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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1910)
4 : DAKOTA CITY HERALD DAKOTA CITY, NEB. OHN H. REAM, . . Publisher. SARTORIAL SNOBBERY. t Tbat cluelre Individual to whom the Now York tailors owe a largo debt of gratitude which may be more than balauced by the amount he owes the tailors has tendered the public an other profound statement lie aaya that a man "who doesn't ro out much' can dress decently on 3,000 a year, ays the Cleveland Plain Denier. Ob eerve the subtlo malgnity of that qual ifying phrase. The man who goes out much, the fellow who romps through Touts and dinners and teas and al fresco twaddlefests, must pny his tall mr no matter what he does for the Jdper. While the poor chappie who s hampered by a measly $5,000 will cut his pleasures carefully according to his cloth, being so closely menaced by that deadly line of decency. Just now this distinction will be regarded by the possessor of two coat hangers, with only one In active use, can easily be Imagined. He will smile at the ukase and snap his fingers at a code of decency that la based on 20 coats and countless trousers. Nevertheless; If you are ambitious to be of the patricians you must do as the patrlc- lans do provided your income ex ceeds the paltry $5,000 and It will be an exhibition of extremely bad form If yon regard this sartorial declara tion of the man who knows In any )ther save the most serious light There Is beginning to be comment n the growing respectability of trade In Germany. Time was when a man of title was believed to soli his bands by making money. The tradition can hardly be insisted on, however, when the kaiser himself has a business in terest In the manufacture of terra cot ta. JYom the old American stand point It Is much more honorable to get money in trade or Industry than to ac quire It by marriage; but It may be a long time before European aristocracy of any description sees the mercenarj marriage problem In Its true light Within the next three years the Ma lay states will export $50,000,000 worth of rubber. This goes far toward put ting the rubber plant on a plane with the Ice plant as a source of revenue. A man In Massachusetts turning to look after a hobble skirt fell and broke ibjs leg. He would not be a true son At Adam If he does not put all the plame on the hobble skirt A Paris dentist who tinkered with the teeth of the royalty of Europe at about $500 a tinker, has just died, leaving an estate "-" wer a mi mmon. j A New Jersey pastor says that wom en who wear bobble skirts should be spanked. True, but In that skirt there's no chance of getting them in the proper position for spanking. When people discover that It is cheaper to buy at home than to smug gle from abroad, smuggling will cease. The pocket nerve la a powerful moral agent Another man In the big woods baa been shot, being mistaken for a deer. In order to be reasonably safe the hunter might disguise himself as game. There Is a school In Dubuque which Is trying to teach boys to love farm Work. One course should be on the abolition of the corn-husk mattress. A Pittsburg man has received a legacy of $850,000 because he didn't marry. Not being married we can't ieeft that be needs the money. i A Washington man dropped dead while using bis lawn mower, and we presume bis neighbors rolled over and enjoyed a little morning sleep. ! It is about this time that the stun tner girls at the shores begins to get busy with her letters to the winter tand-by In the city. Men whose hirsute adornment Is remarkable for what It Is not will disagree with tbat scientist who says that a fly travels 35 feet a second. The tipless hotel should now be come a treat-less hotel also and thus attain perfection. Writing poetry Is such a mild form Of Insanity that heretofore it has not been thought necessary to lock up the Victim. A $60,000 bull dog has just died ana there is to be a post-mortem Invest! patlon, Instead of the usual will con test. Japan has changed the name of the late Emperor of Korea to Prince Gl Perhaps "Gl" Is Nipponese for "Git." I The latest dldn't-know-lt-waslondod operator was thoiiKhtful enough to put the muzzle of the gun In his own niout h. It is reported that 200.000 horses year re eaten in Purls. Cultured she may bo, but Paris certainly isn't fasti tllnus. Any prudent deer hunter should re use to take hla best fiit-nda into the jWooda with him. TJhLO TTTT V WIIJLIAJK .X?ADFOEI E3 fr. William A. UuiUnr.l will .-iiiswci nuoRtlons find Klvn mlvico KKKK ol COST on all mibjocts pertalnlnc ti tin fnibjort of btilldlnK for ttio rc:u!cr n this pnper. On tit-count of bin wl'lc c rlonce as Ktlltor. Author ami M mnfn tnrnr, ho In, mltlifcut doubt, lilifti. authorlly on all ihonn Hiibjcct. All f s all Inquiries to William A. Uailfnnl. No 1M Fifth Ave., Chlcnicn. 111., mxl mil-- .11 close two-crnt tanip for rep'"- It Is frequently assorted that, the people of the middle west have not developed the particular art value of the building of their homes, whii h might be called common to the su burban communities near the cities In the east In fact, In most of tbo towns and cities of thn New Kngland states. Many Ingenious statements have been made by those who have been trying to determine fhe cause. It is, perhaps, after all. simply a matter of tinio. It in a noteworthy fact thnt the west has long slnre re covered from the ornate and gaudy in archltecturo nnd Is settling down to first principles. This is not only true of tho cities, but also of the rural communities, where the Influ ence of popular magazines lias been felt. The public In general Is being edu cated In the uses of cement and its value and economy as a bomo-bulld-Ing material. A number of trade Journals devoted to the uses of ce ment have wide circulation and In formation Is being sent out broadcast. The cement house lends Itself readily to the requirements of the sane In architecture. It hns been proved that the cement house Is cooler In sum mer and warmer in winter than the frame structure. The Initial cost Is a little more than that of frame, but the saving in painting bills more than offsets that item In the long run. Throughout the country, both In the cities and the rural communities, there aro beautiful examples of the cement house. There are In general two classes of cement houses, those made of concrete blocks and those of the plaster tyie. The concrete ma chinery Intorests have been studying the artistic demands of the block and they have succeeded In eliminating uany of the objectionable foatures r. -wiipyi , hi I, from that form of building material. The common objection to the block Is its sameness. This objection has been removed so that It Is now possible to get blocks that have all the charac teristics of granite or of stone. The waterproofing features of the block also have been Improved and the former fear that tho concrete First Floor Plan. block would prove damp and unsani tary has been removed. The botiHe shown in this connection is a combination of tho block con struction and the plaster house. The foundation and Hist story walls are to be built of blocks, while the sec ond story is of cement plaster con atructlon. Tho design Is a most pleas ing one and whllo plulu In appear ance it looks substantial in neat. This houne ought to be built on a largo lot with plenty of trees and j shrubs. Room should bo provided , also for a formal garden. The ap ! pearanco of the house will bo n- i tunic (1 IT a cement huiiikIo root is provided. Cement pltlngltis are now nintic that will wlih'-taiiil all the usage of ii roof ami 'hoy h;ue proved their worth iiei c i.ui:i... It :i cement sli'lir'i' is used the entire i,trinturo from foundation to the peak of tho roof will have the sa.ne gray color Tho house It; twenty four feet wide Mid Is twenty Hill- feet et!;ht Inches lor-K- ll will bo not iced by inference to tho plan thr.t no parlor is provided, but in Its place is a large living room. This indicates that this houso is to bo lived iu all owr t)!f the living room is a cosy nouk provided with an open flrepluce. Jul - . -' Vr fSL ' ' ' II ' ''XL, Jr. lTj B a Iff .t-uwjnJ'-'i! , i. -vjp '-.- r-r f - .i i. .. x . . .., pS Kitchen t1""' j B7rfJ' ircrxiiv J CNooK Living Rm I Porch 0J0'X6'0- 1 rrn A A i 1 "IB: Imagine belnr snugged tip 111 that no., I: on a cold winter night when the v. h- howling outside. Hack of the liviv rot in Is the dining room, and hi I, ilii.if. ulso Is conveniently lo ,,,'m1 Oa the second door are two bedrooms. This Is the stylo of house that will always- 11 lid a ready sale and that is f onset liinp to bo borne In mind In : electing the design of a house. W Second Floor all expect when wo build a home to keep it for a lifetime, but in the ex perience of many tho time comes by change of fortune when It becomes necessnry to dispose of the house. If it is of the old style conventional kind no different from hundreds of others In the community, the sale is a hard problem. Hut If It is stylish the owner will have no trouble in find ing a buyer. Stage Realisms. A rigid realism would make dramat lc performances Impossible. Just as the poet, puts words into Juliet's mouth that she would never have thought of, Just as Booth endowed the countenance of Hamlet with miracles of evanescent expression 1 .i.ii.nwiy. ulliWHiWWj.-" which that ineffectual Danish princt could not have mastered In a lifetimt of facial exercises; Just so the experi enced auditor supplies a multitude ol surmises which tho mimic art, with consummate skill, suggests. What was going on between llocky Sharp and the wicked nobleman when Raw don came In, and what language Fal staff and Pistol actually used when they were alone, are things the wise dramatist and producer leaves to the Imagination of the sophisticated. No one less than Clyde Fitch should put forward the pitiful pretense that the theater is a temple of holy art where unaffected Truth must reign and all compromise with rlncerlty be abandoned; for no one more delib erately and miserably turned his bark upon the noble, uplifting thing the stage might be to embrace the sar donic philosophy of unmoral art. Neither in "The Blue Mouse" nor in "The City" is there any worthy end to be attained, even by the highest talents, but only a depressing and misanthropic picture of human nature at its worst. Indianapolis Siar. Young Men's Buddhist Association. Japanese lluddhisiu Is remarkablt for the great number of sects Inte which the believers are divided. Kvery conceivable tendency of thought l represented by a different grouping. Of late there has moreover been great activity in the formation of Buddhist societies among the educated people. Among oru.mU.iitom- recently formed, (he Ctvai Japan Young Men's Buddhist association, which workt among the students of the different Tokio unlver Hiles, c:h i;s the most important. Many of i:.- older members have at talned hi;;!-. ;o. iiion In the social and political world, and the society thert fo; e "iijoys a i omidorahlo Influence among the i'llclh c! mil classes. U include!-- a : vv.a I s members adherent or a'l ih ' ifii'e -ent f,ocls of Buddhism. - Paul .-" i'ei'i: in !;e Atlantic. Sure They're Edible and Fresh. W ill you h: c some fresh mustv rooms?" a lo d the hostess, sweetly. Vet." f. Iieicd the guest; "if you're quite sure ilu're mushrooms and not ticxlstni ! " 't)h, IM e:-'e sure," replied the ho.-,l "I i.peiied ihe can myself.' Ct.iicker. "Why do win consider women k& perior to me i In i :: ( . i ! r i.n-'.'" "A lialchc.i.iel mat. hi.ys hair to sloier by the quart, doesn't lie?" "Hi yes." "Well, a won. an doesn't waste Unit on hair restorer; i-lie buy hair." " ILDi-A Beo'Rm. vclAIV I 1 r immsi turn 1 1 PfrJi 1 rJ ! BldRm. I j j c l3'6'm' 1 j Plan. L fc lil -Li V" Social Change Iy nON. ARTHUR DO KOT BELIKVK mypelf that this ngo is loss spiritual or II nmre eordul than its prcdcccPFors. I bclicvo, indeed, precisely 1 4llt fnt-orcn l?ti f ItAtvni-nit 4 ti ia Wfi o v 1 in la if Tinf Tilll I n f flfl t if " society m to be moved by tho femote FjK!Cul.ition3 of mtluttnl ihinkers it enn only bo on condition that their isolation is not coinjilete. Some point of contact they must have with the world in which they live, nnd if thoir influence is to ho based on wide spread sympathy tho contact mnst bo in a region where there vim can he, if not full mutual comprehension, at least a large meas ure of practical agreement and willing co-operation. Philosophy has never touched the. mass of men except through religion. And, though the par allel is not complete, it is safe to say that science will never touch them unaided by its practical applications. Critics have made merry over the naive solf-irnportance which repre sented man as the center and final cause of the universe, and conceived the stupendous mechanism of nature as primarily designed to satisfy his wants and minister to his entertainment. But there is another and an opposite danger into which it is possible to fall. The material world, however it may have gained in sublimity, has, under Ihe touch of science, lost in domestic charm. Except where it affects the immediate needs of organic life, it may seem so remote from the concerns of men that in the majority it will rouse no curiosity, while of those who aro fascinated by its morals not a few will be chilled by its impersonal and indifferent immensity. 1 The appropriate remedy is the perpetual stimulus which the influence of science on the business of mankind offers to their sluggish curiosity. And even now 1 believe this influence to be underrated. If in the last hundred years the whole material setting of civilized life has altered we owe it neither to politicians nor to political institutions. Wo owe it to the combined efforts of those who have applied it. If our outlook upon the universe so great and so numerous that they it is to men of science we owe it, not these, indeed, new and weighty responsibilities are being cast. They have to harmonize and to co-ordinate to to preserve the valuable essence of what is old. But science is the great instrument of social change, all the greater because its object is not change but knowledge. And its silent appropria tion of this dominant function amid the din of political and religious strife is the most vital of all the revolutions which have marked the de velopment of modern civilization. It may seem fanciful to find in a single recent aspect of this revolu tion an influence .which resembles religion or patriotism in its appeals to the higher side of ordinary characters especially since we are accustomed to regard the appropriation by industry of scientific discoveries merely as a means of multiplying the material conveniences of life. A social force has come into being, new in magnitude if not in kind. This force is the modern alliance between pure science and industry. That on this we must mainly rely for the improvement of the mate ilul cvnO.Uw. Which societies live is,- in mv opinion, obvious, al Promote Good Health and Long Life By H. L. PIERCE matters as we have to attend to in this life, therefore they should be given as much thought and attention as anything else that we are called upon to do. By knowing how to eat and drink we are less liable to abuse our selves in this respect. The cooking schools have done much in teaching children how to pre pare food, but have not yet taught them how to eat it after it was prepared. Let us have eating schools and drinking eehoiils. It is the abuse of eating and the abuse of drinking that do the injury. They make dyspep tics of us all; they have made many drunkards, and will make many mora unless education steps in and calls a halt. There is a generation growing up that ve will be responsible for. lt us begin now to teach the child how to eat and drink for health, strength, endurance, efficiency and gustatory satisfaction in such a man ner as will build up a better rai-e of people than the world li : seen. It can be done. Difficult to Keep Pace With Sland By PROF. SIDNEY A. 0SC00D of Bottoa was "For hcawtiV sake," thought I, "what did the man mean by a 'run in:'" Later 1 gathered from his conversation that he and the politician bad nut and engaged iu an animated argument, that narrowly missed hem- a niinpii- - a kind of near-row, so lo speak. As Brandt r Matthews 1:a. put Ihe stamp of his approval on ''joint," i m;iio-o that "run-in" vtill conic to be accepted m one of thoso con densed nnd significant biu of cjucch that this generation teems fond of .coining Present Ae Not, Less Sordid Than Others JAMES BALFOUR advanced science and those who have has suffered modifications in detail amount collectively to a revolution, to theologians or philosophers. On prevent the new from being one-sided, though no one would conjecture it from a historic sur vey of political controversy. Its direct moral effects are less obvious ; indeed, there are many most excellent people who would altogether deny their existence. To regard it as a force fitted to rouse and sustain tho energies of nations would seem to them absurd. I believe this view to be utterly misleading, con founding accident with essence, transient accompani ments with inseparable characteristics. How Bhall we eat and drink for the at tainment of health and long life? I un derstand it is the rule among school teach ers to leave these matters mainly to the parents. That being the case, how can we expect the parents to know how, when they have never attended a school that taught this principle? Is it not about time that our public schools took up the matter and made some headway in formulating a method whereby the child can learn something about tho art and not continue to eat like an animal ? Eating and drinking are as important It is hard for a man who tr. io adhere to the niceties of the English language to comprehend a good deal of the talk he hears nowadays. Of course some of the slang is clever and so expressive as to win ultimate incor poration in the lexicons, while some of it is silly and some loses vogue. The oilier day I was talking with a friend, a Harvard graduate, who was tell ing lue of having had a run-in with some politician whom my friend disliked and trying to beat. 1 h Tnoiml VV Blilf 1)11 11 1 I f JLPlf I III wmmsmm p FARMER. Not the traditional sort, but the scientific farmer, the man who Is equipped to enjoy a free and prosperous life How your boy can get the education of a scientific farmer for nothing or next to nothing States ano federal gover'ient anxious to help the boy who wants to mas ter the new farming The re wards of farming by modern methods. BY C. W. JENNINGS. ON'T turn up your nose when a friend suggests that you encourage your boy to take up farming for his life work. I know that a farm er has been 'ooked upon H9 an unkempt. Illiterate, awkward, poor, struggling creature without hope of reward for the utmost self-denial and planning, with buildings and grounds and machinery and horses mortgaged, wife overworked, nnd chil dren forced to remain out of school to help at farm work, nothing but toil and poverty. If such conditions ever really exist ed generally among Uncle Sam's till ers of the soil, which is extremely doubtful, they have departed, for agri culture nowadays is king. It has taken a long time to bring It about; but the farmer of today has every opportu nity to be the most Independent and self-respecting citizen of this country. Uy all means, therefore, If you pos sibly can, persuade your boy to be a farmer not the clodhopper kind, of city tradition, but the modern kind, the scientific farmer. Don't object that you can't afford to pay his way through college (though, for that matter, any ambitious boy can work his way through college without a cent from home, and it ia particular ly easy to do so in agricultural col leges, for the most earnest effort of colleges all over tho United States these days Is to help a boy become proficient in agriculture). Really, it Is far easier to be a scientific farmer than the other kind. A recent letter from D. .1. Crosby government specialist in agricultural education, to the writer contained this: "Nearly every state agricultural col lege in the United States makes some provision for reaching the young man .who cannot secure a college education, ;Several of these institutions offer cor respondence courses and reading courses in agriculture nearly every one of them is engaged in farmers' in stitute work or in conducting movable schools of agriculture, or short win ter courses, at the college or at acces sible places In different parts of 't In state." So great has been the impetus in education for the farmer that there art 500 institutions giving instruction in agriculture. These include nearly 70 colleges, 110 normal schools, 270 high schools and academies, corresionding and reading courses in 15 states, 15 el ementary schools, and over "0 for ne groes and Indians. Agricultural colleges proper, which are maintained in all the states, give a full college fourse, generally bestow ing the degree of bachelor of science, and graduates are fitted for the most difficult and advanced problems of any character in agricultural lines; but so great is the demand for instructors that most graduates take up profes sional work or as teachers, instead of becoming actual farmers. Those who have adopted farming for themsvos. however, are enjoying enviable free and prosperous lives in their several communities. If for some reason your boy can't go to college, still every opportunity Is open for him to get all the education and training that he can find time for. To quote from one of the government bulletins: "For those engaged In agricultural I occupations the larmers, dairymen I and fruit growers, nnd their sons and j daughters who are unable to leave home during the busy seasons the Bueclal winter courses have been or- ganized. These courses carry in length from a week to twelve weeks. They are In most cases severely practic.!. They center around the judging pavi lion, the laboratory, the d:.lry, and tic cheese room, with lectures and read lugs to supplement the practicums. "The nature of these courses is even more varied than their length of term, j They offer courses In general agrlcul- j ture, Including more or less thorough j Instruction in plant pi eduction, animal j husbandry, dairying, poultry culture. ; domestic science, agronomy, bee cul- ture, forestry, beet sugar production, farm mechanics, botany, bat tuioiogv, i and entomology. There are also a ; large number of praclicimi courses an.l ! lecture courses which are confined to j a single line of practice, such as cert al ; judging, stock judging, and the ib - j struction of noxious insects. "The special winter courses are !!. utility courses, important because tu the influence of present practice on future practice. And present p:ac!:c is sure to have a powertul iti!l;ience on the young people who are to bo til" future fanners, nnd on the quality ol soil, farm machinery, and dome.-. tic aplmals with which these young peo ple w ill have to do w h m th" lake charge of farms. "And, finally, there are the suiiiniei schools for teachers and the one-yt ar ami two-year normal courses, in .-ill of which nature study ami ltiuent;u agriculture are Important features." These special and extended courses tire generally given with only u sli-;)it, if any, charge lor tuition, and entrance examinations are not required. So treat baa been the recognition of v v- the Importance of agriculture that li nearly all states it is taught in the common schools. A typical four-year high school agricultural course In cludes such subjects as study of the seeds of grasses, grains, and vege tables; methods of preventing and era dicating weeds; physical features of the soli, their composition and be havior under different treatments, different types of soils and their char heteiistics; chemical constituents of soils and effects of rotation of crop and different systems of farming: bleeding, feeding, care and Judging of swine, horses and cattle; principle of fruit growing, location and climate, tillage, fertilizing, planting, diseases, ipsects, spraying, pruning, etc. Another important phase of present day agricultural education Is tho farm ers'- Institutes, of which over 15,000 are held annually under state or gov ernment am pices, running from one to several days in duration. They take up a great variety of subjects which fit tho particular needs of the locality where they are lieUl. Attendance U always free. The government department. of agriculture stands ready to assist farm ers in every way it can, even to the extent of sending experts to their farms when these experts aro within reaching distance. Often this is dono without any expense to the farmers, if the question raised is one of general Importance. If the farmer's question can be answered by correspondence or by sending a publication, the expert does not go to visit him; if the inquiry relates to some new problem of gen- oral Importance, the expert goes to the farmer." Just to show what can bp achieved by a man that is determined to be a scientific farmer, note this: A man. who has followed Ihe ministry aud was ordered by his physician to get Into an" outdoor occupation, used his savings nnd a mortgage to acquire 15 acres and a ft w cows in Pennsylvania. The land wasn't worth much, nnd he knew nothing about farming; but ho got into communication with agricul tural and dairy experts in Washington and did things as they should bo done iu light of modern scientific methods. At the end of three years he had 30 blooded cows, was employing four tut-n the year round, had paid off the mortgage, and was clearing $2,000 a year from the sale of cows, calves, and farm products. He raised from these 1." acres more food than hla 30 cows consumed though it is held by dairy larrners generally that usually two acres are needed for one cow, and lor one acre to furnish suffi cient sustenance is rare. I'erhaps our boy. it is safe to say, after learning that he doesn't need to be the traditional clodhopper because he is a lariucr, but can be as cultured a gentleman as anybody else, will not protest v. he:i he discovers that you. have the farm in mind for him. Alter he has got all the education ho leels he can afford he reaches the prob lem of "now to get a farm. There la no end of avenues. He can go to work to fix up his father's farm, as moHt would probably do, or can get a job a; larm 1:. ni lor a neighbor, who w ill pay hi::i $!o to $20 a month and board. He can save at least three-fourAs of this, and by the end of two years or so can make first payment on a, tract of land somewhere. Kven if he has no horses, he can hire a few acres plowed for one tliiilar or so nu acre and plant something that will give him consid erable money at the end of the season. Mostly any sturdy young man can. g'.'t a Job mi a farm, the requirements are tu tilvlous and simple; but with ill" st'Hiitilic training he has had ho will p;ti!i;.l !y have a situation offered him or ni:o!hr avenue will be opened up !ti:i.e !i::u- before he leaves school. The ii ore schooling along scientific ic liniiai ii::es he can get, the mora compete if he will he, of course, nnd I the mere c!car!y will he be able to ouU line tht! luruiv. Numerous well-trained ymmr; nn n are employed as superln I tend -r.t.i on huge I arms or find their j openings in resuscitating stvcallei "cxha.'siul liirms. II your I oy should wih to gowest, i post. si c.mI suit to the reclamatloa .ei vi.-e ot the lU-partment of the in-tmio:- will bring information lww to a;:miir(- irrigajed land where tht problem u! rainlall does not exist ' for $:ie it-'i acre i'l ten annual pay menta ! without iui en s ; ; and at the saniu timo 1 Ii.- will h: v. even closer co-operation i of govern:ii"!it xpel'ts. i Anyhow. oui- bey's place as a Hcien j title ran. -er wiil be tin enviable one. pari Icr.li1 .: -;y a iiowatiays uwnip tt imprc.venn n-.-. in all lines of activity, every in: in In populated sectiou can h e li. ti n ii( phone and running water, and ttol'.ey lines that will taku yoi.v in.'- ic the city in a short trino wi ! run by hi.- door or nearby. And I'm- I..:-. ui that knows his business iiaj : recce nt it--111 el's il elect him i ii,- alliance !e.' are. ' : l' -. I ' is always the one his li b! to honor, whether to i ,idi nt ot the local grange i:- In send him to the legi l.v tin ,IV I'll: Assocl-H-I t.lt- N-i .:i:c.s hft Kind of Fait". T In of believes ill meeting me virtue with tin- i be CM '-'cis'i ol her." - i 1 1 as -When t'.-. win ii he we bv faith. In S le liked If that? heal' ; sick said r his wife c illecl In said she cured hint she could hop !! would pay her bill " Made Good, imetl that that ' V ' U cl pp p irat:ea wu.ihl len-.-h my r'a ht.irf Well." 'it IS net well; bald as an ct,'g'" "Well, they're they?" it has l-ft me at banished, art u't X