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The Huron Signal, 1889-9-6, Page 6v A CLOWN'. ROMANCi- • Nedra 11... Life Tb. Ips eats Dwane .r a Werse0at.'s Caeeer. It was Christmas tune in tat. Giles'. Wurkhoua., and there was quit• a large party of us.ntlered un wulitypuo the old people and to miustertog to their crea- tare oumforta W. gar. them • cert of erslert•suaseut afterwards somg", reel - tat toes, Douse amateur u•.nluriug, and in- strumental music. Alter the dinner cease the entortsiumeul; and lust before the eolertasomeot on ounce of tobacco or snuff, whichever they pleased, was pre - seated to each inmate. As 1 handed the tray a.nta►utug the lids packet. he stretched out a shaking hand and thank- ed we to • voice which seemed familiar. "I thank we must have met before, nay frisod f" 1 said. "Lour' bless you, Mr Niblrt" said he; "I used w see you 'most every night be- fore my misfortun.-icy misfortune aa br..ught me here," he added wearily. "Oiled gracious!' said 1, "why, it's Moline. ' "That's me, sir," he said, "or what's left of me." 1 got red of my tray of tobacco and snuff, and thou 1 canoe back to the old man H. wasn't an old man to years, but he looked ssveuty at the least. We had been rivals once, Moliuo and i When I first began writing fur the stage -and 1 began at twenty -1 did • good many tblega fur the 'Bird of Prey.' 1 was glad to write • comic song fur a guinea. I knew what poverty was ; but I was perfectly happy, for 1 was in love with au angel. Aud sowas M•.linu, i was nobody -.n outsider, a "mw: Hr wets somal.ody ; for he was "toe great little Moline," the celebrated clown ; at.d of us two she certainly preferred Moline,. There was no doubt about her prefer- ence, f•.r she was engaged to be married to hien and then knowing how the ease stood, 1, as an honest man. gave up my suit. And then 1 het sight of her fur sense years, and -Mullan dropped out ..f niy tuem..ry alt:-gether. She less cer- tainly the most graceful dancer 1 have ever seen. The school of daucin,( at the "1tmd of Prev used 1.. be quite an in etitut , and it was a tr.ditiou there that the hest danc.•r always played Columbine at Christmas Talk shout poetry . if motion --talk about ;anal grace and rhythmic movement ; never before nr since have I seen such dancing a+ Line's ; and 1 don't believe I ever shall, if I !eve to be • hundred. " You heard how 1 came to grief. sir, I r oppure f" he said. "It was along of beer " ` Why, you were a most sober men," I remarked. 'Ay, he replied, "barley water mo- sey drink w times days, sir A clown don't do nuich good unless he u a sober man ; but it leaflet the beet 1 drank'. sir, that settled ane---it.was the beer I had to give t.. other people. Clowning was a very dilereut thing sat those days. sir, wasn't at r Why, there wash t a house•. w I codon as didn't run its pante-- mime, anto-mime, and it was the comic business they went to see, sir, then, and not the ballets and the pr..cesswna and the gen tlemen and ladies from the iodic halls. They used to go to hear uoe sing "1101 Codons" and "'rippety itchet ;' ay. and I Kot a treble encore for 'em every n ight, tau -as you know, rir. Where are the clowns gone to now -a -days, sir I I can tell you,- he said, in • ode whisper-- ''tee the wdrku•, sir; that's where they're gone. Why, there's three on us here. it's the music halls that did tt. If the public sees clowning all the year round there,and ulec nononly bad clown- ing t.o, they duo t want to see it at Christmas ; and that's the secret. I dou t suppose there was • happier man in the profession," he continued sadly, "then I was when 1 was playiwo clown ml "Harlequin Fe-fo-tam." I had saved money. 1 had lurnuhed • little hou in Holton; and w. ware to be married in a week. Lii a and I The pantomime had only three more nights to tun, and "Luke the Laborer" and "The Murder at the Red Barn" were billed for the following Monday. i had • big jump through • chock -fate ia the second scene of the harlequinade. I was vet, p.oud of my lumps ; they were longer and higher than those of any other tarn in the profession. There was nu fa! went, no hidden springboard ..r d dgery, about it. I took an honest run from the fro tlighta,and I used to go clean through that clock face, though it:was seven feet fr 'm the ground, head first, every night; and four supers used to catch me in a blanket the other side. .V., was on at the time ; for when 1 had taken my jump, which always bought down the house, she used to dance the Vars,rlana, which was • new thing then, with old Brown the harlequin. Tie beer for the supers used to be a pretty heavy tax : and if one didn't pay for it, it meant getting knocked abort or break- ing one's neck. My four chaps were always pretty particular, for they got their beer money regularly. if 1 hadn't been .suite .n liberal it would have been better for me. That night, sir,tbose f our supers were stupid drunk. I took my jump ; and as I flaw through the chock - face I heard the beginning .of the tre- w enduus shout which tame from the front of the house ; and then, instead of being caught in the blanket, i shad head tint into the brick wa;; at the end ..f the theatre. Those four chaps had forgotten all about me and were talking together with the blanket i■ their hands ; because, as I tell you. they were stupid drunk. It wasn't till three weeks afterwards that 1 came to myself ; and then i was In • tied in Bartholomew's Hospital, and I was light-headed and as weak as a child. The nest day was Wednesday. Wednesday is visitors' day at the hospi- tal, and Lin she came to see me ; and she eat by my bed.Ide and she cried as though her heart would break. And then she told me how it all happened : and Sow she laved me ; and f must make haste to get well. that we might get mar- ried, acs we were soder engagement to do ; and she cried fit to break her heart. She looked prettier than ever, pent thing ! And every Wednesday .he'd come and try to cheer me np, and say how hard It wee that our wedding had to be pot oft. She was a gond girl, she was. Bet our marriage wee put off for gond and all ; for 1 was a torie- • cripple for life, mind yoe, and as weak as a child. My mounory came b.ek right enough. Bet bow wee I to get my THE HURON SIGNAL, FRIDAY, SEPT. 6, 1869. living as a dove, ekes 1 were Daly • asi..iable cripple f It was I who bruise off oar e.gagessat, .lir ; fee it woeld0'1 have bees taut ow Lisa to have held her to bee wos4. People and to say that Lw bed cheeks& nor over, and that she was a heartless mini. Bet 1 did it. au, bemuse 1 hadn't the beset to hold her to It ; sad any hoawt seas would have done the same. Titley warn veey greed to ate at the 'Bird,' and they gave - a cbeckttiker's ballet at Wiese bob a week; and 1 kept that billet fur nigh on twen- ty years. I used to get a look at the Kra ; and week by week 1 road how Lw Easton got ea, and how she gut W the very tap of the tree. 1 wed to oat out the favorable notices and paste 'em in • book ; nod 1 was as proud of 'em, sir, as if they'd been my own. And then the 'Bird was sold, as you know , and that's how I lust my billet -fur the Salvetwu Army didn't want to pay any money to the likes o' me ; and then 1 Dame to here. And that's m7 story, Mr Nibbe." "Oh, but any good fellow, ' I said, safely •omethin,p might be done for you. Miss Fenton herself would be uo- ly too happy to help you. Tit0 closet' smiled. •'1'uu was • bit soft oo her, 1 think, au, once," he said. "No offence, sir , but we both use dtu tntuk so." Although I am a man of five and-turty, I blushed to icy ears. '•1 can see 1 ase right, sir, he said. "You wouldu't thiuk much, sir, of • alas that •p inert on the woman that loved hum. Nu; I come pretty low ; but I haven't come u, that, sir. But there Is one thing I have dune. 1 vs given a letter to the master of the workhuu e, and it's addressed to Lina Fenton. He's • little high and mighty, perhaps ; but he isn't • bad fellow the master ; and when I die he will send that letter to Lana, and I've asked her to do me • fever in it. I'ye &eked her to bury me. Shell do it, I think, for the sake of old times." I never saw Molmo alive again. I often mol Lina afterwards She was always affable and nice ; and somehow or other, one always has a sort of sneaking tenderness for one's first love ; and though said is much over 40, and I am the happy possessor ::f • handsome wife and half a duzeis children, i still think Line Fenton the fairest and most faaci- eatiug whmr.0 whom it has ever been icy god fun uuo t3 meet. Iler magni- ticent goldeu .ir is streaked with grey now, the soft blue eyes are not, perhaps, it. bright as they once were; but she is a ch•rwmag woivantill. I gut a note from her One morning,ask- me me to call at her house. She was evidently w great tribulation. She wept bitterly when she saw me, and then told me that the clown was dead. And she asked me to 5o to the tuners!. We went tu the worhltiosse together; and all the w• to Ke.aal Orem the poor think sat seg sobbed May aide in the mourn - 504 conch. -Bt. J.as..'. Gestic. • reed Oegwlall.a. Disordered kidneys .give rise to rheu- matism, dropsy, pain in the back and loins, etc., te.ii:es many dangerous com- plaints affecting the kidneys themselves, as Bright's disease, anoints, etc. Regu- late the kidneys with Burdock Blood Bitters, ;he best diuretic and kidney remedy ever devised. 2 tarty WsNer. J,esraaltsae. When William N. flyers, the Or loradu pioneer of journalism, firrt started in to print the Rorke 310.•01..,,, he had • pretty tough time of it, and experien- ce.lively enough to esu a I"m ludian agent. News was plenty enough, and it was rot generally supposed that the press would make editorial attacks upon the citizens of Auraria, as Denver was then called ; so one day when flyers found fault editorially with the killing of • Mexican by Charles Harrison, a gamb- ler, the letter's friends. fatly anued, gathered about and made an attack up - nn the kg house occupied by the N. The editor and his reporters amid type- setters were so surprised rat the sudden- ness of the attack that they did not have time to make any resistance. Editor Byers was taken a aptive to Harrison's saloou, called the "Criterion. ' The crowd wanted to kill him on the spot, and knives and pist)ls were flour- ished In his face. Harrison had once been a Mason, and knew that Byers was • member of that fraternity, so under the pretense of taking hitt into • side room to talk, hs got him out of the place altogether. Byers was plucky enough, tor he ran for his office, and, arming all hands, lay low for the enemy, who cams fast enough, and • lively combat took place, and one man was killed. It was just about this time that the Hon Joseph Wolff, of Boulder, Col., who was a good printer and • handy ren about an ofboe, arrived in town from Omaha ria a freight train. He was dead broke, and he made at once for the Neter office and asked for the bees. Byers, seated on • barrel, was pointed out to him. “Want any hands 1" asked Joe. lean- ing against th. door. That depends," mid Byers, without looking up. "Depends on what ? - "Can you shoot i" "You bet." "Will you !" 'vif course.' "Well, then," said the editor, getting oft the lural. "here's a rifle and there's a cams- -go to work." What'll I do first 7" said Wolf, "kill somebody or threw in the ease I" Byers went to the window, leaned well oat, looked up and down carefully, and then, turning back, said: "1 guess 71)0'll have tine to throw in • handful." Jost about this time the office was in a state of siege, and to write and print whet Byers wrote and printed required an amount of morel mouses, or whet is more commonly celled nerve, more than is possessed by joornalnts of the present ds Many threats were made and more than one enmb•t took plate, but the edi- tor came out ahead, and always stuck to the paragraph is his salutatory whish read : "Our enures is marked out. We will adhere to ft with ste$dttat slid Bled determination to speak, write sad pub- lish the truth,•ad bath's( but the troth, let to work ate weal or wee." All eggs end eon%itiosa of people my Si. N.tiosal Pi11. without Mjury sed with gnat beseSt. V FUN AND FANCY. a lame asa•eese. sew .. Theta. 1, I . Bashed be Use Meese .r mea. • Cope B.auaIN. -• well -knows sad maseasg story u told of Sheridan, who was so sportsman. Havtag gun. out o0 • shouting eaosrsso0 everything flew be- fore him sad his gen, deeps* his efforts to secure something for bid bag t►u ►s return home with .a► empty beg be saw a mea, apparently a farmer, looking over • gate at • flock of ducks in a pori. "What will you take," said Sheridan, "for a shot at theme dmck.r• The lass lucked et him with •.tuns.haest. ••Wal half-a-crown de r' The mss sodded, sod Sheridan env' him the half-crown, taking hie shot at the ducks About ball -a -&Deco fell dead. As be was pre- paring to bag them be said to the mss, I tbiuk, on the whole, I have got • good bargain of you." "Why," said the man, "they're none o' muse ! " Hs Hsu Baas Telma --Friend Meek had a very good horse and a very bed one. When seen ridiug the latter it turned out that his better -half hot taken the good one. "What !" .rid • bachelor fneod, "how none* it that you let your wife ride the better horse t" "Friend," said Meek, "when tore best married thse'1l know!" Hs WAMraD Time. -A notorious poa- cher was brought up recently before the Sheriff Court at Jedburgh tor eog•giu4 in his nefarious practice of illegally kill- ing salmon. He was found guilty, and fined 30e., or ten day's imprisonment Pleading inability to pay the fine, the Sheriff asked him how long he would re- quire to make it up. "Well, my Lord," returned the culprit, .eratchwg his head, "that s' depends on hon the fish come up the water." His Dw.D.--A worthy couple had lived long together ere the guidman was foro.d, through • severe illness, to take tc his bed. Very reluctantly the hus- band consented to have the advice of a doctor, and his partner "us forthwith despatched ter one The a,00d woman, who Oils v dry anxious shout her hus- band's condition, esu& • great deal to the doctor about his state, and the latter, before he saw the patient, was pretty sure there was little wrong with him. However, when he had examined the sick man, who had never moved or look- ed up, the doctor said -'This is a sad case ; he's dead "You've made • mis- take,' broke in the sick man ; 'I'm no deed, but leevin' !' 'Whet, Jamie,' said his wife, 'the doctor kens better than you !' DR TAVI.OIk nr Nsw YORK Art. Ron- aKrIeOs or IKV'tNL-Io the week In w h_ch the minister of the Broadway Tabernacle has been once more proving his powers in the Scottish pulpit it may be not out of place to recall an amusing anecdote of the late lamented Dr Rob- ertson of Irvine, which Dr Taylor has been heard to relate. tV'hen the latter was a student he happened t. pay a visit to Robertson, who straightway sought to secure his service for a sermon on the following day The tyro modest- ly declared that he was quite unable to undertake such a heavy responsibility, confessing that he had but one sermon. 'But it's $ sermon I prepared for the hall, and its on Justification,' said the protesting student. Roberton would socept no excuse, and, wholly against his will, the modest youth mounted the pul- pit of the moat eloquent orator in the West of Scotland and ar best he might fired off the scholastic prelection which be had prepared for the professor. At the close of the service, when the youth- ful divine entered the vestry, 'Well,' exclaimed Itc'berteun, 'I am glad I asked you to preach, Taylor ;' adding, with a peculiar twinkle, 'it is not e,fteu my peo- ple hear a sermon like (hat !• Taer.agbly Tried. Having given Dr Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry • thorough trial, I do not hesitate to say that I believe it is the best remedy in existence for all summer complaints, diarrhoea, dysentery, colic, etc. Ma.c R. S. lV&ITL, Sprit/afield, Ont. 2 Mr Gladstone's library at Haward.n is one of the finest private libraries in Eng- land. It has more thio 20.000 volumes. Mr Gladstone lends his books out to any one in the neighborhood who wants to read them. Formerly people could keep them as long as they liked, but a few years ago • rule was made that a hook could be kept for one month only. It is the regular free library of the district. With smokeless and noiseless powder, such as it has been claimed has been lo - vented in England, in the wars that are to be death will take on still more ter- rors. The first notice of the presence of an enemy will be in the sudden siniing down of men as though smitten by • pestilence. The sentry will die at his poet and give no sign. The son will shine down serenely while the battle tato•, and no canopy will obscure the butchery. Battle" will be silent execu- tions, save when trumpets sound and furious men shoat and wounded men moan. There will be nothing to kindle the battle ecst•cy; no booming of hotly worked guns will give soda where the battle is .oreet. With the battle clam- ours and the battle canopy drivers away, it will require more nerve to be a valiant soldier than ever before. The soldier will not only have to fare the danger in eight, but also have to contend with the terrors that his imagination will paint him. CV( HI. Swnl 7 -Can your boy swim 1 No. Then do not trust him in any mitt of boat until he has learned the art and feel" as much at home in the water as ors dry land. You might as well send him out "lune into • crowded street before he has learned to walk. He might possibly creep along all right, and reach home alive, nr somebody might pick him up sad care for him, bet the chane" would sot be in hie favor. So in boating, the boy who cannot swim may get akeg very eomfort.hly for • while, and not troffer from the defect in hie education, bot the time will come assuredly when he will have Nose to bitterly regret it. It is one of the simplest things in the world, ton, and ss be learned to say city swimming school, or from the experts of any ooaa• try village. By ail 'mane talk swim to your hoy before you talk boat, sad stip- .let. as nee of the oneditins. of hie hav- ing a bort that be 'hell Bat be able to swum a quarter of a mile without resting, Tie mew heft is still meg et .early a hutdead pieces au Euglaud. Henry Shaw, t►e lit. Louis philea thruptst, who died reosatly, left nearly b s entire estate, amusette* to 02,500,- 000 ur mere, to the on y of St. Luis. While decries away the remain of an ell budding at lit. Augustine, Fra, the other day, wurkssea disourwed over $1,000 in doubloons, .ad en wine search is being made for more A society has been started In London to promote the oeveloponeot of the "msec of mesmerism end of theapplica- tion of hypnotism to practical medicine. The oldest Admiral in England is lair Provo Wallace, wed 98 He esu in the tight in 1812 between the Shannon and the Chesapeake, but he uever command- ed a steam vessel. A funeral w•" announced rrcertly in Connecticut to which relatives and friends were regularly invited, but It was also announced that the burial would be ' 'at this convenience of the family." George Fawcett Rowe, the noted play wriiiht and actor, died at New York re ceotly, wed 60. He had been i11 for scone time with heart discoed, complicat- ed with Bright's disease. Miss Anna Jones, aged 87, died at Livermore hills, Me., on Wednesday. She had been anjinval►d for seventy tears and had been ouufioed to bed tor sixty She retained all her faculties to the last. T'he jury in the Maybnck trial, who were carefully hocked up and kept by themselves from the time the case open- ed, were on the bunday taken on a trip in • specially chartered steamer from Liverpool to Llandudno, on the Welsh Dost. During the trip they were under the charge of two ..f those court t ttioisls who go "on circuit" dressed out In suits of gorgeousness passiug deecripti.•n, and carrying halberts, more showy than use- ful. The American rage for baseball is, af- ter a11, weak compared to the English rage for crickrt. At tbe last match be tween the uwu greatest 4.1 the cuu0ty ele- vens, Surrey and Nottingham, which took neerly three days to play, 60,000 persons went to see it and Surrey's vic- tory. The batting of Lockwood and Abel, who together made 159 in Surrey's second innings, was so important tow- ard winning the match that tho coffee: - Wen taken up fur their benefit amounted to £41, VS of which was in penny pieces. • Free rse er Is Nat Teta. Julius, a western darkey, having land- ed at Chicago, saw an advertisement of • bathing establtahmeut notifying those who wished to be clean that they might get • good wash for • .quarter, resolved to avail himself of :he privilege. Accordingly, Julius arrived shortly afterwards with a bundle under his arm, and being shown into • bathroom, was left to his ablutions. Considerable time elapsed and Johns did not come forth, and after waiting for about an hour, the keeper of the baths went to tbe door and screamed out, 'Say, darkey, are you cuttsiog out T 'Yes, sah, as soon as I git froo wid my wasbio'.' 'How long will that be 'P'raps an hour to an haus an' a hat,' cooly answered Julius. Wit that the man buret Into the r vmw, and there, all around was the darkey-s freshly washed clothing hanging up to dry ; but not noticiag it just then, re- marked : "You must clear out at noce. You're been is over two hours. "Look • here,' said Julius in an en- raged manner, pointing to his drying cl..thes, which rather took the bathing man down, "1 like to see you wash and hang out two dozen pieces in lees time than I've been at it." In another minute Juliuss••—landed in the street surrounded by bhp owning. IT* she rredl/al Maass.., alma e11 wham IS asap • Phosphatine, or Norte loom, • Phos- 1te Element based upon Scientife Facts, Formulated by Professor Austin, M. D. of Boston, Masa, cures Pulmon ary Consumption, Sick Headache, Ner- vous Attacks, Vertigo and Neuralgia and all wasting diseases of toe: human system. Phosphatine is not a Medechte. but a Nutriment, because it contains no Vegetable or Mineral Poisons, 0piatesi Narcotic., and no Stimulants, but situp' ly the Phosphatic and Gartric Elements found in our daily food. A single bottle is sufficient to convince. All Druggists mill it. $1.00 per bottle. I.owetc & Co., sole agents for the Dominion, 66 Front Street East Toronto IREADMAKER'S YEAST. BREAD orae e1 the riser took 1p First Priam at Octan, Fall Shames in 111117. Over ,o ono ladies have written to say that it atomisers ..y yeast ever used I.y them. It makes the lightest,whitest. sweetest bread, rolls, bees and high wheat pancakes. !takers in nearly every townie Canada are este. a. PRICE FIVE Cats DON'T FORGET ISAAC �PocAssmIs -CHZAP- Cash .. Stoxe FOR GOOD. CRZAP Teas and Groceries. NEXT DOOR TO �i -DO RTNIN'CPES II00T AND DMZ 5TORt, CRIBB'3 BLOCK, Godericht 6000 WORN IS DONE AT SIGNAL The Favorite Medicine for Throat and Lung Intl. tellies has tuag been, quad .1111 is, Ayer's Cherry 1'ecwral. It care Crosse.. Whooping Cough. Bronchitis. sad Aal►wr; soothes uritauou of the Larynx and Fended . etrrugtbees the Vocal Organs; allays soreness of the Leese; prevents Geomaasplim, and. vice 1u .dvauyed stmes of •hat disease. relieves Coughing and induces Sleep. There is no other preparation for dts- emr. of the throat and lungs to be Coin - pared with the remedy. "My wife had a distressing cough. with pains in the side and breast Vire trial various tuelicatrw, but none did her auv good until I got a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, which has cured her. A neighbor, Mr.. Glynn. had the measles, awl the cough was tritetwl by the use of Ayer's Cberry Pectoral. I bate no hesitation iu rrtwunrudlug this Cough Medicine to every onr afflicted."- Robert Horton, Feorcnun NreeJfiyAt. Morrllltun, Ark. " 1 have hero afflicted with asthma for forty years. Laid spring 1 sea, takes with a violent cough, %barb threatened to terminate my days. Eery nue pro- nounced Inc in consumption. 1 deter- mined to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Its effects were magical. I was awmredi surly relieved and continued to improve until entirely recovered." -Joel Bullard, Guilford, Conn. " Six months ago I hal a severe hem- orrhage of the lungs, brought on by an inerosant cough which deprived me of sleep and rest. i tried various reme- dies, but obtained no relief until i be- gan to take Ayer's ('berry Petora'. A few bottles of this medicine cured me " Mr. E. Cullum. 19 Second et., Lowell, Maas. " For children afflicted with colds. coughs, sore throat. or croup. 1 do not know of any remedy which will give more .peel,- relief than Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. 1 have found it, also. invalu- able in cases of tW'h...ping Cough." - Aun Lovejoy. 1237 Washiugtou street, Boston, Mass. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral raarAiRD BY Dr. J. C. Ayer 4 Co., Lowell, Masa Hold 14 611 Drawn*. Pnce 51, eta esuk s, $3. • ARMSTRONG FA4Nl16 MILL AND PUMP WORKS ARMSTRONG'S IMPROVED Grain and Seed Cleaner is generally acknowledged to he the hest ata. ,hint mad.- for thoroughly .-leaning grain and seeds ut all Link. —IT— Separates all Noxious Seeds soil chess from grain sr one eieaning. aa, inc I and cleaning all tirrwthy seed at the .Dame time out of any kind of grain. It can be lo..1 into any tensing nii11 without reams ing the .hoe, •n matter how old 'he mill is. and nukes it do as good work or better than the moat O►sproved new mills known. It allows no seed to be blown into the chaff It Cleans Speedily • jrErery cleaner warranted to work ss reprr- tented oro sale.Ty in ordering by mail give inside width of shoe and naive of makerofmill if convenient. and ff ohne- has side shake or the old fashion- ed hind shake. A large quantity of FIRST-CLASS PUMPS on hand manufactured from Algoma white quartered pine. ;oloOrdera by mail promptly attended to. Shipped to any point. ADDRESS ARMSTRONG BROS., Goderioh, Ont. iatr Sticc& Iirs The undersigned is prepared to undertake the petting in of Water Services in connection with the Town System toDwell- ings and other Buildings. Also REPAIRS To Steam Engines, Mills, Fac- tories and Machineryof all kind. Prices reasonable. Satisfac- tion Guaranteed. WILSON SALKELD. !Diff LIME. NOT CE TO BUILDERS & FARMERS The Falls Reserve Lime Kiln is now running full time and any quantity of Fresh Lime4 can be obtained at the Kiln at all times for lOc. a bushel. M. & C. BI(CHLER, Proprietors. odd reek. Mays/ 1.1e. Mkt travelling $uibe. ORAN') 'rltl-XK t .1u.N .t'* Trainsarr %r and dcl.at•t at tivdrncb as to lows. Manly et Mail and Express Mad ills. . - . • Mixed • IMIUMOL ' ne• es .series•..... . 1 . t ,.e :liar 1.. ............ ........... ......t.ud e MARVELOUS EMORY aD187CO.VlERYT rObeen JellLr-1.7-r ivory child wad aisle greatly bee.tlesed. Gnat I.dsssr..r 1. Ossessro &.cads Gamma tis aosesseqs et pr. tamed WeaMinsa. t�Rllgraa�asr eel (sMwMet'1'Irom4 .drat 4 tea 11 alit to .;: ' " : i,1 hers Ave.. N. T. ICURE FITS! , *'nen I say coax 1 do net mean weney tt seethe= for a noir, mei then hale thew return ran. 1 yrs* .l ti .tnh .tL GLEE. i here made the deemed o[ FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLIICG SICKNESS A 11fe long steely 1 WAIIR'.' r my r m«ly to t't KKthraur,tcan.. h,• ,,n.- .14,rsha,egalled 1.00 reason 1:.1 lie' Waw re•e1, 111ii %.. ore. }teal at caro lora treated ..rid a Fag. H..r it F n( my h r A u.t.l n l ►. II E M F.D► . 1.1,1- I- tyres,. and Poet t )flier It costs •w n.K:tang L.r 0 1'1 I. and It sill cure a:. Address H. G. BOOT DLO.. llrwach OMNI, lift Wast Adelaide Street, Toronto. Qoderich Foundry and Machine Works, RUNCIMAN mos., - Proprietors. NA ..,.. �►w utIIS.StfaMteCINtS /CILIPS TheaSMnrtCILLS. utiIS. r ri5IT,.SSTt)rts 'LOuces cuLTIrarcesaea*SSCaStIMCS EAST STREET GOLF:RiCHCW ,,. WE HAVE ON HAND FOR SALE: Improved Land Rollers - - - Price HORSE POWERS GRAIN CRUSHERS, TRAW CUTTERS, PLOW POINTS &c. FricI- 7 S s FLOUR NILLS_BUILT ON THE LATEST IMPROVED SYSTEM. Having made arrangements with the JOHN DOTY ENGINE & BOILER WORKS CO. TORONTO, We are Prepared to Quote Prices to Parties in want of the same. RIMPAIB1113 :♦>11fD O..sTINC}B Ow �Z.L SZ1�Dfa FURNITURE. If you west to see We lame* Meek or Furatturo la town. go W stylist can set sea these lovely tints sad If yen want to wie the Cheapest NvIstaDavcs mrt.A..Dictid and the Newest I do oree /wen Till itiewas ia 11•01,k f.r "'sae °I mem. bet Mere the on bead. sad &ay Parma missies; see I will order toe • email coeusiseies. deem sed owes orperteaseg Oederieli ANS fah In hi the ummakt-Ting IN:reartitliCesilicrr A., att.% ISTuausamsw iiimmoommilicAmoutC31'• too. 111 rh