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The Huron Signal, 1886-10-01, Page 3so 4 'lame f 5 • *1 M 1. Il, A a. L 5 i THB DBIC0018 SHOPPING. ar l':', MAItr a ua.uutt "Wheel are y. a enlstg to lhtladelphy, Merl r asked rate Seethe Attu Orwu- way, as .he rinsed the offset t cups and placed them un the waiter •'Twuurrer I'm so glad ! Y) chick., a' butter money is some to a.nwdd'able this quar- ter, sun I want lota u' new things 'rhiuk you could get 'em i Seems • pity for u,• to lose • 'bole day, and .pend wore'u two dollars ow them peaky ksars, when you've gest tu go ori bus nese. 1 guea. you °sold wit n'e ; you use ter do yer niether's shopping." -Well, I could try, Smithy Ana ; I don' know. Women's Nein's is cur'us ? What you get to *tit f" •'Inv. girt 1.. b•vew.n►e colder gown al considerable business to du. "• cup u' had tea '!I do us good all round,Santha "Liquor ! Yuu wouldn't can this mild The meal over, ntha Ann wished but and harmless beverage iique:r,1 hope s It the dishes in silence. Serest, eight, I"has p.sitivtly nu intoxicating effects. nine o'clock struck, aced still uu sign of Yuu might driut sizty glasses, and then the demon. s, th k J alk t lit I've drank It At ten Sandia Ano went out, for the IT HURON SIGNAL, FRIDAY, OCT. 1. 1886. i made a little awl hundred ter oil on mut--� el Sass .=!111111* wwitla't. I'll .eves eruct •• y her aced daughter were uneasy in her shy Jae*: yo. ti. tease OWN that venture. Du you want the gamma), presence. end could not tell why. mea.' ter Ache, an' s." Idea��w Ir><s of Elul ►►Step. sow, et •hall 1 ii*r. wain r But the widow had come to stay. "But we twee see i*e bets,'- hied his dsaBet head Rst "Weil, 1 raytbetr guess 1'11 tell' it Seethe A.0 put the cover on her sew tib, at bee wits, at her wit. sod. „ the carpet -sweeps said �e now," said Mart, wnh bounding pulses, ing machine, gut tea, and sat down to "Hire Spot Pond tat winter, Seethe Yes ; "an' try seen woe other time. Iia iu watt 'rhe widow wafted also. Ano ; jest hire !Spot Pond, the hull .•f cradle, mud the we -cream eburs .ad the t a bummer, sod there • lou to be due* "I never keew Mart to be gone *oleos *1, an well hese • unser iu We our- "Well well let's make rise heat of it, fur the Lu1ha to house. They dual know before," said Seethe, visibly an.ious. selves. at' make 'nou{h We -cream to last ♦may „, teething about this, yea res, r' 1 kinder "T'nage• he • Lig hied," said au tiara'." • "It'll be all over town," sobbed the want to surprise cut." the widow, in sepulchral tones "But "Arid what is this 1" asked hie wife, girl. 'Nary guud; you shall bare it. Come you mustn't indulge in vague *mauls- piikiag ups large roll. ..t(„s but ' ri ht in nese to this restaurant • id I'll tion ; 111 stay till bereaves." "Leda ie sheet music toe Aehsy ; Y , eettle with you." This little speech the widow delivered 'Dough to last her kung as she Lives Got The two men entered. Lunch was with pitying anent&. It named to ►m- it at a bargain, Sa•tby Aun-got 'ma all ordered, and with the lunch emu. ply that she would Mand between them at bargains, horseshoe an' all." "I told Santhy Auu 1 wuuldu t !rink and harm, whatever happened Smiths ADO groaned. "But Aolksy no liquor," said Mart. "You see, it guns "1 guess we'll have tea, Achsy," said twin'* got u) piaooer," she said, de w soy head before 1 know it, at' 1'.r go. her mother. "len kinder trona deshi ; l spatnugly. "Nor iso uruau, nor any- thiug.' "We can buy 'mu, Santhy-lots of 'N ; they'll be h•ody to hew iu the family," muttered the fernier, uow half Weep. "And this awful thing Santha went twentieth time, and pcerod down the on, picking up a hideous steeple cruwoed moon -lighted road. She was eery 0o- hat -"the •wfulrst thing I ever saw, easy ; but when she reflected that Mart ail the coarsest. It's • mat's straw hid a sped deal of business to attend to, hat " 'Taint. I get it for Achay, 'n I got it cheap, tau. This was too much. The woman threw the bat across the floor, stumbled over bundles and boxes and farming im- plements and made for the door. She turned round fur a fival queatiou. let, the object ef their solteitude test "Did yuu frit something fur • suit of asleep, the iaded horses as'eep u well, the moonlight felting upon the portly 6;ure ie the deaa•n, they wou'd hardly hate dreamed of midnight assassins, boarding house eti,ensea, and cattle feed as did S.utha Ann the whole night long. All would have been well, for the dea- fest au' emeriti at, 1 i pone, and Ache, wants • few beet's. However, it won t trouble you mush, her 111 have eras all writ out. Au' father, you Hoist art genie homespun for yourself. You solely hasn't got melee' touch 'sides your weddin' suit, and mussy knows that ought to be wore nut, though it ..01'1 lank darspec- table yet ; only 1 ueyer did like thew swallow's tells" "1'. meow to the city 1' •sled Achim .lune, a eir1 ". n.4e+r. 1, ���. i�. ,i, in wltb a big loaf et rya Mead hot from tee kitcheu stove. ''Ob, pa, please do take trete „ "Ile cic't, Aehsy ; nut jest yin," said ill an w s rue , . all any lite." "Well, seein's you say," said the easy farmer, "I s'pose I may just drink a lit• Ile. Only oue glass will et.." But mechantcally Mart drank see ten as his f,iu,d lilted up t!.. glass, and though he was conscious .,f no lose of steedineas, still hu was so far under its influence that he hardly knew share he was after he had tumid his way to the iwt dive Nue te whish Seethe Ansi had directed him. "What will yow haver" asked the pu!►te clerk. "I'll hev • cheer, proridinz you can 'commotlate me," said Mart, looking int - her neither. Yuu wouldn't want to go passively at the el. n -shaved face before with your last year's bonnet on, that y+•u him. "I *rel • little t.+p-Gravy. ain't wallet' to wear to picnics even. A chair was brought. Mart took s B 1'ou'J stetter art down what things you his hat, placed it on the floor, and sat can't do without trey well, but yuu must d,.wn. Then he began t. tumble in his can at least, if, as the tun res. and he woman went out of the rens-, and sat rnal:e the last short, Aeh.q, bless quer pockets, brat his coat, then hu trousers, rose too, he had nut applied to the bot- down in the kitchen, almst ready to de - lather should x1111 morn than he expects, - then his vest, and finally, to the sinus.. • tle for comfort. Some way he dreaded .pair. more money, 1 mean." meet cel two or three tat the clerks ranged "I'll make two lista," said Achsa, round, who were watching the proceed - laughing -"toe fur short ladder, and Inge }1e tururl the list out of the inside the other for long. Wall, 1 ton$**," M i st of nu vest, tegetber with Smiths adds*, ae her Meeker laches Ser SwF" Ames toll of bills probation ; "I maser sone)." to 'Merge me ty reading them 'ere, if "She's a reeler boy, mother," imide -, • '' be m -1, with* solemn rullemelt',the farmer, with • cckle, "an' she al- of his rye,giving the lot tu the clerk. came the timid if bones feet and a way. w4l Fee' `•Santha Aun's wrute what .he wants." shrill voice beating about the bosh to the You'll take the big spring wagon, 1 Indeed, my friend, I can t make it time of "We w-wort•t" (very load) "go •'pew," said his wife. "I wish you'd gat that five gallon can fall of oil." nut, said the clerk, after looking it home till morning ; we w -won't" (still ,.ver. •' 'K-a-1-i•k-e-r.' I some*. that louder) " home till bunchy ,nar.ing and Achim suggested that he had .an one or two occasions before staid over night, she gave hien up at eleven, and they all went to bed, the widow iucludt'd, who kept her u w u nutlet 1. Could they have seen, nut snore than two miles from home, iu a secluded hot - clothes 1" she asked, her tibial pn1111ee contorted. "1 aid, Santhy An -1 MC" be an sinned, solemnly, with a side wave of his right band. "I got fifty yards. Make 'em lo••ss ; there's plenty o' mat- erial. ' Between crying sud laughing the to meet Santha Ann, when he reahzel "Well, ' teed the widow, who was now that he las been all night coning home, wiping up the last of the dialler, "u.. and has befogged brain craved more of one cant say but he's a good prowider.' the stimulant which had w basely be- . "I'd just like to hear any one say any- tasyed him. -tilting about it !' muttered Santha Ann, At early sunsets 0. three w n*sn sat indignantly, and the allow meekly sub- duea to breakae 't, and that meal over, aided. ' Well, I ipuee I must nu the tamps. Thank Heaven he aid git the ile :" .a d Santha, "It's a blessed mercy it didn't roll out o' the wagon." And she went we'd split our sal go . slowly out in the hall,where the big tic.- deacon's purchases." (hie) anyhow." :ellen can stood. When Mart woke Seethe Ann looked at Achim with the Through the open dour she cuuld see u clock, he found his Jinni* ready and heart -break in her face. that Mart had arisen and was stagverui "Santha ;hie), tele girl, come out here round. He saw her lift the can and -gee up, Dob !- come out here ' I1te spoke : "Yeti bet you life, Santhy brung ye home • .hic, present -halt • Ann, I had ma'eble w irk keepin that dozen of 'em -come along, Santhy - that thing from '•pludiny,. I put my lung • loug-up.y de:apsey, ,tenthy Ante' Well, the disgraceful tru.h was out. Santba, seeing the hurror•etruck face of the widow, as well as the pity in her eyes, straightened herself at mice. Her pride tuck fire. • "Jokey." she said, with flashing eyes, "your father's been mighty lucky, ur he I "My gracious to goodness !' she cried wculdn't 'a to k a single glass u' beer. as she tried to decant sume of the fluid I shouldn't wonder ef he'd made a thou- into a steelier flask, 'what • this !" 'I do hate peal►ly to take that can,' said the fernier ; "it's a -running over with the least jolting ; but I s'pose 1 11 hey to. Fix it as tight as you can, and hew everything in rsadisees by seven. Mind. I don't wait tor novae, you know, Senthy Ann." "Oh, don't you worry," said the farm- er's wife, absently, solving the problem ie her mind of how far to make twe.ty- fiye duller* go, and hew to snit prices te the eeigencies of leer many needs. •'There's table -linen an' towels " she ejaculated, mentally, "an' a piece or two of cotton cloth, an' things fur Achsy- 'twon t du not to git her a gown or two, a r,bbon, au a new ha. oh, dear, I with I punkt go' EI etaa'u t fur my back, ef Duly I °mold man' that wagon ; but I can't think o' laym' out two er means calico,' he said, atter !Telling it nut. "Well, yes, I s'pose so. Santha Anns more of a sch•dard than I be,' raid the farmer. ' Let me see. I guess I can git throuen it. Yes, I see, kaliker, seed - sucker --I dole know what that la ; cot• 101*, a hundred yards, that meson spool cotton, I cal late ; ball baby stockings ; I wonder wh'we baby she mesa': we 'ain't got none Catch a mare - well, that is cnr'ua. I d+n't catch no marc en this expedition." "she probably means se.raucker--an article for ladies dresses-1L*ibriggan stinking', and cashmere." mid the clerk, politely, behind • smothered smite. "Well, Pm glad you know -I donna," was Marta sassier ; and together they made out the List. "Aad I can't go to oburch nett Sum day, and all the girls with their new bats ! I wou't wear the old nue-1 rut I won't." "You shi ant, my dear. We'll go iuto the city ourselves by the train, you and I." "That's likely, when father's spent at his mummy sad yours ewe' "L'ook here, Achim !" Achim !nuked. What did shout ? A big roll of Dank -bills which her wither flourishing ice the sir over her bead. `•t)b, Ashes !there's a hundred dui - Ian ' How he come by 'em 1 don't kuow, a.' how he kepi 'em I omit say ; but they are, an' it always takes my breath away to think where I found 'em. He bad rolled 'em up and put new for a cork in the now of the kerosine can, an' the can was full of moI$ases. " She .topped now to laugh. "E( he hasn't loses. on a canter, then my name ain't Santha Ann. Won't he be ashamed ? deacon of the church and all' Oh, we've got him well under' Hu won t dare to say 'city' to me for a year to come ; no, nut till tl•e day of his death Fru Koiug to put the cradle in my bed- n►om right aloe his eyes ; an' the cream freezer, an' lots o' things, an' I'm g sing to 'prupriete that hundred dollars, too. 1 won't spend it all, though ; only nuke up fur the things he didn't git ; are I'll buy a carpet, tot, Aehaa, wit he didn't git that .weeper in rain." "Oh, mother cried Achim, drying her tears. "How won can we go r' •• Well, I U.E.M. we can go today, if we can cit ready to an hour. The wide ew gays rhe'11 May here tin me utile back, su's to get the dinner. We'll see h wear shopping-cu►np.area with his, an we don't drir-k no beverages either. But A*ohy, I 'epee if we weren't the victims, lsghing over the about 0110 foot un it ai held my umbreller over it to keen it Dei o' the moonshine, an the bee.tly drunk this morning at sun -up. cork p..pped out, an' I stuffed it up beat Aaiue, yuu ashamed 1 an' yuu a deacun of I could. Don't you never send me after the church : ! ! Now 1 her gut to gut in no kerosene no more." town things reale, needed, an' I tot took "I won't send you after anything, if I that hundred dollars you stopped up the know myself," snapped his wife, and kerosine can with. It wuu't be mie took up the can. fault if I dusnt spend every cent of it, thou I doant know hew yuu cut it-gaw- M�Iled i.,r it perhaps. Bye the time I come home I hope you .01 be sober !" He was. He lived cn humble pie for his wife and daughter missing. He Ilse a cnu::tsed idea that he had driven them beth from home,and was inconsolable tin t1.51 wi.1.,15 handed a new teen his wife, which ran thus : "M.iRT IenRAv,-You coat home sand dullars." Thou they both went out. The farmer three dollars on them li ars. I'd rather "Yuu bad better take your cotton and was literally singing happy. 11." sang as spend it in gntceries I wish I dare to needle. by the box ; we always sell that he shook hands, sang as he unloaded, tier Aehsy, but ethane young au' flighty, i w' ad M taken with every new thing abs judgment -at least he used ter her-an'way to parties out of town," said the roared when he saw the widow, and "Five gallons of good aweetenieg utterly saw. No. Mart's got extraordinary clerk. "Here is something I think wanted to dance with her ; and finally, spoiled ? 1 do think that's the strew too meatus satteen," he added, as he painted after driukiog a strong cup of tea, he sat much, an I won't bear it -I won't. 1'11 out a word underlined -it was satinet. down somewhat subdued ; while the send Mart about his business To think' I kin trust him, ll ' law; 'specially as there's 1"Yell, we'll put these up to the best of ; widow discreetly left and wort into the j he must 'a been drugged by sieve wick- ) ic - efts' grin' villen'" "Kinder looks like m lasses," said the widuw. I a month, and wore sackcloth and ashes "Oh, heavens' it u : When will my i in repentance for a year. Never once troubles end 1" subbed Santha Ana did he ask ter the change of hie hundred dohs.-., but he always looked meditative• ly at the bright -figured carpet which adorns the parlor to this day, and which he unwittingly conjured out of the car- pet -sweeper. but he neter touched wine a;ain, and 3 SCROFULA 1 Erysipelas, Canker, and Catarrh, Can be cured by purifying the blood with I .4. set believe dim Aye" Senepartila has � fair•• It le pleasaa M este, gnu Se e�ep wwSee'-wme weer. the* ry lee II MOM M fever need. -E. Halms, Aso LtrdltM, O. g�I lave Meet Ayeres tansy ftia- Ivy, (or inis,, and tow, It It 1. taken taltbtully, It will thoroughly eradicate thls terrible disease. - W. 1'. Fowler, M. D., Ureeuvllis. T. For forty years I have suffered with Ery- sipelas. I have tree.[ all sorts of remedies ter my eoeplatnt, but found no relief until 1 commenced .slag ♦ y e r' s Sarsaparilla. Alter taking ten bot- tles of this snetllclne I am completely. cured. - Mary C. Amesbury. Rockport, Me. . I have suffered, tar years, from Catarrh, which was ao severe that it destroyed my appetite and weakened my system. Atter trv- ing other remedlr., e nd gettl.g no reit/L.1 began to take Ayer's sarsaparilla, and. in a sew months, was cured. - Susan L. Cook. llut Albany at., Boston Highlands, Mass. Ayer's Sarsaparilla t. superior to an) blood puritrer that 1 base et er tried. I bate taken It fur Serotals, tanker, and 6.0 - Rheum, and recelte.t mueh benefit from N. It 1. good. also, for t weak stomach.- Millie J ut.. Peirce. Sout'r Brs•Iford, M:as. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, E'r..rsd by Dr. J.C. Ayer x rce, [.owe:i, Vase. Pries 151; ei: buttlre, e3. CO 1♦ kitchen. a 1+' "Well, Santhy,- laughed her husband, beverages" of every deeription, except in an !►our. y, "Oh, well, mea *ill thorn thingaor, tea and coffee, he always afterward de- clined.-Harper's Bazaar. Poor Smiths Anu. She hal been ire- amine' liquor' our ability, and licca teem ready for yeti CO CO Saginaw, Bay City, Godet.t►-, Detroit and Cleveland. SEASON AI MAICEMEITS. T1' 1-.t,•gar.t an•l.'.+n r' iiows+tcatvr. "Saginaw Valley" WU. It• to 11. Asa rr. tion run aorine the Sea'.ou of Navigation. ss (olio w s : Leaves Goderi. b every nursery. at 1 o' clock p.m.. for lino CO and !ong�rinaw, (anitra at Sad Be*'*' fort Dew wed Tease. waking eeanrctiuns wog tyrel rl arc Wats at (land Reach for 'linger Cit', Cl.i, er, gen. Mackinac island and ht. Ignore. and at liar Cary with steamers for Ilari'wvi k•, the. von ., d Alpena. returning lo (A,deri, h w. fauda). loaves Goelert.-h rt,•ry r.•,nday.sl lru'rM. k now. for Port Ilun,u. D.trotl at,d Cleveland. returning to God. rich on Th,,r 'ay. This rotate will be roottueed durici the sea- son of mat igasiul► - - posed upon by souse gaud neighbor of ( "Very well," mid Mart, thickly. `'I 11 u the bleed man took the horses away. sod the widow. p se he went limited knowledge, and thought that ail be here by that time. Help yourself "see if 1 haven't• 1 ye ! Aon i that way might along ? " the barrooms in all the principal cities out 0 them twenty five dollen, and g► I didn't tech no !Sync' ; i only took some i ••I'd kill him, 1 bleeve," muttered had been closed. Mart had never in his me the change if there is any ; if not, beverage once or twice." 9•ntha, fiercely ;then her eye fell nn the life been, so to my, deet ; but once or 1re gut plenty of cash ;" and he swag- Santha Ano gave him • look. j roll that had done duty as • c. zk. She twice h. had been uvereeme W the extent I "Well, 1 didn't, Santhy Ann, you can � 1 caked at it through twat dimmed eyes as gored out et the sure of taking a lar wnsUck for Santha Ano, j At a lane hour he came hack, his I l Duk for yerself. Themis the articles. she picket it up. It was creased and and sour milk for molasses ; still, that I wagon w loaded up that there was bat I don't know what they be." Then tumbled and smeared with molar's, but was in the dusk of lung years ago. M • rent room to stow away the nuttier- h. .at back and sang. nevertheless she smiled a sickly smile general thing, he never touched the 1and thrust it into her pocket. nus bundles bruugbt out of the dry -goods ! "Come. • s• .1 V.runla•e. "critter," as his wife called it I house. Hie gait was unsteady and his , "Seem a if I 'ain't felt so musical inclined I Then the went back into the living - "Now don't let anyone impose on 7w+ j speech almost unintelligible by this rite, fur a year. See, there's a c -carpet -s - Mart," she said, chucking him under the room, and found that e'en had fallen for he had imbibed several times sicca sweep er, •n' a credos, an, an ice screatr- fat asleep on the lounge. She began to shin with wifely jullily, as are tied bis lunch, and even bought Nees ..1 the arts • se, sat' luta mora things " 1 tnteRitfato •:Ain, "Peeing bandk after maddest ted "handkercher" roun.l his h'g cle to take home with hint. • '-Mar alive :" ezclaimed Stntha Ann, brow. nett. 'You've goer a ffo"'d dot Meantime his women Mks passed a in dismay ;ewhat on earth du we want 01 j bundle, ."me to her satisfaction, ethers fairly rue ing her blood buil, as she al• of your own money 'long with ye, as well h d comfortable day. There was a carpet sweeper 1 \Y a haven't got a terward intimated to Aches.Then lice can, bat git things that's Deeded.'" Santha Ann got out her sewing machine "fist some, then, Santhy wren, get lots ! piece of calico, a shawl that would have "And don't forgit to buy rte •honk, , p. " added Aches "and something stet t I and gave a thorough overhauling 'rasa- 1 of 'em ; they're )est laying round hrosc at , *etched Joseph's coat, which her alive- and k as ez+tecting to that store. (Sit plenty, or the carpet Donate *poen had d +abtlese intended eJ, with a maudlin grin. I machine, a child's rocking -chair, and a "And what do we want of a cradle f' Ismail patent it an bedstead. Besides! was the next ryaestioo• these there were packages .f cnuJy, "'i\ ell, it sort u remin ied me, Santhy crockery. crackers, cakes. and a d, z4n , r Rregation, so folks could see," she said, i Ann, locking far back and into tutu I two re canned vegetattles. half regretfully to her mother. :•Up ia' ye:a, that we was all babies onc. -all 1 "W'hat ever will i do i' sighed Santha se mine spend as little mouey as you a TICKETS for the whulwill !MUNI, ,P ironPed! 1. On• nn. , 5 $1.2.00, occupying 111 days. meais and b'rtb.Ir,, hided_ For rates of freight and passage. and .11 other information, apply t.. WM. LEE. Agent at i:oderieb. Notice must be given b) paritrs santtrg\ Thursday M;aeurslesa Jane 111th. Ilse. "What is eltt;regor'• Speedy Cure Icer I" It is for Dyspepsia, Lever Complaint, IodtRes,ton, Biliousness, and it is the finest blood purifier in the kuowu world today. ' Does it give satisfaction ?' \Ys caoutdpoint to o:,e instance where it did not. 'Where leis it bate the largest saie 1" light in the dity of Hamilton, where it is manufactured, there has been over use t2wtuand shot lar.' worth sold in the last year retail, end the great majority of the sales are by cane recommending it LS another. Fur sale at ,'Ac. and it per bottle by G. Rhyne, drugg1st. •e) DP7 at. cnm u le work to du, and no dinner to get carpet in the licence were over forty yards of seinen, a whole ` ntory tot the sue w , Sona and nice. I wish ice cream could be i begin )n the morrow. Aches anti_ipat• 'weeper '11 be tinder lonesune," hr ad+! for a present, • pack ref ctrdies knitting f froze into • solid chant. I'd like some ed the sensati"n she should make in herI new hat with • hunch .f bleeders.' pee pies perched *thop. "it would be nice to set in the con• o' that, now.- " 'Member ow."'•'Member the homespun, an' don't bring me home no present un no count," said his wife, smilingly. As they stood there side by side, mother and da.tghter, Mart, looking Ann ; "what shall 1 do 1" beck, thought to himself : the choir nobody known whether yoe • belies once ' Santhy Ann, rho recoLec- 1 have new thingsur not." tion was kind o' suldnin', so' I s. rt o' i Well, yuu can sell some of 'em ' ' •Seamans if I could ge to fallin' in love She don't i "They'll linnet it Achsye seed bee wanted that cradle to meditate over, you eantba Ann Ic",kek up -there .t•ii d over amen with Santhy Ano. • on t look winch older than Aehsy- .he don't, mother, reflectively. "Hats is eompik- know it . frons the cradle 10 the 't grays. now • that's a fact -an I will bring her home yon y s the ubisleitooa widow, a brnad smile on tad ' The *rood 140.4tells us, Santhy Ann, 1 her face, as she took in the situation. a present. Off rattled lbs big enema behind tI e two powerful gray horses, and the moth rr sled daughter went to their daily fasts full of pleasureable anticipations Mart sat jauntily behind his grays, .peculating Drs the probability of etmiog back full -handed. He had secretly put a little money foe in the heads of • business friend, quite peeper - el to Iowa it, bat still hopeful. Seareely had be reached the eity wham he met Ibis same aid ' Good news for rim ! cried the latter. Just then one of the neighbors cane in. it was Widow Norris, with her everlasting tatting and tattling, as Achim said to herself. One of the 1 widow's friends had just etme in by the cars, and brought news that he had met "the deacon," and that he was etembling tipsy -ss tipsy as ere' was The curious widow did not mime to retail this bit of news. Oh no ' She was no slanderer of her neighbors, but she sat so stiff and erraeven, giving now Seethe Ann and now Aehea the benefit of her silent sympathy, is Or shape of long pitiful glance, that 'Behind brethren11 '1 A lady had in her employ an excellent girl who had enc fault -her face was al- ways grimy. Mrs X ,wishing to tell her to wash her free without ette.ing her, at last re.ortt•l to serattgy. "Do yr►. know, Bridget." she remarked in s con- fidential manner, "teat it yuu wash y••ur face litter (ley le het wip and water it well make you kleinlaut." "Will lilt' answered the wily Cr,dset. "Sure. it's a wonder ye utter tried it, ma'am : .e ro a pilgrims ars I won't, 1'11 keep the hull of travellers :.n even Bunyan's Pagri,A's 'em, an of Mart ain't a wiser man alter Proems laid its infant head in a cradle. he Kits wet this spree, 1 ii ' '•,w tl,e So I jest got it for a remembrance, , „mien why," Sinthy Ann -Lam the cradle to the Then she west opsta.rs. grace "' Achim stood by the wi•t .w a ping h• Hs took seat his handkerchief anal eyes . she 1.1 been tepee. heed it 10 his eyes. Aches fleeted out ..Nieves Ino mina, dear, said I.e of the tune, anJ with an expletive not mother, her kind maternal heart ster. 1 at all filial ran op to her own nem • , n t g•' 1•+ feel bad. " "But what do you mean by an ice- "L don't snippet he even th .debt creamer 1" tearfully creed hie wife ; any hat, ' said the girl, tearfully. that thing with the churn -handle 1'I "Neo, dear ; net the right kind of .�i "that is it, Aohey eros. -I mean San- but he --" 16 A N 1$' L Ire.tEl.'TtnR tree with each b teeo f !:hitch's Catarrh Remedy. 1 licca ',Q cents. For sale by J. Wilson,druggist. lux* II!!FUWLERS c- r�. 411wIT 1 j YRIVatimfil11 ufrE� c.'d(JL.ERA INFANTUM i Ar ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS 7,-L '7 BrauL DEALERS. 1 11 LulAT[D Erii .001tAOELION LIVER CURE NAV* ♦OY llt_ IJ..rCamel' cj+, as 1al'4C •reey�� r.,ye .caeca. Dim , "�' .' '� :..ti a .ay'teras. ar r/e'e • Memel r."4.( Drs_ww.a s 1.'vaa Csas w b. bead a sr .d ready. NATYIIt'• ti(ME0r fir tw'aalii.d wcc...1 fn.. Chs..'' I-i.sr ('un Ulnae Co.el.iat rests .oiely with Ow Oct that u gmolpo,,,, 4•wavo•'sw.lutnuwnNaw.veeia.e teas'.Aae Aso DANM. my, ,..*Meal with so Aim nn illuabA res Wks sad Isar having M>�wd.ctse the i kirnee ansa O ee-• fester tAeor .:g1w•. t/ Clw.is Rari/. se ,'vee rsgl ie Carole abet. W. wort w+7 m worm a -f ttrtA ..aa b r.v.M.i ..tfth Liver. n Nares w h r We r ru.D.-r r.rly. ge11eTlmfila. .enfn AtMv rhes wr.A.d tra.s•e�.elwy Le�at!.,' 4*. Orme', L1.wC • • ..le.bl• 1tsssva.me Medical Gids .ad rAs *mea las awkair• wet sob usifel s ads sod ori. °.N'bi.w' TRY comers ws Mew* Ore. A .w .d pr •.a..' r. ret[., 15 mate 11r wort mow mos tors0 Ow ALL `w h.'e10its S*es•aeetl • es. 5.se *.ewes. *'eel �"Reader," in i".fortrine you et the" , wonderful remedy f r Cuugss, Cede. I Asthma, Bronchitis, Cunauwpriun, aad 1 all affections of the throat and lours, we feet that we ate 4u.g yuu a great kind . nese, as if you have any of the •hove .mplsinta, if you will out, try is ee will; ruarantee easiNaction in every case sae :stoney retendel. Ask fee SIefiregor• Lear C. mps'uud. Price 60e. sue 11 per r i bottle at Rhynes' hyn' Drug Store. ") awes' Ma flew mgr. rrrpare the M"iy ter health and vitt•, ,f I by taking 1'r. Chase's Liver Care. Nn i$rring Medeeineto'meal ,t. It stimula- tee the Lever, aids digestion, and panties e'Iliac bin d. large bottle and Boer, I Demi, 01 Cold ►7 Jr. Willem. a"I"JAMES WILSOI t.t7D231bICF'-y *Jct, tl>I.+. tart