The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, May 19, 1892, Image 4

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    FARH DEPARTMENT.
Farm S(i!.
Plant herbs on one side of the garden
where they need not be disturbed.
If liquid manure is used for water
ing plants, dilute one half with water.
Calves if to be raised by hand, need
particular care from the start, if they
make a good growth.
It is the safest, wisest and most eco
nomical plan for the farmer to grow
and kill his own meat
One of the most important requi
sites in keeping cattle for profit, is to
keep the right kind of cattle.
Delay in feeding at the regular time,
causes 1 he hog to become uneasy and.
restless if he does not put in the time
squealing.
Hogs that are fed a good variety of
food, supplied with pure water, and
given warm, dry shelter, will not gen
erate disease.
In many cases if farmers knew the
feeding value of different foods, stock
could often be put on the market at a
better profit
By planting in long straight rows
and using the garden cultivator, the
work of giving clean cultivation may
be greatly reduced.
One of the principal reasons for
trees only bearing every other is that
they exhaust themselves by over-bearing
and it requires a year to recuperate.
If a young tree is growing very fast
it will be best head back half its yearly
growth, for trees that, grows so
rapidly are apt to get bark-bound and
split open; they blossom, but rarely
bear fruit, as the blossoms fall off. To
make such cutting back most effec
tive it shoul j be done when the trees
are in full leaf.
After a fair trial, the bush lima bean
hai certainly come to stay.
It is very difficult if not impossible
under present conditions, to feed a
stunted calf with profit.
With fruits it is rarely a good plan to
risk seedlings, the better plan is to
plant standard varieties.
Troperly managed, a fruit farm ought
to be made readily profitable in a grain
or dairy section.
Because a sow farrows a small litter
the first time, is no criterion of what
she will do the nxt
Because a hungry pig will eat almost
any kind of slop that is given them is
not a sign that it is good for them.
The forcing systems, if not carried
too far, will produce more pounds, for
a given amount of feed than the grad
ual systems.
1 The superior animals are an example
of what can be done, and should be a
'strong incentive for others to improve
if possible.
The peach and plum are nearly
enough related so that one can be suc
cessfully budded on the other. Peach
stocks have no advantage worth not
ing, but the prevalence of yellows may
make it advisable to bud the peach on
plum stocks. This is especially re
commended for places where the soil is
too heavy for successful growing of the
peach on its own roots. American
Cultivator.
Home Hints.
Iron or block tin plates are the best
for baking pastry.
To starch shirt-bosoms and cuffs, rub
into both sides of the linen as much
hot starch as it will take. When dried,
add cold starch for the gloss Dissolve
a quarter ounce of gum arabic in a pint
of hot water, strain and let it cool. Add
gradually one ounce of fine raw starch
and the white of one egg. Apply with
sponge or rag to the outside of the linen.
lioll up in a cloth, and iron, without
sprinkling, in one hour. You can ap
ply a little hot water with a cloth just
in the track where your iron is to go if
the starch baa dried too quickly.
Putting a flax seed under the lid of
the eye to get out a cinder chich has
accidentally lodged there may seem a
curious method of abolishing a nuis
ance, but is nevertheless quite effective.
After the seed has been moistened by
the secretions of the eye, it exudes a
mucilage, which not only alleviates the
irritation of a foreign body, but also
frequently surrounds it and prevents
pain from the motion of the eyeball
against the cinder, and ultimately as
sists in its removal.
A piece of cheese-cloth squeezed out
in vinegar and wrapped around Swiss
cheeses wDl preserve them; and all
cheeses except cream cheeses can be
kept from spoiling by putting them on
a thick layer of powdered charcoal and
covering with charcoal the top also.
Cheese should be kept under glass or
in tin or earthenware, not in wood., -When
doing housework if your hands
become chapped or red, mix eorameal
and vinegar into a stiff past and apply
to the bands two or three times a day
after washing them In hot water, then
let them dry without wiping and rob
with glycerine. At night us cold
cream and wear gloves. '
' To ; make a mustard plaster for
young children mix one teaspoon ful of
Dastard and three of wheat floor, with
water to the consistency of a stiff bet
ter, and apply between soft muslin
cloths. 1 For adults: one part of an
lard and jwo of floor.
Fosllrr Pif kine-
One rooster and tea hens are enough
for breeding.
Pullets that are just beginning to lay
are not good setters.
ICxtra large or odd-snapped eggs
should not be used for hatching.
Fasten a small box to the side of the
house to hold oyster shells, ground bone
or grit.
At no time is it desirable to feel
poultry an exclusive grain diet; they
need more bulky food.
One advantage with ducks about the
yard and garden is that they do not
scratch, although they are voracious
eaters.
Sheep Shearing.
Z Cross-bred lambs ripen quickly.
Good clover makes the best pasture
for sheep.
It is easier to count the profits than
to make them.
Sheep ought to g -t into a good condi
tion rapidly on pasture.
For mutton the butcher seeks a car
cass that is round and smooth.
Put enough good blood in the sheep
to gel the best returns from tiieir pro
ducts. Ewes that brings no lambs and
wethers are the least profitable sheep
to keen.
Farming in which sheep do not fig
ure, is lacking in a good means of
keeping up fertility.
Whatever the breed is, profit re
quires that the greatest amount of
mutton should be got out of it.
Sheen eat closer than cattle and will
seriously injure the grass plants, if pro
per care is not taken.
Eggs for Hutching.
To have something in your columns
from Filmore county, Minnesota, I send
you poultry notes. It is best, to get
your hens setting as early in the spring
as possible. Kot too early to dull the
chickens when hatched. The following
rules should be followed in selecting
eggs for hatching. Have the eggs of
normal size and uniform, avoiding
large or small eggs. Aim to secure
eggs from certain hens, that are mated
with a male of your selection, and col
lect the eggs several times a day, dur
ing very cold weather, in order to avoid
having them become chilled. Wash
the eggs and free them from dirt, be
fore placing them in the nest, and
make the nest warm and have it in a
warm, and secluded place J. W. in
Western IturaL
Providing W ater for Duckl.
Ducks that are kept in yards where
there are no ponds, need a large quan
tity of water. The troughs should be
very large, so as to allow several buck
etfullof water to be poured in, or the
work of filling smaller troughs fre
quently will entail too much labor.
Ducks not only drink water freely, but
they waste a large portion by throwing
it out of the trough on the ground.
Keep only a few adult ducks unless
you can provide water with but
little difficulty.
A Lucky Man.
A man with a long pennyroyal beard
was seen to cross Washington street
and creep under a little ladder that
rested against a lamp-post says the
Boston Herald. -Being aiked why he
did, he replied: "Just to show super
stitious people the fallacy of their be
lief. I alwavs onen niv umbrella be
fore going out, and never look at the
moon over my right shoulder. I have
broken every looking-glass in my house
belong to the Thirteen club, and make
my wife drop the dish-cloth every time
she cleans up the table crockery."
"Are you a lucky man?" "I get a few
caraway seed in my beard once in a
while, but upon the whole have little to
complain of." ' What's the matter
with your foot? You appear to be
lame." "I knocked my big-toe nail off
the other day while chopping kindling
wood. But I was luky in not cutting
off my whole foot. Don't you think so?
"I see you have two fingers gone from
your left hand" Tea, I got them too
near a buzz saw about ten years ago,
but I was mighty lucky in saving my
arm. The saw was bumming at the
time, and it would have taken off my
arm as easily as it took off my fingers."
-Yotx wear glasses; are your eyes weak ?
"They are a trifle lame, yes. I had
probably the best pair of eyes In all
Coos county when a young man, but,
unfortunately, one day I was fooling
with a powder flash and the darned
thing blew up. But by a stroke of
good luck I saved my eyesight, though
somewhat impaired."
"I notice a beod in your back. Were
you born so V "Not by any means. A
few years ago I was as straight as an
iron column, but one day I attempted
to get aboard of a train that had started
missed my footing, and fell between
the cars and the depot platform. My
back got a terrible wrench, and at one
time it was believed that I was Injured
for life. I came out of it pretty well,
however, and every day l thank my
luky stars that I did not go under the
wheels "How came that nick m your
left ear?- "A big bulldog chewed sbal
out when I wasoalria rnnoH it
sj a pretty bad affair, but J'm tarn.
hod giaa i awn t die from hydropho
bia," and the lack man continued his
walk ap the street
AFFAIRS OF WOMEN.
rrrol.
The more serviceable parasols are in
the dark shades.
A beautiful parasol in lavender has
the silk top trimmed in roints with a
'ace ruche of a paler shade.
Unfiles and puffs, ribbon and bee
and flowers, all from the chief attract
ions in the way of ornamenting the
new sunshades
Many very odd handles are formed of
cooked sticks, twisted apparently with
out method or reason, but with all they
are very stylish and look real chic
Make a large rosette of chiffon and
ribbon, and sew it around the stick at
the top. A large siik tassel or bunch
of ribbon gives a pretty finish to the
stick.
Some girls who greatly love flower;
would put a small bunch of buttercups
or voilets (artificial, of course) here and
there, all around in the chiffon puff on
the handle and mingle a few in with
the rosette on top.
A very handsome parasol of red
twilled silk and trimmed with black
. f
gauze. J he trimmings consist m
full puff of gauze all around the edge
and on the top at the center. It has a
black stick resembling a genteman's
walking stick.
Fcmliilnltien.
Two good listeners may be friends,
but two good talkers never.
Of the landowners in Great Uritin,
on ' in every seven is a woman.
Who pf.ys the highest price for a
home? The woman who marries lor
one.
A'Tortv winks' nap" lying down is
the best preparative for any extraordin
ary exertion, either of ho ly or minJ.
It is said that the average height of
the American woman hns in the last
two generations increased one inch, anil
that the same increase has taken place
in her bust and waist measure.
Fair-haired people are becoming less
numerous than formerly. The ancient
Jews were a fair-haired race, and now
they are, with few exceptions, dark.
So it is in a lesser degree with the Irish
among whom one hundred and fifty
years ago a dark-haireJ person wat
almost unknown.
The women of P.pgdad believe that n
doll mav eventually come to life and
harm their children, and they therefore
prevent their use. The girls, however,
play with cushions and pieces of wood
instead. In Siberia and Artie Amer
ica, ivory dolls, clothed in furs, o'
beautiful workmanship, are found.
Shoulder Capes.
Capes of cloth are trimmed with lace
black, ecru, or white set on a shoulder-cape
or a collarette, or else applied
flatly to show the design, and richly
ornamented with jet All height on
the shoulders has disappeared for great
breadth given by full frills of lace, or
by bows of ribbon, choux, etc. The
inevitable Watteau fold forms part of
many capes, and in one instance this
broad fold is in the front as well as the
back. .Shorter capes are demanded bj
young ladies, and are imported in vel
vet with cloth lining and hood, or else
in very light cloth with vestlike from
of mousseline desoia
Velvet ai'd ribbon trimmings are
used upon many of the pretty wash
dresses which are made with a deep
hem-stitched border, a full bodice of
white tinted cbambray, and a zouave
jacket with bishop sleeves.
l'urses are now being made with lit
tle detective cameras in them, probably
with a view of taking the thief who
takes the pocketbook However, as
there is no provision for pockets in the
new gowns, the thieves may be thwart
ed. The newest thing in scents consists
of smelling salts perfumed with the
scent of different flowers roses, carna
tions, violets, lilacs, etc. The salts are
the color of the flowers with which they
are scented and are put up in hand
some bottles.
The "Yashmak" is the name of the
new ' Oriental," or mask, veil, so dense
in its meshes at the top that the
features are almost obliterated as far
as the nose. The more transparent
lower half of the veil, however, permits
the mouth and chin to be visibla
Many of the white veils have borders
of black lace in applique. Black lace
veils are pretty with the pattern border
worked in jet, which also makes the
large veil fall gracefully.
Gowns of English gray corded silk,
with draperies of softest gray India
cashmere, trimmed with cream white
velvet arabesques overlaid with cut
steel, are elegant in appearance.
Veils for large hats are very long
and wide and draped into festoons
around the brim.
Young girls are wearing white
guipure lace pelerines over their
dresses and cloaks. When worn over
dresses tby are looped np on Ul,
shoulders with bows of satin rii.i
match the dress or the long satin sash
w ine duck, vieux rose. v.i..-
yellow and lilac, being reserved for
married women. These lace winn
er soft wolien malarial .
hades, make nraUr imtunu.
va tvi wra-
Nnp, concerts and visits.
I TALMAGE'S SERMON.
His text was, I'rov. x.i.,
sSotuf.il man roasteth not that
The
which
to took in liuiitine-
and Fekeil.
David, and Jerexia,.,
and Mcah..umon, of the text showed
that some time thev had been out on a
! hunting edition p,ars lance
'swords and nets were en. ployed in this
'service. A deep pitfall wouid be
'toed. In the center of it there was
' - r.i.l .-round with a pole on
! which a lamb w ould ba f.u'ened, and
! the wild beiut not seeing U' l"lfa!!
ly seeing' the lamb would plut.gf
prey and uash down, its-If
but on
t for us
! raptured, limb were caught
in gini,
lor pierced with arrows The hunters
i in olJen time had two mission, one to
! clear the land of ferocious hearts and
the other to obtain meat f Jr thetiise.ves
and families Tho occupatio-i and
habit of hunters are a f.ivonte Bible
smile. David s lid he was hunted by
his enemy like a partridge upon the
mountain. My Uxt is a hunting scene.
A sportsman arrayed in a f?arb
appropriate to the wild chase lets slip
the blood-thirsty hounds from their
kennels, and mounting his fleet horse
with a halloo and the yell of the grey
hound pack, they are off and away,
through brake and dell, over marsh and
moor, across chasm where a misstep
would hurl horse an 1 rider to death,
plunging into a mire up to the haun
ches or into swift streams up to the
bit, till the game is tracked by dripping
foam and blood, and the antlers crack
on the rocks' and the hunter has just
time to be in at death. Yet after a!!
the haste and peril of the chase, my
text represents this sportsman as being
too indolent to dresi the game and
prepare it for food. Ho lets it lie in
the dooryard of his honu an 1 become
a portion for vermin a:id beaks of prey.
Thus by one master stroke, Niloaion
gives a picture of laziiien, wuen ha
says: 'The sloth fill man roastetli not
tiiat which he took in hunting." The
most of hunters have the g.itus tlfy
shot or entrapped cooked tha sams)
evening or the next day, but not so
with this laggaid of tha text. Too
lazy to rip oil th) hide. Too lazy to
kindle the tire, and put the gird.ron on
the coals.
Furthermore, indolence Is often a
rev.ilt of easy circum stances. Bough
experience in earlier life seems to be
necessary in order to maKe a man
active and enterprising. Mountaineers
are nearly always swarthy, a id those
who have toiled among mountains of
trouble get most nerve and muscle
and brain. Those who have become
the bclivers of nation? once had no
where to lay their head'. Locusts and
wild honey have been the fare of many
a John tin Baptist, while those who
have been fondled of fortune and
pitted and praise! have often grown
up the lethargic. They have none of
that heroism w hich come from fighting
one's own battles. The warm summer
sun of prosperity has weakened and
relaxed them. Born among the lux
uries of life, exertion has been uiinecs
sary, and, therefore, they spend their
time in taking it easy. They may
enter into business, butthey are unfiled
for its application, for its hardships,
for its repulses, and after having lost
the most of that which they
have Invested, go back to thorough
inaction. This costly yacht may do
well enough on the smoothe glass bay,
but cannot live an hour amid a chopped
sea
Another cause of indolence is severe
discouragement. There are those
around us who started life with the
moit sanguine expectation. There en
terprise excited the remark of all com
peers. But some sudden and over
whelming misfortune met them, and
henceforth they have been inactive.
Trouble, instead of making them
more determined, has overthrown them.
They have lost all self-reliance. They
imagine that all men and all occur
rence are against them. They hang
their heads where once they walked
upright, They never look you in the
eyes. They become misantropic and
pronounces all men liars and scoundrels
They go melancholic and threadbare to
their graves. You cannot rouse them
to action by ttie most glittering offer.
In most cases these persons have been
honorable and upright all their lives,
for rogues never get discouraged, as
there is always some other plot they
have not laid and some other trap they
have not sprung. There are but few
sadder sights than a man of talent and
tact and undoubted capacity giving up
life as a failure, like aline of magnl
flcent steamers rotting against wharves,
from which they ought to have been
carrying the exportalions of a nation.
gioav imamuai panic proauces a
large crop of such men. In the great
establishments, where they were part
ners in business, they are now weighers
or dray men or clerks on small salary.
Again, bad habits are a fruitful
source of indolence. Sinful Indulgences
stmt up a man's shop and dulls his tools
and steals his profits. Dissoluteness is
generally the end of industry are those
who have the rare faculty of devoting
occasionally a day or week to loose in
dnigences, and, at the expiration of
that time, go back with bleared eyes
and tremulous hands and bloated seeks
to the faithful and successful perform
ance of their duties. Indeed, their em
pwytrs and their neighbors expect this
amusement r occasional se.-.son t
frohc an 1 wassaiL Some ofths bejt
workmen and most skilful artitaiis
have this mode of oiidu-ting them- their door n;
selves, but, as the lim ro:i on, ihe
season
t,t di-ai nation becomes more
nro'raeteil and me seas'ui i wum nuiuu.g. (,,
. .. ..r ..... n. I. ........ 1 ...
,,! K.,lir.etv nx're limited, until the captured
enip:o;ers iwcuiut u.o-.o.. - jiuma in iuvit;n2j, J
.1 sKrilwl t'tl Atui tilt ! rnniu !..
w ivi.ii mi to a continuous aim Mover n..i
and ruinous idleness. W hen lliat point
has arrive! he rushes to destruction
with asUmi'hing velocity When a
man with n mng proclivities of aptite
has nothing todo.no fornur eif-re-sjK'Ct
or moral restraiut.or the be
seech. n is of kindred can save him.
The only safety for a man whofels
himself under the fascination of any
form of temptation is an employment
which affords neither recreation nor
hoi it' ay.
Now, what aiethe results of indo
lence? A niaiked consequence of this
vice is physical disease. The healthi
ness of the whole natural world de
pend upon activity. The winds, tossed
and driven in endless ciinils, sc::tte.
ing the mists from the mountains and
scooping out death damps from the
caves and blasting the miasma of
swamps and hurling back the fetid at
mosphere of great cities, are healthy
just tiecause of their swiftness and un
coiitrollableiiess of sweep. But, after a
while, the windfalls and the hot dun
nours through it. and when tho leaves
are still and the grain fields bend not
once all daylong, then pestilence smites
its victims and digs trenches for the
dead. The fountain, born far up In
the wild wood of tha mountain, comes
down brighter for every obstacle
against which it is liiveu and singing a
new song on every shelf of ruck over
which it bounds, till it rolls over the
water w reels in the valley, not ashamed
to grind corn, and runs through the
long grass of tho meadow, where the
willows reach down to dip their
branches and the unyoked oxen come
at even-tide to cool. Healthy water!
Bright water! Happy water! While
some stream, too la.y any more to run,
gathers it.self into a wayside pool,
where the swine wallow and filthy in
sects hop over tho surface and reptiles
crawl umoiig the coze, and frogs utter
their hideous croak, mid by day and
nieht there rises from the foul mire
and green scum, fever and plague and
death. Tin re is an endless activity
under fool and overhead.
Furlln rmore, notice that indolence
endangers the soul, talari makes his
chief conquests over men who either
have nothing to do, or, if they have,
refuse to do iU There is a legand that
t. Thomas, years after Christ's resur
rection, iK'gan again to doubt, and he
went to the apostlus and told them
about his doubts. Kach Hpostb looked
at him w ith surprise and then mid he
must be excused for he had no time to
listen any longer, "ihen St. Thomas
went to the devout women of his tin
and expressed his doubts. They said
they were sorry, butthey had no lime
to listen. Then, H. Thomas concluded
that it was because they were so busy
that the apostles and t he devout women
had no doubts. Idleness not only leads
a man into associations which harm
morals, but often thrusts upon him the
worst kind of scepticism. Loafers are
almost always infidels, or fast getting
to be. Corsuuiate idlers i ever read
the Bible, andjf they appear in church,
can be distinguished in an audience of
a thousand by their lisllessness, lor
they are too lazy to hear. Jt is not so
much among occupied merchants, in
dustrious mechanics and professional
men always busy that you hear the
religion of Jesus maligned as In public
lounging places, given up to profanity
and dissoluteness. They have uo sym
pathy with the book that says: "Let
him that stole steal no more, but rather
let him labor, working with his hands
the thing which is good, that he may
have to oive to him that
needeth." I never knew a man given
up to thorough idleness that was con
verted. Simon and Andrew were con
verted while fishing and Lydia while
selling purple, and the shepherds of
Bethlehem watching their flocks heard
the voice of angles, and Gideon was
threshing on the threshing floor, but no
one was ever couverteil with his hands
In Mi pockets.
"Beady! aye, ready! and yet when,
God calls us to the work and the
cause demands our espousal and
interests dreadful as the judegmnt and
solemn as eternity tremble In the
balance, how few of us are willing to
throw ourselves into the breach, crying
"Ready! aye, ready!" Oh, I should like
to see God arise for the defence of his
own cause and the disenthral
ment of a world in bondage. How the
fetters would snap and how the dark
ness would fly, and how the heaven
would sing. You hare never seen an
army like that which God shall gather
from the four winds of heaven to fight
his battles. They shall cover every hill
vp hiiu itretcn through every valley
and man the
vessels or every sea.
There shall neither
be uproar, nor
nor bloodshed,
lie waste in the
wrath, nor smoke,
Harvests shall not
track, nor cities be consumed. Instead
of ( liM rrrnnna i,9 . ..
--.... ....,. , vouvrs snail come
the songs of those redeemed.
Hut, my text Is descriptive also of
those who hunt for opportunities, and,
f ha rabbit they overcome biuiM,).
morning tramp lies for weeks uncooked
in the ih .
- "J Srfl
brought .!.,. '"1
ng pursuit in,,.
ft .
,,UI,,'R. Ohv-
. ! UV.
overahunt,
thing worm .i
Agnppa when J1
athnstian. So1
man who went
orro iiu. So Wjtll
who have Lue
skies full ofwirlK1,
profit them nothu,,i
roast not that Uci
Oh. make M
m onwit a hunqm
greatest prize mtlJ
is the love and pamj
mat aim you eansar
Thoroughly ce;,Vj.,
commonly oUiT,um
and particularly g.
ewi-speaKingiWj,y
.aii eminent Cause,
practicing in Toronta
in illustration of tl J
neil 1 was yoii!,;
was a wealthy 0!Ji.
liig caustic tiling i,
wires, una SindajJ
I was staying at In
of her neighbor, J
w ithout stmt.
By way of cbanrisj
proposed to real tobe
of sermons I had wJ
with me.
- 1 r i
i Almoin, loiiiid a uttf
wnen loo late, di
in the middle of art
eminent of the ton
I was afraid s!i
selected it to ailmrcs
not slop for fear u(
tlie niicnse more v,
read to the end. prrtt
reading would fOjtK
11,1 l a year tome. -
she said: " 1 laiik t
an excellent serMij
neighbor, Stamford,!,
He q! '
WIumi a man is iijj
about securil.g en)jk'i-
let such a small oas;iVf,
a uile htand in tlii'iijj pej,
tno fact in rejardtoi traoaav
foreman on the Cok'fT
, ,r arm.
sound road. lie aji; yiZ.
tioii to AwwUflf i
McObe and kisimtrt,
mans' queries umall
til the question came: j,
"Are you married? .
ried mini to tale Umtb.
his wife can taxeca."
hnilRP."
The man arknowkcC
wandered in ttw (
and Mr. Mc('absaii!:
"Well, you can la
j. . .t ... lima
gel uiurni-u hi mu
give you
train."
Jt was men
seemed pretty sli'.'rtt
men can get throoC
business in n hour
had arrived for the Ujj.
applicant returntd,
blushing bride andw
"Well, I've 8l,!'
give me thosi paw.
.Killed with ato
readiness of resource
him the passes and B
left on their lionej2
Intelligencer,
uidii'ir"'
Now. Mary
that the neifi
80
tout of them. siM'
a (I '
nw neonle here,
bet foot foremost, 'i
. it
said Mary, l'llptM
on the outside to W-
th.nkin'if vo waif"
uesi 1001 ioiciu"
stockiu' at all.
like, an" some
crnn.1 ilrl " S lid lrl
inelv: -there s
nothtf
niJ imnrpftlion '
;
lilt n i'iarm.
Studied the clothf;1 i
early a peculiarity i'.
froa nf the IICVV i'-.
oenevo ii; -',
their . hands in '"llf
had three wad''1! J;
.. . ..n friu ,
AftmA I nam nil
vwiuo v. i v. . "I
ami tint a nair
their name -Wt
Press.
Bay rum is m""'
in r rum flm Urn"
i 2
s s --
tlllation, and t"
manner. The U,1
the trees and then JJ
thev are phi"1 ia.J,K
mm lino" , ';.Mrfr
.. ..i-iillui mi SC'ht;
III, ,iioniM' I ,ii r
forms litJA
very small q'in"M
for each P'1!''!
ufacuireof bay Jrf")
the northern ejjtf
those engs'V
pkutlful In lb"
ofsocs'l
J