:d m opinion as :ute neural of 1 aï¬'ection 0881b“ I could paerrecw of pam it needed ti hold; zen at dmth’ 3 duo: Lgic. It saved my ï¬g. mum of the tumble} MI. DID IT." OBS OIL The tree†is a. favorite every- EMENT. *1 0f 60 feet. Its seeds are coh- m “3“. oval, winged seed vessel, with small hairs on the margm, mm at the base of the leaves. °’ Slippery elm in much lower and the leaves are lager and than those of the white variety. + Things We Do Not Do. 9 (10 unit I‘AHI:AAI Had: -A know in Emily was burn“! d‘acent farm. toJ my satisfaction, and _ 3: the amount of my_ am highly pleased W1 s of the insurance CO their own interests by gineer in the ‘ m’s ngad, ' * 'arso agon ï¬- ' >ror§ounc§di§ omï¬ [TB MARKETS, SHEETING, Sing 2N3 GRAY FLA] 31's and an almo for Ladies’ and 0h assortment of 0C ’ers in F anqy__6_« *1'1' $8111. ittle Britai 'AL LIVE 3' cil. 11 and Winter m rchasers that by a“ ’, but get reliable g'g'. men to be kept up; I CK AGAIN N MIL N BROS.,W(Eanahia1t ï¬at. .IAM S Company- ucu w W nu!" up, tobetaken Gnu!" "AIR" (.900 "EM-THAI; usual. wanna-t. B prevents the hair from falling out |mmotes a healthy growth, Ii by all Druggists. -¢,:. mvents hair from tumms gray- “My hair was rapidly turning gray and ï¬lling out: on bottle of Ayer’s Hair 1.?ng has remeder .the trouble, and my hair is now its ongxnal color and full. “n.8, Onkrupa, Cleveland. _0. ’ s qcrcs hair 8.13:: fevers. . u 7vch yearn. goleaxadam when I recon.- my hair; :21! out. and “ L13.: little rum 2de I rri :1 various - inithout' 5!: c 35.1mm, 135g Ibegag’ _-;e :‘vef’s- H ï¬r Vigor. and now my was grow'ing . pidly and ismwred 5 onginal color.’ 'â€"Mrs. A. C9153; r pightofl.M ~. H J : lver’s HairVigor 1 i r' :9 Bled, though not so large, and in a. mot a bug could be seen, and his Iewlth bugs after this wee computa- mnll. Dip the pieces of potatoes dug-sen and save killing the bugs. [French technical iournal recom- hthe use of coal tar for water- ing masonry. A small amount of ll’ubbel’ dissolved by benzine will no its durability. It should be kl boiling hot, 5rind if the color F. be objectionable it can be dusted plate: 01f Paris deforo drying. lo the oak belongs the character of 9r}? 16310 ULTURAL. We or purple. coior. The leaves lpleasing light green in the spring m darker as the season advances. Film the foliage gunmen a lively PM. Even in wimer it in a pleas- nect, from the minute division of 3’ 3331 the graceful droop of itl "93PM a cow to make something ‘ “thing; 5:1:ka our cows in an ice-house, M†lingeon; i" “10' than to go :h'hdo you â€din or brush em. hdmgd upon mgtnre alone for w“ lummer feed?“ d° Mt allow the milk to stand 1°"? “1 ‘he stable to absorb foul ant qealect to strain the milk "9"etthex’ni1kinammin W is being discovered every L Not only from our own work 'wntinlnlly learning, but $150 from 9 do not coï¬der that we kilo" "8 lbont butter- making, II 5039' :medy for Potato Bugs. m- mcoeasfnlly tried a. remedy tobugs as follows‘: He procured fmï¬on and research of others. Odo not keep a. cow that makes “00 pound; of butter in a year; u'P‘l“ the dry cow on a starvation Q??? E air V1 of “°’ '0‘ the milk in deep can: in I“With out changing the water :1: n“! 0? m'ithout Ice; sweet creun' wiï¬hcram mlflsthm twelve mm. The creo. in ripened m manna“: théncram forthe ); "'8“!!! ct the mgwmpcniuie ' ‘ wfgfl Mao: “h two or three .honï¬ta‘ £3531» the bum 1mm tho 33% THE SCALP» RENWJESDANDRUFF. ““3101: to “Milk; qts hair from .mmmiu. JULY 29. 12. Price : 50 cts. Farm Notes yDt. J. C. Ayenk CoqLoielLMaL'I. .3 Draggists and Parkman. Medicg -t of $3315 ag1 1r soft. 335131988}. 2:! Astr‘s Hit-«jinn ODE n. flour hours. Lambs sold here tom and com: butchers Mabel-on Monday than they an! at one] City orYorx. otltmneenbnhablds made today byregu- on!!! “dictum $330.59. Lunch m nuke I on"! ma common. 90.91: w w- h to nuke A mouse: sale. The oxen-Inca. m . were about II: can. The market ruled strong It to:- m‘. price- tor the limited ofl‘ednnw wax-o â€muâ€"vw_V m Centrel Gunmen eeye: "A few days departed. She were no het, end wee in a. late of perfect bewilderment. Mr. Peter Wood, who een stumble elonn In the Dutch dleleet. nude out at length thet the girl hed 3 enter here. After eome eeereh- xng e Gel-men 31:! well leeeted ht Mr. S. J. The new emvu um u... w... _._ _- __ sister. The other tolled to see it. end vowed up end down the visitor wee nothing to her. Here wee A pretty pickle. But Peter was nndenneed. ‘Spenk to her,’ he sold to emoaor. Tell her 0! home end mother; recon your childhood’e hep†hours. Se: something you know she'll remember.’ So they did. end no they; convened on this don! beam in my 119. ï¬nd inflow minute. theatre wen-ebb each 81111510,me 19-There were he fresh uri- vde or eele cattle and nothing of cohsequence. Severellcede otccmmcn ccw mil. men end thin “can end heifers. etc..were held over non: Windmnichccnld not be cold an (anatomic decline mom int week's prices. and the contact to: all but choice m steers. heavy amok suitable to export beeveeud good tredeisdecidedly bed to: the beleace ct the week. Veda ma calvesâ€"The edve maket he: ggne to pieces. nine. hsve declined ell at 501: to 50 per cw}. tqr eli-hgtjgncyntguee since gelatin- I‘n in xiiâ€"{ow an: thaw-aun- 4.... ..__ , not quite mag ant-nut lesson,“ . theme olui. but thalamus! wan owl-0330:0011 3.0. and. , chalet apples here In Whoa-«wt they would do 5 um: .- . -- , lam-unlustcgqntm; } the odor of onions, potatoes, cabbage, ‘. etc , pervades the atmosphere ; or because ‘ the cream is kept for a long time till it gets sour, bitter and almost rotten. Is there in any of these reasons an excuse why any person should not follow a more intelligent, common-sense method '9‘ It would be an “eye-opener†for some people if they would strain their cream and see what we have occasionally taken out of the cream brought to the meetings by straining it through the dipper with the perforated bottom; hardened lumps of cream, sticks, dirt and dust, hairs, flies and other insects, and yet some people will pour the whole, into the churn and expect to get good butter out of such a mixture. As to washing butter he would say buttermilk is a very poorthing in which to preserve butter. Butter that has a lot of buttermilk left in it will not keep for any length of time. To get that buttermilk out a great many people attempt to work it out, which is a very tiresome job, and cannot be done thor- oughly ; at the same time if the butteris worked too much the grain is spoiled and it presents a greasyand sorry appearance. Butter should be worked just to mix the salt 'with it to dry it out somewhat, and inst as little as is necessary to accomplish that object. , ; dirty milk ï¬nding its way drgï¬kbydro into ythe pail; because that isnot strained immediately through’tihflee or four ply of butter cloth, but has left in it a large amount of dirt which dissolves there; because that milk is left in an old, ninety; damp, i]1_- ventilated cellar where meat on whatthey ; if thbu'g lit théy’hatla beta ‘1"; he‘wahhtg to lniï¬fa‘bout it, as he "waialwaya anxiou- tolearn, and he would tell other peo of the better way ;if they thought method better he hoped they would ut it into praetiee. Some night aay w t iatheuieo‘f takingthlitrouble, we can- not get any larger price? Some people imagine that if at the country store they cannot get anymore for their butter than. their neig hbofa who do not take the same trouble and care therefore it 1330 much time wasted. But it doee not take more tine; the producer cannake from 10 to 15 lbs. 0: pbutter and have everything waehed up in an hour or an hour and a quarter. Mr. Hum’ehae done it. 01m. 3 lines: is a yirtueithat Ia commendetl next 1 to Gedllneu. Because your neighbor milks a ï¬lthy unchained cow in a. ï¬lthy stable; begun in milking he never brushes oï¬' the udder of the cow or wipe: off her tests, nor yet inflict: his own hands, but Amilka pith W°§ hagglenthe to prov“ Idvantï¬ of tlieir mm: Thenfrime .673, he would-113310 m it to the people themselyea. ghqtheq ï¬gs who“ he #37069“ '3'? in: mm Exam mu 3m u take a leaf 0‘1“ :ok In. supplying gm â€van-known .u’ the outer d!!- He Wonidn‘t Himself: “I, sit,†said the m with no profuuon, Fun a. working politician. ' “We!1,well,†equsimed Mr. Wars! Heel- â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" I.‘ -_J nu..- .- ..-v .. -v___ v The ï¬rst ï¬gure in 392; the second 416. Then the barber is asked what he think- about it. If he is as well posted a the bet-her with whom e reporter for the Trib- une talked the other dot, to will lay thst ordinarily 500 strokes of the rezor ere mode on e men’s face every time he get! slaved. Some of these stroke: may not be more then an eighth of en inch long: and made st the rote of three I. eecon â€"Chieege Her dd. I" W 6:1, IVS“, u-y.â€"..â€"'_ v___ .1- “you ought“ throw up your job' ad ‘0’ into o museum. You no tho only poli- doin- I over now M'workod.’ two monghs she lends the disease to her husbend, who keeps it until the gn- is ripe and heyin begins, et which time ho trunnion it. to jg sister, who in else u mem- ber of the funily. For two or ‘hree you! the funily he. beemreguhrly visited by the In“. an! now the coming of Imma- in 3:03;?“ now the c'omini of ammo is Inilod with anything but pleasure, for it bring. Iniury with it. â€"U'.iu Observer. One funily in Utice is peculiarly Afloat.- ed. They have hey fever in the home six months in every year. When the trees bud the wife comes down with it. and for m months she wheezes, eneem, md cough: night. and dey. At the end of the ,1, u..:. .L- J: ..... o- L-- nus, u an un- “nun“..- ..-- .. ----_- eeca notice. “Of course,†one aye no the cold steel, teking 3 fresh start, creepe among the tinder Index which fling: the neck, “I my be eceived u to the ngth of name of these strokes, but I pretend to know a stroke when I feel. it,†end the numbering machine increases its speed. #' H‘ -- n t,_L-__ c_:-l..ll for you’re 5£'°‘i}‘.’h‘i'{tb utch the flat next stroke. fore you think the bother helf ready for the wind-up the rumor in going again. Twice as fast come the strokes. If one previously thought the harbor had become swore of the experi- ment it now! eeemq o fact. _And the result! don‘the line again shoal?! be countod. Before the momentary speculation on that point, is_ ended the razor has cut anothor wide'swath clear down tho side of the face, and is taking a confusing number of nipl in the wiry wisps which becloud the foothill feature. of the face. One may he usually a calm,cooly-calculating individual, and, thoro- fore, up to this moment not__a stroke ha uumwneno n.â€"-..._' __-_-V, The “ï¬rst ~ time over†hear been‘ ï¬nished, and your mind is given a. momentary weit while tbe sponginglprgceedm It’s no rest, _A4._L AL- t... Whnt the Berber nu to Do With Each Customer. The tiny my come when a person con be bundled up in a rubber lock, put into a. pneumatic tube, and shot to New York in ten minutes, but e real number of stroke: mndebyebo rinshnvingomnn will robebly never be known. If one has onbte about it let him try it the next time he is shaved. He will ï¬nd it one of the herdest talk. attempted for new a day. ith e self-assurance that it’s the enlist thing in the world. one starts in with registering a. mental “1†for that ï¬rst Itroke down the side of the face. The stroke in "not ï¬nished, however, before one queriee whether those three little movements of the razor just before the barber goes beck to go ,,1 n L- __.__ t-) LABOR INVOLVED IN A SINGLE SHAVE The sketch shows a common farm basket covered with a long gathered strip of or- dinary sacking, which has ï¬rst received a powdering of small daisy- -shaped ï¬gures ,5 p. .s, . worked in long stitch ' with green German- town; each ï¬gure re- uires only seven or e1g ht stitches, each stigtch being about ’ half an inch long. - The upper edge of the om‘:f‘;:AL WOOD cover is gathered and m tacked inside the bas- ket just below the top; then the lower edge 1s gathered 1n under the bottom, tack- ed to position and ï¬nished with a round bottompom iece of the sacking which is tacked to the asket, throu h and throu h. A strip of green stri rpet bin in bound about the basket to c8conï¬ne the full- ness, and the haudles are covered with the same. Such a basket ishandy. when one hnsmuch wood to carry upstairs, and it saves all litter from dropping bits of wood and, moss; it also saves unloading, for the basket looks quite as well to remain in the chamber as the old- time wood box, and will hold as much asmany of them did. If necessary, when sp comes, and every basket on the place 1sca caled for, the cover- ing may be removed 1n a very few moments; but an old basket, past service, if neatly repaired, will often do just as wellas a better one. aprth plowed . ifla but, : ntes 2 -They ere, when. ‘ perly 'lï¬nized, our best bearers, sud bypgolsntingpzs I have described, you can always ï¬nd pare plants on the outside of each row, and you mt 30th s new bed esch' yesr end after two crops of strawberries plow under the old bed. ' This is the reason why the lust rows are next the vegetable en. The other row: may continue on t 9 same land for 10 to 20 years. Plant potatoes or peas next to the strew- berries, so that the ground will be in good condition for your next' two rows of strew- berrien. Plant all rows thron h the whole length of the gsrden and wi e enough so that you can cultivate with 3 horse. Put in plent of seed, tend well, thin out prop- erly and then what room you have left plant to sweet corn or tatoes and ' this acre of ground well cs for wiil he the most proï¬table sore on the farm. â€"George J. Kellogg, in Farm and Home. Work Basket For a Farmhouse Chamber. blackberries, 8:33.; {mirth row, 313%., raspberries ; ï¬fth row, black raspberries; qixth row, strawberries,‘ Sikh-om the last and 2ft. in the. row, only perfect. bloo ‘ {ï¬nds ; seventh row, 4ft. from the last an 2!; sport, strawberries, all pistillate ,vu'ie- ti‘ea. _ Y3}: my uk_why plant: any__ pigtil} iiï¬b Seat, Monty em w‘heâ€™ï¬ â€˜1 re- commend burying manure. This row of u- pangu will'lutlg life time, therefore ,pnt 3t 2h eye ~aide 9f the gag-deg. . 9n the ,wupqr north aide, lift. from the feyce, plant. a. row of grapes 8ft. â€at; second row, 8ft. from the grupes,‘cumnu and ooseberrieo, 8ft. spar; ;_third row, black rries. 8x3ft..: fourth row. 313%.. ‘tiro‘eggth of Elle? and no that the gamuwmï¬iéfmm new. ' ltetn runover nknollao u to 8i" southern and northern 31999, will prolong memiciag‘msaï¬baae ta. duys. Plow 9221» 9d thetploviquat on mam- 29 w Lflg‘iammagm be the ca. mignotnpid'g-Ibrï¬onbjoa cl obi m aw THE FARMER’S GARDEN. Paculhrly nicked. wire aid '. lath, «will bonsai-m WWW-M D. 00. chumâ€"n!- digs-w gunman - rot-3:3. th and- him cities dull or awi yin. unuenu‘ v And! to Jul! mg 1931â€"14-4. m m cm: .“ 7 manna WANTED. â€" For s. s. No. am. holdlnuznd «mom-oer. 1 "Ed Eldon. adamant: «maniac; do. :0 commence the middle at am Aunt. with mâ€. um mm m. g 83% McMiLLAN. motsâ€, Glen- WWW/7%â€? ' Ilia/Ia: risen/MIAMI Jam IJ' flIIJIJTIMIIU/fl/VIA’ â€awn/m7 â€my. Mia/z): 72:22 4M: mum. #51010“ 57,411 0/?â€6‘6/171/IY5/6'307; 725.8 â€/77 am toâ€: £01011. A GOOD OPENING for s Dry Goods mustangsmt‘l mum-2m:- Eajï¬mm mamâ€"m. ï¬g Ts'ggmcnifl lulu ma having the mrsnoll. COLD IV ALL DEALZIS. Factory. Toronto, Ont. Miscellaneous. go in deep. but still a few jars of well preserved fruit are very tasty and muchtobedesiredonocaasionsduringthe long winter months. To Preserve any Fruit needs cheaply andwell. We unjust placing in our cellar TWO CARLOAD8_of the diferent brands, bought expressly for the preserving season. They will be found to possess excellent sweetening qualities. In the lm of GE]! JARS we are well stocked. Absolutely air-proof and as cheap as they can be had anywhere, and perhaps a trifle under. SPRA'IT 8: KILLEN, I f you are, and likely there’s no doubt of it, you will require SUGARS. Of course you willâ€"perhaps you mu not care to ', July 7th FLTM‘I‘B: "M35111..â€" â€" Granted that you require VBUGARS, we can mph] your is Sé’a‘s’on ? Having just received a oarload we have the following Brands in Stock: . can and get prices for . Nails, Tar and Building Paper, Paints, (Ii/s, Glass, Before bwm‘mg your smite: you should give me a. HOGG' BROTHERS. Two portable Waterous Engines, l2 h.. p.; in working .order, for sale cheap. Apply to (fBUILDERS. ENGINES FOR SA LE. m Jib snap-n. PURE MANILLA; CROWN! EUREKA BINDER TWINE Mt Man. M7. mâ€"cs. ONE DOOR EAST BENSON HOUSE. BMW" etc. 41' L0 WEST 231033. SILVER COMPOSITE ï¬ogg Bros.-â€" Oakwood. John Hanna. J. P. Ryley. J0]!!! MAI/I18, PU RE Iron Founder RED CAP, URIBN CREDIT FEW. u 00 unor- Foasm. aooooommuax. FEE AND LET. name-3mm“..- tho'cflfl. . MENTION rudim- The place to get those PURE AND RELIABLE E. answer's, Ianglefoot sticky Fly Paper. . Poison Fly Pap", Fty Felts, Etc. “Quantum m.“ at. â€mud“ noun. mun-cum POISDNS â€mamas-Ila.- “mumâ€"4|. _ "3311...! HIGHLOOLEM PURE PARIS GREEN. INSECT POWDER.- RBI-1.33033. 1126391; June 9 1891â€"109. ISSUE}! OF “331MB um - almanac.“ MumM‘ ‘0 autumn Alum D'HIGAL’S 7â€â€! m that you my require during the coming season conxmm mu SOLD BY ALL DEALERS. TILDERS, ATTENTION. â€"At ï¬t 014mm w 1 lawman ,, !_mm_, A- 11199137931. [E LIVERPOOL AND LONDOI AND anon; mam comm h BRYAN SON, Goa. 89:11:80» «mumâ€"4141:. my a. Lind-p M “A! Ins uranco WANTEQTâ€"On 331917 I THE POST.â€"Pufl- mum'g‘ um. . 43 A15 H w: