The Huron Expositor, 1880-02-06, Page 7"trAllY -6, 1880.
LVSAI_Jr_4_
KOME iNDUSTRIES.•
your Furniture
c -an get as Good Value
wary in lleostill aS
nu -n in Ucoiada.,
_FA1RBAIRN
a a Spleudid Steak of
'12 _TT
,ZY DESCRIPTION,
jIi sell at Pri es td
the Times.
zRT,AKENQ
qz..-u,1"ci1 ES PROMPr-
%TEN' DED TO. -
ffertrsi-
aat far FER.A.LS a rea,
mable an ins.
ige of every deeeriptiom.
le terms. Meteriel far-
"it-esell Fart:At are an I taller-
-et .
S.. FAIRBAIRN.
-SEA FORTH
kNO LAND AGENCY.
:0 STRONG
a-eraT Yirst-Claes Stock, Fire
Oteepataes., tied is peeper-,
11VORA nE TERM&
aral of the beet Loan Bode-
sele end purehase of Fara
'!F Pi lt-S'T-CLASS
'1.1,LNIS, FUR SALE.
ionti at a, Per eater.
&tercet.
ae Stet- Line of Steamees
-nee ienes Sue, MaireS
R'S EXTRACT
TRAWBERRY.
iterietli for all Sasilater
itzth as Diarrhoet, Uty-
take it'ltolera. Cholera
Oltera tufaittam, Soar
Itaatine, and all de-
,e,e, bowels. caused by using
as raw t-eleetalalteia
fratt, bad neat le, uu-
Ker change of evatere
expoeure. No matter
la what terra yea on e sab-
ve comeleintsellar. Cow -
r Strawberry
and. a apeedy care will be
injany to the syetem. it
rota' the W ld Strawberry.
on *opium and other injar-
P elle by all dealers, ea h..
s fur $1.
PARED Er
iTLEY & PEARSOlii
T 0 N T 617.
JOT & BOX,
FORTH,
AKERS, &C.
TENDED W Tiff;
NT SOME.
t‘l ICk SHROUDS
ON HAND.
0 R fl I EE.
OR BROOKS
T AND VERMIN
1LKATOR,
VII that wjfl 'drive a.wey
„ eepecially
T S
acknowledged by diem -
highest etanding
tiek toe the following
eragtil mitieh longee
as re) ttiettgretable odor.
ti boxes'. Price. fifty
J. S. ItallERTS'
Sole Agext ler Seaterthe
..reeiree. 6:z 52:
Ii)ECTORY.
1.1 SEAFORTH
aelack.
• .
ectot s Dille Clan et
4
. al.
Ate
Etre at 8 o'clock.
'e'en 'met at the
etaerecen: et aIC fael
RENAUD, Rector-
LICENSEs
A T le: la
•:!ieened at the
SEreFORTH..
ARKETS,
T1( at t artt ern rite fee
• tattle oi teeel diem
ensall Kippen for
ceertet tt, hentile any
efferel. Tee highest
envy, etoterly cleaned
dean it well.
x'Vlf.ip MCLENNAN.
day at Ileum eeeily
pit free. Aeldresa TRUE
a26•53
4eate
FEBIWAltY 6, 18S0.
Varietiee.
Mr. Hardoert, member for Mouck,
is ill, and unable to attend to his Par-
liamentry duties.
e-LIt is rumoured that Lieutentant-
Governor Gambol' will shortly marry
an.-e-°A":tweala.
-A
with a cargo of fresh
meat and live cattle and sheep is on the
way frem Australia to London. The
importationtis an experithent.
-A. party of Government surveyors'
left Owen Soiled by boat on Tuesday,
to make a survey of tho channel at
Little Current; Manitoulin Islands.
-The new Order in Council respect-
ing the re -shipment of immigrants who
are not in Possession of $20 for their ex-
penses -on arriving in. this country has
been pat in force at Halifax, as regards
threeof the passengers by the lastmail
steamer.
-Alderman Rowe, of Ottawa, has
purchased the plant of the Winnipeg
Timm, and will revive the paper before
the opening of Parliameut. He has
sold his 0 ttawa. residence for 615,000,and
proposes closing up his busieess and
going to Winnipeg immediately. -
-About eight o'clock last Friday
morniug a fire broke out in Dorman'e
woollen mill, Mitchell, totally destroy-
ing the building and all the machinery.
Loss, about 67,000; insured for $3,000.
The fire is supposed to have been
caused by a match in the wool taking
fire when the wool was being run
through the picker. ,
-The cheese -makers of Western Od-
tario hey° artaaiged to hold a Conven-
tion in London . ou the 18 th., 19th and
20th of February, and the affair
promises to be one of great importance.
Delegates will be present from all dairy •
districts in Canada and the adjoining
States, aua the discussions may have
an important effect on this industry,
which is becoming of prime importance
in Ontario.
-A few days ago two little boys in
Stratford named. Walter Miller and.
Edward Bailey, each about eight years
of age, were skating on the pond, when
the latter fell through aud was carried
under the ice a short distance. Corning
to the surface again his head struck
another thit placeeend broke the ice.
His little companion, with presence of
mind wonderful in a lad so y-othig, lay
down on the thick ice, a,nd managed to
pull him out, saving his life beWond a,
doubt, As he must hese been drowned
if not rescued proMptly.
-Mr. R. Patterson, excursion agent,
arrived at his home in Paris, from
Winnipeg, on Friday, having safely
escorted throegh his first party for
1880. With him came a rink of Mani-
toba curlers belenging to the Winnipeg
curling :clubs. They intend devoting
the next two -weeks in playing matches
with Ontario clubs, taking in London,
St. Thomas, Woodstock, Paris, Ayr,
Galt, Guelph, Hamilton, Ancaster, To-
ronto, Brampton, aud one or two others.
if time allows._ Mr. Patterson has the.
arrangement •of the games, and is in
communication with the different clubs.
-On Monday the 19th inst, a sad ac-
cident happeued to a little daughter :of
Mr. Jae' Ward, of Fullerton village.
The little girl was lying on the floor
looking into the cellar. Her elder
sister was holding up the trap-door,
when by some means it slipped from
her hands and fell, striking the little
girl on the head, her chin resting on
the floor, ca,using her to bite her
tongue conapletely in two for abbot an --
inch. Medical aid was summoned, and
on Wednesday, after putting the patient
under the inflnence of chlorobrm, a,
couple of stitches were put in the cut. I
It is hopei she will soon receve.r.
V.*
a speech. The unpleasant things said
about him by the missionaries he at-
tributed to doctrinal and sectarian
jealousy, which •had followed him across
the ocean. He admitted that he had
been in jail for bigamy, but explained
that incident as. due to his ignorance of
American laws. Then he preached a
sermon and, that over, he wept, and
asked help to get out of town. After
the hat had been passed around, he
sang whet purported to be Bindoo
hymns, by way of sliming his gratitude.
- he auca valley in the Panama
isthmes has suffered by a visitation of
floods, which seem to have been gen-
eral throughout Colombia,. The river rose
until over three miles in width. Sev-
eral smell, villages are destroyed, and
some lives lost. The cocoa farmers
visited their haciendas in boats, tryin
to gather their crops left on the tree
They ge armed to protect themselves
against immense snakes, which gather
in branches driven down the valley by
the waters. The losses Aggregate a
million dollars.
-The Presbyterian Churgh in Cana-
da contains 860 pastoral oharges, 1,350
congregations, 75,000 familioet, end
-
about .130,000 COMoltliticatits. The av-
erage stipend is 6850 per annum. Its
contributions for missionary and college
purposes last year reached 6241,000,
while for all purposes, including minis-
ters' salaries, &c., there was raised
nearly $1,250,000. Six theological col-
leges are connected with the Church;
besides the two ladies' colleges at Otta-
wa, and Brantford. The missionary
work is divided into the home, French,
and foreign departments, each -under
the °ere of a separate committee.
--Herbert Vandyke, of New York,
Klee Steinway & Sons, piano manufac-
turers, to recover $4,000, the balance of
a sum he claims to have earned for ser-
vices in obtaining certain .evidence for
SteinWay, to be brought to beer upon
the officers of the Centennial Exhibi-
tion to induce them to award a premi-
um for excellence to the Steinwa,y.
piano. Vandyke avers that he diligent-
ly worked. to learn where the pianos
made by Weber, Chickering & Hall
were sent, and that he called upon
Hale and on behalf of Steinway pro-
posed that be should make and sell a
number of pianofortes upon which the
names of prominent manufacturers
should. be -put.
, _
- A strange story is at present going
the rounds of the press. It seems that
two brothers were killed by ivecident in
the State of New Jersey, and their
corpses werneonsigned for interment to
a minister in the township of Nissouri,
Ontario, the depot to which -te-y Were
shipped being Ingersoll. They appear
to have met with frequent delays in
transit, and it is said that fully three
weeks had transpired since they start-
ed. on their joggney. The car in which
the coffins were deposited arrived in
Hamilton on Saturday afternoon and
lay in the yard until Monday, when it
was forwarded west, being attached to
the local freight train. The coffins on -
being taken from the car in Ingersoll
were placed in the freight shed, and
with their partly putrified contents
were left there last night. The minis-
ter -te-whom the Corpses were consigned,
refused to -accept thetti*--:-on the ground
that he did not wish to go to the ex-
pense of their burial, being no relation
to the deceased and there being no
claim Upon him in the matter. It is
a pity that something was not done.
"Bury -the dead" is a command whicb
is not much respected in the good old
town of Ingersoll, or did the residents
of the place kuow aught of the circuni-
sta,nces ? We shall see.
-Rev. Dr. A.. D. Maderie, of Kansas .
City, is engaged to merry .-Mrs. Diggs.
She is beautiful, aceomplished and ae
judge's daughter, but she is a divorced
wortaau,. aud.'on that ground many mem-
bers of Dr. Maderia's congregatioh ob-
ject_to the union. - The pastor called as
meeting of his conregation, which is
Presbyterian, to consider tl 1 e question.
Arguments for and ageinst the marriage
were merle by layrnen, and the clergy-
man. itt an impassioned speecb, main-
tained Mrs.' Diggs' right to become
his wife. - A vote was not takenebe-
cause he iutimated that he meant to
do as he . pleased-, regardless of conse-
quences. •
-On Wednesda,y.night of laat -week
three boys, Thos. Cockrnau ohn
Grant, and Frank Stirling*, etged about
14 years each, were arrested„tat Strat-
ford station - by constable Heenan, for
1
stealing a rid °
e on the .evenii a 'express
from Berlin. They said tl1ey I were
from Guelph,- and at first gave- false
names. The entire assets of the party
were el.30, and they were going to the
States - to Seek their fortunes. On -
Thursday they were brought before the
pollee magistrate, and fined_ 61 and.
costs each. The chief of the p`olice of
Guelph was conamunicated with, who
instractecl the authorities to detain the
runaways till they were sent for.
-A cablegram from Alexandria, says
with respect to the Masonic discoveries
under the obelisk, it is a fact that in re-
moving the pedestal of the obeli& there
were found: First, a Mason's square of
red eyenite granite, the long section be-.
ing eight feet six inches long, seventeen
inches broad, twenty-five inches thick,
and the short section measuring from
the outer angle four feet three inches ;
second, a pure white stone representing
an aprou;: third, found under the apron,
aperfect altat of red granite fourth, a
red granite rough Ashlar; fifth, a Ma-
son's spoou shaped iron trowel of or-
dinary size, totally oxidized ; in all five
emblems, each in proper position. Sur-
rounding the foundation on all sides
and forming a part of it, are three steps
all af stone. The foundation, together
with the steps, were bound firmly to-
gether with, and very well preserved in,
an iron case, inlaid. Other stones in
the foundation bear curious marks and
cuttings, not hieroglyphics, wield), may;
be Masonic,but none are able to decide.
All the stones in the foundation will be
placed in New York exactly as they
were -discovered.
-The Rev. T. V. Roy, converted
Brahmin., who figured in Hamilton,
Toronto and Brantford courts a year or
so ago, has not beeu having a very good
time in Cincinnati since the news got,
abroad among the pious pork packers'
that he has been denounced. by the Rev.
Dr. Chamberlain, of the East India
Mission, as an imposter and bigamist.
When he tried to speak at a Gospel
temperance meeting, a few evenings
ago, some of the brethren, hissed and
others sang a hymn to drown his voice.
On Sunday afternoon he assisted as
side show at an exhibition of healing
powers by an alleged -doctor, and made
- most remarkable letter was re-
ceived a few days ago- by the Quebec
city police from a Mrs. J. E. Dickenson,
of Petersburg, Menard county, Illinois,
stating that a letter written by her hus-
band to her address had been picked up
by an American on a wharf in this city -
and mailed. She states that her hus-
band. left home for Chicago with stock,
for which he received $600, and that he
writes her to, the effect that he was
drugged in that city, and that when he
°erne to himself he was on a -large
steamer confined as a prisoner, and
forced to work, that he had called for
help, but without success, and that the
boat eves, at the time he wrote, in the
river, so.” that he intended, when his
letter was finished, to throw it through
a window at night.. The poor woman
very. naturally expresses fear that her
husband may be crazed. and in some
hospital here, and innocently* enquires
if there are pirates upon thfs river here.
His name is 'James Edward. Dickenson,
and he is described as follows: About 5
feet 6 inches.in.' height, dark hair, blue
eyes, weight, 180 lbs„ walks very erect,
had a long moustache and a scar on his
body, five inches by four, caused by a
blister. The poor woman appears by
her letter to be in sad distress, and en-
treats the police to make diligent en-
quiries and let her know the result.
The detectives are looking' into the
matter.
7 -
-e-
ing steamers, no modern improvexnenis,
few foreign fashions, noregularly-reeti
ring defalcations, little °Melia 1 r
legislative corruption, no stupeucloiai
municipal debt, nd reckless ern.bi ,
no "booming" Wall street, not Ma y
luxuries, but an amazing anaount
public and private- honesty. Vbat
revolutions fifty years mtleb have pro-
duced ! When we look beck through
the lightofhistory it :isms as if 1860
must have been all of flee centuries
ego. --New York Time.
• Drying Potatoes.
or Pain
will finI
Hu,gya d'
beast, IP
appliede
nd Aches, fro
uiek relief fr
yellow Oil
in cannot exi
any cause,
ftl in
m . the use of
for n and
wher it is
, TIM` 114118E.-"
of aniniale under. .
the horse lis unqu
serviceable ;" but i
o many who own
dependent on the'
ng, should neglect
are and attention
erest uo less than he safety_ nd. corn -
ort of the horse demands. The best
Why cannot potatoes be 1ried or j koirieciy for horses is "Derley' Condi-
evaporated, and thus in le d bulky 1 ion -Powders and Arabian Heave
shape be sent to different parte 'of cur erectly." Of this there caai be
own country and to Euro e ? The 6(edoehtL--it is safe and easily giv n.
evaporators used forpreparing fruit Will Remember the name, and see that be
answer admirably for this ipurpoe. si nature of Hurd & Co. is on e ch
The potatoes after paring arel cut in p ellage. Northrop & Lyman, Toro to,
thin slices and dried quickly. They Out.,
are white and ha.rd as horn, but Le- proprietors, for Canada. Sold by
al medicine dealers.
come soft and edible when boiled.
f the great t thber
be control f man,
stionably the most
it not strange that
orses, aaid eh° are
labor for for a liv-
to give them that
hich their own in -
a
Four-fifths of the potato is water, and Bucklen.'s Arnica Salve.
after evaporation - a bushel of fair
he best salve in the world for Cuts, Brui -es,
potatoes will make eight or ten poends,. So es, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Totter, Chap ed
There is much difference in the quality Ha ds, Chilblains, Cornsand all kinds of kin.
Of potatoes for this use. The kind
ar. Er nitwits. This salve is guaranteed to give er-
lii
that have Most starch will make the Vei
most and best dried potato. Mr. Whige_r_ill ce 2. are per box, For sale by Hickeo &
, mssatitelis77etttifooiriti:. every, case or money refueled.1
666-
-
of Rochester, some years ago began thel 4 .
business of drying potatoes, which are
used on. vessels for long voyages. The
United States Navy has given him
seine large orders, and. he has found the
business quite profitable. There I is
usually sometime in the year when
potatoes sell very low. , By puich asing
then and evaporating the product owe
be held till potatoes sell dear enough
to make the evaporated product sala14e.
After being put in thii shape, i potatoes
can be carried around the World ;or
kept for years without lose. Frait
evaporators are becoming quite Com-
mon, and this suggests a profitable use
for them.
Bob I4ersoll on Intemperance.
:
,
Intemperance cuts down youth in its
vigor, naenhaod in its strength, and age
iu its weakness.. It breaks the 'father's
heart, bereaVes the doting mother, ex-
tinguishes natural affection, erases con-
jugal love, , blots filial - attachments,
blights parental hope, and brings do n
mourning age in sorrow te the gra e._
It makes wives widows, children r-
pha,ns, fathers fiends, and all of th in
paupers, and beggars. It feeds rh u-
matisin, arouses gout, welcomes e 1-
demicsi invites cholera, imports pesti-
lence, and embraces consumption. It
covers the land. with idleness and crime.
It fills your jails, supplies your alms-
houses, and demands your asylums.
:
' It engenderscontroversies, festers quar-
rels, and cherishes riot. It crowds
your penitentiaries, and -furnishes vic-
tims for the scaffolds. It is the blood
of the gambler. the element of the
burglar, the prop of the highwaymen,
and the support of a midnigh4 Me n-
diaty. It countenances the liar,re-
spects the thief, esteems tee bl s-
phero.er. It violates obligati° s, rever-
ences fra,ucl, and honors iuf my.
hates love, scorns virtue, and- slanders
innocence. Incites the father to butch-
er his helpless offspring,. and t e 4hild.
(.
to grind the parental age. It pries up
men, consumes women, det Ste life,
curses God and hates Heaven. ! It s
horns wit 'esses, nerses perficlity, d
files the it ry box and judicial ;ernain
It bribes v,otes, disqualifies voters,' cor-
rupts el ctions, polutes our institutions,
and end ugers government. It degrades
the citi en, debases the legislatorj dis-
honors the statesman, and disarroS the
patriot: It brings shame, not hoopoe;
terror, not safety ; despair, not hope ;
naisery, not happiness ; and with the
laaevoleuce of a fiend, it calmly sur-
eys its frightful desolationeaind nu-
atiated with havoc, it kills peace, poi -
dolls felicity, ruins_ morals, blights con-
fidence, slays repetation, and wipe out
aimed honor, then curses the 'world.
nd laughs at its ruin. It does that
lid more -it murders the soul. i It!is
he sum of all crimes, the mother lof all
bomin ' tions, the deetl's best friend and
'od's I, orst enemy.
Rich Men of New York.
It iseaid, and doubtless truly, that
in 1830ga little more tha,n 50 years ago,
only oue citizen of Neee-York, John
Jacob Astor, was worth more than $1,-
000,000. Nothing can better illustrate
the: growth of wealth here than this
fact, Which- now seems surPrising
enough. Millionaires are very plenty
in these days, so very plenty that they
are hardly taken into account. .Every
few days somebody dies leaving an
estate valued -a% over $l,000,000; and
yet the mass of our inhabitants may
,not have even heard of his name. It has
beeu asserted that there are at present
in the metropolis fully 500 men whose
property is estimated at $1,000,000 and
upward. . Such citizens as Wm. H.
Vanderbilt, John Jacob Astor, Henry
Hilton, Geo. Law, Moses Taylor, Royal
Phelps, A. A. Low, Peter Cooper, Alex.
and. Robert. L. Stewart, Horace B.
E. S. Jaffrey, James Gordon
Bennet, Wm. H. Appleton, 1 August
Belmont, C. P. Hubtington, A thony J -
Drexel, Levi P. Morton, Jamesj Brown,
Amos R. Eno, and dozens o!f others
who might be named, are presumed to
be millionaires ove'r and over again.
Hall a century has made wondrous
changes in other things than private
fortunes. Then the city had little
more than 20,000 people; now, includ-
ing adjacent towns and the population
properly ours Within a radius of 50 miles
of Union Square, it includes , not far
from 2,000,000. Then Chambers street
was far up town; the City Hall was
the principal park: we bad no hotels,
newspapers, libraries or theatres worthy
of the name; we had no ocean -cross-
-Captain Young, of the Custom
House at Winnipeg, arrived home on
the 23rd January from an official tour
of inspection of the posts e along the
boundary as far as Fort McLeod. He
left WoOd. Mountain. December 12, and
arrived at Quiphella December 23, after
great hardship, having encountered th
50 degrees below zero weather. H
had with him a skin tent, and a sn a 1
sheet -inn stove. Four herses jere
frozen ti death. The hard crust of the
snow c it their lees badly, and he
wounds froze, which is one great cause
of the h rses' mortality. The party ar-
rived at Quiphella with nothing but the
remaini g horses and. bedding, having
burned the sleighs ' and fuel. , ming
left Winnipeg September 23rd la. t, go-
ing by the Northern Pacific to Bis-
marck, end then to Helena., where he
took horses to Fort McLeod, in the
Canadian Northwest Territory: After
al short stay there he went east to Fclrt
Walsh and Cypress Hills, thence o
Fort ASsirtiboine, now a military1 p st
qu the American side, eighty-five mi s
from -Walsh, and. .over forty fro It e
ound.ary. From Assiniboine h e-
urned to -Walsh, and thence to Wo'd
' ountain, -where the Sioux are at pr;s-
nt encamped. He again retraced is
'steps to Walsh, just in time for t e
naure.ored mounted policeman Grit
burn s funei al. After a few days' st
be left for Wood. Mountain, en ro te
or home, but was delayed there so.'e
it
days, owing to stormy weather.
:
: 1).
EPPS'S C0e0A-Grateful and comfort-
ing. -"By a tharough knowledge of the
natural laws which govern the opera-
tions of digestion and nutrition., and. by
a careful application of the fine proper- gm WILL BUY a geod 24 H. P. Engiue,
ties of well selected cocoa, Mr. Epps 'V `-"-11-7 Saw Carriage, Car, Saw Belting, &c.
ha,s provided. our breakfast ta,bles with Everything oomph te for a good saw rniil,
a flavored beverage, which dooneen_oilnitscoe ,senpitoirmee; lolosteiheTseaal!e cheap,
s, nearly
new. Apply tol BECKETT & WILLIAMS, Pen-
fryn, Ont. 682
,ap od: Advice. i
., (,,v is the timeof year for P eundinia; Lung
Fe
(•r, &e, Eve' fanaily should have a bottle of
Bo• eheeej Ocean n Syeup. Don't a.11ow for ono
m mentaliat eoUgh to; take ]odI of your child,
yo fiiflily or Youreelf. Oonsu aption, Asthma,
Pit atm° na, Cronp, Heinorrhages, and other fatal
dis tuies may eetlin. Although it is true German
S3 p is cluing 'thousands of these dreaded dis-
°as s, yet it is Much better to have it at bend
wh n three dosee I will mire you. One bottle Will
les your whole andly a win ter and keep you Safe
fro n tla9ger. I you are consumptive, do not eest
un il yo et have led this remedy. Sample bottles,
30 ents4 Regular size, 75 cents. Sold by your
druggistl e , , 627-52.
1 .
1
fleljter than Gold.
1 .
al The grand Oh ax of success is at last aehimjed.
The poor rej icc., the sick arise and walk, the rich
bask iu the golt en sunshine of p.erfect health.
The physical miseries of the human frame need
no, longer he endured, Jr. King's Oalifoenia
Gbiden Compouhd, for Dyspepsia, Constipation,
Sick Find:Abe, Coming up of food, jaundice,
Liver Complaint, Biliousness, General Debility,
Droweiness anl Low Spirits. This wonderful
re iedy Will positively cure, and that where every
rei edy has failed.._Toprove that this wonderful.
ready Will dealt we claim for it you are present-
ed with it trial little free of cost, by which you
wi I readily pace ve its wonderful curative (poli-
tic e and which Will show you what a regular bile
dol ar site bottle will do. ' For. sale by Messrs.
Ili .kson & Bleasdell. Seaforth. 2
Wilson's Wild Merry.
ne of the mon thoroughly retable medicine
zIo$v in utie by the Caeadian pe lic is Wilson'
Co pound Syrup of Wild .Cherry. The Runes
wijieh attends its use itt cases of Colds, . Coughs
13r nchille. Creep, Whooping Jough, Loss' o
Vaice and Weak Lurgs, is most remarkable.
Originally prepared to meet the demand fo a
god medicine of the kind, in the retail stor of
th proprietor's, its sale increesed so rapidly lid
be erne so largely extended that the inanufox
ur-
er felt it was only itece ssery to introdue it
tl ..ougl-, the newspapers of the country, to en- nre
its adoption as the national Cueo for diseaseel of
th respiratory organs. Every eeading druggisit in
W edern, Ontario now :tells it.
Ile win hi time • get a bottle and ha.ve -Ai on
head w hen ecquired. The largo bottles are "the
cheapes 68
Grand Triink Rail ay.
Trains leave Scaiciath and Clinton Stations es
LINTON.
.3:10 P. M. Pulti P. M.
Expresit ; .855 P. M. :15 P. M.
Mixed Train4..8:00 A. Me :45 A, M.
Mixed Train........1: 5 P. M. :45 P. M.
$00110W8 :
GING WEST— 0EAFortTu,
' Express
•
GOWS FAST-- SE FORTH.
Express 8(0 A. M.
Ilxprese Ti aiu.....1: 5 P. M.
Mixed Train ' 4.1 ) P. M.
Mixed 5 P.M.
LINTON.
86 A. M.
1'e:49 P. M.
3:20 P. M.
5:55 P. M.
• -
^
AUCTI
_
N SALES.
- -- • -
leer 0E1 GAGE SALE -In pursuann of -a power
43'2- of sae containe in a certain mortgage,
which wi 11 be p °duce on the day f sale, (do-
fatit ha vinglicee ma le in the pay tent of the
pincipal sad interest mina by t e said mort-
gage). there' will be c ffered for sal by Public
Auction, at the COM IERCIAL HOTEL, SEA -
FORTH, on- SATURD Y; the 14:h day of FEB-
RUA BY, Ike), et 2. aaarck P. M., by J. P. Brine,
Aust io neer, tbe follow ng valuable !aria e Being
composed cif the Ea t Hall of I.ct Number
,Twenty -Seven, in the Tenth Concession of tbe
Township of Mclaill p, centainieg by admeas-
urement fifty acne, b the nine more or less,
end now in poeseesion 4jf Robert foraance.
Further pat ticulftre and. cenditions of ale inade
known ori epplication to the undersigoecla
Mo-
CAUGBE3 & HUI MESTED, Solicitorter
Mortgagee. January 2915, 11:80. 64 3 '
AupTioN SALE OF A VALUABLE FA1M-
Mr. J ebn Bullaid has received instillations
from the propietor, to sell by Public Auttion,
on the prem -W
premises, on EDNESDAY, FEBE AetY
25theet 1 o'clock P. M., the following property :
Lot 6 ,roncestion 12, McKilloti,' nutaining 104
acrese.73 01 whieb are cleared, well fenced, and
in a good state of cultiyetion ; the balance is
well timbered ; there are 19 fteres of fall wheat,
10 acres xtia cly tor spring wheat ; a frame barn
38x43, a Ileum house lex24, a young beetling
orchard, a good well with plenty of water; is 12
miles horn Sialortli, 7 miles fioni Welton, 5t
miles from the gravel roads, 1 mile from school,'
and 2 miles flans church. Terins-Ten per cent.
of purcltase motley on day of sale; belittle°, to
male $2,000 -in one month; and the remainder
on time to suit purcbaser with interest at 8 per
cent., Further iefor raation cat be had onappli-
cation to tbe Auetioneer, Winthrop post office.
JOSEPH VANCE, Proprietor. • 634x3
MONEY.
- -
ONFY TO LEND--Itioney to lend on good
improved farms only, at 71 pet cent. inteis
eat, tia y able ectuly ; piivatc lands; charges mod-
erate. JOHN S. POETER. 631
MILONEY TO LOAN -In large or emelt snms
- on hist- den &caul ity, at 8 per cent. e early
intei est. ' Private funds, or on the inetallruent
Plan. Ap ly to W. HILL, Seaforth. 628 '
— -
ONEY TO LOAN -.-On Improved Farm Prop-
-I- erty, at 8 per cent. Intel -en. Interest pay-
able belay nal), or yearly, as desired, with a por-
tion of the principal, if so preferred. Expenses
light. Apply to THOMAS D., KYA,N, Seaforth,
Ont. 625
N1013E-Y.-The undersigned bas a large sum of
nioney for immediate investment on first
mart gages on farm propeity. Seven and a half
per c etit.'intereet yearly; principal as may be
agre ed prop. J. II. BEI\ SON, Solicitor, Sea -
forth. 1, 638
SPECIFIC ARTICLES.
may save us many heavy doctors' 1.).
It is by the judicioususe of such arti
of diet that a constitution may be gr d-
ually built up until strong enough tore-
sist every tendency to disease.
Hrn-
dreds of subtle maladies are floiating
around - us ready to attack .wherever
there is a weak point. We may elacape
many a fatal sheft by keeping ourselves
well fortified with pure blood, nd a
properly nourished frame."-Civi 'Ser-
vice Gazette. Sold only in packets labol
led-" James Epps & Oo., Homceo eth-
ic Chemists, 48; Threadneedle S reet,
and 170, Piccadilly, London." 48-52
ls.
les
To persons suffering from Rheuma-
tism, Neuralgia, Cramps in the Limbs,
Pain in the Side, Back or Chest, Corns,
Chilblains, Frost Bites, Scalds, burns,
etALL AT J. S. ROBERTS' DE170 STORE,
Sento' tie for the Great Sierra Nevada Smok-
ing Compoond, a positive cure fer Catarrh,and
is ettnally efticaciens in all Bronchial Affections,
The wtest cases of Asthma, Plithsic and all
Dineases of the Lungs yield readilyto this treat-
ni ent. M. L. SMITH, Arkona, Ont., General
Agent. For tale by all druggists. Price 75
cants a box. 601-i2
LOST .OR FOUND.
^
NOTE LOST-Thie is to forbid any person
from purehaeing a Promiseory Note, given
by John Henn Ball in favor of Job Wilson, and
beating date January 1st, 1879, payable twelve
months anal; date, as the saute has been lost.
An v perenn finding the (tame and returning it to
JAMES EARL, Lot 26, Concession A, Howick, or
to his address, Wtoxeter P. 0., will be reward-
ed. 682x4
SMITH.-" Good morning onee, -where are you going to ti"
JONES. " I eel going down • to M. ROBERTSON'S Furniture Warerootne, to get some new
fannture, you se e ruir c iagetting played out tend I want to get same fire -4 rate farniture at very low
prices. One baby -wants anew cradle and they say that he has th3 very best and cheepest in tbe
county." ,
S-
1 o the _FPO and Independent People of Ifuron :
M.
Kidd
at re
exam
to or
teeth
Is as
tion.
rate.
OBERTSON tegs to state that he has remove I to the premises leteiv le iesealea. by Mr. John
M. a traelware store, and they he s now prepared to furnish everything in the Furniture line
arkably low prices. Intendine pin ihesers will, dui it greatly to tad. • edvantage to ( all and ,
ne his stock before pnrchesing ele where. .Repairing promptly aline eel to, Furniture made
or on very short notice. Picture fzfuning a epecialty. All work gulls enteed. Farm produce,
re, waoti and lumber taken in exchallge„
ElIS UNDERTA
formerly, mid • hie own supervision, a
His stock of Ctkeis, Coffins, Shrouds,
Funerals atte tded inthe country. A
4.
!NG DEPARTMENT
greatest care and 'eaten -
tu'l it the very lowest
e plate.
SEAFORTII.
d will be cenducted with th
, will be found coranlete,
arse Jor hire. Remembea
M. ROBERTSON,
D.
!NEI GROOEFflES
RO SgAFORTH.
New 1 ck- Basket Rail nee
New widen Layer Ra 4ins.
New S ltana Raisins.
New -Valencia, Raisins
Cases
Barrel
. Figs i
EXTRA AL
1LY
Notwithstanclik Re
partment. '
Rem mber 4.1e Sta
D. D. Rios
ew Currants.
New Currants.
Boxes.
E IN TEA
GROCER'
nt
Advances ia
AND FAM -
almost every De-
-Next Door to he Post Office.
FAM11...Y GROCER:
Aq otos zoo(
.1-19
We)
ill 0
ti 1,4
ta•e:4.
rrrn
cgtz
o
airleVI
ag›.m
;,•!0
0
.•1 tt
=
CI
HARDWA E HAR WARE
•••.111.
SION OF THE CI MAR SAW
ios i aou
0
z
0
rn
CD
0
Flitikill11 DONAL Jr'
itimolatil1111
1.1b eae
iturg."14001))10
4 to 0 1 i_ii .....tz,r-v,IstitgfP:s..2.gt-s
as
;37 aja a, i-4,11 4 e, (Di
re. rn
• 4:5 clot
ca
Es.E .
0 0 "
.1 tr.t.0.7
0 )01. go v z
.C° .....4=)'41 Ex) CI, Ei ,t)
-rn.s fp
"71d, •-ftr.,::p: rktp
4.4 ria g 12. /7' 011 Ps 9: Fir
r", $416: '70 re CO
IFI a a. c'.7,14 ;
7
LUMSDEN & WILSON, Druggists,
"T1
=0
SCHOOL 'BOOKS. SCHOOL Ba4KS.
A Full Supply of all the .Books used. in Itublio
and High Schools at C. W. PAPST'Sr_Boole!_ Sta-
tionery and Fancy Goods Depot, Cardno'sl Block,
Seaforth. Orders by mail will have prompt at-
tention.
4
'e• %fife:4141 II lilt
11 it
011(15iii
tivg
FoR PLEASURE,
comfort and health,
smoke only the genu-
ne GOLD FLAKE.
Pronounced, by all
who have tried it, the
finest, purest an d best
Smoking Tobacco in
the world. Ask your
dealer for it. And if
you cannotget i t else-
where, write to the
undersigned for cir-
cular and price list.
Nene genuine with-
out my Trade Mark
and signature.
.T. E. SAXTON,
Globe Tobacco Work;
Wretesoa, O.
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
SEAFORTH, November 20, 1879
The undersigned having leased the finishing
shop of the Huron Foundry, Seaforth, from J. S.
Runchnan, will be prepered to do all kinds of
repairs required, for steam engines, grist and -
flouring, inilis, sa.w inills ' and all ldnds of ma-
chinery, also agricultural implements, and from
his long experience as foreman of -the Goderich
Foundry trusts to be able to give goodsatiSfactien
to all parties having work done. All repairs at-
tended to at , once. Give me a trial and I -will
warrant good satisfaction.
' WILSON SALKELD.
In connection with the above business, th
undersigned will have art office at the Hnrot
Foundry, and will take any orders for repairs o
mills or other faille's, and will also take contract
for steam engines, boilers, grist and flouring mills
and all kinds of nmehirtery. Having a connection
with one of the Tweet foundries in Ontario, I will
be in a position to carryout all contracts thatanay
be trusted. to me. Plans and specifications fur-
nished for mill machinery, engines, &c. As I
intend to give my attention altogether to the
erection and repairs of machinery and agrieniteral
implements, I hope to be able to givegood satisfac-
tion to all trusting me with their work.
R. ItUNCIMAN..
The tuidersigued will continue to manufacture
plows and all kinds of castings on a large scale at
the Huron Foundry, Seaforth, and with tho con-
nections formed, hopes to be able to push a large
business and to give goed satisfaetion.
J. S. RUNCIMAN.
NO BLOW BLIT REAL FACTS.
TNT (D.P`
CHILLED PLOWS
Proved and Acknowledged to be
the Standard Plow of America.
FOR EASE OF -DRAUGHT,
QUALITY OF MATERIAL,
STRENGTH,
NESS, AND -
IT HAS NO
• EQUAL.
The Material used in the construc-
tion of these Plows, for Smoothness of
Face and Toughness, is superior to
Cast Steel, and is MANUFACTURED
by ME, only in Canada.
GANG. PLOWS,
AND ROLLERS,
SOUFFLERS, &O.,
:Always on hand, made of Improved
Patterns, and -warranted (A. 1).
Columns, Castings chool, Church,
Garden and iatOn Seats, t and
Cast Iron Fencing a Specialty.
All Kinds of Rept' done and
Good Work Guarantee
JOHN NOPPER,
Seaforth Foundry.
_—
WANTED..
aRAND RIVER MUTUAL Fire Insuranee
Company, Galt. C. W. GIRDLESTONE,
Manager. An Agent Wantee for Seaforth. 624
TENDER S WANTED -Tenders will be reedy -
ed by the midereignednntil moonion MON-
DY, FEBRUARY 2ndele30, for drawing mllk
to the West End Cheese Factory. For partien'ars
apply to N. Cozens • or the undersigned. A,
HALL!. 688
'•
This Great Tkousehold Medicine ranks
amongst the eaclifig necessaries or life,
These famous pills purify the BLOOD, and ad
moat poemittliy, yet eoothingly on the
Liver, Stomach, Kidneys,
ana BOWELS, tivirg tore, energy, mod vigor to
these great MAIN SPRINGS OF LIFE. They
are confidently recommended as a never failing
yetriedy in all eases where the conetittition from
whatever cilium, has beet me impaired or lreakn-
ed. They are wonderfully (Meade/is in all ail.
ro. elite incidental to female"; of all ages mad
a GEN ERAL FAMILY MEDICINE are fluent.-
pasaed.
Its Searchliag and Healing Properties are
known throughtrat the World.
For the euro of BAD LEOS, bad brectett,
Old Wounds, Sores and Ulcers, .
it is an infellible remedy. If -effectually rubbed
on the neck and chest, as salt into meat, it cures
SORE THROAT, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, and
even ASTHMA. Fr Olandular Swelling%
,A.bscest es, Piles, Fistulas.
Gout, Rheumatism,
And every kind of SKIN DISEASE, it has never
been known to fail,
The Pills and Ointroent are Arsieufactured only
at 583, oxFonn STREET, LONDON, and ore
sold by all Venders of Medicines throughout the
Civilized World; withdirections for 11:34 in al-
most every language.
The Trade Intake of these Medicines are regis-
tered in Ottawa. Hence, any one tbeouebeat the
British Petiseesione, who may keep tbe Anaeri-
cen Colin tetleits for sale, will be presecuted.
fa=sa Purchases ehoeId look fo the Label en
Pots and Boxes. If the addreee ie not 533, -Ox-
ford Street, London, they are epe'iives,
LUMBER FOR BALE.
iiJ1IM600E, First Quality, $6 per M. PINE
from $8.
BILLS CUT TO ORDER,
All Length, from W to 50 Feet, the
PONY MILL, IN MeKILLOP,
The Subscriber has also a
LUMBER YARD IN SEAFORTII,
Where all kinds of Lumber can be °bailee&
479 THOMAS DOWNEY
TO BREEDERS
-I- OF PIGS. --
The 'andel-4Ra
will keep during
the present sea -
eon, At his Drew le,
ises, Lot 11, Came
4, B. R. S., Tuelte
eremith, one mile
south of Egmond-
villee a Thoroughbred Large Breed Berkshire '
Boar. This animal was sired by a Pig imported
from England, and for whieh the sum of $750
was paid. His dam was also imported. He la
one of the best at preeent in. the County of
Huron. having taken first prize At the County
end all the other &owe.. Ternis-One Dolleer,
to be paid At tbe time of serviee, with the privie
lege of returning if neceesaly. 4. H. CARTE
Proprietor 628'