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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1894-10-11, Page 3''O1f)KRICH. ()IDLY., THURSDAY, OCT. 11. 18941. '-- S DesSMIP7. 11"41.691.1.1":11 11I0 l►D.ti•D TAL 111 •� -ed .=eammi Iii _ it • '- a utak. T -Ng. E• RIOHARDSON, L D 15„ moves de.ria. �� Mahal ensilintrisered w HemseetteMelea�Mthe �- 11 a,•d to accts 'wpm..!l.14T wheal. TAIL H� U T i&iHYSICIAN. SUR ,salt' Nirt►t coir tri Ibta1• _ �CeAaMa PIONAJOHNOTON, BaRdC�Rr&tls*ki- - .sos 1114. tg. yION,IbO.. W. 0. J 110 to LOertiett r. DANCSY, .. as better. Osaver .a0. non Was. 0p to Ism patio O; KeseL ged.l.L tint. 161 N. LEWI8, BARRISTER, PROO• tor h�tima 411 Onearie 011ee-Hee b.tee hew. 10 O. HAYS, BARRISTER, SOLICIT 110 UK to. CO" MSC 151111111r5 aad Wen imitvete Iueds to Mod at fewest twos et later- o,• !^f i 1 ARROW • PROQDIOOT, BAY- lX mesa.A sea. J. T. Harrow.�t W.Preedb i. i IAMEktDNl, s HOLT te cb:tae' egorlob. M. 0. .meow. 40- ; P. Haat ; Meller Hama. O. WARD, OONVIiYANUKIt, J . tta, at estasieseeser fer aw sae re. b a sfdavfts air or stem. d.el.rs- is 0eettPrie- .1 Jareat s. Is oolong Idle yet' 1• R 1 Divielstersiet. Y Meesam ass Oren eamor nesH'saeei e LAMLAMM aam Lam. I SEAORILOONVEYANCINO AND e.eseedles. eppsstutMarth.. Hetet flast xiOFEY TO LEND ON MORTOAOE �lastt~� pmlt. Warden Hwl. emo Wdi MOSSY TO LOAN. - SM,000,00 111 Private Irwin, to teed at in par eat. sa- Reatt►. l ef1Vs t DANCET, Herusali Meek. s,wt• adheres Hmat. Oselerlsk. 107 41 L' J. T. 11Arriu., FIRE, LITS AND C seeyins Iswrease seism • u lowest rosea OMee- Der. bert►•et mad Sewn tiel,1100 TO LOAF. APPLY TO • •GAl 11814 t HOLMIGY, Hein WltIT TO LIiND.-A u ARO I 111- semen! Taft f via i eoA�tp • UDTOOT D RADOLIPTE, OENER&L tN- ik sena.. and �. I t "M.o�, '• -es esus. at the lor•west . el lateeest wtsa. is ohem doer em edeas.. / war re mit tha Waw Oasreas. wise let aleekaalesl' Institute. IIODE1110H ItIORANIOS' INSTI- I.J TUTI LI0RART AHD READIWtll- teoH, nes. of Raw siren sad sheer. Isp epos from 1 se S r.at,, sad Orem 7 le te IBOCT 1000 ♦OL'S 1N LIBRARY. Leeway Day, seed IWed ulrat r AK Y B HIP se tree nes «TIOLIT.WILT Library sad aenimWns les memMere reeelval W Arnim largess B 0111TH. 000. sTlv=U, oedema Marsh ISM WOaeessmer. Anettoneemnir. r▪ HOMA8 MINOR?. AUCTIONEER 1 sad I.sesasee�,aaa�sm t, ealsi.rt1. out. Lease alrel Diana 1[das. al lM / WoOs. la•aes at sad to Is Bair save the meaty. air TORN KNOX, (MURAL ADO - v weer .ad Lead Ta..tsc esderlek. hhsaaaa�'w had os.diesskle temertenes s kis eft wen sables he le Ind• pew n as Earoma is hlal erie*s MA u Hour . or sat hp matt M W the w P. o.. earefeltr Massa& ter 10811 Ower Anaetenmr. troll Deettle Announcement. REETN EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN arH��-ca�oRioe DR. B. RIQHARDSON'S enew al. Pa masa. Ifni MOOSE MCP /EST -STREET samsost, ter� m ree ��m(ardMs s est measeesim wtdi a sell e.l Iara1Ri mi`ie am Rill 1a hen sinal er oliss-411=aellwry. if lath sr Mimi. er w kind to pair mg sasd vers mp. p.*. In the list ISO �B�I►"•0 test ILTAMID� cel Mat he tit. Is hvmt.m wow. itethe Mess knows es arra M reeler ststh a.eweslltive N pale. IEftlat. lash se it le pe'INervinessa10 r Ner•ss a Ns beas. tt�ry Ise of ee of taw oblong Moth .ee}aItp• aal ky .ell s ntty doe* �r OR a RiOtARilanK. 'RO'VER'S. Teo sad a the only renew stip 14•i b tip +a7 is apt isleiela't lle ay fa wise smooth the mirror. am to ernever ant k t la fortune as feed ems roseberm 111. a buree yeti foist .y.ttM .a •u4.g to kegtN lea al reit he have areal M Ob. gaper ma im Usher is made of hM sou tft y how* s.11..a titiat Wm, 4, 4't' slot dem ant fibs an Ms when ;Lar 'amutusi� uareM hhtg * . PIA 1114611.• w+y by >t.asi~ ' THE watt OF THE BROOK. The t.gl{ w celled alien W I taw Puy the far hillside. Meek sad browny And new grat.t•1 Wo@sIuma asset The Whit ls.d say moor feet Alt 1 peal shorties. elegies. down. The happy bird. ay waters drink, The U I but y grow es velvet peva tuna theta; at oar Iwtnk, Tb. pset%n4 cattle stand end--tklak Aad lfts Is 04,111 • shifting h ems I spend my wealth fur other.' s•..m. And the., la turn, their Lsee I irks; The triad deh.hm, with sw..l, nen. Merin er quiet e'er ter brood, And mon • newer charm doth maks My emiad will not let rue stay In may quit, though fair It Le; Er.. while yen watch 1 eltp away. Br day awl eight, by night rad day, To add err ripple to the ,say W4l.•h .ren seeds. to ...k like me. A PAINTER'S WIFE. She often mat to Williot ; be Ilk ed her expression and the Italian tone In her color. Moreover, he grew interested in her from certain words and hints she let fall. She was a devout Catholic, but adulated she had nut always been so. One day Williot led her on step by step to tell her story. and bow she had become devout. They were die -awing matrimony in the abstract. and rhe ap- peared so conversant with the law be- tween man and wife that he asked tar how she knew IL "How did I caw to know the hew," said she. "Well, because you see 1 was brought op behind the scenes -born in the property room of a provincial the etre, and educated to emerge gracefully from pantomime pies or gigantic rose- buds as • diminutive fairy With this refined birth and training I learned many things not generally imparted to children. At any rate, very early I knew that a man could legally chartists his wife. so long as he never struck her with a stick thicker than your little finger. 1 knew this. I say, became I heard it explained by the lawyers when my father was sent to jail for having beaten wy mother with something a goal deal thicker than the prescribed dimensions permitted. ' W illiut smiled and suggested that that edifying rpeetaae had apparently not deterred her from taking a husband her - .elf. "No." she answered, and I was only seventeen when 1 diel marry." "How did that come about!" "Because I was a eelf•willed young fool. and 1 thought I loved the other self willed young foul, who was our assistant scene painter i was playing general utility in the theatre,and he was painting general utility, as on might call it." .'Did you love him then!" interposed Williot "Tee. I say so. but I got to hate him as well Love and hate seemed ever to go hand in hand with me all through. a First one was oppermo.t.tben the otter A contradictory violent tempered yuan wretch I was. I never tried to contr my paesiome-I'd never been taught My mother always said I never had heart . perhaps rhe was right." "Tell me, why did you hate your hues band!" '.Because I found he had a etre will than i had, and because he grew he more savage and morose as he gut n bre prof.•rslon, oddly enough. Be rause. too. he was se artful as he w handsome. and he knew the law bett hen my father. He never struck ith a stick at all. thick or thin. bo once. and that once settled the business ut I shall come to that presently Y be was a clever fellow, too, in his art s. e gave up scene painting and paint ictures instead that sold at high price.. e used to snake me eit as his model hen, and I hated that mors than any ing Yon may wonder that I didn' n away frotn him long before I dib as Tie truth is I wafraid of him. He g. wed the very life out of mAt one made he ade a lot of money, bat he uldn't keep it, and finally we had to abroad to avoid creditors. "We went to Rome, aria lived there several years. In than day. an artist could live there very cheaply, as we did. t still he got into debt again. and for months he was afraid to stow himself daylight. You can guess how we carrion o, and if you can't it won't atter, end so, as I've told yon so much, este e to that last scene between us, hdeb. as I say, settled the business. I seemed to be quick at languages. and lied upa goad smattering of Italian, mod being still pretty he made me sit as model for other painters in order metimes to get food. He even went far, and I didn't mind. as to tem make p Mama wait in the ama di Rpagna. on re with the native models. At first et' were inclined to resent Sig. Ingle's'. trnsioo on their domain. but they were goal natured people and put np th me after awhile. "He was le biding at that time. and had to go to mad from home with the groetset tare. so as eel to betray our hereabouts. My training on the stage. .1 then ten a motel, made me pretty 'utile an st disguise' and westing strange and whoa 1 west is hire to the We lived is a arias half rained lam lapart of what had once been the ape{ of a Benedictine monastery. We bred it of a kindly old monk for • song, t mw otis. lived in the building - Were lding- were themalts alone. I forget .etiy whereit was, bot it was outside city, on the duo of the Osmpa ..a • had a smell room where be painted. part of it divided by • curtainhere we slept At the font of the short stow slab lindlsg up to this apartment oast oadoor, another stone sr nart toe rrt of vault or crypt, HA a by a barred window. At the n of this wethe remains of a little rine. with a dilapidated agars of the Virgin. std on nae side, soiree the a stone back it was what be • pleps toseeo Mto t, nod be ads • ofK 'Lb.st this Mr 1S woe fRtimbmr seladR 1!ita..MK hal berg sec , 'T+t tea , , WawaWawaduos excitement It gave my husbandd an i.1.. for a subject: 'The Woasded Brier's. in Hiding.' He depleted the Rion lying with ht bound ap, seas in this crypt. with the wife kueeltng before the shrine with up-stretcbel arms and clan, wl Ramis in the attitude of suppli- cation The background was all there t.. hal. haul without stirring out of doors and 1. of course, had to sit or kneel ae then praying wife. Without eex- cerptionit was the most trying, tiring at titude I had ever assumed My knees and hack lost all sensation. and the op- iate! arum simply seemed to go dead after hill ala hour. Why. 'haul I resit von will ask. Because I damn t till he goy, me leave. The crosses of our for- te:les had turned hie into a regular ..i t•mype•, au.l he wee at bis worldwhile l.aietittg this picture. For hours he ta .opt ukneeling then. clay after day. ( Rice I grew faint. bot Itw•kily just then he said: 'You can rest,' so he didn't know it. Another time when my hands and arum were all pins and needles, I pleaded for a pause. He refused it. I went on. Then I couldn't help saying a little. He swore at we. I steadied myself. At last, without any warning or will of wine. my arum dropped on my lap. and I fell forward, my chin on the altar. With a big oath he rose fnri- oat " 'You've rained my work, you devil!' Ise cried, 'just at a most critical point. when I was 8nishuig your left hand. ['p mein instantly ur I'll be the death of you,' and he roughly placed me in the old attitude. "Ten minutes later the same thing happened. I couldn't help it. Again he rose, and this time he struck me vio- lently across the back and shoulders with his maid *tick, which was no thicker than his finger. This was the first time he'd ever struck me -badly as he'd behaved, and it was the last. I never loved hie after that. No, kind heaven never gave me the chance, for after the blow I did faint, and when I recovered 1 was lying where I fell. He had not even lifted we from thegrownd No, but he had stretched himself at full length upon the stone bench, and was*mudaud asleep. "Escape was my first thought -re veoge the second --and as 1 stood up. the second overwhelmed the first. Noise leanly 1 crept to where lay, amidst many studio properties, the brigand's poig- nerd. Often I hied dreamt of this, and had seen it glitter in my hand, but m the dreams opportunity was wanted n . Now, both werealities. 1 would use thew mercilessly. Night was coating on. I could escape tinder its aver. Whither to fly, or how to lire after want, I gave these things no thought as I slued with the weapon raised above his naked throat. Did I lack courage! No. sincerely no. What, then. made me suddenly I. *use and listen? Foot tope' Yes. faint and distant on the road, running near our .1..de. Alone, they wonld not have deterred um, bitta above therose upon the stillness a chant -a chant from some religious pro cession, pilgrims probably, passing to wards the city to do homage at the shrine of the Holy Bambino in the church of Ara Orli, for it was not Cbrigttnas Eve? The sounds came nearer. Full. strong, welodious-deep- ly impressive.e "Stnger that I hal ever been to religion and its emotions, it was odd bow, whoa 1 cave to home. s faint erg gelatin of something akin to them had gradually stolen int, my being. I think the manic in the churches did it, and many times I world lure gone in to listen, perhaps to pray, had I known how, and bad I dared. My husband was a scoffer. '-Tbe singers appruacbed until I could almost hear some of the Latin word.. It seemed miraculous even to myself that they should affect me as they wered mydoing. I .trainev ears to catch the prayer. Strange it wonld have been at any moment that it should have .o fas cinated me, but now moat of all strange when my blood was red hot with fury and passion . and when revenge for all m7 wrongs was lying within my grasp' Was it intercession from above. an in- ter.•easion for his life! It struck me so at the moment! Only later did I see, perhaps, that it was an intercession on my behalf also. but at the time I never thongbt of this, and i spared him. I paused no longer. Turning my back resolutely on the temptation. I stole away up the stairs, softly, softly out under the stars now beginning to twin kle in their myriads. 1 followed the procession. and mixed amongst the little crowd of villagers splen following. "That night I sought the old monk, our pedrooe, sod I told him my story as He wmoved, aad said the Blessed Virgin had performed a miracle and had taken me to her bosom. heretic though 1 was. for she saw in me a sod to be saved. I now know he was right. "By his aid I concealed myself from .. my husband, but there was nneed to do so long The saints. their names be praisiel, had yet another blessing it store for me. They hail not only rescued ma c from the ommisdon of a dreadful crime but they spared me its necessity. Throe days later the good old monk went to our rooms, and found --yes' found -my husband stilt stretched as in sleep upon the stone bench as i left him, but he was in the sleep from which theis no waking. 'The story is still cited es a miracle, and, altho. gal it is a long time dace it happened. the few good Catholics snag Lite pointers still use me by proforma ss their modal on its wealst. " g ul a tigtrr to m as er m t es. 1 t w b H H ct ru co ti co io ba by in r w Pic a me se to hi th in wi w am si p ch h we he t W with w from led bit sod sb wall, 0.110 seedy -. Mod T1..gA.a An American .lm will live under fa- vorable circttm.tY' 1100 yam. • nae pis 1100 years. Bet • arse edam .ossaal will live several via Bora that asigln abed in .arty Beret are still dtvt.g esu is good bealth.--(eristian Work. The higher Ofe bogies for nes as soon ea new renftwnee Dur own will to bow be fore a divine law. flint Dns* then love lifet Tboo w.sis sot Chea. tor time is eke east Qhat lir tads st -Presidia MOW TO KEEP4IECO0Dd. A renew wrens tato clear -nes isseirede et thaw Thlas.. A eurnepuudent of the country Gentle man dessribe. the methal of reconliug the ylel.le of milk ut 1.1. cowl whish he has found I•erf.. by satisfactory in every way. A eummes pad hung behind each sows with a pe.Nl tied to It by • string, are ell that are needed In the stable fur the milk, not forgetting. however, • common spring balance hanging hu . small gallows mi as to deer the wall, fur weighlog the milk. The pea are made to weigh exactly the sante by the addition of solder or lead soldered to the peiL The llamas wbo mak.. the pails will do this whim they ere or.terr.L Tho a1aal weight of the milk is thug easily got at, at the weekly addition of the ranking.. Theo, se shoo es • now is nal►r.1, the wa'k u weighed and the weight marked un the pad in • column opposite the date. Each pad has the name of the now plainly written on the top of the sheet. His pads are seven by five Inches, and have twenty hues on each sheat. This makes the sheet last a weak, end on the day axed, which may be Satur- day night, the ,beat is torn off and taken to the house or Ake for entry under the cow's came in the account kept in the book. The sheets are filed as they are entered, and each week's product, as It is added end tared, is put down in a column kept for it Another column may be kept for the butter made when any separate churning is made of that cow's milk, and this should be done et stated times. If s lianooek teeter is kept and used once • week for special work, the I ortion of fat is entered in its column, and the quantity of butter by estimate is put in the next 'solemn. Uses of Raw tilde. For wide usefulness. few things seemed raw hide, though it is nut comwouly un- derstood in the East. or among civilized people as should be the case. The west- ern pioneer through necessity learned the art of manipulating it long years ago, and it• um has out been forgotten. A coil of sun-dried cowhide tied to the plow handle, turret ring or wagon stake, is security against breakdowns and many mishaps which are likely to overtake the farmer ur teamster. Soaked in water, it become" limber quietly and will tie • harm s, wagon and other things together and hold theta firmly. whether wet or dry. When t dole.., it shrinks, binding more firmly than ever. On the tr.eelesw, rainless wastes of the Southwest, where the fiercest sun and constant drying winds wuold shrink the tire from any wheel used in moist climates, the raw hide tin ie indispena able, because the dryer it gets, the closer it sticks. If after long wears tire is tom.{ lose, a new one can be quickly whipped about the wheel at night, ready to start with in the morning. For belt laces, traces and other hareem straps, chair bot- toms, and innumerable other places when bard wear is demanded the raw hide with the hair exposed, or turned in ant of sight, is valnable and could be nand in the older states oftentimes with greet advantage. O: these skins may be "cawed," as the Foo- tman is called when the hair or for is pre - nerved, and no tannic acid is used. This • done by spreading • mixture of finely powdered salt and alum in equal auanti- tice upon the moist flesh side and doubliug one. or laying pairs flesh side together. The hides are left thus for several days, when they seem to have become something like leather. They are then stripped, scraped, rubbed with chalk and pumice stone until smooth, and pulled and scrap- ed craped while drying to make them soft. -Hol- lister Sage. For fsllIwg Trees. in felling (ening trees they generally Tilt and waste so ranch lumber that some way of preventing the splitting should be adopted. (}et your blacksmith to bend • bar of iron about an inch thick and sixteen In long In the shape of Fig. A. Cut tale side of the tree at C. withdraw the saw, drive In the iron with the points B B and the tree is ready for sawing from the op- podte.fde. When the tree 1s sawed hearty through the saw may be withdrawn, the iron removed and the awing eomplet.d from the and cut -Orange Judd Farmer. Kerosene Rradslw. Kerosene seas les is prepared by dis- solving batt posed .f eo•p le • gallon of haling water and mixing this ■t once with two fatless of kero.ne. This mix- ture is then churned evenly so ss to form • creamy mass in which the oil and water do not separate. This may be done by forcing the liquid through • pump Into a pail in which the emul0os 1. formed, or by Ibis w of an egg beater. and will r. - quire from seven to is. minutes of settee •gitaticst• This may be dilated whoa awed with from nine to eighteen times He balk of water and applied to planta by means of • fore. pump or .praying machine. if the well waver available is very herd H w111 be foaled preferable 'o ares soft water. Ordinary well it spell r water, however, .111 to Best 's..,s answer the pwrpo.s i be all sod water will probably @sperms la sees the war is very hard. 'ifs Wit Tar. Improve the bask yes* Plast • few sbrwls std dowers for year own use if they aced • little s/s.ties • yams ea •lip NI 1. the beak lord, look after plate Ma, whoa they would sot tkiak d going is the frost Iowan A good nil* is to ppm,/ ..mMal.g for the beam has Toe otemen De sot eaglet.' tier .bara wog if ether week seems be dam, yep Whole Mese Mea Msay t. save boob Asp dud tare le Ida, Obs .heres sea do thus le the .mom meW4 ata era. b10agf►1 t. seen► hew mom des Cotnsles& "Commend to Your Honorable Wife" -xar.ra..4 ✓ Meese. and tell her that I am composed of clarified cottonseed oil and re- fined beef suet ; that I am the purest of all cooking fats; that my name is that 2 sun -betterthan Mrd, 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 Is ado only by The N. K. Fairbaa Company, W ellr.sg$oa ..d Aa. e1.1. MOIUTtaKAr. A lye■rty tatags. There is toot the remotest little corner or islet of the minute blood vessels that does not feel some little wavelet from the con- vulsion oce•aiosed by good, hearty Iaught- 1 er. The tits principle, or the central man, , is shaken to the moor most depths, sending new tides of Ide and strength to the sur- face, thus materially tending to ensure good • health to the person who 1od.lces therein. i The blood mores mon rapidly and conveys • d.fferent lopresatoo to .l1 the orgasm" of the body, u t vines the organs of them on that particular mystic journey when the man ie laughing, from what it does at other times. For this reason every good, hearty hugh in which a person indulges tends to lighten bio life, coeveyi.g, as it doe., new sad distinct stimulus to the vital forces. Doubtless the time will come when physi„- Mae, 000eeedieg more ioflueece then they new do to itfluence el the mind upon the vital forces .f the body, will make up thee prescriptions more with reference to the mind and lee. to the 'drugs for them: and .ill, ,n so doing, fled the beet and meet ef- fective method of producing the required ef- fect upon the realest. If your child is puny, fretful, troubled with glandular swellings, inflamed .yes, or sores on the head, fare, or body, a course et Ayer'a Sarsaparilla is seeded to impel the scrofulous humor. from the blood. Th. sooner you begin to take this medicine the better. £UUArs till! Id tiCE$. T1ser a. -s sot a Cu.. all, tat .re the best e..dirina ksowa foe ttilie.sn.«, /icy!. h., ('onuip.troe, 1tyyss impala. Indigestion, Pimples, Sallowness and .11 dr. wane er m i.ei....e hl.....1 or •turrish li•.ern 25 CENTS ABOX. Ash Tear 0r1.$ for Thea. PLANING MILL. ESTiILISNE0010bb. Bnchauaiis & Hhyllas Iltaletrra,O'U 1O. SASH, DOOR and BLIND 1>relsrs la .11 kis& of LUMBER. LATH, SHINGLES Lad balder's' material of every deserted. School Furniture a Specialty. 1111•11111 Amid= Elr PATENTS O RAM* prtmt.eiw7!72mevM Scientific American ..Yem la the teas as lre, Y • PATENTS! CdRUTL TWO 'MMS — 11711111111118 WairgrANTP.ale OIL 110540511 (re.s•g N. »LOv •d- vbr r 1♦ al a M sem • NEW MILLINERY ARRIVING AND TO ARRIVE. S CAMERON' Has just returned from the cities having made her Fall purchase in the latest lines of Millinery, Laces, Ribbons, &c., and purposes making a second trip. There will be no so called Fall opening, but the show- roois will be open at all times to the ladies of Goderich and vicinity. 81-2m FALL MILLINPSRY. The Misses rates have opened a large assortment. of FELT BATS {.lack and white. Also the latest in fancy FEATHERS and trim- mings. LADIES' WHITE WEAR. We do not intend having a formal opening this season. Tha Lathes of Goderich and vicinity are invited to comae and sea our goods. e3 -Orn MISSES YATES. THE SQUARE. Headquarters for BOOTS AND SHOES. Having received a large stock of Boots and Shoes for Fall wear direct from the leading manufacturer., we are prepared to give the people of Goderich and surrounding country tirst-class goods—lower than the lowetet. Rememaber we will give you good solid leather goods at the price that is usually charged for shoddy, and being practical shoe niakers, know a solid shoe when we see it. We have a large and varied stock to choose from and feel confident that we can please you in quality, fit and price. Call and see us. No trouble to showgoods. The old reliable stand— PEW" -- N. B. a Custom work and repairing prcmtly attended to. W. SHARMAN, Jr., Successor to E. 1owltufa. 3Z1ZEss GOO=s Now arriving and to arrite, and although I do not indulge in the Spread -Eagle style of advertising 80 common at the present day, a dis- cerning public cannot fail to notice that the Goods I handle are New, Seasonable and up to date. Prices are right every time and all the time, Quality considered. I need not enumerate the different lines in Stock and to arrive in due course, but the public may rest assured that no House in the Trade can do better, as I buy only from the best Wholesale Houses, and on a strictly cas basis. One of u»' Specialties just to hand in an Extra Wide Russian Navy Serge, hard finish, at a Price never so low in the annals of the Dry Goods Trade. taspeetl.0 ailNly 11.511.1111.41. 5 Per fest. aper..■t for cask, 1004 A. MUNRO, Draper and Haberdasher. Choloe Family Groceries The Best in the Market and the Most Reaonable Prices at R. W. RZTNCIMbNre, R/ep..e Urea, a.4.rseh. SPECIAL NOTICE 11. Our Stock el BUILDERS AND GENERAL HARDWARE For Fall trade le sew esmplete. Lane.' Genuine Steel Barn Door Hangers and Track , T Strap and Screw Hinges in all Sines $T E L MAILS. Wb Buy a Ptd 1sst1 wha ria as p them mMe from SOFT RAMC !T11RL u • versa setas •ddraw 1. oro. • ve tbam s alt Mesa WB ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR Portland Cement, Hydraulic Cement, Calcined Plaster, Roofing Pitch, Building Paper & General Hardware. DAVISON & CO. mwat+rMa 8•a R. r. man las B b kr "The Bigaa t-'-$1 s yes,