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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1894-10-4, Page 7THZ SIGNAL : GODZ$ICH. O2 T.. TH [TBBDAY. OCT. 4, MMC r S pECI A L INTEREST TO - - LADIES! - Our Fall importations of Ladies' Jackets and Fur Capes are now in Stock and open for your inspection. We might enumerate some of the different Styles here, but, instead of doing so, we urge you to visit our Cloak Department and see the magnificent range of high grade Garments at such Moderate Prices. JOHN T. ACHESON. CRISP AND CASUAL. Some people ie to show their pretty teeth. Thew of -Ivory White Teeth Pow- der maker pride Image more this ever. It's so aloe. Priem 96 ovate. Sold by drag oats Expense's moos 5. show that the beet wpm of what err ogler, are fried among the dark shades of ogler. That is. light chestnuts, etc, are sot as rood sad ,,daring is Loy wey ea those el • darker bus. 1tvoperaie areas dlseiness, bsed•ehe,eue- ntpstioo, variable sg te,rielse sad sour- ed of food, palpUdia ge.1 the heart,distnse after eating Beat& Blood .Bitten is ransomed to can Aposeie is faithfully used aaoroug b direetlees. For parser streak by Vitale( hag bees remarried the tremtmess gives the ap prosily drowsed. On pliteire has retro several oases in whir people eeeewely deed from lightning were restored S. aeration by fifteen minume' premiss of animal res- pir•tiea A horse can (Paw es natal rail, Des and two -third times as meek as os asphalt pave- ment, three gad ee.•thwd tree as amok as on geed thiggian bloeks. five times r soca se es good gobble steasm, testy its,, as meek ft oe geed earth, ard forty user se mesh as as good gravel road,. Although Costa Rica u .dy about half the s.,e of the Provers of Ontario. its list o f Sada number 730 errs It is • country of forests and of all gone of clime., from the torrid Des asset to be found at an elra- ttr of 10,600 foot, the top of the velar bus, whete los forma la Soothed the supporters of the royal ✓ ens, the lies and the sobers. hold reverse prier to theee whish they held thrnsgh. wt the net of the Usited Kingdom. This was •cteally utipksted for ia, sad. it is be- lieved, is toe of the theses of, the Act of Venn botwesa E.glsd sad Soothed. It has bees computed that since the pee°. me of embalming hers 4000 B C., doves to 700 A.D., when it practically owed, pro. lately as ray se 730,000,000 bodies were esbelmed is Rgypt, of whir the greater art are yet:coseesled, though important fade are wadi from time to time. "Fee several iseuths, I was troubled with e pwmstest burr ea my bead wire gave ✓ rasiduable aasoyaaos, until it occurr- ed to me to try Ayer's Hair Vigor. Before erg Das bottle, the hewer was heeled." T. AdamGeneral M Adams, fal rekant, Terbeville A bride, is now is course of Coo:strnctics acres the Niftier' River, between East Omaha and Ceuneil Bluth, which will be re- markable when esmpisesd as posnessiag the loeg.et swing -span is the werl-526 fest- - being fifteen fent kwager thus the epee of the bridge over the Thames River in Cerleooti- cet. tt hick is were., Morgantown for life or • life long disease, like sorefula, for wi- ample' The former, oonately, would be preferable were it sen that Ayers %re•psr- ills can always ewee to abs reser sad give the poor salient health, strength, sled baepires. F-v,ry pint of pert. sherry or Madeira hes four ouseus of Nebel ; tevary pint of share - papa has three serge; every pint of claret les two oriel ; said every flet of Mesh las ea oases sad sbreeisertrs. Tem ate approximations. rhaare (t is ts,t theyvery The,, are path* ways is whish a can to he 'set' N evile . la • match be - tees Kyaplsmd wad a.eman es years ago • pkwetn threw his bee at ea at H. his the ball sad was asetght. Tide mid to have lest the meth for three. Nevaral tines it has ''pr—ed that beta - U hey. yd the b�jj Into their owe her bees out brews* tbair hate or ear fell epos the wheel. Gad rooked their baps of. Bet hirer ban hen is as toeederfaily se they have leas• Det. The hall loss hem seen r me ble- • the stamps wither/ittea.tlwg the whim the tall hes been W N b�rpw**- 0411 them M hes s sushave bean Immo to ed ie, -'•« 1. forhem been k..wa b have bean hedged ei, W le bare lapse hest upon the wishes*. !let � b an event whishveryvy seldom Whet Meath w• Mir lesser The emblem ler the mereloc'e fusee bad las 'Bee eerie the f rbHdem felt,' sled rel m the breakfast Oaks the WWI pre' su+sd to dims is amskim't it • sfor se ire to t that b w M ten as hates* mesh amebae r "Yea MINIM gtg} M ten heed u ib e,:sid Via Las. ler yiy de owl IOW Id" ea iis ourerrm r W ansae their - airs k..y very well what I would de,' soli Melo. yaw. -edel Marl. 'the what b Wet ! a+d her yyer. ' 111•11 Palm every Yrs essr I V ti aelleft fail IIt 1fo •r. 41thlaialii, hits Melwsr.' ▪ Iflf d •.glg,p r 'You are the people,' said grown up bro- ther Jobe 'It is a pit .sir destines were setspiac.d to year haeta' 'We might aft have dose any bettr,'mid Mrs. Lee : 'but I think it was very foolish of Eve ween she had everything that was 'plesseat the eye and good for food,' sot to leave that tress Mese.' That night whoa Bates and his imps were gathered together, Satan called imp Appe- tite to him tad said : 'Did you pay .peera shorties to Mr. LAMP'S family, as I told you 'Yes, sir, I did,' ,aid the imp. 'How did you sacred,' said Saw. 'Very well,' pissed the imp. 'Tell us •ll about your methods for the beaadt of the ether imps,' said Satan. 'I west then early in the mot•isw.' cone - messed imp Appetite,'asd Igot Walter sail Liar to watch where tear mother put the toady, tad then got them to take some as sees as she wee gar eat' 'That was good,' said Satan. 'Weariest begin too yeseg, if we wish to ret • his bold of them.' Thea,' oeatis..d the imp, 'iI went with Idabel to Wool, and ea the way we passed the erfectio.er's. Thr. was • heap of oriel•t.e in the wiadow, sad f1 pervaded her to speed some of the mosey she 'err saving for the mission box no eome of them. I came home with Harold, and put him in the why of some of our boys, and got them into Mr. Gibson'. orchard, sad help themselves to the fruit. I west west with Mr. Lee to his office, and when some old friends came in, i persuaded him I. have • beetle of wise is, altbourh he is a t.mpersaoe mem. And 1 stayed with Mrs. Ice at direr time, and orated her to sat som.shia„ that did rot agree with the baby.' Aad John,' asked Salsa. 'What about • 'I could sot do aaythia4 with him. said the imp, lookiae very dejectedly. 'I tried everytbiag i could think of : I got some of kis chums to emu him to have • drink when be wee thirty, but he said the fountain was handier ties the saloon, and he would not go. His mother had • dish ea the table of which he was very fend, but I could not get him to take more than his share. Several of his shep-m•iss offend him • cigarette, but in spite of my efforts he always Maim 'No, thank you.' 'Phot is bad, said lams. with • diabdt- cal scowl, 'we most have that young sao,if we possibly can. He r such • street man he will do us math her. if be it easiest ea; sad very meth ler se if he is es oar side. Imo Ambition, you will look after him tomorrow. Perhaps you will had a weak apse is him armor.' Dow (dams ,assns Ttra♦ees .. eewtlaN. Lofton Sheilah : The Queen's trait for the jersey from Gosport to Ballater eft- .issed of sixteen carriages. and was over 160 yards ie Mark. The saloons is whisk the Queen travels between Ragland and Soot - Ned are so admirably eo.stremed ad ar- ranged that eves • hang jeer's, in them memo Logsam the royal passengers. Ther. are two drake .slo"as, ooseeoted by • po- mage, and they are always Mooed is the osmv* of the train. They have avid wheels and epseially a.sLmand .pram, me that the omits of the tram I. barely preeptible. The atop .B like those in old !•ased_ ear - Asps, Ise dews. and the wisdoms are of thick Ode glens The day salmis is tar- nished like on ordinary drawing teem The sight carriage has thickly surt•ised win - dews sad cm.tsine we loft, while adjoining there i. •la.aesry o�rmen a*.with • I•rg. Sited bath. Bath muse. are lighted by listed lamps, and the leen have heavy torpor and thoroughly padded maims Huh .oispanmsft bas separate ser of Nee - brie bullare for the -'—'--r end the ether for the otitisla, aft the tinging .f the letter bell err the immediate stop- page el the Mesio. The Qom travels with an Mesmer somber d /imarh hexes anti perils of book. and beadles of wrapft, for whisk there are Magee racks. The Lead's and Northwester sampsy has always pro- vided the trim ler the geese's j.eraq r $ootlafd. The eeseraeUee tied hostrred. A lestunBm writes to the Hanford Thom It is me natural ler rd squirrels to kill yesmg bird. (and .v .gee too, if they en. rift teem) me it is for hawk and owls to ha the same. The red squirrel b the most deerwmiv seamy ear small Mrd hare to est seder, deeteoyies beth eggs and the �ee� birds. '�'1•� will kill birds en- s of 'pure eassMlettss.' w birds them r ant. It dem as geed to e the bee from ab•sWg and let the red squirrel fig free shh�egtt�hrthere &OW be • by ski he t emerthrglee rseelinsl gristmills to or email birds. • ier Ille emsss. whr.ler—mai; 3�t Ne yes'v. glees p f assaotg, 1 t Vin . whet dere there was se pfs `'em. 1111111.4 he q Old Talks, Qg ler ✓ A C :zkirg Cough Cured by dy:r's Cherry pectoral, 111:4. l'. D. IIALL, 217 Genesee St., I -reap •rt, N. Y., hays : "Over thirty year. ago, I remember h trim7 my father steam ibe the wonder - fol au-ntire chw•t if Ayer's ('harry I'w9.•rsl. a'ur.ag a r.". -tit attack of L• Grippe, wl•i• h t. ou,''d the toren of • CALM b,wreur_e of he lungs, nccom- peu....l by tau aegn.% ..:.,t cough, I as -d various remedies and prescription.. While stone of these mtdieineo partially sun coed the coughing dui us the day, none of them afforded me soy relief from that spasmodic action of the lungs which would seize me the moment I attempted to he down at night. After ten or twelve such nights. I was Nearly in Despair, and had about decided to alt up all night la my easy chair, and procure what Bleep I could in that way. It then oc- rurred to me that I bed a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I tapk a spoonful of tbiv preparation (p i little water, and was rile to he dove!, without coughing. In a few mou,ents, I fell asleep, and awoke In the morning greatly refreshed and f.-e1Png nisch better. I took a teaspoonful of the Pee- toral every sight for a week, then grad- ually therillerel_dose, and. 1!l_.p weeks my tough wedeorod." Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Ptepred by Dr. J. C. Ayer t (•-.., Lowell, Hew. Prompt to act, sum to cure *arm as Wag. garner.. The health of that division of women waren whish ay be called profeseion•l eeep•res with that of their more favored sitters, if to bar nothing to do is to be ooh ddered as favored. Work area does mot hart worse. In the oacupstioes which show • peraestage of ill health It is proved to be the •oorepanitaeute of work, before mestiesed, which are the factors inducing ill health. It mem always be difficult to compile statistics covering the moral life of men or women but ea far as information or be col- lected it proves that girls who work for their living are girls who prize virtue and chastity. Viae is always ready to welcome new devotees, and in • eertatn seas the girl who chooses it has less struggle for her food sad clothing than they have who work 18 hours a day doing piece sewing or work - i steres at $6 a week. Is factory towns it is customary to condoms the girls who flock ea the street at night and who are now and co.spicuor there, but it is well to re- maisbee that theme rouses are the girls' relaxation and they may be loud without being sinfuL The former comes from • lack of gentle breeding, not always from de- pravity. Credit is due to theft women who value so highly that istangiI le womanly votes that they retain it through tempta- tions outward and inward. The scenomtic evils of women workers may be summed up in there warped insufficient wages. Imperfect health. Lack of education. The grinding poverty which forbids any oultare. The enfitrer of the workers' lives for those ef the mothers of Dooming genera- tioea. The temptation to seek evil rather than good. Patsitereeea. The Nineteenth Century . lord Palmer- ston was Iffy years is the hereof oommoos before he led that assembly ; and that dur- ing that ball -artery, although cooinntly he Ales, he W not been a regular speaker, or ever a reveler •Neodaut is the here "I owl get that three -decker Palmerston to bear lows." Mr. Crain send to say ; and Palmerston always hesitated to for- mulate views upon say subject which was mot his spacial etre at the som.et He re- fused e.fused to rot his mind to work ea hypoth- eses. Is Let, he was a typical man of the werld, mrd. se it has bola efts olid. • nam of the world is ort am imaginative animal. When Lord Hooghten bond himself NIL to Ur. Oidmla" at a dimmer hula • .e.5ry ago, be found him "exulted abase (aims and the earth piegrs, sod bed/ a douse stir things t" when he Lead himself sort Se Lord Palmerton he elate got se further Shea the Mevttaw ha-ha and laM.ss-fain. What was atahNe, however. is Lard Palmerston was lie eve rpreslat sero.e of the dignity of Smgleed. "Tell U. Outseto, from s saiipdM.itr.Mb, "that an dem am with rmdmia "W Lpard ligreat ttle tricks with sever co ed to litsle tricks himself, mrd would sot tolerate them is ethers. This attitude, tsgotbr with hie Grow about the milli frees of the rows. and W eroded enafdense is the future and moments of his usastrymen is 1863 sad 1867 were thr•eghiy appwdatd by the gases; es that when the end ore she wadi leek bath and serve heame, at she breaking of aemothr link with the pose." and feel sae .rely ..d is bee iegglete and isolated esdlties, how ens by ens these tried armor sod advisers as. takes dem her." • • Messrable Ilapes.dea Loader Lysehi si Party—It's bows paved that this be) is 1711 MON sad yes was rid- es' ea 1m. sglew. wet yen get soWere e we 11 ▪ Harm Thief- The hews dimirpss/d the Mart' w goo rims bet Well, I hemgewet aims sheat that time, and eh' widens Mew the beam est e' tb' %um sail blew me see* his hash, end Wan ens. cry elms s i erg a geed forty °1111ti ressemshia Ike Merino ler ...arms. yr. ..ea. MasMen, end am .L ironer Wood with - !sr II Nh-;sada► him Huh Multi ea rbee in Camaro. There are low w klig today who Salk and work mere /iiitiaillp for the spinosa' admirers' of ethers than Dwight Moody the world -heard romp—list. Han are care t seg►M of hie that the Heise Gerd aeraseihy o.otmeede to the seteriea of all be He y�s. ialA �want��peak to theme who have d+seelty i.. keeps, up mums in the While. Then has bees critwrm that math of the tesabing ben has beau in ultimo* of the posse aft e people. athey are not interest- ed It was tea years before I bran to grow is the Chrietiaa hie. Reay of the young people are stamted sed do not grew. A mea who masa* feed himself. weal grow. Those CMimosas who jest believes what the Craft Where. who, when yea press them en it, dent ((mew mese about it, dent grow. The reams I. became they have not get to the Word illsoU. Mea who have to be fed with aa eseleeiaKioal epees des'* ret the Word as all, but men's theorise ; and the soul is dwarfed and °rippled Many Christians, if they des'* get food ea Sun day, deal got anything through the week. Perhaps they feed as geology, tad gat only . tomes. There are two things • purees most know to be • successful worker for God that Book and human nature If a man doesn't know homes mature be won't ac- complish much, though he knows the Bible: beat with the two he has • remedy lstall the ills of hams mature. Seats eas has said there are four things •droit, submit, com- mit, transmit. You admit the Bible is true, submit to ita teashiege, and commit it, tad then transmit it ; hut if • man has sot it in his soul he can't do much towards giving it to others lbe reason I mark the Bible is that if people get in the habit of carrying their Bibles to church or meetings and take n otebook and pencil and take doom the thoughts and toed on them, and if they prove food to the soul dot marks oci the mauls, the whole thing will come hack to them when they study the Bible, and min inters would do • hundred times the good they do now. / ' p telly d Indio thea beg is maim e enough so held heavy .be without aag- gimg. Make sash p••hel, whisk is sews • este • gat, plain haokereund, very full. He.. seek at the top, sad rider . tape ea the maid. Ni drawing saner, the ants of whisk draw through two eye -it hales in the seams of the posses at the hem, Thee cook pair of does way be Ned into be ewe peeked away Iron the deet A ghee labia.' io appreciated by Pushy weftes, who are always thankful to avoid eboping. • very engirt and one enie.t salen.t ie made is the fol owing artiste) moons fildent a uesvesiest stoke is the wall, then saw et • portion of as ordinarybox, ng leaviit alert tea Melees ist depLine the boa with heavy. oohed mudie and partition it sato pigeva.hdes, roomy enough so held • pair of @hoes mels The sidism and top of the cabinet can be crewed with plash or stained a dark brews. goose the frost the cabinet has either one or two thing. --s time of light pile wood, steeped et covered with erre tapestry, fastened with little brass sails and braes binges and look, or els • brass rod, to which, by seams of spell brass nage, • silk, eater or ore - teens .urtai. is bug in easy folds. The cabinet itself is se.peeded by a oord L har- monium colon, as though it were • bang- ing shelf. (In the top may not an oenamo- tal slipper, horn, button book, an oblong box to hold shoe -Imam, or a (:lase or pores - late slipper filled with frena Sowers. The Thins.. Teahouse. The restaurant, or teahouse in China takes the place of the western club room. All the current news and gossip is here circulated and disclosed over their eating or gambling One of their games of chance, which we hays frequently noticed, seems to soloist in throwing their lingers at one another, aid shouting at the top of their voices. it is really a matching of numbers, for which the Chinamen make signs on their 6ogen, up to the number 10. The Chinese of all nations seem to live in order to eat, and from this race of epicures has developed • nation of excellent cooks. Our fare in China, outside the Gobi district, wee far better than in Turkey or Persia, and, for this reason, we are bettor able to endure the increased hardships. A plate of shoed meat stowed with vegetables, and served w ith a piquant sauce, shoed radishes sod rifts with vinegar, two leases of Chinese mo -mo, or steamed bread, sed s pot of tea, would usually set us about three and ase -quarter cents apiece. Everything a China is shoed so that it mo be sates with the chepticks. These we at length learned to manipulate with sailsciest dexterity to pick up • dove's eLg --the highest attainment is the chopstick art. The Chinese have rather a sour than • sweet tooth. Sugar is rarely used is any- thing end never in tea. The steeped tea - Hower., which the higher classes use, are really mere tasty wit -beet it. • Pan's eat. Harper's Bazar: Then:Sett-eatb century man of business is not hatted for display, but for •etioo. The bat is a rueful part of his costume, and so that it be brushed and in shape the main interest it has for its wearer is setisfied. For society it has an• other interest, and this u in the mans man- ner of handling his hat on occasions of cere- mony or is ordinary intercourse with others. No man who has the least claim to be • rottener keeps his hat on his head in the company of women. Even if the women are people whom he meets in busieese re- lations, and in thew only, he defers to the sex by removing his hat in the office and is the °oantleg-room as he would in the draw- ing room. A man takes at his hat in the elevator which carries him. if iti►lso carries ladies, He doss not do so in the public conveyance which all share is corn..., be- cause in • street car or boat as is, is • way, out of deers, and requires a covering for his heed. A gentleman lifte his hat when re- cognizing, • friend, or when ppa•s.ssing ladle, who are is company with his fraena, though he does net possess their acquaintance. A boy should be trained to take off his bat to his mother and sister, or to the little girls he knows. To lift the hat with the grace of good -breeding is • murk -to -be -desired se- complishmest Soothers sen remove the hat with Sas gallantry and stand barehead- ed whoa talking with ladies on the paths prems.ade. The action is so thrilled sad so charming that one sometimes wishes it were generally imitated by mea of equal rarer in other portions of our coon - try. bedew In the Se.s.betf. "It has always annoyed me very moth," said • certain neat berbeepr, " te see .her lying about the floors of bedrooms and closets." Sho••h.pare agreat ooeved ler and every theft should be provided with or or two of these bandy noepteeles. A T'be Ortgtn of Tea. Harper's Magazine : It is difficult sow - •days to imagine how the Japanese sasneg- ed to live without um ; everybody drinks it at all hours of the day, and the poorest poopls rarely get a chance of drinking anything stronger, and yet it is, as thine, west in old Japan, • comparatively roost 'ntroductioo. Tea was introduced with Buddhism from China, and though some plenty were brought as early as the ninth century, it was not much grown until the end of the twelth. I)zt.urea. an Indian saint of the sixth century, often represented in Japanese art either as arousing the oases on a reed or sitting on • monument of pat, trace with hi+ hands in Si. sleeves, was the father of the tea pleat. Af'er years of sleepless watching and prayer he soddenly rot drowsy, and at last hie eyelids closed and he peacelully slept N hen be awoke he was so shamed of this pardonable weak- ness that he cut of the offending eyelids and threw they instantly took root and sprouted into the shrub which baa ever a tics had power to keep the world. • Wealth Mist. The late Sir Andrew Clark, the famous physician, believed heartily in fresh air, simple diet, sod • cheerful mind as remedial agent.. He onoe visited • patient whom bedroom walls were covered with a paper of most depressing color and pattern. "That paper," said Sir. Andrew decisively, "is quite enough to send • healthy map melancholy mad : its effects upon an invalid who is compelled to le) still and g.,e upon it all day must be awful. You'll her to move the patient into • more cheerfully papered room." "But, Sir A•drew, this is the best of them all," was the remonstrance. "Then,' said the great doctor, "you must bay • bright cretonne or something and hide these dreadful wells." And cretonne was purchased a000rdi.rly. FROM UNDER THE GROUND. The mines tributary to Butte City, Mont., have an output of $53,000,000 a year. A vein of mineral wiz, which resembles pure batter, has been discovered by peat diggers in Ireland. The old Rosario mines in Mexico are said to have yielded $500,000,000 worth of ore in two centuries. At • depth of 3,000 feet in the tamers ('rosstock mine at Virginia City, Nev., the waters that trickle from sides, roof and bot- tom have a uniform temperature of 170 de- grees Fahrenheit. Australia mined 4,037,929 tons .f coal last year. The supply is apparently Sex- haustible, and is counted on to be an impor- tant factor in the future in the future in- dustrial development et the country. The Meal mrengeb. The Hous loafer around the country store was making beta on his strength and `iv - in. • large buff to a little fellow who didn't seem to have strength sough to raise his voice. "By gum,' said the big fellow to the pro- prietor, "I'm as stout as four of him." " Hardly, I guess," objected the proprie- tor. " I say I am," oeatended the rustie San- dow. "I con ruse • barrel of flour tour feet and he can't phaze it" "That's so sign of • duck'. nest," said the proprietor with trashing force. "he can raise the phos of it and you can't," and the boss loafer went away without asking for more goods ea credit. serf. The ship Argo glided swiftly over the waters. " Ahoy, there," Galled the atraege psi- people eapeople on the shore, "are you looking for the golden fleece'" Jason shook his bead. ' Soft Boal," be shouted back, through the gloom. The id.rm•tios was regarded as being of estr.rdimady importers. as indicating the stoat to which the ether of the strike were felt SUNLIGHT flu proved OAP anorniOUs sale that It fa The best value for the Consumer of any soap in the market. Millions of women throughout the world can vouch for this, as it is they who have proved its value. It brings them less labor, greater comfort. THE NEW STOVE AND TIN SHOP. Stoves, Stove -pipes, Elbows, and Stove Boards in great variety at WORSE2.lZf cZ CO - STOVE -MOVING & STOVE -PIPING promptly attended* to by WORSELL & CO Agents for tk. Howard Furtsees& The Practical Tinsmiths, Hamilton et.. Goderich. I FIBREWARE =5 WOODEN. One of B. B. EDDY'S Indurated Fibre - ware Tubs and Pails will last the life of 5 hoopbound wooden ones. Besides, they are:much more conven- ient and save a world of annoyance. Ask your grocer for E. B. EDDY'S INDURATED FIBREWARE. HUGE DUNLOP THE CLOTHIER, CODERICH 9 I Sti am Boiler Works. B8TABI48HZD'iso, A. S. CHRYSTAL has just returned from the cities where he has been selecting NEW SPRING GOODS. He has now on hand a Large Line of the Choicest Goods in the Market and is prepared to turn out work in the Best Style possible, and -at Prices to suit the times. H. DUNLOP. THE FAIR has come and gone, but LOW PRICES remain the same as ever at the Furniture Emporium of GEO. BARRY. Hamilton-st. UNDERTAKING in all branches, attended to at all hours with neatness and dispatch. Embalming Fluid always on hand. Picture framing a speciality. GEO. BARRY ■AMILTTO.uT. S. meso, to (',trystal ! IffariJ Mannfacturen of all kinds of Station- ary Marine, Upright A Tubular MOsz.l=Rs Salt Pans, Smoke Stacks, Sheet Iron Works, etc., etc. Alm dealers in Upright and Horizontal Sitdo Valve Nominee. A utmostic Cut (ST Know • swishy. Ail eizee of pi e and pipefittlag constantly on hand. Katiates furnished on short notice. itepairing promptly attended to. VW I; I'. (I, Sox J!, oderich. (Hat. Work.-lH)omits ii T. it. Statioa.Ooderick. COAL AND WOOD YARD. Special attention given to SAWED AND SPLIT WOOD. Headquarters for all grades of HARD, SOFT i BUCRSMITH COAL. Coal weighed as either market or mymy Styles. Got my Prices betore going el.ewness, TERM CAea. Telephone c.naeeaien. JOHN S. PLATT, Prop. 11111/47. How TO ORDER "THE SIGNAL —CUT THIS OUT, D. MCGILLICUDDY,"THE SIGNAL, Goderich, Ont. I enclose $ . Kindly forward regularly THE SIGNAL to the following address for months. Name, P. O., County, Prov., Date, ,, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Three l[oatl s • - Six Months - Twslvs Mouths - - - Maniple Oofties row] - 56a - $1.00. i1 . 189 P. a—Remit by money order, if possible, or by registered letter. •