The Wingham Times, 1885-11-06, Page 3DOR DAISY'S SAKE,
BY NOR,AU Lano$SR,, TO80NTO.
Author of "Panay," old'orrteless," "Lady
In(Jledine's Sin," etc., etc.
At the mess grown rustio gate of the pia-
turoeque, sweet-smelling, old-fashioned gar-
den of the Glebe Farm two lovers were stand-
ing, The golden June sunlight streamed
through the wide branohos of the apale trees
upon them, The one, a tall, fair-haired,
broad -shouldered young men, evidently a
well-to-do yeoman, the other, a slight, gold-
en haired girl of not more than seventeen
aummers.
The rich mild rose color of the girl's dim-
pled eheeke deepened, and the Berk blue
eyes drooped sadly at something she was
llstening to. At last she replied: "Philip I
think you are rather unkind to me; if you
had only sp eken thus last week 1; would have
refaced the invitation ; but now, I have
promised to go and it is eo long since I had
a dance, you are very, very cruel to me,"
"Well, well, Daisy, don't thunk any more
of what I have said, dear, but go and enjoy
Ty
said Philip Aehlin, kindly, harelt-
blaming himself for the jealous feeling
i Aiete creeping into his heart, for he could no; bee:
to see tears ou the lovely, child -like tats of
hie future bride. "Ga and be happy, dar-
ling," and taking her in his strong young
arms he kissed her tenderly, and then with a
weary, tr rubled sigh he walked away to h,s
own farm a mile distant.
Philip Aehlin sighed heavily, knowing
that Daisy Vernon could not love him as
deeply as he loved her or she would not care
to attend the dance at the Hall when he was
not included in the invitation.
The Hall at Westleigh was ocoupied—as
it had been for many centuries—by the West-
leigh family. The present Lord Westleigh
was to give a tenants' bill that evening, to
which Mise Vernon, as a friend of one of the
tenant's daugh' era, was invite 1
Anthony Vernon, althougi not a wealthy
man, was of a good family and farmed his
own estate; he had been a widower for many
yeara and Ilaiey was his only child.
The ball room at the Hall presented a bril-
Iiant eight, many of the arzetocraoy of the
neighborhood gracing it to mingle for a few
hours with the tenants of their friend. The
lamps shone on many lovely women, but on
none so fair as the golden -haired Daisy Ver-
non, who was clad in a simple white muslin
robe with a mingle whit3 rose netting in her
flossy ourls,
"Who is that lovely child ?' enquired a
tall, handsome man of some thirty-five years,
with a dark moustache and a somewhat mil-
itary look. "Introduce me will you, West
leigh ?'
"Captain Beaumont, Miss Vera'n," re-
peated Lord Wostleiirh, introducing his
friend after he had himself shaken hands
with Daisy.
As Captain Beaumont bowed low she
thought "what a handsome and diatingefished
looking man, and"—with a Little sigh—
"how different he is to Philip."
Taking Daisy's card, Captain Beaumont
wrote his name upon it tor three round
dances, of which the next waltz was one,
"Thank you very much, Miss Vernon,"
said he when it was ended, "that is the
moot delicious dance I have ever had, But
let me take you to the censervatory; It is so
much cooler there."
P.aoiagDaisy on a seat near a large foun-
tain he entertained her with interesting an.
eodotes of camp life and peculiar people he
had met abroad, noting with pleasure each
emotional feeling betrayed in the lovely een-
sitive face at his aide.
Captain Beaumont bit his nether lip sav-
agely, and a Mephiet'philiau look came into
his dark eyes as he tried not to appear an-
gry at the iutrusion of a servant who some-
time afterwards entered with a message for
him, "If you please, sir, Mri, B.aumont
desires to speak to you,"
"Your wife," faltered Daisy, with a deep
blush and a ahy,•frightened look itt her dark
blue eyes
"No, Miss Vernon, you do not think I am
married, surely. Mrs BeaumoL t is my cousin's
wife, I will take you back to the ball room
while I go and }speak to her,"
The handsome, bronzed face of C ptain
Beaumont haunted D.tisy's vision all- the
next day. He had asked permission to call
at the Glebe Farm, but several days pasted
and he had not done so,
Daisy waswalking homeward slowly
through tho Westleigh woods one evening
when she heard the clatter of a horse's hoofs
behind her, Turning round she.beheld Cap-
tain Beaumont, who instantly alighted to
greet her. Retain'ng her small hand he
drew it through his arm, and as she listened
to the soft, false, musioal voice, the homely,
honest face of Philip Ashlin was entirely
forgott:n,
Captain Beaumont had much to relate and
was, he said, jest thea on his way to call at
the Glebe Farm, "But Is it not much bet-
ter, Daisy, that we met hero instead ? Tell
me, little one, that you are pleased to see
me," Failing to .make the ewoee blue eyes
meet his passionate dark orbs, he placed his
arm caressingly around Daisy's waist ; but
the poor child grew shy and frightened and
bursting into bitter tears she told him of her
engagement to Philip Aehlin.
Cecil Beaumont kissed away the tears
from the pretty, blushing face now nestling
confidingly on his breast, while be told her
she should never be the wife of a poor noun•
try farmer,
"Philip is not poor, Captain Beaumont,
and he loves nie."
"But you do not love him, D,fsy, and
.somebotly Levee you bttter than he does. Do
you love me well enough, darling, to leave
your home and cane with me ?" Gathering
het peaaloiiately in his arms, he kissed over
and over again the pansy -like eyes and child=
ish red lips, while he expla sed to her that
for a bine their marriage =tithe kept secret,
as he was bet the youngest son of Lord Ger-
sten, who had other uiatrfmosial views for
him and having but entail income from the
Army he greatly feared disinheritance.
Week after week pearled by with repeated
seorot meetings in the Woetleigh woods, for
Captain Beaum.nt rarely nailed openly at
the Glebe Farm.
One day poor Daisy, listening to the music-
al, pleading voles of her lever, and beneath
the Dewitt rflhis pass'onato,; lark eyes, forgot
ovorything—her white-haired old father
and the honest, true Heart of Philip Aahliu,
who loved her so faithfully—forgot every.
thing but the ham:honte, dark, pleading fate
befere her and at teat with teeny tears, prom -
lied to consent to his wish of a Whet roar•
riage.
Before the last Ioad of golden pheavep was
gathered into the barn of the Glebe Farm,
Wee, Vernon bad fled from her home; fled,
leaving a tiny note for her heart -broken
father, begging his and Philip's forgiveness,
and telling him she should soon see him
egalfi, ae Cecil had promised shortly to ac-
knowledge her openly as his wife and bring
her back to Westleigh. as such.
That night the red light of the autumn
sun streamed through the Lattice of the farm
house upon the bowed head of old Authony
Vernon, and upon the passionate, pitying
face—now anything but homely—of Philip
Ashlin, who, kneeling beside the old man,
lifted his eyes to Heaven and swore solemn•
ly before God that he would have the life of
tide man who, elthouob, married, had con-
trived by his artful wiles to win the heart
of the simple, trusting girl who was to have
been his bride,
Tho Christman snow lay thickly upon a
newly made grave iu Westleigh churchyard
when Philip Aehlin sadly betook h melt to
London in search of his lost love, poor, mis.
guided Daisy. But, although he traced her
to that great, city and searched with the aid
of detectives almost night and day, he failed
to get a clue to her whereabouts.
Months dragged on and at the end of May
he was still perseveringly trying to find her,
whet he saw in the newspapers that Capt .da
Beaumont had joined his regiment and sail-
ed for Africa, "But where was Daisy ?
Dead? Oh, would to God that were possible,"
he thought as with a heavy heart he return-
ed to Westleigh. In the evening as he en-
tered the village he paused at the gate of
theoherchyard and mournfully neared the
grave whose new marble slab told the name
of Anthony Vernon, In the waning light
he was horrified to find the body of a woman
lying senseless on the daisy -grown mound.
He raided her tenderly in hie arms, for he
knew it was Daisy. Daisy! but ah, how dif-
ferent was the pale, emaciated form resting
against hie heart to the blooming, lovely girl
who had so cruelly thrown away his love to
choose the Dead Sea fruit—the poisonous
ashes of false vows instead.
"I will win her love now," he vowed as
he kissed the closed eyelids and pale lips,
"and, please God," as my honored wife she
shall be happy once more. Daisy, my love,
my love, look up, speak to me, only one lit-
tle word ? It is I, Philip. Daisy, my darling,
speak to me 1" But Philip Ashlin pleaded
in vain; Daisy Vern m was dead!
* * * * * r *
Near to a Hottentot kraal in Central Af-
rica an English regiment had encamped.
Far away from the encampment the glar-
ing sun shone down on the tall form of a
man—an of icer—shot through the heart.
His handsome, bronzed face was still damp
with the dew of death, but the dark, glassy
eyes still wore their cruel Mephistophilian
look,
The tall form and ptasionate fair face of
another soldier—evidently an inferior—bent
over him, who, with a wild agonizing ory
raised his eyes to Heaven as he fell oa his
knees. ,"At last my oath is fulfilled, Oh,
Daisy, any love, my love, for your s.tke, God
forgive me; this is my revenge."
Ashamed of Her.
In; traveling, chance words and incidents
some times open to us whole volumes of
tragedy. For example, take the following
fragments noted some years ago by a pas.
aenger on a railway train in the We.t, on
which a fatal accident occurred, A little
blonde woman, very much over dressed,
was languidly nibbling cake and sipping
champagne at her lunch in the palace oar,
when her husband entered.
"Daisy," he said, "your mother is get-
ting on the train,"
"'Oh, good gracious, where ?"she exelafm-
ed angrily. •
Ile pointed to a tall, ungainly woman in
shabby clothes, going into a second-class
car,
"Had I not better bring her into this
car ?" he said. "There are some rough fel-
lowc in that one."
"Does she know we are on the train ?"
ext.e,
"Then never mind, I can't introduce
mamma to the Sehailers," glancing at
some of her companions,
The train rushed on, and the woman who
had married out of poverty into a fashion-
able set, while shelaughed and jested with
her new friends, wore an uneasy face . that
showed her terror lest her mother should
disgrace her. Her husband said presently,—
"Your mother will want lunch, Daisy.
Suppose I" --
"Oh, let her alone 1 She always taken a
brown paper parcel with chucks of bread
and Bologna sausage. She tikes that sort
of thing.'
An hour or two latter a jarring crash re-
sounded through the Pullman care. Wo-
men shrieked, and mon rushed to the door
as the train stopped. r1. brakesman met
them.
"Keep your seats, gentlemen, Broken
rail only,"
"Anybodyhurt?"
"Four or five people, One old lady's a-
dyin'. I heard her oallin' for her daughter
that's on the train : '.Maggy ! Maggy 1' jest
now. Take keer ma'tim 1" as a Iittle woman
rushed past him,
The old nonan lay on a clay -bank, Same
men were holding her tenderly enough. A
physioien who happened to be ou the train
kneeled beside her Her daughter threw
het self dowu and dragged her head upon her
breast. The woman's lips were opened, and
her eyes stared as if searching for some one,
But she dm not call for "Maggy' any more.
"Do something 1'' cried her daughter
wildly. "Make her speak to me ! Mother!
mother 1 it is Maggy ! Maggy 1"
"Madam," said the doctor, "you aro too
late 1"
•-4 ter► -w.
The itinerant eye doctor of India performs
Ins operations with a confident celerity
which the marc civilized oculist would call
recklessness. As be enters a town he bawls,
" Do you want batik your ight —ono rep
only." When a customer appears ho takes
out his penknife ani psrforme the operation
while etandiug in the open egtiare. Then
he binde up the wound, tells his patient to
keep in the dark for a fortnight, and pockets
his rupee, :l writer itt Month r3' Journtat
who describes this proceeding, says that it
is almoat always suceeeeful ; one of his oa'n
serve -Me, a woman of 80, was in this way
suoeeaafelly operated upon for entered,
Sullirt''rj. iO SPARKS.
Grape" are as easy and pleasant cure for
dyspepsia,
A German chemist, J. G. Ottq, flails ar•
teriel blood to contain more auger than the
blood of the veins,
Iron bars and steel are elongated by mag-
netization, the latter met iso much, but Wok -
el bars are shortened,
The pea is salt because of the great quantl.
Mee of chloride of sodium washed into it
from the mountains.
It has taken thirty trials to oast a Tense
for the Lick telescope in San Franoisoo, but
one bas been obtained which is without a
flaw.
Round chimneys are beet for workshops,
factories, eto. They deliver the smoke
more easily and are less exposed to the
wind. They are not, however, so easy to
build.
Two microscopists, Dr. Nuasabaum and
Dr. Gruber, have artificially multiplied in-
fusorie by cutting them in halves, each half
becoming a perfectly developed amimel.
Rings, or concentric ligneous layers,
would seem to be a very uncertain indica-
tion of the age of trees. In Mexico some
trees known to be but 22 years old were
found with 230 rings,
A paper is manufactured from seaweed
in Japan that bas the transparency of glass
—not exactly clear flint glass, but a good
sort of stained glass --and can be used satis-
factorily in windows.
If igniting by detonation or concusaion
can be prevented, chemists assert that shells
can be charged with an explosive so potent
that one of them, bursting alongside au iron
clad, would shatter the atrongeat armcr
afloat,
The French government has had con-
structed a machine which, with the engine
operating it, weighs some thirty-five tone,
which will out eteel plates an inch in thick-
ness. It is used in nutting plates for swift
cruisers.
The American Indians are found by
Matthews to have a knowledge of animals
and planta incomparably superior to that
of the average white man, or of the white.
man who has not made zoology or botany a
subject of study,
Talo ore is being discovered in large quan-
tities near Red Cliff, Col., principally in
e>.ve% The ore is light and fluffy and gives
no indications of mineral value, yet bas
yielded seven ounces of gold and sixty-three
ounces of silver to the ton.
Good Reading for Yonne; Men.
The late Edward Pierrepion who distin-
guished himself as secretary of the Ameri-
can Legation at Rome, once received a let-
ter, from his father which contained the fol-
lowing advice :—
Dress like a gentleman : never be peculiar
or flashy, but dress as becomes you, not as
becomes some one else, Never talk about
your expenses, or your money, and never be
ashamed to live with economy ; on the con-
: trary, be proud of it. Your business now
• is to acquire knowledge, and you need not
be anxious to display yours, especially to
older men, but always try to learn of them.
Never say to another what it would be
unpleasant to have him say to you.
Remember that good manners are of great
importance, Manners should be frank and
easy, with dignity.
Avoid fawning, toadying ways as you
would the foul fiend. Never fawn to a
prince or swagger to a. peasant. Be cour-
teous and manly everywhere and to every-
body.
Let your manner be quiet ; nothing is
more unbred than a flurried address, with a
face wrinkled all over with grinning delight.
The countenance can express pleasure and
welcome without idiotic contortions, and
when these appear. whether in the son of a
duke or a drayman, they are intensely vul-
gar.
You cannot have good manners in the
drawing -mem if your habitual manner is
bad ; the habit will betray you ; let the
habit be always good.
Far better that frigid look even, than
that you degrade your countenance with
silly hilarity.
Be a gentleman, feel like a gentleman,
and you will look and act like one.
Sometimes you will be neglected, and
your vanity may feel wounded. Never let
this annoy you. Be absolutely sure that in
due time all will come right, and that you
will have all the conaideraticn that you
merit. No one can do you any permanent
injury but yourself, The world is so con-
stituted that it is not in men's power to with-
hold respect from lofty character, real abili-
ty, and good conduct,
TOM THUMB ON HIS HEAD.
Cunning Tricks ole Bright -Eyed Itaby
phan t,
There is great rejoicing in P. 1'..13arnum's
Winter quarters over the recovery of the
trick baby elephant, Tont Thumb, whose leg
was injured at the time of Jumbo's death,
The baby'etephant feels as glad as anybody,
and his exuberance of spirits keeps Scott, the
trainer, in a ecnetant worry. Sha plaster
had no sooner been torn off Tont Thumb's
leg than he waved his trunk and stood upon
his head, kicking his heels in the air. The
baby next climbed on top of the tiger's oage,
and astonished those animals by leaping in-
to the air and turning a somersault with the
agility of a no fessional tumbler. tnfortun
ately he felt upon his head, and hie piteous
cries brought Scott to his asst -tante.
After drinking a gallon of beer the baby felt
better and danced around the ring on hie
hind legs to the male of a pasting hand- c
organ. Tom Thumb does not sleep as well
as he formerly did, and he chooses the dark -
nese of night for performieg lits antics,
Tho gime) awoke one night to find the a
Baby holding the hose and playing eold t
water upon him. There cline pretty near
beiug a row, hut 'qr. Scott roueod himself
and put an •frau t:' the disturbauer. .
Barmen
the Baby's friskiness rontiuues it is
thmught that Mr. Barnn twill be obliged to
oontino him in a cage. Scott thirks, how-
ever, that Tom Thumb in so everjoyeil at
his reeovory that he naturally feola like
having none fun and will soon nettle- down
to the staid life of a trick Blown elephant, f
THEFi FARM'
Texan's 'Wire.
The former game la from the liald one day
Ufa tang rid step and his weary way,
Hie bonded brow sad sinewy hand,
An showing the work for the good of the land
For he owe,And be hoes,
And he mown,
All for , be gooti of the land.
Bythe kitchen fife etoed his patient wile,
Light of his home and joy of hie life,
With flee ail aglow and Inlay hand,
P.eparing the meat for the husband's bend ;
Far she meet boll,
And the must broil,
And she meet toll,
All for the sake of the home,
Huy thews bright when the farmer goes out,
Birds sing sweet songs, lambs Irick about,
Tne brook babbles softly lit the glen,
While he works bravely for the good of men ;
For he sows,
And he hoes,
And he mows,
All for the good of the land.
How briskly the wife steps about wlthla—
Tho dishes to wash. ar d the milk to skim,
The fire goes out, flies buzz about
—For dear °nee at home her heart is kept stout ;
There are pies to make,
'.there is bread to bake,
And steps to take,
Ail for the sake of the home,
When the day le o'er and the evening has come,
The creatures are fed and th milking is done,
Be takes big rest 'math the old shade tree,
From the labor of the land hie thoughts are free ; c
Though he ave,
And he hoes,
And he mows.
And he rests from the work of the land.
But the faithful wife, from sun to sun,
Takes the burden up that's never done ;
There is no rest, there is no pay,
For the household's need alta must work away ;
For to mend the frock,
And to knit the sock,
And the oradle to rook,
AU for the good of the home.
When autumn is here, with the chilling blast,
The farmer gathers hid erep at list,
His barna are full, lits lielde are bare,
For the good of the land be neer bath care;
While itblows,
And it BUMS.Till the winter goes,
Ho rests from the work of the land.
But the willing wife, till life's closing day,
Is the children's, the hu.band's stay.
From day to day she basdone her beet,
Until death alone can give her rest ;
For after the teat
Comes the rest,
With the best,
in the farmot'e heavenly home. •
Gleanings.
Puppies ought not to be fed meat till past
seven mouths old, as this is apt to bring on
distemper. But a light soup made from boil-
ed bones and meat, mixed with bread and
vegetables, is excellent. From seven months
to a year old they may have a little lean
meat daily ; fat meat is iejurious, frequent.
ly causing vomiting,
The largest cheese ever manufactured in
America recently was made at East Aurora,
N. Y. During the process of its mnnufact•
ore, ten $5 gold pieces were thrown into the
milk. Its weight will be 3 300 pounds. The
milk was taken from 2.000 cows, which it
took 300 hands to milk.
From a few stations alone on the line of
the N. B. Railway between McAdam and
Frederickton Junction, there has been,. this
season, exported to the United States prob-
ably 30,000 quart boxes of blueberries and
this is only a small item in the immense ag-
gregate of the export of those berries, from
the Provinces.
There will always be soros soft corn grown
on piante acaidentalIy set back early in the
season. It is more loss than gain to delay
cutting until every ear is entirely hardened.
Corn cut just past the milk stage will be•
come ripe from juices in the stalk, while if
frosted before cutting at this period, not
only is the fodder much injured, but the
further development of the grainia sus.
peuded.
Sixteen years, experience itt charge of one
of the largest institutions in Great Britain
has convinced a teacher of industrial training
that boys who will have to earn their bread
by the sweat of the brow ought to be taught
some hen icraft alternately with their
school work, and that the brain and hands
ought t be taught to work in unison with
each other.
A bee -raiser has discovered toads making
great inroads upon the population of his
nivas. During the dry weather he examin-
ed the hives as the morning and found a
toad at the entrance of each of several box
e;. The toads were apparently asleep, but
as soon as a bee or two appeared would
shoot out their tongues and convey the ho-
ney gatherers into their capacious mouths.
The toads were kilned and dissected, and
many bees found in that stomachs. The
bee -raiser has elevated the hive,
Ther t will be years of poor crops general.
ly throughout the world, when prices w'11
go up to the highest figures consumers can
possibly pay. But as a rule the range of
values will average below that of twenty
years past, and for this reason : While the
consumption is increasing everywhere, the
accessible wheat producing area is enlarg.
Jug faster, It has expanded greatly in the
North-West, including the adjoining British
posseasion�, and ou the Pacific rose". This
twill go on for a few years, until the remain-
ing ground is covered,
At Gilmore, 11) miles S with of Omaha, a
company has started a cattle "" fattery,'
They hew expended $7.1,000 in the erection
of big stables. There are 3,750 stalls, and
by winter they will have .5,200 stella. In
etch atail they will place a '" critter,'" and
they will all be fed with food p'aced before
them through a system of pipes, and cooked
in ea mous steam vats having a cap aoityof
I,000 barrels of toed an hour. 'They will
ship in cattle from the Western Nebraska
ranchos, and fatteu thein in these stalls,
There is rot enough careful system and
regularity in f,edtug. One owner, when
asked how u uch meal or bran he gave his
otos, said he took a bushel and Went along
e taut of thorn and gave each one about
tvhee he thought the ought to have. This
s the way in which mart- farm operations
re etr,ied in. If the owner of cows wishes
o know what hieerefits aro, he moat weigh
the foal he gi' es tu, to and keep a record of
the amount. Experiment may be neoesaarq
o determine the most erofitebbe quantity,
which will to ry with the size of tho'ani-
oats,
Farming.
The euly way to Imo the practi*e of
arming is by actually working on a farm
and taking part in all the operations land
busigess traneagtioita connected tb€xewith,
And this working must riot be mere play-
ing Or passing the time promenading up and
down and around with hands. in pooketR,
lacking et other people woririug, ,A, young
man Might look a long time at s< plough, or
at a man ploughing, uofore he would learns
to hold the tool himself ; and he would even
be little the better of taking • hold of the
stilts for an hour or two. It is only by con,
tinuqus work day after day that ene can
thoroughly /earn the operation, and be en-
titled to call hitnaelf a praoticel workman,
In fact, the embryo farmer must regularly
work a pair of booms for at Toast one year,
such work including moat cf the field oper-
atione on the farm ; and in these he should
endeavor to excel, In Scotland it ie usual.
ly considered that a boy on leaving school
at seventeen beecmes "" odd man" or genet•
el laborer for the first year ; the seooed year
he is a full-blown ploughman, end the third
year he takes part in the manegemeat of
the farm, goes tc market, &c. At the end
of that time he hes mastered "pt;aotioai
farming ;" and further knowledge is such as
he can only gain ty experience as he grows
older He may romein at home, working
or managing for many years th-reafter, un-
til he is old enough, or opportunity occurs
to get a farm of hie own ; and it is obvious
Mot the older he becomes the sounder and
more practical his ideas on farming become.
In all imitations of the Myrtle Navy to -
bum) yet attempted, either inferior stock
has been used or the plug }tae been made a
trifle lighter in weight. The latter defect is
apt to ase -pe the attention of the consumer
until he fiuds that he is smoking a greater
number of plugs thin before. The Myrtle
Navy is m de three plugs to the pound and
each plug is carefully weighed,
At least one ton of gold is buried inthe
gr;tves of the dead every year.
2100,000,000 IN TILE BRITISH COURT or
Ca,zeoERy i—A large part of t' is vast sem
belongs to the people of America Cox &
Co., 41, Southampton Buildings, Holborn,
London, Eng., have just published aLIST of
the heirs to this enormous wealth. Reader,
send a dollar and they will forward you this
valuable LIST ; and if you find by it that you
are entited to any money or property, claim
your own, Cox & Co. will show you the
way.
Snuff is the interpreter of the nose,
Imperial Cough Drops will give
Positive and Instant Relief to those suffering
from Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, etc.,
and are invent tole to orators and vocalists,
For sale by druggists and confectioners.
R. & T. W A TS 0 N, Manufacturers,
Toronto.
l_7� A.P.251
�jEe'uUt;[i',, SIL sJCdiA!�S I�,gt'rirEE--
j� Pablie Library Building, Church•etreet';
thorough tuition ; reasonable rates; particulars free.
Tees. ilaroeouan, 1' esident ; C, H. Baooxs, Sec,.
Treos.
AOHLNERY FOR S.LE—ENGINES AND
Boilers, Saw and Shingle tfills• Planing Fac-
tory and Outfits, Stove and heating Maehinee, water
wheels. Chopping Mille, ete Send or descriptive
catelo«us and mention what you want. (Mention
this papal.) IL W. PE iRIE, Brantford, Ont.
SUCCESS AGAINST ALL FREEJCE
IJDI
v
"Tirana' Ilse Water has proved itself a mower.
y all who have used It aooerding to direction, if their
eyes were curable, as will be open b the undersigned
osrti6aatee It cured mo, 8 yearn blind, 000ulist failed,
O. 'Portia ; It h„ au ed m', coati/at would not try me,
Alexander Want, 6 years 1: incl, rb es. Amiott ; 4 yarn,
Elle Dufour; 33 y urs blind aid now I see, John
Lecrcix. Ask yew druggists f r it. wholesale—Ly
man Bona n Co., 38465. Paul St., iltootteoI,
JAMES PARK & sON,
Pork Packers, Toronto,
L. 0. Bacon, Rolled Spice Bacon, 0. 0. Bacon,
Glasgow Beal Hams, Sugar Cured Ham, Dried
Beef, Br est Batton, Smoked Tongues, Mess Pork
Pickled ungues, Cheese, Family or Navy Pork
Lard in Tubs and Pails, Tho Beat Brands of Eng.
Sieh Fine Dairy Salt in Steele
Coleman's Improved Plough Ilarnes
Adapted to orchard Work
No whitfletresa to injure trees. Easy en gran and
team. working qualities guaranteed. Money re.
I funded if not satisfactory after a fair trial. Price, '
i $l0 wltbnu;, dollars and bridles,
1YEWEY �X, CO.,
COLBORNE. ONT,
GUItEY & WIRE'S
,
STANDARD SCALES
A.re the Rest• At.
tested by the Fact
that there are more of
our scales In use in
the Dominion than
of all other makes
combined, nay,
Stork and Coal
Stales, Farntere' = T
Grath and Oa try Stales, Grocdrs' S itntdhera!
neaten, Stabs rot ifonteatiC STtc,
Housekeepers, Consult Your Hest f
ltltiarests
By tO get purchasing
a Oar scales
In
buying
warranted fo
every particular, .'111 sizes Btailrnad, Warelsente
and In111 Trucks. dlarrta Morley .Mkznweres
For tale by the Hardware Trade generally. 81.
htstrated Catalogue and Price List forwarded upbet
applloetton,
GURNEY & WARE
HAMILTON.
Waaancrsas—Idontreel and Miniuse.