HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1895-11-21, Page 2Ti1E RIONA1.: GODP RiCH, l ►NT., TII I' R.*DA' . 140V 21 IRON
(T rtA
GIVE YO
p 1
Bs gamy spa things are likely
lite Put you els ask in running
tits risk if you keep a buttic of
Perry Davis'
PAIN
KILLER
at haul. + :t nes t s -(,ailing
antidote for pains of :e11 arts.
.•;J by all Uru,i,;{slits.
--Use wound l., • NO imp of eater er=(warns if cuevtalr%)
1 ` `.LE 1)1.:T I'I) .,44hly. w•1 h. f, •Mrd thin. about every
t 1
stun., fr..n. the *term the the bridge, dp
and down d. -r 1, and tat • !hr narrow cores
- - dors of .the croon.„ trying ail th. tante to en-
tl tvilin tile' .fib, lies
1 Add rOHntbtr+ j' x ry ter into wravruhom with ilo•tn. •
title Peter sod hes Wealth, geed old tap
Thug• tiowrvrr, did end *atelia anxious to
tam Co.gulm ha4 6"' Mr to heli.." to it hip meet his; sdv•oe.a F:.ch t,.ue that the
self The truth rr•11v ilea tltet the said *foliate with hi. hat in hue h.nd, ap
Facie Peter had hese the dolour of the itrnse,hr"1 them wd e• mm.rct 1 m his most
family from hie girl,.;hi1dhlwi,hod affable manner. "Etcu.e me, gentlemen,
114.11v embarked on an .tmtritan *nip u • gate to Sou happen t.. kiln% they turned
NEWSPAPER STORIES.
lasts stare deltehIfsl er Iltore'feseet fel theta
wit ever knew b. 10-.., but Me M yy te Ws
sigh ewd thsek w" e1t.1 take • tines, •.d
sever .Mase 1•6 rrj'.s'•a when Sumw•r Is wilt
iseedrr• to ■I.ter)r, las u.ver agate *•y we wlsth 11 were weer —
bat ae.141411.
'4144." oat. pl1ywl • Y•e.rtew pools a alis
dl
yap is . .00haeted .nllrwl,asd wetrass
eery than meet plop'• .r" •sabre • f E:v r rtw.u',.e. Wm growtl,
hod, koews how the psnaveraawe ot a
A fir veer est Hear, ved ik.suH.
•1 merchant of 'itis oily. wits had get la•
to •'.Ito•1 water,",and aur utetilahle steak
before him, was mwoh exert• s34 of as 40 the
dureeente of ,•.moon v•I••bl* ars! estate
nail several thousand deh*rt' worth of 'melt
rad me.nrsn.,e sleeks.
He hod 'beef• m eo'nvolveel that the pro.
coedsof the sale of tht. property eon! 1 not
•wr bust, and et 14. deyoled his gallate t"
the •tgvleing 01 some means whetehy t.e
cou'd ..yr'neta-
After much den►wratina he n••eu"'stied too
&m ey the teal estate .104 et..ek• to ane of
hoe ...elks, who had *eluded h.• daughter'*
ep••fer en•eiura:ed Robert Brace to regain
he ktog•loua m tiwtlsod ; but sot so many
below that, a••'oreting to Jewish treelit1o1, •
-folder raved 'savors Ide Said was hunt-
'
-
iug (or hone and hie «Idler, •ppro.ehed a
MVO where he was hidden Shortly before,
however, • sot ler had spun her welt at the
mouth ot tn. cave ; and the ."I l ., takrog
it tor granted that, if he had t.k.n r"fwae
is the cave. he must have broken the web,
departed, forgetting that the web might
have horn spun after ss well a betas the
eotrsu.w. A snider saved the life of the
greet uncle of the a;ermsn emperor. Fred-
erick Witham wee king of Prussia. and an
attempt was made to poison him to a cup of
ohocol•te. Hy chimer. • spider fell into the hosed in marriage some months befr•re,
cup, and for lids reason the monarch Rave and whew Sulu' he had then lad.gtiani h re -
the ahtwol•t-. to • deg, which ,mmrdlwtely fusee.
died (nelntry was made, with the result Ha resodll'ifa havihe l soap (.ken, ha 'ex
that the cook was hanged, and • Iuge phoned metrorito hie a•tomshed clerk,%ho ,
spider wrou4h' is gold now dee-rates one r.rd'ly felt in with ht. employer's ptets I
of the chief roams of the winter tt.11we at The property was were treordered ; the goer•
Potsdam, in memory ei tYF, king • escape. , eh.r,t (aged "less -i. everything but his
humor;' and the clerk, having u emirs ee
The rer.eaer'. Tette. •eathle s• 11 the 'to .• and real weters for I
po
olear what cash he could Ort for them, fled to
The pet *cher mot first have
Cuba, leaving the "high minded" merrh•nr
to mourn over the 'seal 1'i k of integrity
which is w opt to 1,e der.l.ped .s clerks
whrne.'er an unusual trial or temptation
overtake. there. -
It .lona not perm as vet to have ooeurred
to this broken down o14 man that his own
conduct in this affair ie blameworthy, and
indicates that he ie • moral .s well •a • p.
,amara bankrupt --N V. [.edger.
A \ew.b..ye snpedteeis.
.1 oma 1 and dirty newshny worked •
paving game f .r • wok nr en down in the
shopping d •trier.. He would don • most
...bee boy. *11°r a htcb nothln{g 0Mwe frail around quicsly, pr.rendtn,; not to hear, and
been heard of him. walked 01, leaving him sit%mime there.
This ase the (lain, naerhirMd trath,het i, ,They certainly hay. odd m•nnirs,"
('apt+ n t'ogohn wase • native rt Marseilles mud
the swam
to ht n.elt, sod the•
and had an im•gt• rtiv+ in.nd, console. to ly �P consoled himself with the ides thst,.fter
this plain truth had to he embellished One all 'torr '.•angle hes its own customs.
day he hapfora. 1 to (to
pen' motor who 1'h. two \mar' •ens, in their torn puzzled
p
had rust letus t from
m the 1 'rood N'arre, by the e, c••ntrea'lllen of this man, who fol•
and after dnek'ov s glass or t40 wo,nf sprue Iow.d them about ever, where. qunsttoned
together the tet, mer. beottmu tommunteat. the steward and as h. ws. fond of • duke
nae. The captain hrppwo'ed to mention the he drew spat, his magma -Ion for tees
fact •hat he Md an uncle living nut in Am 1,_..0,.
vt
erica He draw upon hu tm.na•!ve mind •.• 1 ou knew there bs. heed • great
and was 16101. s.0 demerit* the mini uncle. diamool rohhrry its Prru" hr sad '•roti
The accommodating sailor terve * rd ,itratt•11y. •' WrIl, that man is Farness, 'be
having met gust such an tedev•duel, end, ,.rlehrat"d art
eetn•e, Hr a on !h. trek of
what was more, the supp>•estd Ifinch• .'aster 1 the thieve. and to arm."
vol. enerdon has du•
had even . ontided • Mix of presents to rhe guieorel himself like that.
carr of the glhr for distribution rmnng his The leu Americans booked at c•rh whet.
relative on the others side ot the water and loon afterward went, down int(' their
Cnfortunatrly on the lav hen..• there had
'shin and shut themselves in.
been • territde storm, and the b;.1 sad hecn
dropped overlea.rd, kat .til; the Inc, re-
mained that Veale Peter hard tes4s a for-
tune out to the new country and had sent
word to hie friends tha• he should ant for-
get them.
t wu or three years went b,, and at the
end of that time reale fete• owned planta -
twos, slaves, gold mates. petro!rom mines,
and everything, in fact, that as Amencau
uncle is supposed to possess.
The tbgolin family became the envy of
the little !tillage where 'h•) lived, and in
the evenings, when the women gathered to
wether round the doorstep of the a,eep,owr
row .treete for thcir daily gosstp, the name
of the famous I'ocle Peter war frequently
heard.
The ('ogollns themselves waited pa-
tiently
" d'eor fellow, the c•ptai■ would say ;
•• let him live as !env u t;od wills. We .re
in no hurry.
They did not appear again on deck, not
even when they sighted New fork. and all
the passengers were admiring the panorama.
()n 'eodtog, i Spoon Coriolis looked out for
them, hut in vain. Thei had dipped away
amid the confusion.
•
One day a letter arrived for 1..plain Cog
ohs, It was from New 1 ork rud the en,
•slops had the embassy .temp. it was os
heavy letter sod might have cont•ieed any
number of heck notes.
`there wait however, nothing more to it,
and nothing 1,.. t t 50 the ort iticate of death
of Peter l'ngolto.
" He is ready dead, then ' surd the cap-
tain • wife.
„ I lit course he u, einoe the anh.mador
has taken the trouhle to send us this. '
There wee • solemn silence, and then,
although no one but the captain hod ever
set eyes on the American uncle, • few tears
were shed in honor of his memory.
The wife then spoke again. " All the
same, your embaasdor does not sy • word
.bout his money '
•• You would, perhaps, have liked him to
have written about that first and then told
us of his death in • second letter. No, no,
they don't do Tike that in Amortise: They
know what's whet, and they would not
write to . point plank about his mo.ev as
though they thought we were starving. is •
have only to wat,.ad as goons& he decently
can the •:*b.sador will writ is it. silent the
money inatt rs,-.
1'.fortun•tely the ambassador, no doubt
through negligence, did not send another
letter, and in place of the peaceful dream
with whtoh they deluded themselves, •
fever the mnaev fever seized the whole
"Colin family. 'They did nothing now but
dream of Uncle Peter's millions, and on
_od.ys when toey were •11 gathered to-
gether in their cabin it seemed as though
the sun had lost its brightness and u
though even the garlic had no flavor.
One morning the captain anaounoed hie
intenttou of taking • trip
•' 1 can very well get oft for • month or
so, ' he said. " The lade will manage the
boat during my absence, and 1 feet a*
though 1 'isn't rest without seeing for my-
self what's going on in New York
He had so embark at Havre, whteh mate
him furious, u he looked upon mosey "pent
in railway travelling as money stolen from
14tm-
The enormous ship, however, with •Il int
sellers aed passengers. the gilt of the sal -
loons and the bright, marvellous machinery,
threw him into an almost religions admire -
110..
From 8 o'clock in the morning mail pee -
tai M never uttered • word, but jet wan.
dared stoat from one esd of the deck to the
other or gazed .t the instate' "raise.
Haspeech only returned to him towards
the end of the tourney, whose he hsps to
epecnlate on what he should find awaiting
him in New York.
He began to be restless and wanted Me
talk 1• some one about hs errand. The
•tows'vl wee a compatriot mad therefore in-
spired him with enwielesee, bet the steward
wee bney bred ref. -.'r) him to two teak
lanky, s.allerseel sten who were always
'trellis" .p sad down the desk together.
and wise leaked like A..rte.as.
" Thee. g..tlemee will MIl yen all abaft
New Yerk," said the derw.rd- "They
k.. the plass like A B CJ."
()softie (log.11i. wee M1WMed .t the
Wise of meshing the sequoias** ell ess*b
Vie hate lie sir elf Ye dim* w lbw.
" The embassy. sir. 1 •n you tell me the
way to the emha*ey
It was the C.ptam, who after wandering
about all day in • network of streets and
avenues, all exactly alike and all merciless -
11., numbered, wan trying for the hundredth
tune to get tome information.
"How to heaven's nsme 1 ever make
these hurrying, crowding. h:oglish-speaking
staise understand he exclaimed at last
m despair. "Why in all the round world
couldo t my 1 ncle Peter have to k en himself
oomehere else to die'
Suddenly the captain taught sight of .face
be keew. Yee- :t eertasly was one of the
Americans with whom he had travelled
There "fluid be no mt«taking him, although
he had changed his clothes and his heir and
beard were ernpped clout.
"Sir ' -Sir '
The other hears and maks off filet no,
this time he shall net escape, and the gasp.
fain follows him.
The American has long dew, but the cap
glia has strong ones.
••Whathe save below his breath,
"this fellow knows New York like A B t',
and he wos't tell sue wbere to find the em-
bassy
the Amerie.n cannot escape, he skins
round corner sod he dodges down streets.
but the °apt. keeps up behind him.
The chaste goes on until at last the Amer-
ican is incapable of running another step,
and he takes refuge in • resteurant.
The captain follows him and sae, breath
lamely
"Excuse me, air, but can you tell me -
The American turns ,.le, pushes a chair
to the captain. and says in exeelleot
French :
••Hush' let's have no fuss and no use
less scandal. Sit down here a minute in
this corner "
"good '" thonrht the captain, " he's •
queer stick, but he's vetting mere reason-
able...
The Amenoaa 'optioned :
"1 know what you've moms to New York
for. Now, the goestion is, Can we Dome to
as soder*taoding
thoughts ; few have. Then he must bet able
10 put 'ham into clear language whits will
t•onvrt them, and easy I.ngsase in whit*
they can be reoeuved, at least by the .ver.
age hearer, to my nothing of the simplest
hearer, wbo is the proper perms for the
preacher to keep meetly in mind. Thea
th••y must het uttered s clearly that they
sill awaken and not lull. Vagueness of
thought is almost sure to lull the brain, and
even when •he thought is well digested
there are defects of utterance., which few
renew; and which have • like eft reit. A
tightly used voice a worth more to •
preschef in pron. of edectryeoew then groat pathetic expression, go up to a woman and
elft• at intelligence and even deep piety. say : " Mimi«, won't on buy • paper, .h.
et the present generation cf Canadian is my hirf'i•y, and 1 sin t sod hardly any
presehen have to enter on then life work Of course he weull sell ono in nine serine oat
with almost no elocutionary training or of ten, and would generally get • nickel and
(0401' culture There is somewhat better b, o'd to I e •p the change He moat have
nr0vuion now, hut the .uyJecr dors not yet k.pt'h,* up for forty • week and reaped •
get 'tovthisg 1.k. the proporttenet' •tteo- bountiful harvest. At last noe ynang
tion that it deserves. Ao•rt altogether wnm.n who had tired of the *.•me .•nry.end
from r odering it serviceable as • tool of who harame rather .kep'Ice, on the subject
trade, the cnttu-e and correct and powerful of "Meld.u," stopped the %ming/veinsend
exercise of the vows will oostrihute mote to remarked in too.eI.ar enough to be heard
•' .; general health then is generelly Tore,
rota* distance : "See here. little clearnesshoc•
, whet
wined. t'learnes of thought. churnings of did cru sea • 1400( vont birthday Many distinguished p.now urged hihowlo
language and clearness ot thought will. i1 .. Lady,.plebes nay • paper. the i' tet write this book, They knew that he had
found together, be almost sure to stake • birthday, and 1 .int sold bot one paper to sots red 'n this remarwh!e sabres( •
successful • her. The preacher needs wealth of muerte' wh,oh, with his unuloe
pea Iw day,' whined the inane rascal. collect°, of photograph•, would make one
something far greater, the divine Spirit,bnt .. Now, IiWle hav, to ling certain know- of the most valuable honk. of the day.
he does not need these anv lees. -]Montreal
Witness.
_.e
Je ww. L. J 'Is eisea.
Al=
Passes Belief
)Yr. Jas. d. Nicholson, FlorencevUle,
N. H , Struggles for Seven Loiter
Years with
CANCER ON THE LIP,
AND IS CURED EY
AYERS
Sarsa-
parilla
Nr. Nirhnlsen gays: "1 consulted doc-
tors eta prey. 1!: rd for mc. but to
no purpose; the cancer began 10
Eat into the Flesh,
spread to my chin. and i suffered In
agony tor *even long years Finally,1
1 begets taking Airr s 4Atrsapartlle. to
a week ter two I noticed a
Decided improvement.
itneouraged by this result. 1 persn-
eered, uuUl In a month or so the •or.
water my chin le•4au to heal 1u three
months my hp !tt•gan to heal. and a•iler
tying the Sarsaparilla for six months
We last trate of the cancer disappeared.'(
AyeE $ Sarsaparilla
Admitted at the World's Pur.
AI LIS'S PILLat Regulate tete 1.we{a.
The Signa
1.1.1114* and earrl.ae.
There are plenty of cases of happy mu
nate between Itter.r'. people : that u, be-
tw.eo men and women who are authors or
writers. Men artists have married women
artists. and lived happily with them. Ven
poets have married women poets, with
whom they lived .. happily as the two
Brownings lived. Men and women of the
beet intellect and culture have been happily
married to each ether.
We do not believe there is • larger pro-
portion of unhappy couples, or of divorces,
where both the husband and wife aro lintel
lectual than where they are not. We are
aware that, when there is trouble between
husband and wife, both of whom are philos-
ophers, novelist., or poets, the public wen-
ded in the case is greater than it would be
in the case ot trouble between • married
pair of the undistinguished kind.
No young author, scholar or artist look-
ing for • life mate, needs to be scared from
taking one whose talents are e.tu.l to his sr
her own. Where there is inoompstibility
between an intellectual husband and an in-
tellectual wife. it is unlikely that the intel-
lect alone is the primal cause of the incom-
patibility.
There are wives of intellect who live hap.
pilv with husbands ordinary mind, as then
are husband• of intellect who live happily
with wives les highly eedowed.
d'rinees« have married gyral swains with
whom they lived in hlis, while men of
power or genius have lived happily- in their
m•m•rs with unpretentseps wivs-
Even the possession of l'ke intellectual
sympathies on the part of the hummed •14d
wife is not essential to wedded happiness.
Diversity of disposition or temper between
husband and wife is not incompatible with
.biding marital affection -
A w fe who is heautiful may love • hue -
hand who is net, and then may he mutual
devotion between a hashing eat the realistic
school and • wife who is as idealist,
One of the most interesting subjects of
speculation for both mss and women is mar-
riage- Their interest is it after fade. while
life lasts
Over sad Serie.
summer t. over. Where 14.. it vote
ledge y'ou hare had • hirthd•y every day
this week. Aren't you ashamed to tell
such stories" -
He was cornered for • minute, and stood
with bead oast down and even appearance
of remorse. At Net he looked np with the
most innocent expression and said : " Well
you see, I.dv, you an ale we're different. I
ain't very old, es I thought I'd have . 1st
of birfisys to oncet, ft den 1 ooahl '!nit
bens' 'eta like you. Ke.
Sb* concluded that he was put refermi"g
and slipping • dies in hie hand moved nn,
sighing over the wickedness of this afters -
tion. while the young sinner exeonted • tars
de sent of his ewe btventiea--(;hio•go Tri-
booe.
•—
OURUOURNEV AROUND THE WORLD
nsiv yra.rI. I. Clarke • tarw seek.
This highly tnetruottye and splendidly il-
lustrated volume is • record of • retest
journey around the world, M Rev. Francis
IC.
Clerk, President of the United Societies
of Ceridian Endeavor, and his wife.
Throughout the Zoog journey, which mica -
pied mere then • year, and covered nearly
dity thousand miles by sea sod land- they
enjoyed rare opportunities for observation
and stuly. It u one of the most valuable
books ever issued by the American press
The reader us personally conducted through
Australia. India, thins, Japan, Egypt,
Palestine, Turkey, and many other lands.
We see these c,mntries through Amensan
eyes, and obtain • perfectly .leer view ot
them and their people, supplemented by
two hundred and twenty splendid illustra-
tions from photographs, most of which were
taken by I)r. ('I•kk himeelt ; for he carried
a complete pbot usaphtc oath with him.
i)r Clark was one of the lest Americans to
travel through China and Japan before the
war between these countries was begun. I,
this rare volume he gives us the latest and
hest insight into the duly life of a China
man in his own country ; his favorite food
and odd dishes : opium fiends and their
wave ; the singular rites witnessed in the
temples the public execution of criminals;
Chinese farms and farming • the seamy side
of Chinese life ; Japanese* •cr.hats and their
wonderful performances ; Japanese lite,
,queer custom., art, wonderful skill, etc.;
the burning ghats of India, where the bodies
of the dead aro coosnmed on hogs piles of
wood (a ceremony IS. ('lark witoesedl: the
Towers of Silenoe, where the dead are ex
puled to be devoured by thousand. of wait -
bog vultures that 000stastly sit on the walk;
wonderful Dative jugglers, tearless .sake
charmers and fakirs -t hese are but a few of
hundreds of i.terestisg topics presented.
Their route led actress the land that Joseph
gave to his father sad brethren : past the
very fields where the Israelites•m•de Ariake
without straw, and along the highways
where room rolled the ohariots of the
pharaohs The story of the discovery of
the mummy .f the_ph•r.oh wbo oppressed
the °bildrst' of Israel, is wonderfully inter-
esting.
nteresting. it was found among those of forty
other mummies of kings, queues, sot
princes in the royal mortuary nhamher in
the Theban Hills, and the ideetifo•tine el
Pharaoh is ocmplete. Illustrations from
photographs .how where the mummy seas
found, and others give full•length profile,
and front views of this wrist kin, who
ws oontemp..ry with M'..o and reigned
in Bible times, thus enabling all to see "gust
how Pharaoh looked."
A journey was atalelnf hundreds of maim
ales old spring wagon .cross Turkey and
Armen•, through an a-iksown country, in
fasted by robbers end hostile waives, the
seems of the late horrible masseters of
Arwseai.a. by Turks and Khurda Ih.
(,lark was the lent (Aristi•s to travel aero
these countries before Cheer terrible to.s-
serea were perpetrated. The story of this
perilous trip is fell of thrilling iatere.t and
elating ,deet.is
yra fleck aeeoinp..isd her heehand
everywhere- She draws • vivid picture of
life in fr•.ff laude, ' As Sees Through a
Wewsa • eyes." Her narrative is peeked
with ansadsks, ineldet..!•nd p.reen•I ea-
parieseas. Her story of the lose jenrnsy
the wages is highly eaterteini.ge its priva-
tises and porde, sepe•Mlly sea wawa, be.
log wary. She was the ear, wwwaa he the
party, whir& eetriMed .4 herself sad Wild
era
1)e. Clerk's seise r • IsosiWr k.—'---'
ward, sea kb tame as Praellsat s the
United itealieiss.4 arose iboileawer.
with Ito ewe sed tree ball =lien neohefu,
boa .halm to May seller d no wadi.
"Why, certainly, we can. Certainly we
sett.- exclaimed the captain. rubbing, his
hands. "1t seems to met straightforward
poop:e can always some to an uoderstand-
ing
"Hang the straight forwardness, but lets
some to business, • said the American, des-
taortely. ''In thus pocketbook there are f2
000 in bank notes If you'll ray the word
they are yours, .d (1,000 more .hall be
brought to you tonight when the Bratriv
weighs anchor. 1. it 'lode rstood that you
start with the Brittany 1'
•'Why, oertaisly. certainly. on those
terns, said the captain, who was more ..d
mon bewildered et every word uttered by
the American.
He tried in vain to understand it all, but
it was and ever r.m*lned . hopeless myst-
ery to him- He pocketed the money, and
the fennel hie way to the dank, and male
i.quirie. shoat the Erittaay H. seemed
his passage rad sure enough the mimes
promised him Iran brought In the boat then
eight, and t'sptate ('oplin wee rot sorry
to set snail, for he had sees ••e•eb el New
Yak.
.
- _ wood.. dead pe•sh« n. the mnwnd is
AWN eptsh� f/fr�M�M buMm, sib. orchard, d.•d apple dropping heti:
�r `Illy, fort b lib dry li Ilia =yet-
to boughs, and the fe the
'Ey e1sil why h. trHeMyd ►r (b hskeleton leaves that
l.mle1eter'gaeas,seateag.•gb•«-have se beauty in them, by wine creeping
1aeen7.
1414. 1t esrt•MIT w•e exts'aerells•ry a tat- you de waft Sommer h.ek arras : se de
lag int. msnsder.tion the feet that the said 1; war we meas Iowa it We mem say
aisle bad died ineelvst is the buip1' - "it will genie spin sent pate M it will
YWBiea
net. 'Met will he meth* Anww14r. The
ante balwtlaedi w kwblt•y.the saes mph*
Too Oy (tet AOp Nei eel M he et11- M lights O hyaena thfd•r Mery w411
*oily hetrl b Kt hoe you «.talose 11414. dolt aeon .e www ifs day if •ay Ifs 14tef'm
s.dMisee wdtie.t peettive %fiery. 0 ,e life is the ems, even is ear« T•
tee sty si bsisnt. ter Ayer's llweposBIN I sae se 4 le save fee 1M ••m•
kgNlei onebs. The mor in • Mars* «apse
of your lib latest en bastion i11evm
• every tom er MOWwe ken* sew
• - seas r a gooney yeti esieroMg
It was onit yesterday that we said with
equal surprise that it was here.
Of course we may have warm weethur yet
but warnings have been riven us that it will
not last
Ws hated that frightful summer weather,
did we not'. Hut we feel uncomfortable
when we thiuk ot how many months of chill
and shiver, tare boughs and unwholesomely
heated unr lie before us now. We all wish
we had bees more like the shepherd of 5.1-
isbary plains, and (thought "any weather
good the lord pleased to send," and halt
lawsfay that Sommer's departure is a judg-
ment ou w for one discontent.
How we went shoot eying "What
frightful weather " and fanning ourselves
..,vasal swag* who could costume them-
selves with s feather, or eo, and some blue re
beads. Won't we think et it whom our al
ski, it we are lucky enough to pee
p
sew easy -are net (kick enough to kap r
hum he.Aivertnr
Ho* chilly the crs•m-onlored dreams
look ' What • shabby look has • muslin '
We begin oel
•litre cardinal red and hunt-
er's gran and dusky blue.' velvets mass
to make usshudder, and we even aheka s
out our striped flannelettes ad rejoice is
them.
1' we look for the woods and the wilds
again, hat yon remember that they were
rotting dreary whim yea lett then and full
of heavy edeas, tie Dead leaves ie the
It e0n•sins steel -Otte portr•Ite of i)r.
('lark and nt hu wife, frons reosot pboto-
graph e : • terve map, exhibt•iug the whole
world at • single «lance, showing the
author • j 'oro. from :he beginning to the
end, and 120 Sine illu•trstt"ns from photo-
graphs from life, These must he seen to be
appreciated.
We do not know when b40 pagee have
given us more rennin* pleasure 1t we
arab warmly ••1 the book, it se because it
nobly- deserve. it. It to sold only by .gents
and is meeting with en enormous Ogle.
Agoutis who io•roduce • bat -clam work like
that ought so Mo c .r.lielly welcomed. We
believe that tie beat wry to kap out poor
books is tsar t n t rod uc i ne good ones, and •
better one than this hos never been brought
to our notice. Put it tato your homes. It
will be reed over and neer again by old and
!mine, wtth pleasure and lasting profit.
The work u puhhseed by the old and
well•koown fire. of A. 1). Worthington A
Co., Hartford, ('oon , whose 'menet is sut-
ficient guarantee of the exoelleoce of the
volume.
The •sent ,n (:'denote is Charles Payne,
who will thoroughly asev.«ts district and
from whom .II orders nowt M ebtaioed.
•
de M tis peril of your dor'
�s e
Nue snore call« Tomei Wenn*. to
peaseWt4
o1de the pities for the promos
and proper exeretios dA • claims of
primg a A perusal of this nu
suouu.
ssrt may se4Ygeat tonleo
hiug you uty
he in need of, and in snob tube
paw . r
t papatronage, followemat.lent
that ourrtiwts to plows. will 'newt «lith
the approval of our rwtrons
►`o<IL il%i atilt
Thou.eeful Mae is kept in the fall
grange o1 yyuaaitie. Milne ail :ntts,
hewir. Whie
ae gB h11\) . ill ts.e.s
urs nut ao generally used, they
an important place its uoluuneryia
oorr•eepttneh•uce. litter what we ve
got under the abate heads.
aae�<1LY % tmt tk
(h•this line we have a very large
store of tier writing papers suit
.hie for every claim of business
represented in this locality, ''nu
prising laid and Mote, liur•tts,
quadrille and other paper*, ruled
� or uuruleil, ea may be required.ty.'.\ iitC\.J►tb
li the pay-as-you-go" plan wag
the order of the 'lay the denten!
for account paper would not ill
so great , but there are some wen
who get so malty (limners that
they w older if the stock will ran,
rug. out.' We a don't intend it t0,
and at preeraet our stock is ...ow
ple•ne in this line with four eine.,
Good paper and neat ruling.
Atu4,
t tc %%NA
Koth single and doulsl.' dollare
anti cants columns. They come
cheaper than bill heads, and ere
the proper thing to send after a
delinquent once s mouth. They
are sure to fetch him 'roun.l—
sometime.
Job Printing feet itr*r, whist are ousts -
WEAK LINKS.
When the kidneys are weak or overwork
raare o
std polecats of various kinds asure slip
part therm
Sickness of some kind is sure to result.
The kidneys are tillers and their work is
to keep poteone out of oircul•tion.
The sickness will depend on the nature of
the poison, it may be 'Asthma or Typhoid
poison or..methine 51.14
People with weak kidneys oft escape
these effect. by siding these organs by kid•
nev trestmeot
People are coming to understand thus
truth. it expl•tne why l)odd's Kidney
Pills though only a kidney medicine set peo-
ple right, and they get well.
It is all bemuse they go straight to thes
canwhich thews itself first in the weak
link
Whet you are sdek os i )odd's Kidney
Pills for they always mire.
Always WetlesOee
Everyone hue a weleprima
een for the pa
who has the sense own take things quietly.
The person who ogo withotit her dieser
andnot advertise the fact; who can lose her
purse and keep her temper; who makes
Itght of a heavy wetght,and can wear. shoe
that :pinches without anyone being the
s
wiser; who donot magnify the splinter
in her finger into • stick of timber, nor the
mote in her aeigkbor'e eye into • be•m:who
"mellows bitter words without leaving the
taste 'in other people's mouths: who pan
give up her own way without giving; np
the ghost such • one sorely carries •
passport mese
into the good gratesof es•
kted-
BRISTOL'S
• PILLS
Cure Bilienisness, Sick Head-
ache, Dyspepsia, Sluggish Liver
and all Stomach Troubles.
BRISTOL'S
PILLS
Are Purely Vegetable, •
elegantly Sugar -Coated. and do
not gripe or sicken.
$RIs'1'OL+S
PILLS I
Act gently but promptly and
thoroughly. "The !afeat family
medicine." All Druggists keep
1 PIB� T�Lg
Now, it would be hard to eta
along without envelopes, and to
keep up with the demand for
then[ we keep a large stack on
hand. We have now about a
hundred thousand in stock, end
the l.: ices will range from 75c to
$2.00 per M. We handle cow
mercial and legal sixes exclusively.
Ot1wgYC.a, dish: s..0
has already been partially 'num
erste(' in some of the heads above.
There is, however, s vast amour
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 Tan
SIGNAL.
rw'<ta<'ons
to an "At Home.' or a wedding
require considerable torte in seise
tion sometimes, but we make it
an easy matter by keeping is
stock the very latest and bed
samples to be had. Call and see
4 VOterwma
of entertainments and meeting
promptly turned out, from the
plain but neat to the most elegant
with cord and pencil attached.
Core t ars
We aim to excel in all the differ
eat kinds of work we turn out,
but especially in this, and keep
in stock plain and fancy papers
suitable for all requirements.
Cards cur•' T'.eke<s
This head covers s large range of
work, from a bread or milk ticket
to s neat calling card, from an or,
Binary admission ticket to a tasty
business card or a handsomely
printed membership ticket.
Ni os<er
Our facilities for turning out this
class of work are evidenced by the
fact that the great bulk of it ls
done by us. This line also in
eludes
oe.sLer s
which our three fast -running job
prows. are able to Wm out in
eorprisingly short timate.
belong to the poster derartn1Ost
also, sit ; we make a specialty of
them -promptness being our aim
in this respect. A notate of gals
will appear in TEA SIOIt*t free of
charge when bills for name .re got
here.
ASA Ac.r.ds os W ork
in the typographical printing list
can M &SO h this estabiisb'
in an expeditions asst *rtis*
wanner sod
Ovtr 4 % bees tjAk be. Stems
bear r(wsov.ab\t.
We extend our *auks for rot is'
ors, sad admits ooetisufea of lbs
«sea,
T%1L SA 4111#1..,
Af�t�