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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1885-10-2, Page 6THE BRUSSELS BOST OCT. 2, 18855. Dwootary Churches and Saaiotiasl Mnettlil1 Carom—Sabbath Services at t 11 a.m. and 11.30 pan. Sunday School t 9:30 pan. Rev, Jnu, Ross, 13, A., pastor, lixvT Cortioltr-S1blmla Service at aServices t 11 11 flan, and 11;30 p.m, Y 0 pan. Rev, 8. Jones, pastor. ST. JOIN'S Chcneu.—Sabbath Services at 11 a.m. and 7 p.n1. Sunday School at 0130 a.m. 11ev. 1V. T. Cht1le, incumbent. Narnonts'r enoacn.—SabbathServices at 10'93() a.m. and 6:90 p.m. Sunday School at 2:89 p.m, Pastor Roy. Wm, Smyth. 13051&8 CATROLI0 Cameo-I.—Sabbath 9or- vioe third Sunday in every month at 11 a.m. Bev. P. a. Shea, priest. Tliursde 001, FELLOW'S LOn0E overt' 1 evening in Graham's block. MAsoYICLODOE Tuesday at or beforefull amnia Holmes' bleak. A, 0. 1'. W. Zonas meets on 2nd and last Wednesday evenings each month. Troansmnu'aLODGE 2nd And Inst Monday eveningo of eaah month in Smalo'A hall. L. O. L. 1st Monday in every month in Orange Hall. POST OrrigE.—Dffi00 Hours from R a. In. to7p.m. MEC isSirs' 1\,TITrTE Mending 11otnn turd Library in Holmes' block, will be open from 11 to 0 o'clock p.m. Wednesdays and Saturdays. Miss Jessie Ross, Librarian. Fashion Notes, The shelf•lil(e bustle is no longer in fashion. Turbans are the correct hats for windy days. Cnoro. whooping cough and branehitia are, mcdi,tcly reltovodb,- Shiloh's Cure. Sold by G. A. Deadman. Children's frocks aro made with waists again. The tailor-made suit is the popular size. fall frock. 1 Old-fashioned black face scarfs are L TriAT hacking a king:C000 gun •n e 00 it. quickly urcd now' worked °Ver With gold thread, y by bright hued sills or luminous beads, A. Dandmn°' and arranged as plastrons on the Black toilets are trimmed with fronts of bodices and to form a drap- lead beareads. er on the left side of the skirt. tiet nto have another velvet and A. brawn straw bonnet with flaring velveteen season, brim is faced with ercallh-coloured vel• 611113. A. De and Consumption Curo Is �nldbr G. Danlman on a gun=antav, It vet. Bows of brown velvet and satin cures cousumpt1O0. and Cream and yellow flowers, with Large rosary beads are used in autumnal foliage. confined by a long dress ornamentation. gilt pin, form the trimming. Braid ieagain in fashion, but for Black land waists over black silk cloth dresses only. WILL von Buffer with Dyspeptic. and Liiver Complto cu eeyoo. Sold by G.int? Shileh's rA 'Vitalizer nand Beaded crowns are placed over those of satin velvet. Children will wear a great deal of navy bine combined with scarlet. 6LEEPLEae nights, made miserable by that terrible cough, 8hiloh8 Cure is the remedy for you. 9o1d by G. 9. Bondman, Gros grain and faille franchise have superseded satin and brocade. Beads and pins of dead gold have 1n close surtout shape, and long superseded the brilliant t" war the entire dress It _ n 5uCatar . Dipt for Catarrh. DipthOria �'— Sold by G. A, beaadmv J ak-ttu 1., (,t.e P,. Capes, fiohue, and short menthe will all be worn for early fall wraps, Tibet cloth, with boulce borders, appear among light wools for fall wear. f)&T&pent cured, 11001113 and sweet breath se- cured, by Shilob'e Catarrh Remedy. Prion 50 cents. Nasal injector free. Sold b3' Goo. A. Deadman. Even little girls' dresses are mado with plain skirts bordered, not flounc- ed. Large flat buttons are the style for street jackets, newmarkets and long ulsters. 6 n1Lon'0 Vitalizer is what you need for Con• etilration, lose of appetite, dizziness, and all symptoms of Dyspepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents Per bottle. Sold by G. A, bondman. Braid of medium width, edged with pom-pone, is used for trimming wool- en costumes. Small bonnets, with strings, are w0r11 by matrons, but not by young girls, on the other side. No lady whodelights in flowers and likes to see them do well and bloom abundant$, should be without Ilanington's rood for Flowers. Ordinary packages No—Sufficient for e0 plants for one Wean Scarlet and dark navy blue are in- troduced in combination costumes and carriage jackets. Woolen fabrics, with embroidered or gold woven borders, aro made up in visiting costumes. Another season of lace is.predicted well-fed as 10 Bloat nonetatsnt with and indicated by the first imports- profit. Sheep will get more benefit lions of dresses, hats, and bonnets, from pasture in orchards Mau will New Jersey jackets have seams just pigs, and will deposit their droppings like any other jacket or hasquo, and more evenly, tho waistcoat is the almost invariable it often happens that the Fall frosts feature in the latest importations and are light, and do no harm oven to fod and pructttetions of these prtieiett der of cone, which has boon pretty Rev, J. (1. Penis. Dutton, matinee ;—^lpr well advanced towards ripening.'Rho some years rev wife has 00011 troubled with 8\Veot308s Of ea) in etailte where las' primes, r04,001 nue had tread any titins attar an- side and eal'8 have formed is sufficient o eir ill ad nremied with but rerun or no of. rotontioil n ainst frost. while Poon feat till advlee,l to glue MoOrogor'8 6y end} g Ciro a trial. Blues taking the arst bottle i a- g have noticed a dooldoa 114r'''°"1"ab. and nap fodder corn not yet in tassels ie neu- trals °Di fldence reoommeud it to be Quo of,, if not the beat medicine extant for Byepeosin , ly ruined by the sumo temperature. This invaluable medicine for Liver Complaint, September and October aro months jnetssstieu, Kidney Complaint, is purely you. stable. lSold at s argreavea & 001 Bong when Wee are more troublesome to Shorses at work than any others is the The detached dog collar of velvet year. A fly net to protect horase from to bo worn with any dross is made these attacks will soon repay its nest, vory high this fall, and trimmed with Better diminieb the grain ration One handsome Irish crochet or old Fier- half than dispense with the not. A entine cut work falling over it at the horse will soon fret off more flesh top. than the best reading eau put on. Simulated drapery upon overskirts if a farmer has too little stable is frequently attained by cutting the nure thoroughly fortilizo hie lower edge irregularly. This manner land io cropsto, ns ie the tact with moat manner of arrangement when clever- farmers, it behooves him to make a ly done gives the exact effect of drag- little manure go as flu' as possible in aiding the next crop and promoting Delimit° Womeu,pale-faced slekly children, the aged Bed tiepin alike, aro benefltod ly fortuity. This object, we aro satisfied, tee etr°ngtloningg and brood-makin¢Power of is best attained byto t dressiu win - stimulates \Veno and irons e- 1' g cEiunilutegth0 olrettlat3on, improves the ap- tel' grain, which 18 to be seeded with petite, and removes all impurities front the blood, itis the best medicine you eau talc° to clover in the spring• Sire you lasting strength. See that you gut After a wet time farmers 1110 llSllal- tlautngton's,'tue original and sauuin°. I too much in haste to get crops Bended net work brims aro worn60wn Two or three days' difference with velvet crowns at well as with in date of seeding does not commonly beaded ones. 'They are not so wide make half as groat variation 113 rho ae those worn during the summer, cru) as well follow between good and and are edged with cut bends of large pool preparations of the soil. In sowing wheat it is well to work the soil thoroughly, but not so res to make a deep seed bed. Whore drains are laid iu fields Ila are to be kept in grass the tilos should bo placed deeper than is necessary whore only annual crops are grown. Tho grass roots growing continuously follow the water to tho tiles and soon choke thohl, but with good fall and outlet, drains partly filled with grass roots will wash themselves clear after one or two years plowing the field. 2,Iuch of the barley crop this year is badly stained, and sumo is sprout- ed so as to be utterly unsalable for malting purposes. Such barley need not, however, be lost. It nlalfes, when ground, the best food for stock when growth rather than fattening is required. Some good farmers every year grow a small patch of bar- ley to give their hogs a start before corn feeding begins. The experience of thousands of fan niers last year emphasizes the im- portance of digging potatoes as soon as fully ripe. Many potatoes were then frozen by the cold snap which came early in Ootobor. This was by no means the extent of the loss, Some frost-bitten potatoes were put in heaps with the sound ones and caused serious losses by rotting, aside from tho expanse of the re -assorting which this delay made necessary, It is strange that sweet Dorn is not more generally planted for fall feed The stalks are so rich and sweet that they will be eaten Olean by cattle, Where the coarser portions of stalks of other corn will be left. Sweet corn seed is rattier difficult to save and is usually scarce and dear at planting time. Let every farmer provide a supply now, so that he can put in a piece of fodder corn next spring with- out being obliged to pay exorbitant prices for seed. Too many farmers get less good than they might from their pear or- chards, because they allow the fruit to ripen on the trees as they would apples. Few pears will be at their best if treated thus. Plucked when fully grown, and kept b1 a warm or cool room ae their ripening is desired to bo hastened or retarded, the color and flavor of the fruit will be much bettor than it would if allowed to re- main au the tree. Some of the very best sorts rot at the core if left on the tree until the fruit bogies to turn. Every year farmers strain them- selves to get the last aero possible in crops, and in doing so put in more than they can prepare in the best or- der. This extra seeding never pays. Why not omit it, say with regard to winter wheat, and nee the intervening time between now and spring in und- erdraining and manuring. Then it can bo sown with spring grain with reasonable certainty of greater profit than from the wheat crop, and then followed, if desired, by sowing wheat a year hence with bettor prospect of profit than now. From May 1st to September 14th fifty cases of infraction of the Scott Act were tried in Renfrew county.- Out of that number forty-one convic- tions worn secured, and fines to the amount of $1,960 collected. The total value of goods imported int» the Dominion in August, was $8,754,646, the duty collected, ex- clusive of British Columbia, being $1,658,562, The exports for the same month amounted to $8,565,072& show the lace draped in a variety of fancy waye, and jet applique work serves to fasten do vn the plaits. Belts are in favour, nod very showy ones are iu solid tinsel and metal work. Comfortable and novel gossamers, provided for the coming wet season, aro made of doe -coloured mohair, made petfectly water.repellant. These have long capes and aro cut McGregor it Parke's Carbolic Comte to in. valuable for Wounds, Soros, Solt Rheum, tints, Burne. Scalds and Fosters as n healing and purifying dressing. Do not be imposed on with other unclean preparations ,recwmm ended to be its good. Can on 1,y McGregor & Parke'0 Carbolic Cerate. Sold by J,Hargroaves & Go. Madras stripped silk is used for panels, vests, and cuffs for costumes or dark silk or of fine wool. \Val,teoat8, which aro a feature in fall frocks, are narrow and frequent- ly in a point at the waist line. Tho dlsoevery of 00 instantaneous 11ro0000 lolwed taking photographs mediae' World 117 1 quickly and they quick) 101- Instantaneous as Neuralgia, 100thei01ll10 likaches ntaihm Ligght This and is sold remedy 00 omits oar bottler by J. lialgrCav08 & Co. Druggists. Drees bodices, basques, jackets, and round waists all have waistcoats more frequently than any other fin- ish. Some of the handsomest fancy wool- en cloth show vory dark green inter- woven with two shades of blue, dos• Bribing a small chock on dark green ground. Jerseys are fastened with tiny metal agraffes instead of buttons. The newest shapes are cut short over the hips, pointed in front, and with square postilion basques behind. Those who grow sorghum should allow the seed to partly ripen before cutting the crop. The yield of sweet isnot less, and sorghum seed is worth as much per bushel for feeding its corn, and is an important part of the product. It is a good plan to cut the ragweed in grain stubble, rake it off and burn it in some place off the field, so as not to injure grass or clover seeding. In this way future seeding with this weed may be prevented, and at trifling ex- pense. White the English wheat crop is, per acre, nearly an average, that of Spring grains, oats and barley is very deficient. As this is also true of much of continental Europe, we are likely to hive a demand for export for out' surplus of these grains. There is not muob danger that anyone will go out mthe ram to pick apples, but even the moisture of dews should not bo ou the fruit when hand- led. There is a delicate bloom over the akin of the apple, and to preserve this is vory important in preventing the fruit from decay. It is a mistake to give salt to stock at irregular intervals. Eating too much is injurious, and unless 00\Ve have a regular supply the milk will be very difficult to make into good butter. As good a pian as any in salting stock is to keep some shelter. ed from rains where they eau got to it whenever they \Melt. During the summer much rubbish accumulates in open flitches, and this should bo removed before fall rains fill them with water. With grass or weode on the aides and bottom of the ditch every particle of sediment brought from higher ground is retain- ed. The open drain thus soon fills up and becomes useless. Some portion of the oat rakinge may profitably be thrown into the pig- pen. The rooting over of this straw in search of the grain, will soot mix it with the manure pile, and the pigs with this exercise and grain will be put in juet such thrifty condition as they should be before heavy grain feeding, for fattening begins. A flock of sheep will pick up wind- falls in apple orchards even more actively than a drove of. hogs. The pig is naturally a lazy animal, or he is,if bred as he ebould be and kept BANKING. \/[oiNTUSI1 dt iMo'1'AGGART, .. BANKERS BRUSSELS 'IIANSACT A (il'1NERAI, BAN8IN0 :BUSINIESS. l7Nptoeef handdlaoount°d, Iu toresttllowodan deposits repaynble;(QD demand, Promptattentionglvent000llootloue. -0 LEGAL AND CONVEYANCING. ("y IFFAIII) 1;LLI0 T, L A. W o,o COlae, Grunt's JJluak, brussels. Stoney to loon, .11 L+'. \VADE,13AliltISTLR, est:.• UIDceforinerly 000uplud 0y A, J. Mc Coll,Esq.,lu Leckie%Block, Money to load. X T 13. DICKSON, V • (late with (farrow 4Proudfoot,(3odo- riott) Solicitor, Conveyancer, &c, Office fe Grant's Block, Brussels, Money to Loan. ALEX. 1IUN 1'Lli, CLERK Ob' .L the Fourth Division Court Co.11uron, Coal, °pine° r ,Notary Yub1lo,L tud,Lonu and 1000rance Aneut,Fuuds iuyested and to Loan Uolleetlons made. Office, Grahaufa Block Brussel MEDICAL CARDS. A. \feN:lUC11ITON, M. D, C. CO a 111.4 L, 11,11, 1'., Edinburgh . PhyeloIo o, Surgeon and Ae aaonoor, 011100 In Lock10'a blocs, over Dwadmau'n drug store, • A. 11UTOHINSON, AI. 1). r . rt. 1', P. Edinburgh. '•Hasrutnevod 10 lis residence ou Hill Street the house formerlyoccupiod by Dr, Graham, and will Witmer() at Meet, Liu sltll retains til office at Borg rear.' it rug Stora, DENTAL. (=t_ L. 13ALL, L3). F., IiON Ult • (iradoo(,, cud Member of the 11070 College of Dun 101 Burgoo•ms,. Toronto, 0Blee In Bfru thorn Block, \'(sits 1l ingh= 01100 on \Vuthlo0day. Bost possible pains talion in all operations. Hours 8 a.m. to 5 pan. BUSINESS CARDS. %)FINS O'CONNOR, TEACHER .i of Thorough Buse, 1.wa1, and Imam. mental Music on flim, organ and Guitar. ltefnrence—L,Ldies of Loretto, Guy Ipb, Residence—No.2, (south),Brlok Terrace, 11.31n. Brussels, init. W.11. McOliskOKEN, Issaes ltarrtago License0. muse at lila gran, ory,Tarubetry street, 1143 TORN NOTT, VETERINARY C Surgeon ,Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College 'Toronto. Itasidence, th°hone° lately occuplodby Airs .3. L'arkor Slain street .130u - sale. �McNA.IR,ISSUEIR OF MAB- . rlogo Licenses, by aupoiutment of tileutenant-Governor ,O o zinnias oiler , to„Q 13 ,Cm}1oyaneerand .1.gortF1=o lnouranee Co U dice at tltetraubrook Post°fnoo MILLINERY tC HAIR DRESS - ins done by 'Mrs. Turnbull, Resi- dence—North of school lieu se, 00r)mr of tf0• ohaule street, Brusaols. CAaD—We would 1)0001mend 1Tre, 13, Turnbull to the citizens of Brussels as a good straw milliner, \Vhi1a in l,akodold oho gave good sattslaatiou 10 110r customers in making over and dying felt and straw hats. 18. Graham & Sou, 13.411 ROBT. CUNNINGHAM, Ins gran Ce Agent, GUELPri, ONTABIo t�M. O'CONNOR, EIRE, LIFE, • Accident auil Loan I00arann0 Agent for soma of the bout and most reliable Companies in the Dominion, Office, brick terrace, Turu- be0ry St., near the 6tntlou, ;1 months, HOUSE & LOT FOB SALE, ON Qu000 Strout. Thor° is also a 01101, on the Lotthat could be utilized far a stable. WItI be sold on reasonable terms. Apply to— A. BAWTTNHI\IER BusINESS COLLEGE Lv 10011E0TIox 73011 WOODSTOCK COLLEGE, WOO.DSTOOK, ONT. The Collage has boon thoroughly reorgan. ized staff aodT1Lhted sinlitu1,011towfo n wmosthaavle 130011 Priucipalsof si311)01 and ou0000aful institutions). Course most thorough and 01) 0.01.0nr11. l!'eoa vary moderato, For full information ndtlross— N, WOLVERTON B.A. Principal, Woodstock College, Nothinff Like Leather, —0 IF YOU WANT Pirst-C1ase Vallee in ORDERED BOOTS and SHOES Go to JNO. SHANDY PRACTICAL BOOT-MAXER, BRUSSELS. Sign of the Reil Boot. tc� E80 NOW IN i1'1'OC1'. The Famous ROYAL PARLOR COAL, The Famous ltYA1J 1\-lTl-1 OVEN, The UNIVERSAL COAL 5TOV17, Cook Stoves, Parlor Stoves, Box Stoves. Stove Stands, Stove Piping. TI1\ WARE. STOVE COAL At Coal House or dili-i cro(1 11 re- quired.. Call o1' soul your or(1('1•'. B. GERRJ-t BRUSSELS LIME WORKS STILL AHEAD. TOWN C, g.40N. The eubacriberstako this opportunity of re- turning thanks post il atronlage , and lbe g t state that having made several improvements in theirklbl outlined° of burning, they are 11ou, in a butter position than over bay/ oto suPp13' the Public with First-class Lime. This being tho 010v01141.1 000001101 our bnsi- noes dealings in nrussola,nnd having given un- qualified aotlsfaotion so far, the public eau re- ly onrooeiving good treatment and n &rat-ol ass article front us, First -atria Limo at 1.1 cents ratho kiln and 15 conte delivered. We also burn a No.1 limo for plastering at the same price. Remember 1130 spot—Brussels Limo Werke. 42 TOWN & SON. CRANBROOK LIME WORK. The subscriber wishes to notify the PUBLIC that he will have Ids LIME KILN in Complete Running Order by the 1st of MAI', and. will be able to furnishAny Quantity of First -chess Limo at any time during the Sea- son. Price at Kiln --14 cents pop Bushel. Vo Gramm; CRANBROOK, P. 0. BABY CARRIAGES, BABY CARRIAGES. JUST II 1\T JD a Choice Stock of Baby Carriages that Cannot fail to suit 1110 wants of the Public. Cali and see them. LARGE STOCK 01' HARNESS1 ON HAND. Give ine Cb Call. .Ll. DEXXTS.