Carci for Cold * . Coal oil will knock any cold silly , " laid C. C. Warren. "The Idea of drink ing coal oil may seem i apugnant to gome esthetic tastes , but one table- ipoonful will fix the business for the most stubborn , cold In head or body. "Turpentine in another fine thing for general conditions. I firmly be lieve that If a man will take fifteen to twenty drops of turpentine in 11 sugar once every two months he will V never be really sick. It's an Internal l Turkish bath in effect , and leaves the ystem thoroughly cleansed and In good shapo to take on new strength. There's no excuse for a cold , and it's a. dangerous thing to pass by. " Balti more News. H HIS ONE WEAK SPOT. I ; Prominent Minnesota. Merchant Cared to Stay Cured by Doan'a Kidney PI11 . O. C. Hayden , of O. C. Hayden & Co. , dry goods merchants , of Albert Lea , Minn. , says : "I was so lamo that I could hardly walk. There was an unac countable weakness of the back , and constant pain and aching. I could find , no rest and was very u n c o m f o rtable at night. As my health was good in every other way , I could . * „ , „ „ , „ * . . - not understand this i ( trouble. It was just as if all the strength had gone from my back. After suffering for some time I began using Doan's Kidney Pills. The rem edy acted at once upon the kidneys , and when normal action was restored , the trouble with my back disappeared. I have not had any return of it. " For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Company , Buf falo , N. Y. Jn t How It Happened. Mother What ! Fighting again ? Such a black eye ! If you'd only follow the Y lead of the minister's little boy K Tommy Aw , I did try ter foller his ' l ad , but he led again wid his left aa * dat's where he biffed me. Philadelphia Press. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take LAXATIVE BItOMO Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money If It fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature la on each box. 25c. MEXICO IS LEARNING. The Are er I can Way of Living : I Taking ? xe. Deep Hold on People. The study of English is compulsory In the Mexican public schools. Every year Mexico sends to the United States a number of school teachers to atudy American pedagogic methods , says Edward McCouley in the Ameri can Monthly Review , of Reviews. A great many Mexican children are be ing educated in the schools and col leges of this country , where formerly they were sent to Europe. The num ber of Mexican visitors to the United States and the numbei * of American visitors to Mexico is increasing every year. It is said that Yucatecans know New York better than the City of Mex ico and that west-coast Mexicans are more at home in San Francisco than in their own capital city. Thus , each year the American way of living is taking a deeper hold on the Mexican people. The Vice President of Mexico and announced successor of President Diaz is very much Americanized in his ideas. In fact he might easily be mistaken for a plain , shrewd American business man from his appearance , manner and methods. He has always been exceedingly friendly toward Americans. As Governor of the State ot Sonora , he encouraged them to in- I vest in enterprises in his State and te 1 settle therein. He spared no effort in seeing that their lives , property and civil rights were protected. He is well Informed about the United States and Is a student of English. He has three 1 daughters in school at San Francisco 1 and Is educating all of his children ia th * United States. FOOD AND STUDY. A Collesre Man's Experience. "All through my high school course and first year in college , " writes an ambitious young man , "I struggled with my studies on a diet of greasy , pasty foods , being especially fond of cakes and fried things. My system got into a state of general disorder and it was difficult for me to apply myself to school work with any degree of satisfaction. I tried different medi cines and food preparations but did not seem able to correct the difficulty. "Then my attention was called to Grape-Nuts food and I sampled it. I had to do something , so I just buckled down to a rigid observance of the di rections on the package , and in less than no time began to feel better. In , a few weeks my strength was re- i stored , my weight had increased , I had a clearer head and felt better in every particular. My work was sim ply sport to what it was formerly. "My sister's health was badly run down and she had become so nervous that she could not attend to her mu sic. She went on Grape-Nuts and had the same remarkable experience that I had. Then my brother , Frank , who Is in the postoffice department at Wash ington city and had been trying to do brain work on greasy foods , cakes and all that , joined the Grape-Nuts army. I showed him what it was and could do and from a broken-down condition he has developed into a hearty and ef- . ficlent man. "Besides these I could give account of numbers of my fellow-students who have made visible improvement men tally and physically by the use of this food. " Name given by Postum Co. , Battle Creek , Mich. There's a reason. Read the litt'.c book , "The Road to Wellville , " in pkgi. i * _ JS rtfli vtiJttjL , * , , * ; & ftftf ftft aftA Bft ft ftSft BA BAA&A d BAfl BAllH B A fc ftft AAft fe A A ftA A MVVVfWVVVVfVVVVViVVVVVVVVVWVPVVVWVfVVfVVfVVffVVfVVVV 4HA A kA BA * J A JV p * J * * W p J 9 R J J w 4 4 . Opinions of Great Papers on Important Subjects. $ * 4'4'44'2"4"i'4'4"4' § * 4-44 * 44 44 44 44 44 4 * 4 44ft--vljj 5 * DOCTOBS WABN TJS AGAINST HAJBD WORK. I OAF and grow fat" is the trite expression of an .old truism supposed to have the backing of physiological research and med ical experience. The farmer who wishes to fatten stock for the market does not permit it to roam the fields. He puts the stock In a pen , where it can get little ex- trdse , and feeds it fattening material. But It has never been supposed that loafing made a person healthy or strong. It favors an increase of adi pose tissue , but no one ever contended that it made muscular tissue or improved the circulation or strength ened any of the organs of the body. But now come certain members of the American Medical Association with the declaration that hard work is deadly , that -"strenuous life" is making the young men of the United States as decrepit as their grandfathers were at the age of 70 years. The intro duction of the cinder path , football and other forms of outdoor athletics Into college life , it Is claimed , has re sulted In the alarming growth of an Incurable disease that is sapping the vitality of the young men. Tills disease , which the doctors have named "arteriosclero sis , " Is a stifferlng and deterioration of the arteries , causing them to age prematurely and bringing about a serious affection of the heart. It should not require the admonition of the learned doctors to Impress young men with the danger , and foolishness of "strenuous" athletics , or with the benefits to be derived from rational outdoor exercise. The loaf- Ing that permits an excessive accumulation of fat is dangerous. The work or the athletic exercise that does not respond to the rational needs of a particular body Is also dangerous. Experience and common sense teach us this without the testimony of the doctors. Loafing does not bring health. Nor does "strenuous" exercise necessarily bring strength. Chicago Record- Herald. PROSPERITY AND MONEY MADNESS. I HAT an ordinary shameless politician , who must live by his wits , should want to steal , or that a forlorn wretch who has little or nothing , not even the fag-end of a con science , should be tempted to rob his neigh- bro , is comprehensible enough. But why should a man who has more millions than he can count , more Income than he can spend , or even give away , a man who can satisfy every rational desire of a human being aud yet have enough over to support 10,000 people in comfort why should such a man be willing to commit crime to get more ? The answer is that he has lost his mental equilib rium ; he has become money-mad. He Is in precisely the same case as the man who , because of infatuation for a wanton , gives up his wife and children , his home , his religion , his reputation and his money ; and that kind of a performance Is recorded In the newspapers nearly every day. An evil passion has got possession of the soul of the money-mad man , just as alcohol or opium gets possession of the body of a man who is a drinker or a doper. Why did Napoleon , having all the rest of the continent of Europe at his feet , and lit erally drunk with glory , want to conquer Russia and then Asia ? Because he was ambition-mad. He had lost his balance. He had parted with his sense of the right proportion of things. The money-mad man is similarly a victim , but o.f an * other mania. An Insane person is one who is no longer able to perceive things as they are. Everything is dis torted as he looks at it. Always he exaggerates his own Importance ; invariably he gives a false value to some other person or thing. The multi-millionaire who is so hot for more dollars that he will plunge Into criminal J A FAVORED SPOT. $ In these days a town which cannot present a sufficient number of attract ive spots to warrant the Issuing of a book of "views" is indeed unblessed. "They're getting out a panoramic folder over at Green Ledge , " said one of the Inhabitants of Sandville , gloom ily. "Outside they've got a picture of the church , and Inside they've got 'Main street , looking north' that shows the hotel and 'Main street , look- Ing south' that shows the telegraph of fice. % "Then they've got 'Green vLake' and The Pinesand 'The Residence of Samuel Epps , Esquire , ' and 'A Group of Our Citizens , ' and 'One of Green Ledge's beautiful lanes , ' and a 'Twi light Vista , ' and 'The Office of the Green Ledge Bugle. ' I tell you , they look mighty well , those views do ! Now what are we going to show up ? Or are we going to sit still and be squashed right off the landscape ? " For a moment Eben Patterson , one of Sandville's handful of residents , who served the limited public of his town in many capacities , looked depressed ; then he rose to meet the occasion. "We'll get out a set of postal cards that'll beat their views all hollow , " he said , cheerfully. "Let's see we'll have 'A Little Home in Sandville' that'll be your house taken side on , showing the porch. Then we'll have 'The Residence of Sandville's most honored citizen , E. P. Grub' that'll be your house taken head on , showing the front door and the yard. You set. out all the chairs you've got , so it'll look social. "Then we'll have 'A Little Drive Along One of Sandville's Roads. ' You know that place where those ten pine trees grow ? Well , sir , I'll range you and your family and the Todds and the Lamsons and well , that's enough , anyway I'll range you in your bug- glee , and so on , along in front of those pines , and I reckon it'll make a picture worth looking at "Then I'll have 'A Corner in One of fiandville's Gardens. ' I'll squat down in front of those nasturtiums that Bud Lanwon's managed to make grow , and projects and cover his hands with filth and his name with ignominy to reap a harvest of money that he wants no more than he wants eleven toes , is a man who has lost his head. The police might fairly collar him ; but his rightful guardian is an alienist. If , indeed , It be a fact that he and his kind are multiplied , and their passion for spoil is made hotter by prosperity , may we not consider whether , as we look around upon the Increase of graft and development of money-madness , this country could not obtain some benefit from a brief spell of hard times ? Philadelphia North American. AGBICULTUBE IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS. HE question of teaching agriculture in our public schools is being ventilated thor T oughly by educational leaders. State Supt Stetson , of Maine , has expressed the conviction that In some elementary form all the teachers of that State should " " " be prepared to teach agriculture. He thinks that farm boys and farm girls should be so taught that when they are through with the common schools they will be qualified to make country homes , and not , by their very training , be biased toward town life. The fact is that the ordinary common school does comparatively exalt trade and manufacturing as com pared with land culture. The children receive no in formation whatever concerning animals and plants , concerning soils and fertilizers , nor are they taught the relation that in country life should exist between the true , the beautiful and the useful. Suprinteudent Joyner , of North Carolina , insists that 'agriculture should be taught just as history is taught. Asstgn a lesson in nature study , and see that the pupil masters it. He thinks the application will come later. Pupils will become keenly interested in matters that touch everyday homo life. Then he would have sup plied to the pupils small boxes , In which they are to place the requisite soil , and in each plant a given num ber of seeds. He would have them test seed to begin with not go ahead blindly , but make sure at every point. For Instance , he finds in his experiments that cab bage seed germinates at a 90 per cent ratio , clover at a 75 per cent ratio , while blue grass has a percentage of germination as low as 45. His object Is to teach a child accuracy in all matters pertaining to agriculture ; but accuracy is nothing more or less than science. Elbert Hubbard emphasizes the necessity of a rad ical change in the division of school work. To teach agriculture wisely requires a good deal of outdoor appli cation. Recently we showed what Iowa had undertak en with her normal schools that Is , a certain amount of garden work and field work for Incipient teachers , so that they will be qualified to teach nature studies in the schools. " There Is really no good reason why boys and girls should be shut up all day inside school rooms. It is un natural , and it is a serious damage to their nerves and their muscles. There is .rto reason why half of this time , should not be spent out of doors In the application of the lessons learned. . These may be lessons in entomol ogy or in ornithology , or in direct gardening. Mr. Hub- bard adds : "Suppose we quit talking about war , and set ourselves to the problem of educating our boys and girls that is , educate them to be useful ; one ses sion a day for books and the afternoon for hand work. " He thinks this would end the era of overworked teach ers and yellow , nervous pupils. At present we are giving twice as much to war as we are to our schools. We are glad to welcome the assistance of all thoughtful educators , editors and others in this campaign for com mon sense. Let us make our motto "Educate for the farm and not from the farm ; educate for the country and not from the country. " New York Tribune. I'll take 'em large. They'll look luxu riant that's the way they'll look ! "And as for the rest of the set" Mr. Patterson snapped his fingers airily "I reckon we can make out ten , be tween the postoffice and the grocery taken both ways , and a 'Group of Cats' everybody knows cats like a good place to live. Why , I shouldn't won der if our postal cards brought a reg ular boom right here to. Sandville's doors 1" COLLIE WEIGHS SIX POUNDS. Only Three of This Breed ot Aa- grora Doss in America. Although the dog aristocrats are sup posed to have representation in the New York and Boston dog shows , there is one species which is never represent ed , because the species is so rare. This is the Angora collie , and there are only threo of the dogs in this country. Dr. E. C. Switzer , of Springfield , Mass. , owns one of the animals , and the other two are in Newburyport , Mass. , says the New York Herald. The peculiar characteristic of the dog is that while it has all the marks of a typical collie , it weighs about six pounds Instead of the thirty or more which the collie ordinarily weighs. It has the feathering on the legs and in the ears and its head is broad and in telligent , but here all resemblance to the well-known breed ends , for it is a dainty , graceful dog , with all the pret ty ways of a small dog. Dr. Switzer's dog is named Spider and her father and mother were brought to this country from Spain and taken to Newburyport , and now the mother and her two children , Toudie and Spider , are the only representa tives of the breed in this country. Spider has an unusually broad head , big , intelligent eyes with spots of brown around them , brown markings on back and sides , slender , graceful legs , and a coat which is gleaming white except for the marks of brown. The little dog is extremely affection ate , loves to be cuddled , and makes an excellent ladies' dog , but she Is no toy , for she has dauntless courage and pluck and is always ready to defend herrights. . Although born in a warm country , she stands well the uncertainties of tUe New England climate and is perfectly well in the coldest weather. She is a small eater , and fresh tripe is a deli cacy of which she is particularly fond. Jumping is her especial delight , and she will take leaps with the ease of a greyhound. She Is an excellent watch dog and will bark uproariously at the slightest noice. She Is sensitive to a degree and grieves sorely over a cross or rough word. Hedcrehogr Fears No Snake. An interesting fact about hedgehogs that perhaps not many persons know Is that the bites of even the most poison ous serpents have no effect on them whatever. M. Lenz , a naturalist , once watched a fight between a hedgehog and a viper and gives a most interest ing description of it. lie says that when the hedgehog came near the snake she began to smell it , for the sight of these animals is so poor that they depend almost entirely on the sense of smell , and then she seize < J its head with her teeth. In a moment the snake had freed itself , and , darting at the hedgehog , bit it several times , but the little animal did not seem to mind the bites at all , and when the snake was tired out with its efforts she again seized its head , which she ground between her teeth , poisonous fangs and all. Then she de voured almost the whole of its body. M. Lenz also tells of a pet hedgehog that he kept in his house in a large box. box.Several Several times he put some adders into the box , which the hedgehog did not seem to fear at all , but attacked them fiercely , and , as in the case of the other , was never in the least af fected by their poisonous bites. A man who has had a pet hedgehog in his possession for a long time says that he had often seen It throw itself off the top of a wall fourteen feet in height. Without pausing a moment it would contract itself "into a soft , fluffy ball and fall to the ground so lightly that almost immediately it would un fold itself and run off. High Speed Torpedo Boat. Forty-one miles an hour will be the speed of the next torpedo boat destroy er to be built for the British navy. What a man's wife thinks of him Is no * far from the truth. rEri L.aaL ! SO i , * FATHER GAPON IS UNMASKED. Revealed an Tool of Hu.isian Gov ernment Against KevolutioniMtK. St Petersburg dispatches say that through the disappearance'of the jour nalist , Matushensky , the press agent and real brains of the Father Gapon movement , the disclosure has been made that the moderate labor organiza tion , which Gapon established in St. Petersburg after the publication of the Imperial manifsto of Oct. 30. 1905 , was subsidized by the government. Russian officials supplied the funds for the rent of its clubhouse and literature. Radical circles are elated over the revelation , which was made jn an open letter by the president of the Putiloff section of the organization , complain ing tliat $12,000 of the funds furnished through M. Timiriazeff , until recently minister of commerce , had not reached the treasury. The socialists claim that this spells the downfall of the conserv ative opposition to the full revolution ary program among the workmen. It is now shown that Gapon really played a minor role in the formidable movement of January , 190. . and that Matushensky was the director of the campaign which mystified both the po lice and the old-time revolutionists. Matushensky was the author of the great petition with which the working- men were marching to the winter pal ace on Red Sunday. Jan. 22 , 1905 , to present to the "emperor when the troops fired on them. A curious commentary on the condi tions prevailing is the cabinet's action in opening clubhouses. , for which the government furnished the money , when up to the present Interior Minister ItfTurs crrsr. * , FATHER GAPON. Durnovo has not permitted assemblies of conservative workmen ? which are dispersed as rigorously as those of the socialists. PLAN DIVORCE STRINGENCY. Conference "WnntH Two-Year Limit in Place of Residence. Divorce colonies were given a severe jolt by the congress on uniform divorce laws in Washington , which decided by a considerable majority that not less than two years' residence should be required of a plaintiff who has changed his or her State domicile since the cause of divorce arose. Another resolution reported by the committee on resolutions , which was adopted after a warm discussion , prt - vides : "An innocent and injured party , hus band or wife , seekiug a divorce should not be compelled to ask for a dissolution of the bonds of matrimony , but should be allowed , at his or her option , to apply for divorce from bed and board. There fore divorces a ineusa should be retained where already existing and provided for in States where no such rights exist. " The congress also expressed itself in favor of hearing all divorce cases in open court and not before any delegated repre sentative , holding that publicity would tend to do away with collusion and to de crease the number of suits. Other reso lutions adopted provide for the classifi cation of causes for divorce into groups | that would be accepted by the several j States ; declare that when conviction for crime is made a cause for divorce it should involve two years' continuous im prisonment ; that no decree should be given for insanity arising after marriage , nor for desertion unless persisted in for two years ; that defendants in suits should be given full and fair notice , and ' that anyone named as a co-respondent should in all cases be given an opportu nity to intervene. All Around the Globe. Hereafter automobile parts will be car ried by railroads from Gsicago to San Francisco for $3 per 100 pounds instead of $ G as formerly. A large cat killed the 3-months-old girl baby o Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Devlin of Los Angeles by lying on the baby's head and suffocating it. Jacob Riis has canceled his lecture engagements for three months owing to illness. He is suffering from heart trouble at Richmond Dill , L. I. Col. S. W. Stocking , aged 70 years , a member of the board of examiners ia chief of the United States patent ofBce , died of cancer of the throat. Frank Bernat of Minneapolis is under arrest pending an inquest on the death of Mrs. Bernat , who , it is alleged , died as the result of the man's violence. E. H. Harriman and others have ac quired vast coal rights near Durango , Colo. The purchase is taken to mean Harriman's entrance into Pueblo. J. T. Adams of the Adams Brothers Bridge Company at Findlay , Ohio , plead ed guilty to violating the Valentine anti trust law and was fined $ . " 500 and costs. Joseph M. Hastings , the Pittsburg con tractor driven to the wall by the failure of the Enterprise National bank of Alle gheny , died in a sanitarium at Summit , N. J. Mrs. M. C. Hulse , a widow , formerly of Circleville , Ohio , fell from the fourth floor window of a hotel at Ithaca , N. Y. , and was killed. Her son is a student at Yale. Clara West. 12 years old , and her younger sister were burned to death at their home at Enterprise , Miss. , their clothing being set afire by sparks from t grate. RHEUMATIC PAiNS Disappear When Dr. Williams' Pmfr Pills Purify the Blood and Heal Inflamed Tissues. Rheumatism is a di.sease of the blood , caused by the failure of the body to COKJ off certain poisons. External npplicu- tions are of use only in securing renij > o- rary relief from pain ! l-o cure for rheumatism lies in purifying and en- richiiig the blood. Mrs. Frederick Brown , of10 Snmptei street , Sandy Hill , N.Y. , VMS a sufftur from inflammatory rheumatism fuia the time she was sixteen. Sho says. "It first appeared in my kuce joints , then in my hips and waist. It became a regular thing that I would bo laid np all winter. The rheumatism affected mostly my hands , hips , feet msd shoulders. My hands were ail putt'eJ up and my feet became deformed. I lost my appetite , couldn't sleep and sometimes I was compelled to cry out , the pain was so intense. " For several winters I was under the doctor's care and while his iiirf.Jciiio re lieved the pain for a little while there seemed no prospect for a permanent cure. I was confined to my bed , off and on , for weeks at' a time. My limbs swelled dreadfully at times and I was reduced almost to nothing. " In the spring of 1904 , upon the ad vice of a friend , I began to use Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. At that time I wasn't able , to do anything and could barely eat enough to keep al've. I felb a change for the hotter in about a month. I began to eat heartily and I suffered less pain. Of coun > e I kept oa the treatment , using care in my diefc , and in about three months 1 was cured. I am entirely well today and do all my own work. " Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cured Mrs. Brown by driving the rheumatic poisons out of her blood. But you must get the genuine Dr. Williams' Pink Pills , sold by all druggists and by the Dr.YTilliamg Medicine Co. . ' Scbcuectndy , N. Y. A Old Independent. The death of Senator David Wark , the oldest member of the Canadian' Parliament , recalls au anecdote which Illustrates his remarkable independ ence. At the age of 101 he was still holding the seat which had been hi $ for almost halt"a century. During his last years his family had been worried about his habit of trav eling alone in mid-winter from his home in Fredericton , New Brunswick , to hjs post in Ottawa. They urged him to let his daughter accompany hiin. Senator Wark would have none of her. her."A "A man of my age , " he said , "has all he can do taking care of himself , without having.a woman to look after. " AWFUL PSORIASIS G5 YEARS. Terrible Scaly Humor in Patches All Over the Body Skin Cracked and Bleeding Cured by Cuticura. " 1 was ailHctecl with psoriasis' * for thirty-live years. It was in patches * al over my body. I used three cakes of Cuticura Soap , six boxes of Ointment , and two bottles of Resolvent l.i thirty days I was completely cured. aucF I think permanently , as it was about five years ago. The psoriasis first"made itij appearance in red spots , generally forming a circle , leaving in the center a spot about the size of a silver dol lar of sound fiesh. In a short time the affected circle would form a heavy dry scale of white silvery appearance and would gradually drop oft' . To remove the entire scales by bathing or using oil to soften them the riesh would " > e perfectly raw. and a light discharge of bloody substance would ooze out. That scaly crust would form again hi twenty-four hours. It was worse on my arms and limbs , although it was /n spots all over iny body , also on : ny scalp. If I let the scales remain too long without removing by bath or oth erwise , the skin would crack and bleed. I suffered intense itching , worse at nights after getting warm in bed , or blood warm by exercise , when it would be almost unbearable. W. M. Chide.s- ter , Hutchiuson. Kan. , April 20 , 190-V Made a Clock from Slate. A slate quarryman living at Delta , Pa. , Humphrey 0. Pritchard , has made a clock out of slate. The varieties he used include peach bottom blue slate and the red , green and purple slate of Vermont. About 1U4 separate pieces of this material were used in the construction and are hel I together by twenty-three dozen small metal screws. Many of the slate sheets are as thin as paper , and scores were broken before tii timepiece was finished after eight months' work. The clock is 4 feet high , 2 feet wMe * and 1 foot < 3oo ; > . It has a cathedral gong and i.s hub ted by nine incandes cent bulbs. Jewelers" Circular Week ly. 5 Tons Grass Hr.j Tree. EvpryWy levlots and lots of fodder for hogs , cows , sheep aiul swine. I TLe earnous crops of ourNorthern Grov.n I' . V'oe eeis en our geed fsnss the ] ) : : = ; : y „ - . : c , M. > J us to issue a spe cial cwu-.c ye cMlIcd & i : in"s r IOAIN SEED ROOK. Th' ? is i.-Im full of bargain seeds nt ga.n price : . . . srcn THIS KOTIC : ; TO-SAT. and receive free . t seed to pror.- toes of grr.son . ycur k-t cr i. rn. tL summer ar.d oir geat lhr/sn fc.vd Eo k with its ' .venues ul . . I tru-ss ar. greub bargains in ctvls at rar0 . : i p..e . Remit 4c a-ul we acid a r-.cls'e cf C s- mos , the si > st fashioahe ! , servicca l ? , beautiful annual jiowcr. John A. b'al-vr Seed Co. , Lock Draw- er C. , La Cro e , Wis. . "Jint He Hit. "Die says huV given up hunting be cause itwas too expensive ; is gunniug really so expensive : " "Well , it depends upon what the farmer considers his cow to b * worth. " PhiLixlelphia Press.