HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1892-9-8, Page 7rt!1' ef) it'll
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THE SIGNAL: GODERIOA, ONT., THURSDA Y. SEPTEMBER 8, 1 R92.
IOHN T. ACHESON
ft seems very early to talk about FALL GOODS, but
are arriving every day, case by case.
J,9.0$ET3�.1:_ t
are the fust to arrive, and always
the first to sell. We invite your
early inspection, and if we cannot
sell you one ready-made, we can
sell you the cloth and give you the
latest ideas how to get one made.
a amass GOODS
stock is not yet complete, but we
can promise you the most complete
and nobby stock of Dress Goods
_ ever offered by us.
SECTION INVITED.
J
JNO. T. ACHESON.
GN USE ANY WRITING 10.
.0
5
.9
a
v
J)REN'S CORNER.
Tree mere er
as a great ten-oolored dog, with
Ir ca he forehead, white breast
est, •.d be..tifel hazel eyes that
mt speak, they were en expres-
•
liss T was • frail little body, who
had walked with cratohee. O.
Light of her arrival at the Raged
esu sitting on the puma after
some of the other boarders, when
* trotting from the barn, bolding
her bald between hie testi. Drop-
Mr.
ropMr. Remelt feet, b• been to
aper about, which was his way
IM's have • u.me of ball, and
e Mew boarders whet we can do,
11...s do."
tier, Acmes Russel, was in the
laying with him a little while •f -
every sight, and Rover would
Mad him of it if be by chance for-
um really quit. wonderful. Mr.
old throw the bell with consider•
i .crow the open ones space
away is frost of the house ; but
AMP fast the ball aped, Rover
:It it is hu mouth and oases hack
ter, ri maiag as hard as he could
time, and with • osalting tam of
would throw the ball dews, and
ep and lick Mr. Reeners facia
.poo his hied legs be meld e•il�
to paws apes his master's s:2-
time little Mies T. eat and tram -
roomer, wo.deri.g what would
her if that great dog should run
ap at her is tint way.
he tame was finished, prod Rov-
ahoat among the grab to n•
' praises sed petting. Re name
s Miss T., sailed in her .nosh...
Masked i.i.hingly up tato her
i pat her bands apes his bead and
shad his ears, saying :—
Rover ' Nies dog ! Don't yea see
Vee and caseet walk as other
1 have b w these te help me
d ale showed him the orasohes
s1 sniff .t, diem and examine chest
ally.
Rover dear," she costumed, " I
i0 You •mmethbw You ms, It
nary had if you .he.Dd eoase me-
ad jump ap with your press
oy shoulder, heaw I am treat
se4 you meld easily knock w
a►w r. hig sad strong. You will
ceder.
won't you, and hese etre-
of
en tagged hit bushy til as bard as
kissed her little heads an mos,
to tell her that he esdersesel.
a.pged .p thew et her .ids, laid
11180, lap, and began long wee ela-
n
tt serenity Vim T. thought she
Ile down to the meet leek Aho
"NIda, al Rover ekes breakfast.
sere lehad gees
slivered her koe�f reinith •
sea hall -way amen tM�wpwwury
w hetes the '1408thieg to Melt abo m ted '
"RAM RR Me WI EN suddenly.
speed right towards her. There was not •
rock, or 'tee, or shrub, behind which sh"
could seek shelter. What should she do
Her first impulse was to sit right do..
u pon the ground, a.d them save herself from
bang violently thrown down. But quick
as • lightning thee carne a second thought
No," she said to herself, trying to
steady her ahakt'ag knees, " I will not let
him nes bow afraid I am. 1 am just going
to stead still and treat in he nobility and
triode's., the same .a if he were a human
being '
She waited till he was within a few yards
of her sod then spoke in her sweet. kind
Voice :—
(wetly. Royer, gently ; you au.tu't
jump up oe me or bounce against me, emeses
I am law, you know. Carefully, Rover.
There ! that's it His • lovely, mice
doggie sad she leaned upon her crutches
sad Caressed him as he rubbed against her
dress, and poked his noes ander her arm,
weaving his tail furiously all the while.
lice had slackened his paw as soon ea she
began to speak. From that moment little
Mass T.'s fears were at rest, and she sod
Rover became the beet of friends. He wee
always her ooatpanios in the short walks
. he was able to take and .11 summer Tong he
treated her with • gentleness that he showed
to no one skew Although he enjoyed fright -
sang the other ladies by jumping up and try
ing to kiss them in his boisterous way, be
sever annoyed her,no natter how full a fun
and frolic bit was. Hs recognised the fact
she needed nailer protecting cure, and gave
it to her on all ecessio.a She bed sot
trusted in kis mobility] mad kindness in vain.
—i.•sy Lodes Weaver i. Our Dumb
Animals.
■tasriY alsersema smear res. de.
mutat wawa r r/.mlt
The following egppingr ate espied word
for word es they apposed in British rapers
of the datee named :
Leedom M eridag Herald. Match 11 the
1.02: o. the 11th el lest math a parson
said at Market (Ness is Chapel ea la Firth a
wife, • ebild sad some beggar's fermiers
for 11 shilling.
Ln.dos Marais( Herald. April 10th,
1802: A blather sold his wife by aunties
es last market day at Hereford. She brought
El 4 shillings Math • bowl of pssek.
Amos! Register, February 14th, 1806 ;
A man eased Oeesthorps exposed his
wits fur sale in the market .t Hell, but
eerily tow orowd brought together be was
obliges: to take her away .ad defer the sale.
However he brought her out .(aim in the
.vexing toed .he was Gold int twenty guineas
to • peruse by the neon at Ho.eemen.
Meese( Poet, October 10th, 1807 One
a those drgrae.M1 seems took place at
hrmk A aux brought h wits,
.gaipp.d L the meal wx and .ole her to
d eposes sad • quid .f tta
• (eaaadesMM_.
Omenumnm.--My Mother ,.flared from
snnmer axampl•imt .ed was errtremely weak.
W. tied wavy rwdies bat whines afoot
At la.. m] .est advised es to try Dr.
Pewter's Rrhaet ef Wild SMrewk.evv, tad
before he bad taken '..battle be we. etreL
We an.sidr It saved his life.
M,m Asa.at.. Canvas eau.
a.Y,Ml, Mafia
HE APPRECIATED DUDES.
w es Seaters Specimen Geared as OM
as.ehema tan..
Press T>" New Yeah Herald.
We had .Mopped at • railroad Matt= w
the Pecos river t. Tema, ..d many of the
paseeagers were walking up sad &era the
lung platform. Amos' tl.•n was s dudish
young mea who .xcated u.rasiderabls rob -
cute trim the donee rough fellows Imaging
about- One of them nosily said something
shout "cb..wmg him up," when an old man
is the gang mimed hie bead and amid :
" That's 'rough bore ; don't go any fur-
ther. '•
• What's it to you `" demanded the
other.
•' A beep, 1 reekoa ! It's eta mach to me
that I91 do • testis ubootim' uu that feller's
amount if mrd. bs."
The two saes looked ete•aciegly to each
other, and for 70 ..ceade 1 expected to see
than draw and fire. Thea the younger oar.
walked sway, growing aa he want, leaving
the field to the old man.
•• Would you have fought for the dude •"
1 asked wine the strata had bees ',shoved.
" tiartim !" he grimly aa.wei ed.
"But you didn t Mom him."
" No, and probably never .hall ; bat he
sort o' reminds m. of • Lette sarcamataso.
that happened seven or eight years ago. I
bad • ranch upon the Peons plain., sod •
dude nam. out from New York city to visit
• aaybur o' mine. He was jest .doh • bean
. talk as this clap He had soft hand., •
woman's ways of talkie, and I looked him
over and made up my mind that • Texas
baby 3 years old could five him poisons.
Why, darn it, if he didn't wear wiute abirt.
and Dollars, and play the peso! I tried to
be civil to him, casae b. was •
but it 'boat made me sick. I neverr looked
at him without thinking of mush acrd
'lames"
"Waal, srter he'd bin oat thee about
three month. Jim and ane went oat este day
to look up some stay mssta.g.. The fust
thing we knew we got • volley from • lot of
laden, who had broke loose from the reser-
vtioe. Jim w.. hit is the shoulder, bat
fortu.tely carried off by the boa., wbo wee
• dyer. I headed for a .ink I know.d of
and reached it without • scratch. Th..
JMal sae my gaper was to .t..d 'em off 'till
im could send help. I bad • Winchester
and phony of oartriddes, and durrie' the fast
hour I wosaded one are and killed another.
Theo I got • chunk o' lead through this
right arm and begun to feel • bit nervous as
to bow 1t would turn out I .wiped a ballet
into another, and in return I got this rake
aiosg the skull It wasn't 10 minute. •rter
that bolo 1 b.gws to feel powerful .ick and
1 jest reckeoed that my scalp was Asia' to
make .s ornament os sum* red ..Titter'.
belt."
Bat you Mill Good these of `"
"As well .s able, but the end would hen
name is about 1b minute The last three
or four sloes I tired I was.o blind I couldn't
see • rod. The reds were .houtin' to each
other sad Hakim' ready to close is whinI
heard s white man ye '. 1 oosldn't see
what tack pima, but I know what it was
jest the same. That meth-and-'Isas.s dude
was out oe • boa hustle' pathos, rabbit..
Jim run across him and told him bow I was
fixed and axed him to rid. fur help. What
do ye think the dented sass did !'
Rode for how'"
" Not mach ! He rode tar eon ! He'd
sever masa war lnjan in his life, and Jim
told hire that' was • full doses alter n..,
but it made so difference. He noon up n.
• dead run, yellie' end .bootin', and 111
chew any hat if be didn't lay out two of the
critters and kill . pony afore they could get
away. He sailed right in so mighty hard
that they thought he had a big crowd be-
hind him. That th•r' little dude, with
.oft hands and puny arae, lifted me on to
his bons and rode to my reach and then
head. • crowd back and runs them reds
'keen mdse and kills another.
" Why, dura min ! he got two potties out
of that .crap and he gathered up more wam-
pum, bows, errors, tomntabawks, knives
and .ich than any six of us had collected in
five years. When 1 got about I helped him
to lox and .hip 'em to some .club in New
York. 'Pear. to me it was sosethi.' like
the Meadow inn ash. Leastwise, it had •
'taroal luu.ri.t, loom and the feller was •
member
• And you coins to like him I "
"Say ! H. kin her all I've got in this
world any time be axes fur it I made •
bog mistake shim' him upHe could treat
any of es with the pisto4 and the feller who
4"sic amid art him tor a wrestle was throwed
skyhigh before he could bite his whacker.
He could rue like • deer, outMop • kaa-
gsroo and we couldn't find • who
ooeld hook him of."
•• And that's why you interfered, is it'"
•' Exactly. Show ole a dude and 111 back
him. These boys haint learned the differ-
ence between • dude end • fule yit, but I
ben sad I dolt went no better chap Ise -
hind ase is a pinch them fades, specially
New York dudes.
Nessus a4.a...a eases r.mdewf.
Geed Mh.d.e1 I Jeupea,Yea.
The rules that govern good conduct in as
individual are those that should prevail is
the oases of newspapers. There is sews
'eoug� in the world in which the public is
rightly interested to 811 the columns ef a
newspaper every day in the year ; het the
trouble is that gossip and scandal are often
more iatsr.sti.g than matters of nal mo-
ment Th. rale of gentlemanly eosduct
ought to he the nM of 160 editor and pab-
lisber—ae 11.ppily, it very often i. Mad, as
Judge Wallace wisely pointed out, mere
gossip and arattd.l mongering are mot ex.
mated by the answer that the patrons of •
n ews p•pr west what they ought .ot te
h•v. —Rupees'. Weekly.
A r.w alae taws.
In 1634 tie M.ss•ohneette General Court
forbade the percher* of " soy.ppnssl,sitlter
woollen, Mike or lynnen, with any leans on
it : silver, rold, silks or tined." Willie.
Weirdos, in writing el New Eagl.nd law.,
tells us the following:
fes Salem in 1662 • ears was %rre.ted for
"mmoe.. in I",etas, retired.,'meld and sil-
ver lase I" .ad i. Newbury in 1663 two wo-
men ere► wearing •'• silk* hoods and
scarf*.'' hut they were dlei.r•gd oe proof
that their hotheads were worth £200 each.
All sorts of offsees b.sied the selectmen
✓ ed sentry ewrta Reeding is 1649 (lens
thew .earned women for skolding. five
shillin math ; red Matthew Steeley ppe�esys
. bus d
lee winning the affections of Jehe
Tarbox's daughter without her parents eon
watt
in 1773 • maple 04 yens( women et
Springfield were aninetneed to mart ..pee
dee .hate.. of "wearier/ silk ooetrary to law
e m D for Io.g heir rad eller emtawvylm-l.a."
0 1NMd ser Illlimmaalnsa
Ronald McKay, Murray Harbor Read,
P. R. i , write.:—"I was minted with
rhemeatiw .ad seal' get no maid entad 1
earl veer Plat Pills d ser sow wen. "
Of all 414.m ere bymi d et 60e s box .r 6
fu
bores r *ILIAWilliams Med. Ce.,
DmY.
s et imilis.
OPTILgR
LEgSING �� il°
ROFITgBLE
THE PRICES ARE POPULAR tada
THE GOODS ARE PLEASING
TRADING WITH NE I8 PROFITABLE 1
THREE P's
IN
ONE POD.
ALECK SAUNDERS,'1T
Has all kinds of Novelties for the Kitchen,
And will procure New Things as fast as they appear.
GRANITE
IRONWARE J
-
CLEAN,
HEALTHFUL,
DURABLE.
ANOTHER LARGE STOCK TO HAND
~ J IN
SAUCEPANS, PORRIDGE BOILERS, TEA AND COFFEE POTS, PUDDING
PANS, PRESERVING KETTLES, Etc. r
J
THE NEW WHITE-WARE',Ailla
1
Handsome for the Table, Durable for Cooking, Chemically Pure.
.)
HAND -MADE RE -DIPPED TINWARE
is SELLING FAST J
Nothing like it has ever bebn sold in the town. I have it in all lines.
TEE ONLY PLUMBING SHOP IN THE TOWN.
SANITARY PLUMBING AND HEATING.
A.' B. CORNELL
Ljlas LsJ1D."'�-
vINT-InERir A -c=R
rd7 ' McLean's Block --On the Square—McLean's Block,
�A 81'ILL OONTL\U&3 T) OOIWCGT TL-Nlik3ALS ATStiI3 l; i1;JL LOW i'.tICZa•
Remember, NO HIGH CHARGES. The best stock in the county to choose from.
2 first-class hearses. Don't fail to give him a call and save money. Prompt attendance.
:NO CHARGE FOR HEARSES.
I A. B. CORNELL,
To the Front
as Una.
arTI
OTWITHSTANDING the loud -toned advertise -
T
mentoo to be Keen in our local papery from time
to time, and the now stock -phrase : " I buy all
goods for cash," all goods are supposed to be bought
for cash, and I am one of the few who buy for spot
cash or on receipt of goods. Those who are in a position
to boy as above can undoubtedly do better than those who
buy on time and have to renew their notes. I am
receiving portions of my
SPRING PURCHASES
WHY
On the Square.
Do.", 4E0. BARRY, the
Goih'ri.h furniture dealer and
undertaker, keep the best stock
of furniture and undertaker'.
supplies 1 And how is it
that he can sell so cheap
BECAUSE
And will have full lines in all departrnenta a few days
hence, which for style, variety and price will be second to,
none. I am nest afraid of competition.
Strictly one pi toe.
.A.. .NTRO_
Draper and Haberdaobwr.
8084
He finds that it pays in the
long run. Aim motto is :
" Small Profits and Quick Re-
turns." He also makes a
specialty of picture framing.
Give him a call before purchas-
ing elsewhere. Embalming
Fluid always on hand. 2357-y
1
l
J_ F P.OPI egr BON
• Have added ton their present business nae of B. J. Noah'. Latest Style
oI City flares, also the firt.rt line of funeral furnishings in the county,
sad are sew prepared to eomdoct funerals at prides reasonable.
This department will he strictly attended to by his soar William, who, het
in tie.nmpior of the late D. Gordon for Use pest tem years, ha. a !!torr
kanwlmri e_ oI t1. hearse,. and by preempt attention hope. to .hart part of
public petmesse. Remember the plass--Ws.bet., ons your way to the poet
taw Give na a call.
J. BROPHEY & SON.
Patronise.
True
Competition.
Ties 045.01ae Pachon 1fta�tt.w.T Oe.ti
Tiopenten W hem rm.ell.hsd te give the
mime a Il .-,Lara servo.e wit► air amid per-
errt oemyet$ lee.
,waaaaeed on heels.' prl.sipss W In
the Worms et it. pate's.
1t de.'rve8 the et every ern'o whe
b.11evescasa
ncp.Ut .
lar per! d«p.cea w Mite�y
r.J .sMu.
Mara. 115 *'ihlimn ag with all li..
1Mla rreindnaves ar1e.�Grss. wires Canelo ale Sellpur ter.
Odle I eb sistli Mite wss04 P.elb 1
f. 1111.11CYPPS.
OMNI imaml M-.•msr, OMert.h