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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1892-7-21, Page 2TEE SIGNAL : GODERIC IT; ONT.rS'THURSDAY JULY 21, 1892.
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THE POET'S UORNER.
Ilea m lbs Man of M•1.11K
a r Orasa= K. ebeeendit.
Not to the W el dol.%
Not to the teait of deed..
Nut to the sea a/ cusniug,
Not to the was of Greeds ;
Nut for the use whirs passim,
It r for the world's &wow.
Not in • tors of %shtoa,
Conroe • blessing down.
Not unto lead's exp•nsie..
Not to the miser's chert,
Not to the pprrinuety elegies,
Not to the hi/wooed crest,
Not to the sordid worldling.
Not to the knavish clown,
Not to the haughty tyrant,
l'orieth • blessing down.
Not to the folio bli.ded,
Not to the steeped ie shame,
Not to the carnal minded,
Not to unholy fame ;
Not to neglect uf duty,
Not in the monarchs crown,
Not at the smile of beauty,
Cometh • blestng down
But to the Doe whose spirit
Yearns for the great and g�0000dd
Unto the oce whose storehouse
Ysehderh the hungry food ;
Unto the one who labors,
Fearless of foe or frown
!'oto the kindly hearted,
Cometh • Wewug clown.
A USEFUL LIFE ENDED.
CYRUS W. FIELD HAS PASSED AWAY
FROM EARTH.
■ 1. wroth sad .ern Kepeced fer a Lasa
MINN and ■1e bass tailed Is Amlru..
led Msappetnesnene--A mesearhalele Mae
be a.m.
DOBB'S FURRY, N. Y., JULY 12.—
Cyrus W. Field died thin morning.
At his bedside were hie daughter,
Mrs. Judson, mad her two sow, Cyrus .tad
Frank Judson. His eon's disgrace as
weighed heavily on his mind, and intimate
friends say he never regained his old cheer-
ful spirit. This disappointment was preced-
ed by his wile's death and then came the
news of the death of hied•ughter. It war&
tad story in the latter years of his life.
Cyrus W. Field occupied a high poeitics
in the history of American progress and
fame, and 20 yeah ago be was held to be
one of the meet remerk•ble .neo of the
day.
Cyrus West Field, the most remarkable
member of • truly remarkable family, was
born in Stockbridge, N. Y., in 1819. He
was educated in hie native tows, shear
which, at the age of fifteen, he west to New
York, where he obtained employment es a
clerk for A. T. Stewart et 12 per weak. He
became a dealer in paper and failed two or
three toms. His native energy and ex-
ecutive talenta soon pat him in possession
of se ample fortune, so that in 1863 he
practically retired from business and made
an extended tour over South America. On his
return in the following year he was solicited
to engage in the establishment of • tele-
graph line in Newfoundland, and after
mature consideration he entered upon the
great work. He procured a charter grant-
ing an exclusive right for 50 yeah to .stab•
lish • telegraph from this 000tinent to the
colony and thence to Europe After con-
sulting Lieutenant Maury of the navy, and
Professor Morse as to the practicability, Mr.
Field formed a company with 11,000,000
capita). Peter Cooper was the first sub-
scriber to this fund. He visited England in
1854 and in 1856 for the further prosecution
of his pet scheme. He accompanied the
expeditions of 1857 and 1858, fitted out to
lay a cable &craw the Atlantic between Ire-
land and Newfoundland. 1 -he announce.
meet that the cable had been laid, sent a
lightning thrill through all the land, and
men wept for joy. But the success was
only temporary. Four thousand telegrams
were transmitted and the cable's %italite,
ceased.
In the latter part of the '60s the Great
Eastern, after repeated failures, oosnplete d
the task of laying the Feat cable nn July
27, 1866. Cyrus W. Field was now the
lion of the day. He received from congress
• gold medal and the thanks of the nations.
But Mr. Field did not rest on his laurels.
The pioneer of the cable, he became the
promoter of rapid tranit. He secured
controlling interest in the old "1.- road
company stock and worked wonders in
spreading the great system through New
York. In 1887 Jay Gould forced him out
of the management and since then he has
taken no prominent part to any great enter-
prise. He owned a fine country seat at
Irvington on the Hudson, where his special
fad was the raising of chickens. An edifice
which bears his name u the great office
building at the foot of Broadway, whose
upper windows look far out epic the ocean,
which was bridled by his indomitablegsius
for headwork.
Mew It rare annert.e.
(:xxn.twee, —i have suffered very much
from inflammatory rheumatism, which
through wrong treatment left ugly reunite(
sores on my hands and feet, With (hes. i
suffered for seven years, during which time
I had neith.r shoe nor stroking on. I com-
menced using B. B. B. externally and in-
ternsll) using the pills ago, and i can my
now that the sores are entirely cured, and
have been for some time. i believe the
bitten were the means of saving my life.
M let A,.'sir RARn,
('rew•nn'a Corners,
Acton 1'. 0., Ont.
ass.
Rats are native. nt Asia and their raids
westward belong to comparative modern
times From the fact that it le not men-
tioned byany of the early Europeans, it ie
surmisethat it nems unknown west of the
Ganges in ancient time& The black rat
first came from Asia W Rumps in the rix
month reotary--aieag with the plague
and was flet &nown es the graveyard
benne he preyed en the flesh of
t w wrho died during the awful visitation.
He was also known as the ' plagsei ear.,"
Worm the common homes oat had • limf-
k r habit of feasting a the dead. This
Meek set was the eomn-ea beam ret until
the Moira Err gray rat made his apps reek.
im 1776. The gra) rat mea te Europe Irma
lsdia by icy of Ronnie, and ie sow pope -
tarty bloom ea the Norway rat, from • as-
takoa tsarinas that it tame from Norway
se itmgdasd sad hem the latter oometry le
A
IlOsilhoss sola Donee.
All wee have the sere of eeildres sterid
knew that Dr. Fowls'. Rste.et d Wlk
Strawberry may be eesMdently depended ea
fe swine efl lewrsrr enmplsinta, diarrhoea,
iireom/wyma, e.ampa, mile. dreier. halsetem,
..hall• se&.., .maker, see., 1. okginw er
9
TEMPRRANOE SENTIMENT.
t171.11.a.s tfar/tw.
Leek at those •eseimasad Mee
kied woo bang mead tee dates of saheb%
jest as • mote lettere mead the I{ght, s-
aki. to leave bemuse of ii feecinetien, s-
tU it rages ita maim anti falls kelpie. on
the doer.
Tice, pedigeey and mtempere.es are
writ law ea their boos. Metallic ..d
Wombed those sad blooda►ot eyes tell the
terrible tele teat they are boned hand end
toot, and ears debvered over Wear bodiss
to the demos of iatemperanee, that instead
of .olid, substantial feed assteiu.g thea
the tin of &louhol is berm ng and consuming
their viler, and rune boiling sad earthly(
and hieing tkruege feet veins and their
blood." -Father Sykes' sermon ia Liver-
pool, Esglead.
What loved flit Mand.
The New York Witness, is speaking of
some of the manifold tenable to be derived
from pen, clean habits of Ida, says, very
truly, eat " the time may come to soy on
of us when the qustion of life or death will
depend on our sobriety and gerund health
funnels. Then an great, portly, robust -
looking men, w full of disease that the
prick of a pin might kill then., and then
are other men so .dean and b.althy that you
might almost run them through • threshing
machine and the fragments, when pat to-
gether, would knit and heal"
As •u apt illustration of thio fact ta.asee
paper relates the following incident
" A young laboring nian was brought to •
cordon hospital with a bsdly lacerated
and. He had fallen upon an old cotton
hook, and it had gone entirely through the
palm of his band, currying with it rust and
dirt. The wound was kept open w that it
would suppurate freely and be readily
cleansed.
" As time parted on, the and became
very much swollen, turned black, and the
surgeons watched very carefully for signs of
blood poisoning, fearing the the entire
hand would have to be amputated to eve
the life of its possessor. "These signs not
appearing it became a question whether
more of the hand could be saved than the
thumb and first two fingers. As to baud
became no worse, the surgeon delayed op•
erating on it, end after • time it began to
mend, and finally healed entirely, to the
surprise of the surgeon -
young man,' said he to the patient, as
to danger was passing away, ' do you use
alcohol in env form ! '
• No, sir.'
"' Do you tree tobaccos,
" ' That L *EA
HOW NE SAVED 1100.000 -
An [sample That many • Nae Might
relieve.
It is • pretty extravagant man who will
spend 1160 per month on cigars and drinks,
but the man who will set aside that amount
of money to his wife instead of dispensing
it, will find a solid pile accumulating very
rapidly. There died recently in Tacoma a
lady who had by that means accumulated
130,000. She willed the money to her fire
children.
The lady's husband did not drink, smoke
or chew. He was working on a good salary
and in four or fire years alter their marriage
was getting ahead very satisfactorily. One
day he said to his wife
" I think I will give you each month the
amounto.t money i would spend in smoking
and drinking. How much would it be!"
They calculated the sum. One friend
spent about 125 per month, another spent
1100 and many spent sums between the two
extremes. It was agreed that he would
spend 150, and this sum was regularly set
aside by him for her, to constitute a fund
for the Mention of their children. t tree
or twice every year he would coetrilute 1100
to her fund,tnstead of getting drunk. When
the fund had reached comfortable proper.
tions it was invested. Some of it was plac-
ed et interest. (ince the hsbanal was in a
close place and borrowed the money, paying
interest for it. The children, growing up,
were seat to school from it.. Many charit-
able acts were performed with the money,
hut 'still it grew. When they removed to
Tacoma some fortwate .sal estate invest-
ments were made with the money. One of
them netted 115,000.
When the lady diel, her estate, accumu-
lated in this war during eighteen years, was
found to be worth 130,000. it was will.l to
her five children, with provisions securing
them an education. The generous father,
whose abstinence hada made this possible,
added 14,000 to the fund beiroging to each
child. Besides the sums of money which
were expended for chanty ani in theeduca-
tiou of the children, a good) deal was need
for gifts. The gentleman series • 1500
gold watch as a memento of the fund.
" The fund had • little advantage, i guess,"
said he yesterday. " I always took pus to
a
invert it re ally. But compounding
money makes it grow very rapidly. The
amount placed in the sum was about 114,-
400—perhaps • little more, and I added to
my drink money, perhaps, more than 11200
per year. This amount almtet any smoking
and drinking man would spend in eighteen
years. A good many men in this town
smoke 11,200 to 11,500 per year. It dos art
take much high -prised wise to make this
much lager." Tacoma Ledger.
What ae Leer.
• • So you married Smith's widow ! Did
he leave anything !"
.. Nothing but her, and I wish he
abet s'hrMla.Ny manse.
Christianity, if it means anything, means
sixteen ounces to the pound, throe feet to
the yard, a just weight and a lot meesur..
it means honesty in all dealings, purity in
all conversation, • charity as broad as to
mos, unflinching integrity, sympathy, hu-
manity to man, loyalty to God.
saws Abase Tears.
it is the current report about town that
K.mp's Balsam for the thrust led lungs is
making ormto remarkably cans with
who are troubled with coughs, sore threat,
asthma, brvo.chitis and crruetption. Aa
druggist will give you • trial beetle free el
.net. it is guaranteed to reillge .ltd ears
The lerge bottles are Us, anidei (4,ow)
aneemede filer 88a8111816
Mete' eprip —lt titlesi—e eT-%b, A
new v material le beteg imparted
from Algiwb Wbisb is so skink that whew
pelted is hales it has to be held in place by
heavy ideal bands ft is seal for the sale
mod heck• of furniture it possess.s the
asof taN
of •agsess and the imposed -
'milky gettlag out .f repair.
tsh. Owls ..grade.
Oesytswetr, 1 have Hewn ilnrdnek Rhesd
Mitten for lay blood and for pimples, and
two bosom nod. a omelet• ear* of my
ease it is the illy remedy 1 ennk! Newt 1e
helwp m•• Mins Jtru• Verne,
Tram* Oe<
A FATHOM UNDYING MON.
Ire aamp tlltlit pr.e Lao !ago eve i...s. •at
she t ermil 1. MN anereatatg.
Ready 48 years age Misteal be.aa.a, W
wife and family, with Ike eaosplk.a slit fish
rosiest send, Hoary, cams to ride
oouutr) from comity Mayo, lnda.d. Mr.
Ureaors was eel' eues.otel is Inland, lad
kis lastly was very meek averse be W
leaving the land of hr berth, and to quiet
the oppuatta u lir. Ureuaan gave bus Male
neo to pus brother, tee Rev. Hoary Brea -
parish priest art Dysart, lisU.saaloe,
county Rwo..u.mou., inland, plowmen to
return for him withs • year.
The year aeu.e awl went, and Mr. Brea•
ion had grown to lake America an mush
that he gave up all thoughts of ruturnieg to
Iral•ad. Accordtugly I,u wrote is Father
leraus•a to seed on little Henry at one.
At tire& the priest objected, melting to edu-
cate the child fur the pr.et/.wn ; bet
Michael demautled his tmmeJate refers.
At Ieagth the child, then •Mout right years
old, was sent to hie father ear charge of two
Coen. (:.tely and t'uuninelwu, parishioners
of Father Rieman. Hi. preage was pod
to Hamilton, One, shore hie father was was so wonderfully remarkable that it de -
visiting 'I' homes Beatty, ahs, a relater., and wooded further explauettoa. It is of sum -
,L DETROIT MIRACLE.
A arra& Trhsa1Rplh Foss CRAM -
than II1sdtoal So/sante.
Pere r.Isa. elawe et she OMs. amst,Me
trees on waned ssetwel bp IMO bee
teen [ewe --A Steyr tt e.Y •
tlara.ul !'leanest.
Dr!ROIT, MB Ili., JAN. 201'H,
18/1. -A etre has )am come to
light hen, the part..ulaie of which
ae published in the Kreatog News, which
will be read with coasiderable interest by
all Caaadtaes, as It records the remarkable
achievement of • Casaba° modish' discov-
ery, witch hs already, In iia own country,
woo great and ..during fame. At the ad-
ded triumph then is no dpebt the fellow.
countrymenof the proprietors will rejoice,
as it sheds lustre on lmoadiao science. The
story is told by the News et follows : --
The following paragraph, which appear-
ed in the News a abort time ago, furnished
the bests of this iufonnatws • case that
proprietor of the Brstah Hotel in that otty.
i'be child, es well as Gately mud Cusaiag-
lane, sailed on tea chip Sardinia, which ar-
rived at New York Nay 21, 1947, awl from
that day to this no trace or titling. could be
found of the mistime child. Nu mousy was
spared at the tion: in scouring the uuuutry
for biue, yet the beet tarso were in ram.
The supposition is that there men—
(lately and t'unningham--either mil to
child 1w'ho is reported to le neurally
handsome) or robbed his, of what money he
heat for hie father and then left him inseam
asylum, or perhaps in to streets of New
York. Mr Breen..n is stall living, and
thinks hs child, if living, might renwmber
his Uncle Henry and the iuc.dentm of the
trip, and be found even at this late day.
Mr. Breunau's faintly uooaista of two
daughters, Fannie ani Mary, both married,
and three lou, Malachy, Thomas and
James. The old gentlemen s well.to-do,
and would give all he possesses to hear of
his long -lost see, dead or ahre.
areehre's Avsaaeaaf. lilies,
Some have &eked tees " Why did Mr.
Beecher w persisteoty chains the title of
' Uuctor of Divinity !"' writes Mrs. Henry
Ward Beecher iu the Jaly Ladies. Home
Journal.
I know no reason except .n utter aversion
to such & thing as • title to his name. If
others accepted the title it was their right,
and in addressing them Mr. Beecher always
used it. He used to say that such peen
titles as judge, general or doctor desigusted
an individual's dotes or calling, and were
more oda convenience than anything else,
and in some cases were ►Imust a neesity.
Iced •' reverend " for • clergyman might tie
clamed in that category. But he would
laughingly say the " reverend doctor of
divinity" was too much of a good thing for
him to be burdened with. The title was
offered him 11 can not now reals how
often), but in every ivata.ce it was declined.
His own views are expressed in a letter of
declin•ture of that title, twee beside me, lad
which I copy :
Poxes LL, Aug. 21, 1860.—To the Pre-
sident and Board of Trustees of Amherst
l'ollege. Gentlemen : I have been duly
notified that at the last meeting of to
Hoard of Trustees the title of U. U. was coo•
!erred upon me.
It would certainly give ire pleasure
should any respectable institution bear such
a testimony of good will, but that Amhurst
College, my own mother, should se kindly
remeniher a .tin, is a peculiar gratification.
But all the use of such • title ends with the
public expression. If the with to confer it
be accepted, for the rest it would he but an
incmnbrence and furnish an address Ly no
means agreeable to my este. I greatly pre,
fer the simplicity of that which my mother
uttered over me in the holy hour of infant
^olecranon sud baptism.
May i be permitted, w(thout seeming to
under -valve your kinduews or disesteeming
the le nor meant, to return it to your lauds,
that i may to the end of my life 1te, as tbns
fax I have been, simply
HENRY WARD Bnt•HgR
LIKE SOME PEOPLE.
A cartes. VIM Weevilly truest tired -
Third .fN Meath_
War Ltngtoa star.
"Two curious little fished, live in t
mud," said Professor Theodore !;ill latel
"One of them was only discovered recent)
it was called after myself, by way of cam
phment, being named the ' (:iUichthys.'
"• My namesake is a sort of goby, f
six to eight inches long. It digs a hole
the muddy bank of a tidal creek, at
bottom of which it sits and meditates,
mg kept wet by the percolatiou of the wa
through the surrounding mud. It feeds
small crustaceans largely.
" One remarkable thing about to (1
licbthy. is its mouth, which is about one
third the length of its body. It is goal
est, and the Chinamen in the neighborhood
of San Francisco dig is the marshf
specimens.
• The other mud fish is • native of t
South Sea talent's, and u found on of
tropical nests. it hop. about oe the mu
banks when the tide is out, being ap
ently es mueh at home ou land as in t
water. People call it the " jumping fah
" Sometime. it will climb to roots
treestreon the shore, making its way up
by means of its pectoral tins. llften it
cu the holes made by fiddler era
When its hopping &boat on the mud it
usually in pursuit of crustaceans orde
peculiar kind of slug that aRorita fa
orite diet."
One.
he
y
rem
to
the
be -
ter
onto
ilmarsheshe
or
her
d
par
he
of
ward
oc
ha
s
•
v.
ABOUT MEN AND WOMEN.
Bishop l'hillips Brooks sailed for Kurope
last week.
Queen Victoria's resent <ositisental tri
Dost the Rrituh taxpayers 175,000.
Rea Butler says the Piakertees an
Manager Frick should be indicted f
tiresome
Thon.aa Sexton, M. P., one of the and
Parne.11ite lead.re, is the see of • poor apple
woman to ttiateeford, and is almost ea
self .dneated. re
Thomas L Glinmh of Nee* Deralio,
a Meunier before the civil wee WI • (1a
federate (losers! is that MOM" N ellU
o
living at taged 80.
',Wadi I..Q'ltrle•, 1112: Dirrthia
Row private seeremry, Harvard aid is well spoketo e
editorial astsoiats as the
Bones
of I iesu
wipe. e.
Levi K. Feller, Republican mdidate for
Governor ori t'erus.mtt, has bass • msmhsr
of tits Posey argue eompamy slam 10166,
Men se In les eseptey as segtmeer enol
machinist for st. years prior te that data
Hos. Felward Mahe, ex -M. P. for careen
Oat., whom the McCerthyite I ease in Ira.
Amen ire h•. me n te menet the County
Wiliam. is • direct dew tlairt of eof Ike
st
mas N
lay lead owners at ever ter-
stseis•d eirentry.
hr•
moot importance to the News' readers to re-
port it to them folly. 1t wail su important
ties that it attracted considerable at motion
at to time. The following is the para-
graph i. question :
• C. K Northrop, for 28 years o.e of the
beet merchants un Woodward avoaw, who
was supposed to be dying last Spring of
l000meter ataxia, or creeping paralysis, has
secured • new lease of Life and returned to
work at his .tore. The dtse•ee bas always
been supposed to be incurable, but Mr.
Northrop s coalition is greatly improved,
and it looks now as if the grave would be
cheated of its prey."
Siam that time Mr. Northrop has steed-
ily improved, nut only in looks, but in con-
dition, till he has regained bb old -ties
• treh
It hsgtad been hinted to the writer of this
article, who was acquainted with Mr. Nor-
throp, that leu miraculous change had been
wrought by a very simple remedy called
Dr. Williams' Pink Pill. for Pale People.
When asked about it, Mr. Northrop fully
verified the statesman, and not only so, but
he had taken pains to inform anyone who
was suffering in • similar manner when be
heard of any such owe. Mr. Northrop was
enthusiastic at the result in his own case of
Dr. William. Pink Pills. 1t was a remedy
that he had heard of after he had tried ev-
erything he could hop to give him relief.
He had been in the are of the best physi-
cians who did all they could to •Uevute
this terrible malady, but without any avail.
He had riven up hope, when a tread in
Lockport, N. Y., wrote him of the ase of
• person there who had boon cured in simil-
ar circumstances by Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills for Pale People. The person cured et
Lockport had obtained his information res-
pecting Dr. Wiliam.' Pink Pil's from an
article published in The Hamilton, One,
Tine. The Dass was called ' The Hamil-
tot. Mirage " and told the story of a ern in
that city wbo, after almost incredible suf-
fering, was pr000unoed by the most emin-
ent physicians to be incurable and prnan-
emtly disabled. He had spent hundreds of
dollars in ail sorts of treatment and appli-
ances only to be told in the end that then
was no hope for him, and that cure was im-
possible. The person &Burled to (Mr. John
Marshall, of 25 Little William St., H•m.1e
tyro, Ont.,) was a member of the Royal
Template of Temperance, and after having
been pronounced permanently disabled and
incurable by the physicians, was paid the
41,000 disability insurance provided by the
order for its members in such aloes, for
years Mr. Marshall ha 1 been utterly help -
les, and was barely able to drag himself
around his hotee with the aid of crutches.
His agonies were almost unbearable and lite
was • burden to him, when at last relief
carr. Some months after he a•' been paid
the disability claim he heard of Dr. Wil.
liams' Pink Pills sod was &educed to try
tan. The result was miraculous ; almost
from the outset an improvement was notic-
ed, and in • few months the man when'
medial experts had said was incurable, was
going about to city healthier and stronger
than before. Mr. Marshall was so well
known in Hamilton that all the city news-
papers wrote up his wonderful story in de-
tail, and it was thus, as before stated, that
Mr. North
rep came into possession of the
information that 1e1 to his equally marvel-
ous recovery. One could scarcely conceive
a case more hopeless than Chit of Mt.
Northrop. His injury came about in thio
way : (Inc danearly four years ago, he
.tumbled and fell the complete length of a
steep fight of stair. which were at the rear
of his store. His head and spine were ov-
erly injured. He was picket up and taken
to his home. Creeping paralysis very coon
developed itself, and in spite of the most
strenuous fathom of friends and physicians
the terrible affliction fastened itself upon
him. For nearly two yeah he was perfect-
ly helpless. He could do nothing to sup-
port his strength in the least effort. He
had to be wheeled shoot in an invalid's
coir. He was weak, pale and fast shaking
when his timely information came that
veritably snatched his life from the jaws of
death. Those, who at that time saw •
feeble old man wheeled into his store on an
invalid's chair, would not recognize the
elan now, so great is the change that Dr
Williams' Pink Pills has wrought. When
Mr. Northrop learned of the remedy that
had cured Mr. Marshall in Hamilton, and
the person in Lockport,he procured a supply
of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through Merin.
Bassett t L'Hontmedies, 96 oodward
Avenue, anti from the outset foestd an im-
provement. He faithfully adhered to the
use of the remedy until now he is complete-
ly restored. Mr. Northrop declares that
then cal be no doubt as to Pink Pills being
the acre of his restoration to health, as all
other remedies and medical treatment left
hist in a condition rapidly growing from
bad to worse, until at last it was declared
there was no hope for him and he was pro-
nounced incurable. He was in this terrible
condition when he bane to use Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills, led they have restored
him to health.
Mr. Northrop was asked what was claim-
ed for this wonderful remedy, sad replied
that he undeewtend the proprietors claim it
to be • hdcsl bonder and serve restorer ;
supplying in • onadesesd feria all the ele-
ments see emery to enrich the blond, restore
sheared starves and drive oat dinars. 1t
is Maimed by the proprietors that Pink Pills
will cure paralysis, thiamnattsa, sciatica,
.Ipitatksu et tis
:tea
=t and a
pseahlar to femal.s, loss 01 apps
Ute, dismisses, slespise .. , less of mem-
leery, sad all di.ssese trtsime from vow
week, . s.e.
1 worry, dem of vital farm,
ee
i want to say," said Mr. Northrop,
" that 1 deal have meek faith is patent
seedlei.sa, bin 1 menet my too mesh be
praise of Dr. Williams' 11.k Pills The
preprl.eeru, however, claim that they are
mot a patent seed14.,. i• Ur wase is whieh
that term le mel, bat • highly stet.wtle
jw.paranen, /ke remelt et yuan .f e.rdul
My and t w` of Se
pwesmaiptirl.N+Rirlssr. , his-
sed pilbs�pti011r _.esu y� babes b�is-
w plaid ter gseeral oda. lir. Northrup
dtol•r.s ION lee I a living *semis that
Sheri r amal g r open them palls as • j
one for nerve dtlaasa (h, t.gwry tee
writer foxed fiat lies pills were .ussul o -
tared by Ur. Wil/am.' defiles l a,
Brookville, Oat., ani Morristown, N. 1•.,
and the pills an roll in lona, (never fa
balk by tea headed) at 60 mete a box, and
may be had of all druegi.0 ur direct by
Mal been 1)r. W itheend Me,ieiae Co., fru.
either above adltesw. The price at which
these jell. are sold .oaks a centre of treat -
moot with thee. uurupvetw,)y urapeuuve
e a compared w tib other remedies ur medical
treatment. 'I his ..se u ea. ul the meet re•
markal.le de rear nl, anal s it is ler right
here in Det oil awl mat • Montana etas.
away, it oast bo sandy verified. Mr.:North-
rop is eery w'11 known to the people of Dm
reit, end he lays he ie only tau glad to tes-
tify .4 the utvsellone tool wrought .n hie
one. He ways he t•us,ders it hia duty to
help all who ars • otil•r!y rain• rel, by any
word he out icy in lehalt et the waw•lerf.d
daeicy of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. 1t any
of The Newts reeler. want u.y further su-
toew.ation, we fowl wire Mr. Northrop mould
willingly oblige them, .s he has the •norr
in resting these recta to hint.
ROUND SHOULDERS.
Mw 71r) alta sees N*Ny be Node reit,
thee17 asralakt.
One of the tn..st frequent deformities
agatnat which women mist continually fight,
specially mothers with young chiilree, e
that of round shoulder' and a etoopu.g (M-
us. Just observe how nary aitch there
are in any gathering. Even the best natur-
al figures will eller show this tendency
leen eon.. care is taken to prevent it, spec-
ially if their work is uf such a nature an to
keep them sitting at a deet all day, banding
over a machine, or doing many kinds art
housework ; while thin, narrow-cl.sted
women ere very likely w sump before mid-
dle age.
Teachis of physical culture say this may
be entirely rectihel by a very simple and
easily lwrforutel exercise, that of using
one's self upon the toes leleurely in a per•
peo.l..•u!ar p eeition reseal tures daily. To
do this properly, one must be in • perfectly
upright position, with the orris together
and the toes at en aoi le o1 4. ilegrreei, drop-
ping the erns by the side. Inflating and
raising the chest to its lull capacity is a pert
of the exercise, a process which the lune
soon begin to show To exercise all the
muscles of the age and body ooh must rise
very slowly as the ball. of both feet to the
greatest pongee. height and than come
again into standing position without memo
Seg the body out of it. perpe.dicutar 1i...
Thus will be the most difficult part of the
exercise but may be accomplished by pati-
ence and perseverance. After $ whir the
sante may be treed first on one foot and then
on the other.
In order to prevent round shoulders in
school children teachers should never ask
them to fold their arms is front, but rather
to place them baited the hack, which occa-
sionally is good practice, giving, as it does,
the fullest expansion to the upper part of
the body. For this reason more care is tak-
en now thee formerly to see that children
Mt properly, with the spine kept straight
and chest expanded.
Seadtaa as me nth
Many young people (specially those hy-
ing in the country( have sot had as away
educational advantages as they would have
appreciated ; but they may themselves
do a uch to remedy deficiencies in this
respect.
The mind, like the body, needs exercise
to keep it to health, and i1 you never give
attention to anything that requires thought
you will moo have no powers of thought,
left. I do not mean that for the sake of
the exercise you should read on ehrtrns.
and difficult aub1ecta in which you feel no
interest, or that you should choose an
author who express his thoughts vaguely
or obscurely. But it yon have an interval
in history or botany, if you feel any curios-
ity about the people of other times, take
that as a starting pint, and you will find
that ow book introduces you to another,
and tat to still another, and that to still
another, till you will be surprised to desoov-
er how far you hare wandered on the wide
ti lip of knowledge. •
This sounds a veru desultory pan of
reading( to recommee d, but it is often as
unprofitable as it et unpleasant to read on
subjects in which you have no interest;
and in this war you will certainly learn •
great deal. (1d course if you have some
resole for desiring knowledge in one we-
enier line, and have little time to devote to
its so(utaition, some more definite plan of
study will be necessary, and you will be
obliged to leave unread almost •11 that does
not hear on the ono subject..
But whatever you choose, .don't allow
yourself to read in • careless, slipshod
Marion. I let • good book on an interesting
"abject, and then do it the justice to read
it well. Take pain" to understand it. If •
pare puede. yon on • first reading give it
a second, or even • third, if neoeesary. It
may take you as long a time to tester •
hook in the way as it would to get through
two or throe read cursorily, bat the time
will not he wasted By thus rending faith-
fully your mind will have added to its pee
sesame; acrd whether or not you adopt the
opinions of the nether, you will have gained
game new thoughts of year own.
Now is shies a Gomm dim-
Corn
ims-Can there be a perfect way to show •
guest out of the hoose • Certainly there is.
It is the way the American servant knoweth
sot. She goes to the door with an indecent
haste that stacks of glee. She doesn't even
open it, she only seta it ajar with •.ice cal-
culation of "pace that gives just the creek
you elan dip nut through, no more. Auld
she even Wedges you that. You have a
shamed see" of being threat ort into to
world ; gid Were you have gathered up
year self-t'e.peet and your skirts, while
your bel is still on the door rill, the snap
of the knob is heard behind yes. Leaky
�ou to
are if you dne't hear e mend of the
t he the socket, as if you were a tramp
ler • book ags.t. w"
The Kag1Yt maid knohow to make
His let utile'. These is se exquisite
air of defamer* sad r.opest se see epees the
doer, .vee $ teeth of rarret m bar mown
that site shoall he opoalag the deer Wind
you. Rhe bolds ite adem
de
minded the "rep(( steeeet, until yes
are quite epee the newt. a.i.ks elesss it
se slily that N. etfik of Vie latah wrsr
seas to year ear. You s1
are Meepee11oe
seethed lad lattered, and yen .Mp of feel -
hie that to melees !set of the mate... le
meet elarmhg where it hes revealed itsIf
ie the im.mrmaehe fiat bra Iambi the maid
to be gmsyh
Sena %Nit
thee Witt, — 1 had fer years hen
moulded with dp.pspeis sad .iso
and tonsil but little relief trail i Well year
Burvlseh Rimed Niters, which made a per
Iasi sera It is the b..a m.dieime i ever
W le my NM, and 1 wet seem be wtNwa
HAevie Dave,
2 Ohne* 0.a.
he Signal
eros atom .life special •tisanes t.
Job priming facilities, which are eat_
permed outride tee title ler the proms
and proper eaodwtius of all Armee of
printing . perusal of this sammice.
"teat may suggest suauthtag you nay
be in wed of, and in sscb cele we ml4
cit your ranniage, (esl ng o,.dduttw
that our ants to please wall meet with
the approval of oar patella
better %%COLAS
Ii this lino we have a very lams
stock of fine writing papers se
able for every class of business
represented in this locality, t,am
prising lain) and wove, line
quadrille and other papers, .diad
or unrulel, as may be regairsd,
"Rote ii(talit
This useful alae is kept in the fall
range of dualities same as letter
heeds.. \% bile
Mtkkko. Shacks
are not so generally used, they fill
an important place in eomtuercial
correapoiulenoe. 1lee what
got under the above heals.
$k‘.\ iieadts
If the " p• -a.you-go " plan wu
the order of the day the demand
for account paper would not be
so great ; but there are some we
who get so many dimmers that
they wonder if the stock will ever
run out. We don't intend it to,
and at present our stock is cos
Oct*, in this line with four mime
(,dotal paper and neat ruling.
Wtatetltlke its
Both single and double dollen
and cents columns. They come
cheaper than bill heads, and are
the proper thing to send after a
delinquent once a month. They
are sure to !etch him round—
some titoe.
wove
1.4‘rtkotatt
Now, it would be hard to get
along without envelopes, and to
keep up with the demand for
them we keep a large stock on
hand. We have now about a
hundred thousand in stock, and
the prices will range foam 75c. tc
$2.00 per M. R e handle com-
mercial and legal sizes exclusively.
t.vt tkVt.r t
We aim to excel in all the date
eat kinds of work we turn out
but especially in this, and keep
in etak plain and fancy papers
suitable for all requirements.
TOteltt\18
of entertainments and meetings
promptly turned out, from the
plain but neat to the most elegant
with coni and pencil attached
earas faked& 7%ell.ets
This heed coven a large range at
work, from a breath or milk ticket
to a neat calling tail, front an or-
dinary admission ticket to a tasty
business card or a handsomely
printed membership ticket.
�l 01,terle
Our facilities for turning out this
class of work are evidenced by the
fact that the great bulk of it is
sons, by us. This line also in-
cludes
Dodgers
which our three fast -running job
presses are able to turn out in •
surprisingly short time.
O'At $k\‘.*
belong to the poster department
also, and we snake a specialty d
them- -promptness being our aim
in this respect. A notice of sale
will appear in ma NinwiL free of
charge when bills for same are got
bete. •
Z rkklkto.VA.o As
to an "At Home" or • wedding
require considessble taste in selec-
tion sometimes, but we make it
an easy matter by keeping in
stock the very latest and hell
samples to be had. Call and her.
)orllktPlkertkA immV< xg,
has already been partially enum-
erated in some of the heads shove.
There 1s, however, is vast amount
of work under this heed that to
enumerate would more than tike
up the entire space occupied by
this adv't, but we do it all at Tea
HIOWAL
#!�Vi:ute.s O Vel welt
in the typographical printing lien
ire douse in this retabikilINIS
in an expsditioes and artie*
manner and
OW M V'Aces vdkkk let SOkkN►d
wer% rtaseuk(aleit.
We extend oar
eau end what a
atiaia.
thanks for past hv-
eentinaanee of w
Olt 1311#Int
'imams, this