HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1884-6-6, Page 3THE HURON SIGNAL MAY. JUNE (884.
Ellstaco, the Outcas
leeward, acrd stern the mea uI the Hector
mould see what their broadside had dens
to their a eegenist. There lay the
French frigate somewhat astern, bar
yellow aides etreadi.d in some places with
whet. splinters, and sumo of her sails
"Can you make bet out r asked the lunging in ribbons. Recumbent tow,
commander. dead and wouudwl, ware also to be seen
•She's • frigate, air, mumu about our in numbers on her deck, laid low by the
oou ansa, though larger if wythirg rm. 1 .k,t std the musketry of the
'Geed,' said the Captain in . tale of ma• .meso But the Hector had received,
great satisfaction "What is her o.urte r as well as :liven, a broadside, sad at the
'She's on the larb.ard teak.' very insert when she shook in recoil at
Ah, and she steers a good del ofthe discharge of her own guns, an iron
canvas, I see.' shower of death and destruction swept
'Yea,' returned the First Lieutewnt, ,over her dock and through her rittgine,
her foresail and royals are set, hut her laying several 'salient follows low, waking
miser top snit u straaad w
her ain many hearts womb forever to beat, de-
m.ut is shivenug. 1(w she crowds un wt priving others of their limbs, and inflict -
more ..it we must atm with her.' mL gashes and weenie which would
'And what about her pries ! was the leave their wan for life. Alrasdy were
Captain's next query.
'I'm just trying to make her out, sir.
She lies about a quarter of a mile furth-
er off, and is a small gun prig, enuethiug
like the build of the Hawk ore the Dol-
phin.'
ol:phin.
'May she Deet be the Fatc,n r sugttost-
ed the Captain. 'She sailed Truce the
Reeds only • few hours before us, and
should be in the staters.'
Tat
uA
ttse
Ceke tho Emu from melt other horsets to •11. in 11 ens than in uute
s the Make from butte vessels w
CHAPTER Zi.
MUT - BUSTLES la
Ruffs.
LAI!)
tee
poor, suffering moaning onus being
carried down to, the cockpit, to receive
the attemti.n of the surgeon and his as-
si.tsnb.
Meanwhile under the direction of
Saughton, a number of men were kept
aloft repairing the rigging, for on this
everything depended. Cripples .s they
were by tattered sails and severed repro,
they euul1 u.,t tnameuvre the vessel,
'Th. Faloun it is, sir,' answered the while the Cornets was able to tack about
Liautonant. I know her new by the In all directions, and bring her whole
white strip along her hull.' metal to bear on then(. If they had
•o.4, I never had arsy opinion of these tailed, therefore, t•, repair the rigging
four gun brats,' retusrked Brentwood. std put it into better working order,
- 'They are so liable t , Ice captured when i they remained stenos( wholly at the
they cess across a fri gate But we wast ( mercy of their lue. Even now she had
see and take the Faleun from the talons hauled upon the larboard tack, and was
of this French eagle.' preparing to fire upon them her star -
'They're waiting oft us,' exdaime 1 ` board broads But the swift and willing
Saughton, 'but the brig is making off.' ; hands of the workers aloft hal got the
`3u 'that looks like business. Give 1 ropes spliced and canvas fastened eo that
me the glass, Saughton, and get all ready !she could throw her sails back and w
fur action.' foil the Frenchman's int.ntion
Boatswain :' shouted the tent lieu- But the manoeuvre had a far own im-
tenant, 'beat all hands to quarters.' p errant effect than this -t or it brought 'Ay, ay,' answered Saughtun,cheerilT,
And instantly the roll of the drum the two vessels dose together -the sternand Eustace with Willy, who nerer left
rose ',harp on the quiet morning air, and of the t.,urnete carnpr
regain; against the `his aide, sprang to the quarter deck, to
window was turned into a stern (cert,
and • wain deck gun tired frees it, it
would sweep the enemy from stem he
stern.'
'By Jure, you're right,' cried the cap-
tain, seeing in a raeoent the immense
blue of the ides. 'Fellow fire young
esu, with the carpenter syd4osre 4 the
strumpet men
The carpenter was get, sad the sug-
gestius et Yustase was at mow gut About.
While the oarpeoter wee cutting away
the sill of the cabiu window to make
noua for the gun, • group of streets fel-
lows, wrier the direction et Piistace,
weir tusking every exertion to transport
the sfternss st tuaiexdeck gun to his new
post. y, ay,' responded the mem with
lusty cheers, and the cheer had net left
the lips of souse of thews when the fatal
bullet catered their throbbing heart and
serial their lips forever.
The captain would assuredly have been
one of the victims of this dreadful
slaughter but for Willy Somerville, who
saw • French marine taking deliberate
aim at the gold epaulettes. Without
rereutony Nilly trust the captain violent-
ly aside, and the bullet passed through
his cocked bat, which would inevitably
have pierced his brain but for Willy's
interpusition.
•Thauks, my man,' said the captain,
'you have saved any life, and I'll rut for-
get it.'
At this moment the gun was run into
the proper position, and the sailor to
witont it belonged, on taking what he
rolled a v.zzy, absolutely screamed with
delight whets he saw how fully he oew-
inande'd the whole length of the Cor-
nete's deck.
'One discharge, fullowud by an inn
mediate rush of the boarders will do it,'
exclaiueed Eustace.
'Pam the order fur tho boarders to be
ready,' shouted the captain, waving his
hand to the (drat lieutenant.
with swift celerity the mer woo were ex- Hectur's etarlooard quarter, and their
petting and waiting for that welcome spars minding together, fastened there
orde- rushed to the guns. The marines ti,gyther.
ala, were mustered an•1 arranged amid- •Now was the critical went ui the
ship, and a boarding party wore station• I contest-- now the strength, and c .urage,
el, cutlass in hand. away forward. All j and daring of the two sides to be tested.
was mew ready for the coot kct, and per- 1 The ten was (ne which the crew of
feet silence resigned on beard the Hector, i the Hector ardently longed no, for
kart only by the officer's .mice as he thereby they could get fairly at the
ve directions to the titan at the helm. I enemy and tight hire cutlass to cutlass on
be in front of the asatilin. party. The
musket shot still dew like hail, and men
were droppmt duan on all sides. The
decks everywhere were red and slippery
with blood, and the roar of the sang ui-
nary conflict was like a continual thun-
der peal. But suddenly a sound nose
above even the dreadful din of battle,
and. like the shock of an avalanche, the
contents of the main deck on flashed
The two ingatet were repent- nearing his .own deck. So when the vessels be- from the cabin window from forecastle
each other, and on e.,ard the French j carne fastened together, a wird exultant Tio quarter deck of the Cornete. It had,
Teasel ecnrythini; seemed aisr prepared i cheer broke trent the crew of the Hector,
fee action. Sadder ly the Falcon frigate
end every heart throbbed with a tierce
hooted her colors and fired a gun to, burning excitement. A :sass of beard-
wmdwarl. The Hector also raised her era at once prepared to threw themselves
colors, but in silence pureuesd her way, ou the Frenchman's de, 5, but this was
her object being to came to leewanl,atd Myon found to be impracticable, for the
prevent the attesul•t of the fon to escape. Co,rnute's wen far outnumbered them,
Ttsp were new near enough to wcn and they rushee( upon the after part of
other for the British to recognize in their the Hector in such force as to require
ant (,onst the French fr_ t Cornete—every energy to be directed towards the
a . •.•asel which they knew full"- (gut- defence.
sen' INmd thorn ""guns''' and tonnage; The conflict was tierce and tertible,
theta was therefore the eros;,ect of hot and everyman woo had not •special
I closely pursued by the exultant assailants
work hef,re thein, and the stimn!rtting
pest asetimed to him soh nth he could not i who chased them aft without a moment's
thought of eo erComiuo an enemy ref quit, rushed t., ro om a in it. The tall)very i
superior force. The moment the object 1 gluiuse to this Ctiniete's a uarter-
form of Eustace Was conaplciuus in the deck. Herr they rallied somewhat, and
of use Heller Was perceived on (,.,died front, as with cutlass in hand he threw
a desperate hand-to-hand teeniest ensued
himself against the advancing foe, and
by word and action stimulated ,his cone
pani.ns to repel the assault. In that
terrible hour of danger and death his
strum nature was roused, and he fought
been rammed to the muzzle with irua
bolts and lumps of lead. which swept
with a'rful destruction among the doom-
ed Frenchwan. Fre the smoke bad
cleared away, and while the panic was at
its height, a mass of border?, with a
tremendous cheer, burst .on the forecas-
tle of the Cornets, ani at the sight of
them and their gleaming cutlasses the
French sailors rushed ofl it a body, tum-
bling over the piles of dead which the
niainde.k gun had stricken down, and
the Cernete, the latter •opened a smart
tire, which came with shattering power
among the nails and the cordage of the
tarnish vessel. To *told title the Hector
steered a bow and•a quarter course, and
still kept si'ent-a feat wh'ith under a
and led on as one horn to command -aa
galling fire none but British soldier and one on whose exertions depended the
seamen can accempji•h. Steady and fate of the battle.
titmice' creep man stood at his poet --
the gunners with the hot bolts in their
hands waiting with feverish eagerness to
hear the order announced, but manifest-
ing no undue inspatience, though many
of them glanced ruefully at the tattered
sails fluttering from yards. and the sever-
ed riggtn. hanging front t''. a toasts.
'Wait a bit,' said John Murdoch in a
whisper to Eustace, oho stood by him at
the gun. 'By the Lord Harry, !we'll
give him if fur that yet.'
But the Cornets saw her advantage
and resolved to maintain it, By their
present relative positions she could bring
her broadside to hear on the Hector,
while the letter could return no effective
fire, and scorned to waste powder and
shot by making a mere noise. The
Frenchman, therefore, perceived that if
he c.nld deliver several broadsides with
the same immunity Ise would effectively
cripple the Hector and have het at his
mercy. While therefore the latter strove
to reach a proper i osirinn to leeward,
the Cornets filled, wore, and came to
again on the aims tack, discharging
another broadaide on her defenceless foe.
This safe game she played no less than
three times, till Captain Brentwood saw
he could never reach the pnsitien he
Captain Brentwood and Ssu;hton both
raw him as they stood en the quartet
deck directing the storm, and Inore than
once they both burst into admiring ex-
clamations as they witnessed his deeds
'1 prowess and daring, and saw his
towering forst and flashing eyes as he
did the work of a hero, and stimulated
these arow.d him tee do the mare.
Randolph saw '}its ai.., sift R illy
fighting in the same brave manner by his
aide, and the fiendish hope throbbed
through his dark soil that he would be
k• died.
From the position of the ships towards
each ether there was only one heavy gun
which could be brnught to bear in the
contest, and that gun was on the fore-
castle ..f the Cilrnet:e. It war a braes
thirty-six pounder arrunade, and if it
could be fired athwart the Hector's deck
It would do the must dire execution.
This the French aptein perceived, and
he made strenuous exertions to get the
gun into use. Capt. Rrentwo..d saw the
darter of this, and marines were station-
ed at the sides, who shot down everyone
who attempted t.. approach it latents
of Frenchmen fell in the attempt, for the
Cornete's captain, sexing the import -
inteaded taking him to a Fused• purr,
but by the result of this fist I sad Ow -
lain Dunsasors gAang* places.
While this oouv rrsation was taking
place between the two captains, the men
were busy in both vessels is reusovin;
the wounded Irani the deck, hying aside
tate dead fur burial in the deep, washing
the red stains (rum the bound", and re-
pairing ss quick as possible the damage
which had been sustained.
Eustace and Willy hal returned on
board the Hester, and stood together by
the bulwarks Jack Murdoch end •
group of sailors were gathered round
them, and the prowess of Eustace was
the theme of their admiration.
'it is sickening work, though, to le,oh
back on, said Eustace, gravely, as he
glanced at the spltnterel sides and shat-
tered rigging. 'If one's blood was nut
up they euuld never go tbrough with tt.'
'Ay, mercy nu,' ejaculated Willy.
'How dare yuu fellows leiter here when
there • so much work to do 1' was shout-
ed at their side, and Itandolpb Grabatne
pressed in suiting them. Every one
went if except Eustace. Willy with-
drew with the rest, but did nut go tar.
Eustace remained where be was, but
took no notice of j',•nd..lph, either by
word or look.
'Do you hear, fell. w.' reared t5 -e ty-
rant. 'Be off toyouur work, and don't
sola there. Still Eustaee neither
inured to noticed hits
'Ha ' insolence and duob.dsence r
cried Randolph, with a grim ferocto •
smile. '1 order you to themes: head for
a punishment. Go ..tt with you, in-
stantly.
But Eustace remained motionless, and
maintained the same conteruptuous si-
lence, which so euraaged Itandolph that
he clutched him by the collar to drag
hien forward. At the heat touch of the
insulter Eustace raised his arm with the
swiftness of lightning and pushed Ran-
dolph aside wit!: as leech ease as if he
had been a child. The latter went I
spinning around. till he was brought up
by c•.miur violently in contact with the
mast.
'What, ho ' Sergeant of 'Marines !'
roared the infuriated lieutenant. The
otticer called for immediately came, and
a guard with hint. 'Seize that fences,
iron him heavily, and confine him in the
Black Hide.' To this order there was
MY8TU Y O1P TIL* LAKB8.
a swhsettirtraa River llasweea a.wewse
Onsa.te.
I believe then is a subterranean over
running from Lake teeperlur thsoegfi
Lakes Ilunin and Michigan, under Lke
arae, and emptying into Lek. Ontario.
There is no other way in which to es -
armed
Goods.
plain certain m
our greet lakes. The surface of Lake
ysteries connected with WARRANTED
Superior is about 880 feet above tide,
while its bed is 280 feet below tele lesel.
Lake Huron's surface is 50 feet below
that of Superior's, and eta bed is about
on a level with Superior's. The surface
of Lke Michigan is 300 feet Lower than
Lake Huron's, and its bed is sunk a cur -
responding distance to the level of the
other two lakes. Lake Brie's surface is
nearly as high as Lake Michigan's, being
bli.3 feet above the tide, hut its bed is
also above tide, bring 330 feet hi;ber
than the ocean level, aonaaiuently its
bed is 250 feet hlslser that these of the
lakes above it. Lake t)nterno's surface
is the lo.reat of all the great lakes, being
lees than 500 feet above tide, but its bed
is 250 feet below the ocean, ur about the
saue level as Michigau/Hurwn and Su-
perior. So that the is a continuous
tall /rum Lake Superioeto Ontario, and
all the outlet that the upper lakes have
that is known is the comparatively insig-
niticent Detroit river. That stream
never can care for all that great pressure
and volume from above, and the theory
art an underground neer such as '1
mentioned seems t., me most reasonable.
All the St. Lawrence fishes are taken it.
every .on. of the lakes but lake Erie.
Why ? Because they follow the cruree of
the subterranean stream, passteg 300
feet beneath the bottom .,f Lake Erie,
and enter the waters of the upper lakes.
The great lakes above Lake Erie Myelin
occasioned Aux and reflux of their wa-
ter, corresponding with .ocean tidee,srve
in regularity.
The subterranean river, according to this on hand now the LAna:MT *Tett et
my theory, becomes .octatsioua'ly ob-
structed by great ebstaclea that are am- Fi rSt - Cl a! S3 Furniture
etantly moving down from the lake bet• In the county. and a. i no.t purchase for cash,tom•. Then this channels of nut.et are will not be undersold by any one.
I offer Tapestry Carpet lounges. from 16.11
upwards. Whatnots. guod. from WO up.
Dew !tack ('hairs. from 371e. ape and everT-
thing else in the *ante prop•rtion.
Chicken 2 M Tina,
Pigs Feet " "
Corn Beef ,l •
Tongue
Mackerel (in Toutatou nsuee,)
Saluron (extra quality,)
Lobster,
Mackerel,
-f+ardines (French),
Peaches (American),
Blucl,eride%.
-- Tomatoes, 3 Iles tins,
(;reen Peas (French),
Green Bean.,
Green Corn (Auterican),
French Mush rot fns,
Potted Chicken. Hain & Tongue.
Mustard and (lunger in 1 ib darn
CHAS A. NAIRN.
Square, Gudench, Jan. 23, 1804.
DANIEL GORDON,
CABINETMAKER
Lea
Ulldeflaker,
insufficient to carry off the great ...lame
.,f water, and they are dammed back,
and the lakes rise. Finally these eb-
atructt.na are swept away by the urresist•
ible pressure, the river flows naturally
once more, and the dammed waters sub-
side. That is the whole mystery .of the
rise and fall of the tides in the great
lakes. -[New York Sun.
AT THE OLD STAND
Between the Post °Mee & Bank of Montreal
C30DRRICB-
Oct. 1901. 1343. 1913-
---why! What's thrr matterr i3-0DERIC313
l.dt-thtame envelope.' in rel! mf tent p
%`
I 4 ' / MILL
cletbst -"OOh! I'm every with (fiat Neura!g:a l [
that continually trottblcs ray.'
—'Well. how foolish t ‘1. hy don't yuu leo
o 0Bhitghi nIt Scorred aame t gorae bu oieuut
'
1 always keep a bottleuin the bouae. st only
.
ESTABLISHED 131.x.
dosis :i cents anBuUhen l,TOwDuim Robinson'
ne.thin4 for it :out obedience, cul the Freeman's V srin Powders destrnyand i MANCYAMt..M&Ke or
remove worms without injury to adult or t,
ten advanced and laid hands on Eus-'infant
tate, who trade no resistance. They
were taking hi:n away when Randolph
ordered them to stop. 'iron hint, I tell
yt,u. and here.' The irons were pro-
duced and fastened on the youths strong
but vaunt a limbs. the tyrant standing'
by the while, with a smile upon his dis-
torted faced Eustace was rendered help-
less new, and they lifted and carried him
below—down to the l•ewer-m•at part of
the ship—where he was thrust into •
prison of murky darkness and left 'o lie
on "the fluor...
(To /E s o cr1Nt kn
1t: the hist•erc of medicines no preps
ration has received such universal cum-
utendntioot for the alleviation is affordr,
and the permanent cure it effects id-
uey diseases, as Dr. Van Ste/eon's money
Cure. It■ action in then) diet -easing
complaints is simply wonderful. Sold
2m
Again was the tall form of Eustace con- I by J. Wilson.
epicomus in the melee, as waving the cut-
lass :there his head with the rapidity of
lightning, he struck down foe after fee,
and. in a voice which -was heard amid
the noise, cheered the men of the Hector
to the assault.
desired, and he gave the order to change ante of this gun, no sooner saw nae trate
the Hector's mune, and run right at the fall on his way to st than he sent others
foe to windward. This hold and unex• I to meet the same fate.
petted measure succeeded and the two I len th and chug by the Ilan(
vessels being now running in the same
direction, found themselves broadside to
broadside at pistol shut distance.
'Now gine it to her. my lads,' shouted
(ieuthten, wildly waving a hreedsword
3a his hand.
&merely was the rider given when nese
etimultan.ous (halt gleamed along the
1He and a deafening near of thunder
bathe the silence which the Meetsm had
laiaed, while volumes of smoke
Against such a tremendous onslaught
the dispirited and now fearfully reduced
French could not c.utend. The tide of
the battle had set so strum and full in
favor of the Hector that the crew of the
Cornett lost hope and courage, and doz
ens of them diced below. I eein t that
his chances was now hopeless, end to pn.
lone thr dnntsst would be only to have
his man manacred, the French captain
stuck his color's. and the contest ended.
All the time that this sangttinery en-
gagement had lasted the Falcon had lain
to at a 'safe distance, aa the officer in
charts had been instructed to do by the
captain of tl•e Cornet. he never doubting
that the Hector would fall to him as
another prize. He had on this account
given ne instructions what to do in case T. t w McNeal rewr.asew. and alt whew.
of defeat. When, therefore, those on It ..T emcee.
board the Falcon saw that the Cnrnete Ples,hatine, or Nerve Foote a Moo -
had struck her flag they were filled with p'hate Element based upon `cionttfie
consternation,and stood • ff with an inten- Facts,
FonuuBost teal isbyaa cures r Amin,
tion to escape
The Illal.trr'• Tallies.
I am surptistd, Mr. Brown, that yon
do not like our new mmuter. Why I
think he is pertectly lovely and he
preaches such stirring sennue�s.
Well, i can't say I like him.
What particular objection hay," you to
him I
Well, madam, I'll he frank with you.
His cadre is so strong and he makes so
much noise when ice's preaching that it
is alnest imp..sibte to hear the conver-
sation of the choir during the eterm•m• TAMES AMAIW., ARCHITECT. &
!•N ah. M. ? •J pace. erabb's Block. Kingston at..
Ach. Plans and specifications drawacor
"No ; she lin:ered sue) anffered a!o.ig, ly Carpenter's' Latea,r+land rnaasa'sw
"pining all the time for year?. the dor- ieiineil and valued.
"tuts doing her no good : and at lest was
'tedleed kir this . $utters the papers
eq so mulch a I.4 e.i ' indeed '
"bow thankful we should he for that
"medicine ' .
CiorOALZML. - A ts:one well known in
Oct' n With the Hair Renewer, which
in ;Sash, Doors & Blinds
e
00 TO
KNIGHT'S
1POR A
SHAVE,
HAIRCUT,
SHAMPOO,
OR DYE.
TWO DOORS EAST OT P.0
Meaty
tEALKtta IN ALL KINDS Or
Luruber, Lath, ?Shingles
and bastder's material of every description.
SCHOOL FURNITURE A SPECIALTY.
/WAD ()niers promptly a:tended to.
Ooderich. Aug. 2, 138:1. 190f-ty
GODERICH BOILER Y10 ti
BRASS & IRON STEAM FITTINGS
1ot
Itote;tut receive 1 a large stock of
c.
()oder
not
ork
onn
Worm grey hair to os natural color by
a few weeks use. geld at 54 cents per
bottle by James Wilson. 2m
'The.e is no dishonor, Monsieur; Ise
observed. 'in rendering up my siren]
after such a
■n adverary.
one bus a Nutriment. because it centaine no
ary Consumption. Sick Headache, '_tier -
vans Attacks. Vertigo. and Neuralgia
and *11 w•astiii dia,•aaes of the human
gwllant fight, and to so brace systetu. l'h•apsntino is net a Medecine,
'Possibly, captain,' returned Tient-
with • smile. 'However the for-
tune of war has in this instance been
with me, and against you, though you
mem likely to hare been more fortun-
ate.' And es he spoke Captain Brent-
wood pointed to the Falcon in the die-
Atg J Rn rJ I Ar It/tter'. Tribes..bince Theron 1'. Keat.r,edttor of Ft. Wayne !
to tak• a four -gun 'It was nota very. great achieventer.t imi., lin:.ft:, writes : 'For the past live' Cheap and Good.
ears I hare always need Dr. King a New
shoteldere. 'Ret i did semehinst mon character, as well as tor three of a milder
♦'c•eietable nr Mineral totems. Opiates
Narcotics, and no Stimulants, hut sirups,
ly the Ph.»photic and (iartric Element
found in our daily food. A single t •ottpe
is sufciont to eonvintx All Dntggin.
hell it. $1.00 per bottle. Lenoir( &
Co., sole agents for the Dominion.
51 Front Street East Tewnnto
of Bostace, the Hector's boarders re-
pulsed those of Mr antagonist : and no
sooner did they fire way an(' stand on
Ithe defensive at tneir own bows than
' F.ust.aco• whose quick eye and active
mind had seen what an Immense advent-
age eouid he lied, rushed open the quar-
ter deck. sad, enmindfnl of etiquette,
but mood only by the force of hlattrug-
gling soul, apprnached a commander
—FOR—
BOILERS & ENGINES
e w Salt Pans and Boilers
I:u.tt on Shortest Notice.
Mail order* for new work sod,repeirs wi
I r-oetsc prompt attention.
CHRYSTAL Sr BLACK,
Works near ti. T. IL station.
node -rich. lftil.ta 1501. tis►
EE
¶aiited to be Kiiou!
THAT YOU CAN e[T
CHOICE CONFECTIORFRI,
CANNED FRUITS 00 FISH.
TOR. -I CCO, t,'IGJRS, $o
Domeati std J'orbl1ggntn Fruits.
U7aten art t be Res: Brands.
Fresh and Smoked •elfaalt Ws'er Plsh In season
A full as.nrtmrnt of all kind. of Nuta.
,eteen nerved In livery aisle cowrie.
jl'15 5lil6.4Alrt IN # tjANd,N. ,
Floral Designs, Wreath.. (Teres.. (:mimed*
rt,•., made to order.
f ewerlag Punts 4 Vegetable. la wraman.
Ar
A choice assortment of Fresh Field Serbian E. EIIGE 'S
iii PtICBTAT- iiL& T ��//
on hand, for Sale at Reasonable l'ri
AT THE
CASE ST 0 RE.
THERE IS CHEAP
Crockery &
Glassware,
Lamps, &ce
A FULL LI\E (11'
GROCERIES
ANI)
CANNED GOODS
•
Frenchman, with another shrug of the bheenvry for neighs of most severe •
creditable
tips. 1t never faits in *}Feet s .peralj
previous t that i sank the d i t
prey o
My tithe
British ahem Vatient.'
'Ha r exclaimed Brentwood, has my
f.-ientt t aaptain Densmore lest his ship I
H. himself is safe, 1 hope r
'Yes Monsieur, he and as many of is
cure.
s to whom aye re-
ouwtister.ded it gpbee of it to cam* high tents.
Having been mired try n "levee"
COM ( Howie square. Oo.teric!,. Oat
Dec. (t . 1159. H 2-3an.
D. K. STRACHAN,
PRACTICIaL
MACHINIST,
WAX 1,4 on L,.,d n wip;,;y of ma:erial ter tett
repatnng of
Sulky Hay Rakes, Plows and
Agricultural Implements
and Machinery Generally.
'ALL WORK THOROUGHLY DONE.
D. K. STRACHAN,
GODERICH MACHINE SHOP II
Ooder!eh. Uare'b 7's; , is*t. I18-
GOfor tete.•.skintcte lleeMNola
for pWta¢.". and ver w111 aasY feaw.
rnra• a n,?al. velvet*, bite o/ eerier.
pile wends that wing pet ypn In t'
way of enakere store mosey In a fres darsti
Gir. roti .• r- thought tteedbat at say Mtelete s
g►e Hint t i%Z a Call' eaig•al :nd. Wei will start you. Yee E
a.... weal _
set [ftae see t stet. oe1T.
j work i• ani. teleZi 7 SISIIIA to troth M
Diresag sad etd. Yee us. eter esrw
to M (WW1:rests(. Tat nil irbo woad
OL
1 have had for five ears. 1 con •
asdse it the only reliable and ',ere eons THE
seat, c.dds. rote. Call et Wilemt's
Drell Ref* anti ext s Frog Trial (Brittle. I. linare,
omitl
mar tweL we stmt* i. t
DI y. M offer : to who arw nes w sat
URI)CER. will peA t, to pay for ahe tree
ran isi Headers emssuese. sr'7 .
f�dPtrich
Fortune. will he swim bet 11600,4,,,„ A
sub,,. time So the work. 0
h.1.1; <