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The Huron Signal, 1883-11-02, Page 3i i THE HURON SIGNAL, ?MAY. NOV. 2, [883. 3 Fashion's Fancies. Chesnut h a favorite shade of browu. 7.uuare jackets aro among the cunning y lee. Suits ut rifle green, tailor-made, will he much wuru. Cloth bpnuets will be •urn with cloth dresses. Silver white is the new shade for bri- dal dresses. Sleeves have • decided tendency to fullness at the top. Seal browu suite, tailor -'muse!, are very fashionable. Fur trinfined pelisses will he worn as the season advances. Flaming() pink t. a new shade d,tep enough to be called red Bison hair cloth is the fabric dutiued t, ►uperacdu taunt's (fair. Pointed or tapering crowns for bun- t ems are uo lunger fashionable. New round hats have stiff, high crowns and straight or idling brims. Tapestry or hn,catelfe silks ham parts of the richest velvet coatemes. Large bails and spots aro the newest designs for Oriental and Spanish !aces. Parisians aro cuntbiuinq gray with crimson, yellow, green, blue and rose odor. The long Newmarket chat and the Newmarket b.otnrt, a jockey style, go together. , Greys, browu& and indefinite shades of blue or blue-green bid fair to he rery (popular. Many new buttuts glitter like jewels, being made of eulored pearl and colored metal. Combinations in two materials are largely employed in new full and winter c,st ()mea Plain plaited and gathered skirts will be more worn by fashionable women than any other. • A11 drapery, both at the front and back of the coming costume, is exceed- ingly bouffant. • Ribbons, laces and natural flowers are the ornaments that have taken the place of jewelry. Grey and brown in various sj►ades are the favorite colors for the now felt hats and bonnets, Fur travellitag and utility suits for fall wear, checkered and hair -lined flannels will be much used. Embroidered ladies' cloth costumes will be as popular, and almost as costly, as those of velvet., Astrachan plush and beaver IT its natural Dolor are the preferred trimmings fur winter wraps. Winter cloaks will be very long, high kici n the shoulders, fitting close, and with mall ottoman sleeves. The figures iu the tidiest and most shionable black velvet brocades are utlined and veined with jet. Dresses of:cashmere and silk rennin opular, continue in style. From across the sea come rumors of e decline of colored hosiery and the temaoy of whits balbriggaus again. uttons are small and bullet-shaped, lain jet, metal or pearl, or set with rilliants or cameo, and with painted nters. Thin nets and gauzes, with heavy em- broidered figures in chenille of jet, are the popular fabrics for the new evening toilets. In velvet coat() -nes the skirt is no loner! ' f brocaded velvet, but the figur- ed to , erial is used to make the long bisque or Louis Quinze coat, and the skirt is plain. Mel IIs leateh. Anderson, the wizard, met a Scotch - man who stole a march on him after the following pattern : Enter Scotchman—"I say, are you Professor Anderson r' "Yes, sir, at your service." "\\'eel, you're a smart man, and I'm sunrthiu' at a triok, too, you know." "Ah, indeed, and what tricks are you up to, sir ?" asked the Professor, amused at the simple fellow. "Weed, I can take a shilling and change it into a gold piece." "Oh, that's a mere slight -of -hand trick ; I can do that, too." "No, you ciln't. I'd like to see you try" "Well, hold nut your han•l with a shilling in it. Thisis your .hilling, is it 1".4%14 "Sure, its nothing else." "Hold on to it tight. Presto! chenge. • Now, open your it, -Scotty opened his fat, and there was .7, geld sovereign on his palm. "Week you did it, 1' declare ; much Y obleeged to you !" and the Sootchman turned to go est. "Stay," said the Professor, "you may lose my sovereign." "Yours ! wasn't that m shilling, and didn't gen turn it into this 'ere yellow tulle, sh t Good-bye !" And as he left the reom he was heard to say—"I game 'tare s e.'i anything green about this Another witness. d Sterling, testifies to the • Yellow Oil, which injured knee joint, bousekold remedy for in- pain,enrenee, lamenee,ete., afar b swd Seth internally and external- ly with infallible success. 1 TO PRESERVE THE TWITS. A Yaw Alain rads Mid ateol Javan, be • Drat IN. Doctor, are net a great many teeth ruined by having the enamel sore off with tooth powders? No ; that is a most pernicious fallacy. I wish all this world knew the truth, that the enamel of a tooth cannot be worn od with a brn.h and any kind of tooth pow- der ; not if it were .orubloed for five ours a day for 150 years. More teeth are ruined by a fear el scouring them than by all other causes put tog:ther. Thu best way in the world to preserve $ • tooth is to keep it highly polished ; then no foreign substance adhere to it. These adhesions sod gradual rustlings are what destroy teeth. If you wish to keep a piece of steel polt.h it. If you do not, it will rust away. 1t is precisely the same with a tooth. The only danger that cap arise from the use of the harsh• est tooth powders is that they may injure the gun's. Don't ever use charcoal or salt, for, while they are excellent fu- cleaning, they are ruinous to the gums. Charcoal is full of little, sharp slivers that get under the gums or cut into them and cause trouble ; and grains of Ralf, you know, have very sharp edges and corners. Cuttle bone tooth powders are the best, I think. But by all means keep the teeth dean and highly-p-,lished. That reminds me, continued the dentist; a handsome and well-dressed lady came here yesterday and wished her teeth fined up. I hooked into her mouth and say about the foulest chasm I ever gazed into. Why' it was worse than a sewer. I told her Iwould give her a prescrip- tin. and when she had used it thorough-. ly for a week I would see her again. The prescription was for a tooth -brush and a bon of powder. Doubtless she was vexed when the druggist.comp,uud- oa, but it was what she most needed nevertheless. I have heard that many medicines giv- en by the physicians injure the teeth. Is that true, doctor? No, not to any considerable extent. I'll, tell you where that idea comes from. You know, when a person's sick he isn't so apt t, clean lois teeth as when he is well. Tnat is ono trouble ; bet a greater is that the teeth are not used much. Sick person eat but little, usually ; and what they do eat is often in the form of pastes or gruels' that do not demand much chewing. Now, the teeth are like any other part of the person ; if thoy are unused they become soft and more sub- ject tothe decaying influences. Put your arta to • sling fur a month and the muscles and whole member will become soft and flabby. So with a tooth that is not used for some time, Now, when s t oth'vs growing softer each day, and it 11 not bout' cleaned as often as it was when it needed cleaning leu, of course is rapidly fails. This is why • the medi- cines are chanted with, the destruction. Now to Improve the Ceaspiez/.a. Is it true, asked a New York titnt re- porter of a well known physician in 38th street, that girls are now drinking goats milk- to improve their complexions 1 Un- doubtedly, said the physician promptly ; and it is also true that they are indulg- ing in lettuce juice, asses' milk, cream, glycerine, camphor, poultices, arsenic, patent nostrums of every variety, and chemical masks. They try everything on earth except the fundamental requi- site. I have had an extensive exper- ience in treating cases of skin trouble with women, and atn still surprised at the ease with which they are fooled by all sorts of Hack medicines and devises. Last spring I had a girl under treatment whose stomach was almost ruined. She had been tekin d j g an internal compoun , sold in Fourteenth street, which was ex- pected to make her arms plump ! She was not an idiot, either. Another pa- tient of mine excited my ire • short time ago She was the most spook -like and ghostly -looking specimen I ever saw. Her skin was a dead white, and her eye- lids wore crusted and violently red. She was quite satisfied with her Dolor—or lack of it—but wanted me to take away the color from her eyelids. I frightened her into confessing that she had been consuming quantities of a compound said to have been stolen from one of the beauties of the sultan's harem, and then began to cleat- her blood. But do you think goat'e milk improves the complexion ? My dear sir, don't you understand that none of these things improves the com- plexion directly ! It may be possible to improve the general health ser much by the use of goats' milk that the complex - inn is benefitted, but that will only fol- low where goats' milk is suited to the system. Very many people don't drink milk at all. Rubbing milk on the face is the wildest sort of folly. I will tell you how every woman who reads the Sun .may get a good color—by system- atic exercise, regular meals and seven hours' sleep every night. Sounds kind of ancient doesn't it 7 A little jaded. Well, its the only recipe known to us, and it will never fail. Let any woman try it for herself and see. The Miadsrr W. Betwaw comfort and disoomfort is often verb alight. Have you rheumatism or neuro t nr are you a sufferer inxn obscure nervous pains I Why suffer loafer twId for 10 emote a bottle pain—Polsos'a Nerriline, cr you lea get a large bottle for 26 cents It cures promptly. 11 Y sere, pleasant to take, and never fails to cure all kinds of pain. Don't wait an hour, but send to Wilson's drug store and get a trial bottle. Nervili•e, the sure pain cora They all tell the mute .tory. W. etrdet Delhi, sa wed for yew, bologet ass raid astil be used Dr. non'. Stowed AWayt Re mays it was just the medicine i need- ed. It has eared ms. A wren .Melee. Many a dollar is paid for prescriptions for some disease that never troubled the patient, and when the vile difficulty was worms which a few of Freeman's Worm Powders would remove These Pow. dere are pleasant. safe and sure, contain their own eathartio, and are adapted for children or adults. • 2 Farm ant 'Sateen. Mete. .0 sauels. Hearses should no longer be turned out at night. A cold rain may bring .'u tr.uhles which are difficult to cure at this time of year. If horses are unavoid- ably drenched, tub them dry w soon as possible, an.I cover with blauketa,illHorses need to enter upon the winter i good health. Cons cannot be ke t in good flow of milk without ample tions of rich fod- der. As the pastures become bare, corn stalks, cut and mixed with ground oats and corn, may he given. Feed the time of beets, turnips, etc., in stall quanti- ties. The aim should be to have the cows in fie() form at the close of their pasturage. Speak for Illarch lambs this mouth. There is often a fine profit in buying poorly -fed sheep from 'sections where fodder is soiree, and turning them off fat in the spring. In this way a large amount of straw, if fed with corn, may be made into manure as a second source of gain. Brood lows need to be kept in « .od condition to meet the mile next mouth for March pigs. It is best to begin at once to feed for pork, using the softborn first. The pens should be clean and wart). The store pigs will do well en the slo,os of the house with brae stirred in. Skim milk is good for these. The pullets will lay eggs through the winter if kept in a warm house, and pro vided aids crushed shells and good feed. Choppedcabbage and other green food is relished by fowls along with other drain. Avoid crowding the poultry, and keep the nests, walls,,, etc-, free from vermin. Early fetteued poultry are more marketed arketed during the latter part of October and early in Norember than at any other time. ▪ for r sheep. The most economical and appropriate combination of food for fattening sheep will depeud upon the est of different foods in the locality. Nearly all the grains raised are healthy fur sheep un - ground, with the exception of millet, which is probably neither healthynor u economical when fed •unirund; be- cause of its hard husk and small size it ie not masticated nor digested, but mostly pease. through the animal whole. Rye, vats, barley, buckwheat, peas, beans, In- dian corn. wheat, bran, shorts er midd- lings, and oil meal, are each and all good food for fattening' sheep; but sheep should not he fattened upon a single food, as they are fond of variety and will gain faster when allowed to have it. Sheep are so fond of aneculent food that they will pick over large fields, in open winter, trying to find it. They suffer when kept, wholly un dry food for seve- ral months, and for this reason the last food mentioned, oil weal, should be pro- vided in small quantity for them. The feeder can not err in giving too great a variety in the food of sheep. The best ration we have ever known fed to fatten- ing sheep wits composed of equal parts by weight, off oats, peas and millet, and to fifteen bushels of the mixture was added one bushel of flaxseed, and all ground fine together.rach sheep was fed two ,pounds of this ground mixture with hay, and made a regular gain of three you -ds each week, besides growing an unusually fine staple of wool. This small amount of flaxseed is peculiarly soothing to the digestive organs. It is a perfect preventative of all diseases caus- ed by dry fodder.—[Prof. W. Sanborn. Farmers' Seeley,. The Ante, lean Agriculturist for Octo ber Saye large weeds in meadows and pasture, are now readily seen, and can be quickly removed with a chisel blade attached to a long handle. Grass lands to furnish hay next year should not be closely fed by stock during the late autumn, but instead be top -dressed with fine, well -rotted manure. Gratis seed may be sown on spots where the stand is poor, and if harrowed over, and some fertilizer added, a good growth may be expected. It is not too late to sow wheat and rye; if the soil is in fine condition, both may do as well as early -sown grain, and are more likely to escape the ravages of the Hessian fly. A top dressing of manure will assist in giving the plants a good growth before the ground freezes. •.ars/ and Tree. This is eminently the ease with Pol- son's N.rviline, the 'great pain etre.' It is an ,hou.,.*em.dy, for it contains the most powerful, the psrist and most emir - Min pain ssbdning remedies karma to ssedical eeissea it is honest, for it doss all it claims t. do. It r honest, because it is the bet in the wont& It testy eats 10 er emits to try It. sad yea was bay a bottle at Wilson's drug dews. Ifeevi- Kse eerie tootksebs, neuralgia, pais- to the back aid side. AN pains are pram* ly relieved by lbltaos a ltwr.iline- ors ase/ et... lbw /awes. Tt,e ouutparative value er corn and oats for levee may be briefly stated as follows : he (artier is deiici.at in navy of the el eats of mitt -mon so necessary for recuperating the constant wear and tear which necessarily takes pl,,ace in the body of • living animal. On tWa account horses which are fed exclusively ou corn and hay do not receive that kind of uuurishment which appears necessary far the doe support and -maintenance of the animal fabric ; hence we must not be surprised that corn -fed horses show signs of being languisl, by sweating profusely while being worked, lack of vitality, etc. Oats, on the contrary, contain more of the essential, elements of nutritive than any other artic!o of food which can be fed with impunity to horses. Oats are net only the mist natural food for horses, but are decidedly the must nutritious. They are the cheapest, because there is lees risk in feeding theta, and experience has proved that hones properly fed on oats and timothy hay can, with regular exercise, good grooming, and proper sauitary regulations. be brought to the highest state of physical culture, and can perforin more work with leas evi- dence of fatigue than when fed en any other article of food — [Market and HUGH DUNLOP Fahionab1e Tailor, WEST STREET, Hay the Finest Assortment of Goods for Fall Wear to Choose Front. IF YOU WANT 8 Nobby Suit at a Reasonable Price, CALL UN rl"G-H J IT NZ,OP_ BOOTS AND SHOES At the Oldeat Established:Shoo Store in Town, In Endless variety. tc suit the most fastidious and thmost economic •bas • Farut. y er A Weadertul Resale. A single bottle of Dr. Low's Pleasant Worm Syrup hu frequently destroyed from 100 to 200 worn'*. It is pleasant to take—no ether cathartic being requir- ed. Tape worms have also been reowv. ed by it, of 13 to 33 feet in length. It is effectual for all varieties of worms afflict- ing both children and adults. 2 saved by Josh nUllaS,. Josh Billings tells the following atony of one of his own experiences --'A few • days ago I was driving in New York,and had gut just alongside the Metropolitt.n hotel when a man with a satchel and duster hailed me. He said he wanted to talk to me moment, and so I drove areund on a side street, and we stood and talked. 'Now,' said the man, 'six years ago I was going down to my lawyer's office, in the town where I lived, to sign some paper transferring a matter of e10,000. Suddenly something of yours which I had seen in a paper came into my head. I stopped short, thought a minute, pent on to the office and had the papers burn- ed up, and did something entirely differ- ent to what I had iute-rdo:d. 1 sa•e, l by that, ,0,000. Now I d u't• knot- auy- I thing about how you are fixed, but i money is any object to you, if there lief THE BEST ASSORTMENT IN TOWN anything you avant. I ant ready to divide with you. What will you take A full line of all the LeadingPatent Medicines always kept on hand • I took s drink. We stepped into the (( � ly Metropolitan bar, and, after a little claret and ice, I asked the man what say- ing of mine it was that he had saved }del money on. He said it was something like this:—'Never take a bull by the horn., but take it by the tai!, because then you can let go when you want to.' BLAKE'S BLOCK, THE SQUARE! 'Yes,' said the straueer. '1 conclud- ed it was just as web to take him by the !tail. I could hold Jai just as well, I cr,uld steer him just as well, and let go when I please.' MY SPRING STOCK 1. nvw complete, and I take pleasure in infcrmiug ray customers that at no pre- vious time have I had such a Large & Varied Stock As at present. I have raised'the Standard of Quality and Lowered the Price anti it is a positive fact that no such value in font wenr can be got elsewhere. CUSTOM W ORIS of every grade still receives my prontpt and careful attention, and will be made Jay in the most approved styles by tint -class wurkmeu, end of the very heat material obtainable. _ D 0 VCT N T N G CIGARS. CIGARS. IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC (Physicians Prescriptions a' Specialty.) GEORGE REYNAS, Potatoes should be dug as noon as they are ripe, and kept for a time in heaps in the field to dry out. Sunlight injures potatoes, and they should there- fore be stored in a dark, frost -proof place. All decayed potatoes should be assorted out and burned with the vines when clearing up the field. Mange's and beets are injured by frost,end should be harveraed to safety. These -mots may be kept in heaps near the stable, and reninved by the load as required. it is important to ventilate the pits well to prevert heating. Turnips will stand frosts, and continue to grow until the season closes. Make the necessary water -courses in fields to relieve them of tho ezce.s of surface water during heavy storms. The furrows, wide and shallow, should run diagonally across dopes, with little fall. All kinds of litter, except weeds should go into the barnyard. There should be a general cleaning up in and around the garden and stables, to give a neat ap- pearance at the end of the season- Now is a gond time to make the necessary re- pairs and improvements for wintering the farm animals before bringing them permanently into the yards and stables. Dryden "Ba timersher teas, sod *hen yew ease sold swear. Cas draw you M her with a sinole hair." Ilut it asset ie breoHal hair to Saye stash pewee ; sad be astiifwl hair esu be emtaned by the seri of Otwoatasu Mara Raines -ea Sold at 50 eta ray J Wilson The Greatest Ideation t'eaaapeaad is a preparation of carbolic acid, vaseliee and cerate called McGregor it Parke's Carbolic Cerate. It will cure any sore; cut, burn or bruise when all other pre- parations fail. Call at G. Rhynas drug store, and get a package. 23 cents is all it costs. b One of our beet citizens would say to the public that he has tried HalI's Ca- tarrh Cure, and it is all that is claimed for it. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by Geo. Rhynas, s de agent for Gode- riclt. 3m : "Why should aman wnose bloca is warm within Sit ke hisgrandsiro cut in alabaster ?i Or let iris hair grow rusty, scant and thin. When "CINOALYSIRENEWER willmake g.row the faster. For sale by J. Wil- son 2m Thousands are being cured c: Catarrh every year with Hall's Catarrh Cure, that he doctors had given up and said could not'be cured. 75 cents a bottle. Sold by George Rhynas, wile agent for Gude rich. 3in Now that there is a reliable rear edy for kidney troubles, half the terrors attached to these complaints have been removed. For this let all be thankful, and to Dr. Van Buren's Kidney Cure award all praise for having thus removed a hitherto considered fatal disease from our path It was never known to fail. Sold by J Wilson. 2m John 12. Vert, Hamilton, says : "Mc- Gregor's Speeo'.y Cure for Dyspepsia and Indigestion is cheap at fifty times the price asked for it. i am a commercial man, and travel continually, and would no more think of leaving home without* bottle of McGregor's Speedy Cure in my valise than I would of leaving my team at home and going on foot-" Fres trial bottles at G. Rhynas drug store. Regu- lar size 50 ctn. and $1. a HAS THF. FINEST OTS&SHOES =owzZiss.g Weddtzp Beg L. announce to the Public that they hare opened business in the above Store in the store lately occupied by Horace Newton. Having purchased a large and well assorted stock of Spring and Summer Goods at close figures, we are determine to give the Public the benefit, QUICK SALES & SMALL PROFITS WILL BE OUR MOTTG . AO—Please call and examine our goods before purchasing elsewhere. 'Remember the (Glace, next door to J. Wilson's Drug Store. 'Custom work will receive our special attention. par -None but the beat of material used and first-class workmen employed. Air -Repairing neatly dune on the shortest notice Goderich, March 9, 1882- DOWNING & W E D D U F 2N Z9 MO AGA2N ABRAHAM SMITH CALLS ATTENTION TO THE FOLLOWING : CLOTHING t1A LARGE ASSORTMENT AND THE LATEST DESIGNS-Za ttA FINE A89 SIN ENDLEti4 VARIETY GOODS HATS, 'TALL THE LATEST STYLES. EVF-RYOMZE7ia Aram. PATTERNS. HAND APFIT 0OUARANTEFD OR NO "ALE.'••CLOTHS NEW C+o0DS, iNEW PRICES. CHEAP FOR CASH. TALK ABOUT FRUIT. CHAS. A. NA1RN BRAND OF ClNnaLass. —A name well known in CANNED P E A. C H E S onnect.ion with the Hair Renewerlwhich restores {trey hair to its natural color by iN THE MARKET. AND HIM a few weeks use. Sold at 50 cents per bottle by James Wilson. 2m asposime le these ben ear ii ()papers are flooded with palest medisise adeer- tise...Ma, it is gratifying to kaow what be prewar* that will curtail* sure you If you are Woos, Weed eat of coder, Ivor ,iastMw, or :metal debt1itat.d, Kara is aotsi.• is the world that will; owe yes white; as Ilieerris Bitters. Tare • blsaaiat; tri all swkisd, and wan had for poly fifty rents a heal. el Jaws Waimea- (2a d art ansae rse.d. Are you troubled with Salt Rheum, in, Pimples or Anker dens if acv wt ones to Gee. Rh T1Mug 6trrrs and get a peaks,. of iT1 s Irogee Mkt Parka's CsrbnlieCorats- Pries 116 emits. Ti was newer known to fail b A ferret ISlse.v That is daily bringing joy to the homes of thousands by saving many of their dear ones from an early grave. Truly is Dr. King's new Diso overt/ for Consump- tion, Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Ray Fever, Loss of Vol.., Tickling in the Threat. Pain in Ride and Chest, or any disease of the Throat and Lungs, a pouetire cure- Gwaranteed.• Trial Bot- tles free at J. Wilson's Drug Store. Large sits 51.00. (e) CANNED TOMATOES AND CORN ARE DELiC1Ol•+. .A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE_ COURT HOURF. lt4Jl-ARF.. OODERiCH. ONTARIO Ari in Vi 11 Paper. Now Is ths thine. It you wish owe or two .ter rooms at home- 10 se. Putter's room parer He bas wove a. Answer Wanted. Can any one brine no a Daae of Kidney sir Liverplaint that Electric Rotten will not apaadi�y sere i We my they eaanot, • thaws& of already prra ,,Bitty eared sod who ale daily »- will QT. to eek , AT uiWyWriasry amps 1 *ink eard. yr* doe Wed, IugIrlat• t he tow- els„ and seta life �My en Ms diseased partevery guaranteed. For Nil. at 60r. a bottle by .1 Wilson DT I 20,000 Rolls of the Latest Designs Rtautlfnt colon. sal at trios. leo 11Nn .-wry mneh inferi'r grinds. Call and ,es theta they are tie hoot w.lae In town- and most Me NM. The La1s1 Spiug Rzaar Pa1es and Fashion, AT EUTI.ER'M.