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The Wingham Times, 1885-10-30, Page 3A. TALE 'DI' TEXAS, elagot4htehriliwiatleariorrizt juaevIciiciouhiclangiectoioleuil --- ustett je3 the noose. As be did eo, he reinehle hero The laws of our religion tend to the mi. -, sibruptlytd one eide, rio as to turn on a 'Mort, verse' happiness of mankind, Between the raouth of the Rio recoil and parte °more, en time to bring him fem. to The mind le Ito own place, and in iteelf the headwaters of the Brame, in the great lam with his entegoniet, by the time the can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven. State of Texae, lies a broad Pelt of country latter owe up. Re had predicted this sod - upon which, during the last Af V yea, den manoeuvre many times before, and, Men *aped the religion of those who are there have 000ured adventures ae daring and d sharp tura, he eucceeded in it, in time to get tr" le' novelist has been able to depict. A inem hes no more right to say an tin, Settlere, ranolithen and scouts have here a good thow at the Indien• The Comanche, on hie part, understood . civil thing than to sot one ; no more right to battled with Apaches and Comencinne. en the trick well; but instead of delving straight say a rude thing to another than to knock couutoring almost every possible phase of at hine, ail Parsons had feared, the confident him down. peril, but wtth thie difference frem the redskin straightened up in his saddle, threw If we couldread the eeoret history of our novelists veraion, that he thee aetual con - forward his lance to ward off the nooae, and enemies we should find in each mane life Riot a the redskin hits boa only to0' often the rode past, with a whoop of derision an de-' sorrow and suffering enough to disarm all But he had. reckoned without an aoourate 31°Liteiullgth'ing, if loud, ends in a deep sigh. flange, knowledge of the Yankeehr proficiency. ! wrote Jeremy Taylor, and all pleasures The long, wide noose was thrown, swift ! have a ding in the tail, and hard, directly againstthei though they carry dinoo.Pdo : beauty on the face, above the Corneae:he's head, and as the now double loops flew apart, one of them drop- It is much eazier to find a score of men wise enough to discover the truth than to ped neatly over the Indian's tasselled head . e and shoulders. - I find one intrepid enough, in the face of op - Parsons instantly jerked ' 'sharply at the poaition, to etand up for it. line and spurred: his horse. The Comanche - Every man has his Main and hie clog, was twitched from his midi°, as though only It is *reser and lighter to one man than knocked off by a oannon-bell. In another ' another; and he is more at ease who takes at the end of the raw -hide, prairie : it up thanhe who drags it. - Character is made up of little thing& and moment he was briindlibg over the. But the eavage„ was neither killed nor 1 it is only through watchfulness over the senseless • and luckily for him, the prairie ' details of right and wrong that we can hope wile smoothly carpeted with soft mesquit ' to build it into fair or enduring proportion& grass, The noose had oaught partially about his body, leaving one arm free from the el- Hard wok hurts no one; it would u at, perhaps be keying too much to assert that bow down. With this free hand, he con- 1 those who have lived what are called "busy" liveehave kept the vitaispark longest aglow. ewaying his body in, to keep the horse at a reti ? tolenda helping hand in times of desperate ao any the most *skim dime, assailant and the victor. Ecestus'Pareens, a youth from the good State of Cenneotiout, stetted a '4 cattle run," some fifteen year ago, on theupper creeks of the Big Wichita. Young Parsons had come down here from Toaeka, Kansa") having already spent a year there endeavoring to establish himself as a gunsmith,, without success. But if tituniceesafaas a gunsmith, he had yet naught the true spirit of suboess in the t',41k4 :0140YeEliu4 nese one attempts to Weati—whioh is to be frank, open and 'ex- Pertin do. ',Hen* ing a ranohmen, , his first efforts were directed to beaorite a good shot and an adept at casting the lariat or lasso. It was only after two months of assiduous practice at this latter aecompliehment that he mastered it at laet, so efficiently that not a herder on the Wichita could approach or excel hint *akin as aa" Topa elinger,"—and vhe e bewled along—to draw . thio ainoog ofty cow,boyeandranchmen from tried—as we eight or ten range& knife from his belt, and after several' des - It was in June that the adventure whioh ,"p_e_riciatts effort& succeeded in cutting the .` we are about to relate happened. All hands Glanelng haok, Parson saw the Comanche on the ranges had, been out for two days, stagger to his feet and reel heavily about, coursing the extreme limits of their grazing as if stunned, then stave on' after his pony, territory neer the sources of Pease River. Quite early the second morning, Parsons bad which had galloped away to a considerable distance. „ Hie first impulse wars to ride become separated from 'the other ' riders, d and finding the fresh trail of a number ofown the Indian, or try another oast of the lariat upon him. But he saw that the other cattle that had been moving westward, he redskins were still coming on in pureuit, • followed it, overtaking the scattering , i " ' though nearly half 4 milif distant ; and as male, until, by the middle of he ,afternoon, , he knew that the country grew reugher and he hoot gothered.lip quite a " busioh." r• he broken in front, -he now had strong hopes of getting away'frem them altiagether. This he finally did, escaping, as night fell, among the bushy hills whioh skirt the north branch "of Pease River, and reaching the cattle -camp next morning, in time to relate the adventure to his fellow -herdsmen before breakfast—Youth'e Companion. . ti _ , _ _ • vrardsunset he Started these cattle in a di- rect line for camp, where the main herd, whioh had already been gatheeedt was held by a number of riders, waiting to receive others. Considering the lateness of the hour, he bad a long • drive before him, and he was hurrying the bunbli of cattle across a level strip of nieseuit p airie, when seddenly the head ethers took friglethet *me object among the brush in front of them, and throwing'up their tails, went scampering back, bringing the whole drove flying along with them. In vain Paneled shouted and tried to head them off ; they went pest him like a whirlwind, and looking beak to see what might be the cause of this eudden stampede, he discovered seven ComanchieInclians riding out of the mesquit bushes at %racing gallop, and coming directly lowed& ,hiirol They were not more than two hundred yards dis- tant Young Parsons did not hesitate for an in- stant as ,to hi ow -course.Be turned hie horee's head, and dug hisignirs into its finks.: Seeing himithen, thelndiens,reised and followed him at the top of their ponies' speed. „ He gave one glance over his shoulder, then felt for his revolver; biresudderilyremember- ed that he had fired away his laet cartxidge during the foeenoon. Anotherglandal baCketitAid showed him that thaeiontea or the3redekine were fresh, and wee keeping: all the psee ; that they had gained. He was no cowerd, bit he admitted to himself that he had "got himself in the' Boma gentimehts of UM ":BUT." Do you notice that when we talk about people we never use the copulative conjunc- tion ? We use the disjunctive "but." You ask about Brother a, and the answer is. "Well, he's good, but he don't pray in his family." " How about Brot her B ? " Well, he's a good men, a very good man, but nem ta like his dram," Yoli can take this di. junotive conjunction" but" and chip oharao- ter all to pieces with it in a minute. You can 'just take any man* this town! nearly and say all abut him. "He's god and kind, Then commence to " but" hini; and the first thing you kno they butt him, off the bridge„And that's the last of him GLAD THAT CRUD DIED, If I have anything special, in reference to my wife and children, to be grateful for, it is this : I have no child that ever looked in- to my face whin I was not a consecrated Chadian. man,' god !gave ire one when I was wrecked and wayward and, Wiese. Thee little child lived and looked.* mkt face when I was goilessa iinct'Prethie dud Wretch- ed, and God took her to heaven. I shall live a. Christian as long as God gives me a worst fix." he was ever in. For as the red- child to look iu my face, and when I get to skins were between himaelf and his camp, in' heaven I will fall down and beg pardon of foot, 'between himself and all' hope of help that twee& little angel that she ever sew me from the other •heedemera, he knew the race when I wainit Christitn.1 [Team] must be a. long one, and felt pretty Well eat- MONET' A;,,ip CoMMUNIsaf. lefied, too, that it Would helical:et run. ' " Yee!" you say," " Jones , is preaching There was only one hope his horde was ‘: an exceedingly totiglesnd long-winded ani - communism." lam not. I tell you this to. mal, half mustang,. half Morgan, and a gen- .day, thereisn't a man in this country that 'fights ehremuniem stronger, than 1 do. I uine racer. Ifebahliniacould only hold out, and keep out of reelaof the bullets and are havano sympathy with this low-down rack orGocrs • creation ;going mind. here doing rows of hie piirsueri until dark; there would be a fair chance of dodgmg them among the nothing and wanting es erything that eyery- b xly else has, and I haVe got no ay minithy mesquil hushee,,,whicia grew thick And tall in vtanyltutorect (4 I: :•tH t With the fellow that has got a big pile of it, He glaneect t tho Bun. It WOS an geneand Won'Cgive any away. Thates the way I high yet, Then he looked back at the Com- anches,:comingeseerkeil,e.one an4,•0911lo not but feel that even this one chance of eecape was small. n He soon rioted that cite ofll% Comanches had begun to'draiit.away frOm the'reet,1 and was rapidltigainnignmanmel Be -Urged his pony along faster, but though for a few moments, owing to the unusual speed of his home, he gained ground fiat over the main body of his pursuers, this ono redskin more than kept pace with him Brutus at first could leerilycredit the fact; he had great confidence in the running powers of hits owifhonse, which was clatter, ing over the hard -baked soil at the highest speed. It' was a long run' for his much - ridden pony that he had moat feared ; but feel about it. I have foucd out that money is like a walking•stiek. One will help you 6,10411w° are larne; t -but fifty loaded on your haok will break you down. That's so, 'tnd the matter with some of yoa people is that you are loaded down with money. Money is like guano: if you will put it on tco thick it will burn up everything. And so tummy, if you load it on too heavily, will spoil a men. The richest man the world ever EOM was also one of the beet, Abraham could have hotight out Vanderbilt, and scarcely have missed out of the bank the mbney of the cheek he drew to pay for Ven- t erbilt's estate, and yet he was one of the beat men on earth. It is roit so much the . money as the sort of fellow that has it. VARIOLOID PIETY, here Was the Comanbhe, Ma a slnall, cream-, There'a a, varioloid type of piety. They colored pony, rating down On him, and gam- just put you it bed a day or two end you "*1 ing a length -in every fifty yard& were cut before anybody found out you Nearer and nearer the Indian Came, though ' were el*. The varioloid tyre of piety has both pursuer and, pursued were fast distane- taken possession of this. country ; but it ing the rest and ere many minutes the In- ain't catching. But you get one of the old - dime got eo oioae that Persons began to won- fatitioned, confluent comes of small -pox, and der why he did not hoot;'Sfor he had no- . everybody will. catch it that goes in the Coed a bow dung at hie back, and also that rootn, This varioloid type of religion that he carried a long lanoe in one hand, while you eee nowadays aiet catching, but you he 'plied the quill with the other. take au old-fashimed confine:at rash, and Parsons „could hear Mn urging on his . when a, m in has got it, the first thin you horse, in hare), gutteral mum* : "Huh I know. his eel* wilL get and, it will break huh! huh 1" keeping time with the shott, cut over the family, and the whole family quick springs ?I his piny, which ran with will ba comectetted to God, . nose down, and seemed literally to be flying over the surface of the sntooth prairie. Men and women, to lead worthy lives, must have a just respect for themselves and a just respect for ()timers Whatever tends to realize and to strengthen these promotes *Man welfare. Noway has been found for making hero- ism easy, even for the icholex, Leber, iron labor, is for him. The world was created as an audience for him ; the atoms of whicie it is made are opportunities. Our homes are like instruments of make The strings that give melody or discord, are the members. If each is rightly attuned, they will all vibrate in harmony ; but a single discordant string destroye the sweet- neee, Who can tell the value of a mile ? It costs the giver nothing, but is berated prioe to the erring and relenting, the arid and cheerless the lost and forsaken. It disarms malice, whines temper, turns hatred to love, revenge to kindness, and paves the darkest pathawith gems hf sunlight. ! It is the triumph of civilization that at. lett communities have obtained such a mas- tery over natural laws that they drive them and control them. The winds, the water, electricity, all agents that in theix wild form were darageroue, are controlled by human will, and are made hseful servoaats. - - Ruined. by Watermelons. " This yen. has taught me a sad. exp, H- ence in the• watermelon burdneae,1;ehe re- marked, aa the boat left Memphis. "Rave you been shipping ?1' asked the tourist from Ohio, Not a ship. I live over thar on the Ark- ansaw bottoms. I heard so mach about the watermelon bizness—the profit which could be made—that I planted a' hull side hill last spring. It was a bad move." . "Didn't the seed come 'p?" "Come right up as if somebody had a rope and tackle on 'em." "-And the melons grew?" Growed up like a mnd•hblo in w" et evea- ther. That was the trouble —they growed too large," "Couldn't be handled 1" " Not without the help of two niggers and a yoke o' steers, and that was too expensive. Whenyougetan eight -hundred pound water- melon on a side -hill you've got to leave it thar. The steamboats won't handle 'ern if you git 'em down to the landmg." " Yon don't tell me that you had melons weighing eight hundred pounds 1" ' " Oh 1 those were only the little ones. The big ones cum nigh9r a ton. I hadn't no scales, but all my leighhoee aremighty peart on guesag." " And what became of them?" "That's what occasions my grief, strang- er. Them melenothreetened to roll down and do nee damage; I dna?, logs to prop 'em up, and I started for town to get some dyn- amite to blow some of the bigge•t to pieces. , 'While I was gone the calamity took place. You see before you a ruined man," "Y—hat calamity ?" gasped the tour • "Why,; them 'ere in, lone broke loose mad rushed down hill in a body. House, barn, corn -cribs, and orchard were clean swept away." "You don't say 1" " I'm serious, etranger—very serious. I might have recovered from that, perhaps; but one 'o them melons rolled into the creek, dammed up the water, and the inundashttn oarried the silo off my farm clean down to the rocks. There waun't nuff dirt left on 120 acres to put in your eye." "Well, that is tough, and I pity yon." "Don't stranger—don't talk to me that way I kin face hurricanes, cyclones, airth- quakes, and sioh as brave as a lion; but when anybody pities me—when soft words of sympathy aro shot into my teal by a total stranger— it breaks me down, and I have to shed the childiuh tear. Stranger, cxente me while I cry teal hard." Thb Ohio mall oortsiderately withdrew from that sacred spot, end the watermelon man wrestled with a broken heart, It has been shown that the odoriferous molecule of murk s hafiniteemally lsto ower has yet bean conceived tia enable the ,,, Our true knee:dodge. is ,to Iffi' pyr our own .human eyo to tac t one of the atoms of musk, / :' Twice l'artions' tutted in his saddle and ignorance: Our Utile strength is to know yet the organs of sme/lhavo the sensitiv eness threatened Itie pursuer With the 'revolver, at our own weakness, Our true dignity is to to detest them. Their smallness eaunot even which the Wien threw himself flat down Oonfees that We have no dignity, and ate no- be imag'ned, mid the mine grain of musk upon his pony's' neck and lowered, the point body and nothing in outeelvere iind to tad undergoes absolutely no dimmution in of his lame ; but the ?atter came straight oursciveli down before the dignity of God, weight. eteeingle drop of the n.1 of thyme, On With speed undlininished, seerning,iiideed) uhdee 'the shedove of Whose wings and in ground clown with apiece of sugar and a lit - to have a strong suspicion of Ole datadvant- the anti% of whose teuntenance alone is any tle alcohol, will communicate its odor to 25 age of his enemy in the matter of oertridgerr. gallons of writer. Haller kept for 40 years Every mordent he gelded truntstehat, his little created, being tate. Mori perinatal. with one grain of ambergaie. pony running coldly along, while grastile'a The wear and tear of life comes Welly After this time the odor was as Strong as borers was already panting hard. from straining after the impoesible. New- ever, Berdenave has evaluated a moleoule Seeing that the Comanche could not be vouri excitement, alternate hope and clienp, of camphor tellsib!o to thosmellto 2,20,634. retitled by aft Unloaded piaci', and that Borne- Pointinehts, Unveiling istrugglet, *Vomit 000th of a grain. Boyle has observed that thing Must be done quickly, if he would es- an:dither; bitter failures—thee° are the due drachm of assithebida exposed te the cape the lance -thrust so nearly ready to he Worst enemies of health and hall:hike& Open air had bat in six. days the eighth part delivered, Parsons determined upon a dos- the Most fatal destroyers of peace and of a grain, from which Keill concludes that prosperity. They:30mo for the Mot part in one Mimi* it had lost 1 09, 120th of a potato moVe. HO thrust the revolver in his belt, caught from taking up needless burdens. grain. A. Druggiotto Revelation. rrevention Better Than Cm. Many of the diseases se prove:Lett *these He waa handling some mysterime little paroels et the toilet counter of a fashionable dile are caused by plug soap containing drug etore. "I'll tremble you to send it to impure and infectious matter. Avoid all my parterre If you don't mind, You'll send risk by using f 'EMOTION latundt7 Sop, It early? Ah, treelike awfully 1" Then whioh li ebsolutely pure. Ask your grmer with a few languid strides he oarried him. for PIIRFROtION. Nianufaottwed only by the Toronto Soap Co, self to the door and strolled down the street thrswing his heavy horn handled came right Some people are always finding fault with across his path at ()my etep, then dexter- Nature for putting thorns onrosee ; I always ously j srking it away pet in time to let thank her for having put roses on thorns. himself by. Z100,000,000 rri. ma BRITISH COURT OP " Vanilla cream," fold a newspaper mut ONANOARY 1—A, large part of title vast man teasing a niokel on the marble in frongolithe belongs to the people of America. Cox & soda fountain. The druggist looked amused Co., 41, Southampton Buileriege, Holborn, as he drew the water, and stood smiling at London, Eng., have just publithed a Len of the scribe as he disposed of it. "What is the heire to this enormous wealth Reader, it ?" asked the scribe. "A dude,' was the reply. send a dollar end they will forward you this " Oh I thought it was something the mat- valuable LIST ; and if you find by It that you ter with the water," and the reporter finish- are entitled to any money or property, claim ed his glees freed of awful auspicion. yeur own, Cox & Co, will show ru the way. Ont. A.P, 250, " tie'e ene of 'em," continued the drug- " Ah 1" anna 1. ratimv, Quota). ira YirlihtnIii 'ma.. A for 1.61. " What do you think he buys? You could - alifflOVR dRocalat nat , not guess." Then he bent over and wbiii., IMP,IALFRENCHilIGE BLACKING pared in the eoribe's ear, "What ?" 1EXTILL SOME RESPONSIBLE SALESt4AN - V V (ar lady) whn considers h'naself worth 1100 "Rouge, Yee, rouge, for the cheeks and . a month write to W.j{, Bownauxu, Brantford. lips, and face powder, too, and he wears vieneE RiTED altitAHIRILS for sale, two owe, two whisper. Teen he prooeeded to let out ' ' Pon PleVtgepterZ•n°141'.3r111,ir TfilltuaiZtierir corsets," repliel the druggists in a hoarse . AL some astonishing same& " There are lots vALUAIU:e r ASS1 Fon SAL4E—WO sone di miles .east of the city of St Thomas. For of them in the city, more than anywhere I particulate address J. J, Lewis, New Sarum, one. have been, and I have stood in a drug stere %soi, it is mottled by all that the Delnizmira,a0 paint and most of them have good ocimplex- Comparativelyfew women in WoohiaStlme .cman4aaachrftat in most of the large (Aim We sell more leNts 13 a iit'i ass doirma, Kingston, is degerred..0"14 cosmetics, to men here than to . women. la the roost ,popatAr busiosss tralaing seta ool in , at' on. saLE—ENGINES AND ions. Its the men. They - buy all the tory oVtar'St=.aann4c1 lilleft171:111tiell:intg ?.ag; fancy French powders and paints, oder wheels, Chopping mills, e0. Send for desorrptire their cheeks and 13,aucl pencil their'brows. - catalogue and mention what yon want, (Mmtion this I could stand. at the dome; few minutes with! - paper). if W. PErillE, Srautford. ont. you and point out any number who do all FOB FililLilallAti; O./AWL-Mt* this, and you can see- or yourself, if yon --USE ONLiir.... t the tha trouble to notiee,, that they all wear ci i the label. &Triter We be all 11.... (Lode Dealers. ` "But what kind of fellows are they ?" ' ' STAR AUGTIR Rskosi the scribe, hemming interested in,the . new dscovery. .. $20 Per Day TheY are mostly young men whose fathers ' • ' , WELL BORING have had some money and then died and hu no superior; 20 feet per hour; hand or horse. cire:ttpheo—yo"uHmeerane hti: y80.tyit,s,ank,to awhisper, cou ' Fehtgot114111. fralarigge rt Idt erililieatugsgnrdalltat;. "as Mary Street. Ibanallton. Comae& left them to spend it. Then there are the "No, no ; I wouldn't tell anybody for . TAmiss -ni. A. 1.. K 86 SON the world,"- broke in the druggist. "1 ' t+ ..e- =Alfa only imply it—that's •the word„ Of course its only the young ones None of the men -Pork Packers, Toronto. who ha. e se ea iervzo would:do such a thing. L. 0. Sawn, Rolled Spice Moon, 0. 0. BUM But you know eome ot these young fLanclwa 1 iiiiener,737= Btaoptal,"s mu CZ T°:41.„n CI. roirekl who are on duty here and spend their time : Plated eT,nguee, Cheese, Family' or Navy Park, in ladies' society get 'very effeminate. ' 1 ' Lard in Tuba and Palls The Bat Braude of Eng. suppose if we should have war :they would - sh Fine Dlire Salt in Stook. get over it or resign. Don't mention it, please—' Then the druggist became more confidential. " But they, use lots; of pow- der," and then he laughed at his own )oke. " Yerawhe continued, "it is sad to me how men use cosmetic& They seem to care more about looking pretty theml girls do. Why, the girls themselves got ashamed of it, and declare they are disgusted and: will depend upon long walks, cold water and flannel for their complexions,_and will stop using powder of any kind. There in lots of them who never me a bit, and .there' where they are sensible. The best thing for the complexion is exercise and flannel un- derwear. Flennel stimulates the skin brings about a healthy action of the blood, whioh ie essential for delicacy and clearness of tint. Frequently those who have the best coil- plexions bother aboutit Most." ' - corsets. Y: u didn't know that? Pshiewe apperton Spool Cotton a common thind among these fellows, wounted Furz Lanieth, and 80 run month mums, who don't have anything teed° blit fix theme sewIng—maohbse. See first Maps. =meta rums 11 on selves up to please silly girls." "The Proper Study of Mankind is Mau," , says the illustrious Pope: If he had includ- ed woman in the llst, het ivould harie been nearer the truth, if not so poetical. Dr, R. V. P:coce has merle them both a life study, etpecially woman, and the peculiar derange- ments,to which her delicate system is liable: Manic women in the land whore acquaint- ed with Dr. Pierce only through his !" Fa- vorite Prescription," bless him with all their hearts, for he has brought thein the panaceaf or all thooe chronic ailments peculiar to their sex ; such as lemorrhme, prolapsus. and other displacement& ulceration, "in- ternal -fever,' bloating, tendency to internal cancer, and other ailments. Price reduced to 006 dollar. By druggist& Heande heads are showio for umbrella handles. We guarntee the speedy, 'pahilese and permanent cure without koifee 'caustic or salve, Pf the largest p110 tamers. Pamphlet End references sent for two letter stamps, World's Dispensary Medical Aeamiation,663 Main Street, B,uffelo, N. Y. Graeshoppera and ants are the latest fan: 6y for br000hes. Some km pins are simply a blaok enamel ant oarrying its egg, a sin- gle pearl, by its antentre. The effect is !angularly realistic, the industrious 'mob being just life size, Blowing Dip Bell Gate has been a laborious and costly work, but the end justifies the effert. Obstruction in any important channel means diaaster. Ob- structions in the organa of the human body bring inevitable diaeose. They must be cleared away or physical wreak will follow. Keep the liver in order, and the pure bleed courses through the body, conveying health, istrengeh and lifo ; let it become disordered and the ehannele are clogged with import- ' ties, which result in disease and death. No other medicine equale Dr. Piercers "Golden Medical Disc:every ' for acting upon the liver and purifying the blood. If you wane to know how small a man is, give him aO office or let him become eudolen- ly ISIPtRiAt COME Thum: Will give Positive and Inatant Relief to those suffering from Cold& Hoarseneea, Sore Throat, eta,' and avoinatilitable to orators and vocalist& For male by druggists and mattectioners, R. & T. WATSON, Afantlfaeturere, Toronto. The latest in ladital Watched is a larger size than those of last year, and studded with dirtmonde. it is the testnnotter of all hien evhd hate tried it that "Myrtle Navy" tobehoo has the most delicious flavor of any tobacco in the market, and that it leaves none of the unpleasant effects iu the Mouth which most tobaotos do. Tho reason for this it the high and pare quality of the leaf, which its the finest known in Virginia, and the absence of all deletetioue matter in the niartUfacture, Tea Engle 6testm Washer is the anti Washing Machine in. Tented that a %tatty w1)111 AU 01 9111 IA years okl, vii tit the nse of a NV $, h• beard. can svi,11 *tali wash 60 to 100 stacoa in one hour. A Toms 44d. vented all ever Oa, Sample ten:f. r WO and territory ghton, tediett mo'*', gut d agents:nu sots,. 041 clothes, and every lady will but:. atter trying it; warranted to wash calicos in it's:, infant( a, cottsn Y, Yids in 00, Ind.:is:hes 10. or no sale. AddresS, F.ViRTS A Crl.. tentees aol titan. 104t01ers.08 Tarsi!, Sm.^. .."111ONTO,Canada Coleman's Improved Plough Harness Adapted to Orchard Work. No whiffiltrees to Injure trees. Easy on man and team. Working qualities guaranteed. mousy re. funded if not stttsfactory after a fair trial. Price, 810 without collars and bridles DEWEIC & C065 001,Bol8NE. ONT. GURNEY & WARE'S STANDAR:D SCALES Are tike 1100. At' tested by the ruCt thattheosr0 lama our Males in use in tho Drininion thn Of till miter motes combined. Slay. Steck and Chat • 80fr"artittrtsinnrsit'D":11/7;4' ea--.'1es. Settles, Scales hrineetie Ise. nonsekeepero, Conmdt 'Vim. Best Interests 131' ptircheaingt Seale, and in buybng. ene be sure to get the best. Our sakes are fully %tenanted in every particular.All sizes all nail, arelonee end 1111111tetteliH rs. Alarta Stoney strawera. vor Balk, by the Hardware Trade generally.11. mantled catalogue and PriCo:List fc rwardsd Upon applitiatioit GURNEY & WARE HAMILTON, Weatstoeses—lloittivel And 'Winnipeg. • j