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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1890-10-10, Page 7earn mowers W. ACHESON & SON. �`V wristatl VY ALL NEW GOODS FOR AUTUMN 1 SPECIAL 1 u ST OP=ENED Black, all wool, wide double -width Amazon Cloths at 50c., worth 70c. Special fine all wool wide Cashmeres from 48c. a yard. "BALDWIN'S" be.'t four - ply Yarns at 7 1-2c oz., sold elsewhere at 12 1-2c. Cashmere Shawls, $1.75, worth $2.50 Knitted Shawls, 81.00, worth $1.50. (NOTE.) Those Goods are bought less than Manu- turers' price and will be cleared quickly. Very Highest Price paid for EF4 and Butter. W. ACHESON & SON. FURNITURE! D. GORDON has now on hand a complete assortment of Furniture, such as Parlor Suites, Bedroom Suites, Tables, Chairs, &c., Window Shades, Curtain Poles, &c. Picture framing a specialty. UNDERTAKING! evegienspentey1ODEReaATEn.datention to itis mbuakeep 7.t -Sm First door East of Bank of Montreal, West-st., Goderich. Black Velvet Ribbons) ALL WIDTHS. EIFFEL POINT LACE, COL'D VELVET RIBBONS,' AND VELVETEENS, Now in transit from Britain. w ILL BE titii E SOON. ONE PRICE ONLY. ALEX. MUNRO, 2064 Draper and Haberdasher. DRI3N 1Z MONTSERRAT LIME JUICE ! • the mast Cowling and:Hoelthfat SUMMER DRINK. ASK FOR MONTSERRAT!. F.JORDAN, - ODDS AND ENDS. "Don't you tbiak it Hoary, to pay 10 Raises' for • diamond ring for your wife r "Not at all . yen seem to forgot bow seeds 1 shall save on her glove bill." Wddtia • tag's tabor One day's wort be • healthy liver M to secrete three and • half pounds tit bile. If the bile wsrstioe be deficient. wanes ; if profs, bilioes- nem and jaundice arise. Burdock Blood Bitters is the meet perfeet liver rsialater Iowan in mdiaise for sad e.A.g all livor troablea 2 American Rosins Maw —"Now, sir. you have all the details of my new menu - feat ring seL.ms. It we sesseS4, will make millions.' Timid apiteLat--' Bet if we should fail r American Bestow M.a—"Fall1 Io the bright le1Ic3lt of Amon* enter- prise there's no seep word as foil—be- camae wha..ver • thing don't pay we can always soloed it on an Eneheh eye - dictate, " *'asset* wMees. Ores! maid timely wisdom is shown by keeping Dr Fowler's Eztrset of Wild Strawberry es hand. It has no equal ler cedars, el,olera eserbae, dsrnctw, dyesstery, Jolie. .ramp, and all sow r aosskplsi.ts or o sass of the host- els.2 odd Musty b•r,dt of ,elks dgp oworsen heat Syria to Pans. The y.lhm ere to be seed is the prepare- d°. of Imsthar el • very ase quality. "What M the some el year eat r asked tree bey sf .wither. "His seen. was Willies' mail he Ind Its. hal sew we mil him Fib-WEMBess," MEDICAL HALL Equal Rtebta All have meal netts in life and liber- ty sod the pursuit of happiness, bat many are handicapped in the race ty dy.pepas, biliousness, lack of eneegy, nervous debility, weakness, comities - tion, to. Be completely remcvi•g these oomplaista Burdock Blooi Bitters cot- ters untold benefits an all sufferers. 2 The United States is by far tin, largest eoaautrer of postage sevelopee of any setae) in the world, over 500,000,000 having been used tbe pest year. Tse respse•e waste. People Inuits sad mistake otter with ssriow *welts when they oeeleet a eoe- .tipated condition of the bowels. Know- ing that Burdock )Blood Bitters U as effectual sere at say stege of does not warrant as in **Sleeting to w it •t the right time. ('w it SOW. 2 What is the diems).e betimes a poet- ry cook and • bill sticker t One pets pests and the other peek* ep pais art.M e e Lt.imeet !tires sesesme.r. labor ie 'beep i• Ceylon. The entri- es there eau lies on $1 a mouth, .ad are glad to get 121 eons . day for their work. Frank Wilkin*, grain: buyer at Ham- ilton, says : "I aged several m.dioi•es and tno.d we relief snail I tried Albino's Compound Syrup, Wild Cherry." Lees than one battle eared him of a kag stealing and painful sash. with tight- ness of sheet and abort breath. Sold by all druggists. lea Artifiaal endee is ,sew to an •Manny estest, the spark= arta& eeseietiee of the tesstd reel et Merest aerobia. worked op •M1 BOK- stns. THE SIGNAL FRIDAY, OCT. 10w 1890. SHE WEDDED A COWSOT. Tbs Bride terve. s. •mertra . meet the Lover she nese as ar#rw. Frets, the New fork Trieste,. A wedding took place to this net, Sun- day which grew out of a roomette meet- ing and courtship. The fact teat the bride and bridegroom are rich and •ell ou.a.oted leads Interest to the affair. lh. Saturday •fteruotw • y_uug wan, with face bronzed by expiator. walked into the Grand Central Hotel and coned for • mom. He rewistercd his name as George W. Campbell, of Chime r°, Ie. H. had come to New lurk to meet his bride, who was to arrive here Intro Leg - land on the steamship City of Rome, which was due yesterday. The stony est the y,euug inaa's life and hit meeting fat the first tune with his bade is romantic George W. Campbell is the sou oi Jamas H. Campbell, the t:.11houatre cot tle.nan •ud head of tae Jas H. Celnpoe.: Co..pauy, f Chicago, St Leut., !items City and Omaha, lite stuck dealers. He tete occupeas the place -.t chest saleemsu of the company. He is twenty bee years old. When .t.iy a.teei, years of age hr rats sway front noose end went to Texas, where ha fullewed the wild life of a cowboy. Cattle buyers in the employment of his father who saw bite at intervals an Texas, the Indian Ter- ritory and Colorado, tried to per- suade hen to raters: home, but bre years elapsed bitters be did se,. Tern he entered the employ of hi. fethet'a firm 111 tlh,ca{,• as si evesuse, which position he has held ever entice. Three years .g•, the tine sent hies to England to attend to s lot of cattle that the Meuse was sending over there Young Cempbeil went, and atter settling the brw'a stf,irs started to return, but received s cable dispatch telling him to await another shipment. fie found himself In Liverp•eel with nothing to do for two or three weeks, At that time " Meziran Jos.." Wtid West Show was in camp near Liverpool, end for amusement Campbell went out a. the show. He foand among the cow boy em- ployee several of hie former companions ea the plates. At this discovery se, fe.hug of I.. vanished. By their invitee. he spent • week in the Wild West amp. •ad in • spirit of fun took part in the daily exhibitions of riding, roping and •heotitg. Oue day during a performance he picked a silver dollar out of the mud by reaching down from the back .ef hes horse while it was geeing at full speed. Every one in the audience applauded, but stone *o vigorously as a young girl who, with her father, occupied cite of the private were. While waving her handkerchief tae the gallant rider • gest of wind snatched it from tier hand and carried it out to the centre .ef the track, where it fell in the dirt. Campbell was coming den the raceway or: the full ran, sod saw the bit of Isco fall. With- out checking his horse, he bent low in the saddle, and se he swept by picked it up He was cheered to the echo as he turned his pony acd, riding op to the box. returned the handkerchief to its fur owner. introductions followed through the medium id • mutual friend. The ac. cements .•f the box preyed to be Sir Thomas Dodd, of West Derby, near Gverpuol, 7.00 his eighteen -year -aid iaughter Helen. Between the yuune people it was • case of love at tint eight. Young Campbell, instead ,•f riding et performances, derated himself to his newly found friend. It was only a short time before tete young folks were aurae - ed to be married, but when the parents of both heard of it objections were rais- ed that threatened to destroy say anima It was hnelly decided that young Campbell should return home, and if, in the coarse .,t • year or so., their love re mained unchanged no further objectiten would be raised. At the outset Campbell had wished Sir Thomas ss to his ability to take are of • wife apo far as his finan- cial condom!) was concerned. Campbell returned tc Chicago, where he has been ever some until hie arrival its this city on Saturday. Hie betrothed decided th•t,as he could trot get away from busi- ness at this season of the year, abs would come to America and get married here. Herfather's advanced age prevented bit •ccompanyirg her, an shoeame under the .snort of Captain John R. Dewar, of the (bion Steamship Company. Site arrived on the City of Rome Sunday and was met on the pier by her lover. who escorted her to apartments at the Grand Central Hotel. Sunday evening at :e o'clock the wedding tank place in Asso- ciation Hall, the present meeting place of the members of the Twenty-third Sueet Baptist absorb. The Rev Dr Dixon perineum -1 the eeremony in the presence of shoat fifty people—relatives sad friends of the bridegroom. Ceptaid Dewsr gave away the bride. Colossi E M Clark, who was t(mmsely consorted with the firm of Campbell A Ca , acted as best Mian, sad Mrs J. F. Val de Heide stood op with the bride. Mr sad Mrs Campbell will remain is tb. city for two days and thea start on • wedding tour. imperi.i Will preemie an . to extend the tante et Dr Fowler's Excrete of Wild Straw berry, the unfailing remedy forehnl- , cholera combos Ate.. dytsotery.and all •erase coos deist•, to every part of the Empire. Wild Strawberry never fail. 2 N. Alphonse Daudet is busily engaged es a new sold es well se • play. I• the f work the naWioe of di- vert* will be analysed, especially in its relations to the eitatiun of children of parents wbe hase been ..panted by the Is e. Illt*aeg %Iowa Mining tepee.. ROM that &aier• never attacks the bower d the earth, bet hesaenity in funis)1d MI oeessasry to me Dr Fowler's lisiMurt of wild Stesw- berry for bowel diars•n•, eta It b a Nee woes 9 b Oe isforteades laid by Impostor Paisley, Mr This Crews, e/ Bawuiller, @ speared bsfon Mears Make w *imp, Mates. Cli.tes, ns M Meads . gt. 1581, ekull.d with ,Mo lstloof the Creels Ad. The y beige seM.hsd a ism el 1118 yes FARC[, FIELD, GARDEN. SUBJECTS OF INTEREST TO WIDE- AWAKE AGRICULTURISTS. The L... .f Cora is aOdd.wa.Maalua, ais Reported hum the 4 grieultornl Ctperlo.at Station --Two Corn metes Are Advised for Beery Farm. The director of the Kansas Oath)* has the following to say on the fodder quee- t i • : If v: a make fodder of any real value t':e c r.::.teat tee cut up while it is vet ,;ries. At what stage of ripeness the core p iat:t yields the best and kxgest ,...: '.t of redder has not yet leen de•f- tuitel} d ....ermined, but all agree that the tont plant Lutist be -green" at the tittle it vetting. IC,ew the ., of last season made at this statical seem to show as et inclusively as one trial can show anything that the loss of corn when cut even slightly green is very great. To still further test the question of the best time to cut standing corn with the :-dew of severing the largest yield of corn without much reference to varie- ties, a series of careful cuttings and afterward accurate weighing was held in a field with rows of corn equal as to length, and made by thinning exactly alike as to number of planta in a row, were meas- ured off on opposite sides of the field. At one aide, occupied by a yellow me- dium dent. four enttingM were made when the •van was in as many differed degrees of ripeness, viz., in milk, doueh. hard dough state and curt hard with stalks drying up. It was tonna in nearly every case that adjacent rows cut at Intervals of seven to twenty days showed variations. with only two or three .. , in seventy odd cases, almost exactly prolstrtionate to the dif- ference in the time: t cutting. The )arg- ent field of the beet quality of corn was gaine•I with the now cut latest. Indeed. it was plainly taught that the corn con- tinued to improve in weight until the very la'it—after the blades of the plant had been dried up and likely to be blown away; until the juices of the stalks bad been completely sucked up. It seems perfectly clear from these re- sults that we must raise corn for corn, with no thought of folder, and cunt again which has no higher purpose than the production of fodder. We must. in short, have two corn fields on every - farm receiving radically different treat- ment, to correspond with the different purposes fur which they are cultivated. In the Orchard. "I do not advocate autumn pruning before the return of the sap and the fall of the leaf." said a member of the Mas - Horticultural society at one of the meetings. The time to prone apple trees has never leen definitely set- tled. While small branches may be cut when the saw is sharp, large branches should be cut when the sap ni most act- ive and the healing process most rapid. When large bnurchos are cut at other tines gum shellac should be used to pre- vent decay. Pruning, to be properly dune, requires the lest foresight and skill of tho orchardist. In all phases of pruning its immediate and future effects upon the trees should be well consid- ered, that no permanent injury may be done. It is a goal practice, with a view to thinning the fruit, to prune when the tree is in flower with a well trained and practiced eye and hand. The general tendency should be to keep the trees low. High pruning should only 1 _ ... l for direct canoe, as the extra time required to gather fruit from high pruned trees in a large orchard is very considerable. and when fruit fat a it is Imre to be injnrerl. In low pruned trees gathering fruit is very much facilitated and cheaper. The trees are lees exposed to winds and ice and as a rule are more shapely. Strep as Weed Ihetrorerr- Sheep, especially those of the merino breed, are great weed and they can be turned into the corn late in the season. They will do no injury to the corn. After nibbling off the lower blades they will hunt up the weeds. and they bite theeeoff so close to the ground that they are often . , . , kipped. They will also find weeds in nooks and corners that no one else would ever think ofd . As . . the sheep are of inestimable value, not only in the pasture lots but in the cornfields as well. After the corn has been gath- ered put the harrow in the field and turn np the corn •tnbbles. Rake over the Reid several times until the surface spoil has been tberonghly scratched. This will start the seeds of a few late weeds into growth. If the sheep are then turned in the field again almost the last rem- nant of weeds will be destroyed before winter fie here. In the following spring a Dice weedy lot will be found to be comparatively free from thew pests -- American Cultivator. Ream That adeemed Well This Seam. According to Garden and Forest, among the hybrid perpetual roses bloom- ing out of doors not one has behaved better this season than Ulrich Brnnner, with its fell and perfect buds, exquisite color and rare fragrance. The Bareness Rothschild. too. is blooming unusually well, and so are those excellent sorts, Magma Charts and Pani Rkaaut. It they would only bloom again, as do other hybrids which have an China blond in these! John Hopper, Mrs. Charles Wood tied Rev. J. B. Casson are Iy cod, sad Moes tom* neee vv bloomed bet- • VertItr..w err Pastes. Peach treesotten fail, especially on old lands, for the want of mineral plant food. Light or sandy Isandsi, in which the peach irh is .o often planted, have very little min- eral food. The seed teasel forts without potash. and lacking this the peaches fall off soon after sitting. it is believed by eases that lack el potash is the pr.dia- porisg cense M the dimes* knower as peace y.lkeee When takes .arty motels this dhows hr hese tired by bean sP plietliose el aerates potash salts (SUTTEE MAKNI*. - yeah) 1 teem The Dalry World Abut Chandra. ..d nattiag. The cream fur each churning should all be gathered into one vesrel and kept c• ed and sweet. A good practice for fell and wluter is to mit 2.1 per cent. of pure water with the cre•tu befog* it becomes: emir. The whole of it should he well stirred every time fresh crr*ut is added, and half a down times a day berd.kss, Two darn before the churning is to be de ere ahem one quart of cr•sin fur every 1.'ur p eilsfnl to be churned tor a quantity (•eival to Y per cent.) should be set apart and kept as wants as ;o deg.. Fehr. One day le fore the claiming that email tiltao- tity "f cream, called a ferneutation .tarter, which will then lie Nur, should be added to the quantity which is in- tended for cheniileg and be mixer) there- with. pt ehotild afterward be kept at a temperature a deo deg.. Ihtrine rummer the best churning tem- perature le 1: deg.. to S$ deg•.; duriug late fall aid wittier 62 deg& to iii drga. are preferable. The agitation of churn- ing huming should be kept np till the butter comes into particle* larger than clover sees). The buttermilk should then i& drawn off. and pure water at 53 (legs. added in its place. By chttrniug this for t► initiate ..r tau the. butter will be washed free from milk while it is still in a gnu - alar state. The *Silky water may then 1r• drawn off arae replaced ty a weak brine at the twn:e temperntnre. After a minutes (-burning the butter may be left to drain in the churn for half an hour before it is retie/veil to be pressed and salter). Pure salt of medium tini- ness and with a bully velvety to the touch should be need. Regaire..ents of Nut Tress. In a paper read before the American A . „ ,.. 1 society H. M. Engle had the following t.t say concerting the re- quirements of not trees: The different lints require various soils and locations; walnuts lonrisit best in rich loam; but - tem tits thrive in similar soils; both bear transplanting well. Pecans and shell- earks have long and heavy tap routs, and must be carefully lly managed. They should be transplanted once or twice in the mrsery, anti by cutting off part of the tap role they will throw wit side roots, :after which there is little risk in their removal. Wherever the peach and Mae- zarl cherry flourish the cheetnut will succeed—i. e., its light soils, either sand, slate or grcvtl. Pennsylvania has large areas of chest- nut forest which are cleared once in twenty or twenty-five years for the tim- beer, but the nuts en tench trees do not amount to much. as the we mill: grow too dense :ind the nuts ore small. But r. new de/texture has been made which we trust will spread extensively. After clearing tire laud. when the sprouts are of one season's growth, they are grafter) with some improved variety, at such distances as tree should stand were they planted for fruiting. and all the rest are dettr,vel and kept down. The eldest of these trees are now but two Reason' growth since they were grafted, but some hare already borne fruit, and indi- cations are that in : comparatively •hurt time there will be nut orchards in fell bearing instead of timber forests. Queen Bees. Ina paper mad by a successful woman be -•e keeper at the Ohio eouvention of apiarists she told what the gneen should be in the following words: The queen mother ahonld be a well developed queen of whatever race or combination of races ono tray choose --I prefer a pure Italian strain and a queen in her second year. for the trade I world use only imparted Italian queen& By getting new queens every year there would be no clnugi-r of in . . ... 1 do not want a queen so nnwtisfactory to the bees that they are trying to super- sede her, either because she is too old or unprolifc or for some unknown reason, for I believe in the law of heredity in bees as well as in man or the lower animals, and I do not think it possible fora queen of the latter sort to produce as hardy, prolific queen progeny as the former. Sewing Rye. Where rye is sown for the grain there are so many melt and SO Lunch demand for the straw that it becomes a profitable part of the crop. If both are removed from the land manure of some kind must be applied or a rotation with clover user) to keep up the fertility. Rye can be sown to great advantage for winter past- ure when the ground is frozen, or, what will usually be better, it can be cut and ted green to the dairy cows along with their dry food in the spring before the postures are sufficiently grown. In this way the.ueculent food that cattle crave in the spring can be supplied, and the COWS be kept off from the pasture Sold until the grass is old enough to have SUMO substance. The green rye stubble can then be plowed ander. and the land be ready for another crop without any sensible decrease in its fertility. 1.tas and Casa•..... The practice of drilling corn far grain crops is on the increase. Broken oyster shells and lone are both excellent food for bene. Level culture is now very generally practised fur cern. Ikmprsem is invariably the open door to mop. Fill np all hollow plans where filthy water .ecnmulates after it rain. A Routh Carolina dairyman says: "There 1. nn in warming milk above the heat of the animal and setting it in water at 1 except that it hastens the cream to the top in about two to four hoots. There is no advantage to me in raising cream in two to four hours, as the cows are ant ready to be milked before ten to twelve hours." (lmeeo.l in some form Sad times should always be kept . when the fowls can help themselves. Fat hens that do not ley w111 sot pen- ante ro(leave many eggs of ew they meek each • rrmditlerst. Fat r l to egg p -.d artiost. Rtueh Vas &saki be msr- OLRARIN� BALI X01 PHOTOGRAPZI ALBUMS FOR Two Weeks Only. ONE-THIRD OFF RETAIL PRICESI Full Cloth Bound Albums for 25 cents. Full Leather Bound Albums for 50 cents. Plush Albums from 50 cents up. Remember this sale will continue for two weeks only. FRASER & PORTER fre.w r ai:r Central Telephone Est- ange, Cor. North -4 and 'Square. Court House Square THE PHARMACY HARNESS S '[.t.. Soap is bight) c &lust:r fur of odd harness. 11:,' uilie:g o! We ...reuse..., and buinry top.• and is ed in the cleansing and hea:ir, .n... her. galls, 25 CENTS PER. r:c Ly ,:f C EORG RHYNAS, t,oderier Ne'e Geo. Acheson 'dry goods stem. Cattle Chains ---New Patterns. Crosscut Saws --All Makes. Cutlery ---Table and Pocket ---In Endless Variety. Chopping Axes ---At Your Own Price. General Fall Goods ---Stock Complete. ALL AT SPECIAL PRICES! R. P. WILKINSON & Co., Hardware. SAY, 010 YOU SEE THE BOODLE 2 is giving t he LARGEST PRICES for FARMERS' PRODUCE in town at his store. where he al%.qs has on hand • large stock of =ry Goods, GROCERIES AND CROCKERY, FLOUR AND FEED. It will be to the public advantage to give hien a call before going elsewhere. 2217 - THE POET'S CORNER. The *male*'. Pretest. 0, why don't people form their a's. And finish of their b'. Why do they make such crooked i's And such confounded d'et Why do they forni .nch croosrd .'s And rs with ague fits 1 Their go and ha are too much ✓ oe en,' printer's wits. What s human es. is without sitkt. Is an without a dot. Ps are each curious lookleg things We recognise them aot. 1- ought to sand for cnssednem, Bat come. In well for kick. /, i •ad Wears mIschleroua, bas a's just rates Old Nick. O's are rarely closed at all. And p's are shaggy thlass, nye misfit as well he spider's lege, Aad rs waequlto wimp. Nome peepee make a pussies a. Who newer ewwm a 1 : Other" ass the edtyaws strobes Te term •aell e. N' . set straaeely m1:ed, JCt seem ern • spree : ! Is • ekeletoa on wires: )mane bow we growl at :. tie yet. )est ehlek what tress get reeve drivers of the ewllt : They call us each s careless sot. Aid serlhNe es at will. Well. they win w-HDMe, and we meet growl And vainly try to please. 'Till they go heck to school and learn To sake their a b .., THE FASHIONS. • !..gets .r deeds.s tree will taeeress she Fair M". Dark dyes for the hair are said to be daPerffe .d shore fi.d their psrehumre i. Pari•, Plaids premise to he very popeiar ibis mister. Shirts el Empire net are worn over slips ef'e&Isd silk. °rebid jewelry, ie the latest fed in the sulker of Sleeves detfersrte from the twilit* are the ceder stilts day. c. Tbe latest` novelty in Straw b+ r =tad. in the shape of • boat. Hamper•ef substantial makeaeashese en ft r infant's collet baskets. Linen collars end cuffs never low fuer for nue with taaku-made gowns. Black underwear has come to be esa- sioered an essential to • black toilet. Fashionable sueshades for the s.eslry stud seaside are of unbleached silk. There is • rumor that the kis is shortly to be worn is nets dews the back. The Spanish moist is an .swab• dr via fix romodelli•g stained or laded met - sages A little •mmoois or borax r as easel - lent thing to ads to lite bath w earls weather. Little girls' dresses are made mush shorter at the waist Ikea they have been fcr many years- Ysllow shca., which until •ow have been emalined to the co.•lry sad the beech, have made their ea Paris. When the )).ice of acid fruits has touched colored eon.** • palest resto- ration will be ae wmplisbed by tie see of ammotaia. Round waists are the capeiw of the season with the Parisiaanes, bet they ere not *bort, being as long as the wearies firers will penult. T•rtea.'a*d chequered woolly. NMw- rude are tee numerous to spssmli•s They display soh and be•wti•1 l maw - infs. sad demises .... of dodge. They aee all. or nearly all, doable width. Crossed p frost r•dkto . decidedly hold lbs depose and pepe&rity. Figured foulards are eaeil for an emirs dross, as well es is combinatiow, wham they are trimmed with lovely sere em- breiieries, keit:Uag Irish erode!. The elapse* whet, whisk is es coon •in ly esseeskd Weems tie lIsisg soil the het, Betide forth wish svmey meal* the deist, bead a sweet s sires ass the ides that tN esters) ing blooming hsve UN jolt less $girt' for this a spssikl oesasba A sial N whish than is net walks etirw.ta . mum ; tights* sessdsl nee evil imee k iso twkee . w•sssa seem steed sod lovely M ►in,