i M 1 I I mmmtiim mtilSSSi 3 BlAKlNG PRIME CLOVER HAY. The aim should be to cut the clover JiOt later thau the stage o£ full bloom. If allowed to stand locHfer the sterna becooie woody and the heads and leaves break off to a considerable estent. This loss injures tlui feeding value of the hay, and to a considerable extent les- sens iis palatability. Second, it should be cured with the least possible loss of coloi- and aromo, writes Thos. Shaw in the Prairie Farmer. To effect this it must not be unduly exposed to the sunlight, and so far as ia practicable it should be cured by the aid of the wind. If allowed to lie In the sun untU the natural color id lost before it is raked, there is a ^reait loss in palatability, and the nutritive value is also lessened thi'ough the loss of leaves and hea<l8 in the proce.ss of rakinji^ and also in other ways. AVhen clover hay has been well cured, the color of the blossom, ia the same as when the plants were cut. If clover hay of thit character can be ob- tained, it is of rare value, since it may be looked upon aa being in itself almost a perfect food. But when many of the beads and leaves are broken off, and when the hay is brown rather than green, it is but an Indifferent food for live sto<'k. And third, the aim should be to shield the hay when being cured from the adverse influence of dew and rain. These wash out the substances which gives the hay its aroma and they also remove other valuable properties. It is evident, therefore, that the man who makea good clover hay must be up and doing "while the sun shines " and to this we may add, while the wind blows. The great sin of the western farmer in curing bay consists in allow- it to get overripe before it is cut, and overdry while being cured. In carry- ing on feeding experiments at our sta- tion, I find more difficulty from this eource than from any other. Nature in kindness gives men good hay, and they spoil it in the making. And the drier the weather and the brighter the sunshine, the greater ia the loss from this source. Farmers, it is a grievous loss ! It ia a loss that we cannot af- ford. As already stated, clover hay should not, aa a rule, be allowed to go beyond the blosauming stage before it is cut, and yet, in time of prolonged wet weather it may be necessary to let it 8t;ind longer, for clover hay cannot be made at such a li^e witnuut great loss, and if there must be loss the source first mentioned will be the least. Unless the weather is decidedly settled, a great quantity should not be cut down at one tmie ; and whether it should be cut in the fort noon or afieruoon will depend upon conditions such as relate to the succulence of the clover and the nature of the weather. If cut in the afternoon the dew of the following night will seldom do any serious harm, owing to the greenness of the hav. The tedder should be run over the hay aa soon as it baa dried somewhat, and when the crop ia very heavy, it may be necessary to run the tedder over the hay u second time to hasten the drying. R should be raked as soon as th« raking can be done without difficulty. Everyone who has raked hs^ wUl readily understand tiiat v?heu it la too green to rake, luore or leas difficulty will l)e experienced iu drawing it into windrows. When such difficulty is experieui-ed the hay is loo gret'n to rake. If the weather is settled the hay may lie in the win- drow for a lime and the curing pro- cess may even be coiupleted iu the win- drow. i3ut if then' is any real danger of rain, the hay should be put up into cocks. This part of the work should never be carelessly done when done at all. Clover hay does not easily shed rain at the l)«st, and when carelessly thrown into what may be termed heaps rather than cocks, it is in no condition to shed raia. The cocks should be kept highest iu the center when making them, should be oval rather thau cone shaped, and should b« trimmed ou the outside by stroking them down with the fork inverted, and the bay thus drawn down should be spread on the top of the cock. All this can quickly be done by willing hands, but men can also spend lots of time over it when they are so inclined. There is a great difference !«! ween cocks of hay and rot heups of hay. As soon aa tne hay is cured it should lie drawn with all expedition. It ia ready to draw when the heat, caused by fermentation in the the cocks, has subsided, 'this can \]e ascertained by running the han<l in toward the center of the cock. When the hand is withdrawn some of the hay may be brought with it. If ttie wisp thus withdrawn be twisted and the * Bllghleat indication of collected moisture appear the hay is not ready to draw. ^lo fixed time can be stated for allowing the hay to lie before tedding or raking, nor can any definite time Ije given fur allowing it to remain iu the cock. These things depend upon conditions, and can only oe foimd out to a nioety by experience. When drawing clover hay, iu some instan(>ea it may oe taken up out of the winurow with the forks or with the hay lo.idor. Hut usually the best quality of the same is made iu the oock. Sometimes the lower i>iirt of the cock is damp, while the other portion is cured. This may be left out a little longer after the top portion has l)een removed. Another way when the hay Is not quite ready is to open out the cocks by setting aside the upper half and overturning the lower ; an "hour or two iu tlie .sun when thus spread makes a great ilifterence. Clover hay may be successfully cured in the silo and alsio iu tho mow in the green form. But curing by either of these methods is not likely to iKHome very common at lejisl in the happy idississtpni valley where the weather Is ilry and bright, as a rule, when clover is to be cured. survived guch treatment. But for the remedy tor gapes. Place the chickens, Ijack down, l)e- tween the knees, ajid hold it gently ; open its bill and draw the tongue out; seize the lower mandible and tongue thus drawn out between the fore-fin- ger and thumb nail of the left hand. This will bring into view the opening into the windpipe at the l)ase of the tongue, into which gently insert the tutje of a small oil can and discharge a few drops of kerosene ; close the bill and hold the head still for a few sec- onc'j, then let the chicken go. It will i5ough and the worm will be coughed up or swallowed. The gapes will con- tinue for a time after the treatment, but the remedy will be effectual if properly applied. It may readily be re- peated, if needed, aa often aa necessary. After a little practice it is easily ap- plied and always succeeds. HAY, ROOTS AND BEAN. The great object of fattening is pro- duction of greatest quantity at the least coat in the shortest time â€" irres- pective of other conditioos, such slb man- ure value, of which we do not take ac- count alt present. In the natural or- der of this inquiry â€" after summer con- ditions â€" we should look for fodder that can be plentifully and cheaply produced for winter use, such as hay, straw and roots; many farmers give no more, but it is not usually looked upon aa other than are maintenance â€" growing* the bone and muscles of young animaU well enough, but slow at fattening. In this blanch of our experimental work we added bran to the hay and roots, but no other grain whatever, and, of course, the fodder in proportionately larger quantitiea than had grain l»en allowed. The result in cost and pro- gress hod been unexpectedly gratifying â€" something so good that one pauses to consider whether, irrespective of the value of manure, many of our feeders are not in error wilth so much grain and other forma of more concentrated cattle food. Five and one-seventh r>tinds per head per day. at a cost of centa per pound are alxjve the average of the whole seriesâ€" higher than sev- eral that had the like fodders with large rations of grain. It is possible in this example that vigorous youth got all it wanted to grow bone and frame. Necessarily it took much bulk of fodder to do so, for the cost is great- er than two examples on the card where various grains were plentifully sup- plied. This lesson is a go<id one, bow- ever, and bids us exercise greater char- ity than is common to those who pur- sue what is called the slower, or old- fashioned system. EAST SIMCOE'S CLEVER MEMBER Mr. W. H. Bcnneii. H.P. for Earn •Imoae, Tell* ar me .Hacleal BR«ett af Vr. AcBcw'* ratarrbal Pawdrr -l( Kellavaa lualautly aad PermaKaatly <.'ar««. When in attendance at the House of Commons during the last session of Parliament. Mr. W. H. Bennett, who represents East Simcoe with so much satisfaction and ability, awoke one morning to find himself an intense suf- ferer from coUl in the head and catarrh. He must be at Ills duty early, for his attendance at committees and in the House was wanted. Fortunately he had in his possession a bottle of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder. Ho used it, and he tells us that almost instantly, certain- ly wthin an hour, he experienced per- fect relief, and waa able to eater upon hid work with all the necesisary fresh- ness and zest. The wonderful thing abotit this specific ia not alone its ef- fe«;tivene«j8 in ridding the system of Catarrh, but the speedy way that it gets in ita work. Sample bottle and blower sent by S. G. Detchon, 44 Church st.. Toronto, on receipt of 10 cents in stamps or silver. Sold by D. McGillivray. PRODUCT OF A WALNUT TREE. In the Baider Valley, near Balaclava, in the Crimea, there stands a walnut tree which must be at least 1,000 years old. It yields annually from 80.000 to 100,000 nut-i, and is the pro[)erty of five Tartar families, who share its products equally. DHEAHINQ. If Pertlatent. It la Krynrtted By iriantttU as uii ittUlrutlaii ot Imiaattr. The fullest examination into the na- ture and origin of dreams has been mads by M. Morsau, the French scien- tist. He divides dreams into the dreams of health and the dreams that are the result of the diseased state of the mind or body. In regard to the latter it need only be remarked that persistent dreaming is one of the most mvariable symptoms of insanity, and it is a psy- chological fact if genitu Is near allied to nuulncss. men ot genius must be ex- pected to dream more than ordinary men. With regard to the dreams of health, they are the result of an unper- feet state of consciousness or an imper- fect state ot sleep, according aa we look at it. It is obvious that the mind of the clever man. that is constantly oc- cupied with many schemes and thoughts, is more liable to be awake when his body is asleep than that of the dullard, whose mind is often asleen when his l>ody is awake. Thus the sleep of the plowlxjy has become proverbial on so- count of its undisturlied nature. In most cases a man of lively imagination and quick brain Is undoubtedly more liable to dream than the dullard. HEART DISEASE OF FIVE YKARS' STANDING. Abaalalelj Cared hj Br. Acncw'a Cmre far Uie â- carlâ€" The Creat Ll(c-lia*lns Kcmadx SItc* Belter ia Tklriy Mia- al«. Thomas Petry, Esq., Aylmer, Que.: "I have been troubled for five years with severe heart complaint. At times the pain was so (severe that I was un- able to attend to business. The slight- est exertion proved very fatiguing, and neceasitated taking rest. I tried Dr. Agnew's Cure tor the Heart, and obtain- ed immediate relief. I have now taken four bottles of the remedy, and am en- tirely tree from every symptom of heart disease. 1 hope this statement may induce others, troubled as I waa, to^ give this most valuable remedy a Sold by D. McGilUvraj. A GAPE CURE. The following "advice" is givan by the American Agriculturist. If the writer of it has ever gone through a flock of 100 or so ^pey chickens, w« should like to know the time it took and the per otsh. o( Uttie fellows that THE ALPS MOUNTAINS, DaUKert TluU Bcaet the Taarliitâ€" .(eel- dealH That Have Happened There. Among Alpine accidents one of the moat awkward is that which occurs wrieu a portion of the party disappears on one side of the ridge, while the other portion remains behind. This species of .Vlpine adventure is not only excessive- ly disagreeable on account of the length of time that Is expended in extricating oneself from it, but may end fatally to all the party. The most thrilling incident of this sort that has ever occurred in the Alps is that which happened on September (i, 18T7, to a party composed of Mr. W. -V. Lewis, Mr. H. N. Patterson, with .N'iklaus, Johann and Peter Joseph Knul>el, who were ascending the liys- kamm by the terribly sharp Li's Joch (Eastern) arete, when the whole party fell headlong onto the Italian side of the ridge and were all lost. They were walking on the cornice ovorhiugiug to the south, which gave way with a mighty crash. Peter Jos- eph Knubel was the last to be carried down, and, as was evidenced by the fact that uis body was well-uigh cut in half by the tightening rope around his waist, he did hui utmost by throwing himself unto the northern aide of the ridge to stay the fall of the rest ot the party. The weight, however, of the remain- ing four was so great, and tl^ slope upon the side of the mountain upon which the cornice broke away waa so sleep, that the poor, brave fellow waa •merely pulled up to the crest of the arete to l>e drawn headlong downward on the other side, more than 1,200 feetl with the remainder of his unforluiiiite companions. The bodies o£ the three Knubels who were killed on this occasion lie buried in the churchyard at St. Nich- olas ; and, in some of its accidents, this is tlie most tei'rible ot all the Alpine accidents that have ever occurred. Another most awkward accident of Ibis class, though happily not fatal in its results, occurred in the Engndine. In the year 1878 a party, of which old Hans Grase was a member, were de- scending westward along the crest of Piz Palu. when the leaning guide fell down the slope of the northern side, an<t three of the parly of four were dangling on the rope, old Hans alone remaining on the riclge. He managed to hold the three (one of whom waa a lady), but it was not until the end of three quarters of an hour that the last ot the party was landed again ou the ridge. Hans received a sUver drink- ing-cup and a handsome new ice-a.x. given liiui aa souvenirs of his gallant prowess on this most critical occasion. THK MlDDl.E-AGED MEN. " When 1 was a boy," said the mid- dle-aged man, " my mother always used to ask m« when, I was going away an- where, ' Have you got everything I' She wiatttod to be sure, so that when I got there and unpacked my valise I woiild- n't be disappointed by finding that I had forgotten something. " The other day, when my son was about to start op a little journey, his travelling bag lying filled but still o\)ea on the floor, I heard hU mother saying to Uim : ' Have you got everything V It was almost startling. That was vrhal; my mother used to ask me, and I hadn't heard it these years and years. But I guess it la a familiar question, though one asked ofteiiest by mothers, perhaps, out ot their constant care for , iiteir children's welfare and comfort." THE WHISTLING TREE. A species of acacia, which grows very abundantly in Nubia and the Soudan, ia also called the "whistling tree" by the natives. Its shoots are frequently, by the agency of the larvae of insects, distorted in siiupo cud swollen into a globular bladder from one to two inch- es in diameter. After the inaect has emerged from a circular hole in the side of this swelling, the opening, play- etl upon by the wind, becomes a musi- cal iustrumient, nearly etiual in sound to a sweet-toned flute. lijr rhir^irlaa ftatched Ike KeialU af Saath Anrrlraa Kheamaile Care with •taaUhiural-UlieBai tlePula* 4lB»»I Bcrsad MiiiuHu Kndat-aaeeâ€" KellrTed la Twv Uaar* aad Carad ia Thraa Bar*. In adding my testimonial to the many words of prai.-«e spoken everywhere in favor of South American Rheumalio Cure. I am. at a loss for words to e xpress my feelings of sincere 'gratitude and thankfulness tor what this remedy has done for mie. ;\a the result of exposure, I waa taken with a .-wvenB attack of rheu- matic fever, whicU affected my knee joints. The pain 1 suffered was almost beyond human endurance. Doctors' per- scription.s and other reiue<lies gave me no relief, ami I rapidly continued to grow wi>rse, until it necined as if every muacle and bone iu my body was affect- ed. Having heard ot the marvellous cures effecteil by Sou; h American Rheumatic Cure. 1 detcriuiiiod to give it a trial, -scarcely expecting, however, that it would do me any good. Judge of my joyful suri>rise and delight when, after taking about throe doses of the remedy the pain entirely left uie. In three days 1 was able to leave my bed. By the advice ot my doctor, who had watched the results of '.his remedy with astonishment. I continued il.« use until I had taken six 'oobtior.. Every traice ot my rheumatism has now disappeared, and I believe that I am thoroughly and permanently cured. Only those who have suffereil from this terrible affliction can realize the true worth of a roiuedy of this kind, a trial of which 1 would recommend to all sufferers from this ooi-ploint. With best wishts for the continued success ot South American Rheumatic Cure, 1 am, thankfuUv yours, GFORGK W. PLA I T. lMana«er World's Newspaper Agency, I'oronto Can. Sold by U. McGillivray. A romantic wedding took place at Sedans Kan., the other day, in which Squire 'Turner, of Cedaryille, aged 73. and Amanda M. Gillespie, of McLean coutily. 111., aged 1)3, «ere the conlract- iiii^ parties. Nearly 50 years ago the bride and groom were engaged, and al- thoU|j;h Mr. Turner had removed to the east and married another, his present bride wailed faithfully tor the lime when he would a,;aiii Ije free. BETTEH THAN A $40,000 GOLD BRICK. Thte la rrank 8. Eiaerlrk's Opluloa af Saalh Amrtlraa KIdaay Vara, .for It Saved His Lift. The 910.001) gold brick now on its way from British CoUunbia may be a treas- ure to its owneix but good health ia bolter than gold. This us the way Mr. Frank S. Emerick, of Alvinston, meas- ures hoitlth. Ho says : "For two years 1 wad greatly troubled with an affec- tion ot the kidneys, suffering intense pain, and frequently unable to work. I got little or no relief from the doctona. nor from several patent me<.licines that I tried. The di-«>a-<e was rapidly making headway, and the pains became frequent and uitense. Sly friends, in their anxiety, secured a bottle ot South .\m- «ricau Kidney Cure. In a few hours from taking the first dose I began fo find relief, and as ^ result of Taking four bottles I am to-day completely well. 1 consider it worth its weight in gold, for it assure<lly saved my life." Sold by D. McGllUvray. OU.RED OF SCIATICA. The Experience of a Bruce Co. Farmer. liaAred S« Saverely Tkat Be Keenme Al. aiiMt a Briplewi Cripplr-Iit .Isaln Able ta be Abeat Hill Work as Well as Hver. From the Walkerton Teleai;ope. During the past five years the Tele- scope has pumlsheii many statements giving the particulars ot cures from the use of Dr. Williams' Pink PllU. They were all so well authenticated as to leave no doulit ad to their complete truthfulness, but had any doubt re- mained its last vistage would have been removed by a cure which has recent- ly come under our personal ol»servation. It is the cose ot Mr. John Allen, a pru- mini-nt youn^ farmer of the town- ship ot Greenock. Mr. Allen ia so well known in Walkerton and the vicinity adjoining it, that a brief accoimt of his really remarkable recovery from what seemed an incurable dinease will be of interest to our readera. During the ear- ly part ot the summer of lS9r>, Vvhile working in the bush. M>. Allen was seized with what appeared to him to lie rheumatic pains m the liack and shoulders. At first he regarded it aa but a passing attack, and thought that it would disappear in a day or two. On the contrary. however, he daily continued to grow worse, and it was not lon^ before he had to give up work altogether. From the l>ack the nains shifted to his right leg and hip where they finally .settled and so completely helpless did he be- come, that he was unable to do mi-re than walk across the room and then only with the aid ot crutches. Of course he consulted the doctors. Imt ULme of them .seemed a^'le to do him any good, ^'iple in speaking of his case, always spoke pityingly, it l^eing generally thought that be had passed from (be worlil of activity, and that he was doonie<l to live md die a cripple. We are free to confess that this was our own view of the matter, and our stir- prLse. therefore, can Ije readily imagin- ed when some few weeks ago, we saw this .self-same John Allen driving through the lowrt on the lop of a large load of grain. (Jreat h.)wever. as was our surprise at first, it became still greater when on arriving at the grist mill, he prix-eeiled to jump nimbly from the load, and then with the greatest ap- ixitrent eas*- began to unload the heavy Iwgs of grain. Curious to kumv what it was that had brought this wonder- ful change, we took t he first convenient opportunity to ask him. "Well," s;iid he in reply. "I am a.s well a man as 1 ever was. and I attrilmte my cure to Dr. Williams' Pink PilLs, and to nothing else." Mr. .\llen then gave us in a very frank manner, the whole story of his sickne.H,s. and his cure, the chief points of which we have set forth alxwe. After loiusultlng two physi- cians and finding no relief, he set:lled down to the conviction th.al his cttse wa.i a h<H)eless one. He lost confidence in medicines, :uid when it was .suggested that he should give E'ink Pills a trial, he at first absolutely refused. Htrw- ever, his friends persisted and finally he agreed to give them a trial. The effect was Iwyond his most .sanguine exj)ectatioiis, as the Pink Pills have driven away every trace of his |>ains and be is at>le to go alwuit bis work as usual. As might l)e e.\i)ecled Mr. Allen is K>u<l in his praise of Pink Pills, and was quite willing that the facts of hL-s case .should he given publicity, hoping thait it might catch the eye of someone who was similarly afflicted. l3r. Williams' Pink Pills act directly u|x>u the blood and nerves, building them anew and thus driving disease from the syslcnj. There Is no trouble due to either of these causes which Pink Pills will not rure. and in hundreds of cases they have reetored patients to Ilea II h after all oH»er remedies had fail- ed. .\-di for Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a.nd tnk« nothing else. The genuine ate always eni!as«<l in Ixjxes the wrappi^r aioiind whiih Uiars the full trade mark •Dr. Willioms' .Pink Pills foi- Pale People." May (le had from all dealers or scut post paid on receipt of oOeenlH a l>ox or six boxes for $2.50 by a>l- ilresatng the Dr. WUliamfl' Medicine Co., Brockvule, Ont. Always Taking cold, la a common complaiat. R U due to Impure unt deficient Wood and it oltun laads to serioui troubles. T-hS remedy is found In pura, rich blutpd. 1 am not very Btfouu and »omotiina» help ina battle aguioiif â- ickUMR. I find that two or tlue« Ijoule* need a tonic to ol Hootfa Samaparilla ^ Just what I neeil| I have taken It oooB»ionaUy lor Beveral years and do not have any dootow' bill* to pay?' Mw Ja.n-iS H«Jt*iN9, 80 Beau* fain St., Charieiton, a. 0. Remenkbai • ItM S Sarsaparilla Iitba One True Blood Purifier, fl ; 6 (orffll An Englishman named Jefferson has started on a (i.OOO mile bicycle ride to Irkutsk, in Silieria. His machine aud Imggage weigh sixty pounds. riOOu S rlllSuuytoopcrata. 2Sc. FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THECOOK'SBESTFRIENO LAncesT SAUK IN Canada. GOOD WALKERS. The Akoeaiaker I'aa Tell Thrm lu ^«B â- • â- e !!««» Cke Sker-). A shoemaker says' "Aa soon as • man comes into my shop and takes off bis shoes 1 can tell whether or not ha U a good walker, and it is astonishing to find how few men know the propa* way to step out. If the shoe ia worij down at the heelâ€" not on the side, but straight twckâ€" and the leather ot lb* sole shows signs of weakness at the bait of the foot, a little greater on the iiw side just ImIow the base of the great toe, I know that the wearer ia a good walker. "If, however, the heel is turnsd on one side, or is worn unevenly through- out, and the sole is worn musi naar thd toe, I know that I have to deal wibh a poor pedestrian. The reason of the dil> ference in position ot the worn spol lies m the fact that the poor walker waltaa from his knees, and the good one from his hip, â- VVati'h the passer-by in the street ind you wdl at >mc« see the di(tereuo«> Nine men ijut ot ten will Iwnd the kosd very considerably in walking. <si>i)ii)0 straight out with both hips on the samtf line, and the toe will l>e the llrat to strike the ground. 'The lenth man will l)end his knee very little â€" just enougtl lo clear the groundâ€" and will swing the leg from the hip, very much aa the arm is swung frotn the shoulder, and not from the elbow. "By so lioiug he calls upon the uiusclaa which are strongest to l)«ar the strain, and increases the leiurth of his stride four or six inches, 'the heel touches I lie ground Hrst, and uoi. tlw toe. A .slight spring is ^iven from the ball of the foot on makiui^ another stride "Men who walk m ihl* fashion cover the ground 30 per cent, faster with the same exertion than those who walk from the knee." THE SOVEREIGNS OF EUROPE. Maay Nonarckii Wku let Kale at a Up* •Id Ace. Queen Victoria is the oldest femalo sovereign who ever sat on the thron» of England. The Queen is afflicted with rheumatism or gout, but her doc- tors take the liest ot oare of her health. mo that she may yet have years of lits. The oldest King in Europe la Chris- tian IX, ot Denmark, who last muntli entered upon the seventy-ninth year of his age. He has worn the crown fof thirty-three years. rhe King of Sweden and Norway. Os- car I., is in the sixty-seventh year of his age, and has wielded the sceptra since the year I87i. The Emperor of Au.stria, Francis Jo- seph I., will be sixty-six years old in August next, and he sat on his throne tor forty-eigh! years. The King of the Belgians, Leopold IL, is iu the sixty-second year ot his age, and in the thirty-first year of hia reign. 1 ue King of Saxony is iu bis sixty- ninth year. The King i)f Italy, HumlMTt I., is in the fifty-third year ot his life, and in the sevenleeulh year of his reign. I'be King of the Hellenes. George I., is fifty-one years old. and ha.s ruled Greece" for tiurty-three years. The Sultan of Turkey. .\ImIu1 Hiiuid II., is fifty-four, and has l)een the ruler of the Turkish empire for twenty years. The Kinijrof Hoiunaulft,Charle!5 l.,ls in thi> fifty-eighth year o£ hi^ age. These "are the more elderly of the im- perial <<v royal sovereigns of Europe. Among the younger European sov- ereigns are the Emperor of Geriuan.v, 37; the King of Portugal, 33; the Czir ot Kussla.'ih; the King ofServia,20; th« Queen of the Netherlands, 17. and (he King of Si>ain, 10. In the Netherlands there is a queen regent, and also in SiMiin. Pope Leo XTlL, who i» not a tennwral rtUer. us in the eighty-seventh year of his age, lx)rn March i, 1810. Women are aoknowledged to be real- ly braver than m»n. The auticipatwl peril of pain they shrink friwn is fem- inine timidity. Init it they are plung- ed into the midst ot a gneat daugAr you seldom find one that is not brav* and helpful. The woman who has hy>- ^terice at sight ot a mouse will !» the last one to leave a sinking ship, or will, with dogged oourage, ilefond beV . home against burglars, her ohild I against the fury ot a nuad dieg.