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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1893-9-22, Page 66 TETE 13RUSSELS POST gljt AIMS el -IS StinL1aBED- EVERY FRIDAY MORNING (in time for the early mails) ab "Tho POW' Stearal Publishing Jlouso, Tuou000nnx ST., Bunseats, OUT. est T211110 Or Sw am:v=IGN.-One dollar and a half a year, in advance. Tho date to which every eubemrptlon is paid is denoted by the dateonthe address label, ADy210TIBIr$1 RATES. -The following rates will bo charged to t11oee who advertise by the year :- SP8012. 1 13m. 1 0 m0, 1 8110 One 0010ten 800.00 000.00 020.00 00a10 00.00 20.00 12.00 Quarter 0 00.00 12.00 8.00 Eighth" _ 12.00 e.00 _0.00 Eight cents per line for first insertion, and three cents per line for each subsequent in. settles). All advertisements measured as Nonpareil -12 lines to the inch, Business Carcte, night lines and under, 05 per 8111111111, Advertisements without spaoine three- tions, will be inserted uuti1 forbid, and charged accordingly. Instructicnla t0 011aug0 or discontinue 011 adpOrtiOommit 101108 bo left at the eouatdng room of Tam Pos0 not later than Tuesday of each week. This le imperative. Editor and Proprietor. Was At The Fair. (taco Mt Mats 210122 Dunn SEx.toTnr-Tbele mast be more than a thousand peepnl in This town who stay up and make a noise at Hite. The fact is that they matte such a terrible racket that its about all a bodys life is wuth to git a little sleep. I dont bleeve thetas &nether town on urth where so many fokee is kept 8 goin it all the time on the been jump. Everything here is don on the dead run, from buyin a paper to goin home bo Etta, and no matter which way you turn yowl see the peepnl a jammin and orowdin wan a utter like cattle a bein luded onto a steamboat. At the boardin house where Imo a stayin now the ringin ov the dinner bell peers to drive the boarders all nearly wild with excitement. I kno it wud sheer you to see bow they jump and start far the dinin room at the fist shake ov the bell the hiredgal give it, and by the time I kin git in and sot down to my place theyre a goin it like pigs at a feed troff, and enm ov nm is then and out on the street agin before I kfu butter a pankake. I am now boardin at a place where they dont make no claims to bein genteel, and so I dont hav to pay fur Ruthin but my sleep and eat. Politeness dont hav to be paid fur here at eo moot a thank, and so I gib off rite smart cheaper and hav more to eat. Won ov the things T dont like tho, is that Ime crowded so that I cant hardly git my breth. Theyve got about thirty or forty boarders, and whenever its anywhere near meal time you kin see nm fillin up the hall like a lot ov sheep. The table wont hold um all at wan time and a fuller has to be in the fast haff ov the perseehuu or he gits left. Theree six beds in the room I sleep in, with two men to eaoh bed. My pardner wants in a biter faoktry, and snores ez tho he was a tryin to still carry on the biznees when he sleeps. Other ways haze a peaceable man, bat he wears dredful dirty shirts. I never in all my days seen men so full ov miscbuff. Bvey Hite they do enmthin to vex me, like stealin my piller or tyin hard Hotta in my sox. Sumtimes they lessen the bed slats ao that when the bilermnn gits in down we go kersmesh. The only thing that con- eoles me is that I am now gitbiu my board fur four dollars a weep. Ov horse thats a heap too muton, but in a town where evrybody is bent on skinnin you alive, I sckspeokt I ort to kunaider that Ime m loin fustrate. I hav lernt with thing, and that is that anything that kin be chopped up with a hoe will do to go into hash. When I git home I think I Yin show you a good many things that you indent never find oat frum a cooly buke. This mornin while I was It atandiu at the cross roads, a prion sum apples ov a feller in a red shirt who had a shelf kivered with um, 11leard a noise like bluwin stumps up, aid lochia around with &trimble, eokspeoktin to see abildin fall, I seen a site that made mo hold my breth. Jest boon yonder No bill was 0. team ov menses big black bosses -a kum• nein on the keen gallop, ez the the driver was either drunk or the britobin had br'olte. The bosses was a hawlin a thing that was 0moltin hot and looked like a trayslin blacksmith shop. It went by me eizzin, spnn around the corner and in a tninit was oat ev site. I was so bewildered that the man wilh the apples passed a quarter on me with a hole in it, and I got turned around and went more than nighty rods strata back in the some direkahun that Ida hum from. I bav sense foiled out that the thing I seen was a Steam fire ingine on the hunt fur a hone which they bad stim11ow or other found oat to be on fire. I wudent be• grudge a peck ov oats if I cud a got to the plane where the fire was and seen the thing sgnirt. If it ever parses me agin while Ime here Ile do my hest to keep up with 18 to the bur i I burnin tense and of I do Ike epeakt youl gib perticklers that will matte your eyes -pop. The bildino are so high hero that you hav to take more than wen look to see to the top ov um. I kno Iva seen houses here 00 high that if a man hart to sleep in the garret has candle wud barn clear out before he end git tap t0 his bedroom, oaless he and clime Stairs faster than I kin. I want you to try your beet to bleevo it, old women, that Iva seen bildine here so high that it almost seems a sin to look at the top ov um. If the tower of Babel run up any fender into the clouds than sem ov the houses do here it must a ben an wu der. I toll you hat it W is mother, I wudent go o to the top ov num ov the louses here and look down fur the beat hose I ever owned. Ovkoree I want to go to heaven, when my time kume, and I jest must leave here and go eumwhere, but ez long ez I kin stay on the ground you wont ketch me goin up into the aky the way sum ov um do here in Shekawgo, I !ergot to tell you that their ramie are all made ov stone sot up aidgs ways, and I taint seen a mud hole aenseI got here. A body 0ee0 a heap ov queer things in a plana like this. Ex I was a ht1118in fur the poet:age yieterday, I hum akroat a man who woe a gittin thin splendid piauner muzick out ov a kind ov a aid without a notebuke in site. The only thing he dun that I cud the was to shtit his eyee and burn a crank and trust to luok. It wudent be a bad noohuu, it seems to me, far no to git tie a kunscrn like that fur our enmesh in Olde:villa, note that Milly Dumps, our organ player, has got married and moved to Pinbuke. With a box like that to pitch the tune fur us, it looks to me ez tho we orb to be able to git along without a quire, and that vend sato ns many a meetin house fuse. Iva seen dogs hero that peer to be more tbaw6 ov than children are with us. Wimmiu pet um and hawk to um and hold um on their lips ez tender ez I ever eaw anybody do with a chile that was sick. 10 they are .that kind hearted to dune Itritters, what a feollo of tenderness they must hav to their own offsprings, fur I dont mind ez we ever had a hired hand who was kind to the roues who wuzzent good to theyungins. I was out to the fare agin yisberday and tromped around call( today both ov my feet are blistered. I- dideut find no pigs nee kattle, but I got into won place where they most had oil palatine by the alter. I never had no idee that so many folios had quit tvorltin fur a livin and gone to paitttin. I seen sum pikters there that was rite smart bigger than a bed quilt, and if times wuzzent so bard I shudent wander 110 there wuzzent sum there that wud fetch oz match ez five dollars. I seen ever so many that Ike speokt you wudent mind havin hung op aver our mantlopiece, but I also seen a kuusiderabe fele that I hno it wudent be safe fur me to undertake to go home with in daylite. Its skaudalua to speak ov, lint theree a good ninny pikters there that a man like me cant look at without bein ashamed ov himelf. I kno oz well ez I kuo what eider la by the taste that the man who painted um cadent show um in Oiderville without gittin in the lookup, and yit tvimmiu will look at um here without thinkin ib 2081811 while to blush, But ez I hoard a preacher say cannot, I dont sposo the time will ever kum when wundero 2,111 intirely cease. I lowed to say lots more in this letter but six ov the boarders hav alreddy kala in and begun to throw pillars and boots at wen auuther, and it bothers me ao that Ile hav to quit. So Ile say goodby fur this time and atop. Your tired husbun, SILAS GANDEnr001. Disoourngiug A Newspaper. One afternoon at Strawberry Hill the horn was blown vigorously and every miner dropped his tools and made a rush for the piazza,as was the program agreed upon in case of an Indian attack or if a drove of Chinese attempted to turn in 011 no. We found the these of commotion to be a three mule outfit in charge of a stranger. He was an editor, and he had oolne 200 miles to establish the Straw- berry Hill Gazette among us. The mules were loaded with the necessary material, but big Jim Williams, who was town nlarehal that day, had said to the man :- "Stranger, dont you do no unlodin till you hear what the boys hey to say. I'll toot the horn and run 'em in and we'll orgy the matter." The case was soon nuderatood by all. There was even more excitement than if a score of Indian warriors had made their appearance on the other side of the creek. A masa meeting was at once organized, with Judge Watkous in the chair and I remember how pale faced and anxione ho looked as he rose up to lead off with "Fellow citizens, a critter has tonne among us to ynzurp our liberties. Shall he be permitted to yuznrp ? Are we goin to stand shoulder to shoulder in defense of them rights guaranteed by the sacred constituent:: of Bunker Hill, or are we gain to be troll into the girth by the foot of the tyrant ?" Two hundred men yelled for liberty or death -mostly liberty. Then old man Green gob up and followed the judge with : "It was a noosepaper whioh driv me outer Indiana by We about me. I8 said I bad four wives, when Ihadnt but three. My happy, peaceful Ilfe was wrecked by jest sioh a critter as stands before ue and is within to wink other lives. If he are allowed to start a noosepaper here bar- motly will end and a reign of terror be inaugurated -brother will turn agin brother, and fathers will go around ^Rain the throats of beloved sons. Bet- ter & thousand heathen Chinese, each one with the smallpox, than one noose. paper 1„ More yells for liberty or death and then Squat Joslyn was lifted upon the barrel and began :. "Whar the noosepaper is bhar you will find crime 1 A noosepaper brolte up my family. A. noosepaper tient me to jail. A noosepaper driv me to steal a yoke of oxen. Noosepapers have taken away our liberties and made slaves of us. It hetet been over half an hour since this feller arriv here, and yet I find myself longi❑ to wade in Bill Jackson's gore, The ink will sltnosly be dry on the feet 1050e of this noosepaper before we'll bo lyin and statin and ahootin and satin linea pack of gavages. Be ye men or be ye slaves ?" When the cheering had subsided Unolo Billy Taylor was called on and said : "A noose n er will b e lettere 1 Pp d by a ekulehouse and a ekulehoum by a livery stable and before we know it the wave of ctvilizashun will hew rolled over us and tvhar will we be? We owe ib to ourselves and futher geoerehune to nip this im. pendin calamity in the bud. I move that she be nipped. I hainb no orator but I've got feeldns and them fe01it10 Warne me to cry out at the top of my voioe agin Ole proposed iniquity 1" The editor wanted to get up and say something in reply but the case was closed. Every man Gould shut hie eyes and call up a ilioture of bloodshed and desolation and it was the unanimous v01• diet that the outfit mast move on. We allowed hitt t to turn his mules out to grata for two Imre and he Was given 0 bite of something to eat, and when time was up 80 men escorted him down the :week for n mile and &half. On parting with him Judge Watltella solemnly ob. served : "Critter, let this incident sink deep in- to your mind and turn you frnm the evil of your ways. 10 you avant to push them mewls over the rooks and aon10 book and stake out a claim we'll all help you to be an honest, decent man, but if you are de. tormined to persevere In your awful career then may the Lord have merely on your foul, and we'll lynch yen if you are ever seen on this teed &gin." NOTES AND NOTIONS. Love for God never begins until we treat him, The devil's war is better than bio peace. The natural result of seeking riches ie anxiety and care. The result of eeeking God is love, joy and peace. The Gospel is nota blessing to any man until ho believes it, Life never rises any higher than the belief, The man who believes wrong will be. have wrong. When the devil is looking for an easy place he always ands It in a eelfleh heart. The moment we trust in God he is in us. Christ fits ue for Heaven by malting ns heavenly in character. No tree can ever become so largo as not to depend for life upon its smallest roots. Profession that is all pretonoe hoe no influence except for evil. An indifferent man ie a doomed man. To float in the rapids is as dangerous as to row toward the falls. The most preeio 10 thing on earth or in Heaven is God's love. The man wastes his time who under- takes to reason with a fool. When God tells ue to give, it is not to lose our riches, bubthat we may put them in n safer place. When our hearts are full of Christ a very little of this world le enough. Orientals At The flair. Among the young people who are visit- ing the Columbian Exposition this Sum- mer are a 01vanee0 baby, three Chinese boys of teem two to six years, a picka- ninny from Dahomey, a dancing Sonden- ese baby, a little Bedouin girl who danoes in the Arab encampment, a pappoose or two in the Indian village, and a half doz- en Egyptian boys who belabor the tiny gray donkeys in the Cairo street. de the readers of Young People have al- ready guessed, these boys and girls did not visit the Fair to see the curious things in the wonderful white buildings, but to be a part of the show. They are there to be looked at, not to look, and they are among the most interesting of all the exhibits. The black baby lives in the Dahomey village, which is supposed to look as if it had been picked up in Africa and set down in Chicago. In some re0peate it oertainly does resemble the hot country about which Mr. Glave has told as dur- ing the past year. The ground is sandy enough and the sunshine is hot enough for Sahara, and the read -thatched huts which line the high board fence surround- ing the village are uncomfortable enough in appearance to satisfy the most en- thusiastic explorer. In the middle of the village is a larger hut, open at the sides and covered with thatoh, and in this hut the dwellers of the Dahomey village dance the war dance of their native country every hour or two for the entertainment of the white people who stroll in to sae thein. All of these men and women are hideous in their gay entice clothing, with strings of teeth and strange looking bits of stone and metal hanging about their necks and dangling from their arms and ears. But the piokaninny is as O0nning as most other babies are. When I eaw him he was sitting in a puddle of dirty water with no clothing ou so get Boiled, watching his mother and an older brother scouring two or three brass and silver rings with a bit of rag and a handful of sand, Tho little fellow wanted the rings to play tvitb and 201511 he found that he could not have diem 1e set up a howl that sounded very much like a white boy of two years crying because he could not have a porcelain clock O1 a 011005 wagon to play with. • 1NTEJ1NA'TIONal, SUNDAY t•1Uil041.S. The following Thee are gleaned from the International and World's Sunday school Conventions recently held ea 88. Louis: -Arrangements are being made for aggressive work, especially iu tbo South, where aspeoial colored agent will probably be appointed. Nearly 520,000 were sprat in this aggressive work in the last three years, and 830,000 more are asked for the next three years. The Sunday school army in the United States ie 11,000,000 ; for Canada the number is 642,870. The eeoond world's Sunday Scheel Convention met on Saturday, Sept. 2nd, with delegates from the United States, England, Sootland, Ireland, Germany, Canada, Afrioa, New South Wales, India and other countries. Dr. Phillips, of India, historically sketched the work in India, appealed for a missionary in Japan, and Geo. Edwarde, of London, spoke of the work in Europe, saying the Sunday school scholars utero had iu• Greased 600,000 in three years. Many conflicting olaime as to who originated the Sunday school idea have been put forth and it is hard in the light of the foots that have been disclosed ,in late years to decide as to whom the credit is due, Robert Raikes, a printer and p:lblieher of a small newspaper in Glouceeters, England, was undoubtedly the fret whose work attracted general attention and intimation, He got his idea, however, from a Mrs. Bradburn, who had been a teacher in a Sunday school established in 1780 by flannels Ball. Raikes started The fleet school in 1780, and in 1788, 210 yeas 050,110 wrote an article about the sohoul whioh was published in the Gentlemen's Magazine, and once the plan and its nooses as con- ducted by him were made known to the churches in general it was extended with marvelous rapidity. It is a fact, bowever, that act early aa 1530 schools somewhat sitnilnr to that of Mr. Baikee were establisher) by the Dirk of Scotland, and a somewhat similar form of school wan authorized by the church of England in 1603. Among the earliest Sunda newels ' hooem America Y were those established in Roxbury, Mans., in 16741 and Norwich, Conn,, In 1008. But the work of these schools not beteg published to the world, ae was that of Raikes, their influence was only Ideal. The total number of Sunday school traohers in the world, not iuuluding those of the 110mau Catholic church, whose statistics are not available, nor the entire total of the Protestant Bole:opal, is 2,- 0111,070. They teach in 100,575 schools, Which are attended by 18,026,010 pupils, malting total of 20,078,405 teachers and pupile, There are now organized Sun. day 0010010 in every country al Europe save Turkey, Greene and a few of the small Southenatern principalities, in SEPT; 22, 1893 nearly every oountry in South America, in nearly all the isles of the sea, in Afrioa, in China, India, Japans and Per - sift. The United States loade all noun- tries in number of eohools, teachers and penile, its totals being :-Schools, 108,- 030 ; teachers, 1,151,840 ; pupils, 8,649,- 131. 7iugland and Wales come next with 30,088 schools, 608,041 teachers and 5,786,825 pnpile, GOne1-ill lYo1VN, There are 20,000 trained nurses in Eng- land, Ireland and Scotland, A Catholic 01101011 pio•nio fit Salem, Mass., wound up with the Recension of a balloon 0onteining several hundred love lettere from the young ladiee of the parish uddreesed to the man in the moon. And the young men in the party permitted the balloon to get away with its burden. The eared American coin is the dollar of 1804. There are believed to be not more than ten in existence. Ae mneh as 81,500 has been offered and refused for an 1804 dollar. Many explanations have boon given of the scarcity of this coinage. One is that in the year 1805 a China - bound vessel was lost containing almost the entire mintage of 1804. As a ourio the dollar of 180•1 stands first among United States coins. At the menthe Saturday night at 0111. Dago, the 5300 prize for the best ladies' chorus was awarded to the Welsh ladies' chorus of Cardiff, South Wales, director, Mrs. Clara Novelle Davie ; second prize, 5150, to the Scranton ladies' chorus. The Rhonda Valley ohoras of South Wales won the 51,000 prize for the beat male chorus singing, and the second prize of 5500 went to the Penrhyn chorus of Wales. The arab prize of 56,000 was awarded to the Soranton, Pa., 0110r0s union, and the second prize of 51,000 want to the Salt Lake Mormon Temple choir. Superintendent Kimball, of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 011i1d- ren, in NovtYork, line been bothered for several days by a man who wants to sell him a baby girl for 8100. The ratan is Jan Parylack, an Austrian immigrant, who recently arrived with his wife and child, and is disappointed with America bat wants to see Chicago before going back. His wife is with him every time he visits Mr. Kimball and she seems as anxious to matte the sale as her husband. Mr. Kimball likes babies but he thinks 5100 is too much to pay and he cannot make the man understand it. The arrest of twentythree men scat- tered through Jackson and Elbert counties, Georgia, obarged with whole- sale counterfeiting of silver dollars, has stirred op the whole country. Of late money was flush about the little town of Clarksburg, in Jaokson Co. A man who went to Danieleville to trade boasted that be had free coinage of his own. The re- mark was made so significantly that United States Deputy -Marshal Elder was sent for, and in less than twenty- four hours he had the whole plot, as well as ttventy•three prisoners in his posses- sion. The plan adopted was to make the dollars in large quantities, when the counterfeiters would scatter all over the adjoining town., purchasing five cent articles and getting bank ninety-five cents in good money. Twelve men were arrested in Danielsvirle, nine in Elberton and two in Jefferson. Deputy -Marshal Elder refuses to talk further than to say that 110 has found the biggeat affair of the hind on record. As fine a display of fireworks as could be desired might have been witnessed after midnight the other morning in the mountainous farm lands covering the Northern portion of Saratoga county, New York. Frost comes early there- abouts, and three years out of five as., ages or destroys the corn and buckwheat. A Swedish farmer on Hadley Hill sug- gested the use of "frost torches" in time of danger, Anti explained that Soandi- navl0n ag,ioultnrists )Wade 811010 of petroleum • soaked peat. Peat is not handy in the locality of Hadley Hill but pine is plentiful so in odd times during the summer farmers out stakes two inches in diameter mud five feet long and provided themselves with kerosene. At 8 o'clock the other evening the thermom- eter fell to 38 degrees and the experi- menters put their stakes to soak. At midnight they set them np, fifty to the sore, iu the budnvheat fields and by 1 it. m. they had thorn blazing and smoking. Every man who tried the plan leaved las Drop. 011 other farms where nothing was done the probable yield is reduced at least two-thirds. The torches cost in all half a cent each. 7:;11ECOOK'S3E TFRIEND 1.40GE1>T -SALE lel CANADA. Wear, tGklds .41 .te -� is the latest triumph in pltnrmaoyylor the mire' of alttbe symptoms indicating Zinnia's AND, xvua Complaint If yon are troubled with, Costiveness, Dizzlne0s, Sour Stomach., Ileadaelte, Indigesblon, P0011 ABPnTI'E, TrnnD Fn1LINo,EREn11A'1Ie PAIN&, SIeepleestt Nights, Melancholy Fooling, BAO1 Amu,! aEembrny's I 11i.Cy mad liver Corel v t.y,t S willgivo immediate relief and ErrLOTA e;rrre. old at all ])rug Storoe. llEGblbray • Medicine Conl)pa11y of Peterborough, (Limited), PETERBOROUGH, . . ONT SOLD BY J. T. PEPPER, D.I1u0o1ST, Bsussmx38: White Star Line. i1OYAL 1111113 S'I IBA9ISJl1PS. Dobtvoen Now York and Liverpool, via i,ltleonabown, every Wednoetl ay, As the steamers 0f this lino Barry only n strictly limited number in the PinOT and assnrseeidttuiolygPegearrwn1 haan intending for berths Is necessary ab 81110 0010• son. i• or plans, rates, 080„ apply to W. H. I"erla, Agent, Brussels, 1110NET TO E O.A.N. Any Amount of Money to Loan on Farm or Village Pro- perty at 6 & 6k Per Cent., Yearly. Straight Loans with privilege of repaying when required. Apply to A. Hunter, Division Court Clerk, Brussels. r Scrofula "After suffering for about Lwenly-five years from scrofulous sores on the logs and arms, trying various medical courses without benefit, I began to use Ayers Sarsaparilla, and a wonderful cure was the result. Five bottles sufficed to restore me to heal[(,."-Bnnifacfn Lopez, 307 E. Commerce in., San Antonio, Texas. Catarrh "My daughter was afflicted for nearly n year with catarrh. The physicians being unable to help her, my pastor recommended A}'Dr's Sarsaparilla. I followed his' advice. Three months of regular treatment ,with Ayer's Sarsaparilla and A?•er's Pills comp:cl_dy restored tey daughter s health." -Mrs. Louise Riche, Little Canada, Ware, Mass. he '' 1?tls t,Fi "For several years, I was troubled with inflammatory rheumatism, being so Ind ut tinges ns to be entirely helpless. For 610 I:: two years, whenever I felt the effects of Ito disease, I began to take Avers Sarsaparilla, and have not had a spell fir a lone 1i0la"- E. T. I1ansbrough, Elk Run, Ca. For all faiceo i diseases, best remedy is A A it r'r-�a p .rrnl Prepared by Pr, J. C. A.:, & Co.. Lowell, 11: ss. Sold by alt Druggists, 1'ri:a itis ; six beaks, $3. Cures ethers, vv'1.1 cum.') ;,cra M OLEO D' S System lie ,ovatox' -ANA 00111711 - TESTED REMEDIES SPECIFIC AND ANTIDOTE For Impure, Weak end Impoverished Blood, Dyspepsia, Sleepleasneee, Palpate, tion of the heart, Liver Complaint, Neill!. eight, Loss of Memory, Bronchitis, Con- sumption, Gall Stones, Ja1ndiee, Kidney and Urinary Diseases, St. Vitus' Dance, Female Irregularitiesbilityand General. De- , LABORATOCRY k OUERI514. ONT. J. M. 11IoLEOD, Prop. and Manufacturer, Bold by J. T. PEPPER. Druggist; 031uasela. Confederation Life Association. Head Office : TORONTO_ Capital and Assets, $5,000,000 Now Insurance, 1892, $3,670,000 Insurance at Risk, «22,565,000 Policies Non -Forfeitable and In- disputable after two years. Gains for 1892 over 1891 in In- surance, Written, $755,000, Or over 25 per cent. Insurance at (tisk, $1,978,000 Or Nearly 10 per oenb. A5sUrallee Ille0112e, $48,678 In Assets, - $439,878 VCT. . E TDR. E AGENT, BRUSSELS. Via_^. 1:W.c gym, arvie Stro PHOTOLII1APFHO Studio over Standard .bank, Brussels, We have all the leading styles in photos, such as Sun- beams, Mikado Panels, Carcte De Visites, Cabinets, (Man- tello Cabinets, new style) and any size larger, up to life size Crayon Portraits (which we make a Specialty of. Also riotwes Copied and Enlarged. Our Prices are Reasonable And our work nothing but First-class, which makes this the place to get your Photographs, A Call is Solicited. -312-1 Fall ea!lle11 allll Fall Goods. As it is now the season for a change of Clothing we beg to Announce that we are prepared: to supply our many Customers with seasonable goods in all lines. GOODS PRICES RIGHT. • STYLES S RIG -HT. General Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Capp. We guarantee Prices and Quality equal or better than any Competitor. .1 C4LL SOLICITED. 4: s Strachan