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The Blyth Standard, 1893-10-05, Page 24Wwww• AL. tieing of inferior seed, this premise in the aid eau only moult in failure. ClOW. Beomelitil Fuller* Oh. a, of the tree We ehould elk, says James B. Stephens, In SO elaborate artiole u the Practical Fanner, what qualities do • inensgem ent of cattle, ikpartmentolAgrieulture A C., In relation to Foods for Arr, referring to tables given not to be reproduced here, eaya the ittege amount of protein tepee by tee deem pert of the milk and albumen, it la certain thet a very con noble amount of protein should enter 1 Ito the oomposition f Ad. The earbohydrates supply nit el out of which the milkaugarhe fats are elation, though of e' 000 RIM, be made tram the prottre- mere The protein and fat of the fern are the more expensive peeeiam, ind for that reeeon ehould boe-eareful not. to feel them in more WNW allowenee than is actuelly needed. Among grain foode for the dairy the fol. lowing are worthy of special Inc:Mien : Corn.–Indian cam is a most valuable food and one of the °homiest used in the rlairy, and the quality of milk and butter, nese end who are never beatified unless they proem/el from It usually above question. have it chance to go to lame circus or some other wales" leathering, where both money and time ere spent, and no compen- sating advantsgen realized, Some of these men farm no more, end others of them ere scarcely, making a living. On the other hind, I see farmers attentive to their work, diligent:and entliusiestio in their own call. ing, always :v:gilant and economical, Who are making a gond living and Marin up money besides, and who doubtlees hove before them a prosperous and peaceful fut. are. I am aoquainted with a farmer who about eight years ago bought a farm. He had nothing to begin with but energy, eharacter Rea ability, and to•day he is al. moat out of debt. Hie tnoney is all made from hie farm products, and lie even selle corn, oata and hay crepe whieh take off much plant•food, but thie planafood is elways returned by copious manuring, Ile follows general farming, but ft is extensive firming. He doe" no more than he can do well. And right here is where so many fermare make a mistake. They undertake entirely too much. A good old farmer once wrote that he never plowed more ground than what he could completely oover with manure That is a good plan. I ce.n imagine thet that farmer was enoceseful. By plowing no more than what can be completely covered with manure, one is not likely to plow more than what can be thoroughly tilled. An able wrieer on agriculture wrote some time ago that prodigy seed, prodigy fertilieing end prodigy tillage will bring prodigy re• sults. Now, it seems to me that my farm. er who haa reasonehly good land can &tette astoniehingly good results by using the best seed, by copious fertilieing end by thorongh tillage. All thst is needed is enterprise, constant planning and push. The trouble with a great many farmers is, they are satisfied too soon. When thy rsise a crop that is slightly above the aver. age, or somewhat better than that of their neighbours, they think they are doing well enough. This should not be. They should strive each year to surpass the work of the year before. They ehould set before thew selves a high ideal and then etrive to the ettermont to attain it. I spurn the desire of maintaining fertility. That deeire should find no lodgment in any, progressive farmer's mind. Iiiereasing the fertility should be „woo le annually shipped to the Old tec World. For the fertility it contains if for no other reaton, it should all be fed in thin Fast horaes are cerefully fed. Null country and dairy products inetead shipped flanks, with a record of 2,04, eats hay froin Abroad. Montana at $48 a ton. Ormonde, the $150, Bran Is one of the moat valuable feeds in 000 English thorough bred, juin imported, the dairy. From its loose, husky nature still eats hay from England; as hie doctor and cooling effect on the evatem, it can be Melo a sudden change to American hay Oen in *Irma nnY OtInntItYr with little might hurt him. This may seem needless danger of overfeeding. It le the eafest care, but the owners of $150,000 horses toml in the dairy barn, and ehould always don't wish to run any rides with their pro- be in *tore to mix with corn meal or the pert y. pro grains, cotton -seed mord or oil meal. – – – – W thet wheat rapidly depletes the ernetterii FOOM A TRAIL re fertility, and the chemist has fed at the larger.part of the fertility -- - ILA ereineitve Engineer Relides Ms Varied that goes into the wneat grain is stored near the °motile of the grain in what lie- Experience. theme men who are eueousful farmer" pos. sees thed have made them so! Lelia inquire Otto the causes that hem contributed to their /moues Ate they not men of greet energy, wide•awake, and alert, men who always keep abreast of the time.? Are they not men of an unflinching deternilni item, who trample upon difficulties, and who ever press onward and upward ? Are they tiot frugal and Bober? Do they net read and think 1 Do they not love their sialling 1 I am as firm ea a rook in my °pin. ion that any termer who postmen the fore. qualittea will lie suceessful, and 1 also firmly believe that all thou good men who write so ably for the P. F. pewee theme qualities in an eminent degree. I look back over ten yeere of observation. 1 see men engaged in farming who are inter. tested and enthusiaatio in alined everything except their ow» work, who are attentive In almost everything except their own bull, Corn meal ia a eery eoneent Wed food and Wks too closely in the stomeeh, and should be extended with something opener, like bran, if pottible. Corn does not furnish mech protein. Oats are probably the best single food on the list, and ere just a. valuable in the cow stable at in the home barn. At thle station we have found oats to have the value of about 10 per cent. in new of an equal weight of bran for producing milk and but- ter fat. tate contein much 'eh and a lerger proportion of portein than corn, end should terve & prominent place in the feetk.hin of our dairy farms whenever the cost 11 not too high. Barley Is a very common food for cows in the Old World. end is used to considerable evient on the Paciflo coast. It Mould be crushed by rolling rather then grinding. Wheat is sometimee so low in comparison with other grains thet it ean he fed very profitably. Frequently on the Pacific coast It is the cheapest dairy food in the market. Pea –Peas contein a very large amount of protein, and they are en exeellent food for dairy oows. Being very rich in protein, but few pounds should be used in a ration. Cotton eeed.–The progress of Southern live stook. interests depend largely upon an intelligent use of cotton seed, cottonseed meal end cottonseed hulls. Cotton seed hailed le used at the South witlt good re- sults, if fed in reasonable quantity. Cot. tomseed meal is very rich and beavy, and should be fed with care ; it should be Px. tended by some other food like bran and mixed wiih roughage. Cotton seed end oottmeseed meel hare at deleterious effect Mt butter, if fed in large quantities, but with care they cut be fed at eny season of the year with profit. Cottonued Meal 1111011fd be used more generally at the Norte, ito high fertilizing value after pate. I g Oneugh the animal often being worth e first coot. 11 meal or nil cake, –Thie by.product the linsemboil factories is a most valu• ble food in the dairy barn, though it ehould he used in limited quantitim It le especially useful for ealves, and a couple of pound" a day may be fed to d dry cows with profit It le very rich in fertilizing element" Oil meal to the value of $8.• A TEEMING SITUATION, -- It was the second mete of one of the greet like propellers that "poke as they were pearling Poime Aux Barques, end his words were to this effect : " Thst Is a queer cow over there, and don't you forget it." The interlocutor, a malinger, promised that he would not forget it, providing the Miler man would tell him why the coast Was queer. " Well," said the sailor man, but with. out hitching his trousers or shifting Isis quid, or performing any of the nautioal gymnutios attributed to hie kind in the 'dory books, " It wasn't exactly queer, perhaps, but it 11 a coast thet 1 shall re- member the longest day I live. " It wal about six years ago that I was sailing on lumber sehooner, and just when we were about where we are now the cap. tam diecovered that our yewl was adrift. We had been towing it and tome how the painter had parted or slipped, aud there the best was, nearly a mile sway, drifting %shore se fast as the water could oarry it. of view, an egg -like appearance, expeutling There was not a soul to be leen, and if ' in the middle and towards the bock, l'rof. there had been, it would not have been an easy matter to get him to bring tie our yewl, and the captain did not know what to do. I- se I saw the old man was • goal dead worked up over it, I volunteeted 'trim sphere and bring the yeerl, if he would run in u °lose as he could and anchor until I came eboard, "The captain sooepted my proposal very gladly, and as the water wits warm I thought I would have a flut rate 'win', little thinking what ahe in store for me. So I stri d and lowered myself into the water. or • quarter of an hour it was mere fun, but I Noon found I had bit off ' as they hOve in titan. At the departmental more than I could °haw. The shore wm enquiry mentioned shove Sir Andrew Clark further off than I bed floured, and I could stated that when the Yee of drunkenness see a few ominoue looking olouds, which has become a habit in men it is deltic:tat of indicated that the wind wes rising, which cure, but that in women it is all hut imp". might make it hard for me to get back tc • sible. " When Mien early in hand cures the schooner efter I got the hut. I kept . are obtained in both sexes ; but, even then on, however, getting more and more ex• the proportion in women ia painfully small." Muted every moment. I tried every way Dr. Street, licensee of retreat at West. I knew to rest my tired lege and ems.. gate, being asked if it was his experience First I turned on my 'sok and ewam in that 1 woman, hiving once become addicted that position for a while. Then 1 tried to drink, Mu s, greater difficulty in throw. swimming on my side ; then 'dog faahion, ing off the craving for attendants than a and then floating. But all the time I wee I man has, replied : "I should say, general - getting more and more worn out. I tried 1 ly, yes to that, because I think tint, per. to signal the schooner, but my voice wee !haps, the man has more likelihood of so weak I could not mike them hear and having an occupation to keep his they did not underatand, as I efterwerds !thoughts from the one subject than a learned, my frantic motions. Besides they • woman ham." Here, then, io a second onuld not have helped Me if they had, be difficulty ftgainet which woman has to cause they had no boat. aontend ; ehe is thrown more upon herself " I had imam about a mile and was still a for control, while constitutionally she isnot mile from the shore. Mechanically I kept so well equipped as man is for resistance. up my motions ae well as 1 could, but I Add to thie the fact of hereditary drunken. knew I was doomed. me water began to nese, and a third difficulty is seen es "big in my ears and my thought. went back Against the weaker sex. Prof. Clifford over my past Was I have heard drowning Albutt, in answer to a question, pointed out men's alwaya do. I thought of my pour SS " a curium thing" thst (leukemias is wife and oluldren, and wondered how they generally hereditary as drunkenneu, while would get the news. I wondered whether with mean to kleptomania a father might my body would be found and get Christian be a dipsomaniac and a child might be a burial or be carried out into the lake end kleptomaniac ; "but drunkenness generally find a last resting place there. It did not oomes in the same form and mandestatione worry me much on my own acesount–I had it appears not merely u general tendency ceased to °are for myeelf,but I hoped some. to insanity, but as a special form of it. I how, for the sake of my family, that I have been very muoh struck in practice by should be washed ashore and that somebody the extraordinary drink ingatreek which would have my body carried home. rapeeu. runs through certain families, snd this in lated also as to the captain', getting his many ea.ses where the members have not boat, and felt quite mirry when I thought hod very much aseociation with each other. he might never see it again. It memo to me to be a very strong Weil. " I don't know how long it took me to Cary tendency to a special craving." In think of all this. Probably it wao not view of these facts, it is clear that wetnan, more than a minute, but it seemed to be in • greater degree than man, has in this ages and all the time I was feebly moving matter of inebriety a olaim upon special and my arms and feet end just keeping my head kindly attention on the part of both Legie• above water. Meanwhile I had got perhaps lame end society. Under the triple burden within half a mile of the shore. I mute up of orgenization, domeeticity end heredity, my niind–or rather it one& then up–that the poet's plea goes far in her favor : this was just as good a place to be drowned " Whet'. done ye easily me), compute ; ye in as eny other, and abandoning motion I know not what's reeisted." sank to thebottom. It did not take as long as I expeoted it Preece and Rawls. would to reach the bottom. In Imit, I If it be true that Franoe has agreed to struck it with both hands and feet about • voon u had fairly mopped moving. lease to Ruing& the port of N'illefranche as a naval station, heve least solid ground kept my feet on it and atraightening up for Winning that the two powera named found that the water came about up to my will comperati in the event of • European waist. I suppoee 1 ought to hive fallen on my knees in thankfulneu, but inland of itvae Hitherto no conclueive evidence of that I seeded ashore the meddest man on '"" the come !got the ye* end mulled it back to the subooner tha e waitinf at NAPOLEON liONAPAWIll DRINIGIENNEDI IN WON'S le a life Webb le Impossible to Cure The Senses, TellY. Ile Tells how he Loot Wilerise–An Menet The terrible consequences of drunkenness I M." linItithit' b0 "Ph Would Ha" among women, es elioited by the " Told Different Tale. partmental Committee on the Treatment The tollowieg ie an extract from the of luebriatel," is well accounted for by I hitherto unpublished diary of the secretary some of the facts recently laid before the of the Engish admiral who conveyed Napo. public by l'rof. Ludwig !Mohnen He bon lionryarte lo St. Helen It is printed showe, firet, that when the relative and the October ((votary, not the poeitive weight of the female Napoleon mid many of his officers desert- hrain M coneelered, it is not less but eil previous to the battle of Waterloo ; mid elightly greater than that of a man for--- epeakieg of the French nation he said taking into cousideration her steelier that the lower orders of the people were the bodily eize–she peuemeee " prohably even most sincere, the most flrm,and at the same more brain than men." But he next pro. time the beet dispositioned in the world ; ceeds to etate that the development of the but in the proportion its you room the class female brain is loss ay regards the front their ohereetere became the worie and . portion and greater as regard" the top or abets the hourgenie they were too fickleand crown portion. If one leeks at a woman'a ill° volatile to be at ell depended on. They 'skull from above, its outline approximates had ono principle for to -day and another to that of two cones with hitt:Mei end. for todnorroev, according to tne circum. tioined together at their bum whereas a etatioes of the moment.; and he attributed man's skull presents, train a similar point hie Waterloo diluters solely to the dee Ittfeated officers of his army. In talking of t he battle he assured the admiral he hail never for a moment mistook 0.e Prussians for tironehy's divivion, but that he knew early in the day that the Premium were eloving ou hie flank ; that this, however, gave him little or no uneasiness, es he rte. 'tended on General Grouchy also closing with him at the same time,and he had order. eil a sufficient force to oppoee the Prussian', who were in fact already checked. And he added that he eonsidered the battle through. out the day to be very much in hie favor, but OM so soon as it Wes dusk the disaffect. oil officers promulgated the cry of "Sanyo .01 peut which spread Ruch confusion and alarm throughant his whole line that it, became imposeible to counteract it, or to rally his troop', situated as they were. But, he said, had it been ditylight an hour longer, be was poeitive the result would have been very different ; he further said that hail he been eble, when the Marin and confusion tirat took Owe, to have plem ed himself in a conspicuous situstiou front, it would have inured the rallying of all his troops around him ; but as it was, treachery and darkness combined rendered hie ruin inevitable. He ssid that on the morning of June 18 he did not entertain the most distant idea that the Duke of Wellington would have willingly *Bowed him to have brought the lenglieh army to a decistee battle, end con• sequently he lied been the more anxious to push on, and if possible to force it, could. ering nothing else wield offer him a chance of surmounting the difficulties with whioh he wee surrounded ; but, he lidded, could he have beaten the English army, he was positive sceroely one would have escaped being either killed or taken, in wheel case the Pruesian army theying been already beaten on the 1600 must have made pre. cipitate retreat, or moat probab'y would have been diapersed, and certainly entirely diaorgenized. It wse his intention then to hem pushed on by forced marches to have met the Awe trians before any junction could have been made between them and the Ituulans, which would hove laced the game in hie own hands, even If ostilities hail been obstinate. grome at a time. ly persevered in • though in the state of This is certainly a very high recommend. things he had built on the ieles. that a vie- &tin for the medicine, for there is probably tory over the Engliah army in Belgium, DO clale of people that give..inore attention with its immediate unite, would have been to the pliveical health and welfare of its sufficient to have produced a change of ad- members than the Sisters of Providence, and . Reschke is cited as showing that tee " middle brain" containing the " central grey matter, which has no connection with the intelligence, and whioh ant- • mats showe II considerable proportional .devetopment compared to the rest of the brain, exhtlits also in womeri & noticeable preponderance," so that in reality the fair sex have inore crown and middle brain end the sterner Rex more forehead and thinking brain ; in other worde, the passional and e motional, when crippled or misdirected in women, have not the amouot of thought. i power end intellectual control to count upon ocw," et, ba„,o, arineice. A tow forme,. Did jail over poop Mom your cab while anchor for me and 1•11 I NW t OIL I ha, the still hold that bran te LRAM botter than Om' mI".'m lemm04 lm• I." fql." r wff ten neeiteweittrur tan* euswiwoinwevin- Ten ed thee of a locomotive engineer the other day. had been exertiug myself swimming for sawdust. Such notions' belong to the tau " Yee, three or four times,' he answered. more than a mile where tbe water was not generation. Exporter" are studying ow '' What's the sensation 1," more than four feet deep." to complies bran in order to ship it abroad. " That's according to how you land. One "Was the captain glied to get you back!" Thie movement should be stopped ley a night three years ago the train•dispatcher the sailor man was asked. liv,oly home demand. got two of us heatlei for each other on "Blast the captain !" WM; the response. Shorttand middlings are now but a finer single track at a gilt of forty miles an hour. " All he said was You confounded fool, min of bran. Sometimes they contain much The first thing I saw was the headlight of didn't yets know that there wee mile and starch end form $ first-class food, bet, again, they carry the dirt and dust of the the other locomotive rounding e. eery. thirty a half of ghost water all along that rods away. I shut 'er off, threw over the oust 1' " mill, and are not so palatable es bran. lever and set the air•brakes, and then made Malt sproute and brewers' grains, either wet or dried, ars valuable fonds, rich in a jualll I'd no time to piok for a spot,and letetaties TWA Takes. us I jumped I realized that Ed have • bad Con. Lew Wellaoe must be a bother to protein, and often veil at such low prices as time of it, as 1 knew every foot of the the critics and novelists. These have been to admit of very profitable use in the dairy ground. It was on a level covered with a busy for a score of years proving to us that barn. Wet brewers' grains, because of thistle patch. There was a strip of them romanticism in literature la en outlived their cheapness and abundance, are often forty rods tong growing up like cornstalk". folly unworthy of our highly cultivated age misused. The sloppy dreiiiines saturete the food boxes ond mongeronnd Gomm. putrid. I expect. they broke my fall somewhat, but and unacceptable to it. Yet here comes I don't know that I ever hit the ground Gen. Wallace, writing pure romance with endangering the lives of the °owe &tea those until I fetched up fur good. It seemed to e simplicity rivalling that of • century ago, who use the milk. If fed when froth, and me that I just swept through that pitch end his books outsell thou of all our real. in reasonable quantity, and the surround. about kneehigh from the ground,and when kits combined wherever the English len. Ingo kept perfectly clean and wholeeome, there were no more thistles knook down guago to apoken. Howells and Barmen buena' grains are an excellent food for I landed kerchug 1' against an old stump end their fellows have preeched the gospel dairy cows. and uprooted it. I broke a leg and arm, but of commonplace triviality, and practised it, Gluten meal, a by.product in the menu - that wasn't the worst of it. The doct,or too, in full faith that fiction le in their facture of atereli or glucose, ie very rich le estimated the nember of thiitlepoints hands ifs finer srt" than when Scott and sticking into my body st one billion. My Dickens and Thackeray clumsily essayed G. wife and I have been picking 'em out ever Only recently Mr. Borten wrote sneering. since they got me home, and we've only ly of Walter Soott as childiah romance. finished one side of me." monger, lend pityingly of those feeble. " Landing in a mudipuddle would be a minded folk who prefer Soott's meth• soft thing," I suggested. ode to hie own, Yet hundreds of thou. "I've been there," he replied, with a sande of Englialbspeataig people ell over fleeting " While I was rennin the world have taken to Lew Wallace, have protein. The heavy forms of this nieal should be fed centfously and extended with some light substance hike bran. Corn stover and oorn fodder le en excel. lent and healthful cattle food, being quite free from dust, and very palatable to the °ow. The &mount of nutriment whieh can be adhered from a cornfield, and a portion wh ch remains in the stalks haa already freight they built a sidetrack to a grave read " Ben Hur" and art reading the been dimmed under steer feeding, and the reader is referred to that portion of thfo pit at a cumin point. In exoavating at "Prince of India" quite u if they had obapter for information on this important the main line they dug a hole about twenty oever been taught that the romanticism feet long by ten wide and four deep. As • whieh alone gives charm to the latter work Clover hay, when well cured and bright, rule this hole was always full ef water, end is a folly to be monied. The fest appears is especially valuable for dairy cows, mu u it wu on my side of the engine and . be that in spite of all theories the aver. it ferniehes a large amount of protein. always mime under my eye, I got to think- age man or woman likes fiction with incl. Timothy hey 10 et hest a poor food for ing what a snap I'd have if I had to make dents in it mbre stirring than the a jump right there." dropping of a pair of ninon and emotions " But you never had to." more Munn than thou that proven at " Didn't I There Wee a little station summer resort* There is blood in the veins early, are all excellent dairy foods, end just a mile above this hole, and it was a _ of men still. There sure iv., a sympathy their me shonll beoome much more common sharp upgrade. One day while we were • with high emotion and strenuous endeavor. than it h. humping along to mitke the "batten, •dozen Pity still has teen to shed over sorrow and dairy cows ; it shield be left for horse feed. ing. Wheat hay, oat hay, or berley hay, if cut Millet hay is satiefactory if cut very ear. ears broke loose from a freight sidstraaking ly, before the seeds form. et that station, and down they mune, like no many leering lions efter their prey. By the tare I had whistled for brakes and neat rig Seed. reversed my engine, it was time to jump, Prof. ILL. Bolley, botanist of en Amer. and Mess my soul 1 if I ween't jut where I loan experiment station, in relation to con. want id to be–right at the pond. I waited ditions earning the value of wheat for t'e pass the mile•post and then shut my seed, in a game! synopsis give* us the fol. eyee and took a header, feeling sorry et, the sain . instant for my fireman, who'd got lowing pointa wit each strum' the atumpi. Well, I The qualifications of different samplee of W awaI g wheat for seed pupae" vary h " In the teeter 1" I asked, as he paused ampler each should be studied se to its own and worked a finger in hie tier. MMES. When in doubt, the driest, heaviest, " Oh, uo 1 here had bet n a long spell of hot, dry facelift r end every pint of water !loudest, best market gradea of whest are heel evaporah•I • u o' thstamend. The mud the ones to rely upon for seed purposes. Immature wheats, no matter what the wee left b"bald, though, There wan three feet of it waiting to catch some sucker, and cause, whether drought, attack of rust, or it caug ht me. I went head first to the bet premature harvest, are weakened in seed „duo beau, °nook of top food i„pply ton T I rolled over and floundered around for live minutes and could never the grain, and perhaps immaturity of the have pilled myself out unassisted. I didn't germ. break any hones, but–ugh 1" Mixed varieties of seed should not be BOWn because there will be inequality in " " hIt'?" " Mud! I took t wady -seven baths before , ripen ing. I got down so I could see my hide, and it The best grades of frosted seed poems, was hours before mud quit weshing out of reiiith in their first growth from the my ears eyes nose and mouth. I tamed grain than be Gut ease with best grades of mature wheat. mud. I felt mud crawling up and down my back. I moiled mud. I found mud, Wheat that has been wet and subject to freezing and thawing during the winter in my pocket" and combed it out, of my heir until I got tired and let the balanoe cannot safely be used sa seed without being go. I'm running on the toed yet, but I'm tested. not spotting off my mud.holes to imd in. Any seed" which have at any time been On the contrary, if thinge turn out ea I heated became of moisture when in bulk. have figured, my next jump will he into ere very liable to have been injured beyond a patch of blackberry busheie with an old Ability to grow. dead tree in the center, and I confidently If maces ere made from well oured, ma. to mow down everything in my ture wheat, and remain dry throughout the erlhae! whiter, the wheat threshed from such in Path.' the miring will bo as good seed as it other. wile stored. AN MUNN WHALEIBAcm, Wheats threshed from the shocks in the -- gum elite Ihilete Idea C41111441 Crean a spring of 1892 after winter bleaching were Foreign Port, edesin The growth of ft orop of who're ie depend. Not since Ericeson's famous monitor est upon so many and varying conditions, slipped from the waye hes such a singular that no partitive rules of procedure which looking malt appeared in then waters es shell invariably result In mass oan be laid the pioneer British whelebaok Turret, down. Conditions of temperature and which steamed into the harbor recently moisture in both soli and atmosphere, and after • nine cleys' voyage from Timms, physics! conditione of the soil, either at. the Vienne* with 3,022 tons ot co per ore abeard. They don t call her a w &Mack in England, but a turret steamer, but AS is none the leas an adaptation of the Ameri- can whalebesk prineiple. She is 280 feet long by 39 feet bUm and oan merry 3,250 tons dead welcht on an eighteen.foot dreught of water. 11- water %If c :Lac is 111,4i0 un. usual about the construction, but above her (helmeted tumbles home in * short curve to a turret running from stem to stern, and she looks like ten ordinery ship set into the beck of a monstrous turtle. The vessel was hunched a year ago from the yard of Doxford & Sons, Sunderland time of sowing, or during the period of growth, must neoeuarily vitally influence the result, whatever the chereoter of the seed sown. Thus the stooling of the grain ill °hid, dependent upon conditions misters at the time of stooling, go that in dry 1011100011atooling is deficient, when from the same amount of seed gown stionlisie would have woo entailant during a moist ,0111111011 ; aod the quantity of lead sown suffi- cient in the latter case would have been in. insehlent in the fortner. Bemuse of such heets failure may actually follow practice hued en ties best general rules of procedure, terld on the other hand moues may result leent preetioe not utility eatishotory, and and is owned by Petereon, Tate it Co., of Ohloh under other oonditions would limit. Newcistle. ably befr• resulted fetters; therefore, al. She has proved an easy bat in a seaway though enereeesional suareauful orop may and instil inster ships are la merge of goap is legal tender in Dueretaro, Nes. order owtois terditiou result from the oonstrootiem–fNew York Herold. 1 10% the healthy man is still able to rejoice in that " gospel of rout turkey"–whieh Howells finds to be ao unworthy in Dick. en's "Christrnits carol"–a gospel distinctly plegierized from Jesus of Nemeth. There hu been no deadlier folly in the hietory of literature than this latter-day et. tempt to rule out the stronger sentiment" and eympathies of men. There hes been no greeter blight upon endeavor, no more mho ehievoue perversion of mute than thie spostleship of trivialty in the name of real ism, as if reality were always tame and obedient to the laws of etbrette. Liters. tuns in a dries suit la the liters. ture of dawdling, of weskness, of dewily dulness. A touch of wit, a gentle humor, serves to disguise the inanity somewhat, but ite presence mend be completely or for long hidden, It is sot the function of literature to picture the commonplace and the uninterestiug facts of life. Its business is to select the things worth presenting, The Imagination le the °restive faculty, end lo all arts ite successful exercise is the measure of exoellenee. Our modern echool inside that it shell wear kid gloves and °antrum to the dull, monotonous usages of conventional society. The romance writer more justly ultimates his art, amine gets at the hearts of his ruder* To the critic he may well say ; "Dent think because thou art virtuous there shell be no more cakes and ? Ay, and ginger shall be hot i' the mouth, too." Illtnada's ild te Railways. The chief statistician of the Dominion government makes the following atatement with regara to the aid the Grand Trunk and Canedien halal° railway have received from the Ottawa treasury. The fen:Wien Pacifie has received from the Dominion Government the sum of 062,044,159 end 25,000,000 sores of land. Of this latter the Canadian Pacific sold 0,703,004 aeres to the Dominion Government for the sum of .10,. 198,521. The Grand Trunk received from the Government of Canada a loan of $15,-- 142,833in 1855.57. At simple interest the amount of principal and interest due to the Federal Government et tbetimeot confedere tion wu $10,457,4511 interest and the oriel. nal loan, making a total of $20,600,091 dere on the first of July, 1867. I do not Wow that any formal renunoiation of theVebt was ever made by the Government d if the interest were to be added to the aiMunt slue at orafederation the total would rahe to somewhere about 150,000,000. lf th question lake& was: "What WWII rt people of Canada given in aid to these koi railway'?" we would have to examine lee amounts to NA how much has been deans ed to the various lingo inoorporated with sr tinder the 000trol of each of the two greet epitome u systems. Subeidies and aids Were even by the Provinciel Goverment: end by municipalities. r xistence of such a coalition has been Uniloubtedly the cordial re en of the French fieet at Cronstadtand equent return vieit of %mean wo. vo Marione.] • willintoons tho. 4 part to envenrage friendly relations bet sewn hi. @objects and breech eit• izentte, but there is a wide gap ben tweed such interutional eourtesies and the oonclusion of a definite treaty of alliance. If, however, such a country as Frain° has been prevailed upon to let one of her harbors pass even temporarily under foreign oontrol, we may be certain that ad- equete eompeneation will be given ; and this can only take the form of easurances that Russian armies will eupport the French whenever the latter are 1111 (deed in conflict with the three central powers. That mut be the consideration for the teem; for ex. cept in one improbable contingency, France would have no need of help from Russia in the Mediterranean, whereas the acquisition of • naval station in that sea has long been deemed it matter of capital importance to the Northern Empire. It would only be in a war with England–whieh, so long as the Liberals are in power at Westminster may be excluded from the list of probabilities– thet France could derive any ailvantage from the presence of a R01E01111 fleet in the Mediterranean. In any, internationsl cone, pliations to which Engleind should not be a party, Franoe would be abundently able to debt with any force which Italy,Autria, and Germany could array against her in that quarter. The threat of Berlin newe pspers that the temporary cession of a French Mediterranean port to Ruesia would be followed by the leasing of an Italien harbor to Germany can have no terrors for France. When war breaks out, the Ger. mans will require every war vessel at their dispose! to protect their own ports in the Baltic and North seas. Any money, there• fore, that might be expended by the Berlin Government in equipping a naval station in Sicily, or on the Italian penineula, would be worse than thrown away, if it were fol. lowed by the divereion of a part of he naval force from points where the interests of German commerce are cencentrated. When vier comes, Italy will have to depend on the assistance of Austria alone, end no one imagine. thet the Italian and Austrian war ships condannd could make heart against the armament that Toulon would be able to send forth. So far then as France is con- cerned, the permanent etationing of a Rus- sian fleet in the Mediterranean is a matter of indifference. Rosie, on the other hand, considers the acquieition of a eeeport in the Mediterram ean an indispensable move in the game, the prize of which is Constantinople. It is true that the clam of the treaty of Paint forbidding the Cur te maintain war vessels in the Black sea was abrogated during the Franco•German war but the strong naval °roe 1111120 collected' there is still confined by treaty to that basin, and could not eh ((dully eceoperate with the Ceara' Baltic fleet, unless the latter should obtain a coal- ing station in the Mediterranean. For a time the St. Petersburg Governsnent hoped to acquire One of the Greek harbors, hut her plans were thwarted at Athena by the • r,LI end %Were powers, including con. eptett msly England. Theo, when Montane. gro obtained a seaport on the Mehra's; after the Itnsso•Turkish war, this would have been practically converted into a Russian naval atation but for the interposition of England and Austria, eupported by Ger- many. The only power at once able and willing to give Russia what she has long wished is France ; and there is nothing better calculsted than the leasing of Ville• franche to bind ,the Russian sovereign with the strongest ties eternity, for nothing obviously could more powerfully further hie designs upon Conetantinople. In view of the collapse of the Terkish navy, the Sultan's capital would Mutat certainly sue. cumb should the Russian fleet in the Black Sea assail the Boaporuseimultaneously with an attack by Russian Moneta& upon the forts thet fringe tho Derdanellee. Such a comerted operation could not safely lie ini• dertaken Milne Raul& hsd a naval station of her own atrithin a reasonehle distance of the lEgeanc The moment Russia becerias a naval potter in the Mediterranmen, EAe. land would have to fano the alternatiee of abandot mg her traditional role of the Suttee's defender, or of materially increas• ipg her war vessels in that sea. The naval farce which she has hitherto been accustom - to maintain there would no longer be deem. ed more than sentient to safeguard the ph„„;,,,... mt boya–no boy Suez Canal and the short route -to Inf Ina • • ' dia. In such eircumatemes, and especielly ever yet took !laterally to medtctne. Westminister, England will probably de. while Liberal Government is in power at The Queen's favourite wall -paper has a 1 w ;ermine to leat e t!.e Turk at tne mercy oi b j!g(oli.t blue ground xprinkled with white and Ear Infirmary en Charles street, but then his neighbors and reserve her own naval Mdme. Patti im fond of collecting auto. ft:medley felled to do Ian the faintest shadow roes fot the protection of her national in• graphs, and has a very unique and costly of vett. I einnmeneeil gnang hint Mod' ereste. fan in her possession, upon each ivory Liarsapbrilla it /1111111 rum! 1111e, 1 :ostO1 joint of which is inscribed the genuine never dollbilld that it enved stibiti v0011 ir not Aix vrry Ilto, You hay INC 11111 tea new mountain railway has been eon. aateffrePh el lame celebrated Permage' my way pel fauffse. I am alway, art, often called the Rigi of Austria. days old, and usually by the mother. Some ready dad on the Sclisfberg, in the Salzkain. A Hindoo baby is named when it is twelve to sound the praise of Hood's Sarsaparilla 'mountain rises from the W berikiful lake situated an hour°1;egmarcehel: tthitannestthilet .fesitelicetordwii: e frnoroathneortNerbritahmaet because of the tvonderfut good it del my son. The IUMMit veal 3,900 feel above the cose two laMps are placed OM 1110 tWO AMIE F. BLACKMAN. 2888 Wwillington Ilet /Moire level of the lake, an the length of the line names, and the name over which the hmp Beaton, Hass. ,,ven oelo, oats of which is 400 feu look Nam 00111D01111iM Wotan* and wiPeal000. 41:11-:.1–D'Ii P11:18 aro ham; made, and aro pk is about se There are several tue1 berm the brightest is the mu ot THE SISTERS OF PROVIDENCE &Story At est Tinfoil. Some pare ago a Wham:tint deicovered 66 erman -- the ueility of tirfoil for wrapping chewing tobaccos, Theretofore paper had been ex• An Intereating Ohat With the Bsoretary of elusively %teed for the purpose, but it did i at, Mary's tot serve to keep the inoieture of the at. — nosphere away from the tobacco nor par. alio litplatitit Why the Meters and Their lerve the nstnral moisture of they tio.be..ecgs: Pupils etre 011 illealtey –Due le Mittel from the Atom of a dry or heated utinoe. Mules or Regime. and the Medielne pliere. Paper aloe absorbed the aroma el "feed in Gee Illosne–larennation 01 the weed, and wee not aufficientl I t Sable to Everybody. Mei efore tinfoil woo twed for wrappers. From tho Terre Houle, Ind , Exprotoi, lint, it Lome peaty and could only be rolled to a aortae' thickens% or thinness be Four mike to the northweet of Terre Haute, lies the beautitul mut picterestme „Y"rld,,w,b lab tb„e,in,geauitY„11,1 m,an we!'" 10 yinow, 01 81 mory•,,, lima 10 a pa.an uuu imposetoie tO go, este tact woo it,„1, ao reliant could be made to remain tile Catholia Institution which has attained premiere neausary to reashitig the tinfoil eemething more than national celebrity. to a leaf sufficiently thin to suit the ntante Fifty years ago it was established by six esters' of Providence, who came from the lecturer. Many Ingenious inventors eau gled with the pro °earn!' for months, and shorts of France to lay the foundation for the great eheritable order. It now con. sista of the home of the Sisters of Provid• once, known as the Providence Reuse ; a large foniale seminary, One of the fittest °Impels in the United States, sod a Rec. tory in which the priests make their home. A reporter of the Express while being shown through the eetablishinent recently 'whet SMter Mary Ambrose if there was any epperent reason for the good health liviliet,,Iniawdhieh the sisters and their pupils are The answer was that particular attentien is paid by the sisters in charge to the health mei happiness of the studente. " Bodily Ailment, ' she said,;" cannot help but have its effect on the mind. In order to keep the mind bright and active and perfectly clear at all times, the student'. condition meet be as nearly perfect as possible. aome time ago there wee more or less ailment notice. able among the Meters and atudents, whieh was prcbably due to atmosphere% causes, though of ours° I do not know juet what its origin really wet Shortly after tide be. esme noticeable a friend highly recommend• ed a medicine called Dr. It l'ink Pills for Pale l'eople and 60 urged upon me to give them a trial that 1 ordered some of them, and they heve been need in the Meth tution ever since. A few days ago the manufacturers wrote me for an opinion of Pink Pills, and my reply was as followe ; " lie.sfixemtu Sibs–In answer to your kind request for our opinion of Dr. Will. lame' Pink Pills, are plea.ed to say that these pills were so highly recommended to us that we were induced to try them, and we thiak our repeated order, for them are sufficient evidence that we find them all they are reprementea, a good blood builder and a excellent nerve tonic. Yours very respectfully, tersren M. AMMOSM. Secretary for Staters of Providence." Medical scien teas concede that weak blood anti shattered nerves are the fruitful Ouse of nearly every disease to which hu- man flesh is heir, and if Dr. Williams' l'ink Pills is, 0.9 Sister Ambrose says they have found it, "a good blood budder and en ent nerve tottic,"the Douro of good health st St. tlary'a is es.sily traced. Sister Ambrose said they are never with. out l'ink and thet now they order a ininietration in England, end have afforded him a (Mance of concluding an armistice, which he eatil wu really his first object, ae he felt thst France was not equal to the el - forte ehe wu then making, and it wee per. fectly impossible for her to think of making any adequate resistanee againet the %turner. ous forces of the allies, if once united and acting in concert against him. , – • – - rnorintA A 11 WIN PILGRIM& -- Meeting Ravine& News has been received at Lripoli of the prevalence in the State of Boron of a aevere epidemic which is decimating the popula• teen. Tit ) metiers there are petitioning the Tui Ugh authorities to send treops to Fezzen to r ateet the caravans tram the danger 0 toning them in view of the tribel noes in thet mprinn. _During y last otton plIgrime loft. Troia for Moot.. 4bOtet 30:0 more seiled from the other de on the coast. It ill estimated that of Ole 4000 to 5000 persons perished on their way to or from the holy city. Pilgrims who I undergone quarantine on the island of Zambia, in the (Ulf of Tunis, were allowed, after medical inspeotion and disinfection, to come on shore at Tunie In the after- noon of the day when they were expected the different Tunisian sects, with the friends and relations of the returning pilgrims in number about 12,000, marched down to 'the mays, carrying banner. and singing hymns, When the pilgrim§ landed it was learned for the first time that scarcely 2000 of all who had started from Teel. had come hack. lieutrending cries of wailing and temente. tion arose from the vest throug of women, of whom some were carried away faintine, while others threw theineelves on their knees and supplicated the Prophet with frenzied fervour to restore to them the lost. The pilgrims themselves, se soon as they set foot on shore, and before they sought their relatives, turned their faces towards Mecca end, prim:arming themselves, offered thanke to Mehemet for their salvation. The pilgrime e horrible tale of their ex• periencea On June 24–two days before the Courban Beirut–upward. of 100,000 Muse mulmans, Arabs, Turks, and Indians had gathered on the sacred mount to hear the solemn address which is delivered to those who wish to become hadji. Many of these people were in the most wretched condition, and some had not even a loaf of bread. The following day the onward movement to the holy city began. Those who got away were fortunate. The mount was like it battlefield strewed with dead and dying, Cholera hail decimated the great commune of pilgrims. 8o frightfully di 1 the pesti- lence rage that it was impossible for any living creature to approach the place. At length • battalion of Turkieh troops was sent from Suns to bury the dead, and re- move any people who still lived. The hate talion when i• reached the mount was 700 strong. After the work had been done 200 einheonieoran.ly rerriained to co bark to the coma. Five hundred of the soldier* had died of MorIgStell 111 the Mates, Some interesting ststistios have recently been published with regard to the mortgage indebtedness per head of the populstion of tho United Stites. Reports frotn all the Suttee have not been received, but the fit The Duchess of Portland is the tallest urei to hand show that the greateet indebt• duchess in the world. edam to the head of population ie in the new States of the West, and the least is in the South. AR to New Enema and the Middle States, it must be kept in mind that their large anti numerous cities and towns, where real estate is held at high rates, allow a much greater peraentege of debt without danger than can be predicted of the agricultural States. Farms will not bear heavy burdene of debt like city prop• erty, and when the farmers are weighed down with mortgages their situation is seri• ous. Follnwing ie a statement of the mortgage indebtedness to each head of the population ; Alabama .. $ 20 Arkansas 13 Colorado 206 Conneuticut 107 Illinois 100 Indians 51 lows 104 Kamm 170 Maine 49 Museebusette 144 itineaota 152 Missouri 80' Nebraska 126 New Hampshire Oregon 73 Pennysivanie 17 Rhode Island.. 106 Tennenee 123 Verinont 83 Wisconsin 72 they would not use anything in whiah they did not have unbouniied. faith. Dr, Willisms' Pink l'ills are truly one of the greatest teed teal discoveries of the age. They are the beginning of a more heelthful era, Every day twinge report" of remark• able cures that have reeulhd from the use of this wonderful medicine. In ahoy cases the good work has been accomplished after eminent physician, had failed and pro. trauma the patient beyond the hope of human aid. An anslyeis proves that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain in • condensed form all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and re. store shattered nerves. They aro au un- failing epecific for meth diseases so loom motor ataxia, partial paralyeis, Mt Vitue' dance, viatica., neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous head ete, the after effects of la yr grippe, palpits of the heart, that tired fooling moot tin roan nervous prostretioo ; all disarmer, dap ding upon vitiated humors in the blood, muoh as scrofula, cbronic ery. similes, etc. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to feinales, such as sup. preesione irregularities, and all forms of weakness. They build up the blood and regime the glow of health to pale or sallow cheeks. In the case of men they effect a radical cure in all easee arising from men• tal worry, overwork or incomes of whatever nature. These pals era manufeetui e I by the Dr. Williems' ef ed ice tie Ootemeny, of Brooke ille, Ont., anti Sehenectedy, N. Y., and are sold in boxeignever in loose form by the dozen or hundred) at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for 52,50, and may be bad of all druggists or direct by mail from Dr. IVilliants' Medicine Company, from either address. The price at which these gilts aro sold makes a course of treatment inexpeneive as compared with other remedies or medical treatment. _n Tight Between a Lion and a Bull, A mine °enfold between e lion and a bull took place at an exhibit the other day at Le Paz, in Bolivia. The President mai his Ministere were prelent at the show, which watt witneeeed by no fewer then 6000 persons, and the amount of money which changed hen& on the fight in bets reached some 150,000 sole. 'Ehe tull won by pin• ning the: lion with his horns through the jaw mid body, and practically killing him, and eo quickly ended what must have been a most demoralising spectacle. The lion had previously come out conqueror in ley oral fight/J. gsve up the prob em as 'evolvable, when simple workman &bout the shop one day, after rolling two sheets to the tuitional y Gluteus, pia the two theete together into the rollers, and ludo both halve' u thin as one was before. Die was MI simple es standing to egg on end, but it created a revolution in the manufacture of tinfoil for tolacconiats' Me and mete a mint of money for the lion of the discoverer. The man lied hit upon the ides by accident but the discovery was as great and as profitable's' if be had been a great inventor anti spent years of his valuable life over the question. Blotches, pimple., liver palatine, 0. M. le right quick III ipatelieff, Drives away Incipient tumors, t he blood f ran polsonnui humors ; Ailing ono, whiteer you be, 'rry the worth of et. 11, whioh im the great Golden Medical thecae cry of Dr. Pieree–a wonderful tonic and blood -purifier. The "Discovery" is a stand- erd remedy for consumption, bronchitis, cold. and lung troubles , guarenteeil to benefit or cure, it token in time, or money rebutted, lie Knew it all. A popular preacher, whose reputation had been acquired by the skill with which he appropriated the thought" and language of the great divines who hail gone 1 efore him, rather than by hie drawing leagely his own stores of knowledge and eloquence, wu once preaching in the western quarters of the English Metropolie, when a grave old gentleman mutts ed loud enough to he heard by those neer : " Thet's Sherlock 1" The doctor frowned but want on. Ile had not proceeded much fee tibia when ilia t,ormencing interpreter brae mit : " That's Tillotson 1" Tlie preacher bit his lips and paused, Ina again thought it better to pursue the thread of hie discourse. A third exclamation, lmw. ever, of " that's Blair 1" Watt too ntueh, atid completely deprived him of his patience. Leming over the pulpit he cried : " Fellow, if you do not hold your tongue you shall be turned out." Without shoring a muscle of his count ell ance the grave old gentleman lifted up his head, and looking the doctor in the face, retorted : l'hat's his own I" – – - – — Ne DIsappoleiment Cen arise from the use of the great eure-pop oorn cure–Putnam'a Painlese Corn Eutaw. tor, Putnam's Extractor removes urns . painlessly in a few days. Take no BOMA. tute. At druggists. The population of Japan is about 40,000, I 000. An Important Beientine Diseeverr- Norville°, Cie latest discovered pain remedy, may safely challenge the world, for a aubstitute that will as speedily and promptly check inflammatory action. The highly penal ating propertiee of Nerviline make it never failing in all cum of rheums. tism, neurelgia, cramps, pains in the bank. and aide, heetlache, lumbago, ete. It twin leases marked stimulating and counter irritant properties, e.ud at once subdues all inflammatory action. Ortnand & Walsh, druggists, Paterboro', write : " Our cue tomers speak well of Nerviline." Large bottles 25 ciente, Try Nerviline, the great internal and external pain cure. Sold by all druggista and country dealere. t These figures show that the heaviest load of atoregeges is carried by Colorado. Next coulee KlInias, then Minneeota, then Nebras- ka, and Afterwards other Western States. The smallest load is credited to Arkansas, next to Tenneesee, and third to Alabama. Some very ancienthooke are to Le found in the altered relics of Ceylon. They are formed of paint leaves, written upon with a metal pen, and are hound merely by a silken string. Clifford Blackman A Boston Boy's Eyesight Saved -Perhaps His Life Hy Itoodat Sureeparilla–Illood boned by Canker. ltend the (eliciting frau a grateful mr 101 "My little boy had Searlet Fetter when 4 „ .ers old, and It left hint very weak and with blood poisoned with conker. Ito eye; became so Inflamed that tiel 801101'1HO were Intense, and 800011 Vieeki 1111 esitild Not Open His Eyes. • A. P. 07 I r Chronic Coughs Persons afflicted with these or any throat or lung trutibles should resort to that Most Excellent Remedy, Scott's Emulsiorl of Pore Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda. No other preparation 1 effects such cures, •NDAVTION."-Bsware of aubstitaten. eglIerrdegPihtglar.. 60e. and 01 00. °EGET() CUTTING 8C11001. ontellt8 unprecedented faclIttlee tor armirin t °rough knowledge of Cult' eg in all I branches; oleo moral for the McDowell Drat t g Metthine. Write for circular, 123 Yonge the World's Pair, hy Allon's GENTS MESE 101 ARE.--Sainantlia at Wt 0. Over 100 illustrations. Nearly COO pages No Territory assigned, Semi tlinn fOr pro spoclus and push the eitliV1.14 If you want to make looney. WILLIAM 11111111:01, Tentic•r- anoe Lit., Toronto. , F YOU WOULD SAVE Tun AND MONEY MY A NEWWILLIANS SEWING MACHINE Agents everywhere. The High Speed Family Knitter 'S'n1,!'. yrup f For Coughs & Colds. F.,dorn,Tex. :writes: I have used German t . p for the past six years, for Sore Throat, Cough, Colds, Pains in the Chest and Lungs, and let say to any. one wanting such a medicine— German Syrup is the best. Il.W. Baldwin, Carnesville,Tenti.„ writes : 1 1- ive used your Cf --•- Syrup iti Iny family, and find it the best medicine I ever tritil for coughs uul cohk. 1 recommend it to every- one for these troubles. -- - R. Schmalhausen, Druggist, 01 Cho, , 111. , writes After tryitgg scores of prescriptions and prepara- tions I had on my files and shelves, without relief for a very severe cold, vhich had settled on my lungs, I tried your German Syrup. ft gave me immediate relief and a pertna- 0 nen' rare. G. G, GREEN, Sate Manufacturer, Woodlgury, New lersev, U. S. p EACH KIN and older 'clinifirs f•an make I inonoy canvassing for 'Tanners' Friend and Al••111111, Book." Hood for circulars. 11411 111110101, Toronto. SAUSAGE CASINGS 10(111'1'i)trotlrillrg4- oise,ictilly on hand, also prime American Chic's I %ohne. Fii II lifte•f New Dams. lents gOar 10,10111, it0118, 'hoe., Lard. oto. PARK l'11. 1,114 to JAMkti 1'0 & 81,1, Tiirtlfa0. MUSI Every music. Teacher In Ca nada should know where they can vet their Music cheapest, — Write um tor Caialognee ; else steeple ,opy of the CeN•DIAN f sic' se, Ilse monthly join,. o-ith 01 00 wort h of - in each iefIlle 03 to 01 per day mafif•bw emir:wpm. See rem. tool list We carry everything in the Muffle line. WHALEY, ROYCE & CO. ill) 00001 IT, 70101170,0111. THAONEY-AAKER" KNITTINGAACHINE ()NI y ASK YOUR SEWiNG MACHINE AGENT FOR IT, OR St fel 3CEN I STAMP 1 0 FOR PAHTICAILAIlll PRICE L IS SAMPLES,COTION YARN Aft EELMAN c ROS,14r5 GEORGETOWN,ONT. FRAZER AXLE Best in the w"m'GREASE Get the Genuine! Sold Everywhere! IL 'Cour wwwhinery with the standard and Peerless Machine011 iVe will give a substantial reward to any- one bringing um proof of other ell being sold es our Peerless flianlitne Oil. None genuine except from paekaues bearing f ;all brand, and our nom, and sold only by reliable and regular dealers Sole Manufacturers, SAHEL ROGERS & Ce TORONTO. COMPLETE COURSE IN SNORTHANO Isaac Pitman SHORTHAND Complete System foci oughly taught by Mail for only 1 Dollar. Thera] n•sf of a liteihne. Fume hoy and girl in Canada ahotIld commence it al 0111.0. The ar- will soon flamenco.– goorontred. Send in our dollar i111111011110.01y, CO11011,10. the beginning, Rest !Method in the World for imparting Ilk plain rirentar knInlea ' will do. from holucanun to, tory yarn 'The moat prarn,...1 famIty knitter 011 111, mark,/ A child can oncrate ft titr,,ne'. Instruction. BARKER & SPENCE'S SHORTHAND & BUSINESS SCHOOL -re RONTO. - _ IT IS A GREAT MISTAKE To !fink that you mut tttLat. ttitot.,t to havo eotilfOrt, .1'.., k li gilanultre rvrry Illitetillir. to d.. . good work lloWare of 111,1,1111one 1 ItnoOtte, Simple, Rapid IA, ! Ageute wanted. Writ. fUlt yar denture. . Outdo{ Knitting Machine eo . Dundee, Ontario. , 1,000,000 ACRES OF LAND formate by theliAINT DuLtrtit RAIL ROA!) CAmoatEr in Minnesota bend for Alfas and Circus lam They will be sent term P"1:13ME. Addeo' HOPEWELL CLARKE, Land Commissioner, Bt. Paul. Minn, 11/014WWWWWYWOWevvevaateviewwweati WEBS TP,'I?' S 1 INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 0,114.4TRAOT of the .1 nolo Weed." Ten ,{CLIN spent in rolsing, lac editors employed, 00,00 Man F ."300,090 expended. A Grand Edo -eater Abreast or the Times i! A Library In Itself' _ " Itivalunhlo in the household, told to 1 he teacher, profennional Inan, aelf-edurat to. Ask your Bookseller to show litosou. ha,h0.1 (Liz 1.MERRIAlt cit,setasti A • prr Seed for free P1119.41111% N...,,,,c, _ ge..1110strOthols, b y reprOO9 01 MICItnkt WwwWWWwwwww4141, nor 0111•8 are both fool and elegan moo to look a and notn• fort. able while m weer. 1110 .1. 1). K1 & ('o., Ltd. 711 KING EASI. ; E ERs Fop RUSSES raMPTURE ‘\titk.\-\t.\ ,c C‘cOS.CsAkOcfr$.. wminual:m30,7.000huaalagi, CHAS CLUTHE "f(STAETROssICIAE What Game shall we play this Winter ? THE - UPPER - Trai.Pc 151.00. Write tit for Price 1,1st, and your local dealer do, not carry tot r tshici epee rosette of price will t.end pot( paid. 1 is tuilikely, THE COPP CLARK CO., LTEA, TORONTO, ( Just Out Aloldwin Smith's Political History of the United States, --111. si.nnk STANDARD CHOPPER." "THE IMPROVED "Ar •-•MM/M•g/ Wm. Feed Tot r Stork chopped grain, 1.111} STANDARD CROPPER ( 'an he run With ;toy 4 lo 12 liornepoWnt SIMPLE, DURABLE, VERY r SEND FOR el Itt p "USES BEST vinume p, Walla soctor. rniumuoi • •