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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1881-08-26, Page 6c. 6 THE URbN EXPOSITOR. AUGUST 19, 11 91. Charging the Battle Line. Raw Cavalry are Employed in a Battle. Over on the right the infantry were falling ' back, and the centre could hardly hold its ground. The enemy could spare two brigades and still push our right. They were now bringing them up ander cover of the woods to hers them at our left. All our troops in faction, and the -men died on the battle line with the dogged determina- tion not to give an inch of ground. Now there is a lull. No need to telt a soldier what it means. The enemy is changing in his battle line to include the reinforcements coining up. Murder takes a rest for a few minutes. An aide-de-camp dashes up and en- quires for the officer in command. He rides down the line to the colonel. Our regiment is all alone here, and we are less than 700 men in the saddle. Away goes the aide, and as the col- onel turns in his saddle to look over the men we can see that he wears a pale face. What was the order ? It was for that long regiment to swing around the corner of the wood and hurlitself against the enemy coming up ! Wag it a blunder, or was the order born in the grim despair- gnawing_away at the. commanding general'seart as he felt the battle going against him ? If any man knows he has never spoken. The colonel hesitated just a moment. He had seen a hundred saddles empti- ed that day, and now 700 men were to be matched against 8,000. "Forward 1" `We in the line did not know where until we turned the woods and halted to dress the lines. Half a mile away, and coming forward in battle -line, were the two brigades. There were stumps here and there in the field, and the frnit was ripe on a dozen scattering cherry trees. There was no order to using carbines: We `were going to fight with the sabre alone. Faces grew pale, teeth shut to- gether hard, and then the silence of death settled on the little band. orward 1" rot I" allop 1" "t harge 1" "Aye ! we are not mutes after all 1 Yi yi! yi ! comes the yell, and we all take it up. Sabres are flashing, horses rush- ing, and troopers shouting, and there is. an exhilaration in the moment which lifts nen in their stirups. Will they form in square. No ! They shout in derision as 700 men ride down upon 8,000 ! They halt, land the front rank drops to its knee and the rear rank takes steady aim. I am in the front rank of our char ing line, and can see every move- ot be 11 n rs r- e n e r y s e a f n The it EG meat, - I wish it was over. It does n seem possible that one of us will alive after the first volley. There wi be a grand crash, a sheet of flame, an the maelstrom of death wi1F have draw us to earth. Nearer—nearer ! I hear their office commanding them to keep cool. Nea er—here is the crash—the smoke -4h cheers and groans ! Now we are upo them Our horses strike the line lik a great wave which cannot be stayed o turned aside. I see men under foot— they jab at me with bayonets, the strike! at me with clubbed muskets Baglee sound, officers shout—sabre ring --muskets crash, and men liv through it, to pass beyond out of smoke cloud. W6 have broken their lines and con fused them. They are not retreating but they are disorganized for a moment We carr hear their officers shouting or dere, and there is a pop ! pop -1 pop ! o musketry around us. "Rally on the centre 1" Every horse knows and obeys the call.Under the smoke we reform The trooper at my left is leaning for ward in his saddle, sabre gone and both hands clutching his horse's mane There is blood on his bare head and his bronzed face, and a bayonet has give him a 'horrible wound in the leg. Th three horses beyond me on the right have empty saddles, yet here they are, ready to charge back again ! "Yi!yiIyi! Here we go again 1 Who leads us we do not know. What we are charging I cannot see. It is only a minute before I see bayonets and men in line, and then came the shock. No man could tell you what takes place in that brief mo- ment. It is a horrible nightmare of flames and blood and death. We are scarcely through one battle - line before we wheel to the left and strike another. The trooper who was at my left is missing. There are three riderless horses on one side and two on -the other. They keep places with mine. They rear and fling them- selves against the line, striking with their feet, and screaming like wild beasts as the bayonets prick them. Now to the right, and we dash through a line—now a short half circle and men are knocked down and tramp- led under foot—now straight ahead,and V76 follow the single bugle call back to the cover of the woods from whence we started thirty minutes before. There is a very heavy smoke olond down where we fought, and under its over it is trying to re -organize. It is too late. Our infantry line of battle has advanced half a mile, our batteries have secured better provisions, and the enemy must either fall back all along its line or be flanked' and crushed. Where is onr,colonel ? Dead under one of the cherry trees. Where is our major ? Killed as we charged the first line. Five.of our captains ? Stark and stiff down there in the clover patch. Eight lieutenants ? Dead where the blue coats are the thickest. Where are the troopers who sat in these blood-stained saddles 7 When the enemy draws off we shall ride over the field land count nearly 200 rank and file of tie brave 8th, who sleep their long sleej. Their fingers will be clinch- ed in agony—their eyes wide open— the grass!beneath them saturated with blood and their parted lips will seem to ask of us' :— "Have we died for aught which Christian men could not have peaceful- ly settled in peaceful voice." Going to Sleep in the Day Coach. It was not Mr. Dinkleman's fault that he was a tall man, and in fact, under ordinary circumstances he was very proud of his figure. • But one night last week he came down from Chicago to Burlington, and couldn't get any kind of a show in the sleeper, and 1 g one seat all to himself was - the best I they could. do for him in the day car. But he was weary all the same and. had to sleep. So he stowed ' away his valise and prepared to slumber. He made very elaborate preparations, ngs several times, before he could get th fixed to suit him. First he just thrust his feet out way across the aisle a i d pillowed weary head on the wi l dow sill. 7 was very comfortable. But in a t me or two a woman • alked down aisle and fell over his est and sore ed ; then a child cam : along and over the feet and cri..d; then a came along and stem led over his and swore, and jdst as Mr. Dinklei was beginning to hope hat the pro sion was all by, the rakeman o rushing along, he stu u bled over �t projecting feet, made 'De short, u vised remark, turned aa -and gave .nearest foot a kiok hat made e lost soul aboard that; tar draw in breath and Mhudder an ' shriek "aou}o ow. !" and then he sal to Mr. Din man : "Now hold out the other on But Mr. Dinklema • said noth He could only hold th t foot up by ankle, hold it high in t a air with b hands, while he sw yed back i forth, held his mou h wide o and wished for a broke switch, or an a3oident Then when the oessa allowed him to feel buckled himself up in the letter N, with hi against the back of nth him, his feet hanging erect, and his head drc back of the seat. But t: alf his hat in - the m - fell an east San 5 - ()rushed wearer eideavored nuance s- illy to hide a trade dollar hole in t e eel of his stocking ; noticing whip , he parson, who was a humorous sortl�of sky -contractor, said grimly : • ',You seem to be getting married just In time, my young friend." And the ceremony proceeded wi h the party of the first part standing One leg, trying to ' hide his well vent] 1 - ted foot under the tail of his coat, a4d ppropriately muttering "Darn it 7" t t hort-intervals. 1. The Author of the' Land B The Pall Mull Gazette, presumab y by the pen of Mr. John Morley, pays n eloquent tribute to the statesmen who e framed the Land; Bill and carried it through the Commons. "In its amend- od form,„' says that paper, "there is o itilteration in its structure. It is safe o Say that no bill' covering so mnwh round has ever emerged from the or- deal of criticism in the House of Cora - mons with so few changes. There • could be no more decisive testimony to e the strength, the completeness, the full Mastery of Mr. Gladstone of his own idea of what the measure should be. t is this through mastery and comprehe Bion which explains the incomparable Vigor, readiness and alacrity which M ladstone has shown in the committee e has received useful informatio flrom Mr. Law ; but when hanc some allowance has been made for th B t everybody sees that it is Mr. .Gladstone who has carried on the fight. If he ventured to go on for half an hot r to eat some dinner thgs went wron or business came to a standstill. N colleague could take his place, n merely because he Qrrly had full autho i , but because nobody . else bot ows the 'bill and 'is an equal maste o the art of rapid, firm and strenuou argumentation. Unlike the majority, net only of the House of Commons, but of the human ,race, Mr. Gladston knows how to distinguish. He canno only mark differences” (which .seems s simple but is so rare), bun when he sees a difference h is able to see it in all its bearings The House of Commons has certainly not seen in our day any piece of ads vobaby so impressive and commanding For what is extraordinary in Mr. Glad stone is thedegree in which he unites acu men, grasp and argumentative resource with moral vigor and eloquence. Elo- quence is a much misused word, and the word is not more often abused than the thing.bra What ever else Fels` enemies may say of Mr. Gladstone's exuberance, he shows none of it when there is real busi- ness on hand. In committee nobody sticks closer to the point or despatches work with livelier expedition. One night last week, it is:tree, he flamed out into a vivid protest against obstruc- tion, and all who heard it agree that a more effective interposition was never made. It is not merely his own follow- ers, it is the whole House, who feel on such occasions how powerful a leader e is, how worthy of his position. ven Conservatives kind irreconcilables re alive to the inoomparable ability, the plendid energy, with which the Primo iu inister has fought his battle under the ost harassing circumstances, and fter forty-nine years of ardent parlia- •• entary life. For Mr. Gladstone pre- erves just the qualities which the ouse of Commons is most calculated o deaden and benumb. The most en- husiastio young Liberal who has just of a seat has not a keener freshness of pirit than Mr. Gladstone, who has sat hrough eleven complete Parliaments. xperieice always ripens the faculties f capable men, but it nearly always lackens the intensity of their interest nd cools their ardor for improvement. n Mr. Gladstone's case just the oppo- ite of this has happened. If we want o know the secret one part of it is cer- inly to be found in the fact that Mr. ladstone, if he has been a great mem- er of Parliament for nearly'half a cen- t ry, yet has all that time been ha- itually looking outside Parlia- ent. •e one of the rongestHleaders e has bthatthe House has er had, because he never allowed it to mit or m aster the ideas and the inter - t, intellectual and moral, with which e chose to live." ot ,n bridge, an oe �olioy. ion of his ager Sleepy again, j h the ahapi knees bra seat in fron down, his b pping over Both his feet sound asleep More he did, and wli he stood up he fell down and all passengers shook their heads, the m laughed sardonical laughs, the wom said, "what a shame such . a nice, spectable looking man, too," and t man on the wood -box unfeelingly s "too much booze." And his hat f off into a seat behind him and t man on that seat put his feet in it a: spit.all over it before Mr. Dinklem, 'could find it. Clearly that was no w to Bleep. Then he curled up in his seat like dog on a rug, with his] knees drawn to his chin his head on the wind sill and his feet braced against the e of the seat. In about' twenty minut • 0 0 dy en he en re - he yid 11 a n • a w d :5 he woke up with more aches in his legs and body then he had hairs on `s head. He was so sore and stiff that ;t was ten mintites before he could be • d his elbows enough to get his hands n his pockets to get his ticket, and t • e conductor got tired waiting for him t last, and said sternly, "get off at t e next station," and Mr. Dinkelmal. could hear the passengers saying "dea• beat" and "got the bounce" and "sere him right." Evidently; no man coul. sleep very long in that" posture an. get home with any kind of a reputatio • .' Then he tried to sit straight up an. hold his head up by clasping his hon. behind it, but when his hands ga way his head fell back with a snap the t came so near breaking his neck h hasn't got over it yet' and one of th passengers asked him if he did that fog' fun or just because he liked it. The he leaned his head down' on the bac of the seat before him and dozed unt 1 he woke up with a crease in_ his for head like the brand of Cain. Then h lay down with his head pillowed on th arm of the seat, and the first man tha walked down the aisle jammed hi head half way down his neek, and maid him feel that life was a mockery. The he sat up in the seat facing the `arse, put his feet upon the arm of the seat leaned his head against the window and broke the glass the first time th. car lurched. Thirty cents and a cell in the head for that. 1 Having thus sampled all the position • lie could think of he spent the resto the night trying them, sometimes separ ately, wind sometimes altogether, an• when alast he got to Burlington hi hair wailgray, his eyes were wild, h: had to be carried to hie home on stretcher, and the doctors put him in mustard plaster case right away, wher= he has lain ever since • And if you don't believe it, try an al -night ride in a day coach yourself, some time.—Bur- lington Hawkeye. Unfortunate Position of a . Bridegroom. They had a terrible time at a wed- ding up at Petamua the 'other day, and which only goes to show that the smallest drawback will sometimes take the stiffness out of the swellest occasion. It seems that the ceremony was a very grand affair indeed:. There were eight bridesmaids, and the churoh was crowded from pit to dome as the dra- matic eritics would say, but when they got to the proper place in the ceremony, and the groom began feeling around for the ring, he discovered that it.' wasn't on hand. After the minister had scowled at the miserable wretch for a while, the latter detected that the magic circlet had slipped through a hole in his pocket and worked—into his boot. He communicated the terrible fact in a whisper to the bride, who turned deadly pale, and was only kept from fainting by the reflection that they would inevitably cut the strings of her satin' corsage in case she did. "`Why don't you produce the ring ?" whispered the bride's big brother, hoarsely, and feeling for his pistol under the impression that the miserable man was about to back out. "I can't. It's in my boot," exclaimed the groom under his breath, his very hair meanwhile turning red with morti- fication. "Try and fish it out somehow—hurry up ?" mumbled the minister behind his book. "I'll try," gasped the vi tim, who was y on , an a put o e foot on the chancel rail, pulled up h s trousers leg and began making spas odic jags for the ring with his forefing r, The min- ister motioned for the organist to squeeze e out a few notes st fill ' Intime, while a rumor went rapidly through the congregation to the effect that a telegram had just arrive proving the groom had four other wiv s living in the east already. "I—I can't reach it,' groaned the half -married man in agony-. "It won't come." "Sit down and take e our boot off, you fool !" hissed -the bride's mother, the bride moaned piteously and wrung her hands. There was nothing left ; so the suff- erer sat down on the floor and began to wrestle with his boot, which was natur- ally new and tight, while a fresh rumor ot under way to the effect that the groom was beastly tight. As the boot camel fluidly off, its - t i a e1 e An. Antediluvian Monster. There has recently been discovered in `Iberia the bones of an antediluvian ✓ inoceros, which may give as an idea o what kind of people and animals in- abited our globe in ages gone by, and hat sort of winter they had to endure. his rhinoceros was taller than the modern beast by some six to seven feet. It was discovered comfortably inbedded in the banks of one of the affluents of the Tana river. When the bank first broke away the whole skeleton stood there in magnificent proportions, a rev- elation of a lost age. Professors of plieontology are rather scarce in Siberia, and so it happened that the river was allowed to wash the old monster away. Its head and one foot have been rescued, however, and are now in St. Petersburg,. Besides its superiority in size, this aiacient monster had the advantage of being clothed in a thick coat of long hair, which enabled it to live among icebergs and in a temperature that Would have frozen the effeminate Polar bear and made an icicle of the cunning Arctic fox. There was a period when the north of Europe—England, France and Germany—were inhabited by mon- strous beasts, birds and reptiles. The fabulous roe has been discovered in New Zealand, a bird measuring thirty feet from head to claws. The sea serpent is no fiction. Professor Owen constructed, on a reliable scientific basis, a reptile that would measure some sixty feet in leiagth. A great portion of the ivory used to -day is the product of an extinct species buried in Northern Asia, which thio Siberian "resurrectionists" sell to R lssian traders. There lived, these giants in the age of silence, twilight and an w. In Australia a huge marsupial was a,iving, compared to which the kan- ga•oo is a rat ; it hopped about the coun- tr$ in company with wombats as large awe bear, and these monsters found thir enemy and conqueror in a huge m nater, that ponphed lion. Gigantic he biverous dragbns, double tusked reptiles, crawled leisurely along the rich aetnre lands of South Africa. Life a : long in those days, there was no • for the beasts to hurry themselves, roved over whole continentsm ea oh of food. Oar age of smaller he : ical developments, but of more en- igb :ned intellect, has gathered the Battered bones of -these monsters and 1 estred them to their pristine shape nd! assigned them their place in his - ref —The Hour. 1' • z I.t.l 0 0 I 0 0 2 0 0o Q m 3 cb 0 0 3 '1 xvro � yH m H � yH a� m a ' 0 t M z cA H rn Y. >n 1 mFri r —o� m� r 02 9o as m d cA co a1� ti - C • H N � � Z cn M O ti w G xi • =co • = H O Z tj rmU CST �b� z T t .� .� mm 0 0 0) - m P ,Y77IYIA OK'VIa c,:IATOYIi?O V `SiN3daaNd8e 4Si311IAa3VJOS S J3DJ39 Z v m v )IOO1aed bj d H d d EYE, EAR AND THROAT 1 DR. CEORCE S. RYERSON, L. R.C. P., L.R.C. s. E., Lecturer on the Eye Ear and Throat, Trinity Medical College, Toron- to, and Surgeon to the Mercer Eye and Ear Io flrniary, Consulting Oculist and Aurist to the Institutions for the Blind, Brantford, and for the Deaf and Dnmb, Belleville, Oat. L tits Clini- cal Assistant Royal London Ophthalmic Boepi- tal, Moorfields, and Central Throat and Ear Hospital. 317 CHURCH STREET, TORONTO. May be oonsulted at the ALBION HOTEL, STRATFORD, On the Last TUESDAY, of this and EVERY MONTH. 7Q8 2 0 P-5 m szua f1+ b Ott d' PCS co- ct- 0 m p. a 0 0 co tti 1-3 ro fie en tei m O tIl 02 Lei 0 O pa 0 tli Q 0 1-1:47.4 O C ti 0 C 0 a Z v 0 co 0 m Pd w O c co ro a r (571 0 O � b < c m r.. r e coA r H m r > O 0 ml� Z o v O a m • r c O 0 O -1 �-^1 "IIV! z 0 0 m 1881. FALL 1881. • EOMONDViLLE T CIDER MILLS, THE FIRST CONSIGNMENT OF STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS FOR FALL TRADE JUST TO HAND AT HOF FM &N :B RIO T 11 S' CHEAP CASH STORE, SEAFORTH. All Are forrdiallyInvited to Give us a Fall and See Goods. NO TROUBLE TO SHOW CUSTOMERS THROUGH THE STOCK. REMEMBER THE ONLY CHEAP CASH STORE : CA RDNO'S BLOCK. HOFFMAN BROTHERS, Seaforth. PLOWS! PLOWS 1 PLOWS 1 The best selected stock of Plows in the County is at 0. C. WILLSON'S AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT EMPORIUM, Main Street, Seaforth. The following popular makes are now in stock : Massie's No. 13 Thistle Cutter ; Carter, Smith Co.'s Three .Rod -beam $40 Chilled Plow ; the Genuine American South Bend Oliver $40 Chilled Plow, the Brantford Champion Chilled Plow_; Wat- son's A'rought Iron -beam $40 Chilled Plow ; the $10 and several different styles of the Hill pattern general pur- pose Plows : also, the Francistown $13 Plows. The above Plows are from first-class makers, and will be sold cheap for cash or on short credit. In GANG PLOWS I keep the Port Perry, which is now acknowledged to be the best and most reliable plow in the market. Price $20 Dash, or $22 on time. STRAW CUTTERS, ROOT CUTTERS, HORSE- POWERS, SAWING MACHINES, and all kinds of implements belonging to the business. Now is the time to get a good churn, and the BLANCHARD is the acknowledged leader of the dairy. See them before buying any other. SEWING MACHINES. A fall stock of the following leading machines : WANZER C, WANZER F WILSON B and LOUISE Family Machines ; the WANZER-DAVID E for tailors and 1•ght manufacturing. These are all reliable machines, and parties epurchasing a sure' of getting satisfa3tion and good value for their money. A lot of good sand-ha rid machines on hand, and,will be sold from $5 to $15 each. Machines re)iaired on the shortest notice. Needles, oils and all kinds of repairs on hand. O. C. WILLSON, Main -St., Seaforth. THE LEADING DRUG HOUSE. E. HICKSON & CO., SEAFORTH. CONSTANT L Y ON HAND AND RECEIVING : BATH SPONGES AND BATH TOWELS. BATH GLOVES ANDBATH BRUSHES. BATH SOAPS AND TOILET SOAPS. PERFUMERY AND COMBS. BRUSHES AND PURSES. PIPES AND SMELLING BOTTLES. SHOULDER BRACES AND CHEST PROTECTORS. PUFF BOXES AND PUFF POWDER, &C. On Hand, Lots of that Beautiful and Heal- thy Summer. Beverage, "THE MONTSERRAT FRUIT LIME JUICE," The Most Healthy and Delicious Drink in the Market. Small and Large Bottles at E. HICKSON & CO.'S DRUG STORE, SEAFORTH. THE NEW GROCERY. STARK'S BLOCK, MAIN STREET, SEAFORTH. HZTGH R.OBB HAS JUST RECEIVED A 1'ERY NICE STOCK OF CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE, Of the Latest Designs, which has been well bought, and will be SOLD CHEAP FOR CASH.. TEAS! TEAS1 TEASI A Splendid Lot of TEAS, which for Value Cannot be Beat in the Town. SUGARS! SUGARS! SUGARS! A FIRST-CLASS BRAND 'OF SUGAR 13 POUNDS FOR ONE DOLLAR All Kinds of Provisions, such as FLOUR, FEED, &c.• Also, all kinds of FAMTT4Y GROCERIES and Knick-Knacks Fresh and Good. HONEY! HONEY !—Some Beautiful Honey, extracted from the Pure Comb, and from his own Hives. IMAMS AND BACON. The Best Sugcvr-Cured Hams and Bacon in the Market. Alt Cured by Himself. IC " REMEMBER THE CHEAP GROCERY. - HUGH ROBB, Main Street, Seaforth. A. large addition, with satin. ly New and Improved Machin- ery, has been made to our CIDER MILLS. A careful aria Competent Superintendent e1 a. played. We are, therefore, pre- pared o give a Large Yield with gr at cleanliness and dam., patch. Term same as last year. ash will be paid far limited quantity of sound, ripe, cider apples. G. d H. JACKSON. 714-8 14I AZV 14 1\T ---OF ROYAL 'MAIL STEAMSHIPS LIVERPOOL, LONDONDERRY, AND GLASGOW. '.HE SHORTEST SEA .ROUTE Cabin, Intermediate and Steerage Tickets at Lowest Rates.1 Steerage Passengers are booted to London, Cardiff, Bristol, Queenstown petty, Belfast. Galway aid Glasgow, at same rates as to Liverpool. SAILIN +`rS FROM QUEBEC! SARDINIAN .. , .9th:7ULY MORAVIAN . „........ . . . ..... .....1t th JUL! SARMATIAN :. . 28rd JULY CIRCASSIAN ... , .. ,- "' .80th JULY' POLYNESIAN _ . PARISIAN . , „, $th AUG.- 18th AVG SARDINIAN .,I ...- . MOItAVIA�' ...- ,.,,,..-20th AUG . SARMATIAN i . ,,... .,27th AVG. CIRCASSIAN . JtSEPT h POLYNESIAN .,'.•,•,2717th SEPT PARISIAN th BEP SARDINIAN, , y - .. . .24th KEPT , , ,' ... - 1st OCT HORAVIAN SARMATIAN.. . , 5th OCT . • .....15th OCT CIRCASSIAN.. - - --,.,,;22nd e The Iast trai connecting at Quebec with the Allan Mail Steamer will have Toronto every Friday at 7.02 A. M. Imo" Passengers can also leave. Toronto by the -P.52 P. M. train on Fridays, and connect with the Steamer at Rimoniki, (paying. the exira fare, 84 45, Quebec to R. monski.) For ickets and every information apply to I 708 A. STiitONG, Agent, Meatorth. SIGN OF THE 11 C r JO )iOOIS 11 V c 14 CP 3 lZ " 'v hi )-3 t 1l r 0 tri i~ .111rw H im -+ r m g -. 2t g y c M ;poiill If o • b '.. 8 93:3 ,,,n r Nz in 93 m t 0 ri) Ili tj r r cn 0 "''� H m `- 0 L g 1 CIRCULAR SAW rN v j C r m FORBES' LIVERY AND— TAB- SALE LES. MAIN -St, SEAFORTH ARTHUR FORBES, the old established Lir- eryman, keeps the best and moat stylish rigs and the beat driving horses in the businee r• Neat and Nobby Clutters, handsome and coa - fortable Robes, and fast and sal horses always on hand. A sesvery, hon horsome family sleigh for one _ortwo Good driving hors s bought and sold. Day and night cal s promptly attended to. REMEMBER TR . PLACE — Opposite J. O. Wilson's Agricultural Warerooms,Beaforth. 889 ARTHUR FORBES.. E INC '� S J. HADDEN begs to announce to the peopi. • of this vicinity chat he has purchased' As property formerly owned by Mr-. Wm. H*4444s and having erected thereon a commodious shift he is now prepared to execute orders for Weavl in all its branches' FLANNEL, Plaid ad Twined, s►nd CARPETS a 8peeitity. All warranted to give sat faction and terms .= •. able. Residence, half a mile easy' of $dad-•. villa, adjoining the farm of Mra. Gemmell oa'tie west side. A trial is iespectfally solicited. 705-18 J. S. HAMILL was be{ just men with of to Ev- f tion ;usp ave _Esau eeive male,, �ie'd€Ir food- I It di i;oilld' fseo0 th. ice, of main tempi 1y`i< Be a t wal Isis 1 have But sense/ mind: -e lid ingbt revels the p1 light. venter Sneath beve I lea upon() there there what stalwa hander lifted freedot skilful will th few g How ti very re And are tem;:Pis things. tions t Play in .As it Ni the aril their w Esau, nireers critical than weaker j into the Ise wilf scales side of Don watehf' Passio. eonstit you e.r guard there. there. :set you If you become are br yourse guard t where Esau you wil down a Christi D prom is at Mon Lawro hands Coriapa have a the S compa eh En •. the Co here, upon th passen fitted u Lawre • with th During well: d. -and Ca, made t points is binatic sang of the to be a+ such nu knovH Rev. years p at Geo nine hisiam' Nova best E House. she ma and hal of her c mark w White Mrs. H of nam is one o; Americ —Chi fan the ban down. the 1 Fox an a saran died Ditches: liners a Gainsb ruled t' was ono House, close to the Chi .engage leagues Pierola quipano with til its the n which 1: .5 • 6 f 11