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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1886-4-30, Page 66 TU.61 BRufsSJ.Ll$ I'US r. Ai•nrr. 30, 1880.. Dircotory of Charohos and boletiost er,viU4 0111:001. -Sabbath Servioes at 11 a.m. and 0:80 p.m, Sunday Soho/ at 3:30 p.m, Rev, atm. Ross, B. A.,, pastor. Knox Cnoscu.--Sabbath Services at 11 rt,m. and 6:30 pan. Sunday Sobool at 2:80 p.m. Eev. 9. Jones, pastor. ST. Joux'e Cnpnen,--Sabbath Servioes at 11 eau, and 7 p.m. Sunday School et 9:30 a.m. Rev. W, T. Olnffo, incumbent. PfaTIIODreT OIIDnon.-,Si. abbatli Services at 10:80 eon. and 6:30 p.m. Sunday School at 2:90 p.m. Rev. W m. Smyth, pastor. RO W1: CATaoLrc Cnnncu.-Sabbath Ser. vies third Sundayin every month at 11 a.m. Rev. P, 7. Shea, priest. AAD ,FELLOW'S Lanes every Thursday oveniug in Graham's block. 11'Ie60NI° LODGE Tuesday at or before full moon in VVanstone's blook. 0;17, W. LODGE meets on 2nd and last Wednesday evenings of each month. Ponssysn'e Loney 2nd and last ilionday evenings of each month in Smale'e hall. L. 0. L, let Monday in every month in Orange Ba11. POST copies--Ofllce Hours from 8 a.m. 7 p.m. MzoIIANI06' InsTITDT1 Reading Roam and Library in Holmes' block, will be open from 6 to 8 o'clock p.m. Wednesdays and above them and help to keep the peas Saturdays. Miss Jessie Ross, Librarian. from the ground. This crop thus The high price of urehard grass seed induces farmers generally to sow it much too thinly. ...The seeds art large, light and bulky. One buAllol: l /ONLY TO LOAN AT 6 PER sent. Straight !naris. Apply to 9, BA]MANN, 80• Grnubrook, of seed per aorels not too mile'', where (liA,E 1 TO ItB+'NT:--'-TIJR S1J13 a good eland. x8 required at once. But a better 'plait is to sow a tuffs• titre, adding clover or timothy seed and relying on the latter to make it good sod, The orchard grass will appear in tufts at first, but as the clover or timothy geed disappears it will spread and occupy the entire our - face. flaxanmt o ured, health and sweet breath se oured, by Shiloh's Catarrh ltomady Prise 26, cents. Nasallnleotor free, Sold by Geo A. Deadman. Oats and peas are sometimes sown together, but only for food, as neither grain will sell for other purposes un- less pure. It is claimed that more fee. can be grown with this mixture than by sowing oats or peas alone. The peas shade the ground so as to check the growth of shall .:weeds, while the stronger stalks of oats push Farm 1•ioteta. No pruning at all is safer practice than the putting a sharp knife into the hands of au ignoramus. It re- quires skill gild knowledge of ysrieties and their peculiarities, whiolifnw pos- sess, to prune apple and' pear trees properly. What would be good treat- ment for one variety would be ruin- oust0 others.. .Vox lame book, side or chest, id Shiloh's Porout Plaster, Price 26 conte.by G' A. Deadman. 1.1ucn time on every Tarin is spent m doing small lobe, and if proper conveniences for these is not furnish- ed, the time wasted is so much clear loss. A good farmer will try to have stock, grain, hay and roots, with wet- er all under one roof. This enables bion to do the work with the least needless labor, and gives more time for necessary improvements. After calves get so theywill eat hay give them what they will eat clean of this and about one quart of oats daily. Without the grain, the hay will only keep them in store condition. and worth little more at a year old than now. All the profit will come from the grain, and the farmer who sees this point will inerease the grain feed to all the animals will bear. BLaapnesenights, made miserable by that terrible. cough, Shiloh's Cure is the remedy for you. Sold by G.A Bondman. .A. few years ago Betting hedge fen- ces was a popular mania in many parts of the west. There is lessof this now, and many old hedges would be gladly gotten rid of 1313 did not involve so much labor. The hedge fence kills out in spots during severe winters, its roots fill the ground for some distance on either side, and it requires too much labor to keep it in good condition. One thousand pounds of dry corn cobs will burn down to four and a half pounds of ashes, and of this two and a half pounds will be pure pot. ash. The fact that cows often like corn cobs may be due to the potash they contain, and which may serve to correct disordered digestion. Corn cobs also contain about two pounds of nitrogen to one thousand of dry cobs, but this is, of course, lost by burning. Cnonr,whoopingg cough and bronchitis lol- Qed Dearmanvedby Shileh'e Cure. Sold by If judiciously used the farm roller may be made of much greater service than merely levelling uneven surfaces. That would be accomplished by roll - Lag as soon as the seed was sown. By waiting until the grain is up an- other abject is accomplished. The ridges that project above the plants are broken into fine tiltb and com- pact about the roots. This is the best jlossible cultivation for oats end barley. Among the new or less known points of insecticides are the follow- ing :-Mix pyrethum with four or five parts of flour. Gas limo water for the cabbage worm is made by ribbing the inside of a cask with a spoonful of gas limo and filling the cask with water. Burning straw over the strawberry plants for the tarnish plant bug has proved quite successful, Thea effectiveness of pyrethrum is increased by the ad- .dition of alcohol. Fluid Lightning does not take a day or an hour to remove Neuralgia, Soadaoho, Tooth- ache, Lumbago Or Rheumatism, but will du it instantly, and without carrying your head in a pouitieo for a day or use greasy 1lnanients Try a 26 cent bottle from John Hargreaves & iia•, druggists, The low price of flex -seed is ens - mg its more general use for stock feeding, Much care is needed in its use, as it is very laxative, and if fed in too large quantities may pause too open a condition of the bowels. In small quantities it is excellent for any stock, Fed to cows or horses with cut straw, it will do no injury, but rather good, as it helps to counteract the too constipating character of the less nutritious feed, grown ie sometimes used for ensilage and is excellent for that purpose. The virtue of Carbolic Acid for healing elealasln 8 and purifying to woll known; but from the many modes of applying it, the pub - 110 is uaaor3olu how 80 usa it. To meet that want. McGregor & Parke's Carbolic Cerate ie nropnred,an may bo nsod with oonddsioo. Do not bo misled, Tako only McGregor 9 Parka's Carbolic Carats). Sold at Sohn Hor- greaves & Cn'e.S rug Store. A good judge for diary stock will select from heifer calves those likely to prove good for milk and butter, T11e art of selecting can scarcely be explained un paper, but it little exper- ience will soon show the novice the qualities desired. The head should not be over large, the neck thin rath- er than thick, and the skin possess- ing a soft feel that can only be judg- ed by an expert. Look to the escut- cheon and milk veins. • '.Phage are as good indications of character as the pedigree. Mrs. Robert Hooper, of Sinloss, county of Bruce in a letter. says: -"I hay° been troubl- ed with Dyspepsia and Livor Complaints for a number 0f years, and am glad to say to the public as well as friends, that McGregor's Speedy 0ure brought mo around, and now I am all right, thanks to Maliregor's Speedy Ocie." Hundreds of like testimonials aro fre- quently received, and aro daily proving that thiais truly a wonderful remedy, curing Slug- gish Liver, Billions Headache and Costiveness where all else fails. Bold at John Hargreaves & Co's Drug Store. Trial bottles given free. The, air, permeates all soils unless filled with stagnant water. If there is motion in the water through the soil it is evidence that some air is present even there. • All soils except- ing pure sand absorb and retain ferti- lizing properties from the atmosphere though heavy and loamy soils do this most. When the country was new it was noticed that fever and ague de- velopbd from malaria was worse on sandy soils, though these were gener- ally dry, and the malaria itself was most apt to originate on ,low, wet lands whore there is au abundance of decaying vegetation. The Lumber Cut of ;Muskoka. The cut of pine timber in 1Iuskoka this winter, says the !Jerald, so far as we have learned, lite been eighty million feet, as follows Feet. Ontario Lumber Co 18,000,000 Georgian Bay Lumber Oa 22,200,000 C. Mickle 10,000,000 Thompson & Baker 7,000,000 T. B. Tait (Draper Mille) 1,500,000 T. B. Tail (Gravenhurst) 1,800,000 J. Tasker 2,320,000 James Dollar 0. Xing Leishman & Perry John Collins John Whiteside Muskoka Lumbar Co 2,000,000 1,200,000 2,000,000 .1.,000,000 1,000,000 10,000,000 Total 80,000,000 Introduction of Railways. The following are the dates of the introduction of railways in the vari- ous countries from 1825 to 1860 : England Sept. 27, 1825 Austria • Sept. 80, 1828 Franco Oet. 1, 1828 United States.,. ,Deo. 28, 1829 Belgium.....................May 3, 1835 Dec. 7,1885 In the year 1837 April 4, 1838 Germany Island of Cuba Russia Italy Sept. 1830 Switzerland„.„....,..... july 15, 1844 Jamaica..................Nov. 21, 1845 Spain Oct. 24, 1848 May, 1800 In the year 1756 In the year 1850 In the year 1851 Jan. 1852 Bast Indies April 18, 1853 July, 1858 In the year 1854 April 80) 1854 Sept. 14, 1854 Jan. 28, 1855 Canada Mexico Peru Sweden Chili Norway Portugal Brazil Victoria Columbia New South Wales - Sept. 25, 1855 Egypt-, ........................Jan., 1850 II/fiddle Australia April 21, 1856 Natal..., ,.,,..,....... Juno 26, 1860 Turkey - Oct. 4, 1800 scriber Will rout lot 20, con, S. (trey,00u,. talo inside acres, about 60 cleared, for ono or more years, HOuso, baro and nil other -eon.. yenlonoosonthe lot. Thom isa quantity 01 580431108 world be loft, by the Waite agree- ing toleave nsiwiier(lagoon k Whorl his time Was out The use of implements would also bo allowed. 4100 100 auras in Howick town- ship, 13 filo from Wroxeter. 80 a0000 Bleared,. There isShoneoonthe lot but no barn. A tenant building a baro wouldbealloowad to stop it put of the rent. -Possession 080 be given on April 1st. it or further particulars apply to THOS. W111TIO, HEALTH IS WEALTH. • Dn. E. 0, 1Yr:ex's Nerve and Brain Tro tt- meet, a guaranteed amino for Hysteria, Diz- ziness, Convulsions, Five, Nervous, Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mont - al Depression, Softening of the Brain result• ins in insanity, leading to misery, decay and death. 8' remeture Old Age,Barren ase, Loss of Power in either eon, Involuntary Lessee aid Spormotorrhoia caused by over-exertion of the Bruin, self•ebosc or over -indulgence. Mach box contains one month's treatment. 81 a box,. or six boxes for 86, sent by mail, pros aid, on receipt of price. \1' IS.G11.1. HANTilli SIX BBOXS:S To euro any ease. With each order received by as for six boxes, accompanied with 85. we will send the purchaser our writtenguarantee to refund the money it the treatment does not efieotacure. Guarantees issued only byJobh Hargreaves S Co„ Brussels. SID WHO . CAN Should Call and Inspect the New Stock of Dress Goods, Lace Cur- tains of every description and col- ors. Embroideries aucl all over not Bushings. Collars, Ties, Tab- lings, Towels, white and gray, Cot- tons in endless variety. All my goods aro new and cheap- er than shop worn goods. Teas, Sugars, Coffees, .Canned Goods, Spices and Everything kept in a First -Class Grocery. My Teas aro the Best & Cheap- est in town, so the People say at The Recl Store, NOTED FOR CHEAP GOODS. J. a. Canadian Pacific 'Railway Time Tablet BARGAINS! BARGAINS 1 In Plows, Scalers, Land. Rollers, Straw Cutters, Horse Powers; Tread Powers, Seed Drills, Seed. ors, Hay Toddors, Hay Rakes, Binders, Reapers, Mowers, Sulky Plows, Farm Scales, the light run- hing Bain Wagon, Carriages, Bug- gies, two second hand Bnggies, Boll Organs, Raymond Sewing Machines. • HORSES• Two Horses, 1 Colt, nine months old, two Colts, 2 years old, ono 3 years olcl, all,hoavy draught • - e Call & Examine Goods before Purchasing elsewhere. Yours, Geo. Love. ON DECK. Geo. Phippen, Painter, - Brussels, is prepared to do All Kinds of PAINTING, GRAINING, GLAZING, KALSOMINING, PAPER HANGING, &c,, &C., at Reasonable Rates. Satisfaction Guaranteed In Every Instance. ORDERS Left at' Geo. 13aeker's Store will be promptly attended to. areas & Collars If you want a good sot of IIoavy or Light Harness, a well fitting Collar, that won't gall the horses shoulders; any gilds and ends to complete, your set of harness, or anything in the harness line go to I. C. RICHARD'S. Trunks and Valises aro always kept in stock and sold at a small margin on cost. If yon want anything in this lino call at T. 0. RICHARD'S. Baby & Doll Oarriages. Just to hand- a nicely assorted stook of Carriages that have only to be seen to ) o. •.ailniired. Call and get our prices before purchas- ing elsewhere•. Repairing promptly attended to. Shop in Graham's block, oppos- ite Queen's Hotel, Brussels. 1. O. RICHARDS. .ere we are ham, Thanking the public for their pat- ronage for the past 14 years•I de- sire to state that I am prepared to attend to all kinds of House, Sign and Ornamental Painting in a workmanlike manner. Paper Hanging and Kalsorrmining done in a manner that gives Sat- isfaction every time. GRAINING A SPECIALTY. Now that the house clealfitig season will soon be here send your orders along early so that they can be attended to in good time, r i' 0 fleddlc1, The Old Reliable. NEW SPRING- GOODS 16[ AT TII 11 t r,U; li9 ��9 Teeswater Branch.' Milos Going west. Afall, l xprt o Toronto.. Del/7.20a.m, 0 Orangeville .. 0.60 4 Orangevilio 30310.06 713 Amaranth 10.15 ' 10 Waldemar, ... 10.24 : 1213 Luther ..• .. , . 10,81 2813 Arthur ., ... 11.08 " 3013 Kenilworth.... 11.80 " 44 384 MTes. Pag12.PonneT , . 11,5815p,m, a.m, 3...... 47 HAnnxsTo's.... 12.28 " 561 Pordwioh ,. 12.63 " GO Gerrie ,. , .. 1.08 ". 6271 Wroxeter .. ,15 69 Wingham Road 1.88 „ Teeswater. , Arr 1.55 .m. 6,40p.m. 7.05 7.22 " 7.32 " 7.88 7.44 8.10 8.29 8.46 9.01 9.10 9,31 0.40 9:46 10.03 10.16 tt el 44 44 " 14 t, , Milos ' Going Blurt; Express. Moll 0 5 14 .171 2613 30 892 Goa 6113 64 661 170 7 Teeswater Dep Wingham Road Wroxoter .• Gorrie , , .. l'ordwich .. Harriston .... Pages 3., . •.. Mt, i'orest, ... Kenilworth .. Arthur ..... . Luther . .. Waldemar. Amaranth •t• Orangeville Jot Orangeville . Toronto,, Arr, 6,15 mon. 5,28 ' 5.47 " 5.63 „ 6.02 6.26 6.35 8.51 7.09 7.26 7.58 7.58 7.58 8.04 8.12 8.85 .1 10,4 .m. lr /1 „ „ " 2.15 p.m, 2.80 2.49 " 2.50 „ 3.06 " 3.29 ,r 3.40 " 3.57 " 4.19 " 4.89 5.10 " 6.17 " 5.24 5.86 " 6.55 " .8 .m Refs eshmeni and Dining Rooms -AT- TORONTO JIINET141,1, OMAN GMCA K Agit CAr1LE'r'oNJl1NsTeO11, S/t•.710•C=1: io11T .P sztmwl Q3.T THROUGH TRAINS -nf10W0150- --TORONTO AND MONTREAL. T. PLETCHER, 'ru:s1i9' A.G1;8'r, iiilllssb:i.s, 4/s -000000- 4 al�d� Having just received the Largest and Best Selected Stock of Tweeds ever shown in Brussels, we are now prepared to Sell AT i7"1:2/2- 110W ID R.IC IS. Our Stock is composed of Scotch & Canadian Tweeds Velvet finished Suitings, French 'Worsteds, forges. Also an Im- mense Stock of • firms& ain`t Checked Pauti cgs Always on :Eland. Our Stock of Furnishings, such as Ties, Linen' Celluloid Collars, Linen & Celluloid Cliffs, Linen and Silk Handker- chiefs, Pat. Napa Buck Gloves, Kid Gloves, Woolen and Cotton Hose, Braces, Cuff Buttons, Collar Buttons, Breast Pins, Armlets and Gar- ters, &c., always on hand and at Low Prices. • We intend making the Hat and Cap trade a Specialty this Season, as we have a Large Stock of All Shapes and Latest Styles. , Our stock being Large we intend running thean off at Prices to Suitt the Tunes. , We Lead & Others Follow, -000000- . r Our Tailoring epartment Is too well known to need' any special mention. We guarantee Satis- faction every timers. .9 maale's Old Stand,