The Signal, 1894-1-18, Page 2TUE Ee SIGNAL : (:ODER I IU, l►\ T..
t11 c`1) . JANUARY 18. 1-94.
TPSWO Uder Guide.
=..--SOUND TRIIIIIK RAILWAY.
ikflae alive eel depart Oeierich tofel
AielisMs
svaellJa
ad tspeses LM p.m.
Merl and Lupruss •.tma.m.
MeB eat Yr tragi top pogo
1Etssl .... ...........................4 N pee .
De1a11MORK.
ICII(►LSON, L.D.B.-DENTAL
M•
I• rt.oss0 e.ptesite ear om.e, wrwe.,
Ooderlch. All standard awl approved local
••aesihrtka uo hand fur rainless este*.
of te.•th. tel)
D. F. RiCHARDSON, L D. tee
enrw.,ua dsc;iat. Hap amid vitalised air
s.t.iwtst red for paaleee extracting of teeth
aortal attention g.vea to the proses violet
of the Bonus] teak. Udce-Cp Maier.
Qread Open Nasse *$took. otusauce ea Wes:
Oto. Ooderict• . 1161 iv
1Medlcal.
Du. H1 N reit. I•Hi Ii'!A .slI(
teene ac. OM.* - Mel.esn'e Alaek, Mort
realm. Night sal.. from Ilrittah Kt •11 ng.
Bated. 13 ly •
Das. 8IIANNON i SHANNON,
ekrisa" 8arseooa. Aceeushers, kee
O. C. ANNUM.-11.nde■v. N6p1orM acv.
Ge 1. J. H. '41As...N.-HMfdeOe. North-st,
Opp. Model school
~MPIONIt JOHNSTON, BA It It le
tete. >lelletto... Naartea, Bedert, t.
` -Over
er %1.Jo0. J 1 .. M. CAM
C„ yt. U. JOH. ossa it
T OFTI'S F. DANCEY, BARRISTER.
1.11 Solicitor. t'onveyen.N:•, tc.• rte. Memo
10 law at lowest retie. Horton's Bleck. the
pestle Colborne Nowt (1odrrch. Ont: Vern
IIN. LEWIS, BARRISTER PROD.
tor in Maritime Courts of Duarte
OMea--South Colburn tete". LIU
R. O. HAYS, SOLICI+POR, &c.
Oise. ouraer of /Mean sad West
sYMtMdsrir4 over telegraph anile..
tiPrl-
ate gods to lend at lowest rates of toter
est. r btu
(1 ARROW 6' PROUDFOOT, BAR.
VVs.f
rimers. Attorneys, Solicitor,. te.. Oode
Web. J. r. Gd1'ew. QC.. 0r. Proud fool
(t4IIIEkN, HOLT HOLMES,
'.J Bar -asters. Maiden in Ckaaary to.
drop M. C. Cameras, Q.C. ; P. halt ;
D.I1 Holme.
T A. WARD. CONVEYANCER,
tJ . tc., and oommierober ear taking and re•
slug res--dniaapose et brill sedavite of
doctors-
tdepositions �o
fs the z. 7vtice, the
Coag amAppeal for Ontario. er In any County
er 1Nybhan Court, Ail transactions carefully
gusto A/tby otcseatel. Itesideace and P.O.
non OaL MM -11 •
MSI k s• Institute.
-
C ODERLCH MECHANICS' INBTI-
T1TZ LIBRARY AND RiADINti-
ROOM, oar. of East street and Square tap
O
Ops from 1 to 6 rem.. a•d from 7 to 10 r.n.
ABOUT 2000 VOLS IN LIBRARY.
Leading Daily, Weekly dad /I/afraid
Papers, Magazines, etc., on Pile.
MZMHER8H1P T1CHWT• ONLY OR^
pa•tiag tree tae of Library and ies'.
Room.
Applteations for membership received by
Ldbcarlao. as room.
H. SMITH GSO. BTIVRN.
President. Mssetamy.
Oodsrich March 11th n1.S. '
Knitting Factory.
V EW KNITTING FkC1'ORY.-THE
undersigned begs to senesce to the putt:
Ile that he has Acted up premiss with the
latest and most improved knitting machinery
which will be run by • t oroaghly experienced
operator. and is prraared t:, do the Met qual-
ity of knitt,n.1 at very reasonable pries
Yarn,era and otters bringing in their owa
ern to be knit intostoeki■g;.cock&, etc.. wit;
liberally and_promo'ly ,halt with. Orders
left at my st .1•e, cor. Victoria and Bruee-aa..
will rewire prompt attest iota D. i.
8TRACHAN. -
AuotloassriaR.
THOMAS OUNDRY. AUCTIONEER
and laminates Agent. Ooderirh. Out.
Agent I.3o400 mud Lancashire Vire lea. Cs..
sad Oore t)i•trict Mutual Ina. (:a hales et -
bladed to in say p.trt et the comity. 10-11
jOHN KNOX, GENERAL AU0-
• tion«.r and Leel Valuator, Ooderteh.
Oat. Flak Ica had eeneidenble experience la
th .tion i position
e•■e tends he [s o eto
d with t
ti,-ka b 'h =anew -Om all eons
•as � hornmlt
mimeos entrusted to him, Orders tett at
Martin's lintel. or tat by mall to his addreos. Me Comity Autioseer.h P. O., carefully attended to. JOHN
Ii/tt
Ileae:iM.
CANADIAN ORDER OF HUNS
Circles -Boder;eh Cies., No IM, assets
thin Meader of each month la Ws WI ever
Tina Menu aids 8ledoeseteats Is
Iwrenes and slat beaaeta D. CALBICI. tra.R111140N iteettutpm.Ft. J. ACIILBDX. Wagerer;
IL
1Ltr
Dental Announoemsnt.
TEETH EXTRACTLA WITIOYT Nil
R YY OM gilt
as
DR. R. RICHARDSON'S
MINT •1. ratusra,
NEG/ NOUSE SIOCP TMST-1TIEET
403)11120:, ONT.
n.9.4e me u.UesttM after •
th•eesgb swill h � mem sp•ssa►
se▪ stalire
t e •1 elaidead
ta bt Yvp el o gekylased
eslisseflele mega she 0 1, sr .4016. e0 01�rwtnvt�hnttaeie
A mamaMOoa rosy fttb
.&.20=X-2V10RP]M POIO.w .
Is tidal kat serer Ahem the
Erab st len L be earth ease rat= lime% sseed a.h-eseestl"e se paha. Ya4mn
sesame sate It he
0 esplleelp rrAimha• Ale Rs rias.
tp el the water sU M -
I�jIMMetteimm est t K
j pagaf tmmei
ere mess.
RL R. BB0111ARRIO`f.
tate
ISSN
11. ilottexineu, 153 Pacific
Ave., -ante 1'ntt; ('al., writes`
"When * girl at a hong, In Reading,
Ohio, I (tail a severe attack of 'brain
lever. Ou my recovery.I found myself
perfectly told, and, for a I..rer time, I
feared I should be permanently so.
Friends urged me to tem Ayer's Hao
Vig.•r, and, on doing o', thy hair
Began to Grow,
end I now have sa fine a bead et hair as
ane could wish for, h.-ing changed, bum..
t ver, from bowie tedark brown."
" A fter a At of sickness, my heir r•atlle
out in combfulls. I used two butlles-
Ayer's Hair Vigor
and sow my hair is over a yard long
and very hall and berry. I have reeoga-
mended One pr.•per.rt iop towhees with
like good effort." -Mrs. Sidney Carr,
1400 ReeiDa et.. Harrisbmrz, Pa.
•' I hare used tyer's Bair Vigor for
several years an allays uldal0e•tl eat is.
factory results. I know it is the lest
preparation for the hair that is made."
-C. T. Arnett, Mammoth Spring, Ark.
Ayer's Hair. Vigor
Prepared by Dr. J.C..tyer L Co., Lowell, Meq.
INTERESTtf'TO WONSEIrT-
■Mare'e etalraeal rare. La Grippe.
Mary 1:. Wilkins is writing another play.
Ti e piece of work of hcts to be published
✓ s o is the longest serial story she las yet
wr :ten. - `--�-.
ehiloh's Cure is sold oe a guarantee. It
cures tncipicnt coneumptiun. 1t i. the best
cough cure. Only oe • cent • dose : 25 ct..,
50 eta., wad ;'1.00 per bottle. Sold by ell
druggists. e w
The Princesses Maud and VI.totia of
Wales g•ye their mother a piano on her re-
cant birthday. It had been used by Pader-
ea'.k, whet l:e crossed the ocean on the
T. n • ore, an was recommended by Sigsor
Tort i.
The youngest queen consort of Europe,
the .;ween of Portugal, WWI born at Twicken-
ham in England. She was the favorite
child ot the cnmte de Pars, and is • !rave
ted vracef'tl horsewoman. She has two
little eons.
It is owl that when Mrs. Peter ('neper
tint went to housekeeping every piece of
her furniture was made by her husband
with lots own hands. Even the bedroom
and parlor "sets" were the handiwork of her
ingenwus husband.
The sugar coating, which makes Ayer.
Pills so eery to take, dursoRes immediately
on reaehieg the stomach, and so permits the
full •trenvtb and beoeht ot the medic:se to
Le promptly onmmuuicated. Ask your
druggist for .Iyer' .1114aoc, jet out.
Miss Agnes Murphy is an eoterprraieg
young woman. She is the editor of the
Melbourne Punch, is • member of all the
!meting woment clubs ot that city, and
wrees •ut:,uritatively on "Vietrria Ilea its
re sour es." She calmly says that she.xpects
to be •suite independent financially by the
time she is 30, when she intends to take up
literary work in London.
At the congress of Hygiene in London
and at the diocesan conference to the same
city it was urged that early marriages are
so great an evil that some sort ot reform in
the marriage laws le necessary. Investiga-
tion showed that the healthiest children are
those of mothers between 20 and 30, and of
f.ther. between 30 and 40. W hers either
husband or wife is under 20 the of.priag
pro, ed generally weakly.
" l'rinoess " Johnson, of the Mohawk
tribe of Canada, has taken Boston by storm
with recitals of her poems. She is prrhape
the most unique figure in the literary world
of this country. She is a Mohawk. the
daughter of Owanonsyahon 1" the man with
• big house- i, the well known chief of the
Si* Natiooa Her father wu • cultivated
man and her mother came from as English
family. Mies .iohesoo's favorite poet is
Longfellow, her novelist Willem Bleck,aad
her favorite sport canoeing
Although French women's legal and civil
rights 666 extremely circumscribed, at hu
alwses bees advanced in their favor that
they are absolute mistresses is their own
domestic circle. Therefore, it is with • feet
ink amoentang •locust to ewesternatlou that
they learn that, in the matter of dismtestng
servants, it is see husband alone who has
the power. A ossa is point cane before the
courts the other day. and the magistrate
ruled that legally • wife cannot dismiss her
servant. without her lord and master's con-
sent. _ ___
1tieeMs Testimony.
1►sea ants, - Two year ago 1 lied • had
attack of biliousness aid leek owe battle of
Burdock Blood Hitters, and can truly re
eoesiresd at to miy suffering from this onm-
plust UNA. (:Has.gv
2w Terwto.
A Mystery tapla..ed.
tides- How did Cobwigger 0001. to fill op
his dairy is three days'
Merritt He had • had cold and be bean
copying down the sure cures his fiends
ease hies. -- .hedge
aameestw Issingewerad.
(:awtt.awas.-Abet Itse vegetke ago 1
waw nearly wild with haidashes I owe,
taking R H. R , took are kettles sad my
headaches have now a=ir 4.appier..i
1 think it u • grand sisal
lee.
9w
Mammy Station. Oa.
• Bwwlmg Carr.
"i Mel knew wka• she saw is hiss to
fall is kers wish hies. H. Mee heatemese,
sad he has me esesee." "Thee i. tees, Mt
yea mesa rsmsink.r that be bas tile repute
tiles of hake wild."
Redj•y'e Liver Leesimges Mei .. a'. t 1.
weak.
1NE Giff DIVINE.
A slab IMPri
tit aa1tl� 1't; , n n, w
Tee;
In Wagged raise bra t. it : •.
11essi�Tn by wells Of ',rick aid stone
'i bla.Altadois u..i ie.* L. loos
But breadth of land mid se, •,• f sea
Hare failed of su L atlr •,1.0.,.
.\nal bloomy gardrua a : a•,:e,l las
less lnip le t-at,efp. t....,
Ir • thaui.tul sea.. of 1.avl.:nese.
Thou woe/ to ohs tree 1 prime.
1t shuts alt sordid Miele away;
.4.1 , lea Attu t things 'Atl aces:
It 0tia the ..len,. des by day
\\-Ith summer'. M Ck1r.L (mels.;
Brutal, Aa1 141.•. s ild aa,,ere morale for me
And forage murmur iu my tree.
Rads. too. an,' built rMt • and bees
Throng In 11 . com: l ' LAI run";
At•:.oir of ripper.; b.,rp ooke
1 h.•ar 1.i one t rust :)) sparrow;
A stmt of sadden .ttp.!•ine braes.
The dream ui ,.:cn) colored stings.
a bet sor'r'ow curls.
whet tester 141.• CAM Aunt lour
H..ti resit b pun a recd of lu•rtr
TIOP6,itrsip iird.o ..elIkout tow:
Looer)1 Mat ) •• Anoint roil*,
•All ontury s bunt. 1st use free.
undo) &Lout Time"
OLD HORNCS.
A single French regiment, on an un-
+betterrd railroad 1aule stood like a tar -
tet for the Prussian army, Massed in
;be wor.tls seine t4) yards away. As
tine bullets fell *hien about teem, the
French ttiecrs ordered their men to be
limn, but nut one would obey. All
retnnised proudly standing about their
tag.
In that bena.l expanse of green pas-
ture and waving cornfields illumined
by the eettieg Sun, that body of tor-
mented men, enveloped in a cl..nd of
smoke, looked like tt flock snrprioed in
the open ticltie by the first gnat of a
terrible tempest. It did indeed d rain
lead ori that hillside: Nothing could
bo heard but the crackling discharge
of musketry, the heavy rumbling of
.bells sail fire ceaseless vibration of
64010,401 over the battlefield.
Again and again the Hag tell, but
every time a clear, bold 'voice rang nut
above the din of the musketry, the
oaths of tho wounded, the desalt rattle
of the dying eeTo-the nag. boys! To
the flag!"
And instantly, like a vague +-bedew
in that fiery fog, an tanker tk-oUld spring
forward, and the danntleei eueient, ae
if restored to life, world look duwu
again upon the battle.
Twenty-two times it Ir11. Twenty -
Pro tine s its staff, still warm as it slip-
ped from a dying hand, was caned and
raised again, and when at sunset the
remnant of the regiment, a little hand-
ful of men. slowly retreated the flag
was but a tattered rag in the hands of
Sergeant Henna, the twenty-third eu-
sign of the day.
This Sergeant Horne, au old fellow
who could acaree ly t,gn his name, had
been 20 years in gaining the rank of
a nonrrnnmissioneel oflktr. The mis-
eries of the (unveiling and the brutality
of the barracks bad left their impress
in his low, obstinate brow, his back bent
by the knapsack end that unec•rnpn-
lons air of the trooper in the ranks. He
stammered a little, too. but eloquence
is not essential in an ensign. That
same evening of the battle his colonel
said to him. " You have the ttag, my
gallant fellow -well, keep it."
And on his shabby army coat, worn
and faded by rain and powder, the eine
ler placed at once the golden badge of
the ensign. This was the one glory of
his pipe. From this time ifpteld troop-
er held up his head. Tho' peter song
who heretofore had walked with bent
back and downcast glance, henceforth
stood proudly erect. with eves ever
tilted to watch that scrap of cloth flat-
tering in the breeze, and to hold It very
high, very upright, above death. de-
feat and treachery.
Never was there a plan so happy as
Hurnus when he stood on the battle-
field. his hands clasped about his flag-
staff in its leathern sheath. sildent,
motionlestt, grave as a priest, one would
have said that he was holding some-
thing seercd. His whole life, his whole
being. centered in the fingers gripped
about the beautiful golden rag *poo
which the balls seemed to hurl thetn-
selves, and his defiant eyes looked the
Prussians straight to the face as if tp
aay,"Jnet trynowto take it from me!"
No one did try -not even death. After
these deadly battles of Horny and
Gravelotte, the flag left the field cut to
pieces, literally riddled with bullet -
holes. but it was still old Herons who
bore 1t. Then came September, the
army at Metz, the siege, and that long
encampment in the mrd till the cannon
rusted, and the finest troop In the
world, demoralized by inaction, by
lack of provisions and of news, died in
the trenches of fever and despair and
deadly weartnees. Leaders and men
alike lost confidence. Henna alone still
had faith. His tricolor rag was all the
world to bin, and as long as he kept
that It seemed to him that nothing was
lost.
Unfortunately. as there was no more
fighting. the colonel kept the flag at his
quarters in one of the suburbs of Metz,
and honest Hornns was very like a
mother whose child is ont at nurse.
Ile thought of it continually, and when
his longing for it beeline, tineaeinrable
be would rush off to the colonel's house,
where the mere sight of his gag. rent-
ing trawtnilly in its plane againd the
wall, would seed him lark with mur-
alist renewed. to dreesrn glider his eak-
Ing tent of marrhea, of battles, of the
flag floating gayly down there on tie
Prussian trencher.
An order of Marshal Baada destroy-
ed these Illnsioos. Ons morning Her-
ons awoke to find the tamp to an up-
roar, the moldier* in excited group
shouting and talking angrily and ges-
ticulating toward one part of the tows.
"Off with knot Shoot him!" they
cried. and the oaken walking apart
with heads bowed in shame before the
mos. let thorn talk on unheeded.
It was indeed shamefu l ! To 130,000
well armed. able odied area bad hest
been ,wad an order surretwtertPJ them
40 the enemy without a 41,,w.
•' Anti the flees.. demanded Horned
"The Hays were snrreudered with lbs
rest - the guns, the n mules et the
wagon tritium' -ererythllig "
Th eh -thine ler ! 'stammered the poor
(elbow, "they shan't keep mine."
Aud he wt off on the run toward that
side of the town. There. too. all was
confusion. National guards, civilians
0141 gardre nc,bilw were walking
t:lsoat. Ih putatl,.ns ityased, trrulbbing,
on th. Ir way to the tnanhal's bungs.
H.orntta saw uolhiug, heard melting_
lie Eurrietl up the street, muttering to
'bite•!( :
"To tak-a lay flag from met Come
now. vin this he leott-aiMe? Let hitt
,sive the Prussians what is his own -hu
slIv.1 elute *std hisgildedcoachet-but
th:a is mine. 1t is my honor. 1 forbid
any one to touch it. "
(lis acute u•tu warn broken up by
his hurt ;•d pare anal his stammering
tton:,-ueebut, utter all, the old feIL,w
hail a Platt, a clear and tied purpose to
take his flag. to carry it into the meld
Of the seriment, and with any who
would fallow 1 ' to tall upon the Prus-
sians and destroy them utterly. When
he reached the colonel's house. he was
raft even allowed to eater. The colonel
too. was furious dud would admit no
one, but florins did not understand
this. He wept; be swore, be tried to
push Haat the orderly.
My Stgl I want my ting!" he
shunted.
Finally a witelow was thrown open
"It is you. Horntuh':'•
"Yr!. colonel -1" ----
"All tho flags are at the arsenal.
Yon . have ub Y 11,1 go thew for si r••
eeipt...
"A receipt -fee what :•"
:'It is t6o rnanthal'a urdtr. .
But, colonel' ---
"Gi-m-peace:" and down went
the window.
Old Humus stagy std like a drunken
man.
" A receipt. A receipt. " he repeated
met•hanirally. Finally be went off
with but one clear idea in his head -
that bis flag was et tbo ar,enal. and
that, came what would, he must sew it
gain,
The arwcne; gates were opined wide
for the passage of the 1'rarasiau wagons
which were ranged in the yard. A chill
passed over Henna as he entered. All
the other . neighs were there and 50 or
60 tethers. client and heartbroken.
With the amber wagons standing in
the rain and the grunps of men with
bared heads', it was like a funeral. A11
the flags of 13uzaine's army were lying
in a heap on on * cornenof the muddy
pavement. Nothing redid be sadder
than these 1 trips of bright hued silk,
that debris of golden triage and carved
sticks. all that glor:uns paraphernalia
thrown on'the ground. soiled with mud
and rain.
An officer picked them up, one by
one, and es .his regimeet was called
each ensign went forward to get a re-
ceipt. Hard awl unsympathetic. two
Prussian officers watched the registra-
tion
mind yon .i /gars; ate ay thus! -O,
sacred, gloric .., tatters -displaying
your rents, trailing sadly over the pave-
ment, like binds with broken wings!
Yom are going away with the shame of
beautiful things *Oiled, and each of you
will earn- xw-ay a little of France. In
year worn folds the sunshine of the
long marches still lingers. In your
bullet holes you preserve the memory
of the nnkno`eu dead. fallen perchance
beneath the banner, Mrnck"--
"Hornns. you -they are calling you.
Go get your receipt."
There was the flag before him. It
was really his, the moat heantiful, the
meet mutilated of them all, and /teeing
it once more he seemed to be standing
again on the railroad bank. He heard
the balls sing, the shells buret and the
coktael'8 voice, "To the flag, boys!"
His 22 comrades lay there on the
ground, and he, the twenty-third, was
springing forward in hie torn to seize it.
to lift thepoor flag,totfor wantf
feria o
g
a sustaining arm. Ah l he swore that
day to defend it, to guard it till death.
And now --the thought of all this sent
every drop of blood in his body to his
bead. Maddened. desperate, he sprang
upon the Prussian officer, tore from his
grasp his beloved ensign and tried to
lift it very high, fere upright, crying.
"To the fl"- bnt his voice died in his
throat. The staff trembled and slipped
from his fingers. In that weary air,
that deadly air that weighed so heavily
on the snrrrndered town, no flag could
wave, no pride could live, and old Her
ens fell. crushed. -Alphonse Daudet.
Mone Cases Mosso
"(X course horses cannot talk, bat
they understand each other just the
same," remarked Peter Noell, one of
the elitist and best known drivers on
the Spring (trove avenne line of can.
" For a long time I bare been driving
a stnnly, _solid old My. There is noth•
ing fast abort him, bat when it comes
to pulling be tan discount any other
horse o*.wd by the company. H.
known, too, when he is hitched np
with a balky mate, and it is from his
settees on occasions of that kind that
I am convinced that horses understand
each otheb When he is in harmers
with a balky partner• he will stand per-
fectly still and let the other do all the
prancing and kicking.
When it quiets down a bit, be will
nib its neck and puts his nose up to its
ear, as if endeavoring to whisper to it.
When it becomes qulet, the old fellow
will make • move as if to dart. If the
other takes the rte, well and gond, but
it there is one hit of rearing or jump
ing be will settle bark in his place sod
repeat the neck rubbing and "apposed
whispering operations. The second ens
isgenerally successful. and witk.slight
wish, as if his efforts had proved aac-
e etfae, the old fellow starts the car all
by himself. 1 tell you be can cure
soon balky bones of their bad habits
and in quicker time them all the trate-
era in Cincinnati putt leistbse.
dated Constnerelai-OsIMike
OUT or TN
FRYING PAN
liaa come not a little
knowledge as to cook-
ery -what to do, as well
as what favi to do. Thus
we have learned to use
C®TT LEEIE9
the most pure and per-
fect and popular cook-
ingrtaterial for all frving
and sborteningpurposes.
PROGRESSIVE
COOKING
is the natural outcome
+� of the age, and it teaches
us rev/ to use lard, but rath-
er the new shortening,
■a
o
COTT LE NE,
which is far cleaner, and
more digestible than any
lard can be.
The success of Cotto-
lene ha.4 called out worth -
i
less imitations under
similar tames. Look out
for these! Ask your
' (:Taxer for COTTOLiiNli,
and be sure that you get it.
c
e■
g � Made only by
o ' N. K. FAiRSANK i 00.,
Wellington and Ann Sts..
.) MONTREAL. . a
taea Ci. ie •„ea•nn+�1O
O 'ryeu•aat Cororrot +.a t
11
i
CRISPANO CASUAL
stsarr's ataleseat ter tbreseetlara.
Never he without i:.eljay's Liver
Lotengee.
1f some odour heads were Dot eo bit' our
hearts would grow faster.
Ile•tiipg one's apartments with caaoel cost
Oat unit' be doer at a grate expense. _.
Burdock fills cure sick headache by regu-
lating the stomach, liver and bowels. lm
The t'binese language is spoken by the
treated number of people, user 400.000,.
000.
The deepest coal theft in America is ut
Poettsrille, 1'a. Is 1395-n had reached 1,576
feet.
t.
• Orleans has a smaller polios force
than any ot tier American city of toerespood-
utg size.
the mcmey a man tucks away in hu "ia•
side fan kitmay be looked upon as vested
security.
The longest wire span is • tei-i repk wire
•,ver the Hover Hutuah, iu hula. OR over
o,000 fest.
.lagoon says you can't blame a theatrical
company for being spiritless when the ghost
won't wale-.
The swiftest hard is the kestrel. or spar-
row hawk. 1t has been known to nuke 100
miles an hour.
Great Briton is first in merchandme.
Germany second, the 1 -cited States third,
and France fourth.
Many • num who is anxious to reform the
world has a gate that is hanging by one
hinge. Ham's Horn.
There is no better remedy for warms of
any kind for children or adults than Ur
Low's Worm Syrup. Im
When you speak to • vouch ttsogt book
learning these days he Docks yon Imre just
Ib from the race track.
Eves the most experienced bsritage blas
'er mast call en the phyli:uo when lie
wants his grip checked.
Speaking of hard tames the mao who has
a job at small wags probably finds hut little
change in the sito•thoo.
Skin diseases are most annoying because
so noticeable. Ir. Law's Ntilphur Neap
heals and cleans the skin. • lm
in 1720 the world's commerce wu esti
mated at 4440,000,000: in 1889 it was esti-
mated at $16,885,000,000.
Headache is generally the result of • one-
stipated or 1ennged condition of the digest.
ire orsans. To cure the head/Liss it is
neear•ry to get at the root of the evil. and
for this • toning laxative is mach better
than a violent purgative. A doctor gays,"1
know of no better medicine for this purpose
than Faeljay-• Liver Lomeges."
6511. reebable.
"1 wonder hnw it was first dissevered
that Bah wu a brain food !"
She -Probably by the wonderful stories
that tow tell who go fishing.
Mltoh • ettellrer.
Mrs. T. S. Hawkins, Clew aeoop, Tenn..
gays . " Shiloh's Vitaliser ' eaved my life.'
I maids, it the beet remedy for a debilitated
system I ever used." For dyy•pepaie, liver
or kidney trouble it eiosls Pnco 75 omits.
Sold by all druggists. e w
Owe Thrust Cared
MAR Stas, I bad a very sore throat for
over • week and tried severs/ medtanee
without relief until 1 heed oe 1)r. Wood's
Norway Pine Syrup, which- 1 tried with
grant slireele. 1 1Jii.k It • fig. m.dicioe for
sae throat, pale in the cheat, asthma, brow
chitin, aid throat sod lung trembles.
MAMA Mibnrsr.,v,
2vr Bob.rygetea, Ont.
Mite Uhelly.
Watts i had stippoed that ezoaseitely
leak heels were nest of fashion, but i saw •
woatea es the street today with heels on
bee diem fully two Inches high.
Pettit That's nothing. i saw • weenies
on the stye last sight, the heels of whose
shoes wen higher tkaa her heed.
. wiled teem LR. Old Yew.
Iwwie S. Butler, Baste. 1(04.. Rhea*
flee.
Thee Wasson, Sheield. N. R., Lookj•w.
By. Medellin, Chatbari, Oat., Goitre.
M e. 15'. W Jebaetoe, Walsh, Ont • Is.
Oasimattien.
Jean H. Bailey, Parkdale, (1st , Near
L Larne Syd..y, C. It, 1A Ortega
Is emery ease ueseliclted ae.l mobewti
wad. Hwy attest to the merits of MI
ARM'S LINIMENT
A grad, heavy se out elder shalt,
at [Nd's do
er SLIM
AN =INS= BEINISTHB
REVWS. BARKER
oP tsamesono.
Mr. W. S. Barker is a young
minister of Peterboro who has by his
groat earnestness and able exposition
of the doctrines of the Bible earned
for )himself a place amongst the
foremost ministers of Canada. He,
with his most estimable wile, believe
in looking after tbo temporal as well
as tile spiritual welfare of mankind,
hence the following statement for
pablicahcu :
•• I have much pleasure in re-
sotsmending the Great South Ameri-
•an 'Cervine Tonic to all who aro
fileted as 1 have been with nervous
prostration and indigestion. I found
very great relief from the very first
bottle, which was strongly reeom-
mc::ded to me by my druggist. I
also induced my wife to use it. who,
I must say. was completely run down
and was suffering vary much from
general debility. She found great
relief from South American Nervine
and also cheerfully recommends it
to her fellow -sufferers.
6 Ray. W. S Baasat:."
It is now s scientific fact that cer-
tain nerve centres located near the
base dale brain have entire eontrol
over the stomach. liver, heart. 'nogg
and indeed all internal organs ; that
is, they furnish these organs with
the necesalry nerve force to enable
them to I. rrform their respective
work. When the nerve centres tire
weakened or deranged the nerve
•
fora' is diminished, and as a result
the stomach will not digest the food,
the liver becomes torpid, the kidneys
will not set properly, the heart end
lungs suff: r, and in fact tba whole
system becomes weakened and sinks
on account of the lack of nerve force.
South American Neriine is based
on the foregoing scientific discovery
and is so prepared that it acts
directly on the nerve cent•es. 1t
(immediately increases the nervous
energy of the whole system, thereby
enabling the different organa of the
body to perform their work perfectly,
when disease at once disappears.
It greatly benefits in one day.
Yr. Solomon Bond, a member of
the Society of Friends, of Darlington,
Ind., writes: ••I have used six bottles
of Sonth American Nervine and I
consider that every bottle did for me
one hundred dollars worth of good,
because I have not had a good
night's sleep for twenty years on
account of irritation, pain. horrible
dreams, and general nervous pros-
tration, which has been caused by
chronic indigestion and dyspepsia of
lire stomach, and by a bt.lken down
condition of in; nerroas system.
But now I can lie down and sleep all
night as sweetly as a baby, and I
feel like a sound man. I do not'
think there has ever been a medicine
introduced into this country, which
I will at all compare with this u s
cure for the atomaeb and nerves."
LINO_
wseeesear N r. mew.
Wholesale and Retail Aria
t/
Godericb and vicinity
TO DRESS WELL
EVERY LADY i414D GENTLEMAN
MUST HAVE THE
LATEST STYLE OF FOOTWEAR.
THIS IS OVR AIN ; .:: -
To Supply Our Customers with the Newest and lost
Fashionable Footwear,
You can buy no trash
from us,
We don't keep it.
T. FOWLER & CO.
TIa�a: spQ rrrS �PSACTICAL QOV'UI, LITZ T24.CWg
7801702 w0 ga1d1 g hand et the P»f0!PAL of the
MDT LITT Will= IND IROlTNARD $OLUNL, 0s. LONDON,
(fid "s.., p..m.60 r.. M.t="1=="1477 s...r a.seer .1r/�st
b. rnhi k� �ewb*hew t. preppaare r jr■lt�rmsg•.I�ram" 1. DmelaOr Amt Ne.
Tnnear A�/d ars .stbe Bee Istria fossa �tsseieses Cases reers.iy
J. W. VllLl, Fliarlipel.
1 4