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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1893-6-15, Page 2A. 2 THE SIGNAL : CODHRICN ONT., TBITRSDAT, JUNE 15, 1895. ASKoRT rrtt corroarE is iha best Shoiten'np for all Co rit.1 pi.trp.s.e. uE �YoRYe efOLfiXE is tits cla!y h f i fiFul s4or'Ram email .nysieisas endless. IL An O for that uric rorfk hie f*elio of ertoo rnstth richnese from foe4/cooked( In. lard, R food cooked in `QTToi.INa is delicate, delicious, ileaifltFul,eolnforti 5. DoYOUuse CorroLisal Nage *aline N. K. FAIRBANK a CO., Werlington and Ann Streets, MONTREAL. A i►EAL IN DARKNE`S. England deals with international di'ficul- ties chiefly by moans of two metals, lead and gold. Incidentally there are two other metals used in complications, roll steel and cold silver. As a general thing where gold will purchase the way out of ditticulty, England prefers to use it quietly. The ditto cul y disappears, and none but tho.e in the swim know just how things came about. itut in most cases there is the clink of gold in the background. Henry Leggett was a young Englishman who hoped to make his fortune u oue Afri- can expedition, but in reality made it in another, and the gold he won, although it came out of Africa, but RA source in Eug land. He aceimpanied a great African traveller IL an expedition through the savage contin- ent. He kit England with high hopes, and returned a somewhat broken and disap- pointed mac. He had no chaste of accumu- lating gold, and he soon found that if any- thing were done by any member of the ex peditioo except the head of it, the whale honor and glory in some way was shunted from the person to whom it belonged to the commander of the party. If any of the explorers showed originality or talent or genius, of bravery that was like- ly to interfere with the lustre around the head of the commander, the competent. hob ordinate was soon broken, on some trumped up charge, and reduced to his proper place in the racks. Some members of the expedition died of fever, or of disappointment, or of buth, and Leggett lived through it ell, and came back to England with • barge know lodge id Africa, which was useless to him hareem of oettatn clauses in his contract, and a toeling et bit- t.er injustice io his heart when be saw bor.ora showering upon the mac who probably de- served them least of a11. Hi. years of wild life had apparently 'refitted him for civilized oocnpations. African expeditions did not start out every day, and he had no oppor- tunity of making useful to himself and others the extensive knowledge lee had of Central Atnca. Many of his friends thought he had wrecked his life, and, indeed, Henry him- self began to have anise suspicion that such was the case. 11e bore up, however, ■n1 tried to get something to do, not so much for his own sake as for the sake of a certain little girl. Neither the little girl nor the yoan, man had money or prospects enough to venture to marry on, but she lived on hops and he oo something very like despair. She was an expert stenographer and her nimble fingers flew over the typewriter keys which one of the typewriter maoaf.cturing Corm patios aivertlae as being used in the govern - ment offices. This particular typewriter et hioh Madge Davey used was in one of the offices of Her Majesty's government, in a department that dealt with carious savage kings and potentates in tar off regions tat the earth. Henry Leggett, having nothing' to do, need to meet the girl se she came from the office at the Westminster Bridge end of the Thames Embankment and together they strollei down to Risekfriars and back, par 'ruby often noting the fair face of the girl in its contrast with the bronzed hos of the you■g map. " Henry," she said one muskeg, " when yep were in Afrioa did yep ever meet King Tippnowrajaro'.• How do you spell it asked Lovett., " 1 don't recognize it from the proennoi atiou." Mad1e spelt it for him. and then he it. formed her how it should be pronounced. Oh. yes," said Henry " the king and 1 am old chum*. He is a beset, but be rather took to toe. i eau talk he lingo, and 1 might have been his prime mii,lster now if 1 thought yen would have preferred Central Afriea to (..mberville as a plans of resi- dence. HI. taking to ane wen the mere re markable bosses whoa he in sober he dis- likes white nes ; tied 1 antis .zpsad by the way Msgglr, oar commander, pad him. that Ragland Was going to have some trouble with him alter we left. However things appear to bay. quieted dews. " " Thee; have mos %aimed dews,'. cried the girl, eagerly. Hew de yea know •" asked her lover. " Oh. 1 knew all shoat it. 1 have beim typewriting about King Tlppesmajaro Fe. the het two days." Really," said Beery, istetn.ted, "What 11 foieg ea r A great dlel is Nein en," she sail. " It seems that so expedition is te be asst oat te was with bis. Aa a gnawsl tae ds sea pay mash attentive le wire 1 etre to writs, het la toil sense the lajte=f the world resod a o. wmahtitg Hen is this old healthiest who is very likely a esa.iW---" " Oh, he h," said Jimmy, " se q.eoties about that" " And a .1•'. driver— " " And • murderer sad ell that. And yet the great W itleh government is „zit pay him gold, w lute you, who so..lviliasd, and the dearest fellow in the world, • w who L.s done w much and bee so brave, ace practically starting w Loados." "Net quite go had as that," said Iwag+tt. " I had owned i 1•d. sod b�dtr 1 Wye bass aflsM a Ibi• s of the %esti• bar, aud right away, tow" " Oh," cried the girl in alarm, "you will uot take it, Henry; you will not go" " No, I don't think I will There is teething much to it fur ale, but I am to Rive my answer tomorrow. Tell ate more &bout your king. I am a httle interested. What gold is he to get !" ' Oh," she said, " I don't remember it all, but an ezpeditiou is to go out to make tenni with him. They aro to take beads and trieketa mad a lot of those things with them, sed if they can bribe the kine with thine to make a treat with them, well sad good ; but if not they are tot to spare g 1'. The leader of the expedition is 10 take a large sum of the money with him. He is not to tin it unless he is forced to, but to any case he is to slake satis- factory terms with the king." " By J ' ' cried Henry, interested "I'd give a reed dial for a sight of those papers ) ou bare bceo writing. You could not weak them away from the office, 1 suppose, .o that I might have ten minutes' look at them " No," she sad "*!tat would nut do. But 1 have them all hero in my cote book. 1 will type them out for you at home. ' " See here, Hauge," he said, " let us sit down here. Have you your note -book with you! Then you just read the documents over to me. i will pe toil down in my book 111e exact words 1 want to know." The two sat down together on one of the nbamkmeut benches, and Henry transferred the particular. to his own book. When he closed it he said solemnly " Madge, you must not breaths a word of this to auy living soul. It is very import- ant, and if thinge turn out tight we will be married before this time next year." The girl gave a tittle cry. " What are you going to do, Henry!" "The old kine," he answered, is • fool. Balis and trickets are just his a;za. He has no use tor gold. 11e does not know its value. This expert:tioa apparently does not leave for two mouth& I am going W morrow to Zanzibar. I feel that this king needs a prime 'Moister." The girl opeuel ler eyes wide. "Henry," ebe said•"is it homes!`" "1 think it is,-" replied the young tun. "Rut this is a question I will discuss with you when 1 come back. It is tau, prewiug The expedition is acing out, if possible, to cheat the king I ani going out to see fair play. 1 think I may get a hole commission for my .ervtces. I think, besides that 1 shall deserve it. But, as I said, we may discuss that when we get home." The expedition sent out to the kin, was eminently successful. The leader was some- what surprised to find that the king was not to be bought off with beads, and another strange thing wig that whsle the king took the beads and other trinkets, he named a sum in gold which we just slightly under the amount the secretary in louden had commissioned the leader of the expedition to offer. This was paid and the treaties w ere signed. The fact that the king had demanded al- most exactly the sum the high official in London had mud would be necessary, clear- ly proved that the high official was • great diplomatist, and • man of more than utter acuteness. He frequently used the fact with his colleagues to show that be was a nun who knew what he was about. How Henry Leggett got the money that enables him and his pretty little wife to live so comfortably, is a matter of conjec- ture. It is supposed by his neighbors that he made a euowaeful deal in the Afncan ivory trade. -Lake Sharp. Tate a rlebiseite. Should a plebiscite be taken it would jai found that Murdock Blood Mitten is by long olds the most successful and popular care Feer dyspepsia. headache, coo.tipatlon, bol iowoess, bad blood. etc. 1t is purely vegetable. 2w Petmetblas Me threes t. f. "What are you in fore "Matrimony," said the prisoner. "That isn't a crime." "Yee it is. i neglected to kill my first ode before marrying my r.cosl l;iertrtritr autd.... Judge - How did you reoognire your as- sailant if it was pitch dark at the time! The battered citizen Oh, M t'mped me so lard, your anner, dat I saw him by de star- light* - --- Timely wisdom. (:rest and timely wisdom is shown by keeping 1)r. Fowler's extract of Wild Strawberry on hand. It has no equal tor cholera, cholera melbas, diarrho•a, dysent- ery, oolic, cramps and all summer ooen- plaints or looseness of the bowels. 2w AN ANCASTER MIRACLE. IHSTORILUTO HEALTH AFTER BEING OFVE:N UP BY FOUR DOCTORS. Tate ttttr►utanLtt CAaa or AUArwwx Ler -arrLn7$1+ wrITN rAsodotele, SOMA - ISO slTwxra AUUET AND raosoe5CBe INCC0AIILE-ens 1s AMAIN tserelltellolle !MALT% AND vWUI-aux TiLLI OS ,,yuMi 105 Telt os EFIT or UTrtea s(t- Dundas Star. Luring the past two years ninny of our most reputable taonauges have gives ac- counts of rou-lerful cure* oueurrins in the localities in winch tbcy ware published. These cures were ail effected by • remedy that has mane for owl! the mist remark- able reputation of any medto:us ever brought before the meow of the public ; eta remarkable indeed that it u a couatast theme of couveratiu.i, and the name among the most familiar household words. We refer to Dr. Wd ianu' Pink fella for Pale People. Many of tie cases published told the story of people ghee up by the doctors, anJ were an the very threshold of the other world when Ur. Williams' Piuk Pills were brought to their lotto. The oases retorted were in most instances distant from Dundee and for tliu reason might nut be considered of more than passing intaee,t. k'ur the past mouth, however, the Tepee' was current in town of a wonderful cure ao- complsehe,i by those acme pills in the town- ship of Asoaster It was stated that Mrs. U. S. Horning, wife tat a prominent farm- er, residing about • mile west of the village of to town and seven wiles from Dundas, had Lion given up by the doctor*, and that she had been cured by Dr. Wil- liams' Pink fills So great was the inter- est taken iu the case that The Star decided to investigate it said • tew days ago • representative went up to the Horning homestead for that purpose. in paseiug through U. petowu ho learned that yery little alae sag Lilted of bat the remarkable rccorory of Mrs. Horning. Possibly the fact that both Mrs Horning awl her husband were born in the iunuediete neighborhood, and are probably known t•. everybody in ilia canary round, in -meows the interest in the case. The Star pian en arriving at the Hurniug residence was ad• witted by Mrs. Horning Lease:f. She looked the picture of health, aged it was hard to believe ' that alto was the sane woman who was at death's door font months ago. In answer to the question as to whether .he had any o'yeotiou to giving a history of her case for publication, lire. Ilorning replied that she had not. " I con- sider that my recovery wax simply miracul- ous ; 1 give Dr. N'dllues' fink PiUls all the credit, and I am wilting that everybody should know about it." Mrs. Horning then gave the following history of her remark- able recovery :- ' A year ago I wet taken i:1 with what the doctor called spinal attvctiou, w Lich fiaally resultd is partial parulyiu. my Iets from the knees due u being completely dead. My tongue was also paralyzes. Om the drat of July last 1 took my bed, where I lad for four months. No tongue can tell what I suffar.l 1 was tensible all the time and knew everything that was going on, but I oould not sleepier the intense pain in my head. Our family doctor said I could not live and three other doctors called in consultation arresd wish him. I telt my- self that it would be ouly &short time until! death would relieve mo of my sufferings Neighbors came re; 25 to 30 every day, and every time they went away expecting that it was theist time they would see me alive. 1 quit taking doctor's medicine and gave up ►11 bops About four mouthe ago a trieod came in sod read an account in the Toronto Weekly News of the ear- aculous recovery of an old soldier named E. 1'. Hawky, an inmate of the Michigan Soldiers' House, at Grand Rapids The story be told exactly tallied with my con- dition, and it was on that amount that I decided to give Ur. Williams' Pink Pills a trial. When I began taking Pink Pella 1 was so ill that I could only take half • pill a1 • time for the first few day.. Then I was able to take a whole one after each moat, and hare continued taking them. After I had taken over a box I began to ex- perience a strange tingling .emestion all over my body, sad from that out I began to improve. In • month I could walk with w cane or by ming • chair. from cos room to another. My general health also improved. is fact, my experience was like that of the old soldier, whose case Lad induced me to rive the pills • triaL While taki.g the pills at the outset I had my legs bathe f with vinegar and salt and rubbed briskly. It is now four months .ince I began tale • ing the fink Pilar, and from s living skele- ton, racked inocesantly with pun, I have as you ase been transformed into • eompwra- Uvmly well :woman. I am doing my own housework this week and am free from all pain and sleep well. When my neighbors Dome to see me they we amazed, and 1 can tell you there u great faith I. Dr. Williams Pink Pills in the .action, and mesa are m- ing them. When I began taking Pink Pill i .Dada up my mind that if 1 got better 1 woad have the awe published far the ben. ht el others, and I am glad you called as 1 am sure I would mow hove bean dead if it had sot been for Pink P111.." Mrs. Horning .t•tsd tbwt she purchased the Pinsk Pills at Mr. Comport', drag store in Dandas, and Mr. Comport informed us that W sales of Pink Pills ars large and co.ekaatly increasing. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are • perfect blood builder and nerve restorer, curing suet diwawes as rheumatism, nearwlgia, paralysis, 1m:emotes ataxia, St. Ions' Demos, narrowprostrwtine and the tired fedit�he eirea, the attar effects of la grippe, nM.a. dspendisg e• Ninon of the blood, seek se esisfula. abrade wt.., oto. Pink Pills give. a Maltby low to pals wad allowl{eeias,,, wed are • sgeelge for the tzo.Mur pw,illwr to the female system, and to the ens of m.e they risco a radical ewe, in all eines arising from mwmtal worry, overwork er sooner of any Nature. Thee Pith are mwsd1Mond by the Dr. Williams' ldM dy,Ossepaoy,V .,Brookville,ere Out., wad N. Y . wed an mid • ly 4. b z.. bearing the fret. tra& mark sad wrapper, at Mesa a be w six Lexie for SEUL Rear Ie sided that Dr. Wilitsn' Pack Pip. we slat scut in bulk, er by the deem Ir hundred, awl say dealer whoa/ore e eknYltMes ins this term i■ te defre d lee and shsoM be avoided. The petite was e lse e-tWewi agabmt all Moor se•eafad Mead bailers s wad serve Weise, we matter Ne* arms may its gloom Bowes They are MI imitates* •rbeee !whose wilt\ te a posessiary advisees. . .od liar. w.iu .' p melee Ash your dealer ler 1k. Wil$. o.' iPleb PM he P4. People sad name en sabeistaisa Dns lfillninses Pie\ PIIh stay be fed of ei diamble w direct by snM hem t. The Right Way. .lopes Good morning, Beason. How do you find b.eisesw? Benson By judicious advertising. al s Parsing Meaner. The miracle about the tippler's head is that the less thew is of it the more epi it u to go round. 6.erd Agatiest eateeere. Keep the bleed pare, the stomach in good working order, and the entire system free from 'teerbid *Sete matter by using Herdock Blood Bitters. whack clew,ww, strengthens and tows the whisk system. Cholera me - n et attack the healthy. .. 2w Me was Tee Vasb. He -De yeas \.s., carting, i have Dever kiereed any ewe before! Ahs --Well, this is no kindereartes. Oise Moeller. " it's • wise man who kempeth his own ooaeeei." " Yea let • wiear ase who awn sell it, like a lawyer." The Meters arae.. Fear kill. more than cholera. Severe diar13..., purrsg, coolie cramps, eta, are efts miMakes fns ebjwwtie troubles. A tow does. of Dr. Fowler's 1Lztreet .f W iM Strawberry will remove beth the dimes tied the terror it Nephew gar N d►ee% Wertz. Wife -111 have mor delightsr merry for . ass' Hesoad-1 shseM this! yen weed rather bone bar married fee lora %FM►-1fw sir. 1 merrkd ler love my- eeN. fMsrtiweal din et • ped asthenia like bleed pw.aasd w belly kmMy. am lossmary aheyIns. Williams' Medicine Cossp.y ices. .itker address Tile prion .t whisk thew Pins are sold make a rears of tteatmeat ems• partitively ks.xpetrive aa .empersd with other remedies medical treatmest. A OREAT SPARKLER. Tao fate .r tee 1110b4.sear and Us strange ftathry. Leeduo, Juba 1.. -The Diggers News, • Swab African paper, says that a nman sensed l:lsesuo. who was a.sfga•at W the British artily derlag the Indian matlsy, and who did ktt Derwtbar, as.t..ssd to his eon. la -law. Haghem, al Pretoria. Transvaal, that he murdered the Kiss of thole, and with two others stole the crown jewels and buried them. The two other looters ware killed during the war. The day after the ke:tiu. the 'Thirty-second Resistant was ordeeetd sway, and the toes was loaded beck to the enemy, so there was aro time to .mcni. the Jou els. Since (Zleeeoss death Hughes has beunoommuoiwting with the ladies (;overn- meat through the editor of as lad:•an jost- les!, an.I as all the foots lead desenptiosis coincide, Hughes leaves shortly tor !edit to show the spot ober. the trsaoore ie buried nci.r the battlefield. One diamond in the crowu is supposed to be the follow -stone of the Litmus Kol•i-poor, now in pasemsion of Queen Victoria, to whom it was eurrendared by "The Lion of I'unjeub." Farming a Badness. Farming hi • business, and the neo who would make a success cf it nowadays roust be a good business man. H. must be an •U -rouged good business manager. Besides bu) mg anti aping end the employ- ment of labor, there is the pleating, cultiv- atice and harvesting of crops, the breeding, teediug and erre of live stock, the use tib machinery and • huudred other important things which require intelligence skill had executive ability of • high osier. There are • tbouaaud IittJc detain of the business to be carefully looked after to make the farm 4o its best. Taking everything into couaideratiom, the weeder is that there are uot inure failures on the farm than there Are. No bu..iooas in the city would loog eland under the eery -going management of the average uuse omeful former. limed can Fernier. Wtaere *Mete Beata.. "'Tt,ere ie a place delta South where (Le can hear the heart cf • awn six tett ante) ;."•"t distinctly and clearly. E ,eh systole and duaato'u ice as unmistakeable as tie tick of a mantel clock." The speaker was a travelling man, awl be was addressing a halt dozen loiterers. Six whittles of iutxtduhty from as many throats anewercd him. It it a. fact. I'll swear to it, thousands of people who have beau there are witness, Na it, he asserted. Vee by one tiny sorrowfully departed, untol the last one, oho said sadly : "John, • hit of advice : Let your Ilea le Probable." Well if that don't beat all: ' declared the travelling than to the Lar -tender. rt' leu! • .VIiy, they won't helot.. me Ile of the bar rubbed his hair the wroi.g way and looked puz.lcd. "If I had told you that I had cameht a forty -pound bus you'd have believed it, but when t tell • tree tale I'm made out a Munchausen, or something worse." "1'.ime, give it to me straight," said the bar -tender. "It's down in the Mammoth lave, Ken tacky. Our guide stopped our party by the shore of the Echo river and made us pet out our lanterns, that we were in darker.* which miebt be telt It was the darkest place in the world. %yell, the idiot loot his matches, and the:. wash t one to be had a- mongst us all. Stared wasn't the word. We were three miles underground. The guide mastered us 1.i d Blaring that relief must 1.e had in • few hours at most. That didn't reooucile ns much. We stay- ed there ten mortal hours before • search party sent out from the hotel reached tut Then it was as we at In the darkness, we observed the harts beat -not only our own, but those of our companions. We thought it was all due to the thumping that cause of our scare. It wasn't, shear's, for after we were fonnd tied un our way out, we tried it and learned that it was 1.ossible anywhere in the cave, se watt ie tiro awful science. Beep fteiard'. Ltl.tme.t la the Beane. THE SHERMAN SILVER BILL Ta. Whitish Press Aatteryate. the Ryes. .t tee Aet. LONDON' Jen. 7. -The Standard says of Pr..idest Cleveland's declaration of his in• teethe to tall • epeeist session of Congress: Mr. Citteland is too shrewd to act before the country ls rips His decision indicates that the silver party is no litr enough to resist the change. Th. riss o1 prices oil the stock ezchaage yesterday was hardly justified, however, because the first malt of the repeal of the Sherman Act might be that silver would become temporarily unsaleable, thus increasing the summit disquietude. The Fivaacial News asks why the aaggrewwy should be prolonged by President C1s*slsod for three .moths mon. The Time says: It may safely be as- sumed that the Sherman Act will be re- pealed by the led of the year. The act baa proved to be ea .zp.seive experiment which's° natio. but Amens could with- stand without involving itself In meek more serious trouble. The mamba( deme osauot be rmpair.d quickly, but the attitude of eepieion Ito beg amistabemd by in- vestors and speedsters toward Americas railroad. is likely a be gradually modified. fie rtesad.eew Rivera Ile -Rondo tells me he sold a: paeans to files magazines last week. Jack Lever -Poor fallow! and he used to write itch good poetry, tool -Puck. fee Nand C.5 Of sig the e..vee.r. P.ZWDWOL&. Jin 7. -Barak Veaht, 17 years N nag fir the elevator is e. o.. 79t11 Market-ete.M, yesterday. She was es the e ighth Seer sod leaned over the ryrd.nil to mss if the elevator werCeeatiag. Row bead was ret o/ by the demos/Mg oar tad fell fete the celiwr. Tee UAW nes- --13. Pewdees Wixoaoa, Jens 7. -Mea Girard, the wito .f a River Omurd know, had a vio- leat headaehe Ae.day, and took • head** powder. The die net seem a give hes any ease, aedsasloe kept ea taking them until 12 Then the mod .hes as se. lard week Oteestook �iit paned her through. Dmeermsiee Dem tasgaleh Memel .Wr, The New York T1mo : It is le resd that the British " bed loot to , forty sewn �Grew up BM& moaned e,� The lest wend"saes" hem eta end the two �BOOM eroloons ben lose more Ilse twenty men between ire.. 4 a0. not lltlitbr OM ha Ina re: ."ri.d dlbs eft I. theft UM yew a: we i nalied.re fr Ire NMI cou/4 WA �aem Ships " "BMW' •• number of Use 1111011who hoe w ill try to MHOllg p.sUel ehadere the MA* 1b>! NriWt deY,ltta .ettenth. 'Ale pop of au AneeleeB silk,' ls OBI s ninth. -"— - - e ateedf Weekw. "Ate pet ea ere besondl trent es .,hemi Bele `Yesliirr 4 I'm 110 obetkw, losI play son is ►ewes belts slays roe fellow kept ter east knowing kit loan." a Care. (;zza araz, - ring suffered over tete rare with ooaetipattos, earl the dostere MA blood help.s ale, I eseeloded to tryKali, aaJ $.store I mood one bottle I was eared. I can tris realm, ad it for Mak headache. KT1ItL D. IIAtvits, tin Iakoriew, Ont. W Sy is 1M..e ed. " W urn W urea !" greened Larry " Bad luck to the day I was ber•r•a. Hen's them banks all leucin' tap, sad me not get • ciut in way was at 'eat." There are many iadieati.sens avows., but Ur. Low's 11 oro Syrup m.ste thew in every caw succe*afully. lm Thr; Were IVs Ws+w* fres. Collector ---W111 you .obecribe towards the decoration of the...!di.rs' graves? Mr. Trager -No, sir. The mon whom gasses 1 taut to decorate ain't dead yet. Enrich the blood by the use of Milbern's Beef, Iron and Wine, which .uppltes the se •mmary blood building material. lm III NY TO NEALTL Wed/ e$ the dogged sow elf Yell'` yrs e eut imd La Ike wt. m, tesll the imptteides moi Maros dine eta the erne time Vtiera.jrammar Ohm tleemlareauessi ��j 2pp�'`1.m• M10In.1Ded ILEUMQ W.,. , BR1 TFORE BICYCLES HAVE A CTANDA :D VALUE THUM ARE BUILT TO SELL AT e141 PRIDES OFFERED .a unict:ra.. er The Coold bicycle Coatis. Brantford. Ont. Deno t ti Tows So, Taiwan G. W. TEEOtMSON, AGENT, GODERICH, ONT. 4.13401 DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THECOOK'SBEST FRIEND LALIGEST 3ALE Ira CANADA. sesedis Menem Mint tie • ATE_t #cientiftc Atltcrtray t���rss..stt tette" M m .'e-1 n Nt as �.ar M7ee in the tCatataase. r41=.0. PLANING MILL I1T111L1$IQ1 Moi. Buchanan & Son, rAwvrapnrsstr SASH, DOOR and BLIND Dusan le ail kids of LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES Lad bwYoA tt Merin et every esm.rlptte. Wel twill! a 8pee1ty. The Signal ism wereleft sashes te tl. aashtwhisk w tress,, sad esseenee el all claims�ws prt.t�g�rA perm6.it of 113E .auott.ae meat mar seep* esmaUing you slag M i• swi s iii `Immo oras e sag. that oar snorts IS rill wu.a (Rita the approval cf our patrons *Kett i\ewas This Tfeful wire is kept in the fell rattled ttwliti moue as letter Leetjs '1% bile Tat«!X k\etas Io this line we have a very tarp stock of Rife writing papers , able for every clam of butane represented in this locality, cin prising laid and wove, lino,, quadrille and other paper*, ruled Neomr emoi,egenera laaszsyy bused, uthiraey L1 1 anare imortant place in commercial correspondence. See what we're got under the above heads. Bkka i\talks If tide " poy.aa-you•go plan was the order of the day the demand for account paper would not be so great ; but there aro some seta who get so many dunners 1101 they wonder if the stock will ev'r run out. We don't intend it t, and at prescut oar stock 111 cost pleto in this line with four wet Gout paper and neat ruling. 8tatente0ts Both single and double dollars and cents columns. They cons cheaper than bill heads, and an the proper thing to mend atter a delinquent once a month. They are sure to fetch him 'round— sometime. T.u.ve‘owts Now, it would be hard to get along without envelopes, and is keep up with the demand for them we keep a large stock ea hand. We have now shout s hundred thousand in stock, and the prices will rear from 75c. to $2.00 per M. R e Handle case mercial and legal sixes exclusive/Y. Commerimak 1rvaXvctyT has alreetiy been partially crani natal in some of the heads above. There is, however, a vast anima of work under this head that to enumerate would more than take up the entire space occupiers by this adv't, but we do it all at Tu SIGNAL. T wa:Aat\ons to an "At Home" or a wedding require considerable taste in melee tion sometimes, but we make it an easy matter by keeping u stock the very latest and belt samples to be had Call and ria C'treU‘ars We aim to excel in all the differ ent kinds of work we tarn ostr but especially in this, and keg in stock plain and fancy papers suitable for all requirements. • rogrnms of entertainments and meetings promptly turned out, from tbs plain but nest to the most elegant with cord and pencil attached. Cards end►' \Greets This head covers a large ramie et work, from a bread or milk ticket to a neat calling turd, from saes Binary admission ticket to a teen Inosine.. card or a handsomely printed membership ticket. 4 osttY s Our facilities for turning out this class of work are evidenced 137 the fact that the great bulk of it Ir done by us. This line also eludes "ilockeeirs which our three fast -running roi presses aro able to turn out, is s surprisingly short time. %aft 1NAks belong to the poster department also, and we make a specialty!f them—promptness dieing our she in this respect. A notice of ark will appear in Tat Rtow*L fres charge when bills for same are got hare. 4.‘‘ &t OS WO? in the typographical printing lig can be done In this establishment in as expeditions sad saddle manner stand O1kr \'carets u,;AX be. Soca' %limy re.o.sonabkt. We extend oar thank* ger pint fir* on sad .elislt • enetip son al is ...w TWT. SA (\lli#1" tiSfafitfNen, MN