HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1890-6-13, Page 61
6 THE HURON SIGNAL, FRIDAY. JUNE 13, 1890.
FArtM AND GARDEN.
care
Strattgli.R shoots ut shrubbery should
be clipped about June, or • little later.
Ose may preach against formality sad
•rtrfalisl oetlmm
es,buc the a)ority peo-
ple ere pleased with nicely mended or
conical s ecimsos, whether artily or in
group.. As a little abort, wen -rotted
nmeeru should be annually deg lam the
ffo wer-beds, it will aaose • stray. growth,
especially is *oleos, t17 to
tope should be frequently clipped.
These is wide diaereses betimesoda
au treated and thuss permitted to grow
at will. 11 the beds are in regular de-
luges the .hears should frugoestly be
need to shape the outlines- It dry,
Ming hoes rad .priokler into ngeMi-
ticD, as pleata est thickly in beds rapid-
ly absorb moisture from the soil.
Worts arps.tlaa_
The way to grow soar grapes b to let
•11 the benches grow that set. 1 know,
for I tried it once. Now 1 pinch off all
but two bunches on a oboe and see to it
that there bre out too many cases.
Where more than one tans grows from •
bud the extras are broken off soon atter
they start On my soil I never get too
little wood. Variety, tett and age of
vine will determine the best mode of
summer prugiog. Hose bugs will crawl
throogb a very small hole. Bags to pro-
tect grapes from their ravages moat be
pinned tight around the stem or cane,
otherwise they will get in and devour
the young fruit. I bag mine as soon se
they bloom. -Farm Journal.
make it. Mena after to .,weer* sea
seta is over the water. imbed* ; the 0..11
is whisk they grow Moose. se hoot aid
dry se it M possible for it to get is the
tropia.," N -
THE HOME CIRCLE.
'Oats Meet, rbeeem AA.rward..
"A disagreeable old taw," did you
say 1 Perhaps it doss wean es when the
pleasure is very keltiag sod to dao
very erkeome by ooetrsst ; and yet
doubt if any ooe ever wade a success 01
life who tamed Itis "old saw,,' sad tried
w make "pleasure leen" the rule.
It is mid Mat a rich mut, .bo was
poor when a boy, was asked how be
became rich. He replied: "fdy father
taught me never to play until my work
was finished, and never to spend mue.y
until 1 had .arced it. 11 1 had but one
boor's work 1. • day, I must do that
dist; after that I was allowed to play
Theo I amid play with more pleasure
than if I bid an uufini.hed teak. 1
formed the habit of dosing everything in
time. It woo Meanie may to do so.'
sewer* et tM Firma Mas.
The secret of being sober, and of
k.w.pmg sober, is to avoid the first glass.
If you dstsermiw not to take the first
/lass nobody can make you take the
sealed.
All the d in the world be
on with the first glass, and often at the
family table ; it is generally there tat
bora and girls have their first i
Before you take the first glees, you
are perfectly sober, but act quite after-
wards ; and the memo' and third ere
1 Dories. farther moved from perfect sobriety.
Get a fast walker if you are buying •
hone ; second, train any colt in breaking
to step lively. Who, speaking from
practical , can tell the best
way to teach • young horse to have
rapid -walking gait ! Plenty can tell how
to teach them to trot or run fest ; be*
nine -tenths cf the work of hones is
done on the walk. - Praine Farmer.
A 1i.edesees• Mead.
I have four or five toads in my emit -
house, and they are so tame I can do
anyttenl with them ; they will feed from
my hand. Toads are the grestest frieode
the gardener has, as they eat woodlice,
slugs and Iota of other insects that so
infest the greenhouse. I would not
have one of mine hurt In any way if I
knew it. I watched one the other day
and mw him catch no lees than five or
six woodlice in about two minutes. -
English Gardening Illustrated.
Tree twiner.
Trees sed plants growing naturally in
low, boggy spots are not neorwarily re-
stricted to such condom's, but frequent-
ly emceed much better where to land
is well drained. The alleged necessity
for transplanting trees into similar •ills
it therefore untenable. A pine or fir, it
I, forms one straight leading
shoot, and this feature contributes
largely to the tree's beauty. Should
any accident happen to it, two, three, or
even more ter.ninals will result, to the
ssentice of symmetry. But by remov-
ing all but one of these shoots, the speci-
men regains its attractive conical out-
line.
Teach Leve of Leaves.
A simple yet effective way of saving
the trees which should adorn our hind -
elope would be to teach children in the
public schools to respect and preserve the
leaves and shoots of the shrubs, vines and
other plants planted as ornament or
shelter to the school -grounds. We have
here large schools with but narrow play-
grounds; yet, after • talk to the little
ones on the nature and uses of leaves and
trees by the principal. and after they
found that he oared fur them, they began
t, care, too, and it was a beautifol thing
and • tine tribute to the teacher to see
how safe the little rices and plants
remained all -the season in ground beaten
bare and hard by hundreds of rushing
feet. The same are is noted in German
and Austrian school -grounds, .hero the
classes often meet around some plant or
bed to observe how a detail from their
number proceeds to planting or grafting,
•�r trainiag,wd in twelve yeers
in American schools one teacher found all
tendency to vandalism among plants soon
banished by the interest, easily excited,
and the lessons, of such evident useful-
ness, and which aid rather than detract
from the book -lemons --A Farmer -
Teacher.
1 asset -drat royals.
Tobacco smoke will kill the green fly
on roses, but when out of doors tobacco
dust, which is cheap, will answer every
purpose and Is far more readily applied.
But for striped-cocumber beetles, and
the blue Ass -beetles, I doubt its ef6escy;
besides, a fellow would have • good time
"covering and smoktag" an acre of such
plants to the moruing "while we, with
de.." -A. S Fuller.
seg weakeulag.
A small apple full of seeds, or • puny
bunch of grapes with many seeds, makes
• greater drain on the tree or vine than
• large, pricy fruit oonaisting more of
tlreh or polp than seed. For, se in the
animal kingdom, the produotion of pro-
geny weakens the parent, sad the rarest
elements go into the sed. that Gra to
yield it. Grapevines are mach give. to
, and the way to grow sour
grapes is to let all the bunches grow that
est. After having pruned at least half
the wood away in October or November,
we pick off half the bunches in May
This year, however, the 10 degree of
March 7 thinned more than we want oe
all vines left up on the trellises. There
will he, however, many too -i
bonobes to be got not of.
a.rlaess Trsiataa.
it takes • sound body to makes sound
mood. Work is not vulgar. So lung as
the brain needs the juices of the body,
so long will hard work be the fundamen-
tal element in the d t of the
mind. Businees is eminently fit for a
man of genius, and to earn • livelihood,
is the beat way to sharpen one's was. Be-
sides, business affairs offer better oppor-
tunities at present than the so-called
. Therefore our youth should
be thoroughly and practieelly trained for
bosoms, in order that they may succeed
and become • credit to whatever calling
obey may adopt. At the sante time they
should be educate3 not to despite labor;
for, after all, it s only by hard work
that we achieve soy success worthy of
the name.
The 1.1ta Lily.
This is properly the time when cellos
Mould rest from blooming F.,r the
benefit of enterprising in,.voduals who
ignore the fact that •11 i..,1, used
periods r•' nit and auk. vain attempts
to force eallae(to bloom twee • veer. we
ropy the followiry free the f/rwerw'if.:
"My calks dowi't Home, is the cry from
may quarters What is the mater t
11 a e•aaot say positively. hot Oen m
testy the calla wants water like a mill,
heat like • taro s.. food like as atm],
and absolute nut derinr summer. In
its s.tive habitat 1 is 1• eater • foot or
tame in depth, in hrned '.pew eenligkt,
to soil se reek es .fecal ed v.getal los Ma
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Mao to Look now.
old eletbbig may Its made t., luok
.astir as good es sew by permute the
felluwiat plan, says the Philadelphia
Kecord:-
Takc, for Mamma, • shiny, old Dort,
oe vest of bru•dcluth, moth uteri' or
diagonal The .pourer makes • elruug,
wenn soapsuds sod plutigie the garment
Isco it, ammo it ep and down, rubs the
dirty Mama; of ..-.ssuy, puts it through
. •eouod sods, then routes it through
e sveral waters • id hand. it to dry on the
Hee
W►w snarly dry he takes It ui, r.dk it
op or as boar or two and then presets It.
An old sotto° oioth Is laid ou the . utaide
of the c •at and th.• ir•.0 named over that
until the wrtue's....re out: tut the Iron
is removed before the miens ceases tt'
rtes from the .d.. slat they would
be shiny. Wrinkle* That are utrtmate
are removed toy Ievlog • wet cloth over
them and past. ie ib.• 'root over that.
If any eery ptac ere •esu they are
treater' sa the wtini.o. are. the Iron la
lifted, while the fill ei..ud .d meant riess
and bring* the n.{ , o' h it. Good cloth
will bear many waehin.s and took Note'
every time become sol them
Te flea. L,.re..
tote* Care for Laziness.
During • morning walk • merchant
who was detained by business in Amster-
dam tame to • group of men who were
standing round a well, into which e
strongly bdlt mac had just been let
down. A pipe, whose mouth was at the
top of the well, had been opened and a
etresm of water from it was flowing
down into the well and beginning gra-
dually to fill it. The fellow below had
quite enough to do,if he did not want to
be drou .d, to keep the water out by
meas of • pump which was at the bot-
tom of the well. The merchant, pitying
:he man, asked for an explanation of
what seemed a heartless, cruel juke.
"Sir," replied the old mac standing
Dear, "that man is healthy and stroug ;
I have myself offered him work twenty
times, nevertheless he always allows
laziness to get the better of him ; and
he will make any steam to beg his bread
from door to door, though be might
Bashelers Podding — patted awed.nestle t posery
d sur.ts. 1 Trotted apples,
3 oease sur•►, • little aetme t.
3 eggs, • little meemos of luno..
PM the bread is • biota, peel sod sap
the yobs, wash sed dry the currants.
sad Mr bush in ; add the sager, ostmep
and learn.. Mix well. Beet up the
eggs very weiU, stir them la. Peer into
a well -bettered mould, sod outer with a
bettered paper, and •team two boors.
Cream -1 mime gelatine, 2 yolk•
ems, } pint milk, • little memo of vsa-
ins, fl moose fine seem, lrtwpoos lem-
on juke, 4 pint doable meant. Stook rhe
gelstia• in a little of the milk, then boil
the remainder of it, and poor it over the
yolks sed sager mixed ; return all to obs
Ire; stir till bot, bot not boilteg, and
pot said. ; thea dissolve the g.l•tioe,sed
put it aside ; nest whip the *tam ep til►
thick ; add obis gelatine gr dually, the
esstard, the vanilla, and last of all
the lemon pike ; min thoruugbly •rd
pet in • shape all cold.
Norwich Cake -Two eggs. ; potted
lour, '} posed soft sugar, } pound rake
ins. } posed currants, ! posed better,
teaspoon baking soda, 1 teaspoonful gin-
ger, } teaspoonful •llspio•, 1 smell tee -
map of milk, 1 half skin moms peal.
Put flour into • Mesio, and add to it the
sager, fruit --bill nicely prepared -the
suds sod the epics. Melt the batter
and poor the milk among it, and stir it
in. Thea beet op the eggs and utirithete
in. Give it all • good mizisg, pet in a
`reseed oaks SID mid bake about on.
bow.
A method ecru. i,u,.. assist to cl«an and
whiten very dellcote Ica.• is 1.. haste the
1... smoothly on a )ut.•u cloth, then t..
fold the laps inside ao • t. pot the cloth
in a bowl and ,,.r •r it snit the twat
olive oil. letting it irk t'.r ten t,••urs
It should then be boiled fur • quarter of
an t.••ur in water t.avtaa tin e••tttt4Nt
small gsantit., o1 twro, line noel. Rinrt'
to cold water. pat through very thin
starch water, and dry. .)o not at au}
step of the process wring • r rub the lace,
but squeeze and press it treacly. trtten
dry, many of the testis and me.hes racy
be put into ah tpe by p,wi•g pnl...f
various sizes or a b'.dktt ihrouoh them
A firm Ise. may, after oarrfol touting up-
on cloth. be cleaned by a gentle scrula-
bing with a fine brush d.p;wd in a teeing
solution of mettle soap. To clean
thoroughly it most be leashed on both
sides. After rinsing in sett water etrta-
taining • very hale powdered slum, dip
• soft cloth In starch water and slightly
moisten the lace on the creme aide, then
lay a thin cloth over r, and press on to
w ine side with s sn•. ler.ttely bat true.
Point ince that is very mach- nulled may
be cleaned in this w.y.
T.w.b.
Toe best thing of which to ms►r roller
towels is Rossiw crash. I sae t.'Id it M
woven by bind by Rummel perinate. At
any rate, the best and medium go,tliiiee
are more wtisfacwry for roller i .w.' .
thee any other crash I kn-w, and are
least objectionable wbeo new. Just herr
comes in a word as to when to beets us-
ing new towels. Let it be in the anm-
mer time, when skins are not chapped or
sensitive, and when laundry work it re
much easter that the feel, ler
at putting slightly railed
towels into the wash for frequent laun-
dering. One who has ever supplied tow-
els fur a group of growing b ys and girls
.i11 know that new towel. in .liter
tasks tarry work. Nor is this at var-
iance with the advice to buy in the win-
ter. Buy and freeze, and then went for
the summer to continue the necessary
so;tentng process.
One thing more : All know how very
disagreeable new dish towels are. Well,
easily earn it himself by work If he liked. don't have 'em! Go to the supply of roller
We are now trying to make him feel that towels, select some of the oldest. best
he can work. If he uses the strength softened ones. cut them in two and hem
which u in bisarms he will be asvd, if at both ends. The duh towels are thus
never new, and .the ample replent.biag
of roller towels will make it all right
Does some one suggest that this is not
• clean way to do 1 Then use more amp,
water and boding when you wash your
roller towels, and it will be.
Is there any nes fcr other towels that
have developed ve.y thin "middles,"
and lost most of their fringe 1 If one
has time to devote to such saving work,
or if there are little girls in the family
who need, my advice is to
vet the toweb down the center, length-
wise, and "ever end oyer" the *does to-
gether. Thir ,rives • firm "middle,"
good enough to cat square wash sloths
from. for those who like such, or to use
for any other purpose for which soft, old
linen can be used.
Always ave towels of linen. Do not
be tempted into trying the cheaper
cotton, which is very ooatly to temper
and strength, as it leaves • disagreeable
liot behind it, in gentle protest. Once I
was beguiled roto it, and the
now serves to put greater warmth into
my 'advice.
One word about "company' towels and
I am dooe. Have them better than the
family towels, if you please: hut be sure
to let the family take the "new" r.ff,
This may be hard on the family, bat the
wiping roast will love you more, and
leave behind • blessing lemma of • re-
proach.
Mesea.M aWtpe•.
Breakfast Cake. -Two cups of sour
milk, one teaspoonful of sods, one tea-
spoonful of salt, flour enough to roll.
Cat in Darrow strips and fry in hot lard.
he lets them hang idle he will be
drowned. But look," continued the old
Dutchman, as he went to the edge of
the wo , "the fellow finds out that he
has got omelet ; in en hcur we shall
It him out with better re•olattons for
the fatties." Snob was to case, and the
cure wasefectual.-Chrieti•n at Work.
Let. W be 1.e slang.
If young ladies who have the as-
sociation with young man whose limited
edoc•tton and poverty of ideas com-
pel the we of slang iu lista of correct es-
pressione oomprehended the meaning of
many of the terms thus put is their in-
000eot mouths, they would be .hocked
at the vulgarity of their . Al
moat without exception words and phras-
e s popularly denominated "slant" are
drawn from the slams; they aro the in-
vention of the most depraved elements
of human society, and should be avoided
by all persona with soy to
refinement and gentility.
A wend Ie Fathers.
Said a gentleman the other day, "Oh,
yes; 11et my boys go to proper places of
when they beg to, but I go
with them. They seem to like me pretty
.e11 fora ." That man had
discovered • greed rule for any parent
to practise. Such sympathy and good
fellowship between father and sons is de-
lightful. Mothers are ostially inclined
to indulge their children sufficiently if
they will only take utas to weigh care-
fully their desires sad requests. What
wise, loving parent Ms hesitate for •
meesent in choosing how it would be de-
sirable for children to retl•ll in dose to
some their youthful days; whether se •
time of repression and repeated cheap-
, or as a bright, joyous ma-
ma, fres from .oseosisasry requirements
or restrictiona.-Ezobsogs
Ginger Beer. -To two gallons of water
add two ounces bruised ginger and two
pounds of sugar. Boil ball so hour,
skim, sod pour into a jar or tab with ao eterual home with God and •11 bloused
ones beyond. What a falsifier of the
Saviour, .bat • of his Mas-
ter, what a stumbling "block to others in
the way to Maven, sod what an offence
to "the littleon's" in Christ's fold is the
professor who has nothing to exhibit but
Deems and after Taking.
Ileac meralne.
Bright and fair.
Golden sunshine.
Balmy sir.
What a pleasure
Thr to go
Where the woodland
Breeze. blow.
Happe hours,
Free from core.
Joy and beauty
Every when.
Through the leafy
Woods welt .tray.
Gracious. gladsome
Pksic day.
P.cnic evening.
Whit • plifht '
Raiasd from 10
O'clock till night.
Flory prw.eat.,
(laps so rias.
Filled with mud
And hsmsars' lice.
Doer raised.
Pass and cakes
Food for ants
Asd garter snakes.
Full of doleful
Donk dismay, Looking for a Handsome Xmas or
Dirty. drizzly,
Finnic day. price,
-Chicago Hasid.
tONS‘AlerclOf Suitt"
MED
'1�O .'I.',ti i �.. Mars �wr refire Mu 1 ►hist�•awaes•>silee mil*
ear the we s
ellg d to seed hada ties* Imoae abs y sguis w•, _It4 ▪ 4,
♦. A, SI, UM. ILO.. WS vow.? Alli'= f� TOMOtiTO.�ic�e ONTAMO►
Ho you sleepers,
Rub your peepers
Open wide each eye;
Don't be creepers
Bargain reapers
Now's the titue to buy.
RIGHT THIS WAY TO DANIEL GORDON'S
roe sesames
rint.CMs Stock of Furniture.) . oath TABLE RLO'N SUI arc.. BEDROOM.SUITiB,gDfdt-
illy SISI bas &Imso bees to keep Finn -Clam Tursfture. Tb. pat will speak her 1154f. Tonna
are ,••.•,..•-•,I.t, JJ leerytor .)blestg,Jd., andpalm them eR Fat Clam gWr.
The* will cure Itself.
1s oaderukts t I have .vsnthiatr to M foiled M • seer.lass .olabll.►seat. i am the
oldest sad male 1 Faa.rsl Director Is the Carnet). .ATYN
7AaTUeiUhi
CHARGES MODERATE.
W..id.. GoderkHawses►. Hawses P.O. sad Bask of Me.rs
tal• rl nut.
JOHN ROBERTSON
Bap to announce that km is sow meal ter
The L!quorToa Coffipaors Celebratod Tari
Your choice of one out of a hundred or more Handsome Volume
by the Beet Authors, given with every 3 lbs.
Give it a trial, and aoquire • Valuable Library without feeling
the expense.
1 NW GALLONS OF PURE IAPLE SIRUP LEFT,
rite JOHN ROBERTSON,
RHINAS' OLD STAND, COR. SQUARE AND MONTREAL STS.
I CURE FITS Y
C-1na�NDs � se�rru�a
AwVibes I.yAr rEALLr.
•I de est nese
▪ merely to step ter • tins, an/ 1Ma
lave team rtes sews A M A a A D I O A L O Y a R. 1 bass made the Mem et Mew.
<1M•tser M Dlaltmesa a 0. .seg analy. 1 twmrvamt q remedy to Owe the
weed
ee Ise cases.
en:am= Salads haat tailed ad a Pose Sotta d(is as way S.i t Ir Not sow nriCami t a cure. thou
rsst Osie tt *Bab )..sung ler a b1.I,. dl� I t�T yds Ad*wss::w-/I 000?.
0.1116 Dramas OMwwr Me MOT A0111.111110111 s 7000570.
WE KNOW YOU ARE
RELIGIOUS NOTES•
New Year's present at a Moderate
IWe Know we
Worldly $ympsom•.
Worldly symptoms in the pulpit ate
shouts in ignoring or the
worldlioees to the church, shown by
special sympathy and affinities for the
fashionable, the ioduental, and the rich,
• deference to somal position, with epa-
ctal efforts to attract and please this clam.
Worldly symptoms in the pulpit are seen
in the manner and make -op ut the ser-
mon, its artistic taste, its literary treed,
its parte** te pious. Sensation is
worldly, most of the tine preaching is
worldly. The failing to have a large in-
gredient of the "reprove, rebuke and ex -
bort" to a eermuo gives it a worldly fla-
vor The failing to be Instant, as Paul
directs -that is, leaving out the pressing
pungent, personal element ; for instance'
mews to come in upon them -the failing
to do this in seasou and out of aeasoo,
gives • smack of worldliness to the ser -
mom. The toning down truth to snit the
tastes of the is a worldly
symptom of a grievous form. The fail-
ure to rebuke worldioess in the pew in
an arraigning and convicting form is to
be worldly. If the pulpit has any alloy
of self, any desire for ,any de-
an for money, popularity or praise, it le
to that degree worldly ; for them are un-
mistakable symptoms of worldliness --
SL Louis Advocate.
Class Dellg$os.
The religion of Jesus has in it no ele-
ments to reader its Assessor morose,
sullen, unattractive, glum. it is mien
tinily cheery, plement, joyous. It re-
moves all that terrifies and darkens, sod
substitutes whatever tends to Iighten.
beautify, 1weeten and make the heart
leap for joy. The curse of sin is remov-
ed because it loss been borne by Christ,
the wrath of God toward the stoner Fes
been quenched in the blood that cloacae*
from all sin, the sin that separated the
soul from God has been removed, the
poem of God that peaseth all . t-
int; keeps the mind and heart, the spirit
of lore takes possession of the whole
man, "the mountains and the hills break
forth before him into einglog and all the
trees of the field clap their hands."
"There is now no condemnation to him,"
"Christ dwelk so his heart by faith,' "is
formed w him the hope oftoryand
"all things aro m
hill because he ie •
Christ's ;" he has the promise of God for
everything that he needs on earth, safe
conduct through the vele of death and
.boxed lemon and half oases cream of
tartar. When newly cold add • cupful
of yeast. Let it work for two days.
A D... Then strain, bottle, and Dock. A prefer -
Some people who are onn.satly talk • ecce b given to stops bottles
ing of that rare virtue, consideration for Limos Cheeseesksa -Line patty pan.
the Mahar
a
ar ofothere, baro I a with good paste : then put into an en- a glen religion. -The Treasury.
000sidsowt.vee• Bsrses, she
ri•m.led pin the following Motors The
returning home one sight, remarked to grafi rind of 1 lemon and the juice, 1 A box of Ayer•Pills his meed many
his wife that Vsaos was the most coned -ter a fit of sickness. When • remedydoes
end eageerste mea be had ever seen. "How sof' ww.11 beats r acd hall a ottc.
eapfai-of not happen to be within meth. people
hie -ifs askd. "Wby, he set for thew • meas. Stir all over the fire till the mix- are liable to neglect slight &detente and,
boars end let me do s'l the talking. -Ark tare begins to thicken. With this 611 of °°arse, d sertona illaem follows the
meow Traveller• the pens fell and nate in •quick ova atve to suffer ti meimee000a "A stitch
till to paste is ready. in isms noes awe.
A Das.* Daae...
Harry (to Kate, who has Lest &nishd
writiag • letter) -It makes gaits • dif-
fetemos eines they °Malted the law so
that roe ran seed se Man for throe
male. Kaes—A groat deal of differsrea.
Oro has to see so arab more paper than
not to speak of the rites Ila
is otitis* to ell it, that i Mirk the
from half se Deese was as in-
let'. tion
a reel imposi. -Roster
raaa
011.110. Ntlmam Hires MO. esu
Cesary Podding. -Three eggs, their
weight in sugar bad batter, and the
weight of two is finer ; one teaspoon
Imam joie. Warm abasia • little, put
the better la and Mir till it is melted,
but it mast sot oil ; thea add the seiar
to It, and mix well, than the Immo ,
rhos stir to lour is very gradually, .ed
Mt of .11 heat up the we well .ad add
tam . poor leen • nook, greased well
and deeorsted, sed sever with raper •ad
Osseo for two home ; serve with sweet
mon.
•. Took • want.
Fourteen yeses age • Cnsrecticut hus-
band aimed Dime lett the bongo one
alteration maybe, he reamed he d take b
little walk. Two weeks ego he return-
ed, bavteg Dover written a word to his
wife in all the years And the first thing tt
she did wee t. break M
had with the The Signa1tt for the remainder of
bloomstt.k, sad to omit to Worst him
tat SIMW b..s itsaertsd twelve
1890 for 60c. Subscribe at once.
yeses--f)N1eit law Pres
Have it,
having the Finest Lines of Silver Plate, Flat Ware and Cutlery ever
diepla, 1 in this town.
OUR PRICES BEAT THE BAND. t
Inspection Solicited.
R. P. WILKINSON & Co.
LOOK HERE! LOOK HERE !
NEW FIRM. NEW GOODS.
\A/ n i .. iY' K 2NC+
Have opened out a GROCER „ and BAKERY ow tungsten Street. aid are oferfwagg Bar-
stans in NEW BLACK. GREEN and JAPAN TbA•, COYYEEti. neurri, 81-OAIt.'4
SYRUPS. Etc. All Dods of FLAes an* FAIN iter.
Pt Alyn AND assza Aim PA,dTZT ALWAYS 071r LANS.
Only the beat material weed ia an elapses of Baking and termed out in • shape to suit the
most fastidious palate.
WEDDING CAKES A SPECIALTY.
Rutter and F.dgv taken in exchange, for Good., Can sad *mambos our stock. Goods de-
livered to any part of town os shortest possible notice.
WHItELY & KING
t152 Sin KINOSTON.t)r., :. DERICH.
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