Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1876-03-31, Page 3r IVIAncri 31, ind, Alia` IRA3 ARROys, Barrister, Attorney, Office in McLeain's new block, Ware and Waterloo street, Goderich.3 Q'#' ,t? AteF'ADDEN, &Misters tors in Chancery, Goderieh, enznQ f. w. n. AterADD! :A31 SMALL, Conveyancer and mellow er in B. R., Wroxeter, Auctioneer lust Aottuts soil notes collected -A* »e terms. 3611 iCyYT.E, .Barrister, Attorney, Solicitor In acery, &c., Goderieli and Seaforth. of. r Jordan's Drug More, Goderieh, and ore, Seaforth. 8b4 msCOLL, Barristers, Attorneys -at. Solicitprs in Chancery. Notaries ?none, .rich and BrusseIs. F-. R. Sgt"IER, Goo, ..J..ifeCnien, Brussels. #ii )31SON & WATSON, Barristers, Atter. •a, Solicitors in Chancery, &e., Clinton ties -PirSt door mat of the new $03.41 i Bank building. honey to loan on farm. =nNso t. ; 404 Ct... A. WATSON. MEYER, Barristers and Att.orneya, ir, Solicitors in Chancery and Insolvency,, eere, :rotaries Publle, ete. Offices -Sing. l:russel#i. S98,0000f Private Funds to Duce, at Eight per (tent. Interest, payable 58 $E2I'.s`€)t.. H. W. C. HEYLi . rGHE Y cif HOLMESTED, Barristers, Ate eya at Law, Solicitors iii Chancery and Notariea Pablie and Conveyancers, Ffor the B. C.tank, Seaforth. Agents foz ifs Az surauce Company, 0,000 to lend at 8 per cent. Parrett ail Lots for sale. 58 `OTT, 3l.. D. &.e,, physician, Surgeon anrd'. aucheur, Seaforth, Ont. Office and rest-' nth side of Goderich.. Street,first door c sby terian Church. 942 rElt.COE, M. D., G. M., Physician, Bur. in ate., Coroner for the County of Huron. Residence, corner of Market and High ezt to the Planing Milt. +c3fIBE ,L & BURGESS, Physicians, Cons, and Accoucheurs. OFFICE --Mia kaforth, near the Station. Joint C p. Coroner. for Huron Joint A. Bas.. _ < .424 1.1ELA1 M.D., C. M., (late of the than lra er Phelan, Stretford) Graduate of nivt r itl', Phyaiciau, Surgeon and Ae- "eafortin Ontario. dice---Eoores in .dock, formerly occupied by the late Dr, cadence --Commercial Hotel. Will ate :::rronbrools en Tuesdays andl<ridays. 89 DOW SLET, 31. I3., Lars C. P. S. g., ember el College of Physicians and Sur. Ontario- Late House Surgeon of Kind gyral and Lying-in Hospital,: Physician, Ind Acconcheui - Once Albert Street,: `air`is Steam Mills. Residence—Huron 1poseite Commereial Hotel,, Clinton, Ont. nal calls; punctually. attended to both in .count 7l. AIG. BULL, L. D. 8:, Surgeon .} Irentist,&;e.,Seaforth, Ontario Plate work, latest styles, neatly executed. All surgical operations 'with cafe and promptitude. Fees.as low obtained elsewhere. Office hours from .Era P. 31. 1 oc.ms over Mr. A. G. Me- .$'. tore, 31ain-Ist. 270 ;ArGFHT, Veterinary Surgeon, Grads - of Ontario Veterinary College, Seaforth,. ice 'and Residence in rear of Eilloran $ Calls promptly attended to, night or =tock of veterinary media>inea on hand. 'n onoble. Rupee examined as to sound - certificates given if required. 407 31PLELL,: V. S., Licentiate and Prize- i of Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y-., and FE1 Ontario Veterinary- College, Toronto, 'l permanently in Varna, wherehe will be sly and willing to attend to all kindsu of _n all kinds of animals (man excepted), :s of weather, and at all hours. Reef- office two doors east of Cook's Tem- fall. 319 W: ELDER, V. S., Graduate of the trio Veterinary College. After devoting a to practice with Professor Smith, of has settled hI Seaforth, in the office eenpied by Dr. Burgess, Main Street, will be fondreaely to treat all diseases mescicuted animals. All calls promptly to by day or night. A large 8toek of ry, Medicines, constantly ouband. Horses as to sonndness and certificates given. ;ought and sold on eommistsi on. Resi arty opposite the Exi-osrTon Office. 424 TliISLIlE.swiss OE Si. :CAMERON, Practical Watchmaker and ;ler, Mitchell. Custoraers will. find it to rest to (-Icel. with me, as they will have ot my long practical experience in the 408 MINE, !Licenced Auctioneer for the raty of. axon. Sales attended in all the Coe tv. All orders left at the Ex- )iflee ` I be promptly attended to. , �1:CA.L LIVERY,, Seaforth, Ont, T. A. P,. Proprietor. Proprietor. Comfortable and elegant and first-class reliable horses alwayt barges Moderate. Office and stables on .eet, secc4nd door east of iilain street. at any i/f the hotels: promptly attend 899 E ECONOMICAL INSURANCE COMPANY, OF BERLIN, , _ONT_,, S Farm Risks and non -hazardous vii- operty in both branches at moderate -6 Company is conducted on prineipie8 nrers the furl benefit .of cheap insnr- to this end the expenses are kept as low stent with safety end economy. Insur- fretted only an the premiumnote aye- s the extrerncst care has been taken to I good risks their losses have been light, eseeineut has been made onits polic1 tour years, while itaeash andemium ?gave been accumulating, dile the. e aharged on farm: outbuildings has 'ss cents per $100 for the whole term of The undersigned is the Agent in the Ibnron, and has engaged Mr. IL F. assist him, for whose transactions he risible by the Company. Porfnrther appy by post card or otherwise--giv' eoieession—to• JOHN MASON, , ter, Insurance and General Agent, Zurich P. 0. t in South Huron for the Gore Dia- 1, whose merits as a.irst•elass Mutual' own. 481 LOTION OF PARTNERSHIP. tnership heretofore subsisting between 4 rs:igr.ed, under the firm name of WIL' t,LCIT, has been dissolved by mutual e boniness will hereafter be carried iilialeti. All debts contracted b7 nen be liquidated by FT. R. Williams, :s due the late firm: will be COllent` J. It. WILLLA&i8,: NOBLE CLUFF- F tin witjb the above the undersigned s ate t;Ei his numerous customers acid se intSeas to continue the manage,- t-ciasa pktrnps and cisterns as hereto - d ataxia. Ile has now cinch facilities e him tie tura oat a better artiele fou :fiats any other establishmentof the :,ectiuii. IF:=It-lft' F!1 to him he would say that an ss;ctl€mlbt i:i aes�irecl, vas he is urgent- trnoney, Y tics s.l.G c..tabliahed and. well-known Fattory. J'. R. WILLIAMS- FQ ALTO N-.. 9;1E' 'His° ° s.tfer- Special Bargains in DRY ODS > net GROCERIES., III c: ,4..iotlung and Boots and Shoes be r! value i than can be got els3ewheTe• e fol! yourselves. Al N T,. AND VARNISHES brands ''always on hand. Special I ne to Cash 2urenasere. a having; over -due notes and account. ed to settle the same at once, otherwiSs put hitt) otherPARQUHAE s31IT MARCH 1, 1876. The Bachelor's Wife. The :b tohOinr'si< wife is a jewel, moat rare, An eu el, a seraph of heavenly birth, For s fray a creature so sinless and fair, W never more human, the daughter of earth ; But les yon should deem me but speak- ing at random, Norsketchingfmy portrait exact from the life E'en down from a bacheler's- lips I will hand 'em The essentials . that make up a bach- elor's wife. . Her form must be faultless, and ditto complexion, Her eyes must be cloudless heaven's own blue, Her iu must be graceful, her manner per- fection, Her lips like red blossoms just touched with the dew, hood. The fajd is stiff sash,_ bound in, waist. The#'peasant in stilnmcr ; churls lin ,ly a woolen or, i u ;roll#+ r(nind the wears 11 blank leash in wiiiter,"''finving just the same faith fir the Virtue of that color is a heat•giver that the;south cone - try poor of England! halve in the virtues of red asoppo$ed to:white 'flannel. ' The clasp -knife is„ 'gene all ` of a scimitar shape, running to 'int, and is the cause of more than ha the deaths 'set down as due to pian lau titer in tie Pen- insulin. Marriage,` efo a be has served his period of militar service, is discoun- tenanced' by the pa ents of the Spanish girl whom our hero oveS or worships, as the Slender pay of p 'vato soldier al- lows but little i:up ' • rt r a wife ; and, indeed, marriage 1. h idly legal until after the military s vi e, in the eyes of the Government.—"'emple Bar. Marriage of Be ' a (0$ in West, the 0 Her mind must be clear as the fresh 1 Famous Ana crystal fountain, I About the - mid Neer stained by one drop from the 1 century young Wes waters of strife, I ing in Strawberry a ore as the snow on the crest on the ; traits at a guinea a word and each thought of the I and guineas were n mountain, I too, for a few .shi - bachelor's wife. - Cask of Beer," or " ust pine in his absence all widowed Apicture of St. 1 and lonely, having been eapptur ' must watch for hiscomming till antine by the Brits bright eyes grow dim ; session of Governo She must be his devoted, his fondly, his only, think the world nothing to her without him, may be faithful, or wild as a raven, ay tax her existence with tur- moil and strife ; - But n fault in him must the lady dis- cover, Sh 's a pattern of meekness, the bach- elor's wife. ust bearin mute patience all words of upbraiding, e, honor; obey, were the terms of her vow ; though 'neath his harshness her cheek may be fading, must - suffer no shadow to darken her brow ;Allens, who was moat cherish no thought and no with grain tothe smile for another, a ed Benjamin a an him the companion and lord of But loveIrap her life e'en look too kindly on -cousin or now. The Quake brother, saw each other,, t faithful and true is the bachelor's garden and the ot wife. vowed eternal fai win fame and mon ust senile with him still in his mo- promised to come menta of gladness, the earth as soon e must cheer'him when storm clouds word he had enou Pre over his sky ; And Eac She She It An The 1 He She Lo And Sh She T Nor S She 8 Yet She Hill, West copied of his portly patron the attitude of the Wayne, then a han fly dressed young f on the streets wit apple-eheeked Qua many of his fashion persuade to sit fortheir portaits hungry young artis , and it,is hint only made a milita man of him ' troduced him to ing Miss Shewell, with who West, in his proper way, fell in over. Miss Sh brother, however, einga man w income, had no mi ' d tat his pre ter should marry = man who had and whose occupat' on was held to half so genteel as hat of a tailor therefore, locked iesy Betty up in h room, jusfr about t e t%tie, that on sending a shi arving Italians ge on her to an Axtlst. • the eighteenth an obscure lodg- iey, and painted por- i painted signs, inga, • when portaitfi t ' be had— `Thi Th Jolly Fiddlers.' tins, after Murillo, d n a Spanish brig - i `, fell into poses- sole het, H` milton at - Bush smally oleecograzed, and the poor Hester itcTlu}moedgie street I locksmith is now one of the by, painting fbem in -7,wealtl best magnates of the Austrian Em aint. Mad Anthony i pine. 'His wife, the former servant -girl; orae, gallant 'howl- was e llow, was often seen Empe th mild-mannered, - or He brought ae Last .ble'�friendsas hecould Be the Thi �d not to est ut "1- turnip t wives rderli ! army swell e 1 a few th ani tertai ty sis- had tree or four each week since Nei l e not Year' , which were of the most refined H and elegant description. There were ' 'isua* covers for fourteen, and the mean r embraced every delicacy in and out of , served on a table glittering with silver and fine glass, and iIluminat- e profusion of rare flowers. These s have been the talk of the town, has been considered as great an to receive avard for one of Mre. ap's dinners as for a'dinner served White House.. The toilettes have f the most elaborate and expensivle ials. At the last german, whe e. eived the guests for the ``Bachelor's who gave it, the dress 'worn by as said to have cost $600, and cane ingat, hi Paris, and this was oils most molest of her costumes. Her nd jewels were the envy of the l - f the diplomatic corps, and that s volumes for their worth and mag- ce. last appearance in public was On ay last, when she attended three en- nments, the first an elegant dinner given by Madame Bergmont, at her supb rb house on H street. Here she' seem d not to be very bright,and remark- ed to a lady near her, " I am not well ; I am- so nervous, and I ought utt to he here. What wonder that she was ner- vous, with the sword ready to fall and destr'y her and her husband. Later, s' -- went to the last reception given by Mr. , the prominent banker, and liis ters ; and still later to a leap -year given by admiral and Mrs. Porter, ostume of shimmering silk was half n under the drapery of foamy, co t - e, worth, they arty, a' prince's r n- il.er ornaments,. as 1 beard the next were a costly parure of diamonds, glittered and flashed forth a tho4s- olors for the first time. She was undecl all the evening by friends, as acknowledged to be the most e1- ly dressed lady of the evening.— n Herald. illegitit jt() lea%'c ainlin ds beet`d restore ascerta estate. membe TIM -HURON EXPOSITOR. lotei'g9f, 'tai Atnetriian� Colonel, nottiii►g one iborder to'utake. for the great ,injustice £thata ire to Its legitimate herr, to him, if he should be able to' n his wherabouta,, his ' paternal, it was then. that the colonel re- ed having met at Bopkenheim, twenty two yeas `before, aiyoung lock- smith, bees name. ily, wh beim hose.acquaintance he had sought the latter -had borne the same o he applied to the Schoen, fam- where still living at Bocken- nd from that'he obtainedthe in- formation that the young locksmith, -had! left t t place many years ago foci Ameri- ca. 'I he colonel thereu?on applied to - the Au trian legation in, Washington, and Jacob Heydebrand was extensively ad- vertise for, ,until found in New York. Amon the, papers was .au ° autograph from h illegitmate brother, the colonel, 2,pfferin to restore his paternal estates to hint, a d. expressing regrets at the injus- ticei t at had been, done to him for so 'Many ears. Meanwhile Heydebrand had cried a poor German servant -girl, who hod borne to him several children. The w e was overjoyed upon learning the un xpected change in her. husband'el fortun , and she revailed upon him tet go wit enter ition. .. her itnnmediatsly to Innspruck t p the enjoyment of his new pos' At Innepruck his right as the it of Count Heyderband was for, nobled by a special decree of th or. plendors of Mrs. Secreta ap--Exclusive Visit season Mrs. Belknap 'determ.ine d. blish a precedent and declined rel- visits el visits unless those made by the end daughters of officers of the nd navy, the diplomatic corps, and there. She gave no evening en1• ment but her dinners, and she has sary to keep them hroud in her boson] her own thoughts remainder. of the s of sadness, to Dr. Swift, of t troubles so trifling his temper BB we know, au should try ; ning both fame a must stir not a step without his as he was establi wise direction, Hampton Court, s S e must cling but the closer when claim her part 0 troubleslare rife, brother was still i So s ram, so stainless, the pink of per- fection, , 0 1 there's nothing on earth like the Bachelor's Wife. If gen sev tle On "b}rth-ring " of brass or tin, so that, shonld affairs mend at home, his mother claim her lost darling. If not, how - ds, the provincial authorities pay e wet nurse in town or village te e him for a few months, at the rate ree or four dollars per month, and The Spanish Peasant. our hero be one of a large family, he rally, if it be his lot to be number or eight, c,oransences life in the lit - urn -box of the foundling hospital. is tiny hand is, however, a little eve wo so of t after that the wet nurse becomes to all ts and. purposes his mother, taking of him until he be seven years old, he is sent to learn a trade, and mg, writing and arithmetic,' to the nea est hospic;o, or work -house. In this case du ver ear wh foot - when of age and earn his bread. by work- ing at his trade. It is by this means that education is spreading, and finding its I way into remote pueblos and hill - villages, throughout the svhole of Spain. But, eupposing our peasantlhero to be a home -bird, his living is rude and rough indeed, his education 7/i/ ; for, although splendidly conducted in the large towns, yet the schools of the small towns and villages are a mere cipher. So he learns nothing, save how to scratch on ; he runs about barefooted, helping his father to plow or sow, to dig the vineyard, or prune the olives ; or, if he be of the fish- er race, he commenees night work with the trade er drift nets on the boisterous Atlantic or the languid Mediterranean. As to any moral discipline on the part of the parents, it is hardly known ; when they are in a passion. the child is severe- ly beaten by them ; when they are ood- ev hi or ex bl ways keeping back just enough to pay fair his two luxuries—the lottery ticket d tobacco, The house accommodation the peasant is of the roughest, and the rk corners and glassless windows of his ttage would. appear comfortless to an nglish observer, but the walls are gen- e ally thick, the windpws few and small, although the poor little fellow has g the first seven years of bis life a hard time of it, yet his condition is in the hoFpicio, and. he is well -cared nd well fed, and enabled to go out pered, petted and spoiled. - ow - r; a certain keen sense of honor is. the 's guide, and, with poverty, keeps straight until he is carried off for his or three years' service as a soldier ; drawing a lucky number and being mpt, wins the heart and. hand of some ek-eyed lassie, to whom he religiously es the larger part Of his earnings, al- lad gesso coati offe - ed by h one was in t e Belk the wind w a d at th West prom sea o been nd his sw thee mate OU er P. in to the he should se h of the latter froth starvatio aston, Penn. cled. in rapid d money, and Miss She [ the promise. exorable, and consider a painter, lithough h George's Own, a fit in tch for the ter of a blue-blooded He locked Miss Betty chamber. The story the town. Popular s the lovers ; StePhen nounced as a tyrant, of pity and enconirag the high-laticed win was the fair captive was in the barber re West had arranged tb come to him, under th er. The day arrived At this crisis Dr. I Fr the good angel, and p as competent to dirge lightniny or the dra With Bishop White, t captain and _arra I, ed starting until ni weigh anchor at Old 3,Ir. West w and at miduight and Hopkinson re ell's house, faste Betty's window, ed, and conclude which set sasl as The lovers were ed, and lived lo But Stephen Sh sister, nor did sh ii, return to Ameri a. The story tic enough for di+, but bea that when he ra lied the venera op on his part se knight-errant modern Doloride, he replied th done right, adding, with warm " if it were to de over again I sh ,in precisely the Same way. Go them to come toOthei.."—Harp hiladelphta up again ent out mpathy w Shewell nd many ment were ow, behind y to sail, i escost of for her de klin appe a love affai hen a lad of went to t with him t, but to be t en taken o air dthSte be eel a rope d iltavhile she hei. safely to t oon as she was and happily well never for a d thus beat—the one enemy—is kept bay by darkness and small currents of r passing in and out. As a rule, there , e not many villages in Southern Spain, the peasantry generally living in the pueblos, or small towns, scattered over the country ; and as these crumbling *tone houses are large, two or more fam- 'lies live - together in the same house, hen there al e the little ground -floor r jo:,°hgia:ael, seet gren.esgac ribt:Igul:aeielr:lig: . hea‘i .inernearsreogd;nrgtolPinitfendhceitisihavneni onifteh‘s, eAiynroi elf: eylr r tdcaoisrii !tile. If a'oeniousrdr,r. crops per annum, each garden plot has its tiny stone cottage. Again, around Isome of the most flourishing of the An- . idalusian mines, colonies of working miners have hollowed out small caves in the rocks and cliffs, lighted up night and lay by a tiny oil lamp swinging from the orofths raened ytleiaerres, tien osredrevretohibes knienagr thaen: oung peasant grows up, he goes for two ork, they pass their clays. When the untry as a soldier ; but before this he as donned the faja, or sash, and the vaja, or clasp -knife, marks of his man - a The New York Mercury pr following story poor locksmithi at No. 116 Hest One day while pir Fulton-fe he met an acquaintance, , who a if he was the Jacob, Heydebra the Austrian Ccinsulate was for, His frien persuading him and ascertain w person wanted. was asked if I had. some di to ko to the ether or not h At the Cons e had been i ear Frankfo Main. Ile re lied in the a " Did you board there with named Schoen and did you their house an ustriau officer yd ebrand replie I again in thee " What was t e name of the It was Count J ob IVon Heyde trian Hussars I" he answered. then you are t e man we want. ing the Consu handed the he said he had better have ex, instructed t The Germ nece her twe "sad of th ell He H r Mon in her hrough wi as ilea es est Vit sho Id whr is fa h - red las f quite as t sto 18, a csshi de eady boa Wh Sh to esee e sh e- 11 some German lawy ed him that he was the sum of $2,000. to whom Heydeli and gave was greatly surpriSed . at their which where to the followin Count Aloysius Von Heyd wealthy nobleman, had die having confessed on his deat the Austrian officer, Colonel Heydebrand, who 'had hithert his only son, was 'pnly and i child, his real son and heir, born the same nh,me, havin adrift in the world after his died, by his nsistress Bernha zel, who had borne him a son same time. That. wicked s possessed such a power over h had wrung from him the co stitute her son in the plate of 1 whom she had talOn tO her Darmstadt. The [old count i 0. d 18 to iss n bo rd lure is! as she got under weigh a river gig *as d e er see approaching in all haste. In he n- bow of the boat was seen an aged m n, rY wh gestieulated frantically to those on tes boa d the steamer to stop. The boatgot bi tWO of its occupaats—a man a ut ears of age and a young man of 2 — bend on board the Moravian. he rs were naturally surprised at see - in the GRAY, Y UNG 84. SPARLIN One Dollar Tweeds for Eiglay-.Five Cents ; 11rimety Gent Tweeds for &vent; -Five Cents ; Eighty -Fite Cent Tweeds for Seventy Cents ; Sixty -Five Cent Tweeds for _Fifty -Five Cen0 ; Ninety Cent Wool Skirt awl D\rawers for Saty-Five Cents ; One Dollar WoCl Shirt and Drawfms for Seventy -Eight Cents ; One Dollar and Twenty-Zive Cent Wool Shirt and Drawers for One Dollar amd Ten Cent8 ; 0* Dolton. and *gig -Five Cent Scarlet Drawers for One Dollar awl FiAy Cents ; FancyiAll !fool Shirts for One Dollar and Twenty -Five Cents, worth Two °liars ; Cottons for' Seventy -Five Cents, worth One Dollar ; Readiyi de_ Clothing below cost ; Fancy -Wool Skirtings for Forty -Five Cents, iwcirth Fifty-Fivo Cents ; Fancy Wool,Shirtings for Foty Cents, Rigg clang Her hidd ly la clay, whic and surr and egan Bost A says na the last. leav worth ifty-Five Cts ; Gray Shamblays Jo?. Forty -Five Cts, worth Fifty - Five • Extraordinary Elopement. e Liverpool Mercury, of March14, elopement case took place on board Ilan steamer Moravian on Thursday In the afternoon the steamer Was ug the Mersey with a full com tents ; Scarlet Flarimels at Prices that will astonish you. Remember FARMERS' STORE, SEAFORTH. PREPARING FOR AN UNCERTAINTY. Being termt anwl DIE The of Glas for SP ro le B to this he uld act m ant nts tini 60 cla offi ins tro an effe t that his wife—a woman of 48, rd the the mother pf grown-up children-- ad elo ed with a young man of 22 ; that and was the were board the Moravian en r street. rou,e for America ; and the deserted us - Y at, ba d and his son demanded, that the ked im Ca tain should send the runaway on vertising ing that the law gave him no such p aver enity in the runaway wife happened. to pass a ong onatilate th deck near where the group were dis- Avad, the cuseing the point. She recognized her ulate he husband. A fit of repentance seized er. 18 at She at once forgot her new love, and ow the- , only thought of the old. Exclaiming, ive. Oh, John are you here ?" she embr ced ily 1 he husband and kissed him. Her sion, t at to she saluted in a most affectionate 11 he steamer boarded in this fashro noticing that the oId man was ble, they received him courteous listened to his tale, which was to wncertain as to whether he can obtain a New Licendo, has de - d to give the public the benefit of the present one while it lasts, lb that view has commenced Selling Of his Stock o:f BRAN II' INES, GINS, and all imported Bottled IiiqUorsi. at Clost. tock is not large, but is good, amd going of rapidiv. His stock EAS, SUGARS, SYRUPS, General Groceries, Crocke.ry and e is very large, well assorted, amd well bought. As ho sells ash, ontey, and for very light profits the public are sure to get id Vakue for their Money. To arrive in a few d4s, Clover, hy and other Field Seeds, ivhich be rum of ,at a Sn ll Advance JAMES MURPHY, Main Street, t.5eaforth. SE rma a fa Successor to Strong alc Fairly, Seaford., Is no Receiving his Stock of FIELD and GARDEN SEEDS, whic)a he is deter- mine to sell at a Small Advance on Cost. I have now on hanid a Stock of CLO ER and TIMOTHY SEED, Millet, Black Tares, English and Italian Rie Grasfs, ALSIKE CLOVER, Lucerene or Freuch Clover, Yellow or Trefoil Clover, Ore rd Grass, Mixed Lawn Grass, &c. SWEDE TURNIPS—Skerving's Improv- ed, Ian's Westbury, Purp. le Top, Bruce's Selected East Lothian and Cart• er's Im- ilperial. CARROT SEED—Long Orange, White Belgium, Green To , &e. GAR- DEN\ SEEDS—My Stock of Garden Seeds will be found FRESH and GOOD ; Warranted' as Pure as can be got in anY other establishment. CALL EARLY and ur supply. Seeds as Low as any other House in the Trade ; I won't be sold. SEED OATS—I have now on hand a quantity of tholie Celebrated. ZEALAND OATS, yielding from 80 to 120 bushels to—the acre ; stem, 4 ng ; head 15 to 20 inches, on the side ; they stand the weather well and don't I will furnish Bohemian or Harness Oats, and the Tartarian Oats, grown by Henderson, to any person entrusting their orders to me. I w ine Hullees Oats and the Tartarian Oats as Low as. they can et. 'CALL AND EXAMINE BEFORE PURCHASING E oice Stock of FAMILY GROCERIES, FLOUR and FEED alss'ays on hand. BOUND NOT TO BE UNDERSOLD, and to give everybody satiefaction. THE OLD PLACE STILL ALIVE: IMPLEM NT EMPORIUM. TTAS on band t Agricultural ever before. He b man on credit, at t lecturing Com had valuable imp among Which is th only 800 of these siring to purchase number will soon Parton, Tate & London, Gang P and their plows ne " ' Fie- i way, But while these preliminaries to a rma iye. re onciliation were going on, the faithless ran . He th scene, and placidly asked what " it ntof us- w s all about." The deserted hus and "Well, implored his fickle spouse to retu n to ' Sd4 say- he home, in Wednesbury. Thia she ston shed co isented to do, but made it a. sine! qua ts, hich non that the companion of her flight min o in Pa ALL KINDS 0 PLO IRON Spring a larger Stock of ys for Cash and tulle to gOod • lowest living profits. na. well-known Thistle Cntter lectured by the Massey Mina- , Nevreastle. This plow had vements added this season, wrought iron began. 1 have ows for gale, and parties de - should "apply at once , as this disposed of. .'s, and the George Gray, of s. These are the best makers no recomraendation. GENERAL PURPOSE 5 IN STOOL The Scotch D ond, and -the Gnaw:toque Iron Harrows. These rrows are in use on almowt every farm, an& rties desiring to purchase can easily afieertain their merits. get y uncle NE feet 1 shell. John Gen co d by shPuld be allowed to return- with her, orm- The husband aecepted the termii thus him didated„ The master of the Mora ian, i4er se ing that an. arrangement had been Pers co ne to, facilitated the return the tents s ore of the troublesome party who had the were f the erful alk - in I ace pas e legit wh be oth dine abo a time disturbed the decorum o on board his steamer. Whe rty arrived at the stage they red by a cr,owd who had. heard range elopement and the won r conciliation. Wife and husband 72, p hat je Ton mar te. e0 arm in, arm loving along the etage, ad and the lover,' as if to make atonement n set fer his wrong -doing, walked meekly be - r bad Wnd carrying the luggage." OTHER Woods and Eye and Sprague ard machines, with many value Sharp's Celeb furniish the got in the • FARMERS OF HURON AND BR A GOOD ARTICLE ALWAYS CHEAP, nston Reapers, Woods, Buck Mowers. These are the stand - d this year be brought out le improvements, ted Self -Damping Manufactured by pony. As an I Implement I were made and being manufect ready being reee the Massey Manufacturing Com- tance of the popularity -of this just state that last year GO. Id, and this year 1,500 are , and orders for them are al- • SEWING MACHINES, The Sewing Michine business is carried on at full blast as naafi!. JO NSTON SELF -RAKE REAPER; CAYUGA, Jr., and SPRIAGUE MOW - also our celebrated Empire Seed Drill—Improved, and new Patent Self - ping Sulky Horse Rake, without any doubt The Best ever offered in the DOMill- We beg to say ALL the above articles built by us are perfectiy reliable, and. anted to give satisfa,ction. PATTERSON & BROTHERS' In*lemente speak hemselvee, and have earned a high reputation for their many excellent quell - throughout the country wherever they have been used. All Farmers intend - in urehasing any of the above will do well to give them a trial. It is unneces- sa for us to say anything in regard to the sta,nd our Johnston Reeper took at the Gr at Trial on the London Road in 1875, as it is well known by all in this:section of rink's', and we may say it will be still better for the season of 1876, as we have improvements for this season's sales. REPAIRS kept at Seaforth, Brussels, ER, Du war for tie oel- at the omen had that she ttle Jacob, lations in plmied —Dr. Bell, minister of Ca yllie, Arbroath, Scotland, who died abou three years ago, was the inventor of the reap - i g machine. Ha was seventy years o age, _and kis great invention was ade m 1827, and wed in the fi Id in THE FLORENCE, Standing at the top of the ladder, looks proudly down upon all competitors. Mao on hand, full stook of other machines. • MACHINE, NEEDLES AND ATTACHMUNTS Of all kinds au in Stoeh. Th Machines. for all machines, kept constantly hest -.SPERM OIL _for Sewing of BUTTERICR'S PATTERNS. 0 PATTERSON & BROTHERS, Patterson Ontario. WM, GRIEVE, General Agent, Seaforth Ontario, 13STRACT—SOLOMON J. SHANNON, Treasurer, in Account M_UNICIPALITY OF McKILLOP for the Year 1875. al. rah 3, To belanci on hand from last Mar. 8, By Roads, Bridges and Andit I $ 1,262 64- _By Local School Assessment. arch 4, To Tavern Licences 140 00 By County Treasurer T Cash from Provincial Treasurer, By Chanties.. , ... . Clergy Reserve Fund 96 75 By Printing, postage and ate T Cash for Toll Gate 12 00 By Errors In Taxer; and statn Boundary Line Money. 180 18 By Surveying T I Non -Resident Land Tax 487 77 By Defaulters list T Amount of ' Collector's Roll 11,792 OS By Balance on hand . ' THE SEAFORTH MUSICAL II1STRUMENT EMPORIUM, Late 0. C. WILLSON, Proprietors of this we/1 and favorably known establIshment, keep nothhig bat THJEC BEST. vvith the faterial $3,084 45 14,998 04i 8,650 85 688 00 178 87 lonery.. 78'44 e labor.. 11 04 2,4 00 Total.. $14,048 87 Total ived from Surplus Fund Appropri- Paid to various parties for Mortgage e do herehy a that we have examined the sups Account,* with the Totrehere therefor, and 67 89 1,312 78i class mments always on hand. ORG NS. ORGANS. The VOGEL & LINCOLN organ. T his Organ is impolted direct from the mann- fac toren and is now being introduced into Cana- da by Messrs WILLSON & SCOTT, who are the • • SOLE ACENTB FOR THE DOMINION. 404,048 87 T o this Org,an we invite attention. 'We have no boasting, but simply ask you to test it, If your ability is not adequate to this, get help from those who Ma supply your deficiency. We invite THE CLOSEST SCRUTINY, fo nd them correct. ted this id Da; ef Mara, 1876. The keenest c ticisms from the eoundest judg- ments, and he purest _musical taste. Better, however, true your own judgment, though defec- tive, than that of one who has little beyond his 4864 own conceit to ,FIT HIM FOR THE TASX. Such judgment we deprecate. Test us -critically and thoroughly by your ablest musicians. We solicit attenWn to the PATENT MANIFOLD PIPE, The only onceessful method to Wits'!" the Pipe ' Organ tone. W, e beg attention, also, to the PATENT PIANO ATTACHMENT. Hi - It is not too costly for general use, and it NEVER AN GET OUT OF TUNE, it gives a t, yet ringing, bell -like tone, impart- ing a sparill g, vivacious charaeter to the music. IMPOR'ANT IMPROVEMENTS Oler other Organs, and is the BEST AND CHgAPEST in the Canapian market. THE TRADiE LIBERALLY DEALT IrTII; Besides e above the following are on band, or will be =pilled Prince, George Woods, Estayo Mason & Haan, Bell, of Guelph, and others. A few hand Instatmeits ci various lanai for pale c p WI LSON & soorrt •