HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1892-9-8, Page 6TUE BJGNAL : GODERICR, ONT., THUBSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1892.
THE PEST AT NEW YORK. 1 . R Te°" "vim
OMAN 8TEAYEII5 ARRIVE AIT
CHOLERA ON BOARD.
1116, V1eiss•e at sea--Wa YN t. Mow If
U.•rw.u..-i1r a.at« as ewe
saat.a-
Kcw Ingot, Sept. 1.- Nuthisg care
tare the metropolis from a gnat ptagse
0114.lute winplaaw� ou the part u( in
member et thecommunity with the Mat
Lone .J the hear.! of Health and the q
satiric antlunttes. 1 ac danger is
It amonot be o.er st:mated Two sew
infected steamships arrived be the harbor
to dry with stereos ,i( death and suffer
They ..r• the Regia aud Normalises.,
from Newburg. The !legis burial
g.ersste 1'ueeimiers si nee and had fit •
isg chalet a pa, - et * still en board . ben
oast am:hot Sunnannui bwir,ed 4.
Steerage peoreuipen and ore cabin panes&
gar. She had four patinae still alive,
being a meuilwr ..f the . raw. It ta cLl
that theeab:u Iwse.aagger who Cites! un
Nur.o.nsia was suffering trent diabetes
catty. All the dead had igen buried at
The .•.>nvaleecent teem. are ontsid•red eon
oma, and further deaths are likely to cern
Heal, h Odiavr Jenkins muni. datdy code
both step to the lower bay- as .cam as
e.pl.ina 01 the %avels had ttotitied him
the c .ndoion .4 ethane
A aerie state .1 affairs u anticipated
the two additional vessels expected from
Hamburg within the next week. The
left later than to -dray's arrivals and wh
the Jn., ase had node greater ran Ager
Hamburg. Ah....t ,.11 the dead and sick
the Bugle and X neonate heel from Ha
berg or neer by po to A fever were non
dent. of this country. The quarantine 0
ser* ere In a state 01 nervous excitenet
It must not be mndersto.xl that they
fretghteue), but they were looping for
best...n.1 the Nnr:nanuta was expected
Ills sere ov..dw s timers aw..ia taunt..
H Irlm/t1.. Perm laea►
(ler s M od. 01 laming u stray dleert�
.( Canada have sot bees or.d.uive es prw/t
eeb
or i_provemea► el the Leads. We h..e
been embluuus w sal p.tmltave prudence t.
OM- tante. uueuutsls- It wawW pry es beefier
b direct oar .terrines to tie production
and sale d more oenmenermed articles of
sow prudaty, in the furor of animals ..d their
bot peaies:to Tsee folkori a chart will Woe
w ry trate the wlsprrstive ubausttue of sol
rale teem the Ovals of ow bus melt of she differ
u.r- est berm prodm;t r whtcb ere nessatiused
reel. -seer, *amrassie tar ata taysrea u
ly - aaca-
.a:i X101aeaa Acid 1M . •
OW sir
Petri
Thom a tine tat
five %d.,
Me s
he Aim t t4•4 es
Memo a $i.i e'ai.A
,ver hiam OseA. 11.6 7. t
one C�Iowae .4 iXt
►etereee A3 2 1 4 1L4
as
mod 1.t earth. ell 14
t he Pa limey
Pbt wise ( 114.6 1 a
ego (hem o a
it z
en
5
.4.s
r.
reed Illy way of helping; and t.tducittg the far -
Us, men to turu their atte:itien more and more
d toe the line of agriculture, it wit Jetertnined
upon by the lk,cuinion Government last
ou year to establish r uo:nb.r of Experimental
t ry Statue& The object of these was to
), investigate methods o1 manufacturing cheese
a•m and hotter. in on kr that the quality.
ills
t.
might be improved, the (rustily 1
011 au� the cunt reduced. Every active expert-
ai meatal iaveetigatx n hie a two -fold power
of serous. 1t mew raid out something
t!i which eras not before knows, and it may 11
it- limners and demonstrate the beet way of
ase carrying .w the beet known practice. The
Alin nuking of cheese during the tumrner has
absorbed the •ttentuei ..f dairymen in many
get by mtely-. tt nen the nah..'a pa.eet.gen
en tbi..eev-1 will get off tow question Ur.
Jenkins has not yet decided.
There sea.. great excitement at the ow
districts to the exc:us.00 of *11 t..uught
conceruing the ecumenical fairing of stock
for fattening, and the production of butter
ce of s quality fit for . spurt to foreign mar
ket& With Aho growth of fodder corn au.l
the use .1 silos, it has become poesible for
farmers to most districts to awry and feed
many more cattle then they have helpers to
milk, in the akape of milking cow& If they
can be reduced to combine the raising of cat-
tle to fatten, with their dairying opentinos,
their profits rimy be greatly in.re.se.i. The
raising of stock and the making of butter go
well together in ordinary farm practoo. The
making of Futter e.n be carried on with
most profit during the fall and winter
months, when pelves are high and the
Weather „fen the most suitable cond:tiains.
That season of the year in our climate also
affords the hest conditions for the rais-
ing of the best stock. Hance the Expen-
mentel Dairy Stations are making an
effort to induce the patrons of cheese
factories to furnish milk bx the nanu
Lecturing of butter during the winter in
cu -..pensive creameries. By that mesall
the skim milk will be left or sent to the
farms for the nosing •.f such stock as calve*
and pigs. At Mount EIgin, tint., an.:
%Voo„stock, OnL, two 04 these Etlenmeu'
hairy Station were operated during the
put winter with very great satisfaction t
the patrons is these neighborhoods. Every
cheese -maker, who so wookei, was welcome
to go W these Stations and learn all he
could about the art of butter -nuking. in
order to fit himself for carrying ..n this
business in his own Ghees. factory when the
alteration there also cronies- A special bul-
letin or report, setting forth the results of
the winters operations. has been issued for
the guidance of those dairymen who desire
to adapt and alter their cheese factories for
the earryMg on of winter butter making. --
Prof. Robertson.
of the Ha:nt.urg .'meneet, Pocket ('.enp•n
when the new■ got out that the P.ngia an
Nornttnnia had arrival with choke
baud. Hundreds of persons called
seenh of inform:item shout friends or rela
lives who were p....•agent ou the shepa
Most of the Volute:ea were abut the ca
peege- Many persons expect,-
friends on the Nom,inla *h„ were hurry
deg home on ic.o:ut ..f the cholera- The
big list of eaten passengers on that nese
shows that many Americans who haJ in
tetendedrentam:ug in Europe till later in th
season had started home on the first ship
which they c oldoldget f+mage.Th
Ntw Voa.. Sep. a. -e followuyj
the otEcial list of new cases up '.o miluig
Sunday: m
I hi Lord the Norannia Emus Horn
•
sterre. , aged eight, diel to -day, tine day
ill- Hecher Lammers. aged 47, tar.
steerage stewards, died in transit to hos
pin: He hail been nursing the chole
potm•nte. There were no new cases n
hoard the Normennia•;*
On hoard the Rub.Antonionerla,age.
17. 4teera_e, .lied h' -.lay, taken ill yeses
day. Nee came, on Hugo' I oristule Ha4
n, aged 10 and Peter nausea. aged A.
Oa Is rd the Merano-Abnhani Sebne
der, ��gg .l s, died in tran.iL- \0 11.w ate.
n
Sunofay weea hi, day at the quarantine
sla
steamers and the ilea... All the *teerago
ras
pprraangers from the Nonitannia were trans
n.!
ferto the receiving homes on Hofhne
fromeland. The sick from the Normannia, fir
in number, were mit W rn
Swinbue L
lend hospital, which is under the charge
ars- 'teem and ahl.,tt.
The bodies of four of the victims we
=motel to -day, and the other two will 1
eretneted Io mnorrow after 1R. Byrom an.
the other authorities have made autopsies
There was • great panic on board the Nor
Clam, i..
This is briefly the condition of the new
comers at this writing. But the centimeen
w ieners of the Board of Health report Aha
the cholera claimed a number of victims o
the infected *teenier* during the day.
startling fact was male public that th
deet ha had occurred! on board the Normae
n u, two „o the Morrow. and one an th
Rugis. it was also ascertaivad that si
man maof the disease had been sent 1.. ow nas
borne Island today. The cabin paeugern
of the steamer Norrlonnia have been
transferred to Hoffman Island. The pout
among them before their removal i u s
described lo eye witnesses;omethin
frightful. they cried out against bei&
confine) in a past ship and the ladies c
heaved of the vessel wein • state of the
greatest terns. Their fears were relieve
.•
to a stain extent, however, by their re
into al to Hoffman Island. The commis-
sioners describe the terror prevailing among
the passengers u of a beertread-
ing character. There were .rine doubtsamonga.ng the cabin passengers as to the pre.
awe of the dread disease ou beard of the
'teenier, but the deaths and canes
ses
which occurred to -day have brought terror
to the bravest hearts on beard! Of the invowel,fscted vowel, and all now folly recognize
that the grim spectra of cholera is reallyoo
mn d us. ('resident Wilson of the Health
Police Commissioner Martin and
er officials of Inc health and police le
rttnen'4 went down to quarantine to -day
learn for themselves the condition of
Ingo. Their special object was In arrange
to the matter of pdice supervision. Sup
hes were sent to -day k. the infected news
nn.ling off 111 tons of ice, 2,000 pounds off
aur I.4
t, b,4 an
sad • quantity of linen
well and bedding. -
Sono* e, meeerity be tlwrllm.
Ln* 140.4, Sept. 5. - -The Times'' Berlin
.orre.pno.lent says : An ides of the rever-
y .d the cholera epidemic am be gained
tont the fact that the number of oases and
the for the past fortnight already eiceeJ
ose recorded during any of the previous
',peaks an Hamburg ones MI, and there
tooonly t.much reason to fear thnemofli, tel
nem are lar free. revealing the (.11 ex
nt .J the saourrte. it u not improbable
t the Government will take immediate
pd
eteo. d-In.e the Eastern frontier alisolete
•glaluatetu.csian refugees. The action of
ts
Ign nventriew and steamship ,mpsniea
net emigrants has materially increasedma
danger. to which Gerhyy'' s expose.
antral papers are agitoting Mr the awn
leery dr•enatine 1 the ehnkrw victims.
v say this mode of disposing of the dead
•rest the frequent recarrenee of such
epidemic u the following years.
The A mew
rteea Irel.masle.
1. Referringnon, Rept. 3. Referring to President
narrative* eirralar, the Indy News says
the pro hun•tma s pr..dn.in the utmost
os
wstern•tina. Thr spirit of pante ni
pante which
instigated it is forr,hly pointed out by the
alleged order 10 the poli.. t.• shoot persons
detected in trying t.. evade quarantine re
strictiena it maat pw
y he to.•latnaltoe errs
kedged the right side Rowse kedl.eutherities
regard ear system as to-, lac, hat ,t has de
&mini es Wore and will agars. Even
taking the mimeomimeoview that infertiem may
be twenty days thwelopeng, three week.
d.teio
eso after a tan da7� psP44111, is .i
surdly Mwg sad obi wn
nit is ashtray are
eemils
erstsen that this adtmem
s rtriseien
ne
will be meanest
y
d
p
baa
r'nn
on
ed
eti
is
ht
in
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•
rnr
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r
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re
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,.. >t .r,,.tw,--elr",,34-i
WINTER WHEAT VARIETIES.
.reale or tb. Experiment. by *be Ontario.
Department of Aarlealt.re.
The Ontario Department of Agriculture
has just issued an mteresung bulletin giv
tog the results vet some recent experiments
with winter wheats. The document notes
that, .,wing to the low prices ruling for
winter wheat, there will be an inclination
uo ..w • less acreage this season In ex-
pressing the hope that this province will
never at any time grow lase what thee
will suffice fur home arontmption. Partial
bars are given with reference to 44 Gana
dim and American varieties grown undo
exact! the same cowditiosa They show
that the wheat producing capabilities of
Ontario .re still in a very high order. The
melte of the expenmeuu may be thus
summarized , The average ysbin per acre
of the 4-4 ('anadi.n and American varieties
grown to 1442 were , Straw. 3.1 tons ;
grain, 42.R btubels per acre and weight
per bushel 90.5 pounds• The four hest
yielding varieties in ISM. .I1 of which ga.e
mon thea 311 bushels per acre, are Daw-
son's I:olden ('huff, Gold,•n drop, Mediter
none and Fula -niter, named in the order
of the yields which they mate. The four
varieties giving the heaviest weights per
bushel in 1841 were the Fuleaster, 64.3
pounds ; Velvet Chaff (bearded) 1:3 ponds ;
Rod 11-nnder, 4128 pounda, and Fultz, 62.3
Founds. The fourheet yielding white wheats
in IWO were Dawson's (.olden Chaff. Bul-
garian, Democrat and Surprise, tad the
four hest yielding varieties of red wheat
were the Golden prop, Moditerr.se.n, Ful -
easter and Red Womder, in the order named
in both instance& The bald Velvet ('hall
earietia•e gees an average of .et bushel less
per acre titan the mean avenge of the 44
varieties grown in ISM ted weighed 11
pounds les per bushel. In the past three
years the average yield per .creof the white
and red wheats hare mot been far different,
being about on* bushel per a.re in favor of
the white wheats In the put three years
the rel whew have averaged from 1 to 2
pounds more per bushel Alas the white
w
• T.elt.rs Judge
Sir William (!rant, who was Master of
the Rolls at the begin& of the presser
century. was a native of Bsafskire, and for
a rousoler.ble tans represented that eounty
in Parliament. Though a most forcible and
easy speaker, sar.-cly iaferier to any of hit
time, he was remarkable for his extreme
taciturnity, and the alt• of the by were
Ltrastoned to .node to him seating them
selves as Mir William the Meat. He was
an extremely able lawyer, and else vet the
most patient and pauestaking of judges.
The story is well known of his hearing as
elaborate •ad lesgth.1ad argument for two
days, ne the massing * as Act of Parlia-
ment, and when the cn.asel fins►ed, simply
saving "Gentlemen, the Are on which the
plesuliag has bees founded is repealed. ' (.r
ace of his elites to Hol he rode out a few
miles tete the o.sntrryJ, aeaompanid by
own* friends. The may observation that
moped from him was M pairing a Mid of
peas. Very fine peas" Beet day he rode
out with the sense cortege, and equally si-
test : but .rn prmg i.the rune he ,s.
marked, "Ano! very' Rawly podded.tea"
The Wreak Pae.ebou..d,
t.rndneIer (gFta.r•inp at Helse)--anery
too 1 vet wo dont stop et that pl.ls-
F.At.h.rwate - What p leer
C sedaeer-Jltmp.n., the paweitad ree-
GILBkRT ON THEBENCH.
tAe-aOt.lar aakewai awls a twee taw•
sore WaneseR
Irem The New fort tbsameretal Advertiser.
William S. (Albert, whose biting snags
has memifeseed itself in plays and poems
.like, is • megistrete is an old-bioneu i d
Saglish vukoge, ibou.► (sew of his adnur.,
have heard tt. The puyalar Wasthra mesas
w
espy bis few emoluments as homes ef
t he peace for hieldlesea. too. Hes appear-
&aae is described by use who recest4y saw
hist e• the brawl •s bleat 4 • well se de
gentleman tanner rather then, a bright b.-
▪ 11, talbert hes, despite • coned& seventy
of sopranos, mad. himself very popular
*mons the (!&dols of the court wad the .ug
stables eewtmlly, ooe of whom is never
Peed of maybes to newawten : 'a You
wosldn't think, to took at him, 'e 'ad suck
• lot of humor." Like • true genius, Gil-
bert behaves with becoming Modesty. It
u cited to hes everlasting credit that one
told morning he arrived before the Wart
was open. Instead of making a fuss to be
let in, as most judges would do, he quietly
walked up end down, wailing his chance
with the rest-
Ou the beach he spooks very sparingly,
but when he doss male au utterwaee it is to
the point and is worth listening to. During
the hearing of • case he ie ever making pen
and ink sketches o. the sheet of foolscap be
fore hum, not of the people in court but of
fanciful beads.
These sketches are much sought after, and
when the court rinse are eagerly scanned by
the enters and loungers. But while so oc-
capied 4,11bert is keenly alive to all that u
t eking pia.x, as he shows by occasionally
stopping from his drawing to put •question
to the *totem A short time ago • sum-
mons wasbeing heard against • builder for
keeping a house in an uutnhabntable uondi-
tion. The defendant's plea was that the
structure was not dangerous : that he had
',red in it himself and did not mind it, and
that, mono'er, to had often lived in worse
mere. Then, baking up with a smile, Gil-
bert suggested that the defendant, by lir.
tog tet often 111 dangerous structure., had
become Insensible to their perils. Many a
point like this does the playwright pone
justice make and • hearty •pprectation of
his wit is .how -n by the people in court
Mr. Gilbert Lod the police court mission-
ary are very good friends, and in any de-
serving case the former is always ready to
assist- Soon after he had taken his seat on
the bench there came before him a painful
case of attempted suicide on the part of •
man who had (oboe been rich sod influential
That man is now restored to society and is
in comfortable circumstances, thanks to the
kind heart of Justice Gilbert.
ONEHEROIC SUMMER DIAL
Clew *be saved tae Man) 04psendere
Mader nder r.
From The Omaha tt (rid -Harald.
The summer girl isn't always such a tri-
fling tbiug as she looks. She has a way of
drifting around in resplendent oostumesa.d
of talking about nothing in particular and
of idling through the hours with an themes
of industry or ambition until the world in
general gets to thinking of her as a very
.light thing. But • woman is a woman
even in a Paris costume, as was
evidenced at New London the other day.
Min !lessee Shipman of Se Louis who Was
o.0 the bay on a pleasure boot, dressed for a
fete on ooe of the islands near, saw a little
child :ail overboard from a tug; The little
body rose and sank, rose sod sank, and no
body seemed at hand to go to her assistance.
So this particular summer girl got up,
landed her parasol .0 • friend, put her
gloved bands together and took a seat dive
into the water, caught the child and held
it until assistance came. Them she returned
to the hotel, put her ruined finery in the
rag -bag and put on some more --after which
she probably sat around and talked airy no-
things as before.
TO. *II' a is tits. In Me World.
A Chinese banker, Han Quay, is stated to
be north the almost inconceivable sum of
three hundred and fifty million everting.
A great number of the largest banks in the
Chinese Empire are believed to be under his
control, and it his stated wealth be a fact
i the truth there is no means of testing) here
unquestionably the richest man in the world.
In the absence of truth regarding this indi-
vidual, .john D. Rockefeller, the founder
and virtual proprietor of the Standard tail
Company, is the richest man in the world.
He started without a single dollar, but by
untiring energy he has atnaa.el an enormous
fortune estimated at about =150,000,000
His income is five million dollars, and he
spends only 44100,000 per annum, so ti`at
his wealth keeps piling up of • tremendous
rate. Mr. Rockefeller, is about fifty.siz
years of age- If he lives until seventy his
wealth, it ie estimated will amount to nearly
44300,000,000. Viscount Beier..., greedasa
of the Duke of Weatminister, if he lives to
inherit his patrimony, will be one of, if not
the rashest tees in the world, as by the time
he attains his majority the leases of the
Westminister estate w ill have run out, and
the income of the property, sow estimated
at about 85,000 a day, will then be nearly
twenty times that amount, or opened* of
835,000,000 per annum- There are two
families - the Rothschilds in Europe and
the Vanderbilt* in Amen which
are immensely wealthy, the combined
wealth of the Rothschild family being esti-
mated at 81,000,000,000, and that of the
Vanderbilt family 01 shout 8375,000,000.
Unlike the rich men of England --the Dukes
of Westminster, Melford, Buccleuch, and
Argyll, whn inherited their great estates
the Vanderbilt' property was, soonmelated
is two generations and mne.t of it *inns
thirty peen The awe is without • par-
allel in history. Amnogst monarchs the
Ahab of Persia and the Crier of Ramie ere
the moat wealthy their respective incomes
being estimated to be between ten and
fifteen million dollars • year,
*beet pear.
Fear is tin moot skilful grossl in the
world, bemuse he has the most ezheastiee
knowledge of human natters. He seldom
•teaks bay two men from the sane side,
and seldom make. • mistake es tr the vat
nerable place in • man's armor. A moat.
well known birdie. fighter, who had .sore
than one. with a heedful of mss held •
whole horde of savages sit bay and finally
muted them, always dreaded going into his
own dark cellar &lose for any bribe that
coald be offered. Another imam whose ..one
is synonymies, with 'def• and audacity
in beei...s and upright lite, often demi.,,.,
gravely, that be would he one of the wild
set, fastest airs in town if be only dated,
and thee do you remember how deadly
afraid Napalms was of • eat
(.puha Themes Ryas, who ventrals the
nsvtgatens of the (srmhsrlead Ric.,, saved
to he •very hewer drink.. sad •corset pre-
test. ams. Ram Jones enev.rt d hbore, trod
new (iptais Ryes bas the askew deers of
his eteamlerte wet plastered with Ohio
Meta.
"German
Syrup
99
ForTthroat and Lunge
" I have bee. ill for
Hemorrhage " about five years,
" have had the best
Flve Years. " medical advice,
"aud 1 took the first
" dose in some doubt. This result-
" ed in a few hourseatly sleep. There
" was no further hemorrhage till next
"day, when I had a slight atlaLk
" which stopped almost ifnwediate-
" ly. By the third day all trace of
'blood had disappeared and I had
"recovered much strength. The
" fourth day I sat up in bed and ate
" my dinner, the first solid food d for
two months. Since that time I
"have gradually gotten better aud
" am now able to move about the
" house. My Beath was daily ex-
" petted and my recovery has been
' a great surprise to my friend, and
" the doctor. There. can be no doubt
"about the effect of German Syrup,
"as I had an attack just previous to
"its use. The only relief was after
" the first done. " J R. IAUGHHZAD,
Atlnlait:e- Australis.
ODDS AND ENDS.
0I..rd • LJdmae.r relieves %rssabei .
A nest egg amounts to very little after •
man falls back ou it once or twice.-Galres-
ton News.
All area aril cund.tioas of people any use
Nat ions! !ills without injury and with great
benefit. lin
Permits who waltz in oveterowdel ball-
rooms are constantly meeting with reverses
-Philadelphia Record.
Totaldepravity consists, in part at least,
in lying about catching one bluefish. --Mar-
tha's %ineysnd Herald.
Thepan with the parasol knows bow to
sympath-ze with the first man who carried
au um b.LUo. - Elmira Gazette.
A single scratch may cause • festering
sore. Victoria Carbolic Salve npiuly
heals cue, wounds, bruises, burss and all
aorta. 1m
The young man who makes the same dia-
mond ring serve for his .eaw.d engagement
may be said to kill tiro birds with obc
stone. ---Philadelphia Tumors.
For • man who shows so much push in kis
business, the fellow wbo trundles • wheel-
barrow docent tem to get along very well.
-Bingbuoptoo Republican.
Oneof t' r courts hoot decided that shoe-
makers cannot keep shoes sent to them for
doing the work. May be they saa't, but
they do. -Somerville Journal.
A fashion item declares that the new
sleeves are neither eery high nor eery 1511
Right here is where the new .heves differ
from the old jag. --Washington 1'at.
" N e1!, my dear child, bow do you like
Herr von Sorer Kroutntan !" "Oh, mamma,
he is very mice, and so clever : I did not
understand a word he said." -Le. Armadas
Whatthe belated husband Deeds is key.
hole as large ea a hone collar, so that be
can .tick his heal through it and call his
wife to come down and open the door.- -
1lallas News.
Geld tet .. Preemies.
Shue, -For several Reasons we hare relied
on Ir. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw-
berry for all summer complanta A few
doses always give relief and it never fails to
cure. We think it a very valuable
medicise ; as valuable as gold.
Slew- F. C. Wiese,
2 Font Hill, Ont.
banal opals.
This term should be applied to the choice
every intelligent per.on has between
Burdock Blood Bitten, the natural and
certain remedy for dyspepsia biliousness,
constipation, headache, and bad hdood, and
the various imitations offered by unscru-
pulous parties as being "just se good
There is nothing else.* good as B. B. B.
It is an honest medicine and has made re-
markable cures right in our own town 2
wad tate meet of AN 4,4erk.
From The Rocky Mountain News.
A shrewd looking old man stood in froot
of one of the leading jewellers, gazing at a
queer looking clock. One of the affable
clerks was standing in the doorway.
" That's an .11 tired tunny clock," said
the old man. " Whet do yon call it ! '
" That's • .ping lever chronometer," re-
plied the clerk. d It will run 400 days
without winding."
So! That's a long time. But say, hew
long do you •'pose it would run if you
should wind it up most"
• tare to reeesiparaes. wnnambe.
Dr. Silas Lose, while in the Rooky Mom-
tains,discovered • mot that when mentioned
with other herbs makes an easy and certain
cure foe oo.stippe•tixotna. It is in the form of
dry root. sod ieaye, ands known as Lane's
Family Medicine. It will can seek -headache.
For tbe blood, beer and kidneys, and for
clearing up the complexion it does wonders.
Oraggis(.ell it at bOa a packages_-enoogk
for ve w.eha. (how
rF��VLER,
XT. of
. WiLD
5 T
RAWBERRA
,, CUREic-l'COL. C A
G H -MOReus
CHOLERA-
DIARRHOEA
DYSEHTER
U iii ENCOMltPLAIt
s
GHLORE e%DULTS
e SSG Ts
MARE of lf4ITAvow s
SCHOOL OPENING
AUG. 29TH, 1892
4 4 ♦ + ♦ + +
Fraser & Porter
have something entirely new in School Exercise
Scribbling Books, by fax the beat value
ever given for Five Cents.
All Books authorized and r.00lninended for
91G9, PUBLIC &ND SEPARATE 501100
ale aye kept in stook.
September Delineator and Fashion Sheets to hand.
•
Agents for the American Fruit Preserving Powder an
Liquid.
FRASER & PORTER,
FALL TRADE
for which we are new prepared
In BUILDERS' SUPPLIES
you will and all that is required_ and u
that make s sty.
In FENCING MATERIALS
PAINT and OIL
we don't Wok 7011 *act anything lye
have sot got tot is dopartmest-
Ths i. *here we shine carrying ten
complete line la this mousy.
No slop goods &flown' :e the store.
Our general hardware stock is most complete and wet beegbL Chir prtam soiree
tendon tad we your patronage.
R. P. WILKINSON & C
NOW TAME
BOOTS : AND : SHOES
FOR INSTANCE.
It makes little difer-
ence what others say,
the leading place in the
trade for years and
years has been occupied
by
E. DOWNING,
Cor. Salt -at and Square.
P.& -The latest and beet Spring
and Summer designs just to hand.
YOU KILL ONE FLY
12 come to the funeral.
TANGLEFOOT STICKY FLY PAPER CATCHES
the whole procession.
Poison Papers, Insect Powder.
PURE PARIS GREEN.
LIE JtflOE.---Hire's Root Beer 5 gals. for 25e
a delicious Summer drink.
111
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41110
W. C. COP E, THE CHEMIST
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC..
N EW
EAS I
BLACK, GREEN AND JAPAY
Which we guarantee to well at hi*
10 Cents per Pound. Cheaper
Than can be bought from pedlars. A trial order wifi
vinoe you of the truthfulness of this assertion.
sell the best COFFEE obtainable.
REES PRICE & SON.