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The Signal, 1893-8-10, Page 2THE SIGNAL : (X)DER1CH, ()NT., TH [IRSDAY, AUGUST 10, (893. That Pie I had ter Amer was the best I ever ata flanks to COTi'OLENE, the maw mord successful .bortsmtairs ASK YOiJR GROCER FOR n,. Made only ter N. H. FAIRBANR & CO., Wallington and Ann Streets, MONTREAL THE POETS CORNER. My Nd mea tell. Lan night f ee.rcheJ the garret for • long - forgot ten book, And as I pried and peered about, down in a dusty nook I found what made me all at once forget vatic I was after, And filled my eyes with springing tear, end *noel my voice to Ian/tour, And up I took it woudunagly, with cobwebs dust and all, And held ti close against my heart - My old rag doll Oh, dear forgotten childhood's joy' Oar, precious Long last urea are: I assess tell why sack a pais was miegted with a pleasure: 1 unmet tell just why the tears fell feat Crone eyes beat over That dusty, deer, of l fashioned thing -I oely know I loved her.' I only know that "Polly" in her little rag- ged shawl' Is moue onex more -is mine again, My old rag doll Dor retic of my chilJiood-ot that happy, happy tune 1Vheo life meant play awl suashone and every joy was mine: When cars was .11 unknown to me and every bright to -morrow Was but an e.:uue of to -day' There rarely came a sorrow, I;ut woe° my fair hon/m was stirred by sudden squall, There was naught th.t gave me comfort like My old rag doll. Inc old familiar, dirty Lice with features done to ink, And the little faded ribbon tied is many • childish prink. And the dusty, plaid merino of the little timeworn ggoAa, And the tiny knitted stocking., o'er the shoe top. slopping down There ad the tannic N rr 1 s *I.11411'1 broods -1 o'er thnii o1!, Asa iia god for LtAt awxt chtl.lhoo 1 with My old tag dull. Aril though 1 : m a woman with a woman's wort sod rare, Am' though 1 ook each morning t ,r silver in my hair, And ell my golden childhood is but a happy d res m, somehow to -day i's perfect joys • little near- er ..-.•m ti ace 1 found her nl the garret, with the cute. els, Mist .0e1 all, Taal dearest relic of the past, My old rag doll. yearly rime M.stb. 1. a Mldr.s From the Philadelphia Hsoorl• Held for nearly four mouths in an equa- torial dohdrum or dead apes calm until her provisions were exhausted and her crew on the verge of starvation wee the terrible experience of the American ship Edward O'Brien, which had long ago been given up for lost. The chip is owned partly is this city, and the news ,of her safety ham just reached her owners. The ship left Victoria, British Columba, early in December last, for London with • large cargo of when, and tnthtag was beard of her until June 22, when she was sighted by the steamer Galileo in latitude 45.31 longitude 2S 16 flyi.g signals telling that she was short of food. She suppled by Ow steamer, and Capt. Whitton brought to New York news of the safety to the underwriters, who were demanding heavy premiums for reinsuring the ruse! and cargo. It war learned thet the ship made a Roe run down the I'aoillo olamt and around the Horn, but when near the shuetor she had been caught in owe of the dreaded calms that Fr.1ai1 iia that latitude. For three months she remedied within • distance of half • mile from where she first struck the coin,, mid during that time there wag mot wind eineigh ,o 1111 eve, the lightest of her seta Finally a small current, probably made by • storm many miles away appear- ed sad served to send her slowly mit of the locality whieb threatened .t o.e time to hsenn, a plies of death for all on board. Ile thie osrr.at the ship drifted for •1• meat menhir .tooth. TO.. • welcome wind e•rrried her hawk isle the paltIM .( navigation. Wheel the Galika woe es- aw.terwd that water supply of the Edward o Brim wee esh•asted, feed was almost down t. the lees ratios and in • few men hours the ma es heard wesW ham hese h.yo.d help After Wei es led with teed sad water the ship prsgogigd ea her gray e. ieads& " The people( the M.sy M- g le i• the e bray s K tat river O se hat deme pronominal nal the remedy ever pug its • beads, f.r the ~sof all iM(.mYvilaad Ryer emsler eels 0.A. est.; A CHAPTER FOR MOTHERS EMBRACING SOME 0000 RULES FOF GOVERNING CHILDREN. A aeba.. Were lafotivc If Admdae tiered N we■ the Little Cslpit'. Meed to Calla .ad the Little Boort Frey rtes ramie*. 11 is a common mistake, sore The Home Queen, to talk tux) much, to mage um much noise in managing dihedron. For example, &chill giv• way tv temper and pamiwulte cryirig at hie morning drawing. The mother prohougs the evil. and utile to the mama by her upt.raid tugs and persuasions, which. of count•, at the moment of irritation, avail noth- ing. She lead better at tow time be .►1eut, pursuing; calmly her usual mar se; and before or after breskltst, aliuuid she deem It expedient, talk it over with the hale one alone, and if uec•emarr udmint•ter some wild punishment. Only let her take can to do this with kiuduees, explaining the reason of her conduct, but not upbraiding 11w child anti its faultm, assuring it of the stain it gists her to drprtve' it of any gratttica- tiou, and .d the pleasure she will feel in bestowing Ile same upon it when its beliavtor .hall warrant it, This ruude of proceeding will refect more than too abundant repletion of were admoni- tions and rebuke... So alio. if a child behave unusually .:ill, or °Maul mime victory over itself, eacounagt•meut wit leave a more beortieial and core lauding iwpria.iou if, ivat.',ad of saying anything to it at the cure, e e take an early oppor- tunity of bestowing souse favor upon it. reminding it of tete cause of its indul- gence, and then exposing our ae.protu- ttua eat its conduct. NI -%ER YOltoKT THAT A CHILD IS A I'HMO. With childn n a t igilatht superintend- ence is required, but nut a frequent u,- letter, ice. The objre%art telucatiou -ata to preserve theta trout evil, use from childuihnem." W',.hould, therefore, be very lenient to th,tme errors which are more tee defects of die age than of the individual, and bone.:, slut,. Caere nil:Ilk. doubt, will remove, nae rt:ue our aur .or- Ity to be exercised with time more ell et on important o casuoo.-such occa-t..oe ea bear upon tun:dau,tntal prtuc.p..s and mural nahit*. t'hudrea must mel should be dendron gall, and it a oar duty to oynhpath:tte with them as tui b, to impose up,,o1 (rein 1.0 unne°eeeary, re sterns to grant them every Iianuless graNheatiou, and, as far as ptswbl , to promote their true s.,joymeit, rewemUrr- uig tan, although the day Is Often cloudy. yet it w mercifully ordered that the oawu of life should oe bnght and happy. toiler, by mismanagement, It is reuder- ed otherwise. oho'IPLINx. It may, at first sight, appear incoO is - teat with what has Just bceu said atrong- ly to recommend eat he will be effectu- ally suojocted to early childhood. The object must be.. obi,tcued of we proceed in the buwtiaw of education with comfort, or »n.ure the welfare and happiness of our children. A portion of stricter dca- ciplineway, for a time, be required. but duaipline, he it ever remembered. is per fettly computable with the tenderest sympathy and the mat. atlet•tortpte kindness. Many p.areuta, who allow tbem.eltes to treat their children, dur- ing their earliest Fears. merely as play- things, humonng their capnoes and sac- rificing to present fasces their future welfare, cotsnence, when the charm of infancy is past.. .t stem of restraint and .evt'nty, and display displeasure and irritability of the veru detects art which they Tare themselves laid the f uudution. But if authority bar been eatabdtnhetl to the beginning of lite, weatwll have it the mon In our power to grant liberty and indulgence, and to ex wise a geuer,el in- fluence over our children when their feelings are ripening, and whet, them affection toward tour ji:reo1e u of in- creasitrg iiaportaucc. ('1 ,NnINOCI141. HAIIITtt, Amid the lartou. Mope:, of education, the cultivation of colorioatait ,.shits s I. MU often overtook" trots by ntfectioa- ate anal attentive pr*reet.. 'They are, ,-aha t.. obese', r•••pect,ed. and beloved: out this as not sultir.ent. 11,:n addition, a parent can he to ler children the fa - :tidier iriend. the uurserteJ confidant, the sympathizer.; partner to their joys an I stur,.ws, Lops -s and el ..tp;rtntmeuts, . hold on the 1 is +tai1,.•.I wbicu will continue wht•u autburit. --.•.tett, and will prove a s.tfequanl tlhroagii uw meat eritaeal period of lite. 1t 1. important in the nhaw,;rmeut of children ;' wake but few rules, and be unalterably titin in enforcing those which are made -to give no -heedless commands, but to tae that those given are strictly obeyed. We should also be cautious of employing authority on occasions in which It is likely to be exerted in vain, or of cuw- mending what we cannot enforce. NOTES OF WOMEN. Brevities Ceweeralws t►. Delays et the Voir glees Mot Roselle Miller, • quick-witted New fork woman• has just patented an Invention which will be :awful to house- keepers in the seawon of canning anti pr. - Serving fruit.. It is a prr•erre jar lifter, simple. ioexpersive and adjustab-, and in meant to remove jars when filled from the bath of boiling water which at:r- rsuode them to the brim. Mrs Josw Frazee l: ppleman, a Ken- tucky poet, nor ttarnpIantel to Mliesis- sippi, has been twice elected poet of the M..ussippi Trews Asa)caation. In Italy the Queen has found a u.. for the phonograph. which there has hither- to filled the role chiefly of a harmless curiosity. (jteeee Mergherita has • rare gift of improvising ma the piano, but, like others who have this power. she cannot rveall the melodies she has hewn performing. Now. however, aphono- graph is placed on the piano, and It re- cords the fleeting fancies of the musi- cian. A certain young P.ngllshwnman, Mies Roes Bernie, exhibited ■ small oil sketch ata resent exhibition. She appended to her nature • label inscribed: "Not by James. McNeill Whitler." No one as vet has found out whether it was a joke or an evidences O( egregious peewee' vanity. it yet attrset enmities to year child- ren by dowsing them in fantastic gun don't tvwnrt thorn for overweening egotism. A mother shoould think twice before she ..and. • stall maca dressed Mug • t aofnsetal soldier or • Vandyke lettere. tos. ply with everyday grwaby 140 BED OR CHAIR& !swab ee steeps i.ealres O.tdaratg..d neem• sad Carnet ole D.. Coma. Jain Jit Singh. Rafal Iltajamen of Kap- fortieths, said god -by to tbe frieudv he bad made at the Hotel Waklorf yester- day at about rkooa, and with his ieduute of turbaned dignitaries stared for New- port. At about that hour five .1 the advauoe guard of another East India* potentate, the Nawab u( R.mpur, wets at the Windsor Hotel completing the arrangetnenui for the arrival a lit. Nighties to -day. They were a curious looking party, not so picturesque as those in the party of the departing Kin. of Kings, but fully as interestiug in many ways. They were Merry Farrolihy, the tint► sign professor and four Hindus. who came as the torer:inners of the pulentate. to see that arrangements were suede such sit are fitting for an Emit Indian ruler who is d the Mot ainuiedien faith. They have a room, which. while it suits lhemselyes, would be classified w "unfurnished." The tied wane token out, for they sleep on rage or mattr.-+etas flat upon the flux. The chairs were also taken from the room, for they sit cruse -legged upon their rugs and ex - premed a desire that no chairs le allow- ed in the rosin. In the party is the cook, an anuoiuted person, who is authorized under the rules and regulations of their province to cook witch things as ere fitting for sloe Nawab ehl Ratupur w cat E.qv. cal rectiome were sent to the hotel by the party in charge of the Nawab aro set apart a room ells rem this aniksated cook might perform the functiue which only an annotated cook may perform. !rhe Prince and tri. suits will occupy nine roc its on the tint floor of the h.ael fronting :Nh Avenue. Ha advance turd is careful to impress it upon trk,ur with whom they comer it imatnet the the Na- wab is a perwooage of c(maidrr..We dis- tinction. intinction. if he were of the lt:ahtnio faith, he w..ubl be a Maharajah, or pot. AlWy :h Itajai Rajag:tn, like Jajat Jit Shugh ; but being a Mohammedau, he is mailing but • Nawab -N. Y. Tuues. A Q.heae tease.. 1a ala .. 7. or, 0.. is the shading plate .•(n mys- tic lend of Berensn communists. who Mild all pr., peril, in t-.nntnon. the peace befits a miuwtutr bare nom witbul iw•!f. The people, who call t hwutaelves t: • triter, own :000 acres of land... hich ail lies in one body, shout half of the tract tering 1m a high state .,t cultivation. The original ZArlie purchase was 10,000 acne. but *1W have been sold at a high figure. Every article, implement, dente, con- trivance or machine used, wrought with or employed in Zoar is of Zeolite manu- facture, and the same may he said of every article worn or wtteu. witli the ez- ceptioti, of ce.ffee, tea and spices. The shoes the blarhtes wear are made by their own shoeutaken (nom loather prepared by their own tanners from hides taken from cattle bred and rased on the great community cattle Yana The coal which warms thew end cooks their food is dug from their own mini., and is burned in stoves can in their own foundry, from iron smelted in their own furnaces from ore found in abundance on their own lands. They hare commu- nity tailors, bakers, weavers, butter - makers, cbeesn-,takers ant all other use- ful artrans and tradesmen. The tailor uses nothing but beanie cloth made by theZoarite weaver from wool sheared from Zoarise sheep. The same may be said of the whole catalogue to mauufac- turers, which certatuly gives to Zona da- tincti,is characteristics unknown to any other American city or co.nmuuity.- Chicago Tribune. DlsadvaeaagM .e •7atetag,- As tie girl who ••paints" care nothing for the ethical argument against rouge and is nut to be intimidated on the so.ore of health, she can be impressed (only by showing up the diend. antnges of Huge as :t beautifier, and (certainly it has m..t glowing disadvantages. Whet, for in- stance, could he more undesirable than to have a color which does not • eo'ne and go," unletr upon withdrawal to tine boudoir or a plunge in tie surf. The midsummer maiden rarely weep• in iublic, boo that the question of fast co ..r s not to he comities -et' on that score, hut aseuredlythe immess.ref a hetet-mimed clerk most be haunted by the dead 'hit something will happen to it. confrnt.d as it must be by the perils of p repiratl M or weather. it mon be like fearing that One's wig ares course off in curnpany. But the inability to regulate is the nest serious difficulty in the ewe-. Ther•• ore times when every c!ieek ah:uld bib -u upon short notice. How embarras.ing it must be to fall away in a dead faint with cheeks blushing like a peony and betokening the bloom of health ! And as to ps'citing the lips. which is also afected at this time, why, it is .imply preposterous. "Paint" on the mideum- mer maiden's lip ! Think of it ! But perhaps she knows the we eknees of men when they ties "Paint." to touch it and ascertain if it dry.-$o.thern Pleasure Seeker. A asestl..a Attorney. Curran'e witticism, in furnishing for the carriage of a raoh tobacconist the motto "Quid tides," was quite equaled by Mr. Hammond. district attorney of Albany. An aged crier who hail held the office in tete Criminal Court tor years, whose duty ermined little else than supplying lawyers with tobacco from an 0141 box which he carried, was presented by Hammond with a silver tobacco box bearing the motto "Quid pr' qua" The same wit it was who, after having examined • Mr. Gunn in a ease. "Mr. Gunn. you can go off." Upon which Judge Bacon immediately gadded, "Yee Mr. Gunn, you are descbarged."- Mail and Express. A Paying In nee. men there Ie motet', .nal emit Tot Wird nom* ask -1 Ane.wt that .0,.i Thy aimwn Woo or .Mn oar n say to thee, •'1 mad rase .orthy ; do tab deed tor w. r --Jests lms. sweep Raabe Are Clever Masers. A very common practice among the hawks of this country le to follow close In the truck of • railroad train, flying low down near the grnond. The small birds along the line, startled M the roar of the cars, flay up in clouds, and the hawk takes his pick of the fattest of the log. The little birch w an alarmed e noise °f the train that they do net ase the hawk. and before they can get away he has rep eniebed his larder. The tact has often been nla.rved by per - sem living raring the 11,.e of railroads, and is • singular illuatradne of the f•cultty at adaptation pomened by ani- mais that on fawned to eve by their wits. -Q1ebe-Ilomeef.k AN AMtU$IN® TRICK. areyam a name a the need se LJghs • ea. Je•. Hose can a p jet be lighted from an- other without the interventime<Waseka lqoleo that �he not etre/ ie • Wita yu..d hen sir gee jogs mud be in the sante room about six ism apart from each other. Only ow of these fete is lighted, and IAsothsr turned e. full. If the bursas are of the regu- lated kind the glass globes must be re- moval. All the, of course, must be dote beton the experiment is made. When everything is ready, the two bands of the porousan formed into a hollow aroun the hied jot, bringing them es cher as pu.- Mble. A moment later, mod just as rapidly as possible, the hands, without separating them, ore held °ret the un- lighted jet, enough of the illuminated gm blink; carried along to set fire to the mooed jet. if the first trial should prove a failure, the ex nter used sot be discouraged. Th. hands have either been held too far apart or the pressure of gas was not great enough at the proper moment Several trials will invariably result in success. -$t Louis Post -Dispatch (i.tham's otem.peut.a Pres, Besides the numerous dailies in the more important foreign languages a uumber of the nationalities which go to mak. up (ouunpoltan New York's popu- lation are repre,.ented by aeekly news_ papers. Tne Swedes, for example have their Nordstj.rnau, published and edited by Hakim Johansen, which has been in a fairly prosperous state from its inoep- tu•n in 187'2; a Salvation Army journal called the Stridaroyet, and an ostensibly humorous paper entitled Frisk Luft. which was recently purchased by Edward 1. Feek. The Hungarians have a newspaper called The Awerikai Neunsetax, edited and published by Erdelyi Ss Gustav: the Poles have their Kurjer, edited and pub- lished by Edward L Kolakowski; the Finns their Lebti, the Danes Weir Nonhlyset, published by Johann Volk: the Slays their Slovak v Ansenke, pub- lish..) by Jan Spp.evak; rb. Armenians their Ararat. pultlnhrd by P. M. Avyad. ':here are u.ewspapers printed in Hebrew, in Gaelic. an Iriah. Naturally enough. all these newspapers niepeal to a limited audience. they have but a limited eircu- lata,o. Few of them exoeed 1500; some fall below :.n10. Evert the Russians are rerrs•rente•h be a couple of .emi-monthly publications --The Worker Hobocbn and Tlhe Spravnchney Ltstok, which aim to combine news and literature in small duu.es -flew York World. Three Kends .f Lltatss.a. The Etruscans of old believed in three kinds of lightning -one incapable of de- ing any iujurr. another more mischiev- one in Ate character and consequently only to be imbed with the consent of a quorum of twelve gods, and a third, carrying mischief in its train and for which a regular decree was required from the highest divinities in the eartern skies. Cutioualy enough. ,modern scien- tists, following the lead taken by Arago, have also decreed that the varieties of Iighthing are threefold. The first com- prehends that in which the discharge appears like a long, luminous line. tont into angler and twangs and varying in compleziom from white to blue, purple or red. This kind is known as tanked lightning. because it sometimes divider into two or mime branches before reach- ing the earth. The second differs from the first in the range of surface over which the flash is diffused. From this circumstance the charge is designated sheet lightning. The third clam differs so widely from the more ordinary mani- festations that many meteorologists have denied their right to be treated as legiti- mate lightnings. They neither awume the fermi of long lines on the one hand nor sheets of flame on the other, but ex- hibit themselves as halls or gbtelar lumps of tore.-('iticago Herald. Eleetrleal ep.rks An English physician suconsfu:ly treats insomnia by electricity. Wool warehouses in Itradford. Eng- land, are being fitted sritli elcc,ne cranes. 'supplied with current from tete city mains. Hydraulic cranes were for- merly need. The clasic shales of the famous old Rugby School, in England. are to be illuminated by the electric light, lade iu- c:anele.ceut lamps being about to be in- stalled. An electrical engineer has suggested to a British Parliamentary Committee that the marking of imported meat should be done by the electnc current and sub- mitted a simple apparatus for doing the work. The English town of Widnes proposes to dispose of its ref use matter by incinera- tion, and to utilize the heat thus gener- ated in operating an engine for running an electric lighting plant and furnishing light to various public institutions and some of the streets. (Ie.leay 1. she Meerut, A curious piece of contemporary geology s been` worked out in New Jerwj. The whole coast has been long sinking and the proems is stiU going ca. A curious industry is carried on in the e outbern part of the Mats --the mining for cedar. Some of these noble trees exhemed from their swampy burial, ex- ceed throe feet in diameter, with the timber perfectly sound. The "lay" of haeme uprooted trees according so the American Naturalist, indicates the de- vastation, probably, of extraordinary cyclones, occurring at immense inter- vals of time, thus leveling one forest upon another that had been thrown down long before. The cedars growing there to -day send their roots among their long -buried ancestors. The rings upon some of the exhumed trees ahnw a growth of 1,210. or poesibly 2,000 years, and the examiners of at least two hwrid forests below the present growth is in- disputable. Ile an.*a 1. tte.ress./ttan< Everybody knows that ewe are no snakes la Indeed, tent very taw know that Newfoundland is jest Mho intend as that respect --end there is no record that Newfoundland W • St, Patrick to drive the snakes off,MMd sr. These Is _ plenty of �a�s. 1n ewfoe sdland, but ant a tgelM *1 eery kid- snake, lab, frog. limed or eves turtle. Amoeba. queer thing about the proviso• 1m sthbaah1,. while MOM wild minute are ah*maamll Sham we me ewer a.. • rova�s .11 n/r4151:6,16*enwear0� e INMIa •.i C e Saiwl�c .*eft sainnle and maa Made mod alba s.gtYm.-�iiliSs Ira&.r --as•�at 4Msels.eer►.eilli i i you know Mr. cheesier, IM aseti.essr! SMA• wM bode occasionally) -Yes. I have a •cit aeq.aatgees with him. >E.Mrn sad Ilvsmee. All who IMPS the cue of 0hl16.1. dewed athat at Dr. Euwler''e Exuma d Wild Strawberry bay b. confidently &pentad on e owe all sitaumer oumplataa, diarrhea, dysentery, cramps, colic, Cholera isfantum, °Were sorbs, raster, eget, ie children or & delta 2w tepees few Ow ♦sresdiee Briggs--1nnd you here • trine tie.e last sight at t reception ' (.rites Nut .t first. "What was the nuttier ! ' 1 Io.t nearly thirty nominee trying to tied the plank bawl" The a.ma.. LIsbiba.er. Is at hcamhro. S., whence Mr R. 1'. Hard writes es follows :- "wit!, it a doubt tierdoek Blood Raters have dust roe • lot of good. I was sick mad weak a.a had no appetite, boat B. Ii iL mrde eaa feel smart sad osmate were les vote mere widely lumens wing Min Wadi be enved." 2. RUF?JJCK Sisgulets* the stomach. Liver endlowsls, unlocks the Secrstlons,Purlfle.ths Stood end removes ell len- turitlea from a Pimples toe he worst $srofulou• sono. BLCOD "*'CUR DYSPEPSIA. BILIOUSPESS, ONSTIPATION, HEADACHE SALT RHEUM. SCROFULA. HEART BURN. SOUR STOMACH DIZZINESS. DROPSY LVAATI SM. SKIN DISEASES BITTERS • The Whiteman Pea Hartnett? The best in the world for the follow- ing MOODS : 1st It is built of the best malleable wrought iron and seeL 2w1. It requires no holes to be drilled is cutter bar. 3rd. The outside divider can be raised or lowered at Irak or freer, wdepeudest of Idlers. 4th. It loss as red at the back to hold obetrwctio.s and caw chub inc. 51h. There are no springs to break or ✓ et out of order. tkh. It has movable clips aad urn be an in line with t"ugOe of machine if cutter bar hangs back. it b. Each lifter has • guard star, amid breaking mown guano se in,possiWe. 8th. Each lifter se iodependeot of the other rad can he raised or lowered at the back so se to hoe in front should newer guards be out of line. 9th. The nimble of inac:tiaes sold dur- ing the lot sea 'oi enables a largo number of the leadag fermiers of the Prwviace to testify to its menu. F:. ery nhat.•ktum a war- ranted and given to ten. Sample machiee can be sees at R 'fhosnv'o'm Blacksmith shop, (;alerich, l.eskde. at dufemet shoe over the County. .1AR E'. 11' HITEMAN, l'ateuteee and Mlanafactorer. Thomas Brown. General Agrees,:tea:orth, DUNNS BA, INC POWDER THECooK'SPEST FRiEND LAOC[ST S*LL en CANADA. MAIM Amain, yam' PATENTS I t Oarsi-ii:iL. WOmtK lieiwa �11eo.vw . !nw T i to st»aroseoars=OMski. , arliLi OWN kiallo eficitnti u Amnia! PLANING11SE MILL EITiIMIt� coo B & Son, BamorAetv.w.r BASO, DOOR and BLIND Dealers 1e all ideas of LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES Ase ►edYesak m•sorW s every aseeiptf.o School Furniture a Specialty. NEW ARRIVAL GOODEI LATEST STYLES. ■smna.am'reed+ewrd"' ii, Tweed H. DUNLOP, he WA.tt Teem The Sign al ealle isle mini M*ye�g .» Jpam.d e.ts�e me stew chi kir slog sad pss�m execution of .11 NrM peimtiag, A perusal of poi. _ test. anat say o<ngRmaadt la sbosnohu•� cis yourbe te wlppa•lrooy., (wire sedease we um, that our slum to please will eases the approvel of our patrewily host +`tease This useful size is kept in theft of qualities saute se laps,,, While lettttr ikta&s In this line we have a rel lar•, stock of tine writing papers wt able for every class of represented in this locality, prising laid and wove, lima., quadrille and other paper., mitt or unruled, as may be required. tm0. i‘tttt 2 are cwt so generally used, they I.: an important piece in comtzerc; l oorrespomience, See what we',, got under the above head& Bks\ 'k%ta&s If the "pay -aa -you -go" pyla w., the order of the day the deemed for account paper would not be so great ; but there are some mei who get so many dunner that they wonder if the stock will ever run out. We don't intend it tq and at present our stock is cos plate in this line with four itis. Good paper and neat ruling. BtattmtVAII Both single and double dollars and coati' columns. They come cheaper than bill heads, and are the proper thing to send after a delinquent once a month. They are sure to fetch him 'round - sometime. V► kavt‘o‘N.ts Now, it would be hard to pt along without envelopes,.ad M keep up with the demand fen them we keep a large stook a hand. We bare now about a hundred thousand in stock, Ind the prices will range from 75c. to $2.00 per M. We handle cea ' taenial and legal rites exclusively. ommeri•oX 4tfkr iVil has already been partially ta.a crated in some of the beads above There is, however, a vest aeon of work under this head that te enumerate would more than take up the entire space occupied by this adv't, but we do it all at TEs SIGNAL. A Im>%tatkOhs W an "At Home" or a wedding require considerable taste in mac tion sometimes, but we make it an easy matter by keeping is stock the very latest and beet samples to be had. Call and boa. 4eitt‘t belong to the poster department also, and we make a specialty tlf Nem—promptness being our aim in this respect A notice d sale will appear in Tots SlowAL free .f charge when bills for ante ere pt here. ✓ wograms of entertainments and meetings promptly turned out, from the plain but neat to the most elegant with cord and pencil attached Car&s auk& "C' accts This head covers a large range d work, from a bread or milk ticket to a neat oalltng card, from aa sir dinary admission ticket to a tasty business card or a handsomely printed membership ticket. ▪ Witt, s Our facilities for turning cot td1 class of work are evidenced by tie fact that the great balk of it h done by ss. This line alio eludes bo&gers. which our three fast -running frail out isa presses are able to turn surprisingly short thee. Ctrcv►\ors We aim to excel in all the aides, eat kinds of work we tars elft but especially in tide, and M* in .tock plain and SW, IPI suitable for all rami ..Leessia • Y:krk&s of W ores do the typographical printini 1W tors be done in this eetsbtnklMt in an expeditious and atlas (manner and Dv r V rkte.s tlliW. bee SovAi *ern rtaso'tkabkt.e We extend err aiming far peat i.' era and solicit a aontia**$ee d tis MAK T WI. '&W01110,, Uons.rC*, tM i 1