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The Huron Expositor, 1876-04-14, Page 9• • • • 4' . 1 i ' 17 Aram 14„ 1876. ESS GOODg AND WAN DUNC SEAFORTH, give a general. invitation to wishing to purchase MILLINERY. eck is not only the Newest that trket affords, but the Cheapest ime and money can purchase. illy we woald call our Custom. teetion to )RESS GOODS. now showing a Splendid Line of nit' LACE LUSTIIES, Checked ttress Goods in all thi t Colors, With Plain Goods t� LACK LUSTRES, HJK WARP RALERMOS, We; the best value in the trade. IOURNING GOODS - offering the Largest Stook and apest thafl hag ever been offer ! ed to- a EAFORTH PUBLIC. Line fr= English, Scotch, nett and Aruorican Printers. ILL e much id asure in announcing Opening f r Spring of our . . Linery and Mantle ROOM, ea replete ith all the Novelties !'ieesen, and is under the charge Exve4need maner.i epend upon gettig once, & DU AN. • -et APRIL 14, 1.876J THE: HURON - EXPOSITOR. THE REM:TM READER; t' (71.% ntEs lda t1 entee Coed, Re she registered her , set, at the Beeieh 1 louse, Cape May, and after dinner she interviewed the first clerk, a young luau who parted his hair in the midiLit,;intl. Ivor° a ponderous watch chain, arid had a number of rings on his yvhite fingees. Miss Cecil inquered the name of the principal pper, and asked if it had a job office connected with it, and then made known the fact that she proposed to give reading from the poets at an early date. I presume you are fond of poetry, are yon not ?" asked Ida Motez. "Very" responded the clerk, "I think that it is delicious," The beautiful reader was glad to know the fact. The young man at the desk Volunteer ed to show the lady the way to the office called undou ot the Weekly Swaelt. His escort Was acconclusion - cpted and. the editor of that sheet was mentioned e weed' exhibit hinged and paste and aloud : " Bosh !" At the co reader WM manufacturer Of the famous condensed talons the sot soap—one glaie° of herear is enough '-‘1 0 Aiittraet aily yeithg inane"' • - Ur. Inkling," said the young clerk, " I have the pleasure of introducing to you the famous Misie:IciaMon'dz Cecil:" The young man probably thought that • any pretty wemaix with isneh a romantic • name Mint be fetriois: ffaiing perform- ed his mission, the clerk returned to the were welt:fill aristooracy the Cape, au ov erwhelmed les as acting star el the e With what h the be eddy of r. Inkslin a le 'mta !at ager for lg. te ee of su • met woubl bir ;1 to det elderly ladiee_ is eeei. the hoteht and crit'ci the ,we reader, cruel arking peatedemphis th one the purpose a hibiting diamond theee The be chattered in e • ly Ifiht tions from ow, en P tier and Joaq iller, an let it be re d evin amount of int • in Inkii effort " A NI ' Cape We would ouch for but it has be °tied on made acquaauted with Ida Montez When she entered he was engaged in writing up his colemn of fashionable gs- sip, and had just penned • ; "Miss Araminta - Amanda Clod, of Bucks county Penn., at preaent residing at the Higlicharge, is the daughter of the gratulatory and the hotel The edito a moment j "I Was q Just wha hard to con cepted it a was:a doub Beach Ratio spnd Mrs. In hour in front of his loolcingglass. iug, but her Inksling saidthat lieliad heard of Miss Femously. c Cecil often, and she expreseedler delight ner lord inf at meeting so distinguished a journalist. detained fo Both were .equally truthful. thus indhealone. _ Ida, the beautiful, now showed the editor the diamondThe star ring on the forefinger of being w of the left hand, and her plans for a read- �f to call ing from the poets in the parlors of the Beach. House during the coming week. " If you desire success you could -not she would have done better than come to me," said in a sip of Did Inksling, who was jealous of his rival of she the Seaweed over the way. "1 lead M an hour th these matters," he continued, "and you pagne and will do well to put all the preliminaries in dew—,the my hands. Fortunate, indeed, that you • with " i 3 came first to me. I do something in the and one IA rhyming way myself at times." and .a las ' Indeed ! exclaimed the charming melting ey Ida Mon tez, 'puttng her lilly white hands again. together. "How dHow sal delightful, and will you sett e all th the enterta" permit me to place one of your sweet poems on the programme?" He hesitated like a bashful school girl. And then ebe leaned forward and placed the jewelled finger on his shoulder and looked up into his face with her melting eyes and said the writin " To please Inc ?"* And he consented. last evenin The file of the Swah be comple was brought, and the poet eclitor read aloud to his fair Beech to it auditor several of his ablest efforts. admiration. . When he prominente had tiuished, she said : greatest e "There is a sweet sadness to all you After din r. write. De I guess aright that thus far yon have found_ no cougenial spirit—none sent up hs held a wh a in this world to love and caress ?" mingle our1e le The next Montee did, n table, and It hotel as the Bence was i All the utly, fashion, e hotels at 'as almott le of his da- b beautifal e ss the lady r me. The sip of the. dobe of the t at her r - n er was fpr the solitai e eysaonnd, %bvehia x h ough sele with sha ei d the sa ing's mas r he stateine what may e uth rity that at the e ren en of the Alpo, e ..,the edi of the Sea ts displea ttt] by a ptio- sakeable his, and tae of the gii exclaimed ien of th Itelmed rominent *biota b rk. the Serve readings the th competed - in their con - in Inksling 1ingered or say : disappoint d " meant wo Id have be n but I a Montez o plimen , although it e. 1 ai atte ded the re d- e ore and i entity was it ed. a haety as de her tha he would be momen and she as make er way hone he eveni g complain, d, and be ged Mr. 1 k - e next day, hen she wo ld i Is accrued in advertising nt. But before parting the editor and the clink, at the for er's expentie. t her fati ue ? For alf gered ove the iced ch m od of a brosia—ho ey and elys um, and t ea good nigh t' on her 1 ps, most fas inatin smi es, ishing gl nee from lher ey parted never to eet clerk, wh And then she sighed deeply and regard- ed. Inksling out of the corner of her eyes. "None, alas eone !" he said. And if his wife and the mother of six children had been there It is fate to pre- sume that there trould have been a heap The fai ing nothin of "pi" in thatoffice, . constructe 1 "1, too," shel responded, "find no af- te pay her finity, no one ofl that poet nature, that " For h romantic dispoition. But, alas ! why ' exc speak of this I life is made up of sorrow- sellli' it ing and loving.'1 the leaky "And loving lin Vain is such sweet son- I mitobjef, a row," sighed the editor. - over the I -The interview of the reader of the po- ets and the local rhynaster was prolonged furnishing until gaslight. First there was the hand 7 next 24 h bill to write, end the advertisement for lnkslin in arrang: the tiewspapers to compose, and after was ouzel both were arranged to the satisfaction of at the ofte the enthusiasts they again dwelt upon besides lo the ribsorbing themes of romance, love • and the drama,' _ i printing . The draand--oth admired, aye wor- shipped the drama. I am am," she said, emphasizing with the ,disenond finger, "that if you had not been born a poet you would have been an actor.' " Perhaps," he sighed, "an actor of Cape the the sentiments of a Romeo or of a Claude and disapp Melliotte !" she responded. fidence wo juliet to your Romeo, or Pauline to your play dozen ali ci egotistica "How dearly I should like to Claude Melnotte !" she responded. and *MO "Alas ! that can never be," he said. one ever reel And the winds and the waves made and the ftl monnifial echo of " never be " on the a 1 ter should white sands of the seashore. • eise her w ness, and and retur as if he ha his frien Bence. The eth beside hi issue of hi peered to editor of Quite a 1 a Inksling escorted Ida Montez Cecil to greatest the Beach Rouse, and together they sup-, has been ped and chatted of night—the moon and eluding t stas. Mercury. - In the evening she sat at the piano and sang sweetly and lowly as if for him alone, of harps, and broken hearts, and roving, and_ then they walked down by the sea -beat shre, and told each the other what Oweet pleasure it would be to be buried inithe deep ocean down in the, fathomless depths with -the pearls and. corals. W h en In kslin t came home late that . evening he told his better half that he had been detained_ by the projectors of a new hotel, and even went so far as to give the eize and. location of the imaginary struc- ture. The hext day the fair Ida called at the office of thettieash to see a proof of the handbill and circulars, and the hotel clerk for fear of her losing the way accomani- ed her. At night they again walked nn the beac-h and whispered soft nonsense, and Inksling returned home to repeat the fib. about the new hotel project. When the next number of the &vast appeared it was principally devoted to the beautiful reader—editorially it puffed her. And she was paragraphed, and squibbed all over the paper. The announeements also appeared in the ,.*,azt,i-ed and the Oft//, but neither editor was so profuse of his puffery. In fact; the Semed, always a saucy sheet, whose editor reciprocated with interest the hatred of Inksling, :welcomed Miss Cecil to Cape May, but deprecated the unfortunate fact that the evening's pleas- ures were to be marred "by a recitation of doggerelefrom the pen of the assinine lunatic who drivels in the columns of the Siva1, the great living iample of jour- nalistic idicy." Ida Montez was deeply shocked when she read this and she said to the morti- fied scribe : Let the world say what it will you and I know and appreciate true genius." When the eventful evening of the read ing came the parlors of the Each House AD For man of Bercia hto senFos more than d most won ance. No impair hi keaLth. his fathers rong const' talon and las ti c -Mr. Foitt ii's son Jack nherited merh of sll y jack was out frame 1e dee, weep with us, le us s.. , riling the appear at pot etran Observed eh. nterta rn a len hy oon Ipksl before h. iew the 1 his geni din her p Con f Tom he calle ard, the p charming the break e that her in so larg brush after him, rind he 'knew tbit success depended on his peed and muscle. Aft was fifty raods to the clear - h4 had not moire the ten rods the4tart. itt! Was' Ili easel o life or deal, unless lio",relitiquOhedltAe enbo—ai a be was not the mau $10141).„%that. ncumbered akhe was,be roittlikra holing But the bear gained ton kiln, and wt en he ap. proached the edge' of the nods, Mrs. Bruin was lustnt his heels • Jack Understood the peril. ; There was a log fence! just bathe' edge of the clear- ing. Fortienately a large log lay -along- si e the fence. With one iremendons iound: Jack leaped on the log. Another muscular hou ad carried hini- over the fence into the Old.. The beat was on the fence es soon as Jack struck the ground. But she hesi- tated a mOtnent about fo owe g him into the open field, and he sped away so fast that she finally turned bac into the Woods, and Jack escaped, to relate his exploit,' add verify it by the e hibition of his captive cubs. AtieCtiotes of Thac eray. As Setofs of his own exal ed view of his profession, Thackeray sed to tell some goodIstories of the:freq ent absence of its proptir recognitionlbeth in and out of society. "Who is that liv ly fellow ?" asked a oetttlemen of hiS hbor, at a public dinher in the north, w en Thack- eray left the room. "Ob! th t is Thack- eray, the aluthor." "Indeed 1" respond ed the other ; thought h was a gen- demon." iThackeray's first x troduction to_scholastie Oxford is A. bet story and better knoWn. it will )bea repetition. Before he could delive4 his lectnre on " The Gecihres," at Oxford, i was neces- sary to obtan the license of t collegiate I authoritieri. The Duke of Wellington was Chanttellor, rind knew the author. of Vanity Pap, but he had.a lea ned deputy 1 whese kne* ledge of Greek as possibly profound, put whose acleuai tance with of Manhood, &A, giving his rules of Self -Cure, English e1See8 WAS only lim ted. after undergoing much suffering and ecpensetand "Pray What can I do to erve you 7" mailed free on receiving a post•paid directed en- ced the bland scholar, vlope. Address NATHANIEL MAYFAIR, P. O. Box 168, BOoklyn,N. Y. , 1 404-28 My Immo is Thacketay; SCIAL NOTICES. To COMIIMPTIVES. — The advertiser, a retired phYsician, having providentially dieeovered while a Meilical 'Missionary in Southern Asia. a very simple vegetable remedy fin. the speedy and permanent cure of COsumption, Asti, ma, Bronchitis Catarrh, ; find all throat and lung affec- tions,—also a positive and radical specific for Nervoils Debility, Premature Decay, and all Nervous Complant, feels it his duty to Make it known to his suffering fel- laws. Actuated btr this motiese, he will cheerfully send (free of charit)to all WhO desire ,it, in recipe for preparing, and full directiont for succeesfelly using, this providenOally discovered! remedy. Those who wish to avail themselves of the benfits of this discovery without cot, can:l do so by return mail, by ad- dressing,' with stamp, naming this paper. DR. CHAALES P. Ma.asetaa, 33 Niagara Street, Biiffalo, N. Y. EPPS' Cocoa.—Grateful and comforting By iv thorough knowledge of the natural limes whieli govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a care- ful application of the fine properties of well -selected cocoa, Mr. Epps has pro- vided our breakfast tables with a delicate- ly 'flavored beverage, which may.save us many heivy doctors' bills. It is by the judicious Use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until stri:htif enough to resist every ten- dency to i disease. Hundreds of subtle maladiesiare floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We tnay ?escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortitied With pure blood, and a properly nourished frame." Civi/Serviec Gazette. Sold only in pack ail labelled- "James Epps & Co., Ho- meepathie. Chemists, 48, Threadneedle St, pond 110, Piccadilly, Londote" 421-52 OPNFESgIONE4 01? A VICTIM.—Published as a warning and for the benefit of. young men andothersiwho suffer from Nervotie Debility,Loss 4 SO I see by this card. AFTER having used Dr. Wheeler's4 Compound " seelt permission td le -aa Elixieet Photphates and Oalisaya over two the precinets " ure within years in daily practice, I must give, it my unquali- led approbation. During & practice of twenty " Ah ! you are a leeitit yeers I hale used many scientific cOmpounds pre- paed for he same indications as the Elixir, but none of them proved as valuable as this. To the er ? What subjects db ,you undertake-ereligious or I 91 politica • " Neithhr t I am a literar " Have biou written anyt "Yes, lam the author of said Thaekeray, conseieus, having done something Wort brance. . • • I preume a dissenter," da ford man, ;quite unsubdieed. 'i -[as Vanity aabst. wFtek asn?yling to do with John Bunyanie a " Not exactly," said ;The keray. ` I have Also iwritten Pendoni8 " ng labored in "Never heard of these books," said the the leanuid man, "but no doubt they are ght proper wierks." the "1 haite also contriblited 3r, who in her continued the lecturer.' a had given a "I) line4 1 I have heard of °gramme to i the the scholar.- "It is, I friar, tastbrtahinte. h licarrthioeni someate I.Geo.kind. "lied rter retur ed, for gime time Mr. T-hricke ed eon ver ation -With the mods, and to whom he !clic companie him up-steirs, tures oni," The G-eorges," looking f r all the World terestenginotes about his p rned. of ti e decease o" all eray, in the moments of di earth ;dun g his brief ab- frequeutty change his posit ed most at his ease when b Montez ad flown, ally be thought he was mo her room but a cheaply able. 14.8 was easy to loll ngV' anity Fair," o doubt, of y of remem aid the Ox - puff about nt thatit m called at pty trun el bill, n's sake k to Punch," Punch," said ribald pub- er, who was ay's amanu- ted his lee - as some in ron. Thack- ation, would n, and seem: might natur- t uncornfort- w, his enun- and forgetting ciation biting clear ancl .dist net. He gen erally "! weighed his worOs before he ep this to elour- gave thein breath" He never became ed the tee imized editor, energetic), but spoke witi that calm shed his pule Le a humor - as unmoved, Liston, who ed what his hen he gave amusement. peakers, Mr. oo late f r concealment, deliberation which distlngu ter had al eady done the lie readiks. When he m Was carry ng the new all ous point his countenance edifying the gossip by like th4 of the comedia in with a r ithe used to iook as if he wend • oh topic fo audience) were laughing at so far col uisclf them Most occasion. for he Preli he Like the majority of good pay the cted Thackeiay wrote his oratons. Shortly Gat prior to the banquet which was given to and him on his going to Ariaeri a, he said to his amanuensis, "1 wish was over. I what am I and sit down. something raid it will be at there was he time came, and bright and origin- mitted hi inaries 'tha bills contr he Seaw ed and the his own advertising f the Seaweed was with jy, and in the eet, theefo lowing local greet disc wash: sation iva Week by ance of t Ida Mo under the entity Ink 11 mhture of irly next ape the created at the the appea ance with e notorious con- tez Ceil, ith a auspices of that ling, of the milk eet across ; the way. No ed him of ossesstng b eine hat so no rious a, ch rac- aye been p rmitted to lexer. here is owing to her slulowde s irnbecill shment is of a to settle of this 11 ty- alone. His he fact thet he all her bills, in- ce."—New York erate E counter. ears there lived in the town a man by the no, e of er. Altbou h a man f no edium size, he possesse the rfulphysica vigor and e dur- xertion or e. posure see ed to Summer d hunting, i• he vicinity of Island Pond. trampe1 ong and fa , but without suc- cess. The oods seenaid to be destitute of game. Finally! h became discourage and started hor1u wards. 01 his ;way, is he was passiig dense thi ket, he sa two bear -cubs Ls cep. The lay partia y ou their sides!;' ith nose to nese. Front direction it was easy to reach them. He new he co ld kill then with his gun ; 1u he would like to c pture them a1ive The 'cubs ere large e ough to show fijiht, and perh ps their clani was within c1J, eacly to in erfere. Jack p irt1 cautious y about,. an,l not seeing the �ther bear, decided tO risk the atterti • Placing gun In a osition where he could ewe g it under h arm after he had secured h grey, he Cr pt softly to the sleeping i nals, and uddenly grasped each by tit e nose. He xpected, id this manner, . old thein si tightly that they could no ueal. One of i em he suc eeded in hiolding in .that # ner, but he other siippecl from hi rasp. othing da ted, Jack cauy himby he hind 133g, se- cured hi eun, and st rted on t e run for hone. But t ncl was n s yet. Tho cub, not liki • be carrie by the hind. leg, set up loud corapl int, and tne old hear imitptil iately repli 4. She was close at hand; Jack hen d her erns ing throu h the have:10 'ake a speech, an to say ?1 Here, take a pen, i see f I can hammer on it's hamMering now,. I'm a, stammering by and byi." no stammering when the speech was notabl al.—lohdon Society. A Bashful S ee heart. In -At rural district of IForfarshire a youu ploughman once went a -courting on a Saturday night. A preliminary in- terviewwith the objet a his affection passed ff successfullY, and in due time he fouu4l himself seated w th her by the fire sidelof the farm -house kitchen. This was John's first eppea nce in that character, and as he andt e girl had had little previous acquaintan e, he found himself 'sadly at a lois fo something to say, in Order to begin la co versation from which he expected soii uch pleasure. In vainthe racked his brai s for some in- teresting topic ; but tie c uld call up no su.bject let all suitablei for ,the occasion --- not one sentence cou d h: utter, and for two rn4rtal hours bie s on, in silent despair. i The girlhers; f was equally silent ; ;she no doubt re nembered • the teaching of the old Scot song, "Men it di Maun be first to pea ," and she sat patientyregarding hint with den3ure surprise. At last Jobti sus clenly exclaim- ed, "Jenny, there' a eather on yer apron !V " I widna ha'e onder if there had ben twa," replidl Je ny, " for I've been sitin' aside a gdise •' nicht !" -fi'lle Ninety an", Nine. The Ihistory, of t Sankey sings so often rned, 'cal profession and to the public I would es- peaially ree,ommend it as the best remedy for the tre tmentbf that large and constantly increasing L cla s of eases of over-worked, nerve-exhanted wo en. N. WATEYES BIIEL, M. D. AROUND THE WOR •ri GREAT FEMALE REMEDY.—Job Moses' Period ical Pills—This invaluable medicine is i un ailing lin the cure of all those painful and da prong diseases to which the female constitu- tion is suljct. It moderates all excess and re moves all pbtructions, unit a speedy cure may be relied On. IT o marled ladien, it is peculiarly suited. It fwill, in ti abort dine, bring on the monthly pe riod with regularity, . These pine Would not be taken by Females daring the Met three months of Pregratiey, as they are sure to bring on Mis- carriage, but at any other time they are safe. In all wises. of Nervone end Spinal 'Affections, paine in the back and limbs fatigue on slight ex ertion, palpitation of the 'heart, hysterics, and white, these pills will effect a cure when all other means hieve failed; and, although a powerful remedy, d� not contain iron, calomel, antimony, or anything hurtful to the contitution. Full 'Airectionif in the pamphlet around i each package, which shduld be carefully preserved. Job Moses, Now Yorii Sole Proprietor.. $1 00 and 12i cente for postaCa endued to Northrop & Lyman, To ronto Oht:, general agents for the Dominion, will insure a bottle containing over 50 pills by return Mail. Sold in Seaforth by E. Hicktion Co., J4 S.: Roberts, and R. Lunisden. 197 MO ItIlill.—Thomas' Eciectric 0111 Worth ten 'LI tiniCeite weight in gold. DO you know any thing of it? If not, it is time fell did.—ain can not stay where it is used. One dose cures common sore throat. One bottle has cured bronchitis. Fifty cents worth has cured an old standing cough. One or We bottles cures bad eases of piles or kid- ney troubles. Six to eight applications cure any case of eXcoriated nipples or inflamed breast. One bottle has cured lame back of eight years stand- ing. Daniel Plank, of Brookfield, Tioga County, Pa., says: " I went 80 miles for a bottle of your oil, which effected a, wonderful cure of a crooked limb, by Mx applications" Another who has had asthma for years, says: " I have half of a 60 cent bottle lft, and $100 would not buy if I could get no more." Rufus Robinson, of Nunda, N. L. writes: "One small bottle of your Medd° Oil restored the voice where the ponion had not spok- en abovii a whisper in five years" Rev. J. Mallory, of Wyoining, N. Y., writee : "Your Eclectric Oil cured nie of bronchitis in ono week." Dealers all °veil the country say, " We have never sold a medicine that has given such complete satisfaction as this.' It is composed of eix of the best oils that areiknown. Is as good for internal as for ex- ternal uhe, and is believed to be immeasurably su- perior to anything ever mae. Will save you much suffering and many dollars of e-. ponse. It is sold by all i medicine deal- ers. Price 25 Conte. fi. N. TOMAS, PHELPS, r .Y. And NORTHROP & LYMAN Toronto, Ont, Sole Agents for the Dominion. NOTE—Eolectrie --Selected and Electrized. sole in Seatorth by . Hickson & Co., 1. S. Roberts, and R. Lums- en. 427-8. e s ng which Mr. he Ninety and Nine," )is curious. I on inally appear- ed in the corner of ad merican news- paper, from the pen Of IVItss E. C. Clep- hane. When Ma ank y was among the Scottish Highla de' he tried to find seine hymn peculiar' suited to the pastor41 tastes of his jaudiors, who were mainlyshepherds. He d scovered these lines en "the Roek, an E glish evangeli- cal netvs paper. lie t en adapted to -them14 wild plaintiv ayr, and they soon sang themselves iatb vhr3 hearts, not only of rustic Highla der but of lords and ladies in fastidio s Lpndon Drreyou ever think th eda cemmoncold, whe negleced, often 1eadj3 to and distressing dis ase what is term- systeniatically hat most fatal onsunaption— but when attended to at mice is general- ly easy of cure. If you a e troubled with! a cold or cough, " B an's Pubnonic Wifera " _will be lone to be most efficacious in removing t. They give immediate relief and generaUy effect a cure when useL in time. SoId 1yall druggistit andi country deal- ers. rice 25 cents per x. • EIGHTY DAYS ; JULES VERNE KIbD'S HARDWARE JUST RECEIVED, A LARGE STOCE Building Hardware, Which will be sold as SUPPLMENT. .„1\TOTICM. NEW MACHINE SHOP. IjAVING fitted tip the promisee formerly or,- mein(' by GRAY & SCOTT, wean prepared • to emir:Lot for ; This is the Title of a STORY of Thrilling Interest which will be com- menced in THE EXO° SITOR CHEAP AS ANY IN TOWI. FENCINC • IRE A SPECIALITY. JOHN KIDD. CARTER'S STEAM SAW MILL, EAFORTH. 4: • THE 'undersign tage, Carter 1, GOOD H Cut afid Sorted, and Fencing, w Also ri quantity Sheetng, at $8 price bf CUSTOM S last tear's price and for Hemloc pecthilly solicits N. B.—The p what iie oh arged thickness guars About the Firs of May, And will be Continued or about Three Months. Every parson should read it, and none can fail to be Interested in it. d, snceessor to Messrs. Armi- Gray, has on hand over ,000 FEET OF MLOCK LUMBER Will do it, and who would be without NEW SUBSCRIBERS BOILERS & ENGINES, FLOURING, GRIST AND SAW MILLS, SHINGLE, Heading and Stave Machinery, &c. BLACKSMITH WORK AND GENERAL REPAIRS Promptly Attended To. GRATE BARS AND OTHER CASTINGS FURNISHED. FOUNDRY AND MANUFACTURING 00. ROBERT BUNCIIKA, Manager.. Seaforth, Feb. 1), 186, near Mansion House. 426 SOMETHING THAT THE PUBLIC SHOULD KNOW. Can get THE Exposim from now till the First of January, i877, for • ONE DOLLAR. JOHN H. -BROiDFOOT Keeps constantly on hand, at his Warereoms and ifootory, opposite the Market, A LARGE STOCK OF FURNITURE OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, Which he is prepared to sell atprices to snit the the times. In feat he won't 'be underaold. As he manufactures all he sells, purchasers; can rely upon getting the j THE BEST ARTICL#E FOB, VMS BIONJEY. As back numbeis are not kept, all who wish to secure a reading of this MOST INTERiSTINO STORY • should subscribe ot once. Furnitufre Manufactured to Order Remember the place to buy Furniture Cheap IS at the Factory opposite the Market, Seaforth. JOHN H. BROADFOOT. IT PAYS IT PAYS!! WHAT PAYS READ Al\TID SEE IT PAYS TO GO TO Tat EXCELSIOR EGMONI; VILE, ONT. To get your Gristing clone,and Farmers] will in all cases get their own Wheat ground, and good ield. Parties wishing. to get ;the Excelsior Mills t I CELEBRATED FOUR Can do so at Mill Prices, from the following Mer- chants of Seaforth Wm. Allan- A. G. Ault, lamea C. Laidlaw, James McGinnis, Joseph Brownell, Wm. Mill, Hall do Pavey, George Murray, A. Cardno—Bakt, P. Megitrey—Baker. H, Robb, Harpurhey ; W. Scott, Bnicefteld. Any qnantity of Chopped PEAS, OATS And BARLEY, and other Feed, on hand always. M. CHRLESWORTII & Co -X. B.—Agents for the Garden City !Dialing Purifier. 41.1 THE GENUINE HOWE SEWING MACHINE IB STILL AHEAD. • SOLD BY W. N. WATSON, SEAFORTH, •Agent forthe County of Huron. TF You wantto know the true qualities of this 2- Celebrated Sewing Alachum call at my °MOO in Seaforth, and beware of going to where one only is kept -on hand, and purposely out of order; to be compared to inferior machines to its disadvan- tage. After a period of more than ten years•ex- perience In the Sewing Machine Business I ha've found that the GENUINE HOWE-MACHINE Is the only one which has given perrcument satis-* facti0. to purchasers. as never proving defective in its xnvements; nor being returned for :repair. It possesses all the -qualities of a sereiceable Sew- ing Machine, it is strong, durable, not noisy as falsely represented, and all its parts are made of thebest metal and perfectly fitted toether. You may change it from fine work to heavy work wth- out straining -it and rendering it unfit for repro- ducing a neat and perfect stitch on fine work. It will sew with heavy black linen thread with the salla ease as with a fine cotton spool. CAUTION.—Don't be imposed on by un- scrupulous dealers and the Agents of other Sew- ing Machines offering to supply you with a genu- ine Howe biaLine if you are not satisfied to keep the one they are trying to sell yon, as they only intend to impose upon you some worthless imita- tion of the Howe or perhaps an old second-hand. articre re-varnisied to look like a, new mit:due. ROYAL CANADIAN BANK. 7 ii••••••=••••••=1, SEAFORTH- BRANCH.. DOMINION BLOCK, MAIN -ST., ABOUT 2 Cents A WEEK SEAFORTH. 'table for 13uibling, Draining ieh he offers at $7 50 per M. inferibr quality, suitable for per M., and has placed the WING AT $2 75 per M. will be paid for HardwoodLogs 11 cut long.; -Patronage is reg- rind eatisfaetion guaranteed. JAMES. X. CARTER. for custom savting is less than y any other mill, and uniform eed. 426 tot 1 COOD LIVE LOCAL PAPER For the sake of 2 Cents a Week. Dralbs on New York PayUble at any Bank in the United States. •atIf Aide7fmtfli-al:tenit°4 oungcrinp. ayable a INTERES'T PAID ON DEPOSITS. M. P. HAYES, 411 Mastaezn. FOR SALE CHEAP. A NUMBER 02 BENcEi AND KNEE Bob -Sleighs, Wgons Iron, lirwrows and Wheel,barovis, For Male cheap, or will be Exebanig. ed for Wood. Apply to D. MeNAUGHT, Seaferth. I „