word Fight stir and Salâ€" bat they are tee the mainâ€" their respect. ._ ARechwartz urance Hosâ€" Alsaceâ€"Lore who â€" was e movement relief phyeriâ€" n a duel two attempt was use of death, lon of the be cremateg est of _ Dr. o duel was rsonal quarâ€" itroversy beâ€" w the Naâ€" iml, and geyâ€" employed \ir itdoor relief, »nmnsation inâ€" w commaadep oung and capnâ€" ‘attalions have Floriaa, from lor Company, ulty in raigâ€" rganized owâ€" he stockholdâ€" the proposed ,000, accordâ€" atement. Al} ged for new ssessments. A $8,000,000 is y At the nt as Vice ilar clerk in at Bratsburg, in. _ Minister as dated yesâ€" Lhe assassinâ€"~ uperior Co, 1.â€"The Conâ€" D. Sadakot!, a ‘as stabbed to & & Turk, 2} vounded b’ s n the steamer situation in achias is at 0o is a Seanâ€"~ d Viceâ€"Consul er 20, 1399, rudal, who i# ues ived at quarâ€" _ Las Palmas. s of the ship‘s 5 took placs ght on Monâ€" fight is unâ€" to be insane, ination of hig RDAY. T f hrbehssper is Moroagh ty Hcided .ua\?.-els I pmad 7 +s 1-_1-_.f'J *# â€" â€"â€" 94 ue Robert. ville Parker. lenis in To Mclvilie, who e, suifered & s home near H in the werkt slands. Lasher, of ced for catâ€" es to Kingâ€" hree year® itral for 22 anded wo stories th freight. bout $500,â€" anthority Campbeli in Govers led in the T Mayse ind _ Mréâ€" house in rt â€" Brung |l.‘1\lgh‘¢ â€"Jlay bY s a blook tled freight l!way at sShermand vas comâ€" V ag&n "ch wab is N0OW of _ St. profese College, nearly ial for liscal d Wrth rat Ar= r hus erly o# ‘eca tor, 11 he ontly nited h § A Safeguard for Children Cutting Teeth in Hot Weather Ths time when children are cutâ€" ting tceth is always an anxious one for mothers and when this occurs during the hot weather solicitude ofâ€" .tem deepens into alarm. §o many ills that often resull fatally are liâ€" able to ensue that every mother will be interestal in a medical discovery that robs this period of many danâ€" gers. Mrs R. sergason, of 103 Mansfickl _ ttreet, Montreal, Que., gives her experience for the benefit of other mothers. She says; " My baby has always been small and dellâ€" cate, and suffered so much last sumâ€" mer with his teeth that I did not think ho would live. The medicine the doctor ordered for him did not do him any good. Then he wWwas atâ€" tacked with dystentery and a very hot skin and cough. I sent â€"for Baby‘r Own Tablets, and they did bhim _ & â€" woiler{ul amount . of m’imd he is now getting on splenâ€" Raty‘s Own Tablets are sold by all the door, did not see her entet, 043 Lady Llanche, etanding behind her, &eard her ask the chemist‘s assistâ€" ant for some sal volatile. "I want it {or my aunt," she added ; "she is not as well toâ€"day." She spoke in a quiet, Bertec‘t‘ly seilâ€" $ P uy LS LC 4 m man didly."* Baby‘s Own Tablets are sold by all dealers in medicine or will be sent post paid. at twortyâ€"five cents a tox. by the Dr. Williams® Medicice Company, Brockville, Ont. â€" ®* e e e e Ehe stopped at a shop and lookel at the window, watching Fanny Inchley anxiously. She saw her enter the chemist‘s, and, as if she could not bear to lose sight of her even for a minute or 1wo, Lady Blanche, scarcely knowing what she was doing, followed her into the ehop. Fanny. whose back was turned to tha Amor dlil not see her enter, aad "I am going into one of the shops,"* she said to the footman as she got out. "Do not wait , I would rather walk back." The man touched his hat and the carriage drove off. _ figss . & onl oo d s Samtea "Shall we go on, my lady?" he asked, evidently all on the qul vive of curiosity and excitement. What should she do? That Fanny Inchley, scared out of her senses by this fatal termination of the conâ€" spiracy, would confess her share in it and Lady Blanche‘s was certain. What should she do? For one moâ€" ment the thought of flight passed ewlftly across her mind, but only for a moinent. She knew that flight was impossible. The â€" cold, shrewd face pf the detective rose before her, and reminded her that any atâ€" tempt at flight on her part would attract his attention to her. Shouald she go down to Sir Edmund and make a clean breast‘ of it? She rose as if to obey the impulse, then sank back again. She could not do itâ€"not yet. She roust see Elaine, . see Fanny Inchleyâ€"â€" _ She shuddered at the very thought of the .girl, shudâ€" dered with a commingling of fear and hate. 3 50; ;;;a;)'tii.'éiflh;d and pulled the check string. She saw Faony Inchliey, walking quickiy aloug the paveâ€" ment. She had put on her jacket and a veil over her hat, and went downâ€" etairs. (€ ar "No," said Lady Blanche; "drive to the town." She would sead a teleâ€" gram to her father, telling him to telgraph to her to return home. P . W T ui 10M l se ne ce lnty‘~â€" cadutl. dan 0"oan t crgta â€" The carriage turned off toward Barelield, and was entering the High street when Lady _ Blaache, who had been looking out of the winâ€" There could be no doubt of it! And now she, Lady Blanche, the daughâ€" ter of an earl, one of the leaders of society, would be dragged as a witâ€" ness into a court of justice. Witness in a murder case! And worse! The whole shameful story of her conâ€" spiracy with a servantâ€"the houseâ€" keeper‘s nleceâ€"would be brought to ‘The shame would kill her! The very thought of it sent the blood sutging to her face in a gurning flood, and made her writhe as if with phyâ€" slcal agony. Te Some one knocked at the door, and she <sprang up and gripped the chair with both hands, setting her _ face hard. It was a moment or two beâ€" fore she could answer Lady Bannisâ€" ter‘s question: "Have you gone, Blanche ?"*" F#he opened the door. "Not yet," she replied, "I am putâ€" ting my things on." _Lady Blanche‘s man pulled up, and a footman got Gdown and told Lady Blanche. un es o s e s A carriage was waiting, and the ; man drove toward Myrtle Cottage. | As he did so he met the brougham j which had taken the major and } Elaine to the station. | "Just taken Major and Miss Delaine to the rail," he called out. % lfh't, and she would have to stand there and admit that she had plotted to prevent the marquis‘ marriage ! "I came to say that if you can perâ€" suade the poor girl to come back with you, pray do. We are both so sorry for her. _ *"I will tell her," said Lady Blanche; "but I think she would rather reâ€" main at home." P OF I1NTEREST TO MOTHERKS A is a urman‘s fromkgy voice, and when the man lady?" he iand we went to bed." * Lady Blanche fixed her dazed eyes | on her. . z "Thenâ€"then you did not know thatâ€"thatâ€"Miss Delaine want to . Fanony _ Inchley walked slowly down _ the High street, then iturnod down a lane leading to the Castle park; and Lady Blanche, as , if drawn by a spell she could not | resist, followed her. Fanny Inchâ€" | ley, without looking round once, } reached the lodge, but instead of ’entering the park went down a side lane, and stopped close up | against the hedge and under the . shadow of the park elms. Lady Blanche put out ber hand and pressel it against the trunk of a& tree, as 1f tor support. _ t "Iâ€"I have followed you to knowâ€" i.t: bear the truth," she said, pantâ€" g. "About theâ€"murder, my lady 2 said Fanny, each word low and disâ€" tinct. Lady Blanche shuddered. ‘"Yes, yes. You know â€" you must know.* Fanny Inchley‘s eyes were hidden for a moment under the light lashes, then she looked up calmly, steadily. "I, my lady ? How should I know any more than anyone else * ‘"What do your say ?* she demanded hoarsely. "You don‘t knowâ€"â€"*" Fanny Inchley snoox her hoad. "No, my lady. I was in bed at the time ofâ€"the murder," Fanny kept her eyes upon her steadily. "No one is likely to see us, my lady," she said. "And if they did, I don‘t see that it would matter. I don‘t understand your ladyship." W ns dhes rmu l c ut PP h l B wl Lady Blanche 7g‘5,;;l- a:{“{l;é".\;hite face and glistening eyes, the thin, inflexible lips, as if fascinated. "You want to speak to me, my lady ?" she said, and her voice was calm and unfaltering. Lady Blanche put her hand to hber heart, and drew a long breath. "Whatâ€"what are you going to do?" she demanded. "To do, my lady ?" repeated Fanâ€" ny, in exactly the same tone, and as If she did not understand. Lady Blanche stared at her, and then looked round fearfully. ‘"Yes! Quick! Some one may come â€"we may be seen together." She shuddered, and drew her veil still further over her face. Lady Blanche looked at her vyaâ€" cantly, then put her bhanrd to her Fanny turned quickly, and at sight of Lady Blanche her pale face seemed to contract, and her grey eyes closed for a moment unâ€" der the white lids; but without any further sign of recognition, she murmured a "thank you" and "good morning," and passed out. Lady Blanche came up to her and confronted her, white and panting, and the two women looked into each other‘s face. Fanny Inchley‘s was white, too, and the gray eyes looked preterâ€" naturally large, surrounded by a dark, livid ring; but her lips, drawn in a thin line, were firm and hard, and she met Lady Blanche‘s disâ€" traught gaze with the steely glitâ€" ter in her own which one sees in some animal driven into a corper imd determined to fight to the ast. Lady Blanche took up a packet of fancy soap, paid for it, and went out after her. "Yes," Fanny assented with a gsigh ; "but of course it will« all be cicated up" ./: z00500 _=c ‘"Yes, I knew him slightly, poor gentlemar. A shilling‘s worth will do, please." © 4 o w The man came forward with the phial in his hand, neatly wrapped in white paper, and seeing _ Lady Blanche, bowed respectfully as he handed Fanny Inchley the bottle. remarked in a sympathetic tone that he was not surpriscd under the circumstances, Lady Blanche, waitâ€" ing breathlessly for Fanny‘s reâ€" epoose, was amazed at the calmness with which she said : Lady Blanche, still unseen, her eyes lixed on Fanny Inchley, saw her look along the counter, laid out as usual, with a number of bottles and cosmetic preparations, and _ then swiftly and stealthily take up a small paper covered bottle and slip it in her pocket. "Oh, of course," exclaimed the man promptly. ‘"We none of us can unâ€" derstand what Mr. Saunders can be thinking of. Poor Captain Sherwin Did you know him, miss ?" $ It came, quietly and calmly, with Jjust the proper amount of sadness in the voice. The man, with the slow precision of his trade, selected a phial and went to the back of the shop. 4 "Yes ; this terrible affair has shockâ€" ed her dreadfully." parly: "Awlul! Awful!" murmured the man with solemno enjoyment. ____ "1 suppose it is true tnat his lordship has been taken in charge, Lady Blanche waited breathlessly, for the answer. "!lv' ooks my & " Youâ€"you are right!" she said pantingly. "1 know rothing about it "‘ Lady Blanche, as if overwhgaimed by the torrent of scorn and conâ€" tempt, put up her veil, and wiped her forehead. _ Fanny Inchley rasumed her former manner and tone instantly, and secmingly withcut effort. "She will tell all she knows, you think! Let her! Let her! But not she! Don‘t you see that every word she could say would tighten ths rope round him! If she was on the bridge at the time of the murder, she must know who did it; and every word she says must convict himâ€"or herself! And so must anything you sayâ€"anyâ€" thing of this wild story of sendâ€" ing her to meet Captain Sherwin ! You see? Ah, you do!" for Lady Blanche had wrested her arm from the clutch of tihe small, clawâ€"like hand, and shrunk . away. â€" "Now, then‘! Am I right? Isn‘t it better to be silent? Isn‘t it better for him, for her, for yoursel{? Do you want to appear as a witness in this case; as a witness against h‘im or her? You can‘t appeir for them. Anrd who‘ll believe you if you do speak out? Who‘ll believe that Lady Blancheâ€"Lady Blanche! â€" would demean herself to plot with Fanny Inchley against her own cousin? _ What would become of you if they did believe it? You‘d be hooted, thereâ€"in the open court! You‘d never be able to show your face in public again as long as you lived! Youâ€"a grand lady, the daughter of the Earl of Delaine, to try #4nd spoil your own cousin‘s prospects!" She hissed the taunt full at Lady Blanche‘s white face and terrorâ€"stricken eyes. "Bah ! Your ladyship has lost your senses! And you a proud lady, one of those who are supposed never to lose their nerve! Look at me!" She drew herseli up, and fixed her eyes with their black rings on Lady Blanche‘s quailing ones. "Why, you and I qught to change places! I‘m only a common vperson, a sort of servant, while youâ€"â€"" Her thin: lips curled with unutterable conâ€". tempt. "Why, you‘d coniess you did it yourseli, you‘ve \«got so little plue k!" ] "I say that Lord Nairne is not likely to teli the judge and jury that his sweetheart was out in the grounds, on the bridge, at the very time Captain Sherwin was murdered. You say you told the marquis Miss Delaine was out, on the bridge. Did any one khear you tell him ?" Lady Blanche thought paiufully. " No, no!" Fanny Inchley‘s lips parted for a moment, as if with a sigh of relief and satisfaction. " Then it is your word against hisâ€"‘"‘ " And hers!‘ brocke in Lady Blanche. ‘ Do you think that she will remain gilent, that she will stand by and see himâ€"hanged without uttering. a word, without telling ail she knowsâ€"" The mask dropped {from Fanny Inchâ€" ley‘s face, and she grasped Lady Blanche‘s arm and bent forward, so that her lips almost touched Lady Blanchs‘s car. As she spoke the name her nosâ€" trils expanded, and her lipsâ€"for the first timeâ€"quivered. Lady Blanche looked up. "It is no use, no use!" she gaspâ€" ed. "I sent the marquis! I told him! He knows that I did, and will say so! I shall be forced to speak, to tell all! Oh, my God !" Fanny Iuchley looked at her in silence for a moment, then she said slowly, as if every word were weighed, and its efiect calculated. . "I don‘t think the marquis will say so; and no one else can." Lady Blancheo shuddered. " What do you say ?" she demanded hoarsely. _ _ C3 SheR p ‘ knows more than I doâ€"more than anyone else, indeed. I‘ve not heard until now that Miss Delaine was out â€"on the bridge. your ladyship said â€"last nignt. If soâ€"" she paused, and then lowered her voice warningly, almost threateninglyâ€""if so, it will be very bad lor Miss Delaine. She will he mixed up withâ€"the murder, you see." Lady Blanche drew a long breath ; she felt suffocating. "Isâ€"is that what you are going to say?" she demanded, almost inâ€" audibly. Fanny Inchley‘s eyes seemed to penetrate her, and an expression of tmhemtmng like scorn giittered in "What I am going to say? What else can I say but the truth. But I can say nothing. Why should I? I was in hed by halfâ€"past nine. My aunt knows that; I wound up her watch for her. She remembers the time quite well, my lady, for I asked her this morning." Lady Blanche was silent, fasciâ€" nated, spellâ€"bound. Fanny Inchley went on : L“It seems as 1 your ladyship "Yes, my lady," said Favny Inchâ€" ley. "It is well that you should. If you told any oneâ€"if you said in open court what you have just said to me, it would be very dreadful for poor Miss Delaine." of the footmen heard your ladyship tell Lady Scott that Miss Delaine bad gone to bed." Lady Blanche put her hands to ber eyes, and tried to recall the incidents of the awful night. _ _ "Iâ€"IL remember!" she breathed fearfully. â€" .0 ~ a "Let me think!" she panted; but she seemed incapable »f thought, and as if to help her the calm, cool voice wen‘t on : "And I think your ladyship must be mistaken, for . the servantsâ€" they have talked of nothing _ else sinceâ€"since it was knownâ€"rememâ€" ber that Miss Delaine went up to ber room before it happened. One "I persuade you to send Miss Deâ€" laine to the bridge to meetâ€"" she pause@ for one swilt moment and ber face contractedâ€""to meet Capâ€" tain Sherwin. Your ladyship must bave been dreaming. Why should I do such a thing? 1 don‘t know Miss Delaine or anything about her." Lady Blanche shrank back against the tree, appalled by the calm auâ€" dacity of the assertion. the bridge to meet himâ€"that 1 told her, andâ€"and she wentâ€"â€"" Fanny looked at her with calm surprise in her eyes, on her lips. ‘"You told Miss Delaine to go to the bridge, my lady ?" she said. "I don‘t underâ€"â€" Why did your ladyâ€" ship do that ?" Lady Blanche started, and leanâ€" ed forward to look at the white, sot face more closely. "Do you intend to sayâ€"to swear â€"that you know nothing? That you did not persuade me to send "Quick," whispered Fanny Inchâ€" ley, and she half dragged Lady Blanche through a gate in the fie}d, and from bshind the hedge they saw Saunders coming down the lano clickâ€" Ing the heads off the nsttles as he siuntered along with the indolent, glmleas alt 0‘ a man trying to kiil They both ha~r1l ithe sound of apâ€" proaching footsteps. _ F9 "No, I know nothing," she â€" said with a sigh. Fanny luchley nodded. "Of course, now should you? We were all in bed whenâ€"â€"" She broke off suddenly, and gripped Lady Blanche‘s arm. "You‘ill be better directly. â€" Give me your handkerchiel, my iady." She took it and dipped it in the water. "Hold it to your eyesâ€"there! It‘s only natural your ladyship should be upset, being in the same house, and knowing the margquis so well; though, as your ladyship says, you know nothing, nothing â€" whatever atout it." Lady Blanche bathesd her face and thrust the handkerchief in her pocket. "If the person that did the murâ€" der hasn‘t more pluck than your ladyship," she said slowly, "he‘ll soon be foundâ€"â€"*". She stopped sudâ€" deniy, and ber eyes distended with a look of drea2 and horror, as if she baoa seen something over Lady Bianche‘s shoulder. The look had vanâ€" ished from the cold, steelâ€"like eyes before Lady Blanche had time to see it, and Fanny Inchley went on. ‘"Whoever it is will want all his wits. I hopeâ€"‘" she paused a second, and moistened her lipsâ€""I hope they‘ll find and hang him, whoever it is You‘d better go now, my lady. Stop!" Sshe took something from her pocket , then, as if it were not what she had intended, replaced it swiltâ€" ly, and took out the phial of sal volatile, stripped off the wrapper, and uncorked it. _A brook ran down or one side of the road, and _ she pointed to it. "Take some water up is your hand," she said. Lady Blanche obeyed her mechanâ€" Ically ; and she dropped a few drops o‘ the liquid into Lady Blanche‘s palm. _ "Diink that. You look as if yor had seen a ghost." 3 Her own hand was as firm as a rock. Lady Blanche arranged her veil with trembling hands. " Iâ€"I will go home," she faltered. * No! You must stay here. You must go to the examination, the trial! You are a friend of hisâ€"hers|!‘ Lady Blanche suddered. " Iâ€"I cannot !" Facuy Inchley looked at her ecornâ€" fully. _ n Fanny Inchley met her terrified gaze steadily, unflinchingly, _ _*" Why?" she repeated _ slowly. ‘‘‘That‘s for the judge and jury. Let them find out !" "Of course, my lady," she said, dogâ€" gedly. " How should you? You know no more than i do ; and I was in bed, as I‘ve said, at halfâ€"past nine ; and so was Miss Delaine." " Thenâ€"thenâ€""‘ Lady â€" Blanche paused, and an expression of horror crept into her eyes. " Who did it ?" she «asked in an almost inaudible whisper. +i# No discovery of modern times has proved such a blessing to young girls and womena as Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. They act directly on the blood and nerves, invigorate the body, regulate the functions and restore health and strength to the exhausted patient when every effort of the physician proves unâ€" availing. ‘These p:lls are sold by all dealers in medicine, or may be had by mail post paid at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, by writing to the Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" cine Co.. Brockville, Ort. Rememâ€" ber that no other medicioe can take the place of these pills, and see that the full name, Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People, is on the wrapper around .every box. stances uader which she was forced to discontioue her studies and leare school will be of great interâ€" est to all mothers of growing girls, and Miss Dumontier consents to make them public for the benefit her experience may be to others. She says, " At the age of 12 I was sent to a convent school in the parish. At that time J was as healthy as any girl of my age. At the end of a couple of years, howâ€" eÂ¥er, I felt my strength leaviog me. My appetite grew, poor and I sufâ€" fered from severe headaches. I cevertheless continued my â€" studies until October, 1901, wheo I became very ill, and was forced to leave school. The headaches that â€" had bothered me became almost conâ€" stant. I suffered from pains in the back and stomach anod the least exertion would leave me almost breathless. A doctor was called in and he said I was suffering from anaemia, and was in a very danâ€" gerous condition. He treated me until February, without the least beneficlal result. ‘Then another docâ€" tor was called in, but no better reâ€" gults followed his treatment. My parents were now thoroughly alarmed, and two other doctors from St. Barthelemi were called in, and after consultation their verâ€" dict was that my trouble hiad reached anv incurable stage. I was greatly disheartened aad did not expect to live long, when one day one of my friends asked me why I did not try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. I had lost confidence in all medicines, but was willing to try anythiog that might help me, and my father got me a supply of the pills. When I had used a couple of boxes it was very plain that the pills were doing me good, and after I had taken them a couple of months I was once more enjoying the blessing of good health. I feel that Dr. Williams‘® Pink Pills have saved my life, and I gladly give my experience in the hope that it may be of benefit to some other young giris." £ The Pitiable Story of a Young Girl. Every Mother of a Growing Girl Willt be Interested in the Story as Told by the Young Lady Miss Laura Dumontier is: the daughter of a wellâ€"toâ€"do farmer in S‘t. Cuthbert, Quebec. The circumâ€" HAD TO LEAVE SCHOOL. (To be Continued.) ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Mr. Alsx. McLaughlin, tfor 0 ycears a r\lsent oï¬ Bowmanviile, Ont, writes ; * % & 4 "For twenty long years I suffere‘ from itching pilas, and only parsons who hay» been trovbled with that anâ€" noying dismse can imagine what I oncured during that time. About soven years uio I asked a dreggist it ho had anything to cure me. He eal} that Dr. Chas: ‘s Ointment was most favorably spokâ€"n cf, an4 on his Pilos, or hemorrhoids, are small tumors, which form in and about tha orlice of ue rectum. They aje caused by an enlarged and inflamed condition of the veins, which are very numerous in this portion of the body. Plivs frequently attack women curing the expertant period or after chikfirth. $Â¥\ C J s Any form of pilos causes dread{ul euffering on zecount of the itching and burning which accompany thaâ€"m. One can ecarcely walk at times, and céuring the night, when the body gots warm, suffering is intense. A Chronic Case of Unusual Severity and Long Standing Cured by A LASTING CURE Fertilizers with Winter Wheat.â€" In the coâ€"operative experimeats with different maoures applied in the spring of the year, the average results show a yield of 29.7 bushels of winter wheat from aa applicaâ€" tion of 160 pounads of nitrate of soda per acre, and &5.7 bushels from a top dressing of 20 tous of well rotted cow manure per acre. TThe unfertilized land gave an average yield of wheat per acro of 22.7 bushels. The yield of wheat from 160 pounds of nitrate of soda surpassed the yield from _ 400 pounds of common salt by 8.5 bushâ€" els per acre. Nitrate of soda, when applied in the spring, gave better results than wher applied in the Imperial Amber, 61.0 busshels, Colâ€" lege; 24.9 bushels, Ontario. Buda Pesth, 57.2 bushels, college; 21.4 bushels, Ontario. Turkey _ Red, 53.4 bushels, Colâ€" lege; 20.7 bushels, Ontario. All three varietiese are bearded, The chaff of the Imperial Amber is red, and that of the others is white. The grain of each variety is red, hard, and of good quality. All three varieties are rather weak in the straw, The Imperial Amber is a close rival to the Dawson‘s Golden Chaff in yileld of grain per acre. TEST§ AT GUELPH FARM FARMERS SHOULD READ ‘The supply of oil which is invaiâ€" uable for Tuel, therefore, is, first, the small percentage (probably aot over 2 per cent. or 3B per cent.) of the total production of the Pennsylvania and Ohilo oilâ€"the reâ€" siduum from the process of refinâ€" ing; seocnd, crude oil from _ the Ohio and Indian fields, wherever the price of coal makes the burning of oil 95 cents or $1 per barrel (plue freight) profitable; third, those portions of the California oil which are not best suitable for rofinieg; fourth, practically the enâ€" tire outpu of the Texas field.â€"Enâ€" gineering Magazine for August. Varieties of Winter Wheat.â€"Three varieties of winter wheat were disâ€" tributed throughout Ontario by the Experimental Uaion in the autumn of 1902, for coâ€"operative experiâ€" ments, â€" Goou reports of successâ€" fully conducte? experimeats have been received tits year from 18 counties, exteading from Essex in the south to Haliburton in the north ‘The following is the averâ€" age yield in weighed bushels of grain per acre for each variety for five years at the college and for 1903 throughout Ontario: _ _ Wells Vary From 25¢ to $1. The whole question of the econâ€" omy of oil burning for power purâ€" poses ultimately turns upon the price of oll at the wells, apd the available annual supply. In a genâ€" cral way, the price of Pennsylvania oil controls the price of nearly all the other crude oils, and they (luctuate as it fluctuates, the reâ€" lative price always remainiog practically constant and depending on the relative values for refining. At the present time, with Peansylâ€" vania oil selling in the neighborâ€" hood of $1.50 per barrel at the wells, Ohio and Iodiana oils are worth only about $1 and 95 cents respectively. ‘This is because of the sulphur in the latter oils, which makes the process of refining dif{iâ€" cult, and also because of the smaliâ€" er percentage of the light oills valâ€" uablo for illuminating which they contain. The quality of the Califorâ€" nia crude oil varies very greatly according to the location of the weclis, some of it being excelleat for rofining purposes and some of It being almost worthless and suitâ€" able only for fuel. The range of pricos at the wells, therefore, is correspondingly great, varying from z0 or 25 cents per barrel to about $1, with a present average valuo of. 55 cents at the wells. The value of Texas oil for relining is very little, indeed, in fact, almost mothing. It contains little or no naphtha, which is the most valuâ€" ablo constituernt in the Pennsylâ€" vania oil, and while it contains a reasonvnable percentage of kerosene thi sis of somewhat uncertain charâ€" acter and produces ana illuminating olil of an inferior grade. If its price were to depend on its refinâ€" Ing value, it would be very low. Experiments _ With Winter Crops Throughout Ontario. Dificulty in Refiningâ€"Prices at the THE SUPPLY OF FUEL OIL. DR. CHASE‘S OINTMENT OF ITCHING PILES THIS of cures unparall:led in the hist f of meGicine. 6) cents a box Mo:‘ Cmlers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. To protcet you against lmitations, the portrait and signaâ€" turo of Dr. A. W. C+~«=, the famous raolipe book: ruticr> "r> on evÂ¥ert Dr. Chaso‘s Olntment is the only cbsolute and guaranteed cure for every form of piles. It has a record vinco} that the ointment made & porfect cure. "I consMlGer Dr. Chase‘s Ointment on invaluable treatment for piles, In my cagse I think the ture was reâ€" markable when you consider that I am gotting up in years, and bhad boen so loag a sulferer from this clanase," "After three applications I felt betâ€" tor, an? by the time I had used one box I was on a fair way to recovâ€" ery. I continued the treatment until thoroughly curec, and I have not sufâ€" n‘;red ary «ince. I am firmly comâ€" recommendation I took a box. Her Fatherâ€"I‘ll horsewhip the youx‘u’z rascal. How has he deceived you ? Bheâ€"Booâ€"hoo! he let ma decline tiifl kbefore he told anyone he was The Why of the Tears. * _ Titâ€"Bits. ‘ Bheâ€"He had deceived me shame« fully. _ _ The heating surface of a boiler of a amodern locomotive is equal to &â€" surface fifty feet long by fortys seven feet wide. 4 Mateorial for any one of the five experiments here mentioned will be sent free to any Ontario farmer apâ€" plying for it, if he will conduct an experiment with great care, and reâ€" port the results after harvest next year. The seed will be sent out in the order in ‘which the applicaâ€" tions are received as long as the supply lasts. L & 1. Tosting hairy vetches, } crimson c over, and winâ€" 1 ter rye as folder crops 8 plots 2. Tosting tsree varieties of winter wheat ...... ...... 8 plots 8. Tosting five fertilizers with wintor wheat ...... ... 6 plots 4 Tosiing autuman and spring applications _ of R nitrate 0f soia and comâ€" â€" ; | , mon é#alt with wintor 4 alfords a estriking illustration, too, of the persistency of error and supâ€" erstition in the human mind. The rit= ual murder of Christian children hae boen charged against the Jews for conturies past, and though alwaye utterly false and bascless, and tem thousand times refuted by Christians: as well as by Jows, we find it spring= Ing up here again at Kishine{f in all! Itse old virulence, to bear again its :xorrld {rultdln thter slaughter of am nnocent and unoffending people,â€" Loslie‘s Weekly. â€" T xcal 39 tost hbe Gesires; and the material, with instructions for tosting and the blank form on which to roport, will be Turnished free of cost until the #supply of experimental material is exhausted. It might be well for each applicant to mak» a second choice, for fear ‘the first could not be granted. o ic t ) The hideouws and unspeakable crimes and infamios committed during the Middle Agos in the name of Chriseâ€" tianity find their parallel in the mase sacre a%. Kighine{{, where neither ago npor sex was spared The murder.ing lanatics were incited to their crueb end bloody work, as it now appears, by the distribution of a leaflet on tho eve of the massacre in which the Jews were expliciily charged witk killing Christian children that they might use their blood for ceremonial purposes. Spocific instances of recent date were given in which this alleged crime had been committed by the Jews. "Therefore, brethren," read the leaiflet, signed by the "Party of True Christian Workmen," "let us cry, on our great festival, ‘Dovn with the Jews!‘ Kill these infamous degenerâ€" atos, these b‘oodâ€"drinkers! The millâ€" tary will help us. Our Christâ€"loving soldiers have not yet become Jews. Kill the infamous Jews :‘ The case‘ each @f the other two by express. Each person wishing to conduct one‘ of those experiments should apply as eoon as possible, mentioning which: How the Kishineff Horror Was Started the quality of the feed of the latter was superior to that of the former. In ten out of a dozen tests® the hairy vetches were eaten readily by farm animals,. and _ seemed â€" particularly suitable as a feed for hogs. A Bruce farmer reported that "the hairy vetches gave a large yield, and were relished by all classes of animals." Distribution of Seed tor Experiment 5. Tosting winter barley and j winter rye for grain proâ€" * BOCARONE: |savss. | conces martts sonciccs P ioi The proper size of each plot is one: rod wide by two rods long. The matse= rial for cither of the first two exâ€" periments, or for No. 5 experiment,, will be forwarded by mail, and for: Winter Rye, Hairy Vetches, and Crimson Clover as Fodder Crops~ An interesting coâ€"operative experiment was made for the first time by sowâ€" ing winter rye, hairy vetches, and crimson clover, in the autumn for the purpose of producing green fodâ€" der in the following summer. The reports show that the crimson cloâ€" ver received the greatest injary from early spring frosts. ‘The highâ€" individual â€" yiclds were produced by the hairy vetches. In the average results, however, the winter rye surpassed the hairy vetches by 420 pounds of green fodder per acre, but autuimn. ‘The usual cost of aitrate of soda is about 3 cents per pound, in small quaatities, and 3 cents epr pound ia ton lots. Agricultural Colloge, Aug. 21, NFIMENE novilk neess A. ZAVITZ, 3 Gualph, Ontario 4e OV i FI it} } V 14