THE lYSTERIODS KEY OR, TLANNINCJ FOR THE FuruiiE. CHAPTER I. "Geraldâ€" It canuot bo true." "It is true." There was a ring of triuniplj and "Was I not, after all, u true pro- jihotcsT about the lord of high de- gree 1" "Well, iu A certain seuso, you were," la said, with au answering jay in the voico of tl>e young man [ KUiilo, "for ulthuU($.h Mr. Brewster who spoke, and tho sweet- faced wo- was investtxi with uo title, he was man thrilled at the tone of con- aa honest, noblo man, which niean^ fid«nc« with which the words were more to Die than any appellation, uttered. however cxaltc<.l, and 1 am very "1 cannot comprehend. It is jfU | proud of being the son of such a fa- •o strange. Wliat a (X)njplicatiou." j llier ; only there will always bo a "I have the proofs here," said boubc of irreparable loss on uc- Oerald Winchester, as he held up count of our mutual ignorance of the papers in his hand It was, iwleed, a strange situa- tion ; the youug man who, but a short time before. ha<i been but a clerk iu the office of th« wealthy that are too banker, Adam Brewster, now stand- 1 world of ours. Of course, you can ing proudly, with the mystery of ] not feel otiierwise than gratified bis birth cleared by the strange rv- , over tJuB remarkable discovery ; and velationg that the ancient foot-stool ! if Mr. BrewBter could have known the fact." "Yes, that docs seem too bad," returned his friend, with a regret- ful sigii ; "there aro fe« many thing.s bad iu this queer had furnished, as the son and heir ef the dead millionaire. Lady Bromley, who had been fhioHy insitruniontal in the discov- ery of the precious documents in their strange hiding-place, gazed at her protege with eyes kindling with joy- "Ah, Gerald I" she cried eagerly ; let me sec the papers. It seems al- most incredible." "See!" he said excitedly, as ho handed a paper to the woman ; that you were his son, I am sure he would have been as proud of the relationship as yourself. It wiil certainly to a great comfort to you, throughout the remainder if your life to remember that you were his constant companion for some years, and that during that time you eujoyed his full oouft dence." "Yes, indeed, from the depths of my soul I ain grateful for those years cf conlideutial companion- "this is a certificate proving the I ship; but, oh, his whole life seems marriage of Miriam Harris to to have been enshrouded in mys- Adam Brewster, in the year laâ€" , i tery, as well as my own ; there was and here, dated a little less than a year afterward, is another to cer- tify to the baptism of Gerald Win- chester Brewster." "Tlienâ€" then you arc not the son of Miss Winchester's brother, as you have always supposed!" said his second marriage, and the dis- covery that Allison was not his own child " "Not his own child, Gerald !" re- peated Lady Bromley, in surprise. "No. I have not told you about ... that. I have not been able to talk Irfidy Bromley, after she had care-pcry much about her, you know," fully examined the papers which he responded huskily; 'hut I will he had given her. j relate the whole story to you some "No, it teems not; at least, if time, after this puzzle is all my Rurmiscs are correct," Ger.nid solved." The details of the story ' keeping, to make it appear that he replied, but with a look of i)erple.x- j of the death of the beautiful girl' '"*<' hocn defraudinjt his employer, ity sweeping over his face. "Every- 'in the railroad accident were al- } f "d how he had caused his arrest thing seems terribly confused, as ways haunting him. "Then there in the bank upon that fateful Sun vet, and, possibly, I may have i is that inexplicable story about the *^*i.V morning. lumped at conclusions somewhat , present so-called Mrs. Adam Brew- "What a wretch !" indignantly prematurely, but I hope not. You stcr. Ha! " »oe, there was a lot of rubbish in | "Wellâ€" what ?" quickly inquired know," she gently returned; then added, with a ttart: "But if you can prove that your mother was Adam Brewster's wife, it will make that other certificate, which the present supposed Mrs. Brewster produced, a fraudâ€" will it not? And thus you will be found to be the sole heir to the Brewster fortune." "VcH-at least, so it seems to me," Gerald assented. "You will try to prove itt" "Assuredly, if I am convinced, after my investigations in New Haven, that there is the ghoxt of a chance for mo. I have been bitter- ly unroconcihd to the fact that John Hubbard had secured all that wealth which, it seemed to me im- til now, should have gone to Mrs. Charles Manning, who is the daugh- ter of Mr. Brewster's sister ; but, on the basis of the remarkable dis- covery of to-day, I shall at once begin to work for my own interests â€" after consulting with Mr. Lyttle- ton, of course ; he will know in- stantly whether there will be any chance for m-y Ha, ha!" he laughed out suddenly, as )iia mind reverted to some circumstance of the past. "Why do you laugh â€" what amus- es yout" inquired his friend. She was thrilliugly intereste*! in his wonderful history, and did not wish to lose a single point. "I was thinking of a certain moriung some three and a half years ago, when this man vowed that he would crush rae and every- thing else that stood in his path," the young man explained, "and I was wondering how he might feel if the situation was destined to be reversed." Then he told her the little story about the beautiful rose, which Al- lison had playfully thi."own at him on that lovely summer day â€" how John Hubbard had afterward pur- posely knocked it to the floor and ruthlessly set his heel upon it, and warned him that it was typical of his own fate. "But I have it even now," he ccaitinued, opeuing a, tiny locket that was attached to his watch- chain ; "I carefully gathered up every leaf and petal, and, later laid them incased in this, vowing that it should be my mascot, in- stead of the sj'mbol of my defeat and ruin." "Put these safely away, Gerald," she said, as she placed the certiA- cat<»s in his hand; "then read your aunt's letter â€" you do not half-know your own history yet â€" for, doubt- less, it contains a great deal that will interest you, and, possibly, some othsr important 'nformation." (To be contibuod.) â- niEE PLANTING IN HOLLAND. EIiuH and Lindens the Rest, but the Kim iH the Uai-dlcr. There is perhaps no other well populated country in the world which has eo many well wooded | towns as has Holland. Most of the I streets and grachts or canals havej avenues of trees. Utrecht has two! rows of tre^s on either side of its â- quajnt canals. Its canal bank.s arc. coustructed as if in two stories. The lower story, almost flush with: the water level, is lined with ware-) houses ami vai»t«, while the upper story has dwellings and shops. Both levels are planted with trees. So many avenues of trees make a Dutch town exceedingly pleasant, especially on a hot d.ay. The foliage tempers the glare of the sun and the vistas of green are refreshing to the eye. These abundajit growths in thickly populated towns' are highly useful as well as orna- mental. It is recognizM that from a hygienic point of view they are' valuable to the citizens. I In Holland these useful services^ are gratefully recognized and the trees are carefully tended by the; municipalities. The cost of this! care per capita in the different! towns varies somewhat. La-st year, | for example, Utrecht devoted 21 1 cents (Dutch) to its trees for each inliabitant and The Hague 28 cents, for each of its 259,000 citizens. It! takes 2jj Dutch centr to equal aa, American cent. About ten years ago the annual cost of caring for the trees of The Hague was 19 cents (Duteh) per capita, but since i that time many new trees and shrubs have been planted through- 1 out the city and new parks havei been laid out. j I It has been found that not every kind of tree will thrive in the streets of a town, for trees have, many enemies both above and bo- low ground. Gas escaping from that thing"â€" with a glance at the ^ her ladyship, aa he broke off with overturned cricket upon the floor. ' a violent start, a strange look "Perhaps I should not sfeak of it 'sweeping over his face. in that way; but, at any rate, it j "Wait, wait!" ho said almost seemed like rubbish to me when 1 1 breathlessly, the veins lilling out sociated in business with him. But was looking it over ; but, at the hot- , suddenly upon his forehead, a 1 would really g^ory in seeing you torn, I came across a bulky enve- dusky red suffusinc his face: "1 will f ^'in the Brewster fortune from He then relateo, also, how the , pipes underground is the worst man had tampered with his book- «n«niy of trees, because quite small i quantities of it are deadly. For' this reason special precautions are taken against the leakage of gas in Dutch towns. How electricity es- 1 caping underground acts upon trees as yet has not been suflicient- exclaimed Ladv Bromley, wlien he b" studied to be un<lerstood. Trees eoucludrd. "I should judge thatjw»" ""* Bfow m very narrow he had been a sharper from his «'''"*'et8 where the houses are high; youth up. I wonder that so shrewd "either will they thrive if the pave- a man as you have represented Mr. ^^^^ <"""s ""t l*^* »« moisture and Brewster should have become as- air in suflRcJeut quantities. The best trees for street planting ^ __ j in Holland are elms and lindens, | torn, I came across a bulky enve- dusky red suffusing his face; "1 will t «in the Brew'ster fortuno^from ' ''"•^ the elm is the hardier of the, lope addressed to me in my aunt's [tell you presently; excuse me a him. Why, it seems to me that he **" »"« will grow where a linden ; â- â- " â- must have been scheming for it for *'",°"'*- Trees of these kinds hand. In it were these papers, and moment while I go to my room. levcral sheets whieJi she had filled, and which will doubtless explain everything." "But who was Miriam Harris?" queslioncd her ladyship, still study- ing the certificate. GcraUl turned beck to the table and gathered up a couple of other paperx lying there. "Miriam Harris, according to these documents, was the only child of Martha Wincliestor, who married « certain Arthur Harris in 18â€", â- ome twent>five years previous to the date of those slips that you have. Hhe must have been a youn- ger sister of Aunt Honor's, which He sprang to the door, and was gone before she could detain him many years ! His jealousy of you, ir connection with Allison, whom, The excitement of the remarkable it is evident, he intended to marry, revelations was also tolling upon if possible; and then, when she her, and, feeling almost exhausted, she sank into a chair to rest, and to study anew the papers wliticli. she still retained. Gerald was abi>ent fully ten min- utes, and when he returned he was startlingly pale, while there was a look of stem deteimination written upon every line of his face. He had some newspapers in his hands. "There has been a vile plot at work! I said it! I knew it! And would make the latter rny great- j now I am more strongly convinced aunt, instea<l of my father's sister, (^f it than ever I" he said, almost o,& I have always supposed her to 'hoarsely, he was so excited. "See be. This, too, explains why she here '" he went on, pointing to an was so much older than seemed con- article in one of the papers; "this •ihtent, if she had been my own ' gives a full acount of that woman's •unt. I have always known that | claim upon Adam Brewster and my mother's name was Miriam his estate. It also gives the date Harris, hut I supposed that she murricd a Winchester." "Well, it is all very, very •trange," thoughtfully observed Lady Bromley, "but 1 wonder why the knowledge of it has been kept from you ! Why, if you are Adam Brewster's son, were you not under your father's cari to profit by the advantage and position which he was to strangely removed, marry ing that other girl, who appeared as the own and only daughter of the banker â€" all seem to point to that as the goal he was seeking." "Yes; those are my views exact- ly," said Gerald; "and his union with this Miss Anna Brewster was the cleverest move of all, for to him it would prove a bulwark of safety for all time- providing no other flaw was discovered in his work. If he had simply employed those women as accomplices, and then let them go, after paying them a certain price, he would al- ways have been in danger of ex- posure. Now, however, tiicy all have a common interest, and ho never need fear any betrayal through them. But, Mr. John Hub- bard, I firmly believe that at last 1 have found that 'pebble' for my exactly with thati sling!" he concluded, with signi- of the certificate which she brought to prove her marriage to him, and it corresponds upan the one you hold in your handsâ€" April 10. 18â€", is it not?" "Yes," replied her ladyship, after referring to the document in her hands. "Then do you not seeâ€" oh ! it is all so plain to me now!" Gerald Winchester, to bo reared in such c.bscurity ?" '"fbat is a mystery to me as yet,'' replied Ocnild, flu.diing sensitively; "but I presume that Aunt Honor's letter will explain the matter. â- 'Oh: ' he continued, with a pathe- tic yearning in his voice, "why rouUI it not have been? It seems cruel I Cruel! And now I can un- derstand why I was so peculiarly drawn \)) lii.-n ! I oftci used to say t^) myself, when wo were work- ing together in his olTicc : 'Ah! if I could only have luul such a fa- ther, how proud an<l happy I Hhcnild could have given you, instead of; continued eagerly. "John Hub- being committed to the care of Miss I bard must have been at the bot- tom of all that lirewster scandal and trial. He must have learne<l by some means of Mr. Brewster's early marriage, ami that it was a se<!ret which no one besides him felf was supposed to know anything about ; and the man him; elf bcinjc dead, and Allison also, the rcjt was comparatively easy for such an arch-plotter as ho has always beeu. He must have cimo across those re- cords in New Haven, or else known about them, obtainr*! the dates, names, etc., procured an aceoni- plico to help Jiim carry out his scheme, by appoiiring aa the wife have been! He, too, was fond of.ol that early marriage, and so man- ine, m a way, and he trustful me [aged, in his usually clever manner, inMinctive y from the first; he once i to w^rk up this romantic st^jry and toUl mo that he 'would stake his case, which has thrown that mng- (ortiino upon my faithfulnes.H and niticrnt fortune into his hands." integrity.' I can now undorht.ind "Your reasoning certainly sounds why we were BO drawn to each other very plausible, Gerald," responded â€"It was the tie of bloml, of kin-' his' friend. ship. Ftrnggling for expression, fori "I shall go directly to New Ha- rrc.gnit'on," hfl continued, a note ven tomorrow morning and search of ernltati.,11 m his tones. Ithose re<ord8 for myself. I will He wn« trembling visibly, and his Uscertain how a person whoso mai- romp.-in:o- saw that it was with | den name was Louisa Simpson jrr'til didifiiltv he could presorvo; could have boen passed off for an- h.« HHf ,.,,„trol, |r,t)„,r ^.f,,, ^as known as Miriam Wlat did f toll you. Gerald?" I Harris." said Gerald, with consid- â- "I <l. wiih a roguish smile, to eialile warmth. ' the trnor of his thoughts. I "All things are possible, you ficant emphasis. "What do you mean, Gerald?" cried Lady Bromley, laughing at his peculiar tone and language. "Enigmas appear to be the order of this remarkable day." He explained to her by relating BomeJthing of his interview with Mr. Hubbard the day he had met him on the Strand, in London, when the man had twitted him with being a braggart in assuming to be "a second David aching to slay another Goliath." "I believe I have found my peb- ble in those papers which you hold in your hands," he conclude<i, as he pointed to him with a finger that trembled visibly. "I believe you have, too," she gravely observed; "and"â€" laugh- ingly using his own smileâ€" "your sling I know will never fail you while there is a shred of evidence left to prove your position, while something seems to tell me that you will have no difficulty in prov- ing yourself to be Mr. Brewster's son and the only heir to his great wealth." "Ah! But what good will it do me now?" Gerald burst forth, with sudden pain and passion. "It will seem but a mockeryâ€" but the bit- ter irony of fate. Oh, Allison ! Al- lison ! What is anything in life to me now that I have lost you?" Lady Bromley could have wept for him, for the anguish in his tone was like a sharp arrow in her own heart ; but putting a strong curb upon h«n»lf, she arose and went to his tidft reach a great age, like the old elms along the quiet grachts of Kdam, one of the "dead" cities of the Zuyder Zee, which saw the fleets of Van Trorap and Do Ruyter in the harbor of Kdam â€" the harbor which appears so tiny to modern eyes that one with difficulty imagines "the terror of the North Sea" anchor- ing there. Then there are the mag- nificent lindens of the Mallebaan in Utrecht, which appealed to the French monarch, King Louis XIV. Those lindens he commanded his soldiers to spare on peril of their lives. PIRATK8 OF THE AlE. the Little Danger of a RaM on Bank of England. The Bank of England has at pre- sent £40,000,000 of gold stored iu its vaults. This is not a record amount, but it has not often beeu exceeded. As a prominent finan- cier recently suggested that some steps should be taken to protect the nation's treasure-house from possible raids by toreign dirigibles or areroplaues, it may be interest- ing to estimate just what the dang- er from this source is. Assuming that an airship might float over the Old Lady of Thread- needle street and throw out a bomb which would wreck the traesure vaults below, of what benefit would it be to the elevator? Sovereigns run about fifffty-six to the pound, avoirdpois, so that, roughly, the £40,000,000 in the bank would weigh 320 tons. Zep- pelin's airship, the most formidable by far of a > dirigibles, has never yet attempted to carry more than 26 passengers, whose combined weight would probably be no more than 4,000 pounds, or two tons. It would require a fleet of 160 of these aerial monsters to carry off the bank's gold. One of them could not possibly take away more than £250,000, and most airships could not make an ascent with a fifth of that amount. A passenger-carrying aeroplane may be said to have a cargo-carry- ing capacity of 280 pounds â€" rough- ly, £14,000 in gold. It would toke 3,000 such machines to get away with the £40,000,000 in the bank. NATURALLY SO. "I wonder what man on record called the biggest bluff t" "I 'gueis It was the man who named Qibraltar." TOE HUTTO?r BlADS. Trapping Them Only Means of Livelihood of InbabKants. Some time back a party of twen- ty-five interested m nature study and kindred subjects formed them- selves into a parly to make a sea tour among the islands lying be- tween Australia and Tasmania and off the coast of the latter place, says the Sydney limes. One of the party on ills return said there are hundreds of islands in the locality mentioned which from a distance look like mere barren rocks, but on closer exam- ination prove to be fertile terri- tory, many of the islands being in- habited by white communities or native and half carte people who have occupied themselves for many years as trappers of mutton birds for export to Tasmania and for their own consumption. The aver- age cateh on one island is about 1,- 500,000 birds a year, and the in- come from this source amounts to between £5,00 and £6.000. The dark skinned people who oc- cupy Cape Barren Island are of all shades, from the mere oug^restion of tint to pare black, and they have been of this variegated skin color for nearly 100 years. There is a school on this inland attended by sixty or seventy cLiiuren, the teacher being pat*, hy the Tasman- ian Government, which Katisfies its conscience in respect to these un- fortunates by merely givintj them instruction in "the three R's" and takini^ no further trouble to help them to put their eiucation to prac- tical account when they have fin- ished their perioa of school. They are naturally nomadic in their in- stincts and do not know how to organize their affairs, hence as soon as they leave the school tliey take on thT mode of life of their elders, living wpII when the birds are plen- tiful and going short to a greater or less extent in the off season. The touring pa.ty concerned it- self lartrely with the Hird life found UDon t'lc various islands, the speci- mens ineludin!? albatross, frannet, gulls, dotterelB, oyster catchers, pelicans, geesf^ and mutton birds. On Albatross Island, tlie bird the place is named after, hatches its young, and it is saiif that this is the only known place in the world where the bird makes its nest, an old theory being that these myster- ious creatures hatched out their young on their bucks, a theory no doubt absurd, yet forgivable in the early days whou nobody had dis- covered their hutching place. Mutton birds flock on v.».riou8 is- lands iu the vicinity in myrai<ls and the eggs of various birds abound in such huge numbers that ship- loads of them oould bo gathered with comparatively little trouble. It is said that numbers of eggs from these islands find their way into market and a-t gold as duck eggs, which tl ey resemble in ap- pearance and davor. (♦♦"♦^♦♦♦.♦♦♦â- f ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ THOUGHT HER IN MlSimV. The celebrated soprano was in the middle of her cmIo when little Johnny said to hi.^ mother, refer- ring to the corhductor of the or- chestra, "Why does that man hit at the woman with his stick?" "He is not hitting at her," re- plied his mother. "Keep quiet." "Well, then, what is »he hollerin' so fort" "After taking three bottles of your wonderful medicine, our baby was entirely well and needed no more medicine. At six> teen months of age she weighed thirty pounds. She had cried eight months, rtight and day, jmd nothing did her good until we tried Scott'sEmuision."-MRS. E. C. SMITH, Villa Rica, Ga. Scotfs Emulsion probably saved this child's life. Four doctors had been tried. Scott's Emulsion seemed to be just the thing needed, and it is just the thing needed by thousands of other children. It's so easily digested, so pure and harmless, yet most powerful in building up the most deli- cate child or adult. But be sure to get Scott's Emulsion, there are so many worthless and harmful imitations. 'â- AU. DROOGtSTS A Ml top; ot Mm. SmKh't Imtot ibI â- iMk7 otbfln of ft almiUr txft(ur«, («^eUi*t Wltk ftom* of onr Tftlofthls llt«rfttiir« r«. â- ftfUac ohildras, wUi b* Mnt apoa r*. SCOTT * BOWNE IM WalltattM St.. W. TorMU. ♦♦tt • : Abouf tti8 Farm I' : t ••-♦^♦••â- '♦- â- ♦ -f -f-f ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ .f ♦♦♦ f^" SELLING LOW-GRADE SEED,; Practices tending to defeat th^ purpose of the "Seed Control Act, ' in protecting the farmer, are re- porued as being prevalent in some sections of Canada, even among farmers themselves. Not only thi», but also the regulations in the Act, are being violated. Seedsmen just- ly protest against farmers who pro- duce grass and clo\er seeds, Bcft- ing them to neighbors, when tko standard i.s lower than the law al- lows them to handle. Farmers seem to forget that thtfy are liable under the heed Contral Act. The only exemption is th^t the farmer is not obliged to have "each and every receptacle, pack- age, sack or bag containing sueb seeds, or a label securely attach^ thereto, marked in a plain and ip- delible manner," showing name and address of seller, kind of seW contained, and conunon na^mes of weed seeds present. Instaiices axe known where those who deal in seeds refused to purchase lots of seeds from growers because of the preienc© of foul seeds, and whei'o the farmer tlieu sold the same seed to his neighbors. Seed represented as being number one, must nojj contain more than one of the fol- lowing weed seeds per 1,500 of tho seed represented : Wild Mustard; 'i'umbling Mustard, Hare'e-eap Mustard, ball Mustard, Field. Pennycress (IStinkweed or Frenc.*!. Weed), Wild Oats, Blindweed, Perennial Sow Thistle, Ragweed," Purple Cockle, Cow Cockle, Orange" Hawkweed (Paint Brush), Krgot of • Rye (Kclerotia), White Cockle, . Night-flowering Catchfly, False" Flax, Canada Thistle, Ox-eye • Daisy, Curled Dock, Biu© Weed, Ptibgrass (English Plantain or Buck- ' born) In addition, seed of first • quality, offered for sale, n-ust "cou- • tain, out of every one hundred ' seeds, not less than ninety-nine • seeds of the kind or kinds repre- . sented, or seeds of other useful and harmless grasses and clovers, of which uioety-nine seeds ninety must â- be germinable. For the general trade in seeds, the following section applies to all : "No person shall sell or offer, ex- pose or have in his possession for sale, for tho purpose of seeding in Canada, any seeds of timothy, al- sike or red clover, or any mixture ciintaiaing the said seeds, if the Boeda of the weeds named in this Act aro present in a greater pro- l»ortion than five to one thousand o( the seed sold or offere<l, exposed or held in possession for sale.' Every intelligent faimer realizes kiiat ouly '.'lean farming pays, and that, in order to keep down weeds, strict core must be taken to avoid introducing the pests through grain, grass or clover seeds. Pro- tection is afforded against all ven- dors, whether seedsman, general «tore'u<^ppr or farmer. In order to be fair to those who handle seeds, the Act stipulates â- that complaint must be made with- in seven days. The section relat- ing to this reads: "Any sample of seeds taken from any seed found or Buspecteil t<j be sold in violation of the provisions of this Act shall be taken and forwarded to au ofii- cial seed analyst : (a> From seeds tnat are sold in sealed packages, sacks, bags, or receptacles, at the time of breaking the seal thereon; and (b) from veivds thit are not sold in sealed packages, sacks, bags or receptacles, within seven days from tho date on which tho seeds entered into the personal possession and became the proper- ty of the purchaser." Samples for official analybis are to be drawn in the presence of the vendor or two disinterested witnesses, and for- warded with a certiliod statement, accompanied by name and address of the vendor, and particulars re- lating to the seed. Those making purchases of seed would do well to examine it care- fully at the time of purchase. If there is ground for complaint, write at once to the Seed Commis- sioner, Ottawa, Ont. It is his duty to make investigation, and do everything possible to protect tho purchaser from undue contamina- tion of his fields with foul seeds, and, if circumstances warrant, to prosecute the vendor of such seed. Four conditions form exceptions to the Act. viz. : (a) Any person growing or selling seeds for t.ho purpose of food ; (b) auy person sol- ling seeds direct t< menhauts, to be cleaned or graded "before being offered for sale for seeding purpos- es; (c) seed held in storage, to be reclaimed before being sold for setding purposes; (d) seed marked "not aosolutoly clean," and held or sold for export only. All seed held for salo in Canada for seeding pur- poses, comes under the Act, and offenders are liable to prosecution. During the past few^ weeks sam- ples have been collected from stock sold by farmers, and if there is proof of violation of the act, the offenders are liable to prosecutiou. In the interests of Canadian agri- culture, those farmers who are guilty of selling low-grade seed should be dealt with just as promptly as they would have other \endors treated.â€" Farmer's Advo- cate.