HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1894-10-11, Page 2coN$uTtON
k averted, or If too late to Olen
avert It It Is wolf and
slave ',Nailed bT
Sc.otat'l
mulsio
the Cream of Cod—liver OIL
Cures Coughs, Colds and
Weak Lungs. Phlrsicraas, the
world over, endorse it.
Ir't w lu aid h StWfMWI
e.e« • Isms. fisare a Alt lttnrYa MAW
THE POET'S CORN ER.
Me wife's Smother.
Atlanta Constitution
My wife's brother's beta violin' us,
Ant he' stb' exact'neet little cues
ver
'At odewed the breath of life
Er whittled my desk with • beg jaokeila
Fant day he kim be tuk the oat
As' hitched 'sr up to my of silk hat:
He bored a hole right then the brim
To make • hoe an' Imo for him.
Whoa he got out fist thing he did,
He licked our ant door neighbor's kid;
An' bled his noes, an' blacked his eyes--
Ai them I mid ter 'polaris
Nero' day et rained. He tut his ball
An' played a tams in our trent hall;
He used the hat rack fur tint bear
An' smashed the hall .look in the fa.
Then. yesterday, be went tar play,
Aa' first we knowed, he mimeo away.
A plowman found him atter dark
Up with the monkeys in the park.
For seem dais, he's been our guest,
An' each day's been the exaun'est ;
Tomorrow he's a gai■' bum,
An' sex' time—we won't hey so room.
er..r. H.r heart weed rip Erl Y LINEN D011/11.0.
peliptuste
os hamar •s to M
and leeks 4 weed& meth
ever Mr thee ►t was ciellt: seep she W THEY ARE MORE POPULAR THIS
ryes hit le
herne vesMeor
almost memory was
gene, MMe se t SUMMER THAN BEFORE.
,.
the leer, made* movstarst proal* plaint on
eurea through esteems weakness. SM.
ting or random she weak* be diarysad :
rieee
ex -
pentium most depresee4 feelings
sail ems of pinta. Atter the removal of the
reptiles, the deeper swimmer' the ens c t
Dr. Williams' Piak Pills sed she three
treses but fogad no apparent
the. gave up their ass belivinc she was
pmt the aid of modeles At this time •
Mn. Haight. who suffered twelve weeks
with la grippe, sad who was oempltelv re-
stored by taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
for Pale Peple. erred Mrs Weeded' to
begirt the use of Ptak Pills again. She did
so anePhows she perceived their b...tleial
efetta. Her appetite bees to improveaed
for two moetbs she has steadily gained
strength, health sad Headroom of serve
and memory. She eta now do her how -
hold work sad feels as well as ever. She
Pink
says she saaaot speak as stng y
Pils as she would like to, and feels very
grateful for the great goad resulting from
the use of this wonderful medioins
Mn. Haight, before referred to, is
.nthesiastic over her own perfect recovery
trace the after effects of la grippe, feeling as
well as ever she did to her life. She also
eorroboretes the above statement regarding
Mrs tt sstfall'e cure.
These pills are • positive oars for all
troubles arcing from a vitiated coeditioe of
the blood or s shattered nervous system,
Sold by all dealer or by mail, from, Dr.
Williams Medicine Compaay, Brookville,
Oat., or Schenectady, N. V., 50 elate • box
or 6 bozos for $2 5A. There are sameross
imitations and substitutes against which the
public is cautioned.
THE SEPTEMBER GALE.
I'm sot a Micken : I have sees
Fall many a chill September.
Ant though I was • young. er then,
Thai gale I well remember
The day bsdore my kit..esneg mapped,
And I. my kite parwtmg,
The wind whisked off my palm -leaf bat —
For me two storms were brewing.
It came, as quarrels sometimes do,
When married folks get clashing ;
There woe • heavy sloth er two,
Before the fire was fleabag
--
A little star among the cloud*,
Before they rent asunder --
A lithe rocking of the trees,
And then came on the thunder.
lard ' how the ponds and rivers bled,
Aad how the shingles rattled,
Aug oaks were scattered on the grounds
-As if the Titans battled ;
Lad all above was is a cowl.
And all below a caner ;
The earth was like • frying pan
Or some such hissing matter.
It chanced to be our washing day,
And all our things were drying ;
The storm came roaring through the linos,
And set them all a -flying ;
I saw the shirts and petticoats;
Go riding off like witches ;
I loaf --oh, tor- t •rly I wept -
I lost my Sunday breeches '
I saw theta straddling through the air,
Alas' Soo late to win them ;
I saw them chase the clouds, ss if
The devil had hoes in them ;
They were my darlings and my pride,
My boyhood a only riches—
•' Farewell, farewell," I featly cried,
" My breeches : Oh, my breeches
That night I saw them in my dreams,
How changed from what i knew them :
The dews had steeped their faded threads,
The winds bad whistled through them '
I saw the wide and ghastly rents
Where demon claws had tors them :
A hole was i• their amplest part,
As if an imp had worn them.
I have bad many happy years,
And tailors kind and clever,
Bat those young paetaiooes have gone
Forever and forever'
And net till Fate has out the last
IN all my earthly stitches,
This asking heart *hall esase to mourn
My loved, my Wag -lent breaches.
—Oliver Wendell Holmes
Mew It reeks in Print.
Chicago Herald: It weald puzzle a strang-
er to judge of the conversational abilities of
Chicago men by the chat wbieb usually fol
lows • meeting of friends on the street.
This is one chat takea verbatim:
" Hello, old men.
Hello yourself. Howe tricks?
Oh, as so, cant kick. How's things oom•
ug with you'
Right aiwg. Haven't eee, you tor •
month. How you takmg it'
Keay. Anything new with you'
Not a thing; same old *one. Well, so
loog. "
One of the men was • hank president,
the other, • wholesale dry goods mer-
chant.
A board of trade manager met • prom-
mobett insurance manger. Both are well
read men of wide information end are
accounted good after dinner 'meeker'. It
was :
" Hello, old man '
Hello, Billy. How's tricks'
Nothing extra, about ,the same. How'*
the world using you'
Can't kick in these tomes How's your
cesduot'
Some as usual. Aoytt inn sew up your
way
Not •thug. 'Mine old song- Going my
way'
No; se long.
Well, se long. Look out for yourself."
A Dearborn street lawyer met • La Sidle
street lawyer. They are high in legal
circles, have a tine standing in oourt
and are cultivated, refined gentlemen. 1t
was
"Hilo, old man.
Why, hello. How are you!
First-class. Hew s your
icy?
Haven't • word to say.
Seme coming is; nothing to brag about.
How's the world using you:
p'an't oomplue. Don't we mach of you.
What's new with you'
Nothing; mme thing as
miming with you'
So, so; getting • living. Well,
old man. i'll see you leiter.
Su long. Take oars of yourself.
Sure."
LIZARDS I ti THE STOMACH
A REPTILE SWALLOWED WHiLE
DRINKING IN THE DARK.
gzauVIATI du soot( T svr.'gawD IT Md.
wllr,ALL—TWIN INATTSS.D, •:(D
MATS WORMS FOS A, Tag ONLY
From the Tome Cruise.
The editor of the Courier h•vieg heard of
this elMeye mos of Mrs. Simon West/all,
made enquiry and learned the following
Imes :—Mrs Weotfall mid that ore eve-
nieg some three years ago she west to the
woe and pemplag some water drunk • por-
tion. As alio dad se she felt weal mg ge
dere her threat kicking tad she tell Aar
seethe tie at the time. Little she thaugas
el the awn I. stare for her through drink-
ing moor hum a pomp to the dark. ler a
female litre it wayiet. her Mew
ash and hewg•a forth • breed. After •
while she sighs el walk would make her
tremble and she had to give it up. The dis-
order f.oemwd a» that the very eight of
milk world prides* .fest Luring es
ewvehdws She lest he apasele bet
would led se .emplelely gone at the mew
ai dime she had se eat • orweker sad take
Mow aurolio a new laoseaeed t sill They
Aro Mewls ,para* Creat -Tabled 4k*
lee L■s.M.nc Are tie Leas An Volt i•
tate Beet Clretes.
The doily is in evert *Mewl !te Ilam -
hers have harrowed and added unto them-
selves until now they are nearly beyond
count. The very latest of all is the wine
glass dolly, and authorities declare that •
full set must include all sires and sorts
from it tc the big one which forums the
centerpiece. But without going quite so
far as that, one can est • very charming
table and present an up to date appear-
anee with only • part of the prescribed
number.
One of the most important of all to the
lucky owner of a roliehed mahogany
board M the plate doily In its latent,
corpora,- •
Rumness
usual.
rapes/. Carter's Menke,,
Harper's Young People • Captain Carter
who lived in Washington, i). C., when on
land, had • great fancy (c r fine fowls, and
among his collection Prized a fine old king
gobbler. On his last cruise he brought
home • miechieviom young monkey, which
gave him so much trouble it was a good deal
like "an elephant on his hands." I la day,
hearing a terrible ,quaking in the hennery,
the captain found Jocko with king gobbler
under hie arm, while he was deliberately
pulling out the poor bird's last tall feather.
The captain rescued the turkey, sad punish •
ed the monkey severely, who law very
well why he was chastised. The next day,
again hearing • oommotion among the
feathered tribe, he went to the neon of se -
tine, and there sat .Iecko with the much
ted gobbler ►+ e twehis knees, while
rem• was trying to put the feathers hack.
Hie inteetioos of repairing the mischief
does were good, but the turkey did not ap-
preciate them.
How's it
so long,
Origin of " atteelsier,
Americo. Cabinet Maker The origin of
the weed "Escelsior," as applied to wood
shavings to stuff furniture, has puzzled
many pwple. Is 1860 the representatives
of a factory in Maine, where the material
was first made, showed sample el it te
Manna', Glover d ('e., dealers in bedding
and ephelatery supplies in Roslos. A mem-
ber of the firm beearne impressed with the
possible valee of the arWM, and asked
what it wee galled. It had ss mama The
evesua previous, Mr. (Hever, ha•t•
tended • overt where he had heard -
fellow poem "Excelsior," meted for the
first time, exclaimed "We will call it Ex -
error," sad M that meg it hes bee knewu
ever fines Exootior was made d poplar,
mad during the war odd as high as 8120 a
tea. Now all kinds of soft wood are eat .p
tato this material, wideh is selling at 815
• tea.
Fresh water turtles for the R.stern mar
ket are bred at Mathes.
A 23 acre hep yard is Retires, Out„ will
yield eight tree of hops
An eleelrie railway frees Arke.a to the
Mitthig•le
Ce' steal M talked of.
As Oreille R. O. IL ledn will run an ex
w arm M Regal sins (lesss.er. -
C�wad•'s miaefal prodretess last year
reaabed • Meal valve el $18,860,000.
Next Summar the Iroquois Mirk Reboot
will ha.e hem is etbla.m Eye yarn.
A. itein farmer W • squash widish grew
e lz ler in atrsamfine e. r lee weeks
cams herby amp tlo'eg.tly to'glue the die- A msreame.e d leo melt bele ler Neel
�erhenee 'titbits She lab mlewieles tardy.. Leat ensele Pee" rreugh Wiens
i.i flum�ia .viten lbs ywiry knots heyred Mei
and the sew denser bowing bei an ■=
etres�tiltellmtrsbadsee. bee.erdW..
ted Bei& throe
Is her days eight a rle.de el silk pre-
If
awT Mwmgh ?Wtabe
aipe, r ad for e
Il
Mb
Drepi1lerbee tree' Mle. d . the
Om sal stemma mire au asirem itv.NO gimes in va
ft
t . sass e Oesse ire .I sal>y
la eke tarty linter, el %Oli sl
t were ermalled mid Meese. whaler
w me
ed by sh gild dad Mkurieg M
mass3
ed benemiy, e.so
.r.ouvdy and gee-
e aaiuUen! th
l, and es this "sem" bee
e,
beno1 ortglati.td
e, eoectieg and carry -
lag to • mist of mapiwde and stieb dawn
tam oa
• scheme aestaada the •dttrrstieee el
Ganders theworld eves. TM ►..est,
tardily hse
eakegor he preyed biro to
be the beet citizen as (•r as WeepW baa
r
Wilding society is ...cars
failures have warred be Wilda" societies
we et the mais oiewm has hese the are
mot
derive tato the e.agew.etil ••atti•i
breves ideas smarmier from the of theoreti-
cal beaker.. Nearly all, it net every error
estrodsced into the scheme, are scholarly
errors, • prays accepted vadat protest by
the sesehasic e. seen store k.le
esr.
delpbm Prem.
pais M a-
Canad
A000ediag to the report of the huaoraLie
Mutate, of Jodie' on the orimi•al et•tieutshe
of Canada for 1893, just published, ttotal
.amber of oosveuo'S for all crimes t. the
Domiaies during that year summated to 35, t.
663. This is quite a large eresm
s la
t.eo0
either preceding years, and uthe aver a
of the nest e years Of the peewees sus
es,
vtcted 32,151 were malend 3,202 females. warty The disproportion stands 10 to 1.
The tote) number of eionviotione forar
drunkenness during this you amounted to
11,661, brae 236 greater than the year pre
noes, but 546 less than the average of the
w
tea yefrom 1881 to 1891. The "drunks'
alone, it will be ems se a glance at the
shove figures, meow nos Dearly one-third of
the whole. It is • well known fact, bow•
ever, tb t heelers does not o-,astitot•
000-ttal( the cries ar
that eoes out of drink
aer
lb.., there w.2,669 ouovictio.edarts,
the same year for violation• .f liquor laws,
suck as unlicensed selling, selling dories
prohibited boar, violations of the Scott
tvarious of -
teams are added togas her t hey conirm the
several uta repeated assertion of the yea -
arable Premier of Ontario that ihres.fourths
Cr...,et the ipoverty, misery sadtis
atty
ua
.f this oget,w W
toits origin L ane,-
awe.
A TStr. Or DoiLigs
most approved style it is ten inches
square, is finished with a fringe and is
embroidered in one corner only. When the
table is laid them embroidered bits are all
turned toward the centre, where they
decorate the cloth, and the plain portion is
left free for the plate. They are really
very deeurative. and if you possess a dozen
of them and • few caraffe doilies, besides
• centerpiece, you are well 'applied The
multltnde of smaller once will hardly be
missed, and you can always console your-
self with the'thought that many object'
to the too groat seeumulation of lens.
bite.
The wreath and the bowknot designs
still hold sway. The former is treed al-
most exclusively for the round doilies, and
the latter is seen upo:t all sizes and all
sorts. A charming set recently sent to •
bride is all done in wreaths of different
Sower, no two being exactly alike, and
the whole effect is dainty in the extreme.
For these only solid work is used. The
flowers are necessarily email mad do not
admit of the more sketchy styles The
work involved us, of warm, considerable,
but linen endures so well and the colors of
to day are made so lestng that it Is thor-
oughly well worth the doing.
Ribbons and flowers combined are al-
ways charming acid suggestive of the best
Freuch taste. Just now they are very
popular and are rivaled only by the
wreaths. Most needle workers make the
ribbon solid as well as the flowers, but one
clever woman hes devised a rapid and ef-
fective method of her own. She first out-
lines the entire design, then fills the space
between the linea with single eat stitching
The result is really striking and well worth
the trying. The contrast between the
solid flowers and the lighter ribbon is
charming and novel, besides being very
little work. A moot successful design of
the sort is of white vio:ets tied with pale
yellow ribbon, and it le seldom one gets •
better result with even the most exacting
work.
Luncheons promise to be popular the
season through, and the bare table will be
much in nes both for indoor and the piazza
functions These charming bite of napery
will so find • speedy demand and may
well employ all one's leisure tine. Linen
is delightful stuff to handle in the warm
summer days, and an array of well selected
silks in a natty basket makes a picture not
to be despise.—N. V Recorder.
A a.elpe for Tartlets.
Mix four ounces of fine sugar and four
ounces of ground almonds into a stiff
pear with the yolks of two eggs; roll it
out about • quarter of an ,inch thick, cut
into rounds with • fluted pastry cutter and
line some small tartlet tins with them
Fry them In • cool oven for some hours,
remove sad leave them to get cold and
firm. Thee detab them erehtly from
tb. molds dust over with paned•* sever
and all with spy fruit and enema pee -
pard as fotdowei Pot a pound of the
chosen fruit late a bade with lost
ounces of sugar and a t•ppoestel of
m•raeohino, let them ,lead law as boar,
then mix oarefally and klgbtb well • gill
e nd a half of whipped erose. Dish the
tartlets on • napkin or fancy deemed paper.
The best Fnr.ltwr. Petwh.
An expertmeed cabinet maker says that
the Lest preparation for cleaning platers
frames sad restoring furniture, especially
that somewhat marred or serstoked, M s
mixture of three parts el ll.seed dl and
one part splrtb of turpentineit not only
covers the disfigured oarless bee redone
wood to Its original rotor, leaving • lestre
e pee the s.rfaea Apply with • wool=
sloth and whoa dry rub with woolen.
RkMIMb s Al
Geed IR •a
Rabe only to sloe
nem) I liar era
.,w
Fish sad .,was Aa
•'
A. beer or tee e
aftertheno. .
Mere grstiikoit+ •d
Mpg ir
likely to er les la, '
Draw f
mu W.
t Vasa&Ila•, lata,, •
It is toe.d t., .nu
menta ur.
or pbysl we.
(pare are .d ah..•
Meeawe ae • lister ••f .t
Tam. IS • a.pl.. a•
ft T SA T
There
maker
to re
he takes I new
Our
years
Public
record
as
pe•ie is very
• loo *ten Is
e .1 •t• o
,. nSt. l
The Signal
.. .. Ml the
everything sal I., n. .1 ,
Light wasp.. .'s i. .' 'I light
meats should ha.. •'•r -use in hot
weather.
Ahem of the st,•m. b I. d ,.oar will he re
paid ,seer or later i he; paatehtnest
whisk some* to the Flu, • •"
Vegetables and fr..'.."- t• o. g,m.l meet
generously at that w+•..a d tic :ear in
wnsi they eat arelly .w.l are
fegiaaiap the dieser cath weep is the
some ■orae Awmi.p
Get for the frames of your home -lacca
awnings two rowed pieces of wood, like
broom handles. Thee will do nicely if
you have enough of item. l'ut • screw eye
through the end of the broom handle sod
fasten it to the side of the window by ruo•
D ing • hook through it. Piach the book
shut so that the eye will not slip est. Now
fates at the top of the window casing at
the sides to similar sticks, but. looter, as
they must reach oat to the outside edge of
the awnings. Pam another round scion
between the end of the stick whisk you
put a the upper part, end you ha.e,the
•wring fame when you have done this on
broth sides of the window. It s ever se
e asy. And if you do not understood, look
at an awing and you will see for yonreelt.
A little sill cloth may be bought and the
awns( part made and sewed oa. Of
wares, as plae•ed, there no side pieces to
the awnings. But this is immaterial and is
pet (erred by many, as it shields without
shutting out the view. A little ingenuity
and arrangingof string:runaisg over the
window willliftuptheawninge. One woman
i knew was so ingaatane that the got the idea
of lifting the swings above the casing after
they were closed, Awl maybe other womes
will see bow to do this. The screw eye
then runs omits rod planed perpendicularly
en the wisdaw easing.
FM.ere M Wieser Serle
A very plants, table dimer*dioe thee le
easily tarried out throegheet the eamme
soothe le the addltten ei Iowan M the
finger-ttwrls. U.. double bowls. ma
large mealM Mid the other, and Ill the
epees hews•r the be. wish very .mal
M•teema the gees% of thele ted Or
pm Mt. fl.lwrlmktwlee wise le deelded-
b eMgse orf ageneta
• vein •wi
wows
r N I
mega drwafe
Ana es mew M aaapy
.fry btk was to set •tae .bole gsteul le
c.gditha taw ea oilst is, . heal t v meet.
Dian ems —I have seed v.11..w Oil lac
two air three years, and ih.sk it has MO
eyed for croup. tire. J S () Brw,Heata
wile, est.
A• Illenenritabee C rev set...
Ow of the most useful mem in England to-
day is F. N. C'erriagtes, sole of the great
brewer of the same name. Mr. Charring -
toe thus tells of his conversion ---" I was
barely twenty one Tsars of age, and spend -
isles holiday abroad in the South of France,
when I met the son of Rev. Marcus Rain-
ford. • well-known English clergyman. The
result was that I began to look at things in
• wholly different light, and upon returning
to London took an active interest in the
condition of the people in the slums." One
day, outside • poblie Meuse, he saw • woman
asking her drunken husband for mousey to
buy some bread for the children. The hus-
band replied by knocking her down. "The
next moment," proceeded Mr. Cbarringtoe.
" I happened to glance up at the top of
the pablie-house, and there I saw my own
same is very large lettere ' Charringtss,
Head, i Co.' I said to myself, If this u
the sort el thing for which I am respon-
sible. if it is my mosey and my tnfisesos
that MONO this crime sad suffering I will
never have anything more ate do with the
trade." And from that hour i aver estor-
the brewery again." Mr. Cerriagt a at
ovae told his father that he meld tot me
his way te succeed him, sad that there was
nothing for him but to resign his "reargues
" i was taw nearly 21 years et age. I am sew
44. MIonafer brother stepped into my
plaee
sod today amm
illioire; but I should
dike t,o add that my father, when os his
death bed,said to me, "Ter are rigbRFrd:
you have takes the proper esuree;" sod be
tift me in hislwill swab to live epee with-
out adopting • prom mina." That enabled
me to devote myself, as I have dere, to vol.emlssy work cedes the peer.
-r The Worei ear to .Meal..
1`per's Weekly : There are sixteen
e seiMus hada treatise with Jepa., and
they present. (m the forgive.o....d*e', the
✓ egular spsataele d mate.. little geyser
meets all udepesium .1 each ether, di.-
p"ewu ii..�g lrsttee and sdedM..ria se mosey
dlfferwt ferias el law within the sane teei-
ICach Werner is registered Is the eoa-
salate of his country. All Merl preenews
and wits against him, brought by ether
faeeipma or by Japaow are aseered with
sad tried before his eonwl, lou in the
ease d Great itritaim, *Aid mai.tsioe •
mart separate from Ito essealate. If the
• lieu esmmite as oases against Japanese
law er regulsseo outside the trusty Nene
he eon be arrested by the .•five relies but
he maga be tried sod reared, if guilty, by
h is awed, the Japen.m treeerummt pew
M.eetie. the esu, sad it is ales hawed, es
the request el a esimil. to awe* donsrlme
and %elms from teethes eche have fled
w elch treaty limiea terata metes=
bus end r.gelatiem are wedded ler. bas
faikme be par the fernier or say dames
ahem the -la qr ma be s tlld oily by a
masaL
Os the Mbar had, the land la the /mete
esneeseens is tb.1s lammed of pthe Jaips mmo
• r
the seasasr at sue per teras tiff MM
square) white to the Ms.-
alee et the nee, is en.enYy, end le
she sal, sae levied. She Ise ,may ha
haetrt eadeeld, haeabga =W--- le the
argendreat
Is the twig (the aloe of the mmuisyml
am Lad ier) i v td ell *.W end
w emeYre�
att el, sed the we el all M reslsed.erfs
►tit mem wawa mom the Banter
a
SI
makers
Pt leaden
brands of tobacc i s. 13
offered as a reason for
your te3t'n9
AST -rF
PLUCJ
J. B. YAl'S T.ba oo Oe.. Blchmesd. V
vee Meet real. t'an.
Long Waist,
Correct Shape,
Best Material,
Combined with the best filling in
the world, makes the " Featherbone
Corset " unequalled.
TRY A p1°iZR•
-.isom Tan. POGO ,
AN EMINENT MINISTER
REV. W. S. BARKER
OF PET= BORO.
Mr. W. S. Barker is a young
minister of Peterboro who has by his
great earnestness and able exposition
of the &Klein= of the Bible earned
he himself a phos amongst the
firemen minimises of Canada. He,
with his most estimable wife, believe
is looking after the temporal as well
as the spiritual welfare el mankind,
Mass the following Mateseent for
pablieafisn :
M I hope musk pinafore in re-
eemmeadb g the Great South Ameri-
can Mervine Toms to all who are
Misted as I have been with nervous
prostration and indigestion. I fogad
very great relief from the very fret
bottle, which wee strongly reeom-
mended to ase by my druggist. I
also isiseed my wife is we it, who,
I must say, was eompleWy run down
and was sharing very mush from
general debility. She found great
relief hem South Americium Ne.'vl.te
sad ales eheerfelly eesoeameala it
M bet IalbwwAeers.
htsv. W. S. Beam."
It Isere es a eeientife fact that ear -
lain nerve .entree lactated afar the
base oldie br•la have entire soaked
ever the stoma . liver, hewn, lungs
and based all internal wpm ; that
is. key ltlw IA 111r swipes whit
the saeswmrj aeRMiBee le -aa9a
Nom to f11111diosapmese
vat Inlia maims
ease time casae. te
topaaletitle
l white are wow
Jab
lad .gssslltaa d ea dames apromptthe
l
A peremm
l of this •neene-
e
must em,y gape. eassdhing you may
her meed ed. and Mama raw we seb-
th your p•ireaa/s, .. WdI meet with�►
than our siarb to peace wW
W approval et env Palmas
)iOit \itod►•
This useful miss I. kept in the hill
rouge of qualities same as letter
i. itr intoe►•
In this Has we have a very large
stock of fine writing papers suit
able for every class of benisons
represented in this locality, cow
pruty¢ laid and wove, linens,
quadrtUs and other papers, ruled
or =ruled, as may be required.
two . loot►•
are not so generally used, they fill
an important place in commercial
correspondence. See what we've
got under the above heads.
' 1 Mtge►•
If tie " pay-as-you-go" plan war
the order of the day the demand
for account paper would not be
w great ; but there are some men
who get eco many ddnsers that
they wonder if the stock will ever
run out. We don't intend it to,
and at present our stock is coin
plate in this line with four sizes.
Good paper and neat ruling.
ttotplrtiMt•
Her mingle and double dollars
and Menta columns. They come
chow than bill heads, and are
the pepper thing to send after a
dant once • month. They
sea was to fetch him 'round—
Now, it would be hard to get
along without envand to
keep up with the emand for
them we keep a large stock on
hand. We have now about a
hundred thousand in stock, and
the prices will range from i,rc. to
$2.00 per M. We handle cos
mercial and legal sixes exclusively
I,OlbU ttEaok rat\ane,
has already been partially enum
orated in some of the heads above.
There is, however, a vast amoun
of work under this head that to
enumerate would more .than take
up the entire mace occupied by
this .dv't, but we do it all at Tam
StoatL,
fore, is diminished, and a. a ,scab
the stomach will sot digest the food.
the liver becomes torpid, the kidneys
will not act properly, the heart and
lungs gaffer. and in fact the whole
system becomes weakened and sinks
on account of the leek of nerve force.
South American Nervine is bed
on the toregojpg scannas discovery
and is so prepared that it acts
directly on the nerve gentres. Ii
immediately inereaeee the aervone
energy of the whole sy.11sl, thereby
enabling the different orgsas el the
body to perform their wait psefestly,
when disease at ones disappears.
It greatly benefits in one day.
Mr. Solomon Bond, a member of
the Society of Friends, of Darlington.
Ind., writes: "I hammed cis bottles
of South American Nervine sad I
consider that every bottle did for me
one hundred dollars worth of good,
because I have not bad a good
night's sleep for twenty years on
amount of irritation, pain, horrible
dream., tad general nerves. pren
nation. which has been tlawwed by
ehroan indigestion and dyspepsia of
the stomach, and by a broils down
eenditi.a of my Seevoas system.
Bel M I off• he down and deep sU
nisi* as mese* as a baby, tad I
elf lire a anal maa. I Is nM
Bleb Ihm bee oar bees a seedlike
lmMedaead lags this eeastry, whish
M ell eempars wNh this ski •
he the rmmmaeh sed a s'...°
IDAV18,
a.t.iturfor
j tlbatot\Ora•
to an "At Home" or a wedding
require considerable taste in melee
tion sometimes, but we make it
an easy matter by keeping in
stock the very latest and best
samples to be had. Call and res.
r oar oma
of entertainments and meetings
promptly turned out, from the
plain but neat to the meet elegant
with cord and pencil attached.
ei'ar to\or •
We aim to excel in all the differ
ent kinds of work we turn out,
but especially is this, and keep
in stock plain and fancy papers
suitable for all requirements.
Cord►• orad ! t& L 11
This head coven a large range of
work, from a bread or milk ticket
to a neat calling card, from an or
dinary adanisooa ticket to • tasty
business card or • handsomely
printed membership tide*
4 osttr•
Our facilitiesfor turning oat this
elms of work are evidenced by the
f �t great bulk d it u
done by es. This line also in -
chides
ihibsorilii tor "Ai
e
oe.ter•
which our three fast-ruanimg job
preesss ars able toturn oat in •
sat priingly short time.
Y,o\e. $\��•
Wen to theposter t
alm, and we make specialty el
tans—pramptnies being our atm
in thin rempeet. A nation of sae
will appear in Tas ie1AL free of
charge when bills for game see gel
hese.
#k‘ Matti• of Work.
Is the typogapbio.l priafilag lM
elan Ire do,s. is thla egMhliyrt
in an es fliosa and artis*
and
Our l� r'tt• v�+\t tot So`lt'^�
t►tv reA•OtlkOb�•
We stead ver awake liar p•M i
els and alltifdh a ewrMMmw 'f ted
pert..ISUsn "