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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1889-08-09, Page 6•• :••• 4 • Hospital Meats. • He wait PoOrly dressed, his 'fikOa and hands were grimy, and his steps and movements were artistically feeble as he shambled uplo the clerk In one of the • bigoity hospitals a few days ago; but the whine in which beasked for :a bed and "doctorhi" had an unmistakably false ring, and his eyes had anything but the look that genuine illness gives. Nevertheless, the house surgeon told him off to a certain ward, and he._went - away with an orderly in a_ most trilling manner. " Whydidr you let that fellow in ?" i asked an nterested spectator. "He is mostcertainly an impostor." - The doctor laughed. "We couldn't refuse to let him in. He wouldn't .walk ten steps from here in the street before he'd fall down in a -cleverly counterfeit- , ed faint, and the next morning the papers would be filled with 'Turned out to die,' Cruelty in a hospital,' No • place for the poor,' and so on. But he won't stay with us many moons, be sure - of that." "How will you get him out ?" 44 Well, I guess well begin on the fel- owwith what we call .the " Undertak- er's Revenge , It is a frightful mixture of copaiba, asafoetida, , castor oil, and ether, and a tablespoonful of it given to the patient every two hours night and day: A 'concoction of the three fixat-named ingredients would be bad - enough in all conscience, but the taste of it would not remain in the mouth for more than half an hpur;wbile the addi- tion of a little, ether makes the taste stick closer than a twin brother for all time. Very few of these hospital tramps 'fail to ask for a discharge after the fifth or sixth dose, but once in a while we get one that will appear to like it, and thrive upon it." • "Does he become a fixture then ?", "Well, hardly. The second morning - after the tramp's arrival Igo to his bed- sideand inquire tenderly into his con- dition. He will have awful pain, -they always do, and every time I touch the in- dicated seat of the trouble he will writhe in agony. Of course I say it is a more serious affair than I had thought, and I order.my assistant to bring up - that red-hot iron. In -less than ten sec- onds Mr. Tramp feels very much better, and is generally clothed and out of doors by the time the rod is a pleasing red. I suppose some day we will get a fellow who ie so lazy that he will stand the cauterization rather than leave his comfortable bed and generous board, but I think if the occasion arises we will find some way to ousthim." The Influence of- Bad Habits " and Associations. How many there are who resolve on a better life and say, "When shall I swelter But seized on by -their old habits, cry, "I will try once more - will seek it yetagain I" Years agotherewere some Princetownstudents who were skating; and the ice was very thin, -and some one warned the company back from the air hole, and finally warned -them entirely to leave the place. But . one young limn with bravado, after all the rest had stopped, cried out: "One round morel" He swept around and • went down, and was brought out a corpse. My friends'there are thous- ands and tens of thousands of men losing theirsouls in that way. •It is the line round more. • Then also,I counsel you, if you want_ to get back, to quit all. your bad me - dates. One unholy intimacy will fl11 .---your soot with moral distemper. In all - the ages of the church there has not been an instance where a Man kept one evil associate and was reformed. • Among the fourteen hundred millions of - the race not one instance. Go liqme to- day, open your desk, take out letter paper, stamp and envelope, and then write a letter something like this : • "My old companions, I start this day for heaven. Until I am persuaded- you g will join in this, farewell."-Talmagea How Horses Learn .Tricks. - "Horses," says Professor Giergo Bar tholomew, 0 are a good deal like men; you can train them to do pretty much what you want. Nature doesn't seem _to have roes& them to do much talking, - but I believe their capacities in other re., spots are probably fax in excess of any- thing we have yet conceived. And the : - me ods of training are very similar. Ye n't force 4 horse into learning a. thing any more than you can a Mau. Af- fection. is at the root of successful teach-. • ing in both cases. ' _ ".When I by a horse and begin to train him My first step is to win his con- fidence. Till I accomplish that I can do nothing with him. Then I begin to . teach him a simple act. To'make him lift his foot ona pedestal, for instance,1 . would place the pedestal in front of him and touch him on a sensitive part of the knee, at the same time constantly re- peating some word expressive of the act I want him to perform. Of course the horse doesn't know what the word MCAllis and he probably doe/ half a dozen wrong things before he does the right one. The =menthe does% how- ever, -I hold the foot there, fondle it and show my Approval in every way possi- ble. • This is repeated so, many times a day till the horse gets to know what -is wanted whenever he hears the Word.• - "So with the More difficult acts. Some of them take a longtime to learn. It took me nearly a year's patient work to teach AbdaIleh to walk, trot, gallop, march or pace backward or forward at a single word of command, but the way he does it now repays me for all my ' trouble, "-What description of horses. can I train this way ? Why, any herse. People suppose that thoroughbreds alone can:be so developed, but it is a mistake. Any ordinary horse, you know, Understands vrhat you mean by "whoa" and,"baok." So- it can be taught to knovf what you mean by any other. word or sign yon like. Some horses can of . course be taught much more easily than others, - and like men, some who prove very stupid at one lict,. are experts at anoth- , er. When I buy a horse I paypore at- tention to his head than I do to his pedigree. I believe you can- read, a horse just as you can a maw ( - . 4 4 Many people." continued the pro- fessor, "suppebe that the horses go o through this performande in automatic ed , fashion; that by doing day after day ho the same thing they come to do it as a matter of course without regard to what I may say to them. This is a great mis- take. Any one in- the audience is at liberty to have the order of 'Programme changed at any time. When I give an order out of place there will be a ma- mentary pause; the horses look up ioo questioningly, as if to say: Haven't you made a mistakei"--- I repeat the or - (ler once or twice until the meaning of the word assimilates with the memory of the action, and then they at once perform it. " Punishment I have little need for it, I of course show very sterhly my disapproval of strong just as I fondle them for doing right, but I have little occasion to use the whip. One thing would amuse you. When a number of my horses are standing in a row and I crack the Whip at a disobedient one, not one of the others will move. Theyseem to say: 6 Oh, that's for the otherfellow." "It would surprise you how sensitive they are to applause. They are like other actors in that respect. They know perfectly well when there is a big house, and perform so much better that one would think they had an eye on the re- ceipts... - "All this clearly shows that the horse possesses memory, and of course it fol- lows that he can think. He has the power of reason and not merely instinct. Prior to this year I sent my horses, to New- port for several months during the sum- mer. A From -there they went right on the stage and performed without re- hearsal just AS well as they ever did." Imported Fruit and Dirt. Why people of culture with refined tastes persist in eating imported dried' fruits, we are at a loss to understand. Domestic dried fruits are -preferable fer many reasons, chief among. which, is the Cleanliness and care used m their pro- duction. - . Take for example, imported French primes so highly prized by many. They. are shaken from the trees to the ground' from which they are gathered by a not over-olean French peasant; after being handled a number of times during the drying and cooking process, they are Packed into barrels and kegs by "foot, pressure," which means that the packer gets into thebarrel or cask with his or her naked, sweaty feet, and tramps up- on the contents. This style of paokiog imparts, without doubt,the fine "French. flavor" to the prune. Currants. from Greese (they are not "greasy" but oh, so dirty!) are packed in barrels or kegs, which are tramped down in the same manner, with the naked feet, to which add the dirt that is gathered up with the fruit.which is cured upon the ground, not undergoing much if any cleaning be- fore peeking. Imported' Valencia raising, which are largely. used in cull - nary pursuits, imported into the United Statecloy the .inillions -of boxes, are grown and cured in and about Valencia: Spain. The raisins, during the curing process, are scalded in large caldron kettles in a solution of grape juiceotater and lye, which in many cases is saved from one season to another over andover again. God only knows what _this liquor or lye contains after it has been used two or three years in the rural, poverty- stricken districts of old Spain. The illustrations furnished above are all plain unvarnished truths and statements that can be readily corroborated. The countries in which the fig, the currant; the raisin and the prune of commerce -known-as the imported artiole are grown and cured, are all possessed of tropical climates and for the most part extreme- ly hot during the packing - season. The poorer Olasses, who areamgaged in this indostry in France, Greece and Spain, Amid Minor and the Mediterranean Citrus Belt, are a dirty, filthy, slovenly, poor -paid class of _people, consisting mostly of women and children, These classes handle with there dirty hands, and tramp with their nasty, naked feet the toothsome, "delicious" dried fruit you eat, known as imported. lf our American ladies who smack their - lips after eating this imported "luxury" were to MI the methods used in harvest- ing and curing this imported fruit, they would never -partake of them again ;and some of the more fastidious and nervous, we are feared, would drop dead at the sight. We -earns' very ,near forgetting themost unclean of all imported varieties, dates -in mats. &Hide your head and raise Your handsAn holy horror, and when the date dish Is ;sassed to you, ex- claim, "We have hadimperted dirt enough r -California Fruit grower. Troubles of the Over -Fat and Over -Lean Folk. There is no struggle in this world greater than that of a fat man trying to. get thin, or athin Men trying to gain esh. The fat man exercises and -takes Russian baths to pull himself down; and when he 'tops for a week, he is stouter than ever. " • The thin man -furnishes himself with farinaceous food, and doesn't gain an ounce. He also abandons the luxury of tobacco, without the 'desired result. He takeSTurkish baths thatthe reaction May build him up; but he his to give this practice up for lack of, physique. The fat man diets for month said loses a pound; but by this time he feels -so weak that he can -not help indulging in two or. three days high living. At the end of the third day he . is about two pounds 'wavier thait when he began fasting. • In the morning he takes a pair of six - pound bells and whirls them about fif- teen seconds, and believes he has. been using them for five Minutes. Then he works on a rowing machine for awhile!, which gives him an appetite for break- fast, that puts more on him than the exercises have. taken off; He reads all :forts of articles and follows all sorts of rules on the reduction of flesh; but he can no more grow' thin than, the thin man can grow fat. When the fat man and the thin man meet they envy each ' other. "Oh, if I only had forty pounds of yeur flesh I" says the 'thin man, who looks like a pair of shears, "How happy I'd be with about half your thinness !" replies the fat man, who loses his ;wind looking at the thin man. - The city fat man would walk twenty miles a day, he says, if he tonly lived in the countty. He would wander down shady byways in the fresh open. air, and revel in the beauty of his sur- oundings.- He can't walk in the city. cause it is so noisy and monot- ue and the streets •are so crowd. and. there is nothing to see, anY- he country fat man says he would w lk twenty miles a day if he only lived i the city.. He -would live in Harlem, an walk down town and back every day nd never take a car; He would also lk after dinner; 'because he could walk a ne, and yet enjoy a sense of iety and companionship on -the side- • o - • •014.1.•••••••••••1. walks that are always in good condition. He could look at pictures and other -in• - tereating objects in • shdp windotri, isikk if he became weary he could board aver; ..But the country! 'He can notit'itallr there without welkilig-alone and loins crazy. If he goes out at night he I is likely to trip -and drive himself headfirst intoa ditch; arid even in daylight be is apt to go Into the mud to his whisk- ers, because there are no walks. So the city man doesn't walk because be doesn't live in the country, and the ;country man doesn't walk because 'he doesn't live in the city. And so they continue, in spite of all their theoms and practice, to grow fat gracefully-' Puck. IS not only a distressing complainttof I itself, but, by causing the 'bloodtto become depraved and the system en,- feebled, is the perent of innumerable maladies. That Ayerts Sarsaparilla Is the best cure for Indigestion, even when complicated With Liver Complaint, Is proved by the following testimony from Mrs: Joseph Lake, of Brockway Centre; Mich.: - "Liver - complaint and indigestion made my life a burden and came near ending my . existence. For more than four years I suffered untold agony, as reduced almostto a skeleton, and hely - had strength to drag myself about. 11 kinds of food distreased me, and: only the most 'delicate could be digested tat all. 'Within the time mentioned several physicians treated me without giving el lief. Nothing that I took seemed to io any permanenCgood until I commenced the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which has produced wonderful results. Soon after commencing, to take the Sarsa a - rills I could see an improvement in my condition. My appetite began to return and with- it came the ability to digest all the food taken, my strength im- proved - each day, and after a Ow months of faithful attention to your directions, ' I found myself a well woman, able to attend to all household duties. The medicine has given nie a, ,new lease of life." ' • yer s/Sarsapariliai - y • PIUWARIID IMF Dr. J. C.- Ayer .1k -Maps "Price in; "oils bottles, $5. Werth $5 a bottle. .• Wellinirton, Grey and Brice. Pusenger. Mixed., 2.51 r. at. 9.81 rat. 8.88 P. n. 8.06 145 9.20 8.21 10.00 s.so. 8.80 Joao 11.1.0 Pasenger. MixeC 6.89 A.n.n.io A. M. 7.26-p. ti 6.48 11.22 7.55 7.02 • 11.45 - • 8.55 7.14 12.00 9.81 * Goma NOweni-. Ethel.f.• • BrIllifeit•:-:. • • . • Bluevale VVingham.. Gente, SOME-- • Wingham.... Blnevale Brussels.. Ethel........ London, Huron and Bruce, GOING NORTE-r • .Passenger, London, demi: 7.65A.N. 4.85Pat, . Exeter 916 • • • • • • • •••• • . • ... 9.16 5.57 - Hewed. •, •••••••• •••••• 9.28 ' 6.09 Kippen 9.84 6.17 - • Bruoefield • • • • I • 9.42 6.26 t • Clinton • . .. • • 0.00 64 I Londesboro . • .... 10.19 7.013 Blyth. • •'• •••• ••••;•• 1.1.• 0.• 10.28 . 7.12 I Melgrave • • .. 10.42 • 7.27 • Winghani arrive.: • . • • 11.00 7.4.4 4 Goma Sovrn- _ Passenger, [ 0.50A.K - • 7.05 4.00 ' 7.18 4.16 7.26 4.25L 78.5 445 155 . 54t 8.24 5.12 8.328.60 4810 • Blinn III • I .. • ... • • • • • • fir BI•••,••••••••••••,ii Londescoro • • WV • • • • • Clinton' • •_.• • . • . ••• • • • • • 0.• • • • BrilOefiela ; • •• ....... • • • • • • • "sat HenSalla• • . ... 'Atte."'" ••. .EXatelr • • •,•. • ... . , Grand Trunk Railway. Trains leave Seaforth and Clinton station follows: • .1 GOING Warr- SIMPOZTS. •• 0111110,11 Passenger .. 1.08r. 1.20 r,. Passenger... .. 110 P. M. 9.27 Mixed .Trein.., ...... 9.20 A. it. 3.0.061.11. Mixed Train.. .. .. 6.15 P. M. , 8.40r. k GOINO Eaftr- Passenger. 7.59 A. at. 7 48 A,I Passenger • • SA • • . 2.43?. m. 2.26?. Mixed Tram.. .....: 5.80 rM. • 455p Freight Train.. 4.80 P. M. 880r. 'John S. Porter's tYnclertalOng And • ture SEAFORTH, * - ';ONTARIO OUTSIDE OF THE :COMBINATION. • f -Funerals furnished on the shorteat. notice and satisfaction guaranteed. 4 large assort - ebb. of Caskets, Coffins and Shrouds, be.; always. on hand -of the best quality. The best f Embalming Fluid used free of. Charge and prices the lowest. Fine Hearn.. , • S. T. HOLMES, Funeral •Director. Real - - dews GODERICH STREET, direetiy op. site the Method* church in :the,house ormerlYy occupied by Dr. Soot*. . , • BULLS FOR SERVICE... -DOR SERVICE . -A two year old thorougi. bred Durham Bull will stand -for service. this season on It 19, Concession.2, Tucker - smith. Terms -To insure, $1.50. GEORGE A. SPBOAT, Jr. 1110.11• mo COW OWNERS. -Having purchaded two year, old _thoroughbred Durham bull from. the well-known • stook breeders, John MelCayIs Sons, of Tuokersmith, I intend keep? ing him for service from now forward. This ilne animal has a inn pedigree . which can be produced if- necessmy and is also registered in the Ne* Herd. Book. -Tornio-41.50 for the season, payable at the tints of , service.. GEQ. TROTT, Seaforth. .1115- ' MHOROUGH BRED BULL FOR SERVICE.- . The undersigned will keep.during the pree- ant season, for the serviceof cows on Lot 22, Concession 8, L. R. S., Tuckersmith; the Thor- bugh Bred Durham Bull, "Earl of Kipper'. - This bull was bred by Mr. David Hill; of ' bert, and is two years old. As will be seen by reference to his registered pedigree be is from - the best stook. in Canada his sire being " George Gynne" and his 'dam "Princess Vie- taria." Terms. -To insure :a calf, -$1.60. JAS. G. CHESNEY. , • 1I14xtf - ARNISHES I 'Messrs. Andereon & Co., of Walkerton, Ont., who , have one of the best equipped furniture, 4actories in Canada, writes us- "Your Var- nishes are pleasing uswell. yin write you when we require more."', Beware -of White Lead bramfed with -bogus -- labels. If you want a pure article -noted for strength and durability -- 1nsit -upon the " ELEPHANT " GENUINE. 1. The " Elephant" specialities are for sale by • all hardware dealers and paint merchants. Ilerguson,AleUnder 85 Co., MONTREAL. -_-_- FULL STOOK. QUICK DESPATCH? 110942 •Crarnpt,..- DiaJThcea, Dy0i#erY:1,,ho1era.. Morbus And All •Elplypl Complaints, NO REMEY gQLJALIS. 49 Years' Experience proves that PERRY DAVIS' , PAIN -KILLER is the est Family Remedy for ) Burns 13rWses, " Prains, Rh u Neuralgia and ToF•thache. Ppld Everywhere at 25c. and 50c. &Bottle. Bar Beware of Countelfeite Ond feortIzlese Important BIGHT houoceoletttp...I.. SM.A.7'914,TPX.; . e Leading Clothiers of Huron, Beg tginform the people of Seaford' and surrounding ;country, that III they have added to their large orclered clothing trade one of the Most Complete and -best elected stooks of .Boys', Youths' and Men's Radymade Clot -IN- THE COUNTY. Ptices_. Unequalled. We -lead -the Trade. 4 • Remember the Old -.Stand, Oampbell's Block,' _opposite the ',Roy al' Hotel, Seaforth. . _ .BRIGHT BROTHERS.- -1 . CD 0 z 0 TIIE' HA,Y '. TOWNSHIP Farmers' . IVIUtua!, r Insura"nos- Corapity - A Willy Farman' Company. Live Stock also hound when in the fields -or on the road in cha e of oWner or 'errant. 7 , • Also manufacturer -of ihe . Improved --;Surprise . Washer D WRINGER MACHINES. agent for TOMBSTONES and the WATSON- ' . COMPANY.13 114tPL EET8I. UNDERTAKING premptly attended- .to a :inside/pate fa*. ° ' 1 G, HOLTZMAN Zulich. fils - 1W. N. WATSON, •Geieral Insurance Agent .• - Dealer in &wing -Machines. MI 'kinds of property Insured at lowest rate" In finttOlass reliable -companies, and losses set* tled piemptly. Elpiticial low rates on FARM- PROPERTY in the Gore :and Waterloo, Irian 750 to a (eish plan) far .three years. Mills and tutorial in- sured in these .-oompanies at a laving of 20 per aut. on stook companies. 1, • - - So: dealer in the WHITE and RAYMOND • SEWI MACHINES (family and Manufactur- ing). Itilus" ranging from $25 to CC All Ma- ohines irarranted for five years on every kind of work. Needles, pil and repairs for sale. Ma -1 -chines r paired. •' • vir.r7._ Nor.ttasso.m, M IN riTR,EET; SEAFORTH. ti Reniioved I Removed I. Or :WI - .SEAFORTH, ! '. Tke Old Established Butchas has removed to I I1 Q ! i new - premise' immediately opposite hie Old Stand, Win Street, Seaforth, where he -will be pleased tomeetall his old *roils and u many new @nee amity see fit to favor kilnwith their 1:11) 1; mber the place, between Henderson' 1 gPsitrtrnressniteagresi;topi and Mobityrel Rho°. Store, Main r Pn.C.)KrS BEST FRIEND _ street, Saforth. - - . . NB - GEORGE .ii/ING ---- •.• The Best Assortment -AND- °WEST§ -PRICES - -IN- Paper, Decorations AT.L PAPST S BOOKSTORE, S IE A F---0 R T1•11 CALL AND EXAMINE. THE -S*DRTH 'GREEN HOUSE. SEAFORT11.: Flowering Shrubs, Roses, BUlbsand . Seeds. AUGUST- 9;:1889; Whit, .STOVE AND FURNISHING 71 -013 -SM, Seaforth, Ontario.. - ' _ . We are offering Bargains la 00611 & Wood Parlor &ova. All Stoves Guaranteed. va A full line of McClary's amous Stoves For which we are Sole Agente. Great Bargains in Table and Librsty• Lamps. Oa M. WHITNEY; Greens all winter and Summer. Morris' Insecticide Powder, b. Or Plants of all kinds. Call at the Seaforth Green House North Ward. - Wood and Manure Wanted.. 1098 AN OITNLETTER: •Halng bought $600 worth of first class • SPECTACLES Eye Glasses, aliMENP THE BIO MILLS 'SEAFCARTH. The above rains have now been thoroughli builtupon the oomplete • HUNGARIAN ROLLER PROGESL - The Mill and Storehouse Bidldinds ave bur v enlarged and new 'machinery applied gromnlikout. THE .LATEIT IMPROVED Nat. Flour -,Dressing Machines. From the besi'Manufaoturing Firms have :bees 9' gtel LT= scsnvietrything neonsary added tb enable tur SECOND TO NONE In the Dominion. The facilit.es for feeelving pain from farmers and for elevating end shipping have also dean extensively im_proved. Graii-oan ' and loaded into cars at the rite of 700.bialfels now taken from farmers' wars, weighed. per hour, by the work of two men The bankrupt ski@ �f.a deft:net jeweler, at 40 cents on=the dollar, I will give the public:. the benefit ol then: while they last. 'Remember 1 have surnice an sseortment of all grades of 'Columbus, Springfield, Illinois, Waltham, Elgin :and Swiss: Movements in Solid Gold, - Geld _- Filled, Solid Silver and Silver Ore Can; 18 .Carat warranted Wedding Binge; Fancy Gent Binge, Chitins,, Lockett!, Necklets, Brooches, Earrings, Studs, Cuff - 13uttens, leo. Eux, for Ladies and Gentlemen as can be found in the majority of first class jewelers' shops. Come and quo my novelties in Clooks;honest- good" for honest priesi. Look out for ; a first obits line of '.fanoy goods for the holidays. :If you . should 'want anything' in my line call:and he convinced Mit I can and will sell yin; *Int olass article at less than one ef the outside firms who spend thoutands of dollars per year In sending out illustrated, catalogues. Come . and see what you are paying your money for. Leave your money in the town where you earn 11 as long as you can get as good or better Respectfully Tann, A LARGE FEED STONE CUSTOM CHOPPING Has been put in, and the necessaymachinerylor handling chop and coarse grains. A gad shed hao been erected, so that wagon* oan be unloaded and reloaded under cover. WHEAT EXCHANGES Promptly attended to, and FIRST-CLASS .401LER FLOUR . GUARANTEED, C:i'VESTONC 2/73203111:1 Chopped satisfactorily anicwi &out dalay. ROLLER FLOUR BRAN, SHORTS, Andalildnels cd • -A:- D. wotrINTG, -.,, CHOPPED FEED Practical Watchmaker and Jeweler; constantiy on Mut Opposite the Commercial Iletel, Main Street, Seaforth, • CODERICH BOILER WORKS, • Highest Market Price Paid In Cash for any Quantity of ° Wheat. chrystal & Black, • Manufacturers d all kinds of Siationery,-Marine Upright and Tabular Boilers. SALT PANS, SMOKE- STACKS - so an kinds of Sheet Iron work. - BMW AND. WATER PIPE FITTING, • oonstantly on hand. On hand, ready for delivery • One 50 imrse-power New Steel Boiler - complete. ' One 35 horse -power seoond-hand boil- er in good order. Also a 12 herse-power Engine and Boiler, secood-baud, ingood oOnditiek. A :Completelnd-hand Threshing OtiVit; Boiler, Engine; Separator ke, all in good work. Ingord clam. orden wil receive prompt attention. Works opposite G. T !‘ B. Station. p. 0. BOX 861. Goderich,ay Nth. 1888. - John 0, - IVIerrison- PRICE, - 25 Cents: PREPARED BY - OARDNO'S BLOCK. * Next Door to sf. lt, -Counter's Jewelry tiro • . , . Roberts' Plea.'sant -The best. of satiifactios guaranteed and sale notespurchased. Will also be -willing to execute Wills, Agree. Winthr '/ITIORM SYRUP ' • APPLE . BARRELS - FINE, COARSE AND LAND SALT FoR ii•••••• Iiiranant suChileidknd 01}Mtglirabeezi will being farmen s's& and general'reepectfull=rd. A. W. (MIME & GO., PROPRITORS KEMP, Manager.'- THEBEST Blackberry Cordial For Diarrhoea, Summer Complaint, Cholera Infantum,Dysentery,-sadsgunen7 relaxed condition of the Bowels. It ys TOM* it'll& WAS al an akin ent without preclueisi costiveness and is so t to theisaile ikoi children take It read y. --;AGElk,rEFOR THE-' _ . WO OD 23/1STIPMR With . one -canvas ; the best in the market, Fanners are requested to see it • before_ put. chasing any other. Mao the U. T. IC. HAIG ROW; : Au ctioneee for MCkillop. Petits, Mortgsgest dm., at his office, op. . _ JOHN C. MORRISON; Winthrop. .4tr A fair t al given withall Imp ements. - O a • 1 1106 The North American Is the most effectual Remedy -on thellarket far pleaaant .to take that Children ask /armor.. Try a Bottle andbe convinced. the expillsion of Worms of all kinds; and is so ORME - - - 25 Cents« BANKING COMPANY, - PREPARED BY' •(NOT INCORPORATED. - A General Banking business trans- acted. Farmers' paper discounted. Drafts bought and sold.,--- • Interest allowed on deposits: OFFICE -In the Commercial. Hotel building. _ J. C. BRIM Manager. F. HOLMESTED, Solicitor. 10811 ma: a -• J. S. ROBERTS, Chemit & Druggist, - Seaforth PE11161.1% !Mild used seesign ON* _MO MAIM_ t• are safe, peau sure inerfeet; a ladr_rgraaa4 at home or abroad; $1 box -CratalapdrUlg. Mis ocr SURICILL usitlICAL 0e•y1)2211011‘**.- ;•Rold:by LUMSDEN & WILSON, Chadds andi 1001, Saforthi Ont. • 1.22141 a • • zer 221and . Stood - 2,tuo pad t Dna= • -Ong and 12 Saes shore. -ado plan beefs ,ed the kequein Are hu, iffaitinj - them ' 'Aic ben Kirkle 2diddli - .fire op , posed 1 - _itinsl ', Alm 1 of peel fixity 1 =rano *bout: - Iti , . laid fkl consull whoa ktordoi • - roflai - oouver -Ti - VP:Bey *is se The pli - -' bay or4. bast in years, i -upland age. '4 will be - -Or -A ; Ontaril .:.the 'CO . oning , was, mediu pearan• and ea fascinal - ,but resj A serval who sO, worthyl alert in an affee most. to; ter. she 1 -ed. Mel . ter ilis alp thel /tome 11 tot -tem incr. it: submit , during .. thie• a making' tent 'go - sitive. wee.* , . •.• e As y theJer fined al - dairies, ter into - ig 94.13? spread . the sag and tiu ably b sire Lo of wore 'leJeri of the faconie •frent. fore, vg Jerseysi that aln • State the flri *Jersey *wake el • In there w4 in tlie-t, over If3. run th0 003111111: Wa4 Minna prospee lancy p Jerseii Ther TichEngl.= j or A IAA Then th Bey oraz and fan conditio 'Jersey A merits, hat ma n thep lat15I here is o oome sprices1 rom- p keep ono use. Ir lately in tory dm ereasin• g spread 4 11.0tOriel or marl hoe lac -The A a Plitsi 18011 033 *4s new.” gUlatIOXI ni°45` are ;mita followirk quickly • seri af ter till Put a .;* 11.7er I uneverilj