HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1880-10-01, Page 7•
She Poet's (Lorne(
r.
ilancle ft Mee
i4 Marl. gu &wt eon the matte atm
&d oall tn. cattle bum*
and ash the cattle bums.
Across the muds d boo!'
rbs western word was wild madden& 4
Sall all ideas weal she
elm creeping tide come up along ta.
And o'er and o'er the seed.
Aad round end round the: loan
AO tar as eye could
eke Wading tube name down and ow he end
Aad sever home tame Mae
is 11 Wood, or fish, or fkiating .•at
A trees ti guides hair, '
Of drowned maiden's DRAY
Above the nest M seal
Was sever sallitull yet that Mum -
Among the stakes oa Dee'
Mae
My rowed uer across toe room" t..5
The cruel crawling foam
The cruel, hammy forin-
t° her gra% e beuse the
=Ili the boogie= Itearatr ..fl to rattle
A. r.b': raft*. u' i..
• CHMISM11113.3192111Utr.
real mew raner•
Doe 1 amp toy paper, pruater.
Llimat amtke my name off yet
You know the limes are stringent,
And dollar's hard to gtt
itut tug a little harder
Is whet 1 mean to do.
And scrape the dimes together,
Enough for ute and you.
I can't afford to drip It
I and it dowen't play
To du without • imper.
Howe er other* imay
1 hate to ask wy neighbors
To give me Mein on loan;
Thew don't:lustre". but mean it.
V. hy don t you have your own 1
You tun't tell how we miss it,
1f it, by any fate,
Should happen not to reaeh us.
Or come a little late;
Then all is in • hubbub,
.And things go all awry.
And printer. if you rr married,
You lumw the reason why:
The children want their stories.
And tette is anxious. too.
At first to choice it over,
And then to read it through,
And I to read the leader&
And con the book reviews,
And scan the oorrespondence.
And every scrap of news.
I ca.nnot do without it.
11 1. no tame to try,
For other people take it,
And. prLuter, so must I :
I, too, must keep me posted
And know what'. going on,
Or feel and be accounted.
A fogy simpleton.
Then take it kindly. printer.
If pay be somewhat Mow,
For coal) is not so plenty,
And wants not few, you now,
but I must bare my paper.
Cost what it may to me,
I'd rather dock my sugar.
And do without my tem
So, printer, don't you stop D.
Unless you want my frown,
For here's the year's subscription.
And credit it right down.
And send the paper promptly
And regulariy on;
And let 11 briar us weekly
Its welcomes benison.
litorbs of 133isoom.
Sin has a great many -tools; but a he
is the handle whieh fits them &IL
Ceremonies differ in every county;
hut true politeness is ever the same. •
The tire -fly only shines when on the
wing. So it is with the mind; when
once we rest we darken.
God is better served in resisting a
temptation to evil than in many formal
'prayers.
You may shrink from the far-reaching
mg solitudes of your heart, but no other
foot than yours can tread them.
Povez.y often deprives a man of all
spirit and virtue. It is hard for an emp-
ty bag to stand upright.
It is with youth am with piano', from
the first fruits they bear we learn what
may be expected in future.
The time for reasoning ui before we
have ayproached near enough to the for -
hidden fruit to look at it and admire.
Nature makes us pour when we want
nbcessaries, but custom gives the name
of poverty to the want of superfluities.
He who is false to the present duty
breaks a thread in the loom, end will see
the effect when the weaving of lifetime
is unravelled.
Those who. without knowing us, think
or speak evil of us, do us no harm; it is
not us they attack, but the phantom of
their own imagination.
There is a joy in good fortune. There
IA a far higher in the mind's gain of
knowledge or truth. But there is no joy
like the joy of resolved virtue.
Praise, like gold and diamonds, owes
its value only to its scarcity. It becomes
cheap as it becomes vulgar, and will no
longer raise expectation or animate en-
terprise.
Words praise, indeed, are almost as
necessary to warm a child into a genial
life as acts of kindness and affection.
Judicious praise is to children what the
,ian is to flowere.
There is nothing keep.' longer r:hel 4
:Ili -idling fortune. and nothing melte
, way sooner than .. great one Poverty
reside upon th. eel. wren. en..4 ,onee
toned riche.
eh., woes,
. As.rue,
este it: e .p..1 [kg gond offering and ..ri
riling 'teen th. •nttuence ovine
.'*mon. aa th- heliotrope turns tre .areot
- the out.
Math evermore overlooks 'tit ifficul
:ies of the way, and bends her eyes only
t. the end She looks back to the Cross
.or • at peace and forward rt he
wa. and tants for its possession
...to a not like • proud benefactor
n• 'omen, with doing that which
•01 satisfy his sense of his own glory,
net like a mother who pats her arm
o-“lind het child and whose heart is
fra• till she can make her child nee the
loto which w her glory -George Mao
toriela
Ay. ocrount
rHx HuRoti SIGNALFRID
Fun no Fancy
_ -
Never to/4M & tailor •t% ea may tune
• He tuav 'lave priming totamone • • errend
t..
it LIANA:. ,Itt.lt .ttt sAtouainn...
unsenhe at elephant. taper, :.t tt quit
!thing -that oicks ui... with aa.
Dail rot, &VOL' Kiln* 4441ti &Hurd
I Ilittieh of himself woo• den • lo/ ran.. • ,•••
Albioct for aonversaten
Hoe tat u.
swat tD Well acne
umbra but it you tarn the -the, or.," r V a
shun isa/f tulle
Thum ety• -uareolo, ,teit
expression that made her feu
, u pointing to an ebony case of
eltittaware ; that is illy brick -lot taibi-
Pelioitorev t/Y LIFE. A very rich
man said, " I worked like a slave till I
wad forty to make my fortune, and I've
been watching it like a detective ever
since for my lodging, food and clothes."
Whenever you find a house with a
motto : " Weloome" hung si* that it
catches every eye, you needn't be sur
prised at a cold dinner and a hint that
keeping boarding-house doesn't pay in
these dine*. -[Detroit Free Press.
Fashionable young lady at s social ga-
thering remarks, jestingly : "1 wonder
how much I would bring if I was put up
at auction and sold to the highest bid-
der ?" "Just about $3,000." " Why,
my jewelry alone is worth that." " Yes;
thet's what I put it down in my estimate."
An Englishnuan says that no other peo-
ple in the world, so far as he knows, can
equal the Arkansans off -hand exaggera-
tions. " Do you see that spring overt
there, stranger i" said one of them to
him. He said he did, whereupon the
settler added: ' Well, that's an iron
spring, that is, and it's $o mighty power-
ful that the farmers' horses about here
that drink the water of it never have to
be shot'. The shoes just grow on their
feet net'rally."
Somebody aaked Baron Rothschild to
take venison. " No," replied the Baron;
" I never eighth venshen. I don't tink it
ish so good aa mutton !" " Oh," said the
Berun's friend, " I wonder at you saying
so. If venison is not better than mutton,
why does venison cost so much more ?"
" Vy," replied the Baron, "1 vill tell
you vy. In dish world the people always
prefersh wat ish deer to mat ish sheep."
Pretty Prattler (site; the wedding
breakfast departure of the happy pair).
Child-" Why do they throw things at
the pretty lady in the carriage ?" Young
Lady -" For luck, dear." Child-" And
why doesn't she throw them back ?"
Young Lady-" No that would be rude."
Child (promptly)---" No, it wouldn't.
MA tineh :" Pleasant for ma -and pa -
who overhear, and know that others
overhear also.
" Oh, pahaw !" petulantly exclaimed
Mies Lydia languieh, looking up from
the last new novel in response to a re-
quest from her mother to come and
assist in preparing dinner. "Oh, pshaw
I ain just where Edward de Couroey
Montalbert is about to propose to the
Lady Ethelinda. Adele St. Clair, and I
wish dinner had never been invented
And the look of supreme disgust that
dashed from her eyes showed that she
meant it.
Very ready to relinquiah his loot when
there was no help for it was a Chicago
negro, caught by a poultry fancier in the
act of carrying off some of his live stock,
challenged "What are you doing with
my chickens?" "I was gwine ter fetch
'em back, boss," explained he. "Dere's
a nigger roun' here what's been disputin'
along er me 'bout dem chickens. I said
dey wus Coachin Chynit, an' I was jest
takin 'em roun' fer ter 'stablisti my nollid-
ge. Dey don't lay no aigs, does dey,
boss? Ef dey does, I'm mighty shamed
of hustlin"em roun'; aigs is scase.
Some forty years sinde s shoemaker
resided in Brechin, Forfarshire, who,
like many other followers of the •raft,
must have been something of an humour-
ist, for he fixed a signboard •'ver the door
of his shop, on which eaue painted a
pair of torn and a pair • .f menden shoes,
with the following inscription beneath :--
When boots and shoe• are nearly ended.
Here they ran be neatly metaled
Hy George Tytlet
But gentlo folks, what do yen think?
1 must have the ready chink
04&HT TROTTING
•Ilt aaginamaitit wean aenssele-4111e Fro -
Meta Mon all Vast Illoserdit wI'l be Illaaessx
ro
ehlw inoriorturgame 1U1101. .1i ts,
auk o. Ili ear -Amoco etruiriug
• *moment in sporting ciroine M. Robert
Reiner is confident thro
tus tenuous Lorena Ain h.wer the tame mull
urtheo MI Kt MIMI/ .• .putioe
Ilia' Lae tamest
MOMS DOOR Illatte by tent
atienii I
that a1.i1 1.0h :liar
.1fa.009
Mr. Saabs* Poole. •wner e saw mill
ea Lake Opinieeta, is mussing He was
haat seen at tampion. *herein. •etreteuted •
e.me tritons
als• •Ar 11Pralla IA rikl•
n t.hia eurd and
the, •hetre are not more of
cars tees for praise than for appreciation
They hare an ideal after which they aro
..it) 11
them who
striving but of which they -orisciously
fall short as every one who has t lefty
ideal is sure to 4.• When that oleat no
recognised by mother anti 'he) tre
praiser, 0 eommeeded to. sentethine
let that soniething be important .r not
it. to tireetion thea aro gratefid, no. ,
tot the (muse but for appreciation An
element of sympathy raters into that
nicognition, and they feel that they have 11
something in encomon with the onserver
reacteso
• tue 'Ib flits
horses end
ne• unti be
dapaeta wen. t. ...SOY() the,
DID Oa piatirtlellit) 0 wittiemuig the I
attempt .1 Harm. re trot 5 Kole ti. tem'
to Milo. -I he ma* put Um,: F. 'reel ltt
his mettle to heat any tint. yet made.
A Hensid reporter *eked Mr. Bunion
yesterday whether he thought the reword
communed the fastest time that could be
made in a utile trot.
" I du not think so," replied Mr. Bon-
ner emphatically, "for the reason that I
have timed Rarus myself in 2:114 on a
three-quarter track. I «Insider Rarus a
faster horse than St. Julien, and I think
nearly all experienced horsemen will tell
you the same thing, although I think
very highly of St. Julien. The trotting
record will possibly yet be lowered to
2:06, 2:07, or 2:011. Some horsemen
think that two minutes. will be reached,
but I hardly expect that. Rarus, I am
confident, can trot a mile on a mile track
in 2:10 or better. You see I any limited
on my farm to a three-quarter track, as
it is difficult among the hills of Westches-
ter county to get a mile track and have
it level. When Lady Suffolk trotted in
2:264, or Flora Temple in 2:194, it wu
thought that the record (amid not be
beaten. There was the same opinion
about Dexter's trottir w 2:174, and I
may say here t' --t there are horsemen
who think his equal has never been foal-
ed. Eight or ten years ago, however,
tracks were not planed as level as billiard
tables, toe -weights ware unknown, and
instead of forty-eight and fifty pound
sulkies they had sulkies weighing seventy-
five or eighty pounda Now, the fastest
mile to wagon was that uiade by Edwin
Forest in 2:154, and although I paid
*16,000 for him he wouldn't have been
worth *500 without toe -weights. To-
day I wouldn't take $430,000 for him, as
I consider him the greatest wagon -horse
in the world. Maud S. wouldn't proba-
bly have been worth *500 without 'toe -
weights' either. When Mr. Vanderbilt
bought her he wouldn't use them, but
Maud S, couldn't go faster than an ordi-
nary road horse without them, and now
she trots with toe -weights. As to the
lighter sulkies we have to -day, we are
getting the trotting record so near to the
running horse time that every pound
tells. Take two thoroughbred horses in
England worth, for speed, 10,000 and
2,000 respectively, put 20 pounds more
weight on the former than on the latter,
and the 2,000 -guinea horse will beat his
higher priced rival. As we have 10
horses to -day that can beat 200 for one
horse that could beat it before the intro-
duction of toe -weights, I believe we shall
have still greater improvements that will
materially reduce the record.
"
From whaOstocIt is the finest trot-
ting performance likely to be obtained ?",
" We want a greater infusion of thor-
oughbred blood in our trotting horses.
That will give them more speed and en-
durance. Fifteen twenty -years ago we
looked to Maine and Vermont for trot-
ting horses. During the last ten years
or so Orange county has been drawn upon,
where there is more thoroughbred blood,
and now we are getting horses from Ken-
tucky which are still more thoroughbred.
Although there is a difference of opinion
among horsemen as to the breeding, it is
conceded that if you want to breed a 2:30
horse you can do so with more certainty
by confining yourself to our trotting
horses : but if you want a good one in the
future. you must have an infusion of
thoroughbred blood.
-
lit view of St. Julien's recent record
the reporter recalled to Mr. Bonner his
offer of $100,000 some years ago for a
horse that could beat a nertain perform-
ance of Dexter.
"1 made such at offer,' replied Mr.
Bonner. when 1 tiroa., Dexter to road
wagon on Prospect park in 2:214. He
carried 319 pounds on that •tccasion, be-
ing timed by Messrs. William M. Parke,
James Bache. Oeorge Hall and several
other gentlemen I offered *100.000 for
any horse Outs ...dd equal that perform-
ance with such 4 weight
The reporter auggesteo has 4Hian1111
lulng St .Julien • reeN.r. aown to
2.09 . ouble r1& f speed would kei
keetilt impreciatoo Mr ii..rinet thus
made the tolh,wIng annoonnemero
1 (wenn shortly •• lel Rama
Edwin Forrest trot s mil.- or, • nide track.
although •annot to-dav give thr out,-
••ulars 1 n. satisfied that Ramp ',an
heat any leave tti the world • will net
let my Loners tit a .i publi. 1.-1
and unless you g. money th. horse
receives a, record tot his performance
As 1 never trot my boron.. •o. money if
Rarus should make 2 10 at. the public
perfornamo nave spoken off h. would
nor get this rectoocat record n. matter
hoe many thousand enectators totneseed
the feat
who admires what they adman and boot egg shot to Rear
prmses what they Walt is moat worthy brook .ti Wednesday night It had
of remise killed +ever& moves during the week
E. L JOHNSON
7
Phoiouglicr,
'tows thiseseara West end Semen
▪ ,). sib 451101...5% 11116
410.4
'JOHN ACHESON
orpswei derisi the peat new luau, ateerie
$6,0011 nil el
GOO
HE Or"r2..L. NOT BE T.T7111.1DELFL8C).L..LD _
Fa ,eapeotratly Welted. Coen one 40119,..
i*bx IOHN ACHIEGN-
ROP BIT+
•••4414041110, .04 ••
niOrtil, MIAMI% ALAN trellA ma.
DANDICLION:
Amp Tun Pc Ilan 4/1» Main Nzon.p3.
?Ina Or •Lt. ovens arms&
'I" I E 1L.7 11
All Dismiss -sof the Stomach, Bowels, blond.
Liver, 1:14asys, sad Urinary Organs, Der
tounaosavinseplessaesssad
moats Cianaptalnlia
IIII000 IN COLD.
win ee paid for a ease they &Ili nut cure ,,r
8.10,0, for anything Imports 'r tuJur.ou.
found la:atm.
At yew erligetat for Hop Inners and try
tbare before you beep. Take ae Other.
Pond's Extract
Subduer higtrotontaion.C'ontrole all Hewtorrh
age*, Acute and Chronic, Venous aiid Mweewa
The W-Ondar of Healing.
HEYWOOD SMITH, M. D., M. R. C.
r.. au., of the Hospital for Women
in Soho square,London, writing to "The
Lancet," waderte of August 23, 1079,5575
"POND'S Extract is a good preparation. I
have used it for some time (ten to fifteen
minims) with marked benefit in cases of
passive uterine hemorrhage."
POND'S EIKTRACT.
THE YIKIBTABLZ PAIN DESTROYER.
DR. ARTHUR GUINNESS, F. R. C.
S. of E se,: "1 have prescribed
N
POD'Sah"FRACT for Hemorrhages of
dirent kinds, for Hemorrhoids, and for
affections of the eyes, and also Rheumatic
inflammatory swelling of the joints, with
great success."
Also supported by the following able phy-
sicians;
POND'S EXTRACT.
HEALINti-4
DR. HERING, a physician of national
reputation, says: "This medicine comprises
the virtues of Aconite and Arnica, end con-
tains a tonic property which renders it im-
mensely superior to both."
POND'S EXTRACT.
A RENOWNED MEDICINE.
DR. A. E. SUMNER, of Brooklyn, N.
Y., writes in the Medical Union: "Out of
139 oases of Egyptian Ophthalmia (disease of
the eye). 139 cabs were cured by POND'S
E X TRACT."
POND'S EXTRACT.
USED ONCIL-CEED ALWAYS.
DR H. G. PRESTON, of Brooklyn, N.
Y.: "1 know 04 1.0 remedy so ges.11y use-
ful in • tato'!y. "
CAUTION.
(11-0 PC.)
ID
agitate.
• 1. wriaMet.
C. Strachan's
POE
anneriell, Orockery anct. Glassware.
The elbowing. VsaMf any home. Oreeeriee silvers kept ow haad..e.1 •4a wens Moe ennolow Water. 09
lthe t
CASH PAID FOR FARM PRJOIDUCE.
The Old Stand -south sidenif Court Howie OQUIDer.
1:020 1). C. STRACH AN.
W. MITCHELL
KEEPS " THE CHEAPEST AND BEST
Groceries, Crockery & Glassware
IN TOWN -AND V AKE/4
TEAS A, SPECIA.LTY.
GIVE HIM A CALL.
W. MITCHELL,
1751 Hamilton Street, Ooderich
GOING OUT OP BUSINESS.
kW' tag decided to give eabusiness in Ooderich.
The Misses Mitchell
will clear out their w hob Stork within One Month. at
tTnprecedenteclly Low Priam,-
-
wit VAN OSTER
Great Bargains in Every Limn.
And we quote the wtag by way of illustration
Berlin Wool- all shades--reduoed from 20c. 16c.
Fleecy and Fingerings -best -4 skeins for 30c.
Ribbons and Laces below the original cost.
Silk Flosses and Fillocelles at Ife/f former pricea,„
And everything else in proportion.
AP- This u a Genuine Sale, as we have fully decided to retire from business.
Call early and make purchases at our CLEARING SALE Rants before the stock geta
too reduced.
B. & R. MITCHELL,
1752 The Square, Ooderied.
POND'S EXTRACT is .old only DI bottles
with the name blown in the glass, and our
d'^ections. Iambi on Mein( POND'S EX
TRACT D
ame all imitations sad substitute&
t•' It is unsafe to use other articles with onr H ARD
landscape bode:mark on buff wrapper.
Pram of POND'S EXTRACT, 50c., $1.00 4, $175.
POND'S EXTRACT CO.,
14 West 14th Street, New York.
Sold bp au Druggists.
•
no "ORLY" LOH P1.1
Idasiefsetsred hy tbe er*4
ingbalgst Lanmer rad Co.,
Absolutely cures Asthma, Bronchitis,
Catarrh, Hay Toyer. all Throat and Lang
diseases, relieves and suss Consumption
A read or this excellent remedy coats you ne
more thaa Orta VISIT IrItOarrOon Pwructo., to say
nothing of Prep:Spikes. The fart th.,dimase auk
kis cured by Assoarrrow is well ena hi to:heti The
'Ot.tv'' Luton PAD contains the ernho.tol' , Man
research of some of the beat mod:: al stud • aog
Writers in the world, mel onus yea a Sol,
druggists throughout the Domino.,
GOLD FLAKE
C rme ip the heat pine emetritei tobacco war
D
,..4ri-d dee mai opes* 4 •••+
Cments. itottoraialarbode (rem she
5. hew
*4.h fits r.455. • it mob reser ewer
jbecirostem,trocateletbertreedl as Camm& •
1.1* made shieldety roe and wally peeked le
••:let .104'.
el the
It pit= teorterbk dealers b peon
Manebenned09
THE GLOSS TO bACCO CO ffnuesse.
WARE
Fe EV ER) DESC RI PTTON
Reduced to Bottom Prices!
Farm and School Bells. Household Hardware -et diaceant prices. Builders' Hardware sad
Tools at Wholesale Prices. Lancet contracts ailed at Manufacturers' Prices.
1.1 P_A_RS01\TS,
ca -o
1751
1\TCYTIC.
CLEARING SALE
R&olh purehatitni the *well of the GODRILICH FOUNDRY & MANUTacTilitifit. 001e
consisting of one 40 -horse Engine, one 20 -horse do., two 5 -horse do . new and
second-hand Boilers. A lot of Flour Mill Machinery, Saw Mill Machinery, Plows.
Gang Plows, Land Rollers, Straw Cutters, Horse -Powers, Brass Fittings for Engines,
Oss Pipe and C1&. Pipe Fittings, Cooking Stoves, and a large assortment of castings
in genend use The above stock will be sold cum, to make room for the month.
tura of other articles Orders taken for Engines, Boilers, and all kinds of Mill
Work Repair. attendeot n the shortest notice. Address
D#177.1) RITNCLICAN & Co., Goderich
;Mercantile printing
0 t Every 'Variety.
•
4 RIM
1 II11 It
& A 801Na%
MEMGRANDUM:.
RNA GSA loift,
°heap and in the Beet Style '
MO,Itt/CUDDY BROS..(Svnai ()ince
• •