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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1890-04-18, Page 31890 11111111.11.111.1111111118a ;lore T H. annor We, Grocery, DEPOT, 0% They have IRGAN, with ration. They nstruinents. LI. 1161 ketory. hese Factoiv nday, the 12th sII for factory them along - the highest Secretary PAIN enza inine plaints Leness mess nds [ses i.rrh Is WON MADE ONLY BY THE aON D'S XTRACT - CO., FIFTH AVE. NEW YORK Shop. _ FELL'S fit of his many Reed of Plowe, ritivatore, Har- i. sold at bottom rour hard casn big on me tor OEW Repairing-- ; up your Plows. epairs on hand. for all kinds of kind of plows; ite„ plow east- rything in the e Kippen Plow fits leads us to .any cuetoreere during the yments during all better Site - S, Kippen.. oved Ms.T removed ite his Old are he will be s and as mare, - him with their en liendersont oe Stoye, Main EWING. Of:NIX—Com ot„ Tansy and by an old phy- fesa fltaitthly n, and has, been e of over thirty te any address etor'e consul- t. Diseases of - art rulers, te SF POND LILY 131 Woodward 1163-13 Works. G.) Black, of Statien- Tubular S Sheet iren izontal riLde t -Off Engines s id pipe fitting ea furnished at Gederieb APRIL 18, 1800. aslismoullireefrrilril•k 1'41.1E PUFN EXPOITOk, Hobbies of a Number of Washington Women. WASHINGTON, March 19.—Mrs. Le- land Stanford, of California, has been quoted aa having the diamond mania. She really cares tittle for her magnifi- cent gems, and makes giving her fad. So great are her charities that they de- serve a higher name than fad. They be- come a profession. In Washington she gives from $100 to $309 every Christ - Mall t� each charitable institution, half sapports any number of poor families andigivea largely to churches.- The AIM-: varsity founded by herself and husband in memory of their dead 'child is now and will be for years her chiefest charity - hut she has not yet shown any sign of forgetting the local charities here. through the months. Would you not Mrs. George Hearst, of California, be a driveling idiot before five years? I has the reputation of preferring young have seen hundreds of men sitting in kilt to anything under the sun. rhey rowa.making nails, doing nothing all the day long but turning s piece of iron over and over till it is consumed, then grab- bing another and doing the same thing. I have seen the girls in paper factories and printing offices folding papers each the same way. This they did by the month. I went into the heading fac- tory .to -day and found some twenty boys at work. 0, this monotonous, mechanical action, how it shrivels up the mind. I would as soon be in a jail cell as to stand at the poste of a great withgtve everything on earth to get it back. There is no trade. so conducive to health as farming. Most trades are confining, tedious and monutonoui. The active, independent farmer boy tied down to dull routine soon drives the roses from his cheek, activity from his frisky lirribj,s, and displaces his appetite by dyspepsia. Boys, if you prize health stay in the fresh air and the glorious sunshine of the farm. But one of the most serious objec- tions to most- of the trades is that th,ey dwarf the mind. Suppose you had nothing else to do but make pin heads, make them ten hours a day, six days in a week, fifty-two weeks each - year. Nothing else to do but keep putting, the little bits of wire in the machine all are her fa,d, and she well ,deserves the name of brinier out of debUtantes. She says she likes to have them around her, and acknowledged that her only sorrow is that she ha e no daugh- ters. Many a girl from the Pacific slope owes a. brilliant winter in Washington to Mrs. Hearst, and, of a truth, they tell it that many a girl owes a brilliant roarriage to her, too. Mrs. Spooner, of Wisconsin, is a bright, humor loving woman, with whom it is a pleasure to talk. She " has the same fad as Mrs. Clarkson—that of do- ing a dozen things to keep up with her husband. One thing she has never al- lowed to drop, and that is the practice ot music. Her voice is a pure mezzo soprano, and she is the vocalist of the senatorial circle. Countless women here make pugs, raaatiffs and poodles their fad. There is no city where so many curs need not go afoot. They are either stowed under their mistresses arms or have a seat in their carriages. By all odds the wife of ex -Senator Palmer, of Michigan, had the moat blooded dogs of any of the fanciers of canines. She especially likes tiny French spaniels and terriers, and she had a tisk imported from France here last winter that could be squeezed into a finger bowl. Think of a dog with a aid!raBut that is what her pets had ; the prettieet blue eyed lass in Washington •used to walk out from 9 to 11 every bright morning with a retinue of yelping, frisking puppies, Senator Palmer was just as fond of them as his wife, and he used to spend hours teaching them tricks. , Many a registered practitioner here has been called upon to treat Mrs. Palmer's dogs for a wheeze or distemper. When her husband went to Spain last surcuner as United States minister, she took the dogs and their maid. The Patten sisters are also famed for their love of dogs. Their taste runs to immense mastiffs, and they rarely walk the capital streets without these attend- ants.. The married sister, Mrs. Glover, wife of the former congresernan from St. Louis has a liking for pugs as well as =Allis. She tells the story on her- self of how she and Mrs., Lloyd Brice, who is also a lover Of dogs, were fond- ling perfectly ugly pugs one reception day when two women she had never known carne in the room. When they rose to go one of them said, curtly "1 should think, ladies, you had better have your babies in your arms than those pugs." One of Mre. Glovir's pug dogs is ex trsmely valuable, and she takes it every- where with her. Last summer she had it at a high-priced hotel, and Monsieur Pug's bill was $10 per week. Mia Leiter, the heiress and beauty, is just the proper thing when she walks Connecticut avenue of a morning with a mastiff hound which is almost half her height. It is a fine animal, and $1,000 would not be purchase money for it. A kennel as large ace the proverbial one assigned to a honeymoon was built a year ago for Miss Leiater's pet, and in it there are two compartnaents, and a bal- cony where the hound can go and bay at the moon during the long watches of the night. Horses and dogs are the chosen pets ef wealthy women but there is one here who thinks more Of her parrot than of all other animals. She is Mme. Hora- cio Guzman, who is accredited with be- ing the prettiest woman in the diploma- tic corps. Her husband is the Nicara- guan minister, and one of his presents when he was wooing the fair American girl was thie choice bird. It is a picture to see the lovely woman hold her parrot a Is Labia with her dove and discourse to it. mass of our toiling millions. How different the farm, spiced most abundantly with variety. The seasons come and go, giving aeedtime and har- vest. We plant and till and reel) and gather into barns. The man whose heart is in his work arid who recognizes the giver of every good gift will find the farm one round of health giving pleas- ure, such as kings may envy. • • 'Boys Will Be Boys." BY HAR,LAN H. BALLARD; Boys will be boys." We resent the old saying, Current with men; Let it be heard, in excuse for our straying, Never again I , Ours is a hope that is higher and clearer, Ours is a purpose far brighter and dearer, Ours is an aim that should silence the jeerer: .We will be men ! " rreferito" is the name given by M. 01151M1111 to the pet, but it often gets the English equivalent, "Darling." Mme. Romero, the wife of the Mexi- can minister, has no love for animals. Her fad is entertaining, and in a winter she receives more people in the big lega- tion parlors that all the other foreigners together. "Boys will be boys," is an nworthy slander: Boys will be men ! The spirit of Philip, in young Alexander, Kindles again. As the years of our youth fly swiftly away, As brightens about WI the tight of life's day, As the glory of manhood dawns on us we say ; We will be men 1 When "Will bays be men" you a wink, tinewer us, men! How ol d are hose " boys " ? you think, Fifty or ten? It May be the boys with whom you used to go Considered wild oats not unpleasant to sow ; But how leoloethe harvest you hoped wouldn't grove, Is exclaim, with their age, do Now you are men. "Boys will be boys"? Ys? if boys may be pure, • Models for men; If their thoughts may be modest, their truthful- ness sure, Say it again ! If bo 3 s will be boys such as bus ought to be— Boys full of sweet -minded, light-hearted glee— Let boys be boys, brave, loving and free, Till they are men the pine wood quite presentable with a coat of shellac. In moving a large easy chair she found the casters stiff and squeaky, so she went through the house and oiled every caster, so that they re- sponded to a lig'nt touch with a freedom of motion as delightful as ibis rare. "The rector's wife was greatly pleased, and said, 'She's worth a dozen men, she is so handy, and she never - leaves a bit of dirt.' The rector recom- mended her to other families, and she !men found herself in-geod demand. She waa frequently asked to supply missing keys and repair broken locks. With rare good sense, she put herself in trainieg under a locksmith, and was soon able to meet this emergency. She gets $2,50 per day and her lunch and dinner. Probably the woriCshe does, if sent out of the house to be done, wduld cost the family twice that amount. Many a gibe is hurled at women Itor their infelicitous use of the hammer, but this woman earns with hers a better liv- ing than any shop girl or seamstress." On, how can a fair maiden smile and be gay, le lovely and loving and dear, As sweet as a rose and as bright as the May When her liver is all out -of gear? She can't. It's impossible. But if she will only takeiDr. Pierce's Golden Medical Diseovery, it will cleanse and stimulate her disordered liver, purify her blood, make her complexion soft and 'rosy, her breath wholesome, her spirits cheerful and her temper sweet. All druggists. Don't hawk, hawk, blow, spit, and disgust ev • erybody with your offensive breath, but use Dr. Sage's Catarr‘Remedy and end it. • Let the Cat Out. It happened in Chelsea and on the day of the great Sullivan-Kilrain fight, says the Boston Courier. A little boy, the -son of a highly respected citizen, ques- tioned his father as follows: "Papa, who do you think is going to win, Kilrain or Sullivan ?" " What is that?" explained the as- tonished parent. "You talking about prize -fighting? What company have you been .keeping? Mary, (to mother), do you hear this boy? Do you hear him asking me about this prize-fight?" "Oh !" replied' the mother, mother like, "I suppose he has heard some of his playmates talking about it. Boys will be boys, you know." "He has no business with such play- mates. He never hears me speak of any such low and disgraceful exhibitions such brutalizing spectacles. I weuld have this prize -fighting business put down by the strong arm of the law, swept/ off the face a the earth. My lad, if I ever hear you talking about anything of the kind again well, you'll get into trouble, that's all." Next morning, when he went down- stairs, his wife handed him the paper, saying : " I had the curiosity to look to see bow the prize-fight came ont, and it ap- pears Kilrain was whipped." "Whipped !" exclaimed the denoun- cer of prize -fighting. " Then, by jingo, I have lost $10. ' • Is My Mamma Locked Up Grandfather's Barn. 0! don't you remember our grandfather's barn, Where our cousins and we went to play; How we climbed on the beams and scaffold so high, Or tumbled, at will, on the hear; How we sat in a row on the bundles of straw, And riddles and witch -stories told ;. And the sunshine came in through the cracks in the south, And turned all the dust into gold? How we played hide-and-seek in each cranny and nook, Wherever a child could be stowed; • When we made us a coach of a hogshead of rye, And on it to " Boston" we rode? And then we kept store, and sold barley and • oats, And corn, by the bushel or bin; And straw, for our sisters to braid into hats, And flax, for our mothers to spin. Then we played we were biddies, and and crowed, Till grandmother, in haste, came to see If the weasels were killing her old speckled hen, Or whatever the matter might be. How she patted our heads when she saw her mistake, And called us her sweet " chicken dears," When, a tear dimmed her eye as the picture re- called The scenes of her �n vanished years. How we tittered and avrung, and played meeting and school, And Indian, and soldier, and bear: While up on the rafters the swallows'kept house, Or sailed through the soft summer air ! How we longed to peep in their curious nests, But they were two far overhead; So we wished we were giants, or winged like the birds, And then we'd do wonders, we said. And don't you remember the racket we made When selling, at auction, the hay, A.nd how we wound up with a keel -over leap Front the scaffold down into the hay? When we went into supper. our grandfather said, If he had not once been a boy, He should have thought that the Hessians were sacking the town, Or an earthquake had come to destroy. Advice to Boys. Boys, I want to give you some advice. I know you are not hungry for advice. Boys never relish that article. It takes a good deal of seasoning to suit it to their taste. But, boys I want to talk about what I know. 'Boys, stick to the , farm. I left it when a boy end staid away many years, but was glad to get hack. Do not think you can find a soft place somewhere else. After hunting a long while the softest place you will find will he in your head. There is no trade so sure as farming. Did you ever know a farmer to turn tramp? Where do tramps come from, anyway? If you think -them a set of idlers too lazy to work, strolling sibout the country for the fun of the thing, you are badly mistaken. I have seen them turned out of the mines and the shops and factories and printing offices by the thousands; they were good workmen at good wages. Some of them are well edu- cated. I once fed a tramp who gradu- ated at Oxford College in England. What a mighty army there is constantly going up and down the country hunting work, hunting work, hunting work! Preachers, teachers, ' doctors, clerks, mechanics, all trades hunting work. No, not all trades. Who ever heard of & farmer hunting work? He often hunts for workmen, hut never for work. No, boys, if you can't make money as fast at farming, you can be sure of a liv- ing ; and if you keep "pegging away," you will have some salted down for old age. There is no trade so sure as farm- ing. There is no earthly blessing so great as health. You boys now in the bloom of health will pass over this sentence lightly, but when your health fails you cackled How the years have gone on, since in father's barn To play with our cousins we met! Our eyes have grown dim, and our locks have turned gray, The golden, the brown and the jet; Yet Mill in my heart there's an ever -green nook, Where childhood's sweet memories stay ,• And no music, to me, has s charts that can thrill Like the voices of children at plar.-4 grand- -Go den Hours. • She Does Not Pound Her, Fingers. In accordance with the stern doctrine of the "survival of the fittest," all sorts of ingenious methods -of earning a living are adopted by Men and women who, by accident or misfortune'are thrown out of their ordinary walks of life. "An Englishwoman from the middle class came to America to be her younger brother's housekeeper, and at the end of a year he died. She had no near rela tives, and knew she must support her- self here. In her distress she went to her rector, whose firat enquiry was, " What can you do well ?" Gradually he drew from her the fact that she had learned carpentry in a parish school for training women. A bright thought struck him as he recalled his wife's im- patient waiting for a carpenter "to do up the odd jobs round tbe house.'' The woman gladly accepted his suggestion of testing her ability at repairs the next day. • " With her " kit" of tools she neat- ly and deftly accomplished the work of restoring a broken screen, a disgruntled bedstead, a warped door, two rickety chairs, a trieky window shade, some obstinate bureau drawers, a shaky table, and a discouraged cabinet that had fallen in pieces. She brought a small pot of shellac, with which she "touch- ed up" the furniture, hiding all trace of repairs. She also built a playhouse in the little daughter's room out of some boxes she found in the cellar, making IMPORTANT NOTICES MO FA RME RS.—A first class farm hand,;steady 1 and able to do all kinde-of farm work, de- sires a situation. Apply at the Tint Ezroarroa OFFICE, Seaforth. 1162 T0 RENT —A good brink house with brick basement and largo fratne stable and one and a half acres of land. Apply to A. STRONG, Seaforth, or SAMUEL WALLACE, Egniondyille P. 0. 1164W DULL FOR SALE.—Theroughbred bull calf JO for sale, thirteen monthe old, registered in the new Herd Book. Price reasonable. Apply to JOHN REID, litaafield Road, Lot IL 1164x4 TOTS FOR SALE.—Two building Lots on A 1 corner of Chalk and Gouinlock streets, ad- joining Victoria Square, Seaforth. For further particulars apply to A. STRONG. 1117 tf MONEY TO LOAN.—Private funds at 51 per cent. lotereet payable yearly. Charges very moderate Apply personally or by letter to E. N. LEWIS, barrister, Goderich, Ontario. At Bayfield every Saturday afternoon. 1136 DULL FOR SALE.—For sale, a thoroughbred A$11 Durham bull, one year old and eligible for registration in the New Herd Book. Apply on Lot 10, Concession 1.0, Tuckersmith, or address Kippen 1'. 0. JOHN SINCLAIR. 11501i1 RENT—The Albion Hotel, Hayfield. All m flrst-clasp, order. Doing good bueiness. Apply to GEORGE CASTLE, Reeve, or JOHN POLLOCK, on the premises. 1162tf DULL FOR SERVICE.—The undersigned has JD for service on Lot 21, Concession 13, Mo- Killop, a thoroughbred Durham bull, Terms.— Ill, with the privilege of returning if necessary. JOHN STAFFORD. 1166 ONEY TO LOAN.—The Municipality of LVI Tuckersmith has money to loan on favor- able terms. The utmost secrecy will be pre- served as to parties borrowing. Applications may be made to James Murray, Treasurer, Rodgeiville, or to ROBERT B. MoLEAN, Kippen. •1156tf SHORTHORN BULLS FOR SALE. — The subscriber has for sale two young . bulls, 11 months old, also one three year old bull, good color, registered in Dominion Herd Beek. Prices to suit the times. JOHN T. DICKSON, Castramont Farm, Seaforth P. 0. 1167 MO ef7oEoYd T to 1.1.00aAo Na oPwr ei 'cs• at trae t ao sn.d compa noyf private funds have been placed in our hands' which we will loan in aums to suit borrower. Loans can be completed at once if -title saiisfac- tory. DICKSON & HAYS, Cardno's Block, Sea- t orth. 1143tf SEED POTATOES FOR SALE.—For sale, about 250 bushels of po, atoes, suitable for seed, of the following varieties, vise Blies, Early Hebron, Late Hebron and Red Elephant. Price, 50 cents per bushel. Orders lett at H. Grieve's Seed Store, Seaforth, or on Lot 21, Concession 13, McKillop, will be promptly filled. JOHN STAFFORD. - 1165-4 A. RARE CHANCE FOR A TRADESMAN 1--1 WITH SMALL CAPITAL.—A small stock of hardware and tinware with shop and fixtures , and tinsmith's tools for sale in the Village of Brussels, county of Huron, population about 2,000, good location, first class farming country surrounding. Must be sold at once to close up estate. Apply to W. M. SINCLAIR, Assignee, Brussels, Ont 1143 Here? A bright looking boy entered the Chesnut street, New York, Police Sta- tion last night. He seemed to be in rest distress. " Well, my little fellow," said the big, but kind-hearted Sergeant at the station, "what is troubling you ?" "Please, sir. is my mamma locked up here?" "Who is your mamma ?" " Please sir her name is Martin." The sergeant looked at the record book on which the names of all prison- ers were registered. "Yes, here is her name." "Please sir, can I see her ?" "She is drunk. I don't think it would do you any good, my little man. Come beck again in an hour. The poor little fellow, with his eyes filled with tears'turned slowly, and re- luctantly left -the offize. In exactly an hour he returned. He had not been very far &Ivey, but spent the time in going from store to store watching the hour. This time he was admitted to the door of the cell, The mother had recovered partly frem the drunken stupor. "1 will let her out in a little while, my boy," said the Sergeant, patting the boy's curly head. The latter's eyes brightened. "Oh, thank you,' sir," he said. " Where is your father? is he dead? "No sir, papa, is at home." "Why don't he come down for your mother 7' Again the boy's eyes filled with big tears. "Because, sir, he is drunk too." "Poor boy," muttered the officer, "if you should grow up to be a sober man you would indeed be a model." " Mamma was always so kind and good," he continued between his sobs. "Papa drank so hard, and than she thought she'd stop him if she did it too. Now they both get drunk so often." The recollection of his miserable home seemed to flit across the boy's mind and again he burst into tears, and the offi- cer expressed much sympathy for the boy, whose love for a drunken mother was so earnest, so deep. It was a tem- perance lecture that appealed to the heart. Important Announcement. BRIGHT BROTHERS, BM.A.P Pala, The Leading Clothiers of Huron, Beg to inform the people of Seaforth and surrounding country, that they have added to their large ordered clothing trade one of the Most Completeand best selected stocks of Boys', Youths' and 161's Readyniade Clothing —IN THE COUNTY. Prices Unequalled. We lead the Trade. Remember the Old Stand, Campbell's Block, opposite the Royal Hotel, Seaforth. BRIGHT BROTHERS. FURNACES. JJ OTEL FOR SALE.—The undersigned offers for sale on very reasonable terms the Drys- dale hotel property, in the Village of Drysdale. The hotel will be vacant on the let of May. It is well situated for doing a large and profitable business, and is in a condition to obtain license. Apply to JOHN BRESSON, Johnston's Mills P. 0. 1160tf rpo BLACKSMITHS.—For sale or to rent, a _L good frame blacksmith shop and tools, also frame house and stable and half an acre of land planted •with fruit trees. A first-class trade s being done in the shop at present. Is situated on corner of Lot 37, Concession 10, East Wawanosh. Will be sold cheap. For particulars apply to the proprietor on Lot 36, ncession 12, East Wawanosh, or to Wing - ham P. 0. ALEX. YOUNG. 1154t1 HOLSTEIN BULL FOR SALE.—" Bluevale Chief" No. 14491, bred by James Elliott, Bluevale, Ont. Calved February 16, 1889; sire, Crown Imperial No. 7849; dam, Theola No. 6164. Bluevale Chief has been accepted for registry in the 6th volun e et the Holstein - Friesian Herd Book under the rules of the association and will be numbered as all above. Apply to JAMES ELLIOTT, Bluevale P. 0. 1159 The Old Scrap -Book. One of the best ways to keep -in good health is not to think or worry 'too much about ft. If you are strong and well, don't imagine that some insidious dis- east may be secretly attacking your Con- stitution. Eat and drink what you de- sire, as long as it agrees with you. Your stomach knows pretty *ell what it can digest. Plain, simple food is de- sirable, as a general thing, but the luxuries of the table, in moderation, will do no harm. Take all the sleep you can get, but re- "membei that the necessary amount var- ies greatly for different peruons. Some 'must sleep nine hours, while others thrive under six. Only don't rob yourself of what you really need. : The "midnight oil" is a terribly ,expensive illuminant toburn either for purpose of labor or study of any sort. Avoid ,sudden changes of temperature. You cannot avoid them in /New Eng- land, but you can guard against them by • always wearing flannel underclothing. The lightest grade of flannel sold, es- pecially for summer wear,.is a great life - preserver, and not oppressively warm, even in the hottest weather. • Always treat a Common cold with • great respect. Ninety-nine cases out of a hundred it will get well anyway, but the hundredth cold, if neglected, may lead to bronchitie, pneumonia, or con- sumption. It is best to take no chances. —Scientific American. TERSEY BULL.—The undersigned will keep e) during the present season on his farm, 2nd concession, H. R. S., Tuckersmith, a thorough- bred Jersey Bull. sired by Canada's John Bull. Terma—$1.50, payable at the time of service with privilege of returning it necessary. JOHN HANNAH. N. B.—Also for sale a Jersey bull calf, eleven months old, thoroughbred. 1164 FURNACES. Leading Coal and Wood Burning Furnaces" GARNET COAL FURNACE sizes -5. 6, 7 and 8—Steel Radiators, portable or brick set. 11OUSE FOR SALE.—For sale,, that large , and comfortable frame dwelling at present 'occupied by the undersigned. It is next to Mr. Clarkson's residence, is pleaeantly situated and has only been built one year. There are two lots. The house contains four large bed- rooms, besides pantries, parlor, sitting room, &c. There is also a splendid stone cellar under the whole house and a good well. Will be sold cheap. Apply on the premises. MRS. FRIEL, Seaforth. 1164tf "VIONEY LOST.—Lost, in or near the Village of Hensel], on Saturday, the 29th inst. a purse containing about $4 in money, a note for $42 and a bank pass book. The note was drawn in favor of Oscar Ann Randall or bearer, dated Chiselhurst, about December 15th, 1888, and for $42. The finder of the purse will be suitably rewarded on leaving it, with contents at Chisel - hurt Post Office, and the public are hereby cautioned against purchasing or negotiating Said mote AS payment of the same has been stopped. OSCAR ANN RANDALL. 1164-4 • four THE ATLANTIC WOOD BURNING FURNACE in two sizes—Nos. 43 and 53. No. 43 takes wood 13 inches long, and No. 53 takes wood 53 inches long; Steel Radiators, portable or brick set, has an EXTRA HEAVY FIRE BOX; is the most POWERFUL HEATER, Economical, Strong, Durable Wood Furnace made. These furnaces are put up under the supervision of a mechanic with an experience of 25 years in the frr- nace business, and are guaranteed to give good satisfaction every time. DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.—Notice is hereby given that the partnershiphere- tofore subsisting between us, the undersigned, as general storekeepers at the Village of Blake, in the township of Hay, has been this day dissolved by mutual consent. All debts owing to the said partnership are to be paid to John Leslie, at the said Village of Blake, aforesaid, and all claims „against the said partnership are to be presented to the said John Leslie, by whom the*same will be settled. Dated at Zurich this third day of April, A. D., 1890. JOHN LESLIE, ALEXANDER MANSON. Wit- ness, M. ZELLER. All overdue accounts mum be paid at once. 1164x4 -LIAM STOCK AND IMPLEMENTS FOR "X • SALE.—For sale by private bargain, on Lot 16, Concession 2, McKillop, the following property, viz.: One Berkshire sow, bred by George Green and in pig to imported "Sir William;" 2 sows bred by Isaac Harlock, of South Zorrs, in pig to imported "Royal Hope," which took second prize at -the London Show, England, last Ausrust •, 6 young boars bred by J. E. Brethour, of Burford, bred from imported stock on both sides; 1 mare, in foal to " Glen- nis ;"1_good horse five years old ; 1 mare corning three, got by "Mark Laddie " arid eligible for registration; a lot of good sheep; 1 binder, 2 general purpose plows, and a quantity of Golden Vine Peas, clean1 and suit- able for seed. This property must be sold as the proprietor has given up farming. TOBIAS NASH 1165-2 • - kUCTION SALE OF HOUSEHOLD FURNI- iTURE, &c.—Mr. W G. Duff has been in- structed by Mr. W. J Northgraves to sell by Public Auction at Mr. W. N. Watson's Store, first door north ef the Queen's Hotel, on SAT- URDAY, APRIL 19th, at one o'clock, P. M., the following articles, viz.: One piano, 1 excellent parlor set, 1 hair cloth set, several bed -room sets and a lot of other miscellaneous house- hold furniture and fixings, including stoves, carpets, pictures, bureaus, sideboards, chain, tables, ite., also a lot of shop furniture, in- cluding a good safe, together with a lot of clocks, jewelry and plated ware, and other articles too numerous to mention.. The whole must be sold bring what they will as the pro- prietor is leaving Seaforth and has no further use for them. Terms, cash. W: J: NORTH. GRAVES, Proprietor; W. G. DUFF, Auctioneer. gar ESTIMATES FURNISHED. Kidd' s Hardware Stove House, MAIN STREET, • SEAFORTH. C(INSUMPT/KI its first stage*, can Pm anecesattdlyi 1 checked by the prompt use of Ayer's' Cherry Pectoral. Even in the Uteri periods of that disease the cougli is wonderfully relieved by ibis medicine: "1 have need Ayer'a ChemPectoni with the best effect in my practice. This Wonderful preparation once saved my life. I had a constant cough, night sweats, was greatly reduced inflesh. and given up by my physician. One bottle and a -half of the Pectoral cured me."—A. J. Eidson, M. D., Middleton. Tennessee. - " Several years ago 1 was severely ill. The doctors said I was in consumption, and that they could do nothing for me but advised rae, as a last resort, to •rjr Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. After taking this medicine two or three months I was cured, and my health remains good. to the present day."—James Birehard, Darien., Conn. Several years ago, on a passage home from California, by water, I contracted SO Severe a bold that for some days I was confined to my state -room, and a physician on board considered my life In danger. Happening to have a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, 1 usf„sd it freely, and ray lungs were soon restored to a healthy condition. Since then I have invariably recommended this prep- aration."—J. E. Chandler, Junction, Va. NOTICE TO HOG FEEDERS. —The under- signed willbuy hogs till the warm weather sets in. We are now paying from $5.25 to $5.80 for choice light hogs and it is quite possible , they may be higher before spring opens, so that all who have hogs from 125 pounds to 200113s. will find it pays better to fatten and sell them now than hold them till the fall. Seaforth Pork Packing House. " EMU OF H. Bon. 1161 suRzei jJfliUUU J%% uvt.tb TO THE EDITOR: Please inform your readers that 1 have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. 1 shad be glad to send two bottles of my remedy FREIE to any of your readers who hare COW gumption if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. Raspactfall., Ts Ad SLOCUM, 11.0., 186 West Adelaide St., TORONTO, ONTARIO. Ayer's Cherry Penni, PEEPATIED Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. tic)" .1 by all Druggists. Price $1; sixbottlias,0, THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE Established 1867. • HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. CAPITAL (PAID UP) SIX MILLION DOLLARS - $6.0009000 REST, $700,000 B. E. WALKER, GENERAL MANAGSR. SEAFORTH BRANCH. A General Banking Business Transacted. Farmers' NotesDiscounted. Drafts issued payable at all points in Canada, and the principal cities in the United States,Great Britain, France, Bermuda,&c. SAVINGS BANK DE PARTMENT. Deposita of $1.00 and upwards received, and current rates of interest allowed. INTEREST ADDED TO THE PRINCIPAL AT THE IND OF MAY AND .NOVEifEER IN EA.011 YEAR. Special Attention given to the Collection of Commercial Paper and Timers' Sales Notes. F. ilOLMESTED, Solicitor. JOHN AIRD, Manager. GOLDEN LION, SEAFORTH. 1•13111111111 WE SHOW THIS THANKSGIVING WEEK Several Special Lines of Goods Worth the Careful Inspection of Buyers. Amongst them is a line of Black and Dark Brown Silk Plush for • 31/f..A2F111T-JS. This line I bought direct from the manufacturers, and can sell them at $2.50 per yard, worth in the A-egular,way $4 per yard. special value in all kinds of BLACK DRESS GOODS. Also We claim to hold the best stock of Black Dress Goods :outside of the cities. Our stock embraces all the newest fabrics in all wool goods, from 20c to $1.65 per yard. Ask to see our 90c Cashmere. A. C.A1.41.i 8014101'1'MM). AIo ANDIS LNOS11AA 'R 0 0 0j •C:1) 0 c/a 0 c-p- emu put Siticil jo showing a fine . assortment 1=14 11igefi eti JO toSVes iBM.A..ir0=3EEE Seed Emporium, WHOLESALE & RETAIL Scott& Crich, Proprietors. Mr. Scott begs to state to the public that he has *pia gone into the Flour, Feed and Beall business by entering into a partnership with tisa present proprietor, F. W. Oriole The new firm will be conducted under the name of Scott is Crich and having our shop full of the choioest seeds, we feel confident that we ear meet the wants of every one favoring us wit their .ns tom. Among the new varieties we offer you till season are the following Colorado Spring Wheat—this is a new variety introduced here last season and bas done well in this locality, running from 20 to 28 bushels per acre. Ameri- can Banner Osts—the leading variety; Mum- my Peas; also the improved English Chevalier Barley and a splendid stock of common two - rowed Barley, also a full stock of Clover and Grass Seeds — something extra in Lueenns, trefoil and other Clovers. Our Flour and Feed Department is complete in all lines. Goods deliYered to any place in town. Give us a eall and be convinced that we have one of the largest and best (docks of seeds in the county and prices to suit the times. Remember the place; O. C. Willsons Block Seaforth. SCOTT & CRIOIL JOHN BEATTIE Clerk of the Second Division Court County of Huron. Commissioner, Conveyancer, Land, Loan and Insurance Agent, Funds Invested and to Loan. R. JAMIE SON, SEAFORTH. Stink Setdorth. OFFICE—Orer fitou7 $ Livens' store, Kiln matt