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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1880-11-26, Page 7• • r�.-1 err ��:v,rry ""J, R nes THE HURON SIGNAL, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER SA 1880. Morns of lilisaom. Every trail has just ea much vanity es he wants understanding. An ape is ridiculous by nature, but amen become so by art and study. Humility is the low but broad end deep foundation of every virtue. Ofir The )est that gives pain is no jest, nur is that lawful pastime which inflicts an Ua+ ury. If you want euelwes, excel tbe $; if 71)11 want trieucls, let others zosl you. True quietness of heart u gut by re- sisting our passions, not by obeying The block of granite, which en an Li in the pathway of the weak, eooa ,. • stepping -stone w the pathway the strong.-- Carlyle. Ex ert.t--.One watch set right will do to set maty by, but, un the other hand, one that goes wrong may be the maws of misleading a whole neighbour- hood; and the same may be said of the example we individually set ' to those around us. When a man is prusperous it is essy for him to atop the mouth of conscience, to bribe or abuse it, to Ml it with busi- ness, to treat it with temporal gaieties, or to be flattered into weak opinions and sentences. It is not what people ant, but whet they digest that 'mikes them strung. It is not what they gain, but what they save that makes them rich. It is not what they read, but what they remem- ber that makes therm learned. It is not what they profess, but what they prac- tice that nukes them righteous. How To Rung a Som. -1. Let him have his own way. 2. Allow him free use of money. 3 Suffer him to roam where het►lons.. on the Sabbath. 4. Give him frill access to wicked asuman- ions. L. Call him to no account of his evenings. 6. Furnish him with no stated employment. Pursue any of these ways, and you will experience a moat marvellous deliverance, or will have to mourn over a debased and ruined child. Leases in Ireland a g the poorest tenants having 1)o knowledpe of law are more often forced terns on the pert of landlords than bona fide contracts. The Irish tenant, being poor and ignorant, has to accept what he can get. Unlike the Scottish or English tenant fernier, on a small scale, he cannot make a bar- gain with his landlord He must aooept or go. Now these are facts which we cannot ignore. They are facts which show the stern necessity for a better system. —[Soottish American. SENDING CATTLE r0 ENGLAND.—Mr. G. F. Frankland, of Toronto, who deals largely in sending cattle to England, ad- visee Canadian fanners to fatten their, own stock, and argues that good fat cattle will sell every month in the year. He says: "Canada is still sending her hundred of cattle to England by way of Montreal, and the price the fanners are getting is from three oenta to three and a -half cents per pound, live weight: .▪ whereas, if our people would only keep v these cattle and feed and make them • good, they would have no trouble to re- alize from five to five and one quarter bents per pound, live weight, in April, • May and June. And when we consider the abundance of food we have in Cana - 'de this year, and thegreet want our farmers experience in the scarcity of manure, it is a matter of regret they should sell their cattle at such low prices and lose all the advantages they would derive from home feeding, instead of sending them to great Britain to be finished. 5. The courts have decided that refus- ing to take a newspaper and periodicals ,from the post -office, or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is prune/acid evidence of intentional fraud Mirage Ahead. All the world now looks up to Chicago ns the great western metropolis of America, being far ahead of all compe- ting cities; but none the less so, in its line is Electric Bitten. From their real intrinsic value they have advanced to the front, and are now far ahead of all other remedies, positively curing where every- thing else fails. To try them is to be convinced. For sale by F. Jordan, at fifty cents per bottle. indene,. Messer There in always an active demand for butter that is up to the gilt-edged stan- dard in quality and Dolor. Much butter that is otherwise good sells at a reduction of from three to five Dents per pound, because deficient in color. D•Irymen should then use Wells, Richardson & Co's Perfected Butter Color to give a bright June color. This color ia by far the brighten, purest and best made. Mold by druggists. ,eil1s your throat sore, or are you an- noyed by a oonstant sought If son use promptly "Bryan's Pulmonic Wafer." They will give you instant relief They relieve the air passages of phlegm or mucuous, and allay inflammation, and no safer remedy can be had for ooughs, oolde, or any complaint of the throat or lungs, and if taken in time their efficacy will soon be proved. Sold by all druggists and country dealers ht 45 oenta a box. leave, ■seam it ie said that one net of every four real invalids who go to Denver, Col. to reocver health never rotate to the beat or South except as • corpse. The un- dertaken, next to the hotel keepers, have the most profitable husinne. This excessive mortality may be prevented and patients served and enred under the care of friends rind loved ones at home, if they will but use Hap Bubas an time. This we know. See other oolamn. .t.«..rewty- What is more handsome than • nice bright, clear onmplexion, showing the beauties of perfect health t All ran empty these advantages by using IIlestrie Bit tem impure blood, and all diseases of the Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Iinn- ary Organs are speedily cpretl For nervousness and all attendant ailments, tine area never fading remed and positively cure when all ethers fail. Try the 1Clectric Bitten and he eon vmood of their wonderful merits For sale by F. fotdan. at fifty mints s hottle Elia Fashions. Costs of .arta and plush will still be worn with thin white skirts for 'ening dress this winter. Knit Jersey suits are the warmed things for little boys to wear 1)t the win- ter, but they are very ugly. The "beaded braid" trimming suede of cord wound with • tinsel ur fine metal, is substituted for bead trimming. b embroidered collars like those worn y children, are worn with white muslin dresses trimmed with embroi- dery. The substitution of plush for silk or satin as a ground for let embroidery makes the winter bonnets exceedingly ex- pensive. One of the new bonnets which requires no trimming but strings and • plume or two, in a revival of the old-fashioned cal- ash. The only rule in oumbining the mater- ial of • bonnet is that they must match, and that contrasts must toe confined to the trimmings. Suits of cloth and velvet are made up with the two materials alternating in the skirt breadths, and with two capes, one of each stuff Plush is made into branches of berries, and used to trim bonnets. Pluah leaves set in the long pile are the trimming of some plush bonnets. Brocades with no embroidery mingled with their design are considered rather tame by the dressmakers, who aim at having expensive things rather than pretty things. The mantle culler is the great difficulty about an outside garment now. If that be becoming the rest of the cloak may be even more than moderately ugly and yet peas muster. Children are wearing prettysuits trim- med with plaid, and many of plaid en- tire. The hosiery cones in checks and plaids to match the suits making a very pretty combination. The members of the Princess Louise Dragoon Guards attended the lecture of Mr. Archibald Forbes, the war corres- pondent at Ottawa, in full uniform. The havelock is a long in the shape of a close fitting sack, with narrow fiat kitting' on the side of the skirts, and a deep, round cape with a velvet collar. The only trimming is braid or cord. The Duchess de Berri is the new man- tle. • It is large and flowing, hut is gathered nearly to the waist both in front and at the back. The skirt is turned up about one-third of its depth in the back. Plush is to be the rage, and it is seen in every shade in millinery; all the rich dark shades to which we are accustomed, as well as shaded and mottled plush, chinchilla plush, and bearskin. which is finished in long, course hairs. Among the prettiest and most elegant bonnets seen at • recent opening wan one in heliotrope plush, with a large n.11 around the crown of pansy -colored plush, wound with ropes of the lighter shade. The plumes were shaded in the two tints. Broad strings were roped the same as the roll, and caught in the back with a gold pin. Very.cumfortable h.,ods are made for gir!a of all ages for winter wear. Sense arc cr'otcheted and lined with • wadded cap, others are of quilted satin, and some of velvet and satin, either shirred or plain. Mrnallcr ones are trimmed with lase and ribbon ruchings, larger ones in tips, wings, and feather ruohings. Some of the shapes are real hood, while others are quite scoops, giving the little ones quite a demure look with their bright baby faces. Tits e]uesseet Remedy sinews. De. Ktxo'e New DISCOVERY for Con- sumption is certainly the greatest medi- cal remedy ever placed within the reach of suffering humanity. Thousands of once hopeless sufferers now loudly pro- claim their. praise for this wonderful Discovery to which they owe their lives. Not only does it positively cure Con- sumption, but Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Hay Fever, Hoarseness and all affections of the Throat, Chest and Lungs yield at once to ita wonderful curative powers as if by magic. We do not ask you to buy a large bottle until you know whatou are getting. We therefore earnestly request you to call on your druggist, F. Jordans, and get a trial bottle for ten cents which will convince the most skeptical of its won derful merits, and show You what a regular one dollar size bottle will do. For sale by F. Jardan. BazerwooD, April 10, 1880. Mesons. Perry Davis & Sun & Lawrence, Montreal. Our customers prefer your Pain Killer to any other medicine of the same nature, and say its menta are equal to ali tt claims. Yours truly, BRENTWOOD LUMBER CO. N. Ntrrrr.R. i*See adv. in another column. Me NOR laves. Some years ago Dr. R. V. Pierce, of the World's Dispensary and Invalids' Hotel, of Buffalo, N. Y., and London, was sent for to examine a terrible dis- ease of the knee -joint, resulting in uloetation and extensive sloughing of the hone and tissues. The man's Life had been despaired of by the previous attendants Amputation at the thigh was promptly decided upon and skill- fully performed by Dr. Pierce, and as after treatment to purify the blood and prevent a recurrence of the malady the doctor's Golden Medical Discovery was freely prescribed. The man's system was thorough! purified and strength- ened, he rapidly pined his health, the stump healing, and he is to -city a happy man This can was amongthe first in lon which this wonderful b-paritier was twitted It ha since manifested ita wonderful power over the worst scrotal nus and other blond diseases Taber for • time it an purifies and strengthens the system s. to strongly fortify it against the enereachnients of diseases. Sold by dreggista uunnartaLs, Mic. , Feb. 15th, I n71. Hon. R V. risers far lir - T would say that i have sold ynnr medicines for seven year* The Golden Il(edieal Discovery is the beet cough rime ly i have ever need and to every ease where I have recommended it., it has meal. 1 has. treed it is hraily for my children My wri