Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1884-05-30, Page 22 JULIA'S C$OIOE. "Don't you be satisfied . withing nothing but a farmer, Alfred, m son. A farmer, ugh I No young man of any spirit will be content to settle down to the dull, stupid, unpopular life of a farmer. Set your mark higher{ my son." "I wonder what Caleb is going to make of himself. I suppose a doctor, or Iawyer, or something of that kind. He likes books and I don't." "I don't want, you to, my son. Mer- chants are the great men of now -a -days. They are rich, and their wives and families dress like queens, and live in great style. Think how we might have lived if your fattier had been a mer- chant instead of a farmer. Ilg i ! I hate a farm and all there is about it." .► Caleb gays if his father had lived he would have been a farmer. He thinks there is nothing like it." " Let him think so, Alfred. But do you -look higher. I spoke to your uncle to find a place for you in some store in the city, and you know how Abbot Lawrence and hundreds of others be- came rich and prosperous from poor clerks, as they were when they began, and you quay do so, too. Then yon can hope to get a lady for a wife, for what lady will marry a farmer ? I want to see my son be somebody in the w Id. How happy I should be to have on drive oat here to the old farm with S our wife, • fine lady. But I hope your fa her will be induced to sell the farm aft r a few years and live in the village am ug folks, so we can be somebody in our old age, at least.," " Caleb isalways talking about w at a charming place this is, when h is home from college." " Well, let him ; he hasn't •- a very aspiring mind. He lacks ambition: Anybody can see that, for he is always carried away with vulgar notions. He will spend hours watching the lambs racing around in the pasture, or take great interest in sitting down with he chickens and young turkeys around him. Then lie's in love with the trees e,nci. wild flowers, anything—weeds, rocs, woods, any such common things take his fancy. He'll never amount to much., no matter how much Iearning he May get. Your father says he won't he,ve much money left when he gets through college. Your father has one good trait. He knows enough to feather• his own nest while taking care • of other fob's property. So I hope we shall be able to leave the old farm some day." All the hopes and aspirations of Mrs. Thurber were realized in a shorter ti than she dared to hope for. ler brot] succeeded in getting Alfred i to a v ry good position in a large store in t e city, and, yielding finally to her imp r-' tunity, Mr. Thurber consented to let the old farm and move- into the village with his wife and daughters. Caleb,mentioned above, was the son of a distant relative of Mrs. Thurber, a lawyer of considerable wealth. The father anclmother both died when Caleb was about twelve years old, and Mr. Thurber becamehis guardian and took him into his own family. The father had expressed the wish that if Caleb showed any inclination to books he should be sent to college,then left free to choose whatever pursuit he might like. , ne er Perhaps no more of the young mends patrimony stack to the fingers of Mr. Thurber than:the law would allow ; bi t certain it is, he was sure to make the most he could of the funds intrusted to his hands, and the ingenuity of his wife not uInfrequently aiding him iln adding some dollars to the yearly claim. The next year Caleb went to college, the farm was let and the family remov- ed to the village, a prosperous place f wealth and enterprise, quite giver_ t aristocratic notions and ambitions of city ways and styles. ` The first year the farm was let for two hundred and fifty dollars. The second year it had to be let to a new tenant, as the first moved west, content withhaving made the most tie could from the place. The second year it was rented for one hula dred and seventy-five dollars, so badly was everything about the place left out of repair and at loose ends. The farm fared but li=ttle better the second and third year ; and at the end of that time a new tenant had to be found, who refused to give over one hundred and fifty dollars a year and to put in repair what was left dilapidated by his prede- cessors. This sum was pot very much, more than the taxes, which had • in- creased while the rent had decreased. Alfred had meanwhile greatly pros- pered. He had gained the confidence and esteem of his employers and had been advanced till he had a prominent place in the large establishment, with a good salary. His mother's brightest visions were even more than realized. He had become a city gentleman -far, far above any luckless, low -minded wight who was content to be a farmer. He dressed in the finest style, and his lofty, genteel ways were the deligh t of his mother, and one holiday a fine car- riage drove up to Mr. Thurber's door, and Alfred stepped oat and handed out a young lady dressed like himself, the very pink and blossom of fashion. His mother's heart was fall. Her ambition was just about satisfied when her son introduced to her Miss Hawkinson," the daughter of one of his wealthy em- ployers. Meanwhile the orphan Caleb had graduated from college, but what were college honors compared to the city tri- umphs of Alfred. He had been wont in days past to consider Caleb as his superior, but he now scarcely deigned to notice him. Caleb held to his love of those • things which Alfred's mother considered vulgar. He hadexpected to find himself the possessor of many more hundreds than wore turned over to him when he attained his majority,whioh was very soon after he graduated from college. He supposed everything just and gener- ous had been done,a.nd in fact, only, only what was claimed to be right—though the sum was large—was allowed to the guardian, whose account, had it been More carefully and strictly looked into, would have been found to have many charges of items that it would have been hard for the guardian to account for satisfactorily. However, Caleb was disposed to take quietly what was passed over to him and make the best of it.iis superior scholarship at once opened to him an excellent opportunity as a teacher, which he at once accepted ; though had he been possessed of the funds he sup- posed himself entitled to, he designed to Crave given himself to agricultural pur- suits at .once. But our disappointments and the breaking in wise Providence, who what is most suitable ourselves do, prove, if way open to us with our highest good. With. this feeling position offered `him, gave himself to the d in a high school,His year was moderate ; parity and ability be compensation was greater than he hard With the people of was the biggest virtu tue, it stood in their i value than what sly virtue, morality' or u Thurber was spoken model for young n n, lucky fellow, iii Thu and smiles aad narko showered upon,him f deigned to notice. T: his mother was full t ambition knew no bo daughter Lucy was s of the clerks in the ea with Alfred. He wase dashy, fine-lookingan ners. Lucy was much like Cans lied fond of sho �a when her marriage t made a very notable a went to grace a fine of Bat the text daugl#de very different girl.' H striking, but yet vast. to any who cold feel e excellence, beauty and a biped. Her mother el trump in her hands, a d he who received th should be a king of w t 1 laxity and importance 't world. • But in this she was d disappointment just a on the point of realize n his wife came one'day their usual style with and with them cam whom it will hardly do t though some years thi Be was a distant re wife and a member of New York city, which leading houses ' in th tall, slightly bald, ' b courtly in manners intelligent in the ways He was looked upon and the people of T spent several days ther The very thing whi desired did occur',; M deeplyin love. with Juli to relate, Julia was as toward him as though i ble for her heart ever I passion of love. Her m a time in silence, but w signs of the giving, way which seemed to bol soul she took ler to tas ed to know what she c such conduct. Julia m e she had gone to her priy,t took therefrom a letter, to her mother to read ; at the name of the writer eye over the contents h changed, her face becaz fire flashed from her ey, " Julia 1" she exclaim you ' mean 'by holding with one so much benea li 3 0 "You have not alway t •u so, mother." " Well, you know', child. with us have changed years, and though Caleb in his place, I will teal than to aspire to the hando of mine." " You will do no -such thin said Julia, calmly looking the face. Do you mean to inti you are going to refuse t Hurlbert and accept this Caleb ?" I do not intimate onl I will say, plainly, I shah 'n any intimacy from Mr, whom I know no hurt ; bait: my heart now, and had its ev know I had a heart made o " You silly, foolish ' girl, I you at once to put a stop to silly notions. I Will hav4 . . Mr. Hurlbert is just ,the t been hoping for:you,`and I a to be disappointed by any sib of yours." ' Mother, did you ma, because your mother loved hi a fancy, to him, or because him ?" That is no matter of, y your duty to obey yooree knows what is best for you a better than you, a girl of eigh I expect to live with It choose for my htisband,'an You had the choice of al expect the same privilege there is anything tb be said a character of the one I choose, duty to listen to you as my rn in nothing else, and have no dictate or interfere further' Julia Thurber ! I ath and pained to the heart's core you talk s8. Just bee what turn your back on in refasi _bent, and what a sad fate for y`iiurself, in accepting so rsi worthless a character as CilI ton." That, mother, is your eat on of the two men and the two p' si on':, not mine." "-Just look at the positi n f, your sister Lucy, and the -society .sl• : eves in and the style she lives in s' ould think you would be ashame : tiling such disgrace on your broth r .�, ureter as to condescend to marry a a •• hose highest, ambition is to b 'a er. Julia Thurber a farmer's • " : 1 Jest think of the degradation an • is race to the family, Julia 1" . Mother, it is wholly nsel :s.e or s to talk further upon this subjec p efer to follow the dictates of my , • n h:art, if there is nothing against C' le . jT 'ern - ton only that he proposes to . mon. e a farmer, than even you,,, whit 'ave never before refused to :obey. - You stubborn, wilful frhi • ,'' s .id Mrs. Thurber, as she wished' . a -bio• ate- ly from the room. During the last year j of .Sal •`'s ser- vices in the high school, his e y a ► ght the advertisement of the Thar a arm for sale, as it stated, "at a b •i��: n.' "That, of all places on the eh was the one most desirable to ' C eand; it had within a few weeks, be' obi: ore especially so, as within that eine ilia Thurber had accepted the o * of his plans by ar better than we ccept the ng trust, opted the hese years a teacher oi the first 4 his; ca- nown, his onerous-1– le, success nerous;le,success i not a vir- ile ir- se of greater pe pl'e called r Alfred, here as a' e was a', arlance ; • e peot were 11 whom he ti heart of b ing. Her er eldest g ed to one blishment l e Alfred ; e 1 n man-. at r, ambi- ¢de, and , it was and she Ju i , was a eat was less e tractive aw of real et Qss corn-: s•e was a ed that f Julia popu- { • es of the d : cda great ha,. os - were AI feed and. th : City, in rid span, Leman, 1 young, f forty. Alfred's firm in Ong the Ile was looking, es and orld. !family , ;for he ai eta lion. urber +tet crediblefell distant repossi- he soft b• re it ,for he saw no fetters h :art and emand- m:an by, r :lily .till des4 and h::algid it e --lanced i>ln her un enance rid the at do ndence ht him he e' ca w p a1 affairs a few nough better a. tighter • ," thEnererii: Il. o e that its of Mr. se boy ►th:r, but er accept rib -rt, of alehas ince I o. mand all Such e of it. have no going + corns Other o 'took loved t is who ea deal en " an I you. rad I se f. If in , t the s my he , but ig • t to ons sed o. ear lif,. ou arl- c, nose pi : and T orn- .. .0 • LAH TH HUON, XPOSi'OR. MAY 30, is hand and heart, and in language which copvin ed him that, his love was fully re ip ated. h re was a f 'iend of is in h rn vile to whom h wrote asoertean the to est sum the TLurb, arm was be h for, and fond it as several drrd dollars less than a had antioi ed, and, as -it wa withi • }his means at once secured i When it was I to leave the i year, the author bid for; his servic e :nown a was intent ohool t the end of ties m : de him a hil es alio her year, an he was still you and ulia, still i twenty, they bob thought it' be him to continue and ec • pt the pro salary. . The Thurber no had, to on codld appreciate the be : uties of soape and almos every ping attn in nature, more hen . rdin ary a tions. It was located a erly foot of a name was Gray The rear of th part way up the 1. but this was onl t the farm. The easward of the lon but not which was crow e ber1 Directly i some forty or flft large, beautiful garden on the so t °house ran a smal water fed by ne thewoodland pa front of the h • u Met of the far.• plan, gently slop n and containing fro ace s, with scarc:l' ase space upon 't the ong pasture •w inclosures alterna e pasturage. The h pld-fashioned far peen everywhere i • seeds no furthe arns and out -bur d ood, but like the I. f repair. But the eaoher would m. ecessary improve During the last iage of Julia and g house of Th ad failed and nd this quite rec, o the choice of Ja i'. ears were passed o ne ;of those peri u d ster to trade and any establisbme s the hills, and t elonged':to was on Both Alfred a' Lu y's husban, ere reduced almo.t to p nury. It wa and for their wive o gi e up the styl i which they had ived Alfred way o liged to accep some position in hdanufactiiring este. :dish ent to kee mself and fa id: ,fr m starving coy s husband for a tim 'managed' t yep npothe extrav • ance of his house] ld, which was qn •t : a m stery, as no ie knew of his wing any visible urce of ' income. Brit the secret ! at ngtfi came out. I: o ad become a unterfeiter and f leer,; a d to escape e penalties of the 1. w was compelled flee the country, a d L cy was left to ✓ choice between hap p orhouse and ✓ father's house, nd to this, broken arced, she came v i h ,h :r two chill n• at - he ling the her d as. rider t for. red hos Ind- c ive t ac - the south e.st- mountain whose local leard. arm indeed extended ape of the mountain, he w odland par of od r n along to he. ip a p;of- •• 0 t a use, xtending • cult hill, the t wit wood and fron _ of the h rods distant, R -wes across • derly side of fi +roo of clear sgft r f;til'ng springs t of the farm. e w s the prinbil T is was a be to and the leo flit en to twr a st ne pr fort Th re were beef • or three sinal er y us d for tillage or use was a meaty ho se, such as ifs New England, and deet iption. The Cgs ere roomy'and use somewhat oast ast 3 ear's salary as re ;tan pay for all :tits. I ar 'pr'or to the ma lob, he great ban ;onb rg & H'urlbe t e in o bankruptcy, tiled Mrs. Tharbee B t before mend her houses failed. cal eturns of dis- usi ess closed ne one thought firm t'e 'which Alfre f th u�. �n In )al ad nd ty of de sc lE t t+ h h h dr en. ,Alfred no longer a in a carriage with a Thin and careworn to 1, and worse th ti es, with_ the c pr aches of a wif to ger support. in e fa hion, and who, in c ed him too -plainly t knew or felt for i alone can be a man' of trial and adversit R' Ah," said he to ca a to the old h pa adise of comfort fool have I been to b comfort and a life.w¢r come a slave in the it id Come out now. enough for you and find more, yes, twice do Well in) self with wife, and she is a je and you shall have j as you can menage i+ " Caleb, it cannot rat er die than leav mut stay'' and go round far daily brea my head, and that n happiest." Caleb would have Jul ads father and mo old farm and live w me ns of subsistence out but Julia hers 1 knew the temper and d mother too well to ha though she .was, perfe portjthem where the " jL prefer," said Juli bring up our children enoo, and you know often disposed to int their grandchildren t tage. We can make Portable where they a setts Ploughman. The Merry -An Country Out the occasion of that were given by a I a droll fellow of a Mere much laughter by his t and More than all, by the Squeaking of a pig the hearers so real tha it agdin and again. 0 in thle audience, thong; was riot perfect ; and to the stage, and said permitted, he to -mor the lists, and squeak a Anddew f�rr- a wager. patidg grelat fun, shout and accordingly, when came, the; two rival jok place. The hero of 1 wentfirst and the hear than ever, fairly roarer Then, came the countr3 a pi4 carefully cones cloak;, so that no one R pected its existence, vi its ear with his thumb - it sqi eak with a vengea as good—not half as audi 'nce, and many an begad. to 'Fhise. "Fine cried !the countryman, frontf the stage, dray under his cloak, and h. up and high. "Behold that you condemn ?" • T +. • a e s e t h n e i. g 0 pats witl all iplai ho r: tra use. t sh the olac: U o Thornville and driver, uncongenial a thousand is and ro- be could no agance and: uence, show-: really never t love which in the hour lob o •e, n dth : liar; h ;li e f ," Oa mu tlile tp ae eloo , y wife would eoi y, and so I d I y treadmill ndi a place to lay o he ' best or n ling to have er r rn to the t e .I for their d `wlljnigh run obj -ced. She spas tion of her he with her, y vvi ling to sup - ere. 0 Caleb, " to iliot interfer- d I. arents are ein behalf of h it disadvan- st as com- I assachu- I• e. day, as he w almost a ift, " what a :d from real' ving, to be- rm is large d Caleb. I h as I can help of my e. Come, much land e." l e.' w an, om e m�n And -i ks has It help m aI the mad and the festivities nobleman, ow caused �e stage, ation of 0+t eemed to. cs lled for o woven, Citation' its way t if 1 e were oul enter'. t h Merry - nn b antici- thei consent, the next day s wee in their h pry vious day s, 9iorepleased with ;delight. ran, ho, hay - a ed rider his o Id ave see - o ousl,• pinched n il, : ni made n e. -" Not half ]o d !" cried the igng;t eta even jut eesj you 1" ushing to the g til.: pig from ]dipg t• e animal the erformer r • REAL EST4TE FOR SALE,. F° Cull. the Moa SALE.—Lots 2? and 28, high Street, and he house thereon Apply to 8. O. state of the late UGHEY and M. M FOR SA coed, Tuolo 90 of which barn with s ary fo►rerly So.vued by C. H. McCaughey, Executor of onald McIntosh. S. G. oDEEMID, Executors. 832 LE.-;�}-For sale, lot 24, Huron usmit.'h,' containing 100 acres, are Ole red and in a high state here is large buck house, good tabling underneath and other Ings ; leo a large hearing or- . It is plea cantly situated tin the Huron about half ay bet een Clinton and Sea - The buildings ;: d forced are in good - and the la d in rr t class Condition. It e sold very heapApply on the premises Seaforth P. ,q R$. GEO, CHESNEY. 853 FA atbou of cu bank nein char Road forth repel 1 • M FOR SA. taini g 50 acres, made , drained an and nle waste Ian frame buildings, a Is co venient to three Hiles from a ver choice lot a terme Apply on E.--,-Pcir sale, the north half of th °eh ssion of Stanley con - in tO o d state Of cultivation, on t e arm.' There are good ore aid and plenty of water. ohoele 'and 'churches, and is he pi. ises or to Hills Green EST 858 ✓ AR FOR SAL .—F r sale,lot 24, concession 1-: 91, Morris, con a.ining 26 acrea, 80 of which are cleared, and t e rem hider gOod hardwood house and barn, a d a4ro d spring well. Also a youn bearing orc ard Of home frilit trees. The Trope ty is well fe ced, d 15 earns of new land mile a d a half cf IN; lt n, whore there are 'school , churches, oet 1 ce, stores, Szo. Terms easy. For forth r pa t cnbirs Apply on the prend es to OoLI Mc THUB, or if by letter 826-tf which under lit situ Brusse and a shed a It is o jAPply VAR M Rillop, coetainin 60 acres; well drained and fen ed, and oleo r of slumps, A good log house kit frame k tcheri sad a frame barn and log sta le. Is thee quae re of a mile from Win: throp d flee from Seafo th. Terms— ,'S00 comb, balance on mortgage at 4 per eent. Also 50 There i log house and I R e barn and stable, good w e and straight rail fences' ; five acres of bush. 9 situated two and a half miles from Rip - pen an Hansen, and eight; from Seaforth and Exeter. Terms—$1,000 (11 baler+ On n3ort- gage at 64 per cent, Ili S. IN Moll LOP F R SA.LE.-jThe Routh acres of lot 20. c ession 1 45 acres of re cleared, free from etutopg and well rained. N bette land in the county.. ted about half w y between Seaforth and ood frame barn and fra e stable and d good orehatd planted' with apple, ear and che ry trees in good bearing order. VAR IN STANLEY OR SALE:—For sale,' the South Half of Lot i6, SaribbsT4ne, Stan- ley, con ainieg 644,acreseabOut 57 df which are cleared, well fenced snd tinder -di ained. There is a log hcmse and frame ;barn, shed atkd stable. good water. Is witlen five miles of !BaYfield and eleven f om Kipper], on the ;Great' "Western Rail- way. school within three quart° s of a mile. There ftl eight acre3 of fall wheat and thirty acres se ded to grass. This Property will be sold cheap. • For .further paeticnlare apply on the i 841 VARM FOR SALE IN ULLETT. 1— North -A-- par s of Lots and 5,1;?oncession113, con- taining 12 acres; 80 twee cl ared ; thel remain- der is go d hardwood bush Soil, clay lOiun, well watered ith a never faille" spring Oredk rising to chnrc es and schools, and s sitrui ed. 4 miles from Bly h and 10 from ,dinten." or further on the S nth part of said lots, or to Londe& balance as been burned (1.1 Thero is frame house and chardan 44 acres of fall eil POLLOC , on the farm, en FARm lot 1 a e, tho south half of 6 ey, containing 50 w and art bush. leared, rrt of the s able,' a young or- e t. It is situated Jain etown. It . 50, acres are ill be sold t•eparato- UEL or I ANDREW y mail; to, James- -FARM OR SALE —Foiett-a-le, 10') fires, in the eL" town -hip of Kin ;.ss, ei unty of B nee, being 75 acres al ar and in te of, celtiVation ; house, Ira table. 'It is well watered= of water running through t under "fall wheat. A clay be i k, second to none in tho con g for brickwork. Ir is situa cknow, 24- from hes end markets. further p go, OA me barn an( frame on the far for byi nt to echo la, chin. d 44 miles ch station irticulare nd fr( Wingha.m. For emises, r to Whitechurch • 855x4 FOR IS.AILE —The undersi ed. offer their Fruit Evaporato and iCi er Mins for sale buildings 1 aye been fitted up in' a complete cheap -and upon easy terme. f paynirt., The manner; fo the carry' ig on Of he Frutt Evapor- ating Business, and ar first-ela ' working But as W. Roberts° , one of the p rtners of 'the firm of D. D. Wile on & Co., has go e , to Ed- manently, he properter must be seld and the business of said firm fi ially eloSed u For any particulars with regar to said prop apply to vinsT, C ASS FAR FOR SILE.=-Liet 6, con - 125 acres leered, wel fenced, phorqug IT uuder- drained an in a high state, of oultiv (ion; re- feame Fitted and work- hep ;: three geed wells and good gravel road to eac place ; young o chard of stores, aajo ns the far . The e are 1.00 acres entirely fie from stum a. and t o farm s one of tfthe best in the esni:ty. Object in tsll ng: the Mee' UGH Y, Seafortl M IN .ithe no o th 132 acre which 100 fenced, well under-drei cultiVation.1 The bale best of hardtvood. 'lli free from st imps, and la There are g od frame b two large yo ng bee, in 24 miles from the villag forth, and 8 from Br roads leadin to each pl sown with f 11 wheat. one block; o 60 acres pply on th premises, • 817 of lot 15, cone sqihn 14, urea re" clear d,' well ed and in a high state of ce is ti bored ith the 00 rods of boar I feuce. lildinge, three NI ellseand orcherds. It is situated ssels, ; with goo gravel ace. T 'ere are 4 acres he fakra will b sold in it, to suit p rehitser. 828 ARM IN laces,alloet .10 t. Ming 60 b arty all ire f need an n hewed lo e avi7gdeg:f c rner of the ith or with p ietor on th A' TER hip UCKERS will be coneessio cres, all from stu a high eta coupe, and rm is with vel read a lot. It is uc the or premises, RE. 11TH F xchang d for larger is ale , con - red and ps, er-drained, well e of oultivation. There frame arn end stables, a neve failing spring r five miles of Seaforth, lso with n four Miles of The ife in will be sold p. Aim y to Cie pro - 806 residen e and grounds n. Th re are ten aeres cellar c. There is a us differ nt varieties of nd ern 11 fruits. The nted ith shade and ge. The land in in ex- t one of, the most ceen- rivets rbsidencee in ',the adapted for a relred esidence. Is withi 16 ass part of the Earn pply on the pre es, o land on w h use and br o fr it includiT grapery ounds ate nicely p c Bent order. It is in fa diunty and • admirably nutes vva of the bus' d locatien or beauty t at could be desired. o to Exeter . 0. ROBE RESIDENG cheap, th village of obert Fans 'ch is a lar- ek stable and conve TEROB4 COMMOTION IAA Campbell's' S EVERYTHI G S The Eff Has Prove As one ni mark : eve at sort of t ATTE'RED. et of th First S4ot last MON Fatal ito. High Prices,' ill! Goods, oyes around arid he4rs the old residenters ything dull few people in iown, and make us onder Ole large the last few; aay0, but the ods and whoies4le price§ hing, it s are of buyers we havO had fact is very clear ; Gobd g at retail musS tell.' "We Some peo le haire tells us they wibn't -be u every one our usiness i mind .our o 13-4sin kriows that if One buyS th4 cannot sell as low JA uarantee every article at below. Well, such a firm We want to inform aid ,o us nder not d pa s th 11 fo tes is WN old. to ru Ever 10 intelligen cents on t n, but to person e dollar, se who buy for m ch less. glo y, but offering you simp y the effect of buy - E0 1:1OKARD. SUMME Cricket Balls, Boing Gloves, Fishing Poles, Violins MUSI Lawn, Crick Forts, Fish,in Baskets, Bait B sees, ES. Baso Balls, Foot Balls, Fishing Tackle, Reels, AL Guital s, Flute Tha best value in he abode lin ifouth Organs, s is to be fou d at HOFFMAN all and get some of the Big Barg Chec4 Cash Store. Certain lines of' LadieS', irl's, Strata Bats almost gi en away t HO Cash Store. and earnine the goo Cheap Cash Store. White and Color s and prwes at .4n endless variet in Prints R9TH ERB' ins a hildrdn's. Mens' and Boy's F.MAN BROTHERS' Cheap Bel ing very chea HO AN 73R0' 11. BC.Ra: Gingl ns, press Goods and? Trim- 1MA BR9THRS' Cheap Cash Call and inspect ur stock of quality wad price are sedond to none ill the BROTHERS' Cheap Cash Store oods, which for style, trade, at HOFFMAN CHEAP CA1-1 STORE, EAFORTH LIVELY TIME AT KIDD18 EMPORI For the last E NING MARRING op One of the most complete stooksd GENERAL DRY Goo; CLOTHING AND Ever Placed Before the Seaforth People! Notwithstanding the discontent farmers and Others over the grie' mom of hard timeS, we still march on,0111 BUSINESS steadily inCreasing, "Eel is a PBOOF EN ITSELF that Ite handle the tight class of gook* ell them on. the .lowest living mai 4LL LOW PRICED, RASHY GOODS A' WIDE BERTA EITHER UYER NOR SELLEIt DRESS GOODS. In this department will be &lathe tains and all materials appropriate* Wedding and mourning orders. MI4INERY. This branch of our trade requirette dIvertising, sufficient to say supply 'the wants of her customs he, together with a large staff d 'tlorkers, are now ready to suit any= r quiring early spring millinery. EADYNIADE AND ORM OLOTHIN This department is f w th all the newest patte s in relit* g ods. Leave your order, r if yelled- fi and finish ta anything ade to dal in the cities. We have ow a 'irk cl se tailor on the premi es, ttuid it at end the wants of eusto ere. ili T SATISFY THOSE .00 Di US We recognize as tlie only read fd nees success. CASH AND FIRST-CLASS DUCE WE WILL NOT BE Inspection Invited. W9 TriWfr Show Goods. AY 3 Ancient The BY V1LL you see ; least the coyote POT Tbse, nainS is worth *bit might coat to - exactly Bay. „ahoy in old Connection hold ; obit if the e.elIar of Ou leak with gold, Audi frora there rst could bring 2— o' thing. The snm my father years to pay, rre taken out of 'that if Leonid lead him up y smile, at least ; in the East. TAC.15 my mother' u views Ineingb. to give a But mother's struck s e ferent place. Xy girl? - Well, mayise question's put, g wouldn't tell this to We wad to climb those charming witnh), And PrCspect on what w4. But her old father bad many poor, ern tour. ity trip it lasted seve grievea, no doubt, eivore I never would him Aut, You don't know wbat day to day, To strike a vein that clean away, begged, and aleno With treasures that -on a -sexy side? And then tier itliteTS Won I wondered on it for a w boy friend: And jrtSb as had stn. heart beat itigh,_ There tante 'letter up friend's reply: Siternoon she went within the 844 A. rush across -the bar4-ert road ride, And I 'was in the asylul I theright she knew ns. Ana never looked at ms say, nu wanders viand, or c dew niche, And says, " 31.,,e love will, 4,struck it rich? ""11 Noword or look ler me. were cold And something seemed and love yourgol And I Came back ; arid to stay -- A raiser, with his treasti Wealthy bank, 1 With lions except mysell else to thank; But nothing makes arty l With riot a thing to love U.s fate, When We lock up our key comes too Ur' And that I'm loorer .ne happy days whl T owned a heart, and di " struck it richt" ! Gail young man, putth popoe—ektsil.tii mer to a New York after looking saver "Pm net a bit pre verja—wehAfiorb.s,litacnimkuassr titerhi shoe, so th4a blae pr—aise" Yeefs,'Lcsrleanatt Texas lacks is good Liabil ty for Ac Few Tanner/a hal the extent of their hired help. judge address before the t rules of 'the 00rafflO the torts and negl ployees. The to this authorit'i in aamages to .1 wrong acts or neglii occasioning injury,i one of omission or in disobedience to fraud, deceit, or '43 dna, so long ae it the employment:" farmer has a horse era or heaves and man to take it out it or trade it off. vrarraut er meow resort to ally joelse make a sale. The stumped for a tr is asked if the ho auswers„ *t Perfect ot fault about him not be !afraid to trade iES made, an liable for the demi- Was in the course o A hired man is Cow Out of his em killed it 'With a sto the employer liabl A farmer is liabl hired man. done h of his employment It being the d 1111106.a. B. 0erte.. throwing it OVer ployer is liable. was no part of his there would be iw of responsibility is was done accordin(