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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1896-10-29, Page 6THE BT(:N :1 T, : ^•t )1FR VCR` ONT.• THURSDAY OCT. 29, 1896. Jet CANCER COMM - AID A - LIFE SAVED By the Persistent Use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla ." I was troubled for years with a sore ou my knee, which several physicians, who treated me, called a cancer, assuring me that nothing ea+dd be done to save m7 life. As $ last resort, 1 was induced to try Ares Sarsaparilla, and, after tick- Ing a number of bottles, the son began to disappear and my general health improve. I persisted in this treatment, mad the Sore wail en- tirely healed. Since then, 1 use Ayer's Sarsaparilla oreasionally as a tonic and blood -purifier. and, in- deed, it seems ey tr ugh 1 could not keep house without iter'—Mrs. S. A. FIILI)s, Bloomfield, Ia. AYER'S The Only Worid's Fit Sarsaparilla. Ayer'* P111. f4seulatls the Liver - ('(JM \1 ENTS. Ise Weer ■rate,+, It you intend going deer shooting remem- ber the recent cbeogee governing that .port. The season remains es heretofore, being limited to the first Otero days of November. The hunter must now have a i:osaee, which costs 12 : such license must imetatn a minute description of the holder, and asvoae who wishes nap approach the hunter to the woad. and demand to see his hems,. [leer oanuot be killed in the water or Immediately after triol*, out of it. Kotula la Femoral.. Toronto Saturday Night • The a ember. of St. Luke a church. Toronto, have organ - mod • branch of the Church of England Faori.l Society, and it is understood that other branches will be organized, end that perhaps a x:lenw similar in principle will be started is the Presbyterian and .11etbodut bodies. Then should be oo perhaps •bout it, for the idea is so good that one would think the mere suggestion of it ould eusrantee its adoption t s lust guttae bit surprteiag that it should have been left to the Church et England to take the native In • movement in this city for ob.ap funerals, for it is the practice of followers of other deoomtoatieo to moues tbs Aoglmets. of a leaning towards pomp and ceremony. 1>oe might more reasonably have expected this movement to begin with the democratic Methodist church, and car Minty we hove a right to expect the Meth- odist sod I'resbyterla0 churches to Dow take up the reform. The purpose of the burial society is to mate a funeral • simple and sacred ceremony, and not an ostentati- ous display of extensive trapping.. When • member of the society dies, • committee tikes chars, procures • moderate hearer, a ample oolfin, and the satin expanse cannot emend 16.5 is any oam,►nd the average fust- iest oats much lees. No string el albs are hind to drive people to the cemetery. These who wish to attend will go direst to the March, where the service will be erltdasted sad will mot be expected to Mend ins the reside.oe of the dummied or let lee grave- side, This thiscif adopted set ryttherm sad ear - pried eat, would work • mighty rehrs,. At mast, wbsa.ve, death points kis Hager* he set ally te.,,s a violin. but he imposes • tax such as 0o other tyrant could levy is them day.. What • parson dies the head of hie (easily, i0 his bear of era!, al)s in am ud.rtak.r, who I.r'•otieslly hes a free Mad to provide what be ihishs fit, and pb•rse what be 'Molts flit Whatever the owe, 10.7 be, This is. 1. seers. the pap likw la the avenge use. A father wtl haggle ever the pries of •ant ha shad. eel It1 �, • ulna for his .wwh.re for • hearse that Mfl'. osis los this the one offered. If geiesnare bruels d at all, Use votes of the undertaker vibrates with so deep a feeling, that a brief -Waken parent teas Chet it world he seers g. to oe.pl•f•. There must be swab aid .eek a ruffle. es mash .tap., se say pairs et el.'.., es sway carriage. fey Le pill-b.arwn .tad friends, ad se many far fri..4. Dub duke M hllew .1.,. Purple semi be Mash --eat) tb idea le se- eseraged by Cha I.t.,aetd—seat it h positively hideout to have a found wit/t- eat • now of hired eSrt'iag5r he fellow after She beams --o awry .a seniums had whew they lied • fererwl. If a.s..iN1s•e are fumed sad 0 well -ea -de pupas leis tet. w feeble. will ..es .haws hem lavish di. - play t. oven .imspileisy, .ad snag Reed will be the ..teems. Maker theta,.% of worse. miler In .tlenc., rather thus NH their Inschlm to anyone. To leech Iodise Woman's hale is a per fel boon. it eerie aD womb monthl lariblea. abolishes tits agosi of and birth, nabs.w..k wafts sheet and raiders lies weed, THE IDLPIEE8 RIM TNM UTTLE CUL -O -8AG WILL SOON PA88 OUT OF EXISTENCE. Tke L.M .r II.walttg street -as M4Mrrte L..altty la L.ad.a te 11e Wiped Oat u Mate 511011111 to New Sia/Wage Grew Mea Wt. Mai. L Iv.d There. )'or many years Downing street hos been the real heart of the vast British JEmnpire, but soon this little cul -de -sae will past out of existence, and Its name become but a measery. Here the Hill - tall War and Foreign OIRces have had their home. and here, during the put buodred years. Many of the groat statesmen who have played a throat part in their country's history have lived. Downing street is one of those localities that require no further ad- dress to Identify It. A letter from any part of the civlflsad world. It Is said, merely addressed to "Downing street," would be safely delivered In that little "impasse" in Whltebelf. Now all the available land which abuts on this Street ie m eked down by Her Ma- jesty's Office of Works as a suitable site for one of the new (loverument orgies ao urgently needed, and the street, es ouch, will cease to exist. Thire is hardly another street in the world with so illustrious a roil of names as beer been intimately asso- ciated with Cuwning street, even before the days when the Treasury and For- eign (anise acre located there, and the name or thf street came to be used for the AdiwintesraUun itself. In the t::.ya of Lantra If., Lee, Lord Lichfield, Mas- ter of the Horse to the King, had nere his town Mention. On the flight of the King lord Lichfield elected to follow hint Into *Mlle, and his property was fcrfetted U• .he Crown. His houa.! fn Downing street was given for lite to Laron Hothmar, the Hanoverian Min- ister, by Get.r.ie I. On his death It it as ,trervd to Sir Robert Walpole, wao, however, accepted It only as the °M- etal residtbce of the First Lord of the Treasury, and obtained It for that end In perpetuity, He moved Into it Sept. :2, 1735. Horace Walpole, Writing to Mann in :42, has a pleasant reference to It: "1 am writing to you in one of the charm - ng rooms toward the park. it 1a a de- aghtfixi evening. and I am willing to njoy this sweet corner while I may, or we aro soon to Quit it." 1.ady Wal- pole died here in 1738. Lord North WWII he subs••gttent resident, and Pitt, "the eaten -born minister," made it his onatant residence and became so at - ached to It that he was never so happy say- from it Indeed, it is recorded hat during his four years' residence Walmer Castle, the anticipation of `turning to ')owning street was his hlef consolation. The great Lord atham. after his fatal swoon In the ouse of Lords, was carried to a room ere. The Earl Grey also made Down - g street his town residence, and in ✓ own times Lord Beaconsfield and r. Gladstone both took up their rest - nee there. On the other hand, Lord elbourne and Sir Robert Peel merely copied it as a place of business. The street has other memories, too. nollett came to live there in 1744, In e house previously occupied by James uglas. the celebrated surgeon. Bel- ni, the African traveler, lived there 1*2e. Luring the present century e other houses in the street were w- ired by the government for official rposes. It was in Lord Hawke.- ry's office that the preliminaries of ace were signed on October 2, 1101, d there, a month later, General uriuon. aide-de-camp of Napoleon, ,ught the ratification. At No. 14. en used as the Colonial Office, Net - n and Wellington met for the only e In their lives. It is odd that the eat admiral, struck by the converse - n of the Duke, asked one of the com- ny who he was. 1 1 h a in r c Ch H th In ou hf de M oe St th Do w to th qu Du hu Pe an La bra th 0rim Rr do Da lmleaeea' Dwet.y Books, "'Glad's Hill' was a merry house," writes Stephen Fiske, fondly recalling incidents of his visits to Charles Dick- ens, In an article in The Ladies' Horne Journal, telling of the personal side of the novelist. "Dickens was a well- spring of mirth, and his humor affect- ed the whole party. Often, when I came down In London, he would shout with laughter ..ver the tun we always had had and were going to have. When everything else failed the library was an unending amusement. The room was lined with hooka from floor to ceiling, even the backs' of the doors being b.arkcan«.; but, the books on the tivore and along the floor were bogus. Dummy Lacks h,:a been lettered with titles and pasted on the glans• and tkft titles had been ,elected by such wits as Diek••np. Yates. th• (''railing brothers, Alb, rt Knoll .rad iii tk Lemon of 1'un. h, We tired li, alt on the floor 10 s(udy this io... k library and roll over hath .1••libht a e•.me <•lever satire. I remember 'The Virtu.',. .•f tour Ances- tor.,' a v.•hime .., thin that the title had to iv. i.rint.-4 lengthwise, 'Five atinut••r In in.li,.• by a British 'Tour - lot. In two volumes as large as an un abridge.' dl'-lo'nary •hgg.. on Recon,' to match 't'..k - ..n Littleton'; 'Statue* Erected to the Luke of tt'eliu,gttn; Aftreat portly v..lunies, and there were' dozen, of other quips and cranks A catalogue of these books Should have been pr.serywt, hut not...4y th. tight of writing it out, nobody realised that Dickens would ever die." I.r `.b, -t when. .. At the rummenrestant of the French revolution ah.• democrat lc "prntetaIre .." M t'a`i. were called In derision by the court party sans-culotte,, "w thou: brrochr*.'• and the term .noon I.w-• ate the dt.tineilve appellation of a it •red Pa'rt.,t particularly as their contempt Take it Thr so agar tot the rieh was often shown by n.gleet of at•ps•el and the rul.l.•stion of Coughs sad Colds Tomah manners. This la the English Co Version The !mark dennitlon of the words, hawsvy. Is that the .•mental u- tak w., ... called bermes* they gave up kne, hr.ec4ea, and took to wearing trousers CleISP AND CASUAL No mime hes .0Mred Me /Advent 54 tit Ceemnee, a Mei.it MMM+,/ ter 1.400 L7 years All the letters .f the *Meat ei are sea. weed fa tee tdiewisg : ' A quick brows fox ,cines ever J. leap' deg." Tee Leeman mono ..wan *1 estate railway Issues through ..era thaw half of Ia. illy. Larva ossattes of pagl.ad and Wales. Elrod. my teat is Its dwpeal porta t►. uo.aa's swage ate so deem that a Dukes tree. led world sever nut* the bsetom. A. far se milestones w delasasi.e, the temperature of armlets N believed to he two disused tames Serest thee that of red hot tree. A New Y.rk wras.a, who ha. a tnereel lee -Iv Weenies memory. ha..•14 her hoed fir $25 to a medial nine•,, ee be etaanbad by she as eels it., bar death. if. is us the system. of %%'Pitt to 1602, and ih'rnao,1837, there wire 201 .yet.s's of ahorib •rad InNiithed, .ad aeon that dig. there Lave been 281, leakiest a total of 462. Prem Jose 1791, to NevemMr 11313, the Frisch t'evernmeot enrolled 4.5515.000 sten, . Duly tore fourth. of whom died in heti be of wonade, or •.f diseases ooatraotei is tee field. A soiinert reonmmeada that every WS ho•t carried by ships should he provided was* a bottle of oitrio .old, whisk precipitant* nbloride .4 sodium and o.e►erts sea-wMif into a palatmble desk. erudite labored 010.1.n pears oo hie "I'n000rdence to the Ilible, and immediate - y after its poi bastion wee rest to ao 'Orn. H. toyer entirely reoovervd'from the meats/ dismay iaduoed by this gig• ilio es- dertak ing. Lighted cigarettes were distributed the other day among a lot of moskeye at the Zoo in Parte by lame mieebeviow arohfaa The animals puffed .way at the weed with evident enjoyment uatil the advest of the keeper, who put • stop to it. Editor J L. Montgomery, of Marshall, all Democrat, mutes that for nosey year* he .ufa.ed untold gory from Dyspepsia - At last he began to take Ayer's iiarmparills and by the time he used six bottles, he Wal as well se ever. Cares others, will curt you, When thorough in action, Ayer's Pills •treogthen rather than stimulate the ex 'tetory organ'. Leading physicians meets trend th. m because they are free from calo- mel or other injurious drugs, being mei- posed entirely of the beet vegetable aperi- ents. A man arrested in Loudon 0o a charge of attempting to commit .uloids mid he bad 00 sateotio0 of killing himself, but had had • drearn in which he thought he wits native his threat, tied woke up to 6ed that he wadi really b.ekisg his sock with a curving keit.. A depntatioi of caterers of 60, who re- pelled the Facies raid, waited upon Mr. Iagrier, end waken for reoo.ratioo of their patriotic servioee m the shape of • medal and a land ergot Mr Laurier said be would let the matter before his ool- Ireguee. Iestrume.ts for self torture, including • spike, anklet, • rough homebarr belt, diad • " barbed heart," are being sold st a *hep in London, Fag. The des'er roto that fox every order he receives from a Roman Cale nlie he hes three from 'advanced- members of the Church of England. An ordinary map we say everything that any 0oo•sio0 calls for wieb s vocabulary of 1 000 words. Of these he only uses 400 .r 500, using the remainder when an idea oat of the usual line of thought meters to him. Most of u., being ordinary men, seldom draw upon tf a eurplis 500 words, Probably 0 is not generally knots time the wife of the Lord reset Justice has the right of driring through the park gate* of Si. Jame.'s Palace jot se if .ere ware owe of the key./ Family. She need to hese as right, moreover, of •Ir ring do'-, C'o.etft0 tion Hill when it was closed to the public. The town s0 F:nglaad beet provided with plates of worship is the •noie.t nae of Rochdale. where there are 145 *burettes and ohspelr. Fifty belong to the Caaroh of Kee - mad and pipets -Ave to the Ansooeformieta. The Church of Eaglaad Ieoommndates 24,- 449, and the Norpos.t.riist. 61,860 penes, is sitting.. LTI TOT ?Bata LADA" CEYLON TEA it t. the Most Uelcteas of all Teas. NLM MILT IN LEAD P•-K$Ta Se STURDY BROe, EPPS'S COCOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the foliewfaR 1ased egv. Merits Dalloacy at Ivor, Superiority in Qaaaylitty�,�,� tilt tottltl and semen* Dy . tt ion Nutritive Qualities Unrivalled Is Q.arteruread Time sad P.okets .sly.. aJAMS larva ilsoziliikttlsaM. / e FOR TWEN i Y -SIX YEARS DUNN&B�a�cnu POWDER 1HLE�pCHEITfPoENU V.--se.d.e' t•• Only t twrrsm. 1111 1.00.00(1. acrn Ws to n. 'lint authority. dos n fro n14 ago. sal Men suceamh to snot, tt,Ite to mea- .•a roe 4, atr+pl•xy. isms to writ,. t tt.0s to tleSRmptinw, 41.1114 er to art. t r. -ver. 1154.0 to whonptl,g Ile neigh, fit .a to typhoid and tip= s to hpiirsatleThe e averages vary •er .t •.. t.. kireallty. het Mesaae wire • ' e• A pretty aorerta4e ea r'e- eds *4 • •„h.t,on .4 tis ghee all a i names„—t , hat Erse POW ray's Spruce Gum t�_ Syrup TUN tiro IIITANDalltD MOM NONCOM* Oat" MOM tial eta Alhpir slaw __ is mopes sat ems foes ':pim.l.�rt''= emearishess �rWwan a * Oa . r i harems •.00rn...fa j3ast tion, Wash maks clothes sweet, clean, white, with the least labor. The Bicycle Season of 1896. •re you I. 1t 1 1f you are $SI, yep meths ttot�ebe, terfee this .easIaiming to bt: eerlcb then any for hie-reamis censors. • y of It. sends Rigg Academy - for the tralalag of W heelese. and W heelwomes bre been established la Oe4erlcb. and the stancew that atten- ded f[ M.e year warrant. rale 1n cent Iambi the work. Perfect sail` fact/oe Terms reerooable. A full line of first claw Bloyeles oe hire. everythieg 1. the Repair Line kept on handsod none but skilled bents employed. J. YULE, R° Bicycle Livery R f•Rmmoa M PLANING MILL. HTTULISsus Isis Bllchaiiaiis mostrirsortramem BASH, DOOR and BLIND Dealers to all lards rt LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES And batidtee i.atertal et every dessrtpYes School Furniture a Specialty. Fall . . . . .Announcement. New Goods and Best Values in the Tailoring line at the old -established and reliable West -St Emporium. Satisfac- tion guaranteed in Quality, Style and Price. HUGE DUNLOP. GET TOUR OYSTERS Charles Ago. Nairn HASITEDEBti STANDARDS and SELECTS FINNAN HADDIE F1rt of the Season Canadian Pacific Telegraph Patronise True Competition. TMs Casemate! Trip a� eh. w b*'fa�.ma � the et to posowea. pr+wMss w le thett �ltaests ewer gimes wear WaleaaraaatUl" a. ■ai,Y..,k NI el Med Meager....... t. �t�jp.� •ix .rM °. *eR E•.i 1 HARDWARE. 1 R. W. McKENZIE Still on top with Lowest Prices and Seasonable Goods Thorold Cement at price. which cannot be beaten. aun8 eo cheap as to surprise everybody. 1 sell the genuine Hudson Best American Apple st in Carers he et. Powder the kept in stock Ask your Druggist for A Wonderful Tonic and i3$IRemdy liw`,.EQQ Weak and Impure Blood, tikk Kidney and I Liver Trouble(� asae..rwsee o d. M. MaoLEOO. a111•aarSW. env. "THE SIGNAL" AND "GL e BE" FROM NOW UNTiL JANUARY lst, 1898 FOR $1.50 (ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY CENTS) Subscribe at Once f AND GET THE FULL BENEFIT OF THIS BIG OFFER. Call on or address • "THE SIGNAL" Goderich, Ont. Seism the first Ontario railway w. llifitr :terse the feet geese steamer antral. /.erre pesteE, Usage were need ie C..•d ,, Whoa ,C. a. d. was C..diim Cerre.y, E. B. Eddy's Matches 11' Wee haws theserghsed C•..da. es ,key ase sew, es the heat snatches rads FOR FALL and WINTER. NruNp.o, Jew M bugle-♦ large •a/ yr ad Meek D sseslb end i.geeted Ittak, Sleek ,tad Colored , 818mA:a JAOKRT CLOTHS ate •: aael[!:`.. JYietwf,f. Moir aid Doable SHAWLS:7 our leis_ d..W toed 1rt Nark LGSTMB .e. p..*meed aides vales. our GORSITS are sawed be air L_rttelem:k•!aM► A. MUNRO, Draiwri •