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The Huron Signal, 1889-6-28, Page 6THE EURON SIGNAL. FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1889 fls Hunted Erre You ell know that sadden pieta are apt to ether in • storm. Om of there blew on into the hospitality of Mr Illuwsrd Maat'•mbode. It arose, hot sad angry, as m friend and 1 pfd Were his- ge=ne--bwbg Mr held &boot melt f, Illsag oar menthe with dart, Winding as and iuo as, sad just as I had gasped, miles from home, .ud I am so eirsadtelly afraid of lightning I an arm wee offered to eseh of es, sad • voice said"Allow use to moon Toe in- % the h is formate tibia yea ego oe seer. The storm will break ower r to five minutes." Aad we had uttered thanks and spoln- hies, and were muter the rod of the ikandeomwt house in the place bettors the first raindrops fell My friend Mn Barlow ko•w Mr Hast, at least by souse. I saw him for the iret time on that day. He was the only as. 1 over saw is whom lace, or term, or voice I could find no fault. With • highbred courtesy that io itself mast have won s woman s heart, be ut- tered us • thousand little attentions, end made nn at home at •oro. The stoma raged furiously wittuut, but luseriant comfort reigned within, and we looked et the rain drops apuu the paces, and -saw the branches Beed in the blast. and the lightning rend the sky, and beard the thunder roar. aged were ttheakful indeed for the consideration of OM gentleman who had so gallantly ut- tered es the shelter of his root. Mn Barlow was a lively ..W possess- ed matron et some forty years and I eras a girl fresh from school, with ro- mantic ideas in my mind, and dreams which Moore and Byron and Bulgier bad awakened filing my heart. Kamm of their heroes could hare been so heed - some or so admirable in every way as this gentleman, I thought. Mrr Barlow talked for me, and coon *delicate and tempting lunch wee serv- ed, after whist, the storm ceasing and the roads reaming impassable for pedes- trians Mr Hunt drove us home wad left es, promising to cell soon sud pity his respects to M. "1 never told you •bout Mr Hunt, Nellie 1' asked Mrs Barlow, that even- iog.No, I think not." "His is rather romantic history. Ile was poor tem years ago–poor and un lucky. Tbree or four attempts to make a fortune had left hint where he bad first found himself on leaving oollsge-- witb nothing bat his education ; and, despairing ul anything better, he travel- led with • young soon of an aristocratic family as tutor, comps , eta, on the Cootinent. Tkey 'did' Italy gird Prance and all the rest, of coarse, and boally returned to Loudon, where, it is arid, & maiden lady fell in love with biro. She wee $ titled woman–Lady Blanche something, I've forgotten what–and she was almost double his age, and enor- mously wealthy. They were married, -and he sotsaliy brought her to his hoes in this town to be rid of her relatives, who were deeply indignant, and here she died in three months. She never made •oqu•intanoe with any one. We were all too mocn below her, perhspe is her opinion, or he was ashamed of each an obviously interested marriage But I have esu her ufte0--a witch of • w ,msn, looking old enough to be his grar:dmi.ther. eiriekled, and sharp, and gray, skis and hair mike. But she left bits • large fortune ; and with that fact and his wrest personal beauty, he is naturally the best match of the place. 1 could count fifty girls who have done their best to win hint. bat he is obdur- ate. Perhaps the reeks may be reserv- ed for you, Nellie." So our conversation ended with a jest; and • lest indeed it seemed to me, for I never fancied Mr Heat 000ld have noticed ashy young thing like me, who had so little to say for herself, and it had not entered my head to think my- self pretty. Tet when, is a week, he called upon us, and when, the summer wearing on, he became a constant visitor at the Itsrlows', and I knew, and all knew that it was I whom he liked best of any there, • strange happiness thrilled my soul, end I wondered as one might to whom A fairy boon had beset given. The time was drawing near which was to end my visit, and summer never seemed so leoely or autumn so e•d Should we part then, and should I never see him again 1 I eked myself ; but I could not answer. It ley, I knew, with hint. in each • case • girl is poweriese ile had looked into my eyes. Ile had heed my bani lingeringly at paring. I bad memories of tender tons and word. that might have mon meaning than lay opnn their surface, bat I knew nothing of his intentions. It might be his smile way with all women that had wen my heart. One day come an invitation. bit Hent was, it Deemed, desiros of filling his house with gusts. A charming party had been invited for • wok. The pleasantest people in the world, Mn Barlow said, and it was ac kind to ask her boys, who were snob romps. Go 1 Of sours we world go. A pleasanter and mon congenial enm- psny enuld sot have been gathered to- gether. We met for the first time at dinar/re--a feast ; it merited no lees • title. And in the evening we danced aid sang, end walked in oouplos through the gardens, wbere he hoe placed a bend that disa.ursed sweet meek. (Hi, such an evening ! When it was over i found myself following • servant maid along the corridors to my chamber. 1 was Mill in a:sort of dream. I enter ed a choir she opened, and heard her say, "This is yoere, Miss," and saw her pet down the light end tern away with a enertesy ; end then I was alone. i sat dowel in • great armchair, sad Inked shoat rile. I was a splendid room – a lady's, evidently. The toilet sp- pert en&ees were iy�� the mirror most beautiful had ever seen. The Mit end window hawing' were of hes. The carpet seated to he • meteors of white velvet, in the metre of which birds flattered neer • sett of eggs .m - hoovered In foliage. Ten armchairs of merlin velvet, and • ioaams 01 the sante Materiel. e sbeaet of eanoritts, and seem rare china, enmpleted the furniture; and over Hee earned mantel hong • Isis - latera I arose sed looked at it. It w as the psmreit of oar host. I ewld sot resist the impelee--I best over sad kissed it–I kneed it os its pistani bps ; sad thea, is as maw*of Rtrltek Meme, •atiogerW the lamp, sad hastily androgen*, sueghi my pillow. How tusg 1 slept 1 du sent know ; but 1 swekeaed with • dart. The moss had risen, •ad the light fell thrombi the w indow epee the mirror opposite the bed. Lacking towards it, I saw within ie heart a Nonage sort d light - bluish .ad vivid–end amidst it • tom's figure. There was do oats in the roost. How abomld the mimes reheat what was not tip be redeeied 1 I .b.ddeeed, but I had we power to taro away may *yea. Ones I W looked into one of those diminishing glows in which everything is seen on s smaller stela So ouw, in din ordinary mirror, I saw • picture in which the Moires were no larger than dolls--tbe furniture like that of a boy hoses. Yet it was the room in which 1 lay. The bed also ; but ea the bed I saw an old women–hideous as age meld slake her --sound &eleop. A table stood by the bedside–s mosaic stand, which actually was in the corner, end oo it was . glee. A man bent over the table, and I new that be held • phial in his band, from whish red drw(s were trickl- ing. The other band vies clenched. and the eyes lifted as thougb regarding some object with horror. The whole vision, if vision it were, lasted some five minutes. Theo the mir- ror refloated only the menu, and 1 beard, amidst • terror greeter than words can express, the clock of the church• yard hardy strike twelve. I think 1 tainted –certainly I lost ell consciousness, and I a ill late,, very feverish, and loociog • w As I dressed I began to -feel quite sure that this strange thing was only • dread• fel dream. It could be nothing else. I had been, perhaps, a little delirious. My bands were hot and my brow burn- ing. Next night I felt • disposition to de- lay the hour of retiring, and actually left my light burning. Set I fetl asleep, and was awakened by the striking of the cloak. Twelve I koew it must be, for it was eleven before we parted, and the strokes were mmy. The light still burnt upon my mantel, and my ayes fell upon the mirror for an instant, as one sees • Haab of lightning. I saw that ' Hauge picture. The room, the bed, the woman lying upon it, the mut bending over the glass. Bat it vanished w gniekly that 1 had 0o didiculty in imag- ining that it was all a feverish fancy–s remembrsoce of lest nights dream. l d ept again, and awoke refreshed. That night my friend Mrs Barlow came into my room with we. At first she jested and tried to torment me, but at last she laid seriously, "I have sen how it was going on for a long time_ Mr Heat is devoted to yogi. You are • lucky girl, Nellie. He is handsome, rtoh, sod very good.'. "I am not sure he means scything," I • ask for no oonfovioo," she said. "There, it is • quarter to twelve ! I must go. Good -night !" She left me, and 1 went to the mirror and began to oobrsid my Bair. The light fell full &poo my face and I was looking at it is a dreamy sort of way, when it vanished. I noticed the sawn strange bteuk hoe overspread the glass, and I saw the picture once more which I had already looked upon twice. As betore,the room was on • diminish- ed scale ; the furniture placed as it use not in reality ; the stand by the bed, on it, • glass ; within the bed, • woman ; bending over it, s men. But •11 was plain now, with the black and white distinctness of • steel engraving. The old woman's pinched (ace, her wan hands on the coverlet, and the face bent over the table was that of Mr Hunt. He wore • loose dre. lag -gown such as I had never sono him wear, and I noticed that his hair was cot sod parted in • different fashion. I noticed even the horror in his eyes become evident to w–the aw- ful horror of guilt. I also sew the label on the phial which be held. The min- uteness of the letters cannot be imagin- ed. but I read them plainly. The first, a Latin abbreviation which I did not ocmpprehend ; the next, the horrible English word–poises ! Thee. as before, twelve spokes filled the air. It was midnight.. With the last echo the picture faded from the g lass. I saw my own face, horribly pale and terror-stricken, staring at me for e mooent, and then dropped upon the carpet I knew that this time I had next dreamt, and the horror of my conviction was too gnat to bear. I lett the homes at dawn. I offered no excuse. I shocked my friends by my *widen. I was rude and ungrateful to our kind host, they said ; but he follow- ed ma He came to me with lover's looks and words, and pleaded for my heart. A week before, it had been his. Now, I1•It only fear for him. I refused bre, and fled his premium trembling. Ret I kept my secret and never told any no. of my visite and west home at let keeping/ it en closely that its weight became almost too great to bear. i grew thin sad lost the boys icy of my dispo- sition. I was haunted at one* by memory and by remorse. If Mr Hunt were all I Dace had fancied bias, I had wronged hint in as mad a whim as ever played through a disordered brain. The months pard on. A year had gone. Then there came to me • kttei from lin Barlow. A preface of kind wishes, thee these words : "Too remem- ber Mr Hunt, w;inen I wanted you to like, and how angry I was when yon refined hits I My deer Nellie, you had • narrow escape. How he has deceived us ell 1 A week ego he was arrested for the murder of his late wife. No oa. ►s - hewed it here. Her friends moved is the matter, sad we grieved for bit mad tlioeghi it all dries out o1 bate sail revenge became he had inherited .11 the fortune these omens neo and Meese, mud n ephews wished to divide sewing them- selves. Hot he proved ole elf is the 'prong Yesterday he m+mmitted msi- eid* 1i the prism aid lett • written eoa- fessioa "it wee his plan from the irst, as it soma. He entwined her slowly He kept • diary of the chess is her health, and was very enol .boat it. Bet he mord, the fest that at the giving r4 the last dose the one that berried the pont old woman who bad base so toad of him hes eternity– be looked up std saw the rioters is the minor in the Mem, joist as the nook struck twelve ; .ad bow af- terwards he always loaded that the mir- ror was hafted by the some, and that bedtime to it at msdnigbt ha should w it aesie. A &image idea, was it not 1 Bet he was always potties, yen know. Qoeld yon have believed him snob • seosadrol wham be made es all s happ at hie beautiful home 1 I fogad myself w espiwe for bins, thougb he dace not deserve • tear. Puor old betty, what a tate to bring cpuu homed 1 Ten were wiser than we whoa yen refused How- ard tiara." se Mrs' Vilma "Was troubled with headed', bad blood .ad loss of appetite, sod tried all sorb of medi nes without seeneess I thea treed one bottle of Burdo.k Blood Bitten sud found relief in 10 Lye." A J Moodie, Mitigate'', Ont. 1 Sew le mreiba Nobody teaches Awruaa boys bow to breathe. City b, y.. sod many: from the country, two. have finer chasm be - foie they go to school than they over du afterwards. Bitting in • school- room, Of shop, or factory, or any usher room, live or sox hours • day, and there miming mut of the rest of the da be- sides, does muck to weaken the chest ; for ohm you sit still, you do not breathe year lenge belt full Tab ooe targe, fall breath sow, sod sea how your breast rhea and expands, and how differently tram • minute ego. when brunt►lag Daly as you generally do. Many boys as - toady do not Drank* their lungs fell mace in • whole week. Is it any wonder that they have weak chests, and that tbay wily catch ooid I How are you to have strorg lunge if you do not use them I Which has the Meting arum–the invalid leaving • sick bed or the black- smith 1 he who uses his arms, or be who does out 1 When walking at the rate of (oar mils •n hoer, you breathe nearly five times as mach as when you are sitting still. Now, the fuller breaths you tate, and the mere of them Toe take in • day, the etrooger fend fuller chest you aro g oing to have. If every bow in the United Stats would take • thousand slow, very deep breaths every day from NSflLftifi KNOIMLf DOE• 0005 AND ENDS. lie treated °mlulav .dmastea flee soot.. Merl. lege Harm etas Wed. I s glad that there are • sew man iso this age at the world like the old termer who oboe scud to me that "winsome hadn't no ofd ea' ferrels' beyond a krww- Mdgs of ►.mw to write their ewe names and read fairly welt." Bet I do some Noes think that this higher edemitioa ter imam .he.ld be motorised is Sas0 4110 110 by ess•sder•uoae es to what their hears hese ere tv be. 'rbie sou vbtios was strenetbened the other day atter 1 had read the aoouunt of • mar- riage of a yaeag tread ut mina He is • plain. plodding, good uatered sort of s ywog fellow, of ordinary meatal capaci- ty, working for • very mica sake', bat I doubt if he ever has anything mon than • eatery, by way of income, and it was this part ut the wedding notice that set me to thinking : ''The bride is a graduate of oast high wheal, of the W— Normal school and of K— university. She has made a special steely of the languages sad speaks and reads French. German, Spao- iab and Itefub with se muck ease se her mother tow,ue, while she is very pima - neat is many esieetiic studies." It eoourreei to me that • young woman eke had bees educated up to this bigb standard most have had little tine for the study of many things it behooves the possible nim nus of every how to know. I wondered of what earthly woe bee knowledge of chemistry, of mtram my and geology world be in the home she would now have end in the society in which henceforth she is destined to move. I bethought ms of the mistress .1 . certain house, whose kaowledge of botany is very muck greater than her knowledge of bread ..king, and who mold discharge the duties of • college president better than she can direct the affairs of her own wildly disordered home. Too close application to her books has greatly undermined her health, and her husband and children are ob- jects of general sympathy in the neigh- borhood in which they ltwa I recall the mase of a herd working mechanic and bis wife who made every sacrifice that their only daughter might receive an education batter than that given her in the excellent public schools now on throughout his life, it would al- in the city in which she lived. After most double our vigor and effectiveness i graduating from the high soboul she was as • nation. Fur deep breathing not sent for four years to • well known col - only enlarges the chest itself, and makes it shapely and strong, but it gives power and vigor to the lungs and heart, asks them do their work far better. And it does the same for the Momsith and bowels, the liver and kidneys ; in- deed, tdeed, to all the vital organs. It maks the blood richer. It .ddb directly to the vigor of the brain e. well. and eo e nables it to do peers work. In short. it is about the best koowo way of get- ting and keeping health. And whe would care to hire • sick men to work for hie 1 Or who an do much hard work when he is sick 1 Nut that we cao always avoid sickol•., but it is las like - lege, and came home !eighty proficient in many things she knows nothing about today, for she is now the wife of a hard- working carpenter who cannot afford to keep even one servant for her, and ane � married in utter ignorance .1 some ret the simplest rules of housekeeping. She has four children, and the system of housekeeping prevalent in that home I would drives tidy housekeeper crazy. It does not, of course, follow that • highly educated woman moat be either I • slattern or an inefficient metres of a home. Bet it cannot be proven that this so galled higher education is of any vales to the wives of nine out of ten ly to come, and has harder work to men. The eduativa gives in our publ • enter, when we are robust and in good echools is amply sufficient for their training than when we are weak and run needs, and if to this can be added the down. practice' education necessary to conduct a home and a knowledge of bow to make that home a place of nest and peace aid comfort to her husband moi cblldree, she ,seed Dever blush beaus of her lack of kuowledge. Of what me is a knowledge of chemistry and higher mathematics and hydrostatics to the wife of • man, who may have to do her own homework and care for bar own chd- drenl A great deal of fun and poor wit is poked at modern cooking schools. tut what is taught at them might well form a part of every woman's education, for the palates of • gond many men have keener sensations than their hears when they are once fairly established in their bourse, and the best of them think "a W ahl" of wbat they are to eat, so that it behooves every woman to go to a home of her own prepared to conduct its affairs' in a wise and sensible manner. Thu is particularly trot ins this day of iota cleat scants, whs. even wealthy wo- men are sometimes compelled to die *barge the duties of the kitchen and is iu rob well with a cloth wet with keno laundry and pantry themselves. A CO r 8000 oil. eoacepuon of her duties as a wife and Strong brine may be vied to &dean- mother should form a par cf the edgs- tage in washing bedsteads. Hot alum ties of every woman, seen tbcugh she water is also recommended for this pur- goes to her grave without knowing bow to calculate the exact distance from the earth to the moon,; or how to separate carbon from oxygen in anything in which those metol elements ex;at. Sha will most likely have • husband who an f r• gore see% Ditiful ignorance if she an make hie home a place of rest and pesos to him --a home that is iudeed a home for the spirit.–%enas Dane in Good Housekeeping. Saaaersss CeenseeMts. Counterfeits aro always dangerous, more so that they always closely IIII- 'rani TSs OiiOIxAL 1x !tel XXX xAli The remarkable success achieved by Nasal Balm as • positive cure for Catarrh and Cold in the Head has ir- dooed unprincipled partite to imitate it. The public are motioned not to be de euived by nostrums imitating Nasal Balm in name and appeannoe, bearing such names as Nasal Cream, Nasal Balsam, eta. Au for Nasal Balm and do nut take incitation dealers may untie upon you. Por ask by all druggists nr sew poet -paid oo receipt of price (5(k and $1' by addressing Fulford a;Co. , Brockville ODI tf Mew as Seep Also. flees. To keep tinware nice and bright it every two or tbree weeks with finely sifted coal •gibes. A good way to keep clean an iron sink tuner poen If your disks most be washed in hard water, add • little milk to the water and do without soap. Try this and woe d you don't like it. Soiled sat collars an be robbed with ammonia, and then • woolen doth laid over and • hot Hat iron held jest over the cloth to atom it without proving. Carpets should be thoroughly beaten on the wrong side first, and then cn the right side, so as to leave ut fresh. Spots may be removed by the use of ox gall nr ammonia and water. If your fiat irons trouble you by drop- ping black specks from the top or aids when ironing, take them in • pan of soapsuds and give them a thorough wish- ing and dry quickly to prevent rusting. In cleaning oil -cloths we no 'cep or scrubbing brush ; bat wash off the dirt with water and flannel. Then go over with milk, and rub with • soft brush till dry and shining. lathier. woe Naha Nina. Dyspersu is dreadful. Disordered liver is misery. Indigestion is • foe to gond nature. The human digestiveapp•ratus is one et the most complicated and wonderful thing. in existence. 1t is easily pet out of order. Grimmfond, tough found, sloppy food, bed enokery, mental worry, lata boors, irregular habits, and many other thieves which ought not to be, have made the American people a nation of dysp*plloe But Green's Awge.t Flower hhsenn dose a ,wnoderfnl work is trimming thi. sad Witham end Baking the Animism Vowels so healthy that they ma enjoy their meals and be happy. Remwnher : - -- No happine'u. wkhoet health. Rat ('tn*n'. Aagn.t newer brings Waist and happiness at the dyspeptic Ask ycrer drteggi.t for a betel& Seventy-tve rent& newly llusyg wait enlil lard neaps to spot- ter r if It seNalaed fees. never Seepalr. Even when ell seems lost, then is yet bope. Many a despairing, disheartened victim of •iyspepets, liver complaint, kid- ney aomplsint, scrofula or rheumatism, has been brought back to health sod bee- f ohms by Burdock Blood Bit- ters, the greatest remedy koowo for all blood diseases. 2 The nth.r day while at Exeter, Mr W. M. GiSut, of Clinton, was kicked by a salt. His side and arm were pretty badly bruised. and for • time he thoegbt his injuries were serious, bot fortunately they were not. He drove home •iter meeting with the •sident, • somewhat painful thing for him to do. Mleemamte Pates Require no deeeriptiOS, since, with ran exception, all st mem time have expel-- noted xpernosed their twinges. Rheumatism is not .wily dislodged, only the most powerfully penetrating reesedis nisch to its very foundation'. The most see- ms/del treatment traowe, sed R is sow frequently resorted lee by medical &sen, is the t�te•tioe d that mow famous remedy pain-- Polaris's Norville*. It ie sato to my that nothing yet die- messed rmused has efi,rded equal sati.f•etiea N the seffwing A trial ss be made at a small etrt, se samples bottles of Homi- lies* alas he had at the drag Morels for 10 *sob, large bottles 26 mats A R.waaw- Of one deem 'Tauten air" M gay ewe meth the best le- Ayes "enestraav,o hoo- dlum the remarkable littlegema for the Teeth and Bath. Ask y oar drowed se diet. .sysef an Waft er tsleaws se every body. FM le het anew b toe frying wbee the srtiole sinks imm.diatsly and nese at Otto.. Beat materials for Mb balls light with aforced wooden spoon before fumi- ng balls. When frying .oytbing Ione • shed oI .oft paper laid in • pen, and as the food is taken (rum mks Iwo fat lay it upon the , which will absorb the remaining Er For all kinds of fish Indian meal is preferable to bread crumbs ; • very little dour soy be added to the meal, •I- so .•It and pepper. A soft yet persistent answer turnetb away a borrowing neighbor. Semi thou $ mm rosy in hie cheek, joyful in aping soil satiable iu all his ways 1 He bath taken • good oouk to wife. Give not that which is woeful to the pigs, entailer out away stale bread which may ponies the promise and potency of • good podding. $.beer-grsae bath an huoonble name mad is not to be derided ; nevertheless the clothe,- ire tome and the carpet sweep- er are very popular io this oouatry. The foolish woman darkeueth her house to save her carpet and keep out fins, end bebo:d her children grow pale and disease marketh her foe ire prey. Mita Seek A ens Mr Goode, druggist, is Dot • hook agent. but hie the agency in Ooderi h fur Johoeteo'a Tonic Bitten, which ho can heartily recommend for any cooed plain to which • tonic medicine is &p. plink bin. This valuable medicine has bean with moot astonishingly good re- sults in cases of general debility, wan- ness, irregularities peculiar to females, extreme paleness, impoverishment of the blood, stomach and liner troubles, las of appetite, and for that general worn out feeling that nearly every one is Troubled with at some part of the year. Dunt forget the name Johnston'. Tonic Bitten bOc. and $1 per bottle at Goode's drug more. Albion block, Uudericb, sole agent. a To remove a tight ring, nee the finest silk or thread consistent with strength. Pass the end between the finger sed ring, keeping the spool or unlimited nod at the side next the finger-tip. Then wind downwards towards the tip of the finger for about • quarter cf so inch ; then wind off from above by the short end about half this amount. Proceed alternately winding on end off, alw& leaving about one-eighth of an inch io breadth wound bet.wth the ring. When the knuckle is peened, the ring oomes off easily. Oil •,r soap the thread well and push up the ting before conmemeiag to wind. THAT TERRIBLE PARESIS. Are die Caamdlss Teeple iseeemlag Haase elf lamelew t –The Weide I lrsense et rile most lw•etfes lasaauy and Haw M r ennui THE !IR AIN (Jm.r a jt tarrwJA.) 11 Hre0thyCwditiaa With Passu Leaise& nue are many well known men cnnfiied in our Asylums who but a short time ago were prominent among oar butint= sad social circles. Why are they there? Paresis) Did it come on at once? Not at a1L It was a grechial bat positive growth. They overtaxed nature. The drain on their vitality, their nerve powers, their brain tissue, was ton great, and they gradually but surely sank under it. The things they did to bring this sal end about are precisely the same things that are being duce by thousands of men and women to -day. It it not necessary to mine them. They all end disastrously unless checked or regulated. Prof. Phelps, of Dartmouth College, knew this fully when he began his experiments which resulted in the discovery of the wonderful Paine's Celery Compound. He realized that paresis (consumption of the linin) was our great National weakness. Ile knew that the brain and nervoussystem must be fortified to meet the great strains which modern life bring upon it. He saw that men were becoming debilitated and women weakened by the pressure and demands of lie, and he sought and discovered the remedy I'aine's Celery Compound if rightly taken, will renew the twain and build up nerve tissues u fast as they become exhausted. It is not a nazcoi,c. It contains n., drugt, no nostrums. it is perfectly pure. It is absolutely harmless. The bigh character of its discoverer guarantees this, and the srdl,rvemesit of the medical and chnt:irsl professions prove it Sew a Sods t .spas A slow poem; Mao i0 t!.e Leight et (aabwn was violently wiemoog in a street Oil r, w11eu • csompmteu (WWII led, •'Aw, Chaffee, dean buy, bow d'ye an h that dwe&dit.I weld," "As, deah fetish, lett my erne iu the lower hall t. thee day, end iu booking the Moor Moodie, w dweadful ould, it chilled Mb alumni to death." 1f Charles had used Dr. lbw - way'. Red Pine Oulu his add would bot trouble hie. eery mucti e, or sale at J NtlwuL prescriptwn drugatura Y Uoderich Steam Boiler Works Chrystal 8; Slack, ysaetaotaren tied dealers is Steam nutters Salt Pus. Teaks. !trees% r.uwkt.taoka..ad all kind. or Sleet Iron Werk. Improved Automatic cut -of Canine hoe• g lary L priaht and porlaoaial autism Ida- o:Moer, aid Ca.tlmp to every deserietiOS. (tram linings, Pipe and Ytpe Pinions sew e tsmu) c,a k.rd On Hand for Sale Cheap, ski M.T. Jerome Maud Sellm t emp/eer. t aec,ad•taad . Iles sod Meter. 11 M. 5., in erM-rim. tendMlea. Mail orders will receive prompt etteattee. Werk. t Opp. al.?. M. Meel.a• M. Ramos promptly atteadsd to. P.O. BOX 381 NN'S OWDER THECOOICS BEST FRIEND TH1 J. A. COIYERSB a A. W. MOmmm & SMO.. PROP RISTONW. MONTMLA L. sus Tag sacs s OF Ter C[Lgtra•ThP "RED CAP' BRAND CT %&ZXLLA BINDER TWINE Pronounced, by practical con- sumers, superior to anything in the Canadian Market WHITE FOR INFORMATION Muatecturers else of CORDAGE. JIT. sad COTTON BAGS CALCiNILD sad LAND PLASTER- Toronto LASTERToronto ogi sad Wareham :—He FRONT ST REST KANT. W. C. DONNELL. Manager nowt id of )It n_ tO Se 1. 1' z 1, e 4 t 4 or riot "Mom alma reress.bmob r. ..errs waw Waloft et Ta... • w vane►wend lyre% nes sew r•• a.w two a...• ren, .... alt frame. - ewe FY= r Ow iia.. .~n be sof ww..wi,�w'ti..'. sae= Osteo s ow.. smalls, r.eeWi resales. ASAL DALM OitA.accs. Di*nes 1.0., slat. May Ilth.11111. My w11e mired ter ave years wlf>t that dlenwualsg disease. catarrh. Her case was nae of the worst knows In them parts. She treed all of the catarrh rime doe 1 ever saw advertised. let they were of as use. 1 .salty procured & beaus d Nasal halm. SM be. used cab ter half of 1t. bad saw feels Ilk* • new person. I feel It my duty to say that Nsl nabs cannot be Too HIGHLY reeesmeuded ter catarrh weenies. sad am pleased to have all such sefhrere knew through Its use they win reodve>staid relied bad CURT CHAIR. MCGILL Parma. EXPEPLIENCE, CAPITAL AND SKILL Are the factors employed in the purchase of Goods from the best houses in the trade. The general verdict is that Munro is abreast of the times, and in all departments fully up to the mark. My increasing business is an evidence that my efforts to please the public are appreciated. And while I endeavor to keep almost everything us- ually found in a first-class house, the general public may rely upon getting the correct thing in every department. Notwithstanding the advance on Silk Goods I will sell Satin and D'Lyons, Surahs and Satin Merveillieux at former prices. My Specialties for the Season. Linen Goods in great variety, Laces and Edgings, Fine Hosiery and Gloves, and all the leading items in Smallwarea, from Needles up. All Goods marked in plain figures and strictly one price. 9014 ALEX MUNRO, Draw Said Haberdasher