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The Signal, 1896-7-30, Page 22 Tag SIGNAL : G(1T1 FR ICH, ONT. THURSDAY JULY 30, 189x. A NET PIIOPiT. Wo p ea ism -Mem t- .ib.r, ZfY44 ew. midis ed 1 ea a day - fignitzdifir sweet was the �we•t er, amid elm was the pbv. lul in spite .t my peatisse serving re hes fell the wore aid the eat 1 Net pity deaardsg. b►. Mit me ova the mt. My vengesaes at ere ea the wisher Wm kala be ery eaithwe coal ; Tkls vola and vtataslest "hate Walked slay as may aids es • stroll Tb.s led ee, by that&aas' a the ves7 Sam eat 1 imaged to beret ; Where me, by her e.q.m.t aide merry. Had Id.. bed at me over i b. wt. 1 drew ember epee to my aarbbor, Aad food the had altered her mood : OI pordm her talk seamed to traria ; She vowed sleeked been very rude Aad sass wit iea, oh•ared to be at.ydtse Where sorry detest 1 W met - Her ooadvct seas peeve m deoatedimg- She looted me ism ..ver the tet ! TRIAL BY FIRE. TH E Major was one of the marry well-born I .rlu.ba..m who 44-.1 to C.1tfora- i• with . yooager .00'e portion and • small monthly •llow•nOs hod bops to task• • for tone as . vleeyrd or • wheat r.aob. The pen always looks foible in lintels. and the agent assures his victim the the £1,000 will boy • tee-aore plot, plant vines, build • desist Mag•low, sad tide the sooer over aatll the vases than bear and brute him is • harvest of good American gold. The Major was going the way of sway of W British friends. The !1,000 legacy was goes, •.d the monthly allowance of £20 (whiob, viewed from • distaste, seemed Mega). always grew painfully small •e it neared California and the debut it was sup - pond to oover. The Major's little moun- tain vineyard had been destroyed by phyl- loxera, end he was living on the uncertain promise of a number of green •boo*, called respectfully "the olive orchard." Kut the Major was oot .nheppy. When he .as not tilling ths soil he est on • little ver•sdab with his briarwood pipe between his teeth, end studied the long, narrow picturesque Naps Valley far below. It may be that the Major's failure to sue - amid in the grape bushels was not the fault of the ooaotry, but that has gesW, unpro- ttoal nature was the true obstacle to moose. The Major was, in fact, the most helpless Britisher who ever went to Caufornu to t.k• oars of biawi. The poor fellow be- came so oonvinesd of eine atasr • sheet total that he engaged •was to set as islet for himself, and, iaoideat•IIy. cook the .sale of both. Th. Major was • solitary b•ohetor thea. 1 he rode algae knew in what uapro- piaie.e moment he pinked up Pete, to hear about kb .sok • millstone of isof$oiesoy. Pate's poverty mast have bees his reoom- mmd•tlos, end the Major's poverty his ex- cessfor itemise Ida NW had about .. mach ksowledp of laying eat and oaring isr • ma's wardrobe as the Major bed of running • ninth. When the Major married Ellie Smith, • pretty 14.. Pr•ndsoo girl, Pete was pro- moted te be manager of t.4. r•aob, .nd ex- pended his germanise pleas os the pea mule. The Major's wife was "artistic." She studied sk.ebing. and did some really olever Data Her admiring husband wee son that she possessed the divine .tf•ta., .ad omwquenaly meek thee was devoted to art mid 11111• to r••nohiag. But this war nest without protest from ens isd(videaL Net that he was diet.rbed by lack of week, but poor Peas waw oftener than sea the rowans model for ) ll.'s eked stadia One day Pete posed for •' The Mas with the Hoa" His .spar was prtcalarly tried as that oesaien. tar he had takes up his teed with the honest laaestes of weeding the primitive vege4bl. garden. Though he had wadded through the book yard and ellmhed the rear fence. he had not merited es ...t- ing ins reuse mistress in the bare yard. He beim to wrestle with the weeds;,•.d pre- tended sea M sot bre. His edna'tlon, how ever, had wet Waiada • eight a Mind's pietism, er he Weald have fled down the oriental' gide in metre despair. " 8Mp. step Pet• ; right theta Dost mow as leek," esled the sweet miss time drove het le madams. "Ees'eah," Roe es11•d to her hada& "leek. Iasi k wee d•rtd ? The ilea, AI* pm. the very land. seam Eke--" " The Mae with eM Hee," sheeted the Major gl•e:dty " 111 Trot your paints EUIs. Held es. Pea.," ad Were the hes' est sass had time te ernes* be mattered assess he hued hleeesU pesky in • very se. esmdsrMys • e thde, . 58 the Nap Val. ley lving at hie bask and the Major. Ismnil- ar &rasa rkmsfm5 Is hi. este : "Mae pees -jelly geed ssb..s lith.. Medea." Alter peas had pe.•d 1.e • Medved et mere different maw el art without same, he began te %Mak .f d....tisg hie master and hada/ him be a Mee .d awful Inas. But this ssupasdese yew wee averted by the arrival el Bramp.e Bdwrarda, mother Esiishems. who had deme le eats preen- ed mashing maw the direction of his tether'. old Mand, the Major. Atter • week W bees gime up te driv- 1 g his preempt abase the valley end Wm Meths N. M the mash& seamy. the Msjer returned te N. daily tussles of prudes est olive tress mod diming ea• wensa.estga grape vies. Elle moms &seemed as the yam, met'. mems -est Mmes and des .Note epee as eeirdy sew Add hr art study, mid idwas& had the time pm more Ple.esnily as • medal Ms as se em- ef�ihe daytime hew we tN•thw same When Breapmes roes est pesieg fee • wild Nereems es a Omsk hese be w.. it - Mg wiry dam le 1*, milking. s sett es esig tensa, the skte&es et hlam& whet& she Md hem M.k g, Witham ate alt► Maybe tea the path of duty, IOW Mee,. Me guile hwahly adathiberl m. Wie- sen this she wee peter este mhegmog. sad. beteg of ibM ming. the dig see Mama ern - wham MMus hit t&ma sad the year. maw Mattis" W •erited M • stats wbee • warm-hearted. bat tete rats wallas mod- e/ • fried w1M the seems* le Mid Y • seed, Mwat'f41..eelesmMg dear bee her as pee Ise. Pete meld have hid Op the miner with right geed will. bet he WA ass teem hew l• there dye he Hawed the Ma$. ewe dog -like d.vNlss, aid only glowered whin Mite tame sat M the er. shard tae metals( with her paints •d ono. mooed is briars, apes Muesli • eeddiatt from bee over-tsdedgent behead, 8M held her bead very high aid •Yd.a.d m•rehed over the hill muse diatoms •way, where the mead herself ad preee.dsd as same.►, bat was la reality arias her is - Jared tealaga to keep than alto& The Major webbed her d seppeer with • paused expresses o. his good .•tared foo, aid thee weal depletedly late the boMs.IPeae was Sarnia hewed agale.t Ellie, maw made mother edema vow to desert the math. It was the sloety-•ad-doth time diet he had deet et, and this time he." -=i tae vow wish ea oath. The lo.r grass oo the haps kills was burst and oriep, and Millie was daubing vel - low ochre and burst ow.bsr as bee canvas with vicious, strokes. She was act sivi.g soy attention to her work, however, for an athletic' term stood bourses her aed-this laadeeape, and she was t•doleing in •may foolish day dream. To do the little wawa jostles, the was sot ie love with Bread es, but bee vanity had bees stimulated to se& weaderfal otteity by his youthful reliant - rise that etre footed he wee deeply infatua- ted nf•taated with het. She wondered If he world ever tell her that he loved her. 1f she could only have some test of his love, what • satisfaction it would to ! Over es the mountain side, • half mile away, Pete leant oo his horse and watobed • thread of Are .reeling lite • red snake through the underbrush of chaparral and manzanita. H. km. ealy too well that no barren power could stop it. ad that within • few mtnates the gentle breeze would cease • flying spark to fall apo• the loos. dry gram. sod pelt 1 -ate orweli!, wake would heroine • gnat swirling, gall"pin( mass of Home and smoke, .ad would posh over the very place when Elite sat sulking and dreaming. Pete but firmly determine to leave the ranch. He had washed his hands of these people. He would not --bat the grass was on fin, •ad pate made • d.& for the hones, y.IIla( .t the top of his voles for the Major. The volume of smoke was rising high when Elle roes to bee feet had miffed the air. Refers she could gather .p her pint. • this rim of firs nn ales, the top of the little bill behind bee. The birds and in mom rose from tits monad with a whirr and scattered down the hillside. Ellis shooed quickly backward •ad saw the fire Bok., up the grass es it bore dews upon her, .rd the smoke rolling heavenward is dense, sooty .loads. She did sot lase her pres- ence of mind, bat remembered • small ploughed field • short Masses away, when the tluses wield sot r•a& Mr. end ran n imbly down the hill, with bar flattering skits gathering cookie ban and smoker wood as she sped. Wass the was fairly es the ploughed posed tied goads( ter breath. she saw the young Yeglisbm•a te.riag along the bill at • frantic rate. Thrw(h aha smoke Mlok' e d pale and frirbessed. Ellie felt • thrill of settataetiea ; then was the lesgsd-for proof of his love, he thosgkt she was ta danger end had Dons to her rearms. A deep blush mounted es bar cheeks. and bar Mart best te s (easel- t. Bat be did nee seem re see her. It was, evident eo hes that he .as sensed with fear •sd weeld plunge into the fire in search of her. Merciful God ! he would be burst. " 1<romptem ?' she '.ease ; "dear Bethpage, I •m Imre. bah t" The bre was very sisal, .ad she had to throw herself fiat apes the premed to mom being barred. She gam ems mere despair- i.g ory es she felt the hes breath seereh her titbits, : " Rremptes ! Bemoan ! 8rempte. !" A great wave of smoke sad lams steams rated the edges et the plashed greedsmd for a Whet* mealtime weld be hes ee heard. PbrtasnWy tot Reit, the dry mese beret like Bader, gad Ne Maass were sere rear• lag towards the valley. Wb.. RIM, &eked gal Mebemed, 1115 ed bee head.14s saw **SW beg, seam«. ly-eed beet of her husking bsurdleg ever the Mashes& earth Mari law. Hie desk RUSSIAN SOLDIERS. QUALITIES ANO POIMIRILITIY As MIN OF AN £Mutase. CRITIC. me Was ne rp*t•e0 es lend the ear se Amer Miteeate - tl'W, reed Owes arm 4.s sees w Ase..tery wear, With a permit from the Minister o1 War (writes the &pedal correspondent of the London Chronic/a from Mow - cow), 1 have just visited 18. big camp he Kbodtaakole Pole, to the west of the 8t. Petersburg road, and .early facing Petroveky palma Unfortunate- ly, my time was short, and 1 taasot pretend to describe completely a carp which "lbs streaming many a rood." and Indeed, many • Italie. Looking at It from the dreary sandy plain from which the theatre. that utrrluokwl the tragedy of Saturda had disappeared in a night. as thous they were palaces In the "Arab Night;" no me would beliae aha the camp would be such an .ttractl place, and close same W i" is pre- vented for the general public by wide- ly scattered vedaU.s and by well - planted sentries. But the and plain. which but three weeks ago I had to describe as a sticky swamp. is on its farthest side planted wit acacias and other trees, thruugh which lead shady walks, and in which are deftly hidden the headquarter offices. Thee. are Permanent. though wooden. buildings, arid in every one of them work was going on -work a routine, but none the Was assiduously pursued. babied them their leases next Moe and go la as a sort a mounted ire - testa, and the old 'idea d drowses To tido end the cavalry are trained to the sada, and set tae semis.. and hey Mil far more often Osht oo foot than oa horiehmst. But I aanout tied that, in spite of the thea* of the country, they have yet bees provided with proper range& These a which I have heard do not mooed IM meters. or wader AN yard., and shouting ;u that dist/thee will be of very little use in Cilium war. seeing the tremendous- ly Increased power of artillery. As regards the latter arra, I am eat- able to say mlfcb In praise either of the force I have seen se • .bots of its mobility. Of course, it Is a high standard by which W try any artillery to rMrd them from the point of view of either Woolwich or Aldershot. Hut there must be a standard and, with- out Including the artillery of the guard. which Is better, It must be frankly said the Russian guts are very poorly horsed, poorly ridded and y decidedly dencttnt In mobility, for lea ve The furniture 1s M the roughest, an Yet in every apartment there the sacred picture without witch Rusalan house would not be rttoognls able -a perpetual reminder of a Altm hat is to Doe. I was rather .0 prised to land common soldiers an corporals engaged In clerical wo uoh as cvpying and minuting, nevi regard to the backward state of cation In Russia, but 1 found the array is the great educator of the men f nd as service is oompulsury for three ears, though not every man called chosen. since in peace time the intents are always vastly in e the numbers prepared for the bud ts, the system of teaching a ring hes svice, at least the pts of reading and writing. .,spread by degrees through the corn unity a knowledge of two of th here R'., as the old saying used 0. e Besides, every Russian peltas. news how to count, and count close- . at least his money and his goodgood*.be they grain, or wood, or bestial Pro- ver And If a soldier shows anything more ca than the average pacity, be ncouraaed to go mi. with a view t romottonwhich 1s only given to men ho show, a certain amount of Intel- genCe. ta Here, among falr sampkei of e m Iy generally, I found valet is tradition of the guard& that at th xplratlon a there three or rather nd a half years' services. the are almost lnvmrtiiy indisposed to their villages, which„ K ted at so great distances, must meta e their return very dull an en to such an affectionate lseopM the Muscovites have the name ng. However, there la no doubt very large proportion of every eat always begs pitifully for leave Lay on feeling with the old British soldier In e mutiny. who said: "Thegfinent Is my father. and my moth y sister, my brother, and an loud relations." It 1s useless to pretend that t Loops a the Itne or the artillery, be cavalry, are equal 1. the gteenl are picked men, coming frog al rte of the empire, and having not ng in common, but their bight and hest measurement and their attach th nt to their otdeses. 1• e Iane men ten come from the same piece, haves n playfellows together in childhood, od may be men walking abort the mu hand to hand, lust as Or'ieetals o all the world seer, who has. known 'l each other well.iters 14 Indeed, a great difference even in the same bat - ions, as great a different)• as wero In the tops at Aldershot, when ey have not had time to feel the Ming up a the frame that ensues mote= pon the new stem of cooking. And the Russian soldiers are noth- g like so well fed as ours which I not hesitate to describe as now th best provided army in e world. troops of the Cur get about a rthing a day pLy; otherwise they ve everything provided for them. It not abundant, In our seas of the ord. The bread is brown, or rather act, with a large proportion Of rye, thout whits the man of mujlk orlg'I8 mid not care for It as he likes K a fte sour. His allowance of meat Is bout half ours, and that not of the at quality as we judge. and what re 1s comes to hint practically al - e ye In the form of soup, with vege- bles In it. and with more or less of e meat In .soh portion, a, far as It n bg e made to o.se However. If he dono; get much Masticate, he at any rate gets all ere is of good In It, bone* and fat then, especially fat. The days ars, ung pare when the mujlt of the towns CI an opportunity of swarming to lampposts to drink the whale nr oil with which the Streets :used be lighted. and that he did this I ve been assured by many old re*1- ts, native and foreign. but new streets are lighted, where not with tric lamps, then with flake oil and t is a trifle too strong even for the memoir of a #ujik. Hut he Mill ee his fat and the soup he con - mei fairly swims In grease. It not be palatable roup to him With this and he black bread tbrtvea on two meals a day, and cam go and do a long day's work threat wattles for a meal at all. in word M is a gross feeder and a motets. • le alb fairly quick at picking auk and even shows intellleedoe Ma extensfou movements when he heel put trough the mrd tried, ef barter[ parade He b mart, . Nmanual with the manl exer0Ma, and he now to be hatter traded in sheet- - I have no eheitatias Is saying mnem Milks sent will he a horthan Meier at an has seer betas bars, and telt oat M the t•eaitre. tat h ahs earr. le taw seem* te thews web knew Dmmdma to -fief OOZY thea nrf Ilses d brass a r a r4. ng ed 1- 5. 1a con - to 1. 0 a two meta e Par and Moor a reih- t0 th t • a 3 t 0 Be *tie m ru k ly d p w 1! a c a re a 01 eV as be4 m s rv- m b t t who p• c me of bee a st 4 tal see th bu u In do .he The to ha is 41 .1 w, tr! b.- the w to tis a to lh lose ha the .sal to ba den the elec the ea irk sa worts n else he be wet • hard g 54 r his tlesl Ise m Ong thatee ts 4. may es It tremors were sleeted with sese.sad be bad a wet Masks* about ids should've. He meld mea speak, bas smith* Nell 1m his arms. ed bast tele salad rata Behind them was heard the vies of Brspeem R7w..ds. " Hells there, !MM." M galled, "I bed a very wow w co mk .t If. My bammook ad books are burned M tri nisr by thea By Jove, old Mew, yes ase hunted yourself. e gad yes Your wife ore este ease¢ I Mew she meld take ear• et hre.L." Bet FIli. buried her bead is the wet blanks and barn iste Mee of shame • id eestrttles. '• W&, well,' rasped Pets, who bad stumbled op the hill with • boodle of we seek& " i never we se *gutty reared la my les- Theighe you'd be berried ren. Mime RIM. M. es' the M.jer wap have • One thus svt week .kasha,.' Tee PMe had r.ss.ideed Mr situsy..d- shN vow. ldes& le was ally • week Wes .hes he war dpeselayt/ if then wee eves • happier ample Nei the Major and W RUM. And PM lgamed ae be tbsmr8 .t the Ip ole pea Olreapts. 11. wards played es the deg d the ilea Baum Dray, mrae/mg xl 4s, Neese nes a Ntnisseet for rlemeaes, ▪ y nbtit-givetea. Tare amiable, that remove the add poises from the bleed -eke mama /an thatwill year and bellethe Mw .. et reheat `. ` Thee "esgaM .ere is $Ws,'s reedy that °blahs the ben wlm�m be 5404•,4 Mime V. d an J L. er, rasp be or 1 b - their horses are not as good .15 tven those of the Turks, or to go a step Lover, of the Beiglans. The guns are no: kept clean In the sense that an 11,ngllsb critic expects, but there le very good mete -la' las the Russian artillery, and one who ought to know tolls me It makes very fair flew prac- tice Most of the cavalry, too. 1s under- horsed. nderhorsed. The beasts are not so over- weighted as our, but they are too much on the Una of the Cossack pony. They will endure and do well where au English or an trash horse would starve. but tey can never leave the pace or the weight that tells. How- ever. since we are to look on all the cavalry as In the light of mounted in- fantry, save some regiments of the guards, there is no doubt the horses are good enough to take the men from point to point, and to be very patient when they .et there, which Is the more :surprising when we consider they are nearly all entire•. The housing, if I may use the ex- pression, of the troops in the oarnp seems to me very good. A wall of turf le built up about _ feet high and some 13 feet square. When this is nicely finished a square tent 1. et over It a lighter material than aur canvas, but still watertight. and If a channel b cut for drainages as ay from the door no rain can get inside, and, at least. the floor a the tett :s dry. The men have changes of clothlr.g, and now they have begun to live In the camp, and go through their drill In white summer uniforms, which at present have a very clean appearance. How long It will last I cannot tell, but judging by the uniforms that have done duty through the winter there l not much to be hoped for 111 this re- • Pect The officers are almost uniformly kind to the men, whom they treat as a lot of children; but only a small n umber of them study their trade, and so they all have a passion for de- corations which they should hardly be able to obtain except by distill- !Wishing istlo-!Wishing themselves In their buslnese. The supply of decorations opens too wide a geld of speculation A Wily %tatter. A story is told of a meek -looking stranger with a distinctly ministerial air, who applied for permission to look over a large rubber factory, says the Chicago News. He knew nothing at all about the rubber business, he said, and atter a little hesitation, he was ad- mitted. The superintendent showed him about In perms, and the man's queue [tons and comment* seemed l0 come from the densest Ignorance. Finally when the grinding room was reached, be lingered a little and asked is a hesitating way . "Couldn't I have a specimen a that curious' stuff for may e.t.inet?' Certainly." replied the superinten- dent, although It was a °unwound the secret of which was worth thousands of dollar. -"certainly. Cut off as much as you wish." With eager step the visitor ap- proached the roll of gum, took out his knife wet the blade In his mouth, and-" "Stop right where you are!" said the superintendent, laying a heavy hand upon the stranger. "You are a fraud and a thief. You didn't learn In a pulpit that a dry knife won't cut rub- ber." So saying, to the door, and the secret was still sate. be showed the imposter Lady Renee's Peculiar Will. Lady Burton, who recently died 1■ England, left a will which was a curi- ous document She directed that her heart should be pleroed with a needle In the hands of a physician, atter which the body was to tee embalmed. It w111 rest In • tent beside her hus- band. u♦band, unless • revolution moors. wbkth might result in the desece&tton of the dead, in which event the two bodies are to he placed in a vault d- reads purchased. 7fl. tittle Clef mate Irma. JamesGardner, a worker ht the hos Woes at Bessemer, Mich„ has a t8res- yearotd daughter who has acquired a taste for iron ore, which she sats with acridity. When kept from the mines she scrapes her father's shoes and eats tae scrapings with relish. Doctors do not understand the oast Despite her strange diet, the child ls healthy and bright A Rare Deer. Th. erre geography prtnshd M two rte n try was complied by Jededsh Mow, and published M i711, for the res of schools. Tlie ettenspte et maps to the publication were txte seely wade. and gate a very Imported lams of the ewtllres of the Ghm.ta4es these were sup- posed to reprises*. It Is lead that oar/ tweatr-iva or thirty copies °g tam wort are sera is existence. meat*• tied was saw& Bees.t dmes..rles ed para of Boat. ere "Md." amens acme atypehta papyri aseueseate, leads Peaf. Ka - halts te remark that if the attire hook emu be found It would he sees that 1s editing the work the Alaasirieas est set maltase oss.olsth of re G1' ist'a1 teat Pmesear..r meso' *0.4 thick I hear )seer ___ Gina - Ing. Oben I tura Ire rhea t 11a -las Mme It GRt-001111 ONO& NOT A SICK DAY For Over Thirty Years! NW= W Wfi1MO AYER'S PILLS "Ayer's Oasha Pills foe over thirty yeas have kept sae to good health, )aver having hd . Mk day la all that Nam. Deus I was Meaty I re/igen &moss eartlaualty--es a result a ow. _Yp toe -!mels dyspep &, hedm•kea. erausagla, of bolls sad other eruptive dlemem. Whoa I booms gesvhoed that nine -tenths of my troubles were caused by constipation, I began the was a Aytsr's Pile, with the most sanitise - tory results, never having a single attack this did not readily yield to this remedy. My wife, who had been an invalid for years, also began to tea Ayer's Pills, and bar health was quickly motored. With my children I bad no. flood that nearly all their ailments were preceded by constipation, and I soon had the ple.sare of knowing that with children as with parents, Ayer's Palle. it taken in season, avert all dagger of sickness." -H. Wsrrsrsix, Byron. ID, AYER'S PILLS MIglheet Honors at Worlds Pair. Apes Herisperille •tree it $- 4 FIVE Hu'r1Rw Iltg.l_tR; well be $500 gat ens., the., 11 b table m'titutton ssemistusearaosztefirst named by the dna)or of any city in Canada if any ingredient is found in the new medicine, ee•tooxEhpi that is injurious to the system Read what it does : L Heade. curing ebroule rheumath® ad blood dioceses it her a wonderful effect apse fever and malaria it taken in tints, and w. ehailesge the productioe of it .1.44ewof tee tots, of tee kidneys Kootenay will not ours. 2. It is • spesedW tonic and amiss you eat and sleep It cares indigestion, 1 It is • mlcrobs killer and when used OW the *Wets following the wee of morphia ppeo►► par•�oer removes every trace of the poles. from the sy.aem- as also mercurial deposits aid the result* of nicotine from the operetta habit t Mr. Chas. McCracken. 184 Adetall& germ. Wes, former night clerk at the Pales. Ho,'., Toronto, my. that M was greet8 troubled with eroptbn■ on hies la bet ala skin was literally covered with lad blotches- which wee attributed to cigarette .montes. Ordinary medicine did no. One bottle of Kootenay lett his akin entirely tree from every troves of them Wt7ut the & fi .boon*S Mcoicnes Co., Hamilton. for pea. *,het o1 Martliag aura. WNOLESILL ARMSTRONG EROS. *00. Pump & Fanning 1111 Wok?! C30D�RZC]t3, ONT. PEM. soars nsarr A large took et very Melee Pumps, lease feel .r.i bee sMeeted Muskoka gmrered MOM with harts oat ort. These Pumps are seasufotard la • .anter of styles to limit everybody ad every Very saw warden pomp. for deep mesa Irescappod slimed tap peas he Whoa - yards. hoose puma oto. PUMPS sew at POWs fer tag rubbles: oasis& watering prdaas. modesUses. n mite.Med 5slim gives to mewls. water tam mil ��. Yes pumps. 1fee. ad W.assa e•VWa .LY weal er seems•P� WNW salil4 tplta, ,, s, r WO*Laws Pae. .as., rte, FFsoma magas wa N tear. MIpljtINdig scampi*. a.:•L... Ida. Wer ♦11 muelt warrents/. M• *N.e p emgtly ..d ame[1111y •weeds/ to. ARMSTRONG BROS & Co Ask your Druggist fe„wit - tray & Leath in's tea► await • df►kirhr mew, t rie.h T PerWeNdliefeakt. Toilet The Signa awe Mee ealish..amal siesaelsa ,. tee Jeb alioare wan .awl MssWwiir u simmer 44 . mer et wwe• p.al d this ..sissy► he it mei d' surd is isek efts we est els re Mat os, • piens me wilt the sppemal et ear moose ?lots %c.o.d.s This nestugqltatmime is kept in the W = of .:Nies gate as ley« 1�til150. iktadts ars not so generally used, trey an important place in oommercb correspondence. Bee what we've got under the above herds. Letter hews'. In this line we have • MT lege stoop 01 fine writing papas mit able for every clam of beams, represented in this locality, sed. priming laid and wove ) quadrille and other or unruied, as may be required, VrAt .Matin 11 the " pay-as-you-go ■ plan was the order of the day the demand for account paper would not be so great ; bat there are some moo wbo get so many dormers that they wonder if the stock will ever ran mt. We don't intend it to, and at present our stock is nom plate in this line with four gazes, (food paper and neat ruling. 8<attmer\<s Both single and double dollars and cents columns. They come cheaper than bill heeds, and .re the proper thing to send atter • delinquent once a month. They are sure to fetch him 'round- sometimu ILMet\O`se s Now, it would be hard to get along without enand to keep up with the demand for them we keep • large stock or hand. We have now about • hundred thousand in stock, and the prices will range from 75c. to $2.00 per M. We handle coin meed• and legal sines exclusively C °mr1Mter ttt.a..P r�at�r`g has already been partially ennui seated in some of the heeds above. There is, however, a vast anima of work under this head that to enumerate would more than take up the entire space oocupied by this adv't, but we do it all at Tax Sweat. T r�r�<a<�ons to an "At Hoene" or • wedding require 000aiderable taste in sties tion sometimes, but we make it an may matter by keeping in stock the very latest and best samples to be bad. Call and es 4 cograms of entertainments and meeting promptly turned oat, from the plain but neat to theost degas. with oord and pencil au Jr C�ratk .0.rs We aim to excel in all the differ sato kinkindsofl work we turn oat, bat s in this, and keep ..tooo fork plain ansad l requirements.fancy papers eardIs awl 7:leets This bead °overt a large rasp of work, from a bawd or milk ticket to a swat calling Gard, fres an or- dinary sdlnielion ticket to • tasty business card or a handsomely printed membership ticket. ▪ 01<frs Our facilities for turning Oat aril 011111aal work ars evidenced by the feet that the great balk of le !• demo by .a This line also d .lea. Dod►gtrs which oar tires fast -remiss jet presses are able to tarn amt be amrpriiigly abort thaw Bait' Ass belong to the poster denerlemest ales, and we make as specialty .1 them -promptness bang alar alta 1a flrjls respect. A nodes art eels will spplee d Tia eetutes flee d sharp wren bills ler some ere gest bore. #k 'Claris of W ort he Ars typegrapidealpeialieg Mas lre boas in Sae esteblieleseeet lar asrAlNfatas tad erehde wester sad Oisv '%Ness *Ws fee betas *f ltti reasoIhralds. We .sued tier Irsnks jar ped by ors, tad geheie a ewstieeesse 1 Ins atxla T % L Int d�0►'i., ammo% ase. M� ]KI( bell nth W Yee .1 a.a ..e, r ►awl. E RN 1181 ■set. reset C better. . '4gIn 710. Jo . halts loan. tudlce, Streets. lief oFTUS L bh48 to lima at M posh* Dena L? N. LI ,mss.. Nath D 0. HAI sae.cAt l £... est rata !1 ARi4Oil seta. e a V Barroom modest&. hell Medley Halos 1 G. W Ito., w . sdvl ism la se ewela U MON WE Private o tows. I Gotha PRIVATE drone o (, rue seJarity t vriag te J. A. , el," Bundle/1a GICE V.SZAIteur..a 6pfottyt, MONEY 'Iti S&AOrR.Momoe rich. J. T. NAI rats. O�fe. e ( edea. �MAMKRON M°NIT TI animasof 1 at lowest ratsa •(JARROW t l R. ILADOLI s Limas. at tee say tad ddsr hoele s tee Mamma f ODIIltIOH MOW ear. eel nk Opus fes l M 1 ABOUT 1000 saw ling Y: MaM1ilMta d passes hes mM Liuessises to ar~., lure; J. H. OoygoRH salmi& Mosel * 4. THOMAS OU sad bourse Asset Lathes sad aad % re Diable* leaded le la erns N J0HN 1NO] eaI."lretetse seal sesnesererms 7.4=e winmoi t OowsrAt *Arc E. c 8T]QI.s *tonic AMONAth A M. CAS, SOC. f One► -ler. Hail MOUT, The largest meme et the 1 The sass* IC wears. widish tI 'm•M► n.`ii/illra mesa t 1b11.4 rel .0458 d ti •test Mar his Sued belere he res asset The resmir tl 15 his Sin* bads sag , The teeth ef hit he vosembilgel 411. see =rpm yd. 11e.s111aa