OY LOVE AND LUCK. |!V (â- M. KARMER. [V TWO PARTS-PART II. (( ',,)iiluded.) « broods in the Clopper houaehold, """• one of its members and half the :c* "!° n'f the family savings bank. The '°*f " been harvested and gathered into raj- " ' rn but not by the aid of Clopper jun barn ior. Tirii His chair was empty and the bam fl Dig'tye knew him no more. Not " "^he had carried into execution his late """ olution to quit the farm summarily â- ' '^^ rejected by his fair enslaver and to 2 ^^'"A .j^gion and his patrimony togeth- '""vo bloody weapon or empty poison â- le was nop"' picked up on the bank of the mill "' and to new st r tw ha' discovered float- f' l-Iv on its surface. No coroner's jury ' ler/a four abreast through the haytield, "° jg .J fmcking room of the best parlor, â- fno police detective rendered the usual 'li -te attention to the mistress of the r by poking his nose into her secret """tsand cross (xamining the cook with "'T bin between hia thumb and finger. "' ,,^njj of the kind. And yet sorrow brood- 'ntije household; tor yount; Ned, the fu- ' e hope and mainstay of the family name j^J estates, was gone. Mvpoorboy!" sighed Mrs, Clopper, "I ' ne won't eet into bad ways in that •al city. 1 1" told New York is an aw- .1 bjii place for young menâ€"so many wick- â- '„,jD^r woman and other sinful tempta- as par'on Taeesrt says â€" and he's seen :;!-?:Jli. Poor^Ned!" " a, time poor Ned, seated one drizzly v-Doay moruing in his seven by twelve Vinlberdi the thud flDor cf his Bowery caiding house, scanned with profound in- ro^he "want" column of the Herald to -Vj ^me opening to the speedy fortune he •! Jeteriiiined to amass without loss of :iae. There were plenty of them, and from \^EL' theiH he picked out one that looked -r.emobt ptL musing "WiDtedâ€" A young and active man of t i address and neat appearance to take 'rjrrs in this city and Urooblyn. Ten to ffsnty dollars a day easily made. Address. \_ V ., box 17, 1)63 Hera'd office." 'Just tr.e thing for me," said Ned to him- h:' as he proceeded to answer it. "What a turnip I liave been to waste my time the last -.wo jears on that precious old farm, instead ;: .jming to New Vork and pocketing the •reenbacks and en]oying myself. Oh, An- gelicaâ€"it' I only had a castle on Murray 'â- X\h and mciiey enough to keep it np, how .lappy we both might bel" Hi hadn't quite got ov( r it yet, but pret- ty nearly. i;emembiance of that dimpled iice and those brown curls, those bright cveaand hury lipsâ€" would often come over _.T. like.% Wii'.n perfumed bath, but the -: jpect, so close at hand, of making lots of t.OEey ar.ll being recognized a city man â€" :ven of throwing 'dn Dyke Nostrand in tho •!.aae, and inaynap supplanting him in the -eut of prctiy Angelica Bruce, soon over ore ail other considerations, aud he began tjteeiasiihe had the first installment of .. ::uDe already in bank. Two days afterwards he received a postal ari invitation to call on the lont; eared pio- rrictor of box 17,!'6; at his office in Paik i.iw. and straight way sought the int5rview, ' titik, sallow-faced man, with blue spce- ti Ics on hi= nose and a scant crop of vdry einair on tiis head, sat at a low desk cov- erej with painphlets aadprof pectusea, who 5tteted our bucolic hero with an iE(|uisitive :tare, bt^inLiiag at his straw hat and end- ing at his boots, and then asked him through • iiiose wiiere he hailed from, how old he lis, what his father did for a living, how • iity besides himself were in the family, if e sinokeii cigars, drank lager, cr played pscr, and propounded several other par- :Kent intL-rrigatories touching hia (jualinca- â- .;?ns as a young man of buainees capacity, ^0 allot which Ned returned satisfactory an- -wers, 'tei.(i. then," said blue ppf ctacles, 8.e- tvt^Dg a tirr.phlet frtim a pile at his elbow ^^â- •x caajtii.^ :t to Ned â€" 'Here's a specimen • mygrcutvdikon K ectro-Biological Longe- vity, undtl.c Sciiuce of Transmogrification, ill- -stratint; t: e Lvolutionary I'rogress of the )i:pose Tadpole into the Succulent Bull- â- 'g; toijcthcr with didactic, acrobatic, hy- i'opathic aad sporadic essays on Anthrop- ijiccical and Kthnclogical subjects. All •Luve L;ot ^j do,' said blue speccaoles, tak- =g brttiih, 'is to get the prospectus by •tart Dii iâ€" and take as many orderi as you ia. l'ii,.euu shillings C. 0. D., aid your ,n percent, jayable every Sit- -r% nittbt, .;it. T.,. ^, right u? ,t ^2 air cas'" 'ccerni .^ â- . •twn St â- , la' •--i t., 1, 'â- â- '^. ;i-rc â- â- â- "c!,t •:,â- kcd that he'd think of it, and cenback prospsct didn't look so al looked â€" seemed to fade into as far as his approach to it was :,.i Angelica stocks had gone points below par. He went Oi Ml and reflected on the sitva- •d the advertising column again iTiC coic'usontbat humbug was -.\rii inlile'a game. A brilliant 'i bim. He would invest half '• piiuter's ink and call 'in the rity millions of the Amsri- i"!.' The next Sunday's i/«r- i t !c following tempting mor- 'â- â- ut if =ea;.y ,,,,, â- "-â- Jul to;. â- -iCana'la •'-r':ss Dr 'y- la the S'jshp feet effcctua'ly and perma- 11 one hour. Recipe for- y address in the United States on receipt of ONE DOLL.\K, Klward Clopper, NdW York tou.-se of '"is of â- ^'•"d reniittacce enter' ' -opper' ---.^..1 the next twenty days letters, each containing the re- ' "'acce, were poured down at feet, tlenius is equal to any ^, 'â- 'icy, Jig didn't pocket the green- ^*-'ss and depart by steam to a foreign "a?f!i ' â„¢'§" '^^ supposed. But he again hireri v'V^^ printer's and stationer's aid, L "' f a dozen lapid writers at two dol- njj-j^^^eek, and everyday the outward 5aled groaned under the loads of olosely envelopes containing the following â€" .ala in black letter type "'.^^^' formula ,, ^0"t Care "'^.^â- etheankl Have both feet amputated 3t a skilllul surgeon to do it,' blue^\'^^' 'ylish looking gentleman in tod "'"^cloth with bright gilt buttons niihtaiv "â€" ~:i.u _-ij 1 « ./..^ii arm I n f »;""" *^^P "' sol*! 1**'® scroll on the front, and carrying under hia *nort stout mahogany -colored cane, Si^ -^f'® " "PP" loft of a eown Srt^'!i^,^"'8-^ '^^ remarked in .^Te and kindly genteel manner that a ceS hketo interfepwagenUem^B buwnws. thought It wouW be safer for aU patiej (without speeifyingthe parties) tl^tthe of friendly and persuasive acoenta? and Nad being open to conviction under the argument It was presently aj?reed between them that It WM perhaps better for all parties to stop sne uttle game. Ned concluded that he would quit busi- ness for a seasonâ€" take a holiday, and see the sights of the town. He therefore closed his office, ducharged hia clerks, adorned himself m fashionable attire, and went one evening to the theatre. In one of the boxes close before him sat an old gentleman, a young gentleman, and a young lady. What! ^ot Squire Bruce. Angelica and the devoted Van Dyke Nostrand T No doubt of it. Ned could not Btsnd it. He did not tare any more for the play, ana went home, leaving his dollar m the play house treasury and his heart in the proscenium box. Oti An- gelica He tried another species of dissipation next morning, and went into a gay looking saloon in the Bowery and called for a brandy smash. The barkeeper, who was reading the morning paper behind the counter, rose to wait on him. What Not the gay and festive Van Dyke Nostrand with a castle on Murray Hill and a cottage at Long Branch None other, by all the gods of mythology 1 Instead of white kids, aud dazzling jewellery and generally perf-.med operatic case of the previous night, he now wore a calico shirt and checked linen apron. "I beg your pardon," said Ned, when he had sufficiently recovered from hi^ surprise to speak, "but do I address Mr, Van Dyke Nostrand, the betrothed lover of Angelica Bruce?" "I â€" really â€" wellâ€" I don't exactly under- stand you, sir," stammered the mixer of drinks. "Now look here, old fellow," said Ned, "you're p ratty sharp, I've no doubt. But you're a little too sharp to last. I expect to marry that young lady myself in a few months (he didn't expect anything of the kind) and though I have no castle on Mur- ray Hill and no cottage at Long Branch, I think my claim will be preferred to yours â€" especially when you write and tell her that circumstances over which you have no control will prevent you seeing her again. Write it at once, and I'll take it to her. I respect your feelings as a gentleman, and while I'm compelled to trip you up in this little game of yours, I'll not expose yon to the fquire who would cut your throat on sight and hunt you all over the town to do it." "The infernal scamp! Where is he?" roared Squire Bruce. I'll murder the vaga- bond â€" I'll ruin himl" 'Gone to Salt Lake," quietly answer3d Ned. "He has seven wives there and they have been rather urgent of late for him to come home and take care of the babies." "Oh, good gracious me!" cried Angelica sinking back on the sofa ia her father's par lor. ' To think he should be such a â€" oh my â€"the idea!" "Hold on, cried Ned. stepping forward and grasping the squire's hand, "Hold en. No harm's den?. I'm your natural born son in-law, I've saved you from an awful dis- grace. Angelica never loved the fellow â€" she told me so this morning when 1 brought her his letter. I've no establishment en Murray Hill, but 1 ve got a few dollars in bank and can take care of her in an honest sort of way. What do you say, old man?" "Ned Clopper," replied the old man in a sudden bnrst of friendship, "you'ra a brick Tike her if she's willing, and God bless you both!" "An^y," said Ned turning to the little beauty and holding out both hands, " will you have me?" "I don't mind," answered Angelica "you're a good so*- 1 of boy, and I always liked you. But goodness gracious me! The idea of being so fooled." "I've played a little 'game of Love and Luck," said Ned, "And have wonâ€"" "What? ' asked Angelica, looking up into his face with the sweetest of smiles. "A wife!" said Ned. THE CUP THAT CHEERS. A Short Crop andBeavy Speonlatlons. There is a Iar;e speculation in Japan taa in progress, and within a few days the tran- saction at the Impcrters' and Grocers' Board of Trade, in New York, have involv- ed 4 2.50,000 pounds. A short time ago the sale of 50,000 pounds was considerec quite a large business. Now the speculation is so brisk that 1,800,000 pounds are sold in a single day. The trading in black tea is not ao large, yet 585 000 pounds have been sold within three days. Prices have been ad- vancing steadily, owing to the speculative excitement, and are now three to four cents a pound higher than recently. Bisides the business on the Exchange, fully 30 000 chests of oolong have been sold to specula- tors within a short time. "An advance of three cents a pound in tea," says a broker, ".means a rise of §1 25 a chest, and if a speculator has 10 000 or 20,000 chests on hand it is ' an imoortant matter. Toe ad- vance is not due to fears of prolonged trouble between France and China, whereby the great tea ports of Shanghai, Amoy and Foochow might be closed by blockade, Tne Ecason is over there, and there is no tea to export. It is due solely to a marked de- crease in the en p. LMt year the exports of black tea to ihis country from Cmna were 22 129,992 pounds but while we received 80 000* chests of Amoy oolong, only 40,000 chests will be sent here this year. There will also be some decreate in the supply of Japan, of which 34 314,000 pounds were sent here last year. Some think the quan- tity will be 2,000,000 pounds less. Bat it is in green th^ the largest decreaae is «- pect«k Last year we received 18,000,000 Sounds this year only 12 000,000 pounds ^e expected. Lssa green tea U being raised in China, partly because ot the exclusion of the Pingsuey tea that excited so much com- plainthere last year, and principally because of the ext-^me cheapness of tea m thM country. Chinese planter, say there u too little money in tea at the present pri-Jea. PUSNIGRIMS. A night 'owlâ€" The cats. By the wayâ€" Mileatonea. Haunted hotuesâ€" Oin palaeef A tough morselâ€" The crust of the earth. oat 'I back up what I have to say," says the "Porca" meat- Cold muttm and rabbit pie. The ship that everybody likesâ€" Good fel- lowship. SomraTabulism is believed to be an uncon- scious tranceaction. Five letters of the alphabet will always continue faithful unto "death." The French declare they cannot hope for a piece till they have broken Cnina. Britannia and the pedagogue one rales the waves, and the other waves the rules. Beauty is only skin d-^ep. and some- times it is only as deep as the powder and paint. Some of the men who carry the most ex- pensive watches neve r know what time to go home. There is on3 good thing about leap year, and that is that leap year jokes can only be used once in four years. Tennyson didn't get a peerage until he atoopsd writing poetry. Tnis should serve as a hint to other poets. The boy who bit into a green apple re- marked, with a wry face, "'Twas ever thus in childhood â€" sour." An advertisement to invest in certain new linee is with awkward honesty headed, "Purchase of railway snares." Signs o f the times. â€" Knotches in the carv- ing knif' etoksn that spring chicken has been one of the luxuries of the festive season. When Hamlet said, "But I have that within which passeth shew," it is believed that he had in bis pocket a complimentary ticket for a circus. The English alphabet is tolerably virtu- ous. Twentv of the letters have never b'ien in prison. Yes, but look what a lot of them are now in penitentiary. One of trsorge III.'s first acts was to knight a gentleman named Day. "Now,' said he, "1 know that I am king, because I have tuinsd Day into knight." An Irishman hearing of a friend having a stone coffiu made for himself, exclaimed, "By my sowl, and that's a good ideal Sure, an' a stone one 'ud last a man a life- time!' A lazy fellow once declared in public company that he couldn't find bread for his family. "Nor I," replied an indus- trious mechanic "I am obliged to work for it." An awkward fellow planted his foot square on a lady's train the other day. "Ob, you great train wrecker "t said the lady angrily. "Beg your pardon, street sweeper!" was the arch reply. "Hae ye got the Catechism, Jenny?" said a female visitor to a little yellow haired girl "I dinna ken, but," turning to her mother, "Mither, had 1 ever the Catechism?" She thought it was a new trouble. A pleasant slip of the tongue is recorded by a French paracraphist. A lady was en- joying the society of her lover when the bell riu;, and the servant announced "the doc tor," "Tell him I am ill, and cannot come," was madame's reply. A traveller who had jist read on the guide-post â€" "Dublin, two miles," thought to make game of a passing Irishman by ask- ing â€" " If it's two miles to Dublin, Pat, how long will it take to get there?" "Faith," returned Pat, " and it yer heels be as slow as yer wit, ye'U get there about Christmas." Unco thin â€" After auld Jenny A was removed to the poorhouse, the Rev. Mr. Home, then stationed at Penicuik, one day visited her and avked how she was keeping. "Oh, rale weel, sir, extraordinary weel, I think Providence is here, for when I took a spinfu' oot o' my parritch bicker this mornin' the hole filled up agam." Food and Brain Work. An organism which is doing brain work as well as m\jscular work requires higher food than an organism in which the brain is comparatively idle and only the lower centres and the muscles do the work. Un- doubtedly the effect of bran work is to strengthen the brain and render it less like- ly to become abnormal in its structure or disorderly in its activity than if it were idlft. Such exercise as the brain receives in edu- cation, properly so-calledâ€" that is, develop- ment of the fatiultiesâ€" stimulates nutrition, and in so doing increases the need for food. Excessive activity with anxiety is not good at all, and ought to have no place in the educational process Worry is fatal to good work, atid to worry the growing brain of a child with work is to maim and cripples its organization, doing irreparable, because structura\ mischief, the efifects of which muet be lifelong. "Tennsion" in work is not a proof of strength, but of weakness. A well developed aid healthy grown brain works without tension of any kind. The knit brows, straining eyes, and fixed atten- tion of the scholar are not tokens of power, but of efifort. The true athlete does not strain and pant when he puts forth his strength. The intellectual man with a strong mind does his brain work easily. Tennjion is friction, and the moment the toil of a growing! brain becomes laborious it should oease. We ara, unfortunately, so accustomed to see brain work done with ef- fort, and to regard "Tenusion's" as some- thing tolerable, if not natural. As a mat- ter of fact no man should knit his brow as bethinks or in any way evince eflfort as he works The best brain work is done easily, with a calm spirit, an equable temper, and in jaunty mood. AU else is the toil of a weak or ill-developed brain straining to ac- compUsh a task which is relatively too great for it. Hydbophobia from Skunks Bite.â€" Ssv- veral New Jersey farmers have lately lost a number of catUe and hogs, hydrophobia showing itself in an unmistakable manner, aid their concluMon is, that the bite of a skunk was the origin in acme oaaea. Bolwer's 6ambliiiir ' Ea riy one momiog Bnlwer, the novelist, retained to hia hotel from a gambiiDg- houM, where he had beeo paaain? the last boon 9f the night. Por the first time in hia life he had played high and, with the insidious good fortune so frequently atten- dant on the first steps along what would otherwise be t^e shortest and least attrac- tive pathway to perdition, he had gained largely. The day was dawning when he reached his own rooms. His writing-desk stood upon a consote in front of a m'rrcr and pausing over it to lock nphis wianin^s, he was startled and shocked by the refl)c- tion of his fatse in the glass behind it. The expression of the countenance was not only haggard, it was sinitter. Ha had risked far more than he could aflford to lose his lack had been extraordinary and his gains were great. But the ignoble emotions of the night had left their lingering traces in his face, and as he oaught sight ot his own fea- tures still working and gleaming with the fever of a vicious excitement, he, for the first time, despised himself. It was then he formed a resolution that, be the circum- stances what they might, no inducement, whether of need or greed, should again tempt him to become a gambler. Dr. Mo£Eat'8 Ammoniaphone. A remarkable discovery is ropnrted on the authority of a fellow of the Royal Mete- orological society, to which the attention both of the faculty, and of the society, can not be too speedily directed. V:. Cirter Moffat, cousin of the late Dr. Robert M f fat, claims to have invented, after nine years' study, an instrument known as the ammoniaphone, which contains an absorb- ent material saturated with peroxide of hydrogen combined with condensed amine n- ia and other ingrediente, through which a current of air is drawn into the lungs. This is said to be in reality a highly concentrated artiOcial Italianized air, in an extremelv portable condition. D.-. Carter MoflFai'd voice was originally very weak, harsh, and destitute of intonation. By the use cf the amtnoniaphone it has now become a pure tenor of extraordinary range. He no- ticed that after experimenting on himsdf for only fourteen days an expansion of the chest look place to the extent of over half ai inch, with a feelinc; of increased lung space and power of voice, which has since been msintained. Experiments have been made upon choirs in Scotland with extra- ordinary success. As there are a good many choirs in England, to say nothing of the opera companies, which stand in great need of improvement, the ammoniaphone is certain to be in great demand. â€" Pall Mall Oazette. An Inconstant Moon. An aticount of the halting, for pscuniary reasons, of two stage-coaches in Texas says that a passenger named Moon levelled a pis- tol at one of the three robbers " but desist- ed from firing upon discovering a Win Chester pressed against his own r.bs by a highwayman." The passenger's reason for changing his mind seoms to have been so ample that any obtervations as to the incon- stant Moon would ha out of place. Beware of that Cough I it may kill rem; core it at once with Dr. Carsou'B Pulmonar; Cough iorups, it nerer f aila. Large Bottles at 50 cents. For sale evervwhere. Home Testimony. Many hundred recommendations similar in character to the one given below have been re- ceived, and give proof of the great value oi Polson's Nkrviline as a pain remedy. Try it. Athol, Feb. 20 â€"We hereby certify that we have used Nerviline in our families, and have found it a most reliable remedy for cramp i in the stomach, also for headache, and externally for rheumatic pains. No house shoulQ be with- out this Invaluable remedy. â€" Lukb Colk. EusHA Cole. J. 1' Buy a 10 cent sample bottle at any drug store. Large bott es 25 cents, by all druggists. Who is wise He that is wise unto sal- tion. Who is powerful? He that governs his passions. Who is rich^ He that is content. The Tiiangle Package Dyes have won their way to public favor, solely on their own merits, and are now to be found in every lection of the counlry, SO colois All perfect. lOo. Forgetfnlness is one of the broad ways to sin. A ship can be lost by carelessnesM as well as design. The evils of life come mainly through in'vttention. Dr. Carflon's PulmonaiT Cough Drops. The presorip- tion ot an old Canadian Practitioner. The beet remedy for the Lungs, in larse bottles at 50 cents. For sale eTerywhere Not at all Real Jam â€" Dowager â€" "Really, Farmer, I don't see how I can make reduction in your rent if corn doen't pay, why don't you take Mr. Gladstone's advice, and grow fruit for jams?" Farmer â€" "Lor' bless your ladyship 1 Mr. Gad- stone, he doan't know nothin' about it. What's the use o' grow n fruit when t'ne j ar- makers can get turnip i at a quarter the price " GLEMYOUR BOEERS Britannia Scttki Pniver 8ave» Fml, aaoes Bepain, obviates Danger Class Lubricators iSaw 00. Tube Cleaners Savt the Tubea^ Belt Fasteners Save your BtUa. ^?l ^•.^y CX)PLAlf D Sc McLABEN. Cor. Wellinrton Sc Grey Nnn Sts.. MontreaL VOU CAN MAKE MONEY SELLING -*- " Horses, their Feed and their Feet" which all horse owners want Latest and Best Wobk â- price St cents send for terms. Address FOWLER V^^LLS 753 Broadway, New York. OMMON SENSE STILL TRIUMPH- AN T. Fiske's "Common sense" Brace, No straim on pants or shoulders. Requires no buttons on the pants. Sent to ant address, by mail, on receipt of niioo 75c. FI8KE and CO., 277 KiagSt, West, Toronto. BOON TO FARMERS. Circulars free, of new and most productive varieties known of Seed Grain. Testimonials of 110 bush Is ier acre of Boyds Kgyption Oats, Samples of 2 oz., 2 cents JAS BOYD JR, Cedar Grove, Ont. DAKOTA â€" PARTIES DESIRING IN- FORMATION relative to free homes, with cor- rect maps, circulars, and reliable facts, free of charge. Apply to HARRY MERCER, TraveUing Emigiatioa Agent O. M. and St. P. railway. Chatham, 0»t TO PRINTERS Wharfdnle Press »«r Saleâ€" Onlv been five J ears in use, in good order, can be seen running dally at Truth office. Only being sold to make room for a faster macbine. Price iStO. S. Frank Wilson, Toronto, Canada. ELM CITY HARNESS OIL BASED ON BTEATS FOOT OIL. Is the finest harness dressing made. It softens and preserves the leather, and gives it a fine finish. Ask your saddler for it. F. F. DAIjLEY CO.. HAMILTON, ONTARIO. JWSole Agents for the Dominion °®s $100,000 TO LOAN On first-class farm property at lowest rates. Farmers will save money by applying by mail direct to me, Z3. xi- zy o n? ^e*, 48 Adelaide St., East, Toronto. is a perfect gem, equal to an imported French Corset; fits like a glove to the figure; very styl- ish, elegant in appearance, and approved ot by the most fastidious. Manufactured only by THE CROMPTON CORSET CO., 78 YORK STREET. TORONTO- BEAVER S. S. LINE. â- WEEKLY BETWEEN daebee, Montreal, and Llverpttol, CALLING AT QUEENSTOWN AND BELFAST For lowest rates and all partionlars apply to H. E.MURRAY, Bearer Line, Montreal. F. E. DIXON CO, Hanafiietitreri ot Star .Kir* t Leather Belting 70 King Street, East, Tonnto Large double Drivin«; Belts a speoialty.tSend f )r Price Lists and Disootints. Dominion Line of Steamships. Rnnnln«r In conpaetion with the Grand Trnnk I Railway of Canada. Sailing from Quebec every Saturday during the summer months, and from Portland every Thursday during the winter months. PORTLAND TO LIVERPOOL *SarHla, Frb. 88. Ontario, IMar. 30. Montreal, Mar. 6. j Toronto, Har. 87. Oregon, Mar. 13. Dominion, Apl. 3. Rates of passage: Cabin.Portland to Liverpool acoording to steamer and berth, $50, $60, 170, return, $90, fllO, $130; all outside rooms and comfortably heated by steam. Intermediate $10. Steerage, $21. The saloons and staterooms in steamers marked thus are amidships, where but little motion is felt, and no cattle or sheep are carried on them. For further psirticn- lars apply to any Grand Trunk Railway Axent, or local agents of the Company, or to DAVm TOKKANCE Jk C9., General Agents Montreal HAS IXFOBTED 90 PER CENT OF ALL HORSES Ever nported -^^ Prom France to America, Whose Purity of Blood is rstablifhcd bv their Kecorded Fedisreea in the PiT"he ro» 8tud Book of France, which Is the only Draft Horse Record of that country. Wr.Dunharehosjugt j,ub!iE"i a a5.{)00 K^' â- •' his hand- ".â- •l- ^ij- Illustrated .* pacrf? catalo^e lor 1884. ccntainin^ descrlptionf. and ped- igrrees (manv for iO generations) of »,.v™«v».*«: â€" STAllIOIS JIAEES Vow on hand. All Rtallioni, Ruarantped Rrrrders. OitaloBTiie f rpp. Address. M. W. DCMIA M. Wavrip, Pu Pag-eOo., Illinois. t3o miles west of Chicag-o. oii C. N.-W. R'v. ivr A JsrisT^s BROADCAST SEED SOWER HARROW COMBINED. RECEIVED FIRST PRIZE WHEREVER EXHIBITED I Farmers, remember that it is the Beet Machine in use. It will 'work on trough land, in any kind of soil, destroy quack grass. It will sow all kinds of fgrain snd grass seed. Nothing about it to get ont of order. A boy can operate It. Is durable tfnd light oi draft. iBny no oth- er until yov have seen it. Send (or catalogae. ITHE J. W. MAM M'FG. |C0, ROCKYDLLE, ONT. 'i ^* â- 11 !•. i M-i!:| "i| if 1 ' fih. 1^ ^i 4