Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905, June 23, 1904, Image 5

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    It oil dow late In tbe summer. AJI
(earrh for young Howe hid proved
Vuitlesa. Hii mother, suddenly old
ud feeble from grief and suspense,
it nod. one liny, looking toward tbe bay
n a And bop?. Tbe Indian came
winging slowly toward ber. Tbe boy
tad been found. It vii on Indian
jdand. A knife-wound gaped in big
reaat, bta wide blue eye were up
turned In a nior-klng grin, and tbe
(rasa around blm was dotted and red.
Again tbere waa no swooning, no
vert demonstration of grief. Weeks
f suspense bad taught the family In
lie white bouse stoic endurance.
Slkra came every week to do the
trashing as usual, while ber son loiter
td near the cedar trees. One evening
le brought the heartbroken woman
ir hat he considered a rare present, a
nelon of prodlgoua aire. Tbe Indian
iat down silently, and alowly and care
hilly he cot It. It waa a trifle over
ripe, tbe rich, red heart gleaming aa
with blood. Tbe knife with which he
lexterously sliced the melon was ugly
looking, broad and flat, and the deer
torn handle broken, as If by a dendr
ite struggle when last wielded.
The woman did not recognize It.
"You are a good boy," she, said ab
ent!y to the Indian, "to do these little
tlndnestcs to Hal's mother." Kan
Francisco Argonaut.
H. 8. GILBERT S RECREATI0N8.
great I.ll.rcttLt Live Retired I.lfc aa
KnKl!h Country Gentleman.
In bis lieautlful home at Grlm'a
Oyke. Harrow Weald. W. K. Gilbert,
ihe greatest librettist of the age. Uvea
in retirement the life of an English
touutry gentleman. There be Is sur
founded by scene of such sylvan sim
plicity that It Is next to Impossible to
realize that the life ami bustle of the
Uarble Arch are no more than fifteen
miles away.
At home Mr. (illhert Is no longer the
treator of Beetles and sentences that
Have net two hemispheres laughing; be
m. from choice, the country squire, ami
ai filling that role does not shirk the
lutle attendant uon the ofllee of Jus-tji-e
of the peace.
He la one of the most regular attend
Hit at the weekly sitting of the Kdg
Rare, Bench, and his seniority among
jis colleagues very frequently places
iilm In the chair. When not In that re
IjHinHllile position, Mr. (illhert often
Jcgulles the teilium of a long and un
interesting case by making pen aud-lnk
Iketcliea of the parties engaged in It,
u the foolscap provldinl for the pur
pone of taking notes.
Of this class Is the outline of a face
f a typlcully criminal clianicter, be
leath which Mr. Gilbert wrote the
terse memorandum: "Two mouths'
ti. 1." It in that of a ninn who waa
lent to prison with hard labor for Uie
jerlod Indicated, for having stolen a
pair of ducks. Now and then Mr. Gil
bert turns bis attention to the court
jftlclals, and the result of one such oc
casion Is often a wonderfully accurate
ind triie-to-llfe portrait.
Once at least the sketches have been
known to lapse Into reminiscence. Oc
casionally, note-taking and sketching
ul.MAt O will
Gilbert made the portrait of a pris
oner and notes on his crime and Its
punishment
In making this memorandum, the
magisterial librettist doubtless rumina
ted ujKin his well known lines:
' My object all sublime
I shall achieve in time
To make the punishment fit the crime
The punishment fit the crime.
How to Get to Nleep
When we are not necessarily over
tired, but perhaps only a little tired
from Uie day's work, It Is not uncom
mon to be kept awake by a flapping
curtain or a swinging door, by un
usual noises In the streets, or by people
talking.
If we are willing that the curtain
should go on Happing, the door go on
slumming, or the noise in the street
Miitlnue steadily on, our brains yield
to the conditions and so sleep natural
ly, because the noise goes through us,
o to speak, and docs not run hard
against our unwillingness to hear it.
There are three facts which may
help to remove this resistance.
One Is that in almost every sound
there Is a certain rhythm. If we ylld
to the sound enough to become sensi
tive to Its rhythm, that. In tlself, Is
soothing, and what before was keep
ing us awake now helps us to go to
f li-ep. The rhythm of sound and mo
tion In sleeping cars and steamers Is.
In itself, soothing. If you keep your
mind steadily on it, you will probably
be asleep in loss than an hour, und,
when the car stops, you will wake
only enough to settle comfortably Into
(lie sense of motion when It starts
again. It is pleasant to notice the
gentleness with which a good engineer
Mart his train at night, and gives us
Innny a lesson on the use of gentle be
.'Innings, with other things besides
locomotive engines.
The second fact with regard to
yielding, instead of resisting, in order
to get to sleep is that listening alone,
apart from rhythm, tends to make one
sleepy, and this lends us at once to ths
third fact, that getting to sleep Is noth
ing but a healthy form of concentra
tion. Leslie's Monthly.
Kxceptlon to the llule.
"I wonder," said the resident, "who
Originated the expression, 'Where
therea smoke there must lie fire.' "
"I dunno," said the east ender, "but
I'll bet he made the remark before
toy furnace was Invented." Baltimore
t'ewa.
When a woman owns a carriage, she
alallgbU In lording It over women who
)iava not Bat man feela uneasy In
carriage, and shrinks when be meeta
U acquaintance.
BluVentionll
Water Is often thought to be almost
absolutely incompressible, but Prof.
Talt baa now calculated that the ocean
would rise 1RJ feet higher than at
present If It were not compressed by
Its own weight We are Indebted to
this compression, therefore, for 2,000,
000 square miles of our dry land.
Left eyeduesa la looked upon by Dr.
George M. Gould of Philadelphia as of
greater significance than left-handed
ness. He la seeking facts concerning
the two and their association, but sug
gest that both may be due to the ab
normal location of tbe speech center in
the right side of the brain. He be
lieves ambidexterity should be dis
couraged, while he has aeen only bad
results in the attempt to correct a de
cided use of the left hand.
At C'harlottenburg, Germany, re
cently, a novel device to protect fire
men from smoke and flames while
fighting a fire at close quarters was
tested publicly. The Invention con
sits of an annular mouthpiece, situa
ted a little back of the aperture In the
nozzle of a fire hose, and capable of
forming. In front of the man holding
the nozzle, a circular screen of water.
Tbe Btream from the nozzle is not In
terfered with, and the fireman can see
through the transparent screen which
protects blm. Tbe angle of projection
of the radiating scrireii can be varied
at pleasure.
A correspondent of Nature suggests
that mu h knowledge of the processes
of cloud formation, and other facts
that would be Important to incterolo
glntti, might be gained by taking, say,
Wsi successive photographs of a "cloud
scape" In the course of an hour, and
then putting them rapidly through a
klnetnatograph, so that in one minute
all the changes would be observed that
nature had required 10 minutes to
bring about. A similar suggestion has
been made with regard to the growth
of plants, and other natural processes
which are so slow that we lose the
sense of successive and related steps
in development.
Statistics collected in Germany have
shown that 2S per cent of the acci
dents caused by machinery used for
Industrial purposes, such as manufac
turing, were due to defects In the ma
chines and to lack of proper safe
guards. On the other hand, over 40
per cent of the accidents occurring
with agricultural machinery were
traceable to those causes. According
ly, there Is a call for the use of Im
proved safety devices Uon all ma
chines used on the farm. Feed-cutting
machinery Is found to be particularly
liable to cause accidents. A consider
able majority of those Injured by ag
ricultural machines are children and
youths.
In a paper read by Miss Adele M.
Flelde before the section of biology of
the New York Academy of Sciences,
iha j,vinia composing the antennae of
ants were described as a series of
uoscs, each having a special function.
Tlie first Joint distinguishes the ant's
native nest from the nest of an en
emy; the second discriminates between
tbe odor of ants of different colonies,
but of the same species; the third dis
cerns the scent of the track left by the
ant's own feet, and enables It to re
turn over its route; the fourth and
fifth Joints discover the distinctive
odor of the larvae, nnd if removed dis
able the ant from caring for tbe young
In a nest; the sixth and seventh Joints
make known the presence of an ant of
different species. Only after these
Joints are developed will ants of dif
ferent species fight one another.
How Water Freeze.
it used to puzzle all thinking people
why ponds and rivers do not freeze
beyond a certain depth. This depends
on a most curious fact, namely, that
water is at Its heaviest when It
reaches 40 degrees; Fahrenheit, that is,
8 degrees above freezing point On ft
frosty night, as each top layer of water
falls to 40 degrees It sinks to the bot
tom; therefore, the whole pond has to
drop to 40 degrees before any of It can
freeze.
At last It is all covered to this point,
ami then ice begins to form. I!ut Ice
Is a very bad conductor of bent. There
fore. It shuts off the freezing air from
the big body of comparatively warm
water underneath. The thicker It gets
the more perfectly dcs'S it act as a
great cont. und that Is why even the
Arctic Ocean never freezes beyond a
few feet In thickness.
A Census or llnoieiia.
Dr. Ehrlleh, a physician of Slrass
burg, Germany, bus recently published
the results of an examination, made
at the University of Slrussburg, of the
colonies of bactcrlu residing on the
surface of unwashed fruit, taken from
the markets. He computed the num
ber of bacteria found on half a pound
of each of the fruits named as follows:
Huckleberries. 40,0i0; damsons, 470,
ooo; yellow plums, 700,xi0; pears, H00,
000; gooseberries, 1,000,000; garden
strawberries, 2,(HN),(NK; raspberries,
4,0(10,000; grapes, 8,000,000; currants,
11.000,000; cherries. 12,000,000. Dr.
Khrllcb advises 1 lint fruit be cleansed
by the use of running witter.
A Mild Comment.
"In some of those schools In Bos
ton's suburbs they teach the boys lo
sew and the girls to drive nails."
"Well, when It conies to darning
socks I reckon I'd rather give the boys
the Job." Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Never speak III of the dead; there
are enough who are living to keep you
busy.
GOOD RESULT FROM HAZING.
Boy Benefited by Prank of R hol
mate Gem. Dick'a Notice.
There la one Akron boy who believes
In hazing in spite of the many things
which have been said against it The
boy in question is Ianslng Odell, son
of W. II. Odell, a member of the City
Council and manager of the Great
Falls Paper Company, of this city.
Young Odell has reason to believe in
hazing, as through a hazing experience
he has secured tlie appointment of
cadet at the West Point Military Acad
emy. The appointment was made a
short time ago by Senator Dick, al
though it came while tbe latter was
still a Representative.
Last spring, while General Dick was
at home resting from the cares of a
strenuous political campaign, be was
startled one night by hearing sounds of
a scuffle In front of his bouse. Run
ning to the door, he saw a crowd of
high school students carrying off a lad
despite the fight he was putting up
against heavy odds. Kemeniberiug his
Investigation of the uses and abuse
of hazing at West Point, General Dick
started after the struggling students,
but before he could get to them they
had bundled their victim Into a wagon
and were driving away at breakneck
speed. General Dick pursued them on
foot for about a quarter of a mile,
when he met a mau in a buggy, and
pressing the rig Into service, continued
the pursuit But the high school stu
dents evaded him ami carried their
victim to a swamp outside of tlie city,
blindfolded him, and turned him loose.
The boy found his way back to the
city, little the worse for his experience,
but bis father was not satisfied to let
the matter drop there. He had ideas
of his own about hazing, and brought
the matter to the attention of the i
llce, with the result that a number of
young men were haled Into court. It
was then that General Dick learned
that the victim of the escapade was
Ianslng Odell. The trial of the case
developed little, as Odell refused to tes
tify against his clas-sinales, and Oils
fact pleased Genera! Dick immensely.
The manly bearing of the lad und his
determination not to "peach" on his
classmates made a bit with the gen
eral, und he kept him In mind. Odell
wanted to go to the Annapolis Naval
Academy, and his father asked Gen
eral Dick to recommend him for ap
IKilntment. The newly elected Senator
did not secure an appointment to the
twival school for his protege, but found
a berth for him at West Point.
This is tlie reason young Odell be
lieves in hazing, and his experience
with the lingers In the high school here
Is likely to prove of benefit to him
when he reaches West Point. Akron
Special Cleveland Icnder.
THE SADDLE ZIBRA.
Zebra for carriage horses and for
riding piirjKises may soon be a com
mon sight for a recent experiment at
the Imdon Zoo has demonstrated that
thews beautifully-striped animals can
be easily tamed, and that they are
even more docile and easily managed,
W.-. t. o I. 4Vnn 1 n I.W. ff
(leU Ulfti-ll 111, lluitl Hit! p,. linl-'l Lii.
ordinary horses. After sending four
hours In breaking In a zebra Captain
Horace Hayes is aide to ride It han
dily. Ills first pupil was "Jennie,,' a 0
yearold zebra presented to King Ed
ward by the Emeror Menelik, of
Abyssinia. When first led into the
paddock hhe was fidgety and nervous.
In order to sooth her Captain Hayes
etroked her gently with n long rod.
She Ktixsl quite still during this pro
ceeding, seeming not to resent It In
the least. But when a ninn approach
ed her with a halter she plunged and
reared, raced madly round nnd round
the paddock. Presently she quieted
down and the trainer got near enough
to slip a noose around her right leaf.
She tried to kick It loose, but In dolus
so got her left leg entangled in it She
was thrown forward on her front legs
In a kneeling position, ami then with
a gentle push sent rolling on her side.
Her four legs were then Imund with
ropes until she was utterly helpless.
Kcr an hour she was left In this plight,
then the ropes were removed from her
feet and she got up a meek and sub
missive creutunv
She stood still while a bit was
placed in her mouth and n saddle.
strapMsl to her back. Captain Hayes
climbed into the saddle nnd Jennie
consented to be ridden. She makes an
excellent saddle horse, intelligent, fas)
and thoroughly to be rolled upon.
Only a Few Plans.
"1 suppose," said the matinee girl,
"you have made all your plans for
next year."
"Oh, bless you, no," replied the pop
ular actress. "To be sure, my hus
band, Mr. Blgstar, and I have ar
ranged to be divorced, so that lie may
marry Mrs. Footlltes, while I mnrry
Mr. Footlltes; but whom we shall mar
ry next we haven't decided as yet"
Philadelphia Ledger.
The women seem to like tales of
knighthood chiefly for the reason that
they are a reproach on the meu of today.
KINO F.DWARD'S STIIII'KI) COW.
OPINIONS OF GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS
Aaaerkaa Husbands.
WBITEB In the London Telegraph deplore
tbe fact that the American husband of the
"middle claaa" doe not Interfere In domestic
L1 affairs ana seiaom examine tne acoounta or
5 I the grocer, the butcher or the baker and hard
ly x 1 ly knows the cost of staple article of food."
ne aiao iui m uiai uio uuauana im eaunva
;aut and "doe not make hla wife a regular allowance, but
(Irea ber aa much aa be can spare, freely, but without
lystem."
Tneae are simple extracts from the writer's long article
md It shows the vast difference between the American
ind the English husband. In England tbe husband thinks
hat be has to "keep tab" on every penny and dole money
iut to his wife In gingerly portions and, to tbe American
vay of thinking, look upon his wife merely as a servant
The writer in the London paper la perfectly right In his
-eport The American husband is extravagant He does
tot bother his hcud with the price of meat and flour and
Kitatoes and other tUlags for the table. Whf abould he
lo so? He has confidence in bis wife. The culinary de
partment is not his dcfMirtment He runs things In his
fft-e and allows bis wife to run things at borne. Both par
ies are well content He has no Interest wbataoever lu
lie bill sent in by his grocer or butcher beyond paying It
fie knows that his wife has done tlie best she could. On
he other hand, the wife does not concern herself with his
tuslness. She knows taat the hills are paid promptly and
3iat her husband is satisfied. That is all she thinks about
.he business.
The natural Independence of the average American girl
ould resent a husband's constant Interference In her
lousehold duties and expenses. She considers herself per
fectly capable of looking after tluit end of the family, and
fhe is right This shows the difference between American
tint English girls. St. Louis Republic.
The Hero in Politics.
HE case of Cantuin Richmond Pearson Hobson
A I shows that Uie war hero does not always have
I I tlie open sesame to the prizes of politics. Young
B If, ,)...,,, riMilf.iiml frum tin, tiuvv a I'linf n r In-n
ago, and announced that
:iu election to Congress.
Congress, as he recently
jceii to work for the construction of a bigger navy for the
1 oiled States than England has. lie would give this coun
y the s;iine pre-eminence on the sea that Great Britain
las had for the past third of a century, even If this neces
illnted the expenditure, within the next twenty yours, of
wo or three billions of dollars.
But Holison's war record did not prove to be so pow
erful an asset as he and some others supisised It would be.
'Je has lieen beaten by John II. Bankhead, of the Sixth
llubanin District, a very much less picturesque person, but
I person who has hud an experience of eighteen years in
Congress, and who served In the Legislature of his State
u.'tiiy yeflrs before going to Washington, while Hobson
lever ha had any jk11( leu I service of any sort
Like his companion in arms, Dewey, the hero of the
Herrlmoc has had bad luck In politics. The sailors In this
wintry have been less fortunate than soldiers. Moreover,
lie war In which Hobson figured has given no political
irlze to anylsxly except President Roosevelt. It furnished
lim tlie governorship of New York, and this led to. the
iresldeney. The chances are that It has no more political
kosts for anybody. St. Mills Globe-Democrat
Will Penmanship Become a Lost Art.
I SCl'SS ION of "vertical writing" in the schools,
D which has been revived of late, naturally raises
ihe questiou as to the future status of peninan
mmml ship as a means of recording the facts of eom
',.flBftt" niercial exchange or conveying the thoughts of
"" Is penmanship destined to become a
ast art.
"Vertical handwriting" was Introduced In the schools
lecause It was supposed to be better adapted to the needs
t our time than the old Spencerlan, running hand. It Is
nore condensed, and, If properly taught, more legible than
lie old style. But now comes tlie parental objector with
lie contention that the "vertical" writing disqualifies the
hild for clerical imsitlons In mercantile or hanking con
CEED CALVES COD-LIVER OIL.
V ni in u Is Make Great Ouins on This
Kind of Nourinhincnt.
An attempt Is being made to substi
tute cod-liver oil for the natural fat
of milk In feeding calves, according to
the Philadelphia Record. Milk con
tains, as is generally known, all the
nutrients necessary for the full de
velopment of young animal life. If
one of these elements Is removed it
has to lie replaced with a substitute
of like kind in order to Insure thrifty
development. Butter fat and crenrn,
nf course, are the most highly prized
and valuable of dairy products and
some resourceful Individual suggested
that these might be extracted by press
ing the whole milk through a separa
tor and their loss be ninde up to the
calf by adding an equivalent amount
of cod-liver oil, another fat nutrient.
Experiments have accordingly been
In progress for Rome time at one of the
agricultural colleges In Yorkshire and
recent reports seem to indicate that
they are entirely successful There Is
but little labor Involved. The cod-
Uver oil and skim milk Is a cheaper
feed than tlie whole mill; and the
calves appear to thrive on It. During
t feeding experiment embracing some
H weeks it was found Hint the average
dally gain of the calves fed on whole
milk until they were weaned was 2
pounds; those fed on skim milk and
oil and continued on an oil ration, 2.4
pounds, while those which had been
fed oil nnd milk but from which the
oil was subsequently withheld gained
only 2.1 pounds.
On slaughtering the animals no In
jurious effects on the flesh could be
discovered. The dally ration that ap
peared to be successful was made up
of five quarts of skim milk nnd two
ounces of cod-liver oil. Fortunately
tlie calves do not develop that aversion
cod-liver oil which Is natural to most
human beings, but, on the contrary,
readily become accustomed to it
Why don't they put rubber heels on
boys' shoes?
HE
he Intended to seek
One of his objects In
declared, would have
SOLDIERS SEATED
Soldiers In tlie French army have a drill to perfect them in the art c
sitting down comfortably without chairs.
A dozen or more men stand in a circle each facing the back of the next
in line, at a carefully calculated distance apart. At the word of command
they sit down, each resting on the knees of the man behind him. In this
way, as the accompanying picture illustrates, the weight is distributed around
the entire circle.
Food for Fishes.
A recent publication of tlie Illinois
State Laboratory of Natural History
makes a new departure in the litera
ture of scientific Investigation In Amer
ica. This Is a rejiort of the results of
an approximately continuous study of
the minute plant and animal life
(called the "plankton") of the Illinois
River and its tributary waters, car
ried on for five successive years by the
staff of the Illinois biological station.
It appears from these studies that
the ratio of the "plankton" of the riv
er, year In nnd year out, was 2.7 parts
per million of the water in the stream,
and its total average amount moving
downstream past a glvcm point reach
es the astonishing Aggregate of 75,000
tons per annum, or two nnd one-half
tons an hour. This annual aggregate
la about fifteen times the total weight
cern, that It 1 "not a good band for bookkeeping. " And
yet It waa this objection to the old, running, long hand
that led to the Introduction of the vertical sygtent, whose
condensed, legible form was auppoaed to adapt It perfectly
to mercantile uses.
The question suggested by the discussion of "vertical
writing Is: How long will penmanship of any kind last?
How long will we need to teach It In the ticbools? Isn't
the ypewtiter supplanting It In all departments of busineaf
endeavor?
To discuss Intelligently theae queeUons we have first to
get rid of the notion that there 1 i.nythlng sacred about
"penmanship." Following the law of evolution, if It be
come useless, it will have to go. A a matter of fact Un't
Its usefulness even now confined to social correspondence
and bookkeeping? How long will It take to break down
the social barriers against the use of the typewriter for
polite correspondence May not the typewriter become atf
common and as necessary in the home as the sewing ma
chine? Aa for bookkeeping, machines have already been in
vented for writing in iiooks, and It can be but a question
of time when mechanical Ingenuity will supply the perfect
anal practical bookkeeping typewriter. And then what
will become of penmanship and the sticklers for a partio
ular form of writing? Chicago Record-Herald.
Mined Marriages.
neonle who have latelv been aeitatina the
Iqueetlon of "mixed marriages" of various sorts
I I meaning by the term, marriages between
j7jjJlTr ui uiiinniL n uiic laLra aiiu uiutjicub'
sects are, of course, looking at the question
from their own race or religious standpoint al
together. This is a matter in which all the
bane, or all the good, depends on tlie point of view.
Broadly speaking, the interest of the American nation,
lies In a multiplicity of mixed marriages. The safety of
the republic demands that there shall be no upgrowth ot
castes, no hard and fast delimitation of component elei
ments. Our public schools are the greatest mixing agency
on the earth. Our politics are themselves a mixed mar
riage of races and cults. America is tlie melting pot of the
nations.
Our young people have taken their cue from the chool
and the hustings. They mix, and no one can stop them
from mixing. Nine out of ten of the young families known
to every reader of these words are probably in some sense
fusions. Religious considerations are a more potent bar
to mixture than race considerations, save when the race
happens to be African. But even religious bars fall before
a fusion of elements which is proceeding here on a grander
scale, and in more rapid movement, than has ever beforo
been known.
Ixive laughs at canons, at rules, even at anathemas.
Perhaps It would often do better to obey them than to
scorn them. It all depends, in the last resort upon the
Individual will. And we have here a land in which Cupid
Is as free as air, with no will or tradition or authority ta
overmaster him. New York Mail and Express.
Boy Bandits and Their Origin.
HERE Is a groat moral In the execution of
A I the three Chicago boy bandits, and it shows'
I I that there is something worse for boys than
I M crtt rotf eu It- la tha rlima rmvpl thnt trlortflAa
the deeds of train robbers, bank robbers and
other robbers. This may be the initiation of;
public sentiment building for tbe suppression
of publishing houses that issue such pernicious books.
Four legal hangings and one prospective hanging In
Illinois and Missouri and nine murders are the latest crop
of this kind of printing. The criminal press becomes aa
much a part of the care of the state as the criminal who
performs the homicides. The criminal play staged at the
theater is also part of the machinery that supplies gallows'
fruit. A censorship of publications and of plays is likely
to suggest itself to the public mind, although Uncle Sam's
supervision of the United States malls in some measure
serves the purpose.
This Is a free country In which no one Is allowed to"
incite to crime by public speech. Is any one to be per
mitted to incite to crime by public print? Books sold under
the name of "The Boy Bandits" or similar titles will con
tinue to do their pernicious work until public authority
must interfere. Illustrated Home Journal.
WITHOUT CHAIRS.
of the fish taken from the river
in a
J'ear. ,
Tho conditions which favor a largn
annual production of this minutd
aquatic life also seem to favor a largo1
catch of fish, but no direct connection,
of cause and effect Is here made out
"Plankton" is, however, an Indispen
sable element in the food of fishes, tho
young of nearly every species in our
waters being absolutely dependem!)
upon it at sonic period of their lives,;
and adult fishes of several species mak.
Ing large use of It during the season of
its greatest abundance New
Evening Post '
Ynrtf
After awhile, you find out what la
best for you. Profit by your expert
cue. It Is cruelty to Insist that an unmu
slcal child take music lessona.