HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1893-9-14, Page 7THE SIGNAL : GODER1CH, K)IQT., THURSDAY, REMEMBER 14, 1893.
A MAGNIFICENT DISPLAY
OF
New FALL GooDs.
HEADY MADE JACKETS, German Manufacture.
The largest range ever shown in liteler•ich. Nita 32, 31, 36
ei 1 1, from $1.00 to La_c0.0A
DRESS GOODS AND BLACK HYNRIETTAS.
We need hardly say that this department is one of oui special-
ties, inc•.iding the new liop..Aek ('loth, Fancy Pinkie an,l Fancy
Twills in Ombra Eft'ecta.
•
KI') CLOVES
in Black, Colored .cul t'r•esn Castor. We sell the " Adrienne " in
Itl:tc•k •add Colors at SI.lcO. Every pair guerantex.l and equal to
any 91.25 (hove iu town.
STAPLE DEPARTIIEMT Always Complete.
INSPECTION OF OUR NEW GOODS INVITED.
JOHN T. ACHESON.
NON OPS in 1118PBCTION
AT
MUNRO'S
+ + + + + + +
Navy, Black and Colored Storm SE_2es,
Whip Cords a- Two -Toned '. eed Effects.
A . ill line of ''rack Stuff3 in Cashmeres, Baratheas, Whip
Cords, Scliel Cloth, All -Wool and Silk WP -p Hen-
tiettas, Amason Serge and Bengalines,
T')gether with Sateens, French D'Laines, Tousle Cloth,
Prints, Chambrays and Printed Piques.
[XTIt t VALL K iY
White and Grey Cottons, Meetings, Pillow Cottons, kc.
Napery Department well aatortedL
,.• lines are ooea:ag a as test is gosMble.
PER OHNT. DISCOUNppT FOR CASH.
mdaii_ 21.000WItt09
2 4;4 Drawn and Rabe,dssber.
The MeeNs+e Hiplesa Is tCwse, thicken enough et my house to pay for his
salve. I Rand the rags, sad i don't sup
pose be chewies for staking her worse."
The applause was great. The doctor last
and Peter wen
An American dotter named Heyman, had
se.• i Peter 1.wneu ter Me bill, keg over
d r, for attending to the wife a the ]mast,
.olei 11. SL.%e s was os tits llsanett side,
and Robert TeeatM, the in the United
states was for tie doctor. The doctor
proved the number of his visits, their value
awarding to local custom, and hu authority
to do medical practice.
\tr. Stephens told his client that the
d'xtor feed made oat oil case, and there was
nothing wherewith to rebut or offset the
claim, and the Daly thine left to do was to
pav it.
• J o, ' said Peter. " I hired you to speak
in my case, awl sew "peak."
lir. Seepbes told hien that there was
coeliac te sq ; he had looked on to
see that R WY made oat, and it was.
Peter wee ebefilaate. sad at last Mr.
":epheas told Peter to stake • speech
h.metlt, If be thought ossa could be
nada
1 will," said Peter, "if Robby T000b'i
won't be too hard on ate."
•tew•tor Toombs promised he weld not,
aid Peter begun :—
t.entloeren of the jury, you end Iia
plan farmers, and if we don's stick together
these 'ere doctors and lawyer* will tel ad -
tentage of as 1 ain't no Meyer or doctor
end I eio't no obigoties. to thew ie their
Deeper place, but they snit fermeraa, gentle-
men of the jury. New. this wen Royston
a as no doctor, end 1 west fcr hint te cone
nod doctor my wile's eon kg, and he case
and put souse salve en tt, sad sews met
but never did it • bit of geed. Gesthtiilis
of the jury, 1 don't bidieve he i• a darter M
all. There en &semi es Is Melees. wire
enough, but title man 't earn hie
and d vee etlad fee dela, se Mn.
lumen did for • aeon hey, be just ki Ei
patient sad waste yes la pay for it."
" 1 dea't," thundered the looter.
"'bid you cure kiln!" sated Peter with
the slow sonata of a judge with his black
cat c.a.
The doctor was silent and Peter proceed-
ed
THE WORKINOMAN'il FOE.
'trend Dela& lia iia 0sadgeeteent and ias
NPMhIe leateang-
The injury inflicted on workingman
by t'beap tabor, Lots and *subdues, Mo.,
falls fcr short of the injury they inflict
.•u tui-ui.elves by intemperance. At the
ing atit of every trine, around everyman-
east:toty, at the comernt of the street',
we:over toiling humanity spends the
wary bons of laLor, there is found the
asedpement saloon. the workingman's
WIMP* lea. Mr. Arthur, chief of the
fleOdorbood of Locomotive Engineers,
once tttald, "You can go into any of these
groggr.ries and me the workingmen sit-
ting around and spending over oothalt
their earnings for otrung drunk."
•'In Chicago," says Sam Small, '1 saw
a marching body of workingmen, 18,000
strong, carrying • banner inscribe.],
'Our Children Cry For Breach' and they
marched straight to a picnic ground and
drank 1,400 kegs of beer."
The wage earners of these United
States annually pay $600,000,000 for
liquor—a sum so large that if it were
saved for s few years and prewrly in-
vaded a fund would be created that
ander wise management would render
destitution among the poor of this coun-
try forever impassible. Thrift and
drink are incompatible, and without
thrift and sobriety the highest wages in
the world will bring ueither competence
nor comfort.
Then, too, the nae of intoxicants less-
ens
erens the skill of the workingman. A
large manufacturing firm in Cincinnati
recently made the following statement:
"A drinking utau will turu out from 20
to 30 per cent lees work than a non-
drinker, and in addition his work is apt
to be defective and require overhauling."
it is a fact that a man cannot work
hard and drink hard at the same time.
Strung drink, by impairing the skill and
productive power of the worker, lessens
the profits of bnsineei out of which
wages mast come. Hence drinking
workmen keep down wages, inasmuch
as employers must base the average rate
of wages on the amount of work turned
out by the least prodnctive of their em-
ployeott. Strong drink consumes the
workman's wages., destroys his skill and
degrades him to the level of the brats.
Deliberately and truly we write down
the saloon to be the wage earner's great-
est and worst foe.—Christian Advocate.
masse and sham.
The trouble between Frame and Siam had
boos brewing for months, and the active
hostilities date back to the early part of the
present year.
They grew oat of the disputes oxer the
border aloe 'between Aran and Anam, over
which latter county France has a protector-
ate. At ose of the border town" in the
apriag • torte of Anamits and Frenchmen
were attacked and routed by the Siamese
troops. For this France demanded repar-
atioe, an well u a settlement of the boun-
dary difficulties, and sent a gunboat to
Rtngkok.
The thatheee aoyernment immediately be
Han to act on the defensive and sank.. num-
ber of scows on the Masan' river to prevent
the near approach of French gunboats to
Bangkok, the capital of Siam.
Siam has • popabatioe of about 7,000,000,
which in lower Siam is clustered about the
riven and eanabs. The Portuguese were
the first I?aropeane to establish an later -
course with Siam. This was in 1511. En-
glish traders were is Siam early in the
seventeeeth century. The treaty of 1856
with E,Rland practically gave European
free admittance to sum, and Lite Eaglisb
owing to the nearness of their Iodise de-
p.adencies, have had • strong diplomatic
iafos_ce in the attain of the country. So
sum; hes this been that many believe that
a war with Frames will ultimately result in
is English protectorate.
•'.\s i was saying, gentlemen of the jury,
we lantan, when we sell ear °ones, has
got to Rive the value for the mosey we mak,
and doctors sural sone too geed to be pet
up to linguae ids And 1 deal believe
the. 'e•O Saar Uptown is is doctor any
hew.'
' • ]look at sy dip11as U you think 1 am
doctor."
„His diplomat" exclaimed the stator in
creat contempt "His diploma! Gentle-
men, that is a hie word for plated Illiesp-
ik . and it deal make so looter of the
eat sheep as feat worn it; ser does it of
the man who sow terries it; • god ..we -
paper hes mere is it, sod I plat tut to ye
that he.11et so dieter at sIL"
h. fleeter was ki a buy, and ettrea•tod
oat, "Ask my patients bit sum sot a doe
tor
seemed to he the straw obit brake
the ,sues hack : ter Petsr1'a(c�d ywjtt a
leek and tone el mootteesbk sudors
"That is a bard saying, ga•tlemea of oke
n'yand nes ling n'gnine rat to d!e sad to
hare the pnwese se 1 holt tell dseeed to be
e'ercia.4 since the Apostles. Am i to
iinMh toasty eln rcbyud and rap a Ike
total►, sad- meto w m �s et ha at
art frost Idris _oleet r'b ►Ikm. Yih me
""`•Y~' and AM Y yen a sat Wei
4sethnv was nestled mph, Urine t Be
wry, ask kis puny, end Rsalkaw et the
4611 me al dead ! Where ie Ms
ti wsm , i • (. dk the warms M
r''s`evard where be lies. Mr. P. s
1Piat•e. Soto, nes etttmeded h Ilk ...d
ear tout.+] ass.ppebeeed. Where M ftEt
!tiny M 0.4y, •s
Itnatuses4
Tesperaaee Edeeatlea Yew Childrw,
The following are some of the points
agreed upon by scholars as the standard
for the temperance textbooks to be in-
troduced in the public schools of New
York under the laws passed through the
efforts of Mrs. Mary L. Hunt. If this
new education is to give to the world s
coming generation cf intelligent total
abstainers. as we expect, its manuals of
instruction must conform to the follow-
ing specifications:
They mast teach with no uncertain
sound the proven findings of science, viz.
That alcohol is a dangerous and seduc-
tive poisom.
That beer, wine and cider contain this
same alcohol, thus making them danger-
ous drinks, to be avoided, and that they
are the pro,!cct of a fermentation that
changes a food to a poison.
That it to the nature of a little of any
liquor containing alcohol to create an
appetite for more, which is so apt to be-
e arae uncontrollable that the strongest
warning should be urged against taking
that little and thus forming the appetite.
They must teach also the effect of
these upon "filo human system"—that
is, upnu the who!e being—mental, moral
and phyai..al. The appalling effects of
drinking habits upon the citizenship of
the nation, the dc„gredation and crime
resulting, demand that instruction here
shonld give clear and emphatic utter -
:ince to the solemn warnings of science
on this subject. •
AI.L MIRACLES Ott NOT OI)CL'RR AT
HAMILTON.
The whole town of Olsen, Oct., kaaws
of • wry, ky the apptieatbes of !UNARMYS
LI NI Al ENT, le a partiallyparalysed arm,
that equals esythkg thatresseired at
Hamilton.
R. W. Hatarsor.
Ne Moue, For Strawberries.
Two men stopped ata frnit dealer's the
other day. Sold one, "What is the price
of strawbcrriee"
"Twenty centsa basket."
"Twenty cents a basket: Yon'U have
to sell them to rich folks. I can't afford
them. The old woman will have to do
without strawberries this time. Come
along, Jerry, let's go and take a drink!"
They started off for the barroom, and
if they spent any less than the price of
two boxes of berries before they went
home it was a wonder. A drinker and a
"good fellow" can afford to spend money
in treating men who don't care a rap
abort him when he "can't afford" to
spend half the same amount in charity err
church dues or in buying something foe
the wife and children who have the Erre
claim upon him and all that be owns.—
Sacred Heart Review.
war The awwtasn Wessell are rp.Igae
L the mum et as minuted disemesio•
between an :•RYdwowae and an Aseneen
apes wetse's prtviler•s in their different
wneteise, the Mem remarked. 'Well,
pus swat aft& one thing. Though Animi-
sm wwea am set allowed to vote, they ere
well taken NM .1." "They are, are they !'
telssrkd his atttlgmwiss. "Yes. Witt
Ye amts sea beet sp old women .Ter
three," be reepowded, triumphantly. "No,
she retorted, epit.f. laugh,"When
year woman h.esse too cid to be eared
oats is the street ears, they are kept
slrmight by haagis1 es M the straps"
....dt.dw talseovrey.
"Well," be mistimed es he i•apmeted the
.teetrio light et the betel, '•thio bests every.
thief! An' k seines pesky sigh being as
ineelt."
"What do yea sum•! ' asked aim wife.
"dem here. They've sewed the teas .p
doh glass seise filler tilebbet Mmw It eau
I he mated sok"
"Sy' T. er had boos attt� by
pbyeldent fen kaiak wemkswa, tellieet
Perk A amino at rawell &el a ea
YlPinkt '•.weed lush E, Of home fee
p•. 1M s*
There's Nothing
Like
SNL I�
SOAP
T DOES AWAY WITH
B OILINC
HARD RUBBINC
B ACKACHES
SORE HANDS
on't
LLT
AMOTNiw
was.' -
DAT
00 SY
WITHOUT
TRYING
Sunlight
REFUSE CHEAP IMITATIONS
- A Ilse. Male of Late.
There Is one sign of rain that has never
been known t fag. Spidery sometimes
make their webs in exposed situations, where
the falling rain may injure them, and when
the is the case, at every approach of bad
weather the spider whose web is thus ex pos-
ed will cut the rope, let the web fall, and then
carefully roll it up and stow it away in u
smalla compass aspossible, out ofthe reach of
falling drops. Whether the action is m-
stinetive or the result of a reasoning premien
is hard to my, but that the mile always
comes after th :spider has made ready for
it has been often enticed.
MWrt's Liniment le the MM.
-c i 'r '—
COAL AND W000
YARD.
Special atteatie• gives to
SAWED AND SPLIT WOOD.
Headquarters for all grades of
HARD, SOFT & BLACKSMITH COAL.
Coal welshed as either market or my @eaten
Oct my Prices Dt fore going eleeahere.
TEAM cosi.
Telephone Ceaserito..
Teach Chttdrsa self Control.
The liquor problem can im effectively
and perp:anent:y soh ud by only one
mess --t4At of education. Tia child
must early learn self control and self
rlestraint, that his app i'ti:e•a be held t:n-
der check and properly guided. If be be
properly taught, his manhood will be
edf coat:renal sad self restrained. Hs
may not be a total abstainer, lint he will
be temperate in all thinga.—Jewish Wes
same.
Tem.paraee. Not**
Throne+ thenrency orf the Missions to
Semmes society over 5.1100 seniors have
bats •rotted so total abstainers in Cork
kefbor about
TM statement that soddenly enforced
abstinence kills is not borne out by facts
TM death rate In prison is only S in every
1,100, a mnch lower rate than in towns.
Goat is largely contsetl by the introduce
don of stout as • borers" it is aim
sealed that hews M to 7A per cent of the
mime owns are hedieery.
At (]lune City, Vs., the "altia.to -
gumbo r' noir« "no lately elected
mayor ower the '• E/aw a Dian1" oarium
hues
d A.ehi_ gsoa a .nn1r 1 d Fa ib.
Mw • s ts4 the Awe niet III N
ie
501 Its
JOHN S. PLATT, Prop.
int ly.
LOO HERE!
Now is the
time to lay in
your Winter s
AL
STARTLING!
7
The enormous waste of fuel
which might be saved
IF PEOPLE WOULD THINK
when they are buying Stoves to go to dealers who har.dle
none but the best, and guarantee them perfect.
7h. Rest senate■ nerd Coal In tads
Market. ass. More and t1eMnat.. Mss
Rest r:rade of *oft I will 4 se
Lest akark.talta'a CMI .. 3 34
As 1 am armnping for $ oowple of cargoes of
HARD WOOD
LOOK OUT FOR PRICES.
rdeAU Coal weighed at the market.
W. LEE.
Terle.tose Cosuseellee. Il -ti
V
YOU
BACK-ACH E
,.ofD5
KIDNEY
PILLS
"taahasho the
mane the hitt- of t1. 5. ,,
.spa ler• 1. "Delay fa
b•abN. Deity. denptroers. N1g-
klIneg Miztre Id h
s ea toll nNrJa trembles testa!
•' pry send 1. ied Iloo4,
fed aeon/ Liter
Oe df ey Capri:/.t, end
dime/wed Nd- the most day -
gm.. •l ell.
lliyht as well!rights Dhows,
try N have a Diabetes and
healthy *Ito"
without .ewer "lits •ion s
:zees good dleatta.s menet
whew tis *slot where
hid.* a aro Dodd's Minty.rapMM,
Omen Mlle are .rid
bank sad EWE, Task.
SAUNDERS & CO.
have had the best Stoves for years.
SEE THE NEW STOVES
FOR THIS SEASON.
DOUBLE HEATERS
FOR COAL:
COOKING RANGES
FOR COAL:
THE KITCHEN WITCH,
THE DUCHESS OF OXFORD,
THE HAPPY THOUGHT.
A full stock of Coal and Wood Cook-
ing and Heating Stcves.
THE SOUVENIR,
THE ART COUNTESS
THE OXFORD.
Tll.EIR BANO-MADE RE -DIPPED TINHRE
is telling its own story in increased sales.
WEST STREET_
S_ A_�7CTALKE R,
Cam's? a Mar_ufact-=ex,
Having purchased the busitess of
McCREATH & WALKER
I have now arranged, not *sly to continua the Carriage Trade, tut hate decided to
do all chimes of work in
HORSE-SHOEIAC AAD aHERAL BLAC11311ITHIAUt
NONE BUT THE BEST OF WORKMEN EMPLOYED IN EVERY DEPARTMENT.
324T0. A.. WALKER,
2396-1y.
"The Signal " will be sent to any
address in Canada or the United
States from now until Jan. Ist, :894,
for 25c., or, to Ist Jan., 1895, for $1.00.
PATTS!
SUMMER
c000s
The only duty there will
be in connection with my
goods will be my duty to
sell and the duty of the pub-
lic to buy in the most satis-
factory manner and beat
market.
Ready-made Clothing a
specialty, and everything in
the latest and best Dry
Goods and Groceries can be
had at hard -times prices at
tltyt�. 1, sat ,1/tt fiJ teMMMiTS
OMr..w., ....• • 11 rte. iw.. 1• .m„ 1' fle• a
,•. ,++'.rise.. Vial I.I.11hj •tM
,t,. Maws ; MYe IM 1'. ta. tMsea MIL
.h+. .ail mJAI Patent. 'a lest limn
141.• 1'. _ �llN
We eL
dim IS 1111
w.
The Tollio Cash S1.orc
P. ODEA. Manager.
Patron.se
TMs
True
WHY
Does GEO. 1 \ RRY, t! e
Goderich furniture dealer ural
undertaker, kr.-1. the bent stock
of furniture sail undertaker's
supplies? And how is it
that be carr, sell so cheap t
BECAUSE
.Competition.
elm WS
�iwnrtrs worm nim sad per
s wrtastaiee sod t.
tl•rtrillirissiet every gimes wits
arts
HIe Elide that it pays in the
long run. His motto is :
" Small Profits and Quick Re.
turns." He also makes a
specialty of picture framing.
Give him • call before purchase
ing elsewhere. Embalming
Fluid always on hand. 2357-y
GODERiOH
Steam Boiler Works.
txsTARLIBHSD Urs.]
A. S. C H RY STA L
Swe i asor to CIO -porta & Meek)
Manufacturers of all kinds of Station-
ary *trine, Upright it Tubular
Salt Pane, Smoke Stacks, Sheet l'rcn
Works, etc., etc.
v.AiNO Mame n Upright sad 1 Chit
�'�'gasinsia
pseMq Alldose am ta • tad elveattlees
lt ae . O. 'fine On
le
Works--oppsalto ca. T. R. watts. aedestet.
MoL1E0D'B
SYSTEM RENOVATOR
alts °TIMM ?ashen na:]rrmra.
Sfecific and Antidote for
Impure, weak and impoverished Ileal, dm
svi�mreplse�me, palpitation of the
temer tsene.�tbs susses tit' , pi
ria sod elmons, St. Titan'
esued �
LIRORITORT. lOODhR, ONTARIO
J. M. MoLZOD,
PropsYMtr sad llostiosturow
be WI
tin
�a.