The English and Scotch crop. are very poor. while our roproaentntlve who has just returned from the apple districts on the continent report; noon: hnli nverngo cm . Thin “gun well for Cnnndlnnl. upocmry for good only npplen, which will oertninly nuke good prices. Qunlit in the t thing in out mule" ; nnyt in; 3 "Mesa:- kept oleen by eweeping end the nee of later. I save 3 ood den] of excellent ertilher from my one. but doctor them little. In foot, there in no occasion {or it. The ore healthy end doing well, and I till it wise to " let well enough alone." I m ntizï¬ed thet my hen- keep oleer of vermin onl beoenee they ere sheltered in o oellnr. I 0 not know why. It may be be- cause the wellsâ€"brickâ€"ere elwey- slightly cool and dump end perhepe this is repug- nentto lice br it mey be become of the uniform temperature of the room oil the you round. Or it mey be owing to tome other con-e thet I hove not yet found out. Be it u it may. my hem ere oleer oi vermin, and have been for the t four years, or ever oinoe I begun to a eiter them in thin buement. I am disposed to think 3 cellar the proper place to keep poultry for several reagentâ€"B. W. J. Spottevilie, Ve. think, then I ever ind hem to do before. But whet in the more remukebie, my ul- try hove remeined clear of vermin the time. Summer or winter it in the “me; there ere no lice. I believe it in oil due to the kind of room in which I keep them. No extn poin- ue token With an ultry or the room. They no fed regular ytonoe a tiny with corn and oete. end hnve the run of the term and ï¬ne piokin â€"oorn, peanut- nnd ï¬eld penâ€"in the in . The house in kept along by sweeping_en_d the use of A tour you-0' trial of n hmmont room on o pmltry house, [with from 50 to 100 hem, ought to be long enough to demon-tube the ï¬tne- of ouch room- {or the purpooo of sheltering poultry. Do: the whole of this time my onltry hove n free from .11 disco-on, an _ have_ 15h! well â€"_bo§to}', I come In for ‘ m: shuts of the pressure u n yhagover substance the home in roqui to Reference is here made to that very im- portant cushion beneath the home's footâ€" the frog, eo-called. if, in seeking a horse, we take up the foot and find the frog well- reserved; the cushion, so to speak, wide, full and soft, the probability is that the re- mainder of the foot will be in good order. There may be an exception to this in the case of a used-up horse having been turned out to pasture for a riot! long enough to permit the fro to ta e on new growth. .If the frog be fu ly protected and well main- tained, the hoof will be found but little if at all contracted, for the very good reason that the hoof cannot readily contract if the f g be up to its normal size in every way. ut it is the smith, the horse-shoer who ruins the frog ; that is, very many of them do this. During the many years that the writer has driven horses, he has always made it a rule to be present during the shoeing, and has never permitted more than the slightest trimming of the frog, nothing more than the trimmin 011‘ of insigniï¬cant parts, already detach . The smith can mutilate and se- riously damage the hoof by the use of the rasp; but, fortunately the frog is proof against attacks by this instrument, and even the knife requires to be sharp, else the pe- culiar nature of the‘ frog will resist. Fever ‘ in the feet is a roiific source of injury to the frog, and s ouid be overcome at the earliest possible da . Conï¬nement upona dry, plank floor is amaging by keeping up too completes state of dryness. Cutting the frog awa at the time of shoeing, then setting the cot upon eaulhins, in such a manner as to prevent the frog from pressing upon the ground, will, sooner or later, inter- fere with its development and usefulness. The most important function of the froaisto lessen the shock to the foot in its contact with the ground. This being the fact, it should be so maintained, and the shoe be so constructed that at every step the frog can come in for a fair share of the pressure upon 0mm Dmucflox 13 Iran Nonruwxsr. volleys; they leach out the tertinty 0! the soil they do not carry awsy, and leave it in the valley sell as they sink into the earth. This has gone on for e es before the sdvent of the sgriculturist. hen he comes upon the scene, the process is ewelerated; for cultivation loosens the soil, end the reins can lherelore leech out more fertility sud oury ewsy more soil. All over the world it holds true thst the vslleys are more for- tile thau the hills; and the truth becomes more striking se the lend has been longer in cultivation. Iatallty. It In not laying too much to aflirm that h gh ground has become lean adapted and low gron better adapted to orchard growth. This being the cane, It hehoovea na to die- oover what haa wrought the c . My inveatlgatlona have convinced me t at it la not any peculiar climatic condition that in ible. The canoe liea in the aoll. rd ground in very rarely mannred nnï¬ciently. An orchard given the mmure It needl, in an exception. Trees are green feedera. and an our orchards are planted the trees are a bony draft on the fertility of the soil. But in addi- tion. another crop is kept on the land. It is usually a cultivated crop (likely a ve e~ table crop that draws very heavily on t e loll) while the trees are young. and alter- ward a gram crop. When land in occupied by too-exhausting crops, it certainly should be well rrannred. Yet the orchard inzthe laat epot to be mnnnred; and when it in remembered. it gets only a alight coat and very likely of manure so poor that it is not deeired to use it elsewhere. That this is a fair statement of the case, can not be euc‘ oeeafully disputed. _ oeufullv disputed. Low lends ere being continually enriched It the expense of the high lende. The nine curry the soil from the hills into the velleye; they leach out the fertlllty of_ the Than have been suggested may expla- otio-i of tho wall-nigh wholmlo demotion o! orchudo throughout the Northwest duh lag the put {aw nu. One in. that nouns chug“ hove ten and hi hgtonnd unï¬t fox orohudl. Notunlly, th ha met with much _ oppogition; (or herotoforo high I ALod nnd bu been oomidorod the bone: 5? a tank nnd ï¬le of orohudilu. The 0' - donoo that low ground in now the better, in not near so conolvnivo u may would hm. In luppou; novertheleu, In many one! low mound orohnrdl hue Iufl'orqd the Jan Pansnm'lsc rm; F300. AGBIOULTURAL. Avomwo Vnnum. Anus Annom. I chanced to meet alady the other day who had upeut three hour in churning; and the butter had not come. The cream looked nice, waa about acid enough, and only two decrees too warm. but come it would not. “ You try your "J. .louea†on thla cream, won't you I" laid ehe. I added uboutone hallite bulk of wator at 60 do- grees. stirred it up thoroughly and lot. it stand about trm minutou. The result warn that tho wator net the butter [mo and it all came to the top. “ Now churn on the top half of the churn,†aid 1, and in no time ahe had a nice butch oi butter. " Yet, that did the buaineu,"ahe said; but my mother alwaya aid that water in cream or butter spoiled it." What could I lay? What. mother “aald and done" upleta all later ideal and lnmtlgatlone. Howto keep milk oool without ice in a question reputed! aired. Mr. Drummond Huy. Stockton, w 0 but ind consider-hie experience in Africa. hoe A plan tint Work- cepiteliy. He not. hit Cooley can in e tub of water At the pump. right in the sun, lay- 3 ply or two of binnhet over it end pump: water on it. This cool: off the milk no font u if it were in ice wear. 0! coune the blmket mutt not be let drly. He eleo token the plan indlceted by Pro . Roberteon put~ ting in one sixth enter emong the milh end get; on much cream irom thnt u i! it were all milk. The ï¬lm milk in oi cont-e thin- nor. Among the rules of o live stable in New York where the onlmsis o msny wealthy men sre kept, ere the following: "No men willbe em loyed who drink! intoxicating liquors. £0 men shell spook loud to my oi the houses, or in the rteble where they ere. Horses of good blood ere nervous, end loud excited oonversetlon is ieit by every horse who bears them, and keeps them all nervous end nneesy. No men shell use proiene lengnsge in the hearing oi horses.†It would not be o bed idea ii every livery stebie edopted the-e rules. How is it in your born, brother lumen An English former who ha been inventi- geting the ceterpilier Peat, which in proving l0 destructive to the ruit end nut crop. In Kent, he. concluded that the eggs which produced the ceterplllm wexe deposited by the Iwume of bntterfllee which swept the coat lest entnmn. end which were luppoe- ed to have been driven over from the Conti- nent by the Itorml. At our felt- it in n common thing to lee level-n1 platen of n plee which hnve no te- eemblnnce to one other. exhibited under one name. This in perhepe nnnvoldnblo. but It lend- to endless confusion in the minds of nmetenu. AI Mr. Collins ea e epplee from different tide: of e tree mny eo unlike u to debeive even en expert. “ I will never egdn buy I cow from e men who habitually curves hie cattle. You might. as well try to make a whistle out of n pig’s tell. u to try to make egood milker of a cow that. was starved, when young. and we: do- Ioended from eterved enceetora, no mutter how good blood wu In her."â€"-[Hoard. From the paper our fellow-citizen, Mr. C. B. Goodrich, gnve III at the Inltituw we ebltrnct n ehort pnrngrnph that every deity farmer, nnd eve men who simply raises cows to cell, lhoul heed, when ruining s cc“ and feeding an cow; for etervution make: a curse that mny be transmitted to the third cud fourth generntion, unless enacted in ite downward course with good victunle and drink. “Mr. Goodrich-aye: tor than mthuumalkcll 3 big hdlflm‘ln rloo.morepuouu “to nag op! the mâ€"Jnmu gladuy Son, Elin- bnrgh. Auf. 7. ' Our adv on Iron 67 tpplo dhtriou ro- porc the crop to be “ below the wane" In 16 diuulou; “poor" or “very llgm" In 9 district" "modium" or "(Alrly good" in 7 dintrlob; whilo in only ï¬ve cases It I. â€land a “non-.30" or "uthhctory." From this it will be new tint tho Eoglllh crop II_ it legit) per“?! hump. A lly‘slo? crab stood nix years in well-cul- tivated soi , and, though each year making a very vigorous growth, did not make a show of fruiting. The tree seemed to be en- tirel going to wood. A friend, horticul- tur ly inclined, suggested root pruning. l‘his was done by digging at one side of the tree and cutting the main, central root, about three feet below the surface. This was done September, and the tree has not missed a heavy crop in nine yearn. At the time of the pruning, some old iron was thrown in among the roots, by way of experiment. A somewhat remarkable etl'ect has thus been produced, in that the color of the fruit, is a much deeper redâ€"indeed, almost black. The tree, when in fruit, is thus a puzzle to the average man of horticultural tastes. The name farmer has noticed a change pro- duced in the color of blue flowers by putting charcoal at the root. The color is modiï¬ed to a navy-blue. J. Q. A. McCormick, of Can Co.I Iowa. given the tollowing u hla experience with e on_b-_e_pp[e meg I will give my method. The trees should not be allowed to go a they please. Keep them low I0 that a mum on top of an eight foot ladder can pick ell the fruit. Cut out the top and centre of the tree so that the me can get into the centre of it. This will cause yonng hemeheejo _groy_ out all along the body'end main limbs of the tree, and these, when they are not expected to fruit, should be clipped off to within an inch of the stem. For every, one of these out off, from two to six more will grow out. Thus you will have a ï¬ne lot of fruit-bearing branches all elong the inside of the tree. A tree thus pruned on beer up all the fruit thetfï¬vill grow on it ; it will hear more end the fruit will be of the ï¬rst quality. Here- in, I believe, lies the secret of growing ï¬ne pesches. 0n the other bend. the continents! crops ptomieo well. end no likely to be both large end good. Notwlshesending this we look {or s fsvoreble reception durln the seuon for Csnedlsn end Ameriosn fru t well peck- od end of good size end quelity, but would stronglv sdviso our friends to weld ship- ing smell or common (wit. n such is like- y to yield :- results. The shipment of "summer" nit is es ell times seconded with much risk, on sccount of Its soft cher- eoter, but smsll peroels oi the best keeping vsrleties occssionsll) give seulsisotory re- turns. J. C. Hoummn Co. - Liverpool, Aug. 15. A CRABAI'PLB Tuna Exvxmuxxr. Pnuxlxc URCHABDS. Scum Susn. Nous. FOOD AT CANNIIMI. FRAHI'S, for the listwn. like the Alke, ere numbered among the enthropophegi oi Airioe. 'l‘heir ieme ee tighten hee trevelled ier. end the netivee who eosompnnied (ireniell end You h‘rencole were penio etrioken when they tire! enw e dweri. ()ne oi their peculieritiee is the teat thet on their numeroue merchee they do not eleep by 0 mp tiree et nightJlike other netivee, but etretch themeeivee on the bren- ohee oi treee. which the! oleep with erme end Y loge. end there oeoeinl end eeiely eiumber, out oi the reee oi wild beeete. " Don't go neer the dwerie.†wee the admonition oi the Congo netivee to (lreniell. “ Theypermlt no one to enter their countr . They poteon their weepone. They ere t e uglieetoi mortele, end heve greet hoede with boarded chine upon the emeiloet oi bodice." Sure ouon h, ( lronielleud \‘on Frencoie iound board on t e lane of meny e llatwe, but the heads oi the dwerie ere not dieproportionete- ly lerge. end their ioeturee not eepeoielly ugly. Unlike the Akhe. who ere neerly united, the lien“ wear e wide etrip oi netive cloth eronml their loine. Unekilled in eny‘ erte eeve thoee oi wer end the eheee. they chiefly depend ior their weepone, their , end vegetehlee upon the trlhee oi erge I HUI"â€" pn eclone llitle lellowe. In wer they use pogned nrrovn. They (eke the warmth n uprght, steal nolneleulyy up to the Ilee vll Iago of the enemy, ï¬re the huh, andp k the people with II'I'OWI end Ipenn by the light of their burning houses. Their fallen loan and llmlr prlsoueu become ' It “not win-d {Sr efplérrerriflioâ€"ï¬griv the Ihtwn tlmld Ind undomommtlvo. like tho ï¬rst vllhgon that Dr. Wolf mot. Thu huvo earned the reputation of being very ugly And pnguwlpuc limo (allows. In 'll‘ they use er of I end Bully weekend by lens of bl It tell-u any rey. The cunn- lng Pi mie- lnour mull one 0! weapons in theee on ohm. deer elephente end buf- leloee. helt arrow end upen- heede ere berbed end cannot dm out of the wound, neither do they loee e Ipear ehnfu, for the are ("toned by “out cord- to the hand, en if the nnimel In Me flight btuehee egelnet trees, the ï¬nite, III-Med of (Allin to the realm, merely d_qule egejnlh MI I glee. WIIIREVIR GAME IS I'LBNTIFUL, live thereoiew month. end then move on to other hunting grenade. Here end there in the wood- they dig plh obont el ht feet dee , which they cover with brenc no end tur , and in these trope they catch ele- phant-.hippopotemi, end bufl'doee. which ere oiten impeled upon eherpened etokee driven into the bottom of the pile. The eleo hunt large some with the bow on spear. They cannot hill on elephant ot once with their weapons, but they eoldom loee on mime! they once wound. Von Fronooie eeye thnt, lying in nmbneh. they stench the lergeet some, end follow it {Lneoeeeery (or me. Whenever the wounded enimel‘ t.- It heeomee_th_e terget for o lreeh ehow- ‘ All Through this great fore-t re ion mny befound the-o nomad hunters. n little bands of eight or more “milieu they build their guns hum a few of these little people. kept as hunters at the towns of big chiefs, but this was the ï¬rst time he had met them in their own poorly cared for villages. Some of them could speak the langu e of the Baknba, the great hibe which cl ms this region, but they were so awe struck by the white man’s sudden advent that they would hardly utter a word. A crowd of nearly a hundred coi- feebrown little folks, none of them larger than children two~thirds grown, stood tim- idly at a distance and surveyed the visi- tors in wonder. Dr. Wolf won their cou~ ï¬dence so far at last that the permitted him to approach, and, unobserv by the natives, he took the heights of many of them on a spear shaft. These and later measurements by Dr. Wolf of full-grown adults vary from four feet three inches to four feet seven and onehalf inches. The average height, accord- ing to the several authorities, seems to be about (our feet ï¬ve inches. Unlike the Akka, the Batwa are not unusually prog- nathous, nor have they disproportionately large abdomens, but they are compact, Well- huilt little creatures, without any physical peculiarity except their small size. Lieut. Wissmann, however, received quite an un- iavorable impression of the Batwa from the few specimens he saw among the Bassonge, whom he describes as dwelling In tiny huts, despised by their neighbors, ill shaped, and woe egone specimens of humanity. The industry of {our greet trvoliers, who took up the work oi exploration where Stanley left it. hes now supplied ne with considerable informnlion nbout the re- msrknbie Bstws dwnris. who ere spreed in little eommnniliesti :- .ngh the densely wooded regions south of the greet northern bend of the Congo. The hove been found in districts about 400 mfics npsrt end in much of the intervening re ions that ere still little known. They eve been studied by Wolf near the Luiun River, still further essl; by “'ieemnnn in the interminable fore-ts which sunlight hardly penetrates north ol the S‘mknru. by Grenieii snd Von Francois on the Lubiiseh, "DON'T no NEAR 'I‘lll DWABPS" The lmelleu People in the Wen-Id. loll they nee l'olnened Anew. end on (unwell. None 0! the remerhble dieooveriee made by explore" in the dopiho oi Airice he- ever excited deeper lutereet then Sohwoin- furth'e vivid deeoriptlon oi the Atke dwerle whom he found in the northeeetorn port of the Congo bnin. Living emong' tube- of upleudili phyeioel devoiu menu. those little people, from {our feet to our feet eix lnohee in height. ere noted for their courege end egllity. {or their woman no huntere, end ior their unneuel dexterity in the me of the bow and open. In I Recent. ieomre in Lon- don Proi. Fiower, director of the Nomi-Al Hiltory Mueeum, described them on tho emeileet people in the wofld. end expreeeed theo lnion. now senor-oily held. that they end t eir relekivee loath oi the Congo no the Pigmioe who were known to the (hook- end of whom lierodotue end Armeuo gave deeoriptionu ehnt were long believed to he innolful. SOUTHWEST OI" STANLEY FALLS. These diecoveriee were made In the year 1885 “61886. but the explorere were too bney eocumuleti feet: to propere them for public peru . end we have hnd only the most Iregmenhry elluaione to these unique and inure-ting little folks until the wriunga of Wolf, Wienmen. and Von Francois were pnblhhed in Germ“, this summer. One day Dr. Wolf w pushing than I) the forest east of the Luluu River, when suddenly came upon 3 little elude in which were about tweut tumbledown beehive huge, the homeg_of_t o Rom He had Icon Phllulol his will have twenty-Iona thutnow «the two now In the process of 0mm no oomplotod. The Rue-inn Harvest. ' An Odeue ietterto the London “Deily Newe" ownâ€"The nbnndent hervut, hrii- iient weether. end extreordiner demend ior fleid labor have thin lee-on e cnrionl eï¬ect oi denuding the chief popnionl eentree oi the Tonride end Don oi domeetic eervnnh. In Roetoli‘, ior inltenoe, there in not e cook,‘ hitchenmeid, honeemeid or nnrlerymnid Lent now evniinble. Ail ere out on the r tepï¬e herveeting. The deiiy remnnerntion too, greeti in exoeee oi, end in men ! diotricta don le, thet obtained in my prev -‘ one lee-on during the int decode. iThe military commendente in the eouthern die- triote ere innndnted with epplioetionl ior ‘mietenoe, verving in the number re nired from i00 to 1,000 men. Here the ion own-‘ ere hove mode n free gift oi portion. of their orope to the rer pee-entry, simply thet the groin m ght not beloet owing to tho‘ ebeence oi ï¬eld labour. Overworited peel- ente in whole iemiliee heve been cutting theee free it crope by moonlight or the flickerin ii nminetion oi bonï¬ree. Owing to there reppronohingmilitarymenmnvrel. the d lit at commendnnte heve only been eble to give ve limited nuistenoo. ltie niwnye very re notentiy reineed, u the iion'e ehero oi the remit of tho militery labour goee in uneqnei eheree into the poo- kete oi cepteine, mejore, end cclonele, with n preeont to the general. Hence regimen- mentel l nicer: in the block earth regions ei- weye display a lively eoiicitude {or the eeie garnering of en ebnndent herveet. The cat hero during the week hoe been equnt~ orisl. with scarcely e breeze or peeling thunder-storm. The night bring: little to- iiei. Thin extreme heet dcetroye ell hopes oi next yenr’e hey herveet except by www- ing. The green roote ere elreedy burned en'l withered in the roll. tono rewhod on utter making 3.228.000 vibrations. T I II 3 lemon lnnnolhor kind of Ipood, ol: the rule In: which sound navel. Ion-wad t tough the ll! In 65,400 feet r minute. tho tompontnro being 32° , at this In Increased 12 inches with every the In tamper-unto of 1° . The shot from n mun- kot Orwell tutor thnn sound, nnd the fluh much {am thnn the ballot. The hnrrlonno that level: everything boloro It invol- n the use of 9.000 fool in A minute. How about: vibrations? In | minute the lowut sound our our on: ouch but been mndo by 990_ Vlbnuqnn, whilg the highest tono re'whod 1 Talk about quick transit and railway trains 1 Why in one minute we are whirled around on the outside of the earth by its diurnal motion a distance of thirteen miles. In the same space of time we shall also have been carried along with the earth, in its journey around the sun. l,(.80 miles. Is this fast? Comparatively, yes Yet the ray of light that meets your eye now, will ins minute be 11 600 000 miles away. How do we know all this? Ask the astronomer. Compare this with the speed of an ex press train, 1 mile a minute; with that of the fastest trotter, less than 148 rods , that of the street car, about 32 rods. or the aver- age walk of the pedestrian, 16 rods a min» INC. Swift vs Slow.†There ere many things we can only under- stand by comparison. One of these is. our iden of swiftnees. The speed of the nut is swift compared with thnt of some other in- sects. Thu of man is swift compared with then of some nnimnln, but slow compued wighjghnhof the hlood-horee or greyhound. What is the past history of these most unique and extraordinary of African races? We are not likely to have a complete answer to this question. As yet we have had only a glimpse of them, and the study of their languages, traditions, and habits may throw light upon their past. All our present evi- dence poinu to the robshility that they have descended from o earliest inhabitants of the continent. We know something of the migrations of the tribes, around them, and there may yet be found evidence to show the correctness of the hypothesis that the Akka north and the Batawa south of the Congo. the Doha of Abyssinia, the Change of the Geboon, and the Bushmen of South Africaare remnants of one great family. oouuomrlus to my Wives, and throughout the mde region they in- hebii the ere ihne becoming reduelly mergedw th the surrounding pimp . Not. a few communities of pure Bunwe hove been found but: mixed breed. are eleo common. Tho Batwu and the Akin it In believed. are the remnente of a once very numeroue race, and both are qreduelly dyinv out, yic'ime of rthe more suowmo HUNDREDS or “wows that, slimy with poison, dashed a ainst the steel network which protect the steamer, or stuck in in wooden sun rooi. He gives us a vivid idea of the agility and aerobatic aooompliehments oi these eople 215 miles away on the Tohuapa. e saw the little warriors clambering along pre- cipitous sin a above the river, where there seemed har lya foothold ; saw them owing- ing like monkeys from limb to limb of trees, and climbing out on branches overhanging the water so that they might speed their arrow. at shorter range against the pufï¬ng and importinent monster that had dared to intrude upon the privacy of the little folks. He heard their ear-splitting yells, which were wholly out of proportion to their physical insigniï¬cance. Grenfell is a man of peace, and, unlike some other explorers, he did not choose to shoot lead at them. A‘ few blank cartridges, however, had an ex-i oellent moral eli'eot when the enemy took to canoes and seemed bent on making a prize of the little vessel. people neer whom they live. moot o! whom eoheowledge their infetlorlby u hunten to the Ben". end gladly enoonnge them to better theirloede of gems {or produote o! the gel-den, hrue wire, end beetle. 'Ihe Bntwe use than European areduelly dying out, vic'ime oi the more weriul tribe: around them and at their nicrlor atteinmente iu the arts of livin . Meuy o! the Nature children die for lac even at eueh imperfect oere u most sewage mothers Ive their offspring. There rum. to be litt e meteruei emotion, end in flight the tiny mother! heve oiten been known to ebudon their bebiee to their late. \At the furtheeb Point. ruched on both the Buuen end I‘ehnepe Riven, ebont 215 mllee sport, the continued advance of the little Itoamer l’eece was rendered impouibio by the immio hostility of the Betvn and their neighbors. Von Francois, one of the moat graphic wrimn and Do- oomplluhed goo rapbere who hue visited Airioe. nukes e ively picture of the bowling little demon. on the shores of the Buuern, â€"â€"---â€"â€" mun-qr... ' ' ing, Aciml md Pm'iool Busln'fl. Telogn Pgimnnohlp ond nil English Bunch". Ghanaian“ md Type-wriiing miiooliy taught. Bindonuh “tendon“ irom ew York City And summon. America Ind Bermudo lslondo And oil Province. 0! the Dominion. Bend in! circulln (Jung. Yong. 3nd 811qu 8mm. Toronto. J. M. CROWLY, Pro. _.I-A-- -_.I u ....... pxletor and lunagér MARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE: - om ï¬ve hundred students In uuccevnlul pnotloo; lees flnv doflns per union ; session 1888 9 balm Oc- tober 20th. Princlpal. Prol. SMITH, V. 8., Tomnio. MONEY Agents and [or our Illa-cruel , (fatal to. Addrea. 'l'llllln SBLI-WIIIGING or (10.. Toronto, Ont. ORON‘I'O Ill'lflms Gallflulâ€"Bgokknp. _ Inmjcmtlpnq Ppcï¬qtlyuslnvn. Telunoh'. H. WILLIAMS 60‘ Maw .wxzmgagmm. m. anv'ol. Glee: l Adel-Mo 8.. Int. TOR-IO. FARMS Rm! glory springs from the silent oon- quost o ourselves, and without thst the omqueror ls naught but the ï¬rst slow. A. P. 415. The Ohicego Norm-Welter!) Reiiwey Compeny enuounceeueriu of berveet excur- eione to Boinu in Iowe, Minneecte, Dekcte and Ne rah, {or which tickets will be cold Se bomber 11th, September 25th. October th. end October 23rd. et the reto of one fare for the round trip. Theee excur- elcu will afford exceptions] opportunitiee for pereonei hugection oi the productive country reeched 7 tbc Chi a; North- Weceern Railweylinee. For all inform. Hon eddreu E. P. Wileon, Generel Puleno get Agent, Chicego. Prmm procured. Plun. Attéhoyl, and upon. Bot/d 1837. I)...†c. IMO-t a (imam-onto. m' ï¬gï¬ah' min. Ign- rpbln ML open: a mo 0 «mu-appreciation ““47 house of hboooo, maniacs. men“! do: on, cotton] of Ibo bnln. om, pmtun ol 3 . lose 0! nun consul monrax'orflon of the b l“and lo.I 0! not“ rang] l’om uy emu w war. onâ€" on“ oldr ddlo-mdâ€"wbo m broken down "gm In}. elm-Above clamor Any come notmuuionedabou. and moddnunnleocnt-lnmmpflwhubm In book tom. 0! Memo! la». Boot: an. ad and mm from oboonwon. Adan-l. V Lnol "Vim-mam tomato on. While the gift of connotation proves o clover nan, the wont c! It is no proof of n dull one. A smile mey be bright while the heart 15 ted. The reinbow le8 beautiful in the eir while beneath in the moaning of the us. M A.\‘\IL, General Manger, - J mBooâ€"i: WALTER Land Commiuioner, W. S. Aux Axum, General Tnflio Manager, St. Pal. J. M; anxms, va. Pass. Ageni. Palms;- Honu Block, Toronto 3 F. I. Whitnz, ({entl klr’usefyger gnd‘ .1‘icket Agony . Ticket: good- for 30 days, including Itop over privilagea of 10 dnya going and 5 day: returning, on the following dates : Tue-day, Sapt. ll; Tnecduy, Sept. 25; Tuudny, Oct. 9 and Tuesdny, Oct. 23. For free maps, l_)ooka and_ Ill Buticnlu'l, nddreu Ubnity in like money â€"the more we Imdm need of it, the less we have» give. Bur-vest Excursion: to Minnesou, an ta And Montana. First class acoommodati True goodneu in like the glow~worln in this. that it ehinee most when no eye except those of Heaven are upon it. Too well known to need lengthy edvertlleo meats â€"Dr. Sege'e Caterrh Remedy. "’l‘is nothing but n cold,†Ihev my, “ Twill very soon wen ca." Ales. the attry old I The heeflo cheek. the failing strength. The rule! the: cmnot one, And 1119’. won flame goee out et length. In I mnmmptire'e grave. . If persons would use Dr. Pnerce’e Golden Medical Diecove , when irriution of the lungs is indicated y a cough, it would be In easy matter to avert consumption. Be wine in time. Most men expend the elrly N: of their lives in contributing to ten er the latter part miserable. At am a “33:,“ laughing 9911311, um- , A “ Do I believe in advertielnu." said a. pro- minent lswyer, a. dsy or two ago. “ Well, rsther : end in the hidden advertisement more lhsn in any other. I remember, one day, reading a very interesting story, thet ended in what I took to be a puff for Dr. Pierce'e l’lesssnt Pnrgetive Pellets. I threw down the paper in n rage. Not a week otter thst I needed some medicine of that kind, and went and bought those some little pills." “ Did I ï¬nd thern good 3" “ Why, yes, the best thing of the kind I ever sew, but thet hu nothing to do with the ï¬rst question, and I only mention the joke on myself to show thet advertising does pay.†A Vessel that Will Travel Under Water any Depth. wa Your: Sop. litâ€"The Herald's Pull upccial says a new lubmulue boat, invaded to revolutionize nut! warfare, in to be lwpcped 9g To_n_lon_on Sepumgor 15. She I- designed b Mr. Rnnagbto, Government onalneer. S a bio constructed" to be ubla to dive oomrletoly beneath the Reel of the largeutjmno ad 9114 by meal}! of lpecjll aides oi nn enemy ’e vessel and in enabled to maintain oommnnlontion with these ex- pionivo cartrid as when ï¬xed by mean- of a nice! wire, 03 which the outrid el om be exp! ed by eleptriciw. _’I_‘ in new engine of destruction combines sll the requisite condition of speed. steering espeoity, submersion and habits- biliiy. V The vessel is 17 metres long between ï¬erpsndionlsrs snd 1.80 metres beam. She enebled to drive under water to en given depth by means 0! e series of reserve re the receive water in vsriebie qnsntitiee. Reser- voirs of compressed sir silow air for breeth~ lng purposoe to be renewed at will. Hori- zontal seeming is efl‘ected by an ordinary rudder. Vertical steering is effected by 3 double rudder working on double uingel attached to the sides of the stern. A little enpols 35 centimetres in diameter is built on her how. It is in this cupols. provided with glass windows, the the ofï¬cer in com- mand directs the vessel. The entire crew is one diner, two engineers and a seller. The mauve power oonsiste of Krebes’ electric machine of ï¬fty horse power. The other engines are provided with comprezsed eir apparatus. the largest honor-u! an'd by mean of lpeolul {marque {nun ogplodvq caytfldgoq {03.1†Value of Advertisements. LIAMS 00. fn'a'ï¬ï¬‚. Rfl IAIUYACYVIIIB A" DIAL“ ll Harvest Excursions. POI sun or In". Am. sun; Kmmmdi’nlm. Bomupoclal b: on. H. 8. MITCHELL, DRAYNK.3:. “mm wu'rzn -â€"" mom 5 “loan Wall". Addnu 020. I. l'lilllls, 81 Church OI. Tom-b. ROOFERS