HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1894-10-11, Page 66
THE SIGNAL': GODERIOH, ONT a THURSDAY. OCT. 11. tau.
HANDY THING TO HAV'
NO HOUSL SHOULD SE WITHOUT A
FEATHER OUSTER HOLDER.
wYrty Made
!Mem Are
it sh. Insarueueae Gives
Onsets/ Oat—a.t a Pew
Class Needed se say the `teoeesars
easerW
The feather brush is as popular as ever
as • useful ornament for a drawing room,
and there is. therefor no excuse to be
male fur dust upon brackets. pictures or
knickknack• of any sort. The holder
shown hen is, as emu from the sketch, by
no moans elaborate, and must of the effect
depeuds upon the calors and materials
employed for ii.
Of enure. it is made up on a foundation
of stout cardboard, which is cut into •
CiRISP AND
The Irish Pres►yt.ri.s shingle
b. m�seM
106,578 membms r rpt. • galls si 1,864
ever the past year. The isosms is
1.0,000 whir► es a prole ever $b • heed of
the nsembeeehip.
Or, Fowler's KMereet of Wild Bir wMrry
cores diaer=.w dysentery cramps, Gabe,
cholera marbes, Arden i•l••tam' and all
i*eesaine of the bowels. Never World with-
omt it Pries 36s.
Besides the red and white blood corpse -
cies, the osly two described by the averse*
pyewioged un t, theis • thud kind is tee
bluof mammals, disoevered oaly sieves
yeah aqua It. nature is sot yet Mlle mo-
deratood.
I,.
h
RSATUMA DUSTS' •OLDSIL
diamond shape and used with one point
uppermost, the brush being slipped into a
loop specially made fur it. Cut a piece of
moire. or of satin, or velvet, or plush. for
the front, just about one•half !tiger all
round than the cardboard. Cut also* babd
of buckram about two inches wide, and
three inches longer than will stretch across
the diamond Noris •ntally from point to
point. Cover this buckram with plush or
vs:vet to accord with the rest of the cover•
log, and him the noddle of this band with
• scrap of silk: the ends need not be thus
lined. Sew a number of little imitation
gems, or large 'palm's., at equal distances
along the centre of this hand, and add
soul small pompons or drops of some kind
to the lower edge Lay this band across
the ceptre of the satin front point to point,
sew it down firmly at each end from the
wrong side, but leave the exact middle of
the band slack so that the handle of the
brush will slip easily into it. The reason
for lining the middle part of the band is
now obvious.
Now stretch the satin very tightly over
the cardboard, drawing the raw edges to-
gether on the wrong side with lacing
ititclies of strong thread. Be careful to
get the hand in the middle quite straight,
for the holder will be anything but orna-
mental if this is crooked. It is as well to
add the cord r.und the edges below the
band, the bow at the tip of the point. and
the ring to hang the holder. up by, beton
lining the back neatly with sateen or a
piece of plain silk.
It is quite possible to make up the
feather brush itself at home, if the worker
is anxious for the whole thing to be of her
own workmanship. or if she happens to
have a number of fancy feathers that she
would like to use up. A "turned" stick
is needed, which may either be gilded or
enamelled. Take the shortest of the tea.
there and arrange them with the tips
downward round the lower edge of the
stick. Tie them firmly in plate with some
One twine, and glue this well to prevent it
from coming untied. Add a second set
of feather. rather longer than the other.,
and secure them alio with fins twine, gl..
log this as before. Continue this until the
brush is full enough, and hide the suds
of the last set of feathers with a "sugar -
paper" shaped piece of velvet, secured
here and there with a touch of glue, end
having a band of wide gold braid tacked
. round the upper edge to hide the place
where the velvet and stick meet. The
lower edge of the velvet sh•,mld be van -
dyke'. It is • good plan to use kid or
leather instead of velvet, and there should
be no difficulty in getting this of a good
and suitable color, as many bookbinders
will dispose of scraps left over from their
own work.
For cholera mobile, cholera ishatum,
cramps, uouc, Mork-. a, dysentery, ed
Summer complaint tit. Fowler's. � of
Wild Strawberry is • promo,
cure that has been a popular favorite for
over 40 years.
.sir
hawses of the Ogrocesaterm. The deo&
most set be oo■Iweded with
Mr galled dreopiee Mahe -
ie
I vnmentioned oily the osmmesm
plants whose perms s are mese .hither. A
bog Ihe might he ta mime
degree I t.. . bet the easels
of ghats .$ whisk
are seldom total. Perhaps the newt ems -
meta the
et
ile
s, i' the pa-Nras'lvj already referred to,
which redly b net as ivy at all, but a
olawbieg sumsiSbusl. This pial has the
saosviable distinotion of beteg potemmeus to
the touch. Frefeestly it dome not effect all
persons, however, came being able to beadle
it with impunity.
WHEELS IN HER HEAD.
The "eteeralaaeepert" as friar reeallar
New fork Herald . Dr. Thomas H.
Bailey, of Ne. 1 East Thirtieth street, has
The London Mtssiooary Society is it issued as invitation to Dr. Lewis A. Sayre,
hundredth year has 1,476 native ministers,
6,778 other male mauve workers, 94,192
church members and 125,984 scholars in Its
schools The •'.come has been $536,300, the
year closing with a debt of about $166,000.
Local telegrams are sow transmitted
through pommel', tubes in most of the
principal cities, of t.re•t Britian. At preusat
about fifty miles of such tubus f eisepesa'
Oat, requiring an errgrea hbo
power and transmitting a daily average of
106.000 messages. er 30,000.000 annually.
Ur. Reginald Sayre and several other well-
known member of the medical profession,
to witless an exbibitios this evening a the
parlor of the Sturtevant home) of the
peculiar and mysterious powers possessed
oy Mr. Annie Abbott, sometimes called the
t,sergia Marst.
Mrs. Abbot possesses the extraordinary
powers which, apparently, she can exereses
at Will, of re-dering an object with which
she pieties herself iu costae' so heavy that
the strongest moo cannot budge it, althourh
Ammar the crown jewels of ESMn.I, is Its actual weight is comparatively insigat-
the tower •,f Lradon, r kept tb -.'""4".
of Scoot. She me, under certain condition ,
tion riooS." It
Edward the Cook/mar, 1066. It is of pure
gold, richly set with geou,an :! the sou rood to
tie consecrated
enation. It sometimes called the "anoint -
mg spoon."
July was the filth month is the Roman
calender and was called Quintiles. the -fifth.
Originally it ao.teined thirty six days, but
was reduced by Kaneohe' to thirty -oat, by
Numb to thirty. but was restored
( o whom thirty
•
one 4y Julius l; • ear, ano
was tamed July on ►aouut of his having
been born during this month. It was also
so called from the goddess Juno.
One of the favorites ot the late Sultan el
Morocco was Herr von Rothenberg, • brother
of the (lemma Under Secretary of State,
Frew von Kottenburg Iwho married a
daughter of the late William Walter
1'helpsl. About five years ago, when as
officer in the German army, he reeeived •
flattering offer from the Sultan of Morrcco
to enter the service of his majesty and se
oepted it, after getting permission from the
German thnperor. Since then he has lived
in Tangier.
Lime Pock lighthouse, at the southern
end of Newport harbor, is • favorite visit
cog piece for strangers, who go then not so
much to see the light as to meet its famous
keeper, Ida Lewis. She is over fifty years
old new, her hair is *lightly streaked with
gray sod her fine is somewhat rugged and
weather beaten, but she can handle an oar
as quietly and as well as when she began
her record of life-saving with the rescue of
four small boys whose boat had capsized in-
the
sthe harbor.
exercise this power over herself, so that,
although she weighs only nieety eight
povain.-di•., • strong man :■ unable to lift her.
Saadow, it is said, once attempt the feat in
That the exercise of the power involves •
dram of some sort on her system would seem
to be indicated by the fact that she fre-
yuestly suffers from severe pates in her
head. She was prostrated by one of these
•tta:ks some time last week, and Dr.
Bailey was summoned to attend her. It
was thus be became interested in her.
He found himself utterly ',noble mu explain
how Mrs. Abbott performed her teats, which
he says, "seem to oppose all nature's laws."
sad therefore resolved to invite his profss-
slesal brethren to witness them and est
their wits to work to accor"t for them and
put scientific labels on them.
Mrs. Abbott is afflicted with soles in her
head at well as pains. fly bolds, an ordin-
ary wine gide to her head the noise. are
rendered audible to others, sometimes, it is
said, at • considerable distance.
I called on Mrs. Abbott at the Sturtevant
house last night, and she gays me an exhibi-
tion of some of her powers. The noises in
her bead, she said, were not so loud as
usual, but when she held the glass to her
head, by listening at the other end of the
glass I could hear them plainly. 'rhea she
held the glass in her ttands and I could still
hear them. Mrs. Abbott explained that the
noises in her head were transmitted through
het arms. At first the noises resembled
those heard in a sea shell, but were inter-
cepted
ntercepted by what resembled mwture explo-
sions or the sound made by the drawing of
• cork from a bottle, but greatly redu ed.
Mrs. Abbott explained that at times the
pains in her head are so great that she
faints, unless she can immediately obtain
morphine. She can account to the pains
and noises in no way.
I attempted to lift her twelve -year-old
daughter, • remarkably handsome child,
clear of the floor, while she mend Doe band
on the chdd's back and another on my left
wrist, but I found myself unable to move
the girl, although I had previously easily
lifted her clear of the ground when her
mother wild not touching her.
I. the dews way I was usable to lift Mrs.
Abbott by placicg my hands on each aide
of her waist, when she in turn placed use of
her hands on my neck and the other on my
right wrist. When I took a different ens,
however, and seised her round the waist,
cl.upiog my hands, 1 lifted her off her feet
at once. Mrs. Abbott explained that the
co tact of my own hands had made her
further efforts ineffectual.
She can give no explanauoa of her strange
powers. She does not inherit them, she
says, although her mother was • spiritualist
and inclined to the belief that her daughter
derived her powers from that source. She
does not herself, however, entertain this be-
lief. She certainly does sot derive her
powers fromthe exercise of her own strength,
for she is weak physically.
Her husband was • United States revenue
officer and was murdered by a "moonshiner"
m (:Dome about five years ago, while is the
performance of hie duties- After his death,
having three young children to provide for,
she decided to turn her peculiar powers to
account, and she has succeeded in doing so,
with much profit to herself,
A Sala Mem.
" What's 1 holly doing'" " Trying to
collect his thoughts." ' Poor fellow. He
isn't the first to have trouble with bed
debts."
A Little Daughter
retseeim . woos.
Harper's young People : The nicest
death of five school boys at Tarrytown, New
York, from eating a root which they sup-
posed to be sweet flag, calls attention in •
very tragic and painful way to the presence
ot poisonous plants in ..tar woods and held..
Just what she root really was t have not
definitely learned. A medical journal com-
menting on the case supposes it was the
very common plant known as poises -ivy or
poison -oak !Rhos toxicedendront. My own
*pinion would be that it was either the
water hemlock tl'icuta iaaeulatai or the
American hellebore 'Centrum rinds), both
of which are poisonous plants that grow,
like the harmless sweet 8b•, in moist locali-
ties.
ocaletie.. But perhaps it is not so important to
learn what plant killed the unfortunate lads
e a to remember that the fatal root was so
palatable that the boys at. it eagerly. That
• root or other vegetable product may be
pleasant to the taste and yet contain •
deadly poison is a very important thing to
know.
Fortunately nut many of our native
plants possess this very dangerous eembina-
tion of qualities. Of those that do, perhaps
the mast dangerous is the water -hemlock,
already mentioned. This is • rank weed,
growing commonly in moist localities. Is.
fleshy roots have • pleassat aromatic taste,
but are virulently poisonous. To add to the
danger there is • closely related plant, call-
ed the sweet cicely, that grows in similar
localities, and much resembles the water
hemloek, but which has a rust that is both
palatable and wholesome. Many persons
have lost their lives through mistaking else
of thew pleats for the other. Another re-
lated plant that now grows sommoely here,
having been introduced from Europe, is the
poison hemlock At onium maeslata), the
plant that furnished the poises with which
the ancient Greeks killed their capital crim-
inals, and sometimes, as is the ease of
Socrates and Phocino, their philosophers.
These deadly hemlocks belong to the same
family with the parsnip, carrot, and celery,
all three of which vegetables are poisonous
in their native state, and have only become
wholesome through cola cation. Even now
the parsnip monotones develops poisonous
principles if allowed to beoome too old be-
fore being pulled.
The hellebore isalso • Its is m lily Ithoughmon lt,
growing in boggy Pi
no one hat • botanist would suspect the re
latiooshipt, with broad piloted leaves
clasp the stem at their base. Thepoisonous
properties of this plant were well knees to
he Indians. who are said to have sometimes
used it in selecting their chiefs—the num
who could take moat of the poison with ik-
pren'ty bang regarded as strumpet and beet
I qusi tied to lead. tin account of this trdi•
tion the hellebore is often called " hoars-
e.* Make railed Bread. poke." It is also sometime* called " crow.
Tear the erase from • part of • loaf of
plass." because the early settlers scattered
Gorr .lapped in • decoction of hellebore over
baker's bread. Now tear the crumb of their fields to pesos crows
the loaf into long, thin piece. Spread The scoots.* are another tribe of commas
the torn bread in a pan and put in • hot sad • ry da g• ssLoplants Id offered treks
oven to become brown and crisp. it will easing she roots of one of thew pi•etw ‘`'•take about fifteen minuted'Nerve hot with have powers' native speeiso, but some of
cheese Pulled breaddis also nice with •� s k
as well knows as the "ook's
ehocolate OT coffee — I hdsd,'• which has come to us from Europe.
This pleat has a historical istereot, se its
Mhf Kassel, hew Gum. This
was used on arrow heads in primitive
*one one bniing chewing gnm at • warfare, anti in the •xeestton of criminals
senate shop lately began to apologia. for in more eivili,ed commneitae in some
the plebeian purchase "Oh, we .lmc't countries it was used to prawn wolves, and
Hoak anything about It any more," reelie.l heap s at
alar scall dd to 1101119.hase."
for sever
the saleswoman "lis many women chew ai ,thee l" "Bin phrase that are very
rho Ilttlesette of the ran.
There is an endless etiquette in the ass
of fans, and with the Japanese the fan M
an emblem of life. The rivet end is re-
gard..) as the starting point and as the
rays of the fan expand so the road of life
widens out toward • prosperous future. it
is also said that the Japanese ogi originally
took its shape from their wonderful moan
thin, F'uji-sem, which represents to them all
that is beautiful, high and holy. When
one begins to understand all this there
souses a salutary feeling of Ignorance, and
we perceive that the Japanese may claim
to be among the great symbolists in the
world A continuance of such study might
turn the most hardened European into •
Japonuphile-
Of a Church of England minister
cured of a dintre.sing nab, by
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Mr. RICHARD
BMRxa, the well-known Druggist, f07
McGill at., Montreal, I'. Q., says:
I have sold Ayer's Family Medktnee
for 40 yearn, and bat -oilcan' nothing but
good said of them. I know of many
Wonderful Cures
performed by Ayer's Sarsaparilla, one
in particular towing that of a little
daught.-r of a Church of England minis-
ter. The child was literally covered
from head to foot with a red and ex-
ceedingly troublesome rash, from which
she had suffered fur two or three years,
in spite of the best med•.cal treatment
available. Her fatter wta to great
distress about the case, and, ret my
recommendation, at last legan to ad-
minister Ayer's Sarsaparilla, two bot-
tles of which effected a complete curry
much to her relief and her father's
delight. I am sure, wen- he herr today,
he would testify in the strongest terms
as to the merits of
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
Prepared by Dr. J. r. Aye h Co., Lomat. Yea.
Cures others, will cure you
rrJWLER5
ft)(1 OF
0 �jLD
5T WBRRR
RARE 5 �1_
_r6OL /C
G HOL oRA
CHOLERA pEA
DIARRHOEA
DYSEN
TERY
M,pAI l
SUMMeRN or ADULTS
CHILPrice 3scTs
BEWARE of IMITATIONS
Mar and a Ward Villager.
"We : are going to have a war and •
hard Winter," said a weather wise prophet
the other day. " Every sign, and there
are many of them that indicate that. When
the sun sets in the eveaing you will notice
the long, horizontal streaks of red, sot the
usual red sunset, but • streaked one.
That represents blood. A few of the
seventeen year locusts have bees men, and
every one has • ' W ' ou its wing', the 'W'
standing for war. The wheat blade bore
the letter 'Ii for blood. -Again. wheat and
oats are • tighs crop, with lots or chaff,
the eaose as in 1'765, and they grew in spots
as trey did that year The butternuts
are falling off in great numbers, thus sig-
nifying death to many. And last, but not
least, we have the paaiky times semehich hew can
only be oorrected by •
de-
velopment. Now, is regard to • hard
Winter. The coons and groundhogs have •
heavy growth of fur coming os. The chip-
munk and equine! are the busiest little
animals in the world. The moots have
left the north side of the trees in the woods
as you will notice, and the feathers on
the geese are heavier than ever. Young
lambs are growing wool that seems marvel-
lous, and sheep have been sheared are rap-
idly regaining their fleece. These signs were
signs were visible in '57 ted '58. Another
sign that is visibland L not sign f This
\� inter is the large it mesas
also has another signihance,
lots of boy babies will be born te take
the place of those who will be killed in
the sourisg war. I tell you everything
points to • hard Winter and war, and
there are signs indicating this fact which
never fail. Although not sunerstitieus,
i have every roses to believe the signs."
His Dyspepsia Cuei.
grim foe dyspepsia that we always take it perenrea . is particular, the foxglove (15t` -
for rotted that that is why it M wanted." dead) i h (151.
i
itaIie pbellad a i, tie y g
Aa (JW Yeas. mAtrsp•bell. ndu1, the hee►ameIAyoscy
amus nigerA. and the stramoniak iltatora
1 don't ever go 4.11.11 ly store." said stnmeniutnl The less -earned Is • very
Me emelt country bey. nominee read side weed, having •
Why sot!" asked the triifel. "Tired Labeler white flower. ft is eessu
of it!' ed Jameet.wn weed, often corrupted
N*s
"Ifs, ► I was atin a gy on the " prose weed,.' this ,tar having its■
t I. the ►wary et C -
mead ewe day Gad the h rang t a .n la Rowe a Wore who lied hoe. met t•she hash, ad M bort se i've boss sort of Jssa,tews, totis rebellion d
Ire stlto. alas.
I)saaf f write you IW,
that far gems time
I had bas. milhalso
from sesta INV&
svady o[ worse hat
ye•ilssammr
in my bad -
nam thereupon
decided to try Bur-
dock Blood Bitters.
and after taking
two bottles I found
I was quite another
man, for
tg. B. B. CURED NE.
I have also used it for my wife and
family. and have found it the best thing
they can take. and from past experience
I have every in strongly reoom-
meuding B B. to all my friends.
I write you because 1 think that it
should be generally known what B.B.B.
can accomplish in cases of indigestion.
GEORGE READ, Sherbrooke. Qua.
WOOD .. FURNACES
OXFORD CO
.. ifSS MA SIM N i 111 .'
Capacity from 10,000 to 80.00 Cubic
gf
OXPORD WOOD FURNACE
Cits..d ~r Ui s.r r— _ei Mlp
Full Guaranteed Capacity :.f►TtY.eG•
Hastatadnred ky--
The CIIRNEY FOUNDRY COMPANY Ltd., TORONTO.
INN MOM
~et her weed
IS= levy Purse Phe Rea Dema
gaisher and are widish
d igi r
RADIATOR of Movers aatCtimeleea
Don sod Great Heating Mar
LAROB A.stt PIT
OM IMMO
tame Dewane tees IftiebL
WS freaskersereiewei
Her
. Large Heellog Sorra
Meal pie Pet
DEEP ASht Pg1
It
-s
For Sale by HIBIPIB & LIB, Crabb's Block, aoderich
SYST�! RRhOVATOR
ISM e7mla *s.�e sena ores.
Saecic and Antidote for
BEATEMAI
Least Odor,
Brightest Lustre, Drying,
of as. fieri pigs Vsraell"'
CLIMAX FURNITURE POLISH abates old F.raiture leak like sew.
Uwe Our Toni,. '1 ENGLISH HEALING OIL,
ST
VE -PIPE VARNISH
I?IO� heel cote trail wee en saes or heat
aUICKF T R*AL is KNOWN.
It repays man, tcme. iia am. hrtpas •
HORSES A� °�i►TTId3
Impure, weak and impoverished blood, dye
prism*, sleeplessness, palpitation
heart, liver c onplamt, neuralgia, loss of
memory, bronchitis, a.naim ,tion, gall
stones, jaundice. kidney anti urinary
diseases, St. Vitus' dance, female irreg-
ularities and sober•l debility.
LIBORITORT, t006Ri`e, ONTARIO
J. M. 91 c L E O D,
Proprietor and Manufacturer.
McLai n's Wrist= RcrovATon can be bed
from ell druggists in town, as well as from
all the druggist. between Owen hound eine
Se.Jorth. Brussels. Durham mud Toronto.
t.v.
DON'T SNUB.
Christian Advocate ; Don't snub • boy
because he wears Ashby clothes- When
Educe first entered Boston, he wore a pair
of yellow linen breeches in the depth of
W inter.
ltea't snub • boy because his home is
plain and unpretending. Abraham Lincoln's
early host• was • log canto.
Don't snub • boy bemuse of the igoer•m e
of his parents. Shakespeare, the world's
poet, was the son of • man who was unable
to write his name.
h oe't snob • boy bemuse he chooses •
humble trade. The author of "Pilgrim's
Progress" was • tinker.
Don't snub • boy because of physical dim -
ability. Milton was blind.
Don't snub • boy because of dullness is
hie le••oss Hogarth, the celebrated pain-
ter and engraver, was • stupid boy at the
books.
• ilea't snub • boy because he stutters.
�hoasa, the great orator of Greece,
evenness a harsh stammering voice.
Don't :swab a.yose; sot ideas became•
some day they may outstrip yes in the rmoe
of life. but berms' it M slither, am right,
nor Christian.
weber Amens Thieves.
"i once had an experience that proved to
me that there is honor among thieves, ' said
W. .1. Burgess, • t'incinnati drummer.
"It happened several years ago in a little
town up in Michipsm. I bad retired to hod
'n the hotel at the usual time, and piked
my watch and pocket -book under the pillow.
After having been asleep for some tams, i
was awakened by hearing • strange noise in
the room.
"You can imagine that i was consider-
ably startled at beholding • man with •
hasdkerchief tied over his foie stand -
i., by my bedside. Is his hand was a dark
lantern which shone fully in myfar.. He
did sot give me much time to think, but is
gruff voice demanded my mosey and wateh-
i dcw't know what put the idea unto my
head, but, endeavoring to be as calm as
possible. I said ;
"If I tell you exac•ly where they are,
will you promise sot to molest me and allow
me to dirk my sleep'
You are • 000l one, I most say," he
replied,"but you must toll me where your
valuables are aid I will promise net to molest
you sad leave you to finish your sleep is
i will tabs you at • sir word," said I
'my watmh is at the jeweler's Ming repaired
and every Best I haver locked up is the
safe down -stair."
Re stared at este a mit ate as though try
to tell by my hes if I had spoken the truth.
It must have esuviered him, for, mmttering
something i did set catch, he tensed en his
heel and walked out d tie room without a
.heed'
Rama, b ie ae taakkm early
!fell
tlsa Davy for the Ila► ere* stns."—Iger- were yellowed by sating • rased mode of
pare tress Peseta
They Gem's Gee Thee..
lin. 1111sed- l d..'t lite M tme HMIs
threw keels. it Is De Willtelellet.
Mr. Hilssd--Yes p ssG IMs they are se
molly snub pea .Ml�wssa
The Me re'eestew
Yrs. Bingo l'as't i have • heyel•, dear,
itihaw, you'd sever leant
Mra.
M
Bowe Well, I've lied ••eerb prow -
we "volley taw sewi., reline
4dsmdbs Ise Tri g seM. Qrb fps a yew.
" For several menthe I wee troubled with
• persistent homer es my heed which gave
ke 000siderable saseynea until it occurred
to me to try Ayers Hair Vigor. Before
using one bottle the humor was healed."—
T. T. Adams, General Yerehamt, Turbo-
• Va.
urbo•Va.
i AIwryS �i
,SMo4e4 �::„,4I3
Ts
..
Se.,,-. �.NSC°°P
___
GGIIf`., iris Rcallyaa.
rqual to Ary Imported
-54 My Adviceand
1t�i5C OIX acetring tiftiS e
10 Cnr SNA.K,c tbr MCpairt
i(14:1?:2.%'*(P1 iv -v►
Patronise
True
5 for 01 00. t
'V. C. 000D3. • - - Chemist.
hiss 25c.
STOVES I STOVES I - -
Call and see the fine assortment
and low Prices we have in both
Ha ad Coin. Sloiez.
If you do not want to buy
tour
in-
vite you to come in and Looat
Goods.
Competition.
'tin OYraaeaw Pac rtc Rahway Co.'s
Melton eseabllehed to give the
pubtte• greiepgn servl■s with fair and per
osaaant a mpetltl a.
It is massed on Weele a prisdplee sad la
the arena of its pattens.
It desarvee the rapport et every person who
believes In oo et ow bey Cempasiij's
Per a■tet dedw.ptleh Baba
Wee ss ase , Coneetleg ed. sod Were. es
isDlreet threads wires to all gelato in
Norte �Westat. tes r d■o
Coast
01111e•— eeth
rt. ILA,41J Fig
or is Local Massager. Goderteh
GV RE
CONSTIPATION.,
1BILIOUSNESS,
DYSPEPSIA,
RICK HEADACHE,
E6U LiATE THE UVEB
ONE Ptt.L AFTER CATINU
INSURES 0000 DIGESTION.
MICE 25 CTs.Tee 0.13 at`t nT�e,
HARPER 1e LEE
Sign of the Big Kettle.
1Zo Y OT7 W.A.NT
ANYTHING IN THE HARDWARE LINE P
DON'T DESPAIR
WILL CURE YOU
R. W. MegENZIE
can supply you with a good article at • low price.
STOCK COMPLETE' IN
Builders' and Heavy Hardware, Shelf Goods, Garden and
Farming Tools, Paints, Oils, Glass, &c. Also
Steam Fittings, Belting, &c.
VESSEL SUPPLIES A SPECIALTY.
Don't fail to give me a call.
Re W. McKENZ
The Crabb Block, Godetioh.
We A.rseses feedd's RidheT PUb is me rage
rased 8sasc, fgl�tebltea LeShe�
.e. eyes■ ll -iff WW1 r�a�
seven a/e
wt..m dot- sear e.
DO L~ A. fMiTM a, co.. Toronto.
Personal!
Spring is at hand, and after Hasecleaniag you
- TEA OR DINNER SET
will want
•
We have the Largest and Cheapest Assortment in Town.
Before baying call and get prices.
50 -TOILET SETS -50
New designs to sheet from. Tn,pection invited.
Com. A.. NAIL.
UNDERTAKERS.
3314,01"1-133,r alt SON
Have added to their present boatmen one of B. J. Nash'. Latest oBtil
of City HNAes, also she finest dins d funeral (amiable'
sad are sew prepared to conduct funerals at ptioes y'e.f/COable Osiris.
This deportment will be strictly attended to by his eon Willis's, who
in tbeotmploy of the late D. Gordon for the pest tea years. bram a d
knowledge el the i,s•ime, end 1 y prostrt sfeetioe hales to share part
public patronage. Remember the pbves--teeter, on your wsy to tho pool
efiee. Clive tug s call
J. BROPREY & BON. _
4 " 3s only $1 syiii.Get it
L��. ODV* flfilf? 11MYOU1 . Y>.
n•