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The Signal, 1893-11-9, Page 22 i :1 1 �s THE SIGNAL: DERIC$ ONT., TIIURSDAY, NOVEMBER R, 1893. "She Looketh Well b the ways of her household." Yes, Solomon is right; that's what $e good housekeeper everywhere does, but particularly in Can- ada. . But her ways are not always std ways. In fact she has dis- carded many unsatisfactory old ways. For instance, to -day she is using tLIL 1 „ the New Shortening, instead of lard. And this is in itself a rea- son why " she looketh well " in another sense, for she eats no lard to cause poor digestiou and a worse completion. Col' rouses is much better than lard for all cooking per- , as every one who has tried it declares. Have you tried it? For sale everywhere. Made only by N. K. FAIRBANB & CO., Wellington .ad Ana ase., MONTREAL ter, e.eer. "II 'a awful queer to me," said Jimmie, as be thought it over. "1 can't era why chickens. what haven t .ay hair, have comb, while dop and horses that have hair don't.' • (ire for tough.. There i, no remedy that make. a. large • pererntae of perfect cures as 1)r. W tod'e \orw-av Pine Syrup. tone.r11{- every ca wof coughs, colds, asthma, broichiti., hoarse- ness, croup, etc., ata curative effects are prompt and seting. Slued Metaphor. " Brethren," said an easiest exhorter to • body of religious workers, "brethren. r :member that there it not king which will kiadle the fins of religios in the human hart like water frees the fountains of life." Bargee% Steed afters Burdock Blond Bittore is a medicine made from r oto, bark .std herbs, and is the boot known remedy for dyspepsia,cnastipatior and billioasnes., and wt 1 cure ail blood ds- e..es from • common pimple to the wont scrofulous sore. rooms restsb_e. " Beautiful r' answered the fair Pittsburg girl, WWI asked whether the World's Fair was attractive. " lfaeatitoi ! P.U. I should jest say it is. The branding,' look as though they were nerved eat a solid ice .tannate C. Cared. t;crT.aras,—I had a vary bad cough whioh I ow{d not get nd of, bat by using Hagyard • Pectoral Balsam I was cured to two or tbreedsye It is the bast aid.urest cough medicine I know of. 2 Joteru l;Aimee, Goderiah, Oat. Teatrsms... Old lawyer—Really, Miss Dorsky, you 'mite surprise me ; so yea retests to allow us to increase your salary Miss Dewsley (the ype- writer)—Yea, Ur: you see, if —if Harry should offer, I—I'm afraid 1 should hesitate so Io.R betimes the two that I might refine him. • parts, era er.s.ry. For more this twady./ve years has Hag yard's Yellow oil keen sold by dtvjglte, and it has sever to give VW - two a. • heasshetd remedy) for pais, s. . nese and soreness el the lash, tor external aad internal em is dl palatal ooanplaiate. 2 A Tell -hie as.,. Father—Well, has your young mac gees! Daughter.. --Yd.: and I hare Dome to kiss you good night, pap.. Fatter (rifer reoeiviag the kms)—N.11ey, tell year yousg was to use some other kind of brilltanti.s as his moustache. 1 hate the smell of laser Ilene slow ryerep.MM r Qwsed i suffered from dyspepsia, and was weak arid numerable with what the doctor said was serves debility. Seeing Burdock Blood Blood Bitters advertised 7 tried it, and after taking three bottles feel perfectly restored to health. 2 Mrs. J. H. SNIDER. Klsiabarg Ont. awes a sktrgata. But. my dear," prot.d.d lir. Vesag. whoa lir.. Vona/ showed him her pareh..- es for the day, " why here yea bought four Masa olothsspian wham all the washiag is dans at the Iassadry r Ob, Harry, hew a.a vest be so horrid � > p matfett,. "W• they • mammae as LMesr. Tllesnb.rg, March 15th, 1867. T. Milburn a Cw. Sian, --Please ship at coos three deem. it B. Bitters. Best selling mediates la the shop. Sold seven bottles to-daTT Yours truly, C. Taorrnos. Tie above sample Is but owe of the hun- dreds of similar expressions regard's, B.2R Tee ate. 8esao— Railway Mattee of emall village is the Highlands. Tesat (to tisbat .sere) - What would she pe ohergfa' far to fare M Inveraese ! Tiak.t Clark —Two sad Rhesix- " e will be giving yea a.kllLtr� for it.if " " .. mo ; yea rani have it." Tema withdraws, and hoarier tee trans whistling as it Leaves tato atatisa, tares sad taye : Of, .b. seedsr pe whi.tll.' ; ebe gave her es ear .freely and ale wades hash" • Some Lear. A lade samed Yeo T. C. Y. Ha !vhj In Hesse, Oat. who seed say twe Crania 58ssd i�Iaet1.N home te and w �eaMta ,errietwiladieN Weer and r .�ay eased ha of is - low be this rasa* tee beaM1 euArws M fire N se BMAD* TREES. the R.nauve Merits .t rumen ..d A ee min Pi..eta. c... Mer.d. As most readers probably know, the best time to transplant deciduous tree . during the period between t he tall of the leaves in autumn and the bursting 4 the bads into leaf in the spring. In mace portions of the United States throe is but little choice as to the par- ticular week or month daring the above interim beyond that of cboadrof • time when the soil is in good condition la winters where the winter is well defined and much cold prevails the planting period is divided into two aoasoe•, fall and spring, and the relative merits of these seasons are thus described by Su- ctintendent William Sambre be a re- port of horticultural subjects b the Imo - rotary of agriculture at W~sti Other things being hit planting is preferable to epilog pi shire and for these reasons: It is teasel Brat the beet conditions for hastening root tormation in cuttings of any kind is to -seep the soil into which they are insert- _d several degrees wanner than the at- mosphere surrounding them This en- -ourtges root growth in the warm soil, sand the cooler atmosphere prevents the ,rowth of bads or leaves until after the roots have been produced. There ars ,ertain periods of the year when these ,renditions are naturally found. Daring the month of October the soil from 17 to 16 inches belea the surface will average )everbl degrees warmer than the air four feet above the surface of the ground in temperate climates. Consequently a tree a4.--- _ r Wm'S CVT merge a even IIAPit pleated about Oct 15 will immediately begin root growth. In the northern re- gions where winter begins early and is to and neve» tall planting will not be generally so successful as in more temperate climates. In spring planting it is as well to have it done aa early as practicable in Much et as soon as the soil is dry. Planting cannot be done properly when the soil is wet. At this planting trees should be pruned back more closely than is neces- sary in the fall. Trees of largest size, such es lindens, elms, silver maples, etc., should be, according to Superintendent Saunders, 45 feet apart; the Norway maple, and all of similar growth, 85 feet apart, and this last is quite close enough for any kind of tree in the street This allows each tree roots for expansion and prevents too mn shade. The tree depicW in the cut is a vari- ety of the silver leafed apple, a remark- able and beautiful treawith cut foliage. Its growth is rapid, shoots slender and drooping, giving it a habit almost as graceful as the cut leafed birch. The foliage is abundant, silvery underneath, and ou the young wood especially deeply and delicately cut The leaf stalks are long and tinted with rad on the upper surface. Weir's cut leafed maple ranks among the most interesting and attract- ive lawn trees and may be easily adapt- ed to small places by an occasional cut- ting back, which it will bear to any de- gree o-gree necessary as well as a willow. Tret.etl.a =aces. The means of protecting rosea during winter most be adapted to the noosed - ties of the planta according to locality. In and around Rochester, according to Vick, the Hybrid Perpetual may be left in many instances without protection except what they get from the bntid- tngs, daubs and trees neer them. In some cases they are bound up with straw, the wrapping being placed on them when winter has folly set in and kept as until about the ist of April. A of soil is sometimes given by tiding a mound of earth up about 18 inches in height around the plant, thus securing at least all the lower pert of the bush. If the tipper part is injured, it does not matter so much, for it is pruned away. Another way ptactiod in severe cli- mates la to bend the shoots down to the ground. bolding them there by little wooden pap made from tree branches or by throwing pieces of sod on the tips of the shoots. After this the plants are covered at lest • toot in depth with dried Noma Whoa plenty of enugreen branches oats be had. these Mrs a very excellent emoting. A Oste.e Mase eeseat et Gooseberries. The Ohio Falter calls attention to the p4r akta s president of a New Jersey h rden society. He teem a modest tower pipe 16 inches 1e diameter and 14 inches high and mete over seek bash. letting it grow up theeagl>t Ina sprawl over the edge. This beep the berries sad bashes oat of the ground sal provosts the besihm tics layering thlr,sslva l 5 k s to do Twlasrdi�s earl gelsan so eadjaper dtaffsrlhat , whilew • e1 grows ge met the bathos. ORUNKINNUS P1 11001gTY. Raw Tai Wess.. nesesssy •gafssed be Me Mee dot flows• T. Ilr t ro hers. M. D.. In an 1nIw+M- big article recently published in a sear foal journal. Mys: term alcoholism Is and to describe a Diose of wars have become disease by csnl aced sad excessive use of aleohoi b reality as increasing number of those cans begin to ore spirits in exam eableay Asad pass rapidly tato the almost' shot► Trite use of alcohol is only s mpMm• tad the cams are not those of tree alssio - Ws, bacon* they are flue a ;tress carom Inebriety would he a now so - curate term." Dr. Crothere gees on to t4 that he moderate drinker of the pest hes la a mswrs disappeared Now we haveths impnlalve, mamacia drinker, who, after brief preliminary stages, becomes an es - costive user of tpirlta. Is this classesess the periodical Inebriates, who N a>eed Intervals develop as unooutrollable ap- petite. The interval between these at- tacks V often exactly regular. la one case it was 91 days and 2 hours; b an- other 621 days and 4 hours. 1t is tide ab- normal, diseased appetite far ilgnor which. Dr. Brill mys, is vowing more 0011111101111121014 women. The statement has been often made that New York society women are mine given to drinking intoxicating liquors than are the women of any other city in the country. This is unquestionably tree if the range of comparison be limit- ed to northern and western places. It may be that the traditional ase of liquor in the south brings its cities nearer to Use mark. One thing, however, is abso- lutely bqlately certain, :nd that is that in no city in the United States, San Francisco per- haps excepted, is there so general a pub- lic indulgence in wine by women u in New York. San Francisco, furthermore, is not exactly • parallel case, for the clam of women who drink in public there are of • distinctly different order from the society women of New York. The time honored remarks about the feminine habit of snatching 13 minutes from :he arduous slopping tour to lunch off ice cream and cold water moat be re- vised. Perhaps it is because tbeirmoth- ers followed this custom that the pres- ent generation thirsts after something hot and stimulating. At any rate a growing proportion of feminine shop- pers and callers and matinee goers have taken to dropping into their favorite res- taurant and ordering something which comes in a long stemmed glass and is not taken with a spoon. The home dinner and lunch are the oc- casions when the regular table wines are in use. There are hundreds of women who drink to this extent and are by no means counted as victims of the liquor appetite. Where they will be in five years it is not safe to predict. Perhaps they will be drinking brandy, whisky, cologne—anything with alcohol in it—to satisfy their mad craving. And then they will die in delirium tremens, and the doctor will kindly shot the door on the family skeleton and sign a death cer- tificate with a long Latin name of some disease of the nerves, those modern scapegoats of the ills which flesh is heir to.—New York Sun. A Story et Two Glasses. There was once a lad who was very sick indeed. Tho doctor brought him a little glass, like this, full of this black, ugly looking medicine. It smelled bad and tasted worse, and the lad struggled and screamed and pushed it away and tried to spill it. He said lie was afraid to take it. He believed it was poison. At last they held him and forced him tc swallow the medicine, end it cured him. That same lad a few yeah afterward was with a lot of his comrades, and they got him to go into a saloon. One of them set before him a little glass of wine— just like this: It looked good, and ft smelled good, but the lad shrank back. He had heard what wine would do.to hie body, and his brain, and his soul, and he hesitated. "Huh! You're afraid!" sneered one of the boys standing near. "Who's afraidr asked our lad, and he snatched up the glass, drinking all the wine. Then lie called for another ghee, to show that he was not afraid. The other day this boy, who was afraid of the little glass of black, healing medi- cine, hat was not afraid of the litUe glass a red, deadly u ins, died in a ter- -able way and was buried in a drank- asd'e grave. Of which will you be afraid} —Golden Rule, Aleehel Is a Twee redee.. Dr. IE. N. Allen says: "Alcohol is an asrtiedal product obtained by fermenta- tion and is never found in a simple states It is a poison in both its nature and its effect. It is pronounced such by the highest authorities and proved to be suck by the test of chemistry as wed ae physiology. Alcohol unadulterated is a pare poison, and though taken into the system in a diluted state, without at first apparently any injurious effects, it ie etW a poison and dose the work of a poi- sonous agent" A. ay. M Semh..a When sea Doe remonstrated with an old saloon keeper for enticing in the boys, he replied, "Oh, it is Doneness, beuaese—the old drinkers will soon be deed, and where will my borons, be if I don't get the boyar—flzcbange. A mlwisa Small se I a., re. a ml dna belsw_. A .IsMm few whims sal paws as I garm. "1'l MIK Oslo Mir and bawdy sad slut 'sale es hum egg away tom taw paints ea • ;hs le amble talose., nit mos sal quit Mlle 004 sandy em.ar.�'��ey1iw., 'flat t y wend Chet wows. gminal Aad all mid. know is . lith, old pent TS M my •ah su wbet 1 tory mule ma 1st tame ihew. dans II pa wall M true. Thaw rale .0 vireos shad lead Arra M sfa and norm sad keno year used calx we ens some teees the woo l me Weisesesso- Irbeeker Claes Dr. Fowler's lis X01=, e=v�seen,s� �� aatd •ii o W. Msia a para Extract eostai iag ail the videos of wad Wraw- tor all ems aad semi ems saimws eomplabsee. win win odor hangs= yet pampa welim assets. well known a rrr°'' 1106111110. The of Wild Strawberry were knows by miss Iodises b be os excellent remedy fits &arrima, driest/try bat science has pawed aa Ute public in Dr. Pelvis s NM. el Wile Strawberry a compp1.IsSM. ani .L-4ad caw ter frit those disleeseiig ori alter dart/meas complaint`, so common in this able oiasgs- It has stood the test for 40 years. and hundreds of fives haw less saved by he irowpt use. No other remedy always Cures summer complaints so promptly, masa the paw w effectually and save irrita- tion .o wtoo..dufy as this unrivalled prescription of Dr. Fowler. If you are going to travel this Summer be sure and take a bottle with you. It overcomes safely and quickly the dis- tressing summer complaint so often caused by champ of air and water, and is also a speak spinet .sa-siokasse, aid all bowel Complaints. Prins Me. Beware of irnit•d:me tad 5. h4ltut:w told by unscrupulpesdmbra for the sake of greater profits. WINTER 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 moat satis- factory manner and best market. Ready-made Clothing a tlpecialty, and everything in the latest and beat Dry Goods and Groceries can be had at hard -times prices at The Ton10 Cash Stoft P. ODEA, Manager. �Y%T6dLRNiOYA Axa °TESS Tamm aa,rCas. Specific and Antidote for Impure, weak and impoverished blood, dye. pspoa. el eplemnmes, palpitation of the heart, liver seeapiaint, asarwlgia, loss of insmeryjarske, kidney °° and oriem, �y iliemsss, Be. Pilon' duos. female irreg- ularities and mural debility. 141110IAYOIT,1100611I9, ONTARIO J. M. MoLROD, Proprietor sad Maa botarer. MoLiscuis aver=se' Ratoovaron era be dab from _ drawling in .n tbeeddsaeRW b OGoa Owen d as cr0 from asesutb. Drumm Miriam sad Turmas. INT tr. PLANING MILL ESTNslfl U 1K. Buchanan & Son, narrveaarutioa SASH, DOOR apd BLIND Dialers 1s as blade le LUMBER, LATH. SHINGLES And baldmfs' material of every amend.. 8etool Furniture a SBeeklty WHO IS TOUR TIMOR This M widish yes rad JAN lost shouldbwstM give tbeegbt DOBE HE SUIT YOU ? It iciestsa by 'BMW rev vasa ere sr! sat - DUNLOP'S EMPORIUM WEST STREET. CLOTBIIfa etp.okez:Li LRAM' Del Meant a$ esu 14U4.4.(bey early set H. DUNLOP. NERVINE TONIC Stomach#Liver Cure The Most AstoniahingMedleal MOD very of the Last One $Hundred Years. It b Pleasant to the late u the Sweetest Nectar. Itle safe and Ranalese as the Purest Ink. This wonderftd Norris Mate hos only recently been introt[tn into this country by the prepsistero and maaatheturers of the Great South Americas Norville Tonle, and yet its groat value as a curative agent has long been known by a first d the meet learned physicians, who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of the general public. This medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure of iadi- gestion, dyspepsia, aad diseases d the general nervous system. It aim of the greatest value in the cared all forms of failing health from whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities which it possesses, and by Its great curative power upon the digesti,e organs, the stomach, the liver and the Do*eb. No remedy comp with this woaderlttlly valuable Nervine Teale as a builder awl strength_ elm of the life forces of the human body, and u a great renewer of broken-down constitution. It L also of more real permanent vale, u the treatment end vire of diseases of the lungs than any consumptive remedy ever used on this continent It is a marvelous cure for nem oesness of fismales of all ages. Ladies who are approachtag the critical period known as change in lib, should not fail to use this great Nerves Tonic, abatist esmsasmtly, for the space of two or three years. 1t will carry them eddy over the danger. This great strengthener and estra- tire is of inssttelabis value to the aged and infirm, because its groat energizing properties will give them a new hold on lite. It wits add tea or leen years to the lives of many of these who will use a half dopa bottles of the remedy each year. IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF Nervousness, Broken Constitution, Nervous Prostration, Debility of 01d Age, Nervous Headache, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Heartburn and Soar Stomach, Female Weakness, - Weight and Tenderness in Stomach, Nervous Chills, Loss of Appetite, Paralysis, Frightful Dreams, Nervous Paroxysms and Dizziness and Ringing in the Fart, Nervous Choking, Weakness of Bstreinities mei Hot Flashes, Fainting Palpitation d the Heart, Impure Blood, M�sssDsspemdescy, Bsib :rAT al V Ranee, Scrofti nb s Swellings and Ulcers, leer atawe of Females, Consumption of the Lungs, Nervousness of Old Age, Catarrh of the Leaps, Neuralgia, • Broschitis and Chronic Cough, Patin in the Heart, Liver Complaint, Pains in the Back, Chronic Diarrheas, Failing Health, Dedicate and Scrofulous Children, Rammer Complaint of Wants. All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine 'Ionia NERVOUS DISEASES. As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has ban able to compare with the Nervine Tonle, which is very p ad harmless in all its effects upon the youngest child or tie oidast sad nod delicate indtviduaL Nine -tenths of all the ailments to which the home family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired diger tion. When there is an insufficient supply of nave bed in the bbd, s general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, sad nerves is the result. Starved nerves, like starved muscles, become strong nits tis right kind of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and 'ibises disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervous system mast supply m the power by which the vital forces of the body are tarried on, it L tY first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary fbod dos sot ,s► tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nntrbnent necessary to TM* the wear our present Indo of living and labor imposes upon the awls For this rea:,on it becomes necessary that a nerve tbod be =ppd. This South American Nervine has boon found by analysis to mottle the easentlal elements out of which nerve tissue is fbrseed. This aeamis for its universal adaptability to the cure of all ibnos of narrow de rangement ciuwvo.asrn.W. Tan., Avg. S, Ta. itatCawatSeeu* Awfiew,Medie'.rts.t Guir :-1 ralm to oso to you Olaf - f beelisos rorye with a Marna ditelaset the.r midair 1emidhoar ed. Mit moriass • ieseem sue seta vim Ile ✓ year .�r ,r iteretas Tanis d Sums* sad LiverOw. mid dam maw ...aal bottles et /t 1 mess say asst t was eM ptwd at IM wewdw5.t some t. ease ,b. seam - mit .M amoral wvoas mete. 11 eew7e01 Imo rte mhos et tabs remedy as 1 doywswedd sot M .bre to amply the dtmasd. J. A. Kassa. eYBysas. Messgs.sr, Co hamar& Waimea. d b.wasr.aw. I.•. imp.: "I14111bsi 1• a MairlitilliSMIMINS time yam heft lrw.ewsa thstrrM sas..s. i keno.;. sad fsslgtasa ear sty bwlea sur pee. 1 fad Irma anon si* etmdy. oaf s. wad. 1 baster OM MOW hesb A.meleaa Mams wiea dens mu am g eed than asp em Wath et dmbefg 1 we eM Y .y 5.. 1 would a.".vsm every .silt Po sea M me uhf valuable sed malty eernris M betas et it bee owed ren essiblillA se dere n tae gvadmt msdidm la the.a/e A SWORN CURE FOR ST. WAS' DANCE OR CHOREA. Co•wvu t roassvil, Loa i Juno n. 11N1 "Nu:Titter, eleven years oid, was se fft. View? Boo We ipsve her three and eseiself lefties Amides Ilse vim and dm is pletey. restored. I believe it erase every ser gy Vitus' Danes. I have p• it h my family her two ad ora arae ale forms greatest In the world fbrFeng . from w aadieess ►� c.1 „e Jour T. ilei Si tri ygJfatitan. } «: aubemibsd and sworn to before me tib Jars 112.Bill. CR4s. W. WINMer, Nebs7 >tii>ill INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA' The Great South American Jervis* Tonle Which we now ogler yen, is the Aly ebsolatdy ushalblit i discovered fir the ewe d ladigsetioa, Dyspepsia, and the vest leas d yrs ion and horrors whit& ass the resurlt of diastase and�� stomach. No person est afford to pass by :his jeweiof edabls value who is afillsted by disease of the stomach, because WA" whose and testimony d many In 10 prove that this is the on s►t este este goat euro in the Medd lbw Ode universal destroyer. 1102 Is no Ala et-mmalignaot da mese et tie stoma which an reek' IM wedarhe sas+aPve powers of the South America' Nervine Tonic. •Yea Lea A. bravest. et Ins new. MO+ "• ww' a� Irtt` .asatawr 4 �A.wtssa May epe setry jpa ..n tttw tri d„ Ins rY_. ��a,.t.�ks arifess as .beese�.nest�.sa'1t�wrrb'M` e.Aissst..rwd M _ f: �r•+sILes t ewer "1 tarsi owns taw an* 1 esu Idirilat Talc w oasts .as eses.,.,rt e sepyti srel mum was esa,a tt.deraa"sw sus, Sp ▪ oillwa es. one rmin mieess:e�`.:ir sem"' war *erne •aromas gamma ea • ow m - Ikrtrr as t�rs�ewadr .ao�a�ersmiswrswt>):ase tewela ipe endVtifiSsIL"". sur et. tar (lfliPo..dsawy.�gr a*es roil, ..e ..aa■..res Large 16 ounce Bottle, $1.001 1 EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED.