HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1894-11-29, Page 2•
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T$ E SIGNAL : 0ODRRICHe ONT., TYIIRIDAT. NOV. 21. 1814.
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ri
Farr.: :i. II i,.
• t.a-
trial
doctor pr. 'a
Ordinary ti•
nue to to
I did $0
For the t.t't I •
used *hi,.
t!ftect Whet;, ret l
•
A Cad Cr
areal I knawC of t!:•:..'
who keep it iii th••;ui
not colloid( ring li
outIL"
"I bare been
.Pectoral iu illy f:at..., i
Mee moot ei+i•:a.'i.. r- •, di \
ebtMrfeU reci t, ti
dally Mlaplt.l t
plaints. l have. ` r .
palms -wary anal d
etnde,Tend I leas: • `:i4
that Ayers t'r.. • :
poeitl...i pr.," . i
cines i.f rg. :rt,
Dore,. \' .
bare bee more ouslort•ble bad Ss had PUSSY WHIPPED AN EAGLE.
more daylight sad known where he was. xM WWW lsea.aa-ed mere ttiam w►
Vor • lad of 17 he wee vert, nervy, Mad u rep I• tip. Mad she leer
he hummed Moog he drew courage trema rt, Stene
foodltaig the boodle of the revolver, wise* S4 Paul j'taneor Preis ('baths Wu -
he sow f.rvetly th.eked l'urtu for b•yieg well, of t'arbon•a, testate meaty, has •
got ea him.
euddeoly hu frost wheel went down, sad oat that is a king of its kind. Ipeeider be-
th least tat all expected mishaps was hie • i tag a geed mouser, this remarkable Mime l
puncture. Ther, was ootluag to du bat to death to mountain rate, night hawks, and
mead it as quui•ly as possible, for Keefe other pets, sot toss ens wining home •.
saw that at the preset rate darknees would the result of hie prowess • Serge feat rob- .
bit. But the mut' tein•rkehle incident in
the oat's hooey happened a day or two
err
be oe hint mote. mid bodinghie way Mutat
reed to the darkness was t of the gem -
Idea He should have to walk,aed be know
sot bow tar
It eras an enwuuter with • full -grows
11►eathimg • mild anathema ugur*t all Mrd of freedom and pussy was the victor.
The cat was sitting oe • pile of gaartr.,
remedy awaiting the reappeerauee tt a
chipoigok, which but a moment before it
heal chased Into • hole, when suddenly the
sky shove the .:at became d•rkeoed, and an
ominous swish, as if trona a timidly moving
body, fell upon pussy's ear. The oat sprang
aside sub a motion so rapid that the eye
could scarcely fellow it, end in the place it
had occupied but • monied bsfose et.oi.d •
full grows bald eagle, its plumage retitled
sad thirsting for blond. Pussy had sand and
accepted the gage of battle, and is lees tiu.e
than it take* to tell it, the famous "eat and
parrottime was beteg re enacted. It wee
• desecrate struggle, and although pussy
was badly s.•tatctie.l by the t-gls'.lalues,
it, when taking the isolative in the tight,
secured • decided advantage, having lauded
on file eag'r a back. For a few momenta
the air was filled with fur ant feathers, and
the. crwund was all torn up, hut pussy held
an, and in • short time succeeded to bating
hrou,;h the neck of its •ntagosist. The
struggles of the eagle grew weaker and
soon ceased .together, and poesy, exhaust-
ed by the violent exertions and sore front
w ounds inflicts -1 by the eagle's talons. rest-
ed a moment, then, as calm u though ret•
tiny on • rug before the deifies berth, went
careftily over the rur'led fur, made its
t.,:let, anti, miring the body et 'he varalciah-
rd autasnnat, drew it with ich difieulty
to the home of its master. Laying It at the
'nester '• feet, the cat purred its sattstae-
tt•n,anti to this way boasted of the tic
tory.
The trertibat was witnessed by • number
of people, everyone of whom ...premed a
desire to buy the cat, hut fir. Wiewesl sae
he would not Nell It for the beet nitne in mho
black 11L11•. The eagle mea.ured sly feet.
fear nether trout the tip of one wing to the'
of the other.
• THIS WHALE IS LOADED.
pneumatic urea, the cyclist quickly had his
preparatoas reedy, meudsl the puncture
*Aube,' by a splinter mad was pumping la
wino nervously when Lis ears caught the
sound of • pecultai cry at some uiet•oee tiff
t oder the circumstances the young wheel.
man may be pardoned f. -r the chilly feeling
which ran di his .pineat that no.mwt.
Finiasag his wink, he beauty adjusted
his tools, and then, before umuutr., he
et,.pmet • rimmed to Listen. Then was
ahwlute at.eaoe, they the peculiar *create
was repeated. Although he had little et-
perience as • huntsman, young Keefe** tm-
etiwte told him lust then that It must h*.•
panther's • cry. It :otiosely was not a
human voice, or his hearing was decent:re.
liurtag the time consumed in 'seeding the
puncture the tusk had deepened consider
ably, and the whesleme s eyesight meld
only perste the fast dithering gloom • short
distance. Hod (here been m..redavlight lie
weuld not hay• felt so nervous. However.
the c) And mounted and roofs on briskly.
Itsteamg tnten,ly for the cry again, bot the
only round that reached his can was the
clankine of the bike chain on the *rocket,
which s•soded straegeLy mu that lonely spot.
or Tbo next twenty minutes, perhaps.
Kroh, pumped away, carefully watching th.
road in frost. His brat eacitemest was jest
hegemoise to wear d when he .•entrooted a
eight in the road • few rods ahead that
nearly caured him to tumble from hie
wheel.
Steadies in the meddle of the track, as pf
to disputa the way 'o •11 passers by, was
kin. Panther -the female of the gentle
voice whose cryo hail echoed anti re ty:horo
through the wood• • few moments before
The apparition of the neo on •the wheel,
however, eras too muck for the animal, wbe
was tirmfithre hungry. it Keefe Wm fright
at the emideasrea of the meeting. the
panther was .at' nutted. In • second she
had turned and broke into • booed aloeg
the road. This act tea
surprise for Keete, but
the pursuer ant the
poreue.f, he made the m
The cyclist pressed up u hard as be dared
to run on the miserable track for fear of
being thrown, while the panther leisurely'
sad lightly bounded along at a dates.••
that only reveiled to the cyclist the grayish
outline of the animal's graceful form. The
pursuer grew bolder, and eve laughed to
himself over the novel situation', lie tried
the etlett of the bell on the panther, but at
only caused her to put • greater distant*
between them.
But atter some time the panther,deem:ai
the present situation of affairs ton undigst
tied, left the road•with • hound, I•admg up
oo sono, legs around • bend in the road,
where site whirled Mad faced her pursuer, as
much as to say, " Now it my tun." At a
gloom* Keel* sew it meant now or nevet,
and that if he attempted to duh put tier
she would be on him. To rase no that road
with • panther at his (rack was impossible,
he thought.
Thinking that the animal was preparing
to spring, to • Rabb he flung himself oft at
the opposite side of the wheel, using it as a
shield.
With • scream that resounded far down
the valley the panther leaped from her
perch upon the timing young cyclist, who
had kneeled on the ground and whipped
out his gun. He braced himself and took a
steady atm at the animal's hoed aa it same
flying at him.
" Hang ' bear "' spoke the pistol, and
the next moond betty, bicycle and the
panther, with two big bullets in its hotly.
were rolling over and over in an indeseri'.-
able mass. A looker on. but for the ser-
iousness
eriousnesa of the situation, would have been
impelled to laugh at the sight. and it would
perhaps have bees purling to tell which
was bicycle, boy or panther. flue: and over
they rolled into the brush and wood.
Keefe felt as if it was all up with him, but
slung madly to his wheel, which in his ex -
sated state of mind seemed to help prefect
ham. The handle bars had rapped him so
soundly on the head that he was stunned,
but the animal's paw, that bad laid open •
gash on the aide of his face, seemed to stint
him into ceoscioueoess agars. Recovering
himself, he blindly let fly at the panther
three times. The animal bad rolled over
and over, ani she seemed to be partially
dared. Keefe saw she had bees hit at
least omni in the head,for blood was stream-
ing from the wound. blit was edvanaing on
him agate, snarling with rage and pain,
when his last lucky shot took effect in her
heart, and the beautiful ynyah form drop
pod aye- sideways lifeless.
Keefe sat down on the damaged wheel
and Filmed s handkerchief to his bleeding
Lace. He knew that he would need all his
waning strength to get help. and, without
any delay, he dragged his wheel to the road
and weakly started off, boding the way he
knew net how.
There still lay before him two miles of
the tortuous forest road before he reached
the *amp at the sprimgs. The gritty lad
clung desperately to hie machine and forged
ahead in the dark nem, until he at last came
oat into an opening in the woods, and with
a meal "Thank tied." bleeding and bruin -
of and almost ready to drop from lees of
blood, be drew up in front of the only house
in the settlement the hotel, geared *tore,
sad pestntlies.
He managed lis My to the astonished peo-
ple that gathered arootd him that he had
twee -attacked by a panther ; then he feint-
ed. The grim people of the camp oared for
the young man sn well that by the wit day
ha was almost himself again. The crowd
that gathered to hear hie remarkable story
was no lase astonished when the skim of the
salami Keefe had killed wee brosrbt irate
essay Sunday afternoon by sums young men
who volunteered to go in search of it.
When Keefe relented to tbe city they al
meet bemired him, and as long as the /,ts
Zig dab is in existence his emu»nar with
the panther will always be perpetuated.
*gtr'sCtht:r., c.toI'aI
Tea iLsss4 y
Prompt toact , t:,t, t -
r•
'L
WHEELMMAN AND •
PANTHER.
An Adventure In OM!un
an [ iperleaee Whirs acquired Geed
, • t sal need. Mead, ales sad
rails is the Nespe■ that
Mast arrteti.
`T. Louie /:lobe-Democrat-yYliilip
Keefe,an 'Nun boy and lint clam cyclist, who
recently same to Oregon, had • thrilling en-
counter with a panther on Ube ul hs Inset)
country rides an experience that a given
to few to swam so luckily. The Semen
tore of the affair are • freshly healed scar on
the aide of the young mane cheek and seek,
and in the rooms of • city cycling club. of
which Keefe no a popular member, is • pan.
ther's skin which always attracts a visitor •
attention.
l hoe taturday afternoon in the latter port
cif September, Keefe, together with • com-
panion, Will Curtis, mounted his wheel Mad
sat out for Portland, for a b-'fty-mile ride
into the edge of the Cam -rade mountains.
Their objective point was tt'tinotteaprieas,
an obscure little watering place hidden in
the mountains some fifty miles mut beast of
Portland. The *oda springs are reachable
about two or three months in the year, and
in that short period the place is tenanted by
eampers—mostly from the country. bemuse
at has hardly reached that degree of prom
mace to induce residents of the city to
e ndure • long, rough stage vide to reach the
springs•
Keefe and his companion were ben, on an
over•Sunday trip to the springs The start
was made shortly after noon on Saturday,
and from their dight acquaintance with the
rood they believed they could cover it by
dark. For the bit half of the distance
there was a fairly gnod road, and the boy
made Food time. mho country was rolling,
and the rood, 'toilet for an oocaatonal
galoh, was satisfactory. Twisty miles ou:,
however, Cartis hit • big boulder at the
roadside with his pedal. twisting it so badly
that further riding was cut of the question.
There wasn't • house is sight at that
point, and all that could be done was to
turn around and start back on a walk.
Keefe resolved then to make the trip alone
and let Curtis reach home as beet he mild.
” Since you must go. then, better take
this with you you might see squirrels. you
know," and Curtis held out • 32-ealibre pis
fol to his friend.
" Thanks, old man, I'll harry it, if you
this'll' I should ; but, p•haw ' i'll not we
anything, and, besides, youll seed it your-
self, perhaps"
Bat Curtis persisted, end finally the
friends parted. Keefe set oat as fast as he
could toward the springs, sad i urtia start
d walking beak with his disabled wheel
sad abusing hie leek. Keefe wan soon lest
M view over a low, long hill
At last the open country berm to dis•
appear sod one or two stretches of timber
were passed. About ten miles from the
sps3os the cyclist found himself following •
read in the of • valley that wound
armed foothills with oeo••teoal stretches of
ember. When he eris.ed Steiner Creak
the ons bad begun to get no low is th•West
that in the timber it was already dna. The
read wooed up gradually aroma • moos -
tabs vide mot than denosrded agate into the
ve1Ny between the two high mocat•ina
Thee be eteuek the timber line where the
well•beatse meek ran right sad loft among
tie forma teem, whams blackened bodies
Mid of the ravages or a recant forest Gra
Here turd there a tree heti falba across the
read sed W leen eat is two to sok• •
pamtgeway. A. the gloomy shadows deep -
awed among the trees the her hesamie
glare dosi•ts► sad the l.edisoes, ihoa.e,
end last weatag twilight urged the wheel -
min te pram forward eagerly la the dirty-
ing• eipsg trash. The eyelet heal forward
ower hie heail►hase, ',Pembina belly she
Beene it she wemdPrd sad be avoid • pe-
IOW aisle" Pawn obiansegem •edsop-
iiTor lir Sena a Mmes Isle
aadde
�+the
sed et a gasp 7j 5 Me Ml.lr *Wotoly
••tbre el w it tand
gnaw at
A. flits q*.- lis
*bat ins. M be gawk hot
as a still greater
ire be was to be
veru pastier the
t et the situation.
sees weal
RUMINENT PERSONAGES -
teem deed
read. mann she trees Trtb •
Ahead.
Lady 'sophist t'eeil.aeat of the Maryut* of
Kamer, who ie mow 94 years old. is the Iasi
aunty.; of the femme hall let Krueeuls um
the eight Mon watarlaa abs h a dsttgb
tar of the Ihwhea• of Rteloneed, who gave
lbs bell. tied damped that night with the
Itch. of ifrtsewtek,wbo was killed eels day
at Quatro Bras.
Japan has four field mare/salts. The
ablest is a omit 1'esteeata. He u the male
one of the tour not of print elr birth. He a
of humble ortgtn. Like Cee \loutke he is
a ideal man. His Inflames and pepulerier
is the army are great, He is about 47 and
i• European teemed. So are traest of ha
{ saburtnate ofhome.
4 la the list of libraries which an ia.tivtd-
1 gifts are the fdlewittd cams: Cbio•g•i.
Indio i'rv.rer, 0,000,000 ; W. N. Newhart'.
$2,000,0W : New York, the t,awe, F3,000,-
000 : /Baltimore, (:dorm Wulf iely. $1,400.•
000: Enoch Pratt, $1.22b.000; Philadelphia,
Jr.►.tames Kash, $1.500.030: I'tttabergh,
te'iwe Carnegie, $1,100,000.
Willi a ssn.ersue sera► t edev Sit. Sher.
lie I barges all (-ease?..
can Frensies° Examiner - The stews
whaler Belvedere arrived from a year's
whaling cruise to -day with only file sperm
and right. whales to btir credit. When she
left port last December she went in •eat ch
of sperm whales in the south Seas, bat with
poor notes The int one twit the cress
in the units get within retch of wee near
the Sandwich Islands. It was a moister
* perm whale, and all five baste put off to
pursuit of a. t Poe that was commanded by
Mee Philip 1.04 crept up to within remge
of it, and a bomb to whieh a line was ao
tached waged—easefully tired into it, but the
explosives with which the booth was charg-
ed fainted to work.
Awny the whale went, skimming dens at
a frightful rate lust under the surface, and
t.shteg the water into foam a his agony.
The long lime was soon run out, but its end
was acurely fastened to the boat, and the
frail craft as soon flying along in tow of
the whale. The roaster did not seem to
relish being mate a tugboat of, and he stop-
• Swat Rae
vllady nosed Mot T. 0. N. B
BleValia Kea" Oat.,
of Manib ayls Manly and Liver
Cott, ha. terwariad • ihts*sat to the
dais that it asasphl* owed be of in
Gs renotery kidney mrd liver
treelike. Musk r it di emu
phldistee outset remedy Wield
leant
t art`. stet, M give et es
Mg. wooed. ea eadlimaw,nalLhem be'0,
he Medan* et Wwsb ale .LLiis his Sit resd-
weeer 644
fog fey' N r�r.; K �'t
e
�� �Z
• Mtn are gorse
The brat world's secretary of the \ 'tug
\t'„hen's Christian Association is in ne kl les
Annie Reynolds, of New Haven, Come. Ater
Reynolds is a graduate of Wellesley, and has
been a special student at \ ale. She u well '
prepared fur the special work alio will he
called upon to do, being an accomplished
lingniat and • practical philanthropvt. Her
headquarters will be is London, hut her
duties require inu;b travel on the conttn•
eat.
K a:tier Wilhelm carries with him • small
but serviceable revolver, either in his pnok-
et or his belt when he is in uniform. The
threats of the anarchists have caused barn to
have reroute' to this Means of seturtty
Elis .sleety :s extremely akilful in the use
of the *nature, and theehaaseur who • MOM
-
moles hint even where, has had orders to in
spiel it every unrnfng Loo see that at is in
working miler.
The Cattderbdt skill and judgement to
financial Miami *rots out in the daughter.
of the family as well as the tone The tour
daughters each recetvd $181,000,000 on the
death of their father, and have maage,i
and •pent it as they pleased. That they
have done it well is attested by the fact that
despite their liberal phtlanthroptea, which
in the case of Mrs. pard amounts te a!
most continual giviap fortune of each of
the viten hat-roerNNd by fully $<us,000,
000.
The personal appearance of Jean Riche-
pia,
iche
pa, who is described as the most versatile
genius in all trance stare the death of Vic
for Hugo, must impress the stranger who
meets him for the first time. He is pictur-
ed as a tall, burly man, handsome in •
brutal style, with • low brow, • thick
neck, dilated nostrils un a general sir
of athletic calm and intellectual vacuity
A personality of the John I.. Sullivan
kink such as this is uuusal an a famous
author.
The ease with which F. Merton t'r•wford
tuns out • new and readable novel evert
few months u one of the •miring phesomn•
of the soatemporary crop It is explained
on the ground that Mr. i'tawford is a time
of rohust build and vigorous health, that he
is posaeesed of sufficient wealth to keep bin.
safe from financialworry,th•t he hes travel
ed widely and has had gnat social op
porcumties, and finally that he lover his
work,
A pretty story is told of the Princess of
ft elm (One.. when custom an old protege
of hen, living in eat of the eetraves at
Sandringham, agood dame was knitting •
stocking, alta the princes. took it out of her
Mod eayinv, "a ou cant do tete heel as last
pad and torted on his pursuers. Fer.s s I e,.n Andes she sat and chatted this
moment he watehe( the oecutsnty to tis. e' -, to -be knitted the nattiest heel poste
email heat again slowly creeping upon h. a said epee her son', death the
When about half the intervening specs I e. fes has seemed to enjoy herself beet
been covered the whale ssddroly lapped hot
huge tail in the air and went under the
surface of the ocean .5 moment later he
rose wahtn a few yards of the heat and
went at it with a rush, hie huge laws open
and showing every tnd,eattos that • whale
can of anger. Before another shot could be
tired the 'master rolled over mad caught the
boat between his jaws. There was a crush
tog of timbers and all the crew hut one went
floundenog le the wake. The missing man
was Andrew took, awl he sat in the how of
the boat, just where the greet jaws came ?to-
gether.
ogether. It as supposed that he was taken in
the whale's mouth, and u the monster sank
after his attack the man was carried down
far below the enrfam end did not come up
again.
The me, in the other boats arrived and
picked up their etrugrlinr comrade", but
the crews were too much afraid to continue
the streak, and they put back to the ship
with all speed.
When the whale seta same to the surface
he agent made an attack on the boat he had
wrecked, and be did not leave it until it
was smashed into kindling wood. i•or five
days after that the whale remained shout
the ship inviting attack from the small
boats, but the infuriated monster was. left
alone, and now the Soutn Sea has • giant
fish swimming about to it, waters with •
highly explosive and danrereus bomb secret-
ed under its thick omit of blubber that is
liable to implode at any mooeet.
Beard is the Mast Get,
The assistant in the music shop was dar-
ing in hischair, waiting for eastomen, whoa
he heard a faint consonance of musical
tones. He ocnld distinguish methane at
but presently shapes Dame out of the
sound, sed these shapes were words.
" You are only • quadruped,” remarked
the piano ; you are always bowler."
•' You are toe clew kin to be quarrel-
ling," ventured the music box.
" Well wind you up in about • musette"
grumbled the ' It takes a Drank w
do that," whistled the flute. " Aw,ou
are full of holes," blared the cermet. "Well,
it isn't the brims thin, von are," wreaked
the morals, in defence of its kind.
" That beats me," rattled the drum, is it
Mimed in the fray "Two beds are better
than one, if both are sheep's heads," twang-
ed the guitar. "tie string yourself," bel-
lowed the bees drum. " Sepose yea soak
year head," .e,.! sted the a000rdiem, ones -
lag to the rescue of the niter. " Rate,"
screamed the treetbasa, " you are full -of
weed."
" Here, it's tune for yea to slide oat,"
squeaked the violin. rumbling for the tram
boon "yea are fait of weed '
" Hoy up," thumped the harp. Yee
thick yea are very smart because yea haws
a hew, don't your'
' My opiate of yea," rented the vioh.,
Member Serial, es the harp, is that you
�
ouly • sort Ma
of lyre, say law : "d with
WWouegia. outburst, such a wild dig
eerdasee arose that She assbtaet fall out of
hen chair. jut on the slit, asleep in=
sad ram es amok teat that a
Bums is to me isle was tahh►g • suds ba-
ses
arses at teal hear.
..sii'� Del
BV's "•�ta'e�.,',dIM''1„r ,fear►''";
ail•• tiatb� a ia•te tea. Ott w ,i
L,r. i„1e ,,tt- i ,o , u o° c ,o .
.a 7.' • i.'K• °e►'` tot d
w�m,,,s.y°n°er►�e*' st "a e•°' �'°�°tr� 'i+
to 00%1.0.. °•es ,kt' le 11
l,.ttt B tewyw� ae
i .'cDd wed of
ice% „t to \ eel const
It.j, ,dt�r.
i
at 'C.,esd•iirvp
wo; . occupied to some of the womedly arta
she learned in her girlhood.
Mies Francs It:. Willard is very fond of
bicycling. When she was at Chatauqua
durin„ the Suumnter, one of the first things
that she looked up was the bicycle ss•hool,
and took several lesson dungy her abort
stay. She has decided opinions regarding
the bloomer to -tune. "Lady Somerset and
I both believe, ' she said, "in such a reform
in the dress of women as wall make it Inure
comfortable to season, but we neither of us
have ever advoeat.d bloomers, and on ase -
Untie ground, must oppose them. My awn
bicycling costume a • simple street dress,
with the skirt shortened se that it claire the
ground.
\in Beatrice l'otter Webb, whose arta
dee on the sweating systems of London did
so much towards parliament paring certain
laws in regard to health in working shopa.is
probably the richest and meat beautiful wo
men in the socialist reeks. She comes of •
fish and intellectual family, and has the ad-
vantage of having been educated by Herbert
Mpence-. she might have been a great an
ciety woman, had she wished, but preferred
to become interested a the work of woman-
kind. It is said that she tried work in earl
ens shop+ where woman were emploverl.and
that is the way ebb became so famiiar with
the sweating system.
ai
were
• Ems"'
wastei
so fLMVW"-1.ar• •
yoso- am"
,NN��Gtty CMS fir
t °s .•b aced rt tis eel .—
soo
e,st'ce`u,,�,pw eeCt'`,•„•Rconmita
.'.�~,�•
wd
st�wFcotMtwo•-v„ihebut
tt °tuwitir11,•el ,tatrbJydt.Ww.Wryr
soilies.a
`ty
to""d,
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ED I TORS, CLERGYMEN, PHYSIC I ANS
TE3'TIFY.
Nen and Women in ail Walks of Life Tell of the Remarkable
Cures Wrought by South American Nervine Tonic.
SIX DOSES WILL CONVINCE THE MOST INCREDULOUS.
per any sett el heurree.
Harper's \ oust, Teeple • If you eau, al-
ways play a game in preference to empty
going through • lot of mechasioal move-
ments. A rams demises your head, rests
your mind, and helps you immensely.
Whereas, while pulley weights help you,
they rely oelp you to snout ball the extent
that a Fame draw If. finally, you happen
to he near a ryesnaslum, and menet get+iny
exercise out of doors, then go to the gymsa-
sem. Now to particularize a little on the
special works of bey. in special employ •
meats Suppnee you are not very strong,
and you are so employed during the day
that you have to sit down all the time Of
course, you will seed eremite that will keep
your body roving. I should mires you,
then, to take 'en monde off jest at night-
fall. l'ut on light =armee, say a pair of
low Mose, a pair of drawers cat off at the
knee, and an •ader•ebtrt : nothing more,
Thee pa out into quiet sheets. or into the
eesetry roads, and beginning slowly, run •
helf}nile. Come to at ewes rant°ahatb,and
every goal on earth in eMilteed countries one
have a bath, if ha reallyruts one. The
rub voaieelf down with a hard towel and
dream yourself. I say half • mile. Do that
int. Poen yea will he able to do Ave miles
if you have time, bat • good half mile ran
every sight of your We will save many a
pais aid ache, away • dollar is daeter.'
bills, sad mita= a hard St of the "blues."
Don't be afraid of stew out to swish light
clothes melee you ars afraid of the oede-
mas for T have seem may a eighty bey ren
Is jw..b otsthee re cold wldwister
•lght, with WI isehes of miser as the
gremsd ani s had sbesr-eteesw laglag. You
tem see t1M stows seem eat of )ow bedy
whet yea epee, is If yew sat demo eat
gee glares' Spit *cry lady *weldICMer
M• MO yea tea ost that
ailki *Nee a AN sdt,sed as
Mui 711aMIN W s NMI sad w bes
ly.b.mibs be T. Ilseaas. Oaiy Ip'w Pam.
EDITOR COLWELL, OF
Newspaper editors are almost as
sceptical as the average physician on
the subject of new remedies for sick,
people. Nothing short of a series of
most remarkable and well authenti-
cated cures will incline either an
editor or a doctor to seriously consider
the merits honestly claimed for •
medicine.
Hundreds of testimonials of won-
derful recoveries wrought with the
Great South American Nervine Tonic
were received from men and women
all over the country betore physicians
began to prescribe this great remedy
in chronic cases of dyspepsia, in-
digestion, nervous prostration, sick
headache, and as a tonic for build-
ing op systems sapped of vitality
through protracted spells of sick-
ness.
During his expseence of nearly a
quarter of a century as • newspaper
publisher in Paris, Ont., Editor Ool-
well, of The Paris Review, has pub.
hake& hundreds of columns of paid
medicine advertisements, and, no
doubt, printed many a gracefully -
worded puff for his patrons as •
matter of business, but in only a
single instance, and that one warrant-
ed by his own personal experience,
has he given a testimonial over his
emu signature. No other remedy
ever offered the public has proved
such a marvellous revelation to the
most sceptical as the South American
Nervine Tonic. It has never failed
in its purpose, and it has cured when
JOHN
saes Caere malls vestal stemma to its
Job Pruritus!' mise, wknit are smar-
paesml eutetde the Melee for tee primps
sad proper eaeosttos of all gasses of
print -tag. A perusal of this aasessee-
Went may .agge•t aeewthlag you may
be to need of, Mad a gush ew we ask
cit your patreege f sti
eede.t
that our efforts to please will meet with
the approval of our patrons
lio\t N%to.O.s
This useful use is kept is the full
range of qualities same at, letter
heads. While
wetter kkeaa.t
In this line we here a very large
stock of fine writing }tapers suit
able for every class of business
represented is this locality, twat
prising hail and wove, (Yates,
quadrille and other papers, ruled
er unruletl, as may be required.
`1,emo. i‘essa.s
are not so generally used, they ill
tat iauportalit place iu commercial
correspondence. See what wear
got under the ,.trove heads.
—WAX ♦hetes
the order of the day the t matnl
for account paper would not 1„
tie great ; but there are some sore
who get so many dueness that
they wonilrrIf the stack will ever
run out. We stout intend it to,
and at present our stock is coat
Plate in this line with four sites.
Good paper and neat ruling.
;3tattmtntM
Both singles and double dollars
arid cents columns. They route
cheaper than bill heads, and are
the proper thing to send after a
delinquent once a mouth. They
are sure to fetch him 'round --
sometime.
PARIS. CONT., REVIEW.
doctors and other medicines were
tried in vain.
" i was prostrated with a particu-
larly severe attack of 'Le Grippe,' "
says Mr. Oolwell, '' and could find no
relief from the intense pains and die -
trees of the malady. I suffered day
and night. The doctors did not help
me, and I tried • number of medi-
cines, bat without relief. About this
time i was advised to try the Mouth
American Nervine Tonic. its effects
were instantaneous. The first done I
took relieved me. I improved rapidly
and grew stronger every day. Your
Nervine Tonic cared me in • single
week."
The South American Nervine
Tonic rebuilds the life forces by its
direct action on the nerves and the
nerve centres, and it is this notable
feature which distinguishes it frac
every other remedy in existents Tim
most eminent medical authorities now
concedethat fully two-thirds of all the
physical ailments of humanity arise
from exhaustion of the nerve forces.
The South American Nervine Tonic
acting direct upon the nerve centre.
and nerve tissues instantaneously
supplies them with the true nourish-
ment required,' and that is why its
invigorating effects upon the whole
system are always felt immediately.
For all nervous diseases, for general
debility arising from enfeebled vital-
ity, and for stomach troubles of every
variety no other remedy can possibly
take its olacse
D..A_VIS
Wholesale and Retailent for
Goderich and vicinity
T
HE FINEST GROCERIES...
GOOD JAPANS (No. 1 DIRECT),
Ale
sae a fall asosstment of
Y Rag ARE
AT 191 Y
twe‘otpes
Now, it would be bard to get
eking without er.velopea, and to
keep up with the demand for
th••tr w e keep a large stock oat
4ani1. \t-.• lint.• now about •
hundred thonb•nel in atom it, and
the priew•, will vaned- freest T uc. to
Sty (.-0 1;er • '1. We handle too
tioiretml rod i•tga: mixes exclusively.
-has already been partially room
crated in some of the heads above.
There is, however, a vast anioun
of work under this heed that to
enumerate would more than take
up the entire space occupied by
this adv't, but we do it all at Tsui
SIGNAL.
to an "At Home" or a wedding
require oonsiderable 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 rate.
rograun&s
of entertainments and meetings
promptly turned out, from the
plain but neat to the most elegant
with cord and pencil attached.
Ckrtukars
We aim to egos( in all the differ
cit kinds of work we tura out,
but especially in this, and keep
in stock plain and fancy papers
suitable for all requireeeents.
Cards arid► T'vekits
This head coven a large range of
work, from a bread or milk ticket
to a neat calling card, from as or-
dinary admission ticket to a tasty
business card or a handsomely
printed membership ticket.
Ottte a
Our facilities for turning out this
clans of work are evidenced by the
fact that the great hulk of it is
done by us. This Line also in-
cludes
Dodgers
which tier three fast-rnantng job
preemie are able to turn oat in a
surprisingly short time.
$ o\e $A\s
belong to the poster dauartas �t
also, and we make a specialty
them—promptness being our aim
in this respect. A notice of sake
will appear in Tan felsdt free of
charge when bills for sans ere got
here.
,». Kv&e.a t$Work
is the typographical priming lies
Man be dime in this e.tabli.►seemt
in as expeditious end artistic,
.canner and
Ohl? 4 rt.ttet u t be. Sou t
neer% reeotorunbke.
We tatted ear Omaha for past fa'
cru and .ellen a oonalilsettm°e of the
IMMs.
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entre
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paste
sod t
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eters
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little
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