Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1892-10-28, Page 7OCTOBER 28, 1892. A leamemeasnwamesemeMalit Funny Bits. —One of Boston's enfants terrible diettin:- guished himself by remarking to the Rev, Dr. Phillips Brooks during a parochial call -.chi& Dr Brooks was making on t the small bey's mother; Mr. Brooks, I should think you woald a great deal rather have been a pantile the oircus than ha,ve been a minia. -ter 1"—Boeton Gazette. —Gentleman : I can't drink this toup." Waiter takes away the bowl and fetches an- other. Gentlemen "1 can't take this soup, either." Waiter " Beg your pardon, air why not, sir?" "Because you hate) not brought me a spoon." — • Phat a blessing it is," says Pet,tlight- ly meddled, "that night niver comes an till late in the day, when a man is completely toired out, and he couldn't work no onore, snyhovr, at all, not even if it was morning." —The praise which J. M. Barrie, the Scotch writer, receives from his fellow - townsmen its not likely to turn his head.- A wise old Scotch wife,to whose attention Mr. Brie's. Little Minister had been balled, said: It's a' rale true, but, there's eitethin' bale -mere havers about things that's gaen ort ilka day—and wha wants to , waste their time reedin' about sic like. Beside', whet kens he about the metiers in Kirrie. He's just been makin' up bits here and there oot o fat he's heard ither fouk He's no old enneh to hae ony mind o' sic things." What has become of your eice," asked Miss Donohue of Mrs. O'Rafferty ?" g 6 Ooh, sure, an' she's done well wid herself. She married a lord." "Why, yod don't tell me! An English lord ?—" No; I don't think he's an English torch He's a larldlord. He kepee a summer hotel out in New Jareey 7 —On one occasion, when Robin Allison, the beadleof Kilwinning, bad carried -some goods for a, traveler visiting Ms customers. he was delighted with a dram over and abode his pay. Ded, that's rale kude o ye, *too," said Robin• " but, maybe be able to dae ye a good turn yet. Ye ken I'm the parish sexton. Dae—dae ye like yer heid heich ?" Nothing in Newspapers Nohow. He was a well-to-do farmer with a krinvn son or two, and they were thrifty. One day not long ago the old man came into the office of the country paper and found the editor at his desk. The editor was surprised. He had known the farmer for twenty years or more but he had never seen him id that place before. Good morning," remarked the farmer Points. rather sheepishly. The only sinners who are lost are those "How are you ?" responded the. editor. who die without repentance. "Glad to see you. I -thought you naight be Whenever et church bell rings it means corning around some day.'' tint God is still willing to have mercy upon " Yes" and the old trianle'face grew rosy 1 the sinner. red. ' The happiest Christians are the ones win "What's the news?" incntired the editoro work the most at the trade. " I want to subscribe for the paper. That's' •Speett for the Lord every time you get a news ain't it r and the farmer laughed. chance. God will see that you do not run " i)Vell, yes ; very good news." out of something to say if you undertake to 6 4 ia year ?" telk about his goodness. THE HURON EXPOSITOR, ugust lowe The Hon. J. W. Fetinimore is the Sheriff of Kent Co., Del., and lives at Dover, the County Seat and Cap- ital of the State. The sheriff is a gentleman fifty-nine years of age, and this is what he says: have " used your August }lower for sev- eral years in my family and for my "own use, and found, it does me " more good than any other remedy. 6` I have been troubled. with what (' call Sick Headache. A paitt comes "in the back part of nay head first, "and then soon a general headache "until I become sick and vomit. " At , times, too, I have a fullness - "after eatint, a pressure after,eating "at the pit of the stomach and I "sourness, when food seemed to rise "up in my throat and mouth. When "1 feel this coming oil if I take a "little August Flower it relieves "me, and is the best remedy I have "ever taken for it.; Fair this reason "1 take it and recommend it to "others as a great remedy for Dys- pepsia, &c." G. G. GREEN, Sole Maaufacturer, Woodbury, New jersey, U. S. A. cushion, Miss Nellie Collie, Chester Pugh. Carpet„ -Mac Messer, J, Robertson. SPECIALS.—Colleetion canned fruit, F Hartley, H Patterson. Bread, Mrs J Mc- Donald, Walter Rutherford. Butter, Mrs J McDonald, Mrs Hartley. Catsup, H Pat- tenson. RABBITS.—Minnie MeEwen. , BABIES.—Mra. John Diment, 18 months, Mrs Hugh Rose, 4 months. RACES.—Running race, H Johnston, Geo McDonald. Trotting race, J Haines, J Pugh: is a difference of the sixteenth of an inch, the difference is recorded. The sheets of paper, which are eight feet long, peas over rollers that are connected with the wheels of the ear, and keep the record of each rnile of the reed traversed, Every curviest* well as the alignment and variation of the height of the rails, is recorded ; each defect is cletaly marked, and it is then an easy mat- ter to lactate and repair them. This car is also the home of Air. Dudley, who owns it. The car is known as the Dudley Dynograph Car. A Happy Thought. When Washington State was a part of Oregon Territory, and the Indians numerous there and white people few, there came one day to Mr. N—'s young orchard, a, host of red men to help themselves to applee. Mrs. N-- was alone, but she was a brave woman (as it behooved the pioneer women to be), so she went to the orchard and ordered the Indians to leave. They took no notice of her, for well they knew that Mr. N-- was working far on the other side of his fem. Now it chanced that Mrs. N-- had a eet of artificial teeth, and us she watched her apples disappearing , jut° . the Indians' basket, a happy thought occurred to her, and 'walking into their midst, she dropped her teeth into her hand. - The natives gazed upon her in amazement for a moment, held a hasty consultation, poured -the apples out upon the ground, and speedily departed. For years afterward they held Mrs. N-- in reverence and awe. t--Francel Holbrook. There was no Room for Him. It is related in a Penneylve,nia village that on tlte Fourth of July, many years ago, a .certain eloquent member of Congress was delivering an oration. He had rehearsed at some length the virtues and achievements of the signers -of the Deelaration of Independ- ence, and had,taken up the eohjeet, of the greatness of Washington. Working up to the full height of his eloquence' he asked: "In what place shall we pu; this peerless man of Mount Vernon? Shall we put him among the kings of the *tartlet No; for he scorned their titles. Shall 'heeet put him among the soldiers? No; fitttleitiiyite, much more than a soldier. Shalleettfittte.#4d him t*.rnong the statesmen ? i'h4hee thiansim: .plicity, of his geniuil rose auteSte-de- Ogee of - statecraft. In at hat ,then shall we put.him—this peieletift man. Just then, Sandy McDonald, a Scotch - Man, whose acquadritance with Americtan history was possibly not much :greatet than his liking, for the American oratoty, rose from his seat in the midet of the audience. . " Hoot mon 1" he said, "ye ban e'enputt 'im m in my place here, for I'glen °et How muchs it "Quo dollar cult or a dollar and a hall if You can find ten men who will fight for paid at the end of the year." their politics to where you can find one who The farmer took out his peeked:took1 will go out in the rain for hie religion. " Give me $5 worth," he said, Here's the money," Awards for Youthful Genius. The editor gave such unmistakeable eni!.1 Children, to the number of five hundred, deuce of surprise and curiosity that the who are among the readers of Harper's farmer felt ca.11ect upon to explain. Young People, are to be made happy by tha "I guess," he mid, "1 ougbt to have done receipt of prizes for articles of their own it before. We and the boys have talked work that they have sent in to the publish - about it, but we thought there wasn't any- era of the magazine. These articles consist thing ranch in the newspapers a.nywe.Y, and of vetted and metal work, pen drawings, we thought we could get more out of a original illuttraeed fun, descriptions of dollar a year some other way. Not long books read, Wain and fancy sewing, laces Digo we ran aeross a. man with a fine plan to and embroidery. make money. No matter what it was., We The first prize, a fine bicycle, was award- wentinto it and we are short now a thousand dollars. The other fellow ain't though. One of our neighbors read us all about him in his paper yesterday. If ,I'd begun taking your per twenty years ago I'd still have 9S0 years to run on that $1,000 we gave up for nothing. Send on your paper, and when my time is up, let me know. Good day," ma,hogauy secretary for a very spirited pen- - and he went out. . and -ink drawing of a festival party that would have done credit to a grown up per - The First Year of' Married Life. 1 seal. Alice leads all the girls who' have eampeted for prizes. Orton Meigs, ofl A woman should not teke offence too easily. Often, indeed, the words or Manner va. tashittgton, D. C., received a prize for a she resents were not ill -meant by he; bus- well finiehed cabinet box. Katie Ungar.. band. A ma,n may have a hasty, brute'. aged fifteen years, of St. John, New Bruns - sounding fashion of speaking that tries and wick, got the firet money prize for an oil painting on velvet, and Morton R. Thomp- Iturte a woman cruelly, and she should en- deavor, by all gentle means in her power, son, of Garden City, L. I., was given $20 ,-, for a model of a locomotive that was well to break him oft the habit, by represeptino ed to Gardner M. Gale, aged fifteen yeare, of Olean, New York, for a cutter. It has been much admired by visitors, and Ca,ptain Howard Patterson, of the navy, remarked that the lines of the cutter are very fine. Alice Sargent, aged nine, of Tompkinsville, Rhode Island, was awarded a prize of a fine . . to him, in his calmer moments, the pain he inflicts en her.. The man who loves his wife will esually try to break himself of any peculiarity that is distasteful to her ; but she may teat as- sured she will not better him by continual harping upon the sore subject. To harmless and inoffensive idiosyncrasies the wife should shut her eyes. At the beginning of her married_ life let her make up her mind- o one fact; that she cannot force her husbahd to resemble her in read two hundred and nine books, and also every particular of thought and feeling. gets a prize. Charles Mertens, of Erie, He will have his preferences and distestes, Pa., sent a very good electric motor and s and she need not expect to coerce or per - witch and gets a money prize. Alice Win- suade him into conforming them to hers; stanley, aged thirteen, of Yokoha,ma,Japan, after all, he has a right to his own inclividu- sent a pretty pair of mittens, and Emma alities, and she has no business to interfere Kidde, of Hoboken, N. J., a fine point lace with them. handkerchief. Wm. J. Aylwood, aged six - There will always be enough Points of teen, of Milwaukee, sent a very good pen - and -ink sketch of a ship, and Robert W. Crum, who lives near Baneor, Maine, sent a pretty model of a schooner, sane set, in re lief.—New York- Times. known in the Georgia raids during the war. It consists of two hundred and, twentynne pieces, end took three months to make. The judges considered it a very remarkable piece of work. Seth 1.1. Hutchinson, aged fourteen, of South Delete, sent in a list of one hundred books that he bad read, with a brief sketch of each, headed by a picture in pen and' ink. It was considered the best contribution in this kind of work, C Ern- est Scott, aged fifteen, of Alma, Michiga,n, common sympathytto form a meeting ground, and upon matter of divergent opinion let them agree to disagree. A potent aid to a wife's charity for her husband will be the reflection that, in all probability, her faults ere quite as trying to her husbandats his can be to her.—Tit Bits. — - The Bluevale Show. The following is a list of the prize winners at the Bluevale show, of. which we made mention last week: liGRSES.—Roadster, J C Johnston, J Rob- ertson. Saddle Florses.-11 Johnston, Geo McDonald. Yearling General. Purpose. -0 Mills, W Connell. General Purpose, year old.—M Smith, W Stewart. Draught Colt.— E Nicholson, W Connell. RoadsteeColt.— W J Kerswell, Roaeleter Yearling.—Peter Robertson. CATTLE.—Milch cow, R N Duff, J McIn- tosh. Cell, John Farrow, J Pugh. 4 7 Fall and Winter Dry Goods. dunes% When sight tures, and ran her hen face, and shut her eye self that thin was re she had only know looking upon him, nobl appearance as well as out "Just to think many years and never and greater is the soul's the scales fall. from ti ame she was in rap- s over her father's as if to assure her- ly the father whom by touch, and now man as he was in in reality, she cried / had this father to new him." As great joyful surprise tvhen e eyes and the long spiritual darkness is en ed, and we look up 1 into our Father's face always radiant and loving, but now for the first time revealed, and our blindness fo ever gone, we cry: Abbe Father 1"-a-TalMage. Impressions of Jamaica. 'Travelling in Jamaiof impresses one with d the magnificent police isoipline of the ' Is- , land, and with the rem rkable efficiency of that body. The impree ion left upon me, as an old traveller within the tropies,is that the Jamaicans are a contehted, hard•working, as well aa law-abidimi people, and na,tur- . Much travel in the West Indies, nthe spent in the and Porto Rico, it would be impossi- pie. rthern climates that Dees to the poorer own. The year to eries of changes in ay. A mere mini - soil makes the low- liest, and 'independent bsing. Freeze he can- not, and as for starvinti, except as a volun- tery process, that is o t of the queation. To repeat, to some their's seems to be a life of peaceful content, almost an ideal exist- ence in a fine climate where their ' every interest is fostered andiprotectecl by a truly paternal government; Imre presided over by a gentleman, who has rade (remake and her interests his own Sir Henry Arthur Blake. —Dominion Illuetrated Monthly. Too Chary of Praise. praise. I think we and flattery. I was with seeing bow de - ally a peaceful people nearly all the islands of including nearly eix m Spanish islands of Cub confirms my belief that bis to find a happier pe The cold winters of n mean so much wretche classes are to them unk the Jamiiceos is but a one long glad summer mum of labor in such a We are too chary o mast confound praise much impressed once termined God is that people who do right should be praised. So ille has taken it upon Himself, and says: "A woman who feateth ' the _Lord, she shall bejpreAsed." But, alas, it is often after she ba , gone from eartInand then we say she watt very sweet! Why didn't you tell her so nihen she was here? I had a dear friendOnce who had an only little daughter. She . lwanted her to be so perfect that she was al aye pointing out her imperfectione, and she iid not se'e that what the child needed was praise. One day when in her closet, the catld side, she was so draw for the blessings of he for the sweet child Go Change. The secret of happiness is constant dhange within the limitations of reason and ctimmon sense. A rut in the human soul is like a rut- in the road, dangerous and upsetting. If we must remain at the seine tasks year after year for nearly the whole of a lifetime, then it should be our constant effort to get all the variety we can, into ourellives :in other ways. The fact that farmeri wives go insane more than any Other cleats of persons is attributed to the terrible monotony of their liverewhich are one unceasing round of hard ,!work. A machine bearing on a einglempint • of metal wears out that point epeedilye it is pre- cisely the same with our lives. One dull round of thought, doingtthe tome tasks at the same hour year atter year will break down the finest, strongest So get out and have a vacaiion. At least, give yourself a vacation of thought. Read new things; walk along treat roads; look at new pictures and new buildings. Invite fresh, new thought always to your soul; so shall you keep always young. Be not So sure that your fondest theory is exactly the correct one. Nobody's theeries are so per- fect that they cannot be improved on by new ones. Standing still is decay and death. Holdethe same plow handle, bend over the same desk forty years, with your thoughts chained down to them, and you become a hump shouldered old hunk—blind, deaf, week and disagreeable. Keep up with t5e wagon. Change your old views and habits for new and better ones when you find them, and be always on the look out for them. Life is change, move- ment, sparkle. "No admittance except on Business."' "This is one of the thinga I like about Christian Endeavor," said a keen businets man, a, commercial traveller, one of the speakers at tho New York convention. "It places this businees motto on the door of every eociety." A capitally true way- of putting it. Not fun, but business, is the chief end of our Society, and one who does not enter with a clear eppreciation and a loyal recognition of filet chief ed had by all odds best reznain outside. This is but one way of phrasing a ronviction that has been gloriously and variously expressed in the successive State conventions of the last few weeks. "Business ;" that ward has the right ring to it. POULTRY.—Leghorns, J Coultee, D Pat- , " The ;King's business " that requireth Littlejohn. W haste is more and More becoming the great Black Spanish, C Coulees, ton. Plymouth Rocks, George ':Henry, W concern of Christian Endeavor Societies. Higgins. Bantams, P PattersonlA Duncan. "Not to be ministered unto, but to minis - Geese, Tom Diment, C Coultes. Ducks, F Scott, T Diment. ter." .As Dr. Farrar has well said in a DOGS.—Black Spaniel, F Timinins, L B , recent address, " No young person has any right to come into the cherch in thie day Duff. Black Spaniel pups, P Patterson 0 Hartley. , and ask for a seat in a rockinmehair, or Iv expect to be swung in a hammock by the '' FReiT,—Spies J Pugh. Alexanders, pastor," We need La get a great deal more McDonald. St Lawrence, Mrs Crawford. Snows, J Patterson. Crabs, M M V'tt. , c i IS. business into our religion, as well as more rah ion into our business. Far-sightednese, was kneeling at her out in thankfulness life, and especially had given her, that she became entirely ugconscious of the little one at her side. As oon as the mother Ili,: ceated;the child thre dier arms about her mother's neck and excl imed : ".0h, mether, how you did brag abotitt me to God? Now I will be good." Suppose you make a frozen • ones around that they are cold ; p how much they travel trial of this on some you. You complain rhaps you don't think chill them; but try this way of bringing ut the feelings that lie buried, and that love and praise may re- store. We sing: Touched by a human hear Cords that were broken wi But do it as well as 'raking the Plants in. Select some warm and sunshiny day for lifting them. writes Eben E. Rexford, in the October Ladies' Home Journal. Be sure to npply the spade far enong away from the plant to loosen the earth \ without cutting through the roots, and them without breaking, if possible. Do inot attempt to remove all the earth that adheres as soon as lifted, but place them where the sun can fall on them fully and leave them there for two or three days, covering them at night .with something that will keep them dry. After having been left exposed to the sun for a time, the earth wilt become so dry that it will fall off readily when the roots are mov- ed. After being cleared of the soileleave the roots exposed to the sun awhile, as this causes evaporation of some of the juic:s of the plant, which might lead to decay if they were at once removed to the cellar. A pro- fessional fiorist will tell you that more plants of this kind are lost in winter from storing when "green" than from any other cause. What he means by the term green is a too succulent condition., Exposure to the sun and air removes this. The best place to store such roots is in a room or cellar that is dry and cool, but frost proof. A damp place will be pretty sure to induce mould, and though this may not pre- vent the roots from coming through the win- ter in a living condition, it will so injure them that they will be pretty sure to give an inferior crop of flowers. , awakened by kindness, I vibrate once more.: sing it. —Rev. Mr. Holmee of Stratford, preach- ed missionary sermon at Monkton, on Sunday morning, 9th "net., urging a cheer- ful and liberal giviog. Mitchell, followed H. J. Hurlburt, of with a description of the extent and gr iwth of the domestic and foreign missionel of the Methodist Church. —At the Mitchell High School, on Wed- nesday, 12th inet.,,thel four hundredth an- niversary . of the dit+very of America. by - Columbus, was recognised by Mr. Elliott, head master, by giving an interesting ad- dress on Columbus, before the pupate Mr. Race, of the Mitchell Recorder, also ad- dressed thelpupils on the same subject. —An aged and much respected resident of Motherwell, in the person of Mr. James Brown, passed away okt the 6th inst, at the age of 87 years and 6 months. . He became a resident of Fullerton township in 1846. Soon after he was apPointed tax collector, and "gathered in" ie the neighborhood of £50 pounds, an immense sum in those days, -which he carried on foot to Goderich and deposited it with the district treasurer. In 1847 the first school h me in the township was erected and was rat occupied by Mr. Brown, who watethus he first school teacher in Fullerton, which Position he retained until about the year 1860, when he resigned! after 27 years of felthful service in !the' teaching profession, whert. he was placed upon the superannuat d list, from which he drew an annuity of nekrly $200. He filled the position of Clerk atod Magistrate of this municipality and was the first 'Post Master of Motherwell, and fitt a great number of years was auditor of the township accounts, all of which position4 he discharged wit'h that rectitude and ability which character- ized him as a man. in matters of religion he early identified hiMself with the Presby- terian Church Mr. Brown was an elder in the Motherwell Church! for over 30 years. a J. FISHER GRANT, Merchant, New Glas- gow,Nova Scotia : "Having been positively cured of dyspepspepsik by the use of three packages of K. D. C. ould cheerfully rec- ommend it to any su ering from dreadful disease." What is tt_ViMAII,”Vtrt,h`,. • , • al eeeaeSteeeveeneaeieen eeeeneee tenneeeeeeeneeeese‘'d Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants and Childron. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor ether Nr.,,rootie substance. It 13 a llarmiess substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing S-yrraps, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty yeirs' use by licilions of Mothers. Castorcia destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castoria, preverAs vomiting Sour Curd, cures Dlarrlitcea and wiad Colic. Castoria relieves teething, troubles, cures coitstipation and atillency.: Castoria. assimilates the food, regulates tho stomach and.' bowels, giving healthy and nattaral sleep. Casa toria •is' the Children's Panacca—the Mother's Friend. Castoria. `'Castbria, is Ra excellent medicine or c11 - (iron. Mothershave repeatedly told mo of its good effect upon their children." Dn. G. C. OSGOOD, "Castoria ia the best remedy for children of which I am acquainted. I hopo tho day r.ot far distant when -mothers will consider the -real interest of their children, and use Castoria in- stead of the various quack nostrums w hich aro destroying- their loved ore, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup ancl other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby- sending L110/21 to premature graves." - Dr« J. F. Knmart.on, Conway, Ar- Caco-toria. " Castoria,i5 so we:I ad.antedte elaildren. that I recomrzend ic cabuporior toany prescription kno,.ya to ;no." 11. A. Ancruca, M. D., 1!11 f'o. Oxford. Lt., Brooklyn, N. Y. "Our rhysicians in din cllildren's depart- ment hf.---ve spohen. highly of their er.peri- .cace In their outside practice with .Castoria. and although WO only have among our medical zuppliez whr.t., Lnown regular._ products, yet N70 aro free tu confess that the raf2rits of Castoria has won us co look with ' favor upee. it." UNITED HOSPITAL AND DISPENSARY, Boston, Maas. .4.u.= C. Surrn, Pres., The Centaur Company, in Murray Street, New York City. out of it and the cords came back to their natural places again. That was nine years ago and it has never broken out since, I can walk five miles to -day as feet as any one, and all this I owe to B. B. J3., which certainly saved my leg if not my life. I cheer- fully mow mend it to all sufferers. Give 13. B. 13. a trial, and it will cure you as it did me. OU y, WM. McNEE, St. Ives P.O., Ont ario. year a from Nervousness, Weakness of the Stomac , Mr. F. C. Sanderson, the druggist of St. Marys, Dyspepsia and Indigestion until my health was gone. Ontario, certifies to the entire truthfulness of the I had been doctoring constantly with no relief. I remarkable stateroent made by Mr. McNee, and says bought one bottle of South'Amerlean Nervine,which that several other wonderful cures have been made did me more good than any 850 worth of doctoring in his district by this unrivalled remedy for bad I ever did in my life. I would advise every weakly blood, dyspepsia, biliousness, constipation and all Person to use this valuable and lovely remedy." A diseases of the stomach, liver, bowel° and blood. trial bottle will convince you. Warranted by Lumsden & Wilson, Druggists, Seaforth. --.4a,oeise-- ledge, and to -day believe they quit drinking: of their own free wilL No harmfuleffeet results from their administration. Cures guaranteed. Send for cir- cular for full particulars. Address in confidence, fteenee SPECIFIC CO., 185 Race Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. 1260-52 Rebecca Wilkinson, of Brownsvalley, Indiana, says: "1 had been in a distressed condition for three Reminded of His Boyhood Days. It is said that if you once learn- a thing thoroughly, you will never forget it. This was demonstrated recently as described in the following paragraph cut from the col- umns of the Ontonagon, Michigan, Herald : Two clerical looking Individuals recently visited the shingle mill of the Diamond Match Co., and stood watching the packers who, with lightnineelike rapidity, placed the shingles in position. Finatly one of 'the twain, a tall, thin, pleasant -looking man, with an auburn colored mustache and a hand which indicated office work, stepped forward to one of the packers and asked if he would allow him to pack a bunch. With a look of "Oh, you dude, you can't do this,' -Bailey. Tatman Sweets, W Bailey. ca. quickness to see and seize the entice' mo- the packer winked at the other boys and Maiden's Blush, Fred Johnston. Rueset,W lection, W Bailey. - ment, ingenuity and pereeverance,—these I stepped aside. It was then the shingles be - HOED CROPS.—Turntps.—Swede. it IQ - Ewen. M Robertson. White, M McEwen. miliionairet every month. The eame Mangolds, 0 Mills, L Menzies. Potatoes.' iti"' transferred into Christian work, and -L-Elephant, W Haney. Bell, M Smith. consecrated to winning the unsaved and Rose, F Hartley, C Coultes. : Pumpkins, helping inexperienced disciples, wilt giVe to A Patterson, A Dunkin. Squaeld, I' Hartley. each worker who illustrates that kind of , VEGETA BLEs.—Peppers L Robertson. service an inheritance " incorruptible and Turnip beet, A Patterson' W Eltit ' i gins. Lon undefiled, and that faeleth not away." These Haney. Carrots.—Short red qualities are conspicuously lacking in some Hartley, A Patterson. White, if Piet', A of the fortunes that are being made in the beet. W . Patterson. -Long Red, 11 Patteh o 't - C b stock exchanges of our great cities in these bage, Mrs W Stewart W H 8 "th' • a - da s Yes, let. lle hold fast to that motto gen to fly as the office, gent's arm began to, qualities in the cemmerciel world are making , uggm. Red, for every society, " No admittance except W Huggm, Mrs W Stewart. ,Cauliflower, oa ausmese. Mrs W Stewart, W Huggin. Tomatoes, Tom Diment,‘E' Nicholson. Pham,1M Mc- -pop, W Burgess, F Hartley. 'are low, D \ Ewen. German rape, A MeEwene Corn. Patton. Sweet, A MoBweo. ' , PLANTK AND FLOWERS. —Colliection house flowers, Miss M Robertson. Hanging plant, Mies M Diment. LADIES' WORK. —Mitts, 11.rs Munn. Fancy chair, F Timmins. Painting, A Rutherford, J Jenkine. Log cabin quilt, Mrs J McDonald, Lizzie Roberitson. Fancy I quilt, Mrs Hugh Ross, M Dienent. Fancy ; ara in I 1 el sees vs /tint Inv A Car that Writes. After tvrenty yesre of patient labor and study, Mr, P. H. Dudley of New York City, has invented a car that writes. It records, slowly or rapidly, the condition of the road -bed over which it travels. A curious electrical machine controls a number of small glass tubes, fin- ished to a point, that are filled with ink. Thee tubes trace on paper, specially made, all the variations of the track; where there Diteth Pr' g Castoria work like machinery, and he packed a , bunch in less.time than it wets ever done before in that room, causing all the packers to stop work and witness the ,feat and hie friend to wink knowingly as the hero of the little incident, after thanking the shingle packer, passed out of the mill. The cleri- cal -looking man was none other than A. R. Gray, of Houghton, w,ho, when a boy, got his start in life as a shingle packer in the Menominee River mills. From a shingle packer he entered the law effice learned A Cure for Constipation and Headache. Dr. Silas Lane, while in the Rocky Mountains, dis- oovered a -root that when combined with other herbs, makes an easy and certain cure for constipation. It is in the form of dry roots and leaves, and is known as Lane's Family Medicine. It will cure headache In one night. For the blood, liver and kidneys, and for clearine up the complexion it does wonders. Druggists sell it at 50c a package. The Prince of Pectoral R medies. Dr.Wood's Nor- way Pine Syrup cures- Gong s,Colds, Asthma, Hoarse- ness and Bronchitis withou. fail. The best recommendatioit for K. 'D. C. is the cure makes. It has cured sufferers in every stage of Dyspepsia. It will cure you too. News About Town. It is the current report about town that Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs is making some re- Quote bot rnarkable cures with people who are troubled with can ship to Coughs, Sore Throat, Asthma, Bronchitis and Con - HAY! CHOICE HAY! 5 and 10 cars. Must be guaranteed good sound baled hay OR NO SALE. tom price and when you ALFRED BOYD, Toronto. Long Worms, Pin Worms, Round Wcrms or Tape Worms are promptly destroyed and reinoved by Dr. Low's Worm Syrup. elleete0e, Burdock Pills never gripb, sicken or cure constipation and SicliHeadache. -eie • No other Emulsion equat Milburn's Cod Liver Qil Emulsion in pleasant ta te, nounishing power or curative effect. eumption. Any druggist will give you a trial bottle free of cost It is guaranteed to relieve and cure. The Large Bottles are 50c. and $1. --41 K. D. C. builds up the system by restoring the stomach to healthy action. Free sample to any ad- dress. K. D. C. Company, New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. injure. They • A free sample package of the Wonder-working Dyspepsia elite, K. D. C., mailed to any address. K. D. C. Company, New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. RHEUMATISM CURED IN A South American Rheumatic Cure for Rheumatism and Neuralgia radi- cally cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the sys: tem is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disap peers. The first dose greatly benefits. 75 cents. Warranted by Lumsden & Wilson, druggists, Seat orth shorthand and typewriting leimseff, finally beginning the study of law, and to -day he is a partner in one of the most influential and brilliant law firms on the peninsula. Seeing. I wet reading of a painter's ohild who be- came blind in infancy. But, after the child was nearly grown, a surgeon removed the blindness. When told this could be done, the child's chief thought, her mother being dead, was that she would be able to see her father, who had watched over her with ten- t --eeee Ladies appreciate Anti -Dandruff from the fact that it not only thoroughly removes dandruff with three applications, but stops falling of the hair, restores fading hair to its original color, and makes it soft and pliable without leaving any indication of a dressing being used—clear as crystal, clean to use, it is a valu- able toilet preparation. "HuRN8 AND SCALDS." -11 you are go unfortunate as to injure yourself in this way, we can suggest a remedy that will (we speak from experience) soon re- lieve you of all pain and quickly heal the wound; it costs but twenty-five centa for the New big bottle and is sold by all Druggists—ask for Perry Davis' Pain -Killer. THREW AWAY 11S CRUTCHES—A TRUE ACCOUNT OF A REMARK- ABLE EVENT. Ask your neighbors if they use Dodd's Kidney Pills? They strengthen the nerves, tone the system, and themoet stubborn cases of kidney disease yield to their influence. They are especially appreciated by the old. Aek your neighbors about them. 1294-9 Tho right place and the right prices for all kinds of Fall and Winter Dry Goods, IS TO BE FOUND AT 6NOO10V d A. G. AULT'S, SEAFORTII. Where you will find it to your advantage to ea and take a look through, before purehasing els- where. He has just received a large and well as- sorted stock of OVERCOATS, MEN'S and BOYS' READY MADE SUITS, aleo a large and well selected stoek of all WOOL AND SILK M1X TWEEDS, and a nicelot of overcoatings suitable for ladies' and gents' coats, and at rlieht prices, and in the grocery department he e,annot be beaten on teas in all the different varieties. He has about twenty different varieties of teas now on exhibition, and the prime and quelity cannot be beaten, also a large and well selected stock of groceries and provisions, a good assortment in all sizes of fruit gems, a cordial in- vitation is extended to all and will sell all goods at tele lowest possible prices. Butter, Egge, Potatoes and Onions are taken in exchange as cash for goods, all goods sold, delivered free. 0 A. G. AULT Seaforth. Confirmed.. The favorable irupreseion produced on the first ap- pearance of the agreeablo liquid fruit remedy Syrup op of Fig h a few years ago has been more than confirm- ed by the pleasant experience of all who have used p3 it, and the success of the proprietors and inanufac- turers,the California Fig Syrup Company. When Baby wag sick, we gave her Contorts. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria, —Itch, 31ange and Scratches of every kind, on hu man ar animals, cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. This never fails. Warranted by Lumsden & Wilson. ele • ea —English Spavin Liniment removes all hard, soft or calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses, Bleed Spavin, Curbs, Splints, Ring Bone, Sweeney,. Stifles, Sprains, Soke and Swollen Throat, Coughs, etc. Save $OO by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known Warrant- ed by Lumsden & Wilson. Oh, What a Cough! Will- you heed the warning. The signal perhaps of the sure approach of that more terrible disease Con- a sumption. Ask yourselves if you can afferd for the! sake of saving 50c., to run the risk and do nothing for it. We know from experience that Shiloh's Cure will cure your cough. It never fails. 1259-52 — STATEMENT OF MR. McNEE. FOR eight years I was tiloubled with a sore on my leg which resulted from having it broken. The doctors kept me in bedve months trying to heal it up, but all to no purp se. I tried all sorts of salves, liniments, ointme ts, pills and blood medi- pines, but with no benefit In 1883 it became eo bad that I had to sit on one c air and keep my foot on another for four months. I could not put my foot on the ground or the blood A -ould rush out in a stream and my leg swelled to tl,v ce its natural size. Eleven running sores developed en it which reduced me to a living skeleton (I lost 70 lbs. in four months.) Friends advised me tolgo to the Hospital; but I would not, for I knew thy would take my leg off. The doctor then wanted o split it open and scrape the bone, but I was too v,eak to stand the operation. One old lady said it had turned to black erysipelas and could never be cured. I had never heard of Burdock Blood Bitters then, but I read of a minister, Rev. Mr, Stout, who had been cured of a severe ab- scess on the neck by B. B. B., after medical aid had failed, and I thought I Would try it, I washed the leg with the Bitters and took them according to di- rections. After using one bottle I could walk on crutches, after taking three, I threw away the crutches, took a scythe and went to work in the field. At the end of the sixth bottle my leg was en. tirely healed up; piecet of loose bone had worked -we ft 40,. Application painless and easy. Relief immediate. This preparation fills a great and longfelt want among those who suffer from piles. It is a remedy of the highest merit, effective and reliable, and has more than met the anticipations of those physicians who have used it in their practice. PILEKONE IS A POSITIVE CURE whenother treatments fail to re- lieve. Testimonials furnished, Price $1. For sale by druggists, or by mail on receipt of price. W. T. STRONG, Manufacturing Chemist, 184 Dun - des street London. Ont. 1286-52 ase • 41. Drunkenness —Liquor Habit — In all the World there is but one Cure—Dr. Haines' . Golden Specific. It can be given in a cup of tea or Coffee without the knowledge of the person taking it, effecting a speedy and permanent euro, whether the patient is a moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been cured who have taken the Golden Specific in tbeir coffee without their know. ot‘.• ese "4 -CR 0 Cr 1-3 cp cl) O. 1=S CD 0 n ct) e_44 M 1=1 .0. rt 0 P(.1 ° o I:3 P -j rn CD CD 3 )10 0 (12 II) • (1:) C/) fe'.D 5. 0 It 5 ta 15) )—•••i 0.1 c:14 1•••.d Ind g 0 0 rMi cn P-1 CD z 4 ul 1-• .• t 2.7 n 1-•A 4 3., -.0 e.}.. 1r . 0 1 1 FARMERS, ATTENTION! All patties requiring Farm Machin- ery, Implements and Repairs, would do well to call at Hugh Grieve's Wareroom - —OPPOSITE— John Dorsey's Blacksmith Shop Before purchasing elsewhere, as he keeps repairs for the Mapey-Harris, Patterson, Wisner, Gaudy, Mason and Coleman machinery and implements, and he is also agent for the Bain wagon, Massey -Harris binder and mower, drills, rakes, &c; the Coleman roller and a full stock of Plows con- stantly on hand. HUGH GRIEVE, Seaforth. • GODERICH Steam Boiler Works. 0 0 1:1:1 (ESTABLISHED 1880.) A. S. OHRYSTAL, Succetesor to Chrystal & Black, Manufacturers of all. kinds of Stationary Marine, Upright & Tubular BOILERS Salt Pans, Smoke Stacks, Sheet Iror Works, etc., etc. Also dealers in Upright and Horizontal Sll lave Engines. Automatic Cut -Off Engines a specialty. Alt sizes of pipe and pipe -fitting constantly on hand. EeCtnates furnished 011 short notice. Works—Opposite a, T. R. Station, Goderich. ilpinalS1•1••• OIL CAKE 1 1 SHILOH'S CONSUMPT10 CURE. This GREAT COUGH CURE, this sue. cessful CONSUMPTION CURE, is without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos— itive guarantee, a test that no other cure can successfully stand. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat,- or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If yotir child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, useit promptly., and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease CONSUMPTION, don't fail to use it, it will cure you or cost nothing. Ask your Drug- gist for SHILOH'S CURE, Price no cts., to cts. and. $1.00. The McKillop Mutual Fire ,Insurance Company FARM AND ISOLATED TOWN s PROPERTY ONLY INSURED. OFFICERS. D. Ross, President, Clinton P. 0.• W. J. Shannon, Seey-Treas.'Seaforth P. 0.; John Hannah, Manager, Seeforth P. O. DIRECTORS. Jas. Broadfoot, Seaforth; Alex. Gardiner, Lead - bury ; Gabriel Elliott. Clinton: Geo. Watt, Harlock ; Joseph Evans, Beechwood; M. Murdie, Seaforth - Thos. Garbutt, Clinton. , AGENTS. Thos. Neilans, Harlock ; Robt. McMillan, Seaforth S. Carnoclaan, Seaforth. John O'Sullivan and Geo Murdie, Auditors. Parties desirous to effect Insurances or tran, suet other business will be promptly attended to on application to any of the above officers, addressed to their respective post offices. 1 Car lots delivered to your nearest station. Farmers and i'Feeders Pride of the Valley Medicine, The Great Blood Purifier; price 250 a package; five for $1. Pride of the Valley Liniment, the greatest pain de- stroyer on earth for Cramps in the Stomach, Sprains, Bruises, Ste.; use no other; price, 50 cents. Pride of the Valley Catarrh and Rheumatic Cure, a specific for the opening of the organs of the body that become blocked with diseases; price $1, or 'six for $5. Ask your family druggist for the above remedies, and never sleep without them in your house. Yon may need them at any hour. Can club together and take a few tuns each and get rock bottom prices. ALFRED BOYD, 1 Wellington Street East, Toronto. 1294-9 1265-52 THE FARMERS' Banking House, SMA__PORF193.. (In connection with the Bank of )�ontreal.) LOGAN & 00.91 BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENT REMOVED To the Commercial Hotel Building, Main Street A General Banking Business done drafte fame and embed. Interest allowed on deposit*. - MONEY TO LEND On gOod notes or mortgages. ROBERT LOGAN, M.LNAGsn ILO