HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1895-9-19, Page 7'Alio; aid II ria
The child that cannot
gest milk cab digest
(,)d -liver Oil as it is pre-
.red in Scott's Emul-
; �n. Careful scientific
:its have proven it to be
more easily digested than
Milk, butter, or any other
t. That is the reason
ts'13r puny, sickly chil-
i,:
:n, and thin, emaciated
1!d anaemic persons grow
(•shy so rapitly on Scott's
'nulsion of Cod-liver
I ',l and Hypophosphites
'ie:n their ordinary food
d( "s not nourish them.
emeeid.d fo twee a soMenge/
Sett & Bu.ea, Bdlwya 30e.
TEMPERANC[ TALK.
1 he 1oreetan of the work on • tunnel near
$sgtish, bud-, has forbiddes the use of tie
tox,sarte er the telling of scurrtllous stories
by hie mea while engaged in thou .dangor-
*roue week.
There roes • deep pathos iu the remark of
a laborer's wife in Cbvelad, 1 i , to her pas
tor t. regard to her husband : "i thank we
*mild Mishit through, it it wereo t for
Sunday." tis minas wets open titer ea-
:minds,.
leMeloy.
The MOW Preishitery hose decided that
its unurebes must not me ferme•ied wise
at comsuaios eerviese sed that uafersest-
ed grape imam most be substituted •'. all
tines f4 tarry the work of tespar.aee
still further, pledges will be aeon is the
Sabbath schools.
Indiana bee sow s strict lions* 1••.
Ameog its provitioos are the following Se-
I.e.. meet be loomed oe toe rroud floor ;
must have so serene or other obstructions
to public view; must 6.v so eoaseotios
with restaurants or other btui.esses, and
most not selieit oustemsn by the use of
musical instruments. A majority of the
restdente .f * ward may prevent the dorms of
• license to • mien.
rrtgbae.lne catidns.
Not lnag .face • late ebild wee takes
seriously i11. cad the doctor was asst foe
The moment the little one knew that the
p►ystmen was expected an wait tato the
most violent attack of Drying and semi.
historian Wb.. .he heard hill voles at the
dour it threw her tato novulei.ns, and se
saver were she paroxysms that it was
feared she would Dever cense oat of them.
Toe astonishment of the family knew se
Weeds wail tacit dueovered that the nurse
bad Wee in toe beim of teleran the child
tees if obi' w.. disobedient the doctor would
come end out bey up saw little emote.
911 6.d been ill before,and, of
sour.., ko.a notion, of pbsece.e. 1t
took • long time and muck labored trouble
to dupos.see her mind of this uwre•.oning
terror.
A great Itt•uy obildrew have been serious-
ly tntord by frights of tats kind sod enter
emu. The parents themselves are sot .l
ways bloselsaa in this partteular, for they
sentetieea make threate, They tell the
youngsters that the dark will get them or
sometbtng egnelly wicked or cruel. The
rseult is that they briny up a race of
thnnki.g, eowerdly children, whe are geed
for nothing for many ot the •xtremest em
ergeuoiea of life.
Cowardice nu be cultivated as easy any
ether faculty, and this cberacter,eti: in this
practical world of ours, is very sadly out of
place.
• tarry Teams Maio.
• physician owning • country .oat, where
Ins family were aecuetmed to spend summer
menthe, taught his boys b swim ea soon as
Easy wti• out of the nurser%. his farm bor-
dered upon the take. where the greater part
of the btys time was taken up with boat
-
InQ, taking and swimming. Oise was nine
lewd trio other six years old, and ti• y were
expected to take sere of themselves.
hne day the you.ger child was sstzd
with • cramp while be was in the water,
sad atter screaming for aid he rank out of
ug►t. Tne brother swam out boldly, and
gut an arm under him before the third
downward plunge.
The youa,ster was usetesames sad help
lam, but the older one contrived to keep
him afloat with one arm while striking out
for the shore. He drew the hills fellow oat
the water, while me►sonlem ea/ appareatty
lifeless
The rescuer had beard his father de
scribe the treatemelt for reeuecttatiag par-
ss.s taken from the water whoa nearly
drowsed. Ile c:.uld not reme,nber it 10 dated
hat be was impressed with the necessity for
prompt action.
fie did sot attempt to searors help free
the house, wbioh was a Ie.g way oft 1'Ise
mg the boy en his farm with hie cries under
hu forehead, he paused a momout sad thea
turned the hods ole its side.
This crude attempt to moons respiration
eta repeated several sines. maul he was dr
lighted u5* And the Bpi moving, and the
*Yes •pecieg. The young mhysictas bad
rat proceeded um atrialy scientihe Isom
A SUFFERIK ARMY.
Morse Mews by s ■seesaws. err.
Tho great army of sufferers from yari-
O 11, rheutnatit conditions joyfully wel-
(0t * l -base's K. & L. Pills because the
tatter parents of their aches aid pains
are the Kidneys, which, on account of a
diseased nondition, are usable to relieve
t' c blood of uric acid poison. which is
deposited in the joints. producing on the
kr.t provocation inritateng aches and
paves in the hones, joints and muscles.
lee reason that Lima's Pits relieve and
core'. their wonderful power in restor-
'a* dettenerate Kidneys to a perfect and
natural condition, without which the sys-
tem is supplied with blood teeming with
Pelson that adds fuel to the fire of rheu-
matic complaints, demoralising the en-
tire -s`stem and rendering it liable to a
complication of diseases terminating 1.
dropsy. diabetes, or Bright's disease. A
Pleasant feature of these Pills, is that
*fide most Kidney remedies encourage
cora*['Patton, Chase's relieve and tore it.
V warty all rhetimatie attietks there
aims ((motipation a1 the bowels, ,1kb
tit'awlr overcome Cl/.s's trey
'rev fhlII. in fiat. van a perfect
are for soestipathen- Mie emdsseed
61 EIlward Garrett. editor sad pr p!IOW
el the ltradford Oat, IV B/ Wthent.
had dimeradlof ethers. Orta /i11 14118••
tf ' nets a boa. Tbs.medici.e
anus-'
lielti by all oMO...
Ce..
LtIEtta.
THE SIGNAL: OODRRICN, ONT., THTTRRDAY. SEPT. 19 1S9i
fee the eels .t artdetal rs.pie.Mes, bet the
little fellow's breath was reamed.
l'nee t wit additi..sl role, meataoned by
the either war. r meat.ored. The bud
wee briskly rube.d, ad than b.died s
with warm jackets mid dry author wa
were on the bask
Win them mew.s for remain arena
ties. iwovery was well sigh complete. Thea
taking the otel l us hie beet, the rammerer
started tthe house, wek
liere e mother re-
omenthem with upse arm. ans
esd aexte.
fermi.
The pausal 'was pat to bed, and them
father w.. •umst.e.d frotown, Msth
other measures nae hardly seminary.
The arae year-old physician had dooe ht.u.
work se ssomf.Ly that within else wee
rater-!
The father was proal of bit boy,.e he hod
•nghttohe.
'i o.uld bay• net duhe better myself, ' be
.cid s• the led. "You mss ube a doctor
readhe
wny wind, grow up; dnd, you are oma sl•
PIONEER EDMUNDS' WHIM.
v
P
lab
/•,'Warns Cevrred pial, Moly Precept.
Chiselled I• alio Keels. b, M,sa.etr.
Pioue,.r Benjamin Edwards made the
eroses proao, and left to ht. Leroyerd the
most pious and samtve fiasco port to the
state et Maine, • huge, round pilar as
Targe as • hogshead, covered with the ten
oemsaodmente, neatly chiselled. Grandpa
Edmunds hewed the first path iota what u
now the town of Roxbury, o. the Swift
river. While be elsared the with sad rear
ed • cabin, his wife lugged en her hock .11
their earthly poseesuone. Varly an the
Spring of 1790. ere thereabouts, he had pros.
pected a tis region and picked oat the
pretty intervals tb.t be afterward cleared
..d settled upon. A freed a000mp•sied
is his first trip At desk one doily
April night they reached the spot that
premed bort, rod a the gathering gloom
Mr. Edmunds surveyed the level river
bottom from the wended hillsides.
"This salts me : here I will settle, he
said te hie cempautoa. Both mos were
weary . the rr.wp had been leer and
tedious, sad Edm.ads frond proposed to
lie down and sleep. The other pioneer pre-
tested, urging that should they sleep they
might never awake in that atmosphere,
ohilld with April's shower. Hu fraud did
act freeze te death. but sawn • cold that
aided is fetal p.eumoala
The moot mterestiag work of breve poen
ser kdettsda life was his queist stone cut -
tang. It was hie hobby nil diversion.
Then were se ch.ro►se in the whole ranee
wend, ad w the settler used to shp hu
welkin and chisel tate his pocket, sly out to
the woods and chisel passages of ecriwter,
o5* tn. rocks. Pretty soon, se idwtriew
bad be been, that g• when he might on he
farm seise holy precept, some apothegm,
some eters msm•odssent, some helpful
word of spiritual cheer confronted him. The
stones had tongues for him, and others who
labored with him in the Maine wilderness
0.. huge boulder he smoothed and rimed
d up with neat pain, sad °Wailed on it
the tea mmm.admeate an letter three
inches high. It terms a leen pest to Use
old barnyard, and u coofrooted by another
pillar bearing the Lord. pryer. It is
said that the peewees of those stern smat-
ters
atten in the barryard repremed many • hired
man a boated Brgw nest with • refractory
* beef. Wbotther they. availed to soothe.
wise bees stepped in the milk pail cbroui-
clereaes, set.
Grandpa Edmunds *leo attempted other
feats to the stone cutting lis He had •
little dog .( whom he was very food. and
he carved • statue of it that interested
visitors say see oa the premises. Promin-
ently displayed Dear the censer of the farm-
house is a Ids-eiz• representation of • human
head. A retired sea captain living in the
n eighborhood had • Malay whom he had
brought home, rod l:raedp. Edmund* was
.o impressed by the chap's oona►ena.m that
he reproduced It, in stops.
The entrance to the yard is set .1 hi. a
supe aroh, and over toe keystone of this is
another human head, veep neatly executed.
The old gentleman had finished up, as /Feat
etpeose of time and pongees, a life sire
American eagle ea se ornament for this
stone portal. He we. leggin., it .craw the
yard to its position. when he dropped the
dgun anJ broke off a wise. The *tone post
with the ten cemmandree.ta was directly
before his eyes. .o•ttered &beat the promi
nes are many other figures, .11 laboriously
worked out of the steoe with snob rude in-
erumeote se the settler possessed. All are
quant and sense are quite crditahle.
Though 1',y seer Edmunds has bora laid
away in his grave many year, hie stem.
treasures are still foretell preserved, eves
that Amerioso eagle who se ingloriously
and ozeoperati.gly shed his pinto. -iwwia
ton Evening J..e.al.
HE LIVES IN A TOMB.
• •esokly. /errhaat Spend. Ni. Mays
%ear ■a• wire. awasl...
In a vault in the beautiful Evergrees
cemetery, there site daily by the side ot the
casket contention the remains of his beloved
wife, and surrounded by • streams oolleoaM
ot articles •esecated with her daily life, u
aged man, who has become knows to the
numerous visitors to the eemetery as "the
moo who lives in the tumh."
Vince the body of his wife was deposited
in the vault, two weeks ago, he has spent
all his days beside her oeMe, and hes de.
Glared that be will oe.tisue to do se mail
he w gammen to jots her. Se mach ex
outemeet amen visitors to the graveyard
has boos .rased by the bereaved husband'■
man (estatio.s of grief that the aatuerities
of the oreetery have base ferried to mines -
swan with hint. Still be pasts is emir
Maar what he oone,lers lits right to *ser
his time is the tomb.
The vault, ea imposing structure of IMO -
in built tato • geed. slope in the part
of *N msorery k.owe ea Wntep.ri.g
Oren, en the share of the lake. Over the
.1..ee is 'amend is large letters. "Jena
than •ad Mary r Read, and ea on .f the
stove poem rapport's, • heavy are. ragbag
that ~loose • sim.11 plot are fined the
words, " Heehud • ed wife. "
A massive free burred deer gives • frill
yaw of the inserter et the volt, the plan o1
wbioh is .signs. A little vestibule eight or
tow fest .bare eecapiss the frost of she
teeth, giving noses to the Bawer ebaeher,
whish eeasiste merely of • marrow passage
way about ant feet Ieng, nth • sheaf, er
rates,
is ether side. i. ens el these re
toss rete the belly .f lin Reed, the
ether being reserved fro Chet of her bee -
bead.
Al the further aid of the littlepp•.satmes.vPe�
steads • quaint, eM 1.ehie.ed dresi.g
able ad stirrer, e ward with mitten
smell artistes a leastwise use, said is lime
d tub • *hair... whist' the .ahsb.r e..ld
it Weide en main
The mann itself rests is the debt heed
sheaf, *-e'- in • deeble ass, *rat whist'
neap
arman ase-
was
sane
pied with w grata
bmf .,Nsetly
is.. sawed ler a window
!1s eggs— abet b Sebene web en ere
t:mrdtnary edbes4s .1 o►jeots, i..ladirlt
macaw e1 elatklat, skisa vases, wi
benches a( Sowers, boats, old groves, halls
.f yrs sad p..q.e ot tw4i.bd kaitting.
The walls of the aver vault are .overed
1 with photographs in cheap sad tarashed
frames.
Os the left head wall of dm vestibule
nage a tarns portrait of u elderly emit,
.11.8 leog white. ,ode whisker, and bole.
this is • battered camp stool, held together
with pi.tw .f twine. t IS • shelf near the
posture aro piled • we.tas's reticule, ma
o ld card rsuk. several work baskets, cease
knives and .puetu and inure pingo of un.
lambed knitting wink
Probably the most singular object in the
oell.oaos as • pack o1 ward. which had evi-
dently .ever been used, hanging by • .snag
frost the upper part of the grated door.
I learned from to ..,..tory authorities
that Mr. Reed was • wealthy toured mer.
* Mak living at Nu. 67 South Ninth street,
Brooklyn. Hit wile died two veerage,ud
her body was placed to the vault of her
father, Mr. Gould, an the oemetery. 1t was
said that Mr. Reed was not os good terms
with his father in law, grim objnted to hie
ficquent mats to the vault.
Mr. Gould died remedy, cad Mr. Reed
thou had • tomb huilt 0n he owe plass, at
• met of 14,000, •.d had the body removed
to it two weeks ago He thea filled the
vault with mementos of his wife.
since the oompletion of the tomb Mr.
Reed by visited it regularly every more
dog, remawing until the e!use of the Deme
ter% gates at seven o'clock.
He usually site by the little dressing table
at the heed of the body, but occasionally
takes hie chair to the door of the tomb er
ander the trees by the lakeside. New York
Herald.
Trilby s Meet.
The step twixt the sublime avid ridieul
one u quickly made Surely literature
presents no more grotesque idealization
than Trilby s foot, and the numerous wor-
shippers
ogshippers that have figuratively .peaking
bent knees and kissed the big toe of the
foot, wiles reeves once mere comes to
their rescue, will feel ea if the production
of the genu. Ass were perennial. By the
way did you notice whoa reading Trilby
how highly It oommeoded Putnam. Cern
Extractor. who -1h renders impossible the
disoordest excrescenoe, oorns. Tri Illy'. foot
would not be worthy of homage if snared
by notes ; weather would sours. Use Put-
nam s Core Extractor.
/r. J. ■ Marne'. tsebeeid•ys.
The third number of ' The Successeon
tains the first of two deeply interesting ar-
, isles by Mr. J. M. Barrie, entitled ' A
School Revisited 1a this article Mr Barrie
gives delightful remisisosnees of hie wheel
days. W • .aka the fullowieg extract from
Mr. Barrie'i description of hie first day 1n
the paygtoead.
At lest one boy came ad looked at me
for such • lime time that he moat have felt
drew when he oeee d doing
•' Pathfinder, said he at last
"• Chlogachcook, 1 replied at one.
" dawkeye, acid he.
'• The S•rpiot,' said I.
•' You're all right, - he said approvingly.
•' I was sure of It as wen se I saw you. 1
just knew you had read %bout them. -
•' How did yule know, I asked
" I kaew by your cut,- be said, gravely.
Have you read them all'"
•' Rather'"
He had 'mother look at me, and thee en-
quired, an,iouals, " Do you think the last
of the Mohicans was really killed that
time
" They buried him, you know, - I said,
radly.
' That • nothing, ' he simmered, oo.temp-
taously. '• Do you think he was the kind
of 'bap to die ori to quick'"
•• 1 wish he hadn't," I said.
He mane Dearer to m• and said in • low
voice, " Well, no mon he did"
'• But they say he did.
'• All ree i say, do you believe in
dreams'
' I i m not sure."
"1 should have thought from your eut,
that ,you believed in dreams."
" I do," I answered eagerly, " if you
dream them three times."
•' Well, I've dreamed it twiee.-
• What'
" That he gut letter after ell, and is in
another boat."
I clutched that boys arm. I--1 don't
know tor ones.. I said excitedly, " bus I
think - I rather tbisk I've dreamed it
oroe."
"That males tiros tris,' said he tri.
umph•ntly. " I say, I like your cut.
" Well, I like yours," 1 mad, though I
was not attain what • cut might he.
" Whets tour jump'" said he,
" Eight. What's palms'"
„ Elght and • half. :Yhat'e year high •
"Throe and a half. What's year'
" Four.
••What s your hep +"
•• We didn't hop at school. Wh•is
yours '
•
' • lin, half a feet where than your. l'm
you ea core's the road like • hes y '
" No, but 1 can kick ms head with my
heel. •
• '• You teach me that. I say, de you nos
anything queer about ewe '"
N.. "
" Well, there u.
" What ,..
" De you remember how i'•tblinder
aurited r
• Rather ! He laughed eo soft that noose
.omld hear him"
" Lutes, thee
•' 1 dea't bear anything."
" Of 'ours you don't. That was me
laughing like Pathfinder. 1 shirty. do It
that way."
fro will I sew."
"• Ne vat don't."
•• I have se rood • right _
.. Hays en! Didn't 1 de it Bret ! I say,
yea on be Chiogaobosok, and say, ' Ugh
nit.- That's mors Irks year int."
Without a.'.tiesing the weed we ewers
eternal friendship, mid denim ea eareinsal
pause to take eff our *AIM to each other,
it lasted our school days. 11 be di.eoverd
ie a dream ev otherwise the some e1 the
hook in white the last of the Mo8i.sne re-
appears he was to tell in of it .t owe, and
i wee m de se meet for lois. 1 have sot
heard it yet, but am still es the lookout.
Cute Maisie.
T.5 -tear old Hattie lied • diftlealt♦ with
grade.. "Don't you kaew," Md papa,
'That oe should mind grasolma jest an
you do mamma and papa '.'
Hattie answered sething. *'.p. repeat-
ed the gaeseie., het mall these was leo as
mar 1,.m the little girl, who .ted with
deemed bands gazing out of the wisdom.
•'Mc
ben." .xolaisaed bee limbar, ism
partway .at i speak te yea 1 want
yes homy nsasetb yes b... "
Without terming ler bad rho Nada girl
egad)remarked :
•'1 fIt is a toy sees dee, pap..
M -d Needlime
Riming Is eseopeeismelp,
New Is midi. W j lehes, s
or.
tines the eosl. le develops .e.fideso., en
noises oosvereatlon, ud' cults otos grace.
The kir/wings of good books "i• the feud
of youth, the delight .f age, the orommeat
of prosperity, the scutum .f adversity It
Ie as open door to beet .o.et y, • eteppios
etese to the highest fro. a .rues o1 hobo(
i that eatablues the sou. Tbe.e tn,nge beiug
trim, it is one of life a aeoesaww that the
yuuar should read end deo"►a rod out
weary thereto.
/eKheata and Neta... /ea.
('at this out and port• tis 111 your hat un-
til you have committed every word to 11215*•
Of s, then rive it to a friend There s only
mit right was to advertise, and that a to
batnah., your name, your locomen, and
your Lamas so .00etanttx, se ineisteatl
end so thorouehl; tato the peoples hoods.
tb.t if they walk is their sleep they eel
iasnnctively tars their sten towards your
sur. Brains
GENIUS.
The tarn fosadauons of ennui are : the
gift of (:ed,huaaan exertion and theextre e
of 111.,
The three first questiour of g5* .his -an 015
to ate nature, • heart to feel it, and • reso-
lution that dares to follow.
The three things indeepeuetble to rename
--aederstanding, medauou and pereever
ante.
The three things that enable genius vib
or, d eoretion and knowledge.
The three totes. of genlos- extr.ord'nary
sadsietandiag, extraordinary conduct and
extraordinary exertions.
The three thieve that improve genies -
proper exertion, frequent exert :re
successful era—mos.
brw lupppert
proeTheperiIy, thtrsocialgs qu•li6
that.cations
pause.t
A Wed tar the Royk
it you have ►n%thing to do, do it at once
Dow t sir down in the rocking *hair ud
lose three quarter of u hour dreading, the
job. Be sure thet it will seem ten times
harder than it did at first. Keep this
motto, Be so time, is smell things as well
as treat. Habit is every thing. The boy
who is behind time at breakfast and school
will be sure to get "left` ie the important
*tepee of Ids. If yen have • caroms habit
of dreading and putting off thinrr,mak. •
meat effort to euro yourself. Brace up !
Make up your mini that yeti will have
some backbone. Don't be a lamp, jelly -fish
Mud et person Depend` upon it, that lele
is vets much as you make :t. Tb• first
thug to deride is what you •re going to
m.k• The next thing to re take off your
next ..d go to work. Make yourself seems -
airy somewhere. nitre are thousands of
boy and young een in the world who
wouldt.'t be mesad if they were te drop out
of 11 tomorrow. Doe't be on .f this sort.
Be a power is your •w■ little world, and
duped upon it, thea tha big world will
bear from you none day - Standard.
WHAT IT MEANS TO LIVE.
To • miser it means to first eat • barrel
ot money then have a tamine come.
To a society girl, It meting d remiss, parties
and a round of *slash pleasure.
To the pmt, to be in another world that
tonebes this we.
TO • scholar, it means to teed forever on
Mete.
To the criminal, to have his own way and
yet keep out of promos.
To an smut, to give others the beautiful
forma that have been riven to him.
To the wedding, evertbiog that can be
put in the present moment.
To the ('brtetai., what he can know bet-
ter than he keowe aught elm, and yet can
n et tell with • tongue of flesh.- Ram'.
Horn.
A Romeo v-atholie Church dignitaryof
the dinette of Para has declared that be is
determined to refuse, no matter which sac-
rament, to women coming to ask itis • lady
cyclist's dress.
A German firm has just brought out a
glove for gentlemen, the rpeei.Ity e( which
ie that a small mirror, about the Binh of half
• crown. is Inserted in the palm of the hand.
It same curious that this little inventieo
should first appear in meas gloves_
David Hirsh, Assistant Treasurer of the
Excise Board of New 1 ork, recently found
• large pearl in the clams he was eating is
an oyster saloon. • Maiden Lane jeweller,
to whom he showed his find op the following
day, estimated its value at thew hundred
and twenty five dollar.
Otte advantage of taking Ayers Sarsay
arIlia to purify the blood is that
you need not infringe upon your hours of
labor nor deny yourself any food that
aeews with you. In a word, you are not
compelled to starve or leaf, while taking it.
Tho are recowmeedetioas worth consider
Pm.
ifioderiek, March 13th, 1806.
/fo,rard Formrrr ('o.
Gentlemen, - -The No. 9 'Iowan!
Furnace put in for me last Summer
by Meows. J. H. Woraell & Co. has
given good satisfaction and kept the
house comfortable and at an even tem-
perature during a winter of excep
Moral severity. One advantage is
the ease with which it is regulated,
but in my estimation that in which it
chiefly shows itm superiority, is the
e ntire absence a tion or dust in the
house, which has heew Pie much com-
plained of in Furnaces of i.ferior con-
struction. 1 shall certainly ris'om
w and the Howard to those contem-
plating purchasing a Fnrnaott.
Yours truly.
nAIIIEL J. N•rrtl..
i1 yew Misk .l having a Furnass pet i.,
'all and w .m rod we will be pleased se
(flee yea es .stissasa
�
J. H. WORSSEELL
s
t111� g .
Will lest t ►..eels, of Seidefetewn. N.J.,
hes a he. with • lero. treed of "breis.
wain she watubos very closely. The • her
• der • targe cat wanton In. mother said the
little saes from a grave arbor. Prewtly
t.ie wt g.vo • spring and leaded os the ofd
tem • ben6 Thu hos abused 6eht, a.d
atter • short ooiliest. k,1wt the cam.
PYNY—PECTORAL
lea certain remedy teed as artier bre.
him of the dtemas it was created 10
CUM
LARGE BOTTLE 25 CENTS.
35CkSH PllIZES35
1st
ize, 826; 2nd, $15 ; 3rd,
4th, 86 . 6th, 82 . 10
prizes of Si each . 20
prizes 04 60c, each.
The Propnetton of
alada On
S_-� oiler to school chalet's!' the above
A prizes, oompecrtloo ups until 11t
of May, for the beet poem or
L— rhyme, the initial letter of the
A— I limos reading downwards to com-
p— 1 pose the words ---
A — Ii I
Salads CRlooTeas
L The poem is expected to be the
0 result of the child's own thought,
Nthe name, age, address and school
to be appended to each poem, aha
T— s card out of • package of
Saluda" Ceylon Teat
S
—/ /-/—
STURDY BROS.,
GROCERS.
The bemire. Gederieb.
'Telephone a oonsotlem.
FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS
DUNiV'S
BAKING
POWDER
THECOOK'SBEST FRIEND
LARGCST SAL[ IN CANADA.
GODERTOH
STEAM BOILER WORKS.
A. S. CHRYSTALL
Seeceiworto ear'rat.1 !
manufacturer of .11 kinds of
BOILERS,
Smoke Stacks, Salt Pans, Sheet Iron
Works, etc., etc.,
And Dealer fn -
Engines, Machinery ('&.ting., 80.
All vises o7 Pipes and Pipe Fittiag.,
Steam and Water gauge., Globo valves,
Check Valve*, inspirator,, Ejectors and In-
jection Constantly on Hand et Lowest
Prima
A special line of Steel Water and Hog
Troughs for use of fartnera and others.
Repoli -tag promptly atteade to
A. S. OUYSTAL.
rlNr-ly P. O. Box W, tioderloh.01a.
Warks -opposite 0. T. R. statism, Soda**
1 Mitt
ANRIO tor
ATENTS
1� m10M PAF 4
psTRA M
(r..00PYSSONTS, etc,
torte a sad fres Handbook write to
pM NM Rana nwa v. New Tota.
=very poem taboo net M •ar sorarea4 • 1.
/M p 6,M' by • seta. even free- of ,tree to the
eficieutjfxc , rarrican
te •r.•w „17.-t.t.tenn of env wir•tifir mom 'n the
e•s'd. tivieren,tty ton 1 t h
itsat
}mia* t��y.'5 t,5*�without u. �Wsa. 1 'r1r`t•
rtta;'SNej �'s; tb.i.�dw.Ar. /.w�a' --_
PATENTS!
CSifflUTM, TIM6 11111 *88 CB►TIIIIITS
Obtained. and 411 bent..s. 1. the U._gg,, Patent
tlslurried0slurried teat MODRRATL RAIL
Ov effuse le opmo0M the U. R. Pateat Of
Se., - w ten lama Patens Mee tees
is mc
has thus. -wee. from WAntriVO?ON.
Med MO.D1I, ORt�DRA W.IfJAV. We ILO
Meese
1'VD_ 4.11.1 trot
hath ori OR -
31 U Ito l� I»hem Me e, an to etas .1
fes sEsp• recuses mesa& dlssts is rem
Tem mesa M Oeeat, write to
e • MOW dl
fesosens-INeses g4adesehlyNm. 11 a
The Signa
oo.w more call, .PFesetal atilt/iota to its
J"1. Prenting twtht:us, which art 'lnaur-
paesod outside t8..o :sa far 18. promps
soil proper .1.outttm of s!) clauses of
pet -miss. A p.rusel ed this wuowne-
inent may ssggee' t,a.rthu.,d )uu teay
be u need of, rad in su'-h VOW' we .Jt -
cit your pPa�tresagt, Melo.* w.nn.tens
that our elforte to piper* will inert with
the horn ooel of our mo roue
tkott % s ut►s
This useful size is kept in tire hill
rangy of qualities .ante as letter
heads. Vhi:e
%%mu). ♦itad►s
are not so generally used, they ill
an important place in commercial
correspondence. See what we've
got under the above hearts.
I.ttter kke tads
In this line we have a very large
stocn of tine writing papers suit
able for every class of buainees
represented in this locality, cum
prising laid and wove, linens,
quadrille and other papers, ruled
or unruled, as tusy be required.
Va\k kktau►s
if the " pay -es -you -go" plan was
the order of the o the demand
for account paper would uut be
so great ; but there are some men
who get .o many dunners that
they wonder if the stock will ever
run out. We don't intend it to,
and at present our stock is coin
pieta in this line with four sirs.
Good paper and neat ruling.
Statements
Both single and doul,le dollars
and cents columns. They come
cheaper than bill heads, and see
the proper thing to send after s
delinquent once a month. They
are sure to fetch him 'round—
sometime.
_► ravt\orfs
Now, it would be hard to got
along without envelopes, and to
keep up with the demand for
them we keep a large stock on
hand. We have now about a
hundred thousand in stock, and
the prices will range from 75c. to
$2.00 per M. We handle cos
mercial and legal sizes exclwsiveh.
C ommere aa\ 4 e va mi e,
has already been partially enum
erated in some of the heads above.
There is, however, a vast atnoan
of work under this head that to
enumerate would more than take
up the entire space occupied by
this adv't, but we do it all at TNN
Sfalt*l..
T Avata\I.ons
to an "At Home" or s wedding
require considerable torte in salmi
tion sometimes, but we make it
an easy matter by keeping in
stock the eery latest and best
samples to be head. Call and tyle
rosrams
of entertainments and meeting
promptly turned out, from the
plain but neat to the most elegant
with cord and pencil attached.
Carcv►\ars
We aim to excel in all the differ:
ant kinds of work we turn out,
but especially in this, and keep
in stock plain and fancy papers
suitable for all requirements.
Card, and► " 1 tt%
This head coven a large range d
work, from a bread or milk ticket
to a neat calling card, from an or-
dinary admission ticket to a tasty
business card or a handsomely
printed membership ticket.
-P osttet
Our facilities for turning out this
class of work are evidenced by the
fact that the great bulk of it is
done by us. This line also in
duties
D od►v ere s
which our three fast -running job
preasees are able to turn out in
surprisingly short time.
$a\t BA\s
belong to the poster department
also, and we make a specialty a
thorn--promptnessbeing our aim
in this respect. A notice of sale
will appear in Tee'101A1. free of
charge whew bills for same see got
here.
A•\\ `1Gnd►s oS 'W oro
in the typographical printing line
can be done in this establishment
in as expeditious earl aristio
manner and
OW, V% .e e.s tet:.\\ be. Stl1t►11114
•try et0.1.01%.0►b\tt.
Weeatend our thanks for past Wr-
ote, and solicit a wh.tinVanee et the
same
T gt ox#Z.
stamses. am.