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The Huron Expositor, 1877-03-02, Page 7H2,.. ak. ON PLANING'. MILL.. fere/owl hereby inform their many terra end the public generally of the tar Faetory and Lumber yard to new ommodiot l. premises on rH MAIN STREET, k increased facilities and some new of the beat naake„ they vrill continue ture and fl l orders for Doors, Bi,id Moulding., And all kinds- of NED LUMBER a, Prloes. to Suit the ,Times. gates, Hay Racks, CUM. j30X8Sy. &Ce. iteck a Seasoned Lumber on Hand. .1.1 AND SHINGLES. , ing an.d Custom Pinning will eeive Prompt Attention. eribers hereby thank their nurneeette tor the liberal patronage extended tei g the past, and hope, by Istria int.>se attendon to busmess, to raerlt a and increase of the same. ose whose aceennta are overdue we dew Nitration to pay up. GRAY ilk SCOTtr. lans and Specifications for Baild% applioation, NOIOET SHOE SHOP, s.raigned begito notify the inhabi forth and autrounding cotmtry hoed huainseS SEAFORTH, next door to Pillman's Carriage r, where he intends to carry on ustom Shoe Businegs ALL BRANCHES. having be‘i earefally sflleeted and none but r-OLASS WORKMEN i EMPLOYED, id attention ta businees the pahlie -L. getting good value for their money. ING donewith Neatnekts and Di - J. J. SCOTT. D'S HARDWARE. RECEIVED r FROM MANUFACTURERS: CAls,I CUT NAILS, DES, SHOVELS,. FORKS, OES AND RAKES, GLASS, PATNTS, OILS, ase. rENCING WIRE BUILDING HARDWARE Of Every Deseriptien Cheap. IROUGR'S AND CONDUCT- ING PIPE he Shortest Notice and Warranted. r inducements to Cash an -ompt Paying Customers, JOHN KIDD. L.10ANADIAN BANK liaFORTH BRANCH. MON BLOCK, MAIN -ST" SEAFORTH. On New York Payable at Ana e United States. of Exchange en London plush's, f Cities of the United Kingdom, EST PAID ON _DEPOSIT& M. P. HAYES, MANAGre FORTH PLANING MILL, DOOR AND BLIND FACTORY' scriberbegaleave to thank hisnumerouk erafor tb.e liberal patronage exten.dedta commencing business in Seaferth, arA he may be favored with a eantinuanca e, tending to build would do well to gr„ as he will continue to keep on hand * ' of all kinds ef RY PINE LUMBER, SA , .S, BLINDS, MOULDINGS?. INGLES, LATH, ETC. .nneeent of givingeatisfaction to thaw , your him with theirpatrenage, as wilt 'a ssworkmen are employed. cuiarat tuttion paid to Custom Planing JOHN �. BROA DFOOT. 1 LL PORK, PACKING HOUSE scribers haVing commenced Inasinea' ir New Pori. Packing House in 1Ien5al4. fir to THE HIGHEST PRICE For any, quantity of HOGS,. • R ALIV GR DREssra antitY Of PORE CUTTINGS avail' on hand for sale cheap.. G. & J. PETTY. 0=1:ZS. gainto call your attention to as' merons IMITATIONS of the .••• .11E NAVY TOBACCOr TLi neeeP rracS33- berg la on Emelt Plug of the GeattliW 1E, 187T. tit -P • - rj MARCH 2, 1877. The , DruMnHier Boy and the Queen. Wien a boy enters the army at a very - early age, which sometime,' happens in the case of one who has suddenly be- come an orphan, he is generally made much of by the officers, and eventually ranks is the "pet of the regiment.' An instance of this kind occurred in one of the regiments of the Guards shortly after the Crimean war. A bright, in- telligent little fellow,about nine years Of age, whose father had been killed at the battle of Inkerman, and whose mother, having three younger children to attend to, bad applied to have her eldest child taken into the regiment, was duly enlisted to "serve Iler,Majesty the Queen, her heirs and successors.” The boy wag so small in stature, and yet clean and smart in his appearance, that he soon became the favorite of all, from the colonel. downwards. His usual Place on returning from a field -day was on the back of the colonel's horse at the head - �f the battalion ; the colonel himself, an .Alrna hero, with one arm; walking be- side the animal, and ever and ,anon making some remark to amuse the little fellow. It happened at this time that the young Prince Arthiir had begun to evince a taste for a military life, and by the Queen's command, the drum -major of this battalion, which was stationed at Windsor, attended regularly at the Cas- tle, to teach his _Royal Highness the drnm. Her Majesty anel. the Prince Coniort were often present on these oc- casions; and one day, when the young Prince asked his tutor if there were any drummers in the Guards as smell as !himself (the Prince), the drum-niajor in- formed his ROyal pupil of the facts re- lating to the little soldier -boy inentioned above. With her usual kindness of heat, the Queen directed that the little fellow sheuld be brought to the Castle on the following day. Accordingly, the morrow saw the worthy non-commis- sioned officer and his tiny subordinate.. thelatter being as trim' as brushing and pipeclay Could make him, with his fife under his arm, and his folage cap sat iauntily on the side of his head -trudg- ing up the Castle hill towards the resi- dence. On reaching the royal nursery, they had not long to wait before her Majesty end the young_Prince made their appearance. The drum -major and his little charge instantly sprang to " lention," and brought their hands to the salute; while Prince Arthur, with a cry of delight, hastened forward and be- • gan to ask, his brother drummer a thou,s- and and one questions. The "pet a the regiment-" was naturally shy in such august corapany, but he became re -as- sured when the Queen, taking him kind- ly by the havePAecidressed a few mother- ly remarkb him.' Then the royal drummer slung his - drum, and calling upon the Young guardsman to "play up," the latter responded - to the levitation with "God save the Queen," the Prince joining in lustily the while upon his well-batte‘d sheepskin. Her Majesty was greatly pleased with the simple compliment; and. on the conclusion of the audience she not only provided her novel guest with a good luncheon, but gave him a five -pound note for his mother. German Society. "How many charming young married women there are in England who would be glad to amuse themselves, happy to dance in muslin, if Mechlin be denied them, how many that would • adorn society, make drawing -rooms that are dull with dowagers and diamonds, gay with bright youth and pleasant laughtee.. Yet they are not asked, because they give no dinners in return; because the alderman's wife, who is blazing with the diamonds of Golconda and the gold of Ophir, would wonder, and the county member's wife would be disgusted, at the simplieity displayed in the cheap gown of the 'young person' opposite, and marvel at the 'queer people' you had got about you. In Germany there is no snobbishness of this kind ; there is class - prejudice, but let it only be,known that you area lady, your welcome would be just as warm though you come in cloth of frieze instead of cloth of gold. You are asked to amuse and to be amused ; you can enjoy yourself quite as well, though you be only a lieutenant's wife, as though yeti were a countess from be- fore the Deluge ; and the consequence of this iib4ral view of things is, that youth and /gayety, and fresh toilets and bright faces, are generally to be found at German balls, [though there may not be so much jeivelry and pomp, and circum- stances as your prejudiced mind may deern desirable on such festive occasions. What you are, not what you have, is the only matter to be considered; and if you are what sodiety expects you to be, you may anticipate, as our transatlantic friends say, 'agood time.'" Oliver Against Oameron. Mary S. Oliver, widow in fact and clerk by prefession in the United States Treasury Department at Washington, has brought an action. against her friend -and benefactor, Senator Simon Cameron, for the stun of fifty thousand dollars, with her proper costs, &c. Her com- plaint is that the elderly senator has trifled with her affections, and that the sum named will barely compensate her for the arushing which her feelings have endured at the hands of the sena- tor, who procured her appointment to her present place itt the civil service of ter country. We are not informed as yet of the faets of the case in detail, but there are certain general considerations which seem to us to militate strongly against Mistress Mary's success in this case,. She is a widow, in the first place, and. the affections upon which she places so high a price are warmed-over affections, so to speak. They lack soniething of the freshnesS which gives to youthful affections thoir chief value, and it is scarcely probable that a Washington !tiry can be persuaded to think second- hand wares of this kind of greater com- parative value than second-hand furni- ture is. A second point is, that widows are not easily,' deceived or trifled with. Courtship with theYn is apt to he very much a maer of business. They are very cool r...nd clear-headed, commonly. The romance of love -making has lost its power to blind their eyes, and it would not be easy for Mistress Mary to per- suade a jury that even a handsome, knightly and gallant young Wooer had turned her head and led her mature and practised judgment captive. In the ffresent case her task is even more diffi- cult. Senator Cameron may or may not be handsome; that is a point upon Which masculine judgment is untrust- worthy; he is reported to have a cap- tivating way of smiling when he is r pleased, and his bearing is reasonably courtly, according to the Penns lvania standard; but he certainly is not young. He has a soh who is called; in the pleas- antly facetious and figurative parlance of Washington city, "an old hand:." He himself is reported to have begun life as long ago as the end of the last century, and' is what we may fairly call a mature man of 78 years of age, and it will be a Credulous jury which believes that at his time of life his fascinations have been equal to the task of fairly turning 'the head of a widow. • We do not mean to -prejudge tho case, but merely to point out some facts which can scarcely fail to affect it when it shall come to trial. The moral of the matter is plain and here - elderly senators will think twice after before they lend their influe widows who seek appointments t in the civil service. 4muse.ments and. Rollie n. Let no man despise amusement, It is a subject which demands the most careful consideration. it should le just as`triely a part of the church ec noMy as the sacrartients. Mistakes,, here keep people qut of the church, and ound weak consciences and , confuse weak brains, and prevent growth of gr ce in the church. Let our christianity bi coin- prehensive symmetrical, well deve oped. Let bur young people bring all ntiteir bounding spirits, all the dew and resh- ness and gladness of their youth, tb the Lord -assuredly knowing that thefr are made in the very image of God-rthat their mirthfulness came from Himl just as much as their memories ; tha the ringing laugh and the merry song, tin their Proper place, are acceptable to as well as the broken and contrite I4eart, and the fervent and effectual pra erlin its place. The church wants all 'the elasticity, and cheerfulness, and sp ight- liness, and wit, and humor, there is in the world, whether it belongs t the young people or the old, and wi fi d plenty of work fot it to do. God is not the God of the dead, but of the living; not of the sorrowful only, but of th 9 .re- joicing. .Feasting and fasting can and should be done alike to his giory. 1fesis was present, not only at the to b in Bethany, but at Mk marriage in qan. I know no reason why he should n t be presentat the merry -makings no , as well as eighteen hundredyears ago. ife is the same yesterday, and to -day, and for ever, He does not afflict the c ,ild- ren of men because he likes to do it. Ie rejoices m all innocent happiness; The boy need not abate one jot or tittle o his love for play because of his love for od. The sudden up -springing of the one oes not necessitate the decrease of the o her. he Christian ought, all other Pilings being equal, to he in school the chest student; on the play -ground, the hard- est player ; in the workshop, the nicest workman: behind the counter, the ost valuable clerk ; in the battle, the st rd- lest- fighter. ce to posts • Death of a Keeper of the Seals. In a modest dwelling in Frederick street, St. John's Wood, died a few days since an individual who for many years filled the office of Keeper of the Seals with dignity and efficiency. The history of igland tells of other keepers fining more distinguished places in society, but it is no exaggeration to state that the subject of this brief notice was to the full as popular as any ef his predepes- sors. The Keeper of the Seals to whom; we • more particularly refer was the gehial old Frenchman So well known in ;the Zoological Gardens, and the seals Were not emblems of high office and authority, but the graceful creatures that occupy the pond in the Elysium of animal ilife in the Regent's Park. Everybody in the habit of visiting the Gardens was familiar with the, cheery old Frenchman and Ithe objects of his care. He had been in he navy, and had seen "foreign parts," and • being particularly well up in the matter of seals and walruses he was selected many years ago to look after the wants of such menabers of those families as might find their way to the Gardens. He liked them, and they very soon re- ciprocated the sentiment. They invaria- bly responded to his voice or his whistle, and he trained them to perform a niim-• ber of tricks quite inconsistent with their nature and early habits. Struck down with a painful illness the old man keenly felt the loss of his compenions. He used to exclaim, "1 know I should be be 'ter if I could but see my children; I kriow they will die if 1 connot see ther." Tender hands nursed him, and he Wa dressed and put into a chair in order t be wheeled to the Gardens and look fo the last time upon his "children," 1ut the exertion was too much for his strength amlethe attempt had to be: abandoned! I The old man was a great favoeite of the Prince of Wales,- who always made it a point to have a chat with him on Sundays. But the Prince carried his consideration further, for among these who visited the Keeper of the Sealsat the last was the heir to the British throne. Can as much be said of Other Keepers of the Seals ?-London Globe. Turks and Their Wives. Having „obtained a wife, it is worth while to inquire how a Turk treats her. I am not aware that she has much Ito complain of generally from the personal ill-treatment of her husband. I shoUld think, as a rule, that the Turk is a fair husband. The Turk in ordinary life is not unkind or cruel. The wife's misf r - tunes arise from her position. As husband and wife see little of eaCh other, they. are not specially given to quarrelling. But she is a woman, possi- bly purchased outright in the slaVe market, for it is pure illusion to suppose that the slave trade in Turkey has been abOrsled, and being a woman she,bears about her on every hand the marks of degradation. It is laer duty to wait on her husband, if he is goor, at meals. Her accommodation in the house is in- ferior to his._ In all things she is his slave. If the wife is the daughter of a wealt y man, her lot is not a hard one. As tie law regards marriage merely as a parit- nership she keeps her own property, and the husband has to be on his good behavior to obtain a share Of it. If she is of poor origin she can hardly be said to have any rights. - - On two or three occasions it has be n my lot to travel in the steamers of t e Austrian Lloyd's, when we have had a harem on board. In each case the hus- band was in the saloon with the rest f us, living well and sleeping in a co fortable cabin. The poor women were penned'up as deck passengers, living en wretched food which they had brought with them. Only a few weeks agot travelled in a steamer carrying a harem • • THE HURON EXPOSITOR._ where there *ere probably twenty wo- men, wives and slaves, who were shiver- ing under canvass, whiah was quite in- sufficient to keep out the pelting rain. I know that it is a thing 'almost Unknown for a harem to!have cabins taken for it. The husband tikes care of himself, has, perhips, as I remember' seeing, un- limited champagne, and leaves his wo- men huddled together On deck to take care of themselves,. 1 do not think it neould be fair to charge the Turk with oruelty for thus treating his women. An Englishman does not usually take a first-class cabin for his servants, and the Turk withe no more or intention Of harsh- nees, than en Englishman who sends his servant third-claes, will take the cheap- est method of transport for his women. -London Daily New's Constantinople Correspondence., The Bear and the Tea -Kettle. - The bear e of Kamtschatka live chiefly on fish, which they procure fer themselves from the rivers. A few years ago the fish became very scarce. Emboldened by the fanaine and consequent hunger,, thr bean, instead of retiring to their dens, wandered about, andsometimes entered the villages. On a certain oc- casion one of them found the outer -door of a house open, and entering it, the gate accidentally closed after him: The woman of the house had just placed a kettle of boiling water in the court. Bruin Smelt it, but burnt his nose. Provoked at the pain, he vented all his fury on the tea -kettle. He .folded his arms around it, pressed it withhie whole strength against' his breast to crush it; ,but this of course only burnt him the more. The horrible growling tehiCii the rage and pain forded upon the poor- nm al now brought the neighbau.ralto the spot, and Bruin by a few shote was put out of his misery. To this day;:bo,*ever, whenever anybody injures hiniselfiley his.' own violence, the people Of the village call him "the bear and the tea -kettle.' , Distilling Sun Heat. M. Mouchot is continuing his experi- ments in utilizing the heat of the sun. He hae lately shown to the Academy of Soiences a small still, in which the sun's heat was applied to the process of distill- ation. With this still the mirror of which was twenty inches in diameter, the inventor succeeded in :tistiliing a quart of wine in half an hour. With a mirror five times as largOhe inventor believes he will be able to edistil twenty quarts in the same -space of time. The seasons make little difference in the working of the solar still, prOvided the sun's rays be not interceeted,_ and M. Mouchot has brought water to the lediln Mg -point in January, in a boiler Stand- ing itt the open air and cove ed with ice and snow. • Glasgow Umbrella' Firm. A firm.of Umbrella -makers in Glasgow have lately filled an order for forty enormous sun -shades which are to be sent as presents to African chiefs. Three of these parasols -or palanquins, as they are also called- are about thirty:feet in circumference, and the rest about eigh- teen feet. They are covered. with a rich variegated damask silk, fringed around the edges, ornamented at the' top with gilt balls, and lined with finished cloth. The handles, which are of lance -wood, are armed with spikes for tenting pur- poses, and a bayonet joint on each, stick, renders the whole more portable.. R17SSIA'S WAR PREPARAJTONS.-+The Russian army, at Kischineff, ,ready to )nove against the Turks numbers 124000 infantry, 8,000 cavalry, and 428 guns. The two corps at Odessa wou/il -make the total of the arrcry of advance 180,000 in- iantrk, 12,000 cavalry, and 720 guns. A thousand horses have been )brought from the trains. The bridge lying here is capable of passing the whole army over the Danube in a day. There. are also' 13 enormous steam launches, two large bargqs, seven smaller boats, and masses of other things, even to the smallest de- tail. The mobilization has proceeded SO satisfactorily that within a month four army corps could have crossed the Pruth. A SLMPLE Amsop..--,-An excellent de- fence against cold was used by the Eng- lish actor, Macready. It is simply two or three sheets of paper—a newspaper would do as well—laid across the chest under the vest. This forms a "curiass,"- says Mr. Macready, "impenetrable by Boreas, Eurus, or any of the malignant gales that drive cough and too often con- sumption into thelung the unwary. This simple breast -plate will, on the coldest day, witheut extra upOr cloth- ing, diffuse und' r eiercise, t warmth through the whol frame." In a cli- mate where eas wind prevails, or to one caught o t in cold_i_weather, this simple expe iment may prove a valuable recipe. HEALTH IS STRE GTH. -To prevent or conquer 'disease is one of the grandest at- tainments ever aimed at by man, and "Bryan's Pulmonic Wafers" will as sure cure coughs, colds, tickling in the throat, and pulmnoary complaints, as war and pestilence will destroy. Severe colds, if not attended to, sooner or later lead to incurable consumption, and the strength of the strongest soon fails if neglected. The readiest and best means known for the cure of these complaints is "Bryan's Pulmonic Wafers," which have been thoroughly tried for the last twenty years, and has never been known ;to fail. Singers and public speakers will also derive great benefit from the use of them. Sold by all medicine dealers at 25 cents per box. SEE WHAT THE CLERGY SAY. -Rev. R. 11. Craig, Princeton, N. 3., says: "Last summer when I was in Canada I caught a bad cold in my throat. It be- came so bad that often in the middle of my sermon my throat and tongue would become so dry I could hardly speak. My tonguesvas covered with. a white parch- ed crust, and my throat was much in- flamed. An old lady of my congrev,ation advised me to use the `Shoshonees Rernedy, which'sh.e was then using. The first dose relieved me, and in a few days my throat was nearly well. I discon- tinued the use of it, but my throat not being entirely well, became worse 'again. I procured another supply, and I am la appy to say that my throat is entirely well, and the white crust has disappear- ed. I wish that every minister who suffers from sore throat would try the 'Great Shoshonees Remedy.'" • Rev. Geo. W. Grout, Stirling, Ont. says: "Mrs. Geo. Francis was severely Ont., with kidney disease, and had been under the care of three physicians without any beneficial results. She has since taken four bottles of the `Shoshonees Remedy,' rr and now enjoys the best of healt ." Rev. T. C. Benwn, Brooklyn, Ont., says: "My wife was very low with lung disease, and given up by her physician. I bought a bottle of the 48hoshonses Remedy,' and at the end of two days she with much better. By continuing the Ret4dy she Was perfectly restored." Price of the' Reniedy in pint bottles $1 ; Pills 25 cents a box. A Goon HORSE. -• "There is much pleasure and profit in the service of a good horse, and but very little of either in a bad one ;" no person from choice will retain a bad horse; many, however, are in pOssession of "such Rho need not be., We think there are few horses so bad' but that their condition can be im- proved and rendered more valuable and useful for their owners, to effect which there is nothing ,equal to "Dar- ley's Condition Powders and Arabian Heave Remedy ;" it his effected as- tonishing results in thonsands of cases. Remember the name, and see that the signature of Hurd & Co. is on eack pack- age. Northnop & Lyman, Toronto, Ont., proprietors for Canada. ,Sold by all tnedicine dealers.. A COLLECTOR OF Coms.—Dr. Charles Spiers, of San Francisco, who has been a collector of coins since boyhoed, has this country. Ile says that he as the one of the best numismatic cabiliets in fifty-one dollar pieces coined by our government since 1787, and the speciznen for 1804 is worth perhaps $4,000. Efe has never sold a coin, but gives one away sometimes, or makes an exchange. He says that he has the first coins of all nations on the earth that ever coined tioney ; the coins of Europe' from'the earliest period, and the coins of Atnerica from the colonial period downward. He is a native of Virginia, seventy-seven years old, but went to California in -1849, and proposed to leave his collection to the Society of California tioneers. • EPPS'S COCOA.. -Grateful and comfbrting a thorough knowledge Of the naturalllaws which govern the opertions of digestion and nutrition, and by al care- ful application of the 4ne properties of well -selected cocoa, Mr. Epps has pro- vided our breakfast tables with a delicate- ly flavoured beverage,which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every ten- dency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal • shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with, pure blood, and a properly nourished &slue." Civil Service Gazette. Sold only in pack- ets- labelled- "Janes Epps & Cc Ho- naceopathic Chemists 48, Threadneedle S t. and 170, Piccadilly, London." 482-52 1MORE THAN HE BARGAINED FOR. - Some years ago there lived in the parish of F— a minister of the kiek of Scot- land, who, had got tired of preaching. He therefore resigned his ministry and took a farm in the neighborhood of an old man who went by the name of atid- dle Rob, well known for his witl and originality. The divine farmer, in pom- piny with another gentleman, onei day drove past the old man as he was thatch- ing a house at the roadside, and think- ing to amuse themselves at his expense, addressed him thus: "Hilloa, Rob ! have you seen a man with four horns going this way ?" to which Rob replied, " eel t no, but I see as queer a sight as th ugh he had fourteen horns." "Dear me, ob, what can that be ?" exclaimed thel di- vine. "Oh, just a man that threw of his coat and leapt out of the pulpit into the barn." . I aerme 03 AunesNnoi go *H_LHOAV3S '100 ' WOZIA 133-Ei GANG' PLOWS, GANG PLovvip;1 • • I HILL PLOWS, 1 • HILL prows, LAND ROLLERS, • I • LAND ROLLERS, I . FOR SAM', AT THE HURON FOUNDRY AND,BACHINE SHOP, i PLOWS And PLOW CASTINGS I Made fromJ the _ CELEBRATED DIAMOND. IRON. - . Far mere would do well to call and examine fore purchasing elsewhere. , be WHITELAW & MORE. , TEA.-WrLsoN & YOUNG have a lar e and very fine stock of New Season Teas -Yon g -Hyson, japan and Blaok-which they are selling cheaper than ary other house in the Cotuaty. All warranted to give satisfaction. 472 2 2 0 0 0 ssuaaiing 0P-'74 1-3 en ca F TJ R1•T1 T r- 8-ELI-ING OFF. ‘30 -co I have come toputtolEnsion to sell off . m C:11 1 IG STOOK OF FURNITURE ei3 AT -COST > Forthe next Thirty Days, and Just. COME ALONG ALL YE m Married, Unmarried and About Getting MARRIED, 0 And I Will Give You SLICH BARGAINS 1> Z .As cannotbe attained elsewhere, AS I MUST SELL Toprevent the Sheriff doing so. 133 I saw him the other day, and he gave me 7 • TEM WINK, r But don'tmention it, as it is a Secret. , I knew at once that something was up. SO COME ALONG AND BE AHEAD OF HIM. O You will find the Place. MATT. ROBERTSON'S OLD STAND, Main -treet, Seaforth; • JOHN S. PORTER. N VO 1 H3 1AI V MARRIAGE LICENCES • OR CERTIFICATES,' (Under the new Act,) issued at the EXPOSITOR OFFICE, SEAFORD'. Under authority of the Lieutenant-Govenior On trio. Fz1 E-4 0 *AA.VS uvrrnoii WWW1:citilb:/tdtclinitdtittb:ltitiedbritd LmIttttltttLtMtVittiitdtttttzlktIM t -i t-41 t-4 t-4 k-4 t-tt-4 02020202020202020202mcs:202020,202w • 0 m 0 0 0 ID td tiJttttit•-J t -q-1 09-WWC/IW 0 0 IDX in `S31.VIIS 310110V 0 03 td W td bc; Exi td -LtLmittLtti-itttiltri t4t-( tei te otwenentneowenotenenwco 0 0 rn 3 co 2 nrinsru. bdtd to b:itt tzlbdbdbd tdtdb:itd tzltdtdtdw mL----itzittttLtt-dtt-tiltottt.tt=1it_t w.wwwwwwwcr,wwrAwwwwww < 0 0 3 0 C13.1.03dSNI td tr) tx/ tefle:/ td tri td led bd b:1 td td teJM.iteJteJ&it---ntnettte•ittttttLei L-4 t" -_4t4 t4 ri C.DLOCkU2C/2C/2WC4Wv..WW91r/202C/1WCD WM. ROBERTSON & Co. SEAFORTH, OVERCOATS, � VERCOATS. • A Big Rush in Overcoats at WILLIAM CAMPBELL'S, Temporarily at Killoran & Ryan -I' large I , brick block, Main Street. A Large Stock of All the Varieties. • SPLENDID LOT OF ULSTERS, Just the thing wanted for the coming winter for riding. The Steek n all lines for Merchant Tail- ' J ors' purposes ?.s quite full, and as 1 want to sell off the whole lot look out for rare bargains for cash. BARGAINS, BAR -G -A -IN -S FOR CASH. Wth„ CAMPBELL. AN OLD FRIEND THE BEST • FRIEND. W. H. OLIVER,'SEAFORTH, BEGS.. -to aequaint his many friends and custo- mers thathe has removed two doors north of his old stand, McIntyre's Block, where he has a stock equal to any in the businets, and at the most favorable prices. All kinds of Repairing doie on the shortest notice. A good Stock of Trthiks, Valises, Whips, Combs, Brashest, and all other such articles required constantly on hand. Rememner your old Friend. Sign of the Scotch Collar. 481 W. V. OLIVER, Seaforbh. THE GREATEST WONDER OF MOD- ERN TIMES. HOLLOWAY'S PILLS & OINTMENT The Pills Pirifi y the Blood, correct all disorders • of the Liver, , .tomach, Kidneys and Bowels, and are invaluable in all complaints incidental to Females. The Ointmentis the only reliable remedy for bad Legs, Old Wounds, Sores and Ulcers, of however long standing. For- Bronchitis, Dip- htheria Coughs, Colds Gout, Rheumatism, and all Skin! Diseases it has no equal. BEWARE OF NEW YORK COUN- TERFEITS. Spurious imitations of "Holloway's Pills and Ointment." are mann factured and sold under the name of "Hol-loway's & Co.," by X. F. Henry, Curran, & Co., Druggists, and also by the Me- tropolitan Medi- ine Company of New York,witb Ln a 8 6U m e d • trade mark, thus: -Again o n e Joseph Haydock of New York, likewise passesoff counterfeits of his own make under the nw,Lie of Holloway & Co., having for a trade mark a crescent and serpent; McKesson & Robins, of New York, are agents for the same. These persons, the better to deceive you, un- blushingly caution the Public in the small books of directions which accompany their medicines, which are really the spurious imitations, to Be- ware of Counterfeits. Unscrupulous dealers obtain them at very low prices and sell them to the public in Canada as - my genuine Pills and Ointment. I most earnestly and respectfully appeal to the Clergy, to mothers Of Families and otherLadies, and to the public generally of British North America, that they may be pleased to denounce unsparingly these frauds. Purchasers shoidd look to the Label on the Pots and Bbxes. If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are Counterfeits. • Each Pot and Box of the genuine Medicines bears the British Government Stamp, with the -words, " HOLLOWAY'S PILLS AND OINTMENT, LONDON," engraved thereon. On the label is the address, 533, OXFORD STREET, LoNDoN,where alone they are xaanulactured: Parties who may be defrauded by Vendors solllng spnrious Holldway's Pille and Ointment as of my genniue make, shall on communicating the p articulars to me, be amply remunerated, and their ,nantesinever divulged. Signed THOMAS HOLLOWAY. London, Jan. 1, 1877. • 477 MRS. MARKEY BEGS to announce to her friends and custom- ers that she has again opened out in her new store, oposite Hays' Hotel, Seaforth, where she hopes to receive thrt LIBERAL PATRONAGE ! heretofore extlended tOwarda her. She 'intends, as heretofore, to keepthe bofound BEST QUALITY OF CONS tobought, t uni a Ind etalloeh 472 angMaerd.kets. Farm Produce MRS. MARKEY. • •