!__jLE, THURSl).AY JUN:E Jr,, 18 t 6 .. CANA.DIAN STATESJ\IAN, :BOW].1AN") l_ ~~J·~-. .~ -"""2!"'!" ~ '!"'! --~ ~ !!!!!!21!"'!""'!!!'ll!±"'!"~~ -...!' _!!-"'!'!'.~-"'-'!'.--"!_!\"!!.1!2'!...!'"'!""'!"~"'!111"'!"~~!"'~~ -~ -~~ ~ ""' -·""" -"'!111"'!"!'.'! £!!!!1!"!! ""'!'ai_'!.--"""~"""'!!'!!~'!'!!'"""""'"""!""""'~""""!!l'"""~""'~'l!!"-""""!"!"'!""!"!!""!!ll'!'i! _ ~ _ "L!"__""" -~ - "-"""-""~~~~M:::&iSC!!"'~-~--~ci~~ ~""""""!!"'!"'!111"'!""'!111""""!'!'~~"!'1'1!""""""!!!~....~~~~""'""'~"""l""'l!"!"l!'"""""'""'"!""!""l!"!'°"......."'!!~"'"!'l"'""'"'!.'!!!!!t!!!!'!!l!!!!M+!!'l!!E'~ ·""~~=~'!'!"'~-"""--~ "-'.""!l~JE£i!"O'~i~ ~~~:'.22'1£\""!~~~~~ ~~-""'""'"!'!'!!!!!'~"'!"11!!!'!"' LIVING IN THE KITCHEN. I wish to enter n protest against the prevalent idea, th at to a farmer the kitchen is ths room, of all others t he most important. " The kitcl1en must be on the sunny Pide of the house, " say they ; ~"must be th e pleasantest r oom, because it is where -th o farmer lives." ~ I am ready to endorse the doctrine that liie living-room should be the 1>lea·antest, E unniest and cosiest in the house, but why ueed the kitchen be the living-room! Why_ may not a thrifty farmer have a sitiing~rou m a nd diuiu g~room for e very-day use, as ivell as a k itch en 1 I d o not see why a for mer or llis family should relish' kilclieu sigh ts and smells much.bett&rthan a merchant or profesaion a! mo.n. l")a.tcr fa.milias enjoys an easy chair and a took or pap~r far better, when he is out of !he way of pots and ke ttles, and mater familias finds it mu ch e a s ier to do her l1011sework 1 when masculine boots do not occupy the space contiguous lo the stove. She has fair sailing, aJ\li usually, friendly breezes, ivher e there are n r) breakers in t he shape of cha.rs tilted back, and elevated extremities in cowh ide or India. rubber, for her tO run foul of. If,at every journey fr r ;n pantry to stove, she has to make· a long detour around an imtnovable object, . the weariness may so1netimes ca.use clouds te gather in the family horizon. But the 'poor men must be somewhere. \Vhnt are they to do with th eir hungry selves while t '10 meals are bei ng prepared, or at any t ime after Uieir work is done, if there be 110 sitt ing roo1n with broad lounge, patria rchal ch·i r, ·ud sheli of books r.eady t o r eceive t h e10 with open arm s? Dy all means, l1a.ve a sitting r oom though it bo a plain one, with rag carpet: olC-fash10ned furniture, and a few pictures. But it s11ould ha.ve sunny 'viudowa. wl1ere Fnc11sias and Heliotropes will flourish in 1vinter;although th e flowers of social intercourse, flourishing in t he sunshiue of happiJJess, would perhaps be mor e profitable fo r cultivation in t he sitting- room. A parlor ts a lux ury wh ich might be eMily dis pensed with, for like inost luxuriesJ it is n1 any t hnes unw holcson1e in familylife. J~u t a. sitti ng rdom is a necessity, and a d1ning ..ro om scarcely less ::so. l wis h farme1s1 at leagt well t o-do fa rmers, would let t he kitchen be si mply the kitchen, and l1ave done with setting th o tal1le there, in t he Yiciuity of t he cooking s tove, and the sinJ.: , and afterwards sitting down to · rest or t o read or worlr wi th the sa.mo uninviting surroundings. What with flies and heal, t he kitchen is An nnplea.sant dining-roorn in the summer, and in the winter the atnoke and steam and du st, e11 en with tidy housekeeping, render it son1ewhat uncanny. Some peop le con1bine thfl sitting an d dining-room into a.. Ji ving roorn ,and with a'crumb cloth, 1 1' hich _ n1ay be_ shaken a nd put away, every J meal time, t.h1s 1 nay be easily done, and is a vaf!t im pro'fement on eating in tho kitch· en, and living in the ki tch en, while other par!<! of t h e house are kept hei·metically soalcd. M c A r thur T~~co~!~~~bu~i."a~~~~~~"Hs~· .~ THE j For Sal e. I BRADBU RY ~ I N THE TOWNSHIP OF WHITBY, I t t.Wb Bbilr ie s h igh, eigh t lOOVl E ; g ood ce 11 ft } l e.nd soft ·w at er, coal hou se, and o f,h cr co n ' enccs. For terms, a 11 d othcr purticulru· s c 1 q of the subsor ibcr , on the prc1n1scs. - I S- J OH N M cl\lb kllt YJ Bo·wm nnvillc, Sept.29th , 1875 9-H. PSYCHOMANCY !ml I COINC OUT 'Of THE DRY - coons BUSINESS, CINATE and gain t h e love an(l atrect10t1s of a.nyperson th ey ch oose instantl y. 'l'his si1nple m ental a cqu1rement all can poHsess, tree, by ma.ii, for 25 cen ts, together· wil. b a .l\IarrJ ngc Guide, E g yptia n Oracle, J>re.atn s, l Unt s to Ladies, & c. .A. queer, exc il,ing hook , 100,900 Rold . A ddress T . ' VILLI ANS & Co., Soutli E ighth S treet, Ph iladelphia . Pa. _ H ow 01' Sonl Clia1·ming. E I THER SEX llfAY FA S- > ~ 1NEW GOODS1 lines of and joining the Town of"-7 hitby,-190 acres. Bl'ick cOttage 'and good bn.rus en prem ises. 2000 Aro "COINI NG 1\10NEY" with the fa mous b uHh els of N'o. 1 BART..EY were grown on the farm th is year . 'l'er1 ns easy, large por tion of purchase money ma.v r m ain on inter est for a n um bcrof yca.rs . ~<\.pply to JOHN A. DONALDSON, The F r en ch Eclition of which sells for ' 165. 00 Esg. , Emigrant Agent, 'l'oronto, or to the under- itnd t h e London Editi on f or $200. Our Popula r s i ghNL ~ J d1tion (5 501, containing oYer One Ilu n d red full-page qu.'\rto pl:lt es. i'3 the CHEAPEST and 1tHl:.t ELEGAN L p u blication i n Amer ica an d t11 e .rH;;.ST TO SELT . Critic~ v1e Voli t h 0 0.&l h ' othe r in pr aising it, and th~ In ll SS P.S bu y ft, From a l ocal a gent in H011 t hport, Conn .: "Jn our \'illngc of eig-ht3 l. m iHe s I have taken sixty~ fi'\'O orden;i; have r:an' ue .. eil in a ll about t we.lv e dava (In village a n d t·onn t r y), attd ha1·e taken orders for on e hun dred a nd Hix: copies." J . D . .IfORD & CO. , Publisher s. Agents aru! Good Salesmen BIDA D]JSI_ G NS, F.ULL PAR1'TCU L ALS F REE. A ddr ess AND IS NOW- 3 SELLI·N G OFF BIS ENTIRE STOCK -AT A - - THE Low-1rri.ced,ser,·lceable,qun.lityunsurpassed 1'vI1tch1n cry, I ron an d W ood-\vorking, o ler..ding Can ndlan and U. S . manufacture Cohl-roll ecl Shafting , Gearing, Belting, Dia rnond Em ery W h eels. a nd Grinders, etc. JAS. R. ANNETT. 51 90 \Vellington 8t., J!.Iontrea.J DA~ -CYJ,JNDER ENGINE 0 l1j \Vor th y of n oticA, and mMch more so t han E ditcrs of Newspapers. 'l'll OS. D ALE. Gen. Agent. l!am iltoo. Ont R EJY-C - V ..A._ I., Our Stock is one of the Lest in at work for u s in their sp a.re m om enta, or an th t.imc, than a t a.nytlung else. ra:r ticnlars free.~ Post card to tl1 e Stal es cosll't llQt on e cent. A ress G. S TINSON & CO. Pol'lla ud ~ Main e . ~ ( PER .- Agents 'Vnuto<I $5 To $20 A ll classes of ·w or king p e oplo of e it h e r sttx ybuhg o r old , n1ake moro mone 1 0 ~ WATCHES, !Ins r emoved his Bakery a nd Confectionery estr..blish1 nent to 1nore 1 ·ornmorliou s p r e mi ses. PLATED INARE, and will now be fouu d in the Mtor e · NEW CUTLERY, BET1ITE E1\T ANDER!~~ ·(;O"S n nd P RICES ·w ill be t o sui t e-V"P.ry person , ~ sono can be disap pointed, as a ll 1n ust b e sold IRA STErVENS Vf 1, I ,Y:LE,UUKTIN'S. A f ull stock of Brend , Biscu its, Cakes, Candies, &c., vl'ill lJe k ept on h and. AARON BUCKLER. S op ten1ber , 30t h 1875. !Hf. A GRAPHIC . DESCRIPTION OP TH3 Don1iniou o C Canada and i1s Pro1·inccs, NORTH-WEST TERR11'01UES, ANTI· COSTI am.I J..ABR A DOR, with a n .APPENDI X containing in form a tion of n11 p0:ciAl interes t t Q tho Emigrant, a nd a T .A BLE OF R OU'l'ES. A m ost u seful B ook t o sea d Lo fueuds in the ~ld Count r y. PRICE 50 CENTS. Sen t fr ee on recei pt of p rice . f,OV EI, PRINTING & PUBL TS!IING CO. M ontreal. A J,SO, NE W F OU NDLAN·D, THE I t'3 [ij oo I ARE UNEQ UA LLED FOR I I and OYS'L'ERS, COFFEE, ~ept ~c~n~~ !~~!:::: e tc. , will be sarved at al h elll'a. A call s olici ted. Bo w 1 u a nville S'optcn10cr 22, g.Lst smrnTHJN G NEW AND DURABLE. Time, Money and Labor Saved. F JR. E lST C :El!: J. Purity of Tone and ,Beauty of Finish . O IL POLlSH -r CHEMIST AND DR0GGIST, EGS RESPECTFUT,LY T O AN Also , a TREMENDOUS SACRIFICE I THE BEAVER BLOCK -IS THE PLACE TO GET- Concessions o.,t· Victim. for th e bene fit of Youn g :Men and others who smffcr from NERVOUS DEBI LITY L08!S 0,li' MANIIOOD, "\"I'l \ .<\.L PO\\'Ji~R. otc .. 'gning h1g rules of Self- Ourc, a fter much s.utTAring u.nd expense, nnd sen I freo on recefvrn g a ~tamp for rr,turnposta.gc. Address NA 'J'TIA :-i JK1_J l\.lAY· F AlR, P . 0 . Box 153, B1·ookl:p1 , N, Y [JS-6m, P UBLISHED AS AW ARNING AND Win d _ i ng U pl OCT OBER 10th, j B t h a t h o hn.s r P. ('Ptve1l a well o.s so r ted stock of Genuin e Drug·· 1Hl.4l Ettg!!.sh _.>N O UNC~ r ~arefull~ ChP1n1 (·,1 .J8. seleded This French Oil P olish is prepared for Carriages, Buggies, !Iar nes~, Bo,at s and ShoO!l, Pt.P'C splendid st ock of the n1ost AND A LL KINDS OF LEA'f HER . D Y E S T {T F F S 1 ..vhic h ca nnot be stupltf:!:,;ed for exce11encv 0 ftui..li t y .\ n aao; 01 t m ent of A nd:n e n;; 08 ·kep ('J OHst1:1.n lly on h and together '" ith a choice se Joctiun of ' Dill:: G C S.1E , H 1.:tl 0 .1\ LS, PATF.N'f !\1'EDI CI~J:i~8 . ' l " ~ Ili~ut n11pc<:n:tJ.,nce, and v,t the sUJnc titn~ fl'~ 1n i ~s"' 01iv t o?nds mi.ich :o preserve it : 1t w1l i~;opert10R I t w ill give;. nny a r ticle of L cathm· n most h ril 875. BH U SHES. C0 ,\.1 B~. SIIOULJ) li,H- 1 lltACF.S, SU Pl-'Ol'T.1£l U:3 & & Cu s tou1s Dc1>arunent, OTTAWA, Octoh~r2, 1875. It is my intention on the nbovo date to wind up the longw in ded ered it eptem . nnd oell only for CASH, 0 1· ots equ i valent. OILS, P.A..I~TS!. I · c · c COLORS, VAR~JSHE."3 I . iean In v oices ·mtil f urth e r nolice l2 pa cent. ;. A UTHORIZED DISCOUNT on AmerJ . J OHNSON, Commissioner of .:ustoms. It requi res · .rF A t the very 10-wcAt roriccs. n,nd '\VIITTE L 1':A nl wn,, s be iuoist nnd pliant, ~n d niay be '!XPO Sl)d to " ' nter l1lld wnRnPrl aT1d w·1II n ot lose its bullia:r.c e, nnci it is not to be fe are d t h nt nny CrtH;t will settle on sttid Jea tl>cr 'w hen preser\'c<l witl"l ... t h e a boYe oil. ft:il' For t.J:ie w oorlworJ.- of Uu g-gies. Carriages a. nd Fu1 niture, th Ate i~ not a hetter nrtlde in use. J\f;i.nu f a1, 'l n1e . d l)y .1· ··CO ~ · 1.. SI'<ON n L · c>.:. _, ., 1 a nn ~ re 1tnd C11 111e1 s , funncr1y of Ft nllt'f. .1ow ot' 'Ph1ladelplua, Pa. L-.:srnuc ·.r ro~::-s Shake bottle. .A:. fe"1v Jrops on a piece of sRonge, a pply it lightly to the lenthe1, and you wi I obtain t he fines t lustre. Price 75 cm1 ts per Hu ttle, or $7.60 per do?.dn . no argt1 mcnt to oebbl i:,J1 tho,t it is to the advn n tage of bot h buye r a nd HORSE AND CATTLE MB DIOI::'<BS. N. B .- Conutr y Storepeckcrs s ur,p1ied on ~ad .T. SMALE , G en Bown1ar. vil le , A11gust 13, 1874. Agent · . - z soIler to t rad e fo r reac\y pay; the buyer thereby gd t~ r.g g oods at LOWER W e t hink I ~ antng~~~~~~---------;" 1 InsureyourHomes CHEAP DRY .GOODS In t h o I so1ate tl Risk I ns ura n ce Compan y. 1. , ~~ gen t. __________ ,_ v_ ._ R _ ._c_L_I _~_ r_m _ Awarded t heHighestMedal atVienna then that nll part:ct:l will concur i n tli e ~isdom of thif" change on ou r part. fi:Ji:O ur g9otls will hereafter be bought for CASH only, wo and shall thercby~ rc9p E. &H. T. A N THONY &CO., 591 Broadway New York 'Opp, I\-1etropoli ~an IIoteJ,) t11c n.dvan t ::igo of lnrge t i·aC:e di]counls, wb ich ndva n tage I)urticR purchasin g fron1 us FOR THE NEXT 3 MONTHS. I we a re dctern1i11 cd to ~ive to our ousto mers. SIRES to i et1u·n t hnnJ..s to t.ho fa rming ooiun1unit:r fo1 the libera l patron age ex tend(' fl t o hi m in the past; and ' ' ould direct atten t ion t o · C' the cxccll r.nl one·hOrf}f'; nnd two-horse h·on C uJ, ......::::> J... .l. ' tiv~to1s inh.1111fa_ctur('d by h rn1, a n d which 011/ to.incd r1rst P.rncs' Jast fall at t h e Provincial N RESPECTFULLY .RETUBNING llxldbitfon ln Hamilton and t h e Union Exhib!thanks tQ the public for past li.boral pn.tronagc. inn in no:wn1a nville. 'l'hey are undou bred ly wo u ld a.11 nonn(...c that h e is n ow pl'eparetl to fill Uw b.cs~ nnple1nents C:f the k in d fn u se, · itl1 order" in his line in a m a.nner second to uo es- arid w1ll 1n n very short t rme mol'e thRn repa y their cost , in ttic cific1en c' and excellence of their tab1ish n1cnt in t he coun t10s. 1 CA n GES work. I11~pcction irn it ed. A ~mpply nf Cult iYa· , l{.l\J..A l f.. ~ tors no"" on hand frir the spri ng v· : ork, a.no. vdn ~ A R R I _A 0 ES ! ' '"THE SJ:B SC.'.UBE R HEREBY DE- Ja m e I - M 0 I" r ,s may therefore depen d upon getti ng goods at least ten per cent. cheaper 'vV !\.GGON be sold M lo" est rate 0 · ' 1 MANUF ,\<; r c ltl1H.S IMPOR TE R S AND I I All Wool T'\veed Suits MADE TO ORDER AT $8. cHRoMosl A.JST JD FF:.A.rv.i:E, S th on und er t he .old plao. CU1,TER , I . of a s:;upeirior ],in d, also on 11 r.n1L T E IGII. &c. , , B UGG I :ES AN D WAG 0 NS MAXU.FACl UH.El) JN ,~NV IRON H ARROWS ,,n R""\ LE D "" ~ IRED . ~ l':. l co n ~ !.tnLly liH.J1d Fnr salo. = :our stock w il1 this Fall be n1orc rcplote t ban ever, and a still higher class of goods will be kept. eatisrnctio n We therefore gu·rnnfoe I he greatest I STEREOSGOPES AND VIEWS, A lbums, Grp,:ph oscopes an11 Suitable VIEWS. , tOall who nu1y fi1vor us wi th t hei r p ntronage. ,tir' A ll lioh1ds of BlaC'k:=nni!Ji , .. a1k d one on Rt-nn emhel" t h rrt nothing but t b ~ h P.· I i nnterial is sho:rtes~ notice .· A call "<Olidtcd. u ~ed , and hcst · w ork m en en1plu_yP!l- ihns eusm I . VilESTCOTT. ing- d ura b ility, Hl egan ce snd con1fort-thc Juost impoitanL1 equiBi tcs n1 a conyeyance. Bow ma.nviJie, Feb . JD, 1873. 80-t.f. R ctlail ing in all bra~ chcs of t he tract"' p r ompt ly at tended to. AND ON l 'lJE SHOR'I r-;or 1 ci<: . FENCES and WASTE LAND. We know not who the writer of the folBowmanville, May 30, 1876. lowing is, but it is good as gold to every far· ~- rncr who W1!t-heed its auggestionB: "If a farm of 160 acres is diY ided by fences into fieJds of 10 acres each, ther e are five miles of fence. If each fence i ;; now one rod wido, no less than IO acres are occupied by t he m. This i· equal to 6l per cent. of the farm , and th e loss of th e use of the fand is exactl y equal to a charge of per cent. of the farw. But nearly every fence made a nursery of . Every buyer should see our stock of ro w in the-cou ntry is _ weeds, which stock th e whole farm, nnd ruake an inunense · amount of labor neces~ n.ry to keep th en1 fro1 u smothering the crops. l\Iuch damage always results to the crop from these v.·eeds, and if these expenses aro add ed to th e first one, the JI whole will en·ily su m up t o 20 per cenJ., Every buyer should' see our stock of or a tax of one-fifth of tb e value of the . . farm .~ To remed y this, we would h ave ' fe wer fen ces, or we would clean and sow down t he fence rows to gra.s.<i a nd clover, nnd wow them twi ce a year. 20 acres of clover or timot hy would, at least, supply a farm with feed and a few tons of hay every year. ~. .e would, in short,lconsider Ev;ery buyer should see our stock of the fence row o as a valua ble part of the far m, and use ,them n.s such. "-Maryla1fd .Far> ner. PH DTOGRAP HIO J\f ATE Ill A LS. '\Ye a r e Ilead quartms fo1· C> Cl .'.! tl.·ng The following lines will be founi full :J I ALL Kl'-'DS OF ' v;o.y of · ;n ~ th I R eady-mad11 Clothing, Cloths, Tweed"-, Dress Goods, Silks, Shazuls, Skz'l-ls, t--'ottons, TVince3's, Blankets., B11f,i!u Robes, &c.,&c. I BLACKSMITH A U p lCRTQ ..!. J. l, ·~1 ·1· iao-c lin o (rive ·::'.,b · WORK, nro R. ItIS n I 9n Or ue1· m Cnn11c1] , berinng SA'fISFACTOHlLY DOXE I rN ~ ~, , ,, , "T"TE" Cnw"' · 6thApri l, 1875 .cu "uu-\ ' n. 11>.! OTICE IS H EHE B 'i GIVEN TH AT ' ~ '\Vh on you \Vant nn ~rthi n~ ~ ~n the , 1 _l_' , I] l ~ Lxc~llcn c;" the GoYernor-Gcncral, by ~ MURDOCH BR.O'S Stereopticons anclMagic Lanterns cing Man u facturers of tl1 e MICRO-SCIENTI FI C LANTERN. S1'EUEO·PANOPTI CON, UNIVERSITY STEREOP CON. ADVERTISER'S STEREOP T I CO ARTOPTI CON , SCHOOL L ANTERN. FAM I LY LAKTEBN PEOPLE'S LA~TERN. Each style lleing the best of its claes in tho Catalog ues oi La n tcr1is n nU S lide8 with fiiroc tiona for u sing sent on a r plfcation. Any ente rprising m 1 1n can nu.k e mcncy '?fit a.1tfag Lantern. · .a:6ut ou t th is a d ve rtiscmr.w.t for reference. J AJ\1Tf,S :.i C ENTS ' SUITS Atm SHIRTS Bo,vMAN VlLLg, 3R.ll, v ..· l h c \i; Hl SllJ!J: you. ) r,t' I by tl,c 4t h :::e ct10H of 11-c made to ord er in cit),· styles, on slwrtest notice. dot' r \Vest or t.11e Ont;uin nttnk H0..,,-n1anvillc . Oot. 1n. 1R71. dn t e t~<;} 3"1- l'j nor1t..-y""·e:::tcd in b1nt :'i]s~ "'\'~ 1 <'1011,1, c aµ 6, !1 a , b-eenpleuscd to 01de1 <:tIJd tluct L 1hal 1l1o follnw 1 k1r,:>; n1ticlc bctrunsfc1rcd to 11.e h st of g-oods i ns 1a ut,a11cl1.i1ill'~·1l1r:an 13 l" October 1 1 i375. S _ F _ ::S:::ILL 6t R ELIABLE for the GENEUAI_J A ~JENT \\bJ('h ino.y be in~portcd into Cuncda fi·c o of do ty, viz·-,, G rou nd GypR1nn fm· ag~Icru"'taz.<tl purposes.·By co~.!llhl!i fi, J . JOlINS'TON; Sf I Ctnnm1S>"1nn l~r of Cust(rrrur 1. STAPLE GOODS.I ancy D ress 'G 00d s. 0 htar1 0 Smith Amelcan Organ CompanJ,I DOSTON JZf:~'... G 0,000 Burnett's: Extracts F or oook1u£t purposes. Burnett's Extracts sv.rw.rl.·w." "~i- 11.tlv -Parker lloueo, Dodon. Organs n1a<..1e a.u ,l su1 d. ~ .AL~O, Burnettrs ExtractsLlfKOtl'1 ALMOND, ORAN GE', FOit =[GEO._ STECK & CO'S - (i..373)- VANILLA', NECTARI NE, P EACH , R~E, CELERY, NUT M [O. CI NNAM ON, CLOV ES,. ' UNGER;. F Ch1·on ic Diseases. Burnett's Extracts "The bat lntke'tJJtnlrl." -E!flh Av. Ilotd,N. Y. Burnett's Extracts "l.TurJ excl11$ i.v..:'&~r:~~t Horei. Phi.Ia. Burnett's Extracts BLACK LUSTRES. CosT OF ABUSING MILCH Cows.- H arri· IJewis, the eminent (Herkimer county, .... N e\V York) dairyman , said lately, in an Every buyer ad<lress to mik producers, that he had known a cow which uniformly ga\.·e eight cen per cent. of cream to her milk to decreaee her yield to six per cent. in the short space of twol ve hours, merely from the cxcitcmc11t ca.used by th e bad treatment of a. bruta l 1 n iJker. It was n ot guess work, Every buyer because he used g raduat ed glasses to test t he matter. 'l'his sh ows pretty conclusively tl1"t it does not pay dairymen t-0 allo w t heir co ws tc b e illtreated. And in illtreatmenfi is snre t c be inclnded any thing that \'i-ill alarm or ex0it e them- fast driving to n.n d from pasture, wo rrying by dogs,yelling at thc;im, thr0at enin g detnonstrations Remember liy boys, &e., &c. Civilityandgo;;d nature pay, even '"lien bestowed on cows. r should see our stock of I I I · F ancy w 001 en G 00d s.' should see our stock of ' PERRY DAVIS & S6N & LAWRENeP,, MONTREAL, P. Q. Ageats fol" Domin10· of Ot·ad a. I 1 · Export Agents . Dut g oyne, B u r bridgcs & Go-., ulnm,nn Strcc J... ondon . Newberry & fi ons, 37 Ncwgu.tc r r.r t , J.o n<lon. Barclay&· S ons, 95 li'"arrj n gton St:Ic1't, J__,undon Sangfl r &: Son s, Oxford Str eet. Lon d on . .A.nd all Lh e London W bolesaJc Houses · A.gents J n C:tnnda , llf'o n trea l. - Ev nns, Nfercor &:, Co., ' Vholesa lc ' mPH BURNITT & CO., BOSTOl!t MILLINERY Murdoch is the place to buy your CORN.-'rhe JVui t- I ~r-n Ru1 ·al tells of a man who plants, two or t li eee weeks after the crop is planted, a n t'w h ill of corn every fift eenth r o,v, en.ch R emember way. And this is tlrn reason : If the weather become dry alter the filling time, the silk ~nd t assels botJ1 become dry and dead. D I SCOVERY ABOUT \ . A T.E ,4. S. Murdoch E:ro's is the place to buy your Ha~:ilton.~\Vj~~~ is~~ e n. Haliftr:r..-.AJrcrv,Br o "' u &· Co. D1 ·uggisls. · J..ymans, Chu e & Co. T oron to.- E lhott & Co., ' Vh olc:mie Dr uggists. l n this eondition, if it should become ~rna sona.ble, t he silk revives and renews ils growth, but tho tassels do not recover. Then for want of pollen, the new silk is unable to fill the office l~r which it was designed. T he pollen from the replanted corn is then ready t o supply silk, and the fillm g is completed. He says nearly all the abortive ears, so common in all co rn crops, are cau sed by tl1e want of pollen, a.nrl he haB: known ears to double th~ ir size in this fil1ing . A couple wero recently married at 'Vaynesboro,' Pa. , the bride being seTentyfive and the groom seventy-one. The latter had never been married before, and he was So overcome that he fainted at tho conclusion of .tho ceremony, which incident Jed the newly married wife tc exclaim, "Poor fello w, I have feared all along that he conldn ~ stand it. Coffees· . F~OWER . Atm VECET ABLE SEEDS : Are the best t he ,..,-01·lrl prod11cc~. ' They are p ]a.nterl by a wiJlion people in A nwrica. Dnc'i the rcsultis,-bcautiful FlO\\'Cl'S and aplfln<l1d '\.~ege tn.blcs, A Priced Cato.logu e sent free Lo ull who 1enclose the postage-a 2 cent st.a.mp. ,.. VI O l:Z::_ 's I Remember M11rdoch Bro's Remember V.I CK ' S · Murdoch Bro's Remember Murdoch · Bro's BUILDINGS, September 211, 1875. PE"EJ,ING 0NIONs. - In peeling onions put a large needle in the mouth, half in a nd half out. The needle attracts ihe oily jnice of the b11 lb, and any nu mber VIC.TO n1:1y be peeled l'ithont affecting the eyes. 1 Baw ~me ,