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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1893-7-13, Page 22 THE SIGNAL : GODERICR, ()NT., THURSDAY. JULY 13, 1893. andb tirpsvO • ed� eland Patti, but lis tbm.eh oltlicate. r iI sr•rtiO FD To cooky but Was brad and akkoFt(i tete and$reell of lard, ,$he borsht Cottolens> 6ttHen ahortilti?i) and tif oVeD store 'than a., be— Cause She made better foo4,aad he could tat it Aleut aryl( u i) Seasalct after effect. Now-- IP/9 orr`pEY "[ HAPPY„ a►dfits fouled filth BEST, and most short- thily.e✓sr made — TTOLfNE's. Bladeonly by N. L FAIRBANI & Olk. W.Wag•e. end Ana M esy 1lW 5TRSAIi. SINGULAR ---VERY Lofts S. Lt. NSN. IL "Thanks for the flowers. 1 do so love flowers, and I am always sure of getting a nioe bolos when i cora to see you. Ah, your yard is so pretty ! 1 wish my yard and windows were like them hut oh ! I have so much to do and so little time to my- salf, 1 have to give them up," and my friend, MIs. Outwore, sighed deeply at my good fortune and bet ill Lick, as she bade , me soodbyn. "strange," I mus to myself, after her departure, "That Mr Outman has so) much less time than myself for her tamily is no larger, and her house as convenient' After a moment's reflection, however, I re- member tit it she make' • ronnd of the stores each day, to see the new goods, and to match ample' : that she is out almost t every night to same meeting. aero, ration, or merry making, ao.l that she spends the greater part of every afternoon In that tire- some, soul -harrowing occupation known as making calla. Of course she has her house- hold cares and family to look after, besides Singular, wasn't it, that 1 should have thought fora moment that she bad time for the adornment of her yard " How could she have. and look after all these thin "No," says Mrs. Evertrim, "I haven't read a new book in sit mooths,or touched the piano, exempt to dust it, in the last year. Prof. X. used to call me hie brighest pupil: but oh mo! what are accomplishments to a woman after she is married! John hs - ss at me because 1 don't ung and play for him, like 1 .lid in our courting days. H wont see that I haven't time to keep the house in order. If I get • few minutes tints may eyes are tired. and my back aching, an I want to rest. John is like all the reat c: the men, he is inconsiderate and thought lea " "Singular, isn't it, that Mr. Erertrim should be so inconsiderate" He knows his wif will not allow Bridget to do any of the fine 000kiov or part.culsr trona*, that she does all of the sweeping, belmaking, dusting and polishing, and annus not • speak of dirt anywhere. He knows also that it takes great deal of L ne to do the Kenstogtoo, Ar rosette, and Roman embroideries which s finds necessary to the proper furnishing ow,m her home; he known it has taken any hour's steady work to make the wrest Lechers and enema of wax, thousand wont ed work, that repose eider glass caseate the parlor, and even more time to mike the tidies and head rsata Whet adorn every chair the scarfs and lambngains that drape every shelf, picture and mantel, and the oonetlses batmen cast ban •ad screens. air les and cards beard trifles, worsted work motto, sad band -painted lags everywhere. Truly, as his wife hs .add, he is most inoonsiderata in expsatieg kir to keep up her mono and read. Mg, as in the days ed More. Singular, les it how tbosghtless mem are! My friend, MrslivesBrighte., lives near nos in • pretty vise -draped ao emu She says she is prouder of her large family of boys sad gob then Mrs. Millin. is of her thetasgeld, sad thetas would sot rive the wealth in of bud sod Moes Is her flitting-roswin- dow for all d lura Evrg trim's paintings and dr•pisw. lodged, she bee been beard to sic say that .he dosadmire • parlor fur. sighed with cardboard and ironed .beet d waddles. athat ebn e sese beauty is • pafst-daubed Me, or • tical covered hens - shoe Isn't she singular ! Aad that is net half of her oddities. She •as.ally trainsrs. her ebil4e to help her. sod to wait epee seek ether, adsu it is ss whispered armed neighborhood, that while the girls malt ▪ the sapper dishes, she auris Nis the ears noir, sad reads se istsreeHag hook or paper. the aye gds pale few alas sr frills es the ebildes.'s elating. ad stakes bet few saline ga•t pe.. hamar ef lamb of truce. Yet she takes time every day le pry ere qua er lumbers with the slbIaa. irete , resp Mem menset to awe wish them a tic pane. Aur husband ib bead edam r. ib. ant. ag. roc worship ber, bet ki it ase embargo de ! Ahs is ossg•hr---v.y t Deal yeti Waits' e d • he b sna WN the worn err *VIZ dififf/inaPeeragesI rheBill urea. Tr t n erre POPE LEO'$ GROAT WORK- $.5klme sees M.se.se.e Thee IA* Re- eeaealau .. .f sheo creek and win cherub. Very remarkable is the pea�wo which has been made during the leer twelve mouths le the great work uptw the ae- oomplWimeat r[ which I.eo XIII has est his heart, knowing full well that it would render bus pontificate the meet glorious In papal history, and cause hs name to remain on record as the most enlight- ened l) ht- ened and broad-minded prelate w bo has ever occupied the chair of Si. Peter, says the New York Tribune. It consists of nothing lees than the r•etesciliatiou of the Rosman Catholic rhumb with that of the so-called Orthodox Onset rite --in me word, the conclusion of that schism inaugurated in 10Sl by Leo IX. in con- nection with time "flitquc" votarovexs . Malty truitlees attempts Lave been magi. dunag the het eight centuries to effect a rivooeeliation. But the present purttif', who has already achieved even more fame as a diplomatist and ae a statesman than as an teolasiastie, has quietly bu: none the les surely brought the w'gotia- lions in connection with the matter )to such a point that we may practically be said to be withui view of the reunion of the Eastern and Western churches. I In the pursuit of this great ulniertak- ; Mg Leo XIII. has enjnced not only the encouragement but ale, the active asp - port of nearly all the great powers of Europe. The Italian Government, which possetsee in its Monies a large popula- tion belonging to thelhtho'Juz faith, has already given official notification of its hearty a,.proval of the scheme. So. too, has the I• reach Government, out only on similar grounds. but ale, because it fore- sees in reoccitiatioa of the tnochurches a strengthening of its al!iwee with Russia It is no longer any secret at Rome [flat the reveal interviews of the Czar's bruthcn w:N.t the Pope have had a bearing en the sabje t, and one of the mart influential prelates of the Pontiff's court, l'ardival Vanutedli, published some months ago a book distilled to prove that the reunion of the two churches, far from weakening, wou!d, on the contrary, rastl n- stretheu the portion of the Cur. and greatly contri- bute to convert the now discontented Polish populauon on the western frontier of the empire 1010 loyal subjects of Alex- ander III. • The work in question is asserted to have been received with tokens of tuark- ed favor by the Muscovite court, as well as by tlsarittocracy, and the procurator of the holy Synod at St. Petersburg, the C'zar's former tutor and Present confi- dant and advisor, N. I obiedonotaeff, even when w far as to matte • rem:trk-- able letter to Cardinal %'anute:li expreaso.- ing sincere wishes for the realizat,oa of the prospects of reconciliation held out in the volume. At no tante once the days of Peter the Great hare he rela- tions between the Court of 5t Peters- burg and the Vatican been so cordial and intimate as at the present mouteut, and it mac be rentemtered that the Czar wee the only monarch of the old world who took the truuile to send a member of his own family to convey his good wishes to Leo XIII. ion the ocosavion of the latter's epsaoopui jubilee last win- ter. Moreover, the formerrsecution of the Catholic clergy in 11'uLud and elsewhere in Russia has entirely ceaaed, while the priests and eishope baniseed to Siberia under termer reigns have ail been permitted to return 10 their homey. At Athens the government pre% is openly discussing the gammon of. tecocil:- ation wits ezprts.iuna of good will. and at (Bucharest, Belgrcde, Toth'. and Cet- tinje the same favorable ttiepuatiots are to tie found on the part of the govern- ment, the clergy and the people. Mean- while, the pope is deplaying a liberality and breadth of miud in the matter which have contributed in no small measure to Conciliate those who were at first most hostile to the. project. Since his acces- sion to the tiara the Greek church, semi- nary, and college at liroseoferratu his had its mammal largely developed by tins of the munificent annual cubren- tie . accordtrl to it by the papal treasury. Armenian anti (:reek colleges at Rome have likewise been the rec:Inents of generous eubselis from the pIYscnt pontiff, who has also largely contrinuted toward the maintenance of the Greek church eminary of St. Anne, at JeraYa- k'm. It i, perhaps due to this policy that the Nstoriams of M a and Persia, who had hitherto own them- selves as the most refractory to We pre- cel.ts of the Church of Rome, have of late given .ignifi.-ant evidence of their disposition to revert to their former spir- itual allegiance. The work undertaken by Leo XIIi. is one that lemands the exercise of diplo- macy and vtat,e-r ft, rather than the- ohigy. For the eastern church has re- mained in dogma and ceremonial almost Namely what it was at the titre of its separation, while the doctrinal points of difference are exceedingly small, the chief point being the omission by the Greek church of thew urd . filicq»e," or "and the son," after the clause in the Ni- col)* Creed which declares that "the Holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father." It was the retutsal of the eastern church to render obedience to Pope Leo IX. by inserting thee. words that caused the schism which, according to present ape pearatces, is about to be brought to a satisfactory conclusion by his enlighten- ed namesake and staocessor, tan XIII. 1.r. N.welte par. 1is the Rook. "Niagara. First and Inst," is the title of the story, framed in the shape of a personal reminiscence, which Mr. Howells ham contributed to "The Niagara Hook." In this sketch he gives a humorous arenunt of hie setting forth from Ohio in 11110 to explore the distant capitals of Boston and New York, and to acquaint himself "with the manna and customs of strange peoples, no far as they were en ha studied in Canada" For this purpose thee youth took all the honey he had. which happened to be ti profits of his campaign life of Lin- a A Cheer Dodge. A curious device for "working tip" them ale of • book ie reported in Tee London Author. it was given out that a moble of high degree had resolved to marry the exact onunterpart of a certain &maine of roomette. Of mune the emarriagable girls all hotreht the ro- Mance to see what the heroine was Ube. limos mach profit fee the author. tspe.vl.e tea amnia The Germane and Rwias Governments thee enterwd leen as agreement for the impmveelemt of the C!pps re Rhine. sitetiit hems lake (1..etene•a The completion of the work as planned will take 14 years meld the leitrsy eespst .i kiwi 1.utf.a lm em MOW r tlasbd at pNASA*d ....Gin A WOODVILLE MIRACLE. THB RBMARI►ABLK CASE OF LITTLX OBUROIR VBALL ♦Rema TIMIS Viable or tt.Lvatle els r.lzao. Lenl'aasn Or els as,%,t'SILT --aserea- aTlolt CANE weal uses eau .tutu? clean --ria UTTLa VSLWW Is Now LI LI%&Ll as A tlut•kET—A SWAY INUIT WILL aalxu Burs To OTnaa raaaxTs • Woodville lad readout, The Iadeposdeos has published from time to time the pas -oculars of e ver rwatar k- waneabls oorss following the ase of Dr. Wil- liams' Piok Pills for Pale People. Titov uses bar. been .o fully verified as to leave n o doubt that the, sow universally favorite remedy is One of the greatest medical achieve/name of ea ase that hes been re- markable for the wonderful duuoverwa of aciatie. 1'wsibly some uf our readers may have thought that the virtues of the Meth - eanc hear: oven care—Iterated, but there are w ay them who can testify to is virtues, and now the Independent is enabled to give the particulars of • cure uocurring in our village quite as remarkable as say :hat bss hitherto beta published, and which may be so uasity verified by any of our readers that akeptici. m must lx silent. We had beard that little lieorgse Vesta Leo hem eared through the use of la. ‘t'alliams fine Pills, and as all our people know that little buy had been ill fur a luliit time and his recur ery was thought to be hopeless. The report of his care therefore created as much astunish- ment that we resolved to ascertain the facts and accordingly we called upon Mr. reale to get the parttcutaes. Mr. George Veal* has been • resident of the village for years, is • waggon maker by trade, and is well k.own to all our citizens, as well as to most of the people of the surrounding couutry. He has • family of young children who un- fortunately lost their mother surae six years age. One of these children, eared George, is about seven years cd ate, and some three years ago was taken ill and has since been practically helpless, and as a result reach sympathy was felt for the family owing to the child being mortarless. The .:ase of the little fellow was considered hopeless, and stn one ever expected to see him able to rise from hes bed again. On asking Mr. Veale • laut the report we hail, heard of the boy's recovery, he said It was quite true, end ex premed his willing•es to give us the par ticular., declaring that he had no hesitation in asyisg that it was owing to the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pith that the lad was now better. He said that some two and • half years ago little (;00r1110 was taken ill with inflammation of the bowels, and re• mired good medical treatment. After being ill for some time, the trouble seemed to take • new form and settled in his bones which became dueaeL During the summer he got a little better but when winter set iu he was taken down, and the disease bourne worm. Swelling arose over t he body, and several small pians of Lose came out. He could take but very little sustenance, and for several months weld not stand on his feet. 11e had to remota in bed or be carried about in his sister's arms. AU the medicine he tit, did him eo good and his case was given up as hopeless, and it was thought that he would not long sur- vive. Mr. Veal worm had reed of the worful cores effected by the use of Pink Pdb and decried that all things else having far:ed he would try what they would do for h:sbsy Accordingly he purchased some at Feud's drug store, and began giving them to his . on. After about two weeks he found that there was an improvement in his condition, which warranted the farther use of the Polk Pills, and accordingly he procural another anpply. " And now," said his father, " The little follow is mania; .out as lively and miechevious as ever." "There is no doubt about the matter," said Mr. Veale, " Pink Pills cared my boy when all other remedies had failed, and I am glad to give this information so that it may be of benefit to others.' W. called upon Mr. Feld the dm:NI t, an 1 asked him his opinion of lir. Williams' Ptak Pills. He said that the demand for them was so great as to be setooishing, and that thaw who once use them bey a, tin thus proving tbeir value. Mr. Fuad mid he sold more Pink fills than any other rem edy, and the demand is still increasing, and he thought no better evidence weld be giv- en of their value as a medicine than this. The Dr. Williams' fink Pills for Pale i'eople ars manufactured by the Dr. Wil. Luis' Medicine Ca, of Broekyille,t.at. and Schenectady, N. Y., • firm of unquestioned reliability. Pink pills aro not braked upon as • patent medicine, but rather u a pre- soripuon. An analysis of their properties show that these pills are an unfailing speci- fic for all diseases arising from an impover- lobed 000ditioo of the blood, or from an impairment of the nervous system, such as Itis of appstita,depr. cion of spirits,an:. mia, ehloroeis or green sickness, general muscu- lar weakness, dizziness, loss of memory, pal pttatiao of the heart, nervous headache. l000mntor ataxia, paralysis, sciatica, rheu mutism, St. Vitus' dance, the after effects of k grippe, all diaries depending nem • vitiated condition of the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They ars also • specific for the troubles panther to the female system, correcting irregularities, suppressions and all forms of f�weak- sins, building anew the blood and restoring the glow of health to pale and allow cheeks. In the case est men they effect a radisal ours in •I1 eases arising from meatal worry, overwork, or excess of any nature. These pills an not a purgative medicine. They contain oil life-giving properties lad nothiag that could injure the most delicate system. They act directly oti the blood, supplying its life-sivi.g qualities, by assist. ing it to abeerb oxygen, that greet se= er of all organic life. in this way the bseotning built op " and being supplied with its lacking a s.tisueete, becomes rich and red, nourishes the various erpm, stimulating them to aotivlot in the p�fsets saes of their functions and thus ._te disease from the system. Dr. Willtuni Pink Pills are meld eaiy in bores hoarier the fin's trade mark mad wrapper, (primed In rid luk). Bar ie mied that Dr Wdlients Pink Pills are never sold in balk, or by the dorse or headred, and fnds ids Miler e www m.btlt les le qpm aveidsd.� b. patties defrend dies s.thnd avian all ether weaned bleed builders mod serve maim, pat no to de. They am small •!1denim.denim.eating when makers hep be reap • peemery dv..tye trona thew weederhd rep.main moneyed by i)r. Williams' Pisk Piller Ask year dealer for Dr. Williams Pink Pills far Palm Peg& mud refuse all imitations and abtttsMma ilrruWilillliiaams' Pink P1Ils may he had of W9dlm.il' Manse. either serf fin Ute fa *tiaras. a 60a. • bet. er Mt bores for OL SO. The prism .t whisk then pills ars meld ankes a mutes et buataat emmp.sdiva jp imopsaive se emapseatival ineseepmms as' ed with ethersemedhd eOnrll SeeeemeSo • them etrerrelnees ANTIQUITY Of BILL POUNDING. The ABS tiauwe as Use s.eess Moes TUMID Ibissi tan l..sea Os•9wees, lite art of atoll founding is undoubted,/ of great antiquity. The Saxons ale known W have used bells in their churches, although probably but small uses, for the venerable Bede, writing at the end of the seventh notary, alludes to them in terns which seem W show that th»y were not uutatudiar :!rims. Tbe towers of the tdazuu pend have belfries of considerable dimensions he meet cases. and, according to The Gen- tleman's Magazine, at Crowland Abbey in South Linculmhir a thuya was a famous peal of seven bells many years before the Norman conquest The monks at that time and for hug after were the chief practitioner of the art of ball foundiug- which indeed it one of the many things theme well -abused men have headed down to us. Their bells were rarely without inecriptitru, often in very bad Latin, eoutaining I..erualy some Olt- Deere ilecure juke, the point of which is now lost More often they were a • religious nature, sometimes probably not unmixed with a dash of superstition, as when the hell declared that its sound dries away the drawnes of the air who cawed peeta- Iroee and famine, lightning sod thun- derrwnua As a rule unfortunately they put no dates on their balls, a defect which has been in some measure over- come by the rvwarchs of many enthu- siastic cainpanologasts, but whir i is like- ly to keep the early history of belts shrouded to darkness for a lung time to come, toner Leek and Key. Two vases which the Spanish Com- mieioners are at present keeping under lock and key in a pnrate room of the Spoleto section of We Manufactures Building show ex- clusively that women in produc- ing; arutatic work need not be by any means limited to textiles. They are boat made of iron, cast one in Etruscan and the other in pure Grecian foram. and are richly ornamented in gold hammered into the baler metal in exquisite dsi,gns. partly conventional, partly classical. One ts four fret from rim to bare and gleams with vines. Cupids and delicate scrolls of gild which connect vignettes, in the centers of which graceful ti,ures of women in tkiwing diraPEtise4 are posed. The ornamentation of the other fuLuwe the same general plan, but the design is even more refired and elegant They are valued at $111,000 each and were de- signed by Felipe Gu aasola, who was un - till a few Years ago a pair working girl an Elbar, in the Barque provinces. areblleetaraL The Chinese pagoda is a development M the pointed tent. the Egyptian tentltle of the cave dwelling. Carthage was 45 miles in circnnafer- ence, situated on a peninsula. Ou the LL.l side there were triple walk guarded by towers so large that the haseuteut of each continual stalls fur over 300 ele- phants. So ghat are the acoustic properties of the !lantern tabernacle at Salt Lake City that it is averred that the sound made by a pin dropped in a plug hat at one end of the budding is distantly audible at the other. The distinctive turns of American architecture may Le Been in rite modern office build:11g now so popular in most of our large cities. It combines in the highest degree utility with elegance and is at once a model of convenience and beauty. More Img-(; tory A tansy for :euosmia . "... .ureal upon the Meeeyt 1• minimae, climbing, ted.•o,q, Tiwy .pest the runnier hours. The nimble eorwh.g-gt.ey Could Goan o..tetrep freer all; He ..limbed his treltke tepee a Wt As Icy climbed h. wall And is the early morning, When at tell fresh and /air, Ile ruubl wing a hundred due,bhel;i At use time in the air. -',arab Cease :lay. That East media. stat... I was much amused at the fro urine with which a group of Daisy )1il.'r.. .-' •mined the statue of an East 1-1l1i 1:i Princess. It was life -like in its eostul•.1••. olive pallor of complexion and attit:ide of leaning over a table ELY if readi.hg iuu Englisl: journal which lay there. Tire girls felt of the rich texture of the Nue silk robe, criticisod the yellow damask satin scarf, the flowered silk iron sere and embroidered shonsi. and pronounced it a darling just as it lifted its eves in well-bred setonishment and asked in fairly good Euglish : •'(!an d of service be to you, ladies r The girls giggled and retreats 1, and I would harp given much to have read the thoughts of that East Indian statue. D/Rers.t fieb..ls of stwsa- F.ach generation, tired of the outworn devices which furnishes its predecessor with excitement, demands newer and stronger effects t, stimulate its emotions. As the devices of the classicist grow pale, the listening public demands • romantic school with new fortes sad strange pro - The romantic school would, s.n ons. bearers had their way, be in turn by a chaotic school, and in the race for stew sensation all vestige of artistic form world disappear. -Mao- radian's ltapaios. :•.wspspet m4•ferprtse In arrt a, Manhonadand is evidently becoming civilised. A year ago a weekly paper began to appear at Tull, the instrument of km -Auction bring a small cyclosty k which allowed only a few hundred copies to be pabli•hed each week. A few months ago the sin of the paper was increased and a special number wee issued containing thirty-six pages of reading lea � matter and twenty-one illse.tas- nut R. Is the Louder .f the Nis. Ward MrAllleter is enntething more than an am and a drink miter after all. Ward's latest ebullition rf blither -leg idiocy i relieved by one assertion whir& marks him also a roue. He says : "The demi-mond. are not often met In this fashionable driers of New York. but with that exception we have tr►eything On Make New York as aetr ndwe as Pieria Ward has berg merited the et - Motion Motion d the fool -killer, bet it mese he Is oho set wb j.c/ fa them other mai- med New Yorkers, Anthony Gored sk mod lir. Parkhurst, as w.1L-(;hdaips ,.,•_.. 1..g.ee. items lest will. W tailMsl ear - vent Johann le lemeek* 10110 mime/ rim be des. the sanest. •f whist be *reek during ttlry gbYisa" t mist. tfiit# AMINO " What is • heals without • baby Y' ask- ed • tiny writer, and as old brinier Miler replied : " It is e•rpenaively quiet '• Ase, Alva Teuag. Of Waterfall, (hit., writes, " M baby wee truly sick with summer awnplaist, sod cut ag would help his till Mi tried Dr. Prowler s Ent met of wild strawberry, whisk eared bum et once. It is ms of the best remedies I stet used. 2w Tee Seas.. atty. Pine I see we have • new guest at the he f Pedrita--" I weeder why they tall • Mania • saint ' Pw.lope Ueoause one is gesserd about so asah, 1 ,appose, by the other peuvlw' Trouble al Nellie. Mrs. W. H. Brown, of Melita, Mao., status that two of her children and two ethers belonging to • oeigh:,.u, were cured et the worst form of summer oomplaiot by ow bottle of 1>r. Fowler's Extract of triad Strawberry, saturi • specific for all summer complaints. 21/ bet lery alert. City Editor-'iVa.le through this sermon of De Loasitatk's and see what's in it ; it's pretty lung. Assistant --That's all right I osn wade through that cosy immesh ; it's not very deep. De oma ■ Feel. MI: " i've hero airtime quietly on this fence jive twenty-two amitosis by ti:e watch " hs said, " watching; that cat crouching by that rat -hole, and ahs basa't so much as moved an ear, for I've kept au eye ua her steady. Whet • fool a mutt is eYra-sred Me sew. Daae Mtis,-I also mss bear to Hooey to the value tit year wonderful remedy f.. the stomach, lirer, bowels lad blood, G KB. 1 care used it as well as Burdock Pith for over tors pant, sten neoerary, and find them the beet remedies I bare ever used for oonstpatio.. 2. Man. Ga[eoa, Owen Sound, Oat. ttre Saby reale 11101. " !'bat's a Rare, sulfa bsby of years. New- p•h," said a friend who was admiring the first Wry. '• I)0 you think lie's solid t" asked Newpab, rather disconsolately. " It seems to me as if he was all holler." was ae Fool. Ford pad --(;imme your money. Mr. t.0■h- forth idiegwtedly)-lluyousupprsa I would be going bogus at 9 o'clock if I had any seerey ! You aro the big pat okasy 111.tve met in a mouth of Sends" male a atemen s NNW tlreu.. ae. r DWLER'� v F lain) sRR rRAWBE ,R,A COL IC c HOLERA CHOLERA DIARRHOEA DYSENTER SUMMER COozPLAINTs CHILDREN orADUCTS Price 35c s BEWARE of IMITATIONS DUNN'S AKLC POWDER Tl E COOrS BEST FRIEND SALT tN CANADA. Assilas Awe, aw PATENTS P' tri: 'usi 'en 'ed 1�e iise��af weR� 4 Dd t1K5(a tele 511 if.OA t, btu yttai. Mat h"rnte Inc ere ays � i�s �serfs► tLa ep �a?L't icon u.t M etateer tet= ass petd:a a � a mxmae ulna tier ou .latae a 1M !cientzfit Amnia)! L:r .afnahwa,e. t e�e�. Alan slmeld M wtthoet-it NestlT rt7n �sv� A.mswtTJe sc,:x rtba a PLANING ZELL EITUUSIBan I Ilii. & BuchanSol, I,aRcvarn'ttxaa BABB, DOOR and BLIND Damlars 1a all klmds d LUMBER. LATH, SHINGLES Ase kilted* seae.Ml et neer dessentles School Furniture a Specialty. NEW ARRIVAL -ar- BMOC= GOODS LATEST STYLES. lemma -s b Neau 0 mama 1ks H. DUNLOP, h. sr... The Signa game men calls etteaJub Priatisp fa.alitiss, wk •► w te to passed outside the cities for time promo and proper 010011144.11% of all claaass ei printing. A perused id Ibis anao.r„d, heat may suggest resiethi.g you nay be is need uf, and is suuh ease we sub- eit lour {patronage, feeling ad�t that our a&g rte to please will west with the eppiuval til our Latrans dote Aft Ui This useful viae is kept in tate fog range of 1114E4es rune as Lepel heads. H hill) l.sttttr k11tt.\C\s In this line we have a very large stock of tine writir g papers suit able for every cure of husuwrs represented in this locality, ixas prising laid and wove, linea; quadrille and other papers, miss or unruled, as may be required. ¢m0. \te i\s are not so generally used, they an important place in commercial correspondence. Bee what we've got sudor the above heads. 13.\. \los i If the " pay-as-you-go " plan was the order of the day the demand for account paper would not be so great ; but them are some men who get so many dunnere that they wonder if the stock will ever ruts out. We don't intend it to, and at present our stock is cots plate in this line with four seats, Good paper and neat ruling. .%taXemtt,hts Both single and double dollars and cents oolumns. They epee cheaper than bill heads, and ane the proper thing to send after a delinquent once a month. They are sure to fetch him 'round— sometime. Lowe\eves Now, it would be hard to get along without en and to keep up with the demantl for them we keep a large stock on bead. We have now about a hundred thousand in stock, and the price. will range from 75c. to $2.00 per M. We handle esus mercisi and legal sizes exc1u.iveh. l�om�ncre�a\ Z'rtnmn i Inas already been partially anus erated in some of the heads above, There is, however, a vast ameuti of work under this head that le enumerate would more than tale up the entire space occupied by this adv't, but we do it all at Tem SIGNAL T VwAtiXtotns to an "At Home" or a wedding require considerable taste in melee tion sometimes, but we make it an easy matter by keeping in stock the very latest and beet eampies to be had. Call and etre, SOU. litk\\s belong to the poster dipielogit aim, and we nuke a 'pais* et them—promptness. being our aim in this respect. A notice of sale will appear in Tem Sweet free of charge when bills for same see got here. Z'rOQraims of entertainments and meetings promptly turned out, from the plain but neat to the most elegant with oord and pencil attached. Cert it awe, T •ekets This head oovers a large range d work, from a bread or milk ticket to a neat calhng urd, from an or- dinary admission ticket to a tasty business card or a hands espy printed membership ticket. osttrs Our facilities for turning out Wit claim of work are evidenced by the fact that the great balk of it kt done by ns. This line also in- cludes nscludes DotLQers which our three fast-nuYeiii)1$ n pra +s are able to tuts Al 1B B surprisingly short time. CureAskars We aim to excel in all the iiAr cot kinds of work we tern tylik but imperially in this, and IABP in stock plain and fancy Mere suitable for ail requirements. #\\ ' &t of `1iT or t in the typographical printing lid eon be done in this eetabgebient in an expeditions and artistic inner and Our 4 rites vr;.\\ het Soo tl>'txy rtasoenotb\te. We extend our thanks for pad lay. era and @elicit a mettlesome of dee Icon. T \1—