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The Signal, 1906-5-3, Page 44 TavtiuoAy May 3, 1906 THF S1($AL: GODERICH ONTARIO THE CITY BEAUTIFUL. WHAT HAS BEEN DONE ELSEWHERE MAY BE DONE IN GoOERICH TO IMPROVE THE APPEARANCE OF OUR TOWN RESULTS OF A SYSTEMATIC CAMPAIGN OF CIVIC IMPROVE MENT AT DAYTON, OHIO. Written by J. E. Tom, 1. P. S. Iti the following article Sir. T tells of the success of a movement that has been carried on for some years nt they ton, Ohio, for the tweet Hying' of the city. He suggests that the ntelhu.lr adopted there with such excellent results should be Applied in Gnderielt, and that, though our town has been greatly favored by nature. there is •h for us to learn in the cultivation of the spirit of Civic beauty and the practice of outdoor art. Among the many interesting fee- I which feidesb to thrive were given ex - tures of the Lewis and ('lark Fxposi- fait attention. tionat Portland, Oregon, last year were: The Art of Landscape Gardening. the illustrated lectures given in the (Fut of the Imass of material thus building of the National Cash itegirler eoIIerLtd three -primary Coater erre Coon n • of Dayton, (thio. rt. These art. Tttrel tali the lou is .uf all outtlucn i'a ) a • 3 AThese ratter are : interesting lectures treated of the sal Keep centre of lawn open. growth and development of their lusi- On Plaut in utaxs•s. nese and particularly of the means (co Avoid straight lines. Three simple principles the 15 11 c adopted by the N. C. R. Co. which ,.f landscape gardening - were the been made Dayton the prettiest -city foundation of all the instruction given in America. As 1 beheld the Jseauti- to the citizens of Dayton. ful illustrations showing; the wonder- A Transformation Wrought. ful transformations which had taken The illustrates[ lecture on Isndaacap e place in that city, 1 resolved to tell g+at'dening was given fo1' ell the N. C. the citisens of the Circular Town on it' euy)loyees, in the, public schools, before Sumdaay t h:ols, httshtess uu•n's Lake Huron. for which nature -has organizations, etc. Its effect see( done so much, how they may make widespread end immediate. The dis- their town more attractive. trict about the faetiry. Tong known as Atter visiting ,Winnipeg. (`algary, "Slidrrb,wn," gars to be like x park in the u Iter and beauty of its vines, Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle. Port- shrubs and trees. • Slidertown" was land, flan Francisco, Salt Lake Pity, forgotten and South Park became ()nr Denver, Owxha and l'hicxgo, it of the show neighborlie slsof the city. Not content. withlire-achingthe t n o see ed u me that. while Vancouver KeePel f outdoor art. the Company has the grandest situation, Denver is started N. C. R. boy: gardens and the cleanest, prettiest and most per- also offered prizes for the heat -kept feet city i had seen. This is due to pr't•lltts•s, the t beautiful tine the interest each citizen of Denver (-Mean; and the nand decorative window IoxiA. The prizes were takes in keeping his own home and awarded in a big utass meeting which the street ()ppxelte in perfect order. . was in itself a great factor in par ing enthusiasm for the work. Keep the Town Tidy. Slowly the results were obtained, he - In our own town private individuals eamse much of the work was along and business people thoughtlessly untried paths. The outcome, how - throw waste paper. old bottles, tin ever. has justified the patient effort. cans, etc„, etc., on the streets. Sev- Prettier dwellings. well -kept grounds, erai times last surnmer, old envelopes next and clean etlrets and ninny other from one of our business's' houses were iuiproveinents have followed in the scattered along Wert street on Sat- wake of the landscape gardening. The utdey evening. Frequently waste vnitie'of the property in South Park aper from the stores 1s swept out in has increased fourfold vas the result of the sidewalks by those who should be all this activity. interested in keeping our town tidy. Costs Little but Effort. Men and boys etxnd in the doorways and squirt disgusting tohacco spittle But the cost? comes the query from on the pavements, much to the annoy- the practical individual. The reply ance of thoeie who desire to have our the \. C. H. makes after nine years of town clean and attractive. Can not experiment is that the work costs our council and citizens unite in doing h in effort, but little in money. sowething at once to itnprove the There is a right Ind it wrong way to general appearance of the streets. the lay out your grounds. Plan 18 the flt•st parks and hoses of Goderich, as was essential. Reuoettther that you are done in Dayton ? Let us have some aiming to make an outdoor picture, public meetings where these things using Hewers and vines inetend of may be discussed. Anything that Peine and canvas. To gain this effect will create a desire among the citizens the three primary rules of gardening. to beautify the town should he already referred to am the a 1) c of attopted. outdoor art, utast he observed. no Keep rentte of Lown open. The Beginning at Dayton rhe Plant in ntassrs. In IPSO the N. C. R. Co. decided to lel Avoid straight lines. beautify the factory premises and 4o Nature made the rules. Man de - encourage their workpeople to make Serves credit only for having observed their homes newt. attractive. The t hem. The :meetesatul htndseape artist -(change began with a general cleaning is the one who seeks his models tip Rubbish was removed. Fences directly from nature and is content we torn down. Walks were with nature's Tawe. stray htened and, rebuilt. The spares Might Be Applied in Goderiek about the buildings were sodded. Flowers; trees end shrubbery were Atter hearing the N. C. R. lecture at planted. Conventional methods were Portland, I believed that the natural followed and itnproveutent was Ixxutiee of Goderich might Is in - marked from the beginning. The re- creamed sixty or x hundredfold if her sults were not entirely satisfactory. citizens united systematically and per - To carry the Work further it was severingly in amu effort • to make our decided that the Aid of an expert in town really beautiful. landscape gardening -was needed. To 1 write thin letter for the purpose secure A competent niait was the Prob. of enlisting the thoughtful cittzt•ns in lem. The Ohnstem1Rrothere of Brook- s seheuu' which "'"Y result in a line, Masnachusetill, were., asked to radical improvement of the appearance submit plans. They wets and oreof the old town. still the foremost exponents of the — — "natural school” of landecxpe gitirden- SABBATH DAY LEGISLATION. ing in America. They had designed — - the grounds of the World s Fair t Meeting on Monday Evening Addressed Chicago. Making the Waste Places Blossom. by Rev. J. C. Reid. 31 r. John C. Olmsted carne to Da mptecial meeting of the Goderichton. He viewed the factory grounds, hr:a•hof the Lord's Day Alliance was noted the direction of possible growth, held 1 the Irettire room o[ North and began planting. He did not stop street J ,thoditt church Mondayeven- with the N. C. R. buildings and lawn... ing of thi week. 'Chem war a fair nt- Hr, extended his plans to cover the tendance. fter the opening exer- neighlorhoocl. He showed by actual bcaper, the idem, . of the lua•al example lsimple and easy the art ranch, Rev, W. H. Graham, ex - example one of the gardener is, applying it on the plamed the teiaiatal for calling the one hand to the, spreading factory tuec'ting, the rex'Wive con ittlMee on the other band to the having thought Uul the present bill grounds, tiny plots usually allotted to modest before the Home. of (. unmet should town dwellings. He planted vines and have the PO inert of x t� lot ion from shrills., and a dreary place became a pleasant picture. He showed that one could be an artist wh.•n using nature'% colors in tree and Hower as well as when employing brush and paint on canvas. The aitn of loth is beauty. Mr. Olmsted did not stop with planting for the Future. Permanent einem and shrubs are slow of growth. Accordingly, everywhere he net telt a hardy vine tr shrub he planted a temporary, annual vine or shrub to fill the blank spare until the sturdier plant got its growth. He did not give the new edthusiasm time to cool while wait ingR for results. He second results with his annual,. the first sear son, and made converts everywhere in the community. Far-reaching Effects. - Within the year a radical change had taken place in the appearance and In the spirit of the neighborhood. A definite idea of the thing to be taught had also been developed. This idea stands for good taste and beauty in the house and its surroundings. It means green, smooth lawns, whether the premises be large or snoalt vine - covered houses, clean streets and illeys, the removal of nuisances, the improvement of working And living renditions, the rousing or interest In the physical, tnnraat and intellectual welfare of the con nnntnity, and the ttrc+ation of a pghlic opinion which will demand that these ideals Me put into practice in everyday. 111.. A General Crusade. Interest in the decorative a..P nt shrubbery and flowers haul always ex- isted in Dayton, hitt the trouble wen that all .such effort had been hap- hezaard. without plan or purpose. Nature's way of planting was never studied and knowledge of the first prineiplet of outdoor art war com- pletely lacking. To remedy this de- ficiency a systematic cnurwe of ilium - Dated lectures on outdoor art were delivered in every part of the city. The lessons of the teeters. room were further illustrated by practical ex - empties of planting. The vines end plants recommended by the Company's' fardenene were shown clinging to the actory walls "r blooming on the borders of the factory liawns Car- loads of these were brenght to Day- ton and sold at actual cost to all who applied for them. Close watch was Wen kept of the neighborhood during telae season, and the vines and shrubs this Imam h favoring i adoption. Rev. J. C. Reid, pastor of N Metho- dist church, wvls celled mien o give not addrenii, to which'', he neap led. giving an MVde ixlttsitiiih of the I 'in- ciplexupon which the Load's Day v founded. The first thottht is, said \1 r. Iteid, that the Mttldtathh is tin eternal law—a universal law in, all ,ages. it is a moral law which \in given ns. and moral law is neeess1lrily eternal. It is found in the 1►ecalnl(tie, which reflects not passing 1,11 pritteiples, but eternal. ,abiding law. It in ati axpression of God's own eternal, abiding chariu'ter. That law im written on emery man's conscience. 1t ntxy not be Se self -mule dentIt/4 smite of the ether (mei:iamb. of the Uec•ai^gue, but 1ieeumee so em. wee detu^nsttvate the ()there, The first three are melt -evident to our moral nature. and the last six are aelf(evi- dent to our moral nature ; and,ds the las( six dependupon the first three for their keeping, titin fourth one (melting in bel ween giros that right of relation- ship to God. The last s' depend on the first three, and the are fulfilled in the fourth. 1Vhe wr try to keep the other nine met nandments, this one will be as self -t• dent necessity ...,. It woo before the ten eo,nmand- tnentn. You are familiar with those Irtstant•es cited in the Bible where nisn were ponisheel, one man tanto death, fin.' violating it: and how provision was retitle for sustaining lite nn the Sabbath. And so it wax a recognized principle even before- the Dectalogue•. And after the Decalogue 1 find in many of the Prophets the burden of this [message. There ho no moral law which they denounce the people for violating so tnueh an this fourth Com- mandment. The attitude of Jesus Christ and the Christian church %how the same thing. 1t hot been reeognized fmm the very dray of the chtirrh's inaugura- tion,- -f'enteco st, which was the first day of the week, which ought to spesk very mach for the honor Geod has played upon it. In the Scriptures we find this is not 1plavtsi AN A Mosaic law, but SA it moral law. Excavations in Eastern countries show that the Sebleth wee observed thottsnnils of years ago. We know that it wax recognized from the time of Noah. The ancient Pendant( re Rented one day in seven rata a meted festival to their gal. it was a recog- nized principle tunnng nations,—na- tions that. were not influenced b tew- i.h law. It is an eternal Inn of God, made known to at a very early txri.sl, and recognised xa x moral law, though not well obeyed by the mites of the people. Why do we nett observe the day observed in the old dispensation, the stveuth day' It tinware( to me that the agitation kept tilt fur the seventh (lay it this (.'ltt•istiatl. dispensation weakens the spirit if Sablwth-keeping and enforcement very it I ootid that '•the seventh day" means In neatly every- raw[. "one day in seven." We• have hail the patriarchal, and the Jewish, mod now the Christian Sab- bath, and I find A Certain day meow uize(I in all these dispeuratiuus. In the patriarchal periost we Hitd creation the great act upon which the law was lased. The great suet in that Jewish period was the deliterance from Egypt. anti the prcelaniation of their Sabbath and their love for it was founded on their national delivet•euee from the land of 1.:gy}4tt, and so placeed on the very day of the exodus. This continued until the Christian Sabbath (o t•uuuucmurxte tiie guest event, and then the new cteetiotl, which eclipsed the original one. The patriarchal sabluath was on the first day of the week, and the•Jewish un the seventh, and now the Christian again un the find day of the week. The Jewish Sabbath could never be on the sante day of the week in two consecutive year's, becatues it sus on the same day of the year. It changed Mao limns ; that was the number of year's from the time of its institution to the time of the Christian Sabbath. 'Chest- things show the fallacy and weakness of the arg •nts art those who would dispute the authority of our Sabbath, and make of no effect any attempt :tt legislation upon it, b y insisting oat x particular day, when, in the fired pls'f'e, inor- ally, the seventh day is the flay, end there never was it day when they thought of that as the seventh day of their week. \Ithoart uniformity tYw e cannot have a natiitnal Sabbath at all, ixcause we our living in as time when society is very c plea and highly or- ganized. 'Cheer was a time when men did their work individually, and did not depend on other's. We tied it so in the farming community today. but in the busy centres the world is get- ting mere end more into a state where society is highly organized, ami today when our ratan tests the others (oust. They say it tikes twenty men to make a pin. and if there were only seven and they had different ideas xlstut the Sabbath when one stopped they, all would have to stop. 1 think no one who is pressing for Sabbath Ie'gislat• seeks to tyrannize over any man'so.conscience, or tell hits how he is to keep the Sabbath. only in this regard. as a. day of test ft certain lines of business. We want 141 ,Good between the financier and capitalist who employ many turn, and say. "You shall not cninpel men to break the Sabbath.' 1 say that the law shoes not tell n [nen hove he is to keep the Sabbath, but merely imposts certain restrictions upon him in as tumttlees sense. One num may keep it irreligiously and (another religiously. but it gi es a titan who wants to keep it religi6usly liberty to do so. Even under the present system a titan hue liberty to keep the Sabbath if he wishes. to stiffer the eunsequene•es, but if x man haat to put upon his f •1) the penalty of poverty by his losing it situation that is unjilrt. Selfishness in, after all. the greatest thing we have to ebntend with. Either for love of pleasure+or for love of gain. there ie the continu i tendency sot only to violet e the Sal th, hilt t() • pre' others todo so. A d 1.11/ Wt. have deputations from Milan s of busi- ness waiting on the Government these days. There are exprme eases, of Course, requiring consideratloi't, but these are made the excuse for laxity in tthereaees. These mien htave•,uot learned (icxd't►way. \. The worst thing we catn do is\po esjol. and flatter ourselves in oar• al superiority to our tonsins acro the line. I tell you they areaway ahead of us in legislation on newel (mentions. ,in Ottawa they iue saying that on account of Anna -limn railways running seven days x week we t do the same to • tete with theta. All the tines in the United States do not rim on Sunday. In fact it in not a general inactive. And pretty nearly all the railway accidents that happen are the direct result of lack of rest and overwork nn the part of em- ployees, whit Zack a day of test. ii.1 tisties in France Itaken over a wide area and ' • showed that. the prelim - tion nt accidents due to carelessness and weariness uveas greatest in the closing hours of the working day and least in the early Moura. It is men we want in this enmtry, - not money. That nation which ham the grandest, bravest, strongest types of manhemel will lend. Superiority in px'rnnnal, individual citizenship will give superiority in lenderahip of n.t- tions always. The Sabbath is not for ntam 'to ignore. it was made for man's well-being, the higher culture of moral character, to bring hint to his highest greatness. Seven (ley' of ntinh drudgery dotal not conduce to th highest Manhood nor highest Wen 'n•, will ret time to reflect upon the en a and urn oet. of all his toil, end the gree it et life. -Neither will six days of , iI and one day of aelflnh pleasure co tyre to the highest ends ; nor siatdays t toil and one day of sel- flsh 'torpor. t legislators provide opportunity for 1 ing the Sabbath in the highest and eel -intended way, land let individuals see veil thenteelvea of that opportunity as . o find all its helpful and soul-inspir • influences that God intended, An it will not be a Mullejt, but s blessing. At the conclusion of the at 'rens a motion was- curried authorizi • the Land's play Alliance exrcutiv- to tratt1 .t resolution favoring the ttttop- BRIGHT'S DISEASE is the deadliest and most painful malady to which mankind is subject. Dodd's Kidney Pills will cure any case of Bright'. Disease. They have never failed in one single case. They are the only remedy that ever has cured it, and they are the only remedy that can. The are imitations of DodWs Kidney Pills—pill lox and name—heat imita- tions are dangerous. The original and only genuine cure for Bright's only, is ODD'S KIDNEY PILLS Doxdd's Kidney Pills are fifty rents a lox at all dntggists. Chun of the hill, having It signed by the president and set'relary and for- wareied at once to the Minister of Justice. A vote of thanks was tend - eyed Itev. Yr. Reid for his able all• dress, atter which the meeting was brought to +l close. A ROCK IN THE BALTIC. A Remarkable Sinks of Adventures Re. sulting is a Naval Mistake. • The careless firing of a new piece Of ordnance by Lieut. AIau 1)rwumond, of H. M. N. Consternation, w h i l e cruising through the Baltic, lees le' to a series of unaccountable and surpris- ing international cetnapditvttions. 1Fruunuond sighted as new gun un an apparently deserted bit of rock that jutted up out of the sea. TO his amazement his cruiser was at once fired on from the rock, wain the Rus- sian Goveryla•nt demanded an expla- nation Roma Great Britain. The ntyeitatt'y of the whale affair the preruencet of cuimlen on such a site, the auger of Husain +a1111 the 11111101i. ance given to wt insiguiticaul at matter ---worked on Drumuttnd's imagina• tion, and in n eat of headstrong folly he went to Russia to investigate. A scrims of surprising adventures followed, culminating to a scene that defies description. The whole story fa splendidly re- counted in Robert Ilarr's great novel, Hock in the bailie," which has pint been purchased by The. Mail and Enquire, and is to he the first novel of the touch -talked -of '•$150,(11C series' which this enterpptiring paper it to issue during the firthclutiug twelve the. This series consists of twelve great novels by the most fatuous living Anglo-Saxon tutdujrs, 'Che Mail and Empire, with its cus- lontary alertness. has secured the sole right in this district to publish these novels in serialbefore fart u o re the appear in book totem, which will oo afford its readers a literary treat tyeter before offered by any newspaper in America. No other.paper in the city or vicin- ity run publish these great utorieit. Order in advance to avoid disappoint - relent, as the edition will be exhausted lecture all are able to buy. Com- mences nn Saturday. Muiy 5th, and each succeeding Saturday. These stories will else, be published in the Weekly Alai' and Empire, commenc- ing May 11itb. Who Owns Driftwood? ' Front Mall and Engllre. D. G., Holuestille, t4tts—Qu.—i rented a farm on Lake Huron; is the driftwood and unbranded tiutlxr which washes ashore on my flare legally mine or eau nay Ianrihlnnl claim it and °prevent me from wring it ? Ans.--The driftwood 1 tt scot rind timber, n xt, which washes ashore on the lands oc- cupied by n tenon, belong to the ten- ant. as against all the world, except the real owner. The landlord, or 'Inviter of the pn.pertv," has no claim upon much wood or timber. Hut the "owner of mull wtaxl or timber," up- on proving his ownerships, a;.1 upon paying to the tenant him charges for "salvage," has as right to it. and can claim it from the tenant : or he can claim from the tenant the value of such'weaoil or tiutlwt•, less the tenant's charge's for malvage.- if the tenant ham std it, or used it. Your landlord hat- ing Int claim upon the wood or timber, cannot prevent you from using it. Have , Earthquakes Disturbed Lake • Levels', Detroit Journal : Many of the men most prominent in lake navigation interests are discussing the question of whether or not the recent esrth- quake shocks have changes) the Teat l if the hike Ixrtt s. They say that many Narita are grounding this eeasen in places where last year in obstt•atc- Corp, e•xisteel. The great number of groundings so far this season makes vtwseltiwit Iwlit've that the polemic shockyave something to do with it. Sie•sn$tgt•aphs reeorlexl ahicks in Plastic the lake regions and ntarind leen say that it in possible that some upheaval 'PHONE 86 Bargain Days CASH OR PRODUCE Saturday and Monday MAY 5th and 7th, • WILL BE THE TWO GREATEST BARGAIN DAYS THIS S FORE HAS EVER GIVEN. Nearly a whole store full of goods at Bargain !Day Pricer—lig reductional will be matte in a great many things. Our spring stock is very complete, with x big lit of new, nubby, attractive spring met•ehanditat ,and you are sure to find Bargain Day Pricers all the way through, for when we say bargains, ha tgaint it is every time. .To avoid the afternoon rush, if pnaisiblc curate in the forenoon, as it is the beet time to get waited on. 111 fancy colored shot milk dress ends. No two alike. 15 yards toast dilate. 39 Regular price 50 centsoil' Saturday sold Monday C Don't forget the days,dISATURDAY, May 5th, and MONDAY, May 7th. J. H. COLBORNE Corner Hamilton Street and Square, - GODERICH. or rolling of the bottom of the lakes may have moved a Matructioms nit into the channels frequented loy the large teeighte1vs.. The ex`` erierce of the steamer Henry Steitabrenner on Lake Superior, the captain of which says that off Kewee•uaw Point the vessel suddenly shivered from stent to stern and seemed to eonae to a standstill, in I eing generally di•acuwsed in marine eitcies. Plastic Form Clothing has style — faultless 6t— newest pat- terns. You get all these advantages —and get them BETTER. --in "Plastic Form" Clothing than the average custom tailor can give you. Did you have your watch mule to order ? Do you have shirts, collar., shoes, underwear cut and maple to measure ? Why clothing ? "Plastic Form" Clothing gives —absolutely perfect 6t , —the very last word in styles --hundreds of patterns to choose from —tailoring of specialists —all backed by a name that is a guarantee of honest value all over Canada. At Last, SEE the new styles. 'PHONEI 5 6 D.MILLAR CO 'PHONE N E 56 We are this week making a special display in Mantles, Jackets and Cape in all the Latest novelties. Ladies' Ready-to-wear Wash Sults This w eek wv opened up a shipment of ladies' . ready -to- $2.25 ea ear w•:uh suite and have then[ ranging from, per suit... Dress Tweeds entirely new from[ \ t range (if (Irvin tweedy ranging upwards „Nut. New Dress uslins We ere also bowing a very large range of new dress muslin,. in all the latest col( n gr and deeI n.0 . Ladies' W hitewear In our ladies' white•\vwu- department WP are nuking a special (lispliis of all thetnewt•st creations in ladies' undergarments. NEW HOSIERY and GLOV NEW BELTS and BUCKLES NEW TRI1aM!NGS and NECKWEAR For The Spring Cleaning Season unr sths'1 ..f TAPESTRYS, CRETONNES. ART MUSLINS ae,l SATEENS, CURTAINS and CARPETS will he found very t, ut- ldett•. 'PHONE 56 Millar's Popular Store PHONF Form Parlors, - Godertch loll REG. BLACK Sole Agent We Court Colnparison THAT'S ALL Our prices will decide whether we sue entitled to business or not. besides you know the reputation of our clothes. Correct. Fast Sellers, and Money Makers. Keep :Skilled Workmen in Town by Ordering your Spring Suit Here. Frank N. Martin "i he Tailor on WHEN YOU'RE GETTING, GET THE BEST i am still talking clout httggiee, and the best thing in this line is made by the Wm. Gray k Sans .00., Limited, Chatham, Ont. im the finished product of the best principles of manufacture applied by competent workmen in n splendidly -equipped factory to Hod -rotes material. THE GRAY BUGGY is thorough -- every hit of it initial(' the ratan who awns one is better pleased with it the better he is acquainted with it. ... i supply .. . GRAY CARRIAGES in all st.ylits. ('all at my wareloti14,, ilat111lton street, and what i eon do for you. N e L. W. LAVIS ,A SPRING MILLINERY As usual I have a full stock of the most poular shapes trimmings fur ladies' headwear for the commg season The latest fancies and shades Trimmed and untrimmed hats MISS CAMERON llantilton street, Goderich. For Want of a Horse' r it•e`' line of it is said, a kingdom teas tom -A est. The noble animal is equally ingortant in the pursuit of money an of gilt,. Walpole's it's well worth while to keep hien in good condition. (live our a nlee Tonic Condition Powder n psnund to each hoes•, and yon, will be pleased with the result. it improves health. strength, spirit. 25 cents, 5 for a $1.00 English Healing Oil (neatest thing for healing all cuts and mores. Your money back if it doesn't sticeexl, \ 25 tests a box 25 cents, 5 for a $1.00 Dyes, Disinfectants, Furniture Polish Meade right tip to the high mtandanl of the . W. C. GOODE - Chemist 1 ntanutacturiug chemist !meal agency for Tanbc K. Son, rye -.fight ,ipa•iallKi+. All orders. repaint, etc., attended to hetc• Toilet Soaps (imxl s -tine at 4iliil/ tililiii iib pupil iliili itiltliiliiiiiliiliiliiliiiliiiiiliili pulpit& C i a New Hardware 4-.. Store F 31 �® F 1 F 3 I have opened out in the Dunlop block, F 3 F West street, a full line of IF 1 HARDWARE E 3 _- F 3 including Farm and Garden Tools, Build- E 3 ing Supplies, Paints and Oils, Shelf and 3* Hardware, Graniteware, Tinware, F Vessel Supplies, etc., and solict a share F 3 of the public patronage. IF 3 IF F 1 IF J. NICHOLSONIP �•• 10TTTTTI%/001 tTTTTTifkolu'( goPTT, . -