The Signal, 1897-3-11, Page 6THF SIGNAL: GODERICHi1. ONT ,; PPHTTRSDAY' MAR. 11. 1897.
LOSS OF VOICE
Atter Acute Rlronchltle
=RD 111 os1Be
A 1 L. F4J Cherry
Pectoral
• PREACHER'S t>QEusENa.
"Three months ago, I took a vio-
kM cold which resulted in an attack
Of aeute bronchitis. I put myself
ender medical treatment, and at the
end of neo months was no better.
1 fioeed N very difficult to preach.
Mad concluded to try Ayer'a Manly
Pectoral. The first bottle gave me
great relief ; the second. which I am
Bow taking, has relieved me almost
entirely of all unpleasant symptoms.
and I feel sure that one or two bot-
tles more will effect a permanent
erre. To all rnini.stere suffering from
throat trnnblev, I recommend Ayer's
Cherry Pertoral."—E. M. BRAWLET,
Dict. Secretary, Am. Bapt.
Publication '•relet y, Petersburg,Va.
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
GOLD MEDAL AT THE WORLD'S PAIR.
AYER'S LEADS ALL omit sARSAPAIULU&.
HOT (BORN.
He—Let a king tad make it up.
Mabe -1f you kiss me, I'd hey' to'make•ap
all over again, sure enough.
"There is a report that 1.u/tore has •
large gloating debt, •nnouuced the cashier
to the manager
" Yes r > ><),t)ou steam yecht.'
I'aterfenalie lout of patience:—Look here,
yosa' man, its hell past twelve—haven
you got enc home lc go to'
Lover quite fabberg•sted,—N-no, un—
set yr'
" Brown is a good shot, tan t be •
" Vert good. We were proetuing with
our rook rifles at my country pee the other
day, and he bit the bull's eye the first
time.
Very olever
" lass : but be had to pay for the ball. '
" Pape, te Mrs. Bigelow very poor
" No, Cedric. Mrs. Bigelow is well off.
Drat you know what • now burse she bas"
" But she sleep,' tit the hen -house, papa
Why Cedric '
" She sold she 11.1 '
' Wbet d. you ,nese '
" Don't you r_member when she was here
to dimer night hetoie but she rxcwted her•
rs1f, and sail the must go home early be-
gone" she went to be.i with the bird,.
"Have you completed your review of the
new book asked the editor.
•• No,' replied the critic " It a the
aloweSL most difficult piece of work I've t
t!i • iLun tune. I don i sem
ie make any he.dw.y •
" What is the 'remote •
" Well, the feet ,s. 'be st.:.ry u so well
written that I .•to find tittle or ootfitng te
Sad fault with.'
•
LOCAL NEWS.
Pervisaust
Oak Reformer Meas AM* dolomites, of
(:•demob, is the quest of Mem hears Heid,
of Ayr.
(;uelpe Adrowt. Vise Polley, of (;ode
rich, prendeot of toe Rafter Munson Band
for Canada, is • freest with Mrs. G. Yuvests,
of the beak of Commence, atty. Miss
Polley addressed the N F.M. $ooiety in
('balmer'e chary► Wise ^htsrscos.
Passed Away.
The St. Mary a Argue thus riders to Um
death of the 'ether o1 Mrs. Haigh Roes :—
(In Wednesday of leo week another mai•
deet that joined the incidents of eerly set•
then' life with the preeest wee disolved by
::.e death of Jamas Henderson, of Wed
Nemours, at the.dyanoed afro of 85 years,
t moDtw and 23 days. Mr. Henderson was
born in Ktno rdine.htr•, Sootlaad, near
Stonehaven an 1811, and emigrated to Can -
•d& In 1840. He lived at :madoa for • few
yews, and msaaged • tum tor the K.v.
Mr. Proudfoot, who ooaduuteal a school or
college. Mr. Henderson bought • term In
East Nssouri, Dear Kintore, about fifty
years aro when he moved to his *on llbna
neer Wellborn, where he paired away. He
was married Is 1856 to blur Mariotte Feir-
weatth, of Norman, •Iso • native of Scot-
land, who died in 1359 Mr. Henderson .l -
ways tock an active part u municipal and
parlsmeot•ry el.etions, never having miss-
ed polliog • vote is hes hie. Even
the last municipal eieatlon he went out and
voted. He was an elder in the South Pres.
byrertao church tor 35 years, was elected to
tee townehap commit, sod occupied the
reeveobin for tour years. He was • stroag
Reformer. and took great satisfaction in the
result of the election in Joie last.
There were only ihree children, two of
whom stall survive him—Mr.. fobs Head-
rick died eight yews ego, and Jame. lives
on the old tonsil farm .t Wellborn, and
Mrs. H. Roe., Ilint on.
i. N, rani.
The following from the Si Paul. Minn,
Patter, refers to • son of Mrs. Capt. u.tboon
of town, • former well-known resident
Rev. A. B. Meldrum gave added Impetus
to the cause of practiosl religion by his ser-
mon before the congregation ot the t -aortal
l'reebyterian church yesterday morning He
care • deeper and more j.ractieal view of
some of the petitions of the Lord's prayer,
oboosmq tor his text the petition: " /:Ive u*
this d•v our daily bread.' In part the
preacher mad
With all due respect tor the optntoa of
those who regard this petition figuratively
as • prayer tor spirituel blessing, 1 •m stall
convinced that our Lord bore tee3hes us to
pray for breed in the literal and materiel
seam He who made the body does not
scorn to feed it. The body is the temple of
the H..;y Ghost. •end though feeding the
body is a very ordinary and ooutmon-plsee
thing our Lord would teach us to regard It
as • religious act.
In this petition we pledge our .y mpechy.
We do not pray solitarily and selfishly. The
arra of the Gospel is the very opposite of •
selfish ',pint. It prompts tie to seek the
good of otter., as well as our own—not
their spiritual good only, but their tempor-
al good also. Let no man seek his own, but
evert scan another's wealth. This petition
teaches as not only to bear in mind oar
necessities, but also the necessities of nth s,
and to esteem t.`.e care ot those ten o as
oar own. This is in keeping with the
whole tenor of Christ's teaching. He would
have us mindful of the neoeseitiee ot our
neighbor.
behr": a that t sod intended wine should
be rich and some poor, and this instituted
the emergency tor human benelicesoe and
charity. Every man to whom God has
given more than enough for his owo needs,
he has, by this very acs, cos ni.,lobed to be
he almoner of t;• bounty to those less fa.
wed. "The poor ye have with you s-
ways," said Christ. I know of no one who
denies that these unfortunate ones have an
absolute right to live, and oonseluently •
Pohl to so much of the property of others
as fury be necessary to support them. Our
• eylume and hospitals and bor.ies for the
poor and infirm all grow out of the duty
which the element of wealth and strength
owes to the element of poverty sod weak.
OMNI.
i touch here upon one of the most ditli
cult questions that has occupied the minds
of the Christian philanthropist.. f'anper-
ism most be fed. lint how How is .00i.ty
to osre for her destitute ohrldren without
nursing and fostering them an sloth 1 de
not see 1n sooisl revolution or in human Ir.•
'station the solution of the proh'.m, unless
the solution means the surrender of our free
institutions and the assumption of despotic
cowers and the oonseyuent destruction of
industry and enterprise and indepodeooe
•moo. men. We are foroed to have re
sours• to the ttrisoipIce and the preotioe of
the gospel. .lesu. Christ is needed, not only
as the d•yeman between God and men, but
also es the day -wimp between man and man;
between the several classes of soniety now
e yeing each other askenoe, each endeavor
'ng tai abridge its duties and ex•gger•une
to dammed' upon the elites opyaeed to it•
self. The gospel doe. not contemplate the
obliteration of distinctions that now obtain
to society, in the seems of reduoing •11 to
the sass level of wealth or social Standing,
but it does eontempl*e diffusion of sympa-
thy and good will among men. 1t lays ion
hand epos the poor and teachee them self
respect. sobriety, economy and anotentment;
and upon the rich and teaches them nom.
passion, symp.tby and ges.eeeity. it says
to x11, '•1'e .e. mtmbers, one of another."
We c.auot forget it with impunity: and yet
our deneer lies in the ferlattutnes" of this
great truth. There are men poor and in
want today became* of opghoesien and in-
jo.tiee and robbery and wrong. Strong In
stituttss. ( which is but another term ter •
rombia.tes of strong men) have est then
selves 1. heft' out or starve out thaws who
are doing • 'all but honest business in
their gine. They were not contest to let •
man eat hue daily bred it they could lay
their hoods upon It They have Dried not
es, our bread, but me, my bread, and not
for today, but for years. and they base
. rows tat and 'geek ea the fifth and blond
of ethers. On sseh lip this Lord .prayer
ie an hem.lt to high Leaven and • mockery
to (kid's peer
Christ would have se, then, ft we petty
for ou,setvei, bear is meld the nest' of
other. Ilse He given yes year daily
bread • Ten Ho makes you Rte agent,
sad says: • -(em., week with a ts saws..
W the prayers of year brother; sees* with
me, sad, by geweredty, bsa►orty ey>ap.tay
and pens(. Velem, massik the
.f the per sea's path ....s
spirit
.• out to slag i _
•efllN of the t'Ntita.
gates—Who, 1 elver 1111,4 unybodt like
George be can .elk up .n •w subject. .
Aunt Hannah .1oyeuo(ect' Noneoass'
Nana our subject cpu° which he can talk
intelligently
Helen -Well, aunty, you should hear him
talk about lacvclte.-
Auut Hannah—Bicycle ' Fiddlesticks
What other suhjec, ' •
Helen —Wast other subi -ct • Th•ri is no
slier subjoot worth talking stout."
Alp Verisophy -1 tum not quite myself
today."
Mew Sharpe Allow me to congratulate
Minor Poet -11 n•t nt.de the poet remark
that' the tallest MOM aim Sleep night and
de .
th. heert.l LAW-- H. probably thought
*hair snowy peaks were nightcaps, •
119.500
4Pkg
WA
. BICYCLES w=
wara+cs.oR
(,V14U4H
pE�
Dating the Year 1897.
tAlf lie ,..i-*.br..•e ..t -eriti oe n.ett•. or apply t.
/WI MOL. Ln., 13 leer es.. u ,*
HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY.
AS the ateetiag of the Horticultural Soot -
sty ea Thursday evening of last week, Mr.
Cherie. Wells tatredtsoed • dl.ousrsn os
dahlias by *snag teat More ars tour klsda
t ascly, single closures, pmpoe or le -
vet, wee sad large tlewerus g err show
atelia.
The tubers .bould be planted as early as
possible m efts seems, and as woo as the
sprouts appear us good size the mbar should
be out to sings eyes so as to allow only one
stalk to each cutting. Th.se should be
planted in g(,od mellow riob soil ft soon es
all danger ul frost has diamppear.d ; the
land should bo kept clean and bcavily
maaur,4 with "pout rotted oow menthe.
Whore late stroag bloom is wanted the Bret
bade eeould be sipped od, and in all oases
the bloom should be removed before is
ripsaw, as, if allowed to remain upon Um
stem they legalism the plant and destroy
she chances of • good atter bloom. By
tollowing these elmple directions all lovers
of this be•aulul bower will have no difficul-
ty in produoinr exhibition bloom. In the
Fall when the plants have dried off the
tubers should be taken ep cad stored away
for the following season. la the disouswee
that followed all those who had experience
agreed with Mr. Wells to hs directions,
and the Society are hopeful that members
generally will oke now so w. shall sae •
fuller deploy st ..at Fall exhibition than
eve.
Mr. Wills tlbts desribed his method of
raising pommel, which should be of interest
se Se has for several been so successful.
He stake • trench similar to what to used
in planting oelery taking care to use good
to peoil au the bottom where be plants the
ants • few inches apart. They grow readi-
ly and to appearaooe resemble peas. A.
soon se the bloom appears cad opens for •
couple oI three days he draws to sentiment
soil to cyber the bloom The bloom Dome*
upon every pont around the stem of the
plant, and these are covered over regularly
as they appear in the Same way se the first.
This pleat seeds • long *swoon to ripen its
crop. and • light warm soil is preferable to
any otter. When takbeg up the crop the
stem is generally easily purled up with a
ring of nuts attached firmly- to each mint ;
these are removed and dried and Mr. Wella
finds no trouble in producing as good nuts
as those found in commerce The light
warm soils in this section are well adapted
to the growth of the picot, the ooly polo?'
to be watched ere earliness in pleating and
keeping the soil fairly moist while the plant
is growing
The next meeting of the society will be
held on March 18, when Mr. Wells will in-
troduce the sat jest of " Poultry in ooaneo-
11on with fruit grossing. ' A. we .re to
have several expensed poultry fanciers
and fruit 'rowers prevent to take part in
this di.cuemon it is hoped a large number of
theft interested will be Deftest, and ell are
wel.•ome. Remember there t. De charge at
the door and co collsctioa. The meeting
writ be held in the Court Homo at 7:301 a
est thole Cure ter Teethaebe.
Magical in poteoey and power, penetrat-
ing at once to the diee•sed Nervi
incT- Derve pale cure—curse toothache in •
moment. S.rvilioe, the most marvellous
pato remedy hooters to meow, may be ua.d
tor all nerve pains. Test at once ire elk -
tray.
Crnr.fui.
The late Bishop Tnorold had • neat no -
:jou of arranging surprises for his clergy-.
1 M is how his diary' record* the way he
tendered promotion to two of them :
" 1 gave Mrs. Jackson the letter f„r her
husband with the oder of !'-nada►cry, to be
given him by hie baby."
Mr. Jack.00, It is 1.plained. had long
been • curate in the diocese and met tbsa
and hu ail- were rejoicing over • new-
tiora ba►y after many years of married lde
"• I offered (;randy St. Peter's, Deptford"
gibe moot valuable hvt.g which had yet
fallen to hie gift). " Hie little girl was to
give him the letter ft ten true 'venom.
There will be excitement is that little home
Weight."
Old her rant.
In them acne too tlouriehmg limes it is
probable that • great deal of chanty is as
badly misdirected as was that of • charit-
ably doomed young woman noted for her
somewhat novel ways of helping the Deady.
" 1 have such • pity for these poor street
musiceuis she said one day to • friend
who was visiting her. " 1 pay one old
Italian • shilling • week regularly. He
plays in the front gerden every Thursday
afternoon.' �,1stt
Hut that must ft hard. To be always
on hand --and the noise must be tedious.
said her somewb•t nervous companion.
" (!h no, ' was the oompl•oeet reply ;
" the maid *tends to that; and as for the
music. 1 don't hear it, for Thursday is MY
afternoon in town."
ealuaNe.
;yf y trade an unimportant oaf 1" latybtd
• dealer in human hair " Wby, thearMde
1 deal in Is positively the sort valuable
commodity that is grown. It is trail that
ordinary shades of emir eight teethes in
length only feseb • shilling aa ounce; bat
„'.� _+slue
The Bladder
cal'
DODD'S UDHBY PILLS
I was troubled for three years
with inflammation of the blad-
der, the neck of which was near-
ly closed up. Doctors and medi-
cines gave me no relief until i
tries Dodd's Kidney Pills. Seven
boxes completely cured me. I
work in Tuckett's tobacco fee -
tory, and all my fellow-employys
know of my disease and can
testify to my wonderful cars.
THOMAS JOYCB,
Ia4 Peter St., Hamilttfon.
Dodd's Kidney Pills
Always are Bladder Tiouldst.
then hair • yard long realises sweaty tine
as swab, while fa.oy prices are vest' ohms
given for anything beyond that lesgtb.
” Furthermore, at least • hundred thous-
and pounds' weight of bur u required every
year for the iirk:ish market aloft. for whisk
the kat buyers heft to pay between
`h0 and t:4(10,000, while ours more sons Ss
Francs.
•• What are the most impeseive shades
Gray and golden ones, sinus it ie impossible
to properly imitate either of theft hues.
" By the way, It is • cunosr not 01S
gratnlly knows that hair after beteg rev.
"rod hotline origiae' owner's bead has •
tendency to heoose lighter in oaafriu.sos
of being unable soy longer to draw soarMb-
nest through its roots"
AS WELL AS EVER
A Bricklayer hisses to Ramon —Uses :rix
Riess of Rodd a Kidney Pills and tells a
Brockville, Mar. 81.1 (Speciell--Mr. W.
Odell, perhaps ooze of the best known cltl
of the town, has lately reoovaed from •
long oounued and painful Monett. He
tells the story of bis experiesoe to the oor-
reepoodent gs follow* •
i have suffered tor over • year from kid-
ney dune, the pato in my back being so
severe that 1 was sable to *tend to my
work.
Noticing the published cures of what
Dodd's Kidney Pills were doing for othon I
osccluded to use them.
Having used only ar boxee 1 can my the;
1 am perfectly cored and well, an that I osa
attend to business as well as ever 1 could.
1
merest Ilia tele.
A good *tory is told of • certain landlord
who had been bavmg much trouble in ooh.
l.ctmg rents from bin tenants. There was
one man with • large f.mtl), who had occu-
pied • part of one of hie houses in the sub-
urbs for s number of years. The man wee
thoroughly honest, but in desperate straits.
The landlord bore the low of his rent
with oonsidereble fortitude until be tbouyht
it was someone el's'e turn to help the fel-
low • little. So be west to him ow day
and told him. with all seriousness that be
was intesdinq to overhaul the house, at was
out of repair, and he had dem.:.d to speed
• little money on it end make some import-
ant aeet•tions ; and as it would omit the
Dian • good deal to move. he gonerously of-
fered to beer all tee ex pane, himeetf
The matter was arranged with the ut-
most friendliness on both sides. and the
isadlord went hu way, Iseult" not • little
like the celebrated Pharisee. A week later
be asked his agent shout some fists that had
been empty tor • month or two.
" All let," said the .gent, and he nerved
parties, whereupon the landlord experi-
enced • sudden relapse.
11 bet he had recovered himself *Oficial!.
ly to talk Eoglub, he proceeded to inform
the astooisbed .gent that ewe ot the acquis-
itions was the man be bad just removed at
his own expense out of the hoose i• the
suburbs.
tatf-A red.
A water, sojourning In an Italian city'.
tolls how an eartbgnske announced itself.
" tate one evening, lie my', " lsolett•
s.d (•tens•, our servants, rusted in upon
us iD terrified etWtemeet as we sat rending
by the l tet of an oil lamp u the • pollee
MOM:. 1'trett fame were of the whiteness
of pope, and their eyes had • wild expres-
sion of fear.
• Signor, they gasped • whet is the
matter ` Every bell la the booth is ringing.
P. bat will become of u •'
" 1 must explain that the bells were of
the old fasbiooed variety, which hs.g on
wire. and are pulled by a bell -rope.
They were** mach in earnest that, to
calm their fears, we went into Om hall.
There were the ten belle bung is • row sad
ringing as though the ferias were .t the
other end of the rope ' !Unglue of their
ows &cooed apparently, or at least pulled
by no vimble head
,. (k • saddest we became aware that the
leen wan troubles, the walls were sh•k•
int. The whole building moved on he
foundations ; it swayed from side to aide.
at tint slightly, then farther sad further,
with • slow, rythmie motion, tail of gra••
and majesty ; but we could realize Do *etaa-
tlon beyond rbkenine terror.
, It was an earthquake. The motion
lasted • few.eoonda, thea o.m..d gradually.
Had it continued three seconds lesger the
tall obelisks. tee beautiful osmpsath, would
have folios "
*AYR 1+00 TAW=
it
NaJt
LA
CEYLON TEA.
IZET..17...10 I
always on hand. The Beet
and only Scraton Coal in this
market. Hard. Soft amd Black-
smith Coal always on hand. All
Coal weighed on the market scales,
so that you are sure of Good
Measure.
WM. LEE.
er Harbor quay.
ZAiTRS Lsire Stec.
BLIT BIUNUCTION
—IN—
NAILS.
Those intending to Build this
coining Summer should pur-
chase at once as NAILS were
never so low in price and may
not remain at present prices
very long.
FIRS BRICK, FIBS CLAY
and
SEWER PIPE.
We have purchased these
Goods in Car lots direct from
the Manufacturers and an
give very 'ow prices.
A full line of GENERAL HARD -
WARS always on hand.
DAVISON & Co.
The ?p -to -Date Hardware.
PLANING MILL.
ESTAllltefe Iflib.
Buchaiiaiis & Rhyiias
rawCraatctisa.
SASH, DOOR and BLIND
heaters la .11 kinds of
LUMBER, LATH. SHINGLES
Aad bandttr% merest or every dee.rtllYsn
School Furniture a SDecialtl.
Spring is at hand.
So be prepared to meet it with a
good Hat or Cap when it .omen.
We have put in stock all the Latest
Styles of Spring
HATS
which for quality and price annot be
equalled. In stock are numerous as
sortmenta ot the latest in
GLOVER COLLARS,
SHIRTS. HOSIERY.
MUTTS. CUFFS
CAPS, NECKWEAR.
.0. B. SHANE & Co.
EPPS'S COCOA II- 'eBabl' H•i sed Furnishing kspNitA
ENGLISH
BREAKFAST COCOA
Pong.ftea the foliowi• i,i*tj, tut e Merits
Delicacy of Flavor.
Bupenonty m Quality,
Oratefal and Comforting,
to the nervous or Irtspeptic.
Nutritive Qualities Unrivalled
in (gnawer -pound Tins cele.
JAid Errs A CO., Ltd., Memwegiethle
Chemises Louise. ensued.
Pacific
Telegraph
Canadian
Patronise
Trite
.Comoetitlon,
s rite Most iblclSss of all 'Etat'. .f.�� OAn�A�i a�tlelrpi, RtAdILWAT C .p
selaty . lade PACtitfa ST public, a$s teAitt nab tW sold era
STURDY BROtl,
mallow t. smeared lea.
Wa.4ples •ad 1•
the Intone ee 1e IlMaeas.
1It deserve tat sf .very person who
believes V oessrar
Per snick deson0111 was this Cosa
Ira.*, eoaae.ttsg wtr all Rees sad sabre*
la Vatted as.'... noses sad R1�u `y y�
North week ruttish amble sadDire>?ftlee atalt
Oboe—Seete Wide rwrsow.
OOfaRiOH
STEAM BOILER WORKS.
A. S. CHRYSTAL
a resuwete Oheu hal ! air,
Maoufsetarer of all Made of
BOILERS•
Smoke\ Stacks, Salt Pans, Sheet Iger
Works, eta., ego.,
AM Dealer fa—
Regina., M.ohtsery Caster, he.
All .gess of Puss and Pip. Flatting.,
Moos and Wee daces, Globs V.tvsg,
Mask Valve. leePIrsHol ICHH• a .ad ia.
j.el.es OwalaaKy se Hood as Lem*
A .p.h•1 lino of Meal Water and Hog
7�e�ts
for see .f fassess sad elms.
Weedrra ttsstletlr eetsod-d as
A. C. m ITA.L.
fluty P. 0. Rat W. Mdelsa• Os►
Wetllt -Cp , a fl,! L fllal ra tllaenha
RADCWISlas
alts Losialllananar: eeeee1M
WE MAKE�m.t�
Sewer and
Culvert Pipes
AMI nese rum Asa. to Ira fit. Aft
Cosaeerless.
WRIT/ FOR fsRrOffe.
THE ONTARIOAOULASEXIERST.IPPE CO
IOS ..
.IleiOav AT stolen TORONTC
Por Spruce :: Spruce
Colds, ron-
chid; Sore Gum
throat, etc.
a t suet. war'eolr • er0. , t..e..,..e.•.
Meta*sraa.
•
a
¶hai Abo gar C1ubbiii Bates? TaLe'em in
Ask your Druggist Mr
itattlOiS SIVE* if3104
weak a --fed Impure stood.
A
Wonderfrl Tonic
and
Sidney and Liver Tro
w
t
weeefteseinew as d. ■. NNa.LtOO. ellIMINISOW111. OM.