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The Signal, 1890-10-17, Page 3PM 01111Eit SLOES P TR ENDLESS VARIETY wt SR►lo sad PAM, at the 016211Maidedied erkuoo Eltore OR E. DOWNING. STRENGTH. THE C*LiaRAT=D Ram Lal's PURE TE Unequalled for gale, and •._ _� Ricftuess of Illfusiou. and gsot confined to one Make er Slylo_ ,Ibut en Rive you our cboa dot the. Best Productif-^s In foot wear from all the Leading Manufacturers la the Dominion. Prime ewer than at aa7 ether esyn the D•ml.ioe for the same dem et Goods. Ordered Work equal to the best la Canada. NO SLOP WORK £YKRY PAIR OUAIIANTi,ED. Re airing done Promptly and Bight. E. DOWNING, Car. Mast st, and Square. Goderich. WILL POSmYELY Ci1RE CRAMPS, PIIIS II TIE STOMACH Bowel C.)mpia;ate, Diarrhoea -An .t:.. - SOLD BY ALL DEALERS. WHY EVERY FARMER should get one of Armstrong's Improved I. AT.I'. — GRAN ti SEED CLEANERS? BF3CAUgE 1 et -it allows no foal seeds to be blown Into the chaf which is of groat Importance to every farmer wbo wishes to keep hr farm clean. sad -11 saves end cleats .11 Timothy seed from any ktad of grain while deaaing the grain. 3rd. For ]Market craning It remorse Cockle. Chess and sbrsakea (rein. and gives the farmer the mod ocsaible weight for his grain with no lona ph -it will sample grate for Mow a.d end vamoose equal to hand picking. ale -Cleaning nerd Wheat It removes all Cockle. Mlusserd seed. Wild i•eme, Wild Flat and other foal and Awaken and broken grain. an -1 gives the farmer pare. clean. seed grain. Mie -!t will oar Oslo. BvMya:o.. thole etKhly without waste of gni*. Ttb.--Cleaning Pease : it will separate the sand. quartered. Laves, Oats and whoa Pees f m each other, rarryrag race to • diffetk.-it is • perfect Clover teed Machine. re- moving all duet. beekem and dead Seeds ad other etech larger or smeller than the Clover seed. Mb.- It le • first class Grass ted Machine, blows no seeds away. 1Mk.-It is • good pax seed Machine, tell. -it is a Mt elate chaffer. .eta- Item to fitted Into the oldest faehate1 !list Mthat id add, es wins sad makeW r la R do the wort of • sew MOL ilii. -It ma be.taehad to a new MW with - eat injuring It. and ea be removed at any lime as easily as • three combined. It dose not laterfure with the use of the re - goer ayes of the MOt tth. it ernes are snarly all perforated dna sMb -1t bee • aspanity of izty bailee of gale per hour. teq, -it r ea cheep as the ordinary inning Mill sieves. tach. -Iver. Machine Is Oraaornan. Seed your order at once If you want Il this . If you have not Beets • Machine ask 0 Mee ~mint few lespsrtios. red that yea It ne condition It sola. Is sedate( by small send lased. width a et Fanning M111. ?BONG BROS., G-oderioh, Ont. Wag .abs. trey sea Me awe s_ .ter e ar lie en un unites!mane Mos eM ewer.( i. n. awesome IL wtw obe Mara I.w.re...aNr.el..sAw�er. es bire• ler air at ROBERTSON'S GROCERY ! Corner Moat:mile& ad (Mare. FLAVOR. FRAGRANCE. HOUSEHOLD RECIPES. Liver Toast -One cupful cold boiled or stewed liver, half oupful of brown navy of any sort, enough mustard, salt, pepper and Winoestenhire sauce to sea- son the herr highly, several cleanse of buttered toast. Rub the liver smooth sitb the back of • spoon, add the sea- soning, beat to boiling with tie grary, •ted heap or spree/ upon the toast. Set to the oven two minutes before undtug to table. Lobster Croquettes. - Meet cf one Targe builitl4 lobster, half pint white sauce, two eggs, juice of one lemon, salt aod Ctyeone to taste. Mince the most fine, stir it int. the white sauce, add the eggs well beaten, •no last, the lemon juice. Taro cot on • plat. to Doul When perfectly cold, farm into Ball croquettes with the hand., roll in beaten egg, then in fine cracker crumbs, sod fry in deep fat. Deviled Mutton. -Rob slices of rare mutton with a mature made ea fulloes ; teaspoonfulone Worcestershire e oex e tapeottful vinegar, one tela.peonfui made mustard. tablespoonful melted but- ter. Let the meat lie in this for an hour. Then dip each slice in • trying better made as directed in recipe for "ban fritters, and fry in deep fat. Or the deviled meat may simply be broiled over • clear fin. In either ease serve very hot. Rask. -Two ceps .ilk, 2 eggs, 24 cape flour, i mop butter, 1 cup sugar, ii • yeast cake dissolved in warm water. bet • ',pones [Wade of the milk, the yeast and part of the flour -enough to make • good batter. Let this rias all thigh:. In the morning work in the beaten eget. the sugar, butter and the rest of the flour. Knead well, and make into bolls with the hands. Set these together in the pin, let them rise until light, and bake in a steady oven Jost before taking them out brush the tops with me.laa.es and water. A $crap Hash. -Two cops cold beef (roast, boiled, corned, or fresh;, ooe or two ould sausages, two or three slices cold bacon. one cup pato, four olives, tablespoonful Worcestershire wuoe, a little cold stewed tomato (if you have it), bait an onion minced fine, one cup gravy or soup stock, or one eup boiling water and a tahlerpoenful of butter. Hest the gravy or stock to builicg in • frying -pan; stir into it the other ingredients chopped One ; simmer for fifteen minute., stirrtrg oe,n.tahtly. You an sober serve the hash soft or let it be era on the bottom. 011a podrida though it theme, it will be savory, sad will be relished by nearly e very one. Ham Fritter. -Two (Mpg minced cold him, one egy, half-pint good stook, salt - spoonful dry mustard, teaspoonful Wor- cestershire sauce, tiny bit o. scalded onion (chopped). half teaspoonful minima parsley, one t•bleep000fel butter, ooe teaspoonful flour. Hest the stook to boiling, and thicken it with the batter and dour rubbed tugsther ; stir into it the ham, seasoned with the mustard. oaeon, Worn(.terhir. mum, and pan - ley ; add the beaten egg. Pour Mho mixture on a flat plate to cool. When coid and firm, maks the mixture into d•tteoed balls about the .ism of • small plum ; drop each into a batter ade of melted butter, • small cop of warm water, the beaten white of egg, end • little salt. Ley each fritter oat of the hatter into boiling fat. They will pot op at ones, and sboeld be of • dolled. brown. The add KelbMM. In them days of humbug it is • relief to hear of eom,thing that can be depend- ed upon. Wilson'. Wild Cherry has bees tasted as a remedy for the cure of all dimmer cf the Throat, Chest and Loop, for nearly twenty years, with seek ewes.s as to seen for itself the title of The Old Reliable nun for Cough., Colds, Creep, Asthma, Bronohttie and other .neetems of the respiratory system. tied that you gel the gen- u ine, in white wrappers. Sold by all druggists. A young led, named Clement, of Sea - Meth, got he collar boas brokee on Wallsesday of hist week. Ho was driv- i.g the Queen's betel has into *shed and got eswgid between the has .ad the top of the shed dere. ttllreeegl M- , Wald Ms awe Sala• 011104112e. work fee • healthy liver le M sgfMSls three .ad • half precede of Mw 11 the We s.seetien be dofleiewt, wnllrp des meals ; if p.ufere, heaves ado red j•saais• ethos. Rerdoek Blood Mese Y the moat perked liver nput•ter harms 1n .041 i.s far prevesdi.g ale mMO a/ war teeablea ,THE S1aif AL. FRIDAY, oar. 17 1890. NEW FOR THE DAILY. CRITICAL OPINION AS TO THE MR- TLR EXTRA TOR. A Internam That Me Gime . Meaelall•. le Maar tlekbag•-One Aelertty Who Waage. 1k. Mater estreeter to se. Crease Mrarwr sed Cher.. We early took the ground that the batter extractor should have a fair chance, so far as we could give it. to prove its u.efulasm. belteving then, and believing now, Oat if it can be used to make the Miler of oumtnerce it simply involves n ... of the busi- ness. We can wait till we know before making stupendous fools of ourselves by telling the -creamery men of this broad land" that it is a failure and then have to take it all back. There is probably many hundred times as much butter being churned frout sweet cream, fresh from the creamers and centrifuges, as there is being nada trete the few butter extractors that are now being operated. The first and most serious criticism node on the butter of the extractor by many -ourselves in- cluded -more than a year ago was that it made butter devoid of acidity. Many retain the same view yet, while it has been renounced by so many within the year, and sweet butter has so grown in favor that it is far lens a bugbear to the m , ., than it used te be. In- deed when we get right down to the bottom fact the difference betweeu but- ter churned from the slightly acidified cream that is now mostly charred in separator factories, if it is thoroughly waahed of cameras matter in the churn, so there is a fair hope of its keeping sweet twenty days. can hardly be dis- tinguished by experts from extractor butter if it is made from pure and wholte some milk. So it is not the etweetnees of the batter that is turned out by the extractor that will lead two its condemnation in markets that take millions of puunds of that churned fawn freeheet ererun or from that mildly acidified and well washed. The condemnation will come. if it comes to stay, for the same reason it comes to chnrned batter, and comes with swift wings. because of the foreign matter left in it, as it came to the extractor when the milk had not been cared for properly. We are now assured that that defect is obviated; but even if it is. any extractor can handle milk with success till it is coaled down to eft (legs.. no more than cream can Le churned from the separator that c, Imes rent at :'i to ee dogs. till it has been cooled down to proper churning t. .... .. .. The extractor does not and cannot make good butter, either in defiance of the churning laws of nature or in con- tempt of the laws that govern the proper care of milk, before it can get control et it. If all these laws are heeded as well as they have to be to preserve milk that will make good and sweet cheese, the extractor will do next to perfect work today. But whether it can take un- clean milk, and that out of condition otherwise. and eneceed in rescuing it when on the way to decay as well as the separator and churn cats, is the question now in court. -Hoard's Dairy- man. MIIk for Cheese. Rim the milk through an elevated strainer in air of the same .. as the milk, and you will find the ani- mal flavor gone. Take the new milk and cool it rapidly with ice or cold water, and yam get rid of the hest. bot when you taste of the milk yon will find that the favor is there, although yon will not smell it very much until it is warned up. This is where the cbeeoe•- maker is very often deceived, to wit: The milk is brought to the factory cold, and he does not discover anything wrong until he gets it heated up. Then his trouble begins, for the milk is eo sweet that he cannot et the add to kill the taint which is the inevitable result of that way of handling the milk. There is only one way that milk can be properly taken cars of for snaking cheese during the summer months. and that is by exposing it to the air, by ming an elevated strainer, or pouring with a dipper from On can to another until the teatsenttora at the milk is about the stance as the ..I ;. . . If this is thcro.gbly dose the gas will be entirely driven out, and the milk will be abort the proper ripeness for making good cheese. Repeated .. show that this animal odor or gas in milk. rather than acidity, is what we have to contend with in our efforts to improve the keeping quality of our 'theme. which is the greatest fault that is found with it at the preetont time, and what we mast remedy if we are to com- pete with Canada in the marked of Eng - and. -B. A. Smith. Dairy epossilieses and Aa•wees. Here are some tet the question. and an- swers given at a dairy institute beld in McDoeongh. N. Y.: Do you allow tobacco smoking where ague are making butter? No; never. How can we beet sell our bnttert Di- reotly to cenurmtsen. First sell two your Mewls, and ns. them as aide to •acne other customers. In this way we may save the and peons of the hendlars. Will cream tier at may time by making the idllt thinnmt Yes; cream will always ries quicker by thin- ning the milk. The .snarler the volume of milk the womem the cream will rise. Thee Net beechen us sot to have the silk too deep In the paile e r cans. Sbseld .oar buttermilk be pat Veto serest cream? No; do not do that, if you do you will be likely to impart a betterroilb t•Ms to your omen sail he - Jure the flavor of your batter. WW better beep bother tuber Miner thea .tit? Batt. Amid le when sena and the six waenaded. This age be Inas well with malt and a enob at IM Whoa a .ad the toy •ant, Gess a sloes lies • kirst d salt paste d• top of mid. ems WSW M faLawys with Was ile SOL al THt GALLOWS' SHADE. lanae aamatea seaweed v.W Deemer bele la--ttiaial aeelaied to nag thee. W eed.asn, Oe► l-Whe• the Aatiee Court wand Ih maraf•g ]lllr. Jobasesse Crows ensmsid, Bled the •Mention et Judge Rom SO the fist that be bed made • mi lake le perooaieg aatenee on 1h. primer Hey, o asvtctsd u( wide minder. a pawing senteeee His Iadrg wined Thursday, lett November, as the day of ezecutluu,' and counsel pointed one that Tuesday wee the leth November. Mos Lordship replied that Ike mistake bid already been called to his attention. and said he Wended the .x.ctrtio u to take place em Thurrlay, lett Decem- ber. He therefore mode • record of the mistake and would notify the Minister of Jude* in order to bare the prteoner re- prieved for true moth. The order was at once telegraphed to Ike Minister of Justice. Day appears to ss as calm and iodkfereut as before conviction, and his guard rays he slept soundly throughout the night. Mrs. Quigley, w ho sun in jail. is completely broken down and wepi4oupiouely while .its talked, Mut abs stoutly .db. red w the may .he told in court. Ka deplores her brother's tate, Mut is bitter against heu because at the trial bs attempted to ooavinos the jury that it was the who pushed Mn. Day over the cliff. tibe will be df.cherged from custody this evening. Meehan Rergaed to etc Fat.. Woomsr.)4,7z, elet. M - tlrM. Birdsall and bar sister, Mrs. Wad -Jones, visited the prisoner for. few minutes yestorday after - DOM, but under the new regulations oaly one visit . week will be allowed hereafter. This will probably be on a Wednesday or Thursday. Birchall's spiritual adviser coo- tmues to pay b: regular calls and this is producing its effect on the doomed man, .s 11e evinces much inured in Rev. Mr Wade's visits. The prisoner was allowed to read the new jail r.galatione yesterday, and although they were vary stringent he offered not a word of dimwit. He appear .,ow quite re- sfgad to Its fate. sit looks es if Biorb•ll would be out of the tow murderers to go to the gallows without same fanatics at rest petitioning for a commutation alai' doom. So far there s not the first hint of any petition being circulated for him, and if any eine did go to the trouble but few signatures could be obtained here, when the condemned eau is beat known Pickthall baa ones again determined to settle down and is buying a farm near Woodstock_ Out a some SeeteO or $12,000 be dill hes 14000 or 86000 left and his prin- cipal trouble now is bow a will get his wife back, as her parents for Some mysterious reason refuse to let bar have anything more to do with or even to see him. Bi cball still gets his food from the hotel and will continue to dorm to the end. alert. M.M eaag, Qt•t.tc, Ons. 8.—T6e judgment of 16* Court of Appeal in the ase of Morin, the • Mootmagay murderer, was given this morn- ing. Cbrt Justice Dorton raid: '•Although the present cam is unique in the annals of criminal . of this country, it is quite evident that the writ of error in virtue of wbicb the present case was brought before Mks tribunal is illegal, for no writ of error will be authorized m a criminal proceeding except when a motion for such writ has ben duly presented to the judge presiding. In this ease no such motion was filed before Judge Pelletier, and so this writ is illegal from its base and should never have been granted by the Attorney -General." His Honor then demised the ase and ordered Morin to be conveyed to St. Thomas and theire to be surrendered to Use Montmagny sheriff and hanged on the 1: th of October. TORONTO TOPICS. A O aadiaa's Mysterious Death 1s Art - MI °Rcli""° ""° °°""EN' FINE TAIIARINC} GARDENING AND FRUIT GROWING FOR sena. 4blunsf0, 7 t 9.-Itobert Hardie, a Gana- • flea, was murdered in Arizona on Queen'.! Birthday d this year. He was in company with lib brother-in-law, Dr. Haynes of Los Angelos, Cal.. at the time. The batter gam • deesiled . . 1 account of how Indians committed the murder, bat Midas at Len Angelos believe that it was a white man and not Iodise. that " did up " Barrister Hardie. Mr. Hardie tormsrly lived In Strathroy, when his dater, lira Sexton, now resides. He was well known in that and other towns, and also in Toronto. Dr. Frank Hayne., now d Lo. Angeles and formerly of Phila- delphia, was his brother-in-law. lir. Hardie was murdered on May 91 bad near Tomb- o la*, ombdao*. Ariaoos. Dr. Haynes .. 1 with Mn. Sexton merely to the effect that Mr. Hardie had died suddenly. All •ttempta to obtain particulars of the •celdent were futile, and as the murdered man had • 000idmable tem of money in his pommies .ad no amount of It can be obi Ward from the brother -ha -law Mrs. Sexton w11) vat California to eware aldose. as to the delnal nature of bar brother's death, some startling I having reached he ears of bate. In May last Mn. Sexton wrote • bates, later about saomey matters to her brother Robert, who was a header in the law ooara Bs placed the letter in his coat pocket, hag the coat ha the hall, and on returning from coon found the atter miming. in reply to this letter atones pureporting to be written by the dead man was received, dating how well off he wee Inanefally. A peculiar accident occurred yesterday afternoon to • w*ddiog party on their road to the train. is rounding Si at King the horse tented too clans, overturn - hag the eab and dampt•g tete bride and bridegroom and a lady land gsstleman friend in the mud on their heeds They escaped with no injury, but the driver, George Jos- tles, r.aeivd.rtor. injuries. Wright ie6.rwood of Rol ted been ..par.ad from his wife for Os weeks Oa Tuesday be went to are bar and foxed her diad body la dm boom. Isher- wood dorsi 10 tike matet the ferniest*. bet was stopped by the reWfw of biip dead wife, wbo had Mm arrested ea ea nil war- rant for To the Vagrant. be 7•et r'd•7 •1ermi•g iiid that Ids wife was worth 8110,0110 and that her relatives bad eased the do.seM treats He was allow- ed to go The new stresesre recently emceed .t 'Fort d ears by 1he tail way brands of the Taranto Yoaag Ma_% Priests. Assod.lise was fartasily opened era Teseday alga by • pads las meeting sad Misery s.Serl•in- trasal, wbft& was slMedd by upward. of NS madam's at Mss Toronto vQIsp end frh.d. frees 1he erg red . A. It. Craig, dose *art at the Reads Menet, bas reamed [td. perste•. sed, K le aid. A probably move a New Yestt. Me. Dreg bin hem et 16 i1onMe Roles ter Aft path sod whim Gerry Rhee dist. web Gem poi ttgq Sire ash t esetweded Nm. AMATEURS AND PROFEeeIONALS. A tier( t.rateary .( She Advantages .1 Tial CMOs .( Mardi /rwerta. ahr.he Igaewa as Wolg.lea. with as 11taMrnt.d Deerripthea .f . Newer W.Igela.. Among hardy flowering ehrnbs no clam ham mors friends than the weigelaa The habit of growth is hanebrue, the foliage is clean and beautiful the season or R't:rel: FIS e•; I:Rrtu through. and the flower,-, which cone in after the lilt..•*, are unexcelled for beauty. In every way the numerous varieties of the -.-e charming Japanese shrubs deserve 10 rank tt::tong the choicest add nte.4 desirable of hardy growths for besutify- io;; the lawn and flower garden. one of the metre recent varieties of this species, and now growing upon the Popular (hardening grounds. in the white flowered weigela 'Diervilla eandidn, 'hewn in the annexed engraving drawn free life. All the et called white va- rieties, it is told in Popular Gardening pr. -rheas to this one, had been lacking in some important point. With the present subject it isquite the reverse: along with the handsome flowers the habit of the growth is as free and abnrdant as that .)f the fancily generally, which is saying enough for vigor. Plants of this tie-eirable weigela can be obtained of all nurserymen who carry a considerable a 'or•tment of bandy or- namental shrubs. Earliness with Unripe Seed. There appear, to be considerable evi- dence to prove that seeds from imma- ture fruit will give a product requiring lest than the tumid time to ripen. and that the earlineece thus gained can be in- t -nasal by continued selection. A strain of tomatoes from green sed has made it fifth' at tho Indiana Ex peritnent station. J. C. Arthur. writing from that station on this and other at- tempts to investigate the subject, says: It is nut the slightly unripe seeds that give a noticeable increase in earliness, but very unripe seeds. Such seeds ger- minate readily. but the plantlets leek vigor and are more easily affected by re- tarding or harmful influent**. if they MD be brought through tbo early pxeried of growth and bec,u)e well emstabliahe 1. and the foliage or fruit is not attacked by note or blights. the grower will usual lag be rewarded by an earlier and mere abundant crop of 'slightly sn'. I -r and Inas firm fruit. The plant .. well as the fruit tends to early ripeness. and ei tl.e period of frni:fulness-that is, the time between the first and the last rip' frit -is mach shortened. With the increased in the amount of fruit there is a correep oo liug in the Size of the teem:; and fella :e•. ;f thine follows k'giceIly that :t'::ile earl*, sem may tee? coned. red hs a usual coutli- tion in all crape fro:.t :teripx' ens ed. an i:t• crease in the amount of the cr:n only event when the true fruit is the part narvestal. Ri ire ttt-ant:t0e3 :Mal re:M. a':'. a decrease in the a.aoaat of the crop o-•- t•an when any part leeddie the fruit it harvested, ae in tremip; awl pot .toy. Whether any methyl can be 'tenni t, theenfe:•:sdingof tbepantamt: yet preserve marline,s remains to be 'sew Clnerestas la the 1 C inerarias aro amort; th-• moa: and showy plants for the e:nbellivhtuent of thecenservater.y and greenbnnst• dor- ing the winter and spring months. They are easily managed. too, but are seen much more rarely than they deserve Ctuerariae are clawed as green/louse perennials. and many varieties are grown as mach in Europe and , by off- shoots after lowering; but the difficulty here is that the plants cannot e-nrvive our mummer sun and heat This fact must also be borne in mind by theme who treat them as annuals. Plante from Peed wrwn in May soil Jnne lack the vigor of pater sown seedlings. and britt is a vital point in cultivation. Seed tet an extra good .train should be obtained from a reliable 'retiree, and two sowings made -the Bra from the middle to the latter mod of July. with another about three weeks later. Every . t. most be taken against frost. bot the pleats should not be hurried into the ; . . , for mild weather is often 41 \ l after a light frost or two TbednMaria dislikes Misr heat and Meshemt and extreme., ef Sae perntare. and when it is negsity b firing Om plana into the •,, place them in the coot hones, dviisr air tow all favorable oxxadeas. but guarding against totting draaghle of oiled air. a glaring sen and a dry [11 e , i' .--Gar Jen and Forst. 1890. 1890. mal a .d. vv .-'-' teT_ Fine Display of New Gia. Fine Worsteds. Fine English and Scotch Tweeds. Fine Canadian Tweeds. Fine Overcoatings. Fine Workmanship and Trimmings. CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST. 13_ asCOR1MACm ,PUBLIC NOTICE .earlet Oereat.a. Tl.e scarlet geranium, with its perpet- ual blooming and may culture, is a iron teal favewlte. It will not stand minis frost, and therefore plana to be married over to another sewer, moat bis dog np .s nosn as they have bet -sane nightly. The puna are often kept throngh the whiter in hetet proof tenets by being simply hong em by the root. Thio plat is not, however. to be dspeede) upon. A hotter one i. Neat of parking tete plana after all their leaves have dj.np. ped I. dry earth or send in the oe(far. Hoes ewe.) Is. awarding to awn, fl(rr•iata. an .sodluet fertiliser for tete geranium. A her.afel of flier meal fa Weed throw!t the soil aavali snob *at whim eel pat Another large consignment of Fresh Teas of superior quality. In order to counteract the di honest practices perpetrated on t public by peddlers and others, are offering Special Inducemen Tea and Coffee, and solicit your r, ro n age. REES PRICE 8T, SON. Kay's Block, next Bank of Commerce, Square. Orders by Telephone promptly attended to. Golerich Foundry and Machine Works, RUNOIMAN BROS., - Proprietors. FLOUR MILLS BUILT ON THE UTEST IMPROVED SYSTEM WK HAyk UN HAND FOR SALK: IMPROVED LAND ROLLERS, HORSE POWERS, GRAIN CRUSHERS, STRAW CUT- TERS, PLOWS, &c. We are Manufacturing Improved New Model Mowers which are equal to the beet. (live th m a trial and encour- age home manufacture. We Will Guarantee Satisfaction. It Will Pay you to use our new Steel Mouldboard Plow.. Doty Engines and Boilers for sale. REPAZRB AND 0A. TZNas NEW ARRIVAL of PATENTS FALL SND 1INTE CAVEATS, , dtoaTIIIDE MinasSAKS lira e8. Obtained. sad .11 business 1. the U.S.l; .8. Paten COPERNINTS (Mice attended to at MODERATE FEES. our once is opposite the C. S. Patent OF foe, a.ed we ooe o ■ Patent. 1n Nos tied than those remote from WASHINGTON. Send MODEL OR DRAWINO. We a- ver as to ppastteaablllt free of cg* d we make NO CHARGE Charge; WE OB- TAIN P4?X .'7. We refer, Ore e Pesetasaster.tbe to Weary Order Der.. and to Macias of 16. U. 8. Patent Moe. For circular, advioa germs and references to actual aeras in your own !Rate or Comity, write to C A. SWIM A CO. (opoo.fte Patent Oeloa WaailegteaD.C. GOODS. LATEST STYLES. Remnants to be Cleared Ont. Perfect Pit. and Showy Shapes. H. DUNLOP 1187 The Westet. Talisa. MKN.local ortrarelling. to mall my trearantee.t STUMM:RV `-T." It. Solar) or Commission. paid Special attention given to hesrlseers. *makers serer fall to make good weekly wages Write me at Moe for part 'calms. The hem* i rename. • w, ANTED! A Rood pnehlnsc Salesman here. First gas play guaranteed weekly. ('o. nstest e x s1er7 Quick selling new Fruits ted 4pecTARSIERSan get • good miens job role ,face winter. Write for full terms std per carr. FR KD. R. YOUNG. Nurserymen Teen Ro Newell N. WANTED Any quantity of peas, barley and mita, for which the highest. market price will he paid at BURROWS', The Seedsman NAM. FINE PNINTING PAPERS AT SIGNAL THE KEY TO HEALTH. nfrK. BLOOD B!TrFRS Velnelte apt the degapd avenues of the Dowels. Kidneys mod Liver, awry- btgd grsduelly without weakening the system. an the imparifies and led humors of the M Ike tan e lrsoaom•ebe DrsOdegiesling at . fi rtbrmDieubsela. Re Dragon_ Dryness of tho Okla, vision, Jass=a.mit Man iniat the Hvart. ]l► .mad oral Debility all trim and teem ar: alf‘ gal &IA& s iMAM • SS. rand lit_ lneille ...e 4. ► M .mace .a,' e ~