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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1889-10-18, Page 22 THE RU$ON SIGNAL. FRIDAY, OCT. 18, 1889 _.�...,... e_ ANNA. 'I'bs village d Offetd Bob was alive with to Nes AWN that BReady ruo& holbrothels Tema. I3e had wooed sad wen ler i. New York. sad now of his family bed dean her astil ler arrival among them •the Milk killers "The whole thio*, said Dr Teaser, "Close no doubt at • while beet,after the fashion of the Treseb The T .ashes were • larrs-bodied, bot - blooded race, always staking a talk in the comity by saddest outbreaks tato vise, or into big, heroes deeds al vines. The quiet, slow -*wog, beetcb-Iri•► Preebytstriaw who made up the oum- e meity of the village et Offord found tie virt.oel Trenches quite as dtseom- perhag end uncomfortable to live with as abet slated one "Radical religion," said Deacon Yale, "is like s bailie.' horse. He may in- tend to drag you up hill, tout he lands you is the ditch at last. time me en old, steady pacer on the road or in the eoherch. " The Trenches had • front pew (for which they sometimes forgot to pry), aad it was bore that Bob led his wife in the morning. She was a small woman with light eyes and hair, and looked oddly white and cool and insignificant namol0lneg the big -boned. black bruised T5toocbea. She knew that the whole eougreg•tion were sitting in judgment en her eyes and nose and gown, but went through with bar devoticna in ab- solute calm. ()id Dr McLeod, io the pulpit mating a curious glance down at her, was appalled by catching her pale eye fixed rebukingly upon him, and flurried through the sermon in headlong baste. When the plate was passed for the col- lection, honest Bob, in thelitervor of his N oel, pulled oat a hundred dollar ball ; but the bride neatly intercepted it and dropped in five instead. 4)n the wsy home she gave the note back to him "Why did you 1304 let me give it, Anna 1 My heart was so full of thanks- giving ! I have you! I wanted somebody to be abs better for it." "Fire dollars is quite encogh to spend yearly on the conversion of Jews," she said, smiling. "We will make oat a list of charities, calculate .hat we can afford to give to each, and divide." "Bother ! I like to make a spurt whet' I feel charitable," grumbled blob ; but be squeezed her arm and looked down on her adoringly. "How just you are, Ansa 'Pon my word I believe you are perfect," "I try to do what is right,"saidtbe little creature, walking beside him with trim, measured steps. There was not a touch of elation or Phari.eeum in her tone, yet Bob somehow felt belittled beside her, and shuffled in bis body and his .pint like a big. guilty school boy. Luncheon'was the first meal at which the family had met since her arrival. Now Grandma Trench, who was seventy, had long ago yielded the care of the house to Kate, the eldest daughter. There had been tierce suspicions in Kate's mind that the newcomer would try to wrest the reins of sovereiguty from her. "She'll take the bead of the table ; you'll see," she told her sister Josey, vehemently. "She must understood from the beginning that you and I con- tribute to the expenses, an that I mao- ape. I wit' lever take • second place— never ! What can that child, brought o p in a city boarding -school, know about housekeeping r But the child in ber babyish white gown seemed to understand aha situation by second sight. tihe ems into the room where luncheon was served, her arm about rrandma's waist, softly smil- ing u the old lady chattered. Kate, tall and grim, stood behind the chair of honor. In an inatand Anna had seated the old lady in iL "My dear !" she cried amazed. "Thu L not my plane ! Kate, cr— or you—" "No, no, dear ! Sit still Of coarse the plans of precedence is yours,` said Ana, gently. "That is nvbt. I will sit by you and do the work," eliding quietly into • chair. Kate, to • dumb rage, found herself deposed. But what could she do 1 Asa& was right. She eras right, lou, when Bob sent up for a third cup of green tea, in leaving it untitled "You think you want more," she said, ber light, smiling eyes hol lint his hrm ly. "But you are mistaken, Robert ; you do not. You only think so." It is a fact, memorable among the Trenches, that Heb never asked for $ third cup again. These Trenches were undisciplined it their eating, as in everything else. When grandma asked for deviled lobster, Anna, with an innocent face, gave Ler oold chicken. "The child did not hear me," the old lady thought, and she quietly are her vapid faro. But Kate was not deceiv- ed. "You snake a mistake," she said to Anna, after they left the table. trying to smile courteously. "We never ioterf.-re with mother's diet, however uti hele- t ome it may be.' "Ah i But Chet is not right !" re- plied the little bride with a sweet !soup. "I .hell ere her too dearly to allow her to commit suicide by inches." "It is right." That and her sweet laugh were her only wusp.ns The Trenches might fume, or rale, ..r laugh with savage insoleees at her pop sed reforms ; but there •ke stood, calm, en - movable, an inflexible purpose ai met- ing every atom of her weft little Kele, and giving meaning to her pale blue eyes and gentle laugh. to • year she bad proved her pewee. De'ilea lobster, with all other highly tseaeooed and expensive dishes, bad vanished from the Trench t.ihde, and had bees replaced by ouol and cheap messes eompouoded by Anna's owe deft dog- OTIL "It was not nest that w ranch of their moderate Morose should go to their strenseh.'' "It was right that when Amb was the chief bread -wiener of Ibe howssbadd Bob's wife should hey the breed." Kbe never put .Ls. lest maxim like weeds, but este beetle, immovable, ineseet assndea Whin grad bites, team of lemgglg 1er bee bee Geni•s, lee itsdm the pies Mimi ist the eldelilvers, *like pais mil Assess el , navel, t►s....R "mph% la aha the vi- varia/1e s told seAram. Wats hdr pls•.at Masi. W mended deems sad Mea to he se inswfssa as cards. The sssghboea anal kind tial their noise M nand eel were regarded by Yrs Hobert se a sad setae of time, sad hied to toms. Assn. 'who liked to hear her owe visa, Iaaegitratd a series of miming reading oat aliases saki history, to which the family loused with covert yaws• sad .shallow .piriita. Yate, tboewh the twel,e months had measurably cowed bee, veneered ow • v►guross protest 'Mediae," she told Anna, "always made our home pleasant ahem we wen young le urdoe to keep a is le This woe a gay, hospitable boles; every Trench lured it She tried to du the same for Nellie's ohildlm slum she brought them hack to us fatherless. But it is no longer g+7 or buspstable, and the children are learoing to hate their home.'' "I understand you, Catherine," said Anna, smilitg ; "ben demes• and other silly wastes of time I regard as wick- ed.,, "But we do not so regard them. Surely Nally b.rself must judge for her child- ren.'' "There can be but ma right and cue wrong," said the smiling little somas. "1 •m ngbt." It was Anna who oriticied poor Josey's oil paintings. Josey wee • cripple, and her one amusement was to paint Impee- sible valleys, hills and beeches. But Anna *holism her how false wet+ your coloring, and out of all rules her draw- ing. "Artists would only laugh at her pictures, dear Josephine," she said. "Why waste your immortal time In • garemit for which you have absolutely no talent r 'How could you be so cruel 1' Kate cried, 'with angry tears, when Josey went out of the room. "She suffers constantly. She never can look forward to the life of other women. 1f her poor little sketches dive her happiness, why should von rob her of it 1" "It is not right to even tacitly aid io deception," said Anna. "Besides, 1 wish Jts'phina to embroider an altar carpet. Why should she not give her time and labor to religion T' Josey that night, pale and red—.sed, burned all bar sketches. "Why did you not tell me wen worthless daubs?' she said to bit- terly. •'As for altar carpets lbe- niile work, that is not religion. 1( will have nettling to do with them! ' But in a week she was at work upon the car- t pe "&obs wife shall never interfere with my life," Kate boated, hotly. Yet it was Anna who called Bob's attention to the fact that young Whit- ing had been banging around the girl for mouths. "Hae salary is a mere nothing and bis health is not goad," she urged. "Kathy has something of her/own, and if she loves Billy she may wish to nurse him back to health," raid good- natured Bob. "It is not right that her life should be sacrificed W an invalid." "Really, Anna, I cannot interfere. Kate is old enough to judge fur boreal( as to the right course." "Dear Robert,tbere can be but one right course ! I have told you what it e." In consequence of this and many utter talks Kob treated young Whiting with such eoolne.s that he left the house one evening deeply offended. Ii•••.., afterwards be emigrated to California, there to grow healthy and rich and in time to marry a girl who resembled Catharine Trench. Kate is .till unmarried. Grandma Trench died in the second year of Anna's reign. "She was ureic countably weak," the physician said "and notable to resist acute disease. He told his wife that he "suspected Mrs Robert's dietary was not of • nourishing kind ; and the old lady belonged to • large bodied, hungry race who required rich food and plenty of it " The parr old woman crept into her grave with • dull sense of stare lion in ber mind and heart as well as body. She had been a Methodist in her yo:,th and would gladly have gone to that church in the lam days of her life and Mee joined in • psaeionate hynin or in sh••utine "glory!' But Anna, when she to!d her this, gently shook her bead. "I do not think such excesses are reverent," she said. "Dr Patey, will come and pray with you this afternoon," "I will not see Dr Pate,," cried the old lady vehemently. Anna told her husband of the refusal. "Mother used to be • Methodist. Perham she would like to go to ber own church P" said Bob snxiously. "As if there could be more than one churcht' thought Anna. lib* let the matter drop. 11 Mrs Trench would not hear the truth in deoon us fashton it mimed be better she should bear nothing. Re the dying woman made her peace with (hid alone, if she mad.. it,and died, and Doctor Patey buried her. Soon after this, Nelly, Bob's widowed sister, told him that she would take her children and make a little home for them. "Jimmy and Kate will go with us, brother," she seta. "Itut father meant —1 thought we all ',curd keep together while we lived, Nelly," said Bob, bis Mack eyes growing dim. He was an specimen) fellow and his sisters were very dear to bite. Lale atone with his wife yawned very bare and empty heftier. him. "I hope you and Anrve had no words?" "N,., indeed. N,,h..dy could ben word. with. Anna. Kut—it would be borer for us to go, 11., . " She maid to Josey afterward : "God help her ! Khe is engine him 1 seem •toy, but i will not have th. children's li... craniped. Kb. has her little rigid ides rel dui y and she goes about forcing every ether Iowan bangs life iota it. She might as eel !have sen ire oboe made tr. fit herself, end then crash all 01{ oar foot into t11.1." Anne setiliugly bade her sisters fare- well sad prayed God to blew them "i never th.u.bt to see flea girls leave 11,. -id hon.e.teed." said K•.h, hoarsely "P.ther ttwaat their boa. should be here " Anne's beset was warm with triumph that she woe et lade misMw of the odd homestead; het she really did Rot know the elan of her trimesis She ibosgy UM theiri plead that bir eiders W "Alter ell, 1 is AM right the Stena shook. mart herseU for ler children," she sea "()b, I same. so r broke forth Bob. "Yee always kites the Mt. Ansa, sued it 1e always so smelly dmespwsbM&" To be feet to the Nide w.msa, whom site wens OM with her 14.. of right like as We slams she did est easpeet that her owe set6shssm or *serosas had molded it. It was, she Mese y Whored ret Clod's .akin*, sad k was His will that all haws beet should be ers.b.d into it aid walk in it. After this she reigned supreme. The only Tremeb left was Bob, over whose stupid, aff ctioeate, but -tempered patens as he grew older she lust all power. He would not listen to her .el.Mi6e read- ings mor to her expo siuooa of the creed of her own not and cosdeonation of ah others. "God help you, if that is the religion you teach your eons," be said. Hut why should poor Bob talk of relig- ion, who spent most of bis time now in the barroom of the Offord hunt Hie old neighbors gave "poor Treacle who was going to the devil,"the cold shoulder and pitied his sweet tempered, pious wife. Anna had two boys, twin On them she had full time and taster to experi- ment. She dictated their diet, their words, their beliefs, their very thoughts; she was their nurse, their 'overuses, their tutor; she prepared them fur owh- loge; she permitted them to form no ao- q.aietauces with other boys until she had closely examined and approved them. "The result will be," said Roily to her once, "that those lads .ill be either weak imitations of yourself, or hypo mites." Aanis face fell into its customary smile off superiority. "There can be but one right way of tinting, talking and living. If my way is right, why should I not compel my boys to adopt The boys went to college. Then, as Nelly expressed it, they kicked off the iron oboe. John plunged into every dissipation within his reach, was expelled and disappeared. James drank, but drank alone and in secret. His mother took btu home and struggled with him for years; but even bar will was not Strong enough to conquer. "It is the only fun I ever bad." said poor James, the' day before he died. He was a mild, lovakls fellow, and would have been glad to place her. But be felt dully that his life had beep unhealthy and dwarfed. There was no strength in it to resist temptation. Anna lived but a year after him. She was calm and self•pouaeesed to the last Poor old Bob insisted on helping to nurse her, and strove vehemently to drat her back to life again. He watched her face grow thinner each day with fierce wrenches at his heart of love and remorse, When at last he knew that she must go he brought himself to speak , kneeling by her bed. 'We've made • mistake, Anna—some- how. God knows why ! We've got far apart. Can't we come together again! Can't you forgive me, my darling r' "Certainly. I forgive you, Robert." Her voice was weak but composed. "I am sorry you think I was to blame in going apart from you. Of cone's, we are all sinners. But I tried to do right, and—there is only one right way." Sbe died that night, and was laid in her grave with a complacent smile on her little fair tare. Bob Trench left Offord immediately. It was said that he went to South America in search of John. After two years they came back together and set tied down on the old farm. John is a thorough Trench, big, sincere, impul- sive. His father bad pallor him out of the slough and be never returned to it again. He married one of his cousins, and the old homestead is again the centre of warm, helpful, happy life. But, oddly enough, Annie name is never mentioned in it. There are many well-meaning women who carry about iron shoes and have their own way with them while living, t hey aredeade the w„halm hastily ambotswtheirhen tname on thcalm marble at their tombstone and forgets them as quickly as possible. — Independent Attarkrd Three Theirs. "Having been attacked for the third time w'th Inflammatory Rheumatism which kept me in bed six weeks under medical care, without relief, I resolved to try Burdock Blood Bitten, and be fore I had finished the third bottle I was able to work again.” Geo Robb, Garden 11111, Out. 2 regal 'Nvelle& Heating to get rich. lusting to get into the papers with big yields of milk. speed of horses, weight of fleecy and fast-grow- ing pigs, breeders here ooam.itted crimes against nature. They h... on dermined the cense tit ions o`'impmred" animals. They have bred tr■, youtg, f turd, overfed, pampered and pushed; built underground stables, carded, ear- ned and coddled ; denied any outing ex- cept an hour's eunttath a day 1 Diseases and weakness have been bred into them Animals need air and sunlight ; they need to rough it some It will ruin any animal toi hoose it and coddle if—horse, hog, cost, sheep or emu.—(Farm sod Fireside. •a defer ■am ee oho roast. f}rapensis is dreadful. D•sordered liver a miser,. indigestion is a foe to g.ww! nature. The human digestive apparatus is one of tbe meet a.mplisated and wonderful I things in existewee. It is easily pet out el order. Greasy fond, toegb foxed, sloppy food, bad cookery, mental worry, hue hours, irreenlar habits, and matey other tLsets whish ought not to be, have snid. the American people a nation of dyspeptics, But Green's August Pilate Ma dome • wo.nderfnl work is reforming this sad bemuses and making the American prank so health that tbq esa enjoy hemeek r measad be happy. Remember :—No happiness without baflb. Bet Orwn's August newer bawl bud* and happiness M t►. 41soh Ach your druggist (hair a bottle. &.IM ve *sots lowly haw f.e..l prossmties meg act arm a rivet. The Iasi name a dylag person talk ie the twat to bolos. A dish slut► Meg ea • door boob is s . ip el death is • foody: The +orpes most sot pen twice over nay port of the sem* toad. To dame os the gruead indicates di- aster oe dear► "tithe the year Whoever WADI on a sick perogn'+ dress, he or she .ill die wit►ii • year. Whoever coma the oaniagss.1 s psas- ing funeral .ill die withis s year. If a hue be larded throagh a boom* seem sue will die before the year is time If shirts+• sit at table, the one who risee &&et will sot dye thrush the year. To break a looking glees is a sign of death in the family before the year chase. If three persons look at the same time into a mirror one .ill die within the year. The person oe whom the eyes of a dying persou last rest wiU be the first to die. The clock should be stopped at the time of death, as iu running will brieg all luck. If one dies, end no rigor mortis issues, it indiates a speedy second death in the family. It is unlucky in • funeral for those precept to repass the house where death has occurred If • hearse be drawn by two white horses death iu the neighborhood will occur witbin • month. If rain falls on • new made grave there will be another death to the family with- in the year. At a tumoral entering • Morels before the m ,users means death to some of the entering party If theygrave is left open over Sunday another death will occur before the Sun- day following. If ram falls into an open grave enoth sr burial in the same cemetery will uc cur wiibiu three days, To keep the corpse in the hones over Sunderwsll bring death in the family before the year is rot. If any one comes to • funeral after the procession starts another death will occur in the same house. It is unlucky to pass through a funer- al, either between the carriages or the files of mourners ere foot. In Switzerland, if • grave is left opeu o.er Sunday, it is mid that within four weeks one of the village will die. To put on the bonnet or hat of one in mourning is the•ign that yogi will wear Line before the year is out. When a woman who• has been sewing puts her thimble un the table as she efts down to eat, it is a sign that she maul be left a widow if she marries. If, during sickness, a pair of shears be dropped in such • manner that the p.o.t sticks into :he floor, it indicates the death of the sick person. A common saying in Eneland is"happv tithe Corpse the rain falls on." The be lief exists also in the i'nited States. Thus it is said that if rain falls at the time of the funeral it is • sign 'that the dead has gone to heaven. a lbsa1•.$ Dise.uwr. I suffered witb'neuralgia and obtained no relief until advised to try Hagyard's Yellow Oil. Sisee then I base found it to be an admirable remedy also for burns, sere throat and rheumatism. Mn F. Celestes. 137 Richmund 8t W., Toronto, Ont. 2 U.dktW rrnpereha of irietabtes. The foliowing imform•t,on may be useful to some at this season of the year, if not new W many : Spinach has • direct eflect on the kid- ney The common dandelion, used as greens, is excellent ter the same trouble. Asparagus purges the blood. Celery acts admirably upon the nervous systole. and e a cure for rheumatism and meantime Tomatoes act upon the liver. Beets and turnips are excellent appetizers Let- tuce and cucumbers aro cooling in their effects upon the system. Onions, garlic, leeks, olives, and shalnts, •11 of which are similar, possess medical virtues of a marked character, stimulating the car colatory system and the consequent in- crease of the saliva and the gastric juin. promoting digestion Red onions are an excellent diuretic, and the white ones ace recommended to be eaten raw as • remedy for insomnia. They are a tonic and nutrition A soup made from onions is regarded by the French as so excellent restorative in debility of the digestive organa, Catarrh is in the blond. No cure for this loathsome and dangerous disease is possible until the poison is thoroughly eradicated from the ardent For the porpide, Ayer's Seriepsrilla is the beet and most mei-minim! medicine. Price Fl Six bottles. $6 Worth ,It► • bottle. Count Tolstoi'• Christianity es • marry twenties' Chreitiamity This honest man e nd able sinter believes in a fair appor- tionment of labor—the hest and wont oaf taxer divided up so that one may not It "It down nn hie brother and call him menial. 11 Me dr•ctrine would only erased into soreptnnce the world neer we weeld yet live leo sea the millen- n ium. here Tremble Naha be ttaeetee. if yon do not (teed the warnings of na- tive and at 'nee pay attention to the maintaananer of year health. ,flow often we ale • person pot off from day In day the purchase of • medeein. *blah if pro- cured at the o.ntstart .,1 a disease would have remedied it almost immediately. Novi if Johnston's Zonis Liver Pill. had been taken when the ha oneaeame made its appearsnc. the illness weeld have been "nipped It the Md." John- son's Tonic Blum and Livor Pille are derided!, the hest medicine of the mar-' bet for gt.eraI tonic trod ievi*oratiag cassettes • Pi1ls Us. sew brainier Bitters geode the deaghLt, Aihieis Welk. wen male and el per bat* MA by theater �l THE LATE PROF. PHELPS. The above is a portrait of the late Prot Edward E. Phelps, M.D., LLD., of Dartmouth Coll , Ile was a saran*, able sta•,whostaraitli lade literary and saentifie worlds. 11 is not generally known, but it is, aevevthekes, the truth, that I toL Phelps was the discoverer of what is knows to the Medi- al Ptolemies and Chemists universally as Paine's Celery Compound, unquestionably one of the most valuable discoveries of thus center,. This remarkable compound is not a nervone, an essence, a sarsaparilla or any devised article, but a discovery, aryl it marts a distinct step in medical practice and the treatment of nervous comphcatama. It has been freely admitted by the best medical talent in the land, and also by the leading rhemistsand scientists, that for nerve troubles, nervous exhaustion, it summa, debility, senility and even the dreaded and terrible Paresis, nothing has ever been dbcovered whit), reaches the disorder and restores health equal to this discuvery of Prot Phelps Pain's Celery Ceenpoend is now prepared in quantities, and can be at any reputable druggist An attractive bunch of relay is to be blend on every wrapper. It las become ty popular among professional men, workers ladies burdened with exciting social duties and ire- quenters of the leading clubs. ..d - saw l mala Yoe Foes. rawe - a aha row .tor err were towy.6 lei .el - 04 s Ilse .t `oessird liammplom,Mme. a, vo see mar haw sen. was ,.haw la prat 5'.. M a t...As M Ammo Waw .. Om. w.. Irl M'....k,L 1M�krw. pal •.. t.... IN mar .. aq .a_aJI�6r aha. aha�w�w6A/M�14 .Isere eriwo.. *smm mell :"T. Veerlmind. iib M 1 T'HIEEIEGT- AH H11CO. I 'BENG POWDER -.Is +- L 12E S imn Friel T?o A:am. Noti..sg Injuries*. ETLtLE3 EVE 7VE9'. F.CTOIT SUP?LiES Valves, Iron & heed Pipe Loam Polity Oilers, Eliee let Pimps. Fara Pros, Med Ml:is, Cram $pest., Dairy sad tasadq Utasdls. S3SCIUIS STP.OT, MONTREAL CHADWICK'S SPOOL COTTON For Eland and Maclaine %ate. HAS Ng SJPEd;oa. ASK FOR IT. sta-UND TilU!!$ aft lues Ltr*rtst TRUNKS In the Wort L J. BYELEiGIaC3 MONTREAL-, 911:11. It7 i`« r.LZ''1 HOTELBTMEALMORAL. ,L. It... hit... swop& the meet .rM,wt aotev farr•hhns lintels to the Liessahed.tt.,e for 400 guests. $;esti Y, vv tier PEARS' 1011.11 tall 111r f�ffi`s, i.PluER&3O$ t: holrsal. Imp'tr. of 3RU0CiIT$' SUPOR ES 1:11 i7111 DILE 17., MONTREAL SOL . DOMIN10:1 LEAS BOER s:O&APANY. Manaf cturen of liS$ESTOt tELLSI R) seam 1P4esing. FRICTION ISP�,ULLET$0AR7, IS , vie Piefo-c rice:'M. RECKITT'S BLUE a THE BEST FOR LAUNDRY MR. awe he len To ORDER fit 'AMOR • EON$ & t �Lu1D F IHE BREAT TRENGTH 61 Flo, r000 �a Tent wow OM Inn l tertleaSarte a& - II'. A Pow Mut INVICQ0AT'1w PLANING MILL fSTA$LNgi! Nil quail & 101111101, eaawNAL7cwara SALH, DOOR and BLD peahen In stI kmb et LUMBER. LATH, SHINGLES Ase lel g aaatevlea ef every desmeetiee. Noll team $ ltd I I" � SFUBR THEE 1890 WEEKLY EMPIRE limas Loft Newspaper PATRIOTIC IN TOR% THUS TO CANADA, Tlit't To TUK IZMPI'BIt. THH EMPIRE I8 NOW TR GREAT WEEILI PAPER elf Tat 11.11111111011. sad weed arrangements are belle hide to add sew 604 att•aetite features, trafd wlU arvuly Dacrew ite sietedt sad valoo. A. u ltadoteier•t to phes 1t la the Made of .11 r &TaMT1r fAi 1Mas. the hikes, of press■t year out bemivan FREE TO NEW SUBSCRIBERS, Making it may Ow Dollar from sew till rad el ISW. address •ares EaPIsa•»twttttn, ow. The EXAMINER (P. O. Bax 3691,) NEW YORK CITY. The Leeil& Baptist Heivop aper, PubliMsd .t Two Dollars • Year. Will be seat un s "trial trip" frost OCTOBER 1, 1889, JANUARY I, 1800, For the nominal sem of THIRTY CENTS. I Fyou a i -b toknew what lire Baptist dr- mowtnattus at doing, sad te retrive all the sews .f for world besides• try Tom Kzasuass. ihe.r National paper. sad • lire newspaper a. well. I you your r 1,1see "ter ase ttsow toe, mIsb :Tea for shaven orf tl.em -trial trip.- or Indere saves of them te eabuwibe tknsgb you, and wit w111 w .'.noise year Undoes, b. ,►remise ion • 3111 page, ttmo.. jest isawed volutes of the seeress work ..f CUMMINS U. eat 'luno.. the great London weedier. THE SALT-CELI ARE, Briery u Collection of 1'merrts, ToyetArr H -itA Homely Nolen Threes one of the spiciest and moat common sense of his work.. ' you esenot seed ,ruse team, s and IMO and torture the rift, send whatever number' oe cam, at therms. time lead- ing for oar "BOOK OOM[YISSION LIST" Aad see what handsaw books.inrlaeli.g Tea GALT CSLLake.� yours& add to your library. or lave fo: Nopdal riri boots. dui by iodise. leg • tee of the 'trial trip" salsa nbers to re- news for lean at our remoter price ut $i • year. roe "eeeivtag• boot fur every soar wawa yea renew. BUT de net waste preras lime in oerrii. poadenee. Just .hand in nom*. as you gnat them, os n.sial reeds if /o. .:11 sddreeelst 1 m EXAMINER Box 31181 New Toes (ITY. 'catalog were ,uu base termed ODA - sauna ('OPIUM WIWI. w NOTICE! In view of the fact that a large percentage of time who avail themselves of OUR ANNUAL OFFER TO NSW SURSCRIBERS become permanent readers of "The Signal," we offer the following inducement : FOR 25c WS WILL BEND Ti) ANT ADDRESS "The Sial" FROM NOW TO isi OF JAL 1890 -- FOIC-- 25c Call, or send us the atm*, amount at once, a000mpat- led by name and address, and secure the fell. benefit of this offer. D. llcOTLI TpUDDY. COMM! W. Oi tame Weer eMtiiM if ear CS __ w Ilhhbl get▪ vee es gerNwltr the Liner of Tai Tessin Ba --The 1.4101 New York Ostia purtsma to Ulster may error* of • Is* Perhaps yet in your subsea* ole d the beet ial Unified amiss roam* AM We might have bare in the &ate hemp sudaieuitly • livtthe ; if we heli public welfare ant *begone. to cum are nesseeary 1 . persistence of re Adiroadsek W ml bees bbd perusal' isivolke Sime TI a..tld k either. ei the could here been t of this art,aud the played in the ears woodlands of tele try. The whole odes was "Mean The timber could the trees matured have bees w' cwt more absurd than should t.ver be Whatever a tree should se cut d .r to some useful pe its value, and in . oecraaion art q,•rl thus for the pert est If the Adieusds itite liuently man they would now time yielding eh the people of the elation would hero ed t•y the raise: foam sod woman Men richer ..day of the means of s fort and happot ;very child in bees bora to a into more favors) The Guests wind' than ewer before, Sere nn ifCreaatt Sts et the state, Mee of populati.. exhalation of it «iota 6t for atria The Adiroada agrieultere. N eea�ssy other than lima should haw, TPI'. it is ends turh these a,er h• or to remove ly, without moat acid anmbtlating itef any value r obvtoul a region t eon be fn suede this sent and erodes sod this sole and a most importer been recooenized. As I said year' forests could be o of the best p.estl "An Act for ti Agriculture in th lumbar tumoral; only. do.atructivc Teas .4 t Meseta for any nes but lb stripped of trees, pastorate have b of reproducing t1 *the laced ever ha. 04e.nge—if anytl strange—tn see s in the effort to ' so meagre. and cold, that no et labors is poesihlo diaappean after only the bare, 1, as meet of the ' rolling/ or hilly tl break down and are firmed, whack every year, till v shifting and, e varied only by n: .treteh before where once grog perennial spring The region eat It has no natural It is pitiful to sat vegetation which deem bete cut e pee' and auto! in the middle of Southern States t millions of acres tilted beneath es effort to farm tk has also beets the portion of the it so nisch ofthe r is cleared by beim dry time the fire low to the woods, to keep it with' common saying it cnnflagsatioe is e dent for the tart the next &•.riug skims! any el raises • crop is 11 of the 'farming bresghe istoouiti is all, frees Mgt waslef.l sad .ul inevitable end, tl Ince orf the soil it Mau has no pow* He has not let 1v of the owe whir ability to wreck a great. it P St Kpeskw.Il 0410. wt use *g. g11w, bet w1. a every s5... dlp ed by for itis • + R 57 sae r w mise. b++NMf em