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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1890-9-26, Page 3r THE SIGNAL. FRIDAY, SEPT. 26, 1890. THE NORTHWESTR N FAIR re.uat.ad INN Ano i► Panels; sets, A 0 Jos'. !/ XIs A Casae; *seed er snyoe drawing, Mn A Casae, 'ld Mrs Oolin Campbell. Jedges -R S Chilton clad Mrs Saeger, Ouderish. DOMESTIC MAYUFAOTU/MS. Honey in comb, 10 lbs, Mrs C A Humber, 2d Jim Atkin head ; jar of honey, Mrs C A Humber, !d Johu Pur. ter; maple syrup, Mrs Marvel Human, 4d Wm. KlleSt; collrctlou of TIM..elate pre+,rites, .ousaeting of Mresborriea, raspberries, gooseberries, chsrrisy oar- s%%, plows -one jar each, lir family use, Mrs It W Mckenzie, 2.1 Wm Wee. nook; 1a'+chin, 3 jars, Mrs C A num- ber, 2d R L Wsltun; pests, 3 jars, Was Warnock, 'LJ John Porter; citron, 3 jars, . Wm Waruosk, 2d It L leant n; cucum- ber, 3 jus, Rob!, Medd, 2d Wes Somers; jellies, 3 jars or puts, 3 kind., R L �1'altou, 'lJ Mn it W McKet.zir; het of burse -made bread, John Porter, 2d D A Purvis; Les iiiscuste, 1 plate, 1Vu. Stew- art. 24 John 1, A,tkius; special- best three layer jelly take male with Ocean Rate Baking T }opine. Judges- Mise lien, Mi bell, J W Smith, llodcrio5. nab}'. Itecomsiu.w. "Oh," says wau.nta to her husband, "Mob goia news! Baby talk.. He has jest said his first words." "Reath r' "Yes ; just fancy. We wero at tho Monkey age 111 the park, elem baby arced out : 'Ab, papa'' ' r;: . 'yt�)! } IIN e; , i• l';;LL C'-rr(.: Cif 1:_UF. ._ CILLO:'.' CI I.ESF, 1,7_,-2:':,'.f, DRCdJY. /.":1(,.- ._,:.i, t:_UTTSRI,:711 J," 'JR' i OF TB:: HEART, 11:10'.'i!". ACIi'lTY OF SALT Rt:::.:f, HE STO Y,iC,4, HEAPTlt'1:.V, OR. fTSs /if,W.COHf. Of T HZ , 7IN, And ..cry er,..tas of a"ae'� 'whit,. f.•or- Nsordertid , /.:r, a:t,..:. v,3, 6tir Atyf, Uerwr..i Oft i..GCO, T. RUM h m " ao WHY EVERY FARMER should get or.e of Armstrong's Improved GRAIN & SLED CLEANES? ? BECATJSra fist -1i allows no foul seeds to he blown lido the choR. +oho+ h is of grew to entry farmer who wishes 10 k..ep hie'orue clean. tad, -I, nave. and clean, all Timothy sowd from any kind of grain while cleaning the {(rain. Mid. Por Market rieaaing i• renews -est ('eekir. Che'w, and si.rnaktn Erain, red eller the farmer thr moat oossebi" weight for hie main with no hen. ash 1t will remote graiu fist how and scud purposes equal to hand picking. fib.-('1+•aningi. seed Wheat is remove• all Ca kir. M t.etard se. d. W i to Pees. 11.r and other fun! and d,ruoken IDA Fmk, n grain. ane' gives the farmer purr. clean. reed grata. -- It will clean tats. itarley. S7.... thor- oughly without v:a•+te of grain. -CIcaniasa Prase : It will separate th sand. quartered. halve*. tots and whole 1'e..• from emit other. oar°tug tach to a different t• . - It isa perfect Clover seed Machine. re- moving .11 dost, broken and dead weds and other stet's. larger or wailer than the Clover seed. it ba flet elate Grass seed Melchior. blows no seeds away. It to a goal Flax seed Machine. It isafirst class chaffer. it can be fitted into the Miles* fashioned Fanning Mill that 1s laid erode s• useless and make it do the work of a new Mill. -It eon bs nuncios to a new Mill w it b- out injuring it. and can he removed at any time as easily as a there combined. It does oM Warfare with the use of the re- gular sieves ut the 11411. ,- its sieves are nearly all perforated sine. 1t has a capacity of sixty- bushels of grain per hour. - It is sacheap as the ordinary Fanning Mtn sieves. -Every Machine is GIARANTEKo. d your order at ono+ if you want it this If you have not men a Machine ark ve one sen' for inapet•ti.n. and that you It ter rondit ion it sults. ordering to nail send Inside width of Vanning Mill. TRONG BROS., G-oderioh, Ont. ir,1Taff Ynl..'a w r r sods sin et airflows asinibis SSse=a yea b••tis ONIO 10/1 .sea Oro te .Y,dos so psis so .are'wma TY As en. as.A f ewe.. oe. ...1 rollimissi moll mimeo. SEER SHOES to ENDLESS VARIETY of Sty le am' Price, at the 01d-Batatdishrd Shoe Store Oa' E. DOWNING. I am not eoufined to one Make or Style„but can giro you your choice of the Best Productions to footwear from all the Leading Ianufacturers in the Domisio.. Prices lower thou at any other stem la the Dermalon sur the same amass of Goods. Ordered Work equal to th best ill (;asitia. NO SLOP WORK EVERY PAIR GUARANTEED. Repairing done Promptly and Right. E. DOWNING, 4 cr. Eo_ 1-s:. and pare. Godertth. me adre wrrf a ti� Aiymink isoseM�a ase �a=i'u►• +makan.tmotorrrmm •�mc0 Mie.► sswsara..aria ER SERVICES pot In with vanized Iron OW Black Iron Pipe, with Brats Oonnectlona. 011 VAiPOUN PATTERN& lts. Dqoahses. owl moose stood% mar TIAs Shoot Mesa BIIILBER. 1 PtuSTIYZLY GIBE I1!PSI NIS I ThE MIER Bowel tsaer.la.riz,Dlarrt.oea -Lad, s SUMMERCOMPLAiNTS KEEP A BOTTLE IN THE HOUSE. SOLD BY ALL DEALERS. wow■'. Win 4 berry. For nearly twenty years tela Valuable medicine hes been largely used fur the cure of Couchs, CoIJa, Bronchinu,Cronp, Whooping Cough, Loss of Voice, and Lunge. Those who know its valets a) ways 1 it to their frierds, knowing that Wilsons R'ild Cherry new ser disappoints. The genuine is sold by all druegi.te in white wrappers only. lm FARM, FiEji1 GARDENS ORCHARD AND GARDEN. I I Average Oatwe Nod. by Durso -Jersey. TOMS SURE TO INTEREST COUNTRY AND SUBURBAN READER& ttelptuul Etat. Thal WUl !rote of t,alae Wiser* Tile Praising Is to - A Prollee Cause of Failure t., Reap tieeeRt by Drainage. "11 will never pay to undenlratit," says - Protea.or Carpenter, of the Colorado Agricultural college. ill Fanners' Re- view-, -unless you are prei ensl 10 da it properly." Every case of failure to reap benefit by draivatge can be trace l t•, sumo fatal error to the plan or ccnstrut:- tiun of the drain. The proper con- struction of a lino of tile drain, in order to obtain its maximum ethylene', re- quires as much or more ae t nntcy than the Breve cabinet work. Every devia- tion .idowiee from • straight lint.) de- tracts front it* carping capacity; every deviation tai, or down front its grate, line is more or lees fatal to itsef Hien}. The wintry bi hill of ditchers who, ac- ceordin; to their own story, have laid miles of tile in England or Ireland, who pretend to hare the skill to determine the pru1* r inclinatiem of the grade line entirely by the eye. "I have tested the work of some of the best men of this class," tells Professor Carpenter, "by running a level over the bottom of the ditch after they sup - lewd it was fitted to receive the tile. and I have found variatious front the grade lino, within forty relit sinal U, one foot in depth and suflit•ieut to nearly destroy the valtw of the drain. My own optnion is that 90 per cent. of the class of work dome by these mea is inure ser leas a fafture, awl that there are miles of drain in vperation not runnel"; to tee -half or to their fullca- padty. This of course meant.; that for the benefits receive:1 tow grt•,:t an ex- penditure has been made for rile. "It never pays to lay tile unless they are laid in such a trey that their full capacity is utilized. It dues not pay to give e$26 per thousand (11 vents per red, f+.r four inch the awl have therm laid sus that they will only do the work of two inch tile. worth :IO per thou. -stud' 161 cents per rod; yet this is done mon frequently than many would suppi.'. It is often done t• er men tvho feet felly 'satisfied that they have had a gcxs.l job ,I, me, simply because they de net know what a groxl job is. In all ordinary casts it will pier to drain, and in any cis, it will pay to takes sneh _ .. a.+ will insure yon that your tile will worts to fall capacitv." aerk.►Ir..• .ad reloadd'klas rigs. In INCO-U0 an ea eraueut in feeding pip of dttter•nt brevis inns conducts -.1 at the Mielugau experiment states with hope that it might give seine evidence as to the e'umparative otitis of souse of our !nee,ls of swine fur p era production. The breeds reprove %teed were the Duette Jersey, ur, '- Jersey, the Ike -bible) trod the Poland- China- two of each tool all barrows. The pigs were placed in comfortable pens with adjoining i anis and were fell regularly three times a slay. the experi- lneut begiuuiu� July 10, Is*, and contl- ing Jan. 81, 1'590. Their feud was composed of equal parte of corn awl oats grewnd together and mixed with twice it, weight of Ane middlings, excepting during the somite (nen Aug. ti to 119 and front Oct. 1 to 7, when they were fed on fine middling% abate. All the pigs ftsl better utt the tuise•tl fend The grain was sorrel into cull water and left to steel fur six hours. or from one feeding till the next, except un a few cold nights when there was danger of its freezing. The pigs were weighed every fourteen days during tie , and the gains or losses noted and compared with the food for the plied. The two Duroc-Jerre vs gained in a Wiry Rome Orchards Aro Short Lived. - lete reagent why orchards -"it many place's, thont;lt prsrduetive fur a time. ate not endurit; is that the trees are of :sorts not quite harly enough for the spot where they grow. Top worked upon native seedling's they do well fete a '.vhil '; but severe test winter`. in con- junction with he :try crops of fruit AS they tomo into full hearin.;. weaken the vitality of the grafts, aid with r. hard winter. innmeliately fellowine a large yield of fruit. the or•ltarl is fond in a bad and ottee an irreeove'rable con - clition. The • is aet:eiug in such a re - snit that sler,:b1 be unexp_ete1 to at in- telligent cultivator. If he wanti a long lived ort•harl, says T. H. Hoek -ins, of Vermis:it, in Garden anal Forxst, he must plant uuly sash lung lived varieties as are quit., ctpatble of entluring the severest extremes of the locality. But Mr. Hoskins believes it will often lay 'sufficiently well to practice the ether ruethexl. though inevitable risks attend it. The orchardists et south western Maine grow such valuable .. 1 apples sus the Baldwin. th, Rhode Island greening, the Roxbury ru ese•t and the Gravenstein successfully only when top wor.t•+1 nem har•ly native stoekes. Ilandy to Portland awl t.' 13-ostoa. these grow- ers have easy aceefes to the best hone and foreign markets with tfaeir apples, which. when well grown and properly handle!. have a quick an•I .oro sale at a hiotll price. Their trees will net be long - - lived, but they will live long enough to - yield a hand'rnn+, pruit; and as they = rarely die all at nae time the orchard _ cam be kept up oy replanting or by sue- - esslliT, planting. so as to stake the basi- 1 weal ctmtinnowe finch orchards, short - lived though they may be, are very much IL more profitable than their long lived ptwaecm.or5. Crossbred Fowl.. There are many poultry men who agree with The Germantown Telegraph ]uta■rd'J,Li.lmrst 1s the gest. _ in the statement that crossbred fowls The Fuji Islands mission hes 27,0(P7 church members and 101,150 attendant io public wonhi-,. Fifty years ago there was not a Christian on the Wench; now there is nut a hesthen. Tett mono. sews a. E. W. T. - are far better and more hardy from the Writing from this fertile dutrpct, Mr; Abell than the purebred. Following are (3 F Clark says this had a avers attack - t1.i a of the benefits named by this an- e-�tlHty.. -We can cotnbine goal traits. of diarrheas, but wa quickly eared by 1 Tl+ boo l; tits small wing Dr Fowler's Kztraot of Wild Strawberry. 2 ■tart a U.lasewi Cures Colds. rte The royal commission for an inspection of Westminster Abbey reports there is to um in It for ninety more interments, and opposes the bmildiug of an addmtion to it at present. (..s.tgttw a.remy rears✓. To THE )mitres .-Please inform your readers that I have s positive remedy for the above mined disease. By its timely we thousands of hopeless crises Aare been permanently cored. I shall be glad lc send two betties of my remade Crass to any of your readers who haws consumption if they will mood ase their Express and P.O. address. Respectfully, Ds T. A. SLOCUM, 1y 164 W. Adelaide st., Toronto, Ont. A baa ball club, the •mallett member of which weighs 1116 pounds. haa bees organised at J.Reesoevilie, led. The aggregate weight a the tear is s little ender 3,000 poende. alas Y leen. Lives of .Mldrew are often endaagerd by widen aad trinket sneaks of sheleea, ol.rw sherbet. diarrhoea, dpeastery, and bowel aomplaiats. A r-msensbls and serials proweatios im 11. keep Dr Fowler's litrees d Will Nswbarry sIewaye M • e inn Llsghorn ye egg. the black Spanish the largest. Where merely a commercialists trade is to be reached this cross hie Ns marked effects. We may not opal the Spanish eggs m an average, bit we Mahe up a sort of middle size- jest the ilio to sell well in market. We can arabins early maturity with plump worth. The Asiatic fowl grows slowly, bet it counts in weight. It would take too long to get it to a broiler if left all alone, bat if we cress a quick grower -the Leghorn, for instance -on these Asiatic hens we get the quick growth and the body too. This is indeed a decided advantage. "Farmers, as a rnle, hare a collection of all kinds of fowls. Fysders call them dunghills Showmen class them as mongrels. But be they what they will. if the males were killed off and pure bred males substituted there would be more eggs. more spring chickens and better health." R.erplwg Milk Sweet. Owing to the scarcity of ice there have been an unusual number of mixt- ures called pea .u.vMires" sold and used with a view to keeping milk sweet. "The slow poisoning process" is what Moistest Dairy Oommiadoner Van Val- lseberf calla the mixing of "peesarva- three like borax and salicylic acid with milk Both the New York state dairy eommidon tad the city board of health bays derided to put a stop to them mesh la at k - ITEMS OF PRACTICAL INTEREST TO FRUIT GROWERS AND GARDENERS. A Rask.' I•taut of t. careful Habit mad Vigorous tiro%tk That Rex ands the Ykrrl.t with tI'uudrut FIowrre for Any Attention tt.•, lu*.d Uplift lt. Th pte•uliar acrd gracofnl habit or the oxalis r t i.•rs it tep dally atlaptt•d for n wiuelotc lilant. ih. browa insigttiti• cant little bulbs' t '11 u,. tale of the beauty hiddea within, our j+ +w. pl:tatl•d in -uuill Qutul ante* of lour or tire, t}a•y aro reedy in .kegtt.t or tieptnehtr to begin life over e;aiu, and from th +dealer, tlr+n,l• ink; rt -•t +. with their h•aree of clever shale. to the clneters of lsl+sssones. (laiuty and sweet, to charms everybody the whole winter lone art 1 wilt Cie spring beside. Tuey very it tittle- in ha:,it, the yellow and r.:•, varieties tiro'ping tutees is' flower awl leaf than the white, whic't hulels itself rather erect, yet is just as beautiful and a. well adapt..el for hang- ing l'"1", whole their habit of bloom in all winter leo, ening varieties iswpm lly profuse. The neves') is given in Vika Fioral Magntine to pot au+ ,early as" 'mese- hie ,'msssi- hle in good sandy loam. ate' throe. four or live in the same 1102. If }seat 'start weight from the beginning. Though as wit h but 'me bulb or two of :t kind they fleshy as any of the they were will exile be wultipliel taitnifoll. When still making excellent gains and were - threigh flowering they v:ill tent yellow, finding well at time ut slaughtering. and she uld lxe allows*1 t .'try elf gradn- The average gain was 38.24 Ile. per ally, whets tlw bullet c:ue be knocked out period of fourteen days, or 2.10 lbs. per auel meet at the proper time. day, eerurel at a er,st of 4.6.5 lbs. of grain for each pound got' ie live weight. Tho average gain mule by the two 13erkahires was 29.16 lite. Ix'r period, or 2.11 lbs. per Clay, secure! at a cost of 5.22 lbs. of fled for each p Bund of gain. The average gain per 1• ria of mash' bit the two Poland -Chinas was 22:1.91 or 1.85 lee. per day. recur .1 at a cost of 5.87 lbs- of feed for 1 petrel of gain. Had the experiment been terminated siz weeks earlier. or Nor. 1.4, le*, tie: Polarohs weul,l have shown au average gain of 81.23 lbs. per penal. or 2.23 lbs. per day. secrred at a cost of 4.94 lbs. of feed for each popntl of gain. Itemedles for lee Sting. The rem•'tiies for lee stings are as ntimeroa, as aro the cures for colds. Prefesny r A. J. Cook advisee its ani' a person is stung that he afro euld step heel a little for a moment, as the pungent odor 1,1 the venom is likely to anger the bees and evince further stinging. By taming a little smoke frees the smoker on to thu part stung the oiler will be ob- scured. The sting should be rnbbed off at once -not grasped at with tae finger nails, as that crowds mor., poison into the wou n 1. lint rubbed off. 1f the paint is troublesome apply a little tunln.uiat. The veno[:: is an acid and is neutralize .1 by an alkali. A thin solution of salt- peter 13 advi-, d by suave. Others have used ice coli water with peed effect. while ethers n;;.tin apply salt and stela mixed and slightlymoi.teu+sl to the part stung. Quimby advised, when the sting Wild severe enough to caste blotches on the akin, camphor taken internally as well as applied eternally. An im- portant point iii the removal of the sting, which. as Pelee -or Cook advisee, , shocltj be extracts"1 in such a tray as not t force any more poison into the wtma,1. The sting may often 1,3 scraped off with the blab of a knit', and tho part be squeezed a little to force the poison out. r Points for Lilac Gesture. Tbo Revue Horticole calls the atten- tion of cultivators of the lilac to the fact that the regular lee :ening of the lilacs in tee public gardens of Paris is obtained - by an annual pruning, which servos also to keep the plants in shape and within reasonable bowels. Every year, after the flowers have passed, the flowering branch is cut back to the bud at its base. By this meant all the strength of the plant is thrown into the branches which have not flowered. These branches then ' grow vigorously, and are throes able to develop the terminal buds which assure the flowers of the following year. The practice is ono which might be mon generally observed than it is, especially as lilacs unless they are pruned occasion- ally grow beyond ordinary limits and do not always flower regularly every newton. A Dead Limb hubs the Trite. The Florida Fruit Grower very truly says: '•A dead limb left on a tree robs the living wood of sap by absorption. This is proven by the si y appearance of the limbs near th wood, and these limbs frequently die owing to the robbery. If the tree is young (this hap• - pens lees frequently in the hard wood of old trees) the borers will sometimes start in a dead limb and fit down through the center into the live wood, even down nearly or quite to the ground.' sgsaabes for Winter. Select only the soundest specimens. For long keeping the quash ought not to have $ bruise of any kind. When gathered they should be clipped off the vine. The Hubbard and the Turban squashes are good sorts for winter. Keep the .gnashes in a cool. dry place. w until freezing weather comes, then re- move them where the temperature mil be warm throughout the winter. PUBLIC N "•Pother Targe consignment Fresh Teas of superior quality. In order to counteract the di honest practices perpetrated on the public by peddlers and others, we are offering Special Inducements in Tea and Coffee, and solicit your pat- ronage. REES PRIC ; & SON. Kay's Block, next Bank of Commerce, Square. Orders by Telephone promptly attended to. Goderich Foundry and ILalchine Wor RUNCIMAN BROS., - Proprietors. FLOUR MILLS BUILT ON THE LATEST IMPROVED SYSTE OXALIS is' A n.n.SKFT While taaay plants in the window are often chary of Llano, to the great dis app..:ntwcnt of their ewnors, the oxalis hes thies merit, that it i , never without flowers in leettsn::. a:t 1 will row ark, by it's attendance lance ut ,loom. the attention best - we 1 upon it. It will entirely fill. e,'etj"'!y if more thea on.) pe:tib b elante:l. any basket, t -o the exclusion of nil else, for it it a vtxorons grower, awl its 1••^f sterna are equally profnee with fes theees. Point• la Pans CuttYM. Seed es pre slur plant . f, it early sprints b1ts tniii; shonl3 irestown from the middle of August to the meld!,, of September, and the ycnng planta wintered in a cold frame. B earl% may be need in teal of glass to c -,ver r-ith. Plants start:d in the greeeu'.tonee early in dewier:Ion not quit- s., early, ant iftree fr.one pl:►nts ar trait a:planted once t►+ early as spring pertait they art, ae g,xrl In every re- spect. '110 plant=s win .h have flowered it trite spills will do well again in the fall if the lung branches aro cast back late in June. The plaints which hevo flowered through the surann:et. a!t:1 fall will usually winter over well if pro- tected with a light c.verin_; of etra•v ur leaves. lent thorough surface drainage mast be prevideei t o prey.nit water from acrmnr+latin ; around the plant.; and forming ice tibent them. Fancy IN The varieties of this section aro ranch weaker growers than the large Severed kinds. and shoull not be, cut in so c1'otte. I have always foan.l thein do the lest whet: the tops were removed at point where the wood was green. If cut back to the hard, ripe wool Lary sometime, fail to break. After heading down treat the plant* in the way ad- vieed for the Targe flowered sorts. being particularly carefel that tors much water does not reach the riots either before the new growth appears, or afterward. The fancy pelargoniums are more likely to suffer from any excess in this direc- tion than the stronger growing kinds. A or Cave Rust. A serines disease this menton among the small fruits has been the cane rust, which attacks the growing canes of ta.pbernca, blackberries, and in some cases the grape vine. Professor Bailey's plan is to cut nit and burn up the dis- awned vines as sworn as fruiting is over; then in the early spring before growth begins spray with a solution of snlphate - of imn (about one pound to the gallon), wait t nt t ort . special .Ureic■ gi. •w and follow this np with Bordeaux mixt- b � W orkera serer fail to steak: -ere as eorm ae the leaves open. Good weekly wages. Write me at once for •t WE HAVE UN HAND iuR BALE IMPROVED LAND ROLLERS, HORSE PO GRAIN CRUSHERS, STRAW CUT- TERS, PLOWS, &c. Wo are Manufacturing Improved- New Model which are equal to the best. Givo h rat a trial and age home manufacture. We Will Guarantee Satiefac It Will Pay you to use our new Steel Monldboard Plows'. Engines and Boilers :or Bale. REPAIRS .&N D CA.STINO-S cEF .LL 3 GE O_ FAIRY Tbc Furniture healer. iv selling all kinds of dun.:aur • ,t the lowewt possible prises. well-known (act that lie encash. Ito Intuit the lredin,t Undertaker of the town. ilenbsluning Fluid always kept on land. lb- also n socio a s{r.•iany of Picture ("ranting. Mire him a call tx rure purchasing Furniture elsewhere. and )uu wiil Bad out that ht duces as be (Toys+ -tells .-neap =CR Cwes.SI3.. In thankinz one and n11 for their pant patrun1,c: Ir• hopes to receive a continuance of thy same. GEO. B A RRY, Hamilton -1st. NEW ARRIVAL of nyfripnri mi-bi s LATEST sT1 L Prescription Drug Store. NEW GOODS l BS Liquid Rennet. t Cream of Witch Hazel, Reoamier Freckle Lotion. , White Heliotrope, Wood Viol. let nod White hose Perfume, 2.5cts. per Oz. 7IZINSON' Remnants to be Cleared I tut. Perfect - Irits and Showy Shapes. H. DUNLOP 41a7- The West st- Tailor ANTED MEN.local or t ravell In if. to .e•11 my guaranteed Nt'RuKRt ST $ K. staler} or ('omnusstow, paid part lou lar. The tall Web Worm. -3 let K. O. nRAti.t . Nurseryman. tThis house is reliable .l Torte,' TO. UST. The torch and prnnirg shears are the meet expeditions remedies for the e-eb ons. Where the torch is used a little caution Is necessary in order to avoid, as mach as possible, injury to the tree. Ar- senical preparations will be quite effec- tive when applied in the form of a spray. But the torch is leas expensive and fully as rapid. and no risk is run agai, at poi- soning either the operator or stock that may be running lose about the place. fle.11eultarat Nets.. Gladiolas bnlha should be lifted before frost. laid in a dry. shady place for stew days, attl them placed on a shit where there is no danger of frost for winter atorege. Begin to earth np the earlier plantings of celery mime as the stocks have grown enough. Cure the onions thoroughly before storing them. 9.012 of mignonette might to be sen 1sl 9agbtober /o prods., plead thst will Sower during January and February the following yaw. This moping eight to be mods b the ante pod lbs Orb ars M Whom Ia. per. and Thus. Mr. Van Valkenberg the assistant dairy oommlasioner. calls the mixing of the to called "prTwrvativee," such as borax and salicylic add, with milk "the slow poison process." Both the state dairy commission and the city board of health are agreed in their determination to pat a stop to the nee of these chemi- cals in milk. Governor Hoard, of Wisconsin, says the dairy exhibit will be one of the great features of the World's fair. The premium Het of the Minnie state fair for 1f1S0 aggregates nearly 07,000 in purism t Range cattle have died is urge a®- i.rs from the effect of cowtlatad droaght 1a Artemis, Colorado and Moa- ies Rhode Mod has a Ilse pot M warp. ANTED! good pushing Salesman herr. First ,. pay guaranteed weekly. Commies wary. Quick selling new Frniu and peetalues. FARMERS KIRS can set . Fend payl■g job winter. Write for full terms and par- kin* MED. E. Vot'Ne. Narsenmaa RoeHu+Tak. N. Y BU'S ENVELOPES, NOTE MEADS, LETTER PAPER. BILL HEAQS, Ere.. Eta., at 111111011111 ATENT: CAVEATS, TRADE MAKS 111111 CMl*NNT$ Oak.Obtained. ed 10 s1 MOORR4 rthe * PRIM Omit oak. 1. espoelte ttbhllU.. 8. Petewt M- iler thweeremote ear oesffrroln Fartgatk Des st R•AgM/VOTO.� M Sad MOORL OR DRiWING. W. od- vtaa es 1o rstab lhti Ira of chart, we make NO CHARGE IINLs.B WE ► D- ?Al1V 4 ENT. me HI ssofOr er Dlto i� ritobotato wet the s4 Wish foamiest *boobs,. whim LIZ=rnfhy.t5.what** Z1a, OSamMs eloolaind Isolado MO an. WO