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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1881-02-25, Page 6w..I•....Ms•..'e•l 1.Rw�xY1e,.'A► '•► i.V-I•-a zsa.n M•.�sYMw�.H.sia TC'�_... THE HURON SIGNAL, FRIDAY, FEBR.UAR '2T, 1881. She Poet's Corner. r.e slmaresa Time elan. deterred iteeketh the hear rick; but whoa desire cometh, it is a tree of Lie."- Proven.* AM. 11. 'Meteor, dans ot silent renew t the Qasoms et our lite There are wild dmpained! menaink Vere are hoar, ot meatal ante; Throe are times et u.eaW ar•eaieh• Whoa rhe Is begin to tali; Hat the weltber time. my brothers. la the hardest of nein all. Ysstlt and love ase eh ImssUeat. Hnihtag tabtics begomd their reach, Aad the heart grows sick of hoping. Wok naso,, what We era teach; t'or before the truth be gathered. Ws meet se the blots.ms tall. And the waiting time, my brothers, Is the hardest time of all. You can bear the beat of conflict Though the sudden crushing blow, Beating trek our gathered fume For • moment lays us ow; We may rite again beneath It, Nene the weaker fur the fall: Aad the welting time, my brothers, Is the hardest of them all. !'or it wears the eager spires, As the salt waves weer the stone: And the garb of hope grows threadbare, Till the brighten tints are flown; Then amid youth's radiant trauma. Silent mows begin to fall; tri, the waiting time. sr Wetter', Is the hardest time of all. But at last we learn the lesson That God knowetb it beet; For, with wisdom uumetb patiosos. And of patience cometh rest; Yea, a golden thread is alining Through the tangled woof of fate; And our hearts shall thank him meekly, That He taught us how to wait farm area tbaraen. -- BANKING t"r Ho17i17t—Build your cel- lar walla of stone, well laid in cement, taking care that none of the stones reach through the wall; put in double windows, tightly fitted, and you will have a cellar frust -prom. The aluount of three con- sumed in ten years in 'banking -up' would build a good wall. Banking -up the house is always a disagreeable and often a filthy job, discoloring the house, lit- tering the yard, etc., and it is wholly unnecessary. The best way to t-entilete a teller ia to build the chimney from the cellar bottom, leaving a hole at the lease for the escape of the bad air, and from which the soot can be taken. Where the chimneys are already built a ventilator running from the cellar can be cheaply arranged. Fresh air can be admitted by the windows; or, better still, ventilators can „ be placed in the cellar walla These can be opened, cl osed,lor partially closed, as the weather varies. Plenty of light is must convenient, and promotes cleanliness. A dark cellar is almost sure to be a dirty one, and vice versa. .ttelmosus Bcus. -It nruet be a false idea • of neatness which demands that beds should be made soon after being vacated. Let it be remembered that inure than three-fifths of the solids and I; luids taken into the stomach should pass off through the pores of the skin— seven millicons in number -and that this escape is more rapid during the night, while warm in bed. At least one half of the waste and putrid matter—from twenty to thirty ounces in the night— must because more or leas tangled in the bedding, of course soiling it, and a part ..f this may become reabsorbed by the skin, if it is allowed to corse in contact with it on the next night, and it must if the bedding is nut e:oposed for a few hours in the air and light. We niay well imitate the Dutch example of plac- ing such bedding on two chairs near the eindow in the sunlight, or in the window, that the best purifier known, the light of Gen. great ea 1S Press. /!t the Press Club dinar in New York recently, Cion. Grant made the fol- lowing humorous referenoe to some of the characteristics of newspaper ;men: - I sunless to • little egtkr/ttwmsnt this evening iu being called upon unes- psolsmy • to thy a word before a yet of such diffident men as compose out only the Prises Club, but these associated with the press of the country. 1 thought this was an evening that I wits going to spend where all would be quiet and gond order, (applause) where nobody would have anything( to say. We all kquw the characteristic modesty of the people associated with the press. (Laugh- ter.) They never want to iuquire into anybody's affairs (laughter,) know where they' are going, (laughter), what is suffering and struggle au palpably. Be- side hint, (loath seers to stand crowned by effortless sielii entent. But what a pair they are : RUetache I's great succuss in his statues lies in his subtle expreer- iun of their noble friendship. Gumbo's hand on Sehill.r's shoulder, and the one laurel writtlt which the hands of both touch, itt such e Ise that you cannot be sure which gives or which takes, sym- bolise a reality far too rare in the annals of literature. - [Critical Essays. t'e.Ites7 N cterth-risen. A young watt was seen to enter e church during service. He paused at the entrance; the congregation stared; he advanced a few steps, and calmly sur- veying urveyiug the whole assembly, commenced a deliberate march up the broad aisle. they are going to do, (laughteri, what )iota pew upeuld; the audience wore they are going to say when they get there, and resfy thought that you would exare me this evening. But I suppose you'will expect f,r►s to say something about the press—the press Of New York, the primp! the d'nited States, the prem of tMWorld. It would take a good deal of tune to tell what it is possible for the press to do. I confess at souse period of my life when I have read what yuu had to say about rue, that I have lost all faith and all hope. (Laughter and ap- plause. But since a young editor (Mr. Ford) has spoken for the press and has fixed the lifetime of a geueratiun of the newspaper men at about twelve years, (applause and laughter), I have a grow- inge hopwithin me that in the future tine press may bauble to do seine of the great good which we all admit it is possi- ble fur it to do. (Applause and laugh- ter'. bore it off and placed it where he had I have been somewhat if a reader of newspapers for forty years. I could found it. The congregation is now the read very well when I was eight yeah of meat polite and attentive to stranger in age and it has given IIIc forty years of Ante' [Ex. If You Want C+ood GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, CROCKERY, or GLASSWARE, too busy for civility. He wheeled, and in the saute manner performed • march, stepping as if to "Roslyn Castle," or the time of the "Dead March in Saul," and disappeared. A few minutes after he re-entered with a large block upon his shoulder, aa much as he could well stag- ger under. Again the good people started, and half arse from their sesta, with their books in their hands, At length he placed the block in the very centre of the principal passage, and seated himself upon it. When for the first time the reproach mu felt. Every pew dour in the house was instantly thrown open. But no, the stranger was a gentleman; he came not there for disturbance; he moved not, smiled not, but preserved the ut- mcat decorum until the service was con- eluded, when he deliberately shouldered the block, and, to the same slow step, observation of the press, and there is Urnaziae: St'CPL('a Arrttts. -- "We one peculiarity I have observed, and that ia in all of the walks of life out- side of th press, the , people have entirely mistaken their profession, their occupation. (Laughter.) I never knew a mayor of a city, or even a councilman of any city, any pub- lic officer, any Government official, 1 never knew a member of Congress, Senator or President of the United States, who could not be enlightened in his duties by the youngest member of the prey. (Laughter.) I never knew $ General to command a brigade. a gilt -is -- ion, a turps, or army, who could begin to do it as well as men far away in their sanctums, and I often wondered. I was very glad to hear that the newspaper fraternity were ready to take with per- fect confidence any office that might be tendered to them from I'reaident to Mayor, and I have often been astonished that citizens have not done so, because they knew all these offices would have been well and properly filled. ,Laugh ter.) Well, Gentlemen, I am very- happy to'luve been here with you and I hope when the new generation about twelve years hence comes up that I will dine with the Press Club of New York City, and I will see those of this generation, who are so well fitted to fill all civil offices, have all been chosen, and that there will be nothing left then to crit- icise. I thank you, gentlemen." G.etbe and itebifler. Goethe had dark biewn hair and eyes, the latter large and almost preternatural- ly luminous. His complexion, ala:, was more olive than fair; the nose nearly Roman, but with a Greek breath at the base and senaitive, dilating uustrils; the mouth and chin on the sculptor's line, the Hun, dissipate the impurities, or ample, but so entirely beautiful that neutralize then. At least three hours,] they seemed smaller than their actual ..n the average, is as short exposure as 0 compatible with neatness CARROT" FOR ANIMALS. The carrot is the most esteemed of all roots for its feeding qualities. When analyzed it eves but little more solid matter than :any other Mote, 85 per cent, being water; but its influence on the stomach on other articles of food is most favorable, con- tributing to the most perfect digestion and assimilation. This result, long known to practical men, is explained by hamlets as resulting from the presence of a substance called 'peetine,' which operates to coagulate or gelatine veget- able solutions, and favors this digestion on all cattle. Horses are specially inne- fitted by the use of carets, and they xhonld be fed frequently with their proportion. His face was always more er leas tanned; he really lost t.hn brand of the sun. , In his later years it became ruddy, and a siight increase of fulness effaced many of the wriekl.o of sr Stieler's portrait (now in the Goethe mansion, painted when the poet was 80, expresses an astonishing vital power. Preller once said to me. "Therm never was such life in so old $ man ' Tf s can non hall had suddenly goosed my heed, I could r.nt have been more startled than I heard of his death. I felt sure that ho would live to be 1b0 year old "' If Goethe illustrates as .careelyaty .thee poet (yet we imagine both Heater sad Shakespeare to have poesee.ed thPuree), the perfect &cooed of ;ntelleetual .And physical forms, Schiller. u equally ro- ther food. Mad all sections of the markable as an er.ample o' a ruled tri - Western country produce, when thor- umpiring over inoesaant bodily weave's. •ilgbly cnitivatvl, bpuntifnl crops of and torments. Dunne, Fu:rteen peter' carrots, and they can be raised at a he never knew a day of complete lin- trifling expense. shak.n health. He was fair and free: • Tres Hoasa'' Bir. Let any one tel, with it. dklieeme a skis Nat the whn has the care of ahorse these slightest excitement of 1,.ts bin•.d hl:ceh- e 1 threagh i:. Hos thin, aggravated, aquiline nose was s, c•.napicu eus that he often laughingly referred ta it as the triumphant result of constant pinching and pulling during his school diem His ehifi was almost equally I•niselomat, i iv ing hive what his stater Oltrileophowi called "a defiant and spiteful under lip His shock of hair not parting int.. half ,•old, freely morn n p deliberately ;hasp in his ben.i a piece of iron; indeed, let him tench it to the tip of his tongue, and then let him thrust the bit into the month of a horse if he has the heart to do it. Theo horse is as animal of ner- . nus nrganisat.ion. His mouth is formed of delicate glands and tisanes And it ei not • naan.ntery pain the home snfet' when he Lakes a frosty hit Fnn.I is curlalikeOnstIie's, but straight i tit tang, -at.en with olifimlty and the irntteven wax „f yellow 'brown hu. "sfmmtiring wp.atted day alter day, Clint** loo of intoe nodi a t'aedese t Weir/igen vie Appetite iad lues of strength Man, it tiara/1Y say The picture •e' him ' korai her inrMmw .. ,th1M- •a •' `e* spml.athte m hes 'sat • r titan* ether caws than this e,wav•,i. .• ierhanthorsus,eheeei.ren.,• —GO TO -- D. FERGUSON'S Hamilton Street, Opposite Bailey's Hotel. In addition to the ordinary linen of the Oroeery and ('rockery Trade. I carry a fu stock of Floor, Meals, Pork anOliOf Pro!sious MY MOTTO IS. "Fair Dealing and Moderate Prices." know of at least one farther in this Stat. who makes a speciality of drying apples for market, chiefly of the late summer and earl' fall varieties. In a room in the domestic department of his house he has constructed a sheet -iron hot air chamber or flue, connected with a large dove, this heated chamber being provi- vided with a aeries of trays, or deep 'pan -like shelves, and upon these the shoed green apples are placed, where they remain until thoroughly dried. During the period when the early ap- ples are coning on he employs two or three girls, who are kept paring and pre- paring the apples for drying for'nany weeks in succession. They ate all care- fully sliced, and when dried are packed in boxes of five and ten pounds respect- ively, labelled with his name and the name of the fatty, arid thus put upon the market. They find a ready sale, and the proprietor tells us the demand for dried apples of his 'trade nark' is constantly increasing." - Farmer and Dealer. Cell Oil ahroleMd. See my Stook and get my prices. dr Goods delivered to any part of the Town. D. Ferguson. HOPE ICOM CONBIQI' flee what ink_rosoms. sad rte Pee N may eieot DOOTIPfl lilraWWa 61 GOD GIVER OIL Ai0 IIV~•O~MOO. !MEL�e, amid Wed7lise �` £i •sse a ihereira Marra Some & Bowes: Oeu uestanjvet ha% • led dopes Eneeles et Cod • OU. ac..ukm7 prastiat and used U to say Gum Uy. I am greatigeased with lta that because of it palatableness the good its taw. I have tumid 1t very s.rvteeabi' lis lees/tektite dinars ands� pyyuuolmonary affeeliotu IRA M. LAN. M.D..V II Ban Broadway, N.Y . 1.ouLvUls, Ky.. Ja•uery3 ret Ls 1 0o a$TL&ii 7 - For the !set fifteen have used your Cod Ltver011 Emulsion. both to hospital and (u private erection, aad here been greatly plessed wee Ea atlsots. 1t is better bonne and can Is. taken for a b time that any other ',reiteration of ('od Liver Oil. In (,•oi.sump Lien and children's disuses 1 have found it especially .'Usable. J01Ila A. OCTKRLONY, M. U.. Via Yb!'alciaa . Loaterele Clty Uusl t* . Messrs. Score & Bowan : I pave used Roott's ndItro Liver ttwit/knee.. Maim d to be e..lytaken.esdy assimllettd, and rapidly lmpprO% ire the nutrition sad flesh. I muskier It the hest Emulsion 1 arra over used. 1!. 6 HAl �(od essapotie IM. nd 1 Messrs. St•onTdt Howitt: 1 have given your remedy of Cod Liver 011 de.. a fair trial. and Ln glad that I can say i think It is TIM [candy fur week lungs and bad ea ughs. I can btgkl7 roo"en me up, 1 comtnencedeuend it. trusing your meditt tee lit I OM kt$d te.vend am gaining health and t.trenge`i very fast and think i.hall soon be well. Yours truly. O. A. 11[EIrOrelv'T �• in.l. ar p'o Et ORNAMENTAL WEDDING CAKES, CHRISTMAS CAKES, CONFECTIONERY OF ALL KINDS CHRISTMAS TOYS and THE BEST BREAD. IN TOWN, a O T O Newspaper laws. We call the special attention oi post- masters and subscriber to the following synopsis of the newspaper laws : 1. A postmaster is required to give notice by letter (returning a paper does not answer the law) when a subscriber does not take his paper nut of the office, and state the reasons for its not being taken. Any neglect to do so "takes the postmaster responsi rte to the publisher for payment.. .. 2. If any person orders his paper dis- continued, he must pay .all arrearage,, or the publisher may contfflue to send it until payment is made, and collect the whole amount, whether it be takes from the office or nor. There can be no. legal diic'ntin :ance until Elle payment 13 made. Any person wild' ttiit b a parer from the pest -office, whether directed to his name or acether, or whether he has sub- scribed or r.ot, is responsible for the pay. 4. If a subscriber order his paper to be stopped at a oertain t:.Te, and the publisher-, continues to sent,• the sob - scriber is bound to pay for it if he takes it out of the poet -office. Tha premeds upon the ground that s reran most pay- for what ho near • 5 The courts leve decided that refus- ing to take a newspaper and periodicals from the lost -office, or sesrvving and leaving them uncalled fur, is prisms feria evidence of intentior.al fraud. At the (present moment there sae more members laid up than was ever known before, and pone of them are so serieua- ly indupt..ed Chet their recovery is doubtful. (-f the Ministry, the two Popes are confined to their bed, as alas ttir Charles Tupper, the latter sbt- tsrieg from inflammation of the lungs. Mir .i ohn is also said W be sick. Messrs. annell sn.l Ei1Lm. from the hewer Provinoes. are laid up with erysipelas, the former seriously In addition, there are several members ..n the sick list who are ',nknown in the West, and ',hese names swaps nee it the niomont, - [Londorn Advertiser Corregwnieat. Near Ombra a girl of thIrteee was robbed by two rtlffiftns, wh'h pot her eyes out with weenies She died ar...n after itt horrible affray The murderer* have not leesn arrested. SeorT g Bowra : I frill' my duty to let you know the benefit I ha ve dert v ed from the use or your Emulsion. I had e t : r had cough for years, and on eonsultlag Dr. E. Gorsuch or J. he city. be informed me gulf no loft lung we. diseased, and prescribed Scott's benulsiun with H,popheePbites. After taking tee Crottles. 1 bntan to tmpreve very rapidly, sad et/tunost using :t until I had taken ten bailee. and now am Y health, a man an there i.. in the city of Baltimore. When I bgtan using it I weighed 145 pounds. I now we lg6 1D pout.,QQts. Your p. 1'. i 'lliait mere. Md. Out. 3. lane. l'.AN A71 DANA: A..Mept. IN•1117. Starr k Boa NE : Oswr e I thought I would Write W you. Y I mw a notice upon yunr bottle, of late upon its long eontieucd nue. This tea proved true in ley ease. 1 was sgctree up to di, consumption. March with eonsuptlon. the beet medical aid made no tree of way treatment. Mybushes 1 applied for your Emulsion of ('dal Liver Oil ; he D. CANTELON'S hes hue xp ting to be r of my ad tt rvcr day me to health brvood the expect/ite ms of bu• rtug deeds r x ee tlWt W hear tit my death eve 1 should like to take 1t fora year. when. I 'tie1 will be perfectly rand.! -WE.`(T STREET, Gf'DERICH.-Vv,• Yours withT°�e°R MRS. LDR1DOl:. rFr!'Ldiss requiring Christmas Cakes should send in their orders without debar For sale by drutt iets at et per bottle. Mil Hone -mode cakes taken in and ornamented on short notice, and at reasonable rales' - :IOPEAA from Brasil, la now orfs,, i$Io (ands it u a mild purgative, flbtjsq as • wander epee, sad gtvtng strength and energy to the digestive us of the human stomach, for re ng and innreasing the arnds. It is .IrertRly anti bilious ante-srriea nff all maples bile ton •+laver ,.i mend digestion st =SNP and elle iotri sk JoNMi flM a ben giant aseastio beetle dui •'lest 7ewase the new enetnennd, lame ajght eeinrs iv.ttle Tr, emit* 111 o R m etd s. ar A a OPicture Framing and Repairing a Speciality. O FARMERS O 2ad 0 0 K I= R= ct I WONT BE UNDERSOLD by any other ntan in the furniture m liminess, as I buy close and buy for cash, and CASH customer will d.. well to C give me a call. ey James G. Ball, t Ippxoaite VI'ataon'e bakery. id -Stephen Ball is prepared to take boarders, either ladies or gentlemen. 188], JANUARY 1881 E. & J. DOWNING Return thanks for the very liberal patronage accorded them, and wish all their customer and friends a Happy New Year We would also. call your attention to the fact that we have a very large stock of Seasoriable Goods on hand including 2 ADIEB, C+ENT8 8z C1-III4ID1REN'8 B00T8 8z 81-1O3E18 of every conceivable style and price, many lines of which will be sold at a great reduction previous to stock taking. Don t fail to call on us when requiring any thing in our line as we have the f„es a ewe w Largest Stock of Shoes West of Toronto and we can and will sell at prices that will suit you. ORDERED WORK ei every description promptly attended toand satisfaction guaranteed. We keep a large staff of oompetent workmen, and being ourselves pramiesl men of large experience, can turn out work UNSURPASSED IN "r tlE DOMINION. THE SQUARii, OODERICB. Sri Daniel Gordon, Ciml—Mfter aid lloiertior. Oldest Howse is the t.ownty, rrrtd Lltyes! :Nor': IM. side of Loader! Pantos Scrrts, BED -Roost Sorrels, Stfl>.-BoA1n•>� sv Castile, *1 n I. Antes,Nne. , pro. '1$ I Btlynrr will ta1 11 to their advantage tepee my neck if they moire ret article at stow erten. n. OORDON, Wpsd Street, weer Tort n)>Iot OoderwA. GET SOU AUCTION SALE 3 PttHf'r'1t1ii %be ass. nese ,. !t'orth TILE (:l(KATIySI WON DER OF MODEM/ T I MES I --The Pills Purify the Brood. corrects' disorders of the Liver..Stomach, Ridne',sad Bowels and are In taailrosnplal1iis In cid ental to remakes The Oiists.eat is the eels reliable remedy for Bad Lege, Old Wound.. Sores and !leers. of however long standing For Bronchitis, Irl ph theta.. Cougkal'oids,Oeiie . Rheumatism and all Skin Diseases, 1t Itas u.p BEWARK OF AMBitICAN COUNTZI1 FRITS. - I meet respectfully take leave to est the attention of the Publicgenetan, to the foes that cereals Houses 1■ IlewYsek reeeadhlgto many pada of the glebe s,VwYot:a IYITAT>Dm,t of ml PRi• and Ointment. T see trends hos on their labels some sddreen In New York. 1 do not stow my Medicine to he acid leaay part of the United States I tare no Agendafierr My Medletnes are only made by mo, at 533 Oa ford Stead, l.asdoa. in the $eoksoe direction. affixed to t1e spurious make is • mutate ware - Ing the Public against bet deceived b1l Dour. terfetts. Ito not be misled thio attdadon.. trick. a they aro tae ass dna they pnessd indenoessee. These counterfeits ere purohesed byunprtaripled Vendors Vendor, itt one-balf the Woes( my PillsandOlntenestand are seed toyen IOW? Resume Mediolaee. e•reeses mem' to butt sense of Justice which i feel sure i may VOL ture upon staking from all honorable penman, to assist me, and he P.hlts mbar Y may Ile L their power. In denouncing this sh•mstulut Fraud Each PM aad Het et the Oenntee Medicine bears the British °overawes; Stampp with the words "HOL.owAT t PILI AaD OOrTrtnn. Loons.' esprseed ghernoa. On the label 1 the address,133 Oat ed Street. Loedma whore alone they are Masahotnred. HolPelle and (lfwtstent bearing any gore. od&eaa (te- amster/Wt. e- amst r/ett. The leads Marks M these Med ethos are registered in Ottawa Helios any ese throughout the+ British Possessions, who may keep lite Americas counterfeits for Pale veUl M powdered. mimed) THOMAS HOLLOW A Y Oxford Street, London. Jsa. 1. IMS. HOP B • 1 a (A 31.dlels., not a Omsk,) COITAOrr flora, nVCHU, MA''tli1L![E, DAADELIYN. ♦x. Tae Ptseer.an Rare an,[: a:.Q',ay:. Tt. N ALL Oras* TIIIM Y CIS It ANn•w.esof theato mh, Rowels.3tooa Liver,ary organs. iv-- T..matit N a Ns tally $1000111 COLD. M pard for • awe they wit; Sat .care a•h►. ee for Arythlatt Impure or laJrnurs food Ir thewh ►.r rnere lee weep. YTake a. Other .1. C. Y ea sawlata mid tme.t.tt►le arta t. Ilesk.erss, sr of o ea, to*.soe. se.l IOW somas. ria.. slri ILVItr.. I. t.,a Towels, NIA t. --i N G- Ais E �s r!A1°: RtN'EWL. The .. .e «tre�sea �. tiZoni rota s en a eh �.��I Ogg a wwssd0.shh ass f 1e- �A / aet redere t weerlasAir s.M erfm sap tit SERUM GREY NAM TO tT3 UMW COLOR. Wt MA* ...am ttayK►er r'*lent cis j,4 hnttlr F i1,�l AGENTS wPw. 1 .h i Work employment NOat ee.Iced tens laeIce., Mo. eyes