/-â- J.X- -t- .«"» f^E FARMEE/S OOBNEl. j-aim Work for October. r„e weeds in m eadowa and pastures are I "^eaiii'y seen, and can be quickly remov- 1-i* jtb a cbisel-blade attached to a long J-^ ,u Grass lands to furnish hay next V r.houlJ not be closely fed by stock dur- â- •^t'jje late autumn, but instead be top- "-=eJ "' ^°^' '^sll-rotted manure. '^3 seeds may be sown on spots where I ';. jyjti is poor, and if harrowed over, and 'le fertili"^r added, a good growth may be .-^cted. 'f. is not too late to sow wheat and rye; 'e soil is in fine condition, both may do jell as early-sown grain, and are more f.^\ to escape the ravages of the Hessian ' A top dressing of manure will assist iviDg the plants a good growth before ^..'rroand freezes. Potatoes should be dug as soon as they I '-ipe, and kept for a time in heaps in the .;; to dry out. Sunlight injures potatoes, '.â- 'tliey should therstore be stored in a ^.'j^ frost-proof place. All decayed pota- *; should be assorted out, and burned t;; tbe vines, when clearing up the field. t^eles and beets are injured by the frost, u should be harvested in safety. These Umay be kept in heaps near the stable, removed by the load as required. It is r^rtant to ventilate the pits well to pre- J; heating. Turnips will stand frosts, c: oDDtinue to grow until the season closes. I jiake the necessary water-courses in is to relieve them of the excess of sur- i;effater during heavy storms. The fur- wide and shallow, should run diagon- al across slopes, with little fall. All kinds ::ter, except weeds with ripened seeds, -aid go out into the barnyard. There I -;d be a general cleaning up in and f ;ad the garden and stables, to give a L: appearance at the end of the season, I «â- is a good time to make the necessary irairs and improvements for wintering the ,-j. animals before bringing them oerman- iuto the yards and stables. Notes on Live Stock. I yjiii should no longer be turned out at :;;. A cold rain may bring on troubles v.'hich [•i .iitiicult to cure at this time of year. If :r=es are unavoidably drenched, rub them as soon as possible, and cover with tickets. Horses need to enter upon the r.cf in good health. jvrs cannot be kept in good flow of milk l.;oat ample rations of rich fodder. As \: pastures become bare, com stalks, cut mixed with ground oats and com, may ;!ven. Feed the tops of beets, turnips, in small quantitiss. The aim should be .ave the cows in fine form at the close of Isr pasturage. peak for March lambs this month There jiten a tine profit in buying poorly-fed from sections where fodder is scarce, I; turning them off fat in the sprine. In p way a large amount of straw, if fed J:r corn, may be made into manure as a Ljiiii source of gain. lorcoJ sows need to be kept in good con- |:Dn to meet the male next month for itcn pigs. It is best to begin at once to iiifi r pork, using the soft corn first. The [:â- should ue clean and warm. The store b will do well on the slops of the house, r.:: bran stirred in. Skim milk is good for liepuilets will lay through the winter if :t in a warm house, and provided with i-.eJ shells and good fed. Chopped cab- e and other green food is relished by along with grain. Avoid crowding poultry, and keep the nests, walls, etc., from vermin. Early fattened poultry ^ore profitable marketed during the lat- ;art or L»otober and early in November at Thanksgiving or Christmas time. Choosing Sheep for Fruflt. po.nt to consider is the increasing use • '•ilue of mutton, and, no doubt, this in- ::â- : would be more rapid and greater in â- -at if the quality of the meat oflfered â- : jetter the second point is the large â- -i of an early Spring lamb, worth not so â- â- ' for size as for quality and plumpness â- Jird is the market value of wool. Now, "ild go without saying to the practised " practical farmer that all those points "â- "'1 icr their most successful issue upon :T.an3u-eiiient of the flock â€" the selection, â- -reeuing, the care, the feeding, and the •^- All these are of the greatest im- ""Ece, but the first of all is the selection. • a sheep 13 kept that makes inferior -â- â- rears a thin, scraggy, bony lamb, or ---is low-priced wool, all the care be- â- "-• upon It is thrown away and labor -^nd in regard to mutton, while it • be admitted that the Southdown -is first and the Shropshire second, and â- â- "nese hold the same place as regards â- iM lamljs, yet we have a class of Mer- inow as delane wool sheep, which are â- ' ds-ep-bodied, and of which a 3-year- ^^ether yields as good and well-flavored ^•03 as even the Southdown, aud a Mer- -imh is proverbially plump and fat. At 'â- ^â- ^ time the wool of this sheep, class- _^\hne combing â€" for it is long enough for ^^"ig with the present improved nia- "7--and delaine, is quoted in the Boa- i^arket at 4S tc 50 cents per pound, â- ' is .J cents higher than Ohio and -sylvania full blood fine wool from the â- ^ short wool merino. This, then, would to be the most profitable sheep for the ;;'f to keep, more especially as it produces â- â- ^^y a fleece as the long wool sheep. •" (s inferior in every point. Next to ' â„¢'ght be placed the Southdown and hshire sheep, so nearly alike, except .n 'hat an expert only could distingtiish These produce mutton of a peculiar â- texture tender quality, and gamey ' 'hi.h i3 very profitable. For the 'P^t, these sheep, being small andcom- ^- *U die young, strictly speaking, for ^j^Ppear in the butcher's stall as although they may be mature and f°wn, It ,3 very true that as " lamb " '^^""ally, these sheep make as good a the long wool lamDs, really in their ^tate. But as Spring lambs, weigh- pounds and three months old, they "Jiexcelled or even unapproacbed by i^\^y other breed. Such lambs have " often sell at $8 or $10 each when i enough and heavy and Jat ei^ugl*- C'a 1 full 100 per cent. div?d«a;PB the \,^ "a another to come by and by from "^^ of 2.5 per cent, or more. And the ^, when fed, will atways return her coet with interest. These are *hrri. r ' •whi/.K +1.-, « i: ^. " sheep from Plentiful enough ever to come on to the mar- flpL? a g»ded Bort These sheep yield a w^l wH*w *^^^?°"^*^ °f t^? ^d of wool which is sought by the country mills and buyers for ordinary domestic goods. The wool 18 short, medium tine, and strong, and 18 usually classed as medium, cardinf or clothmg wool. Either of these breed^ make an excellent cross upon the native grades ewes, and the cross is as valuable in hit? "^T^ "'^P* for breeding, as the pure bred. They are worth study and examina- tion by farmers who are desirous of going in- to sheep as a farm product. Tbe Potato Rot. The daily papers recently contain tele- graphic accounts of the great destruction of the potato crop in various sections of the country. The disease was the one known as the 'potato rot." This is not a new trouble, and most of the older inhabitants can remember the ravages of this pest in 1842 and again 1845, when it spread over Great Britain, Ireland, and tUe United states, causing much distress to those who make the potato the leading article of food. The rotting of the potatoes is caused by a microscopic fungus, Peronospora infeatans, which inlest the potato plant. By fungus is understood a plant of a very low order, the more familar members of which are the toadstools, mushrooms, mil- dews, and moulds. Some of the fungi live only on decaying organic matter, and are comparatively harmless in fact, aie often helpful in hastening decay and preparing substances for future usefulness. Other species of fungi are parasitic, growing upon living things. The bread mould is a familiar illustration of a small fungus wh ich feeds upon dead matter, while the potato rot fungus is an equally striking example of one thriving upon a living plant. The mildew of the grape, which has caused great damage in many vineyards, is a close relative of the po- tato rot. They both belong to the same genus (Peronospora], a genus which contains a large number of species, and all are des- tructive to the host plants. The potato rot fungus consists of long filaments or threads, which grow through the substance of the potato plant, and rob it of juices and induce a rapid decay. The fungus usually makes its first appearance upon the under side of the leaves as frost- like patches, soon causing the foliage to curl and turn brown. The frost-like appearance is due to a multitude of spores which have formed upon the ends of fungus threads pro- truding from the breathing pores of the leaf. There are many thousand stomata or breath- ing pores to the square inch, and a dozen or more threads may come out at each open- ing. Each of these threads form branches, and each branch bears a sptore. This helps to give an idea of the vast number of spores formed upon a single affected leaf. These spores germinate quickly and in a peculiar manner â€" each spore giving rise to several smaller spores provided with hair-like ap- pendages (cilia) by means of which they move quickly around. This is a most ad- mirable provision for the rapid and perfect spreading of the disease when it has once "struck " a potato field. After the foliage has become affected the disease passes into the stems and down to the tubers, when the most destructive work is done. The farmer should be on the watch for this fatal pest of his potato field. Like most fungi this Peronospora thrives best in warm, rainy, or "muggy" weather. In one of the recent press reports it was stated that the decay was caused by the wet weather which has prevailed in many parts of the country. The weather was only a favoring condition for the growth of the rot plant, as much so as the rains are aids to the profitable development of the various field crops. Weeks ago we predicted, and with a great degree of certainty, that the potatoes would rot in many sections. This came from a knowledge of the nature of the rot and the conditions which favor its develop- ment. It has been shown that the disease is first seen upon the leaves. When the foliage be- gins 'â- o curl and turn brown, the potatoes should be dug at once, and in this way prevent the fungus from reaching the tubers. The potatoes shonld then be placed in a cool and dry place â€" the conditions least favorable for the further growth of the fungus shonld it be present. All affected tubers should be thrown out and gathered with the vines and burned. This destroys multitudes of spores which might otherwise live through the win- ter and be ready to propagate the rot the following season. There has been a great deal said about "rot proof " varieties of potatoes, but they probably do not exist. Some sorts are more susceptible than others, probably from con- stitutional weakness. Many prizes have been offered in England for the finding of the best sorts to withstand the attacks of the rot fungus, but without any satisfactory results. Knowing that the disease is caus- ed by a parasitic fungus, the rapid develop- ment of which is favored by moist, warm weather, there is little hope of finding a variety of pototoes sc abnormal as to be "rot proof." ITEMS OF INXXKKST. The Rochester Post Express says A cat that would'nt gladly die for the privilege of having its dead body thrown at Oscar Wilde as ' Romeo' must have a very poor comprehension of the beauty of Shake- speare." A new Gatling gun has been invented which can be so elevated as to fire perpen- dicularly into the air. It will be popular with VirKinia editors. Hamburg landlords insure their tenants' furniture for them and add the premium to the rents. There are said to be 250 legitimate life in- surance companies in the world, and 9,000,- 000 policy-holders, implying some 45,000,- 000 people depending on the stability of the institution. An indiscreet son-in-law â€" " Your mother- in-law appears to have a pain in her ladeY' ' ' Not at all. She has a toothache. " But every now and then I see her put her hand to her aide, aa though she felt a pain th«re." "That is because she pat her teeth mner pocke*;*' ;; A SCENX or CBNAOT. Charge of » BaUway Ttaua Ujica a Mnl tltndeâ€" rrikktfiU llatUatloB of Forty Victims. Heartrending and appalling are bu^ weak words to describe what must be called a rail- way " accident," which occurred near Berlin recently and resulted in the immediate death of about 40 persona, comprising 17 men, IS women, and four children, and the more or less serious wounding of many others. An old soldier who witnessed the catastrophe said that he had been present at six pitched battles and a variety of minor engagements, but that all the scenes of car- nage he had ever beheld were surpassed by that upon which he looked yesterday. The sad story is soon told, Steglitz, at the station of which the accident happened, is a village, or townlet, about three miles from Berlin, on the Potsdam-Magdeburg-Cologne Railway Line and the fine Sunday weather had tempted to the place, as to all other suburban resorts, crowds of pleasure seekers of the poorer class, including some patriotic societies, to celebrate the anniversary of Sedan. At the close of the day the station was besieged by several hundreds of the ex- cursionists, eager to get home by the first train from Potsdam. The station at Steglitx is furnished with insufllo ent waiting accom- modation, and passengers going to Berlin have to cross the rails in order to enter the up trains. Until the up trains arrive it is usual to detain Berlin bound passengers on the down platform, by means of a moveable barrier, such as is used at most crossings, and behind this barrier towaras ten o'clock, an impatient crowd of 200 or .^OO pe)ple were waiting for the train that was to take them home to Berlin. The train arrived and eager to secure seats, the excursionists either burst, or jumped, or pushed back the barrier poles, and began to stream across the rails, LIKE A FLOCK F SHEEP. This they did in spite of the shouts, re- monstrances, and lantern-waving of the railway officials â€" of whom, however, it is said there was an altoeether insufficient number â€" who saw, to their horror, that the Cologne express from Berlin was tearing down upon the station at the rate of a kilo- metre per minute. There was one heart- rending and unanimous shriek which silenced even the thunder of the approaching wheels, the heavy engine dashed in among the wedged and struggling mass, and in another instant the line was strewn with the hor- ribly mutilated bodies of some 40 human beings. The catastrophe was as appalling as it was unique. Words could not describe the scene of carnage which presented itself after the express, its wheels clogged with ghastly proofs of the ruin it had worked, had passed the fatal spot. Surely never had Jugger- naut'scar a more ghastly harvest of sacrificial victims. The station-master, a strong man, fainted away at the sight and the driver of the express was so shaKen by the spectacle that he had to leave his engine at Potsdam. Some of the corpses were mangled and mutil- ated beyond all possible recjtgnition. One poor young mother had both her legs cut off, and gave birth to a child in her dying agonies. The fragments of the dead were gathered together and lait.. out in one of the waiting-rooms, and a sort of panic-terror spread over the place. Medical help was procured from all sides, but a good many cases were beyond the reach of surgery. CAUSE OF THE DISASTER. Towards morning the Potsdam terminus in Berlin was besieged by an eager crowd, such as used to await the arrival of the wounded from the seat of war in li70. The Emperor sent two of his adjutants this morn- ing to inquire into the nature of the disaster, with the responsibility for which the Prussian Parliament must ultimately be saddled. It is true that the primary blame must fall on the unfortunate excursionists themselves, who rushed across the line before they ought to have done so but at the same time they never would have been tempted to break the rules had the Prussian Chamber been char- acterized by a less penny-wise and pound- foolish spirit of niggardliness. The Berlin- Cologne Line is now a State railway, like most others in Prussia, and it was only in April last that Herr Maybach, the Minister of Public Works, asked Parlia- ment for 422,000 marks to build a proper station at Steglitz, where the traffic is active, and to construct a tunnel under the line, so as to obviate the dangerous necessity for crossing over it. But the Chamber refused thi:: most reasonable demand, and tne re- cent horrible catastrophe is the result. Tbe Terror ol tbe South. Jasper, Fla, â€" Mr. Boardman W. Wilson traveling for A. G. Alford Co., dealers in Firearms and Cutlery, Baltimore, was pros- trated here, with the " break-bone fever," he asserts that in his own, as well as in the ease of others, the only thing found to re- lieve this painful malady was St. Jacobs Oil. This wonderful pain-cure has the en- dorsement of such men as Ex-Postmaster General James, Senator Daniel W. Voorhees, and an army of others. Sam Patch and Captain Webb can go down to an inglorious immortality together. Another idiot is said to be preparing to emu- late the latter. Do not wear faded clothes when a 10 cent package of the Triangle Dyes will make them look bright as new. All the popular cjlors. 10 cents. At a curiosity shopâ€" "Oh, the charming little boxl Antique, isn't it?" "No, madame, it is modern." " What a pity â€" it was so pretty " " Corns! Corns 1 Tender eoms, painful corns, soft corns, bleediuK corns, hard corns, corns of all sizes, are alike removed in a few days by the use of Putnam's Painless Ckm Extractor. Never fails to cure, never causes pain, never leaves deep spots that are more annoying than the original discomfort. Give Putnam's Pain- less Ckm Extractor a triaL Beware of substi- tutes. Sold by druggists everywhere. Poison Co Kingston, proprs. A New Indepettdknck.â€" The Irish Tem- plar says â€" "July 4th is hereafter to be the temperance holiday, if the Good Templars of Los Angelos, California, are to have the or- dering of the day. They have called a great temperance meeting to be held at Oak Grove, near Pasadena, on that date, for the purpose of making a new " declaration of in- dependence " â€" this time from the power of men â€" and so do away with "the handliat- ing fact that America's fatilidays art red" letter days in the annals of crime and drunkenness." .5- *!*| T* THK HIGKSST AUTHOKITY. Upon a smdoot (tfVi(«i iat««st, Aftoct- tB« tb« mmtmrm of All. The following i:emackablletter.faaioneoi the leading and heat iknwd sifisitiflo wkte of the present day is especiiUly significant, and shonld be of unnsnal value to all readers who desire to keep pace with the march of modem discoveries and events " A general demand for reformation is one of the most distinctive characteristics of the nineteenth century. The comrnon people, as well as the more enlightened and refined, cry out with no uncertain voice to be eman- cipated from the slavery of conservatism and superstition which has held the masses in gross ignorance during a large portion o( the world's history, and in the time of the 'Dark Ages' c»me near obliterating the last glimmer of truth. Dogm itic assertions and blind empiricism are Josiu; caste among all classes of all countries. People are begin- ning to think for themselves, and to regard authority much less than argument. Men and women are no longer willing that a few individuals shonld dictate to theniirhat must be their sentiments and opinions. They claim the right to solve for themselves the great questious of the day and demand that the general good of humanity shall be re- spected. As the result of this general awak- ening, we see, on every hand, unmistakable evidences of reformatory action. People who, a few years ago, endured suffering the most intense in the name of duty, now re- alize the utter foolishoess of such aCourse. Men who were under the b )ndage of bigoted advisers allowed their health to depart suf- fered their constitutions to become uuJer- mined and finally died as mar'yrs to .1 fil^e system of treatment. There are rnilli â- ., people filling nutimely graves v u imgut have lived to a green old age ha.l their original troubles been taken in time or pro- perly treated. There are thousands of people to day, thoughtlessly enduring the first symptoms cf some seri- ous malady and without the slightest realization of the danger that is before them. They have occasional headaches a lack of appetite one day and a ravenous one the next, cr an unaccountable feeling of weari- ness, sometimes accompanied b f nausea and attribute all these troubles to theold idea of ' a slight cold ' or malaria. It is high time that people awoke to a knowledge of the seriousness of these matters and emancipated themselves from the professional bigotry which controls them. When this is done and when all classes of physicians become liberal enough to exclude all dogmas, save that it is their duty to cure disease as quickly, and as safely as possible to maintain no other position than that of truth honestly ascer- tained, and to endorse and recommend any remedy that he has found useful, no mattuT what its origin, there will be no more quar- reling among the dcciors, while there will be great rejoicing throughout the world." " I am well aware of the censure that will be meted out to me for writing this letter but I feel that I cannot be true to my honest convictions unless I extend a helping hand and endorse all that I know to be good. The extended publications for the past few years, and graphic descriptions of different diseases of the kidneys and liver have awakened the medical profession to the fact that these diseases are greatly increasing. The treatment of the doctors has been large- ly experimental and many of their patients have died while they were casting about for a remedy to cure them." " It is now over two years since my atten- tion was first called to the use of a most wonderful preparation in the treatment of Bright's disease of the kidneys. Patients had frequently asked me about the remedy and I bad heard ot remarkable cures effect- ed by it, but like many others I hesitated to recommend its use. A perincall friend of mine had been in poor -health for some time and his application for insurance on his life had been rejected on account of Bright's disease. Chemical and microscopical ex- aminations of his urine revealed the presence of large quantities of albumen and granular tube casts, which confirmed the correctness of the diagnosis. After trying all the usual remedies, 1 directed him to use this prepara- tion and was greatly surprised to observe a decided improvement within a month, and within four months, no tube casts could be discovered. At that time there was pre- sent only a trace of albumen, and he felt, as he expressed it, 'perfectly well,' and uii through the influence of Warner's Safe Cur.-, the remedy he used." " After this I prescribed this medicine in full doses in both acute and chronic neph- ritis, ^Bright's disease] and with the most satisfactory results. My observations were neither small in number nor hastily made. They extended over several months and em- braced a large number of cases which have proved so satisfactory to my mind, that I would earnestly urge upon my professional brethren the importance of giving a fair and patient trial to W*rner's Safe Cure. In a large class of ailments where the blood is obviously in an unhealthy state, especially where glandular engorgements and inflamma- tory eruptions exist, indeed in many of those forms of chronic indisposition in which there is no evidence of organic mischief, but where the general health is depleted, the face sal- low, the urine colored, constituting the con- dition in which the patient is said to be ' bilious,' the advantage gained by the use of this remedy is remarkable. In Bright's disease it seems to act as a solvent of albu- men to soothe and heal the inflaimed mem- branes to wash out the epithelial debrij which blocks up the tubuli urini/eri, and to prevent a destructive metamorphosis of tissue." " Belonging as I do to a branch of the profession that believes that no one 'school of medicine knows all the truth regarding the treatment of disease, and being inde- pendent enough to select any remedy that will relieve my patients, without reference to the source from whence it comes, laqi glad to acknowledge and conunend the merit of this remedy thus frankly. Respectfully yours, R: A. GUNNi M. D., Dean and Professor of SorgeVy,' Uiittd States Ml dical College o| New York; editor of Medicl THMie; ^thi ot Gunn's New and Improved Hand-Book of Hygiene and 'Domestic Medicine, '^^,|Btc. • «! » » ".i »i 'm ' .1. I The fruit merchant s strawberries may notifiU'theinoasnre; but Dr. FowlefvEx- *r^ t.i traiMvf .WAd Strawberry fills th« tAtaviire evecjr tioM in the M^1«^^re^|(ii^T)^t8 far ** lgHy "^yipy ^ilittorms of Sum- Erindals, Credit P. O., Jan. 8th, 1883. Mt DbA£ Sut^ulakd Some two months sinoe I became so afBicted with Bheomatism of the neck and right shoulder as to render my right arm nearly powerless. I deter* mmed to try your " Bhenmatine " and the result is that I am nowjree from pain, and enjoy the fail maeofny am. My general health is also much improved by the nse of the medicine. The first two bottles relieved me â€" the third bottle freed me from all pain. Wm. Magrath. J. N. Sutherland, St. Catharines. " Your language is wholly uncalled for," as the publisher told the author whose works failed to seU. Mrs. Partington declared the Neuralgia to be worse than the old Rheumatism but however bad either may be, Burdock Blood Bitters wUi ccmqner it. It also makes pure blood, regulating the Liver, Kidneys and Bowels, and eradicating scrofulous humoi from the system. 25,000 bottles sold in the last three months. (25) ' I occasionally drop into poetry," as the man said when he fell into the editorial W4bte basket. Tbe Greatest Horse Breedinz KstabUsh- ment ot Amerloa. One of the many wonderful enterprises the great West is noted for, and one which none favored with opportunity should miss seeing, is the great breeding establishment of "Oiklawn," owned by M, W. Dunham, at Wayne, 111 35 miles from Chicago. His importations ot Percheron horses from France, to date, have ags;regated the im- mense sum of $2,500,000,00, and at the pre- pf^nt time at "Oakland," 500 head of the choicest specimens of that race can be seen, while on their Colorado ranges are 2,000 mares and 21 imported Percheron stallions in breeding. In a slander suit in Oregon, the Court held that " an honest man is a mxn who won't steal firewood on a cold night." In the summer and the fall, the urchin climbs the garden wall. For green apples, in his frolic He will eat his fill, till, very ill. He's doubled up with Colic. The antidote is Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry â€" an unfailing remedy for Colic, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum and all Summer Complaints. (30) "Does poultry pay?" asked a stringer of a city dealer. " Of course," was the reply " even the little children shell out." Of all the sweets of wh'ch mortals can dream. There is naught to excel strawberries and cream. Neither is there any remedy known to mortals that can excel Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry aa a cure for Choi a Morbus, Cholera Infantum and all Bo el Complaints, (29) When a man is about to be told a secret he shuts the door when it is a womin she opens it, to be sure no one is listening out- side. The well-known drug firm of Ormand k Walsh, Peterboro, writes that Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry is one of their "standard summer medicines, and has a good sale." An unfa" g remedy for all forms of Bowel CompL at. (26) '• If I thought I was going to become grey I knov I should die," exclaimed Miss Springle. When the turned grey she did dye, sure enough. Mr. W, J. Guppy, ot Newbury, informs us that he has used Burdock Blooa Bitters in his family with good effect, and adds that the Rev. J. R. Smith has used it and speaks of it in high terms of praise. It is the great system-renovating tonic that cures all dis- eases of the Blood, Liver and Kidneys, act- ing harmoniously with Nature's laws, 25,- 0(K) bottles sold during the last three montlu, (28) " A. P." 144 im fiERriANlEMEDf CURES, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headacne, Toothache, S«re Throat, Sn^ellincB, SpraiBB,BraUe*. Boms. Scalda, Frost Bites. IRD ALL OTUER BODItT PAIS8 AND ACHES. 80M by Druggists »nd Dealers everrwhere. FiftjCenut boun. DireotioDi In 11 Languages. THE OnABLE.9 A. TOGEUIR CO. •1 .. HI to A. VOQELKS k CO.^ Baltlasra. II(L. C S. i' OR SALB CHEAP-SPLENDID STOCK or Dairy Farm. 4i0 acres adjoining Court- land, 5 miles from Tilsonburg. about 100 acres cleared, free from stumps and stones, a quanti- ty ready for cleaning up; standing timber worth half-price asked; frame bam and stables: two new frame houses; good water would sell half, or exchange for a small property. Apply to ROBERT WHALEY. Box X. CourfUnd. WANTED-STEADY EMPLOYMENT and good pay given to every lady owning a sewing machine. Material sent and returned by mail. (Send one dollar with your application as a guarantee that the material we furnish will be returned when finished. FINDLAY CO., Manu- facturers, Detroit, Mich, QflQ ACRES MINERAL AND TIMBER 9119 lands in the township of Darling,county of Lanark, at one dollar and ahalf per acre: lies near Kbigston and Pembroke Railway; joins township of Lavant, where the Caldwell gold mines and other mineral deposites have recent- ly been discovered must be sold in one lot minuuteomMUBeaof dealers in wood can have a bargaiUj,^ sAnplf immediately to I. S. SPAR- LING CO., Real Estate and Commission Merchants, Pembroke, Ont. I is a perfect gem, equal to.an imported French Corset; fits Uke a^love to the figure; very styl- ish, (Aegant in appearance, and approved of by the most fastidiouK Maiif|ctq»d,lpr THE CROMP'TONiOOf^TCO. • tt 78 TOKK STREET. TOKONTO.