THE FARM. Crops for â- Sreen Feeding in Summer. Oue of the first croix? in the sprinj that is availalile for i«ilin« is rye, writes Prof. C. S. Pheips. Thia crop should be -soivii Sept. 1, at the rate of two and one-half or three bushels per acre. The time during 'which the crop is in the best cxmdition for feeding is short After the heads have generally appear- ed the rye snon Ijecomes woody, and is then more or less rejected by stock. For this reason the period of feeding must be sliort, and large crops cannot be exi)ected. Another spring crop, and one that may be made to follow rye if desired, is winter wheat. This crop Is more leafy, develops more slowly than rye, and can be advajitageously fed for a longer period of days. Although not a legume, it gives quite a high percent- age of proiem, ami b a fodder to which cows seem to re-spond readily with an increased product. Like rye, it needs to be thickly sown â€" not leas than two and one-half bushels per acre. Thia crop responds quiokiy to the application of nitrogen, nitrate of aoda probably giving the quickest returns. By the us© of fertilizers rich in nitrogen, not only the total yield >u'. also the value of the crop may be v».-y materially in- creased. BED CLOVER. Farmsrs to-day do not appreciate the value of clover as a forage and hay plants to the extent that its merits war- rant. JVIany contend that the seasons have changed, and that clover ia more apt to winterkill than formerly, but this is proliably not the reul cause of the de(;reas«. The fac-t that hay with sim- ply a small admixture of clover in branded as second class by liverymen may have something to do with the re- duction in the amount ^rown. This is all wron^, for an ajlmixture of well- cured clover improves the value of hay for all kinds of live stock. It seems probable that there La something lack- vns in our soil that makes clover less productive than formerly. The best clover lands are found in limestone re^- ioiiis. and it is quite likely that the lack of lime in the soil is often the cause of failure with the crop. Nejtt to the '^raisses, clover Is cne of our surest crops for hay, and ten tons plight Ije ^rown with profit where one i» now produced. The experience of some of the leading farmers in many sections has .shown that the liest time to sow red clover is after wmler ^rain. durioij; the latter part of July. A (food catch is generally obt.iiaed at this time, an<l the clover Incomes firmly rooted by winter, and is not liabl.j to be thrown out as a result of freezing and thawing during the winter and spring. Red clover is one of the most nitrogenous of our fodders, and can !» profitably fed for alxiut two or three weeks in June. A gcod second '.-rup will be available early in August, and on rich lands a third crop alxnit Sept. 20 ia not uncommon. Alfalfa takes its place in the west. OATS AND PEAS. Uats and field peas smvn broadcast as early in the a|>rin« aa the soil can be thoroughly worked, make one of the l)est crops for July fee<l that we have yet tried. The largc-i; rowing western oats are to be perferred. Sown at the rate of 1 1-2 bush, of oats and 1 1-2 bush, of the peaa, the amount of fod- der may )» made to reach 10 to 12 tons per acre. It a lai-jaie, strawy variety of oats are sown, they will afford support to the pea vines, and serioas lodging of the fodder will _not result, except in case of very severe storms. The best plan appears to Ix-, to make two or three s.>wing3, one week or ten days apart, and to use the fodder from these areas siK'cessively. At our station in Con- necticut, the first sowing was made one year on April 17. Feeding from this area was begun June 25 and con- tinueil until July 11, the vield l>eing at the rate of 15 1-2 tons ol ^reen fodder per acre. The second sowmg was not as heavy, but gave good feed from July U to 18, the yield bein^ at the rate of IS 1-2 tons per acre. Oats and peas give one of the Ixsst crops tor summer feeding during the month of July that we have yet tried. U Ls also valuable tor making into hay, but requires a larige amount of drying in the cwk ; indeed, so much that it is often diffi- cult to make it into good hay. During the first part of August, and some seasons late in Jul^, there is a period that .teems rather difficult to cover. At this time we have used to advantage huTigarian grass sown about the first of June. In fertile soils a heavy sec- ond crop of red clover will liecome avail- able early in August, and this will fill out the time till com or some other oiXH> bet-omes available. FODDER CORN. There is perhaps no forage plant let- ter known to our farmers tnan corn. The total amount of food materials tur- nlslied by this crop i^i without doubt greater than from any other of our common green fodders. The nutritive value of The toiider is, however, much less, pound for pound, than the fotl- der of clovers, peas, or soy lieans. Wo are firmly of the Ijelief that some of the more highly nutritious fodiler plants, like soy beans and cowpeas, can lie sulnstituted for corn, and l)e grown with a smaller drain on the fertility of the soil. SOY BEANS. This valuable fodder plant was in- troduced from Japan. There are sev- eral varieties, some of which are especi- ally vaiualde for the seeds, while other.s produce little seed but a large amount of forage, "Medium IJrwn" l)eing the best Cor fora|ge. The plant grows about three feet high, li leafy and quite sue culent, and us well eaten by cattle. In fairly fertile soils it will produce ten ton.s of green fodder per aoie. It should )ie sown in drilU 2 1-3 feet aparl at the rate of 1 to I 1-4 bushels i>or acre. It may lie sown about the sam") time that corn is planted, and will pro- duce valuable totlder tor stall feediii»j Aug. 10-30. Cultivate freely in the early part of the season of growth. COWPKAS. This fodder p}ant hjis l)eeu grown by the Storrs station for the past sev- en yeam. The results have been gen- erallv satisfactory, and where the crop has f>een grown on warm soils with a literal quantity of mineral ferlilixor, yields of from ei^ht to ten tons have I <v:r: Qbtalbe<t. Mtt&t of the area seeded to this crop was feitilized onl}' with mineral fertilizers. A .small area to which nitrogen was supplied in addition to the al)ove. appeared to give no in- crease in crop. This crop has furnish- ed good feed during most of the month of Septeml)er. Consideral)le exper- ience with this valuable fotider plant leads us to re;von)inend it for green feadlng or for silage. Most seasons the crop may well l» fed from about Sept. 1 to 20. or until injurious frosts occur. Tlie yield one year was at the rate of eight tons [ler acre, while the next it gave 11 tons per acre. T'here are great differences in yield due to variety. The Clay varietv is the best for fodder, .sown in drlllB 2 i-2 feet apart at the rate of 1 to I 1-4 bush, per acre, about two weeks later than corn is usually planted. TEA-GROWING AND DRINKING. EnKli»li>l!i|»eHhlui; People Arc the breat «'un- KUiMerM* A collect iim of the statistics of the tea trade shows that the consumption of British-grown tea continues to in- crease, not only at home, but in foreign and colonial markets, says the London Standard. Up to the end of last Octol)- er about 30,000,000 pounds had l>een ab- 30rl>ed outside this country, against 24,- 000,000 at the same date in the previous year. The absolute quantity is small, but the relative increase indicates a very encouraging tendency. In view of the large amount of British capital now invested In tea-planting, and the rapid extension of the industry in recent -years, it has become a matter of great commercial importance to find new markets. India and Ceylon can not continue indefinitely to displace' the China product in Great Britain, lie- cause there Is by this time comiiaralive PERSONAL POINTERS. IwniH of lalrmil About S*>me of Ike Urcat F«lkii«rth« World. Touog Alfonso of Spain has just put on hU first regular military uriform with much pride. Being neaa'ly ten years old, I he juvenile numarch held a grand recejuion on his name-day. and was allowed t.o appear in the ctjsiume of a pupU of tho Infantry I'raiuing School. He looked a soldierly little fel- low, though .still somewhat fragile. Roisslnl WHS bom on Feb. 29, and it pleased him to have his blrttdav . . â- brated only in leap j-ear La his Jd age, he used to say that he was twcity. This yt_,r, as usual every four yirs, tha composer's native town, lesaro, will oelelirate the event, and as Maa- cagni will prepare the programme it is likHly to be most interesting. Senator Hill, of New York, devotes his leisure, while other men in Con- gress are alHiorbed in those socii^ amuse- ment.3 which he deprecates, to the study of the works of WUliam Shakespeare. In this way he obtains a refined and rational recreation, and he furnishes his mind with famous passage suitalile for for quotation in the Senate chamber. Lucrezia Borgia was a singularly lieautiful woman, with grey eyes and yellow hair. It was said of her that her upper eyelids drooped over more thin half the iris, ao as to give the eye a languid expression. Sha had a pecu- liar trick of looking steadily sideways at those with whom she conversed, and this peculiarity invariably excited dis- trust in those who observed it. Joao de Deus, who recently died at Lislwn. was the most celebrated of modern Portuguese poets. He was bom in 1830. and studied law at the Univers- ity of Coimbra. He devted himself to poetry, ajid was hailed as a second Camoens. His puldished works are few in uiunlier, but his poems are remark- able for originality of thought and pur- ity of style and treatment. U is related that Baron de Roths- child, of Paris, ouoe called Guzman Blanco the richest man in the world. When the Venezuelan dictator protest- ed against the oomplfment Rothschild retorted:â€" "You are surely the richest man in the world, for who else has estates comprising 600,000 square miles of territory f Who else has an income jof «37.000,000f Who else has 2,.")(l0.000 ] slave's {" Guzman was noi slow in eyes. They gazed at each other silent- ly for a moment, and when the old man uarniled the incident the tears roll- ed down his cheeks. " Ah, that was a ijad day for France," he said. " They were kind to ev«rylx>dy and helped the poor." We have come to look upon the edu- cated Englislunan as the disciple of all sports, .says a New York paiier. A non- .â- jporting Englishman is regarded as a curiosity. Chamberlain, then, is a curiosity. He takes not even the or- dinary exercise of wal king, to say noth- ing of going in for siwrls. He is one of the inveterate smokers of the gen- eration, and I lielieve smoking is wor.se for the system than drink, but he does not even seem to lie nuude nervous liy extravagant indulgence In the weed. Of himself he said recently ; " I do not cycle ; I do not ride ; I do not walk when I can help it ; I do not play cricket ; I do not play footliall ; I do not play ten- nis, and I do not even play golf, which I have understood la an indispensable condition of statesmanship â€" in fact, I do not take any exercise at all." ly little left to displace, and, unless other countriies can •» induced to fol- low onr exanmle. the trade is likely to suffer seriously from overproduction. Happily, there are signs of a growing taste for tea in all parts of the world, md if our neighlxirs only become half as fonrt of it as ourselves there will be room for the multiplication of East In- dian plantations tor years to come. Taking .some of the principal European countries which have never Ijeen given to tea drinking, wk find a distinct in- crease In most of them. Thus it appears that lietween 1880 and 1892 the annual consumption rose In Germany from 3.- 000,000 to nearly 6.0(X).000 pounds, in , . round numliei-s; In France, from 1,000,- ! scouig the jwiut. 000 to 1.500,000 ; in Austria-Hungary, j Sam Cliffe, who cla-imcd to lie the sole from 725,000 to 1.500.000 ; in Norway and i survivor of ruiming footm.jn, died re- Sweden, fix>m 300,000 to .')U0,0IK): m i ,, . . , „., , ,, Switzerland nearly the same, while in ^en^ly m London, aged 92. Ui old post- Bulgaria the amount was qua^lrupled ' ing days h« was emjiLoyed to secure re- in the period given. Only in Belgium i. lav,. His general run was sixtv miles and Portugal does there appear to have i ^ j^y q,j ^u ,^, great toads from the lieen a fall, and that but slight. All i north to the miaroiKills hs was a well- theae are cottee-driuking ixiuntries. i known figui-e, and his supplies en route In these where tea is already the , were furnished without demur, ami the popular drinkâ€" Great Britain. Russia I cost charged to his patrons. Up to the and Holland, and over seas, our colonies [ higt h« was in receipt of a pension of and the United Statesâ€" it also grows , |s a week continuously in favor, though, of course, there is not room for such a large re- A Market for Canadian Horses. The average annual importation of horses uato Great Britain amounts to 20,000 and till very recently the supply came from the continent of Europe. But since 1890 the United States and Canada have captured a considerable percentage of the business. In 1894 the former country exported to England 4733 horses, while Canada's quota amounted to 5000. A London firm of horse dealers advise that from January to May is the liest time to put horses on the English market. "Sizable car- riage horses, 15.2 to 16 hands high, suitable tor private buyers and our London job masters, realize from 3200 lo $500, according to size and quality. I'ho stronger class here, used in our omnibuses, trams and van work, fetch from $150 to $250. The age should lie from 5 to 6 years. They must lie quiet in harness and to ride, as the case may be, and without any lirand marks." lative increase. The total consiunption of all countries .rom which returns are obtainable, exclusive of the East, shows a rise of 23 per cent, in t he twelve years. In short, tea seems to l<e conquering the world ; thcne who used not to drink it have liegun to do so. and those who drank it before drink mure than ever. WORK OP A SINGLE DAY. Some Startling Facts Concerning the Action of the He<rt. Do people recognize the work transacted by the heart in a sin- gle day } It equals that of lifting one hundred and fifty pounds to a height of thirty-three hundred feet. And ye!, knowingly, or through ignor- ance, nine out of ten people almse this hardest worked organ of the body. There is nothing remarkable in the fact and apoplexy Since the foundation of the English Royal Academy in 1768. there have only lieen elected ten presidents. They were Sir Joshua Reynolds, appointed in 1708; Benjamin West, in 1792; James Wyatt, in 1805 ; Benjamin West , in 1806 ; Sir Thom-is Lawrence, in 1820 • .Sir Martin A. Shse, in 1830 ^ Sir Charles Fast lake, in 1850 ; Sir Kdwui Landseer, elected in 1866, but declining t« serve ; Sir Francis Grant. wLj was elected in 18ti6 ; and ths late Lord Leighion, in 1C78. Captain R. tirey. one of the English prisoners in the Pietoria goal, had a immense j cLTious expe ience. On the very day he wa« captured by the Boera he was honoured by the Queen, the order run- in^ thus:â€" "To l>e ordinary memlier of third class, or companion, of the most distinguished Order of .'^l. Michael and St, George ; Captain Raleigh Grey, on relinquishing '.he apixiintiiicnt of lieu- tenant-colone commandment of the that heart failure and apoplexy are among the most prevalent diseases of i Brit ish Bei-huanaland lx>ider police." the day. Happily a remedy is found I „ . _, ,. . ^, ,, in Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart, I' rancois Coppte lives at the south which gives relief Instantly. This me- end of the Faulxjurg .SHiut-Germain In dicine should be kept in every house, a district all saddened bv houpitals, il- rea'r^tou^lett filLf LfLic'^^'^'rh^ I lu'"-ted by the gilded dome of the ON A BICICLE TOUR. A CLERGYMAN'S EXPERIENCE WITH LONG, HARD RIDING. Ila.i Travrlled Folly ,'t,eo« Miles on â- !* Whrelâ€" Be .Hakm Same Krileclloaa 9m Ike KcBcnis •{ Ike imparl, aad Tclii •! Ik* Waaecr*. From the Utica, N.Y., Pre^. The Rev. Wm. P.F. Ferguson, Pres- byterian Minister at' ^Vhit6sbo^o. whose picture we give lulow. will not be un- familiar by sight to mnny reailers. A young man, be lias still had an extended experience as foreign missionary, teach- er, editor, lecturer and pastor (hat has given him a wide :ici{ualntaiice in many parts of the country. In an interview a few days ago, he said : "In the early summer of "94 I went upon a tour through a part of Ontario on my wheel. My it>ute was from Utica to Cape Vinc-ent, thence by steamer to Kingston, and from there along the north shore of the lake to Toronto and around to Niagara Falls. I arrived at Caiie Vincent at 5 o'clock, having rid- den against a strong head wind all day. sived, by its prompt and efficient work, .Hotel des liivalides, where veterans of the lives of thousands of Canadians. many wars are at ease. Copjiee Ls in Sold by W. F. Ricliardson. Why He Declined. It was a son of Erin who asked the meeting to excuse him from serving on a committee because he exjiected to be unexpectedly called away. Catarrh and Hay Pever Relieved In Ten to .Sixty Minutes. One short puff of the breath through the blower, supplied with each bottle of Dr. Agnfew's Catarrhal Powder, dif- fuses this powder over the surface of the nasal pass.iges. Painless and de- lightful to use, it relieves instantly and permanently cures catarrh, hay fever, colds, headache, sore throat, ton- silitis and deifness. 60 cents. Sold by druggists. Sample liottle and blow- er sent on receipt of two three-cent stamps. S. G. Detohon, 44 Church St., Toronto. Sold by W. E. Richardson. Dauber's Occupation. Poor Daulier's only means of gain- ing a living is by his brush. Really ! Why. 1 didn't, know he was an artist I Oh I no ; he Isn't. He's a bouse paint- er. KIDNEY TROUBLE, The Bane of Millions of Lives, Can be Cured The diseases that we so dread do not come upon us at one step. They are a matter of growth. The sad news is only too commim of friends who have died of Bright's disea.se. dialietes and kindred complaints. It is known that in the .system of thousands exists the seeds that in a short time will develop into these dre*d maladies. Disease of the kidneys in its mildest form never stands still. The warning is worth heeding that efforts should lie prompt- ly ! aken to eradicate the slightest symptoms ot kidney disease, and in S'out h Amoricsvn Kidney Cure is found a sure and sifo remedy tor every form of kidnev troulile. Whether chronic, incipi<int" or in some of the distressing phiises 31) well known, it proves an ef- fective, and. what Is pleasing to know, a readv and quick Cure. Sold' by W. E. Richardson. delicate hetUth, but, although he Is a popular poet, a gentle artist, a drama- tist, the author of " Les Jacobites," an academician, an essayist of Le Journal, a dramatic critic of Le Paris, and a writer of stories for many journaLs and mugazUius, he is poor, he cannot afford not to lie at work for a month, and he is not 8ur!)rlsed at this condition at all. Lord Lcighton left one of the most interesting art collections in England, a collection particu.'arly rich in works of Corot and Constable, and it was housed in one of the most luxurious homes in London. In addition to his celebrity as a painter and .sculptor Lord Leighton had great talent as a linguist and as an orator, and he was a vei'y fine figure of a man â€" one of the band-soiiicst in all London. He was at home to his friends In his studio every Sunda.v, on which oc- casions he usually wore a shaliby black velvet coat that was in striking con- trast with his head of silvery hair. " It is an open .secret," .says the La- dies' Pictorial of London, " thati the Quee.i takes a deep personal as well ns Imiierial interest in South African af- fairs ; but it Is a mistake to suppose as many do. that her Majesty has a large, financial stake in the success of the Chart«i;ed Company. I Ijelieve there w.xs a time when the Queen and the Prinoe of Wales had consideral)le in vestments with the company, but that some time ago they relinquished all their intoiest m the shares. At the .siiuie time, the tact th:it the Duke of i'Hfc is one of the loading spirits of th," enterprise cannot fail to increase her Ma.iesty's anxiety as to the issue of the crisis." Not long s'lnce the ex-Empress Eu- genie visited a gallery of pictures at Monaco. The piuide. an old so!dicr,wear- ing his decoral ion, was kindly address- ed l)y her. and -she enquired in what regiment he had served. " In the Ini- perLvl Guard," he ropliod. as he looked at the b.eiit, white-haired, widowed fig- ure leaning on a stick, and the memory of t Ik" Empress he had .served in all the brilliancy of her lioauty ros9 Ijcfoi-e his Catarrh in the Head Is a (langeroos disease because it ia liable to result in loss of hearing o» smell, or develop into coniiumptiuii. Read the followiug : " My wife has been • sntferer from catarrh for the put four years and the disease had gone go far that her eyesight was affected so that for nearly a yeaa she was unable to read (or more than five minuteH at a time. Ske guOered severs pains in the bead and at times was almost iistracted. About Christmaa, she com- menced taking Hood's SarsaparllU, and since that time has steadily improved. She has taken six bottles of Hood'a Sar- saparills and Is on the road to a complete cure. I cannot speak too highly ot Hood's SarsBpartUa, and I chnerfi.!:,- recommend It." W. Q. FussiXR, Newmarkat, Ontario. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is th3 Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. Hrt«/i'a*DiII« «"'* habitual eonstlpt* nUUU S rUIS tlon. rrioo28o.p«:boa. FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS. OUIMNS BAKING POWDER :H-Cr<>rSREST5:?IEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. "After a delightful sail through the Thousand Islands, 1 slcppcd on shore in that quaint old city of Kingston. A shmver had fallen and the streets were damp, so that wisdom would have dic- tated that I, leg-vv-eary as I was, should have kepi in dc-ors, but so anxious was I to see the city that I sjwnt the whole evening in the streets. "Five o'clock the next moi-ning brought a very unwelcome discovery. 1 was lame in beth !inkli>s and knees. I'he head wind and the damp streets had proved an unfortunate combination. I gave, however, little thought to it, .sup- iiosing it would wear off in a few hours, and the first flash of sunlight .saw me speediiug out the splendid road that leails toward Napanee. "Night overtook me at a little vil- lage near Port. Hope, but found me still lame. 1 rested the next day. aiid the next, but it wai too lato ; the mischief was done. ' ro I" i jocl many miles during the rest of the season, but never a day and Mildom a mile withoui pain. "Th3 winter c,uii»3 antV I put away my wb>»l, saying ''no^v t s'laJI get well.' I>iit to my disap|)oini nisrtt t grew worse. St>ni!> dtuys my kiiet>.s almost torl)ade walking and my ankles would not per- mit me to wear sho&. At timiafl I suf- fered severe )>ain. .so severe as to make study a practical iiniiossibility, yot it must l)e understixxl ih'it I concealed th" condition of affairs ;is far as possi- ble. From iieing local the trouble Iwjgan to sproati slightly and my anxiety in- crejissd. I c^nisulted two physicians and followed their excellent advice, but without result. .So the winter jmssnd. One day in Mareh I liap|>ened to take in my hsnd a newspaper in which a good deal of sytacR was takm by an ar- ticle in relation to Dr. Williaims'- Pink Pills. I did ii'it: at llMt tiiu». know what l.liey were srupiKised to care. I sh mid b vvA paid no attention lo ihc article hv.l I not caught the name of a. lady wh'Mii t knew. Reading, I found that .she, had Iwfin <{r»ai.ly Iwnefitcd by the us<> of Pink Pills, uid knowin;r her a,s I djIB I Ivad no dou! 1 of the truth of the statement that she had authoriz- ed. The iirst lx>x was not gone l)etore I saw a change, and the third had not l;e«n tiuished Iwfore all signs of my rheumatic troubles were gone to stay. " I say ' g<me to stay ' for though there has l)een every opportunity for a re- turn of the trouble, I have not tell the first twinge of it. I have wheeled thou- sands of miles and never l>efore with so little discomfort. I have had some of the most severe tests of strength and endurance and have come througli them without an ache. For example, one afternoon I rede seventy miles, preach- ed t liat night and made fifty miles of the hardest kmd ol road Ijefore noon the next day. Another instance was a ' C«ntury run,' the last forty miles oi which were made in a downpour ol laiii through mud and slush. " You should think 1 would recom- mend the:n to others* Well, 1 have,ai»d have had the pleasure of .seeina very good results in a numlier of instances. Yes. I should feel that I was neglect- ing a duty if I tailed to suggest Pink Pills to any friend whom I knew to be suffering from rheumatism. "No, that is not the only diseaaa they cure. I personally know of a number of cura^ from other troubles, but I have needed them only for that, though it would be but fair to add that my general health has been better thia summer than ever before in m^ life. l3r. Williams' Pink Pills contain all tile elenicnla necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They aie sold in boxes (never in looee form, by the dozen or hundred) at 50 cental a box, or six boxes for J2.50, and may be had of all druggists or directly by mail from Dr. WiiuuiiK' Medicine Company. Brock- vUle, Ont. Fixing the Flavor. Waiter- 1 can't satisfy that guest nohow. He says the steak don't tasl« right yet. Cookâ€" Where's ho from? From the West. And this Is Western Ijeef. I told him so, but he said it didnt taste right somehow. Qh I 1 see. He's used (o steak cooked on a soft coal fire. Hold it over that lamp chimney a. while." THE PAIN LEFT QUICKLY. Rheumatism of Seven Tears Standing Cured in a Few Days. I have Ijeen a victim of rheumatism for seven years, l)eing confined to bed for months at a time, unable to turn mvself. 1 have i)een treated by many physicians in this part of the country, none ot %vhom bsnetited me. I had no faith in rheumatic cures advertised, but my wife in<luced me to get a bottle of South .\merican Rheumatic Cure from Mr. Taylor, druggist, Owen Sound. At the time 1 was suffering agonizing pain, l)u! inside ot twelve hours after I took the first dose the pain left me. I continued until I took three iMjttlea, and I consider I am completely cured. (Signed) J. U. McLEOD, Loith P.0„ Ont. Sold by W. E. Richardsoa. A Resignation. To on© of two brothers who keep • store on Main street n.n old emi>loye came last night. If your l)rother dee-^n't take back wliat he said to me vcsterday I'm going to quit, announced "the maii. with dignity. What did he say. nskeil the i>rother. He said i hat the tinn wouldn't require my services any louge.". Her Failing How tedious it is playing whist vtth such a partner as that Miss Gndalviut ' Yes; 1 lieliove that girl would ask i.io angel Gabriel "what's triuup i" »,.,»;,aif.--^-,:-'^.grir â- ^^^^^^S^^^^-^^SHi^^^^^^ â-