HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1893-11-23, Page 6THE SIGNAL: GODERIOR, ONT., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23. 1883.
POESY, r BEST.
CamargueAl..,'- set OWE`
SELF-DENIAL OF PARENTS.
Where abs ,1011 -sax aeras .f Fa/firs+ and
Umber. n.eatd irate and R.N.
'rha: parents sl.wld deny themselves
superfluities for tair mks of their children
1, oat is the (east to their, credit, it is [nest,
right, sod their bounden duty. That they
should Riva their children better advantages
then they have had themselves u atually, in
the mature o! tt.:ugs.:heir proper line of con -
dm: Each ge•erat.00 owes to the one in
advance all that a an lraiuw- of prepar-
ation
rc
ation of culture. opportunity, and effete
vJegs. The self dens: ut parents .s the
tribute that the rue demands : it is not es-
pecially notable nor particularly praiseworthy
because it is the appointed and expected
rule which is vett to people when they
take upon then.:te obligations ut parent.
hood.
Rpt self-denial ..t :he part of the parents
,. ogle -thyme asd self-elTaoement .tail.
another. The pica mom and the plain wo-
man who hare scntrped and stinted and
saved, sootnved. misaeef, risen early Ina
set up late, to stud theirs.nsaad daughters
to col'is e, to tdccate them liberally, to place
them well in the world, are not to be set
mite as of amaU recast when their children
ar.we at maturity
They are wrong :o allow themselves to
be pushed to the wslt set in the background
■, they sometimes an the mother m iy
not kuow Euclid, or tan.• the faintest ac-
quaintance with a reel porn : the memo
her daughter play. tray he a t'himee puzzle
to her comprehewtos but she don know a
whole world of science. not necessarily in
books, to which her dauchter can obtain no
clue is the clam roam, .(nee life must be the
teacher. The father may speak a lees
ornate vernacular thea his boy's vocabulary,
but he les the shrewdness, the antwant/woe
with aro, which come only by intercourse
with eon's fellows by oy and sorrow, and
the different phases through which all pies
who live 'rang esouuggt. it should be no part
of the self denial of moots to do wtt.hout
the deference, the teederoesa, the regard, of
time whom they loot brought up.
t ne finds it oftener in a comparatively
ncty country than to tine more conventional
lite of our cities, • state of things in which
parents seem to hair teen outgrown by the
ch,Idren. There et farm-h,.usee in our
frontier state. where women. not yet
meddle aged have 1-. on grey hairs and
wnnklee, lost the beaty and elasticity of
youth. tears before :ie.r time, resignedly
a. opting privation mi toil and lottelinees
to give their girls a chaser. If the girls are
noble, sweet natured and true, they will
hold the dear mother is the greatest esteem
bee nee of all that the has dos for them.
Far from entertainer a feeling of pride or
complacency, they tell repay the beautiful
self-denial of their parent by a devotion
which never know -trade ofdiminntitn. It
is .a ignoble eau:re aloe. which is capable
of feeling ashamed of those who belong to
ones kith sod kin on account of any sim-
plicity of manner or plainness of sper_•h.
Self-denial must not become self-effacement
A few years ago u: wee common to find
t ag otjous people rather
out of the way, the drawing -moans git en up
to the youthful daughters and their friends
while the mother sed father gat by them •
selves in a bermes' dining room or their
own chamber. A better ,tate of things ob-
t uih now, and yowag people have learned
that society is crude met unsatisfactory in
which their parese y, a not their fitting
plate. _ -
DRINK LIARS TO 01111801PULATION.
fib. OM.ohne et Deeek.edo d ee De..eeed
Weaklings or Idles..
M. Charles Fere, a well know* aet►o..
ity at Paris on nervosa and modal dis-
eases, and whogives particular &nestles
to them as they maoif et themselves is
infancy, says they are frightfully on the
increase in France. The Paris corre-
spondent of theChicago Weekly Dispatch
writes: "This he thinks due to the in-
crease of beer drinking, absinthe driuk-
iag and bare. Th.re was hardly such a
thing as a bar twenty-three years ago.
Oso awn them now nearly all over lite
town and always crowded. The plosion
for betting on race horses 1s now well-
nigh universal. Ban and low eating
houses where alcoholic drink is sold with
or without food are the centers of resort
for those small tradesmen. cabmen,
cooks, artisans and so on who want to
get tips and enter into sporting transac-
Uous.
"Dr. Fere noticed all thio in connec-
tion with the increase of spine and brain
dismays in young children. He has taken
a rather original means of demonstrat-
ir.g that the coincidence had a general
cause behind it -namely, drink. It is
well known that drunkenness in the long
run leads to depopulatiou. In the early
• tagee of this vice, druuken men and
women can, of course, be parents, but
their children are deformed or idiots or
violently impulsive. and destined to swell
the ranks of the army of crime.
"Dr. Fere has noticed the frequency
of infants thnesrtffenng from the atusof
their forebears in th. north of Franke.
which differs from the rest of France in
having a large percentage of drunken
women. But to come to his scientific
demonstration of the effect of alcohol
on embryonic life he exposed hen'. eggs
during the period of incubation t , the
fumes of alcohol. Some were thes
treated during 28 and some during 48
hours. He obeerre.t that this delayed
the growth of the chuck in the shell awl
occasioned num(-ron. moustmeltime
One clutch of eggs was kept under alco-
holic fumes for 100 hours. At the end
of that time the germ was not as much
developed tes it would have been after 241
hours M hatching ander the ordinary
condition;.
"The doctor concludes from this that
the children of drunken parent. are at
the time of birth less developed than
thole of sober parents, and that them
are pxositive arrests of development its
many directions. He says it can never
be repeated often enough that alcoholic
drink. are now the great enemy of the
races which do not abstain from thew
and that if the Aryans go emu tippling at
they do they met finally gine way to
Jews, Arabs and Chinese."
A rr.thleg Deaaerlatloe of Ranaeollen,
Judge Hubbard c.f Nebraska. in lass•
ing sentence upon sotne convicted rata -
sellers recently, c•h:arac•terize.l its ti:ur
(.tut terse their evil irttairtese. He ati
There is something in the taking of
human life instantaneously that shocks
and terrifies the mind of all• and y. -f we
look upon that moan who take„ life quite
as surely, but by a sl•,w, lingering trac-
er, if not without con.l••tlllatien, at
least without horror. Yon who stand
before the court for sentence are to
every moral seu,e murderers, and yeti
are in the spirit. if nut in the letter,
guilty- of I anslanghter. ro the law Saye
whoever acceleretl•s the death of a lut-
man being unlawfully i- guilty c.[ the
crime. Your bl.mteel victims upon the
witness stand, slid who nnduubte,llt
committed jerjurt to scren you trout
the law. not .•sly teetify that you Ileae-
celerataug death, but that you are endur-
ing men to commit still greater crime,
than your own.
"You still maintain the appearance ut
respectability, but how morally leprous
and scrofulous you are inwardly, The
GO THOU AND 00 UKEWIUE.
..proem owl ae.lu Cam. N t . Dr..k-
w W . l'.Ilew.d . tM.t.rs edema
A loading Logsdon pliy.icie. recently
related the fullowing •zperiesce. Ho
said: "1 was in my Aloe ow day .omS
year. ago when a tan entered who was
written (rote head to foot with the rec-
ord of hu mined life. That he was a
drunkard was proved by his Imoks• his
breath, his halting step and his open
cunfeetaon. He told me that he had
tried many methods of improvement.
but all had failed, and he carne to tee
me as a last resource. 1 was obliged to
leave a few nai:inter after his arrival to
inert an important engagement. His
cane seemed so utterly hopeless that I
felt all the usual remedies would prove
abortive and simply left him with the
words: 'You can let liquor alone if you
like. I do. I never drink.'
"About a year later a man came to my
office, upright. reputable looking in face,
figure and attire. He deec•ribeel the rag-
amuffin of whom I have just spoken and
asked if 1 remembered such a visitor,
which 1 teas euablc.l to do because I
never in the course of my practice had a
speenneu of humanity so wretched and
woebegone enter my door. The man
thea took them his pocket a photograph
and lauded it to Inc and said, 'Do you
recognize the person I have described?*
1 said. '1 theik it i, this very mat: herein
thephetegrat•b.' Yrs.'rel.'t••tl to viti-
ator. 'anal I mu l..•.' This taxed t.oy err
drlt.y to tit!• tan.. -t. bat he went on to
ssy that whoa 1 F 't Nut ire walto.l .along
the atroet rvnnanrinl to ti it, tf: 'That
dca•tor done Ritbont Liquor. He says I
can 1.4 it slime if 1 like, anti be uueht to
know.'
"This was a gleam of hope. are! 1:e de-
cl•i.-,l he would tams the nest petite..
;o•.;:,.•, a thing he hail not don.' it: sears.
i1 • w•elit I y saying to him i lf. '1 can
! it alone if i Imo' lit than way be
v.•e!;t ee tooting nu..uy hone until he
le•.•.lar• quite s•,!s r uu•1 s t .•e. -led in
mei-tea li!tlr j..;. of work. 1l.• 1 Kok six -
1" • of the e. -um 1 in this
ray :! I had hi 1.11•.1 • h :skeet by a
tr..e•;: + . !di -rage -op -le p -l. r. 1''r in that tiny
be suet trout les•l to worse, but
from p'- :.o beti. r. A v der keent sat-
ing to i•ext, 'Yon can let it alone if you
like; t;t•- .lo. - 1. c dors.' And he was now
a sober, t:adnstrione and suc•ce.sful nam
of Mutineer 'I do not know,' said the
doct.,r, with a smile, closing his story,
'that anything in my life has ever given
ate more genuine satisfaction thou this
incident.'" -World's White Ribbon.
Sever Too (Poor to any Whisky.
It is n noticeable and significant fact
that among all the failures in business
which have recently been published in
the columns of the daily pr.•m it i' rare-
ly, if ever, that a failure is noted among
the makers or dealers in strong drink.
Theetact le explained in part by the
enonnen. profits of the liquor business -
Largely lagneent.-el in many u
peons by the cheating or outright rob-
bery of drunken customers. Another
reason i• that the reteil dealersaretarge-
Iv "backed" by the motley an.l influence
of the wealthy- l.r•wers or distillers and
are thna practically insured a paying
bn.imess.
A third an final reason for the almost
invariable prow erity of liquor sellers
lies in the fact that the drinking crimes
will have their beer and whisky no mat-
ter how hard the times may be or bow
ranch they may be ccnipellett to pinch
their outgoes in ether direction.. The
drinking man often finds himself too
loner to.letbe his family decently or to
give them proper f..Ixl and shelter. but
never to poor to buy his beer or whisky
and treat his boon rompani.ene. Excuses
are easily found for denying bread and
clothing to wife and children, but ex-
en+(•s never bar the way to the door of
the inogshop.-C'hristiau at Work.
nes Gnaw Teen • Saab.
M angry dt.caan esu taking place
between two colored men on Mites street
recently, and ore of them esu about to lay
heads on the other, when ['faddy 11'hite
came down Ceder amity and stopped to
ask what the row wssabout.
' I hat man owes ee half • dollar ... re
plied ose of the dilettante
i don't dory it sand the other.
•• I)sei why dost ys. my me ...
" Kw it'. too sea'
e If ye' dose pay ne dat half dollar I'm
gwtne to ertaeh eo' fie '
• Hole on, Mister Simpkins bole oe '"
said Daddy, as he stopped between the pear.
Let's vee hew dr rent case steads. How
loom has die gem .. owed yo half a dol -
Best fo' weer.-
" Has yo' dao •,ed him fur it befo' :"
oleo. .bh„
• • Dor yo' hain't let no ase as' better
sop Te r sone."
Dear ke ewv me dot money .
' (N co'.. M does, but am yo' a bigger
TAD dor • lariats bank, If yo' warts
dot mossy 10' me hes tO-days' retie ao' do
Maar is • busses war. Humph ' Ile ideate
of a white-washin' eoll'd man aortia' Mosel(
o p to be binge's • Mak wide millyon dol•
Lan is it r -Dairen Fres -press.
STUB ENDS OF THOUGHT.
LOP. llstard's tieetwee le elle. /•SON
Stdorioem is perverted „e,onenS
Hop• paints only u bright es,s,w
ineath oasts so shadow until it is near.
No Inas is akentetatc free from hypo-
why
Meet of the beautiful thiop is the world
Mar talk.
!for �y ake ode hut they meet
ElA r+aas mmode
141. what she waft
Utas what she knows.
Lore baits the now, n, yosag hearts,
had aha melee as old.....
tae guttae ass h Peat 1r kewieg how
M stain ethers stake him r ns&
n. t�1gr. (sass's ands M (.ell every
Hiller aha of s Ms se w e•rs kr.
N
M■► nes
,w eh w wean she
a
inflicting upon this community declare,
as if from the hou.etope, that yon are
living in idleness and eating the !bread of
orphans watered with the widow's tear..
Yon are stealthily killing your victims
and tnnrdering the peace of the com-
munity and thereby converting happy.
industrions homes into misery, poverty
and rage. Anxiety' mothers watch and
pray in tears nightly with desolate hearts
fur the coming home of your victims
whom you are hiring with the wiles and
smiles of the devil into midnight de-
bauchery."
Wise Casted 11. Lem of the 'Vittoria.
It is now stated on good authority that
the fearful disaster which itef.11 the war-
ship N'ictoria, resulting in tee instant
destruction of hundreds of lives., is an-
other of the long list of calamities which
may ise set down to the credit of strong
drink. It is said that the fatal order
which resulted in the collision with the
Camperdown was given in a fit of reck-
lessness snperinduce.l by too much wise
drinking. lin no other ground, it is
said, can it be explained why a man
ordinarily so cool, discreet and skillful
as Admiral Tryon should have given an
oder which the commonest sailors knew
could only resnitto disaster.
It is charitable to believe that Admiral
Tryon was not in a condition of mind to
realize what he was about when he said
that "six cables length" instead of eight
she.nld be thedistauce between the ships
in that- maoetiver. That two cables of
difference meant a swift and awful death
to hundreds of brave men, Including the
admiral himself. It was wine that did
It and not Admiral Tryon.-Christien
at Work.
Tompmeaee Nota
Th. bappy bride who makes her has
band rich is Temperance.
In races It inn been frank that the
saes who do not use stimulants do by far
the best work.
If drinking men could only see the ef-
fect that whisky has ea the stomach,
they would never drink ataothsr drop.
Close every aloeei, heck door and
front, for one week and statboa a police -
maw at each don,, and toes moms one to
watch the policemen, aged whoa the sun
goon down on tie sent Reterdly sweeiag
there will sot be a brdMaak Mit r a
bwte er shops
No Som In a.s.tolaad.
It is oheervetl that whent•ver native
African tribes are saved from decimating
intertribal war and alcoholic liquor*
they thrive well, no matter how many
whites are around theta. The British
government has completed its census of
Basutoland, which not many yeah ago
was being rapidly depopulated by inter-
necine strife end ram. This mountainous
land is now well governed and is n pro-
hibition territory. In 1875 the black
population was 137,000. Under the bet-
ter auspice!' of today the population lase
increased to 218,000. In 17 years there
has been an augmentation of 81,000 in
population, which is conclnaive proof of
the vitality of the black race in Sonth
Africa, surrouuded as they are on all
sides by white men. -New York Sun.
Playinw with a'1.•..
Yon often hear moderate drinking
men say, "Drinking does not hurt me,
because I do not drink enough." if you
reply that it may get the better of him
and make him a drunkard, he will laugh
and say that he knows what he's about;
he ran take it or jet it alone. But it is
a Imre fact that abont nine out of ten
moderate drinking men die drunkards
What Temperaae Ia.
Temperance is at once a principle, a
motive and a practice. Its principle Is
purity, for the sake of the highest uses
of lite. Its motive is abstinence+, for
the take of good. Its practice 1. chasti-
ty, for the sake of the noblest ideal ends
of being.
Twee ► Net abs 01ass.
If you have the good of satiety at
heart, touch not the intoxicating glass,
for most of the evils we have to deplore
In oar social and political life w the
progeny of this prolific mother vino--
%temperanse.
4
Ttrtd as by i•4w
I sued te the fiery rwewaee.
In ttgi tart of Its sra.Nag dams
A11 friend. of the world forgot nee,
When I relied nn the geeod tnrd•a e•ma
He would not Ile a not
Of for err* berets, glare.
Bat wryped he meat le slime
Awd 1lneered with me tb.re.
Mewls the erase herwlsg
1 am wrong le hear btu my.
"Amo oat M eke Sent tureens
T, the Mato apemer• y
-mares of Oda.
V/1000010, SALZAC.
Tbortttbea. .MarWeeks. Rem.l•.as Perms
A nem who loves well i. some wholly
ingpiaahls
ILavy Menem as manly ogatr as admira-
tion
Talent, like the gout, ass Ionones skip Iwo
R.....tl..a•
Yea, be he Medioae esorgb, ma arrive
at aaytiiag.
Raabe are the perks of soowty ; emotive@
ooaoern lied.
1t is, primps, by our vices that we bang
best
Wooer hhr.e by seuttm.st mbar, man
Byte by action.
tight should be the baggage of him wbo
pursues Iurtuae.
Some people have only .tuff enough in
thea( for sae vice.
A hobby is the medium bete me a passion
and • monomania
Legally" is a robust adverb that props
up naay a foresee.
Beauty is • veil that often serves to hide
meaty imperfections.
The law has convenient syllogisms for
crooked coisctewcts.
Mediocrity wages iooeswot warfare
against superior moo.
A hobby is a pleasure metamorphosed it •
to the form of an idea.
it man is strong when he admits to him
self his own weakness.
The world always ands to condemning
those whom it accuses.
There are but few moral wounds th.t
solitude does not cure.
Tee .coder t. always • tuperfictal being,
and conse.tuently cruel.
There is nothing like tM et crease of power
for teaching you politics.
Wealth has never lost the slightest ocea
sluts to show its stupidity.
Of all the practices of love, praise is the
most adroitly treacherous.
Time is the capital of niers who have but
their iateUect for fortune.
In France the horror of • crime disappears
in the wit of a clever saying.
Love, after giving more than it has. rade
by giving less than It received.
1a the medical profeseioa a earrage u
often mon essential than skill
A mar who hasn't a hobby does not kuow
how much he can get out of 1de.
Without totelligence the noblest virtues
nave the seed rf mischief in them.
We never lack money fur our whims, but
we dispute the prices of necessitate
The old .critic a sways kind and consider-
ate : the young critic is implacable.
France is the only I•ad where • little
phrase is •bk to nuke a greet revolution.
The matority of men are like animals
they take fright and are reassured by melee.
tt omen ate apt to tee chiefly the defects
of • man of talent and the merits of • fool.
He who don not bestride success and
grasp it firmly by the mane lets fortutoe es-
cape.
Sick headache caused by excess of bile or
• disordered stomach is promptly relieved
by using National Pili.. im
HORS] IID RIDERS.
A luso never looks more manly than
when astride a good steed which he knows
how to rat and govern. tan the other hand,
an individual who is nct "muter of the
situation -- looks supremely ridiculous on
the outside of a horse.
.\ less demonstrative e.tuine .tuadruped.
or one that has been trained to repress his
feelings takes It out in bitter sarcasm. Hu
pantomime satire is melanin! to behold.
He tosses has head derisively : be works his
ears disdainfully : he whisks his tail soeff-
isgly : he winks and leers at every horse
he meets, as much as to say, "You se*
what • guy I've got on my hack," he neighs
mockingly : be snorts contempt.
Filum. is • shrewd creature. By the
time his rider has settled himself in his
saddle he has formed his own opinion of that
rider's capacity for horse government. If
unfavorable, he manifests it either by direct
rebellion or open contempt. If an animal
of violent anal ungoverned passions, he dings
his heels iodigoaatly in the air, or makes •
biped offoin.self by standing bolt upright
on his hind feet, or takes the bit between
hie teeth and execute. • gallopade. in
either case the usual result is • spill, and •
laugh from those who witness the tyro's
discomfiture.
Horses in this ironical mood may not no -
frequently be sees. and they always carry
on their backs • vivid excuse for their dumb
show of scorn. A great many young mea
take e.lusstriaa exercise, who have not the
gift to "turn and wind a toryps�aua," bat
tam tml w
are in fact compelled to ind as
their four -footed o.mpaEbas think best.
If they wish to be sslassssd of horse flesh,
the looser they take Imam is the art of
cultivating its stlaMmese sad respect the
bettor, for of • W "As horse knoweth
his rider." Amelia th. Multitudes there
are unqueressetlmew graceful and
thorough heisowna, bat Mt• a;ilpius Pe*.
dominate.
Ash an .load(( ale .elle so mine.
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Spectator
ENLARGED own IMPROVED.
reelals. 511 the Uwe.
Maar Operant Miens.
Preen and nested re -«el•
The Nese taswe dress Morose.
Th. 4D..ees. Levered laa@s.r,
Eeerynalsg ter Everybody.
i TO 1ST JANUARY $1
1005
1f0 I • great paper hem pew till be Smeary.
-lameaeryy..
er
peel ppre�mlem meows von aft -pi to TAE
W HIM1Jt Gm Rot' Nf for eel, lie M
Agents Wanted
Worn eammi,.su t. ea A Mad sweet
ler the. !bans@ I. at -erg eke
will Worse waren ens a .mA11ee and
MS make • akssesskeae.r of 11@ ilEiietlw.
l Nn am_ ..rnisebereasdel.es
.o..tata. 101101111480.
1 OOisa:.
Good ci ars are - �
gar(
bqh WALL PAPER SALE
priced,
because of
high
tariff Taws.
MASTIFF
PLUG CUT
is mahirnc)
pipe-smoklnc
popular because it
rives more for the
money.
.1 P. PACZ Tobacco Co.. Richmeed. Va..
sad Montreal. Can.
Tis. hew sash• and nem Trieloaelsept
It is stated in • geoeral way by Harper's
Bazar that there is a tendency to reduce the
artphtude of skirts, and furthermore the
best dressmakers do um, •t least for Tight
weight dresses, employ staff facings of hair-
cloth,
aircloth, buckram or crinoline in skirts. The
n ew mtutts manufactured for winter, both in
wooleos and silks, are of the supple, cling-
ing quality which leads itself so well to
n atural folds (bat the aaneuncentent made
in some quarters seems credible that we are
about to return to double skirts, or at least
to skirts slightly draped. Braid is employ-
ed on substantial woolens, ouch as serge*,
cheviots and cloths, set on in spaced rows
of the wider kinds or to cluster rows of
n arrow widths, Some simple tailor gown'
have three or four rows of braid placed at
30 ischee above the lower edge, 'about
where the folds of the skirt emanate.
Peet allied Sirlemer••••
The most prevalent complains at this
season are rheumatism, neuralgia, erre
throat, intlammatm>as sod congestions. For
u.11 these and other panful troubles Had-
yard'o 1 ellow Ohl is the best internal andex-
terasl remedy. 2
REMEMBER
t IsLbas ney_feethseare
esesMl m a ID11IT Iona
(.eves1t
a yes are troubled
~Nlaslne.•, Mer mammal
11,
MEMBRAY'S,
6Mmaals� Toes
Parra
Ream A
Lever
realm Pulliam.
Nights, ldsanebsly
bray. Kinsey
KIDNEY AND:
ieismedlaierelief mid Ems? •time
?Ilse at all Drug Stoma
ls.mbray Medicine e•oespaay
of rnerber..ab, (Lemisedl,
PETERBOROUGH, . ONT.
LIVER CURE
For male bI O A. FKAR. Druggylat.
Soderich. Oat.
They ane not aam ea, but here die ben wr
medicine
ne
knees far ga
eepstia, Indientkin P'implae, 11ow.ass and all ling' dc.
.._ ns hewn*tee Wad .1 liver.
25 CENTS ABOX.
Ask sear aosinglet Far lianas.
A GREAT OFFER !
l;REAT PAPERY
a1D -
GRI4AT PR1RMtl-M'
We are 1a a psitfes to 'Abe Tbe talaeel
and the months Maimed and weekly Mar. et
Moetreal for see year for jI.MO This oder ea
titles the subscriber to a choke of two arrest
premiums g1vea by the publishers of the ram.
Ile NwId. These premium. aro the •'ata. "
aineeae y� far 1�51. • swperb book of I1, pem,
or u Id •S env •Ips of the great t/e s at
.... ...v.a@r are. whichMans at
sweats d.Ilaea The premisms-411/011111041 ad
Picture -edit be reeds above tM ate of Nev-
ember. and will be forwarded in the older 1a
which ala p.erriplion' are received. tllub-
nerirtieaa to the payor nay beam at crow
Remember the sere of -
ef p.mise
boldo geed to people whe subscribe daring
tkr s.tama, Afterwards Me chokes win
ps.ltfwel, be withdraws. sett
Patronise
True
Competition.
Telara rreaa east+I iskk Advo ar-
�psgbsEe�• I.� �11r W ,oe-
it(1�.t�� ie lw.lrse misoleles nod Is
Hl 1_.ee fir "Waif ever/ mesa
ose aaaw�hitt
Ise... �e ZlielloWMwM me_
M� end eatfee
mut "' sw:s.gailla
Special Sale of. Wall. Paper
Two Weeks Only.
A few of the 3bc. quality for 15c. per roll.
es
se 250. 10c.
N {{ 1&.
{{
N c. {{ pp8bc8cc.
Q ~ .
N
f
Several hundred odd rolls and odd lots for lc., 24,
and bc. per roll.
14 + 14 51 X 51
THIS Ili A t11ENl'INE MALE, AND WILL LAST Fell;
TWO WEEKS ONLY
MAKE N(1 MISTAKE; COME EARLY AND SECURE BARGAIN((.
FUSER 8c PORTER,
Booksellers and Statione
torsi lionesses Neil Telsitkear e..
Goode's Beatemall Stove Pipe V
Least oder, Brightest Lustre, Quickest Drying. Use it once and you use Do stns.
Climax Furniture Polish,
Brightees op all varnished furniture. \ ery Lan
Standard Sarsaparilla,
A fine thing for the blood u • Fortier net con
FREEMAN'S TASTELESS CASTOR OIL.
LIGHTNING SOAP FOR REMOVING SPOTS ON CLOTHES.
OUR STOMACH ANO LIVER PILLS ARE FINE. FREE SANK
W. C. GOODE, - Chemist.
Safety Blcyoles
FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN
W5 A115 Ot'TSRLLINO ALL (70YPXTITOR$ :
PNEUMATIC TIRES, from $50.00 up
CUSHION TIRES, " 20.00 "
OUR ('OM1' TITOI'.tt ARK SIMPLY NOT 01 IT roe QUALITY OR PRI('K
neer alae Imported.
i ItiCKs 51101.
GOSHEN CARPET SWEEPERS, the
LAWNMOWERS. This years pattern is perfection.
GARDEN TOOLS AND HOSE. Our lone ,e rombtr.
R. P. WILKINSON.
NO DOUBT YOU ARE
VERY MUCH
ALIVE
TO YOUR INTERESTS.
1HAT 1S WHV YOU BUY YOUR
BOOTSand SHOES
E. DOWNING,
Where yon will get good, (bonen goods, and a.erybillg wegMEEtsi to M as rs Infirm
We bats • larger stock and greeter variety than all the Mbar shun lldel• b
town combined. We keep the meet stylish and fa•biosabie geode made is Canada.
Ppm are Lour tgas IgE Lam, and iflli ie kepi lgtllt.
E. DOWNING.
N.B.-Leather and Findings is soy quantity at lowest plias.
Keep your eye
ON
NAIRN'S SHOW WINDOWS
FOR THE NEXT MONTH
YOU WILL FIND IT WILL PAY'
UNDERTAKERS.
3. HPoP13 ET' at 0024
Have addled to their present badman roe of B. J. Noah's L/atiSt
sof Qty Bear.sa also era int Ilse of tensnel f.raishlngs is tits ego"
sad ales sow prepared to os.inet torah at Woos rgyO0able
This dupartnsmt will be attended to by kis era Wi1Wn, wlMyttif
he the KNOT of the bate D. Gerdes ler Mrag so Ma yea"W * .� W
kawl.tye- of No bmsiuses, sad by ,.....pt atteetiea kepi to shore pre
po &W ps4emsge. s..emlbtr tee pl.er-Weet'w, as year way to II* F-
ifth Ohre as a rfl
J. BROPREY & SON.
WI
S
IIn
Lin
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5 PE
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Texas
New l'
time is
ta,'t ws
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idea th
there w
learnia
clthel
'Tbi
fag ,1
bad he
and chi
rattler
all righ
ion ,oa
turned
him •
hadn't
,.duty
would'
when h
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had 111
Tom
teem
at sir
hy the
• 1
'earl.
noel
Kern
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e 4
navel
Ohio {
about.
woods
how I
troop
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kigh.
the In
looker
look I
with
le
at th
model
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'ave
way,
den.
:'Ion
Reis
aloes
wy1
feet
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wild
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Tex,