Loop City Northwestern -I. W. BURLEIGH, Publisher. LOUP CITY, • - - NEBRASKA. 1- ■ — —... ..j. __L_ — Prof. Behring’s Discoveries. Prof, von Behring, whose tubercu losis investigations are more than ever interesting the scientific world, . recently made to a party of French scientists a more detailed statement of his achievements than has hither to appeared. In this he affirmed that he has been able to prepare a fluid named “tulose,” differing radically from Dr. Koch’s tuberculin, by us ing which he had been able to check the infection of animals by malignant tuberculosis bacilili. He frankly ad mitted, however, that he had not yet succeeded in developing a serum sim ilar to diphtheritic antitoxin, and that he considered the future discovery of such a serum “extremely doubtful.” Yet it was not impossible that by further experiment the “tulose” could be made to develop curative proper ties. Meanwhile, says the New York Post, clinical experiments have shown that injections of this new fluid are of value in the treatment of children suffering from tuberculosis or scrof ulous troubles. Finally, Prof, von Behring announced that, until further experiments have shown for just what uses “tulose” is best adapted, it will be dispensed only to a few select hos pitals and clinics, which will pledge themselves to use it only-in accord ance with certain conditions pre scribed by him. If this calm state ment disappoints those who have al ready seen the white scourge disap pearing before Dr. von Behring’s magic, it is yet proof that a great scientific advance has really taken place. Cleanliness at Home and Abroad. England, which has been properly and justifiably horrified at the reve lations made concerning American packing houses, will be yet more ap palled at learning that the food prod ucts of her own country show, in many cases, an equally disgusting dis regard far cleanliness and asepic conditions. Two government inspect ors, Miss Deane and Miss Suieres, have found conditions in the sausage, jam and chocolate factories of the most repulsive character, says The Reader. Apropos of all this, an in teresting traveler, the count of Turin, cousin of the king of Italy, who has been making a tour of America and Europe, says that after visiting sev eral of the local London packing houses, he has come to the conclu sion that the Chicago establishments were the cleaner. The truth is, we require of wholesale purveyors a standard of cleanliness which we too frequently fail to enforce on our farms and in our bakeries. The Amer , ican traveler who goes no further than the local boarding house, the country inn, the urban hostelry or the railway eating station, has data enough for a Startling culinary essay, were he minded to write it; and what goes on in our kitchens is something of which most of us were happier to re main in ignorance. A good deal of nonsense is being talked and written by opponents of spelling reform about the danger that words will lose their etymological identity; that their derivation will be lost or obscured, and all that. But as a matter of fact, says the Indianapo lis News, only the scholars are con scious of the derivation of words in any large degree, and no matter how you change the spelling they will re main just as conscious of the source and origin of words as they are now. Indeed, some philologists assure us that derivation would more easily be traced and followed in the simplified or phonetic spelling than in the pres ent illogical and wildly varying forms and symbols. There is no more doubt, to take a single example, of the derivation of filosofy than of philos ophy. The National Druggist says that nol a few of the coffee substitutes which are advertised as preferable to coffee contain more or less coffee. This may be tested by shaking a teaspoonful in a bottle half full of ^ater. The bot tie must be thoroughly shaken, so aa to wet every particle of the sample when nearly all of the non-coffee in gredients will sink to the bottom and the coffee float on the top. The reason for this is that coffee contains - a large amount of oil which buoys uf the particles. Peas, beans, wheat corn, chicory, etc., are heavier that water and, having no oil, sink to the bottom. A mule in Dallas, Tex., objected tc the noise of an automobile anc wrecked it with its heels. Horse pow er in automobiles is»not a guarantee against the destructive power of i mule. A Kalamazoo wife buried the wrong man, and it appears that though hei intentions were the very best, hei husband doesn’t like it. A man who climbed Mont Blanc says it gave him “rheumatism in the head.” He seems to have found plentj of rheum at the top. Fay Templeton’s new husband li William J. Patterson. We believe says the Houston Post, the world is now in a fair way to ascertain definite ly who struck Billy Patterson. We a. 3 schooling ourselves, says the Newark News, to regard the chorus girl as an admirable and very effective method for keeping the rich from growing richer. The Yale professor who insists that horse flesh is economical and pala table can’t have in mind the 100 to 1 shot that U running yet. Once Again the Summer Girl Has Proved Herself a Real Heroine with a Remarkable List of Successful Deeds of Courageous Rescue. Which is the braver—man or woman? This is a question that nobody can answer, for the simple reason that it is impossible to tell to what degree of heroism either will go'when occa sion demands. A little girl of five, who under ordinary conditions would scream at the sight of a tiny flame, will dash through a conflagration to save the life of a baby brother who has fallen into the blaze. A young woman daintily clad and afraid in her normal mood to go into the water without holding to the life line, will, forgetting self entirely, plunge into the stormy flood to rescue a drowning person as quickly as the trained life-saver. Compared individually with mem bers of the opposite sex, women to day stand forth ahead, says the New York World. For instance, the sum mer girl and the summer man, classed together in ordinary affairs, are far apart when it comes to matters of heroism. It is the summer girl who shows “the real stuff" when it comes to a pinch. A11 summer long there have been young women who have performed deeds of splendid daring. Many of them have not been reported in public print. This attribute of bravery on the part of our women is not new. This sum mer's exhibitions of it are only new. And it is only meet that the story of some of th^n should be told again. When young Earl Buckley fell from the pier into the sea at Island Heights, N. J., only Mrs. V. Floyd Campbell heard his cry. She screamed for help. Then, as she saw the lad rise and sink out of sight again, she plunged into the water. She was fully clothed and swam with difficulty. There was still enough life in the boy when she reached him and enough of desperate terror to make him very dangerous. He grabbed Mrs. Campbell, and with arms around her neck and legs twined about her body, clung with a death grip. Frantic Struggle for Life. Then came a frantic struggle for life. She struck the boy in the face and tried to choke him. His weight and her heavy clothing bore them far under the surface. When they rose again she put forth all her strength to drag their weight nearer the shore, where the shallows would give her a foothold. Her efforts were successful and thus she brought the boy to land, and together they fell on the beach, exhausted. At Lake Hopatcong Miss Edna Hart man saved the lives of four drowning persons on as many occasions. Miss Hartman is only 18 years old, very pretty and a splendid swimmer. An other heroine of Lake Hopatcong is Miss Effie Field, of Rutherford, N. J., w’ho plunged into the water in her brought the unconscious woman to shore. ' Saved Two from Death. Then there was the brave rescue by Mrs. Frederick E. Crane, of Brook lyn, of her ten-year-old daughter and the latter's playmate, who together fell off a pier into deep water at Say brook, N. J. She went in after them. Encumbered by her heavy clothing, she performed a great feat of physi cal prowess in bringing the two girls safely to land, where she herself sank exhausted from the shock and strain. And not least among the water he roines is Miss Mamie Sheehan, of this city, who a few weeks ago plunged into the Navesink river and saved the life of James Edward Connolly, a re tired merchant of Washington, and personal friend of President Roose velt. Miss Sheehan swam a long dis tance to reach Mr. Connolly, who had fallen into the water from a canoe and could not swim. With consummate skill she brought him safely to land. pies. As Tommy came up she seized him by the hair. Holding him at arm’s length and swimming, “sailor fashion,” with the other hand, she made for the shore, crying for help. Mr. Edick heard her calls and helped her at the shore to take the uncon scious boy from the water and to re store him to life. The summer's deeds of the girl hero include the capture of many burglars. The record of her accomplishments in this line have made many a pretty story. The World Magazine has told how Mrs. Esther Evans, the plucky little janitressat the apartment house, No. 128 West Twenty-ninth street, has captured since June 29 seven burglars and turned them over to the police. Seized and Held Burglar. Then there was Mrs. Margaret Hayes, who found a man ransacking the rooms of a boarder at No. 907 East One Hundred and Sixty-fifth street. “What are you doing here?” she asked him. “ITn looking for a girl,” he said. “What i$ that in your hand?” she asked, pointing to a gold watch. He dropped it and tried to push past Mrs. Hayes. Instantly she grabbed him by the throat. In the struggle the fellow dropped a “jim my.” Her calls brought aid, and the burglar was arrested. But the interest always comes back most strongly to the woman who rushes voluntarily into danger to save the lives of others. Near Cedar Grove, N. J., a horse attached to a light run about became frightened at a passing auto and dashed at high speed along the turnpike. In the carriage were two girls, and in her fright the one who was driving dropped the reins. The horse was on a dead run when it approached a field in which Miss Pauline Weiss was picking daisies. The two girls were clinging to each other and crying out in terror. Miss Mrs. Frederick E. Crane. Sunday finery and rescued Walter Hutchinson, a 12-year-old boy, in the nick of time. Mrs. Frederick G. Ware has just added another rescue to the 14 she has made in the nine years that she ha3 lived near the canal at Ansonia, Conn. She has saved six boys, four girls, three women and two men from drowning. Her latest rescue, and one of the most difficult, was that of Mrs. Charles Cahill, who fell into the canal where the water is 12 feet deep. Mrs. Ware leaped in after her, fully dressed, and after a hard struggle in the presence of several men, who were too frightened to give aid, Miss Florence Bowen, a pretty Chelsea girl, saved the life of her six year-old nephew when they were well out at sea. The little lad fell out of the boat in which the two were row ing and sank. When the child came to the surface he was some distance from the boat, and Miss Bowen saw there was not a moment to lose. She sprang into the water and swam to the youngster. She got a firm hold of him and piloted hyn back to the side of the boat. Eleven-Year-Old Heroine. And this brave deed was equaled, if not surpassed, by the achievement of little Mary Edick, age 11, grand daughter of United States Commis sioner Shields, in saving the life of her playmate, Tommy Williams, age ten. It was In the Hudson river, off Grand View. Tommy had swam out into the river a long distance—much longer than he had ever attempted before — and then discovered, out there all alone, that his strength was failing. That discovery brought panic, and, with a scream for help, he sank. At first Mary, watching his pranks from the shore, thought he was still playing. When he rose to the sur face only the back of his head showed, and again he disappeared. Instantly Mary dived from the pier and swam with all her strength toward the rip \Ve!s3 dropped her apron, half filled vlth flowers, vaulted over the four rail fence and ran to the middle of the road. She seized the bridle of the horse as it got abreast of her, and held on, swaying back and forth and sawing on the bit, for more than a hundred yards. Quite similar to this was the dar ing act of Mrs. George Corwin, of Stamford. She seized the bit of a frantic horse dashing toward a crowd in the main street of Bridgeport, and by her courage and presence of mind undoubtedly saved the lives or limbs of more than one person. Miss Annie Barner hesitated not a moment to risk a horrible death un der the wheels of a Pennsylvania rail way train at Elizabeth, N. J., to save the life of two-year-old Edward Cope land, who had wandered to the track. The speeding locomotive was almost on him when Miss Barner climbed up the steep embankment, seized the child and drew him out of danger. Fought with Mad Dog. The terror that a mad dog inspires in the mind of a young woman did not cause Miss Anna Winters, 17 years old, to hesitate vThen the moment came to do a brave act. At her home in Prescott street, Jersey City, a mon grel dog which had been in the family for half a dozen years suddenly went mad. It pursued Anna's flve-year-old brother Harry Into the room in which she was sitting and had sprung upon the boy to bite him. Instantly the girl rushed to the child's assistance, drew the dog to herself, and a fierce fight for life ensued. The girl got her hands around the beast’s neck and clung and choked him with a desper ate grip. She held on until she had strangled him to death. The summer has pioduced many little girl* heroes. The prompt and brave action of 11-year-old Fannie Haskowitz, of No. 91 Hopkins street, Brooklyn, saved the life of her four year-old sister Julia. The children were crossing the street, when a Sum ner avenue care bore down on them. Fannie had crossed safely, when she saw Julia knocked down by the fender of the car and carried beneath it to the swiftly moving wheels. Fannie was instantly down at her little sis ter’s side, dragging her forward and out until she had pulled her away from the wheels. .Julia fainted, and when the ambulance came it was found that one of her legs was broken but her little-mother sister had saved her life. A still younger heroine is Madeline Spinello, of New Haven, who rescued a little boy playmate who was drown ing in the river. Dragged Sister from Flames. And think of Rena Etson, five years old, who walked into a fire in the street near her home at Battle Creek, Mich., and dragged her three-year-old sister from the flames. The brave deed was done with a cool delibera tion not often found in older persons on similar occasions. She did not call out when she saw the danger to her little sister, “because she was afraid she would scare her to go further into the fire." The baby was scarcely injured, while the little he roine was severely burned about the face and chest. Another “little mother” of five years, Hannah Lavin, of No. 774 East One Hundred and Fifty-seventh street, was left alone to care for her two baby brothers while the real mother went to market. When Mrs. Lavin returned there were fire engines and an excited crowd in front of the house and smoke was pouring from the win dows of her flat. She swooned in at tempting to make her way through the halls, suffocating with smoke, to the third floor, where she had left her Miss Anna Winters. children. But meanwhile little Han nah had worked her way out of the burning flat, little three-year-old Joe clinging to her skirts and the one year-old baby in her arms, covered with an old shawl to shut out the sight and suffocating smell of the smoke. Wilting hands were ready at the last flight of stairs to help the lit tle heroine and her charges. WRESTLING IN SCOTLAND. Athletic Sport on the Famous Field at Grasmere. The sports field at Grasmere lies at the foot of a characteristic ridge of fells, very narrow at the top and as steep nearly as the side of a house. As you sit in the grandstand this ridge rises up in front of you. On the bare, precipitous slopes of it the guides’ race is run. On the ver dant lawn on which the grandstand is placed the wrestling matches are held and those spectators who are not in the stand make a ring around the lawn. There are coaches and car riages, too, all around, on which peo ple sit and watch and have picnic luncheons, and it all looks rather like Lord's cricket ground reduced in size. In Cumberland wrestling the fall is won directly a man is thrown to the ground. There is no need to pin the shoulders down as in Graeco-Roman wrestling. Here at Grasmere all is ended just when the Graeco-Roman catch-as-catch-canners would be get ting to the serious work. Were it not so the Grasmere sports would last all the year round. Many of the men had their tights embroidered with wonderful flowers or designs in silk or wool—the work of their women folk, who were now straining to get a glimpse of how the charm worked from the swaying ranks of the people around the ground. What we think about God depends upon what we think of the universe. When a child begins to ask about things around him he is beginning to look for God. As man's knowledge of the uni verse grew his idea of God grew. He obtained his first knowledge of God from the skies. All the early theologians were astronomers. We must look at ideas of God, and heaven, and hell from a spiritual standpoint. Our greater knowledge of things have changed our ideas of the location of heaven and hell. We formerly thought heaven was above our head and hell down in the earth. If heaven were up a per son in Hilwaukea and a martyr in China going to heaven would travel in opposite directions. In olden times some people thought God held the universe in the palm of his hand. Others thought the world Was supported by pillars, and the Greeks, for instance, thought the earth was held on the shoulders of Atlas. All these ideas have gone and a roomier universe has taken their place. |(tan is more than the heavens and more than the universe. In olden ' , ;i / ' v ' m times, when the earth was considered small, the men in it were small in tellectually and in other ways. Now a larger world produces larger men, larger in brain and ideas, and a larger God. God has always been great, but man’s knowledge of him has been growing gradually. And as that knowledge grows we come more and more to see God as a spiritual and not a material being. We are not to look for him in the skies. He is by our side as much as anywhere. We are God’s’ children by virtue of our capacity for containing him. The capacity of Jesus Christ for holding God was infinite, and we should as much as possible endeavor to imitate him. They Looked Like Sinners. On the occasion of the last football match between Yale and Harvard, which took place at New Haven, the crowd that came to witness the match, estimated at over 30,000, so filled the streets of the Elm City that there were large groups of peo ple everywhere. The little daughter of a well-known clergyman was, on the day of the match, taking a walk with her mother. When she saw the great throngs of people all around her wherever she went, she showed her early religious training by exclaiming: “What is it, mamma—Resurrection day?”—Harper's Weekly. Not Encouraging. "I have called,” said the party with the unbarbered hair, “to see it there is a vacancy in your Joke depart ment.” “There will be,” replied the busy editor, “as soon as the office boy gets time to empty the waste basket”— Chicago Daily News. FILLING FOR THE SANDWICH. New Ideas in This Popular Afternoon Refreshment. Every housewife is more or less in terested in sandwich fillings. Here are several good ones worth trying: Use walnuts, pecans, almcnds, or a mixture of the three. The addition of a few black walnuts gives a piquant flavor of which many people are fond. Brown or graham bread is nic§ for these sandwiches. Themuts are chopped quite fine. The bread is cut very thin, and on each slice is laid a lettuce leaf. A teaspoonful of rich mayonnaise dressing is spread over the lettuce, and this is sprinkled thickly with the chopped nuts. The top slice of the sandwich, after being lightly spread with butter, has also a spreading of mayonnaise dressing. Some people like a grating of Par mesan cheese with the nuts, and this can be used or not as desired. The granishing of this dish should be leaves Of delicate green lettuce, and set in each a shelled half walnut. The remains of cold fowl and ol cold ham or tongue can be used up, the mixture being especially tasty. The meat in equal portions is put through a chopping machine until it is fine enough to be almost paste. Pepper and salt and a very tiny pinch of ground nutmeg are used for sea soning. The mixture should be wet with some strong chicken stock. If no stock is handy it should be well mixed with some good melted butter, sufficient to make it soft enough to spread easily. White bread, lightly buttered, is used for these sandwiches, which are cut in squares or diamond shapes. Use the remains of cooked poultry, game or shellfish, cutting them into small, neat pieces. Lay the meat on thin slices of buttered toast. Spread with a thick sauce. For poultry or fish mayonnaise is preferable, while for game a thick, white sauce is best. Garnish the tops of the sandwiches with white of egg and pickles chopped fine. GIFTS FOR THE BABY. Dainty Trinkets Designed for the Household Tyrant. A little ring chain of gold, so fine as to be almost invisible, is made to pass around a tiny wrist and fasten to a finer ring, inside the hand, so securing the ring if it is large enough to slip off easily, which is usually the case with a baby’s first ring. Baby armlets made of narrow shirred pink or blue ribbon and trimmed with diminutive bows or lace rosettes look like Liliputian garters, but are meant to hold up baby sleeves in place of the fancy pins generally used, says the New York Sun. Small powder puff bags, sponge bags, etc., are made in pink or blue silk or lingerie stuff over silk and daintily embroidered with the baby’s name and a garland design. The sponge bags have, of course, a thin rubber lining. Lovely little comb, brush and pow der sets are shown in white, pink or blue celluloid, painted by hand, and are really more babyish and prettier in the baby basket than costlier sets of enamel, silver or ivory. Padded cloths hangers, covered with pink or blue ribbon and reproductions in minatures of the pretty coat and bodice hangers made for women, are used for baby's cloaks and dresses that must not be crushed and rumpled. DOMESTIC SCIENCE. Always put the sugar used in a pie in the center of the fruit, not at the top. as this makes the paste sodden. Keep the cake griddle in good con dition by the vigorous use of sand paper occasionally, -.using very little grease for frying the cakes. Water should never be put on gilt frames. They should be wiped with dry cloth or chamois. This applies to all metal and lacquered goods. A piece of soda the size of a pea in a quart of stewed rhubarb or goose berries greatly reduces the amount of sugar required without impairing the flavor in the least. Ai^ong the artistic materials in use for walls now, none is more charming than the Japanese grass cloth, with its interesting handloom weave and attractive silky gloss. It is, of course, not inexpensive. Roll all pieces of wrapping paper not good enough for further use that are usually thrown into the fire into hard, tight balls. These will help along wonderfully in the kindling basket for the morning’s fire. Plenty of soap and cold water and' fto soda are the secrets of success in washing board floors, and the wood must be scrubbed the way of the grain and not round and round if you want to get the dirt off. Change the water often. You can’t expect boards to be a good color if they are rinsed in dirty water. To Stain Oak Color. Dissolve five cents’ worth of brown polish in one quart of hot water, then add as much brown umber and yellow ochre as will give the shade desired by at least two applications. Apply hot, wipe of while still wet with a piece of rag, finishing in the direction of the grain. There is a method of staining and varnishing in one opera tion, but the more satisfactory way is to stain the wood first, then apply the varnish or polish. The colors men tioned can be purchased ground in water, in which state simply mixing them w'ith beer or vinegar makes good stains at small cost. By this one can tighten the sashes. Chocolate Cake. Ono cup of butter and two cups of sugar stirred to a cream, with the yolks of five eggs added after they have been well beaten. Stir this into one cup of milk. Beat the whites of two of the eggs to a stiff froth and add that also. Now put in three and a half cups of sifted flour, two heap ing teaspoonfuls of baking powder having been sifted with it. Bake in jelly tins. This gives one large layer cake or two small ones. To Remove Onion Smell. To remove the smell of onions from the hands after peeling them, rub with a stick of celery and the NUftll will entirely disappear. Cure For_The Blues ONE MEDICINE THAT HAS NEVER FAILED Health Felly Restored and the Joy ot Life Regained. When acheerful, brave, light-hearted woman is suddenly plunged into that perfection of misery, the BLUES, it is a sad picture. It is usually this way : She has been feeling “ out of sorts ’ \^/4rrRosa^^^^/' for some time; head has ached and back also; has slept poorly, been quite nervous, and nearly fainted once or twice; head dizzy, and heart beats very fast; then that bearing-down feeling, and during her periods she is exceed ingly despondent. Nothing pleases her. Her doctor says: “ Cheer np: you have dyspepsia; you will he all right soon ” But she doesn’t get “ all right,” and hope vanishes; then come the brood ing, morbid, melancholy, everlasting BLUES. Don't wait until yonr sufferings have driven you to despair, with your nerves all shattered and your courage gone, but take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. See what it did for Mrs. Rosa Adams, of 819 12th Street. Louisville, Ky., niece of the late Gen eral Roger Hanson, C.S.A. She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham; “ 1 cannot tell you with pen and ink what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. I suffered w.th female troubles, extreme lassitude, * the blues,’ nervousness und that all-gone feeling. I was adv ised to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it not only cured my female derangement, bnt it has restored me to perfect health and strength. The buoyancy of my younger dayshas returned, and'I do not suf fer any longer with despondency, as I did be fore. 1 consider Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound a boon to sick and suffering women. if you have some derangement of the female organism write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. W. L. DOUGLAS *3.50&*3.00 Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD #.LDouglas $4 Gilt Edge lannotbeequailedatanyprice/jR |a\ To Shoe Dealers: W. L. Douglas* JoK ting House 13 the most complete in this country &end for Cat aloQ ru .— IHOES FOR EVERYBODY AX ALL PRICES. Men’s Shoes. $5 to $1.80. Boys’ Shoes. $3 to $1.28. Women's Shoes. $4.00 to 81.50. Misses’ & Children's Shoes. $2.25 to $1.00. Try W. I,. Hanging Women's, Misses sn<1 Children's shoes; for style, fit anti wear they excel other makes. If I could take you into my large actories at Brockton, Mass.,and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hoid their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value th an any other make. Wherever you live, you ran obtain W. L. Douglas shoes. His name and price Is stamp'd on the bottom, which protects you against high prices and Inferior shoes. Take no substi tute. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes and insist upon having them. Fast Color Eyelets used; they u/ill not wear bra-,s; Write for illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles. IV. L DOUGLAS, Dept. 14 Brsckten, Alans. HARD days come to over-worked women, because of their weakened female organs, which cannot stand the vital drain that over-work i causes. Pain, backache, i* headache, sideache, etc., ; can be cured with WOMAN’S REJJEF because of the specific curative effect it has on the womanly organs. It builds up woman’s strength and makes her hard days easy. “I often recommend it, in my practice among women," writes Dr. J. F. W. Metc ler, of Rosehill, Tex. Try it. At all Druggists cis WRITE for Free Advice, stating age and desoribingyour symptoms, to Ladies Advisory Dept.. Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chattanooga. Tenn. IF YOU WANT fo EARN MONEY here r your chance. We offer Stt*‘>,000 In CASH P SIZDS for those who secure subscription for the LwoKreutesi magazine clubbing oflersor 1 ae season. Success and Womans Home Compav in, each torn full year. $1 H6; Success, Woman s Home Companion "net Review of Reviews, $S.0U. Pi i zes are i n add I *.>or» to a liberal commission on each order. T est clubs almost sell themselves. Some earn S1U) a week, many as much as £>U. Can use all your time ora part of it. Write to-day for particulars, before Tout ‘eiTitory is taken.to «U:CKS* MA«AZl.\k. u WufcjA«t«a 8«. B„ Kcw Tsrft C4*j