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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1932)
BRITISH SEND NATION GIFTS London — (UP) — Gifts ranging from thousands of dollars to old sets ct false teeth have been re ceived by the treasury from patri mous Christies’ auction rooms in January. Miscellaneous articles of jewelry including gold chains, brooches, pearl necklaces, many of them treasured heii looms, and even sets o? false teeth with gold fittings will be sold. A large number of men and wom en receiving old age, or disablement pensions have notified the treasury that they would not draw the mon ey for their allowances. Taxpayers, content with a moral victory and wishing to help their country, have waived their rights to rebates after a long struggle with the income tax authorities. Most cf the gifts are accompanied by letters giving striking evidence of pubii* good will and sacrifice. WHERE ARE THE IDLE FUNDS? From New York Journal of Com merce What and where are the idle funds about which people talk so glibly? Some of the optimists who suggest selling billions of dollars’ worth of government bonds to give work to the unemployed say com placently that idle funds in savings banks should be put to work by purchase of these '"onda. ’Sven mere sophisticated think .vs who do not see visions of billions idle money piled up in the country's banks nevertheless betray a curious con fusion of thought when they begin to discuss the sources cf investment demand for new bond issues. Without sharing naive views of Senator Lahoilcttc, trained econ omists do net hesitate to talk about the idle funds that are available to satisfy investment demand, if only confidence in the future of business can be Irestorcd. Trouble begins, however, when an effort, is made to establish a defi nite connection between these so called idle funds and the new se curities for which they are ex pected to supply an investment de mand. Where, to repeat, are these funds and are they really "idle’’ as alleged? Unquestionably there is a large amouts of money-act ually ccin labs, etc.-stAvcd ay in homes and in safety deposit vaults avc" such cos:i: 'ay be avail able for investment when fear sub sides, although even part of it will be needed for currentt purchasing. Apart, however, from these rela tively small hoarded reserves where in this country or anywhere else are idle funds to be found. Even the cash reserves of banks and the uninvested surplus reserves of corporations arc chiefly claims on other banks and institutions that a"e convertible into money on demand. Most idle funds are "only idle in sense that they are not be ing employed or invested in the v ays that they ordinarily would be. When, for instance, a bank is said to have large resources in highly liquid form it may be concluded that the bank in question has bought government securities. usually large claims on ether banks and possibly a somewhat iorger stock of vault cash Idle funds how ever, in the sense of resources that have not been invested at all do not exist in modern communities barring cash hoarded for, special reasons. No doubt many people are reallj thinking about inactive or ab normally large bank balances when they talk vaguely of the existence of idle funds. It is most mislead ing, however, to think of deposit* as funds. The deposit is only a claim, usually resulting from a prior lending operation and the resources of Ihc bank against whlcfcftthe de positor holds this claim are for the most part already invested. As a matter of fact, loose think ing about the nature of capital and credit and its relation to goods and services is responsible for a great deal of muddled reasoning about idle funds and unutilized invest ment reserves. What actually occurs in a community that buys and sells with the aid of bank deposits is that purchasing power is being constantly created through borrow ing operatic ns of all sorts negotiat ed with banks, while simultaneously purchasing power is being extin guished. If for any reason the process of credit creation or the employment of credit is disturbed, so that peo ple fear to exercise their claims or do so in usual ways, trouble ensues. We then have a situation in which bank balances may become highly inactive, as r.t present. The problem then becomes one of increasing money market activity so that both current business and investment activity may go forward. There is r.o capital market outside the money market and the capital mar ket in its turn is the market in which purchasing power is bought and sold by bank borrowers and lenders. The person who Insists up on talking about idle reserves of investment capital is indulging in abstraction and cnexising a fund that exist only in his own mind. YALE GETS STE1NMET/ DESK New Haven, Conn.—(UP)—The time-scarred desk at which Charles Proteus Stcinmeiz. electrical wizard of the General Electric company, used to stand—not sit—has been presented to Yale by Prof. Robert E. Doherty, former assistant of the scientist. NIOB8 TO < LI x BOOL Shelton, Conn.—i UP)—Mott high school cla'sts leave carved and bat tered' desks behind them, blit 90 members of the graduating class of Shelton hijh have voted to clean, paint and polirh the school as a graduation present. ———* - —■■■■-. .. » Ritfinr*. Nat Art. Pionv Fa m Journal. lone tolfer: Senny. you've berg following me around fer an he :r. You'll neve- item to play golf by vvati hing me. tfenuy: 1 ain't watching you, nr'i ter. Ai seen s’”, yon d!g up ato.a woijr.s I'm gt.nr fishing. | Out Our Way __ _By Williams I There's a gut who vmouvD \ ThiMU' The OOOr that oroppeo 1 The Some .to gras T-v omE i IM -TV WATER , WAS AWlfOL / Dumb — 0uT HES OOim'TH' ' T SAKAE TH\MCr. he’s Gu\-P*m’ \ HlS UOMCH DO VMM IN4 A V HuRRT.SO HE Cm EmJO'*/ \A G."VME OF CAROS DuR»M' ^T^VTH' OimmER HOUR. | ~i WE.L.V. , ME‘S A l.iTTLc. Brighter than) th' 00G-—I th dog ooki'r get eohe^ But he. gets Both, EvjEm Tho His iwDiGESTiOvi Bothers hina so much ME CaniT EM30V TH CAROS THaTS -TH' MCOERM WAV o' ^ - vJ.RWU.AMS wtcu r^T orr _ ‘ - ^_ /«.wiiYW«iwc[,iic.v^| Hard Times, Sure! (Des Moines Plain Talk) A Texas editor, mourning the pre vailing terrible depression which as sailed the country about 18 months ago, and which appears to be hang ing on like the seven-year itch, tells his readers all about it as follows: “We are having hard times in Texas; the streets are full of auto mobiles, going, as Will Rogers says, nowhere in particular, but in a great hurry to get there, times are so hard that it is difficult to find parking places for our automobiles; we have only about one for every three of us in the state; if times were not hard we would no doubt all have an automobile. “We are right up against it; we saw a little girl last week so hard up she did not have silk stockings, and rather than wear rayon she wore none at all; of the thousands of girls in Texas, it is almost unbe lievable that one should do without silk stockings, but that is not all, the consumption of cigarettes increased only about 6,000,000 packages in the state last year, whereas everybody knows it should have increased by twice that amount. “Times are so hard—we were * able to obtain a seat at the movie after waiting only 20 minutes when by rights we should have had to wait at least an hour; the drug store got along by installing only two extra fountains, which shows how bad things are, but an extra show case for lipstick, two extra racks for magazines, and a lunch counter cut into the druggist's earnings and made him realize how hard times i are. “And to make things worse, every vacant lot in America had a minia ture golf course built on it last year, and it looked like hard times were getting so hard that they were going to have to tear down per fectly good buildings to make room for more pee-wee golf courses. “When will times be better.? Its’ almost impossible to find a parking place near the movie theater, dance hall or other places of amusement —a terrible condition. Something really ought to be done to require the hot dog stands to carry on hand a sufficient supply of food to feed the crowd; and this way of building stadiums and ether places of amusc . ment only half large enough to scat those attending ought to behandlcd vigorously. “Yes, times are hard; the grocer can hardly sell flour, grits or bacon; it takes all of his time to sell canned peaches, canned salmon, canned soup, canned meats, and canned apple sauce; the dry goods mer chant is crying because his bolts of gingham remain on his shelves, while the clerks waste all the time selling such things as silk and rayon: the hardware store has no demand for plows, wire fencing and nails, 1 but cannot supply the demand for f radios, electric percolators, vacuum cleaners, etc. “Yes, times are hard.” The Soviet Pace From New York Times A full page of pictures in our roto gravure section recently was con cerned with the Soviet automobile plant at Nizhni-Novgorod, recently completed at a cost of nearly $150, 000,000, and designed to produce 150. 000 cars a year. The most vivid ef fect is conveyed not by the pictures of plant and equipment, but of the peasant recruits who are being trained to operate the machines. A peasant woman in cotton gown, shawl and bast shoes, straight out of the pages of Tolstoy or Turgcnicv three-quarters of a century ago. is being instructed in the use of the machine tools of 1932. The impres sion is twofold. You grasp the magnitude of the effort now being Drunken Driving Calls For Harsh Treatment From Mir Pasadena Star-News Los Angeles authorities, taking frgnizance of the startling fact that mo'i than f>00 lives were lost in traffic accid'nts In Los Angeles during 1931 and that many thou sands wrre injured, some of tligm seriously. h*\e started a grim move ment to curb reckless and drunken • Ivlr.g Particular stlent'.en Is be ing given to the prexentfgn Of reck* Iim driving by neisonj in s tl.Ji.keu —--—-----^ Milk Bootleggers Menace to Health of Community OBSERVANCE OF SANITARY REGULATION SAFEGUARDS VI TAL PRECAUTION TO USERS IN CITIES By IJK. .MOKKIN FISH SKIN Editor, Joural of the American Medical Association, and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine The 18th amendment has made the word bootlegger significant to every person in the United States. However, the u?e of the term cannot and should not be re stricted wholly to the illegal dis tribution of alchoholic beverages. There are bootleggers in almost every field of human life, and it is conceivable that the bootlegger in the health field may be even more of a menace to the com munity than the bootlegger of in toxicating liquors Because of the menace that exists from milk coming from tuberculous cows, from milk that has been collected under unsani tary conditions and from milk that is distributed without suit able hygieic control, the milk bootlegger may cause more dis ease and death than the purveyor of bad whisky. Most large communities have laws regulating the collection, pasteurization, distribution and sale of milk. These laws involve in many instances adequate physi cal examination of the workers Sn the dairies and on the farms to make certain that they do not have infectious diseases. The laws demand adequate re lrigeration oi tnp mine during transportation, pasteurization by the holding method, which means that the milk must be held for a certain definite periou at a certain definite temperature, distribution in sterilized bottles and proper handling of the bottles that are collected from the homes after the milk is used. Instances are recorded in which farmers owning one or two cows have collected the milk from these cows and peddled it from door to door in nearby communities, with out observing any sanitary pre cautions, and at lower prices than can be met by reputable distribu tors who observe the law. One instance is recorded in which such a farmer peddler de livered milk to a home where there was scarlet fever and each day collected the bottles from this home, rinsed them in his wagon, and refilled them with milk from a large can, and then left these bottles in other homes in the community. Such performance is far more menacing than bootlegging in any other field. It is wise precaution to check up on your'milk man and be sure that his methods are sanitary. made in Russia, but you also realize the magnitude of the task. That peasant girl will probably learn in time to make herself useful in the Nizhni-Novgorod auto factory, and so no doubt will her peasant brothers. But you wonder how soon they will learn. The question of time is important, > because it has been implicit in the Soviet industrial program. We may discard the inflated boasts of the early period of the Five-Year Plan about industrial Russia in five or ten years overtaking the United States, but there is no question that ' the Russian leaders are out to set , a record in the pace of industrial ization, to accomplish in years what ; other nations did in decades. In the matter of building factories and in stalling machinery there has been rapid progress, largely due to for- ( cign assistance. Can a class of skilled factory workers now be created with equal speed, or something like the same speed, out of the Russian peas ant masses? This is where the peas ant woman gives one to doubt. She can be taught, yes; but how fast? Can a peasant nation be imbued with the spirit of craftsmanship, the mechanical sense, the “feel’’ for the machine, which other na tions have taken hundreds of years to develop? Historically, the process from the plow to high-precision machine has been by way of the textile factory. That is the way the Industrial Revolution begins every where, and the way it began in Russia, where before the war there was a very large textile industry. The jump from the plow and the inilkpail to the high-speed tool U a different matter, and American en gineers with extensive experience in Soviet Russia and sympathetic with the Soviet aims are now wondering. A considerable mass of simple craftsmanship Russia used to posses. Before the war the household indus tries, the so-called Kustari pro duced more than half of the na tion's supply of consumers’ goods. Mr. Duranty has repeatedly pointed out that Soviet figures which show industrial production today far : heed of pre-war are concerned only with factory production, when pre war household production is taken into account there are less goods produced today than before the war. This native craft aptitude the Soviet government cun no doubt condition. It is found that many traffic dcr.ths are due to driving by drunken persons. The Los Ang eles authorities are planning to Rive jail sentences to drunken drivers who run into other cars and injure their occupants, or who run into and kill or injure pedcs i trians. There is but one slew to take of drunken driving and but one p o per course to pursue: that rs, to treat the drunken driver es a pub lic menace and to proceed with ail the authority of the law to piurith I him tor tnthjuani the nubile in train for machine industry of the higher type. But the supply is not enough for the ambitious industrial program. The education of raw peas ants into automobile mechanics is apt to be a slower and much more costly job. That appreciable results will be obtained is plain. The huge effort and expenditure are bound to show. But it is a question of how fast the results will come. The daz zling prospectus of a Russia indus trialization, electrified, motorized modernized at top speed withdraws a bit in time as one compares thai peasant woman in bast slippers with one of Henry Ford's young men. Soviet Reorganizes Collection System I.iO£cow—(UP)—Reorganization o) the methods of collecting—that it to say, state purchasing—of grain cotton and a series of other agricul tural produces has been announced by the government. The underlying purpose is to ccn tralize responsibility which hereto fore has been divided among local co-operative societies. An all-Union trust for the col lection of grain, just organized, will have the national control and the responsibility in that sphere. Corres ponding trusts have been formed lo» cotton, flax, animal products ana other items. Californians Prove Tell Stunt Possible Modesto, Cal.—(UP)—Debunkers who said William Tell didn’t shoot an apple from his son’s head, first, because they didn’t have apples in Europe at that time, and, second, just because he didn’t, will be cha grined to learn it can be done, at least. Recently. A B. Downing and A. J. Honnclt, members of the Modesto Archcry Club, shot apples from the heads of dummies. Downing was a member of & party that killed a black bear with arrows several years ago. • » ■■ ■ — Begging in Europe and Asia' is a professional racket. It is estimated that there are more than 10 million professional beggars in those two continents. excusably while he Is intoxicated. Not only should the drunken driver be punished, in flagrant cases, but hr should be deprived of his it* tense to drive. * —— .. »»— — ... ■■ WAR rR FT A RED NESS? Pas is -A gas maak lor every pei s n in Fiance has been ordered by t :e French government. Fifty mil lion cf these protective masks hart been central ted for, and specifica tions iee(ulre that they run for 10 he ;rs without renewing the chenri ta'.a In them. They are supposed U b* proto; tlen against tire deadliest . U rn rr-atre. OF INTEREST TO FARMERS FALL SEEDING OF GRASS There ate farmers everywhere alio cling tenaciously to the notion that fall seeding of grass with fall grains is best; that they obtain a better stand and a better yield of hay than the spring seeding. This fact suggests that the business of farming is not one of absolute but of relative achievements. The kind of soil, lay of land and condition of weather, all these operate seriously a* to result. What may be success fully carried out in one locality, one field, will not do in another locality and in another field. The fact that frequently better and more hay may be secured through fall than through spring seeding in some cases may be attributed to the following reasons: It may hap pen that the soil is of loose tex ture and is easily worked; one that otherwise canno long retain mois ture in the early summer and in times of drought; where burning off of spring-sown grass might fol low. and where location of field is such that in the winter the snow will evenly cover It. thus preventing it from freezing and heaving out. When grass seed is sown upon early plowed grass sod the autumn—even very late—is a better time for seed ing than the spring. At a season when rains are frequent there will not be as much reason to bring the sod Into good capillary action as there would be in the spring, at a time when the young plants are forced to depend in a great measure on the store of moisture that the land has accumulated dur ing the winter. By seeding grass seed in the fall the seeds of weeds as well as those of grass will ger minate, and the early frost will then kill the germinated weed seeds and not hurt the germinated grass seeds. In this manner weeds that might otherwise do pfrcltlve Injury to young grass are put out of the way altogether. It must be remembered that grass seed and cereal grain seed ^will germinate and grow at much lower temperature than most of the really hurtful weeds. Those weed seeds not germinated will not cause annoyance to the grass plantlets when those plnntlets have once became wrell established. Tall grain seed with grass will help to hold a covering of snow upon the land during the winter and so tend to shield the grass from harm. TREATING INJURED TREES Rabbits have caused considerable damage to trunks of young fruit trees in many sections this winter, and experiment stations recommend in cases where the damage is not excessive, that all injured surfaces be painted with melted paraffin to prevent further drying out of the exposed tissues. Such damage is en countered where the rabbits have only partially girdled the tree. The wounds may also be painted with white lead mixed with raw linseed oil or with any good commercial tree wound paint. Pine tar, grease or coal tar base paints should not be used. Where lower scaffold limbs and side branches have been gnawed to the wood and girdled completely, they should be sawed off flush to the main trunk or to a main branch immediately back of the first point of severe injury: Where the trunk Is entirely girdled, with bark gnawed to the sap wood, cleft grafting below the injured area or bridge grafting are suggested remedies. If the crotch portion of the trunk is badly gnawed or en tirely girdled, bridge grafting or cleft grafting also is suggested. Success with bridge grafting is not always certain when it is prac ticed by one inexperienced in its operation. Therefore, it is recom mended that the grower secure the services of an experienced orchard man to do the work. THOUGHTS AT MILKING TIME In the following paragraphs will be found some of the unrelated thoughts that are likely to pass through a milker’s mind as he sits beside the various cows in his string. Wonder If cows think. Won der what this one is thinkin’ I'm milkin’. She's switchin her tail and steppin’ around. “Dang it. Cut that out I Hey I Right in the eye.” Just the same, I'd like to know what a cow thinks of a fellow who swipes her calf, and borrows her milk for 9 or 10 months. Where did I read about that? Some magazine. Fel low said, "Man was the worst thief in the animal kingdom Milk wasn't a natural food.” Stool In one hand, pail in the other. Dump milk in the strainer. Another one. Holdin’ up some. One fault you’ve got. There the comes—like a hose. How about chickens? A chicken doesn't know much, anyway. But theyi don't Just drop them in your hat. It costs money to get those eggs. Suppose cows and chickens were turned loose—say, in the wilds cf northern Canada or Montana. It takes the human touch to keep cows and chickens alive and thrifty. Cripes! Those hind teats milk hard —just like an inner tube full of air. Stream about the size of a knittin’ needle. Good cow. though. Dump milk in strainer. Cows eating hay. stanchions squeaking. Not so much—. Better hunt up the herd book when I get in the house. Another cow. “Come on. Get over there! So-o-o- now'. Quit that switchin’.” Stealin.’ Cows, humans, chickens. How about dogs and cats? Hunters and meat eaters. They could live off the country, but they don't seem to want to. Pigs? They’d make a go of it all alone, if the beechnuts were thick enough. Any way, we don't take anything from a hog—only him. And he doesn't mind, after we do it. A cow, though, works in good, same as chickens: to eat stuff that wouldn't sell well. Humans do bet ter for having them around. And they don't seem to mind paying for their keep—once they're broke in. "Whoa! Nearly got your foot in that time. Next' time you knock a fly off your belly, ray something.” ALFALFA FOR HENS There U no one be*.t way to feed alfalfa hay to hens. Unndinj, fuie atemmed. lecfv. green alfalfa in an attrition or hammer mill, and addinsr It to the mash, L« one wav to feed this best green feed substitute. Our expc nence, as well as that or many others. Indicates that it should not make more than § per cent of the mash fcv weight. More alfalfa than thU reduces the pahrlthility „nd amount of the mash eaten. A see nnd \crv aatiafactorv m» 'hod is to feed bright, green, fine. lea'y al falfa In a htv rack. Ore eao nfft a darted rark, aftcilar to that need for «'tle or thtra hut with the *.>«*% noeee,~rtre COCO t < * There's old Jerry. Wouldn't I* huaf up the works, if he got * rhp.nrc? But that’s the bull at ft. Mfe-h f could talk the bull lAogiutgv l don’t ugieo with that lelfow -jho said nulk wasn't a natural food and that man was the voet likf in the animal kingdom. Man has been at this cow L xiness lor cen turies, building up the cow. Just like carrots or niHtK.ch, A modern carrot is different l*cra the wild carrot. Oats, wiM oats. Oranges, grapefruit, ; pudst Eie.-y thing a man eats Chickens, cows, and hogs to suit his needs. That's the man of it. Got a paUfnL Not so bad for a heifer. A Haifa end clean cows smell poo«L A no) hr r cow, and an easy milker. Just what did that specialist say, any way? Coaxed the cow Into <nnji«at relations, when she warnt k»>k>n*. then hcoked her calf. Not b* die satisfied with that, guadrd her milk for 9 or 10 months. Only te le peat once each year. Put (he queer thing Is, a cow iritis to Ukr it. It’s been a long, tedious fmoma. building up the dairy cow mini she fills the bill—and the blllbonk Bur bank worked a long time ou spuds. But who would say a spud namt a natural food? This follow will b« saying that the oho is % natural food nc' t, because we didn’t swipe it from something. Bui nu.r tom ir.dk, then I eat! Tl AY fr'lSFE WITH r/tpP'U'.K Our i-j: uient vegetable gai.hr er, prod (tl 75 tens of cabbage on four ; it . On an adjoining three and er.c-half acres he prodmed eight .or.'!. The only difference be tween i two fields was that Ihe seed in the first field was treated with hot v.ater. In tbs se.eml Held he did not think he >i»«l iti«m to treat till! veed. He lost many font of cabbage due to heavy infertnf.U no of black leg and black ret. Ik; ex plained that his first baUli «>f >v& was t.ir.tcd by dipping the seed iu hot weter He followed the «ll«»c tlons end heated water to a tem perature of 122 degrees F. e.cul‘fJi>n‘f dipped 1i:e seed in Oils water for 30 minutes Boiling water was a>Wed from tlmi (o time to keep the tern-* peratuie at 122 degrees, ^nether lesson he Warned about hts treat ment i;j that the thermometer ured must be i n urate. He hllkd a heavy percentsgt of his seed with ihe> treatment. It must be nriwmbticd that tbc‘o heat treatments ©I seed are dcliu ai t and a UKiaWBckr that is fom or flv degrees off may cause considerable damage. Ad cabbage . ml cauliflower s»s-d ah* »ld be tree cd by this hot-water The blivii Jcg and black rot dis eases rue contained within tbe n cd coats ; id rurface treatments are not efficient. It is suggestt*} th.it gardennr. use about 25 i<er •• at . more ,‘t f 0 than they nidi in allow for any injury that might eicur. - 1HGW YIELDING BAUDOT Ti e highest yielding of itte smooth-a woed barley varieties u.i der Ictvo conditions sr««i to be Wnoonsjn 33, Velvet, (jinbrnn and Spartan. T> r Velvet ami titabro* varieih • (ginated at *lic Atftna-ip.' esota (>t omerit station. Under Minnesota conditions, the 4 liable*, seems to lane a slight advantage. . but i ntJ< r 3ctva conditions Uie Vel vet it raid -o be sliglitly in the lend, although u oie is no gnat ence. 1 e Spartan vnrli ty was ori ginated by tire Michigan expei I ment1 stoticn and Iras given un usually good usults In the south* <w half of Jcwn. but has net bt<n quite so uh -ifuetory In nertiv »ai u Iowa. The S-artan is r»W U be just a littk shorter iux| rtWfer: strewed than the other1. WmrW 38 is an unusually high yV-khr un der Ic.we, conditions, but Is a lew days later than the ether vai*e ties. nil of these sorts *wn Mato' ; yielding1, good quality atm Ins •€'. t smooth awmif barley. On fcho av erage, a)3 of them will uRyk'il l tin regular kinds of barley with thg harrh f.nw. FOE FETTER BOOR Most mprpvementa. -mitdi *• > fai m J'cllsjj ’I 'i t.will totu>g ment l he ■* production of <arger or hTvlwr crops, livr.stofii and llYi-titoek |ji«P ucts involve tlie laying cat «| cadt. There is cnc that doesnt call Or much if any such expci.dltiu**. it Is the production of higurr grade mar ket ejts V e*iuent cleaning of iww* houses, especially the t»o-:ts, ts es sential. Provide plenty of chuis straw, shavings or sawdust In the nests. Keep ..uulholci rod •%«•% spot* • ■ out of tie ft'uii yiud. pr.rep I he ■*< hens conlir'd v/lien the tnunnd Is wet or o'iably— 11ll noon. If It Put feasioli tc Vnp tlicoi m nil d. y_ Keep the fcrculy i-.eea cut of tlie nests, net only to keep the ihks from !.<i»»t,!rg'to incubate, 1>»A * cause of i eroding. Keep *o*,ie h!l- r on the fleer— it make?! for destine tcet, rnil b< noe ne-ds and ngy*. f*e to it th"t hens do not iccstmetis the ri Is. finch a pu-funiM arid give ;» very bun porceniage of ■ Wan ckk'* Gather t* o i at irr*t f'.vloc *t’*I>.* , Use rigid path; or ct.trr coot* Maori that si lies’ rvdl net glveamlcmeW or j cru*h er;s a.* ibc |a<l be, o*m-i heavy J or full. T it »' ft iiU'ti. tad «jf a« Mte ; sort in the bottom »f the •«mtaiu> i Store eg* . n itu s wdh huge rads up. Do ■ in ■ : *e until red >*. extremely b. f v.rathee tfiw in u.of plser— a coder i *avc hi host Cockrrrl* >. .r r.-> plare ■,« ©,,11 nary fann flrtk-i ra.-ept dming Hu , season wi'« ’ ur r oFt M>g mvidh* hafthirn,•. 7b* y r rnld thin lw* ha.i i ished to 11 ;• .Uo iiow-i s, or belli sold, ffivrn > V> r nnxmiWmiy .M,4f Iowa i nt tin • < niimidvp *^ could b' n or og i 0 ,• inum .ik\>e gsT •■rd Ur *'i ,ric tV^ifc v.ouVf rvcA-1 d 'IIKHik ) 1 ei i s in t c I! <1 ■ tat«c. They a***’ • not new I ?o two «, ' V iMjli hnr-K • « f hr »r J t. * 1 > , •«*, nf a riic'it.ic routs»•'.« M.-iV . >,t i*f two-fti. I irrOi po»''i..7 nir-Mr ran hr *rw.f.k,7 i ehr.t?« !rj« <‘r ’v » .4 " tt>r f• >• r• *■ tvt »»nri*- I r.i it. 1 . it f.nutwl t«/ DltR(l •. r.r • -.I'N.it fr<4t tvm/r to 1. •) .iwm T n "l ill. • ,» tj J .17 rr*f i> < 4 'or .1 < < w | f . ■ | 04 o* .nth •« ist a »»ry T. rwlo* ire rr>Jjr 4-# «« lit; t..t CiVo »i n. • '1 ?r»it r-r | *.'!%/ 14 >,«•, «fl!C0 4<*> i ill* I if ft* "» *1 .. **ill .'C. ‘.r.o -44 1CW* •