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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1882-09-22, Page 3r PUBLIC, me and. an, for the trt have extended- to en years, and. hope ince of the same. I rtunity of informing going to, the Itiorth- Irma at my 31d post is to slaw you the deoreest stock of ox, JEWELRY - TED WARE. ever wn. UNTER, maker and jeweler, TH, ONT. SES THOROUCHLY G THE E HEATER OR Y or ME STOVES. est known improve. and _labor of any ai market. THEM AT St MAIN ST. 'ORTIL !OH >E. AGENCY WATSON, Wine, Thee and Ac- kce Agent, Convey- er, Etc., SEAFORTH. lies represented. AU kinds 'est current rates on all eclat attention devoted to suranees effected on farm District,of Gatt,establish- .64 to• I per cent., cash, per than. any mutual coin - Th e following companies ion & Lancashire,Engtand; cottish. Irnperial, Scotland t; Royal Canadian, Mon - Galt; Canadian Fire di lance, Hamilton; Toronto Travellers, Lite hnd Acci- , .Agent for tUe- Canada ravings Companyi Toronto. cer t. on real es --te. Agent .!tr.reship Comp , sailing d Glasgow. FiIst Cabia, rstrin triG ; Ste age, $2&. good for 12 mon s. W. N. Seaforth. Offf e, Camp - the Mansion Hotel. sal ,,RATICHAEL'S). lit ONTARIO. :5 WE/R Ad friends. and the travel - ['axing purchased this new huildiree, he basthorough- -fitted it from top to bot - of the most comfortable in the comity. By strict 5- of his customers he hopes Me patronage. The rooms- nd well heated. The bar kith the best and an at- e -thy hostler will always be sample rooms for Commer- ml Hotel,'" corner of Main Seaforth. 733 ;S WEIR, Proprietor; %)FtT14. o the farmers of Tucker= pid. the surrounding country v completed. whereby I can etch ease as any house in tendon, to businees I hope a increase the large patrort- orded to me under len tames during the past I have been continuously BEATtlEt IIE SHADOW, CALDER TOTOGRAPHER„ begs to returned home from Da- '. that " There's no place ends to remain at homes e his entire personal at- ' His faeilitiee for doing BEL arid he can guarantee me, come all, and briug e•iende, and secnre the nee fades. I can aec,oul- an send. you on your way and prove- rue. Charges the plece—Scutt's Block, YREW CALDER. KR 22, 1882. , . j THE HURON EXPOSIT6R, ara Friandhip. A ingteinnian of wit estate, int senerouslaind so body spent it on his friends. le Om bid none at all. Ittraddsittendadiseovered this, And -then their worth they showed ; They idt him, nor e'en paid the debt Ofostitude they owed. leerfong the man got rich again— Mob richer than before ; Andtholle who then received so much, 01,58 now—expecting morel Them= Why -this time, howe'er, Allergen greet been taught; And straight he sent them all away, With the large sum of—naught! Vends, be had learned, do roundus flock When -we are rich and great; But whenwant cornea and troubles rise. They leave 'us to our fate. Anti he had 'yarned what oft is seen When friends are inquest, lbetthose of whom we tbink the least, Tara out to be the best. Gaieties. 118hort visits are the best," as the fly Raid when be alighted on the stove. Almost anybody can run into debt, eat nearly everybody has to crawl out oelp t it. somebody worse off than your - Aiwa you will find that you are bet- ter off than you fancied. —How very fortunate it is that every Mei& able to believe that he has more , than his share of brains. —The hardest rocks are made of the eofteet mud; just so the biggest swells are made from the smallest men. —Sweet Evelina from the suffocating embrace of her lover cried out, " Give roe liberty or give me breath." —Some men when they go to church never think of studying the frescoing on the ceiling of the edifice until the collec- tion plate is being passed around. —A passer-by gives two cents to a beggar. " Thank yon for your good in- tention," said the beggar, but 1 no longer accept cents. They did very well when I began to beg, but now—" What have you been doing since I bat saw you ?" " I've been attending a course of free lectures." , A course of free lectures " Yes ; II was married a week after we parted." • —Guidwife to herd laddie: " Jock, oome ben tae ye're parritoh; the flees will droon of age, hale, hearty and well yer milk." Jock "Nae preserved. ; any worse, iinyhow. It was a little better, thank God.' Fifteen months after that -I bore one child only, a dear little boy. Ah 1 then we had a grand, glorious jolifloation. John, for the first time in his life, got tight as a lord. 'Ah Cis,' said he, 'we've got down to a proffer economical basis at last.' At that time I was only twenty-one years old, and I tell you what, to be the mother of six children, at that age, seemed very queer, but, still, I thought the worst was over. Many women at double that age did not have larger families than mine was then. Two years passed by and1 again.became a mother. This time, to our astonishment, it proved' to be another pair of twins.- John got tight again, but this time from sorrow and not from joy. 'Mother,' says he, this is awful.' You are right, John,' says I. But these two were a lovely little boy and girl, and their cute little ways and beauty soon put courage into our hearts. John owned a little shop, work was brisk, and all went smoothly along until a year and a half afterward, when we had another pair of twins. 'This broke John all up, and he went on a spree for three weeks. 'Old wo- man,' said be. can't dripped a whole country.' Well, I soothed and sobered him up, and got him to working again, for the Lord knows there was need of it then. During the next ten years I only had six children, being single births only. 'Ah, ids,' said John, 'we won't have so much of a family after all.' Three years passed away without any addition to my family, when in my thirty-eighth year I presented my amazed husband with another pair of twins. • 'Mother,' says he, 'this is astonish- ing.' They couldn't have come in a worse tim& for Johu, who had for a number of s years not done very well in his business, had just made a bad fail- ure. But the other children were working, and we put the best face we could on the matter. Two years after, when I was in my fortieth year, to our unbounded surprise, I bore another set of triplets. This, I think, killed poor John. Yes, sir, he's dead—died ten years ago this coming June. 'Mother,' says he, think 1 have lived long enough'" - This remarkable woman is fifty years fearthey may wade throughl." Gude- wife: "Is that Haydn' ye dinua get The British in Egypt. enench, ye loon ?" Jock " Aweel, there's aye enrich to sair the parritoh 1" —A. minister was catechising one day over in Kinross and asked a raw plough- man lad, "Who made you ?" He • answered correctly enough. Then- an- other question was put, "How do you know that God made yon ?" To which, after some pause and head -scratching, the reply was, " Weel, sir, it's the com- mon clash o' the kintra." —A chaplain of the last Duchess of Qneensbury, when talking Scotch one day at table, was told by her Grace that ha would not say anything in Scotch that she would not understand. "Well, my lady," he replied, "what's twaneffus ce darts?" Her Grace was at a loss, and, desired him to explain. He said that " twa neffes o' !darts are just a goupen o' glaur." —A forlorn widow, the third night after her husband's death, sat at the window watching the stars with sleep- less eyes. Thia trying to go to sleep," 'Ma soliloquized, without a quarrel of some kind is so new that I can't stand it." just then two men under her win- dow fell to fighting. She watched the conflict to the end, then quietly un- dressed, saying, " That's kind of home— like," and in a few minutes was in bed and fast asleep. Sketches of Some of the Principal Gen- erals. • Sir John Adye, R. A., K.C.B,, who has been appointed Chief of the Staff and second in command of the army in Egypt, is son of Major P. Adye, R. A., and was born on the 1st of November, 1819. He was Assistant -Adjutant Gen- eral of Royal Artillery during the Crimean, war, and was present at the affairs of Bulganao and McKenzie's Farm, the battles of Alma, Balaklava and Inkerman, capture of Balaklava Castle, and the siege and fall of Sebas- topol. He has the medal with four clasps, C. B., Commander of the Legion of Honor, Fourth Class of the Medjidie, and Turkish medal. He held the same appointment in the Indian Mutiny, and saw the hard fighting round Cawnpore, and was present at the action of Pandoo Fnddee on the 26tb of November. He was present at the defeat of the Gwalior Contingent on the 6th of December, 1867. He was employed on special service against the north-west tribes in the Afghan Sitana campaign of 1863 4, and was present at -the storming of Lal000, capture of Umbeylah, and the destruction of Mulkah. He was Dire°. tor of. the Artillery and Stores from 1870 to 1878, he was Governor of the Woolwich Royal Military A-cademy from 1875 to 1880, and has been Sur- veyor -General of Ordnance from 1880. He has thus served in thetprincipal array supply departments of the War Office, and has had great experience in all the details of the equipment of an army, • Lieutenant -General Willis, C. B.,who will command the First Division, was born in 1832. He served with the 77th Regiment during the first part of the war in the Crimea, and was appointed in 1875 Deputy Assistant Quartermas- ter- General at the headquarters of the - army there, and subsequently Assistant Quartermaster -General of the Fourth Division. He has been at different times Assistant Quer; termaster-Generad at G-ibralter, Assist- ant Adjutant -General at Malta, Assist- ant Quarter -General of the Southern District, and has held a similar appoint-. anent at the Horse Guards. In 1878 he was appointed Major-General in com- mand of the Northern District. His commission of Lieutenant -General bears the date of 1880. Sir Edward Hamley, K.C:M.G., C.B., who has been appointed to the command of the Second Division, served in the Crimean campaign in 1854-55, including the affairs of Bnl- gene.° and MoKenzie's Farm, the bat- tle of the Alma, where his horse was shot ; Balaklava and Inkerman, where his horse was killed ; the seige and fall of Sebastopol, and repulse of the • sortie on the 26th of October, 1854,when he was mentioned in despatches. He was appointed as Her Majesty's Chief Commissioner for Delimitation of Bul- garia in 1879, and of the Turco -Russian frontier in Armenia in 1880. He is the author of a valuable military work called "The Operations of War." Major-General G. Graham, C. B., V. C., who has been appointed to the com- mand of the 2nd Brigade, entered the Royal Engineers in 1850, and rose to his present rank in 1881. He served in the Crimea, and at the assault of the Redan he gained the Victoria Cross for his courage in leading a ladder party. He was twice wounded during the war. In 1860 he went to China and served in many -engagements, being present at the assault of Tangkn and the Taira forts. He was also present at the surrender of Pekin. He was wounded in this war with jingall ball. Maeor-Gerteral William Earle, C.S.I., entered the array in 1851, and rose to his present rank in 1880. He served with the 49th Regiment throughout he Crimea, and was present at the battles of Alma, Inkerman, the siege of Sebas- topol, the sortie of October 26, and the assault of the Redan. General Earle will command the lines of communi- cations. Colonel Drury C. D. Lowe, C. B., who will command the Cavalry Brigade, entered the army in 1854, and beoame a full colonel in 1871. He served with the 17th Lancers in the Crimea, and also in the Indian _ Mutiny. He com- manded his regiment in the Zulu War, and led the charge at the conclusion of the battle of Ulundi. He went out to Satisfactory Identificatio:a. A raw -.boned Irishwoman entered one of the National banks in Providence • the other day and presented a cheque at the cashier's desk. The cashier looked at her and said politely: "Madam, youmust get identi- fied." "Faith, and what's that ?" 'Why, you see you are a stranger to me. 1 don't know you." "Well, thin rrn proud to introjuoe mesilf to yez. My name is Sairy MacFlin, an' Fra. not ashamed of it." "Well,but you sae I can't tell whether you are the person whose name is on the cheque," said the cashier too polite to tell her that perhaps, she was lying about it." • 'An' what did he say I must do ?" "Identify yourself. Bring some one here that knows yon." "Indeed. I An' who knows me better than I know myself ?" The cashier paid the cheque without another word. South Africa again in 1881 the oatrairi there, but did n the °nutty in time to service. Colonel the Hon. J. C. D who will act as Assistan Adjutant - General, was born in 183$, and mar- ried a sister of Sir Archi eild Alison. He served in the Crimea, ad was Aide - the Indian •expedition eneral. He r -General's nerds, and aster-Gen- istriot since Edward of mer has left o command ot arrive in see active rmer, C.B., de -Camp to Lord Clyde in. Mutiny. Daring the Chin he wee Assistant Adjutant - served in the Quartermast Department,at the Horse has been Assistant Quarter eral of the South -Eastern 1878, tender General Primo Saxe -Weimar. Colonel Dol England for Egypt. Colonel Goodenough, whie will com- mand the dloyal Artillery, Army in 1849, beoame a B enant-Colonel in 1869, and nel in 1881. He served in the Mutiny, and was pre action of Pandoo Nuddee, capture of Luoknow, and and capture of Port Birwa was severely wounded. ' Colonel C. B. P. N. H. who will command the ntered the evet Lieut. a full Colo - Amelia during sent at the he seige and the attack where he ugent, C. B., oyal Engin- eers, entered the regiment in 1845, and became a. fall colonel in 1873. He • aerved in the Baltic during the Russian war in 1854 and 1855. Ir. 1854 he was senior engineer officer att Commander -in -Chief Charles Napier, and was capture of the Aland Isl of Bomarsund. In 1845 ed to Admiral Sir R. Du present at the bombard borg. • H. R. H. the Duke of born May 1, 1850 ; enter wioh Military Academy a became a lieutenant in t gineers in 1868, and in the Royal Artillery lieutenant in the Rifle 13 same year, and a captain staff services are :—Bri Aldershot in 1873, Brig Cavalry -Brigadier at the in 1875, in the October of was appointed Assistant eral at Gibralter, which until April, 1876. In 188 a General of Brigade at sides holding other app Duke is Colonel-inoChief Rifle Corps and personal to the Queen. His Roya never before taken part vice, and, as we have nonnced, he will now Guards' Brigade in the fi A Prolific Mother. A REMARKABLE PHILADELPHIA -MATRON, WHO HAD SIX CHILDREN BEFORE SHE WAS - TWENTY-ONE, AND TWENTY ONE CHILDREN WHEN HER HUSBAND DIED. A most extraordinary woman in her peculiar line, and one who is largely responsible for the rapid increase in the Population of Philadelphia, within the past half century, is one living on Col- umbia avenue, in the northern part of this city. The New York Mercury says that she is the mother of no less than twenty-one children, the most of whom are living. A representative of the Mercury recently visited the wholesale Mother. The reporter was ushered in- to the sitting room of her residence one evening, and at first he was doubtful whether he had dropped in on a Sun- day School in_session or a miscellaneous party. There was certainly enough human material present to make either or both. The old lady consented to give full particulars, "providing," she said, "you do not publish my name. I would'nt like to have it spread all over creation that I have so many children. The required promise being freely given, she said : • "Yes, John and 1 vvere_married when was sixteen. John, he was twenty - live, and a handsomer man could not be found in Philadelphia, even if I do say it myself. About a year and a half after our marriage I astonished John by presenting him with triplets. 'Well.' says he, 'this is good beginning, any- how.' John was only a poor shoemaker then, and three added to a family all at -once did make a grant difference, but three lovelier babes couldn't be found in Philadelphia, even if I do say it inyaelf, and so we thought we'd get along. Two years after I became the mother of twins. I could see that John felt a little blue over this. But he would have his little joke, would John. Mary,'says he, 'you're not doing ohed to the. miral Sir resent at the nds and fill e was attach - des, and was ent of Swea- onnaught was d the Wool - cadet in 1866, e Royal En - a lieutenant in 1869, a dodo in the in 1871. His ade-Major at e -Major to the same quarters which year he djutant-Gen- post he held he was made ldershot. Be - laments, the of the Royal aide-de-camp Highness has in active see; reviously an- ommand the st division. EUROPEAN WAR. AT J. Mc LOU G HL, I N'S In those critical moments we are still composed, and still hold the fort in one line of goods, such as our most improved STICKY FLY PAPER, INSECT DESTROYER In Powder; and Distributor for same., The Courtesies of Travel. It is' common to say that, in losing the old stage coach, we lave lost that comfortable sociability which once made travel so great a charm.(But we have lost something more. W have lost that humane instinct which, in the olden times, made all travelleronsiderate of travail ; the suggestive. It k, in the old on strain and mea co -opera - it trans - one another. Travel derivation of the word is was work, and hard wo days, and out of the co the common hardship c tive and fraternal spi formed its hardships in pleasurable memories. But the Pullman car is a refrigerator. In transpdrting fruit from California, the first colidition is that there shall be coldness, ndthen—isola- tion. The nectarines ;must not touch each other. In like Manner, as we multiply the luxuries of 'travel, we mul- tiply the barriers between the travellers. It is not merely that there are parlor - oars; it is that in these, and in the ordinary American railway card*, also, the first consideration comes, mere and more, to be personal comfort, and not mutual consideration. The grudg- ing answer, the reluctance to impart Fly Poison Paper% SPOINTGI-ES. We have just received an immense as- sortment. CHAMOIS, Or BRACES, TRUSSES, BATH TOWELS, SHOUL- STORE, WHITNEY'S BLOCK, THE FOLLOWING NEW GOODS HAVE BEEN RECEIVED FOR UTE FALL TRADE : PRINTS, DRESS GOODS, CASHMERES, . DUCKS, DEN1M6, FLANNELS, BLANKETS, • TABLE LINENS & OIL marHs, UNDERSHIRTS, DRAWERS, -WINCEYS, TWEEDS, HATS, GRAIN BAGS, &C.. All of which are offered at the lowest possible profit for cash and produce. Combs 9/ all Kinds, Soaps, Hair The GROCERY STOCK is always kept assorted with fresh goods. Tooth, Nail and Cloth Brushes. All are invited to call and examine THE BEST VALUE IN TEA TO BE • HAD. J. MeLOUGHLIN, Seaforth. rbERFUMERY In all We branches, both in bottle and in quantity. HORSE AND CATTLE MEDICINES. HYSICIANS' PRESCRIP- TIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUND- ED. E. HICKSON & CO., Druggists, Seaforth. ! • Change of SEAFORTH FOUNDRY. Business. j_lr AXING purchased from Nopper Bros. their 'LA' interest in the foundry, we will still continue to keep on hand at the old stand, Main Street, Seaforth, a full assortment of • Gang Plows, Land Rollers, Scuf- flers, Cutting Boxes, l•c„ And all other Implements in our line. We have also made arrangements with Thomson & Wil- liams, of Stratford, to keep a full line of repairs for all maohines sold by them. FARMERS 1 We are making a first-class Land Boller, equal to the best in the market, which will .be sold oheap. It will pay yon to examine them before buying elsewhere. Having secured the services of MR. E. SAUN- infdrmation, the most brutal struggle 1, DEMI late of Toronto, who has held leading for the best, which inceeasingly disre- gards weakness and age and WOMSII— theie are things which one sees now more frequently and unpleasantly than of old. We talk of the garrulous and per y as Massasoit interrogative American, But where is he ? Vanished as ut: Indians. An English gentleman, who lately traversed the pontinent, said that he had never travelled in a country in which his fellow -travellers were so reserved. It is a mistake, if it i nothing more. There is no one whose horrizon may not be widened if he will only avail himself of the wholesome education of the fel- lowships of travel. It ts easy to be -too much upon one's guard, All travellers are not swindlers, and courtesy is not necessarily familiarity. i As it is, one is reminded of that countryman of ours who, having crossed the Atlantic with a room-inate who, from the beginning to the end of the voyage, had not address- ed to him one word, pitrted from him, saying airily : "Well,, good -by 1 you will now proceed, I Suppose, to your home at the Deaf and Dumb AsyluT 1" — (" Topics of the Tinde," in the ep- tember Century. . i About the Hens. Good, comfortable nests are among the requirements of tniccessful incuba- tion. Mr. F. H. Corbin, Newington, Connecticut, whose Successful experi- ence entitles his opini ns to considera- tion, advises that the nests be about fourteen inches square, and during the cold season made warm with broken bay or straw, covered with feathers. Later in the season this plan should be reveraed,and a piece of fresh turf hollow- ed out into a concave orm and covered with broken straw onlY. He keeps both from vermin by a dust-bath. The entifully through the hen previ- ous to setting ; then B, suitiable ;dust- bath,*easy of access, iS provided.' Mr. Corbin cautions against feeding soft feed (by reason of its quick digestion) to setting hens, and suggests, instead, whole grain, corn being preferable, with a supply of fresh water daily. A correspondent in ,the Poultry Yard, writing about nest -boxes 'for hatching, claims that these ought invariably to be placed upon the ground. Ile claims that his greatest success has been gain- ed by the use of boxeS, with bottoms.not exceeding half an placed upon the d small holes to admi hens and eggs free means of sulphur and Sulphur is sprinkled p the neat and a little o nob in thickness, mp ground, with moisture. When —TI positione in some of the beat establishments in the country, and is thoroughly experienced, we will be prepared to do all kinds of repairing of Threshing Machines, Reapers, Mowers and all agricultural implements. Special attention given to Engine and Mill Work. 'Repelling of all kinds promptly and neatly doae, and satisfaction guar- anteed. arise us a trial. T. FOSTER & SON, Proprietors. E. pAUNDERS, Foreman. the box is not set a damp place, he advises that inverted turf be placed in the bottom of the nest. In lining a nest, care should be observed not \ to make it too deep or rounding, else the eggs will press so closely together as to become broken. When practicable, sit- ting hens should be quiteapart from laying ones, and their nests placed in as quiet and secluded place as possible. CLILOCKS, CLOCKS, CLOCKS. PAPST, THE JEWELLER, Is offering Seventy -Five Clocks of last year's designs—all genuine American Cloos—for the next Thirty Days. Will be sold at cost figures. All who, are in want of a Clock should not miss this/ chance. Come and gee them. � OD .13 co INT. FALL, 1882. z Received and Opened up the Contents o C. L. PAPST, WATCHMAKER,JEWELLER AND ENGRAVER, SIGN OF THE BIG CLOCK C4th. FORBES' LIVERY •S4k.LE STABLES, MAIN -ST., SEAFORTI4. 30 Cases of Old Country Goods. INSPECTION INVITED. tT.A.I.TIMS01•T, SEAPORT I THE FAMILY LIQUOR STORE. L. THORNE Would intimate to the citizens of Sea - forth and surrounding country, that he has purchased the liquor business o Mr. Kidd, and intends carrying ou the same in the premises lately occupied by hira, where will be found a complete stook of PURE WINES, LIQUORS; &C. At Reasonable Prices. ALES AND PORTERS 13y the Bottle or Quarter Barrel. =10.•••• ORDERS RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED. Goods Delivered to any part of the Town. THE ,CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE. HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. KILLORAN :& RYAN ARE NOW SELLING OFF THEIR IIMMENSE STOOK OF GROCERIES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, VIZ.: Teas, Sugars—all qualities—Coffee—Green, Roasted and 'Ground—Rice, Rais- ins, Currants, 8 s—Whole and Geound—Cpamed Goods of all Kinds, the Beat Brands of Cigars, American and Canadian Coal Oil; &c. A RTHI7R FORBES, the old established LIT- eryman, keeps the best andmoatstylish rigs andithe best driving horses in the business. Neat and Nobby Cutters, handsome and com- fortable Iiobes, andfast and saf horses always on bend. Avery handsome family sleigh for one or two horses. Day and night calls promptly attended to. Good driving horses bought and sold. REMEMI3E3 THE PLACE — Opposite 0. 0 Willson's Agricultural Warerooms, Seaforth. 689 ARTHUR FORBES. = - CROCKERY DEPARTMENT. Our Crockery Department is filled with the Largest and Cheapest Stock of Goods in Seaforth, or any other Town West pf Toronto, Fuld up Capital, - 56000,000. Beet, - • - - 1:400,000. FLOUR AND FEED DEPARTMENT. ' Our Flour and Feed Department is always stocked with the best Goods in the market. VIM ,=••L Presinent, Hon. Wm. McMaster. iaSEAFORTH BRANCH. The Seaforth Brain& of this Bank continue' to waive deposits, on which interest a allowed on e most favorable terms. Drafts !on all the principal towns and cities in nada, on Great Britain, and on tne Unitedtates, toles, bought and sold. Ofilee--First door klout% of the Conunerelal otel. 689 A. H. IRELAND, Manager. LIQUOR. DEPARTMENT. Our Liquors are widely known, and we guarantee them to speak for them - pelves. The Celebrated MARSALA Sacramental Wine always on hand. We must trouble all those indebted to us to call at once and. settle up. KILLORAN & RYAN. g m {=1 — • F.; #E 4C LU 10 I" 1 0 1 Ad ku eye CC 1-1-4 — D • 1"4 R__IM 0 r OMB See the great DUNHAM PIANO before buying. These magnificent Pianos have been used for 50 years in nearly all countries, and are still ranked among the best Pianos in the world. ORGANS.—The "Excelsior Organ" is now acknowledged by the best musicians to be the leading Organ n Canada. Pianos and Organs of other mallets supplied. Send for Catalogues. SCOTT BROTHERS Seaforth, Ontario tarBELL'S MILLS, KIPPER JOHN McNEVIN, Proprietor of these well known and popular mills, has now got everything iU. P-rst-elses v./or:king order, and is prepared to turn out an article of FAMILY FLQUR which cannot be ex- celled by any mill in the country. GEISTieta DOER WHILE THE PARTY WAITS FOR IT. Flour exchanged for wheat. Chopping of every description promptly attended to. Flour and Bran always. on Hand, end sold at the lowest market prices. Remember the popular mills. JOHN MclgEVIN, Rippen. EGG EMPORIUM-. THE Subscriber hereby thinks- his numerona -4- customers (merchants and others)flor their libeislystront,„--a durine the post 7 years, aid hopes by etrlet integrity and dose attention to business to merit their eonfidence and trade is the future. Having greatly enlarged his prem. tees during the winter, he is now prepared to pay THE HIGHEST CASH PRICE For any quantity of Good Fresh Eggs, delivered t the Egg Emporium, MAIN STREET, SE.DeFORTH. Wanted by the subsor1ber,25 tons of 'good dry elan wheat straw. D. I). VP.71LSON VT-TE3NTITT:..T1-4M. J. S. PORTER SEAFORTH. I am determined o Clear Out my Entire Stock of iv/nature regard- less of 09st. THOSE IN WANT, It will pay them to alone -A° him prices Were purchasing &lettere. I give e large discount to those paying leash, es- pecially to newly married :couples. I am dill idling six highly finished chairs for $2. I also keep Rnowiton's Sprbig Bed, the best and cheapest in the market; warranted perfectly noiseless. Warerooms direetly opposite IL R. Counter's Mammoth Jewelry Store, Mein Street, ifeaforth, Zest Side. 625 JOHN S. PORTER. WALL PAPER, WINDOW PAPER, - FIGURED BLINDS. LARGE ASSORTMENT AT THE LOWEST PRICES. C. W. PAPST, Main Street, Seaforth. EYE EAR AND THROAT 1 DR. GEORGE S. RYERSON, E., Leeturer on the Eye Ear and Throat, Trinity Medical College, Toron to, and Surgeon to the Mere& Eyesnd Ear In - Armful, Consulting Oculist and A:urist to the Institutions for the Blind. Brantford, and for the Deaf and Dnmb, Believille, Ont. Late Clint - cal Assietent Royal London Ophthalmic Hospi- tal, Moorlields, and Central Throat and Ear • Hospital. 317 CHURCH STREET, TORONTO. May be consulted at the ALBION HOTEL, STRATFORD, On the Laat SATURDAY in EACH MONTH. 706 2,000 CEDAR POSTS FOR SALE, Suitable for Board, Wire, or Straight Rail Fences. One mile and a quarter west of Winthrop. ALSO RAIL TIMBER By the Acre or by the Thousand. W. C. GOIJINLOC K MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUE) AID THE HURON EXPOSITOR OFFICE,: SEAFOBTEL, ONTARIO* arammiamm.....•13 a 140 WITNESSES- REQUIRED