In stock-raising it is of the utmost impor- tance to make the most of the pasture-land and so to manage it as to set from it the largest possible returns. Many partions of pastors-land pissessing a soil of undying fertility, are comparatively vnlueless from lack of drainage. We feel curious to get an approximate idea of the amwunt of land under pasturage in the [)(miniou that is thu in a. manner lying waste. At some seasons the draining of these lands would be attended with much diflizulty from their possessing a great excuse of moisture ; but not so during the months of Saptember an] Ostober, when there is less or water on or near the surface than during any other months of the year. Draining should tnerev fore, be pushed vigorously forward during these months. as n) investment can be maie thet will so wdl repay the outlay. It is all very well to spend a. few days at fairs, but it is usually a, serious matter to spend weeks away at a season when a greater variety of labor can be done, to better advantage, than at any other. Prizes may be piid for at too dear a rate. If you can do not-hing more, put in at leastone main drain. which cannot fail from the result to stimulite to higher efforts. Increasing the number of cmle does not necessarily imply decrease in the amount of grain grown, as very many suppose, but simply dr crease in the number or bushels of the coarser grains sold. It means )ncrease in the amount of grain grownl whenever common sense is exercised in the care of the cattle, but usually on a less acreage sowrl, which should be welcome tidings to the farm- er,‘awho very well knows that the main dif- ference betwren the (on; of labor expended upon a. good crop and a. poor one mainly con- sists in the handling. Here is a way to earth up celery to blanch : First, the earth is wo.ked up to it with the hands. the leaves being held close together with one hand ; this is wlnt is termed handling. Then it is allowed to grow for a week or ten days, when common brown wrapping paper is wrapped around the stalks and tied with twine, and the earth it worked up to within one inch of the top of the paper. In abmt a week or ten days it is wrapped and tied as before, and the earth is partially worked up to the top of the paper. In a. short time it will be blanch- ed sufï¬ciently for use. which may be known by the blanched stalks growing out at the top of the paper. For crispness, tenderness, and ï¬ne flavor, I think celery grown in this way cannot be excelled. Certainly, it takes work to tie and wrap it, but 1 think all lovers of this excellent vegetable will feel repsid for the extra work when they have eaten it treated in this fashion. The New York Tribune says that one capital er-orâ€"â€" because a waste of capital 01 the farmâ€"is to keep poor horses and mws. A $50 horse is not worth one-fourth as much as one that is worth $100 It will eat as much and cost as much for harncss, ani will neither do as much work nor live so long. A $20 cow, that makes three pmnds of butter in a week. mate as much tor every- thing, labor and utensils included, as one worth $100 that makes 10 pounds a week. Another error is to work po )r land. Many a man has broken his back and lost his heart on a poor farm which be has sufl'ered to run down by bad management. He has spent his labor and capital over 100 acres, when, by conï¬ning himself to 25 or 30. he might have become happy and rich. The way to repair such a capital error is to begin with one ï¬eld and get that into good condition, and let the rest lie, and so go on through the farm. One rich ï¬eld will then make'it easy to enrich another or two; and while the beginning is slow, it is downhill work, and as the end is nearly reached progress is fast and clay . . . . . . The worst of all capital errors is for the farmer to neglect his own improvement and education. A man who has $10 000 in a farm and stock, may easily have twice as much in himself and make his work pay 10 per cent. on his value. He is the greatest part of his capital and it is the greatest of all errors to misuse himielf. “'hen is the question of the value of en- i silage to be determined? The battle still rages in Britain, and America, as toits com- parative value, between the friends and op ‘ ponen“s of this system of curing fodder. Experiments have been conducted by lead- ing men on both sides of the Atlantic for years, and are we now, we ask, any nearer deï¬niteness than we were long ago? Nu- merous improvements have been carried on tending to show that ensilage fo ider is in- dispensable in dairying, while other experi- ments, made by parties equally able, go in quite the opposite direction. \Vhile we have every faith in the propriety of calling in the aid of science in farming and stock- raisiug, we at the same time should be very cautious in receiving the conclusions of science where these are contradictory or even not concurrent. The idea forces itself upon our minds that this question will be settled more by a certain class of farmers than by scientists and that it will resolve itself into a matter of dollars and cents, the degree of its value to be determined by those men who somehow have a wonderful tact in de- termining what pays and what does not. Men argued for years, some do yet, that fattening cattle does not pay. their ï¬gures regarding this matter seeming most conclu- sive, us they dwelt upon the comparative prices of grain and beef and the value of the labor involved. The answer that those en- gaged in the fattening business gave was, that they grew rich by the businessâ€"a very conclusive answer. If there is virtue in en- silage it will be discovered. and the value of it as a food adjunct may by and by be safely gauged by the number of silos erected and sustained throughout the land. If we may venture an opinion it is this, that its prin- cipal Value will be found as an adjunct to othe' cured foods used in this country in the winter seasOn, a less proportion being re- quired than in Britainhon the principle that a less iortion of turnips is beneï¬cial. It seems clear to us that in this cold climate the food ration for man and beast should materially differ in winter and summer. Salads are in a manner indispeneible in summer, in our climate, but who will say this of them in winter? HOW2ver, where Mr. Henry Wood and Sir J. B. Lewes are (AGRICULTURAL. Earthing up Celery. Keep the Best. Ensilage. not agreed, it is doubtl.ss the part of WiS‘ dom 10: us to stand uncovered at a respect- ful distance and maintain a prudent silence. We may add that the system aeema to be gaining ground in Britain. We notice that in the British papers machines designed for cutting enailage are being advertised, while ilns are becoming more and more numerous. â€"-[Canadia.n Stock Raisers‘ Journal. More than a “Spectre Bark†Roving the Sea. The lumber-Jaden schooner Maggie M. Rivars which was abandoned watulogged, naar Oape Hatteras, on January 7, still out- lives the raging Atlantic gales. A vessel arriving at Halifax last week reported pas- sing this derelict on the 11th inzt‘. in lati- tude 37 deg. 05 min. north, longtitude 64 deg. 16 min, west, dismnated and covered with barnacles. Aiter the crew left her she drifted 300 miles in an easterly direction rightacross the G Jlf S;ream current, then altered her course, travelling 120 miles due southeast: then for forty days moved 10 the northeast. In M AV she. was heading for the Fiorida coast; in June she turned towards Sevnnnah, and since then she has been two: reported drifting to the north- e'sstwar‘l in the Gal! Stream current. She is now prohably abort 250 miles She is now probably aho it 250 miles southeast from New York, an‘l having gotten by the aid of ocean currents fairly within the “ anti-trade“ wini bdr, she will be speeded by combined Wind 2113 current agency in'm the great ship routes be‘.ween America and Europe. She is not a " spectre bank," but an almost solid mass of lumber, and hence a. grave menace to navigation, which may for yrars survive the disintegrat- ing power of the wavcs unless someone blows her to pieces. The government would do a good servica to commerce by dispatch- ing a naval steamer to ï¬nd and sink. or else to brring intc p m: this seemingly inde struc- tible rover of the deep.â€"[New York Heral l. A Kansas woman and a. bulliog and a club drove four cowboys a distance of two miles and then she lat up b:cause she stuck a. sliver in her foot. It is estimated that $50,000,000 has been squandered in rrying to solve the problem of perpetual motion. It‘s a gmd thing to keep a man home nights. Tue h( we of a Russian psasmt is ï¬rst in his estimition; then come: his cow; then his dog,and if he has anything left it is bestowed upon his wife and chiliren. A Duluth mm who wasjealous of his wife hid her bustle so as to keep hera‘. home,a.nd the paper: speak of It as "an mtrage wor- thy of the dark ages." A case his been found in Chicago where a woman was paying a pa wnbroker $58 per year tor the use 01 $25 That's about he av- erage fema‘e idea. of ï¬nance. A druggistin a. new town in Wyoming aivertises a good opening for a. doctor who knows how to read, write and spell. Any other sort will be given the cola! shou‘der. A Phi‘a. lelphia burglar has his opinion ab mt b xrglar-alarms in houses. Ha says that nut more tmn one in twenty ï¬ve will ring ix} en . :u‘m a'ter \ha house ha}; been occupied three months. New York's death nte comes close to a. thousand a Wtek, and they are wondering how long they can continue to spare a. good- sizad city out of their populstion each week and keep smiling. The wcm 11 who wants to look utterly flat and silly in the eyes of common- sense pzoplc has only to pin a. sun- flower to her left shoulder. It answers just as well 8d if she turned her tongue hanging out. The doors in Japanese dwellings are made so small that a. person must turn sideways and squeeze in Tnis is the reason why a. Jap throws his wife out o! the wind ow when ah gets (:1 a rpree. "I m a. plumber!" answerei a, burglar who was discovered in a. chamber in a. house in Cincinnati at midnight, and the owner turned over in bed with the remark: “Oh,l was in hopes it; was a burg‘ar, and he m‘ght leave me somathmg.†After half a. dozen persons had died in a. ï¬ne-lucking dwelling house in V‘Vas‘nington,e an investigation was demanded. and in was found that the plumbing had been done with- out a. sing'e trap. The owner saved about $12 by leaving them out. Os board the Heola, one of the ships he- belongiug to Capt. Edward Parry’s expedi- tion in search of the northwest passage, a. paper was printed called the North Georgia Gazette and Winter Chronicie- The ï¬rst number was dated the lat of November, 1819, and its twenty-ï¬rst and last the 20th March, 1820. The Great Britain steamer, which started for Australia on the Blst of August, 1852, may claim 1:.) have inaugurat- ed the practice of publishing a newspaper on to 1rd ship, as a. paper, entitled the Great Bn'tain Times, was published every week during the voyage and distributed among the passengers. At the present time these seaborn broadsheets are a source of consid- erable amusement and go a long way to re- lieve the monotony of the paisenqers, At the present time these seahorn broadsheets are a source of considerable amusement and go a long way to relieve the monotony of the paeage, as the passengers not only read but supply the articles. Burlesque telegrams, jikes made by the passengers. and all the news, whether social nautical, or personal, oi the voyxge, are published in their col- umns. Er tired mind kain‘ hab er rested body. No matter how healthy 3. tree looks, ef de sap ain't right, de fruit ain't gwineter be sold: . ’Ligion sorter ’pens on sarcumstances. 1 dean b’lebe dat er hongry man ken sen’ up ez putty er prayer ez de man what hab had or good meal an' has er putty good idea whar he’s gwine ter git de naixt one. Do man whut spen's his time in groanin’ bout de wickedness 0’ dis hear worl' may out or bigger ï¬gger at er camp meeting den de hustlin’ sort 0‘ teller, but he ain’t gwineter raise nigh so much cotton. Er little sweat mixed with “ Oh, szd, gin us so and so,†heps do cause mightily.-[Arkansaw Tra- veller. Plantation Philosophy. Newspapers Afloat. CURRENCY. IMOWI What are the North American Indians! Dr. E. B. Taylor made some remarks before the American Association on North American races and civilization. In attempt inq to answer the question: “What are the North American Indians ‘l†he stated that whenever he had been among the In- dians the thmght had always struck him that. if these people were dressed up as Asiatics, there would be little observable diflarence. Admitting this supposition the next question that arose would be : " How came they here 7" To answu‘ this question, Dr. Taylor warned his hearers that they must beware of taking for granted that the physical geography of this continent has not changed. The next question would he: " How it is that among tribes, physica'ly 8) similar, there should be such a diversity in language as we ï¬nd among the North American Indians!’ For the unlution of Az'suralians is also prev'alaut amOng the I diaus; This system is not so uncommon may be suppmed, and lingers in many cu ous cusxoms. Thus among the Kaï¬im South Africa. there is a cussom by which man is suppoaed to cnnpletcly ignore t existence of his mother-in-law. If the 12‘ should meet in the street they tum am from each Other. This custom, tracm which, Dr. Tnylor thought. existed amm the Spumns in historic times, points to a matriarmal system or society in which mar page 11 surreptitioui and unrucogniz:d. Three speculation wu‘e strangely conï¬rmed by the report during the past. ye ii‘ of some Dipch residents in Sumatra. Tne inhabit- ants of that island still live in the matriar- chal system. When a. man and woman marry they do not set: up housekeeping for themselves, but both stay in their mochar‘s house. Tne failur has no control whatever over his chiliren, the maid of the family being the maternal uncle. It would be con‘ siderel agrave offense against his wife's family were a min to undertake to reprove or chest-so his children. The curious state of affairs which exists in Sumatra is the key to customs, common to me Kaflirs 0t So 1th Africa, to the hill-tribes 0t India, and the Indians of North Americ i. One of the crimes of the ageâ€"and it is . really a crimeâ€"is the hurry and bustle with which nearly everything is done. The busi- ness and profesiional man, the farmer and mechanic. hurry themselves in their clothes in the morning, hurry their breakfasts into their stomachs, and rush OH to their work as though it was their last day on earth. A certain amornt of energy is always to be commended, and the sin of overwork 13 better than the sin of laziness. Bat amo Jg those who earn their bread by the sweat of their brows there is entirely too much worry, for they are the men and women whoselives should be prolonged as being beneï¬cial to the community. The lazy, trifling person is of no consequence, and it really matters little whether his good-for-nothmg form re- poses on a dry goois box or in the grave, but no mm or woman can be in a continual state of worry and excitement and do a full day’s work without soon breaking down. In very many instances the useless worry and excitement in regard to tasks to be per- formed is mich harder on the vital forces than the work itselfâ€"and the premature gray hairs which adorn the heads of most middle aged men crn be attributed to need- less concern and mental strain in regard to their daily tasks. While attending as strictly as possible 10 work, let all worry as little as they can in regard to their various occupations and matter concerning them.â€" [Datroit Caafl‘. Nothing so cements and holds together in union all the part: of a society as faith or credit ; which can never be kept up, unles: men are‘ under some f0'ca or naceasity of honestly paying what they owe to one another. What'a. vast deal of time and 81.86 that man gains who is not troubled with the spirit of impertiaent curiosity abiut other; ; who let his nei hb )r’s thoughts and behavior alone, who couï¬nesihis inspections to himself, and cares chiefly [or his own duty and con- sciencegt The only way for a rich man to he hea‘thy is by» exercise and abstinence. to hth as if he was {nor ; which are esteemed the worst pints of poverty. W6 can be thankful to a friend for a few acres, or a little money, an! yet for the freedom and commmd of the whole earth, and for the great baneï¬bs of our being, our life, health and reason, we look upon our- selves asunder no obligation‘s. ~ Nothing hinders the canstant agreement of people who live together but vanity and selï¬shness. Let the spirit of humility and benevolence prevail. and discord and die- agreement would be banished from the household. Detect in manners is usually the defect of ï¬ne perceptions. Elegance cones of no breeding, but of birth. ‘ There should be, methinks, as little merit in loving a. woman for her beauty as in loving a man for his prosperity ; both being equally subjected to change. Men of quality never appear more amiable than when their dress is plain ; their birth, rank, title. and its appendages are at best invidious : and as they do not need the assistance of dress. so, by their disclaiming the advantages of it, they make their superi- ority set more easy. Keenneas in a. man isnot niways tobe taken as a. sign of capacity, fon it is generally ob- served the most in those who are selï¬sh ,and over-reaching ; and his keeness generally ends in that kind of penetration inbo other people's interest: which will tend to beneï¬t his own. Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a. government without new}: apera,or newspapers without a government, gehould not besitste to prefer the latter. GEMS 0F THOUGHT. Don’t Worry. sa cuasom by which a mmpletcly ignore the ,er-in-law. If the two street they tum away “W311, yes.†the young man blushineg acknowledged. “H'm, I thought_ac_>. Jug}, put that “No, sir, but I am frequently taken for him. We resemble each other closely. I am a. lawyer, and make a specimlty of divorce cases. Has your object in ï¬nding the Rev. Dr. B. any connection with mat- rlmony '1" Catarrhâ€"A New Treatment. Perhaps the most extraordinay suoces that has been achieved in modern science has been attained by the Dixon Treatment 0! cutarrh Out. of 2.000 patients treated durinu the past six months. fully ninety per cent. have been cured of this stubborn malady. This is none the 1054 startlinq when it is remembered that not ï¬ve per cent. of the patients presenting themaelvas to the regular pracgipigner nrg “Are you the Rev. Dr. B.?†a. young manijnquriregl of _a. citigan on tile ptreet. card where you aon’t lose it.†the 1651 startlinw when it is remembered that not llve per cent. at the natlente presenting themselves to the regular practitioner are benefltted. while the patent medicines and other advertised cures never record a. cure at all. Starting with the claim now enerally believed by the most sclentl 0 men that the disease ls due to the magma of living parasites in the tissuea, r. Dix- on at once adapted hi:i cure to their extermination : this accompllshed the catarrh on at once adapted his cure to their extermination : this accomplished the caterrh inprectically cured. end the permanency is un- questioned, as cures eil’ected by him four years ago are cures etill. No one else has ever at- tempwd to cure eaten): in this manner. and no other treetment has ever cured cetarrh. The application of the remedy is simple and can be done at home, and the greeent season of the year is the moat tavora 19 for a. speedy and permanent cure the majority of cases being cured at one treatment Sufferers should cor- respond with Meaei‘s. A. H. UIXUN 8c SON. 305 Kingâ€"street West, Toronto. Canada. and enclose esttamp for their treatise on catarrh.â€"â€"Montreal ar. berth, the great. overlaker, prepares the way for the undertaker. Those who have Tried it Say The best proof of the great power of Pol- sou’s Nerviline over every kind of pain is obtained by the use of a ten cents bottle. Nerviline requires no pufï¬ng; every bottle tells its own story. It cannot fail, for 1b is a. comtination of the most powerful painâ€"subduing remedies know to medical science. Nerviline is equally useful in external or internal pains. Try the great remedy. Ten cent bottle at any drug store. Large bottles only twenty-ï¬ve car bl. 7 iTinose three King; c ml] raise the deuce in Enope if they Xe“: so disposed. Young Men lâ€"Read This. Tm: VOLTAIO BELT 00.. of Marsha“, Mich.. offer to send their celebrated ELEC- TBO-VOLTAIO BELT and other ELECTRIC Ar- PLIANCES on trust for thirty days, to men )young or old) aflLcted with nervous debili- ty, loss of vitality, and all kindred troubles. Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and many other diseases. Complete restor- ation to health, vrgor and manhood guaram teed. N0 rial; is incurred as thirty days’ trial is allowad, \Vrlte them as once for illustrated pamphlet tree. Is it any wonrler tiat “bonds of alder- man should stmetimex be wooden-headed .7" Have You Thought of It. For four thousand years or more the world groaned, sufl‘ered,and fumed about its come, for there was no positive relief â€"no certain and painless cure until Dr. Scott Putnam gave to the world his great Corn Extractor. if there is suffering now it is a result of carelessness, for the rem- edy is at hand. Try Putnam’s Corn Ex- tractor. It ls sure, painless, and prompt. Beware of substitutes. N. C. Polson 6:: 00., proprietnrs, Kingston. 23mg“; “"1235"fo The Widow of o. Hmdon is about the only individual whom career really “ends in smoke.†Imuortant. When yOu visit or leave New York Olly. save Baggage Express 9.9 and Currlage Hire. and slop at the GRAND Umox OTEL. opposite Grand Central Depoz. 600 elegant rooms ï¬tted up at a cost ofï¬oue million dollars. gland upwards per day: European plan. Elevator. taurant supplied vvlth the best. Horse cars. Itages and elevated rallroads to all depots. Fam- illea can live betterylor less money or the Grand Union Hotel than as any other ï¬rst-class hotel in the City. “Ave shrouds classed 3.5 km; suits 2†asks the Plttsburg Telegraph \Va have heard them called “ep'rit wrappers." Although they an intended far the close of life they they air: not designed for the clothes of life. A.P. 198 HRENOLOGY. EXAMINATIONS GIVEN BY WALLACE MASON, at. 362 Yonge St. Toronto. RXNBTWPOMUNU‘Y mm A FARMER 1w tiring and able to command from 812.000 to $20.0â€. large city estate, embracing about 30 houses. will bring such rental as will giveguud interest. on investment and handsome return for necessary attention ; property 03mm“. W. HAM! 231 Palhot atroet. Lonrlnnl {LE}! 1'10 King ï¬ll-act. Etna, Toronto. at a double Driving Belts 3 speolalty. Sen or Pt 06 Lists and Discounts .The most convenient mam. for [nu-marl In their bad“ season. These manta are cooked and randy for use Sold by grwqan thru 1: Mn: Dominion Sand for price to W. CLARK I" 0. ox 342 Montreal- SMSKED SAUSAGES. DIXON 851300. He'ather Bglting ! “I BUSINESS COLLEGEJIAIOADE. YONG! ST.. TORONTO. Finest worm in America. Practi- cal in every deplrtment. Teachers pushing and one:- getfc. and know whnt they teach. Endoned by the leading buIinesl men of Ontario, its Grnduates Ire ï¬h~ in: positions of truot in ever, city. town Ind village 0! Can-as. Bend (or new circular. O. 'ODEA. Secretary. THE NEW WILLIAMS BRITISH ‘AMERIGAH fl BUBINESI CULLEGEHAIOADE. YONGI Next to the Clel'gvman. inannlnolurari qumr yup: com msud from 312.000 to 820M mains about 30 houses. will bri cgoud intereat. on investment 3: r necessary attention ; propex from 231 I‘albot act-eh. Lonrlnn. 320.030. 111 bring ant and )rqnerty H. “’ILL l [M 5. gSLATE AND FELT ROOFER. Manufacturer and Dealer 111 I'm-ted Fell. Roofing Pitch. Building Paper. Carpet Felt, £c..at lowest Prices. 4 ADELAIDE ST. EAST, - - TORONTO, 100 Grey Nun St" Montreal. Importers of Drum Pipes, Portland Cement. Chimney Tops. Canada Cement, Vent Lintngl. Water Lime, Flue Covers. Whiting. Fire Bricks, Plaster 0! Paris. Fire Clay. Borax, Romnn Cement. Chin- Oh] Mnuulacturera of Bessemer Steel Sofa. Guan- Bed‘a Spring- The Ready Mixed Paints MANUFACTURED BY A. RAMSAY 86 SUNS. MONTREAL. W. & F. P. Currie & Co are groundln Pure Linseed Oil and Turpentine. The American Mixed Paints are to a. large extent ground with Silicate of Soda. and an dear at. any priue. (or Ramsay's, and and mat you get; them. Applym your local dealers. h1 will supply two yearrdlid vines of t o without any conditions whatever at WHTTï¬i‘EPE Sailing during winter from Portland every Thursday, sud Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool. and in summel from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool. calling at. Ion- douderry to land mails and passengers for Scotland Ind Ireland. Also from Baltimore vis. Halitsx sud 8t. Johp'l N. F,. to Liverpool fortulghtly during summer monthl. The steamers of the Glasgow lines nil during winter be tween Portland and Glaauow. and Boston and Glasgow alternately; and during summer between uebeo Ind Glggow_nnd Boston tud Glasgow ev‘ary veg . wan Line Royal Mail Steaméï¬iï¬ Agents Wanted, apply to For freight, assago. or other information :1 ply to A. Sc umacher $6 00.. Baltimore: 8. unard 8; Co. Halifax: 81153.8: 00., St. John’s N. F. : Wm. Thomson a 00., St. John, N. 8.; Allan 8c 00.. Chicago; Leve & Alden. New York ;H. Bourller, Toronto ;AJJans, Rae 3: 00.. Quepeo ; H. A. Allan, Portland. Boston. Mon- Running in connection with the Gnnd Trunk Bell- way of Canedn. Hailing from Quebec every Saturdny. during the summer monthemnd from Portland every Thursday during the winter months. Bailing dates from QUEBEC T0 LIVERPOOL Brooklyn, Aug. 23 I Montreal. Sept. 13 Toronto. Aug. 30 | ‘Vancouver Sept. 20 ‘Oregon. Sept. 6‘ Rates of passage: Cabin (iueheo to Liverpool $60. $60. $65, 880. Return. 890. £10 , 8117, 8144. according to steamer and berth. Intermediate 835. Steer-age, It lowest rates. The saloon and etateroomain steamer- mnrked thus: “ ore amidships. where but little motion [5 felt, and no cattle or sheep are carried on them. For further particulars apply to any Grand Trunk Bail": Agen: or local agents of the Company. or to n . m... .n... . nVn-4 -. ‘1‘ Rates of p 330. 865. 880‘ steamer and lowest ram. marked thus Dominion Line of Steamships." Imgmved. works without whiflietrees. 0001, light And dun la. and mier on man and teams. This hung-l is a specialty in orchards. as no ï¬res“ on ba injured a working qualities guaranteed. Price 810. Territory (or sale in United States and 03!:de MEWS & WARE, ï¬ï¬aï¬ï¬m. THE BEST. THE STRONGEST THE MOST REiIABLg. Unrlvnlled in material construction and Ankha per- fect in accumcy and unéqualled in dunbillt . un- anheed to give entire satisfaction. BAILROAD. WAREHOUSE AND “I; TRUCKS- gammnmvsmmmm GUBNEYS 8c WARE. Coleman Patent Harness. Sawing Machine of tha Period. Addressâ€" It In “(In and Easy to run. Ellen: and Rapid In movement] Plain and Simple to learn! High Arm Machine is now recognized u the It is strong, durable, and we“ built, the very best material that money on buy or skill produce. It was awarded ï¬ve medals and three ï¬rt prizes at the Dominion Exhibition last October. It is rapidly superaeding all the old fashioned makes everywhere. See it try it, buy it, and make sure that you getjt. THE WILLIAMS’ MFG 00. 1783 Notre Dame St" Montreal, md .King Sh. West. L‘oronm. THEY EXCEL ALL OTHERS. Two Dollars Bach. J B Dewey & Cg. Mills’ Alarm Money Drawers; D. W.1Beadle, H. WILL! IMS. iiAvm TOBkIN'CE a £0 ST. CATHARINES. General Agents. Monires UOLBOBNE.