ht \f kin, and the Watkin tower will probabl be much talked of, later on. 'hnn'lllbz four elevators, two running up 150 feet only, the other two m’w feet. The first &m 160 feat the ground, and 200 feet square, will contain rastaurâ€" ants and a concert hall. The second piatâ€" form is 500 fest high. . A thlrd.h:ahcr still, will have a post and telephone At the very top will be an observatory, surâ€" panorama to look down upon. . The «rchiâ€" teot of the new tower is Sir Edward Watâ€" The Great Structure Now Balldrng Th a London Saburbâ€"It Will be 1,1530 Fee High and Cost $1,000,000, The steel abortion which was the drawâ€" hf card of theParis Expdsition is bsing eclipsed, in height at lflfli b{ a similar construction at Wembley Park, London, where 150 workmen â€"are now putting up a tower which is to be 1,150 Mhm ‘fio Riffel h'.‘!.: Patis is 975 1:: lu::r stands on ground near Seine, but in i o eohe Pntioneny a Tr, Williams‘ Pink Pills are sold on'K in boxes bearing the firm‘s trade mark. ey are never sold in bulk, and any dealer who <offers substitutes in this form is trying to defrand and should be avoided. The pubâ€" lic are cautioned against other so called blood builders and nerve tonics, put up in similar form intended t> deceive. . Ask for Dr. Williams‘ Pink Piils for Pale Poople, and refese all imitations and substitutes. Can be had from all dealers or by mail from the Dr. Willisms‘ Medicine: Company, Brockwville, Ont., or Schenectady, N. 1, at 50 cents a box or six bores for $2.50. parents imagine. . ‘Their complexion isâ€"pale and wur in â€" appearance, troubled with heart palpitation, headaches, shortness of breath on the slightest exercise, fainticns and other distressing symptoms which inâ€" variably lead to a premature grave unless prompt steps are taken to bring about a natural condition of health. _ In this emérâ€" gency no remedy yet discovered can anppl the placeof Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, wï¬ic{ build anew the blood, strengthen the nerves and restore the glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks. 5l'hay are certain cure for all troubles peculiar to the female system, young omaln}.’e Pink Pills alsoâ€" cure such diseases as rheumatism, neuralgia. partial snnly-h, locomotor alaxia, 3t Vitus‘ lance, nervous headache, nervous prostraâ€" tion, the after effects of la grippe, and severe colds, diseases depending on humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic eryâ€" sipelas, etc. . In the case of men they effect a radical cureâ€"in all sases arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses, . The Qscen is said to have si t nge!,u-.uo»n"..mu Mrs.J. E. Hunter, wife of the evangeâ€" list, told the reporter that Miss Harris was a good, reliable and truthful girl, and that perfect reliance could be }Suud in her statements. ‘"She looks like a different girl from what she was when she came here a year ago," said Mrs. Hunter. The facts above related are important to %ui as there are many: g-n; girls just is, to -Â¥ the h-t.Tmon critical than their parents imagine. . Their complexion isâ€"pale h&(;, and she will toll you I have never been ill a day since coming here, and I always feel strong and able to do‘the work. 1 can and.do strongly recommend Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills," said Miss Harris in conclusion. fler appearance is certainly that of a strong, healthy young woman. Mre. f E. Hunter. wife of the evangeâ€" Hunter brought back from Brockville, I am ?erfectly cured. I have not been ill a single day since I finished the seventh_box of pills. I came to Mrs. Hunter‘s a year alive. _ It was my grit and strong will, the doom%.‘ï¬{n kept me alive mt. all. â€" If T tried to stand for a ghort time, or if T got the vlmt’git warm 1 would fall ovorlin m faint. My eyes were white and glassy, and I wasso thin and pallid that everyone believed 1 was dying of conâ€" sumption. . During the five years I was ill, I was attended by five physicians in St. Thomas, two in Detroit, one in London and one in Aylmer, and none of them could do anything for me, I was so far gone that they had no hopes of my recovery. Towards the last my feet and limrgl swelled so they had‘ toâ€"be . bandaged‘ to" keep them from bursting. They were bandaged for three months, aud my whole %ody was swollen and bloated, and "I believe Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills saved my life, and I am quitq willing that everyoneshounld know it," was the reply of ‘Miss Harris when asked if sho had been benefited‘ by Pink Pills, and if so would she make public her story. Continuing,â€" she said, "%hen I was twelve or thirteen years of age I was first taken sick. The dectors said my ‘blood had all turned to water. For fiveyears I suffered terribly, and was so weak that I could barely ‘kgep Stanley road, who had been cured by Pink Pills of ‘running vicers on the limbs after years of suffering, and after having been given up by a number of physicians, ‘The old lady had entirely recovered, and could not-Â¥ too much in praise of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, which had given her a new lease of life. As it was with Mrs. Cope, so it was with Miss EAua Harris, the young lady in the employ of Mr, Hunter‘s family who had heen restored to health and strength 3 Pink Pills. Miss Harris has just passâ€" her twentieth year, and is a daughter of George Harris whoâ€" lives av Yarmouth Heights, and is employed by Mr. Geo. Boucher, florist and plantsman. _ it was a wonderful story that the young lady had to tell, and is un loubtedly as true as it is wonderful, Lmst June the same reâ€" porter interviewed Mrs. John Cope, wife of the tollgateâ€"keeper on the London and Port The Startling Experience of a Young Lady in St. Thomas. A Constant bufferer for More Than Five Yearsâ€"Mer Blood had Turned to Water â€"Physicians Meld out no Hope of Mer . _ Mecoveryâ€"Mow Her Life Was Savedâ€"A ::‘d.“d to innni&nu a ‘marvellous cure to have been o:aw}‘ huthn nï¬u of a mg lady em r. _ Huntor‘s {::TB, b ,lhlt pr.‘bknovn and popzll:r remedy, ï¬r Williams‘" Pink Pillls. "And live in «n nige noted for it energation sext. ve in an age or. its energetic, t MM&- endeavor, â€" this EA of Mr. Ho to impress the uruths of the scripâ€" wares upon those who read though they run, is altogether so original_and soâ€"novel \hn‘::t once excites the curtosity." %ou mot familiar with the text make a mental note of it, and at the first opportunity look it up. ‘This is just what was done bK & representative of the Journal, who had sccasion to visit Mr, Hunter‘s residence the other day,‘ But with the object of the visit and .the information obtained the reader will be more concerned. . ‘The reporter was J.E. Hunter, In letters of gold on the mained glass (ull‘%t over the door of his pesidence, No. 113 Wellingtonstreet, is the TALLER THRAN THE EIFFEL A MIRACLE OF TOâ€"DAY nï¬ ie i ++ ie en ce m prndly us t &_ o rmnbierimenenrns 220. / / ipeiilthine veamremnis aysvap ns Wt tall Wim before he leaves me |" _ doar git noae not 9M 4 pive you feays."""" _ "She amiled at this sho looked ap brightâ€" only teasing .{hql ,I ‘-olo e was you, t me -d’,'mnlmtht such a ‘fellow as that d dare to look at you even. Now, look here," He had put his arm round her tl:.nll her head nestled confidingly on his shoulder, * I had meant to wait, but= well, darling, now <I have seen you mgain, darling, I can‘t wait. That‘s the simple truth, sweet one. I must take you away, z::r: as soon as you can lsave your ly. "* Mr. Clifford has never said a word ig me on the subject ; and if he did, how cou I "‘1!,' think of marrying him . when I love you 3 > * *‘Curse the fellow‘s ldeence ‘ Rising abruptly from the sofa, he began to gto- the room. â€" He was furious that this "Clodâ€" ho:‘por," as he mentally‘ called Clifâ€" ford, should dare to ‘love Ruth. The idea had put an obstacle in his way which he had not counted on. It hur seemed to him that her father‘s incapâ€" able state had taken away a hindrance to his designe ; and he hadâ€"not believed in the existence of external Jnhrï¬;vnoo. At last he aflmd himself, and he turned to look at Ruth, . ‘ She had expeoted he would be angry, and she sat with a frightened look, waiting for him to speak. He came and stood in front of her. * You mean, I suppore, that this fellow had made you an offer, -ndlou want me to tell you w{otlnr you should accept it !* Rnt:n roseâ€" to h;r fflut. Het ognoh and oyes glowed, and her figure seemed grander h{ h-“r lfl:adm. She did not reproach him, but voice sounded sad. * Mr. Clifford has Mver':zi a word ta ‘‘Please do not be lnï¬ry !" she said humbâ€" ly ; "I will tell you why I can‘t wait, them you will understand. lÂ¥nhu has asked me to marry Mr.:Clifford," 4 He said this rather. r';iro_:l';;;ly, and she feared aho had vexed him. T ** You said something about it in your letter, deatest ; and the best way out of it â€"well, my precious qirl, I have come to arrange that with you." _ The girl‘s heart seomed to lighten with the sudden relief sho felt ; all would be right now that she had this dear oounullorl%o- side her. She looked up in his face with the implicit trust o.t.sohsq, as she said : ‘‘You see," she said shyly, for his warm kisses made her shrink in spite of herself, !‘since my father‘s illneis began 1 have not been able to consult him â€"about anything; and, as I told you, we shall have to leave Appledore, becangeâ€"â€"boum we cannot u&rd to stay on here." * T cannot â€"marry ~you till ~I have told She Blushed, and quivered all over with the delight she felt in his mers presence. All hor anxieties seemed laid to reat ; it was so sweet only to look at him : to listen to him was an added delight. > He drow her to the sofa and~ they sat ~down tide»b{ side, while he kept his arm round . her waist, Ruth was much less shy ‘with hitn; rrh-p- there is some truth in the old sayingâ€"some love does strengthen in absence. . But Ruth‘s love had been at first sought too suddentyâ€" before it had had time to develop. Its very strength had 1t that time alarmed her, and she hadstruggled to repress it. . All these months it hus boen growing steadily, and in the light of his dear presence maxx;Tho intense trust she felt in him, she gave Herâ€" self up to her hlpyilz and to the thankâ€"~ fulness she felt for his constancy. fls "You see." she Said shvlv. for his warn « "‘Is that all the ;;ogip';t wanted me for? . Any old graybeard would have done for an adviser, would â€"not he ?" ult gri oo ns He slipped his hand‘ under her chin and looked at her #weet face With ; increasing admitation . Formerly her frank simplicâ€" ity had seemed a‘part of her surroundings ; it now gave him a delicious sense of security in the possession of her love. â€" "‘What is it, darling?" _ He. was halfâ€" alarmed, halfâ€"vexed; she was far more lovely than he had thought she was; he was not Surprised at the love he felt for her; cerâ€" tainly he had not seen any one zo beautiful since they parted. _ £1). ; "I cried because I was so glad, so very, very glad. â€"I have been so lonely all this while; I have wanted to ask you so> many things," she said tenderly, _ . ‘__ . _ ‘"Are {;u not glad to see me Ruth®" he said in theâ€"gentle, refined voice she remem bered so well. TA 1 Aâ€"wate inb â€"at M Ruth iviped awaytherâ€"tears,â€"and then she amiled up at him. _ _ + â€" The glow of delight she felt at finding herself once . moveâ€"with bim and at being â€" ‘thus ‘assured that . ho loved her dearly in spite of all her doubts and fears made.her look more than ever beautiful, and for themoment concealed the traces of fatigue which yesterday had made Michael Clifford‘s keart ache. Suddenly she broke into passionate crying and hid. her eyes on her lover‘a shoulder, * © *‘*I may now tell my father we are enâ€" aged, may not I? It will make him so appy : you know how fond he was of you." * That was very good of him." . Bering: u’!p_i_ï¬ï¬.i%%. as if he was thinking of ~** My bn!m:ll-@l,gy own Ruth!" he said ; and he pressed her closely to him and covered her sweet face with passionâ€" ate kisses. _ Rath felt as if she ‘were dreaming when she opened the door of the sitting:room and saw her love standing just as she had often seen him stand beside the hearth, leaning against the high mantelâ€"shelf. ‘ She had hardly time to lock at. him, however; he came quickly forward and took ‘her in his arms, a# if they two had only parted yes: fopmcn t if thoy ime bedios He is going away from me soon," she YOL ITV. The APPLEDORE PFARM. CHAPTER XUL Snd Sarend bniurtar | the sfairdete Iooed wad curved butumers ; the old, but it was not cambrous, and it conâ€" trasted ly with the white paint of the doors and skirting and the distemper of the It has been said that a man‘s house, when his ciroumstances rrlnlthi- to choose it, is an indication of his charaoter ; and when Michael Clifford opened his low, wide enâ€" trance door there was something reassuring and restful in the spotloss m of the square hall. The doors on all showed th-cnmflmâ€"omdnhlt A round table in it tentre writing . materials and a nesatly arranged row of newspapers. When Michael Clifford left lprlodon he rode to a manorâ€"house some miles aw ay, He had business in the uï¬hm and h“u‘d‘p'fllï¬â€œ -ub': his . the stables, igreerearecter an, on bottom of the broad, steep street in which his house stood. % , The suspicious look â€" remained on Saily Vode‘s fac«>~*"T‘d tike ‘to kï¬ow," she muttered as Ruth left the room, *‘ what call thatâ€"smart y gentleman had to come like a ‘thief inâ€"the might after Miss Ruth. â€" I‘m going to kebp my eyes open." ‘ Before she could reach the . door »Mrs. Voce came into the rdom. She closed the door cautiously behind her, and then she looked suspiciously at Ruth, Thegirl red« dened under the look, but in a moment she held her bead erect; she was determined to ku‘rhor promise. _ > _ t *‘You have had a visitor I hear frie." Ruth broke in gravely: ** You must llx‘nothln about it to Mr. Bryant, Satty. â€" Mr. Bn‘n.to‘n did not see him. 1 told himâ€" about the â€" illness ; it would have greatly agitated '.6' father to see a ‘domparative stranger. Until he is quite himself again he must notâ€"hear of this visit; it would rouse up painfal recollecâ€" tioms. You had better tell Faith not to speak of it to III{ one, lest it should come round." Then she went on with an abrupt change of voice, *‘My father is going to stay a fow days.with Mr, Clifford IJ hia sister, . It is so kind of them to ask him, and we can do the spring cleaning while he is at Parley," _... _ se coout mnrxing him without the consent of those proud parents, but she believed that th6y would naver like to accept heras a daughter, even if the question of means hlï¬ now arisen. . He evidently meant to live a quiet, retired life.with her, or ‘he would. not have said that about Eo-itlon. Was it indeed possible that he, the light of her life, would one day be hers, her own darli:ig husband? She started from this thought with a quick flush of shame; she had forgotten her father, whomi she had left llngl'ng; she had forgotâ€" ten every one but Mr. Bevington. alway‘s. He had taken possession of her hand; his other arm had slipped round her; she du?not. ruiï¬ it; i‘r, ?‘vu_r.hs _lub time, she thought. ** I do notâ€"blame you," she said ; I am grateful to you for coming. Even if I never see lou again I have had this happy time with you, and I can never forget it. 1 shall never leave off loving you.â€" I shall look tor your name and l‘ef proud of you, even when I know g:n have married some one else. It will be different with you ; you must forget me ; it would make your wife unhappy if you even thought of me ; and you could not do such a wrong as that." She rose and held out her hand.â€" *‘Goodâ€"by, dear, dear Reggy ! Ah ! how happy I was who’n‘ you wrote and asked me to call you He was looking gravely at her; she did not guess that ho ‘was trying her.. The light seemed suddenly to fufo from the fature that just now had shown‘itself full of sunshine. â€" Ruth hid herâ€" face in her hands ; she was too wretched to cry. Her heart ached with a strange new Y;in that was Al.%:t intolerable. As last she looked up, he thought her eyes swam with tenderâ€" mess ; and he longed / to take wher in his arms again, but something kept him back ; heâ€"did not yet feel sure of her. . 5 " fate is full of. chan and changes, my girl ; no one can see Kw ')\bo..l:wn- ’B‘m are women who will any vexation and. trouble for the sake : of being with the man they love ; I thought you ~were one. like this. And there are others who cannot even bear the voight of & secret. . You understand now, by what I have told you, why I cannot let you tell. your father that I love you. I have already gone through so‘ much {vexation on this subject thatâ€"that I had almost determined not to see you again; but I could not reâ€" sist your ‘gummons. After all, it is not I who am to blame for this meeting, Ruth." . _ _** Tuball never give mtp," he said, but she felt that he was ing away from l.::z ; ** but, unfortunately, at prosent I am in & positien to mry{:-; I must wait a littl. â€" I shall never a free man theoged 11. am depandane on my father ; 1 am t on my father wad mother, and ‘they ~would â€"not | conâ€" sent to let me marry any one who had not a fortune." _ Ruth looked athim very sadly; then she ** I understand now," shesaid; ‘‘you came to tell me this ; you can never marry me, le heard a sob in her voice; ** but, 0‘. 'h{h: did youdeomo -.d% !. h“h‘n made so much worse, you se Jt aow Foh wuald tock ho me iway 9 He started up from th6 sofa as if someâ€" thing had sharply stung him. He walked up and down before he answered. Atâ€"lést he stood again in front of her. . _ _ him ;" then, looking down she blushed at her own daring. ..â€" . * fVuth looked at him very .““i‘ th drew herself gently away from him. I shall think of you and pray for you CHAPTER Xiv. WESTON. ONT. THURSDAY. MAY 31. 1894 deoidediy apica ui while whe snn d 6 w upoke, * “l!q-n- #ure before I â€:yni! tha‘t there was 6t Wothe. ons clse in the Two extraordinary cases of builet wounds roo-ilgnnï¬vn -h:‘ -b’ space of twentyâ€" ur are a German m""&.. in tist s1 h Iatonmaksemtined n living at Dusseldorf, who was wounded 1-“ muw war. Three years « ballet noah’cl- tnma:- his right shoulder, and a we second case in that of a stationâ€"manter who a Mhy:.?omepnnd in a clinic at lh.m:hulh the 6 Wome Th eoeiel se *" Nh i Se ns t _ Men "“)I' ncnn.!n these matters so cltmaily. ichael did notâ€" dream of the péin he had given by his announcement, and so he decpened it by his next words. _ «*For all that; I shall ask her to be my wife when sho is less anxious about her father.. Now that you know this, Dolly, will you not aak her .to .come and see you daring her father‘s visit, or whenever you P?“Y". 4 â€" Michaelâ€"looked.â€"hard at his ister; he saw that she was‘ not saying this to tease him ; she was evidently in earnest, and convinced of the truth of her words. He was very much annoyed, but he felt that she was trying to save him from disâ€" appointment, and he tried to speak patientâ€" 1y as he answergd s | _ . 00 0= =â€" ‘‘Very likely not, but thatis no proof thatahs does not flirt. Don‘t you see, Michaél ? She looks on {oï¬ as an ol‘l friend. Â¥You are probably not the sort of man she would venture to flirt with; she probably regards you as 4 brother." â€" *‘That is a falsehood," hesaid impetuousâ€" ly, ""I have known her ever sincs she was a child, and she never attempted tc flirt with me.", f *‘I do not think it was gossip, Michael; it came from that poor hud-wo&sd doctor‘s wife, Mrs. Buchan. She told me that Miss Bryant was very handsome, and also that she was very.fond of flirting." . She could have shaken him for his blind folly ; he, as she thought, who might any one he chose, who m‘(‘m have the plc{ of the Purley girlsâ€"only there was not one good enough for himâ€"he;â€"to throw ~himself away on this farmer‘s dnufhw, who, if all stories were tute, was only another man‘s leavings ! ; ~ ‘‘Are you enigaged to her ?" Her voice told him how vexed she was. â€"_‘*‘I should not haveâ€"asked â€"her to be my wife without giving you some kind of warnâ€" ing, Dorothy.. I have waited for several reasons, one being that I hoped for your nymplthz. You mast like Ruth Bryant: if ou saw her or knew something wbout her ; zut you won‘t take an"fiterest in her." ~ ‘‘Perhaps I do know something about Miss Bryant; and perhaps what I have heard has not made me think.wellâ€" of her." ‘"I did not think you, of all peopla, would listen to gossip," he said angrily. _ _ _ Dorothy knew it. She had known it this long while, and yet it gave her exâ€" ** Look here !" ho said, "I believe one gains nothing by beating about the bush. I am sure you wish me to be happy, Dolly. It is better‘to n!{ frankly &nh?unnot be bappy without Ruth Bryant. 1 want her '-OSO my wife." a t He seemed ashamed of his own sternness, for he left the window and came and sat down beside her. . 1t e *‘You do not know Miss Brysnt because you will not," he said so stern‘y that Doroâ€" thy felt just a Hitcle Werv0U8."~*‘It would have been kind of {onâ€"-olnrmble. tooâ€"to show some friendship to a motherless girl, left alone, one may n{,_ since her grandâ€" father died ; for her father is not that sort of & man to advise & girl of ber age." Dorothy was looking at her delicate fing» ore. ** Miss Bryant has always had you to advise her, Michael. I know little about young girls and their ways." . © _ * Ab, well! you know what I wish, Dorothy," . _ 1 He turned away abruptly and looked out of thi window. 14 Clifford. was.not irritable, and his sister‘s manner helped to keep his judgment calm and unprejudiced ; but for all his ‘calmness he cguld sometimes ln‘ very angry. ‘‘ I did mot say arything to Bryant; I spoke to.. his daughter." Clifford lopked away ; he felt impationt under the searchâ€" }ng gaze which his sister had fixed on his ace. "‘Did you ask Miss Bryant to come too ?" There was‘aâ€"certain mockery in her tone, and it seemed to hurt him. _ _~ ‘‘I should not yenture to invite a lady to the house ; that is your province, Dorothy," he said over his shoulder.~ > _ "‘I do notâ€"know Miss Bryant,‘" she said dryly *"* Was it to ML'Brgat you said I would taie care of him ? en sometimes do not like theidea of being taken care of by strangers," ‘ ® She looked a‘little less bright,. but she ltm%fllfl:"i;.“ be l.d M * We be v to see. . Bryant," she n(d‘.‘?({tgfly.‘ . "Was it to Mr. Bryant you said I would "Well, Dolly," her brother .said, as he came up to her, I knr you like to be benevolent ; so yesterday I took upon myâ€" self to give an invitation in your name. I hope you ‘will indorse 1t * "That depends," she said, smiling. "Well, L g:u invited my poor paralyzed friend B?M“ to come and spend a few days here ; and I haye also promised that you will take care of him. WLG do you say to that nooh, Sipbp t S P98 o .157 ate and useful. about this part of the house, Long Lost Bullets. (To ax coxtTxURD.) Mio, and yet it gave her ex. 10 fhong it anid. hy her . brother A ht milk can be well washed out and.the grain *‘ How many boys and girls on the tarm have had an old -rmn tied around their waiste and beon told to ‘ churn until the butter willâ€"hold up the dasher?"‘ Such instructions ate fatal to good butter," saj the Homestead. .‘ In the first place, ln dash churn is tem years behind the times and ought to be thrown out of every farm, even, ifno more butter is made than to supâ€" ply the family table. The box or barrel churn is cheap and it is so much more conâ€" venient and so much better butter can be made with it that there should be no hesiâ€" tation in discarding the old dashâ€"charn ig its favor. But no matter what kind of a churn is used, never churn until the butter is gathered in chanksâ€"large nough to hold ug‘:h' dasher. There are several réasons why this should not be done. One of them is that the gtain is destroyed. Good butter has a fing. distinet grain, and when broken shows a dilfl:ï¬ hotnr;ylih cl:luo. It this grain in -erc{:d cverâ€"churning or m«%kin., the butter. becomes a .h"g-, mixture, like lard, and has a greasy taste. Again, it is necessary that the buttermilk be woll washed out or the butter will beâ€" dome strong and rancid in a short time. This cannot be done when the butter is churned into lumps, so in the latter case the grain, flavor and lug:lu qnllh.Ls'n all injured. The churn should always be stopâ€" ped when the butter bh.&!fl'-d-sl granules, '""3 in size a red clover seed to a grain of wheat ; then the 2’h‘ï¬nhnn-nvhytb'l§'-n id not make just as fine butter as any one, providing he will take the trouble to do it right." > Railway building and railway traveling are greatly increasing in India. }nr h-nsred and uzlty-nln «miles of new railroad were built during the year ending: March 31, 1893, making the total mileage up to that date 20,305. _ The number of carried daving the yout was 122,158,515, an incroase E my lxfl?l.nnh( was increase of 175,279 tons for the year. There are other breeds in the field specialâ€" ly adapted for huvg millk, production, the capacity of which the Jersey cow scarcely hopes to successtully compc{a with, even if ‘dnlnd ; but her supporters need have no alarm that her pmtg: for butter making will ever be lowered or weakened by these enormous mflkin{ machines, . They may fill the largest bucket, but that is as far as they will ever reach. Leave that honor to: them, and let the aim of the Jersey breeder be to produce the greatebt number of coxs capable of producing fourteen Sgsndn and over of butter per week, or 1, pounds per year, and to so skilfully control the system that there will be no blanks or disâ€". sgs:snmmu This is glory enough for one ‘ b . h The list alluded to contains the names ofâ€" many of the most noted cows of the breed, with._butter records varying from thirty Eoundl to fortyâ€"six pounds twelve and pneâ€" alf ounces per week. One of them proâ€" duced 936 pounds fourteen and threeâ€"quarâ€" ters ounces within & year, which was all sold at an average of thirty cents rronnd ; soveral of them have official rmrzo thirty md- per week‘ aud more; all are: t umers of concentrated food, wizg imâ€" mense digestive powers, and none are in clined to accumulate flesh when in full flow of milk. _ A daily yield of more than thirty pounds of milk from any cow in the list is exceptional, and during the greater period of their milkingâ€"term it runs down below oneâ€"half that quantity. These cows and their characteristics are tyf:icul of their race, and the wise breeder will not seek to divert the course of usefulâ€" ness intoâ€"other channels than legitimate ones. Tbo’guin in quantity of milk will be at the sacrifice of butter and cream, and is consequently a retrograde movement and unwise. The Jersey cow was created for a butter producer, and for this she is absoâ€" lutely unrivaled ; and while it is possible, by a persistent line of breeding, to change, to an extent, her habits, and even her nature, and irodm an animal that will give more milk, the course is wrong, and antagâ€" qunizes the zlnm ‘uull;lisho: t.:’ n-;ure. uantities of milk, ard this rich inâ€" ï¬v% of ‘butter, are incompatible in the same animal. : _ _ Before us is a list of over thirty Jersey cows, none of them remarkable for great milk-glvlng capacity, that have produced a pound of butter each from an amount of milk varying from three and oneâ€"half to ten pounds. ‘The average of Jersey milk requires from fifteen to sixteen pounds for a pound of butter. This is the qvortï¬ quantity of milk from . fresh cows; as 6 milking ‘period advances, the milk becomes richer in cream and yields proportiopately more butter. td El PSNEDIUY L mb lc t ul a great flow. of milk, and it â€"will. be noted invariably that a pound of butter is _proâ€" ducecâ€"from less milk from a cow giving a amall amount than from one with & heavy flow of milk. a2 Experien&8 teaches that comparatively amallâ€"milkecs ;rc o}rn;:he heaviest butter ma ; very few of the large butter proâ€" du*‘fi the r‘-eo_‘h‘uo g‘ivgn an. unsually cumstances are most favorable. A large quantity of mu{‘lrom the Jersey cow is not, in itself, estesmed the most valuable consideration, as â€"this feature is almost certain to detract from its richness; a heavy milking.cow, of any ‘breed, canâ€" not very well, in the natural order of things produce very rich milk, and‘in.proportion to increase of flow there is a lessening of the :ily pAl‘El of which butter is composed. +T ME 40e O idï¬ l tun, Seteia As a family cow, whose milk flow never ceases from the I:fl.uh‘ to the end of the year, always beavily laden with ‘ creant, a l'oyni' favorite, and an. orngment to the hmyuzmlldh “t:?-lthu. continually evincing a disposition‘to do the right uhm -W" her bitterest opponents lrully mit. She is not noted especially as @ large yielder of milk, though scores and hundreds of â€"instances are recorded attesting great capacity in this direction; _ It is conceded without dispute, even by :::u whose self interest and admiration other milking breedshuts.her out from employment in the dairy, that the Jersey cow, as & superior butter maker apd great producer of rich crékm, stands without a peer, and an honest confession frofn any rntled source, with a full knowledge of acts, will accord her this " distinction, no roatter what objections the breed may posâ€" sess in ?hq:nll ing it for other purposes. The Jergey Cow and Her Product. THE FARM. Railways in India. Granular Butter M ‘TeelÂ¥ . â€"amd . the ‘ to C e nn '; * To jant we oc too,nntflhb::fhd. to test. . B took a kodak made :‘,rennd the bridge with mo train upon it Then he | / kept his camera in position "and waited for a fast train to come, Pretty soon an exâ€" In Enogland a few weeks ago a certain imbn;l'polmu'm railways was sus coud being unsafe. It looked all right, t there were some reasons why the man« agers were afraid of it.. They could not °C It is imyossibh to understand by what ridiculous ‘fascination the J.?:q- are carried away, altogether losing their judgâ€" Burequis . omovam, Sieis qremge thon Eu costume; w dwarts them, makes them m‘-.‘-d destroys their character, will everywhere replace, at least in the towns, the ample, supple national dress of noble nI.h. which gave such dignity to its wearers and suited the Japanese type so well." came thandering on and just as the E.humflnmd Ih.â€h'flld spen the slide and took a picture on tho same plate ‘that still held the first. When the plats was examined the pictare with the train was found n-'h:â€l the other as to show what the and managers had fearedâ€"a dangerous droop to the bridgo. . t ext ud ** Many Jg‘nm have wonfided . to me with what difficulty they acoustomed themâ€" selves to our costume, uEecully to the high collars and boots, which put them to a perfect martyrdom. They would start off on an excursion sometimes very proud of their exotic bé6t#; but how often they te« turned looih:g’ pitiable objects, with bleedâ€" ing feet and their boots in their hands ! A little while ago the wife of a general went to see the chrysanthemum show, and wishâ€" ing to be in quite the latest fashion she laced herself into a pair of European n..r. but she could not endure the pressure, fainted away in the middle of the fete, and nearly di-d.' But what of that * Onemust do it ; "tis the fashion !. novpionl, mys that mentar norey inthovind i sn t :.:. oft -,:lr‘ The number of.cases has tâ€"op. It was only those_Japanese who r.d traveled in Europe and were .lwzoï¬wr chic who noted the irregulartiies of the cosâ€" tume and had much ado to stifle their laughter. . e *‘One evening at Kioto, the now abandâ€" oned capital,a very noble “zf.io' appeared, according to etiquette,in a black dress cont, waistcoat, and trousers, but he also wore socks without shoes, and a waistcoat cut very low left the h-i? chest of the daimio exposed to view. he great man knew nothing about shirts or patentâ€"leather shoes and thought he was in a very correct French Judith Gauthier gives an account of the progress made by the Japanese in‘adopting western customs, _It seems by the followâ€" ing that the transformation from native to foreign attire is attended with some diffi~ culty ; " Many of the men are in a melanâ€" choly state of indecision about their toilets and com@â€"Outâ€"in the most extraordinaryâ€" combination of garmeiits, some national, others foreign. One sees a man sometimes wearing European boots, a Japanese robe, a loose ovetrcoat, and an English hat, whileâ€" he holds above it all a paper umbrella. For ‘ officials, military men, and police agents complete disguise is obligatory, and m_} â€"official balls the black coat for men and a Parisian costume for women are compulsory, This obligation led, especiallyâ€"when first in force, to some ridiculous effects ; one among many others has become historic. The Plecuresque Native Costume Giving| Thenew Algonguin park set apart by ‘Way . io Inartistic European Fashâ€" g‘? Commissioner of m“ulï¬& ~in the tons. ipissing dhf.rlct_ appeara & hl?’ Fudith Ganthier af hunting â€" ground. _ According . to #. udith Gauthier gives an account of the| Thompson, the chief ranger, both moose progress made by the Japanese in‘adopting | and deer are plentiful, particularly in the western customs. It seems by the followâ€" northern aod western townships. . There ing that the transformation from native to :‘ hy ".“'3 ;':::' .::‘ d:::.'i do‘.th :' ::: foreign attire is attended with some difi* houndnpy the ,,";ol. â€"are very numerous. culty ; " Many of the men are in a melanâ€" | Signs of beaver are seen in various rlnqu, choly state of indecision about their toilets m;hl'om: ?b?rtl:n‘:.nim l-hi‘“ "butâ€"i ; a re e ind goï¬ne' h s6 in the most “»‘""d,m"r evidently existed in large numbers in times combination of garments, some national, past, there is now no. indication of their others foreign. One sees a man sometimes l)reqenoe. They are,_however still sufficientâ€" wearing European boots, a, Japanese robe, | Y ';‘““'m‘“ to ;'Pl"’l"l the ’I;‘k. if proâ€" a loose overcoat, and an English hat, while m'yrv:*;c:a i -0'.:::1.’::‘;"", ‘r:’â€â€œ'l P he holds above it all a paper umbrella. For q!‘sl;onnd. There are many < bears and officials, military men, and police agents | wolves. Foxes are Thn:rnm. and prey upon complete disguise is obligatory, and in | the partridges, atter are abundant, bomplete diiguite . is . obligntory,. and ind oud wild ducks are often seth gn "some of It is interesting to note, moreover, that the use of the apparatus does not end with the cleansing of the smoke, The black deâ€" posit gathered by it is taken off in barrels toâ€"beâ€"used in making paint and printin; ink, yielding an acceptable revenue inlbug of polluting the atmosphere, and the reâ€" majping liquia: is said to have proved Itaelf & most valuable disinfectant. Thus a twoâ€" fold purpose is accomplished, either one of which would seem to be quite sufficient to commend the process to manufacturing communities in whichâ€"smok@suppression is a live topic.~* coneanr hevieder t daii : atrerant ie es d the Psn dradk slotted barrel, which is filled with perforatâ€" ed heaters, and the tank is wï¬;’ filled with wln.ur. The amoke is dl:uwn into % barrel from the machine a power fan, and nndcrgoum: gnbzing rocess. The barrel rotates yery rapidly, cguruin‘ nf the smoke wit.hzh water. â€" On the top of the barrel are several semicircular trays or sieves, which ars perforated, and effects the Knrpon of further washing. the emoke. The smoke which escapes from the beatâ€" ers is caught again by ‘these sieves and duhe(l‘ down again by a very fine spray of water from the beaters. â€"The bu:krtlnd‘o of solid:â€"matter is forced t5"the â€" top of the chamber and â€"thrown over into a chute, which conveys it to a wooded tank.. The smoke which finally escapes from the machine is said to be comparatively inofâ€" fensive;, and there is certainly good reason to believe that this should be so. It is not surprising, therefore, that a somewhat analogous method should have suggested itself as of likely, eervice in dealing with the now ‘zo much discussed Wmioke problem, and that it should have been ‘tried with encouraging results." At any uu.‘i‘lomp-rr paragraph, now goâ€" ing the rounds, tells â€"of its application by A*nglinh factory owner, whose repeated. conflicts with . the local smoke ordinance promptéd "éxperiments in this direction. and apparently with perfect satisfaction. According to the published description, somewhat ‘indefinite, perhaps, in a few respects, the apparatus used :y him conâ€" sists o_( _uhrgc castâ€"iron tank, in which is a warranted, u\dw’ a smoky and unclean outside atmosphere suggested the desirabil> ity of submitging the air to some cleansing procéss before© allowing it to ‘pass into Buildings: * IAI.' o4 of Dealing with the Nuis: ancé in Cities. ® ! Wuiz’drdih impurities by passing it .through water . screens: or. through chaimbers into. which water is profusely sprayed, is a ‘wellâ€"known and muchâ€"used process in heating and ventilating , Ite merite were conclusively d-::::rd years ago, and ever since advantages have been taken of theti in large ventilating installations, in which their expense was. Snap Shot at a Weak Bridge IN MODERN JAPAN. WASHING SMOKE. NO3 +o digthe The revival of .interest in Napoleon has brought to light some enterainting,informaâ€" tion about the Emperor‘s gastronomic tastes. He always ate from silver plates, of which he purchased 1,000 at one order. Chicken was his favorite article of diet, but while confined at St. Helena he developed a m liking for pork chopi, sausages and puddings. _ His table manners were not very refined. He boited his food, used his fingers in preference to fork and spoon, and dipped his bread into dishes having sauces and gravies before they /were passel to the, others at the table. The countess of Albany, seeing the E:Pcror at dinner on the hlu(i Elba, recorded that he "lived like a pig." the lakes, â€" Three.men.and aâ€"dog in a bont could have a splendid outing at Algonquin necessary licens "Tt Affords me much pleasure to recommenc Hood‘s Sarsapartlin. . My son wis afficted with great pain in the joints, accompanied witk swelling so bad that he could not get tjp stairt to bed without crawling on hands and knees. 1 to bed without crawling on hands and knees, 1 3 was very anxious about him, andl having read A Perfect Cure by Hood‘s Sarsaâ€" pariita. road from the nearest settlement, 30 miles distant, is in & foarful condition, and the water supply is bad. The camp swarms with men v{o have had no experience in mining, and who fall ready victims to sharpâ€" ers: gï¬hén who have no means and who expected to get work have crowded‘ in. They are practically destitute, and the Goverment will have to aelp them out. â€" ‘The gold field probably consists of a main back> bone of volcanic formation ‘of uncertain length, trending northâ€"west by north, and crossed by numerous feeders, principally of quartz.and ironstone, running northâ€"east by southâ€"west. â€" But what portions of main reef and of the feedersâ€"besides those already Wyalong in New South Wales. . Many disâ€" tricts of New South Wales have been drainâ€" ed of labor by the wild rush to the Wyalong gold fields. ‘This new district is in the northern.end of Gips county. â€" The gold lies in reefs. < Rarly in March there were 3,000 people on‘ the ground, and the number has since been ‘swelled several hundred daily. On March 30 it had reached 8,000: _ The . The most important flews received from Australia by the steamer Alameds deals with the rush to the new .mining camps of ent parte of the country not one has e been the cause of a loss to sit s foundâ€" ers or members, ‘The essential charsoterâ€" istice of each bank are as follows: h bank deals only with its own : district or responsible for the assets and debts of the society, which insures a great facility for borrowing the small sums they re« quire to lend. ‘This rural association has no capital ;* its members have no sub scriptions . to pay ; they only lend bor» rowed capr Any surplus money : which the gains goes to form a reserve to cover any losses which may be made. The teserve grows , and. when it becomes m.l:r it in on im« provements â€" w will benefit the local community. . Never do the members of the: society receive a farthing in the form of dividends, nor do the directors get any pay» ment or fees whatever for their services. The society lends only to its members and for a purpose which is deemed satisfactory. It armï¬a beforehand . with..the borâ€" rowers theâ€"time at which : the money is to be repaid, the dates usually falling after the borrower has r is c re« h has realized hi prin'?pd ceipts for the year, ‘The:â€"results of this excellent nun&emoflt can sasily be guessâ€" ed. _ It draws the memhbers of the communâ€" ity together by bonds ~of mutual interest and makes men who would otherwise be the slaves of userers free and indepnddno and able to live on the results of their work, thanks .to the‘ capital lent to them by the establishment instituted for the‘ common good. Still, wages in Germany are very low, ranging even in the “ll}pcid iron, steel, and metal industries but from $3 to $4.50 per week. found carry payable ‘gold is a question that remmumho&oomd. mrtenntecse A Rush for the Gold Fields. A.Happyâ€" Huntingâ€"Ground. â€"= . 4 -ub_u,bdl«-q Franw L €EAKE Napoleon at Table. i‘;’é’ l