HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1893-9-21, Page 3THR SIGNAL: GODER1C11. ONT. THURSDAY. SEPTHMRER 21.1833.
3
0•1•Eirrt
PURE
POWDERED
Tics_h_i�gh Mad fie Oweeees.
h epee =premed that her rsilli.mJres
sere asked to state me behalf ot ps i
moo oho were only begtns�iag lite, are
tadttie• were moat likely to insane masseur.
Here area few war bite picked net of the
roOies
Take the tint haslet work offered and do
a with all your might.
A man, or boy, who works the very best
. knows bow is always wanted.
Rork with honesty of pawpaw, remember.
ag always that whatever ought to be done
on be done.
}'at plain, nutritious food which will
kr ,14 health ; ami live ea lour than you
mat.•, which will brag wealth.
Choose some useful calling that bar-
. most with your tests ; you will
then be likely to give your whole to teae
sad attention to your business, l
pleasure in it.
To canny mecum any calling, per -
anent modest effort ie necessary.
As iihappy Saar
liark'nsfound Snooper *tending .t the
d or of • large dry good store the other
day with • deep scowl ou bas face.
• What's the matter, Snooper T
' Coaf000d this rale
' It weal. hurt you. Rae fir a ear.'
' It won't hurt me, but ney wife is inside
the store.'
That's all right. Alise's dry there. She
esu wait robot the Mill is over.'
• That's jest the trouble. She west in
for a moment to get a piper of p'y weenie
ether inexpensive psrobaan. Now it's
gang t., Lala for a■ boo- or two. and she'll
pay theca lI its over.'
• Well. what of it
• whet of it! It's easy to ass you're not
• married man. Why, nay dear air, she'll
overhaul the ..sere stock ' t the store, and
goodness ealy knows what she won't boy.
greet Soott, nese, this rainstorm will cost
me 7,50 at the very baso i'
Aad Harkins wort .a. leav''g Snooper
writh''g ha heads.—Harper's bazar.'
•a. Low et £.ea..y.
The young Jean wanted to marry the girl,
but he seam • reckless chap, 'mediae kis
eatery up dose..ed the girl's father didn't
want to take match a risk.
About bow much do you save each
Tru t" he asked the youth who had •p•
poached him on the subject.
"1 should say about 14 • year," be laugh•
.d, to be was the kind of. young man who
thine. it is a wife's duty to teach a yousg
wan how to save.
Cm -nm -K. calculated the old men.
"Four dollars • year—foss donss+ • year.
Well, you eau have the girl. he went on
briskly sad is business tease, "but you
have pot to wait for her read you have
Noel :100.000. That's the •.osot I deter-
m:ned her huahend shall her.. Of course
it will take you 25,000 years and a good
deal may happen in that time, but your
k".1 of ecosessy, my boy. is bound to get
there by and by •. Good morning."
WALKS AND DRIVEWAYS.
W eer Thee Mae De Kesel lag or+w Ware •
email Ousiner .t Thee sail Leber.
On the avenge farm. where work moo
melted with the growing crops, the har-
vesting,
as-vesting, care of stook, etc., is ever press-
ing, tbe walks and drives are liable to
be neglected. Indeed it is well, under
many conditions, to have as few walks
and driveways as is consistent with con-
venience
oo-venience or neoeasity. Some walks,
however, are unavoidable, such as the
direct tines between road and house, be-
tween haus and barn, or between any
of the farm buildings. Them are trav-
eled over to such an extent that paths
would soon be worn into the best lawn,
to the dir*guremeut of the whole place.
Formal walks are absolutely needed to
counec% those points. How to construct
theta is the question. In this connec-
tion the following remarks by T. Grei-
ner in The Country Gentleman nay be
of asaibtance. He says:
Sifted coal ashes or coal dust, fine
gravel or slate, sand, etc., all can be used
to advantage for walk making. but it
takes a great quantity of materiel to
make a good walk. First of all lay out
the walk in a graceful curve from road
to house, with a few shrub or trees giv-
ing an excuse or apparent reason for the the
curve. The sod, If on a lawn already
established, is to be o.ntoved and the de-
pression filled out with the material on
band. Fine seal and sifted coal ashes
or coal dont make a walk quite comfort-
able to walk upon, but coarser materials,
especially coarse gravel, afford less pleas-
ure. A plank walk will be preferable.
A.Neel A.peer.s Girls,
The girl of sixteen who will neither sew
nor do housework has w business to be
decked oat la fiomry and rambling about in
se auk of fon sad frolic melees her paresis
ere rich, and is that event she needs this
wstcbtul diaertioe of • food 'wither none
the laza. Then is no objection to tun, but
it should M well chosen .sed well timed.
No we.ss es- girl who will not work has a
ngbt to trMre • poor moo's toil I1 she does
*lark, if she makes the clothes she wears,
and sweets in the household duties, the
chasms are she will have .neigh self.i i-
spect to behave when playtime .sines ; lost
if she should still be • �tt s "wild" the
honest tell she has dose will cosier opus
of right to have bee owe
thesR* it may be. Th.
'spins to promiasmw in
fir ether, sad her nt•noer+
sod cession WI fn grea sr or les degree 4.-
triped te attest* the following at ben. she
should reseteber that followers .re sot •1•
ways asthma end that the most sewers ad-
miration • .M Mer tier ter • woman in •
dr•wiag-remse is why Wash epos bar aid
aye a his •s e emsssiewswese. "Mie is •
perfect lady."
her some
way, IU -
wild girl
some social
TNg SU 110TH.
Sew a Winona Aptoeaa l renes 8th. !►
,.seed Combs.
In We. Hsrei.o.'s baa nodes submitted
to The Paddle Dareser. she sayer
Formerly whoa Island .*used wombs
he blow la riathe .arson
away wouldbantweanns~� W
exposing from time te time to
the fumes of burning sulphur. If the
combs have boa* exposed to sere weath-
er it will have destroyed the moth ban
stages, and If the vacate ware pmt in
secure place when the moth could not
oviposit in them, sone will develop.
But, if the combs belonged to ooioutss•
we cannot be sere that the moths were
destroyed by the giro weather. for soca
of them may bare been protected by the
warmth of the bees.
It wee late this season when I cleaned
out the biro when hese had died and
stored them i. the °War. Moths had
p1J.�tE WALKS.
At Woodbanks we have arranged anged our
walk as shown in illustration. It is a
simple, cheap and generally satisfactory
way, and when kept in good order adds
much to the attractiveness of the place.
The soil is a clayey tusm. What we need
is a clean, dry walk. Band, gravel and
similar materials were not easily acces-
sible. The planks are two-inch, 10 inches
wide, and as cheap as they could be bad.
Knots and other imperfections do little
harms-, as they can be filled out with soil
They are cut to fit, and imbedded to-
gether in the soli u shown by the trues
section at the lower left hand wormer of
illustration. They require no cross piece
to rest upon, no nailing, and the walk b
not only good to walk on. but also good
to look on. The soil on both sides of
coarse must be kept free from weeds,
This 1s easily done by an occasional
scraping over with the hoe or spade;
possibly the object may be accomplished
by a heavy dressing of cheap, coarse
alt. It takes bot little time and labot
to keep this walk in good order.
Neither is mach fuss made over the
drive on the lawn. In spring we plow
it quite shallow, throwing the furrows
toward the center. Then we go over it
with the common harrow, and finish on
with the Meeker barrow. This leaves
the drive in excellent shape, well round-
ed and smooth. Weeds of course soon
spring up again, but we promptly de-
stroy them with our homemade
eweed
eed
cutter, consisting of $ sharp
steel Last ted to an old fashioned thiU culti-
vator frame. This cuts an inch or two
below grpmnd, loosening the surface and
killing all weed growth.
1:111
Regulates the $iterneeh.
Liver end Dowels. unlocks
the Sac retlons,Pu riflesths
Blood and removes ell Im-
purities from n Pimple to
theWier at'Scrofulous Sores.
-3 CURE. -
DYSPEPSIA. BI'.IOUSNESS
ONSTIPATIOPL N :ADACHE
SALT RHEUM. SCROFULA.
HEART N. SOUR
DI Z NESS. DROPSY
RHEUMATI SM. SKIN CMS
Lit MvIES= OUZO.
hatched, and I removed those that I saw.
After an interval of a week I looked the
comb over carefully and removed those
that had developed with the point of a
long. slim darning needle. Every cocoon
was removed. At intervals of a week
this was done three times, and the third
time not a moth in any shape was dis-
covered, as the window to the cellar was
covered with wire gauze and there is no
outside door, and not a moth was allowed
to develop in there. There will be no
further trouble with moths this season.
A Chep Cistern.
A Pennsylvania farmer tells The Na-
tional Stockman bow he built a cheep
cistern. He struck a circle seven feet in
diameter and dog down three feet, then
another circle ono foot leu in diameter
and dug three feet farther and broke
down the aides to a dope; than with a
Eve foot circle he went another three -
feet and cut away again, making the cis-
tern in the form of a jug. The sides and
bottom were plastered with cement di-
rectly upon the clay, and the top wsa
arched over with brick packer up with
sand and Dement, and a file was pat in
to serve as an overflow pipe about 11
inches from the top. ' As the average
diameter would be a little more than six
feet, it would require nearly seven bar
rels of water for each foot in depth be-
low the overflow pipe, over 60 barrels
when tbe water was 71 feet deep.
His figures for the cost were: Two
days' labor, *2; one-half day of mason,
$1; 9 barrels of cement. $2.50; 400 brick,
$240; total, $'7.90. It has been in use 1C
years and is as good es ever excepting
near the top, where he allowed it te
freeze. and the cement cracked and pull-
ed off, which could have been prevented
by a covering with straw or other ma-
terial.
new the awed N.
4+m. people, said H. O. Taylor, of the Fall
River lima, are afraid of w•aiokau . sad
hesitate to travel by water lose• les of this
fear. A triamd of .1*. mem on board the
steamsr Plymouth the ether ev sing is •
happy frames of egad. H. had bees
troubled for • beg time. whim off Pehl
,11th, •• his way to N by • helisg
of nausea ; bet new be woe a fiat he
had fond • wary to navoid it
beard,
e
as soon v he a (elsg 1
osame ami
there instil he arrived at Yrs deellsatim.
tm this oesa.ios he bods res a legated /,d
sight climbed into his berth sed h a law
anisates was last .sleep. Ms dept ells a
t ontil 7 eels*ant ....0 • H. root
d• loght«I, soii.id fist km W a$ lest feed
5 remedy he the draeier'Mai had gassed
him .n musk zaiewr. 1Re west dews into
the diadem mom end ate a hearty msal.
though . market twist es jaw pas -
Imagers were stirring 011.1110 N durk with
• satiid leek es w false and 'a Lathpisk
is hie mast►, he test Mr. Turban
"%y. .14 tees." be ea hine&l. “that
•i'seise reuket el aim worked like • rearm.
Never had • teseh of it all sight"
Taylor smilsel.
"What are yes ghosts' ter!" asked his
basad is "T"'
1iesiese. oarnversi Tgrrs, the Ply-
mnnth bMs bees pad te her desk all .igk<
lth• hes ate moved a kat. Timm wee mow
thin matter with har end
a.eenl.r the paarsalse, Ne
d that a teas wash �s e l red et 6
S deck, en1 as yea ware .o10bshai is the
trawlers. •
•rte. F.r.tgw Deaa..9 see' Bay.
Them remains no longer any doubt
about the marked shortage of hay and
forage crops in Europe and especially
in Franca The present indications are,
therefore, that a large foreign demand
at remunerative prices will prevail.
notably for baled hay. Already several
Baltimore and New York shippers have
chartered ocean vessels to carry baled
hay to Havre and Bremen and other
French and German parts.
D..tr.ytng Wed.
Every swoon the question 1. agitated
concerning the destruction of uoilone
weeds. Poison ivy, dock, Camila this -
Us and dandelomeba�l� subjects del
vknow aried inquirplant ies rs
ancan live le and�Meeh n tells the readers of
Ids Monthly if a plant is cat on to the
sec* after making leaves is
t is generally destroyed at once.
net sometimes another o, seamed growth
win appear of a More or lees weak char-
acter,
harBeier, mid if this is **tn cut the plant
w l slM'eV die. Nothing 1s sash, then
tom these wee&
The wetter of this
pia Y kept 1* *dude
tlatapupi has known a whole half acre
.1 a�..d$ thistle entirely eradicated by
a boy out them beneath the
'fug 'the lseca*ddtime, bat
Very
these wet, agsia cut as soots as per-
e �� plant result
did not cost $1KY to 0
10do{1.
swore Norti ma AWN&
t+htrn atratr. — I was bedbd with
&breds ditrvtww ler war three yeses ani
method fir batch.freet an the tae -eine I
OWL l warp loann t.b
hergeentee the
r ele.tirlIel: 1 d 1 wN111 ' .. I heSs me
The P.wltry..ase'. Chart
The following chart showing the NO
tienai parts of a fowl was originally Ire'
minted by The Southern Fancier:
Wheat Atte ■.ed Crede
111s not becoane wheat 1a so proitabds,
bet rather became it is dsiesMe to have
short rotations. that tics pwactioa is grow-
htt of t owe wheat the same tall that
cors Ned poletoes are got os the land.
The Geld is taus ha"pt with jOOe sort
ot•a� ,forty
following: The wheat b M. toll cams up
feria.gwfw b "oiled bond mads oo*siderably wider Man the
away in Sot would dh
8113
I* way. tb°. the � dve and *Red 1b two oleate 5 tubas
immt WOW will came the spring wide. This wins whresting re file hive
. $ W boon Pk"' °air dmilloiai will he S babas .hove
and whets the soli he fun of the tertillgIdo try •
—TaS—
Row! Ehxtrick
1to2UTI AL
PAPS*
MILLS
CO.
i
COTS111111$1114011.101 lt.ws
a PAM" UNIT no trrt.wg
rate Mime, wrsp-eae
54Awa*gt' .t th5Rrlhe01111
4
PETERMAN'S ROACH F000
NOT A Affirm. POISON
FATAL TO COCKIIOAOMffg Ala WATES Suri'
w.o...uwto.errrev aae� mre� pn w
LS_
eo1slim. leo /rove& •
Erna, NERRON & ca,'
toe aa., en a in K Peal 10.55, OO1r1'tsa1L
Liols e BBQ
t..•e.f...ea atts••r►.-
v . arrLI. WINE INE
SPIRIT T
s-* cuasr
t w
r— MERCHANT.
,ra� �es.. «ft= w�thooa.**."i
' C..nr.e—atei reies.rfeller° ae. tiff.*
/1e it. Paul street. Montreal.
Montreal a�,E. TRADE 04,
a
Wall (ra.‘ccArrvouNuRIPa fir
P 1 g
Factory 11 � co
..L-r,O AL PASTS Ui a VOWT.
1. Crop. 1 Wattle. L !teak. 3 Comb.1
Fans. a Dsst ser. 7. l arteme 5. Heckle. >4
Seek. 11. glekIs 1!. Tail 1* Will s verla
16 is&Ale. 15 Lewder ria_ k or les
Wa▪ r. St. Get 9rs.tb•ae. 1 taw.
preset
or bar. to erg bow or ...solder.
44HTaasv
MMMS THIS5 MINN
M. NIL M. flet, hen.
"keellailwaOwen lids a?*
iek_
ll )(eat' Ow— tiffs
rte a.e�.t.row
a1=all mow
MVCiLAME & UQUie GLUE MANFR.
B. AU LD Pries* Elsie. 759 Craig
OE'AICi!
MINER MAUL
w.SNOW, FaLlus et'bt. 1513 gore thane
SAFE �IANUFAC UEs
ft. a II►a&LG,faire'uae• amain. is Cult
THE EQUAL OF
:4
e
4
vi
e�
5 {
1R
1�e
NHiW
Fall Goods.
We have in Stock now a fine assortment of New
Dress Goods in the new Fabrics, viz. :
Hopsackings, Octagon Cloth, Whip
Cords, Serges, Tweeds and other
new lines for 7all.
We have the 8n 'st line of
Velveteens and Velvettas
ever shown in Goderich.
OUR MANTLE STOCK
Will be complete in a few days and surpass
any former year.
We will cut and fit all Mantle Cloths
bought from as free of charge.
TWEEDS, 35, 45 AND 50 CENTS.' GREAT VALUE.
I Bl� STOOK OF NEW CARPETS FOR FILL.
Highest market price paid for Butter and Eggs.
5% discount for Cash on close cut regular prices.
Bar first-class Dress and Mantle Maker up -stairs.
COLBORNE BROS.,
GODERIOH.
Great Carpet Warehouse)
of the County. J
}
t'
lIBY'S
PARISIAN NAiR RENEWER
Gnat he 1se4, for vestortnr grey lair to Its
metasal ..tor and beauty; i1 keeps the head
am awl roof, sad fres from daadreit, a
.to the hair from falling eat, promotes the
growth, .ad gives the hate Hes glee.. beauty
sd s r+ogtk of youth ; whoa wed nedlreeesd
tt WY never kerma to All. Motel for ball the
prem of my other reverse ra, used le meek
batter thea may knave hair taut.
geld everywhere at See. a Inge.
The e.st1.rssr as Stere.
The .oatberasr sa home is prow to
a.rl.t W ke•dgeor for the make of having
kb foot well shod, aid be will go about +•t
public pleas weariag • battered and waled
.blab hes but .orepalossly seat as to his
footwear. The peculiarity perbeps arises
from family pride, • Weenie. ssethsra sew.
en• ured is the slaps .ad .tee of the feet. It
b worthy of mot., bowsver, that the eleaah-
d hat i..hes • moth amicio of the Meat
e .odd `
Sad bat for win.
5.5 owl
dindestructible Pea•.•
ter ild •mol*y ldy
abase for se..er are the proper headgear
for • weathers ..wiry gestisn&
slr.mefs we.we sew nhweaetrm•
MAW That Are Teti.
warm rd that thousands
Mohan-
a to tbe
Unita •
eto Shim L�Maare aegotta for
Ilmtgo Iamb of oil iyn O.augka tad lhor
lin, sttd will form colonise he several
wares states.
)lheisesor A. J. 000k•of the Mtohiwa
Aglisdtettal collage says: To shade the
nothdag is so good es a shadr
d The Asterism N4
that � �ion�ts after � sups, evertor says that Ws
wheat le te ba so et weMsshl
in *eeesssry. ON Os sore very ha*ggy heas+etiltsg r b lsrt ttt�/' was
los stabs oil* Its h--14 wake iha pub h fie 1:si ve1y 5A'ee*•
whit s w4 351 t Tb of tsar 1 Dr. JAW Mor smokiest anew bell
dwell large d fY at*d berar & on �s st , of sappe, b fee
Thq sir slot sib to tela as swims ore ono°+gspUat aro "les
to f I" liar ord
rae�rli►�irllrfU t1r Wert .*d w"' elm ..
•
AN USE ANT WRITING IU.
i
_� s t9 li
A �
Is!
.-4:
Real
BealI I 11 a I
THE KINC OF SIAM
Has something like 300 wives. He mast have a hard
time keeping them in a good humor. But men
with the orthodox single wife will find that an
easy way to please her is to make her a present of
a lull set of
EBBY'S LNIIIIBkTEII FIBIIE IARE
PAILS. TUBS, WASH BASINS, ETC., FOR HER KITCHEN.
It is the lightest, tightest, swestsst5 cleanest and most dur-
able ware over mad*, and will last five or six
times is long as wooden or tin wars.
BOLD leVIIRTWHMBIC.
THE E. B. EDDY CO.,
HULL, CANADA.