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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1889-3-1, Page 7THE HURON SIGN•1L, FRIDAY, It1.1.1t(`IJ 7. 1 HE POET'S CORNER tiro C.aeat.ee Ceagneeod. am.t►ire archipelagoes .'d fought the weedy .i.«sib•l ; 'd ak lamed stud muted the crocodile ad found him very useable ; .N a word of fear he'd uttered, •N • word module • (syllable. • claimed ale strtu.rrtb was were gnat. for Gwyn 'tad Ito.. eud•bte t .cued to bout the grimly bear, std foetid Wm very buatsbt. ; claimed la killing u.eneutres (snakes Must be nes eery capable. • bab.aenetrblur ouuN escsve, fee he was esescapabte- wit/s.t blppupt•ml h• mid bs wee lane- :ible. u sumer could minae hiss wince, baosu.. 0e easel w tan/MN ; Is orale the raa.p4Mg elephant no Mager re• ogaifable, .1 pulverise.) the roaring bulb and found bio pulrerisable. st teen his wife came 1• and said. "I'd think it quite cum•.ead.ble, f yolked x me and 'tend the baby . sad you ll lad hint very teudab;..' be way she took been by tee car will make this poem readable he polled biro oat .ad 1d him bums sad Mead him very Imadabls. MAX ON AMERICA. Ertl. Ilse CrMN of ieeplee. Utes ■M I lows of Mustier .leeatlsna. American women 'flail tbili hesbards td fathers very &:use in the matter of wit. The liberty enjoyed by American girls oweh.. the Iiuglish as nisch as the .betty of the English girl surprises the 1''reoeh. From the age of 18 the Amen - .n girl is allowed almost every liberty. .a takes the others. Not to take the name of God in vain, .e English have invented many suphem- ono ; some men, swimming, I suppose. that the Deity takes nu ougntzaua off any language. but English, venture w for as to say "Mon Die..r "Hein . ,tt." At this ted of thtog the Ameri- cans are as clever as the Yereltele. They have Invented "Great Scott. ' The Americans are Christians -that is to say. they attend church on Sundays. • • • How resist the two following appeals, posted at the doors of a New York mid Chicago church . I copied theca word for word with great care : Musial Ev•ogelists. Solus ; Short sermons ; The place to be happy and saved. Welk in in,ledies and gvutlemen,walk in. The other, more seductive still, was eroded thus : No reason for not coining '. Free Meets ; Cheerful service Books supplied to the congregation. The poblle are requested to leave the oke iu the seats atter we I saw in .n Amerman paper the ap eurauce ••f Miss 1111uute Palmer spoken in the fuliuwlrg terms : 'Minute Telmer ..It wear ali her diawut.ds .0 the third act, - Tim booking ofti:e was besieged all .lay, and, in the livening, muney was re fused. An mousing det.il was the er- r:T.l of • good fourth of the audience at lU o'clock to sou the diaarow in the third act. The population of America is 60.000,- 000-m,+tly colw,elia An Eugiisb old maid would do with- out her tea before an American woman would go without diamond& Gh,tbose diamonds m Ameviee ! Yon see then' wherever you go ! Not uoe woolen in • hundred will you see with- ut a pair of them in her ears. h is an 'wua"m. Jonathan admires all 'that glitter*, ,ren that which is not g••id. In his eyes the suoaees of • thing ac- umen for its quality, and the ohartat.0 :son that *wooed, as superior t, the .Hent that vegetates. The American men are generally thin. At • dinner party given recently at T)elmonici;• 1 heard that each items had s chain attached, consisting of pearls aud diamonds, and valued at $1,00J. Every American with the least self- respect is 01100411 or Judge. Few tamps R NNlslnag Yee 11. 'I was troubled with liver complaint for gruel many years, but was cured by one bottle 4.1 Burdock 1314e,d Bitters. 1 have never found any medicine to help me kik• R B R , in fact one bottle made a onrplete cure," W J West, Park kill, (Int. 2 T. be %Ned by ria•Itaea. urn. Owe no man • dollar if you can avoid it. [lave • goners! extended knowledge of all thin,. you deal it. Go into beanie*, on your own amount late rather than too early iu life. Clot into an old firm rather than weal, dish • new one. Avoid large sales to individuals. When you buy, take ears; when you sill, take quadruple care. Make no aimless eipenditures when I u owe ntheJS. Deep your property well insured ; you ra.:not air w lose while you are try- ing to make. Re holiest, economical, aggreiahle sod I.iesesut Keep yoer ezpenres low and your profits high. Take little ..41eit411.ve until money. Have s small hr.eie and lane eapihsl. Re m:.dest, nut feel yoer strength. Mn bit...dv will n..t pay your hill • therefore don't let your 114111bsed too much to please her. The heat rea'ulatnrs for the etwaach aria I...web, the heat care for hilareenees, tach headache, indigestio.w, mid *1 sem Hone arising from a .1itordrred liver, ate without ineeptio,n Jotinsum's Tonic I.iver Pial• Hwm.h in size. suras n»teal• rn.'d• T.. efforts?... 75 .rt.. ' -r !mode sole by ...bot.•, druggist.' Alban Klock, (lode rich, re le anent. fel EDUCATIONAL THOUGHT. ta/etestang P.Ieelloas a VMS. M Tama. et. w yeses.. It is a ewe of the otwuoua system of artificial rewaiJa mud punishments, lung suave ne.iced by the Blear -sighted, that by substituting for the natural rosette of misbehaviour Gorham tkr.atened tasks ur c••tigati..ne n produces a radically w rong st.odsid of woad gwdar.ue.-- Mpvuwr. Men are born with two eyes, but with owe tongue, w order that they should ser tweee as much es they say ; but from, their oonduut num would supp.w that tb.'y Ulla., born with two tuugues and uoe eye, for those talk the most who Ivan• observed the (east, and obtrude their remarks up.0 every tbiug who have .ereti lulu nt ILing.--- Bacon. If children et scb.e.1 can leu made to understand huts It is jest •cad a,bie b. be huiusue even to whet we term inferior •alma's, /t will du much to give them a blither cltar•eter and tune through life. There is uothia g intense that. bartsrou* and cruel treatment of the dumb crea- tures that can mut answer or resect the misery which ,s as t.ften oeed•eeely in- dicted upon them. -Joon Bright. We cannot know in another what we have riot first known in ourselves, We study children through ourselves. "We've beim there," and we know how it is. We have often urged the neces- sity of the stony of the child. This is all important for • teacher, but sell - study sh .ud dome filet. This was the diedinztive and decided teaching of Soo - rates "Know yourself " was his oun- stant gourmand. In self knowledge we lied the ban of mule's, intelligent •o- telligrta action. and religion. 8,. we afro, with Geo. P. Brown that "the shortest road to the kuawledge of the olttld is through • knowledge of self. '- N. Y. School Journal. Nr Mund•lla, vice-president of the C..uucil, seed in a recent addreeir'st be :.psi int of the Tate Free Library it. L.ndun : "The way to elevate man, to keep biro in the paths of virtue, purity and euhihty, is to. make Lim s reading m•u." We believe this statement, strong ask O, to be no stronger than the tailsfL ate same justify. Young m.u, men of middle riga and old men, Inatome loiters, vagabonds, end toxo often criminals, because that' do sot knua how to par their time when Lut employed at work. Hut no one can be expected to work every day and from ten to sixteen hours • day. Some means should be devised by which the spare hours may Dot only be pleasso• ly but prulitab•y spent. If there were no better way, It would bo to the interests of the c.mmuuity that mew who can do nothing else should be kept at work from early worn until nine or ten at night, rather than speed it in idleness, for such • course 11 pretty sure to lead to what is worse than idleness. But there is a better way -sad this is to sultivate the love of reading in the young. Such a tate can be grsttlird at • trilling not. I:o.u.l rradu;g produces bentelivi,al results by keeping the reader -rut •4 uuschi.f while be is reading, and by filling his nand with proper subjects for wrdttation and Cuuterattm.n at other times "Hz who nieces a ebUd with terror, ! u p• it• play, and stills Its aoog, Not .loue commits an terror, Bela great and moral wrong. "Olvii it ply. and never fear it, - Active life is no defect !lever, never, break it.spirit. - Curb it only to three'. "Would you stop the sow..11t river thin::og it would nesse to Auw I Oaward it must tow forever. Heuer teach it when to go." The truth is that i,tnonnt'e and indif- ference are almost the as me ; we are sure to grow ititernated, as fat as our know- ledge extends, in any subject .Newest. -W, B.'t) Peabody. es N Well M laeaeamber. That slander, like mud, dries sed falls .:fl! That he that . gathers roses most not fear thonis. That to wait and be patient soothes any a pang. That all are sot princes that ride with the emper• That correction is Koos whets adminis- tered in seam:.. That it takes a great deet of grace to be able to bee: praise. That you will never have • friend if yon must have one without failings. That to have what we want is riches, but to be able to do without is power. That there is no limit t.• the •ye at which • man may make • fool of him- self. That the roses of pleasure seldom I•.t long enough 111 adorn the brow of tbose who pliant them. That • man who cannot mind hie own mention is not to he trusted with the business of others apace Sefbre Tlst.lstag. An agreeable young lain was calling with date ceremony on • nice Auhnrn . irk the other evening when her brother Tom, just arrived horns fr•,m a olLwe cwt the evening trnin, rushed into the room and embraced his sister, ••Who, how plump you've grown, Edith !" he e.el.tmed. "You're Bally quite an armful t" •.isn't she !" .zc'eimed the merneahle !mine isan--nod thea he flit • chill rac- ing down hi. spinal enlwwmw. -That is,' he exclaimed, "i've re donht • f bit -i-, The rother llsaked carving knives at , and t►a-isid.n blushed far tMlB! LIVE STOCK. It is boon uajunacwtm stud cruel to .e- pttee cauls of salt. They will often meter impure water to pure druabiag wa.er, heatuee when Ostia tank water they are not kept pr•pariy supplied with reek salt. In their deters fur saliva loud, animals will drink the most ►w pure fluids and will .•v.0 eat earth. If cairn fodder is out sod steamed, . r mt.tateusd with tn.ihu,t water, it will to found au excelleut and agreeable champ. f &Mt fur the cows. Coes that are given • v.rtety of Ioel occasionally w.11 always keep to better condition aha.. shoe•s th.t are fed uu • sameness of diel contionallye Commence the new year on at. farm by paying for toerytbtug as yuu g •- Ewunsuus belt ewes trouble sod tuo'.n- .miwace.-Agricultum! Epttowi*t. "How lucky wow men are 1" is 0 e .linos& .mesuws cowuiei.t of the hap- hazard farmer and stosi:ko:au as he oun- tuwpiat..s the suawas of hi. wide •wake, thorough -going ueighb.•r. - Hrevtlwrs' Gazette. N.. r►u's experience can Leech him all that is worth kuowiog ; therefore read, and get the exponents* of '.them. . Tee beat profit is is the test products. Au afternoon visit to maiket wilI bud the best meet, putter, ve.teiai les aud fruits all sold -Vermont t:.,cb• man. The most mab mo joke in all the world is faruswg just fur duo. . . . iC n- sia is a sort of atm,-barbslous land. bot blinders ate never put on horses thele. Pulttruess pays to the cow stable. A gentle man tints swiss 1111111( the a harsh one. -Farm Stock and 13„w, s. It is almost wore thrown easy to set trees, shrub., and tlumers, mad Alen Nate them to take tare of themn•Ive•. In the management of • faro, os well as with all other pursuits, 'titan, • leg to details has duce more to assure stteress than anything else.-M•rylan•3 Farmer. Ii is not what we produce but abut we uulisr th.t makes the profit. . . Us the faini as elsewbrre misfortune is the shadow of case!emnesa. . . . Many a bey has berth driven fronnt the fares by Lein: compelled to du choirs while the win weld MOUlatng ut.der the trees- - t emoted. Don't keep tau many "dead head matin.” 1f yuu want the eats fir hatchimu, one to every dozen hells is enough, end if you want eggs for market, you need no roosters at all. Yuu tin materially lessen your expenses by at- e lii.g to thus lime.-1'omtry Montbl 1 The Poultry Bulletin says :-"Feed- ing for eggs is the principal thii•g for wittier laying, un tatter what treed 7-0 keep. Meshed potatoes in the soft feed aro very desirable sal greatly reii.hed two or titre* timrs a week Vegeta! les are necessary as well as grain, and ani null foie+ for the full developmi'ut of the laying capacity of any breed til p In growing calves for near the top of the market be sure and keep the top line stsatgbt. The calf that is Got - bellied is sway -backed, and is like bid butter-epnl.d once sp.iied forever. It le first good breed,, , and ssco cad, go•.d feeding, especially .ietiog the tin: year. that makes the strai.ht broad neck, without which ,.o cattle bring the top "Tt •••!ter maid Iwo "I Amid •u Hera seer w ars e•lver.d place and wet! thbltered, 1 nut lettuce plants n ow, soothing is i. elven ea drip.' dirt gfirkleel ne the Items of the ponpry , hoses, sod in She stalls of the staples and rattle .he is. i{ s oat your mamir• now sed sews M nut of the • ay h.1 •r• sprint. B' twit/ «, flan n.•n•n• wi'l ha in Co.taf/rMal• ton (•r its er•pa. lK ProLS•mbcrn's ration for a,1000 pound bolas ; Two lotus of oats 112 the moor lag, our and one half "parts of bran at n oon. and a strong quart of corn at n ight ia not • tr.oblesome way of fend Thu ration is large entoullh for a bora. se any lLbt •ork, and probably Niger than Leaded For city purposes Of for • pleasure home its • city a differ- ent ration would be given. During the work sesao•n the grain ration may l e doubled and • little ground feel added to the barn. Consider that fact that in every work- ing season there are 60 or 60 working days w rainy and disagreeable that a met, eaonot do full work out of doors. flee fernier who pious fur profitable work indoors an these da)• is an es000miat in the true sense of the word. Teach your daughter that good batter is better than good music. • , ` • The "scrub' farmer will al- ways have scrub settle, no nutter In what herd book they are recorded. �Rur- al New Yorker. A calf born in fall or winter is worth twu born in the spring for profit. To attempt to improae stab crop by selecting and breeding is poor economy. You cau purchase improved stuck acid secure the benefit of the work of ethers cheaper than you Bao do the work )our- self. . . . The greater the number of persons oontr,buting milk or cream to the factory, the lees uniform will be the product uule.s the operatr,r or owner carefully inspects the herds' stables sod dory house. of the petrous• -Dalry World. Prof W. A. Henry'sdairyexperiments go to show that the ripening ..f cream before charring iuerea.w the yield ..f butler from 15 to 20 ler cent- over the yield from sweet cream, provided that both are churned in the same year. The ripening of cream appear* to hive no marked iofpence upon the tame of churning. The mixing 01 sweet with sour cream just before ehormng does not result 111 any advantage 10 t114. sweet Bream, the same 'itemise in the yield of batter produced by ripening the cream may he obtained by editing acid to swell, cream just before churning--Itur■I the Yorker. When the sprint( rains come do not ajlotw any ..f the water to 11 .w into the well Grade ep around the well we as to tat illi' -i rise* water sit —_ __ - -touring January s. - number of accounts will be dnt cut, and to meet the emand we have ordered a large stock of account pap- ers which we will print and pad in quantities to suit at reasonable rates at, THB SIGNAL St^'r.i Printing House, No?tll8t., Goderich. Brilliant! Durable! Economical! Diamond Dyes excel all oche; s in Strength, Purity and Fastness. None other are just as good. &- ware of imitations, because they are made of cheap and inferior materials, and give poor, weak, crocky colors. To be sure of success, use only the DIAMOND Dm for coloring Dresses, Stock- ings, Yarns, Carpets, Feathers, Ribbons, &c., &c. We warrant them to color more goods, pack- age for package, than any other dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and durable colors. Ask for the D:arnotrd and take no other. A Dress Dyed 1 •OR A Coat Colored Garments Renewed I CENT&. A Child can use them! 10 As Draggists sad Msrcb..u. Dye leek fres. WELLS, RICHARDSON & Caw Montreal. P. Q. AN IMA, •''A CLUBOF�'Er';; SCRIBN ER .s eel NAGAZ!NftJ. . :oyes Its readers liter. ture cf Iit:::*ga -cst aid value. it is fully Z7,4 bcre_ti€u11 -c'o Illustrated uad has alrcarty ,�,'Zkinc .) a r: -r than tkatiol44 circulation exceeding' 12 .0 O i copies monthly. ft eW a A .fer ti rt. ac A. 'PRICE 25 CENTS A NUME ER 4 3.°O A YEAR :!,SPECI-AL_ ARRANGEMEMTSZ;th Assays. Charles Scribncrs.Ions the Publishers enable us to offer SCRIBNERS MAGAZINE with the Huron Signal for $4.00 to 1890. EWCOMBE PLAITING MILLtMlitINI FORTE: RUOIIF I I k ROBINS 311, Eat gent 1 r;ti211, DOOR ani LIND 14•.o{, re it. ell klud. of Olid In Conrtnit,)'! 1�v Exct. •ertl :•1 Ton IRONOUNCED BY ARTISTS TO BE 'NE FlI*EIT: BADE IN CANADA, sod equal to the bel I, iced Stair I estru 'sfs, at (rhee duty ad *eight w Pall) Witt -46. t!":111Ee33, I75P474 042?3Y, 1'191C1.771C14 FL'JTTERM'1 ,'tt::G'G! OF TH. Hi ART', ACIDITY OF C.(I.T 1 !.: •f, -HE 3T0.:' -1C11, YCSS Or THE SKIN, A.d rein, s•, -rte; of d'. we •rh:nw from d.aorr.•red V. h.CP4EVG. DTOfrAt7e1 oa 1.iiliyBCi L & ociatogo l Scbller' Rata For 1889 The publishers of Scrih'i.rs MaOaziar aim to noses it the most poptmaran•t int.-rpri.talr O' per'odh•als. while at a:l tines preset, MK its high litr'rarr character. t+.o'onew invaders have been drawn to it during the paw six months by the In, resod exn hence of its contacts iriots Ole the I:altoay art iciest. and It closes its second year vial, • crew Impetus and an assnre.t rub:noxa The Wua.ru iuea will .1,,,w .ome n. w effects. •nd outlaw to make Scribners .Vnonsiara:tr•ctire and in- teresting will be ncgleett'd.t THE RAILROAD ARTICLES will be cin tinned by (several eery .intone paprrn: one especially interesting by Ilx-Post-t.taster- (tenenl riomes 1.. James on "Tbe Railway I'oatat service. - 111 txstrale.t MR R4)RERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S seri W novel 'The Master of Rallwutrae." wit rim through the greater pan of the year. Begun in \'orrwrhrr, A CORRTMPONDEN.'E and collection of m•nnw:Mp. memoirs relating to J. F. Ifillet and • ramous group of modern FRENCH I', INTKRK w111 furnish the substance of several art ick*, illustrated. The brief end taper* written Mat year hr Robert Ions Steventon. .1.1 he revisited by equally interesting cunt ribittions hv different famous authors. Mr Thorium Halley Aldrich w•11 write the Ant of them for Ili., January number. lllwafrolrl Articles on ALIT SUi1JEI. TS will be afea- ture. Papers are arranged to appear by Clarence Cook. E. 1i. )tlaehriel•t, Assn 1)ub- nos. and mac. others. !ll maul riled, FISHING ARTI('LFS demo -Ming sport In the best Schism grounds wad appear. )telmon Winninish. Has. and Tarpon are the sehjects now arranged. The authors are well-known sportsmen. Aluslrnlri. ILLI.4T.tATE!) ARTI('LFSI oft variety. tom hong upon all manner of sub acts travel. biography. ta.rription, eve.. willap- pear. hit sot of the ionventiunal common - pimp tion. .U..frole.l. Ariongthe most interesting In the list of s.'ientiA.• paters for tole year will he a re nt,rkaMe article by Prnfeesr John Trow bridge. norm she most memo 1.•••Mprenta and n..s of PHOTO ° it I'H Y IU.sI rut, d A clans of articles which rens proved of special Interest w:11 .,t• r,•ntinned by • wrong of ponces upon KLRA'THII'ITY in les most recent apr• •atimta, by emirrnt anthnriti.-. - a remarkable taper on 1110.1'M1�1?'(i, and other interesting paper*. f.'s.our /Uoslrelinne. A P1'TCl A I, OFPKR to cover las rear's number. .hi• h In. -Inde all the RAILWAY AHTIt'I.K,+, es fobl.w. • A year s sntw•riottor IOWA and t he nnmhere for I!!W, ft 10 A year's wMnr;nti.n haul*, and the numbers for Iiteb b,.arol In .loth. . is le aa.es • )Tart IS tents • •..sbev. CHARLES SCRIRI",ER'S SOIS, 743-i i3 Broadway N. Jr. PILE aO74R3>g POwDEU a. Aye plc.testi to haw Cast- !is t4.1..r..'n toe •tl•1 11 a at'r.. WON se.l r se, itrel liNttr tOt' dI I l It : -. ,.. s: 4 • Per Cent. Less Expense MOH PSI1UADIS ttSSetnrJTi BITE Tilt MARIAtTiifI$ :, OCTAVIUS NEWCOMBE 4. LUMBER LATH. SHINGLES huilder's w... lel of every descripi on. School F+uniture a specialty NMI WINNCB ORM, TINE 1 00D• �.�� � r• ' ` WOOD. .'!.Tft .YS AND RcMOVES WORMS - ALL KiNDS IN CHILDREN OR • •.'t --S SttltET AS SYRUP ANil vANNOT HARM THCr f''3 r Chino • - DUNN'S SA.KINC agrER ZEST FRIEWWn .� �t..ls.n.•, lel R E -, �- , S ▪ . mar. •eu►n. i'•Y • ..0. 11 ren.. 1 r E '� • ,-...••......1 1' wl ieew. ,. ,l .er see .• • c - __Me erre e..rr , t, 1 .M rwms,.c...11 Or .n.r►wru , $ -44.111f:7---7 ''- . we wa1 Or. sed erre. air►..,. -11 ', am of or math..( m.lwt,. o • i •�,� slow Not we ram. to lase. ...• ' t .� may malt..,... M....W ew,a . Sol mo r•. all *all b./p.....w �. a. rli W+ So .•.r ..,-b. ,ere.•. +fie• ler n.. .r sir pr.... .noel' MIA or baa,.Sib tie . M. .ea .... .ea dr et. worry.. W sr - /ad*. •sets.• ..pr••I res. has nsmess.(s�.u. •5.. . r• ea at Baa am se - gam ha it — .e+e+Yn r s....M. ma .e. Ora 4..45.4..1lararew dawn rearm...1. •...... !Divi* vii... ism 'rM A. lllatme. F iRMEPLS' GRISTING H*rIng pnro•1•s•e•l and r.-arrs.ngel 111'• FLOUR and b ELI) Rusieeeart Mr. H. !Oleo w 14 .t street vie are prepared to EXCHANGE GRISTS — AN!. tt-t•1'l.i --- FLOUR, BRAN, SHORTS in any qusetl y and 11" of ' PRICE3 TO SUIT ALL fatties fit a!Kw: to lake wood from me must lean .• their nt;ter.a unci,. :o.ti+u 11.11 shipped fur tee.eason. torah-ra will be att.-adt- l to if lett at the following .lure-kev'pers: G. H. 1)i 1), it. PRI1'E, .J of x Ros- EIITSON and JAMES Lu'lly. NI ER B/ECHLLR 71.1ot Falls Reserve NASAL BALM ltay 11th. 1ST. ]1y wife suffered for Ave years with that dietreesini( (Usease, catarrh. Her case wail one of the wont knov n In 1he.e parts. the trier! all of the atarrh reme- dies I ever saw adserti.err. but they were of eio use. I Anally procural • hoot. of Nasal Halm. She has used only one halt of it, and now feels like • new person. 1 feel it my duty to may that Nasal Halm tannin be Tian If loll LY reeoonirndrd far catarrh troubles. and •m pleased to hay. ell such sufferers know through it• nee they will receive Instant relief mid t; Ick CHAS. MOOiLL Pannier 'Spring Goods GREAT VARETY- -AND AT— Our well-known and poe-*l*r Ms ;wheeler knots here beearecently improved. and we are able to turn ohs • FIRST-CLASS F LOUR which we guarantee to give satisfaction. —AT THE— TORONTO 11111H&'IT PRICE PAID FOR (PAT:1CASH STORE• l,'koplrg done at .L•. per lee lbs. 1 , at the mill. AT OUR GO- DERICH STORE we keep etimatenf ly on bend • toll supply of O'DEA FLOUR, FEED AND SEEDS. 01ve us • call - you will And us Vermin mil • reliable. 111 A. P. CULL14, 77 O. Sods; it b ad Manchester. MANAGER WE HEAD THE PROCESSION. 0E0. BARRY, the Furniture Man, is giving the befit of value in all line. of Furniture—from the s,nill.'*t chair to the lar r••,lt and btnmle tt htMl-uset, or parlor c'u'te. Call and see his stock and get a bargain. Ie tdtttq branrtteK, r nlnptly attended tc ice' EMBALMIN(, FL17I1) always kept on hand. PICTURE FRAMING 11 al> rioltT. G20. WRAIY, 1llemiiton-£t.,t3c.darjob. Min to the ihroll SO.