The Huron Signal, 1881-06-10, Page 6I; THE HURON SIGNAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1881.
She Poet's (Corner.
shag.
IWMrANION TO "Mr unser.")
When and how shall I meet him, if ever 1
What are We words h� ltret will say 1
How will the berm,*uqw that sever
Our kindred spirits pbeeLspoken away 1
This self same sunlight on him la shining
Shining somewhere the while I sing --
The oaly one whom my will resigning,
i coal ',acknowledge my Kies, my King.
Whether his hair be golden or raven,
Whether Iis eyes bedeck or blue,
1 know not, ow. but t'would stand eugraven
On that white day as a perfect hue.
Many • face I have liked for • minute,
Been charmed by a voice with a pleasant
ring.
But ever and aye there was something In It --
Something that could not be his-- my King.
I will not dream of him handsome or strong,
My ideal love may be weak and slight;
It matters not to what clime he belong,
He will be noble enough to my sight.
He may nut be brilliantly gifted, my lord,
And he may be learned In everything,
But if ever he comes. he will strike the chord
Whose melody waits for the hand of its
King.
But be must be courteous towards the lowly,
Kind to the weak and sorrowful, too,
Ile must be brave and refined and holy,
By nature exalted and firm andttrue.
To such i might fearlessly give the keeping
Of a love thatehell never outgrow its spring;
There would be stew tears of women's weeping
If they 'loved such men as my King, my
King !
If it is possible, try to suit your sis-
ters, cousins, emits, grandfathers, neigh -
bon, friends aid acquaintances when
you happen to tall at love. If yes can t
suit them all, don't worry, for the thing
has never been done yet.
If you use powder, don't give it away.
For instance, it would be well to
spread • handkerchief over the shoulder
of his broadcloth before you lean there-
on. Ho will be too green, depend on it,
to suspect the reassure If his moustache
happens to look & little powdery, there
are several ways in which it could be
brushed off.
Don't imagine that a husband can live
as • lover does—•n kiases and moon-
light. He will oome home to his meals
as hungry as a bear, and any little know-
ledge of cookery you pick up during
courtship is about the best provision you
can make for future happiness.
Remember that nature has put every
man under the necessity of having •
mother, and that the latter is not in any
way to blame if she a regarded as the
bitter part of a sugar-coated matrimonial
pill. If you feel in duty bound to be
her sworn enemy postpone this duty till
you know something about her.
Don't seek advice to love affairs from
an old maid who has been crossed in
love, • bachelor who has been jilted, •
woman who married her husband's
pocketbook, or a man who happens to
be henpecked. Don't confide w your
Fun ani Fancy.
Cannitrils eimietimes have their neigh-
bor at dinner.
Fame ie like a pig with a greased tail
- hard to hang on to.
Of all the attachments of a sewing ma-
chine the feller is the most pleasing to
girls
A medical writer says children need
more wrens than adults. They general-
ly get more.
"Ma, what is revenge?" "It is when
your father scolds me,and I,hit him with
a broomstick."
Young ladies and elephants attain
their growth at Its. But here analogy
ceases. One trunk is euough for an ele-
phant.
Ought not a picture dealer to be semen
of picturesque appearance, have a fine
frame, ,end be .able to canvass success-
fully?.
"The strongest propensity in a wo-
man's nature," says a careful student of
the sex, "is to want to know what is
going on, and the next thing is to boss
the job."
What have our babies done that they
should not have a coluinn in the census
reports ? They ahoul3 be 'enumerated
in the schedule of "domestic pr duets."
A. New York -j ape. says that in that
city crying at weddings has gone out of
fashion. In Chicago the father 'of the
bride does the crying when he comes to
settle the hills.
girl friends; to keep a secret in a love
affair would kill them. Don't consult is what it seemed to be. For ourselves,
your minister; he'll have the marriage however, we should say that the making,
fee in view. If ou go to your familythe tnmtniug, the basting, and cutting
might safely be left to the taste and skil-
ful fingers of the ladies, while the impor-
tant thing would seem to be to get the
"correct thing" in the material itself,
which is understood to be imported by a
Boston concern,upoa whose waresfashion
has set her seal. The iichness, the var-
iety the wonderful delicacy of shade and
tint make a "paper party" like a gli apse
of fairy land, and that this really charm -
France had never—Ass never—been so deg form of evening entertainment is
near extirpation. "The people," as the
historian Martin expresses it, "were no becoming more and more fashionable,
longer bathed in their sweat, but ground -
in their blood, debased below the beasts
of the forest, among which they wander
panic-stricken, mutilated, in quest of an
asylum in the wilderness." This fervent
La the first place. The variety of eiders,
shades, and tints is practically hawthorns -
so that every combination and
every kind of effect are pusibte. Tbeti
the paper ern be made to imitate almost
any thing in the way tit costume
and trimaaiug-rutlb, pfaitingsti flounce's,
fringes, and all the indescribable but
highly important furbelows which no
man in the world but Mr. Worth
can ever hope to understand—se all
given exactly; important, even DI the
gilded circles of which we speak, is the
fact that the paper a unlike the costly
fabrics which it iaitatesit in one respect
—it is not wetly. Probably only a wo-
man can know the full delight of mak-
ing • dress, looking at it with altar!,
doubting about it, concluding that it is
"horrid," and then being able to seemly
throw it away, without a thought of the
expence, and make another as unlike it
as possible. The process of making the
custurne is very simple, as described is
the writer by a young lady herself
arrayed in a most distracting Watteau
costume, charming in colour and mirac-
ulous in cut who said: You just baste
the shirt on over the skirt, and then you
cut the waist out of pique' —at least this
physician, he will say your liver isaffect-
ed in place of your heart. If you must
get the instructions from somebody why
not ask your mother how she used to
manage things with your father ? True,
love didn't run any smoother in old
times than it does to -day, and, since she
knows how it is herself, we can't think
just now of any better way to advise
you.
A three-year-old discovered the neigh-
bor's hens in her yard scratching. In a
most indignant tune she reported to her
motherthat Mr. Smith's hen were
"wiping thit feet on our grass.."
A witty divine, who was consulted by
a committee of church wardens in their
perplexity as to the heat description of
block pavement to lay' down, advised
them to lay their heads together.
Jeanne Dare.
and sympathetic girl came at, length to
see the desolation ..1 her country; her
owe village was laid waste and plundered
by a marauding band. From childhood
she had been familiar- with the legend,
"France, lost through a maid, shall by a
maid be saved.,,
The story of her exploits at court. in
camp, in the field, is familiar to all the
world. A thousand vulgar fictions ob-
scure and degrade its essential truth.
What this untaught girl did for her
country was simply this: she brought to
btaar on the armies of France the influ-
ence
of what our own Western preachers
would call a "powerful revival of re-
ligion. ' From bands of feckless and
dissolute plunderers, she made French
soldiers orderly, decent, moral, and de-
vout. Hope revived. She made the
king believe in himself; she made the
court believe in the cause. Men of faith
saw in her the expected virgin savior;
men of understanding perceived the ad-
vantage to their side of having her thus
regarded. She may, too (aa some of her
warrior comrades testified in later years),
have really possessed some military
talent, As well as martial ardor and in-
spiration. They said of her that she had
good judgment in placing „artillery.
Later in her short public career she
showed hetself restless, rash uncontrol-
lable; she made mistakes she incurred
disasters. But for many months, during
which France regained a place among
the powers of Europe, she was a glorious
presence in the army --a warrior virgin,
in brilliant attire, splendidly equipped
superbly mounted, nobly attended; a
leader whom all eyes followed with con-
fiding admiration, as one who had been
their deliverer, and 'vu still their chief.
The lowliness of her origin was an ele-
ment in her power over a people who
worshipped every hour a Saviour who
read over the door of an ancient inn
Rheims, the Maison Rouge, this inscri
"I•say, Jenkins, car you tell a young,
tender chicken from an old, tough one["
"Of course I can." "Well, how?" "By
the teeth." "Chickens have no teeth."
"Yes, but I have. "Good inorning. •'
"Good morning."
"There's one thing I envy a hog for,"
said Spenoerton to the barker. "Ile
don't have to be shaved till after death."
"Some hogs does and some doesn't,"
replied the artist. There's no use argu-
ing with a barber white in his power.
A young gentleman the other day ask-
ed a young lady what she thought of the
married state in general. "Not know-
ing, I can't tell," was the reply; "but if
you and I were to put our heads togeth-
er, I could give you a definite answer."
An exchange nays "striped parasols
have to take the place of striped stock-
ings." We don't believe it. The idea
of a woman holding a stocking over her
head to keep off the sun, and wearing
parasols on iter—oh, rho, we can't believe
the story.
A patent medicine advertisement is
headed "Women neverThink." But let
one find a perfumed note, written in a
feminine hand, in h.:r heeband's coat
pocket, and she will think with all her
might and main for upward of consider-
able time.
Lesser la Ilse+4 Illatlag.
and generally speaks well at once for the
taste, the esthetic perception, and the
good sense of "society."
PAY VP.
BERG now out of business on account of
the tire, it is necessary that alldebtsowed
me should be settled early. I take this oppor-
tunity of desiring all concerned to pay up at
once.
1778-2m GEORGE CATTLE.
PRINTS.
COI�BORNEL BROTHERS
5 CENTS A YARD UP. .
THE BEST VALUE IN TOWN.
AFTER TEE FIRE.
JOHN :'TORY
The Tinsmith is still to the font.
1 have pleasure to state than dbsplte the Inocnvenlen.x, I was put to in rets business by
Cbs reoent tin, in my premises, their I am now in full blast again. prepared te give the greatest
bargains in Goderich in
STOVES, TiNWARE, LAMP GOODS,
and every other line in the business,
rwould also return my thanks N the Fire Brigade and people of Goderlch tun
manful eAbrts,ln saving my property la my absence from home, at the tate Ire.
TO THE PUBLIC:—
Having disposed of my Photo
Business in Goderich, I would take this
oyiwrtunity to return thanks for the many
facers received since commencing business
here seven years ago. For my- successor,
Mr. Se/lows, I bespeak u continuance of
-the patronage so kindly tendered me, and
ktu,wing him to possess superior ability,
predict for him a successful business career.
RespectfuUy, •
R. R THOMPSON,
Photo.
F"R THE LADIis,
Don't love to,, many at :ince.
Give your little brother taffy and get
hint to bed before your chap calls.
Rec"Meet that a wedding -ring on your
finger is worth a good many of them in
your mind.
Try to find out by aome moans wheth-
er your intended knows how to earn a
decent living for two.
Be reasonable; don't expect a man
w. rking for $8 a week to furnish you
with reserved seat* at the opera every
other night.
Don't be afraid to show the nun of
your cheicethat iota love him—provided,
of course, lie loves you. Love is a elon-
ble-sidod sort of concern, end both have
a pert to play.
Don't try t t friars :on uiau suitors to seen, fashionable lady in r it oe
our feet. They have feet aawell as you
your
n•td a ret ata sae rine ,ail of ?eel 1 + .,reins in B,stnn not 1 tie Ince
have, y 1
planned and carred .iut a •'tissue -paper
party." The public in general has, per-
haps, not discovered it lint she had
found that tissue paper. are importe,l of
late of a most marvelous variety and
beauty of color. With a happy stroke
of inveativs fancy, she determined to
give a party at which t,aeiie-paper'tress-
es should be d. rio.,ir. The idea was III
m,es recognized as a hapyy one. sad tb
result eras a .neceaa .o complete ee 'to
sutpsise even the originator r1 tilt[ 1446.
was cars led in a manger. We can still
tion; "In the year 1429, at the coron-
ation of Charles VII., in this tavern, THE REPRINTS OF
then called The Zebra, the father and
mother of Jeanne Darc lodged, at the ex- TNF. BRITIAN etA10TKILY r Krrnprtical/,
penes of the City Council." %Deli 41 4tTERLI f('onsrrratirei,
Her career cnuid not but he brief. EDt%RI14.11 (WW-hig/
When she left home to deliver her coun- AND
try, she had lived, according to the most' pE-"TMl�is5TEll tLebtrtai
recent French authorities, seventeen REVIEWS,
ears and two months. Fifteen months urD
Blackwoos'a T4iabargh Marasine,
With reference to the above, I would inform
all interested that my aim will be to produoe
work at the Lowest Prices consistent with
Good Quality, and shall spare no pains to give
satisfaction.
A fine assortment of Albums. Frames, &c..
to hand in a few days.
A call solicited.
R. SALLOW S.
Photo. Blake's Block. odericb.
'Successor to R. R. Thompson.)
John Story.
the sac
SAIIIERS' VARIETY STOIE.
8 VICK'
a1ISV*ATr ,& SAI si111114
Fur 1161 is w t Book of 130 One
Colored flower plate, sad Iltusirsttoos,
with Ile. ,�jgla�s{t et ttlhoaesbeet Flower. sad
10Vegetables.o..lanrttrs man.tarlrh'oftenero. Ody
l0 renis. a German. II
wards order &gigot the 10 coats
net's Seaga are the beet in the world The
floral Outdo win tall how to set and grow
them. o�o��b1. Garden,
Slick's Flower endes Ss0 lfagrsvin(i. rue
Pages, 6 Colored 1'1•tM 0YD
!]l.rti is elegant cloth.
to every a sad
NEW GOODS.
5,000 ROLLS WALL PAPER
50 menta in paper se
1n German or
Tkk s O/
Pages, •
many
sac �ia� . psis Tt.s s yes►•
Five Copies ur Mui. Number.
sect tar 10 cents: 3 trial for 16 cents.
Address. JAMBS PI . Rochester..NN. Y
figr•FRESH STOCL"sk,zeo-NEW STYLES. -ea.
WiNDOW SHADES, TRAVELLING BAGS,
BASKETS, BABY CARRIAGES.
A FINE STOCK, SFCYLISH AND CHEAP
Note the Stand. "The Cheapest House Under the Sun."
crNext doer to the Post Office.
SEE WHAT
PHYSICIANS
Aad People in Canada say about
Scott's Emulsion
Of Pure Cod Liver Oil
WITH
R phosp hes of Lime & Soda
AS A
REMEDY FOR CONSUMPTION
AND
If You Want Good
GROCERIES,
PROVISIONS,
CROCKERY, or
GLASSWARE,
--60 Tt)—
D. FERGUSON'S
Hamilton Street, Opposite Bailey's Hotel.
s
Min addition to the ordinary lines of the Grs'ery and Crockery Trade, I carry a f,i ock of
WASTING DISEASES
etlloodlao, N. B., Nov. 5, 18/I1.
Mesar.. soon' ts BOW NE:- 1 have used arch
prescttbed for .utas time "Scott's Emulsion of
Cod Liver Oil." aid find it an excellent prepa-
ration, agreeing wail with the stomach, easily
taken, and iseooatinued use adding greatly to
the strength and comfort of the p•tlent.
A. H. PICK, >L D.
Penn. Med. College.
Amhara, Nova Scotia, Nov. 8, 1880.
Meer.. SCOTT & BOWNIL—Cents: For
nearly. two yeses I have been acquainted wit h
Scott s Emulsion of Cod Liver OII with HYPO-
phospbttes, and consider it the finest prepara-
tion now before the public. itsperutaneocy as
an Emulsion with the pleasant flavor, makes it
the greetfavortte for children, and 1 do highly
reoommend it farat wasting diereses of the
system.
Years, very truly.
0. A. BLACK, M. D.
Halifax, N. S., Nov. 19, 1880...
Messrs. SCOTIA BOWNE,--Gentleman: I
have prescribed year EmuWon for the pasttwo
years, and found it more agreeable to the
stomach, and have better results tram its use
from any other preparation of the kind i have
tried,
Ir. t'AMxaON, M. D.
Flour, Ies, Pork and llueiaI ftois!ous
N.B.—As I have all the Negatives made by at
R. R. Thompeon previously to my taking the
business, parties wishing duplicates will please
send me their ordre.
R. SALLOWS,
•Fhotografo.
LIBERAL OFFERS
FOR 1881_
p Two Years for the Price of One !
ater, May 24, 1430, after a series of im-
portant victories, followed by minor de-
feats, she was taken prisoner under the
walls of Compiegne, which she was at-
tempthtg to relieve. French troops.
fighting on the side of the English, cap-
tured her and held her prisoner. French
priests in the metropolitan church of
Notre Dame, at Paris, celebrated ht r
capture by a "Te Deum." It is doubt-
ful if her own king lamented her lose:'
fur this devoted, deluded girl belonged
to the order of mortals whom the powers
of this world often find it as. convenient
to be rid of as to use. It is probable
that she had expended her power to be
of service and had become unmanageable
Small, needless failures, chargeable to
her own rash impetuosity, had lessened
her prestige. For the fair and wanton
Agnes Sorrel the idle King r•f France
would have attempted much; lint he
made no serious effort to ransom ..r res-
cue thb Maid to whom he r•wed his
crown and kingdom. --(James Part. n. in
lfarper's Magazine for done.
Tlsswe-raper Partly..
walking cif from you soma nay y.,u would
he very glad to call back.
Keep your temper, if yon expectour
otI tr•lia:f inlay to keep his. 1f 11e
doesn't suit you gi.e h;m his ticket -of -
leave. If he does suit you, uern't expect
him to put up with your humors.
Deal carefully w•{tl b. +Idol loves;
lead thele gru,lra!iy t • the (,Hint (of pro-
pw..al, of comity), but rlon't let :beta sus-
pect what yo'• are t.t, t.rthey 'night faint
.tri yore hands, of fir' maty on the spot
it is said lovers' yearn' r always end
a -lib kisses. This i.s j,;utl' true; hut if
yarn
ere -"tit r fid these'itt; e1 -its is
ndulq. 1n tt e is in SI, '.desacs Tow 10 truth. the drew*, conjured out.iie
porpt, iM i x yfelliez to hem. ,. {rt Aare 'Tutorialra
storial e. •vtrwniele 14,0146.1
•i
Present the hest rorr-idn pp-riodinala in a -on
venlent form and with set abridgment or
alteration.
Terris atMabseraplMa 1lAirfoil sig rMtage.1
Blackwood or any nee tteview... $4.00 paean.
Blackwood end any one Review. 7.00
Blackwood and two Reviews. . . 10.00
Blackwood and three Reviews.. 13.00 „
Ally two Reviews 7.00
•'
rise four Review. .,
Blackwood rend the tout t'eviews 15.11)
These are about MY tar priers charged by
the English Pnhlishers.
Circularm giving the Contents of the Period -
Male for the yews MY and many other partic-
ulars. may he had en application.
'PRIEMILTMIS_
New subscribers may have the numbers for
1M sad I8el at the prior of one year sub
stilettos only.
To any subecriber. new or oft. we will fur -
Mall the periodicals for 1871 at halt price.
♦Il order. to he went to the p•thlieattnn °Moe.
To t." are pre miemit apply promptly.
The Lsoaart Scott Publishlhe 00.,
es BAB. LtI ST.. NEW TNF.
Pig
w „r
r •
`11 v
37-
.0
11:
Els
GLOM TORACOO CO.,
t'PI n.+ w,.. ,-,1 'Ma:prnis '1
Mt MOTTO 1:.
Fair Dealing and Moderate Prices."
Coal Oil also sold. Seedy Stock and get my preen
q•tGoods delivered to any part of the
D. Ferguson.
Daniel Gordon,
Belleville, Ont.
Messrs. SCO1TeL BOWNF,—Dear Sirs: I
feel It • duty I owe not only to you but to the
community, to make the following statement:
About three yeareago my eldest daughter was
taken with • serer cold which settled on her
lungs, and not wittsslanding all that her medl-
eal attendant could do. she got worse and
worse, and appeared to be in the last and hope-
less stage of consumption. The Doctor said be
could do nomore, but recommended your Em-
ulsion, and the effect of it was in the opinion
of every one who knew her. simply -marvelous.
Before she had used the first bottle. she felt
much better, and to the surprise of us all, she
continued to mend so rapidly that in three
months she was able to go about as usual. and
has continued in such excellent health that
she got married 18 months ago, and has now
as flne and healthy a son as you can find in the
country.
WILLIAM BLAND.
Elora. Ont., July. 1880.
This Is to certify that my daughter has had
Lung disease for some tints, and very much
reduced in flesh, and had not strength enough
to walk aerues the street. She was advised by
a lady friend to try Scott's Emulsion. and to
our great surprise before she had used three
bottles her health was completely recovered.
I recommend it to every one troubled with the
same disease.
JOHN W. Bl,WLe.
r' THE GREATEST WONDER OF JIO1)MRN
, TIMES [—The Pills Purify the Blood,correct all
1 me eil disorder. of the Wver, Stomach, Kidneys and
Bowels and are h, aluable lnallcompplaints In-
cidental to Female+. TbeOintment tt the only
reliable remedy for Bad Legs Old Wounds,
Sores and Ulcers, of however Legs,
standing.
g ForBronchltis,D1phtheria.C'ougha,rolds,Gout,
Rheumatism and all Skin Diseases. It has no
equal.
BE�t.1RE OF AMERICAN COUNTER-
FEIT �. - I mbit respectfully take leave to hall
the attention of the Pnhlic generally to the fact
PARLOR Sumas, the certain Hooses in New York are sending u,
Bsn Roo. $CTftta, many parts of the globe ePCRIOCs IMITATIONS'
:'i1Dx-Boehmof my Pills and Ointment. Thew, se frauds hear
r
on their labels some addreIn New York. i
EASY CiHAI>tt, do not allow Medicine to be sold in any part
Lot''rors,sxrc , ere. of the United Htatea. I have no Agents; there.
My ate-twine/late only made by me at 533 Oz -
will find it tib their advantage to see my stock if they need a good article at ford StreeLoudon Street. Lowon. make fn the 'Books of directions
D. GORDON, Tvrsl Street, near Post Office, Goderirh.
amxed to the ttpurlousake is acant lnn warn-
ing the Public against ieingdeeclved by roun-
terfelte. Doan, be misled 1, this audacious
trick. as the/ are the rowwlrrrils they pretewd
Metronome,. These nounterfclte are purchased
by unprincipled Vendors at one-half the pelt -cot
my P,lleand Ointment and are told toyou semy
genuine Medicines. 1 moot eerneetly •ppesl to
that tem.- of i ustice which 1 feel sure i may v.n-
tnrr np.in eel( ingfrom all honorable pens)na, to
a.tiet tee. and the Public, as tar as mat lie in
Carriage w Ori. S . theirp,wer.indenmmrlitVhi.eham 711eZtRt_
Fa'h Pot and Roz of the tienaine Medlelne
s hear. the• Rrltsh Government Sta
Oldest House in the ',minty, and Largest Stock this side of London!
Cash Buyers
close prick
KINTAII
POINTER
having leased the shop of Mr. P. Bayne, is now engaged in the manufectu re o
first clans
CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, WAGGONS, etc.
Give me a call. and I will give yon prices that cannot be oeaten in th
county.
REPAIRZNC� 8i JOBBING D ONE
KINTAIL CARRIAGE WORKS,
B. FoINTER
GET YOUR
AUCTION SALE BILLS
PRINTED it the ,Aloe of nu' l3URON .ZONAL
Nettl4 Piet se, .-stens
p
m with the
words HOLLOW Ar'. PI LI/i AND OISITIIIMT.
LoSIr>nN. engraved thereon. On the label is
the addrre., MI Oxford street, i.ondon. where
alone they are Manufactured. HoUowg,j'.Pi11.
nazi Ointment bear(wp any other n4m'e s are
enwaferee(t. The Trade Marks of these Meet -
cines are regbtered ht Ottawa. Hesee any one
throughout the British Posseestees. who may
keep the Armenia' Counterfetta for sate, w1)1 be
Prosecuted. Marilee) THOMAS HOLLOW A T
Oxford Street. Lesidon. Jan. 1. 1879.
.,INUALESE.
IIAiR RENEWEF
The erne—now glory et men or wnmee is a
M•antlfel MEAD OT MAIM This ran only be ob-
tained by usi ti IltwA �a �8RR. whieh has
proved 'Melt to the SHl®'X' $�ZR
R IiS'I'OR R to the market.
moan • healthy growt of the hair. renders t
soft aril allky• Wreathes. its ret... and pre
cents its falling ont. Ind sots with rapidity In
RESTORING GREY NAIR
TO ITS NATURAL COLOR.
t.ir wqh Woets.. see. N eta �• batethto r 41751,1d by,
AGENTS 9I-•atnd Rig Pay. I"'t'
wort. t'entwast eatpylwt'
�fe C�Isat tiro+ J ae=s I.st &tea Moo
to sat. rs 1110
5'