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The Signal, 1890-10-31, Page 3THE SIGJAL, FRIDAY, OCT. 31r 1890 MIXER SHOES trhm .v owns meso ant FARM,FLEA GARDEN. ENDLESS VARIETY eel Style awl him at the Old-lisfabtYbed 01Z0@ Store OF E. DOWNING. an. not Id eonillaed a your cbelouse s of thee trot Best Productions . la footwear from •U the Leading Manufacturers la the Dominion. Prices lower than at any other store in the bominion fur the lame clam of Clouds. Ordered Work aq°al 10 the best l• Canada. NO SLOP WORK SVIIRY PAIR OUAIIANTERD. Repairing done Promptly d Right. E. DOWNINC, Cer. rias -at. and Square. Goderich. ( lti ti�i �FT.If:1�Y:.Mu3_ ilei Jr fiiIS x11Q:TIE FUT; CCWCi r`i(r01rr;Siris,%:!'r cea -.c:: .. - SUIYIKETCORP IXN T KEEP A COTTLE ill THE HOUSE. L:-..zr797iMr1VC4BEL, SOLD EY ALL DEAL_tii. 1'I WHY EVERY FARMER •tion:d get oneof Armstrong's Improved e1TT. lin rr.� a AR RQ 9 I we YaJLL U1J W11JaPU 1 BECAT_TSM 1st -it a:lona nn foul seeds to be Mown into the (haft which no of ate at importance to errry farmer who triekea to keep his farm clean. —it saves and cleans all Timothy seed say kind of grain while Maiming the aged. For Market cleaning it restorer Cockle. Chess and ahrnnken grain. aad awes the faster the most ooseible weight for bis Rain with no loss. •ab. It will sample grata ler dhow and seed purpose* equal to bead pickiag. ML (leaning used Wheat it remotes au Cotkle. Mustard seed. Wild Peas. Wild Flea and other foal awl sbraaken and broken grain. awl given the earner pews. clean, peed grain. alb. It will clown Oats, liarl.•.l. ate., thor- oughly without wane of grata tab. -cleaning Pease: 1t wul separate the sand. quartered. Woes, Oen sad whip Peas from each other. carrying each to • different comport meat. ea.-- It is a perfect Clever peed Mae►Ise. re- moving .11 lust, broken tad deed seeds sad other boots. lamgerr or mouse that the Clever seed. ab. It is• ant clam Oran is ]Uaehlae. Mews no seeds away. ash.- It Is a good Flax seed Machine, It►. It Is a first elms Misfile. vs etb. Ilium be fitted Into the olle t fashioned h, rasalowgg Mill that Is bid aside as melons sad oaake It do the work of • sew Mlll. sib. -11 can be attaabad to • new Milt with- a oat IaJaring It. and can be removed at sal Ilam as easily as a three oombtaed. 1t 1105 Woes act interfere with the nee of the re- !m, haler sieves of the Mie. tat 44hsloe.fu Marty are artty allperforated ale Mb. --1t has ■ oapseity of shay busb.le of em Enda per Your. Os Mb. it bas chomp as the ordinary hada( met sierra ltsb.--Every Mao:•ise M Or item. Head your orrisi' at owe if you want 11 this . if you Moe see sees • Machine eek at have oar soot for limpsoti..e. a*d that yes hu ke it os. coe,dltlos It gene. In orderfnq by mall lead inside width of nee oeof Fanni-.11111. be TRONG BRAS., net O oderiohs Ont. A somber of accidents have oseasr•d is thisneighborhood daring the lest to woo..Oo Saturday, the 11th host. Mr a. Spree/ fell from a ladder while pocking apples and bort hi* hack ma .taerabl] ; sat weak Mr A. Robertus also tell frogs• ladder phased b an op pt. tree sad hurt kta arm and side badly Both are almost well again. While cleaning out the stable las week Willie Yoongblut and fractured ono of the bocce of hu sem &huv• the went. Mr (leu Youngblut, )'r., has returned from Gent, where he has been working fes the last year and • half. Mw Maggi• Roberto° bug robe t0 Galt, iso a visit to her sister, Mrs Laps ley. O THE EXPERIENCES AND OBSERVA TIONS OF THE PROGRESSIVE. I$ieettea Given at a Weta Farmers sa ttltate as tie Fassea*edam 'ag .f *vel -A • - Y well It -'-,d i•eoa-Tse Ifalw.f tM lomat reeds aa 1 by Aaalysa.. OE1MIE FOR PROFIT. Meow and Where Mem*l (w tae 11& 5 wish peeve. Aa compared with other chases u! poultry but few geese are raised, and yet, with suitable facilities, breeding • geese to doubly profitable. There is al - way. a fair demand for well out..fattened IMF ' young birds duriug the lowout. and again at the holiday season, as well as the trail for flee specimens tet leading varieties fur breeding and exhibitioniv 'tures& The market for what is ..op- ularly known as "live geese blathers" is never glutted. and therefore the yield of ' feathers adds a second and very consid- erable suture of profit. It must be borne t m mind, however, says the agricultural editor of The New York World, that t getne are profitable only when there aro • suitable facilities It is imperative that them theinclude exttuded grow runs, for geese are great graziers, and free access to water, this latter being necessary to a plentiful growth of ft•atlsers of pure quality, as well as the thrift of the flock. An ideal place for geese raising is a hilly plaud piers of grass ld through which flows a brook. It is useless. fr.,nt a commer- cial point of view, to breed geese in ro- atri •ted quarters or in a see proximity to small fruits and vegetables.. In the first nuke will nke but meager growth and they v. -ill destroy the sec •:.d. Autumn is a favorable time for mak- ing; a selection of binds Leer (,reeding, just before the flocks are ceilk-d fur fat- tening. The two principal breeds of geeeee, when the birds are dcared fur . profit, aro the gray or Toulon*and the white or Embden. These insure hardi- ness*, early maturity, heavy wei;;hts and pnlificaey. The Emlel,•as require a pond, but the Toulouse.. other thine being favorable, will d•. fairly well with what water can be furnished in trungls.. The standard weights, as est by the lnierica:i standard of perfeetk,n, for an adult Toulteme gander awl goose are •respectively twenty-five pornds and twenty -there pounds: and ter ;smug one. twenty pountle and eighteen p,unoLs. The standard weights for Eisele dens are placed at the same fig ores. though 1Ie conuuoa opinion is that the Toulouse gaiu the heavier weights. Other and leen well known varieties are the African. light gra plumage; (Ili - nem. brown. also white len:nage: (':m- arle. gray. and Egyptian. colored pinm- ag". When geese are set early two broods may be obtained from each female, thus securing large pocks fur each seasons sales. The later hatched titds make ea- cellnt fiesh by Christina. time. A gownk-. ma: s het a poor show upon the table unless it is very fat , For fatten- ing gees onght to be penned lip. halt a dozen ti.gether in a dark crop or ahead. and fed on barley meal and fatteninggrains. When raiscd for m rket old geeese may be plucked three Chios and young ones once before killing time. ere, Ley regularly, and tear their young well season after season, but the gan:lere aro not ;'rotit-•:bly kept more than three or four years. Llnnld Manure.. In Germany all animal liquids are cert•ftelly preserved in cement , tanks with elated envera. upon which the dung; is thrown every morning from the stables. When the pile get+ very dry some of the underlying liquid is pumped over it to prevent it trona ..h . .rt,� ,. None other than liquid manure is need there for garden and all hoed crops. it is else. Is: ;sly ss weed aria top dressing for gra, :u:d the beneficial results shote t't••'iselves much serener than on portions treated with solid This is particularly the case on level, well drained land . There exists a very prevalent impres- sion that top dressing leads to much loss thrungh evaporation. With the solids this may be so, but with liquids it is lin- poesible, because they find their way im- mediately below the surface, where the plant roots lay heal on them. A recent writer from Wartembnrg alleges that he has reapers better crops and larger profits from the ruse-- the of liquid manure - sometimes alone. . . . in conjunc- tion with the ordinary stable solidsan from that of the most highly re- puted artificial manures. Uvtai.Nae as a Teacher. Mr 11. M. Stanley bears this remark- able testimony to the character cf Dr Liviogsiun. : "I have been in Africa seventeen years, and hare never met • emu that would kill me if I folded my lands. What has been emoted, and what I have beet' Indenturing to ask for the peter Ai- rmails ever 11150• Lving•tons taught me during these four months that I was with him, has hien the Rued (Alloys el Christ- iane. In 1871 1 vent to him as preja diad as the biggest atheist in London. Tie a reporter and c.,rtwp•.ndent, such as I, who had only tts deal meth wan• Inaba - greetings and pollee gathenagr, .euti- mett.I meters sero courtly out of my province. But there came for ins • long ttme for reflection. 1 was out there away from a worldly world. I saw the solitary old roan there, and asked my - :elf, 'How on earth dues he atop herr 1 1a he cracked or .bat t K htt is tc that iarpires hirer F,r months after we intt 1 simply found myself leiter leg to hint, wondering at the old man carryieg out all that was said in the Hole, 'Leeriest; all things and follow Me.' But eine by little his .ympa'by for others becan e eont.etoua ; my sympathy was aroused ; setting his pity, his gentleness, his z -al, his •:immune**, and how he went quiet- ly about his huairese, 1 was cotiverttd by him, althe.utth he bad &ort treed to d.. it llowes('thatMowe•d.. l men nhe.u'd nave died so reuse ! H.,w joyful he we .1d have been if he could base seen what has since happened there. ' Meme Leandtes. Here it sn old auntie's prescription fur fever seal ague which, for forty years, has peeved a cure when takes acoufd- tug t.. direction : it:ow oat -the Bell from whole mustard aced, either black or white. and take a Iablespuonful °eftre breakfast every mornueg for three mae- oea.ise days ; then men. it three morn • iota, and again take it three successive mountings. Before the patient b*is taken the n:nth dose be will woi,oer what has become of his chills. The seeds should be swallowed whole, ted are easily taken with water. Mustard seed taken the rams way as dee.crib.J &tore, hut to tearpe.ou d..set, 1* an excellent remedy for dyspepsia. Are old-faseiened at.d very good cough syrup is made of sui.tlower seeds as ha- loes : Put ball a pound of tee seeds en a bag and pound them goal they are broken, the. add A quart of water and souk them well, after •hick strain thew and add • pound of loaf sugar and ■ teacupful of New Orleans molasses t i the juloe. flail It down until quite thick and add half a pint ..f the best gen, then bottle fur rix. Take a teaspoonful of this several times a day, according to the ..verity oldie cough. A syrup much used by ourgr.ndmoth- era fur colds And whooping-a,ugn u wads of tquel yuasuuts of dal seed, licorice nous. Luur•et and slippery else bail. To there add cold ealei to cover well. and let the mixture buil slowly 1..r an hour, then strain It ,sad add half a pound of loaf sugar and a pint of molas- ses A remedy 1.-r coughs , 1 by many of the beat dueto* is made by steeping Liz seed and straining et through a tau strainer before it gets too thick. Add &o equal quantity of lemon juice, and enough waif sugar to make a syrup. This should be taken frosty. For • chronic ec ugh get a bottle of strained honey, one of olive eel, and one of homemade wine. Two or three times a day take • mixture composed of one teaspoonful of the honey and two each of the oil and wine. When children are threatened with croup, cut raw unions in .live•, put them is a saucer end sprinkle thew freely with brown sugar, then give the joins that forms in teaspoon doses. A raw onion .lined and plaosd in t .ick -ronin is. good disinfectant, as it ab- sorbs poison rapidly. For that reason it should he burned twice • day and re- placed by • fresh one. Try cold Sop tea for the nervous M- ild who cannot sleep sad make • ptl- w of hope for him to sleep on. A most ezoeleat remedy for diarrhoea made as follows : Brow° half • pint tf in a .pider as our mothsre need to wo coffee, taking care that it dose sot re ; then grind it in • Boise oill •ad kis it into coffee. Drink the freely, ng only • little !MA la it. is has red severe to.of winter °bolero. Magog tl ars Mining experts nob that cholera newer tacks ah• bowels of the earth, hat inanity is general find it mummery to Dr Fowler's Riztreet of Wild Straw. rry for bowel eemplaints, Dysentery, iarrbos•, ata It 1. a sere euro. 2 t has been discovered that Loegf•1- • "Village Blacksmith" ie Beery Freesia Moore, a smith who lives at edited, Masa usatta, aged 11 year.. • Foal woo a frequent dallier to oor•'• smithy. Dr ft , the famous esti-fat ce *Nan nt Rimnak, has gone on an wrinaded tour aRamps with the objeet illesisning hie weight. Be hs grown tbisi s a rail, &sd hie a•rreee oyster 10 Olin aa Ytt�g low M 4E1 Th ew ween as Wow is swI wwat aawaw ••tai pla as Aram Dons arm." toe s su et i..�rsiker r RI Ikstonukjy prestestd. The 8epreme Closet of Mtaaeent• ie ema.r erwrurt/e►..tel s.....ei.vr �d to have lately rendered • desi- i.'esa.•.�..,..tw Idea daelerie, that "bark cheeks are not • +i'1 tea seekmemtttdde til owlepeewees t.' � vale* e *smut we sots r.rerwms .fY 5 When pigs are bang rapidly grown care must be ezeirciard that they are re- ceiving food tet the kiwi to make bode and muscle sufficient to carry the L that will be laid later on. if fid to heavily on corn at an early age they get weak acruss the loins and the hind fee draw up clue together. and the pig. are unable to rise without help. The objec the first four or Bre months should lee then. to grow bone an.i muscle. The brood sow and pigs leant have pasture. Clover snppliesthe most teed to the acn-, bat blue grass is good, and even young timothy is not to be despised After the pig has reached five months of age the ration of corn can be increases], but not too heavily at first. If the profit is in the fire 2•10 poeada, the quicker you can get your pig to that weight the better utter getting on the cern ration. Geed feeding is regular feeding, and all the huge will est without Toeing their appe- tites The value of different (melee as dem- onstrated by chemical analyte:;, is net always borne out in practice. The di- gestive noel assimilative capacity of the animal to wiuch the food i, feta cannot lx, eietennine•:1 by the chemist, and on these depend .0 a street measure the re- melts elts obtainexl by feeding. Considerable mere feed will be found eecceal-ar\- for tee maintenance ration of 100 pouuds of -shark" then 1W pounds /of straight Poland China or Berludere. The small pig that consumed a pailful of ri••h slop, to the surprise and disgust of his owner, who when the pail was ala ity jammed the pig into it and swore that the pig didn't begin to fill arta pail. was taking pretty near 100 per cent. of the feel con - mama for a nutinteriame ration. If you dewire to know how runel% the foal of support enemata to in a pig that you propose to sell at COO pound.: vrcight we will suppose that he reaches that weight in 20') days. As he ince zi..0 front noth- ing to .00 pound;, then 100 pounds is his average v:ei,rht for tide entire time. And the amount or food pm•r .lay that will hrel.1 him at 100 pounds without losing or gamin,( will be the avercg. food of support per clay for the entire 2011 days It is about time fanners were beg -ermine to realise t'utt greater profits ere made fn ea fretting young animals than from feeding oddones: that no one fool is as good as a cocbinetion of foods: "that good bloat will tell" nee Notes. As to bee stings an English eethority says: These stings, thong°'Tinfn'. are not to a healthy tenon, en - less in the month. tilroat or eyelid. The bene leaves its Isningg in the wound: care- fully arrful:y extract this and gcnilyrnb the spot with eqnal parixf olive oil and harts- horn. A. I. root says that black bees are no more pn..ef against feu! Imolai than Ital- ians. In England awl (k-rauunye where black bees are the pretailine rate. foal brood has made its mischief for many years. As Ittlianr often get honey when common lees do not. they , swarm when e- mmorr bees do tint. A Can: ellen beekeeper. in a disc -Limner) nn intr.xdnciug queer:A at a reeent con- vention oo-vention Raid that he tb•,ught a great many queens were het thrr•igh the bete keeper being too ancione tut see whether the queen is all right. and examining the hive too soon after the que n has been introsnced. He now leaves the colony abme for several daym, anti never bites a queen. He nese a Peet cage. bat instead II( putting it between Vie trainee he pmts it on top of the fraises and lets the bees get her out. A Dutch bar.. This benbebed to ere, -t ander which to keep fodder. corn and hay is what is known as a latch barn. This he simply a roof elevated on pe.le•s. with the sia•s and ends open. In England there roofs are frequently made so that they can be raised or lowered, being held in position by rings around the poles, which rest upon iron pins pawing through the poles. By these means the rise of the shed can he enlarged or contracted as the crop stored incensms or diminishes, and thus perfectly protect frau the weather what is stored at any time. When not required forstoring fodder the roofs are lowered, gay to a height of six or eight feet from the ground. and boards placed from pile to pole in the opening between the ground and roof, thus making a class and warm shelter for stock. We strongly *dries every tanner to erect such a phew!. It will be found inva liable.- -Southern Planter. (sub 11 Cas., The American Dairyman wants to know wherein we consider a milk dis- tributing can. made like the .lash churn, better than to use a long handled dipper to well stir np the milk before delivering to the patron. In this: The milk can be well agitated with the dasher without lifting the corer to have the nontenb ex- panse] to warm air, dust and flies, and the milk can learnt in a cleanly man- ner from the faat the lease, without the spilling anti slopping incident to dip- ping. We don't suppose it is a life and death question. but then we vote few the eland cover, the timber and the faucet Bot thew for our own eating we prefer the delivery of the individus1 quart measnreel at the farm. "Yom pays year tourney. and you takes your cboioe."- Htard's Dairyman. tl./shin rerUllws. Bohahia fertilise, snob as nitrate 0t soda and snlpbats rel ammonia, should! a never he applied in the fall, but in the spring- The fin fertUla.re are Hese , g*-wnd banm pioneer, ads and *eh pheapkatee aahavw not been seldelabd. Sanely rile ar eigily leached by wows and rains, which mean pus °f •oluhla tomb, to winter. The Apple Marren - Choose a cool day for picking apples• and pet them in a cool eked out of the sun until they are barreled. The moisture which gathers upon the snrfaco of the fruit is the result of . from the „ . when the apples are ex- posed to a higher temperature. as from hot days to cool nights. The popular notion that apples "sweat" from within hs erroneous. it is not safe to put in the barrel a single dropper] apple, no matter how sound it may look. Wort. Raewlag. The .. . arrived at by the di- rector of the Maryland Experiment sta- tion, alter testing forty varieties of wheat, is that the Dietz. Pnleaster and New Au.tridian are superior to all the rest. Of the three the Dietz is the best. Missouri's fruit crop. .. t speaking, is a good one. Cold storage or a cellar, dark, dry and ss near 10 degrees as may be, is a good means of preserving seed potatoes. At a recent meeting of a Michigan potnol.tgdeal society a grape grower said •1 have fonnd that by pruning and thinning 1 an get (be same number of pounds of grapes in a similar bom- ber of clusters, and these will be more comport and nnifnrm in alae and bring the highest price in the market. Two items are Imp it-tant In draining - secure a gond outlet and provide a regu- lar deepest for the water. Oa ao average the hatter plan i* al- ways to sell an animal whene -et it is ready. There is always more or lees of Isles #n fiMdtng longer then tide 11T show that Pari* groes ie prat rabt. to London purple am an in- secticide on peach trees. One part of Faris green to ADD parts of water is the proportion seed. The Loudon potpie, woo odiro does, hoopoe the drew d the tame 3 ORCHARD AND °ARDEN. FINE TAILORING INSTRUCTIVE NOTES ABOUT FLOW- ERS, FRUITS ANO VEGETABLEP. That Pasaitertl Ameoriono Plant the t'arte.-Seene rA gee Charweberiataer-A Cafes A t .f Cacti. 1a the style- of a is1.Iet.re Lechery. The cacti aro peculiarly Aio•rleas plants- American Garden is authority fur the, statement that the cactus family includes about I.000 species, of which all but one are native to the western i . In shape the cacti bre per- haps the meet varied of all plants. Bonze are *tweet perfectly aphericel. some are cnnuualy fiat(. ►de some aro angled, furrowed and grooved, many of then are column like and some are comped of curiously fisttened joints, like au ag A CY1d,.•CE ARRANOCY!NT 01, CACTI. gn•ipttion of a great many plates . thickened leaves e.ue upon the ether. F. the mise part cacti are leafless, yet t p•reekias have tree leaves; hut in :t c bun sense the whole pleat may Is (tai to 110 One gigantic met curious leaf, f. the green tissue oel the entire snrf:u ewes in the capacity of foliage. The flowers of the cactry tribe are al- ways singular and interesting, perlate the more tui beecreise the; are sr, entirely unlike in expression to the plants mem which they are borne. If the plants re. mind one of the most scorching deserts the flowers, on the other hand, recall the ch ,icest blossoms of the conservatory earl the garden. They aro exceedingly varied in fo-;a and color and six. Notviitlistauding the fact that cacti have lunch to .......,..,:.d them to lovers of the curious ane beautiful few per- cale ec&.ane knew mach about other than the ordinary kiwis. There npinear:t no ma - eon. say.; Orchrrl an I Garden. why any own woo can devote a small space t1 them in his window or garden should not grow men :.ace eieifally. It is by contrast rith one another that different .:riet;os. are disp laye,l to that beet ad, ventage. The authority quote) sugggusti the atrrnnga..ettt s'ue,an in the cut of s 1 V.V.' choice specimens in the style e: s miniature rockery. r • ro n age. Je iZEES PRICE & SOFT. 1890. 1890. ..E 'cru aiZd uv sen terve Fine Display of New Goods. Fine Worsteds. - Fine English and Scotch Tweeds. Fine Canadian Tweeds. Fine Overcoatings. Fine Workmanship and Trimmings, CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST. • R- Z\SacCORMAC- PUBLIC NOTICE Another Targe consignment of Fresh Teas of superior quality. In order to counteract the dis- honest practices perpetrated on th public by peddlers and others, are offering Special Inducement Tea and Coffee, and solicit your Originating New Peas. It 3wa.1 long thought th:•.t natural of iaset•t cross fertiliatioa s,f the pea was practically inrpa.ssible, but Mr. Laxb.n, who ire known as the originator of sums fifty tariotie;. now thinks that minute iuse.-ts whi^h appear tit: earl on the pol- len he:cxe the flower opens do. in ntane cases. carry it from flower to flower. The presence of "rogues" or irregnllu plants is sometimes due t•, this agency. Great improvements have been MIRe in peas in pent of earliness. size• Produc- tiveness, quality and dwarfness of greertle. rent for various renw.ns there is a renstant tendency to revert to the old form lied lore the advantegeea gained. This makes the continuo -aa peudnction of new varieties necessary in order to conn- I (eruct this ,..tope ,,, ! r tendency. Mr. Litztein say -is on (lids subject: By means, however, of cross fertilize - thin aline, and melee; it be followed try careful and continued selection• the la bun; of the cross breeder, instelcl of ben efiting the ganle,ner, may lead to steel confusion, ixrausn the pea under orli• nary conditions is much given to sport. ing and reversion; for when two dissimi- lar old or fixed varieties have been crone fertilized, three or four generations at least mast under the must favorable cir- elapee begone tho progeny will become Sneed or settled. We must therefore still largely look to selection as the final means of wiataining permanent i• . . i in the pea. Kay's Block, next Bank of Commerce, Square. Orders by Telephone promptly attended to. Goderich Foundry and Machine Works, RUNCIMAN BROS., - Proprietors. FLOUR MILLS BUILT ON THE LATEST IMPROVED SYSTEM WL HAVE OX (HAND FOR SAlti: IMPROVED LAND ROLLERS, HORSE POWERS, GRAIN CRUSHERS, STRAW CUT- TERS, PLOWS, &c. We are Manufacturing Improved New Model Mowers which are equal to the bast. Give th m a trial and encour- age home manufacture. We Will Guarantee Satisfaction, It Will Pay you to use our new Steel Mouldboard Plows. Doty Engines and Boilers for sale. REPAIRS ANT) 0&BTINC39 OSt ALL . .-.... DB - NEW ARRIVAL FALL AND WINTER 03-0 033E3. LATEST STYLLS. Remnants to be Cleared Out. Perfect Fits and Showy Shapes. Hints ea Camellia (•.timer. For ' decoration no plant H. DUNLOP that will flower in an equally low tele peratnre can at all compare tit desirable qualitiew with the camellia. In every re- spect, with the mingle. exception d trent. it 1. the equal of the nee, whiles in it/ ability to thrive in a low •, in the hearty of the plant, wf11i its heavy. dark, glossy foliage, In its free- dom from inrectw, and in the durability of the bloom, it exoets oven the queen of Sowers. The canal is is 50 hardy that it will Hire in the open air in many porta of the southern. stater and in res eland. in cultivation an - der glans it will In a dormant MSS live and thrive in any I. , „ above the freezing point, and will take little or no hart if subjected to three or four degrees of frost. Tb. planta will bloom freely in a . „ of IOsletga., tllongh 4l deem. snits; them( stetter. Popular (1-ardening, authority for the forugsnug, mays that as a rnle healthy mentalism produce enough thrifty remit *hereto roverhoyear to require no cutting lack. 1f, waver. there be a lack elf throe, or it is desirable be improve the form n' the plant, there need be no herd- tation Meant Hotting it hack, for few ;dente will bear the kwife better that the catsellia. Tire tnnmrtat, nr eve° be- fore, the late bitterns fade is the time fox toning. 1 21117 The West•1t. Taller. 341EDI' xENlee l to .ell my guaranteed Ncasrnr MTvtr tl1c. .bnor I -..o mi.sion, paid wee• jS 4nt lire. ripe, i., et.ention given to beginners. Worker. Iles .•r Mmake fail to Rood weekly wages. Write me at Dice for part$cuie n. 72 Mt K. 0. GRAiHAM. Nareetyman. inigilleisse b rellabte.I Toe o,sm, OwT. ANTED! A grand peaking flale.rnan herr. Fleet ^lam pay guaranteed weekly. ('omen Wlon tr maQuick selling new Fruits sed 'p.rlaltle, KAIUIRit$wa net • good trying Joh for he whiter. Write for hitt ten -s and par ,.en'er& FRED. K. 1.OUNO. Noreen noun. 73 An Rocitsgrrini. WANTED Any quantity of peon. barley and oats, for which the highest market price will be paid at tilrawberr, beds that arm t, fmit nestBURROWS', tea.o 0 g t to be lerpt firer feta vlws. 'i he Beadsman. Stimnbate with a pixel top Arming el fem. hen manure or word 04*.., or baths. Bane chase she doing. merle* a p a FINE PRINTING PAPERS AT SIGNAL PATENTS CAVEATS. TRADE TURKS Ann COPYRIGHTS °Heine&, and all buainea in the U.S. fates Oteee attended to at MOI,RJL4TN PRES. our ortice le opposite the U. S. Patent Of- fice, and we an obtain Patents is ices time lhaa three mamas from R'4OHI NOrON. Send M(1DIL OR 1414 WING. We .d - vise as to patentablUty fres of charge; aad we take C/111ARO/ UNLRSS WS OB - TA IN PI riNT. N'e refer bare, to the Postmaeter,the S to kion 7 jrder biv, and to °Melds of 1 U. S. t Opine, roe cirrulare adr(ee. gangs awl ear renes to actual client. in your own :stats or (``minty. write to A. s*s•w a C111.. Opwo.lb Patent Oats. Wahl ialiew .O. THE KEY TO HEALTH. Dnloetts all the Clogged avenues of the Howe* leidnayv and Liver. carry Mac gradually without the astern. all the impurities trod foal humors of the sseakiou M the sur Rqe the Btor an j� � of the t It nn t a.ps�•a.Uee1t, t l •art,,• ,ant Oen- oral Debility ; at *me iaa ld bmaln�yy a� similar Co plineee aints U' bobs SL.00D .RU'PJ♦IRS, 5. 11111t>Cfm • SSe. pe enta. ,!rises v awe w - dy wya i.+1ur wMrerse.gt ear. reaves