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The Signal, 1893-8-31, Page 6cn.LETT S' PURE POWDERED PUR[IT, STRONGEST. NUT. a.at,? et see :We9 aa�a�tr. For .aatae ees. A wate»nge�wb a aaafzM area a oar ecoid ep••eana•Ye 504a. 5.14 N alt goatees eat neernissa . W. 4111.Z1aZdinr4', TsewomMa CANADA HANDICAPPED. Open Opinion by a Staunch Conservative. HENRY FOLGER SPEAKS RIG4T OUT rk rreee.t• the t ••r chem a rarely S.ar row.. m1e.dpoleI lbe Sie.rrua el t Ana Aa teem Uer \ si.rel Marl. 1 I..*1m..1 et a rime The Trmp,.rar, AI. meet et trendy la Ise 1 rttrrl mute. i. ✓ at .. t' IMri.w Yams an intoniew with Henry tearer. of K.asstoa, to %. V. Tantre. 4 'read* is a country of pro.l h g ioua natural resources, her people are self-reliant, sober ninny and industrious, and they would be en, Cly prosperous if they only had a emirket for their surplus products. The t'euted states is the natural market fee the greeter portion of everything they raise, bet they are excluded from it by the McKinley tariff and ere forted to exppoort it to England. ' Two years before the McKinley act went tato force, that is, the fiscal year 1888,1 find by the returns that the Culled States took .115,4)0.000 worth of certain farm product, while of the aaine product Eoglaud pur- chased but *353,000 troth), and this sot• withstaudi.g that 1' naiad Mates duties had to Le paid at the frontier on all except eggs end hides,whereas Englaad admitted every. this: free. , For such commodities as wool, barley, horses, beans, bay,- potatoes. etc., the States is the only profitable market the farmer has and he either makes nothing or loses when be tries to sell across the Atlantic. Then, again, in spite of the American duties, the States is chief ppurchaser of Canadian min- eral*, fish and fmeet products. "A state of things which compels the pro- ducer to avoid his best market and seek a ..eon' Lest is msnifeatly injurious. The ppssonple are unable to make the most of their labor and resources and emigrate in en- ormous numbers across the lisp. On ac- count of the present demoralized state of business in the United Fetes, owing to what may to termed an artificial crisis, many Canadians are returning t n their homes, but only with • view of a short sojourn, intend- ing to return to the I'ranee States, looking upon the disarrangement of business there es merely temporary, white a Canada it is deep seated and far-reaching. There is no employ meat for them here, and their re• turn will aggravate rather than alleviate the settled discontent. • "As far as 1 can judge the Canadians as • body have • deep affection for England, and well they may, for she hies treated them for the last fifty years with the utmost kindness. They would Itke to do all their trade with them, but geography forbid*. If political u.dom comes it will be l,rought about by eoonotmc causes, by the desire r i the Cana. dans to obtain free access to the United States market cod participate in the won- derfnl development of which the ratted States us. the scarce. How do political parties in Caned• stand on the questions of trade and political tenon " The Conservative party has striven to develop the potential wealth of the Domin- ion by means of railways. canals, and other public works. It este elished a protective tariff in 1R7q, which it will no doubt revise at the next session of l'arli•ment in the in tenet of the natural industries, the only fear bring that it must be jus: enough to soothe and to damn. " It is obvious that (Colo can net er prosper u she ought to do until she is able to share to the full in the commercial and in• dustrial lite of the coutinent to which she be- longs. The high tared stimulated industry for • while, but is now a burden. It is im poverrhing the farmer, fisherman, lumber- man and miner, while the manufacturers, in whore marmot it was devised, are net making money. The l.'.toservativen deseree ere lit for what they have tried to do, but they have been contendine against the irre- sistible forces of nature and have conse• queasily been baffled. " As • matter of fart, the people have little confidence or hope ot relief from either of the t ptrties. The sentiment against ckinleyisen which swept it from power i. the Unite. !stater, exists against the high tariff here. and it only needs a Canadian as wise, fearless and honest as Mr. Cleveland, whom the people can trust, to create as great a change in Canada ae the last election did in the United States. " It is a enures of regret to the true patriot •n.1 well wisher of Canada to ret • fine country tike this, and se fine • people, suffering from the • ommercial iso - aeon and heaping up s huge debt in the vain attempt to develop their resources while remai.i•r severed from their natural market. " Rut things cannot go on in that way m%rh longer The farmers and others hare their thinking rap on Witch' tel.. Is. .t el. W.I.d ming Senior - You wouldn't take me for a married man, weld you' Mies Flyrt i rather thick i waai& if you should ask me. ra1MJr els 11.11,+. For fifteen years we have Deed Ile. Fowler's Extract of 1Wtld Strawberry as • family medicine for summer complaints and darrth-e a, earl we sever had anything to equal it. We highly reoen,na..nd it Sem OA %Cann, Corbett, Oat. Mew tet ear1h514,1 Before eh., Dote. Ir it jest 250 years mune the first hand er 1 chief. wore mad.. TNT Caere maaefaetur ,t' at Paisley, in Scotland. sad were only - natty sold for one (10111111,810•00. lianas* reeve Vignette, it necessary against unexpected attacks of rummer .wnplaint. No remedy i. sn well knnwa or so suoersalul ia th s clean of diseases u Ile Fowler's F.xteaet M 1 Wild Strswh.rry. Keep it is the hoses as • safe -gaud. THE SIGNAL : GODERICH, ONT. TIHURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1893. TONGUE AND SPEECH. Tar/w Prettier. haeam•d te mama Wesel sesame For making thea and z the tongue has to be partially applied to a portion of the palate next the teeth. Not only, however, must the contact be tncvm- p1ete but its place is indefinite—may be half an inch further hack, says Her- bert /ipener:, In The ('outemporary Re- view. To make ah and sh the contact has to Lel made not with the tip but with the upper surface of the tongue. and must be an incomplete contact. Though for making the liquids the tip of the tongue and the sides of the tongue are use 1, yet the requisite Is not any exact adjust- ment of the tip, but an imperfect coutat't with the palate. For the th the tip is used along with the edges of the tongue, but no perfect ad juetnieat is required, either to the edges of the teeth or to the junction of the teeth with the palate, where the sound may equally well Le ,uaJe. Thottgn for the 1 and d complete con- tact of tip and edges of the tongue with the palate it required, yet the place of contact is not detiute, and the tip take; no ui.re important share in mho action than the side*. Anyone who olaaervee the movements of hie brogue in speaking Wilt tint' that there .e.'''UC n0 C;.soy In eheeit the a,l- juntumehts must have an , too -twos o -s cur- respondiug to tie) extreme ismer of dis- criintriation which the tip po.aeaaee: fur speech this endowment i, useless. Even were n useful it could not ,Joe shown that it has leen developed by survival of tl:e fittest: for though perfect articv- laat.n is u.t.tul, Net imperfect articula- tion has rarely'such an effect as to tnl- l.xlo a than in the maintenance of his ife if he is a good workman. A (lerntau'- interchanges of b'e and d'e du not di -advantage him. A French- man who, iu the place of tiee sound of the th alttays stakes the sound of z, succeeds a a tucker of music or danc- ing no It.. than if he achieved the Eng- lish pionnnetatiou. Nay, ev.•n such an imperfeeti.hn of speech as that which ens;e from cleft palate does not pre- vent s man from getting on if he is capable. True, it tiny go against him as a can- didate for Parliament or a, an "orator" of the unemployed (mostly out worth employing,. But in the struggle for life he is not hindered by the effect to the extent of being lea able than otters to maintain himeetf and his offspring. NIGHT GROWTH. \&tare's limit Work t. Uowa During thee Hoer et Repose. It is a curious fact that night is the time when nature unitises for growth. Plants grow much more in the night than in the daytime. as can be proved any time by nteasureuienL Measure a vine at night, then nlea.ure it agaiu in the morning. and the uext night, and it will be found that the night growth is two or three times that accomplished during the day. During the day the plant is very busy gathering nourishment from various source/; and during the nicht this raw material is assimilated into the plant life. 11.e same fact is true o,f the animal creation. 4 i,ildren grow more rapidly during the night. lu the daytnue, while the child is awake and active, the sys- tem u kept busy distm,eiug of the wa,tes consequent un this activity ; but during sleep the system ie free to extend its operations beyond the mere replacing of woruuut particles ; hence the rapid growth. This is why el many invalids need so much reit and (deep. The at stem has been taxed fur years beyoud its ability to repair the tissues, and fence the argan- isne has lee hme wore and disabled from the accumulation of waste products, and disease las retuned. With the proper conditions re,torei, and it season of per- fect rest, nature will reassert herself, cleanug up tie clogged and dirty tissues and reetoting the organs to their normal condition.—(Mod health. HARDUP PEOPLE'S CLUB. A Qae•r Gathesng That Mas be Sere tit r— Karla At the entrance to the Avenue du Bois, on the left, is what is called the Cercle des Panes, which. tran,Iateed, means, "The Hardup Peophe'e Club." This gathering is held under the magnifi- cent verdant foliage of four rows of chestnuts, which were recently in all the glory of full bloom. it is supposed to be frequented by persons who cannot afford a carriage to drive to the wood, and yet who want to see and. above all, to be seen. The accommodations con- sist of arae and other chairs, which are paid for it the rate of two and four cents a sitting, and the plebeian bench, whieh costs nothing. Harriagt'able young ladies, flanked by a superb cla- pernn—generally the inainuta or an aunt—muster there in force on the keen lookout for • lord and muter. Men also frequent the spot. They are of all ages, from the pert, downy-lippel ado- lescent, freak from college, to the made- up roue. Everyone rhere is well dress- ed and impecunious. and the other sex exert, all fa efforts to de-eire the other. Men are looking out for ladie). maids or widows with • dot, and ladies are in search of husbands.--('bicagu Ilorald. Wire mod Cut 14.11a, The holding power of wire and cut nails was recently investigated at the Watertown arsenal and therm nails were shown to have a holding power about 73 per cent. greater than the other class. As the production of steel wire nails now exceeds the output of cut made. and as the manufacturers of the latter claimed for them a greater boiling power, a challenge was hatted and accepted, and the arsenal test was to deride the dis- pute. in fifty-eight series of test the cut nails came out ahead in each, and in most came very much ahead. in all 1,1:9) nails, ranging from 1 1 8 to 8 inches in length. were driven into spruce and pine timber, and the force required to pill them oat was measured on an Emerytling machine. With flour nails irom 2 to 4 inches long driven in •vente the resistance of the cut nails was All per cent higher then that of the wire nails; with finish nails in spruce the cut nail wise it'd cent ahead, and when driven into ne with tie perpendicular tot grain of the wend the exams re.i.tance in favor of the cnt nail was 176 per octet. Even with the taper parallel to the grain of the wood the oat nail afforded a mistimes twit that of the win nail. A ler i•.7 .r the el str.h. Freddie—Na. didn't tytWdoeary see Miran them the savages (Mel wage My Mame Two tionssi. will be (Seal or the Caned seat i Itele m taw tar Mother—Yes, Ndyps Peg • 'MOM in UM Ill Jeaseey 1, Mt, girl IiefM UNITED STATES NOTES. C►mi etrs has preemie ly did oat al New York. The State LAW mea at Ripon, Wia, Today. The debate u. the ledges tither bill is 1• progress at Wasbingtoo. This year's yield of oaten in the South, it is repurtd, will he heavy. WUltam J. Jamlesoa, a colored bel doctor sad murderer. was Waged at Quincy, IIL ('barhe %Poitou, aged t'0, was 'yarned at Morgaritield, Ky., fur kUlieg Pam Keith. At • 8100.11) firs is St. 1'a.I Fireman Michael Colossi' met detail, alba other fire - owe fatal injuries. Three more gouboats are to be added to the ever Inereasag fluted Steam navy for service In ('emcee waters. At Milwaukee bicycle races Zias.ermsa won eterythtng he went Mtn. He west a mile against oust In _' 1s. is an effort to reach Sanger's record of 3 91. The committee of the Columnbia. Ch... Congress has determined to indefinitely postpone the date of holai.ng the proposed «regress in bope of • brighter .CAM of 8- wuc ial affairs in the future. Great Britain's day was.accwafully cele- brated •t the %Voill's Fair o• S.tuteiay. There was a large attendance, and the demonstration and ceremonies are described as haring beep very imposing. J. S. Johnson krocked 13} enneads off the •I,,v-n.i'. Licveb record on the INmneb.aba track, Minneapolis, making the .distance in 7 13} against 7.31 made by `Waller at Indlanat.,:ls July 3, Itele. PERSONAL MENTION. TMminiee Immigration Agent W. A. Webster is denten only ill at Kingston. ih P:ayter, of l.lttawa, has issued • writ against Hon. A. 11. Angers tor alleged IibeL Re.. Abbe i'roulto rector of Laval t.'ui- rerrlty, is to be appointed Bishop of Sher- brooke, Que. 11y. Carl Peters, the Afri' n explorer, has arrived in New York. Ilei not believe Emirs Pasha to dead. Mr. Oui,net luta openly deniedTarte s charnel that he betrayed Mr. Cha u for accepting • portfolio. Lieut. A. H. Lee, K A., is the new P tensor of Military Topography, etc., at the Royal Military College. .one. B. Arnuldi, wines term of imprison- ment will expire Sept. rah, is to be lioer limed at once on scc..unt of ill -health. Sir Hcury Tyler, president of the l:. T. It., is expected here snout the end of the month to make his •unual tour of inapec- :iou. It is prohsi.le that Rev. Mr. Diehl, "harsh . f England pastor at Karan and Hyde Park, may be asked to resign, as ha denies eternal puntsLmeet.. GENERAL. Cholera has appe.rd in Brazil. The Vienna has overflowed its banks in }last Pressure In 1-. hours there hare hese 23 fresh cases of cholera and" deaths in n;alicia. Sixty thousand pounds in gold has been withdrawn from the liauk of l :nglaud for shipment to Toronto. A salting house et Silks, Alaska, was re• .ently plundered of its sal skins by creed from unknown versals. The number of fresh cholera tams re- ported in Russia during the last week is 2,113; the number of deaths 768. The rebels In the Province of Corrientes have defeated the l.overnment troops and art marching on Torrientca e'rty. In the tight between French and Italian workingmen in Aiguss-Mortes Thursday, at but :A were killed and 1:h(1 wounded. Nine vases of cholera and two deaths from the disease have been reported in Krahilor, the principal port of Roumania teriout fights aro reported to have taken 111aee 04 Saltill, Mexico, between the tw•, 7F%t factions there. Many persous were lolls Slants. Napier, of l;lsegow, deny that they had tendered for the establishment of the feat ocean tiers ice Letweeu lomat Britain and While theail at Tiztia, (:reeve, was being cleaned the prisoners attacked the guard and twenty escaped, Two police- men and two prisoners were killed. Cholera has made its appearance in Bra- rie. The death rate from the disease in Ru- sin is high, and in consequence the embark- ation of Keeton emigrants for America at Bremen ha been prohib.tcd. Settees riots are rr1orteeal from the eol- liery districts in South Wales. The strikers on Friday made repeated attacks on the collieries, and • large number of men were u• jsrel. The military and police have been called out in force to repcer the dis- turbances. The triumph of the Liberals in Nicaragua is eomplete. The leaders of that party claim that they have ample power to main- tain order, despite the many reports to the enetrary. Elections will ba held nn August 27 for delegates to a constitutional conven- tion that has been called to assemble on September la ACCIDENT RECORD. A MOM fire recurred at i►undalk, flat., Friday. Robert Turner, whose leg was cut off as Ori lia Monday, died at Hamilton. A hny named Athier has had Lis arm clashed at Alel.•ren's mill, Ottawa. Crawford Atkinewn, • C. P. R. brakemen, was killed by falling off his train at (eagle sewage. H. Msekel, an expert Pennsylvania saw- yer, was ant in two by a hand saw s.1 Hull Point, Que. It hi' add lbt kleIteinnell, the rope walker, will he maid. to perform again on mermaid of his fall st landau. fherge Fanning. aged 17, SAn of Thomas Fan"tng, of Alnwirk Township, Northam bertand, was killed by falling off a lead of grata. A. explodes neared nn Sat.rday in • coal mime at Berne, Westphalia, and seven mea were killed and of serioaaly i.• jaecd. While working ea the ete•aer Tecumseh at i'rrt Colborne • day OR se ago, Regiment Joseph Daws•n tem etraek se the hod wit. • Meek sad shehtly injured. Ho was laid at for • tow days. tagA 1 Isardaaa • dmew wattempttWeill Mee )amines, kil ,mage the whet& mad led eaa lee take. of .ad Me tithe w ksil, eenrh.� Met am etael.a woe es canary. Cures Others Will ewe Yes, is a tree stateaset of the action of AYER'S Salta caller when takes for dimming originating la impure blood 1 but. while this asssrtlos is true of AYER'S Sarsaparilla, as thousands can Meet, it cannot be truth- fully applied to other preparatloas, which unprincipled dealers will recommend, and try to impose upon your as " just as good as Ayer's." Take Apes Sarsa- parilla and Apes only, if you need a blood -purifier and would be beeeMed permanently. This medicine, for nsarty My years, has enjoyed a eaputatleos, and made a record for curer, that has never been equalled by other prepara- tions. AYER'S Sarsaparilla eradicates the taint of hereditary scrofula and other blood diseases from the system, and it has, deservedly, .the cesdidemce of the peoples. AVER'S Sarsaparilla " I cannot forbear to express my joy at the relief I have obtained from the me 01 AYER'S Sarsaparilla. 1 was afflicted with kidney troubles for about six months, suffering greatly with pains in the small of my back. In addition to this, my body was covered with pimply eruptions. Tho remedies prescribed failed to help me. 1 then began to take AYER'S Sarsaparilla, and, in a short time, the peons ceased and the pimples disappeared. 1 advise every young man or woman, in case of sickness resulting from impure blood, no matter how long standing the case may be, to take AYER'S Sarsaparilla."—H. L Jar - mann, 33 William at., New York City. Will Cure You Papered ed by Dr J. C. Asir & Co. Iowa Nan. w A veneer Mfrs eh et brat. farmer neer (:oderich u stated to have oto in his barns the accumulation of sev- en yea 'wheat crop. He has been holding on hopidg to realize a price to pay him for d•laj iuge sahep rotor". wa,r" The expen ens u one which will turn out more uoprobtable than he probably re- alizes. The lanai y shrinkage in volume and weight, and t ovidiog out of the; etre, a liberal supply rat food, are ser• tato to be consider•Me The loss of interest on the honey which might have been secured by ailing this wheat will be close epee 20 `n me a Lualicl. Taking the total selling rape ..f the grain tc-dry, and cumptrieg it teeth what might hare Leen r.ali.el, Ile b.'icva that the storage of that whim' fur the pat seven years has resulted in • dead loss ot not less than 40 to oO ceuta a bushel. If a fanner stores up his wheat each year for seven years, which he could have sold each year for 81 a bushel, he would have to sell the wheat at the rod of the seven yam for 81.21, in order to save himself from loss, without deduotag • cent for shrinkage and vermin. There are hundreds of (srmars paying 7 percent interest on mortgages who are In the habit of holding their wheat without ;ter reflecting that they are losing 7 per. cent on its market price so long u they keep it. If kept for over thee. years the interest becomes over 8 per cent, out in b years close uo ou 10 per cent, by cotnpound- n e. The fact is, that the conditions whichcon• trot the price of wheat are now so vatted, owner to the cumber (f the sources of sup• plies; the different periods at which Nipple." came into the a.arket; the maeliabilty of pnbliahetl rctnn,l, and the operations of speculators, that it is utterly beyond any farmer's caSty to see far ahead as to what his crop will realize. Holding what for • rise is as much • spe..olat ion as tossing coppers to see whether they will come down 'heads' or ` tolls.' No portion can, however, bare riven the wheat problem any considrrat oa in recent years without coming to the conviction that the chances of wheat ever again ruling at 11.00 • bushel are very dim, except for very brief periods. When wheat toneless that figure the chances ars very great indeed that such a price will draw out supplies large enough to cease • dere. We should like the farmer who has held his wheat for several consecutive years to compare notes with some of his neighbors who have told their wheat soon after her - vest for the same seven years. We are satisfied that such • comparison would oosriuce him of there being far more mosey in selling wheat every year, in p•r• tag debts with, or prudently inverting the proceeds, than keeping it in the barn subiect to fire risks, to shrinkage, and to the chance of • very uncertain market. The whole agricultural community is believed to have aided in bringing about the unpr.oedented lowness of prices line grain by persistently and systematically misrepresenting the yield of their crops, and the areas under cultivation for some Weare. Each man hu dome this is vain hope of raising priey the crop being understated. Td b The effect km bees to muse • 'slump' by vast stores eom- i•g forward which were not mleskted ups. The kw of averages, the laws et supply • id deemed, may hs disregarded, their (m- oieties may be temporarily set aside by hese data, bat those laws are inexorable is the keg ren, mid, this year, are •sorting their power i. • way which those most suffer from who h•yi sembt most to set them at shoaght. - -Trade Review. ( C. R,egaarst A Co. (:entlsm... For 'WI 1 have bees troubled with screfeloas some apes my hoe i have .peat hasdrads of dollars trying to effect • care without any result. 1 ant happy to say sae Bottle d MINARire LiNIMMRNT wtirely eared me and i sea heartily reeearmeed it to all as the best n eedleies in the world. Rev AI.n MCI Rayfield, Out. "Asia" aee,"Afet' " .e tie poker pleger tllhs went bYwe .1 jt'2am dm School Opening 1 1893 - AUGUST 28th - 1893 ERASER & PORTER have something entirely new in Exercise Books W Scribbling Books. The best value ever shown tet 5 cents. Headquarters for School Books. Full suppiies of all the latest and best Educational Works, authorised and recommended for Collegiate Institutes, Model Schools, Public and Separate Schools. September Delineator and Fashion Sheet to hand. FRASER & PORTER, Loral Illaaajers Sell Telephone 1.. Booksellers and Stationers, T1 L T'B TETE IDEb- Yon kill a few Siea--the -or- Lola an indignation meeting. You ,:41t11 the whole arum Map with TANCLEFOOT $PICKY FLY P1PEf1, cheapest and beet made, or else knock them ..tet with e, 1'L'RE INSECT POWDER, %heti toter '...a Sea -Bathing at Home. This excellent admittance to limit •ter} Ix at by purchasing a box of sweat, 25e. t1 , keep it. `OOLITIC), RL/IIL4HINO SURR}:f; a 1tlNKt are Hire's hoot Beer - • 25e. botch ),.es gallons. Lime Juice, 50 cta • large bottle. W. C. GOODE, Chemist, Opea on Sandys for Prescriptions, Sze. SafetyBlcycles FOR LADIES AND GENTL*MEN. WK ARE OUTSELLING ALL CoMPSTIToR( : PNEUMATIC TIRES, from $50.00 up up CUSHION TIRES, 4 6 20.00 " UUR COMPETITORS ARP: SIMPLY NOT IN 1T FOR QUALITY OR P111' ti. SOSHEN CARPET SWEEPERS, `k' Oe"'ta` iml>tI( Ila MO RT. WN MOWERS. Th a Jests Pattern i. pertelai... GARDEN TOOLS AND HOSE. O r I1.e Is rume!MO R. P. WILKINSON. NO DOUBT U ARE VERYNMUCH ALIVE TO YOUR INTERESTS. 1HAT 1S WHY YOU BUY YOUR BOOTS SHOES E DOWNING, Where you will get good, basest geode, and everything warranted to be as repre.• ntel. We have a lamer stock and gnats* varlet ton ea by e1� chs• dealers s town combined. \3 e keep the most stylist sal Saab asnM is Qsaada. Price: are Lower than the Lowest, aid will be kept there. E. DOWNING. N.R.—Leather sad Findings in say quaatlty at lowest prises " LITTLE CHIEF" BRAND CORN, PE AB and TOMATO E8 Are the best Canned (foods in the market. TAMILKANDE TEA IiQ PA011C1RTB AT 40, 50 dz 80 com.rra PDR POVND HAS NO SUPERIOR We are agents for both lines, and a.k for them a trial, severed this they will pleas: and extend oar trate with you. Yours truly. OKAB& tg. N.AIRN. UN DERTAKE-RS 3. 3311,0P1 --113i arc 80N Have added to their *tree bonitos. nee 01 B. J. Nash's LOZMt 8t7 Gdi (ty Hearses, also *he Inn line ref fennel furnishings in the can" and are saw prepared to eondeet>iserais at primps rest ble. This department wui be mark* enseded to by Me taw wi11Lm. hs the el the We D. Claim der the pat tem hes a itnewbelp if the Muse, sed by ptwePt •tns•Iise hem to share part eg a ON i Renumber d the plegia--weeR, ea year tray to the pMg Asa