HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1894-7-12, Page 3.11.11111111.11111.1
tt•rfection of the a tell
I:ant properly enr,41
growers. NI 11.1
right and of ntst, h-
Mastiff Plus; ( Iat
most fastidious.
stmoos Co.. llenessL �'
ersheniasee e1 affected .hg.
s oatriage akin meraiag with
roti g 1s it. It wee oohed,
how thea 1 eon slap ea the
is the ribs when I most him
k ; but blew you, when he •
carriage this morning, he
sad with ea mash dismay as
data of • holt doses healthy
she was to the carriage 1'y
slats arouse him --sad he
i1y have yelled to me to ens
without 15erincisr hu good
didn't do it, however Hr
ea withoos more thaw • alio'
f doesn't have the; effect asp
o horseba•t dss•o't, en visa'
--moo the must he some
misei soau.ave to baureol
i Journal.
INOTHER
11I080a
■
M ��isMa►
1
It. E, SIHRAHLOOS. L 1
D. .,
Sim vita.als
~testi.
Oa.. -U. Mars.
11•011. 0.111•••• .. Mee*.
gr 11w"'S' n.t•Iy
Dgt BUNTS& P�gH.IT,gs.1sC�LAN, SUR
�as�, to O0..- i mks Illeoa, Yea.
rspR t(Igst e.lr fk.w last 141.17aes
DN. SHANNON
ersse� SHANNON.
Anewsehers. ea.
testlJz _ ot sear.
mos-.-ResYas.ee Map Nertias,
sw 1w1W
){ABaL
CIAKP,IOON IIIJs.O IdsINSTON,BAKRIS--
w ilese ov r aeras& l r A (;A>r'
rite'. ti. C.. H. 0. JOH N. cry t•
bra. s�
LOFTUSIL DANCIY, BAKRIITER,
WOsseo/ m Isms at Meow
or. crows ti to.. I
seem CSI4•rN Hotel, O.de h. Ont. !>Yl -U
V14.• LX W IH, BARRISTER, PROO-
Es. we is Nantes* Omits at Omens
thilboros Mesal.
R. os.s,aAYSt r et `T"and w oo
�1ewt Oed•eloh, over totoQ•pb .m... Prl-
rau broads to load of Iowa& rates 1meter-
ro
I t AKKOW A PROUDFOOT, BAR.
D rasters, A ttortrye, aotldtws &co Node
i.e, J. T. (Jarrow. GC., W. Pr adfoot.
'J airflow's. glleMmn V Cauvery, Ito.
gestin ►. M. C. Ommor•m. tie.; P. holt ;
Dolle, Holmes
J-O, WARD. OONV1iLYANUIIi,
. te..end mow-.- -�r. taking mod re -
mews reesa• dwmevile a
eelrmatisso, 4Mo•ltlaas or solemn declare -
Mae is of easiceraIng may Amities, snit or gas
• eduua to the HataObert of Justice, the
fours of Appeal for Ontario, or t. say Cu•101y
ria oa Cover, A11 trsosecttosw ewer(t
mgt
▪ arolwomi L f
ed. I14411•114411•1401100otOeao P.0y
sasr.w_ Dme/
_AMS Ham 1T•arllttiMs
*MAGER, CON NEYANCIri6 AND
.sae.Ma opt t.Illartu.'a 140441
1fuNEYyyTO LILND ON MORTGA(.K
.LAO[ICH.ao. *Petty M o. Weal. c.
Y•tin's Weal. thole
he.
tfONET TO LOAM. - 1111b,000.00
01 Priv Ma rases to land at 1111 per east. ea
amaty. WYTUdg.DANCILY. Mintios.Moot.
oppesit. ('naturae Hotel- UedsAs► INV
Lt J. T. NAIrrKL, nits, LIVE AND
C • .oetdesl 1DSwraoo. •goat ; at lower
ash. UOoo -Cor. N•rte+*oarst. awl *oars uod
rt -
V00 000 TO WAN. APPLY TO
M CAYtRON MOL? & HOIJMES. (*od.
,tee, sat.
MONEY TO LEND. -A LAKUI
amount of Private roads ter i.vwtm•tst
stle.det rant o. i4wtolaw Honesees. ADW
•4AKIWW & PHO U IJtUUT
RKADOLIYFR, GENERAL M.
. su1,.m, Hol Loath and Yeas,
t1•oog Airesat. OW 5twt.ehee oompumi•s
Igrw4ud. Mowry 10 bead oa stralgh
Saes 51 the lowest rate of uut•w soaag. la
way to swat tl5
t 00(10.*. (ls.. Bse.
I.it door from .quare, West met ft .
■asrvilea,
' ODERICHatwoeANIOS' num-
M0011 • t e. *r r.tL1KSARiwt a Dad egqu.r.ItICADN p
slake
Opss tree 1 t.roes, sad tram r to I. rat.
ABOUT 9000 VOL% IN LIBRARY.
Losdln9 i esely, Weedy mod Illestrated
Papers, Mayansses, We., see Pi..
!Menthe/GP TICUT. ONLY1.M
pesusg free w .f Library mod il..dlsa-
Roses
Appitootlo,. tar .x.mbw•htp r.0«v.d W
Lamwn•s to rpm
H• OMITH, 910. BTIvgN,
emwerarr•
i
Marsh lflti tea z
AlleenlONMItDR.
"UOMAs tIONDltT, AUCTIONIER
r 1
and i.saraso. Agent. Ooderioh. Out.
• - J. Asset Tondos tad L.."amhlr. Fire Ise Co..
W Oen District Yates& Ina Co. gales at
Imded to tae say part of the county. tt l7
.ourse is mafiosi t *
one fibres in the wails
whish at OM. Mai •
Ills. 4th. nerve metres
l the stemaeb. notifying
arsines of food ; where-
ve hamate send down a
rya form or nerve fil id.
login the operation of
tat 1.t the nerve Matra
tl the slomaek IN U-
tley will mot b. am. r
a .ttfiioieut sqM/ d
ee.ol� t�Jalgal di*
g std s .•d
tke their agpearenen
the other .was of to
MT* centres which .ow
d wpm them with
Mesabi i.sattg i. awl
Imow d the
re as the Gloat Beath
ryia. Thais is des is
K is proposed by sae d
d eem physieiams tad
the age. sal is lama
ing sei.atifie discovery.
marvellous powers ier
tar,o.seess, SIM"
!salsas. Meep$sM•iM
Bt. Vitturs Daoas. llm-
amy. Sidle H!Mtt
Mob Sookefos. II is
mels spathe ha all
hien
1ON,
4 ItletallvictrEt sad
tlx
AL
JHOHN KNOX. GINKIsterOat.artehe
read I�issdawabr ateeebeeena
0
t•
W%Wenn with
Isettosa imea 4imtlampositios
atl..ail emssaarnona la 111.0inasss left as
DReeel.er
P.O. stealer wised« wad=
Ceta.e Aesl sso w. Mitt
Dental Announoem sent.
TEEN EITMCTED WITHOUT PAIN
KTHELCNTORIDE
AT
DR. E. RICHARDSON'S
.mltaa .&.L•1114.
NM NNW 01000. $UUT-1T*EET
GODaamI, OUT.
h ttlhwde s e wsut.i..d s.usteettes. after •
the most eatmwsr
of wall owl aynlab•d
Mama, le submit that I Ove the 1517 sed
M• a btt tow la hedseyh. the lathe
ry when 1. wwn..t•d .oyer
create the least pals dear, the •:rramies
et dewass,
or stamps of W 4154. •a mewls
, •s, and vers nes pats 1. the mem
uslim mew
ffiTii Tar..-Qa TARID21
it a Iwy
het
s~I't l� •l tr�oaswale
w
v: ase win-
u
essidor
Ow teeth wo....awdeate
some au ale
►esttivetp i -v.Ne. se so moria.
Prwer� ►I•tea of the watwa.l tooth • le-
•p�wuu.. well and des..
rf maws IaSir ar•meas.
IMO w DR_ W. RKIMARnsoo.
Peewees Ma/a&
it an dories the seems is wbleh the es -
W shipwreck had takes plass, and • hest,
with the hero sad lee er three ether, is
ewes
tarok
than, sirs.
el so et
(tick
Awn
to
▪ aftliamalla hitt amyaw i to ed......
•
f a
•
.1 the . . hue.
he
.heeled " is..
raw •
r 1J
THE SIGNAL GODERICB. ONT., THURSDAY, JULY It 1104,
EVOLUTION
rte:' :ice 4"' 1221
"
thither .dew• thea w
M1•nt44`argy were
While ether, 5• re ivta t �•e�aaa.
• •' Beam we've aliirw *4. mea• trete •
leek
Aa' seem w s•ts1Ush the tact,
O mune 'sty eeempia Yembed,ka.ws,
As far u I've read or cuu
♦te them se doss kww all about the hall
whams
Why, nose of 'em mover $pee.
Now, why 1 thlat it'e • samosa tier.
whet
stv o• shhaler �itet b d the day,
Of the t.ralmot n hae f angled aid lute
oaks as boon eypberts' out
•n• 611 marts of Mortes Ise ria
'Rout wbal ale sun's made of or how as cow -
An' lots id '.r think that It to
O' ...arta 'al's r.Itteplo' '•t 5ubodr kuow.-
Nol..ly 'mast the sem,
Nary • h.dy or bolo , !tepees
Nary • bola' bit lay.
Teti L1v Latlw, an' what doespbe Aar&est how ws .I I venins from •ayyee'
A.' there's the aorlele,.nd kis •'httepantee
Pattsru'd *sort ly our shape
An' I've seed ,erne folks an' I fusee so have
you
A.' it ain't no.m of our Mamma neither.
That actually look d like they sprung from •
•gr•.
Aa' didn't have fur to spring either.
4'ours* 'Wt's ..uepan'•l .very nes know,.
1 don't see bow you folks ran doubt It.
$'p.eMn' they have souse re.e'mbl.nce to us.
N. 4n s -o r(Un' &hunt It.
1f • Niter rookie) r 9t take a rooe) hookAn' mot N aru.hli' long through it.
lint lee' mutt u' flat ser the thing out )•r•elf-
W (it 1 mean; ply ,.,••elf 0.11
You'll see• we're dust-up folk. ten thousand
iodine old.
hulls on • .ondenwe pla0.
I'.,Iorltow' Mita tn..•ta Mr Moors all out
And Arrant. the biblical! mutt.
U' t..er.r '.t'. w.n.rpin 'el IWI./d) koewe,
?..t..ty louder the sun
Nary • body or Lein', 1 stats,
Nary $ Wu' hut IMS._ ---
A GREAT TRAVELER.
(Adding to London in the second-class
compartment of a fast train one morn
ing I met the greatest trnteler in the.
world It happened in this way There
was a friend with me whom 1 met 011
the railway platform,and we entered
together a secvmadl compartment
that contained one passenger, a middle-
aged wan who eat is a corner. It was
a wintry day of most disagreeable char-
acter There was snow and deet and a
strong .est wind. It rained occaawn-
ally. and the wind blew in gusts nonfat
tor what was cowing down The con
partmant was nnhe.ted, of course, and
we shivered as we sat there My friend
said
• •Wbat a f,.ol any man is to spend the
winter in England if he can wraps to-
gether en•:ngfi money to live anywhere
else. and even if he has no money be
twee 11 all himself to tramp out of the
country "
Wow CAM t do that." i said. . for. if
yon remember, the cuuntry is surround-
ed br .alt water."
iOb, wptrr cried! my friend in dig-
gnat
iegnat "There is water. water evert
where. panting down no u.. surround
lag as and 4It were not for the drop to
drink 1 ddw' know what we would de
Now where would you rather he on a
day like this? I'll tell you what 1 think
yearningly shout. it is the ('orniche
roast, betwedn Nice an.l Menton*, with
the .na lotting qpon one and the Medi
terrauraa Iuue ane sparkling away down
below on the right hared. What's your
choirs''
• Well. If 1 had my way.' I said, 'I
wonld go to the bland of Sicily there
1s a forty -wile road there. 1 uutlrrstand,
which goo around the base .1f Mount
Aetna I ahonld like to be with
.some good fellow tramping along that
r..sd.
i beg yonr pardon.- said the wan in
the corner, breaking into the cupverse
non. which is a u).1/t unusual thing to
happen in England. -but the road you
mtlti00 is sixty miles long tustea.l of
forty.'
' 1 ►h. u it•" i said with some enrprise
"1 was never there myself "
"Well, you may take my word (or it,
it is sixty mile. long, and probably the
moist delightful road is the world
Starting from Taoruiina you gu west.
than southward around Aetna, and
ghop jou have done Duty miles you aril
ick at Catania on the coast again.
Ton hey. not been there' to said;
"well, take my advice, and when you
go take plenty of prorisions with you.
The Cottilche road, which this gcntle-
plw has joat ninti.rned, is pinch better
upp the Ray of hotel •tyonimodatiom
Wben you tramp that sixty -mile r..wl
you ought to do it very comfortably in
three days. but you will find hotel ow
coma od*tions exceedingly bad The
food will be unfit to eat. and the sleep
ing quarter'" -hers he shrugged itis
shoulders ---"well. yon utast pat up with
theist as lest you natty 1 suppose." he
bolded. turning to lily- friend, •'tltat
when yon walked trent Niro to Mentome
you lunched at Tnrbie."
' Yes, we did." admitted my friend.
'They give you a very decent lunch
there,' continued! the man in the corner,
"but if you have a large party it is al
ways better to ardor it by telegraph from
Nice beforehand i suppose von did
not natio* in tits morning's weather re
Dort --.mane paper/ pepublish the weather
reports of different points in Europe std
some do not -that the weather both in
Hlotly and along the (%nrnicho road dur
tile last week hos been exceedingly
• • No. " 1 acknowledged, "I did not no
tics that '
"Therefore," rostinaed the man in
the corner, "if you are tyles you will
choose for your winter sojourn a little
town that is not math known, althongh.
• nfortnnately, it is rapidly Doming ad
the knowledge of tourists 1 mean
Seita, in Africa. You reach it frost the
Medi'i.rreneaa mart by a wonderful reli-
ned going through gnrg.a in the monnt
sins It is jaw beyond the foothill.
Wolf. and is an deists. almost, In the
llah*ra There, the weather is always
fine in winter. the air being invariably
tiro and clear. To the north you
vs the mountains• which naked
`e secaery .*ally accessible. be-
e
ee dies. they cot oat all northerly
winds.
��_��� T��_heis reasonably
ably gond hotel
ai'clrtl t�elton
. &n roe can are mock
of Araby'!tttte "
We arrived at the London terminus
u. • before . • thought we had start
ar
the
VI
for
in
1
way a hen n rr
(Mmos )(turnover, .mane
Mita il, c'
ab
b
I'' ..st rn.rv4Me•(y tra he
!KO ever /set There we.ssa
. set nn this earth with which' lie was
..familiar. he had the Week amble*
iste fl.t,lg., sod for a time II had ._-
he would wipe e slat eo.ea-
amilanimmiimingamour
tld.atal trip with s... bot unfortunately
he never could gest olf jest when I time
to be going. and so the waited
p sever took place. Whammy I
went, however, he ways gees tee
neeful Information about the spot to
esi ch 1 was going. lie wrote dews the
name of the beet hotel thea was at the
same time reasonable in its charges. He
gave me Mute on travel, how to get there
at the least exposes, and where there
was • choice of two routes he indicated
the better one to take. He frequently
gave me letters of IItiredoction to hotel
keepers, mentioning the correct charges
for mows and txosrd and I found these
always exceedingly weft/land ouch re
•peeled by hotel mem. who vaguely re
membered him. He was a wan who
thoroughly knew the rupee.
On r 'turning one sultrier 1 missed
him for a week or wore at the railway
station He was a must tnethudical wan,
always leaving by the same train in the
uturulug mud rsturuiug by the same
train at eight After musing him fox
ten day., i looked his Dame up in the
local directory. and tolled at his resi-
dence. It was a boarding buu.e appar-
ently. and the landlady told me that I
was quite q. rrectiu surmising he was out
of town 11e had gone. she sae 1. on his
usual two weeks. trip to the ae.1 •1 :r, but
would he beck, she added, 1u .1 couple
of days
• 1 Utoraght," 1 sat. "that ho 1 ifuue
on one of bay customary trips 1.o til. con-
tinent. '
' /h. dear' no. she.nawere-I. "h• has
never been on the continent t1 his Me.'
"Never been on the coutineut'" I ask
ed in sunrise.
"Not that 1 know of, and he has lived
with me fur twenty year,. He has the
two ro.'w• on my first floor, and is se
rtg^!sr ea
' Oh in that caw. clockwork" I said, "he is not
the man I am looking for The man I
want is the greatest traveler 1 ever
wet . he has leen all over the world.-
' •Ah. then. ' said the landlady ."it is n )t
my lodger. for he is a clerk in a lawyer's
o ce. an.l ha. been all his life he gets
only two weeks in the summer, and then
he runs dowp to a little place on the
.'oast. He did not give yon this address,
did 110-
he did DoE," I answere3. "I
looked it pp in the Local directory.
'Then you must be looking for some
one else.' said she.
This was so very evidently the case
that I begged pardon for hading troubled
her and left. Two day.. afterward I
fouud my mend un the train as usual.
1 told him of the strange coincidence
that in the .awe suburb there should
lire a Ulan the same name as himself
tab never traveled. but mlways went,
dtinug his vacation, to the name little
place down by the sea.
My friend smiled somewhat warmly,
and said "If yon think over our talks
you will remember that I never clatuded
to have been is any of the places I have
spoken of.
• Never claimed'" I cried in astonish
went. -Why you gave me the utast
minute particulars, of all those places •
"Quite sue he .a:.1, -still I never said
that I had been to any of them that
was merely your own inference. Will
you come and see me in my rooms to
nights,'
i promised to do s11 and went accord-
ingly. I found that 1 had been at the
right place after a11, and when he took
me into his first floor sitting room I
found it the most amazing ruow I had
ever entered. _A11 the walls were cover
ed with books. and all of oc:e kind.
Every book the Baedeker or Bradshaw
had ever tasted was there. also second
hand books of travel. guide books of
every kind and of every country that be
had picked up on his small salary at
secoud•hand bookstalls. There was
a large portfolio of photographs
and engravings. most of the en
graving. being on steel or wood.
and even' locality under the suis
was pictured. Twenty years ago my
traveler confessed, he had a great demure
to see foreign parts, but, 'alas, h. had
neither the time nor the .one?, so he
had done the next best thing. and travel
ed entirely in his imaglnatua He had
now practically lust all desire for for
ei$n travel, for when I asked him a0 ac-
company me as my guest over to Brit-
tany, he shook bis h6dol, and said, that
his own mind -pictures of these places
were so vivid that lie feared the sight of
the places, themeelves would remit.
ip
4isapp uiptinent I saw him the oter
y, And lie was looking forward with
pleasant anticipation to his annual litter
trip to the seat. He had packed up, he
said, four book{ of trove) that were new
to hint, and be had laid theta aside so as
to study them undisturbed when he
reached the shore this summer.
Ulmer amity.
The only 1p mserious argument against
feminine srtfoking that I have ever men
is that It i. "unwomanly .-which begs
the que.tion. "Womanly things are
things which well bred women do at
any given time and in any given place.
In Turkey It is unwomanly to show the
face. In Japan it is unwomanly to en-
ter a room before your husband- In
(ierwany it is unwomanly to shake
hands with a mere saintance-if it
be a man Ili England twenty years
ago, it was unwomanly to ride in a han
Isom. Now it is not , simply because
women habituallyride in hansoms. And
aro if women reall) with to prove that it
is te,t "unwomanly" to smoke, the only
thing they have to do is to smoke. But
it is nine of my basin(.'. -Pall Mall
(Janette
3
$.told HM $1.r...11 row 1151...•.
( hie of the moat %ingnlar things about
the great nervous specialist, Dr Brown
Bonnard. who .lied recently, woe the
way in which he saved his nerves for
tucience, butt injnred his stomach for the
same cause Throughnnt his lite he was
opposed to the nee of tobacco. "I never
smoke," he dace said. "became 1 have
seen the most evident proofs of the in
jurions effects of tobacco on the nervous
s stern " hnt hie desire to investigate
the &outmnts of hie own stomach, b7
Swallswing � r to which s thre.d
wast and pn!l:agt them up to exam -
So the gastric juice yhich they had ab-
sorbed, brought oo • rare aA,ayge,
known as morychtm, or romi.aWli,
which compelled Mw to aaWeate Ins
food a .meed trine.
• P•trte.d *1114haat.
H. les. Nerntwrg of Lawrwen*. Kan,
while pee•prt't(g around Castle Reek
Dove .ve fS.wnear r the Handy Hill
✓ ive Mall unearthed the entire forts of
h patrta•d 0lephaet bng.th.r with
tutorage parts o1 the.., helme& sea
hes •alm.d.. Owniolgii4e any these mei
tnrifteteis hot of ptrta.d Y ell MI
varieties, std that in mew elf vhf
caverns uta be sept •tam whish slept
have some Newel Ash of senstenes paw'
psrtta>•a.iA4ostgo um,*
LADAS' 111140E11.
fidlr treason rase wear « the stormy
Maes. w es lila
revered.
Th.
The Asserte•a Ambassador at Landoe
h as readmit • very missal prim( at the mart
iy Premier • per -wool regard. • plots. or
10 tabor words, • horseshoe, ours by the
wiser a the Derby, is more highly prised
as • memento teas ashyether gilt whisk
wealth w w . ma pa•et a Great Bra-
ss. One of lads•' same went to the
I'rieoe of Wale ; reaet8.( se no he forced
tato as akataad for Lod Kos.b.rry's wnt-
isg desk , 'mother w111 pace the house of
Mr. !hyoid. the Aswican Amb•wdor, at
his hums to Dst•wmru, .ails the gesaps are
►eay about in. diNrabitao of the forth
shoe. l'mdoubtly an swami effort will be
made to trace it to the bomdmlr of some
5om•n of beset, is society ser ea the Nye
is Lemke and the te • hot chow jars now,
.000rding to the British seems, paper., to
associate the came of some of the much
talked abort .01015 in Lando. with the
some of the Prime Miotster The chase is
conducted is • thoroughly sportomanhk,
spirt, apparently, as the gamest theory
seams to in that sues the Prince of Wales
h as bola talked about so mach in cosolc
non with women, • dead game sporting
sprit sat the anp. of K.retsrry should not
mita • Mlle bit of scandal in the thine
t111" 01:00.
Net only the show of the 1)erl'y wavers,
litz the.• of the wieners of oth.ei notable
moo In Ern/laud. are also t•►.n off after
18. race sad distributed se sous ruin by the
owners. hose of the lkund street _• fellers
eat the shoes with to.lsumm•te ',strave-
gasue. One such horseshoe is on a xhibttios
is • window on Bond street, and for • lose
while • number of Amencuo■ looked at it
with mese or low interest.
On the toe of the shoe were the owner's
racier (Mora, worked in garnets and trine.
midi, while the o..leide of the shoe was
meddled with a lice of magadceo• diamonds.
In the macre was • small bevelled mirror,
which was surmounted by • jockey cap sad
room whips, shale the heels wet• rupported
by saddles, strays and othe fantastic stable
toggery. As extraordinary valuation was
set upon it. 11 wine not for sale, of course,
once these plates are always gilts, and are
intended in a geseral way for the dreset rig
table of a lady. Owing to the great value
of the brilli.att sfsund the horseshoe it
would not b. well to leave at wreh+•iy
around, lives in the most carefully guarded
house New York
boo.
6ISMARK'S DEBTS
lee Pricers Imewlae severely Affected by
the mvpres.l...
Nobody in Germany has felt tb. 1511
effects of the agricultural ieprewien more
keenly aha■ hos PrInee i iamerk 11.s
annum wy that is this out Ilea the rens.,
1.4 his Letter (•ppal;aou. •o ties g.,,ermen, •
iv..tcy o: redu. 1..4 tl egt in !la 118 by It eat Kir
with Russia Metria and the Balks. slue?.
1o per.c.a .11. hate read 14 he Mow
mtoceot preset• elven to lturark b, the
old I:nporer at has been a •organs• to learn
recently that his estates are heavily wort•
gages'. His trews( frim the old Emperor
after the Aurtro-Pfuwtan war o1 1866 was
1.500,000, and with this sum he bought his
place at yawls.
Alter the France I'r,usian war he re-
mived from the same hands toe baso
forest at }'reidricheruhe valued at$750,000.
He Inherited the ancestral estate at
'cbmnheuses. Os April 1, 1885, Bur ark'.
seveoueth birthday, hie admirers through -
the world gay* him that portion of the
sehoenheu.en p.opert, which his father
had been obliged io sell when times were
herd. The me.ey value of dm gift was
some $4(0,000 Hun,$rk is atm a d;stiller,
a forester, and the owner of • loran brick -
yore'.
Respite .11 these advantages, however,
he has band it unposoble to lift the wort
gages, amounting to about $750,000 which
have encunbereo his states for many years.
Of his gross ionone mon than 032,000
must be devoted every year to paying the
interest on hie debts. The burden is not
agreeable to the old l:hancellnr, and he has
cites remarked to his friends recently that
his ambatino to leave an uneacan.btred pro-
perty to his children would .ever 11. grati-
fied.
"Commend
to Your
Honorable Wife"
-Afr.riese .' Vm4a
and tell het that I am composed
of clarified cottonseed oil and re-
fined beef suet ; that I am the
purest of all cooking fills ; that
my name is
that T am better than lard, and
more useful than butter; that I
am equal in shortening to twice
the quantity of either, and make
food much easier of digestion.
I am to be found everywhere in
3 and 5 pound pails, but am
11ad•only by
The N. K. F•Irb.nk
Company,
wwetllegt.. ad Ann ase,.
*o*'TPSAL.
PARTY GLOVES.
The agrees as 1e setas she Mem le mom
Trete The Chimer, I:ecord.
" n,d you titer wonder what beoomes of
•11 the long party gloves that girls adore
and speed small fortunes for '" asked the
girl who ocrosioally knows • thing or two.
" Powder rags, of coarse," (ranted the
moody girl.
,. Not tow of the sort. That sl„ws thew
moil .1 o.1 keep up with the till .1• -ns. -le pro-
arresl•'s," 1, '. thv Brat •p.•►.•r. " lou
w -an' to s;i.e 'em to your beet y••angta.ufor
1.7.1 N,..ps The edea a just too 4.4rl•ut1)
lovely.
I-When the blessed sage' wants to sharp-
en hie razor he fastens the cep of the ``love
to • hook on hut dr.sser,takes the freyedo.t
fingers in his left hand and .harpeoe •way.
A.d all the time he is thtnkug of vorioua
ineideate that happened .ben • dear little
hand was inside that glee*, and glove and
hand were both sandwiched in between his
two hands, and h• was *ytsg sweet things
and she was trying to dig • hese a the floor
with the toe of her satin slipper, and, oh, 1
think it's .11 lust too dear. and I'm cola( to
goad all my white gloves o0 to Charley right
away."
The moody girl looked diegosted. She
sena :
" Well, I'm glad that 1 don't keep up
with your old 'tin de-ueol. prooe•sios. It
swede • good rooting out of idiotic feels and
a big dem of cosmos sew. And between
you and tee sad this button hook, I don't
believe that a man would w • glove for •
rarer strop any mote than he ever uses all
those silly necktie eases that you girls .ak•
oat of silk •ud nbbons and things."
The moody girl's ill-natut• is easily e1•
phoned. She's been trying to match • prow
of silk that she bought last October ase •
clearing out sale. She also has. friend that
iasi•ts upon m•kiag sketches of her a04 de-
clartog that they .re perfect likenesses
WHICH IS KING?
the lies T■br. to (hr Jungle Wires 111t.
&.*•,heti Appear..
lo discussing the question, " Which is
the king of boasts !" and old African buster
says.
" Colne *08 me to • desert pool some
clear, moonlight .1,81 when the shadows
are deep •ed clear-cut and the moo her-
self in the dry, 'loudlee .ir looks 1,11• •
ball. All le nearly as bright as day, Daly
the light is *dyer, not gold. Sit down on
that rook and watch the thirsty animals se
they drink -buffalo, rhinoceros, maulepe,
quagga, tied occasionally, if the water is
large, Iles, too. But what has frightened
the antelope and quagga that they throw up
their heeds for • wood and fade .way into
the shadows • The other beasts, too, ars
IiN.15i.g, sad now leave the side .f the
pond. Nothies bet the iseviteble, irre-
pressible jackal that gamins among wild
thio(e nesseisa in view. As yet your dull
ears have caught no sound, bat very .moa
the heavy tread and slow rumbling note of
o n o.o•misg herd of .lephasts reaches you.
They are .t the water. The jackals have
sat down with their toils stralaht end be-
h ind them, but not soother animal is to be
ries The king dri.k. Not • sowed i.
heard. Be squrt• the water .ver ►is lack
makes (8. whole pool mwddv and retires
solemnly, leaving his subjects, who now
g ather round to make the beet of whet he
kse fouled. This N the ki g .tie opinion
of the besets."
MODERN PROVERBS.
Empty threat make lying ohtldeon.
The esrpeat of the still wean no rattlers.
The is sway • kseekout t. • whiskey
ID..'t go to the wrong shop to wet
shaved.
A Wanted wife cos grid
the dark
If we had eterael eneehime .• would bats
16 crops
The dangling* sad e1 • ran leseak. makes
M WOOL
The eggrsete1 imam •1w•ys nada the hon
o at .t 8.1him.
Than to • lasers' for every crumb from
the party Wide.
Oes elessesegse is more ds.gerotr thou •
deal. aristeerata
God sevav mistakes • kneeling hypeerlte
fes an ser ght .a..
The was who gives enrol( away Isn't al
wave wank tablas,.
Seem .me 14514 510 there war. r .5e
'hese She i.s,ltaw lido use weal.
Mike', Oar. is all en .lathe 0. 1.
a vest pocket ia
he mese Them Of.
A deleg•tios of charitably disposed ladies
who had n.thtog else to d., called on • mer-
chant to solicit hes aid in relieving the no
comities of • poor family.
• What is the name of the redumd folios
ly "' asked the merchant.
' The lady has seen better days and is the
proud to allow her Dame to he mentioned in
this connection.'
That's just the ex my family is in. If 1
were to contribute 1 might he contributing
to the support of my own family as obi/iota
of charity. My pride would sot suffer me
to take any such risks as that. Otherwise,
ladies, I would be only too glad to seat
You.'
M/IN'• 711al1see.
.noes li=rent
- GREAT -
COTTON SALE!
GREATEST VALUE EVER BEEN IN GODERICH.
A Good 35 -inch Cotton, 10 yards for 40 CGnta.
A Heavy Sb.etit% :ltd inches wide, 10 yards fat 60 Cents.
An Extra Heavy Extra Shetetin , 36 inches %tele],, 10 l unix for 75 Cents 36 inches atoll],, 10 t urds for 75 Cents
If THESE ARE NOT TME CHEAPEST YOU EVER SAW.
DONT BUT THEE,
11 Ladies' Su 'r Capes at wholesale price- - a real snap.
Short ends of Carpets away below coat.
LACE CURTAINS. As usual the greatest value in the County. In
S.•ts l'r•eam and N1'hite , also by the yard. Bear in mind, we have none of
the I', to 20 rent tr•aan to offer, but a large aasorta.e•ut of first-class stork, di-
rect front the makers in C1.Asoow, ScoTLAvu.
ttur CARPET SEWING MACHINE is a great success. We can
make a 3u or 40 yard Carpet in about two hours. All order* promptly
executedI.
COLBORNE BROS., GODERICH.
The Great Carpet and Lace Curtain Warehouse
of the Coome.
9'0 TIIE PEOPLE OF GODERICII
AND VICINITY .
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN,
I beg to aunounee that on July hat ltoo1L_ •
the hoot and Shoe Business formerly carried on by Mr. 1£ Dowitttu,
well and favorably known to you.
Mr.r w e e v
Ikyw.rl.r ., after t my years of service faithfully
done, and, I alai pleased to know, favorably acknowledged by the
public of this section, has derided to retire from I.uuinoss, *nil on his
retirement i have accepted the 'responsibility involver) in hereafter
conducting the trade which his shrewdness in business, general tact
and aevumintxiating Manner had succeetlecl in building up.
i''or the pout eighteen _:.ars, as m*nv of you are aware.
i have been identified with the bu,iness, most of the time as sales-
man and general a.siat,utt, and on that account feel immured that I
Imre become w in touch with the requirements of the customers of
the .'stahlialiment, that i shall not only he in a position to retain all
former patrons, but be able to draw others in the time to come.
Hoping to receive the hearty co-operation of those• who
patronized my predecessor, and making promise to carry on the buil
nese on the same straightforward !intoe that chatacteri,wl all the deal-
ings of Mr. Doweled:, 1 extend a hearty incitation to the public
generally who desire to do business in the Boot and shoe trade, to
call upon
Yours very truly,
•
W. SHARMAN, Jr.,
Succi asor to E. howl,,••.
Gou$klcn, .1 ul, I ''' I
SPRING ECHOES.
NOW IN STOCK
Parasols and 1'nlbrellas, (the latest).
Gloves as usual up to the mark.
HOSIERY . .
Black, White, Cream, Slate, I''a'an and Tan Shades in Silk
Lisle Thread and Cashmere.
SPECIAL VALUE .
A large range of Trimming Braids, in Silk, Mohair and Angora
All widths in Serpentine and Creme Military.
DRESS GOODS . .
Cashmeres, Henrietta.• and Whip Cords. ('ashloerea . in White,
Creme, Skye and Cardinal. Leading Shades in Nun's \'cilings.
DELAINETTES . .
In Sprays, Buds, Spots and Stripes.
A full line of Smallwares, inc;udin Pearl and Linen But-
tons, 2 and 4 boles.
a.apeet... singly Mollested. x ver rent. 1111...r•••11 rev (ark
Mn. 1. S. Hawkins, t lattaw0oga, Tem.,
seri : " Shiloh's Vitalizer ' sewed m, life.' 1004
I consider it the bast remedy for • debilitated
system i ever sad." For dyspepsia, liver
or kidney trouble it excels frim Thomas.
Soli by all drnggiata . w o l oe
Family
Groceries
.
Draper and Haberdasher.
essiasetotiaa It is the►.et
Oalp
it deo ; Selo
60 *is, add $1.00 p• ttraA.1144 by al
DO YOU WAST
FIRST CLASS BU08II58,
IMPLIIIINTS?
FIRMING
If so, nail upon JOHN KNOX and ROHRRT
THOY l'el )N. Oodertelo or W. IL t- A RCOIL,
Iywsameeoe.
They show 51st -claw top -b. 4 hag
haa
gas., 01w0sadtoa. road oasis, sad various other
stye., All wort w.rtYtod sad of Mlocla.s
Web. made by The YI•LAUGHLiN CO.,
(*HAW A.
Noxon Farm Xachinery.
The .adeerrwsdg.mm«ed .re also agents for Mo50.
Heathen' OeNhrwled B.sl Drina Bladen .ad
Mowers, eyeing Tooth Cultivators HOMO
Rah•,J.,.,e-.sewellasfortm.
Cocicahntt Plow.
t 541541 wed by the (01,k•hutt 1905 ('o.. of
Rr..tIsed. Oleo
We ere provers/ to fur•Ml the eolith with
every .tyles of vehicle and Use vary bunt mak*
sib',mmatterat ono oomtem retmmisramita e t tbe with mem.. edam
West a•me8t
Yee ds.'t have to wait • am..th or two •her
1o.ttyy year order, bat we are prepared to *C-
OD Fess heat es the opt
17 you want vrwos Is as above .awed
linos he lay. •d wt. sew order wan « ad
am war even ef the .
JOHN KNOX, G.d.neh,
ROBT. T11O1MPHON, 0odeeish.
W.. V ARCOIR Dungannon.
*1-51
The Best in the Market and the Most
Reaonable Prices at
R.W. RUNCEK .1 Z,
f•r.tta..taest Wool land rima e.
Salc
oi Elm Goods al Cil
MRS. R. B. SMITH
is selling the balance of her stock of Straw Goods and Flower'
at Coat. Alto a box of Boy.' Straw Hata at 10c.
The sale will continue flaring the remainder of the season until all
Snmmer Millinery is cleared out.
MRS. R. B. SMITH,
Glasgow agow House.
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