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The Goderich Star, 1905-09-08, Page 5yp {7. 0.'1i-. + •,t•Zit.,41. iv".t .;.,..,.4....- ..- 'res .�'� ,r,...'I :..'ai' • r.......w,•vsi`+.if�+M r , . .. . ,. i I...::.r..:.. w'$ p.1 • 0 I _ •- H s, . 1_4=-�.� , I, T� I 1. .1.• .. �. 1.1, I I .. . I I 11 � . � I� I YOUR f* � � I "I04JANGI., -" I .. I'll, -- ' I I I I �, 11. ,. , . I .1 . ,, I �, . � . IH . 8- CA PA-100,Iffo - : R ') f _r 1, .. . � . .1 -05411111190,16, I ­ � I, ­ ­­­, ;i , , , , � � � 11 1� 000"., � *" �_ : , .1 I ,� � . ,,, ', I � II _, I " , ., I 1 - I . , ,. .­ . _ � ii .. rr 1}1. affil �' Ky.�. 11�. - . .. .. Ax x Y,oa, gaid�• b0040 t'ltalnlf tit: • , T i 11. .r� r, �, , cru+ Rtt _. ltal a4tts tttl+t � r�Y � y f. ♦' .. , d - Lo x x. I ts'11 ►_ Ill. •.S, pp r jt+ e4 s at , y t! �,+ li*, Y ���Ipp1 i w �5�ri�.ro 'A.II A *i'+- � the crew of the steel steamer Severna ... I 1. . ,. 4. ' ,', . ^ • . 11 ,:,> To t~uf;fMy S>xb c ber w #i? xteu w� is x9oft ' or', ,, .• ,, o eve-Ty:'1T0w ub c%l'x`her who pays 'O_Ae :�toiaar} Superior, late Friday night. Eleven W iYi T. ;GIV-9 ]FRCP.' OX.R EACIR 0�:0 � • � <. ' 'D .: IO 1Gk�R 'S " R,OSnS?' AND. "PANSIFS" . in Kirkcudbright, Scotland. That .... ' ' OR !i COPY F is the part of the old country from MOALI' UR'iS "THV DFFD TO TI4F FARM" .• * •. --. which most of the early settlers r. "9606""18661180 � , , ,� Def you know what these Pictures are ? A writer ' in a recent issue of th about here came. The ship we . Womau's. 'Home Companion said :. came over in was a little hit of a human be - Paul de' Longpr� is (perhaps the only artist to devote his whole life -work to th „ 'painting of flowers. He i5 knowp from , "Paris to Pekin" as the "King of Flow ings were huddled aboard her for Painters:" His home at Hollywood is. one .of California's most beautiful "'Show Places, five weeks before a landing was In . the garden ,'there is a -riot of color but a simplicity of arrangement which° batfl 1. one's attempt at description.: In his rose garden over Bob bushes of the finest var ' eties of the' "Queen of Flowers" blossom for the. benefit of the painter, j. . . , . ,, His beautiful Roses and Pansies are each reproduced in beautiful oil colore * Panels, Iox14 itches, flat for, any drawing room or Art Collection: We ba -; secured- six designs of each, and offer the choice of one of each to ever journey occupying eight or ten 3nbscriber PAYING UP TO DEC. 3i, i906. . days, The countly all the way Mates and four others were selected to their tIgee fdr the safety of the !I Louis Moeller's "'Deed to the Farm" will appeal especially to our countr I readers, It is. i5x2o inches in size, and is a beautifully pathetic scene, faitbf _. in .coloring and eatpression to, the great .original, which won fame in the .Roy {". Aca&my. • You can have one copy of this mailed' to you 'iu a tube, if you pref ,• it td the Plower pictures. , . - __. .._.._. ._. , As' the roses and Pansies cannot be mailed with safety, those desiring the , can Qbtaiu therm by calling or sending- to the office. and might have become quite a AN thtse ilesi,�ns can be seen FRAMED AT THE STAR OFFICE. You ori place but for the railway. A few speculators who stood in with the ffndi it w'orlih while to call and see them. . . 1SEMBER they are given FREE to all OLD or NEW SUBSCRI where Seaforth is now, and secur- ERS ,who pay to Dec. 31, 1906. • You, eaumt pairchase these pictures in the Art stores, if at all, for less than tl } 1. plane ofyeIam year's subscription --we offer them to you free. Do you want them i it iaa• Rha, acknowledged fact that THE GODERICH STAR is Hurati's largest a ,i 1',� most progressive paper. As a NEWSPAPER THE STAR has no equal in Provinci i ` ,- gountr.y journalism.' Xew, if any, approach it for "Quality, Quantity, or Circul V �, tion,"' We desire' to increase our subscription list to high water mark, and this " ' the•iftsan we have adopted the giving away of these high-class and meritorio ' prlsmtiivaras. R,emlember, all subscribers, old and Clew, must pay spot cash in Ord ' `' to,securm any once of the splendid premiums. . . MN MITCHELL & TODD � - 1. . PUBLISHERS GODERIOH, ONTARIO I I I ""Ja': .�' , � . �!. . V I I V " . I I ; 1.6 W!", I . I I - ' ,VVICM ANGG .n. g e famous %r . . • ' rtivir• su rior cookie valitits-andel sim {�t 4dtion n, q P . y� A soIflI *10hies, i5 1. 1 ' all that a first class -• r Uge should; he —. Duplex Gr&hp, Aleralca • oven1 �Lackd 4s' �?ir d ''1 Prdt T)amrr, and 5KCIai • fire Box all combine 'in Im1.king : . . 1 i I I is t11, . I 11 I �t ik OK . mrkd A'"1IMi: ��I►rr ' 1156 hob o res `, ; Ther 00ttley, Td4tit t;tlfltjl#i13 iirreMtekt,llMri 'moi11 a tGlrNlheA tdift* U406 011 tl 1014lltt fxnr a tai- +' , '•a 1e 'I""90 q,w.v..^-F4.•„-A'lialr • . i- VAW"Ii�Wlt iaft�t►CI�t6�N4�Y Vl* ififi%"w#wiftily�fY'IYdfill''>�YtiitiJilGYi#$e*. ���N� liiir���� a__N ay lv it 'j r *�'w' �' u ,. 0 , M g i (N . '� 11 f 'I . ,,yt tio 'All 4- + (� ( I ,. ;r . � �.v 1 " •• 1 M +.,, _ t�aF,Fa -a �tiAt w,ay or telly 70% *4 at o 17Q'tV ill tut tli1n rtottktl VXVt'_, �. AUft t VVA 't1MIt, %% stJol t�lfii. "flow � "tk% Jos" so ,tttt q t atl�ll 11 ��AI#dtll.t+� � 'rrrrYtbi t s" d Iwa .. t1r,Yrt -tt trlrtlM ltglat+r AQ IMMy4'R ate' Xrt9M+r �' k"P tAe rte? cllaaA,etati�-if !in"A, ,X" ,flat *tbillr 0W xog>t+tz" M '� .H : rltiKlffi t+xu► -s arets�t4t %waara>s11.Ab,dRt1RIM I ; ' `. a . �platiktt:a��Grot.►arbte V4� ^ :. �tgdt a "area al�llpt * fl,*luitaa 1 . tall khe tlattiut s . lr�1 i1Y tit bots w� . r 'k'+fi i AR�tlitrtt�i�ikt, SN'ar!a.Ao?w`'1 � CENTURY AGO. 2 SOMI* INTERESTING itE[t11NtS- 1 aNalRs �� ao a of the Pioneer Days In This o rm,y, Olit. County. ff brussels Bost. e '1e. Oxer half a century ago Cham. r e Huron �• bers Journal pronounced til t. .Tract the Garden of Canada. The e I -statement was notitrue, because at er 1, that time there were no gardens to es f anywhere in, Canada. The state- i- ment would hardly hold good even if made now. The distinction of being the Garden of the Dominion d . belongs to -that narrow strip border- ve W by the mountain on one side and the lake on the other, extending y from Hamilton to Niagara. But in , Huron you will probably find a greater stretch of first class land suitable for mixed farming than can Y ;' be found in any similar area in On- ul . tario. The land is strong and yet °� mellow ;..ifs is not rolling, and yet it al is -easily drained ; it will produce er V equally satisfactory results in ap- ples, wheat, or garden truck ; it will yield great crops of roots or corn s� for winter feeding of stock, and m � still as pasture land it is not excel - i led by the broken timbered land in i� the Northern .districts. 11 i�And the people of Huron have prover` equal to their opport'ilnities. Everywhere there may be seen B- �� evidence of thrift and prosperity --- well -tilled fields, comfortable brick Kms, homes, large orchards, and rows of ', I spruce, locust, maple or elm lining "a the public roadway or private lanes, le � are to be seen on every hand. ? �+,6,, WHAT HAS BEEN ACCOMPLISHED �f IN ONE LIFETIME. an � The whole looks like a picture of al ,l country life in England, where, as Mark Twain once said, the land has a- (;' been cultivated with a .fine tooth is comb for centuries. But, as a matter of fact, all that one sees in us Huron is the work of yesterday. er w How new the whole tiling really Is was brought home to me with startling vividness by a chance re- mark dropped by Rubert McMordie, y of Kippen:- 0'% "The first debate 1 ever took part • in," Mr. McMordie said, "was 'Re- solved, that the horse is more use- ful to man than is the ox.'" <6 This question, as facts subse- r� quently stated showed, was an open t'� one then. Today the ox is as ex - Fr tinct in that country as the dodo. "M f th " Mr M'Mordie said 11 JA ++�,: -i l M CM.1 � '+� ,, !wl•Q%04c; .t me tit.. yl ' Vii° � iatlikittr ro ,__ tyltiilate, wit llilfi>eiW1 1111II# IIfI iMIItH 1FAlyIJ>S ani c x Iv, fllrtll „ tWifnt; W # #t11Mt�1A 11t�11.11 A4##flr 'i`itiyr TrAl1k tf1'tift2 es t hralr�N! :rcittt •'i Ct 11 "!i iiia t ICN71 STAIif',1i1f11'II11•s' NewepitJ if tllobshtetit h ° , .. 11 �11 I « ...r T rerrtfi; wore •left. T�hore 0Y. as , r of the eh�yIn an his large and flourishing town, while ape lwllir f6wid of the four Harpurhey has ceased to exist. b`(Ati, attd tltdy Orb un - 04 3BTTLC+R'3 FIRS` C[3r7P Iia . The Sibvaia was it t km r f 42,8" tons s e C d„But all this tailway affair was *Vftkk 61ttho f3eVona the a (natter of subsequent develop- pdslir,, 'bf IMY 'G'itq, Aft h., ment. There was no railway, or t%toroftlftrt6iim6k,CZ thot,ght of railway, at the time I 110. TM tiYCtt�ainerOlive First spoke of. Tile country was a th a +!'I*# Nevou men, wilderness then, and our own farm iter WittottT IOwt, to milt's was all bush. We arrived ton late itge #dtt'y'. ' etew aro 3rellttilft. In the season to plant anything but I I 1. - ,t16*1hfW*t. At tht WS fe- iY owr 'th* 6*r the 90pI111a .*lured out. tlw gj*irl. TtW work Iclesolil& wits egwily lathal'toas. titst wo Ahrew tilt* wheat. heat flu M sheetS"AU let tl* >t!►44 parry tlze, cIaff a+s th0'grltitt,&We(l4e,4 vol some ono $Ct a 40 of tuns oiz hl"twoRl'R tack. Y a er, . later, "teamed wheat all the way ,r, to Goderich, 30 miles distant, by os awass?��igai gdA ox team. One day was occupied t ld f tt t in going and another in returning, orf, tit l t ' N t3 tt►Ipit ed aff 1t and yet the wheat was sold at Soc. WRECKED IN LAKE SUPERIOR. a bushel, halt in cash and half i,t - . .. .. Ax x Y,oa, gaid�• b0040 t'ltalnlf tit: trade, with mighty long profits for Heroism of s Boat's Crew to Save the merchant on the trade." Other Lives. James Lansborough, who lives cru+ Rtt _. ltal a4tts tttl+t � r�Y � y near Seaforth, was able to tell from Bayfield, Wis., Sept. 4.—Mleven of his own recollection of an early day the crew of the steel steamer Severna in the history of the Huron tract. were drowned by the wreck of the 1i1 came to this country in '34 as steamer on Sand Island Reef, on Lake one of a family of nine," said Mr. Superior, late Friday night. Eleven Lansborongh. "The old home was others were rescued. Including the re- in Kirkcudbright, Scotland. That mainder of the crew and four women. is the part of the old country from The story of the disaster Is a thrilling which most of the early settlers tale' about here came. The ship we Seven of the dead offered their lives as a sacrifice for the rest of the twentyy- came over in was a little hit of a human be - tiro on board the iii fatea ship. Of sailing craft, about 200 those for whom they gave their lives, ings were huddled aboard her for four are dead. The rest reached shore five weeks before a landing was after a night of buffeting by the waves made at Quebec. From Quebec in an open boat, and a trip of more than twenty-four hours cutting a road r, to Kingston, via Montreal, the trip through the wilderness of northern was made in Durham boats, but Wisconsin. from Kingston to Hamilton the When the shock came the captain hound that there was no for journey was by steamers. We ebance all f4 try and reach shore and called for volunteora to stay on the ship. More hired teams to take us from Harrill - ton to Seaforth this stage of the g than half the crew volunteered to stay journey occupying eight or ten aboard. I+'Inally the captain, the two days, The countly all the way Mates and four others were selected to their tIgee fdr the safety of the through was one great forest, rest. broken by patches of clearing here The trip ashore of the lifeboat, in and there. Dundas and Galt were rihlch Were the women, was one of hamlets, Stratford consisted of a terror. Saturday mornih th storm- Cotr4e4 was WAS ashore few shanties, and where Seaforth party tit Little Band Say. • here they found a now stands not even a board hfid at that time been erected. Harpurhey hdweefeader, who [Ad them to two "feriae, t*o miles in the interior. The was the first village in this section, Iden Moro so exhausted they could and might have become quite a hardly walk. ' C9'port l:'eaehing Sayfleld, th/Haling place but for the railway. A few speculators who stood in with the tAr Harrow, of theRooth Line, start - rd out for the s"no, of the wree with railway company selected a site Y P Y d, party pififteen tirorl. 't'lihe to tug where Seaforth is now, and secur- t6i0hed the Oecne of the *reek of the ed a location of a station there. Slltrotts, +ont# a few splits and the after fed you gee Seaforth is a 11 JA ++�,: -i l M CM.1 � '+� ,, !wl•Q%04c; .t me tit.. yl ' Vii° � iatlikittr ro ,__ tyltiilate, wit llilfi>eiW1 1111II# IIfI iMIItH 1FAlyIJ>S ani c x Iv, fllrtll „ tWifnt; W # #t11Mt�1A 11t�11.11 A4##flr 'i`itiyr TrAl1k tf1'tift2 es t hralr�N! :rcittt •'i Ct 11 "!i iiia t ICN71 STAIif',1i1f11'II11•s' NewepitJ if tllobshtetit h ° , .. 11 �11 I « ...r T rerrtfi; wore •left. T�hore 0Y. as , r of the eh�yIn an his large and flourishing town, while ape lwllir f6wid of the four Harpurhey has ceased to exist. b`(Ati, attd tltdy Orb un - 04 3BTTLC+R'3 FIRS` C[3r7P Iia . The Sibvaia was it t km r f 42,8" tons s e C d„But all this tailway affair was *Vftkk 61ttho f3eVona the a (natter of subsequent develop- pdslir,, 'bf IMY 'G'itq, Aft h., ment. There was no railway, or t%toroftlftrt6iim6k,CZ thot,ght of railway, at the time I 110. TM tiYCtt�ainerOlive First spoke of. Tile country was a th a +!'I*# Nevou men, wilderness then, and our own farm iter WittottT IOwt, to milt's was all bush. We arrived ton late itge #dtt'y'. ' etew aro 3rellttilft. In the season to plant anything but I I 1. - ,t16*1hfW*t. At tht WS fe- iY owr 'th* 6*r the 90pI111a .*lured out. tlw gj*irl. TtW work Iclesolil& wits egwily lathal'toas. titst wo Ahrew tilt* wheat. heat flu M sheetS"AU let tl* >t!►44 parry tlze, cIaff a+s th0'grltitt,&We(l4e,4 vol some ono $Ct a 40 of tuns oiz hl"twoRl'R tack. tint the'.c'taff. of alt' thus'crf Ateiir €gltrtpn' tett! Yes', 'it way 'Baur molds : $ t "t tk froul flrain, prt>� ced ins the Way, I t ld f tt t R�;xk, orf, tit l t ' N t3 tt►Ipit ed aff 1t rt 9 +tot. v aladert�lt at loog�pleice for trade 1.1141 - . .. .. Ax x Y,oa, gaid�• b0040 t'ltalnlf tit: 531.0 to .FIs 00' . fob 't114 fl. urn 1-,A0 'I tellla ill* c- ,tt i votltthing tv : b3dto earl ~vent t?t .; cru+ Rtt _. ltal a4tts tttl+t � r�Y � y carr, h ve e i a spontfing la4v prlcesa z ' b ; .'... %1411,., � � sutiae t . IMM � �! �'' Sp g R fed ell n oitd id 'itt h G s to tlrel+ctttr. W1re?MrIv11 "gltd Kr ,#fIitel►tsua��ps4rr?Atxiwl tt+ark u C-.. 3 C ttCCCI . t11e ztt� 4 «si 41fpi 1 i)K n f Q per cwt. u t l� t ttI a, f o >d S. p t0 r ee ig Summer Complaint. Y p ► ;�"ra4lxg r : n,�f�v� �y�.y yy,..�.,y.. 1 *04xili "0d0; .,Mi;#1W t[yyiiTl,{a.rkl .`MIR... t+R!1 trRat�+1Y1»� , rt`lxbitt, Ems• ` �,!balr 4440-01Y 09 NIMN4t ,, . . h,. nV., , ii4tR,,Mt1{j7 SUTh. 1 ,t)W, it @ ver thinvaa� of caters , :klrcttt.". dorso with oxelt. The firsf yolk of .,� . cattle wo. bought im,00--from Penn. - 4• Sylvania. An enterpri0rig, Yanliee gyp, brought tip a drove from that state • and sold them to, fatmerk, ill tile . ,�► settlement. gIrt chainsb used • Lob with the orewereee expensive andd Is an instantaneous cure. It has been hard to get. One of m brothers Y 4tN'�ix'l lists'.- • carried a chain on his back, all the K.a by pttllt-ativtls falwttlltl' t)tt4.ra v way � o o t fourmiles b e - t H lmesvl le 1 r send Clinton, to have a link put WHEN TWE BOOM GAME. a few potatoes, and these froze in thegrounii before they were raised. Jno. Beatty, who Is today ,tile But for flour purchased at $fo per oldest resident within the corporate barrel from the Pennsylvania limits s • ll in. of Seaforth, also has a Dutch settlers in Waterloo, there teresting story to tell of the would have been starvation in the early days: Huron tract that year. None of 'AAs a bare-footed boy," he said, our people knew anything about "I chased cows through the bush chopping on their arrival, but still then growing upon the land on father, with the help of two sons which the town of Seaforth stands who were *fill advanced towards now. A few years later I was in manhood, managed to chop two or business here, when conditions three acres during the first winter, were altogether different. This, Chopping was really the easiest was in the boom days. Seaforth, part of it. The. greate5t difficulty at this second stage in development, was experienced in. getting the was the centre of trade for a vast green timber to burn. With forest range of country. This was when - all around the little patch of clear- the surrounding country had been ing, there was no current of air to fairly well developed, and before fan the blaze, and we had to strip railways had beer -built. At this the brush, let it dry out, and use time farmers from the country as that to start the fire going. far as Walkerton brought their pro - BUYING DEAR—SELLING CHEAP duce to Seaforth for sale. I have seen the North Road, leading out "When we 'began to ,produce towards Brussels, for a distance of something, fresh difficulties stared five miles, lined with teams hauling us in the face. When we first in grain, pork, wood and tanbark, came there was. not flour enough with scarcely a break between. for local consumption, and we had At that time t6 warehouses re - to buy at $io per barrel, When ceived grain here, and those in we began to produce, there was charge were busy from daylight .till more than the local market could dark. The time 1 speak of was absorb, and we could hardly givs about '64 or '66, Everything was our stuff away. Goderich, which booming then, and dealers as well then consisted of a few houses, was as farmers bought anile sold in a our best market, but it was years most reckless way. I have known 'and ears before n cent of cash Y dealers to go out to a farmer's could be got for anything there. home and buy Sao or boo bushels For wheat there was no sale at all ; of wheat 'unsight and -unseen.' I it was:ulT disposed of in the form have seen them again buy a load of of flour, In disposing of that, one pork on the street at a lump figure day was consumed in making the Without weighing. In these days journey to Goderich by ox team, of narrow margins, no one thinks another was used up, peddling the of doing business in that way.” stuff about the village, and a third spent in the return journey ; and even at that not as much would be obtained in cash as would pay the price of a dinner. My mother has Light -Sweeping carried butter to Goderich, 20 miles, Brooi n and sold. it at 12;c. per lb„ all trade. BOLCKH BAMBOO handled "HOW did 1144 buy our clothing j Y k brooms aro ecieutiflcatiy baLnced in theirconstruotio 'jhoweight We didn't buy any. it was all is Placed at the brush end where homespun. fhe spinning wheel it is needed. The handles are was in every kitchen, and hand light and mote easily grasped. looms at every crossroad. Our BOECKH BROOMS greatest difficulty in this line was sweepcleaner in securing boots. The cobblers last lnger, and were the busiest men in the coon- givomeroelatis• , try, and sometimes one had to o g factory servioe, - , than any other eight or ten times before getting kind. what was ordered. A pair of hand- .�� UnftedRctnrra, made cow -hide boots cost $4.50 t4 undbed. then. Toronto. Canelo. OLD STYLE OPERATIONS ON THE FARM. "Farm work was conducted in _ . . _ . _ _ _.—,__ .. -. __ _ very different fashion then from — what it is now'. The stumps, which stood thick in the field, would have prevented the use of modern Implements, even had we possessed them. I have helped cut wheat with a sickle, haul it in on a jumper, and thrash it with a flail, or tramp it out with cattle. We sometimes tiled what was called a 'nigger' for threshing. A post was set upright in the middle of the threshing floor, a round log was pointed at one end and the pointed end set in the post so it would revolve; spokes were driven into the log so as to form teeth, like those in the cylinder of a thresher; a horse was then hitched to the outer end of the log and started round and round in a circle, like the horse power of an t , _. _ ._.. ,,..4 , . _ , ..,moi_ p,r ._ I ► Hit * Is .s .ft>w . - I � Ik iMleeseNt seMltsetlt 1tYf1li ft tti11tts st 1 -r ' 1F „ Ills ,liilliwe+t Iya1�,rMl _ telt _:_ -1 .. _---.-. + &C � 'l!'tse >Ms1s terse. %fi 11 4 Gs�At 10 Pis vliii. t floret all oftm atlll "%A � ♦ s Z. 11esf t+rilk t1 it,M Ill lick. .. ,, .: "11'!14 elf k Ow rotten et *0 r M / A� 7 y Impe1.rial r'ial tb� n A ♦- ` ange • ,u ora a qtz •+ca >z ` . ?1triielii 4ir ill- a owl, i11. +Ikmrll h 11 r ' � t 90,4 �ttcrrtliltq h a : t oV.t tR f ! v top.. ba 11, R1rct1iaG11e 1' tl 1 w it � t1 uo� 1 ' u I a x. th # I 11 i tW;t4tir 9uui , ' ria S �r3"�t 1;t4�at , torr' � ,M em l' I'le r v 1t 4 ratur4; a t tc � '1' c d t.l rr<d atr quit ii al se for t 40 oven. rally I t .with tlhat' 100,30rthacooki''o .distkik o 'rrn . i Int tial r a s t?x a d ef; calk. 1?i f out trwd with Irro , firoh 4;y, heat: 1 E i rY -r ., Y1 �. ,r would d a' 4 i o? ears tQ �a to x. at your deatcrh4 if he pa t thovr yeu e 1. t a'. r .n the Imperial i AxP a writ t os JG u l o w Pe , sAll ar' we'll fiend you fill particulars ead telt '' '.. ' you whoa you can sca it; 1� - Ike GYA Fa d CO. . 1 troxunTe. McNTIMAL, LIOUeil 1 w x v uv 111 Irau once sa . per•,^'-.^"y..w.r'.`R�..�.,",* ^ ��4 1," n •..,---nom' a• 4 - 1 t �55 l ,or sale bey C, J. HARPER% Cioderich ,�: ,h . r +� "r Mrs.Wa.•Sandem'DressCuiiingCCoune , i 11 I p IewnceiM In tees, IenpravltR in 1 • {" _ , 1p11 lyytAVEIp.rpv.J Mr prNilN14nn6(.ounnawll na.Mtnuigi wl. �,tI ll N,Ig1, Qr 18,14aw'a4' o"'`uailtw(�`W►IapNpivaa�iai"+p/1Wltwygl�.,w1ltp�eY«�, � - � t; , ,-.�, eugl1wwIThagrtiwiiwYry .rruM lq 1p#•nuwv roles ewWk. lwtlr �llpu. /, �,', i.; annitUX rxmrlla all cuaw, Nr wqo a %-11 rt .. wyill u rM -++!• 311 luveg4nrt Nq.xpMarlutlCa q,n,wry, Nu adv, taNulw. wtUu dtgca+ IrLytWt, A n.taliN QI 4x1 io Myon, tyq�wt �vw prove tgwl {p�� fi,�' nlprov.,J nutrrpwan lv noi�bn i Yr balq 1Lrylpi, altWr br nWl �� + ur pr. nal Itwtrocnuue, wqo ir41 Mnlxu,lhi 6Y qu owe eccoyt u17• �.. .. I$ ,414 t w luvuut,r, ori r 1w 11111 oral. Ntnncgn Ila`. WN. 8ANO1tt' 8t1tt CarrilN 80Ntta Ya Vol, e,axew ,' rs,, '.. ' 1011141r Wrtmtn'dar rut paru,•ulan. DnUTFtlta.�eaT.. taA IN• NOT10®—You can comtnonce taking a cour,to In Your own home 6 y da The whole randly Inn learn from one course. Cultiag dorso by &a ��,l�to T101o1• Sydow, Incest In Chleol}o, moehd a,vanted ut Srn l.Ogt9 `Vorld'n Fair, _ _-. .__ ._ __ r t �a x our GREAT OFFER: � �, ,z �" tr` ;;,�`�, E, ;:'.,,,��A` j ,� ..''I'''.IL'' .� L , �.�, �L­­ L.'' 11` `i ji . . -,:��,,,i,� i The small sum of twenty.",." " . :;11 215C � ,,:�;. f ive c e nts, i n advance, ,' .,i ' i P !; will pay for TH E STAR (postage free) to any address, to to end of igo5. e a A great and. undoubted vAlue. ii i' u r { `+ I. Tmo�� I, I I : �1:r�. ime's Upt, summer shoes� f'. I , I ,_,.,�r,i1, �'; MUST a00 1.!. ��, ` � THh'RE'N plenty of time to wear 11 ,� 1 �` • I . / - j them, ii it:not no much time to ✓ wr ' ' .�-� . C -Y( 1- "�z = sell lhene, so we have been a' . - �r_R? �� through our stock and put a fare- � b well price on solve �: L. • �' ' /'i 111 Summer Lines �V 1' \. ' - -- - -- " LL YriceH ore so low that you'll not kj 1a, able to resist the temptation of t buying a pairg, � Men's regular $1.25 Crtnvav6 111, for . .......$1.00 A14-11'" regular. $1.111 (lanwa Af aln, for .. .... . . . . .... . ...... 7SC e Huy'H regular $1.(14) Uranv+aei 10 a1N. fur.... .. . . 83C Men'n regular $3.1141 and 1'$1513 Tan and filack 146,1,", la little nar- row In the toe.) fru.. .................... .., ....$I.00 These aro not all Cir . good things w,• have to offer. ,, — -- - -- �' 111111161W W 'S H AR ►MAN, GODERICH .■■la t +.!` tI ISeasoll nia01.e Furniture .11 vfr: r'. 11 4. .Couches in velours +# in all fancy stripes, from $5.So upwards. Eas ll holstered C P Y P hairs in leather and velours from $6, Sou wards. Dining Chairs and Extension Tables in large assoriments, and Parlor Suites in Silks, Velours and Rugs, from $ao.00 upwards. , Bedroom Suites air A Sideboards, from the cheapest to the best, in all I w the latest designs. , CALL. ANI, EXAMIN E NU TROIJBL.E TO SHOW GOODS t,' . - — 1, �`1 '�, , eT . 1) t J . " L 1'I -1 ( SON V Ich Tito Leadinr drafter takers and Embalmers . West Street, (,oder 8rtIT' NWIt anl e day calha will receive perrOnAl rad pmurpt attendlou. ,, 'P 1 Residence--r%l in Avenue. boa g 11 I I 11 tae. _ ____ , star --� "' THE CiOD13It;1CH STAR has a Lar>;or Ctrvcutiitttill tlf /l4: ''r any other NOWBI)SPet It► this Section of tutor h+IM811 1 of Huron. Sbr,bwd Advediftfs value 'Clift 47' _,,! x... I;° -- - _J, '. p ;air• ;'•'` 'f,rt. ter:✓' e�• •.�� •'••.• ••o 19. • . •: 11 ... FOR... Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic Stomach Cramps. Cholera •mow 1 Morbus. Cholera Infaintum. Seasickness. Summer Complaint. and all Looseness of the Bowreb In Children or Adults. w .:: ' DL Fowixa&tss 4• Extract of — a • Wild Strawberry Is an instantaneous cure. It has been used in thousands of homes for sixty years, and Fas never failed to give satisfaction. Every home should have a bottle so as to be ready In case of emergency. h +~ Efts. Gttonoa N. HAavint, Rosoneath, Ont., writest �Mtii "I can recommend c mmend Dr. PowlePo Extract of Wild Straw- a•r berry as the best medicine i have evbr used for Dirtrrhmea and alt summer complaints. I always keep it in the house and It highly to friends." •, praise all my ;:.. a: w1 N....01-11:64,11 - t , _. _ ._.. ,,..4 , . _ , ..,moi_ p,r ._ I ► Hit * Is .s .ft>w . - I � Ik iMleeseNt seMltsetlt 1tYf1li ft tti11tts st 1 -r ' 1F „ Ills ,liilliwe+t Iya1�,rMl _ telt _:_ -1 .. _---.-. + &C � 'l!'tse >Ms1s terse. %fi 11 4 Gs�At 10 Pis vliii. t floret all oftm atlll "%A � ♦ s Z. 11esf t+rilk t1 it,M Ill lick. .. ,, .: "11'!14 elf k Ow rotten et *0 r M / A� 7 y Impe1.rial r'ial tb� n A ♦- ` ange • ,u ora a qtz •+ca >z ` . ?1triielii 4ir ill- a owl, i11. +Ikmrll h 11 r ' � t 90,4 �ttcrrtliltq h a : t oV.t tR f ! v top.. ba 11, R1rct1iaG11e 1' tl 1 w it � t1 uo� 1 ' u I a x. th # I 11 i tW;t4tir 9uui , ' ria S �r3"�t 1;t4�at , torr' � ,M em l' I'le r v 1t 4 ratur4; a t tc � '1' c d t.l rr<d atr quit ii al se for t 40 oven. rally I t .with tlhat' 100,30rthacooki''o .distkik o 'rrn . i Int tial r a s t?x a d ef; calk. 1?i f out trwd with Irro , firoh 4;y, heat: 1 E i rY -r ., Y1 �. ,r would d a' 4 i o? ears tQ �a to x. at your deatcrh4 if he pa t thovr yeu e 1. t a'. r .n the Imperial i AxP a writ t os JG u l o w Pe , sAll ar' we'll fiend you fill particulars ead telt '' '.. ' you whoa you can sca it; 1� - Ike GYA Fa d CO. . 1 troxunTe. McNTIMAL, LIOUeil 1 w x v uv 111 Irau once sa . per•,^'-.^"y..w.r'.`R�..�.,",* ^ ��4 1," n •..,---nom' a• 4 - 1 t �55 l ,or sale bey C, J. HARPER% Cioderich ,�: ,h . r +� "r Mrs.Wa.•Sandem'DressCuiiingCCoune , i 11 I p IewnceiM In tees, IenpravltR in 1 • {" _ , 1p11 lyytAVEIp.rpv.J Mr prNilN14nn6(.ounnawll na.Mtnuigi wl. �,tI ll N,Ig1, Qr 18,14aw'a4' o"'`uailtw(�`W►IapNpivaa�iai"+p/1Wltwygl�.,w1ltp�eY«�, � - � t; , ,-.�, eugl1wwIThagrtiwiiwYry .rruM lq 1p#•nuwv roles ewWk. lwtlr �llpu. /, �,', i.; annitUX rxmrlla all cuaw, Nr wqo a %-11 rt .. wyill u rM -++!• 311 luveg4nrt Nq.xpMarlutlCa q,n,wry, Nu adv, taNulw. wtUu dtgca+ IrLytWt, A n.taliN QI 4x1 io Myon, tyq�wt �vw prove tgwl {p�� fi,�' nlprov.,J nutrrpwan lv noi�bn i Yr balq 1Lrylpi, altWr br nWl �� + ur pr. nal Itwtrocnuue, wqo ir41 Mnlxu,lhi 6Y qu owe eccoyt u17• �.. .. I$ ,414 t w luvuut,r, ori r 1w 11111 oral. Ntnncgn Ila`. WN. 8ANO1tt' 8t1tt CarrilN 80Ntta Ya Vol, e,axew ,' rs,, '.. ' 1011141r Wrtmtn'dar rut paru,•ulan. DnUTFtlta.�eaT.. taA IN• NOT10®—You can comtnonce taking a cour,to In Your own home 6 y da The whole randly Inn learn from one course. Cultiag dorso by &a ��,l�to T101o1• Sydow, Incest In Chleol}o, moehd a,vanted ut Srn l.Ogt9 `Vorld'n Fair, _ _-. .__ ._ __ r t �a x our GREAT OFFER: � �, ,z �" tr` ;;,�`�, E, ;:'.,,,��A` j ,� ..''I'''.IL'' .� L , �.�, �L­­ L.'' 11` `i ji . . -,:��,,,i,� i The small sum of twenty.",." " . :;11 215C � ,,:�;. f ive c e nts, i n advance, ,' .,i ' i P !; will pay for TH E STAR (postage free) to any address, to to end of igo5. e a A great and. undoubted vAlue. ii i' u r { `+ I. Tmo�� I, I I : �1:r�. ime's Upt, summer shoes� f'. I , I ,_,.,�r,i1, �'; MUST a00 1.!. ��, ` � THh'RE'N plenty of time to wear 11 ,� 1 �` • I . / - j them, ii it:not no much time to ✓ wr ' ' .�-� . C -Y( 1- "�z = sell lhene, so we have been a' . - �r_R? �� through our stock and put a fare- � b well price on solve �: L. • �' ' /'i 111 Summer Lines �V 1' \. ' - -- - -- " LL YriceH ore so low that you'll not kj 1a, able to resist the temptation of t buying a pairg, � Men's regular $1.25 Crtnvav6 111, for . .......$1.00 A14-11'" regular. $1.111 (lanwa Af aln, for .. .... . . . . .... . ...... 7SC e Huy'H regular $1.(14) Uranv+aei 10 a1N. fur.... .. . . 83C Men'n regular $3.1141 and 1'$1513 Tan and filack 146,1,", la little nar- row In the toe.) fru.. .................... .., ....$I.00 These aro not all Cir . good things w,• have to offer. ,, — -- - -- �' 111111161W W 'S H AR ►MAN, GODERICH .■■la t +.!` tI ISeasoll nia01.e Furniture .11 vfr: r'. 11 4. .Couches in velours +# in all fancy stripes, from $5.So upwards. Eas ll holstered C P Y P hairs in leather and velours from $6, Sou wards. Dining Chairs and Extension Tables in large assoriments, and Parlor Suites in Silks, Velours and Rugs, from $ao.00 upwards. , Bedroom Suites air A Sideboards, from the cheapest to the best, in all I w the latest designs. , CALL. ANI, EXAMIN E NU TROIJBL.E TO SHOW GOODS t,' . - — 1, �`1 '�, , eT . 1) t J . " L 1'I -1 ( SON V Ich Tito Leadinr drafter takers and Embalmers . West Street, (,oder 8rtIT' NWIt anl e day calha will receive perrOnAl rad pmurpt attendlou. ,, 'P 1 Residence--r%l in Avenue. boa g 11 I I 11 tae. _ ____ , star --� "' THE CiOD13It;1CH STAR has a Lar>;or Ctrvcutiitttill tlf /l4: ''r any other NOWBI)SPet It► this Section of tutor h+IM811 1 of Huron. Sbr,bwd Advediftfs value 'Clift 47' _,,! x... I;° -- - _J,