The Signal, 1891-4-17, Page 3Great Remedy
CATARRH.
UGMANSIA I
Warranted
A SURE CURE 1
SOLO SYIALL O UGGISTS.
1: .1, i:. GORE.
9We 1•atewe• sue Mau•teeterre.
t. it PI(1I. ear.
sENo W . a.�te�sa•d it )
r tea, ad we l sold you by express. C.O.D.
WaoMgant *slob which you clTan daxamlae, are
not lad
a all and even [.ere
itthann we dates for
hof if pertaTctly a�'
!x lehieteryAg pay
yt the
.B�:
Sscb a
abases Is secure a
reileatiet batepiess
at wokk • eW-
lonaly low price re
esidver hie
(bee. cAkead. Thio
Ismjambe
BA
Unloose
ewe over oinnW.
boa m S L It has
seal how. cap and
• •t-
grisraTailliii
ear
roof. The works
��aY°1ae{pM�balsam,.
had styli,
to Land we warrant It t as ae W m
keeper tt is snitabie for either a Wily to
gentleman. bse
in at with each
watch Adeline* rhe. ATT a 00.,
Watchmakers. eL l)at.
SEND 118 $1 IN �yy`oe°vv°`t =
weevil seed yea pietp&a th51 atolMat
lath OwOThese ttwg�Ri1A BM
rue net
woes by lod11s
seed.th
... e hese
sseisty. sad halm the
Immo
PATENTS 1
NIEATtNTOACI LAMAS AN, CZPIAI►ATS
0.bt.1Nd. and all hammers in the U. re. Patera
take anemia!, to at McIDEAATb' Fitt&
Our oak -v is opp_it. the L. h. I..trill 0f
tem, and we dam ouzels Norms le tem tier
-fistula ba.eemem afree, WASH/an TUX-
:lead MUNKI. IIR DHAWI \'O. woe SKr
rosea to naen.atessey fres d charge -.ala
eke tie CHANG i U.VLioth it i. r,R-
T i is P. rtNr.
We maim byre. to the Par tt.e Stipp.
'f M ($rd.•r I) v,• sod to °echos of the
C. * ramie' Nam. Fur c.r. nl•r. edek-e.
tonnage releremes to actual Clients in sour
owslkst.erCmel,. wntet.,
C A attew a
trwwitiot (M1ee. tt ashngusn,I C
17 -if
t- i,;OMPLAINTS
KC:.'F' A GC1TTt.E EN
i'ifti HGL,'SE.
Sett.1 . . :.IE al LRS
6oderich Steam Boiler Works.
EataNbhed rtxR
Chrystal & Black.
SECOND HIND IlOHINERI
!n Stock For isle:
1 50 -horse -power upright
boiler, all complete.
1 6 -horse -power upright boiler
and engine.
1 6 -horse -power engine.
1 48 -horse -power horizontal
boiler, complete.
1 50 -horse -power elide valve
engine, all complete.
The above have been thorough -
IV overhauled and warranted in
drat chum oondition. Ready toe
immediate delivery and will be
acid cheap
Ilse enters will ren••1v prow 1 iAsgftet►
warts t Sep. e. T.
a► Rsps&n pre.ptiy •hoed., e..
P.O. BOX 8d1.
SONGS MORGAN SANG
WITH STRAIN OF MUSIC SWEET.
I.a.r limed Old fu els Mat are ■
./ the Sar aa) • ./ Old rte ermine
S The masa, Mt emu are
(haat. of Oma sr Lena ag.,
We eat us the stave of the uld Sen.. we
used to live as sled listened la the easuner
evening. The fiddle that lel been our
friend fur so many years was neglected, and
she 4)1.1 nam .at with it can his knee. He
nerved it and (.caked over the Idle tope with
Hit first tiuge of red in his wrinkled cheek
that had teem there cur many a day.
Fisher had bought us All organ, and away
dowu the aide line pat the church and the
saw-uuU we cuuhl hear the warm .acme.
The moue( of that wagon was s familiar
to tour cars as a street oar bell Is to yours.
is w the stillness of that summer night the
weirs' smutted from culvert to culvert
wink a full rumble first, and then the
staccato rattle of the solid road --I heard
the old tiddler sigh.
For he was jealous jealous to the heart,
and that heart sae heavy. For the old
Liddle that had taught our toddling feet to
stay and mark music was no lager retell
it lay in his lap like a chip.
1 see hu white hair yet. 1 see the tender
eyes aid the weak chat which seems to be
the birthmark of nature's musicians. 1 mart
ate the formal smile of the old ran limit amus
u,er might as be fitted his oil fiddle arta
tried) to be gay.
:end the old iron ask tree wagon bumped
up the sidewalk and as it bearer Larne we
-aw something beautiful in the old fiddle
Like hitt who casts off au told love there is
A *onset bins in the new that taunts with the
1 eauty of the old.
He took up his fiddle, and in the star-
light by the Iliac trees he played, se if in
defiance. of disappointment, e•1Veit fur the
Wagon" as the wagon rolled into the yard.
J.&ger beads !died It anti plated It in the
old _parlor ; eager eye' searched Is from top
to (taken ; eager hale ones knotted at
either side tend waited. Anel when she
who.,, hails are folded forever now touched
the magic keys such a flood of music
swarmwd through the old farm house that
even the clock belted a Inoneut to hear and
then ticked apologetically. The music
streamed through the open windows and
• Ioair dal every nesting baric except the
wt -bird, for he had sat on a branch not
ivany Lours before era caw- a ! ,
✓ w.eloun,l songful towards the plant It
wok, the sleepy ham upon the porch, and
they leaned over and blinking funnily at the
dim window- of tLeir house. In the stable
gentle horses cased to eat anti pricked their
innocent ears forward to hear, and the timid
ant inquisitive• two-year-old colt stretched
his long velvet intik over the stall and nib-
itled the old name's shoulder and asked her
in the dark what it was all about. The
dorm(!_ LOW with the t une:allowed curl an
her tongue rose and listened.
The cat skulked into the woad pile and
the .In*. feeling that something was expected
from hien rushed to the gate and barkwl at
homself.
That was • great night when the organ
c Luse home and every year tacked new his-
tory to its wabant sides. in a shadowed
n..* I used to sit and hear the voices of the
told .organ. 1 had an uncle who used to roar
the Meath of Nelson. He would stand in
the [middle of the doer and thrust out his
chest till hie arse dangled down behind hus
lake stockings from a clothes line. He
would grow °orbs -like about the neck awl
:ap.pletic in regard to the face, and with his
goggle eye, fastened on the exiling would
elow the stay of Trafalgar. That old
organ taught me history anti tt taught me
the story 4,1 the sea tight,
I saw as 1 sat to my quiet nook the hunt
ed ship. of Spun and Pianos kenneled in
the bay, end I saw the avenging blood-
-hounds of England rine upon the startled
ihoriwa. 1 went aboard the Victory as she
noiselessly- made her way in the ver and mew
a noun stamping on the quarter-deck, a little
men is hose stunp of an arm wagged, wag.
gal, wagged in his empty sleeve. I saw
the men stnp to the waist and stand half
naked at the gums 1 hewn( the captain of
the foretop call for volunteers, and 1 saw
the tailors rush up the ratline and swarm
upon the boons with every eye on Spain.
Their mar knives in their teeth there,they
are high up in the dicey mase places crouch-
ing like tiger. for their pray. And down
Ion the swinging deck men are spreading
law -dust --.lust that will ick up blond im-
mortal. Faster eel with unernng aim the
great ship is coursed straight for the dark
cliff -like sides of the sullen Ftrnchran, and
as she comes snarling through the frothing
waters. tone by one the signals flutter from
lier utast head till nien read the immortal
sentence : "England expects that every moan
will do his duty."
There is a faint cheer as the great ship
rushes on her victim. Site da mom
ent and careens, and fire rushes frau her,
and as the smoke settles she slip out of it
and gives it to her again and amain --owe
more again aa: again.
And ■pushed with blood I see a mean lean
over and pick up the old bero, and amid the
lace work of shot and fire hear him dying
below.
Ah, the ell organ wart eloquent. 1 CAA
remember when the boys and girls learned
the ole paraphrase in the solemn parlor
"04 God et Bethel by whose h and
•I
by ample x111 are fed."
i saw the people huddled on the bleak hill
side. and i law drying men skulk in the
heather. i Now • man arise in their midst
and hard him tall in horning words the
truth that theme was no slavery either for
body or soul.
I saw • main and hia wife .rated no a
stone, and just u the hymn sounded on the
hill cavalry ,(anew( through the valley. anti
AA the patient people nisi( :heir watchful
eyes, lo, Cava -home flamed on the hill.
Then the man looked in the hies of [tis wife
the woman who was nursing his two
weeks chili. She made no out pry with
er mule she nw.aa Her steady eyes looked
in ht., anti he drew his good MOM fell from
the scabiand till its point rang on the rocks.
Them he walked down to Ikwmeksg, who
waters lisping over the smooth noises 1ws
tattling their new feud secret to the sym-
pathising sea
Then came the enemy like an avalanche,
like the fall of • mountam, end the whole
valley was red with idnod and grey with
duet, and when the mid of the battle was
gorse 1 saw in the tern tori the hoof marks
of the helve that in flight carried tb. Moeda
('laver'.,.
Then from for mountain side aid up out
of the glen now in triumph - then ..ibbisg
prayer rolled the anthe in
"tit tied of Mets. ( ala whose hand
Thy weep(, will •w fed.'
Oh. iihe old orae ! How it talks to me
seen sow whew ems hoes, ars broken and it
le laid away la the UMW The n.awii, of
'Jou Lover of on$s.P er mended so
serest aa did hA towWeis Mien dear old
aiel► ea Hei r1iri �11W a white > rod - I
THE SIGNAL: GODERICH, ONT., FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1891.
torah the kale 1 nth* web 11ks boys and
-la 1.11•, r Data. Oh Lord. AM de With M&'
HURON'S LOCAL MEMBERS
name iketrke, of the Three u.g'wrs•
elvaes u the Imalstatere.
Th. (.lobe of Saturelay,4th mat ,.antained
portraits of all the members of the Owlario
Legi•latute,with abort biographical sketches
of the members. Huron', three represen-
tatives are Lbw mentruoed
♦W'H. ALIHOP.
The riding of tooth Huron has been
represeatal since 1873 uuuttnewaly by a
Reform member in the penmen of Mr. AreSa
Laid lilshup. He is of Se,ttah birth, first
seeing the light near E:dtuburgb, oil Sep -
tender bah, 1829. He mens to ('ata.la to
1849, end for mems time resided iv Outarto
comity. but removed to the farm he tow
entopic,, tear Exeter, in 1854. He was
married 1t. 1867 to ]Lias Janet, monad
daughter of the late Hobert Doig. In 1862
Ise entered muaieipri p.litiut, ami ems reeve
of Lisburne from 18b3 to 1874. lu 1871 and
1873 he was warden ..f Huron, and was tint
returned to the Legislature in 1873, ou the
retirement of the sitting member.
L T. 0Miaow.
Mr. J. T. (harrow, Q. ('., the nee :occulter
for West Huron. is in all respects a sun of
the soil. He was born at Chippewa, Wel-
land «DuntJ in 1843, and spent his youth as
a farmer's boy. When about tat, he remev
..d with his father's family t, Huruaconaty,
awl settled an a farm there. After study-
ing law in (:uierich he was called to the bar
in 1868, awl became a junior partner of Mr.
M. 1'. Cameron, the present member for
West Huron in the Cottonton*. This firm
w•a dissolved in 1874, and Mr. (:arrow is
now senior partner in the frit of (:arrow &
Proudfom. He ass for seven years reeve
of 1 derich, being elected by aeebs. aeon
for the last six tents 1t. Lie closing year
he was choral warden of the comity, after
which he voluntarily retire!. He married
a daughter of the late Rev. Mr. Fletcher,
and has now a family of seven children. He
was elected last Jun.t io reprment West
Huron, defeating Mr. 4. M. Roberta, and
succeeding Hot. A. M. Hous. He second-
ed the address in reply to the speech from
the throne this I:lsitn.
THOS. alio,,].
.Ir Thomas Gibson, member for Fist
Huron, is one of the oldest members in the
Haase He was born at Greenlee, Her.
niekshire, `ootland, in 1825, and was edu-
cated there. He was married to Mir
PJiiabeth Hudson 4t. 1054, and after her
iw..a.k Mir Sarah Touts., of Lakedet.
He learned the trade of a millwright, and
worked at at .one yetrs before conning to
('aasia in 1855. He was reeve of lfowick
for some years. At the general rlectiou in
1867 he was an utn.ueuessful tawli.late for
legielatice honors, but at the next general
election, In 1871, be was elected, and again
in 1875, and at eery affection sirs.,.
a Lib oral mad aeispperew of Mr. Mowat.
fekmig rhino.
" What is worth doing at all is worth do-
ing well," *Lys an old adage, and .omeholy
has described genius as "merely an infinite
capacity for taleg pains" Meiaaonier, the
French painter who died so recently, had
this capacity. He was teethe Nista of some
other painters, but much that Ire lacked in
talent he male up by infinite painstaking.
The New York Press tells us that when
Meiseonier painted " 1807," now in our Met
ropubtan Museum, he bought a standing
crop of grain in • field and hired some boys
to gallop horses over it. so that he could get
the effect of • trampled down field that he
needed. Awl w painting "1814"' he bor-
rowed Napoleons blue overcoat from the
mMeV m,bad it exactly reproduced by a tailor.
put the imitation coat on, mounted a "lay'
horse and painted before a mime in Ile open
room mn his roof, in a snowstorm. But it
was to his smaller or rather to his smallest
paintings that his greatest Nome was due.
Sometimes he punted with a fortieth arrert-
rng of a single bristle, producing the delicate
effect which made llelacroix lay that his
"Chen Players- waa painted with baby's
eyelashes. To a theatre manager who asked
gem to paint is drop curtain he rtpliel with
an estirrate that as his pictures brought an
average market puce of 80,000 francs per
metre, the drop curtain would Dost 21,600.-
000 flans, ar 64,320,000, and would be
finisher( in one hundred and ninety-nine
years, at his usual working speed.
Many a youth: will find that where others
excel in native genius, painstaking attention
to detail --in a word, t . . -will
make amends for the lack, and thkt is soose-
thing that can be acquired.
6ppt.ess at Same.
Probably- nineteen -twentieths of the
happiness you will ever have you will get
at hone. The independence that comes to
a man when his work is over, and he feels
that he has run out of the storm into the
quiet harbor of home, where he can rest in
pace with his family,:s something real. It
dos not make much difference whether you
own your house or have one little rotor in
that house, you can make that little
room a true hone to you. Yon can people
it with such moods, volt can turn to it with
such sweet fancies, that it will be fairly
luminous with their presence, and will be to
yon the very perfection of • home. Against
this hone none of you should ever trans
gras- Von should always treat each other
with o ourtesy. It is often not so difficult
to love a portion as it is to be oourterms to
him. Courtesy is of greater value and •
more royal grace than some people seems to
think. If you will bat he courteous to
each other, you will soon barn to love each
other sore wisely. prnfmtndly, not to may
lastingly, than you ever .lid before.
ifit ads•. wvrrna.s.
The following i. • list of the various gov-
ernors of Canada For the last hundred yeah
and the date of their t
Rim John II -raves Mlmcoe, 1792
Air Robert Shore idle., 1801.
Air Peter Hater, 1802.
Air Je5. CraigTeasels1807.
Lord Teasels Craig,
1807.
Mir George Prevost, 1812.
Sir George i)rummond, 1813.
Lord Francis ( tors (•pored tits.), 181&
dike of Richmond, 1818.
Sir Penalties Maitland, 1822
Sir John Colborne, 1829.
Sir Promote Bond Heart, 1836.
Sir (hvwgw Arthur, 1838.
Lard Durham, 1838.
Chaies Pouliot Thns.po ei. Lard 'yds'.
him, 1839
Sir Charles liagese, 1841.
Sir Charles ete•lf, 18t1&
Bard (stheart, 1646.
Lord Sighs 1647.
Sir Edmund Walker Head. tris
Vieco.ns Minsk, 1864.
Hit Jeb. Yaws 1868.
Lard Delewi., AVM
Marquis of Lase, lees
fowl iemilow.sa [mak, .,nwu a cud
lewd fw.14y, t
THE HUCSE AND HOME
SUNDRY A106 TO CONVERT THE
FORMER INTO THE LATTER.
rue t and iwgseMteem -A
Tale bait. mer [stile. l'akte-A IwY-
tea lamed Sward Knife twerp.ntag-
■.w lu Comma our sewing Ma.hlne.
Twill b.
I that .%eat
(1ke..la C*d. Toni. l'abin, used
t., tet her frankly -laked coke with
au old, but veer) thio, kalif. when
the y..ung heir of the Shelter man
.Hal took supper iu ber cabin, de-
-larfog that otherwise the lightness
sof for due so entirely roamed..t thio knife is surely s great con-
venience. whether for kw( 1. cake
or bmre.i fr•.hl) baked or lino and
nm 1 .o5l. The knife shown iu the tllm-
trattus trig ;i is made .4 steel, ham-
mered out to extreme thinner. and
Mo. Y. FOLDING 'Mien Inman
[ben ground down eweih uicu its sides and
quite sharp upon the edge. 'The tbioner the
whole Llade, a ,nal.2e alt s.;u pr..per flruwe.s,
the more convenient will be the knife. The
chief merit u( the bawl hand [Fig. :'I is
that the rite used fur rutting is always
sweet and clean, being kept always tram
dust and Rim, by simply f..kiing the two
laves together. It is alio s, ecenpact, when
so folded, that It can ice put away In a
snail space. It may well la• made of two
pieces of whits wood that have bun kUn-
dried, thus rendering them not liable to
war11.
Another suggestion. relating to the tabor, is
to regard t, duels-niug the care ing knife, the
et; -e .J which is frequently destroyed by an
improper manner .4 draw ie.; 41 amiss the
steel. The knife shook' be drawn acnes in
the direrti oe shown by the arrow in the 5!-
5e0. 3. 5NIRRHARrtNI`r1
lustretkn'Fig. 31, then placed on the other
ole .4 the steel and drawn in the isms di-
rection as before. If drawn inose direction
and then in Me opposite. the i,. '. esu
teeth sipu the r d,;e .-ill bre torn off aced the
cutting queens' injured, instead of being
bettered- The same is true in honing a
manor, or 4m whetting a knife.
who Mil 1t •.e
In every boou ,hold there is scarcely • week
without this gnesti• n having to be asked
abo ,t +new Moen, brsikaide or neglect. It is a
great thing if a ready. truthful answer
comes. Not L. g, further thaw that and ay
that voluntary eonfesi of should be made
before any gee tions are asked, 1 lay it is a
great thing if • truthful prompt answer fol-
lows the gnrmtioo.
This state of affairs in a household means
tench. There must be a high sere of hon-
or, a love of truth. bravery as to the conse-
quences of telling it. and a trust in tete one
to whom it mast he told. Than conditions,
are not acquired in a day, and lack of than
must be discipline and s•If-dieciplin..
The "head" nI • family has this matter
largely in her own braids. The cert way to
*entre truth -telling, and, better .till, the
voluntary confer/non. is to ay that there
will be no punishment if the truth is told
and then to take care that she keep Ler
word in deed and spirit. I hgve known per -
ems who did not "punish" when they mid
they would not, but who had • way of
"throwing it up to a fellow," that was ten
times worse. Yet this rule of never punish-
ing if the truth is told cannot be absolute.
There are to for whom this would
be very bad. such for ic'tnce, as are hab-
itually careless. and do not care for any cou-
.oquewr except physical pain or that which
touches their pocket -back.. The former you
find amongst children. the latter amsongat
servants, most Gequentiv. it takes a nice
discrimination when each is the clue, and
much patient baser, watching and conscien-
tious' experiment.
A senora( honor is* plait of slow growth.
Where it is wisely cultivated in a child from
earliest childhood, it (an be made as natural
*any other habit; but where it has to be
planted later in life. we it does in many boy
end gIrleof all rands, and in the rwnmon
elms .4 servante who drift into our hoar&
it b, difficult to make it take root and grow.
Yet who .ball ay that the effort is not
worth while: and Wlso shall ay that nay ef-
fort is ever wholly (teat
I have found it a helpful Wing to trust
children and servants until they have earn-
ed lay distrust I am waif aware that
this M the revers d the workt's way;
but let me speak front personal ez-
pertmwe and ay that my reams have near-
ly always been honesty, truth, kindly feel-
ings, goad .mice and aff action.
"Karns! vigilance" is another element
that mud go with trust even if at Rest
thought it seem. contradictory. "Lead ns
not into temptation" is the daily prayer of
the Christian world: but bow often dos nen
remember to ale. "Let mss lead nit into
tsntptatice," anti, "Int me not leave an op-
portunity tor another to fall into tempta-
tion. even when t do not lead."
All of ns real to lar "hedged mond about,"
at trona, and this *bruit snake us who sr.
bead. of Arriba 5kt, *where of ,,hood,,
overseers of any kbad, all the more mew
hal to "hedge round about" [Moss for
whim we are in any way responsible.
lntthe "hedge" ht. • beautiful one, such es
ern he Mel enol relied upon with tittle nao-
.riomme ' that It la a "h.dge," and the &1
which If within Ice sheltering borders ate
grow in beauty which all may w.
1f my simile .sera poetic, let It not ked
you to think this is a pocke matter, or yore
entWass may a p edtlr dle nut You will
lass to ado mai plain, severe, mrpn.'tie
dieiptlning of yourself, -now and always,
to -day, to estwrrrw, every day if yon would
b the bent foe nears; mad win. in answer
to year "Rin did kr • prompt "I did,"
from those wan limy have very strong Mew
titins in beep still or .o deny. Juliana
Stafford, in The Housekeeper •
A Osaalawtres Dress
The neatest way to stab • home dream in-
tended few sets& service le 1M kitties h
Ohba A welt 111.4 flubs weds* aid fill
mai-dr• Star sewed by Ms wade by a
vldMlsg`� and fl•Ieaed with a Item sew
wet dit 8�iweh asserikig toa height'Mam
ulsarii tiny talc/
very may laundered, and an use sold have
sawmill's (.r swearing w • BMW dram*
leery, ..is though obliged to do bow ono
waahtug weal Ironing In atanhiag chaos
ivy-bhe dramm put panty d blue in lbs
Merck, and ab. sld one isblrgwsuuful of ..it
to every galkw of boiled starch. This will
undo them inn very easily Havieg pro-
vided
vide! yourself wltb a number of them, sr a•
many as you out afford, you wtli thea deed
to make nous mew apneas. At lea.[ taw
doom will he required -sit striped borne -
spun mer for wearing while cooking, ars(
Ss keg wrote ones with pieln loan at the
bottom so wear at the table aid to •anun.+ It
veiled hastily to meet vishore
Helpful Mt:st..
To pr•vrot layer cake !null sticking. genus,
the lies mil dust it, a little :1 --our
A teens. maul .4 euru•eIamli [nixed w 1151 a
cupful of mit, will nesiove all p rlbsbty of
dampness In I Ir• ahsker
Scald tt, bowl ht which the butter w.l
wear an• t.. be• .•mooned for 'X►e•. the h .t
dish heats the butter lac that it caul b1. -ii
much tomer e Ith the a5Vear.
%Che•n m:.....,,; whit, cab.., us r one its!:
teat's am mere eg o:em n ..t tartar thou sal i•.
as Shu extra quwnuty ..1 cream .4 tartar
make, the egg whitest suffer.
lewd for cake uuy lie prevented frost.
crockfn;; whew .•ut, by ad,leu: our m`deq.a ,
(ul .4 xw. et create 1 , ewr.t uub.rokea
lieu- all up he:eth,rr, then ad l sugar until s,
stiff as can be stirred
TO keep the bread -jar and oaku-box sweet,
- riuraf;er washing. with boiling water iu
whicb a Ilttle neugu.au n.ln ha bees* tbs.
$ d,hear In them set out of ,halt thew win fur a
few Isonrx
Kse,rewer pipes, ....tweeted with nada.
aro 'camels, rima., and wholesome by scall
ing t,mv a Mork with 1..shnK water in shit -h
washing soda has leen disc.dv..l, remember.
ing
e ember-
img that many a case 01.liphth'ria have bra•.i
attributed to fowl sewer pipes_ -
Solutlm for cleaning silver- and brass: -
To one quart of rein water add tau ounces
of amu;s.iaia mud three ounce,% n( precipitate.(
chalk. Ititlt• aid keep weal -gibed, and
shake before using. 1%'s.,55 'Myer in 45.1, soapy
water and rine• to clean bot water.
A valuable salve for eves . r w-..unds of am -
kind: -
nykindi--13,41 tot -halt cup of thi.'t sweet
cream tort or fifteenIntuit•.., stirring con-
stantly. when eokI, twat it thoroughly.
when it will be n creamy paste. Bottle and
cork tightly or stake fresh .'very time.
A gored comma for nwwhne: for broke,,
china: Di:noire a little girt(-a,eine lel a 14111.'
water :.s that it is rather tined. put enough
plaster of Paris into this 10 utake, a thtt'k
paste. Cetneetbroken Orem '4 chine Loge -
tam., ands. half .an hone they cannot be
broker in the sans plane•. Hot water seems
to oma (' it ui.,re Mr as.
ClrassIng a wleg Machine.
•
It is lteceaaary that a sewing ,machine
should be thoroughly clean awl in go..1 order,
for if not, it will tire the prrrdrn who is ut.ing
it, and will not sew as wee. When buying
a machine the agent tells yo;, 4t must be oil-
ed often Nay once a week, but even if tui.,
is done it frequently happens that after
h aving bona id me s.aurtinte the iachin.•
begins to work hand mat ,often refusee t.
cork at all. If the operator under
Marais tbo utachioe thoroughly- and is all•
to fix it, there will be w, :urtb..r trouble; or
there may be a mean arsenal the place with
acne idea .f machinery- who s ill be able
to tell you what is the natter, or, what is bet-
ter, Rx it himself. If the operator is not
favored in this way it may he tnw«ary to
send it to the city, or down town, whish be-
sides
o-sides coding at least two doilsra is often in-
asivenieut, .'.ruing perhape in the middle of
drusannaking. All this trouble may b.' un-
mee.nary if the operator tars a little comi-
cial sense and goes to work in the right
way:.
Take off tb• strap and loosen the top, then
take it to the sink, an.t with a small paint
brush and plenty .1 kerosene give the works
a thorough clewing. This cub the dried oil.
Thea take toff the little slide under the needle -
bar, and there generally lice the trouble.
The feeler plays tack and forth in a
little (kleg pit. Thi pct soot gets fillet(
with lint accumulate 1 front the constant
frletlou of the feeder teeth upon the goods.
of course when the feeder cannot move, the
wheel width.• whoa rna"Siuery steps. It is
ensihy eleoma( by taking off for small plate
and poking. out the dust with a thin wire
The teeth also should he cleaned with • pin.
as they pull the goods dung and are apt to
get full of lint also.
Tray ('loth far an Invalid.
Tray cloths an, so popular and numerous
that it is w,l nes-eeary to speaka good word
for them or call attention to their beauty or
♦ Danery TILT ('I.4TW
utility The one herewith illustrated is
murk like many at them -male of twilled
linen. fine and m,ft vet hooey enough t.. stay
in place well, is fringed and has a cerosator-
awed corner of drawn work Flat in tits
upper left Fraud corner the first line of -
"Just atiny bit.
There le no mote,"
le embroidered in outline stitch, and in the
tower right hand eerie, the remainder is
plowed; the sketch shows bow tate words are
arranged asap by roti.' twenebea.
This cloth ass designed ,.palatally for an
Invalid, and was dotted to fit bar own
trey which wen large enough t, bold ail re-
quired for a Yews) in the ark -room Theae
who have "been toms" can judge .4 her
phased eurpr me when she first waw the in-
srrlprion ehwerful rd letters mien* the
brown hwwnrhee iteoping up at her from
wither side .•f • dainty bat of game and t.ad.
it was not lewd at all times, only wows fad
Mg appetite railed for • tit .4 d Heat* nrsk-
wry writhes Month*, both to mid ret to the
mesal : therefore, It never felled topless' A
Roard me-erea instead wf the.
twenties it dainty and niggestive; if
aortal in mma, with wash stitching silk,
ob.* worsts he pretty for the steins, .cant
foliage areal let ere.
As Australian is reported
to ger •:Madame pectoral .f objets at • dhe
tens at ba mils
Ta. Royal M 1 s.r4Ry of Isre-
M hen resivaed an amount of • lights*(,
Croke ie badged *htea uttered Iia sheiks
of son* eggs willies' breaking the ismer
Is.
the ..w 4Sa... cry her photography 1's
,alma( ,elms, when tae twines are Viewed
bbtk. '-' r plass
of eteima 4 Ned
muse .
3
S
ANNOUNCES THIS W,£EK
That he has opeaod eat •
grocery Department
la ouaseetlw wltk 5151
HAR7.317P-41.2k $TORE,
Wkert will be kept a full stook of l'FIOICIC rA1dILC ORO('M.it1FF.
hammersprod...,. amen is eaukaaaggee
His hardware ,tock w111 as formes(, be ooapl.t.la all Its departments.
BOOTS & SHOES CHEAP FOR CASH
---1 O-
! o other shoe store can compete in price, quality or tit with
A full aswrttnent of
Ladies', Gents' and Childrens' Boots and Shoes of all Kinds
\uw In stock.
0
/My Motto ls:ISMALL PROFITS AND QUICK RETURNS.
I will make lust .Ica gd..is to order at the following pnore
Men's hand -sewed Bala. or Cong, at (net)
Men's machine -sewed or hand pegged, at (net)
Women's Kid Lace Shoes, at - -
Boys' Grain Kip Balmorals, at -
tsr all rapt:repaired iris of .Large. Repairing neatly done.
301-11\7431"0 11T OAREY.
Wholesale and retail P.
A4.60
1..50
225
1.66
EARRJ\VS, UUO%VS l
I\
'OW is the time to tea-urn the best Harrow in the market. 7 tied glial
solid steel and tempered. Every tooth atampw•d STEEL tad tam.
ranted. Time and quantity are limited, so those that wile le be
supplied :lust call early.
$14.00_ $14.00_
. it r
•
. bio
!,-f. • :::: i .. f
•
e. • , t 1 •
a
i5.. is t•5 ms
a
These celebrated STEEL TEETH can be fitted into old Harrows felt
Thu ix a special offer, and will be open for is .bort time only.
Who would not have old Harrows made better than when new
D. K. STRACHAN,
(2300-tf)
HAVE THE GOODS.
THE SUBSCRIBER WISHES TO ANNOUNCE
New Goods Suitable for the Season.
FULL LiNES IN ALL DEPARTMENTS
i do not quote prices or make a specialty of low priced goods. r
aim at keeping such goals as will give entire satisfaction, and those
who are not glaroured with a Scare and sideshow method of doing busi-
ness will, i think, r `; . business tone on business Tines.
GOODS MARKED iN PLAIN FIGURES.
And siviedy one price. Will be pleased to show goods, and no one will
ole lh to purchase.
9064
CHANGE OF BUSINESS 1 t'`
- /war•....t.tr.lew.N7.es ,
yesma.d-7.iy.l.t..AA _ems , ei a
y.. yew wets r nor.. Atm •.. .
O • to N4a.r a••w _.... .t A
OW e. • ••7 M here so n.wmt woe• rot eon i
a+�.....o .._. AI oarroww
mei.. er Ow,. wove a..w•,,a,.
EAST 1. ` .. u, 'ter ew.,. o.... w+.r s1i w
M until. Alli.... u:+». foe M
rm.? e..fw. ws +.nlti.n,t=
�Ara.yr
=MIA aRw.ILt reds
•'toss ♦ ew, rwwdvass. tutee.
Draper and Haberdasher.
r
THE OLD AND RELIABLE
FLOUR DB FEED STORE
HAS CHAIIOZD HA1RIle.
earl public ces" eo: a.beaptadby A.C. SEAGER,i
THOS. J. VIDEAN,
-Omer is Mcl a ne's---
whe w111 many it on la all Its Leasehes at 151e
d deaMaier
Owl
man, sear a,. scar., NEW BLOC g
Uwder i►e aaasgeMat of former °•,'vaso•
made bwst•ase Law seas the scot moos.
I Is Its 11se of any la teww and as x51m new
been 14
weprleter has h.ustlhed with It few
over eight wars th.n will he ow falling of h
Lbw enmity b •:MMated h komodan k h !
he frost rank
genes dithered te •11 pens of the tows. to
The latent dad ti..t Rate d Isar :tad fedi i ��e• Lend ��i
alwar• es head sail shears seals wgs�ses l .lLend
THOa J. SID=AN.
ammerater
1 tato tib � islty Omahas ea has my our ▪ 'r
od t Its °Mw► awd 1'we7 t
fir, [tai ask..lm.w.r, r ss.I *-
e'.w,
. primes �lte p4thed
Cheap Bates,
10= '`Z tri W
I�