French Merino . Now, as fa hion is, many styles of these go rn st be made as stiff a d hard as si le. We have to ac ommodate fa ries o the changeabl tastes of la ies, nd the consequ nce is that now re uire a large sup ly of long, 11 wools. At the present time it is loag aerubing wools tha we want, shell continue to want r our wore fabric.' As before indicated all is c auged. The soft fabrics are agai re nest, The Cotawol wools have le 15 to 20 per cent, aid the half -b w ols, from crossek of t e Merino the Co swold, have rise 10 or 15 fl t. a 11 lies in andted 'evein ements 1 a an Boston. Dake Everybody, says the has heard of Boston's baked beans, and man know what they are f perience. Boston, a Euglaud, are about a their baked beans as "cuichaw." In Bost° versal habit to have the Sunday mostg highest and lowest baked beans of a Sun feast upon about the • diet that diere is in ing the week the ta grean beneath the co the tables of the spread with the chap lasts afford Peat on eat of the same di'sh, 1 # 0 a 11 Bean. estern wn breed and f ()Uri iiroaq6os pleaPent in feet, New mll knewn for y are for, their t is the' mai- ed. be*s $eir eekfast. Zee ler abet die morDieg and pee t ar of .! ! Thar - the rieh hes, and scantily the • rerar- they !aN ud thoasands' Rol mar o of est °or are st that undays Y - e, of ly ve d u- ; is s cept the best ! was made sy s to incre se LUB re ng alpacas d one wholly out ' Is are requi ed soft Merl o herefore, 11 ye! 1 value. he e experien ed Manufaetur rs' w • ss a - as d ft ! he ! he de ! OBe ur we! he nd! ed ove e SPECIFIC ARTICLES. ASTURE-60 acres tor ca single month, or $1 25 eeason. Yearling cattle at 7 for the season. All pasture to removal of animals. Owners ponsible for eetrays or looses. a limited number wanted. IConceseion 2,H. R. S., Tun farm hand vnented for a term o to above. ; $1 50 for a er month for the cents per month be paid for before f stook to be rea- pply early. Only JOHN THORP, ersmith. A good • months. Apply 704x4 FOR SALE OR 0 LET. _ VOR SALE — Splendid Dwelling House and Lot, with stable, on John Street. Apply to te JOHN KIDD, mpi th. 706-2 ;To LET—Six rooms over A. G. Ault's Grum* •L• Store, Seaforth. Suitab e for dress makere ' or private dwelling, with front tad rear entrance. Apply top.. G. AULT, Proprietor. 693 TWO HOUSES TO RENT—To Rent, a cora- . fortable dwelling house adjoining the Old ;Temperance Hall, in the nicest part of the town"; also the house adjoining the Dominion Curling and Skating Bink; possession at once • rent res.- sonable. • Apply to L. MURPH1Y, Seafealh. 800 uce as a ma said: "It our aim a ne fabrics s ce tu th th STOREHOUSE TO RENT. -e -To rent a geed grain storehonee on the south side of the railway track in Seaforth, with two sets of scalee, truckle and jiggers all complete ; possession given imniediately. Apply to Scott +others, Seafortt. or to the proprietor, ROBE T SCOTT, Roe - bora. 677 "TORE TO RENT—To ren a large and coin- modions store in Whi ney's block, Main Street, Seaforth, in the best usiness part of the town. The store is 60 feet ug with a store room 30 feet in length ih the ear. Rent reason- able and possession giyen on 5th January, 1881. Apply to WHITNEY Bh.OT4ERS. en! vARm F )1i SALE OR TO BENT—Being Lot -I: 12, Concession 6, Hull it, containing 100 acres, 55 acres cleared atid th balance well tim- bered with valuable timber; s il good clay loa m, orchard, hOuse and frame ba on the plaoe ; I'f miles from /auburn, 74 from linton and 9 fr ora Seaforth. For terms apply to THOMAS MILLS, Constance P. 0., or at hi residence on the place. 702-8 1_ 00 A CRE FARM FO SALE—The Sub- sonber offers foil sale a first-class farm, consisting of 100 acresi of excellent land, being Lot 18, Con. 4, L. R. Tnokersmith; 86 acres cleared, 74 clear of st mps, and the rest timbered with beech and ple ; comfortable hewed log house,frame barn a d log stables; well fenced, well underdrained, tw wells and a good bearing orchard; is 2i miles from Kippen, 5 frOm Brucefield and 6 from Seat rth; convenient to schools and churches; will be sold cheep, with or without orop. Apply to RO ERT GRIEVE, on the premises or to Egm.ondve P. 0. 706 IMPORTANT NOTICES. DENIED. -1 hereby declare that certain re- ports at present in cite' lation, and tend- ing to injure the reputation Pt John Galbraith, are falne. I deny having or ginated the same, and declare them without oundation. MRS. HTIGIL TURMAN. Winthrop, June 22nd, 1881. 707-1 pOUNDKEEPER'S NOTI E—Came into the Seaforth Pound on Friday the 8rd inst., tw o heifers two years old, both miarked on the left ear. If said cattle are not taken out on or before Monday, the 4thday ef July next, they will be sold by Pnblic Auction at 12 o'clock, noon, at the Market Square, Seafoiith. Seaforth, June 4, iesi. E. LUSBY, Pounciteeper. 705-3 NOTICE OF'DISSOLUTI N OF PARTNER- -LI SHIP.—Notice is hereby given thatIthe co partnership formerly existing between us, the undersigned Duncan McGre r and D. Urquhert , as millere at Hensall, under he style or firm o f McGregor & Urcialiart, was this day dissolve d by mutual consent, and that the Bald business will in future be carried on b • the said D. Urqu- hart alone, who will receive ud pay all the debts of the late copartnership. ated at Hensall this 13th day of Jane, 1881. . McGREGOR, D. URQUHART. JOHN J. FR SER, Witness. 706-4 CHA.NCERY SALE—In C emery, pursuant to a decree of the Court of •hancery, made io cause of McNaughton vs McNaughton, the creditors of Peter McNau hton, late of the Township of MeKillop, in t e County of Huron, yoeman, who died on or a out the month of November, 1874, are on or b fore the 28th day of June, A. D. 1881, to send b post, prepaid, ' to John Cowan, of the villa e of Watford, the solicitoreof the plaintiff, gues Moscrip Mo • Naughton, their chrietian and surnames, ad- thesessand descriptions, th fall particulars of their claim, a statement of their accounts and the nature of the Becurities( I any) held by them; 'o111 erx default h fromte thereof they w 11 be peremptorily d lsenefit f the said decree. ad- Every creditor holding any °unity is to prodace ed the eame befere me at my o, ambers in the Court ,House in the town of Goderich, on the 30th day njwsk of June A. D. 1881, at 10 o'dlock in the forenoo , being the time appointed for adjudication on the claims. Dated this 7th day of June, 1831. H. MACDEB.MOTT, Masterat G-oderich. 705 per So eager were the Bradford menu ac- rers to, produce long eombing wo ls at they issued in 1869, circulars t all e W001 producieg cOuntries in the rld, asserting that the -"Wor ted manufadturers • would long be able to affoid remunerative prices for ny q antitY of good !serviiceable corn mg w ol that the world may be capable of p odueirig." The consequence ap ti at the fide wool growers in Austr lia • ossed their fine -wooled Merinos ith ✓ mo pf English blood, to such an, exs t nt as to greatly njar their charaCteir is ic production Of fine wool, an to d aw forth the remark Of Messrs. Bo ea B others, the most eminent woolbu ars i England, "The infaeion of Eng ish so in ave bloodi which has been effected to 1 rge an extent daring recent year A stralia, will prObablY prove to b en a mistake." I Only last year there occurred on t iose strange freake in the fashion go ods which disturb al calculation to the market of vfrools In thio ea , as i.a the cloth, and rot as usual t e dress goods Manti actin. All c othing mills of the c untry, as if c ncerted agreement, , went into p oduction of nOnt'SO vool goods, a are known as mdhevi ts. There a il a del:1;nd in this icon try for at fi e Million pounds f coarse w c mMonly used ohly aa combing w a! eve the ordinary consumption. Million pounds were imported 2 ngland, and the, pricPs of those nee from ten pence tth eighteenp his year the cloth manufacturers :I1 gone into soft and tine wool g : nd coarse wools are in demand only the ordinary combing purpose ,iew of these facts, how is it pos f or the manufacturer, with any s dence, to advise the growers as to @articular wools whiell are likely is denaand at an fuliare period. • F • Hodge and the Vicar. The following necdote, 1 yenta hint Points to te fact that an 'meal sense of 4-amOr in the B okel (whether aeciderthal or ()the ervives the age cf Shakesp lowns. A vicar of a country act occasion lately toi3rensonstrate m losely meber ef hi flock, wh °gaiter*, been "consp mous by hi Once" from the leb ation o the COmmunion, for hisi nonestben Hodge hazarded th4 excuse th did Dot consider hi Bell suffie qaalified to atten . "Why ged the vicar; "yoi. have bee med." "Yes, ! sir,'l replied na Vaccinated too, but neither to .k"—London Warl Of eit the by thp uch OSe emit 013, any rota 001B 1104. ods, for . Itt ible 0011 - the be 111 ivrEpic _T 0. SCOTT, M. D. (in " • Acconeheur, Seafort donee eouth side of GOderic east of Presbyterian Chaos hysician,Surgeon and ,Ont. Office and resi- Street, second door 342 TT L. VERCOE, M. D., C M.. Physician, 1-4- • Sur- geon, etc.,Coroner- I ori the County of Hnron . Office and Residence, on Jarvis street ndrth , directly opposite Seaforth alone School. WM. HANOVER, NC.D., . M.. Greduate of McGill University, P ysician, Surgeon an d Accoucheur, SeaforthsOnt. Office and Resideno e, North side Goderich Street, first Brick House east of the Methodist Charph. 496 TIE. HUTCHINSON, Gr duate of McGill Col- as' lege, Montreal, Licen late of the Royal Col. lege of Physicians, Edin urgh, and late House Surgeon of Craiglockhart Hospital, Edinburgh. Office—Bluei,ale, Ont. 686-52 TT bER YSHIRE •L. D. S., purgeim Dentist, Graduate of the RoYal College of Dental Surgeons !of Ontario. Office( hours from 8 A. M. to 5: P. M. ROOMR in Mrs. Whitney's new brick block, Main Street Seaforth, ROCERY NEXT DOOR TO THE POST OFFICEISEAFORTH THE SEAFORTH FLAX MILLS, NOTWITHSTANDING the late -fire and p;10 consequent loss sustained by the deisinnoteon of his barns an& a large quantity of material, the undersigned is determined to go into the Flan EAS. TEAS. TEAS. TEAS. tbiltisinessrthis coming seaeon more extensively, He is prepared to receive applications kora parties deeirons to grow this profitable er I either by the acre or the ton, and Will eeive I very best terms. He desires to Becure this tele son about 500 acres. ' Any quantity of good clean seed on hand, Partiee intending to sow should make appliea. tion as soon as possible. IN GREENS, JAPANS AND BLAiDICS, FAIR YOUNG YSON TEA, 30 CENTS PER POUND. GOOD YOUN HYSON TEA; 35 CENTS; PER POUND. OHOICE YOU G HYSON TEA, 40 CENTS PER POUND. EXTRA 01-1010E, 50 CENTS PER POUND. VERY FINE, 60 CENTS PER POUND. THE BEST IMPORTED, ,65 CENTS PERr POUND. VERY FINE JAPAN TEA DUST, 30 CENTS PER POUND. (1. CART RIGHT, L. D. S., eassiA-e-a •-•'• Memb r of the Royal Cellege r'enat-' of Dental Surgeons of Canada. Office—Ind an block, Market St., Stratford, Ont., has now ponedont an Office in Seaforth at the Queen's H tel, where he will be prepared to perform all d ntal operations with enal and skill. Office open first Tuesday in every month. 563-52 C3 -1Z0 -171\T") At 25 Gents, Pe0 cents, 35 cents, 40 cents, and 45 cents per pound. WHITE SUGARS -9 and 9i pounds for $1. LIGHT ANDaELLOW SU GARS -10, 11,12 and 13 potinds for $1. FIELD AND GARDEN SEEDS—A Full Stock. D. D. ROSE, SEAFORTH. A NEW GROCERY N SEAFORTH. -cr ci- izz 0 JE3 , .1.4_1TA•anVINd RoG tReemrtgoovne,Bd stdee4th Commodious Store in Atark's Block, between Megarey's Bak ery Meat Business, was added tore, and having more room at his disposal than is required for his Cu red A STOCK OF NEW AND FRESH GROCERIES, AlJCTIO EERS. • 3 P. BRINE, Licenced Auctioneer for thp v-' • County of Huron. 'Sales attended in all parte of the County. All orders left at thet2I- POSITOR Office will be promptlyattended to. A LEXANDERDELGETTY, Licensed Auction eer,McKillop. Speeial attention given t sales of Landed 'ropeLy, Farm Stock an Implements. All order left with the ande signed at Walton , P. ., or Lot 14, con- cession 14, will be pro ptly attended to. Sale bills, notes and sta s furnished if req iredi. ALEX. DELGETTY, Walton. 639 MORTGAGE SALE, UUNDER and by virtue f the power of sale con- ks' isained in a certain mortgage (which said , mortgage will be produce4 at time of sale) there e ro' frill' be sold by Pirblio Lution, 'tion by JAMES HOW- on- SON, Anotioneer, at the hour of two o'clock in the •t• h afternoon, on FRIDAY, the 15th day of Jai 1881, at BELL'S EOTEJL, Londesboro, all an we)singnlar that certain arcb1 or tract of land an rarn's premiss situate, lying -and being in the Town- areoa ship of Hallett, in the potuaty of Huron, and Wiiih Proseinoe of OntLoarito,nbRuoemuint composed of the twb -east corner part of the had naeorreteheopmoanrptriosfing. the or Twenty-six, in the iTeetnt,thwhiC ohoseanaon of the aid Township of Hel- per comprises Slat pothole ann°:_. of tho eaid lot lyrilnogrth of the south branch of e corner efdr &Aland Raverti°a which said south -eat t he partthew.sr,etotif enins o say: Commencuag ok better. deseribed and kuthe"aleateasIrly°iklimit of the aaid lot, at the di. • of eighteen chains and fi ty links from tele easterly angle of Londeipboro Graveyard, thence south thirty degrees west on limit of Gravel" Road four ehains ninety -live leeire of high water mark of the River Maitlahd, thence north-westerly fo s- lowing norela bank of rive four chains sixty Linke, thence north thiaty de roes east three -phain seve.uty-eight links, theroe south sixty dgres out four chains forty -e.± links, to the place f beginning, containing hy admeasnrement t scree of land, BB aforesai This property p one of the best stands' in te county fox a cheese factory, and is fitted np in first-claes style there- for. Terms maade known on the day of sale. For tartlet. partioulars applr to A. H. MANNING, Solioitor for Mortgagee. 707-3 t t CHA-LL NQVI KING enable to Make game with the Seaforth Lactose Club are n f or 'a match with any pick team at c onitties of Ertron,4erb nd Blase, to in Seaforth, not la r tha tte Slot 70742 13. J. Uno Aft, See y team, V veil e three pleyS4 y,18• ary., Which will b found as C omplete and Varied as any in the Trade, and gVERYTH1 NG IS FRESH AND NEW. He is determined to sell st ctly for cash, and will consequently g.ve his customers the benefit of a beral Discount from ordinary trade prices. Some of the est Teas in the Market ,for the Money . CURED MEATS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS ALWAYS ON HAND AS USU AL. 000d8 Deli ered in any part of the Town Free of Charge. BUTTER AND EGGS TAKEN FOR GOODS AS CASH. He will still sell his milito a suitable pe seal on reasonable terms. JOHN BEATTIE. MONEY TO LOAN. Any amount of money to Loan on reaeonable rates of interest, on good farm security. OFFICE—Canadian Bank of Commerce Build, hags, Seaforth. JOHN BEATTIE. THE SE A 'FORTH INSURANCE AND UNE) ACENCY. ALONZO STRONG TS AGENT for Several First -Class /Reek, Mee -A- and Life Insaranee Companies, and is pupae. ed to take risks on the mot favonable terms. Also Agent for several of the best Loan See cieties. Also Agent for the, Saleand Purchase of Rana and Village Property. A Number of First -am _Improved Farms for Sale. $50,000 to• Loan at Seven *err cent. lintereat. Agent for the sale ef Ocean Steamship Tielseta, OFFICE — Over M. Morrison's Store, Main Street, Seaforth. -645 THE ZURICH SADDLERY, HARNESS, FURNITURE ESTABLISH/ENT! HERMON WELL, Propiieter„ A GOOD Stock of Harness of all kindle always -1=3- on hand, together with everything else be- longing to the bnsineser, which will be sold cheaper than ever. FURNITURE, FURNITURE. Specially low prices given to newly married couples requiring furniture. Call and see my Stock and prices before purchasing elsewhere, Se you will save money by -doing so. 893 HERMON WELL, Eurich. FORBES' LIVERY —AND— SALE STABLES, SEAFORTH,, A RTHUR FORBES, the old establiishedLia- • •L -L. eryman, keeps the best and 1310231 st7lish rigs and the best driving horses in the business. Neat and Nobby Cutters, handsome andoom- fortSble Robes, and fast and saf horses always onhand. A. very hen' some family sleigh for One or two horses. ber the Place and Give Me a Trial. Day and night cells pronaptly attended to. Good driving horses bought and sold. REVEMBER THE PLACE — Opposite 0. C. Agricultaral Warerooras, Seaforth. 659 ARTHUR FORBES. Remo UGH ROBB, Main Street, Seaforth. "AND D N'T y 0 U FORGET IT," --=11EAT- 0 KI li_LORAN & RYAN THE OLDEST FIRM IN S •e• AFORTH, They have always paid ioc cents on the dollar, and they expect their customers to " gdand do do likewise." They do AO pretend to sell Goods at Cost, o r even below It; but they are prepared te sell the VERY BEST GROCER! S, CROCKERY, AND LIQUORS The Very Finest THE MARKET, AT A FAIR LIVING PROFIT. RANDIES from, our Resident Buyer in France, and WIN1S from, our. Agents in Spain and Portugal. FINE TEAS A AT SPECIALTY. SUGARS, TOBACCOS, &C., THE VERY LOWEST FIGURES. GIVE US ,A. CALL AND SEE FOR YOURSELVES. KILLORAN & RYAN, Seaforth. N. B.—We are also Age ts for the Celebra t ed" ,Ma reale" Sacrapintal Wine. Warranted Pure. THE SEAFORTH AGRICULTURA 1 IMPLEMENT EMPORIUM. 0. C. W LSON 1 0. C. WILLSON 1 HAS NOW ON HAND A FULL STOCK OF ALL KINDS OF FARMING IMPLEMENTS AND MACHINERY, CONSISTING OF THE FOLLOWING: PLOW 8—The Ma sey No. 13 Thistle Cutter; the Three Rofl Beam Chilled Plow; the Ctenudne American 0livex Chilled Plew, No. 40, manufactured at South Bend, Indiana; also Wat- son's No. 40 Cid ed and the Brantford Chilled Plows, and a number of obker General Prirpose Plows. This ia certainly the best selected stock of Plows ever kept in Seaforth; call and see them before p hasing elsewhere. R EAPERS AN 0 MOWERS—The Reaper and Mower business is again to hand for the season, and as usual I have a thorough reliable stock, consiEtning of the Massey Harvester, the Massey Toer and Sharp's Sulky Hoene Bake; also Miller's Thackeye Twine and Wien Binders. Ths chines aro too well known to requke an Comment, suillee it to say th.,ft they are My upt% the miprovements for the season of 1831 SMALL IMPLIgNIENTS—A full stook of moll implements, Buda as llorse Hoes, Weeders atid Scaffiers, Corn Planters and Corn Cultivators. Iron Haerows at a minced Price SEWING MACHINES A SPECIALTY. The Wanzer F, Vzer C, D and E, Wilson B, Lonise and othv inachines. Those ale standardmachines and parties purchasing can rely on ?fetting value for their money. • Machine Needlk OUe and Repairs. Repairing done on the shortest notice, and work guaran- teed. Alao Agent for ,Abell's Patent Portable Steam ThreAders oind Engines. 0. C. WILLSON, Main -St„ Seaforth. N: B.—A few boreet taken in excbange lox maolaines. TrC.TRI•TarrT.37AD.. J. S. PORTER SEA -FORTH. I am determined to Clear Out my Entire Stock of Furniture regard- less of Cost. THOSE IN WANT, it will pay them. to liner- ei- tain prices before purchasing einewhere. I give a large discOunt to those paying caah, eta pecially to newly Married couples. ; I am still selling fliX highlyftnishedehair' e for $2. I also keep Knowlton's Spring Bed, the best and cheapest in the market; warrinted perfectly noiselese. Warerooms directly opposite M. )L Janata's Mammoth JewelrY Store, Main Street,Seaforth, East Side. 2 • JOHN S* PORTER. EYE, EAI AND THROAT DR. CEORCE S. RYERSON, L. R. C. P., L. R. . S. E., Lecturer on the Eye Ear and Throat, TrinityMedical College, TOrair ' to, and Surgeon toe the Mercer Eye and Ser In- firmary, Consulting Oculist and Anrist to the Institutions for he Blind, Brantford, and for the Deaf and Dureb, Belleville, Ont. Leta Clini- cal Aesistant Royal London Ophthalmia Hoepi- tal, Moorfields, and Central Throat and Ear Hospital. 317 CHURCH STREET, TORONTO. May he consulted at the; ALBION TIOTEL, STRATFOR,D, On TUESDAY, JUNE 2"-Stfi;and onlast Tuesday of every month thereafter. , 703 CHARLES DUNBAR LOCK AD GUNS,MITII SEAFORTH, MANUFACTURER and Importer of all kinds -LY-L- of English and American Grate, Rifles, lie- volvers, Fishing 1Tackle and Sporting Goeds general, wishes to inform the public that he has enoledralilaelipda,iropSphoospiteinCaMtalRo's3beHrtells, Aiikinde gtediloansethinearrLoYcoksn ,breiyilseisClins, Revel- ' Umbrellas. Table, Plate, vow(or GrindingopefhrerResui:egeepdghapi Ma- chines a Specialty. Scissors, ;Revives, Skates and Lawn MoWees sharpened: and repaired: laseartia:Dianamionles: The Repairing -ea 'inswing ma. Electro Plating done in Gold and ;Silvan, Old Jewelry made east as good as neve. All wort entrusted to him will be promptlyattended to on LrS DUNBAR, Seaforth.6t1813e ehortest ncontlAce. n ANCHOR LINE. UNITED STATES MAIL STEAMERS Sail Every Saturday feom NEW YORK and GLASGOW (via Londonderry) and LONDON Direct. TICKETS fon Liverpool, Londottderry, Gu - now, and all parts of Europe. Fares staler, al any other firstealass Prepaid Passage Certificates issued to parsons V/ s h in g to bring out their friends. The Passengeraccommodathonof Anchor Line Steamers are unsurpassed for eleganceand tom - fort. Apply to S. DICKSON, 593 At the Post 'Office,Seeforbb a - ..A. -NT I INT 0-. :r 8. HADDEN begs to annonnoeto the people " • of this vieinity that he has pierphatred the Jeroperey formerly owned bn MT. WM. I;1411 and haling erected thereon& COLILmodions he is now prepared to exeotite orders for Wea g all its branches. FLANNEL, Plaid And Twilled, and CARPETS a Specialty. All v.* warnaiited to give satisfaction and terms *allito. able. Residence, half a mile easst of Egmond- ville, adjoining the farm of 51re. Gemmell on the west side. A trial is respectfullysolicitett 706-13 J. S. H2eDdAllg. - LE CREDIT FONCIE-R I THIS new Company, formed for thepurpose ef -a- investing French Capital in Canada, N now prepared to advanoe money on the most fa terms on good landed soeurities. M P. EtL geent for County of Huron, SeafOrtia. 699 MEOW Tla be& seeki his, 't itself all r briu °per elect tion ij equii yisib and the char Deere share ity 11 Iri t ceive churl what rod ? distr wed. 1 this o owe arrai in light eon t ieeeets eh:eu An4,1 rods or f< plOIS reqn- dee# rave Mg, req etyle cone amo its tin Pr° C011 whe tWi in -Sty Ohn' ech vie for i 'the t hel ho lik Stan the ho ski Po ter ina hel eh bet to hen IBA 1MS co Se sys aff thi cet Pea ha pe tim f3a. bus • 137 he e,e tur @ID ava he 6 I wo tw Slo ssa an yo th ab no ao fa of re t - a ta to 11 01 ae te 6 0 Et