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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1890-6-20, Page 632 MINERS KILLED. TERRIBLE DISASTER IN A PENNRYL• VANIA MINE, The Total letellaito of a Torsos II 10 a atilve,ring roar shook the lowly 'timers' dwellings on Hill Vann in Fayette County near this plane and affrighted hundreds of perils who knew too well the rowel indicated another mine duiter. In a 110041betlt tho fearful news had opened that the Hill Farm mines owited by Philadelphia Faroe. had exploded. The low -brewed hill front erlirch the dope entered shook from n i..ith 1,, pit and the scorns of nursers' Dien brig the bill poured out frenzied inmate, by tlie bundred • rib was wads to the Begonia the pit, but ingress was impoihM. as smoke in dews volumed was fortb. Fifty-two rumen WO gone to work this n ie.rning and were in the slope whoa the ex - Orono occurred. Of these jib 'ism the left beading and S2 in tbe right heading. These ths. k.ft heading gut out all right. All tbe others were cut off and ISA one J011 lint0YOUL. HYAItl'il. NACU' PVT= Loan J. Boum Mageser (cited). it vcss. A roes. Joan DaliMer. Jame Devaney. Tem. Davos Jim Xcetsarv C01 wryer Ran ItioixT Main 'elide). 1.•N SMITH At the gang turned ill at the mines, the candler gang drifting off to tn. left while the 'larre, some :t.; in number, drifted to the right and deareteled some MU feet trout the surface and at least a mile from theopen- 'lug. These two drifts arc connected. but tbe connection is frotit the main stem. some half mile froin the &trams.. The mine hol jbeen somewhat troubled oith watrr stet an sir abaft had been drilled from the surface tc the junction of the right and left shafts, 'where the water seemed most abundant ' As the ruiners branched off from this point they know an air bole had bean drilled there 'and that it had not yrs been broken into the mine, but tbey did itot know the shaft west, be broken into today. Tbe 'haft is a six ito•b ilsole. A miner named Kerwin had been left ' in the right drift pear where that branch joined in the mine's exit and in the course of hi. 'abort, broke into the perpendieular shaft. 'The moment this mei broken into a Rood .d ,water rushed out and Kerwin and • man iramed Lardy standing by yelled out ter some one to,saee the men in tbe mine in tbe right drift. l Young David Hayes, who had seen the affair, ksaped forward at the can aml turned slown tLe left drift in • deluge of water :toward bi• endangered comrades below. Just as he peered the air shaft that had been .I.roken into the rush of waters had changed , to the ugly roar of a flood which blanched the cheeks of the men who stood bebind and towards the light The flow of water had changed to a deadly volume of lirerbunp, and as young Hay.* swung by, the flashing of the blazing light toted through the shaft fro,' end v. end. ilt earned the daring eine, carriel •ein open burning miner's lamp in Ms bat and lb, had hardly taken a step beyond that roaring •shaft when the spark i4nited a reservoir sit ;the deadly fire disinp that had already ate 'cumulated tn.! be sank • corpse 10 feet to. ; ward the. mon be had holed to save and whom Ilse certainly &entre. At midnight tee smoke and gm, frs.m the riot siert policed im thy 'Immo tee in a broken column. !and after trials airiest beyond human ▪ enderane. the reseuing party gave up all bopes of ever recovering the deed bodies front ithat entrance and turned their attention . to the Ferguson mike away. The 'Maio and rinks balk their every ettrts. Tbe universal tenliet of the old ruiner% 1. that the enteenbot men were either killed tonight by the sapkwion er later by guff.. AT1.AAT•. Jun, 1...--Tlo. International Typographical I nem convention lies rid ie etre se The convention Pe.11 will be MIONI., furl Thowto P, 11. bite a New oilcans were 414.1 ,f1 .1e1r Kano to tie !American Federation ,if Latest.. Thew seven trustrs-r. w.f. "I...clod for the Child -- Drexel Home' James O. ant, At- lanta" Amos J. (' .ngs, New York, Will Nashville: John Xnuglien. 10..nver of %V ashiagten, Among tbe laws mood was one more than six days in any week. Ibis wro introduced by Mies Taylor. the lady .1eiegate JUDGE'S LAKE. The Discovery Made hs Fiplorete Um Northwest Terrnorlfeh ceived to -day from the Alaska expioring party • deepateh to tee effect that they have diseoveved • lake which they have named bake Arkell, and which in the British Nortewest Territory. about longitude I:* 310 minutes north. The extent ,d the lake is not known,!but the Wiens my it i• many miles long and many wade. Ohl TAE BLACK Lig'''. Th. !S.. Vora illerears to O. neleod 1411.. and labor* r0111194A In ll'wen.In. 1+1-4AWA, June Id woriir• Tho New `1"..rk Mercury on Mat tinier wail the reerult .4 an order Mid from the customs lepartMent mailing: "Metre when and where found in ranada The paper arrived fa Ottawa early tin Friday attawn...n Odor.. the order bad hien certified. As • the paper was distributed city. Mit in the future the paper 1/111 no% b• 1111.4•04 to enter Use Customs al my point En t HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Deterallis the Dense. Here le the advise of • decorator in making over • hoses : Have your libra ry dela and rich, soar diming -room bright IU 0010,11M1 and your sleeping rooms as neer white or cuaterd am peeps ble, strap.% the windows with lawn, timeshare tallepeall or upholstered ferm- ium. It du rams are very high • (hop fries. will lower them, and paw on the 3eding grill also bring then down. There ars few time. that cannot be rub• bed, polished and filled fir or herd - wood effects. The oust of wood carpet can he saved in duster's fees. The ouol, clean, bright, colunial effect is to be pie- ferred abuts every other period for the drawing room or parlor. It costs money, to he sere, to appoint • house, but taste le341* a very wag way. tee Dallis resin. A marble poetry table to a very useful piece of kitetimi foreman in summer, •hen it is didicult to keep emery st peeper temperature while it is being pre pared These tables cost $10, mounted nu white pine, at the shops of dealers in house furnishing goods. This ie more than. or Its 111Urh Se fun-. item dealers for- merly charged for • marble -topped centre mem mounted in walnut. The kitchen •aele beem better and is MVPs suitably+ fer the purpoee for which it was intend- ed than the parlor table would be in its place ; but it ought to be cheaper. It %could be more durable and c iuld be snore easily kept clean if it was nesuutee in good herd wood, oiled, rather than tu left pine. There have been a great many inven• none for chill lig pastry which have been out sed -out failures, becalms they were conceived by some ..ne •ho had no prac- tical knowledge of the precees of making puff petite. The hollow gleam rolling pin, which was designed to be tilled with ice, seetned to th. se who bad never tried it to be all that could be desired ; but the illusion faded away ou the first sutniner day it was used. If it is tilled with ice the 'moisture of the atmosphere conden- ses on it and supplies drop. of water that are fatal to the auccese uf the paste. It 18 an eloalletit .roller, however, .1 not filled with ice -the nest we here, unless • marble indite can be feand. Excellent putf paste can be wade Ly an eepe: t ith a weoden reller mei board, but it wall take less time and Um werk will be inure accent. if the beat tool* are presided. The laid of good pastry flour is a mat- ter more essential to tne preparation a perfect putt paste or of tender cake thau anything else. Good cake or pat paste ▪ Is a mass of delicate crisp layers Cannot he Mad. it Oh breed Sear. Since the intreductieo sif the "patent roller - process in milling. the beet bread is made from snring wheat green iu favor- tl rar must he made from winter wheat in order to possess the requieite qualities. For a long time after the introduction of the patent roller venter wheat was ground by the old process and tho flour went by the name of "eld process- flour. All flour now is ground by the patent roller ; and by improvements in the last few years as much gluten, it is said, is saved he this method as by the old pro- cess. There are several brands of so-called pastry flour in market, which are prepared from spring wheat merely "softened.- as the dealers torte it, with • little winter wheat. This flour is offered es • compromise and is reeomtnended as good fin, hoth bread and pastry. In 1) ont of fact it Is inferior for beth uses. Nothing sleets the lack of "softness- in the flour made ot spring wheat so quick- ly as cake. Bread flour 'mikes tvugh, dry cake. • Few Awful Nisi, " The simplest way of setting the color in navy or indigo blue cotton drowse, so 11 will not run Into tbe white trimming, is to rinse them thsiroteghly an a solution of weak salt aud water. se &beet two t•blespoonfuls salt to every gallon .1 water. lie oareful to wring out the wir- menu from salt rinsing water as dry as possible and bang them up at ouce. The sawdust and glue paste for filling holes in wood into which nails or screws are te be put with sate temness may prove a useful hint to many. Knives .sr hoea may be fastened in the handles by this means, d not to be exposed long to soaking wet. We have found sawdust and hate more firm and durable than plastering made as usual, with sand and hair, but not quite so *molly applied. There is special necessity for inoreased attention to cleonlinese and full light, as means (if preventing disease after the mild wintet, but housekeepers often de- feat their own efforts in the* direction by over -frequent and free use of water in their floor -cleaning. This slop, by soak- ing into the dust that tills tloor-crevicee, makes a conditton especially favorable for development rf the germs Of com- mon diseases, although some kinds are carried through the air as dust, and ap- pear to find the moisture and other con- ditions for their multiplication in the bodies cf already weakened animals that inhale them.- -Qiiiequis. The Art of Illoodloa. There is nothing more important in the instruction of the children of the house- hold than systematic lemons in mending. As soon as • little girl is able to handle a neediest'. should be taught to darn her stooktngs sew on shoe buttons. As soon se she has mastered these arts, she should be taught bow to lay patches ; not in a haphazard fashion, btit easily and flatly, matching the pattern of the goods and laying the patch the proper way of the cloth. A patch, put on prop- erly and praised after it is put 141. can hardly be recognieed se • patch. The darning of cloth is so art by itself which even expert do not always indsrstand. edges of the rent hoeld be brooght together. and the needle ran thvissob the cloth between he inside and the outside in sash • way so to emcee the stitches. Whet the darn is dampened anti pressed, it bowmen almost invisible, and oan be Mood only after the elneeml Unmet:time It will be • long time before • little girl ran do mesh nest work se this, bet she should be I in every way to try. Lessons in 'needing should be given as ▪ Diesels. to seonomy as well es good n eedlework. A girl who hem been prop- e rly brought up, sad is compelled to do The Henfaz-Illormada 4 a1.1• Hs1.11,•S, Joao la -Tb• 111,441111•T Walt. nowith, whieh is to lay the het•roso Halifax and Bermuda. arrived hors this entwaing from tn., tatter plans The bottom acme the eve waira taa MN, Is te+ he laid wee sessedad sad found vary avsendi and rest Ile seserner win enammen. laying in VII be lei werlduisairder by Jraly bee owe umodiaLwaUl be more @eyeful use who is a: no pens to speedos( rode For thso resew even if it m sonsiderahly mice trouble to oversee unessdinsf than to do it younielf the child alsoald do it, nut seal, fur the sake of the metzsetsos, is order that she may sutler from hew , the rent is Gm moult ol An impatient pan of nood:og is the rippiag sod preparieg the work fur mending. lf the garnseat seeds Folio - tog it lo often desirable to leek* it over entirely, in which case it should be ripped %homes/My. The thread should be brushed off and the germ/Nut cleaned. There are many ways of clesuiug mater- ials that cermet be washed. Delicate silk ribbosie and other silk may be sponget well • little alcohol diluted with water. Stains caused by amds may causally be taken out by weak solution that era too much hided to be made over, may Wiwi he dyed aud oumbined with a little new siik aud way give ith much weer as it did hetes+. There is always special satudisotiess in making over • dress thst had emened 1.. ne past its usefulness and fiuding it able to serve again amid perhaps look better than it did when it seas new. The secret of the proverbially economical and well-dressed French - WOOD= 'a success lies not only in her taste. but in her ingenuity in making over and repairing her clothes. How• e ver old her dna.* at is mended so neatly that it Dever appesn shabby. Thur [noel usu• ally the bast dressed, because they keow how to take care of their clothes, while women whe spend money lavishly on their attire are often slovenly to the end. Vital twease. The proper name a "vmegar warms" usually called vinegar eels, and not rare in the beet samples of vinegar is Septo• dera,exophila though often referred te as Anguillula meti. Mists elle of the neon - wild worms, and Ito C10001, related to the pork w. ran Trichina spiral's), Me common round worm, pin worm, and hair worm. The form of the worms is much like that of the common aegis or earth worns. Tiley are bisexual (sexes Ate distinct . Many worms, even those as high as the earth worm, are herma phrodates tech individual being both wale and female . Old time vinegar al- . , heilietTniiir less sugar ; bat much of that made today is destitute of sugar. This latter is apt to hare, in ad- dition, sulphuric acid, which prevents formation in the vinegar of the fungus on which the worms depend for support. By adding sugar and mucilage to any inegar we can insure the presence of the fungus, aod then the vinegar worms soon appear. Tne purest and best viue- gar attracts swarms of these minute worms ;they are not more than one - twelfth tf an inch long), just as it at- tracts us, and I do not know that It in- jures the enterer. If any dislike the igeought of such lively diet they w3uld bettor not inesetigate good vinegar with ▪ linlineno Cares raids. elle. Isone "lithe frame- work of Os *bonnie, this whide thing b., built tido die hoe«. at area.. &Zip are 1111#1.1.rfIll Theriot); Comm flow seldom the once familiar word parlor is applied nowadays to that room in the American home of any pretensions which is used te receive guesta in. Draw• tog -room, Reception -room, or even sit- ting -room are preferred now, and parlor. are pretty generally relegated to the ho- tel, the dentist, the manicure and the barber. People who never -withdraw' have • drawing -room, people who never receive, in the formal acceptation of the never sit anywhere, as • rule, bat to the dining -room, bedroom or kitchen, have • sitting -room, but few people now have a parlor, which really means the talkIng- room. The reason for thi• is not quite tease. Probably it is because the ad- vance in house decoration has been so great and so widespread lately that no- body meets the disappearance of the old fashiened peeler, with its darkened windows, horse -hair furniture, erten brocaded hangings and wax flowers, and the name has gone with at. People who can afford it now go in for rooms decorated an distinctive colors, calling them the red room, the blue room, the yellow room, etc The writer knows a woman of artistic notes who is not able to gratify them on such an elaborate scale as this, however. But she haa one unusually large room in the has two •Icoves 1n aed • big bay win- dow. This room she has lied ut in divisions as fsillowa : the yellow •Icove, the olive green window, the Jimanese corner, the old oak corner and the old rose alcove. In each division • dietinct yet harmon- ious meths.(' of decoration and furnishing has been followed. And when she gets tired of the arrangement she changes everything all around, k e • kaleidoscope, and gets nu, end of amusement cut of doing ao. Often the trappings of asm entire corner, bric-• brae, furniture, pictures and all, are relegated to the storeroon for twelve months, and when they are brcught oat agouti they seem ea good as new, and the owner has the pleasure of greeting them as old (needs thrown is Beside the bay window in this room, there were five rirdinary windows,two on one side and three on the other. The third windnw ort one side was entirely superfluous and broke up the wall-spic altogether too much for artistic decor- ation, so this handy woman devised • way to torn the offendieg window into me ornament. It had • deep frame ali around it, and so a carpeeter was secored to place thin boards over the glass. Then these boards were covered with dark crimson plush, which also covered the sides of the window -frame and the sill. In this deep recess were fitted • lot of dain- ty shelves, running irreeularly acmes the window, arid just se deep as the rooms itself, so that the front edges of the shelves wens plumb with the walls irf the room. The shelves were of common pine, end were then painted • dead black, not shiny. Little sapprirtiog «damns of pine ran from ose shelf to the other, on the outer Was, ao thid when completed the whole made • parteelarly pretty cabinet of black and crimson which set off the china and brie- • brae placed upon- it to perfection. 0.. would naturally think, on mesh* it getting beck in the solid wall, with .00e1111‘1111,14 forearmed toothier, cramps, dysentery, come suddenly in the night and sp.• and prompt means 'Rust he used ave them. Dr F ▪ Extract of W Strawberry IS 01. remedy. Keep it • hand fi..r es. If limier 1 cure or relieve. 2 01/10 Wily 50 de 11. QUIRT : -"Hoe eau we begin seek it a wive that is dead r. AhoWILIt : Tale gee/Coon Collie. to nu brave girl auswered it. Mile Eireitteiti P. Goethe), LI Armursidate, wa in a western village that bad peter le-arsi being largely foreign, where him e verything their own way, and the rhilu ren were growing up tette r . h. At knowledged Honest Principle of having Goods Ma:el d in Plain Figures and Strictly One Price. 3MALL WARES DEPARTMENT Co vis *moll suRtm MIRED TO THE I! DITORt Oman, ay • nisei, awl emematia bee Wee eases hie hem owed. Ptease ad,../. your miens Mat I hie • sweldwe eelnald Oar ohms IM1 be sled to 6 .1 two nettles of air noaede le Amy af,ser lave me isol,puon if .1.1 seed ea their Repress sad Peet OWe Aildsmos. T. A. ALMA; 04,, 183 Viet Assoicese In. Twittery% Ossireffidse THE NEWEST OF THE NEW! 1 remit departments. )VES, FINE HOSIERY AND Aryiniaal, will beta Noticeable Feature. feet tha, I here won the confidence °tithe Public, and will de my uttneet to resale it, 14,sott isee rser, legalmate osmium 'ogee h:niire satisfaction to alt tavoring me with their I mill and always will adhere to tbe was a condition of 'hinge thn. t had reasoning powers and hieulticy d.- veloped mieht well hate caused them te wish they had never (well bor:i 1.4e without any sentamentalisin or Miss B. Gorden tilled tier port- age of her cloak with nets. candies and fruits various kind., and begin rusk- ing • daily promenade through the toe,. g iving oUt these attractive. Wee on -Is . I invitation to every hey and girl see Ku, , ander sixteen years et age, tellite, 'awe tit on the next Ssturtety at three 0 clock she was goner to be M a certain school -house, and thst •be would have with her a copy of "Marching Songs, Mein which she would tench them wee. 110111/11 that they would like beyond tell - mg, mid she would relete some stories that wmild reake them beth laueli awl cry. It is needless to say, the youoe people gathered in. pscleng de, •n I windows. 'rimy liked Miss Boole, the) learned the songs, they enjeyeet th% and copies of The Y,,,trif retA,pier, came again the next Siturday. only more so as to numbers, and kept night on. She organized them into a Loyal Tem- perance Legirn out of which grew, through the interest sleeted animist -the- °ugh to invite the state couveetion to be its guest befere • year had passed "The way to resume is tint to teatime." Thr way to cause things to e else te. peso ia rause thern.-Frances E. Willard, in Union Signal. A boy named Sam▪ uel Kimball, see - teen yam eke a chorister boy in St. Mary's Church, Brooklyn, d ,ed very re- cently at St. John's Hospital. Ahnoat his last words were :-"Let any boy who smokes marlines look at me now and koew how mooch I have suffered, and he .41 Defer put another tato ustAIlh.. LOOking for a 11:Link:nue Xmas or New Year's present at a Modeles Ho was a bright boy, an exquisite sing- nriet„, with hie grandmother and worked in • • chaudelier factory. Here is Lis story, as W he told it v. his nurse. Sister Cornelia : "To me he confessed that this nimble had originated front mearette etuoking. , having' tile Finest Lines of Silver Plate, Flat Ware and Cutlery ever 1' ,..,:trt• eitention. and deservedly SO. Ilial ileparltaletal being Ilse KZ 1 Tall oaks from acorns ii.prnif,r. ALEX. MUNRO JOHN ROBERTSON Brigs 10 1101100111Ce that he is now tepee for quor- BR °mous go rato Oaf '1 I ur chntet- o One out of a hundred or more Handsome Volume by the Beet Authors, given with every 3 lbs. Give it a trial, and acquire a Valuable Library without feeling the expense. I PH GALLONS OF PURI MAPLE SYRUP LEFT, JOHN ROBERTSON, ROMS' OLD STAID, COR. SQUARE AND MONTREAL STS. 1 CURE FIT THOUSANDS OF MYLES DIYEN AWAY YEARLY. a When I say Ossi de OR woo merely to stop them far a too aad this worst C Eternise others have failed is so reason for oot bow scare. Sid at once for ••treatme set a Free Sitio of toy &gram and Post Office It costs you bathing tor a trial. and it will care Ailleris--11...1111111FF. WE KNOW YOU ARE THE FASHIONS. viselsa hi Jilting* *bat lotereat do Vole Ism. TIM latest in veils is UMW ducted aod isvegelerly with black sputa suggest seert plaster. There was a time whoa the dnt lady the lead Gamed a parasol with • con. piceously long handle. Now it is uoly room ladies who *any A jinni, dress for travelling is ot seeoloted eansel's hair with stripe. nisi snood the bottom of shaggy in • darker shade swellest butter (babes are epl. but t and they are . with @true elver pot nisch leoger doe the eager Mis Woe Parasols are unusually pretty this ass- t- non n. Th. °sweet aro of Irani in various on, dotted with white -polka spots. cook! wo or three ruffles are placed on the 51,. it, and rosettes are tied tio tho top of shad, e stick and on the handle L Bonnets of the latest turportatioa are prou othiog but • mess of dowers. coed Small Sorel wreaths foe tbe neck, with t"'_ oda which are brought down over the r 'dice. are need by young ladies with mr heir 10,11 dress.. instead of jewels. able Coral red, whit% is not unlike cherry umes lor, a greet favorite this season. Mr Yellow dandelions ar s much mod as ,E.Itgl at trimmings. Their fluffy seed balls it.b. re even more popular. Me Butterflies ruad• real lace hays been that n all the spring hats. Ursaments reads of quill feathers are Th ea fie bat trimming. MC* dkerchiefs daintily embroidered upes Sewers are laaulrid In by those Sir %Oka op the newest fads. deo.. Boots and shoes .4 ParlSiso Matt) have 'toted toes. 'I he latest fancy in necklaces is • cord f •hite silk having • slide id diamonds tine •21,1 ends studded with the same spark line jewels. Yellow is the new cAor in writing pa- Leo per. and should be etamped with silver. re The (rules of ball corneae *re °fn.- alid mented with jewelled plastrons made to t: the figure. Cut steel is in us* again for cumba aud "le I the t Meru It is onnidorod boo form for Wks 1.8 took they all provide themselves with mackm- e Alias in sem if • storm. for ri: All the meet faehionable women wear arid behind than in front, and *lithe trim- 'eve ii,:ret placed at the bot . bal,i Hats and bent:seta are now kept on die heat' by means of splendid jewelled pun., l're* entique daggers, sod pine with gold, sil- ver, steel, and copper, obeli, and amber , 11f hemic nen Die benefits of vacatioo *cerise may be Pm'. Ovally eiihanced, 1, at the same time, aern. the blued is beteg cleansed and eitalmed thell by t use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. A year stteud the use uf this woudertei oriel .d -fashioned French latrine 14". 'ids with rew faces, oom more en - e, in their lump. sheer felids, the r: ti 4)f the imams. of fashion as they did eneta .• dry pretty American mates. freeks for t. -"La that azet and hs use wear are made up with hwt, ge cuffs and oollare,guimpee and waist:* 4,s of whits pique. duck or butchers' fm.,, cu. Or eCTU el1145•10. ,itconitive erf craze .d the English ' sane at the moment is wood carving, • ! tear stc which has been festeted by the , ts, of the South Kensington Museum ; ties department of art study. I bas7 It is not to be dented. even street , era, ns do trail a little in the Meek, but He s bet neel Lem Malls Lot moos and c nein Willi e Know we Have it Some digs, he said, he smoked twenty ist this town. cieerettes. At first he kept his grand -1 mother in ignorance of I is indulgence. ! OUR PRICPS BEAT THE BAND As be continued to smoke the appetite g rew upon him with such force thit bel 'Inspection Solicited. feet his ecnieitutio% 'Why, I asked ' what it was bringing you to r 1 , could not,' he replied. 'If I could lee , get to smoke I almost went wild. I LOOK HERE could mid choke it .41, and it begen to at. him, 'did you not • p when you saw R. P. WILKINSON & Co. could think .1( nothing else. That me LOOK id.n.ttE! grandmother might not suspect me, I , would work eters houn instead of ',pond- ing my regular wages fee cigarettes.' , For months I kept up this excel.. al - I seemed to fall to pieces all of • sud- den. ' His disease Veer the term of • Hale oPero'd sat a GROCERY and HA h' EP King.ton aril are offering Bar- iropay in die legs, and was very eentel; Itifli71"1 Gar riA Sister Cornelia continues the story. FRUITS. SUGARti "During all his guff/wings he hoTer for- PLAIN AND FAN= CALM 4WD PASTRY ALWAYS OIT HAIM. got what had btought him to this terrible Only lie mai leo. (1 in all canes of Baking and turned ont in a shape to condei Ha kept asking me to warn toast faCithous all boys against their use. A few dere befere he died he called me to ht. bed- side and said thet he thought he haa not heisted to ale par of town on shortest possible notice. NEW rum. 611100DS. WEDDING CAKES A SPECIALTY. lived in vain if only those boys who are still slice would profit by his stiffeners and death.. There is no other ferin tobacco so dangerous as ciearettes, be- cause the niceties in the smoke Is not ab- sorbed in the loose tobacco, smokee clean op to the end, bnt is taken, unfil- tered and uudiluted, into the lungs. It was not the psoson in the paper, but the poison of the tobacco which killed Sam - eel Kimball, and M ruining the health of. thousands of other pale -faced boys. - Union 22.-4 3411 all that the fashion onginated in the bustles when Ilet backs first came ia I dent of skates being reheeed of steels of about a year ago. Nothing can be prettier for a half ot ht mourning gown than one ef striped k gray veivet bands, belt, collar sod I teem te deepen the tone. Butt the Goods de - 1:e Week lace butterfly flutters and j iishes .in tulle hats and bonnets, (.0 ! ning and dance -gowns, on the skirts, ' low feint of the bodice on the should- 1 and not infrequently it 'levers over parasol and the evening coiffure. he anpliyie embroidery bands, hor- sed motifs, which c nee in delicate - Wed celery, with gold and sever ries in old poirt cs ope stitches for grounds, are among the most beauti- t -lungs that are put on summer in ct sierves, collars and cuffs applique to the cloth with gold cord braid in micelli or intricate Greek patterns. k well With turbsos or capotes to trh, and are suitable for any sort of lieht function. 'My father, at about the age of Et y. ' 43 the hair from the top of his hes'. er one menthe trial of Ayer a flair e, the hair began coming. and, in Pe menthe, he had • fine growth of r .1 the natural color." -P. J. Cullers 41. latest openings of crepes de chip. c erounds of shaded effects in delicate iiral tints, on which are all sorts of t leek lilts star dust or phosphrsre•- t sea jelly, and irre.gular figurines of .entionalieed objects Irons the sky, rth, sir and water. ime of tbs most exquisite gem and el eettine seen in a Fourteenth street ow ennsista In the revival of what is led "in•isible setting." Ono largo no, amethyst, sapphire, pink or rol- iamonda, and no visible metal how the cohesion is I. WHITELY & KING, Peelle liesitinsent. To apply the poetic words "a medicine that's able to breathe life into a stone to B. B. fi. moon of exaggeratien, but • e Its countless cures and won- derfel work even .. , seems justifiable if it I:curia:xis those who hesitate to try B. B. B. and be cured. 2 He possesses dominion over himself, and is happy, who can every day say, "I have lived." To -morrow the Hoarsely Father may either invade the world to dark clouds or cheer it with clear shine. He will not, hs-iwever, render in- effectual the things whieh have already taken place.-Horatie. Piet ing As "rlolete plucked will never row again" so • good name once lost we never Din regain. An article which after ex - Method trial won great fame and .t time mile on by gond deeds still faaresesea, it is Burdock Blood Hitters the haat etre for deepepsia and all blood dimmer. 2 Ta earth) services the seater snj the profit, earthly t is religiose services the servant minim it. "Asd die ark of the Lord costumed is the heels of Obad- Edora, the Oittite, Qra. snslke; sod the Inrd blamed t)bd•1dsea. Wel all his bno.ehold. " The ark was not liaised for the sake of hie hominid, bee bi household, was blessed kir tbo ado of the ark. The ark of Ad 61w47e Pip for .11: -Beeks. •be�•a...r k 01? YOUR PRINTING DOI" £T `TIM SIGNAL." • MC Mr 714 ale fi sal • Dhi 64 011 1.3-4 Ipt 111 it tj a i 11 D 3 I th 0 i 0 0 ia :1 -#.1J .10 1, 2- q Pik 112 id 13 !I 411 111 • 3 1 1 "1 take pleasure in certifying thst vs ueod Dr Fowler's Extract a Wild wherry in my family for years and d it a sure rare for diatrbsee anti sum r corapleinta both for Mildew, and Tichlsona, Oat. sidel atin Peu to 3 not The Mtn mat by t this Tow Al flee Al tins Deo Roe 14+ Roe A Pat A (10 A Nee Hre A A Ste AtI 844 Bei Plel Du Ds rot of fly flietrop, Gepg, - left au Toads, f week far St. Peal, where be 1 snit his Cortoott.