Ue Hanisoa Press-Joarnal C-C. BUSK t Paarairrb. HARBISON, NEBRASKA. A Brooklyn church, yearning for eai-e on eanh, ha atKilished the ihoir. The weight of expert opinion seems c be that spelling correctly Is a gift, ke same as spellbinding. When trust magnates beg-in shying (tones at one another there is sure to te a great shattering of glass. We often hear of a middle-aged man. wt never of a tuiddie-ged woman. A romto is either young ft old. George Kennaji Is bearing up un ier the repeated misfortunes of the lussians as well as could be expected. The man who thinks a good deal of lis wife should not attempt to conceal lis thoughts when he is alone with her. A New York man is learning to !n!k without a tongue. This is new; Vit many people have learned to talk without brains. Andrew Carnegie has now given iway more than $lOno.OCin. Hur rah for Andy. May he not stop till le makes it a billion. It is comparatively easy to discover he germ that produces disease. The teal trick is to prevent the germ from liscovering his victim. An excited doctor has run a pin through the mump microbe. It will ie a great triumph when they coral the stone bruise microbe. Many a candidate who thinks be tears the voice of the people calling to him. discovers later on that be has responded to a false alarm. Sir Charles Dilke will now be voted Ibe loveliest man in all England. lie las come out flat-footed for the adrrvis lion of women to parliament Another trained nurse has married I millionaire patient. The training of torses In some quarters seems to be a fomprebenslve sort of tutelage. A great many people devote their test thoughts and energies to bring ing prison reforms who never give a thought to the man that never did anything to merit imprisonment. The geological discovery that the western mines of the United States tan produce unlimited quantities of radium follows closely upon the heels f the discovery that radium is not good for anything. America has begun to set the styles Df the world in wearing apparel, as well as in freedom. An English shoe manufacturer with branch stored in many large European cities is making hoes on the American model because his customers demand them. Dr. E. Benjamin Andrews says that the President's race suicide theory is a good one but that it can be over worked. Dr. Andrews says that ten ' children is too many. A few more bits of wise advice and the American people may yet learn how to regulate their family affairs. Public opliiion hag turned against lynching so steadily of late that the action of the Colorado sheriff who, ingle-banded, stood off a mob at the point of his pistol represents a popu lar new fashion in officers of the law. A few more such instances of deter mined official fidelity and courage will greatly help to cure the lynching habit The frequency of the remarks that Russia and Japan will get rich out of their war shows the long life of a popular misconception. Countries at war get poorer with startling rapid ity. War does three things which niake nation look prosperous: It make a scarcity of labor; It taxes the future for an Indefinite period and spends the tax money at once in lavish turns; and It enables a handful of cap italists to reap vast fortunes out of the profuse expenditure of money. This true statement of the case cannot too early be mastered. Vereatcbagln, the Russian painter who has devoted bis life to depicting the horrors of war, with the Intention tf abolishing the cruel curse of the ages, was on board the Russian bat tleship Petropavlovsk. He died In cs trying out the cause to which bis art was dedicated the securing of peace to the world. He was only In the military camps and upon the mur derous engines of sea battle to study realities so as to present to the world the scenes Inseparable from war. It was his hope that, when the nations aw what they were fostering in the military spirit, they would revolt from It and bring about a new reign of peace on earth, good will to men. To? war canvases of Verestchagln have been forbidden the galleries of Russia nd of Germany by more than one de er. They were feared for the effect Cms would have upon the masses. George Collins, a young man, was fclSftd In St Louis recently. A few fceurs before bis execution he aald in 1 O fc4arrlew with a newspaper report er: Hj parratl nortr gare me a Vy." Kor 4 be aay this because a rxk, w to j notify himself. Aa .""-'..J: fey KIM history what IZI tfl few. TM boy did not get a fair chance at 1 fe. In fact his parents gave him no change at ai!. His father and mother were unfit fr parenthood. Tbey allowed their son to grow up in the streets. There no home atmosphere mr influence n i induing. The only training wa iu the direction of evil. Very early in life young Collins came into tinfii t with the police. They pronounced him a bad lot and finally had him Kent t "the reform school. In thin school Collins simnly tok a post graduate in vi.-e. After thus fitting himself for a criminal career he was released to prey upon society. The road to the scaffold was a short one. Primari't the blame rests with the parents. Had they given him a fair chance he could then blame himself for his wrong doing. His father and mother sent Mm to the gallows. The lesson of his misspent life Is for parents: Be gin the education of your boy before he is born with yourse f. During a discussion at the Chicago Woman's Club. Professor Arnold Tomp kins of the Chicago Normal Schooi said: A man should dress well t should a woman but not too weil; In should comb, but not too well; lit should write well, but not too wetl and he should spell, but not too well The press re-ently criticised Mgf school pupils because they were pool spellers. It was the highest compll ment ever paid to them, because il proved tbey were In better business. Another sneaker indorsed this not lot by declaring that there were more im portant things In education tlmn w spelling, and that the time was coming w hen the poor speller wouid no lotigii lie considered illiterate. From the assertions and others like them wblet proceed from the mouths of who' teachers we may infer that a contempt for spelling is being rather assiduous ly cultivated by a considerable nuhei of our modern educators, and thi question arises whether they are no" inviting contempt for themselves. P is to be noted, moreover, that they cut put forward no superior claims to au thority In the matter, liecause the te of the value of spelling Is not routined to the classroom. It Is being nppliec every day In business and in the pro fesslons. The high school loy who it assured by Professor Tompkins thai the censure of his errors in spelling it In fact a compliment may find thn the more he Justifies such compliment! the more difficult It will le for bin to secure the favorable attention o; thoe upon whom he depends for era ployment. That is a phase of the sub ject that is of very great practical lm portance, and that admits, we shotiK say, of little difference of opiiiloi among persons of experience it. tin world's work. It Is a fair conciusioi also that where slovenliness Is encour aged in one branch of study Its iutlti ence is likely to be felt In others, am If there are occasionally Instances fron which It appears that poor spelling am broad general culture are not incom patible they are to lie taken as ct:ri ous exceptions. Furthermore, whei we are informed that there are limn Important things in education that good spelling we are entitled to a bli of particulars; also to proof that inac curacy In spelling Instead of tielng tin sign of general slovenliness Is evl den of devotion to the more lmpor tant things. I'pon the whole, it wonk seem that the high school lxy is get ting slops when he needs discipline and If a professor may defy the rulei with impunity the boy enjoys no sue! privilege. In this connection a storj that is told of Dr. Tnrr, an eminea English scholar and educator, is pert! nent. When a gentleman defended hli pronunciation of Alexandria with thi accent upon the "1" by an appeal ti the authority of Richard Ilentley, Pan came down upon him with the com ment that he (Parr) and Hentle) might pronounce the word that way but tlint the gentleman had beltel stick to the ordinary usage. So Dt Tompkins may spell as he pleases, bit he ought to refrain from making i laughing stock of his pupils. Bach Good Baby! A new case of mistaken Identity it reported by the Philadelphia Puth Ledger. One hot afternoon a yonnj man in shirt-sleeves and straw hai was wheeling a baby carriage bail and forth before a small house neai Fairmount Park. He looked hot, but contented. "My dear!" came a voice from at upper window of the house. "Now let me alone!" he called back "We're all right." An hour later the same voice cams again In earnest, pleading tones; "George, dear!" "Well, what do you want?" he re sponded. "Have the water pipes burst?" "No, George, dear, but you hav been wheeling Anna' doll all the after noon. Isn't It time for the baby t have a turn?" The Recipe Habit. "I think those neighbors are re;i mean," said Mrs. Bligglns. "What's the trouble?" asked her hus band. "Tou know our Marguerite doesn'' get on In her studies very well ant their Matbilde is always at the bead o the class." "What of that?" "They wouldn't tell me what par licular sort of brain-prodticlng pateni food they give tbelr children." Wash Ington Star. The Lover. Tess Well, their engagement Is oft Jess The Idea! It was only an nounoed yesterday. What did the quarrel about? , Tess A to which was the more un worthy of the other. rblladelpbli wjKi0m --v. snw l"niiue Post Puller. Pulling iost8 by ordinary means is lot an easy task, as any one who lias ried it will admit, but when some sim ile device like that shown in the lllus ration Is used, the work Is much "ini ilitied. A frame about three feet high houid le made of lumber four im bed juare; the frame should I nlsmt 'ighteen inches wide. Make a roller tlx inches in diameter and fasen to he upper part of the frame as shown ind a chain should lie bolted to it near me end as Indicated. This chain ihould le aliout four feet long with a i ....nA.t t.. tl.A u,.l .... r I be other end of the roller Uire two joles. as shown. Hlxnit three inches ipart and each hole one ai.d one Icilf riche In diameter. To operate the do Mce phice it near the post, hook tb Lain around the post near the ground, hen use two bars, one in eich hoi ; urn the roller with those bars ami he post will yield readily, and with llOML-MADK POST I't'lXKH. he us.? of but a small amount of strength upon the part of the operator, iny one who is handy with tools nn aslly make this devlre, and it will p:iy 'or itself In a single season if ninny Kists are to le pulled. Indianapolis '6W9. PatwtitiK of Maw and As. A T'uited States Consul reports that n France trees are being felled by elec ricity not struck hy lightning, as In he old time way the work lielng time by a platinum wire made white lot with a current of electricity and ised as a ssi w. A tree Is cut down In tie-eighth the time consumed by the niinary methods of sawing or choj ling. If trees can be felled in this vay their trunks can also be cut into ogs and the logs Into boards by a ilender wire instead of the cumbrous law. Is the coming wood or lumber awing machine or mill to tie simply I portable engine running a dynamo c genernte electricity to heat a wire hat will go through tree or log eight imes as fast as a saw? Quite likely. tl-tricity Is yet an undeveloped in '.ant: what will it not do when fully natured? Muring Mock Swine. Never buy an animal simply because te has a piligree. and because he is m sale at a low price. Pedigree alone Iocs not constitute merit for there ire animals with pedigrees a foot long, rhlch would ruin any herd Into which hey were Introduced. The next class -the farmer's pig is tiit which Is lot good enough for the breeder of ligh-claas stock; this animal may be a lt coarse, and not up to standards, tut he Is a good growtby or a prolific lort, which the pork producer will be ;lad to have. The next kind Includes Sic culls, runts and Inferior spec! liens, which should be turned into luteher's meat as soon as possible; nn ler no circumstances whatever should hey he used as breeder. American Farming. An Illinois farmer says: Comparing he composite picture of the American larmcr at the threshold of VJH with lis likeness in 1SK9, there is good p-ound for estimating his present mine as double that of fifteen years Igo. Potentially he Is the coming man. -Alt roads lending to the farm ari vlng more and more traveled. Inter oursc promotes development and (he 'armer Is demanding a larger share In the life of the nation. In response to !l,ls demand a rising tide, of effort and iccomp'lshinent, is seen on every hand.. To Break t'p Hitters. The means of preventing a hen from titling seems like a very bnmh'e prob em to occupy the throbbing lira in '. in Inventor, but the matter has been ecenlly attacked by a genius of Itrk sh Honduras, who is so sure that he las found a solution of this mighty natter that he has gone to the trouble if taking out patent paper In this and tther countries. . The apparatus consist merely of a hop of wire adapted to fasten to her kg and encircle the limb In lucb a ..lanner that the fowl's freedom of is imt interfered wiib in her ordinal) ramble aliout the barnyard in searci of food, but the moment she tries to ! cste herself on a nest she finds a jaw ! lug chasm lietween them. She may hover around and over tb nest, but it refuses to receive her ro timd form. This Is lie- a use the win prevents her from landing her leg. ? is neeei-sary to assume the sitting pos ture. It is said that after repeated ef forts to rind a hospitable nest she give up her task and forgets her dream cf maternity. tsiluge Fatal to !!ore. Corn silage Is a natural food for milking cows and growing cattle, it is useful in the ration of fattening ani mals. It may le fed to honw-s with probable advantage, but it must te fed with extreme caution. If fed In regular amounts not ex ceeding ten to fifteen pounds per day, many experiences have leen entirely satisfactory. If fed In unlimited uiiiomits, and especially if the sPai;1? has lsen poorly made or has und t gone s.ime further degeiieraticn. it ,n proved deadly in iN effects Last win ti r in .Minnesota a man came to us i.t the Farmers' Insiltut wi'h a sorr-iw fill tale. He had filled his silo with fmsten corn and ther. was mold on th siluge. lie had no hay. His horse had len gorged with sllnge. having n oiher feed. They ate a bushel iniuiri a tiny. They gained In f.esh fur a tlrna Then they liegan tnys: r ousiy t i sick eu and die. pjira'ysis of ibe ihroe.t v. as one symptom. No remedy helped them. All died. I think, and he wai a poor man. In debt lor his farm. This winter a friend fed silnze What they rejected was thrown on: In a yard in a rack. From this rack cows gleaned. One day eight Imrset running in the yard nte all they want ed of this half olled silage. All died The symptoms were peculiar, inclnd Ing nervous spasms, and one veterin arlnn pronounced the disease hydro phobia. It may possibly have lieen but I fear the silage alone was renpon sible. Tills need not deter any one frrcr. building silos. There is abundant tisi lor silage In the dairy barn, the catti? nrd. the sheep pens, even in the swine pins. Iet the horses have dry forass cr silage In small amounts. Rreedert (Jnzette. Home-tlrown Alfalfa Keed. Reports from Michigan farmer! nn plats seeded to alfalfa show Mi folly of using f-eeil Imported from K'l rnpe, rather than the homegrown seed. The Imported seed has a le i vitality and docs not catch so well, and also has a lower per cent of ger mination. While these two points dh enough to enable the farmer to sc that the home grow n seed is cie iriy the bt, there is one more ferious objection to the !mKirted seed. Mwl of it is found to contain a large amount of weed seed, the most trnublesoui ones being dodder and buckthorn. One mini invested something over s hundred dollars In European seed, tin result from which was almost absolute failure, although different plats wcrt sown in varying ways, some with t nurse crop, others without. Neighbori who used the home-grown seed -rot good results, as the past season bai Iieen nn especially favorable one to gel a good catch. Good M ilking; Htool, John Jackson, in the F.pitoniist writes: 'I have used a milking stooi made as descrllcd In the illustration for five years. The sent board, A, ii made of a two-inch plank nine im-bet wide and fourteen inches long. Tin stool iKiard, R, Is two inches thick ant nine inches broad and long and cm round. A three-eighth inch liolt C, Ii put through the middle, the bead sunk ami the nut left off so the seat will ro volve. The seat is eleven inches deep A hoop is fastened with staples on tin upright board, R, to hold the bucket at a convenient height from the floor t its upfs?r rim." Good Two-Year Old Milker. The Jersey Huiletln mentions I 2-year-old Jersey heifer which gavi 204 pounds of milk In seven days making over fourteen pounds of but ter, "with the temperature .HI degreei on the bad side (below) zero." When could that have been? We suw altou the same thing accomplished in Hood'i herd, at Iwell, Mass., but the cowl were housed In comfortable barns. When Htsliilng PI.. When scalding pigs put three band fills of pitch In the water and a haul till in each succeeding beat. Little is no shaving of the pig Is required Hmoke the meat three days, having I very hot fire the first day and usiii two pounds of sulphur In the Arc thi laet two days. Neither file nor ml will touch the meat Machinery of no kind abould be eJ lowed to remain exposed to the weatl er an more than la neceaury. MILKl.NO feTOOL. I A HLRO OF f HE HOI. t t i I i I-H-H--I-1 H 4 In the New York fire department al sets .f heroism are compared wi!t miiat Jim McKvoy did that Sumta) i.onii;g in May. ltsi'i. when he car rled bis partner, MrXally. a llvlnt t.-n h. out of a burning tem-nicni. J writer in Everybody' Magazine telli the story: A Mt of lard Uiiled over In a liake hop lu the first itory of a New York East Side tenement, and In a few minutes the building was in (Isno-s. When ihe policeman rushed through the house he found most of the tenants In bed. He hammered door artet door, and sveliig retreat cut off from trf-lnw, commanded the frightened jo ple to follow hiia to tlie roof. They did, and so made their escape through the scuttle, across the roofs and down through the neighlsiring houses to the street. Then it was found that on (nan. a cabinetmaker, had been for gotten. Truck 3. to which MrXally and Me Evoy belonged, had arrived by this time, and a ladder was put up to ward the window of the cabinet mak er's room. But the fire had gained 1 uch headway that it was deemed un wise to order the firemen to mount the ladder. MeXally found out that there was a man in the building, and without waiting for order he mounted tlie ladder and disappeared through the window. It is said that no one saw him go, which might easily be, for the smok vas thick and the excitement intense He might lime burned to death then and then1 but for the merest chance lim McKvoy had started for tin! truck, which was round the corner, to get his rubber lioots. As he ran h looked up at the building, ami us hit glance swept across the blazing from be saw at the window atxive the liiddn 1 face. McKvoy forgot his boots, and running forward, he, too, climbed tin ladder. window, from cmf wytauim!!ififff1),.fl:. lie mounted steiulily toward tin window, from which the llamcs wei-t Is'lching as from a furnace. During an Interval when the blast seciuK less severe he caught the sill ani illved through. No one expected hltn to reappear, but in a minute he wa back with what looked like a hugt torch In his arms. The torch was Mo Xally. who was aflame from head tc foot. MrXally, when he entered. Iin missed his footing and fallen bead g downstairs Into the lire. Xever iieless he managed to crawl up U the window again, and it was at tlif moment when he looked out that Mc Kvoy liHd seen his face. The flame had eaten through his rubber rout oml he as burning up. To toiict ti 1 in was like handling a hot brand Uul yet McKvoy put his hands rotmc 'lie brand and lifted it through th window. "Somehow or other." as he says hltn self, he npinagiMl to pass MeNiiII) low n to w here Sliaiighnessy was wait Ing. and together they got him down while the stream from the hose pinyei! nn them to keep them from bunilm to death. MrXally died after days of suffer Ing. His courage had been efpial U that of McKvoy. whose Injuries wen wvercly burned arms and hands. Tin ?abl!ietmnker, after all, succeeded It making his esrnpe from the opposilt side of the building. hmall Farms in Iterinuda. The farms In the Rermuda I standi ire not such as to Impress one will in Idea of the greatness of the iimn Ty. The islands being extreme; iH-ky, the farms consist fur the mo jiart of tiny detached tields 111 tin pleasant hollows, where the ueeuiiiuia '.Ion of vegetable matter and of wash ngs has made a shallow soil, in thest 'Jltie Islands one sees fields from tin slw of a parlor floor to t'mt of tw( acres the latter size being uncommon It is strange enough to the visitm from more ambitious hinds to see I patch of onions or lilies or potatnci nly a few feet square bravely assert 'ng Its Importance in some front yart r by the highway. But although these fields are dtmin utive they are numerous, and the com bined output makes up a lurge trad. In Bermud.'in products In the Xc York markets, for probably nine tentln of the product, except bananas, finds market there In spite of the dutie The hinds vary wonderfully in price from very little for the excised c!ea lions to $."((K per acre for good plcen In the littlo- vales. The high price o Jiese pieces and limited amount oi and on the Islands there are lo than 10,(iO acres all told has en forced a very high state of cultlvatiol )f the lands. The islands comprise I Kries of Mnnrt garden hollows, am ,he hard-metaled, while walled road siiltc, smug houses and profusion o fompact garden growth all unite h make the place a diminutive picture find. Discreet Hllencn. When Itlsmnrck was a lxiy his fu Iher desired him to become a clergy man, says Hon. .ndrew D. White Ii the Century Magazine. In his late, fears the "Iron Chiuii-ellor" found hu Vior In the suggestion. "You probaiily think that If I hn KMime a clergyman I should be n bet Vr mnn," he said Jocosely to his wifi ine evening. "I will not reply to that," she said julefly, "for my answer wonld not b sillte." When a small boy get hi flng.'i fought In the pantry door It Isn't tht lam be ii looking for. Hue d ipir of MiOOcrn pyiuttctiuia r. th'jD lo bctb the Hiiush and Imericm sections of the LlnerJ Irts Palace al the Wmia'i Fair. j 111 form of rockeU et piece, bomb ar commercial ue and vthti piecu or bulb display and useful pui- o are shown by the largtst BJiiDU acturersof fire ork la the world. '1 be ba ber In Cub latber tbeii attoris with tbelr binds, from a ol made tj fit uoder tbe chin. A rush is not i aed. air. Alte'a 0IbIoi. Alpine, Cal.. June 6. Mr. T. M. Al ice, our postmaster, ba expressed an pinion based on hi own experieni rhich will do doubt be of Interest to hany. Mr. Albee 1 a man of few, tords, but hi well-known truthful-W-ss and uprightness of character luul such weight to any statement ho uakes. He say: "The first box of Dodd' Kidney ills that I ustnl convinced me of their jood qualities and 1 used altogether bur Ikixc with the very Is-st results. can heartily recoiunicud thi rein tly." This voluntary expression of opluloo rill doubtless Bod an echo In many loines In California, for Dodd's Kid ey Pills have been making some mi scuious cures In this State. From the evidence already publish id It seems safe to conclude that thi nedielne will le found to be a perfect re for Rheumatism, L'riuary trouble, Jackaehe and any and every form or (yniptom of Kidney Complaint. A press rourc for foreign Jouroalisti piorldcd Id ibe German Natlotia Pavilllon at tbe W.irld Fair. It s furnished In dull finish old oak. Missouri's apple exhibit In lh 'alace of ArgletilLure at the World'r Talr covers IM plates reuresentiti 5! varieties, collected from 18 couo les. Cuba's exhibit In tbe Palace a Jbetal Arts at tbe World's Fall touslsU of photographs, the pro lucls of printing, musical Inslru nent, chemicals, modeU, etc., Il i cai varietr. jtat or Ohio. Citt or Toi.rro, I Lccas (Vustv. (" FRANK J (HKNKY mllM O.'llh 111 lit h 1 111 irnlor trtoiror the firm of F. .1 ChksstK'o, toing liii.tiiMii in tiia "ily of Toledo. ( ounty no itala sfurcsshl, suil tliat said nrm Kill y tli im of O.NF. IllMUlKI) IMII.1.AK.S d.r M. aid verr (- o( atarkh llml rmiimt t lured b the lue o II all I at hum i i ar FKANK J. ( HK.NK1T. Sworn to hWor me anil fuliM-rllml In mr pras k, Uils glti df Ot iMlOMlllier, A. 11. IMS. i"AL( W. (JI.FASnv, Xolary f'ublio. IIa.ll Catarrh furs In Ultra Internally and art ItrwMy on lha hiood and miH-min kiiiiaM9 of Uie Tuleui. baud (or Unilinnii'.Ala. frrw. F. J. CllE.NtV & CO., Toledo. (X Sold by nniulsu. "5c. Hall' Family PI I la art tht beat. Kiigllsh history, Is shown by the els, coins and medals, that hav teen used during hundreds of years, s told in a unique exhibit In tbe British section of tbe Palace ul jlberal Arts at tbe Woild'a F?lr. Ilodels of the great seals In use by ivery xuler, from Klin? Olla of tbe flexclans, wbo ruled lo 790 A. D., lowo to the modern nionarchs, aia Jiowu Pieces of nearly every gold, diver and copper coin In present ise in England and her dependen 1ea are shown and many of tbe wronat on medals, military and taval deals and those given fui ife saving are exhibited. Dr. Charles H. Xaucrede, professor if surgery lo tbe medical dcparltuetil f tbe University of Michigan, hat ecently performed with apparently erfect result a simple operation (or ,he cure of trifacial neurallga. Tbe iperition consists in tbe injection of smlc acid into the affected nctva liter its exposure by a trivial loci Ion. This method bas been mtro mced but a short time, and this vas its first trial at tbe Unifc-ialt lospital. TURN OVER TIME. When Nature Hint About tbe Food. When there' no lellsh to any food nd ail that one eat doesn't scent ! do any good, then Is the time to make t turn over in the diet, for that' Xa lure's way of dropping a nlDt tbat iht food isn't the kind required. "For a number of year I followed railroad work, much of It being office pork of a ylng nature. Meal time were our busiest, and eating too much tnd too quickly of food such as i tommonly served In hotels and restau rants, these together with the seden tary habits were not long In givln; aie dyspepsia and stomach trouble which reduced my weight from 200 t I00 pounds. "There wag little relish In any food nd none of it seemed to do me any food. It seemed tlie more I ate the poorer I got and was always hungry before another meal, no matter how much I had eaten, "Then I commenced a fair trial of Grape Xuta and was surprised bow a mall saucer of It would carry m long, strong and with stitlstied appe tlte, until the next meal, with no sen sations of hunger, weakness or distress as before. "I hsve been following this diet now for several months, and my improve, aseirt bas been so great all the others my fi rally hsve taken up tbe ns f Grape-Nuts with complete satisfac tion and much Improvement in health nd brain power. "American people undoubtedly eat hurriedly, nave lots of worry, thus hindering digtin and therefore need fotMl that la nredlgMted and concen trate in nourlakasMt" Name given J Ptajtnas O., Baltic Creek, Mich. , Laws In sack pc far thn famoui IKtl bewk, "II! ls4 to WsilTtUtv"