tot City Nwttwtsten louTotv I I I memom *>T cast • bookvorB br u«4 far test? .% toortrr )s a booster sf be pots k» knock to tte n*fct place XewUk tedd «b4j permanence k tte art at 4y tag before be tries It *"by not date the canned roods tar the beceAt cf those shn prefer tte oid tasters at their Beals'* Another maa 'afraid to pat bis ■*ff tn tte bank- tones on tte street tte *ni* »» a poet. « would be acre's teamed cn a da* Hke tMi P.eferrtc*. to any old day »his month is tahtn* tbe piarr of New Tort Tbe ten step I, |« Ktauuta Meetliai for tbe A a»i who rasaot be happy and t antes ted these spring dare baa radically wron* » th bis dacmutd ptmxy mam It rffi be a poor doctor eat bare bis Ktsc MreHIt is dy:n* scans He reruiad* as cf tbe story at tbe Eta •bo said be wished bis wife would Tbe peeen of Italy in* takers is rnOer sharia* What has happened to that escort ertqaette that we bare al ways beard ao a.orb about? This is ao time o' year to tell os that tbe bamboo. lots* oar-red to tbe manafartore at fishtc* ruds. is stow to be gracad Into pulp for paper A IVtifTima sas drank St riasses of bocfc beer fa three days That is almost as serioos as try-in* to corner tbe coal supply at Alaska It is rapidly approaching that time of tbe year when “cooler” from tbe weather mas elicits a tick of relief rather tkaa a ahi*er at fisroctnt A California bortWiturtst has sac reeded ia making roses bear edible berries. As a result every rase bush ia future will be its owa fruit garden. Actual airship rales for tbe rorero meet at aerial craft are sooe to to into force la France Tbe world do move and seemingly taster there than Tsiceeatty of CMrstb mea are p'i Mu* to build and operate aa airshi People who bate ruse southward astomobtles recently report that tbe are some eery soft spots oa which ali*kt oat toward tbe Indiana line. eapects to annex JS#.I ants durta* tbe coming so «o *et tbe names of all America nbo Intend to *o to Canada Th seO bo coasted before th alie*ed reason for ia that they are nf: ck la craasinc tbe 1 -may be interested that the Pariw London Trans ly hopes to be able to s -aerrice by airship Dower aad Calais within s Tbe breakfs* oat of forest fires i Oconto and If arise-te counties. Wl coasts, wares residents of timber dl tries eery early ia tbe wbat should be iraarded ■sally. not only on aero • aloe of tbe timber, bat la tbe inte eat at tbeir own safety Tbe “non woods' ou*ht to be steadQy natron* wherever there Is darger from loc *. or from brands fra It **» m «ii »u*7 That was told at R^4 Bank. Ne* Jersey. the after day, whe* aa aMoaoUlbt npitlsH that a f te which had destroyed hi* valuable *tUr<« was elut'd hy his ovi cir* IcaMMws ta ttrxsltg a luds{ match pato the grouad. Occupants of aa tOTBohOea should ahsa matches aad hChtad pipes aad cigars. as gaaolia sapor la as tEfiag.g.»Ue as powder aad as tetroctlTt trader certata con tiittea. Philadelphia candy manufacturers have bee* using raralab on candy Te *tre it the proper finish yow know They might to aew their finish A yomte Philadelphia man was shot while acrompaaytac a soman across society will get one At a bathing resort la a wealthy voo a poor man with a bald eye aad false teeth. A for a* that The world la eerTanly becoming better Fire workmen retaraed |!jM to a Milwaukee firm, which they said they had tahes King Frederick of {seamark say* Che mixed States la a model for all satsers* aad Cotee) Roosevelt tells Egypt that Ee*3and is that same One fellows is Jollying with the heri-bert the hook gher diseases with _tt*s hard for • ®aa with oSd hay fever fe attract at His Daughter-in-Law By JOHN PHILIP AKTLE Griuffr Malton had ambition*. If it bad not been so be never mould bare attained the eminence in the world that was his. for only dossed persistence, an Iron will and desire for power would have sufficed to overcome the handicaps that bad been bis as a poverty-stricken boy and youth. Now that all things material wrere his. he began to yearn for other Joys— social supremacy, 'or one. Shrewd enough to realize the race was run for himself, he centered his schemes and hopes on his only son. Hadley. It made him satisfied with life and re paid him for his struggles when he ktoked at Hadley. who was everything his father was not—big. handsome, dew of speech and graceful of man ner. so distinguished by his spirit of sheer good nature and well being that he was always a marked man when be catered a room He drew people to him by a magnetism that was Irresisti ble. He was pointed out by the crowd as a shining exception to the general rua of extremely rich men's sons, and Granger Malton let himself dream dreams as to Hadley's future, espe cially concerning hit marriage. Hadley's mother, long dead, had sprung from the same class as Granger himself, and as the older man looked hack through the v sta of years and recalled her. colories., faithful, com mot place and awkward, he wondered a little sadiy what she would have done with the mosey and the granite palace and the power that would have been hers. Stem honesty told him she would have done nothing—would have suck beneath the weight in awkward terror. He could fancy her shrinking through the big halls of the home be and Hadley occupied. No; Mary would "I've Been a Fool." Dot hare been happy she could not have grown Into the elation Fate had in »tor* for her. Moreover, she would have hampered him He was resolved that the p rl Hadley married should be one who would not hamper him; for hi* son was to progress even fur ther :Lan he had done Hi* wife must have been brought up in luxury from the cradle, so what would have made Had-ey'a mother gasp would be taken as a matter af course by her. She must hare beauty and youth and the scat of sweet haughtiness that comes from careful sheltering and breeding. SLe must be fitted by tdrth and bring ing up to reign over the huge Malton house on Fifth Avenue and the coun try place at Newport. For a year or so. Granger Malton had been calmly reviewing the young er beauties of the town trying to de cide which one Hadley should marry, for be never doubted his son s willing ness to please him in this point He was too shrewd to dictate, but be knew how to manage him Let the boy it ink he had all the rope he want ed and yet twitch the rope In the di rection he wished Hadley to go He ciuded that it was time to disclose carefully his general views to his son one ttgbt as they sat over their coffee and cigars in the big library, but his speech was checked by the curious ex preudoo on the young man's face. Never had ho seen him so pale, so tensely nervous, yet so 'earless Father." Hadley broke the silence which fell as Granger Malton* words trailed off into nothingness In his sur prise. den t talk to me of marriage— of your wishes—your views! 1 have something to tell you myself tonight. 1 was married this morning to_" H« ceased and sprang forward at hli father » ghastly lace, but the older man motioned him away as he slowly recov ered Us self-control. Yet his face was ' gray and aged from the moment. He stared at Hadley with an awful curi osity. as something new and strange. “Marriedhe echoed at last, choking ly "I cant believe It! You! To do a think like that! After all my plans You're spelled your life! Men don't run ott and marry secretly when they are proud erf the girl! Who U she? Do 1 know her?" “No." said the son. as white as his father. "You tat know her. But_" Granges Malton lost ha head as the full realization of what this meant broke over him. He shook one trem bling hand at his son “Go!** be saiu hoarsely. “It might as well be now. for the break would come, sooner or later! Ill hare no shop girl or chorus gtri brought here to make me a laugh. :ng stock before the eery servants! Is she a shop girl?" Hadley Maltoa looked at the dis traught old man quietly. “So.” he said again, "but she earns her own living Inez Dartmoor—“ “It's all the same." his father inter rnpted roughly. "Leave me! I’m done with you. Hadley! You've got ample means of your own I've settled on you —you won't starve!” Grimly be watched the tall, straight igure vanish through the doorway Chat was the * -st he aa* of his son or many a day. and often as the scene recurred to him he remembered M~ sarcastic taunt: "You won't starve!’* He grew grimmer as the days and months went on bringing no word fr. , | Hadley. Seemingly he and his wife— how Granger writhed at the word—had dropped off the earth. Hadley's frieuds were not his. and he rarely ran across anyone who inquired for his son. A great hunger to know where the boy was and If all was well possessed him. There was nothing but bitterness In his heart when he thought of the un welcome daughter-in-law thrust upon him so suddenly. He tried to reason out why a young man as aristocratic as Hadley should have chosen to fall in lc ve with an ordinary girl, a girl he had to run sway and marry, because he knew his lather would not welcome her. He remembered dimly that Had ley hi:u said her name was Inez, but that meant nothing. She was un known! He could not be proud of her. His bitter sorrow over the daughter-in law of his fancy, whom he would have showered with gifts, spoiled with his I admiration and to whose pretty rule ho would have bent cheerfully, was pa thetic. She was an Impossibility now; the brilliant future that would have been Hadley’s was lost Life was very bitter these days for Granger Malton. and he was aging ■ fast, grow lng more taciturn, more of a : i recluse. Even h!s business associates saw little of him. He roamed the great granite house 6adly, fancying it as it I might have been, realizing its useless i ness now. Light months had passed and still no word from Hadley. Beneath his dull anger was growing the pitiful hope ; ’.essness of age. the one wish to see his j son again, to have him near. Granger j Malton had reached the point where, if he had known Hadley's whereabouts, j be would have asked him to come and j see him. but he would not ask his wife, and I he knew Hadley would never cross the threshold again till she came with him. It was some days later, at the close of a conference with Simon Daly, who was interested in the same mines that Malton had interests In, and who had just come home from Europe and was bluff of speech. He slapped Granger Malton on the shoulder as he got to his feet and stood drawing on hia gloves. “Say." he cried, "why didn't you let a fellow know Hadley was married, j Met 'em over in Paris, but 1 can't say 1 saw much of them, as they—Mrs. Malton. rather—was so much in de mand. She's the most popular person in the American colony there, I reck on. judging from the invitations I saw piled up on her desk. Hadley always did have luck. Not one man in fifty gets the combination he did—beauty and talent and family. Why. Ine* Dartmoor's people hare ancestors to burn, but they didn't have any money till she developed into a genius. They say sbe'li be the greatest woman sculp- . tor of her day. if she isn't now. She's the most graceful girl, and her eves—oh. well, you know all about it. Hadley told me about his wedding— how n took a year for her to make up her mind and he didn't give her ten minutes to change it again, but whisked her off to a minister's at once. You're in luck to have such a daughter-in-law." Granger Malton sat long after his friend left. He was thinking. He re membered now—Miss Dartmoor, whom people had talked about and raved over and so rarely could drag away from her studio. He knew nothing about art. but he did know the prices Inex Dartmoor's work had brought, for the papers always mentioned it. And he had sneerlngly called her a shop girl when Hadley had said she earned her own living. Granger Mal ton had all the awe of genius that be- ! longs to the uncultured man. He re- ! roembered. too. the kind of people who had sought after her. Presently he pulled over to him a cable blank which he addressed to Hadley In care of his Paris bankers. What he wrote | with quick, decided fingers was brief. It read: "I've been a fool. Come home and bring your wife." The Short Story. The commercial value of a short story Is a much-mooted question be- ' tween author and editor, the former . pointing to the extraordinary success : of such authors as Sir Gilbert Parker, Rudyard Kipling, or Mrs. Freeman, while the latter refers to the sad fate of the genera! run of short-story fic tion. A new contribution to the au thor's side of the discussion is made by the editors of the Harper Readers' library, William J. and Coningsby W. Dawson, in the preface to one of the new volumes. Prejudice against the short story, say these critics, is large ly due to the lack of definite stand ard, as to just what a short story should be. "If the story succeeds, it appears to be by accident rather than design. Sometimes it is Interpolated into the text of a novel by the most haphazard and clumsy means; some times it is really a long novel abbre viated." Accordingly the Messrs. Dawson suggests that “the true stand ard demands that the short story shall be complete in Itself; that It shall be 'short because it can not be long;' and that it shall consist of but one inci dent." Check Impulsiveness. There is a sort of impulsiveness which often gets people Into serious trouble. We are fretted and vexed at the acts of somebody else and we do not wait to think, but say out our irritation and wound deeply some sen sitive spirit. We are angry and we let passion rule us instead of calm reflection. The impulsive person who cannot control his temper is like one who carries fire near gunpowder. Says the Immortal Bard. Some rise by sin, and some by vir tue fall.—Shakespeare LONG LIST OF FLAVORINGS W«ll to Keep on Hand or In Memory Ingredients That Are Moot Savory. Man? flavorings are used t;< meat dishes. some of which are familiar to all cooks—onions, carrots, turnips and garlic being perhaps the most widely known. Butter, too. may bo regard ed as one of the most common sea sonings, and of course makes the dish richer. Meat extract Is also used for flavoring meat dishes and other foods, as are also, though less commonly, similar extracts made from clams or other "sea food." The following list includes these with various others, a number of which it is convenient to keep always on hand: Onions, car rots, green peppers, parsnips, turnips, tomatoes, fresh, canned or dried: cel ery tops and parsley, either fresh or dried; sage, savory, thyme, sweet mar Jo ram. bay leaf, garlic, lemon rind, vinegar, capers, pickles, olives, cur rant Jelly, curry powder, cloves, pep per. corns, celery seed, meat extract, chill sauce, pepper sauce, or some sim ilar hot or sharp sauce, and some kind of good commercial meat sauce. SERVING IN PROPER MANNER Uncooked Vegetables Most Be Put on Table So That Appetite May Be Tempted. i ncooEea vegetables, such as onions, radishes and cucumbers, should always be prepared in an appetising manner for the table. A large Ber muda onion may be sliced' to form sections resembling those of an orange. If these are placed in a sau cer-shaped dish and the sections di vided with curled parsley the result will be very pleasing. Cucumbers cut into cubes and chilled are nicely served with olives, surrounded with parsley or upon lettuce loaves. Rad ishes. especially the sma.l red cnes. may be cut into thin slices and mixed with salads. They look tasty among wax beans in a vegetable salad. By cutting the thin skin of a radish into flower-like petals and folding them back, each radish will appear like a miniature rosebud. Cucumbers cut lengthwise and hollowed make pretty receptacles for a vegetable salad. Olla Podrida. This Is a savory mixture of rabbit, oysters, vegetables and herbs. Clean and parboil the rabbit, disjoint and put in an earthen baking pot or cas serole with a dozen oysters, a pint of good consomme or broth, a bay leaf, mace, thyme, parsley and salt and pepper to season. Cook about an hour, dish the meat on a platter, strain the mixture and return the gravy to the stove in a saucepan. Thicken with a tablespoonful of flour stirred smooth in a quarter cupful of butter and add It to two minced anchovies and a tablespoonful of white wine. Pour over the meat and surround with vari ous vegetables, such as cabbage, tur nips. onions, peppers, beans and car rots that haTe been cooked together until tender. The name olla podrida means a medley. Chicken Broth. Clean the chicken and separate it at the joints. Remove all the skin and fat. Cover the chicken with cold water. Add one tablespoonful of salt, one saltspoonful of pepper, one small onion sliced. Simmer until the chick en is tender. Remove the best part of the meat, and put the bones and gristle back and simmer until the bones are clean. Wash and soak two tablespoonfuls of rice half an hour. Strain the broth. Remove the fat. Put the broth on to boil again, and add to It the rice, and the nicest por tions of meat, cut into small pieces. Simmer until the rice is tender. Add seasoning to taste, and serve at once. A few spoonfuls of cream may be added if desired. Velvet Collars. Though the velvet band around the | throat has been worn for some time, it is too becoming to be lightly dis carded. Stunning new bands are be ing shown in it crossed by slides and ; buckles set in seed and pearls and Parisian diamonds. Some of these have a group of three bars in the middle of front with an other at back to serve as clasp; others have the bars at Inch wide intervals around entire collar. The velvet comes in several widths, from a half inch to two Inches. Often instead of a straight bar or slide the jeweled effects are arranged like a Greek cross or are oval. The Draped Toga. There has come about a fashion of wearing an immensely long and wide draped garment over one's smart aft ernoon frock. It is of the color of the gown and Is edged with a wide band of fur or a deep fringe. It is thrown around the body some what as a toreador throws on hie scarf, only in a more classic fashion. It sweeps down over the right hip, goes across the chest, over the left shoulder, across the back and is caught with a buckle at the right hip. When gracefully done it is exceed ingly pretty on a slender figure. It may be of chiffon or gauze. It must be soft and it is prettier when sheer. Veal Croquettes. Make a cream sauce or one table spoonful of butter, two tablespoon fuls of flour, one cupful of cream or milk, one teaspoonful of onion Juice, a little salt, pepper and paprika; one beaten egg may be stirred In. the pan left one minute and re mo red from the fire. Add to this two cupfuls of minced real, a little ham. chopped mushrooms, sweetbreads or truffles. Any two more of these ingredients are good mixed, but the real alone may be used. When the mixture is cold, form into small cylinder or pyramid shapes, egg and bread crumb them and fry In boiling hot fat for two minutes. Bread Omelet. Boil a cupful of milk and pour It over a teacupful of breadcrumbs. Let stand for some minutes. Break six eggs into a bowl and stir until mixed Do not beat them. Add the bread and milk, season with salt and pepper and .urn into a hot pan containing a spoon ul of boiling butter. Fry slowly and when brown turn and brown on the other side. SINGLE COMB RHODE ISLAND RED INDUSTRIOUS Then Is None Better for All-Parpose Fowl, Says Texas Poultry Fancier—Little Chicks Very Strong. There Is too little attention being bald to poultry on the farm. Poultry Is as essential as horses, cows, hogs or any other farm stock. It seems to me that every farmer's wife would select •some large breed of chickens and have a small flock to supply her table with nice fryers and fresh eggs all the year. There is none better than the Single Comb Rhode Island Red for an all purpose fowl. They are very large and very In dustrious. Rhode Island Reds are up early every morning and go to roost late every evening. The little chicks are very strong from the time make nionoy with poultry. January. 190$, 1 had seven red hens and one cock. In that month the seven hens laid 109 eggs. In February my fan; lly was sick so much 1 could not keep a record of the eggs laid. But In March I was able to keep a record, and they laid 140 eggs. 11 doten and eight eggs laid In March. 1 sold a good many eggs for hatching pur poses, and sold some of the stock for breeders, and raised 40 fine pullets for my own use. Besides, we had all the fryers a family of four could eat all the year. I sold from those seven hens $46.55 In eggs and stock. I never got such results from any other y ' r i»i' o. Single Comb Rhode Island Red. they leave the shell. They feather early and all poultry raisers know when a chick is feathered It Is raised, writes K. C. Yelverton In Farm and Ranch. Chicks grow very fast and are large enough to eat when they are eight weeks old. The pullets, when well cared for, lay at five months old. I have raised many of the so-called standard breeds, for instance, the Barred Plymouth Rocks, the Wyandottes, the Ham burgs. White Leghorns. Buff Cochins and others, and was always troubled more or less with various diseases among my chickens. I can truthfully say since 1 have been raising the Single Comb Rhode Island Reds 1 have never had any disease whatever among them. The Single Comb Rhode Island Reds are very beautiful with their rich red plumage, well developed body and exquisitely bright eyes, which all goes to show they are the chickens lor the man or woman who wants to chickens. This year 1 have two pens of fine red hens and two fine cocks Killing Pocket Gophers. The pocket gophers are quite easily killed with poisons. The United States department of agriculture gives the following formula for this: Dissolve one ounce of strychnia sul phate in a pint of boiling water. Add a pint of thick sugar sirup. Scent this mixture by adding a few drops o! oil of anise. Steep a half bushel ol corn in hot water and allow It tc soak over night. After this, drain It and allow to soak for several hours In the poisoned sirup. Postage on Seeds. The total weight of seeds sent by congressmen to their constituents through the mails In a single year is 1,350.000 pounds. If postage wery paid on these seeds it would cost the congressmen a round million dollars FOR LEVELING UNEVEN LAND L A cheap and effective contrivance for leveling uneven land is shown in the accompanying Illustration. The leveler may be made of any conveni ent length up to 12 feet; the steel smoothing plate is very light, but will Inst a long time. It Is brought from the middle 3 Inches by 2 Inches beam to the underneath of the back 6 Inches by 3 inches beam, and holes are cut In It for the ties and bolts. It is a flat steel sheet with ends turned one inch, and secured with one-inch screws. The cutter is shod with 2^-inch by 4V4 lnch steel plate, with beveled edge, se cured with two-inch screws. The stand tor the driver is of pine. 2 feet 9 inches by 1 foot 6 inches by 1V4 inch. In use the driver standing on the plate, by moving forward causes the front beam with its cutting edge to enter the 'round, and carry forward any soil cut j \ liy moving backward he raises the cutting edge, allowing the accumulate* earth to pass under in as great or ai little quantity as he pleases; while thi sloping steel sheet smoothes it out crushes the lumps and spreads it inti any depressions. Value of a Sow. The sow that brings two Utters i year and nourishes them weU until all weeks old is worth two or three time* pork prices, however high pork ma; be. Never fatten your reliable sowi until they fall to be reliable. The Flower Beds. It won't matter what shape fiowe. beds you make—round, square or ob long—so long as you make them. A man who owns a farm foul witl weeds is still a renter. Sometime: less than half the crop is his. XWFUL Maisle—Tu be on his knees when he proposed? Daisy—No; but be went down thn steps that way when papa caught him. Old Men in Responsibility. The American business system, which gives mere boys responsible po sitions before they have acquired prac tical experience, is to an Englishman quite unaccountable. He wonders whether it does not cause reckless trading and wild speculation. In other countries they prefer to keep elderly men in r» sponsible positions because they can he depended upon. Messrs. Dyke & Sons. Somerset. England, em ploy S6 men. More than half have com pleted 30 years' service. SO have been there 40 years, nine over 50 years and one 70 years. Shameful. Extract from a young lady's letter from Venice: "East night I lay in a gondola In the Grand canal, drinking it all lc. and life never seemed so full be fore.**—Lipplncotfs. Some men get as much enjoyment Dut of a toothpick as others do out of a cigar. rKHKYiuvisriiNKiitra Fct a vsJOer. ets ', er e«C< m» r»:nk-.lW. Hwwiif.i irrhm a».* *eaMtert-v«c iai» ■mJsan* n, w fjui* Sc, SSc J*.- fentoa. Once you start thinking about your self and your complaints, your health begins to go. TH. P'.w*'* MVtk. «=©*'*.. . %• »t«* •* aihlr. Nffdttd .U4\VhW thMMX jtat *nd bwwtclv iv Qv t jnpv Put up with sarcasm—don't practise A Lewi«* Smc’e Binder cigar. Original Tin Foil Smoker Package, 5c straight. Farmers and washladies get their living from the soil. The Bitters has clearlv proven, during the past 56 years, that it is an ideal tonic and invigorant for those in a weak and debili tated condition. It aids di gestion and keeps the bowels open. Try it today. WESTERN CANADA HflMt l»L Mia. Hm OrMt WsllPMd RNwMrti^ •f Wheat hAmMfd In 19W. A»wv» « U» tbmi m*r area «>f fc*ka«eh***n aad Maiutt** ailS fc* ipw4io(M‘ lYto feoaneatemfeaff ICttaerta. fxcfUfnt, anil th^ wry B__ nlhrtr* rtow at buhl. kulkt int lumber cheap, furl ms to frt mk! muoiMbb la prW. aater maUr i^wuml; mixed farmlntr a rarrea Write a to hert place for fHt ♦»' low railway rate*. tarnitla UTaa Intel ‘‘Let Bat fw* oa app'katK>n s wX* c: her»r.foraa t«oa to Sup't of laaifimxa. Uu«a Oan.. or to tU Otaadwa W. V. BENNETT tOm liliw «m»* y»*V K PATENTS W>MMK.Calrmt.V'Kiv lastoo.n c. Kook-free. Hi^ta cat RMRnxt Ben nk» Nebraska Directory John Deere Cultivators ARK THE BEST ASK TOTH I'KAl.KK OR JOHN DEERE BLOW COMPANY, OmaM. Wn CUIIIH Uncotn’ ■ U« will nil Manufacturer of COPPER CABLED LIGHTNING RODS If b b UIIV VI this process sii hrekea parts of machinery trade pood as new. We ds east iron, cast sled, aluminum, copper, bran cc any other metal Expert amomooiie repatna*. •ERTSCHY MOTOR CO.. Council Rluffo. TYPEWRITER S iexchange Lincoln, Nob. SlxSS and up. At) standard Kates seal oe tented. Keat applied >f xuu purchase. Marklase shipped am »«ere enatproeal. >o deposit reou red Pnefsrlsiyr’ut LINCOLN TV PE WRITER I 122 North llth Stroot TAFTS DENTAL ROOMS 1517 Notts 2., HUM, IEB. RUBBER GOODS by mill exit price*. 9rad for free etukfv% MYE RS-DILLON DRUG CO., Omaha, Nab, DO YOU PUT DASE BALL? I.MO WIFOMS II STOCK Send stomp foe esiah, and wholesale rrw, on Base Bali. Tennis. Golf ami Spcrcinr 0.^1 at all kinds, and one handsaw ' - huttoi. State position yo= play. TOWNSEND GUN COMPANY CM Karnem Stroot n__