Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1889-3-15, Page 3THE HURON EIGFAL. FRIDAY, MAR H 15, 18.59 3 CORN SMUT. na A.*he.1tr ea tike esteem lapses Els Thews sod Moves .ems Iewa-Y.na According to the chief of the section of vegetable pathology, "it is as certain that Aral stout cannot mate truaplmly as that corn turd grow train seed." The extinction of the storys thou axons the reduction of the smut seam or later, but Over wide area it nesessiery, 4 w. tette spean.� are light and may be carried in the statosphere more esisMy than ordin- ary dust panicky. Any retuedy mast be thoroughly tried before being oosdemned Nee year is not sufficient) and every eluate of error must i.e guarded against. It is worthy of po- llee that the time of greatest injury to corn eruct smut is at the time of fruit- ing. l Corn smut i 71 marked exception to meet other kir' f smut, in that it forms its spore eta.. . in any putt of the plant curial the mete instead of being always found :n ...taw definite place. Cutting out. guys the ieutburity under cisltikierotiuu, ought to be prat -toed in- telligently and pendstently, and taru1'•n d toittkkli cooperate. The smut should be . ut out as soon as it gives the first eve deuce of its presence by the swellings it produces, and before any of the mores burst through the epidermis. Corn is probably the only crop in which themes becowee evident long enough before ma- turit,,yy to make treatment effeKtml or pa.edble. As soon as the spores begin to break out they will ►•- scattered far and wide over the whole field. Any cars that are partly smutted at the honking should not be theme in with the r'eNt, and . nutty stalls that are standing when the corn is out should be kept separate, and both should be deet: oyed. Farmers will erre that they cannot afford to cut out the smut. In answer to this it is mkt a forty acre field should produce try worth tit corn, and that Nolte la reran_ hist than one smutty ear to the iquuia rod. which would he a leen Of 2 per cent. on the crop with frequent lenses much greater, and milieu preven- tives are it is liable tai constant in- crease. Outward applications are in- effeettWL because tow hinges is entirely within tissues until after the damage at ikon. To destroy the spores adhering to the seed grains, immersing ersion in a strong solution or copper sulphate (blue Yitri:.l; bee been used with rued rusuir•. Only a few minutes are r qulrtd, just long enouty;h to wet the seed without injuring its vitality Pure need. however, will be ut no Peel against unlit sutras in the menure VIOL or natty aatltg kit ie the Aka Dont vs. Met Coss in the eastern and outdate states the flint varieties of corn have the prefer- ence. while at the we,t ani in the aolth the dent or bornntouth kinds ore largely grown. The latter have larger stalks and are usually later in ripening than eastern flints. f -hurter semous, says American Cultivator, have obliged farm- ers in New Fn-;lan.l to locket corn for earliness, and thin, ineieeel, h some sea - seas is cnyr here a most de -Arable qual- ity to have. Of late years stere very early dent corns here been originated et the northwest. The Pride of the Nun') i, one of the best of the:4e its habit of growth is ►tali i, between the flint and dent in rite. butt the ear and grain have the deep kernel; characteristic of all w:eetern dents. This t ore will not weigh as heavily 'r Mashed of grain as will the harder flint varieties. It is porous and revels a good deal of drying to fit it for market. In the ear thea dent corns are ctuo•h heavier than the smaller grained Pinta Handling a bushel lct,ket of the ears it much like the handling of an equal bulk of potatoes. The liability of deet cern eu mold in the crib in warm, moist weather explains and to some ex- tent excuses. the wo-+tern habit of leav- ing curl hulking until severe cold freezes is dry. This is one seas. n why the wast- e el farmers comply :i t..) much of poor Cetea seed. _ -- Cast of nahltu etnneber•r:ea We have often turprised novi:vde, nays Country Gentleman. by telling them that strawberries can be raised as cheaply as potatoes, before ba -vesting, and with about as litany bushels to the acre. To accomplish this r.'-.:ult, all hand labor should be reduced as ranch expansible or entirely avoided. The preparation of the soil should be cosnuoenced the previous year, and the ground manured and fitted in autumn. Plant early in spring as noon as the first growth commences. Set in rows both ways, or in check rows. (cultivate with a horse both ways, and mve hand hoeing. A light one hone harrow b a good Lrapkmeent for this work. Run elute to the straight rows, but very shallow. so as not to cut the roots. The plants will form large stools and bear abundant crops of fine berries the second year. It L much cheaper to make new plantations than to clean out weeds and grass from old ones. But if the ground has been well prepared before planting and cleared of foul stuff, weeds and grass will be slow in corning in. Hence the importance of taking good preparation fh previ. een summer or autumn, Gtber by some kind of summer fallow, or by a hoed crop kept perfectly Mei and Thom The new cotton mills have succeeded in producing from low grade cotton • cheap substitute that will,bably et- persede the tan of jute bagging entirely. This l an important change. The new bagging ix made& home product instead of an imported one, and another new in- dustey is established in the south. Experiments with thick and thin seed- ing art the Indiana Mellon are reported ee showing that at keit Mx pecks of wheat to the acre should be sown on land of medium fertility. Thin seeding almost inrariahly suffers most from severe win- ters- With early sowing at rich had tour or Ave pecks of amid might answer. One pound at parts green to each htm- dren pounds of land plester did parfeet work in killing the potato beetle at the Vermont station. Mr. A. W. Cheerer, of Masseehne etts, rotes the superiority of fine trendy loam for potatoes over a richer looking dirk American tepee aro the hest for Amer- lca. my prominent nurserymen. Many oreherdisb prefer to "heel ia" trees for !spring plgntlag is the fall rather than take them dftwatly task the susee ly when wanted. Profeeeor henry dates se the*et experiment that �g eadlege nearlytwice s far in feeding geese as long whoalarge varieties et toe! • d. England mid a le _egidto have one to eight cow to three and A garde , one cow to one PROM Avery use's Wed. A mistake which many of us make all ser loose is to lea gyimg the woad of praise to thu.e that would like to bate at, .t the iueuteut the., it N apt and well leeaeved, and eepaseally to the am of he „young. Tae child who briars you tier .00tids of patchwork with it riot of latw,rl.ore emollient expecte yeti I. own mend lief n.Justry ..1 her skill ,-t her deepetch, teemed of merely retina her sootier quare and • fresh e.edlelul of thread ; the child eh., has refrained front undulgeuos to the face of • greet temptali,.0 w, eld I.. very unohddhke If ,tee did not l,a.k for an repression of ,retsfioatein on jour part, or of approba- t,t•r. of herself. Appreciation is some - them for which we all hunger, and to witted we all have • sort of right, it Ming one of lb* aalunl oousequetices ,f the perfureual.oe of rind deed., of the poseessO.t of geoid qualities, and without sou h the effect of our action or pose.. situ upon ourselves alone, at any rate, u ,.euhet•a incomplete. The word of praise a recogiatien of our eudeavur, if net ur suttees, through some month piens ,of our little domaatic public ; and its absence is doubtless the removal of a .T.sselerable atimulup to exerts en, ho. ever un(uttunate it may be that it is s,. Of course it is necessary to say that the ff ort .hog d be made all the same, but every sed has harvest, and a part of the harvest is reoo. ultiuu, rise it it is no inure • pert than the bloom opus the plum ott the bask open the grain. It it eert.wly worth while to stood • child sees revised for restating temptation. nine. the pleasure of the wrong or laic aim act bait been foregone ; and as cer- tainly it is wee to uphold the young strugt,lw •ovat the tint difficulties. strengtheuutr, as it were, the fibre of the moral muscle till it ten go aline, for eltbough praise be not emential'yit ii Is very agreeable. Ono can indeed crow V • desert without any enjoyment hut he hope e.1 the end, but an Gaels of Pala and aprintts and melons ami cu- cumbers is • great so ace, on the hard, hot way, gives much s•rsngtb to go on, a id is • pleasant thing to remember. All eheeifal eererie• ees, in fact, are of ,iset in celestine the temperament, and • temprran;ent alored by early happin.e. carries • person through life much more etai'y that. one which has been made m.rhid and n,rlarchely by uncoutf'na- ele and unpleasant happenings. It is • duty on the part of elders and parents to pr,•vide these pleasant experiences for obiidrtn, and one of the pleasantest ie the meed of Fraise that is given whenever 'teewtime has loon made for something out s kftier or better level. a Feeble Failure. Many persons hrc.me feeble and fail in health from disease of the blood, liver, kidneys and stomach when prompt .see f Burd',ck Blood Bitters, the grand purifying and regulating tonic. would quickly regulate every bo,fiiy fubetion and restore to perfect health, 2 Seal a esal•M Rea no net in buying medicine, but cry tee greet Kidney and Liver regula- tor, made by Dr. Chase, author of Chase's reoeipes. Try Chase's Liver Core f..r ail diseases r,f the Liver, Kid neje Sumach and Bowels. Sold by all druggists. The distressing paleness so often oh - served in young girls and women. is due in a great measure to a lace of the red corpuscles in the blood. To remedy this requires a medicine which produces these necessary little blood eoestiteent., sled the teat yet discoveeed is Johnson's T,.nic Bitters. Price !ls) cents, and 11 per beetle at Geode's drug store, Albion block, (:oleruch. Sole agent. (bj [Mae at meme, The absence of hem,, life is ore of the prevaihne eh.ractensees of California, and one which the popple should endeav- or to remedy At present time many a young ample marry, elect to live in a mope. ut roup, aid go Out to some restaurant for every meal, • state of things which the brtdegruout soon finds might be improved upon. Dining out is very pleasant fur a change, but when it comes to going out fur your dottier or genie without. it gets • tittle miserable. Tbe wife does riot, perhaps, see it alto- gether in the mine light. She is left alone, probably, the greater part of the day, while her I usband goes to his of- fice, lied finds some trouble in shaking uff a growing feeling of ennui, cons. - mime', ns.- ge*mtdy abe la only too glad when the boar conies to meet him at some res- taurant, where she can at once eat and observe the bumming crowd. Jul this yeseg wife begin properly with • little house of her own, she would never feel that life was beginning to lose its inter est fur her. She wculd hste plenty to do, seen if she only ordered the dinar. Then think bow very mach nicer for her to he able to give select little dinners to her friends ocean malty, sod that at a minium er.t. There are lots of books she can study on this interesting subject. She might make herself famous is society for her diners, as end sot always easily attin- r ; on the contrary, there are lute of risk people who oily seemed la making thsmenisea notorious by their v.'pr prefwsie's eon want of taste. If ye. w est te bolt your food,go to a reetauraat: if you wast to eat, dine at boast. Then the tennis are not everything ; good glees sad dowers are half tee battle. and the latter are cheap enough in this eii- mate. And now one word of advice to young ample" Don't rain your tem- pers and digeeties by dining st roe - temente. but try the expeiseat of how- ler/ a hoes* of year owe ; yoe'll find it the better plan of the two. Jap•sees boys, with • little training, make stood souks. Besides tide, there is srmetbieg la kepis/ together ; man and wife shoeld be more than mere companions, to be separated by the Ara squall that sweep mimes the sky. Were there geese home lib there would be fewer / blparutigw and diverse ernes, -lin Transkei Nora Latter. Meas apeekwa ken M sick In buries nedieiamr but ten the get Kidney sad Liver rimle- ss', mad. hp Dr Ohm% either of Obeee'a Try Obee's Laver Owt. ter Siek and Blaver, the hBowels. kill Jame 1ru._. smart Mess Wassel elderly Iht.tlemen, mat. d at their ease to hatideosse feud risky fernith.d sure, are unto ,q.test/..aed ea M. the ehauoee width their brattish of bsstuem there to ambitious yeses wee They all make about the saute ana•fee to the inqutrser'a questions They say, with eaaper.ttog vagueaese, tf a young mss especa to succeed in their kind of bee. meg, he must be the right kind if teatl fur u. Teel all say, toe., tb•t suoce.s generally endues, If it comes at all, after • I..ug and laborious appreuuoe•hip. Aptitude and fidelity •e.m ao hm the prime qualities, nowadays ; particularly w the industries that are at present must popular among young me., Eles trieians, fur example need not be pro founder learned it, the science ut eleutru ally, --though it is desirable that they shoeld be,- but they must have ulgetiu ity, des_enty, and • p.war et cto.e, sustained attsution. They meet have a greet deal of gumption. a great power t f editor pain., the instinct of thoreugh- seet, and • *steam gutuknses to take etc Idea. rerun Ilia.e t is. ' Io the years 1088 I awghe,t for six mouths, amid havtug uusuccee.G.11y tried mint remedies, I partly gave up, think- ing I had consumption. At last I tried Hagyaid'• Pectoral Balsam, less than Jae bottle of which cured me, leaving me as well as ever I tae." Hairy N Carus, Waoaah, Out. 2 A great many persons in 'eery country of Christendom are onus em ployed in the electric industries, sod their cumber u iucre•siuz every mouth. There is nut the ahghtest chance, in any branch of slits interesttug busieess, for the encases of • person who is careless, indifferent, or atnpid ; our is there mu_h chance for one who is not, in some de- gree, so electrical enthusiast. What would Ketone have been without his int• quenchable love of his art I Coal aeon emu, Is Mao fatal wk of sea rea.siiod in tea.. Leslie B N obos.un, 19 Weell..eley A.e . T..n...t... says: ••As a quick more, ,,.Ida. sure thea•, celled..ea, etc , 1 Nt. re- ..meaead Nagvsrd'e Yellow (ill " it it • sire ewe. Usrectio.r aue..mpaos eac1. Neel Ie 2 no SAND! no DIRT! WHERE SHALL I GO TO BUY MT FRUIT? Why ! go whereou can get the Choicest RAISINS, CUR RANT and PEELS, and where they CLEAN ev- ery pound of FRUIT by Machinery. IT ¶ILL PAY YOU. TO GO TO CHAS_ A_ A WeaderfelAtesta►. The Largest organ, am' one that plays • controlling part on the health el the body is the liver. If torpid or inaetire the whole system becomes dimmed. Dr. Chase's Liver Cure is made specially fur Liver and Kidney diseases, and is guaranteed to cure. Recipe book and medicine $1. Field by all druggists. But eve• in the occupations that •p pear to give do chance to the mental gnalit,ea, men of experience tell the same story. Bey. who peep tutu the ',indeed of • hank and see a number of nicely erased clerks handl:nit heaps of money, con - delle that banking must be an easy busi- ness, besides being were profitable. It is neither very profitable air very may. The best regulators ter the at "Hach and bowels, the best cure for biliousness, sick headache, indigestion, and ail affect tions arising from • disordered liver, are without exception Johnson's Tonic Liver Pills Small in size, stater costed, mild, yet effective. 25 ata, per bottle sole by Goode, druggirt,f Albiun block, Gode rich, sole agent. (al A clerk without intelligence. who is also steady and faithful, may live and die a clerk on a low •glary. To get pro- motion of • valuable kind, incolsing the management of a hank, demauds quick- ness of apprehension, a great k11u1bled2e of business, • ottoral gift Lir ki.owing men, and an habitual aelt-comtnu:d. Flurry will Do more do in • bank than indolence A good banks' ie as civil as an orange, but he must also have that kind t.I nevem. which is not obstinacy, because it is founded open the keno- ledge - Modern business c,mpe:e the practice of the virtues meat essential to the dig- nity and efficiency of men, such as tem potence, honesty. faithfullness, sincerity in word and deed. A civil engineer, • railrnsd man, a manufacturer, chat can either of them accomplish, in the fano of keen competitors, if he does net work in harmony with the law of nature and the rule of right 1 At the same time, these virtues will not suffice A man may be as honest as the dee is long, and yet fail disastrously. He must bays knowledge discernment, seam said judgement. lie must, also, possess the mortal aptitudes required in his special pursuit A WenaevTwt Fleas rvedweer. This is the title given to Scott's Emul cion of Cud Liver Oil by many thousands who have taken it.. Ir not runty [ryes Seth and strength by virtue of its own e etrite.ns properties, but creates an ap- petite fur food. Use it, and try your weight &wit's Emulsion is perfectly palatable. Sold by all drowse', at 50e. and $1. Buys may as well make op their minds to comply with the demand of modern life. in which roma electricity and the patent-ofiee pl •y en important a part. We live in • changed and ever changing world, wherein neither rustic simplicity n or dainty minim will carry les far. e ma as,., wiled ameba r No "hardly ever" about it. He bee as attack of what people call "blious- n elea,"and to smile ass impesibls. Yea a aaa may "snide and smile, and be a MINIM still, still be was no villas., but a plain, bleat, hugest man, that seeded d remedy seek of Dr Pierce's "Pleasant Pergatit+e Pellets," which never fail to sure bilseamens and dimmed or torpid ver, dymp.pei• and chrome eoaatspm- tien. tel draggist& Let as minuted of the Gospel ha NNir hammed ht rood wort ; aged let him set ledge his labors trekker bisaea it the very time of perfermieg them he may be e.eoessiues of the good b• does At Newark, N. J., • Methodist peeasker mom weeks age, learned after km eves - tag disswres, that be W immersed a burglar ty ks sersiw. Tee law -break- er genegsed to enmmit a berglery that bight, bet was drawn by some eat,,.. is�ismm este the ptew as wurebky se he w as pose*. URN'S PATNT.? CAVEATS, TRACE RAMIS AL :APTRICeTS Obtained, cud all b,riarss, in ter C.S. 1'aoa Office at truant to at ,Yf)l)h'N.s TB) EK.S. Our Mice u opposite the U. S. Patent Of ice, and we oar obtain !'stent, to leap lime than those n -mote from H'ASII INil TON. Send MODEL OR i)R.i IV/NO. We ad- vise as to patentabilitytree of chary' and we make .1e)QKIRBUNLiSI wlydMS- T .1111 a.T141 Pd num._ We refer, here to the Postwtseter,the Rapt. o Moor; order t),v., and to officials of the l'. R. Patent Other. For circular. advice. tern* snot r•fereac••r to actual cliouta in your oe u State or County. write to r 4.14%00 a s'e., Op,osite l'atcnt u.Itee. IS'aabinstin D.(' Skirt--H.Ii,,, Mesta, I b•vwt ase., row Meoly I impious you uses bee• ochry busy. Merlon Yee ; I have been a..etog t•.w a new house. I live tat tk. q▪ uare now. Short—Is fleet se f I most be • new eapertenos (.r yee,— H..., .. P,..t e _SEM sooaQ TOWN f ROERTIES FOR SALL $100 AND P WARDS I have • large number of holies and lags and Vaaant lands to the mom desirable ports mttbe teen remwtlatUtsr. Now I. the time .0 e."cure property before the Hatt bush. The l'. 1'. itto •.111111g earn aa.l In a short time prices will have advance., o r -pool the r, art, •f many. 1 all and «•e Ltst suit Prices before porches tog else is here. It, RAiC'LIFFE, Beat e.stalr and thalami Insnrsnee Agent. Odtre ti'.-si-rid., third M.., 'me, Sgnarr, C. r. R Ticket and Tulestraer Uthce, 3541. URDOCK L.) PILLS A Bulla. cull[ Fes DILIOUSNEee, CONSTIPATION, IN ordtlIT10N, DIZZINESS, INCA HEADACHE, Moe emcaect Or viii STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWS LS. Teta AAt 1111LO,TNOROYGH ADD MOOR Ise AcT.,, AND Mae a Ate . TO nV.00ca Stows eNTTcse in TNA eacenatar Am eons or CHHON10 AND OaiTINATc DISEASES. a. aewsM. -s�.y =2.16 were le Se went Omaremr.w y Oars DM ..• . ere, wee weer am 41 ewe gnaw ta risew hesea is. ower se ren ens m• Ilse re Lana . fair mar, OM en ar Whoa awe Her Fa bore Mpg See le year as.. ler It mils red Mw inn re Hee ens air is.. WK lase been Her ewe s.egrer_ Trm WO urea r .woe rm to ase erf�f�'�see eI smi Flat mai k wit rehe th :re I till MOM ghoulUna & lon Ildpit-50 TR BEST IS CiSAPLST. lrery hems should read tbe leather and only I.imea0e d -t pDeat(tm devoted W W bmlama. Tboimads my there is none equal to It, and no deim emended from emblem retinas so mach It treats mall broaches eoneseted with e the It homely prised by the ladles and .loss et hK farm I It boa bee awed a the farofarrow . mil- W oad il- bowel dollars by sbeeibtrNoreen he Introduction a ▪ _ _ - trawNnaoarhas la- of ii.. Comaisailed ply sadensues:t Wt ilkes onadOs sad� uralIlasaphsepies docasl �Asents PF. O per •••6 Addressranula`& A DVOCAra Omsk Leaden r Ertmons. BIIY ENVELOPES, g NOTE HEADS,I LETTER PAPER. BILL HEADS, Etc., nt THE SIGNAL y P3:11T14r2OFF:Cf. k u t SOOTHISS, CLEANSING, NEAUNG, is cases CATARRH, Cold lo Nad, NAT MEL Draped/teats= Nasal peerages EASY TO USE. Into the throat sad exoeedve .xpectoeadea eased by Ca- tarrh. Odd by DeggW, mama preesi i on meets of pries, fix seed $1. Address POLTOUD • Os.. SReaicvlNar One. Largest Cireolatlop lo ■esterq Ootar:o —:TX :— Free Press LONDON. - CANADA. 'l"ba "Tres Prerf' H the ooh newspaper 1• the West roost v Iai the A naoetar /a• Press Det. matches. It e•staine ALL TUE NI.WI. by Cable, Telegraph. Telephone and !feel ii lb Dour of going to preen It gives in each nriaisal and valuable ills tratlons of men And things, sad I. the oily newspaper in Eaaada eeploytng its own artists. The Weekly "Free Press" VON PIM VICAR. PORTAGE rules. Akfseri•Aed Nearly /fad/ a Cestury./ "The Three Graces" and " By the Lakeside" TWO HAND.1ONIt CRROMOI Also, a bea•tiful Illustrated ('HItiSTMAS NUMBER mwprlsing espagss, givea away Iron to every subeertbo err for lam. $8,000.00 IN PREIIIIIS. Comprtsfag .Veer and Elwehf Art taus, slam swap fleets Agrsb. see nest fAerwlGr jneemsats ewer erred la Granada to Iprsb, Read foe Agnes ecfM est terms. '11HE FREE PRESS" f• She Pah reewtat sae Beene.. raper ►wMsaed is Wenger. 5.ssr.., It le ihrw.Nsd mit all early iweralee sable et, .�r��� sill Pews between ismer ad tett esoar i by Aa. RIM /.f Lmm.dhe ea014 Were the yTO- �sM M , Th Lin Newspaper of tae West, 1 le per lest. pMtet+t fres. MW M Attests everywhere. Addrem\- falLlE PIM MOM IM,. lithe/. CYfslaa. Merchants can get heir Bill Heads, letter Heade kci Re, printed at this oMc. for very little more than time generally pay for the paper, and It helm to advertise their business Call and see samples and get price., THE KU TO HEALTH. Valooks &11th. clogged amuses et tar De'wsis, Kidneys and Liver. ing.ff gradually without wetahsnugq system, all fibs impurities end humor. et the istrees at the lama fllkenao 1. Goring 31111touniess,h}>Igs. ysp� IImadaahme', Dlaalns.q of f Dmi Dr ss_esAa - tDelss ii.M�, m oralDebility; all them. end maw other similar Complaiate$y6$Di M xte hiaWODinfluence of ilirwpa I. IMAM • t1.. Ptwee,rtee. Teeri 10000 PRESENTS To nae? a -rL VIsu. SOMA Tap LAM N a w t:l .and h. malt Y p"t•rish-mr�iin to as n.. des, wile, n,..th-u or c. -coli. -.sae a toreii, who ed1 tri the eaaseette's brit* Pewits d ct the red circle hoes the bb A sad send it to a Mawr stating h.,ufot uptr..m altos fair t cl. Einem a S, lOorr ex•.l six" will .Kiat ase .\nV gr..•'T ..r rt, •-.',.. pen knows • h--t11tt -t it it ...ant for by v..u.--AJJresr- 1 Hl'K1'AiLL t 01.Te1I03'iO LIP 1'L's LIVING AGE. In Ilmg TH li LIVING AOA enters upon forty-sixth tear. Approved in the outset by Judge Story. t'hancellor tient, Prosaism Adams. historians Sparks. IRe-en.tt, Ticknor, Bancroft, and many others,it has met with constant commendation and success. A Weak Li MsuAzirrs, it gives more theta TIME AND A QUARTRTHOUSiNC doable column octavo pages of reading mat ter ;racily. It presents in an inexpensive farm coneldering its great amount of matter with freshness, owing to its weekly lease. as d with a coin oletenees nowhere rise attempted The best Konya Reviews, criticisms. Tales, Sketches of Teasel and Bisoorrwsryy POMrr, Scientific. Biographical. Hi Mavtorioay. d Political Information, from the satire of Foreign Periodical Lett -raters, and fb��a pew of the VSEAENT uriNC w NETTS& OPINIONS, "in It we And the best productions of Use best writers upon all subjects ready to ear hand."- Philadelphia I• direr. "The readers miss very little that le impar tant in the periodical domain." -Bores Journal. "It may be truthfully and cordially meld tbot it never *OMrs a dry or aaluetem page." --New York Tribune. "It is edited with great skill and care, and its weekly appearaace gives It certain alias- taws .lia taw{e•s over its monthlyrivala"- Albany s. Arga 1t furnishes a complete oompllatIon of as indispensable literature.-Chlcado Evening Journal. "rot the amount of reading matter contain- ed the subscription Is extremely low." -(beta tun Advocate, Nashville. "In this weekly magazine the reader Sade all that Is worth knowing in the realm of cue - rent literature. --Canada t resbytertae, To- ronto. "It is indispensable to all who would kegs abreast of our manifold progress. it is ab- solutely without a rival." -Montreal Gurgle. Published WKKKLY at 118.0, • year,fYse elf postage. se TO NEW Sl: IISCHIBE1114 for theeer Ruta. remitting before Jan. 1st, the nambers of Ieix issued after the receipt :of their sob - script ions. will be sent gratis. glob Rates for best Hooke hail Fors LIT n &TVRR. ot�e+'enameled of (Avow AG' and noo or eTor: (Avow of oar vivacious American mon thlies, a subscriber will And hint•eif in core.enwd of the whole sitsaflox."-Philadelphia Itventam. Bulletin."' For swim. Tits Linton stand any ose eK the American $1 monthlies for flamers. Weekly or Horan will he sent for a year, post paid ; or. for $ SO. Tele; t.lvteo Aug sail the Ar. Nickolas or Scribner's Mapasiva - Address. LITTELL RjCO.• Berea MISS GRAHAM HAS OPINED OCT HER 3.1"=777" S110W MILT IINER�Zm, and hes the latest styles in BHAPE3 AND TRIMMING1S. M neual her rates are nteett reasonable, and she invitee tie Ladialk of Goderich and vicinity to call and examine the styles and tern! a. BernNar bee*. lgd111aeey mew ea tb^ nestles, Neat t. dewier keen •