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The Wingham Times, 1885-10-02, Page 2TELE E 'F.e . i:1s i hanging with their tops resting on the ground and burdock and other hardy weedsgrow up through the dead branchi . A dismal picture, but tin often true to life. TWo things alone will make a yard beauti- ful, if well.arraneed and oared for; trove and grans; butthe t ees must not be in stiff, un- natural rows, nor crowdedelr'se to the house and the yard must be well graded, and the grass kept ola mely out, Flowers will usually give a better effect and be much easier to care for, if planted in small beds. The garden can be kept clean much easier, as the grass will be continually encroaching on the small beds. A single Kum rod will enable you to grow quite a variety of flowers, but several rode oughe to be spared for this purpose. Locate, the flow- er garden where the wife can awe it when about her daily work, and h will prove a means, of grace to her. A very little work done at the rigbt time, will keep it in order, and if weeds are never allowed to go to seed in it, the labor cf oaring for it will be less ooh year. I cannot think of any other way in which eo amen au expenditure of time and money will bring so much pleasure to the wife and education to the children. Try it, and see how much genuine happiness can be had from a. flower garden. Hack to Griggaby'il' rap's got hes patent right, and rich se A11 ere+tton But where's the. peace Ind OOUi1ort that we all had ketone? Len; Ile go a vieltla' back to Origgeby'e Station— Book where we Feld to be eo happy andso pore! The likes of us a•livin' here 1 It's jest a mortal pity Te see us in this great big house, with carpets on the Matte. And the rump --Fight 1n the kitchen' And the city 2 oily 1 city 1 And notbin' but, the city ail around ut everwberes i Qnmb clean above the root and look from the steeple, And never ma robin, nor a beechor ellum tree t And right here in earshot of at least a thoueau" pee - pie. And none that neigpbone with us, or we want to • go and see. Let's go a vIeitin' back to Grlggeby's Station— Back where the latch atring'e a•hangin' from the door, And every nelthbor round the place le dearaa a 'Un- firm— Bock where we used to be so happy and Be pore 2 want to vee the Wlggen,es, the whole kit and bilin', A•dririn"up from Shallow Ford to stay the Sun- day through •. And I want to see them hitohin' at their son-in-law'e and pi lin' Ont there at Lizy Ellen's, like they need to do want to see the piece quilts the Jones girls lemaki&'' And I want to pejter Loury 'bout their freakled hired hand, And joke bet 'bout the widower she come putty nigh a-takin', Till her pap got his pension 'lowed in time to save his land, Let's go a•vieitin' beck to Origgeby'aStation — Back whore there's flotilla' aggervatin' any more, Shet away safe in the woods around the old location— Back where we used to be so happy and topore l I want to see Marindy and 'help her with her eowin', And bear her talk so lovin' of her man 'that's dead and gene, And stand up with 'Emanuel to phow me how he's growin', And smile as I have saw her 'fore the put per mouruin' on, And I want to see the Samples on the old lower Eighty—' Where John, our eldest boy, he was took and buri- ed, for His own sake end Raty's—and I want to ory'with Katy As she reads all hie lettere over, writ from the war. What's in all this grand and high situation, • And nary pina nor hollyhawk bloomin' at the door? Let's go a•vlsitie to Origgeby s Station— Batik whore we need to be so happy and eo pore. During Oorn Fodder. When well cured, corn fodder that has been properly grown, ia.quite equal in value to average hay. To secure the'tnll r utritlye value of corn fodder, it should be' grown' in rows sufficiently wide apart to admit • an abundance of light and air. ,Light and air are both necessary for the full development of the plant, and the production of starch, su- gar and other nutritious constituents of the stalk and leaf. The pale, yellow leaves and stalks, that result from broad -cast sawing, are of little value, and when dried, become harsh, brittle and tasteless, so that a horse or cow rejects such food with disdain, unless starved into ea ing it. But the dark -green, well grown fodder, issweet, tender, and' as we have said, is equal to hay for winter feed- ing. To save the fodder in the beet condi- tion, it should be cut before frost has touched it, or the tassel has dried.' If ithas been grown for grain, the time to out it is when the kernel Is glazed, bath yet soft enough to be impressed by the thumb nail When the crop hes been grown for fodder' alone, we cut it before the blossom has quite faded, and when the ears upon it are half ' grown.• To cures luxuriant crop of fodder, weighing. while green, twenty tons per acre, is not au easy matter, unless, one goes the right way about it. The atalktf should be tut close. to the mho of the ground,' so as to leave us stubble in the way of fitting the ground at once for a crop of rye For this purpose, we find the old fashioned corn hook, made of a piece c an old scythe, attached to a abort, stout handle, to be the beat and easiest tool. A stout brush hook, at the end of a handle four feet long, halo an excellent implement for cutting by hand. But a reaper may be used, if it is drawn diagonally across the rows, and .the land has been cultivated on the level. But in whatever way the crop fa cut, it should lie on the ground for twenty- four hours, to become thoroughly wilted. It is then bound in small sheaves, weighing about twenty-five pounds, whioh is a con- venient way to use it for, feeding, and these sheaves are set up in shocks, end protected from the rain. In.this way the fod'der will cure perfectly well without molding, and preserve its color and sweetness, until it is ready to be taken in , when the beat way to dispose of it is, to stack it in open barracks. Stooling with Sheep for the Winter. The season of autumnal drouths' and short pasturage always brings lots of sheep upon the market, which their owners oonolude not to winter, and that may often be very profitably bought. Sheep of good conatitu tion, with good teeth, and healthy, may be safely bought, if one has feed for them which he wishes to convert into manure in the easiest and cheapeat way. For instance, a large oat -grower has straw which wilt carry quite a flock through the season. If he buys ewes that have had lambs this year, and, hes them served early, by a long -wool or Down ram; though thin now, they will rapidly pick up and probably give him one hundred and twenty-five per cent. of lambs. Of course Finch ewes will need some grain ; all the more if wheat -straw instead of oat is their princi- pal fodder. We have known lambs to bring in the spring double and triple what was paid for the ewes, whilethe ewes were worth fully as much as they cost, and the manure as much more. This is hardly the usual ex- perience, but under advantageous oiroum- stances, the experiment is well worth try- ing, recollecting that October service brings February lambs, which, if well pushed for. ward,may be in market by the first to• the midde of May. Earlier aerobe will, of course, bring earlier lambs and greater pro- fit. ,Around the House. Little wonder that many farmers' wives wear out, grow prematurely old, or die youeg, There is absolutely nothing attractive for them to look at about the premises The yard has never yet been properly graded, and if mowed at all, it is but once a year ; generally the horses are turned in to graze it down. Sprouts have come up Prem the old frult trees, branches broken down by the Weight of fruit or winds of former yeare are , Helpful, A correspondent of the Pall -Mall Gazette tells the story.ofa plump, pretty little or- phan of seven, who was one of the steerage passengers in a steamer heavily laden with emigrants for New York. She had • not a relative or friend on board, but was sent from .some remote district is., Sweden to Chicago, The poor baby made her journey of font thousand miles • smiling; happy, finding a friend's face in every one that looked at. her. The emigrant women on 'beard oared for her as though each were her mother. Every morning she carne on deck freshly bathed and''dressed, her pretty hair braided . under her puokered hood, :The ]angileh- man who observed the universal kindness to the bliild says, "In all my life 'never liWei' s4 Ane It thinii. ' - . A story wjiioh is told of some Gertnan emigrants might psral el this Two broth ere, one an:abled bediedmechanio, the other a slight lad of eighteen, were steerage 'pas- sengers in one of the large Amerioan atom - ere several years age. ' The elder, ventur- ing into some dangerous quarter of theveseel, during a storm, was evened overboard and drowned. Re had.on 'his person the little, store of money and the tickets belonging to both. The lads Gottfried, was leftabsolute- penniless, and 'friendless in the world. The. other emigrants contributed, oftheir poor. little savings enough to pay his way and support him until he reached a colony in Da- kota, to which most of them are bound. He is now one of the most industrious, energee tic men in it. Sarcely a ship -load of emigrants comes across the sea in which there is not shown the same mutual kindness and help. There is sometimes: hi the not of cutting loose from his old home, and all past.. associations,, 'which makes a man cling more closely to 'other -men as neighbors and brothers ; giving and asking help as never before. It is the bestpreparetionfor his life inthe new country here he will stand on en equality ,for mu- ual Iielp andsupport with men of every na- tion under heaven.' • ' • Yet after all, 'are we not all emigrants crossing a wider sea to an unknown country, which we all—the millionaire and pauper., the white and the black, the gentleman and. the slave -shall' enter together, children of one Father ? Shall we not, too, t y to help each other on this our one short voyage ? A Man Without a Oountry. A curious case has been for some time on trial before the French courts, and has exoit. ed much discussion and many smites. It is that of an eccentric Frenchman, who, at the . early age of 33 or 34, was deprived of his liberty of action by a family council ; or, in other wordy, was prevented from ruining h moil financially by having administrators appointed over him. This, so enraged him that he conceived a violent prejudice against his fellow -countrymen. During the remain- - der of his life he seems to have pegged hie time in inventing measures for annoying his relatives; and in hie will he expressly stip- ulated that as soon as he was supposed to be dead his administrator should pierce his heart with a bodkin in order to .make sure. that he should- not be buried alive; after which he should convey the body to within one mile of the English coast, and there have it cast intothe ass. "I decline to have my remains repose," said this energetic French- man, "in the midst of myfel'ow-oountrymen, who have acted in an imbecile and idiotic manner in taking away my liberty of -action when I was in the prime of life." The ad- ministrator-guardian expressed a profound willingness to parry out the instructions in the will, and was even having a small boat constructed for the purpose of performing the funeral rites on the water, when the other members of the'family interfered and brought the matter into court. Before the tribunal the executor again declared that he wen ready to carry out the will or to have the body of his deceased relative placed in a vault in London as a kind of- compromise. The matter has not yet been settled and is likely to become legendary, Perhaps it may lead tosome reform of tee eastiron reg- ulations as '0 the disposal of fortunes, reg. ulatiope which may have been very proper in the opoch of the first Napoleon, but which are rather antiquated and too tyrannical to suit the temper of the present generation. "What becomes of men who deceive their fellow men ?" asked a Sunday -school teacher of her class. " They lose the con- fidence of good people," was the prompt an- swer. "Very well, indeed. Now, what becomes of the women who do the same thing?' The question stumped the olase for a minute, and then a little girl piped out "They usually catches the man for a hue• band, mum," A popular minister was asked how it was possible for him to preaoh a new sermon every Sunday, year after year, and to find something new to say. "Doesn't it give you a good dual of thought and trouble ?" "Oh, no," was the reply. "It le a mere matter of habit. "My sermons have never kept me awake fveminutes. " "Ah i" said the other, " that, then, is probably the reason why they don't keep other people awake, either." THE (GOOD WI OHL An Account or the Trial and yxeculion or Ors, Nourse for'IYlrclaeraft, The folios ing regarding the trial' and ex- ecntion of Rebecca Nouree,'who •wan s ori; Hoed to that strange religious Moloch, Salem witchcraft, in 1002, has been publish. ed. The magistrate ( Hawthorne) mentioned was an- ancestor of Nathaniel Hawthorne, and is no doubt the original of the Col,. Fynoheon in the "House of Sevbn Gables." The life end death of Rebecoa Nourse form a mad obapter in the history of Salem. Tra- dition mays that she was a be..,utiful woman, past middle age, rospeored by all who knew her, from the time she first entered the town until, in accordance with the popular super- stition of witohcraft, she fell aviotim to her neighbors' displeasure end oalmy went to her death on .Gallows hill. With the promptness wh oh oharaeter'zed .her, people's acts on religious subjects, four indictments wero sworn out against' her, and the wife of Franoie Nourse,-ono of the meet respeotable citizens of the deluded town, was brought into court In her old age, experiencing a full share of the delicate infirmities whioh'the instie eta of humanity require to be treated with ten- der ednsidoratien, shewas ruthle•e1y snatch, ed from the midet of a lovb g family and made to feel'the horrors of a criminal's hfa and death --to please the imaginative and religiously oraz•id people. Of her early life little on be said, She was born in Yarmouth, England, in 1621, but oame to thie country and settled in married state, `braving two sons. For many years she was one of the leading sisters Pt ; the church, and was ;actively engaged•in all religious work. How the fatal hand of qua piolon settled on her has never been ascer- tained, but it is known that her examination 'oame off in the parish • ehuroht The age, character, and appearance of the prisoner made the occasion one .of urinsual interest. The building was orowde1. Hawthorne, the magistrate, began the proceedings by ad- dressing eleef her tie:loo a.• , . $Eats this womanever b'slrt you ?' "Yes," was the 'reply. !'.What do you say to. that •?" (to the prix - oner). - In a clear but low voice the woman;re- • plied : "I can say , before my Eternal Father .I am innocent, andGod will clear my innocency " • ' Then followed the investigation, With" customary unrelenting `character of the se- •ousers a,,deaf ear was turned tothe,eloqueet appeals of- thewife and mother, who seemed ,to speak' by'divine inspiration f:ir fife and' lib rty. So clear was he defense than no possible ease could be made out against her, but, despite it all, she was kept within the arm of the law and without regard to justice, sent to jail: Mrs. Nourse, as has beenesid, was a very devout woman, and probably the hardest blow of all was the aotion of the 'church, of which she was ;a member. The • records still preserved read as follows "After sacrament the elders propounded to the church, and it was by unanimous: vote consented to, that our *deter Nourse, being •a convicted witch ami condemned to die, be ex -communicated, - which was accordingly done in the afternoon, she being present,"' Then came the day of execution,,July 169. At an early hour 'the little village was' bristling with •activity, 'Ube devil's aegis' on earth", .was to be punished with the death she deserved, a d so, the• Feritan - maidens attired themselves in holidy dress to 'honor the event:' .The procession to the gal- ' lows was a long one, soores of people from - •the neighboring towns, and villages taking part.' The victim, manacled and,guarded by the sheriff and his deputy, headed the line,• while close behind followed troops of men and' women who laughed, deeming it rare aportto•see the agonized foes of the terror- , stricken: family as they watched the mother and wife grow pale, and tremble as shiebe- ,can the ascent d the rocky cliff whose top was crowded with the ine'rament of death. ' It is impossible, in words to depict the scene of the execution in the horrible colors in which tradition has painted it. With tirm steps and eyes upturned to heaven the gray- haired woman took her place on the drop. Silently the hangman tied the rope before the eager -waiting assemoly'; then a moment- ary ; hush passed' over• the crowd—the executioner's duty done. A moment later all that was left to tell the story was the body.of the aged, woman swinging gently in the summer wind. Seldom women met with a harder fate. Eer body was thrown with the prev- ious victims into a hole in the crevice of the rooks and hastily covered with earth. Then the masses of spectators turned home- ward, leaving the bereaved family at the homestead neared forbid ignored by their once firm friends. A Love Story. - The suicide: of Mies Annie Sharp, who leaped off Beachy Head and fell a distance of 400 feet which was shown at the inquest to have evidently been inspired by a love quarrel between the deceased and a young man who had broken off the engagement, gains an element of additional pathos from some incidental facts which the investiga- tion of the case h a brought to light. A young Essex gardener, named Philip Cook, having read of the suioide'in the daily papers, , concluded that the young woman who had destroyed herself was an old .sweetheart of hie whose whereabouts he had not been able to trace. Being poor, the young pian start- ed for Lindon from Essex, en route for E.at- bourne,and arrived at Landon Bridge weary and a ithout means, atter a disheart- enieg walk of 30 miles. Once on London Bridge this ardent rustic lover wield not find his way dirt of town, and he had no personal knowledge of the direction he ought to take for the south coast. ; but de- termined to walk the nearly 100 miles to Eastbourne, he consulted one of the Metro- politan Police. A city gentleman overhear- ing the inquiries as to the route and the burning tale of the young man's in. tontione, advanced the latter 10s, and the wearied Essex traveller at once, tvi h aim- plc honesty of purpoae, handed the gentle. man this befriending him a watch as proof of his sincerity of search far the remains of the girl with the auburn air. The young lover was thee with the 108 able to ride in- stead of walk to Eastbourne, where he had the mehnoholysatisfaction rf finding his suspicions but too true s.e to Annie Sharpe being his old flame. WAYS, It has been said of Epgland the* her three proudest reigns were women's--.Etiz,abeth, Queen Areae, Victoria. False hair was worn ages ago. Tit was preaohed against by the feathers of the Church, but to no purpose, The Japanese Government proposee to de- oorate ladies who have distingniehed them• selves for the benefit of the oount y. The correct mourning hornet is strictly purple and white. A feather fern or two or -a little smilax may be reed, but no other green, Oat of the thirty-eight million dollars of exports from Soutn Africa the ladiee ace( unt for twenty.tive million in diamonds and os- trich feathers. MiasGrent, a native of British India, wait one of two ladies who recently passed an ex- amination at the Sorbonne fur the degree of Bachelor of Seienoes, "The Dachese"—whose works are popu- lar bseause all the world likes love stories prettily told in a playful way—is an Irish lady, Her name is M.% Argolles. Oh woman 1 Loveliest of lovely things,. First in ohuroh, drat in charity and firat in circulating the news, The friend cf the edi- tor, but the foo of the press. The Maidens' Ball in London was very sur:reseful, Each maiden paid $25 and re- ceived thereby the privilege of inviting five gentlemen. The wall -flowers were exolu. - sively of the male en. Baroness Rothsobildgave aball in London recently; at which the ladies wore gowns of either gray, blank or white' material, the court being now in mourning. The effeot,t though ember, was peculiar and not with- out richness. Lighting His Own Funeral Pyre, John Rosaenmoyer, a well-tq-do farmer in Weisburg, had. been drinking deeply of late and was in' 'a state bordering on delirium tremens: ' Returning tie his home, he began a violent attack: upon, the members of his family, and.drove each ,in terror rem the house. Still imagining himself pursued by devils and' hissing serpents, he piled the bedding end furniture in heaps upon the floor and set them ,on fire. Then, armed with a,gun, he placed a ohair upon a table. in the centre of the room, and, amid the roar and crackle of the bla.ing combustibles, sat 'upon his elevated•seat,with his weapon in his handy, shouting defiance to the ima- ginary swarm of snakes and devils that. were, in the light of hit maddened brain, seeking to devour him: ' The fierce flames spread, and the entire building was soon wrapped in the consum- ing elements, yet in the midst of it all could be seen the maniac Like a monarch on his throne, he sat laughing and exulting' at the ruin and havoc around him, and shouting at the top of his voice defiance to fire, devil, and death. Not until the flames had entirely surrounded him and he bad toppled from his lofty seat were the alarmed spectators able to reach him and drag him from certain des• 'truction. - While then engaged in •their hu- mane work, he threatened with loaded gun to shoot them. An examination of hie burns showed that he could not live many hours. The house with all its contents was destroyed. • "I ldou,t Want Relief, :But Cure," is the exolamation of thousands suffering, from catarrh: ' To all mole vie say : Catarrh can be cured by Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. It has been done in thousands of cases ; why not in yours ?: Your dapger is in delay. Enclose a stamp to World's Dispensary Medi- cal Aesociatiun, Buffalo, l"1'. Y , for pamph- let on this disease. Men will .never know us by our faith, for that is within us; They know us by our works, whisk are visible to them... An important Arrest The arrest of a suspicious character upon his general, appearance, movements or com- panionship, without waiting until 'he has robbed a traveler; fired'a house, or murder- ed a fellow=man,'* an important function of a shrewd detective. Even more important is the arrest of a disease whioh, if not check- ed, will blight and deetrgy a human life. The frequent cough, loss of appetite,' general languor or debility, pallid face, and bodily aches and pains, announce •the approach of • pulmonary 0 nsumption, which is promptly arrested and permanently cured by Dr, Pierce's " Golden Medical Discovery. Sold by druggists. • 'Hypoorley is Shaking -hands with your neighbor, and 'then, when his back is turned, kicking his dog in theribs. Weak lunge, spitting of blood, coneump- 'tion, and kindred affections, cured, without physician. Address for treatise, with two stamps, World's Dispensary Medical As- sociation, Buffalo, N. Y. • A rural obituary relates that " the de: ceased bad accumulated a little money and ten children." It is beyond all doubt that "Myrtle Navy" is the favourite tobacco with the smokers of Canada. They obtain mora en- joyment from' it than from any other tobac- co made and those ofthem wbo have used it long enough to test its merits neverlaban• don it for any other brand. The reason for this preference is teat the "Myrtle Navy " is made of the very finest leaf which is grown and that in every process of its man- ufacture the most vigilant care is exercised to preserve the genuine aroma of the leaf. A miser grows rich by seeming poor ; an extravagant man grows poor hygiene- ing rich. Pre'entlon Iletter'Thali'Cue. Many of the diseek* no prevalent in these days are oattsed by using soap oontafninp impure and infectious matter. Avoid all risk by using PERFEDIloN Laundry Soap, which is absolute y pure. An your grocer for P.ultvnd•Iow. Manufactured only by the Toronto Soap Co, In character, in mannern, in style, In all things, the supreme excellence is simpli•. city. ,car Alma Ladies' College, St. Thomas, Ont., has full staff and complete courses in Literature, Musfo, Fine Arts, and Cormier. clal Science, Re -opens September 10,1886, For 60 pp, announoetnent, address Wind - pal Austin, B.D, These evils "dtaerve, yet derppir hob of I 'is final pardon wh one ear is ever (pen and His eye gracious to readmit the sup. plioant. A.P. 246, I ARM+ FOR -BALE.—All kinds, -fiend ler nat. Jouw.7. 1)ALear, Guelph. ASIC YOUR nueonat I'OR- IMPERIAL FRENCH SHOE BLACKING URIs BUL'D AYRIIIIT li ti for sale, two Dose, Iwo on. price ichnnd0pedfsree to O. F. s and one occas. 'F'afafor'es . • VALUABLE nun F011 SALE -100 acres 83 mileseast of the city of Si. Thomas For particulars address J. J. Lewis, New Berard, Ont. ori It le ooncruii I by all that�the Domnueil y sea Corr,+aa, Kingston, is deserved- 1�1 y toe most prpu ar business training school in Canada. FOA 'L'L$IASANT klli1717140 ---DoE ONLY—•a Clapperton's Spool Cotton l Warranted FULL Length, and to run smooth on mut sewing machin. Bee that CLAFFID:ITON'e name is he label, ISN ' war vale by au n.v (*nods Dealers ATER STAR AUGUR' $20 Per Day WELL BORING has no superior; 20 feat per hour; hand or horse. power; oombined boring and rook drliling machine'; grand euooe=a ; first prises and diplomas. pend tor Oat. alogue. 68 Mary Steiner. DEarnilton. Canada. JAMES P ..K & SON', Pork Packers, Toronto. L. 0. Bacon, Roiled Spice Bacon, 0. 0. Emma, Glasgow Beef Hams, Sugar Cus'ed Ham, Dried Beef, Breakfast Bacon, Smoked Tongues, Mese Pork, Pickled T mguee, Cheese, Family or Navy Pork, Lard in Tubs and Pails. The Beet Brands of Eng. ler Fine Dairy Salt in Stook. PRINTERS W110 RE QUIRE New or Second-hand Presses, OR OTmsa MAODINBRY oR MATBa1AL OF ANY FIND, will get the 'lowest prices and best terms from ,I. fl. VIVI AN, 27 and 29 Adelaide St Emit, Toronto plltlltt UILD atI81NFEOTANT SATCIIEir planed in Drawers, Trunks, Wardrobes, eta.— They drive away and destroy Moths and otherineeote, imparting a delightful and delicate perfume to the olothing, carried or worn upon the person they are by Noir powerful concentrated disinfectant proper- ties, a perfeot means of proteotion against infection of disease, giving off at the game time a most delight- ful odor ; made entirely of satin in assorted colors, vd have pretty, Price 10c. eaosleet. etthree for 26onoThymo• Oresol Soap, the ;great , English disinfectant toilet soap, awarded the gold medal, London, Eng., 1884. Large cakes, price 16o , or 81o. per box of 3 cakes, sent postage paid to any address, upon receipt of pride. Address Tnrso•OassoL COMPANY, 769 Craig St., Mon. Meal. Circulars and descriptions of ourEnglish Thy mo•Oreeol preparations mailed tree on application. Agents wanted. Write for terms. If Ruptured, Cads, CLIMB% PzaFBOTBD SPIN. AL Taoss will cure 3 ou in four months, Infante in two months. D otort themselves wear and recommend them as the best for all classes—Ministers, Pro- fessionals, Mechanics, Farmete and Laborers The most per• foot System to send by mail. Send Oe. etamn for Book on Rupture and Human Frame, 8th Edition. Address, OHAS. OLUTHE, SusorOAL 3fdouansi, 118 King 88. West, Yoroato. Ont. CUT THIS OUT! The New, Co -Operative , er6. _}• ltlaehu"e!i --IS THE— BEST IN THIS MARKET, 1liEw STAND 2 NEW FURNITIIR.h Latest Improved Attachments Agents price for similar machine $00 Onr8prioo only #125 mon. - ;9;1d , a � R fo,7e,bpllli19 send ;la ,stam�k rlor nisi elegint photo graphand eamplee of sewing, ? DSaahinee gearanteed for three year/ and ecce us. 12111,1, An lad wantin a machine 7111 do well to writs to TICE CO.OPERATIVS Sewing Iaehioe Co. In TAMER RT. ROUT21i: HAJIItr,TOH GUtNEY & WARE'S STANDARD SCALES Aro the Beat. At. tested by tate Fact thattbere are more of our scales in MO in the Dominion than of alt other makes combined. playa Stock and poral ,`; Seeks. Farmers' Gram and Dairy Scales, tiro cos' atBntehers. Stales, Scales for Itomestic Use. lgonsekeepers, Consult Your Best Interests By purobasing weals, and in buying one be tiara to get the beet. Out 'sales ate Cully warranted in every particular. All sizes RAID std,'warehouse AIM 31111 Trucks. Alain Morley Drawers. For sale by the Hardware Trade generally. 11. Inneptrllera tdohdatalogue and Price List forward upon ap GURNEY & WARE HAMILTON. Wuesnouets---Montreal and Winnipeg,